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1972-06-01 - Orange Coast Pilot
l · ' 17 t ' ' l -... ~Ollll ' orce' • Ir DAILY Pl·LOT Sniper Hits CdM Shop: * * * 10' * * * THU RSDAY A FTE RNOON, JUNE I, 1972 Shooting Spree Li nlaP VOL. 6$. HO, liJ, J ll!CTIONS. • PAOll:i I .. • • • • • • • • • • • State Council Str·addles Pro.p. 9 Free Man Bobby Baker was released t o- day fro1n AJ\cnwood Pr ison F' arm in Williamsport, Pa . Baker had served 18 1nonths of a three-year sentence for fraud, theft and tax evasion. Group Assat1lt Made on Marines In San Oemente An undetermined number or assailants armed with knives and tire irons at· tacted a pair of Marines at their San Clemente apar~ment Wednesday, leaving ane victim stabbed in the side and the other beaten on the head. · Police detained three men after the assaults but they were later released without clfarge. The victims, found In the driveway of apartments at 137 W. palizada , were Jack Dean Gibeault, 20, or apartment A ~t the Palizada address, and his room· mate, Arthur Aney Walker, 22. &th are stationed at Camp .Pendleton. Police said the incident occurred at 1bout 9 p.m. when the group of thugs ap- ~ at the apartment after an alterca- tion earlier in the day. Moments later, officers sald,·Gibeault's .,._.,. Kltby, discovered the two bleeding me;si lying In the driveway. She ran to an all-night market !le¥bY to seek aid. Police saJd her husband suffered a afnlle slash wound to his lower side. wauc:er, apparently benten with a tire tron, 1Uffered severe head cult and other hurt!. After emergency treatment at Mission Community Hospital the two victims "ere , transferrl'd to the tJ .S. Naval Hoftpital at Camp Pendleton for further treatment of the Injuries. Both are e:.x- peCted to recover, police said. _ Offtctr1 oid the>: h.av,e not yrt .. determJned the exa(!t "l'Uaom for the af... (See BEATING, Pqe I) Baker Out Of Prison; 'Did Duty' ... From Wire Servicts \VILLIAMSPORT, Pa. -A relaxed and sm iling Bobby Baker. saying he believed he had done his "duty" "·ell, was paroled from the Allenwood Prison Farm toda y after serving 18 months of a three-year sentence for fraud . theft and tax evasion. The form er protege of President Lyn· don B. Jotmsori and secretary to the Senate majority. was driven from the fann , a section of t he Le wisbu rg Feder11I Penitentiary, by a woman .shortly after 7:30 a.m. Baker had been picked up at the fann's administration building in the private auto and the car stopped just before it reached the gates , where a ,:::roup of abou t 20 newsmen and photographers were waiting. Baker, neatly dressed in a l ight topcoat to protec t him from a chill wind. got out of th e car and read a short prepared statement to the waiting ne\\'smen. Baker said he entered the Lewisburg Prison on Jan. 14, 1971 with a vow th at "I "·ould do my duty and I believe I ha ve done it well." He said he would grant no Interviews until after completion of a book he was working on. He then refused further com- ment, got back: in the car and wa s dr iven off. · Baker. 44, granted parole on his second appeal in April, was transferred fron1 Lewisburg to the Allenwood Fann near here as a minimum security prison er after his first week in prison. He reminded newsmen that he has maintained' he was innocent of the charges on which W was convicted in 1967. Without parole, Baker could not have been freed before next May 6. Baker's career l.n Washington began when he anlved fro m Pickens, s.c. and became a page. He earned a reputation as a tireless worker and went to law school at night. RFK Sori Pa ys Evasiori Firie BOSTON (UPI) -Joseph P. Kennedy Ill, 19, son of the late Sen. Robert Jo~. Kennedy, has pleaded • guilty· through an attorney to A charge of failing to J»IY a :JO.cent turnpike toll. He was flned $25. ' The incident occurred Tuesday night on the Ma 8sach u 1 et ts 1\Jmpike. State trooper Edward Brown made the arrest. taking young Ken- nedy to Brighton police station where he wns booked on a charge of toll evu:l.oo. Gets the Bn111!'s Rush Dick Groulx, executive secretary of the Alameda County Labor Council, is taken into custody after a sit-in at University of California President Charles Hitch's office on Berkeley camp:..;,. tJroulx, another top labor leader, and 14 other persons were ar- Ul"I Tt,..,,.tt rested after staging a seven·hour sit-in to protest the 45-day labor dispute at the campus. The Build· ing Trades Unjon struck over pay and grievance procedure!. Corona del Mar At1t~ Parts ~l1op Hit hy Sniper A sniper who may be responsible for a recent wave of Harbor Area shooting In- cidents hit a Corona del Mar auto parts shop with a .38 caliber slug, it was discovered Thursday. Richard Rosebuth. owner or CdM Auto Supply, 3&17 E. Coast ffigbway;ritlmated damage at $200, according to Police Of. ficer Larry Gabriel. .. The pairolman found a marigled slug which put a fi ve-inch hole in a plate glass window and ricocheted off a tool cabioet insh{e the firm . · Th~ bullet struck the glau at the rJve- foot revel, about chest high to arwme who mi ght have been inside, police noted. Seve11al shooting incidentr during nlp:ht hours h11v& OCCUJTed ln the 11reA, in· eluding a riOe rampAge through Newport Center some week!! a~ in which aever1l offk:e buildlflil were hiL Supervi-Sors Consider. ,• 'Air Force' Test Plan Bv JACK BROBACK Of II• Dally P'llet l llff Orange County's own "air force " may ge t off the ground next week if the Board of Supervisors approves a test plan pro- posed by county Dirtetor of A via lion Robert Bresnahan. Bresnahan has suggested a aix-month MOTHER SUING GIRL SCOUT S lOWA CITY. Iowa (UPl) -A mothf'r has flied suit in district court bere aR:alnst the Girf"'Scoots. contending the gr~ refused to promote her daughter. twtr~. E:.Stelle O'Brien said in su it her daughtl'r, ~1nryellen, 10. completed Rll the requJrciments for A fJrst clas! badge but it "'' not awarded. trial period al a CMt of $22,000 for an ex- perimental patrol over the Orange Coast With cooperation of the city helicopter forces from Newport Beach, Costa h1esa, and lluntington Beach. If supervisors approve the teit prcr gram and it prove.. s u c cesa f u I. Bresnahan has outl ined an overall county atr surveillance and rt!ICOe project at a cost of $2.3 million for the flrst year. The "Sir force" is a prop()sal advanct!<f by Supervisor William Phillips ot Fullerton several month,, ago. Bresnahan estimated that the' overall countywlde system would need eight police patrol helico pters and four patro l plane! plu!! two larger aircraft, one a helicopter nnd one an airpline lor utility service. (Jf the $2.3 ml\l ion ftrat year spending. $1.t million wou ld go for equlpmcot with (Set 'AIR FORCS,' Pict I ) Ecolo gital Unit Vote s 'Yes on No' Special to the DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -Despite earlie r predictions fro m Orange · Coun ty Super· \'isor David L. Baker, the Cali forni1l t~nvironmental Quality Cont rol Counci l iod:iy finds itsrlf stuck squarely in 11. ft•nce-straddling posi tion on contro\•crsial J>roposilion 9. The council in il<; 1ncrting here \Vcdnesday, voted to oppose the so-called rlcan environment initia tive on the Jun e 6 hallot. But on the other hand, the counci' refused lo rcscinJ its earlier vote v.'hich endorsed Proposi!ion 9.· "People arr going lo think "·e·re balmy," explodl'd board rncmber Albert Jlcarlso n or J(ivcrs1d1•. "It 's like letting a stone wall stand and the n mythically tearing it do"'"·" Th e council's fence-stradding stance began May IB in l..os Angeles \vhcn lt voted 5 to 2 to endorsl' Proposition 9. But Chairm::in Baker or Orang(' County. '''ho wa.! abst'nt :ir thnt incf'tini;:. s;iid "trickery" h:id been used lo get the ('Jl· dorsemenl. Ile Sl0 ht'dulcd another vola this Wednesday in Sacra1nento. The second lime. !he council voted 3 to 3 lo oppose Proposition 9 with l\VO abstention s. Baker had predicted it would be en- dorsed 8 to-5 by the fu ll council. • lfowever, the council refused tn b.ick up and revoke Its previous 5 to 2 vote <'n- dorsing the propos ition . A motion to let the endorsen1enL sland won 7 to 4 ap- pri:>val of the council. Slate Sen. Robert J . Lagomarsino fR- Ventura County ), a legi.!lative member of tbe co_uocil, o!fered consolation o! sorta: "This happens all the time in the (See PROPOSm ON, Page !) Orange Weather Jfazy .!iunshinc ti ~agenda for Fri day, bul thtf'"temperature "'ill still be towafd the top of the thermometer. !Ughs at the beach 72 rl!lng lo 80 Inland. Lows $$-65.. 11\SIDE T ODA'\' In bedroom commvnft¥ of Norwalk, t~ only cc· ... kfate who armise,t genuine l'nth""°'7ft is Alnbrmin's (;ov. Ccvrgc C. \Val· luct . ,Set story. Page 21 , l M BH'lll • ' C•••lornll It (,~">hl!'CI JI.JI Camlt• 71 Cro1"••r• '' Oc1111 H1tk11 U f:oflllrl•I ~-t f:Ml'rlolMl\1111 ,, Tl ~ lftl"(I H -t'I Ftr 1111 ll KOMI 1t ljfTl1(0ff It AIM LIMfft It M""ln ti Mull.I•! '""'' • Nllle11411 lftwt ' Ort rtff C......, n ,_,.. ..., Shell MMk... -,,.....,,,,.. . TM.11<tr1 » w ..... .,. • ... ...,..,., .._..,,,.,." .,,, .......... "'-• .- • DAJL't' ~ILOl 'Tired' Nixon Reaches Accords, aeads Home \\'~RSA\\' f I., 1'1 1 -A "dead urf'd" 1'te51dtn1 Nixon rra<.·hfd aomt widt>·r~- 111~ act·ords ""'1lh J'111Jsh le<iders ttld11y as lht fin.iii stroke of tu~ 12-day dlplornat1<' nlJss100. and h(·<ldl·d hurne fur oi report to <.:ongrcss 10111~hl on !ht ~1oscow summit. The presidential Jtl, 'J11e Spirit of '76, lc!t \\'ar:.:iw on a nlnc·hour night to \\'ash1ng1un afltr Nixon ;ind f'lrst Sccrf't<irv 1!:1.h••ard C.it'rl'k of th1· Polish C.\1mn1lui1st !'arty :-i1.i;n1.•d a 1.iHn1nunH1uc !1Utn1n1ni.: up fuur h<iur:i vf \<4lk~ In lht' dtx:un1ent. tht lelldl'r:. :ii.;rt't'tl Olflt t<ilk:s ~/){lull.I bf opened as swn as ptWJSlble on F:nst-W('Sl 1roop rtductions in t .urof)(', I•• l::iy gro undwot'k for ii Eur:o· 1)('11n St:('urity con ference -ol~(l agre£>d lo by i\1xoo .it the l\re1nhn !>un11n1l - and to conduct conllnuing talks on lrn· • yrovlti.g U.S.·l'ol.l.ih ltade -non-1peal1c, as ~as the case In i\1o.,e-ow. But JUSt as ht: failt-d Lo brl'ak a11y new ground with Soviet lf'aders on ttle V1et- 11om lssut-, Nixon -...·ss unable to rench ac· t•ord with th<' Polish. 1'he \Var5;iw corn· munique ~id : .. Both sidl's )JrtSl'llted tht'1r k110 .,.,•n posi- tions 1in the \li'ilr 111 Vlt•lnarn ;ind the li!l\lall011 in lndtX.')1Jna . J•:.~SCllt!al VleW!I or the. two sides 1n this qucs la.111 rernaint"<I d1t'ergen1 •· His departure. ended a dramatic mission during v.·hich he -...·as gree-ted by antiwar rilJters in Au!ttria , -...·armed by <'heerln~ rrov.ds In l'o!::ind, fo!lov.·ed by b6rnb blasts in Iran :ind -inosl 1111· portant -welromed in the Kremlin. A> NI.ton wound up hil Joume1. whlcll incl~ atops ln LenJngrlld, Kif:y •nd 1'thran, the President &bowed clear signs of the :stress ht has been under since hls arrival in MOSt'OW May 22. "He's dead tired but he won't admit it," one aide said. !~is wife. Pat, also lost the poise she rnaintained throughout the journey, .map- ping at Polish plainclothesman trying to kt>ep ht>r a way. The President's plane. left WArs.11w airport at 8:03 a.m. PDT. more than 4-0 minutes earlier than plaMed, becaUM of 11lrong headwinds .along his routt. An ~stimated 4,000 persons lined the motorcad~ route to the llirport, whtre Polilh leaders saw tbt Prtsidtnt off in a britf cen:mony c-arrled li\·e ~ Wan.aw celevilk>n. But weary as he was, tht Prt.Sidtnt ln- tendtd to apend 1nost. of I.be time on the homeward flight, at<..'Ording tu ;.ides, in potting finishing touchts on his 6:30 p.m. 1'111' addr~'l1' to a joint Sf!11itinn of C..:Ongreas, lo be broadcast nationally. The speech' was ex pec ted to put em- phasis on his nuclear anns llmitation agree1nent with So viet leaders. Aides said Nixon was thinking of the exa mple of President Woodrow \\11!son, who negotiated the treaty of Versaitle.'i after World War I and rttlH'Tled hon1e 111 triumph onl y to havt the pact rejected by Cung res!. In 90 Days ~ . . • N.VIETNAM .-J?' DMZ 0 ·· McGovern Vows Return of POW s COVI NA (AP) -Sen. George ~Gove.rn, pla yi ng to a big cro-...·d in the Ca,liCornia presidential primary cain· paign, has pledged that if he wins 1 he W)lite House he can gain a release o[ U.S. prjsoners of war within 90 days of his : ,. auguration . ll'tle South Dakota senator drew several thousand persons, a crowd· that stretched fat back jnto the darkness of the Covina Park Wednesday night. ?.fore tban 2,000 turned ou t 1or anot.hei-rally in San Bernardino. T'f1ney Asked That Committee "Invite' Sinatra ' :WASHINGTO N (API -Sen. J ohn V. T;nney has acknowledged he <1 sked a cqpgressional committee not to subpoena flank Sinatra, but instead to ''invit.e him tO talk'' to the ('ommlllee, which i! in- v{j;tigat ing tie! between organized crime a~horse r acjng. nney (0.Catif.}, said Wednesday he t phoned Rep, Claude J)epper (0.Fla.), c irman of the House Select Committee ort Crime . after being contacted by an at- t«'ney for Sinatra. funney said he told Pepper. ''There is no way I would ever make a cal! to try to •· prevenl your committee from gett ing all tht ·informu t1on you think ls available . Hirt if you wou ld inv ite him (Sinatra) lo l~k to the committee members instead or. subpoenaing hin1 , it -...·ould be the coUrteous thing to do ." Tunney said lhat "a man who has reached the level that he (Sinatra) ha.s •.. should not be treeted that way." Despite Tunney 's request, the com· mltlee gave the subpoena to a Yi'ashington attorofy for Sinirlra. and the 1lii ger iS scheduled to testi fy June 8. !J'unney's acknowledgem~n! "ame after comm ittee mem ber! reveal ed he in- terceded on Sinatra'& bebaU. One congr6SD'lan. said a member or Vite-president Agnew':i ataff also ob- jected to the subpoena. Those appearances cli maxed a 14-hour day of vote hunting for hi5 Tuesday primary contesl wit~Sen . Hubert H. Humphrey, a man ~Govern described as "part of the old aparatus •.. " Mea nwhile, Huftll phrey was ha\•lng trouble. The luncheon aud ience was leaving a" he drove up, 45 minutes late, for a speech to a businessmen's group at a fashionable Santa B.11rbara hotel. Undaunted, and without even leavin g his car, lfumphrey went right on to the next stop, a union hall in Ventura, where he deli vered his Santa Barbara speech to a IOO-pcr1'1"'--audience thal consis ted mainly oYthe tra veling pre!'s corps. Despit' such mishaps, Humphrey said as he flaw back· lo Los Angeles aft er another dl\y of small campaign crowds that he thinks he has al least slowed McGovern's momentum for 'fuesday's cn icial Derriocratic primary. In Cov in<i , ~fcGovern said that he could gain freedo1n for America n prisoners by withdr~1111i ng U.S. forces a nd support from South Vietnam. "l know that President Nixon tells us \re're staying in Vietnam because we l'!'Ml to bring about the rele~of our prisoners . , . '' l\-fcGO'l>"enl sai . "The tru th or lhe ma tt er is until e set a deadline for the withdrawal of our forces, until we terminate military opera- lions, until we cut out further military support for the Thieu regime in Saigon, !here's no hope at •11 to bring about the release of our priSOners , • .'' j'How are you going to do it!" a young man shouted from the front of ~crowd, McGo·vern said he ~'ould do it by agree· ing to the withdrawal of U.S. forces over a 90-day period and the termi nation o{ American military support for Saigon. He said be would ask in return that witbdr&wing forces not-be attacked "and that once that has been completed our pMsonera be released." P.1cGovem acknowledged during a television appearance Tuesday ni ght that there would be little' tne United Slates could do if the prisoners were not releas· ed in exchange for wlthd.ray,·al. "There'! not an awful lot we can do other than to take our case to the: in· ttrnational community,'' McGovern !:Bid tben.) Humphrey was optimistic over his chances. QU THAILAND LACS lM~~~·!IM DA NANG CAMBODIA .. ... (•HNOM ~INH 0 MEt<ONG DELTA • • ' 80UTH CHINA .... SOUTH VIETNAM Ul'I N•Wt"'•• HEAVY AIR ATTACKS-Waves or U.S. B52 bombers pounded North Vietnamese troop concentrations in Quang Tri Province (1) north of Hue (2) and near the Gentral Highland capital of Kont um (3) in one of the largest 5ingle dlay bombing raids in Vietnam this month. Communist gunners pumped 130 rounds of rocket. mortar and artil- lery fire into defenders at An Loe (4) the devastated provincial cap- ital 60 nu1es north of Saigqn. Fountain Valley Man .Held on ·lS Sex Counts A Fountain Valley man accused or multiple acta of sex pervec1ion with a youth 1n the suspect'• home on aeveral pccasions: last April was Indicted today by the Orange County Grand Jury on 13 charge! of u.i: act,, and iupplylng mari- juana to the youngster. Deputy Dlskict Attomey Al No\·ick hopes to arraign the JUJpetl, Leolla Lee Heater, 40, of•10922 CRJkt.eM.ye Ave_, Fri- day in Supei'Jor Court. • Canada and returned to Orange County to lace charges stemming from his allege.d aexual acts with a 13-year-old British tchoolboy whG was vacaUonlng in Seal Beach in June of 1967. The alleged victim told police that Heater fotced him to participate in acts of sexual perversion after driving him from Seal Beach to the Laguna Hills area. Heater l! today held in Orange County Jail with bail !ft at $500,000. Novick llllld Heater will be brought to trial on both seU or allegations. Press S«-retar)' Honald L. ZJC"gl~r !ld1d the President dtcided lo r~pon to Congress jm1nedlat ely aftu hls arrival hOme because he frlt ii was lmportaot to explain to Congrrs! the appto\'al and suµwrt needed to \n1plen1ent what t.he !'resident has calll'd a nel'I' era of negotiations and t'A~lng rof J.~~Sl·\\'f'l't lenslons, The President al.50 returns with agretnlents with the Kr e 1n I i n to cooperate in space exploration. lncludinJ.: <1 joint miss ion in 1976. and other fields in- cluding public he1dtJ1 and science and teclinology. and BRrl'e<I to order the ir navies lo quit har11ss1nf( each ot her on the hig h SC<!S ·-Pat Nixt1n rchclled to<l<iy at too many "No S11.111101·t' 1 uf1unu111~t JJUlltl'rt1cn lcllu:ig her \.\'hit lo "" "Ca11 t we tell the Secret Poll~ to stand aside?" I h ~ Pri sldent's wife snapflt'il in CJC<1.spcr1tion as WP.IJ·meantng J~olJ:i:/\ p!iuuelulht'i.1nC"n lrie:<f to keep her <i"av from o frirud!v 1'1'Ul'.d. "Gvodnrss. l'vc 1levcr i.cen such peo.. pie," !lhe ex!·l:urnt-<l. 1)1..11·t11i; eight days Ju ~tosccnv, b«:ause of light security, Mr!l. Nixon w1s never 11b!e to do '4-'hat she likes 1nost -making per!>ona.I cuntact with · peopll!, like hand- shaking and talking. She lelt security forces prolec,t1ng her overdid it, by keep-' ini;! ~r and the ~ple too sl!parated. \Ii .., \'1.\011 k1•/Jl her pOisr \\'ilh so1nf' ('ffu!'t Ul ;\!o~l'O W. S._ Viets Reach '\.. Quang Tri Edge ... SA IGON (!;Pll -South ViC'lnamesr paratroopers and rangers baekrd by lan ks drove aln1ost to the border of Quang Tri Province today in an effort to il nock ou t a North VietnamC"se r1·g1mcnt and blunt an expected a!lack on llLii;>. They moved -...•ilh \'irtually no ::ur sup- port and came under heavy artillery fire. Bad weather settled on North Vietnam and the northeastern quarter of South Vietnam but lhe U.S. C-Omm;ind s;iid pl anes knocked out 111•0 n1orc (If l·lanoi 's power planls \\'cdncsduy and th:1t LIS. Air Force Phant om jets knoc'kC"d do1\·n l\\'O of fou r attacking ~llG 2l jets over a :!1}1nin ute pC'riod ne;ir Jl a11oi. U.S. planes bon11>ed northern targets toda y by radar. The ll ano i official arn1y ne1vspapcr Quan Doi Nhan Dan adn11 Ucd In an issue rearhin g Saigon tha1 the U.S. air of· tensi ve l'!'as hurt ing North Vietnam 's 11·nr effort. It said the fight lo m;iintain com- munications and supplies to rhc sout h \1·as becoining more "strenuous." Field officers along the 1\ly Chanh River defense line 22 miles north of Hue said !he north...,·;irrl striking South Viet - namese armored force of 2,000 m!'n was hit by a barra~e of 50 130mm ar1 illery shells-lhe he;iviest such strike in a \Yerk -and lhal there 11rrc ··quite a fc1\'" casufllties. UP I correspondent Donald A. Davis reported from Hue tha t the three bat· la lions of government troops reinforced by armor .,,..ere seeking to capture or destroy a battal ion of 650 North \1iel· na mese troops in the hills just ~outh\1'cst of My Chanh . or drive it back north. The situation on other fronts: -Heavy housc-to--housc fighting ,.,·as r eported in Kon tum. 260 miles north of Saigon, and government spokesman said 234 Comm unists were kil!ed Tuesday and ROvernment troops round the bodies of 125 othe rs -a toll of 359 at a loss of 13 government troops killed. They said the Communists faked a sur- render move \Vednesday and poured rein- fo rcements into the northern part of Kon- tum during a lull in the fighting. -Fight ing at An Loe, 60 miles north of Saigon. tapered off but the city \vas hit Wednesday by 350 mortar and rocket rounds :ind figt1ti11g \l'l!S reported along tlirce ~a1go11 rcllrf culu1nn., strung out from two to 15 n11le~ to the sou th. -F'ighting flnr<'d in normally calm Binh Thuan J>rovrnce along the South China Sea coast about 100 n1ile! southeast of Saigon. Frona Page l 'AIR FORCE' • • • thC' balant:l' CO\'rring Ofl('raling costs for tile fir s! 12 n1011!1ls. Brcsnahun's si x months test pro posal c:i!ls for osin~ police hell co pters already. in S('rvicc 111 the three l'Oastal com- rnt1rtil!cs. ln <1ddi1ion to the six <.:Hy-operated !1eltcopters t11e test pro~ram l'!'Ould in- clude a rented ll'!'n place light p!ane. Bresnahan cs111nates that !he joint pro- gram betv.•een the cities and the county <"OLJlrl reduce annual helico pter costs to the three cities and to Anaheim. the only other county co1nmunity \li'tl h choppers, by t\\'o-thlrds. If the flna l plan is adop ted . an opera- tion Ct'nler \\'o utd be establi!hed at ()rnnge County Airport and slaffed by the participating cit ies. The center ~·ould ha equipped by the coun ty. Bresnahan suggests that the six-month tes t area be split into l\\'O !ectora, one from Seal Beach Naval \Veapons Depot to LiCI an d the other southward to San llc.mente and bordered by the San Diego .FrC'el'!·ay inland and the ocean on the east. <:Overage u•outd incl ude the three co m- munities now operating helicopters and JXlrtions of Foun tai n Valley, Irvine, \\'est minster and Seal Beach. The additional rixed wing plane would operate for si x hours a day and tht helil'opters an additional five hours, Bresnahan suggested. If the county\li·ide system is eventuall y <idopted, there "'ould be. required It aircraft, helicopter and fixed wing, with 44 employes includi ng 21 pUots. nine observers. three admi nistrators and 11 aircraft mechanics. A Tunney aide said Wednesday tha t 'f'unney we! not lrying lo "inter('ede." blll merely wanted Pepper to know Sinatra's feelings. "l think it U very close," the former vice president told a reporter as his twin- engine light plane touched down at JfoJlyv.·QOd-Burbank Airport Wedne sday . "It's iii the seventh irming and the !core is ti ed three~ three," Novick. said the alleged multiple of· feMeS against the !fr.year-old boy oc· curred las t April at Heater's home while the defendant was awaiting delayed cou rt action on sex chargu allegedl y com- mi tted five ye.ar11 •go. sofa bed sale! npw .queen size • • • $2 99. . 1'f'ro"i Page 1 PROPO SITION .. legislature.'' he. said. the mPeting ~·as frequrntly in!rrrptC'd hy boosters of Propositin 9, a 23·point measure that -...·ould cla1np a f1vr ye8r moratoriun1 on nutle;ir f'I0\1er plant con· stqJclion. among other things. ~ha riman 131'1kt'r remained them thr mqrt inf! wa5 not ;t 011hJir he:ir in,... OU.N6i COAST ST DAILY PILOT ~· Or&1>9e Co&Jf DAILY P ILOr, wl11'1 wlli(ll ,, eomd'i11cd Jh1 N1W\·P•eH, 11 1111bll~d br 1"-Or.Jn<;1e Co.,11 P11bll1l'linQ co.,,~ny. S•o•· 1~11 M l!lo!u ••• llllblllllea, Monclly f111•011ol'I 'F rldf'f, !or Co111 M111, N-?O•I &t•tl'I, ... vnli"l!lon 8ttcl'l /Fo11n1•Tn Vf llt y, L•9""• lauel'I, l rvlnelS•!ldltb~ck t nd $•n C~mtnl1/ ••" .l11an C10!1!r•no. A 111'!11• reolon•I itdlllon i< 11ubl••"ed ~•tu1dar• aM s11no:11~1. file p•lnc!11~1 P11bl11l'lln11 p!tnt I~ '' 3l0 w~,, J'•y !ttrefl, Co111 M'11, C1luornl1, '"'''· I Rob11I N. w •• d Pr11~111t 1"4 Publlll>tr J 1~~ R. C url•r V1c1 Fr11kltn l •rod <i1111r1I MtNllCr Thom11 Kt••il Eoll0t I Tho "''' A. Mur,111.i"• !. Mene11lng ld•IDf" ~~1rl1t H. leo1 Ri,h 1rd '· Ni ll Ault!lnt M'""!llno Edi!OIS I • CtUI• M~·~ l» w.,1 ll~y Sir~! Nf'Wlll!rl ll11ni: llll NfWDOrt 8eutt¥•rd 1 L..ltllfll euc11 : m "''"'A¥-1 H..,unoton ll"'dl:·ll'fl'S l!llf<'f~ew1rd S.n CllnM<lt.t: JIU North E.I C.mlM ltMt 1.i....,.. (7141 642"'4JJ1 Cl...m..i A41'itrtfW.t '4!0 5671 Pr-C1n•I A-S...'11 O<f 1...-1 .. dl 4•2-4420 ''''" Htnll Ot•,... c ..... ,., C•m"""111t1 140.1121 Cano!Ofll, lf12. Ora,.. . c .. 11 "ut1na11i.,,, Go"'-'"'· No MWt 1!orll1, ru.,.1r1tlont. ..clltOl"lll !>111,... W td .. .,llMl'!lfU\h htrtln "'fr DI "'lll'MIKM wlthtlul NIKlll W> I'll~ ., tefl'r•ltlflt .-. -'-"" tlft' _,_ ... Id 11 CMl1 M ..... CIQ,...,.19, Sllb'Kflit!IDfl 1W cttri.r lt4S ~I W MMI U.11 .......,,.,IYI ... 111t1ry .... 111111-.. u.as "*"'"1~. \Vhal\ l·Iumphrey might have added is that It i~ th e final gan1e of what could be the final season of his presidential seek- 1og career. Des perately short or funds, outmanned organizationally, Hum phrey is carrying his president ial canlpaign, as usual , on his own shoulders, trying to fire an old f;imi!iar coa litio n of labor, minority gro ups and the eldM'ly to tu rn back the voluntet'r·fueliW ~fcGovern tie. ' The inan who campaigned through the early Democratic presidential primarlt!, stating he would never say anythinr bad about his opponents that could be used by ihe Republicans in the fall, is denouncln,g ~lcGovern from one end of Cal iforn ia to ~nother. seek ing lo tag him as an unrealist i(' radical who doesn't. un- derstand his Ol'!'n propoffl.ls. According to official a 11 e g 1 t I o n s , lieater jumped ball on two occasion! since being arrested·in June or 1917 when he lived at 701 .Rockford Road, <Arona del Mar. He was recaptured Jut month in Laredo, Texa!, after forfe!Ung more than 131.0lltHn liall put'up by hb aunt. Heater bad earlier been arrefttod In From Page I BEATING ... • tack, but the Incidents could have bttn the culmlnation of a dispute v.·hlch had begun earlier in the day. A squad or narcotics agents took part In a .search for !Uapects through the nisht and (lther detective! planned interviews today with a large list of individual! who might be related to the incident. Fear l~ollowed Teet1i Marks, Blood Scared Diver SAN' FRANCISCO (UPI) -A JL-year-old caMery worker attacked by 1 shark while diving for abalone In the Pacific 11ays he was more frlghltned \\'hen he saw the teeth mark! on his leg afterward than whlle tbe 12-foot <.·reature had him in its jaws. "Mainl y. the· thln£t 1 had on my mind was to get back to our outboard," llelmuth Himmrich said Wednesda y. "That's when I really got .Cared, once t W8$ aboard and aaw those teeth mnrk! o( the shark on my Ie1. And all tbit blood." ' The burded diver I! less than haU I.he siie of the shark that tore at ·bta leg and severed a nerve. J-fe was at Letterman J-lospllal where he underwent surgery to repalr his wounds. ltlmmrich. rather of two ~mall children, sai d he just'flnished b1g1lng his limit of five abalone . a 11eafood dellcRcy found only off limited Jtretche.oi of the U.S. Pacific coast, and was swin1m lng ba ck to the boat where hia two brolliers-in·lay,· and a nephelv were fishing. "It seemed to take one bite, !hen nnother--a harder one. Then it grabbed hold, lmnglnJt on , llftlnjl" me out of the water. J felt !Ike it was tryln1 to tear off another part or me.'' Hlmmrich, of Lodi, who has been ocean diving 1tnce JH4, wu phlloeophl- cal about the 1ttaclr:. "fle rnu~t have been hungry, and 1 waa the onty ·thing around," ht aald . ' ,......, .... -,.,.-,-.:.-. . ~ Open as bed ·-. . ----=--- dual, size ... · $249. These are very comfortable sofa beds for sitting and sleeping. • A wide selection of fabrics and . colors to choose from. • Reversible backs and seat cushions.. ;~~ s n f I • c c f t w c l r c 1 • 1\'.lom s-to-be Assigned Waterbeds SAN JOSl jAP ) -Expectant mothers at a San Jose hospital arc enthusiastic about the latest piece of equipment in the 'tnalern1ty ward -a watcrbc<l . "We haven't had any trouble Jn gett ing won1en to usr 11," said Dr . Robert <rl>odlin, associ.ite direttor of obstetrics <ii Valley hledu.:al Center 1'he specially built bed, ... :hich C<lsl abt1ut $.1000, has been in use for two \l'Ceks for cx~ctanl 1nothers, to help ~:1~ thl!lr lal.l!•r pains. Or F:rne:.l LIJ\\'f . ti trector of tlie 'JbS1t·lr1cs deparln1cnt. said use of the b.•tl •~ :.tar1ing a trt:nd Ii American hospitals 10\\'tlrd the European method of labor. 111 !hat 111ctho<I, a position on the side \vil h JC'gs drawn up re~e'lnbles the fetal pus1\io11 <1nd is rnorc co1nforlablc fur 111any wo1ncn , said Lowe. 'J'he v.•aterbt..'<I a!IO\VS the patient to cud· die do1vn i11to il s \Var1nlh -It can be rt' ulatcd from tap water ternpcrnture to HKI degrees -<ind fi nal. \\'hen delivery begins, the patient is mo·.cj to a cunv c11ti nnal delivery bed \Vtlh tlie firnu1ess needed to gain leverage for f · ildbirth. \Vr.:l'rbcds arc not new in hospita ls. 'I'h ev originally we re used for burn pa· lLcnts and those "'ith severe bedsores. "\\le have one lad with a particularly hard head wh'l can be used as a battering ram," he said. Karate Experts To ll1atcli Skill Against House BllADFORD. E:ngland (UPI) -Phil r.lilncr and 15 friends expect to bring doYin the house with an exhibition of karate this weekend. They'll all fight just one opponent -a h~·· ". !' 'er and IS other enthusiasts of kar:?te hope lo set a record by demolishing the J SO.:Jear~ld , two-story stone house using nothing but the hand ch 'lps, Ir~ ki cks and head butts of the Jananese fi ghting art. e "No one has ever done thi s before," Mi1ner said. They plan to raise money for charily by financing sponsors to bankroll the wrecking operation. They spent a month looking for a su ••:ble house. Finally, the City Council obliged with a house that had been ticketed for de molition. F ive Candidates To Particinate 1·1 Coast Fortun Five or the seven candidates running for Congre~s in the newly created 42nd District "'i ll par1icipate in a fn-um tori"hl at the Community House in Dana Poirit. The sessinn, spo nsored by the Dana Poi nt Chamber of Commerce, will be~in at 8 p.m. at 24642 San Juan Ave. The new Congressional District, created under re-- cent legislative reapp1rtion...,ent, extends from northe.rn San Diego County along the coast to l"'.ewport Beach. Candidates wh'l have ind icated they \viii attend or send representatives in· elude Republicans Fred Gage, Norman Rean1 and Mrs. Gaye Lewis and Democrats Joseph Tomehak and Robert Lowe. Chamber officials said they received no response to invitations sent to Republican candidate Clare Burgener and American Independent candidate Armin Moths. l .udy Lo11gshorenia1i The ne\vest addition to the d ock~ at l)ort i\n geles, \\'ash., is 23·ycnr· o!d Julie .Fuller. a lady lon g . .;;hurcn1an on the first day of her ]Ob. Julie \Vorks \\1ith n1cn as a 'slinger.' hoo king cables on logs so lhey can be moved fro1n trucks to ships. She says she needs the 111011ey for college. Safety W 01~ker Increases Up for Study lly Cou11cil Requests for substant ial increases in V.'ages and benefits for San C!crncnte police officers and other safety \l'orkcrs -emphasized reccn1ly 1vith group resignations and an official claim for back overtime--v.·ilJ come up for city council budget study tonight. The session, starling at 7:00 o\:lock in cou ncil chambers. is the last public session on the safety issue before the public hearings and possible of approval of the $1.3-million budget nexl l':ce k. As the public safety department's budget stands at present. no changes in v.·age scales or benefits are included in the $1.l million segment-the largest single department expenditure in the budget. But despite the hefty role the $1.1 million plays in the city's total financial picture. "''ages and benefits arc the lowest in the county, according to scvernl su rveys. For police personnel. raises rangin~ from 14 percent for patrolmen up to 41 percent for dispatchers are proposed by cmploye representatives, plus the pay- ment of time-and-one-half for a 1 I overtime, longevity pay and paid medical insurance premiums. Lifeguard wage inc~eases range from 1-percenl raises for lieutenants to 4 4- percent hikes in the ch ief's annual 11·ages. f<~ire department emp'.oyt"s seek 15 per- cent for firemen. 18 percent for engineers and a 3.2-hour v.·orl. v.·eek for all person- nel. City negotiators have yet to publicly announce a counteroffer, but soine sou ret:!s within city halt have said that the council has ordered a hard·line stance at about 5.5 percent ra ises across the board. The public safely wagl'-brnefil is~ue ha s commanded 1videsprcad attention in recent n1onths. At !cast five key officers hnvt" resigned in recent weeks to accept better-paying police pOsitions elsewhere. Several other offi cers. some of them acclaimed detectives, left for the s~1mc reasons earlier this year. Underscoring the problem as well is a formal claim against the city by one of those former detectives who now serves as a police agent in a suburb of Denver. Coto. Burdell Burch recently sent an official cla im to the city sct"ku;g $4.000 in bac k overtime pay 1\'hich he assetts 1vas never paid him . Burch stressed that his claim v.•as bas· cd primarily on the desire to see an of· ficiat overtime policy ·for existing person- nel in the public safety department here and he vov.•ed a court b:Htle, if necessary, to include the nc1v policy in a settlement of his claim for 600 hours back pay. Councilmen tonight \Viii deal only with one half of the ir current v.•oes over \vage- b1•nefit requests from city employes. Other hefty increases have been re- quested by the city's general employes, \vho see k a min imum of 6.8 percent in raises and more than a dozen fringe been fits . City officials have repeatedly claim.cd lhat lhf' city budget has no extra cash and funds for raises would not be available v.·ithoul substantial increases in the city's $1.45-cent tax rate. Movie Operator Gets Jail T erni For Sexy Fil1ns SAN DIEGO ~A P) -f\·!ovlehouse OJX'rator Donald \\'ten('r h;is bc<'n stn- trnced to a year in county 1a1l and fined $1.00(} <ifter a jury ('tln\·ict ed hini of show· in!.{ obscene ma1erial. :0.1unicipaJ Court Judge Frank H. Nott· bu1;th ,Jr , who imposed the sentence Tu £>sday, ord ered $300 fines and pro- ba!i"ln for 1hree yrars for three male Cl"'ploycs of Wiener's dovrnlown theater. The jury of 10 womf'n and 2 men \'latched tv.·o film s :'it'll.Cd by police v.·hich showed couples in v;irious sex acts. \V iener. 34. also v.:as given a six-month suspended jail sentence and three·year proba tion and !he judge directed that Wiener consent to a property search at any time. ' ;r Beauty and the Dory Boats A prelty girl Is dressed for th e warm weather as she takes her pooch to the wate r's edge in Newport Beach. The dory bwts and their hard-working fi~h· <.' ermcn makin g an interest ing photographic contrast to the bikini-clad lass an d her dog. l'lvs4a7, J!JM l , 111J:Z s DAIL V PJLO'I' 3 Torture Repo1~ts Told· Evidence of Argentine Atrocities Grows BUENOS AIRES (AP) -Argentine newspapers and magazines are reporting iul·re<lsiugly that police prlsoi'lt'r:s have been beaten and tortured, frequently wit h an "electric needle'' similar to a cattle prOd . "The growing evidence and testimony st-ow th8t an infrastructure ol torture ex· isLs in Argentina," says the daily El CronistR Co mmercial. President Alejandro Lanusse says he abhors torture and has "taken the firine st decision to exhaust a 11 poss1 b1lities .so there is no torture of any kind against anyone." ~10RE TIIAN 50 persons allegedly have been tortured in the past year. r.1ost v.'ere accused ol connections 1v1th a half-dozen guerilla organizations. These groups have claimed responsi bility for kidn.ap ing and killings. f>"'ederal pol ice and the armed forces deny their people practice torture. but the accusations keep coming as Gen. Lanusse's n1ilitary gover.nment presses a c1u11paign to break up guerrilla groups. Hoin;in Catholic bishops, at a n1eeting this 1nonth, issued a statement con· demning torture as illegal. even when ap-- plied to pt:ople accused of terrorism or olhcr ''political 'Crimes.'' The bishop's statement heard an ac· count by Norma A1ore!Jo. a 30--year--0ld rural teacher and a n1ember of the Church-sponsored Rural ~1 o v em en t , \\'hich tries to help i m po" e r Ls h e d farn1ers . Miss l\.lorello said she had been ar. rested Dec. I , tortured for a month, and held in jail until early in l\.1ay. The Inter· ior li1inistry ordered her release after civil righ's groups and Catholic organiz- ations complained. MTSS ~fORELLO reported she was blindfoldetl for days and could not iden- silverwoods tily the men who tried to make her admit to a love affair with a priest and to guer· ril\a ucliv iti~s. The story was sin1ilar to statements by other men and won1cn, most of lhe1n youug people. A st111e of siege declared by the mi!it:ir~· gove rnment in 1969 permits ar- rest without warrant and indefinite un· p risorunent without for1na l charges or trial. 'l'wo v.·omen arrestl'<I in conilect1on \\'Ith • Gluc Con1panic1' Oppose Planned. Snif fi11g La\\'S \\'ASHtNGTON (AP) -The nation·~ glue. n1anufaclurC'r.s. clai nung thry ;irr being ui\fairl y sn1r1.Jred 3s "drnth n1erchan!s." toc.lny asked states to go slo\v in passi ng anlisniffing l.'.\11'S. • The Adhrsivt" nnd Sealant <.~0un('1I, rf'presenting 60 co1npanies. said the n1o sl conunon ,glue-sniffi ng drterrenL pungent oil of muslard. is inrffective and poten· tial!y dangerous. 1'he council saicl that of 42 sniffu1g deaths reported hy nc"'spapt"rs 111 rhe last eight n1onths of 1971. only four were at - tributed to glue while 26 v.·ere caused by a.:.vsal.s and 12 by other household substances such as paint thinn Prs. Deaths re sulted from suffocation. severe depression lending to suicidt . and accidents caused by hallucinations such {IS the cause of one sniffer '"ho "thought he was Superman and jumped from the rooftop five stories to hi.s death,'' the council said in a report. • a k.irlnaping said they •re tortured bJ' federal police with the electric needle. Eina Elida de Benedetti. who was fou r month! prtgnant, said a doctor wa s 11 t her side during the torture checking het t:ondition and advising the police, THE POLICE OF.NIED I.he accusation. Two alleged vic tims Inter died. One was Eduardo Pablo Monli. 43, a texti!t-\l'orker, fat her of four. and a follO\\t'r of ex-Presi dent Juan D. Peron. lie was arrested ~larch II on a larceny 1 ·har~e \1ne days \;1ter. Buenos Airr.s l'ro\'lfll"(' pohre deli vert"d i\lonti to Olmo~ 1atl 1t1 I.a l'lata Jail au1hur1 tre.!I reportf'd th.i t he arr11•ed "in a regrt"tabl e cond1· {hltl An autupsy showed bnus£'s on i\lnnti -~ 1}{'\i.h J 11;1n Lawchovsky, 32. nn auto \\nrk~·r. 11 ;1s \('Jled April 30 b} ~£'\'£'ral 1n1·11 I J.• rl'll1r11f'd hon1e Mav 2 feeling \'l'ry sick, hi." \.\'lfi' later testif1Nt. L<11l'eho\'sky told hC'r that his :ibductors r111f'Sl!ont"d him abo ut the transporta\1011 "r "capons to a guerrilla group and that he 11·as tortured bfcausf' he proclai rned l1is innocence. l.av.·cho\'sky went lo a hospit :-11 anti died nf internal he rnorrhages. EJGJIT PERSONS apparently involved in lrftist activities ha\'e disappeared since 1969. Their fate ren1a1n,<; a mystery E'xcept for one.whose body was buried un· der a false na me. Dr. Alfredo Moles. a psychialrist, made a study of torture in Argentina. His find- ings, published in a ne"·s magazine, blamed some sort of the activity on a secret group called the th1v.•ks whose 1nembers allegedl y came from "the most distinguished policemen. although some 1nilitary al so an allov.·ed in.'' The purpose Is to wage a merciless war a~ainst urban guerrillas and o~r dissidents, Moles said. • PRE-FATHER'S DAY • lac -• pec1a Regularly 22.50-27.50 FAMOUS BRAND NAME S DOUBLE KNITS TEXTURIZED POLYESTERS PURE WOOL WORSTEDS Everything you're looking for In slacks •.• for Father's Day, for vacations, for travel ..• al very special savings. St)1ed for every man's taste •.. belt loop, beltless, flares and straight Jag models. USE YOUR S~\'a!WOOOS CIWIOE, MASTER CHARGE, BANKAMERICARO, OR AMERI~ EXPRESs ~TH & 8~AY . 55'2 wns1n11t:. ~129 Cll£NSHAW . us.c.. A"A.ll[IM Cf1tTtR . rMOW&A cm . DD. AIO. COITUrf' arr . OXllAQ . SM~ PA.SADCM • TOPAHr.A PW.A •SNIT" BAR9MA • 1'£WPORT BEACH • W vtGAS • MOffTCUJR • LA HA8AA • ml SPllNGS . llYCASIOC • DOWfrlO' • LOS CUM10S -I ,. ' • • • , • ' I .,-I • DAILY PILOl REPRISAL PROMISED Israel's Golda M•ir Officials Nab i . . • Bomb Suspects ln W. German y • ;FRANKFURT. Germany (UPI ! Police firing rifles and tear gas can-~ today captured the ro.leader of a li,ft-wing anarchist gang and three of his t61Jowers whose organization claimed lftsponsibility for a recent wave of bom- fGgs in Germany that killed four U.S. ti:rvicemeo. ,;A police sJ>Okesman said among those .ken into custody following the shootout • a house on the city's north side was "1cfreas Baader , 29, a former sociology ttudent· sought by Police for more than two years. The so..called "Red Army Fac- t;k>n" that he and a woman command taid it planted bombs in 11t least five •est German cities in the past t hr c r Weeks. :The spokesman said police this 1norn- 1Jlg surrounded the house and, using 16Udspeakers. ordered its "OCcupants ~tside. The order was met by bullets ~m the house and police opened up with ~ire, brought an armored car to the ne and fired tea.gas into the house. four men were captured about 90 utes later, he said . • Police said one of the four was injured Iii the shootout but did not identify hi1n . l!j:or would they say what Jed them to the aaspect.s. ! Arrested with Baader were J an-Carl '8spe and Holger Meins. both sought in the killings of three policemen over the past year and a half. The fourth man was QC>t ident.ifi~. Since the bomb blasts in 11cidelberg and F'rankfurt. police have conducted a massive nationwide manhunt for leaders ol the group. Policemen armed with pistols have stopped automobiles on highways and special helicopters have been surveying high-speed autobahns. "The other leader of the faction is Ulrike Meinhoff, a former journalist \vho also bis been wanted for more than two years. ~.Qne lhou~and students in the huge *ture hall of Frankfurt Universit.y heard the tape-rroJrded voice 0 r Germany's most wanted woman tell them Wednesday to attack U . S. Mtablishments. :111e 38-year-<1Jd co-leader of the uBaBder-Meinhoff" anarchist band told d "leftist comrades" they no longer .should hold back "from making all Amer ican establishments the aim of your att.acks. ·· She told them they must y,,age an ''anned battle against the imperialist criminals." ·The voice, played back on a tape recording in the university auditorium. was that of the anarchist leader, ac- ctuding l-0 students 1vho know her. 'J'he "lted Al1l1y Faction_." the group she and Baader lead , alreadv ha s claimed responsibility for placing ·bombs in the U.S. Anny's Europpean head- quarters in J1eidelberg and in the Army's V Corps headquarters in Frankfurt. Fou r 54tfVicemen died in the blasts. The listeners who heard her Wednesdav did not al l share her sentiments. Her ad- . dress w<1s punctuated by boas as WJ?ll as by 11pplause. One who shouted criticisn1s \VBS Daniel "Dannv the Red" Cohn-Ben-di~ the leader of ihe Paris student riots o( 1967. Cohn-Bendit still is active in F'nnkfurl lefl\\'ing student politics. • Israeli lt'ar1ai.119 Lebanon Ready For Retaliation By United Prest lnttrnational The Lebanese arrnl': went on fuU alert today 1n expectation of !."lraeli reprisal att3cks against Arall guerrillas who used a three-man Japanese suicide squad ·ruesday night to kill 26 persons and wound 81 others at Tel Aviv's Lod Lydda International Airport . One of th<> "'Ounded died today re101ce? We ~JOICe because Israel now (talizes lhat It is wide open to the will of the Arab world anQ international revolu- tion. We rejoice because the right of the l)<1lcst1nian Revolution has now betn p!an1ed in the world consciousness." 1 .. 1e French-language Le Soir said in Oe irut that Israel was in the habit of blaming Lebanon for all its Ills and "now that Lebanon extends to th e Japanese f•:mpire v•e have but to rejoice for the dimensions of our f'nuntr y, thanks to the logic of ~1rs. Meir " Lr b;1non 1varncd lhl' lf11ited Nat1or1s &-curi1 y Court('i l th<1t such :llt;-,cks could bt· expected. 'Armored trucks and tanks 1vi•r(' s1•nf to 13eirut a irr){Jrt "'herr an lsraell reprisal altal·k on J)('C. 2-1 . 196~. destroyed 13 airliners. Guerrillas began rnoving women ;;ind children from border \'Jllagcs. lsr<.1eli PrimE~ ~11nister Golda Meir· \'/arnctl \\lednesday th at lsrael tle\d Lebanon responsible and hinted broadly at reprisal altacks. 'foday the guerrilla movemen t hailed the massacre as proof or its worldwide statlLre and said Israeli reprisals would be met V.'ith "un· precedented violence." Kin g Hussein of Jordan co~demned the massacre as a ''sick crime committed by sick people and planned by sick minds as well.'' I-le spvkc at Amman Airport ceremonies marking the end of a visit by Pakistani Prcsident~ulfikar Ali Bhutto. .ll. The Arab world rejoiced at success of 1he attack and, •• Cairo's semi-official newspaper Al Ahram said editorially the attack "was evidence thal the Palestinian guerrilla movement had acquired in· ternational dimensions.'' Another Cairo Newspaper, Al Akhbar. said such operations \Viii not stop "until the Palestinian people are given back their country and rights." Although Lebanon was fearful of Israeli counter measures, the Beirut newspaper Al Yorn asked, "why shouldn't the Arabs In Tel Aviv, Israeli foreign Minister AOba Eban sRid that if airlines serving lsracl have "any consciences and any rr.sponsibility" tht.>y will accept the Israeli government's plan f11r increased secur ity precautions. ~Irs. Mei r in her speech \l.'ednesday was critical of Air F'rance for fail ing tu l·heck the passengers' luggage ""·hen its plane left Ttornc lur Tel Aviv . The threr Japanese -two of u·ho1n died in the assault -brought their grenades and AK 47 Chinese-made automntic weapons in their sui tcases on the Rome flight Air !•'ranee <innounced meanwhile ii has begun to search passengers' h1.gga ge, Four Tel Aviv-bound planes were delayed at Paris' Orly airfield fOr hours \Vedne;- da:v by bomb threats and a Pa r i s bound Air France jet was delayed at New York's Kennedy Airport Wednesday night for four hours by another sue.ti threat. Ali turned out to be hoaxes. ~ Eban told UPI correspond nt Ohad M. Gozani he would not commen on reports Israel is considering deny'1g landing .- rig hts to those who don't cOmJllY with re· quests for'litougher passport fhecks plus better body and baggage seai:thes to pre- vent attacks against aviation -serving the Jewish state. Three IRA Provision.al Wing Leaders Arrested DUBLIN ( AP l -Authorities of the Irish Republic arrested three leaders of lhe Irish Republican Am1y's l)rov is ional vo'ing \Vednesday aad today but ,.,.ere unable to find a rourth . The l\vo arres ted Wednesdav \Vere Joe Cahill. once the spearhead of Provisi6na1 operations in Northern Ireland, and Rory O'Brady. president of the Provisional's Political ann, Sinn Fein. They were held under the offenses against the state Jaws. allowing police to keep them for 48 hours \\•ithout formal charges. Prison authorities said they went on a hu nger strike. O'Brady's brother. Sean. publicity director of Sinn Fein. was picked up to. day. Sean Ma cstophain. chief of staff of the Provisionals, evaded a jX)lice dragnet. l·Ie has not been living at his home 25 miles out.side Dublin since he \vas ""'ounded two 'Put It Do-iv11 , H e1iry' -N ixori \\IARSA\V L<\P ) -President Nix- on, detennined to keep this tou r 011 sche¥1e, told his adviser Henry A. Kissi nger today to put dO\\'tl his chanipagnr glass and move along to the next stop in the ceremonies. Arter signing n jolnt con11nun ique v.·ith Polish officials. Nixon joined in si pping the chan1pagne with the le:1ders of this Communist nation and his cntournge. 'fhen he looked at his watch and s.i1d : "We must go." Kissinger \vas still holding his champagne i;:lass and the President lold hin1 : .. Quit drinking that, Henry ... Ki ssinger pu1 his glass on the table and joined Nixon in walking outside to the waiting motorcade. months ago by a bomb sent through the mail. I The Officia l wing of he Iri sh Repul>!ican Army announced a cease-fire f..1onday night, but the ProvisiGnals have jgnored it and kept up their campaign of violence in Northern Ireland. Their head- quarters is in Dubl!n. capital of the Irish Republic. In the Northern Ireland capital of Belfasf. two men burst into a downtown taxi office early today and shot two Roman Catholic attendants, ~·ounding them critica lly. Security sources said the raid may have been a revenge nttack by Protestant guerrillas. The Rev. Jan Paisley, th(' rnilitant Protestant leader , demanded strong ac- tion by British troops against the IRA. Otherwise, he said. "the city of Belfast will be in ruins and inevitably loyalists will be for.ced to take drastic action to defend ihemselves." There was also an explosion and shooting around the dock :1rca of Belfast. A policeman was shot in the back: in Londonderry during the ni ght and today guerrillas opened fire on an army check· point south oi the border to11:n of New ry. No casualties were rcp<>rted in thot a t· tack. ,:i.t Dunigiven. in County Tyrone, an army patrol walked into a booby-lr~pped house and an officer ,~·as burned in the face and hands. He \1·as opening the door to the empty house \~·hen the de•,..ice \vent off. VD Education ]>us]1 e d PHOENIX, Ariz. ! AP) -Spokesmen for the Arizona Pharmaceutical Associa- tion said today venereal disease in Arizona will not be brought un der control until facts about it are explained more fully to "VD prone youth." The spokesmen held a neu's conference today to kick off Arizona's first venereal disease "Awareness Month." Cool, Dry • Ill Central U.S . Sccittere<l S hoivers, Tliu1iderslio·ivers Liglit i1t East • ~IA.IH f;.'.~~;lu·iow ~ ....... ~~lf0Wf t$. ·~ l lOW ll.S. Summor11 Coot •net dr~ w1111111er dQl'nlMles 11141 cen1,.1 p1rt of Ille n1!!on.e1a!n !od•Y with r•ln Conti~ to 11•r11 ol Ille E•rt CG11sl •nd ttll ltl'l•rmounl•fft W..t. Tem11e11M11rn 1Ulll)fd lf'ltO 1he '°' •• l•r '°'1tli 111 northttn Al11tMom1. k•lltrtd *'-tr• • n d thur.. der11>owrr1 In 1ri. E1ut en<! Wtll _,, on the llOht ''*' but P0rtlon1 CJf C-Mdkul _,.. NMed by mot• th~ 1n 1.-dl of ,.. ..... durfnt-fM "'-· • West of thil coot 1tr, ht9Mr·th•.,. 11or,...I ~ -.n tht ru!t. Greet Falls, MOnt •• ', .. ,tt ... ed Kl W~f'\Hd11y, Intl l'lllMllt twr recordtcl llltrf/ lhll •••IY In "'-W•r. "' fflw 11rtu ln lh• droutM'.itfrlcQin SOUl!wtt1t •Kordll'(I r••dlt'\IS of lOO. ' Coa1tol Weather I.ow cloueh today, Ll9hl varl1btt wfl'ds 1119h1 •rod mom1no P10v111 btc:OP11-1ng t.OUlllWtJI to .... ,, • lo IS knob 111 ~ltemoon1 IOCl•Y Ind Frld•Y· Hldi IO<l&\I 10. Co1ut111 temper•turtt ,.,.... ~ to to n. lnl1nd ""'"~'llK" ••not fl'M\ 61 fO 12. W1ltt l~l\lre M. Sun, "'-··Thie• T"UUDAY Sr<:ond tilth .... , •..••. 12:1so.m. •.t ltcond '-•... ..,. •.•... •r04p.m. 2.t "'-IPAY Flrtt hftl'I '""" .... t ioto.m. 2..• Flr'lt tow ... 1 ..... •:s21.m, .o,t llCdld '** ,_ ............. P,fl'I. , .. 111n •U•n !:II •.m. '''' 1:00 o m. MoOo ... ll;"4Mn. k1a ,..,, ... n. • ay sa e~ • r1 ay, • Sale. Run to Penneys ,...,-------;; for big savings. Now 20%off~ Now's th·e time to collect big savings on sneakers tor mom. dad, and all the kids. Choose basketball shoes, deck shoes, tennis shoes. or striped t ~ack shoes. But hurry. Sale.15% off all infants' sunwear. Playwear for 1he sandpail set-at savings. Suns uits, bubbles. open back styles for infants and toddlers. All in easy- carefabrics, most Penn- Prest to never iron. Pick up plenty so you can en JOY s ummer. too. Sale.15% off Our decorator Penn-Prest sheets. ~· to Save on all our muslin and percale sheets in fash ion colors, stripes, florals, prints. ,50% cotton/50'A> polyester ... and more. Most are Penn-Prest fo r .no ironing ever. Furl size sheets and pillowcases available. / , JC Penney .·. The values are here every day. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the followlng stores: NEWPORT 8EACH , Fe1h;on l•l•nd. HUNf lN GTON 8EACH , COSTA MESA. H1rbor Centor 'l'Clo11d SundoY I Hu"tin9ton Center. Ch•roe it)> ' ' ·: . ) • ' ' ' ' , .. 1 • t Protest 1•1111111ed F'olk singer Joan Baez and rep- resentative:; of about 20 ant1- \var groups announced plans \Vednesday for forming a hu- 1nan chain of \\"On1en and chil- dren around the Capitol June 22 in an effort to prcsRure Con- gress into cutting off funds for the war. • $1,500 to Enlist Army, Marines \ Offering Bonus \V ASliINGTON {UPI i -For the J 1r~L time sin<..-e the Civil \Var , the Am1y and the Marine Corps today began offering $1.SOO cash bonuses to men V.'ho enlist fur co1nbat training. 1'he bonuses will be offered until th~ end of August i.n a 1nove to 111tract n1ore volunteers. They n1ay be offered again later if the trial period proves successful. There art' son1e catches. 'fhe volun - teers must go in for lour years, 111!:>le.1d ul the usual tv.·o-ycar hitch for infantr~· artillery and arrnor: and the bonus \1•i!I be paid <lniy after the v'otuntccr ii;; 111 uniform, has suc<.'essfully completed his training and has bttn accepted for co1n - bat service. [)('laying the paym('n!s in !hat mann('r L'i an attewpt to avoid !he abuses which occurred fhe last time the bonuses v.·cre paid, more than 100 years ago. During the Civil \Var some n1cn enlisted; col- lected their bonus -it \\"as called a "bounty" -and lhcn deserted. only to enh~t again in ;,nothl"r p<irl ul 1/1t· lOLUI· try to repeal their deception, 1'hey v.·erl' t::illed '"bounty jtin\f.~:r·;""·• and tlit'y brou..:ht !hr .systen1 into sueh disrepute that 1t ha s oot Ocen used sinet• But Coo!-:re.ss authori:tt'C! the new bonus in Sl'ptember, tt:IJil1g the Defense 0..'µ<111 - mcnt at the tin1e that it C'Ould offer 11 hounty or up to S..1.00"J. Defense SC<'re1ar1 .\feh·in R. 1-<lird decided to ust' oo l\· ha lf that amount fur the suinmer test period 'fhe plan "a" g1vt'n no a<lvanct' publlt·i· Iv so that vouni: 1nen v;ho intended 1o ~ig n up dur;ug ~!av v.•ould not delay tl1(•1r enlistment !1) t~kt' advantage of !ht• bonus: but 1h1• Pentagon tM1gan a l'ull publicity campaign on the offer todll~. l(leindienst 'Victory' The bonus is ainied at 1his yerir"s <'rop or high school gr:iduri tes •vho nre con1in;:: into a labor 111arkct \l'ilh a 6 pcrt rr.t uncmpl<lymcnt rate over all. nnd a 17 percent joh!i-ss rate for their :ige grC1up PentAgon officinl~ said if the dr1\·c suc- ceeds this sun1n1f'r !ht•v bcliPvr thr Ad- 1ninistration's p!.:in for" an all-volun!ct>r Army beginn ing 1:1 mon!h s froin 110\'I v.·il! be a success. The bonus idt>;1 is as old a ~ th e· republic. Five 1nonlhs before I hr [Xiclaration of Tndependence \\'as pro- claimed, the Continental Congress. on George Washington's advice, adopted an~ enlistment !xM.1nty . !I provided $4 for nlen without rifle s and $G.li7 for men v.·~th Seen Despite Cranston \\'ASl·IJ NGTON <AP\ -Senators up- pcsed to the no1ninatioo or Richard G. Kleindienst to be attorney general have gained· aoother vote, but supporters re- n1ai11 confident of a decisive victory margin. Sen. Alan Cranston ID·C:.il1LJ. an- nounced his opposi!ion to the nomination, \\·hich n1ay be voted 011 by tlle Senate next \\'eek. Senate debate hegan \Vednesday after a long delay •vhi!e the J udiciary Con1mittee investigated Kleindienst ·s role as deriuty att.orney geocrr:l in the sett!cn1ent of an- titrust cases against J n t e r n a t 1 o n a I Telephone & Telegraph Corp. So far only a few Democratic liberals DAILY PILOT · DELIVERY SERVICE OcEV!ry of th' DdilJ Pi!o: is guarilntced /.IGnddV f:•i<l~y · If VCIJ do no1 ,,~,~ vou• Pd~r DY ~:JO p l'I'\. {~II •r (I \CIJf .... oy "''" b(" t>r<l\JgM !D you. (.•11. •·~ ••t ~n ur hi 7;.JCI , ....... S•1u1d•v 1r<:1 Su"d1v: II VOii do !'IOI rt(~ ... VDUr COPY by I •.on. S~!ur(l~y. Or I ~.m SU1\d.1v, t•ll otl<I • copy woll D~ 1>rougM to YOIJ. (11/s 1r1 M~en un1il \G •.m. Telephone~ Mc~• Or•n111 Coon1y A••~' •...... .141-~lll NDl'fhWf~t ttU'l!lnllTDn !!elth 1!>d w1,1m1n,llr . . . . . ... , ... J.O•llJf $1n Clt~n1t, C~piJ1r&nD B~~rl\, Sin Ju<:1n C1pli!r1110, 01n1 Pein!, South L11911n1, Uigun• Nlguel .... 4tl"44lt have announced they \\'ill vote againsl confirmation despite the furor stirred up by 22 days of hearings on the ITI' aff;iir. Cranston based his opposition on 1\•hat he called Kleindienst 's lack ol sensibility for constitutional ri ghts. ":0.1r. Kleindienst has evidenced a hii;th tolerance for \'.'ire-tapping, n1<lss arrest~ and preventive deten1ion," Cr:.inston said in a speech prepared for today's deh.1!E'". "His thinking is fuzzy v.•hen it comes l\l distinguishing bct1\•ecn people I\' ho threaten our nation's :-;ccur1ty ;ind p<>oplt' \1·!io [l_'erel_v cti s.1gre<' 1vith him politic.fly."' Cranslon added. Kleindienst's noii1i11atinn to succeed fo11ner Atty. Gen . John N. illilchcll \Vas submitted by President Nixon in mid- February and <lriginally v.•as epproved unanimously b.v the Judiciary Con1nli!lce. Some of· the committee's liberal DenlOCrats. hov.•e\"Cr, "'ere ~ri\ica l or .Justice Department · policies <ln 1·h·11 rig-h111: and l'ivil libcrtic~. Sen. Barrv (iold\\<"ltl'r ilt-Ar11..). S:ild :1! the start of the Senate debate. '"Somf' hberals are afraid Dick Kleindienst v.·1!1 he too good at the job he ha s been pro- posed for. I suspect ,Ule oppooition :>terns from the very thing f"be!ieve \Ve n~ the most in !he DeP artment ()f Justice -a tough, unyielding. uncomprotnising ap- plication of the lav.• to all parties of all social, economic or political statuses.•· rifle s ·who enlisted. , During the H.evolutionary \\;ar lllt· bonus rose to $200. and during thf' Cirll \\'.1r it ranged from SIOO to $300. !Juring the latter conflict some lo\1'n."i offt'red bigger bonuses -ranging up to $1.500 - 111 an attempt to attract volunteers fron1 other communities so the local boy s v.·oukt not ha\"C to march off to war. Florida De1ncin,cls Autis1nug Action ~ll.'\.\11. Fla. t AP! -Environmc-ntal officials here have de1nanded antismo~ action by three states after charging that an ·•industrial air pollution bank" \Vhich drifted dov.•n from th£> North blanketed !he Sunshine State with sn1oky haze lor fh·e davs. \\leather satellites traecd ·!he no1\' of "this unusual pollutive lood"" fron1 111- dustri:i.I regions of Ohio, 1~enns_rlvan1;1 and Tennessee, said the Dade County po!Jutio11 control chief, Peter Baljet. For live days beginning !\lay 21, the pollution obscured the n<lnnally clear skies of sunnv Florida. As the srriog lay trapped al ground le\"e] by a tcmi>erature inversion. a rise in respiratQry diseases and hospital ad- n1issions was reported. .-- • . ~-· y ~ ~. ~ ,__ . . , ,-~. r: 1111 , • l\1l1tts Ue:> llo you recogn 1zc thi .... 111:111"' \\"l·ll. believe 11 or not it's actor Hu rl l.i-incastrr in ont> of the -.1ranj.!est disguises 01. Ins career -a blar i.. priest -for hi s rolr 1n ·scurpio.' a ("lA thri!l(•r ht·111g fil!ned in \Vasil 111gto11. Seek Vici 'Var End? \\' i\SlllNtiTO'.'l" I UPI i Fitteen Arnerican prisone-rs of \\·ar in South \' i e 1 n a n1 purportedly have signed a stalemPol asking Congres:; to ''OP rh(' "'irn111orat , tr;igu· l\"ar " 'J'l1e ;1 ppenl and tht' 1H1n1e-s of lhf' alleged signel'S "·ert' hrnad l"a"t O\·er ··Liberati•111 Haclio." <ll)l'rat t·d by 1hc Viet Cu11g. 1'hret· of the inen \\"t're prC'v1oui:.ly !isled as offk·i:i!l.v 11 11ssini;: in ar!ion. ·rhc r~ngllsh-lani:;ua~· broad- c;,~1 \1 as n1unillired by !ht• LI S. ~ovf'rnrnenr Tuesdn~. l "1'1 obtained <i lranseri p! (·11py fro1n g-o \ f' r n n1 e n L ~ources and thr Dc ft'n:-:e Ueparlm£>nl has confirmed its authenticity. Bui ::i spokesman said deparlmrnt policy pro- hibited confirming thr na111Ps of pri~oners listed Th<' Pen- tagon \Vednesdav1 sl::irtrd lo notify the relali\"('S ol the men namt'd 1n !he broadcast i.:atastrophic ronsrc1uen1·e.~ ·• ··Hat1onal beings r" ct i r \ 1nist11ke.~ when recol!nr zed. ·· the statement said. ··The 1in1t' is 1.:ritic111. Pleflse take t>f- fective legislali\'e action. \\'e mu~I choose bct11·eet1 an in1- moral. lragir \1·ar \Yi I h catastrophic consequences and the honorable future of the Un ited States." OAJ L Y PILOI .. Five Bornb Shelter Victirris Smelled Gas~ Survivo r Says \ /\Ll)£SJ-". "\ ~' ! t.:PI I - .ThC'" SllrVi\Or lil a ho1 n1J ~ht>lter ~1plosio11 that k1tl1·d hrr five pl:11 rnat1·~ s 11 1 d \.Yedrw•:o;da:• !!H' ('h:!flrrn h:ir! sneakt:<l into 1l1t· .;!i1·l lt·1 111 pla_y a11d V.l"l"t' .dr.11d 1n lt•ll an rurit' the r11111'tl'lt· r·ub1t•!i' reeked of ga ... I i\ Sll(JU1' , . 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P! lt \ll'I li,1!<\ l•H' l,1,I \I 11\tt"I e ('l111rt'~ Ill . 1 'Ill lJ \ J \ \t, 1 \I'' I ,I/ 111 \\••I l..1 '! ' lo•," lo·I ll.!' LAYER THE LOOK l.,) LOOK IH·1•ll 1,,)..,·11 !•• ,I h·,~11>1 .ll thf' t''l:plll.'ion 1q•p:111 •111l1 '" 11 \, 1,,,1~1 ·il li\ .i !ii ol '" t,i•I 17th & l<~in~ l'Ul"l"t'"d bee:1U~l' ul llit• 1111\ ("11,l\i'/ 111~ l.!l't !111!11111Pd W£STCllff Pl.t.ZA );p11rk tTt'lltl·d 11l lt'I! foll(" .. 1 !111• .olld d1.11111 \\,(~ L1ht'iL 1 .. !ht•~---·-··_._._._._._ •• _,_, ___ .. i·hi!clren flipµf'd :1 t;r.t11 ~11 1!111 i~:;;;;;;;;;;;::;::i '"Thev uh~t·rvl·1l ~"rn 1· ::.i• 1Plllllllllllllllllllllllllll and odor 11nd 1t1~. u''!'d 1! 1 ;1111011)! lhE'lllSt•il t" 1111 ! tt11•\ did 1101 tell :ti\~ ,111 1111::. :il ~11H 1t het'JUS(' tht•y \I t'll' ;111;1111 o! bt•itlj..( p U Tl i S h I' II . ' • .;:ul( \\'i!li;i1ns altt'I" 1111 t·r 1·tt'I\ 111g I !ht' n11ly Sllfl'tll•I \\!1\SHJNC.T<)\ t.\f '1 -Hc-t jecung 111dustr~ plt",1~ lor I delay. the federal j'..:11\ l"l"l lllH'tl1 1:; urdcring r11;u111l:1t•111r1·r.; 111 , n)ake su1;ilt 1·h1l dr r 11 ':-.1 sleep1vcar lirr-rcs1.<;1,111t Co1nn1erce Secrct<JI"\' Pc (er . ' c;. Peterson lul11 11e11 srucn \\l('dnesday tht rir st phase or I 111l' llan11nahilit v <:ta11<h1rd. covering sizes O i"11 liX 11 di i.:11 I into effect .Jul\' 2!! Af!Pr th:11 ;lat1· 1·!11ld1 •·11·~ :;lee1nvcar rn11 st be rr~11il:1n1 111 I Jaine or tht• govcr111n~·111 11 ill J;tl)l'l the J(arnH•rlfs ll111111n,1l1lc 1 and plat:c ;i 11·;11·111ng "11 rhf· <·lothi11g, A year Inter. all !:>1 1•('1'111 ~: garn1cnls in si zes O to 6X rnu~l 1 rveet !he S(.1ndard or h1• banned fron1 the 1narkl'1 e S ur!/f'l'!J IJPIH!JPd 1 SILVEB SPHl:\l,;, :\I <l , I (UPI ! -Surgery 10 remo\ 1• :1 I bullet frorn th£' 8pine of <:01 .' ! :eorge L". \Va!Jace ha.o: b<-t·n I put off by doctor:; for I ht uH- tnediate future, :iCt(lrding to a \Vallaco .11de. IN·Sl~K-ERATOR THE NO. 1 DISPOSER Wn~I n»k<I l n-~•nk·E•MO• "''"' "'ri•>l•d' IBe•u!ol~I <O• .o, .. on·ptool .,~1nle1> <l~el E•<I"''~'' hk• m. ··w,~n<n •!IP0" ,,,., IH< yo11 c IP•r i••n• .~1,1y •nd "'"'' Pio won<l•r !ti• won<:IPr!"I M<>d•I 11 ... , • t•l~I""' CO•rO\•On wMr•n!y •no • i yt•• ,,.,h w•rr•11•>' too. Th• q.,Ah!y lh•> "'•Cl• "' s1rt1( [~~TO~ ·~• ,,.,mbr< On• ""l>O>•• e•long, '" ~""' ''"~·~. RE PUBLI C "GEMINI " 20 Gei l. 10 Geil. _..O Gal. SO G•I. WATER HEATERS -- '52" • '59" '64 " '84 " T~ .. qu•lily <;rl••I lined ""'•l•r ht•I- •• ;, •quipped wit~ 1•f•ly temp. •I r1q11ir •d bv ''""· S·v•. 9 11•r •t1+•1 O'ft l•n\t. ~illy Joe Carnp. \VellHce·s press secretary. said \Ved- ne~dav that doctor~ h;ive decided to postpone surgery to remove the bullt't which has left the governor parlially Mon.-Fri. 9-9; Sat. 9-6; Sun. 10-4 z 72 • (;_l1_I·o1na~olor MODEL YEAR Ultr• MM•rn •tyllng for th• mMt contempor•ry room sottlnw1. Cabinet flnl1hecrl In Bermuda Shell Whit• hfth tf... lacfluer flnlth with lteHWMd celor t.,. Chroma-. col.,. 100 Picture tube. Titan 101 Handcrafted Chat1l1. Avallabl• with Romot• Control NEW LOW PRICE Table Model CHROMACOLOR PICTURE TUBE Depond a•l o handcrafted Cha11l1 with Automatic Fino Tunlnt. Automatic T I n t Guard aM Sol~·St•t• 3- 1to1• IF ompllfler. LOWEST PRICE EVER AutomatiC Fine Twtin9 e Automatic Tint e Customi.zed Tunin9 e Walnut/ Contemporary Cabin•t NUMBER 1 RATED COLOR CONSOLE AT A TABLE MODEL PRICE Zenith's Larqest Screen Color -Choose Table Model or Stunninq Cabinetry e Gold Vldto GYGrd Tuner e Automatic: Flae TunllHJ e Titan 100 Chants PHONE FOR OUR LOW PltlCI TOP OF THE LINE 25" TABLE MODE.L AN SA 16'' DIAGONAL BARGAIN COLOR STAND AVAILAllf ONLY •2aa•• CONSISTENTLY THE LOWEST PRICES IN ORANGE COUNTY FOR ZENITH PRODUCTS PRODUCT KNOWLEDGE SECOND TO NONE WHY BUY AT ABC? • No Finance Charges If Paid in 90 Days or No Down and 36 Months to Pay CO.A.CJ • l Year Free Parts • l Year Free Service • 3 Year Picture Tube Warranty • Free Delivery and Set Up • BankAmericard/Master Charqe • • .. •• Ii DA ILY PILOT IIDl'l'OlllAL PAGE Streamlining Meetings - In these tl~p -when public meetings aJong the Orange Coast take on the air or fil ibuster!, any changes \\h1ch help to streaniline things are truly refreshing. 1\nd San Cle1nente planning commissioners have offered some of thar refreshment with a ne\v set of changes to their meeting fonnat. }~aced la st \veek with an a"·esome agenda shO\\ 1ng 15 public hearings and dozens or other items. comnll S· !llOners set these solid ne\v rules: -The reading of lengthy stafr reports "'i th minute details '''ould be foresaken. Instead. the reports \\IOt1ld be posted at th e back of the meeting room. -Any irrelevant commentary during the publi c hearings \\ ould he discouraged. and the audience was urged to keep even perttnent comments brief and top· ical. C'on1missioriers and city staff members themselves helped things alo ng as well by taking several hou rs before the meeting to tour the parts of the city which would be. involved in the evening's business. Those excellent changes, seen for the first ti~e last week . could profitably be adopted by other public panels \\'ith notorious records for early-morning adjourn· men ls. Educatio11 in Jeopardy Shortly after the 1970 munici pal election in Laguna Beach, a speaker at 11 Chamber of Commerce meeting commented, "Now that we've d one it for city govern· ment, let's start working on the schools .. .'' • "Working on the schools" turned out to mean get- t ing a super-co nservative majority onto the school board with the apparent Jntent of unraveling years of work that went into developing a school system recognized He Doesn 't Publicize The Phonies .(SYDNEY J. HARRIS) A11rwu1 to Various Querits That Coifte tltbt MaU : From R.B., Raleigh, North Carolina : "Why didn 't you ever comment on the Clifford Irving case while it was making front-page news?" Because publicizing phonies is not my Idea of an honest day 's work, and al!o because I wouldn't read a book about Howard Hughes even if it)were authentic. Frcun L.B., a 4th-· grade student in Fredericton , N e w Brunswick: "After seeing so many def· initlons in your col- umn recently, I won· der if you could tell me how ""e began to call 11: certain kind of pants 'jeans.' Your column is very populM and read by so many aroun d here." YOU SLY um.E devil, you knew just what to say in order to get an answer, didn't you? Well, Mi ss Flatterer , "jeans" is short for "jean fustian,'' a fabric of l'otlon and flax originating in Genoa, Ila· ly. Now do your own homework alter Utis! From A.N .. Sausalito. Cal.: "Are you too meaJy .mouthed to l<1ke a public posl· tion on the subjtcl of school busing? What is )'our \'icw?'' I have disqualified mysc·ir on the suJ>.. ject. since my children attend a private school. and I think anything I :;aid on the subject ·would be &elf·serving. For the record, though, I don 't th ink it makes any difference since they just get different kinds of rollen educations. Dear Gloomy Gus Don't the promoters of that de- structive Proposition 9 realize they nullify their clean envirorunent pre- tensions by tempting shoppers to be litterbugs when they inundate them in parking lo1' with ·their milll eadlng handbills? - B.E.A. T~I, ........... rtofl«.H rNdtn' "'""'"· .. , n.wJMlrll'I" !!MM " tfle MWWll Hf. s .... r flrr •.t -"'• f'f •l•mr (1111, Otllr "'"'· FROM P.B.E., Long Island, N.Y.: "I agreed with your colwnn on the beer drinker& and thelr filthy habits of tossing cans everywhere - but what about you miserable cigaret .smokers and .your butts?" You've got me there -all an inveterate puffer, I plead guilty to nipping clgaret butls indiscriminately. ":hich just proves that there are Yahoos in every element of the population. From B.G., Grand Junction, Colo.: ''Who do you think is going t.o be the Democretic can didate for President in 1972?" Someone the Democrats think they can spare for the sacrifice this fall; except for a disaster, the Rt>publican primaries in Peking settled the issue. FROM C. W., Fort Worth, 'Tex .: "After reading your column aboul Jon ah and the whale, J y,·onder what religious denomina- tion you belong to." l am, as you coul d learn Crom Hansard '!! or the Almanach de Gotha, a member or the ~form Evangelical Druids, a smR ll but strict sect, whose principal creed can be ex pressed tersely: "Most people don"I even live once." · From D.R.S., Pompano Deac.h, Fla.: "Do you think that even tually evtry country will be Communist ?'' Yes, unless the capitalists are smart enough to make everyone a capilalist ll'l time lo forestall this dreary prospect Pl 2asu res of Middle Age Middle age ls the least apprttiatfd period of lire. People lreai it as lf ii were 1 Joalhesome disea~e ltK'y don't want anylxid.v tlse 10 know they have acquired. They often ac:t as 1f they thought that if 1hty p.<1id no allen· lion lo it. it would go :1way like 11 bad dream in the night, \Vell. ii \\'on't. On the o!he.r band mid· die 11:ge is no 24-hour- a·day, around the rlock nighlma re. Al · 1 er they get used to 11 , many of ilS vic- llms find middle •ge to be more tnjoy· 3blr, in some ways, than youth . Yoo don't have to be daffy to rerognize tha t the middle years of e1istence have their consollng rew ards aa: well u their demerit$. Some of them are on the wry ~t, but that doesn't make them Jess real, HERE ARE A FEW reasons why you 1tw>uldn"t dluolve to tean on arriv t11 at ywr 40tll birthday: · You don't hive to cal1 up an electronic d•tlnr bureau lo find out wtUdi cir! would be boot for you lo take out aome eveninc. Your wife will nomlnate berae.lf. 1l isn't necessary lo start aearchtng for a blgl'f 1porlmt!11 or • larger bou" U }'au Jee a atorll::'' will( on the horizon.. The llorl "" .._. ~ your -In 111 oddras book. Yoo .,.obobly hll" booomo familiar with tlJe l)'lllpl01111 of IOD>O kind of clnoic diltlM with whlcll you 11 keep "°"M'""1 In your old a;:c . And I( do«n ~ ( HAL BOYLE ) Sttm as terrible as you thought it might be . YOU lfi\VE l..OST much of lhe in-- M<:urity that secretly plagued your youth. Therefore you don't make a nuisance of yoursel f by trying to top every witty remark you hear at a cockta il party. Unless you have become an alcoholic, you have learned to take only two lul ones for the road instead or five. Your children are either out of their teens, or near the end o! them . and now end then do aomething thoughtful that leads you to suspect they ma y tum into human beings, after .. all. Some months you &re even able to pay their phone bills without crying -out to high henven in financial agony. THERE IS NO lnclin&tion to jump on the bendwagon for every new Intolerance or prombed reform that parades by your door. You may even be willing tn drop aome old outworn prejudice that kept )'OU · smug before. Ezcept for financ ing i new au tomobile now and then, It is Hkely that you are through with undertaking any major new economic burdens. You ha ve all the mortgacea and life ln.suranct I.hat any Dllll ln hlJ r1s,i;:..m1nc1 llffdl. All In 1U, ii u much about mid- dle &Re to .. Joy u lllere 11 lhlll needs to· b!' (ririive n. among educat.On H ouU;tanding in lhe nation. Almost a year has passed since the new board mem· bers were seated. It hM been a ye ar o ( confusion, frus· tration and a minimum of constructive actjon. Alarmed by the McGuJ!ey reader approach of the new Lrustees, parent.!, teachers and concerned residents by the score have turned out for board meetings. a de- velopment g reeted with marked antagonism by the new members. · "" So far they have voted down acceptance of federal money, then voted it back; voted down th e trimester system for the high school, then voted it ba('k; de- manded that textbooks be changed yet refused to schedule textbook etudy sessions; r efused lo discuss the reasoning behind their votes and repeatedly exhibited snappish bad manners in dealing \\.'ith teachers and par· ents in the audience. Touchy isubjects are evaded via requests for more .,study" when there seerps to be an impending threat of open discussion . The latest maneuver, an attempt to change policy on renewal or ad1ninistrative contracts, is an obvious ploy to replace Supt. William Ullom with an adn1inis· trator more to their liking. lf s uccessful, it would enable the board to drop the policy of renewU1g contracts a year ahead, give the superjntendent six months notice and sign a long·term agreemerlt wi th their chosen replacement -leavin)! the next board with the choice of keeping him or buy· ing off the contract. The Laguna school system is not perfect. There are some discipline problems and adjustments needed in some of the academic program s. But surveys show that Laguna stud ents are fun cLioning welt, both 'locally and when they go on to college. A reasonable board could preside Qver the correc· tion of deficiencies without shooting up the \vhole sys· tern. s ".Joe Average' Not "Apostle of Reve11 9 e' Vote Should Decide Death Penalty To the Editor : So people wbo wish to overturn the C(\lifomia Supreme Court ru ling on the de'at h penalty are "apostles of revenge." Not really! Most of wi are just '4Joe Average," who wish to extend to the people of California the right lo decide. Believe it or no!, votin g is a right of the law-abiding citize ns of California who are registered to vote. Certain restrictions are placed on this right , so that the law·abiding dtizens can decide. I WOULD LIKE TO draw to your at- tention the faet ihat in our penal facili ties psychiatric care is provided. Many persons have been helped in this capacity. However, our courts and penal fa cilitie.s are filled with cases of "tern· porary" in!Bnity. These people aoe tried, convicted, incarcerated, treated and set free just to re-do ~·hat they were treated for. You see, they were ''temporarily" in· sane. Please explain how a psychiatrist can treat these people for the remainder of their lives. Please e:<plain \~:hy some return and go through the same routine. Please ezplain Wl'lere the end of our "helping the poor sick mind'' is to stop, and where self·preservation is wrong. "JOE AVERAGE'' Is told to double.- lock his doors, don 't Shoot l'ln intruder unless he tries to kill you first , "Jane Average" is advised to carry, in her purse, protection. No guns, of course. Those are concealed weapons and against the Jay,•, '-''e are txpected lo excuse burgla ry, robbery, child mo!es!ing, rape, murder, harassment. assault -you name ii. Just beca use old Average is in cont rol of his actions and reactloiis. he must excuse. NOW TKE CALIFORNIA Supreme Cou rt says we. must give every major criminal the opportunity of being freed fro m confinement and free to commit n1urder again, all without his ordered dea th. I agree there should be stiffer gun con- trols, including the registration of all guns and ezamlnation of eaeh pe.raon having them. But this iJ only 1 small part of a big problem. To accu11e the "apostles of revenge'' or jumping on a bandwagon bect1U!le of another shooting is ridiculowi. My guf'Jl.S is you ju!l didn't circulate among Joe Average people when the decision wu handed down. Many were for retaining capilal punishment. MRS. C. R. DEWEES l\'obe Pollution To the Editor : At 4:26 p.m. at a Laguna baseball dlarnond , it blasted off the Little League loudspeaker to the !!ides or Laguna 's residencla amphitheatre and ill echo boomed up Thalia and Temple Hills to the Top of the World, up Park Avenue to Mystic HJll!, up Skyline to Thurston : "BAITER -Bl.A, Bl.A. BLA - SHORTSTOP." • "Get in there. Kevin. Get off the ba.'Je. Bv Geor9e --- Dear George : Why doesn't your editor fire you off your job? FURIOUS Desr Furious: Because I am IO tnslgbt·laden. widely read, helpful and com- P•sslonate. Abo, because be'1 been trying to figure out for lho put 10 yeara oacUy what my job 11, and tt•a that llrll step lhllt 1>1m11 blm. [ ..... _MA_IL_n_o_x ___ ) Letters from T"eaders are welcome. Normally writer.! should convey tliezr messages in. 300 words or less. The right to condense letter.! to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ters must include signatures and mail- ing address, but t1ames may be 1oith- held on T"equest if suffici~nt reason is appa.rent. Poetry will not be pub- ii.!hed. C'mon. John-go, go, go!" "BAITER -BLA. BLA, BLA THIRD BASE -STRIKE." "C'mon. Mike-BLA. BLA. BLA." At 8:43 p.m. -more. FROi\1 A Los A n g e I e s ncvnr· paper: "As a I ea d in g crusader against noise pollution, Robert Alex Baron. puts ii, unwa1tcd noise, even at moderate fevels, can be a form of torture. It can so weaken the body's defense mechanisms that di sease. tan more readily take hold. The organism does not adapt lo noise. it becomes in· ured and pays the pric('. The price of thi~ adaptation is in itself a hazard to health." City planners con tend that res idential noise is the second most serious so ur cf' or noise pollution. ~fajor offenders are still jet aircraft. freeway traffic and trucks. Although there are codes and ordinances against sur.h ha1.ardous nuisances as blaring loudspeakers. barking do,lls, your neighbor's rad io and TV, neighborhood concerts and the screeching hol·rodder. rarely is there an enforcement Of these codes and the average citizen is ap- parently willing to tolerate these impo- sitions upon the wmmunity well·being_ and y,·cl fare. NOISE JS ~tORE th.in an annoyance. It b a health hazard and here in Laguna. perhaps more than in the mesa-country neighborhoods, the elevated structure of the village topography multipUes and reverberates in excess the ordinarily tolerable sounds. Mostly. Lit tle League baseba ll players are a li stening refreshment indulging a beneficial recreation acti vity th a t su bstitutes something of value for the ob- Vk>U!I, antisocial attractions now imposing the?mel ves upon the growth and develop. ment of young people. But in an attempt to big league the lit· tie league, the baseball loudspeaker in 1...ctiUM is an obnoxiom" nuisance and delnlcll; grossly from the wholesome .spontaneity of youthful exuberance that characterizes the sport. "C'mon, Kevi n - Bl.A, BLA, BLA." BRUCE S. HOPPING E'or Proposfti0to 9 To the Editor : The DAILY PD.m'1 three editorials attacking Propo.sltlon t and prophesying doom 1f It passes drutlcaJly overslmpllfy " aet.. oC eomplu bluet and fall to make c.le1r I.ht following facts: It Is • technically possible to p-ovide fuels which meet °" .standards set forth by the initiative. Indeed, the Federal Environmental Prot.ection Agency, when conlUlted about Proposition 9, said that many or its provisions a p p e a r e d "im!Pally nllor<d to mct'I the ,... qllRPnents of the ftderal law.'' A ahutdown order In Uie C'1Sc or a smog emergency 1ffecU: only ~se ~~me:11ts or lndu1trtes or corporaUons -not private 1ndl¥1dual.s -whJch are a I r e a d y openltng -· VIJiance and therefore are 1lrtady eJceedlng the air 'quality standards set by the Air Resources Board. ANY PORTJ ON or the act can be con- tested in the courts and is S('Verabl(' from the rest of the bill. Proposition 9 has been analyzed in detail and at lengt h by a non·partisan group, '"\\"on1en For·· -"'hich points out. )inridentatly. th:it the presumably adverse economic effects of the bill stand to be counter-balanced by the development of tho se jndustries that create pollution equipment and low.polluting products. Pollution itself, needless lo say, costs us dearly. \\'e urge every voter to familiarize 'himself v.•ilh the particulars of Propo.~i lion 9 before deciding where he stands. Whal is at stake, obv iousl y, is which shall prevail: privnle interests or the public in- terest. short·terrn advantages or long- term security. HO\\'ARD and CORIN:'-JA BABB 1Ui/J; Fluorltlnllon To the Edl!or : The Arnerica n Dental Associati on and !he American Medical Association h:ive both advOf'ated the treatment o.( water by fluoride to prevent tooth dcca~·. On the. other hand the general public write in considerable numbers t0 their local papers cxpress in~ fc:irs about po~s1- b!e harmful effects . Th e threat to the u1- dividut1l"s freedom of choice arot.IS<'S in- ten se feelings of resentment which un- doubtedly innuence local co u n r i J i; !1esitat1ng on the brink of ;uloptin~ \\·ater fluoridation. f\feanwhile children ar<' gro \\·ing up sur· ftring unneces sarily fr orn tile increasing incidence. of dental caries and the en- suing ill-hcallh "'hich can harm them for the. rest of their li\'es. FLUORfD E TABLETS and the use of toothpastes with fluoride are bolh steps in the right direction, but the~c. methods c:'..111 for unceasing watchfulness on the part or parents, or in whose. care the children are during the important formative time of the teeth's enamel. A method which fits more easily into normal habits would be better. It is not far to seek. Milk has been shown by scientific resc:;irch among school Dilige11t Search? (PRESS COMMENT~) Niles. JU., Scrap Age: "A search by the IRS! How diligenUy does the IRS search for a taxpayer who has a rerund coming to him? Apparently not as much as when he. owes the government. Whe11 the IRS office in Albuquerque gave an 'unable to locate' list to newspapers, en edUor spot- ted the name of a U.S. ma~istrate who holds CQUrl across the street from the l RS of rice." Terre Haute, lad., Spect.tor: "We're Qnly 11bout liALF as honest as we used to be. Recently. the !' of Liberty magaz.Ine conducted . 1Jmllnr to ~e run near. a half centu ago. The renlts were lte lllurnln.ating . . • and c.m· barras ng ror the CWTent generation. Back 1924, Liberty sent out 100 letters to peo le &e.lect~ aL random llCTO!tJ the countr , e1.p lalning that a dollar bill cnclos was 'in adjustment of lhe error lalned or in your account.' which of rse, did not exist. Of the JOO people contacted, XI returned the dolh1r, announcing that a mlsUike had bttn made. whlch was In marktd conlrast to the results In 1971. Jn this year's test. on- ty 13 of JOO pe<:iple returned the money." children. notably by Dr. E. Ziegler or \\"in lcrthu r. Switzerland lo be a safe vehi· rlc for fluoride which can easily be mixed into it and di stributed ...,.ith a family'I dally ,i;upply in clearly labeled bottJes. This can be done by any processing dairy' ;-is drmonstrated by the Borrow Dental i\·lllk Fouoda!ion, a non·prolit makin~ eharita!Jle trust estab\i«h1-d 1n Engla nd to lnC"rca~il! public 11ndf'rst.'lndlng of the problern nnd shO\V this sllfc l'l lternative wav lo inure ('OSt!y <.1nd 11•as1cfu l meth- ods. TllERE IS !\'O DANGER in the in- gel\tton of !he cont rolled an1ount up to the age of It years: there is equally no reason to continue it throughout adult life_ To do 50, as occurs when fluoride i~ introdur.cd into piped water supp lies. is ti> incur unnecessary expenditure . Only I percent of the water \\'ill be drunk and lhe rcm.'.linder y,•ill now a\\·ay into the Se\\·age system. \Vh y use 3.000 times m'lrc fluoride than Is nccc ssary to ;,irh ir~·e the sarne result ? \Vhcthe r run under a stall' scheme or through other means, the adv:intages of the milk 1nethod :ire outstanding. Denial i\-lllk would strengthen youn g teeth in the formative vears. \l"hich i ~ the sole ol:r j('clive of liuoridatlon. R.E. PETTIT!' f or the Aorr0w !Nntal ~tilk roundation \Valer loovifle Porls1nouth, England V 11derp.,ltl CUP To the Editor: Guess the California Jl igh"·ay Patrol just 1.~n·t politically ntotivated enough for Gov ernor 11eaga n lo warrant equal wages ~nd benefit s to those of a policeman, though the \\·ork of !he CllP Is far more d<1ngcrous -to themsclvf'S. BERNY WELSH ll'P"i t e to CtJ119ress To the Editor : Do you know that Sen. John Tunney'! "good friend," Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, has proposed lhat $20 mill ion of the tax- payers' money be appropriated for a na- tional park around Chappa quiddick Pond? Do we need any more governmen t held and adm inistered land? In 1970 the fede ral bu reaucracies held 40 percent of the land area of the Uniled States. some . of which ranchers and cattle rais ers uS«I for grazing and paid no taxes on, It makes you wonder what the population gang is talking about when it tells us we are running out of land to house future. generations. Un less you want to help finance a memorial lo Mary Jo Kopechne. tell your representatives and senators to vote no on SB 3485. VIRGINIA McllONE OJtAHOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. W •td, l'ubfilhrr Thomn! Ktevil, l:ditor A/bf'rt \V. 8ntr.s !.'dltorial l'age Edi lor fhr f"dltortal Pl'~ ot tM Dally l'tlot 11rek1 to inrorm find atlmu· ll\t~ rradt>ni by presenting 1.hh1 nC"'lpapcr"s oplnJOnl" ftnd <:om• m"ntary Oil \()plQ of lnlen>tt And 1l~nlflcan1:(', by providing a f11rum for tht CXPt't'Ulon ot oor re1 drrs' oplnlnn.,, 11.nd by ~l'!'ltlng r.h~ dl\•1·"e vl<"'·point~ ur lnformrd ob- ~,..rvrn 111nd 1poke.rn~n on t.opScs o( lhe di\¥. Th~rsday, June I, 1972 . ' Han(l~ of Mc1les 'Looi{ the Best' Coeds -A!~ get their-1,.'Qllcge degrees don't mnke good "'1vcs. Such is the contention of a scholar. A maJe ctiauvin· 1st scholar, I think. These h.ighJy educated young ladies says he, a.re trained to compele, not to cooperate. ln ma~ rimony, thal's bad. Very bad. They must be retrained, these girl graduates, he says. Clearly. what's needed now by new husbands is a "how to" manual on the training of bright brtdl'.s ' 1'11l;itlE Al t!:~ nu;r1· 1nl'11 "ith rlnL·ly sh<11>ed hands than wurnen:' says a professional pholographer. An,ong his uretime chores. he says, ha\'e lx'tn nurnerous <1ssignmenls by jewel- ry firms I.(' tnke pirtures of finger rings. "No prublcn1 ;:it all to find a c:ood-lookin~ pair of nian's hands." he says. ''but lhf' fingers of too manv Wf>n)C!l nre either pudgy Or <:lnv"like ." r)iscrcdit d\Sh\\'asher, he says. A DRINKE R'S license, that's what a California doctor proposes. He would have such a license issued to any grownup \\'ho might want to buy liquor. With leara.cr's permits for teen. agers. fie\'Okablc, temporarily in mi~r drinking offenses, permanently in serious drunk drivfng cases. Bartender. what's your stand on this rl·comn1endation., LO'ifERY -An1 asked ho\v many s tates carry on legal lotteries. F our no'"'· Connecticut, New York, New Jersey and New Hampshire. EXACTLY 60 years .ago, U1e record shov.·s, you could reut a four-bedroom house for $10 a month. \\'llA'r I still can·1 rigurc ou t is how a little old por- poise c.:;111 lhru\v ;1 footb:1ll in a perfect spiral about 50 f t'{'t <~ ... J>IDN'1' l'residenl !Jarry Truman once appear 011 that old ·rv shov.' '\\'lia t's J\·ly Line' as the mystery guest?" A. l~e was scheduled. a ll right. But Remington Rand \\':ls the sponsnr. you may recall, and Gen. Douglas J.1ac- Arthur was on that firm 's board of directors. f\.facArthur SCO\\'led Perle i\J1esta subs!iluted. I~, .. SAYS hert· the SC'crcl Service men always know ho1\' n1any pickt'!s ;ire goin r.: to shov.• up for any sizeable demonstration. !Inv;""' A. They poll the bus cha rter companies, figure 40 pas- sengers per bu:; AFFAIRS -Ask 1,000 engaged men if they were ever eni::<ir.:cd previously and about a third will say yes. Put !h<' s;i 111e query vr 1.000 engaged ,gi rls and about half \1ill ~ay yes. Po\11'tcrs have proved !his. But they do not lx'lie\"C it 1nc:ins these unmarried gi rlfriends reallv get en- g;igccl 1nnrr oftl'n th.1n d1) the bn~·fricnds. ThC'y think the girlc; lr·nd In <ll•serihe 11 s :in engagement \1·hat lhe men ll)crl·I."' pl'cft:r to call <111 ;1ff;1ir. J\d<lrr.s$ mail to t . /I T. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif. 92660. Lake Ranch Host,s .Urtique Weddings ENUMCLAW. Wash. (AP ) -If you 're tired of traditional y,·eddings, then dri\•e past the c ity dump, the pickle factory. fJete's swimming pool and th!'n up a d irt road and straight into the for!'st to a sccluded "'edd1ng ha\'Cn called L ittle Lake l!anch. In clear lwil ight. l\1 t . Rainier, snowcappC'd and po nderous, broods over lhe seen('. Thf'rf' will IX' lots of \\'lt- ne::;ses handy -1X.acocks ~pread ing their glorious tails In search of J>N hens . . . S\\'ans crl'!nin g their nrf'ks as they bob up c1nd cl0\\111 On a ~vlvan la ke. . .t'halll'nn~ l::Ccse and ducks. A W0!\1AN \\'110 "just liked seeing-people get married" has tumed her 160-acre ranch into a wilderness v.·cdding site. Vera Dyar came here from British Columbia with her hus- ·oond 20 years ago. ·n1c built up their ranch and enlarged a pond into a lake. After the death of her hus- band, things got too quiet for Mrs. Dyar, better known as Lady Vera, so she let fri ends hold their weddings outdoors and use a two-room guest house for their honeymoons. A FEW YEARS ago, she turned her hobby into a business. advertising the LltUe Lake Ranch as a marriage site. "We have had a dozen (wed- dings) or more. one party of 250 from \Vashington. D.C.," she says. The couples bring their own minister. Recently. Lady Vera invited new,otmen to attend one of the v.·eddings of a young couple. 'rhc ceremony was complete \v ith elt'Ctric organ. The au· dience included the ranch anin1als -ducks, swans, ix-acocks. catlle and geese. La dy Vera. in a shining s:iln1on-colored gown, seemed to h:ive more fun th.an a nybody. "l'M NOT REALLY Lady Vera or Lady Dyar,'' she sakl. "l 'm not a lady, just Mrs .• but people have always called me Lady and I'm used to it. But isn't this marvelous'!" The charge is about $60 for :i small wedding party and goes higher depending on the ty1:ic of ceremony, Lady Vera said. One thing Lady Vera doo«n't guarantee in the price of ad- mjssion -lhe success of the marriage. "That's outside my depart- ment," she said. Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers '* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * MERCURY SAVINGS and loan association Open Mon .. Thln. 9 un.-4 p.m.; Fri. 91.111.-li J1J11. BUENA PARK Mercury Savlnp Blclr., Vtlley View ot Lincoln HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury Savlnp Bldf., Edlnfl( ot Btacfl TUSTIN Mercury S.Vlnp Bldg, Irvine Blvd. at Newport A¥t. ***************** r-u • .1u .. 1. 1972 DAILY PILOT 7 . ST ARTS ·sATU RDA Y Shop 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.n1. at all sto res (exce pt Downtown L.A.10 a.m.-6p.m.) Sunday noon to 5 p.n1. c Downtown closech ' FASHION SAVINGS KNIT DRESSES, PANTSUITS town and travel 49 -reg. $30-$76 19.99-49.99 JUNIOR, JR. PETITE DRESSES young signature 94 -val $22-$36 12.99-19.99 ASSORTED POLYESTER PANTSUITS blvd. dresses 95 ·-reg. $22-$30 12.99-59.99 SUEDE JACKETS IN ASS'T STYLES coats 103-reg. $ 100-$11249.99-59.99 BLUE FOX CAPELETS THREE ROWS DEEP choice natur•J-l>lorweigan blue fox 77.00 QUALITY NATURAL MINK WRAP-AROUNDS fursalon 47 277.00 1 h;irge your fur porcha~ rt<YW, piy in Octobef 1ur produCl5 libeled lo mow country o( ori1in o( W.irn"'""""""""' ""' 111~y cu does not arry fun of 1nimif1 thre11t'nfd with-"tincllon FAMOUS MAKER KNIT SEPARATES, 8-18 act ive sportswear 76-val. $15-$18 9.99-11 .99 PRINT ANKLE SKIRTS, conoN, 10-16 skirts, coordinates 101 -reg. 18.00 13.99 LEVIS FOR GALS® hopsack, 5-13 campus shop 43-were 12 .00 7.99 ASSO RTED VINYL HANDBAGS handbags 26-8.00-11 .00 val. 4.99-6.99 VIVID PRINT SCARVES accessories 19-val. 3.00-5.00 1.99 ALLEGRO LOLA CASUAL LEATHER SANDAL boulevard shoes 112-reg. 10.00 7.99 KIMEL, FORECAST DRESS SHQES forecas t dressshoes 125-reg. $24-$28 18.99 WOVEN SLING PUMP moderate dress shoes 12-reg. $1 7.00 12.99 COBBIE EL RANCHO LO W HEEL CASUAL women's shoes 51-reg. 18.00 13.99 FAMOUS MAKER BRAS bras and girdles 44-5.00 var 2.99 LONG AND SHORT DRESSY DRESSES linle girls 56-reg. 8.00-12.00 4.99-6.99 BABY DOLL PAJAMAS, SIZES 4-14 lingerie 79-reg . 4.00 2.99 NYLON STRETCH BODYSUITS, SML accessories 11 8-5.00-7.50 val. 3.99-4.99 FRAG RAN CE COLLECTION cosmetics 100-reg. 2.99 1.99 MEN'S, BOYS ' WEAR MA YBROOKE DOUBLE KNIT SUITS men's sui ts 21-reg. 100.00 74.00 MACPHERGUS BERRY SHIRTS, M-XL sport furn. 84-reg. $8-$10 4.99 SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS furnishings 6-reg. 5.50 3.99 LONG SLEEVE KNIT DRESS SHIRTS furnishings 6-reg. 12.00 8.99 GR6UP OF SPORT COATS sportswear 45-reg. $55-$80 $49-$69 POL VESTER KNIT SLACKS sportswear 45-reg. 18.00-22.50 13.99 CASUAL STYLE FLARES, sizes 28 to 38 sportswear 133-reg. 16.00-20.00 10.99 ITALIAN MADE MEN'S SANDALS men's shoes 60 -reg. 8.00 5.99 VISOR PACK AUTO ACCESSORY furnishings 80 -reg. 7.SO 3.99 FAMOUS MAKE LEATHER WALLETS furnishings 80 -reg. 6.00 -8.00 3.99 FAMOUS MAKER SWIMWEAR mach ten 83 -reg. 8.00-10.00 4.99 CREW NECK KNIT SH IRTS mach ten 83-reg. 6.50-8.00 3.99 NYLON WIND BREAKER JACKETS mach ten 11 6-reg. 14.00 7.99 BOYS' DOUBLE KNEE JEANS boys' wear 14-reg. 4.50-6.50 :Z.99 BOYS' SU ITS, SPORT COATS boys' wear 14-reg. 18.00-35.00 14.,9-19.99 BOYS' DOUBLE KNIT PANTS boys' wear 14-reg. 16.00 11.99 BOYS' KNIT SPO RT SHIRTS, 8-20 boys' furn. 23-reg. 3.50 1.99 LONG, SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS boys' furn 23-reg. 4.00-6.50 2 for 5.oo FOR THE HOME 30-HOUR TRAVEL ALARM CLOCK clocks 64-was 12.00 7.99 SILVER-PLATED CASSE ~OLE, PYREX® LINER silverware 48 w as 13.00 10.99 NORITAKE STONEWARE 45 PC. SET FOR 8 china 46 ·was 84.95 59.95 HANO-CUT CRYSTAL DECANTERS glassware 126 -w ere 20.00 10.99 SU NBEAM 3-SPEED PORTABLE MIXER sm. appliances 74 -was 11 .99 9.99 DU RAC REST WICKER HAMPER, BASKET bath shop 139 -were 7.00-15.00 4.99-10.99 DOUBLE HIBACHI GRILL FOR PATIO COOK- OUTS housewares 33 -was 8.99 6.99 HOME EN TERTAINMENT, APP LIANCES MG A CASSETIE TAPE RECO RDER, PLAYE R stereo 729 - was 49.95 39.88 ARVOM SP:OD STATE STEREO CPMSP:E stereo 729 -all stores was 199.95 139.95 MOTOROLA 16" DIAGONAL COLOR TV W/INSTAMATIC televisions 722 -all 18 stores was 379.9S319.95 ZENITH 25" DIAGONAL CHROMACOLOR tv 722-was 669.95 589.95 MOTOROLA STEREO CONSOLE stereo 728-was 399 .95 289.95 MAGIC CHEF CONT. CLEANING GAS RANGE ranges 737 -was 249.95 195.00 WESTINGHOUSE 2 -SPEED WASHER washers 714-was 199.95 178.88 PHILCO 17 CU. FT. SIDE BY SIDE, ICE MAKER refrig. 72 1 -was469.95 419.95 CANDY, LIQUOR CHOC. BRIDGE MIX, RAI SINS, PEANUTS candy 78 -were 1.00 lb. 79c lb. 2/1.50 MOLEV VODKA OR KINGS CROSS GIN liquor107 -was4.85qt qt.3.99 TOYS, SPORTS, LUGGAGE COLT 12" BIKE WITH TRAINING WHEELS toys 42 -was 26.98 19.99 10-SPEED FR. BIKE CENTER PULL BRAKES sporting goods 50 -was $119 $99 FLITECREST BLACK WATCH PLAID LUGGAGE luggage 36 ·were 16.00-28.00 12.99-19.99 NOTIONS, STATION ERY, ART NEEDLEWORK 46 INCH CHROME GARMENT RACK notions 1-reg. 12.00 9.99 FIVE-DRAWER VINYL CHEST notions 1 -reg. ·13.00 9.99 TWO-DRAWER STEEL FILE stationery 66 -reg. 40.00 24.99 ANGEL TREAD SLIPPERS, SM , MED., LARGE notions 1 -reg. 2.50 1.89 SELF-ADHESIVE PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS stationery 66 -reg. 5.00 2.59, 2/5.00 WOOL OR ORLON® ACRYLIC YARN art needlework 40 -reg. 70c-2.00 59c-1.69 BOOKS , CAMERAS CHILDRENS GOLDEN BIBLE books 66 -reg. 4.95 4.19 KODAK INST AMA TIC X-30 KIT camera shop 37 -reg. 29.99 26.99 MINOLTAAUTOPAK400 XCAMERA camera shop 3 7 -reg. 31. 99 28. 99 BELL & HOWELL PROJECTOR ca mera shop37-reg.13 9.99 118.99 TASCO 7x35MM BINOCULARS ca mera shop 37 -reg. &4.95 33.99 HITACHI TAPE CASSETIE RECORDER camera shop 37 -reg. 79.95 -59.99 mey ce. MUth -•I plau, .. n dlego fwy. at brl1tol, coot• maH; 546-9321 thep.....,.y thrufrhlay lla.m, tet:JOp.m., .. tvnley, 11a.m. to6 p.m. ........ , -'Ill s p.m. DRAPER IE S, LI NEN) SURETY COTTuN IERRY BATH TO lvfL S towels 30 -reg. 2. 'II 1.H'! SU RETY COTI ON I ERR Y HAND 10\VEL::, 10,vels 30 -nll 1 f\ <,l<lrt•.., r<'~· 1.6() 1.ic1 SU RETY COTT UN I ER RY WASH CLOTI I'> towels 30 -all 111 ... 1,irl'" rt•g. 80c 5 'Jc SPR INGS N O-l~ON PER CALE TWIN !>I I[[ f' sheets 34 -.11! In .... 1c)r('c, re~. 6.50 2.9q IMPORTED IACL)UARD BEACH ·1 OW~LS lowels 30 -re·~· 7.110 3.99 X-WIDE LIN ED 1\NTIQUE SATI N DRAPERIES draperies 1 13 -rr•g . $3 5-$55 pr. 27 .99 SHEE R POLYL5TLR VVIN IJOW PANELS curtains 11 J -reg, J .70 ea. 2.7'l COMPO SE PILLOW, 20!'x26" STANDARD do111es1ics 34-rc•g. 6.00 4,6q COMPOSE PILLOW, 20"x30" QUEEN SIZE domestics -reg. 8.00 6.59 COMPOSE PILLOW, 2CY-' x36" KING SIZE domestics 34 ·reg. t 0.00 8.49 SURETY DELUX E ACRYLIC TWIN BLANKET bedding 4 1 -rPg . I 5.00 9.4'1 SU RETY DELUX E ACRYLIC FULL BLANKET bedding 41 -reg. 14 .00 11 .39 SU RETY DELUXE ACRYLIC KIN G BLANKET bedding 41 -reg. 20.00 15.99 ARISTOCRAT SHAG BROAD LOOM floor covering 32 -reg . 13.00 yd. 8.88 DEL UXE NYLON PILE FRINGE D AREA RUGS area rugs 137 -reg. 9.00-140.00 4.88-78.88 HOME FU RNISH INGS ARMSTRONG REP RODUCTIONS ON CAN- VAS pictures 75 -reg. I 0.00 40.00 6.99-29.99 CERAMIC TABLE LAMPS, 34" HIGH lamps 63 ·value 45 .00 29.99 STANDING OR WALL METAL SCULPTURES pictures 75 -reg. 20.00-35 .00 14.99-24.99 5 PC. MEDITERRANEAN BEDROOM furniture 143 -reg . 665.00 539.00 MR. OR MRS. LOUIS XV BERG E RE CHAIRS, furniture 141 ·reg. 125.00 -135.00 99.00 LEA TH ER-LOOK VIN YL SOFA, WOOD SIDES furniture 141-reg. 349.00 279.00 PECAN, WHITE OR G ILT BOOKCASE furniture 144 -reg. 149.00 99.00 LIGHTED CURI O, GLASS SHELVES, SIDES furniture 144 -reg. 229.00 169.00 SEALY TWIN, FULL MATIRESS -SPR IN G sleep shop 145 -reg . 59.95 ea. pc. ea. pc. 42'.00 BUDGET STORE VALUES MISSES' NYLON ST RETCH PANTS, 8-18 SIZES misses' sportswear 800-reg. 6.99 4.99 PA TIO COTION DRESSES, CULOTTES, 10-18 misses' dresses 810 -reg. 12.99 8.99 WOMEN'S NYLON SHORTS, 32-38 WAIST women's sportswear 816 -re g. 4.99 3.99 JUNIOR COTION SMOCKS, PRI NTS 5-15 jr. scene 801 - reg. 7.99 5.99 MISSES' COTION TERRY ROBES, S-M -L SiZES loungewear815-val.6.99 4.99 DORITTE PANTY GIRDIJS, SIZES 32-46 girdles 819 -reg. 7.00-8.clb 5.99-6.99 NYLON PANTYHOSE, SIZES A AND B hosiery 807 -reg. 99C 49c GIRLS' AS SORTED SWIMWEAR, 3-6X 7-14 girls' wear 824 -reg. 3.29 ' 2.59 JR. BOYS' POLO SHIRTS 4-7 SIZES children's wear 808 -reg. 1.69 99c NO-IRON TAPERED LEG JEANS men's sportswear 817 -were 6.98 2.99 SEERSUCKER SPORT COATS, SIZES 36.46 men'sclothing814 -reg.19.99 14.99 MEN'S SWIMWEAR IN A BIG CHOICE men's sportswe~ 805 -reg. 3.99 -4.99 :Z.99 00TTON VELdlJR KAAUCHI ROBES men's furnishings 806 -reg. 14.99 10.99 CALVERT NO-IRON WHITE TWIN SHEETS domestics 803 -reg. 3.79 2.99 SHEARED BATH TOWELS IN PRINTS, SOLIDS linens 831 -reg. 1.99 1.39 • MAVCO I . 8 DAILY PILOT Crewmen Dram atize Air · Fears By PETER TONGE ClltlsH111 l"-KI Meftltw S.rv1c• \VASHINGTON -Airline Capt. Caroll Woods had a hand grenade held 10 inches rrom his neck for a seven-hour in- ternational flight. His Pan American World A i r w a y s plane was later blown up in the Jordanian desert. First Officer D o d a 1 d Salmonson of Trans-World A.irllnea sawJlis captain, Dale Hupe , gunned down beside him. Petite Nancy Davis of Alaska's Wien airline felt the cold barrel of a gun placed at her head on her first flight as a stewardess. IT IS THE drama of these • scenes and hundreds of others that the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) hopes will stir American public ()pinion to generate pressure for solu- tions. The stories "!:re part of a presentation called "Meet the Enemy" at the ALPA annual convention here. Siii:teen hijack v i c ~ i m s strode to the pod ium aod told their perS()nal tales of con- frontation with the air pirate -the hijacker, tbe ex- tortk>nist, the saboteur. (More than 1,500 air crew members have experienced a hijack sillce ·the mfd-1950's.) Most of the 16 liP.Qke in a coolly 'disp8ssionate ·manner. Traces of· emotion crept into the voices• or a few. A11 felt frustrated and angry that air piracy remains what they see as a largely unchecked menace. mE PRESENTATION was based on a successful one m a d e to Unlted ·Nations re'presentatives in Montreal "last Novem~r. Now, ALPA is considering ways to bring a simila r pro- gram to the public. ALP A spokesmen point with disgust to the way "D.B. C.ooper" -the first ex- tortionist to escape b y parachuting to earth -has been made something of a folk hero. There's even a song "immortalizing" the s t i 11 unidentified and u n r o u n d crim inal who jumped out of a jetliner with his bag of loot. "Those who sing about him and wear D.B. Cooper !Weal shirts should experience the fear of being blown up in midai r -just once," was one crewm<ln's bitter comment. A POPULAR misconception Is that hi jacking is "all threat, and no hann in tended." The I facts don't bear this out, ALPA says. Says Capt. Thom a s Ashwood , chairman of ALPA's fl ight security action com- mit~: "In the past 17 years 400 passengers a n d 50 crewmen have been killed by hijackers. The loved ones or those people know what air piracy is all about." Specifically the pilots :want governments to ratify the Tokyo (196.1 ), the Hague (1970), and the Montreal (1971 ) treaties which outlaw air piracy, cell for the ex- tradition of all hijackers e1- ctpt l.tme seeking political asylum, Md provide severe penalUet for all offenden, ln-\ eluding political r e f u g e e s. They also -want effective passemger-3Cfeenlng devices at all airports. MOST GOVERNMENTS, it seems, have placed t h e ratification of the truties at Ibo bollom .. the pile of bulll-lh<J 1111111 •tlend lo. °"'" educalld ... tbe hl-lldll« ...._... !he public woald be r<ldll1 ~ to pnd ~""""""Into 1ctlon. pi1otf ~·ieve. Tnvelen would Ill II!. lo boJcoll l)rllnu ...._ aov..-i. .. bn• not nllllod lllo 1~1111. lt...w• undti •rllen are • ......,. ... _.,.,,.. to • tbe AIPA --th1t ~ ... -~be • Thttrsda1, Junf: l , 1972 HITE STRONG 1/4 LB. SPOOL MONOLINE egc "'· "' Specially pr(l~f'ss~d m:)t tlue O~- Pon! nylon is e1t;~mPI/ ~ur~I~ a•d lle11tle. ChoO'P. trnm 4 !~ 40 !~. t~·t we1gMs. Now at s~•ir&·· 32 CAU1JN PWTIC TRASH RECIPTACLES FRONT FISllNG PUBIS BOMBBIGRHN & HANDY SHEATll HAIR JIG LURE 143 ~','; 47c "J~· Ha~.df, 811 p~rpo~e needle nose pFers SpP:ially designed !or saltwa!er v. ih ru I and corro:iun re~1 <;tant g.1111.0 t1~h. Hottest lu·e oi the coa:t rtrom" fini·ti. In s~0at~ wit~ .1~ap !or ralico bull tJ1~. U\e fo: 1igg1~r. U~ and t,elt h-Ole. N~at gift 1deJ. tJ ting, troll.ng. Ge~ tre bit tnes. WHITE FRONT VINYL LATEX WALL PAINT OURR!G.199 3.58 .GAL Goes on smoothly, leaves a soft matte finis h; dries odor-free in just JO minutes and is easily cleaned with damp cloth. Clean up tools, hands with soap & wafer. In white only. BARDAI. NO. -1 ~or 2 lleavy iiity pl.,tic can wilh tight 211 fitt ihg cover and molded handl!1 Get "·new one. now al our special low ou1111rc. d1scounl pric e! .J.tt OR CARUlfTOR .Cl.fMBI Choice of p10ten products to he~ I I C IOIJI car run hetttr. Md Bardahf lo crankcase; Carburetor Cleaner lo gas tank. You'll notice the pep. IA. 6107 . CHA l ff IT.-WF CHDlf CAID PENN "SQUIDDER" Willi TWO SPOOLS 18~.~ .... 22.97 Orpendahle, heavy d~ty saltwater reel with single screw tilke-apart feature. Star and le~r drag systems; holds 200 yds. 35 lb. line. 31'.-ta 1 gear ralio. # 1.40 SPRAY-All 130Z. 1 PT. VARNISH & ENAMRPAINJ PAINT REMOVBI 49c .. ,_ "' GGC :~· Gn~, on ea~ily to 1-:ave 11 glo'>Sy, : oinl tan ol S1110 X Piint and ~ar- durao1~ l•n1~~. Aoplie~ to all surf~cr~ ni ~~ 1emnv~r maies removing old --met~lt, wnod~ ~nd pla:.t•c;; t1~. ha la<!, ~tick 1~b. cr-,oi~e of decorator c:olo1'3. 1 QT. PAINT TfflNNlR ., •• ,, 66c LOVELY LAMSKIN GARCIA SALTWATER 2 PIECE SPINNING ROD OUR REGULAR PRICE 20.97 Sall wat~r favontf" v;i!h 11 · · ! •1· •. mr dium ~r.tion. Brown : .. r w•111 ! I w~ winding and gold t111n. 5 1/r1 -·· )'u C· Bnd tungsten carbide t p: cor k h.1nal'! and toregrip. 8Y2 ft modd Z55L. 43 DAIWA SALTWATER CUSTOM SPIN REEL OUR REGULAR PRICE! 3.97 Smoo tb, rugged action with i!3 SwPdish steel ~ail and Pcrmala st line j!uidf!; nvJcn ~ut r" t ail arm won't ever loor~n. Preci~i~n tut teeth on gears give high~st relr ievi~g power. Holds 125.J'ljs. of 25 IO. line.# 7700 t 43 ' BlACK & DECKER BOffiEOf75 GRASS TRIMMBI ROlAID TABl.Ell ::i 12ssOURlOW Pll lCI 1ac .... 1.01 Dn~:. !he wor~ ti ~2rd :1 r~~: 11·'1!-T-' '•·-a ~ a· d balanror ~iv!S OJ\ b~nd1r.p, and '.1l •r r1· <· ... ': '1 !, • i'" ii"~ !•ng la·t P\t 11>i,d r.~ni w~ll~. frrc~~ a~1 ~,,1.rr'. .,.,n. ~ Y' •· 1" rd!Pn l~n nuck r1rh !'ia'e tc use; we i;h' 1u~t 2 J~:.. OtOO l... vi c· .r• : . lt~norr.y t-0111~ of 7~ HOSTESS LOUNGERS & GOWNS • • ·EACH Th~ royal look aoo feel that makes any night's wearing a s~cial event. Print and solid combinations of wonderfully smooth acetate and nylo~ lamskin. Two different patterns with solid tops and print skirts with interesting trim. Be- 1ibbone~ nee~ and elasticized waists. In rose, lilac, gold or blue; sizes small, iiiedium aid large. MOT AT lOKC IW:ll 01 TOJIUlftE STOICS r .... _ ·-• -.nll CtMt' i.-.,... . , .... FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIEl:E. JUST CllARGE ,IT TODAY I . .. " • tlf M 'WWMiii Cllll'I RmS ~· .. ' I Za co be co lS •• 36 co lADIES' TRICOT P 't~at of a sei t~ 1 nl 6 5lyle' ~· :~1 colo1s . tllf;l. Siles S-M· · g to fashio~ ... pillows to paint! FASHION PRINT BEACH TOWRS EACH Zany, cotorlut, hignty modem prints on big, lliick and thirsty cotton terry. Generous 34x62 incb size gives plenty of room between you and the sand. Buy several now at our low dis- count price. Slight irregularities won't impair looks or wear. lST QUALITY 30x60" JACQUARDS ••••• 1. 99 AND l6x66" BOLD P•INTS ON THICK THllSTY TE•IY. 36x66" PRINTED VELOURS •••••••••• 2. 99 COLORFUi.. AISO•IENT COTTON, SllGHT IRllGUU.llTllS. • IES' NYLON GIRlf NYLON MEN'S NO IRON ICOT GOWNS Sll,IJRTITOP SETS~~ SHIRTS 1ss, .. c, ... 150,,. .. .. 3 222 • Of RIG. I'll(( '·" FOR 2.91 . t tif a sellout! Shown are iust. l.Jrg"e assortment of color com bina.. fine quality 65~ Dacron-polyester f 6 style~ iii an assortment ol \ions w1!h solid ~nd stripe slee~eless· .ind 35% cotton white tee shirts. I tolilrs. W1tb lace and riobon tops and solid color snorts. Girls' 1hey hold their shape wash alter wash il:es S·M·l.. sizes 31.ll 6X. 1nd never need ironing. S-M l ·XL FOR THE FASHIONABLE HUSTUS MfN'S NO IRON WY CARE BRIEFS .... 3 222 OF FOR. ;',•; Parmanent Pl!S.S blend ol D~cron9 polyester and cotton: reinforced at points of ~train. 30-42. BOIE! SffORTS ........... 1.77 Thu~da~. Junt l , 1972 • WHITE ·BOYf NO IRON DRESS SHIRTS\ s1 IPlCIAL l'RICl ligMweigbt short slce~e shirts w1:h lon~finl collars and chest poc~et. 10 nylons and ptJlyesters; ~ol1ds and stripes. Sizes 8· l 8. FEATHER I FOAM PRINJ&llJI Fill am PlllOWS BATHTOWB.I 2ro1s5 99cSPICIAL •tKl Jumbo ~ize 22x28.. bed pillows Sig, thi~k 111d absorbent cottn11 ~lumfly filled with a firm, res1l•enl terry bath towels in issorttd c-olors len cf foam and feathers. At!rac· .ind pltteins. Slight irregularities- five cotton ticking. won't impair looks, wear. 4 FT. •EIOl.D AUMllllM LADDBIS G~! t .tJ Strong and lightweight slep ladder gives you ti• extra reach needed for so many holtSehold. chores .. ·full 3" rail and reinfOl'ced sleps. Swing-out pail shett. Tested tor safely & LI.~. !isle d. 5 n. STEP LAOOU, REG. IU! ........ 9.9' In. STEP LAODll, REG. 12.11 ••••••• 11 .9' Llllllll AITlllPTIC GIMT 3! OZ. BOTTLE BlACI I Biii GWS BIEi API 1IMMll Kills genns by tie millions on con· I I c Powertol olectric makes light tact: gives aro und the clock pro· work of 21n ·otherwise tedious te<:tion against colds 21nd b:!ld lawn task. Contro l switch on brea~ with rogutar use. REI. 1.ll ha nd!!; cooveils euity. • 3411 rrotf NOUtlt DAllT .,,. UTVtDAT 10 All To ' , •• DIDAT "Ml TO 7 , •• THltf'S A Wiim rtOllT llfAI YOU! PRICES 'OOD THIU SUNDAY, JUNE 4 6117 3088 BRISTOL ST. .. CHAlfll IT •• Wf CUDIT WD . .. _, ·--•IMSfUC-ltm •IV.• C......-.rl" Ctflilt 1'191 I OAIL Y PILQT ~ 0Lff'S OODOWfril ltl"fJf. 1.MTtlt .UE tlHOVOIMTKL&l6DRINK-IN 1• Hers11ey Buildi11g Siiperpcirk HERSflEY, Pa. -:\:i. U !his llttle to1vn didn't alrtadv ha\"e enough .. vacationer:i Mrnlng through to tour the-chocolate fa ctory! Now llerslte.\" is ju m~ ing on the Dis n r ~· I a n cl . bicentennial wagon by srnrting its O\VTI superpark. \\"ith part or the park opened ~fay 7. the cro"·ds ( mostlv s<'hool groups so far l ha\·e startrd their summer throng· ing . Scheduled to •be fi'nis hffi before the sun1mer of 1976, jµst in time for the U.S. bicentennial celebration, fhe ne w 11ershey park is essen- tl al!y a repeat of the Disney formula that has provl."n It$ success in California, Florida, and el sewhere. BUILT DY the ll ershf'v F:st:i\e!i. the park is rxpecterl to draw more than lhree million visi tors a yenr to the little town, '~rhose residents already complain about ex- treme inconveniences caused by tourists vis iting I h e ~hocolate plant in ever grow- ing nuq!bers ! reaC'hing a million last summer I. \\'hen the park is finishe<l, the chocolate factory tours ~111 be stopped, hopefully end- ing the crowd i ng Oii C~Ja te Avenue, Hershey'• main street, and the near lm- mobilJty of the city's stores and office!. Instead, Hershey Foods la -constructJng a visHora center adjacent to the new park bui separate from Jt, w her t visitors will be taken on an automated tour through a simulated world of chocol ate passing on the way evcrf stage in the production or the sweet stuff, from tropical c_aca a plantations through a final chocolatemakin.R" at a l{ershey plant. Admission wi ll remain fr~. (The n e ,.,. I1ershey park charges an en- lry fee). OCCUPYING SOME 2 O O acres on the out.skirts or town, the park wJll be completed in six phases over a five--yrar peMod. JI is planned des igned by R. Duell Associate.~. ol Sai1ta Monica, an architec- tural firm ol CK-Hollywood nrt and set directors ""ho nlreac!v chalk up to their credit such projects as SiK t~lags over Trxas, st.z: Flags o v e r Geo rgi a , If o us to n • s AstroWoi ld, Sandusky's (Ohio) Cedar Point , and Southern California's Lion Co u n try Safari. CurrenUy, this outfit is in- volved with the new Opryland- A In NashvWr, Trnn., Carowinds: Park Jn t h t Carollnu, Bu.sch Gardens in Houston. and new marine.land in Rio de Janeiro. The llrst pha s e of Hersbeypark lncludts three major attractions. The most popUlar l!I lhe dolphin show in lhe new Animal Garden. The anlm11 area, a major change from Heney perk'• SO.year-old zoo, enables dtlklren to play with baby animal!:, enter a rl'H'- fllght bird cage, and watch a barnyard animal ahow from Hot Sprlngs, Ark. Another popular attraclloll 1$ the Carrousel Clttle. In od· dltk>n to several · new rldea such •• the Monster, the Toboggan, and lbe·Scramblor, the circlo lncludf!I tbe oldest CN1"0UMI ltlll In LM in lbe U.S. No two ol ILi hllndpalnted horses art alike. ' THE P EN NSVLVANIA Dutch area ls a more "Adult11 show. Hue the visitor r an view crafl!mtn mak.lng quilts and fatric1, can s a m p I e typi cal foods of the Pt.in p..,. pie and can visit a typlcll barn of an Amish farm. Phase ti, dot to bt com- pleted before the 1973 8ear.on, will Incl ude a 17th-cen tury English vllli.ge and a rural German tihlntland area. At that lime, the new llerstv chocolate tours art e:1peeted to start. ending tho vbtu II the factory ltWf . I • '. I U ' DAJL'V PILOT C~osi1ig A rg111ne nt State Say~ J iu·y Ha s 'No CJ1oice' :i\tt•inpl tu free hi } ulder hrf1thrr Cl'.'orge Jackson r --- , T iclela11cls BilJ Wi 11s l11itial OK SA('!1A.\lF::-JTn I Al' I -Tlic lnl l pulling ;:inulh1·r 43 000 lit l :.u!J1n •·rct·rl 111 ;J ~;JfJ('\U;1ry !ht· ~l'l lil(I·. t111rt 11delan<l:. 1~ ~iraded f(lr T elei'isio11 !.(1:-. t\J\'(;f.Lf·~S 11 ·p1. ·rht· stn.1~~·.lr for 1 11 t' I) f' mo r r ;it i c prc~lill·n11:1I n<1tninatiu11 \\'as no rnatcll fur ,\hircu.s \Vl·lb~. A<.'(,'(M"{jlf1~ lo lht' N1clst'n r;i tings, 19 percent of the 1 il•v.t·rs ill the Los Angrlt•s OJ!l\I 'J\J{'s</iJy tll).!.ht \\'.1fl'hcd the srcond Or t/11' tPlev1sed "dl>bates'' betv.-.;en Se 11 s ll ubt·l"I II llurn phrey · and (;eorge S. f\l eCriJvt'rn, batt ling l1ie 1rers Vote DelH1/c (Ju t Ne arly Everyone Listens lo La uder~ SAN JOSF. fUPI \ -Albert 11.,rri" n1ethodi<'a lly p 1 I,. d r11ge1her all the blls anc.! piece~ nl c1rcumsta11tial evid<"n<'f' :1ga1nst Angela Davis, and tol d the Jury it had no alternaln'e bu! to find ht>r guilty of rnurder. kidnaping and eo11- ~p1ra<'y. • Sf>ldoni has a <'lnsin.'l'. sta ir 11r~urne111 in a capital case hl'f'fl so fli11 and unrn1n1ion;1I. hot \hf' as~is1<1111 a!lnr11c1· i:1·ncr1Jl \\'l'dnc~da~ h;1d tl1~ J IU'.\·.~ intense L·oncentration as lit· •H1 ll1ned the events leading 11p to the blo11dy Aug 7. 1970. San Ha facl c<1tirthv11S(' i.;un b;ittlc ;ind altenipted tn tie fll 1ss Davis into a!J of th('fl). <>11 jinr of the rare occ.-..~1ons 11 Ju·n hr shn\\'ed ant: er, llnrns li1:>hct! out at the defense irr tirn:1l1011 there \1·as n o pl't·11H'<l1tale-d pl:1n \vhcn youn g J;1<"k.~on suddenly drew e gun in !he r 0u rt r0i.1n1 nf Jurlge Jl<i ruld Haley where con\'1rt .J<Hn•·:; ~h·Clfl1n v.<1s on trial. i\!c1J:u11 wa:; a cel!mate of c;eoq.~e J .'.lckson at San Quen- 1" ~ ~ ~' --H_R_I E_· F_S_~ We've cut the price of L4-Z-BOY Reclina • Rockers for Father's Day 1'he 28·y('ar·nld r o r m e r UCLA ph1lnltl'.lphy 111.q rl11_·!1Jr sat slun1ped w1!h her chin in , hand, exorf'ss1onless as Ha rris SJ)(•ke. lier turn e;in1 e t0<J:iv when the deft'nse puts on 11~ final argunlrnts -possibly with Miss DBvis Sf)f'aking. l)efense nrguments were ex· rccted to take up most or all of today. J~arris has " hrief rebullal argunlent and !hen the judge will instruct the jury. \lihic h was expected to begin deliberating late Friday. llarris hit hardest at the defense contention that Miss Davi.s knew nothing of the in· tent of Junathan Jackson. 17. to break into the Marin County Courthouse, take hostages and ··r hrrc· w:1 <; no surprise on lhf• p.,r! 1if ~1 eClair1." Harris ~aid . "0nlf•ff' wns oo '\\'hflt ure \OU ,i.:01ng to do?' lnstencl, he ;aid. 'IJJC! )(1U bring the !:'.lj)l''I' ., Thi· rol l of adhes1\ e l<q){' lo'.'hich .J:H·k~n had in a hril'f· L'a~1· \\;)~ 11~('d lo f;1~tl'n a s;io..\Prl-<1ff shotgun tn Hair;. ·s hf':td . td.~n 1n thf' briefcase \\'ere ,i.:uns bought by ,\1fss Ua\ I~ "ff you had seen that roll of tap(' for· the first lime. what in the "'orld would you do with it?" /larris asked . ''McClain kne111 what to do with it because that was the plan. That 1\'as the cornerstone of the plot." .• Harris said Miss Da vis ad- nlitledly bought and gave to Jonathan the shotgun which blew off half of the judge's face_ • ~.. ' ,, • • ' . ' . ' .... . ' ............ ..\ ..!....,.?t--.. \·~·· .'', . ,, .... \' •' ' ., ,· \~ .,., ,·~·'' .~ .. ' ... ~ ..... ' " --· ...... . . \ \ . . . i DA NG LED ·T WO DAYS SICK FROM EL CAPITAN Blair Glenn, 18 , Passed Out Affer Rock Hit Him l ll Cli1ri be r W£1 11 ts To Try Peak Aglti11 YOSEMITE NATIONAi. PARK (APJ -A!Lhoug/J still dizzy from a b!O\V by a !l}mb- !ing rock on El Capitan. a San Jose youth says he \vants to try again to scale the famous Yosemite peak that 111•ic r thv1arted hinl and a p;irtner. But Jlt'Xl \lint•, ht·'ll climb :1.200-ftl(Jt F:J (' <l p i I a n "son1etin1e in the L1!1 11·hcn it's cooler," Bl;1 1r \V, Glenn. 18. .~nid \\'t'drie!'rL1y nftc r elJ:nl1•11g dowu J.8fJO. feet to safely What Happens When You Have to Ration Electric Power? A snuill rock knocked loose hy his cJ1mt11ng con1panion, lJa1·1d PL•drrson, 22. Cupcrl ino, struck c;Jenn·s head SOQ[l ~fter they b('g:in the ir nsccnt "'S"atur- da}. 'l'hey ron!inucd to 1·i iTn b the nex r h1·0 da,1·~. but (;Jenn s:1id the hlnv.··s effect.~ Dnd lhe h(Jf sun 1·<1u.~etl him to p.::iss out tor 45 n1l11u1es r-.fondav 1rhile h:inging froin t1\'0 nvlu·n t_•ords ottached lo Pcdt'rso;1. (;Jenn said he lav on the r0 ck fnre l.300 feet lip ::ill day Tuesd<iy, unconseious part of the time. \vhile PPd crson rcl!C<! do11•11 the niountain. ·r1vn S\\·1ss mount;iinrcrs 500 fcrt below heard the shouts. nntified r;i nge rs in Y.o.,e1n1 te VnllPy. and helped !he str<1nd- ed n1cn clo11·n to the 1,200 fool h•\l'J. For lh-weeka In February, electric power was rationed in England beclUH or I ahutcfown or COii supplies IO fuel generating plants. The haldll-1e11 the s1orJ: Woman dies as power cut candle starts fire Commut ers face 50%cut in r;1enn and Peder s on descended the rest of thr 1vav alone \Vcdncs<l~v. · .. ,_ !houg ht {r (the rock! <·:i used a concussion. but I f Pe l all right no1v. I guess," Glenn said, although admitting he Elill felt some di zziness. lie 1r;1s n1ore irritated at th eir SPrnnd f.:ii!ure to conquer El C;:ip1tan. 1'he first time, they h.:id In clin1b dOl\'TI 11·hen Pederson slipped .1nd hurt his shoulder. Glenn said. Glenn · ll.'as treated at the hospital here ;ind was reported in satisfactory condition. Tile bill, by A :s ~ c HI bl 1 ~IK·i.Jkl:r Hob r..1oretti 111.\'1111 1 /\'uys 1, won 57-.1 ;1pprova1. It \would pr(l hibil th e St all• L.l rl(J;, \('nntn11ssion fron1 1 ~suing any _l11o.11·1· 1111 or gas k':tsr·!i on thl· ;1e1·('ill.:C' e ll1t•t1 Jr ,~JJl i r t 'ill•tl1 !.(IS A.'\CELES flJl'J I -s, n:1'r111r111~r Da vid (;ilt!r. 28, h·1" lil\·d for a divorce frorn iH'lrt'S~ J\'nncy K1van, 33. liil\'!' 1n his petition filed in S11r<'rinr Court \Vednesday, < 1 le ti ''i rrC'concdab!e clif- li·rrnees " (;ilcr and Mi ss I 1\\1:111 \Ver(' niarried in June . l!liO, in Carson City, Nev., and :.cµ;~r<1tt'd 1n f'.'ove1nber, the peti1i on s:1ld. e VD Bill Okayed . SACRA~1ENTO (AP ) Cnlifornia school d I s tr i ct s cou ld contract with pri vate! organizations to pro v id e vene ral disease and drug in-.1 st ruction under a bill headed I fur the Senate. The bill. by Assemblyman .John Vasconcellos 1 !) -Sa n Jo!iel. 1von 58·4 Asse1nb!y ap- proval \Vednesday. e S50 ,000 llail Set SAN DIEGO (/\Pl -Two Texas n1e11 accused of raping ! <ind kidn:iping 11\'o teenage sistcrs-in-l:iw fa ce trial July 1!1 after ha\'ing bail set at $50,000 each. 1·he bail and trial date for J ames Cal!yon Hamilton. 32. of ~raskil l. and Joe J. \Veaver. :!7. of Odessa, were. srll \Vednesday by Superior Court! Judge Gilbert Harelson. e f)is(•·r i••1i11utitJ11? SAN FRANCISCO (r\PI - Charges o f discrimination against female employes have been leveled a~ainst l he Californ ia and l-!awaiian Sugar Co. by seven woman \Yorkers at the firm's Crocke tt rcfiner.v_ In a U.S. District Court suit field \Vednesday. t/1e class ac- tion ::;ought an injunction ordering that every "\\'Oman production worker ... be paid wages or salary equivalent to that 1hey would have received This model shown in Velvet or Leather- like vinyl ... it rocks ... it reclines s129so Toke odvon1age of this ge nuine LA-Z-BO(SALE tod ay and SAVE! HURR Y TODAY ! Come sit down c11nd lounge ., bit in this fa mous lA-Z-BOY recliner-rocker! Comfortable, isn't it? That 's qut1 ilty foam a nd spring consfruc- tion tht1t firmly supports <'I nd cushions you from hedd throug h knee. Just a fl •c k of the sm all stick-shift adjusts to upright sitting and full reclining I no awkw <'lrd body contortions are required). Yo ur LA -Z-BOY just ch a nged fr om d loung e chair to ., sleeper. You'll love the le.,th er.lik e vinyl fabric thc11t's glov e -~o ft, lovely to the eye ... will give you fasting beawty, f.a ithful ~ervice . Hurry to Martin's! This f<!l bulous bargc11 in will sell f.a st! Terms are e t1 sy ! DELI VE RY i1 free, of course! All LA ·Z-BOY ROCKERS REDUCED FOR FATHER'S DAY. NO SPECIAL ORDERS AT SA LE PRICES . m 1865 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa -548-51 31 had they been men." __ [L:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.! train services By St11ff Rcporterll Soutbln bsion"1 lnfa ~ _,be ai1 by hall ll"Olll Mooday. AJJ, BRITAIN ON HALFTIME COSTA MESA-NEWPORT HARBOR LIONS CLUB e 27th ANNUAL e , .. ·~··.,·· --·-' Thousands more laid off as power crisis tight.ens grip -"= :-"".::t'..;:. "=.::,.· -!': =:.: ':': -·--.-·--... -"t:-.. --- _.., __ _ Iiisill111•ionr.d hnu PowtT nits ha•t! C'aosed mn- lions of hens to rrduc,. thf'ir lav- ing, bv remo\•i nii; the bri;t hl lights which fool hirds intn 1hink· ing it is perpetua!l.v spring. 'Millions to be laid orr !tin mor A hnth.~ The 120.000 ririrrn~ flf Jp!Wich. Suffolk. wrr,. ;i~krcf hv !own official.< yest!'rdav to rake no more balhs while fhe power cmrr;:enrv lasts. hrc:H1~e of pumrin;:: stali'l n problems. A shor t period of eleclric power rationing aJmost ~recked England's econo my. Can you Imagine the effect that pennanent power rationing-with recurring brownouts and blackouts-would have on the people of Cali fornia? IT COULD HAPP EN HER E! Proposition No. 9, on lhe June 6 ballot, would ban for five years construction of nuclear power plants, Including those now being built. Jf our norma l power needs cou ld be met at all, t hey would have to be met by increased reliance on fossil fuel burning steam generating p!ants, which em it pollutants into the air. Nuclear plants, by contrast, are a clean source of electric energy. Thus, Proposition No. 9, which Is promoted by Its sponsors as an anti-pollution measure, would lncre ... air pollutlon instead of reduc· ing it At lh'e SarTie t'lme, it would force upon Oilll Californians !he insane risks involved in rallonlng eled'tric power: widespread unemployment, darkened city streets, the loss of such labor .. saving devices as electric stoves and washing machines. DON'T BLACKOUT YOUR FUTURE! Vote NO on Proposition No. 9 CIUfORNllllS HllNSTTilE POLLUTION OOTlmYE 870 Market Street, San Francisco, CA 94102 1127 Wiltlh lre Boule'/ard, Los Angeles, CA 90017 at. ElllL II. JIRAK, Chanooflor.fmeritvs, UfliV1f:lily of C1/Jlomia1 Davis Co-ch~rman e DELICIOUS FISH DINNERS ! • DRAWINGS for 50 PRIZES ! • MI SS MERMAID BEAUTY CONTE.ST ! e BABY CONTEST! e MIDWAY-CARNIVAL-EXHIBITS! e BAND CONTEST ! FRIDAY NI GHT DON 'T MISS THE FUN! Bring The Family for All 3 Days! . ' . THIS SPA CE DONATED AS A COMMUNI TY SERVICE BY: LIONS CLUB 3 BIG DAYS DONATION T ICKE TS ONLY $1 .75 All proceeds go to Ha rbor Are a youth activities & to services for the bl ind ! Y'all Come! COSTA MESA • PARK 1 ... _____ D_o_n .... s .... ~ .... e .. d .... ~ .. 'U .. n...,.d._ ___ ..,. COMPL~!~. ~:5R9 CARE COAST GENERAL _TIRE s~~i~~;o 646-5033 ' I ' "I think we're in real trouble when the family dogs start 'dropping-out'.'' Idaho Bad Me11 Catt"Le Rustlers Do Big Business BOISE , Idaho (AP) -Cattle rustling in Idaho;s cow coun- try is widespread and often uncontrollable, hilting a peak during the late spring and summer as animals graze unattended on e xp a n s i v e rangelands, an -industry of- fici;i l says. "There are rus tling cases all over-one right in the city of Boise." said Robert Hen- derllder. executive vice presi- dent of The Idaho Cattlemen's Association." \Ve 're missing an a\vful lot of t1nimt1ls each year which simply are unac· counted for.'' llcnderlider made th~ com- ments follo v.•ing a meeling of brand inspectors fron1 eight western stntes, in c l u d i n g Oregon. \\',1~hington. ~fnnlan<i. U1ah, :\e\"ada. California and Arizona. "WE"RE PR IM AR I L Y trying to coo rdinate the ac- tiv ittes of the various depnrtments and get 1;1niformi- ty ia inspection and .methods of ehecking movements or cat· tl e."' he said. \fOOern transportation has m;ide toci<1v's cattle thief a mot>ilc individual. "H<' can load up a critter here and be In the r-.tiOwest in a matter of hours." !!en· de rlidcr said. "The biggest problem in rustli ng is the people have ch.:1nged clothes," said Oscar Arstein, Idaho 's commissioner of a-:riculture. l!c mentioned instances whrre cattle brokers h11 ve declared bankruotcy after cat- tle have been shioped from the state. He also cited fa ilure of :slau~ht erhouse firms in both ieastern and \vesfcrn Idaho. "ALTllOUGll THf:RF: are no sµec1fic fir,ures relatini;: to ann ual losses through mstling, Hende r!ider said there are manv instances in which callh! simply are shot and butchered on the ranRe at ni~ht, killed 1:pparenlly for target practice, ehot and hauled av.·ay or :;tolcn for resale. f\1eanwhile. the N e v a d a State Board of Agriculture Ul'!T$~ ~ew Official .Jean Auer, 35, a San Fernando housewife, has been sworn in as a member of the State \Vatcr Resources Con· trol Board, succeeding Kerry Mu lligan who re- 1lgned under fire. Mr s. Au er will rill the la.st •lght months or Mllli- gan 's unexpired term. adopted new regulations aimed at reducing cattle rustling, a problem y,·hich costs Nevada ranchers $300.000 each year. The regulations w e r e adopted following the last of seven public hearings on the ru stling controls. State Agriculture Depart- ment Director Thomas Ballow sa id that despite some changei; made at the request of Nevada ranchers, the r egulations should effectively reduce rustling . "WE'RE GOING TO concen- tr11te on enforcement." B31low sa id . "That's \vhere the \Vhole · key is." The regulations establish a 20·renl pe"r) head fee for cat- tlemen to finance the hiring of :idditional brand inspectors. The initial proposal had be€n for 25 cents per head but it was reduced at the behest of ranchers. The departme nt will begin hiring some add itional full I ime brand inspectors and a full-time li v estock in· vestigator. They will Join some 130 individu als who work with the department ()J1 a parttime basis as inspector!. Payments On Co yote Los s Eyed WA£HINGTON IAP ) Jlome on the range, wher'e sheep are the coyotes' prey, those owning herds have cliscnuraging v.·ords about the millions ttley're having to pay. So. under a bill due to reach the House floor soon. (ederal taxpayers would compensate farmers for sheep and other livestock killed by coyotes-in· demnifica tion to the tune of up to $50 million a year. "RAO PRECEDENT ," says Rep. Paul F'indley !R-Ill .), an opponent of the legisl<1tion ap- proved by the H o u s e Agriculture Com m it tee , Indem nif ica tion payments "in general are a questionabfe field ." he adds, "and this one is the most "'ide open to abuse thal we 've ever considered." Bu t, says Rep. \V. R. Poage, (D-'fex.J. chairman of the committt>e and chief backer of the bill. the coyote population is on the rise while the federal government contributes to the farmers' probl em through a ban on poison . The legislation, with a five- year limit, contains no specific figures but aides estimated rair-market·value cln ims could range from $10 million to $50 mill ion annually. Payments would be made afte r Agriculture Depa r tme nt verification or the loss . DURING 1t70, according to testimony received by the committee, sheep losses to predatory animals nationwide ran $1 7 million, plus substan- Ual calf los!ies. P!iage says the bill "is war- ranted as a result of receflt federal action prohibitlag con- tinued use In predato r y~ animal control work of certain chemicals Jong employed in combating coyotes and other destructive car n I voro u s animals." But. says Findley, "the bill does not get to lhc root of the problem. Jt would be far bet ter for Coni;:re!is to enact authorit y ror interst11te shli>- ment of the poison under FOl>- er conditj<>m." Th11rsdar, Jul'lt l , 1972 Refores ting Methods Un d er Fire I . I SPfCIAL EDUCATION SUMMER SCHOOL lflodlwlf,_.lhfllll te:llOf!ltt<t ,., Ill• llOW ll.AllNlflt, .t.U11STIC. Nl:U llOlOOIC•llY ,.AN01("•1'"1f0 •M OfNl.lt' wm• •-••! , .. ,...,.., pr.-. J'INE, Ariz. (AP' ecolog1sls have the companies and U.S. Service up a tree. -The timber Forest The men who harvest the trees say their heaviest criticism comes because ol :Kimething that's essential to assure a continuing supply of trees. That is the pract ice of lea\'· Ing the laod sacrificed, or torn up by the bulldozers and trucks, after the trees have been cut for lum ber or pulp. REPJl£Sli:J\'1'ATI\ .ES of the news media were shov.n hj1\\' the forests are being cut and reseeded during a tour of the nation· s largest st..1od 11£ Ponderosa pine spqn.sorl.'d by Southv.·est Pine A:;~oc1ati on Kaibab Industries, Southll'l'Sl Forest Industries and tltl' F'orest Serva:r_ 'l'h~ foresters conC1'.'ded that a !ogged-1'.lver area is anything but prt'!tY, v.·lth the bran Lhe:-: piled high for winter burning and !he ground lorn up as if 11 had been plo\~ed. In the cur· Clear All Drain Cleaner !~ :, ~.- CLIAR AllL --------..__, ... ---- e Sop er 1lron'il ... Th• on• prof.u;on 111 "' e Unclog l dra;"i in minu ltl -iiier Bonus 2500 Sq. Ft Bag Scotts 'Bonus' For Dichondra • s1r.n9lh11n1 dic hondr• e Pr•v•nh 1pott1d 1pur9•, <rebqr•n e Con"trol c••li1 and many olher w111d1 1295 ln-Sink-Erator Garbage Disposal • Grind1 and d1•pOtfl, t a•y· lo·in.+afl • l if11 !im6 lub . ritalion • Mod61 No. JJ3 U.L. 1pprov1d 26.88 Your Choice 9-lnch f;'C5~t Roller Covers • • Dyn•I or Moha ir rl'/\t ~try \\ e<ithl'r, the v. inc ts sllr up dus~ But Dick Beaubien, d1 str1•'l ranger of the Co<.'001no :\a· tional Forest, saJd that if the lurnber compan1r!' didn 't le i.J \"C lh(' ground th.'.1t "'ay, ll:t• J.'oresl Si:r1.1i.'l' "·vu!d 11<1\'t' to spend nlOlli.'Y tu s<1cr1fy ti !•\ u1 u.ke ll 1norc rl·cept1ve to tht· seeds blul\"!1 frt1n1 the pl11t• l'OJlC.S. And e:i:Qfpt in the cas(• r1f burned over areas "'hf're U11·rc is no natural reseeding, Brau· bein said this \~as a be!!t•r 11·ay to insure more trees thau started two years ago . But Lhls )e.ar, whea the seedlings Pl~E TR EES AVERAGE 11 nre ready, the Coconino is too j,(U<Kl s('fti crop t~very srv('n dry so they're being diverted y<':irs, In those )'ears. llll' to another area. I -· PlfitlST SUMMll SCHOOL c;1., .. , tor 1~• •1Ht " r c~Jld Ju.• !'1~ ~ July ll!f! Tl.AN$POlTATION P'ROV IDID KENWOOD PRIVATE SCH OOL SSS 5o. Wat111' ,.A••~,.. 5J).))10 r onl'S :ire gathered and put in Along the Blazed Ridg('1 dl-Cµ lrf<!Le. 1nuch as a Road. near the r-i.togollon r1m .1 \'t'll'r1nar1<1n freezes Ille sper:n the new smen were shown how o! ;i pr1 zr bull an area logged in 1964 had TJ1e ~~ds :ire sent lo A reseeded itself. 1::::::::::::::::::::::::'. Fvrest ~rvi<'e 01~ra1ion at Along }lic ks Road. lhe) S.'lnla F1·, N.l\1 , for prc>1:-Wt>re shown how the frrshlv TAKE THE c·ssing ~11d then . in 1he cnse log"ged area looks and told "ti; of U1c (\'<'i1nino, lo a Forc;;t it shoul d lie left that wav NEWS QUIZ Scrv11·c nursery at Boi:-l'. ral!ier than re~eeded u1 gr as; I We Da e y OU lcl;1ho, for plant ing, F<lr une !Jung. t!k' i-:r .• ~s r • • • "For 1·x :111111le, 1h1;: Co<:onino \\111110 ~t't'P thr pine ~ef'i:l lr•uo 1 Every Saturday sr11t S{~d.s to Uoi.o;e to_tw _1.if..1n1: h~·ld 111 !he ~rtiun<t ·t__ ---------· ----~-- KERM GETS SET . FOR SUMMER 'SALE-ING' Miracle Super-Stick Panel Adhesive e EMy to ~pply e Hai ext1a 1ticki~q powio• th11I la1h 11 nd 111111 e A liHle qoe1 • lonq w11y Strong, Durable 4 In. Dryer Vent Hose e Qyal;ty m1<de for thenqth and 1ef11tv e Sturd~. long. l~1lin o; m111 h e Ge! al much Of n1 littlo "' vou ~e ed. Glidden Latex Ceiling White -• Gofl on .> T ru-T est 19-lnch Econo Mower e Co ~»e n•e ~!, e~•'t' ,for• ~~~d ie e B"qll• & S••otto~ l H.P. Big 4x8 Foot Wall Paneling e M1~ worn oul •oom loc ~ f•61h 6nd n6w e Choo16 dar~ "L11 Monch11" or liqht-color,.d "Sprinqwocd" e E1t'V lo in1l11ll Cast Iron Single Hibachi • H•rdwood t.1 ndl111 mak1 it 111ilv r•· moveble lon9 l•1lln9 in dur1ble t11t iro11 239 . ,if, Brigh~ Colored ~ /:I Tiki T arches < r Exo!i( forc~11 Tru Test 20-lnch Time Saver Mower down for 1toraQ• e l .S H,P, !1;9q• I Str811on Black & Decl!er 7 li Circular Saw lmprow1d, burnout prol1ci•d l·hor11pow1• motor e !1v1t end d•plh 1djo1lm•nh e Mod1I No. 7)01 19.99 Big, Tough 9x12 Foot Plastic Drop Cloth • Prol•<h fu•n ; • lot• ""d floott fro.., P•int ,p;11, 6···· ..... ,h~·· 10-Pound Bag Of Charcoal Briquettes • Mnl.11 • 9ood I ''~fTh ~~· • Sl't>octh 1pply . +to, 1moolh •nd on 6·foot pol11 hot r;,, i119 W~fi~~ I dri ple11 Cho:c, of i ~~;vi~".'~-\ e Goad qu•lily '!J ~ ~~/:Y • c ol orful on1m1I • F11f lightiiull Ea1~ to U•I, \ \ lo 1111 o~•• lateX • finl1h•1 • Slow hornin9 '~: J \ . Ind OW•r ~ \ ··1 e Fih 1ltndt1d ~ \ .,. 9" 1o ll1r1 t .\ :i 39c ••I K: ... ~;:k !1 f ,' • f •. '\i.:: ~ . "it'" • e~1v lo cl w1n ceiling " • EcollOl't>'f pric1d W'(ge 1.99 ~ Copveniently lo(otecf .•. EoJy To Reach! 2666 HARBOR BLVD. ·IN COST A MESA PHONE 546-7080 I I HOURS. 1· EE KO AYS 9 TO 9 S~TURDAY >-ND SUND AY 9 TO 6 PM I ·q .. ctptc:ity l 1nd1 •lmoiph1•• 1.29 ·- coin Mlll • M .~. I U•• YO• h•w• 111ou9ht 66' l 2 DAil V PILOT Thursday, Jun'-l, l9n C01111ty Pol.iticul Notes Fituess Talk Planned :100 s. rlo~·er St .• here. For The Schmitz Committees Told ORA.~CE -Dr. Ja<'k IL \Viln1ore, as.s1slant irotr:.s.sor of physical educat ion al lJC 03vis will be a r~tured .~peaker et the Orange (;oun1y By (). C. H US1lNGS 01 I~• D•l!Y l"lltl 11•1! TUSTIN -J\1~rt' 1\•ho's ,~·~·10 in !he effort to rerurn 1hc John r~1rl'h s .. rif'!y's J 11hn S(·hnlill !IJ c·ongrrss: ~I is lead ing lhe ''llor111r~ umm1ttce f•;r Schrnllr. '· .. The d<><·turs on the ('f/'1 1 millet" arc s u pp or t 1 11 I! t.'ongressn1:tn S1:l1n1il7. l°lf'l·;1u~·· he has a phi\ c11 1 rcord ol ••1 ~ posinJ: soc1:1 l11ed 1nt'1l1t 1111· a11d ~upport ing the pr11 tilt• p!' :.• · tH'r of n1e<11M\'I('" .:;111 s ll1. Gr11h:un . 1'.tedical Association's 16th An· \\'0111en'$ Clubs . nual Physical fitness 1uld lll·r sut>Chairmen include : Sports Clinic Saturday at the H;.oncht'r Gary ·raylor· coveri,1g medical association building, Anv lnte~ttd person 1s we!cOm,· to attend. There b no chllrge and the m e d I e a I nW>Ciation will ho.-5t a buffet luncheon. Registration i! set for 8:30 .;i.m. ~·ith t.lie con· ference concluding at 2:30 p.m . Births SOUTH COA.S'I' C.O 'olM IJ ll lTY "°'''""t. May t , l fl1 Mr. l l'<f M•t. Wlnl•M 0 01'&1(1 '1Cl(t<lr!t t11 lM w, M•r!PO<t1, s.,, C.•en1•nl•, t lrt. /-11• •nd '-'" Jor<" 11•""~''1 JIMll'I• f)f UU T-1• *"lilt Ot•~•. L••wnt fl••CM, bO•. M,ty 11, 1•11 Mr ~ftd I>" Jal'i,,~I• L•• ~''"""'W~M of '~'' N.o•tan, O•••G•, 9.r1 Mr tn,. "''" 1•rr• t•<rw•lt )., • ...., .,, U S Mlr,.,ar, San C lt...,tnl~ .• ;,,, M .... 11, 1'11 Mr •nd Mrs_ J~"'~ M, ""'"""' o! ·1cS V,1 50<0<ro. Sa n {l~m~n!t, t>o• , .. , l'>C "'"·-ll(ff11'•1M .Jrnn •of>"''' fll ?1'n Stn v rncen1e. Mo•I•.., v 111o, •·•! Mil' U . l fn Mr. •rid If,,_ Da·1,e1 Jo5~o" HO~•n ot 1•j.ll L"' Serr•"°'' Lac!iun1 t!Touel. DAILY "ILOT Still ,,.,,019 .1 First i\1rs. Jaequeline l ieJ!h· er of Ne \\.·port Beach is the first lvoman ever elected chair1nau of th e board of the Orange County J lea rt .1\ssocia· lion. ... ~----------~ M1y lf, ltt1 Mr 1"(1 "''i SleO!'lon l(ln9 Lo ~·•, rf ,115 No, "•etman l1n1, Soni~ ,.,,,, t lrl May l,, 1t 71 Mr •nd Mri. LIHV Du••• Scnn•'I el ~S2 A, M<l"l.,1v, Sin {l1>n1enTe, OQ• ,..,.,. 11, l f'2 Mr. I"<! Mri. HI•<>~ It. S!au/f OI ~50 W. Vlclorla, A. San C:~mJnt•. bOY I T', JOSll"tt MO:ll'tfAL May II, ltt1 Mr, and Mr•. l"r.atrlct T, Smi1~e, sm.a 111r., El Toro. DOv. Pissolutimis Of Marriage Purchase Of Trails Approved ORANGE -F'i\'e r111Jes of abandoned railro.ad tracks and right--of-way ,1·ill be purchased by Orange Countv ~llftl'N Mir I f bl " "d" d I "k· Gr .. r, S.is1n C•ro1 1..., a:H,. J ae~ Or pu l~ r1 1ng an !I 111g: Parrir1t!on, "hrlli1 Mary 1nd Jl«>ert't trails. Henrv County supervisors ·voted lil:ler.1rd, M~rv J1n1 i nd Rot>trt Tuesdaj tl) buy the Southern L90l\fl•d Paci fic Trans...,.rtation C:1>.'s Sd!lt!'tltl. Cl••• '11!1 I n.cf ~lfreo' lrvln1 t'v "'•nu~. Jo 1"e1 Jon.. J. property which me:lndC!'S w 1r1h, °"""1 M1e a,,d cr.1ri.1 C•rl through Orange, 'fustin and LOH9 "9r, Low Ann end i-lllrlnOI' F . s11r1me1c, JMeotl J. •nd ""•v Jo the north Tustin area. Mel-. l<Ml!IH11 J••n •nd Jtst• Mow1rd 0-.!, ""'" H-1...i J<>hn l'••ncl9 Frl1bj1, Glori• Je1n •"" Erwin VIC!or U.w, Glcl Je•" Yv0!'1n t t nd Jl~btrl Edw1rd F1ll1llfli, Grewory 0 Gt!>erQe e II d E1lr•he!ll Gol!lolein, 81rn~1 111d WtoMY Jt nC" Co1dstt ir. l n1cn. Ell.,, LO\Jl'e 1nd "'"'" 01Jn Arctllbtld, W1nd1 L. aM J•mr s T. l o r.r1rH11. L1s!le fl. 1rid w11111.., I . N1ol1r. Mt rl1'11 Ann .Ind Paul 0.le, Alln 0 1,....,, IM lllOC.rl l . The county can pu rchase the property for $300,000 the pr ice of six acres. 'rhe railroa<l fir m 'viii donate the remaining 28 acres. acl'orcling lo Supervisor Ralph Clark in \\·hose fourih district the right· of-v.•ay is located. Th<-··0cnti~rs Committe~ for Schmirz" 1$ headed bv Dr. J);:ile 1::. Hnllison of Or811,1:e. l!;dl1so11 has been :l n (Ju(.;poken /Jll'tnber of !hf' ()r.'.111gc Count\' Bo:1rd rot f·:durntinn. but ·i~ not running fi'lr re-t>lection !his ye:ir. l!t> :..ays tJentists :ire !'.'UP- por!1ng Scluniti bC<'.'ausP .. he I" 'Jpposf'd to sociali?.e<I d1.:n- tls try becausC' it \'.'Ou!d turn ;:i profrssijJn i11tu H IJu reaucr:c1ey. ·· l\len1bers of Tt:illisozi"s con1- n1 il!te include : Norman L, Cra,.,•ford, presid~nt-c)1·rt of 1he tJ11iiigc c Ounty J)t·ntal A.~sfiCi:ltlon: Fr1u1k L. f']!Jrrs, Costa f.1('S:J ; Terrell L. Ruot , Costa iiesa: John J. Thor11· quisr. Ornnge: James f. Car- ri·. Fullerton: -\\'illi:in1 P. Sn111h. Fullen0n; Charles \V. t:antrell. San t<! Ana : Guilbe~t T_ Stroschein, Tustin; John L. ).fcAndre\V , Santa Ana: Ran1on \Vert s. J·'u!lerlon ; \\'iJ!i."lnl T. .Kott. Anaheii n: fi ohert E. \\'ashbon, Ne,vp11rt Beach. and Donald I. , J/untsn1an, Anahein1 , "' * * * Halph E. Crah:nn. :1 n Orange phy::;ician and o·.~·ncr of Chapn1an General 1-lospilal and !lie San Clen1ente 1-lospi- County Helps Figlit Dread Horse Disease BJ· PATRICK BOYLE Of Int D1ilr Pllol Sl•!f ~ccording to county l\1osquito Ab:lten1ent District Di.rector SANTA ANA -/\s a result Jack Klrnball. of research partial!y tunded Unlike I h c n1osquiroes. n1idges live on the botton1 of a by the Orange County i\Ios· pond or pool. Traditional 1nos· quito Aba tcn1ent Dis Ir i ct, quito eating fish feed on the scientists at UC Ri\'e r~icl<' surface and rarely eat the hope to create a "biological midge larvae, Kimball notes. barrier'' iu. i\·lex1C'O In slop the Bui th" tropical fish being ~prend of tlrt•.'lded horse raised by Dr. Lt>gner. the The do<·tr)r'i <"Ornrn1tlet• i ~ planning :1 IJ:1rlx•cu1· !ht~ Sau1rcl ay ~ll !lit• El Tr1!'(1 r:111( 11 of Griltlill1 B1t1art. <1 111t•111brr or lhl' S.111 .JIJ;\(IUlll t'lt'flll'/l(:IJ'\' school board. Thr li:irbel'U(' 1s set for 4 p Ill. It 1:> 11pc11 to !hr public. if 1·o u h<l\'e Lhe pr1ce , \VhJC'h ls ·:siu per head. Dr. (;rnhan1 a11d Dr. VincenL P . (';1rroll of Laguna Bf'<iC'h ;:ire co·c-ha1r111e11 of 1he e\e11t. 01hers on !hi' J)oc tor>1 !'11ni- lll1!t re fllr &:hn1ir1: 1.yh· C:. \'ogl'L Orangr: Hi ch:lt'd L. ~l1111on. Tustin, F. E::i rl ll'oodhu l!. Ana,1('i111 : Chnrles t u~la l\lt'SH at large. Jl.ealtor l ____ _ !JJl'k Vors1·tt. r.lesa .No1 th ; r •. rn1er Costa ,\tesa flfS\Vr" .h>lin Snulh. ~les;:i Del ~1Jr; 111vet\tur Jat•k Byrd, r>orlh <'olll'gt Park : Jtcaltor Cha rley lirnw11. St111th College Park : ll+gl1 S...!1(11Jl ·reacher l\lary t\ulan . Suu t/1 Mesa Vt>rde : /\! r<1~p:1t1· Exl.'i·utive 'Frank J(:11nsc.1 , Central flt es a \ l'l'dt·. :incl Health F'oocl Store l\l~inager (;en e l:lurkeland , Nl•l't h l\1csa Verde . HAR801 CENTEA F, f>]C'l'dil1", (;al'dell (;n•\'('; llOO Harbor (fnl1t '> Co•I~ Mt••, C•lllor1ti• l{nbert G. Ren\·es, S:int:i An:i Ph. (71 41 979.2353 Doris Arat1jo. Anahe1 n1. ;i 1111 s. Brookhur$t s1. An•~flm, C1I. '21114 member of the coun tv Bo<ird l'h. 17141 77•·5800 , • I See by Today's Want Ad s • i\·lARir-.·i;: EQUIP~fENT: A Jvhnson OB, 28 JIP, 1n l'XC'"lll'nt c·ondilion and Voit 11·alo"r s)o,.;, 01"11, stn· .{;le and rloublM. e FURNITURE ~'A\.OR· f'TE:: A \\"a!nui tabll", I 1·'1airs and a buffet. Tht!y nre all f'.>:l'1•ptlonal. e TALLY HO! and a1,·ay you go, in this '71 V\V camp- _Pr. Tl has ~hag CaJ"Jl("l!I', Jjm mlle:<1 and i~ ln :i;pot- lc:;.~ l'Ondition. of f>~ducatiori : HC'1irv V ]•••lllliiiiiiiiitiiiilliililloill•ril F:astnuin, Tustin. and 1·a<l E. ==~;~~~~~~~~i:~~;~~=:iii:iiiiiiiiiiii~::~~~=~~~~ Lonerg;in, 7us1111. / * * * OAANGf COUNTY CHAP'TIA et AIA AND MESA OIL MAI NUASllY Saddleb:lck \<,1llcv ;1 re n H p 1 All J h thairn1un for lhr. Schn11tz ave ut t oget er complrlgn is Chorle< KcttlnL 4t. of 24072 E;igleinont, El IN OUR CAROUSEL COURT Torn. an ;nveslmcnt cotmseloc. ~oath ~oast ,. .... forn1er aero~p;iet> t'rnp!oye f:J _... an<l president of the S:id · dJ('back Reptiblic;1n A~~cn1bly.f -;,;-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::~ Jlis sulx:ha1rn1r 11 are .l)or Pcllcttieri, El Tori>: Dick Ackerrn;in, T\-fi.1sio11 Vi ejo: Bob &J ls v.•orth. Lei sure \\·orld: Jeff Johnson . Capistrano Highlands, \Vest' Sartin, Lake F'ore~L and Clyde f),1 1·1s. Agc:ln I lllls. * * * ALL·DAY CLASSES Kindergarten thru 8th Grade ' • Teachinf the 4 R's with phon ics HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS di sease, Vrncquelan equine tllnpi;i, fccOs both on lhl' en cephalomye!itls (VEE: I. surface and the bottom. l\lrs. Jr'<in Suinr:lll li'Gti Tile disease \'.'as re~ponsible .. These fish arc the onl v Bahan1;i Place, i' CtJst:1 'lf's>t Enroll Now Fall Semester • Door-to·Door Bus Strvic1 •Before and After School Care • Reasonable Tuition REGISTRATION FEE ONLY $10 IN l'OUNT,t.I ~ VALL EY' 1683) B•OOl'.~unt S!ree1 (714) 962-3312 Xeep your chlldrtl\ in good hinds. Ask about our Div C.,. •nd Summer School. Ct""°"· Mtrri1m Lovl1t Incl l am~ nrf1 Jove•, J o """' end Gr~orv A. U1!let , J t nH E. tnd ROfl•l!I E _ ••1•01l•r. C••otr n J, 1nd O••n YI. J-1, M1rllvn I. ltOn Vernon Ttllbo!l ttu. "•nnv II, 1"<1 J1moo' e Th e track has been cnuscd since the 1969 floods when a bridge across SantiaP,"o Creek· was destroyed . Because only one trai n a day made the run to Tustin, the rail road clecit!?d lo abandon rather tti:in rcbuHd tht> bridge . for the deaths of thousands of hope \\'C have of really cnri· ..,rea chainn;in fur Sthn'll!7. horses in 1971 and resulted in trolling these midges," Kim· ~-!rs. Sun1ra1! is sf'contl vie<' a go\·ernment-funcled m:iss ball notes ... Chemicals just president of thr Orange Ccun· vaccination prograrr, of all aren't effective anymore." ty Federation of Republican ho~es in the Southwestern 1-:'..:~:..:'..'.::::'.'.:.::.'.'.::.:.'.::::..:.:___ __ .::.':__'.__:".'.'."..:'.'.'.'.:'.'.....:'.'....'.'.'.:".:~~'.':.'.'.'.'.:...::'."""""""""""""""""""""""""""'::::===--:--:--:--:--:--:--:--:--:=~==--:--:======~ U.S. The county ab.1tement N . ..:t11y, Glor!• C11n1r1,.,. """ e11,,.or!ll JaiOj)tl - Sml!li, l<""llt!ll P1lrnt i-•r>a' kat~1rinr Fl1n11111 •• ,.,.,,, Alice I nd Jotin ·Ort"'' Qul11ri1n1 1ne1 S1nllto<> Me1~ur1H, Wlllll• ...... '"" S11~I•~ Cl111n SMwell, N1rocv A. •"" llruc1 f:. Cr1w!ord, L!llCll l . and J<>/ln Cr1wlord S1/letf, G""'r"'11t I nd W1rr.., S. Tru111Mt11. Jol!n Paul tM S1ndr1 Louis• ~tlfor!I, 1(1v Jove~ i n.cf LHll1 Eute't!lll w.,.,.,, w11111m 1nd v1r11n11 11.nlY•, 111-'1 0 . tnd ~lry It. llothmtn, Murrey S. 111d AIC11 H. !IUllt, Anetll"9 Mi r!-l llCI Jlmm1 W"ldon Pin.di•~" Oi1nt i nd 1(1rl Ltovd S1...:!1, J 1m1• H, i nd AC!t!a W l(roc ~, Collttn Ell1n tnd 11111;., W1Db, Frede!IC" C. •M PaTrJc 11 ,.,,,, "ALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona dr:l l\far 173.9450 Costa ftlr:sa 846-!U-t BELL etoADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Cosla l\lesa (J 3-34.U McCORMJ& LAGUNA DEACH idORTUARY t7'S Lagnna' Canyon Rd. 4H-Hll • PACIFIC VlE\I MEMORIAL PARK C.metory -.ry Cbapel 31411 hclli< View Drive Ne11'pO!t 11<1cb, Clllfornla lff-fllt PEEK ,AJllILY COLONIAL FUNERAL DOME 7111 Bo11a Avt. Wnlmb111er in 1511 SM11m':ORTIJABY 117 Mm It. ea • ......,._ .... Since ihen. ;)e<·1)1·di11g 10 <.:lark. the r i~ht~f-way has become a county duinµ. lull of cans and other debris. Ke nneth Sampson. county director of harbors. beaches and parks said the µroieet might be aided by funding from federal or state ~rants. Other monies he snid, cou!d be gai ned fron1 the state sales tax on gaAf:lline that has been earmarked fo r environment:i l enhancement, or fl'om county toad and flood control funds . Pot Iss ue To Be Aired ANAHEI~f -A discussion or the California ~f;:irijuana Initiative \~·ill be held here al 5'.30 p.m. F'rid3y 1n the Unitarian Ch urch of Orange County, 1120 \\'est Sant.1 Ana Street. Speakers v.•ill include Dr. George Chun. author o f "J\1ar ijuana. a Realistic .l\p- proach:" A. C. Germann, pro- fessor of Criminology at C;il State Long Beach: Robe rt Ashford , proponen t of the ini- tiative n1c3sure; and (;orclon l:Jrown eJJ, formtr member of Crtlvernor Ron;ild Reagan's election committee. district has contributed $10.000 In tile research nf TJr. Fred Legne r 1n rnising mosqu ito 1\'.Uing l'ish \1·irh \1·hich i\tex· iran pond.<;. ~lrt•;ims ;:ind ir· r1 ga1i on ditchc.o: ll'il l b r. stocked. "Ry stocking 11\('Sc !ii-i h in l\texico." Dr. Legner notes, "\\'C hope tll help officials 1here cut do\\·n on populations of 1nosqt1itoes that carry VEE . \\'e also hope lo create a vast reser1·oir of these fish in the U.S. should the need arise." According to Dr. John Philp , ch ief 014-the Orange County 1-1 ca l th Department, the disease is not f'Xpected to ha\'e anv effect on the countv horse pof>ulation this yea r .. During 1971, the he;ilth department supervised the vaccination of about 18,000 horses to combat the spread of VEE. which ha d killed several animals in other parts or the state. Dr. Philp said almost every horse in the county recei ved thC' VEE \'acc.ination and that on!y new-born anim:lls or ones t h:it h a\' e reccn!ly been brought into the county should n(·<'d the \'acclnation "\Ye are urging the owners of t.hrse horses to contact their veterinarl:ins for the vat- 1'inalinn," l)r. Philp s.1id. In :id<lition to l1elping com· L;1\ \'EE'.. the ('OUnty funtling IJf Dr. Legner's rescarcl1 l1as resu lted in n1;in\· countv floocl control ch:lnnets. being Stocked ,V.'ith special mid,ge-ea ling fish. . . . (hvosc 'i I ~i :: I .( . ('arcers ·~. '·'I frtpert now for '1;' I • ehell1ogi"' CerMr .i~ • ,, u 1MEDICALASSIST· 1-· ANT,MEOICALOFFICE t• Rl'CEPTIONIST,Of'OENTAL \~ ASSISTANT/RECEPTIONIST in ~; our modwn f1cilltim. An •lltibl9 instf· ·;.~ tutlon underthl FEDERALLY INSURED r STUDENT LOAN PROGRAM~ APl'ROVEO ·~ I fM VETERANS 9nd dlPI ........ ~ Tuition PAYMENT ., ' Pl.ANS1nllllble. Ufetime lMPLO MENT REFERRAL y SE RVICE •t no lddltlon.J ·cott. ACCREDITED ~· . i.1 tt.. Ac6Ml1h1i ,._.,.,,."' •I th• ,.,.,...,_.I A9"1_..lt •f Tr ..... TedmlC•I Sdl .. 11 Wrft• ., l'ha. let ,,.. ,,.,._,. '· :{ ' SAVE JO( The regular rale for a 3-minute sla lion-to-station cal l made with Operator ass istance is $1.50 no malter when yo u call. But ii you dia l direc l, without Opera16r assistance between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m weekday s, this same cal l to San Francisco costs $1.20. SAVE70( Dia l di rec I between 6 p.m. an d 1 1 pm .• Sunday through Friday and hol id ays· (or 8 a.m. to 11 pm. Salurda y) and lhis cal l will cost you only 80¢. SAVE s1.01 ' Call between 11 p.m. at night and 8 a.m. in 1he mo rn ing (or from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Su nday and holidays ') and you can dial direct anywhere withi n California fo r 49¢ or less. All rates are for three-minute station.to-station calls from Santa Ana to San Francisco, plu• 111. • Dial direct rates also apply on Operator-assisted statio n·to-sta!ion calls placed from com· munitij s where long d istance canno t be dialed di rec t. Dial d irect rates do not apply on persoi'l-to-person, collect, credit card, hotel·guest ca lls, calls charged to another number or calls o~r 40 miles placed from coin phones.· 'Holi day rates for call s withi n California apply in 1972 on Wa shinglon's Birthd<iy (Feb, 21), Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas and ,New Year's Day. DIAL DIRECT-IT'S FASTER AND CHEAPER. @Pacific Telephone l l ' ) l • ! f ' I I ! l ' l ' j ~ i , Ii I ' 'I , I ' ' c I l<I ' t ' ) ti ,, 0 h '·' .I. • " ~~ ti w •• ,, '" in pl en h b c ,, ,, T1 T; ,, J'aually Circ11• by BU Keanr ' ~ l I l l ". , ..... ~ -........... . ''Well , Daddy , how do you like be in' a BACHELOR ?" '· f , ! j Diaper Rasla : Phosphate Curb ' <il ('Effect Stn.~!ed 1 'MIAMf. Fla. (AP) -Sir months after Dade Count(s ban on phosphate detergents went into effect, housewives -say their wh ites are grayer : ancJ a hospital repo rts a slight J. inc rease in diaper rash cases. ' Pel.er Ba!jet, Dade County · pollution control officer and a 'lea der in the fight for th e ban \\•hicb went into effect Jan. I. said that his office received calls frotn house"'ives who say the nonphosp hate dclcrgenl s 1flon't get \\"tutei-:is 1\·hi!f' as ,1hc phosph..,te tlt>!Crj'.!C11ts did. "'But n1ost of the 11•omen s;1y th£'y don't 111ind it 1f it helps Clean up our ~·3tcrs." he ad- ded. OFFICIALS AT Jackso n \lemori:il llospital rcportl'd they harr "l'<'n a slight 111- crcase in d1apc.·r ra!lh t;l!->(':;_ ··1 underst:u:d lhe incidence or draper rash reportl'd at hospitals has ~one up coun- tyv.'ide verr sligh11.v," one J;ickson doc!or s<ud, "and 8 I I ho U g h 11•e haven"l rcscarehM u lo 11herc we can :>:1v it "s drf1n1 tel v because of thi-phnsphatc ii;in. r (:an·! think of anl" o1hl·r eausc Iha! 11•ould <'UI aCro~s :111 soci al and eeonom1c lrnC's.·· Pollution <.:untrul off1 c1:rls say that 11"s still too early to le!! if the ban 1r11! ac/11(·1·c 11" intended eflrcl of J011"cr1ng the phosp!,ate eontcnt in arC'a <'anals ;ind 11;llf'r1vays and help c[in1111atc the a 1 g a c buildup that covered many ranals ~·1th a sli my green c11rpct o[ Vl'gctat1on Baljet said the ban might be st.1vin~ off an outllre;ik of RC'd 'fide in H1sca\"11c Ba~·-Heel Tide is a killer ,11gae lhal slaughters fish ;ind other lnsta·Matlc" Color Tuning 1n1k11 po1tfbl• 2 r:JJB'tontro• BICI UN ol lnett-Mttlc Color Tuning, Motorolt etl mln•l•d tl'I• compl!ctted , color 1dju1lm1nt bunon• on lht r1mo11 control lr1111mlt11r 1o ""~' 11mo\1 control tunlmjj •••Y· $11 1 d1mona1r1t1011 todt~I 11·1 • gr11t ~•lu11 marine life by the millions, but Baljet admits there is no way to prove that the phosphate ban is helping in this instance. "IT'S TOO EARLY. I do not expect we will find any niarked improvement in -0ur \\•aters for at least a year," the pollu tion control official said "\Ve realize that ph05phates are just one of the many n u t r i e n ts 1vhi ch cause nvercnrlcbment or waters and a corresponding algae bloom." Baljet said. ''but phospha tes arc one that could be con- trolled. and it 's a step in the right direction." The ban \Vent into effect ovrr sarong obj~tions by :-u1nr detergent i n d us tr y rrprescnt:it1\'CS \l'hO Jobb;ed hard in an unsuccessful ef[ort 10 defeat 11. The pro-phosphalf' detergent fo r ce s predicted there wollld be a rash of child poisonings from the phosphate rree detergents, but th is has failed to materialize. Baljet said of the -poisoning prediction: "We knew th is "·ou ldn't happen . People can re..1cl the warning labels on detergent boxes •.. and keep tbem a"·ay from chHdren ." !{cal H.iahness " LONDON (AP) -The fliers of four royal fami!es -iri- cluding the 8.S-ycar--0!d Infante Don Alfonso of Spain \vho still pilots bis own plane -are combining effo rts for a book ;ibout royal exploits in tbe air. 'fhe other flying enthusiast s are from Britain. I b e Netherlands and Thailand Modtl TT5MJW MOIOROLA Quasai:H works~n-8-drawer~ consolette colorTV s4999s 540·7131 -TV & APPLIANCE CENTER • Horbor c .. 1.,. e 2l00 H-II .. COSTA MESA FDA Ban on WASHL"'JG1'0N (Al't -The NatJOnal Soclely for t he Prevention of Rhndness 111 n"lollnting a public campa1g11 lo force a ban on all f1re~·ork.s, including the safe-!lnd-sane" variety it claims are among the mOBt dWlJl Crou:i. those used !or !Jcrn:.cd putilir display Fireworks Pushed LOOK AWEIGH l Otltrabillll. Tiw: SCK'lt'ly ·~ particularly rrl1f~ Bl tht government 's re- J0Ctlon of 11.! 1969 survey on fireworks injuries as "1n co1nplete. vague aod of ques- tionable value." taius .i1'"1d Ru1111u1 c;indlt'll "caused 42 pt"fCent eacti of tht lot3l cases, inJury cases and property damll.He C'aSt.'i . larger Clas,., 8 hrework.s ~tween 1967 and 1970. "To ben 90rtlething. )'()ll · don't just \¥3\"t' a mag ic wand," said Dale (' .. 1'tiller, compliance officl!I" in tht> FDA 's Bureau of Prod uct Safety, ··t:mollon has got nothing to do with one of thes{' LOOK t>anniog actions ." 'rhe New York -ba s ed org<Jnization has ma1Jed nn ap· peal to J JO newspaP<'rS acrO:;s the country and, 1n cflecl. called off ILs polite truce wllh the Food and Uru g Admi nistration. TH.E EJ)A.. HAS 1.s.sUrtt .t µ1 IJ- pused regulation to ban all firxrackers with niore tbau t~'O grains of powder. remov· ing a 1970 exernp!Jun for fan11er s \\'ho said thev needed lht:ni to scare birds .awa v fro1n fields. 1'hc propo~ill "·ould not take efft'l't witll .aftl'r the Fourth of July. FDA officers say they "dl try to curb further s.:1les of bootl~g ftre\.1-'orks by sending 1nvest igators po s 1 n g as tourists seeking to buy thl' Prepaf't'd with the l~Jv l'r the Na tional Fire Prevention Association and the Fire Marshals Association. the i i· page report ltnks f1rew orks t.o 1.330 personal injuries 111- t'luding five deaths and 31:1 cases of lost eyesight. "OF A.LL ·r11E pyrotecllllll" t.le\'Jces. U1c CI ass (; firecrat kcr neio.'> th;~n 114•~ grains) caust."<I th€' lari;:t'.st proportion ol cases -IS p~·r i.'ent -and accounted lor 2:! pt:rrent of the 1njur1ts and I:! µt'rcent of ti)(' p roper\)· damage t'ast's " The bl1nd -so1.:1ety survev he ~aid. "w1ts not S1.lfficfe~tly 1 J lri~ detailed to d e 111 o n s t r a t c C'" ..,.., fireworks have 11 high degrl't' \.AAl'I I T,he mailings ask edttors and readers to dema1itt that "the F'DA ban all fireworks , except The report said I e g a l firewo rks, including smaller firecrackers. sparklers. foun- The F'DA 's ftgures. rnurh 11f lhen1 dra ~·n lrorn nel\"SJ>llpt'r clippings. show eii.tht dea1h" and 41 injuries allribuled !11 of hazard. 'T'here :irr P·•~t· 17rh 1 1 •• 1 .... ,1fter page of I.ables but !111·\ WlSTCLIFF ,LAZA don'! cn;1ble VOii 1•1 '1"'~1·:-... !111· Mtwporr lcot.~ dl'g ret' ol lllJ;trie~ ·· MARK C. BLOOME WORLD 'S LEADING TIRE DEAtE :°.•MANY WAREHOUSES-· DIBECT TO YOU! ' LOW PBICES ..• & FBEE INS'rJULJITION ... OPEN NITES 'TIL 9 5.60x13 . . Choose~:~::;~ $J 2 95 Your 5.20xl4 . ea~I• Size: :1 .• 20.T1:1 OR ..• 1he famou1. Uniroyal Laredo Mult i Rib ti re a lio (O iied the "Ro in Tire." This tire hos been purcho1ed by millions of !t0ti1fied cu\Jome-n. thruout the nation .................. . ;,,,...,- '" 8 .85xl ;) f J7B/I 5 1 7.75xl .f 7.35xl 4 7.753:15 IE78/141 1>'78/141 (f'78/151 '2495 8.25xl4 8.25xl5 "'" IG711/14f (G78/l 5) 1695 Al ir11me11t serYite with 2 Ti rt Purc~2st. Fill Silt U.S. C21 s. ittl1des c~eck a11d correct · caster, c1111ber. tie in, whe rf 11ecess2ry. Air co1dit1oaed cars 1.95 2dd iti1nal. SIZf PllC( 6.00116 ..... '15'' 6.70115 ..... 1 19'' 7.00'15 ... -. 122'1 7.00116 ... -. •24•• 7,;50116 ... -. •2a•1 • • • f.f.T. 2 .36 2 .•• l .14 l .00 ).69 LOW PRICES! DISC BRAKE.JOB s1ir PllCE f.[.1". 8 .00-16.5 .. '34'" J ,29 8 .75-16.5 .. '36" 3.7S 1o .o~16 .s .. '44" 4.7• 12.00-16.5 .. '49" .S .IS ,1 f ,f , 4 Wll EEL.'i REGlJLAR DRlJMTYPE J, INSTAll NCW 4 ttlSC ,US Oft FIONT 1. IN STALL N£W IONDCD 71.IM llllL[. Wllf[lS . ll N!N' ON All 4 WKEELS 1. TllllN All FRONT DISC IOTOllS 7. IESUILO AU 4 WKffl cn!MDEIS t flotfT DISC CAtl .. IS l. P.ICll: FRONT WHEEL IWIN&S l IJfSPECJ Al 4. TUllN I llESUlflC[ All 4 DlllMS 4.1£PACll: flDNT Wlllfl 1(.1.llN;S S. MIO BIUE ftUID & ll££D LINES 5. Alll llUC rlUID & ILCCD LINEi 5. INSPECT Bl.I.KE 1£TlllN ANG HOLD I. INSPECT lllAS!fl CTUND:"'r--,::::-.._, DOWN SPllNGS l MOSES 1. lltSl'lCT All NECESSAIJT "M ~ l .AIC 'RIND ALL llAJ(C SMOfS WDIUI & Sf'llNl:S f't••-lllf 1 INSPECT fltllfT,IUSE SEALS I. CltlCll: ft.I.II:[ NOS£S ,....., •e.U, . fl!! IOJUSTll!Nn Fill t fl Of t. IJISPfCTllUSl SWS ·~r-i•!I'• & I . t/NIM: ·~ 1 11. nut ttST ro1 Sll£TY t"N"HIMler•." ti. tDID TCST FOi Wm s29~.!. ... . ......... , ... . ..... ,.u .... 1 .............. . • ....... ;., .. , .......... aw ......... , *FOR ALL FULL SIZE U.S. CARS, Except ,,.If.adj. bra kt~ $1.i .i per ,.,·11 ~"1 a<l<l'tl Mark C. llloome will 11ot do le•• tllo,. a .~AFf; BRAKE JOB! *C•rtdltion1 p•r.,,otting 01i..',...,1t. f~lro • FIH lroh i"""-•I h .. .,, NI Hit« ..... ti ,,,, f•• bl-encl ..... 1yti11dt .. c1....... ·~111 ... "'1" .. "" U!Kll...,. '•"llM. ,..,, .... II • ' • """llttOllW1l1 t1 ..... 1 ... n 1•..i11.11 • ff ·ecl1¥1te", -•It• c'ytiMi•r, ho•••· ttf' Ml 11W 1"11 <y ot ,_ • .;,.,.,. flrt. ....... ,,..;..,., ..... , b,,.,,;,,g• .• ,.. lrtch ' ··-· ... '"' ... .,ltt t • .., ..t .. w.. • ;",;;1! Costa Mesa · Garden Grove JOOS 14040 Harbor 81. 8rookhur1t (cor. of l•k•r (cor. of Wfftmlh1t•r & H•rbor) & lrookhur1t) 1714! 557.sooo 17141531).3200 1395 8.55xl 4 (H7iifI.f/ 8.55xl 5 (H711/I 5) 1995 95 .. .-;.f;o .,· I j _ 6 .. 'ill.~I :1 fil.J: 1878/1:11 IEAch. -I S).Sf ~ S2.ll '"-d. l•. 1 •• f_ ... Whi.-llt S2.Pl lat•• Radial Belted Tubeless Whitewalls 2+2 STRONG JIELTS 20Sxl4 "I c I ~ l 6'1x] 3 •29 p5 (i~: l ~.90/ft.OO. \l) -·'' " i3911:; r.r.-111 11111:;) Balancing •j·;o Prr W'h1!el-rWei,irht1 95c La Habra Buena Park 2000 2962 Whlttitr Bl. Lincoln Bl. (cor. of Whlttl•r (cor. of Lincoln & IN<h} & Knott) 674-3666 (71 4) 826-5550 1 95xl 4 13411a filp; (f'"71!/14) 215x 14 f11.1 : (lli 8/14) 1 he NEW 7 R•b 1u be le~s 1 t 2 'ire1 wl-..ch mea n 2 pl~ rord pl~1 2 ply BElf for your greater prole<tio11. Know n for ih performon<f'" & handli11g, Thi, .ho1 got to bit !he LOWEST PR ICE anywf.e1 f:' fo r lh>!1t-'"'"' larl'.!do BELIED 78 1er ie1 WHITEWAllSI 95 F78/I ~ E o~~ S1 ~1to ll11 f •d [, fn• d•p•~d '"II' ""°~ •h· .. ,. lllark1roll• $2.95 ·~~·-: <: 7R/l.i '259 5 H16/1 4 '2895 J 7H/l l '2595 H16/IS ,'2885 J7K/t5 · Faslrak W-i-d-e 78 Tubeless Glass-Bell low Ptice1I. _. Uni royol etigi11al equipment on mi ll lon1 of ••w <ar1 ••• double g lo,i .beh•d for 'fOU' 1csf•ty!I Hvrr11! 8 1888 F 78/14 s269 5 .\ 7R/ U lr'7H/ I;, Ci8/ i:l '2J95 r;;111 1 t 8 2 9 9 ·'. "78/ I> s2295 H78/l·I s33ss · C7H/l 4 H7K/I i E78/ 14 '2395 Li8/1 5 '3695 l~ch.+~lt0"'1l.11Ftcl E•.To• Fullerton 1321 So. Euclid (1 Ilk. N. •f ll:lv•r1lde Pwy.) 171 41870-0100 °"' •-••"''' ,. "Y ' • •• ,, ... , 1•¥· , •• ...,.,,.,'I•• '""•-••••I-. ll'•N••to • .-,,..,.1o11 ·-4•.-M t• ,._,"'"''••I .... 111 ........ 1 (, ............. , ................... 111 JI ,, ... ,, ,, lt'l.41 ••· n ......... w ··" ...... , .... ,,,.,. .. w ... 1 .. c" .. ~· • ..... 111.1 •••• , ............ 11 .... ,.1o. ~"--"-"'-'""--"':::; ''.\', 11/"f" ' \ -' • \ l.EC~AL NOTICE L ~GAL NOTICE l.EGAL NOTICE l.EGAL NOTICE Keen Prop. 9 Fight Rages Both Factio11s Haul Out Big Guus Ott Jl1. ensure 1.l!:GAL NCJTICE ---liAllBOll V1£"'1 •!OMES llEAL T'V ,.,CflTIOUS IUSl~l!ll COMPAr.!Y, 1119 Po•! S~t!fltld Pl•~•· ~AMI .STATl!MINT ,j~ ... P<l•• s •• ,n C•h! ltlMO I Jll \f T~• 1utlc-Hlf\.ll PtllOll• •r• doon• Oontld L ll1~n Com11•nv ((•llfOr n•• NOTICf 01' !Al.I O' o.,.,,..,. •• Coro> J !llll Vtnh.or • Bl•G, ~lltlll'•n ll lE.l,L P'll OP'(llTY AT TRONAOOR A fN TfllP1!5E!, LIM 0•••· C•ilr t\8)J P'lllVATE SAi..E HED, 19.lt LOH• ~ ..... , Co•t• 1 .. 1o °"''""'' 1. be•n• C0"'3UUtd lh• • Nt. A llXl '-'e•~. C•llr fla)6 (llt'PO•aliM. 1~ ·~• ~ Pt ,IN (OU" ~· •no .51a!t Of An10ll!o E Su•rtl. lllt 1.,....1 !lfff!, JAME! L MANLEl', (alo•o• .. IO. IO• 11\f CPUntv o• Or•r>llf' Colla l>\e••· (alol ,,~,~ Vk• P••I. In lftt M~ll•• a< In• L>•••• ol Dw1on1 Ana I. ~uattl. II.lot 1-• Strool. Col!t Tftl~ l!•ll"Tlt nl 1\19" wll'> tno C""MV llAV ME~• MOllTGAGE~ CO, 410 w Cow•! t<•gl>wtv. N•,..llOl't ll••cll, C•!I! Jl lDtll f Rolln•tnn, 71lf Oaolni• lloao. H•wP<>rl ll••cn, (tin. T1'>1~ D<-1111•>1 11 br•nt LC>'l(llK1N b • t n lnol•ld~o l Al.SERT C ll OTTM.Al'f ll'u1 Oit1ttm•M lit.ct will> "'• Counrv (•••~ al Ottllilt (O.mh ori Mt, )(I, ltl2 Bv ll•Y..rl'f J . MtOOllA, DIPVIV C.ounrv C lor1' c GOO<l•.tll. ti><> •nown •• Ow•Qnl M•••· Calol. fl•l6 (lo•~ of O•t nvt Counrv on M•• JO, 1911 1'"11104 Cl••lle• C.rGO•<l" O.Ct•1od A,.. P St:are" m ~o Mo1lp01t ev 8t •••IV .J M•dOO.t. Olpu!v (ounty Pub1•1"t'd O•anvt Co.ttr D•lly Pllol LEGAL NOTICE tlotl(t •I ll•r~bY ol~•n 1nal llO• Ul'I> Avon.,., API. No, :!01, LOI .Ano ole1, (lo•• JuM I. I. IS, T.I, lt12 )•)! 11 o., ... n...i .... 1 "" •I Prlvtl• \&It. !O '"'" (t ill. 90020 1'11102l-------------- hlpno11 aoo 11"11 bidder. •ubl~tl lo con 111., b<.>>'11..Sl !> bt'in9 (Ofldl,l(!ff In a P1111U1lltd Ortn•~ Co•>! Dtlly P.lo!, 1<1mf!ID" 01 \tlO \u1>•"io• (D<Jt!, "" or Llml!to Pt Mllt •Sl\lp. June I, I, JS. n . 1911 lol(l:;.n alltr '"' 1)•11 d~• ot J11n• i.n. a! tile 01-,t.NtON +D E SU.1,ll[l .---------------1----;c:::::;:o;c;:-:-:::-::cc;:----I ,1,. DI S1um<1 Ariel G11111!!, ll10 Al l•nll( 1111• tl•temonl llltd .. n .. Ille Coun!l l'ICT IT IDUS I UllNl!tS A•~nut. Sulit •, tP 0 l>o• 1n•1 L!>ni! (It!~ ot Oran1>• (ounlv on. M•v '1. 011 LEGA?!: NOTICE NAME STATliMl!NT ll••cll, (1l.1o•nl1 te601 County o• Lo• Bv lltv..-t~ J , Malldoa, 0•1>ury Counly Tllo loll<>Won11 Pttson It dclni busintn A.n11elt11 , Sla!t ol C•ll•ornlt, 111 me rl11M, Cltr~. I!; !it:o tnd In terest of Wiid Otctt>.0 t! Ille ,.11t4J l'ICTITIOUS IUllNl!.IS lHE TRAVEL MA JI T, :!OIS Son JOI• t1mo of dta!/l end 11! lfll rl11n1, 111\t ancl Publltllod Or1no1 Co••! 01111 Pllo!, NAME STATIMl!NT ouln Hiit• lln.od, l\tW1>cr1 e,,1,11. In'"'"'' 11111 H1t tslt1t o4 1•ld decotH<I MIY ,S, ancl Jun• 1, I, l~, 19r:I ll•S·ll 11\t IOllOWlnw i>aroon It d<>lnti lru1!11es• NEMAR lllAVEL, INC .. 1 (&ll!o•nlt ~n1 acoulrtd IW oc>er•lfon ol law or 111 coq>ora!lon. 7015 .S.in Jotquln 1-11111 o,~•'"''IU. c!llt r l~tn or In •ddll,on to LEGAL NOTICE P H.O, FRA.MING COMPANY. 13•1 Rood. Ntw1>11rt ee1ch. Tllo ! cl 1110 dt(t•led. 11 Ill~ lime of S111!l190, S•nt1 Ana, (till. T11io bu'"'"'~ !t btlnv (Ond..C l•d bv 1 at~111. !n and 10 tit Ille c••!•!n re•! proo· Jt rr• 0, Jennfn11>. lUI Ea•• Ml!Cl'l•ll, cor1><1<•t<on. ertv 1l!u~rtd In tile cllV ol Tu>lln, (ovnly HOTICI! TO CRt:OITOltl A111 . ..OA, l u1lln. (~Ill. '26111) Emmt!I E O'Oonntll nl 0r~nge, Sl1tt of C•lllornfx. parllcular lv Ht. A Ji .. t Tho1 llu1lnt11 !• 1>eln9 (O!l<IU<lt'd by on Tru• •lslrmom lllf'!I Wit/> ti!• Coun1v Clt•crlP>eo ti 1cllow1, lo·wll: &uPtdor Court Of lhl S"t• 91 C1lilotnl1 !nDlvldu•I. Cler~ 01 Or•nt• Ccun1v en MtJ• 11, 1971 lo! 11 QI lr1ct ~111 1rl(I 1/13-1111 un. lot !no Coull1Y Of Oran9t JERlt Y D. JENNINGS Bt ll1•trlv J. M•dOo~, Oepuly Countv d·VIO•d !nltrttl In Lei A of lr•C'I SllS Elll to OI GERTRUOE KLEI N, Dt<lll· Tl>l1 f!l!omtnl lllNI wlln lne COUnlV (ltrk, per map recorded In llDQk !I,, Pt9tl •3 td. Clerk o! 0•8"9t Counl'>' on : M av '11, 19n •ncl •• ot M1M:t ll•n<1011• maP1, rtcords Nollet 11 htt•l)V t lvtn 10 credlton ol' llv BtV1<l1 J, Ml<ldox, 0.P"1V Coun1v • cl Orantf COllnl•. Celllornl•. !tit 1bO•t l\amod dtcltdal\t 1~11 tll Clt tk. ,. 111JI P vblt"1e.! Ot•ngo Co,ut Otll• Pilot, M•V 2). •flO Jun1 1, I, U. lt7l t')61-n Subltct 10 Otc11ratlM1 ol CcvtlltMI\ puoon1 lla•lnt cl•im1 •taln•I 1h• Mid ,.11'41 •nd Rt•Ttl(l.cnt •tccratd J•n11arv 7L dectdtnl art ro<1ulre<:1 to flit 11\tm, with Publllhtd Cronce C<»•I 01llV Piiot. 1'64. In Book U'91. Ptllf 1J7, OUlcl1I Ille ll•C•U•r~ v°"'"'"· ln rl'l t of!lc• cl M•v 2J, •nd Junt l, f, 15, lfl? 1:Ml·11 LEGAL NOTICE • l!t:o•d1 Of Or,.n<11 County tnd ""m111<1· lht Cl..--Of t11e atMlvt onrilltd court, or!-----------------~------- ·.m•nl lo Ille DKltr•!lon1 ot Cov"'•nh lo Pra1onr lhtm ... 1111 !ht nact•1•r• LEGAL NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS llUSt~l!SS : 1na R•llrlcllons rKorlltd Marci'! :>II, •OllCl'lars lo !hi uncl1ril9n.a ti lllt olf lctl NAME STATEMENT , 19iol. In loclrO ,911. P•H ltS, Olllcl1I Of l(ENNEDY A. KENNEDY. USU !--------------Tht lotl<1wln9 H rocn 11 do.n1 bu1lne11 • Record• Of Or1n11t CD<Jn!y •nd u cD<KI Wilslllrt Bhld .• .Suire l05, LOI An .. 1t1. NOTI 11; • A ..... nclmtl\I a Ot<:l•r1tlcn• c I Ctlllotnla 9QDl7 whlcl'I i• '"" pltce DI Cl n PET PRODUC TS 2) PET r-ooo •.covtn10n•• l lMI Rt"rk:llcn• rocordllld bu1IMu ol 1119 Undt.,iUna-d In ell m•!!tr1 Nolle r Is l'lt•rl>Y U•••n lhU !n '"~ PROOUCT~, 1~95 Newport eiud,, Cotti : JuM 10, lf6S, fl'\ Bea; 1JS, f'eve 19), Of· per1tln1n1 fo !tit •lltll of ••Id dtc...,t..t, NtwPOn·Mtlt UnUloa ScflOOI Oll!rlct Of Mt•• , lo<ltl RtcorG1 ol Ort"1H County, mD•t .,.lthln follr mo111111 •tttr lht llFll PUblk•· Oronae Coontv Uovtrnlng l>O••d momoeri J<»tPh c. C•rroll, 2010 Mtrlcn Woy, LEGAL NOTIC:-. , , comma11tv llnown 1s~ A condominium tlcn of !Ills notlct. m•v bf' •oPOlnttd In lltu Of hOldlnv an C 1 M ' ola<:llon en ""u1u11 1 un.. 01 • .e1a •• ~·n ' IOCtt~ ti 1 "' Mllclltl, No .• ' 01tod M1y n. 1t72. A I I I I ll. Thi• blltlt>tss Is Dtint conduct•d bJ I ll '.iuUlfl, Ctllfornlt . FRANCIS R. OWYER ppa n mtn n •u OI !'>Olding en tlec. Jndl•ldutl :·Termi ol illt c••h !II 11wru1 ,._,..,Of Extcui.,.. ol Ille Will !Ion tllt lt bt mMlo PU••u•nl le EdU(ttio<'o J~lt"" Carrllll "1t United ~ttlt• "" conllrmilk>n ot solo, 01 ••kl <le<:t'denl. Collt Stcllon lJ,1 U only Ont l>'!t•on er no Tl'lil ltJttmtnl !il•d W•!ll !lie Cou"I .,. -~rl ca111 •nd baltnct t vldtn<td by KENNEDY & KEl'iNEDY P&fNln for •tell Vt<•nl 1>1>1lllcn Ills l>f!tn Cle•~ cl Oranur CcuM v"" Mev 13 191/ f\llte H(11rtd b• Mortoate or Tru1t Oetd 1UI Wlls.hlrt l rvd., Sii. J05 ~~1';.'i:d ,';', '~", •;,•,•2• ro, llllons b•>Y l>v BtVtrlY .J. Moaao•. D•ouly CountV (lrl •~e l>f'-'" o.o .OIO. Tt n Plr uni ot \. .. A,......, Ct+lf9f-... " · ' u,.. ' · un t i> • 1>e · Cltf11 .... cun! bid 1o bf dHlotl!od with bid, Allorntrt '"' ExtcutOI'" ll!Pf' 1lantd by !Wt MV·llve voters of lhr · l'H'n • C: ~s or Dllers lo bt lh ""rltlnv 11nd will ll'll:·Sn\'1 dli/rict 17r':lcilfni th•! • wr\lt·ln com· Pvb1<1ned OraM~t (Ot•t Oall v Pilot ~e recrlvod 111 t1he alor•,,"',', °''•let ~ •..,ny Publlllltd Or1t\ge Coast D1llv l'\ICI, :~a~nte~ 10 1~: c~.'..1v"";~~r!n~:~d.:I~~ MiV B, i nd June l , I , l5, 1911 IJ!J.1-i tlrre 1t1cr lllt I rt! pub Cl on rrtv• i M&V 25, •nd JUI\& I, I, 15, 1'11 13S7·/1 S hoo b<'to•• ddte ol 1t!t. • c 11 bV Junr 7t, 1911, OaJad 1n,1 16•11 onv o! Mav, 1972. .St.ell t o110lnlmt nl wlll bt maa~ by tne GORDON L. GOOO ll lCH LEGAL NOTICE ll'OVtrnlnt board cl tilt N~w~nri·M••• E>'rcu•o.r ol !lie Unl!lod 5c~ooel Oi.1 rl(f pur1 u•nt IC wilt of itld OtCl dtn!. Educ1llon Cade Src11on l'.119 FiC TITIOUS llUSINl!:SS •• , •• ••D OAillNllt NOTICI! TO C•EDITOill l Otltd IM• IWt nty·fll!hdtVOI Mty, lt1l, N~£ STAllMliNT ' SUP'l!RlOll: COURT 01'" lNI! O O "''' .,, ,,,,_, ''' I Ool • I ~ A.llt t1tlc AVf., $ullt • . " man. ' v-I> on t n9 uvl nt u ,., O. llo• 71,. .STA.Ta 0,. C""Lt l'Oll:HIA 1'011: OtPUIV •i: Lo"" ••Hll, Ct11'9rnle KNI THI! COUNTY 0,. 011.ANQI! °'"'""County, VICTORIA 8EACH HOUSE, ,,,, lfr": lllJI 41._rw4 N9, A·11MI SuPfrlnltncl~nr 01 ~CllDQIS Scu111 Coa1! Hlth.,.•Y, L1•11nt 8t~ch, Al1ort11VI for ltttCUllW Elltlt cf CONCETTA. EVANGELISTA, l'ub!I Jl!ad Oranae Coll! OlllV Pllol. Cl, tl~I • Pl Dtcttled. Junt I 11'1J 1'?1·12 Oonald A. llovtnrlrf. 1194 5ov!l'I Co11t , Pullllshell Orangt Ca.ii OtllV lo!, NOT ICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN lo Ill•!---·------------! Mlghwtv, L111vnt Ortell, C•. "1651 By CURTIS J. SITOME R C~rh.llH ,, •• ,.., _l,.r i t rVict LOS ANGELES 81!lboards ·<lot the California coastline: "Losing ''our Job Won't Stop Pollution.'' T~levi.!fnn spots s h o \\' families eating supper 1n darkness or by the ttirn light or a 11.·ood fire , Aod !hen vley;·ers are y;'ame<l to \'Ott "no" on f'ropasiuon 9 -or risk a major j)O\\"Cr shortage Nuclear power plants art' unsafe, uncertain syste1ns that could spew out dangerous radiation in a mishap. en- \"ironn1enlahsts counter. Even under 11ormal conditions, they rharge, nuc lear plants produce lnng-li \'t'd. <l i ff icu lt-lo-<lis pose. of r ndioactiv e "'':is te n1:iterials. AT ISS llE IS TllE m ost ~tringent environmental con- trol measur e ever put before Californians. and said to bf' <1mong the toughest proposed Jn the nation. It is on the same ballo t T uesday as the presidenlial primary candidates. And. like them. it is arousing con- troversy. If approved, bu i Id i n g nuclear po11·er plants y,·ould be banned here for five years: of!shore oil drilling would be outlawed: use of certain pesticides. inc.luding D D T . \1·ould be prohibited: lead in gasoline would be phased out, and \"iolators or smog rules v.•ould h ave their businesst>s shut down or slapped with heavy fines. The measure is backed prin- cipally Uy the People 's Lobby, a )'Outh-oriented. loosely knit coali!ion of environmenta l ~roups. Ti s help is v olunteer. Its funds are limited. But sources here say it has better than a ~50 chance of winning. J vnt I, 2, I, 1972 1.0.·71 crtdlrc•t Of !ht tbo•t ntmtd dtc..S•n! 1111, bu1lne1• ls btlng cO<lduc1od l)y •n 11111 •II J>erton• havl!WI clllfl"ll •••ln1! '"' LEGAL NOTICE IM!vldutl. THE 0 p p 0 s r T ( 0 N is L EGAL NOTICE 111d dtc-llr ••t r.,qulrtd to t11a 111om,, _____________ ~cl Don•ld A. 1101onr1et formidable: oil comoanies and with lht ntee ... •'V •OIJ<llert, 111 1111 ctllctl • i hll lltl•mt nl filod wlll1 lllt County o4 l1lt cltrk of '"' •boY• tnlllltd COi/fi, or l'ICTITIDUS I UllNISS Cltr~ ot O••nvt CO<>ntY ""' M•• 71. 1'1l. utility groups and 0th er • NOTICI! 01' TltUSTll!'t SALi! ro pr t1ont '"""· whh !ht lltCtl1trv NAM• ITATl!.Ml!NT By BtYfrlV .J. M1dd01t, DeP!.ltv CD<JnlY busintS.!I, industrial. a n d • No , ... ,, voucl'l•t1, to tl'le undtr1l1MC1 11 tllt olflct i k• foll-1119 Ptfsont ••• Going Clr•l. , · .... , °' OONALD ""· MC. CAllTLN, uoo Ad•m•. bu.1 ... 11 ••: ,.,ntt governme ntal leaders . They're On Junt '· 1"2· al 2:00 o clock P.M.n •I Sul" llS, Co•I• Mfia, C•lllornla. wnlch 11 MONTCLAlill·LEMllAll ,.l,SSOCIATES. Publi"°'td Ortnt~ Cooit Otitv l'llol, II · ed d 11 !tie i'fot"th Fronl tnfftnc~ lo IM Or1 IHI lllt IHtce <If bl/JIMH of 1'• unclet1l1nltd In :20l So<l!ll Bttt lllVG .. l rto. Catllorni1 M.lV 1$, and JuM 1, I , U, 1t72 llt4-1J \\'e OrgaOIZ an We chance. And leg1sla1ors: ha\'e at~ ralled to curb poll ution. Now thl! people rnust act on their O'A'n," insists Edward l\uupal, tht-group 's t'Xt'<'ultvt' diret lOr Y.'h-0 is spearheading the •·pro'' drivf'. KOUPAL SAYS the measure ls solid, y,·ithin the guidelines sel nat1011ally by the Environ- 1nenl<1 I Pro tection A genc-y. l/11y,·ev er, he admits some pro- "isions. pnrtic ularly those thut would shut down smO,R·1Jril- duc1ng l>usinesse!I on •·all'rt" days , ("{)Uld r a is e t•on- stitutional questions. "How ever, let's !av it .al\ on the t able and have the courts decide ir necessary," he says. 0 p pone n t s stronglv disagree. They charge the 1111· tiative iS an • unwork11l>lc n1rss " It w ould sly n1it• 1he state's lr.!nsporlalton nf'twor'k t"OSI thousands their jobs. :ind lf'ad to power blac koy!s, !ht•y a dd. f\otany belit>vt the key i;la11k is the nuclear ban. Sorne sav the referendum here. if p<1s:>t'1.I , v.•ould likely heat up tht• r1;1 - t 1onal debale o ver u!ie of !his type of energy. The nuclear pov.•pr in1lus\ry pro\'1des ahout 2 percent uf lht' nation's elec-tritity. Rut tht' federal gorernn1ent l'Sti1n at1•s that up to 50 ~rrent of t he power arross hi.' l)111h·d States \\'iii stt'Jn from thi.~ :.ourrt.' IJ)' ltll' J~JIJ .!i ECIL-llll ,ind other UIJlil y g1an1:0 111s1~t lhnt 1n 1elear Jl{j\\t•r plan t ~ :ire i;af~. t·lean. :ind dt•pc·ntl~ble Tht•y iidd lhSI !he\' ;1r1• Ult.'Xl:.Cns1vr and l ~lliur 1on-frl'l' producer~ or o.:"lf•t'frl('l(I 1!:111 1111111111•ntnl1s.ls disagree. tl>ISfl,\ \\All '\S th;1! <1 b<rrl on nul'lt·nr p1111cr plant con· ~lllH'IH•n 1"111111! lt lJ.(~C[' a :.t'rt1)1JS µt111t•r ~liurlage in !";1l1f11rn1a 1111h111 fl\'t" to seven ve;u :,; • A11d s1~~t·-:lllt•rl ~:1y tl1r only :ihcrnal1\t' 111111Jd he to cun· .~true! 1u11n• ga'> :ind (11!-hurn- 111~ 111:1111~ 11h1ch ('Ould llf' m:1· Jttr SHUflt•~ 11/ p1,)lfllll\1rl --------------~ ·fr ft E lectric Conce r1'ls 'Switc1i' MADISON , \\lis. Wisconsin's powe r companies are showing s igns of switc hing some corporate energy into ef- forts to preserve the en- vironm ent. The s tate's five largest elec- t ric companies made public plans !or expansion of genera-~ ti011 capacity at the highes t t'~ cost estimates ever approved.• .. But they made their an- now1cement from the podium of Gov. Patrick J . Lucey, who has made environmental pro- tection a k eynote of his ad- ministration. " With the governor's ap- p roval. power-company of· ficials spelJed out in d etail ad- justments i n construction designs they adapted a rter consulting \\'it h environmental groups. Frosty F1111 • UPI Tt!1oho,. Counrv Court M0<>H, 100 Civic Center ,11 mall••• per!llnlnv ,..,ht ''"''Of 511d Monlct1lr A.nocl1I•• dbt MOnlcl•i•>---------------1 financed. Grl•• Wetl, In '"' Clrv ol S1nl• Ant . .,tc~tn!, within lour monrn1 i rt tr rht Pit••· • Lid. Ptr!n•rilllp, 7311 w. El LEGAL NOTICE TJIE GOVERNOR welcomed Later in the sun1 mer th ere. \\ill be many, but it takes a real enthusiast to \\'ater ski at I..akc Tahoe t his. time of year \1:ith \\•ater t c1npc ralu r cs in the 40's and the crisp morning air no! 1nuch \varmer. This skier \\·ears a full len gth ''·etsuit to bear the chill. Cn1.1.,..nla. '' , ''' •l ... 11\I rl Stt<>l'ICIO Bl•d Howtll«nt Cati! '°150 The best e stimates are !hat lh · I ,. £ th t"J" · t • LAW'(EllS itTLE GUA RANTY COM· '011': Mc:, ~."ltn I nc ct . llelm•r C;;,oorallon ,dbl .L•mb~•1----=:-:::CC"CCC--:-C,,-,=::----1 m o r e than $2 mi]lion i$ bein " e Jn en IOn 0 e U l ltleS 0 '"f'"""'"""''"'"''"' .......................................... -... -... -... ., f'AN"r, I Ca111orn1i co•portll"", 11 lht MARGElllTE CALICCHIO Corpor1t\on, a Ntv. corpor•ll~n, 103 Sc, ,.l(;ITIOUS IUSINltS t> CQnCeotrate new generating 1 ~·••nt ,,.,,., .. un<1er tll• o~..s ot Tru•t Admlnl•1ritrl• °' 111, will II ••• !ll•d., !I•••· t1111. f16'1 NAMll STATEMENT pou red into tht campaign to capacity in an area that will mada IW JAMES A. HEf'iN ANO DIANNE o4 11\t ibove ntmtd d•t tdtnl Tlllo lw1lnt11 11 conduc!td bv 1 Tiit fOllOWln9 Ptrscn l1 dolnv M lntSi d f I th · "t" I" '· HEHN, Hu1b1nd •nd w1i. '"" recorded DONALD A MCCARTIN D•rlntflhlP. •$: e eA e JOI 1a 1ve, reduce the number 0 r f ell•uar-v 5. 1Mt 111 Boo!< U6!. P••• ~of IJM .Adam;, .suu1 111 Mofittlllr A11oc1111s. '1 FANT As Y 11 o AT s 1 > Yet. opponents adm i t ()111d•1 Rrcord1 ol Or•n11 counrv. ''''' ·•--, ''''"'"'' a LTd P•rtne•ihlo EYGAS ROAO'S 11 EYGA 8ll OAP transmission lines, thu s C 1 1 1 -they'•e "run nm· g scared." •111orn1a, • v•~ o srcvre t n 11• T•l-MM· M1<7S'1 Bv: l•N•t w. H•l'l n, rnc .• "•rlMr MANUFA.CTUll ING co., ltl• Plactntl• • Jessen1·ng env"1ronmental 1"m -Ceb1..ino1• In l1v"' Of GLENDALE .,... . • < > p h p I ' Lobb ' .. EDEllAL ~AlllNGS ANO LOA N Al,., ... , .. A""'11l1trtlrl• M•rm•n M•l•r ..... o'" Mt••· Ct lllorne '1677 er aps eopes ys d Id! .''o''.n oN, '" Unl1td Stiltl CcrPOr•· Publl11'1td Or•nte Cc111 Otlll' l'llot, Tl'lh •l•larntnl Wa• !lie.I wl!ll ine Coun· Jol!nn• c:;...,r .. E•o.Orc1d, 23J7 !.o. b" I l . gTO "nn pact an prov ng the "most J 1 1 1, ,, 1911 l•Jl·n '" c1ano; Of Or•n•t on Mev 11, 1t n , •c,...,tr SI., .S•nt• Ana, C•lltornl1 tt101 1,e:ges rump IS WI ,., economical and feasible solu-flon, bv rt•"'" or 1111 brt acl'I o1 ct•t11n u"" ' ' · · 8Altltl!TT, t Tl!AltHt a COLLINS, •rty1. Thl1 bu1lna11 I• bfln1 conducltd by •n citizen distrust of industrv and lllbll11!10111 1t-t:urtd l"•r•bv, no11c1 ot 1u• un1a11 111111 Tiwtr lndlvlduel. 'J tion to future power needs." wt1lell w•S rtcordtd Jtnu•rv 3, 1912. In LEGAL NOTICE .. Dll A .... ,.l'llMl•I C•nltr' Johnny G. EYll8b•o•d ~overnment's desire and abili-Th rod . r .,. 8ook '951, P1v1 !O, 01 1•ld 0"1c111 .. Torr111ca, c1111. MJOJ Trils 11e1emon1 tiled w1111 lh* CD<Jntv I th e new P uc tion aci ity ):tocord1, Ortnot Cc11nly and rtrtcordedl---------------ITel: UIU 17'-JJll. 711·4M1 Cltr~ 01 Or•nvt Couniv on May t , 191!. ty to C ean up e en-won't be a "plant,'' but a n l'ehruary 11, lt12 In Book 10000, PtQt l. NOTl(I! TO Clt l!DITOltS :WJ-OC bY lltvtrlv ~. Mtddcx. Dt<>Uly County Vir onme nt. "eneruy Ctfltef'," the governor "'111 ''11 ~· l>Ubllc l!KllOn lo lhl hl•l'lt•! SUl'EllrtOlt COU RT 0 1' l MI! .. ,,..,Clerk, "Business has had Its ,., bl~der for <•Ill Plftblf In l1wful fl"IOney STATE 0,. CALl,.OltNIA "011: PubllillMI Or1nge (0111 Otlly PllOT, 1'11,M and the corporate m a nagers of !I'll Unhtd S!e1ts ol ""fl"ltrlca •I lht ••• Mtv 15, •nd Juno 1. 1, JS. lt1l 13'1·12 Publ11htd Ortng1 Cot•t Otllv Pilot,l----.,-=ccc:--:c::::==:------I · ed !Im• o1 111e, ... 11r.ou1 cov1n1f'll or w•r· THE COU NTY 0 ,. Oii 1 M1v 11, 11. 15, '"" Juttt i, 1912 1114-7' LEGAL NOTICE e xp a in , -~ he ran!y e~prenltd or lmollad. ts lo title. E1l•!e of GEORGE HAROLD FOGLE, But ( most r evea ling Pl>'UHICll or tncumb•tnctl, 11'11 lnlerell 0.-ct•,.., .. LEGAi, N'O'I1CE LEGAL NOTICE l'ICTIT\OtJS BUSINESS l r th t c11~vev..S !o t iw:I now t.eld bv 11Td TrutlH NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN lo 1he ...... Ml tTATEMINT ii.spec 0 e announcemen '1nder s1!d D•td cl Trusi. lf'I i r>d 10 tht cr..Slto•• cf 1t1t above n1m•d dtcedtnl ;~, 1o11owin11 1>1roo11 11 doln1 bus:neu wa s disclosure of the care fol ....,Ing de'ltrlbotd prr'lf•f'f, t~·wlt: lf'lt1 111 lleflDn' ht•lng cl ilmi i oiln$! rf'lr SUl"llltlOlt COU•T 0 ,. TMll ,.l(T1TIOUS I USINliSS II: Let 111 tnd • 11]1'1h Uf'ldlvldtd 1n. 11ld ~ectdtnl •r• rf<!Ulrtd kl Ille lftt m. STA.Tll 0,. CAL!l'OltNlit. ,.Oil NAMI! .STATEMt:l'ofT TAYLOlt TEA.CHING TAPES. 1&41 w ith which the corporate 1ere•I lf'I common In tnd lo Lt'! I Of wllh tile ntct•••rv ~Ol/'Cht•s, In th• ol!lct TH• COUNTY 01' OltANGf T1ICI followl""' ptriOll• ••t d<>lno M11tnollt . Wtttm1nt1er, Callf<lrf'li• managers planned the an-i ttcl Sl60, e1 per m11> rKor<ltd In I fll I k of Ina tMI t llllt'd courl ct Na. A·l'HfJ bulll'ltH ti: RllP1'1 Aoti.rl Ttvlor, tlO Mtltot! f'.-..k 111. p1ae1 «I. ~1 tnd •? of :, P~f;::., tl>em • ..,r111 anlht ntetn~rv NOTl(I[ 01'" HllAll:ING 01' l"l!TITIOH LAMPS N THINGS, 11\ol So. Cotlt ........ C1'ull• \11111, Ca1L1otnl1 '2011 nounceme nt and the emphasis Ml>eelltn"°"' M1p1. In tf'lt OIHct of 11'11 "°"'"'" 10 !ht u'nc1triltntd ot '"' cHlct l'O .. l'llOIATE 01' WILL A.HO l'Olt H"""f .. L•tuna Betch, ltlUI. Thl1 bu1lnt1s 1, bt!"9 conduc!e;:i by • given to preparatory con-(M·n•• llM"rrder ol 11ld Coun1Y of lltr ~llorn.ev P•lriCI• MtfJOll JSOO ll!Tnltt TllSTAMl!NTAllY Phllh• E. Sllbaw•kl. 2i5' Sottno WIY, Sola Owtll••l'llp. TOGETHElt WITH non-twclu1i•t E••! C1>1sl Hlof.way, Coron• de1' Ma r. E•111t ol RAMONA SVTTOH, •k• La•unt fltlKll, '1165"1 , Rilph R. Tay1or ferences \l:ilh the political ~~·.rrrenh ~nd non·••clu•lve rlgt1t1 of c 11110,111,, wf'llcll 11 1111 pl•<• of bll•IMn RAMO~A G, SUTTON, Oect111d. John A, Llndou ltl, po cvpr·t u Drl•t, Tnl1 al•ttm•nl fllttl wllh lht County communitv_ . including I h c ""'v D•tr. under tiw:I UPDn lei 1 l~ of lf'lt undtrtlvntd In 111 tn•llttl Pl'· NOTICE IS MERE.Bl' GIVEN lft8! L1tunt Beach, tW1. Clerk ol Ortn9t CO<lnlv on Mav 9, !t Jl, """-f lSIFV 0' dt1lrable lnt1ra11 Ind !alnlft9 lo lht t •tatP ol still decedt nl, 8arnlct l tMt V 11111 !l ied llar•in I i>tlltlon ihit buslntls !I btln9 conducled br a bv llevtrlv J. M•ddOX, 0~UIY C111,1nly Vigilant conserva tio n and en· t Qrt.•t. t•lev1,1on ctble-s, P01es, wlrt1 wllllln IOI.Ir montlli '""' IM !lrit public .. for Prolltll Of Wiii tnd tor LP11t" Ptr!ntr.ship. Cltrk. . J . •n<1 condull1 for t lt<lrlcltY. !tlt phcnts 11,,., Of tilts nonce. l t1t1m111r1ry to P•llllontt, ro!ort nco 10 PllollP £. Slltiowit! I' 17''3 \'lrOnmenta -action groups. '"" 0111er D11rPOiH i nd accoulrtmonts O•led Ma¥ 9, lt7,. Wf'llcn 11 m•de tor lurl~ar 1>artlcu1••1, and ;11;, s11tt mtnr !llf'd w;111 ,.,. cov"'Y ,.ubllshtd oranve Co.o•I Dally PilOI. J ohn Quale, president of the •~·•elO. wwors. drains, w1ltr, •••and MARIE FDGLl' lh•I lllt llmt Ind Pllcl Of f'lt•r1ng In• Cler~ 01 Oranve Counly .,... Me• ,J, Jf7J Mtv 11, 11. 15. n/\d Juno I, ltn 1m.n f · I ed '"' ~1ttm o1P11. encl accou lrtmenll thereto. E~•cutrl• ••mt "•• bttn st t tor Jun• 10. lt/l, al !ly Bevtrlv J, Mtddc•, D•1>11!y County argesl coni.pany 1nvo \' , uit.: 11~<1 •or i<Kll rP<ll averri1n;1 •nd olllt• 01 t~e WIJI ol t :JO 1.m., In l~e courtrDQm cf ~Pan· CJ••k. WiS<:onsin Electric power Pno:roaaimtnlt ol • t!kt er 0T11lmll1r 1110 •bOYt "tmtd drcKtnl menl No; l cl ltld c...,r1, a• 1'00 Clvlf " l7t'1 LEGAL NOTICE ~.l~d. 11nd e11~emen•1 011 adltcent Loh ot l'ATltlCl.I, HEll:.l.OG C1nt tt Or•vt We1 1, Jn Int City cl S1nlt Publlsl'lod O••nilt Co.it Otlly Pllol.> ----:-::::=c:::-:;-::::;:;;::;----Company, emphasized that the s1ld Tract 516tl for rDQf eve•h•n•• '"" lJOt E111 Co1st Mltlll.,.11 Ana , Ct \llo•nla. M•• 15, •nd J uno i, 1. IS, 1'7J 13'!·771" Slate Depa•tmcnl of Natural •>'.~t~ "nc•n•rnmenh. of t llkt or COl'"tnt dtl Mir, Ctllttrnlt Oa!od M1v JS, 1t72 l'ICTITIOUS 8UllNEIS ' dP11•mll1r kond. Ttl: C1HJ 41S.H1• w. E. SI. JOHN, NAME STATEMl!NT Resources, which has b road A1$0 ~nown ,,. 183 Mo,,l1!own Lint, Allor,.., tor ll•Klll•I• County Cler~ LEGAL NOTICE Tht foUowl "'IJ persons ••• doif'lg Co11a Mtsa. C~ltlcrnl~ Put>ll!llO'd Ort"'IJt Coat! Da(ly Pllo!. I UllTON. G ... ULDI N, THOMSON ,.l,NDI---------------bu,lntlS • ., powers over the operations of lor Ille l>IH PO•t ct n•ylno Cbll!lftlon1 M•v 11, \I, JS, t nd June l. 1977 11l•·n HILSON PICTITIOUS IUSINE SI llAY i nd eE.ACH .APARTMENTS. 1470 utilities for the avoid ance of 1•curtd bv 1ala Oetd of Trull l~cludlng Artarno•• 11 la.,. W. Oc•an•ront, Newoort Betel'!. Ce!o!. 1~•1, ch&IVtl and o~ntn1t1 o! 1~1 l•u,rrt. 1614 !aul!I l't+n1tr "'Vt. The NAME STATEMENT Rcb•rl P, Gormlv, HOS Cen~!ei!lc~ a1r and Water poJlution, and A~v•ncti. I! 8n~. und•r Ille 1,rms c! 1e1<1 LEGAL NOTICE Whllliu , C11111rn11 "'· lolll>wlno Pt<1on 11 Goin• buslntu L•n•. Ntwoort 11e1c11, Call!. t he Public Service Coni-ti·e~ ol T•u1t, l"!e•t •! t~er('~n ~nd Ttl: !Jill ,,._.411 CE NTU RY 2I J1£AL ESTATE . uiii Vhdon M. GOrmly, 1145 Candle1ll<k ll•.1H 01, In unpaid prlno:lo~I cl tllt not• Alt•rn1y1 "" P'lllll111t r II each lllvd.. Huntlnvtcn eeAch, CA L1nf, l\ewoort etath. ca111 miss ion, whic h has reg uJritory ••""t d bv 1altt Oeod 01 1ru,, w1•~ 1~ 1 llto6 Publl1n1a Or•nPt coeit D•H p ·1 , 9i6•7 This bu'!'lntss 1, blln• <Ol'l<lucttd bY • power over the expenctiture •,:'e,;',,'~',','."',.f~o0•, •,,'."',•,,',',',21' lt71. 11 1¥:~:1g: c'...°t~:JR~~A ~~= Mov JI 1nd Jun• 1. I, 1•12 -l•1'o~ri Chrl1•I Rttl!Y, 11171 etecn Blvd . Partrterslllp. " r " r "" .., Huntintton Bt.cl'I, CA t1'47 VIVIAN M. GORMLY Corrunitmen~ a nd p I ant Da1ed M•• 11, 1911 THI! COUNTY OI' OllANOt: LEG 'L NOTICE r 1111 bu1i11~1 11 blln• condu(ttd bv 1n Tl1h st,.t•m•~' flltd with tht Ccvn1v d f.liigns, had been g iven earl)' l AWYf.11~ TITLE No. A·1>t\J "' !ndlvld<11I. Clt rk flf 0••"0~ CD<JMV on ; M•V 16 GU AllANT"r COM f'ANY, ~OT!CIE 0, Hl!AlllHO 0" f'tiTITION tddo 0 WI c I" f th t' I 111,1,~. l'OR l"llOllATt 01' WILL ANO Victor 1-1. Jtlhlrukl ttn. e.v eev1r1v J. M ~. e Y ovn· no ice o e coopera ive p an, ev R1C1<•110 c. MAll SH ALL, ~~~;~·~EN~~:Y l'Oll '-I! TT•" s s u~~~'rt,'.i Tc°o1~:~o~~o~t1 c1!~1 o;'~~!~;;'ci:.:~-;i, ;:,1.11\A:.'112i.°r,"17. iv c1ert. "111n lfE ALSO R E LATED h Vile Pr•< E•l•I• cl H•N.SON DUV ALL PUT HUFF, Sl ... TI DI' C""Ll,.OllNIA f'Olt !Iv lltvt rly J, Madd(llt, Dt1>11ty Counrv Publlthed Or1n11 COM! 01!1v Piiot. t a t R :~11~1 S~;,~~.!~y II, l! ... SSEN. l l'ID known •S HANSON 0 . PUTHUFF, TNI! COUNT Y 01' Oll ... NGI!: Cltrl!. I'll"! Mov II. 21· arnt June I, I, ltll. l)00.1J COaJitioll 0 f environmenta l 7"'44 HA N~ON PVTHVFF •net H. D Nt. A·'2Uf led b (h W " I • ''' • 0 , , 0 ,, '''''· ,,.~"''· •--,.--. E11t1, °' MENll:Y JAME S JOHNSON, PubHlt>td Or•nvo ca.tt 0111Y f'llot. LEGAL NOTICE groups y e 1scons n AA•~ 1 1~";.,~ -~~·J~;_ 1.0~'n • v 1101.11 NOT1cE :-5 HUEev GIVEN 11111 •110 •nown t i HENR,. J. JOHNSON •nd M•Y 11' 11' l s, •nd Jul'lt 1' ltn 1111·n Wildlife Fede r ation was ~iven LOUISE WH ITE PUlHVFF 1111 fll td HENRY JOHNSON, O.Ca11l'<I. 51.ATIMl!NT 01'" WITHDllA.WAL "11:0M The f'lertln • ptf\IJon 1.,.. Prob.It• of wltl •nd NOTICE 15 HEllE8Y GIVEN 10 th• LEGAL NOTICE ~·,.AillTNEltSMI " OP'l!llATJNG UNOEll: advance notice. coalition. LEGAL ~OTICE Codldl •n<I tor l•1uenct of l tlltri CTtdl!Orl 111 !ht •bove n1mtd deced•nl l'"ICTITIOUS 8USINE.SS NAME he noted, w as formed "lo Tea1tmentary lo ~ l!Clll!lol'ltr rt"ftrtMt ltt4il •II l!Cl•>Ot'll 111"1"11 ctll!Tls 1g1lml l1'lt! NOTICE 0 ,. lNTl!NTION TO aHGAGI! TM IO!lo¥oln9 g1<1on ~•I wllhdr..,.n ts I 10 ,, !O Wl'lltl'I It m..,t !or lurlfl.lr oi rllcultrl, l•ld dtc..Sent tl~reaulr•d to Ille Ill~. IN TME SALi! 01' ALCOllOLIC 1 1ent rtl p1rlMr trorn !I'll l"•IMrU.IP Create dia ogue with e lectric HOTICli D' TllU STEI:'' S.i,ll! end lllt! lhe llmt t nd Pll CI of ht trl!WI tht Wiii\ tilt ntclHI lfOl.ld>ttl, In !llt O!flCt I EVl!ltAGIEI 0Per1lln11 Ut'Htt r lht flc!lllOlll buslntH companies 00 the problems Of f' No UI! • 1~me II•• -n J.tl tor June :IO, Hn. t i DI lht Cltr-of lht bove anlllltd <ourl, or MtV 1&, 1f7' n&mt of ART CRAFT DECORATORS •I 0 , Ju~e .t~. l•n, ~· 11 00 ,. ,,. , t ·)O •.m., In •ht courtroom "' Deo•••· '" or•••nt •~•m. w1111 ""' nt-t:tn1rv To Wl'lorn 11 M•v ccnct rn: 111jl Mt. B8ldY c 1rc1t. Fotinl•ln v111oy, energy and the environment." FULLE:llT ON Mo 11 t G AG F. ANO mant Ko. l Of ••Ill court, at 100 Civic •oochtri, 10 111• unclarsl•lled •I 111• O!llcf'I Sub!KI lo li•u111c:a (II tl'll Mcen!-9 11p,.. C11norn11 t77DI. He said the planners will l!~C llOw (0\/Pt,NY, '' fr.,~tre U"der Ctntt r Orlv1 Wa1!, In tilt City el h nt1 of HARWOOD. SOOE.N .. A01(1N$ON. 550 piled tor, hO'l lce h ht•tbv •lvtn llltl tt11 T~t !lcllllovt bu!!Mll "1ma ~latement end PU'1\/~nl ·~ !l••d ct Trust dt1td Af'la, C•tlk>rntt , Naw•crt Ctnltr Orl•t, Suitt I).(. N...._I Lm<l'r1l11ntd P'Cl>O'I"' to 1all A!coholic lor Tilt Ptrlnarshlp wts llltd on Nolll'mbtr SOiicit al/ Of the COUnsel OcT<ltNor tl. 1t10 •••t ulfd b• HA RR V Y. Oelod MtY JO, 1'912. llialcll, (tl1fornl1, wlllc~ Is !ht Ol9Ct Of ~veraDtl 11 ttot preml1es, dt1crlbtd 15 7(, \t i? In Ille County ol Orlntt. avaiJabJe fO antic ipate ob-011.VIES. Jll ~n<I (At.DACE 1.. OAVIES. WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, bl/I nen ol lhe undtrtf•ntd In Ill mitters follows: Full N•m1 tnd A.ddrt11 OI tto t Ptr'4/l ~u1bAnd tnd wife ~nd reco•dtd Oclobtr COlllllV Cltrk ~Mtlnln9 It !ht tilttt cf iald dtctdtn!, 1644 NtwPQrl Blvd., C<Mll MIS .. Catll. Wllfldrew!nt • jectiOnS based 00 ecology, and 16, \t70, In l>DQ~ f 41lc na~t ~'3. ol Olllc!tl MOLMP.t I'. N08All:T within lour ""':"1111 ll!fr 11\f llrtl publ!CI• Por•u1nt to IUcll lnl•M!lcn, ltlt Un· ROLLO EOWAll.D 111'0WN, lllll Oki th 'd d J d • flKc•d1 In tnt cHlct n! 111r Rfcorder cl 145' Wlllfl)r1 SlvC., Suitt 1:ro1 1100' f!i,'",i 110:·c~;,., derlltntd 11 '"'lyln1 ro Iha Oeo9rrmen1 F11hlon W1y, Gard111 Grove, Calllcrnlt. US to BVOI e ays an Jn-O••nv~ Coun!v, C•lllornl11, will 1tll 11 Los ,t."111t1, Crill. "'11 1 ll:V;~ ic: JciHNS()tt ol A!cOl'lolk B~ver•o• Conlrcl !or lnY•ntt 11:.0LLO EOWARD BR OWN terventions. public auction to ~iv~e•! b\dder lor (ISl'I Ttlt UU) Ml·m7 · ol 1n 1lcof\ollc bevtr111t llttn11 ~or ,.144'7 I'!"\. 'sod Ill tr l (1>xv1bll •I !1..,e o< 10lt on lowful mo~tY At1om11 fw: f'ttltl-r :::'~~.,,,~d l~:c:;::• ol lhl llctnu1) for lllt1e ortml1a1 11 fellow\; Pub!l1had OrtnG1 Coe1I 0111V Piiot. .,,le epi e US a eS aS el !tit Un!lltd s1~Tr1l en ,~. !ro~I \lfPI IC Publlth$<1 Oranot CU.II D•llv l'l!ol, NAltWOOD, SODEN .. AOl(INIDH On 5tlt B"r Jul'lt I , •• "· ,,, nn 1.1,)(1.12 clearly as any other in the "1t Nori" •n!rantf or l'u!l••l!Pf' Morl•oa• Jun• 1, '· 1, !912 l4J1·71 lH New-Ctnltr DrlYt Jtmt1 L. Anderoon W'"-·•i"n power Indus!~ Jate-)nd E.scrow Com.1>~nv, 'l()S 5. Euclid Pubn111t'CI Ot•!Wlt Co•1I 01i1Y ,.ITO!, '"""-"'"' ·~ )lrHI, Full~rLon. (xllln,nl~ 11+ •IQ~!. f11!e N-rl •••th, (l lllor"1' June l, 1971 U:M·'7 LEGAL NOTICE Jy that generating sites wllJ no .111G lnlera1! tonvevP<J !o •nO n,,..,. f'l•ld llv LEGAL NOTICE "'•~lJ1 ) -... • ' 11 under Mild oe~ 1" •nt r>•ao""Y • ......,, .... '""' r1• LEGAL NOTICE longer chosen or pla n ts built sf!UllN Ill lfte Cltv of lrv,nt. in ••Id l'ubllstltd Or1nge Cotl1 Ot!IY Pllo!. l'ICTITIOUt SUStNl!lt · · nd · (ounty •nd SI•!~ G•icrlb•d ~· NOllCI! OP II.ILK T•ANSPl!ll: MtV 11, 11, tJ, •nd JUM I, ltn ,,n.n NAMI! tTA.TaMl!HT on engineering a economic Loi }II 11, Tr.ct No. 1061, ,n •n~ (,ho! ISte1. 1111.fH, tJ.(,(,J ,.ICTITIOUS SUSINl!ll Tiie lollowl111 Hl'IOfl b dtlntl bllllMU J'On!idtrations onJy, lrvlnt, 11 tllown c" 1 .,,~0 l"!••t'C• Nollet 11 tlt••bv vlvtn lo !ht Cr9dltontl LEGAL NOTICE HAMii! ITATl!Ml!NT 11~ recorded Ill bocll ?6t, p~g~1 l8 lo 41, ""l MILLE1', irln1ftror • .,,.,,Oif busl ... 11 T,..'lotl-1"9 PtrlOn 11 ctlll"9 bulffMIH l'All:·W!ST LEASING CoN\,.AHY, 1 The governor noted the Mftctll•-M1p1. 1rccttd• .,, •~Id ""'"" 11 • Nor111 co.111 Hl....,.•Y· ••: uu N....._.t e 1vd .. N_,,ort a..(11. decision of the u ti 11 t y Ortn .. CIM/lllY. L~llM !a.ch, CounlV ol Ortnot. Sitt. ol 8 14111 D. J ATICIHSON Ind COMPANY, 1'1ul 1'1«r• Jr., .)VI Giibert PriW, T~• ill'ft'I iddrHI flt mP r@•I oroPfrly Celltornla, !1'111 I butll !r1n1f..-11 t boul lo NOTICa TO Clt.DITOltl 2~ Ct ll<I Htrrnota. C11>lelr•no •••<II, Huntl,..ion !tKh. manager! tO design a nUCJear .,sc:ri!Md •bOY'f 11 PIH'llorlld lo bf• b<t m.ot lo SUSANNE TltET~EWf.Y, tUl'l!ltlOlt COU•T 01' THI! C•. lt267•. T~ll bu1lntH 11 !)el119 ·condudld w •n generating plant becau.se It Is tf1SI Cornll' SlrMI, lr•lne, C..tlfornla Transtt•et . .....,_. butlMlt tddrH < It 136 IT ... TI! OI' CALll'09:N IA l'O• . Oonald Jt mt ""1tln11>n. 161M Ctllt lndJvlGutt, Stld ul• "'111 M mHt, IWI ""''"°"' Locull SlrHI, 1.1vun1 lletd'I. Covnty Of TNI! COUNTY OP O•ANGl' Harmo..a, Capl1lrtno llHCl'I, Ct . '261,. l'tul Pee.rt Jr. thought tO be the rtl()St <O-tlll ~ .,.~rrinty •~•,tn er !moll~ O•~ntt. Stet1 cl' C1lltoml1. Ht. A·J'MU This bl/11""'' !1 btlnt1 cond'llcltd b¥' •n Thll ol•ttmtnl lll+d wHh ttle (Ol,ln'ly f lbl H l rdlne 11111, .Un ion, or .,.: Thi prOPtrlT to bt tr1ntltrrld 11 loc:•ltd I! 1 I• It 0 I I E U L A H 'A. y E h1dlvldual. Clt tk M Or1n .. CcunlY on: M1v t, ltn . elS e. um branc••· ,, .,.., fltf: uflP•<d i>rlnclPtl ,1 .., Her111 COl'lt Htlhw•v. L111111t KHLUf.TElt. °'<••lid. Oontfd J . A.ltll'llOll Ir 11,,..tv J. MtddoJ<. O.PlllV County "Because our earth ob- sum ol llW lllllt ~ b¥ 1ti. 09t(I, 'fl< llttcl'I. Covn!V M Ort-. Sltlt ti HOT ICE 1.S HEll EllY GIVEN !o !ht (ITl'l~s J1~llrntl'lt( 111":' wl'." Mlht l~"'t;l; Cltrt. Vk>\z~l does not CO n t B I n """· 11',t .. Aol. wt1'11 !n1trt11! lrorn C•lllor1111. r;rtdllvr1 ol !ht •bcrlw "lmtd dteedtf'lll 1.'' 8-vtr~'"'J. M~:~""~ Cou11.Y '"'" ~ .. , ..... -1, ltn, It In 1111! no!• P-0. S1ld On:toHtlY It ffKYfbtd In -•1 tl'lt l t it porJOlll hll'lnet clalm1 1g1ln1t lllt Cit~ l"ubl\"'9<'1 OranM (Olll Dtl!., l'lkl1, UnJJ te<f !UpplieS O( coa( and wld..cf . ..,..llKH. II 1ny, undl< lllo l•tml ll: All •toe~ In t•fft, ll•tu•t1, tcll!IOfl"ltnl Uld dtetdenl t fa r .. ulrld to !Ill Tl\tm, I' 1l'MI Mt1 11, 11, U , and JUM I, 1t12 1m.17 Ottler '-asjlJiecf fonnl or 01 telO l>Mdi ... s, U.."""1 tl\d t•ot<tit1 t lld '"°" wlU ol tht l, Ari Gt lle•v bu1lnt11 Wll!I ttoa M(lll•l"'I' YO<>OMtrl, I" ltl<f Ollltt " bll Or ( O lly Pflef !==============:! <~ 01 "" T,,,.,,.. ..-ici o1 ltt• trutt1 c .. 11ed ~.~.,·~ M1LLE1t,,.• ','..,'o'•O ,•, c"', 11 ""cltfk el !I'll • .,. .... 1n1n1111 t011rt. er Mi~ 11~":!, '"" ·~~ 1.8:"1tfl • l)OJ.ri tnergy and b!cause we are bv said °""· .. •lld I«• • or HI It '"''fnt 11\tm, wllh th' n.ct1»r1 ' I •• 'd I I ,..,. bt.,.iid•l"I' tllld« wld o"°', .,.,. Hl<lhwtv. Lii~n• ee•dt. ceuntv cf .._11er1, 1111 ,.,. unOtf1I•* .,. ""e>ttJct LEGAL N::rTICE a re11....., e p et n g our 'n••011 °' • br•Kh ., H11u1t +n "" o,.,,.., s111• °' cin•or"'11· at hit 1tt11r"ltY. eLOCI(, 11uCKNE1t t. LEGAL NOTICE rtlOUrt'eS at a rapid rate, an At1ll11tlon1 MC\lrtd flltrebof, fltottlofort '"" bulk !•Intl•• will be (Oni11mm1Md LOPIM, INCORl"Oll:AlEO. nu North ,.,(TITIOU~4Ull N•t• I •• ••• I ed «•Klllld and 1191lvttlld 10 the ufldf<"tlvt!l!I on ., "tor 1111 hi dtt' of JvM. 1'1), •I BrOldw1y, Sanlt A.n1, C1lllornlt •7701, Plt'trTIOUS SUCIHl!SS •' ... AM• STATIMl!NT A temauVf: tO WH:! COttt nu a wrlrtfl Otc11r1llC11 fl# J)tl1utl •rtd 1>9. Miu\orl 8tnk. too GlenntV•t. l teune Wl\l(fl I• lM P11U ol bulll'ltU ol 11\t H""MI! •TAlEM•NT TM tcllowllll ptnon l• ctcln• bu,lnt1, U86 Of theJe fon:iit of energ .,.,,net tOI' Stlt. eflCI •rll!ton f!Olk* fll •aecl'I, c.,nty ot 0r•"9t· .S•tlt of ur.dtf1!t!'ltd lh tll m•1t111 11•tt•lnl119 lo i ll• fO.lltlw!nt .. ,.., 11 llelllt blllfl'ltll 11: ~·t•dt Incl ol 91&Cllon IO C9111t ,... Ctlll .. ~I•. "" ''''" of Mid dt<Pnl, ... 1111tft IW, ••: THI! •ALDWIM (l)Ml'A.NY, •• geoeraune mWft be used," '1N)ersltnt( 10 MU 111!1 prOPtrtv lo $o ltt ti ).nown ICt lhf Trelltltr ... ti! monlllt tltll' 1111 11'11 P1Jblltttlon cl 11111 COSTA ME$A llEll'O•Tllt, tlf VIC· C1m11Ut Orlvt. NewPOff 9 11 c ~, remarked. sttlity 11iaci01111r~, •IW:I ""rHtt.,, °" bll~I...,, n<1m11 tnd •Od••n•• u1..i bv 1tc1lc:1. torl1, svn~ 177, Cc.I• M•18. Ctlll.,..nlt fl6t0 J-rY l l, 1'71. tl'lt v110..-1l11nt4 c•uHd tr.il<tOI' lor ,,,. Ill••• Yttrl 1111 Dl1f, II 0.tld Mt., t. 1'71 o ... Dllntln, 41 (llfUI Vl•w Oflvo, llALDW1N BUILDEltS I• (tilt, •tld r.ollc9 o1 brt1d'I Ind ti t lKtloll i. IW dlll•tl"I "Oll'I '"" •llQYt, t ra: nont. HllHll:Y Hl!ll:M.1.N SCHLUETlilt, An~lltlm. Corp,), DOO C1mou1 Drlw, NtWl)O(! •f'COl'dld Ill boct ....... Hll .... ., ••le 0.Nd: ~ 1'. lfn lkl Hl!NltY H. SCHLUETER Tht1 buJI""' 11 NIM (ond.>cttd D-II< lfa(h, C•!llc11111 t'JUO 04n<ltl .l'(Ofdl. SUWl!nt Tlt!'-wrv. IJ!KIJMr el' ... Wiii !lldl•ldu•1. T?!l1 lll.rlllltlt I• <onduclfd by I (Of· O_,.: "'411' t. 19?1. l rtntltrff ,,. o1 1'111 l bov-e na""ICI dtttd9ril 0""N DUNCAN 110r1llori. t"Ulll!•lON MOll:1'0A.OI A.HD Mlul.,. SW l lOCK, lllCICNI• & LOll'IH, INC. Tl'll1 tlt1t"""'t filed wit~ fl>t (ountv J1met ,., l•~ln aK l!:OW (OM,.ANY ,_, Olllct ..... ,... 111' N.,,. .,..,..,y Cl9rk fil OranM Countv ori; M.., 11, ltn. kcrtl•rY ...... T"MNI· -• .....,,.. ...... AM,. CL ""' ew 9-rlY J, ,lillddOit °"""' Ctunty T?!!1 ''''-' ••• fllfof Wiii\ ..... ,.,,,,. SY W1111&no I • ......,..,., ~. !!""'• Ctllfwlfl T9ft f"41 --1 C"'1L IV Cltrt of °'""* Cou""' ewt Mn I. ltn. Trnt Dmm' ~ ..., .... &"'""'9 flw ....... 11'•111# •17 ... ~·1-Or-( .... Olllll' "'"'· l'vtlllillltl er-. CMst Dtllf f'llef, l"ufllllMd °'-CMll D•lf'lo •11o1. f'Ublllohtd' DrHoOf c ... , Dilly ,..... "'"""*' °""" c ... , 01ny l'llot, •J •• it II -J,,... 1. lt1J ll'r.·1' Jun• 1. ltn ltl1 N M•v 11. 11, u. lt1ld Ju111 1. 1111 inc.n ww 11. ,i. tl\CI June I, a. 1tn ll0f·71 Mav 11, 11, u , ,.,.. June 1. 1t11 1m-n "NUCLEAR ENERGY ap- pears to be the answer to m • e l I n g the den\2!!1<1-s' or a growing popula· Uon for necesury electrical powtr far lnto the futatt,'' be s.tld. ' ' ' Sc1·ib e Sal11tes 'M1·. A ve1·age' By fl'JLLIA~I SCflRE IBE R Of !hi Dl llW Pilot ilO!t JIIGH SCHOOL a11·ards banquets are m n rvelous things because they honor achicven1ent and bring bac k m any old memorie.~. • • They a lso nerer change. The rast or ch:iracters is di!· ferent. but the scene is al\\a~~ t he 1 sa1ne. The stream er-bedecked gyrnna- sium \.l'ith folding tables anti f'h::i 1rs laden w ith paper plates, cups crnlflr. pieces and bland c1.1fleria r::irc hns been the same ror m:i.ny years and ;1l n1any sch ools all ac r oss the counlry. I remember try ing to 1x1p ~ n crumpled paper cup through the bas- ketball hoop so neatly tuck ed away over the speaker's platform a t \V r. Woodson H igh in F'airfa :o:. Va . That bas k~tba\l hoop was "still there :i fe\v nichts ago at a ltmlq uet m Newport Beach, California, It still looked tempting and the speaker s lill looked apprehensive. THE SPEECHES arc the same thoug h some seem to h ave new slants. But after a ll. ho1v many things can you say about students who h ave prove n they are the bes t Oh, the ~p students are the same. too-the smiling races. unfamiliar coats and tif".<: and som ewha t uncertain handshakes with the teachers v.·ho \Vere out to flunk them just the day before. The teachers a lways h ave their day at aw:irds ban. quets. ]l's funny. but teach e rs alv.•ays loo k the s ame. The hrilr may be a little 1on ger and shirls a l ittle bril'.!hlcr ~ul they 11re the same teacher s I saw ha nding out the same a\vards to the same kids years al-!o. What m ore is the re to say. !\fy ce rtificates or merit and achievement have long since vanished in a huge box or trlviRI paoers and m atters n f the p ast.. Rtn' T R E m em ory of it all never r:ide~ In m y m ind, It can't fade at least as long as h igh school awards ban. quels are held snmewhere in the w orld. The whole practice or honoring the best sudents and m ost o utstending athle tes at annual t1wards ba nquets got my twisted sense of humor working. A s we s trolled !rom the l?Ymnaslllfllf after three hours of awards in Newport Beac h recently , my wife and T lhouR"ht it only !a ir that there should also be a n award for the "Most AveraRe Student." \Ve h ave aU known hiin and DCrhaps m nny of us we.re that 11tuclent at one time or nnolhe.r. HE IS THE RUY wh"se gr:tdes never sway from the median . Hit awa"d would be for the student who m ain- taine d a perfect "C" avcragt throul{h four years In school. ,JTe Is the guy who never pRM1ciuate<l in a .!iln1rle club sport or activity end instead preferred evening tclcvlslo~ and a good boOk. He ls the guy who never f1ad a date a nd never wanted onr. He also never attended 1 sinRlt: ~11001 d a nce . Mr. Average missed ~actly 4.75 d rivs. of 11chool <or whatever lbe. median Is) earh yef!r and Is ~flctly 5 foot 7 Inc hes tan and weiJi!hlJ IS7.5 pr.unds. He IJJ also the JtU:V who yPars l:ile r when vou scan old ye1rbook5 you say "!ley, lhere:'1: $?r1Cd old ~·hat's hb name !" A1 ANY RATE, Mr. Average. slnee yo ur m odest 1chlevernenLs may never be noUeed, I hereby ~lute you •nd wish )'Oil well. ' I l a t i r c ' II Jl Ti I ti p l( m b, d. w "" "fo Jo )' p w :i, d > wi jn 0 Kl p Ii pl m m pr si ve te el th s t ,m I 'de ... f t I • Jensen Adds Power Mesa Fir111 to Pro<l11c e Cruisers Lt_.c1l building ~ind t11arJ..t1 hn~ "Wt hav' the toP designer the cruisers hin1self. of offshore cruisers in the By ALMON LOCKAB EY 0 •11¥ P'Jllit ... ""' ll!Gll., Jensen Marine of Costa Thomas said the co1npa11y country in Arthur DeFever. Meaa , m;;inufacturer of !he in-11·outd now tnke O\'er pn.i· lh-e 1narkt•t for these boats is tern a I i on; 11 y fan1ous dt1clion uf OeVev1'1·s ov•·r,eus growlnl.;. we will offer the con- fi~rg\ass ··ca\" !in!.' of ~•hilc cxp.ind1n;; f:-:rt!:t1t<'.': :it siarrr :i cho1C't" of constnJ('tinn sailboats. annollJlced Vi'ednes-the Cos!~ Mesa plant lo bu ild in all wood, aU glass or ha!(. day that the firm has taicen the all-fiberglass models. and-half~ rhursday, JuM 1, 1972 DAILY PILOT j/J MANUFACTURING AND FIELD REPS OXEROXING 0 ANSWERING SERVICE 0 DESK SPACE OLA LINES 0 TELEGRAMS, TWX, Ef.OS ~ 0 SECRET ARIAL SERVICE 0 BOOKKEEPING 0 MIMEOGRAPHING. DOCUMENT TRANSMISSION 0 MAILING LISTS COMMUNICATIONS SERVICE BURUU TM>'s "Co•un co~cAr,.NS"' row c~ IRVINE·AIRPORT INDUSTRIAL COMPL!X (714) 547.7777 (213) 610-9393 on the production of the "Jensen's Pntry into rhe The heaVy displacement POP U I a r DeFever-4.esigned trawler market is a very 6 -diesel J>Ol\'ered. DeFevf'r boats!~====================::;============::::!. pCl\\'er cruisers. riling development." s 11 id are designed for long-ran ge R d. J D AJLY PJLQT '< Tl1e Dere,·er line is desii:rn-TI1on1as. '"\\"e <ire very op-cruising at 8 to 10 kn ots. Thr ea t l C ~ _ -ed by Arthur DeFe\"t>r of San timi.~tlc atwut th(' s11cl'('S11 of <·1·uisers are priced corn · Ul"I WI'""'°"' GOOD ~IT.IZEN -Jan1es LeBoeuf, 28, ,vho escaped from M1c.h1gan prison gang in 1968,~1ay gain free- don1. Ohio may not allo\v extraditio l of LeBoeuf \vho autho.ri_ties said has been Jivin in Ci ncinnati as good citizen, Identity came to light \vhen he Diego and Cornes in three the venlure fur s e \'er a I pet itively with existing Jines of For Top Spo 1·ts Covera rre sizl's, 38, 50 and 54 feet. The 50 reasons. offshore trawlers. • c: t""I and 54-foot versions a r e1 ~;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij~iiiiiii•••••••••••••••••••••iiliiiimmm"j 5ought to aid a J>Olicenian, .... Aqucinauts Well \.. After Deep Dive From \\'Ire Service cu stom yachts built of wood in I 1 Tai\\'an. The 38-foot boat has Ali-1 also been built in Taiwan but u·lll now be bullt by Jensen in fiberglass. Jeosen Marinels a division of the industrial conglomerate Bangor Punta Operations Inc. headquartered in Crcen~·ich, Conn. Bangor Punta n1anufac- tures a \'arirly of products in the leisure industry. including Piper Aircraft. Starcraft boats Rnd trailers. Smith a n d Wesson sporting equipment. Balboa motor homes and Ranger Luhrs and Cal boats. Two Navy aquanauts \vho set a deep-diving record of 945 feet are in good spirits after IO days ind ec om press ion chambers. \Vlth them when t h e v emerged "''ere three suppofl divers who went to the 850-foot level in the n1issi on ciff California's San Clemente ly unkno\vn to the avera~e Alabama voter. got almost 65 percent, apparently ending Connor"s long political career. Connor, 74, was confined to a \vheelchair by a stroke and \vas unable to campaign ac- ti vl'ly for a third four-year ter1n on the commission. The new· division will be known as DeF'ever Yachts. Announcement of the new manufacturing and marketing division \vas made by Charles E. Thomas, president of Jensen Marine, and DeFever at a press conference al Balbo a Yacht Club. ... every way to sleep! Jsland. · The Navy doctors who rx- amined all five said they \\'¢re in good condition after en- during bod.v stresses far greater than thoSC' of astronauts .in s1:r.::icc. Each of the decompression chan1bers is 7 feet thick and 20 reet Jong. In the record dive Mav 20. Chief Boatswain'.~ Mate ·war-I PEOPLE ren Ramos Jr., 28, of Sa n Pedro, and PO 1 . C . Christopher J. Delucchi. 21. of Fremont, stnved 30 minutes ;it lhe final depih. * * * Eugene "Bull" Connor, Birminghnm's tou gh poliC'c. commissioner during the civ il rights violence of the early J960 's, lost his hid for re-<'lec- tion as head of the Alabama Public Serviei! Commission. State Sen . Kenneth L. Ham• rnond of Vallry I-lead, relative- He11ry Says Of Dancer: 'Deligl1tf ul ' * * * Actor Bruce Cabot, \Vho died May 3 of Jung cancer at the age of 67, left a will dated March 13 leaving everything to his son. The '"ill n am e·s as beneficiarv "Druce J\<lichciel Tonnes, Who currently llves with his mother, Laila Tonnes, in Malmo, Sweden ." The ~·ill. filed for probate in Los Angeles. gives no in- dica tion of the vnlue of the estate. Cabot apptaretj. in many movies but is probably best known for his part as the ad ve nturer in "King Kong," 1nade in 1933. * * * Rep . Ric hard Poff (R-Va). who \vithdrew his name from consideration for appointn1ent to U.S. Supreme Court :iftcr criticism of his civil rights r{'('ord. \\'as named to the Virginia Supreme Court. Poff, Ytho opted not to run again for Congress after Virginia's congressional reap- portionment m o v e d his homcto\vn of Radford into <-111(1\her district, said he ac· cepted the nomination to Four of the OcFever yachts v.'ere alongside the BYC guest dock. including two 54s. one 50 and one 38. DeF'ever. an internationally known navttl architect, ha·s 2 1'1idshipn1 en Wins Jlonors T11t·o Orange Coast residents are among 25 midshipmen who have been honored by the Navy RCYfC unit at the University of So u the r n California. Steven E. Amling of Corona de! J\far was presented a sword for his "significant con- tribution to unit espri t de corps" and was also -honored for achieving the highest acaden1ic standing in a Naval science leadership course. !\lark J~. Saunders of Costa Mesa recei ved an award for achieving the highest degree of physical fitness in the ROTC unit. Virgini:i 's hi ghest cow-t "with Olyntp;c a curious mixture of joy, " gratitude and deep humilit y." Melvin*e.m*64. o! of 'he Hopefuls coun try's best known and most colorfuJ trial lav.·yer;;. T • LJ will marry a college CO<d Ulllltg p Saturday. TEHHAN (AP) -Henry A. Lia 1'riff, a senior at the BERKELEY (A p ) 'Ki ssinger. the ~ixo11 :id· University or l\1ary!and. will Sailboat racing fever is at the n1inistration's swinging be Belli's fourth wife, it v.•as boiling point on Berkeley's bachelor. says the h e 11 y reported in Sonora. Olympic race course for West dancer "'ho plopped in his lap Belli achieved prominence Coast skippers bidding to com- \v:'ls a "de!iF:htful ~irl" \\'ho as the defense attor11ey for pete in the Summer Olympic .\\·as "very interested l n Jack Ruby, \~,.ho k i 11 e d Games at Kiel. Gennany. 'forf'ign policy." presidential assassin Lee The three classes competin g Tl1e \\'hite !louse :1dvi:;('r JJarvey Oswald in Dallas. on this coast are the Dragons, ,joked \\'ith ne1.\'sn1en abonrd J\.1iss Trilf. daughter of Mr. Solings and Stars. President Nixon 's ,i et Ii n" r and Mrs. Thomas Triff or The test for Dragons will ;ibout t.he scene :11 a Tehran Bethesda, Md ., is scheduled to take place June 22·29, the Sol- -party in the v.·ee hours graduate next month v.·ith a ings June 30-July 7 and the \Vednesday v.ilen the raven· degree in anthropology and art Stars July 8-15. :}iaircd dancer. Nadia Parn, hi story, and has been awarded' The course, called the Olym. did her gyrating number a Fulbright scholarship. pie Circle, lies d i r cc t 1 y Vtithin a fe\.\' feet of Kiss-* * * downwind or the Golden Gate jnger's beaming face. then :;at Tn his last message to Jaw-and was chosen because its on his tap for a few minutes. f'nforcement officials, the late v1c1ous tides, chop a n ·d As the dancer sat on his lap. FBI direc!or. J, Edgar screaming and summer winds J\isslngcr said, they talked Hoo\·er. warned of increased are similar to conditions at ,about his s!rategic arms crime dangers during the Kiel. limitation conversation tables. summer vacation months. In fact, the Olympic com- "f spent some time f\:· "The challenges of summer mlttee's requirement that two plaining ho\'/ you con\·crt SS require the highest level of of the seven trial rl'lces start· .missiles to Y Class sub-law· enforcement perform-12 knot s of wind Jnight be marines.'' :ince,'' said Hoov er. who tough to fil l because summer \Vhen the reporters l':t· died May 2. "This is no winds on the bay regularly . pressed disbelief, Kis singer in-more than professi1>nal stnn· blow up to 20 knots gusting 25 sisted tvith a smile the con--dards demnnd and no less in the afternoon. versat ion v.·as strictly in-th11n the public has a right to The top threat in the Dragon tellectual: • "Of course, what expect." · ~ass is 1968 gold medalist Bud- else?" l·loover's remarks were con-dy Friedrichs of New Orleans. And, ln jesting reference to lained in the D i re c tor 's Denmark's Paul Elystrom, a the President's fre q u en t Message in the June issut of three-time Olympic go I d statements that he seeks to the FBI Law Enforcement medalist. ls favored to take ,make the world safer for Bulletin, released Wtdnesday. Soling honors. today's children. Kissinger ad-J iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiifiiifi!iiiiijiii~;!ii~'iiiliiji~fjiiiijiiliilll '.ded: "I want to make the world -safer for the Nadias." THE BEST \ Readf'nhlp po 11 a prove "Peanuts" is one or the t.world'1 most popular comic /strl~. Read It daily In the fJAIL Y PILOT. LET1S BE FRIENDLY Jr you have new nelghbort1 or know of 11nyone moving l to our Ull?a, plc1t~ teU UI ao th11.l "'e may t>xtl'nd a frl<':ndly welcome-•nd hel(I them to ~me a r.qua1ntt:d in their nt'!w 1urrourfdlng~. So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 4ff.9Uf Harbor Visitor ~174 ' . SAVE $ SAVE $. SAVE $ SAVE $ SAVE $ Queen Size Twin or Full Elegant Is the word for this superb Ortho bed. 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' pr an VAi In ins ... •• OU "' ' ' ' ! f. :. • 6m en BEA ANDERSON, Editor ' "''' 11 School Age Pregnan~y . - •• ' .._ -.. • - ' • ' ' ·r.: .> -· J. < :II • • I . • • • Dail y Pilot Photos by Patrick O'Donnell Teens Learn in g to Cope By MICHAEL GOODRICH Of the D•llY ,1101 Sllff The school age mother ha! special 1 problems. She must plan for her future and her child's as we ll. ' Education may be the key to both. Teenage expectant mother! in the Hun· 1 tington Beach Unifiet.l High School District, beginning last fall, were offered an opportunity to continue their education and receive training for' their roles as mothers. Sinct the school year began more than !Kl girls have attended SAM classes in the Huntington Bfach Convalescent Hospital. Thirty-six· expectant mothers now are enrolled. Regular studies are continued and ad· ditiolial inttructlon ls given in prenatal exercises. A family life Class discusses pregnancy, labor and delivery, child care and nutrition. VARIED STUDY Mrs. Arlene Bentley teaches homemak· Ing a.nd business. Mrs. Vern Va.llercamp ln!llructs in academic subjects that would be Included in regular school curriculum ranging from mtithematlcs to French. F1rnlly Ufe discussions are led by outside 11peakers Including n u r 1 e s , psychiatrists and counselors from !he • welfare department and adoplion agcn· cies. School days begin with 20 minutes of prenatal exercises, an hour of family life class, then an hour of academic study. Lunch i.s prepared by students who learn cooking. Another hour of academic study ends the day at I p.m. Coping, with schoolwor~ and pregnancy Is easier for the girls, they explained, because they have someone with whom to share their problems. HA VE PROBLEMS "Many are having problems with their pctrents-and are disturbed about what to do with their babies," said Mrl!I. Bentley. "Being together, they learn to cope with their problerl"s." "You don't think about your own prob- lems when you see everyolie else here,'' added a JS.year-old mother·l~be at a SAM program open hou,,e. "We all joke about being fat." "If I was going through having my ha.by by myseJf.'' another 15-year-old ex- plained, "l 'd be really &cared. Now, I'm not." "I WM really scared about having my baby until I saw the childbirth film in our family life class," commented on e girl whose son is now ai1 months old. "Since J was tht Aeeond girl in the pro- gram to have her baby, I bring him back to the class often to demonstrate bathing." Th ere is no pressure on the mother for or against keeping her baby. Many ha ve decided th ey will keep the child. ''There is no longer a stigma attach~ to keeping your baby if you aren't mar~ ried," added Mrs. Bentley, "Things have ~hanged a lot since I WM their age.'' On keeping the baby girls said, "l think .I can do it without too much trouble. Financial matters bother me most." Another said, "J just don't think I could give the baby up arter being with him for so Jong." The prime concern of the school district, h!)lyever. ls the Welfare of the young moftSers. ClaSSe!!I are designed to- help the girls adjust to their condition and continue their studies. Students attend classes until their babies are delivered. and most of those tn the program eventually return to regular classes. Graduates of lhe program often bring their babies to visit the class for practice in child care. The important factor, however, said district officials is that schoolln• con· t:;;ues, giving a bfighter outlook for the future. This year one perctnt of the ·district's fe male population was enrolled In the program. Program Aids Young Mother • Futu r e s· St-ud,i·e- By AWSOJ'\ DEERR 01 lk D•ll, ,li.1 Sl•ff She's a teenager and a student. She may be married or single. She is. or soon Y:ill be, a mother. What are her chances of com pleting her education? In the pas!, chances were slight. Although she was not forced to lea\ e school ex<'.'ept for her health. she "'as bani.shed from regular classes and counseled into home.bound teaching. SAh-f -The S r ho o I Age f\.1others Prograin -has in1proved the outlook. Begu n last Apr il by the Ne wport -to.1esa Unified School District the multifaceted progran1 offers more than just the 01.1- portunity to take hon1c a diplon1a. RESPONSIBILITIES J1oused in the Harbor Area Girls Club in Costa l-.1esa, SAM is designed to equi11 the teenager to handle the responsibil ities of motherhood. Classes arc taught by Mrs. Nancy RN Jane Dunwortli explains shampoo method, above, and bathing techniques, below, to Newport·Mesa school age mothers. Wa.l.sworth \\'llh U1e assistance of in. structlona l :11de Donna Berry. public ht'alth nurse Jane Dun~·orth and d1slrirt resourct's. District nurse r.1 rs. Ellen J11gran1 \V as instrun1ental in b<•g1111ung the class. In addll ioo to regular sthool \\'Ork, ad. justed to 1nect each student's rH't'ds and intcrt'sts. th<'re ar~ \OC111ion;)J ('iassi-s. honH! f'C'Onon11rs lessons. 1-1rt·11at;11 a n d postnatal c;1re. roie1Y n1othcrs bring thl'ir t•h!ldn·11 :iluni.:- to sl'hool each da y fron1 fl -i s ;i 111 In I p.nl. Exp<'t'lanl n1oth r1:.s help ,·;ir,. for (ho• nCY!'borns. learning child l':1rt· rhn111gh :it· lual expel"lt'llCt'. RELAX ED CLASS 1'he girls like \11(• relaxrd u!rnospht•r t• al the t:irls Club. \\lhi!c !lit'} are rcqu1r1 ·d lo con1plete f11e hours of \\Ork JX'r w1'1·!, in each subjt•1·t. (';1ch studies a1 ht'r p1111 pace, intersprrs1ng-t'X('t"Cist's. c-hild l"ill'1• anti kitchc11 duty 11·ith h1)111r11·11rk. Th rf'C' days l'<H h ll'fl<'k llll' .;iris prl·p;11r. lunch, rotat111g t1ur1cs of l"l1uk, table si·L· lin~ Rn1I rlet1n11p crew . On !wo other d.ar. .~!rs. \\'als"·or1h and f\.·lrs. Berry preparr the rnidday 111eal. u~ually including a t.:Oi!ktng dc111onstrat1011. Tt1<' H~ \'lslls the class~ eat.:h \Ved- nt.'~day nu1rnin~ to ~1vc prenatal and J>oJstn:1t.1I 1nformat1011. Jlcmonstrations 11:1\·e 1n('ludec\ t"."i.t'rtist::. an d baby bathing ll'l'hlll(jlll'S • Jl()SP!'l'\I. Tl>L.:H Stud~·U1s 11.11 ~· H.111ro d l h1;1~ to.lr1nnrial ltnsp1Lal. I 'rt'"il) ler1:111 .uid th•· \\'1•11 Ila by t 'l 1n1t• 1111t·r.t!L'<l hv 1til' (·~·s!;1 l\lt·,a \\111 11.111',<;. L'lu b, 1\·Jrs. \\.ds\1t1r!h :.<11d. '!'h~· _1nun~ n1 others l1app1ly IH~l' on the l"l''\.Jtltl!)Jbil1ty of caring fo1· tlle1r t111n li;1h11's, .11HI those or utl1crs l!l the ,i.:roup. Ft't'lini.::; about tlit• t"l<i,sC's fn11 n the t,111:; 11t'l"l' posi tive. '"l !h1nk the progr;1111 i.~ 1·11;1llv great," 011(' t't111111H'nled, ··h1·t·.111S(' I t·:.i 11 hr1n~ !he 1i,,1i~ <.1lo11g. r..ty n11J!hrr \1as go111g to take f ':1rt· 11t hi nt bul J fl't'l 1t is my ' 1 r~pn11s11J il1 t y. ' ··111 hon1e teaching I sa1v a tr<ichcr jusl onc1· or t11•1ce a week to get ass ignmenl!l'. '\"his is 1nuch better. I enjoy belng with 111:.·11pll'." Bt•ing 1vith people. l'specially other girls 11ho can share the experience ot prcgnnnt·y . childbirth and child care, is onl' of the biggest pluses in the program, f\·lrs. \Val sworth explai ned. LIKE A FM11LY "We've really become like a !aD)lly, concen1ed about each others need! 'aDd feelings. \Ve all try lo hl'lj1," she added. Information pamphlets from the heaJth department and llo:.1g: llospit al have been provided on <.1ll phases or childhood gro1vth and dev elupn1ent, family planninc: and nut rition. "TI1c girls are all S<"lf·motivated," the teacher said, explaining that all five gjrJs vol un!C<'red for the prograni. They can rctnain with the program. she added. nfter they deliver and unlil the child is a toddler. then return to regular schoof classes if they desire. SPECIAL EDUCATION i\lark H8Il8en, coordinator or special education, said, "We hd"pe to do better than just getting a diploma . We want the girls t.o be able to earn a living and get Jn volved in their own futures • "Balancing the scales with positive e:re pericnces is our goal. There are enough negative aspects to being a school age mother." He cited statistlcs th11 t there arc 200,000 school age mothers in the l.Jnitl'd States. Students from Ne1\•110rt-i\1esa district high schools are eligible tu attend SMt claascs. The girls arc bused daily to and fro1n cl asses. Parental and doctor's ap- proval is requir ed. llansen and r.lrs. \V:ilsworth fee l the program is working well. Ty,•o girls will return to regular l"iasses in the fall. One is married and a graduating senior. 10\Ve want ~·hut is best for these young gir-ls." Hansen said. "We want each girl to ha ve the opportunity to continue the P,_reparation for the future." I . I • , 8 Dll l V PIL OT Tnur~dJ. Junt l 1Q72 • Female Experience Explained at I • rv1ne 8\ I.A URI E KASl't.11 "01 tM O•!I~ l"llel Slltf Th"' fPmt1IP '"'Jle' le"!<'" 1~ "alv.·a~s a rirocf'ss nf bt'{'1•m- .n~ l.1\llr j.\lr!s ,11rr /}l•t'1)1111ni.; 111- !le l11.d1 r s teer1.1g1·r~ tire berom1niz ~uun~ I ,, ll 1 t'' . \\Omen f'n!t·11n~ thr '"h11lv state of 1 0111u11u11l v pr111)(·rr 1 ' ar1' hf' co 111 1 n g "~01nl'1111•'!'1 II Ill''" ,1·n111lg IJ\()11J1 ·f"~ ;Jf!' b11 ,1 be1·0!!1111g tht· kind ••f rno1h1'r '1w.·11·11 :.a1, 1hr1 shnllld bt' F1nilll~ ill ilho"1UI !hi' ;igp 11f 40. .... hrn )11·r ··hildren nu lnngrr .,..·;111t hrr and h«r' !H1'- h11nd hfocnn1f·s !ess 1n1er1•"!f'rl , "then she conies fa te Iii f:i.f·e "'ith hfe ," arcord1ng lo I.\ nn 0Sl'n , con~u!tani rn I he \Vomen 's Oppori vnH1es Centrr at UCL She 'A'BS !he first speakl'r d1UUI){ <I flll'hllUf t•HU/11. c·.1!1 f'd only An ln111:1t11111 111 'l\on1(·n. at l:l'I ~l11ndnl'. 1·1)11011111,i.: ht-r r:11k hnurlv rll5('lJ.SSIOl\S <In \ 11rious ~uh J~t·t.~ 11•l;1[IOJ.{ IP \\1~!111"!1 t1r1':1n J 'nrt11 ·i p:i111 ::; dr 11 1•'•1 111 <11!d ou1 d u11nJ! 1)1{• ;,)11•r11·~·11 :111- p.1r1·r11h i.:11111 111~ 111 l11r lun1 h. 11h1·n ,.i.,,s "~'' 1•1•·r ur 11 1 ~1 11hl'1l tht !opw 1riH·r1"\l'd tt1l'n1 Sl'.\Ht\J·:ll BY J• \~T ,\ 1n:1ji.r 111 4•f !hr p.1rt11·1p.u11, 11t'rt' '''l1H1r' t;u 1ni.: :-i 111.1)01 dPc1,H111. oldr r ~!Udf'nts who li.111• rt·l11rn1•U tu :.ch<~il :111d st.ti! 1111•11d.1e1 s. \1iss 0;-.cu t11ld fa·r l1~lt'llt'r.~ that &11·1nl <;1·1t·11t1 ..,1~ li;i11: 1111 1nadcqua!I' und ~·r'i!<1nd1n.: of a 1\on1an·s !dti. \\'h en :..pea kin g of normal adult brhal'ior, they reff.'r 1n masculine tr;i1rs , ap· parrnt ly indicating lh.J.l the ' \ • I . ~. ~ • ' ' .. 'r ·~~ I ,-1' ~(·111101111' l'hilri1(·trn"il11 "i ;11(' nnt ;is rlf's1rnhll' . But. shf' 1iia1d thi.~ rwr10.cl nf llrnr 1~ ii .. rcna1s-.:ar1C'r nf <'nn- ,·r-1 r1 ~t:>out women !'ip;irkrd b) !)()l'J;il 11H111·1n1'rlts of lhr p<i~t dt·<·:i:lr·. •ornrn h.11 c QUf·~l1n111•d 1h1•1r nw1\ .'r:itu-.: Iii tiJ ,. ;incl ~h1· 1nd1r<1tP<1 , 1h1s 11 t!l ""n1in111• 1\l!/111ugt1 t))1·re bas bC't'n i1 ~r·l';!I ch;111~1· 111 <ttlltlldl'S, !hr> :iu11)1,,-;11111 l1•;1c·htr artrn1!tl'd s(l me 1101111'11 ~tdl f<•rl thr~ Rrf' ou! of !ht• mn1·emf'n1. Th i'i .... he bl111ncd nn thri1e rea~11ns 'rhc first rind ,greal 1-st h:.1!'1 been till' in1age i.:i~eo v.•oml'n's l1h€rat 111n1 <1~ b.v !he rna~~ n1t'd1;i l't'lio f(Jcus on surh 1h1n.1::s ;:is !hr.Ir undrrv.·l'ar fem1nlt.1 and .~ex life. BRA BU R~ERS Although resea rc h h a s ' .. . .. I ~ I . ~ • • I " .~· •• '. hhu\-1 n that nn 111)(' Jn thr 1111J~e1nent c1(>r hurnrd a bra. ,.hp i;;airl 'V•r-v.ill .;till gn l!nv.·11 tn t1 1slorv :is bra hu rncrs." Shi· al:.o said Jt t;ikrs I\ v.01n ;111 <>t>1·11rc· 1n hrr fc:n1111ty to cx:11n1111~ Lt t1rld a rn.tr1 !it'<'llff• in hi<; n1ascuhnuy 111 <1dn111 .1 "'•!nan·s pus11 1nn "l"ht• se1·n1HI tf·:l:.on ~he tltf'<1 frfr lh+· t1'!U'>il l of soinr wnnlf'n 111 'J(11n tile 111111 r1nrnt is ;1 1n;1ll1•r nf t1n\f' "\Vn1nrn arc n1 >ik 111g ;i <1ua111un1 lrap ." she .~ill(f 11'1 lll:tJI\ \-\<11111.'ll \-\'OU ld l1k1~ n111rr 111111• Tu e\amine the lt1•11·1·11H'OI Th11d!~ 'hC' ''41d. not C\PrY. 11nn1;J11 <.'<Ill <lj.'.l't't' Oil f'\"CfY pnrt 1tf the m1i vc111cn! ~·l an.v wn1nrn n1ri1 f111•1r f'qua l p11v hut ob1cct to The forn1 nf pr11- !r<;t Hn11·r1·f'r, s h r> 1·hari!Prl 1! v.·l)u ld he '"1ntr!lf'ctua!!y dishonest'' tn let the fo rm nf protcsl nbhtt>i"ate the reason for tht' prote~t nep;,rts from !he rom- n1i~$10ll vn the Status of \\'or11cn s i n1c e 1961 ha,ve r f'lti.•rated 1ne ·r ' a s oo g , prima rily ~he higll perrentage of 1vork1 ng women. salar ies lr111.er than 1nf'n and lark of da1' eilre ~ac1ht1t!>. 1'hos1· v.on1l'n v.1111 don 't 11,trk nn<l ,tla 1·e ;u1 ulrnl 1I~ tir rl t•!nselv 10 ,t.hf' farn1lv dis CO\'rr 11l1en 'u1f'y. loose th t.ir f;:in 11lv that !hf'y beve no ident ity of th«>1r 1h1 n. llOW Sil~ FiE't,, ~liss tlsen 1sald a v.·oman shou!d know ·how· she feels about her$elf, Oft en. she said, a \.l'Omi.Il has a drcp rage hidden 1ns1de \\'h1ch, "\\'hen st does e1(llod e. u·s !er'rihll'," often re.sulJ:ing in physical illness. "Before we reach a new sisterhood, il • is v 'r y necessary to understand hov.• we feel toward olher women,'' she cootinucd. Many won1en compt'!le for a man and for a PfM!ll)on of powel' and status. Many, loo, prefer ha1·ing men over women as friends. Th is. she said, "shov .. s a lack of fa ith in women.'' f\li11s Osen also sairl ii is im· portanl lo unders tand the role of men. She noted their rol es 1n life are difncu\t also bu! said won1en shou ld be past the no tion that the 1nasculine ego \1 ii I be shattered if he is not given the sacc.ha rine approach or if his won1an y,•orks. One v.'ay for a woman to find out v.·here she's at. she said. is lo fanl..!1 111ze about 'A'hal vou v.'f!uld hke to do_ Later ·on. she sai d, if the dreain 1s looked al obJec!Jvety, it .... 111 "!ell }OU a ll'lt about \.\·ha t your 1dcnt11y is " l'IM~ BIAS She reminded the \.\'om en, •·\Vhe re you are lomorrow depends on v.·here you 're going todl }." !\be saut. "1 1h1nk '4 P all ha ve a t1 1ne bias. SnmP people look tn rhe pa.~t Some peopl e look. to the futurr " 'l'h1s has notlunj.\ lo dr. 111th chrnnologJf'al <IJ:ll\ she i-airl, noHng 1h;i1 hi,l!h Sl'hool girls are ·'perhaps one of the most ho.o;t1le groups \\'I· enf'nUn1er," hn11·p1er "II d(}('S ha 1· e son1e1 h1n g ro do 111th v.he re your head 1s a! "ThoSf' 11•ho ~Pr 11 as an age of birth." ~he cnnclurled , "are people onentated ln t h e fu ture " Ne.w Method Offered For Scoring the Game \ ' By t.:Ril-tA BOMBE:CK l<.ly husband \l'as reading A story lhe other da y where a man in Lond on rl.'n ted his '"ife out as a housekeeper and com- RRn inn for three months for $120. them and put ~hem on yo ur blouses. 10.30 a.m.: Take tuck 'i in all of underwrar ind ~lacii.s to mrike him th ink he is gai ning \\'eight. the c;i.r seat up under the s1eer1ng "'·heel so your leis v.·ill cramp." l , ' . I OPPORTUNITIES SNAPPED UP -Melanie Mizell, Costa Mesa (rij:ht) focu ses her camera oo fe llow Girl Scouts (left to right) . . . Sue Schmitz, Cris Hamilton aiid Patti Sl ope" The four beach area girl s wil l particip ate in national \\rider Opportunities progran1 . 1: " ~~~o~~~~~·~~~ r. .. ·.,·- i i~:'.~l'li/J11 1'\.A_t Ii'\ -1 n .. -. !~~~::Li../~ ~~ ~~ 1 ·~~~~ ... ~!9.-~ ~ • To avoid d.i s!)p polntment, prospecti ve '.s:; :::· brides are reminded to have lh~ir ·?.'edd ing ,-:,·· •-stories '-"'ith black and \\'b ite j?:!os-;y pho to- . graph s to th e D:\II,l ' PILO'r \Vomrn 's Dtr partn1ent one \veek before the ,,·cdd 111 g. .. Jl1c tures recei ved after t!Jnt tin1e \1·111 no t be u~cd. i:or engagcn1cnt announ cerncnt s it is iinper ative tha t the s1o ry, a ls o accon1pan1ed by a black and \\'h1le glossy pic ture. be su b- mitted si x \1•eck s or n1 ore before the 1redd1n g date. lf dead line is not rnet, only a story 11·iU be U.5ed. To help fi ll requirements on both \\'Cd- ding and engagement stori es . forms are available in all of the DAILY PILOT of!iccs. Further que stions \Viii be ans1vered by \\'omen's Section staff tne1nbers at 642-4321. Wider Opportunities Offered Gir.I Scouts ' ' Four tir.ich a~,:;t Senior (i ifl ' chosPn as an alternate. !., Sc-nuts '4'ill· !pend l'A'D. weeks Patrici a SJoptr . \\'ho 11 in· I h1~ ~11mn1rr explnr1n,1? their leN>stcd in "'al er spo rts ,and ~pt•r1al 1nt 1•resl.~ in a nation al prest•r1a!1on of marine r n- pr11gr:1 n1 1':"11!ed \\'idef . Op· \'Jronn1 rn1 , v.·111 lli1f'nrl fool· p11rl11111t11'.~. pri ut s 111 the ./trsev ·S<lnds 1n Thi· progr:in1 is ~P"J\~Ored y,ioodstown. N . .J .. She '»>ii! Iii llil' Girt &out Niitioiial . ·study !he co~li n& and'·it-. trcatlq1tarL.e~s in i\'f.W.. York · ecological problems t rom June ;uul 1·nunc1ls !hrnug h !he 17-29. l 'n11 r<I States "In hel p older ~ r-.1clani<' l\1izrll ~'i!! al1C'nd r ;11"1 St-·nu ts lf':1r n ah fl \l t l.ra ph ic<11!y Spe:-i king I n 1h1>n1~e !VC'S and the y,•r1rld in Hn('hester. NY .. no 1n·depth "IHrh they live." explora tion of graphic ;1 rt llrange Coast S c o u ts techn iques. lier special in· partie1p:-it1ng are Palli Sloptr, lerest is photography. 'I'he Ha lhoa Island : ~\elanie Mizell. se.o;;sion wil l be ~uly 14·7), l'os1a Yl~a; Cris Hamilton. Cris Hamilton and ~§ .. n Ne.,.,·port Beach, arlid &islUJ Schmitz wil l atttntj the•MOUt'l - Schn11!z, iwlis.!iion \.'il'jo. Kathy t~in Magic program o'.n Me;in~. Cn!la M~~A. · wa!' :Wilderness ilvtng, c'roS~·couit- tr~ na1 1i:;a11on . rh·er boallng anrl rock rhn1h1ng in Portlar.d for !\\'O \1eck!'. f Betrothal Revealed ·Grandmas Rock Texas Town • , ~ •tUFKIN, Tex . 1t:l'r1 -Tht· ~ on ly thing a hunch of ol<I 1randmolhf'rs can rln is sit and mrk an<1 bake apple p1r~. 11khl ? ' .I ·: ' • \Vron~. Tl}e grnnd11101hers in agl' fron1 60 to 117. hnve turned 1rlralisti1; rh1•l11ric into posi!ive (\1'!1011. f1n:u1rin.': 1·nnstruction rif a s\-\·1mn11ng pool and a SI 000 5afC'IV fenrr at the Lu!kin Sta1C St.:htio l for the ~1r111:1 lly Hc\ardcd. T11·0 or lh<' i:rnnd111othcr.~ 11 1·111 tu a l,1.1 fk in hank and iYllTll\Y!'d $JOO U~l 11 pt'fSOnal 11<11r to n1akc 11 dn'A'n payment ' • this easlern Trx:is ci!1 . "'hn Cl'~W !Ired of p:iying durs !n f11ni.hce bf!nrp1rt.o; for ::i na- tional orga111?.atron. h ;i v e 1truck a blow for "(lrand- IJ211S' l.ib " The '4'0tntn. wh n range in on the s11 (el v f rnre. . 1 -;;;:;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;:;;;:;;:;~ I 1( The wornen·s h U l .b and S llll~~ DTERY I I l YOU CAN FIND IT AT Orange Count y's Largest & Fine&t r.,. 11,oN .:-.r.c. .. "" YaitlaJE unr•• 1 ltflOll ft (ltMll... I l.'::,r,•:,. . SHOP ge ........ ti•."'•.. 1ttO IMtt A"' (•t L111tet.) •:. 1,.. IUOCA PAii • tD-i120 I I .. Al ltiSTEP-9£'1lNAllDO ~ Mii., KiM El SCHOLL SANDALS -~PASSfORTS MA~Of:°SIAN .:.._Ml$$ AM'ERIOA V'IHfl CASUA L$ -t)A ~ -E4wtr4•-G•tb•ric h -Aobi11 Hoocj Pf Fly~r! -·u .s. K•d• -S11r11ll'l•r•tt•• C1p11io D•~c• Sh•t• · B~t• W11r bv 01~1~ln c."",i;; sai... ,., c•n .... ... ~25 E .. 17tlt ST.-COSTA MESA • S4t•2'7·71 · • · · e 14'f1CA¥1~C4"0 e I ~., •• CMA•tl ¥' "Don't get any ideas." I sald. "I ha1·e no in!ent ion of accepting mnn·ey and lo~ing my amateur stand ing. l'ou ne\'er kno11• 1vhen rhe OJym. -· ........ . AT WIT 'S END 1 I a.m.: Borrow his rai or hladr.o; ro lake the hf'm out of the livi ng room drlperies. Break for lunch. fnllnv.·ed bv "A~ !he \Vorld Turns.'' · 3 p.m · \\'ash good \vhile tennis :;;weal.er in hot \\";Her v.•i1h R red blanket. 4 p rn : In vite s ni a I ! neii![hbnrhood children 1n!o the i;:ara.':e rn play \l'ith hu~ba nd"s po v.·er lool.o;. ~p m.: Put an on ion inro lhe n1·rn !n in::ike husbrind think d1n11er is on, fi· I I pm : Tell husband \\·hat a hard d:iv vnu had "\\'r ll,"-·h" sr11d tr1un1- phantl\· "Did I ni 1 s s a n\'lh1n~"" '"Yf's ," I said. •·...,hen ~ou ;ire il."Jee p, I run out ;ind 111nve LOOK JtoJo tnhl I I 11h & lrwl" I Wl:STCLIFF PLAZA N•wport leoo::ll Sund•y Shopper? H•Mf .. hHI ·-· o;.,. 1J t. I, ..... COSTA MESA 1101 HlWPOlT ILVD. !North oJ Jl th Stu11tl Bankomel"lcal"d • .. I'll be glad 1\·hen you're liber ated," he said mis erablj'. ""MY KIND OF GIFTS"" FAmtn·s DAY JUNE 18th SEE THE GREAT SELE CTION OF FOOD GIFT FAKS AT fl(tk41'1 t4~!!''· SOUTH COAST PLAZA Low•• C1•01u el M1ll COSTA MESA l r11lol II Si n D•tl!O Frtew1y Ol'E~ OA ILY : 11 A.M IO t -JG P.M, SUNOA YS !AFTEll CH UllCM) 'TIL J PM. Pl-IONI: !•O·ltll HUNTINGTON CENTER •84 OUTllDl MALL fN 1xt to l•rlt1r l ro1,J Mo61ercha1"1Je • • ti Building Her Car eer Jeannette Champlin, a 22-year-old coed ial ~tichigan State University, grad- uales in J une with the fi rst \voman 's ?ekee in building construction. Puppy Love Smothe rs Pet DEAR ANN J.Ai>"DEllS: 0Ur oul<loor n<ljhbor boui)>t rdarltng lllthi PllWl' !or lh<lr chlldmi. Sounds .....t? W•ll. the children are four and five )'hrt or ace and they treat the puppy as if It were • stuffed animal. Jn fact , I am not at 1.U BUrt: they know tht 'difference. A few days ago I sew the/~ child squeeze the puppy so har l thought he had killed It. I rushed over and took the pathetic cruturt oot ol tht youngster's hands. Then J went immtdlltely to t~ child's mother and told her \\.'hat bad happened. Her. respome infuriated me. 110h, Don- nie didn't mean to hurt I.he puppy." she yawntd. "He just l<>ves that Ntlle dogie io death." I told her she dkln't realize how close btr language had tome to the truth. Yesterday the five-year~ld had the pet in the backyard. He \\'as dressing the puppy in doll's clothes. The skirt "''a! so tight that Ult puppy \va s crying in agon)". The child had put a hat on the puppy's he ad and tbe elastic chin-strap \lo'as chok- . ing blm. Again I went to the mother and complained. Thi! time she got mad and ·told me silt was sick of my inttrference and to mind.my own business. I want to help that little animal but I don't know what to do next . ity husband says he doon't want me g~tting In· to fights with the neighbors -that I have made two attempts and nov; I should ketp quiet. What do YOU say? -•IATE TO SEE IT DEAi\ SEE: T•ll dull dumbbell out door that U Y•U •ltaeH uotMr ad of l!Tllf;lty ag:abut that helpltt1 .-..y 1·011 are rolq lo call IMo SPCA, -do ll DEAR ANN LANDERS : Do I have 1 right to an explanation? lf you say no, I promise to keep my mouth shut. If you say yes, 1'11 show it to my daughter·in· law and tell her to start talking becaw;e Ann ls on my side. Last night my son and his \vile and I w ere playing three-handed b rid g e. About midniaht a car p u 11 e d into the driveway and just stood there. I re("Ognlzed it at once as my ex-husband's Che\'rolet Impala. i\ly son \\'ent out lo the car and stayed JO minutes. He came back and said, "Dad has had a little too much to drink. He doesn't \Vant to tome in. He just \\'ants to sit out there and listen to the radio." With that my daughtf;or-in-la'v excustd herself .wd '\'ent <lllt to the. car. She was gone Marly an hour. This, of couri;e, ruined our card game. But \vorse than that I drove myself nuts trying to figure out what those l\\"O v•ere talking about. \\rhen my daue:hter-in-la\V came back in the house she didn't say one \Vord lo ex- plain her lengthy absence. She and my son left shortly after and l '1•e bttn boil- ing evto.r since. · I feel my dauahter·ln·lA\V o\.\·es it to me to tell me ~·hat they talked about. \\!hen l _asked my son if she had told hi1n he replied, "No, I figure-d it \\'as nooe of my busines.s." \\'ha t do you think about ii, Ann? -BL'\CKEO OUT !Har Out: Since your daugbtrr-in:faw !lid not ,·olunlttr any Information, a<"ttpt tht (act tbat Hhe I' kttping a conlidtnt't. lUspttt brr Integrity and stop probing. DE • .\.R ANN LA'.'\DF.RS : I h:i•·r n'I th~ guts to tell her lo /1rr t.1fc-. Shi' rf'all~ your colun1n e\·er ~· da.'" \\di y ... 11 print th is~ DEAR \\'IFE: Tht in,·itali(ln r.1r our hi,lfh K hool'11 ?Stb rf'union l'llm~ last ~·ttk. I'd kl\'e to go. Yt"\11 }'OU pltasr losr :lO pounds llO I l'3n he proud of }'OU'..' - ''OUR LO\'ING lll:SRA .\;ll DEAR llllS HA ~I): I takt II \'OlJll wright i~ the llamt'!. II hrlll'r be Huh. Is al<'oholi"-ln ru1111ng ~x111r hfe?~K1101\' the clanger signals nnd \1"llflt to do. Ht>ad ihe book let, "A\eoholisn~ -!lope ~u1tl Help," b.v Ann Landers. r;n<'lose 3!"1 cent~ in coin l>>ith your request and a long, stamped. self-lld<lresscd envelope to the DAILY PILOT. OAJL Y PIUIT J • Fit Stay Stable lM"A Y~'TIE, Ind. Cl11'!1 - ~ttplng fit a.id,, emotional ~!ability, acco rd in I to r~st:arch .al Purdue Universi- ty , A four-nlonlh re2imen of physical conditioning virtually elhnlnated the n10st pro- nounced p e rs o n a 1 i t y dif- ferences bet ween one group of physically fit ntiddle-aged mf'T\ and another of their out-of· shape conternporaries Before the fion·fit """tre rP shape<l . personality h.•:stlniz shov.·ed thr\' \\ere not a:i emo- tionally f it as \\·ert !he physically fit men . (JJ~~ ril1a1111J11tl cfll,,'fi Clubs Celebrate Spring, Initiate an Active Y ea ~r Spring luncheons and in- stallations top the list of ac- livities planned by 0 r ange Coast clubs during the next few days. Speeches on topics ranging frocn the world lo ll·tyasthenia Gravis and a n1usical progran1 are also scheduled. Scripps The Orange County Scripps Alumnae will n1eet. for a luncheon at 11:30 a.n1. Wednesday, June 7. in the Corona de! ~far home of r-.1rs. Richard Flamson. Gard en Club Concluding their first year or federation wi1h C.11ifornia Garden Clubs, Inc., Harbor Yo ur Ho roscope Aries FRIDAY JUNE 2 ARIES (i\Iarch 21-April 19 l : En1phasis is on ne1\' approach to obtain desi res. Friend plays role of importance. Leo is in picture. lncon1e rrom oc- cupation is due to increase. TA URUS (April 20-fo.-fay 20 ): Standing in community is ac- cente<l . cOOpera1e in civic proj- ect. Set exan1ple for those v.-ho look up to you. Ilise above the petty, Look to ru1ure. Perceive potcntittl. Accept ad- NOW UNDE RPANTS HAVE A PURPOSE ... TO TAME YOUR T UMMYI WUNDERPANT S · BY 01.GA Even a slim figure can have a tummy problem. So Olg a invents Wunder- pants'" -lhe first sol! all- stretch underpants with tummy c ontro l. Wearing Wunderpants·· gives you the sleek comfort of Olga's famous hidden seam design plus a smooth look v1ith everything from pantyhose lo pants and shorls. Olga's Wunderpants'" are stretch Power Tricot of nylon and Lycra• spandex. While, nude, black or fa sh- ion shades, P-lo-XL Tummy trimmer, 4.50; more tummy ttimmi ng and all·round slimming, 5.50. Veta's INTIMATE APPAIEL --··ft&-........... II\ l'hont: 642·11'7 View Homes Garden Club \\'ill carry out a Getting to Kno\Y You theme during the first in- stallation ceremony at 11 :30 a.m. Wednesday, June 7, in the Stuft Shi rt. New officers are !he i\1n1es. Robert Clay, pres i d ent: Robert Floyd Sims, vice president ; Art \Vi s so 11 and Clarence \V. Pear son , secret aries, and John B. Cobb, treasurer. Pa nhellenic Dr. Giles T. Bro\\n , dean of graduate studies at California State College, Fullerton , \Yill speak on Focus of t~ \Vorld during lhe Laguna Beach Panhellenic·s annual !ipring luncheon at 11 :30 a . m. Due for ded responsibility. Be direct, confident. GEA1INI <r-.1ay 21.J une 20): Give full play to intellectual curiosity_ Teach and learn. Read and \\Tile. Publish and advertise. B r o a d e n educa- tional horizoll'. You are limited no\V only by self- restriction. Kno,1: it and act accordingly. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Check apparent minor points. Interest in the hidden or occult is stressed. Don 't confuse glamor with factual in- formation. Be a \vare 0 r policies. leases. legal and financial commitments. Ge t on solid ground. \Vednesday, June 7, in Irvine Coast Country Club. New officers will also be in· stalled. They 2re the ?o.lmes. Marshall Patton, president ; Clyde \V. Phelps and J\.fildred _killstrop, v i c' presidents; Sherman Todd and Dale 11 arvey, secretaries a n d Robert Coulter, treasurer. Mus ic Teachers New ml!mbers of the Orange Branch, Music Teach l!rs Association of California will perform during the group's final meeting of the year \\•hic h btgins at 9 a.m. \\'ednesday, June 7. in fhe Santa Ana home or Elaine Dysart. New officers also \Vill be in- Raise nothing. Someone now may be intent on selling you hill of goods. Romantic n·o t i o n s dominate. You feel young and you are as young.!.s you feel. SCORPIO (Oct. 2:1-Nov. 21 ): Be practical. Check accounts, past r e c o r d s . Re\'le\v references. Take nothing f9r granted. Insist on facts. not rumors. Property values, home appliances comm a n d at· tention. Take cash and let credit go. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Accent on short journeys, dealings w It h neighbors and relallves, Finish v.·hat you start. Take long- range vie\v. Make contacts. CAPRICORN. (Dec. 12-Jan. 19): New approach to col- lecting, paying is a requisite. stalled. They 'are Philura Stockwell, pre!ident: Beulah Strickler, ·Josephine Chance and Helen Fackiner, vice prt sidl!nts; C ·~ o 1 y n Han- neman, ~tty SfbeKwell and Frances Kempa, secretaries, and Michtle .. M c Ca r t n e y , tr~surer. Dlrectots are Jean Hall, Aida MacDonald, Vi r: gin i a Sangermapo and S t e 1 l a 1:-indstrom · a rt d parliamen· tarian is Mary Lou Chase. .AARP The Hunlington B e a c h (,1iapter of 1he American Association.of Rttired Persons "'ill sponsor • luncheon at noon Wednesday, June 7, in ?o.furdy Community Center. September Date Set Janet Ellen .Forteville will become the brkle of Roger Phillip Gteyshock during Sept. I rites. Their betrothal has been an- nounced by her parents, l\.1r. and ~Ir!. Ge:>rge P. Forteville or. NewpOrt Beach. He Is the son· of ~fr. and Mrs.' Phil Greyshock, alSo of Newport. Miss Forteville is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and , Orange Coast College. She aitended Chap- man Ccllege and Is now a stu· dent at California. S t a t e College at Long Beach. Her fiance, an alumnus or Newport Harbor High School, attended Santa Ana a n d Orange Coast colleges and will enroll at California St ate College at Fullerton in tht fall. BSP Xi Pi Phi chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will conduct a pledge ritual at 7:30 p.m. Wedne'Miay, June 7, in the \\'e~tminster home of Mrs. Bill Young, presidtnt. Gammn Phi Betn BaJboa Harbor Alumnae of Gamma Phi Beta will meet under the command of thei r new officers at 10 a .m. Thurs- day, June ~. in the Newport Beach home of Mrs. Alan l\1iller. ?o.Irs. William Duf(y, new president, will he assisted by the Airoes. Richard Lutdke, J ohn Kamtl and James Ken- dall vice presidents; J . D. l\tacLelth, treasurer , and William Kirk and John Van Dyke, secretarlt!!. Mesa-Harbor Zonta C lub Mrs. Carl Neisser, who recently traveled in Russia, Romania and •1ungary, u·ill compare women of the U.S. ll.'ith the "'·omen of ('()m1nunist countries during a !all\ before the Newport llar lJor Zonta Club at noon, Thursday. June 8, in the Sen ior <.:1tiiens Recreation Center. Lunch eon 1'be Women's S' r ,. i c e Fellowship v.'ill sponsor a FY Guild ~!rs. Garth Duffield wns elected and installed as presi- <lent of th e Fountain Valley Co n1munity lloopital's Ciuilcl recently. Her hoard include:=. the ~lints. \\'illiain Uallar<l , c; Po r g e \Vier and .John l'eterson, \'ic e presidents: ti<1ry Qul!!a, secretar)', and Ronald Cochrane. treasurer. luncheon at noon Thursd ay.----------- June 8, in the Conununity C hur c h Con gregallonal, Coron·a del Mar. Proctetls \\'ill go to the benevolence fund . Medical T e lk Dr. Elinor Randolph Ives, clinical professor of neurology at USC, will speak o n Mynthenia Gravis du ring the spring metting of tht Orange County Auxiliary, MG Foun- dafion at 7:30 p.n1 . Thursday, June 8, in the First Congrega· Gar/and Catch • sparkle trom lh• morning 1utf. Hold th• magic • of a sudden brHZ• •. K••P thos e moment• alln . The y're yourt tor• lllttlmt with a diamond 1ng1gement ring front Orange Blossom. A Sew and Go piogram will be present"ed for the A1esa- Rarbor club at 10:30 a .m. Thursday, June 8, in the Mesa Vertie Country Club. tional Church, Santa Ana. 1 ~~~==~=====;==========~~=' Art Le11gue Nt w club officers also will take over. They are the ~Imes. Harold Lak.ln, pr e si d ent ; Frank Martel, W 111 l a m l\IcNaughton and Donald Ben- nett, vice presidents; Donaht ... Wilson and Robert Sickler, secretaries, and James Jones, treasurer. A~+h•nlic, H•nd M•d•, lmport•cl New officers of the Costa l\Iua Art League installed re<:ently are the M m e s . Richard ll. l\'larsh , prl!sidenl; Don Hudson and Carolyn Overman. v i ce presidents, Gertrude l\1addock.!, secretary and Fern Miller, lreasurer. PERSIAN RUGS KERMAN PERSIAN RUGS l IMPORTS 2111 I. Cent Hwy. (AT HELIOlltOPe) c., .......... 171·7141 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 : Be ready for change of scenery. Opposite sex is involved. Rela- tionships are intensified. r-.-tar- riage is highlighted. Study reactions, responses of those close to you. You learn valuable lesson. Apply it". Cancer Individual fifUrf:s pro-___________ _:====================== minently, Bl! receptive, but Singer Blue Tag Fashion Fabric Specials maintain stance of in- dependence. Ga\htr 1 n 'd delineatt lnformaUon. Genuine bargain is. available. ' VIRGO Aug. 23-Sept. 221' Be aware of basic issues. Don't neglect to praise in- dividual who performs special service. Work and health area are spotlighted. Reunion \Vith family member i! indicated. Make gesture of recon· ciliation. AQU ARIUS (Jiln. ~Feb. 18): Study Caprk.,. mwage. You art apt to be dealin&: wit!l Cancer and I.-individuals. PISC~ (Ftb. 19-.March 20): UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)' In matters of speculation, take view that you get nothing for Forces tend to be scattered. You an restleu, but have feellng: of conf.lnement. Get cooperation of speetal iroup, organization. Sartttart11 is in picture. Work In behind satr1ts capacity for best re.mils. Girls 10to18-leam to sew and win prizes in Singer World Stylemaker Contest. Make a dress in class! Costs less than St per hour. . Call your local Singer Sewing Center and register for summer cliwesnow! For address of the Singer Se wing Center · nearest you, see White Pages under Sll'IGER COMPANY COSTA NISA COSTA NISA Brlstol I SuRflow•r 2100 H•rbor lfvcf. Soulh C..11 Pt.za Ha"-·o..tei 540°26)) Kl t .llH '• . Take you~ pick of. 14 Singer*sew1ng cab111ets (2CABINETil llHOWN HERE-SEE OTHER BWE TAG SAVINGS ATYOUR SINGER SEWING CENTER) • \ Contempcrary and altek-lhe B1ker1fleld desk . . and savesso~~ on this.GOiden Touch & Se\v* sewing machine in a cabinet r~====~~i!iif\l Co1111 In~· Save SSO off reg. price on the Golden Touch l Sew• o wing machine In a cablne~ Th ia machine le sew-et19-Ju1t push the ' CIHT~ Ml~~ .................... . .... ~.,.... ..... C.n AMllA -.. N""9r tM. ... ,.., c.. .• , ... "" dial to twitch stitches. Get Singer atratch ttltches !or knits. Sew buttonholel with the bullt·ln butlon- hol•r. And,the exclusi ve S!Dg11• Pulh-Buttbn Bobbin winds Itself. S1v1.on thll machine In the cabinet you.like. Singer has a Cr edi t Plan to flt your budget. SINGER Ol.lNlt -11 IM-11" "Tiie Clry'' C...,, Ml..-. ._., .... •••v• -"" ,,..,_ on... c..ty ..... ....,. h l11tlftt Dr"' Crtpit Reg. $1.99/yd. Prlotl .. -... w .... R•9. 'I. 99 /yd. Te-t4 Dtlcroo Prlot1 R•9 . ,2.99/yd. C••• Prim R•9. '1.59 /yd. u ... w .... ""'" R•v· •I.99/yd. c•• ••••""'•' R•9 .• 1.59/yd. ... DNI• NnoltlM R•9 .• 1.99/yd. Top11try -~R•9. ,4.99/yd. SALE $2.2J/y4 SALi $1.44/y4. SALi $2.ZJ/y4 SALi $1 .Z2/y4. SAU $1.44/,.._ SAU $1.U/,.._ SAU $1 .44/r'- SAU $1.77 /f4 . NOT ALL ITIMI A\,AILAl ~I AT ALL I TO••• ®R"8itttttd Trldemark O\lront Cmp. tRf1iltmd Tradrmark joMph 8.in<TOfl & SON & Co. , , Tht Singer 1:!2:...l6" Crtdlt Plan can h~you have au · ' : lh<'st values now -within Y-2!!! budget. : .... T•aa-..l o1 nr£3'1N<;tll ctlf.lrANY Fashion Fabrics • • ) '' 20 DAILY PILOT SOFf·SELL SA'! by Jllarvln ~lyen I I I "MA.Kf IT A DOV!>Lf ... MY B05S WAl.KfD ALL OYER ME /ODAY.(!" L A Size s Up Cit y's High Rise BJ!ildings By CYNTIIlA RA WITCH LOS ANGELES fAP I -F>f- teen years ago. 11 visitor from atop Mulholland Dr i v e and looking out o v e r thf' sprawl of Lo!! Angele15, would say: "It'll very. impressive. but it's flat. It isn't a skyline." Now. the same visitor. stand- ing at t h e same spot on Mulholland, would remark : "Aren't you afraid an earth- quake will knock down all those skyscrapers?" It's the same city. all right., but since the late 1950s, when virtually the only tall building was the 28-story Ci!y Hall. skyscrapers have been pop- ping up everywhere. And they've dwarfed the City Ha ll. THE NEWEST -AND tallest -spire is the 62·story, 858-foot Un i t e d California Bank building, expected to be finished by the end of 1973. At 62 stories. it is th.e tallest building west of Chica.go and ii touted as the t11le1t bank building in the world. It will stand head and shoulders a bove the second biggest building in the city, the 55-story. 746-foot Security Pacific Bank headquarters. for which the first steel work is expected to rise in .June, The two giants will stand among lesser high rises in downtown Los Angeles, which is becoming an increasing maze of hig h-rise office and apa rtinent buildings. Already completed are the 52--story twin towers of Atlan - tic Richfield Plaza (667 feet ), 42-story Crocker Citizens Bank (802 feet), Union Bank Square (42 stories and 516 feet), and the 32-story Occidental Life. Mutual Benefit Life 1 n d Bunker Hill Towers. Ho"·ever, unlike New York and Chicago. L<ls Angeles' skyscrapers are s pre 1 d throughout the city. strung along Wilshire Boulevard and ext.ending into the San Fernan- do Valley and Long Beach. ALL HAVE BEEN built in the la~I 14 years. since the la11· b;inning c n n s r r u ct i on or buildings morr than 13 stOrirs high v.•as rescinded .' Brfore the height llmit v.·as ch<1nged,'therP were only 11-1,n buildings in the cl1y more lhan 13 stories high -C11~1 Hall and the old Federal Building. The present height ordinance simply limits total floor space to 13 times the area of a building's site. Since thrn, at least 50 buildings o( more than 13 stories have been erected. with more under cons I ru ction or in the planning stages. lo.lany are more than twice the 150-foot limit of 1958. Because the skyscrapers are all new, they also are all similarly modern in design. Some people wish there was more variely. There's ano!her complaint that is raising more concern. Skyscrapers i n er ea s e. con- gestion. "THE CONCENTRA TJON of people and cars is so gre..at. I he whole downtown area i! strangling itself." says Thomas Stemnock, head of transportation for I he city Planning Commission. High rises are scattered iii 10 local.ions around the· city, inclu ding the new Century City complex on Wil shire Boulevard which has seven buildings at least 20 stories high. But the greetest con· centration is downtown. draw- ing more ~ple to .tn already crowdtd erea. "We're worried," Stemnock says. "Since there is no mass rapid transit sptem, the only alternative is keeping parking outside the downtown .area and using people movers." Another com m only ei:- pressed concern about high rises is their vulnerability to earthquakes. But the 11kyscrapers rode out the Feb. 9, 1971 , earthquake here with ease and most scie.n· tists feel they cAn "'ilhstBnd much stronger tremor~ It Didn't Work VIENNA fAP l -Three students in their early teens issued bomb threats to the direc1or or thei r high srhoo! to .[:Cl cl,1.ssrs dismissrd for the day. police reported. The director ruled that. l h e students wou ld havl" to make up for the lost day through Bd- ditional afternoon classes. Uil'I T•'-"-" Herring on the Rocks Fresh alewife Is the choice of the day of several lourisu al a herring run at Bournedale. Mass .. oil Cape Cod Canal. Using spinning rods, nets, hands or bu ckeu to nab the tasty fish . lishefmen are real" in.g Iarre ~•tcbes since warmer days exhiluated the run. ' &OUUft~ {"""' Seo<sp to 1tt1t4.' • , Ctof.t ltOOJ H.t.l[lw~•I • •f1 ''COMING ATIRACTION'' HOW-TO·DO·IT CLASS UNDIRGROUND IPRINKURS lllv•rdcl• • TU9•., Ju11• 6 ""•helm • W•cl,, Ju111 7 Pev11t•l11 Y•lley • Thw.., J111111ot I 1Uf RffUSHMfNTSI PRIZISI ' .. .... .I" ... _ ->./\·; -.......... . "·'· OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SAT .& SUN . 9 A .M. TO 6 P.M. Big Double Big 24 Inch Structo Structo' HIBACHI - ''Check These Great features'' ..,,,. Cost a luminum gril!--3 position e levator. Yo' Wood handles & base, odj. a ir ven ts. V Siz e , l O"xl 7". REG. $6.89 SAVE $2.001 Kingsford" FOLDING GRILL ''Ta~e It Along Wherever Yi:>u' Gol'' ""*'Rustproof, c hrom'e~plated grid. V Adjusts lo 4 heights. V Legs fo ld & detach for eosy storage. RIG. $8.49 SAVE $2 .501 Therm09rlp . CHARCOAL BRIQUETS ELECTRIC GLUE GUN • 8ond1 wood, fobric, lecither in 60 seconds. • Includes glue, gun & 1eci ler sticks in plo1tic:: corrying co1e. ''Only Th• l••f lor Our Cu1torner1/" • Sel ec! highland hordwciod . • Smokeless & ordorle1 1, 79' RIG. 99c Backyard RIG. $3.99 a;, ''xSO ft. GARDEN HOSE SMOKER WAGON ''Fantastic Value & Versatile Tool'' I"" ~ee thru-h eot tempered g lass door. V Side & bottom storage shelf. I"" 6 positio n firepon .A0.,_-1 REG. $24.99 SAVE $5.001 ''POP'' e RIVETOOL • Now rivet-ii' t et"uierl • Includes 01sor1ment ol riveh. RIG. $3.49 Colorful CHAISE .LOUNGE PAD GYM SET "il!uy With Confld•nce-All Lln -lrook Ho•• fa Ouorcrnt••d 10 Y•ar•I'' • Foam filled-easy to clean cove•, • Greot lor~lcit ion wagon1, beach or yard. • 2 inch frame construction with baked e ncmel fi"i!h. •Self locking protective plostic bolt cove rs . • 2 passenger airglide & 2 swings. HG. $19.95 HOME SECURITY SALE! llldlng Chain WINDOWlOCK DOOR GUARD 110. ,,, 39' 110. $1.4t 99' ..,.,. fUP ._lOCK 110. 4"' ••• 7 • ~ "J;.50 ft . hose delivers more water in le11 time. • Rustproof, bro11 couplings . • A great volue--now'1 lht time lo buy! RIG. $1.29 88< 26'' Wld• Piber9lo11 PATIO ROOFING '' Malntenance•f r••I'' • lefs you enioy the outdoors year 'ro und. • Colorful corrugated fibergla ss . • n. 11:10. $3.2. 10 ft. 110. $A.It 12 "· 110. *"·" WOWI I • Pic k up se..,erol for summer vocation tim e. HG. $1 .99 ''Kwlk Kover'' ADHESIVE PLASTIC • 1 8" wide-for quick.stick oclion on cabin ets, wall1, shelvei- unlimited po11ibili1ie1. • Asaorted color1 & pal!em1, HG. i9c \ . ' . : . '. ": • .• • • . IJ •Ame b,os • Incl hm RI • -' ·' ., Sale Prices Honored Thru Sun., June 4 It's Paint-Up Time! 1'T'1e finest Paint We've Ever Soldl'1 Zynoyte ~tn_olyte ~xyLatex ~Paint -..... .__ ' "-'t WHrnHION•YtU.OWl!tG 1 't:'l ' ""' ""'-11t WHITE /NON-YIU. "'*ET J2 FL . OZ. (1 OT) lifT I lli.1.lLO-~ Epoxy Latex S Yr. Guarantee 1 Coat Covers ENAMEL WALL PAINT HOUSE PAINT •Use it inside or Jut, its weatherproof & washable. •Chip & mar resistant. •Dries in 30 minutes. •Cleon up with soap & water. REG. 52.99 ~'Naval Jelly'' RUST REMOVER ,. NAVAL JELLY ••u-. .. ,..#. ... ~ ........ . ......... i.a;I • Non -flommobl~ odorless. • Will not siiffen or evoporolle. • Just brush on- rins e offl RIG. $1.99 ''Tylo'' by Kwlkset ENTRY LOCK SET • .A'Tle riton-mode, polished broi1 finish. •Includes oil nece 1sa r1 hordware ond 2 key1. RIO. $6.39 .. "Kitty Gritty" CAT LITTER • Hormlt1 s1 to your fr iends in the 1ondbo1t league. " • Absorbs moistur&-- eliminote1 odor. • Sig 25 pound bog-i;tock up todoyl 59c 2S Lb. lag WOWI • One coot coverage. • Scrubbable /color fast. •Spot res ista nt. •Dr ie s in 30 minutes. REG. 57.99 •Won't chalk, peel or fla ke. •Weather & mildew res istant. • Dr ie s in 30 minutes. •Soa p & waler cle a n-up. REG. 58.99 Gallon Gallon Top Quallty SPRAY PAINT • Tke easy woy to point small jobs. • Point the town in your <f:.h01te of tolors-il'i; fosl drying . REG . S9c 01. "A LIN-BROOK BONUS!" FREE! ORTHO GARDEN BOOK Free colorful booklet-jam pocked full of hints for lawn & garden core. 1 per coupon-pick yours up today I /.IN-BKOOK CABINET HARDWARE ROLLER CATCH uo. 10< DOOR STOP RIG. 1 2c MAGNETIC CATCH RIG. 1 Sc s~ .. ~:> Microflame fti GAS WELDING KIT "N•w From l in·Brook!'' • A new self·tontained gos ~-' weldin g tool. ' • For welding, brozing & soldering of small ports. • Temperatures up lo 5000' F. Kit conlo1rn torch, f!ome lips, torch 1ube, gaskets, butane & OKygen c.yfinders. REG. $16.95 Top Quality LEATHERETTE • Great tor pillows, wall c.overing-make on old piece of fu rniture presentable. • 54 inchei; wide--choice of co!ors & textures. REG . 5 9, SAVEi SAVEi DRIVEWAY COATING ''It's li.x·Up Tlm•I" • Re1 urlace your driveway. • Re1toret orig inol block color- moket it look new again, RIG. $3.99 SAVI $1 .001 O.tdl Y ,IJLOT 2 J •He's 1'1y ltlau' No1·wall<:'s Rea lly . ,. ( 11 "Wallace Country' - Ry TRU I))' nL'R1\' C~rllli•" '(lt "Ct M..,!Nt ltrYo(t l\'()fl\\'A!.I\ 1'h1~ I~ ;j l"M"dr·o1'!n r o tn i11 u n i 1 1 111 .~1111!hr~~r \.n, \H[!i'lt'~ !1 • •111t> t•1·1111•1rnio· ~11·p 1q1 fr nrn 1l1t> hr.11 I 111du,111.d .lt•'.I' •HI IT~ f/'111,11.r~ 11hl'1r \,t~I r1npr1 A!"!'!l~'l;H'f' p\flnt~ 1110' !hf' h1~h\\,l \\ .111d .. 111.111 <lll •!t·f~ Cir l ,tr·, ~I! rnt \1>rt•l1 111 \\!I!!' pl.1111 p.u l..111~ l"I' •l""1~H··d lnr lhu11 ... 1 11~I' \l.1 d,!11111 • 1·1d t· U1)ltli "t S1 11•t•I' 111 \,1•1, 1 ~ i·u•11' ,1l .. 11i,: ,1 ; • ! • d,j 11 ol!'I ~a11rh111·h1'd 111 •ti. o! t111 1 1n;q1>1 ho1ulo•1.11.J, ~'qr r n p,1,10•1 li.11 hn!!lt'~ \,.,,,\I lu\h g1 "'•'1!1'1·1 111 d "';int.:" ;ind p111 pl1• hl"~~•ll ll~ Ill lho•I( !l'nlll ·· I l•r1ll1•1 i11 !I'''''' s,,;,,,. ,,,,, ..... ,,., nf· f,.,., ~,,,,,,. ''''"'''· ''' ,,,,,,,.,.) 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She i.'t Cf'lia f\·1:iv Mi!lt>r da11~hlt·r of !)r and ~·1rs. Joh~ r '1illi•r of lfi'l1 Hulh Lanf Another Exclusive-June 4 The Race for mn~! knn~· J>MPIP "·hn hat·, 1'he1r w11rk 1 artf'.~ Thf'rf! 18 11 pnl1rPman. a milkman. a ttHnistf'r , ilnrl 11 ~ m a I I rt'~!aur:i!Pur. h111 mo~I 11.re hli1r«·ollar union mem~I'~. 'lhf'1 1\ol r~ rn1,it;I 11h<llll 1,1 1t'~ llllrl pru·r<1 11 111! 1111,.rn- plrll 1111•111 . ~ornr i1hol 11 rlrllR~ 1n th+• <• h110I < l!1tlP. 11hot11 h11~IO.': th ,. 1,,u,: h;1~ n••t ;1r·1~tn !·•'I I' llJltl HOii f;\ll)l l"O!li!J!V 1h1111l lhf' \'11'\11.1111 11 ;u • 11 11-.St-: AH ... 1ti•· \11111" Pf'•fp lr to "h"in "'~" ''""'i:!P. \lrl;il\'l'rn I~ II I 1ni.: Ill ,lp)ll'<1 ! ~-1111 ant1-f'~L1hl1 •h 1nPn1 n1111· 1~·l 1 1a·1an. ilnd ''' 11h11111 .-.rn fl 11 h•'r! ll lh1n1phrt>\ 1.• :ilnl· l!IJ.: !11~ ~log1111 . "Thf' Pl'o1pli> • I l1•1110K'f'Ol1 •· l ~11l ft•\\ h!'ll' l.11~ "' lt111nphrt•_I' OT \l1·1:r11f'! II :\\;111v .... 1~· 1h.-1 11.1·r undl't'tderl HI d1~l1k~ a!I 11!1• l'iHld..\Atr< ' Th,~ onl_v l1g11/•' 11h1, ~111 .. r~ !<•'!llli!lf' f' II 1 h \! ~ I ii ~ ffi l~ ·\l<1ban1a·s (;,.1 f:f'nri;:I' ('. \\'l'llh1cr. · ( ieorg+" \\';1ll;11·r. tir ·~ n1v 111,1u," say.~ 2:l·\'rar·nlr1 .1;irnes ( 'nlli n~. runn111~ <111" h11nd thl'ou2h h1.~ lnnjlt:-h. 1·urlv hlond hair ii~ hf' roll.~ 11 h1tP paint ont o !hP 11<1111( ,,f !hP !-pare room ":\ bullr1 111 1ou r spine dflr~n I ilffef't 1•1ur hr11i n. Sn rn;;nv 1 1·ilnd1dilte~1 11 1!1 ~ay "'hat ttiP1 think n!hcr~ 1r<1nl you !n think. hut hP ~a1 ~ 11 hat he 1h1nk~ whr1hl'r 11's ri~ht or wrong." COi.i .iNS. AN IHllN workf!r ilnd un1nn rnrrnhf'r .,.,·ho frlt 1hr jnh rir11·h 1n 1971, rrall v 1:.a1't krr·n :ihou! any nl th' 4'.1nrlidatl'~ "Humphr1•1 . hr '~ ;i i·1 Vhllhy, tT1ed \li'hrn r-.1Knn l'lf"11 i him. 1\ic(;nvrrn 111ant.~ to ,1:11P nlrf !>f"Ople $6 .~0ll i1 ve;ir : 1'h;1t 'o:; fine if thrv rlrsprvp 11 hut .1·ou'd h11 vP 1'1 t rvh<lrlv l1n1 ni:: "P Collin~ resrnts 1hf' la). h11r ''II takes hillf rn 1 pavt"hf'<'k 11 it \li'l'ren't fu r th;1t I 1·11ulrl hnpr 111 be a 11Pal!h1 rniln T<ixrs hr! nur hnmr h:i1·p i:nne up S15 111 !he 10 rnunths we'vP l11rrl here." ll i.s v•ifl', ClarPne. pcekin1-: 1n l o check on their 10-weelt-olrl b.eby. is a r Pg i s I t re d Rrpubliran \\'ho will volt for Nixon becausl'.' ''hp·~ a Chris· tian.'' Pat Nixon's Title This week's cover feature is a collection of Vera Glaser's petceptive biographical sketches of the wives of six leading contenders for occupancy of the White House. Look for something new in can· didates' wives: No longer are they important just becau se of their radiant smiles; each of these ladies is a unique personality in her own right. And each has an individual life style and strong beliefs. One of these outspoken ft:d ias has even said, pub- licly, ···1 can 't imagine being Slltisfied with cuttin& r ibbons and giving tea parties." • PAN~ISHING IN THE U.S. -Here·· an article . to entice beginners as well as experienced &nl· ler!I to the prime panflshine spots. ll includes de'scriptions of equipment and techniques practi- cally guaranteed to produce a "mesl!i" o( fregh fish. • EXTRA SENSORY PE•CEPTION -Quit offers readers a chance to test their knowledge of ESP against scientific findings in the flt:ld . You could score high if your mental telepathy Is "'orking. All Corning Sunday With the [DA~LY PILOT j • • , / • • , ' • 2J DAI LY PILOT DICK TRACY ' ' l hur\rl.lY Junt 1 197 2 A. BASKET OF -"TICKING BREAD~' R.E TQ l~VED FROM ™E COM~V KI TC ~EN BY OWE OF OJQ GUA.R05, SAVED TIIE PLANT ~ ,,,~, c--..... ~& TUMBLEWEEDS Mun AND JEFF (harumph!) Pfl>Ff'SSIONALLY SPEAKING, HEMP, ~ow IX) YOU FEEL P.E!OLJT f HE ~Al.LOWS MCTHOD AS OPPOSEV TO THE TRff METHOD ? . I .. By Chester Gould 'ME AND ~IZt ARE AT MRS. 6AA:LEY'5 TAU< ING TD T~E 'BRAIN'.• By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith LADY. DID YOU CARRY ANY1NSURANCE ON YOUR PIANO? OH --MY PIANO! YoU'vE iHROWN MY PIANO OITT T~E WINDOW! Of\, WEu..-- ' ~ "'·"- !T WAS OUTDFTUNE ANYWAYJ /'r..,.f.:;-J FIGMENTS By Dale Hale NANCY MMM--- TH/S TAFFY /S GOOP IDAILY ACROSS l U ndrd ''lilt 6 Rr.ch about urK;rrtilnty 3J Expiration of lrrm of srr· Ylcr: Abbr. 14 Run away 'lllitll a lovrr ~S Dlalrcl of Latiu m 16 Cum1ln11 J7 (Y\olin11 J9 Actress - Seal ~ 20 Br told IXlN'T llORRY. ... I KNOW Rl6f!T WHEl<E fr IS .... . . //Ctl. 5A'5 EVE RYTJ11N6 IN Tit: \\CllJ.D THAT'S LOST /5~Y IN THE JUNK t>~AWElt ! _,,,.,,,..,,,,.... ""'"M'"~ OH,OH --HERE .JUST WAITING FOR COMES IRMA A N APPOINTMENT Jt:•[-! CROSSWORD ••• by •• A POWER I PEANUTS WHEN 6A8<E5 ARE HUN6R<I, 1l{EV OON'Tki,\lo(i ~fi; Cllmbtod OYtt ., . "" 48 "-P•~rr"; Pro~am of rarly radio •9 Onr frrl!ng . . .., ~lmos i!y ~O Stngrr - Sml111 52 City Jn Hun9ary 56 Blitek cuc koo 57 Accomplicr 60 Drcrlvr 61 Habltuatr: Yrsttf!IJy's Puzz!r So!v~: 10 Locomotivrs JS Minislrr of U1r nrrds of 1' RERUN" JS CK!.t'IN6 AGAtN ! CAN HEM 1-!IM.- 10 i.l'.IT JUDGE PARKER Ernie Bushmiller I DENTIST i I..! I IT TAKES A LONG TIME TO LEARN PATIENCE .. GASOLINE ALLEY . Keep an e1..1e ou t here, Rufu-:; 1 -;omeone m,qht w::_;r fiii~~~ Q""'"""~ tne alley! SALLY BANANAS ~~--;;..-~~~~-, AJ.,J~.:tM ~~~ .. ... .. GORDO MOON MULLINS " WHAT l>o you THINK oFMYNoW -HAl~DO, MOON? ANIMAL CRACKERS By Charles M. Schulz ~-~~~-~-~.~-~-~-~~~~~ '" "" -·· --50ME l'EOl'LE i'M YE~ I KNOW NEVER l'ATiENT •. iT '~ M~5TOMACH THAT'5 CRA~! 21 Duck ~nus Var. 22 Sri pitcrs fn t• 6Z F1encll lorm 11 des!gn annui ty 11 Hl9hrst rank In a boys' or9anlza1lon ; 39 Assrmbl rd .tl Prnelra>,s WE LL, HE'S TAKIN G A DIFFERENT ROUTE HOME! OR MA'f6E THIS 24 Amon11 f.3 Small barrrl 2b Adopts pniylog fl4 Sharpr11 in position crr!a ln way 27 T 1ansporled 65 Moved JO T Pndons g•adually 32 As rrd is ---; 2 words DOWN )3 Small ponds 1 MethM1 1c~· 34 Boundtt Abbr. :n Evil s 2 10 1Pt ... a/d 38 Up --: Unti l 3 Girl In thr prrstnt: !Olll \1tlt 2 WOfdS 4 Pf'I' orms J'l Adv&ncrd bf:-sur~try lend recall 5 Johl'lny -; '40 ndlc1\in; C~edrr1lt 111aldtn namr sol rr ·•l Juan Oomln90 6o 019an -: Prtsldl!flt 7 Nr111 Zealand ol Ar11tnlina timbtr lrrt '42 F1ird in Ytf'/ 8 Jim-: Grt1I l\tt lr fll Ohio St~te '4] Olvr lootba llrr 1'~ Tht -calf of 9 Ki11d of the Blblt omammt 1 1 J • • ' " I> 17 " lO " 'lll " ,. ~ " ... " lJ ,,.. I "- ~ ';•, " ~" " ,\\l .. ""- ,. .. -. " M ~ I " u 2 words 12 An atttmpt IJ Lingr1s 18 FCW"ciblr policr invasion 23 Latrly madr 25 Camr Into ISSDtiat ion 26 Possrssrd -now I rd~ 27 Brtithrr ol '"' 28 Slc lllful 29 Assl"11ng lo pattlcul• catrvory JO .Spanish tltlr or rrspect 31 Stttl lflllrt dit11 l 33 "Encotr 1'' 35 Onr's Mlarr of rxpensrs 36" .t.ct 7 • ' iO " ' '.·' + 71 1J ~ t-" " Ji -,_., 1"11\.l" ~ " ~1'' .. " " " it,~ " iii .. 42 Day of !hr wrek: Abbr. •4 Brrwm<1Strr's product 45 Supply materi al lo I machine 46 Shanty 47 Kaya~·s rrla\lvr 48 Undrigo I SGl-ll!Q In liquid 50 Bump on m • lrtf tM~ 51-Cuban rhytllms 53 Group of laborrrs 5~ Imitat ion: Sulli• 5S ODor SS Canlld i"1 prov• incr: Abbr. 59 Bffort " " u 16 " . -·,,: ' " • " ~ ... ,_ " " " MISS PEACH :!'M A F/?1END OF il1E 8/RDS . I EVEN LOVE' n.ie L/TfLE SPAl<l<ELS. PERKINS c . 'SPA RRe~~ ?• AND YO(.{ SAY YOU'l<E A FR/END OF THE BiRPS ?? d- 15 HIS N IG HT _) OUT! Al<THUl<1 A Fl<iEND OF niE !>/RDS WOULD KNOW ENOUGH TO C:ALL Tl-iEM SPARROWS. S-P~·R-R-O-W·5!' '\ If '-' ._ ·:"_ ~. '\ , , <C.'· .. -- By Meft i'HfJfl REALLY CLOS E BUDD/ES <CALL THEM 'SPll RREL$.' / By ,John Mllff '"""""...,...... ..,.,. ........ 1 .... ,. J . (r);bni·I By Dick Moores You lorqet mu imPortance at Citu Hail ! I carrlj all of the ke4s! By Charles Barsotti .---~-~-, n .. _& ... am&&mift =mo. "·..\'.JV"'-'-Onnn. ·-~.ic-~-~ .. 0 .. I TEASED IT MYSELF! 11~1''' ' ' f'o?\J / ~ .ilYt j """&' "' By Gus Arriola Tlil! ONLV !tJ'AOON ;:. FOCI.-( \V!fH .SNAKES /6 -·· \OU i!ARC'L '{ !=.VER ..5EE TORT!UA51 .ScAMPL!RIJV ACROSS~ FllEJ-0/ By Ferd Johnson rT FIGGE.RS! LOOKrT HQ\.V LONG YOU\IE ~EEN TEA5iN' ME! 0 ): , __ _ By Ro9er Bollen E)(CUS!:. ME~ IS lH/S THE. ll~-SQ)JH OR EAST-l\)ESr STAMPEDE. "" THE GIRLS I 11l'oio mallU"how much Ibey improYe lhtm, Ibey 1tlll ~·on·1 ring unless you're hi Ute bathtub." DfNNIS THE MENACE • WE KEEP HIM Pfi'lllED IJI 1!ECAVSE Ht'S GOT A llE.A!. llo\O l!MPEIZ.. ' µQ,4· -6·/ ' J 11.tlHOfA If ~.Wlt!W t\1:R 'JlnGIT ASXrr M?' .. . • 7 7 f -" .. ,, • ,, \ ·I ::-1 ---' . ,. ' ' DAILY Pl lOr --... c ;tR .... ,_ .. rs-w• .. r TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIGRTS · • ...., KITV m 7 ,\5 -Dodger baseball. Dodgers vs. ..,1ants at San Francisco. CBS IJ 8 p 1n -"ri·1v \Vor!d and \Vel come to '._I It." Selerted rebroad casls of episodes previously re5e nled on an other netu·nrk \Vill iam \V 1ndorn Mars. . Kc·~~·r fD 8:30 -"A f.1emory of T\\.-·o ~1 onday s." . A bleak portrayal of blue-collar t1fe in . .o\merira during th e J)epression . u·r1ttrn by .-\u thur ~1'.ller. NBC' 0 9 rm. lrons1 dr lhief Jronsidr repays a f· ~ebt to a Japan<>.~e veteran \1·hcn he trave ls to y fnkyo to rrevent the man·s murder .Jan1es Shigeta guest...- KTLA "You th man at 0 D r .n1 Bdl\' Graham \rusad<' the Un1vers1tv of Life., is tonight's ser- Charlotte. Norih Ca rolina. ~ .. ;.Zt ' f 9. 'f~Q ti I' Zt;:;.t:t" 'C ' IOllWl'Ql f 11•(10 •••I'"-••"•- •• l•~•I ••• t•~o •clo .. 0 1 J·l ll• EXCLUSIVE Charl ton Heston "SKYJACKED " MON . 'JHRU S.t.f ,t,T 1 -8:4$ -10.30 SUN. ?.-..-4-1-10 r~---~·-, .... ,. --I fr_e';.: ktV _ DAILY LOG_,_ I AL~~.~~~ '' . --"SKIN GAME" Qll P1opo1ltion 9: Pro ind Con Thursday Evening m: NET PltJl!OUM on Ui. 'JOI (R) 1-------------1 JU NE l f ,,., DD 0 IIl'ID al,,., l,,---Cllll§lNews ' 0 Tiit Ila: Vtllty 0 (IJ '#!111 Wild '#ut ID Thi '1l11bton• OJ l !tl Cosby Show {IIJ 111 t11t Spotllpt GI Hod11podp lodfl . ft M1yblny M'O C® lo1 Tene~rGSOI m Thr11 Stoa1u !:30 0 Mo¥11: (C) (90) "Co11bey'' l1dvl ·5a -Ja~~ Lemmon GI~ n h11d !!nan Donle...y, Anna Ka~hl1 De~~ cl~rk beuimes panntr v.1111 b•g time tat11eman 1nd rtce•ve! some rough t1eatment wh ile btcom1ni: a towboy. Arthur Miller's "A MtrnOf)' ot Two Mondays," 1 ble1k. 11m1.1utoll io- 11aph1cal ~rlr1y1t ol bfo• eo111r hit In Ame1lca durina: tM Ofp1111lon. 9:00 IJ ']J CBS Thund1f Movlt: (C) (21/1111) "Tiit Comtdianr" ~ora) ·67 -Rkn11d Burior.. C:111be\•. i1Ylo1, Alic G~1nn'!J, Pttt; •:r::toe-.•. rum Vtllloo\ <cf Cr1~1 ,., (,.""' s :1<1vtl abo~1 1 ar~i.p 0: "°":t wno oomt lo I \'t'tr. lrulltn i!l1roc:: C'.,~11 lhl d1n1t' al lb otvOiutioll·!oc; rer:me . D ~ m lroulM "No ~O'!i>"t tor Murdtr" (R) Chit ! lr01'1sjdt ;t p.,s 1 dtbl to 1 J1p,tntst ~·t11r1n '"htn ht lr1·1tl1 lo Tokyo te ple•tot the ma"·' rTlLrrkr. Jamts ~nlgfla 11uesh 0 B111r Grahlm Cru~de "Yo111h· The Un'Vel'Sll'j ol lite" is ton•Rht's :i.ermo~ at Char lotte. North Carolina . Norm [•1!ns of t~e Mi1mi Dolphin$ g•vP.s 1 1est1mony_ 0 'J1@ ffi Longstreet ' ' T h ~ Jon• Fondo ,, "KLUTE" "SUMMER OF '42" BOTH COLOA BO TH (Ill (JI C8S Nt"'5 Walter Cronkite ®J Hollywood Squires m Andy Gritt Hh Shnw long wa, Hom e" (R) M1~e assumes l ~iiiilloi•lllllllll••••• 1 f1 lse 1dentny to investigol e 1 I' -------ID Ninny 111d !ht Professar Oil Guitar, Guill! ED BGok But "lhe Rovers of [105" by Cyrus Coulter. ' I m T1e1surt ~ Grttn Acres senes of rohber1es 1n an e!eclron ic.s plant , Sus1n Oh~er r uesrs. al N0t~es T1p1ti1s · S Thi Vir(initn CE) NMll CID Ttlt·Rtvi!t.I Muslt.11 !:30 0 Ntwa Witch John Fullmu (!) Victoril hmes Show al Avenlur1 EfJ He•cbhop [11101 M•nll aJ R1tinf From Hollywood P1it • 1':55 0 Polrtit1I Mt5.51a:• 1 10:00 0 10' m De1n MfifM Sho111 (R) 7:00 I) (fl 0 en News Ph1t S11~er1 and Dom Dtlu1se guest O MO\'le: (2hr) "Ed(t el Doorn" Sho.,. w1:1 be 1 ~!e11~pted for covenge (Cira) '50 _ Dana Andr tv.s luleyl r,f Pres. N•1on s 1rnv1l 1n W1~h, D.C. Grangei. Mala Powtrs ' 0 l'ltws Gt0f2• Putnam (i' Trull! er Const Utf'ltU 0 I l ) [6) (!) 0 W f n M111h1M (8"' Dr•rntt q "Burdt n o1 Proof" IR) M111 chl!it.d D Whit's M lint! 1t11th the h1I and·run 1/ay•nt ol his , · T J 'Sh v.•fe has no defense ara•nst Ille uO, 0111 ones ow . m I love LutJ' e1verwhelm1ng ev1dente el the prose· cul•rn. @I Dream of Je1nnit Q5) SJll!ikinR freely 0 Mo'lit: (C) (2hr) "Dvtl of tham- fi) HithlYORt plont" (adv) '62 -Al1n Ladd, Frant1 Denoia. rn Uni Pltitri1 tn el Cimino @ Mo'lit: ''Titanic~ Q) News Hua:h W1lh1m1 CE) El Prof. S.1it1 rio @ Wortd Preu ED Sptcl1I ol !ht Week (R) "lnYi· 7:3D E en Rollin' on Uie River r~t•nn to I March" 0 t111it "G~ntl1 01wn ' Lt~le m Lu~1 lib11 Wrestling and 1 ne1hng hnnet huch1n1 htr fiJ L• leyend1 d1 B1!omtl t,igs 1n • c•l'j p111i: brln1 two lonel~ IO·JO O G Put , T lk 1 t tieople 101:etMtr · eoige ntm I • · It @To Ttll lht Truth ffi Biii toui! Show (J' 1 Dre1m ol letnn!t @II l:" Sl~n~tl ~ 0 M'lr I M " (lh l MD ..... ~ r1lm: Miu Sldl• fllompsan I IOn ltV'lt, I ar.,1 J n:. Co . . C I bl R1nr111" (adv) '58 -J•mes G11rn-UJ ne1r11 01 II Pl t tr E1ch1~1 Chou1eu1. 10:45 ED r}S' Crttlc 11 Larae ID Dodger Du11out/W1rm-Up ID (,fl D11a:n1t 1 ! l :00 'l' 0 0 1Q' rn CE Nrww £D An Prolilt fran• G11ln. stu!plor 0 McGOVERN pnn1maker and u~•ve rs1t'f' 1eachtr , * FACES THE PEOPLE gues11. O Ont Slip Beyond CEJ Ttlt·Rtvisll Mul.lt1l (6) MtrWI Dillon Cl) Wilburn Broth111 .Show m Nt'll'I Ptlt Miller, Ken Jon es :m Movi1: (2hr) "Youn11r Brothen" ID D1-.id rrut Show (wes) '49 -Wayne Morris, J~n1s flli lWV: Propositions P311e. ffi Headsliop {R) f:55 m DGd~t1 B1stb1ll Dorlgers vs. G1·• ll:15 g) ;l'fn Ci11t dtl Ju~ts "1nts 1tSF. ':·,.' • 11:30 fJ r]) New1 '·1:00-f) DEBUT My Wcrld 1nd Weltom1 Q (f9j m Johnny C.rien to It Th4 Monroft House~r,ld 1~, O Mo-.i1: "Rom1n Stlnd1l1" (mus) th rown into turmoil when 10 year I '33 -[dward A.rnold, Ludlle 1!11!. • old L~d11 thre11ens tn run 1w1y 0 CIJ@ aJ Did C.wtt from home. W1ll11m Windom. Joi n Hotthkis. Lisa Gerritsen, Harold J 12:00 0 (]) CIS lit.I Mo'lit: "Murder rt Slone sl1r. ltl1 G1llop" {tem-myi) '63 -Mar· 0 @} en Flip WilMln (Rl Rny l 11ret lluthtrlonf, Rnbert Mo1lty. Ct11k. Barbu& McN11r. and Stolle• Miu M1rpl1 investl11tes the death end Mtar1 a:uesl. nf 1n 1ld1rty recluse. 0 (i)@ ffi Ailts Smith in• CJ Me'lit: "Wnpt Around the Ne[~" klnn "Smiler Wilk a Gun" (I!) Ii (dr1) '66 -Je111 llich1rd, D1ny ynunr. 5m1lln1 1unman le!ve! Rob in. H~yt5, Curry 1nd 111 Cid prc~ec!OI m Jrvlll ti' Collll(turftt.1 lo die 1n Iha d1ser1 1t1u l~ey havtl mined 1 for1une in 1otd, Guests are 12:30 m Tt Tell !hi Trvtll W•ll Geer 1nd Rn1er Davis. 0) Country Music Ci) l illy Gr1h1m Crvs1d1 (D Bo1lna: front tllt Olympic @ Thirty Minults With , H~ber1 Humphrey 1uests. ::m Bl1ct .laumal ~ 6I) £1 Shl>'ll' dt lot11 V1ldtr • CE) Csl.ldon Cenlr•! 1;30 0 I]) Mr Thtet Sens (Rl Barb1r1'! n1turat 1nthusi1sm bubblts owr 1~ to 1n emb1rr1ulnr nenl111 101 Stevt. ' Friday DAYTIME MOVIES t OO m (Cl "I'" ...... """ l"" ~ {rem) '46 -P'llnlp Dorn, C1th1rt~t ,· Mcleod. \:iO 0 "Tht Lllll YtJ• .. M01111" (1!tvl '40 -John Wry11t, l1n Hunltr, 10:00 1]) "Tht ltwltu lrud" {wt1) '!3 -R<>Ck HudM>ll, J1,1l!1 Ad1m1. Jt.lO O "Our H•1rb Wtlt tr~ftl U'" (com) '46 -Gill Runt l1, Dl1n1 Lynn. "101~1 ti N11.11ry 11111" (mp) ''1-Clltn D11w, Rtllut Pr•to11. ''"'@J DD IIJ~Nm m All·Nltlll: Show: (C) '1moky," "Showdi::nm 11 loot Hiit," "Mr. Smith Cioes to W11hlnrto11" 1:10 0 HielwRJ Pttrol Z.:05 IJ MIWI•: "DenCI With M• Henry" (com) '5!1 -AbboN ind Costello, 4:00 I) Movll: "fllaht to .Hon1 Kon(' (1dv) '56 -Rory Ca lhoun. 1:00 D "h rk tnop Hill" (drtl '59 - Gr11ory Peck, Hul}' Gu1rd1110. m "A letter t9 T~rtt WiYtt" (dr1) ''9 -it1nn1 Ct1ln, Lindt D1rne!I. l:lO D "Htn.efNtlllfi"' (com) '32 - Mux BrotMn. J:OO Cl) (C) "lll• lldhlillb F1t• SMt· tit" (••S) 'SJ -Gtnt l1rry, Rho~ d1 Flelfl in1. l]l "Th ... pln1 City" (drtl '50- Rk~trd Contt, CoHetn Gt1y. 4:00 0 (CJ "fM tht nnf' T11111" (mus) ~9 -M1rio l tn11, bl Zsa Gtbot, 4:10. (C) "tltdlbtttd tht !'11at1" (tdv) '52 -Robtrt NtWlon, LI/IQ 01rn tn. (]) S111111 1110 AM llstlna. Nearly Everyone Li stens lo Landers "FllNCM CONNl(TION" (U & "VANISHING l'OINT" !''l l••<OI" ... w ... ,,, ....... Bl• •O>O Onl~ Or•n~t Ce. Drlvt-l" Shew;;;, "GODFATHER " (R) -~·,..., C:•-·-.. ,,,_ •9l ·~·!I W nnt~ J <•demt .\w••dtl Grnt 1-/~t~m~n i\<1or IUT "(IUl l "FllNCN CDNNI CllON .. !•J I. "VANIS MIN ' •OINI" !•~) • ••• 11-.,. ,., " .... ,._.,, llo I ,.j 1•U Mtlof Ovt r e 111" W1ekl °""''" '"•"O'" •.~oO 'l•ol "WHAT'! UP. DOC?" !G) "HOW TO COMMIT M••-IAGl'(PG I "DOt" •! 1,$0 & 11,•I t .M, ~ .......... .. ., .. ,,_ 'l ! 111! ... -.... ..... -, ............. 111 1111 llotllT POITNt MAllT lll.i.POllTI NIU Cl &ND TMI l'ft&CNll" IPSI P(Ul/IAMU COtU•M "TNI NOllKltSN (l'G! l""'o•~ '""· w ... "' ~....it 111·1J1'l OlllY DllVl.111 l•OWtll•t WQOOV AllfN Pl6•/Jam•• Coburn "GYPSY MOTHS" (ltl ( U"01r IT mv•t 114 wll!I •••..,II ........ , ..... , .... t • ._ .. S'l .fOJJ ''THI ll!OINO DP fUOO E" CMAlll.IY" {!'0) ~lu1/J lmmy U•w•rl "Cl'tlYINNI 'OC l.\L CLUI" (PG' ='=' ~ ...... . .. ~ .... ~ U l toll ... llll IWllMlWlfl ·-·~···· ....... !>-11 llll Vf1IHl11111llAWlfl JU COi PIOlllM "TNI lllT<MUlllt" !•l ' ""fl°' WMl!ll" IPO/ lllU"4., fl6.1 1ttW•\'*"* 111 --...... ..... -Ml-)UI t •ti t it lilt 1 "MIAT 01' flilNtOMT" , "Ol!'fflNO STltAIOMT" 111 ) J "11.\1 • .\llLL&" !'1 ~ ! I MU!! t1 Wllw Pl•{tjl (I \ 'Cello' By Ci.' -,ce.,..,,_ Of 1119 Dali/ ,iJflr.~ . "S. '°""'If" or "ap. ptarantes can be decf'11 iniz •· are the me:ssa~es 1n.heren1 In Ira \\la lla('h·s c nm mu r11 I v theater staple. "The. Absenc'e nf a Cel!o," wh1rh npened 'fuesday end runs through Sa1urdav at the: Lido Isle Pl.:iyhnu.se Thf" production directed by Ruth n1ight do Y.'ell to idPa of •he pl a~ i ! s e l f • r..1cCullel', follow the Jud,1?.1niz bl' the first ac1 (lpen ln~ nu?hl , !hf' pla~· "'as nn l\ a!J r1,1?.h! and performances ""ere acceptable. < ··~(tri!b r'X('CpllOn$ ! , By thf $rt"Ond act. LIM' pl.1y h11d 11 little more t>nergy .11.nd trr1la!ing ht1h1I$ nf soml' player~ 1n the hr.st act had either di~appeared or e:voll'f'd into rhararter traits. The th ird act. 11s of\Pn hap- pens, 1<o·as the best ThP 11 rtor!i had "·armed up tn lhC'1r rolf'~ 11nd Arldf'd some natura!nl".~~ Ba stcal!\', 1tll this mPans that L1rlo.'s "Ah.~en<'f'" 1s a good product inn hy l'On1 munit\ theater standards and if hli?h! <:'omedv w1th a ff'\<o' oh11nu~ but a('C"tp!able me<:~a;::e<: and :1r1 evening of innocuous en- 'S oap 011era' Star Like 011e of F a,111ily By CYNTHIA LO"'RY !\1EW "t'ORK (AP \ -The suspense has be:en r1;:rr1f1c. but !l appears now tha t to.·11chael Baue:r, who ha s bef'n hovering at death·s door since the f'V!I Flip Ma lone shot him a couple of weeks ago. ls going to surv1vt . On Wednesday the lady doctor to ld his w\fe, C'harlnlle, that ~f i ch at 1 's temperature and pulse 1<o·ere normal and gave a qualified "yps., v.·hen asked if he y,·ere out nf danger. The improvement ought to relax tbe st ve n million or so viewers of CBS's "Guiding Light ," a daytime serial that "•ii! have its 20th anni\'ersary on t.elevi~inn nexl mon1h. Tn manv 1·iC'"'crs. to.1 icharl is ;:ilmost a "mrmber of the fami- lv. Acto r Don St t1<o'arl has been playing the par! of the lawye r on the soap opera for 3~ .vears. After Michael was gunned do1<o·n. s nm e soph isticated members of the program·s ;iu- dience 1<o·orr1ed that it m i~ht be fatal . Death occurs in the YIBps , usually when an actor playing "a C<Jre character .. in a series succumbs to 1llntss. de.:ith or the lu re of Holly":ood and is sn identified ~·ilh the rnle that 11 1s hel1P\'f'd im- po.!!S1ble to rep la ce him $!p1,1,•art usu ally a pp e a r ~ !hrf'e: rlll ~'S (HJ ! of fi vf', hut rrrrnt l.v hr h11d brf'n 1<o'ork1nR tl1nnd;iys !hrnugh Fridays for months "·hen M1chaC'l 11·as dC'fend1ng a 11·om;in on a murd~r chargP. His illness 11·as a little off.camera hnlt- da.1• Ste,,.,·art, a h 11 n d so m P bachelor in his '.Yls. like s his work a11d has hig h regard fnr the acting skills of his rol- Je:agues -''the rea l stars of the induslrv." he cttlls then1 . At the ·same lime he is aware that serials are rough on the performers' egos since they are morf' \ikelv to ~ identified b~1 the publir-"'It h lhf' name of thr1r ('haraciers than by their o"·n n;imrs. ''\ am pleased." hr says a '.1ltle defensively, "that 98 per- cent of the mail 1 get is ad- dressed to Don Stewart. not Michael Ba ue r.·· That may be Strwart's v.•ay of "·histlinF, past t he grave.yard. bu! he actually thinks of himse:lf as a singe:r who acts. For the past couple or years he has been moonl igb!ing as a singer on eve ry ocr.asilla that presents \\self. . 11 Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse PllSINTS "MY SISTER EILEEN" by Jneph A. Fl•lft & Jeromt Chodoro• MAY lt-10·26·27 JUNE 2-l WIST GA.Tl -ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS 1:111 ,.m. Alml11lo", il.00. F•• r11•rYlllon1 call ll•·UfJ, ll!•r I c•ll 134-11'1 NOW SHOWING-WED. THRU SUN. llODEIN THEATIE IT ITS mn:sr, " i1tn11 ,.,, .. ,, slllJ 1f men it crisis set q:atlirt De •r11•er •1ckpo11~ tf •• clue t-ii Im Cll1an ti nrlt 111itiCJI '""· "Jll .. r llM119hl·,1l1Yoli Int , IUl·Wrlft(/llllf ,.. .. ,,, , • l'relMollly ,,.. -•I lmP<1rt1111 .\mtrlClll ,1 • ., "' ""' 1111 l•Yt••I 'It("" , • , , , " D•Uy ~!loll ., .. ,,..,,MJ "FURY ON WHEELS" ,. .... ,. "POSSISSION Oii JOIL DILAMIT" '" ~.-----• DtTWAlllMEHT sfsk-r (a lfs (()r the fntervlewe:r P\al'fd to sharp pr~n by :\anry GPrrltngs, the role: of ~1arcia h 11 1 an r 's e1'ervone t'lse's pretensions · Pilgrims l'.01fe, Cella, 1! a forcrnost \led1e1<1I scholar As \ei1il, Eb1e P111 ntPr rnakes 11:.l'I of Hn interesting 1·n1c~ and e.ng11ging .~milt t<1 ~1\ r 11rldrrl char1H·te r to a 1111 1ni.: but Ill· d1\·1du:ilist1r "lfr• !\'I~· :\nnrttP Bell 1~ ,ln,1 nn;i 1h<' 1\;111r\\111>5' n,11,i:h11'r an 1t l™•k• t hr p<1r! Jonathan Ch.-11 lr5 1 ~ 1)Jr 11rrrir1r fr1rnrl l't·rt \ fDWAIDS CINfMA M•rllOt ot .llld•"'' (Oii• M• .. , •• )li)l 'f<OWT •"fl ' ' , ... lll''" ,. ... I 1 11 9 l'N-trr1a1nmt'nt arf' \Our irlr.l~ nl fu11. lhrn t:<• \, 11•11 ti .11' rn<i~ 11• ') R l't .. ___________ _, !I 11,1:-> flh\11111,• l•I f'\{'f\Pf11 that ;\'.;H "lt('h81 l<l it. F:m111a the \\ 1secrac k1n~. t1ppl1nL! Pftll 1h1ef·neq,~hhnr, "as .t stanclnu! As "·r111 rn . Emn1 :J !- the funniest char;'trfer 1n l !1r l'la~, hut ~!r~ ~lichaud hr,, beau1 1ful 1nflect1eins an<I st11.1,r f;;i r1.1I nuanres In tl1r rnlr The pla.\' C"nnC'rrn~ t h r r1lgrin1 f;i111 ily 1 .. 11('(·1hr .. 1· Dr f\iidrrw !'1lgr11n ,, 11n11er~11 .v sc1Pnrr prnfr 1 ~ gnne bankrupt fr(lnl 1111~•0 ressful exp<>r 1n1P tll5 .J;irl. ,,, \\'ilcnx as AnrlrP1t' .<.1·r1••. c·JosPr [o rhe rolf" lrilP 11 1l1r plal'. but treats thr ,, fe!lectual \\'1th Sl'llllf' ar :r( t "" Andrew P1l~rin1 :inrl 1'1 fam llj. fr y lo prr!rnrl 111 hr "'haf th ey're no1 ('oni mun11y v,onrkers. grn11p !o\rr .. and basically, dull finer 1nnr1", -Ill get a JOb "'i th a carbon copy Mmpany. Complications ar1st 11 hrn the interviewer. 1,1,•el!·playf'fl h1· Wayne Gibson. sets lhrough their flimsy d1sgu1srs. Pilgrim's resC'arrh asst5t'1 nl 'French' Se'lu('I HO LLY \VOOD ll'l't 1 \!r l 11!1'\ ~ d1r1'< IH•fl '' '>1f lh l•·••t '''f'W'f 1\i\ rrin:-1,l •·1 "'l' 11,, l!'!'!'b'r 'l'l''rl1••n r•t nr •h1• 1. r{tl 1~ t' ,1 t.!t' •f'l .p T' 1., '' ~uc 5~ 'w'l $1t1111 1 ·,r I' fi '!!l r1 -1· I )ra111a I if ~ ~··h .. 1I11 led • rPntr11!rd ;1nrl 1n!rni-1\·r A:<>hley rarr rerrJ1 I'd his \IF .~ from the 'Yalf" Sr hool Ct! nrama in 1964 He ha~ a('tf'<l ninrr th:in !'.(I prnfr~);IOO/l] rnl r~ nn lhr '"'11' Yrirk ~r:igr nr1 tr111r. nnrl n111r)r11sir111 Hi'1 hrrt Cnhrn rrrr1\'"rl h1~ {lFA fr .. n1 !hr 'l';1\r S<'h,,!'ll 11f f"lr ,1 111:1 1n l'llifl llP h11s rl1rrrtrd ovrr 4n pl:i \<:. :.inrl ,, th,. Allthor of thr rrrrnl h<inl. ~EDWARDS . THEATRES . .. " . i. ' , __ ... :;, ~Jo11·ard \\I Koch "'ill prnrh1rr a mol'1e titled "Ba1li::r jli" and starring Gene Hrickn1;1., rn the further exploits nf ~:rld1 r "Popeye " Egan. !he tf'lll~h Ne1<o' York rnp on "·hnm T!1r FrenC"h Connection" 11 11 :-. based. . ... . . ... .. . 1\,.ttni:: Prnf P~!'1nn:i!ll' " I"• F11r 1nfor111n1lnn :inrl :ip · COA!.T HWY •' uar•"n"i" 1ttvn pl1r:it 1on form~ plr;i~" r;i!I NE WPORT B£ ACt~ • 644·07 0•~ T 1114 • 4'14 tfi.12 bell1fPl1 i p ni Al ri nlf ~rm 1230.330.700.1000 PM. ''WAit •ITWEIH MIEN I. WOMIEN" 't1rrln1 J•<k l.•m~11 Ind "SK lH GAMIE " l•clutlYI Or1nt• Co~nty 1t1 .. rYMI l••t •"••g•m•nf Nomfn•lffl !Gr I AcNl•my .\w••d•I "~IODL IR ON TH• lt00"'" "SILl"fT lll:UNNl"O" • ".l.NDll'OMIOI Sll •IN" ''KLU TE" • "$U MME'lt ()P '~l" "IHI LAST PICTUlllE !HOW" ' "$DMIETIMIS A GllEAT NOTION" "l'LAY -V1ric r ri! Canhy, N&w Yo1 1{ Times . '"THl GODFATHlR ' IS I SPECTACULAR MOVIE, QllE OF THE FINEST GANGSTER MOllU EVER MADEi " ((;f') "PATIO N" \1ai lr"t llr1n•ln HJ.lt&Oll ll~D •l WILSOl't Sf. COSTA 1111($.1. $16·0$13 a MlllS SOtJTH I SAii OlfGO TW'(, [X(lUSI YE f~GAG(MfNT .ltliOC LW'ION•UWAAW t ... ~ _r · "'°..,,. ~ ~""""" Gll:lA I IM• aftO AIHIA(Tl()N O•nn,. "•Y"Old~ .. HOW SWflT IT Ii" EOW.AROS HARBORc.':r:.2 H•••n• e1vo " ••lJO" s1 (0§11 .. ,,. 6•6 0,11 A JO(JPNIV 8fV()ND IMAGl"IATION -sno:nt running· ...... _ .. ~ "~""·a - '"" .,!1 1AMf~ rn; -!l•"I "!M( llONllllS" !I'll) WllST M tN S TE"' .\1' OOlDIN WI T 9£TWE£N ~!:0o~; .. °o"r;;:,";,: 192·449 . . I """ l".·"'1• Rrrl.~ra\C -f ;ir k ~r.n \l.ar11. CJ11t"t'll llf s •• ,,,. ''""'"'' 1!11>'• n, "'~ '~"'. "'" '""' ..,_ '"'1 S"""'v Po'''". i-w.,, lelott#t "BUCK ~~r PREACHER" . .. ······ ..... . W•STMllllS1'1:11li ATOOl.Ot"f WIS'f OAllOIOI •llOVll 6 IETWi'EN •"'N 11t•••11t • .....,...192-+413 A IOORN[Y IDOHO IMA.GIN400N #sno:nt runNng-·--Of\.I·· .. _ ..... :....i Ol"lll gllO (,fflLOM: f~U(IN ~1,0" IN M 'SSI N Vll!JO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ·~ ,,, " ..... " • "-· ., ..... 11 ~' ' . ,., EOW.a.R09 CINEMA L Showflmt 7:00 p.111. S1111dty Metl11• Shllrtt"' J:OO pu11. 1--AND "' "IOSIMARY'S IAIY" 1-----AND CCl "l "FRENCH CONNECTION" ~--AMO "SITIING T,t,IGIT" HIR"<'lt 81.VO Al l()AM~ c:~:~ 546-3 l02 "(;llAT WHITE MO,I" l\'1411'1"4 fl flQll •ICHllQ It.Il l~ "MAMMflSMITM I! OUT" (I ) 11 .................. . • \ DAIL y PILOT sr1u PllOl9 OIRECTRESS VIRGINIA POWERS (Li SPEAKS Version of "The Unexpected Guest" Will Be Presented Ai Golden West Deaf Performers Will Stage Play By JOHN ZALi.ER-· 01 l'h• DlllY l'llol 51111 "Keep your eyes open so that when the phone rings you'll be able to react to it," motioned impatient student directress Virginia Pov,,.e rs to an embarrassed actor. "What will the audience think if we have to prompt you to answer a ringing lelepho(ie? You're not deaf, you know," she ended without any trace of a smile. The actor was deaf, though, and Mrs. Powers knew it She was deaf herself. But the actor nodded to in- dicate understanding as if nothing were unusual, Mrs. Powers retreated frorn the stage, 11nd the other actors resumed their silent dietlogue in preparation for opening night !his Friday at Gol den West College in Jlunlington Beach. "The Unexpected Guest" by Agatha Christie will be the se· tond major production by the 27 Golden West students "'ho formed the Silent Rustlers Orama Club with !he aim o[ staging drama for both hear· lng and non-hearing audiences. The first production last January was a sell-out l\vo weeks in advance of opening night, and for this show, the deaf students have reserved the 350-seat Co m mu n i t y Theatre in tht> hope of ac· commodating all comers. "A few even think it's gro tesque. "But we consider the sign language beautiful, and in many cases, ii can even be a more efficient medium of cotn· munication than s poke n language," Cullon said. "We hope that people com- ing to this play will get some sense of this." To insure that the audience will be able to follow the play fully, however, "interpreters" will be used to read the lines of the various characters as the actors are "signing" them OU!. Culton will be one of these interpreters. "There is a prob- lcrn." he noted. "because Virginia is deaf and can't hear the interpreters to direct them . So we're pretty much on our own." r.:>eafness presents other prob- Jerns in the staging of a con1- plex play. For example, hear- ing actors don't always face each other when they speak. Deaf students must also turn their backs on each other, but since their communication is all by means of hand signals. this me11ns they loose touch with each other at times and must proceed entirely by a sense of timing. There is only one wa y to overcon1e this type of problen1 -lots of practice. And the deaf students have been 11t it more than a month as they enter the final ·week of .rehearsals. "We \Vant to sho\v ourselves that deaf people can achieve "Many people think the sign language of the deaf isn't very communicative,'' explained Paul Cullon. chairman of Cr0ldrn West's ll ea ring Impaired Program. · the same things !hat hearing people can." s11id "Virgi nia Powers, through an in- terpre!er after practice. Guitarist To Perfo1m Guitarist Manuel L o p e z Ramos will perform ""-'Ork~ by Purcell, Bach. Schale. Tor- roba Castelnuovo ·Tedesco, Madlem and Rodrigo July I in a concert scheduled for 8:30 p.m. in the Laguna Beach High School auditorium. The concert. sponsored by the Guitar Shoppe of Laguna Beach, "•ill be the only Orange County appearance or !he famed South A mer i ca n guitarist. Tickets can be purchased at the door or at the Guitar Shoppe, 1027 N. Coast Highway, Lag un a Beach. • RHll TeSI • Or~n & ReliR Fluid • Atmovt Pin • Visual lntp1ttion • Adjust Binds & link1111 • New Pin G11ket • a ... h"" & 1c,...., "c:.Mltleti •-ltrl ..... ' . 11-tionol/Cout·to·Coast Mrs. Powers, a 31-year-old mother of four, is herself 11 paragon of the "can do" at- !itude. She is an honor student at Golden \Vest in regular rlasi;es. which she attenus along with a group of other deaf studen!s and an in - terpreter, This year she also won the Bank of America award as the top soclaf science s tudent at Golden West in competition with both hearing and non-hearin g students. "Deaf people are natural ac- tors. So much of their com· munlcation system depends on facial gestures and pantomime that they have to be good ac- tors." Tickets for the lwe>-hour play, ·which will run Friday and Saturday, are $2.50 at the door and $2 in advance at the college bookstore. Cu r ta i n time is 8:15 p.m. COSTA MESA 193-4 Newport Blvd. 645-7570 SANTA ANA 8:.t I' f I SI ,., ....... Ml.-1115$ LONG IU.CH SSC> F P f fie CCN•I Hwy, ffl·lJll WHITIIE R 1.~•I " "·•~ tllvd. • . ··'""°°'' DOWNEY n1~1 L.o;tWOQd 81vd .•. 16f·IS61 MOH. THRU FRI. I to 6 e SAT. I to 1 TV Snaps Up ''Patton'', Other Top Movies ~ ·~':':: ~BOOl'f HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The gap between first-run n1ovies in theaters and their subse- quent beamrng on tele v1s1on narrows. Nex t !\ea . ..on "Patton," voled best picture of 1970 and a host of other Academy Awards in- cluding best actor for George C. Scott. will be aired by ABC. It is expected the lengthy 'Vorld War II epic v.dl be shown 1n full , prt'·en1p!i11g regularly s c he d u l e d pro· gramming for one. entlre-effl!'· Hl,C!. Viewers are disinclined to give up t"'O successive even- ings to see u rnotion plL1ure cut in ha lf. 'J'he continui ty 1s disrupted even worse than by :1 quick ha I f ·d o z en cu1n- 1ne1·r.:iul~. "Ben llur" \\·as sold to !he t ube and ser ved up on dd · ferent n1gh!S'. \'ie\l'ers v.er" cornpelled to tune in !\vice knov.·1ng the ch.1rtot ract> wa s the second half !ugh point. ··w<'st Side Stury," still ano!her Academy Award win· fU!f': WU'' ·lt;-6fl, fof!levbi.on. drawing high rallngs on SlH.'· (.'tss1ve nights. As the motion picture pool s hrinks to almost nothing, television is buying up the great boxoffiC'e winners wit h alacri!y and for les!'J mone y than it paid for run-of·thC'·n1ill p1e1ures a decade ago, '"In 'fhe lie at of the Night .'' thl' 1967 Oscar v.•1nner will be aired by NBC next season. The question is . how long h<-fore this year's Academy Awa rd winner, ''The French ..._ ___ . 0 ~~,ton, the 1ube·1 wot be ~Id to Certuinly not before every periny possible has bee n .sc1uee2ed out of theater box- off1ces by 20th Cent ury·r ox. Even so, <·ertain scenes ~ind dialogue will be umiUed in cit>ferenee to the FCC. ·rhe L'ontent of "~1idn ight CO\\'boy" is a major stu1nbl1ng bl ock to television. Others. ''The Sound of Music" for example, a.1·e in another category. Like "Gone \\'ith the Wind" these super spectacles can be re--released 16 ..dtP&~ry ..• ~. ~i<tl\ ' 'J'hi waiting lime i5 .• lJtt ..... -nith great success. Ing e.·ery year F'or this reason nont> of Produl"ers uf <"Ontroversial Disney's classic ca r too n filnis. especially those with · features has ever bet'n shO\VJl in its entirety on televlsion : "Snow ·White," "Bambi." '·Pinocchio." "Jungl e Book" an<l "Peter 1~an ." ·rhese, hov.•ever. are the except ions. Today. even in 1-lolly wood, it is con1mon to hear people 1n the. industry say, "Tl 's too much of a hassle to go to the the;i ter and see the picture. 1"11 wait for 1t to eome to telcl'tslon." . •.. exphcit sex scene or t'X· cess11'e vulgarity, are m(lkin~ two 1 ers1ons of th L' 1 r 1uu\i~"-ull•· lvr tt·,. ~.trr:;. :11~ otht'r for ~<ill' tu lt·l1•1 l~HJll ut the future. One v.•onde1·.s 1f the censurs v. ill snip a word or l\l'O from -Ceorge C. Sco tt·s opening speech in "Patton." It set the tenor for tht' picture. Will telel'ision change that'! Suggested sale price at participating stations for four Shell Belt ed Seventy Eigh t ''' wh itewalls. In sizes: C78-13 (plus $1 .90, federal excise tax per tire), and' E78-14 (plus $2 .34, federal excise tax per tire)_. Check your Shell deal er for sale prices on other tires, too. Participating Shell dealers. are stocked-u p ... and ready to deal! Th e $99 SPECIAL is ju st one example of th e great buy s you can make. But hurry! Th is sale ends June 30, 1972 ... Size Suggested Sale Price• Plus Federal Excise Tax for 4 Tires for 4 Tires C78·13 $ 99 $ 7.60 E 78-14 ' $ 99 $ 9.36 F 78-14 $123 $10.08 G78-14 $134 . $10.76 . H78-14 $147 $11 .72 F 78-15 $125 $10.32 G78-15 $138 $11 .12 H78· 15 $150 $12.04 *Prices may vary at participating stations. ·TIRES .. ·-. ' • • f ' r ha th wb " ' ' l I .., 'p Jo l co l Ito ha wb "" In l!M Co ove ma rat cap lol two .. pla mo hid jou to T t sei .. . wb HI to Col wa co cer to Da I Gurney Asks • ' , .. Wi.ll Figlit Agai1i l ' ,/~ ' ,, ' <t < ' l J Ron Stander, the heavyweight boxer who lost to champion Joe Frazier a week ago, takes his daughter An gela and wife Darlene for a short ride on a rnini·bike. Stander says, "I'll fight any living human being and most animals as Jong as the f!lOney's there." U11f 01·gettahle Hayride Opened Door to Freedom Louis Hintnaus look('d like the \Vorid 's 1appiest, most carefree man. ffis statuesque daughter Dagmar u·as :>erforming under the bright lights of Long Beach Arena, frequently pleasing :he crowd ·with her grace and charm while executing routines during the trials to make the U.S. Olympic women's gym· ::iastics team. He occasionally gave her a fatherly ~mbrace and v.·ore the smile of pride only ,,_ _____ ___ WlIITE WASH ------- • GLENN WHIT• • parent can know ":hen his offspring has :ione u·ell. Indeed his v.•or\d did seem un- eomplicatcd. Jt has n~ always been that \v ay, t>owever. How, you ask yourself. can this man haVe experienced any kind or intrigue wben his greatest adventure in life was a hayride? That hayride. it so happens. took place (n Czechoslovakia back in the winter or 1949 when Lou, then 23, was fleeing the Communist government which had taken over his little counlry. Why leave family and country'? He explain s: "l was studying for my masters degree in agriculture when the communists took over. Bee21use my rather owned a farm they labeled us capitalists, kicked me out of school and told me to go to work in a coal mine for two years to prove myself. "It was then I decided to leave. We planned the escape for about two months." he te\IS. 'Hintnaus, another man and four girb, hkl under the hay and began a six-hour journey which they hoped would get them to Germany and subsequent frttdom. EYentually the family made it to the United Stales -none able to speak anything but (;erman, Czech and Portuguese. Dagmar. readl: for the second grade. recalls sitting in school here day after day, not knowing what was being said but eventually learning English, with a big assist from a neighbor. That was 12 ~ears ago. Now at age 19 she atlends Cerritos College in Norwalk and al H. 127 pounds seems too big to handle the intricate and graceful movements demanded by gym- nastics. Yet she has mastered them, as she did the English language. Although judges seem to continually unde.rgrade her performances (her coach, Bud l\1arquette agrees that she de!'lerves higher scores than those generall y ac- corded her). Dagmar remains loose ancf philosophical. "I've enjoyed the time spent in gymastics." she says. "I learned more from this than in school because when we go touring we stay in people's homes. "As for the judging. that's something else ... it's political ." But Miss Hintnaus has s o m e h o w learned to live with the scores that seemingly should be higher and she anti- cipates another year of competition -8 year which should carry her and her SCA TS teammates around the v•orld to compete. Included on the agenda is a visit to Red Chin11 . People watching Miss H i n t n a u s perform told me she spends considerable time helping the small children who are beginning gymna.!its. They lauded her pa- tience and rapport with the young11ters. Dagmar is a physical education major and says she might possibly get into coaching someday. She won't project that she might tutor lfYIJU18Stics , however. The politics Qf her sport may have held her down because her coach is considered a rebel of sorts. some observers believe. But the Hintnaus family has overcome dirty politics one way or another since that memorable hayride Louis and Marianne took back In , '49. to Reconsider Penalty , . '- Costa Mesan Admits Violating Rule in Indy 500 TNDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP! -Admil· ting a rule was violated, car 0""11er Dan Gurr~y ol Costa Mesa usked the United States Auto Club Wednesday night to reconsider a penalty that cost him $72,000 in pri.te money from the Indianapolis 500- mile race. Gurney's fo rmal appeal. filed just a few hours before the deadline for doing so, contended the penalty imposed against Jerry Grant and his Eagle-Ol'- fenhauser was too severe and "'a:s levied arbitrarily. Grant finished secorid in Saturday's race, trailing winner Mark Donohue by seconds. A protest was filed against the Dodgers.Go Mter lltl1 Straigl1t SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Right- hander Bill Singer, the last Los Angeles Dodgers' pitcher to lose at Candlestick Park, will be on the mound tonight when the National League Western Division leaders seek a four-game sweep of the struggli ng San Francisco Giants. Singer, 3-4, was beaten by Juan Marichal in a 1--0 duel May 15, 1971. Since then, the Dodgers have captured 10 straight at Candlestick, i n c I u d i n g Wednesday's 5-4, IO.inning thriller. Th is time, Singer will be opposed by t ighthander Steve Stone, 2-4 wi th a I.BO On TV Tonight Channel 11 at B earned run average. as the Giants at- tempt to snap a four-game tailspin that has embedded them in last place. Giants manager Charlie Fox underwent minor surgery for the removal of a kidney stone late Wednesday a fternoon and will be lost to the club for 48 hours. Third base coach John McNamara took over for Fox Wednesday, but the results were the same -another excruciating defeat for San Francisco's error-prone youngsters. "You just can't give a club more than three outs an inning -we've been doing it too much," says McNamara. "I will consult by phone with Charlie and see if he wants to make any lineup changes for Thursday night." Although Wiltie Davis' walk and MaMy Mota's one-out triple of.f reliever Don McMahon, 0-2, proved decisive in the 10th inning, the four other Dodgers' runs all were the result o{ Giants mistakes, both mental and physical. Bill Russell singled, stole seCQnd and scored on Ron Bryant's wild pitch in the first and centerfielder Ken Henderso11 dropped Davis' long fly for a th~base error as Los Angeles scored an unearned run in the sixth. Equally destructive, however, was an abortive pickoff play ln the filth with Steve Garvey on first via a single and two outs. Bryant threw to firsf"'6ase as Garvey broke for second, but first baseman Ed Goodson hesihited before making the throw, which was to the third base side of secood baseman Tito Fuentes. Garvey was credited with a :stolen base and Bob Valentine followed with his second homer of the season. L" .......... "' Si n l"rlMIH• (0 V1l..,lln1, lb Runell, •• W.Ot vl1, tf F.Roblnson, rf Crawlord, rt Moll, If W.Parker. lb G1tv..,., 311 OIHr, c Sim•. c bownlt1<l. p Wllhtlm, p W111t, pl'I Brtwtr, p 1b rhrt>I ••r~,.. 51 1 2BO<ld1,rl .jlll ! I 1 0 Fl19<1!_,, 2b 4 1 1 0 4 Ji..G 0 Good10fl, lb l I I 0 J 1 1 0 IOngm.on, l b J 0 G I l OOOSp.el1r,11 JOI' JOllM,.ddox.11 4 00 0 •010Hend1not1,dl120 4 1 1 I R,G;btan, c: 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 8.Wltlilm1, pt! I 0 0 0 l 0 t 0 HNIY. <: 0 0 0 0 J O O O Bryln!, p 2 t t t O O O O Gtllagller, pt! 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 J.JotlftMlf>. p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ' Arnold, pt! 1 • 0 41 McMallon, p I o o o Totals 3-4 S 1 4 Tl>lal1 l3 ' 4 4 LO$ Ar>Otl~ 100 021 oot 1 -J S.n Fr11ncb.co 100 002 100 t -4 E -V11..,tln1, Henden.on. J. Jofln11tn. OP - LOI Ang1!n J, San Frtncilco I, LOB -LOI Anoti!"- 1, San FrlrKIKO S. 28 -ll"uenltt. SP911f', 8ond1. )8 -Mol11. HR -V1 ..... 11.,. (J). SB -lhn1tll, AA.011, <;...,.,y, Spellr, S -C..rv.y, ll. Glbton, Mot1, Wiiii . 5F -IClng~n. IP M ll •ll •a SO Downl1111 6'2/) ' ' • J 1 W!lt>tl"1 J.J/J 0 I I I t Br•wV (W,•21 2 0 0 0 0 I Bry11nt 74 4J4t J.John1011 2 I 0 o o 1 Ml;M11hon JL,4>-'1 1 1 I I 1 1 HBP -by Bry1nt IMot1 \. WP -Bryant. 1'8 -01.ir. Time -2:5'. ,.tttnc11nc1 -&,NJ. Proisy Pulls Upset PARIS -Spain's Manuel Orantes qualified for a semifinals berth In the French Open tennis tournament Wednes- day with a 6-4, S.7, 6--3, 6-2 vi c l or y over Harold Solomon of Silver Springs, Md. Patrick Proisy of France pulled an upset toda.y by defeating Jan Kodes of Czecllos:lovalda, the 1970 and 1f71 cham· pion, ln the quartaiinab. Gurney-Grant team, alleging that on n fifth pit stop. with 30 miles to go in the race. the cru-took on fuel from ihe lank of teammate Bobby Unser. On Sundti y raei! officials dropped Grant fr om S('cond to 12th place. Unser was forced out early Saturday, Each car is limited to use of fuel fronl a ~gallon tank in its pit. "We made an honest mistake." (;urney said. "Our crew acted on refle11; b.~ af. taching Jhe fuel hose'' whf't1 <.trnnt overshot his pit lUld ended m L'ns1:r's "I jumped up and told them to stop, which they did. "I know It was aa infraction of the rule, and l'nl )101 qt1es1ioni11g but "'hltl tht re should lSe a J>£1nnlty. But not one this S('V(>rf' " The diffC'rt:n('C in prize 11\0fH.'Y ft1r sec- ond and 12th p\ai:c I.! nearly $72,000. c:urney also .said , "I have been unable to find any\1'herl' in the rules book any set pcn:1lty for ndding fuel fron1 somPOn~ else's pi t t<111ks. 'fhere 1s absolutely no precNlt·nt si:t for it :.ind no dl·fi ned 1x·nalty " l!l' :>Hid <:rant 111:.idt• tht• u11stht'dult'd IHl stop be··aust• ht· h;id run O\ 1'r 1nf't:tl on !ht• track nnd darnai,:ed his lt•f1 frll11l t1r('. 1'he ('<ir (!111 not llt't'li fut•L the tl\\Ot·r s~ud. "tr our radio hookup with Jerry hadn't failed , there would h.ave been no question ' etther. because "'e would have knowrt ·why he was ('Oming for the pit .stop and there ~·ouldn 't have been such con- fusion ." 1'he L'SAC president must name a judge's panel to hear the appeal. Hepresentpt1ves of all !hose in\•olved irt the rear(angement of se<:ond through !2th places \\'il l be noti fied of the time of lhf' ht>:iriui.i so they n1ay <1ttend. ll dl ~111\'lh. l 'S.\C l'Xl'('U!I\'(' di rector, s:iill the JW3 ring probably "'ill be next \1t•rk . as l·1.1rly as l\·lunday and probably no ]it\('r than Frida~'. Stanton Average Spirals, Angels Begin to Move ,. Apparently as Lee Stanton goes, so go the California Angels. Ten days ago the Angels outfielder counted on to hit the long ball after being acquired from the New York 1t1ets in the Jim Fregosi trade, was batting just .146 with three runs batted in. He was downcast, dejected. Today, life looks rosier for both Stanton and the Angels. In a11 c1i.;l1t ga11n.· l1v1nl' :-l[l11d . S1nr1t(1n delive red 11l h·<•sl <1 t1,1 'l' lilt 111 l'<lt'l1 .ind the Ange ls \\ull :-ix uf !ht• l'lgh\ lu Ins last 11 gn n1es, S!a11tvn h:l s dri\'cn .it·rn.~s 13 runs and his ;l\crage has spiraled to a pleasant .271. Stanlon gur thr1~!' hit.~ and <lni v(' 111 fl\O run s \Vednesd11y ni~ht :.is ('a!iforni.i C':Jmf" from bchu1d to shade !lie Ch11:<ii.:o \\'h1tc Sox. 4-3, on Bob Oliver's t\\'o.uut, bast s- \' ~ OUT AT SECOND -Craig Nettles of Cleveland slides into s econd base too late as Detroit's Dick ~1cAuliffc fires to first for a double play. Cleveland's Jack Brohamer of 1-luntington Beach had a single and a double and 'vill be awaiting the Angels in Cleveland Friday night. Says Mark Donohue Cash. J(eeps Hi1n Going; T·ires Make 'em Faster TORONTO {AP) -If it were not for the money involved, Mark Donohue says he would rather race high·powered sports cars than compete in the Indianapolis 50()..mile classic at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. "Of course, you can't divorce the monetary factor," Donohue said Wed- nesday, but "I think high-powered sports- c&r racing like the can-Am is probably the most demanding or all because you must do so many things and do them all ralrly well and that's what racing is all about -excellence In performance - 11nd it's probably the most demanding k.ind or racing." Fresh from his victory in the Indy 500 last Saturday, Donohue was in Toronto for final tests on the car he will drive in 10 d1ys when the Can-Am circult opens at MOJport Park near here. Hi s Porsche Is turbocharged, to help compensate for horsepower below that or the Mcl.arens which have ruled the Can- Am circuit for fiv e years. Turbocharged cars have an accelerntion lag which Donohue hopes has been overcome by development and testing. It's ll lag that normally could be costly on the many corners at Mosport. "This is what we're doing to call a 917~ 10, a derivative of the 917 which won the world manufacturers' championship," Donohue said at a news conference. "The difference i1 that it'11 going to be an open car. The engine will be the flat 12 th..ey used for the world championship, but it will be turbocharged. This will bring the horsepower Into a more com-. petitive range where most of tbe other Can-Am cars are operating." ln11d!'cl si ngle in the ninth inning. It \\':is the sixth \'11.:tory 111 scvrn games fur the Angels, "'tlo 110\v prf'pare to tauni:h :t nine-g:.i rne ro:ul lri? In l'll'll'l;lnd Friday UIJ:h!. Jn that gan1e. ('lydl· \\'right, 3-2, \l'i11 face Lle1'eland's \ lt)Ct Colbert. 0-2. "I never felt I ruuldn'l hit.'' Stanton $;11d after a third st1CC<'5.sivc Angel \'ic-. l\1ry ... I \.11as a lill ll· do"'n \\'hen I wasn·t h11l1 ng but the guys krpt g1\'i ng n1e word~ of Cnt'our::igement. I've JUSt been giving it ult I have." Oh\'er was also satisfied after the game. He had been angered Tuesday night when he was hit by a Stan Bahnsen pitch "I'll lake it, I'll take ii ," he kept saying of his ga1ne-win11ing hit, ll loo ping si ngle tn C!'nler that ft!tl ln front of the hard· chnrgin.c: J ay John.stunt'. O!h er also drove in the second Angels run \\'ilh a si11;th-inning single arid he no w h:.i~ 20 HB!s, topping Stanton by three. The vic tory v,.·('nt to relief piti:her Lloyd All 1·n, I-2, while Kealey, 2-2, took the loss. cn1~•.-Ill Ctllltml1 l~J .. ' ~ rai .. r ~ rDI P l!;f !lv, ,, • ' ' ' Atom>1r, " ' ' ' • J(lll~"°"·· " , ' ' ' ftf "Y " ' ' • • 0 Alltn, " , • ' ' i;i ,,,.,,. " • ' ' • CMaV, " • ' ' ' l'ln10t1, " • ' • • M(ltnn, " ' • ' ' R Oll~•r. " , • ' ' H~''"'"""· ' ' ' ' ' M~Mullen, " • ' ' ' Mo•~lt\, .. • ' ' ' Sl•fl!0t1 " ' ' ' ' Ori•, " ' ' ' ' Caro..,"'· .. ' ' ' ' Br•<llfv, • ' ' ' ' K11~nyt" ' • ' ' • Fo,.1e" • ' ' ' ' R.Clark, • ' ' ' • Kralt v, • ' ' • • Spmcc1r, P11 ' ' • • L!-1, pli ' • • ' L.All.., • • ' ' • 101alt " ' I ' To!•I• ,, • • T wo 0111 Whttl wlnnl"'ll nm 1t~td. lDI 001 000 -) 0 1~ 001 011 -• ' • E -KlilnY4f'. MtMul,..,, Ctlll..,11, D. Al""" l OB -ChlctOO 11. C•lllornl• 10. 28 -0 , ... u.,., McMull"". HA: -~•111 !21. Sll -,., IC1 lly, (. M~Y. Or1a, $ -llr.c!l1y, C.rd..,.1. Br•dll'f Fo•st1r Kf!~lev IL.2·21 R c1 .. rl( L.Allf't'I (W,1·2) .. 4-1/J 1·1/1 ' ' ' H It I'll 81 1a 5 2 2 I I~ I I 1 I I J I I 1 I ' 1 2 • • ~ ~ 0 ~ ' Time -J:,1. ,.!lfridal'Ct -,,•11. ~) Classy Hank Slams No. 648 To Tie Mays By Associated Preis llammerin' Hank Aa ron of the AU.Ota Braves has Ued the flamboyant Willie l\fays for second place on the alJ-tlme home run list at 648. but says, "The big· gcst one is still ahead." The soft-spoken slugger caught Mays \\'cdnesday night in the liftit inning of Atlanta's 5-4 vi ctory ove r San Diego when he belled a 3·2 pitch rro1n left-hander Fred Norman into the left field seats along the roul line. lt was his ninth homer this year and left him only 66 away from one of baseball's most revered records -Babe Ruth's 714 lifetime homers. When Aaron cracked his 600th against San Francisco last year to cut Mays' lead to 33 the Atlanta star quipped, "It's kind of tough to catch a moving target.'• "I've got to catch my own targets now,'' Aaron said Wednesday night, "I just haven't been hitting the ball well at all this year. "I need a week of really constant hit~ ting and co ncentrating: to get in that groove. Once I get in that groove, J'll be all right.'' Aaron attempted to play down the significance of catchlng Maya, one or the' game's all-time greats who at age fl lJ id the twilight of a career tblt saw him traded from the San Francil<o Giant. to the New York Mets early this leJ.90n. "I've never had a rivalry with hlm,"' Aaron said. "Jf there w1a 811)' at' all, W was just a friendly one. "I have my job to do and Willie hu Ws," Aaron a~ "Anyway, I ~ myseU ln a different call-gory. He'• tl1 and I'm 38 and that matra a dllf-, no matter what you might think." They mode It out of their country, ned lbrough the Icy Bohemian forests and settled In a refugee camp tn Germany. •Asked if he knows the current whereabouts of the other escapees lllntnaus acknowledges he has been able to· keep t&bs on two of them. Orange Coast Favored at Syra~use Aaron, who trailed May1 by 107 hhame.i-~no•, when the Braves moved from Milwaukee to Atlanta In 1916, sa;d, "I really bl'(tll't taken advantage of ·the situation. Klttlng in this ball park Is a lot easier that hit .. Ung In San Francisco, or New York lot that matter." One is married and living in Canada. The other resides In S o u t h e r n California. She's Marianna, bis wife. Lile was tough during thoire early post wor days In E:urope and .HlntnAus' in- come ca.me principally rrom playing soc- cer. Then can1c an opportunity to migrate to Brarll. Tht young couple took It and Dagmar was born to them there. • SYRACUSE., N.Y. (AP) -A record- high field or 89 crews from 32 schools gels the "ready an, row" call today as the 10th National Intercoll egiate Rowtng ChampionshlM, start on Onondaga Lake. Coaches and obtlervers see this yeai-'11 compeUtlon Jn the featured vArslty tlght- oared event as the most open In recent years. Orange Coast Collf:ge was a .solid choice in the coaches' poll to win the JV eight tiUt, while Washington Md Wisconsin Iha~ high rankings for the fre:i:hman eight event. Navy and Yale crtws were rated tbe best among the varsity fours. The University of Wa!hlngton, mindful of the narrow dereat it surfered to darkhone Cornell In lut year'a finals, 111 ae:eklng to regain the crown It won in 1970. The Huskies wUI have the heavle!t crew on the lake, and the only one that went undefeated this season as well. Pennsylvanl1 was picked over Washington In 21 newspaper poll of coactles, bot Eastern Sprints champion Northeastern and Brown also gol high marks. Several other crews have a title ch11nce. Three qualifying heats In tach of six events were scheduled today in each of six ever.ts -the varsity. junior varsity and frestunan eights, tbe varsity and frosh fours and the varsity pairs -with winners .ivancing to Saturday's finals. Today's losers get a second chance for 11 starting berth In the tltle test by com- pclln~ in Friday's repcchage races. Two le vels of consolation events will precede the ch:.impionship rowing. The armada that will ply the 2,000.. meter course is the largest in the regal· t11's histor y, !.:isl year, 75 cre ws from Tl colleges and uni versities took part, The blast Wednesday night abo eoable4 Aaron to reach annther major milestone' in his 19-year career as he became on}J the second player to attain 6,000 totl1 bases. It moved hlm to 8,001 , trailing record·h~lde.r Stan Musial, who has l ,134. Aaron allowed a sheepish grtn to cross his t.e< and lelt no doubt thot he wouldn 't mind Mays wate:h1ng him hit the homer that left Willie ln th1rd place. • . I ' 8)' ROGF.R CARl .. ')ON \\'i1500 1um.tntd h up brltny atlrrwerds. junction could pu( Nc.,,.·porl back into tht MJnnlng. Of .... 0.11• , •• , '1•11 LOS ANGELES -Nl•v.'port Jlarbor JUgh's Sailors ' domination -0f Ci r' Sou lhern Scx-rion tennis circles offlciBlly camt to an t-nd here Wrdne~day on the U'a ditlon steeped courts 11t Los Angeles Tennis Club, bovdng to lhe new chan1· pion. Beverly 1!1lls, 17·11. "A look at th•· Jndiv1duu/ ten11.1s rank- ings tells lt I rhought v.·e had a good team rffo rt all )'ear. but Bevt rl y Hills Just has that great. great dtpth. Rut s1nglt:s player Alr.x Sih·a, a Jirai1Han transplant . virtually completed the Ue verly H!IJs k.1.11 by cuming back from a 2·5 defici t to post a 7·5 singles tr1u1nph over Newport 's Da ve Nichols . Afl'r tlwl it seemed only a matter of 1ime. "St1JI, I fttl this V.'aJ a storybook year for our kids and frankly I'm prrtty proud of them," added \\i;son . The loss ended Ne'>''port '5 dreams of a third s1ra!ght CJF ehan1 1.11onshlp, and pl3y, "-'ilh the exc·eption of 11 m<1lch or t1vo, followed the ex pected format. Sieling, a gracious fellow prior 10, dur- ir\g and aft er the banle, called Nevt'port, "The best team v.·C''\·e faced all year, there·s no question about tha t." Ne v.·port's only effective threat in sing les at>:a!nst the Beverly Hills jug- gernaut ,,·as little Tim O'fleil!y, who ('a p- tured both singles clal:i hcs in the (irst tu1!f. then came from behind to tie fre~hman sensation Hov.·ard Schoenfleld In shorl. coach Hal S!ehng's Heverly Hills Norn1.11.ns sin1pl_11 had too man y fOugh pcrforn1ers, nnd Tars coach Pat 'rhe Sky League champs took a quick 9· S lt'ad at the halfway point and it sp.- J.ie'itred only a sv..·ccp in doubles from that ~ports in Brie f Messersmith Disabled; Pepitone Back to Work Pitcher Andy J\11'.'ssersmith v.•as placed on the 21.-day disabled list by the California Angels '\lednesday because of the rig ht·hander·s injury lo the middle flnger of his pitching hand. bumpc<l into coach Pele Reiser, v.'hG askf'd . ''You 're. going to rome back, .aren 't you~" Pepitone answered, •·v~, I will. The Angels said outfielder Roger Repoz V.'as recalled from Salt Lake City of the Pacific Coast League to t a k e MessersmHh's spot on the ro ster. ' Messer~mith. a 20-game \vinner last year, has an innamed tendon in the-.. r,nger. A doctor said the righ!hander Should not pitch for two weeks. He had pitched only once in relief during the past hvo weeks and has a 2-4 record. "I really hadn't given lt a thought until I bumped inlo Pete in the Cubs' clubhouse," Pepito ne later commented. "\Vhen he asked me. lt was just something that ca1ne out." "' LOS ANGELES -Jim Bertelaen leads a list of rookies signed by the Los Angeles Rams Wednei;day. "' CH ICAGO -Joe Pcpitone 's retirement has ended abruptly, and lhe colorful first baSeman will be back with the Chicago Cubs July 2. Pepitone's decision to return to baseball. announ ced \Vednesday, came as quickly as his decision to leave the game. Pepitone visited the Cubs' locker room at Wrigley Field, last Saturday and Sportfishing Spots in Full Summer Swing Full summer schedules are in vogue al 11! four Orange Coast area sportfishing landings with improved conditions and fu!let sacks anticipated for the months ~head . Bass. some halibut. sculpin and ~heepshead are making the fish count re- ma in stable. The summer schedules that .,,.·ent into effect thi s wee k or before are as follov,1s: Art's Landing -San Clemente trip, F'riday and Satu rday ni~hts. leaves at Tiidnight: three-quarter day bo:it lea ves at 5 and back at 2:30: half-day boats in- ~luding !he twilight at 2:30. Davey's Locker -Island free lance xiat at midni ght t>very night , returns t>etween 4 and 6; local boat leaves at 2 1.m., returning at 3:30 p.m.: half-day .)Oats at 6 and 12:30: ¥..-day boat leaves 11 7. re!urns at 3:3(). All operations now 'I the Pavilion \\'ilh same phone num- X'rs . lJana \VhJrf -Sea tlorse goes to San ::lemente Island eve ry night , le11ving at Ti idnight . ba r k at 6: Rll-day boat lraves .it 6. returns at 3: half-day boats at 6:30. 10, 12 and 5 ~30. llirnlington Beach Pier T h e \.lcCullah brothers operAte the M1llt 1\laJ.~h on a half-day schedule leaving at 8, l and 5::10 daily. SANTA MOHIC.t -30 .!nott " 1<11 rec~ COii, !4 ~""• 2 tl l!llbvr. BG•q~ onqltr\ JO m~ck~r>!, NEWPORT !01~e¥'1 1.Kktq -J! 111'Glt •<' 119 ea llco ll8•" 10J •~nil r>••~· 4S bot!llD, 71 rock ("'1, I bl!rr•cu!la. (.trt'• L•nOlnt J -5.! ~ngltn: 24 b8)), !I rock cod, e m1ck,.tl S.tl't DIEOO fMvnlclp,11 Pier) -71S 1n111~" 75 ,.llcwltll. 1t blrr.1cix!1 , 1 whl!t 1e.tb•~•. !~ bc<l l!o, 117 ullco bnn. n h•ttb11t. IMPE•IAI. lllACM-74 1r111l1rt : 74 bcnllo, '<•lice ™''' 2 r•l1ow11ll, IJ rl>dl cocl, J h•llbu!, I lln11 <Ud, n rfl&(l:t rtl. RHOONOO -90 .,,glf"' 1J b11rr1c!Jd1, j7J c1llco b1111, 3'° rock <od. e ... 11e--S' •"9l••t: 417 1n1cktrtl, !30 rock cod, PARADISE COVE -61 •nt1l"1: '95 b1H, It fl•"bv!, 1'10 ro<:lr. rod O.tNA WHAll:" -" •r>ult r•: :100 b1 u , 1 fl11ii)ll!,. 10 m•c~e-rtl. VENTUll.A -17 1n11ltrl; 16 ClllCo b11u, 161 rocl( Cod, J h11'!)11I, ! whl!t tt•b•tl. I.OHO tl!ACH (Jl'ltrpO!nt l.1111111"11 -SS •"91 .. s' I wh11t ltlblU, ~ b..,.r•cud•, l'9S cl UC.C b•U lllltl• monl ftl••l -2J •n11Wor1: '° ullto t>au, tos r11cl( cod, B•r~t : 71 ft~Oi••l: f ba rr•tvO~, 11 1And b111, l t>r;nrto, Ji m•c~or•I SEAL ll:ACH -.\(! ,lnllltrt; 100 tO(I( cod. 115 b;,u_ 89'\l~ -41 •n11l•r$· 1' b1rr•tud•. 1 belni!o, ~} H ncl b8H, 4a ~8llb111 . HUHTtNc;TON llc.tCH -ll •n•lt rt: I b1u , '3 t g(I( coo. MH PEOllO -65 ll'!lll~rl: 6 b1rr•,lld1, J bonllo, Ml c1llco b1u. I! "•llbul, 109 roe~ <od, OXNAll.O -Jf l nt l•ro· 115 c•llco ba11, ,, 11nd b~u. • fl•f1but, 9 11no c~. 1 111111011. Bertelsen. the speedy University of Texas running back, inked a contract along with college teammate Eddie Phillips, a quarterback the R a m s will convert into a .'Jafety. Others signed were running back Larry Mccutcheon of Colorado State, guard Bobb Child! of Kansas, wide receiver Tom Graham of Baldwin-Wallace, safety David Hoot of Texas and linebacker Ken. ny Page of Kansas. "' SAN FRANCISCO -San Francisco Gianls manager Charlie Fox: was reported in good cond ition after the .surgical removal af a kidney :Hone \Vednesday afternoon, a team spokesman said. "' NEW YORK -l\forris "Moe " Berg. baseball's legendary linguist and scholar of the 1920s and '30s, is dead at the age af 70. Berg, probably the only protessionar baseball player ever to study at the Sorbonne in Paris, died Tuuday In a Belleville, N.J .. haspital after being ad- mitted for obslrvation Saturday. Readers' Hot Corner Dear Miss Becklund: /'laving read your recent article on long hair (May 21), [feel maved to comment and hopefully clear up the confusion sur· rounding the purpose of haircuts. You are correct in assuming that long hair does not affect performance, this is obv inus. Haircut s are not f'ven for discip!lnary purposes. The purpose of having short hair is to mea sure the dedi ca tion of an athlete. Short hair · is a measure <lf the se riousness of an athlete. Getting a haircut is a sacrifi ce. When an alhlete ge ls a haircut upon requ('sl from 1he c·o;1 ch It means the athlete '\'ill not let personal things stand ln the \v:1y of team su r;ccss. In a lime when lo ng hair is in style, gelling .a haircut is a real sacrifice, For n1y11elf, if short hair is a requirement for being on a learn, 1 \viii -..make the s:icrificf'. Unde rstand tha t I like long hair but in life some th ings are more im- portant than long hair, I have worked tao hard and too long to let Jong hair stand in the \.\'ay of my goals in llfe. in closing. I .,,.·ould like to ask a ques- tion , Your article was titled, Why the Big Fuss Over Long Hair ? but I ask you , Why !he fu ss over short hair? ln your article you called coaches \\'ho make athletes get haircuts by the term, "moldy minds." Please come see the coaches el Golden \Ves! College and talk v.•ith them. I'm su re vou will have a change of mind afler taiking with th em. fu>bert Brickner Huntington Beach ii< "" ·.·;Ii• JEFF WINSHIP Coach Rates Winship High In LB Plans Just "'hen Laguna Beach football coach Hal Akins found a blocker to suit his tastes and to protect his squadron of knick knack-sized offensive backs last season. tragedy st.ruck. Jn the second game of the 1971 cam· paign {against coastal neighbor San Clemente), that much-sought-after block· · er-junior Jeff Winshi~was felled by a broken arm in the wrist area and was last for the remainder of season. But now Winship is healthily going through his paces wilh his Artists teem· mates in spring practice and Akins has big plans for the 5-11, 15$-pound senior-tcr be. Says the Laguna men tor, "Jeff was the counterback (middle running back) in our triple--1 offense and the middle linebacker in our pro-style defense last year. So, we sacrificed quite a bit \\.'hen .he got hurt." In 1972, an almost-wholesale realign- ment of Akins' philosophies \\'ill take place with Winship the central figure of much of the planning. "Our offense will be the triple option this year and Jeff will probablY be the right halfback." Akins says. "It's a Jot 1ike the Houston Veer with the t\\'O re· maining backs either diving to get the ball or swinging in for the pitch. I'd think it's n1ore of a running offt•nse. "And with a blocker like Jelf v.·e hope It works well ." Also. the t..aguna ns v.·ill be changing to an Okie defense and thus wilt elim inate one of the linebac king slots. "As the Jefl linebacker.'' says Ak ins. "Je{f ""'ill more than likely be calling our defensive signals and \\'ill piny both ""'ays if he pl11ys up to hill potenti:il. "Some Okie teams flop lheir backers but it's easier to teach a bo_v in one po~i t ion. Any .... ·ey, the left backrr tend~ to pla y righthanded and gets used to the of- fensive Oow going in a certain direction.·• Despite hi11 versatility in being able to play both way!<, the thing which im· presses Akins most about Winship is his toughness. Akins claims, "he's <lne of the hardest hitters on our team and shows e lot f)f toughness. But sometimes he tends lo overeharge and react too far into the backfield on defense; so he 'll ha ve to overcome tha t." \Vinsh ip came to Laguna after his freshma n year in Fisher, 111., near the University of Ulinois campus in Cham· paign. As a sophomore Arlist. be was the most valuable performer on the soph team and possibl_v CQu!d have played varsity, although Aklmi says, ''we were very short or sophomores so he played on the sophomore te-am ," Tai· Accidentally Shot MA TT HOGSETT Hogsett Misses State Meet Track and field slar 1\1att lfogse tt or Newport Harbor }llgh is currently listed In good condJUon and is recupe.ratlng at Newport Beach's Hoag Memorial Hospital uftc.r accidentally shooting himself with a .%2 calibre pistol Sunday. The bunet was lodged behind t.he femoral artery or. the right thigh of Hogsett, 18, and surgery was ptrformed Tuesday to remove the projectile. Originally scheduled to anchor Newport's mile relay squad this Friday and Saturday in the state high school spl.ke championships at Oroville, Jlogsett will not be able to run for about three wetks. The mishap oteurrt.d wltlle Hogsett w11 on a hunting excursion in the Imperial Valley near El Centro. IJe drew the pistol out of his hip holster and accidentally hit the hammer or lhe weapon , thrusting the bullet downward into his thigh. During the course of the present sea.900, Hogsett erased four individual New· port track records and was.a part of the 1chool'1 mile relay record-setting 3:19.6 e.ftort. Junior Pat Roneywell wllJ SUJ>plant Hogsett tn the mile relay. ' • ~-· .. __ ~- In the final amgles event of tilt day at 7- all. But hia efrort11 and the doubles ta ndttlts or Dave East1nan and Cody Small and Sle ve Speir and Jim Jacobsen we re not enough to off.set the superior drpth of lht Nonnana. The loss: marked the filth loss In 98 outings: for a Wllson--coachtd Nev.'JXlrt con1ingen1. Beverly Hil ls, meanwhile, c-losed the aeaS<ln undefeered with 24 straight wins. And to complicate matters: for every- one ne).t year. the Normans, ooly senlor ls doubles entry Ke fih Steinbaum. The rest arf' jun iors wilh the exce ption of Schoenfleld and sopJ1omore Pa u I l>oru:is, the Normans ' top singles stand· oui... The match marked Ne>\'f>Orl llarbor's fifth .straigh t appearance 111 the Clf' finals . Glrasole In State Meet Ex-Eagle Still Shows Speed for SD Sch.ool SWITCHEROOS: Afttr taking a doub le sprint "'in, finish ing .second in the long jump and anchoring a victorious 440 relay team in paring Estancia's Eagles to the CJfo' Southern Section Cee track ,and field title last spring. Bruce Gira sole 'transferred to San Diego's Madison High. Girasole has obviously enjoyed his stay in the Border City thus far. His 9.6 ( 100) and 21.4 (220 on a fuU turn) sprint c\ock- i!l,s are the best in t.he San Diego ClF Section and he leads that area's con- PHIL ROSS tingent into the state finals Friday and Saturday in Oroville. Although it's only c:onjecture at this point. there appear to be three alternatives for the bespectacled young swi fty come next school year. First, Gira.sole's father is being transferred to St. Louis by the firm for which he v..·orks. But Bruce has stated that he wants to finish his senior year competing in California where the weather seems to be more aggreeable than the hwnid late .spring season in the midwest. Therefore, Girasole will either move to J\tissouri with hls father or stay in California with his mother -elLher in the Madison district or back in Estancia ter- r itory. \Vhen will the next chapter unfold in the Girasole saga? * * * \\'hile Girasole's sv.·itch has been a con- versation piece among Southland prep spi ke wa tchers, another ClF Southern Section twin sprint victor is fleeing the Suns Lose Coacl1 ATLANTA -Coach Lowell "Cotton" Fitzsimmons, who took the Phoenix Suns to consecutive third.place finishes in two professional coaching seasons was named coach of the At 1 a n ta.Hawks Wednes- day. r~itzsimmons , tht shortest coach in the National Basketball Association at 5 feet 8. replaces Richie Guerin , who resigned about a month ago to becon1e general manager of the Hav.•ks. .settion in favor ot San Diego. This time it's Danny Miller of El Cen- lro's Central High. Recen t winner of the centurv and furl ong in the 19'n CIF-SS Bee ·final s, r.tiller is transferring his serv ices to S11n Diego's 1-lorse High, a school which ha s produced some decent sprinters in the pa st * * * Fonner Villanova Unil>'trsity miler l\tarty Liquori, who was America 's prime hope for the 1,500 meters at the upcomh1g Mtmlch OlympJcs until a torn left httl ligament sidelined b.im, thinks there's a future for professional track and field. Says the 23-year-old newlywed, "pro ten nis ba s really been a success and I think pro track has as good a chance or better of succeeding." Liq uorl's basic quarrel is with the !itald, archaic Amateur Athletic Unio n tAAU), which forbids a person li ke LJ. quori from procuring gainful fu lltlme employment, on the premise that his moDetary ga ins may interfere with bis career as a "true" amaleur athlele. His younger brot her -now a 4:2{) miler and senior at Essex Catholic High in Newark. N.J.. from which J\1nrly graduated -bas cast his lot with Boslon College instead of follov.·ing r.tart)·'s foots ttps at VIiianova. * * * Speaking of the AAU, !lank Ehrlich - one of the members of tt1e group 's tr11ck and field board -is staunch in his su ~ port of present AAU chief Jack Kelly, who is the brQther of filon<ico 's Printe~s Grace, • Says Ehrl ich. "people like Jack, mysl•lf and several others don't necessa ril y agree with the Y.'ay things have bee n run all these yea rs in rega rd to ;11natcurisn1. "It's common kn owled ge thal more strides have been made in the last t1vo )'ears or so under Kelly's guidanre than in the previous 50 years of lhe /\AU . !l's a shame Jack 's ten ure closes 11ut <it the ~nd or f.his year." Ehrlich 11!.50 figures U.S. amateur athletes have had to work much harder t/1an those in most foreign countries in achieving Olympic status. "- He claims. "let's face it. \\•ith the ex· ception of about three countries , a!J lhe foreign countries subsidize their athletes. But If ·we did th at. we'd be called pro- fessionals. "Why. ju st outside Frankfort, \Vest Cermany, for example is a gymnastics school and it's the mos t elaborate setup of it s kind in the \\'Or!d. The gymnasts at- tend college there while they eat. sleep and drink gymnastics. Then people \\'onder why they're unbeatable. ''This whol e situation has t:1 come to a head soon or v.•e might ns \\'ell give up." Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE New York Pi ttsburgh Chicago Montreal Philadelphia St. Loui.s Dodgers Houston Ci ncinnati Atlant~ San Diego Eamt Division w L 211 11 24 15 20 18 18 22 16 24 18 25 Wett Division 26 16 24 17 23 18 18 22 San FraJ1cisro 16 26 15 31 Pct GB .725 - .615 4'1 .526 8 .450 11 .400 13 .390 13\0 .619 - .585 11> .561 21> .450 7 .381 10 .326 13 WMll>fflllY"I •IMUlts SI. l 11<1!1 l , Cl\le11g.o • l•t '"'•'" J, 5111 Fr•"'<llfii '· to l11nln111 MOnlrtal ), Pllhbllrtl\ 2 1'>11111!1 s. !•n l>le90 ' (ln(!nn•ll 12, Hoy1lon ' P hll10tlOl\l1 ti Ntw Yo•-. r1l1t TfoC•Y'• OllftH S!, lOllll !WIM W 1 •I Cf\lc•to IH1ncll >-11 Phl1tdtl11h11 (541m• l .. J •I N1w Yorlt (Mc-l'>rldr1w .).l), niflfll Clncfnn11l fMcOlolh!ln NI RI Hov11ttn fJll Yll ).J), n!oht lM A,...... fll!'IMr M) If S•ll Frtrw;lf(O (SIOM J-4), 11!11'11 Onty ••mt• ICll«fvled 1'r1111,-1 ••-Cfnctn11111 •I Phllfi!t l.,.t•. nleht HCl<!lton •1 Monlre•l. nlttll All•nl• •' .,...., Yori!, 11l1hl Chk H O •I S•n OIHO, nlofll SI. l.ovlt •t lff A-let, nl•hl Pltbburt'l'I 11 hn l"rlroc:lteo, nklM AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Detroit Baltimore Cleveland New York Bost-On Milwaukee 21 16 .568 - 2{l 16 .556 ~ 18 17 .514 2 17 20 .459 4 15 19 .441 41,1, 12 22 .353 71> West Dlt·Js)on Oakland 25 12 Minnesota 2.1 12 Chicago 22 16 Angels 18 23 Texas 17 24 Kansas City IJ 26 WtdMJlllY's J!Hullo Otttoll 5. Clevt l1n(I 4, 10 lnnl"91 Mln~tol• 3, 1C1nl111 City 2 New Yllfl(" J. Mllw1~kt• 4 Oa-1111<1 '· Tf~ll 1 C•ltfor11l• ~. Cfllc•eo 1 So1ton 11 B11llrnor1, r1ln TMl1•'1 0 1mtt .676 - .657 .579 .439 .415 .333 3 ~~ 9 IO 12 IC1nw1 Cltv (Or•110 7..t) •I Ml•m•jc11 t l<••I . ., N-Yori( (~!Inion l ·O) 11 MU1'8vk" (Jl1!Cl!'I .. , llOllOll (SI.rt :J.n •I 8•111mot"t !McN"I' ) JI, 11!11'11 O•"ou CCol.,,,•11 7·JJ 11 c1evet1nd (G. P•rry l ·f), nl•hl O!llY 111m.t •Cfl"llu!MI l"rltl•v'1 0 1rn11 01•!8NI 11 l'l~ll lrnor~, 11111\I c .i1i.r1111 •l c i.v111r.cf, n1111t Tf~8t ~t MllWIY-ff, nlthl l101!on •I IC111w1 Cllv, n!t hl Mlnnetol• •' Detroit, nlont NtW Yor-•I Chlcato. nlt>hl DEAN LEWIS , • 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Service and P1rt1 for All Imported Cara . Modern Body Shop for All C•rt Orange Coun ty's Large.ti and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer OVIRSIAS DILIVlltY SPECIALISTS JOHN D'ANNUNZIO Ex-lineman No\v Fullbacli For Trojans There's a n111.jor rebuilding job t11kjng pl;ice at University High during the cu~ rent spring footba ll drills and coach Jer- r)' Redn1an's quick to avoid singling out .;.iny individuals. 'fhe currrnt scene at quarterba ck rcr!ec ts the si tu ation as five candidates arc in the running for the starting berth. Rrdman, ho\vever. was unable to avert getting into a conversation about his fullback opening. \Vhich is rapidly becom- ing the possession of John D'Annwuio. D'Annunzio played offensive guard and strong safety last year, but the S'!Vitch to f11!1batk :1ppcars obvious "·hen Redman t1c·ks off his assc1s. "John's a very strong kid for his size (1 65, S.-Hl) and he's an excellent blocker. "He's the type of kid yQu're looki ng for '\'hen you're ninning an I-formation. Basically a fullback is a quick guard," says Redman. Tile assets that Redma n requires for !he job includes rhe ability to block, then the running ability to be effective on stnbs over guard and tackle . "\\'e like to have an ('XCellent athlrte et that posit ion . \\le'd like our biggest run· n1ng back at that spot, and John's about the biggest \\·e h:1vc. But his bloc king Is the n1ain 1hing ," says !he University 1nrntor. f)' Ann unzio alS-O figures lo return at strong saftty, a posi tion Hedman says is 111!( kl'Y 10 !he rlefense. -. "\\'c treat our strong safety much like a 11u11rlt•rb;1ck on (1ffense," says {ledman, "and D'/\nnunzio has been working at that spot exceptionally well this spring." S1ill another facet that the senior (i n the fall ! lC'ttcrman may be involved in is 1n 1 he p11nting game. "He could be our deep snap center on punr ing si1ua1ions. too . He wa.s an <1ltcn1;He las t yea r at lhtit spot. but it's a tough silu::ition to put a kid in," says BecJ1n<1n. The Trojans v.·ilJ \\'rap up their spring dnlls \1 ith a flag foo tball game June 9, !ho graduating seniors against the vanl-1r Area Ma11 Shines S/\N l\lATEO -Coron11 de\ Mar'a .J:unf's Eubank set five national masters :1gc group s1v1n1 records last \\.'eekend in lli'1 N:irion~! AA U l\·l<Jstcrs Short Course c·l1;1mpJonshi ps at College of San Mateo. F.:11bank set re('ords in the 50, 100. 200, ~()() :i11d 1,650 frecstylr r::ices. 1!1s limes, in ordrr, 11•cre 28.5, I :02 .:l, 2 · 19.!'i 6·2.'.t 5 and 22 35 7 DEAN LEWIS 1972 TOYOTA CARINA WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING $1200 PER MONTH $94.70 Total Down -$72.00 T.tal Monthly Ptyment. •31520 ,.r Forty Eight Mos, Defer"4 - $3SS0.00/C•1h -$27M.10 Al"R ·' 12.76 on •pprov9CI crtdft, 1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN WITH FACTORY ~ ' • AIR CONDITIONING I $9900 PER MONTH I I $117.46 Tot•I Down -o.twrM' \ \ 56057.46. Cash Prlc• 54246.21 Incl. ! T & L/APR 1S.l6 on ap,_ crNlt • l 1972 TOYOTA MK II I STATION WAGON WITH FACTORY • AIR CONDITIONING • • $98°0 :~NTH ) It ! • l . l $147.IS Total Dow11/StlM Tetal Monthly Pymt. for 'o~ ll9ht Months. o.ftrred S411S J Al'lt l 12.6'1 (AT79000 -14197 onJft:i credit. R • • • Newpo11 's Cla'fk,'MD Tight End Maler Dei High's football squad will wrap up its annual spring drills y,·ith a Red -White touch football game at Santa Ana Bowl thi vening . It gets way at 7 o'clock o 11 ow i n g the sophom e game and tt'! the fin al 1 k C'0:1ch Boll Woods will ha at his team before the sum break. And it 's a chance for \Voods C,'\'.Ji:.<"i':: lo take another look at hi.!! start ing tight end , Newport llcarh's Jeff Clark Clark, a 6-1, 195-pounder, started for the ~lonarchs las t year at linebacker and he's counted on for a major share of the v.·ork load this tin1e around. f.louble duty puts him at tigh t end on the offense. "I'd say Jeff has ifnprovrd as per- cenl offensive ly over last year," says Woods. Clark also saw action as a l'iophomore for f11;i ter Dei defrnsively, so much of his work in this year·s spring praclice has been on the of- fensive setup. "He likes to play linebacker NEW CHAMPION -Kathleen Meyer (left ) shot a four-round 343 to clain1 the flrst wo1nen's golf club chan1pionship trophy at the ne\v Big Ca nyo11 Coun- try Club. She by 11 strokes. Coast Areci Ron11dup defeated DAIL y PILOT Stall Phoi. runnerup Deane Helperin CIF Semis Tluir'.>day. Junt l . 1972 Area Athletes Seven Orange Coast area high schools honored 1he1r iipring s1>0rts alhle!f'S y,•lth a\\·ard t\-inquets \\'ednesday night. SpeC'ial award \.•<inners: Mli•lon VHl l• TtnN1 V••'<TV -Mo1• lmP•O•l'll" ~rlc Brown . Ou!1l•ndl1>9 Ju"'°' M••t f OM011; 0ull!t"'31nQ !>OPl'IQ•...,rt • 8 111 Wtlk~r ; Ovhtt f\don a F<t>hmt n Ed l r<rv Trtck Vt rsl!v -H11n l'O•M "''" ~COii K •P~rs , .Y~·• trn~•o"'"'' Jl.\t r• •towt •. MOlf IMP"••1on•I c.orv Mt••uo:o•• Q.,1,ltn<!•na r,~10 P!r'orm~' l om M•nn, Ou"'"n<ll"'I l••Ck f'••lcrn••r f n lltU•'"'"'"'' T••<-"''"'''' O! 1nt ""'' f<I llt<lt•m•cht • lunlo• ""'"'" -i"l •t h "'°'"' tnt ~ Ooo.19 w •• , f fOlh-S<l<>n -l-l<Gh <><l•M Mt n flo ltn lnwi:••!l~I· llodM• Brown; Moil lmPIV•.0 P•1.0l ,8~fMtle , C., ... ,~ Jitn C•ln, llt•! Hl!!lf !Ire><-PemO<'tlon; !It\! P1 1c~tt Gr•11 Fo•!", II••• Pe"n•r. Rllfl ~ ... ftnton MVP: Ktll L"°'le; Mo'' 1n,1>h•- !oonel V""• II••••· M• p,fCh., l!o!> O•c•tr; CtM•ln K0<v L01"1~0l•C .. t ' ~'.d JI.'>•• o ....... . MVP· M•-t 0"""""' N< Plt(h•r j 8trrv !>o•»lnt rl,t lO. MOii ll'\!l·to••uo1al Wtlt St!llt < C•l)ld'" 1"1•11 ~Jl11t• ~n<! I t.,f,!h llra.rn \l"IVl •t ot• Swlmn,.n1 v .. JI SI TV -Mc>• 1,,,. ....... ,,,.,1 N '" 8,•tr• /,'"" lm1>""'" '°"' I<,•·""' 101 P••cen• C••n••<>n c"'W"• v" 8fF' MO•! 1.,,. •l •: •• Pn,11.,,.. IQ! P"r<•n! 1.u It~•••• Cff S JI.'~" lo··~"·'' , l , '• lDI P••\fnt D ...... ~,.,, n• l a\rDall 1ietn11\'. w ... mln•llt' Vill ll~llV -MVP I',, l>f •9••<1 Tri<~ J1.1n•I Ouh •Jn•l"•V ;i ,, "'' ""' • '·•" l/lril1t l,'u1' tn•1><1tl•<'n,U \'• ,,. I M Q, (ap1.ilt'I -Ji ii Yuun1 MV Join !UNIU~ l/ill~~l I " '·'' " •t• Pou "'"'·"" ~ .. , .• ~Cb•""•" ...... I 110~11 51'.lP>< I ,., " ""~''I Cap"'" -Re• Ve9•, /o.\o!l V1lv401,· /o.ldtlO• Gvr.•,I ".1\P (l>1lr ""'• SIP•I 6r•d•new lt•<~ CM• VAll \llV 1,1\1 B~O f'•o,Hn•'1 Ca1>1e!n -Milch O~o Meil V•lu•bl• ,._._,,, l"•<>•Dv1n 11('0 AU<'l,.n •·•~ )"''" ~ ..... ,. (;e11fn Ro·IW•1\UI' f ro•M !HI \ JI.IV Rnn { .... ""'"' ...~~:~~~~ 0.;. P~i~.~~ w .110" 1.•011 l'Cut'f\'d J;i~'~ ..:1~\',~: 11~,n"H •. 1..,,11 Swomml"t lm1>1 u•t<I l~.r• f'•••'•'" I V•rlol' Tenn,. Mo.i v~111eolt Jr!! Tr Pnana111 l "O" V.e.~~ITV -M V Kof' v ""•' //l>'l lns,;.,,a•lcn~I O.•v1~ Soul I.lo ! (N,.1 .1 ... ,1 L;;rr, \11 ,n 1,1,,,, lt1JIJ<O><'O. llill 0 T ~Olt '"'"'"""I f'~"I ''"''"" llH• Ji>NIO"' Villll \1!~ MV \It •• Most Velveblr i\-1·•• r "1,.. ' I "'"11 • I.lo>! Co"'''tr••I In l'<!lliMU ln~ph1>Tlonal : Tnnv lr.,,1.. 1-'• •' 0011 I o ·.IL v PIL<lf :tZ 11'r,q~t rt~t I.OS A~GF.LES -Big Rod Crc·ek. Crystal Lakr. J~kson Lakr, Little flock Creek , U ttle Hock Jteservolr. San Gabrid Jt1ver E;i~t and West Fork!. !{IVEHSIDE -Fu l mo r Lake, llcmel Lake. S.-\N liF.RNAHDINO -Blg Bc:ir l.itkt'. Grttn Valley l.11kt'. (;rc!(ory Lake, Lytle l'rt•t•k ~tidrlle and North Furki> Engineering Design & Development Sm.!ill System\ & Eqv•pment optic .ti. mecha nic al electrom11cha nic d! electronic Ormsby Cornell Corp. 1833 East 17th Street Santa Ana 17141 835 -7215 """"VC'U Sl•ve ""r' lt.e.li'llV ('~,.r~"' .J•t! r.,,,~lr I Cr11 ~.1\1 1,1.u ~ ""''"'JI.I••! IO\H><el .• 111•1 . Mn•I V1t luabl• f!uU l ~,.,, l•c ! ~0~'~"~''~"~"~'°'.._.:__.:__ ____ ~~~~-~~~~~~~~ ln•1>><1>tlOndl R1tn<J< S.•ul Mo SI -!morovlN!: Ml-e Sm,rn Ntwporl H•tl><tt l rte~ V•rsuy -C4'pl1>•n TttrV All!""•'" Mo,1 v1lueblr· Mdll H<'<i••!f. "'""' lm1>10vtO· Tom Oo51anl\l•o llrt• -C"P! ... ln fl<•OM .\•r(11nt M"'1 V•lueble (hnl H""'"· Moll lmp•oulNI: Joe Ml!ll9an C~es -Caotaln Jim Fu>umotn; Mo" V•lu1>blt vr .. r<'n! Mulro1 f;lo•! lm1><ovl'll: 8uro:llc~ II •\' Co.la MMt T1nni• Vorsllv -Cap•~·" S«"lll En<1,lt" "'"'' Vtlv.,oleo· Seen f,,,,,1~ •. ~'"" lmpro"ld l lm Thon10•~"' Mos! lnsplror11H1al; Toll Nt .. Ule best," sa ys Woods. "but he·.., getting to appreciate tight end, too. This is a very critical spot for us and v.·e lhink he can do the job. '"As a swing blocker it puts w ' a great deal o[ pressure on 0 men s him. But he 's lea rning to block Golf Action Set Friday ctr AAAA ano A A A baseball playoff a c l i o n re s u m e s Friday with sen1ifina!s games on iap. T\.\'O On1nge County nines continue in the running for !itll'S. Junior v•r•llv -(•P•1tln Hnw~•n C•n•lt•; Mos! V1lv•bl• 11.lokr Mulry•n L•1wn• llt~<h .... Vars•l"f -Mot! VAl1tabl•· Mark koe9; C•Plf;n C E. Wllllamu 11.IO•! lmo1ovN1· lley Wl!llttn• from both sides." Woods says his linebackers have many alignments to learn v.•ith attention priid to different keys depl'nding on the situation. "It's a position th at requires a Jot of football sense," adds the Monart·hs leader. As for the tight end aspect, it ·s \Voods" opinion that the candidate must be strong. possess good size a n d quickness and be able to catch the ball. And Clark fill s the bill in each case. Others who figure at tig ht end a re underclassmen. sophomore Mike Najera and Junior like Beeuwsaert. ~EFF CLARK Polo .Crown To Plrillips WA LNUT -Ph illip~ 66 of Long Beach v.•ith /lunt ing lno Beach High 's Cla~· l=~vans in the lineup, upended NJ.\1A . 10. 9 in overtime to \.\'i n the Southern Pacific Association AA U senior water polo cham- pionships at Mt. San Antonio College swim stad iun1 . Steve Shaw of Phillipll fir('d the v.•i nning goa l in the srcond overtime period ~·ith I :06 re- ma ining. lt \\•as guest day at Rig Canyon this 'v~k \vhcn 'fl·trs. Clayton Rose and h e r guest M(Ji. Jack S<1yers of S<1n· ta Ana Country Club won the combined net of partners CQm- petilion in the first class . The duo tabulated a 138. ~frs . Evelyn Earnsha\\" and ?o.1rs. Bruce Esty of Irv ine Coast posted a 143 for the prize in second class. Two tv.·osomes nell{'d a 148 in the th ird class. fl1rs. R. L. Berkson and ?-.1rs. Francis Fa- bia n of El Niguel tied for the lou• net a1vard v.•i lh r-.1rs. Robert Yardley and ht>r guest ~1rs. Robert 11endricks of Cos ta l\'lesa. So11t.o A 1111 'The Santa Ana Country Club women golfers held a two.day eclectic event which ended this week \•:ith awards being given out for the low gross and low net of partners, Lois Eads and Biba Shinn (74 J. Aline Boyle and Pat Fossatti (82 1 and r-.1 a r y · Breman and Eda ~filler (88) captured the lou· gross a\vards in the three classes.. Twosomes receiving the lov• net prizes were Virginia Cof- fing and Florence Keller (61), fl1arga ret Crank and \Vilma Shivelv (63) and Fran Dye and ?o.fary ·straddling (63). Cosla !llest1 The (Qsta \\10men"s Golf Club selected a lo\v gross-lo\.\' net tournan1ent fof 11s 1nost recenl even t. Ann Pappas (91 l, Carole Ross (94 l <ind Phyllis Barnes i 108) topJX'd off their flight s in thr low gross compPl ilion. Dons Bal! 1.ron the A flight low net a~·<trd with a 73 u•hile .Je<in Creighton and Rctt y \Valtha!! posted ide nt ical 74s lo tie for the low net pri7.e in B flight. Norine Grady (80 t u·on the C fligh t low net av.·ard . /llet1domlark The final scores o r r-.1eadowtark Country Club·s \Vomen's eclectic Io urn e y found Lael Murray in first place in class A With a low gross of 79. Pat Eorio and Jan DuRec tied for low net honors in the top group. • Joyce Tielman and Fiona Moore tied at 88 for low gross honors in class B while Freda Si lverman and Rose Eri ckson shared the low net prize with 69s. •NOTICE• SAN JUAN HILLS GOLF CLUB In Sin Ju1n Capl1tr1no 1nnounce1 Summer Weekday Rates 18 Holo 9 Holo Grffn FHs ... $fii0 $2:-qg::: Eloctrlc C1rt .. $6.00 $-4.00 OPEN TO THE PUBLIC GOLFER'S BARGAIN' ** Prior to 7:30 1.m. & attor 2 p.m. 2 With Cut. ti holH . 1 1 0 00 P.C.H. w l1n DI• ,-wy. ta Ian Juan Capl1tr•...-turn on Ian Juan (l"Mk leM t. CluW.uM • , SPECIAL 9 HOLE RATE AFTER 3 P.M. 837-0361 493·1167 llelen Erncrt sho.1 a 92 for lo\11 gross in cliiss C. Buland captured 1he net af1cr pos ting a 66. El Ni1111el Gloria lowest The El Niguel Cou ntry Club named it s weekly tou rne y a lo\11 11c t-lo w gross affair. l·'ir1ng lhe \ov.·c~t scores in each nigl1 l v.·ere : Esther Nugent (86f, Jackie \Va tson (92 ). l'eg Hcrten \1001. and lliitdred \Vilbur (107). Charlene Cramer and Dorothy Al{'icand cr tied u•i th 74s for the low net prize in the first flight. Claire Abrams, ?-.1. Johnson and !i.1ary ~1et z eac h netted 76 to "'in the lo\v net of the other three flights. Missio11 \liejfJ In a low net guest day affair sponsored by the Mission Vie- jo Golf Club v.•omen golfers, H el en Goodhe<1rt receiv- ed the low net prize in the guest fli ght. Women's club president Rae Stoneman won the member fligh t competition with a net 76, v.•hile runnerup Nadine Maze scored a 76. Irvine League champion Los Al:unitos n1eets No. l seeded and defending Clf' AAAA chatnpion North Torrance at Blair Field in a 3 p.m. clash v:hile Sierra and Don1inguez cl<'lsh at Cerritos College at the same time. In AAA action it"s Crestview League champion Katella and Norte Vista colliding at La Palma Stadiurn (3 o'clock) while lhe other half of the se n1is involves El Segundo and Rolling •l ills. Soohomo•• -~! Vtl11eble: Erl< Schwofl. Ca1>!Aln: GUY Gtlf\dle; Mo•! lm1>rov1N1· llu .. 111 Han11n. F reshm•n -Mo•1 Va!1ttblf: Rob Miltlk•n. Ca1>11ln: Jim Grten1 Mosl Improved: Stev~ Havn•1. l•nnl• \l a"''" -Mo>t V~luabll'· Cl~v!cn 6~"yl>ill; Mo'! l n11,,oved ~""• 51>~l<1in1>: Co·ce1>11ili1: Scoll M'C•ftt• and Btrr'f~ill. Junior Vat>il"f -MOii V~IU~lll•· A•n Levin; Mos! rmprove-n: Je!f Lo~o: Co <1>1>IAin1: John Me.,Uel<l an<! ~!cntv MoyocW.. Fro•h-So1>h -Mot! VAlu11ll• . Jom e""ltCn: MO•! lmprnvfd• JAV Wll!ltm•, <o·C&1>•t in>. Gre11 S!ice •n<I JI!! Jcnn>cn. Mlrl"I Trac-Varsjfv -Mc11 lmProvf'(f · R•n<fy Hawkins. Most 1ns1>l•1!!on•I r.~ne TAYier; (li>l•ln· Ktn M4't l~<>: M•»I V~lu4'b!t: Gtne l1ylor. 6tts -Mo11 V•luabl,· 1-<A• .. ev Hire!a; (11>t1ln; P re•!on Cltni>l>l'!I. MO>I lmP•ovrd Rk k Mt•ltold Cen -Mo•! Vt lu1bl1: Jo•h Rico; Cao!ain: Gary 81vma; MO•t lmprov!CI: C•1l11 N0<lon. F•Mhmen -Most V1lv1ol1· Don Rank!n; Ca1>t1!": Div• lll1hm1 Mpu lmprovl'I!: 01n Locfo.•hlW Mar l"• ltlH•ll Vartllr e rock P,m1Mr1on1 S,fCfAll UMITlO Offf~I Rrgular·)l4c( fl(}!/) 121,9 BUY THE l PK. CASE. 4 SUPER SPORTS SHOPS Sine~ 1925 ANNUAL SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE! JACK NICKLAUS SET .. 3 Woods 8 Irons REG. $13S s99so TENNIS BALLS ON SALE CAN Of 3 LIMIT 2 CANS '1'' FISHING-LURE SALE Hugo Hloction of lures 11 Silo Prices Save20% No gimmicks-our best lures Santa Ana Stor• O"IY FAMOUS MAKE ~ SURFER AND DIVER WET SUIT TOPS HEAD SKIS NYLON TANK SUITS (Dis<ontlnued Patterns) Whit• Stag full 1ip., Short 1!1tvt, Nylon lint4. RIG. $19.95 Speedo Swim Suit 4 0 % I HHdqu1rtm OFF j j Ov•r 4 ,000 to choose from ~1 '15'' FULL DIVER SUIT Nylo" llntd S Zippers Top & lotto"' RIG. $SS s39's TAPER FLEX WATER SKI SALE LA TEST MODUS $90 sklls for $6JDO SKI VESTS Coatt Guard Approved RIG . $26.9S $J 995 BUSHNELL BINOCULARS ON SALE .. ,. 713.S tenner $.S2 . .SO $42.25 71.SO lenMr $66.50 $49.95 7'31 Sport $37.50 $21.50 b30 S,,rt $37.SO $21.50 GUN SALE FLOOR SAMPLES SLIGHT SCRATCHES LIMITED STOCK AS IS ••• HURRY SANT A ANA--PUUllTON NIWl"OllT ITOIU ONlT GAME SMOKERS Electric, easy to do smokehouse • Use it for full smoking or to give all meat a tangy taste. REG. $35 SALE $2495 @5 I SANTA ANA ea NEWPORT 601 S. Euclid BEACH 219 E. 4th 871-5988 Fashion l•l•d Kl 7-5723 SPORTING GOODS 644-2121 Houri Houn Mon. thru Frt. 101.m. to 9 p.m. Mon. & Fri. 'ti! 9,00 p.m. , Mon. & Fri. 'tll 9:00 p.m. 4 SUPER Sit. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Dolly 9,30 to 6 Dilly 9,30 to 6 SPORTS SHOPS Sun. 12 Noon to 5 p.rn . • GK03 REG. $100 $ 5995 I ROSSIGNOL SKIS Concord11 Reg. $100 $ 59ts Boots--Parkas Pants--Sweaters on Sale. Save to 40°/o All WINCHESTER AMMUNITION SALE 10% OFF CASE LOTS SAVE 20o/o ROD-REEL SALE Hugt Sawlnfl from our ''I· U11t Sttck PENN 500 JIGMASTER Wltlo , .,..1 ... Utt Jli.H CERRITOS #163 Mall 924-1625 Houri Mon. thru Fri, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. ~ Sat. 10 1.m. to 6 p.rn. Sun. 12 noon to 5 p.M. • J ' I • • ' • • ' • • • • I • ,. - • • 2n r.ATLV 11l1')T -..... SM90WI) HI• l.w L .. I 0. =~ft 1: ~ r~ ~~ ~ ~ f~O~.~ _..., ,,,__ ""'-!flt ... ., l1'o ,_,,_. t ..... " P.:'lf,. 'fi;J3 • ~ ... UIC~ I I• fjO 1-. 14h 1~ ~ llltf H I ,. JI lfillo ft 1"4--14 f ....... IO NASO Ll1tlng1 tor-Wedne1d•y1 Mty 31 , 1972 ACl"I""' >A " ~ ~ ""o,;,....' rwnsw 1.u c 471.• -"" '' +. \IJ ,. i' '" '-• •1>C1Ullo1>t "C~l/lol ~ .l,ll'i \rdn M'<t I • t'• •&fl~ $( ? ~ ti 1C••fl Dr '' • olt V. !'• Wll<J )0 XI~ 'if. ·-f"°s ~ ~M" ' !i! Aar>t<tv AO 14 ""° It ... lfl4-"'° Wlr NY t 214 JOflli ~ JO -"~dUti 1.:a -~ j » • ' '' .,. ''" I' ••I Pwr fl• ..... IE ~ I AcrrJfrMt 1" 11 ~ ~ :lt\oli>-\o!I Mii 1 Ill J;t\6 J1'io J1"t--4'j, •, ':l!• t\IPPI"' °" '"" N• '"' l'l"Ot 11 'l \flO• ur ~ • • • .. M! .... ;;..: it; ;~.;;.1 "' Jori. .....,_ ~t!lltfllC I•" ii,, w. Im Ml r. .... ff !)It 111. ltf'+-~ lllMt 'tool J1 J,P;, JS J~ \o!I It lfbnt! A.H0<1•tlon ol • I"""'' ~ 'it t rvlGt \_; "~ .a.iv 1.. .,., 11., T ,. '°'" JOll mff\ U• •!~• !l\li W •tde 1i:t I ~~,. M MlfUt lll .U t\o ·~, t T )Ii Mot 1 U•o %>1.t :J1l.9--.. '1M '°""" !!','"•',",'•"""','/f;,\,frco''L~3 ~~~ tl""c:~°I.~ T!!'! , ~r,•1 .. 11~ ,., 1~ v"''"" ... 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C• •• ' -'' '' '' ,, 0 ' -• ,, WHAT IS THE EFFFCT Of ALCOHOL ON DRUC.57 lty TIRRY GRANT, R Ph \\ C' hrnr th1>1 llUt'stlon '\• 1.,. oftrn and rt ii; an in1 JJ1Jrtflnt one F 01 alcohol can 1n!t>tnct fr 1ntr1fr1E> \vlth a great rnfln\ f}pcs 1.1r d1u J;::" Anh e1111.:11h1nh: 1eita1n sul· ptn1r n1r rltl Int'., 1n,.11hn nn· alI;f'SJCS 1nRny 1111nqu1Hzen1 e.nd anti h1st1m1nf'!i arr .a J r.>v. of the ma)Or Cl'\ tE>got ies nf drugs effected by elco· hol To 11.h\a)~ ht on 1h•• s11rr 's ide-1t 1~ a £t)r,d Jden not to ha\r> a d11nk \\h1le C)!l any nied1ca11on I-Jou.ever 1! lhert' Is sOtnt' snecu1J O<'C8· sion or s1tunt1nn 1n1,ofved y ,u should n1akt 11 a point lo check \VLlh \o\1r ph,~l· t 111n and to mention it \\hen )OU bI1ng in your prf'sc111p· 11on YOU OR YOUR DOCrOR CAN PHONE US \Vhen you ne~ a delivery \Ve tvUJ de· 11ver promrtly v,.rlthout extra "'Chaf'l:e A great many people rely on us rnr their health nccd1; We \\'!')comr-request~ fo r de.hvery s e r v I c I.! and charge accounts 9 cw 1 ''" o ,. lL In l!l~W A 8 1 • ""'..., Sta RH• 1'\o 1t\lo •Ill•~• wrw..., Wfftrd1.,..1 1111 blO AM~tn )Gd u l:t\io 11\• u• .. -~ " 1 "' n ...,. 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J V>-1'1 rwn tl ll'O J1 2tlo 19_. 2'9~-'/•GtlkOr 110 llhm Tri l'l(I) l"icl~r I'd AUOC Trt n• • 1 I ll 111.t+ ""C:rvnlpl l :l'O llOO If• St 541 GtNoltPll lb Mt•• l?S '1 •2 ~1?S31J,9 A!'11or.f 20<I ,) 111 , 11'; 11<1.i-•Jo~TS Cp,"' !6 =---,. .. 31~-''0INH•k I.cl ntr~v 1J()6 1J G6 l'l111llcl \) 96ll 11 AllcMI I Ud •,,' n,•, ,n,,, 1n,, .... ,+...,l'a 1JUl01n 111 ll llY1 18 , 11\..._ •o G•W''" ''' <W •v , '61 to" Pll GRO IS 27 11 " Al C,..,.E 1 '° 2l ~· ,... IH'!'lml 61 ,, 17\/i 0,\ .. ,,.,__, ~ Filrfld 11 "MJJ.O PAICE AOWIE 1\llC.Elg' !lo l !f !? 89 nOr 1 l2'te 11,' n~+ l'oG•1Weal U" meet the $1 0,000 panther* .. " PANTERA AUTOMATIC by d r!l 11n1aso 1mpn1ted for Lincoln Mercury Jtal1an coa.c h\\01 k c1 ca led by the brilliant Ghia Studios of Turin. Ford de$1gnrod the 151 CID 4V V 8 enJ:rne Four \\lh,.tl in· depenent !Hlsj)enslnn and m id i;h1p t:n11;1nc p)accnlelll } l\oe speed gear box lully synchronized • GARAGE DOOR OPENER SALE ORANGE CO UN TI ES YOLUM£ DI STRIBUTOR Fm &ute 1o n1on C:rw111 J1S•1l U At ,~/Id 2 lllJ 4 '• &o>. 601-"'1~1,, w':f 11n J7ll. Jl: J111o+l c.Gw,,uw•,,.",'-oO C:iptl 102 HwErt 11661l l6 Alll cof1tD ll4"M1a ;,49•~ rt•W, '' ... '' • ., , ••" JlllDILITV Nw Hot lll 0l ,607 AllRchc•IJ 1103 lO?~lOJ -1 "'Hr ,1 jft~ sl\! 51'\!..-+ :GrnGl1n1 I GltOW' Pre Fd 1? oil 11 '9 ('.! ~! Cor o 'l9 1•• 1 • 1 .._ \\ Cu!ltrH I :20 10~ 2 11+ ~. Grevl>d I Ol 11\d deb t MJO~PrnPor!I 1011 0IAT0 111C 11 761 1210 11l• llt1--.... ~~~~~~M~ :~~~=JI\; 31,,_,,Grt vhnd wl Ctol!1l llt" $2'9 Provd1 }JO 17' Avlom 0 1!• '' 17'.• 17 II _.,. 1 DD--Grolier 1'0 (Ofl!•a 9 18 10 IO P rnvd (;I 9 )J 10 Of AvlQml Inds 1'i ,f"',, ,«, ,,",•,= ;~ D•mon (p --,,J 60 59 , St ,_ , , Gg'..',m,0o 2 ',',," E sse~ 'ii PrvCI SI P I I 1112 7• Avto (Oii> A> J ~ -., w s! t I> PUTNAM A~cc Co V.!• ?~ .~. • 1 '" 01nRlv1r M 1 9 • 9 9 (, vii l •I ltd $f'W 1' 16 11 H l'UNOI t vco pf ) :Ill 1~ ·~ •S (5 -Vo Ol"l (p I "JO 20 :IO'o :>9'\0 :ttlo~ \o GullM ? llO• •Pantera TtAhan for Pan1 hr-1 Q••~11 C1~111y1 "I MllldJ ~/I 1•• (•r• • LOWEST PRICES! lnuallo•ion 8. St"r wie .. Ga1a-1e Ooor Hard ... aro Jl"plare d 642-3490 2626 HARBOR •LVD .. COSTA MESA • 540 5631) Sea Coast Builders Supply I ts I Placentia, Cosfa Mesa Happy Birthday To Us. H Hentz & Co year old this week . In( , O range County oflice 1s one We'd li ke to thank the people of Orange Count y fo r m.1k 1ng o ur fir st year so successfu l Herc are the reg1s tercJ representa ti ve s" ho ,1rc cclebrau ng with us C. Richa rd lv!dlcr Ronald L.1r son DonJld O IJ endo1 f Pa tri ck Boy le Wilh am O'Neal Robert Bryson Roy Page Rose Smcdeg,1arJ Art Speakc•r Jim T urncr Milt Fryer Roberr Bo" yn I C hnstopher Pa nos Martm Hershkow it : Nial ~rckman Max Moore Gerrie Putnam J,1c k Spangenberg J,1c k Taylor Norman Canfield R .. 1dcn1 Manager H.Hentz&Co. -Inc.-. Mtmbcr1 Ntw Yotlc St0<;k Exchan1r, fn( 1. 4.. And m hcr lcad1n.i •xch11n3t•. a. Main Office 72 Wall Scrttt. Nrw Yo1k. NY. tCOO( , _lfstabluhed 1856 { _ • '68 'f""":•nd O>u ntry, Or•nge, Californ ia (714) 835· l I 00 • ~er11 ll$1 i.I; EGV lh 11••117•Avtr~Pd ?• II 15•1 11•~ ~5.+ ,o.r11n 30a• 1()0 :..~. >6 . S61J.+ 'Gu~Oll !•~ "" Ii? f ll G.., xl•11!111 AvllC!t Old I" 11'• 11 .... 1?'-"~0tfllfldpl ~ 11 I.I 51 • I.I + 'Gui A l. Cn Purl!ft 101• ,,. 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" .. -·: \~ .. • • l•?l s ··wettnesday's Oosilig PriceKoinplete Ne,v York Stock ·Exchia.ttge list, Stock P1·ices Fall Sharply NEW YORK (AP) -Slock markel prices !ell sharply on a broad front in todays moderate trad 111g Ana1Jsts said the drop was to be expected fol· Jo,v1ng the substantial gains 1n stock pnces recenUy which sent the Dow Jones rndustr1al average up some 46 points S•t• tWa.) •• 1-~~~~~~~~~-1 Mitt l.tW Clil!M 0.. ,uarket...Tretul , .. ' "' " " ... .. .1, ...... lS • ~ , .. ,. ~ .. . " 'A U . " • ""'' ~-4 ... ,,.,..!'("•• ,..._ ~ et<I .,., ... I ,,... ... .., ""9+..,, eta( 1~41-• •M•lll ,.. " • t .. ,, .. . " " " ltl .. J • )I . ~ .. '!' " .. " " " ' ' "' • " " ·~ ""' ,, ' ' ~ " l'I " • u: " . " '" " ~\· .,, '" l llo '" " '" " • ~· ~= 11:: ' "'· ll: .,. •1to " '" 11•, " ~I );,. • '" __ ,,_ '" " .. " ,., " " " "' "" "' .~ .. " .. ~· h 14 2) • r. • " " n • 1n. 51 , S1 " . 7 ~ 111 • I'/ • 11 II ,. II .. el o\ •• l t~ QI ]OJ 11 • lO 7J }'i I r . 1• ~ ' .......... Sflt1 M•I (11111 I M fll Lt• Cl•~• <.111 -ww- 11 .. 1) u ,, rJ .. ' )J ll > .. • ll 1 1: ~ • • .. • J•I *' t •I ,• • • • " ' • • .... !. • • • ~ . ] ?J • ~ ' . •• '" ~. . ' '" ' ' ' ., " > ' • • " • .. " " ' ,,,._ • • > • " . " " ' " • • • • ' ' ' . .. ' DAIL V PILOT .... lllCf.I , .) . \ 1 161 ut ....... • t::. -~ _,., l~J "' t'1 ~ •• '*' ""' ,,, ft' ........ n Jo\,o t11'1 J&llo• \lo ,J ~-!I .... ~it-\ 11 110 ~ IOI''• llO'o-ft '"\'Joi·»-.. •!of r, r>. Iii!. •J !J TI.. n i o ~ JUG •1 .0 .. ol - •111) 11 JI JI .. 1 • t 11~·· 11)) 11.\.\~ l Jt '.If :It - );I l•l.. t)' .. ' n JJ • ~ ~.; tt"'" , .. io .,,, ?ll 4l ... )') ,. 1'11 11 •lo •l • Ill SI , n l 171 l'l•• lO l .,. 41 '< l'I SI J1 ' \~ \f., r,·~ ~· 11 .... ' I 16 ~ t11!~1·~ ti .. Ill I I A • ~ : i. !•l ~ • .11' rt ....... 1• •1 0l ••ll • ll lu Ii~ I•\ t-\ J ll ,., • -itYl-. " ... ,. 1) '! ... " 11 I) • ·~ l< 0 •O • " ' i.i .. A ... 111""-\ • .N ! • ,,. Complete Closing Prices-American Stoel\. Excha11ge List ~· lJI "'I tllf >. I H •II Le" (19$• Cn~ .. , Mllll L-Clew. tilt 5119" "" tlMlt I M tlil Ltw Cltst CllJ .,, .. IM• I H tl'I '1 '" ~·-(!ell (flt THE BEST Ii !: -l! ... dM'lblp p 0 111 -°'PMnutl" ll one ~ the M)r\d • mott popu.l:aJ' corrde 11tr1pa. Rud It ll&1l.1 Ill lbt DAILY PILO'l' • 30 DAIL Y PILOT S Thur\day, J11nr 1, l lf?? ~l~•;o,'>~J1'.Jed \~ Laguna's Artist s To Get Own Zo11e? Laguna Beach, ran,ous as an art colony, is now 1nu lling a plan to give tht' arts and crafts their 01o1·n plare in the sun . in a ne"1 zone 10 Laguna Canyon. There in the 1\1-18 zo ne artists could do Ulf•ir thi ng amongst other art is ts also doi ng their thing, city planni11g comm issioners thought a s they met 'f'uesday 10 a study session. The r..1.JB zone v•uu !d cxt('nd from the Canyo n post oifict annex to El Toro R1_1ad. Frorn the annex in tu luv.·11 \() the area where lhe S a w d u :. t F'estival ·sets up the zo ning would re main in l\·1-IA, light manufacturing . "We tried not to leave an art or cra ft ou l," John r-.'fcDo\rell. cornmissit1ner , said during a rev icv.• of the uses v.·hich 1vould be l>t'r1nittcd in the new zon e. Actirities no1v going on in the area such as the Telonics plant and the Langlois food processin g plant would also be permitted under the new zone. Music '72 Set June 9 "Music 'n'' a musical presentation of a 11 in· strumental and choral groups in the Laguna Beach schools will be on stage at 8 p.m. Fri- day, June 9 in the high school auditorium. Commissioners t'Xprcs.~ i::rea \ conct<rn over 'he traffic hazards along the Canyon rOJd_ To partially reduce the clan ger, retail salt's \\'Ould be prohibited in the artists' manufa cturing zonf'. Cub Scouts Make Junk 'Beautiful' Boys in Cub Scout Pack 606 1n Irvine know the true value (Jf junk : they trade it for trees. The 30 cubs, most of them from University Park School, recently donated 19 Eucalyp- tu s. Silken Oak and Scotch Pine trees to the developing Environmental Study Center at the school. They raised about $70 for project in .May, v.·hen their theme was ''America the Beautiful.'. The 17 boys in den mother Donna Richardson·s den will now have their n a m es permanently placed in the grove area behind the school. They raised enou~h money to donate a tree for each of them. The other two dens worked to purchase one large tree each. The cubs did odd jobs to make the money, bu t mostly collected "white elephants" and sold them at swap meets . One of the boys was more direct. He exchanged his junk for se ven small trees. DAILY l'ILOT llltt l'llolt AMY BORLAND ILEFTJ, DAVID PRICE EYE MILK PRICES AT CIPP Geri Caneday and Mike Kelly Prepare to Make Purcha•es STORE Special Viejo Program Gets an Tha t tell-tale report card : how many times when walking home, from school with it b1J1"ning in your coat pocket, was the temptatio n there to help write it ? At r-.1arguerite O'Neill School in l\1 ission Viejo. about 240 students get to do just that. And they don't have to devise magical schemes to pencil a .. C" into an "A'' because they onl y get "S" or "M." A From Pupils and a nev.• empha sis on in- dividual learning speeds <ind intt'rests is GIPP, O'Neill's Co n t i nuous Indi viduali7.ed Progress Plan, no1v in its third year. CJPP extends from first throug h sixth grade. Parents must enrol! their children in the special pro- gran1. The rooms are arranged to open up to eac,h other if hvo, four or even all eight classes in both upper and lower levels v•an t to v.·ork together. perhaps because they were too challenged. A child's level of maturity is considered v.·hen he is grouped in the program a11d the ones needing more activity 'viii be placed in a cla ss with mo1'e "doing" ce nters than (iuiet learning centers. "I like CIPP because you can advance as high as you want." one long-tressed third- gra<le girl said. ''I like CIPP because if I try and get n1y papers done, I can .. ~ew .Trial Date In Threat Case Pharmacy Student · Graduates A two-week delay has been granted in the Ora nge County Superior Court trial of .a woman who a I I e g e d 1 y threatened the key prosecution wilness in t~ upcomi ng rape trial of South Laguna trash ex- ecutive Thomas Tru lis and - salesman Eugene Imondi J r. Presiding Judge Bruce Sum- ner sc hed uled June 14 as the new trial date for Lena Em n1a Imond i, 32, of Anaheim. J\t rs. Imond i is the wife or TruHs' co-defendant . f\.trs. linondi is accused of threatening a girl who ide n- tified Imondi. 35, and Trulis, 38, as the two men v.·ho posed as movie producers an d Coed Receives Perfect ]\'larks r-.1iss Kathleen Phipps, or 6342 Flin t Drive, lfuntington Beach , has been cited for academic e ~cc!lence at Col- tey Co 11 e g c. in Nevada, Missouri. ~liss JlhJpps maintai ned the highest schola stic record in the freshman class. She earn- ed a 4.00 grade-point average, for the first two semesters at Coltey. persuaded her to join them in se:ic eels rommit!ed iri a car parked at the Fash.ion Island :;hopping center in Newport Beach. lt is alleged that Mrs. lrnon- di threatened the 17-year-0ld witness during a mu nicipal court hearing of charges against her husband and Trulis and that she then follo\ved the girl home and repeated her threats. Imondi and Trulis. who are a lso free on bail. are accused o! rape and sex perversion. Police arrestt'd the pa ir after their alleged victi m told them starring roles in movie and television were offered to her but that she first had to demonslrate her willingness to participate in sexual acts befo re the cameras. Kent \V. Taylor, 1966 Laguna Beac.b. l:!.i,ah School gradua te and son of former Laguna Hc=ich school board pre!ident Larry Taylor and l\frs. Tay!o'.) \Vas arnong 5,000 student• graduating fro m !he Univer:s '- ty or Arizona. Tucson, Sa tur• da~·. Taylor, \Yho a t t en ded Orange Coast College for two years. has been in the university's Phar1na cy College fiir the past four years. At lhQ College of Pharmacy gradua- ll un banquet, he v.•as presented with the Bristol Award io recog nition o f ou tstandini: d edi c atio n during his pharmaceutica l studies by C( \\.'. Bristol of Bristol and J\feyers, who journeyed front Chicago to make the preser>- tation. BOUTIQUE CLEANERS QUALITY & DEPENDAllLITY AT A FAIR PRICE Wanaer-Dale Center Corner of Warner & Springdele, Huntington Beach 842-2050 NEWI MAST.ERCHARGE ACCEPTED FOR STORAGE CHARGES FoR THE "Artistry in Moving'' BEST MOVE OP 'YOUR LIFE CALL 494-1025 :;~~ttfl.~~~.~EA~tt..· ,,~~~~~l~~~~~· ··~.~ ..... • ..... '.'!·,i· ....... •t025 ;·. : .• :.'., . Several o r i g in al com· positions by students will be included at the program to be di rected by Dea ne Boffort. elerRentary music superVisor; Jeff Forster , Thurston music instructor and F'red Stoufer, high school mu.sic instructor. The center wil l be used for outdoor study of nature and other su bjects. ..S .. means satisfa ctorY and "M" means simply, n1ore lm· provement needed. The teacher st ill makes the subject evalua tions. but the child can fill in "I do mv best \VOrk in ... ., " "I need in1- pro vement In ..... " and like phrases. Structure is still present, but gone are the old straight rows of dC"sks. read more," a boy near her1ji;;;;;_. offered. I.I Copy It! at our 11#11# quick-action copy cent•r. lmporf1.,t Corrt1pondt1'11;• lnvt nlory Sht1h Aeeoun tin9 llteord1 Order & Bid Form1 lnvoic11 & St.11m1nl1 C1!1lo9 Sheth & 8ul11tin1 Proj ect/Proc!u ct Sp1eifie1tion• Pro moliontl l11!111 l Fly1rt Try This Conv eni ent New Service Soon! COMMUNITY BUSINESS SERVICES 17175 Beach llvd. -Huntington Beach In Dally Piiot Office 147-5111 Tha t deemphasis on grades Also gone arr n1 any of the daydrea1ning children of old. \vho v.·ere restless because they weren't challenged or "These chi ldren," s a i d Marge V a nd e rv ee r , cur· riculum coord inator." are ab le to say to them selves, 'I am so and so and I an1 capable of doin g this, or need im· provement here .' " SUNSET LIVING at Capistrano Beach Students Wi11 Awards Mrs. Vanderveer feels CJPP i~ "success-Oriented " because the children Jea-rn to study . .in- depcndently, lo he!p each other, to be happy in school. Beverly Ma nor is centrally located for people liv in9 fro m Laguna Beach to San Clement•. It ii easy to visit, by way of tho San Diego Freeway or the Pa ci fic Coast Highwa y. Thero is ample parkin9 at all ti me1. •·r he dignity of the patien t1 mu5t be ma intained for their welfare." "Of course I love math. How In Art Co111petition did vou know I love math?" a ners Iron1 591 entries in the sec0nd-grader asked the sixth· e-0mpctition held at t he ~rader lookin g over h e r Fourteen CQl\ep;e students walked off with $2.600 in scholarship awards at the first annual all-ro\Jeglate Lagu na Niguel art competition. Visitors Always Welcome Laguna Nigu el TO\\·n Ccnli'r. shoulder. Bev•rly Manor Conv•le•cent Hospital In the p:t intlng and graphics "ii-lost people do," came the Sa11 Dl090 Frwy. to C.MIH Estrello, tvn1 n11tll 01t div isian:"f,irsl prize v;ent to re pl~·. 35410 Camino Capistrano, Capistrano Beach A jury of art CQ1Jectors and art instructors selected win· llarold Biir ch of Stanton. a There is no problem in 496-5786 student at Art Center College tr a nsf erring lhe "S" and "M "' [ !'..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,,,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'"" of Design, Loo .Angeles: se-designations to other schools, cond to Terrie Mills of Ocean but how well the CIPP a Farmers car in- surance policy with addJtiona! r ec eive ex tra m o n ey while yo ur car ls being repaire d for colli· sion damages in e xcess of your de- ductible . Fa rmers pays you $10 a day ,.. tor up to 10 days for meals, car rental, motels, phone calls and other 'extra' expenses-even if yo u .don't spend the money. Just ask any fast fair, friendly Farmers man. Chuck Sperrazzo • Henry Ekizian • Naemor Joseph 17918 Mo9110Uo, Fo11111tol11 Yoney, ''2·2411, 545·1401 or 17171 hoch ll•d., H.1.-142·1115 4411 ldh1pr, H.l .-lfl·,511 11705 Edi-...-F.Y.-tlt0 tSOO •C~~ El Morro Readers Win, Title Pa rk, student at Santa r-.1onic a children "'ill do in in- College : third to A n d y termediate school may be C:hambers of Laguna Beach, answered next year when t~ student at the Laguna Beach first CIPP "graduates" move School of Art; and fourth to on. Fay Colmar of .Fountain "That's the ac id test.'' Mrs. Valley, student at Cal State Va nd erveer agreed. "But J F'ullerton. think the childr en will be ex -Wi nners in sculpture snd 1 bf ·· crafts v•ere f\1a!thC'w i\lackie. treme Y capa e. El Morro School in Laguna 'J\i·o ctirls "·ere play;ng B h · d I h Sierra J\-fadre, Pasadena Citv " e a c re c e 1 v e e · chess ;,, a corner, v.·hi le a l k d · h College student . rirst: .John "' sweeps a es awar 1n t e re-gcoup of fo ur boys <eading t R d • o I · Larnb, Rirerside. Ca! State ccn ea ers Y m P 1 cs below their age level listened -• 1 1he o Fullerton junior. second : Don sponso1n 1 ly range to ta""" stories a'i they fol!ow- Co t De rt l f Ed Hartrnan. Los An"cles. UCLA I-"-"' un Y pa men o uca-"' ed in books. ti on at El J\lorro. Student, third: and Jlobert f'i\·e school dis tricts _ Norton. Big Be;ir Lake, C;il Some younger c h i Id re n J,aguna Bea f'h. Sa n Joaqu in. Stall' F'ullcrton student, fourlh. began setting up the ClPP Lo\\·ell in V.'hitt icr, Tustin and OrAnge Coast students win-store. v.·herc they would sell Garden Gr(lve _ sent six-ning ho11orablc mentions v.·ere ('mpty product boxes to learn menober tcanls to the reading \\'ayne Forte of L a g u n a math, whi le thei r classma tes an<l language skills e\'ent. Be.1ch, a student at UC Irvine "counterfeited" the money for El J\·1orro :ii.'>(! \VOn the and Leslie Sobol of Costa the purchases. deductive reasoning contest, i\'feS<J, student at Orange Coast Jn other areas. things were v.·here teams hun ted for ob-r;;C;;o;;ll;;egio,e;;. ________ ;;;oiq;;,u;Oi,Oit,OibiOuiOtmsiOtiliOIOiaiOctiO;viieiO. __ '"i, jects f·rom v.•ord cl ues. fl Two Irvine students, Kerry A rm st r ong and Ka thy B i r n b au m , both from Universi ty Park School. won awards. Kerry pla ced first in creative interpretation end Kathy, second in book report. Charles Curtis, an El Morro student, was nllnled ouLc:;tand- ing participant. ~re plpaccd first in recitation: second in vocabulary and book report and third in reading com- prehension. Smile, you're with Safeco. h .!f VISIT US AT t1l" ~Old M.@cDonald's Farm ~~ WHERE YOU CAN SEE, PET & +l'l.1'111 TALK TO THE ANIMALS Old M•eDon•ld's Fe rm h•s hors•s. pi9s, eh i e~•ns , go•fs, ducks, t urtles, mul es, doves, roo1ter1, sheep cows, bo•rs, longhorn cattle, turkeys, rabbits, ind lots of fun. Old M1 cDonald'1 Fa rm hai continuous Train•d 81rny1rd Ani-~ m•I Acts & a Petting Area, Pony & Burro Rides •nd a Mule-0. , Powered Merry-Go-Round, Barnyard adni1i ion: SOc for Chil-4 · ~ dran, $1 adults. Burro Rides 50c, Pon y Rides 25~. For infor-~' mation call 495-4313 or 811 -1880. f"'\._ \ I '-AD ~~5 ~;\'¥ San Diego Frwy. at the jc Crown Valley Pkwy. MISSION VIEJO .,1; \ 1 1 ~,,1.v DANIEL D. GORMAN, C.L.U. Auto • Boat • Home @ Mobile Home • Ufe ~ DAN GORMAN INSURANCE 496-2114 34551 CASITAS PLACI DANA POINT MARINA, BLDG. 2 ' - Interested in getting tax-free incoine? If you are, come to our next Merrill Lynch Forum. . The subject: municipal bonds. · 4'.. ~ ';!, ' We'll go into the basic appeal ·'!·:'?c~'_· of municipals: the fact that interest ~'\\'"~~"! 1s exempt from Federal -and often state-~ income taxes. And the relative safety of high grade municipals as an investment. Then we'll explain the various kinds of municipal bonds. The significance of bond ratings. Who should consider municipal bonds. And we'll discuss some specific issues that our Municipal Bond Department regards as attractive investments. The forum is free, but space is limited. So reserve your seats now. Call. Or send in the coupon. But come. Thursday evening, June 15th, 7:30 p.m. San Clemente Inn, 125 Esplandian, San Clemente. For reservations, please call 547-727~. P------------------~ I Please reserve seats for yoar I I Municipal Bonda Forum. I I Name I I -I I c;1y & s.... Zip I I ~Jepbono I II 5 M•"""L LYN~H·"'""c•, ••NN~" ••MITH IND I Segerslron . ·nter, 1000 N. Main Street, I Santa Ana, t;alifornia 92702 I ~-----~---~--------~ ·~ • DAIL V PILOT ~1 Fathersfj Kiils Bridge Gene rat • on Gap LAURIE CACERES POINTS A MESSY FINGER AT FATHER BOB DURING FINGER PAINTING EXERCISE AT LEBARD SCHOOL • School Echoes With Laughter "' 1 111~·1• ;111>a1 Buh I :ind: Ir!•'!,' I. ,r!•1 IJu ~l rh1·;r 11"1111"' 11.:11 !111 \.. ;, ! .u '· 1 l'l:t~Srt.0111 ,1t J.1 h.11d :-,, l-•· t1ni.:1un ];,.,,, h II !l •· For L.u1d1 . ,1 r.11 1·1 r 1•1 ·..,11 ,·,' 1·1 i:t cip;1J. I! S ;111 t':\~lt'I 11'<'1 l lo ·•·• d·1ill1 .l ('hant'1' 111 ~h1n1 1h1· l.1th11.., ''I .I i...ud .,1 ,, 1t a~· 1 ... ~pC'nl 111 :-1h ·111 I··. th· 1•· ''f''-.,,,n.., and dau~h!l'l'S. Fur !he l11ill-.111;; 1!,111• 11 ,, ', , I 1111 11 1'\Tl!'llllh'll! 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("l.11· n1,•I· 1 ·1h·11 ~1:.:i::lt" 'd hr1·:1 !.. 11110 !01111 l.11q.'J111·1 11l11·11 1h1· I•..: .1• 11 11 ;;1n;.;111r • lh·r·· ! •'11u". 1'•·!• 1· I ' JI "r' I :Id ""1111· '" thr cng1 1u·1·r 1ng 1L1ds ~\1rpr i;.1 ,1 11 ···11 .. ns. 1)r daugllt•·I'...,, Ii\ ,.,l':ll111(! f1»r:1ll' hndp;i'S fn)111 J hr :-11nplc ln1 ild11'~ [11,,,•l._s pro\ ldrd on llif' fli)(1r It 1•11lv lasts :111 hour H11d·:1·half '1111 :-011\l' nl th(' dad~ :1pp:irt•n!I.\ l1hr II '1 11r!I 1h1 ·~· come h.1c'k ni'xt .vrar, \1 11 1 .u:nlh1•r ~1 >n or daught er Da ily Pil ot Ph otos by Richard Koehler COMPETITION WAS TOUGH FOR ROD AND KIMBERLEY HARVEY DUANE STANDARD AND DAUGHTER CASANDRA 'DESIGN' A FISH DON AND WENDY HARTLi.IG DISPLAY ARTISTIC CONCliNTRATION DURING DRAWING CONTEST ' • " ___ .... ~.~ I • KIDS PLAY iSWITCHY°CHANGY' WITH A PARACHUTE AS FATHERS -HOWL ~ -WITH • -... ··1s LAUGHTER ' ' 3f DAILY PILOT fhu~day, June l, 197/ ------n·-... 0 • "---:;-L-;:11--.•7 ........ ~~.-ot •, -••-·~·., •• Eve ryone Has Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad 1 The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results G -:::ni:ra l CHINA COVE· Corona del Mar •.. just a stone·/; throw to the beach ... yet you have coinplete privacy. A 2-sty. vie\V home '"'ith 3 bdrms & 3 baths -· comple!e \v/elevator fron1 garage to top flo or. O'sizcd 2 car garage ... & storage like you \vouldn't believe. $98,000 OCEAN BLVD. • VIEW HOME Corona de! Mar's fi nest loc. A custom hon1e, handsomely detailed ... plus 2 bdrm. guest apt. 4 Car t,?araj!e. Extra lge . ree si n1ple lot (not leasehold). Owner has other plans & has just reduced the price to $128,000 to ex· pedite sale. Convenient parking-easy to be 675-3000 a "DROP·IN" at Bay & Beach Realty •BAY& BEACJ..f R EALTY "' m •fl•'~• M[ MA0)0 AHA \t~CI ,,,. • General YOUR CHOICE * 5% Down • 5 Bedrooms, 2 Baths * Walk to New Park * Priced to Sell Fast * Only $29,500 * Make )'OUT own terms * Vacant + Make OUel' * Call 847-fiOlO No\\·! INVESTORS PARADISE 12 Unit~ in Costa Mesa on large-lot. Potential to build 19 additional units. Check this out a t $165.000. 540·1151 (Open Eves.) ~ ~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS General I General WOODY COTTAGE Tree lined street in EasTsicle Cosra Mesa. Shingle fioo!. Brick Fireplace ln Ille Family f-tooni. 2 Bdrm, Hardwood Floors, La.rge Back yarrl, Alley Arcess for Boat Storage. $11,:,00, Call 646-0555, Evenings 642-7438. COLUfE(l '. PROPERTIES, INC.' REALTORS LUXURY LIVING "BY THE SEA" Spiral stuircusf', 5 BR, 3 BA, fron1 roon1 ·\1•irh parent rr- treat and ca.refrl'C', fully auton1~cd, hra1ed pool. Vacant. Ont' block lo brarh. REAL ESTATE FAIR (714) 536-2551 General CHARMING· DELIGHTFUL General General ••••••••••••••••••• HIGHLY DESIRABLE In Irvine Terrace !,el us sho\v you t his enchant ing home. Atriun1 entry, spacious living room \vith fire· pla ce. 3 J_,arge bedroon1s 2 baths, ..LOVELY IJfNING ROOri--1 -!· roon1 to store your trailer or boat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $62,500. SPECTACULAR VIEW Eastbluff -A truly lovely Ba~k I3ay vie\v ho1ne. 4 Bed- rooms, 2 baths, FA !\'l lLY ROOM , firepl ace. builtin kitchen with breakfast area. Custo1n carpets and drapes, beautiful patio for your entertaining p leasures. . ... , , ..... $55,900. WATERFRONT View 38' WATERFRONT and a POOL TOO ! Pier & 'lip available. NEW OflAPES & CARPET$. t. bedroo1ns, 2112 baths, MARBLE Fil\E- 1.J L.o\CE. buillin k itchen '''ith WET BAR , patio overlooking the \vater. You m ust .see to a µ. preciate . . . ....... $85,000. CORONA DEL MAR Two Triplexes Built in ran,ge and oven. dishv,iasher and disposal, carpets and <!rapes. 2 Units have 2 bedroon1s, l bath: l l lnit has 2 bedroo1ns, J lf.t baths \V/firep!ace. f.ac,h unit has 2 car- ports. maintenance free yard and pool privi· leges Each $79,500. FEE LAND Turtle Rock 3 BEDR00l\1S. famil.r roo1n , 2 baths, atrilUTI, builtins \\·ith self cleaning oven, shag carpet- ing and custotn drapes. Large covered patiQ wi th super landscaping. l\.1UST SEE TO AJl. PREClATE. . .................... $47 ,900. ~ Na! ASSOCIAT[S REALTORS 644-7270 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. 3 BR. bayfront beauty w /paneled den. I-lard to beat Bay view & price, $165,000. ••••••••••••••••••• Jim Muller CAMEO SHORES VIEW ESTATE Nearly 1h Ac. vie\v site. Perf. for entertain- ing: 4 BR .. 5112 baths. Pool -l~e . rooms . cabana -fabulou s bar. Cal! for pictures. $175,000. George Grupe LIDO ISLE . NEW LISTINGS I. Charni galore! Sunnv. hanpv 3 Rn .. beam cei!., beaut. patio. 45 ' Jot . $69 .950. 2. Immac., rf'mod. 4 RR .: dbl. Jnt. $129.500. 3. Vac. Jot 40' St. $53.000. Charl"rie \Vhyte EMERAL D BAY . $84.500 General ABANDONED 3 + FAMILY I ONLY $13,900 ClLI·: COl'1'-"Tl\'Y l lf.;'11" I N.t'"t lo•1 j h~·'.1•0:1l11_f;O It .sh:H!•: !!•""'" !"!1\l'.\F.D CLASS I r;JY \\'li\IJ()\\:-> Iii· n v .v 111·:A:.11·:n 1·1·:11.1:-.·c:-:. r·w11 General "TOP OF THE WORLD" \ 0 lf'1v it froin the hou~~ of 111any 1vind01\'S, ~l<ll'IOUS l)l'('Hthtakinji unobstrurtc>d 11t'1v allvays 111 your con1 · nn1nd. Top H off 11·1th four lorge bci.lroon1s, .~bath!';, all f'l!'clric kitrhf'n ;ind St rami- fy roon1 \\ ilh hi~h open hf'an1 ceiling. Spare for lrrrgc pool in professionally General General CHUCK CAROTHERS REAL ESTATE · TREASURES FOUND BY: FLORENCE BENNETT A DUPLEX WITH SEAl!/ARD EYES In Corona del Mar. Only $63.500. One rented ...: one vacant for you! Sunn y, with beautiful t~rench shutters. HARBOR VIEW HILLS You can hear a ship's fog horn as it makes its way thru our jettys from this all beamed ceilinged home. Only $79,500. Yo u'll love the kitchen, too! WATERFRONT Exotic v.1aterside li ving. 3 BR . home plus rental cottage. Boat dock . $95.000 5 BEDROOMS 21/:.i .B.aths -neat neighborhood -fireplace -d1n1ng room. $48,500, Spacious! Newport Beach & Co1ta Mesa Multiple Listing1 . 1831 WESTCLIFF DR., N.B. , CALLME 646·5152ANDSEE :, .;_,;. General SHORECREST 4 BR -2 BA SPANISH General Newport Shores -Exquisite! \\lrot iron gate and quirt path ro superb Franciscan !ill'd entry! Giant i::-ardcn Uving room 1vilh go~eous mass!\'<.' glazed li!e fireplace. Frnn· ciscan li!cd dining a1·ea. Gourn1et kitcbrn wi!h pass- thru serving bar, \Vinding General General oflnda .!J:ife PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY .APPOINTMENT IOI Linda Isle Drive Lovely S BR., 4 ba. home with do\vn stairs 'vaterfront rnstr. suite & lge. game rm. or study. lYtexican tile floors, beam ceilings, quality construction, slip .......... $155 ,000 For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots. Plea1e Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Or., Suite l, N.B. 675-6161 G2neral neral * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB NE\V 4 BR residence in th is prestige area. .S urrounded by 8.C. Country Club. Large fa mily room & formal DR. Plush carpeting. Garden entryway. Beautiful. $124,500. 1'0ur 27th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hilla Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644.4910 Ge n e ral General SPACIOUS -Large 4 bedroom single story on an 80 x 100' Jot near the Countrv Club. Service porch, country kitchen and fruit trees. Needs loving but owners are gone, and you're here! $52,500. PHONE UNIQUE HOM ES, MESA VEA.OE, 54~-5990 REALTOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. General FOUR BIG BEDROOMS TJ11s forn1er MODEL l lOME 11·i!I please even the "fuss- 1es1" buyer. Inside you'll find derp ~hag carprts, cu~· ton1izcd k1tchi'n, a paneled f;;1nily rooni and air·(..'Ondi- tioni 11g. Oulsidt> 1s the SI IARPES"l' LANDSCAPING you'll set>, complete with patio, and automatically con· rrolled sprinkling system. Call 00\V lo see the best! $36,950. /ca,., COATS ~WALtACE REALTORS --.546-4141- ( 0pen Evenings) *SPECIALS* FOUR SEASONS BEAUTY. 4 BR, 4 BA, lg fan1 rm w/ fp !, form! din or den. Ail· sume VA loan. Submit cash down. Near Beach. Quick * * * • * * 4 BEDRf..1 CONDO. Good Joan assumption. Payrnts Jess than rent. Gd cond. Crpts, drps, & retrig. Small dn, \v /2nd. Ava il 6·1 * * • * * * $ Instant Cash $ tor your equity. \\'e pay costs. 24 hr. serv. * * * • • * CALL 847·8507 DOUBLE YOUR INCOME Q11·ncr !ransfrrrc~o P11lo Alto and \\'Ullts to ~IJ in June. F'eaiures la1ni1Y room \1•i1h fir('pJace. kn•1j al dining area, Spanish dceor. in1n1ac· 11la!e Mndilion inside & out. Esl·elll'lll ncighborhOOd. very <:lose to ;ill S(·hools, hcarh and shopping. 1;;.xis1ent loan is 6'~ :1nd as.~umabfe by anyon;•, F'u!J price, $35.950. For additional infonna!ion, please phone 5'1ti·2:ll3, stairway ro upper level and General Gener•I \Vith this truly fine income property, I-las 4·2 bedroom hon1es on large lot -OK' d for 8 units. 2 story -e ach home has ifs O\\'n yard &: private patio -single gar· ages for each home -cpts + drapes -stoves. Immac- ulate rnndition -n~er a vacancy. Only $62,750 -or 2 can be purchased, Call 673-8550. 4 king sizf' bedrooms . ..-lt baths. Dl'coralor's delight~ ---------- Large brick patio plus extra Too Much Equity? large llt'Cluderl sundeck. Pri· JI your bonds are tlerl be· vate beach, pool, tennis and cause of all ·your 11·orking much more -call quick! capital being in your present 645.0303. holdings, tht' Colwt'll Com- WEIGHING VALUES? Looking for your money's . .. . HlRISI J Ol.,O\ RCAL'"ORS \1·orth? Then take a look at -~F~l~X~E=R~.u=P~P~E~R~ this 4 Bedroom. 2 Balh Hon1e closr !o Cosla l\1esa. $27.000. Loads of Refinished Kltchen Submit all tenns. Prime C11bincts, New S10VP, Good North Costa Mesa location! Ca r p e f 1 n g , LAunrlrv 3 Bedrooms. 2 baths, fan1 lly F;11·iliT1cs ;ind !lot \Vale~ roo1n, rircplace, shake shin· 1-/eal<'r 1n lhr garage. gle roof and douhl<' garage. C:OOI) CON[HTJON Best for the n1oney, GOOD VALUE. F'liA-VA Call 545-8424 iOpen eves.) Tern1s S:xi .00. Cnll 6'16--0555, EvE'n ings &16-4579. COLWELL pany can probably help you. \Ve are the Sf'(_'Ond largest niortgage b1'9kers in Califor· nia. and our new reaJ estate offi<'es are opening f'very· \1'hcre to assist you in all your real estate matters. Cal! 675-7225, COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS SHARP AND SPACIOUS 5 bedroom "·ith fom1aJ dining features custom drapes, shag carpeting lhroughou! PROPERTIES. INC. The "Yellow Pages ' classified . , . 64u.678 of 11nd overall delightful living REALTORS Panoramic: View $29. 9 50 ! I 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Once in a lifetime op. 1 • portunity to invest in such .a location at this price. You·n love the counlry-like at· niosphere of this gorgeous 3 bedroom home. 1-ligh on a hill \\'ith a prominent view of the Valley, E A S Y t erms . Call Now .••. 842-2535. ,a · THE REAL \~ESTATERS ' .. ·. . . 180 FEET ON 7-HOUSES TJ.IESE ARE FTXERUPPERS but produce xlnt incomt & tax sheller. S-2 BR & 2-1 BR homes on a double k>t. $875. monthly income. $10,000 down. Asking $79,51Xl. Ph: oo.1m. LOW DOWN Att r. VIE \V . 3 RR .. den hon1e: lo~' n1aint.: beamed cathedral ceil's. lJnder $100 n10 . for taxes & dues. Private beach. Dob Yorke 1 11 ~1111111 1m111 ·l 1n~ ,'i: 111111.~ flf !'<1rk i.;:d"H'. Eni'han1 111)! Pn1 ·lusrrl J.1\N1\l phi~ ~1i1vl"1 hrwl1 pn110, 2 C,\f{ g-;1r11gf'. l'on1plt•te 1111h hlfl('k 1\·all !f'nr1ng. ;, l\11'.'J. TO 1-lF.1\Cll Srl'ing i~ ht•l ieving call 11011'. (714) 962-5.185. landscaped yard. Untlrr1~-~.,.------ priced at only $79.!IOO. Call Gener'al General for a large lamily. Add lo th is; sprinklers front and rear, plus a circular gas BBQ for eveni ng enjoyment. Only S'12,4.%. Fl-IA.VA. Call THE BAY l\tagni(icent baytronl home in exclusive Bayshorcs, with pier & slip for large yacht. 3 Spacious bdrms. p l u s servan!s quarters, fomuJ dining room & large living room. Large la"•n slopes to the bay. Enclosed pool with jacuzzi. Finest location! $546,000. And As1ume VA Loan Nil'e 3 bedroom Ea~tside hon1c 'ol'ith brick fiN"pla~. HUGE ya.rd, cul-de-sac lo- cation. Detached rlo\,lblt garage with alley entrance. Pri<:ed only $26,000. Call now for further details. OWNER IS ANXIOUS Sharp Carmel model l-Iarbor Vi ew J~omes, w/lots o! brick. 3 BR .. 2 ba., fam. & din. rms. Asking $52.900. 1-lo,va rd \Velis ORIGINAL BALBOAN Qu aint 4 BR. ho1ne \v/for1nal dining rm . t Black N.11.Y. Clu b. betv.reen hav & ocean. F or those 'vho love tradition, S56.500. Bill Bents REALISTICALLY PRICED Well located townhouse in Univ. Park : 4 BR, fa m. rm .. 21fi ba., nice end unit: walk lo schools . pools, tennis. NO \V $34,900. "Chuck'' Lewis 5 BEDROOMS. BAY VIEW Gourmet kitchen. Walking dist. to bay & ocean. Great summer house or year 'roun d, for large fam_ily. Triona Bergin LIKE NEW BAYFRONT Choice Lido Nord 4 BR plus family rm. home. Perfect for entertaining. Pier & slip for large boat. Immaculate ! Eileen I-Judson IT'S GOOD BECAUSE .. , .. It's Corona del Mar ... it's 2 BR. & dining rm .. 2 full baths ... it's near beach. bay & stores .•. It's fresh & nea t Paul Quick OCEAN l BAY VIEW Truly the spot! Large gracious home on n quiet $treet in a fine area. Has a private up-- staJrs suite or den & bdrm. Nice yard with trees. $69.000, Bill Comstock _._ Coldwell, Banker '44-24l0 ~ Sit NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.8. roRE.\l [ 01.SON "' REA l70R S TRANSFERRED 3 + SEP FAM RM $27,900. 1!700 ~'ft of i"ustorli'izcd liv· 1n~. • b11tl1s, hartl1>.'ood floor.~. firf'plnct'~ rirh panel. ing, forn11tl dining roozn, all pushbul!on applinnce-1 Sub-· n1it. Call fl47·1221. 17141 Beach Blvd .. J{.B. "LIKE A MODEL" \\"l(y j?l) thr~1ugh !he e.11:pensc 11. n<'\-\' home can incur. f..love lruo « 4 bedroom ho1nf" lh;\fS I 11 s I efu l ly dt"C'Orfl1Cd inside n n d hfonut l!ully I and sen pr d OUl~!<!t>. Spor1!! IJ r i c k pll111IP1-.~ nnd t1 brl1·k pt11io. Prlrf'd nt $32,950. I\ 1 l Tern1~. Call Now ... 842·2535. ll7J.-R.'fi0 for appoinlml'nl. 1-------------------- FOUR BEDROOMS + 2()' x 2()' bonus room. Cus- tom built fan1ily home wilh J bedrooms, high beam ceil- ing~ ·big rooms, modern buil!in kilchcn, hravy shake root. Dctaehed double gar· age \viU1 bo nus room over head (ideal for Mother-In· ],aw apartment.) All this in Costa hl('sa for only S29,!l50. NO <lo\Vn VA or IO\V down FlJA tcrn1s. Call u11 for fur· thcr dctuils. 54&-5880 tOpen eves.} • ·.J ... HERITAGE , • REALTORS EASTSIDE-- $26,000. A reRI lw11uty In this com· forlable 3 bedroo1n home. Nt>a r new c1u1>t>ts. hard- wood noorti, cozy tlreplace, l"nc.losed yard And just list· I'd' Ai;.,ume low lntl'rt~ lo;ln, $19'1~1o indudeii taxeii. \Vilh n1inimum down. Best hurry::! Cnll 515·.~124 (Open Evrs.) MACNAB IRVINE Fl NE R HOMES COMMERCIAL -BALBOA ISLAND Prime location -"Carmel'' Type Bldg. Used brick fireplace. Now available for owner/user. Room fo r 2nd unit. Harriet Perry 642-8235. MULTIPLE UNIT INVESTORS Owner wants tcr move up. -12 -1 BR units centrally located in Costa Mesa. Very low vacancy. Ideal for non-resid;ent manager. Good earner. $120,000. Tom Queen 644-6200. NEW IN BAYCREST \Varm sun.s hiny 3 BR's w/extra spacjous FR, lush gardens. An immaculate home w/charm. $&4,950. LE ROI DE MONTAIGNE Build your castle on huge hilltop lot al ex· elusive Big Canyon Country Club. Barbara GothSid 642-8235. --------'!'·------ 546-2313. EASTSIDE TRIPLEX Privacy for all -Spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath owners uni! plus two-2 be<lroom rentals. Two years young • You can't beat th is "pride-of· ownership" location, in Har- bor J{igh School di.strict. 540-1151 (Open Eves.J :. HERITAGE REALTORS What A Ilg House * 5 Bedrooma * 3 Baths * Formal Dining * Atrium * 2 Patios * 3 Car Garage * Only $46,500 * Perfect bOme tor lru-ge fanUly * Call 847-6l!IO Today! O T~!I: Rf.l\L "'\. [ST I\ TERS re.,"'' THE REAL ~ESTATERS , '1 I f ", I ", • '" • \outh. (. oast --. [Irvine I -b·1m ... 11oo11y.ea..,.., ~g~-:=::: I BAYCREST BEAUTY · And ~~,L ~ .!:',~;, Cu•· REDUCED $4,500 1 ---';;'::7.:;;:;~'=--i IOI°""'°'"'" IM2·12SI romlzed 3 bdnn, 2 ba. '"""" f:J1>gant, immn<'. 4 Br., & BA YFRONT IMC MK.Arthur IU•UOO flreplAccl Lois of privacy on ) f11n1i!y rm. home v. 11argr Chnrmlnl'? J nr, 2 a&. Condo. thls corner kit. VACANT rnrmal din, rr·n. S.l!:i,OO'I f'ool. pier .\ ~llp _ $79,500. Newport ... ch,Ctllloml• 12•1.t TOO! , BALBOA BAY PROP. TED llVBEltT I. ASSOC. GINNY MORRISON REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 CALL 546·5AAO fOpen Eves.) .·., ~-~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS DON'T READ THIS , . , unless you IU'e tired of looking and are ready to buy. Everything in TOP $30, 900 SHAPE. Good a•!Umablo VA loan -4 BR. 3 BA. 4 Bd + F amlly Rm. spacious happy family home. ~ C~ TS designed for active living & • en t e r1aining. Gourmet's WALLA.Cl pride builUn kl t ch en , REALTORS <llshwasher. fa mtl.y room Open Evenings with elegant fir eplace . e ~2 .. ,. e Completely ca r p e t e d , !!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!~~~ ... ~~!el draped thruout. Rorr;gerator. w .. her and I ACRE WITH m,..r included. 0e11ght1ut 1 HOUSE coveied pallo. sPrillklers. Vacant _ move' right in! Good Cost11. Meaa location - Walk to schoots, pool and $M,950 Builders -Great k ·~i-pott.ntial tor 12 unlt1 plus a-per . ~ lllU· TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Cost• Mel& Cul de Sac Charm . "Apple Pie Cond." good 2 Bedroom bouR, Call 646-71TI, • O THr. Rl~l\T, "'\. ESTl\Tf.l?S ' THE be« buy on rematntnr lol'I, on Bristol Mtwetl\ Birch & Cypn?111. C-1 82'x224' !e<funl $70,IXKI cub. Luge lnnd!!caped lot -Call commercial o e p' t . sprlnkJt.ttd -ao YoU can Elmore Co. ~al Estate r njoy lhe PoOI! The house Is ,Division. BRKR 64$..4040. new thruout. just move into 1-'-~S~T~E~P~S~T~O~B~i~.~C~H~· I this 3 bdrm. charmer. "' Pr~ to 11ell at $44,500, 3 BR. 2-sty, RecentJ,; decor, CORI.IN-near"""' carp. Open 1-m ce.U.; large patio. $33,900. CAYWOOD REALTY MARTIN * 54-l290 * Sell the old. aluU Buy UM! llllll!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!ll!ll .. 1111111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!....!!~-I * 64~7491 * 3471 Via Ll<~ 6J5.8500 1 _________ .....;; ________ 5574130 RSALTOR 5411'2286 ;_;Rc:E;_;A;_;L_T ... o ... R ... s_;_; .. =4 _766'-'2 _,.,.. __ •• _.u _____ • J• I • . ' ' > Im Oo· !\!us TE :M71 Very unit Joe a Roy l81 O\\'N ""'' ranli \'Cl" !er!. built Ne111 Com ou l. or n Do n't (If con • / -.., I •I D~ILY PILOT :J,";. Coron• del Ml r I ~:.:;;;[ ;;;""";;;;1. """';;;· ~'~~ J Mobile Hom1s For Sale 125 Huntington Be•ch Newport S.ech Bayfront + Pier *NEAR BEACH* College Park WHITE SAILS On !ht> bay, OCl'Sn and brig-hi JJghts 11.1 1ught are Uie VlC'\\'S tha t "ill laSt·uut1l' you hurn 1hf' large glass v.u1()t1"11 (if th!! l~llY, •·lw-o>rlul liarOOr V1l'w I lunic. Tht' pool, patios hnd party 11r1•as arl' grl'at for t'ntcr1auung. Ca l I 675. 722.::i. llY 0\\,...,1:.:B, ~BR, 1 ~. B,\ J11n1. r m. sh.1.g ('pl ~ , l8fll"1 S<j. II. $31,ji)(). 96.J..21}6 01 -SPECIALS-TEMPLE HILLS PANORAMIC VIEW J 111 II ,,1,· """ l lll''i. , BI !• ""I I I I. B<':iUI. n1a1J1talnrd IJ1i1nr t nnJI. Adult l)ilrk, J•:..'(t~I eo.i. Chnnning 5 81· beHt'h hon1e. Exciting harbor <irtiou, 2301 Bayside Dr. SIG.9.000 Bayfront Condo 3 Br, 2 Ba, pot1l, pier & ~Jill. Delightful $79,~l()O EMERALD BAY lmmaculatf' J Br + riun rtn. ()1·ean side ol h11·y. \'1C'1\'. fl!U!ll IIC't'! $1<1!),000 TE:D HUBERT & ASSOC. '.:.171 Via Lido 675-1!5(X) TRIPLEX 10 MONTHS NEW 4 llugr bt<lroorns, 3 baths, Sl'par<ile lanuly roo1n + rtinln~ roo1n, large living n;o:1n1 11·\1h f1replacf', hu1lt- 1n~. up~r:uh·d c·rpt.s & drps, 3 ('ar ~ar $-13 .950. CALL ANYTIME 646-3928 or 673-1S75 Lachenmye Realtor * DUPLEX * OCEANFRONT Chalet -1~1"'· :1 Hit, + lnh & :! ha. upp• r. l..011 er 1s 'l BR:. V~i;t nice 3 BR, 2 BA 011·nrr'!'I unit + 2-2 BR l BA. Cood lotalion. $51,500. I l ha. Frph·~ Good r, nta! arra ,'i,, !011 \'Jeancy fat tor~ $120,000. Roy McCardle Realtor 1810 Ne1vporl Blvd., C.Jl. 548-7729 OIVNER n1usr .~1·!l 4 bec!roo1n, 2 ha1h 1101111•, I fanlily rnon1 11·ilh fir('fJlil!'(' \'l'l'Y eonv1•nil'nl for t•n. terta1ning: olf lhc drluxr Call: 673-366.1 642-2253 Eves. associated IROKEAS-AEALTOAS 2025 W. lolboo 671·J66J ORIGINAL OWNER buillin kitchen, dish1va.<:hl'r. OFrF:RS TJ!fS CUSTOLll Ne1v lllush c arp eting. UUJLT llOL\11': -A mos1 dC'- Completely pn in tcd insidl• & ~irahle !loor plan 1lrs1g11rd out. $28,9.'il. Bkr., call d11y for fan11ly living 11·ith a for· OI" nlght, 540-1720. nuil d1nu1g roorn, family Don't givt-up !he shi11! "List" it in class!fird, Shir to Shore Results! 6l2-:Aii8 It°s a breeze .. sell yf1ur 1 items \1t:ith ease, use Daily I T ilol Classi fied. 6-IZ...5617. room :u1d ·I bP1!rnon1s 1n t'.'<· l"IU.'>ll'l' Rii}I J'C'<:I, PETE BARRED -REALTY- 642-5200 DON'T PINCH YOURSELF (You're Not Dreaming) But You Can PINCH YOUR PENNIES with a PILOT 4 Bl>tlroon1. 2 b:Uh comer lot hun~c 11 /El.lr·t·und., l'OVl'rrd pa110, sl"parntr· piny yi-tnr & v.a1!-to-v.a11 thh·k ~11ag cl'1111o;. Drive by :!317 Hu l!;,l'fS Dr., Call 10 SPr u1sidr $3 2,950 Build Dream Newpor t •• Fairview 646-8811 (•nytime) Your Home JJ.\VE lan:1·, l1•vt>\, 111•111 J101 S'.!"i,000. Nt'•I lll)l't fip;11·h • l!A VE 1•nd or l'U!-dr-~Ll' j)I(' i;hap<'d IOI, Nl3, SJ.~.500. \\'1/1 1-011.sit!t·r t'.\;·lia11g1•: HA YI·: H.-3 1•oun1ry lot, 13u1Jrl !10111c & .\lra uruis. Paint & ·Save $17,750! Tht' 1 ixrr·upµ<.'r or '72' ~rC' I! to OCl11'vr. Crl'at slartr•r 1•1\alrt. FHA b11yrrs -11 ••1- t'OllH'. r\l'l'ds lols of TLC. P!rasr \\ i1)(' your lt>f·I on !hC' \\•ay out! Call &15-0303, roRESl r oi.so~~ · ,,, . N.£ A l T O .llS . POOL 4 BEDRM· COLUJELl PROPERTIES. INC. REALTORS I_ -~ - -- PREVIEW SHOWING _ Shorecliffs 245 Evening Canyon Frida y only 1-5 $99,500. University Realty ::001 E. Cs!. ll11·y. 67J-6:i10 Co sta Mesa * EASTSIDE * Sh:ol'p :; Bli. + f;unily nTI J·1, Ba. l';11·11uc•1 firs .. l'UV•'f · I'd pal ill. s::2.fl~. --GEM-- 1610 \V. Coast REALTOR S T\\'O STOHY lh\'y., t-;.B. 6-12-1623 llARC,\IN. Suhn11t all \Prms. 42131 37~721. NEED SIX ;, Br & l ba. 1-leatl.'<I pc.o()l, BE~ROOMS Frµl l'.' In :\laster fj, -rt , i ,,"Ul!"' ho~')''' larg<> t-trnnnl<. $12,000. 96."-236j alt 6 11111. nsk1ng f~.~ ~nlaH hnn11• -'>t•d1U1u11s, a!;klng $'...~l.500 ~ , nn:.. ~ .,.. 11o. <11111} ., Uc &: 1 1 1 rn11n1, I\''•"'' l•urn1ng 1111' 1 · ~,1;oon1 " 164 500 81'1l'.c ami Y \lt•J.l1, S-IS-::.:~11 I ' rm. w . . . 11 a1-l'; 11:or11Jr,1n111· 00·1•;111. ,. G W "l l' 1·Hy 1!('11, 10 111 r1,.,.1 .~.11 I eorge I 1amson 1!Jf••on j),,l IJuy 111 u1,,1 .:sl Realtor 548-6 .170 64 5-1564 ~e.or £11~t~. Gen•t•I i Br +-Lrg Bonus Room SACRIF ICE Bo!h i1\-;,11!11hlt• nu do\111 \',\ A& I Convrn11·nt 10 f \\y•, le< lo!. /, !1 1\..'1•111rid 11 .... r Iii<' P ··1f1, I Ot" l•rll 1!Hlll! FIL\ lt'f\1\•, 0 an I Acreage for sa. \\'1H i 'll;\, PS,000 847-39;17 l Ill: :", h;1f1 1, I'"" I• II • E As TE R N c HA RM .;-;;.;.·;.;·.;;;.;·;.;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I 150 REAL ESTATE 111 ... Curnt'1 l•1t •f "lll! 1111 \\'ANT A POOL 110:\l E~ 1!1•n1c--;1rk !or a r•'d hr1,·k . . I ~··ur 1"•'1 & 11 ·111• Country L1"v1"ng • 4 nr. 2 Ka. crp1~. drJll>, ~'O\' h11u»(' ~\H'rnal d1111ni..: !t~11;1.·11!11 \!I' Sii~~) r ~" II p;itlu, 01\Tit.'r 96&-l'.?l!J. 11~1111" l .:11",:~' ll\tn~ ~\ll>1n .1'1 !•1.1-;: . ,1'1 11::11. University Realty PICK YOUR OWN Huntington Beach •ind a M"lliU:ltC r :u'lOI' '''.:-MYST IC-HIL LS -·1-11 1 I' I Jh1_1 . l ORANGES -----------·I arl1<Jur in the lntt·k ~ nrll ,, I LARWIN'S IJ >1'Jlt'd 111 llu 1111n~ton0'"''11111''"' llldn11~.-l>1 . l\l\l\1" :! 13 ., "' 1 . lll•.ieh llnil on!y 11.""il (),·,·an \lt·11 l•\dli.; .t dll'<i•~ 111.;1• '"'r. 1 •• · ~-' , , 1 BEST BUYS CLOSE TO THE rlll' l.,i.:1' J,•1 •I ).1rd 1••••11 I" ,1 11•1. 1 !h1 ''' •o, I * BEACH ANO SO 0 0 0 f111 ['"'! .'\Jn1 n• u·t,1--1-11 •• I LUSCIOUS INEXPENSIVE i•l•"l' 10 s• lu•il" s1•1 .~~!. .. 11•1 :!,>;!'oil • I . \ 1 ~II .._ I-I . J o I 1•111·1 11J .. •rc11~1-\! 5 "I '1.>0 I ' L\!)l,\Cl1L,\TE 4 BEJ)ROO~I \\'hen y1>11 s.·~ this rr.~lt~ TO \\'Nl!OUSE, Thick t':\jlCn· sharp 3 h<'dt'OOnl t1un1c-~(IU ~:1\!l~ Newport He ights sivc shaJ:: t·arpl't thruuu!, \ion't OCl1t'\'~ !ht• pn.·r . ~j~·_.-/ ff)rn1al dining-roon1, 21, Prnrl'ss11111nl!v landsl·:i1x,1 ,.. ' OPEN SAT/SUN . l·S lm.!hs and fuur UH; b!'ll-yard, onlv 524.500. ' "••·•,.o,.u.. •. ruon1s. Uwnrr 1ransfrn'f'tl CALL 5-l(}-~;ti» _.....,..._,.,,.,,'-""··-418 Fullerton Ave. -i1·~·vr }:01 u ''S+>ll 1t nov.-·" SHERWeeo REAL TY Laguna Niguel • \I 11 I 1 .... 11\•, ., prirl' of s:l.5.51X1. Call l<U"\llll \.~%1 Brookhurs! 1··.v. ----;--' ' j I 1· ! 'I p.111·•,,1 .11 .~ ,,.,t Jr l•l ,u'J'1 111 1:11!,l•!r 1.1111111!1 11·nl1C•• n11 h1 11 ' ' '' " 11C'1! I " I JI~ \,1!.•n r ani.:t• I•• 1., I 1 I ii•• 111 '" •• d•I !l1<' 1'1 \I 1 '""" 1111" I •o~ I i' \ ' ,_,, ·"'ft', t • I •.I ii I <'If I .. <>11, , ,1, ' 1.I '"'I II I 1 1111 II,! I Ecl<hoff & Assoc ., Inc. j , , ~ II •,I FOR ECLOSURE quie'.: ru Sl'f' rtu~. · * ~ iv.~lli.;r I Ho 'd11 • "" 'if..· ··I 1 1:1: : !\ 1 111111•, 11'"1 11 ,t, 1 * --J~st Refurbished •C'h<i~. !Ji :q"'~. 1 1 1•1•[1~.~ 111• ~ .i,,1111 1•ln•• \1 1 111; BIG FAMILIES I BH. + h:<·. n11111111~"T!11 •l 'n1que [),,k, .~ !'1'' \11· .. 1.1 \I""· ~!i•11~1 I I I I ~ 01)11 !"ii' I' •r·" ,,,. )•r \\'ANT TO l!l::.AR ,\ \\'!IOP-Nf'll' 11' II' c :11·1•. 1!1r11oul. 1''1"1 •Cu:.t11n1 !·+·,,·111 1 ~ '111'11 W a lker Realty 675-5200 0 11 11-: 11,1, ,. , 1 1, 1, ,0 pu111t in.~. \ou1 , !·11 H111h~. ()1111t'r; 21211 l .. 1 JI, 1·11i. ~.1 11 \ ., Ii \ p' I;,, , PEfi? J!nw 'bout a 1\'l1oppin' "1·l1·s, too I,, I: 1. 1, II p,. Varant /nr qu1o·k .....,sscss. •·l!l:1-.c>~l3~1 big 3 bf>droorn ran1lly l'()Onl .~ 1 -~-~.-------BY OWNER t '1 .. k, 1 ... ,,. SIUh''l ( ,.1, ft ~ Don't t{'l\ the kids lo "get REALTY & 111 " ii, 1.· <I, 11.1J.· . ., 1,.1, J ,1,111 n ,t, 1.iJ,, , 1·,•1 l<'•l •ll• 111• ''Sho\\·case ho1ne?" 2-KXJ sq . ~~·u !l prict' onl.v ~:r..500. Lido Isle : 1:1: ...:j•tnl·li ,-hH1n•r I'.• po11't'. !"11111011• !'·'' S.1:11 Jost ~" i11thishon1{', lt'lltakl' INVESTMENT CO. l».un 1 ... ~;1;,i~•l h l.i!,!'1: 111 SS~I a 111". Tr.1111·111l"u' has Just listl'd and priced youa11·ccktorindthrn1.5<-<' _<7~2_645-4085 11.1.,, 1,-;;ii;·,,1.11 , S·i in\ 1·1·1~11'1uult1 1,, ,,.q1,11 r I•· f1Jr inuncdia11' sall.•. 5 !hi~ hc>n1c loday~ Covt•rt>d REPOSSESSIONS 1, 11,, d 01' 11h11t 111,, n"' 1,, .. 11 oil l.ll·dn ... 1n1s, 1 b:~rhs, J)('\I patio. 3 car garage. Sf'XY • .1l1h• tnn11•1 11 carf)('1". prime loc;it1on and RonHin bath in the niaster For lnrorrnalion and local1on. . , . :: 111:. \'.,.;1,,I, lt'l 1••111 I") .• ~na1·1ou.~.1 1.1. • •••1·1 .1111.1 0 1, ,11 .... ,,,,1 1 .. ,,1 l·.d f'.d11 r11 •h. !"or1.l11.i1·. lw•!11•v1•-1t-11 r-no1 fully au· ~.,ll ""n<ln•o•·•.Pri'odri•.ht oflhl'scFHA&VA hornl's, I "I II I 1 11 1 • "-·· ·''·' -,1 ~···ot"''' -11 1 .. 1,1• ·' "'" ,-k lt•n,,, >.1 I Uoll!I ~II'" ·1:";,...l)lll l.!•i-7\l l' !'.>-.~,. I o~-.I conchtion('d. P robably v•on't at S-tZ.500. at Ja"1·1n. c.-ont11ct -I II I I I --11 1oar :.l•J1 ;11:r • 10 y t .. 1 W .-\II i\CRES. '\,.111 \jo'\u'<•, oc l:i.st thru the \\'N'k so ll<-st * KASABIAN J . I t t . iuHnl' 1;11 ,. '", 1111.1i1• 1. es m1ns er n:i!iilnal r,11 ,"1· s1 I:!• l'!.l! be quick! Only S39,Sj(). C;li! NEED A 2 BEDROOM 675 6900 I ~1;,_g.124• SOlITl-I COAST Real Estate 847·9604 --,\CRE. $4~l l\lo. ~~7. HEALTORS. MAIWNITTEHNANNOCE• GOV'T OWNED-coin L'"J'LI' I ATTENTION Gl"s ;., ACR ES ;,,,,,,,.;.,\.,,11," . . . ' "'c ""'""l··l"I ·' -N-0-00WN~T~O~V=ETS BACllELO!lS, PUSS't' CATS Reposst'SSl'cl hon1rs. Ll>11' !"f'!lt-\'Or. !nuhtiun11I h,11111·. :l ;-,o.' du1111 11a~·n11 •nl and only nnly S2~ill 1k111·n, ()111wT 3 BR. 2 ba. Qui!'! l'Orncr. OR S:\1ALL YAMJI,,' -d011·n. Goven1nlent pays llilrn1~,. <!in . rn1., 1!r11 S.iOO, clo~ing cost~. 3 fi('(lrni. rnu.~t .~f'll. ~>-lf,..:JO&li. J3o;d spacr. NP<ir frf't'11·ay & co111r fall u1 JO\'f' 11 llh !his clo~in_g ro~rs. Call 96S-·144!. 11/\1 1•1 h;<r. 1.1r1:•· NrlK'r dc·n, 2 halhs, firl'pl, ldi•ul • FflHI-:~ l~111·n-Gll'ndalr. shoppu1g. S29,:XJO. Hurry~ 2 bedroon1 2 bath 1o1\'11hou.s<'. * Crest Realty 101. f~ri,.;t ··1111. o;qq "•'1 11"~r ,~111~·~~1;1~·irrThi• JlfAL 2 plot.~ 111 ('0111111. Sf'c t1()r\ GEM ]l 's ":\lu\'e !n" t•ll•;11 1 ;ind s-;·111 for h 1!11 i 11 <lli~-:!17'! --I---1 " 1 SOLD howan:b l owson )"-1 ---$23,900--NO DOWN lti10 \\'_ Coa st l-!11·y., N.R. on Y ;, n11nul{'S i-0111 tht• 'Apar·tments for sale 152 be;irh and al! aclivitit',i;. All niy li~lings. l\l'rrl homl's aco~tQA I~ l1·1·111i-~ 4 0Cllroo1ns, 2 1 n1;:1\LTOE::\ 6·12-1623 1 " 1 I II •·· ~llli \.'1a l.1<!11 '''•I·•,:: _._1 H CKI C t I $1 ,000. lPss than "Ne1v" o fl.<i\'rr 1se anr Sf> . r or .--ccc--o---c~-Muu le omet l""'"'i!"' I eme ery ~i·paru t (' h:iihs, huilt in 4BR&-POOL-B Own r 2"9 I · f . I If t "l'J'-f·,,,," '''' '' I " L /C 156 rlrPain kiTchi·n. Lo\',.. 1 Y y e cost. s 1, ~.at ar11·1n. pro css1ru1;i, r rc1,•n srr-" --. ,. ,. • . '" • 1 o ~. 1 1 ots rypts I :F la d Sparkling-C'lran. H.C'a1ly to 968--1405 Anytin1c \·1rf' Lor, s!l'f>l'I lo Sin'•'! S1·1 .:,1~1 1 pa .)I}. ~~Jo;vl0-i;2~...;roun ~-move 111! S33.900, 10~;, dn. I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO Call June Blair 968-7833 7J ~-1. l•l1, li:;•'. l1urn1•. ·"'' 1 1 1 M b .1 H j ~ Cl'nicio ·I'~ lo·~. 0 1111111' 11" 11· siiim poo • " ' · 1:\!r1 Sh;innon Ln . Hal<'rrcst. GOLF OR SWIM 1:1 vrs 10 Rl'al Estat(' SnJr~ to s1rf..1·t ............ ~·11'1 !11~11 ° 1 e omes !ioo, S~'fl(t •'••1·11. G 0 " •I TARBELL OiK'n 12-5. Info. 541!-27:"-ll. R£°L> C,\HPET HEALTOHS LIDO REAL TY I For Sale 125 Shi'1Jtu i•if ri·in.-t.·rir, If H This large 4 BR hon11• fl.'<i· 962_7711 lli7 \'ta J.uhi. :\ i:. 1-----------Slfi-fi03::. I SHARP turrs a lri:: hrau! htd & fl1rd 0 673-7300 CONTEMPO. l'~)Jl Sulf' ~ l111r1.1l ln1-1 tn R1•pub]i(' hntn". 4 + ~. l:ir~" pool. just J hlk from the first \\'N l~:n aro..1ous. El1•;.:;u11 _ __ LAGUNA HILLS Porkside Perfect clo·n. fnrn1 ;1l dining. By 01vn-ll'P of an IS tlQlc Charn"ion-Sp<tlll)<h rlr~ii.:n. 4 bed1\1tu11s. BAYFl'.U.'fr J!t )\11 ric-~ll»r adnlt n•n1tt•tlnil\· "n1iro\·i·d ·•11' 1 1111 rho r 1' l:r.<.t. ('nil c.1~ \.:.~1. Pr. ;:..ui.:,:191 _ sh1p golf t'OUl"~C'. Enh'rini.: hui.:c family mom. Spanish P irr .~· Sl.p Sl 111 ~'1 :u!1:1r1·nt to 1.risurc-\\'f>r!d ----- lhis fornil liv rrn to ;i hi,i:::h nrrh v.-il~~-F.1Pga111 t•n111· 1..'.EN BRITTl'.'\Gll.\\! 1:.•aul surm1111!l1n1·~. ;ill lu:<· 1 Commercial Cho1cl' t'Orn!'r nt•.\I tn park 111 lz> 111!". 1\lany 1 ·u~1on1 tlr- t:iil~ 111 nu~ fJne fan11l)' hnrnr 111!h 4 l~c·dnJ11n1s ;ind fn1n - 1ly nJ111n. Pri1·1·rl lo ~··II fa.~! i11 S:l·l.<50 1nrlud1ng lhl' lan1J! G1ti·i171. BY O"·nrr • Ll>\'ely 3 BR. fpl .. cor lot, rm for botlt. 1·.imfl''r 2835 Portola Dr. J.16-10.~1. --------0\~'NER . 1 &:lrn1, lg l1v nn. Sunr1n. Kil, din, rpt~. <lrps, fncd yd. ~ar, SlS,;x,(J, S3.IXXl. dn. Bal 7';. 6-15-233.S Ea st Bluff HEr.;T BEr.1T:1t.:,i~1eA THE BLU~FS 011 :i•1 1ll'Sf}('J",1tr T.1kr ov1'r 14 F:f{ · 3 ha · 2 2~ sq, lt \ I S,.2 " s·~• f"c F:nd unit. Cho1cl' <'a rly area. p m S .,., nlv. ~vvu. v , ,~· "J ll 1 t v. () 11 n I A g 1 . (,oorJ !'onrl Qui ck posses- ·--"?19/·,···--0·-I SIOO! S~8.:ll0. .1.11 -v-• • '" . "") Balboa Island :' -.<f-.,. A RARE BUY! $65,000 Oldr r hut ~trui•tur;dly St111nd lari.:<' fa111 1ly hUn1c. 4 Bdr1ns. '1 Bris, pool tiihlr·SIJi· fam- •b' roon1. r11·('pJ:1rr. Ano1h1·1· 1 11n11 can b,• hutl1 nn tl11s It '.! Int. Good f1nan,·111i;. OPEN HOUSE S,\·r. & ."U'.\. l -.1 ~)l lor:1I Avr. f>.;1lhn;1 Is. ISLAND REAL TY (:1·~1•·f' \\,•1!1ni::h.i111. IOtr. J'.IS Park ,\\ f' • I~ I. 1;7::.12m {.st ·. '}J3Jt(' .: •. really . .,,,__ .. 2114 \'isla del Oro Nrwport BC'aC'h f>.ll llJ3 Ai\"'l'Tl:\IF. l'alhcdral t·cihng, nH1ss1vc hall. X1ra storage areas. RF.AL'rO!l r.1: ... u:.': 11ry r1p1..--.1n1n1•·11r~ Th• rn-Property fir<'p!, umailed rrr>ls. drp~. Brk. S2X.500, 962-1371. Mesa Verdi J'l''llllr po'll, ,.11111;1<. ~·1·111, ·1 t -----------1 158 •ounnr1 kilr h 1rt bJ11n Ht O. Q\\'~f'.:R IPa1·1n:?". S1\'Jtll l~"OI h1!l11r d tnhl<'S. fl l lJ C II Laguna Beach t ~>I.IX 113 C·2 ZONt: d$h1\·shr, lots of {'(luntl'r \1•lr h i.1[!--0-:\!at1r pool 0\\'N~:H BOUGHT ll1\:-.C I l\1•1HJ-.• P · I I I I •I " S 1 "\ ~ 111<'"'""" I 011(' ol !a.~! du11•n lo1\·n parer!~ spacl', p;1s~ out lo pa1io. C'IJl'Pr. dl'lightful patin ;•n'1 l"ll'C't 11s · lC r.•0111, -Cl' ,,,... 1 11 :i.n1 • " ... high blcx:k \1all. Jus! 2•~ y;;r rd. 4 &dmon1s, f;;rmi!y sto1y ll<'puhlic h11n1•· J11r ll· !'Urn1sh1•d 1nn1h•l l1nm1·1~ l):-i lor dl'Vt•loprn1'nt. yrs De\\'. Truly executive ron111. drn. Jargf> roo1ns rnf'diatP salt·. l 1u111:~t·u all', &\LI·: TJllS \\'J::F:I..:. I ·family living, $•10.995, thruout, Brk. S 3 7, O O O, 11·1th f1in1111.J rl 11111h,:, u1:1• R.10-3900 or 830-7900 I' 1llage Re~I Estate g.12-2;i6L fainily mo1n 11·11h hr!'P ·1r ('. CONTEMP0- 11·rt h:ir. l<11'i.:1· 11111.1"1· GREEN RIVER Q\VNER trans. J bt'drooin.~. ht'.'dronin .'\llrl l~Jl'll•i lor. · dC'n. dining: roon1. 11,1t11r:d loon. !'.::>.:pertly 1Jrf'nrnll'd ll'ood cabin{'\!>, picture 11•in-.,,.,..~.,.~~""~""""!J I I fl S lj,9;{1. CALL;, 4 5 -,~ 4 2 ~ , 962-4471 ( ~::.) 546-81 Ol ( ;p·;d Fv1J1ilv P;o!'k l\IONTl!l.Y ~PACF: RJ·:NTAL f'RQ~l sr,<J ~II' = COOL OFF NOW! do\i·s. popu ar ef'n!ra oor ~OU I JI CU AS T plan. Buillin r ange & oven. H.I::ALTORS. A ere.it l:1n1il,v 1·or11munl1y S BR + POOL Sll·im pool. Park like ya1·d.1 _____ ~-----11•ith ron1fort & luxury fnr $37,900. Bkr, $24.!KXJ, 962-&%.J. Newport Beach L:1rgc ho111e in xlnt arC'<i. O'"'NE-r. rl 1 S h 1 ------~----. .., ~. esjX'r<i r .. pan1s POOL f'.;eiv ii·/w .~hag_ rarpel!I llnd Arc hes, bcautiiully de.sign"<l lols of fresh paint. fircplHC{', honie, slep rloll·n lii·ing all buillins, H&~' + low roorn. 4 bl'drooms, Jen. mainlf'nanec hark yard. Subn1it. Call 8~7-1221. larnily ronn1. lan1ou~ i::-ard,'n kitc hf'n. Brk. S 3 3, 7 5 0 . 846--0001. B'l' 0-.~nl'r. assun1<' lo t"llA. 3 BR, 21 ~ BA, lam nn., <'Ii'<' 1TI41 Bear h Rlvrl., JI.A. b!tns, crpt~. drps. rl!n .. nn rnr boalf!rlr. !)6.~3~13 ('l'f'!i Ideal hornl' 1n pnnlC" l/,1rlior !li,r.:hl;u1t1~. ~ SJ»t<'1ous BH., lan1. rm , ~1 , hath~. scp. launr!ry rn1. h:1 lchl'n bllns .. cptfdrps. & a spa rkling hc.-atNI pool. $14,000 THE POINT <'Ve!j•nne. IJX"1frd 10 min rnst of Anahl'in1 nn !!"1"' R ivrrsirle F"'·y. Takl' C1'f'•'n River off-r amp a<11arf'1Jt lo Cr('rn Rivrr G<i11 r fl11r"('. 4!lll l Grf'f'n f?i\•t>r !)r Comna * • 714 /i:li <::74 LIDO PARK NEWPORT BEACH E. 17th St., Costa Mes• Tu11 \u..:anurl, !ow 1lnw11 11.5'.f '~pcnl1ahle relurn P.l'nlnoonucs, Bk1·. 675-6700 Condominium• fo~ ••I• 160 O:lndo. J AR. 2 Oa , r>rl 1'1~" entry, \.\•l 1.:11·. N ll/1·l1•.111 oven. \I 1·1~>1·o·d 11'1rrlrnbt> 11.....,r~. ! ·,.1 1r·d 11···11 nnrl air/rollrl !'•••I .t 11·<T1•iit1on area. ~1 1111• 11r>o•d l.111d~1'<1[l- ing S "\ 1·1 ... .11• •f"11 t1lf' i::arnga ')!•1_1,11 Ir~ SfiOOO do11·n. '\H;l :'fl r,,,. 1110. C;dJ 8Ji~J.ll! llkr. Oupl•xes/Units sale 162 $26,950 Irvine f::.;rlus1vr> B.i!hoa J~l'n111~u1.1 Pn1nl. 1111p1·,..ss1vf' 4 RH .•. ~ h11 ltl~, ''"lr1 l;1r.::P l1v. r n1 . & hu1.;r ,,.,,I() l:1m1lr r1n H1•:u11 1·1•1li11r:!'. ~I " ~ ~ i 11 r frplr .. J:1r·:.:" pa110, Shrl\1n hy :ipp L Si~. 7)°!. Brriut1ful mobilr h11111r. 1~:1r· rilll1y furn 1~hrrf. 2 f\f'<ln>111n. 1 ar~f' l1vin1? room. pat11 1 pri· \'air hl•arh & rl11h hvu-.· mealiB.Aa Lovrly 3 Bit, 2 BA . J.l;is xl ra 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 lrg kl1<'h & ran1 nn. l.1its ofl1 ~hag rrptg, .ell s1zrd hedrn1s. NEW LISTING J\l u~I sai·riftr·f'1 Call ~1241 ·, INCOME HOMES Hnvl1mr l..1·;1\'(' nlf'~~.1 :.:•· j ~E\V LlLl'l.l.'.\l·.S Si.'!.!l~ll _:_ir h <lfl''r;llrir ,\1':\I/ THJPLJ-.:XJ· .. -; $67,9".() PENNY PINCHER ISO• Back Bay View ! J~Juff<; .'!-:!'~ Condo, On fllt"· IUJ'C'~Ue b;:iyfront St'{C\udc<l cul-1ff>.sar. L.ivi.~hly u11gr11rl- f"d, 11· n<'I\' CTJ>ts. 11a1lpal)C'r, ln::111 l1xl t1rl'.~. fr('sh pa111r. J:,,·1~"1 n1:irkrl. 01111er. ~.·11.i:ll, fi 1·1-.1\4 19. I B ayshores ----~.·----- 1 3 BR .. 2 P.a., d111 rn1. r·11.01. I Fountain Va lley fn,·d yard, 2 1·;1r gar. i\Hn. 3 Bn. 2 1 ·~ ha1h.~; la1111l.11 rm SJ.400. do1111. Selit"1"4l'lll p~1y In thr popul;1r 1 .J ~1nn1'd ii•· buyer's loan c·liarges. i\1on!h-1'1'lop1nl·n! of Un1v••rsl1y ly $23.J. rover!! ;ill, Park. Come & sC'C 011.~ ('ALL e . 6411 ·l 414 Cl '~Tiil l11i1l! Vrig.dJond ~l \GO, ... J1:1l: c-pl , rus1n1 dt'pf>. :.! Br .. '!. Bii., d1•n, 11•·! h;1r', p ·fl : 1\/( ', IJtl•"T ;11 h1l l p1 l1 N<l111 und"r ti;ns1ru<'t1on at 1'.11 1';. Rn.v i;1, Co!!la Mesa. ('11rnpl1 •!" .l11h ~4:!--1:1(1;,. . ' Classified Ad 3 LINES • 2 TIMES Any Item Price d -$50. or Less (If more ttl1n one Item, the combined tot1I cannot excMd $50.) 642-5678 <'l'Pl shu111'rs ,t, 1!rpc. JJcr O\\':'\EH rnust S<'ll. Assun11' k it J,n1v L~r. hold. 67.~0.~10. I S·',' · apr Jo;in. lu1\' ~hllrp, clean homr today_ Offl'rrrl ror $4.1,500. lNCLUU· ING TIIE LAND, Capistra no Beach ', A('f{E. ·1 Hit 2 RA, 22('1(1 ~IJ fl. •'Pl~. h!1n~. 1::1r. S:!'.1,:ffi. :'f,1112 l\l1Jn!f'r1'_1. 01\nrr, Corona del Mar ~~~i~: <l-1. n1onlllly payments, large f 111111.v n11orn, rn1y '1i>n, 4 t~'flrnon1 ~. u~l'd h r i c k hrk. S?.l . ."l(Kl. 8·12-66:11. I' 1llage Real Estate 531·5800 ( ::::.) 531·5100 0\\':-0:[-R !rans. 3 be<lroonis !:.:_ Do }'OU have SJ.500, lo put dPn, di1unr: roon1. fr1mily do11·n? Can you afforrl $235. n'lfnn \'.'I th hands om<' per nionth? ~!ov(' in loday~ 1111tur:il b r i c k fin:-pla<'e. 3 BP., p;i111•ll'cl d('n, family 1lob 1Jrllil, -- -1 l.rullor natural \\-"Ood pa n e l in g, area. 2 tiled BA. 011·ner \\"ill "SINCE 1946" rlf'i'Or:itor 11•allpaf)f'r. patio, install c<U"Jl('ls of your Jst We~ern Bank Bldg. I3rk. SZ1,900, 962-5566. C'holCf'. University Park, lrvine 0 -2-Roberts & Co. 962-55 1 I D•Y• 552-7000 N;ghts DECORAT R'S 3 Br. Ba. f'xtra.c, up!'rark>s . .chag crpt. NEAR Brar·h • JWnutiful lrg 1::::::::========1 drps. f11Jlr, pat\O. B y 2 BR, rlin Hm., f'rpts, NEW LISTING A,;.aM11t. 7°!r.A LT Y Nt•r Nt.,porl Poir l Ofrltt EASTBLUFF EXECUTIVE ESTATE 1Jnhl'l1rvahll' h.11f ai re 11· :l2 !n'l'S sur1l1unrlu1g th(' prvt- l1('~t yunl y(Ju'll l'Vl'r .~l'f'. :i BR, 3 BA, 2100 Ml ff. \\'ha! more can we say! Ruy app'I onty -Call ffl-1050. B•·.1ut. el!Jll~<'. h1"1 J:ol••I. Jltt·1111i, )W•tin:i, i·:1rd r n1 ... ,\ p<lfll !ht ~. f,12-1:;-;f), ---• :'llOVl\G ~ :-0:,··1rly n1•11 [)()UBLE "•irlr Flaminio mo h ll l" hom f', Jla g evcrylhing. Set up ln n 11·t> fan11ly park. Prr,.. OK. SS.'.iOO 531-7291. ---~---,....---1971 K1rk11·ooJ 2 1xf.O 101\· * RARITY * Sharp 2 bdrnt. hnmf', North of l]11·y,, 011 n .2 IOI. NC"ll'IY pain!C"d 1n & out; spric·1ou.~ l~ving rrn .. ea!ing ar('a in kt!!'h.: 1m1T1{'d. po.~Sl'SS. Sl-1.~iOO. 011 nf'r. S:\a.000 ( 7 1 4 ) drapes, dsh/11·sh .. rnc patio. 96 .. o•i. h.. d · kl 127 500 2 Bdnns. & rlen JI arbor Vic\\" BACK B..\ y • 3 BR CONDO. dwn, rakt> o 'paymrnts, v-,)J.< ..,._-a ut . yr . sprtn er. , . 1 89;i...1-93 GREf'N B k 11 FV 4 962-2194. I-Jome. Expensively dcrorat-$26,250. Dshwshr., frpl., ncr ot .•. ;1 ··~-~- l'llr- • • -' roo -onie, · · 'C"7e="'Cco-~.,---,,-·I ed, 1\'i\h many l'X1ras. Pv!. pal1'1, 2 i':ir i.:ar., s11•1m 1970 L:1nc('r WxfiO~ ln1\' rl"·n., Rlirm., 2 Ba., family and * 4 BR. 3 Ba. 2 story. $ha ~ $52 500 I 61 , · 110'' take o 'paymf'nts, chOil"(' IOI. MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675-6459 :T':,,l::,:":;:~·j:;:~:ll:o~:':"::~=·=~=;="=:o:( =~=l~="=j~:;:~:rno:':· =;....,,=·=·=~~:i:.l:e::s:to:ry::. ::;;,.:':~:~:":':~:":":':5:.:;:,r:::s:c:h:;:;ool:s:::&;I &Sn red h·111 J1~,~~ ~~:~:~~):.;;,lnl yo1:: u~~~:~;; mob1ll' }\Onlf', adul! \!fJ REAi.TY ~~1~~ c7~~~H~1~c~~·r:~~~1ly I ~~~:5oo~i~7~~: Jiunt. a. $©\\Ji}}A.-~£tfS" The Puzzle with the Bui/f.fn Chu ckle O l!eorronge letter5 cf The lour JCrombled wDrd1 b.- low to form IOI.It Simple W01d1. ~' ...., 1 _o ~O, ~p r..-E ..... T, -jl ! l A new fame may be hot stuff but lke old one knows V 0 C I N E i -1 I lwha!'s - hsr-~,,,....,,-,,~. -,~7c--rl -j Q Complete fhe (hvclle q..,oted o by foUinQ: In !lie mo»Lng word . YOll dtv•lop from Jlep No, J beki ..... e Pll:!NT NU~B[RfO LETTER~ t l IN 1Ht:SE SOUA,[S ti \JNSCl!AM8 LE l£TTERS 10 GET ANSW[' SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION BOO Univ. P ark C1•nrcr. lrvlne Call Anytimr. Rl1-0M20 Qf(ir(' hours R AJ\1 to 8 PJ\1 BY (),.,·ner 3 BR .. fam nn., Plan 1, Broadmoor Turtle Rock. Lancls ca ped & sprinklt>n:. Rn-2798. UNIVERSITY Park, J)('roratrd 3 BR, 21, ba,, F'nm Rm ., Pr of . landscap('{f. lro-009J. BEST Buy, 4 l'Jr. 3 ba. fam, Tur1lcrock, nr schls, 147,400 l.o <in pyml, ownr 8.1.1-2929 Laguna Beach .. sl!AtH HOUSE $29,500 Qu::iinr hnn1r 1lN"11: cl115t' !n Be1un ccil '~ .. fir. I() C'('il, lrpl(" •• piclure window, N>I .. \Oo'A~ht-r. J Hr \\'/bath. 11\ISSION H.EALTY 494--0731 a.acbfront-Great View 2 BH. 2 HA , O"'·n-Your4)"'·n 11pt. Pool, ('11•\•utor, "C(·ur1ty. O"·nrr "'Ill 11'.'n ~r. J4fi.50l1 Bkr 21:?: $119-.'iZ!'a. 714• .ot9'J.3Cm. $68,SOO F~rarr s.11. H1· lf11 111 r l'ruu·. llrtl\ \<'111 ~1r\ IJ11pl\ Z'.Hh St : l\r 11p l: il<)11·11 C11ll h·l<'-1. :1 '" t.lf· 0712 Income P rope rty * 6 UNITS * JN t':,\~-rl :Ll 'f"I-' 166 •• '75-&0SO 0 W M'l'IEM!ll U...& 1.1 U N I TS. Jn1n1aculale, f.a.~lsidr, clO!le in. Bargain. f'hLI S:1l hv:1n, R r 11. It o r . ~'>\.4761. 28 Unll·N .. Shop"g. 2 & :l BR, :.! lla. !!ZJI Elll.s AvC', 110. $420 ~1. Ml-3957. P1KlS Ill . IJ ,,.,. ~A., Xl'"t::) 6-17·2'-» ' • .. ,. ' \ ' ' , • r-OUft,PL.f.:X aJI :! B1. I HSI. In(' $.i70/r»O. no dn VA . CrtV $~2 000. Nr OCC. 5.)7-6151 --Industrial Property 161 32 UNITS • '""rh""d3". Junr 1 1q1,. TI !TtE~ Arch l Sity r~·nl11J, 111!<.l•ll•· ()f Juflf' t hn1 Jul) Jl 2 BR t-J)US(', $1~ .,..1;, '.l \1k 1111n!llllJrll 4~1.l---1 !J'.l. f-PHrt~ ,t· hf'r:C"~"'~· -- Newport8each F REE!! Landlor d t ·Ow.ners \\ 1• "Ill n ·lo•r 1 .. 11:irll.~ !11 \·Ou ~'p,J-;V nt 't111r1;1· •.. \111ny o j,.~11·;1l ·lo· !0 •11;ot1IS 1,j, !Jill' A LA Renta ls e 64S-3900 I ){ l " - ' ,, '>...: ,,, ,,_ _.< 305 Apts. F u r n. 360 Apt. Unlurn. M esa V1rd e , :: tor-, 2 b11, 1;11111~ J HI. 1 .. ·.1st• SJlk.I 1Hu or ,,..JI -M ission Viejo --~-~-----·I Gener•I C:o s1• Mes• WEEKLY HIDDEN VILLAG E APTS. Executive Suitet. Hom•like"" Living '2080 Newport Blvd. f•milies Welcome! Cust• Me ia 2 BEOR.OOM-2 BATH I·'()/: 0a~1·, .: Hr.'..' t'.u I 642-261 1 From$159 365 A.pt_ Unfurn . Huntington B••Ch :! BDIL\l., :·<h<1.g crpts .t-clrp.~. Sl5Q m<1. ('htl(lrt<n 0 1\. :-.u 2 Ul{ Apl, <:JoS('d };:.II ('r1ils, Llrp~. Cluhl & ~111. po 1 (,;., $145. X47·:l940 -----111•L'. tliill~"·. p;1t ... t•·11°,11 STUDI OS & 1 BR'S t 'arpet:-• Draoes ·Ai r Conditioned · J~n<:los· Over 2 aer1·s ol f':u;y !ivi ni::. NEED \td 1,;dk 1 .. \1 hl·. :-Oi. l"'t ~ 1 • •Jt l·.I· '·'''''''' t•d 11al1 os . J-I Catr>J Pool • Forced Air }-feat • _..,, I 1111 "i' ,vonr , 111"' SJ!... 111n ,. -g"-'ut>n apar1rn••nl:< 111•Ar 1 .. 1, 11 <1lil •nr ~~1~ '~OJ n10. X:''i-~llil • t'HEI·: 111111111." (';1 r port & Storage. ~!:i ul~~10~:u;1:;'~ l'~lt~i~n I THE BLUFFS A LA Rentals e 645-3900 ·: 1:r:. :: ftdh, l;1n11!.v ini, • ~ ull hilt 11•·11 2SOO South Salta, Santa Ana 546-152 5 Laguna Beach * NE\V :.! HI~ -b!k 10 l.N':.i•·h. 51-'t-·tta-.:ui:.r vu•1,, S2:ll up '193-3383 or 494-23::ti on lS'J', clov.'n. r-.1ay ,., JUNE THRU SEPT. 1,;,11", r1 'H1•·d 1;ud \\11 h·r • tl•'<ilt·tl l'wl ~entcr 2blks \V.ofRri stol.o ff\Va rne r on chant't', Listed r r i 1.1,. ("(, .. 11 l1\111i.; i.:<df 1uu1•li. n" r1 .. ·1111~' I l1r· 11r • '"'l ,,.,1 :-.o fK'IS. A1•:oil .July 1-.1. • l"1 un1lry Fa<'1l1t1•' Linda Way, sou th to \V. Central) --- I -000 II I l«'I" f!O .. ,n.,k·· ., nr ' l'J( !111'1C'! 1111! Hll I --1~·:, ~2.1~/ll~I. 71·1 1{1::.1 Pi'\ • rv t,, n1a1d ·"'JV .. , ... 1 •14:1, , ca our nve11trn rnr · · -· ' ' ______ _ Divlsion, 546-HiOO. fu rn . 1 .. i.:J(I rnr• AL A Rentals e 645-3900 Newport Beach • l'h•u11· S.·1>·1c.-VILLA MARSEILLES LAHGf: nv'>J•·rn 'J Bit. 111· IX""ach. Adulls, no p<>t~. $16:1. n1n . .;.+1-:t1:~1. * ?>1 -1 CORNE R + \~'i lh older house. l~rirnf" location, Costa l\1l'slt Cor bin·l\f n.rrin Rerll!or~ 644-7!i62 Of li-12-:il'.\.~:l I """ "'" .1""''' 1 1 . I I *-$30 -WEEK-&-UP-* SPACI OUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. I ·1-1 !!'''!-B k· ..._,,,' 1·:111111\' -' H1 111., I-------------'-' '" rii i t I 1r;1 ,11, 1 i.:;,1• ,..1,1. 1,..1 .. 1:1111('\'IJ.JUS' _ ~/':"' H;i•·h • !-.tutJ10 & I HI~ J\pl-. F urn ished & Unfurnished L!l>f) Islt'-1 Bi~'l-BA--,..,°t1Jk \~1111 Furn ,\IJ urd pd s11 ·1 e TV & l\1<11d :->.·r>·u·t• J\\;t1l Adu lt L iv ing lroni pnv beo··h/1·l uh ll n A LA Renta ls e 645-3900 ALA Rent<'lfs e 645·3900 • l'!1nn•' ~1·1v1,·t·~Jlt 1I l'or"d Oi;;:h\\lash er co lor ('Oordina ted ;:ipplian ccs 4 nual or hv mn. f.7'.l~!\JJI. 1 • 1·iii111rr11 & Pet St..•\·t1 .. t1 J::»Jush shag cnrpet . n1 ir rored \\'ardrobe doors· :-;1ngli·s --'' 1 Br u111i$Ti:i-:-t f-'. 7. I ~1'"' II' ~ Br. 1111 11'1 XUHLll\1FT ·~ Br :.: 1:11, lrpl. :t:•,71; N"llJJlll'I nJvrl, C\1 indirect Jighti n~ in kitchen • breakfast bar • ()o ·<'•ir• V11•11' $125 11 111 1_.,r dq)J pai111 i11;:, ! "1''PS '" to.•;,.'h' l~:'.fl \·r1y ~1•1~:1i:i:-1 1'r ~;1: ... :1~~;7 huge private fen ced pJli o • pl ush landsc:ap- Rent-A -House 979-8430 J ALA R e nta ls • 645-3900 ALA R e n tals • 645-3900 ---;:foTIDAY-PLAZA-in~ . brick Bar-bc-(Jues. large heated pools ---------- Mesat'erd• UJ-:LUXt: 2 & '.: flf. 2 f'r1c l ~1u· $1"1:> up. Rf'ntal lH<'. :iu~J5 t.1:H·e A v e., 5--1\i--1()}1. Newport Beach Lota for Sale HoUU s-U~fu r~-305 I S1111:lr·s ' :; Br_:: H:1 ,1·11,.1 r:a r·. l .\11~) --ll111·i-. B:1 .1' Sp;11 + J)~;LU.'\t; :-;p:11·on11 s r RH . ,\;_ lnna L Air conditi onin.c. 170 k id~ pi•t..: •ll( .l\ICI< '\l';i1 I 1.1111 1·111 , ::1, na . 11111 lq11 .-. ftll·n Rfi\. :S.l ~j l!1 •:d 1•d rioo i. 3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana 557-S200 General ALA R enta l!. e 645-3900 J i••JI ... . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . .. . J\n1r1.--. r~1rk1n~. Adult~ -COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on the bay Liquidating: 1-4 rt-2/ft..:l Jurs. Near ocean, 1•lean & ready $6,950 ea. Pos. lf'rrrls 673-17.'!4 Mot.m1•in, 09s1rt,. Resort 174 I 2 Lots. secludf'<1 S2.4:iJ Moonritl~ cabu1 .~15.7.'il Lakeside cabin $:!5.fXKJ Call 866-4641 or \vrite: Spencer ReaJ Estatc, P . 0 . Box 2828, Big Bear Lake, Calif. F'mntial I~ Business = • RENTALS Hou•••* Apt1. * 645 -JJ111 * I I s 12:, -!!.'irl•11' \'11·11 '1 + r~.rn ni> Pt'ts. 1 ~11;;; Pon1ona "'1'r . MANAGING AGENT $1'.llt r '.HJ Pd, l.r1: 11;,. ·h .. lull rn 1. 11 pl< . i.:ar. ,\rd, p1Jt1P. ( · '.\I. [lllllJ!!!'l••l!!J!iii!!!!!!ii~i!!!j!!!!i!j~ii!!!lll!l!!!l!!!l!!!!Jlll!!!l_l I "' 1 1 I 11 , Ill Luxury •~rur1n11•n1 l1v1ni.:. n\" " · "~1• ''. ,. 11 ' P'' \ · · l'•'I pri1 I. 11111, lf•·I~ . . ... . -· A I U fu 365 A U I 365 l ll_iO ·; nto" .,111,v \1i·s;1 NU-VIEW RENTALS St:::1F\!fJ_ lJJ, 111u i. h111 P • n rn. pt. n u rn. ,·i·lwkini-: th1· 11•a1rr. 1:.:nJV> \ I ' "I I II ~l'ft:!'ll fJoJJTh, ('OJJ \Jil $T:i0 000 h1··U1h Sjl'L 7 ~\\'Ill)• P!'! •', r•H'" ~ ~r, ~1 1 r" f!).'., !i7.~-40:1U <1) -1:1.1.·:2-1~ 1-----------1 Costa Mesa ' · ' · '' · ~pl~. drps. g;;r •.... , •....• furn. !1111 pool. 1\dlt<, r1n Corona dtl Mar 1u111g IXXJls, 7 ll!;hh'•I !I'll· sr :.::, -2 Hr, ]J'pl1, IH';Hn~. 111.VIN~: '1'1•rn10•1>-i:;-r;1<•1ousl~ pl'!S. 1 St•as0n·~. :?.1j9 Nrt ll lS 1'0Urls, plus ni1 ks of 1111 11~ .. iril. 1., ~id•·.......... !krnr.11rr1 !.1n1ilv 1io111f'. 1 _n_.1_1 o121iw;~~:! DELUXE h1l'y~l1· r1·;11ls, pull ing, sh11f 433 W.11th COSTA ME SA ~~r, 1\T,.~:1 \'•·rrl•' : l3r 111 Hr, 11, f~A , :: frph•, r1:i11trlrg Sl'A<:IUUS-h,-c-h-,·l-,.-,-1 11~Jv APARTMENTS lli·boanJ. 1Toqut'I .. !u111or I's H:i, ld1n~. r\11 ··pt..:, 1Jrp.;, .1;11·11 $:i.i0/1no1 , I) IV n ('I' r11r·n. 11•/1v 1'rfl'"·· ,,1:-r bl tn~. ~~;. J\ir Cone! -~~rp1•''$. 3 S1vim· fl\1111 llti•t.:10 n1ontlily; :~!so I S140 -2 Illt, 1 1 ~ B,\, hltn.~. ('l'pts/drp:., r;riv p;1l lH, ~u1I pet ok. i:;a1', .1·r'd, patio, .\lril llini ~;'?-_0_3!l0_. _ 11r fr1\'.\'" s, ~hvpg. StJllalil•• ..., rn111).: Pools -l lentth !'pa -and 2-l.H·rirooin plans 11rHI out , . , , ....... , ... , . , , . . . . . L~E or flpl. ~pa•· 2.JflO ~1. 11 r.1r wnrlon~ ;1dt1l1. l\o fJf't~. 'l"·nr11s Crts -Ctimc-& 1-slory 1011·n house~. Elri-· NU.VIEW RENTALS 4 RR. S4~. 2204 Donnie Rel. :,.1: ..... 1:-.~l::. ll1 U1ard Roon1. tnl' kit,.111·rls, IH'l\'ii!l' pa111ls N.13. Avl 6/26. 642-2GSJ. I _B_ I'. !·'urn. ;ipl., lilt! tllC'l'(t l , 20BNR.~.:CRESu-• l BEDROOJ\l fir b:1Jconi.--.s, C':1rpr:(1ng, 1lra-fi7::.qn::o 11r 1~14-::21.1:> .$140 -UTIL PU. F urn l 1-~R ---------- duplex, enr·J gar, huge fncd i::ASTS!Df·:. :t Hr. 1', Fla , yrd. E /sidf' C.ilf. h!lns. washcr & 1lryrr. l:ir.gf' ~·:i rd. 1S ): 2(j Trrt' shudf'd $169 -.'iPAC/OliS :: Br.'..! HM, I dt•ck 1v/P.DQ_ Fish [)Ond. '2 nr OCC. bltns, •·p1/drp.5, 1·:0· dP111••!it'll gar .. 11 111'.v ;1,·- • ..-....... A: '"'urn. 1-'ROtlr Sllia p1•nt'11, Subll'rranean p;i.rk-J BR Condo. $2i!5 int·l's S\i iin :->1ni:;le '-rorkin)( Tr1an only. . ·. r!('/S. :110 :-,1r:adoii·lilrk Ln., Fll'eplaces I pnv. p8.Uos. MEDITERRANEAN 111;: w1lh (•lrva1ors. l)p!loin:.il pool, l1rt'pl.. <b:h\\·shr., Jl\'I. Pao'-T · Co lnt'I Bldst n1a1d st•rviC'C', Just north of 'J (', \l. 646-7?23 afl 6. "'-~n "' ennlJI n -VILLAGE f)<ll lO. A_i;1. 6-l~.-~.. V I-"' 000 o-' ---Cd'I ""2611 r·ashio11 Island al .lttn1hon ·I' ---.")u11 .. h111<' '1. 1-fi Pi\1. .,..,a .-. .. 11:-, " .,....... 3 BIC. 11-, B;,,. Sr"t"-~ 11J I (MacArthur nr Collst Hwyl ~100 JJ3rbor Dlvd., C.~1. and San J oaquin I/Ills Hoad. he;1('h. S.'\00 n10 yf'irrb. * Sll:i * (714) $57·80'l0 Trlephonf' 1n <1\ G44-J!J()() for rental informution ' 1'3. ',' - BEUl\UU.\J I'/ lo; 1 Ii.' hf' n privil. I! II urf~i. C1dl %2-7j2Q <•It 6 pn1 Ol' 1111 tl<ly wro.:k••!l(l !).[*~:EPJ :\'(;· -,-m-hl-,-,-n-1pl~yr1l 11)1!/l l.rll'r :111, nr 17th & Jr.·1rw, ('\1 1 F.a"/mt1. ti 16-87\fi. 1~11'•'ly Jun" Ur l'ri. •!\I. & bfl . ·rv, i;::tr. rr1~. Su1tl\tJl1' fnr r1u.~. 111 ;1n fi4 5·•[l54. \\'1)M/;N 11111 n·nT :1 1111'" lri;: 1Wm I•• r«lll'l 'OI l:1d.v. ][0111 " ,,n.... ln1•I, ,·ur p o r!. ~:li .J IS'.' --------"()UN<._; n1arr1rrl rouple Im., r·~•ll1 ,(, l..1!1 !\I'll (H'IV f•·r ~Ill· o1 .. n1 $...i 111n. rr1• 1>11. h-[1-l{):\.'1. ------ftfj{J,\·!S SL• 11'k 11p 1•ll;1 (. S.'.'.O 11 k up Ari$, :'i 7fi r\f'11•port Blvd, C'.'11 54:.:-!l7JJ. -- ('[)\! rurn. r n1, h111h, p1 !V. 1·11!r11r1e1•, patio, q111l·t. rion- s1nnk1•r. $7~1 rno. l\73-6Hl7. • \{f'l'('l IJ-:N pnvl. SfiU nin. 2ui1 .\11111'r s1 ., c·o,1:1 \1 ,.~11. '.\f•·n Only! C111l 89J--;';3i0. l"UHN. r1•1111 1r1 Costa '.'11<':>R n1ee & qu1c·I honH•, for 11·orkJ11g n1an. G4'l~17!l-1. Room & Board 405 \\'A~T}J): fen1<i l1• ('Olll'~f' sturll'nt f11r sun1nH·r in ~x r·ha11g(' for 1l;1ily •·ar<' of hoy f., ;!11'1 ages 11 & t:: + Sl\lary of $7U Pf'I' nio. (h1'n r o o n1 ,.,./re lc ph -On (', sewing n1at"hinP. dcsk & typev.•ritcr. \\'all.: to beach. t::ves &. \I knds frr('. Mu~f have own t·ar. Non-smoker. 644-2005 aft 6 1,n1. fam1 ly/s1nl{les/pf'I~. C'f'SS. $Z']:1 \1n, iPilS!', \\'alf'r __ paliL J\1•.,il f.--1. ~,:,O-Tifi).!_ Opportunity 200 $185 -PRIV. 2 Br llomf', i\·l ESA DEL :>-'1 1\R .1 !wdrooin frpl, gar, fncd yrd for kids/ t~-.n1c 11 ith t'ill'r<'1s. drap•?S * BARBER SHOP * * 1;7~ .. ~117 * Studio Ap1~ .. 1 Rr. l l'.1:i. PF.CT &: RENTAL OFFICE ----Older adults. No pets ~ · ,\('U L.Alt l~ay 1J!-:LJC l!T~·u 1. !lomt··l!k(' ·l fJ,·ean Vie1v. Hug,. n1>1\' tr1 · OPEN 10 AJ\1 TO 6 P M BR. 21 ~ 'BA. ·ro1\'nhnu"'' i(j)l. Near CtL\f Jl1i;h. &;<1-:-~i.-.o. ~IJ~i Elden. ,\Ii.;r. Apt. G. Irv. luxury 2 ht., :: ha. * LARGE * 01\~: Bdnn. Adult:., no pets. r·rpl<' .• IJ!tn:-: bcani ~'ti .. NEWLY DECORATED Gues1 Home 415 A~~el~?rll~'~:-*PRIVATE ROOM* for ;irnhulatory pr rson. Good food, nice cheerful surround- ings. Pool .t ufih tiC'S included. c!hl gar,, Be:.t' a11';1. S-100 P"r Beau1iful Grounds S\45-Sl~.0. &15·fi424. c:ar:.igl' JllO, _vcl,v. 2SZ2 ~ravit'W. JO Minu1P:> ~o Oc1'1111 + parkillf.: & s!oragr CcL\1. !);1ys ~>7~i600. r:\('S Clo~e to bus linr & slurr<: 320 p<:t. ;111d big ··ov1·rPd pa tio. J-'11 md 1e~ only. C:1nlf'nrt' in-CondominiUms Unfurn. * Call 548--4153 * Wlth 4 chain, cabinets, fix- ture& le equipment. Good lease w\th 5 year optio n. Good Jocalion, nr. Sr. citizens home. 01vner leav· ing area. \\'ill sell for $4.000. Call: 673--3663 !!611----2505 Eves NE\VP ORT I igt!'i -2 + Bar 1'0n1pl. rurn. Creal for Sl\'inging !JflCh('lOr. -327:1. ,·Jurlr"<! al :S27.J. (l!'r month. C;i!I Agi•nt, ~>4\r--4141. General DLX 2 Br furn <ipt, pool, 494--~l'.\:J. _______ G;is J·ll'al & S1ovr . \\'atrr. l'lose tn shops. Adults, nn Costa M esa l;!lragr. Rrr'. /{ni. Laundry }'ur n1shcd /\vai!able SJO--OH 1st tllo's Rf'nf, on yearly Jea sl\ 1vhen you brin;; in this ad. (nr o.c. Summe r Rentals •20 20102 Birch St associated BROKERS-REALTORS 2025 W Balboa 613·]66] ALSO \VE l /AVE OTI IERS: LANDLORDS! Do you hav" a vaeanry? WI' "an fil l i1. Ma ny desirahlr tenants on our \\'aiting list. Absolutely NO CJIARGE. BEACON RENTALS * 645-0111 * EXTf:A 111ee ;; P.r., 2 h:11hs. Lovely p1;1t10, Bltns, \\'.~hr .. 'lAH .. :!BA. '2 :-1111'). <':tt")X·t.~, dryer. Av[lil June 6th. $'.l~-() dr~1 1ws, ;.:n r:1gr. pool. i\li's<t rno ill(•I. i;a r(!f•n,.r. Ven.le V1ll:1~ S'.!00 J110. Burr \V tiltf' ltllr li7:r--4630 __:_''~15--0'.Xll!-"-'---;. ______ _ 2 Bit !..· :: BR, rrpls/d111s. Irvine f'it't'. Jrpl .. J'1•fr!J,:;. STOl'f', p:11 10, bar. fn<'(I .) rd, \\'11s lif'!'. ti 4 6 -6 '.16 I or 6·16-1216- N~:\v plush :t Bil (.-onQo. J\rlul1s. $01.'i. ITIO. ~.Zl-ffi1 2; :-:71-1G06 or :.2~1-12'.l-1 P"1~. Fron1 s1 ;i0. 1 9 ·11 Roorn 1n1•!11dt•d _ l_'o_m_o_n:i. r'\·t. 1 Bl1. $140 Furn. Bachelor & 1 Br's especially nice. 2110 Newport Blvd,, CM, NrCE 1 & 2 BR Trailers. sso & up. !\rature adults, child ok. No J)l'.'ls. fi-12-116:'>. HARBOR GREENS Furnished & Unfurnished :!. BR . SlfiO. $16$, $175 H acienda de Mesa 160 \V. \\1ilson, /\pt. I , C1\1' New Villa Pedro }·11n1ilics \Vclconie u1rport, S. of l'alist1dPs Rd!. f'riv_ p11l 1n, lilll1:11·1J rn1 .. Jacu1.zi. r\r. t.:c 1i·v1ne. __ __:_l\-fgr. 979·HAA9 SEAl'LJ}'f' i\lanor -J BP. Studio. Pool. Crpts. drp~. bl!ns. $150 /unfur n, :SJG:J/furn. A<k ab•)\!i our OCEANFRONT ~ Br:.. 1·Jp~n. 1\·e11.rurn. $200/11k. 170(;•_, \\'. 0.:-<>an- fron!. NB. Agt. 67J-1972, C\'t'S £75---J(J7J. ~~-B/I Y \·1 E \V ., tx>dl'oom , sleeps '1 comple!l'.'ly furnish- rd. J\1·ai1 June to Sept. S7.:lt pr n1on1h. Ad ul ts onl}· rigrnt. 67; .... '19~(). SHOPPING CENTER FOR LEASE. Z·I stores in Nev.·port Beach. Call Division of lligh1\'ays. Mr. Hancock, 213;620-3:J14 J une 1st, 2nd & 5th. tram 8 to 11 AJ\1 unly. FREE RENTAL BOOK LAH.GE .~ Bit 2 RJ\, cTpls, Th<'re are several ~'\Xld son1t> Ur~p"s. priv yard, h o m e i; for rent for }!'llr'. All u1il pd $250. Orange approximalely $200 p er Avr. & 16th 642--0531'1. New li.~ting REDUCING SALON Holl•nd Bus. Sales "TI1e Broker \\'i1h E mpa1 hy" 1716 Orang!" Avr., C.l'o1. 64.')..-4170 540-0fiOR t'Vf'C:. SM Spls\\T Hi 1 -Htr5. ~sent Costi.: Mesa loc 1 yr. Reas. :rent, 548--4775; 968-0770. Investment OpportU'1 ; ty 220 month. St o p by ll n d hrow.se tl1ru it. You miJ?"ht rind v.·hat you'I'!' looking for. C WA Ll(lR & IEE Real ro~ 27~ 1-Jarbor Blvd. at Ad<in1~ Cost11. Mesa, Calif. LANDLORDS! \\'e SpeclaJlze in Newport Beach e Corona del Mar • & Laguria. Our RentaJ Ser· vicf' is FREE to )'ou! Try Nu-Vlei.,.! PLANNING a h e a u ti r u l NU.VIEW RENTALS rest,.,ran1 & shop in Cd'.\1 673·'1030 or 494·'.124.~ on al,000 ISQ-ft. or proµcrty $190 .J\1onth. ·• f!f'droom. On r--·t Jh y·, ·,r .'~" wo"ld '-"-" '" N1".•oly de('(lra ted inside and likc to participate ~ a out. No Fec, 842-6691 or lim ited partner ( S 1 0 . 0 0 0 9G2-556G. min. inve!llmenl). Call for ---------- info. 644-7.'lS~. Corona del Mar Monty to Loan l40 1st TD Loans $275 -2 Br, frple, hlt ns. nu c•pt, dn Js, ~ar, y rd, pat io. 21 ~ bl ks 111 bch _ .......... . S:lnO -Lrg :I Br 11pp<'r, 1111 shag •pl, h!!ns. 1 hlk !u H unt ington Ueach *WE have a large :;election or 3 and -4 bedroom homes that can be moved in!o almost immediately on our Rell t•Opt i on pla n, SHER\VOO[l RE A L 1' Y , 5411-8555 NE\\' l-l1111t1n&'lo11 B e a c h , :i.000 sq. fL •I Br., J ba .• h<JllUS rm.. Olympk sz. flO'lL S 4 2 5. 1131~30--'.'~i N(J\\''. J Hr, a! Pae S:1nd ~ VrplC', patio, l1Hn~. 11/w :-hag:. rnhana 1·lh. \\'alk 10 Ocl'o.n. Ren! or Option. 1199. '.'1'.16--7!'11 1, ~341 i\1 unstt'r. 11 .B. :1 Hr. 'l b:i. bl1n:s. <lrps. \1'/\V «rpt. fncd. dhl go.r11gf', Nr schl & c:hop'J:: re ri L f' r. Rrp;iinted. S2'.J(). %2-4 ~!1 1 , :1 BP.. CO:'\DO, J 1 ~ BA, poolc:. pn!H\ dhl ~il r. frpL 11r Of'f'RT1. !)t;l---0!):.lS ;ifl '.'1 pT11. Duplexes Unf'urn. 350 LRG n1cf'ly furn. 1 l}r. F.n<·I gar. Quiet. Arlul!s. ~~!~, 2452 Eldf'n /l\'c, fi46-276S. Corona del Ma r BRASD NE\V-Avail. From $120 to $215 m o Ba chelors e 1 Bdrms 2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrms 11/:z or 2 Full Baths 1n .I BEDftM. furn. U!il1t1c11 pd June. l fugC" dlx 1_nvn(f['',;; $12.'.i/rno. Ar!ultc: 01~lv 532 unit. 3 BR. 3 BA. 1',irep!ace. •·r,·• Crnter St. ::.1S-::ro7G. !llaster si7.e bedrooms \v/ hl1·inc:. J~ sq Jc. + :; h igh beam cei lin~s. large decks v.•/\·ic\I' of b.1y, Z l-lP.. -Uhl. paid. l ivin~ roorn \\·tgas or ocean, & hills. \\'all; to b<·h '2277 J\1apl<' SI. \\·ood burn.i11,_r: fii·eplncc. :.1:-:-:t.n:~ Convf'nient laundry area & shoppin~. l :\'r lsf'. $425. orf klt.:h1'11. Enclosl'd pa- H.f'fs. requirf'd. 6i3·0960. Huntington Beac:h t 1oo;. ;: s1\'imrning pool~. 2 UR, 2 BA. dq>~. \1'/w, frpl•·. :;ml patio. \\'alk lo beaL"h. Adults, no pets. S2'.?5/mo. Yearly. 6-12-8520. ----r ~ I Ap,ir rrnP•>h lo• R~"t ~ _, Apts. Furn. 360 General A Bald New Concept FURNITURE RENTAL -.-!<lonth to 1'fon1h LaQUJNTA HERMOSA sattna. recreat ion !acil!- l iP:s. Security guarcl. Spanish Country E state Liv-Models Open it il 9 pm. in~ & Spacious Apts. Ter· rac-.:!d pool : ~unken R'.as 2700 P eterson W ay, CM HAQ. Unbelievable Living -nr Harbor Blvd & l1nly Adams I BR -FURN. $175 .ALL L'TIL!TIE:S PAID 546-5025 (·I blks S. of San .Diego .Fr.1·y<l ~!l!!!l!!!l!!!l!!!l!!!l!!!!!ill!!ll!!!! on Beach, J bl k \V. on llolt l' to 16211 Packs<0e Lane,) weslLB.llU 20 """"""~iTI..,•l..,84~7~-S<t..,•~I """"~ 1 ~~~~~i·n-~ .~~v. ~~~'.'. ~:~.;f.o. $145 .. $16:'1 2 B I R.l hath ............ $185. Bach('. or &. 1 RR. patios. J\lso avail furn1shC'd f~lc s. priv. ga r ag e s· Pvt. pntios. lush forl"S t srt· D1\·11J,~d hath ,i:, Jn1s or ling-, tfll'J)Vrt~. gas pol. <'l(ls1Hs. Rf'c hall . PJOI ,I; 11·1 f,, 2CHll ~t. C.t--1. -~1.q..o137 pool tnblf':;, S~IUllil bnth~. .._ --- 2 Br .. '2 full Ba. ,,hag t'rpt/ tl rps, patio, beam Cl'il. gar- <t&rs. From 11115. 2:!J2 Eldl'n Ave., C.J\f. ;,4s.s224 I\fovr in a llo\1·ai1C'r, thi~ a d. SPAOOUS 3 BR apt horn<'. tl1scoun1. 1 .·.~:, Pl11t'l'nli:. 1 & T un _ Al "r:-; In Eastb!ufr. Fron1 Sl8:1. •• 175-6050 0 -•••tmrm 11..& Frpl1'., J:flr .. Ir~ pr1v. 1m tin. 2 Bit ,(· F/I{, T\\nli~r :qil. -B<'aut. lndS<"pg. Adults. :S26:i. J ~J J.;a. Y1'ly J 1· a~" 5-lU-4016. S,'X.()/n1tJ. l!or\;tlll r.(·:1l\\1r, * * BEAUTIFUL l & 2 BR. tii~l!.172; •'VC' 67:t--l~Si.L Conff"lllporary G11.rden Ar is. Apts., P:lt1os. frplc .. pool, Slii-Furn. or Unfurn. 370 $170. Call :HG--5163. DELUXE 2 &droom apt. Costa Mesa Also l Bedrooni. l\1gn1c11 t Opportunity ;;~ l\1iner, 642-Q6j9 SP/IC. 2 & 3 Br. apt $140 tip. P<.o;il. C'p!/drps, t;ltn~. kid~ rik !~i :>!;ipl,.. :So. 1. 1;.1Z-:1~1:i S:\lL. J Bil apt 11/crpts. clrps, stove, rC'frig., gar . $140. Adults. no p e Is . 642-:1583. * LRG Deluxe 2 Bil., 2 BA. ~nr. sml pet ok. Nr. So. r,na~t Pla7.;i. 545--2321. Summer Rentals PALM MESA APTS. J\JJNVTES TO NPT. BO-I. FURN. OR UNFURN. Unbclicv11bly lar ge apts., hui;c pool, Jac:.1zz1 elect bJt. ins, shag crp1~. lirp.~, ~auna etc. Adults, no pc'ts. SING LES ••.•• }~rom $135 1 BEDRJ\1', ••..• 1-'ro m $140 2 BEDRi\I. •..• }'roin $.160 You're right, th£>y'rl' undcr- priccd! Ll61 J.-Iesa Dr. (5 blks from Nc\vporl Illvd.) 5·1G·9:\60 e SPACIOUS C> 6% % INTER EST 2nd TD Loans l'l<'h •••...•....•.•.•. " ••••• $?.65 -'l nr, :! lln, '.l lrplr-. h1.1g,. 11.,. rni, l1r1 rk, ,--opprr & h<'atn~. t>o11t spacr, ! b!k 'l Bg. 1 na. lio11s<'. Yard. ~r-* 100';~ Purchase Option n1';11·h -~· \\-:u·nc r. 111\. Sl'!.j_ * \Vide Selec-tion- f>l'.'1-lfi66 All . U P,\L Style.COio~ S/'f' for y1111 rsMf! 17:WI Park-Like Surrounding 1..;1'("];:on Ln. fl blk \V. of QU!F:T -DE:LU:'\I': Hc;ich. l blk N. or Slater). J, 2 & 3 BR APTS S-12-7iHS Prv. pat ios * I-ltd Pools * F'REE 1\fo's Jtcnt on yr·c: lflf'. 2 Rr, dt'n, frpl. pri pal!Q, rp1/clrp. r·NlP r. Ari. :,, :;..1S-R101 or 21'.:: J~'l---:1227 LRl-;. :t J{r .. 2 ·B.<!, no J>f'ls . l'hil1!ren ok. N r $Chis & shopg. $170/mo. ~;"n\'Wl. Huntington Beach \\'cll-L>c-s1gnrd 1\pts. 1 -~ 2 l3H .. \\1/T•'rr;11·e.~. From Sl,10 -S27~1/n10. Shag cpts, drps, saunas, pool, jacuzzi, encl. gar. Lo\veRI rate!'! OraTii;:e Co. $1::U ~ Singles or eour1li•s ::' * Pl !·lour Delivf'ry e (,ftf;. 2 nR . HungalO\\' Nr shop'g * Adults Only "WE BUY TD'S " Saltler Mtg. Co. in t>('h , ...................... . NU-VJ EW RENTALS Bil l1nmr Prllf'('d 11 n ~ ~.A-Hou se 979-8340 I w 4§E !ID Ari1. .1 r.nri!rn11. 11 roors. Martin iq ue Apts. Saunas. llot .Tac\1zz is. 'fen-1777 S.in!a Ana Ave .. C.l\t Q .o:-t .. \dull living MERRIMAC WOODS 4.23 ... 1·rrin1ae \\'ny, C!\l 642-2171 546-06 l I Scrvini;: J lt>rbor arr;i :!1 yrs. 90.95°/11 ConvcnlJ()lla\ rrnl Joans. 1.lr. J\d11ms. 641· 7477 or S33-!.Dfl'.:. $15,000 Priva!c monry for rcnl r stale loan. ri-1r. J\dflnis. Bkr '1!'19-21.10. or 644· 7477. H9UMS for Rent I~ Houses furnished 300 Costa Mesa .,,. ·l'.H ;!'24~ ----------$:1:il fl"r rnP EschJ~1\'I' lrv1nt:' T('rr. -1 llr .. 2'~ Ra .. ron11I (Jin r1n.. 2 frplc:-: .. \\'alls o r ~!Hl1n_g J:lRS$ pan<.'!.~ open onto spac. gardt'n~ & l1ri,•k JJ•1f1()~. f'Vf'n .:i Jargc- S!7.<' pl:iyl1ousr. 0 1v n ,. r 67:-i---OR>. 2 Bit _,1n\·r/1·efrii::., pr11•arc, c:·oz.~·. frplf'. Rf'11r flUnrirrs '.l BR .• :l ha., atrium s:tl~13:!:/ 3 BR .. 2ba .. l am. rm ... 3;{35 \VE 1-lAVE OTllERS "IJ11~'-l 1i1llil, ---'11.Pal!or \~"/hath for mofh('r-ln-la\~· "SINCE 1946" •Jr slu1h·nt. $,'..i(} L s C'. l 1st \Vrstcrn Bank Bldg. 675-1:;.iO. I Un iven:ity Park, Iivine 110'.'lf l': 2 hlks IK·h. Adult Days 552·7000 Nights l ~J~1 E::::::=::::::::::::::~ la rntly. 2 BH + i)f'p. ,,Lots f'lost>ts. L. Ptilio. Lt"'-.~P. Bt·s1 l"f1Jls. No pt•!..:. 1290. £i7:\--1'.ll~I. 2 HR., 2 ba!hs , .... , ..• S300 .1 BR., 21~ bat h.~ ..•.... Sl1~1 :1 BR .. 2 hnths .... ~3:.0l.16~ Sl30-Uti! Pd. Rach, E-sidf', 2 Brt + Oen. JI::.:; ('\'Pl)'· J ll k. ·d I thing, Bring the kirls_ I (i red hill U JI, COllSl :;m 1!1'1. ••• $130 -1 Hr ovf'r r1trport. R ent·~·House 979-843E in-1, child/Pt\ 0 J..;, ••••• •• • 4 RR. fan1 rm, din rm, 2 ha, T\E,\L T Y $175 -1 + fam r n1, r:.side. llarbor Viev.' il-1onte~. T'ool I Uni\'. Park Cl'n1l'r. Jl'\·inc lmmac n1n(: Yrd. µa1iQ .. privr!rges $425. 833-3894, ,, NU--VIEW RENTALS Call /lnyr1111r )!3,1.o._11:_)() 3 BR. 2 BA, S. or Hv.y. J.'.lf>C Ofticc hours I> J\;\f 1u S l'l\f 67'.1·4030 or 4:1·1-32~8 s1ove & refr1~ .. rrplc .. very '"'""""""""''""""""'""'-.• Alone on lot. Single~ or fnnl· atlr11c-. Sl50. 673-1676. $:-110 -'.l Br, 2 1311, bl!11~. \lil•s. 2 Br & Drn. Costa M esa frp!r, i::ar , fnl'd yrd. p11t10, Rent·A-House 979-8430 pool. l'h1tdrrn & !Ji.'ls \1'f'l · Fountain Valley 2 Bil \\/gar, Sl•IO, tncd yrd ('Onll'.' ... ,., ........ , ..... , . v.'/par!... \Vtr prl. 2228 $335 -Lri:: ,1 Or, ;! Ba ~·nndfl, AVAJL June l 51h, '4 RP., 2 Plaeen11:1 AVf" (BJ. Call btwn f1·p1..-, pool J.'HZ'. p:llin, /\'1•·•'. n ,\, nieP yard, 10 min 10 1 & 5. 1136--41 20. NU-VIEW R ENTALS nr 5]7 \V. 19th. O f 2756 N, Main, SA 548-3481 5-17-0.1 14 ON THE BEACH! 1 Bl~. Furn. & t tnfarn. FROM ON LY $17S OCE/\N QUEF.N 1s:10 "E. Ocean Blvrl. f,QnJ! Beach (21.1) 43.~~45 l\lnJ.(r"I by \Villiam \\'alters Co. Balboa Pen1nsula e S25 \Vil'. & UP-Ori Ocr an e Llll'e-1y R11<"h • 1 Rr. • Roo111s t.la1d c:rr.·1e•··P0nl-ll1 i! Pd. e C:~!l 605-87-10 e nis t'ourts. :S190. 846·0'.!59, /ll~r. /\pt. 11.3 646-~J."142 $100. S<G-0259. * * $l 70 * l!U'.'ITING_TON t: a rd i· n s 3 nr, J 1'1 Ra, ne11·ly r!nferl Apls. 1-leil a l IJol,a Chie:-.. P.ltins, crpt/drps, ('nr l 11atio. 816---132.1. Co1np:irr: -St't' Nr schls & shop'g. Childrt n 11·hnt yoo'r(' n)1i;:i:;ini::-. }'r, ok, no pets. S.~O Center St., S1:»--:S240. C1\f. 642·8.1·10 or f14S-26B2. 2 RR. Tov.'nh<>ust' for rt'nl. 'l "1111·: VICTORIA~" ha., bl!n.~ .• frplc., Sl:'t:i. 19742 2 Hr \\1 J! a r-ad 11 c:. ;·o~·t''..;!_ry, l l.13. S.1:1-1103 or cp!/drps/hltns, fll('rf yrd .J-l&-91.N 1'Ve~. ,v/palio. ~Vl r ptl. Call bt\vn A 1-'T. Pooh;ulr -Spa.c101L~ 1 & 5, 636--4110. Bung-a JOI\'. Pvl. patio $"150. 667 No. J Vi1'IOt'la ....... ~!:;,.) mo. to rig-ht. aduJt!l: 84&-13.23. N ewport Beach e \VTNTER RENTALS e HO:\IF: sizf'cf ap!., 3 Bl'., 2 hn. Crptlcfrps .. d l~Jn\'shr .. 1ti!lp:>Sl, trplc .• dhl i:::ar .. ('flCI yard. Chilcf rf'n ('k. S2W mo. \Vrst Ne1vporl Reserve now! S46--0-169 or 5,i7-10-l'I. ON BEACH! FURN. & UNFURN. 2 BR. From $265 ADULTS ONLY Furniture Availahle C a r p ets-dra pes-rl ishwasher heated pool-saunas.tennis rec room-ocean views patios-ample parking Security Guards. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 711 OCEAN AVE .. H.B. (714) 536-1487 Ofc open 10 an}.fi pm Da!ly WTLLlAM \VAL TERS CO. ---Huntingto,. Beach NEW SANDPIPER Early bird spccials---1 RR frorn SJ::!j, 2 BR fron1 $\jj }'urn/Unfurn, cool color in· tenors. pool, Jacuzzi , nior~. R03 1 l lolland D rive. liun- tingtun Beach. 3-17-9a9.i. Newport Beach FROM $135 A LfflS1 YLE FOR T~E JO'S l!avr 9.ln1cth111g you v.•ant sell? Ch1~<:1fiNl ad~ r!o 11•rJI -f":tll NO \V 642-flfi 78. AHBF:Y REALTY 642-3850 Arc you tired of !!ll,)'ing -----------1!.HG. 2 BR, $150_ Nl.'1\' <'rpL. """"""""""""""""""""!lout ~ood n1oncy for the lo 'l Or nr ocean, furn. shag priv pa1io, fnrd yrd .. no BE ONE OF TIIE F lflST sarne uld skimpy apar t· I( $2110 yrly. adults. no pets p<'ls. 7S3-B \\r, \Vi!son. TO LIVE TN TJJ!S nient!'; \vi\h even s kirnpicr 12s1 1 4G1h ~!. f.44·<\.140: av-now 673--717s. JUST COMPLETED racilitJcs and no extras to ----------speak of? Then enjoy t he <·1!,\R:\IJNG rot1agr , walk to 2 BR . I BA unfu rn. bltn • Lux ury 1 br ap!. J i f~·stylr of the 70's at bc-nc h. :Sl4<l l\1n. incl util. stove. S160 + deposit. 2 • Adult ()A I\ \V (l 0 fJ GARDEN C'O'.'lfPLF:TE Bach. /I p! .. 2 1214 \V. &'llhoa Blvd. Chilrl ~n OK. ;-;9 pets. e _Di!!hwashers Al'AHTt.'1EN1'S. h!ks 61R" <:oronn. 1 Adult, no r.•11 5~,, e Choice of 2 CC>lor scheml's Ther e's $1 1nlllion in rec--""' Sant,• Ana ,,..,,... "'--""-· · · 1 d' l ~Is. St..,._. ut1! pd .. Yrly. ----------=~==------e cu~lom C&:rpl'lillJ; 1·cat1on 1ncu tni:: ar ge &l'2---it"i2:0 OE ANZA PLAZA SPACIOUS 2 HR, crpts. e J acuzzi • sb·\vihn1ming dpoo11.1 wbhl1•11pootl drps. re[rig. & s!ovr. pati-0. at s, san vo cy a uru HAC.11EUJ!t RPI f()r qu.it't I & 2 BR Furn. & Unfurn. Ad 1 • lleatcd pool tcnnl' co"•·t<;, a pco shot> u fs. no f)('tll. J\ g t : 0 d 1 m~in, no 1.wki11~. UtiHtit'S Pools, curports & other t>X· • ea • IO!t locks & pro \\•ho oflel'S fr<'e group I . ~J--10--IJ:il e 0 I $1'0 I ,_ lllt1• J>allv. Cl6sc !o s tores. h·ns. Nr. S.A. & Npt f'rwys. J---'-----------n Y ,, per rno. lcssonS. A beautiful c uu-- t>! l-iiOl. · l·i'Onl lllG up. Adults only, l & 2 BR. apl$., unfuni. BAHIA PUERTO house has 2 health clu bs, l.llRGF: n('~·lv ,,._,, 1 BR no pcls. 1402 F ri.iii ~'I .. s.A. Bltns, pool. 313 E. 17th P L 21110 17111" SL, J-1.H. :1:l6·4R15 saunns, bindoor golf 1drlv\Tng ~ • "" ~ $13."l & $150. 642-98.52. -----'------~ r a ngc, llliards, eo or V Po.ii k r•'l' ai'ta. &tf,..5530; * .i<\.1-6620 * SEA AIR APTS -$115 theater. Activities mcfln Corona def M a r ilO \\'. Hnh .~1 .. C M. • Apt. Unfurn. 365 PATIO-er DEN-2 Br, Lrg. 2 BR. Crpts, drp!I, bltns. f ree Sunday brunch ctt, bar- . 1 BTi .. 21~ BA., p:1t i, ('lhhs,..c ,-- 1 -M __ __:_.;:,;_;,_ ___ , ·2 Ba, $150. Adults. 1 blk N. or Ada ms off &ach be--ques, s po rt s tourna- tPnnls ct & ("')mni pnol. s:.xx.i 1--0-•.•--•-•.•.__:_____ Corona d tl Mar Ca.II 546--7331. Blv. 729 No. 6 Utica. n1f'nt:IJ, etc. lK'll<'h. Children/pet con--2 BR, nu C'rpt .. drpi;., M1ildren sideN>d $300/100. 962.--353.l O.K. $1fr(J + SGO C'lng . Lagu~ Beach f44-2Jll 1ly, ~>49--42'.lJ t.v('s. Sl 70 -Utll pd, J Br apt, full.)' NICE 2 RR. fell(·f'd ya.n!. fu rn, New C A D, xJnt IOI' • • l~f('r Yf)Ung rouplc. $95 $180 -1 Dr upprr OpL"<, frple. mo. &IJ.-,IBGJ CVl'.'ll. /\lief" Vu, rxc11-ptionnlly \Vf'll :1 f~·droon1, :l hnrh, nrw lurn,v.'alk to bch l T\vn •• 1·n r µl'l!I & dr11 pf"11 . $1.~ -util pd, Lrg Allf'h, S200/n1onrh. CAll: :"1r ... ~1~. 11:orgrou!I'. vu, full k11 · • --· · • · $'11'5. 2 plutc: rlf'll-~lwp & NU-VIEW RENTALS Clf'an. 'Frplc, 11.ir. i;::1rdcllf'r 673-4030 or 494·324.il lncl. Agf'nf 956--ml 1 ---~--------Walk to ocun. 1 Br. private 2 BR. J 'Btl. Pr•.'f"r mid· home. 1ingler.-: ok. dle&gl'.' rouplf>. 221 E. 23rd Ren1·A-House 9794 1340 St. Costa MeSJI. 1 f3d. ocrn.11 view, I blk Vlr- tori11 f\(;'h, n!Cf'ly tum. le trp1 sn'I fi4Z.1m 2 BR. -7'29:l Onll"l't" Ave. S1R.'1. mo. Av1ul ~r, 642-0&43 nr fi7fl.:t261 - !l'itSI'. Ai,:1· r11()...11:11 · NF;\\'J.Y rrmodclrd Bachelor , SHARP'&-; 4 Bedroom, DJ<:LUXE 2 BR. 2 BA, trplc.1 ___ ,_36-_2796.,;..:_•~•__:_536-::..1"7.c_O __ gl!;~i0'.\'2 ie~~:'~~nlsil~ NE\V 3 Br. 2 Bn, palio, 1'nt•l 1111! pd. Quirt. Gar. Sl35. Nu 211 1Jath 1vnlk to bclach. Dl8hwl!8™;,r, etc. $180 mo. NEW 2 Bdrm. a p t..i,, shsi.g or Unfurnished. Low m ove· lx-k yrd, C•lmm S.11·1111 ro:,.11. i•p1~. 54:-:.Slal or 548-1405. r a mlly prt>ferr«!. Month to -i3G-~52 ('rpl.. drps, gar.. blt-lns ln costs and no lrnsc rr· clbh~. S:l!O Ir!!. ti-1·1-1·1.·.r,, !tC)()\lY 2 hr fu rn. apt., 1nonth. $39J pr m nnth call 2 BR . upper, drps, t·rpt'd rAtlgf', 1H'.~~ trtmi f'le. j~7~· .l\fodclo; open daily Laguna Se•ch op.~lfl i r~. l \7;,, ulil pd, Baby Mr, Ba il~. 673-8550. dshwhr, $1 55/mo, 2 2 S4i ~~l ... $J.,1~L pe r rn o · OAKWOOD GARDEN 0 1\. no f)('l.'\. &12-~;')83, 1 Bil. _f'rnnk!in frplt., over Mlncr, 0 1 557-1928 ONE Y1•ar U-11~·· ••nly. '.l Art I fUl Tr.11lkT. Adults CJnly. ~nr, :o;fo\/f'-/t'l'trig.. $.hl\R $170 . 2 l'hild rn ok. 3 RR, J~ Large, quiet t Dr, nu dJ"flt>. APARTMENTS ~ HA ll(lu:;eo. f!ri·pl:1l'I' 18.> + util. crpt. tm.lc<>ny, SJ)). U\f'. BA. lnriry, C' r p I / d r Jl s, c-rpl.l'I e!C'. Blk tn bch. 224 ()('f'll.11 Vlt'V.'. N(/ pr 1 ~' "·tl!-10~ ,--I"" l h h t <«321· Sth SI. Cll.ll i. .. 1 (,7,1·11'4, (Resor t UV~lt for 494-5971 , .,..r """" r.r ,),JO. t s M r, no IX' J • .,..,r, ::i. Adult~ Only). Me1e Verde * I 1\I ~1 AC U L fl T f; 4 REDROOM hon11'. . 1 .. ·.11i;1•. Av•il mid. J un,. s2~:; pt•r ~n~~~·· 5-ll1--i'.'12i SIOj...& tJp. Nkf!ly fur n l& 2 2Brt 1 1 ~ BA. frplc, bit-in.•. 2 BR a.pt unturn-ch !ld~n ok 2 AR. duplrx tlr•\\11lnv.•11, NEWPORT BEACH BR Trf!Uers. /ldlts, no Pf'\J. ht'alerl pool. dbl rarpoM , • no pets. 126 Monte Vil!ia rrp\J/d'rpii, sl')vf". Sl'10/n10. 16th & Irvine 1.tl \\'. WllllOfl, Q.1. 645-1!'>.10. $'2201ll)O, f,7>047~. 646-0IR4. Avr. 536-lj()7, 645-0550 or 642-8170 1 BR. $130, 2 Bil. $100. Jdt'al :! BR. bllin~. pool, \VRLk ro SF•AC10US 2 Rt. nr $.hops, ZBfl ~lurllos clrlu~·adult~. Zl'"""""~--------· I fnr bACh('lonc, i;pac., !i/poo[. hc11ch. S200·up. O r an 2" r fwy!!, Q.C.C., & U.C.J. Sl(;j. blks !rorn occnn • <'all 1d! N('('(I ;:r "Pflrl"? Piil.re a n 11d' ~)l.~!16:13. 1993 Clfin:h St. (·()f1~I Rr:il F~•lt1lt', &14-4..IWS. <'All 979---01.14 5·3(1 ~JJ6.'iC __ ,1_1_&1_2_,_-~_7_<_+----' ----~--BAL Is. Studio 11 p 1 11·/,'l"!n1pl ete kil. Aval! J un<' • Sf'pl. nr mon1hly. 6!;..-507-l or 675--3770. 2:D-I \\'. (){'e<1nfmnt. ~ 1 RR J\Jll(' l1T'l/mo. J uly :'Sl~,0/11k. Aug $17 '.i /\\'k . 1;4+..;"1:110 . [,.<\KE -Ar;:;;:;head-doekfc)/' r!'.'nt fnr srtison. Easy e.e· ce~s. LIDO !~le: 2/3/4/'J BR. Avail. /lO\V • monthly \Valkrr Realty 675--520'! Ren1als to Shir• 430 SHA RF: 3 BR housr lln Bnlbon Isle 11·/1 or 2 11·ork- \n<: r-irl~ Su111n1rr onl )' 1;1~ .. :,127 '~------Sl!A RF: dclux1· I r i -1 r v" I bea('h apl. llalbna. l pc!Vln s1ralght t1ndf'r JJ. ST25 mo. 67:1-7-14~1. 1''1'.'.:\1 . to sh:1rf" :iBf{ npt It\ FliN loc-. on heh. 1\·/same. 1 rhikl o.k., 67~~!ii01. S! IARE Lovrl.\· :l Bil horn". 11 n. Call ;ir,2.7:,~io aft 6 r:ini nr :ill d:1y l\'C'f'k<'nd~. SllAl{F. l'l't1! Jun<'. ~T'C';Jt house in Laguna. blk lron1 hPach. SS3. 49-1-8-167, G a rages for Rent 435 !'1n~lr r;,r g11r:n:.-. JI !~. $20 111onth 6lQ-2('~~7 URGE~'T ! \VantNl: r;:ira~ fnr !11J11.~ehol1! J!'OOlrls stnr<1gr. fi73-:J4!H; 6'i:r-6.llJ'i. Office Ren1al 440 N.B. ae1ion location ..•. O.C. Airpl ,{-fr.>.'Y ron1·. Air rond .. c·al"JX'1S & drapes .•• J. 2 & 3 l~c off ice s1Jitcs ..• Short or long lra.o:,.~. 1\1."" -100 ~Q. fl. storngt•. 1711) 97fl-2'100. LO\V cos! rornpletr pro- f('ssion11I nffice -w/rrl'C'J'J· 1!011is1 ~r1virrs. AC, c,rp!cd, furnished , par king. 419 E. 17th S!·C1\t. 642-6747 days: &IH-377~ f'V<':'. DESK 5pace available $50 mo, Will provide furnltUft at SS mo. Anw l"Nlg servic. a.va.Lla b1e. 17875 Beach Blvd. lluntington Beach. 642-4321 Dr:c;K space avaJJable $50 mo. Will provide furniture RI $.5 mo. An!nttring t1ervlee available, 222 FOTC?st Ave, Lr.guna Be11ch. '494--9466 BAY VIEW-OFFICES Deluxe, 11.lr-rondilioncd Redecorated. Lido area. Realonomia, Bier. 675-6700 ANTIQUE Ro.......Suit. for f\lrn, R.E., Mlon elc. 2376 Newport Blvd, CM 54S..9755 64~3987. OFFICES, SS~ & $69. Will dcrorate. Near 17th SL. bank & '1hopping. 5-18-8118. MEDICAL 1iuil<', l'elldy to go. llril at Dolsa C1ica ltB. S275/mo. 846--1323. ' TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD N s R f R '" h " T v ' JA u I b ' d ' a T c Yo r w $1 • p ol " T S:l IV of ol "" " \\' /\ h' p Al" "" ho to gu ~ Po * Re Sp da g; hcl 3 I 71 4/ PR lid <y M 64 A Ph r . Tr G c .. '1 \ •• ... ~·' f-. I l' ~f ) .IJ I: ! ." ' ., ~-~· ) ./.'.'·'/'. :...,., 'I . ' DAILY PILOT :JIJ I ... ~. I~ I .., ... .- ~--~ (/11C*)11•1t ![Ill I )[Il] ~' _. ""_•·=·_llllJ Office Rental «Cf found l frM •dst SSO Carpet Service ;ardenlng F..XP. Ha\.\'B.lian Gnrtlenrr Co1nple!e gardening i.cl'"\'K'f' Kan1tt.lanl, &f>...4676. S PRINKLER-REPAIR J[j]: I Help Wentod, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wintod, M & F 710 Help Wanfed, M & F 710 * AIRllORT AHEA '* FOUND :iC'>rable m n. I~ AdJ. Alt1l0 rter /1011•!. r)o •luxt" t ockapoo fiup. y i 1· 1n 1 1) 1-2-3 l'OOn1 5Ulll"S. U1\\'i':Sl' c:11b .. rr SL nnd Stsn!l')rcf, H.A'J'E S. 2lll:Z Dl!Jlont Dr., Gardf'n (;!'->\"(•. 539-284 1 room ii. 83.3-2:i-l0 ltft•·r 6 p.n1. OH 14 .,, I .~I• w•• ~ii!], ! n~IC:!j()"'°-Acl-,-. I Fl\ J i-n 1,1 J', '.-c. ,-,-,..-,dc,c,,--,-.," ntXJV(' $165, New <lu>i>. r1•1J1s. :O.hirgtt1•r1 tt· /'.1rk\\'ay .~· 124 ~th St Hunt. Bt h. G7:l t1ll·l c;e1~1111111..,, .,lissi"n V!C'jo. New Systems * 546-25.15 -JcOolclc,cSO-,-.. -<'-C:-,\-lt D i'~~-"-,-r. 'i."anl !-.lulnte11::tJl('t', Plnn!in~ Clt•anups 962-2!J:lj KEYPUNCH ~~~-~--~~ PROF'ES.'iIONAL RF.Sl'AUHA;"o;T & JfCYrF.1. t~:\IPLOY;\IF.;"o;T AC ~;NCY J\~I. ;'lfgr,;. $600 lo S700 1110. "l:u;ler (:lief •.••••• ;1100 1no. 2nd Cook ........... $2.i. :ihllt !Jroilrr ri·lo.n ....... s~ !!hU1 Pant1·y ~Inn ....... s:n. gh1ft Business Rental 4fj 1L:.d':1t hu1111•sJ )t:.:7-li\!l. f-')';I>. \111 y '..!~1 h 111 \](•sa 11<'1 ,,1 ·.r, !r1: rnitl•· B<l\t'.'l' !fll\l tl cvlor€'d 1 "/._·hoke <0ha1n. ~~1)--tj\,X,t) J OJIN 'S CM~! 1.: Uphotsrrry C!~aHer s . £x 1r a Ori-Shampoo tr r f' &>o11·h- i.:uard f&ul Rt>!11rdan1~ l. D1:~Trasers le all C'Ulor lu .~l1l,nlr:> &..· 10 111!1111t.· hl1•111·h fur 1\hitc l':trp•1\s. S;1\'1• y()ur monc·y hy sa1·1ng r11<' '""tra !rips \\'!IJ 1•l1>;1n !11in;.: 1111, d1 nini.; r111 & hall Sl '.i. Any rn1. $7 50, t'Ouch $10. l"hnlr $1. li )f'. 1•\p i~ \\hat roun!~. not rn«lii1Mt. I do 11·nrk n1y~l'lf Good n ·f. 5::1--010 1. * LANDSCAPING-* Nr11• lawn~. Spnnklf'rS, •J1·1·k-.. 1·l1•a11Ufl. !'1ut 1• h1 "ti , !JJ6.Jt"Li Day Shift Tr111nt·e ('U(}k ....... s2-S3 hr Available Now l!;ir!••nrtl'r .... ,t\110Y.l1•d6'f' o! STOHES f11r 11 •;1-w l IOO <>I' m:I ~q . !t. ('p1 ~"' & ~l~n. r Pady to gu. :0.la.)Or ~hnpplng ("f'r111·1·, S.111 C lP tTI ("n1 f!, 492-::-1:>7. 'i1A~-r~-:1'7<~'-"-.~,uoo=-,-,-, ~fl-.. ~,~,, or 3 r<'t:l ll urllbi .. \/\•F.1rld•·n Squari· al N€'117>0rt P.1·;1l'h P i<'r. 5lS--.".Q!l3. ---F.XP. il11v.;.i 11,1n C~ard1i111· Television Repair \"(l,\CJ-;:;:-;10;'\ ,\· bu-.-••f!1t.,. ~'!! \\ \fll!'d l1111llf'd111'1•l1 (j 'lonlh~ actulll \\Ork r-.:f)C'r. P_olyn~:sian •inn~; .• $15, iJHft <•!! 1•1lh,.r 11 kf'}1IUll<'h, ~ast 1-(1()11 :-.1~r 1 ra1rl('•' ----~-~~ Co1l1j1!t't1• g:tfd(•nin!.! 't'l"\'ll'•· r\atnil lani, &1&-<lti~G. • Bl.,\!...;~. S TV * !'t'l"I U'l!IJ.: ,,11 llr •• nd..: 'J'/1\•:111·.-. (',1n 111.1 11•·1 ....... \1 .;1 ;il l " l'\l h€') t.~11e •·r k1"y <Jisc 1tt·i Jt·i-. I < )\•'r '21 • • · •• • • · •••. SliW!r: 1n11 \\:111 .1 .............. s1fi5 11r ------.c----,--* * Slore/Oll1IT, !! I a :.,; d1\pl11.) 1·;\~P llo1rnto11n II.A. 21~-Jth 51. Sll:i f)f"'r ino. ~if...W07. * OFFIC~:-flAJ ~q. f1. ,\I~ ~ Sq. f~. IN DU""i'ltl1\L SJIOP. ('(')~la ~11·~;1 f}-IG-217.0. STOH.L ,f.:. of!Jl'P for rf'n!: Bol ~a Chit·a ;i t Jll'il, llR. !M6·1323. Sl'UHE & olfwe !nr 13olsa Chica :c t l!i·il. 8-16-132::. t'('Jl1 11.H. MEU1cAL :.u 1tr, rt"ad} to gp. Jl€'1l at Boli;;i Chica, I! Lt $2'n/mo. 846-1:123. t ::\!>. l\r•>~ .-=11n.:r:1y h1k(• \\1">1\lllJ • ._r\·a ·)I~!!/ 7 ~. lt1·hu·11 ir fan 1d<'nt1f_v. tJ.lti-1779. VI 1uN1 .,-" '"1,o,c.,•""171,c,c,c,-. c,c,,o,c:,. V11\ oJ Ada1n'> ,11, ,\lagrvilia. Jl unt. Bch. :.Q..i:::J!J all 5 JH11 \1·11 , . .,,c,.7. -:,-,.0,-,.-,-.;1"1-:,c, l';hcl::cu<', hMwn !')€''-nt' u te rt',I . \'1". ;\1<11n & Frankfo11 , 11.B. 5.::&--12;,9, GEHi\1AN Sh•'/1h1•rd :: -·I 1no11ths old. :\lale. Ne;ir UCJ tii::-.1~'6."1 --.~:-70-::-c;-c::-ccc rf'!J. Ian & lilond ciog \lt'. Carpenter General Services .A111h .. 11,11J 'l:1i;11a1')' C OOKS ____ _ l<\fk,111n flll' 1111111'\IV .•~n r:1, I\.~'(' I>( Snu1h t 'u,"I (".di f1·r llA~nY.\lAN for s,,,...·u·P. Tree Service "/'pv111 IJ1 11·111 ••T.•'lt~r Day 1hift until move to LARGE OR SMALL i'lun1!1. I.Rak'. l n<:f flll. ----------·l ('(I! ,\.TFH-~<•!!!~111 -:~~ If your math's 1n Newport in September All T)J.t', \\"nrk · Cur 1!001-.;. ('arfl('nl r), /':unrni:;-. f'ff' TREE SERVI CE nir. :triil'-_111, 1·1,~1 :1 \h•,1 ! good d 't• then 1wing ~hift 4-1'2 p11n1·I, l"<'Jllti<l1•I. I l n I l> h • -~l'l-11'93.~. T'r1n1n11n;:. P runuu.: .i:, { 'l1•;lt1 (' 111 ·~IJ ... :O:H·I. 1-1pn1 •I \ii~ I con I ion, PM. frnrll". r €' ":J. Lr!., ('It'. I ',\' ,,, o o "" . LI , <'l"<'I, _up_ G-lt.51''6 nr 1':4:.' >:11:.' . , , ~ We CQn USe YOU. X li••1I !r.i ll I,\~ 1~· ,., ' ,. '' ",. ._ -l <>I I 1.1':-"-h"th 'l.:1 ,\ ,..,,., I''""' I ' ' . ! I ~~!1!"'!1!"'!1!"'!1!"'!1!"'~~~~1 G d . & • '" 1 I.. f'"\111'! h•'-l'l\I. =Jr '"' · p un111, encl'. 1 n ~ n ~, r A~-1-r. ,,ll!I" 1 111 .1 1 n t 1 00 typing 1n.- --.-CAl :PF.:"TRV e cai-pen1ry, (il1•. 6 ,\/:".tC l ________ ]f i• J) 1,lupll·~ tl\·1'11t>d for 11 " ,.._11u-R111J~h & ~·.111 ~11 P;1l1ns .I'.· c:i11t. 5.12-:'l~I!) E~oymenl . T pl .. :-,. i\p1 + .,11 r1 tlJ»'l1 SUrance experl• Cl'111cn1. .i l ~-1 ·1 ~~ 1·r 1--;J'CYfAL Sf!tVICF.S CO . J'hon" ,,10 11-~ r1 9-L ence helpfu( 1 but f-i.16-:-f.li l. P!un1bg: lnstall's-Carpen1rv :!LI ·1:1: .. ~~·i.1 CU.""1'0'1 \l "<xhl'<•rk pri11<'l-r:Jcc 1tc.,-.a 1r e frl&-l S09 Job W a nted, Male 700 llA'l'l ;"o;l~ 1111,,01-,,.-,-,,-,-,,-,,-,-.... -. n 0 t necessary. Ing. f;1binf'I.~. (;,.n"l N'/llll!"~ Hauling l!"T!-:LLICEi\ l' h:u·il·\\Pl'~ {';I", h.-il'~.-i l !l'1' fl1111 11",'11\' Apply now for: l'h. Duk(· r1;i Dn rk ;1, V1,· \\;ilia•··· ,{ ll;1111il1,.11 LOCAL l\10\'C'!'. ha u I i n g, i11;: )Ouni.: nian 'IJrf'lj lit• ,1 ., I'\ Tf1:\ 11-.\\'1.'\•: T ·r,, ,(· \\od !'1;1111 .'P"l 1!11 11, .': 1'11 :l.11 1\ l.!1•11\ (\~ ~!T l. '\I I\' l 1~' ! it I; 11 l ILJ 11:-,1; \\'11 ~011 & \'1e1or1a, c·.,\l. i-:xP:°ltC'lnod ... Jin<>. c;i l>11H•l<:,, ~.1n-:r1z:i or 1~1G--1100. ("' i;~g.7~!~~ I I Jvh. lull 1>r p .. 1·1 !!111,• C°'l 1·!i•a1inp. Exr ro ('J'.:(' ~n.\lhir1k!. t;.l!i·'.J~l.~I 11!·'.:'\''!'1\l-:-;·l~1+r~1·!" :1s-~E'· studi•nt. Lri; truck. Res. • Figure Clerk -~-repa irs. n1n int. f\'I) J•lh too FND ).:i'l'Y eat 11/11lu1t• f;u·e-sin. Ht'<i.~. fi·lf1-1221. S.· 1unnny. Vic. }'. V • ;\1 JNOJLJi-,.-.,-,.-,-€'pau~'I-,.,-,,. ...:_'l62-!Xi3G. bing: -earpt•nlry • painl!ng - l'lran11ps. U!rt. il'y, backhof' NEEi) hl'lp ;it '111111 1•'' \1'1 · h111r-Au l1'S e Nur s<'s • pnrid<"I <1111 11•, !•'!' g_i•n,.r:i l pr a(' ! i !',. En1hu~1.1.•t 11·. 11111~(111 1\: & :;lli l1Ty lfl 1111rk 1\ /pcool" a 111u~t. !lfi~-1:\1!'1 -- Jnl,.rf'~l 111c: n1w•1 11 n(:~ ,t> Sr ... 1-.111· !111' ,l r PACIFIC. MUTUAL 1-'.\:'IJl(l'.\I l~l..\\11 !i '·w111•r S;1111 ;1 Cn 11 ,(• :-,, 111 • ''I (\•1\l!'I" I >t'11 •'I II o11I n ''1 ~ ...... 1 up ll1on1•r 11<111" ~ !-11('1.I ,\/ C'l'IC'klail ....... , , •.•..••• , , • I li:i hr c ·,1sl11t'r ............. ~I iJ hr l\u,.,1~1y~ '' .~, ,, 1 .~I G.• tir t-1· I 1:c)y ,,1. -'' 1:\ 111· o\1,1··-...rr "'Jl ll~ ,\,.,:t llL \ '\o I\ 1 ltlio I T•l '•·f'\4' ,\•Ill 1'111' ... I ;~.\'> C 0.<lll l'll' I >1 11,. I ~l1Jl1· Ill'!, :-,, \\f•ll I g,,_., h PROt"J::~JO'\' 'L p ll o 11 ,. sollci!or -lJ~111,1 Pou1r. :'i.1 n C\€'m<'ntt\ C;1 p 1~trnno .nv-.1. \V'lrk in '''!Ir 01111 ho1r1" Rrsr dt-.i.1 ° u1 n1~"1. rh...,n·· 835-146J bc!\1('('n 9·00 a .n1 I a.nd noon. lt.r'., L11 · ,'(,, I '11l1t Industrial Rental COSTA MESA 14-lO & 2880 Sci fl. CABii'IET ~lAKERS }o'IBEnGLASS 4SD FNU. Surfbo:ird VI <'. 4211J ,¥.,. H.1v<'r 1\1·f' .. \\". t\e\\·por\, C;ipt. NPl'l 675--0956. i\!,\Lf: Yorkshire" Tt>ri'tt'r \'u·. Tus1 in & 17th Sr .. C.!\1. 6-1~3JIO. roofinJ;. Call ri.10-;,;,f,-O. Cement, Concrete YAHll. g:1ra~r' H1•1no1 ~!r•~f's, s k 1ploader, S l 7-~. -.-Gard,.ning. \'ard & Garage C_f_:_M_E_N-,-.,-,-v"o"n~Kc.-. -00-1"·0"1>-too Clean l'.p. Frl'.'e Est. ~nu11!, n.•asonabl€'. Fl'"N' Reas. Ralf's. 6-16-3488 F.s11rn. I[. Sturlick. 548·861~1. YARD ,I'.· Cara!'.f' Cleanup. JOHN'S l'atios & Blo1·k .Frrf' rs!. 1 days. Call }lousekprs • CQn 1p;1111u11~ --D ISHWASHER e fl om e n1akC'rs-L'pj1.1hn i·· 5-1 j -{{><-~]. iJAR-:y;--,.-,,-,-,-.-,-.,-.,c.,.-,c,-,c.,1-ic-.e \\'Oi·k desired on S.a1ur1la~ ti1nr .Apply In Pf'tson Colony 1..::iteh1•n '.:.21 J ll:1rhor Bl .. C:"-.1 • Gen'l Clerical V.1ri<'d or1 1:111}!~ 1ncl11d\•, fit Ill);, I) 1111\).: .~ g<otld !"l'lll niun1t;1l11)t1 .. 1o.1t\ ... ._ FHEf-" 11 nl) h 11, !r:lll"P•~• lat 11n f1•r 11"(wk 111 1 ~1~· An;;11••s uni •! 111111" 1.1 !\r11•porl, St>pl. 'i2. Earn $750 & Up PER MONTH PART TIME $2000 and up ri. r 1110. lull time. Nr. N11·pt Flv.'Y & S.D. Fn1)' 1 COLL.I I:: dog, n1ale, F.J~or:.ido 2931 Gr:ice Ln. ·rrarl, !lliS51011 V 1 e Jo. (So. of BnkC'r, E. of Fairvit'IV 5.\IG-59S6. 12 1tlJ Rrprcsenlnli\'e lhl'rc I 1-'0UND , h .. 9 l? n1an s \l"atc v1r1 n1-(;l~)-979-"'.:°~4 or 879_471 1 1y :\lain ~lll'~t. Huntington Nl::\V DELUXE :\f-1 Units. 3 ph. poy,·€'r. li~l ~fonrovia ~1-l;~-311:): ,l\J6-97!J$ e\"C'S. * M·I, 1600 sq. ft. * 2 Fr olf .. ::l-r h p11·r. :':200 zno. C.M. &16·7fi tn. f.45·1101 . &ach, &1.~9287. S:VIALL gtc:'y kitten. Vic 23rd. & Santa Ana AvC'. 646--0219. FND Currency in v ie 219 A.i;alt>. Call 67.'>-2:'H-l aft 7. ~'OUND lrn1a!(' Terri,.r Mi.-.:~ Nf'v.'f)Ort Bc:h area. :):i7-0li9. 1vork. An assoc. of Vii r:~ Lands(•aping c.~1. l!:t:!-0:.x.ll JlATIOS ·walks, drivl', install 1x•1v 1;111·ns, sa11·, break, rf'ntO\""· S.IS-fifitiS for c~t. Child Care YOL'NGSET S!·honl. ag1'S 2-{), Opf'n 7 0;1~·s. 6A:\l-7:30 P:-.1. Sl'paratc' progrun1 6-10 yrs. l'ror. h•achcrs. $20 6-l&-.1i00. 516 to 9600 Sq. Ft. 4(()1 Bireh. N.B. ~)4 1·5032 Lost 555 Contractor Storage 455 F ill, Cdi\'i, T<'tT ier nux. RE.JAIL shop avail. 111 The fem.. "' h I J1•gs/lhroa(. Fnetory, $175. n10. See No. 9 brinrlle back. Jo ng tall, shrt ror in fQ or 6i3-960G. roar, blaf'k eyt's, ans to R .,ntals Wanted 460 Vicky. Re1varrl. 613-1·190, ---l 61j.<J!l'!IJ. WANTED JULY I J r:E\\t/l !{'"Dcc,-~Lo"<71-,B""'1 ,~, k· RESPONSIBLE Geim an Sh<'phcrd ( f ,. m WORKING COUPLE \1' / r1--c1·nr ~un::<'ry-;\1 UST nff'd one or h1·0 lwdroom llAVL !)()(TORS CAREi house 111th l;:irge fencf'J \1i!·: ll<1rhor & Adams. yard (for hvo VERY \\"EU~ ;~!G-87~17/6-12-8131. TRAINED dogsl $13.i mos.t. "CflARLIF:", JOO lb .. 6 yr. Vic: bell1'€'€'n l!>rh & \.'il·!orin o!rl G<'r. Shrphen!, blk/L.tn, -!npar \V, Bay St.) COSTA 4 ('hi!dren dog, vie. Edinger 1.-1ESA. 548·7R81/aft 6 p.n1. near Sun<;ct Aq_ultic Park. JAP,\NESf: businl's sm11n 21 3/£91-3459. "·i1h 11·1fr anrl one f'hildF '=E= .. c\1:-cclc,;-,ch-,-,-,-le-r-pi-,p-.-c:\-m-o lookln.(: for house on lea.~e. uld. V i<:: Dahlia, Cd:'l-1 \\'h1te basi~. 1'ry to k€'l'p your prnp· n1:irking on ch€'sl & toes. t'rty in be~t ~hupt'. sl'f'lll"l1.V 6i5-717l!. de-posi t up 10 t11u month rent accr-plab!€'. About S200 a mon rh in roastal :lrl'1 or Tu~tin-lr\•1ne-Cosla ;II l's <t . C:i!I SJJ-3928 afr 7 P;\f. Private parry only. LOST nl:llr 1 sr. olrl Colli<', hMl\'!1 & \\'hitr, Ill Nel\t>CJfl J~ach arca. REl\'ARD: 6-Ci-:l:i91. U JS1': Afghan rcn1. 5 nio·s. ROO:-.·t Add itions, E stunates. plans S.: la.1·ou!. single or 2 ~lory . L.T. Olnstrur tion. S-li-1511. Additions * J~en1olll'lu1:.; (;••r11 irk & Son. 1.ic Gi3-fill l * 5!'.1--2170 rrmod., atld11. 20 yrs f'Xp. L11•'d. t11:-o \V;.i.v Co. 5-l7-003fl. Driveways JIA~·LEY'S Se:il Coatins::: \\'€'ather, gas. oil resistant. Stays black. 545-51!13. Electrical ELECTRICAL \rORK. All kinds. Big or smnH Lic'd & Ins. Free C'sl. ~>'lG-0:!11. F. L ECTRICIAN, lic€'r1.~,.ri. bondt'1L Small jnhs. n1a int. & ?'('pairs. f"l"fS-520,l Gardening QUALITY GARDENING ;1nylimt', S.IS-503 L _ Housecleaning :\Ii'::SA Cleanin:;. Carprl.~. 1>. indo11·s. I JI') ors l'tc'. Rt's1d/C"<11ll'l. :i j 7 -6 i ,1 z , $1R--llll. LC'! J)UTCJ I clean your carpt>t.~. Also, 1vlndo11•s & and Sunday. Expi·nt'nccd.l-,,,-,cHcLc,c.-,-,.-.,-,-0-,,,-,-,-,.-"-'_P_"_I•-'' Call 6i:.-OS:ti. JC'llV\•ry flJ!t'll. \\"k-clays & llOUSE\\'OHK h) 1!u.v i.r 11k-nd c. 1'r11rk Tit'Pdrd . Companion. \\" f' I J t'· After nnon run 1·ar OK. fX'rif'n('Pil ~2-liS!t e G-IG--4'7(1(; e -----Pltt\'f'. :\'l"HSE-Part-t1n1•' or full JI or 12. hr. * ~~r .. )tl lX * Help Wanted, M & F 710 ~~-~-~~~-~--'-'"""""-·"x_·_10"1-.w,o,ck,· ._c'''c'c-c' :;oc:-'-· ·J>':;;;CX'Oul\·rs l';iyalilf' flt·rk Dedicated Cleaning ...._vpr ;I] 11fJ111. l In 2 yr ... Li\GINEfll: :-.1anular1uring, 1)1" n1ech11nic:il In dr-v••lop ~;1dho.11 prorlurlion li nt·~. T11•grf'f' rf't'(d. 1'np p.1) .t :-.ln'I lut11r1·. !II1u.·Gr1')tnr r 111·hl Curp, IG:ll Pl:1{·1•nt111, C;\1 . ~X P:.c1c,0-1c.1-1 ~-,.-. -,.-,,-,1c,-,-.,-.-,:-,. 1:-.'TE ll VI F \\"l:\1 ; Tu<'" & \\"f'd 'l111n-Zf\n1 Thur' .~ I· 11 '1.11u L'pt1 1 ():'\l SITE ClV C)lil: Nf•:\V RU JLOINt; PACIFIC MUTUAL FASl!HJi\' J.<;L 1\:"\I ) ~Corn1•1· ~.1 111:1 l'n11. .(: ,'\,'11purt {"1nl•1· !lrll<'I \lACllJNIST to g111 t'n~nw l.i!!it' .'i.· \'~·rh1·al null. \lu~t h:l\r" ;.:-•ofl!.I at!t'n dnn1· 1'i'1·ord. Apply 131 I lJ'l_i::an, t'Jut "J"' c· .. ~1:1 \lt•s;i 'i.\'.\-~h'lf'al 1lrl1\'1'l'i•'1'. ~hJ.~t hP nt>;1t .11pprar111';?: Irvin(' Offic(' Supplif'I!, 1ll07 Nr"·port Hlvd., C.M. '.\lA!J\'Ti'::\ANCI-: COUJ'LJ;: ~:\!,',! HI 1•11•;\l\lll).:, J\U !!l l!ll~ ,t,,; 111;11ut A1•t + s:1\ary. l'hone 'll'ln-~'n ~·1""1, :.!1 :1 ~~1~1-'.!~:1'.l, * \rE DO EVF.RYT!llNC * "·'f'· Irv in(• Cl)111p lf'\. \lr R<'f~. Frrt' ~·st. 646-28:\9 B1'!l11n ;,;)i-99{Xl. F'"RFf·: d.111\' h 11 • p!y in piT:-on Thf' Chili J)f'P-1ra rh f1t1r1 :1\11111 l•n 11••1"1. IJ'l,; Anl(C!('~ 11n11l 1)1"1' N€'11l M.Jl'f, Sf'jl! ·;:,: :\!,,1'UltE lfldy tu hi1h1·«1t 111y 111 llfll11f' -"l\11 r :1r . T th'" F.· i.i Thur« !l 'A ~fi 30. ~HI Jlf'r day. ~;1:....-11!l j BAY & Beach Janitorial Crpls/1\·indov.·s/floors c lc. Rf'.~ld/Comn1'!. &16-1401. CLEA:\ING Speci;l!ist: \Vin- (]011·~. curpct, floors, s1oves & 0\"f'llS. 77 1--0:\21 . 1va nls hous•'cleanin.c E:-.pt'rienccd. 011 n J)!'f' Hrs!au1·a11 1. :;:Xll PaPifi1.: ADVERTISING C1>:1!<! lh1). Cd:-.t. Great (Jppo11un1ty for hii:::hly Jo":x-·1-~1-. .:Jl Salt>s11on1at1 n••cded 111nl!vatf'd, l1 ighly sk1ll1'1l fvr Dt'iiu1y Supply S1nrP SC'Cl'etary to 11·ork into broarl-(J~;iut ii·ianl. Call frl5-:'IJSO er r1'spon~1h llilil'S :it f;ist · or f>IG-2816. pal'"rl t\e1v1l0rt Bea<'h ad-_. .... .__iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio [ \'€'r1 1sinJ: ;i1:rnl'y, Brains. FACTORY ini1iati1·P. & sh r€'au1rcd. On th€" J"h 1raining. Lite-fat'· ,,. .... ..,--... ---·I .\1l-:c1 !Ai\' it··-. -,c,~,..c,c., -:,:o,c1g"11· llYDRAULI(' t;·st tf'l·hn1•'11111 111f'nt, h11u•11p, 11rakr(, .t for USSt'Jllhl~ t,. 11·~1 1n;: VI\'' 1700 0 '"''''''' ,_ .~. 111 • -" ... ,. Al'ros1111cl' i!)rlr:iu l1t'.~. '111~1 1 , ___ , -,.,,. I l'"'' Jl ';I I l 1 .. , ,,.,t " •, , ~1 hrt \'P 2 .... T". 1111!). "XP I ' • On1•u1, 1~1 !';11, It~ ,~· snn ,\l1l11ary f'-.:p . ok. ~):,7-1"!'.!J \VE OFFF:f/ e FREE TRAINING e LEAOS e GROUP INSURANCE e CLOSING ASSISTANCE e DELUXE OFFICES e BONUS PLANS e MAX. ASSISTANCE R .E . LICENSE Get 1J1l th1• 1lt•1111ls SAT., Jun!' ·1 At 1 ! n'r lock A.M. Refre~hn11'nl11 srl'\INI 1'0rl'.i· Jllt'l1Clr!~ al 10 ::fl A.;'I! Richards & Assoc.1 Inc 17!M \\', l.111c-oln. Suitt' A. A11al11 ·1n1 S1111'1' 19'17 REAL ESTATE -SALESMEN-J..J\OY \\"Ork. t rans &.17-3637 C a ll 833-1670 ___ lnry & a ssf'nlhly. lJ.\ yr!<. & I ASSISTANT 1.11·pr :"ll<1n)' opPning~ in lhl' To trans1xise ('1Jl!1n:; lj('k l'I ~. lr1·1nt'·Nl'1\·1xirt lli'-al'h oirea. INJECTION MOLDING OPERATORS :\11-.(']l,\.\IC 11 an!1•.t I" r Need 1 or " r:-q,,.rirnrM La ndscaping TOP 501 L -541).0097 L:1.11•n Rl'moval, Rofo!ill Painting & Paperhanging PAINTING lnlf'rior-Extrr•or R<'llSO/labll' PrlCf'S 20 Yra1-s ~:xpcrit•nr·r F'rre Es1irna1r-s fi46-49S6 YOU Supply the Paint. Rn1s pnint,.d $10 l.'il avg_ Al!"), fl'l(- lf'riol'. Refs. 30 YN. <'Xpcr. Sh1pp1n.i: dr pr , 1·11·. Short .r,, Jon!.! t (' r n1 Marianne of Calif. 11 s~1gnn11•nts, Paid \\•kly. '.l:\3 l\1arinf' A1 €", na! ls. A 1, ~ n I u t ,. 1 ~-nn fee. ATIRACTIVE Bar111;11d, no KELLY GIRL 20ll\ Bus1t1C'SS C1t". Dr. l'XP<'r. Jl<'f' . .Apply in p••1·son. Vikki's Lounge, 17:'J 1 ·~ Irvine 833-1441 1':1•11·pol'! Bl\·U. C.:"11. 1~ .. ~~"!!~""""""'"""""" FIBERGLASS l'l-1old£rs, skiH-BABY~'T'TEH. Sununll" joll, t'd & unskilled. All J shi!ls. ~Inn-Fri. J.l;J0..11 :30. m ule or \\"c ll'ill train. 16.11 P lacer1- ft'n1rt.!t'. 2 Boys !") & 7. Salary C Opc'n. :J!">I Ilucknc!I nrJ .. C!\1. tia, os!a !\Iesa. FOR boys Jl through 14 \\'ho ll('C'<l a i;un1n1<'r 10b--Apply IlAB'fSITTER. for boys 7 ,i:, 11011·_ Bl'eon1t' a pal)('r boy . 11. llun1ini.;:ton Bt' n r h · Routrs open in t(lStll. r-.1esa \Vf's\1111 nsl€'1" ;:1rea. ~·01· ~u111-;incl Irvin€'. :J40.-300!i. (Or Trainees) For Pl<1stics M<1nuforturrl". grav£'yard shift. Musi b<' neat & dependable. 1'~ema!e prcl'd. !\l u.~t be uble to "·ork Sat. or Sun. Apply l PM-4 P!ll Costa ?o1csa. Calif. X!'J() \Ves r 18th St. * Or1u1ge Coast J>Jnsti('S * INSPECTOR l•ll • ·:.:n 1·•11·~. :11 1':1 1)12-~1 !1.l MEMORIAL COUNSELORS \Vll l Tt'llln 2 ?otatur,. J\ll'n Over 30 'f':x c-eUcnt Cn1npnny \\"11h fringe fle11t'fit.~ Abo\'f" 1\veragP Earn1nf(s i''<•r \\'orkrr~ \\'{' llavr C'oun"it'IOr:rt \\'ith U11 Jo'(lr Ovt'r 12 )'"<'arc; sall'liP•'tljlll'. /11ce11ti1·r 1•nn1· mission !J:lldlng sct1le plan, personaU:r.ed lrnining hy :1 professional. ALSO will train new UcenSl'e11. Small oftict', pteasanl working conditions. l"'r-rsonal interview -Ask Jor r.-fanager. U.S. AFFILIATED Brokers Rf!aJty 847-850'7, Evmi 96S-l t78 REAL ESTATE -SALESMEN· wANTeo·----old. \II('. 'forktO\l·n & 5 ''rs 1•xper. in arra. Jt,.. planting. haul a11;1y , )::t'nf't:il landsr·u1l{" m:11 ntC'nanct'. ~}-1(}.;l}lclic.~-cc:;---;--= l"'AIN'fll\fG. lnl. .~. F:xr. Ren:-. ra tt'~. \\'ork guaran'ri. I M al rt'!S. Li<.·. Phi I, 1!)1-W.ll. mer. Aft 5 prn. 11k1k1y~. all 1--=-""'-:-=·o--·~- rlay \l'('('i(f'nl'!~. S97-~Jil. Gen'I Ofc. $425 1':0011·l<'dgt· or hookk('Pping. / Tyf)(' '10 v.·pm. Kt10\\' 10 key arlrl. Good hanrl11·riting. \\.'lit tr:11n frir D;'llV eonrr.:ic!s Call H~:l-5011. Broad exrwr. required in first 11.rticle &. lx'nf'h inspection & familianly 11•ith all pl't'r i&- 1on n1,.cli;1nieal n1easuring insll'um€'nls. Layoul e'.'l:per. 111 cast1ni.::s pr€'frrred, \\'ork \.\'llh an f's!ablish- <'11 off11'1' 11 l!h n i.:roup or Chrls1 11111.~ ~f' fill' rl1f. trrPiJC'<'? ltC'p!1('S 1-onfi- d€'rll 1aJ. A~k lnr E•l. Young couplr "·ould likr ff) rent 2 BR unfurnish<'d housP "·ith Rarage in Ct-.f. Up to 5150 n10. Coric! r€'fs . .Roth e-mployed. 557.9305 alt 4 P~I. PllYSICJAN. "·Hp & lll nio olri daughter, $l'ek 1-2 yr. rl'lllal of 3--1 Br. home in Turi IP P.ock or (Univ. Prk. I 8.i~ 1.:ro. \V ATERFR(l;'\'T hon11', 111u1. ol :: Bdrnis ,r.i bath.-i. !\lonth 13ushan:L Rt'ward. 96J.-~7. RE\\'ARD! Wst stnall blk & v.·hit<' mn.le kitten. f'.:<'ar 18th & Orang<". C.\I. 548-1516. LOS!': Ladies chan1ond \\'f'd- riing band, ''1c. RaJJ:>o.,1 JJ>.larul. Rt·'\•iard. 61.J-760-1. [ S~ices and R~ir1 I ~ of Aul!. I'll' &'pl Xlnt I Carpet ·,ervice rvfrrrn('''~. Cali Stal1flcr f:!J:l J 7!1.l-1188. STF.Aflf Carpt'I Cleaners. \\'A~TED: Bus. 111an <lrs1rcs proff'ssional at Io 1v (' .s 1 11.~C'/art 10 shnr1-. Prf'f,.r nr prif'rs. 3 fl\'~ rms romplC't(' Pen . f.:d-Eve: 67r.-1 1<Jl $39.9"~72. Babysitting e DEPENOABLE e BABYSllTING Jl:1rbor·Bakcr nr<'a 546 ·4145 1An __ n_ou_n_c_e __ me_n_t• ___ 5_00_ 1 BAHYSIITING in n1y home. *Wanted Dead* RefeN'"n('(',;, Costa r.tesa Aluminum cans that have served you wrll & provid('d hours of plesSur€'. RUN!!! lo 1060 Gtennl'Yfl' St .. LA· guna Beach. No glass 1\'hnt- ~11cr acrl'p!Prl. area. 642--0384. RARYSIITER 24 Hrs Fenced Back Yard * Call 642-1592 * BABYSITTING, N B. arc11. Jn my homr. Any Qgf', \\lkly or hrly. Call 675-3238. Frrt' r«lim;itf's. 541).7873 or 646-9016 AL'S GARDf:NIN°G-- for s::ardming & s m a 11 lanrlsc:i pin~ .c:ervicec:, cal l ~1-I0-519S <',.,.s. Ser v 1 n i: Nf'11'port. Cd:\!, Costa r.les;i, Do1·rr Shore.~. \\'rstl'lilf. PRnF1·;:-:s1n:-J1\I. 1r"<' 11·n1 k. 20'~ 1!isc. paper ,':,: har1e ir.g, n1ob1],. ston', 1·i11yl, flock. ;..ii-5.IW6 The II an g: man 8-lfi-2182. P 1\I'.'JTJ1\G • llonest. r!ran. guaranlred 11·ork. Licf'n "'r>U ,'f;, insurrd. 61:r.il-lO_, ___ _ ~:x·rEJl. Complnr 2 ('O<l l«, 1 :-;'nr.v $240. '!. ~tory S:'.XJO. J\',.at \\<l!"k. Ro.1. S-li-1 3:~~. Bt-..:AUTICIAN 111111 clit'nlf'!f' 1rantltl f\1r J..;:pn T€'mpl('!1Jn !lair :';t~li~I 1101 \\'('str liH Dr, !\B. B t-:A u·crcl C"' lcAc,c-,oc--,-,~-clc<'~l-cf~"' hus) shop. S!.6.·1 hr nr ;()'' <'<lmn1 . I'd 1.1<'. <;;i ll ~-l.~-flll!'1 -BOAT TOUCH·UP f;i•lt'fl.11 ('\j}rr. r.•qlLll"f'ri Co:i.~la! R,.r r€'al1nn. lnr . 9·10 \\'. 1i1h :-1 r .. 12 0:142 pr 11 n 1 11 g. tr\ n1 n1 1 11 ~. l'f{Of''. painli n.i:;, 1ntt>r/€'X!Cr. spr.1.1•1n1.:. :-Pr Ink l f' r ~ -Qunlily \\"Ork. R<'.1s. Lir 'd p, CJ 0 1.:;J.:;fE!'ER-Cor1~1 ru<·T · l .:1nd~r:1 p1ni;:. f' 1,. n 11 11 fl · lns. ;)~7-ilJ.I. ;113-2139 :1[l J. 1"11. ll1r11 TB. ll•'rll'Y 1\ P \.l'<'n::r f,.\l>-31':!.".. \lu~! II(' 1'\fll'I' l nH111•1I. T NEW-LAWNS-.-* WANLo LIVP:i~~ER * i•fli·n1ni,:. C.dJ ,\rlr•n,., !Jl-i'l....f,i2~. Sod. ~!t·lnns -~,.ri ini::. Yarr! \\'hen you call "f\-1ac" ___ ___ - r("rnodrlini;:. Sta te L1c"d .. 5'IS-l4+l 646-1711 ROOf.:KEEPErl f•'r :0.1e1hcal 5.l-1-4.~:!l . ----tirn1 IN'alt•d in l\"1·11110rr :lfl IJ:1y Sprf'IUI. In!t'r/Extror AL'S l..and~c·apin}:. T rt',. ITmoval. ''11rd rt'nlnrlf'lins::. Trash haulln~. lo! rlranup. !!€'pair ~prinklrrs. 673-1166. Be:1cll. Pll'n~C" I o r \1 a r rl 111i in!lng. 1.ic'rlfln~. IJ'lc11I r('sUnll' in Mnfic lornrC' tn l"{'r~. 3ll Yrs. t'Xp. Free t'SI. 1>.o. no\ 108.~0. Santi! Ana Cilll C.'huck, &15-0.'\~. 1 Re1a1I ,;porting £l!Oc\!1 .WALLPAPER-HUNG i:'.,.·r.Ef-:PETt. i'iill 11n1,.. Carl Rt'hk0 646-2449 F.CI 10 JOB AGEr-.'c'· 6,'l.11 \\"tsln11nstf'r ,\1"{'1lUl' \\"l'stm insh•r, Calif ------;-c-,c;c ---1; !·. :<. J-: 1-t /I I, n Jo' t ' IC J;:. &a11 t1ru1 n1,,rl1·rn n r I 1 c r 011•1·!01'l k1ng thr (l('f',Ul. 1111~ 1·rJ, <1fff'I"-< lh(' l1t~I l~·n(·f 1ti. 111 11i,. :~n·a. ,<;111 r ! S 1:1:,. F•'f" l':11d. f",.1' J1,1" ,\]~I) C'111l .J •-.111 B1,n111, ·•'10 -fi .<l !'J :,. {'n i<lnl Ai;:tn1·~, 2 j !I (1 Harl~1r f\1. n1 Aolain$ --.;:-:ccc=~cc! ; r 1t1 _-.; • It 1 r h a r <l s o n ' " no 111 9 !lour Day '1~ I lour \Vcf'k Pmfit Shanng THE l. C. CARTER CO. 671 \\. 17!h ,c;1., Cos!it ,\'lrsa S4J.3421 f)p1{1t {lp[l!irluni!y Emp!oyPI INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE Full or p/tlme. For An Jnf<'1''ll'''v Phone 644·0212 NEELED As.s!Aant to Kelly Te-m-plcton "-'It h opportunity lo bf>cnmf! ~tyliJ;t. ,,Just hflv f' Californi a Cosml'.'11')]ot;i1<t I ! r P n .~ 6-12--0Hl-1. e e NEEDED Two Office Girls '"' BE YOUR OWN BOSSI *•'l"lll'\\111~ shop I;ir!~ 11\-10 Men or Women l coc--c----~$2 H ror 11 1.i:h µ.1y1n.i: ros11 ions. 11 Packager • r. ,\'F.F.D h:iby~illt'r • $1 lf) hr. °"·n trflnS", Z or J afte rnnon11 dur111i.: "'k. llarhor Vie1\' Hontt<s. &JO-JS.l7 ~rt 6pn1. you ;i rP int€'rest€'d ,111 niak-Lease A Yellow E:xcr.llrn! t:'<impany hf'nrrlts HI!! S~SJOO pert titn{', C'QU· & mt'rit increo.ses are )'(Jurs Taxi Cab Jlli· ni~hl ~ a \l"t'ek -0r $\~ if you ha\'e &0mt' previous $2000 v•rt"k, full tJm<', €"all plant or a~t>mbly exp. Call • 1•90-1 Call for Appl -~v-I · 893.S(}ll. JAPANi':Sf: r. a r •I<' n" r. Coinpl<'tr-\':11'fl\V()rk & Ot•a n-up. f'rt'C Est imntl's, &12-3102. P ROFE:;iSJONAL rnor. riainhng, also roofs. accous. f'f'il., inter/l'xtf'r. Lic /Jnc; f'"'r<>I' f'.~t . 6-l;)..5191 . Jap.anc."t' Gardening: Ser.'if'e INTERJOR·Exft•rior Qua11!y Free E~!. '* 6-IB-«i\9 11·ork. R('a.'i'Onab!y prieed. Expert Japanese Gardenl'r i'-1't'r f"St . 6-16-l?;(]fi. bu~in{'c;s. Sal a ry haS<'1I upon oGcl~R"L""'>·c.,c,,7,cy--cLcict<c-;tcycpcio"g. (' x pc r lf'l1 rP. HuntinJ;!on c:rnrral of!lre Y.'Ork. To P.c..~l'h JOC';\llOn . C:i!I Ed ;i~s 1sl orlt' J'.!'.irl nff1C<'. 1 blk Clark for ;1pp1. 0Ci2-:i:i2 1. 10 hea ch. Hour-. f!cx ihle to BOOKKE~.:Pi':J{ F/C. 1{€'n I your ncl'lls. Dre~~ opllon1ll. ll'dgf'r lhru tri11l lmlarl<.'('. P€'rm. Nr"'l)Or! rcR i<!tinl. 546· 1311 ECHO JOB AGENCY 6531 \Vf'stmin~ler Avcnuf! Nik for Hl'.'nnan We!J:lmin!lfPr. Calif. INSUllANCE As,:-cncy Girl. PAINTER fast painter for Koo"·ledR:e of O\\·elling nre lrJi:'. apt. bllisc. F\111 time. & l·lomc ownet11 rating J>txint" J\l\ln-Fri 9-ol , Z13: h€'lplul. Xlnt opp. S.1 Jary 355-2859. llc11.vy on l'"f'r1i1·ahlrs, ~mt' llii.:h Sr ho fJ I , OCC, typing. :\lr Am11 n. !i.'i7-!Y.IOO. 11 o u -~,. 1v i r r (JI\. Call Compll'te Yard 51'.'rviCP Plaster, Patch, Repair FrC'e <'slin1all'!1, 646-7624 * PATCJ·T PLASTERtto;G I I~ l t's a bn!(!ze .. sell your C 0 MP L ET E La\l.·n & All typ!'s. fret' P~tima!es Pe1"1on~s ._ I it('fns \\'ilh case, use Daily Gardening i;ervlce. 1-laullng· CnJl '.'.10-682:-i ~. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·~"Wm;~ PUot O assifie-<l. 642--5677. & clean-up. J ln1, 54~105. I ;P~l-u-m~b""in~g:------ :eraon•ls 530 I i*iiiiiiiii*iiiiiiii*iiiillliiiiiiiiii"°'iiiiiiiiii*ii SAVE on hnn1f' repairs. frl'e ---------* * e~t ., plumblng, paint. In- BOY~· :i•IG·~dH4. Ag<' 10-14 ro 1lc1tver parlt'rs ---c,,c,c"7'c,c.rc,odacy,,---- in the Dann I'olnt, Srui Cle-~ hrs prr tlhy, in CM menu• area~. ;,.u~.4110 opi•n. J\1os t h{' ~'OO<t typist. -"P'°A"R"T"'T"lo;M""E~'Po;B;cX.,- California In 5 u ra n c e ; MOJl·Tues·\Ved 5 to 8 PJ\f, hvil"K', Calli. Call Ft'rn Nut-Sat & Sun 12 ·noon 10 8 p~f. II"!' for ln!l'\IW. 113.1-9480. r.tr. BIU~<'ll, S46· 1361. ~ t n 11 at i on s, hauling. SJ!H)3i2. DAILY PILOT 49241~0 COLLEGE stuclC'nt. full l int<' summer, p:lrn time during school, al Shell Station on r.IR.L Fridl'I~'. :\·lk1g <.:onslt. Sharp. ln1\1nti1·('. Typing. llC'scnrch, bkpg. plusC's. :lO Jlr. 11·k. SJ hr. P.O. Rox R822. Fountain Vall<'y, 92708. PART T i1ne. Early /IJ\1 JR\/JNE PER.50NNEt dt'Jiwry. 'i\1usl have pick-up SERVICES •AGENCY 1-0-',_,v"'c-',.,,· ·=~,..._1 "',,.· =c-- Fr€'C & re-P, Po11itinns EXt'('. J\.fktng Sec'y lo $675 rart Time Paintl'r, Cal'J>('nfer, Laborer. * FlJL.LY LICEN.3.ED * Rt>nowned Hindu Splrltual!!lt. Splritunl Readings given daily, 10 AM-10 PM. Advice 1 given on all m11.llt>rs. I can I help you. Trader's Paradise PLUt-.1BING REPAIR N('/ job too small * 642-3128 it C11ll 54()..5560 ScCTr-lsries $600 Eni<:inecring Sei•'y lo $550 PIZZA Cook11 & Df"Jl\'CI')'_.. S«-rei11ry 1() S550 male O\·er 21. pft in1e. A~ 312 N. E1 Camino Real San Clemenr e 492--9136 or 492-!KIJ.4 S.1ve ~loney, &lvt• Th111 Ad! Jltumbi~ N'J>."irs S9 per hr f>-l2-27'55 or 642-1·!03 COLE PLUMBING 7 ply 16.')Jl Beach Blvd., Jtunt. S.'c111!11.ry Lf'gal In $600 Be h A"t-oun!lng Clf'rk11 to S51XJ ac · f.:§C'rov.• [)<'f'll11/Note11 In s:n 5 POS'TAL'-~Cc,-mc.-.,-,. -;0.-:-,,llc,.-, G••n'l Olc /ll te hkkpng $500 )'our OW1'I area. Costa !\!es.a, Newport •• Fairview 646-1111 (1nytime) Rei1I E1t•t• Cal'ffr New or experienced, join the Company that's growing, If you do not have a license, chr.rk on our $49 Real E stat• Licen1lng Course Full i;aJ,.s tra1nin:: pr()jl'l'am -no cost. l\TAnngcment op- portunHit's. A~k for !\!n. Jon€'11 for iafnnnation at 842-5511 1. Tarbell Realtors Real E~tatc Professional Rt•al Est11.tc Salesmen & l>1'flkers! The opportunity i1 hl're! You are ntt'dt"d immcdl11;trly ror our rapidly cxpanti ing Rf! a I E111ate divl~ion. Posilive op- portunity for advancement, i''or appoinlml'nl phone Rick RIX'gn€'r. RECEPTIONIST $4GO Arthlteictural firm looking lor sharp gal w/good t;yph~ skill!! It plf'aMnl t~l~phone penonality, Co. pays ltt. Also f<'<" positions. CaU Barl>11.r11 King, 5f0.0035 NEWPORT • FIND YOURSELF JN' SO?ofEONE ELSE. DISCOVER DISCOVERY 71 4/~ 2!Jf3B'l·3393 PROBLEM ~gnancy. Con- fident, ~mpathetic pl"C!gan- cy cousellng-, Abortion & Adoptinn ref. APCARE. 642--4436. . lines times dollars 24 hr. servlee. &15-ll61 Remodel & Repair heach in l.aKuna. NO lonit llOUSEKF.EPER v.·antetJ, to hair lit must Ix' 111. 494-9003 live in. Thert' arr ju!'lt two CLERK TYPIST: Exc1linl". of us with a homP in I rvine opportunity for sharp i!:al Terrnc1•. Our pr e .~ en t \1·/.11:ood ~kills. tdPal "'Ork-couplr, 1vho hn''e bf'en v.·i lh ing rond1 llnn~ 11•/r/lpirl nrl-v.~ fnr ~'--i Yt'Rrs, are rt'lurn- vn11('(·1111"111•. To $-11 2. Call in~ In f.llfl':ll\nd to tf'lil"f' l'nd Linda Ray, 5 4 o-fl o s 5, nt Jun('. Occasional rook.ing, Coastal ,\RC'ncy. 2790 Vt'l)' J11tJ(• t'nlertaining. jusl Jlarhnr Bl. at Ad11.hi11. .ll:t'llt'ntl hnu.~C'\\'Qrk & light K1·yp1.1nC'h to $475 11'unl. Bch.. F'ntn. Vly. Heceplioniir;t/Typist $400 llOUSt'l\·ives pT'l'f'rl. 5.»-0402. l'>1t1111t' C;rn'I Office $2.80 hr San Clem 496-5903 alt 3 WI .E. 17th ftll lrvint'I C~I pm. PERSONNEL AGENCY 3848 Campus Dr., NB /ILCOllOLICS A nonyn1ou~. l>tion<' 512-7717 or 1vritc r .o. Boll: 1m, O>sta 1\t,.AA. r rav.1 540 SET SAIL TAHITI Grand 111 Ma~ti'l:f Schoon!"r, Crrw l GU('Sta shn~ cosl.11. 1213) 37J.1239 llAVE 11harp 2 berlroo1n, pool Cd!\1 Harbor View lune \Vant 'J'u.sth1 fooU1ill1 3 to ~ bed., large lot preferred. /lg!. 675-7225. C.R.T. Green metal Alakr F llx'ritla.'."I dun~ bum w/tow m& &. many extra11. I Trnde for I/0 boat, 847-7921 * * RE~IODEUNC. addition!'!. patios. prompt ~rvice. /ITT' e-sli1nale!!, rcfcr€'n~. local hui!rtrr, 1-10 p.m. 9(i.\..9()67. \VMI C11mper, IBM ell'rf., 96S-006-t ){Ave 'fi7 C.11ry1le r N.Y. $55.- 000 Ex~. home . .Shop\ll'mlth, Roofing Vacuum ('Quip. 23' 1111ilboot. I -.:-·~T~.''"'l'.[;~,-y""'R~oo-Oli-og-.-,~.:.-~1 548·4900, ~.. flint'!. I r~1 n1y own "·ork. L1k1• to !rndP? Our Trari<'r'11 64.i·27l<ll. :1'1:'1·!1590. Parnd1"e {'())umn I~ r1ir you! Sewlng/Alleratlons ~I l1nt" * ~I rll\j'!I for !"1 hurk~. * * ___ ,, ____ ._ fl Jo:ST<:NER-Eu.rnpean trnint'd, 20 )'t!'i. f'Xp .. ™'"' In 1Jun11n~ton B<'nf'h. 96.'t--0739 Alterations -642-S845- Nf'11t, n,..,..,,nile. 20 ytAr,: l"Xp. 64 2-1470 'r~R~F~:-&~.-,c""-c' c,-.,-,~h-,-,.-,,_,~,-"-"" CLERK/TYPtsr-laundry. II you happen to hnvi• n h11,~hand \\'hO Is good To lrnrn l..'!.d1e! C11.rmC"nt nt (;ardi·ninJ,?, "·r 'rl like tn f.l fg lalk !<l l1 un rnn. Tht-rn art' .!!!"'.''.":~~~~:":'::".\:~""" Marianne of Calif, L"•n1 fnrt;1 b!•· living-quarlent music bckgrnd. 111.~ion Vie- KEYPUNCHERS )1. ;'11rs. Diehl. 8'37-299.1. .~:U 1'!1trlnt' Avt'., Ral i.!I. Ad"qll<•I " for n oouplf'. Cf)~1PANION Pli•:tM' Jth(')ru• 0 46.-3963 l lOUSEKF:EPi:R \\'f'"k•!n.v.~ fnr ~pointmrnt. [,h·r·ln & <.'f"1Qk f<1r €'ldt'rly JIOLiSJ-:KF:E;PEH, Iii<' "')rk. l :l1I~. SXX) nio. 6i.;..J932. 111·1• 1n 'l 1•ld<'rly lnrl1e~. Bal. COOK :irf';i. ('ull fi73-.l2i-l·I. Sonic f',\fK'r. n<'l"I'~~. ApJ;ly llAllt st}li~t v./clicnti>l4' In prr•;op. 1.ove':ri nnQ, Sl;i!onn ri 1·;ul. 70~~-Ask fur Aronkhurs! & Arlam~. lrB Nr•rrnll n, !iil-5930 NTI. lf11ve !l(lm11hlni;: )'QU wan! toll\'11 A bM'tzc. ,fiei\ your ~C'll'!' C1n~1flt'd ads <I(/ It 11rm~ \\'!th t'ai;e, USt' Daily ~ru -tall NO\V 612-~illi~. 1 •11r~r CIR..,ifiNI fi...12..'.~TI. NrrdC'rt lrnml'Clln!1•ly. All PHINTIN(; .~hlfl,, n1t1.~I havt'! cxper. J ~lMEl)l/IT~ OPEN INGS >.ln't l'nrn ln~~-fOR F.XPEltrENCEfl Call Sue KELLY GIRL 833-1441 2061 Dusint·s11 Center Dr, ll'\llne e Stripp•r/pl•t• maker e Fold•r/cutl•r op•r•+or L.l-:G1\L ~"1·1·i-1 ;1ry: rrrin1e ll1•ff'tf'll(',.~ 1tt'qu1rrd n111y lt':ld to 1'' I ! I m f' . :0.lartt'C Print!nK, t:,77 rl11 · '"ou n~. ;\.I nt t ~11 1\t. r!1("· 1·r nt1a. N.U. No ph<lnl' 1'111!~ tarhn11t" C.11-(.IY.'.'::, 1"1\'(lt r1lrll~f'. An rqual oppor1un11y Cf'nt,.r · l'!l'l l!kl)•f'r, iiii:EPTIONIST; Use )'OW' ability wlth (le(lplfl on lh l11 job Convince !hf! client.I tlll1i 1his is thr flnt'st com- 1111ny In lhf' R.n:n. Strir\ $476. Call Nwx·y i\luy. ~ Cl'"ln~t11! A,R€'11C}. 2 7., 0 lfnrhor Bl. 11t Adnma. TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 . ________ __.. ··~. ~ • I l • Help Wanted, MI. F 710 .._Ip Wonted, MI. F 710 Help Wonted, MI. F 710 Help Wonted, MI. F 710 Fumftu1'9 Pl..,../O.,.n1 126 Rl::C!'.:PTJ O,\JST -l;irJ rn <l;l). ln1n1l'd1att-pos1!1<in 1v1!.h ~l'Chll1•1'!U l'lll fll'!)1. N.B. Plush surJ'O(tl'\<lir~~ • Good starling sala!). f"rOnt 0H1cc appearunl't.' e~sen1 1al Call ~like* tl7:,..2:;~1J ' Hi-:Ttl'!EO nu111 1" '''"•rd1n:i t,.. ('(Jmplt<Uon 11! rh111·rh e .. n. ~lr'U<'lion pro.11't'l. 21-.i:l Iii"~ 1wr v.·k. Sn1a ll ~.d;ory, C.all X:i'J-6297. ''";;;======1-------: • &>er~u.1r111J 'v'&\.·•I~ R1·H1•/ SECRET ARIES Eern "'tour Pay Th• Kerfy Girl Way One Time, Part Time Or AU. The T!mc J uJt See f(•!' 1\dv,.rt1~u1ic l)t>pt. Tr1kr Sii, 1y pt>, detail \\Qrk. Av· prvx. fi wttkll. Starling J t1ne Zf>. 1972. Call ;\l11ri::nrf'I Cr1•('nmu.n r11r A1>po1nt111t•nT DAILY PILOT ~,''.() \\' Uny ~I.. CJ\! 6~2-1121 1,r111t'rn 9.4 P~1 1-se.;mstress, f/time Thf'n J~irk Tht<. Hours. 011)·~. 1 :JOL 2\lth Str\'1.'l, N 8. l~1 ·n1.,'1h 01 F~1nplo,r1nl'l1\ I 1"h:Jt f 11~ Your NP('ri~ ~t..Jt VJC'f: S!t1!1on ertf'n<lanl. Yuu'IJ \\<•rk JC,.r l 's •'\f'l'l'. llil}e ,t· It nv•(•hrirur al, ()n l)ur Pay1'fdl .dl ~h1f1~. lru,I, J{r:11•·y:irrl, In n 11r \u~1n1n1·rs !llfii •·.!f. !,ill & J1<1rt l!rnf' a1:111. ;\fl- 1\,~'H f'hu1 A \Vork ply tll l"l°"Ofl '1nh. l.;:i P;i1. Schrth1lr 'ft1 Suit Ynu l'n1urJ, L.'1 /J;:1z Jt1l. & !'ian Ull•' Thal ls T:1ilf•rt•d l>H'~'• F1",1~. ------1'Q \'uur Al>1l1t,y ~l~rt\'IC~~ra11on at1rnrlant Y!1t1r Timr p/t1n1c·. c·\'('S & \11knds . .t.X· Yo11r Tran:,por1;1liun lti'I' 11nl;1.. ,o.,;,,;.1\ 111 ;1p \\'Atm1'::SSES. No l'.xp. n-q. FRENat Prov. bt<lroon1 Top \\'age!'I ~nd t i~. ~tusr furn. a.n1 iquf' wblte !in. b<• neat & W<'ll i::-room«I. v.·/gold eolnr acttnts J<~n" A11ply' i11 ~r!!On, ,Daily.1 ll 111ze beq \\'/headbo.'\.Td, Dl;J aru ~pen ,Ses.an1c, 1410 \~ r111 d re 5 8 t r , df'E"ss tbl~ i'a<·1f1c Coast JI"')'., Ne11'· v.·/bendl, triunt"l:I mirror, port Bf•ac:h. ar rn t hr, chat.st> lounge, 2 \\"AJTR.ESS. r~prr. V\•'r 21. n1gh1 :-Inds, $1.iOO or best J•IOfl & 1'()(·kt~1 \ls. Apply Lil rt.•as. ofter Oak Dln tbl IJ'.'JSOI\, Thr Ulu~ B~··I, 107 \\'/011(' hll $35, Culligan :tl.'! P l. N.B. auro watf'r sofl cner S200 or \o.·1,ITRESS for <.-ofJco• ~hQp, best. ·l!}.1--0669 oVi'r 21. t::;.qwr. Apply 1n SILVERTONE Sier('(), $80, ~-1·so11, i\lf'!>a I.a nt's, 1703 Provincial Cabinet ('nJ, Surx·r1or 1\\'",, C.:'lt. Shops :'11aple Gatr LR~ \\'A I T ll E SS, t>'Jll'rteHt't' l>\Pr 21. AJJJJly At L11\rS, Hrookhurst & Ar!an1,;, I lun· <lrvplraf t.ihlc & J)llds, all x lnt., $120. 8' s o fa , n1111J!nllydf', ix1r! a blr TV, to ngton &a<·h. m;.i ple bookcasP heat!lflarri. ___."'-':C.-'-...'-------1 ciouble, S33. G las~ pritJo \VEl.C0:\11:: \\'aw:on ha~ 11rrn-tabf-1 & ('ha11·s, $00. S.12-:'1179. ings in Ne,1·port lk'a<'h. ~.'""""-'--'C. =cc.:cc..:._ _ _:. l\t\1~! have rar & t)'P('"Ti!<'r S<lLI~ Birch bedroom ~f't *AUCTION* FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. June 2nd Late mod~I color TV'a, 1 pot· ~able, 51<'"-"03, new A-US('d divans & love 11eal.s, bed· rwm sl"ls, bunk ix'd:s ch('sts, m aplt' dining sets, rockers, coUce table<c, w;ird. ro~!I, Spanish S\\•ng lamps, 2 side·by-i'lide fro:st free rr- frigera tor11, 2 avocalla stoves, lotii of ml~·. !or s1•·ri p mri•t•·rs. WINDY'S AUCTION COJ\tf! BRO\\'SE AROUNn 2075\; Nc11•port Blv~r. Behind Tony's Dld,t;. f11a r1~. Costa t>fr~u -. 6lf. !!f.Rli GOULD MUSIC CO. l F..W. CaLico long hail". PR.ESEN'1'S 3 tnooths old. Clack, lted, LARRY ROOU Dro .... ·n, \\•hilt. CaU &16-4268 Premltting the 11-iittln..cuJor after 2 p.m. New Conn Org11 ru1 1 .,::::::...:'-"::::-----~ Sunday, June 4, 2:30 rim S~L r PJ!1PY • .3 mo:oi, nii~ at El~~~ i!.~~i'~t ;;;~:~ Ana ~~ecl'~tldrc~l 1 ~fk k "i_ t~'. Frf'e adn1iss100 ~.l.~-G37s. priz•·~. fun, SPA YEO fen1.!IC' La b 10 good • * * * * honH'. A)so G e r m an l\!r, Roou ronduc·ts fte•~ \\'Ofk· Shf•phcrd ll go sanlf' home. ~hop in our 111ore 10 nn1 1 _:6~7~:....:"="::::..· ------- l\11)ndn.y June 5. Call for LA.!\l"DLORD says I go or he r eservation. goes. 10 r'no. n1ale German C:OLILD l\·rUSJC CO. Shep-hsebroke n • lovt's kid:i. 204il No. rota.in, S.A, 557--0697. 547.oost * * Sin_ce_19_1_1 I c•=,P~c=·n~SO:,,.,N~A~L~J~n~·~p~u~P~Sc--• * ATTENTION * ORGAN BUFFS! Cocker-Bl'ag-11', fret lo loving hon1es. 496-3729. YACllTIN<; A~tt11 C'.orp. u1v!te11 I~ public to ride on the lvorld' s lirst Turbine l»"'ered pleasun' boar' on Ju11~ ~. j , 4. Z.-"J05 \V. Coa..!t Jl 1~h\raJ-, 1''e-.1·port ~ch f.1&-()5.) I. -------41 1-·r. Cltris Craf! u·l·t'l\btn tl t:iL r lank 11111hog. beauty! Comp, rt't'OIKL, !uaded Y.'llh f':-;tra~ .. S2-l ,t\Xl, I>r1 v. ply. 2'J:l : -lJ~2')tj:J :ti3:4Zi-7493 16' Ci"n l11ry, Fish Ski or rur.about. xln't (.'()nd. 170 hp C'h~. i\fusr sell. lkst ofr. ~ll-,13 1.'J, 5.i2-9.'.iS9 eve~. c·1JJI C)r \'1.,11 "":tranr". A1•PI'. murn111).;~ f!Ol'it1on. f'J«•V10US l'(IUle Ill' I" ,o · _fi~ Ii~ (; t only, TJ!:JO r\e"'"f~rt Bl\<l .• ~l&-571:'!, W/tw1n b<-ds, dbl~ dre&St'r. -lg \\'ood frrimed n1u-ror, nJ!I" \\'HILE i\1on1s av.t1y wh1.::h stand. $125. \\'al Jli-f i r f' sponsiblf', 11ff1•1·t1ona le, cabirl('t 1~1 t h fir v.lthnnt f'.~fl('rlf'l'l('~d, anci f'llf'rgc!ic con1ponenls, SJ.5 to $90. 110n1an J!> J:illltlg to t'tU"P fnr/ 546-97-15 OPF.:\I nAI!.Y 9 lo 4 UOUJD-ATION SALE- u~ed & n l'IV ifrn1S O! 111] kinds. }·tJrniture, l.\'Pf'llTH- l'rs, Je1l'el.ry , cnmr•r;1s, in- ~trun1f'nts, sport fquip & restaurant equip, pn'hirr.s, bri('k-a-hrnck. No re<1i;o11nh lr offer r rfnsl'd, 2.'l:.O Nr11·port B!vd., C.M. lcnrnl"'r Of \\'11· sq_,1f Boats, Rent/Chert'r 9DI GliN"S <'C'N'pled in tr~de, Pn1t1t.x 'i'n~hica S . L . R., ~r\larJ;:t•r .Sl :i, ~itlf" proj. takes bo!h l5 & 21~. 773'1 B<'JgTa\'f' Ave .. G.G., lkh. & Cha pman, <.-:'11un. ECHO .JOB AGl~!\'CY ' C, ''-------- :->U lf'i> ""fl. C;itl .~9.1.:..,11. I 2531 \V('S lllllllSl1·r Avenue I! ';J ll' s 1 "r 'f EH-ll()USEKEEl'J·:R 1IAV£ UOA ·T-\\.'ILL Sport C1&-0000 TRJ\VEL !Jslunc 0-uising tTt·1-8Zll 1---IV~e~'.:c1n:.!._r::.1_:~. ~ul iL I 2llfi \ fiusin1>ss C1•11!t'r fl1· 11·on1an 40 to ~ !I) e:.ire fl'!r :t rhdd1'i:'ll l11 111y ho1ne. !°> ;.r old S: 2 n10 infunt. Lil~ th<' 5 WOndC'rS? Agi•s 2 10 12. -'-''--'--"~· ------- :11•Jnday H1ru Fr l d a y. VELV~J ~uftt'd sofa. ll('Wr X1tin-61nn. 5~~r-70l0. u~eri, $13:.i; 1natch1ng lov<' SALESMEN Irvine 833-1441 1 Boats, Sail learn the c:ar business and hou~r 11·11r k, .1 r!<i} 11·k. 7 :~ 1\f'Cd lnen v.•hO are r·f'ady to I <1re \villing to trai11• P..tust *Secretary $550 am tn 5::>.0 pm. 0.1<n tran~. ..-..::::.2::::..::.::_:__::c_ ___ I ~mt, SS~1; vr!vr r hi-bnck XL.NT Oppol'. Nat'l Concern cM.ir. S8j: l'OC'ktail tnbles. J1as (lpl'nin~.~ for route s:~~ f'il; Jan1ps, $20 ea. salesnH~n in C.:.1. 962~16. 531\~ZSJ. 8-16 l\rt><h1o:tion P L, N.B. 645-1530 G<}(}O dog fur ~·"Xld hu1ne . :vJedium siie malf', 11 :! yrs. Exe. \1'/l'.'hilrlrt-n, tii:'.-73.~ I. r·RF:E ro ,;DOd h.-.me -]{lk .~· \1·h1tr n1nlc> ki1tf'n. ~ \\'ki>. olci. &If~ 1:~19. LJ/X) 14 l\o. 3159 including lr11 il1·r. Xlnt t:ond + frcr n1l'n1ht•r sh11> 10 NC\1'po11'15 n•'ll'l'.,I & llno',,t Yacht Club. :'i:?:>;iO, f'l.Jt;...1·:~11. have good personality, be Sh 80-90, lype 60 +Some c•xp., $6:J. 11·k. 8 pd hoti<l a }S & [)<I ·., "n"''."" ,., ...... ~-· '""h".' "I \':J('l1l11,n, Hunlin«ton Jk·a~·h. interested in a J"uture, dress 1" ~ "~ .. ~(· ""' .,, ,-, """ .. v.·ell, salcSJninded. Bt'nefit.s! hackg round helpful. c'c':\tcrlll_:.:::c'"c· -------YOUNGj.\AN o-;;,:-18 tO -~t_:A_PcL~c-· -b,-m-k-0-,-,-ru-o~dl, A s s i s t Maintenance heds, n1att x!nt S50. Pair of Man, must be neat, ef-J'\iahogany con1mOOe~ S10. ficient & reliable. $1.75 \Vindsor arm chflir $25. hour. Call 546-5025. Antique clock $85. 673-1676. STERP.O: u nc r Rini f'd J:iy;'.!\1·n y, C::1 rrard 4 ~prr(! chnni::er. 11 i r ~·1~J)(>0.~1tH1 spenkers 11·i!h m u 11 i ri I ,.. c ro~ ~-n v er ne!1vc•1'k, AJ\f/F!\f/l\fPX radio 11nd T11pe df'ck, Still hr;:incl nr•r- FREE Demo., group ins .. high F•'i' Paid/Also F<'P Jobs I S l' ANI S I! ~ p<'a ki n )! commissions. Unlin1iterl in-I Scrvire Ce ntf'r AgCll!'Y housekecper/~1ttl"r 2 girls, 3 ORANGE COAST HAMMOND STUDIOS ----------HA.\C t·:lt X t11 tl} t'fJO ll) r.1<'· come. Ae,ply in Person. 1 ~ 12G2 Campus Dr.,~~ 11~.r: 11 k, Balboa ls land, UN IVE fi S 1 Ty OLDS-Suite B-1 :l:l7-Zi1l G1 .... 1fiH. oHt•r.s l\ITTEi\8, ti ,1, .. ·1:,. (,1.1. fr•~" lo gooci hnn1••. /\~~rl1·d col· fll"S & si~.f':<, fi•IG-::s•·~. !11"/,·111,"11:.:. ",.,;,!I~. 2 1ra~· 1·:0 •. 1>. Li.~!;:ri·, S 1 0,:, 0 0 . 'f ,'l'lll:i. (h1·n<'r, • 816--2936 't.10BILE, 2350 l·fa1·hor Blvd.,! 11t'lc>n SchaffE"rS CU:.:::N_D~A~Y::_&_"_h_I -1-.,-.,-,.h-,-,-,-.-11 1 AVOCAJ)Q ci'U~hed vrlvet Orit;in:1lly S·lla.!l;, pay· nrr 4 1\<lult F;vC'n tng Classe~ • f;\rg111ner~ Lai.l/Sh'-'phrr/] \l!:o.: • ,-,'1'.!"Zl,;f, Costa Mesa. dcnnn1!nA!1nns. Sec I )[§] sofa. $150. Love seat $1{)(1. sm:i.11 hnlanr r of $1'.17.~.~ 01· • lnlt·rinediatei e Theory --'-----(';i ll : r:.11'rr$idr, C',1. !i' 'f'hi;lle. f 'b/gls re;hly to -SALE~ OPPORTtmfTY! ''HEU' WANTED'' Daner T('hrs (all rlanr cs) CONCERNED ABOUT Host/Hostess' & \1•ailress' 71 1; 6~IO:f, n!I 1; p111 :;.iii, nr11· ln1v Pl'J{'f'. ~l.275. :i. BEAUTU•'UL cocknpoo C:1ll !11'12-61 lti. Merch.ndis• """ '£'ables S35. Lamps $20. , pa~1m('nts or SS.25 nt(lnthly. '--------V . Cbairs 1S5. 546-2973. U S A S!('!'Nl l~rrui p. • 1rorksho p EmLOG\" \Vant £x.rypc SN-relary to Sules Reps & Yoga Instruc· ' •••••••••• \Vnrchnti~e. 17!'1 V.. lilh St.. 7 PC Contemp. Walnut Br Call f11r U1fo1ma11on puppie~ free 10 goo:I Monit" 'V~l~CTO~-R-Y'--,c,-,-D-,-,.,-.-;1-.,-.1 , Expanding con1pany n('{'dS: 5 manage 4 J::irl offic('. Kno1\'· tors Antiques 800 J N·• .. (6 · l •·3-g s~ Co.~ta J\fr.~~. 64:r-2·142. :Sf'. "'"' mos .,.1, .•..• c. _ ----~930 979---1368. y,·/lr lr. '.! .sets dials. }·ixt'd Slllesfl('Ople \1•00 ca r~. Jl'dgf' of P.cat F..:state help-SINGLES CHALET $200. Before 5 pm Frirlay, 536-6581 clays, 557-040S evr~. COLOR TV, ~100. Couch S~iC!. lJ:iir d~1rr SJO. Can opener comho $3. C.ICX'k r:id io $:i. Chilci'.s des k/rhr ~10. 2 '11vi11bC'r!S, romp!. Sl:i ('<t. Dre.o::.sr r. baby dresse r , lamp s , p ir lur f'!, lmick-lmnC'ks, 10y<r/,!:;an1r~. <'h ilci's clolhC's, fli'll'C'r l;n"n efl~er. like l1f,'\\' s:;o. Ilab) Tenda Table ~:i. Eo1rlin::: b:i lls, SJ lo ~10. 5'lj...l().1G; 1ii11 In1va, C :'.f. 2s:1~ E. ('oa~t Jh1·y. Ccl~f \\111TE Siuniesc rna le cat t *PIANOS*ORGANS* yr. olci Good "'ith childrP.n ker'I Asking S\400. 64.;..~9. • Grow1d noor opportunity. rut f'or appl. t'all 546-1600 1!!63 Harbor Blvd, C.1\1. --·-----SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS NITA BRIDGES !\30--3939 .•. A~k for i'lt~. Al11·n. 64&-5337 646-3!"-..hG Garage Sale 812 Going-Out .r·or Business 557-8380. KITF',.. "'i fh doUy. Good cond. &iii:! by North $600. Dy ' &l;Hi.116, e\•es fHG-5938 "\V h i t e Elc>phants" ovrr- running Your house! Turn them into "CASI-I " -sel! them thru Daily P 1 1 o t Classified. 642-5678. :From "Chris!n1as Neckties" to nut1,'T'01vn Levis -you can turn "lra.~h lo cash" in ii DAILY PTLO'l' t'lass1 fie<l ad -call 6-12-5678 SUPERVISORS, 11 ol l I bo a I prod. Supervisory ski I I cssen. Boat bldg ('X[l. not l"f'q'd. \Ve \1•ill t r a i n . :i\1acGregor Yacht Corp, 1631 Placentia, DT. Tinkle -I:>ot;ma -Drpol - Novi1·e -COOKING GARAGE Sale: lOOs ot i!ems !tft over from old antique shop. Old ch·essers, t:-i hle~. all sizes, v.uod stoves, radios, trunks, r o c k er s, chairs, clocks, tin. iron & hrass items, records, toys, :''"' --'CC:_ _____ _ ~e~! ~unlil:V • prirrs. '. sc1v. BEAUTIFUL kittens, 2 pure f,all'a1-Stcin11·:1.v-Bnld11·1n. etc \~·hite 1 grev & \1'hite. ~eed Playf'r P ianos & Rolls good home. 0968-7359 aft 3. R1'ntal <r ,,. \Ve Buy. Sell!~~~~~~~~~~~ o .1 ir.v 10·6 sun 12.~,r 6' Fibe-rglass sa iling dinghy, Complete. $12.'l. 546-4211 J4' Super Satellite w/trailf'r. : •••••••••••••••••••• Switchboard Opr Kelly G irl A nc\v flam£' mfly hr hot stuff but the old one kno"·s \1•hat's (O()J\JNG, FfELD'S PIANOS I II~ l Cos1a ~!.:-sa 17141 645-'.:2!'>0 Pels and SuppliQ T" Sporting Goods 830 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ All glass & e.lum. Vrry , !!harp, $750. 545-3448. ' *Wanted Dead* gta.~s. picture fr nm cs, A!un1inum cans that have sllO\\'Cases, rools, etc. 3151·1 Nc<'t!s ,vn11 for ~hol'\ 1rrm ]st A'e 0 0 ' -gu"o Fri ' • served you \\'cl! & prr.ivici('d · " ""'· Ult " • • ,. len1pora1"' a ssigrm1ents. Sal. " hours of plea.sure. RUN!!! IC:.:"---------]\'IUSI !1a ve f.'.l(Pf'r. Xln'!. !O 1060 Glenneyre St., La· YARD Salr: Fri & Sal. Tv.'. \\·orklng conds. Top earn· guna Beach. No glas5 \vhat· h<l. complete \\'I ma p I e ings, \Veek ly fJay('llel'k. 1\b· '--'h d" sorver a ttl'PtPd. "" rd. Apt size frig., incite> solule!y no fe<'. tables. end tablf's, hi f); -~--STEREOS SABOT-.'\'f'\1• J\loving J\1-1 C.1r:1nd r ifle. 30.06. ll&n Ca ts 852 ~ZZ:. n1fg. Sp,•eial 11·ood strx-k. 8-12-3(17!1 1972 Garrurtl, .systrml1cd, F.xcclJ,.,n t ~ o n d , SfoQ. f I ' lili\1,\LAYAN emalc, s,'.,',,.1 Boats, Slips(Oocks 910 fully a11tom.1tic chan!!l'l', ~19--rr:.~.'{. poinl. produces toP , A11/F:i-l/MPX rarlio, sr ;iJ. tl ' SURFBOARD tens. CFA rf'~istered. Al~o \\'ANTED, "''icl~ or side t ie : ed air suspension ~peak1·r~ * Good cqndll!on * persian kittens and per" J;)' slip. Cail 6T~96 afl 6 I plus ta pe dc>ck. S li ll brand :;ian s tud ~rrvirr. s:;.:1. ~7-762 1 89,.29-,0 llC"IV & i:;uarantccd. \\'as I ~~~.:. ,,---p.m. For an ad in Woman's World Call Ma'y Beth 642-5678, exl 330 Kelly Gl.,I :F'UP.NITVRF: -Glass -hool<s & l<Jt~ more. 2tm 20G1 Busines!I Ctr n r i\lisc. 470 O!d Nt1vpol'I R!vd. N,.,,,~,·o lkh, Thur• _ Fri . J\1onrovia, C.1\l. Irvine Sl1·14•11 '" '"' Sat. .12-3, GARAGE sale: TELEPllONE Sales. Top Andrews IV!. N" vJ port S I. left unclaimcci. Ori,c:i n:dly TV, Radio, tfiFi, SfAi\1ESE &nlpoint prited at over $300. l\'(I\\' Stereo 836 SlO. rn, Call after Slftj . Cash or s ma 11 •1-fl7-2-c-1-_0-,-,-:0-U-T-,-a-le--011 646-27ill. ... p3ymen!~-Credit Dept. killen! 2 pm. CHOICE :;lips in new Marina for 25-70 fl. boats. 673-6606, -mml•••.O"S a"d honu•. An OVER 200 \vashers, dryers, '"' " " •-Beach, Lots of inleresting Ply In ....,_. ..... .__._·,·een ".1111 re'fr i.i;crators from $39.95. ... ~•""" ""'" " things from a large group of and ]2·.1111 noon at''.~ Doi•• _54_>-0_;_,.,_._______ J JO 'I & S Special Checkin9 ! Snu9 Sleepin9 Ba9 7.<'ui1h & P.CA TV's in full SfA.:\IESJ•: Ki!tens. S ,. a l 1141893-0~..m . r · s 11-. --------s11i11g. l .011·c1't priC't's of lhr otn1s. \l'P('I\,,,. :J e<1ch" i\lOVING: 2 dbl bed couehe~ Y<'<i r nn ·nJI '7'.! nioilel$. Full e :'"H11·70S.~ • SLIP a\·aUnb!~ on l yf"ar lf'ase. \\'ill tak"" ho a t : 40 +x1:':. ii~.3-8fA1 lbus.\ " J ,; " ' , '< • .. 9010 SIZES 8-18 L,, 1lf""; .... 111 w-1'~ \i1'1·y 8"'ECIAI~ CJ ll·:CJ\. L'\G for ,V()\I \\ho IO\'(' ,h1rll1"a1st 1lash 11nd dnJnta f'rrnlf" a srpar.1TC'.~ lf•)k i11 •·hrr k:oi plus soll<I f'ulor for di·"~~ .~kiri . srarr. PrtntC'rl P<i!lrrn !"IOIO : ;\:t,;W \Jis.~<·~· S1~PS ;!.:, JO, 12, 1 ~. 1h, 18. S11r '12 1 h11~\ :t4) rlrf.'?..~ l 1/1 )'T<ls. -i:rin.; l "• yrds, 1i:intr, SEVENT\'·t'fVE CENTS tnr each 11a!!('t'll -add 25 (·en!~ for eaf'h pattern for Air ~1a1t <tnd Special J.landl- lng; othe.ti\ 1se 1hlrd·class olclivery \\•ill takr lht'ce u·eeks or more. Send to Marian Martin, lhl! DAfLY P ILOT. 4~1 Pattrrn ~pt .. 232 \Vr.irt 18th 81 ., Nr1v York, N. Y. lOOU. Print NA;\fT., AODRF.SS \Yilh 7,ll'. SIZE and NTl'LE Nl/l\IBt:a. SEE MORE Spring Fa~h· ions 3nd chOo.~ Ol'lf' p:Jl!rrn free fro.rn new SprinJ,l'·Sum· mer Ca&flJog. All sitf'S~ Only 50 ct.l'd.S. INSTANT SEIVING IJOOK ~ today, wear tomorrow. JJ . rNST ANT r ASHION BOOK ' lfuntJrtdl ot ta#lkm tacts. n ' • \V h I t t £Jepn&nu.. over· ninuiJla J"O\#' hoUMf Tum them Info "CASH" -· ell them tbnl Dally P 11 o l .~... .. _ prop e. It 5 Fri . at. AvenuE", J\1idway City. Rent Wa shers/ Dryers GARAGE Sale. liousehold. Tow-TRUCK-DRIV~R s2. \Vk. I-'ull .maint. $30 f'a, 6' ~'rigirlairr frf'(',:,•r 1 1· ·1 b 85• [XX:J.: •\I,' hathroon1 llll IO · ~,.. _"r ion 1 you uy nc111•! Dog1 $75, \Ve'Stinghouse Wash<'r & T'!'lf'f'd h('loiv 1 h e dis--"'---------26', !575/m<l. No. 2 Balboa • * 639_1202 * Fri. thru Sun. I~. 212-l91h $100. J'U'l' 1vk + <'ommis~ion. St. Newpo!'t, corner 19th & K('nmore Dryer i l 0 0. roun!prg & i\·ith :: yr piC'turc LABRADOR Re tr e 1 v (' r, Stingr ay bikl" $1.i, Tu he & 1 \·T J)W'!~ & service. AKC, regi!l. quii.J ity puppil"I!. Cuve~. N.B. Gii>-42:11. Maturf' prr.;on. \Vil! train if llEFRIGERATOR. 2 Dr. Bay. Boats. Spoed I. Skiffi : cll':in cut & rlC'pcndablr. Auto Defros! GARAGE &lle'; Baby furn., Call R93-501l. * 893-0060 * ,. I & \\'estin!!house Coppr!1011e ~, · C•ll 5-7 "279 -•1 •pm c1a,·• " 2.•' cnl(Jr ('on~oles frorn " ~ "-n.i " • ' " rPfrigf'rator $50, v.·ht dh! $425. 19" Chron1ocolor or shol1'. dre~~er s:<>;;, fr p Ir: RP· L.'-100 S:l()!), 18" rOJor S'-CC~l~I CN_A_U_Z_>_: -R--p-,-.-.. Cf'~soriC's Sl5, 6 chr.; & Tbl Nrusr SELL. 1969 Gla.~tron : -----'-------1 area t1lJ::", 1nene, amps, ECJ·IO JOR AGENCY . I:; U R 0 P E A N Ca r v f' i:l niisc. 19322 \\'orchester Ln, 6531 \Ves1minster Avenue Arn101re, 2 doors. 7'fi" x 3" ll.B. Sa t & Sun] I to 5. portahlrs $2.5~. ABC Color hsebroken, shots, groom & $5."i. 962-20ll TV, !lfl'.!1 Atlantn. lltJn· 1'!ud serv. a\·ail. Terms V-1~. 1•;/SOhri .\Jere. u/b. ' FULi~'{ EQUIPPED. $28<X) ~ or mnkt offer. a.IS-4124 or a.ft 6 493-3.~85 \Vcstn1in~1cr. Cal if. ]l "xl' 8''. S2i5. 675--&t&L ' •: 1'ravel Agt-Exp Prori i\fanagf'r Opeo lo S.12K Open Sfi75 Appliances 802 1-IOUSEHOLD lten1s, tools, furniture & misc 6/1-6/3 \VAS NO\\' I t ing-ton Beach, 968-3329. \\'e, ~&~JO.-OS;..::="~"'-~-~---Tarx-Deck {2 spdl SlOO $ 5<1 n110tr phnnr pricf'~. I ~ ., LAB 1'11i.'< Piip,,, 1 male 1 100 'v Amplfr ~2j5 S !15 , DA· ~--------~--1-1 35 l·l' Ski Boat, 6,j hp P..fercury, ; Xlnt rond. $700. • Buyer-Slee. h , ;J~9=12~P;o=rt:...:B~'=l.s~lo=I~, ="~· "=·::_~ l\1A 'i'TAG rc:<palrnian as1" ~~~~ian~~ch i~~~ ~1~ 1 G.~~~:.~r :;~~~~~;:·F~;~~~:.f ~;na:;;tia, Ccl:\If'~~~:. 2 7 .. 537--031 8 * .•.. . . • .. •• • Se<-'y-~iarkr!lng Sec'y/Bkkpr &>c'y/Con~!r I Anahrn General Offic·r :'."ledii'al :'\-r,'\V NEWPORT to $700 S650 !.illll $61111 ,1·nshcrs S3:i. to $100. Can GIANT i\·Julliple garage sale. ci<>lh"'r 11'/l yr, guarn. 1&1 & 186 E. 21'!1, Ci\·I J une 839-1778. ='~· ~'·~·~·=·~·'~· ~--- Bu i 11 -i n TRANS1''f::RRED. gas. bro1vn, piece's or furniture }'HJ(;JOAIRE Dishu·asher, j2ii. things. 842-3079. many & misc. open 9 to 5 1\'rekrl~y~ tnll('r, ~" "'aft amp, Srp IRTSII Sef1f'r pupi1, AKC top NEWPORT ORGANS ~pkr in fnldl'<l horn ~ho""· lineg & qua!. Perm. l t"l1clo~11r<'. Tap(' d f ck shots. 3 mos. 9)2-41·1~). 846 Pn:xJuclion Pl., NB ,1-/Rnhj•rts prt"a lllJ'I. All or 645-1530 component i:;roups $35 tu $90 GREAT P).TerteE's ma J e , J[i]: Transportatio,, 7030 ~A&c'B...& \rh1p thii: lip lnr ('<11np111;! !I trip$, <'.1(1ra j;Uf'Sls al hon11>! Personnel Agency 833 Dove r Or., N.B . 642-3870 TYPISTS Temporary illus! Lr pnr~ril. \\ rll grnnrn- f'd, l;:i11• rirc~~lll'i' jrd1s. ~1.11 '1 i1nn1etli1l!•·l.\'. X I n 1 or · p11r1 1111 11y r.,r t1nu~l'.'11 i\'C'~ rr· i·nli•n ni::: !hi' 1ob marker or in bef\1 Pen joh.~. KELLY GI RL Youn.1-:stf'f!i love '" snui::i::lr '.?l))l Businf'ss Ctr. Dr_ inrn a ~-ozy .~l+:·r>rl n~ h11g, Irvine 833-1441 u.~(· r.-11 r ... r turtle·~ h(·;1d. ff't•t, f<'a1111·rs. .t~11sy-sc11c! TYPIST P:ittt'rn i"O:l(): pa It r r n 1··l11mr. Tv11r addrf'S.Sl'S on J1"'C''°"· ff1ree11ons J4.x{i7" JBl\I rnr;!s. Mon·F'ri i;t ;:l() l>lf'rri111.i:: b11i;:-I A~f to 5:::10 PM. Applv Pen- s•:vt:Nlfl'-Fn'•~ ('t<:;o.;-r.< 11v.~aver. 1545 N('\\"f)(ll'f.Btv1i .. fur cal'h pa!1f'rn -;idd 23 C.1\1. C'f'nt~ tor each pa11rrn f11r '--------- 1\lI' J\lail 11.nd ~pecial lfnndl· TYPIST $500 in~; o!'hen1·ise third-clns~ \Viii trnin on i\ITST. Xln'l delivl"ry 1vi t! 111.kr lhl'C'(' lX'nef!ts. Local nrl'a. Cl\ll 11·rl'ks nr inorr .. Sl'rnl In Zi•na, 956-1000, Cal Fair Em· .AH1·1· 8 1w ks 111,, DA!L'i' plnyn1cnt Agency, ~ No. PILOT, 10.l, NtC'dlPCrnf! :Euclid, Suite A, Anaheim. Dr pL. Bo;-.. l fi3. ()!d ChE'l!l<>a Stn tion. Nr:-1v 'i'ork, N.Y. JOOJ1. Print N11n1r. Addret1s, Zi11, 1•,.11ern Nurnber. NEE DJ.F:CRAFT '72~ WANTED Licens9<1 Land Salesmen \\'e Offer Crocht'!. kn il. etc. Fn>i' • fully vr~ted contrart din •ction.'". !"iOc • 2::1'1~ eommisi;ion NF:\V: ln~h1nt l'lftt'rn'u". •Comm. Pil id by 'T'n~lee Bri~ic. fAn<:y kno1~. pat-• '21 ~ Aerr Suhdiv111ions trm11. SJ. e \Vhitc rcrorts 1<;"._,,. Ari l'lf ff a I r fl In 1'1.11. Cook & Al!soc. <:rl'c·ht l -ovl'.'r 26 designs to 673-7374 n1akr .SJ. ===,.:,:.:._:..--_.:._ __ _ \\'fu\'TED by c:irN'I' \\'Q!Tlan: ln!'tant Crnc:Mt Root -rhallPrli?ing po11l!lon Opt'tl lrarn by p1ctu1'i's' Pattern!. trw rompel1>nl, m 11. l 11 re $1. dO!llf'J!l1s:. Li\!C•ln, Ol U !I I Cnrn11Wtt. ln1d•nt Gift Book Nv.-l'l\\'n Nir, can> of 2 -n1ore th.11n 100 i;:lft~. -SI. children. Run f! n I I r,. f 't11U plcle Afa:han Rook .. hnu~r•hold. Good ~l!lT)' + Sl. "Ym1 . ht\erd & iiomc f'X· Ill ·llfty lht( 6ook" -~.()('. p1111s-•.1<, l~na N i g u f' I • Rook of It rrlte AfJhan'I", 19.\.~17 .. -------f(lc, - * fi46-:'ln'J3 * * NIFTY GARAGE SALE .ELECTRIC 1vasher .t:_ Dr)'l'r. Sat 10 to 5 only~ \\'hite. l':tcellent condition. 209 Apolcna Av~. Bal Isle Private party 9~2j()() or Jewelry 815 979-72·1.'l ask for C:isey. REFTIIG .. very clC'an. :;helf J E \\If: LR y • hankruptry in dnor. SfiO. 7 1 3 0 s!ock. 1\1u.~I srtl. 50.75r;~ oft. \\"f's I m l n ! I(' r Av I!· Variety of inrcrnntional set· \\'(~ltnln~lrr. tu1g!". Precious stone.c;. Avail l'nrT11l1lf' Dish\\'ashrr on cii strrss salf'. fi7::...752l . 1;,xn>lh,nl !'onrlillon s:..o * ;.~7-!017 \\a~h,..r & Gn~ Dryf'I' IJ()lh fol' Sfi j * f;.l·l-4.f..IO k Machinery 816 OXYGEN -Arrlylene - 11·rlr!lng anri ruftini:: outfit. $79.95. AC ATIC \velder. 7.!5 an1p1. $95 827-30.JD. I.I!\~: Nr1v~ Srors \\11.shff, -1!'1~ drvf'r, nm! Refrigerator. Mi5cellan~ous 818 $:100. i::·!7-Z391/211-4:lCHl526. DANISll ,\1o<lern living room Gas Dryer $50 b'l"OUp. Includes sofa, chair, :\Jn'! 1·onrt. 67:t-5216 Jamp table and coffee table. Furniture 810 P ri ply. AU for $75. ~13-1-729-1. TABLE. J){'d/\\•hl, 4 hlack F..LECTRIC I.rain~: .027 1-1.0. chr~. $75. Buffet-walnut N. Gaui;e, 2 train boards,]. \\'hilP tor. .$65. JlangW.g 8x8 .027 track 8 ~itches. 1- Jan1p-1\frd slylE'. $40. 5S7-8820 Rx8x4x4x4, 3 'switehc's. ~ BUNK Bl-els. Solid Oak, Conway, CM 546-1597 \\'agnn \\/heel d('sign. Xln'I MJSC furn ,t, antiqut's. rond. com p I f! t e , $75. Dishf'5, elt' Fr·i, Saf only. .-~1~1213. 5.%-279-1 24782 .C:adt"ra, FOR:'IIAL Pl'can din. fbl, 6 Mission 'Viejo. ranehack chrs, malching MOVING -must :sell Sony hufk·1. qua!Hy. $750 lirn1. Tape deck &. Bonanza ?\-1!ni ~l-1.lt26. "Bike & olher misc. Hen1s. DUAL lwadboarrl, lK>auliful _Ca=:.Uc:....:8~46"'84:...:::.:.:.1.c.... ___ _ Pecan v.·ood, $50. C.aU Aft 5 POOL labl!!!, antiquf' slylt, pm \\'kdays, 1111 day 4.x8 slale. $325. Will deliver \\'t'E.-1<~s. R97-RT74. ftl"e. 8J6....S102. llF.D divan, llrrculon, orange CARPET FOR SALE & yellow, llke nl"w $47.00 by Carpet Layer. Cllil &f2-SJ71. • 546-5745 • 540-2086 GOLD ve!vcl ~fa, 9', rond. S200. &14-4397 excel l Couch S65. chr S35, drum set cond. 675-.1577. & ottoman $25. Perl 91t ' yellow diamond tufted MOVING~ Refrigerator f15 50fa. Selllng $195. Call aft Ull'g't' ~ove $25. Both good OLDER Sin~er sew i n ~ mrtehine-\Va!nut cons o I e model-Straight stitch plus attachn1enl~ H em m r r, pleater. ruffler, buttonholer. hemsri1·her, pinker. :zipPf'r loot S.30. Cal! mrirnings or nf1<>r 5:30. fi.1~ ... 2251. 5-Jf,...97-tl. P.,'1p('N., JO mos, shots. $75. --or ofter. 962-3.:lJO. SPEAKER l':ys!en1s, 11l1ipp\ng damae:r to bo'les k par:king * * OUTSI'ANDTNG GJ"E'a1 only. 6" l-\\·ay to lj " J..\\'a y Dan " Pu P s, AK C, ~ir sU.~p!"nsion ! ~· ~ t r m s .1 _c'c''="°="'=acbl~•c· ~""'-.:.:..""'='--- 50-r; o(f !'(")..'. r ti ail. 5 Ye11r * * 2 Silkie~. ma1r .~ fem. gi1a ranlN>. S~2-1191. Silvf'l'·hh1r. Tiny. Af<C rt.µ:. STEREO 6.i6-0142 or 5-18-107.! evf'.~. Comri!rte r;:.·stcm~. 20 to 40'~ 'i'ORRIF: Pups J :1tos. sho!s, off reg, r etail. SpC'akf'r sys-A.KC, 29 ch in 5 J?;en lrm~. 35 tn 50•;, oft rf'g. fll'd li;ret, SlOO. 892-1549, r etnil. "RM \\"e~!mins!cr TINY Teacup Toy Pood~ AVE'., \Vr.~tm in.~tr>r. 8~2·7952. AT{C rr.i::i.~t,,r('rj RCA H1r-i-11.n1p & phono. ~10. '.'"J-17-J.~:il • f)47-!l.1!11 ]"\" Silvertone S1;1, RC,\ J/4 Lnh Rc>trie'·"r P1.1ppies A:'II /f'~1 $7. III/}-l-rad/ Blk., Dam, Af{C, Gd Com· phono S!O, 51.~·!lS3Z. punion dogs. $1j. 586--0:J93. Pool tbl 4 yrs old·n1nrhlc br.ri. Empire 8 mndr l, hy F isher 8' 4" by 4' 9". Jn- <'h1rles balls, 8 cues, v.·al[ racl<.s, dhle blk wrou.r:hl irnn overhead J 11.n1P~. Ori,:: s~;;-,, No'v S450. 64fi.1270 aft 7 pm. GAS Dryer, Xln! Cnnr!. .$6.'l. Heavy Duty S11·ing Sri. $85. J\fattell 1-lorse t7. Creative P!aylhings. SIO\'l', SIO Few i\f isc. i t ems &IS:.284·1. COLOR TV S9:i. 71 " TV $19. ST. Bernard, fl'malt. l 19" port. \\"/~la nd $.r.l. All months old. AKC. All shots. xrnt confl , 557-39!1.1. * 5:l4-'.i017 * 13" portAble color 1 TV Horns 156 $200. Stereo record p ayer 1 _;....;.:_;..... ______ _ FENDER Villager 12 ~tring acoustic guitar. $1J9. Guitar e.mplifil"r--silvertolle' w!twin speakers, re-v~rb a n d vibrato $75. Voir sinqle rac-1 ing ski. New. $35. 968-15.34. _ Miscellaneous Wanted 120 $100. ~665."l. BEAtJT. Puttbr'f'd Ar ab Sho\v Horse. Hackney Pony ,. A: Quarter Horse. Call tor Fl'ff to You r~ appt. 5S2-8l57· I :~3EL;r~ne~·~· 2~T~i~m~ .. ~··~'::2.:oo;l~(~-~-... ~~~:'~...,;·;"~j£(0'~j WA NTED: Presidential 3 FEM. Kittens, black with campaign button.~. other whill' features, mother political Uems. Pri. party Siamese, 673-7853, 833-0460. Boats/ Marine 546-3767. RARE miniature Ru~ian,1 __ E_q.:.u_i.;.P_·-----904- Mu1JcaJ ln1trument1 l22 Blue fem kltttn. Frtt to WANTED; YAOIT JUNK good homl". 5'f5...46,iJ. on consignment. CI~an out FULL "Sct of Hogen drullll5 including cymbals. 545-3192 After 7 P.M. Office Fumitvr./ Equip. 124 FrH Baby Rabbits your garage or dockbox. C~ll 548-0lGl Bring good u.'Jed marine f!QUip Ii hllJ'dwllI'I! to Sara'1 FRE KITTENS Marine Salvage, ill-30th SI .. * &12-9169 * -~=~===-·I N.B, 675-4684. LAB PUPPIES JOHNSON OB. 28 hp, xlnl no pnpen • 499-1937 cond. $195. Volt water skis. {2.l 60" steel desks, ~y. 1 --ro=u~Rc"l-on-g--h~.-;-,~ki~t-t•_n_•_ new, s~t S30, Obis $25. black .fWlvel chalr1 315 3rd Six \\'ttks old 9tl2-~17 Aircraft 915 . l·TALf' inlt'N'st in a '661en:na l :;cl. $JOO &: take 1 over ' payr11en1s S.'16-'.'iO.'lS GfJgg. : Campers. Salef R•nt 920 1 g· Cabover. Ha!!: si7ik, IC'e : , bo.I(, carpet, WO!~ proparl(' tanks. henfer, t.'.1.bll" lo!~ of ~roras::e sriae.o + 31~.. 1 fibeN:!.1.~, insu\at1-0n. You pand the in.~ide & save . ' SW:i. fi1·1n. \\'f'<'kdays call hef()r~ 3 pn1, 536-7i49. ' !'"OH sale, 1970 Camper-type ; Do<lg~ van. Chinook top, • • auto, air. 10:0: Inch "'het'] , bai;e, 2.i,000 mi, Xlnt conrl, : S2795 .. 496-32.qg. ! '65 Ford 250 % T. Truck ': \V/8,~' Cabover \Vestway·~ : camper u.nil. 4 speed. Rl.H : XI nt cond. 54,00) mi. ,f19$. ; 5.18--0316. '69 W ' Camper-pop top. "New ~ng" iitill on WILJ"-: : r nnty. Nev.· lit'IJs·stereo tape. : $2fi50 or best offer . 714/837--07'78. J\LUM. Campe:r, Bunk. louvemJ 548-6732. 4x6. ms.""; windowz. l: ' ' I ·n VW Campmobtlf'. Pop top, spec. 3-way refrig.. ~ radio, camp. gf!ar. 499-1$1. : ll Cycles, Bikes, ' Scooter• '72 HONDA 175 CC Le111! thnn 500 m'lle1. Ab80lut· tly cherry! (BEE030). $549. llarbor VW. 18nl Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach. , St, H.B. 536-7581 or e 5'18-6357 e 968-4760. '65 Mercury ~ H·P long =84~2-4-435-,.:._, -------I : 3 Ff'mal" Chlhu(lhua pupe, 1 shaft. Xlnt conct., $250. Alt 1972 HONDA CB 4SO. Only l' lllM Exec. e.lec. typewriter, la old s ,.. -111111 ,... · • 1.,:~· ~-c::..:.:;_"-----~ miles-Brand new c:on.-• • ~nt cond, prl ply. $350. -----~-l_T ____ 18oafl, PcnNr 906 dllion. 1 monlh oJd. $875. ; cond ..:..:~241-=6:..7:..· -~"'"' ----IFREE Jfappy Healthy Kit-Must Sell! 586-0096. : • IRISH Settl!'T pop, mllle, 12 tt"tt.'I male & l PmAle. Wean-24.7' Owena Flttphip eruiSC!.r. 3: 30 557-2914. cond. 645-2637. BUFTE"l' with hutch handcrafterl pine. 646-9'"3 wk11, 1hots, show qua!. Hunt ed & trained. 548-4615.. 8 hr1. smc. major overhiiul. Bch 968-9230. ---------1 208 total hl'tl. SJttpS 4. Prlv. in STX1Y-FiVE YEAR OLD •826 CAT Loven • come & g('I he11.d. Nr"'' pnlnt. \l.'all/v.·ftll PEN k INK DRAWINCS Plinos/Orgins tht"sE' beautlfuJ k It ten 1 • crpt. w lrt'd for ,,/s. NtJ\V • 540-6655 • J-IAMMONO organ. Pert. SJ&.8280 canva11. Encl. stern Rm. l"LOIL\L Sofabe<I S50, bed is GOLF CLUBS. Fh"!t Flile likr new. 646-7010 o r DRUM SE'T, 5 pc., 2 s-tand:oi. eond, $1600 Nl"w, Dbl. 5 Mlh°ET) 11p liltlt> puppie~ G11lley·Ml\ny f:Xtrn1. Slip keyboard. S750. &l'.'>-1666 Aft C'T)'!og "Sav~ us from the ava il. $5950 or be!!! offer 714- ·10 Kawa111tkt 500 1'.iark rrr. 'l'rttde for <'Br or $795.. 3000 ml. l'lt\V. 8'17-172i!. '&8 BultaC'<rfl Band ito 360. X.lnt colld, nu motor. $S7S. 548-1610. Quilt Hook 1 -Iii J;1$111f'ms. -WAITRESS - ~" F.xper. over 21. Apply in f)f!r· _ 11111""111n Quilt Root t _ 110n nftf'r 'l PM, Dell Shrl, \VAL.NUT tablP./6 clwliN. GTRL'S 3 speed bk:ycle, like !'JOc. Ln.gu~a Hillii Plnzn, El ·roro. Buffet, E:«-tptiorW. $1Z or ne"'" $30. 673-74~1 All Ex • .mnd. 673-6517. 6 PM. • Pourxl". 64fi..2154 645--3959 aft 1 pm "•kdays, PRIVATr: PARTY WANTS l ·KITT==E~N~S-. -s-.-.-u-t~l~f-u-,.l ,1...:all::..:d=•::.Y_:"ck:.:•~"'='c· ---- TO BUY PIANO •'Oil red/white. Rrey/v.·hite, Frtt. 13" Boston WhaJa, 40 hp CASH. &ts-2278. 5'13-6.'lro John50n. CO\.'~r Ir Bimini 191t Su:ruki 185. 4IXXl n\llt.~. $l"5. 61.H228 ____ , I ! Qullt• f11r Tt11h1y'• U\•Jn,e .. "rAITRESS. nlU!ll be tx:p .. 21 ~I offer, M0-1014. 5.l1~1294 1;, bfoautlfnl P"Ut'Til~. 00.-. -or l'Wf'r. Apply in perl!On, SRO\\'N, tuftt:'tl curved bflck P(X)L table &: OYf!rhcM (21 7 \Vk old. pups ~ii Genn. top. SllOO. 546-1375 alt 5. 1971 lJONOI\ CB-100, xlnt cond. Dem otfeT OYtr $115. &44-1514' after 6. ' • I :t1'.IS2 C11:mlno Capistrano, Pl"OVitl. type 110f11, good light. AU. POOL EQUIP. ··················••f·_c_SJ:..::C:.... _______ ::_:w/.::'.M:::!apl::•:...· ::S40::. . ..:6-=:::. fl50 or malt< ol1er. &IUJ<S C'Ofll(Al,-Ponl's or horic $20 lo $25: mo. No fN:dlnJ:. 548~56:'!6. ... Shtp, 1; Collif'. Turn ur11~ ltemJ11 lntQ quk::t 8•16-2947. ca_.h, tJ.11 SC-5671 llou~ HunUnc7 Watch th OPEN HOUSE column. I ' ' 2 Co ' St PA 1\11 L B, c 22' ho • * m co N • ... " :\Iii SI 49 Tr • San l9'h w .. * Al l!l54 _..,. lliJ I l§J I Cyclet, llket, Scooters Trucks ns NJ Autos, Imported 1961 BSA GoldSt&r. Fut &t Sllnitary $700 TI j...<9.>-46<0 1'70 Chev. Pickup •• Ion, 4 apet'd with klw mJlea: and clean. •8210311.. $2495 IMW IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BILL BARRY SST ?iflnl Blke, 4 .:ean, 41~ hp. Xlnt for <llr1/1t. Sacrt 0 1135. 548-~~. '67 Henda 305 &ranibltr F lat·GMC-Pontiac Excellent rond. $275 ll:st St. at S.A. }'rv.•y,J e S45-2lOO e 2000 E. ll'lt St., Santa Ana SE:E US AUOUT 5[),q.1000 Overseas Delivery '69 llonda 450 SL. ~!int ron<I . -,6-7_D_O_D_G_E ''• TON CREVIER MOTORS S5.50 firm 10032 J\uKui, lJJJ. '/: 962--161!1. Plck11p. Vll l'"ng ioe, autom11.ur 3'Jf \\'. J:o;t St .. Santa ,\na • ......... _ 970 Auto1, Imported 910 Autos, Imported 990 Autos, Uoed ROTARY'S Immediate Oellvtry HUNTlNGTON BEACH ~ ... l,"1 17331 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINCTON BEACH ' , ..... ~ M'" '" W I'~ ~ 842. 6666 SAAi ~~~.!0~!~!1~~~ 1957 vw .... ;., •'"'"""''· • ·61 AMBASSADOR YOUR ONLY radial llrei It n1od1f1cd ,.."< [>PL. 'l dr. !IT. ,..u lly rqulp-FAC'J"OHY You Try Harder • hausl S)',t('n1. Ca..!J J1n1, 1x·d. V1•ry pr1•1ty, l:i roo.o:o• AUTHORIZED Wt At Cout 5."i7-Ji37. 11' \'lnyl roo!. Y\V1'656. Would Like To Boast 1~1 V\\' Squhrt"l•ru·k. Ori.:ui,,j $1695 CADILLAC "Wt Sold Tho Mo1tl '1 .., p111nt, t'ngtn1•. 1ransrn1.~:;1011. Harbor American f)!·:ALJ·.1{ As of M1tn-h 3, 1972 \\'e \\'eN' Tl,000 nulr~. /lcu.I 1 !L•au' l. ... il"J;l'SI i;elr•ct inn or C:uld· No. 3 in the Nation (In Fru•I $.ii)(), >16--0:':o'!. 1969 Harbor Blvd. 1111·~ in ~ 'lflf1i:;t· C"oun!y. rhe-\\lorld!) Jn Sales for fhr Coste Mesa 646-0261 S11l •·~·l.1·11~1n~· 1.NI\.: IL>r nl1r SAAB SONN ,.71' Sports Car '(.6 \'\\' B\1s. :-.;,.,1 iot Hki•:-, ---------1 full 1»1r •' nds c1 1·rv \\11'4.I \\'e \\'ant lo be and \\"l!l ht tu·t•s. \.'!lltL'h, ('It\ \'1•1) ).: .. "\\.! BUICK & f'r11l1tY r(J r l'(ll :.>oi>t.'L IJb .. AMERICA~ VOU<SWAGEN CADILLAC trnnsnii~~,,\n ISl.Ull91, ____ aJ=S-lc.:.:lc._71 ___ _ SUZUKI~ Wke >><w $165. $599 Ne_ t by June Isl Tt>st dri\'e •'(Ind. SfKX! &l.~!ll!ll ht·f1w• b a Sonnl"ll today a:nd st.'<' \vh~· ~&r.Hm~ 1111 s. '69 BUICK ~. -i Na ers 24&1 1-lnr!xlr Bh·d. Vi.!1t our nt!W heme~ 0 mort' l>rople buy fron1 COl\s! '69 V\V :,.qhrl.., .. llh•, 111 1111. SKYLARK U Cadillac than any o!h"r dt'a!er ln So. P11'{"ll1s, 1 1111i::~ ~'\I i..h'n"1, 18 772 MI LES ~f.IYl llllt:J!(\I: 1.t_. Cahf. pl'rf;"t' i I ' .1 0 In r ! •' r. ' ! · 1~··1 \ 11 > 1 r l~-7'ilG I ll:lrdlup t.'eu ~·-l!1 0,11 1!if11t 'I",.. 1 ·"" ' • .~ 1 .,. · • . , .. '.oJi.i \ •1,.•n :-.uri. 1\ ,.,;uli l 111th 11h111• 1"J' J.:••l•I ~11-mt DAVE ROSS ·n 110""" SI. "° PONTIAC Lo\\.• 1nile.R, sroo. 968-1762 Y •m•h• 2511-$200 * 549-2422 * '--- Costa ~1t.•sa 546·8017 '63 Chf'v. ~i Ton, 6 cyl, S575. '57 V\\'. ~nroof. lg \\'hi~. $275. lRll Iowa, C~t. s.t.·1-1().;(). ROY CARVER, Inc. MERCEDES BENZ 234 E. 17th SI. COAST IMPORTS \'\V ·~ -~bk·. SUI~\,.;/, .11('11 lap..·-;try in1•Tl1'r. \',\ ·.nllu ' ''66 CAD CONVERTIBLE br_ak• s .t Tin~ $, ll. l'uun-pov.rr i.t,.••ru1i:; ,t hr:1i,, . ., I 111.111 Va!lt>y, ~1:;!-1\f.f.~. null" '11'lll"I' \\~\\" 111,·. I . 1971 Yamaho 90-Mil Costa Mesa ~444 s 100. • 833·2~1:! 2 Girl s S!ingray bikf's. 3)" & 26" • $13, $17. 54ll-9R:12. Mobile Homes n5 UOLiHLF~ 11·irl~' t la1111nuo n1oh l lf' l1nm 1'. 11 115 1•\'f'I) th1ni;::. i"o'! up 1n nicf' f11.n1ily park. 1'1'.'I~ ok. $8:JOJ. 5::1-729-1. Motor Homes 940 *Marvin Pearce* Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 558-3222 lfll S, Vlll11ge Way, S.A. 136Zl Harbor, Garden Grove 1 B!k, So. of G.G. Frv.)'. 63G-233J SUNSET MOTORS Ne'.v 1 ~· Eldorado MINI MOTOR 1!0~1E. Fully self coniainctl. #213207. $6995 Complete Hne of El Dorado t'ampen:, chassis mounts & 5th 1vht"rl lraller. Phone 645-66i7 1970 Harbor Blvd., C~ta ~Ies;i PACE-ARROW., CllINOOI\: fill top branch: •. Di!lcount price , , Jl\11!EOIATC DE- LIVERY, , B£ACH CITY DODGE 16555 Btacb Boulevud Huntington Bench 1 n ") 540-2660 ·--T-EST DRIV_E __ THE MIDAS MINI MOTOR HOME Distributed by Ken Craft Produrh~ CREVIER MOTORS 208 \V. lat St., ~anta 1\na 135-3171 27' El DortHlo, l\t 1n1 :\1 n!nr home on 300 Ford, romp!. ~If ron!., bike rack & l\\'fling. Xlnt cond. S6T:ll. 19'251 Brookhurst, No. 72. Jin • * RENT our '71 F.l fl<"irarln motor home. Slrep:o; ti. i;rlf- rontaincd. RES E RV E NO\\'~ 5-lS-!f.ilJ . • l\F.\V 23' Luxirry rental. Alt. loaclrO ! ra te~ JXl.S.Sible. Pvt 968-1397. ~t.11. f\rst l>ty. :\tl~I ;\lolor llomc for ff'nL Slcep:o; 6. 5l'lf ront. P\·L ply. 497.2384 aft 6 pn1. Trailers, Travel e ARISTOCRATS e NEWPORTS 945 AUto Leasing 964 Try our JeaSe experta for Snvlngs -Satisfaction . Ser· \'ice, \V~.; LEASE ALL POPULAR 197'2 f\clA.KES AT OJ~IPETJ. TIVE RATES. Call Malcolm Reid tor further details. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2000 llarbcr Blvd. Cos~ fl.tesa 642-0010 Auto1 Wanted 961 WE buy all makts of clean used sports can, pa.Id !or er not. Please drive 1n for free appraiuL NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach ,642-9405 WE PAY TOP CASH fDr med can A b'uclta:, JUIC ean a. f(C' tree esttma ta. GROTH CHEVROLET AU fol' Salts Ha.nqer 13211 &acb Blvd. Huntl.n.irtoo Beaeb S47 ..m87 IO 9-333l \\'E PAY 'IOP 001.LAR FOR 'IOP USED CARS I! your car Is extra clean, aee U!! first. BAUER BUICK 29Zi l!arbor Blvd. Costa Meu. 97S-2500 IMPORTS WANTED Orange Counties 'IOP ,i BUYER Bil...L MAXEY TOYOTA 18881. Beach Slvd. R. Beach. P!t. 847-8555 ~Y ytiur car paid for or t. Call Ralph Gordon -445 E. CoMt HW)'. Newpor1 Beach. Auto1, tmported 970 ALFA ROMEO Alfa Romeo '72- 2000 2IXXJ roiles, Stock •'11 CREVIER MOTORS 208 W, 1~1 ~T , Santa Ana 835-3171 --c=ITROEN Citroen Sports Maserati Orange County headquarters for local & Eu r opean dellvery. J im Slemons Import• 2201 So. fl.lain, Santn Ana 557-5242 Open Sun. DATSUN '66 DATSUN PICKUP Looks & Run.!i fine! Excelltnl transpor1alion -cute little truck ISLU479l, 1.fa.kt offer! Bkr. Before 7 pm. 66-4392 er 644-2950. '71 ·240 z 4 spd cllr canary yellow, plush blk. interior, mah \vheels, frnt & rear guards, Jo1v mi, sacrifice! E'l'SOR9. 546·8736 alt lO am 494-6811. 'TI 2.W...Z, ols nia~:o; ~ rad, f ac air, 1 O\\'nl'r, exN"l ('Ol'ld. ~j(()-Sat & Sun. fi.14--0753, v.·ee.k days a!t 5. '69 Datsun 510-Xl nt <'Ond . $1150-Perfttl Gr11d gift . Call 11ft 5P~1 64.>.195.t '71 ~~ 240 Z, air/mni;:.~. :-.1usl s<:-~I. best offrr e\·er S.KXJO. 6-15-4~ &12--08-13. '72 BIG 510SEDAN- 4 DR, 4 spd, dlr, Jew mileagp. Raclio, heater (#3379911 ) $2349 !ull price, \Vi!J flnllll ce pvt. ply. 546-8736 a.It ll am 494-6811. '70 DATSUN 5 dr. wagon. Auto., A!\1/FJl,1, nr ne1v e'slze tires. $1695. 968°-7145. '67 Datsun 1600: 4 dr Sein Good rond. $·t50tbst olr. S.lS-1610. DATSUN 240, S4,444. ~tusl sell, imrnac., air cond., mag whls .. fa ct xtras, 492-2512. FERRARI '69 Ferrari, 365 GT. 2 + 2, silver, AM/F:-.f, air, full p-.vr., new llliclie lin, 714: 67~10, early mcmlng. FIAT 1968 F;at 124 Opel NOW IN STOCK For Immediate Delivery Instant Credit BANK FINANCING 5 !peed wiH1 air rond. Sharp car, YQU557. COAST IMPORTS $1395 BILL BARRY Pontiac-GMC -Campers Fiat ()st St. nl S.A. F"r,,,.y.l 2000 E. 1sl ~t , Santa Ana 55,11. 1000 e AlTI'0-11.tATES Abo, several used S395 I: up WRSHM! TIVi ILER SALES lOCJ0.1200 W. Pacific Cst. H"'Y· Newport Beach (714) Sfl-0406 '69 124 Spyder. Conv. 5 Spli, A;\1/~:.1 . hlue/hlck lo m1. Xlnt. 846-3813, S.M)...S(JlO t'XI 259. 7709 \V. 17th Street Sa.nla Ana (TI4> 531-2595 191h' TERR''· ~lf-eonla i~ w/complete To\\i ng package. S19:C. ~J. ............ ]§] Antiqu;e1/ Classics 953 CLASSIC '54 Mark Vlf J11g. Not running, but complete. ht $115 takes. 646-t:.146 Alfa Romeo NOW ON DISPLAY JAGUAR '67 JAG XKE 4.2 Air, Al\11 Fll!, 4 ~pc-cd, \lire ""'heels, Jn1marula1e, only 47,000 mih·i;. ZYF'742. $1995 BILL BARRY Sale1 SUvfct" Fiat-GMC-Pontiac Part• Body Shop COAST IMPORTS nst SL at S.A. Ft;.,'y.~ 2000 E. 1.~t SL. Santa Ann 100).UJO W. Coast Hwy. 558-1000 Newport Beach 6f2.{l4{)6 '°"'°"-,,..::::::__c.:::_~-- NE\V J11.rn1ar nE'l'!ds new * '71 ALFA * liom•. '71 XJ6 " V!2. ReMOn, 1 driver, 2 ce.r11. 1 CL£ARANCE * "°'h ""''""' ooncl. '"'"" JI{ under 400). 645--05...-.J. '70 MERCEDES '• ·1, •. 1.~.\r11n"l1h1•!•111J,.1d }'Qf{ Salt> -19iu \\\ Vtut. l\l('al l 011111'!'. !111p1.·t·1·uhl" 1 !11 , 1,.11 ,,1,11.,,. 1°11 •··I 280 SEL Sc>dan. Very lo\v nu!l"':tt:t'. E.'l:qu1site Tobacco limwn tln1sh 11·11h natural lull Jrather interior, po1\·er steering, hrakes, ell'ctril' winrlo11•s, fa etory air l'Ondit- innlng, A M-~~M stereo n1ulli- ple ..... Absolutely sho11•roon1 frt•sh thro1.11;hout. t53l!CEJ) $1'.m fl'. Oest nl_lrr, t.-unrl, 1i:ilillL.\ 1 1,, , ! i'•~~"f..J\ 1 1:1 r l'.ill :-..1s-11:13i\Jon-l-n. $2666 t• ,,. , p 1 r:1.1'1' 11 1 1000-1200 \\'. Pacifk Csf. lhvy. '66 Y'IV Cainf)l:'I', r~·b~. 1. I\ ~ 1 JI Nt!\\.·pon Beach tTI4) 642-0406 s1100. ,;7~9;0 Ar1rr 1; 11~1 . • Nabers ~ I ~,.,.\I l1h1· t~·,1 !1ilq TOYOTA .is-i-i~i.~. Cadillac 1 .\ ·"1 11,1 ~" • 1111"1·/ "6-1 V\V Bui.:-. Ult't'h .• pt"·rft'1'I. I• "' ,, ! \I ~r. , •. , 'I '72 TOYOT·A---1 nf·v.• pa111t ,t, l1f\·.s. S6t~) u!' ~'GI.JO 1!,,HJ\{)fi !:l., I.•!" r·1,1,,.1 ~J'lf'• rd 1i111 1 $2029 h··~l offl·I'. ~)fiS.J(i:!S. CLIS'J',\ ;'11) .S \ f' I·"". \\hf l1•f· ()tl\,•r 'fl I'• , --:>10·911~1 l l(Htl S111Hfa1 'l;h, 1•11 ..,!!, ,•:·. .,, 4 s~i trans. Dix A,_1' radio. 66 \I'\\' S'I'/\. \\'A(;. $7222 ~ Nabers ~ Cadillac 2ft00 l!ARBOR BL., ('OST A fl.1ESA 540-9100 Open Sunday SO USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY NOW Lease New Merced•• $118.71 Monthly HOUSE OF IMPORTS '69 J\1BZ 250 sed stick. R/11, LD mi., immac. new engine. P l pty. $4700 even. 675--6644. OPEL '70 OPEL Rallye, 14,600 mi. Xlnt cond . $,IT;AJ. Call 646-5100. PEUGEOT * PEUGEOT * Jleatt'r, defrosters, tinted Riii. GO<?n COND ITION. DUI('!\ g 11·1pr;1 I'<. S1 ••1l•'"'· glass. \Vhite \Vall firer.. SS:-() ~2-3.t22 bla<"k I.in.! 111 "'' 111111• i\:I J)O'I\"(•!'. <Ill", $~1''' \lU•I .,...JI Pep-out rf'ar v.in<IO\\'S, Vinyl VOLVO . c !l'i~J.;.r. tr1n1. arpets. Front disc _ brakes. Reclining bucket ·1;:i Huu·k \\ 11<1,·.1! seats. KE 20-300785. 1972 VOLVO \\' 111.1r (' n Hl p I •'I ,. 1•111: ·,,,, I t:-1 ... , ,. I I !11l 11•1 I•' 1!Ju·1· 1\ \1 J. \I. "•"1l 1n··I \,.,1 , ,.·~I ,t;~ ~J 1~\1~ ''\ l CAMARO '68 CAMARO Z18 flf.411. luoi& LHst TO!l•Y al 1)\'t'l"h:1ul. l\1·11 !11•:11-.r~. 1\ 1 ' t.'Ond. Sj()(). !'tiJ-201'1. '1"'•'11 . J'l!ll•'l' .-1 •·1'1"111~ rndu\ lu •au•r 111t!r ••\;ii t 1r1•.:. 111n;: "he• I~ TOYOTA Best Rat11 $811.74 Per Mo. ----'6S Bt'l('f.: 1:J\'J1·:1:,\, rull fJOl\'CT, a ir, <·lean I ,..11·nr car. S1000. Pr 1 pt). ;,:,;-~JtiS, w • II bo CM "A" n.,,.., 0 .A.C. Al\1/Bf, Auto. trans., .i.;ow ar r, · · ~ disc brakes. 36 ma. '67 Buu·k Eh•1·!1\1. For Leasing or buying power, atr, r:id1:11.~. :\lrll rond. s1:00. 6-11-1373 Toyota & Jaguar Dt"aler Authcrized Sales & Service 900 S. Ceast Hlgt11v.11;y 1966 H:arbor, C.r.t l.agunn Bt"ach 540·.!lOO Autos, Used '70 TOYOTA WAGON $1495 AMERICAN SA~"~~i('~~!pt~~~iOTA American Motors 7:30 ant 'Iii 9 pm ,....,Gremlins ""'Hornets i\1on-Fri. 540-5212. 4.17 \V. """'Matadors VJav1tin1 \\"nrner, Santa Ana. J."Ambassadors 1967 TOYOTA C<Jron.1. • Dr Huge stock or '71's· & 'T.l's "'"°an1 ,hm. Eng;oe"""' Big·Blg Savings n'built. $325 ar best <Jffer. Call aft 7 pm, or \\"N'kt!nds Harbor American anylime, 979-1496 ask lor Dennis. TRIUMPH 1-lome e r Convenient Payments 1969 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 646-0261 '71 Buick Riviera Luxurious hordtop 1'<lu)X' wi1 h factory air 1'0rwl., full (101\'l't includ1ni,: dnnr lock", vinyl f(lp, 1il! \1·hr1•I. !'1 1·ro •u 11111111 p h•.I\. Sfl'l'tlu ~1 ·;d'. '1•11'1 \\'h\'t'ls, <1ft". <'I(· \"••!')' h•11 . ]{)1\' inilrs. 1 ;117c·1 •\1 '· $2666 ~Cadillac U Nabers 2600 AARBOI', BL., l'OSTA ?.11-:SA 540-9100 (J(lt •n ::i11nrt.'ly CADILLAC $1 699 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC ~·11<1! ll11rhflr BJ\'rl, Costa t.1l'Afi !··16-S0\7 '70 CAMARO ?SI VS, 4 ..-prerl, radio. heater. vinyl ''111f. t>11<·krt s1·:11~ !:lf.J. AVn 1 $<!1.Y.:o. 1·uni111y Ayrt•s Ch1'11i;1kt, !l·J6 S. Cnnst 1111 .1 . l.ag111111 Bra ch. 1:1.1.10 11 !l4G-!~lfi0. ::_ __ _ I ~\t 'l:1Fit'l-:~·1.-.: ('11111 . .i" SS, I:! 1111111 :»(', rr1i:. •I ·"!~!. inai::~. <:d;.·1~. air .-... 11.wh.;, P It .::oUJ.:t''· , lhl,,111 II\!. _>l_·ro_ ~~If.Cl. __ ~- CHEVROLET 1ri .:: Chrv~· :! nr. s 11 /Olds e11g u1.. ~-U rh"aJl. 709 :-;h:11n1l;1r A111 2, C :\1 . i'~l(;...?fJl l .i ~k fur c;1~1ri:•·. ·v.• ("llf·:V !inpa.la, :l ilr 111', '71 GREMLIN M low a! $2,299. (No. 5545) * TRIUMPHS * Like nt"W and has mag \\.'heels 1969 CAD. El Dcrado, 37.0110 mi., leslh<'r interior, Joafi •'il \\'ilh r.'>tra.~. 1~\\ 11n •\. $.1,9'E. Priv. party, 9G8-~1:;;;. 1964 COUPE De VIiie ("on\' All po\\.·cr. detailed, ""!rn clean. $900. firm. i213J 592-1656. V-S. aulo, ps/ph, S~WO. 616-564.1; 545-1010 1''RIT--: \VARREN'S '71 CLOSEOUT and big tires. Very low Sport Car Center SPITFIRES AS WW AS $2399 mil ... 9-IOCQR. * "G.1 Cl!EV. JI NOVA * GOOD eond. -LOW prie« e ORANGE COUNTY'S GT-6 -....SAVE $500 $1695 , LARGEsr rnrrz WARREN'S Harbar Amencan '6J Cad secrlan dcVilll', Silver wJblk vinyl top, fully equip, lo niiles. J\1 inl con d. 496-2812. * 536-3288 * no E. IBt s1 .. s.A. 547--0764 Sport Car Center 1969 Harbor Blvd. PORSCHE ORANGE COUNTY'S Colla Me.. 646-0261 1957 Chevy &1 Air. RebH v. R, P/S, GI. lil'f"!<. P..ody ir._ tel'ior $3)(). 642-171S. 1957 Porsche. Top condition. Compll"l.ety restored. • Call 673-8:19~ * '63 I':lrSC'he Convt. reblt rngine. Call Dr. Cassidy. 5-IS-9319. '10 Porsche 911 T Stereo, l<.Iags, Private Party, Days SJ.9..9560, aft S - 833-3155, RENAULT Renault Demo Sale Semi Annual Demonstrator Clearance Sale This Weekend Unbeatoble Prices ALL 1972 MODELS IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY INSTANT CREDIT APPROVAL BANK FINANCING COAST IMPORTS SAAB SAAB SALE LARGEST Autos New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New TIO E. ]st, S.A. 5-i?-07&4 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '59 111-3. Good rond. $275 833-594:) or 833-1 412 VOLKSWAGEN '63 VOLKSWAGEN Rblt f'ng, $300. Call 54R-7~1 bh\'n 6 pm & R pm wkdy!!, \Vknds noon lo 8 pm. '61 V\V Bug, good for b!!ggy. No rnginr ~ ha~ fmnr f'nd damag,•d. I~l'sl of lxkly is gnnd. Good tra11:o;. SJOO. or hf'~I ca~h riffer. Must sell thl:o; 11'erkc nd, 548-5:®1. '63 VOLKSWAGEN Rblt Png., MovinR. Must Sell. $395/bst ofr. Call 548-7881 btv.·n 6 prn..S pm. LEAVING ror Europt', nlu!!t sell. '611 V\V. Exct-1 cond, nr1v engine, automatic, best ofter. !'"'31'.i-4273. J!lf,S VIV -like ne\v, Be$1 of!t'r l hi~ v.·rek. Aft. 4 -673-3618 '6:, V\V Bug, nev.· sunroof. $X(l. * 536-0370 * '70 V\V A.\1 /D1 paint, $159.) l971 VW bus;(-like new. 9CNXl miles. Sl!K.X'.I. ,,,,_TI23 '67 VW Van for Mic or trade dov..·n for older car + cash. Call 846-684 \. '68 VW Bus, !lllnroor. lust rack, :xlnt COil(!. $1695 er of. fer. 536-3507. 1968 VW Squareback, cle an, radio, new w/w tlT"E'!. $1475. 644--4374. THE Important Difference! This Shield Means 1 Thal ·We Are Your OnJy Factory Au thorized Cadillac Dealership Four and one.half .a cre1 ol totel .authorited C•dilla c f.!lc iliti•s designed to better s•ll a nd service C.!idill•c •ufomobile5. 80 !work 1ta lhl •od 45 factory trained fechniciao5. Largest Selection of late n10«Jel Cadillaes and other Luxury cars in Orange County! '63 COUPE DE VILLE F1,tory 1ir conditionin9, clotli I l11fht r inter- ior, i ll p<>wt r, tilt I t1l11c opic 1l1trin9, AM / FM, 1utom1 tic 'rui11 'ontrol, moil 111 dl1, tr• 1t11. ltlM771l '70 COUPE DE VILLE Vinyl top, ,foth & l11th1r inft dor, full power, door loc~1. 1ulo!l\11!, 1111 r1t1111. J0,000 mil11. l octl t owner, Ertr1m1lv b11 ulifut. f7!4AK XJ '71 COUPE DE VILLE V11y lo .. • mil119t on lhi1 tliowroom frt1 h 91111, f1c tory t ir cond ., fu ll powt r, winy! top, full l11th 1r inlt fior, AM/FM 1lt r10 mullipl1r, till- ltlt . 1!r9., powtr door loc••. lwi, 11nlin1I. t b· 1olut1lv btt uliful. flllOF.AI '70 EL DORADO F..,11 powt r, f•cfory •ir cond., it !t .filt whttl, 1ttrt o d oor lock1, .,.;n'll top, lt•llitr i~ltrior. .AM/FM mulllplt r. Sli ow1 m1liculou1 C•tt th rou9houl. (401776) '70 ELDORADO SALE PRICE $4555 SALE PRICE SALE PRICE $6888 SALi PRICE Duno BU911le1 •56 '61 V\V Bua, good for buay. No engine A hat front f'nd damaged, Reel or hotly I~ good. Good trans. 1100. er bht cuh otter. !I.Just sell U)i1 weekend, MB-5380. um XKE All New SAAB'1 Are * SALE * AJC. \Vire Wtit>e1s. AM/Fl\t Alw•ys Special Pric~ '65 Bu!!, crpted, paneled, re- bit, 1600 Eng. \\'\rip Ovals. Gd cond. $ll25. 675-5116. loo~1 & runt lik1 flit div firtl 1old ! Fwlf P'""''· f1clory t ir cond., t1l1·lilt 1+11rin9, Joor loc kt, crui11 c ontrol, wlnyl fop, full l11lhtr inlt rio r. I 10,.AGC L N1w w1w t irtt. $5222 CLASSIC Meytn M a n x - show cond, all equip N'IY. needs eng, bsl o tr, alt 6 pm. 49~. Trvck1 Hl • '40 CHEV. PICK-UP • Xlnt body. S400 * Call:' 675-3331 • '70 DATSUN p.u. Alr/cond. SM!l camper. Lo mUe age. 97!H73S Tho 1972' 1 Aro Hort I ' Larre11t Sa.vinga Ever On All f.lodclt! This t. the Weekend To Buy Your New Alla at : COAST IMPORTS 1000-1200 w. Pa.cltlc Cat. Jrwy. Ne"'1)0rt Beach (71.f) 8(2.(MOO \\'hilt v.·/blk int. I At Coast lnstent Credit Exttl Cond. 641-llm Bank Financing .66 xKE 2 + 1. Chen-y Immediate D•!ivery' ccrxlilion. One o""'ller. Auto, Factory Trained wire v.·hls., lo milt>!!, hP!'lt Experts In Service, eUer. ~fu!lf tell. 67J....<m2 Parts, Sales KARMANN GHIA KARMANN Chia '70\ grn conv., ROOl:I cond, below bk, $1300/otfrr, leavil'!i cnlry. 615-!1679. LOTUS Over11a1 Delivery COAST IMPORTS '63 VW bug Good rondlUcn $425. !),ls-.:-41-47. Z76 Prin- lon, CM. '68 VOLKS\VA.GEN. f:ood condltlen, auto. Clean. Best offer! 536-4273. --·11-vw -a~u-s-- * 546-2656 eves. • '65 V\\', lcw milt't, 4 rM'."1v tlf'{'11, very clean cond. $575. 67S-J3,';.'i I ' '71 VW cam!M'r. ghag c:r111. 1 '68. FLEETWOOD Brougham F:r1,,.Jit ptint • .,.;nyl top, !1p11fry I lt1!h t t Jn. l1r:or, fu ll po,..tr, f~clory •ir, til t wlittl, AM / FM St1r10 r1dio powt r door loc~1. IWWE•251 SALE PRICI SALE PRICE NABERS 1954 Ford % ton tnic::k. Runs Wt!ll. $200. 246 Viejo, l.Al'Jn(I Bff.ch. i) ~ &: camper. cood eondHk>n. ?:xtru! l9J'.l or best otfl"r'. ~317'7 AUSTIN HEALEY 'I) Auat1n Jlealey. Bug-Eyed Sprite, conv/hcltp, x I n t body/ere. $475. M7-7762 &ft •• 1969 Lotus Lian, rM, low milrage, exci>l cc"'l. Call S5lt-9393 dlly1; S.t9-2157 evoe; ' ' W h I t t Elepha.nll" over- runnlrl&' your house'!' Turn them lnt(I "CASH" -Ae!I them thru Dally P 11 o t Otts.!ilf\,.d . 6-12-56iS. 1000-1200 \V. Pacific Cs!. lf"''Y· Newport Rench (7l4) 642.()4()6 131\f mfll'll, ~tlcs:o; ,...Jrld , 11.1~/otft>r. Eve, 979--08(',5 , 1970 V\V. LOW l\11Lf:1\GE I Good rondltlon. A M. r M rndlo. F,~1ro1 557-311U ·54 Ford 1/( Ton. Nt-"W •rwhw. Good condition !<00. . 6'1>-~ " HOUSE H~! Watch thl OP!:N JtOUSE column. Nttd a ''Pad"'? Place an ad! 0.11 642-~73 Llkl" lo traoe? Our Trader's P8radlae column ls tor YoU! ~ line~. -~di\)'!! ror 5 hurks. 1966 vW BUS f,<)(Xt Corid. Ca ll R93-~76 '69 vv.i· C..mpeT. Pop-top. EXTRA a..EAN! CAii 33&-WJ9 2600 HARBOR BL VD. COSTA MESA 540-9100 ( DAIL V PILOT - , - 990 Autos, UMd CHEVROLET COUGAR FORD 990 Autos, UMO MERCURY 990 Autos, Usod MUSTANG --------1 ··~·'< ( <f)\ 'f;,\/{ :lr2, 2 hbl, ~II (' •• ' ' • 1 I 111• t<1 fl111i·~ VHl\I '70 F d M . k " l'l''.i. $11..0 ,·.iil or aver1c " 1•111 .:.(ir ... ,·d l);1~2"000rn1l(·i;11n \ 111,·1· , IP1111 ,.:,r. Z\\'D· I ' 01J ·~1ERCURY Monlt"rey 9 pas~. sta. wgn. Radio, a.Lr, poJwt'r .s tl'er\ng &. brake11, Luggage rack_ XJnr cond. \\'lo: days phone 5-14--7130, '67 MU.!>"'I'ANG Fastback, low mileage, good cond, new tires. 842-3402 aft 4:l1. OLDSMOBILE DODGE $1195 Bill BARRY a tJ•T fi ,I; (111 V. kfkJS ·192--J1117, --------- ,fl I· I C'Xl ;(/. '-jq <. i\,k,111.• $~''1111 Hliu N•1v;1 S.S c·;-;u/iL' .. ::.0-\'11 AutunlidH· 1ra11 ~. 1:1\'IQry ~aLigl•s & TA('I\. Btto'kl•! &>&ls. V111yl !op. i'uYif't Ol.~t' lirakcs. S207J. 5.'\J-!2li'I, '61 Chr1·y 11a~on 11'Jt/~:: engine -runs goo<!. Go•.Jd 11 1d1• 01·nJ l1rt'~. J\'('P1ls head gal;kL·I . G1Jod rran!iporlat1un c:u". $85. 675-13-IJ eves & wkl'nds. CONTINENTAL ·71 Con!inr•nta! l\1ark JI/ '6& Dodge Coronet ,i~l 11.udl•"! 1 H\J[ll• 11 .~Jll i·d . 1.i111u <ind h•'IH!.'t. ntt:t;:fw1. $599 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC $10 l/urbor Illvd. 5-IG-.4'017 '69 MONACO 4 Dr, t-l. '/'op. dlr .. far t 11i r, J11<;1d1•d. U1Jdf'r 26,000 n1i. LC'ISW"f' \\lorld Special (\!QC· 495!. Take clean cf•r or ? 5'1G-S7J6 aft 10 am 404-6.1(11. FORD Loac1l'.'fl, 011P 01\tner, privatp ---------p:ir!y. 71.f: 4~9-1~54. '67 (:;aJ 500 2 Ur hf, p/s, p/b, CORVAIR fal' air, 1 0\1.llf'r. s~:(J. 641-075.1 a.h 5 or weekf'nd.~. Pontiac-GMC-Ca m pers Fiat '1~! S1. <.il S.1\, F1'\1 )') 20110 t-:. 1.<it SI.. Snnta Ana 55.'l· 1000 ~~~~ 19(iii Fo1~1 St;1 1q,:r1. I'S/PB, b ir/eond. (:i;.c><I e11nd. f\lust so•l!-!t•Hv1ng lo11111. $·I 0 0. ffiJ-9470. 1%:.i .f'a1rlanr ~I 2 Dr l1rt!rp , HlllO trans, HI![, S;:(-,O 1' X.13-2353. onIG. O\\'N~ll : 'lit Galaxic Fat'I. air. Clran, $!><15. 673--0>:).l 67!"1-1.tt;9c. __ _ ~f'ord L TO:-rull po11'l'f. fl lr. s1creo, 1mrnae rond! $1200. One owner. 4.'14·70$/1. MUSTANG MONEY '7 0 Olds Toronado ISN'T ALL YOU SAVE! SHOP THE MOST BEAUTIFUL NEW CAR FACILITY IN ORANGE COUNTY AND SA VE TIME e EFFORT e CASH 1972 BUICK SKYLARK In~. bra~u~s. radio, w~l!e wall1, l1nl@-lf ;Ian, full whHI cover5. All lac!o•Y ""!um equ<pmenl, Ser. No. 2Zl00•19. 1972 BUICK ELECTRA EXECUTIVE 4-DOOR LIMITED· Fully equipped inc luding facfory air condit ioning e AM/FM stereo • power seats, windows, bra kes, ,teerin9 e vinyl top e t inted glass e c ustom int er ior e fa ctory eKecut ive ca''''~====~ only J,000 miles. Ser. No. 4VJ9 T2 H45 3547. .... Mfg. Sugg. Retail Pr ice $7138.60 $5795 BE,\UTIFUL BAUER BARGAINS TOO NICE TO BE CALLED USED CARS '71 BUICK ELECTRA 225 2-door, full powe r, fectory air, l11nd1u top, AM/FM 1ter10, till wh11I . Immaculate 11,000 mile c•r. l ie. No. 2 t SBHT. ILUE IOOK PRICI $51 SS ·.~~~:·· $4795 '71 DATSUN 2·DOOR 8 enu!llul one OW'ne<" car complel1 wllh •·1pe«I Irena. Lie. No. '21 CF8 . $1195.00 '70 MARK Ill lmm&cula1e one OWl>l!r. Low m!l11. Wh•I I be1u!yl Full PO-r w!tl! ll!1rm11lat air Condllionl~ kl'. 1-io. FOV tJA&S7277F $5995.00 '71 CUSTOM RIVIERA Full power wilh factory 1ir, AM/ FM llereo, l11ndeu lop, tilt wh11I -on!y 6,JOO mil11. Ser. No, '49-4· 871H917901 ILUE IOOK PRICE $5115 ·.~~~:·· $4695 '70 CAD COUPE DE VILLE Full POWfr. l&clory alr, l11!11!tr, vinyl IOP, gleamlrig oold ff,,1•11. Low mlleage. Lk. No. '53 ASO $4995.00 '71 FORD TORINO WAG. Gr"t Femuy V1catfon C••. Po-, •lr condltlonlno, 11t"ml11g whl!e f!n t.ii, Llc. N~ 2~ EYY. . $2895.00 '70 BUICK RECIRA 225 Cu1tom 2-door h•rdtop. l11ed1d, full pow11, f1cfory air l1nd•u top, cr11i•1 m&1ler, AM/FM radio, t ilt wheel. l it. No. 549AGG. ILUE IOOK PRICE S39'45 ·.~~~:·· $3795 '68 OPEL WAGON ~speed tren1., radio, io.--1 frmlty 1111' c•r, low mlln. Lie, No, WIO srn: $795.00 '69 CHEVY PICKUP CAMPER Hll'I Comft w mrMr run. ' .BMLlllfVI ~ dllloft. See It tod•yl Lie. No. 11).QC. $1995.00 2925 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA . , ' ~ ..... _.1_ .... • We need your q uelity us ed ce r to- day to f ill our big new lot ••• we're paying top dol!er end out· standing trade.in allowances .•• try us. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK e STORE HOURS e 1:30 A.M. tlll t P.M. Moitday tfini Friday 8:30 A.M. tlll 6 P.M, $gt11rdoy 10 AM. tiR 6 P.M. 511ndoy e SERVICE HOURS e I A.M. HU 9 P.M. Mondays I A.M. till 5:30 P.M. Tllflday tflr11 ftldcry Clo.-d Sohlrdcry Ir S1111doy "SERVICE TO BELIEVE IN " · .. SP'ECIALIZING IN 9UALITY" 979-2500 Autos, Usod 990 PONTIAC PONTIAC '72 Grand Prix '72 Bonneville $4995 $4497 2 Dr. Hardtop, f;ttllY e<111ip- Jk'll, Ai\l/F~l radio, r-.iUy '11 11l1t'cl~. lt.i,r cond., powtT steering, po<.ver brakes. Dt'tllO 2N57V2006.1ti1. Fully f'<JUipPed, AM/FM slL•n'.'O, air L'Ondilioning, rally J! wht't'I!!, powt>r s!rering, p011er brakes, powe1· v.·ln· dov.'11. 2K57R2All'i706. BILL BARRY Bill BARRY Fiat·GMC-Pontiac I l!it St. at S.A. Fnvy. l 1<XJO E. J.~t SI.. Sru1ta Ana 5~18·l00Cl '()G P™1!1ac Ten1p. Cus. 326. E.'l!t·M Cond. 58/iOO m1. pr1/pty. $695. &ffi....172.f. RAMBLER WE'RE MOVING EVERY CAR MUST GO BY JUNE 10 PLEASE-NO TRADES '64 '63 DODGE 6 Pitl:up IN'14779l Utility Box CHEVY BELAIR ~ Or. IJ MH78ll '63 DODGE SEO. \1-8, Rad io, Healer, Auto, Tra11. !IZF2 46l '67 ~,??.?,~ .~~.~~~~T tWK41F711'1227 1) $895 $395 $365 $565 '70 l'LYMOUTH Fury $1094 C.O. Cir, A;r Cond., R1dio, Ha1la1 , Auto Tr1n1., Power 1 St11rin9 , Power Br1~11, N1w Pain t ln1id1 end O ut. ! PK 4 I K00224062) 1 '65 '72 '62 I '62 I '62 VALIANT 600 Sta . Wag . $595 A ~to. Tr1n1., R. H, Sha1p. DUNE BUGGY !OLR'1435) FORD Econo Van Nu P•int, Ru9, P.n,lin 9 IGG20 111 ECONOLINE VAN. Silver-Purple , Pin Stripe1. (66 1835) ECONOLINE Pic kup, Sh1rp R.,d, Utility BoK (0AR 167) ECONOLINE '64 W indow V11n. B!ue l Bluel Wh;11. !P71 966l I '56 T-BIRD AT, PW, Nu Chrom e, L1nd1u I NS Ul 86l, I '67 CADILLAC S1d1n De\'ill1. Full I power, l1a th1r, eir, Lendau, (081AEKI S1d•n D1Vill1. Full '67 CADILLAC power, air conditioning. I Bhr w/lendau, (XWTl 791 ' '65 CADILLAC S.dan 01 Ville (NWS7191 '66 CADILLAC Sedan D1Vill1. Full Power, I Air. ISZH431) '64 ECONOLINE Pickup lfu1, I N95077 l. 1 '66 FORD Van I IU40016) '·· '65 ~~~~?.~~;~E'"•· Mu1t 111. IR62754) '63 FORD Wagon Sh1rp, Full Power, Air Cond. IFM6519J '62 IMPALA 4 Or., Auto. Tr•n,., Air Conti. ILVFSS•I '56 MERCURY COUP'I Airto. Trani., Nica Cir. IPZU'4561 $995 $1295 $1145 s795 $1095 $1595 $1895 $1745 $1095 $1095 $895 $1698 s1495 $365 $395 $299 s395 ~~ '67 OPEL 4 1p1ecl. I llOOTXI 2!00 ~". .:OR BLVI>. COSTA MESA 645-0466 - 17 l I I 7 . ' . . . . , ' y • San ~le111ente Today's Final Capistrano ED ITION N.Y. Stoek.8 VOL 65, NO . 153, 3 SECT IONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE CO UNTY, C.AUFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE I, 1972 TEN CENTS T1~affic Safety Plan Slowed by Cof C-Carr Bi· JOHN VAL TERZA 0 1 IM OellJ P1i.1 Sltlf San Clemente City Manager Ken Carr \Vednesday labeled chamber of com· roerce ()bjections to left-turn pockets along El Camino Retil "a rly in the ointment" in cit y plans to launch prujects related lo a recent traffic safety master plan. At a joint study session of the cify cou ncil and all city commissioners. Carr iaid that the opposition to the left-turn pocket s by a special chamber co1nrnittce. has "stymied" the city's plans to launch major implementation of the Topics traf- fie safety master plan prepa red recently by a J)omo na consulting fir m. Chamber President ltoy Garbarine, sit- ting at the session as chairman of the planning commission, promised another review of the chamber position by the governmental relations comn1iltee Tues- dav. But he hinted that the wording of the resolution might be softened, "but the spirit will probably rernain the same." 1'he cha1nbcr policy adopted not only by the committee but also by unanimous \'Ote of directors earlier this year ' specifically disapproves or the in- stallation of the pockets until the city can provide off-street parking to make up for parking spaces lost in the process. The policy also has caused ~elays in a federally-s ubsidized installation of a traf. fie signal at El Camino Real and El l-'o rtal nea r the chamber offices where plans called for pockets and other changes in the intersection whlch would elirninate on street parking. Any deviation from the total plan, Carr has sa id. would cause the loss of federal funds which would pay about half the costs for the $24,000 installation. • Ir 2 Marines Bludgeoned Assailants Att£t ck P air • in Sa11 Clemente An undetermined numbe r of assailants armed "'ith knives and tire irons at- ta cked a pair of J.·larines at their San Clemente apartment Wedn esday, leaving one victim 1tabbed in the side and the other beaten on the head. Police detained three men after lht' assaults but they were later released without charge, Officers said the y ha\·e not yet determined the exact reasons for the at- 111ck. but the incidents could have been the culmination of a dispu te \\•hich had begu n earlier in the day. Se~ond A squad of narcotics agent! took part in a search for suspects through the night and other detectives planned interview! today with a large list rif inQividuals who 1night be related to the incident. Seizure The victims, found in the driveway rif apartmenl! at m' W. Palilada, were Jack Dean Gibeault, 2(1. of apartm ent A at the Paliiada address. and his room· mate, Arthur Aney Walker, 22. Pot-lade1t Vessel Nabbed in Dana Brith are stationed at Camp Pendleton. Police said the incident occurred at about I p.m. when the group rif thugs ap- peared at the apartment after an alterca· tion earlier In the day. ~foments later, officers said, Gibeault 's wife, Kathy, discovered th e two bleeding men lying in the drive\\·ay. She ran to an all-night market nearby to seek aid. Police said her husband suffered a !ingle slash wound lo his lower side. Walker, apparently bea ten with a lire iron, suffered severe head cut s and rither hurts. A second seizu re this week Df seaborne marijuana at Dana llarbor was a n- nounced by U.S. Customs 1gents \Vednes- day a ft e r the arrest of four Big Sur residents and discovery Df 116 kilos of ma rijuana bricks aboard a 26-foot cabin cruiser. The arrests marked the second raid this v.•ee k at the ha rbor relating to a\leg· ed sm uggling operations from ~-fexico. The marijuana had a street value or about $20,{)()(), said spokesmen for the agency. Those arrested in the latest raid v.'crC ROdney C. Richmond, 30; Ronald Lussier, :u: Melinda Smith, 18, and her sister, Constance. All four residents ol the central CaHromia coastal crilony were anaigned last Wednesday before a U.S. Magistrate in Los Angeles. Last Monday in a similar raid, cu.st.om.I agents arrested two Santa Barbara residents and seized 30 bricks ol tile forbiddu weed aboard a small trimaran whic;h was beading out to sea after spen- ding the night at the yacht basin. Customs spokesmen said thl! week that both alleged smuggling operations did oot include the harbor as a drripoff point, but me rely as an asserted stopover in the all eged smuggling route north. The 26-foot cruiser boarded Wednesday at the harbor apparently r;et out from Puert o Vallarta, Mexico , with Its al- lcJ.led illcgial cargo, rifficials claim. After emergency treatment at l>.1ission Community Hospital the lwo victims were transferred to the U S. Naval Hospital al Camp Pendleton for further treatment o( the injuries. Bo th are ex- pected to recove r, police said. Hospital Area Hit by Flames Reagan Decli11es Support Fo1~ Coastfu1e 'Efforts' The name from an acetyline ·weld ing torch apparently was tD blame for a fa sl- movi ng, smoky brush blaie wh ich erupted at the lunch hour W<'dnesday at San Clemente General Hospita l. The blaze, which burned a small patch rif mov.'n weeds rin the freeway side oC the new hospital, erupted shortly before l p,m, as workmen were welding large sec- tions of pipe in the area. Although there was no danger ol struc- tures becoming involved in the blaze, the fire did prrive vexing to firemen whD had to scale tall fences with their hoses in tow to quell flames beaded toward the San Diego Freeway .. Several Sin Clemente police rifficers lent a hand ln putting riut the blaze. Fear Fron1 \Vire Ser,•ires Governor Jtona ld Reagan said \Vecf. nesday he was ''inclined not"' to support the efforts now being made by con· servationists to place a coastline pro- tection measure on the November ballot. Speak ing at a press conference, the Gove rnor said he felt adoption Of coastline controls should be left to the Legislature and that the people should only act by initiative "if the legislature took no action." ..... At the same press c o nference , Goveroor Reagan said he supported the present efforts to place the death penalty issue on the ballot through petition and Teeth, Marks, Blood Scared Diver SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A 31·year-0ld cannery worker attacked by a shark while diving frir abalone in the Pacific says he wiis more fri ghtened When he aaw the teeth markl on his leg afterward than while the 12-foot creaturt had him in its jav.·s. "Mainly, the thing J had on my mjnd was to get back to our outboard," Helmuth Himmrich said Wednesday, "That'.s when I really got scared, once I WU aboard and saw those teeth marb rif the shark on my leg, And all that blood." The bearded diver js lesa: than half the iiu of the shar'k that tore at hl'l Jee and aevered a nerve. He wu at Lttterman Hospital where he underwent eurgery to repair bis woond3. Hlmmrlch, father of two small children, said he j~t fini shed bagging hi! limit of five abalone, a seafood delicacy found only off limited stretches or the U.S. PllcUJc coast, and was awlmming back to the boat where his two brothers-in-law and a nephew were fishing. "It aeemed to take one bite, then another-a harder one. T\in It grabbed hold, bJ.n8ln& on, lifting me out of ·t11e water. l felt like it was Trying to tear oU another part of mt." Hlmmrlch, or Lodi, who hat been ocean diving since 1964, was phllosop hl- eal ebout the au.ck. "He mu,,t have bttn hungry, and J was tht mly thing 11round," ht said. th::it he had signed rine or the petitions. The coastl ine protection measure is being backed by the Coastal Alliance, a coalition rif .conservationist organiiatlofl!. Spokesmen for the group say they launched the petition drive rirlginally because the Legislature p r D b a b I y wouldn 't pass a sufficiently strong bill. •·1 would be inclined not to (rupport the roast al measure) on the basis that we do have a legislative solution which is being advanced/' the Governor aald. "l would think the time for a coastline initiative would be if the Legislature took no ac- tlrin." A bill backed by the Coastal Alliance was ki lled earlier this month in the Senate Natural Resources and Wildlife Committee. The same committee ap. proved a less restrictive measure au thored by Senator Dennis Carpenter (R-Newpett Beach). The Coastal Alliance initiative mea.rure would create six regional commfllslons in the state with half of the members chosen from local elected offlclals. The c:ommissions would control development Crom mean hlgb tide Une to 1.000 ya rd1 inland along all Df calllornla's 1,100 mllet or coast. The Carpenter bill wUI es:clude ln- C(trporated cllit! from oontrol and would allow Individual oountiu to define their own coastal zone somewhere: betwee~ J ,000 yard! and three mUes Inland. The coastline prot«tlon lnJtlatlve need! 315.504 certified signatures to be placed on the ballot In NoYmibu. The secrtt&ry rif state has suggested ttuit peUtlon circulaton of bDth the coaatline meuure and the death penalty 1meodment begin fll ing thetr petitions with local .county clerks Monday. The slgnaturefJ must be verUied not later than JWle 2t to quallfy for the November ballot. 1-u.. the dtalh ptnatty tnJU.Uv• calls for an amendment to the California constitution. $20,Q 1ignaturt:1 are re- quired for ils addllion to lhe bollol. The di!cussion rif the chamber position was a small part rif a three-hour n1eeUng in which the matter rir parking in busi- aess &rea! dominated dlscus.sion. Essentially. the dl5cussion ~urrtcted problems which have grlpped the C1!y's commercial di!tric:b for nearly two de- cades. During that period the city had emplriyed and later abandobed plans to charge stifC, in-lieu, fees for businesses without adequate parking. The $1.500-per· space Cets, however, never were charged. The funds, it had been hoped, would ha ve orce' Close Harmony? been put into a special acc;ount to hel p finance offstr~t parking [l)!s. Parking Commiss1011tr \\"1ll1 a1n \\'a!kt'r said that U\C' current then1e 111 his group to he!p J.M1n•idt> badlv needed p3rk111.i: 1s the launrhing of ,1 full ran1 p:11gn tfl bruig bus1nessu1en together in :'llll)!ht<r :itli·n1p1 at selt1n~ ::i sp('('i.tt!-:iss('s~1nrnt chstr1rl perhnps alon g the 21•1 blU<·J., 1Jr A\enuht Del J\lsr for <.·vnstrur11un or :1 rnun1C'1pal lot. ~in1ilar trirs in a t\\'O-hlo<'k pnrt of tlie street failt'd l\ro years ago. \\'nlkrr .sn1d. because of strong 11ppos1tion by ::ibsentce PAIL Y l'ILOT Sl .. I 1'1"19 "Explorations in Rhyt.hm11 will be presented at 8 p.m. Saturday in the San Clemente Community Clubhouse. It is sponsored by the South Coast Choral and Light Opera Associat ion. Performers will include The C6llage. a jazz sextet. Seated is Mary Campbell, pianist. Stand· ing from left to right are Ben McLane, vibes; Lon Graves, drums; and Red Kahle, bassist. Defense Asks Acquittal In Angela Davi_s Trial . . From Wlre ServlCH SAN JOSE -The defense told the Angela Davis jury today that tt must ac. quit the 23-year.-old black m 111 tan t becaU>< the st.to filled to prov• b<yoad a reasonable doubt that 1he con.spired in ""' San Rafa<! kldnoplngs and killings. (See'earlier s~ory, page 10). RFK Son Pa ys Evasion Fine BOSTON [UPI) -Joseph P. Kennedy llJ, ti . ..., ol the leto Stn. Robert F. Kennedy, hu pleoded IUillY throll{!h 1n ettomey to 1 cha,.. of lallhll to pey 1 30-cinl lumpik• toll. He was ltnld US. Tho lnoldent oeourr<d Tuesday night on the M1111chu1ett1 1\Jrnplke. State trooper Edward Brown made the arrest. taking yuung Ken- nedy to Bnghton poUc. ataltoo where be waa booked on a thar1e ol toll .. ulon. Howard Moore Jr., opening final arguments for .the defendant, aald : "The two words, reasonable doubt. are probably the most important words in Angl~son American jurisprudence. "The second most important may bf' the burden of proof that rests on the pro- secution tri ·convince you or the absence of reasonable doubt. "The state has failed to do 90 in lhis Cl\lJe and that Yt'Qu\d require you to acquit this defendant." Speaking i.n a soft accent, Moort lJBkl one thing that was a 80Urce of dlstn!ss to P.11.as Da vis was the lack Df any membus of her ra«: on the jury. Moore said he WIS conndent this jury could reach a proper vtrdlct but that ht: felt concerned that the absence or blacks might impede justice. _.J • "So, we'll wt>rnit the rate rif Mlss Davis -her freedom , her \lfe, to you." Moore was to be followed In lhe defense sumn1atlon by attorn ey Leo Branton. Miss Davis wiU make nri final argu~ ment in the cast. On \Vednesday, pro:seculor Albert W. ll•rris Jr. told the jury In a Oat and unemotional tone that It had no altemJtive but to find 1'.1iss Davis guU1y IS.. TRIAL, Poet I) ow·nrr-; of the busi ness buildings In tPle ;t/' ... 1 \\';i11irr stressed !h.:11 i( the tity Jlaff <:•111 :.vor 1 l'Ompleie 11sual a.id.s 10 hel p 1he- ,11~1'l1S!l1u11 of the p<irking problem aorl hus1nl''~11 1cn in !lit art.'3 would 10111 tuj.!t'll.l'r 111 meel ing:-: ... \\'e n1ii:ht ha \·• !ht' pr•1hlt•r n llrkt'<I ;ind ht> successfu l in t'~IAhl1~h1ng one srtiall d1str1rl to sho\f lh<it 1L <'an be done." llt• :uld('d that 1hr education r<impaign rn1J;hl 11lso ser\'e lu unite tenants or hu.s1n!'ss buildings in ap1>lying pressure tn :11\~<·11!1'(' owners who a.~se rtedlv do little to anpro1 c the parking problenis. Helicopters To he Used Along Coast By Ji\CK UHOBACK 0 1 I~• 0•111 P'li.1 Still l)r;ingr Countv ·s own "air force " mav ,::et utf the grour'id next week if lhe Board of Supervisors approves a lest pl an pro- posed hy county Direc tor of Aviation J{o!H-rt Bresnahan. Bresnahan has suggested a six·month trial period at a cost or $22,000 for an ex· perimental patrol over the Orange Coast with cooperation of the city hellropter forces from Newport Beach, Co!ta Mesa, and Huntington "Beach. If supervbon approve the tert pro- gram and It proves succes1ful, Bresnahan has riutllned an overall county air surveillance and re!cue project at a cost of $2.3 mill ion for the first year. The "air force" is a proposal advanced by Supervisor \Yill ia m Phillips rif Ful lerton several months ago. Bresnahan eslim11ted tha t the rivera\I i'ount ywlde syste1n would nttd eight police patrol helicopters and four patrol pl ane!i plus two larger aircraft, one a helicopter and t..01e an airplane fo r utility service. or the $2.3 mi llion nrst year spending, $1.l mllllon would go for equi pment with th e balance covering operating costs foe lhe first 12 month!. Bresnaha n's six month.'! lest proposal calls for using police helicopters already in service in the three coastal com~ munilies. In addition 1o lhe six clty-0perated h('licopters th e tes t program would in- clude a rented two pla ce li~ht plane. Bresnahan esti mates that the joint p~ gram be tween the cities and the county t:ould redu ce annual helicf)pte r costs to the three cities and to Anaheim, the rinly olht>r criunty community with choppers, by l WG-thirdS. If the final plan is adopted. an opera· lion center would be established at Orange Criunty Airprirt and staffed by the participating citie!l. The center would be equipped by 1he county. Bresnahan suggest.s that the six-month test area be split into two sectors, one from Seal Beach Naval Weapons Depot to UC! and the other southward to San Clemente and bordered by the San o;ego Freeway Inland and the ocean on the east. Coverage would Include the three com. munitles now operating helicopters and portions of Fountain Yalley, lrvlM, (S.c 'AIR FORCE,' Piii• I) Caut Weadler Hazy sunshine Js on the arenda for Frldiiy, but the temperature will still be toward the top of the thermometer. lllghs at !ho beach 71 rising to IO inland. Lowt ~ INSIDE TODA V Tn bedroom communftv of Norwalk, the onlu candkfate toho aro11ses gmuJne tnthMlicmi '4. Alabama'.t Gov. Georue C. Wall lact. Ste storJ1, Page 21. LM. I•~• • Mnil9 .. C"lftt11l1 . " ,.__. """ • CT•nlt ... .. ... --,. Comll:l • or.-.'-"' 11 C•M•-• i :::·,.... ..... .... Dell!\ HolkH . .. t•lff"ll I'••• t1itoll•l'4I .. I ~!•l•l~ll'lfflt .... ,.,,. ..•. u l'l ... JKf ... WM-• , ........ ll:Mwf " ........ ., ...... 11'-lt "···-" -·~ • .. ..-" 2 1DJ.ll 't' PILC'! SC ----- 'F,ry' Set U p -Fishy ~t\ctivi ty In Costa Mesa Costa Mesa '!! d011"nto11n p ;irk 11·:1s 1•1r11ed lrlto a riot of l'O)Or tod<l)' :J S' ll'flrk- l1 l1'!1 ~t'I up fcrr1:. 1.1hc1·!s, 11 1i rr~ go-- 1·ounds and :1()(1UI :iu nltwr ;ur1 11:.1•tilPnt r1rlts In prt"pt1 r11\tull (Or lht ('11y's 27th A11n\ial t-~ish Fr)' :\fl'1nhf>.rs of th{' !.ion.~ ( 'luh 11111 thro1v I/le !'!Wltl"h on lhrir "inip<'r-c".H'!ll\';11 :i t pr t •('l!-.Cly r. p ni F rid.11, ;1tMu1t 111u · h11lr hol1r after the scr1 u1g Lf ,1dch11nn.i l 11sh 1hnners b<.>~ins I°h<-pnrk :11 lRth !'i t r C' 1· t and Anaheim A\'C'nuc 'n tll be lhe <.·t·1ll<'r of ne:trly all F'ish fr~· ;;!lrnt tions. includin~ h,1bv and bcautv contest:ir. a b;1tt!r CJr lhl· bands. sttigt' shOw~ and prize dra v.·1n~s l·'ish dinners. priced at $1.75. 1rdl be 'old F'riday night .;u"KI (ron1 noon lo 8 pm. 111111'1 S<iturdny ;ind Sunday. All prCJceeds ,1 ill go to ch:i r1t y. J ligblit,~1 Of lh£' lhrl.'c-day l'Xtr<1V:l· '.;?:11zy.a prornises 1o Jxi lhc parad{' schr- Jul cd for Sa 1urdny . It bt>gins at ]() 30 ~en . ;i\ !Rlh Street and An<1hrim AvPnu r ind runs ;1!011g-J9th Stre<:t and f1i<ll't'nti:1 fl\ (,HJC , Fur those \1·l10 1niss !he display uf (~ r1nat~ and '.'10 marching bands, the parade :.111 be tcll"cast in color from 3 p 111. tn t :lO p rn . Sunday by KTLA Cha nnrl 5 Parade Ch;1irn1n11 Cliff Wesdorf sriid lll(' of the rntrants. the Tijua na Police ·'lutorcycle Squadron, will be featured in ~ special performa11ce at 2 p.m. on :en ter Street. fa cing th e park. Pancho the Tnco-caicr. a lion cub ll\'OCr by Costa ~-lesa rc·staurateur A!- .!'<'d Klinzmann . is the oHicial mascot {)f tw parade and v.·ill lead the field or 1.500 participants in the parade, \Vesdorf said. He will be on display from I p.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday in the handball courts of the (;iris Club, immediately adjaccnl to !he park. (;rand :\-tarshal for this ye"r's parade is Marlin McKeever, the L<t.s Angeles fl ams lineba cker from Corona def Mar. Mexican Doctor, Ex-Na vy Flier Helll on Drugs SAN DIEGO (AP\ -A ~lexican physi. :-ian and a former Navy pilot are-charged 1n t\\'O separate frderal indictments wil h ~ol'ijipiring to smuggle heroin. cocaine 9nd marijuana into the United States from Mexico. ~!r·Kee\'er vdll sh:irc lhr ~pol11ght with ~JX>f'in l gucsis "Sey mour." tht.' ll·lcvislon horr11r n1u11e ho st, <111d LI'S .. Mr. Fish J.'ry'' Aliller, the n1a11 '""'l1n l1ns nunuunccd the paradr fur thl' fJ<isl 26 :i.ears The sche<h1le ol Fish J.'rv f:\ t'nts 1s a.'I rol!<1 1\.~ · f"ltlOA Y ·-.'t :!tip 111 F1·h /l1nn£•rs. f'itv l'ark -6 11 u1 . (':1 rn1\·;il /ti des and ~l!d"<lY Bou1h .... City /l;irk. -"i pm Uand Contest. City f'.:irlr.. !'1.\'r l!HUAV -10 am . C;1rn1val. Ci ty Park. -10 :30 am., f>"1sh Fry Parade. ~,'11.xH1. 1-'ish Dinners. City Park. -J:Jll p.in .. St<ige Sho"'· City Park. -2 p.rn. 'f1Juan<1 Pollt'e ~lotorcyc!e Sql1<.1dro11. -l 1~ p.m Oan<.·crs. City Park. -6 .10 ll.rn. Stage. Sho w, City Park. SU~l)A Y -.'l'oon. Carnival, City P:.-irk. -2 :10 p.m., B.1 by Con test, City Park. -J JO p ni,, Mlss}vlermaid Contest, Ci· ty Park -6: 15 p Ill Stnge Show City Park. -8 p.m., Drav.•ing for Gr:ind 1~rize. Ci· ly Park. T111mey Asked That Committee 'Invite' Si11atra \VAS~I INGTON (AP ) -Sen . John V. Tunney has ackno"'·ledged he asked a congressional committee not to subpoena Frank Sinatra, but instead to "invite him to talk" to the committee. wh ich is in· vcstiga ting lies between organized crime .:ind horse racing. ·runney (D-Calif.), said WC'dnesclay he telephoned Rep . Claude Pepper ID-Fla.), chairman or the House Select Committee nn Crime. arter being contacted by an at- torney ror Sinatra. Tunney said he told PC'ppcr. "There is nu v.·ay I would ever make a call to try to prrvent your comn1ittce from gelling all the information you thi nk is a\'ailab!e. liut if you would in vite him (Sinatra) to t:ilk to the committee members instead of subpoenaing him, it ~·ould be the courte<>us thing to do ." Tunney said that "a man \.\'ho has reached the level that he (Sinatra) has , •• should not be treatec! that way." Named Wednesd:iy in the federal grand lur>;< indictments arc Dr. Gustavo c;uerra· ~lontencgro. 37, of Tijuana. Mex ., and ~J1chael Terry Drake, 26, of San Dlefo. Bo!-h are being held in lieu of bRil. • They are ac:cused in one. indictment of ronspiring to smuggle 66 pounds of pure heroin, valued at $20 million on the illegal murket. Despite Tunne y's request, the com· mittee gave the subpoena to a \Vashington attorney for Sinatra, and the sin~r is 1Schedul~ to ~tify Ju~\ • 'J'dnney!, acknowledi<me nt caiie artJt coh:im.ittU: members revealed he Jn- terceded on Sinatra's Mlla lf. 'Ille heroin wns n~v('r delivrTed to undercover narcotics agents who "·ere in · \'ol ve<l in negotiations for its sale. federal offic::ials said. The other indictment. "'hich also n;imes four other persons. in \'oJves the confi scation by authorit ies in San Diego of 3.038 pounds of 1narijuana and 2 2 pounds of cocaine.\ Assistant U.S. Atty. Thomas i\1. Coffin sai d he believes th~ slx persons. all of \rhom are 1n custody. were part of an in- ternational ~muggling ring. ()ne congre ssman said a member or Vice-president Agnew's staff also ob- jected to the subpOena. A Tunney .Ude said Wednesday that Tunney was not trylng to "intercede." but merely wanted Pepper to know Sinatra's feelings. · Lodge Burns Down GUATAY (AP) -Guatay . Lodge alongside Jiiterstate 8 burned-to the ground \Vednesday. The Cause of the fire was not determined, the U.S. Forest Service .said. THAILAND ' CAMBODIA PHNOM PINH..,, 0 MEKONG DELTA : _:.;...;._..._ ___ DA NANG ' SOUTl1 CHIMA SEA SOUTH VIETNAM UPI H1w1m10 HEAVY AIR ATTACKS-Waves of U.S. B52 bombers pounded North Vietnamese troop concentrations in Quang 'I'ri Province (1) north of ~rue (2) and near the Central lligh land capital of Kontu1n (3) 111 one of the largest single day bombing raids in Vietnam this month . Co1nmunist gunners pumped 130 rounds of rocket. mortar and artil- lery fire into defenders at An L-Oc (4) the devastated provincial cap-- ital 60 miles north of Saigon. 'Tired' Nixon Reaches Accord in Warsaw Stay WARSAW (UPI) -A "dead tired" President Nixon reached some wide-rang· ing accords with Polish leaders today as the final stroke of his 12-day diplomalic mission, and headed home for a report to Congress tonight on the Moscow summit The presidential jet. The Spirit of '76, lef t \Varsa w on a nine-hour flight to \Yashington after Nixon and First Secretary Edward Gierek of the Polish Communist Party signed a communique summing up four houf'3 of talks. In the document, the leaders agreed that talks should be opened as soon as possible on East-West troop reductions in Europe; to lay groundwork for a EUJ'O-o From Pagel TRIAL ... of mur~r. ltidnaping aqd cooaphcy. MOort told the juJ1 Pterl h1 i di{. ference between clrcunutantlal evidence and a coincidence, and described Miss Davis' arrival in the San Francisco Bay area Aug. 3, 1970, her purchase of a sho tguq Aug. S, and Ji~~ departure Aug. 7 as "mere chance bap~ings." He also challenged the eyewitness iden. lilicatioo of Miss Davie: by prosecution wttnesse.s, saying: "All of the eyewilnes~ identifications of ~tiss Davi.s \•:ere racial stereotypes." Mls..! Davis. a 23-year-old black Com- munist and formr UCLA philosophy in- structor, did not testify in her own defense but proclaimed her innocence in her opening statement as cocounsel in the case. She faces a possible Ille sentence if convicted. pean security conference -also agreed to by Nixon at the Kreml in summil - and to conduct continuing talks on im· proving U.S.·Polish trade -non-specific, as wa s the case in J\'losco111. But just as he fa iled W break any n£'1v ground with Soviet leaders on the Viet- nam issue, Nixon lvas unable to reach a<·- cord ~·it/} the Polish. The \\'arsa1v con1- munique said: "Both sides presented their kno1\'n posi- tions on the war in Vietnam and the situRlkln in Indochina. Essential vie11·s or the two sides in this question remain C"d divergent.'' His departure endl'd a dramatic mission during '\\'h.ich lie was greet.eel by antiwar rioters in Au~ia, '\\'arnied by cheering crowds in Poland, fol/011,·ed by bomb blasts in ]ran and -most in1- portant -welcomed in the Kremlin. As Nixon wound up his journey, w'iirh included stops in Leningrad, Kiev and Tehran, the President showed clear signs of the·stress he hss been under since his arrival in Moscow May 22. .. lle's dead tired but he won't admit it." one aide said, !·tis wife, Pat. also lost the poise she maintained lhroughout the journey. snap- ping at Polish plainclothesman trying to kee p her awsy. The President's plane left \Varsa\v airport at 8:03 a.m. PUI'. more than -10 minutes earlier than planned, because of strong headwinds along his route. An estimated 1.000 persons lined the motorcad~ route to the airport, where Polish le aders 5a\V the President off in a brief ceremony carried live on Warsaw television. '.l\ro S11pport' S. Viets Reach Quang Tri Edge .. !'iA ICiON (UPI ) -South V1rtnan1C'sc p~1r;,1truopcrs uncl rangers ba('kL'd by t,1nks clrove ahnost to the bord"r ol c..i uang 1'r1 Province today 1n an effort 10 J..uock out a North \'1£'tn:11nesc reg1mc11l .:i11c! blunt :111 t'X Pl·Cted att<1l·k on lltJr '1'!1cy 111u1't·d 11 11h \'irLuutly no a ir .Stlp- purl and ciunc und1·r hc:ivy ;irtrllt"rv fir(·. Bud '""'eathcr settled on Nor th Vietnam :ind tht' nurthl'HSlt'rtl qu arter or South Vtctnan\ hul !ht• U.S. Comn1and said pl<1nes knocked out t\10 rnore ol Hanoi·s power plants \\'C'dnesd:iy and tbs! U.S. Air Forte JJh<inton1 jets knocked do\1·n 11\0 or four ,al\ark1ng MJG 21 jl'IS over a 30.nitnute pPrind nenr llanoi U.S. planes bornbed northt"rn largets tod;1y by r:ld[lr. ·rtie ll anoi offic1al ;irniy nc11'5paper Qua n Doi Nhan 01111 admittC'd in <rn i~suc l't'actiin~ S11igon that the U.S. air of- f(•11s1vc 1v:1s hurling North V1ctnr11n's 11:1r effort. ll sn1d !he fight to n1n intuln ron1 - r11u1uc;u1ons ;ind st1ppli1·s lo the south \r;1s bct·on1111J~ n1urc ··str('11uous.·· Field officers <lloni.: the i\ly Ch:1nh ll!l'er defense line 22 rn ll('s north of l lue said the north11·nrd striking South \.'i1•t· nan1csP ar1norcd force of 2.000 men \vas tut by ;L barrage or 50 130mm artillery shells-the hca\'1cst such strike in a 11·e£·k -and that there \r1•t'l' "quite ;1 fe1v·• < asu<i!ti(·S. l'Pt t:orrcsponficnl l>onald :\. na ris reported fron1 Jiu!' !h<lt the thrcC' b:it- t:.ilions of go1'l·rnn1l•nt troo ps re inforced by armor v•cre seeking 11,1 c<ipture or destroy ;i bal1:1l1on of 650 North \'i1~t namcsc troops in the hills just southwest of ~-ly Chanh, or drlvr it back north. The situation on 01hcr front s; -Heavy house-to-house fighting \\'flS reported in J\ontum, 260 miles north of Saigon , and govcrnn1cnt spokcsm:in said 2:14 Comn1unisls 11't'rc kl!led Tursda y and govcrnnll'nt troo ps found the bodies CJf 125 others -a toll or 359 at a loss of 13 government troops killed. They s~1id the Con1mu11 ist~ f<iked a su r- Tl'nder n1ovt• \\'ednesd::iy and poured rt'in- rorrt>ments in to th<' northern part or Kon- tum during a lull in the fighting. -fighting at An LO<'. 60 miles north of Saigon. lapcred off but the city \Vas hit \\'cdnesday by 35-0 mor!ar a nrl rO<'k<'t rounds :ind fighting 1vas r<'porled along Mou ey Wi1i1ier lit Seclusio 1i SALEi11 , 1-tass. (UPIJ -ThomtiSl c;_ !!all, a telephone repai rman wbo \\'On $1 rn il!ion th ls 1rcck in the l\fassuc husetts Lottery, had his phone disconnected . App<lrent1y anxious to avoid the round -! he -c I o c k calls from i;alesmen. ne"·smen and con ine rt lh;it plagued th e stat e's first $1 million ~·inner -Joseph Ronica of Ne\\tOn lla!I \\'as 1n- tornn1unicado ICl'!ay. liall, 25, began a vacation after the Tuesday tlra\\·ing and \\'as not expected to return to bis $130-a- \\'ee k Job. tlln.'t !ia1gon rC'!1cf eoluntr ns st rung out frutll 1\1·0 10 15 1n1lrs lo the south. -F1gh1 ing fl ll r£'d in norn1ally t'aln1 Hu1h Th11110 PrtJ\'tli<.'t' <dung the Sout h t 'IJ111a St'il c..:uasl ;,1bout 100 rntlcs southea:st 1•! S;u~on ,\ Cnn11nun 1.1,t b;ttt:!l1on of 400 rnen at- 1 :1~·1,,·d ;:l g1J\1•rruncnl fo n·e 20 rnilcs north of thi· prv\ 11~1·1:11 l·:q111nl of l'h<111 Tht>11 ;111d \1 ,1~ h\'tll•'n back 11Jth 54 dead. 1:1J\1•r'11 Zi1t·HI lusst·s 11\•r1• put at 13 dend ;ual 21 11 ounded -South v.cst of llu<' Sou1h Vietnamese tr oops s;ud !hey kilted 28 Com1nunists in :.1 sk1r1n1sh seven miles from ll ue. ll52!t strurk he:iv1Jy HI that area as well as in 1ht' t\1)n!tJn1 reg ion. U11it Opposes 9-Sort Of Speeiol lo the 0 1\ILY J'ILOT SA CRA~IENTO Despite ea rl ier prcdiclions fron1 Orangl' County Supt>r· visor Darid L. B:ikcr, the Californi~ l'.:n\·1ronn1<.·11tal Quality Control Countil tll(lay t111ds 11sclf stuck squarely in 11 ficnce·straddl1ng position on controversial l'ropositio11 ~- 'rhc tounctl in it s rnccling here \\'edncsday. \'OIC'd to oppose the so-called , clean environment ini tiative on the June 6 hallo!. Uu! on the o!hl'r hand. the cou'nci1 rerustd to rest·ind Hs t'arlicr vole which t.'ndnrsed Proposition 9. .. J\•ople are going to think \\'e'rc balmy." t'xploded board member Albe rt l'r:irlson or llivcrsld('. "Ifs likr lett ing a sione 11·alt stand and lht'n 1nythically tearing it do1,·n." ·r he council's f£'nce-.stradding slance bt•gan illay 18 in Los Ange lrs "·hen 1l \Otcd :i to 2 to endorse Proposition 9. But Chain1H1n B;ikt•r of Orange County, 11 ho 1'1 .JS abst'nt at that 1nceting, said •·trickery"' had lx'en usrt..I to get the en- clors1·rnenl. ~le sch('duled another vote U11s \Vcdncsday in Sacramento_ The second time. the council voted 6 to :i to oppose J>roposilion 9 "''ilh two :1bstentions. ll:iker had predic ted it "'·ould be en- dorsed 8 lo 5 by thf' full council. l!owcver. the <;ounci ! refused to back up and revoke its prev ioos 5 to 2 vote en* 1Jorsing lhc proposition. A mot ion to let the c11dorsen1ent stand \Von 7 lo 1 air pr11vnl of lhc council. St;itt-: Sen. Robert J . T..agomarsino (R· Vt'nfura County\, e legislative member of the council. offered consolation of sorts: "This happens all the time in the lt•gislature.'' he said. The mcet lng "·as frequently inlerrpled by boosirrs of Propositin 9, a 23-point 111easure thR.t wou ld clamp a five year n1oratorium on nuclear po\.\'Cr plant con- struction. nmong other things. Ch;irim:in R."lker rrmained them the 1nceting v.as not a public hearing. f 'rom Pflgl' J \~IR FORCE' McGovern Restates Plan • sofa bed sale! npw · .queen size • $299. • ••• \\ t·s tminste r and Sent Brach The additional fixed 11,·1ng pl:in(' \VOUld npctate for .si x hours a day and lhe h£'liCopters an add itional fi\'e hour~. Bresnahan SUf.l~C5tecl. If .the countv"·1cfc svstctn is eventual!v adopted, thefe wouid be required 14 aircraft. helicopler and fixed \\·ing, with 14 fmployes including 21 pilots. mne obsqrvers. three administrators and 11 !lircrart mechanics. Ol:ANGI COAST ic DAILY PILOT 1 ... Orl nOll!,,,,(Otl! OAILY P ILOT, w!lll -..llocll "i1<omo.11fd """' Ntw1 Pren. It 11UO!l1lllld ov I~, Or lngt CO••I P110h11}jn9 Comp.ony. Srp1. '"lf tdll•<»>I •rt PYbh11>to, Mollday ll!rou91'1 "'if'"· tor (o>Tt Me.a, NrwPOrl llrtcll, "u~T.ngton Dt .. cll l'oun!aln VMlt1, Logun• Be1oc1>, !'""lt.~a<l<lltbac~ tnd ~•n Cltm•M•I ~.Ill\ JU•n ( .. o••l•t•IO. A l•nglf f'OIMOI •.:111 1011 11 111101,111ro ~0Tu•d~y1 11nd Surid .. 1• l ,.,. ll"nc;111I pubh1ll•nQ fll~nl h er JJO Wt•! e11r ~trte•, Co1•1 M1>1 , ~o i.to•nlt, t l6l•, R'obtr! N. w,,J J"1r••dtn1 trod P~ol•11'1tr " J 1,l Ft . Curhv Vt•t Pttl«ltnl I nd Gtnt •l l M•n•~tr lhom11 Ktt .. il [d•IOf Tho..,11 A. M11r :oh;111 M1nag,.., [<1 IOr CIM.r l11 H. loo, Rid••rd P. Ni ll I' "''"\!IM MltilQl"ll r d 10., ~· S-. Cl••-'• Oftlce lOS ~lorfh l:J C imino Ftttl, 1'J672 1 Otkf Offlus I' Co11' Mt11 l)O w,,, e1v ~Trrtt llJ!t•pc>•t 8r1cll: )SU Htwparr &Olllt vl•O H\on!lf>vlon 8ttCll ~ "''' Buell ll0u11 ... •rd II L•e111M lltlC/I: nJ ,_.,,,. #>¥1Mllll I: Tel ...... 17141 •41-4JJI f1-lfle4 .Alfwrtlll1t9 '42·1•71 1 .. c~ An Oep•rt-•h: ' , • ..,, ...... 492-44:11 To F1"ee Wai· Prisoners f'O\.Ii\'A (APJ -Sen. George ~ll"Govern. playing lo a big crowd in the C;ilifornia pres1de11tial prima ry cam- pn11u1, has pledged that 1! he wins the \\'hitf' Hou~e J1e c:an gain a rrlease of U.S. pri~oners of 11•ar within 90 days of his :· ~ ;1uguratio11. The South Dakota senator drew se\•eral thousnnd persons, fl crowd !hat stretched li1r bark into the darkness of the Covina l';1rk 't\'C<lnc$day night. 1\fore than 2.000 turn<'d out for another rally in San ll('rnardi 110. Those appearances climaxed a 14-hour <lay CJf vvte hunting for his Tuesda y jlrunary cont.est \\•ilh Sen. Hubert ll. !Ju1nphrey. a man McGovern described a~ "par! of the old aparatus ..• " 1\-Jeanwhile, l·lumphrey "'as hs.ving !rouble>. 1'he luncheon nudience was leaving a~ he <lrove up, 45 minutes late, for A speech 10 a businessmen's ~rOUIW!t ~).ashionablc S:inta Rarbara hotel. 1 ~ Ln daunted. and ""ithout even leaving hrs car. Uumphrey "'t'llt right on lo the 11exl ~lop, 11 uni on hall In Vent ura, v.·here he de.livered his Santa Bll.rbaro speech lo a 100-person audience that consisted n1:tinly of the tra veling press corps. l>t-spile such mishaps, flumphrey said 3!'! he flew back to-Los Angel~s aftrr another day or small carnp1ign crowds that he thinks be hae at least slowed McGovem·s momenlum for Tuesday's crucial Democtatic primary. In Covina, McGovern said that he could gain freedom for Amcrl.cl'ln prisoners by \\•ilhdrnwing U.S. forces And impport from South Vletnan1. "I know lhat President Nixon tells us v.·r're stnying in Vielnnm because we "''ant to hring ahout the release of our prlsuners ..• " ;\1 cGovern sa id . there's no ho pe at all to bring about the release or our prisoners •. _ ·• "llow are you going to do it?" a young man shouted from the !ront of the crowd. McGovern said he would do it by agree· ing to the withdra\\'al of U.S. forces over a 90-day period and the termination of American miUtary support for Saigon. He said he would &.!lk in ~turn !hat l\'ilhdrRwing forces not be attacked "and that once that has been completed our prisoners be released." McGovern acknowledged during a television appcaral'lee Tuesday night that there ~·ould be little the United States could do if the prisoners were not releas· cd in <'Xchonge for withdrawal. "There's not an awful lot we can do other than to take our case to the in· ternational community,'' McGovern said lhf"n.) ffumphrey was optimiJtic over hi! chances. "I th ink lt i.s very clMe," the former vier presidC'nt told a reporter as his twin· engine light plane touched down at llollywood-Burb<lnk Airport Wednesday. "It's in the seventh innlng and the score ls lied threC' to three ." What Humphrey might have added Is I hat ii is the final game of what could be the final sea300 of his pre!ldebLi.al seek· ing career. Desperately short of fund1 1 outmanned organizationally, Huinphrey is carrying his presidential campaign, as usu1l, on hls own shoulders, trying to f1re an old famlliar C08lition of labor, minority groups and the elderly to turn back the vol unteer-fueled McGovern tie. -. • • $249. T hese are very comfonable sofa beds for sitting and sleepi ng. • A wide selection of fabrics and ~o lors to choose fr om. • Revers ible backs and seat cushions. H.J.GARRETT fLIRNITURE ~ (::!:1(1111. lfll, OrtroQ• Ca1,1 f'11b!h lll11Q (o P'"V• Ho M •I lt11rlt• lll1111<1tl0f.i.1, ..,,I 111 m.tl!•r llt OCIVf flllfm.tl\11 lllffo~ ~~~ ffllflt011(td .,.:1"°"1 1HC,.I ptt • m11 i.... Of toovr!Ofll o•~tr. S <i.u OOlll'(ll Olid If (01!1 M•11, (• 1111. k111$C'r1¢1M b.-t l l<lt• Uil motJllll¥1 11y ,.,..,, 1J.IS ••111•11111v1 mrht••¥ *•fMtlM1 nu ""Dn•111, "The truth of the ma tter is until we set :.1 de11dl inc for the withdrawal or our forces, until we lcrmlnate military opera- tions.' until we cut out {urther mlltta,ry supJ)OM for the Thl~u regfme In Snigon. The mnn who campBigned through the f'llrly Otmocratic presidential primatlet. ~tali~ be would never aay anythlng bad llbout hi s opponents that could be used by lhe Republleans In the fall, ls denouncing McGovern from one end of California to another, seeking to tag him .. an unrealistic radkal who doesn't un- d<,..tand his""" 1'"'J>OHl1 . PROFESSIO NAL IN TERIOR DESIG NERS Open Mon., Thurs, &. Fri. 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C ll1So I 11<1 • ' . ; .. , .. by TERRY GRANT A Ph \Ve h~ar thi!t quci;tlnn ~ 1) oflt n &11d 11 1:s an 1r11 1 .. 11arlt on• }ul 1!1uhol t an 1t1 ltrl\ll u1 1n tc1!t>11' v.1th a !!.ll'Rl nHlll~ l)l/('» of drURS. Anl1 coagula nl ~ f"t"rta1n sul ph111 n1ed C'l l1<'" insulin an 11lgrs1ts 1nAny 11anqu1l1zer:1 and anti h1stlm1nt:'S are a rf'w of the ma,Jor catego11cs ( r drugs effec ted by alco hul To al,,Bys bf' on t hf' iafe side 1t is a i.:ood idea not t i have a di ink 11 lulc on Any n1edu:a t1on Hov.ever 1( there •~ son11 s1K'c1al occn .. ion or s1t ut1t1nn 1n\olvrd 1uu should n1:-t kf' 11 a JHH nt I ~ t:hCl k \\tlh ) u 1h1s1 (I Ill a nd IC> n I 11011 II II hen 11 br1ni; 1n }our J 1Psc111 \1 11 YOU OR ~Ol!R DOCTOR CAN PJ.fON E US when you need a deh1 ery We will de· liver promptly y, 1thout extra charge A great many people rely on us for their health needs \Ve 1velcome requests for delivery ser vice and charge acoounts 1m l!lrt> )! )l , J t cobn St 11 , 11 , Pou Co 11 ., 1l , M~rlln St 21 1:1-!l. l Pu!lllWI Co Inc ••o.+ "-UP I I Atltn Cft 41 ll 2' .... 1$ 1$ _ ot C1r. In• S<' '•nl>l'I Ml (Ml 111 Jt m W•t 1i.. 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Pl1nnd 11 9611 II Al R cMld ? tl7 •11.lo 60\1 i\G"lo \.lo Cwrfl•• Wrt oull• F ~61 0# PL! GllO 1Sl711ff ARch r:it J'• 1630 .Ii'!. S• 51 -V.CurtlnWr A Fm flure 10 111012 (; wlh J1 ~I ll I• AllAch grt l l 10 101 lOl C:vcl1191 lSd panther* ••• the $10,000 1neet PANTERA AUTOMATIC by d r Ton1aso imported f o r Llncolo-MerC'u1y It.al1an coach,,01 k tlPllted by the bnlhant Ghia Studios Cl! Turm. F ord d< s1,..111 cl the 351 CID 4V V 8 l'ng 1nc f our \1Jheel 1n- dcpi n Il l su~prns1on lll d mid ~hip c 11g1nc placrn1cn1 Fl\e zpced gear box fully synchronh:cd GARAGE DOOR OPENER SALE ORANGE COUNTIES VOLUME :>ISTl'!IBUTOR 1l~lld 1116 l ol(I PlllCE ROWE ... !lie o! , 10 ... ~ ~ •• •t1h+ "c ... n,." 1 20 FO Cap!! 5 01 Nw Er• 11 661\W ... 1111 Coro 69 11. l "t 7 ~+1 1CvPn1SMI 1 f'IDILITY l>IW Hor ...S OI '601 ATO hK 12 6t 1) 11•~ 17> -Yo GROIJI"• Pro Fd 12.1111 • Autom 0•1• 11 11 • 16 I II +-\lo o....... 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O range County oAicc is o ne We'd like to thank the people of Ornngc Count\ for making our first year ~o successful Here are rhe regi stered reprcsencat1 vco "ho .ire cclebraung with us C Richard Mill er Ronald Larson Donald Oldendorf Patrick Boyle Wilham O'Nca l Roberr Bry son Roy Page Rose SmedegaarJ Art Speaker Jim Turner Mile Fryer Robert Bowyer J C hristopher Pano' Marcin Hcrshk o" 1t: N 1al HJCkm an M.1x Moore Gerri e Putn .1m J ick S psngenbcrg Jock Taylor Norman Canfield Rc11dcnt Manager H.Hentz&Co. -Inc.- }...1emht:r~ NhV Yof~ S1ock Exch:11n;c -' And Ofhtt lrad1na rKChiJni"' M11.!n Of.er 72 Wall Srrect Ncw York, N Y IOOOS E11abh shed I ~56 68 To" n and Coun try, OrnnR<, Calo fo rn1 a (714 ) 835 11 00 fund 11 e11t .qGta Jtl6171 !1Arlt-e0111 111,.., 11'11 11i._'h o.,PLI 164 Purl1n 10 11 1 I• Grwtll n a• u ~ -• •-Selem F 1 00 6J.6 Int 1'5 t•5 fllb&WJI .I~ Jf 1' ,. 19 \.• 0. lpl 190 l rend 1~01 , J:! l"v 10 ,1 116'1\er~f 10d Ill !~"tu: !•t-;OHn W IO<I "'INAHC!A L v ~'· F 12 :JI 1)" "·~·· tn l~ ,, 11 • ' ' ., •-' ... 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" )6 • .... t \ ll ' " ' " ' • I I •I • • " ". " ' '" .l•lo !. " " '• " . " .. .. " • ' "' " . 11'• '" " '" ". " . " . ., •• • •• '" " . " ~ ... )l•· " " ' " ... .,.. " . lJlt " ,. " " ' " '" ' " ' '" .. "" n U'o • • • .. •• '" "• "" '" '" " "' '" • .. " ·~ • •• " . " " "' .. -" " . '" ' " • " ' l)'o I "'-• " ... •• •l • .. 01•. •l -.. . " ' ' . >9 1• • 1 1) • J II'• 10 ._ .. "'~ 115 1J • ' u• . "" ., .. 111 11 ... ' " ll 21 • ' " l)t IJ , IQ II I ~ 21 l ·~ .. I 11 , . ' " '"' ' ' '" ' '" .. " . " .... "· '" ... " " . '" " . n '" '" ,. . '" " . ' 101 ' 2 /I I ' . " .. lt to I " . '" U o '~ '" '" ... " 1,1, f> .,. " J ,_._ .. 11 .-I .. "" !I• -11 • ~ •• ... " . 1• -• "' '" " " " • I • .. Newport's Clark, MD Tight End Mater Del l~1gh"s football squad will wrap up its annual spring drills \\'ilh a Red-White touch football game al Santa Ana Bowl this evening. It gel.!! under v.·ay at 7 o'clock f o 11 o "' i n g the sophomore game ;:ind it's the final look coach Bob \Voods will ha ve at his team before the swnmer break. And it's a chance for \Voods to take another look at his starting tight end, Nc"•port Beach's Jeff Clark. Cla rk . a S.1 , 195-pounder. started for the Jl..t onarchs last year at linebacker and he's counted on for a major share nf the v.·ork load this lime around. Double duty puts hin1 at tight end on the offense "I'd say Jeff has ilnproved 85 per- cent off ensively over last year," says Woods . "''~" -, . 1 -1~ ,..;-.f , ··~, ,. • .r ...,-.• • "\I l I \ ., I ' ~ DAILY P'ILOT St•ff l"tloM . -~ ' ..... r11ur1<1ar, Junt l , l97Z Banquet_s Honor Area Athletes Se\'en Orange Coast area high schools honored their l'pring sporl11 athlP!f'~ with aw1;1rd banquets Wednesday night. Spct·ial award winners: Ml1~11 Viti• T..,nll Vtf>J1Y -Moir fmpr<>v~: Eric 81own, Ou!\lendu"ll Junior. Ml~• Fot1o~; Ouhltr>dln11 5oonomo•t · 8111 W11I~..-; O..!i1111<1on• Frl•hm•n: Ed Brrry , Track V1r1llY -Hl~ll 1>clnl m1~· Seel! IClot•I. Ml>•I 1mo•<>Ye<I M1t~ Howt•: ~r lns1>lrel0flll · G1rv M1huc~1; OUhl~r'\Oorio Fltl<I Pertcrm .. r· Tim Menn. Ouh!an<llno Treck Pttlctm•r: Ed Radtrmecher Tr~tk Al,.let• ol 11!.e 'Ve1r · Ed R•ootmecMr Junior 111r1lly -H•11n <>P•nt man; Oc>uo W1•I. Froill·SO<>ll -H.gl\ PC•n1 m•n· ll rlln Ht•nty, Wt••mlnlltf" Tr,c• v .... ,v -Jut Yovno, lllV; J!m ln1plt1ll011•I: RodMV Brcwni f.'1 011 !mPrOll•Cll. "'•ul 811rdtlle ; (ep1•1n: Jlrl'I C•ln; llt1' HIT1et: Brock P•mt>trrc.,, lle11 Pltcllt'r : Cr111 Fo•tor ; bl'>I Oef•n•e: !<en Swen.on J11111« Vllifl!Y MVP: Ktn Ledlilf: Mo51 1 ~11•lr1-llon•I: Vince li•lleo; Mr. Pilch•• llC!I llt(lltr: C1ptaln; ICo.r y LcMrn~~tr e•>d Ml~e Ovr k ... MVP· Mill• oaw11c; M• P•""'' I B•H• Sommtrlltkl i MOtl ln•<>l••••On~I W•IT Sallltr; C11ptaln! W•ll SMiier 1n<1 ICtil" Bt lK,,, Un l111nlty S•lmmln1 VARSITY -A\llll ln11>lrillcn1I Nie~ BM"" Meir 1mpr<>Ve<1; Slevf Rlc~e111, 101 P1rc1nl: (am1ron (0111ro11e BEES -Mo\I lm~ro~ea· Mike Pllllll/s; IOI Percent ; Jt"lf Tnome1 CE S -M<>>! lmorov~; Jim Oitrle. 101 P1trcen1 ; O•v• Spe<~I. 111...uu VARMTY -MVP; Rick P•r19u<1. Mott Outslln<1 in9 Pllcll•r. Jett S1~11•. Milt! lnsaftatlonal · Sttv1 1'••110. (lpllln Pou. JU NIOR VAASllY -Mr. Hut!lt Aw1rg · Sieve Rot>lnson. II"' FR SH-SOPH -Coacn•5 Aw•rd. (eP!lin -Ally Voy•; Motl V•IUdblt ; M.l rcM G<in~el; MVP ' (IYdt Hile. SI••• B•.i!1~ew. VA.ASITY' -Tt_t<;k Bob Bradford ; CIPl•lfl _ Ml tc~~I, Mo•! velu1blt· Mo•! lmorovtd ' Bob Adolpn •nd Joh~ Sltvt G•l!tl\. Aot>erl•on. Froi11 BEES -MV: Bob (ol t1Ti: Mc11 C•P!fln _ Lvnn Wihon : M<>•I tm11ro•~: Rte~ l(let>er. Val~ablt . Don Pr in~e. (EE S -MY; Bob O•shc!f; M0$1 S""lmrriifl• fmprcv td; Tettv P•t$1Cn. \'1,.;1• T1•1r1k Mos! Valuible J"I Trino hlm MOii VARSI TY -MY : l<tn Vlelr•; Mo•! ln>Ptrarlonel; O~von Seul: Mc, 1 Con•l•1ent: LaHv Witl : Mc•! hnproved ; Slit O'loolt, lmprOvfd; Paul Simon. lit... JUNIOR VARSITY -MV· STrve MOM V11u1bl• Mlkt P11IK1; Mo1t Antll: Mc'I (on1i1tenl: Ed Polli~td. lns1>lr1tlon1I; lon• Tr!coll1 Mo•I Gall mproved: Sieve Pact. VARSITY: Captain; Jeff G~hlt; •' ' ' . OMLY PILOT 21 Trout Plant LOS ANGELES -mg Rock Creek, Crystal Lake , Jackson l..a ke, Lillie Rock Creek, Llltle JWck Reservoir, San Gabriel River East and West Forks. RIVERSIDE -Jo, u Imo r Lake, }lemet Lake SAN BERNARDINO -Big Bear Lake, Green Valley Lake, Gregory Lake. Lytle Creek r..1iddl c and North Forks. Engineering Design & Development S.maU System' & Equipment optical, mech•nical electrom•chanic•I electronic Ormsby Cornell Corp. 1833 East 17th Street Santa Ana 17141 835-7215 Ce•• MV; Mark Hlrrlo; Most ln>Piratlonal: Mc1t Veluabl•· Rob Ltwl1: Mntl 0 ~0.~·~•~A~•o~O~oo~o.:._:._..:.:.:._.:.._.:.._:._~~~~~~~~~~~~~ lns~iraHon~I . Randy Saul, Mo •I 1marov~: Mike Smlln. Clark also saw action as a sophomore for Mater Dci defensively, so much of his work in this year's spring pfact~e has been on the of- fensive setup. NEW CHAMPION -Kathleen Meyer Oeft) shot a four-round 343 to claiin the·first \vo1nc n's golf club championship trophy at the new Big Canyon Coun- try Club. She by II strokes. defeated runnerup Deane Hel perin N1wporl Har bor Tr•cM V•rJtt~ -C1p11ln, Terr~ Alllrltron: Mo~1 V1lu1blt: Mall liOllSfll; M<>" lm1>rV.fd ; Tom OISt1nlsl•o. M!":'' v;u.~r~111(i;n1 B•~~ •• 'r'cc,,o:..:,i "He likes to play linebacker Const Arect Rou1idup CIF Semis lm11ra11ed ; J~ Mljll911n Ctts -C•PI• n: Ji m Fv~vmcto: M~I Valu1bte; Vincent Mulroy ; Most Improved; Burdick Riv. Cott• Mllll T1nnls Varsity -C•o>laln· ~coll Endsltv: fJ.csl V•luablf; Scort Ef'ldsl~; Mo•t lmpr<>Ved: Tim Tllompton; MO•! lnsplralron11I; l td Nt•lllt. best." says Wood s, "but he's getting to appreciate tight end, too. This is a very critical spot for us and we think he can do the job. "As a swing blocker ii puts w ' a great deal of pressure on omen s him. But he's learning to block Golf Action Se t Friday CIF' AAAA ana A A A Jo>nior v••slly -CIPl11in; Howard Gtn•ler ; Mc.r Val uable; Mikt Mulrv•n. L••un• llHCh ••• Vatt,ty -Motl V1lultble: M1rk HDf'11; Ce1>taln; C. r W•lll1ms1 f,\<>sl lmprovfd · R11 Wllliarris from both sides." Woods says his linebackers have many alignmenls to Jeam with attention paid lo different keys depending on the situation. "It's a position that requires a lot of football sense," adds the Monarchs leader. As for the tight end aspect. !l's Woods ' opinion that the candidate must be strong. possess good size a n d quickness and be able to catch the ball. And Clark fills the bill in each case. tt was guest day :Jt Big Canyon this week when Mrs. Clayton Rose and he r guest Mrs. Jack Sayers of San- ta Ana Country Club won the combined net of partners com- petition iri the first class. The duo tabulated a 138. I ll'lcn En1er! shot a 92 for low ~ross in class C. Boland cnpturcd the net after posting a 66. E l Ni gue l Gloria lowest baseball playoff a c t i o n 1· c s u me s Fridav with first flight. Cla ire Abrams, M. semifinals games on iap. 'f\\'O Johnson and Jl.1ary Jl.1etz each Orange County nines continue netted 76 to win the low net of in the running fo r titles. the other three flights. Irvine League champion Los Alamitos meets No. l seeded lf'lissioti Viejo and defending CIF AAAA champion North Torrance at The El Niguel Country Club tn a low net gu~st day affair Blair Field in a 3 p.m. clash So1>nomcre -M<>st V~lutblt~ E"r!( S(~wat1 : C~1>1ain: C.uv Gflna!t; Motl lmpto•~: Ruutll Hanst n. Frr•~men -Melt Valuab!': Rob Miiiiken, Ca1>t1in: Jim Green; Mo•I Improved ; S!tYf H11vnes. Ttnni1 E!;;~~t'1'1r; -M't~lt r~~~~~'d: Cl~r;z~ So~ldlno; (C'"(l<>l•lnt: 5con McC•rter •nd Btrry~lll. Junior Var1lty -Moil V•lu•bl•: Btn Levin; Mosr lmprcvt<I: Jell Lot11 ; Co- c11~tains; John M•rlll•ld and 51antv Mavock. Fros~·S-OP~ -Mesi Valuablt: Jim 8tnlon; Most lm1>rovfd: Jey Wll!l•ms; (C'"(a1>11lns: G•e9 Slice •nd Jell Mrs. Evelyn Earnsh<nv and named its \veekly tougiey a sponsored by the Mission Vie-\\'hile Sien·a and DOn1inguez M1r1n1 Mrs. Bruce Esty of Irvi ne low net·lo111 gross affair. jo Golf Club women golfers, clash at Cerritos College at va•s i1v _ Mo~;1'1";.,0,0vfl!· Ri ndY Johnson. C t led ·1 ·3 r the 1·· . I I . H I Goodh t . lh ,. H ~wkins; Mo1! ln11>it~!lon1I : c;,nf oas pos a .. or ·iring t Jc O\\'est scores 1n e en ear receiv-e same 1me. 111v1or; c1101 ~1n · ICtn Mi•rvn; Mci1 prize in second class. each fl ight were : Esther ed the low net prize in the In AAA action ifs Crestviei~· v·~~:1''_co':0~~vt~.;1111b1,. Ha .... ev T"·o twosomes netted a 148 Nugent (86 !, Jackie \Vatson guest flight. l~eague champion Katella and ~.'~:;a1;.,0~:~;~1nk~~·~~~7904~•moci.u ; in the third class. Jl.1rs. R. !.. j92). l'e~ llerlen !1001, and \Vomen's club president Rae Norte Vi sta colliding at La c.~~~n -c;~;-~·~1~~~%'o'lrJ1°,;,~,:Y1!;; •• ,,,., ):14«(' !Ill!# 1/219 BUY THE 3 PK. CASE. Others who figure at ti ght end a r e underclassmen. &0phomore Mike Najera and junior like Beeuwsaert. Berkson and Jl.Irs. Franc is Fa-!\1ildrcd \Vilbur (1071. Stoneman v.·on lhe member P aln1a Stadium (3 o'clock) er:;~~;:~~"·-M~t v .. iv~bie: °"" bian of El Ni guel tied for the Charlene Cramer an d flight competition 11,ilh a net 1vhile the other half or lhf' Rankin ; caorain· oa~e e1111rri; Mos111i ... 11>.;:;:::::~::!'I! lm<>rc•fd. D•n LOCk!l'!IW 11 low net a"•ard v.·ith ~lrs. Dorothy Alex ander tied v.'ilh 76, v.·hile runnerup Nadine semis involves El Segundo and M•rln• B•lltl•ll Robert Yardley and her guest 74s for the !01~· net prize in the Jl..laze scored a 76. Rolling llills. BtocltY•r~~mt>erion : Jl.1rs. Robert Hendr icks ofl----------------------------------------------'----------------------'-- J EFF CLARK Polo Crown To Phillips \VAi.NUT -Ph illips 66 or l..-0ng Beach with fluntington Beach Jl igh"s Clay Evans in the lineup, upended NIMA, 10- 9 in overtimf' to "'in the Southern Pacific Association AA U ~cnior water polo cham· pionships at ~1t. San Antonio College swim stadium. Steve Sha\v of Phillips fired !he "'inni ng goal in the second O\'f'rlime period "'ilh I :06 re- maining. St.,.llln11l e11t>0., BM•.C11rt1n1 n 1 1 1-J tllM"' l 1 I I I Sr11•i"G 8~!00.. -Ito 11 I t II . fAo·oer.•M•I. New•omb N!lllA Phil""! Sftl~. l':r11l! l. !\IA<~. Se•n•rd. Ph1ll•11• 6' I Ml S•n •nionlo 1. Thltd ,.ll<t Bo1tl<HI Sav.Co•on• o 1 1 1-5 "'T ~"" .&.n!~n1o ] ) • 1-t Scor•nq t1 .. 1noa -0110, M1·ien1t1,,1, Newcomb J. ChtmPion1hlP N IMA ' I I l-' 0 0-9 Pllllll~ U 1 ~ 1 1-• o 1-10 Scc•lf\11 N!MA -Oliln~. Salf'. l(tu", Pllllpel •. Bft"frd? PMlll<>\ -E·•~s. N~m~n. Sllew 1. N~s~ ). NOill Costa ~1esa. Sonia Ana The Santa Ana Country Club women golfers held a two-day eclectic event which ended this v.•eek with awards being given out for the low gross and Jow net or partners. Lois Eads and Biba Shinn (74 ). Aline Boyle and Pat Fossatti (821 and Jl.1 a r y Beeman and Eda Miller (88 ) captured the low gross aY•ards in the three classes. Twosomes receiving the low net prizes \\'ere Virginia Cof- fing and Florence Keller 161 ). Margaret Crank and \Vilrna Shively ~63 1 and Fran Dye and l\1ary Straddling (631. Cosio 1'1esa 'T he Costa Women's Golf Club selected a low gross-!ow net lournament for its most recent event. Ann Pappas (911. Carole Ross (94 1 ;.ind Ph.vllis T3arnes ( 108) topped off their fl ights in the low gross competition. Doris Ball \\'On the A flight low net award v.·ith n 73 ,\•hile Jean Cre ighton and Bell y Walthall posted identical 74s lo tie for the low net prize in B flight. Norine Grady (80 ) won the C flight low net a"·ard. 1'1eadotvlarl< The final scores o f ?i.1eadowlark Country Club ·s Women's eclectic to u r n e y found Lael Murray in first place in class A wilh a low gross of 79.' Pat Eorio and Jan DuRN> tied for low net honors in the top group. . Joyce Tielman and Fiona t-.1oore tied at 88 for low gross honors in class B while Freda Silvrrman and Rose Erickson shared the low net pri1.e with 69s. •NOTICE• SAN JUAN HILLS GOLF CLUB in San Juan Capittrano announces Summer Weekday Rates U Hole 9 Hole Or-FHI ... $J~o0 -$2~00 - Electric Cert .. $6.00 $4.00 OPEH TO THE PUBLIC GOLFER'S BARGAIN : ** f'rler t• 71H a.m. & afttr l p.m ~ 2 With Cert, 11 helH S 1 0 00 P.t.H. w l a" DI..-'WJ· to S.1'1 Juan Ca~str•n.-t'lilrn .., Ian Juan Crwlr IN4 te Clultho1,1M • SPECIAL 9 HOLE RATE AFTER l P.M. 837-0361 493·1167 4 SUPER SPORTS SHOPS Since 1925 ANNUAL SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE! JACK NICKLAUS SET 3 Woods 8 Irons REG. $13S s99so TENNIS BALLS ON SALE CAN OF 3 LIMIT 2 CANS •1•9 FISHING-LURE SALE Huge selection of lures 1t Sale Pri ces Save20% No gimmicks-our best lures Santa Ano Store Only FAMOUS MAKE SURFER AND DIVER WET SlllT TOPS HEAD SKIS NYLON TANK SUITS \ (Di$continued Patterns) White Stag Spe~o Swim Suit 4 0 % Hesdquortm OFF Over 4 ,000 to choose from TAPER FLEX WATER SKI SALE LATEST MODELS $90 skfls for '6300 SKI VESTS Coast Guard Approved REG. $26.95 '1995 BUSHNELL BINOCULARS ON SALE .... "" IO•ot• $52.50 $42.25 7.SO "'"'°' $66.lO $4f.95 7dS S,Ort $37.SO $21,50 l d O ,,.,, $37~• $21.50 Fvll 1ip., Short 1lt1vt, Nylon lin1d. RIG. $19.95 '1595 FULL DIVER SUIT N~lon lintd S Zipptr1 Top & lottom REG. $SS s39's. GUN SALE FLOOR SAMPLES SLIGHT SCRATCHES LIMITED STOCK AS IS ••• HURRY SANTA ANA--fUU.DTON HIWPO•T ITo•u OHL y GAME SMOKERS Electric, easy to do smokehouse • Use it for full smoking or to give all meat a tangy taste. REG, $3S SALE $2495 - SANTA ANA FULLERTON ea NEWPORT BEACH 601 S. Euclid 219 E. 4th 871-5988 Fashion lslncl Kl 7-5723 SPORTING GOODS 644-2121 Houn Ho1W1 4 SUPER Mon. thru Fri. 10 '·'"·to 9 p.m. Mon. & Fri. 'tll 9,00 p.nt. Mon. & Fri. 'HI 9,00 p.m. Sit. tO 1.m. to 6 I'·"'· Dolly 9,30 to 6 SUft. 12 N-Dolly 9,30 fl 6 SPORTS SHOPS to 5 p.m. GKOJ REG. $100 $ 59ts ROSSIGNOL SKIS Conco•d" Reg. $100 $ 59ts Boots-Parkas Pants-Sweaters on Sale. Save to 40°/o ALL WINCHESTER AMMUNITION SALE 1 Oo/o OFF CASE LOTS SAVE 20o/o ROD-REEL SALE Hu91 S1vl n11 from our ~I· Urtt Stock • ,.,, JIGMASTER 9 5 PENN 5-00 $13 ~ --.;:;"' WI" I .,..1s, Uri $U.N CERRITOS #163 Mall 924-1625 H .. rs Mon. thru Fri. 10 1.m. to 9 p.m. Sit. 10 1.m. to 6 ,.m. Sun. 11,nton le 5 p.nt. j J I l \ I . \ • I \ ,. ' SC DAIL Y PILOT ~9 Thursday 's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Investors Look To Nixon's Talk NEW YORK (AP)-Stock market prices moved v.'lthm a narrow range 1n todays moderate trad 1ng as investors apparenUy waited to hear \\hat President Nixon \\Ould say in his address tonight on h~ trip to the Soviet Union Analysts said it \\as an encouraging sign the market refused to give in t o the profit taking pre~ sures ~h1ch produced \Vednesday s sell off N,..,rr O Mo'°" M~t JI. 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' • .. j.-"' ,, ·-. ... 11 >'> t • 11\lo - '" 1~ • t " " • " ~ . \J ... ,., ... 13 •• " + ' -»~. r-1 • • ,~ •• + 1. " . 51,+ • • " ·~ '" • '° -•• • • 11•, ' • 2• ~ t .. ·-'" "~ . '" ,.,., '" ", ' It~•+ ~ ' -• ' . , . ' •• • Weekender Advertising 30 DAIL V PILOT s Tht1,....dt1Y. Junt l, 1972 Move Mulled Laguna's At1ists To Get Ow11 Zone? Laguna Beach, famous as an art colony. is now n1ulling a plan to give the <1rts and crafts their OY.'O place in the sun. in a new zone in Laguna Canyon. There in the fo.I .18 zone artists could do their thing amongst other artists also doing their thing, city planning t_'()rnmissioners thought as they met Tuesday in a study session. The M-18 zone would extend from the Canyon post office annex to El Tlfro Jload_ Prom the annex in to toy.·n to the area where the Sa w du s t Festival sets up the zoning would remnin in f\-1-lA, light manufacturing. "We tried not to leave an art or craft out.'' John r.1cDov.•ell , con1missioner. said during a review of the uses which v.·ould be JX'rmitted in the new zone. Activities now going on in the area such as the Telonics plant and the Langlois food processing plant wou ld also be permitted under the new zone. Music '72 Set June 9 ''Music '72" a musical presentation of a 11 in- strumental and choral groups in lhe Laguna Beach schools will be on stage at 8 p.m. Fri- day, June 9 in tbe high school auditorium. Commissioners expressed great concern over the traffic hazards along the Canyon road. To partially reduce the dnnger. retail sales v•ould be prohibited in the artist.5' n1anufacturing zone. Cu.h Scouts Make Junk 'Bea'utiful' Boys in Cub Scout Pack 606 in Irvine knov,• the true value of junk: they trade it for trees. The 30 cubs, most of them fron1 University Park School, recently donated ts Eucalyp- tus, Silken Oak and Scotch Pine trees to the developing Environmental Study Center !t the school. They raised about $70 for projec t in May, when their theme was "America the · Beauti(ul.'' The 17 boys in den mother Donna. Richardson's den will now have their n a m e s permanently placed in the grove area behind the school. They raised enough money to donate a tree for each of them. The other two dens wo rked to purchase one large tree each. The cubs did odd jobs to make the money, but mostly collected "white elephants" and sold them at S\11ap meets. One of the boys \.11as more direct. He exchanged his junk for seven small trees. DAILY l"ILOT St•ff l"lloM AMY BORLAND !LEFT), DAVID PRICE EYE MILK PRICES AT CIPP STORE Geri Cantday and Mike Kelly P rep.1re to Make Purchases Special Viejo Program Gets an That t ell-tale report card: how many time.-; when walking home from school with it burning in your coat pocket, was the temptation there to help write it? At Marguerite O'Neill School in Mission Viejo, about 240 students get to do just that. And they don't have to devise magical schemes to pencil a "C" into an "A" because they only get "S'' or "~1." A From Pupils and a ne\v emphasis on in- dividual learning speeds and interests is CJPP, O'Neill's Con t i nuous Individualized Progress Plan. now ln its third year. ClPP extends from first through sixth grade. Parents must enroll their children in the spt>elal pro- gram. The rooms are arranged lo open up to each <llher if t\\·o. four or even all eight classes ln both upper and !o\ver levels \Vant to work together. perhaps because they were too challenged. A child's level of maturity is considered when he is grouped in the progr.am and the ones needing more activity will be placed in a class with more "doing" centers than quiet learning centers. "I like CIPP because you can advance as high as you \vant," one Jong·tre.ssed third· grade girl said. New T·rial Date Pharmacy Student Graduates In Threat Case A two-week dtlay ha..! been granted in the Orange County Superior Court trial of a woman who allegedly threatened the key prosecution il;ilness in the upcoming rape trial of South Laguna trash ex· erutive Thomas Trulis and salesman Eugene Imondi Jr. Presiding J udge Bruce Sum- ne.r scheduled .J une 14 as the new trial date for Lena Emma Jm<>ndi, 32, of A11aheim. 1.1rs. Imondi is the wife of Tru!is ' co-<lefendant . Mrs. llJlon<.li is accused of threatening a girl "'ho iden- tified Imondi. 35, and Truhs , 38, as the two men who -posed a5 m<lvie producers and Coed Receives Perfect l\1arks Miss Kathleen Phipps, of 6342 1''\int Driv~. llunlington Beach, has been cited for academ ic excellence nt Cot· tey Co 11 e g e, in Nevcida, Missouri. r-.'fiss Phipps maintained the highest scholastic record in lhe freshman class. She earn- ed a 4.00 grade-point average, for the first two semesters at Coltey. persuaded her to join them in sex act! committed in a car parked at the Fashion Island shopping t enter in ili<'"'!)()(l Beach. It is alleged that r-.trs. Imon- di threatenE'd the 17-year-0ld witness during a municipal court hearing or charges against her hu sband and 1'rulis and that she then followed the ~irl home and repeated her threats. ~ Imondi and ·rrulis, who are also free on bail. are :itcuscd of rape and sex perversion. Pollce arrested the pair after their alleged victi1n tofd them starring roles in movie and television were offered to her but that she first had to demonstrate her "·illingness to participate in sexual acts before the cameras. Kent W: Taylor, 1966 Laguna Beach liiah School graduate and son of former Laguna Jieach school board president Larry Ta}lor and Mrs. Taylor; \\-·as among S,000 students graduating from the Univers'" ty of Arizona. Tucson, Satut, day. Taylor, who at ten ded Orange Coast College for tw6 years, has been in thii: universi ty's Pharmacy College for the past four years. At the College of Pharmacy gradutr· tion banquet, he was presented with the Bristol A\\•ard io reeognition o ! outstandin& de d i ca ti on during his pharmaceutical studies by C; \Y. Bristol 0£ Bristol arnj Meyers, who journeyed from Chicago to make the presell" talion. BOUTIQUE CLEANERS QUALITY & DEPENDABILITY AT A P'AIR PRICE W anier-Dale Center Corner of Warner & Springdale, Huntington Beach 842-2050 NEW! MASTERCHARGE ACCEPTED FDR STORAGE CHARGES FOR THE BEST MOVE OF YOUR LIFE CALL 494-1025 580 Broadway Sevefal origin al com- positions by students Will be includro at the program lo be directed by Deane Boffort, elementary music supervisor ; Jeff Fonrter, 11turst-on music instructor and Fred Stoufer, high school music instructor. The center will be used for outdoor study of nature and "S'' means satisfactory and "M'' means simply, more im· provement needed. The teacher still makes the subjeet evaluations, but the child can fill in "I do mv best y,·ork in .. _ .,'' "I neCd im· provement in .... ,'' and like phrases. Structure is still present. but gone are the old straight ro"·s of desks. "f like CIPP bet'Ause if I try and get my pa~~~ne, I can read more." .a boy near her 1jii_,iiii offered. 11 other subjects. i Copy It! at our new quick.action copy cetittr. lmport•nt Corr•1pond•nt• lnv•nfory Sh11h Accounting R1totd1 Ord1r l Bid Formt lnvoit•t I St•l1m1nl1 C1!.rlo9 Sh11h & Bulletlnt Proj1ct/Product Sp•cific•tion1 Promotion•! l•tltr1 & fly1r1 Try Th is Convenient New S•rvice Soon! COMMUNITY IUSINESS SERVICES 17175 l••Ch llvd. -Huntington •••ch lrt O.lly Piiot Offlc• 147-5111 assuming you have a Farmers car in· surance policy with edditlonal receive extra money while your car is being repaired fo r colli- sion damages in excess Of your d e· ductible. Farmers ' poys you $10 a day _. for up to 10 days for meals, car rental, motels, phone calls and other 'extra' expenses-even if you don't spend the money. Just ask any fast. fair, fri endly Farmers man. Chuck Sperra110 • Henry Ekiiian • Niiemor Joseph 17f11 Maig11olio, Fau11tal1 Van9:J, 962:2411.141·1401., 17171 lffcli l mf., H.l .-t42-llll 6411 ldl119ft, H.l .-tfJ.6111 11705 ldl..,... f .V.-8Jf.tl00 VISIT US AT That deemphasis on grades Also gone are 111any of the daydreaming children of old, who were restless because they weren't challenged or Students Win Awards In Art Co1npetition "These children.'' s a id fo.1arge Van d er v e e r . cur- riculum coordinator." are able to say to themselves, 'I am so and so and I am capable <lf doing this, or need im- provement here.'·· Mrs. Vanderveer feels CIPP is ·•success-oriented'' because the children learn to study in- dependently, to help each other, to be happy in school. "Of course I love math. How SUNSET LIVING at Capistrano Beach Beverly Manor is c•ntrally ~~fed for people living from l:.ag una Bea ch to San Clemente. ~t il easy to visit, by w1y of the Sen Diego Freeway or the Pacific Coast Highway. There is •mple parking at all tim•s. "The dignity of the _patients mus t be maintained for their welfare," Fourteen college students \valked off with $2,000 in scholarship awards a t the fi:rst annual a!l~llegiate Laguna Niguel ert competition. did vou know I love math?" a ners fron1 591 entries in the secOnd-grader asked the sixth- co1npctition held at the grader looking over he r ,.,,,.00 (~[~~~~~ Laguna Niguel Town Center. shoulder. Beverly Manor Convalescent Hospita l ~s i D In the painting and graphics "r-.1ost people do," came the Se" DJet• hwy. to Ccnllhto l:atN>llo, ,.,. souril •n --<;;~';· ~5~-~'~ division, first prize \Vent to reply. 35410 Cimino Capistrano, Capistrano Beach 0 1 Visitors Alw.1ys Welcome A jury of art collectors and art instructors selected "'in· Harold Burch of Stanton , a There is no problem in 496-5786 student at Art Center College t ra nsf erring the "S" and "M "' jl!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!! of Desrgn, Los Angeles: se-designations to other schools, cond to Terrie -r...1i!ls of Ocean but how y,·ell the CIPP El Morro Readers Wi1i Title Park. student at Santa r-.1onlca children y,•ill d<l in in- College : third to A n dy termediate school may be Chambers of l.aguna Beach, answered next year when the ~tudent at the Laguna Beach first CIPP "graduates" move School of Ari : and fourth to on. Fav Colmar of Fountain "That's the acid test," r-.1rs. Vailey. student at Cal State Vanderveer agreed. "But J Fullerton. think the children Y.'ill be ex- \Vinners in sculpture end J bl ·• crarts were r-.1a1thew Mackie. treme Y capa e. El -r...1orro School in I~aguna Two girls \\'ere plav. ing Be a Ch · d t h Sierra ~l adre . Pasadena City rec e 1 v e e chess 1·n a corner. while a I k d · th College student, first : John s"·eeps a es a""·ar 1n e re-gcoup of four bovs reading t R d • o I · Lamb. Riverside, Cal State "' cen ea ers Y m P 1 cs below their age level listened sored b JI 0 Fullerton junior, second': [)Qn span Y ie range to taped stories as they follow-Collnty D rt t I Ed Hartman, Los Angeles. UCLA C'pa men o uca-ed in books. tion at El Morro. Student, third: and Robert F'il·e school districts _ Norton, Big Bear Lake, Cal Some younger c hi Id r c n Laguna Beach. San Joaquin. State Fullerton student, four1h . began selling up the CIPP Lo"·ell in \Vhittier, Tustin and Orange Coast students \\'in-s tore, where they would sell Garden r.rove _ sent six· ning honorable mentions were empty product boxes to learn member teams to the reading \Va yne Forte of L ag una math. while their classmates and language skills event. Beach. a student ;it UC Irvine "counterfeited" the money for El r-.-torro also \\'on the and Leslie Sobol of C.OSta the purchases. deductive reasoni ng contest, Mesa, student at Orange Coast Jn other areas, things were where teams hunted Jor ob-· ~-C-ol;;;le;;g;.e;;;. ---------q~u•i•et~,;;;b;;;u;;;t ;;;'t;;;il;;;l .•.ct;;;iv;;;e;;;. __ .,, 1 jects from word clues. 11 Two Irvine students, Kerry Arm s tron g :ind Kathy B i r n b a um , both Crom Uni versitv Park School. u•on awards. Kerry placed first in creative interpretation end Kathy, second in book report. Charles Curtis, an El Morro student, \Vas named outstand· ing participant. lie pip.aced first in recitation; second in vocabulary and book report and third in reading com- prehension, Smile, you're with Safeco. Interested in getting tax-free incoine? If you are, come to our next Merrill Lynch Forum. The subject: municipal bonds. "l. ~ We'll go into the basic appeal '~ ~" of municipals: the fact that interest ·~~~ is exempt from Federal-·and often state- ~ income taxes. And the relative safety of high grade municipals as an investment. Then we'll explain the various kinds of municipal bonds. The significance of bond ratings. Who should consider municipal bonds. And we'll discuss some specific issues that our Municipal Bond Department regards as attractive investments. The forum is free, but space is limited. So reserve your seals now. CalL Or send in the coupon. But come. ' =: ~ ~, 8 ) Old MacDonald's Farm '\ WHERE YOU CAN SEE, PET & Thursday evening, June 15th, 7:30 p.m. San Clemente Inn, 125 Esplandian, San Clemente. For reservations, please call 547-7272. TALK TD THE ANIMALS DANIEL D. GORMAN. C.LU. Auto • Boat • Home @ Mobile Home • Life -~ DAN GORMAN INSURANCE 496-2114 34551 CASJTAS PLACI DANA POINT MARINA, BLDG. 2 ' P----------------~-~ I Pleaae reserve oeata for your I I Municipal Bonds Forum. I I Name ·-I I Add-I : City A Stata Zip : I Thi.phone I II ~ MONOOILL LYN<H,•t•NCO, ••NNON. •MITH INC I Sege.rstrom :;nt.er, 1000 N. Main Street, I Santa Ana, California 92702 I ~------------------~ ' ., 17 7 • Lagu11a Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. StoekB • VOL 65 , NO. 153, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 'I, 1972 TEN CENTS • .......... oun ' Ir orce' av • Se~o.id Seizure Pot-laden. Vessel Nabbe<l in Dcnia A second seizure this \veek of seaborne marijuana at Dana Harbor was an- nounced by U.S. Customs agents Wednes- day a rte r the arre!il of four Big Sur residents and discovery of 116 kilos of marijuana bricks aboard a 2~£oot cabin cruiser. The arrests marked the second raid this week al the harbor relating to alleg- ed smuggling ()perations from Mexico. The marijuana had a street value -0! about $20,000, said spokesmen for the agency. 1bose arrested in the latest raid were Rodney C. Richmond , 30; Ronald Lussier , 31 ; Melinda Smith, 18, and her sister, Constance. All four residents of the central California coastal colony were arraigned last \Vednesday before a U.S. i\fagistrate in l.As Angeles. Last Monday in a similar raid, customs agents arrested two Santa Barbara residents and seized JO bricks of !he forbidden weed aboa rd a small trimaran which was heading out to sea after spen- ding the night at the yacht basin. Customs spokesmen said th is wee k that both alleged smuggling operations did not include the harbor as a dropoff point, but merely as an asserted stopover in the alleged smuggling route no rth . The 26-foot cruiser boarded \Vednesday at the harlx>r apparently set out from Puerto Vallarta . Mexi co, with its al- leged illegial cargo, officials claim. Reagan Declines Support For Coastli11e 'Effo rts' From Wire Ser\•lces Governor Ronald Reagan said \\led- nesday he was "inclined not" to support the efforts now being made by con- servationists to place a coastline prcr 'tetion measure on the November ballot. Speaking at a press conference, the Governor said he felt adoption or coastline controls should be left to the Legillalure and thal the people should only act by Wtiatlve .. if the legislature took no action." Al the same press confer ence , Governor Reagan said he supported the present efforts to place the death penal ly issue on the ballot through petition and lbat he had signed one of the petitions. TilC coastline protection measure ls being backed by the Coastal Alliance. a coalition of conservationist organizations. Spokesmen tor the group say they launched the petition drive originally because the Legislature p r o b a b I y wouldn 't pass a sufficiently strong bill. "I "''ould be inclined not to (support the coastal measure) on the basis that we do have a legislative solution which is being Pla1111ers Study Buildi11g Ban In Ca11yon Area advanced,'' the Governor said. "l v.·ould think the lime for a coastline initiative would be if the Legislature took no ac- tion." A bill backed by the Coastal Alliance \.\'as killed earlier this month in !he Senate Natural Resources and Wild\i[e Committee. The same committee ap- proved a less restrictive measure authored by Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach). The Coastal Alliance initiative measure v.'ould create six regional commissions in the state with half <Jf the members chosen from local elected official s. The commissions would control development from mean high tide line h> 1,000 yards inland along all of Calitornia's 1,100 miles of coast. The Carpenter bill will exclude i,n- corporated cities from control and wou ld allow individual counties to define their own coastal zone somewhere between l ,000 yards and three miles inland. The coastline protection initiative needs 325,504 certified signatures to be placed on the ballot in November. The secretary of state has suggested that petition circulators of both the coastline measure and the death penalty amendment begin filing their petitions \.\•ith loca l counry clerks Monday. The signatures must he \'erified not later than June 29 to qualify for rhe November ballot. Because the death penalty initiative calls for an amendment to the California constilution. 520.806 signatures are re- qu ired for its addition to the ballot. .; Given Bu.m's Rush Dick Groul'<, executive secretary of the Alameda Cou nty Labor Council, is taken into custody after a sit-in at Unjversity of California Pres.ident Charles Bitch's o!fice o~ .Berkeley ~J Cl~lli¥. 'IJ!ql\l~. top labor leader, and 14 other persons' were ar- rested after staging a seven-hour sit·in to protest the 45-day labor dispute at the campus. 'J'he Build- ing Trades Union struck over pay and grievance pr~ ~ - Defense Asks Acquittal In Angela Davis Trial SAN From \\'Ire ServH:es JOSE -The defense told the Angela Davis jury today that it must ac· quit the 2&-year-old black m i Ii ta n t because the state failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that she conspired in the San Rafael kidnapings and killings. (See earlier story, page 10). l·loward Moore Jr.. opening rinal arguments for the delendant, said: "The tv.·o v.·ords. reasonable doubt. are probably the most important words in AnglcrSaxon American jurisprudence. "The second most important may be the burden or proof that rest!I on the pro- secul ion to -<:onvlnce you of tbf! absence of rrasonable doubt. "The state has failed to do so In this case and that would require you to acquit thi.'i defendant." S1>eaking in a soft accent, Moore said one thing that was a sou rce of distress to Atiss Da vis v.·as the lack of any members of her race on the jury. Laguna Fortun Slated Tonigl1t For Candidates A public forum for candidates seekjng election to the Laguna Bndl City Council July 25 wlU be pretented by the Coordina~ COUncll al 7,30 o'<lock tonight in city hall councU chambers. Following a brief business session for election of officers, the candidates will be allotted eight minutes' apeaking time, with a question and answer period follow- ing. Al.so on hand to explain the combined recall-council election ballot .,~:i ll be city attorney Tully Seymour and city cltrk: Dorothy Musfelt. ,. A building moratorium in Bluebird :;anyon betv.·cen Glenneyre and C.1t:i\ina streets is being eyed by Laguna Beach planning commissioners in response to awakened interest in an apartment com- plex there. __._ Commissioners were concerned '\.oith preserving the open space in the canyon and perhaps some future dedication of territory as a walking or hiking trail to Bluebird Canyon Park further up the hill. Lagu11a Rec1·eatio11 Off ice Add,i)Baton, Guitar Class Moore said he was confident t his jury ('01Jld reach a proper verdict but that he felt concerned that the absence of blacks 1night i1npede justice. "So. "'e'Jl submit the fate of Miss Davis -her fre«lom, her life. to you." l\1oore was to be fo\lov.·ed in the defense summation by attorney Leo Branton. Miss Davis will make no final argu- ment in the case. On .Wednesday, prosecutor Albert W. The candidates seekinf{ lo replace councilmM Edward C. Lorr, subject of the recall, are plltnning cornmlssioners Carl E. Johnson Jr. and Laurence Campbell, person n e I adm\nislrat<lr \Vayne Baglin and volunteer worker Beth Leeds. Free Clinic Has New Q1tarters Under plans first approved by a plan- ning commission in 1965, a $117,500 apart- ment group of 13 units was prnpo!ied for the area. The topic surfaced at a planning study session Tuesday. . Plans for the project were apparently put aside by proponents and permits once approved have now Jepsed. Back- ers will have to start again rrom acratch, city aides said, Inquiries about the project have been made by a Newport Beach law firm. The property is bounded by the Catalina Street right-of-way and C.Slliope street. Planners have assigned the street number (lf m Calliope to the proposed. complex of five modules contait\lng from one to four llY"lng units. "This is one of the few areas that we can still do something about.'' Michael ~fay, commissioner, commented. As yet, there are no formal requests for com· rj!Lssion action. In other discussion, the planners: -Martedftime on the subject of 1ignal lights at the intersection of Glenneyre and Thalia streets. A copy of a tr8.frlc circulation 1tudy recommending the signaling was rupposed lo be ready for the discu aston session, but, w11sn't. Plan- ners refused to go ahead on the project tumtd over to them by the city council. -Agreed to :ichedule a publij: hearing on rezoning of a portion of-'the W~land Drive area from l>'HA back to R·l. Plan- oen had dilamed not reiOOln~ at 1\1, but, jun adding R-1 as an acceptable use under 1 ptrniit in the prmnt rone. This would aOoW mldentlal property to be rtbulll ond Improved. bul decided on • hearing to feel lilt public pulsc. New classes in baton and guitar have been added to the t.a·nuna Beach Recrea· tion Department's lengthy summer prcr gram. Recreation Director G e o r g c Fowler said registration for these classes, along with others ln the prcr gram, will open at 9 a.m. Saturday at the Recreation Department, 175 N. Coast Highway. The baton classes for children and youths will be conducted by Carol Fiore, whO has appeared as solo twirler for the Pasadena Rose Parade and currently is director of the United States Champion Baton Twirlers, selected to perform at the International festi val in Trujillo, Peru , in September. She will teach a beginning class at I :30 p.m. and an intermediate class at 2:30 p.m. on Wednesdays in the hig h school girls' gym beginning June 21. ree IS $4 for the five-lesson series. Children must be at least six years of age and provide their own batons. Larry Paul, who Is graduating this month from cal State Long Beach with a degree in music. will conduct beginning guitar classe! at 7:30 p.m. and in· tennediate classes at 8:30 p.m. Wed~ Sen,tence Impose d LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fred Shelley. the owner of a Vernon meat pncking firm, has been sentenced to two-year pro- bation after pleading guilty to income'"tax fraud. 1bt sentence wa s Imposed in U.S. District Coort Wedneaday. Shelley. 43, of Riverside. was charged with repor1.lng la· c:ome. of $5,850 for 1966 when his actual Income was ,9,~I. ncsdays in the Recreation Department building. beginning June 21 , with a second series beginning J uly 26. Fee. is $5 for li ve weeks. Paul has taken master classes with both Andre Segovia and Vicente Gomez. but his sun1mer instruction will be on the folk level and designed for youths and adults of all ages and proficiencies. Harris Jr. told the jury In a fiat and unemotional tone that it had no alternative but to find MJss Davis guilty of murder, kidnapi.ng and conspiracy. Moore told the jury there l! a dif· ference between cir'cumstantial evidence ar.d a coincidence, and described Miss Davis' arrival in the San Francisco Bay area Aug .. 3, 1970, her purchase of a shotgun Aug. 5, and her departure Aug. 7 as "mere chance happenings.'' Fear Followed · Teetli Marks, Blood Scared Diver SAN FRANCISCO (IJPI) -A 31-year-old tannery worker atlacked by • shark while diving for abalone in the PacUic 3'.ys he was more frightened when he saw the teeth marb on his leg afterward than whlle the 12-foot creature had him In !ls ja~·s. "Mainly, the thing I had on my mind was to get back to our outboard," Helmuth llimmrich said Wednesday. "That's when I really got scared, once I was aboard and .saw tOOse teeth marks .tJf the .shark on my leg. And all that blood." .. The. bearded diver ia leas than half lht size of the. ahark that tore at his leg ·and severed a nerve. Jte WA.$ at Letterman Jl03pltal where he uuderwent surgery to repair his wo1.1nds. Hlmmrich, father of two small children, nid he just finished baggl:n1 his Hmlt of five abalone, a seafood delicacy found only ofr limited stretches of the U.S. Pacific coast, and was 1wlmmlng Nck to the boat where hi! two brolhe""'in-law and a nephew were ftshtng. "lt seemed to take one bite, then anolher--.a harder one. Then ll grabbed hold, hanging on, llrUng me oul ol lhe woter. I felt like It w" lrying to tear ofl another part of me." lllmmrlch, of Lodi, who bas been ocean diving aince 1964, was phllOBOphl- cal about the attack. "lie must have betn hungry, and I wns the only thing around," he said. In Laguna·Beacl1 The Laguna Beach Free Clinic, in its new quarters at 460 Ocean Ave ., now Ls open to the public from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. t.tonday through Friday. Director Mary Perelli-Minetti armounced toda y. The clink, a community aS!istance facility, is staffed by trained medlc&l personnel and psychologists, most of whom donate their services. APPointments for treatment may be made in advance and persons seeking help for treatment of Jt1fectlous dlseR$H or problem pregnancies are urged to vislt the cl\nLc, the director said. A lecture on birth control Is given on Tuesday and Thursday evenings. with sign-up lime at 6 p.m. There is a special pedintric clinic for chlldrtn from birth to age 16 on Wed- ne'lday afternoons from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m . No fees are charged for the clinic's services. but patient donaUons totaling M.000 were rtctlved la!t' year and most of the labor and mattrinl rtqulred to outfit the new qu1Jrters al.so wris donated. Minuteman Launched VANDENB&RG AIR FOl\CE BASE (AP ) -A Minuteman Ill mlsslle wa s ,/ launched from here Wed nesday, official!I said. They sakl the 60-foot mlssUe: was programmed to fl y about 5,000 miles to a target in the Pacific. Ocean near thfl M11rshall lsla11ds. .. Helicopters To be Used Al ong Coast Bv .JACK BRODACK Of t~• O.lh P li.1 11•11 Orange Count y's o"·n ··air force" may ,::rt off the ground nex t 11·cek if the Board nr Supervisors approves a lest plan pr<r l'klS('d by countv Director of Aviation Hobt•rt Brcsnah Rn. Bresnahan has suggestrd ., six-month l rilll period at a rost of $22,000 for an ex· perimenlal patrol over the Orange Coast 11·lth ('OOperation cf !he ('i ly hel icopter forces from Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, .end l~untington Beach. If supervisors approve the test pro. i;:ram and it proves succe'ss fut ~ Bresnahan has outlined an overall county fl!r survei llance and rescue projec t at a t.:Ost of $2.3 million for the fir st year. 'J'he "air force" 1s a proposal advanced hy Su pervisor \Villiam 11hillips ol J."ullerton severi11 months ni;:o. Bresnahan estin1ated that the overall ('Ountywide system \You!d need eight police patrol helicopters nnd four patrol planes plus lwo larger aircraft. one " hehcopler and une an airplane for utility service. ()f the $2.3 n1ll!lon first year spending, $1 I million would go for equipment with 1 he ha lance covering operating costs for U1e first 12 month!. l\resnahan's six months: tes:t proposal calls for using police helicopters already in service in th' three coastal com· munlUes. In adclllion lo lhe m clly-operalod hcll<oplen lhe tat projp"llll -.... elude 1 rented two place Jlghl_-... Bresnahan estimates that tM-jOIM pro- gram betw&en the cJUes and the county ('Ould reduce annuaJ belfcopter costs to the three cities: and to Anaheim. the (lnly other counly community with choppers, hy two-thirds. If the final plan is adopted, an opera· I ion center would be establl11hed at Orange County Airp()rt and stalfed by the participating cllies. The center would be equipped by the county. Bresnahan sui;:gests that the six-month test area be spl it into two sectors. ono from Seal Beach Naval \Veapons Depot to UCI and the other so uthward to Sa n Clemente and bordered by the San Diego l'~reeway inland and the ocean on the east. Coverage would incl ude the three com- munities now operating helicopters and portions of Fountain VaJJey, Irvlne, (See 'Affi FORCE,' P11e !I Lagit1tu. l 1ivaded By Murk y Wltter Murky water enveloping the Laguna coastline is expected to foil scuba divers' Friday and perhap! over the weekend, Laguna Beach Jifet{Uards said today. Tidal .actions wer~ blaMed for the water conditions. Diane SI o w sky , lifeguard dis patcher, said the guards would ask divers not to go down because ''there's no way to aee anything and it'.s hazardous." Jellyfish which have been plaguing swimmers in Laguna waters hav• retreatai aomewhat, she said. A 2 to 3-foot swell along the beache.!I deposited 11 quantity of . kelp alooi the Matn Beach this morning. Weatller ltazy sunshine is on the agendl for Friday, but the temperature will still ~ toward the top of the thermometer. !Ughs at the beaic:h 72 rising to 80 Inland. Low• ~ INSIDE TODA l' In bedroom commtiniey of Norwo.Uc .• the onltt ccndidatl ioho oromes genuine enlhU#ia!m ii l\/abama'1 Gov. GtO'l'Qt C. Wal· lace. See 1tory. Page 21 . l ....... ..,... 1 -11 C•U'9nll• " M•llMll I' ..... • C'•t1lllM 11-• Nits.Mt ,._._. I Cemln 11 Or•11,. c-tv· 11 , ... .-... n ,_., ...., o..n. Jkrln• 11 ·---..... ,,.1 , ... • T..,.,,.. " .. ,.,, .. __.... ... M -.... .. f'll\.Het •tt WM-• ,." ..... ".,.. 11 ._... ,._ 1>-tt ....... _ " --• Allll U ... ,.. " '" 'Fr y' Set Up • I 'No S upport' Fishy ~t\cti-yity THAILA ND S. Viets Reach DA NANG In Costa Mesa Quang Tri Edge COila -'\eS.a's do\lt'11lov.11 i> :.a I' k ~aS I urned into ll not of l'(1lor totJJy ;1:; 11or k n1e11 sci UJJ ferris 11hcel:., n1t·rr)'·j!.1J· rounds :u1d about 30 ot~ amLt,.,l'IJlt•nt rides in prrpllraUon for tht ti!)\ '.lilh .J\nnu.'ll Fi:Ji fry f\.femben of the Li1)t\1 c·1u.b II tl l !hr .. w thr s.,.·llctl 011 tbttr ··supc r-tar 111~;d'' :1t p1cl'lS tl)' (i p rn. Frid;i y, aboul 4Jnt• h;il f h011r after 1/w serv11n{ vi add1tion:d li~h dinners begins 'l'h" park ;11 IC1 h St rec l :111d Anah~·irn A1·rn1u· 11111 hi' lhC" f'e111rr uf nf'arl.1 :ill ~·1~h Fry 11tlrnct1ons. 1nchidin~ b:1by and Ueauty cun!ests, a battle of the (;roup A ssault .-~ Made on Marines In Sa11 Cle111cutc An un<lctermined nurnber or :issail:ints :irn1ed \1·ith knives and tire irons at· tacked a pair of Marines at their San Clemente apartment Wednesday, leaving one victim stabbed in the side and the 0t h.er beaten on the head. Police detained three men after tht> <issau!ts but tbey were later released \\'ithout charge .. The victima, found in the driveway of a partmenll at 137 W. Palizada, were Jack Dean Gibeault, 20 . of apartment A at the Palizada address, and his room· 1nate. Arthur Aney Walker, 22 . Both are stationed at Camp Pendleton. Police said the inc ident occurred at about 9 p.m. when the group of thugs ap- peared at the apartment after an alterca~ I.ion earller in the day. ~1oments later, officers said , Gibeault's wife, Kalhy, discovered the two bleeding n1tn lying in the driveway. She ran to ·a n <i ll~night market nearby to seek aid. Police said her husband suffered a sidgle slash wound to his lower side. Walker . apparently beaten _with a tire iror1. suffered severe head cuts and other hufts. After emergency treatment at t11issio n cdtnmunity Hospital the tw o \'ictims wte transferred to the U.S. Naval ll~pital at Camp Pendleton for furth er . lre,'.atment of the injuries. Both are ex- pe.Cted to recover, police said. Officers said they have not yet deaermined the exact reasons for the at· laclk. but the incidents could have been the culmination of a dispute which had be:gtin earller In the day. A squad of narcotics agents took part in ~ search for suspects through the night arlf other detectives planned interviews t~y with a large list of individuals who nllght be related to the incident. F,.om Page I 'AIR FORCE' ••• \VeStminster and Seal Beach. T)le additional fixed wing plane would o~ate for six hours a day and the heli copters an additional five hours, Bresnahan suggested. Ir· lhe countywide system is eventually :idopted, there \vouid be required 14 • 11rcrafl. helicopter and fixed wing, with 44 employe'.'I incl uding 21 pilots, nine ob~rvers, three administrators and 11 :iircr:ift mechanics . TI1(' progTan1 \\"Ollld be admi111Stered by 11 mulli-1urisclic.:tional uv1allon t on1- n11ssion. "rhe primary purpose of lhe aerial fleet, Bresn<Jl1<ln expli1111cd. \\'Quid be polite =-~·r~'ices but with 1he larger helicopters :ind fixed v.•ing aircraft. fire and rescue ~frrices could also be provided. la the past. the county has used aerial r.ervices during flood and hre sltuations. ln ooe ins tance during the 1969 Ooods and tin Clther occasions. Marine Corps heli- cop~crs \\•ere volunteered to the county fo ~iid in emer_gency control. OlAHClE COA.Sf LI DAILY PILOT ,,.~ Or&"Oe C°"'.i DAILY PJLOT, with .,.lllrll h C<Jmbonfll '"• fhW1·P•eu, 11 pUOlhlltd l!Y tht Or1noe (0111 PublJ1n 1n11 company. $~· r~1e l<l illon' ..,,. pvoll1n..O, MGl'ld1y tnrov~h l'•«l~v. for Cooi1 ""''· Newport l\t1rn, Hvn!ln11~on 6!~r~i FO\l'l11ln V&llty. l1g1tn1 Stir~. !r~1t1• 'S~~dlflb,o(~ ~~a S•" Clt~nttf f>•n Jv•n C•n,,1r~~o, /I ••n11Tt rt•Ql!>nll .-.11on i1 pUb ·~~"!! S~tv,n•v• en<! sv••<Uy1, Tllo prln~lp,11 Pvf>l••l'rl1>1,t pl&nl h 11 3XI W"11 S.y Slrool, C""t~ Mal. C11>1orn•6, t16~. R:obt'I N. We.,J p,,..,O.,.,, l"IS ,.Ubli•f>t r J ,,~ R. C u•lt y \II(! PrnlOsir I~ Gm.nl //,ln~;~r T~o111 11 1(1 ovll Editor Tlio11111 A. Muq>h;n1 M1n1111no Eot"or C~•rl11 H. lcio1 Ritli11d I . Nill Aul1l.-il M1n-iilrl\I Ellltc>rt L .. ••• .. IN:ll Off!&• 222 for11t ,._~•1111• M1ili 119 Ai:ldre11: l'.O. l cir 666, •26S2 OttMir Offke TMept.e ... 17141 l<fJ.<fJJI tC l•tHlelll Alll.,.rtl\l fMI 142·1611 Let ... a..c• AU D•,•rt-.m: I T.,., ....... , ... , .. ,, C°""tlflll, 1•'1. Orll'oQt C011! l'l'\ltl!!ll'ltllQ C6<1!1Hny. No "-' lll•...,, lll11'1rlll011' folil!l'O•l•I mtlll'I" ... ...,~.,111-11 l\frtl~ ..._., ti4' ,_.oelut-., wltflou! iPl(:i.I Jiii'· Mlf~ of COPVrlfll! -·· Stt""' (le.. "111'9f: •Id t i (O'llt Mtt1, C1•lhttn11, tufltCTi!ltlOf\ In' (•.,ier ll,il ~1'111; W ,.,.!! IJ,1l, "*'111!1; mltfft ty .. 11p111lorlt QM ll'IOl'ltilt~. .. L.uids. :.tagc show s <111d prlZe dra~·ings. FJ..sh rl111n~rs. pru.•e(! :1l Sl 7~, v.•111 be sold Fr1d11;. 111g!11 <111/J lriu11 noon to 8 p 111, IXll h Z'i:11urdu~v :\nd Sund:.a:,. All pr'Or«eds 11 ill ;;:u 10 c h11ri11 IUgh!11{hl of Lhc three-day e~tf':.11:.a ~anzJ µromJse! to bt the p<1radl· s('h("- t!uk"tl Jt,r Saturrk1y. Ir begins at IU JO ;1.n1 ;,I 19th S!rett and Anaheirn A\1•nu1· ;ind rl1n:i along 19th Street and J'h1cl'nl1<1 ,\\ !'ll(I!' For th•J.',f' who n11.ss thp <ll~pla.v or 15 /111,t\s .1nd :i11 n111r\·h1n).( h;_111rls, the par:.ade 11111 llt' t1•l\'<':ist 111 tulnr lrorn J p ni . to 4 :10 J).111. Sunday. by KTLA C'han11el 5. l\1r:1rl1' l'h:11rr1i:ir1 Cliff \Vesdor f said Ont• ot the entrants, the Tijuana Police fl·lolortyclf Squadron, will be fea tured in ;~ ll pe<.:lal perfor1nance ill 2 p.m. on (\·nttr Street, fac ing the park. KONlUME).,......_..,_I CAM BODI~ MEKONG DELTA -le SOVTH CHINA. .... SOUTH VIETNAM _} UP1 N•w1mt• l'ancho the Taco-eater. a lion cu b 01\ner by Costa ~1esa restaurateur Al· lrt·<l Klinzmarui . is the official mascot or lilt' pJrade and will lead the field of l ,500 \ p;lrticipanls in the parade. Wesdorf said. HEAVY AIR ATTACKS-Waves of U.S. B52 bombers pounded North ... Vietnamese troop concentrations in Quang Tri Province (1) north of Hue (2) and near the Central Hig·h}end capital of Kontum (3) in one of the largest single day bombing raids in Vietnam this month. Communist gunners pumped 130 rounds of rocket, mortar and artil- lery fire into defenders at An Loe (4) the devastated provincial cap- ital 60 miles north of Saigon. l!c will be on display Crom I p.m. lo 4 p 1n. Saturday in the handball courts of 1he Girls Club, immediately adjacent to the park. lirand Marshal for this year's parade is Marlin McKeever, the Los Angeles f{a ms linebacker from Corona de! Mar. r.lcKeever will share the spotlight with special guests "Seymour," the television horror mo\i'ie host. and Les "Mr. Fish Fry" MIUer, the man who has ennounced !he parade for the past 26 years. · The schedule of Fish Fry Events is as follows: FHIDAV -5:30 p.m .. Fish Dinners, City Park. --0 p.m., Carnival Rides and Midway Booths, City Park. -7 p.m., Band Contest , City Park. SATURDAY -10 a.m., Carnival. City Park. -10:30 a.m., Fish Fry Parade. -Noon. Fish Dinners. City Park. -1:30 p.m .. Stage Show, City Park. -2 p.m. Tijuana Police Motorcyc.lt> Squadron. -4: 15 p.m. Dancers. City Park. ~:30 p.m. Stage Show, City Park. SUNDAV -Noon, Carnival, City Park. -2,30 p.m., Baby Contest. City P:irk. -3:30 p.m .. Miss Mer1naid Contest, Ci· ty P;;i1·k . -6· 15 p.n1. Stage Sho \V Ci ty P:i.rk. -8 p.1n., Drav.·ing for Grand Prize, Ci· 1y Park. Co'u11cil 10· Hear Laguna 'Tl1eme' So11g at Meeting I( nrusic hath cha r~ to soo ih the savage beast, perhaps lhe Laguna Beach ci ty .council meeting \\.'ednesday \1•ill be a bit more placid than usual. The city fathers u·ill bC' asked to adopt :1 nev,• pop song titled "In Laguna" as the ci ty anthem. The musical proposition is l:x.'ing tloosted by the Laguna .Jaycee.'!. The song. composed by guitarist George Russell . was released early this year on a lonJt; playing album called "Easy Listenln"g," f eaiurlng Russell's music . 'Tired' Nixon Reaches Accord in Warsaw Stay WARSAW (UPI) - A "dead t~ed" President Nixon reached some wide-rang- ing accords with Polish leader• today as the final stroke of his 12-day dJplomstic mission, and headed home for a report to Congress tonight on the Moscow summit. The presidential jet, The Splr!t of '76, left Warsaw on a nine-hour filght to \Vashington after Nixon , and First Secretary Edward Gierek of the Pollsh Communlst Party signed a communique summing up four hours of taJks. In the document, the leaders agreed that talks should be opened as soon as possible on Ea~t-West troop reductions in .Europe; to lay groundwork for a Euro- pean security conference -also agreed to by Nixon at the Kremlin summ it - and to conduct continuing talks on im- proving U.S.·Polish trade -non-specific, as was the case in MD-'icow . J3ut just as he failed to break any new groulld wtUr'Soviet leadft-1 ·on the· Viet- nam issue, Nixon was unable to reach ac· cord with the Polish. The \Varsaw con1- munique said: "Both sides presented their known posi- tions on the war in Vie tnam and the s ituation in lndochina.·E.!!se.ntial views of the two sides in this question remained diveraent." His departure ended a dramatic mission during which he was greeted by antiwar rioters in Au~ria, warmed by cheering crowds in Polan d, followed by bomb bla sts in lran and -most in1· port.ant -welcomed in the Kremlin. As Nixon wound up hls journey, which included stops in Leningrad , Kiev and 1'ehran, the President showed clear 1igns of the stress he has been under since hls arrival in r,,io~ow May 22. ''He's dead tlttd but he won't admit ii.'' one aide aald. minutes earlier than planned. because or 11trong headwinds along his route. An estimated 4,000 persons lined lhe motorcade route to the airport, where Polish leaders sa w the President off in a brief ceremony carried live on Warsaw television. .But weary as he was, the President in· tended to spend most of the time on the homeward night, according to aides, in putting finishing touches on his 6:30 p.m. PDT addre.ss to a joint session of Congress, to be broadcast nationally. The speech was expected to put em· ph.asis on his nuclear arms limitation agreemen t v.·ith Soviet leaders. Aides sai d Nix on was thinking of the example of l'resident \Voodrow Wilson, v.·ho negotiated the treaty of Versailles after World War I and returned home in triumph only to have the pact rejected by Congress. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the President decided to rc1Xlrt to C-Ongress immediately after his .arriva l home because he felt it was important to explain to Congress the approval and support needed to Implement what lhe President has called a new era of negotiations and easing of East-\\lest tensions. The President also returns v.·il h agreements v.·lth the Kr e m I in to cooperate in space exploration. incl udin g a joint mission in 1975, and other field s in- cluding public health and scien ce and technology, and agreed to order the ir navies to quit harassing each other on the high seas. Pat Nixon rebelled today at too many Communist policemen tel ling her what to do. ~ SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese parat rooprrs and rangers'. bal·kcd by tanks drove ahnost to the border of Qu<.111g Tri Province today Hl an effort to knock out a North Vietnamese regi1nen t arid blunt an l'Xpected attaC'k on l·lue. 'l'hcy 1110\·ccl 1vllh virtual!y no air sup- port ~nd rame undt·r h(·avy artdlt•ry firt'. U:id v.·eathcr se ttled on Norlh Vietnant 11nd tl1c riort11e;;islern <iua rter of So111 h \·1clna111 blll the U.S. Cornmand said planes knocked out two more of Hanoi 's pov.·t:r plants \Vednesday and that U.S. /11r Force Ph:1nlo111 jets knocked d01\'ll t11'Q of four attacking i'IUG 21 jels over a 3tJ.111inu1e period near Hanoi. U.S. planes bon1bed nort hern targets today by radar. The r l;.1no1 oFfieial army nc1~'Spaper Quan Doi Nhan Dan ad1nHted in an issue reaching Saigon that the U.S. air of· 1l·11s1vc 11·:is hu rting Nor!h \'1i.:tnnm·s 11':-1r effort. ll said the fight lo 1nalnta1u com· 111unications and supplil•S lo 1he sout h ~ras hecon1ing more '"Strenuous." Field officers along the My Chanh Ti iver defense line 22 mil es nor th of l-lue said the northward strik ing South Viel· n:imese armored force of 2,000 men was hiL by a barrage of 50 130mn1 artillery shells-the heaviest such strike in a week -and that there were "quile a fe1v" t:asualties. UPI correspondent Donald A. Davis reported from l-lu e that the three ba t- t<1lions of government troops reinforced by armor were seeking to capture or dest roy a battalion of 650 North Virt· namese troops in the hi!ls just south1vest Laguna Offers Two W orksl1op s 011 Seascapes 'l\\'o workshops in :<>casc::ipe pa in ting: 1ri1! be conducted by Bennett Bradbury, nationally known 1narine artist. during lhe Laguna Beach School o( Ari's sum- 1ner session. 1'he first Dradbu ry ~vor kshop is scheduled for June i through Junf': 16, the second from Aug, 21 through Sept. 1. Another special summer offering v.•ill be a concentrated five-week course in sculpture '~·ith artist·instructor Roger 1'\untz. running from July 10 through Aug. ~ I Noted as a teacher. sculptor and painter. Kuntz holds a master of fine arts degree from Claremont Graduate School and studied in France and Italy on a Guggenheim Fellowship. Children 's art, taught by Jack Taylor, 'vill be offered on Saturday mornings from IO a.n1 . to noon from June 19 through July 29. A wide variety of other art C(lUrses \\'ill be taught by the Art &hool faculty in the rrguk1r nine·u·eek summer program fron1 June 19 to Aug. 19. A brochure listing all classes and fees may be obt<1ined by phoning the school. 494-1520, or v.'l'iting to Laguna Beach School of Art , 630 Laguna Canyon Road_, Laguna Beach, 92651. Registration now is open and classes are limited in size. or fllv c;hanh, or drive 1t ba1,:k north. The sltua"tion on other fr onts: -Jlc;.1vy huusc·to-houst' fighting wll.~ l'!.!l)tJrted ul Kontun;, 260 1n1!es oorth ?' ~<JJgt;u. nnd govl·rn1 nt·nl spokesman sa1d 23~ Co1nn1un1s1s were killed Tuesday and ,goverrunent troops found the bodies or 125 ot hers -a toll of 359 at a loss of 13 government troops kiJl{'d. 'rhey said the Cnmmunists fa ked a sur· 1\•n(lcr n10Vl' \Vcdncsday and poured re in· forccrntnts in to the northern part of Kon· turn du ring a lull 111 the !1gh! 1ng. -Fighting nt ,\n Loe , 60 miles north of ~aigon . tapered off but tht> city was hit \\'cdnesdav bv 350 rnortar (Ind rocket rou nds an·d fighting was reported along lhrce Saigon relief co lumns strung out fron1 t\vo to15 miles to th e south. -l<'if?hting flared in norn1ally cal m Binh 'thuan f'rovinc1• along the South China Sea coast about 100 1niles southeast uf Saigon. I<'u11eral Slated For Lila Bear: Services ""l\l be held Friday at 2 p.m. in Sheffer Laguna }3(-a ch Chapel for Lil & B. Beare, 145 McKnight Drive, who died '\'uesday in South Coast Community J-lospita !. She was 66. ri1rs. Beare is survived by her husband. Lloyd Beare of the home. A licensed vocational nurse, she was born in Canada but had lived in California si nce childhood. Paul E. 'ri bbetts v.·1ll officia te at the Friday S('rvicc, \\'hich v.•iU be follov;ed by private burial . Mrs. Ford Joins 111 Lagu11a Study Top of the \Vorld resident l\1n~. Karen Ford hns been named as the fifth representative to a committee studying traffic and circulation for the Laguna Brach General Plan. Mrs. Ford, 3066 Mountain View Drive, \\'ill join Larry Hunt, Bill Axline, James fJilley and ~tichael Schley on the com· miltec. The traffic and circulation committee is one of three citizen panels working OD various clements of the general plan. Lagunan Appointed To School Committee Lagunan John B. Lund has been ap-- pointcd to the Orange County Committee on School District Organization. a group •1·hich rules on a ll organiza tion and rt.'organization of school boundaries in the county. Lund, Is a trustee of the Saddlebsck .Junior College District. Lund·s nev.' position V.'aS opened \\'hen Selirn S. Franklin of Costa il.1esa resigned to aeee pt a municipal judgeship. L::itcr, •1·ords 11'rrc put to the music by t he son.R: v.Til 1ng team of .lay Livingston and Ray £vnns 11•ho previously v.'rote '·Rultons and Bo11·s." "Mona Lisa," and ''To Each li is Ow n.·· 1-lis v.·ife , Pat, also lost the poise she maintained throu ghout the journey, snap- ping at Polish plainclothesman trying to keep her a•vAy. ~sofa bed sale! npw . · .queen size • • Bil \\lood . Jnycee presidrnt. and liarry Blthell \~·Il l play a tape of the song to the councilmen. A sample of !he lyrics -"In Laguna as 1rarcs were rolling. I saw you strolling along lhC" sa nd. Brffi\•n arm~ and sun- kil'>Sf'd shouldt'TS n1:1dl' !r;lvCI folders StC"n1. oh. so bland ... " Husscll composed the song one day as he basked at the foot or Cleo Street with his guitar on the beach, the Jaycee presi· dent said . AclYcrtisiug l\fau Dies NE\V YORK (1\Pl -Theodore L. Bates. 70, "'ho founded his own ad- vertising agency and drove It to become one of the fi ve largest in the world, died Tuesday. Ted Bates & Co. epitomlzed the h;i rd.sell television commercial and pioneered in exploiting the medium "as a markeling tool . 111e Pres;de nt's plane left \\'arsaw airport at 8:03 a.m. PDT, more than 40 RFK So1i Pays Evasio1i Fine BOSTON (UPI) -Joseph P. Kermedy II[. 19, son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. has pleaded guUty through an attorney to • ch.srge of failing to pay a 30.Cent turnpike toll. He was fined $25. The incident occurred Tuel'!dsy night oo the Ma 11 sac h u s e t t s Turnpike. State trooper Edward Bro"'Tl made the arrest, taking young Ken· nedy to Brighton police stallon where he was booked on a char'ge :>f toil evasion. Ho11orary Service Award ~oes ·10 Thurston Teacher The cartooning, hlsLory. archeology and nev.·spapcp. talents of Thurston Intermediate School instructor Ron Rodecker have brought him the Honorar) Srrvil"e Award of the Lllgun3 ~JlCh PTA Counr·il. no<1cck1•r. \l'h() joined the district in 196.1 ag an adm ini sl ri:ltive ;:rsslstant to Supt. \\'i lliam Ullo1n. presently teaches c:;irtoon lng, srch~logy, his tory, and journalis1n at the innovative Intermediate sc hool. llodf.cke r. JOJS Ncstall Road, has also worked with students on drama pr~ duclions and dlre,ts the Fishing Club at ThuNtnn. A native of Long Boarh and a former ntwsp•J>tt reporter, llodeclrtr for the past two yean hu beoen tncluded Jn •·Leaders in American Educat.ton" a who's who for the educatlonli prole111on. I..ast year, he aerved on the date Advisory Committee for Education. He Ir currently working m a book, "How to Destroy Children.'' TI1e award was tire1ented to Rodecker at a recen t meeting of the PTA Council where new offlcer1 for lhe 1972·73 achool ytl'lr were elected. Mrs. Lucllle Whitaker \\'ill serve 11s president : Mrs. Katherine Pool, vice president; Mrs. Shirly Heu, treasurer; M", Au4r)I Chrl1ty ud Mn. Koy WlllOll , audilors, aod Mr•. Florence Bttne. parllamentar1an . I , ' • • • $249. • These are very comfortable sofa beds for sitting and sleeping. • A wide selection of fabrics and . colors to choosa from. • • Reversible bilcks and seat cushions. ,.:;~;, H.J.GAI\1\ETf fllRNITURE ~ PROF ESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Mon., Thurt. & Fri. Eves. 1215 HARBOR Bl YO. COSTA MESA. CALIF. ' • I ~ ) I ~ ' l f . • ' Saddlehaek VOL. 65, NO. 153, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 'f, 1972 A·Il-year School Ignites Candidates' By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 "" O..llJ f'ilel "~" AU.year school progra1ns sparked a lively debate among Irvine unified school ~istrlct hopefuls afld a sprinkling of ?&rents attending Wednesday's can- ~idates night program in California Homes sales office. When candidate Lois Benes, a 36-year- ~ld housewife from the Ranch, suggested ?Ctf"nts in California llomes had had a t'hoice betwetn the all-year program and ~ I,. the traditional sc!Jou! sc:J1edulc at Irvine School, the otherwise rou tine cand1datc.s forum heated up. Bill Culbertson. of the Gabforniil Jfon1es community .association and pro- gram moderator. charged that his decision to place his children in the new El Camino l\eal School was not based on a liking for the 45-lfl pilot plan. "My children aren't guinea pigs,'' he said. ''I just want them to be able to go to school nea r home .·• ,., 11le California Hoines school -El I Can1ino Heal -is the only school in the San Joaquin District W use the all-year plan. The 700 children "-'ho will move in to lhe new school this coming year, presently are housed in p o r t a b I e classrooms in the overcrowded Irvine elementary and junior high school in East Irvine. , Culbertson, and ot.htt parents present, contended that the "choice'' was to place their children in a new school located ,., closer to their homes and remove them from the "substandard" lrvint School. Most of the 14 candidates speaking Wednesday agreed the lrvine school should be closed as 500n a.s possible following unificaUon. John Hulbert, a 29-year~ld hotel chain execuUve from University Park. 1ug· gested the Irvine ~ool site would be more valuable to the district if sold back to the Irvine Company, Money gaiMd from the sale might well provide a more de sirable site and some ex tr.! cash for plann ing schools to replace the present building which is servitlll 1.700 pupils although it y,·as built to house only 680. Mean111•hile . 1\trs. Benes reilerak'd her earlier view that the choice of expandinJ.: the al.I year schoo l pro~r:im should be that of parents in the new Irvine unified achool district. Nexl Tuesday, voters in lhe Tustin Un.ion High School District \\'il l be a~ked to approve a reorganization plan that County Air Today's Fina) N.Y. Stoeb • TEN CENTS Debate \10Uld crente three n('\1· unified -kln- ll1-rga rten to grad e 12 -districts. ~Ir~. l\enes a11d (·;111d1da te Sharon S1rcello. a mother of se~ en, teacher and l"un1111unity y,·orkrr fro11t Univers1lt I 'ark. agreed that the op lunum situation \1•011\d be a unified t1istr1el thAt offered bot h education.al plans y,•lthin indi.,..idual schools, All I ~ or the act.i\"e candidates seeking election Tuesda v to lht' five-member tSte CANDIDATES, Page Z) Test Force May Fly if Board OKs Pinn DAILY P'ILOT Phol• b'f' P'•lrkk 0'0.nn•H Saddle back Valley Panorattaa Bv JACK BROBACX Of ftM Dlltr P'l191 '"" Orange County's own "air force" may get off the ground next week if the Board of Supervisors approve!'! a test plan pro- posed by county Director of Aviation Robert Bresnahan. Bresnahan ha!'I suggested a si x·month trial period at a cost of $22,000 for an ex- perimental patrol over the Orangt Coast \\'ith cooperation of the city helicopter Defense Urges Jury w Acquit Angela Davis From Wire Services SAN JOSE -The defense told the :::1ie1a~tR;~:r.c~l.:\ l'lT-1 t~ The once-scenic Laguna Hills and Mission Viejo area seems to have lost its panorantlc view, al least along this access road paralleling the San Diego Freeway. The view is southerly near El Toro Road. As the photographer observed of the burgeoning area: ''AJI the beauty seems to be blocked by all the signs telling you how beautiful it is." becall!e the state failed to prove beyond a reason.able doubt that she ~nsplred. in Ibo Sia RAM!I kldnapiJlll and kllUnp. !Se• earlier llaty, pag• 111). Seizure Pot-laden Vessel Nabbed iri Da1ia A second seizure this week of seaborne marijuana at Dana HarOOr was an- nounced by U.S. Customs agents Wednes- day aft er the arrest of four Big Sur residents and discoverv of 116 kilos of marijuana bricks aboafd a 26-foot cabin cruiser. The arrests marked the second raid th i.s week at the harbor relating to alleg- ed smuggling operations from Mexico. The marijuana had a street value of about $20,000, said spokesmen for the Bgenty. Those arrested in the latest raid were Rodney C. flichmond, 30 ; Jl.onald Lussier. 31 ; l\1ellnda Smith, 18, and her sister, Constance. All four residents of the central Callforni a coastal colony were arraigned last \Vednesday befprc a U.S. !\1agistrate in Los Angeles. Last l\1onday in a similar raid. customs agents arrested two Santa Barbara residents and seized 30 bricks of the forbidden weed aboar d a sn1all trimaran ~·hich was heading out to sea after spcn~ ding the night at the yacht basin . Customs spokesmen said this \veek that both alleged smuggling operations did not inc!urle the harbor as a dropoff po int, but merely as an asserted stopover in the alleged smuggling route north . The 26-foot cruiser boarded \\.'edncsday at the harbor apparently set out fron1 Puerto Va llarta. ?-.1exico, \\"lth its 111- leged ilt egial cargo, officials claim. Council Straddling Fence on Prop. No. 9 Special to the DAILY PIUJT SACRAMENTO -Despite earlier pre<lctions from Orange CoWlty Super- visor David L. Baker, the C.a.lifornia Environmental Quality C.Ontrol Council tpday finds itscU stuck ~uarely in a fence-straddling position on controversial Proposition 9. The council in its meeting here Wedneaday. voted to oppose tbe s<><:alled clflan environment initiative on the June f baUot. (See related story, Page 14), But on the other hand , the council ftfused to rescind its earlier vote whi ch endorsed Proposition t. < Saddleback GOP N81Des -~i:esident I , The Saddl•back Volley Republican Autmbly hos elected aie.tu G. Briner of M'Jaskm Viejo as the organlutioo'1 now ·proaldenL Biiner, a 'Laguna Hill• 1!00t broker, succeeds out-golng prtsldent Olarle1 Ket· chu. Tbe new pruldent is "tso an incumbent tru.'llee of the Tustin Union High School DlStrlct, and a candidate for electk>n to the board of the proposed new unified ICbooJ dlatrlct. "People are going to think we're balmy," exploded board member Albert Pearl.son of Riverside. "It's like letting a stone waU stand and then mythically tearing it down." The council's rence-stradding stance began May 18 in Los Angeles when it voted 5 to 2 to endorse Proposition 9. But Chainnan Baker of Orange Coun ty. who was absent at that meeting, said "trickery'' had been ~ to get the en- dorsem·ent. He scheduled another vote this Wednesday in Sacramento. ~ The second time, the council voted 6 to 3 to oppose Proposition 9 with two abstentions. Baker had predicted it would be en- dorsed a to 5 by the full council. However. the council refused to ba ck up and revoke tl! prevlOU!i 5 to 2 vote en~ doninJ the proposition. A motion to let the-efidonement stand won 1 to 4 ap. proval of the council. State sen. Robert J. t...agomarsino (R· Ventura County), a legislative member or the couDC.il, offered con9QJation of sorts: "This happens flit the time in !he legislature,:' he said_ The meeting was Cttquently interrpted by boosten of Prcpos1tln 9, a 23-point measure that would clamp a five year moratorium on nuclear power pl11nt con· 1truclion. among other things. Cba.rtman Baker remained them the meeUna was not a public bearing. Reagan 'Inclined Not' to Support Coast Initiative From Wire 8'nrlces Governor Ronald Reagan said Wed- nesday he was "inclined not" to support the efforts now being made by con- servationists to place a coastline pro· tcction measure on the November ballot. Speaking at a press conference. the Governor said he felt adoption or coastline controls should be left to the Legislature and that !he people should (Jnly act by initiative "if the legislature l!XJ k no action.·• At the same press co n f er en c e . r.ove rnor Reagan said he supported the present efforts to place the death penally issue on the ballot through petition and tha t he had signed one of the petitions. The coastline protection measure is being backed by the Coastal Alliance, a coalition of conservationist organiza tions. Spokesmen for the group say they launc hed the petition drive originally because the Legislature p r o b a b I y wouldn't pass a sufficiently strong bill, ''I "'ould be inclined not to (&Upport the coaslal measure) on the basis that we do have a legislative solution which is being advanced," the Governor said, "I would think the time for a coastline initiative would be if the Legislature took-no ac· lion." Howard Moore Jr., opftllng final arguments for tht def.-, Nld: "The two words, rea30!1able doubt, are probably the most important words in Angli>Saxon American jurisprudence. "The second most important may be the burden of proof that rests on the pro- s:ecutlon to -convince you of lbt absence of reasonable doubt. ''The state has failed to do so tn this case and that would require you to acquit this defendant." Speaking in a soft accent, Moore uld one thing that was 1 source of distress to Miss Davl.9 was the lack of any members of her race on the jury. Moore said he was confident this jury could reach a proper verdict but that he fel t concerned that the absencf:""of blacks might impede justice. "So, we'll submit the fate of Miss Davis -her freedom, her life, to you ." l\1oore was to be followed in the defense su mmation by attorney Leo Branton. ~fiss Davis will make no final argu4 ment in the case. On Wednesday , pr~tor Albtrt W. Harri!'! Jr. told the jury in a flat and unemotional tone that it had no alternative but to find MW Davia guilty ot murder. kldnaping and conspiracy. Moore told the jury there iJ a dif· ference betwetn circumstantial evidence and a coincidence, and described Miu Davis' arrival in the San Francisco Bay area Aug. 3, 1970, her purclwe of a shotgun Aug. 5, and her departure Aq. 7 as "mere cha~ happenings.'' Ht! also challenged the eyeMtneu iden- tification of Miss Davia by pl'OHC!UUon wilnesses, saying: "All of the eyewltnu.s identlflaliom of Miss Divis lftl'e racial !ilereotypes. '' Fear l.,ollowed T eetli Marks, Blood Scared Diver SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A 3l·ytar~ld cannery work.er atlacked by a .shark while diving for abalone 1n the Pacific says he was more frl&htencd when he saw the teeth marks on his leg afterward thin while the ·u.root cr.eature had him In ltJ jaw1. ·"Mainly, lhe thing l bad-on my mind w11 to set back to our outboard." Helmulh Hlmmrich said Wedntsday. "Tbat's when I really got oeartd, once I was aboard and aaw tho9e teeth marks of the shark on my lq. And all that blood." The bearded dive r is ''" than hall lhe tlu of the shark !bat lore at ht, leg and severed a nerve, He wa:1 at Letterman Hospital where ht underwtnt surgery to fepair his wounds, Himmrich. father of two small childrtn, said he Just finished baa1n1 h1I limit of five abalone. a seafood delicacy found only off llmtied 1ttetcbea of the U.S. Pacific coast, and wa1 swimming back to the bOat where hit two brothers--ln-law and a nephew were fi3hing . ''It seemed to take one bite, then another-a harder one. Then it grabbed hold. hanging on , lifting me out of Ule water. t felt like tt wu trying to tear off 11nother part of me." • lllmmrich, of Lodi, who ha!'I been ocean diving since 1964, was philoaophl· cal about Lile attack. "lfe must have been hungry, and I wa.s the only thine around," be uld. ' forces fr om Ne1vport Beach, Costa ~tesa, and Huntington Beach. If :supervisors approve the test pro- gram and It proves 1uccessful, Bresnahan has outlined an O\'erall county air surveillance and rescue project at a cost ol $2.3 million for the first year. The "air £nrce" is a proposal advanced by Supervisor \\.'l!lian1 Phillips of }''ullerlon several months ago. Bresnahan estimated that the overall Student's Plan For Hospital Nets $150 Award Saddleback Community llospital has a""'arded a Cal Poly, Pomona stude nt, Jim Bradanini, a $150 scholarship for his design of hospilal landscaping. An ad- ditional $450 was given to the school. Bradanini along with 15 other Cal Poly &tudents drew landscaping plans for the ...$11 million l~bed hospital now under construction. The plans were judged by facully members and six finalists were ..elected. Each oI the finalists gave • detailed oral description of their plan.s to the judges, John Boethlng, or Treeland Nurseries; Jerry Woffinden, Leisure World grounds aupervisor: Robt rt Omtn1, architect for the Lutheran Hospital Society of Southern Callfornla, J. C. Scott, member hospital board of directors; Will iam Conover, retired horticulturllt and charter member of the Leisure World Garden Club ; and George Crowe, architect. The student'• plans include olive, eucalyptus and evugrecn trees, a pond plus ground cover and sbrubl. Project cost l.!i estimated •t '3S,000. SF Board Curbs Garage Sales SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -After long debate over demand for more restr1ctlve measures, the San Francbco Board of &.ipervlAors has pa'9l!d a law Umiting garage sales to one e-vtr-Y. six months by anv city resident. The ordlntUK'f!, adopted 7""4. dots not re- qu.lre permits or restrict adverti&lng iu the Council of Dirtrtct Merchants would ha ve liked . f'or exceeding tht ont-per-«i1-montM limit Qn 1(111r11ge sales, the maximum penalty ls a fine of~ and s.lx months in l•ll. countywide system would need eight police patrol helicopters and four patrol planes plus two larger aircraft, one a helicopter and one an airplane for utility_ service. Of the $2.3 million first year spending, $1.1 million would go for equipment with !he balance covering operating costs for the firs t 12 mont hs. Oresnahan's six n1onths les t proposal ca lls for usin~ poli t'e helicopter!'! already (See 'All\ FORCE,' Page !) Irvine Plariners Get Fir st Look At Neiv Bud,get Irvine planning commissloner11 will get the fint look at a proposed total $1.4 million budget for tbe ci ty of Irvine dur- ing 1m.73 flJCal year. C.Ommissioners will review the planning portions of the budget during thelr'study session at 1:30 o'clock tonightJn the ten1· porary meetlnr room on the ground floor (Jf Irvine Town Center, 4201 Campu.1 Drive. The unbalanced budget proposal which lncludts several options including a $280,000 capital improvement program .the city may or may not choose to im- plement, shows income of $799.800. The difference, should the City Council approve all the included oplions. would require a tax rate increase of 40 cents per $100 of assessed valuation . AS!istant City Manager Paul Brady noted. The bulk or the projected revenues come from s.:ile.s taxes, license fees for cars. fines, the city's hotel tax and fr:inchise tax . Blanks for amounts to be raised by property tax~. planning and iot1ing fea and b.Jsiness licenses would bring the revmue listing up to balance the pro- posed spending, depending °" the City touneil action. Bro1dy noted, 1'he 1972·73 progra m budget summary divides spending into fivt general 11rea~. Those areas and the projected amounts to be spent for each are General City management and support: $332,955 or $16.52 per city resident . Planning : $138,980 or $6.89 per person. Public safety: $381,134 or $18.91 per person. Haman Enhancement (parks ma in· tenance, reCreali on): $128,338 or $6.37 per person . Envlroamtntal Preservation: $144 ,500 or $'1.11 per person. · The public gafety expenset are designated for police and traffic en-- forcement at a cost of f353.23t with another $27 ,950 uaignod to coordination and supervilion. The City Council may ... v1... lht (Ste BUDGET, Pap I) ' we ... er Hazy sunshine 11 on the qeoda for Friday, but the temperature will sUIJ bt toward the top ol ii,. thermometer. Hlaho at lhe bMcll 72 rising to 10 inlaod. Lowa 1ML INSmE TOD~ 'Y In lftdroom commtmll!/ of Norwalk, the onl11 candidoU who aroU$es Qtfluine cnthuriaim U. Alabama's Gov. Georg< C. Wol· lace. Set iiorr, Paae 21. l ,M . ....,. 1 <•11~• ,. ci.1111..,. U·• C9"1kt :ta ,_ n DHlfll _.... It ,,;,.,,1 "'" t 1'11IW1•'-"1 1).M ,l ... f!CI •·Jt ,ff "" ...... ,, ...... _ ,, AM L•...., 19 ' ·-n ,..,. .. "'""" . H• ...... ..._ f °"'"' t-n 11 -..... . ............ T-D --a ....... . ._..,, ..... IMf ...... ..... . • -~ OAIL\' PI LOT JS ~---~ 'Fry' Set Up Fishy ~t\ctivit y In Costa Mesa • Co.<lta Mesa's dO\\'nlO\~·n park v.-as turned into 3 riot of C<l\or today as \\'Ork · rnen set up ferris v.·heels, n1crT)'·go-- ' rounds and about 30 other ani usement rides in preparation for tilt 1.:1ty's 27th 1\unual r~ish Fry. ~1embers of tht Lions ('!ub \111\ thro11• lhr switch on the ir ··.'lu per-e:u·n11 al" 011 precisel y 6 p 111. Fridil~'. alxiur 11rli' hJl r hour afl<'r the serving of addit1oni.il fish dinners begins. The pa rk at 18th S t reel and Group Assault Made on Marines In Sa11 Clemente An undetermined number of assailant_, armed with kn ives and tire irons a1- ta cked a pair of Marines at the ir San Clemente apartment \Vednesday, leaving one victim stabbed in the side and the ether beaten on the head. Police detained thr~ men after the assaults but they were later released without charge. The victims, found in the driveway of apartments at 137 W. Pallzada. y.·ere Jack Dean Gibeault, 20, of ~partment A at the Pallzada address..._and his room- mate. Arthur Aney Walker, 22. Both are stationed at Camp Pendleton. Police said the incident occurred at about 9 p.m. when the group of thugs ap- peared at the apartment after an alterca- tion earlier in the day. J\.1oments later, of ficers !laid, Gibeault's wife, Kathy. discovered the two bleeding men lying in the driveway. She ran to an all ·night market nearby to seek aid. Police said her husband suffered a single slash \vound to his lo\ver side. Wal ker, apparently beaten y.·ith a tire iron, suffered severe head cuts and other burts. Arter emergency treatment at t-.tission Community J-lospital the two victims were transferred to the U.S. Naval Hospital at_ Camp Pendleton for fllrlhcr treatment of the injuries. Both are ex- jiected t-0 recover, police said. Officers said they have not yet ~termlned the exact reasons for the at- ck, but the incidents could have been e culminati on of a dispute which had gun earlier in the da y. A squad of narcotics agents took part in a search for suspects lhrough the night and other detectives planned intervif.wJ today with a large list of Jndlviduals "'ho might be related to the incident. Man Dies After Alleged Assa1tlt SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A 2&-year· oJd man accused of assaulting two pplicemen with a tire iron after ramming tltei·r patrol oar has died in surgery, police reported. ·The man, identified as Leo E. Maxwell of San Franciseo, died at Mission Emergency ffospital Wednesday night while uodergoing surgery for chest in· juries possibly incurred in the collision. Frona Page 1 BUDGET ... b~dget proposal during its study session ne:xt week. That med.ing, originally SPt fOr Tuesday y.·ill be held on Thursd ay at 7:.30 o'clock -the same time the plan· ning commission next meets. The formal public hearing on the budgr>t is scheduled for the following Tuesday, June 13, Brady noted. OIANGI CO.A.St IS DAILY PILOT Anaheim Avenue will t)(' thr cenlef of nearly all f ish Fry attrnction s, including b;.iby <1.nd he<iut y contest~. a l)..1ttle of the b11nds , 3t;1ge sho ws and pr ize drawings. Fish dinnel'S, priced at $1.75, will be ~old Friday night and from noon to 8 p.m. li•\l h Sfl!Urd:ty ~nd Sund;iy. All prQcet"ds \1111 gv to ("hr1r11y 1!1gh li~ht 11f 1!11· 1 1J ricl~d:1 v i'xt r~11a· 11:1n1a proHlll\t"S t(I ht· t/1r par:id" S(·ht·· l1U!t'I.! for S<itun..!ay. JI begins at JU<lu <1.rn, .1t IR!h Str<'et and An.<1heim Avenue ;in d runs along 19th Stretil and Placenti:t A1·enut_ For tlJose Y.'ho miss the display of I~ fl oats and 36 marching bands. the parade 1\ ill be telecast in color from J p.m. to 4·30 p.m. Sunday by KTLA Channel 5. Parade Chairman Cliff We.sdorf said fu1e of the entrants, the Ti juana Police f\1otorcycle Squadron. vli ll be featured in :i special performance at 2 p.m. on (:enter Street , facing the park. J'ancho !he Taco-eater. a lion cub 01rnrr bv Costa t-.1csa restaurateur Al- lred Ktirizmann, is the official mascot or the parade and will lead the field of 1.500 participants in the parade. \.\.'esdorf said. Ile v.•ill be on displa y !ron1 I p.m. to 4 p.n1. Saturday in the handball c:ourts of !he Girls Club, ]n1n1ed la tely <1dj:.ict:'nt to the park. Grand il'lnrshal for th is year's parade is f\1arlin McKee ver. the Los Angeles Rams linebacker from Corona de! Mar. ~1cKeever will share the spotlight with special guests "Seymour." the television horror movie host, and Les "Mr. Fish f''ry" Miller, the man who has announced the parade for the past 26 years. The schedule of Fish Fry Events is as follows : FRID AY -5:30 p.m .. Fi sh Dinners, City Park. -fi p.m .. Carnival Rides and f\-1idwa y Booths. City Park. -7 p.m .. Band Contest, City Park, SATUltDAY -JO a.m .. Carnival. City Park. -10'.30 a.n1 .• Fish Fry Parade. -Noon. J•ish Dinners. City Park . -1:30 p.m .. Stage Show, City Park. -2 p.m. Tijuana Pol ice Mot orcycle Squadron. -4: IS p.m. Dancers, City Park. -6:30 p.m. Stage Show. City Park. SUNDAY -Noon, Carnival, City Park. -2:30 p.m., Baby Contest. City Park. -3:30 p.m .• Miss t-.-1ermaid Contest, Ci- ty Park. -6:15 p.m. Stage Show City Park. -8 p.m., Draw ing for Grand Prize , Ci- ty Park. Tunney 'Asked That Committee 'Invite' Sinatra WASHINGTON (AP ) -Sen. John V. Tunney has acknowledged he asked a congressional com mittee not to subpoena Frank Sinatra , but instead to "invite him to t<1lk" to the committee. v.•hich .is in- vestigating ties between organized crin1e and horse racing. Tunney (D-Calif.). said Wednesdav he fr lephoned Rep. Claude Pepper (D.FJa .J. chairrnan of the I-louse Select Conuniltee on Cruue,.after being contacted by an at· !orney for Sinatra. Tunney said he tol d Pepper. "There is no way J would ever make a calJ to lry to prevent your con1mittee from getting all the in formation you think is available. But if you woutd invite him (Sinatra) to la!k to the committee members instead of subpoenaini; hirn. it Y.'ould be the courteous th ing to do." Tunney said that ''a man who has reached the leve l that he Uiinatra) has , , . should no\ be treateC that way ." Despit e Tunney's request, the com· mittee gave the subpoena to a \Vashlngton attorney for Sinatra, and the singer is scheduled to testify June 8. Tunney '3 acknowledgement came after C'Ommillee mem bers re\'ealed be jn- tcrceded on Sinatra 's behalf. One congressman said a member of Vice·president Agnew's staff also ob- jected to the subpoena. A Tunney aide said Wednesday that Tunney was not trying to "intercede.'' but merely wanted Pepper to know Sinatra's feelings . .. ' , ~ .;;. ..... ~ ·-~~-~t,' ~ -' ~ DAllY PilOT Sl•ll Pholo COMMUNICATI ONS WERE NOT HAMPERED BY LANGUAGE Japanese Educator Watches Monique Viger Cut Out Animal ~ El Toro Students Offer Smiles to Japan Guest The 1nan spoke nothing but Japanese, but the children didn't care. They spoke with smiles and shyly offered examples of their work. They spoke v.•ith a quickly constructed "Japanese teahouse·· made of building Fro111 Page l 'A IR FORCE' • •• in serv ice in the three coastal com· 1nunities. In addition to the six city-operated l1elicopters the test program would in- clude a rented two place light plane. Bresnahan estimates that the joint pro- gra1n bet ween the cities and the county cou ld reduce annual helicopter costs to the three cities and to Anaheim, the onlv other county community y.•ith chopperS, by two-thirds. If the final plan is adopted, an opera· tion center would be established at Orange County Airport and staffed by !he partitipating cit.ies. The cCDter would be equipped by the count y. Bresnahan suggests that the six·month test area be split into two· ~ectors, one from Seal Beach Naval Weapons Depot to 1.JCI and the other southward to San Clemente and bordered by the San Diego Freeway inland and the ocean on the east. · Coverage would include the three com· munities now operating helicopters and portions o( Fountain Valley, Irvine, Westminster and Seal Beach. The additional fixed wing plane would operate for si x hours a day and the helicopters an additional five hours, Bresnahan suggested. blocks and with a song of greeting. And the man. S. Ochiai fro1n Tokyo , Japan, understood. I-le returned the smiles and softly patted quiet kin· dergarl.eners on the head. Ochiai , \Vho trains k ind erg a r t e n teachers in Japan, Wednesday obse rved l~arlerie \l/ellsfry's kindergarten class at I{a!ph Gates School in El Toro. He is staying in California for five or six days with family friend Hiroko Falkenstein of El Toro, v.·ho brought him to Mrs. Wellsfry. Ochiai is on his way to Toronto. Canada. to represent Japan at an International Children's Theater Con- ference. '11e is a very respected" man in Japan." Mrs. Falkenstein said as Ochiai wat ched a boy playing \.\.'ilh a wooden train. Through Mrs.Fa 1 ke nste in' sin· terpretation, Ochiai explained that he was surprised to see "older children" in tile cl11ss. In Japan, he added, children beg.in kinde rgarten ;U age three. not fl\'C. He noticed tbe alphabet letters displayed about the room ;ind said that language study didu 'l begin in ku1- dergarten in Japan. Gesturing broadl y about the room, Ochiai spoke at lengU1. tl1!'s. ·r alkenstein translated that !he edu car or was an1aze<l at the large space and that there were only about 15 children for one teacher. In Japan. she added . rooms are smaller and used for one purpose only (music room, dance room, science room) and classes are a minimum or 40 children. Ochiai took pictures of the children ancl nodded his approval of th eir draw ings and their teahouse. One girl holding en1p- ty alun1lnum trays politely asked if lhe visitors "want rice or anything? Son1e tea?" f'roin Page l CANDIDATES Nif;I-11' . • • frv ine urull~ school board spoke \Vednescl<1y night. 'flk' fo l!owlng <1rto siJHl•' of <>aeh hopeful's vic"'S : Mr1. Elltabeth P. "Ltt" Sic~olJ. 40, of 18002 Whitewood Way, University Park, urjj:cd support for unification . The Mus(·· wire and community voluntc('r c~llt·d for .an ''out standing ~UJ>f'f'1ntendl·nt'' selet lion. a sound curricu!un1 gt'<J rl't.I tu the needs of Jrv1ne i.:hlldrcn . an end tv U!:il' of the Irvine st hool site and a master plan for boUi fa<:ilities and curriculwJ\. Paul II. Deniare.:. 76. of 4682 Sicrl'a Tree L :JIK'. Univ ersllv J'ark, desl'ribt'd unificat ion as a "gold en opport unity 11) establlsh fine schools in Irv ine ," l!i' stressed the need IQ select the best po~:il· blc superintendent and su,11,1.:ested h'iu ~· iii,.::. cul'ri rulu111 ;uni ~ill 1•c<1 r S('hou l prvh· i\'ll l.') i."t•tlld IJt' /'i''.'101\l·d tJ!ll'C lh:.tt IS 1lone L-Ois Benes. a 3G-vcil r·old housewife :ind p11rttlmr teCtt her f~on1 15452 Orleans Cir~ ('](', !ht' lta11t'h. sni d growth and the nt•cd for qunllly educa \1.1n 1vhere the rn;'J1or problen1s !he new district faces . She called for an outstanding ad- ministration, a flex ible program, full use of schools and close cooperation bct\\•een parents and teachers. C. O'Donnell Lee. a specifications t'ngineer front 19461 Sierra Porto Road. 1"urtlt> Rock, snid hc\J c:hangi>d his mind ~1bout unil1 e~1 tion and no1v supports the threc-<11 s! r1ct plan. Noting he ll'as running becau~e overcro1vdl•fi schools had han1pered his children 's reading and vocabulary skills, Lee said he favors pern1anent con- struction over leasing of temporary classrooms and said the ne1v lrvinr district will have $6 to $8 million iu bond 1nonev avnilablc. irnmediately u po n unific'ation fllr con~truction. Oran Olson. a 43·year old engineering manager from 15361 H.ei ms Circle. the J{anch. urged approval of unificati'on and the abandonment of the Irvine school site in fa vor of a site gained from the Irvine Company on a swap basis. Sharon Sircello. 36, of 4111 Brisbane \Vay. University Park, urged support for unification to end the "chauvinis m" shown towal'd Irvine by members of both the San Joaquin and Tustin school boards. She urged new pilot programs, new funding sources. increased cit izen in- volvetnent, a!ternatll'e education such as night high schools for both pupils and adults. combinations of ungraded an d graded primary classes, and a dis trict •·ded icated to i n d l vi d u a I i t y not sameness.'' Norman fl. Ginsburg. a 35·year-old Ocean Vie\v E!e1nentary Distrfct ad- ministrator who lives at 5372 Kenosha Lane. Turtle Rock, noted he would be looking at 45-15. all year school plans both as a parent and an administrator in a district that is also trying the progran1. RFK Sori Pays Evasio1t Fi1ie BOSTO N (UPI 1 -Joseph P. Kennedy Ill, J!l. son of the late Sen . Jtobert I". K('nncdy, has pleaded gud1y through an attorney to a r harge of failing to pay a 30.cent turnpike toll. He was fined $25. The incident occurred Tuesday night on th e J\I a s s a c h u s et ls Turnpike. Sta te trooper Ech\'ard Bro\\·n rnndc the arrest. taking young Ken- nedy to Brighton police station y.·here he \ras booked on a charge of toll ev:ision. lit: ur)les guaranteed :stude nt represeri-. tibu tu the board. purent lnVulvemtnt and ;1 ('11rr1c:uJu1n "that doegn't abu5e the se1 gender" of students by.forcing Lht.m u1to soc ietally·accepted role3. rttrs. 8. Elaine Antboay, a 42-year.oJd high sC"hnol l'1lunselo r of 18891 Via Pal31 ino . 'l'urtle Rock. said in 20 years in 1«lut;1llu11 she 's seen the sa111e problems rt•tx·l'ur bel·.:iu se di.~ll'iC'ts seek t~mporary rilther than perrrttu1 ent solutions. She urged development of instructional 11ro~r:uns t!J;1' ;ire relevant to the , l1fc•111nes oi st\ldl'n!s ''nol ours , or our p;irent~. '' Geurgr Herritr, a 42·Year oldjnsurance .;1 ~ent of ..\9lll Karen Ann Lane , C111!fomia Hon't:S, suggf:'sled rh•· F:t ('an11no Real all 1 \"iH" sl'h1 1<•f p!.111 tri:d 11 ~1s an f'.~periment tl1:J1 t1111c 11•!1 ! de t1,rn1111c it s nobilit y. lie urg1·d l'il'l·li111\ ·1'ta·.~d:1y of a strong, li;d;111l'cd .~cl1ool hoard . .\lrs .. J;1nl' f\!1·1\t'r \"l'Y· a l6·ye;1r oil.I ac- <·ot111tunt and l1 uuse"'ife rrum 13682 l)nkavha C1rrle. The llanch, .said her so n tind ~xpericuced three years of -all·yeu r ~rhool ln a private school in Ne\vport Beach but nn1~ atte11ds R<lncho San Joa- quin 1ntrrn1ediate school. Although she favors :1H-year schooling, :-:he be!ie1 es uni fie at.ion will guarantee Irvine residents the chance to determine it s worth for then1selves. .Jeff Cohen . a :J2·year·old probation school teacher fr{)m 18315 Chicory Way, Lniversity fJark . sa!d he'd seen enough of lhl• "I don't care attirude" in student:'! whi ch he feels is fostered largely by schools. Ile urged provision of schools that en· cournge a feeling of bel onging on the part of students and teachers and called for a 15 to I student-teachec ratio in elemen· tary classes and a 20 to I ratio in high schools. Charles II. Boulanger. a 41-year-0\d elementary principal of 17992 t-.fann St.. University Park, urged consideration of modular construction techniques now ap- proved by the state. He called for cooperation with the new city government on population densities and laxes, urged a planned kindergarten to grade 12 curriculum, two-way eom- 1nunication V.'ith parents and selec tion o( a superintendent with ideas, experience and imagination . John C. Hakkila, a 40..year-old pro-- bation school administrator or 3712 Hamilton St .. Cul verdale , urged voters tG select board members in·ho are motivated, humble and y.·ho recognize the need for support fr om administrators, princi pals. teachers and the community. lie called for a goal of providing the best education and promised to involve parents at the problem solving level. John Hulbert , of 18106 Leatherwood \Vay, University Park. noted unification y.·ould mean a $20 per student incentive from the state a1nounting to $160,000 more a year f0r lrvine . He urged ad~ tion of a coordinated curriculum and ('Oopcra tion "'ith the city on planning for 11ew school sites. 11ulbert outlined the v.·ays the lhree- year lag for constructi on of high school.! can be cut in half. urged sale of Irvine school on a contingent lease.back basis to remove it from the district's inventory or classrooms th:it determines eligibil!ty for newi schoo l approvals and consideration of ti1 od ular construciion to e a s I ovefroy.·ding. _t\.dvertising l\fan Dies NEW \'ORK (APJ -TI1eodore L, Bates, 70, who founded his own ad~ \'t'rfising agency and drove it to become one of the five largest In the world. diod Tuesday. Ted Bates & Co. epitomized the ha rd-sell television commercial and pioneered in exploiting the medium as a marketing tool. If the countywkle system is eventually adopted, there would be required 14 aircraft. helicopter and fixed w:ng, with 44 employes including 21 pilots, nine observers. three administrators and It aircraft mechanics. The program would be administered by a mulU-jurisdictional aviation L'Qnl· mission. sofa bed sale! npw · .queen size • • • The primary purpose of the aerial neet, Bresnahan explained. would be police services but y.·ith the larger helicopters and fixed wing aircraf t, fire and rescue services could also be provided . In the past, the coun ty has u5ed aerial services during flood and fire situations. In one instance during the 1969 floods and on other occasions. Marine Corps heli - copters were volunteered to the county to aid in emergency control. ~ ' ~dg~Burns Down GUATAY (~P) -Guatay Lodge alongside lnter:state 8 burned to the ground Wednesday. The cause of the fire was not determined. th e U.S. Forest Service said. . " l"r"• O•Ar.Qt c,,.,, DAIL v PILOT, wlltt wtilcll '11$ comblnaf 1"4P N...,..P1-f11, I• pVbtlllhed b'f' tllle Q,•,,qe (11•'1 Pubtl•lling C11mPo1nf • .!.t!M· 1r~1t tdll'°"' •rt Pl.lllli.,,td, Mond1y tfl•Dll;!ll 'f rld•r. for (II•!• Me.1. NrHPO~I 8t•cl'1, , llt>ll!'>Vltn Br1cll1~ovnt1ln V1l1ry. Laqun.ll 1 ffdl, lrv~/Suldlrbltk ar.d $9n Cltnwnlt/ In Ju~n (~o .. 1r1no. I\ sinq!r r~ion•I IW1tion 1• l>U~!+'""' !.•lur<My~ .,...., Sund~'f:>. lt"l\4' pdnclp.al publl'"'"" plftnl ;, .u llO Wlhl !81y ST1tt1, C:l,.!t M~..i. C:1li!111nlt, tUU. Robt rf N. 'W!td P1r1lll•nl t rio;( PuDlo•l>tt J1clr R. Cu11•v Vi<~ P•e1klfl'I' •nd Cenft•I M•Nt91r Thom •1 1(11vil E<lflot Cou11ty Reports District Support for Prop. No. 2 du<il • size ..• $249. ThoM•t A . Mu1ph;,,, M11>111tno Ed.tor Cj.11!11 H. looJ Ric.ll1rd P. Nill Aul111n1 M•111111nt Ed11ort " Offkn Cott• MHI: JJ0 Wttl .. 'I' SI""" I HfWllOrt 8tl<h' JJlJ NIWllOrt llt1.1l•¥1rd L•llU"'I IU1ch: m "°'"'" """'119 1h....,t1"o;if0fl BrK.h: ltlll 8Mch 80\lltv"d r )t" Cltm .... te: >OS ,,.orftl El Utnlno. Rttl Tel.,.._ f7141 642-4121 Cl...m.t! Adnrtl1l19 642·1671 sn ca.-.. Aft O.,•rt-llf"I: Tt..,._ 4fJ-44JO Olfl'f""lol\I, lt72, Or_,,,. CtHt l"vl!lltM ... c;p...111nv. No "'w' 111M""111, lnu.11-.110"'-oilltorl•I mttttt" or ad¥1rt11t"""l1 111rti.. •r llf 1~..:i wll~I af1KL.I ...,, 111.1""' Of COPJl'ltilll OWl'lt•, Eol'ld cl-_,,.. ,.141 11 c..-11 ~. io.nlt. ~rl•tlon bY ctrrltf 116S 1111¥/ IW INU U .l S motlltlly: mnulry ~11Nt1'M U,., mo111111.,, I I ·r"·enty·two Orange County school dislricl.!l and 10 civic leadf:l"'s or organiia· lions are urging a yes vote on Proposition 2 on Tuesday's primary ballot, according to a· release from 'the Orange County Department of EdrJcation. San .Joaquin School .District and the Tustin Union lllgh ·scooo1 Dl.!trict boards have endor!ed the proposition. which would provide $2~ mifllon In state bonds for earthquake ftafety and $100 mllllon for school building fund s. The Orange County Dtpart.ment nf Education Hstl'<I the following as also being In suprort of the bond i!lsue: Ct1llfornia Statt Department of E<lurn· lion. (;overnor Jleagan, Ex·Govern-0r Ed · mund G. BrOwn, State Superintendent of Schools Wilson Riles, A J,. t.. -C 1 O • California ChAmbtr of Co m m er c e , California Ta xpayers A 5 soc i a l Io n , California Labor Federation, St ate Parenl·Teacher .As.<K>CiatiOn and the Orange County Board of Supervi!IOrs. Overcrowdin,s and i n e f f t c t i v e in- struction caused by lack of proper building fund s, said Or. Robert Peterson, ()range County superintendent of. schoob, ('An create "educatiorially deprived students.'' Education helps determine "the ef· fecliveneS.! or our cltiUnry and every deterrent is regretted," he added. For that reMOn. some districts that don't 1mmcdlately need the fund s support the proposition, he said. "No district can really predict with any perfection that the y're not going to need the · money before It's all ustd up," he said, pointing to unexpected tnrthquakes or popul.atlon explosions as affecting fac- tors. PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open as bed ' Ol)on M on., lhurs. & Fr i. Evt s. , • These are very comfortable sofa beds for sitting and sleeping_ • A wide selection of fabrics and ' ' colois to choose from. • Reversible backs and seat cushions. r~~~ 22 15 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA , CALI F. I l • I ~ I 1 " ( f i ll I g ~ ' ' " d ' n y b " • .r OS « ly It "j ,. ,~. Jr ' " r di ki I a ·' T . th ti a ~r , Jh rlt a- d ,, it. ti •b lh th I de ~ si 1~· re ~~ do w ev • )' T its wi ch C<l f DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Support "I don't t·are abou t oclier t duco.tiott districts. Thi! i$ rite Tusr111 d1 stni:I, ru,1 b!I Tusr1n people, and. paid for by T1.1s1nt taif'-~ · -Robert Barrh.olom6tD, rruSi(C, 'J'u31111 U111011 lfig/1 St·hool District, Mau 22, J.972. F'or parents of half of the Tustin Jli gh dl.strirt J>U~ils -those \\'ho live in Mission Vie jo. El 1'oro, and Irvine -tins recent statement should be reason enough lo support t.he proposed reorganization in next Tuesday's election . It is precisely this "let then1 eat cake" attitude on the part of the majority of board me1nbers -fron1 'l'ustin proper -that has for years galled residents of the Saddleback Valley and Irvine. On 'J~uesday, voters f rom throughout the district \\•ill deci de if the presE!nl high school districl and feeder elcn1cnlary districts are to be scrapped in favor of three nc\v unified school districts. lf a majority of voters agree it is time the educa~ l ion of children from kindergart en to grade 12 shoul d be controlled by locally-elected school boards, new uni- fie d districts serving Irvine, h1ission ViC'jo and 'l'ustin would be created. They "'ould begin operating en July I, 1973. On that day. the Tustin J.ligb , San Joaquin, Trabuco and Tustin elementary districts \Vould dissolve. 'fhe builcLings. assets. staff and bon d obliga tions cf the existing four districts would be equitably divided an1ong the three new unified school districts. Supervising the distribution or property \Vi\l be the members of the three new school boards selected on Tuesday by voters in each of the proposed di stricts. The new school boards will have one year to plan for the transition, hire staff and work out budgets for the new districts. For the first time those co mmunities experiencing the 'tnost rapid growth, Irvine and Mission Vi ejo. will h ave no opportunity t o elect sch~l board members v.:ho \Vilt reflect the desires and concerns of each community. For Irvine, an area that has traditionally supported He Doesn 't Publicize The Phonies (sYD1''EY J. lIARRIS) Answer11 to Various Queries That Come la the !\tail: From R.B., Raleigh, North Carolina : •·\Vhy r!idn 't you ever comment on the Cli fford lrving ,.case v.·hi!e it was making fronl-page news?" Because publicizing phonies is not my idea of an honest Uay's work, and also because I wouldn't read a book about J-lou·ard l·lughes even if it \\'ere authentic. From L.B., a 4th· grade stud ent in l·'redericton, New aruns\\·ick : "After seeing S<l many def· initions in your col- lllnn recently, I won· der if you could tell me hO\\' v.•e began to C'all 3 certain kind of pants 'jean s.' "'our co lumn is very popular and read by .so many around here.'' Y01 J SLY LITI'LE devil , you knew just \\'hat to say in order to get an answer, didn 't you? \Yell, Miss Flatterer. "jeans" is short for "jean fusti an." a fabric of 1·otton nnrl flax originating in Genoa, Ila· Jr. Now do your own homework after this! From A.N .. Sausalito. Cal.: "Are you loo mealy-mouthed to t:ike a pu blic pos i- Tion on the subject of school busing? \rhat is vour view"" I ha ve -disqualified n1y self on lhc sub- ject. ~ince my child ren attend a private sthaol. an1I I lh1nk anything I :;aid on the 5\1bject would be self-serving. For the record. though, I don 't th ink it makes any d1ffere11ce since they just get different kin ds of rotten educations. Dear Gloomy Gus Don't the promoters of that de- structive Proposit ion. 9 realize they nullify their clean environment pre- tensions by tempting shoppers to ~ litterbugs when they inundate them in parkin~ tots wit h their misleading handbills? -B.E.A. T~lt h•l11r1 rfll~tt "''Cltrt' vl<lwt, 11111 .. .., .... ru, !1101• " '~· MWll"IPlr, StnCI Y111r • ., J>lfVt M G!wmv Gua. D•llY f'llll. FROJ\-1 P.B.E., Long Island, N.Y.: "T agreed wilh your column on !he beer drinkers and the ir filthy habits of tossing cans everywhere -but \\•hat about you miserable cigaret smokers and your bults?" You've got me there -as an inveterate puffer, I plead guilty to fljpping cigaret butts indiscriminately, u·hich just proves that there are Yahoos in every cleme nt of the population. From B.G., GrRnd Junction. Colo.: "'Who do you think is going to be the Democratic candidate for President in 1912?" Someone the Democrat s lhir.k they cRn spate !or the sacrifice I his fall : except for a disaster, the Republican priitaries in Peking settled the issue. FROl\-1 C.W., Fort \\'orth. Tex.: 11Af1er readin~ you r column about Jonah and !he v.·hale, I v.·onder \vhat religious denomina· tion you belong to.'' I am . as you could learn from l~ansard's or the Almanach de Gotha , a member of the Refom1 Evangelica l Druids. a small bul strict sect. whose princi pal creed can be expressed tersely : "~1ost peop~ clon·i even li ve once." Fron1 D.R.S .. Pompano Beach, F!a .: "Do you think that eventually every country will be Con1munist?'' Yes, unless the capitalists are smart enough to make everyone a capitalist in time to forestall this dreary prospect. Pleasures of Middle Age 1ifidd le <'ge is the least appreciated period of life_ People treal ii as if it were a loathcsome dise-ase they don't want :inybody else lO know they have acquir~. They often act as if they thought tNt if they paid no atten- tion to it. it would go 11way like a bad dream in the night. Well . it "'on't. On the other hand mitl · die age is no 24-bour· u-day. around the clock nightmare. Af· ter they get used to it. many of its vie· t \ms find middle age to be more en}oy- ,,ble, in some waya, than youth. You d<Jn't have to be daffy to recognize that the. middle years oC ei:l.stence have their consoling rewards as well as their demerits. Some of them 11re on the wry _ side, 1Nt that dotsn't mete them Im real. RERE ARE A FEW reasons why you l!houldn't dissolve in ttar.t on arriving at your 40t.h birthday: You don't have to call up an tJectronk dating bureau lo f1nd out which girl u•ould be best for you to take out .10me everiing . Your _wife will nomlnat.e her1t:lf. It Isn't neceswy to st.rt ,.lll'Chlng for a blgget ap:artment or a larger house tr you see a stork'• wtng on .. \he «n'llon. 1'be stork no longtr btps your addrns in il!i addreu book. You probably have become famlllar ••ith the !)'mptotns of some kind af chronic d~ase wit h which you'U kttp company in your old age. And it doe.sn't ( __ 11_A_L_n_o_YLE __ ). seem as terrible as you Ulought It might be. YOU IIAVE LOST much of the in· security that secretly plagued your youth. Therefore you don't make a nuisance of yourself by trying to top every \.\·itty remark you hear at a cocktail party . Unless y~u have become an alcoholic, you have l~rned to take only two la.st ones for the road instead of fiv•. Your children att either out of their teens, or near the end of them, and now aod then do aomething thoughtful that leads you to turped. the(. may turn into human belngs, ah.er al . Some month! you are even able to pay I.heir phone bill!t without crying out to high heaven in financ ial agony. THERE IS NO lncllnallon lo jump on the bandwagon for every new intolerance or promised reform that parades by your door. You may even be willing to drop to~ old outworn prejud ice that kept you smug before. 1 Excepl for financing a new Butomobile now ind then, lt 11 likely that you ate through with undtrtaklng an y major new economic burdens. You ha"e All the mortgages and life Insurance that any man ln hi• right mind ne<ds. AU ln all, there ii as much aboul mid· die oge to enjoy as Ihm! ls that nted! to bt forgiven. Unification scbool finance measures, local control may well mean easing of the cla.ssroan\ shortage that has plagued the eJementary district and wtU soon hamper <1uailty edu· cation at Universi ty f.l igh_SchooL For t-.·lission ViejO, where Lhe high school cl assroo111 shortage is even mole critical, unification \l!'tll provide locally determined and financed building programs or alterniltive scheduling programs lbat r efl ect that con1· Jnunity':; willingness to support education. In Tustin, \\'here gro \\·'lh virtualJy has ceased to be a problc:n1, \'Olcrs )\"Ill no longer \l!ield the ballot box pD\Ver to under1:ul the finance needs of the lrv1ne ;i ncl ~1 iss1on \1iejo con11n unities -or be burdened by those needs. Unifi catio n deserves the sup port of all residents rtf the Tusti n ll1gh district on Tuesda y. TMR Students Neecl Scl1ool Septe1nhcr is drawing near and San Joaquin Ele· mentary S1:hool District officials still don't kno\v \\!hat to do \VJth their traina ble mentally retarded ('l'l\'IR ) stu- dents th ey have a legal responsi bilit y to educate. Controversies over the location of the sc hool , over the bid, and finally over fundin gs ha\·e caused costly delays. 'l"'wo board 1ne1nbcrs have i;enerally aligned them- selves with 1'rustee Gratian Bidart \\'ho has said ht: \von 't spend a cen t of genera1 fund money to pay for any part of the facility. Preston rt ov.•ell disagrees and recently pointed out that the di strict spends $700 per child on normal students \Vhile the slate provides funds for the TA'1Jl program. Th~oject is being rebid with several items listed for deletron in an effort to get the bid low enough for the state to fi nance the school. It seems reasonable that non-essential items -red tile roofing structures, for example -could be funded by the distr ict later. The important thing is to get the school built. I •Joe Average' Not• Apostle of Reverage' Vote Should Decide Death Penalty To the Editor: So people who wish to overturn the California Supreme Court ruling on the death penalty are "apostles of revenge." Not really! ~1ost of us are just "Joe Average," who wish to extend to· the people of California the right to decide. Believe it or not. vot ing is a right of the la~·-abiding citizens of California who are registered to vote. Certain restrictions are placed on this right. so that the Jaw·abiding citize ns can decide. I WOULD LIKE TO draw to your at4 tention the fact that in our penal facilities psychiatric care is provided. Many persons have been helped in this capacity. However, our courts and penal facilities are filled with cases of "tern· porary" insan ity . These people a;·e tried, convicted , incarcerated, treated and set free just to re-do \\'hat they \\·ere treated for. You see. they \\'ere "temporarily" in- sane. Please explain how a psychiatrist ran t reat these people for the remainder of their li\•es. Please explain why some reluI7J and go through the same routine. Please explain \.\'here the end or our "helping the poor sick mind" ls to stop, and \\'here self-preservation i~·rong. "JOE AVERAGE " ls ~lol~~o double-- lock his door s, r1on't shoot an intruder unl ess he tries to kill you first , "Jane Average '' is advised lo carry, in her purse. protection. No guns , of coursf.'. Those arc concealed ~·eapons and against the Jaw. \\'e are expected lo excuse burglary, robbery . child molesting. rape, murdcr, harass mf'n!. ass<tult -you name it. Jusl bec11use old Average is in cont rol of his actioos and reactions. he must excuse. NOW TJIE CALIFORNIA Supreme Court says \\·e must give every major criminal th e opportunity of being freed fr om confinement and free lo commit murder again, all wHhout his ord ered death. l agree there should be stiffer gun con- lrols, including the registration of all guns and examination or each person having them. But this Is only a .small part of a big problem. To accuse the "apostles of revenge" or Jumping on a bandwagon because of another shooting Is ridiculous. My guess is you just didn't circulate among J oe Average people v.·hen the decision was handed down. Many were for retaining capita! punishment. MRS. C. R. DEWEES By George --~ Dear George : Why doesn't your ed itor fire you off your job! FURIOUS Dear F\lrlous : Because 1 am so insight-laden, widely read. helpful and com· passionBte. Also, because he's been trying tO figure ou t for the past JO years e:ir:actly what my job ls, and it's that first step that baffles him. Otar George: Wou ld you accept one 1trlou1 note? A nurse Jn my ward here tells new patienu about your col- umn In our local paper and I loo k forward to It every day now. It gives n lot of people a laugh and I thought you would Hkri to khow. HEART PATIENT 0.Ar ThoughtruJ : I 11ppreci<lte you lltklng the time to tell me that. Than"k.s very much. Thnt 's not a ~erious note - 11 lightens my whole doy. ( MAILBOX J Letlers from rea ders are 1velcome. Normally writers sliould co11 vey their 'nessages T11 300 words or less. The rig llt to condense letters to fit space or elin1inat.e libel is re served. Alt let- ters must include signatures and moil· tng address. b11t 11am.es may be with- held 011 request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be pub· Jished. Problen• Transfer To the Editor:; ,, Consultants for Newport Beach urged last \\'eek that coMercial jets be moved lo El Toro Marine Air Station. It's bad enough that 1.700 children have to attend school right under the El Toro take-<1ff patt ern (where noise level s sometimes reach 100 dbs.) but there is no way that we parents would stand for add ing con1- mercial jets as well. I sympathize with the residents of Newport , bu t if this ha ppe~. the .scream from Irvine School parents will echo in all of Orange Coun ty ... even louder than the jet noise. THIS JS ONE issue where. I'm sure. every parent in Orange Counlv would agree y,·ith me. You do not sOJve one serious problem by creating another. Unt il we can remo ve our children from the Irvine Elementary School site, I must seriously object to :iny added danger ;1nyonf.' n1 ight suggest. LOIS BENES Irvine Tomorrow To the Editor: This leuer ls not intended to offend, but rather to put into a more proper perspecti\'e, the continued presence of Irvine Tomo rrow as a political organiza· lion wh ich unknowingly continues to divide and rekindle the past animosities or the people of lr\'ine. I would \\'ish to believe that members or Irvine Tomo rrow are una?.·are of the in1- pact <>f their recent actions. I was under the impression, as J'rn .sure mosl. of the people were !hat c>nce our city govern· ment began to reach its full polcn· ha! in Sl'l'k in~ full t· 11 I 'le n \n. volven1ent. rh:it 111! po J J t J ,. ~1 1 or q11asi-po!it1cal nrg;n11z~1\IHHS 11·ntd1J 1hvr . .;t thernsclvcs of th1•1r secul:ir 1n\£'rc..;ts an4l join, rather thnn rrin1petr v.•1 th, r1ur l'OU!l· cilrnnnic conunil !l't'S , \l'h!l'h tnilv l'Ol't•r the \1•i tle spettrurn nf t·1t11.l'n 1ntl·r~·st:; a11d invol\'cment. 110\\'E\'ER. I SF.E , :111d I :11"11 not alune, lH\ escala!11111 111 the l'fh11"1 «: nf Irvine Tomorro11• lo sponsor polllh'.'ll t.:an- d11ta1es an1ong their 111en1bcrs or· (I( 1heir f)('Cu!iar point of viev.", an1t Ln 1ncrca:;c their activities in areas that are now receiving the full concern and attention of our city's committees. TI1ese actions can onlv divide and dest roy the very moral fibers !hat make this city so very, very different from all the other cities in this nation of our$, "Jn conclusion. I would hope Iha! the Trv ine Tomorrow leader.ship 1vould agrtt to discourage what is now considered by mnny to be ruture duplic:itlon of, or c<1111petition v:it h. our cit izens con14 mittccs. E. A. s~11r1r !Hilk F l11orldallon To the Editor: The American Denial Association and the American i\>1edical Assoc iation ha\'e hot h ad\·oca ted the treatment of \\':lier by fluoride to prevrnt tooth decay. On the olher hand the gene ral public wrlle in considerable numbers to their local papers expressing fears aboul possi- ble harmful ef fects. The threat 10 the in-- dividual's freedom o! choice arouses in· ten se feelings of resentment wh ich un- doubtedly innuence locnl co u n c i Is hesitating on the brink of adopting water flu oridation. 1'.1eanwhilechildren are growing up su f- fering unnecessarily from the increasin g incidence of dental caries and the en· suin,i;( ill-healfh \vhlch can harm them for the rest of their lives. FLUORIDE TABLETS and the 1f.!< of toothpastes with fluoride are both .steps in the right dJrection, but these methods call for unceasing watchfulness on the part of parents, or in whose care the children are duri ng the important fonnative lime of the teeth's enamel. A method V•hic h fits more easily into normal habits would be better. Tt is not far IJJ seek. ~f ilk ha s been shown by :scientific res earch among sch o o 1 children, no tably by Dr. E. Zlegler of America's Past Told The epic adventure of the discovery and expl oration of the North American continent -from medieval legends (){ Celts and Norsemen through the estab- lishment of the first permanent 8f'lllf'- ments on these shores -is chronicled with vivid, eye-witness accounts by the explorers themselves In a magnificentl y ilh15trated vohune. The Dlscovf'ry of North America (American llerltllge 1""8,'$25). The pictures -370 In all, 75 in color - have been selected [rom rare con- temporary records preservtd I n museums ind librsrh!s throughout the ~·orld . These maps , charts, draw!ng:i;:, and palntln~s made by e:"tplorers on t~lr voy11ges revtal ho"· the New World looked t.o the eyes oC earl y European pioneers. TRIS BOOK IS ~ collaborntion among three distinguished hlstorlitns: l)rofessors W, P. (..'ummlng, D. B. Quinn. and the late Dr. R. A. Skfll-On. The Discovery of North Amerirll Is th e fir st slngle-·\'o\u.me, documcn1ed.,~count of what was .seen, c.tperlenccd, and recorded bv the Europe;in di~co\'erers of America . The book's six cha pters range ( T~E BOOKMAN) over the possible medieval explorations: the emerging knowledge of the eaat COBSt Crom Cabot to Cartier : tht Spanish e:it· ploralions of the southern Interior and W~st Coast: the 16tlH:entury attempts at col1Jniz:1tion ; the .search for a Northwest Pa ssage; and the beginnings o f pernianent selllement in the early 17th century. EACH CHAPTER has an Introductory historical essay whith «lmments on the orlgina l accounts and illuslrntlons that fQ!low. In add ftlon, annotnt1ons at'- company the flrst·~rson acronnts, M>me of u•hich have ntvcr before tx>en trnn!;]altd Into Eng lish. The DisC<lvery of North America Is a unique hi~t-iry of an excllinr, and iten· erally litrle-knou1n chapter in the Amcri- CAl1 post A.nn 0 . o.:.e \~'!ntf'rthur, Swll1.erland to be a safe vehl· (·If' for fluoride \Vhlc h can t'ns!ly be mixed l!lt~1 11 nnd distributt'd U'ilh a family 's d;1i\y 1'Upply in clearly labeled bottles. This (':\n be done by any procf'ssing da iry 01.s 1ll•n1ons tratrd by the llorrow D<-ntal i\lllk Foundation, a non-profit making rh;1r1table trust cS!;lb!iSh('d in England lo it1\"N':1se public un<lf'rstanding of the problf'm and show this safe 11\ternalive .....111 lo more co:.tly and v.·11st'Cful meth· Oils. TH ERE IS NO DANGER In the in- gPstion of the controlled amount up to the age of 11 years : there Is equally no reason to continue it throughout adult lire. To do so, u occurs when fluoride is introduced into piped water supplies, is to incu r uMece ssary ei:pend.ltur-e. Only I percent of the water wjJJ be drunk and the remainder wiJI now away Into the .s('wage system. Why we J,000 timeJ 1norc Ouorlde than i1' nccess,1ry tt> n1·hieve the same result? \Vhether run under a sta tf' schen1e or lhrough other meaw . the ad vanla ~es or 1he mil k method 11re outstanding Dental r..11lk would strengthen young teeth in the rormatlve years. which is the sole ob- jective of f1uoridation. B.E. PErTI'I'I' f or the Borrow Dental. Milk Foundation \Vaterloovil le Portsn)outh. 1-;ng land Underpaid Clll' To the Editor: Gueu the Callfomla Highway Patrol ju.st isn't politically motivated enough for Governor Reagan to "'a rrant equa l wages and benefits to those (l f n pOl!reman, thoui;:h the work of the CHP is far more dangerous -to themselves. BERNY WELS H Write to Congre•• To the Editor: Do you know that Sen. John Tunney'• "good friend." Sen. Edward ~1. Kenned'y, has proposed that $20 million or the tax- payers' money be appropriated for a n&· tlonal park around Chappaquiddi ck Pond? Do we need any more government held and administered land? Jn 1970 the federal bureaucracies held "o percent of the land area of the United States, some of which ranchers and t attle raiaer1 u3ed for grazing and paid no taxes on. It makes you won d e r •hit tM population gang is talking about when it tells us "'C are running out of land to house fut ure genera tions. Unless you want to help finance a memorial to ~1ary Jo Kopec-h11te, tell your representatives and senators to voCt DO on SB 3485. VIRC JNJA McHONE ORAMOI COAfl DAILY PILOT Robtr-t N. Weed, Publishn' Thomas K(tuil, Editor .Albt.rt W. Bof.t!'s EcUt.orial Page Editor ~ f'dltori•I Pl\R'.C or tM o.117 r l\ot Sl'<'ks to Inform &ud alimu- 11\fr r1'111!rrs by pr'"t'Sr.ntlnr this Til""\•,,1•Apcr'1 upinll>rw and Con'l- n •111 ;uy on topics of lnltrt"tt 11nd "1 ,:nlflcftn('(', by provldlni: 11, forum fnr th~ exf'!T""!Ulon or our ft'ftdC"T'K' aplulun.\, 111td by prett•nUng the d1\·c•rii;<-\Ir" 11nln11111r in!ormf'd ob- 1r r\"••r.; nnd gpnki,men on topics ;1{ the driy, Thursdoy, June I , 1972 I .. • UA!L Y PJL01 -'-------~-----~·>- Army, Marine~ Five Bonib She lter Victirns Smelled Gas , S urvivor S a ys l'rote•I Planned f'olk singer Joan Baez an d rep· resentatives of about 20 an!1· 'var groups anJ1ounced plan ~ \Vednesday for forming a hll · man c hain of women and chil- dren around the Capitol June 22 in an effort to pressu re Con- gress into cutting off funds for the V.'ar. Offering Bonus \\'ASII17'GTO:--; {lJJ~11 -Fur thi: rir;;t time since the Civil War , the Army and the 1.tarine Corps today began offering $1,500 cash bonuses to men who enli st fur combat training. The bonuses will be offe red until th~ end or August in a move to attract n\ore voluntttrs. TIK"y may be offered again later if the trial period pro\·es successful. 'rhere are soi~ cat<:IK"s. Tile \•olun- tL>crs 1nust ~o in for four years, in stead Of the usual two-year hiteh for infantry. artill ery and armor; and the bonus \\'ill lit: pa id only after the volunteer is u1 uni fonn, has SU<'cessfully completed his training and has been accepted for con1- bat ser\'ir.:e. [)claying the payments in that ma nne r L'i an attempt ttJ t1.void the abuses "'hich occurred the last tin1e the bonuses were paid, more than 100 years ago .. During the Ci vil "'ar some n1en enlisted, col- le<.1ed their bonus -it was callfd a ''bounty"' -and then deserted, onl y 10 i:uli:-.L ai;.U11 111 JJ11JU1er part of lhe cow1- 1ry to repeai their deception. They were called "boul.l) jumpers·· and they brought the system into ouch disrepute that it has not been .1sed s1oct:. But Congress authorized 'ue new bonus in September , tel11~ the T>efense Dep-ctrt- ment at the time that 1! could offer a W/ao'• lie? bounty of up to $3.000. Defense Secreta ry Do you recognize th is :\1e!vin R. Laird Urt·1ded to t1se u11!y !1;1lf rnan '! \Vl'll , believe II th:it amount for the sun1mer test period. or not lt':i .actor Bllrl Tile plan \\"as f.l1\'en no ad\·an<.·e publi<·1-Lancaster 1n one of the I}' so that youni: 1nen \\'ho intended to strangesl disguises of s1~n up durin~ ~l a v 1-1·ould not delay their his career -a black t.-nl istment to take advant.1 ge or thi-priest -for his role in bonus: but the Pent :1gon began <1. full 'Scorpio.' a f'l1\ thriller pt1blicily c:impaign on the offer today. being filmed in \.\'ash· The bonus is ;i inied at th is year's crop ington. of high school grHdLI:ites who are coming --=---------- into a labor market \\"ith a 6 perce nt Prisoners VALUESE, N l' t L'Pl f - ·The survivor of ;i bon1b sheller exploslo1i ..-that killed her five plp}'mate:i ll a i d Wedne5day t~e c hildrf!n had :i:neaked into the sh!-her~ to play cu1d v.:ere afraid lo Ufll anvone the concrete cubjc'le refked of Ji!~S- I N SHORT .. Cynthia •·Bea" Picou. 10. e.~('aped death beraust> she y,•as !he firsl ont of th~ children to leave the shelll'r and \A:ns a little dl.~l ance a\\·av 1vhen the gas ~xplvded TueS- day ev~n ing. A federal 1nvest1gaWr, Jack (' \Villia rns of the Alcohol, 'l'obacco and fircarn1s UniL .said a valve lt•adinl( from a gasoline ta11 k into the bon1b shelter had been leaking, and lhe explosion apparently OC· 1·u rred bt'"cause of the tinv :-;park created \\'hen one of the children flipped a light switch. J(leindienst 'Victi>rvr' unemployment rate O\·er all, and a 17 percent jobless r;i le for their age g1 oup. Pentagon officials said if the dri ve s11c- t.'eeds this summer tht'y be lieve !ht' id- ini nistralion's plan for an al\-volun·eer Arn1y beginn ing 13 n1onlhs fro1n now V.'ill be a soccess. TI1e bonus idl'o1 is as old as lhr republic. Five n1on ths before the Declaration of Jndepe11dence \\'a5 pro- t:laimed. the ConUnental Congress. on George \Vashington's advice. adopted an enl1stment bounty. lt pr<l\'idt·d $4 for 1nen without ril1e;-; :ind $6.67 for men '.1-'ith rifles who enl isted. Seek Viet War En<l~ •·They obser~·ed some gas and odor and discussed It arnong then1si:l ves. Wt they did not tell any adults about it because they y,·ere afraid of being puni s hed .'' said \Villiams after in terviewing Fifteen Ameri can prisoners of !he unty sur\"il'Or. y,•ar in South Vietnam \\"ASHINGTON (AP)_ Re- purportedly have signed a jecting industry pleas for Seen Despite Cranston \rASfllNGTON t UPl 1 \VASlllNGTON IAP) -Senators op- pooed to the nomi nation of Richard G. Kleindienst to be attorney general have gained another vote, but suppor1ers re- main conndent or a decisive \•ictory n1argin. Sen. Alan Cranston <D-Cald.1, an- nounced his opposition to the nomination. \\•hich may be 1•oted on by the Senate next week. Senate debate began "'ednesday after a long delay 'While the Judiciary Committee investigated Kleindienst's role as deputy attorney general in th e settlement of an- titrust cases against I nter n a t ion a I Telephone & Telegraph Corp. So far only a few Democratic liberals DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oelivtry of the Daily Pilot Is guaranteed A10t!d~'f·Frid•'f: H yov no not n•~• Vov~ p;,P"' O'f ~:JO pm . t .lll •nd your COPV ..... 11 bl l>•OVQnl 10 you. c111s ••t r1ken ur1•11 7:30 p,m, Slh,o•d9V Ind Suncf~y: !f YOU do ,,or rr<:fll>• your copy oy 9 e m, S1111«lly, or 1 1 .., ~ur>dav. tflt ~ml 1 coov will l>t" orougni 10 vou. C1J11 1r1 liken unlll 10 e.m. Telephones MM! Or1np• Co...nty Ar•as •.••. , U1·1!71 l'tonhwt•t Hun!\notcn e111>cn •nd 'fttllmlnlltr ....•...••.••.•• f4 .. 122t $111 Cllmenle. C1pj1tr1no llt.11c~. 3an Ju.11 C1p!"r1no, [M,,. Polnf, $cU1~ .La';lllM, LlllUIW Nl!111<1( •••• '"2-4411 have announced they '\'ill vote aga1n.~l confirn1ation despite the luror stirred up by 22 da ys of hearings on lhe ITT affair. Crenston based his opposition on \\"h:al he called KleiiKl iensl's lat·k of sensibilit y for constitutional right s. "Mr. Kleindienst has evidenced a high tolerance for v.·ire-tappin g, 1nass arrests and preventive detent ion," Cranston said in a :speech prepared for tocb1y's debate. "His ll1inking is fuzzy \\'hen lt comes to distinb'llishing betv.•ecn pe9ple "'' ho threaten our nation's security and people who 1nere!y di sagree "'ilh h i n1 politicall y,'' Cranston added. During the Jtevolutionary \Var the bonus rose to $200, and during the Civil \\"ar it ranged from $100 to $300. Durinj! 1he latter conflict some to\Yns offerf.'<i bigger bonuses -ranging uP to $1 ,500 - in an attempt to attr;ict volwileers fro1n oUier communities so the local boys \\'Ould not ha\'C to march off to war. Floridll. _Den1a1itls Autis1nog Action statement ask ing Congress lo delay, the federal go ... ernment !Stop th~ "immoral. tragic is ordering manufaclt)rers to ~·ar." ruak~ iimall chi Id re n's The appeal and the names or iileep\\'ear fire-resistant the alleged signees 'vere C(Jn\merce Secretary Peter broadcast over "Liberation (;. Peterson told ne1-1•sme11 Radio." operated by the Vie t \Vednesda y the first phas~ of Con g. Three of the n1en 11·ere the flanunability standard. previously listed as offici;ill y.., CO\'ering :sizes 0 to 6X. \\'ill go missing 111 action. lntv effect July 29. Th~ English-Jnnguage broad-After that d~1 !e, children's (:t1st was monitored by the sleepy,·ear n1ust be resist;int to U.S. ,-?overnn1cnt Tuesd:iy . i!<une or the government \Vill UP I obta ined a transcript label the garn1ents nammable eop~· from J: o \" e r nm e n t and p!a<'e a w;.1rning on the ::-:ources Hnd the Deferise clothing . I Kleindienst"s non1i na!i on lo ;,;uc~ed i\llA\11. Fla. (..\P1 -En\"ironinental Department has confirmed its A year later. all sleeping ronner All }'. Cen. John N. ~litchell v.·as ofl icia ls here have demandl.>d .1ntisn1og authen1icity. But a spokesn1:in garments in sizes Oto 6X must suhmilted by President Nixon in mid-action by three states after charging that said department policy pro-nu~t:t the :stil,l1dard or be February ,and originally \\'3S approved an ''industrial air pollution bank " \Vhich hibited confirming !he name,s banned from the n1arke1. unanin1ous!y bv the Judici11ry Conuni ttee. drifted do\\·n fro1n the North blanketed of prisoners li.stcd. 'fhe Pen-• Si•rgei•!f l"elu!fe d J Son1e of ihe comn1 ittee 's liberal the Sunsh ine State \\'ith sn1oky haze for tagon \\'ednesday started to ' Democrat s. however, v»ere critical of fi\•e davs . noti fy the relatives of the men SILVER SPRING, ~Id_ Ju stice Depart1nent pol icies ()Jl civil \\'eathei satelli tes traced the now 01 r1 amed in the broadcast. (UJ:>l 1 -Surgery to remo\·e a righl ~ and Ci\"il li beMil'S "Lhi!l unusual pollutive load " fro1n in. catristrophic consequences " bullet from the spme of GO\'. Sen. Barr.v t:oldv.·:Her tR·Ariz.), said at dustri al regions of Ohio. Pennsylvania "Rational beings re r Ii f v l:eorge C. \\13lJace has been the start of the &iiate debate. "Soni(' a11d 'feflllE ssee. said the Dade County mistakes '\\'hen recoenized.". pu! off by doctors fur the 1n1- l1berals are•afraid Dick Kleindienst 1~·ill pollut iOJt control ch ief. Peter 'Roljel. lhe statrinent said . "The tim e 1nediate fLilure, according !o a be too good at the job he has been pro· F'or five days beginning May 2l. thr is critical. Pl ease f:ike Pf-Wa!Jace aide. posed for. I suspect the opposition ~tern~ pollution obsc:ured the norn1a\Jy clear rective le gislati ve action . \\'e Billy Joe Camp. \\'a llace's from the very thing I bellc1·e '''e need the skies of sunnv Florida . must choose bctlreen an im-pre;;s secrelary, said \Ved- most in the Depar11nent of Justice -a As the sniog lay trapped at ground moral. tragic \\•ar w i th nesday thal doctors have tou gh, unyielding, uncompromising a~ level by a temperature inversion, a rise catastrophic consequences and decided to postpone surgery to plication of the law to all parties of all in respiratory diseases and hospital ad-the honorable future of the remove the bul!et which has social, economic or political statuses." mi ssions was reported. United States." left the go11ernor partially puralyzed at lloly (' r n ., s hosµ1t<1 I Ly ~ 111 b u I fl n f' t Hospital sil)ce ~lay 15. "''hen \\'ednesday. Ur. Augusto Ort11,. he was gunned dov.·n vdule the physician ~·ho ha s at- campa 1gn1ng al a nearby lcildt'<.I Chavez during !he fa.~t. J..aurt'"I , ].ltJ .. shuppu1 g l"t'"nl~r dc~citl>ed llJ'l t ondi11011 <15 e ~l ent P1·i cPs f lft :-.criuus anti :.aid ht uri.:c11U y \\'ASlll NC~T(lN IAI ') ni-edt!d Ult•dJ~'iit iun After slumping lor t \\"of_ months. rar1n li vestock prices LA YER are on the mov~ again and I ~""may ro"' ,.,,.,s umer s 10 THE LOO K gird their loin!'I at 1nl'at l t:ot111ters. ... '!"he Agriculture J.>epartn1t nt , reported Wednesday that li ve· J 1·at1le prices ruse in tvlay to r1n all-time high t1f S.13.10 per 100 I pounds. llogs avi::raged an 11- Pt"l'C'<'nt inc.TC:lSt'" to tl-1.90. 1na1nly as a result or fe1-1·er baby pigs last winter. e Clu1 ve;r Ill Pl!OENIX, Ar iz . (API -1 Cesar Cha1•ez. 1he lJui ted 1 Farrn \\'orkers ll'tUJer . has been taken to a hospit<il. weakened by a 10-day last. l"havez. his face hollu1-1·ed and drawn. wa s taken to the LOO K 17th I 1r.,l11• WESTCLlff l'LAIA N•wport 1.-h IN-SINK-ERA TOR REPUBLIC "GEMINI" THE NO. 1 DISPOSER wn11 !Tllkt• l n·Sinl<·IEr•I<" m111t w1nt..i~ Bea1111!11I co•· roi t0n-prOC1I ll1lnl1u ""I. .IE•<IWll~M Ilk• th• "Wr•n<I•· •II•" tn11 ll>h .,.. .. <IN r i""'' .... 1.,. it.nd mor•. P>lt wonclor "" wo"4tNlll Mod•I 11 "•• • lil1tlm• (OHOlion ...... M,. .4"4 • S·v••• p.1rt1 w1rr•n!V '"· Tno q11.iu1 thu mild• H'<l·SINK Ell.ATOii Int "umorr Ono di1po11r 11tl!lon91 In ~tur ••t<nen. ' ..... , $5795 17 ' lO Gal. J O Cial. 50 Go l. WATER HEATERS '52" • '59" '64 " '84 " Mon.-Fri. ,.9; S.111. 9-6; Sun . ID-4 --------------------·~ ------ z 72 MODEL YEAR N / Ultra Mod•rn •tylin9 for tlw m"t <~tem,.rary ""'" ffftlnt•-Cabinet flni1he4 In hrwnld• Sh•ll Whit• hith ''"' lac111u•r fh1J1h with ......... c•ler top. Chroma• celer 100 Plctur• tube. Tit•" IOI H•nllcr•fttcl Ctt.111.a. Av•il•bl1 with llternote C1tntrel NEW LOW PRICE Table Model CH ROMACOLOR PICTURE TUBE D 1 p • " II • ~ I 1 twlndct•fted Chaul1 with Autemtitlc ,,,.. Tvnl"I, Avtom•tlc TI 11 t Gv•rd •nd Solld·Stat• J... '., ... ,, •m,lltt.r. LOWEST PRICE EVER Chro1na~olor Automatic Fine TuninCJ • Automatic Tint e Cu1tomi1ed Tuning e Walnut/ COfttemporory Cabinet NUMBER 1 RATED COLOR CONSOLE AT A TABLE MODEL PRICE · Z_enith's Largest Screen Coror -Choose Table Model or Stunnin~ Cabinetry • IOald Video GHrd Tuner e AutOIMtic. Ff•• Tunln9 e Tl-100 Cllasala f TOP OF THE LINE 25" TAIU . MODEL .AN ·SA 16'' 1 DIAGONAL ONLY -· . BARGAIN COLOR .CONSISTENTLY THE LQWEST PRICES IN ORANGE COUNTY . F.OR ZENITH PRODUCTS PRODUCT KNOWUDGE SICOND TO NONE ,, WHY BUY AT ABC? • No Finance Charges If Paid in 90 Days or No Down and 36 Months to Pay C 0.A.C.l • 1 Year Free Parts • 1 Year Free Service • 3 Year Picture Tube Warranty • Free Delivery and Set Up • BankAmericard/Master CharcJe : • 1 I . ~ 17 17 Hunlington Beaeh Fountain Valley Teday's Fl••I • VOL 65, NO. 153, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTYl CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE I, 1972 TEN CENTS Two Ocean View Schools Get 'All-year' Nod By JOHN ZAILER 01 !ht Dtllr l"llitf Ut U The slate all-year school!'! comrnHtee \\'ednesday approved "continuous learn- ing program s" for Crest View and West- rnont schools in the Ocean View School District. The action is regarded as the final hur- dle for plans of Ocean View officials to start a pilot program July 10 on the all- year calendar. A letter or unrestricted approval waits fbis morning on the desk of state Superintendent of Public Instruction Wil&0n Riles. His signature is expected to be automatic. "Ocean View's feasi bility study "'as very thorough and sound ," Aubrey Calvert. acting chainnan of the state al\- year schools committee said this 1norn· ing. "There was some parent.al opposition ." Calvert said, "but as long as those who don't want all-year schools have an oi>- tion , we see no reason why the majority of parents who do want them should be restriC!ted." Calvert aaid that although opJXISition parents claimed 40 percent of the Crest View and \Vestrnont co1nmunities were .'1gainst all-year school plans. he accepted lhe figures of Ocean View officials. who l'l:1 imed oppos1t1on from less than 25 per- cent. Principals of the l~·o schools have rC'ported that more than 90 percent of the children involved have elected to stay at their schools when they switch to all-year calendars this July . The rest have either said they wish to go to nei ghboring schools on tradi tiona l calendars, or have not said what they wish to do. "Everything is going smoothly as we prepare for the opening of school on July 10." said Ken ~1eberg. all-year schools coordinator for Ocean View. "We're just "·orking out details and tying up loose ends at this point. We'll be ready when school slart.s." About 1,000 children will be involved at lhe two schools. Meberg said there will also be an opportunity for children from neighboring schools who want to go to schools on the all·year calendar. It will be on a "s~ce available basis," he said, and subject to the provis:lon that parents provide the transportation. Ocean View 's plan is krlOV.'n as the "45· 15" or staggered attend11nce pl an EaC"h school attend11nce area will be di vi ded 111- to four quadrants. At any ~n·en lirnt , three of thf'se groups v.·i\I be in <"la:ss on a nine-week tern1, and fhe fourth group \Viti ht on a three-week vacation. Theoretically·~ ttiis permits 25 percent more use of exi~ting buildings. v.•hich was a principal reason for s\.li·1tching to all- year schools . 1be other r('11.son given v.•as tha t 1vhen chjldren have four, three-v.·eek vacations 1'.1t/1 ~ rar insLe;id or one-Jong vaca tion, tltt>~ \.\+1n't suffer vdl<Jt IS kno"·n as "sum- llll'r lt•arn1ng Joss" (kt'an \'ie1v ofricials pl;u1 extcnsi\te lt·~t~ lo Set' 1f all-year !lc hoo ls really do t.:l11111null' this "Jcan1111g luss. '' lh't·ou1 \'1e w trusiecs have sait.l thcv v.·111 re<._•ons1de>r the atl·)('.'lr plans on the ·bast.JI 11f th is information. Thcv ha\'e also said thlll. if the expE"r1ment~ at Crest Vlc \.f and \\'t'stmont are unsut'l'tssrul, the pn:>· .:ram t·t>uld be e!1n11naled after just one year. County Air Test Force May Fly if Board OKs Plan Given Bum's Rush Dick Groulx, executive secretary of the Alameda County Labor Council, is taken into custody after a sit-in at University of California President Charles Hitch's office on Berkeley campus. Groulx, another top labor Jeader, and 14 other persons were a_r- rested after stagi ng a seven-hour sit-in to protest the 45-day labor dispute at the campus. 'l'he Build- ing Trades Union struck over pay and grievance procedures. Reagan 'Inclined Not' to Support Coast l1ritiative From 'Vlre Services Governor Ronald Reagan said Wed- nesday he was "inclined not" to support the efforts now being ma~e by con· 5ervalionists to place a coastline pro- leclion measure on the November ballot. Speaking at a press conference. the Governor said he felt adoption or coastl ine controls should be left to the Legisl ature and tha t the people should only act by initiative "if the legislature took no action." At the same press conference, Governor Reagan said he supported the present efforts to place the death penalty issue on the ballot through petition and that he had signed one of the peUUom. Tank-lJacked S. Viets At Border of Province SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese paratroopers and rangers backed by tanks drove almost to the border o[ Quang Tri Province today in an effort to knock out a North Vietnamese regiment and blunt an expected attack on Hue. They moved ~·ith virtually no air SUI). port and came under heavy artill ery fire. Bad weather settled on North Vietna m and the northeastern qu arter of South Vietnam but the U.S. Command said planel!I knocked out two more of Hanoi 's power plants Wednesday and that U.S. Air Force Phantom jets knocked down two of1four ~ttacking MIG 21 jet.s over a 30-minute·perlod near Hanoi. U.S. planes bombed northern targets today by radar. The Hanoi official army ncu•.spapcr Quan Doi Nban Dan admitted in an issue reaching Saigon that the U.S. air of- fensive was hurting North Vietnam's war effort. It aaid the fight to maintain com- munications and supplies to the south was becoming.more "strenuous.·· Field officers along the !i.iy Chanh River defense line 22 miles north of Hue said the northt1•ard striking South Viet- namese armored force of 2.000 men u•as h1! by a b<1rrnge or 50 J30mm artillery shells-the heaviest such slrike Jn a -a•cck -and that there were ''quite a few " casualties. UP{ correspondent Donald A.. Davis reported from Hue that the three bat· talions or government troops reinforced by armor were seeking to capture or destroy a bat talion of 650 North Viet- namese troops in the hills just southwest or f\.1y Chanh, or drive it back north. The situation on other fronts : -Jleavy house-to-house fighting was reported in Kontum, ~ miles north of Saigon, and government spokesman said 23• Communists were killed Tuesday and government troops found the bodies of (S.. VIETNAM, Page Z) Bv JACK BROB.4."CK Of ttie Dtll/y .. 1 ... ,,,,, Orange COunty'.s own .. air force" may get off the~ ground next week if the Board or Supervisors approves a test plan pr~ posed by county Director of Aviation Jloberl Bresnahan. Bresnahan has suggested a six-month trial period at a cost of $2:2 ,000 for an ex· perimental patrol over the Orange Coast with cooperation nf the city helicopter Environnient Unit Opposes 9-Sort Of sp«GJ tO Ult DAILY.PILOT SACJ!.AMENT9 -DeJpile earlier predictlfns from Orange CoWJty 5"Per· vis-Or David L. Baker, tile Califotnf.I Environmental QuaJ ity CoOtrol Council today fi.nd.s lt.!ell s:tuck squarely ln a fence-st raddling position on controver•ial Proposition 9. The council In ils meeti ng hert \\'ednesday, voted to oppose the so-called clean environment initiative"'on the June 6 ballot. (See related story, Page 14). But on the otller hand, the council refused to rescind its earlier vote which endorsed ProPQ.5ition 9. "People are going to think we're balmy," exploded board member Albert Pcarlson of Rlverside. '"It's like Jetting a stone wa1l 1tand and then mythically tearing it down ." The council's fence-stradding stance began May 18 in LOs Angele! wh~n it voted 5 to 2 to endorse Proposition 9. But Chairman Baker of Orange County, \Vho \.li'as absent at that meeting, nid "tric kery " had been used to get the en· dorsen1enl. He scheduled another vote th is Wednesday in Sacramento. The second time, the council voted & lo 3 tC> oppose Proposition 9 with two abstentions. Baker had predicted ft would be en· dorsed 8 to S by the full council. However, the co uncil refused to back up and revoke its previous 5-to J vote en- dorsing the proposition . A motion to let the endorsement .!land won 7 to 4 1p- provHI o( the council. State Sen. Robert J . Lagomarsino (R~ Ventura C.ounty), a legiafative member of the council. offered con.90lation of aorts: "Thi.s happens all the time in the legislature," he aaid . The coastline protection measure is being backed by the coastal Alllanct, a coalition of conse.rvationbt organlutioll.ll. Spokesmen for the group say they launched the petition drive originally because the Legislature. p r o b a b 1 y wouldn't pass a sufficiently strong bill. "I \\'OUld be inclined not to (support the coastal measure) on the basls that we do bave a legislative solution which ts being advanced,:;. the Governor said, "I would lhink the time for a coastl ine initiative would be U the Legislatufe took no 1c- llon." Valley Addition Sought A bill backed by the Coastal Alliahce was killed earlier this month in the SenaU N1tural Resources and WUdlife Committee. The same committee·. ~ proved a less restrictive measure outhored by Se1U1tor Dennis Carpenter '(R·Newp<>rt lltach). The Ooutal Alllance--inltlaUve meuure would create six regjonal commW:ions in ·ttie alate with half of ~ membtn .cho.,.,, from 1oc.l elected olficlala. The commissions would control development from man hl,gb Ude line to 1,0001yards .inland ·along 111 ofClll!ornia'• 1,100.mlltl Of C()llSt . The Carpenter bill wm utlude ln- t orpor11.ted titles from control ind would allow Ind ividual counlits to define the.fr own coasUll zone 1m11ewhere betwet:a J ,000 yards and three mllea lnland. New Hospital Wi11g Orie11ted for Specialist Care By MlCllAEL GOODRICH ot .,. DNIY Plitt 1te1r Approv1l of • $1.3 million addition to the Fountain Valley Community Hospital may be 'CODtlo.1 within the next two months, 8Ct'Ording to Gene Mesick, the boepltaJ•1 top administrator. ... ! om hopeful that approval by the Oranee County Health Planning C(X.lncil will be within the next 60 days," Mesick aald to<lay. The new 101 -bed wing or the hospitnl will be orleated toward apeclallat care P"'!C'ams and allow the hospital to develop apedal pravams. Mesick said. "Once the second phase Is completed, oor emphasls wUI shift rrom providing general rnedltal servii:es lo one of ddeloping care programs consistent with the changtnc: 1.nd Jncrea.sin& nttds of the community,'' be added. · "Since there are. 138 specialists on the ho!pital's staff out of a total of 186 phys i· cians. many or the doctors have been re- questing facilities keyed to this mode or health care and matched to thtlr specialties," :mid Dr. Wilfred R. Coheit the hospital's chief of staff. New fa cilltltS added to the hospital upon complelion of the new addition will lnclude: -seventeen new pediatrics beds and a 12-bed obstetrics department. -A nine-bed pulmonary care unit for respiratory patients. -A fOUr·btd di11lysis unit for kidney disease pat ients. -An add ition of four beds to the In- tensiv e car' unit. -An addition of four bed.i; to the cor· onary care unit. -A six-bed atroke unit to se.n·e pa. 1 .. ticnts ln critical cond.1Uon and a nvt-bed Isolation unit for !ltroke patlenta. Special community lll'OifVl1S planned for lhe completion of the hoopltat addlllon include communlt7 health cllnlca, drug •buae programa, f111111ly planni,,. cllnlct, alcohoUc consultation 10rvlct1 and pro- granu to facilitate the Jmprovemtnt of health care In the community'• minority groups. Training program!! p1&Med for the future. according to Mesick, include nurw' tr&lnlng for •tudenta from Golden West CoUege and a wort tnce.ntlvt pro-- gram with the 1tate Human Raoutttt Department M"ick said thal, If the addlUon 11 ap- proved by the Oranie Q>unty Health PlaMlng Council, COOJlrucllon lhould begin within the next ye1r. • forces from Newport Beach, Costa J\1esa, and Huntington Beach. If supervisors approve the test pro- gram and it proves succ essful, Bresnahan has outlined an overall county air surveillance and rt'SCUC" project at <l cost of $2.3 nlill ion f.or ihe first )'ear. The "ai r forte" I!; a proposal ad vant·ed by Supervisor \V illiam Phillips tJ[ Fullerton several 1nonths ago, Bresnahan e.stin,atcd that the overa ll countyv.•ide system would need eight police patrol helicopters and four patrol planes plus two larger al.rcraft, one a helicopter and one an airplane for utility service. Of lhe $2.3 million first year spending, SI.I rnillion would go for equipment wit h tt~e balance t·overing operating costs fur the first 12 months. Hr!'~nahan's si>: 1nonths test proposal c<i \ls for using pollce heli copters alread)" tSee •AJJl FO llt:E,' Page%) 'Dead Ti1•ed' Presidtnt Nix.011 Reaches Accords Wjtl1 Leaders in Warsaw WARSAW (UP!) -.A "dead tired" President Ni.Ion reached some wide-rang· in( ~s with Polish leaders today as the final .stroke of his 12-day dipl9mal ic mission, and headed home for a report to Congress tonight on the Moscow swnm1t, The presidential jet, The Spirit of '76, left Warsaw on a nine-hour flight lo Washington after Nixon and First secr~tary Edward Gierek of the Polish Communist Party signed a (.'()mmunique summing up follr houra or talka. In the document, the leaders agreed that talks should be opened as soon as poa:ible on East-West troop reduct.Ions in Europe; to lay groundwork for a Euro- pean se<:urity conference -also agreed to by Nl:zon at the Kremlin swnmit - and to conduct continulng talks on im- proving U.S.-Polish trade -non-specific, as was the case in J\1oscow. But just AS rte failed to bre1k any neW" ground wJth Sovlet leader1 on the Viet· nam itsue, Nixon w11 unable to re1ch ac-- <:ord with t~ Pollth. The W1111w coin- munJque 18.ld: "Both sidet pn!sented their kno1vn posi- tions on the w11r In Vietn 11n1 nod the situalion in Indochina. Easential vfew., ol lhe two sides in this question remained divergent." l~is departure ended R dramatic mission during v•hich he was greeted by anti war rioters Jn Au~ria. wanned by cheering crowd.! in Poland, followed by bomb blasts: in Iran and -mo st lm· portant -welcomed in the Kremlin. As Nixon wound up his journey, which Incl uded stops in Leningrad. Kiev and Tehran, the President showed clear si gns of the stress he ha~ been under since hi.I IS.. ACCORDS, l'ag• 1) McGovern Vows Return Of POWs in 3 Months COVINA fAP) -Sen. George McGovern, playing to a big crowd in tile California preside11tial primary cam- paign, has pledged that if he wins the While House he can gain a release of U.S. prisoners of war within 90 days of his · ,. auguratlon. The Sruth Dakota senator drew several thou11nd persons, • crowd that stretched far back into the darkness of Uie Covina Park Wednesday night. More than 2,000 turned out for another rally In San Bernardino. Those appearances cllmand 1 I._.hour day or vote hunth1g for his Tuesday primary contest with Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, a man McGovern described as "part of the old •paratus , .. " Meanwhile, Humphrey was havlf!g trouble. The luncheon audience was leavinR 11 he drove up , 45 minutes late , for 11 speech to a bu1lnesamen'1 group at a fashionable Santa Bar bara hotel. UndaUQ,ted, and without even leaving hl.s car, Humphrey went right on to the nut stop, a union haU ln Ventura, where he delivered hb Santi Barbar• speech \() a 1~ audience that consill•d malnly of the traveling press corps:. lltlplle such mllhapo, Humphrey said 11 he Rew btck to Los Angeles aft er another dly oC small campaign crowds that he thlnk.s he has at le.tst slowed McGovern'• m0tnentum for 1\lesday's crucial Dtmocrallc primary. ln Covina, McGovern 13id that he could gain freedom f« American prl&onen by · withdrawing U.S. fon::et and aupport from South Vietnam. "I know thll Pre1ident Nixon tt.111 us we're 11taylng In Vietnam bec1usc we wRnt to bring about the release of our pNorlera ... " McGovern said. "The truth of the matter Is untll we St:t 1 c!Hdline for the wlll1dnw1t ol our • forces, until we tenninate. milita ry opera. lions, until we cut out furlher mi litary suPPort for the Th.ieu regime in Salgon, therc'.11 no hope at all to bring about lhe release of our prisoners •.. " "How are you going to do it~" a youn g man 1houted from the front of the crowd. McGovern said he would do it by agree-. Ing to the withdraw•! of U.S. forces O\ler a !JO.day period and the termination of American military support for Saigon.'" .. He said he would a!lk in return lhit' withdrawing forces not be attacked "anif that once that has been completed dilE prlsone-rs be released." \ ~ w-t1ter lfazy sunshine Is on the qenda for Friday. bul 'the temperature wilt still be toward lhe top cl Ibo thermometer. Highs at the beacb. 72 rising to ao inland.. Lon 5M5. INSIDE TOD.4'Y In bedroom communitv of. Norwalk. ihe onl~ candidat. wM arowe" oenuint tnthu1ic.ttn ~,, Alabama's Gov. Gt:orpe C. Wal· l11ct. Set 1UJry, Page 21. L.M. ~ • -.. C1UIWtll• " --.. Ct1nlflM .... ........ -' C•"''" .. _,,.._ " <r•'~ " ._.. ..... Dl•fll Mtlkft " ·--.... •11...-111 "'"' • ,_ .. l11Wlf'-f l>M ,_ .. 1"111111(1 .... WM-• ..... "'-•tcWlll " ............. ,. .. Htt•ti;-" --• .......... ~ .. & DIJLY PILOJ ' Clubs Back Capital Punishme nt Membe~ of Hunt1ri.;Lon Beath :lnd Fountain \'<llley l'l\'l t ('Jubs strongly favor the u~ of the dr:ith p<>nR!ty 1n C.liHfornia, according lu llunt1ngton Ueach City Attorney Don Bonra .llonfa said today a sur\c~ of 10 local 4·lobs show~ 170 cluh n1en1hers f.1vorf'd <.:apital pun1 sh1nrnt for 1·{'r\a1n l·1·1n1e:;, \1hile 59 oppos<'<l 1he dl'<i!h :o.t'nlcnl'l' The survey wa.!i n1ade after lv10 of Bon· L1·s deputy attorne~s s1a~ed debates at llif' (_·)ubs on !ht• C:i.1Jforn1a Suprl'mr <'OOrt's rectnl decision °"'hich made the death penally unconstilulionHI in the ~1,,alc. Boufa predicted that the Noven1ber in- it ietive. designed W restore capital p1.1riishment to Ca lifornia. would ea,,i ly pass, based on lhc re.!lults of his club :;u.rvey. lie s,11d, hov.·e\'er. if the U.S. Supreme c;uur! even!ull!ly decides capital punish· rnent is unconstitut1on.:1l. the Callrurnl a ini li ative would not be valid. e\·en 1£ passed. The debates and sw-veys were held dur· ing May in celebration of "law da y_'' IJt'puty City Attorney Dan \\'hiteside had argued in fa vor of capiL1 I punishment. v.·hile Assistant Cily Attorpcy \\' 1 J 1 s Jl;l~vis opposed it. Both positions were based on the legal briefs fUed i.1 the recent California Supreme Court ruling, Bonfa said. Man Held on Bad Check Rap After Tags Questio11ed ' ~ record check run on a lluntington Beach man who apparently neglected to i:;el Im tags for his car led to his arrest ir\.Newport Beach \\'ednesday on a felony b<f!d check cha rge. ;Discovery of tv.•o v.•arrants carrying a t~al of $5.044 bail sent Stephen \Y. Smith, 24. of 312 Nashville Ave .. to city jail. Smith was picked up there this morning bj Orange County Sheriff's deputies and trt.nsferred to county jail pending ar- r,:(ignment on the check case and second· a!'Y traffic violation cha rge. :Officer Rick Goode ll said he stopped Stfiith at East Coast High way and B.tyside Drive aOOut 4:45 p.m. and ¥Sk.ed aOOut his lack of ·72 registration. Given only a temporary driver's license for identification. the suspiciou.s officer er.suited computerized central records 11 ' came up with !he north and central 0 ange CoWlty Judicial District v.·ar· r<01ts. •, From Page J ACCORDS. •• an-ival in ~foscow ~1ay 22. ''He·s dead tired but he ·won't admit It'' one aide said. ~is wife , Pat, also lost the poise she mllintaincd throughout the journey, snap.. pipg at Polish plainclothesman trying to klf_P her away. j"he P resident's plane left War.saw ;lir port at 8:03 a.m. PD'r. 1nore than 40 1rpnu!es earlier 1han planned. beca use of :;trong head\\·inds along hi s route. ~n estin1atcd 4.000 persons lined the n1btorcadc route to the airport, where l'~lish leaders sa1\· the President orr ln a br'icf cercn1ony carried live on \Vars;iw tulcvision. 13ut \veary as he v.·as. the President in- !e11ded lo spend most or the time on lhe hOITIC\\';1rd fl ight , according to :iidt's , in pij/11ng fin ishing touches on his 6.30 pm l'DT address to a joint session of Congress. to be broadcast nationally. The speech v.·as expected to put em- phasis on his nuclear anns limitation ;igreement v.•ith Soviet leaders. OIANGI COAST " DAILY PILOT 1'~t 0••"1lt Co•1t OAIL Y PILOT wlit'I Wt'lk l'I •• cornbh•rd !lie Nrwa·Pru1, Is Pllb!l!ll~ bV ll'lt O•~not (orsr Publl11'1J119 Com~ny. St~· •Air e<llllons ••f J101Dll11'1fd, M~y 11'1~11!1" r"dty, for (D•I~ MHr. N1wp0rl Bfl C,,, ltunl >nglon lle•<'ll ~GVnl•l'1 \l•lley, l•gu.,,. llt•d>. lr.rintlS•lidltb•tlc •l'ld S•n Cle,...nitl s • ., Ju•11 C•!>,,l•~r.o A •fnolf rl'Q lon•I '"'''on •• pubio•l'll!d S•luf<llV • •rod $un<U y,, 'Ji., princl11•l lluD h•l'llno 111.snr Is •I JlO Wt\I 8 11 ~•rtt•, <o•T• Mt•••, C•i<tarrltl, t211t. Rab•rl N. Weed J'rr 1!01.,1 •n<I Publ••ll~r J,,k R. Curley \/Oc t "'''"'"'' .. nc1 Gr11t1•I M~nrwe• 1'h om 11 Krr.,il £dolor lheun11 A. Murph:11e M•n•w•nci Edi!or Ch•tl•• H. Looi Rj,heri P. Nell >.ul1t1nt Ml"'9Qlng Edllor • lrHV Cowil!t Wttl O••"flt Coun1, Edl!or H111r11.,t .. lffcti Offk• t117S l 11th l ou l1•1•d M1ilin9 Addr111 : ,,0 . l ox 7•0, 91,41 OflMr or11c., l•gunt llr•d•· »1 'ort1! "•..,w Co\11 Mtu: JlO W11t 111~ 1""' N.wport 811(.11: JJ).:I Nrwpot! llOl,llt vu'lf ~~ (ltmenlt : JOi NOfll'I El C1m•nei R1tl 1 .. .,.._ 17141 '4J·4ll1 c1 ... m.c1 AMrtl6'"t 64l·5171 ,.~ N1r• 0•• .. • c-tY c..111...,.,.,111,1 140·1lJO (1Jfff'i9fll, 1'72, Ort• (.0.111 P11Dtltl'll1>9 C..,,MJ'l'I'. No n.-., Uo•lfl, lllu.!rAlion•. tdl..,111 "'"'"' or "'''ll•tmWlto M••l'l ,.._, R •~W "''""°"'' N)l(Mf 119t· frtls•lon et copyrleh! ... ,..,. ~ ~!Mt ...,,..,_ N ld II (1111 Mfu. t •llfW'lia. W-,....rlofl W (ltr.... ,1 U ~""""': b'f rnr u u ,, """"""'' ,.,111,,.., Ottlkv•IMI 11.U ""°"'"'"· Thursdly, -1, 1'7? -• OAtLY f'ILOT l l•ff f'MN LIN DA ARMSTRONG, 18, IS FIRST ON FERRIS WHEEL Colita Mesa Prepare• for 27th Annu•I Fish Fry 'Fry' -Set up ... Fi-shy · Activit}~ In Costa Mesa Costa ~1esa's downto~n p a rk was turned into a riot of color today as v.·ork· men srt up ferris wheels, merry-go- rounds and ab9Y'-30 other amusen1enl rides in preporlltion for the city's 27th Annuli! Fi.sh Fry. Members of the Lions Club 11·111 thro~· lhe switch on their "super·car1uval" <ti prec:isely 6 p 111. frid:i~·. aOOut (lnr h:1H hour after !he serving of add1t1on;1 I fish dinners begins. The park at 18th St re et and· Anaheim Avenue \V iii be the center or nearly all fish Fry attractions, including baby and beauty contests, a baltle of the bands, stage show!' and prize drawin~s 1-·ish dinners. priced at $1.75, ,1•1!1 be sold Friday night and from noon to 8 p.1n. both Saturday nnd Sunday, All proceeds will go to charit y. l·lighllght of the three-day ex.tr11va- ganza promises to be the parade sche· duled for Saturday. It begins at 10 :30 n.m. al 18th Street and Anahei m Avenue and runs along 19th Street and JJ!acentia Avenue. f'or those \1·ho miss the display of 15 floats and 30 marching bands, the paradt> \Yill be telecast in color fron1 3 p.m. tu 4:30 p.m. Sunday by KTLA Channel 5. Parade Chairman Cliff \Vesdorf said one of the entrants, the Tijuana Police l\lotorcycle Squadron, wUl be featured in a special performance at 2 p.m. on Center Street, facing the park. J'<Jntho ihe Tnco.catcr, a lion cu b O\vner by Costa l\tesa restaurateur Al· Ired Klinzinann, is the official mascot of !ht: parade and will lead the field of J ,500 participa11ts in the parade, "'esdorf said. Jfe will be on dis p!ny fro m 1 p.m. to 4 p.ni. Suturday 111 the handball courts of the Girls Club, 1n1n1edlately adjacent to the park Grand :'l!arshnl for lhls y('ar's parade is Maritn "ll'f\ccver, the Los A11 geles Hnn1s linebn<·ker from Corona del "tar. Me f\ec ~er v.•i!I sh<1re the spotlight v.·ith spt't:ial guests '·Seymour," the television t1urror tnovie host. and Les "Mr. Fish Fry" fiif11ler, the 1nan who has announced the par;1dc for the past 26 years. 'fhc si.:hedule of Fish fry Events is as fullul\o'S. .f<'HIDA Y --5 :30 p.m., f.'ish Dinners, City Park. -6 p.n1., Carnival Rides and Mldv.·ay Booths, Cily F'ark. -7 p,m .. B.irtd Contest. City Park. SATUHDAY -IU a.n1 .. Carn1\'al. City Park. -10:30 ~1 .m ., Fish fry Parade. -'.'loon, fish Dinners. City Park. -1:30 p.m .. Stage Shov.·. City Park. -2 p.rn. Ti juana Police Motorcycle Squadron . -4: 15 p.m. Danc('rs. City Park. -6:30 p.1n. Stage Sho"" City Park. SUNDAY -Noon, Carnival. City Park. Mo ney W inn er I 1i Secl usio1i SALE~!. l\tass. (L'l'I J -'fhomas G. Hall , 11 telephone repairman who \von $1 1nilllon thl! week in the Massachus~tts Lolt~ry , had his phone d1sc:onnected. Apparentl y anxious to nvoid the I' u u n d . t 11 e -c Io l' k calls from salesmen, 11ewsn1en an r1 con mrn !hat plagued lhe state's first $1 million \Vinner -Joseph Bonica O( NC\\'ton •lall w a s in- communicado today. •Iall, 25, began a vacation after the ·ruesday dra11 ing and v.·as not exJ)('c:ted to return to his $130-a· 11·~t>k job. Sheriff Na111ed In $200,000 'Class Action' An accused gunm.'ln y,•ho once charged an Orange County Superior Court judge and deputy district allOTney with brart- ding hiln as a ''nf() Nazi and a rnembcr of the Aryan Brotherhood " has sutd Sheriff James ~1usick for $200.000. Douglas Plumley Jr., 30, of Long Beach, held in the county jail pending his lrlal here June 12 on kidnaping, robbery, burglary and escape charges, fl ied the suit Wednesday in Los Angeles Federal Court. Frotn Page l "AIR FORCE' ••• in se rvice iu the three t·oastal con1· munities. In addition to !he six c:ily-opcrated helicopters the test prograrn would Hl· c:Judc a rented two place light plane Fountain Valley Man Held on 13 Sex Counts -2:30 p.m., Baby Contest, City Park. -3:30 p.m .• Mis.s Mermaid Contest, Ci- ty I'ark. -6:15 p.m. Stage Show City Park. -8 p.m., Drawing for Grand Prize, Ci· ty Park. Heart 'Scanner' Do11ations Asked Plwnley, who was found to have re1110vered his sanity after a long stay in Atascadero State •losplt.al, c!al ms Musick I has violated his t'Onstitutional rights by , sanctioning "unfair disciplinary treat4 ment." .Bresnahan estimates that the joint pro- ~ran1 between the cilies and the county could reduce annual helicopter costs to the three cities and to Anaheun. the only other count y 1.:urn1nu111ty 1vith 1.:huppers. by two-thirds. J( the final plan is adopted. <111 01:.era- tion center would be established at Orange County Airport and staffed by the participating cities. The center would be equipped by the 1.:ounty. Bresnahan suggests that lhc six ·n1onth test area be split into t\vo sectors, one fro~! Be'~i\~ \\'eapo,~ ~i=pot to ucr a'Ud the Oil'IEr sou thwartt fo S'Ah Clen1entc and bordered by the San Diego Freeway in!~ an<f the ocean on f.be cast. Coverage \VOuld include the three con1· munities now oper.atlns helicopters and portions ·or ,Fo_untain Valley, Irvine, Westmthster and_~ Beach. ,The additi.Onal .fixed wing plane would operate' for ~ix "9urs a day anil the helicopters 1Nl additiona l f1 \'e hours, Bresnahan suggested. If the countywide system is eventually adopted, tht're would be req uired 14 a ircraft . helicopter and fixed wing, with 44 emplo yes including 21 pilots. nine observers, three administrators and ll a ircraft mechanics. The program would be ndn1inistered by 8 multi·jurisdicllonal aviation coin· mission. ·rhe primar~· purpose of the aerial fleet , Bresnahnn cxp!ain('d. v.'ntdd b(' po ller services but l\'ilh lhe lnrger heli copters and fixed '~ing-aircraft. fire and rescue services could :i\so be provided. In the p;ist. the county has used aerial services durinti flood :ind fire situ11tio11s Jn one insl<ince during the 1969 floods and on other occ,1sions r.Jarine Corps heli - copters 11·ere \'Olunteered 1o the county to Hid in cn1P r~t•nry <:ontrol. THAILAND A Fountain \'alley man accused of multiple acts or se x perversion with a _\OUth in the .. suspect's home on several occasions last Apr il was indicted today hs !he Orange County Grand Jury on 13 <'h;_irges of sex acts and supplying mari· JU:ina to the youngster. Deputy District Attorney Al Novick hopes to arraign the suspect, Leotis Lee Heater, 40. of 10922 Goldeneye Ave., Fri· d.'ly in Su perior Court. T\'ovick said the alleged multlple of· fcnscs against the 16-year-old boy oc- <·urrcd last April at Heater's home while 11 the de fcnd~!1t v.·as awaitina: ~e~.ted court 1-1cti0ft on sex charges ane~IJ com· rnitted five years ago . _Accwding to official a 11 e g at ~o n s , I !eater jumped bail on two occasions since being arrested in June of 1967 v.•hen I~ lived al 701 Rockford Road, Corona del t-.lar. lie was recaptured Jakt lnonth in Laredo, Teus, e(ter forfeiting more than $31.000 in bail put up by his aunt. !!cater had earlier been arrested 1n Fro1n Page D VIETNAM .•. 125 others -a toll of 359 at a loss of 13 government troops killed. They said the Communis ts faked a sur- render move Wednes day and poured rein· forccmcnts into !he northern part of Kon- lum during a Juli in the fighting. -Fighting at An Loe, 60 miles north of Saigon. tapered off but the city 1l'as hil \Vednesday by 350 ,mortar and rocket rounds and fighting was reported nlong three Saigon relief columns strung out from two to 15 miles to the south. -Fighting flared in normally calm llinh Thuan Province along the South China Sea coast about 100 mites southeast or Saigon. N.VIETNAM~ DMI ~, LAOS DA NANG CAMBODIA •HNOM PINK 0 MEKONG DE LT A ' 't &OUTH CHINA .... SOUTH VIETNAM Uf'l "'-HEAVY AIR ATIACKS--Waves of U.S. 852 bombe rs pounded North V1etnamese troop concentrations in Quang Tri Province (1) north or Hue 12) and near the Ce ntral lllghland capita l of Ko ntum (3) tn one of the largest single day bon1bing raids in Vietnam th1s month. f'ommunist gunners pumped 130 rounds of r ocket. mortar and artll· lery fire into defender< at An Loe (41 the devastated provinci al cap- ital 60 miles north or Sal~o n . Canada and returned to Orange County to face charges stemming from his all eged sexual acts with a I3-year--0ld British schoolboy who was vacationing in Seal Beach in June of 1967. The alleged victim told pol ice that !!eater forced him to participate in acts of sexual perversion after driving him from Seal Beach to the Laguna JJills area. Heater is today held in Orange County Jail with bail set at $500,000. Novick said }!eater wiU be brought to I rial on· both set.s or allegations. Superintendent's Farewell Slated A fare\\ell banquet for Dr. Clarence J[all , superi ntendent of the Ocean View School District, has been slated for June 16 at the Airporter Inn at the Orange County Airport. !!all \\'ill lea\'e his lfuntington Beach post after four years. to become Associate State Superintendent of Publi c Instruction on July I. The banquet ticket \Viii include a steak dinner. lip and dancing to the Joe Dia- n1ond Qu artet. Price is $6.50 per person. Heservations 1nay be made through Gail \Vayne at 847-25.'il before June 5. Flo Davies is looking for some people \vith soft hearts in order to htlp others "'ho have 11·ea k ones. The mother from the Village View Sehool PTA in }iuntington Beach has chaired a committee that is trying to raise $3,800 to buy a heart scanning device for the Ocean View School District. After v.·ork ing since September, Mr!!. Davies has only $3,600, and the school yea r is nearly over . "I've tried everything and I don 't know what to do!" she says. "I even sent lct- tend:o 4~1 arpnizations ~oDiy two responded." To prove ~ nee~. for the dev~. kll0"13' l~iolcan, Mfa-Jlovles pointed ouftliitti\he dis trict rented one to test four!h graders this year. and found 14 childrC'n with undetected heart 1nurmers, including one in serious con- d1tion . She urged anyone \\·11ling to make a ctonation to call 846-2801. His la1vsuit is represented as a cla!.!i action on ~half of all other Orange County Jail inmates who .ol!egedly have suffered from v.·hat Plumley describes as victimization by jail deputies. Plumley claims he has been held Jn solitary confinement for the past five months, is constantly harassed and cursed by guards and is allowed to take his t1\'0 baths a v.·ee k only in the middle . of the night. Jail officers state that Plumley·1 solitary confinement was ordered follov.·· ing the diseO'very of a pis tol in the Long Beach man's cell. It was stated at the time of the discovery that a jail vi.sito r passed the weapon to convicted murderer WWiam Westwood "The ~1an" :\fcCle Uan who then slipped the gun to Plumley. Plumley was already recognized a.s a dangerous prisoner for hts role in two escape attempts: the first in November, 1970 v.·hen he tried lo shoot his v.·ay out or \Vest Orange County ~1 unicipal Court .and the second when he and ot her county jail prisoners threw pepper into the faces of jail depuLies. Plumley an d his colleagues were overpowered by the blinded deputies L I B -D after a stniggle in t~ f'levator that wa.• 04 g<! lll"JlS 0\\'ll transporting the prisoners to the Supt>rior Court hearing room . GUATAY IAP 1 -Guatav LOOge Pl umley was first arrested in Sep- a!ongside Interstate 8 burned to the tem~r. 1969. He spent two months at ground \Vednesday. The cause of the fire Atascadero after being found insane , 11 v.'as not determined, the US .. forest mdnths at Vacaville St.ate Prison and 19 Ser\'il'e said. months in Orange County JaH. 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~--~~~~~~--~~~~- • ~sofa bed sale! npw · _queen szze • • $299. ' PROFESSIONA L INTERIOR DESIGNERS ' . ' -" . I , f.-,7·~;:::::=:~~~~·=-~~~~~-·~-~-=-~~~~ Open as bl!d ' Open Mon., Thurs. & Fri. EYe1. • dual size • • • $249. These are very comfortable sofa beds for sitting and sleeping. • A wide selection of fabri cs and colors to choose from. • Reversible backs and seat cushions. 22 15 HARBOR BLVD_ COSTA MESA, CALIF. f I I I 1,• I • • • lle a11ty a11d the Dory Boats A pretty girl ls dressed for the warm weather as she takt!s her pooch t o the \vater's edge in Newport Beach. The dory boats and their hard·working fish· ermen 1nak ing an interesting phot ographic ron tr2st to the bikini-clad Jass and her dog. Bobby Baker 'Did D11ty'; Leaves Prison to Write From Wire Services Two Marines F ou11d Beaten 111 Driveway Angela Davis' Defense Urges 'Acquittal' Fnm Win! Servittt SAN JOSE -The defense told the Angela Davis jury today tha t it must ac. quit the 23--year<Old black m i 11 t 1 n l becall!e the state filled to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that she conspired in the San Rafael kldnapings and i.illlngs. (See earlier story , page 10). Howard ~1oore Jr.. opening nnal arguments for the defendant, said: "The two words, reasonable doubt , are probably the most important words in Anglo-Saion American jurisprudence. "The Sf'<'Ond most important may be the burden of proof that rests on the pro- secutioo to <anvlnct you of the absence of reasonablt doubt. "The stale has failed lo do so in this case and that would require you to al-quit this defendant." n ..... .,, -1. 1'n RFKSon Pays • Evasion Fin.e BOSTON (UPI ) -J00<ph P. Kenntdr Ill, 19, ton of the late Sen. Robert F. Kellfl«ly, has pleaded gullty through an attorney lo a e-barge of falling to pay a »-cent tumplke toll . He was fined m. The incident oei:urred Tuesday night on the M1s11chusett1 Turnpike. State trooper Edward Brown made the arrest. taking young Ken- nedy tG Brighton pollce !!talion whe re ht ~·as booked on a charge :if 1011 tvas1on . T1u111ey Asked Tl1at Committee 'Invite' Si11atra Speaking In a soft acctnt. Moort said one thing that was a source of distress ~o !\1iss Davis wa.s the Jack of any members \VA SlllNC:TON IAP \ -Sen. John\' of her rare on the jury. Tunney has ackno.,.,·ledged he asked a Moort said he was confident this jury congressional c·omn111tre not to subpoena could reach a proper verdict but that he Frank Sinatra, but instead to "invite him felt concerned that the absence of blacks to talk" to the com111ittee . .,.,.hich is in· might impede justice. "So, we 'll submit the fate of Miss vestigating ties betv,.een organizt<I crime Davis -her freedom, her llfe . to you." and horse raci ng . ... Moore was to be followed in the defense Tunn ey (0.-Calif.), said \Vednesday he summation by attorney Leo Branto n. telephoned Hep. Claude Pepper (D·Fla.). ~1iss Davis .,.,,ill make no final argu. chairman of 1he I louse Stlect Con1mitlee ment in the case. on Crime. artrr being contacted by an RI · H OAIU PlllT I 2nd Marijuana Seizure Made At Dana Point ; A aeoond seiiure thJa week of sea~ marijuana at Dana Harbor was •~ .... nounced by U.S. CUstoms ageuts Wednes- day a f t 1 r the arrest of four Big Sur residents and discovery of 116 kilos of marijuana bricks aboard a 26-foot cabim cruiser. 1'he arrests marked the aecond raid this week at the harbor relating to alleg- ed smuggling operations from Mexico. The marijuana had a strett value of about $20,000, s;iid spokesmen for the agency. 1"hose •irres!ed in the latest raid were J{(1dnev C. Richn1011d, 30; Honald Lussier, J I ril~linda Snuth. 18, and her sister, Constance. All fou r residt•nts 11f thr rf"fllral California coastal t·ol1111y \\Cre arraigned last \\'ednesday tx-fnt l' ;i l s . .\!ag1!'itrate in Los Angeles. Last .\1ouday 11 1 " s11nll<u· r:url. etiston1 ~ n~ents arreste<t tw v Sant ;i Uarl)ar:t residen ts and seiLed 30 brir ks of U1e furb1ddtn weed ;iboard a sn1all tr1mara11 11h1c h \\'as.head1n ,i.: out tn sea afte.r spt'n· din~ the night al the yarht basin Customs spokl•Srn('n said !his 11·ct>k th;i t both.alleged smugglinR oprrati\1ns did not include the harbor ;1~ a dropoff point. but tnt'tl•ly as an aSS i'rll•d stop()\'CT in the al!rged smuggli ng routl' north 1'he 2&.foot erui st'r bo:1 rdcd \Vedne~day at the harbor apparPntly set out fron1 f'UC'rfo VRll&r1a . J\·lr xico , \\•ith its al· lC'j.!ed illrgial cargo. officials claim. On \\l'ednesday, prosecutor AJbert W. torney for Sinatra. Harris Jr.,told the jury in a. flat and Tunney said he told Pepper, "There Ls Ad ., o· unemotional tone that it had no no way I ~·uu!d ever n1ake a call tn try t(l -VCl0 lisiug: !11 an ICS alternative but to find Miss Davis guilty prevent your con1mittee fro1n gelling all or murder, kidnaplng and conspiracy. the lnforn1ation you think is availaple. NE\Y YORK (AP\ -Theodore J.. Moore told the jury there is a dif. But if you "'•ould invite him (Si natra ) to Bates. 70, \\·ho founded his O\Vn ad4 fereoce between circumstantial evidence talk to the committee members instead \'t'rtising agency and drove it to become ar.d a coincidence, and described Miss of subpoenaing him, it .,.,.0uld be the one of the fiv e largest in the w•orld, dif'd Davis' arrival in the San Francisco Bay courteous thing to do." Tuesday. Ted B11tes & Co. epitomized th area Aug . 3, 1970, her purchase of a Tunney said that , "a man who has hard-sell televl!ion commercial and \VILLIAM SPORT, Pa. -A relaxed and smiling Bobby Baker, saying he believed he had done hi s "duty" well, ·was paroled froni the Allen"'ood Prison Farm today artC'r serving 18 months of a three-yea r sentence for fraud, theft and tax evaslon. shotgun Aug . 5, and her departure Aug. 7 reached the level that he (Sinatra) has pioneered in exploiting the medium as a An undetermined number of assailants as "mere chance happenings ." ... shou ld not be treate<! that way." marketing tool. · armed with knives and tire irons at·:----'-"--....;.:..:..c._""-------'-:..:_.:::::.::;;:...:..:..:..;:,:.,-::..:::::.:c:..:=.....:=----'=---'="-"'='-'------- The fonner protege of President Lyn- don B. Johnson and secretary to the Senate majority, was driven fron1 the farm , a section of the Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary, by a woman shortly after 7:30 a.n1. Baker had been picked up at the farm 's administration building in the private auto and the car stopped just before it reached the gates, where a group or about 20 newsinen and photographers ••ere waiting. Baker, 11eatly dressed in a light topcoat to protect him from a chill wind, got out of the car and read a short prepared statvnent to the wailing newsmen. Baker said he entered the Lewisburg Prison on Jan . 14 , 1971 with a vow that "I would do my duty and I believe I have done it well." He s aid he would grant no interviews until after completion of a book he wa s v.·orking on . He then refused further com4 ment, got back in the car and was driven off. Baker, 44 , granted parole on his second appeal ln Apr il, was transferred from Lewisburg to the Al!enwood Farm near here as a minimum security prisoner after his first week in prison. He reminded newsmen that he has n1 nintained he was innocent of the cha-ges on which he was convicted in 1967. \Vlthout parole, Baker could not have be~n freed before next May 6. Baker's career in Washington began when he arrived from Pickens. S.C. and became a page. He earned a reputation as a tireless worker and went to law school at night. lie earned $19,600 a year as se<:rctary to the Senate majority. but his income went far beyond that. He estimated he received $2 millioo from his motel, vend· ing machine interests. insurance and r eal estate ventures, his law firm and travel agency. At the time of his parole hearing, his attorney said Baker would be "involved in managing his present businesses." He was reported last December to be promoting and developing a $53-mlllior; 25-story condominium apartment in Ocean City, Md., neit door to tbe Carousel Motel he owned at the time he resigned the Senate post in 1963. He sold the Carousel recently for $2.5 mlIUon. HE 'S A FREE MAN Bobby Biker ReleaHd Five Candidates To Participate 111 Coast For11m Five of the seven candidates running for Congress in the newly created 42nd District will participate in a forum tonight at the Community I-louse in Dana Point. The session, sponsored by the Dana Point Chan1ber of Commerce, will begin at 8 p.m. at 24642 San Juan Ave. The new Congressional District, created under re- cent legislative reapportionment. ex tends from northern San Diego County along the coast to l"~ewport Beach. Candidates who have indicated they will attend or send representatives in· elude Republicans Fred Gfl,ge, Norman Ream and Mrs. Gaye Lewis and Democrats Joseph Tomehak and Robert Lowe. Chamber officials said they received no response to invitations sent to Repub!Jcan candidate Clare Burgener and American Independent candidate Armin Moths. Fear Followed Teetli Marks, Blood Scared Diver SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A 31·year-0ld cannery worker allacked by a shark while diving for abalone in the Pacific says he was more frightened when he saw the teeth marks on ht. leg afterward than while the 12-foot creature had him in It., jaws. "Mainly, the thing I had on my mind was to get back to our outboard," Helmuth Himmrich uid Wednetday. "That's when I really got scared, onct: I was aboard and uw those teeth marks or the shark oo my leg. And all that blood." The bearded diver is Jess than half the size of the shark that tore at his ll~g and severed a nerve. He ~as at Letterman Hospital where he Wlderwent surgery lo repair his wounds. Himmrlch, father of two small children, said he just finished bagging his limit of fly: abalone, a seafood delicacy found only oft Umlted stretches of the U.S. F'lcific coast, and was swim~ back to the boat where his twD brothen-in·law and a nephew were fishing, "It seemed lo take one bite, then another-a herder one. Then It grabbed hold, hanging on, lifting me out of the water. I felt Uke it was trying to tear off ~nother part of me." llimmrich, of Lodi, who his been ocean diving stnce 1964, was phllosophl· cal about the attack. "He must have been hungry, and J w111 the only thing around,'' ht said. • lacked a pair or J\1arines at their San Clen1cnte apartment \Vednesday, leaving one victim stabbed in the side and the other beaten on lhe head. Police detained three men after the assaull s but they were later released without charge. The victims, round in the driveway of apartments at 137 W. Palizada, were J ack Dean Gibeault. 20, of apartment A at tl)e Palizada address, and his room· mate, Arthur Ane y Walker, 22. Both are stationed at Camp Pendleton. Police said the incident occurred at about 9 p.m, wheo the group of thugs ap- peared at the apartment after an alterca· lion earlier in the day. f\..1oments later, officers s~id. Gibeault's wife, Kathy, discovered the two bleeding men lying in the driveway. She ran to an all-night market nearby to seek aid. Police said her husband suffered a single slash wound to his lower side. Walker, apparently beaten with a tire ~ron , suffered severe head cuts and other \. hurts. After emergency treatment at Mission Community Hospital the two victims were transferred to the U.S. Naval Hospital at Camp Pendleton for further treatment of the injuries. Both are ex· pected to recover, police said. Officers said they have not yet determined the exact reasons for the a~ tack, but the incidents could have been the culmination of a dis pute v;•hich had begun earlier in the day. A squad or narcotics agents took part in a search for suspects through I.he night and other detectives planned interviews today with a large list of indi viduals who might be related to the incident. Motl1ers-to-he Get Watcrhed Access, Like It SAN JOSE (AP) -Expectant mothers al a San Jose hospilal are enthusiastic about the latest piece or equipment in the maternity ward - a waterbed. "We haven't had any trouble fn getting women lo use it,'' said Dr. Robert Goodlin, aS!ociate director of obstelrics at Valley Medical Center. The specially built bed, which cost about $,1000, has been 1n use for two weeks for expectant mothers, to help ease their labor PJins. Or. Ernest Lowe, dlr:ector of ttie obstetrics department, sakl use of the bed is starting a trend in American hospitals toward the European method of labor. In that method, a position on the side ·with legs drawn up resembles the fetal position and is more comfortable for many women, said Lowe. The waterbed allows the patient to~ die down into its Wannlh -it can be regulated from tap water temperature to 100 degrees -and float. When delivery begins, the patient ls moved tD a conventional delivery bed with the firmness needed to liain leverage for childbirth. Waterbeds are not new tn hospitals. Th~y origi nally were used for bum p.- llenl.1 and tho!:e with severe bedsores. MOTHER SUING GIRL SC OUTS IOWA CITY. 1ow a (UPl) -A mother has flied suit in di.,trict court here agalMt the Girl Scouts, contending the gTQUps refused to promote her daughter. Mr1. Eatelle O'Brien said In suit her daughter, Maryellen, .10, completed all the requirements for a first clus badge but it w1s not awarded . silverwoods PRE-FATHER'S DAY " • ec1a 1 Regularly 22.50·27.50 FAMOUS BRAND NAMES DOUBLE KNITS TEXTUR IZED POLYESTERS PURE WOOL WORSTEDS Everything you're looking for in slack~ .•• for Father's Day, for vacations, for travel ... at very special savings. Sty led for every man's laste ... belt loop, beltless, flares and straight leg models. • UOE 'l'OUll !lll 'mlWOOOS CHAAGE. MASTER CHAAGE. BANK.AMERICNI), OR ........cN< EXP..ss ' liTH I BlfOltJWA'f • M WIUHfRE • t12'9 CllOISHAW • D.S.C. •MAHON emt• • PAHOWU Qfl •DD. AMO• CUR\Jlft' CITY • <D:"ARO , WI flCMAIOIWO ~ • TCPMGA !'WA• SNfTA M11MA • _.,.,.,, SEAal • W VCGA1 • •OlfTQ.AfR • LA ICMRA • ,AUi SPa!NCS • ll!YEISIOl • OC1W10 • t.OS ctRRlnl ' ; I DAlt.Y PILOT REPRISAL PROMISED lsreel's Golda Meir Officials Nab pomb Suspects .bi W. Germany " ;FJtANKFIJRT, Germany (UPI) - ~ce firing rifl es and tear gas can- llt.ers today captured the co-leader ·or a 1.ilft.wing anarchist gang and three of his t!illowers whose organization claimed i:.isPonsibility for a recent wave of born· '81 in Germany that killed four U.S. *vicemen. A police spoke.am.an said among tho.se ten into custody following the shootout a house on the city's north side was dreas Buder, 29, a former sociology dent sought by police for more than E years. The so-called "Red Army Fae- ,. that he and a woman command d it _planted bombs in at least five West German cities in the past three 9eeks. :'Ille spokesman said police this mom- Jatg surrounded the house and, using IJudspeakers, ordered its occupants 9 tside. The order was met by bullets trorn the house and police opened up \'lith iu.nfire, brought an a rmored car to the ~ and fired teargas into the house. 'ftie four men were captured about 90 dlinutes later, he said. "Police said one or the four was injured ftl the shootout but did not id entify him . ~r 'vould they say what led them to the easpects. ; Arrested with Bander were Jan-Carl 8aspe and Holger Meins, both sought in Cbe-killings of three policemen over the ?Bst year and a ha lf. The fourth man was not identified. Since the bomb blasts in Heide]berg d Frankfurt, police have conducted a ive nationwide manhunt for leaders he group. Policemen armed wilh JW;tols have stopped automobiles on Jlghways and special heUcopters have teen surveying high-speed autobahns. · ~The other leader of the faction is Ulrike rfeinhoff, a fonner journalist who also }tlls been wanted for more than two years. ·One thousand stud ents in the huge t;i:ture hall of Frankfurt University Htard the tape-recorded voice o 'r <lt:rmany's most wanted woman tell tftem Wednesday to attack U . S . ejtablis.hments. ""l'he 38-yeaMld co-leader of the •'haader-Meinhoff" anardlist band told all "leftist comrade!" they no longer sbould hold back •·from making all Nnerican establishments the aim of your attacks." She told thcn1 they mu:;!. \"'age an .. armed battle against the imperialist criminals.'' "The voice, played baek on a tap<! recording in the university auditorium, was that of the anarchist leader, ac- 1»rding to students who know her. 'fhe "Red Anny Faction," the group she and Baader .,.Jead, already has ~:lallned responsiblfity for placing bombs iii' the U.S. Army's Europpean head- qearters in Heidelberg and in the Army's V•Corps headquarters in Frankfurt. Four s!rvicemen died in the blasts. ·'The listeners who heard het Wednesday did not all share her sentiments. Her ad- diess 1,1.·as punctuated by boos as well as hf 11p1>lause. One who shouted criticisms 'oms Daniel "Danny the Red" Cohn-Ben-rlr, the leader of the Paris student riots o 1967. Cohn-Bendit still is active in f"'tankfurt left""•ing student politics. Thursda,,, Junt l , 1971 Israeli Warning Lebanon Ready For Retaliation By United Press lutenaatloul 'J'he Lebanese army went on full alert today in expectation of J.sraeli reprisal attacks against Arab guerrillas who used a three-man Japanese suicide squad Tuesday night to kill 26 persons and wound 81 olher.s a l Tel Aviv's Lod Lydda International Airport . On e of the wounded died today. Lebanon warned the United Nations Security Council that such attacks could be expected . Armored trucks and tanks \vere sent to Beirut airport where an Jsraeli reprisal attack on Dec. 2-4, 1969, destroyed 13 airliners. Guerrillas began moving won1en and children from border vitlages. Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir warned Wednesday that lsr:iel held Lebanon responsible and hinted broadly at reprisal attacks. Today the guerrilla movement hailed the massacre as proof of its worldwide stature and said Israeli reprisals would be met with "un- precedented violence." King Hussein of Jordan condemned the massacre as a ''sick crime commi tted by sick people and planned by sic.k: minds as weU." He spt.ke at Amman Airport ceremonies marking the end of a visit by Pakistani President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. The Arab world rejoiced at success of the attack and Cairo's semi~fficial newspaper Al Ahram said editorially the atlack "was evidence that the Palestinian guerrilla movement had acquired in- ternational dimensions. •1 Another Cairo Newspaper, Al Akhbar, said such operations will not stop "until the Palestinian people are given back their coWJtry and rights." , Alt.hough Lebanon was fearful of Israeli counter measures. the Beirut newspaper Al Yorn asked, "why shou ldn't the Arabs rejoice? We rej<Mce because larael now reallm that It U. wide open to th< will of the Arab world and international revolu- tion. We rejoice because the right of the Palestinian Revolution has now been planted In the world consciousness." The French-language Le Soir said in Beirut that Israel was in the habit of blaming Lebanon for all its ills and .. oow that Lebanon extends to the Japanese Empire we have but to rejoice for the dimensions of our country, thanks to the logic of Mrs. Meir." Jn Tel Aviv, 1sraeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban said that if airlines serving Israel have "any consciences and any responsibility" they win accept the Israeli governm ent's plan for Increased security precautions. Mrs. Meir in her speech Wedneaday was critical of Air France for failing to check the paseengers• luggage when its plane left Rome for Tel Aviv. The threE- Japanese -two of whom died in the assault -brought their grenades and AK 47 Chinese-made automatic weapons in their suitcases on the Rome flight. Air France announced meanwhile it has begun to search passengers' luggage. Four Tel Aviv-bound planes were delayed at Paris' Orly airfield for hours Wec:h)es· day by bomb threats and a P a r i s bound Air Fraoce jet was delayed at New York's Kennedy Airport Wednesday night for four hours by another such threat. All turned out to be hoaxes. Eban told UPI correspondent Ohad H. Go:zanl he would not COlllJJ\eDt on reports Israel is considering denying landing rights to those who don't comply with re- quests for tougher passport checks plus better body and baggage searches to pre· vent attacks against aviation serving the Jewish state. Three IRA Provisional Wing Leaders Arrested DUBLIN (AP) -Authorities of the Jrish Republic arrested three leaders of the Jrish Republican Arn1y·s Provisional wing Wednesday a:id today but were unable to find a fourth. The two arrested Wednesda y \1'ere Joe Cahill, once the spearhead of Provisional operations in Northern Ireland, and Rory O'Brady, president of the Provisional 's poJltical arm, Sinn Fein. They were held under the offenses against the slate la•vs. allowing police to keep them for 48 hours \vithout formal charges. Prison authorities said they went on a hunger strike: O'Brady's brother, Sean, publicity director of Sinn Fein, was picked up to- day. Sean Macstophain, chief of staff of the Provisionals, evaded a police dragnet. He ha s not been Jiving at his home 25 mil es outside Dublin since he was wounded two • 'Pitt It Do·w1i, He1iry'-Nixo1i WARSA\V (AP) -President Nix- on. detennined to keep this tour on !<chedule, told his adviser Henry A. Kissinger today to put down his champagne g la ss and move along to the next Stop in the ceremon_ies. After signing a joint communique with Polish officials, Nixon joined in sipping the champagne with the leaders of this Communist nation and his entourage. Then he looked at his watch and said : "We must go." Kissinger was still holding his champagne glass and the Presldmt told him: "Quit drinking that, Henry." Kissinger put his glass on the table and joined Nixon in walking outside to the waiting motorcade. months1ago hy a bomb sent through the mail. The Official wing of the Irish '-Republican Army announced a cease-fire ·Monday night, but the Provisionals have ignored it and kept up their campaign of violence in Northern Ireland. Their head- quarters is in Dublln, capital of the Irish Republic. In the Northern Jreland capital of Belfast. f\\o'O men burst into a downtown taxi office early today and shot two Roman catholic attendants, wounding them critically. Security sources said the raid may have been a revenge attack by Protestant guerrillas. The Rev. Ian Paisley, the militant Protestant leader, demanded strong ac- tion by British troops against the TRA . Otherwise, he said, "the city of Belfast will be in ruins and inevitably loyalist,, will be forced to take drastic action to defend themselves." There was also an explosion and shooting around the dock area of Beliast. A policeman was shot in the back in Londonderry during the night and today guerrillas opened fire on an army check· point south of the border town of Newry. No casualties were reported in that at- tack. At Dunigiven. in County Tyrone. an army patrol walked into a booby-trapped house and an officer was burned in the face and hands. He 'vas opening the door to the empty house when the device went off. . VD Education P ushed PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Spokesmen for the Arilona Pharmaceutical Associa- tion said today venereal disease in Arizona will not be brought under control until facts about it are explained more full y to "VD prone youth." The spokesmen held a news conference today to kick off Arizona's first venereal · disease "Aw.areness Month." Cool, Dry • Ill Central U.S. •• Scatterecl Sliowers, Tliu1idersliowers Light in East 1 Te111peralttres Ml11! Low Pr. 70 61 ·" " .. 18 M .09 61 5-.i • .)() !l ,, .71 88 61 5• ,, ~ "' 51 At T ~ ~ ll R " " ,, « .I ,, Sl .. M " .. ... 73 '·'' Sl 4S .. " 'I i~ , .. ff 6& .02 " n ·-"-ll " ->'~·;, dMr 1f l!S .. f .._,, ,,, r IC: ..,ctOllllY H /~~ '° "' c.ut .... 1a ---- llOfMD,----~ l!llPJjWH (t;illJ .. ow r:23UIOW!n ~ ,tg._ .. ay sa e. • .r1 ay, Sale. Run to Penneys ----~ for big savings. Now 2ocr()_Off. Now's the time to • collect big savings on sneakers for mom, dad, and all the kids. Choose basketball shoes, deck shoes, tennis shoes, or striped track shoes. But hurry. Sale.15% off all infants' sunwear. Playwear for the sand pail set-at savings. Sun suits, bu_bbles, open back styles for infants and toddlers. All in easy- care fabrics, most Penn· Prest to never iron. Pick up plenty so you can enjoy summer. too. Sale.15% off Our clecorcitor Penn-Prest sheets. Save on all our muslin and percale sheets in fashion colors, stripes, florals, prints. 50% cotton/50% polyester .•. and more. Most are Penn-Prest for no~ Ironing ever. Full alze •heels and pillowcases avallablo. JCPenney The values are here every clay. Shop Sunday noon to5 P.M. at the following stores; ' ' NEWPORT BEACH, f•1h ion l1l•nd. HUNTINGTON BEACH , COSTA MESA. Hubor Center •(Closed Sundey ) Huntln9ton Charoe it! C·enttr. • I I' • t ' ' l ! • ' • 6 DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' The Fluoride Proposal /\ special local issue which both Jiuntington Beach and ~·ountain Valley voters will be asked to resolve a t the polls June 6. is whether they want·thelt cilles to place fluoride 1n city water supplies. Both cities have scheduled simiJar elections v.•hich ask residents to give a s11nple "yes" or "no" to the fluoride proposal. 1'he argu111cn t in favor of water fluoridation is its value to children under the age of eleven. It strength· ens their teeth and sharply reduces the Likelihood of C'a vities_ Opponent.i; claim "'alcr nuoridation is in <'Sscnce ''soci alized 1nediC"1ne." They say peo ple s hould have the right to choose their medicine. Their argun1ent sounds reasonable unJess one con· ~iders thal several million Americans already use fluor- 1dated \\'atcr \Vith no documented cases of harmful ~ effects Furthern1ore, the \Valer supplies in both l-l unt1ng- ton Beach and Fountain Valley already have h<Jlf the fluoride ne<'ded for tooth protection. The cost '''ill be a per capita minimal -alx>ut S20,000 a year in each city -but the savings in un· dan1aged teeth for our youth could be tremendous. Fluoridated water isn1t going to hurt anyone. Tt \\1i!I help 1nany. (For description of a milk fluoridation a\. tcrnative. not presently available here. see letter in ~Iailbox bc}O\V.) Councilmen's Salaries A stO'rm of controversy ltas kicked up around a proposed amendment to the Huntington Beach city charter on the June 6 ballot. The amendment ''.'Ould place the salaries of city councilmen in this charter city in line with salaries of councilmen in general la\V cities. The current salary of Huntington Beach councilmen. as fixed by charter, is $175 a month. U the amendment is approved the salary will be $300 a month, the same as councilmen serving in general law cities \vith popu· lations greater than 75,000. General law salaries are guided by the state Leg· 1 He Doesn 't Publicize The Phonies Dear Gloomv (sYDNEY J. I-IARRIS) Answers to Various Queries That Come In the rt1ail : From R.B .. Raleigh, Nor1h Carolina : •·\\'hy didn "t you ever comment on the Clifford Irving case while ii was making fronl-page news ?" Because publicizing phonies is not my idea of an honest day·s work, and also because I wouldn't read a book about J10\\'arrl Hughes even if it were authentic. Frorn L.B., a 4th- grade st u de n t in Fredericton, Ne w Bruns\.\.·ic·k: "Af!er seeing so nlany def · initions in you r col· umn rffrntlv, I \\'On- der if you Could te ll me ho1.,. 11·c began lo call a certain kind of pants 'jeans.' Your column is \lery popuhir and read • Gus Tt must be 11 kind of irony for tlenry Fond3 playing the good guy as Sgt. Smith, upholder of law and order. to have a daughter Jane. liberal acti\list and spokeswornan for the not so good guys! Which one is only acting? -Diogenes '72 Tlillf. h•lul'I rt11«!1 ,...,.", ... ~.,. Ml tlKftUrllf 1110.. ., "'• MW1PI...... !u14 your "' ... ..,., Ho colwmr Ou1, P•lff Pli.t. FROM P.B.E., Lon~ Island, N.Y.: "J agreed with your column on the ~r drinkers and their filthy habits or tossing cans everywhere -but what about you miserable cigaret smokers end your butts?" You've got me there -as an inveterate puffer, I plead guilty to flipping cigaret butts indiscriminately, which just proves that there are Yahoos in every element o[ the population. From B.G., Grand Junction, Colo.: •·Who do you think is going to be the Democratic candidate for President in 1972 ?'" I.stature and are based strictJy on population. Council· men in Fountain Valley, a city of 36,000, now earn $200 a mon th. Costa Mesa councilmen "'ho ha\•c b<"en receiving $2~0, go to $300 this month under the !'itate law. The ballot argument against the charter amend· 1nent claims the council would have the power to set It! own salart. That is not true. The state Legislature would, in effect, set the salary and 1-luntington Beach councilmen \vouJd then be paid on a par with council· tnen in more than 400 California cities. It's really a matter of bringing J-l untington Beach councilmen's pay in line \\'Ith others. A Question of Tactics The Fountain Vallev School District earned a com· mendable reputation fof \VOrking hard to bring about school unification in \vest Orange County. There is some indication, however, that the district may no\V be push· ing a little too hard, tactically speaking. Fountain Valley has recently proposed an area- wide s tee ring coma1ittee ll\, pro1note unification. But response to the idea, while polite in most cases, has been noticeably unenthusiastic. And trustees of the Westminster School District, in fact, rejected the idea outright. In all these cases, school officials have pleaded that problems of salary negotiations \Vith teachers, balancin~ lhe new budget, and ending the year \vould make it di!· fi cult for them to devote much time to a reneY.1ed uni· fication drive. In the circumstances, it might be best for Fountajn \'alley to delay the first meeting of the proposed steer· ing committee a month or two until everyone can come to it with a more positive attitude. Unification is a criti· cally important problem, but taking the proverbial ''one step back" at this point might be the most effective tactic for progressing toward ultimate agreement. H 'Joe Average' Not 'Apostle of Reverag~ Vote Should Decide Death Penalty To the Editor: So people who wish to overturn the California Supreme Court ruling on the death penalty are "apostles o( revenge." Not really! l\1ost of us arii,just "Joe Average," who wish to extend to the people of California the right to decide. Believe lt or not, voting is a right or the law-abiding citizens of California who are registered to vote. Certain restrictions are placed on this r ight. so that the law·Bbiding citizens can dec ide. I WOULD LIKE TO draw to your at- tention the fact that in our penal fac.ilitles psychiatric care is provided . ,.,_1any persons have been helped in this capacity. However, ou r courts and penal facilities are filled with cases or "tem- porary" insanity. These people are tried, convicted, incarcerated, treated and set free just to re-do \\'hat they were lreated for. You see. they were .. temporarily'' in· sane. ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome. NOTTnall11 writers should convey tlieir messages Tn 300 words or less. Tlie right to conde1ise letters to fit .space or eliminate libel i.'! reserved. All let· ters must include signatures and mail- ing address, but names may be wilh· held on request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetru will not be pub- lished. didates. This couotry sorely needs Its priorities reshuffled . This is what McGovern plans: • -"A vast military colossus, now capable o( blowing up the world a hun- dred limes over, is devouring two out of three of our tax dollars." he states. He plans to cul the military budget by $32 billion over a three.year period , His ~ page prospectus proposes r ad i ca I rev isions in our present military system -all long overdue. Voters of C.'.lllfornl:-i h:iv1· lon~ obse r\ l'cl the dctcr1or;_i\lon of thr l'u;1~1:il arras. the pressures flf urhan11;1!in11 and ti('v£>1 op· mcnt. the conrl ictin~ int erests as 111 USf'S. as well as the fr;i~1ncnt~11on or authority among a multllullr of J.:O\"crnme.ntnl agencies. Your ed1ton <1l t1nd:.; our ln('k of <"Or'J· ridencc in local govl·rn1nt'nl d1sappoint1nR and unv.·a rrantcd . ycl !he coast or California is n1utt• e\lidrncc tu the reasons for C"IUr 1:-ick ol confidt•nc l'. Responsi ve local government can only gain in stature by recognizing that the ramification of coastal problems do not end at the borders of their cities or coun- ties . Concern is for almost 1.100 miles or coastline, nol just the beach In front of our doors. t'"1tl1p:istes with fluoride are lxlth !'ltcps 1n th<' ni.:ht dlre<'lion , but 1he~e-mrthoc\J catl (nr 11nceasin11; watrhfulness on the part of p<1renLs. or 111 whose c~rf' the childrl'll are durifii the imwrtnnt f11r1nat1ve tlme of the ttitlh's enamel. A nH•thod which fiti 1nort: ea::;ilv in!n nor1nal habits would be b<'!lcr It 'is nl)t f:ir to see k. Mille h:iJ been shown by sc1en1ific research :imong sc h o o I c·hilrlren , notably by Dr. l::. Ziegler of \'i'11Hcrthur, Switzerland to be a safe vehi· ti(' for fl uoride which can easUy be mixed into 11 and distributed with a family 's daily supply in clearly labeled botlle.11. This can be dOl'le by any procell!inf d1lry as demonstrated by the Borrow Dental Milk Foundation, a non-profit making C'harilable trust establlshed In England lo increase pub!Jc undentandlng of the problem al\(I show th.la: aafe 1ltem11tlve way lo more costly and wasteful met~ ods. ,.._ by so many around here." Someone the Democrats think they can spare for the sacrifice this fall : except for a disaster. the &publican primaries in Peking setUed the issue. Please explain how a psychiatrist ca n treat these people for the remaindC'r of their lives. Please explain why some return and go through the same routine. Please explain v.·here the end of our "helping the poor sick mind" is to stop, and y,·here self-preservation is wrong. -~1cGOVERN aims al taxing big cor- THE LEAG UES JN California are sup· porting and v.·orking for the Coastline Initiative because it will provide not a moratorium as you call it. but a period ot interim per1n it contro l which will serve as a brake lo sl od-down the pell-mell rush lo develop our coastal lands. Such an int~rim period y,•ill allow time for lhe development of a comprehensive plan for the orderly, long range conservation 11nd management of the California coastal arf.a. TJIERE IS NC) OANGEll 1n 1h"' in- grstion of the controlled amou11t up to the age or 11 years ; there is equally no reason lo continue it throtlghout adult life. To do so, as occurs when fluoride la introduced lnto piped water .11upplie.!'I, Is to incu r unnecessary e:JJ>('nditurt:. Only I percent of tht-water will be drunk and the remainder w1ll now away 1ntn the sev.·age .!lystem . \Vhy use :\.000 limes more fluoride than I,<: nrcr~s.1ry to achieve the same result? YOU SLY LllTLE dc\lil. you knew just \'lhat to say in order ln get an an s1\•er. didn 'l you'.' \Veil. Miss flatterer. "jeans" ts short for "Jean fustian:' a fabric of cotton and flax originating in Genoa, lta· ly . Now do you r O\\'n homework after this! From A.N .• Sausalito, Cal : "Are you loo mealy·mouthed to take a public posi- tion on the subject of school busing ? What is; your vk!w ?" I ha ve disqualified myself on the sub- ject, since my chi ldren attend 11 private school. and I think anything I said on the subject would be self·scrving. For the record, though, I don't think it makes any rlifference since they just get different kind s of rotten educations . ' FRO~t C.W .. Fort \\'orth, Tex : "After reading :your c.:olun111 abOul Jonah and the whale, I wonder what religious denomina· lion you be.Jong to." I am, as you could learn from Ha nsanrs or the Almanach de Gotha, a member of the Reform Evangelical Druids, a small but strict secL whose principal creed can-t><rexpressc<I terse.ly: "Most people don 't even live once." From D.R.S., Pon1pano ~ach. Fla.· "Do you think that eventually every country Y>'ill be Communist?" Yes. unless the ca pitalists are smart enough to make everyone a capitalist in lime to forestall this dreary prospect Pleasures of Middle Age Middle age I! the le&.!Jl apprtoeialtd period of life. People treat it a.'! if It were a loathesome disease they don't want anybody else to know they have acquired. They often act as if they thou ght that if they paid no 11tten- lion to ii. it would go away like a bad dream in the night. Well , it won 't. On lhe other hand mid- tlle age is no 24-hour- a-day. ;iround lhe clock nightmare. Af· ter they get used to it, many of its vic- tims find middle age tO be more enjoy- able, in aome ways, than youth. You don't have to be daffy to recognlze that the middle years of txlstence hive their consollng rewards as well u thflr demerlll. Some of them are: on lt'.e wry skle, bot that doesn't make them 1esa rul. HERE ARE A FEW rea .... why you ,;houldn't dissolve ln tean on arriving at y00r\40th birthday: You don't have tO call up an eltoetronlc dtttinjj: bureau to find out wh!ch a:lrl would be be.<!t for you to take out Dne evening. Your wife Will nomlnate twself. It isn't neees.sary to st.art aearchlng for 11 bigger apartment or a larger house if '!Ot' r.ee 1 stork's wing on the horlton. The stork no M>ngt:r k.eePf your address in lt.o &ddrm book. , You probably have beoomo familiar ~ith the $Jlmploms of oome kind ol chronic dlseAM: with which yoo'll kttp company in your old age. And ii doe~n·t ( HAL BOYLE ) seem as terrible as you thought It might be. YOU HAVE LOST much of the in- security that secretly plagued your youth. 'Therefore you don't make a nuisance of yourself by trying to top every witty remark you hear at a cocktail party. Unless }'OU have become an alcoholic. you have learned to take only two last ones for the road iMtead of five, Your chlldren are either oul of their teens. or oe.r the end oC them, and now and then do oomethlng thoughtful that leld.! you to suspect they may tum into human belngs, after all. Some month! you are even able to f)ay their phone bill~ without crying out to high heaven in flnenclal agony. 1'RERE IS NO tnc.linatlon to jump on the bandwagon for tvery new lntoler11nce or promised reform that parades by your door. You may evtn be willl~ to drop 90mt old outworn prejudice that kept you snug before. Except for financing a new automobile now and then, It Is Hktly. that you are through wilh undertaking any m1jor new eoooomJc burdem. You have all tht mortgages and JJfe insurance thet a.ny DWI In his right mind need•. All In all, thert Is u much abool mid· die ag• In enjoy u !hero IJ thal ntOds In bt forg iven. "JOE AVERAGE" is told to double- lock his doors, don't shoot an intruder unless he tries to kill you first, ''Jane Average" is advised to carry, in her purse, protection. No guns, (Jf course. Those are concealed weapons and against the law. We are expected to excuse burglary, robbery, child molesting, rape, murder, harassment, assauli -you name it. Just because old Average Js in control of his actions and reactions. he must excuse . NO W TIIE CALIFORNIA Supreme Court says we must give every major criminal the opportunity or being freed from confinement and tree to commit murder again, all without hi! ordered death. I agree there should be stiffer gun con- trols, including the regl!tration of all guns and examination ot each penon having them. But thi$ is only a small part of 11 big problem. To accll.!le the "apostles of revenge" of jumping on a bandwagon because of another shooting ill ridiculous. My guess ill you just didn't circulate among Joe Average people when the decision was handed down. Many were for retaining capital punishment. MRS. C. R. DEWEES ltle!Govern's Program To the Editor: J can't agree less with Robert S. Alie.n's column, "McGovern causes Shock and Alann" (DAILY PI.LO'!'. May 221 . Allen. quoting Sen. Henry Jackson, atternp13 to tnstll l. fear into his readen regardlr,iog presidential hopeful George McGovern : '"The McGovern Doctr ine .... that would be a diluter for tht American people." DISASTER~ Hardly. On tho eolltrary. his doctrine is the most thorough, the most valid of all the presidential can· By George --- Dear George: Why doesn't your editor Ore you off your job? FURIOUS Dear Furious: Betause I am '° tnslghl·laden, widely read. helpful and oom· passionate. Alw, because he's been trying to figure out for the past 10 yeirs exactly whit my job is, 11nd It's that f1nt llep thllt batn., him. por alions more (L6i0,000 U.S. cor- porations paid no corporate income taxes v.·ha1soever in the last fiscal year), and to tighten control of funds allocated by the federal government. .. -McGovern p1ans to y,·ithdraw all American force! from Vietnam y,·ithin 90 days of tak ing offict'. -He also plans to revamp and reform many federa l organization! and agencies that need such changes (FBI, for ex- ample). -McGOVERN proposes federal aid to elementary and secondary schools by an increase of $12 billion. The present budget Is $3 billion . -He y,·ould shift $43 billion a yea r from the more afnuent to the relatively poor through a redistribute-the-wealth plan. These are bul a few of McGovern 's programs for governmental reforms. To aay his doctrine is "a disaster for the American people" is totally unrealistic and dO\\'Tlright ridiculous. CHRIS BRODERICK Underpaid CDP To the Editor: Gue.!ls the California 1-0ghway Patrol just isn't politically motivated enough for Governor Reagan l-0 warrant equal wages and benefits to those of a pOliceman, though the work of the CHP is far more dangerous -to thcmselv~. BERNY WELSH Coastal Bills To the Editor: We &re reaponding to your editorial or May 11 which commentJ upon the en· do~ment .by the League of \\'omen Voters ol the coutal legillation embodied In the Sleroty-Grumky bill! or, failing their pasuae, ln the Coastal Initiative. Your editorial claims that it is "a cop out for any of us ... to put down local government for what ill our own col· lective hindsight awar~ns of a whole variety ol problems including the en· vironmental. '' May we. remind you that the League of Women.Vot ers has for over 15 yenn1 been dreply concerned wlth the development and management of water resource$ and believes that protection of the t1:nvtronment must receive major con· !ideratloo along with our social and economic nee<hl. WE DO NOT C0~1 F. new to the suppo rt of measures to protect our cciast. The co11stal L~ague~ of !he Lcogue of \\'omen We are indeed suppor1ers of local con· lrol -but true con!rol, not a euphemism for govcrnmt'nl by \lestcd interests . \\'e sec 1nonumcnts to existing coastal plan- ning procedure! in asph11lt and cemenl, high rise and pollution, dredge and fill all along our coast. The effects of true local con!.rol are clearly recogn izable in strong, responsible local go\Pernmt'nl, responsive to the needs or all. We see. hope for the pre.!lervation of our coastal resources in the development of regional under- standing and action a.'\ set forth in the Sieroty legislation or 1he Coast a I Initiative. RUTII FINLEY President League of Women Votera of Huntington Beach /Hilk Fluoridation To the Editor: The American Dental A!isociaUon and the American t\1edlcal As.'!ociaUon have both advocated the treatment of water by fluoride to prevent tooth decay. On the other hand the general public wr ite in considerable numbers to thei r local papers expre!!lng fears about possi· b!e hanntul effects. The threat to the ln· dividual's freedom of choice arouses in· tense feelings of resentment which un- dotibtedl y influence local co u n c i I 3 hesitating on the brink of adopting water nu orldation. Mea nwhile children arc growlng up suf· ftrlng unnecessarily from the lncreasl!"lg lnclden~ of dental tarit3 and the en-- suing lll·health which can honn them ror the rest (Jr thtir li\1'3, FLUORIDE J A.BLETS and the use of Diligent Search? (PRE.SS COl\iMENTS) Nllet, 01., Scrap Age: "A search by the IRS! tlow diligently does the IRS se~rch ft'Jr a taxpayer who ha~ a refund coming to him? Apparently not as much as whtn he owes lhe gt'Jvernment. When the IRS offlct1: In Albuqutrque Jta\le 11n 'un11blt to locate' llst lo news~pers. an editor spot~ led thr narne of a US. mflJ.:istratr who holds c<iurt acrou the street frQm the I RS office." Whether run wid er a stat(' .~chf'mc or through other means, the advantages of the milk method arc outstanding . Dental Milk would strengthen young teeth in the formative year!. which is the sole ob- jective of fluor idation . B F.. f'F.TTI'M' For LI~ Borrow ()('nt11t Milk f'ounda tioB \Vaterl ooville Portsmouth , England WMte to l:o119ress To the Editor Do you know that Sen. John Tunney'• "good friend," Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, has propq11ed that $20 million (Jf the. tax· payers' money be appropriated for a na· tiona l park around Chappaquiddick Pond? Do we need 1ny rnore government held and admlnlatered land? In lf70 the federal bureaucracies held 40 percent or the land area ot the United States, tome of which ranchers and cattle taiJer1 u9ed for grating and paid no ti..xes on. It makes yoo wonder · whet tht population gang ls talking about when it tella l1ll we are run ning out of land to house future generations. Unless you want lo help finance a memorial lo Mary Jo Kopecl•. tell your representatives and senators to vote no on SB 3485. VIRGINIA McHONB OL\HG& COAIT DAILY PILOT Robm N. w •ed, l'llbU.1- Thomas Ke"ui~ Editor Albtrt \V. 8<1tu Editorial Pov~ Edil<1r ,,,.,. M1tot1al pt.Ste of the Dllb' Piiot aef:ks to lnft"WTI'I and aUmu· late rt'Mlf'rt by 11rt'llrnt1n1 this neW!lllflfitf"'• nplnlona •nd com· mrntA.t)' on topir.11 of tnltA'lt and ali:mlfh:lln('(!, b)' 1u·O\'ldlnr a forum fnr thl' cxprrt."ln11 of our rf'11idrrs' '-'r i11 ion11, 11nd hy JJf'l'IM"ntlniC tM d1\'""" ,.1,.\\·110\nt.J ~f lnfon'nl"d nb- lH'"r\'rN 11nd 1pokt'llmrn nn \011\cs o( the day. Thursday. June I , 1972 • • , ' DAI LY PIL OT ;; Sl ,500 to Enlist Army, :M;arines Offering Bonus Five Bomb S h elter Victir1i.s Smell.ed G~; Survivor Says \'ALDESF:. ;.; r. 1UPI1 - 1 ~The s:urvi vor of a bomb i>helter etplosion that kil!Cd her five playmates s a id Wednesda}' the children had sneaked into lhf> sheltrr In play and were afraid to tell anyone the concret~ cubicle reeked of ga s p.1ral)Zed at llvl\' Cr u ~ s ho!ip1tal l>> a 111IJuIti11 rt l~ospital sinct> ~1.:i\• 15,. whi.:11 \~'ednesda·~ 1.>r Augusto llr'li.£. he was gu nued d O\Vll while the pl1~s1t·i:in \\]11~ has at· l"<JlllpalJ!:t u11g al a nearby tended (.:hJvez during tht' [;1~1. L:1urcl. r-.1d., shoppu1g center desi:ril>cd 111~ 1·11nd1t1un ,1 '1 1•rotcst Pla1111ed Folk singer Joan Baez and rep- resenta tives of about 20 ant1- '\'ar grou ps announced plans Wednesday for forming a hu- man chain ol "-'Omen and chil- dren around the Capitol June 22 in an effort to pressure Con- gress in to cutting off funds for the \Yar. · · \\' ASHI!\GTON' ( UPf) -For the first time since the Civil War, the Anny and 1he Marine Corps today began offering SJ .500 cash ~s to men who enlist for combat training. ~ bonuses will be offered until the end of Augll."lt in a move to attract 1nort volunteers. 'They may bt offered again later if the tria l period proves successful. There are so~ catche!!. The volun- !eers must go in for four years, in stead t.if lhe usual t\4-·o-yt·ar hitch for infantry artillery and armor ; and the honus 1\ ill be paid only after the volunteer is 1n unifonn, has successfully completed hi:-; training and has been accepted for l'Om- bat service. Delaying the payments in that manner is an atte1npt to a\·oid the abuses which occurred the last time the bonuses were paid. more than 100 years ago. During the Civil \Var some men en1isted. col· lected their bonus -it \\'as called a "bounty" -and then deserted. only to J(leindiRnst 'Victory' . . Seen. Despite Cranston \VASHI NG TON (AP) -Senators oir posed to the nomination of Richard G. Kleindienst to be attorney general have gained another vote, but iupporters re- main confident of J decisive victory margin. Sen. Alan Cranston (0-Carir. ). 1111- nounced his opposition to the nominntion. whic h may be vo ted on by the Senate next l\"eek. Senate debate began \Vednesday after a long delay \\'hi!e the Judicia ry C-0mmitt~ investigated Kleindienst's role as deputy attorney general in the settlement of an- titrust cases against I n t er n a ti on a I Telephone & Telegraph Corp. So far only a few Democratic liberals DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oel!very or the Dal!y Piiot Is 9u.:irantted MOf!day.r:r"'ilY: ir vou do not i..i~• your paper by !.:JO p,m_, c•U 1nd Yll'U• (OO'f wlll i.., t>roughl II) vou. Cat~ •r• l•k'~ unt11 1:l0 p.m. S•turcf1v 1nd Suf'ld1y: tr ~u do not recelv1 yovr copy by t •.m. S11rurd~y, or I 1 . ..-.. Sund1y, clllt lr>d ii tOPY wo!I be b"'ll!lhl Iii you. C1U1 ''' f11ken un1fl 1~ 1.m. Telephones Moll Or1ng1 C111rnly Ar111~ •.•••.• t4l·4UI Northwe11 Hurrtlnoion ee1ch •nd Wn!IT'llnsit r ..... , ...•..•.... f*.1!21 San Otm.n•t. Cllpl'1rano BNth, $.!Jn J1111n C•Plllr1no, O..rw Po!nl. $Ou'l!I Lt""°"', ~ N;gu.I .•. •t:i-4411 MODEL YEAR have announced they v.'ill \'Ol~ agai nst confirmation despite the furor stirred up by 22 days of hearings on the ITI' affair. Cr.anston based his opposition on what he called Kleindienst's lack or sensibility for constitutional rights. "lo.fr. Kleindienst has eviden~ a high tolerance !pr wire-tapping, mass arrests end preventi\'e detention," Cra nston s3id in a speech prepared for today"s debate. "His thinking is fuzzy when ii comes to di stinguishing betv:een people w h o threaten our nation's secur ity and people "'ho merely disagree v;·ith h i m politically." Cranston added. K!eindienst's nomination to succef"d foimer Atty. Gen. John N. ~titchelt \\'as submitted by President Nixon in mid· fo~ebruary and origin::itly \\-'as approved unanimously by the Judiciary Committee. Some of !he l'Omn1ittee's liberal Democ"rats, ho\\'ever. v;·ere critical or • Justice Department JX>licies on civl! rights and c-i\'il li~rties Sen. Barry C:old\vater ( H-Ariz. ), said at !he start of the Senate debate. "Some liberals are afraid Dick 'Kleindienst v•ill be too good <it the job he has bf:en pro- posed for. I suspect the opposition :steins from the very thing 1 believe: we nttd the most in the Department or Justice -a tough, unyielding, uncompromising ap. pliC'ation of the law to all parties of at! social, economic or polit ico! slatust-.~." enlist again 1n <tnolher part ul lh~ tl.ruu· lrY to repeat ttK-1t deception . 11tey were called "bounty jumpers"' anrl they brou ght t~ system into such dii;repute that it has oot bet'n used sul<'e. 13ut Coogre.s5 authoriied !he new bonus: in September, telling the Offense Depart-'l'l1o's lie? ment at the lime that it could offt·r a bounty or up to $3 .000. Defense Se<-retar\' Uo you recognize th i;; ~lelvin R. Laird decided to use onh· !iJ lf 1nan:' \\'ell. belie..-e 1t th11t 3mount for thf' summer lest pt>riod or not it's actor Burl. ·rhe plan wa:-: ~1vC'n no ad\'ance puhli<'i· l.anc<1ster in one of the 1v so that young men \l'ho intended !o strangest disg uises of sign up durini.: .\lay vouuld not dela~· tht-1r /u s career -a black cnlistmen! to l:ike advantage of !h1' priest -for his role i11 bonus: but the Pentagon began a lull 'Scorpio.' a rJ.I\ 1hrillt>r publicity c·amp.:ii~11 on the offer today hcing filmed in \\'ash· The bonus is aimed at this year "i; <'rop ington. of high school graduates who are coming --- into a labor -market with a 6 percent. unemployment rate over all, and a 11 percent jobless rate for their age group. Pentagon officials said if the dri\'e suc- c:eeds this :-urnmer they believe the ad- mini!;!ration"s pl:in for an all-volunteer Arm y beginning 13 months from now v.•i!I be a success. The bonu;; ide;1 i.~ as old as !he republic. Five months before l h c Decla ration of Independen<'e was pro-- <"laimed. the Continental Congress. on George Washinglon·s advice, adopted an enlistment bounty. ft provided $4 for n1en without rifles ;ind $6.67 for men with rifles who enlisted. f)ur1ng lhe ttevolutionary \Var the bonus rose to $200. and during the Civil "'a.r it ranged from SlOO to $300. Durini 1he latter conflict some towns offered bigger bonwies -ranging up to $1 ,500 - in an attempt to attract volunteers from other communities so the local boys would nol have to march off to ••ar. Florida De1nands A1itisniog Action i\lJA.\'11. Fla. (AP l -Envir1illmP11\a[ officials hert' have de1ni1nded antisn1og action by three states after charRing tl1at .an "industrial air pollution bank'" "·hich drifted down rrorn the North blanketed the Sunshinl' Stair with smoky haze for live day.s:. \Veal her :.ate\lites tra<:ed I hr now or "thi:i; unusual po!luli \·e load" l'rom in- dustrial Tegion s of Ohio. Pennsylvania and Tenness~. 11aid the Dade County pollutiOJt control t·hief. 'Peter l\aljet. F'or five days beginning ~fay 21. the pollution obscured thfo normally clear :skies of sunn y Florida. As the smog lay trapped al ground leve l by a lernperalure irlVersion . .a rise in respiratory diseases and hospital ad· missions wa s r~ported. Prisoners Seek Viel War E11cl? \\'ASJlll\'(;TON I UPI I Fifteen American prisoners of v;·ar in South Vic t n a m purportedly have signed a .sla lement asking Congress lo stop the "in1n1oraL trag ic war ." 'The appeal and the names or lh<' alleged signees v;•ere broadcast over "Liberation Radio." operated by the \i'iet Cong. Three or the men were previously listed as officinlly rnis.sing-in action. The English-language broad- c..isl v.·as monitored by 1he U.S. governmrnl Tuesday. UP r obtained a transcript copy fr om I{ o \' e r nm e n I source~ and thr Dfft'ns.e Oepartment ha.~ contir1ned i!~ aut.hcnticitv. But a spokcsn1an said department policy pro- hibit('(! confir1ning th e n;ime.:; of prisoners listed. The Pe11· tagon \\'ednesdny started to notify the relati\'eS of the men narned in the broadcast. catastrophic consequenct-s ·· "Rational beings re c ti r \' mistakes \vhen recognized.·· tht-statement said . "The time i~ criti cal. Please lake ef- feclive legislative action. \\'e 1nust choose betv.•een an ini- mornl, tragic v;.·ar w i I h catastrophic consequences and the honorable future of the Uni led Stales." I e tll r ar P1·i<·es IJp serious ar.d s:11d h<' 1irt:l'~~!!y \l.'ASlllNGTON IAP) _ needed med1c<it 1-0n. After slumping for f w ol·;-;,.. _________ ~, n10nths. farm livestock prices jl LAYER I N SHORT.· I are on the move a,i::ain and soon ma y force consumors '" THE LOOK !{lrd their loin:o; :i1 1neo1t counters. Cvnthia .. Bea"' Picou , 10. The Agriculture OeparL1ne11l esc:iped dt>ath bec-ause ~ht' 1·epurted Wednesday that hve- ~·as !he first one or the caUle prices rose in ~lay to an children t-0 lca\·e the shellt!r :iJl.11me high of $33 .10 per 1001 and v;·,:is a little di!.trtnee a"""'av pounds. !logs averaged an 11.1 \rhen the gas exploded ·rul'~-µt:r<:ent increase lu tl4.!l0, I day C\'ening . 1nainly :1s: <1 result of fcwt•r A federal investig::itor. Jack baby pigs last winter. I LOOK c. \Villiams of the Alcohol, e Cl111ve:: Ill I ·robacco and fireurn1s U1ut, PllOENIX, Ariz. (AP\ - .said a valve leading from a Cesar Chavez . lhe United ' Jc" al'\ I\,_ L II ~asoline tank Ullo tile lxnnb Farm \Vorkers: leader. has \A.All I ll.l ru shelter had been leaking, and been taken 10 8 hospital. 1 . !he explosion apparently oc· !kl f 17th & rv111• curred because or the tiny weakened by.a 2 ay asL WESTCLIFF l'LAZA h r I Chavez his fate hollov.-·ed I Newport le•~h t:hildren flipped a \Jght sw1teh. ___ _ _ ' spark crea_ted w en one o, t ie and dra~n was taken to the ;;;;;;::;;;i "They observed so1ne gas I and odor and discussed it among 1hemselves. but they did not tell any ;i<Jults about it because thev \Vere afraid of being pun'ished .'' said \Villia1ns after interviewi ng lhe on ly survivor. \VASllJNCTON lAP) -Re- jecting industry plea~ for delay. the federal govern1nent is ordering manufacturers to make small c h i I d re n • s .li lei;p\\.'Car l'ire·resistant. Commerce Secretary Peter G. Peterson told ne\\·smen V."ednesday the first phase of fht> f1<1mma bil ity standard. covering sizes O to 6X, "'ill go into effect July 29. After !hat d;ilc, c·hildren's I s-leepwear musl be rf'sistant to I fl an1e or the government v:ill label the garments nammable and place a \l'arning on the tlothing. A year la!er. all sleeping: I garments in sizes O to 6X n1ust 1 meet the .stand.1rd or be bannf"d from the mar~t. JN-SINK-ERA TOR THE NO. 1 DISPOSER REPUBLIC "<;EM INI " ' WATER HEATERS 20 Gol. '52 " • JO Geil. '59" 40 Gol. '64" e .S11rgcr11 Delayed W .... I m•1te1 ln·S•nW·ErUo< mo11 w•n!t'IH l••uhltil <•" roa<on·p•oot ll•lnl••S ltetl. E"ctu•l•tt liflt Ill• "Wroncll· erro•• ,.,., lei• r-u clelr 1tm• oaJ1ly. Ano md.-.. N1 -... !ht _,...erlut MH•I " hi• I liletlrrw cor~Mon w•rr•n•v. And I l·Yo•r ,..r11 wl tr•nly IM. lM 11\Wllily 11'1'9 m•ll1 IN·SINIC:·EllATOll Ill• numof'< Ont •i.,0111< tlO'IOl'I•• ln ~ft;f ~l!clleft, '84" SJLVEH SPRiNG, Md . (LJ PI J --Surgery to remove a bullet from the spine of Ga-.•. c;eorge C. \VaJ\ace ha~ been put off by doctors for the im- mediate future . according to a Wallace aide. Billy Joe Cainp. \Vallace's pres~ secretary. said Wed- nesday that doctors have decided to postpone surgery to rem<1ve the buRel which has left the go\'ernor partially SO Geil. This qu1lily ql111 l;nocl w1l1r h11 I· •• ;, oquipptd ..,(th 11f1ly ftnip. 1 1 r •quirod by l~w. §·y•. 'u<>r •nl•il "" ten~. Mon.-Fri. 9-9,· S.11 . 9.6; Sun. JG-4 Chro1na~olor • AN ,--:;31llll"."" • Automatic Fine Tunln9 16'' BARGAIN COLOR WHY BUY AT ABC? U1tre MM.,." stylln1 for tt'Mt m••t con..,..perery '""' nttlng1. C•ltlttet flnl1hed In ......,ud• Shell White hlfh t i"' i.cquer ftnlth with Reseweod color t.,. Chroma--tolor 100 Pfctvr• tvlte. Tlten 101 Hehllcraftecl Ch•••lt. Avall•M• with R~~ Contrel NEW LOW PRICE Table Model CHROMACOLOR PICTURE TUBE Dep tn d•ble MIMlcr1ftttl Ch•nla with Automatk ,.,,,. Tunh"tt. Autom•tk T I n t Ou•"' 11\d SoJhl.Shte .,... 1te9e IP em,llf'-'· LOWEST PRICE' EVER • Automatic Tint e Cu1tomi1td Tut1i1tCJ e Walnut/ Contcmporory Cabinet ' NUMBER 1 RATED COLOR CONSOLE AT A TABLE MODEL PRICE Zenith's LanJest Screen Color -Choose Table Model or Stunnin9 Cabinetry e COold Video Guorcl T•ner e Aat-lc Flu r .... 1 ... • Tit.. 100 Chassis TOP OF THE LINE 25" TABLE DIAGONAL STANO AYAILAILI ONLY 528888 . ' . CONSISTENTLY THE LOWEST PRICES IN ORANGE COUNTY FOR ZENITH PROl)UCTS PRODUCT KNOWUDGE SECOND TO NONE • No Finance Charges If Paid in 90 Days or No Down and 36 Months to Pay ( 0.A.C.) • 1 Year Free Parts • 1 Year Free Service • 3 Year Picture Tube Warranty • Free Delivery and Set Up • BankAmerieard/Master Charge \ I' I -«'- I I< I j I ho "' lo p s ha ha v.·i m pu ex N m <X of .. la .. p N on al •i M de pl 0 c na be pr I pr • d I . ~ • Orange Coast EDITION Today's Fln•I N.Y.· StoekB Ot:. 65, NO. 153 , J SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA , THURSDAY, JUNE l, 1972 N TEN CENTS Yes' or 'No' Not Enough on By L. PETER KRIEG Of tf>e Daily J"iltl Slaff nine different people \lo'hether y're going to vote ''yes" or "no" on he $8.9 million Newport Beach park: s aud you're Liable to get aine dlf- ferent answers. That's simply because there are ac-- lually three separate propositions -F. G and Ii -on the ballot that deal with the proposed acquisition and development program. LEGEND e EXISTING PARKS *NEW PARKS *NEW VIEW PARKS • PROPOSED EXPANSION PAtlR " • l • • It's also because a lot or poople feel a whole lot differently about the bonds and there are, theoretically, nine different combinations ol. yes-no votes that rould be cast . Two-thirds of those Ve>sing will have to vote "yes" for the bond measure s to pass. That's a tough assignment, getting n1ore than 66 percent of tile people to agree to spending their money. eVt'fl though you're talking about $11 a yea r fur the average Newport Beach homeo\.\·ner. * • • i " : 8 • ~ > < ~ •g • • Supporters of the bond i.ssue are nonetheless optimistic. Earlier this week both Mrs. Ginger Page, ~airman of the Cilizens• Park Bond Team, and Calvin S:ewart, parks, beaches and recreation d I r e c t o r . predicted at least the fir st two questions \\'ill get the necessary votes . 'l'he three ballot questioru: Proposition F asks for $3 ,560.000 for land acquisition , for park and play· grounds, vitw parks and bicycle trails. * OAll.Y "llOT Hrn Mel' MAP INDICATES NEWPORT BEACH'S EXISTING AN D PROPOSED PARK SYSTEM City Seeks Funds for Open Space to 8 ring It Closer to Nation1I Standerds Bulk of Ft1nds In Park Plan Set For Acquisition The bulk or the money Nev•port Beach hopes to raise in Tuesday's bond election -well over $7 million of the $8.9 million sought in the three propositions-will go for acquisilion and development of city parks. While the city council is not bound to spend It on any specific sites. councilmen have adopted an interim park plan and have indic~ted the proposals in that plan will be Implemented with the bond money. About a dozen new park sites will be purchased and developed and two others expanded, if the bonds pass. The sites are spread from Wcsl Newport to Corona de! ~1ar, wi th recom- mendations based on two key factors - existing park deficiencies an d availability of land. AU but two of the parks will be "neighborhood parks" or playground!. no larger than four acres and designed to serve their immediate vicinities. Two IO-acre "community park!" are proposed. one above Fifth Avenue in Corona del Mar and the other along the Pacific Electric right.of-way In West Fe11~e-hopping? Ecology U1iit Opposes 9-Sort Of · Spe<lal to tbe DAU.. y PR.OT SAC RAMENTO -Despite earlier predictions from Orange County Super· visor David L. Baker, the California Environmental Quality Control C-Ounci l today finds ltself stuck squarely in a fen ce-straddling position on controversial Proposition 9. The council in its meeting here ·Wednesday, voted to oppose the so-called clean environment initiative on the June 6 ballot. (See related story, Page 14). But on the other hand. the council refused to rescind its earlier vote which endorsed Proposition 9. ··People are going to think; \.\'e·rc balmy," exploded board men1ber Albert Pearlson of Riverside . "It's like letting a stone '"''all stand and then mythically tearing it down." The council's fence-stradding stance began May 18 in Los Angeles when it .. voted 5 to 2 to endorse Proposition 9. But Cbainnan Baker of Orange County, who was ab3ent al that meeting. said .. trickery" had been used to get the en- dorsement. He scheduled another vote this Wednesday in Sacramento. dorscd 8 to 5 by the fuU council. Ho .... ·ever, the council refused to back up and revoke its previous 5 to 2 \'Ole en- dorsing the proposition. A motion to let the endorsement stand \.\'On 7 to 4 ap- prova l of the council. State Sen. Robert J. Lagomarsino (R- Ventura CoWlt y), a legislative member of the council , affered consolation of sorts : ··This happens all the time in the legislature, fl1€"l 1d. The meeting \\' s frequently interrpted by booste rs of ropositin 9, a 23-point n1easurc that uld (')arnp a five year moratorium on nuclear po1.1.·er plant con- stn1ctlon. among other things. Chariman Btikcr remained them the meeting was nol a public hearing. I). Phone Di spute Over Proposition G asks for $2.425,000 to develop them. The money would go for site preparation, equipment and con- strucUon of 1 ~mile network or bike trails. Proposition H asks for $3 million 10 the city will have some cash on hand in the future to buy open spaee or park sites when they become available. The initial $.1.5 mlllion is earmark~ for about a doz.en park sites and r ight-of-way acquisition for the bicycle trail network. Although councilmen are not bound to spend it for specific projects. PBH Direc- tor Stew art says the city has indicated the money will go for a park systen1 outlined 111 an 1ntr-ritn rnaster plan adopted only last v.·eek by councilmen. On the surfacl', the bonds .appear to have a Jot going for them. in ternls of community support, "'ith relati\'ely htUe opposition. ~tak ing lhe loudest nois~ has Ix-en Carl Arthofer, y,·ho owns ll piece of proptrty \ on Chlf Dri\'e that Ult' city wants to bu y for a \•tev' pctrk and hkely ~·ill condemn if the lAinds pass. A !nnnll band of \\'e:it Newport rt~:;1dl1nts also oppose the measures. s11:-i111g passage W<lU l1l provide the im- J.lt!tus for n plan to \.\·1pe out thtir homts .".>';I the 381h Street !'ark 1.-ould be f'X.· pande<I to the bav. Sirnil"rly. a grOup of residen1s In and "r o u n cl t\.larinap;,rk. lhe rity-O\\'Ded iSft 1\-IEASURES, Pai:e Zl County Air Test Force May Fl y if Board OJ(s Pinn By JACK BROBACK Of tltt D•llY Plltl •l•ff Orange County's own "air force" may gel off the growxi ne1t week if the Board of Supervisors approves a test plan pro- posed by county Director of Aviatio n Robert Bresnahan. Bresnahan has suggested a six-month trial period at a cost of $22 ,000 for an ex· perimental patrol over the Orange Coast with cooperation of the city helicopter forces from Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, and Huntington Beach. If supervisors approve the test pro. gra m and it proves success f u I , 13resnahan has ouUined an overall county air surveillance and rescue project at • cost of $2.3 million for the first year. The "air force" is a proposal advanced by Supervisor William Phillips of 1''ullerton several months ago. Bresnahan estimated that the overall countywide !>'~ would need e.i.gbt pon<• Jla'\i.! lietloopters aiid foui patrol planes plus two larger aircraft, one • hellcopter and one an alrplane for utility :;ervice. 01 the $2.3 mllllon flr1I year 1ptndlng, $1.1 millio·n would go for equJpment with the balance covering operating cost! for the first 12 months. . Bresnahan's six months test proposal calls for using police helicopters already in service in the three coastal com- munities. In addition to the six city-ope.rated helicopters the test program would in· elude a rented two plaet: light plane. Bresnahan eslimates that the joint pro- gram between the cities and the county could redu~ annual heUcopter costs to the three cities and to Anaheim, the only other county community with chopper!'!, by l\l;o-thirds. If the final plan is adopted, an opera- tio n center would be established at Orange County Airport and staffed by the participating cities. The center would be equipped by the county. Bresnahan suggests that the si1-month test area be split lnto two sectors, one from Seal Beach Naval Weapons Depot to UCI and the other southward to San Clemente and bordered by the San Diego Freeway inland and the ocean on the east. " Coverage would Include the three com· munitles now operating helicopters and portions of Fountain Valley, Irvine, Westminster and Seal Beach. The additional fl:r:ed wing plane would operate for six hours a day and the helicopters an additional five hours, Bresnahao suggested. a multi-jur1sd1l'l1onal J1viation 1..'VJll· mi ssion. The primary purpose of the aerial r\eet. Bresnahan explained, \.\'ould be police services but with the larger helicopters and fixed wing aircraft, fire and rescue services could also be provided. In the past, the county hns used aerial service~ during flood and fi re situations . In ont' 111stance during lhe 1969 floods and on other occasions. Marine Corps bell· copters were volun teered to the county to aid In emergency cootrol. 'Dead -Tired' President Nixo11 Reacl1es Accords Witl1 Leallers in Warsaw \VARSAW (UPI) -A "dead tired'' President Nixon rc8ched some wide-rang- lng ~ccords with Polish leaders today a:oi the final stroke of his 12-day diplomatic: mission, and headed home for a. report to CongNu tonight on the Moscow summit. The prt!lidential jet, 'The Spirit of "lt, left Warsaw on a nine-hour Dlght to Wubington after Nixon and First Seaetary Edward Gierek of the Polish Communist Party signed 1 communique 1ummlng up four hours of talks. In the document, the le ader:J a gretd that talks should be opened as soon as possible on East-West troop reductions in Europe; to lay groundwork for a Euro- pean security conference -also agreed lo by Nixon at the Kremlin summit - and to conduct conUnuing talks on im- proving U.S.-Polish trade -non-specific, as was the case In Moscow. But just as he failed to break any new ground with Soviet leaders on the Viel· nam issue, Nixon was unable to reach ac- cord with the Polish. The Waniaw com· rnunique said: "Both sides presented their known posi· lion.\ <>n the war In Vietnam and the i;i!uation in Indochlna. Essential vl.ew1 of the two sides ln this question rem.alned d1vergtnt." His departure ended a dramatic misskm during which he wu greeted by antiwar rioters in AuStrla, warmed by cheering crowds in Poland, followed by bomb blasts in Jran and -most im- portant -welcomed in tbt Xrem.Un. A3 Nixon wound up bls journey, whlch incl uded &tops ln Leningrad, Kiev ind Tehran, the President showed clear signs of the l!lh'eu he ha.s been under slnce his arrival In Moscow l\J11y 22. "lle's dead tired but he won't admit 11 ,'' one nlde said. Il ls wire, Pat. also Ins t the pcbe tihe maintained throughout the journey, snap- ping al Polish plainclothesman trying to keep her away. The President's: plane left Warsa"' airport at 8:03 a .m. PDT, more than 40 mlnules earlier than planned, be<:au.se ol. strong headwinds along his route. McGovern Vows Return Of POWs in 3 Months COVINA (AP) -Sen. George McGovern, playing to a big crowd Jn the California pre.!1lder1tial primary cam· palgn, has pledged that ii he win! the White House he CM gain a relea&e of U.S . prisoners of war within 90 days of hl.!1 · 1- auguration. forces, until we terminate military opera- tions, until we cut out further military support for lhe Thieu regime in Saigon. there's no hope at 1111 to bring about the release of our prisoners ... " "How are you soing to do it?" a young man 11houted from the front of the crowd. ';. Newport. Two \neighborhood parks are proposed on Balboa Island, which bas no parks at all now. One would be comtructed on the site of the old Balboa JSlaod Community Methodist Church. another at a site to be determined just west of Marine Avenue. The second time, the council voted 6 to 3 to oppose Proposition 9 with two abstentions. OAKLAND (AP) -Pacific Telephone Co. and the Communicatiorui Workers of America have reached agreement in a dispute that involved the firing of a union off icial and threatened to touch off an area-wide strike. A company !pokesman said Wednesday that Loren Bla~ingame, president of CWA Local 9415 was rehired and placed on 00-day suspension. If the countywide syrtem is eventually adopted, there wouJd be required 14 aircraft. helicopter and fixed wlng, with 44 employes lncludJng 21 ptlotJ, nine observers, three adminlBtraton and 11 aircraft mechanics. The &outh Dakota senator drew Rvera1 thousand persons, a crowd that stretched far back into the darkness of the Covina Park Wednesday night. More than 2.000 turned out for another rally in San Bernardino. McGovern said he would do lt by agree- ing to the withdrawal of U.S. forces over a 90-day period and the termlnaUon qi American military rupport for Selgon . He said he would ask 1n return ~ withdrawing foret:s not be 1ttacted .,arit that onct that his been completed our prisooen be releaood." ~., Newport Beach Parka, Beachel and Recreation Director Calvin Stewart tx· plains that, right now, the city has •bout one-fourth of the perks it should have •c- cord\ng to national standards. . The interlm park plan explains that the national 5tandardt of four acres per l,000 population weren't followed, however, because of the considerable beachfront 1vallable for recreation here. "Two acres per 1,000 population wB!I used as the guideline In determining for neighborhood park space," the plan says. Newport Beach has l.S acres of park.I per 1,000 population at lhe pr"3<Jll time. "Another unique feature of Newport Beach Is the abundance of prlvat< recreational facllltiu malntalntd by community associations, the report notes. ,.,,,_ activities that normally would be !>fO'ldtd under 1 public n>erealloMI program wen given tun credit towl'rd.. the 11atW1etion or area standards." The report noted tbat mony of U.... • private areu do not provide facilities as extensive as city parkl, however. The r<porl alao explal"' that II Is de.scribed as lln •ttnttrim park plan" only (!Id PARKS, J'al" Z) Baker had predicted it would be .en-The program would be adminlstered by • No Support From Reagan Governor 'l11clined Not' to Aid Coastline Move From Wire Service• Governor Ronald Reagan said Wed· nesday he was "inclined not" to support the efforts now being made by con- servationi!tJ to place a coastline pro- tection measure on the November ballot. Speaking at a prf53 conference, the Governor said he felt adoption of coutilne <onltols should be lell to the Ltglsla-and that the people should only act by initiative "il the lcgi!lature took no action." At the aame ireu conferen ce, Governor R .. gan uid he supported the prestltt tf!Oita to pU.C. the death penalty Issue on lht ballot through petition and that he bad slinoil one ol the petition" The coastline protection measure is being backed by the Coa.t.1 Allisnce. a coallUon of conservationist organizations. Spoktsmeu for the iJ'OUP say they launched the peUtlon drive originally because the Legislature prob ab 1 y wouldn't pass a sufficiently strong bill. "T would be inclined not to (support the coast.al measure) on lhe ba sis that we do have a legislative solution which ts being advanced," the Governor said. "I wou]d think the lime Cor a coastUne Initiative would be if the Legislature took oo ac- tion." ~ A bill bocked by the Coastal Alliance was killed earlier thiJ month in the Senate Natural Resources and Wildlife Commitlet. The same commJttee ap- proved a less restrictive measure authored by Senator DeMll Carpenter (R-Newport Beach). The Coastal Allla net: lnitlntive measure \fould create six regional commWlons In I.he state with half of the member" e:ht>!en from local eletted officials. The oommissiona would con trol dev elopment from mean high tide lint to 1,000 yardl Inland along all or Californla'1 1,100 miles of coast. The Carpenter bill wW exclude In- corporated cities from control and would allow individual counllu to dtUne lhtlr own coastal zone somewhere between 1,000 yards and three mUet Inland. The coastllno prottctlon Initiative needs 325.604 certllltd slgoatulU to be placed on the ballot In NoYember. Tbe ltCl<t&ry or tltate has tugguled that pet!Uon clrculaton of both the coastline mtuure and ' lhe death penalty amendmtnt be flln filing tbelr ptUtlops w}th local tounly clerks Monday. Tf>e stgnaturet must be verified not later than Junt 2t to qualify for the November ballol Bec1U!< the death penalty Initiative calla for an amendment to the Callfornla constitution, 520,0 algnatures are re.- quired for its addition to tbe ballot. Those appearances cllmued a lf.hour day of vote hunttng for hJs Tuesday primary contest with Sen. tlubert JI. Humphrey, a man McGovern described J! "part of the old aparatW! .. .'' Meanwhile, Humphrey wat hiivl.ng trouble. The luncheon audience was leaving as he drO\'e up, 45 mlnutea late, foc a speech to a businessmen's group Jt 1 fashJonable S&nta Barbara hotel. Undaunted, and without even Je1vlng hl!I car, Humphrey went right on to the ne1t stop, 1 union hall ln Ventura, whtre he delivered his Santa Barbara speech to 1 l00-per900 audience that comlsted mainly of the traveling press corps. Despite such mlshap1 , Humphrey uid JUI he flew back to Los Angeles l ft tr another day of small campaign crowds that he thinks he hu at least olO'll'ed McGovun'a momentwn for Tuesct.y'a crucial Democratic primary. Jn Covina, McGovern said tMt he could gain frffdom for American prisonen by withdrawing U.S. forces and support rrom South Vietnam. "I know that Pre~iident. N'lxon tells us we're staying In Vietnam btcluse we want lo brin1 about the release of cur prisonen .. .'' McGovern 11id. "The truth of tbe m1tttr ls unUl we 1et • deadline for tt"9 •Jt.hdraw1J or oor Wutller llazy sunshine la on the 11enda for Friday, but the tempenture will sUll b< toward the top ol the lh<rmomettr. !Ughs at !be btoch 72 rising to, to lnWMI. Lowa -· INSIDE TOD& Y · In brdTOO!ll commllftllJ of Nonoolk, the cml11 cu"djdafe who crouaer otnuine tnthvdcaim ;, Alabama't Gov. Gtorg1 C. Wal· lac•. Ste story, Poat 21. f. " . ; " . . • I, ' z uAlj.Y PH.VI " Hig h Rise H earings Sche duled Public hearings on proposals io control high rise through Newport Beach and to allow a high rise office complex un the Collins Radi o Com p.any property on Jam- boree Road wUI be conducted by plann ing coniml'JSioners tonight at 7:30 o'clock in city hall. A propoged ordinance limiting popula· lion density was discussed by com- 111issioners al a study session earlier Ur day. The hig h ri~ ordinance would establish fou r height limit zones. setting 50 feet a.s a maximum in commercial areal unleu a developer first obtains a use permit. The height of bulldlngs in residential .areas \Vould be limited to 24 feet. Both the high rise and density measures would be interim, pending ' rompletion of a new mastel' plan of de.velopmenl. Collins officials are seeking approval of a planned comn1unity iontng for their en· tire 177-acre parcel. JO acres of \\'hich a . ., now utilized by the eleciironics firm. About 10 acres of the 177 are being used by the fl.arbor J udicial District CourL Coll.ins want.a the remainder of the parcel for two million square feet of of· fi ces. a hotel and several restaurants and gas stations. Other items on tonighrs commission ;agenda: -An environmental impact statement lor the proposed \Videning ot Balboa Boulevard between 42nd Street and \\'est Coest Highway. -A proposed 18-unlt condominium at 631..fi.33 Udo Park Drive, north of 28th Street on the Lido Peninsula. -Additions to the Newport Beach t1unlcipal Code regulaling outdoor lighting for swimming pools, tennis courts and other similar uses. -Request for amendments t-0 the Emkay Devel opment Company's 200.acre project adjacent to Orange County Airport At the city's instructions. de\tclopers are requesting the exclusion ~ airline terminal services or f8cilities. Permission to relocate a proposed fire station is also requested. Frona Pagf! l PARKS ... because of the slow pate in developing an updated land use plan for the entire city. "Park facilities have lo be coordinated with existing and proposed land uses, particularly residential neighborhoods," it says. "This relationshi p also has been a limiting factor to date because progress on the land use element of the general plan has not kept pace with work on the recreation element. "The term 'interim' mrtrk plan was coined for this reason," ir'iays. This phase of the pla n ;jncJudes only· those areas where the neeCf for exis!fn(f and future park facilities co uld be. determined. "Area.s with in the planning area where future land use has not ye t been determined will be added," it says. This, Stewart explains . is \lo'hy there is Proposition J{ on the ballot, setting aside $3 million for fu ture park acquisition. One pert of the plan is the inclusion or "view parks." areas set aside for ju.at .looking at Newport Beach, particularly Ne~•port Harbor. The plan proposes such parks on l'rotnontory Poi nt. just above Balboa Tsland : on Cliff Dr1\'e overlooking Lido Isle and on the bluffs above \\'est Nev; port. Vic 111a111esc Cu lture Eyed at OCC Fo1,1n1 Vietnamese n1usic. poetry, and oth('r forms of culture will be explored at 8 p.m. Friday in a program at the Orange Coast College Forum . The program, spon.'!iored by the OCC ''eteran's Club, is open to t~ public v:ilhou t charge. Oi.ANGI COAST N DAILY PILOT Tiit o.-..-.. CM1I DAILY ,.ILOT, wilt! wtNct1 h ~Md ftl• N...,...,.,_., ii PllOUll'lt'd b'f tl'lt O••nvt Co.11 Ptttill1hlna (Ofnfl&"Y· it~ r111 lldll1Dn1 ••• pylllli.111111, MOl'ld•V throuoh frld•r. ror Cm!• M ... , N•...,,.,..I l 11cl!, H1111!l1111tor1 fleacl!Jfoun!t ln v1111v. UioVM fltac;ll, lr-vl11•/S1ddl,bllck end 51" Cltmwnt•I s... J111" CtlllSh•no A •Inv•• rt0I0<1•I edition Is JlUbll~td St 1Unll'f$ trd 'und•Y•· Tht prlricfl).tl P11b1i1~!"9 Pl•nl h •I UQ Wn l B•y ltrttt, COii• M.,,., Call!onila, f2616. Rob1rt N , w.,4 Ptnlllflll •rd Pllbhllltt J1t11 R. Curl1y V.ct PTnkl«ll •nd ~•I M1~•tit• lhom1• K11¥ll EllllOt Thomtt >.. 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Give1i Bu11i!'s Rusli Di ck Groulx. executive secretary of the Ala1ncda Cou nt y Labor Council. is taken into custody after a sit-in at University of California President Charles Hitch's office on Berkeley campus. Groulx, another top labor leader. and 14 other persons \Vere ar- rested after staging .a seven-honr sit·in to protest the 45·day labor dispute at the campus. 1'he Build· ing Trades Union struck over pay and grievance procedures. Man H eld on Bad Cl1eck Rap After Tags Ques tioned A record check run on a Huntington Beach man who apparently neglected tn get 1972 tags for his car led to hi s arrest in Newport Beach \Ved nesday on a felon y bad check charge. Discovery or t"·o v.•arr:int s carr.ving a total of $5.044 bail sent Stephen \V. Sn11th, 24, of 312 Nashville Ave., to city jail. Smith was picked up there this morning by Orange C-0unt y Sheriff's deput ies and transferred lo county jail pending ;1r- raignment on the c:-heck case and st'Cond· ary traffic viola1ion charge. Officer Rick Goodell said he slopped Smith al East Coast lligh way and Bayside Drive about 4.:45 p.m. and asked aboot bis lack o! m. r?gislratloo. Given only a temporary driver's Ucense for idenlificalion, the suspicious offi cer ronsulted computerized central records and came up with the north and central Orange County Judicial Dis trict v.·ar· rants. Cor.ona d el Mar Auto Parts Sl1op Hit b y Sniper i\ sniper who may be responsible for .! recent wave of Harbor Area shooting in· eidents hit .a Corona del ~far auto parts shop "·ith a .38 caliber slug, it \\'as discovt:rt-d 111ur~d:1y. F ountnin Valley Man Held on 13 Sex Counts A Fountain Valley man accused of multiple acts of sex perversion with a youth in the suspect 's home on several occasions last April was indicted today by the Orange County Grand Jury on 13 charges of sex acts and supplying mari- juana to the youngster. Deputy District Attorney Al Novick hopes to arraign the suspect, Leotis l.ee llcater. 40. of 10922 Goldeneye Ave., Fri- day in Su perior Court. Novick said the alleged multiple of· fenSC'S against the 16-year-old boy oc- curred last April al }lealer's home "'hile the defenda nt wa s awaiting delayed court action on sex cha rges allegedly com- mitted live years ego. Atcordinf to oltici.al a 11 e I • t i o n s , J!eater jumped bail on two oceasions since being arrested in June of 1967 when he li1'ed at 701 Rockford Road, Corona de! !11ar. He "'·as recaptured last month in l..aredo, Texas. after f~rfeitinr more than $31,000 in hail put up IJy' his aunt. Heater had earlier been arrested in Canada and returned to Orange County to face charge! stemming from his alleged sexual f!cts with a 13-y~ar-old British schoolboy who was vacationing in Seal Beach in June of 1967. The alleged victim told police that I-feater forced him to participate in acts From Page 1 MEA SURES . • • of sexual perversion after driving him from Seal Beach to the Laguoo Hills area. !!eater is today held in Orange County J ail "·ith bail set at $500.000. Novick s;ii d Heater wil l be brought to trial on both sets of allegations. Balboa Parking Cash Di sappear s Ne\\'port Beach police detectives are probing d!sappesrance of St.044 in Memorial Day income collected by at- tendants at the municipally-operated Balboa Parking Lot. Someone apparently slipped up and swiped a brO\\'n paper bag out of one at- tendant's ca r Monday, after another had placed it there momentari ly. Beachgoers' contributions to mWlic ipal coffers ~·err all in currency. whlch would have been fai rl y easy for anyone in the throng of sunbathers lo pocket. Lot attendant San1uel J . Couch said he had counted the bills and put them in fellow cmploye William Becket's car. Neither Couch nor Becket saw anyone in lhe crowd near the vehicle, they told detectives. 'Fry' Se t IJp Fishy Activity In Costa· Mesa Costa Mesa's downtown p 1 r k was turned into ;i riot of CQ!Or today as work- men set up ferris ""'heels, merry-go- r ound.!I and about 30 other amu.!Jement r ides in preparation for the city's 27th Annual 1'"ish Fry. Members of the Lions Club will throw the switch on their •·super-carnival" at FBI Na1nes S uspec t In S kyjack \VASl·l!Nr.TON (APl -The FBI said lnclay Frederick \\l tlliam llahneman, a 4U-yca r-old Easton, Pa., man. is being sou~ht for the .skyjacking of an Eastern .i\irline.<i: plane May 5, blackmailing of. ficials for $.103.000. and then making his ~eta\vay by bailing out of the plane over 1-londuras. Aeling FBr Director L. Patrick Gray 111 said Hahneman \\'as named in a feder- al \.\'arrant issued in Alexandria., Va., \\'ednesday that charged him \\'ilh tak· ing ove r lln Eft!llern plane en route from AllC'nlO\\!n, Pa .. to Miami. Fla. The plane \1·as diverted to Dulles In· ternational Airport , in nearby Virgini!. \1·he re 1he skyjacker demanded and re- ceived $303.000. Taking off again. the plane was direct- ed on a course V.'hich took it over Hon· duras \.\•here the hijacker bailed out dur- ing the early morning hours of 1'1ay 6. The FRI said llahneman. born July 5. 1922. llt Puerto Castilla. Honduras. "''as an i\n1erican citizen who served as an 11 ircraft radar technician in the U.S. Air Force during World \\'ar JI. In recent yea rs, t'he FBI said. he has tra veled in a number of for eign coun- tries. The bureau said he is married and claims a permanent residence at 145 .Jan1cs St.. Easton. c';ray said that the ~londuran .aulhori- lies provided excellent cooperation and that lhe ass istance made it possible to trace the movements or an individual be- li eved identical with Hahneman through a ru ral area of l-londuras. The FBI released a photograph of llahneman and described him as a white male, 5-8, with brown hair and brown eyes, and "'ilh a scar on the back of his left hand . Traf fie Victim Dies of Injuries Melan ie A. Nichols, 17 of 20002 1\. Ponderosa Ave., Tustin, died late Tues~ day al Tustin Commun ity Hospital fron1 injurit's suffered in a traffic accident last Saturday. The California lligh~1ay Patrol said l\1i.ss Nichols was ejected from a vehic le driven by Donna Sioclai r, 18. of the same address which overturned into e drainage ditch at the Warner Avenue exit of the norlhbound Newport Freeway. f..Iis.5 Sinclair is reported in isatisfac tory condition by hospital aides. precisely 6 p.m. Friday, about one half hour after lhe serving of additional fisll dinners begins. The park at l&h S t re e I and Anaheim A venue wW be the center uf nearly all Fish Fry attraclioru:, including babY'®d beauty contest.!, a battle of th e bands, stage sho"·s and prize dral'l-·ings. Fish dinners. priced at $1.75, \viii be sold Friday night and from noon to 8 p.n1. both Saturday and Sunday. All proceeds \1•itl go to charity, Highlight of the three-day extrava- ganza promises to be the parade sche- duled for Saturday. It begins at 10 :30 a.m. at 18th Strert and Anaheim Avenue 11nd runs along 19th Street and Placentia Avenue. F'or those who miss the di.!play of 15 noats and 30 marching bands, the parade 11·ill be telecast in CQIOr from 3 p.m. to '4 , 30 p.m. Sunday by J\'TLA Channel 5. Parade Chairman Cliff Wesdorf said one uf the entrants, the Tijuana Police ~lotorcycle Squadron, will be featured in a special performance at 2 p.m. on Center St.re<"!, fncing the park. Pancho the Tac4>eater, a lion cub 011'ner bv Costa f\1esa restaurateur Al· fr ed Klillzmann, is the official mascot of the parade and \.•:ill lead the field of 1,500 participants Jn the parade , Wtsdorf sa ld. li e ~·ill be on dlsplay from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Saturd3y in the handball courts of the Girls Club, immediately adjacent to the park. Grand ~1arshal for this year's parade is Marlin McKeever, the Los Angeles Rams linebacker from Corona de! Mar. fllcKeever will share the spotlight with !iipecial guests ''Seymour," the television horror movie host. and Les "Mr. Fish Fry" !11il ler. the man \vho has onnounced the parade for the past 26 years. The schedule of Fish Fry Events is as follows: FRIDAY -5:30 p.m., Fish Dinners, City Park. -6 p.m .. Carnival Rides and Midway Booths, City l)ark . -7 p.m., Band Contest. City Park. SATURDAY -10 a.m., Carni\·al, City Park. -10:30 a.m .. F'ish Fry Parade. -Noon. Fish Di nners. City Park. -1:30 p.m .. Stage Sho\v, City Park. -2 p.n1. Tijuana Police !11otorcycl• Squadron. -4: 15 p.m. Dancers, City Park. -6:30 p.m. Stage Show, City Park. SUNDAY -Noon, Carniva l, City Park. -2:30 p.m., Baby Contest, City Park. -3:30 p.m., Mlss 1'1ennaid ContW, Ci- ty Park. -6: 15 p.m. Stage Show City Park. -8 p.m., Drawing for Grand Prize, Cl:· ty Park. l\Tason~ Still Out SAN DIEGO (API -Three hundred union brick tenders were in the s~nd day of a strike against the Masonry Con- tractors Association in San Diego Cou nty- tnday. but the absence of pickets allowed \\'ork at most construction sites to con· linue as usual. The brick tenders, members of lnternational Laborers Union Local 89, voted Tuesday night to reject • two-year con tract offer by the masonry contractors. Richard Rosebush. 01\·ncr of CdM Auto Supply, 3617 F,_ Coast l!ig"hwiiy , estimated damage at $200, acC()rdlng to Police Of - fiC'<'r Larry C;:ibrirl. 1'he p;1troln1an found a m,1ngled slu~ "'hieh put a fi\"('"inrh ho!r 111 a plate glass \vl ndo\v and r1 coc hclrd off a tool cabinet inside the firm , trailer park, are fearfu l that money would be used to develop that acreage in- to a park. forci ng them from the area. lloth of the latter issues have not yet been resolved by councilmen. Cou ncilmen have ordered a staff st udy of proposed public improvements for the Balboa Peninsola trailer park, indicating they feel the four-acre parcel should be opened for public use \\'hen current leases expire in two years. sofa bed sale! npw • queen size • • The bullet strntk the glass al the flve- foot !e\'l'l. abot1 t ch<'.~! high lo 1111ynnr 11·ho niighl have been insiclr. police notrd, Several shooting incidents during night hours have occurred in the area, in- cluding a rifle rampage throuizh Newport Center some "'eeks ago in which several office buildings were hit. Turnbull Takes Airport Post Donald W. Killian. Ne1vport Beach 111 - lorney. has been replaced on !he Airport 1..and Use Commission of Orange County by Frank \Y, Turnbull or Huntington Beach. Killian's term exp ired May 1 and com- 111ission members had recommended th11t 11e be reappoin ted. But supervisor Ronald Caspers of Ncn·port Be.ach appointrd Turnbull to lhe post end gol approval or other board members. Killian had served for two years on the commission as an appointee recom- mended by former Fifth Di s tr i c l supervisor Alton E. Allen. Turnbull is an extcUtlve with Roadcraft Manufacturing and Leasing Corporation of Gardena. Student F ou1id Killed i11 .Home !.OS GATOS (APJ -A Son Jooe St•le College srt student. t~red 0 . ltU1relll, 25. wais found shot lo death In n smi ll home in suburban Monte Sereno. Santa Clara Counly Jher\ff'11 deputie.~ said lu.arelll wss !lhot In the ne<::lt and chest, and bullet b o I es in the -w11ll! t bowed .a . number o{ c;>th!r ahota were find. The 'place had btfn enttr~ ford~ ~v and r.aaaacktd, lht depurle& sald. I Son1c ~uncilmen have expressed con- cern about whether such a public area wou ld attract more outsiders to the Peninsula . or would be used almost ex- clusively by area residents. UncertaJnties on the part o { homeowners behind the 38th Street Park stem from various proposals to •·iden Balboa Boulevard, taking away a strip of the park bordering the road. If that Wert to bappen, they are certain the c:ity will want to enlarge the park to1vard the bay. 1'he road-widening project, however, has long been opposed by Mayor Donald A. fltclnnis and councilmen have orclered • it struck from current planning. On the other hand, residents point out thnt Balboa Boulevard has already been \videned west as far as 33rd Street end !hat a fifth Jane soon will be added bet\veen 46tb Street and West Coast ~lighway. Ste\\·art points out that the park plan talks in terms of 1990 for exparuiion of lhis park. • ''\Ve're no t going to be throwing anyone oot of their homes," he said. Ste1rart remains optimistic about the: chances for pauge. "We'"e made any number of t1lb to groups." he said. "and, frankly, the sell- ing point Is when we tell them It's only going to cost them Sll.10 a yur for the average homeownu lo ply off t.he bonds." One of Arthofer's arguments his been that, on top of thb, theee lands will be ofr the future tax roles and resident.a will have to pay that much more to support government. "Too many perks, vie"· poiJltl and "'llterfront 5ltes have been lo.st to residential or commM"clal development slmply bacause1.the city didn 't have the funds to acquire them at the time they were 1v11Uable." Sttwart sakt. He 13id th11 polnt Is 1 .. eooct rtalM lo trupport Propoaltlon ff, to set uide monty for future acquisitions, too. " I PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open ts bed ' Op•n Mon., Thuri . & Fri. Ev•s . dual, siZ& •.• $249. • Those are very comforta ble sofa beds for sitting end sleeping. • A wide selection of fa brics and colors to choose from. • Reversible backs and seat cushions. 22 I 5 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 1 1 In ··w C.:li ''° B i<le bee llo ~ra Fr Brl ~ee in it "m dcr me call nf Yo by v "h 1!id IS • t·ott ly. this F loo lion \\'h I Jf'Ct "l'h "lib cec 11iff ~in per • I ;iny The the lion aw dre w WOU t~ve It fl bi you 1'he its y wll chr • a DA.ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE .. Reasons to Vote Yes ()Tiet !litre were green f1ttds . kissed btJ /lit sun 011Ct 1/1tre wert valleys wht rt nvtrs Hftd to TU!I, <lnC't' th ere !.C.'03 blut: sky, with u·~ii tc clouds cbot:'t , 011,·e tlt f!Jl u·er~ part of cr11 ei1erlasti11g lovl'. -Fro1n. tlJe song. Nc\\'llO rt Beach need not talk about open spac:e 111 the past in1perfect tense. Il might ha\•e to, if voters turn do\vn the proposed $8 .9 mill1un bond issue Tuesday. But, as in th e· song, ll \1 ould be sad co1n mentary. There arc l\\'O very good reasons the D . .\JLY Pil.OT urges a "ye~" vote ou all three park bond pro1l0sitions, V, G and 11. -Ncv:porl Beach, and its people, need the open space and the bicycle traiJs th ey would provide. -Ne\vport Beach. and its people, can afford lhen1 . Speaki nt: to the latter point first, Newport Beach taxpayers today don't O"'C one c ent to\vard J'asl gen- eral obligation bonds. It is a state that coul be con· s1dered unreasoned frugality. 'fhe argument that to saddle future taxpayers - •·our children" -\\•ith bond debt is simply Invalid. l-'uture residents "'ill benefit as much. or n1ore . than \Ve frotn a wi se invcst1nent today. /\nd h O\Y many times has each and every Ne\vport Beach resident cried his heart out over his shortsighted grandfather for not investing his life savings in land in th is coastal community. It is equally faJJacious to argue that Newport Beafh residents don't need or won't use park and bicycle trails facil ities because of the miles of beaches. First , the existence of the beaches was taken into consideration in developing the recently-adopted interim park standards for the city. \.Yhile most communities are "'orking to\vard pro- viding parks at a rate of four acres for every 1,000 pop- 11lation. Ne\vport Beach planners lo\vered the mark lo t\VO acres of parks per 1,000 people. Today the city has only slightly more than 1.3 acres He Does n't Piiblicize The Phonies SYD~EY J. TIARRIS AnsM·trs to Various t~peries That Come in the !\tail : From H.D., Haleigh. J\orth Carolina: "Why didn't you ever comment on the Clifford Irvi ng case while it was making front-page nev.·s?" Because publicizing phonies ls not my irlea of an honest day·s work , and also because I wou ldn 't read a book about Jloward Hughes even if it were authe11tic. F'rom L.B., a 4th- J!rade st u d en t in Fredericton, Ne \V Bruns\v ick : ''1\ftrr ~eeing so 1nany def· initions in your col- umn rC'ccntly, I won- der if you co uld tell 1ne ho111 11'(' began lo t'.'111 a certain kind or pan!s 'jeans.' Your column is very popular and read by so many around here ·· YOli SLY l~trn..E devil, you knew jusl \1hat lo say 1n order lo get an an swe r, <lidn't ~·ou? \Ve!l , r..1iss Flatterer, "jeans·• is short for "jean fustian ," a fa bric 1,1r rollon and flax originating in Genoa, ]fa· ly. Now do your own homework after 1 his! from A N .. Sausal ito. Cal.; "Are you ltlO mealy-n1outhed to 1ake a public posi- lion on the subjec t of school husing? \\"hat is yot1r vie11•"" I havi:: disqualdird myself on the suh- jl'ct, Since n1y children attend a private -.!·hoo1. and I think an y1h ing I :;ai d on the ~ubject 1\'ould be self-se rving. For the record. though. I don't think it makes any 1l1ffercnce. since they just get diffe rent \.,1nds or rotten educations. Dear Gloornv Gus Don'L the promoters of that de- structive Proposition 9 realize they nullify the ir clean environment pre- te nsions by ten1pting shoppers to be Jitterbugs when they inundate them in parkin~ lots \l:ith their misleading handbills? -B.E.A. Tfli1 ,.1tur• r.Jt1<19 1ud•r1' ¥1tw., net nl<tl»•OY !hOM ., tti. n_, ....... St"4 yovr ••I H •ve I'll Gl_,Y G\11, 0 1111 ~lie!. FRO!\f P.8.E., LonJil: Tsland, N.Y.: "I agreed "ith your column on the beer drinkers and their filthy habits of tossi ng cans everyWhere -but what about you miserable cigaret smokers and your butts ?" You've got me there -as an inveterate puffer. l plead guilty to flipping cigaret bulls indiscriminately, which just proves that there are Yahoos in every element o( the population. From B.G., Grand Junction, Colo.: "Who do you think is gain~ to be the Democratic candidate for President in 1972?" Someone the Democrats think they cRn spare for the sacrifice this fall : eKcepl for a disaster. the Republican primaries in Peking settled the issue. 1 fR0~1 C.\V .. Fort \\'orth. Tex.: "Aft er reading your column about Jonah and the "'hale, I ~'onder "'hat religiou~ denomina - tion you belong to." I am, as you could learn rrom Hansa rd ·s or the Almanach de Gotha, a member of the Reform Evangelica l Druids. a small but strict sect, whose principal creed can be expressed tersely: "Most people don't even live one!'." From D.R.S., Pompano Beach, Fla.'. "Do you think that eventually eve ry counlry will be Com munist ?'' Yes. unless the capitalists are smart enough to make everyone a capitalist in time lo forestall th is dreary prospect. Pleasures of Middle Age Mlddlc age Is the least appreciattd period of li fe. People treat it as if it were 11 loathesomc dis~se they don 't want ;i nybody else to know they have acquired. They often act as ir they thought that if they paid no atten- 1 ion to it . it \\'Ould go :1way li ke 8 bad dream in the night. Well , it \Yon 't. On I he oll1er hand mid- dle Bgc is no 24-hour- a·day. :iround lhe clock nightmare. Af· rer they get used to it. many of its vie· 1ims find middle age. lo be more enjoy~ ~ble, In some ways, than youth. You-'<>n't have to be dnfry to recognize lhat the mlddle years of existence have their consoling rewards as well es their demerit!. Some of them are on the wry ~1df'. but that doe!n't make Lbem le-s1 "'''-/ llERE ARE A FEW ttufu.. why you !lhouldn't dls90lve In tears on arriving at your 40Ut birthday: Yoo doa1t havl!: to call up an electronic dating bureau to find out which glrl \vould be best for you to take out some cvenina . Your wife will nominate heraelf. It isn't necessary to st.art searching for a bigger .apartment or a larger house ll you see a stork's wing on the horbon. The stork no longer keeps your addresa in iL, address book. You ~bly have be<ome famllior with tl1e s)'mptoms or some kind of hronic disea~e with which you'll keep company in you r old age. And it dne~n·t ( HAL BOYLE .) seem as terrible as you thought it might be. YOU JfAVE LOST much or lhe in- 8e.<:Urity that secretly plagued your youth . Therefore you don't make a nuisance of yourself by trying to lop every witty remark you hear at a cocktail party. Unless you have become an alcoholic, you have learned to lake onJy two last ones for the road instead of five. Your children are either out of their teens. or near the end of them. and now and then do 10mething thoughtful that lead! you to suspect they may turn into human beings, 1fter all. Some months you are even able to pay their phone bills without crying out to high heaven in financial agony. THERE IS NO tncltnatk>n lo jump on the be.ndwagon for every new intolerance or promised reform th&t perades by your door . You may even be willing to drop 90tne old outworn prejudlce that krpl you smug before. Except fo r financing 1 new automobile now and then, lt l11 Ukely I hat you are through with underUklng "ny m;tjor new economic burdens. You ha vt' all the mortgages and life insurance that any man in his right mind Dttds. All in all, thert ls as much •boot mid- dle age to enjoy as the.rt t~ th~t needs to be rorgiven. for each 1,000 of its 53,000 residents. -Nol every mother can send her eight-year-old dO\\'Tl lhe street to the beach, They need pl:ayground!;. Si mil arly, lifeguards frown on pickup baseball and football ga1nes amidst a crowd of sunbathers. Fron1 b:oth an environmental standpoint, and in an unemotional practical sense, Ne,vpart Beach needs the greenery. On the ballot. Proposition F asks for approval to !.pend $3.5 1nillion to buy property to meet immediate needs. J>roposi Lion G \Viii provide $2 4 million to de- velop those areas and bike trails so they can be used. l)roposi tion ]-{ proposes setting aside $3 million so monev '''ill be r eadily available for £uture acquisitions. The thrpe proposals add up to the best buy in family recreation and entertainment available, at less than $12 per family per year. Jt will cost so much more to buy breathing roon1 in the fu ture. An lnterin1 Solution The c:h il dren of \Ves t Ne\vport, from all appear· anccs, are going to get a branch library. That's good. Until the tin1e conies they can have al'.cess to an elementary or middle school library1 Ne\vport Beac:ll should make every effort lo provide such faci litles. A Ne'vJ>O rl Shores storefront is a v.1orkab!e interim solution. \Vhile the DAILY PILOT endorses the need for a central library to provide sophisticated services de- manded by local residents. we can agree that accessibil- ity to such a facility can be difficult for young children. It is obvious that ultimately a central library con1· plemented by the existing branches and an extensive school library program are what all r esidents should plug for. N 'loe j<\verage' Not 'A postle of Revenge' Vote Should Deci~e Death Penalty To the Editor: So people who wish to overturn the Californ ia Supreme Court ruling on the death penalty are "apostles of re\'enge." Not really~ f\·fost of us are just "Joe Average." who wish to extend to the people of California the right to decide. Believe It or not. voting is a right of the law-abiding citizens of California who are registered to \'Ole. Certain restrictions are placed on this right. so that the law-abiding citizens can decide. T WOULD LIKE TO draw to your at- tention the fact that in our penal facilities psychiatric care is provided. Many persons have been helped in this capacity. However, our courts and pena l facilities are filled with cases of "tem- porary" insanity. These people are tried, convicted, incarcerated, treated and set free just to rHio v.·hat they were treated for. You see, they were "temporarily" in· sane. Please explain how a psychiatrist can treat these people for the remainder of their lives. Please explain \\'hY some return and go through the same routine. Please explain where the end of our ''helping the poor sick mind" is to stop, and where self-preservation is "'Tong. "JOE AVERAGE'' is told to doub\e- lock his doors. don't shoot an in truder unles s he tries to kill you fi rst, "Jane Average" is advised to carry, in her purse, protection. No guns. of course. Those are concealed weapons and aga inst lhe law. '"'e arc E'lipected to ell'.cUse· burglary, robbe ry. child molesting. rape, murder. h::irassment . assault -yo u name it. Just because old Average js in control of his actions and reactions. he must excuse . NOW TIIE CALIFORNIA Supreme Court says we must give every major criminal the opportunity of being freed from confinement and tree to commit murder again, all without his ordered death. r agree there should be stiffer gun con- trols, including the registration of all guns and examination of each person having them . But this is only a small part of a big problem. To accuse the "apostles of revenge'' or jumping on a bandwagon because of another shooting iJ ridiculous. My guess Is you just didn't circulate among Joe Average people when the decision wa1 handed down. Many were for retaining capital punishment. MRS. C. R. DEWEES By George Dear George : Why doe.,n 'l your editor fire you o[[ your job? FURIOUS Dear Furious: Because I am so insight-laden . widely rtad, helpful and com- passkmate. Also. because he's bttn trying lo figure out for the past 10 years ei:;ictly what my }ob is, and It's that tint step that baffles him. Dear George: Would you accept one seriou.!I note? A nurse in my ward here tells new patieni., aboul your col- umn in our local paper and I look forward to tt t very da y now. It gives a Jot of people a laugh !'nd I thought you would like to know. HEART PATIENT Otar Thoughlful : J nppreclate yo~aking the time to tell mt thnt. Th8nks very much. That's not " serious note - It lirhtefis my whole d1y. [ ~/~t.J.ndard~ ~l·t l1y lhl' ·\Ir Ttesourcrs ' ~oard. l\IAILBOX' ) /ANY PORTlll\' <lf 1h(' :u·i 1·:in he c·on- /tC'sted in the co\ir!.~ :ind l" 'iC\'<'r:ihle rrorn _ _ the rest of !he 1>111 ._ ___________ _,. Pro position !J hn ~ lit·t•n an:1ly1e<l in Letters f rom Ttaders are tvelcome. Normally writers should convey tllci r messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or elin1 inate libet is reserved. All let- te rs must include signatures and mail- it1g address. but 11ames may be witfi- held on request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will 1'10t be pub- lished. Bicycle Trails To the Editor: Jn regard lo Vice Mayor Howard Rogers' opinion of those who support bicycle trails. if one is a nil·wit because he belie ves that : -bike trai ls wlll provide greater safe- ly for hicycle riders and automobile drivers ali ke, -bike trails will prov ide peace of mind for the parents of bicycle riders. -bike trails will provide less ex- pensive and healthier transportation and recreation for all cog,cerned. -bike trails will cut dov.'ll on auto emissions and all of lheir atLendant damaging effects. -bike trails will save taxpaye rs' dollars that might otherwise be spent for far more expensive widening of streets and for provision of school and municipal parking spaces f fl.r ever-increasing numbers of automobiles. Then please list 1ne with the gre11ter nit- \vi1s. NORMAN C. LUMIAN Problen1 Tran6fer To the Edi tor: Consultants foc Newport Beach urged last week that commercial jets be moved to El Toro ~farine Air Station. lt's bad enough that 1.700 children have to attend school right under the El Toro take-of{ pattern I where noise levels sometimes reach 100 dbs.) but there is no way that we parents would stand-for adding com- mercial jets as 'ft•ell. I sympathize with the residents or New}iort . but if this happens, the scream from Irvine School parents will echo in aJI of Orange County •.. even louder than in. Jet nol ... TIIlS IS ONE i!.!Ue wherf', rm sure, every parent in Orange County would agree with me. You do oot solve one serious problem by creating aoother. Until we can remove our chUdren from the Irvine Elementary School site, r must seriously object to any added danger anyone might suggest. LOIS JlENES f'o,. Proporitlon 9 To the Editor : The DAILY PlL01"1 three editorial." attacking Proposition 9 and prophesying doom Ir ft passes drastically oversimplify 11 set of complex ls.sues and !ail to make clear the following fl<.'tl: It Is ttt.hnlcally possible to provide rue.ls which meet the standards 84!t forth by the inltintive. Indeed, the Ft"dcral Environmerltal Protectk>n Agency, when ('()ll!Ulted about Proposition 9. i;aid that many of It! provisions a pp ea red "e~ially t11ilored to 1neet the re- qui rements of the federal Jaw.'' A shutdown order in the c;ise of a miog emergency affecta: onl y tho!ie segments <lr industries or oorporations -not private lndlvl duals -wh ich are a I ready operating under 1 variance and lhererore are ;ilrt'(ldy f'XCeedlng the air quahty drt;:ul and al ll'ng!h Uy ;1 111111-par1is:in gmup. "\Von1 cn F-0r · -'' hu·!1 p1)1nts <1ur. 1n{'tdenl:1lly. th<i! !hr 1)rt·~urn:1bly r1dvcr51' et·onom1c effecls nf lhf' hill s\:lncl lo bf countrr-bal:incrd hv lh1• dr\'rloprnrnt of those industrif's thnt crrllt<" pollulton Pquipmrnt ,'lnd IO\\'·pq!lu1 1n~ pn)(!uets J'oltution itself, neert!ess to say, costs us dearl y. \Ve urge every voter to famil iarize hi mself with the parliculars of Proposi· I Ion 9 before dec iding v.·here he stands. \V hat is at stoke, obviously, ls wh ich shall prevail: private interests or the public in- terest, short-lerrn advantages or long- ter m security. HO\\'ATtD and COH INN A BABR 111111< f'h1orl1follora To the Ed itor : The An1crican Dental Associa tion anrl !he Amer1 cnn 1\iedical Association have both advocated the treatment of water by fluoride to prevent tooth decay. On the other hand the general public write in considerable numbers to their local papers expressi n~ fears about possi· ble h;trmful effects. The lhreat !O the in- d1v1dua!'s freedom or choice arouses in- tense feel ings of resentment which un- douhtedly influence local co u n c i 1 ~ hesitating on the brin k of adopt ing watf'r flu oridatloo. Meanwhile children .arc gro'n'ing up suf- fering unnecessarily from the increasing incidence of denta·I c8ries and the en- :i:uing ill-heal th \.\'hich can harm them for the rest of their Jives. FLUORIDE TABLETS and the use of toothpastes w.ith fluoride are both steps in the rig ht direction, but these methods call for unceasing watchfulness on the part of parenl5, or in whose care the children are during the import.ant formative time of the teeth's enamel. A method wh ich fits more easily into oormal habits would be better. It Is not far to seek. ~ii lk has bttn shown by scientific research among 1 ch o o I Dili ge11 t Search? (PRESS COMMENTS) Niles, 111.. Scr<1p Age: "A sea rch by the IRS! Jlow diligently does the IRS search for a taxpayer who hos a refund coming to him ? Apparently not as much as whc11 he owes the government. Whe.n the lRS office ill Al buquerque gove. an 'unable to locate' list to newspapers, an editor l)Xlt .. ted the name or a U.S. magistrate who holds court across the street from the IRS office ." Te.rre llautt. Ind., Sptttator: "We're only about llALF as honest as we used to be. Recently. the editors of Liberty magazine conducted a te11t similar to one run nearly a half century ago. The results were quite illuminating . . • and em- barra ~s lng for the current gf'.nl!ratlon . Back in 1924, Li berty sent out 100 lelll!r! to p«)ple select~ at random across the country, explain ing lhat ~~ dOllAr blll enclosed was 'in adjusttncnt of the error you complained or In yo ur account.' which of course. did not e.xlst. Of the 100 people contAclrd, Tl retumt•d the dollar, announcing that 1 mistake had bet'n made. which v.·As In marked C1)ntritst to lhe rrsults in 1971 In this year's t'st. 011· ly 13 uf 100 IK'nl'Jll· rt lur:-:cd the monry ·· clulrlrrn, notably by Or. F.. Ziegler of \\'i!l!l'rthur, Switzer land tn be n sa fe veh i· l'lf' for fluorl de whi r h C'an <'a slly be rnl xed 1n\11 1t :incl distribulC'r1 '''Ith n f11mily'1 (L1ily -.upp!y in rlC'nrly labelPd l>Ottles. 1'h1.<: can he done by :lny processin~ da iry a.; d1·n1011slrated bv 1h(' norr{'rl\' l)('ntal ,\l!lk Foundation, ·~ non profit ffi!lk1n g (·ha1·11 alllc trust estahli~ht"d 111 ~-:ngland 10 tnf'ff'11Sc public 11ndf·rstnnr1in11: nf the problrn1 :ind show this l!:J f1· t1ll ernnli\'• 1>. :1y ll) more <'oslly <ind wusteful meH1· ads. Tllt-:n I•; IS NO DANGER Jn lhe in- gtstion -0f the controlled amount up to th e age or 11 years: there ls equally no reason to continue it throughout adult life . To do so, as occurs when fluoride ia introdu ced into piped water supplies, Is to incur unnecessary expenditure. Only 1 percent of the water will be drunk and !he remainder will now away into the seu•age system. Why ust 3.000 titnes tnnre nuorlde than is ne~.:essary lo achieve the sam(' result ' \Vhether run under a state scheme or through other means, the advantaRf'! or lhl• n1ilk method are outstanding. Dental i\1lik would strengthen youn,i:: teeth in the forma tive years. which 1s the sn!e ob- jective of fl uoridntion. B.~:. PETTITT for the Borrow Dent.a! ~fllk r oundallon \\r!lterlooville Porl.smouth, Englnnd Underpaid CUI• To the Editor: Guess the California lflghway Patrol just isn't politically motivated enough for · Governor ReagRn lo warrant equal wage.a an d benertts to those <Jf a police man, th ough the work of th e CllP Is far mor• dnngerous -to th emse!vr!f. Hl·:HNY \V~:LSH Write 10 (;ougre•• To the Editor: Do you know thal Sen. John Tunnt'y'1 •'good friend ." Sen. Edward M. KeMedy, has proposed that i20 million of the tu.- payers' money be appropri11ted for a na- tional park around Chappaquidd ick Pond:" Do we need any more go .. ·ernment held and administered l.tid? In 1970 the federal bureaucracies 'held 40 percent of the land arta of the United States, some of which ranchers and cattle raisers used for-grazing and paid no taxes on. It makes you w on de r what the population gang is talking about when It tells us we are running out of !ind to house future generations. Unless you want to help finance a memorial to Mary Jo KopechM. tell your representatives and !enators to vote no on SB 3485. VIRG INIA Mcl!ON& ORANOI COASf DAILY PILOT Robert N. W~M, PubU.Mr Th oma.s KttvU, Editor Albert W. Bates Editorial Pou< Editor TM fdltort.J J'lft.l't or the Dalb' Piiot •f!"'k• to. tnr~ 11nd 1Urn11· 11\IC! TC11drrs by prt'Mnllnf thhl ncwll)Apcr'a oplnlo~ and ·com- m~ntary on topic. of lnterHl and ~lgnlf\c11.n((', hy provldlni:: • rorum Cur lhl': ~Xflf'l'«Jlon or ou r rt>adf'IT ''!'h1\()ni'I. nnd by prr~·nlln11: 1he t11 v<'ntj• vir .. ~1f)tli ri1 ~ (lf lnronn('d fll>- ,,;rn1rrx nnd a,l()kl'smrn on loi.»ai of the day. Thursday, June !, 1972 • 1 • ' . -- $1,500 to E11list Five Bomb Shelter Victims Army, Marines Offering Bonus S nwlled Gas , Survivor Says VALDESE. r\.C:. j L.:PI I -paralyzed at Holy Cr (J is~ ~The survivor of a bonib llospilal since-r-.tay 15, when shtller explosion that killed he was gunned do\1'n while her five play mat~ s a i d campaigning al a neart;iy Wednesday the children had Laurel, ri.td .. slwppn1g center. sneaked into the s_helter to e 1tleot Prif.•es Up ho9pltal by arnbul11nr t \Vednes:day. Dr. Augusto Or111, !lie physician "''ho hits at- tended Cha~·et dur1UJ!: the fast, described hi s t·ondi11on "' :ierious and said he uri.:cn ll)' needed mt'Cheat1on Protest Planned F'ol~ singer Joan Baez and rep- resentati ves of about 20 an ti- \1•ar groups announced plans \Vednesday for forming a hu- man chain of women and chil- dren around the Capitol JunC' 22 in an effort to pressure Con- gress into cutting off funds for the war. \\IASHIN"GTON (UPl 1 -J.'ot th.> fif.,l time since the Clvil War, !he Annv and the 1'-1arine Corps today began offering Sl ,500 C'ash bonuses to men "'bo en.Lst for combat training. The bonuses will be offered until tht end of August in a move to attract mort volunteers. They may be offered again later if the trial period proves 5U<'cessful. 1'here are so n1e catches. The volun- teers must go in fOf" four years. in stead of the usual two--year hitch for infantry, iirtillery and armor: and the bonus v:ill be pald only after the volunteer is in uniform, has successfully completed his training and has bttn accepted for com- bat service. Delaying the payments in th:it mannt-r is an attempt to avoid the abuses which occurred the last time the bonuses >A'ere paid. more than 100 years ago. During tilt Civil War some men enlisted. col- lected their bonus -ii wa s called a ··bounty" -and then deserted . only to J(leindienst 'Victory' Seen Despite Cranston \\'ASl llNGTON (AP) -Senators op- posed to the nominalion or Richard c_;_ Kleindienst to be altorney genera l have. cained another vote, but supporters re- main conridenl of a decisive viclory margin. Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Cahf ). an- nounced his opposition to the nomination. v.·hich may be voled on by the Senate next week. Senate debate began \l.'ednesday arter a Jong delgy \.•:hile the Judiciary Committte investi gated Kleindienst's role as deputy attorney general in the settlement of an- titrust cases against I n t e r n a t ion a ! Telephone & Telegraph Corp. So far only a fe~· Democratic liberals DAIL I' PllOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otli~try of \ht Daily Pilot is <Juarantt ed M010d1y.J<r!d~v: II )'iltl !I() no1 1>11v• yovr p.'lprr l:)y 5:)1} p.m., c•U .ind vour topy will be l:)rouglll lo y0u, Call~ t rt t1k~" t1nt•I 7:l0 1>.m. S.it1rdlY encl SuNl•v: II vou 110 not 'Krlvt VOi" COPY Dy t • ti\. Sa•u•llay, or ' 1,m. $und•y, (I ll itnd I CO!lY W•ll ti. o,owl>t II you, C111~ 1r1 1ak,n 1111111 1Q '·"'· Tt lepllones Moot Or111g• County "''••• ....... •42 .... ~1 Norttiwnl 1-tunllnQ!on 80oe<" -· Ind Wntmlnsrer ... ,.. . .... 140·11'21 San Clt~nlt, Cap151r1no SNCI>, S~n Jwn C1pi11t1no. D1111 Poll'I, .Sou!P! lflrunt, l1gun• Nlg.,.t •• 492· .. 21 z 72 MODEL YEAR have announ('ed H1ey \\•ill vote aga1n~t confim1at ion despi te the furor :stirred up by 22 dayl: of hCaring:s on the JTI affair. Cranston based his opposition on '"'hat he called Kle indiepst's lack of sensibility lor <'Qnstitutional r ights. "Mr. Kleindienst bas evidenced a high tolerance fer wire·IRpping, mass arrests and preventive detention,'' Cranston ~aid in a speech prepared !or today's debatt. "His thinking is fuzzy when it comes to di stinguishing hetv.·ecn people \\"ho threaten our nation's security and people. who merely disagree with h i m politically.'' Cranston added. Kleindienst's nomination to succeed foMTier Atty. Gen. John N. ~litchell \\•as :.ubmitted by President Nixon 1n mid- J:'el>ruary and originally was approved unoinimously by the J udiciary Con1rr11ttec. Son1e of !he committee's liberal Democrats. ho>A·ever, v.·ert critical of Justice Departzne nt policies on civil rights and t:lvil liherlit>s. Sen. Barry (.;oldwater (R·Arli.), said a1 !he start of t~ Sena te deUate, "Sonit• liberals are afraid Dick Kleindienst will be too good at the job he has been pro- posed for. I suspect the opJX)Si tion stems fro1n..the very thing 1 believe we need the most in the Dep:irt me nt of J ustice -a tough. unyielding, uncompromising ap- plication of the law to all parties of all social, econom ic or political statuses.·• NI enh.sl again 111 ttnvlhtr part of lht u>un- lry lo repeat the ir deception. They were called "bounty jumpers·· and they brought the i.ystem into .such di srepute that it has not been used since. But Coogre.u authonzed the new bonus in Septembe1", lt"lling the Defense Depart· ment at the time that it could offer a -- ft'ho'• Def play and ~'ere afr1ud to _tell \VASJ~INGTON lAP) anvone the concret e cubicle Af 1 · I' 1 re€m" or gas. te r s ump1~g or .w o 111onths, fnr1 n livestock prices 11\' SlfORT • are on the move again and soon mav force consumers to gird thCir loins at meat c:ountei·s. LAYER THE LOOK bounty of up to $3 .000. Defense Secretary Do yon recognize thi s C\·nthui "Bea " Picou, 10, The ~griculb.ire Departn1en\ esc3.ped dPath because she reported \\'ednesday that live--1 \\·as the first one of the cattle prh:es rose in May to an children to leave the sht>lter all-lime tush of $33.10 per 100 ~elvin R. Laird decided to use only hatr n1an? \Vell, believe 11 that amount for !he summer test period. or not it's actor Burt and "·ns a little dist<inct awa v pounds. llogs avt'ra~e<I an l l- 11·hen the ga~ l·xp!ode<.t Tue~-J>l'rcenl increase ltJ $24.90. day evenu1g . n1ainly as a resu lt nf fe\•:er A federal investigator. Jn1·k baby pigs last 1~·inter. l '. \\-'il ha1ns of thr Alcohol. e Cl111 1.:e: Ill LOOK 1'he plan was given no advance publici· f_,ancaster in one of thE' fy w that younK rnen "'-'ho in~nded to strangest disguises of sign up during \fay would not delay their h is career -a black enlistment lo take advant.'lge cf thf' priest -for his role in OOnus: but tht> Pentagon began a full ·Scorpio.' a CIA t hri\1('1· publicity ('11111paii:tn on the offer today. being filmed Jn \\'ash· The bonus is ain1ed at thi:oi yea r's crop ington. nf high :o;chool gradua~s who are coming --~-------- into a labor 1n:irket "'ith a 6 percent unemployment rate over all, and a 17 percent jobless rate for their age group. J>entagon officials snid if tht-dri1·e suc- ceeds this summer they behe1·e the ad- 1ni nistration's plan for 1111 all-volunteer Arn1y beginning 13 month~ from now wi!I be a .success. ·robacco and Firearms Unit. l'll OE~IX , Ariz iAI') -1 said <t valvt' k·adu1g lron1 ;i Ct:sar C:huvt·z. !ht· L'nited Jc ll"""' "'-LI\ gasoline tank intu the bonib ~·arrn \\'orker~ Jead('r. ha s \A.Ill I LUf\J shelter had been leak ing. and been takt-n 10 a hospital, The bonus idt.'.l is as old as the republic. Fi\'e months before th c Declaration of Independence wa~ pro· c·laimed , the Continental Con,i;:~~s, on <:.eorgc \Va shinis ton's advi('c , adopted <'In enlistn1ent bounty. II. provided $4 for men without ri!les and $6.67 for men l'•ith rifles who enlisted . During tlit ltevolu11onary \Var !hf' bonus roi\e to $200, and during !ht> Civil \V<ir it ranged fro m $100 to $.100. During !he latter c.-onfl ict some lO\\'JlS offE"red bigger bonuses -ranging up tn $1.:i() - 111 an attempt to attract volunteers from other communities so the local boys \\"OUid not have to march off to w3r. Flori<l,f.t De1nands Antisniog Action ~1IA~lt. 1'1a. tAP ) -En\·ironinent al officials here ba ve dem anded a.ntismo~ 11ction by three states aft('r chargini:-that an "indust rial air pollution bank" 1vhich drifted do\\'n from the Nurth blanketed tht> Sunshine Statr \\'ilh smoi..')' 'hazt' for fivt> days . \\'eather satellites traced the f!o>A· vf "this unusua l pollutive lo.ad" fro1 n in· du strial regions of Ohio. l'ennsylvani;i a11d Tennessee. ::iaid the Dade Count y pollution cuntrol chief. Peter Baljel. For five dayi beginning f\f<iy 21, the pollution obscured the oom1all y clear :;kies of sunn\' Florida . As the sniog )ay trapped flt ground level by a temperature inversion , a rise in respiratory di:;eases .and hospital ad· missions was reported. Prisoners 1he explos ion apparently Ot:· iveakened by a 20-day fast 11th & .,.,,,.,. t.·urred ·because of the tiny Chavez his face hoilowed WESTCLl,f l'LAZA ~p~rk crea_ted ...,·he n one o~ the and dra~:n. was taken to the New,ort lffch children flipped a light sw1tch.1 _~;~;==··~:;~;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;3 Seek Viet "The y obsprved soni~ gas War End? WASHINGTO N <UPll and odor and discussed it ;1mong thenisc!v('s. but they did not tell any adults about it because thty '~·ere afraid of heing pu n i sh t d , ' ' said \\'illiams after intervie1ving Fifteen American prisoners of the only suri·i\"or ~l'ar in Soitth \'ietnam \\'ASJtJNCT0'.11 (AP i -Re- purportedly l1ave signed 2 je<'1ing indust ry plea~ for slfltcment asking Congri'ss to delay. lhe fede ral uovcrninenl :;top 1he "imnior<1l. trag il' is ord ering manufac.1urers to war '' inake small c h i 1 d re n's The aµ~a! anrl the name-; or slecp1vear fire-resistant. the alleged signees were · Co1nmerce Secretary Peter broadcast O\"er ''Li~raliou t;. Peterson told newsn1en Radio." operated by the \"it'l \Vedne sday the firsl phase or Con!{. Three of the nien v.·ert-the Jlamtnability standard. previously listed as officially c·1.1verl11g si2es O to 6X. v.•i ll go mis~i ng in acti on 111!0 effect July 2!1. The En glish-languagt" broacl · After !hat ll ate, ('hildren's c11.st "'as monitored by tne sleep11•ear tnust be resistant to U.S. governn1ent Tuesday. flame or the government will UP I obtained a transcript labe l !he garments nflmmable copy from go \' t" r nm en I and p!atc a v.·arning on the sources and the Defense t:lothing. Department has confirmed ils A year la ter, all sleeping authenticity. But a sJ)flkesman garments in ~izes 0 lil 6X 1nust I said dep11r1ment policy pro-111eet rhe standard or be hibi led confirrninJ!' thP n:imr'I banned fron1 t/1e market. of priSilners lis!ed . The J•en-• S 0 I 1agon \~·ednescl::i~· started to • •~rgerf/ eft1yed notifv the relatives of the men !':i lLVElt SPR ING . 1\1 d. namfct in the broadcast. 'UPI ) -Surgery to removf" a t:atastrophic consequf'nce~.. ti ullet front the spine of Gov, ''Rational beings rec ti f \ ! ;eorge C. Wallace has been I mis take.~ "'hrn recoimized." put off by doct ors for the 1n1· lhc statement !';aid. "The time rnediate future, acc.-ord1 ng to a i~ critic~!. P!e::ise t;ikl' ef-\Vallace aidt. fective legislati\'e action. \Ye Billy Joe Camp. \\'allace's must choose between an im-press secr('tary, said \Ved- moral. tragic l\'ar w i t h 11esday that doctors have catastrophic C1:lnsequences and decided to postpone surgery to the honorable future of the remove the bullet which ha s United States." left the governor partially IN-SINK-ERATOR THE ND. 1 DISPOSER wnal maNH. ln·Sonlc·E••lo.r mo•I w~nleCl1 a .. uritul <••· '°"'n-proof "a'"''" •1..,1, E •cf1110ll•~ lil11 "'1 '"Wr•n<ll- ett•" tnu lt'l1 yow cle•r 1•m• ea11ly. Jond "'9re. H• wonder Int ... ,,.. ... 111 MO<lel ll .... I l•l•llmo corrtl•Gn "'""""'~· Joncl 1 S·1tar p.orh warran1y 100. Tll1 q11•litr Illar nu~e l"l·SIHK-1(11.\TOll 11>1 nwmOtr 0110 cll1pet•1r ~e•on,, !11 1011r kil<~~ REPUBLIC "GEMINI" WATER HEATERS 20 fO.a l. '52" •· lO Gal. '59 " 40 Got, '64 " 50 Gal. '84 " Mon.-Fri. 9-9; S•t. '·6; Sun. 10-4 Chro1na~olor A..tomatic Fin• Tunint e Automatic Tint e Customized Tuning • Walnut/ Contemporary Cabinet NUMBER 1 RATED COLOR CONSOLE AT A TABLE MODEL PRICE AN SA 16'' DIAGONAL BARGAIN COLOR WHY BUY AT ABC? · • No Finance Charges If Paid in 90 Days or No Down and 36 Months to Pay CO.A.CJ • 1 Year Free Parts • 1 Year Free Service • 3 Year Picture Tube Warranty Ultr• Medtn1 1tylln1 for th• mo.t centeu.,.rMy ,..... NHlnta. C.binet finished In lerMud• S~I White hlth glott l•cqver flnllh with 1 .... ...i color tep, Ch,...,.. color 100 Plctu,.. tube. Tlt•n 101 Hantlcr•fted Ch•11l1. Avall•ble with Jttmota CMtr•I Zenith's Lal'Cjest Sc.-.en Color -Choose Table Model or Stunning Cabinetry ONLY ITAND AYAILAILI •2aa•• • Free Delivery and Set Up • BankAmericard/Master Chal'CJe NEW LOW PRICE Table Model CHROMACOLOR PICTURli TUBE D t p • n II • .. I a hlincf'ctift .. CMMhi with Aut ..... tfc ,1,,. T""I"" Avt ..... tlc T I n t OvaN anti l•U~·lhlto •t•t• '' arnpllfiw. LOWEST PRICE EVER e Gokl Yid" GYCll'd Tunet e A•tomotic Fine T11•i1HJ e Tlton 100 C1Nt11la TOI' OF THE LINE 25" TAIL£ MODEL C9NSISTENTLY THE LOWESl PRICES IN ORANGE COUNTY FOR ZENITH PRODUCTS PRODUCT KNOWUDGE SECOND TO NONE I / • .. 17 / • .. - Orange. Coa·st N.Y. Stoeks VOL 65, NO. 153, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE l. 1912 c TEN CENTS -. Mesa ~eady to Kick 011 27th Fish Fry Costa Mesa's do1vnto\1'!1. park "'as tunted into a riot of co lor today as \vork- nien set up ferris v.·heels, merry-go- rouuds and about 30 other an1usement rides in preparation for the city's 27th Annual Fish .fry. h1emb«s of the Lions Club will throw the switch on their "super-carnival" at precisely 6 p.m. Friday, about one half hour after the serving of additional fish dinners begins. The park at 18th St r eel and Anahei1n Avenue v.·iU be the cl'nler <Jf nearly all Fish Fry attractions. including baby and beauty contests, a battle of the bands, stage shO'A'S and prize draw ings. Fish dinners, priced at $1.75 . v.•111 be sold ~'riday night and from noon to 8 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday. All proceeds \\•ill go to charity. llighlight of the three-day extrt1va- ganza promises to be the parade sche- duled for Saturday. It begins at IO:JO a.m. t1t 18th Street and Anaheim Avcnu1~ and runs along 19th Strett and Placentia r\venue. For those who miss the display of 15 floats and 30 marching bands. the parade \\ill be telecast in color fron1 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sunday by KTLA Channel 5.- Parade Chairman Cli ff Wesdorf said one of the entrants, the Tijuana Police ~1 otorcycle Squadron, will be featund in a special performance at 2 p.m. on C£'nter Street. facing the park. Pancho the 1'aco-eater, a lion c u b owner by Co.1ta Mesa restaurateur A I- f red Klirwnann, is tbt olficlal masrot of the parade and will lead tbe field of 1,500 participants in the parade, Wtsdorf said. He will be on display from l p.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday in the handball courts or the Girls Club, immediately adjacent to the park. Grand Marshal for this year's parade Is Marlin McKeever. the l..os Angeles Rams linebacker from Corona del f\1ar. (See FISH FRY, Page Z) Test 'Flin-ht' ~ Studied Coastal 'Air Forc e' Probed by Supervi,sors By JACK BRODA.CK 01 ltl• 01Jtv Piie! SIU! Orange County's own "air force " may get off the ground next \Yeek if the Board of Supeyvisors appro\·es a test pl an pro- posed by county Director of Aviation Robert Bresnahan. Bresnahan has suggested a six.month trial period at a cost o( $22,000 for an ex· perimental patrol over the Orange Coast \l'ith coopcralion cl the city heli copter forces from Newport Beach, Costa !'\lcsa, and llunlinglon Beach. If supervisors apprO\'C the test pro- gram and it proves succ e ssful. Bresnahan has oUtlined an overall county air surveillance and rescue project al a cost of $2.3 million for the first year. The "air force " is a proposal advanced f;Dead Tired' Presi~nt Nixo11 Reacl1e s Acco1·cl s Witl1 Leade1·s in Warsaw WARSA\V (UPI ) -A "dead tired'' President Nixon reached some wide-rang- ing accords with Polish leaders today as the final stroke of his 12-day diplomatic mission, and headed home !or a report to Congress tonight on the Moscow summit. The presidential jet, The Spirit of '76, left Warsaw on a nlne·hour flight to Washington after Nixon and First Secretary Edward Clerek or the Polish Communist Party signed a communique !wnming up four hours of talks. In the document, the leaders agretd that talks should be opened as soon as possible on East· West troop reductiod in Europe; to lay groundwork for a Euro- pean security conference -also agreed to by Nixon at the Kremlin summit - and to conduct continuing talks on im- pro\•ing U.S.-Polish trade -non·specific, as was the case in Moscow. But just as he fa iled to break any new ground with Soviet leade'f s on -the Viet- nam Issue, Ni1on was unable to reach ac· cord with the Polish. The Warsaw com- munique said: "Both sides presented their known posj.. tion.s on Uie v.•ar in \'ietnam and the situation in Indochina. Essentia l vie"'S of the two sides in this question remained divergent." His departure ended a dramatic mission during which he was greeted by antiwar rioters in AuStria, warmed by cheering crowds in Poland, fol\o\vcd bf bomb blasts in Iran and -most im- portant -welcomed in the Kren11in. As Nixon wound up his journey. which tncluded stops in Leningrad, Kiev and Tehran, the President showed clear signs of the stress he has been under since his arrival in Moscow 1.1ay 22. "He's dead tired but he won't admit it." one aide said. His wife, Pat, al so lost the poise she maintained throughout the journey, snap- ping at Polish plainclothesn1an trying to keep her away. The President's plane left \V arsaw a irport at 8:03 a.m. PDT, more than 40 minutes earlier than planned. because of strong headwinds along his route. McGovern Vows Return Of POWs in 3 Months COVINA (AP) -Sen . Georg t McGovern, playing to a big crowd in the California preside11tial primary cam· paign, has pledged that if he wins the White House he can gain a release of U.S. prisoners of war within 1lo days of his : ~ auguration. 1be South Dakota senator drew several lhousand persons, a crowd that stretched far back into Lhe darkness or the Covina Park Wednesday night. More than 2,000 turned out for another rally in San Bernardino. Those appearances climued a 14-hour day of vote hunting for his Tuesday .Or .. fe C.alt Weatller Hazy sunshine Is on the agenda for Friday, but the temperature will still be toward the top of the thermometer. Highs at the beach 72 rising to 80 inland. Lows &6-65. INSIDE TODA l' In bedroom communitv of Norwalk, Lht onl11 candidate who arou..e1 genuine enthu.riann I! Alabama's Gov. George C. Wal· lace. Ste itory, Pof}e 21, L..M. Im ., C1llftrftt1 1t Cl1 .. 1"" II·• c-k• n ,......,. n OMfll IN!ktt 11 ..... " .. ,... ' ant.rl•lillfMtlt t»4 ,.,.._ .,, ,.., 11111 It_. 12 MlnK-,, ,... ....... ,. -.Vitt ,, Mwhl.t ,..... • JUtltllllt .,..,. r o~ c-tr 11 ·-.... ·--~ .. ,, T•towl1iell U T"'11trt P """""" . ........... 17·1• WN1f NeWll 4 primary contest v:ith Sc.n. l-lubert II. Humph rey, a man Y..1cGovern described a s "part or the old aparatus " . .'' Y..teanwh.ile, l~umphrey v;•as having trouble. The luncheon audience was leaving as he drove up, 45 minutes late, for a speech to a businessmen's group at a fashionable Santa Barbara hotel. Undaunted, and without even leaving his car, Humphrey went right on to the next stop, a union hall in Ventura, where be delivered his Santa Barbara speech to a 100-person audience that consisted mainly o( the traveling press corps. Despite such mishaps, Jlumphrey i;aid as he flew back to Los Angeles after another day of small campaign crowds that he: thinks he has at least slowed McGovern's momentum ror Tuesday's crucial Democratic primary. In Covina, McGovern said that he could gain freedom for American prisoners by withdrawing U.S. forces and support from South Vietnam. "1 know that President Nixon tells us we're staying In Vietnam bttause we want to bring tibout the release of our prisoneB .• ," McGovern said. '"l'he truth of the matter ls until we set a deadline for the withdrawal of our rorees, untU we terminate military ope.ra- tion!, until we cut ·out further military support !or the Thieu regime in Saigon there's no hope Ill 111 to bring about the release of our prisoners ... " "How are you s<ilng to do It~" a young man shouted from the front of the crowd. McGovern a:tld he would do It by agree- ing to the withdrawal of U:S. forces ovtr a to.day pcrlod and the term1natlon of American military 1upport for Saigon. He 11id he would &s.k In retiirn that wlthdratring forces not be attacked "and that once that ha1 been completed our prisoners be N?!ca!<d." by Supervisor \V illiam Phillips of 1-'ullerlon several months ago. Bresnahan estimated th,1t the overall county11'ide system would need eighl po!ic'e patrol helicopters and four patrol planes plus two larger aircraft, one a helicopter and one an airplane for utility service. Of the $2.3 million first year spending, $1.1 million would go for equipment with Nloney Winner In Seclusio1i S1\LE~1. J\·lass . (U PI ~ -Thotnas (:.!!all, a tele phone repairman \\'ho v•on SI million this week in the tllassachusells L-Ottery, had his phone disconnected. Apparently anxio us to avoid the round -th e-c 1 oc k calls from ,a\esmen, newsmen and con men that plagued the state's first $1 million \\.'itlner -Joseph Bonica o( Newton Rall was ln- communicarlo today. Hall, 25, began a vacation after the Tuesday drawing and was not expected to return to his $130-a- week job. Corona <lei Mar Auto Parts Shop Hit by Sniper A sniper \\'ho may be responsible for a recent \\'ave or Harbor Area shooting in- cidents hit a Corona de! Mar auto parts shop \\'J th a .38 caliber slug, it was discovered Thursday. Richard Rosebush. O\\'ner of Cd~1 Auto Supply, 361 7 E. Coast 1-lighway, esti mated damage at $200, accordl1'ig to Police Of· fi cer Larry c:abriel. 1'he patrolman found a mangled slug which put a five-inch hole in a plate glass window and ricocheted off a tool cabinet in side the firm. The bullet struck the glass at the rive- foot level, about chest high to anyone who might have been inside, police noted. Several shooting incidents diiring night hours have occurred in the area, in- clud ing a rifle rampage th rough Ne wport Center some weeks ago in which several office buildings were hit. One insurance executh1e wa s missed by only a few illC'hes as he walked by when a carload of snipers sped through. the balance covering operating costs for the fir st 12 mon ths. Uresnahan's six months test proposal calls for using police helicopters already in service in the three coastal com- munities. rn addition to the six city-operated helicopters the test program wou ld in· elude a rented tWo place light plane. Bresnahan estimates that the joint pro- gram between the cities and the county could reduce annual helicopter costs to the three cities and to Anaheim, the only other county community with choppers, by tw<rthirds. If the fina l plan is adopted, an opera- tion center would be established at Orange County Airport and sta(fed by the participating cities. The center would be equip ped by the coun ty. Bresnahan suggests that the si1-month test area be split into t\YO sectors, one from Seal Beach Naval Weapons Depot to UCI and the other southward to San Clemente and bordered by the San Diego Freeway inland and the ocean on the east. Coverage would include the three com· munities now operating helicopters and porti001 of F-quntain VaU.,., Irvine. Westminster and Seal Beach. The a~tiooal ftxed wing plane would operate for six hours a day and lhe heliropt.... an additional five hours, Bresnahan !Uggested. If the county-wide system ts eventually adopted. there would be required 14 aircraft, helicopter and fixed wlng. with -44 employes including 21 pUots, nine observers, three administrators and 11 aircraft mechanics. The program would be administered by a multi-jurisdictional aviation com- mission. The primary purpose of the aerial fleet , Bresnahan explained, would be police services but with the larger hellcoptera and fixed wing aircraft, fire and rescue services could-also-be provlcied. - Jn the past, the county has used aerial services during flood and fire situations. In one instance during the 1969 floods and an athe r occasions. Marine Corps heli- copters were volunteered lo the county to aid in emergency cootrol. Lumber Tn1ck's Load Tips Over A truck heavily loaded with lumber nudged a roadway center divider while making a left turn in Costa Mesa at noon Thursday, tipping onto its side when the load shifted. William D. Robbins, 34, of West Covina, wasn't injured in the accident on old Newport Avenue at Baker Street in the city's northeastern industrial area. A heavy duty low truck was dispatched from Buena Park to right the slightly damaged rig and iU lumber load, which wasn't scattered. > Fe11~e-hopping~ Ecology U11it Opposes 9-Sort Of Special le the DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -Despite earlier predictions from Orange CoWlty Super· vt.sor David L. Baker, the Califom\ft Environmental Quality Control Council today finds itself stuck squarely In a feoce-straddling position on controversial Proposition 9. The council in its meeting here Wednesday, voted to oppose the so-<:alled clean environment ln1llative on the June 6 ballot. (See related story, Page 14). But on the other hand , the. council r efused to rescind its earlier vole which endorsed Proposition 9. "Peo ple are going to think we're balmy," exploded boa rd mernber Albert Pcarlson or Riverside. "It's like letting a stone wall stand and then mythicnlly tearing It down ." Th e council's fcnce-straddlng stance began ·~fay 18 in Los Angeles when it voted 5 to 2 to endorse Proposition 9. But Chairman Baker or Orange County, .,.ho wa3 absent at that meettna. 1ald "trickery" had been used to get the en- dorsement. He scheduled another volt this Wednesday in Sacramento. The second time, the council voted 9 to 3 to oppose ~ition t with two abstentions. Baker had predicted it would be e:n- dor!!ed 8 to $ by the full council. However. the councU refuatd to back up and revoke tta pre:vlous 5 to 2 vote en- dorsing the proposition. A motion to let the endorsement stand woo 7 to 4 ap- proval of the eoundl. St;ite Sen. Robert J. Lagomarsino (R- Ventura Cmmty), a legillallve mtmber of the COWlCU, oUered consolation of 10rts: ·"Thll happena all tbe time In the legislature," he aald. The meettnc waa frequmtly lntm'pted by boo$ters of Propoeltin t , a S3-polnt measure that would clamp a five· year moratorium on nuclear power plant con- 11troction, among other things. c h-artman Baker remained them the meettn& was aot a publlc ~Inc- • DAILY "ILOT lt11f ,.._ .. LINDA ARMSTRONG, 18, IS FIRST ON FERRIS WHEEL Costa Mes• Prepares for 27th Annual Fish Fry Tank-backed S. Viets At Border of Province SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese B1nh Thuan Province 1long the Soutb paratroopers and rangers backed by China Sea coa&t about 100 miles southeast tanks drove almost to the border or ()f Saigon. Quang Tri Province today in an effort to A CommWlist battalion of 400 men al· lacked a government force 20 mlles north knock out a North Vietnamese reg irnent of the provincia l capital of Phan Theit and blunt an expected attack on Hue. and "'as beaten ba ck with 54 dead. They moved with virtually no air !iUp-Government losses \\'ere put at 13 dead port and came under heavy artillery fire. and 21 wounded. Bad weather settled on North Vietnam ~ Hue Sauth Vietnamese and the northeastern quarter or South-troo~s uld they killed 28 Communists in V.ietrntm-bortlfe U.S. Command said a ski rmish seven miles from flue. B52s planes knocked out two more of Hanoi's struck heavily in that area as well a.s in Po"'er plants Wednesday and that U.S. the Kontum region. Air Force Phantom jets knocked do wn two of tour attacking J\.1TG 21 jets over a :M).minute period near Hanoi. U.S. planes bombed northern targets today by radar. The Hanoi official army newspaper Qua n Doi Nhan Dan admitted in an issue reaching Saigon tM.t the U.S. air of- fensive was hurting North Vietnam 's war effort. It said Lhe fight to maintain com- munications an d supplies to the south was becoming more "strenuous." Field off icers along the J\.1y Chanh River defense line %2 miles north of Hue said the northward striking South Viet· namese armored force of 2,000 men was hit by a barrage of 50 130mm artillery shells-the heaviest such .strike ln a week -and that the.re were "quite a few'' casualties. UPI corTespondent Donald A. Davis reported from Hue that the three bat- talions of government troops reinforced by armor were seeklng to capture or destroy a battalion ol 650 North Viel· namese troops in the hills just IOUtbwest or My Chanh, or drive It back north. The &ituation on other fronts : -Heavy house-to-house righting was reported in Kontum, 260 miles north of Saigon, and government spokesman aaid 234 Communist! were killed Tuesday and government troops found the ~ies o{ 125 others -,a toll of 3$9 al a loss o( 13 government troops killed. They uld the Communista faked a aur· render move Wednesday and poured rein· forcements into the northern part of Kon- tum during 'a lull In the fighting. -Fighting at An Loe, ltO m!les oortb of Saigon, tapered off but the clty was hit Wednesday by 350 mortar and rocket roundJ and fighting wu reporttd along three Saigon rtllef columns strung out from two to 15 ml1ea to the south. -F'lghtln1 flared In normally calm Vie lna1nese Culture Eyed a l OCC Fonllll Vi etnamese: mu sic, poetry, and other form s or culture will be eiplored at 8 p.m. Friday In a program at the Orange Coast College rorum. TM program, 5ponsorcd by the OCC Veteran's Club, la open to the public wlthout charae . Wallace Shows Voluntary Toe Movement Today SILVER SPRING. Md. (AP)-Alabama Gov. George 4 Wallace today wa.s. reported to have shown :!Orne sllgbt voluntary movement of. the toe!I o( hi, left foot -the first time he has exhibited any brain-controlled motk>n of his at lea.st temporarily paralyzed legs since he waa gunned dawn May 15 al a political rally. Dr. Joseph Schanno. the vascular surgeon Who ls leading the team of ~ tors on Wallace's case sald, in reportJnc tltis. that "lhe ovtr-all significance of th.ii ln regards to the e\lentual outcome of hia paralysis ls undetermined at this time." However, If the toe.motion dkmite11 was volwit.ary, lt could Nwe--at least some favorable slgnlficance as regard4 Wallace's physkal future for th11 reaa aon : • Any voluntRry, that la, bra!n-<ontroll<dj movement of any part of hJs Umbs, ho-. ever slight, meant that the iovemoi.i spinal cord Js not completely eevered f+: ooe publiohed report said within 48 ~ after Wallace waa felled by a would-bit assassin's bulletl. ' Theo report was attributed lo an un- named doc1or at Holy Cross hoopit'i! where Wallace Is convale:~. • Complete sevennce of the aplnal cord -whi ch provides a kind of bodUy, lelcpllone cable between the brain on<! the limbo and otber nerv&<mtrolled structures -would mean that Walltce had abSOlutely no chance of any reolor• lion or runct1on to his panl)'!ed limbs. Hts doctors have said that there 11 'M way or telll"fl, from the X·l'IY evidence, to what degne the governor'• spinal cdi't Is Injured, tncludlng whether ,.. not It It · severed, partially severed, or jµlt bruised. However. _, 'Ille latter ccili!4 ~ very serious. (Related ltof"Y °'1 pogc 5). • 1'11ey hAve 88kl that only through fur- ther surgery-for the removal or the:I let still lodged within Walla .. '• canal -can the e1tent ol damage to . cord be fully assessed. • ' DAlL Y f.'ILOT Racing Car Destroyed In Wreck from Wirt Strv\cei; BRlGllAM CITY , IJ\ah -A 125 ,000 Santa Ana-based sports raelng c::ir was destroyed here Wednesday in a coUi!:ion creating a fireworks-like dl!play. a! ill 1nai::neshun parts exploded and burned. 11'\C vehicle en route to the Conl 1nent:il 5000 Series at ~:drnonton. Alberta, Canada was a total los!i. Utah Highway Patrol officers 11a1d an elderly couple ~whose car coll id~ with a ;iickup truck and trailer carT)'ing the Formula 111 machine were also injured. Tho~ and Zenath Elwin. both M and both of Clearfield, Utah, were listed in good condition. Race crew members Steve Jennings, 23, of Santa Ana , and Claude Holguin. 30:, escaped the collision oo U.S. 66 with 1ninor bums. "They weren't really hurt." said a female employe of Moto r Racing Equi~ nlent Company, Santa An.a, builderll of the race car. She said neither Jenn ings nor llolguin -the latter a Los Angeles County resi~ dent -had to be hospilaliu:d. She also s)!.id any additional in- lix-mation would have to come from the Motor Racing Equipment Company presi# <lent , who left for Utah after the accident. Virtually all competition race car crew! headquartered in the Loi Angt\es-- Orange County area are now on the road for the June 4 race at Edmonton. No one elR-could a.ay today who among the Southland-based road racing fra terni- ty was scheduled to drive the destroyed car in Sunday's Canadian event . The Edmonton meet was third on the current Can-Am schedule but the or iginal second rice set \alt wee k in Michigan was rained out. • Mexican Doctor, Ex-Navy Flier Held on Drugs SAN DIEGO (AP) -A ti.1exlcan physi- r ian and a former Navy pilot are charged Jn two separAte federal indictments vdth conspiring lo smuggle heroin, cocaine and marijuana into the Uniled States from Mexico. Named Wednesday in the federal grand jury indictments are Dr. Gustavo Guerra- Montenegro. 37. of Tijuana. Mex., and Michael Terry Drake, 26. of San Diego. Both are being held in lieu ·of bail. They are accused in one indic1ment of conspi ring to smuggle 66 pounds of plUe heroin, valued at $20 mlllion on the illegal market. The heroin \vas never delivered to undercovet narcotics agents who were in- volved in negotiations for itl sale, federal officials said. The other indictment, whlch also names four other peraons, involves the. confiscation by authorities in San Diego of 3,038 pound! of marijuana and 2.l pounds of cocaine. Assistant U.S. Atty . Thomas T\1. Coffin said he beUeves the six person!. all of \vhom are In custody. were part of an in- ternational smuggling ring. Traf fie Victim Dies of lnjiiries ~\c !anie A. Ni chols. 17, of 20002 N. Pondc,rosa Ave . Tuslin. dird late Tues- <lay <ii 'ft1stin Co1nnlt1n11y \!uspital from injuries su ffered in a traffic accident last Saturda". The Cal ifornia Highwa y Patrol said r..Uss Nicho ls ~·as ejected from a vehicle driven by Donna Slncl~ir, 18. of the same address ·which overturned into e drainage ditch at the Warner Avenue exit of the northbound Newport Freeway. ~tiss Sinclair is reported in l!atisfactory condition by hospital aides. DAILY PILOT Tiie Orl r111• Ct:NI! OAIL Y l'U,.OT, w!M'I wllltll I• comblntd Ill• ,.., ...... ,.,PU. II publllhtd .,. me Or•no-Coe11 l'ul>llY\lng C~Y. "'1!ol• r1,. M illon• •r• pu1>1\1hl!d, Mor.d•"f' lllfOUgll F rld1y. 1'0f CDlll Mn1, ~t"'ll'Orl 8tiKll, l-1urdl""ton l!IP<h/1'1111111111! V1tley, Laoun• Buch. 1.-.Lnl'{5111clltlbllck lllld 51n C.lil<Mntl/ S111 Jul't C...pl1tr1no. A 11,,..11 ,.,1on11 fdtllon 11 ll\lllllohl!d Sl1urd•YI •"" l uniil';I. TPle prlnc1.,.I publl1lll11og pi.rit Ii •! lJO Wnt a.y $1r"1, ('-I• MUii, C1lltonil1, 92'». k 11D1 rt H. W 11d Prftldrl"ll i t'll Publknlr J1ck R. C<1rltv VI<• ,.,._lclenl I M Gt.....-11 MMl~r Th11111 11 Kt1"il Edllor Thom11 A. 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I • V l'I Tt!tP~tlf No Support Governor Won't Back Coastline from 't\'lte Scr\•ice1 <.;overnor B.onald Rea~an said \Ved· nesda y he \~as "111clined not'' lo support the efforts now being made by con- servationists to place a coastline pro- lection meal!lure on the November ballot. Speaking at a press conference, the Governor said he (~ll adoption uf <:oastllne controls should bt> lefl to the Lt>gislature and that the people should Sheriff Na1ned 111 $200,000 'Class Action' All 11t·cLis1~d guntnan who once chari::ed an Orange Co unty Superior Court judJ.;c and deputy district atto n1cy \Vilh bran- ding him as a •·noo N:iii and a mcmb('r only act by initiative "i.f the Jegis.l.a1W'e took no action.'' At the san1e press conf eren ce, Gvvernor Reagan said he supported the present efforts to place the death penally i:;sue on the ballot through petition and thrit he had signed ont> of the petitions. The coastlin(' protection measure \s bein~ backed by the Coastal Alliance, a coalition of L-onser\';it ioni st organizations. Spo kesmen for the group say thty launched the peti tion drive originally because the Le~lslature pro b a b I y wouldn"t pass a sufficient ly strong bill. •·r "n·ould be inclined not to (support the coastal measure) on the basis that we do ha ve a legi slative solution which is being advRnttd," the Governor :ulid. "I would think the linle for a coaslline Initiative would be if the Legislature took no ac· lion " Given Bum's R1isli of the Aryan Brotherhood " has sued Shrriff James ~·lusic k for $200,000. A bill harked by the Coastal Alliance \1'as kill!'tl earlie r th is month in the Senate Nalurul Resources and \Vild!ife Co n1mlttee. 1'he same comnlitlee ;ip- pro\'cd a less restrictive nleasure outhnred by Senator Denn is Carpenter (fl-Newport Beach). 1'he Coastal Afiiance i1itiative measure -y.•ould crrate six rcgionnl commissions in the state with half of the members chosen from local elected of(icials. The con1missions would control development fro1n n1can high tide line to 1,000 yard~ inlan d along all of California's 1,100 miles of coast. Dick Groulx, executive setretary of the Alameda County Labor Council, is taken into custody aft er a sit-in at University of California President Ch arles Hitch's office on Berkeley c ampus. Groulx . another top labor leader, .and 14 other persons "'ere ar- rested after staging a seven-hour sit·in to protest the 45-day labor dispute at the catllpus. The Build· ing Trades Union struck over pay and grievance procedures. Douglas Pl un1ley Jr., 30. of Long Be ach. heltl in the county jail pending his trial here June 12 on kidnaping, robbery, burglary and ('Scape charges, filed thf" ~uil \Vednesday in J..os 1\ngcles Federal Court. Easter11 AirliI1e Hijacker FromPnge} FISH FRY ... 1'\unlle_v 'A'ho "''as found to ha ve recovered his sanity after a long stay in Atascadero St ate Hospital. claims 1fusick has violated his con..stitutlonal rights by Th~ Carpenter bill wit! exclude in- corporated cities from control and would al!o1v individual counties to define their O\\'n coastal zone some\vhere between 1.000 yards and three miles inland. lllcKeever will share the spotlight with sanct ioning "unfa ir disciplinary treat- .special guests "Seymour,'' the television nlent." horror mo\'ie host, and Les "Mr. Fish His lawsuit is represt'nted as a class F'ry" ll1lller. the man who has ttnnounced <tc tion 011 beh al f or ~ill other .Orange SuspectNamedin Warrant The coastline protection initiative need! 325.504 certified signatures to be placed on the. ballot in Noven1bc r. The secretary of state ha s suggested that petition ci rculators of both the coastline measure and the death penalty a1nendment beJin fili ng-their petitions 'A'ith local county cl erks t-.1onday. The signatures must be ,·erified not later than Jw1e 29 to qualify for the November ballot. . WASHINGTON (AP ) -The FBI •aid today Frederick William Hahneman , a '49·year-old Easton. Pa .. man , is being sought for tbe llkyjacklng of an Eastern Airlines plane May 5. blackmailing of- ficials for $303,000 , and lhen msklng his getaway by balllng out of the plane ovtr Honduras. Acting FBI Director L. Patrick (',rav 111 said Hahnem!V1 wall named in...!l feder- al w11rrant issul!d in Alexandr!~ .. Va, \Vednesday that charged him "'ith tak- ing over an Eastern plane en ro ute from AllenlO\.\"n, Pa .. to T\-·liami. Fla. The plane v.'as di\'erted to Dulles ln- ternationel Airport. in nearby Virginie. vrhere the skyjacker demanded and re- cei\'ed $303.000. 1aking off again. the plane 'Ara.5 df'rect- ed on a co~se \1·hich took it over l ion· duras where the hijacker bailed out dur- ing the ear mominr hours of May 6. The rJrr said ~lahneman. born July 5, 1922, at Puerto Castilla. lionduras, n•as M .i\merican citizen who served as 1111 aircraft radar technician in the U.S. Air Force during World War II. Jn recent yea rs, the FBI said. he ha s Mesa Apartn1ents Hit b y Thieves; $2,500 Miss ing Neighbors in the same section of Costa l\1esa complained to pollce Wednesday they lost about $2.500 in cash in l!epa rate grand thefts from their apartments. No evidence of forced entry to classify the cases as burJit\ary could be found . Roommates Stephen M_ Knight and r.1ichael L. Sparling. of 526 Bernard St.. Wld Officer Pat Rodgers they lost $1 .~20 in total. The ca sh v.'as in a desk drawer and contained in clothing hung in a closet. they said. Officer Rodgers was also disp11tched to the apartment. of Diane F. Cushman. 13, at 870 Center St., where !he just moved. 1'.1iss Rodgers 311id $970 i.n cash that v.'as in her suitcase upon arrival had been solen . Ski11nydi pper 'Drained' Out T-IOUSTON (UPI ) -A 29-year-old San Antonio man \vent "sldnnyd\pping" in a motel swimming pool. and refused to 11\lr- render to police who thought he should be wearing bathing trunks. Police had to drain the pool belore they could capture U1e man. TI1e incident began when an ambulance was called lo the Chltf Mote] to pick up an apparent heart attack victim. JJ al· tendants led the man to an ambulence, he broke aw ay and jumped tn the pool. Police were called after the man peeled off his clothes. The man. who officers would not identify, aaJd he wall enjoyi.ng himself and refused to come out. The officers apparent.ly did not want to get wet, '°a fire department pump truck wall called and. ~ht; pool was drained. Ht was bt\ng held f<lr a psychiatric ~x amination, police said. Acto1· Teachel' Di es Lll\1A . Pa. (AP ) -J;i!1>rr Oet'ltr. 78, Pn actors' teacher and as!IOCiatc of dlrtc· tors and ph1ywrlghts who w A s ncknowledged all n ma jor figure ln the modern Amerlcnn theatt?r. idled \Vod- nt.!dny. A former vaudevillian, Deeter founded tM Mt>dgerow Playhouse. where his student! Included Vnn Hentn . Richard n .. ~ ... Mrt and Ann Jl,1rdlng traveled in a number of foreign coun- trlell. The bureau said hi.' is married and claims a permanent residence at 145 ./amC's ~. Easton. (;ray1'aid that the Honduran 11uthori- Hcs provided excellent cooperation and !hat the assistance made it posslble to trace the movements of an indiv idual be- lieved identical v.·ith Hahneman through :i rural area of Honduras. The FBI released a photograph of llahneman and descr ibed him all a white male, >3, with brown hair and bro1\'n eyes , and \vith a scar on the back or his left hand. F ou1· Countians Indicted hy Jury 111 Fraud Case U1e parade for the past 26 years. County Jail inn1ates \\"ho allegedly have The schedule of Fish Fry Events is as suffered fron1 \\'/1at Plu1nlc y describes as follows: \·ictirnization by Jail deputies. FRIDAY Plu mley claims he has be en held in -5:30 p.m .. Fish Dinners. City Park. -6 p.rn .. carnival Rides and Mid"·ay solitary confineincnt for the past five Booths. City Park. n1ont hs. is constantly harassed and -7 p.111., Band Contest, City Park. cu rsed by guards and is <illo\\'ed to take SATURDAY IHS two bat hs a v.·c~k only in the middle -10 a.m .. Carnival, City Park. nf the night. -10:30 a.m .. Fish Fry Parade. Jail offi cers _ st:t lt-that Plu m\ey's -Noon, Fish Dinll4!rS, City Park. :o/Jlitary confine ment "'as ordered follO\\'· -1:30 p.m .. Stage Show, City Park. -2 p.m. Tijuana Police Motorcycle ing the discovery of a pistol in the Long Squadron. Beach n1an's cell. -4: 15 p.m. Dancers, City !'ark. lt \\'as stated at the time of the -8:30 p.m. Stag' Show, City Park. discovery that a jail visitor passed the SUN DAY \'>'eaJM)n to convicttd murderer William -Noon, Carni val, City Park. \Vestwood ''The Man '" l\tcClellan who -2:30 p.m., Baby Conte$t, City Park. then slipped the gWJ to Plumley. Recat1se the death penall y ini!iative c;ills for an amendn1cnt to the Cal ifornia C"Onstit ution. 520.800 sig natures are re· quired for its addition to the ballot. Insurance Firm May Lose Permit Over Li1ikletter --J:30 p.m., Miss Mermaid Contest, Ci-Plamley-waa already recognized as a ty Park. dangerou;i prisoner for hls roM!! in two TALLAllASSEE, F1a. (AP ) -The -6: t5 p.rn. Stage Show City Park. escape attempts : the first in November. state today ordered National Home Life --8 p.m., Drawing for Grand Prize, Ci-1970 when he tried to shoot hi s way out or Assurance Co. to show cause why it1' ty Park. } \Vest Orange County Municipal Court and 1~1orkla license should not be Hfled (IA the second \vhcn he and other co1mty jail grounds it uses an unlicensed agent - Four men accused of defrauding an in-prisoners threw pepper into the faces of Art Llnkleller -io advertisements. surance company of $150,000 after they SenalOJ"S Vole No jail depul.ie.s . Tnsurance Commissioner Tom O'f\1alley allegedly set fire to their Anaheim auto J>Jumley and his colleagues 'A't:fe sc heduled a July 5 puhlic hearing t.o parts business were indlcted today by lhe \VASllJNGTON (APl _ Sens. Alan overpo'n'ered by the blinded deputies determine whether the St. Louis . Mo., Orange County Grand Jurv . arter a struggle in the elevator th at was firm 's license should be suspended or District attorney's offic.ers are today Cranston and John Tunney• both tD-trans portini:_: the pr isoners to the Super ior revoked for its use of ads employ ing the scheduling superior Court arraignmen ts Callf .l. \Vednesday voted aga inst "" Court hea ring room. radio-television persona lity. for Jerome stanley Miller, 40. or amendment to the State Department Plumley 'vas first arrested In Sep--"to.Ir. Link.Jetter is not 00 file [n the f'ullerkln. James Dowell Spradlin, 15, or authorization bill to perrrilt continued im-!ember. 1969. He spent two months at Florida Department of Insurance as a Garden Grove end Bertrand Lawrence ports of Rhodesian chrome ore. The Atascadero afler being found insane. II li censed agent authorlied to :solicit in- Brotsch, 38. and Bud Leslie Brotsch, 35, Senate adopted the amendment by a 40-36 months al Vacaville State Prison and 19 surance in this state." O'Malley said ln a both of Anaheim. \"Ote. mon ths in Orange C',o unty Jail. news release. All four men v.·ere charged after a 1-:;;~~;::~~~~~JAlF~;;:;:;:;:;:;;;~:;:;~=:;:;~=:;~;;,;;;~;;:;;;; year-long lnvestlgation by District At- torney'' oflicers and Anaheim police with so~a bed sale.' npw 0 arson. grand thef t, conspiracy and the dcfr1.1ud ing of an insurance co mpanv ll is alleged that they were respons."1ble -. queen size • • $299. for I.he fire last Aug. 30, lhal gutted t.tie premises of J & f\f Auto Parts in Anaheim . l n\'estigators said one of the defendants \1·as injured in \\'hat \\'as descrided as a spectacular blast. T1u·nhull Takes Airport Post Donald W. Killian . Newport Beach al· torll4!y, has been replaced on the Airport Land U8e Commission of Orange County by Frank \V. Turnbull of Huntington Beach. Killian's term e.xpired May 1 and com· mission members ha d recommended that he be reappointed. But supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newpcrt Beach appointed 'T'urnbull to the post and got approval of other board members. Killian had served fof two vears on the commission as an appoin-tee reconl· mended by former Ftfth D i 11 t r I c t supervisor Alton E . Allen. Turn bull is 1n e•ecutlve with Roadcraft ~fanufacturing and Leasing Corporation of Gan:lena. LA Bitses Roll; Dispute Studied LOS ANGELES (AP ) -11 '"' business as usual today for bulH of the Southern California Rapkl Tran a It District, even though the compariy failed to re-new its contract with Its 1,500 drivers . The contract expired this mornlnt, tut a threatentd walkout wa1 everted Wtdnesday when Gov. Ronald Re1gan 11pp0lnled a fa ct-finding commission to study the contract dispute. The United Tran1pOrt.ation Unkm \1 barr~ from 1ltlkln& for to days after the oppolntm<nt of th< commfasli>n. The-commission haa JO days to lllue • rcrx,rt • dual • size $249. -. . for sitting ond sleeping. • A wide selection of fabrics and colors to choose from. • Rewrsible backs and sea t cushions. ~~~ H.J.GAI\l\ETT fURNITURE ~ PROFE SSIONAL INTERIOR DESIG~IEP.S '. Open Mon., Thuri. & Fri. E¥e~. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA. CALIF. 6 Di\ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE End of the <..:osta Alesans breathed a sigh of reJieJ early this 'veek "'hen state authorities suddenly withdrew .an ulti· 111aturn on purchase of the Fairview Park property. 1'hc ultimatum, which was tied to a th reat to dis- pose of a valuable 36-acre chunk of park property un· Jess Costa l\lesa declared itself willing to buy the park· !')Jlc ;it $4 million, "\Vas removed on Tuesday. '!'he good nc"·s got even better when Assemblyman J~obert Burke announced that Governor Reagan's offil'C 1•a ssed the \\'Ord that the state's plan to tr~~e ?f~ 36 ar·res or the land to a private developer \\'as def1n1tely off " It \l'a s explained by General Services Director l~il "'re nce J\oblnson that the \Villiam Newsom Devcl- opn1cnt r o. -p:trty to the proposed trad~ -was more interested in state surplus lands at Can1ar1llo Slate lfos- pital and Jlatton State llospital in San Bernardino than tile Inca! ac reage. f-~or local park proponents, the recent develon- 1nent in Sacramento \Vas a pleasant turn of events. At one poi nt it appeared t hat Costa 1\-fes~ \Vas in serio_us jeopardy of losing its bid for the entire 257-acre site because it could not accede to Robinson's demands to purchase the la nd by Jlme 2. \Vith the threat of i1nmediate auction or trade or the acreage removed, Costa Mesa and county authorities ran nO\V gel back to the business of planning its acqui- sition . A joint po\vers authority of the two go vernments, now in its format~e stagei· will soon address itself to that problem. Several avenues now ~ppear to.~ op~n since in1mediate payment of the entire $4 m1ll1on fi g- ure i.c; no longer required. The long-term lease bill by Assemblyman Burke ffi·Huntington Beach), which is expected to go to the Assembly floor next week. may be one of those alterna- tives. It \vould allo\v Costa ~tesa and the county to hold H e Does n't Publicize The Plionies SYDNEY J. HARRIS Anli\\'er s to Various Queries That Come in the Mail ~ From R.B., Raleij:!h, t-;orth Carolina: ''\\'hy rlidn't you ev er comment on the Clifford 1r\'1ng case while it was making Cront-pa_ge nt\\•s?" Because pub licizing phonies is not my idea of an honest day's work, and also because l 11·ouldn'l read a book about l/o"'ard Jlt1~hes even if it were authentic. Fronl L.B .. a 41h- grade student in Frederi<:ton, New Bruns11·ick: "After seeing su 1nnny dc/- initions in yottr col- um n rt>cenlly, I \\'Oil· der if ynu could tell me ho1V 11'e began lo <'all :oi certain kind or pants 'jeans.' Your column is very popular and read by so 1nany around here.'' YOlJ SLY LIITLE devil, yo u knew just \1·hat to say in order to geL an answer, •lidn't you? Well , Miss Flatterer. "jeans" 1s short for ."jean fu stian," a fabric of colton and fla x originat ing in Genoa, Ita- ly. Now do your O"'fl homewo rk after this! From A.N., Sausalito. Cal.: "Arc you too mealy-mouthed to take a public posi- 1 ton on the subject of school busing? \Vhat is your vic1v?" I ha\'c disqua li fied myself on lhe sul>- jcct, since my children attend a private 1-ichool. and I think <'lnything I :;aid on the ~ubjcct 1>,•ou!cl be !elf-serving. For the record, though, I don't think it makes any •tiffercnce since they just get different kinds of rotten educalions. Dear Gloomy Gus Tt must be ll kind of irooy for !Ienry FondA playing the good guy as Sgt. Smith. upholde r nf la\v and order. to have a daughter JMe. liberal activist and spokeswoman for the not so good guys! \l.'hich one is only acting? -Diogenes 72 Tnl1 lttlurt rtfl«lt r11dtr1' Vllw1,. Mf llf(tl~rll'I' 1110..., fl th• 11-.. •Ptr. 5tnd )'tur '" lltfYt .. Olllllml' CiYI,. Di ii)' ~1191. FRO!\I P.8.E., Lonfi!'. Island, N.Y.: "J agreed \Vith your column on the betr drinkers and their filthy habits of tossing cans everywhere -but what about you miserable cigaret smoke rs and your butts?'' You've got me there -as an invet~rate puffer, I plead gui lty to nippi ng cigaret butts indiscriminately, "·hich just proves that there are Yahoos in every element of the population. From 8 .G., Grand Juncti('ln , Colo.: "Who do you think is going to be the Democratic candidate for President in 1972?" Someone the Democrats think they can spare for the sacrifice this fall : except for a disaster, the Republican primaries in Peking settled the issue . FROM C.W., Fort Worth, Tex .: "After reading your column about Jonah and lhe v.•hale , I wonder what religious denomina- tion you belong to." I am , as you could learn from Hansard's or the Almanach de Gotha, a member of the Refonn Evangelical Dru ids, a small but strict sect, whose principal creed can be expressed tersely: .. Most people don't even live once." From D.R.S .. Pompano Reach, Fla .· "Do you think that evrntually every country v.•ill be Communist?1' Ye!'!, unless the ca pitalists are smart enough to make everyone a capitalist in time to forestall this dreary prospect. Pleas ures of Middle Age ~1iddle age ls the least appreciated period of life. People treat it as if it were a loalhesome disease thCy don't want anybody else to know they h3ve acquired. 'rhey orten act as if they thought that if they paid no ntten- tion to Jt. it would go away llke 11 bad dream in the night. Well, it \Von't. On the other hand mld- rUe age is no 24-hour· f1·day, around the clock nightm are. Af~ ler they get used to It. many or its vie· , • Jim! find middle age ff> ht more enjoy- l!ble , in 90me ways, thlin youth. You don't have to be datry to recogni.Ze that the mlddle years of exlstenct have 1 he it comollng rewards as well as their demerita . Some or lhem_are on the wry :!;ide, but that doesn 't make them les.a: real. llERE AllE A FEW lfflOns why yOU 5houldn't dtuolve In tears on •rriVl.111 1t your 40th blrlhday: You don'l have lo call up 1n eltClronlc dating bureau to find out which girl would be best for you to take out some evening. Your w:ife wUJ nomiMte beneU. IL Isn't necessary to !tart searching for a bigger apartment or·a larger hOute lf yoo Ste a stork's wing on the lwbon. The stork no longer keeps your address in its address book. You probably b,ve become f.amiliar "''ith the symploma of some kind of chronic dlse11se with which you'll keep rnmpan y in your old llf'le. And it doesn't ( .... _H_AL_B_oYLE __ ) seem as terrible as you thought ft might be. YOU JIA VE LOST much of the in- security that secretly plagued your you th . Therefore you don't make a nuisance of yoursel[ by trying to top every witty remark you hear at a cocktail party. UnlesJ you have become an alcoholic, you have learned to take only two last ones for lbe road ln!tead of five. Your children are e.ither out of their teens. or nett the end or them, and now and thtn do aometh ing thoughtful that 1 .. ch you lo ouspect they may lurn lnlo hwnan beings, after 1111. Some months you are even able to pay their phone bills without crying out to high heaven in financ ial agony. T8BJLE I! NO lncllnation to jump on the'\llDctngon ror every new intolerance or promised re!orm lhat parades by your door. You may eve.n be willing to drop ...,. old oulw01'11 pro)udlce lhal kepi you smug be:fore. Except for financing a new .automoblle now ind then, It ls likely lhat you are through with unde:rtaking any major new economic burdm1. You h&ve air Ult mortgages IJ'ld Ille insurance that any .nwi In hb right mind ....is. All In 111, there Is 11 much 1boul mld· dle •ge to enjoy 111 there is that needs to be forgiven. Ultimatum the property fo r 50 years, after which it would revert to the state. ~ . At the same time, there appean to be growing support for a shorter, 20-year 'ease-purchase agreement on the property, provided such a pact can be negotiated with the Department of General Services. Whiche\'er way the decision goes, it appears that C'o'sta Mesa and Orange County will get a tine ne\v park site -perhaps yet this year. Broadening the Tax Base Costa J.1esa, \\'hich has been a thriving community both commercially and indust.rlally since its incorpora· tion in 1953. is working to keep things that way. The Chamber of Com merce has just launched a ne\V drive to fill Costa Mesa's 800 va cant acre.s of industrial property \\.>ith ni.anu!acturing plants by 1982. Attracting new industry may not appear to be in keeping \vith today's goals of cleaning up our environ· ment. but the Chamber is seekin g only highly special· ized .. clean" industrial plants. No offensive polluters currently operate in the city but to make certain the status quo is preserved, a special committee is being appointed by the Chamber of Com· n1crce as a \vatchdog. 'l'he Water and Energy Co mmittee will not only \vork hand-in·hand \Vith the New Industry Committee 'in providing adequate sources of energy for the new plants. but to make certain they do not disrupt the environ· ment. More clean industry, as proposed by the Costa 1'.1esa Chamber of Commerce, should be a welcome ad- dition to Costa Mesa. It will definitely broaden the tax base and relieve some of the presSW'e for higher home· oy;rner property taxes. c 'Joe A v erage' Not 'Apostle o f R evei1ge' Vote Should Decid~ Death Penalty To the Editor: So people who wish to overturn the California Supreme Court ruling on the deat h penalty are "apostles of revenge." Nol really ? r-.fost of us are just " Joe Average ,'' who wish lo extend lo the people o! California the right to decide. Believe it or not, voting is a right or the law-a biding citizens of C8lifomia who are registered to vote. Certain restrictions are placed on this right. so that the law-abiding citizens can decide. I WOULD LIKE TO draw to your at- tention the fact that in our penal facilities psychia tric care is provided. Many persons have been helped in this capacity. Ho\\'evcr, our courts and penal facilities are filled with cases or "tem- porary" insanity. 1bese people a;·e tried, convicted, incarcerated. treated and set free just to re-do what they were treated for . You see, they were "temporarily" in- sane. Please explain how a psychiatrist can treat these people for the remainder or thei r lives. Please explain why some return and go through the same routine. Please explain where the end or our "helping the poor sic k mind " is to stop, and "'here self-preservation is wrong. "JOE AVERAGE" ls told to doubl~ Jock his doors. don't shoot an intruder unless he tries to kill you first. •·Jane Average" is advised to carry, in her purse. protection. No guns, of course. Those are concealed weapons and against the la"'" We are expected to excuse bur gla ry , · robbery, child molesting, rape, murder, harassment, assault. -you name it. Just because old Average is in control of his actions and reactions. he must excuse. NOW THE CALIFORNIA Supreme Court says we must give every major criminal the opportunity of being freed from confinement and free to commit murder again, all without his ordered death . I agree there should be stiffer gun con· trols, including the registration of all guns and examination of each person having them. But lhUi is only a small part of a big problem. To accuse the "apostle! of revenge" of jumping on a bandwagon becawie of another shooting is ridiculous. My gue!l.!I is you just didn't circulate among Joe Average people when the decbion was handed down. Many were for retaining capital punishment. MRS. C. R. DEWEES A gainst B e Heopterf To the Editor: I am becoming Increasingly disturbed at the noise level created by the Cos ta Mesa Police Department helicopler11. Each evening the helieoptera conduct routine surveillances at various hours which disrupt conve rsation, television and sleep -to aay nothing of plain 80lltude. ON SEVERAL occasJons J ha 11e call~ the Policf: Department and reg istered my B11 Ge orge --- Dear Gearge: Why doesn 't your editor fire you off your job? FURIOUS De11 r Furious: Because I am Mi lnsight·laden, widely read. helprul and com· paMionate. A.130, because. he's bten trying to figure out for the: put JO yurs exactly what my job la, and It's thal flm 11ep thal barn., him. [ MAILBOX J Letters from Te aders are welcome. Normally writers should convey their message$ ftl 300 words or less. The right to condeme letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ters must include signatures and mail· ing address, but names may be with- held on request if sufficient ,.easvn is apparent. Poetry will not be pub· lished. complaint only to be told that J should IX' grateful for the fine prote<:tion. J am not grateful ancl would like lo know "'h11t can be done. SYLVIA B. JONES f'or Helicopter s To the Editor: Our family has just moved into Costa J\lesa and we Jove it. Thursday night we saw the fine Costa Mesa police deparbnent in action on the drug arre!'!t. The people of Costa Mesa should be proud of the police and their helicopter. The way the men handled the helicopters was something to see. YOUR NEWSrAPER said people we:re Irate because of the noise. Think of how irate they would be if one of their loved ones got ·hold of some of those drugs. When l hear the helicopter. I know the police are doing their best to protect my home and family, Costa Mesa police should be thanked for the fine job they do. MRS. SHARON ANDREWS De fe tad• llfcliov~rn To the Editor : Jn two or his recent columns, Robert S. Allen has attempted with his typewriter to do the same job Bremer acC()mplished with a pistol -seriollllly damage the chance for election of one of the presldeo- tial candidates (Sen. George McGovern ). His second column contained nothing or substance beyond the first, but merely piled the abuse to a greater height. What is mainly objectionable,.bowever, is the dislngenuousness of his method. Ile bounces his bullets of vitriol off people like Sen. J~enry Jackson and (without identifying th em) lhC' "party lrnders and stalwarts" and !ht• "\1·idc ~pectrum ~;r Democratic leadrrs" in suc:h a "'ay as to build the illus11Jn hie; fir e is comin~ ot once from n lhousant.l sc<1 tt<'rcd n1achine. gun empl11cen1cnt s. llOW Cr\LCULATF.n is th<' vir 1ousnt$s of his own "·ords· ""'id1'sprcad tremors of shock and alarm ... propagandists arr. busily portraying hin1 . . . b;ickstaJi:C pussyfooting ... mu:;hmouth and finagle them behind the sce1ics ... reco rd of ex- tremism and radicali s111 ... .. \Ve v.·ould expect the target of SO('h a withering barrage of 1nl'ective to be perhaps some mad foreign tyrMt who puts innocent people lo death. Yet Allen is assailing not only a fellow American but a mild and kindly man, a fonner pro- fessor of history, a ma11 decorated in bat· tie in the service' of our country, a United States Senato r, a man whose sole purpose is to see our nation arise once again to greatness and respectability. He deserves son1ethlng o'n the editorial page that has as its sole purpose something other than his polit ical destruction. W. B. ANDERSON Jtl llk f'luorldat lon To the Editor: The American Dental Association and the American Medical Association have both advocated the treatment of \\'ater by fluoride to prevent tooth decay. On the other hand the general public v.•rite in cooside rab\e numbers to their Jocal paper-3 expressing fears about possi· ble harmful effects. The threat to the i""' dividual's freedom of. choice arouses in· tense feelings of resentment which un- doubtedly innuence local co u n c i I!'! hesitating on tbe brink of adopting water fluorida tion. Meanwhile children are growing up sur. fering unnecessarily from the increasing Incidence of dental caries and the en- !'!uing Ill-health which can bann them for the rest of their Jives. FLUORIDE TABLETS and Iha use of toothpastes with fluoride are both steps in the right direction, but these methods call for unceasing watchfulne!s on the part or parents, or ln whose care the children are during the important formative time of the teeth's enamel. A method which fils more ea.sUy into normal habits y,•ould be better. Jt Is not rar to :!leek. 1\-tilk has been shown by scientific research among achoo I America's Past Told The epic adventure of the discovery and exploration of the Nonh American contlnent -from medieval legends or Cella end Norsemen through the estab- lishment of the Urst permanent settle- mentt on theat shores -is chronicled with vivid, eytrwllntsJ accounta: by the e1ploren themselves ln a magnlficent.ly tlll.lltrated volume, TtM! Discovery of North America (American Heritt'lge Pr .... $25). The pictures -370 in all, 75 in ('()!or - have been •elected from rare con- lemporary reoorda preserved I n mUHum s and libraries throu ghout the world. These maps, charts, dra"'·lngs, and paintings made by explorers on their voy1ges reveal how the New World looked· to the eye.s Of early European pionee rs. TmS BOOK L'i A collaboration among lhree distinguished histori11ns : Prorl"!sors W. P. Cumming , D. B. Quinn. and the late Dr. R. A. Skelton. The Discovery of North Americfl ls the first single-volume, doewncnted account of whet was seen, experienced, and recorded bv the European discoverers or AmerlCll. The book's six chapters range (THE BOOKMAN) over the possible medieval explorations; the emerging knowledge of the eart coast from Cabot to Cartier ; the Spentsh ex- plorations of the AOutbem interior and Wc!'!t Coast; the 18UK:tntury aUempts at t:olonlui.tion; tile search for a Norlhwest Passage; Md the IX!glnnings of permanent set4,e mtnt in the early 17th century. EACll CllAPTER has an Introductory hlsk!rleal essay which commtnta on the original accounts ind llluttratJons that f(lllow. Jn addlUon, annotlillions ac- company the first-person arcount.s, .some of whl(·h have never before been transla ted Into Engllsh, The DlsC'Overy of North America 11 n unique history of 11n excitinit 11nd gen· erally llttle-kno\vn chnpte.r In the Ameri· c:an past. Ann 0, Oale children. notably by !Jr. E. Ziegler or \V1n1t·rthur. Swlt·ler!and In be n snfc veht- t lt! for fluo ride wh1 th C'Hn easily be mixed Into 11 ~ind dlstr1bul1•d \~·ith a family 's d<il!y supply in clearly labeled bottles. 1'h1s t an be done by any processing dairy as den111nslrated by the Borro1v Dentnl r-.1ilk Foundation, a non-profit making charitable trust eslablishcd 111 £ngland to 1nC'rt'asf> public undC'rstanding of lh~ problem and show this sofr rilternatlve "ay lo more co!ctty :ind was teful meth- ods. TllERE JS NO DANGER tn the ln- ~r sl ion or the controlled amount up to the age of 11 years: there 11 equally no reason to continue it throughout adult life. Tu do so. as occurs when fluoride ta Introduced into piped water suppliea, la to incur unnecessary expenditure. Only 1 percent of the water will be drunk and the re1nainder will now away Into the scwnge system. Why IJ5tl 3,000 times n1ore fluoride thnn I.CJ necessary to achieve the same result'! \Vhether run wider a state scheme or through otber means, the advanta~es ot lhc n1ilk method are out stand ing. Dental !\1 i!k would strengthen young teeth in the formative years. whi ch is the sole ob- jective ol fluori dation. B E. PF~ 1'11 J'I' For the Borrow Dental Milk Foundation \Vaterlooville Portsmouth, England llnderp nifl CUP To the Editor : Cues~ the California 1-Ughway . Patrol ju.st isn't politically mouvated enougti for Governor Reagan to warrant equal wage1 and benefits to those of a police man, though the work of the Cl·IP Is fa r more dangerous -to thr1nselves. BERNY WELSH n1r lte lo Co11gres1 To the Editor: Do you know that Sen. John Tunney'a ''good friend ," Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, haA proposed that $20 million of the ta:r:· payers' money be appropriated for a na,. tional park around Chappaquiddick Pond? Do ~ need any mor e govemmenl held and admini8tered land? In 1970 the federal bureaucracies held 40 percent of lhe land area of the United StatmJ, some of which ranchers •nd cattle ralser1 u..sed for gr112lng and paid no taxes on. It makes you wonder what the popu?aUon gang la tal king about when It tells us we are runn ing oo• of l1nd to house future generations. Unless you want to help fl nanct a memorial lo Mary Jo Kopedme, tell your representatives and senators to vote no OD SB 3485. VIRGINIA McHONll: OllANOI COAST DAILY PILOT • Robert N. Weed, Publilh<r' Tltema.t Ktwil. Editor A.lbm w. Bates Editorial P•ge Editor The t.dltorlkl paJ:" ot the DaU, l'JJot 11cclui to lniorrn •nd aUmu~ IAto ft'ftden by prrsununr thhl nmvspn!JC!:r'I optnlo/'\I And ~ mrntary on to11I~ or lnt~rCl't •nd ~l11:nlficRnec, by 1,rov1dln~ " (•lrum fnr thc-cicrrr~lon cif ...,11r M'ftdf'IT Ojllnlonll'. And by PM'S:f'nll nir lh~ d v1·(!11• vlr .... ·1>0ints: or lnfurrnc'd ob- ~f·n.·••rir nnd 'llOk~mf'n tin topics tJf lhr dny. Thursday, June I, 1972 " • ' rt1ursa1y, .JU(IC' 1 1972 DAILY P1L0i t ) ---- $1 ;;oo to E••list Five Bomb Shelter Victims Army, Marines Offering Bonus Smelled Gas, Survivor Says Protest Plannf!d Folk singer J oan Baez and rep- resentatives of about 20 •nli· war groups announced plans \Vednesday for forming a hu- man chain ot women and ch.ii· dren around t he Capitol June 22 in an effort to pressure Con- gress into cutting off funds for the 'var. WASHINGTON (UP1l -For the iust time since the Civil War, Ult Anny and the A1arine O>rps today began offerin~ $1.500 cas~ bonuses to men who enlist fo r combat training. The bonuses will be olfered until !he rnd of August in a move to attract 1nore volunteers. They may be offered again later if the triaJ period prove3 successful. There are some catches. 'The volun· teers must go in for four years, instead of I.he usual twcryear hitch for infantry. artillery and armor; and the bonus ~'Ill be paid only after the ''olunteer is 111 uniform. has successfully completed his training ai1d has been accepted for com- bat service. Delaying the payments in that manner Is an attempt to avoid the abuses whit·h occur~ tht last tUne the bonuses w're paid, more than 100 years ago. During the Civil War some men enlisted. col- !e<.""ted their bonus -it was called a "bounty" -and then desc11ed. only 10 J(leindienst"' Victory' Seen Despite Cranston \\'AS~llNGTON (AP) -Senators op- posed to the non1inalion of Richard G. Kl eindiensl to be attorney general ha ve gained ano~r vote, but supporters re- main confident of a <I C"cb,i\'e victory margin. Sen. Alan CA'anston ID-Calif. l. an· n\unced his opposition to the nomination. wh ich may be voted on by the Senate next week. Senate debate began Wednesday after a long delay while the Judiciary Committee invest igated K!eindienst'5 role as deputy attorney general in the setllement of an· titrust case!! against r n t e. r n a t ion a I Telephone & Telegraph Corp. So far only a few Democraiic liberals DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlivtry of th! 011Uy Pilot Is guarant~td • Mondly·Frldly: II y<HJ do f!O! "•v• youf ""~' l>Y ~!lG p,m., tall •!ld \'OYt tO~Y "''" be tor-ht 10 yo,.. Cans •r• uken u..111 7;JO p,m. S.111rcl•'J' end l11nd1v: If yau <lo 1>11! •tctiY• yo~r tOPY t>V • •.m. Satu•d~v. or I •.rn. Sund1y, c:•H •nd • copv will r,., ~·O~h! lit 'J'Olt. CaHl ar• l•ktn un!U ID •.m. M«1t <>r•nv• County Are .. s •. ... • 11-12·4)JI Mor1hwn• H~1'lln9!0fl 8t•d'I Incl Wtllmln•!t r .. .. .. •. • ...••.. 541-1221 San Cltmen1e, Ctpil!r•no I N tn. San Jiiin CtPls!rtno, Dena Polfll. Soum l•ovnt, L•.11un1 Nluwl •• , .,,...ttt ha\·e announced they will \'Ole against co11finnalio11.tlespite the furor stirred up by 22 days·or hearings on the lTI afra ir. Cranston based his opposition on "'ha! he called Kleind ienst's lack of sensib!li!y ror constitutional rights. "r..1r. Kleindienst has evidenced a high lolerance for wire-tnpping, mass arrests snd preventive detention," Cranston !'!aid in a speech prepared for today'5 debate. "His thinking is fuzzy when it comes to distin~ishing bet"·een pe-ople "'h o threaten our nation's security and people who merely disagree ~·lth hi 111 politically," Cranston added. Kleindien sr s nomination to succeed fon11er Atty. Cen. John N. 1titchell ~·a!S submitted by President 1'."ixon in mid- F'ebruary and originally u·as approved un~1nin10U$ly Lv the Judici ary Co1nn1ittee. Some of ·rhe commitiee's lilX"ral Democrats. however, ~·ere critical of Justice Department JX>licies on ci\·il rights and civi! liberties . Sen. Barry (ll>tdwater lR-Ariz.), said al the start or the Senate det.ate, "SomE" liberals are afraid Dick Kleindienst will be too good 21.t the job he has been pro· posed for. I 8uspect the opposition sten1s frorn the very thing I believe v.•e nttd the most in the Department of Justice -a tough. unyielding, uncompromising ap- plication or !he law to all partie5 or all social,. economic or political statuses.,. enlist again 1n another ~ri of the t'\Jun- lrY 10 repeat the1r decept10n. The y were t·alled ''bounty juinpers·• and they brooght the system into such disrepute that it ha:1 not been used since . But C'.ong:ress authorized the new bonus In September, tellinj: the Defense Depart- ment at the time that it could offer a U'l1o's lie? bounty of up to $3,000. l.>efense Secretarv Do you recognize lh1s .\fe!vin R. I..a~rd decided to use oo!y hJ lr n1an~ \\'ell, believe it that an'iOunt for the summer test period . or not it's actor Burt Tiie plan "'as J!i\'f'n no advaoce pu bhci-Lancaster in one of the ty so that young men ~·ho intended to strangest disguises of si,'ln up during !\la_v v.·ould not delay their his career -a black enlistment to take ad\·&nt.1ge of the priest -for hi s role in bonus : but the Penl<1t?On began a full 'Scorpio.' a CIA thriller publicity canipaign on the offer today.. being filmed in \Vash· The bonus is ninied at this Jear's crop ington. or high school graduates .,.,.ho are coming ----------- into a labor 1narket "·ith a 6 percent unemployment rate over all. and a 17 Pt-'rt·cnt jobff'ss rate for their ai(e group. l-'entagon officials said if the dri\'e suc- 1.:l'ecl:-; this :;un1mt'r thC'y hf'lie\·t' the ad- 1n in1slratkin's plan for an all-\'Olunteer Arn1y beginning 13 mon ths from now will ~ a success. The bouus idea is as old as !hr republic. fi\'c months bcrore l h e Declaration of Independence \\'a~ pro- claimed. the Continental Congress. on George Washin~ton's advice, arlopted an enlistment bounty. lt provided $-4 for men without r ifles and $6.67 for 1nf"n with rifles ~·ho {'nllsted. During the Hevolutionary \\'ar th<> b:)nus rose. lo $'200. and Curing the Civil \.\'ar it ranged fron1 $100 to $300. During the latter connict some towns offered bigger bonuses -ranging up to $1 ,500 - in an attempt to attract volunteers fron1 other communjties so the loca l boys 1i;oo'd not hav e to march ofr h> war Florid<t De1n<inds Anti8111og Action l\t!Ar-.11. FlJ. 1AP 1 -Environmental officials here ha,'e demanded ;n1tis!'no~ artion by three slates after C'hari:inJ: that an "industrial air pollution bank '' 11·hlch drifted down from the !'onh blanketed the Sunshine State \.\'ith sn1oky haze for five days. \\leather satellites traced lhe f\01Y of "this unusual potlutive load" from in- du strial regions of Ohio, Pennsyl vania and Tennessec. said the Dade County pollut1011 control chief. Peter Baljet. For five days beginning i\fay 21, the pollution ob.'>rured the normally clear skies of ::;unny J•Jorida. As the sn1oi:: lay trapped at ground level by a tc1npe rature inversion, a rise in respiratory diseases and hospital ad- missions v.·as reported. Priso11erli Seek Vi et \Var End? \VASllINGTO:'I (UPI f Fifteen American prisoners of war in South Vie t n a n1 purportedly ha \'e signed a statement asking Congr<>ss to :-;top the •·1n1n1oral. tr;igie war." 1'he appeal and the names ut !he al!~ged signce'i "'ere broadcast O\'er "l.ibera!1on Rad io," operated by the \'let Cong. Three of the nien \\'l're previously listed 11$ offieiall y 1nissing in action . The r:nglish-J:inguage hro<ul- cast v.•as monitored by the l f S. govern n1cn1 Tuesday. LlPJ obtnined a tratiscript co p~ frorn ~o\·ernn1ent sources 11nd !he Defense Dept1rtml'nt h11.<> confirmed its authen!i<'il~. Bu! a sp.1kesn1an said depar!rnent policy pro- hibited confirn1ing the na 1nes of prisoners li5ted. "!'he P<>n- lagon \Vednesd a.v s!;irted to notify lhr relatives of the m<>n named in the broadca!'I. 1.:alastrnphic eonsequencl's ·• "Rational beings rec I i F ,, mistakes "·hrn reeo£ni2ed ." the statement said. "The tim e is critir31. Please take t'l - feeti\'e le gislali\•e action. \\'e must choose bcl?•een an hn · moral. tragic u•ar w i th catastropl1 ic cons<'quences and 1he honorable future of the United States ... VALDESE. N.t tl'Pl 1 - 'The survi vor or <1 bon1b iihelter explo!lion that killed her li\'e playn1ates s a 1 d Wednesday the children had sneaked into the shelter to play and "'i'ere afraid to tell anyone the concrete cubicle reeked of gas. 11\' S HORT . • I L)nthia ··ttea .. Pu::ou, 10, egcaped dealh lx>C"au~e she "'as the firs! one of the ('hildren to lea1•e the shelter and \\'.'IS a little distance away when the gas exploded Tues- day e\'en1ng. A federal inve:s1igator. Jal'k \.. \\'ilhams of the Alcohol , Tobacco and Firearms Unit, said a v:1\ve leading frorn fl gasoli.t!e t;1nk inlo the bomb shelter had been leaking, and the explosion app::irently oc- 1:urred because ur lhe tiny iip<irk created \\·hen one of the 1:luldren flipped a light switch. "They ·ob;;;erved some g<1s and odor and discussed it a1nong then1sclves. but they did not tell any adults about it becnuse they were arraid or hein g punished ,'' said \\'iHiams after inter\•iewing the only survivor . WAS!llNGTON (AP) -Re. jecting industry plea~ for delay. the federal government is ordering manufacturers to I n1ake sn1a ll c hi I cl re n 's s!e<·pwear fire-resistant. I Co1nmerce Secretary Peter (;. Peterson told oe"·smen \Vednesday the first phase of' the fl:unn1ability standard. covering sizes O to l'iX. "'ill go into effeC"t July 29. After that date. children's sleep\\•ear must be resistant to flame or the governrnent v.·ill label the garments flammable and place a warning on the clothing. I A year later. :ill sleeping gar1nents in sizes 0 to 6X must I meet the-:-;tandard or be banned from !ht· markct. ! e S 11rgen1 Dehr!Jed I SILVER SPRJNC, IVI d. 1llPI1 -Surgery lo remove a bullt·t frun1 I)~ ~pine of Gov. t_;eorge C. \Vallace ha~ been pul off by doctors for the im- mediate future, according to a \Vallace. aidt. Billy Joe: Camp, \Va\la ce's press stl'retary. said Wed - nesday that doctor5 have decided to postpone surgery to remove the bullet which has lert lhe governor partially µaral vzcd at lloly Cr o i s llUSpital since r..tay 15, when he· was gunned down "'hilt> c·!'mpaigning al a nearby Lauftl, ~1d .. shuppi11g center. e ~feat 1•ric-es Up hospital by 101bul11nce \Vednesday. Dr. Augusto Orl11., th~ physician 1vho ha s at- tended Chave7. during 1ht ra ... 1 , described his cvixhuon AS serious and sr1id he urg~ptly 1lffded mt'dicaOon \\'ASlflNGTON (AP ) --~--After slumping for t w oJp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_..;;; ____ -. rnonths, farm livestock prices are on the tno\'t again and soon may force consumers lo gird their loins at meat counters. The Agriculture Department reported \\'ednesday that live· cuttle prices rose in r..taJ to an all-time high of $33.10 per 100 pounds. flogs a\'eraJ?ed an 11- per('("nt increase lo $24.90, 1nai nly as a result of fewer bnby pigs last winter. e Cl•a<·e::-Ill LAYER THE LOOK t OOK PHOE NIX, Ariz. I APl Ct!sar Ch11ve2 . lhe Uni1e<l Farm \Vorkers leader, ha s been l;1ken to H hospital, 1veakened b.v a 20-duy fa st. 17tll &. lnl"' l'havez. his 1ace hollowed WESTCLIFF PLAZA Newport leo'h And dra"·n. \\'a s taken to the;;;;;;::;;a IN-SIHK·ERA TOR THE NO. 1 DISPOSER W"'"I .,..t•~ l11·~1n~·5:•Uor nio~I "'•ni.df 8u 111llul <O<- n11lo,...proo1 1t•it1ltn •1•11. E•<lllliWfl likt fht "Wt•ncl>· •Ill" fflt l ltl'a YOll CINt 1•mo u •ih· . .And lnCltt . Ha -•< Tilt "'on4er111I MO<lltl lJ I>•• • Hle!lm• corroi..., "'•rr•nty, ,t.nd 1 S·~••r P'"•l• worr•n•v too. Tilt qu•lttv lftU m•dt ttol·SIH K·Ell,t.TOll. 11>1 n"mb1r O~I ~l1,e11• 11-.... "' ~u• k!l<l>efl. Mod<I $5795 77 ' REPUBLIC "GEMINI" 20 Gerl. WATER HEATERS '52" ., " •. i:...'~9" '64 " 40 Goof. 10 "•'-'84" 11.;, q w•lj1y ''''" IPnod .... ,,, l-111· •• ;, 1quipptd ... ;11> 11f1ly t1mp. 11 ••quif1d bv l•w. Ji-yr. 9u1t•nf11 •n ,.,,~. 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