HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-06-05 - Orange Coast Pilot~ . e1s
EU.ployes Charge
I '
Battin Can1paign • Stills Barking
Used County Bolls.
'
Costa Mesa P11ppy
•, ·' . -.
tb•l:LY PILOT
7~'I. * * 1oc * * * .. . --~ '•: . '
Ii l-•' •
MONDAY AFTERNOON; JUNE 5, 1972
YOL. U. NO. 1,7, J SICTIONS, a PA••S
l(eeping It Hot I
'
Man Dead •
N!gllel . .ppc:
, Suspe~t Seized
Davis Lauiled
B y McGot,ern
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Sen.
George S. McGovern told a crowd
ol cheering blacks at a rally in
Watts that the acqll.lttal of Angela
Davis should be '1cause for re-
joicing."
hi. Stabbing
Incident
' . I · • Ul'I T~ ..
,'IVbll• te~ratures rise along !he Orange Coast, the mercury ])egins e time of year south of the equator. But the nip 1n ·the
411 air didn't cool bikini-clad .,Rosemary ,Smith -or anyone oo vicinity -in Sydney recently.
'
Employes Cln~m Cou~ty ·,
List,s .Used by Battin~-· ·1
<:\--.t CowitY's'pilmary eledlon c.m..: 'y.Jn! tiialri'ct'ufiilii themftO vote ~11¥ · ,.r..,... eallvt:oed OVef Ibo .w .. keJl<\ by Ille .incumbent •U~laoi'. i!I; .~ts
-... thot Finl Dllt<lct Supervl80f primary, ,
Ro1Jert 'W. Ballin had uaed a llJI of coun-The ••member OCEA planned, I<> -17, edlpio)'t> and lhelr addreues pru-d\K:ld by the county's Data Services file a class action suit In Superior ·court
Department It county expense. today against Battin-to· Tecovtr the cost
:Bl'tttn 1llegtdly u9'd the list to mill 1 of providini the list of name•.
letter to emp)oyu fu reply to an Orange The 11uptrVIM>r's office said lo<lay that
County EmployH A&'IOOlallon bullttln be plans I<> reimbur~ Iha county for tho
IDlllecl 1ut wed< to 2,000. W<lrker1 In the tS.. tLF.cl10N, Pq• I)
In Ohio Heist
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of 1M Pally ...... Sl•ff
Tight-tipped federal agents today con-
tinued their Investigation of the spec-
tacular Laguna Niguel bank burglary
amid speculation that the suspett ar·
r ested Friday may be tied to a similar
bank heist in Ohio.
The suspect, Charles Albert Mulligan,
38, of YoWlgstown, Ohio, was scheduled
for arraignment this morning before a
U.S. magistrate.in Los Angeles in con-
nection with the Laguiia Niguel crime. He
Js being held by FBI agents in lieu or
$100,000 bood .
An FBI spokesman in Los Angeles
wou1d say nothing about the case other
than that the man was taken .into custody
in Tustin after being trailed thlte from
Los Angeles. An unemployed barber,
Mulligan arrived at Los Ange~ Intema·
tlonal Airport Friday from Chicago.
FBl agoenta In boOJ . ia Ang<lea and
Cleveland refll!ed to· CC1m.ment on any
possible connection between the March 25
burglary• in Latuna Niguel in which an
estimated $2 million in cash, securities
and jewels were laken, and a May 4
burglary in Lordstown, Ohio, in which
f430,000 cash was taken.
Lordstown, a one-bank town some 15
miles north of 'Youngstown where
Mulligan lives, is the site ol a General
Motors production plant. ·
According lo Sgt. Joseph Murphy of lh•
Trumbull County Sheriff's Department,
the Lordstown branch of the Second Na,
t1on8 1 Bank ol Warren was burglarized in·
much the same manner as the Lagun!'I.
Niguel Brandl of United California Bank.
ln a telephone interview, Sgt. Murphy
said the large amount of cash had been
lfrought to the bank in preparation for
payroll check cl!hing following Friday's
payday at the GM plant. Some time dur·
Ing the . night, burllan cul throuih lht
rPQf of the bani Jiito a utility room ad-
jaCent to the vault. They then broke
through a concrete wall, ~ a torch to
cut throV&h a ball inch of steel plate and
•ni<rod tlie vault. ¥· Ml!<PbY'llid th< thieves connected
NEIGHBORS DIE
. ' -
IN 'DOG' FJGHT
ARCELIA,. Mexico (UPI) -Adrian
Benlteuhot and killed • dog belonging to
his neighbor, Ernesto Brito, and Brito
th<n killed two of ll<llltei' dogs. .
Both m~n confronted each other, ope:n--
ed !Ire and both died In th< shootout.
••
a jumper win I<> Ille interior alarm and
sprayed foam on ·the bell ot the outnde
alarm, disabling both systems. He a1so
noted that investigators found four sacks
or mud on tbe roof of the building the
next day, indicating the burglars had
come prepared with _eiplosiv~ to blast
their way lhto the vault if necessary.
Mud is: used to muffle the sound of an ex·
plosion, the sergeant explained.
ORce inside the vault, the thieves took
only the cash, leaving behind checks, food
stamps and a large amount of coin, Sgt.
Murphy said.
The FBI in Cleveland on 1wfay 26 ar~
rested a man in connection with the
Lordstown burglary. Agent in charge
John Burnes identified him as Sidney
Leonard Goldstein, 52, Canton, Ohio.
According to Burns, the suspect
allegedly had gone to 14 different banks
in the Canton area (Canton is just to the
southwest of Youngstown) exchanging
small bills for $100 bills and saying he
netded. the larger denominations for a
trip to Europe. Bums claims the aerial
(See BANlt PROBE, Pa1e JI
'Bar.king' Dog
Found Hanged
In Backyard
A C.OSta Mesan whose terrier
puppY~I barking hid c • u !I e d
nelgbor!ml camptalns ar-Sun-
day -..g and -il dead, llonged In hla boclcyard.
Jorry J, Stanley, of ll20 Cedar
Ptact, c1lled police at 8 a.m., when
110 found tlle pet da"ili!>g from tho
biictcyard clothesline. ·
Olfu:er Gtrry K0<;~ndorler aaid
'th< brc>Wr>and-'Ohlte. 1"'P bad the
cord -CUI llrst lo livt alack -wound arqund Ill ntelt 21 times.
'nit udlallc pel·ola)'t!r lller1 ~
chod the remaining lftlclh ·over tilt
c)otbeslinel>Ole, bolattnf Ille cloC ln-
l<l Ille air and strangling ll
Police lnvallga!lng Ille cue
along with county ' SPCA olllctala
for pcmlble criminal chat11et lald
two prlor C9ft\Plaint.I had been
received about the dog'1 barking.
Cruelty to anlmalSo Ii punishable
by a jall ltrm, fine, probation or all
three.
McGovern, speaking two hours
after a jury In San Jose cleared
MW Davis Sunday, of involvement
in the. Marin County courthouse
ahooting, was greeted by a crowd
chanting :
"Power of the people hu freed
Angela."
"This is a happy day which I can
understand," he said. "This is
another demonstration that we can
be pleased about.
"That's not a cause for mourn-
ing. Thal'• not a cause for protest.
That ought to be a cause for re-
joicing. ''
See story on Page 5.
Searchers Fii1d
Final $160,000
In Reno Hijack
RENO, Nev. (AP) -Searchers bave
round the $160,000 balance of a '200.000
ransom g1ven en airline hijacker who
parachuted into a desert area after col·
lecting the money. ·
Vern F. Loetterle of the Lu Vegu FBI
office said Sunday night the money was
found stashed in sagebrush in a remote
area 20 rnlles IOUth of here near Wa11hoe
Lake.
The ·other $40,000 was lert on the United
Air Lines 727 jet when the hijacker
parachuted -apparently becauSe there
was no room to stow all $200,000 into his backpack,
Robb D. Heady1 22, was arrested SatlD'•
day and chargea with the Friday night
hijackJni . ol UAL niiJ!l" 239, which
originated in New York and was headed
for ~n Francisco. The Vietnam veteran
was taken into custody a few miles from
where lhe money •u later r«overtd. A
search for the money began immedJately
1fter Heady's arrdt.
Alter walking aboard tha airliner at Iha
airport here, the hijacker -h11 face
mosked by I pillow tlip -(ti th•
pauengen leave but held the pilot, co.
pilot and three ll<ward..,.. at pnpotnt
for the 0!0.000 ramom. With the money
delivered, the alrlJner took off on orders
from Ille gunman who [Jlll'achuled from II
a few miles from the airport.
Heady, a •tudent at Western Nev11da
Community College near here slnct hls
return from military aervlct In Vietnam,
wu arraigned Saturday on federal •Ir
piracy chargei and was being held in
Wa"1ot County Jail In lieu of 1100,000
bond •
One man was repeatedly and fatally
stabbed in the chest at his Costa Mesa_
apartment over the weekend , while a sec-
ond victim, knifed in a separate Llon1
Club Fish Fry incident, survived.
The series of violent attack! reported
Saturday led to the arrest of the slain
man's female companion. while polJcti
are still hunling a suspect in the
do""•ntown Costa Mesa Park stabbing.
Murder charges were be.Ing pressed to-
day against Trinidad D. Crane, 30, of 131" ·
N. Evergreen St ., Anaheim, ~
from the predawn slaying 5aturdq.
She was arrested at Costa Mesa
J\1emorial Hospital, where doctors pri>
nounced Lionel Martinez, 23. dead of
multiple wound!! inflicted by a kitchen knire. ~
The tndicent al Martinez' apartment
976 Mission Drive , was first reparted t~
the Costa Mesa F'ire Department about
2:30 a.m., as a medical aid for a PoSSibla
heart attack victim.
Rescue squad members arrived, took
one look at Martine1' bloody, mutilated
chest area aod notified police ot foul play.
Detective U . Harold Fk.her said today
that a "1ll)ess placed Ille lnlilal call lru:
firemen.
The name ol tho tadlvldual preotnt fn
the 1 a m e laborer's apartme.t bealdet
(See llNIFINGIJ, Pap II .......
Weitldler
Mora buy IUll!hine aim. 'tllo
Orange Coat Tuoaday, followtni
low cloucla and log al the btacbeo,
Hicba of-70 aloog·lhe .... rlalof
lo IO lnlllld. LowMML .
' INSmB 1'9DA l'
Sh<'• black, u Blplist, u ...,.,.,.
inp molh<r and f<MUIW •llf ....,
tl•ct•d 1ludmt JJl'•ridt!tt of ua.
Roman Ca~llc. Uftiwrntr of
San Dl•oo fn a bitter ..,,.polgn. s .. •""1/. Pao• 20:
l.M. ...... •
•••llllt M C•llltrllle I C11uf1IM n.ft·
Comk1 ti
Crot1wenl H
0.•11t Ntl!cte It
541llltt111 ..... ' ••Mrl•IM!otll• u l'll'IMCt l~lt
l'tr tflll ·-· 11 ......__ 14
---.. -.. ............... --" ., ....• .,.,., ,. ...... .. ... MMll..,.... .. ,, ,.......... . --. --. ·--·· ..... , .. ,, ........ """" .
;
• I DAILY PILUl ____ , ___ ---M011day, Junt -'· 1~n
HHH Criticizes McG overn in Last-ditch
I.OS ANGELES !UPI) -Hubert H.
Humphrey today llCCUl<d G.o<1e S.
McGovtrn of voting to "emaKulate" a
key sectton of lhe 1964 Clvll llights Act
He also scheduled an hour·long ttltthon
on election tve ln 1 lut • ditch dfon t!
ltOp McGovern.
PttcGovem, confidtnt of winning the lm·
portant CaJifornia primary and its 271
delegate votes, broke off his campaigning
In the slate lo schedule a four-hour s"·ing
into Ne"' l\1 exico, which also holds a
primary ·rue!K.lay.
Aides to bolh senators looked for a
comrnon break in the hectic scheduleJJ to
arrange a fourth ''debate," which
Humphrey ~uggestcd and to whiC'h
AlcGO \•ern agretd.
ln a 1pteeb prepared for dtllvt.ry at a
rally In Oakland. llumphrey accultd
,.1ct:iovern of "a brazen and full-sc&le it·
tempt to emasculate the vot ing rights
proviJlon of the Civil RJghts Act"
He said ,.1cGovern joined 22 sena.ton,
Including 18 ~thtmers , In voting
against u pro\·ision that allows the al-
torney general to require that all courts
ex.pedi\(' legal c:unlpla1nts on voting
rights.
"I challenge Stnator McGovern to deny
to any blact or any Mexican-American or
11.l anoyne else In !he state of California
that he did not cast this vote," liumphrey
said.
The !t1lnnesoU iena tor, t r a 11 i n c
t.kGovvo by 46-Jt percent in tho
mpO<ttd CalUomle·Pield poll, ached uled
a pr~Ume I p.m.·9 p.m. television ~
gram dt.ttln£ which listeners can e&lJ and
.. k quu!lo ... '
1hl Pt.Nram w1U be abown on nine
comrn«dil ~TY otatlOos and 32 cable
t~levlsion syJJtems wJth an es:Llmal.ed J.7
million potential viewers.
llu91phrey s~faced hi11 own poll, taken
in Los Angeles County by Pubilc Affairs
Communic-atlora A 1 .so c i a t e s ln
\Va1hlrwton. O.C. which showed the Mll)o
nt~Ui sen:itor trailing by les.s than 1 per·
cent,
Jlis campaign manager claimed tht
Connally to Tour World
15-uatiou 'Concern' Mission Se t UfJ by President
• KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)
Secretary of the Treasury John B. Con-
nally will leave Tuesday on a round-the--
world misBion to some 15 n1tlon1 for
President Nixon to discuss "matters of
common concern" and economic issues,
the White House announced today,
The trip will take Connally to 111 South
America n nations, the: Far East, South
Asia and Europe.
But. Presidential Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler said, Connally ·would
not go to North Vietnam as suggested
Sunday night by Democrafic presidential
candidate, Sen. Hubert Humphrey, who
proposed such a mission to discuss
release of prisoners of ~·ar.
"That ill not the purpose or his
Con~er1 Quiet
Sto1ies Open U.S. Tour iii Se attle
SEAm..E (AP) -The Rolling Stones, making their firllt United States
appe.arance In their North America tour !'Jere Sunday night, \vere greeted by
an enthuslartlc bu t comparaUvely quiet sellout crowd. ~ night tiefore In Vancouver, B.C., a rock and bottle throwing 1nelee
erupted outside the Pacific Coliseum during the first performance of their
first North American lour in three years. -
The British rock group performed two concerts in Seattle's Coliseum Sun-
day night for an estimated 28,000 persons.
On Saturday ln Vancouver, some 2,000 young persons tried to crash the
concert, and police said 11 officers were boepitaliied as a result of the scufOe.
None was seriously Injured, police said. ·
1,Eight persons were arrested, police reported, The di sturbance apparenUy
bejan when two smoke bombs were tossed into the lobby soon after the per-
formance began.
Gross of $93,000 Seen
ln Fi,sh Fry Proceeds
Thousands of ticket stubs were being
counted today by members-of. the Costa
Mesa-Newport Liot1s Club to dctermlne
the amount of money raised for charity
by the 27th annual Costa Mesa Fish Fry. , .
l Indications are that the gross take
tfrom the three-day extravaganza will be
~about $93,000, the same as last year. ac· ~rding lo Steve Perrin, publicity
fchairman.
i All proceeds will be turned over to
lllarbor Area charities and y o u t h
;c>rganlutlons, among them the Boys and
;GirlJJ Club&, YMCA, Fairview State
1.fospital, Boy and Girl Scouts, and
~rvkes for the Blind.
: No official crowd esUmates have been
:;given by the Lk>na for the weekend af·
·1air. but it Is believed that the parade on ~aturday attracted 50,000 persons.
featured a record 180 entries in t wo
dtvlJions.
Wlnner tn the six month to 12 month
age group was Angela Marx, the JG-
month-Old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Marx, 2147 Westminster:. Ave.,
Costa Mesa. Another Costa l\.1efa girl.
Par.iela Young, the 2 3 ~mo n t hJI · o I d
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Young,
9&l 5prfngfield St., "\li'on flrst prize In the
13 month to 24 month dlvlJion.
The runner·up in the younger division
WaJJ Kristin Carlson. 9 months, daughter
or Afrs. l\.1ary Alice Carlson, 22652 Jenova
St.. Laguna Hills, with third place going
to David P, Martin. 12 months, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond 1t1artln, ~ West
Wilson St., Costa Me sa.
' ~ Marguerite Marsaudon, an J~year-old
-'2>runette from Costa Mesa, was chosen
~lss Mennald of 1972 during a be.auty
J>ageant Sunday at Olsta MeSa City Park.
; A drama student at Orange Coast
College, Miss Marsaudon won the title
i>ver a field of nine conteJJtants. She
)'~lved a trophy and a $250 merchandise
trize.
In the older division. the runner-up
trophy was given to Mark Erwin, I ~
months. daughter of Mrs. Carol Er"•in.
2620 We.st Aurora St.. Santa Ana. and
third place to Stephen Benclvengo. JJ
months. son of t-.1r. and ~trs. Michael
Bcncivengo, 1614 Viola Place, Costa
ME"sa.
~ Runners-up v.·ere Connie Wiggins, 18,
;the former ~1iss Huntington Beach, and
.~ackie Frasco, 20, Orange. Both were ~~arded trophies and $125 merchandise
71z~.
1 Mothers turned ou~ in force Sunday for
it-he tradltionRl babv contest wh iC'h
'
• .
' ' i
l
I
DAILY PILOT
1
Tiie Ont!Dt CMO DAILY l'ILOT,"""' 1114'!11:71
h combined ltlt' H1W1-l"rn1, 11 Pllbllthfocl 1J1
l'lle or.fnQt C .. tl P\lltll111'"9 COtr!!Nny. S•Pt•
r•lr M U..,._ ••• JMJClltlled, Mtn111y tt.roVOh
'rlcley, tor eo.t• Mn1, Nf'lll'POrt 11e1ch,
H1111ll"llM ll1;oi;h/~oun111n l/1tiey, L1011111
a..dt, lntln1/S1dllllcb1ck lfllll Sin ci......,111
$en J111,, CIPhlt-. A •lft91r •tQillllll
H lt!Mt h P11bJ111'11d s11un11~ •nd ~~~•ri.
Tl\9 prfndllel Pllbllthlng pl1n1 h 11 JXI Wtd
.. y $trffl, Colll M .. , Citllorni.I, t}j26,
'
l
"•"-rt N. W11d
l"t•1kl.-nl •M ,.llt!!il~er
J,,1c It. Cu1l1y vie. Pmwtnt end c:;-,1 Mt11t1>1r n.,,. •• k11Yll ..... lli'"''' A. M.,,h/11 1 M ..... lftl 11411!0<'
Clier1t1 H. loot ' ltidlar' P. Nill
loaMtlMI ~ &u1w1 -Clltl Mme: nJ ..... ..., s1,...,
....... "9di1 ~ "....,..., ...,'"'•t41 UfWle h9dl1 Ill ~-I A.-.nw '"'""l!e'! ~! 1"1'S hedl ~ltvt,-, a. C111-r. ' al *r111 I I C..mir.t "-Ml
. -'•••11 (714) '42-4JJ1
Cl IM A~sr1tl1' I 142-1171
,,.. 0..-#wt ....... u,.. ....
4tl"44Jt
,,... --.,._ (-9f Ct~ ... -•m °""""'· lm,. Ol'IHltt C.11 ~llhlrle ~. "-"""" 11tt1et, m"'"'•tklM, --~·· ""''-' .,. ttlwfllMf{llflh '*'"' fS'fY • ••••wet• """*" -.ci.1 ...,.. .... ., .,, .... "-"·
...., dMI ....... NII tf Cotta Mn1, c.llelnlll. ....,. ... .,. llT t 1rrtw U.U =iiiii;;;,,' 0.,. -n u ,11 '"°""'": mllrt.,... __ ..... """""l'I',
A band conl('sl F'ridlly ni ght on th('
park stage "·as won by "Central,'' which
raptured a $50 cash award. Second place
;ind a $25 cash award wa s won by "13th
Our." The thirrl and fourth place winners,
"R11sh" and "Bridges" each won $15.
The grand prize, a 19'n Ford Pinto sta·
tion "'agon. "'as dri ven home by Kirk
l)oyton, 3018 Coolidge St., Costa fo.1esa.
Dayt.on held the lucky ticket stub among
thousands of fis h dinners sold during the
festival. Each person who bought a fish
dinner was eligible for the grand prize.
M a11 Indicted
l1i Attorney's
Deat1i Kills Self
OROVILLE (AP) -A man indicted
for killing an attorney and wounding a
j u d g e and a witness in a courtroom
hanged hlmself today In his Butte Counly
jail cell, jailer Jack Kent said.
Minard C. Rutherrord, 57. a rural
postman, used a mattress to Alike a rope
wlth which he suspended himself by the
neck from a croubar on the cell door,
Kent aald.
Rutherford's cell ~·as being checked
every hour, the jailer said, and the: hang
ing occurred after the 2:50 a.m. check .
lie tried mouth-to.m outh rt1U1CILaUon,
but the prisoner was dead btfort
reaching Butte County Hospital a few
hundred yard> !tom the jail.
In the courtroom ahootjng May 25; at·
tomey Perry Farmer, 14, wll killed by a
plrtol shot in the head and other 1hot1
caused arm wounds to Karolyn Garrick
or nearby 'nlermol!La, one of the plain,.
tiffs, and Judge Jean Morony, who was
passing by.
The ahooUna climaxed a dllf)ute that
led to 1 clvll suit over altAchment of 1
tractor and other equlpm'ent owned by
Mrs. Garrick, whom r a rm er
represented.
I
•
mission ," said Ziegler, although the press
secretary said CoMally wou.ld be ready
lo discuss any matters that the foreign
lci'!dcr& "·ant to take up With tum.
1'he month-loog visit will 1tart v.'ith a
stop in Venezuela.
Connally was flyi111 to Key Biscayne to-
day for an afternoon conference with
President Nixon and national aecurity ad·
visor Henry A. Kls!linger.
Jn making the announcement, Ziegler
said Connally "'ould meet with chiefs of
state and heads or government "'ith the
emphasis vn economic issues. But, he
said, the 5e(l'l"elary also would be in a
position to discus,s "developments in the
intematiOnal field," including Nixon's re·
cent visits to Moscow and Peking.
''The President feels that the ex·
changes which Setretary Connally will
hold wlth the leaders or the countries a:s
special representative are timely and will
jje of great value," Ziegler added.
Niion bad hinted that he would ask
Connally to undertake special mi!sions
<BM tasks fo r him whei') it was announced
last month that the Texas Democrat was
resigning from the Treasury post.
Ziegler said Connally would spend June
6-14 in South America. After Venezuela
he will go to Colombia, Brazil, Argentina,
Bolivia and Peru.
Details of the itinerary after that will
be provided later. Ziegler said.
He would AOt say fihnly that Connally
would go to South Vietnam, bul on
response to questions, the press stcrelary
said it could be assumed that India and
Pakistan would be among the countries
he would visit in Asia and he would not
rule out the possibility of a stop in
Bangladesh. Connally is due back July I.
Kissinger is departing Thursday even·
ing for a June 9-12 vi.sit to Japan.
The two emissaries wilt confer with
Nixon, who is continuing a F lorida stay,
despite four day; of rain since he alTived
at his Key Biscayne home Friday. He is
to return to Wash.ington Tuesday.
Although Connally has announced his
decision to resign from the Treasury
post, he remains as secretary until his
successor, George P. Schultz, is con-
firmed by the Senate.
Connally is considered a pouible vice
presidential running mate of Nlitin In the
November election. Foreign missions on
behalf of the President would have the
added effect of enhancing Connally's
reputation and of keeplng ht.s name
before the public.
From Page 1
ELECTION ...
estimated $30 cost or the tapes.
OCEA general manager John Sawyer
said the association will also request a
grand jury iovestlgation ot the use of the
employes address lillt. Two of Battin's
opponents, John W. "Bill" Hill and V.'ally
Davis have also called for a grand jury
investigation of the incident.
Sawyer said today that the associa.
tion's directors view Battin's action as a
"misuse of county property and an illegal
expenditure of public funds."
Otherwise, political campaigns In the
county in the last weekend before the
election were largely routine with a rash
of last minute advertisemenlll and closed
door meetings with 5\lppcrters by the
various candidates .
Registrar of Voters O.vid Hitchcock
said today that everything Is In readiness
for counting the county's largest election
in history. from tbe standpoint ol the
number or registered voters and
precincts. There are 661,000 potential
voters compared to 612 ,000 in the 1970
general election aqd 1,619 preolncts com.
pared to 1,070.
Polls will be open throughout the coun.
ty from 7 a.m. fu 8 p.m ., Hitchcock said.
He predicts a vote of .ff3,000 or 67 percent
of those registered.
He hopes the ·ballot count will be com·
pleted by 9 a.m. w~ morning
which would .be a MJJ record . The unof·
flcial tally was completed at t : 10 1.m.
November, 1970.
llitchcock aaid new computer equip-
ment shoul d 1peed ·up tbe proc<u ind
overcome the laraer nwnbu ol voters
and prtelncts. /
Major Interest In the county has been
centered on two hotly<6nttlted r1~ for
the First and 'Jbirdrdistrict supervl.ilortal
oeats and the battle amq Crance ~
ty assesaor Andrew J. Hiublw, acOOol
trustee Earl C&rraway, ~ Llrry
Denna and lncwnb<nl Rep. )olln G.
SChmlli for the Republlc'an nomination 1ri
!he newly aligned 39th Congressional
District.
Stilt Champions~p
LrrM.E DOWNHAM, ~and (UPI)
-Fra3ef' Gilbert, 1&, }'On the BrUJsb
1Ults dl.unplonshlp Sunday by wllldng
480 yards on atilt.s.
•
&Utve~. taktn Saturday, showed a
Humphrey 11ur11 but alao documented
that Rumphrty surprlJ!ngly tr at Is
McGovern among blacks and Chicarw
and ru~ evr with Jewish voters.
Humphrey s 1u11estioO for one more
debate was made spontaneously durlng
t.bt third show on ABC'1 .. luuu and
Answers" Sunday, whlcb included other
candidates for the nomination, Rep.
Shirley Chisholm, Los Angeles Mayor
Sam 'Yorty and a Npresentative of
hospitalized George C. WaUace..
The cand.ida1's sparred over the
release of Amertcan prisoners-of-war:
commitments l-0 lsratl: support of the
Democratic presidentlal nominee, and
Cutting It Close
othtt iuues.
Humphrey urged Prttldent Nixon to
stfld former Treasury Secretary John
Connally to Jlanoi \lo'ith a fixed date for
the withdrawal of" American troopg if
North Vietnam would at the wne time
release the American POW'1.
But Mrs. Chisholm and McGovern said
• the withdrawal of Anu~rlcan forces should
not be dependent on the release of the
pri.!IOnerl!.
"We have lo say lets get out of there
and at 111e same time continue negotia·
lions for the release of the prisoners,"
Mrs. Chi!holm said.
"I agree 100 percent "'i lh what Rep.
Chlsholm has ju.st said," McGovern said.
A North Vietnamese fishing boat bn.i.shes past the U.S.S. Newport
News as the cruiser fires its guns at Thanh Hoa, North Vietnam. In
foreground, U.S. Marines watch the small craft go by. The fishing
boat, which got in the \\'ay of the s hip as it was making a firing run
at the coan, was not damaged.
From Pagel
BANK PROBE ...
numbers of the small bills match those or
some of the cash taken in the Lordstown
burglary and that Goldstein allegedly e>·
changed some '120,000 in s ma I J
denominations for $100 bills.
Burns refused to speC'u!ate whether
there was 11ny connect ion between Gold·
stein's e.rrest and the arrest or Mulligan
exactly one week later.
Mulligan is alleged to tiave played a
role in a weekend burglary in Laguna
Niguel, which police offici als have
described as a "Mi!Sion Impossible" type
of operation.
The bank, hidden behind a wall of
landscaping on busy Pacific Coast
Highway, serves residents of Monarch
English Sikh Gets
9 Months for Deceit
LEEDS, England (UPI) -Gurdial
Sahota, 2'1 , has received a nine-month
prison sentence for swindling fellow Jn.
dian sikhs with a pill which he said would
ensure that thelr wives gave blrth to
boys.
Sahota, who has three wives, was con·
victed on seven charges of obtaining
money by deceptioo.
Bay and Niguel Terrace, two excluJJive
commWJ itles where some homes sell for
$350,000. Many of Ute r esidents buy bonda
and invest in aecurltles, items commonly
stored in 11afe deposit boxes.
Some time during the weekend of
Ma.rtjl 2.>26, thieves blasted through the
roof of the bank vault and rifled some 450
safe deposit boxes, taking jewelry,
negotiable bonds and securities and at
least $50,001 in cash,
Esti.mateJJ of the total lo!s have ranged
from $1 million to $5 million and none of
the contarts o1 ~ safe deposit boxes WB.J
injunct.
Inveit1*tors ·noted that whoever com.
milted the 'burglary had extensive
koowledge Of alarm system electronics
aod aploslves and was able to
descrimtnate between negotiable and non--
negotiable securities.
Officials in Ohio said Mulligan has an
arrest record dating back to 1962. when
he pleaded guily to charges stemming
from a rash of burglaries Of strip mines
near Youngstown. Jn addJtion, he served
time In Ohio Penitentiary after being
convlcttd in 1964 of receiving stolen
goOO.s in connection with the theft or
$3,000 in drugs and cash from 1
YoWlgstown drug store.
That same year, he was acquitted by a
leder~ jury of robbing a bank.
.Tired of the way. yP.uJt r!-ngs look?..
Why .~0t •• 1e Your Rings , .... ~ '
Reset •ln Beautiful
New Mountings?
''She. ls talking common sense on tJli1
issue. It 11 dear uow that we are nol
going to get our prisoners released tf wt
stay on this pre~n t mlhtary course ''
McCove.rn and Jl umphrey promised to
support the wlnne.r of thl! presiden tial
nomination. but Mrs. Chisholfn a.nd Yorly
refused to gi ve a "bl:.11lk fheck" p!t.-dge
prior to the conv en llon.
On CBS-'fV , where a ,.cQ1.1rt order g;1ve
her free time because she was excluded
from last week '1 debate. l\1rs. Chisho!r n
called McGovern and Humphrey "p:-irt ot
!he nallooal leadership of recent year•
that has broui.:ht Uus country to its cur·
rent malaise."
From Pagel
KNIFI NGS ...
the suspect, f.1iss Crane , was not releas-
ed.
A quarrel immeclintt.>ly prcceclcd the
fatal wounds and LL Fis("her said in·
vest!gators said they suspect it involved
the releationshlp bct\veen f\.tartinez and
Miss Crane.
She is a cashier at an Anaheim rubber
products firm, while the dead man \vas
unemployed.
Miss Crane was booked into Orange
County Jail on suspicion of murder after
being placed Wlder arrest at the hospital
by Officer Hubert Hogan. first patrolman
to reach Martinez' apartment.
Roughly three hours earlier, Charles A.
Harrell, 16, of 3761 Cosley St., Santa Ana,
was stabbed in the .ibdomen during Fri·
day night's Fish Fry celebration open·
ing.
Suffering from l n tern a 1 injuries,
the young victi rn didn·t report the stab-
bing al first, but ll'lter \Vent lo Tustin
Community Hospital seeking help.
lie was admitted to the intensive care
unit at first but today is listed In satlsfac·
tory condition, according to nursing
personnel.
Delective Lt. Fischer said the knifing
resulted from an argument at 18th Street
and Park Avenue, near the Fish Fry
carnival area.
"Over v.·hat, we 're not too sure.'' he
said,
A young male about 18 to 20 is being
sought in !he attempted murder case
assigned -like the fatal stabbing -to
detectives George \\'ilson and Jim
Strickland.
Cities Win Awards
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The state ol
Wisconsin and the cities o{ San Diego and
~ Beach, Ca lif., and New Canaan,
CoM., have won awards for pedestrian
1Bfety in the 33rd annual American
Automobile Association Pedestrian Safety
Jnventory. The awards, announced Sun-
day, are made on the basis of pedestrian
casualty records and accident prevention
programs for 1971.
He Finds New
Life in Jail
LEWISBURG , Pa. (AP)
Anthony De Angelis, the man
behind a caper labeled "the biggest
fraud to hit the world of finance in
American history," was paroled to-
day, a fit -!ooking 80 pounds lighter
than when imprisoned.
"Coming here actually saved my
life," De Angelis told newsmen at
the gate to Lewisburg Federal
Penitentiary. "I came her e
weighing 250, and I leave at 170.
Spiritually, physlcally and morally
this prison has saved my life.
"I have no sorrow for coming
here," the 57-ycar-old former New
Jersey "Salad oll king " said. "I did
wrong and J paid the penalty,"
We c•n G11i9ft • rin9 11p•clelly for you wifh your
'old di.tmond1. W• 1110 heve foo,• cH1mond1 and
can add to yout pr•11nt on11. Chicle our prices
and 11v1.
If'" ..... .,.. .......... llM ~of•·-··-.,,., .. _
fwtwe chd: .., tl•a•d .. ,.. 1
AU DIAMOt4DI ·~OMTIO TO Al'PIAl'H AT 41% MOii THAN YOU PAY.
DIAM.QND . WEDDING 2995
AND ENG~~EMENT RINGS . UP
1002 mMs ro'cHbOSI FloM • FIND IT HERE FlltST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
Ol'IN DAILY t te 6 r.0111t IN AND AOWSI AROUND
' ' 1138 NEWPORT ILVD • PHONE 646-7741
DOWllTOWN COSTA MISA -lolwo• H ... l •nlwor
DOM RACITI
OUR MOST
UNUSUAL
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
Whltl YM 'Hy ........ ..
froni • WI Wll II& ... '" ............. .,.
pnihe .t 40,_ MOU
~yoopold .... lt•
. .,_. -IY ......_ C..
JOll tie -.......... ,
COMPAU.
r
\
$
l
I
I
d
I,
(I
" b
s
P'
h
m
to
' "' •I
I'
pr
' l
('U
Io
I
dt
le
in
Jr
K
Sa • c
IC ..
"'
Saddle hack
Tax Boo st
By FREDERICK St'llOE'.\1EIIL
01 !l!t D•1I~ P'llH "•II
A 'A'hollping 16-eenl tax rate increase to
raise half or the Saddleba{'k Coinmunity
College District·s share of a science·
n1athemat1cs building will be considered
by trustees lon1gh1.
rr approved by the board. the lax r:ite
of 41.47 cents per $100 a5_;:esst'd v:1l uatio11
v.·ou\d Jun1p to n1ore than j7 <.:t:n ts per
$100 assessed valua11on
The ('IJ!ll'C 1·0 .... 1 uf t h·· '(CICll('!'•
m.'.lthcn1J!u::::; building I!) l 0!il1n1<1led t11 bt•
~4 ,,j 1nillion . with jU.')l rnorc lhan half v[
t he CO.')! chipped 111 by !ht' ~111lc. 1'he re-
ma ining $2 2 million \\'ii! IM' raised by !he
d 1st nc·t Ill pc rmlSSIVt' lnXl''\ OVlT a t\l'U•
}'t'ar· prriUrl. c>:pl<11ncd Supt. !"tea 11.
Brcrncr.
Tn1stees g:ivc t:1c1 t approval to levy ing
lhc· pcrn1issi1e t:ix Ja ... t Ul'CCn1bt>r .
de-.pite a ground ~1vcJI or protesl tro111
laxµaycr:. 11·1!J1 i11 the t·o1nn1unit y college
district.
The $1. I nl!U ion r;:uscd hy the tax 111-
crcasc ~rould boost th <' college district
budget abo\'e the $8 .5 inillion n1ark. ,1·1th
$6 .9 n1il11on cannarkcd for the gcner;il
fund and $1.6 million allvc ated to the
building fund .
Trustees 14•ilt be asked to approve the:
tentative budget with the !&-cent tax in -
ereasc at the 7:30 p.m. 1nceli11g in the ad-
n1inistration building board room.
FoJ!o14·ing final adoption of the budget.
scud Dr. Brcmf'r. prep:ira11011 of the sill'
tor the sc:ienc:c·ITiillhcn1al ics complex will
hcgui. "\\'c'1C looking to beginning eon-
structiun around Sep!. ! . 1vith a <:on1-
P1CUon -date ut Febrllary, l!.174,'' said
I~rcn1cr.
The 16--cent incrca~l' 1vOuld rnea11 a
person 01vning a $40J)00 home ,1·ould be
paying SIS more next year abovl' the $-il
he. is no1v paying lo support the con1 -
munity college district.
Other iten1s coniing before trustees
tonight include :
-Discu.::sion of 1rhclhcr ph y s i c: a I
f'duca!ion ~hou ld be n1andatory or
P.,.'rmissi\"c lor student:> 18 and over "·ho
attend the collei.;e. Trustees del f'rred ac-
\1011 on this 1f(:m at their ~la~ I n1crling.
-Action un u11e of six sa la r~ propo~als
providing p<1y raises lor both t f'ri1ficatr.d
1teachers1 ;111d cla;-,sit led \ secretaric~.
l"Ustodians, etc1. em1lloyc ....
-Approval of three proposed board
polick·s relating to acadcn1i 1: standards
for students.
Rock fl ttclson
Hurt in Crash
SA:\TA Ff.. i'\.~T. 11\Pi -Actor
f:.ock lludson !'llffcred 1ninor cuts
and bruises 'vhen his antique car
crasl1ed into a trf'C and a wall.
111c mishap occurred Sunday
"'hi\e ll111lson 11·1l.s 1naking a trial
run in the ca r , a 1900 steam-
operated Locomobi!e. in prcpara·
tion For a :;cenc for the n1ovie
"Sho"·do11·n. ··
l~e "'as taken to St \'1ncf'nt
Tlospi1al for observation, !hen
reh:asetl.
,, ...
YOUTH DELEGATE
Kevin M. Cotn
Junior at Viej_o
Named DeJegatc
K(!\'ln M. Coan , a junior as ~1ission
Viejo High School. has been named a
delegate to the Nl'ltk>nal Youth Con·
rerence on Science and the Environment
in Chicago No•. 9-1 1.
The son of l\1r . and Mrs. JtSse R . C.oan
J r .. 26522 Cortina Drive, Mi!ls.lon Viejo,
Kevin was chosen by a committee from
San Diego Ga.t & Electric C o m p a n y ,
r;poftsors or delegates from Southern
California.
!·le will join a:hout 700 de\eg11te!'I from
I Cr CWJs the country RI the confertnce.
wh ich w111 featur~· speeche:! on currrnt
ttlenunc developments.
:
First F1111tily lt'o1·ship
J)resident Nixon and farnily talk \Vi th th e l{ev. John
:\. ~luffman Jr. after attending servi<.:es at the Key
Bisc:ayne f-'rcsbyterian l 'hurLh. J !earing the :->crn1on
··Blessed are th r l'rac-crn:ikcrs" 1\"erf' Ed\vard (.."o:-.
left. hi s \1:1fc Tr1c:i:1. 1\lr.-.. Nix on. !he President, lht·
\~ev , ll uffn1a11 . Julie and Uav1ct Eisenhov.·er.
B1tildi11g Permit
Issuances Up
111 Lag1111a Beach
l-O nstruction acll\ lty in Laguna tle;1ch
continued on the upgradr dur ing .\lay,
wtlh issuance of 51 bu1ld1n~ pcr 1111ts 1r1!i1
a valuation of S821.0'!2
1'h1s cornpared 11•J1h t~ µc1·1 1 1d ~ lu1
bu ilding val.ued at S620,5.12 ~11'·1 ay. 1!)71
Valuation ror 1972 is running about a
million dollar~ ahc ;.id or !asl year ·.~
figu re. at $2.969 .82.1. con1parcd ,1 itli
$1.917,442 in the sarne period last year.
The ~1 ay figure ~·as boosted by t\\'O
large project.-; in the Boat Canyon area.
One pern1it tl"as issued for on l8·un1 t
apart1ne~t complex on the RllSselt prvp-
cr1y on Oolphm \Va y. above Boat Ca11-
~on_ and a n1aJor ren1odeling JOb on lhf'
Boal Canyon Safe 11·ay store arcounred for
inost of the $143,188 1'al uat1011 011 lour
permits issued for co n1n1ercial alter<1·
lions.
Fire Substation Plan
Doomed Despite Need
Despnc a 111dcly a<.:kno1\·Je1Jged t.:r1 t11:;1I
need for a fire d£'p:1rtmenl suhstat1011 111
thi· nonhcri;,·· :1rca of San Clemcnle lh(•
project see1ns doomed ag:i1 n for ,1nolhl'I'
budgt·I year untess c!ly counellnicn tan
f1 nd an cstanated $125.000
The ex isting prorx:ised city budgcl.
described as bare-bones and tigh t by City
i\lanager Kennet h Carr. has no funds
ovaitablc for the project \Vhich has borlll"
a top·priority label in recent years.
"There simply 1sn"1 en oug h n1oney."
Carr-told t·ounf'i ln1e11 at a budgrt s1udy
la tl' last 11"eck.
Carr conceded ihat a i.:ouncll resolution
Jas1 February t.•mphas1zcd that Fund~
shou ld be sci aside in the budgrt. h11! tl1l'
t.:Hy n1aru1ger said there sunply 11·:-is not
enough eash to go around .
The stalion. it has been hoped. 11·uuld
serVf' to better protect the rast-gro,l"ing
ix1rtion of the city 11·hich includes a
master·planned medical care co1nplf'x.
high-density residential areas, and ex -
pensive housing tracts.
r11f't1gh t1ng personnrl \\hu \VOuld nlOl'f'
'nun 11110 1h1' nc11· !irt• depar11u r nt he.id
1p1:irtcrs <ii c11y hall .
li e said lhttt althoti gh !ht• nt 1r 1n1·n hat!
Uel'll txp1 •rtctl 111ui.:h earlier, con1plet 1011
1! e I 11 y ~ on 1hL' $140.000 headquarters
t'iiU~NJ lair h1ri11:! of the ne1v men.
Und•'r lhe expanded systen1. San
C:le1ncnte would have 'round·the-clocl.:
protccuon 11ith 1wo-man squads who
1".ould be aug1nentcd on major calls by
the \"olunt eer corps.
L;1st year's pl;ins had included pro·
posnls to initiate an unusual cross-
tra1n1ng progra1n to use on-duty poli r'"
p:Hrol1nen as an in11ial attack force on
r1rcs. but I ha t ide;i apparently has \Vaned
bccausr of 1l1fliculty in selling the idea lo
police orliccrs \\'ho hav<' traditionally
b:dkcd ;11 assun11ng offie1al firefighting
roh·s
'fhe other h a I f of the l'l"OSs-tramini;
idea. ho"·c1'er. remains somewhat alive.
The new firen1en to be hirCd by the: city
1111·0 ·already ha\'C passed aU tests! would
assume so me minor duties· in lhe police
Uc1lartment, notably clerical and •in-
iipcctlon duties duriog their Spare time.
s DAil V !)LOT ;J ------• A~e ID Hole
Radarnia11 'Hits' First MIG
By ARTH UR HIGBEE
ABOARD THE USS CO RAL SEA (UPI'
-Chief Petty ofncer Larry II . Nowf':ll
hrlped a night of Phantom F4 pi!Ol.'1 th:ll
lnl'll1dcd a ltunungton Ueach rnan. shov1
d01\·n their fJr.~t ~1 J(; jet 01·er North V1tt ·
1u11n nearly thrte n)onfh!\ ago. But ht>
n1et lhc1n only last 11·rrl.
Th.it was "'hf'n .\u\\"e!I. a radaruia11 ·
11 tl<i opr1 .1!t'.'l abvard 1he cru i~r C11icag0
l'aui:;h l 11 chopper out lo !he c:&rriC'r Cur;il
~·:t ~'llf'rt· tiu• F~ pilols arr b,1 -;ed
Uu11ng lht> lhrt'r 1no11ths 111 bet11er11 .
l\0111'!1 -11hon1 ~ t· S. Ith ~·ieet pit·'··
r\·le.1:.1.· t·.i lls ·!hr h"llC' .. t air euntr111!rr 111
lhl' 1:u tf 11t Ton l;.11 1"' -ha~ gu1J<'d l ...
pilots 111 th1· d1111 11 111~ 111 JI o1hf'r \!J( .~ 1"r
.a IOl <il of ,lll l'\l'll dnl.l'll
1'h1s 1nakl'.~ ,\011·t·!I . 11f l1t11h.1n. Al., a
<tuubl e ilt'l', so lo .'>j><'cll., 1 Vl'll th•Jltj.!h lir
11ork s 111 a t'••11lrul llll •lll un sh 1 1il~1anl ;11.d
no! 1n :1 l11ft1 <'1>1 k111t
E1c11 !hnu1d l Ill· u1el 1J11· p.1n111·t' 1111 !ltf'
r.tt1 l'h 6 ~11r: •·1;.111 '" 0111\ lat 11t•fk. ll1r !'
all 0Vl'1 !ht' <;ult l<.n•111 l11s 11i h T lJ\' n•.11•
;il)d tlil'y t·:1ll 111111 11~ 111..; n11 ·1<.n.1 1)1~·.
·-At'r '" 1\h11 ·h 1s li1s , •«Ii· 11;11111· a ~ 11,.ll
\\hen \0•1 ell 1!11 '1 1111 · 1111• rul•11 ~ .111il
Ollt' ul llil' ll;\l l'~il ll>I'~ ;ilJ,1,IJd !lit' \'.i1 ;ir
Sc;t, lhe~ llt ·,~T l[1,·<l il11• ;\l;11 1h Ii <I011 11J11~
of !\!!(; 17 likt' 1111,
l.L 1;:1rrv \\,•1;:.11111 111 1 ',oJu1nllu ~. rth1".
!ht• pilot \lh1 1Sh•lt 1!1111 11 !)11• .\lit; 17 · "\\I'
1rcre 0111 Ol 'l'r rhl' T1111 l.1n 1:ult es<ort1ni.: ;<
reconna i:....;,1 11•T 1111s:-.1 .. n 11111·11 1\1·f' g.nc
us the 1rorrt "
I.I. Rill Frl'<'klt•l\111 11( tiOi:! Hri:1rcl111 .
lluntin;.::lnn Hc~il·h C';1l11. \Vf'11:ancr~
navigator: .. 1'h" dog11gh1 1t ~(·lf happi'11f•d
juSI a few ht1n<trt•d f('l'1 Ult•r f;u rly fl at.
sparsely·inh abilt'tl 1ar111L1nll 11 11 ;1..; ;t l•Hlt
1:!20. 11.:!0 p rn 1 l•ll ,, .~t•lllh hu1 h.1zy 11.11,
\\le ll't're :1l111u1 !Kl 1n1h·~ 'uu1h 111 ll;u1111
~owel!· "I pau1tct.l q11ekl·d Upl !Ii<' bli p
of a !\1fl; on my radar scrcrn -of cour.st'
I "·asn'1 surl' ii 11·:.i.~ a J'o.·111; al the tinH.' It
111as a l'l'r~ 1ai 11 t pa1111 ··
\\le1 gand '\\'r ll11'n1·d
st arOO;ird <1nd hl'.i1l11d 111land
iifl fol I "
Tilt' r·IHef
v.·as prettv :-.ure 11 11.1:-a ,\JI<;" .... . ' ' . Lt. Jin1 St 11l1nj'.!1·1 u( Po1n1111 ;1. Cal1I .
le<tder (Jf the l'l ight : ·'Ae" reall.1' (".1111•·
lhrough Jor us. l!t• kt·pt our a irrr<i tl 111
~uch a positlOn lhill nobody could tneak
up on us. lie was ®r e)'H. All the wh.i\f'
we raced inland, he wa~ frcdlng us .U'l-
formation:•
\\'eigand "Jiitl Stil l1 n,c:~r was lbt: llr~t
lu aciualty sec lht' :\JI(:. lit• c<tlled out,
·Tally ho, thcrt' he 1s .... ' "
S!ifltn~c r · ··1 stayed behi nd thr ~11c;
f11r thrt't' turns. On the s&"Ond ti me I took
a shol al h1n1 and n1is.se<1 . An ~·4 goe~
t11:->tf'r th11n J ~II{: but <t ~11\. 1nake~
t1gh1t·r turn5 -up close our spi.."'ed ad-
1,nna~f' 1:->n't much hf'l p So !hf' thlrd
t1mf' I pnrpt.1:-l'h u11•r :-.ho1 turn. That got
111111 t" r~·\1·r~t· tJ1, 1ur11 .i nd 1·ha.se n1e All
111., 11t~·u11u11 11.1 .. 1l1•1ot,,d lo rnr .. I
11• •l.1 •d ,tt 111111 1 .1111111;: .1 ruund the t•orne r
111111 .1.11110;~ It) p ll1 lu-.. gun ~ 1111 mr.
f ,111111: . .ic·!\ lit• 11:i~ ,111! (ni t of raui.:e "
\\l'1::.u~J ""Iii:: $!. <i l his .JJ terburnf'r
gu111,: 11 hh h J!;ivr 111111 ,1 n f'\11 a l.1urst nF
'Pf l'd Iii' II ;1 s OOS(' d(I\\ 11 a, :thflU~ ~0'1
Irr! a11d 1·h.1r~41tt st:41 1;.:h1 ,11 J 1rn '
. ..;!tl!111g1·1 "\.arr1 ~:111! ·11('·~ r i~h!
l11•h1n1! I IHI ' I ren1~·111 lx·1 U\.t! \(•! \ \.\('I\
··11 1dt·~·(t . # -• --.,,-.
\\1•1g,1nd ··1 1\itS .t bil ll1JITled bt'..:dll"'°
1 11~1., .111.11d I wouldn I Or at.ilc \11 G~'l
till'l'I' 111 tll lH'"
'\t1llr11'·•·1 "Thl'rl ~•tW (;;.1rr~ ·,
!-1dc •\1 J1\d~·1 1 hf'at .,;o.:1•ko1R 1n1ss1lr l I don 't
1111111. 1!1" \IH; tired :11 nir at :ill '
\I ri~:111<1 "l rol\f'd 1n ;.nd he l"anir u11
i11 u1\ ;:u11:-.1ghts. I 11!'•'\I and the mi.o1~d P
111·11 ri~h l tlp his ta ilpipt• ··
~·ri ·1·k lrt"ll . "Garr\ \!'ll<'d . 'I gol h1111 1
I go! htn1 ' 1'he ta ll fl t>I\ o!{ and a lot or
d<'hr1s "'en! past u~ utl thr starbo~rd ~1d('.
Thr rf'sl of the ~11G JU:>\ sort ol went in to
thP ~rou nd in a lon g slidf' and cxplcx.Jrd
•fn u11p;1C'1 in a gout of orange Oa!Tk and
l1L11·\.. :-.1nokf' \\1r riidn't sef' an"
p.1 racnt1tf but he 11 .1:-. onl~· ;i ft•11· hundrrd
lt•,·1 ll!l
\\1•1g,111U .. \\t ~ul 111111 all ri~hl , Util
. .\re was 1he lirst lo spot him ..•. "
StllHngcr· ··r\ce really did a supt')' job.
\\"e w1·re all prelly happy about it. ll wa~
lhc tir~! i\11G for Garry. tor Ate. for the
( ··ll"<il SC'..t a~d vr uu1· sr1uadron. And Jt
was the tirsr me wc'had no1vh toget he r
a1:a1nst a M , \Vt'd trained so long and
l!Ur training really paid off."
Hula Da11ce Class Off c1'ed
Classes In hul a danf'1 ng f11r• 11u1h
ctuldren and aduh , \\'Ill hi' u111•1 cd lor \0
1veeks l>cgitm ing June 21 by !hf' 1. .. ;:11n.1
Beach Recreation Deparln1e n1
The \\'ednesday c'.:];iSS('.s lor .i·)l"••f·•>lr!
to 15-year-old lHila enthusias t:-\1•111 he
held at .1:30. with classes lor adl1i1 s Lit
ginning al 4:30 p.m.
Jn addi!ion lo ofrering lnslrucllon in a
variety of hula movements and steps, in -
structor Connie Kelly wlll teach stude nt:o:;
how to make leis and head hand:o:;. She
11 111 al.~u d1.5cuss I 1<111 ;11 ia11 lcrm~. namr~
ol 1 ar1ous costurnes and musc1al in·
)ittumcnts used 1n th(' dant·f' ~nd ho11· tn
)1u!1l a luau.
\!1 s. Kelly he1s studied hula dancing In
!lay,•:ui and Ila~ performed with the Don
I lo enterla.iners or the lnternalionaJ
i\tarket Plaoe in Waikiki.
f'or further infonnation. contact the
Recreation Department, 494-1124, Ei:t. 4fl .
A f et Q! $8 is rtq ulred .
Top less Ruling
Favors llli11ois Carr explained that the funds !or actual
conslruction of a building and purchase
of a s1nall attack pumper "is not \1·hat
concerns me . .,
~~--~~--~~-
1'aver11 Operator
EAST ST_ LO UIS. 111 fAP ) -A Je)!al
brittle over tavern topll·Ssness put 1:11<·n1
o!)<'rator ~:d1vard Bf'cker out of busi11e,.:>.
but he took !be n1atLrr to eourt 11·/Je re ht•
got a favorable ruli 11g.
Circuit Judgr F'rancis i\lax1veJI ru led
!hat the ban by !hf' St. Clair County Ex-
t.:1s.: Con1mission was unconstitutional.
He rult:'d that the county ord inancr a"
\1Tiiten prohibilo;; the prcscnl'e of an1
lop!c ss female employl' or t:lllployf'.~. but
said that nudny itsclt docs not cons111utc
obcrf'nit_r.
··:\udity in•-ol\'ed in cnter1:i1n1nrnt h:is
been held to be protected unrJrr 1hc pro-
\·i.s ions of !he F irst Am endn1ent !o !ht'
Li.S. Con stitution and tile 14th An1rnd ·
men\ prohibits the stai r-> from in-
tcrfetini:? 1vith the con~titut 1onill right s of
inrl 1\ id11a1.~.·· ,\J <1"<we!l sair!.
Becker resu1nt·d operatio ns "'llh thrc,1·
topless "'ai tressc'>. a.~ Francis ~'ol!c~.
t•ommi ssioner. an nount cd th nt 1 h f'
ordinance ·Y.'ould be rf'Writtcn ··to pr ohibiL
this kind of thing .. ,
Patrolman Hit
'
By Assailant
FLAGSTAFF. Ariz. <API An
Arizona higF!"·ay patrolman. 1\•ounded by
an assailant "'ho later killed himself. "'as
report<'d in fair condition today at
F'h1~staff C-Om111uni1y H o s p i t a I , in·
vestigators said.
Authorities !'aid patrolm;in .J ll n
Mad eya. 27. of f1agsta ff. 1va~ shct in thr
right shou ld<'r afler .stopping a car abnut
15 miles east of here Saturday evening.
They said ?lladcya apparently was shot
by Melvin K. ~·ichols. 21 , y,•ho .sped fron1
the scene, wrecked the truck he wa s driv·
ing and ·then killed himself.
Nudists Take
Five • Protest Lit
BERKELEY t t.;PI 1 -Beside a ''Str1J>
for Peace"' sign, about 15 person~ held ~
nude-in at the neu•ly hbcrated "Peo1llc's
Parle" near the University of Califomi1.
A CTOYt'd of 250 pushed and shoved Sun·
day to get a peek' at the undressed -
mostly men from the Sexual Freedon1
League and Aphrodite Love Church.
Three Berkeley policemen f'lbo"'rd
through the crowd and !!Aid only five
minutes of nud ity \vould be allowed
One male stripper embrticed an orncer
In flvt minu tes, everyone, inrlu<l in$::
organizer Al Jukes. :l8. v.·as dre:ic srd
"No sweat. Al ," !Jaid onf' of tht nH11 ·r!'~
•s they turned lo leave.
J
lie said that at leas! seven f1 re1nen
\\·ou\d have to be hired at ~J0,000 apiece a
yf'ar lo staff the station on a 24·hour·a -
duy basis.
"Th:1r 1s a ru nning expenditure of at
least $i0.000 a year. and still the substa-
tion \vould nol amount to full fire pro-
tecl ion." he sa id.
\\'hat has been envisioned as a subs t<1 -
tion 1vould be to use a portable-type
building to house men and equipment on
lf':ised land 111 the area of Camino de Jos
.i\lares.
The small squad "'ilh a quick·responsc
truck ll'Ould be ahle lo scr \"e medical aid
calls and other rescue 1nci <lcnts and
swiftly a!t.1ck Fires \tith a small !ruck
t1nd kf'C'p names at bay until volunteers
could join in !he battle.
01.~cussion of lhc north station -con1 -
n1011 subjcrt in budget sessions in recent
ytars -came at :he beginning of study
on the ];lies! plans to upgrade the ranks
of 1hc city fire department.
Carr has se1 aside more than $40.000 as
the first-year \\•ages for live ne1v
Ho-ivurd Huglies ,
W in.s Canµilw -n
Extensio1i Bid
VANCOUVE R. B.C. (l\Pl The Cana-
di;in government has e ended the
visllor "s per1nl1 of American ustrialisl
\101\•ard Hug hcll by one yrar, lo Ju nr 2.
1973
Th<' reclusive bill ionnirr <1rrived in
l\l~rch and has been secluded in his rent-
I'd quAr terll on the 19th and 20th floors of
lhe Bayshore Inn since then. The ac-
con1modations cost an estimated $1.000 a
day.
A Canadian imn1igration ofrtcial said
Sunday that the exten$ion or 11ughes'
three-month visitor'll permit was granted
Friday. after an imm igration officia l had
bf.'en sent to Hughe!I:' suite.
•· 1t is normal to have applicants appear
;iJ the off ice ," John 1\1.cKinstree said
'"Ho14·ever, if they are una ble to appear.
~·e go out and do st."
McKinstree dee.lined lo elaborate, other
than sRyinp: Hughes had a ''valid rea!fQn'"
for n<>I. making a personal appearance at
the immigraUon office.
Royal MiscatTiage
OSLO. Norwa)' IAP l -Croy,·n Pri ncess
~njn surfered her second 1niscarriage
elilrly today. the royal palare iin nounced.
Last \Vednesd<l y the 1 vy<il co11r1 an-
nounced that U1e 34·)'ear.()ld t f(I Wtl
princess Sonj R gave bi rth lo l'r 111er~!
~l<ttrtha Lou ise or ~nrway Sep1 22.
BE
Tliere are a doze1t Great Shoe
$1 o
$1 s
I
I
54 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER •
UM T•ur M. .... , ca.,,. e l•1tkA1Mrlc.,4
• ""'"11111 ea.., ..
•
$1 l
•
tf DAILY PILOT
No Comment-Algeria
U.S. Sees Return
Of Hi jack Cash
ALG IERS (UPI ) -The Unlted States
believes Algerian official! wlll return ~be
$500,000 given in raMOm to a pot-11mo~1ng
Black Panther and his blonde gtrlfr1end
who hijacked a jet from San Francisco,
an American dip lomat aaid Sunday.
Algerian officials today refused to com·
ment on the statemenl of \Villiam
Eagleton, chief of the U.S. interests s~·
t ion of the Swiss embassy, who 1s
negotiating for return of the money and
lhe hijackers.
The hijackers were identified as
William Holder, 22. San Diego. a Vietnam
veteran and a member of the Black
Panther Party, and Kather ine May
Kerkow, 21, of the same address as
l-fbl der.4I'hey were taken a"'•ay for ques·
tioning by AlgerLl n authorities as soon as
they la nded Saturday .
Algerian governme nt officials said they
'"'ere "thoroughly investigating'' 11older 's
request for po!ili cal asylum but __ offere~
no otber Indication as to the hi1ackers
fate.
"'\, Eag1eton said the United States had
asked for return of the money, and "we
assume they will return the money ."
The ... hijackers commandeered a
Western Airlines Boeing 7Xl in the air
over Washington state Friday night and
demanded the ransom plus a longer-
range Boeing 720 to take them to Algier!.
Half the passenger! were relea~ when
the hijackers changed planea in San
Francisco and the rest got off at a refuel·
ing stop in New York .
1be plane returned to Los Angeles Sun-
day night.
At a news conference, a weary Capt.
Laird Claims
Huge 'Russian
WeaponsLead
WAS•l lNGTON (UPIJ Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird testified today
the Soviet Union had "far outstripped''
the United StateJ in oombers of nuclear
weapons and served noti~ t h e
Admini stration would proceed with crash
programs to develop new .submarines and
bombers for the 1980!.
Laird told a Senate appropriations su~
committee t h a t lht Strategic A r m •
Limita tions Talks (SALT) would lead to ~n overall reduction in defense ipending
during the next few years by eliminating
10 planned instal\aUol'll for the Safeguard
antiballlst ic missile (ABM) system.
But he said the administration was still
In need of full funding for other strategic
programs In the offensive at°ea. .
Despite t he SALT agreement, ~1rd
testif ied, the Soviet Union has acquired
such momentum in weapons production
since its buildup began in 1965 "that th~
Soviet Union has far outstripped the
United States in terms of numbers or
weapons both offensive and defensive."
The Moscow control agreement "puts
some brakes on the momentum" by
freezing numbers of certain offel'l.'llve
weapons for the nexl five years. he said.
''lt ls eb!Olutely essential durlng this
period lhat lhe United States be In a posi-
tion that it can go forward with new
v.·eapons progra ms." Laird sa id, "and
that the Uniled States not lake unilateral
;iction" to ha lt improvements and
replacements of its offensive weapons.
Laird singled out $1.5 bllllon requested
for the next fiscal year to develop -on
an accelerated basis -the Trirlent
missile-firing submarine and I he
supersonic Bl bomber.
fi e said the SALT aitreement would
lead to no reductions in those programs.
noting that neither of these wea pons
would be readv for use unt il after the
five-year offens'ive agreement ex pires.
The SALT agreement limil<i both sides
to two ABM installations. Laird liaid the
United St.ates would complete its
Safeguard si te at Grand Forks. N.D.,
\\'hen! 90 percent of the work is under
contract. He did not indicate whether the
administration would pr oc eed im-
media tely to dep loy the second permitted
site -to protect Washington, D.C.
Willlam Newell sajd the hijackers were
•·cautious but easily agita ted .'' 1'hty
"methodically planoed everything. Tht:t
wrote all their demands down." he said.
During the fl ight, the two hijackers
smoked a( le.ast si.t marijuana cigarettes
and "the smell completely ft!led the
cabin area ," said fl ight officer Dick
Luker, The hijackers rejected the crew's
rtfons to have them retum tl'le money,
saying it wa~ "going to e good cau~ to
help many people ," said Ne,.·eJI, of San
A-fateo. Calif.
He said that during the 7,404-mile night,
llofder talked about his dishonorable
disc harge from lhe Anny and his
dfssaliafaction wi!h ii, his arrest on a
rnarijtiiana pos~ession charge and his
wife's leaving him.
Newell, 48, said he knew of no demand
to free Angela Da vis, the black Com-
munist who was found innocent of
murder, kidnap and conspiracy charges
lwo dayi after the hijacking. nie chief
of securit y al Seattle-Tacoma Airport
••
said Saturday the hijacker demanded
Miss Da vis' freedom as p a rt of ttis
ransom package. Nortli lrelarid Drarna
Jn San Diego, Ed ward Ford , manager
of a 12-apartment comple1 , ~aid }lolc!er
and Miss Kerkow had been living
together in his building for several
weeks He described her as a n
oceanography student.
,\ British officer aids a man hit during a confronta-
ti on bct\l.'een troops and abou t 50 youths 'vho at-
tacked them with stones and bottles. A \Voman
kneels to pray at left. The attack came as about
1.000 Catholics staged a mainly peaceful march to
protest internment without trial of s uspected IRA
members.
Other members of the crew were co-
pilot Donald Tbomp!on , 47 , Capt. Wailer
"Bud" Brown, 57, of Seallle and route
chief Ira MacPtflllan , 55.
They said Holder was carrying a black
case with cables, which he said conta ined
a bomb. Algerian authorities said the
briefcase only con tained two books and
some toilet articles.
Thompson said the hijackers told him
Sons of Mobster
Leruler Colombo
Gunme1i T llr gets
the $500000 ransom money paid by NEW YORK (UPI) -Shots were fired
\Vestern Airlines wou ld "be used for a big today at the eldest tw o sons oiailing
ca~ae and would help a lot of peo ple,'' · •· underworld leader· JOseph A. Colombo Sr.
All the crew members de!Crlbed the hi· as they drove up to their father 's hou se.
jackers as genera ll y courteous. but There were no injuries, police said.
Newell said Holder was easily agitated, .d k 0 f•'red Police sa1 an un nown pers n especially by delays. h
'The Western Airlines jelliner carrying several shots at Anthony. 27, and J osep
the crewmen arrived here late Sunday Jr., 25, at 1:15 a.m .. hitting the right
aft.er stopping in New York earlier on the front door window of Anthony's car.
'"'ay back from Algiers. There were two other persons with the
Weighty Campai1111
Kathy L. 1IcChesncy puts the
fini shing touches on her can1-
paign to gai n we ight as she
do\\-·ns lasagna and other high
caloric roods. A graduate of
Washington State University,
Ka thy passed all the written
and oral exams for a IX>licp-
woman's job. but she \\'as un-
derweight. She \Va s given a
month to add the necessar y
three pounds to make the 98-
p o u n d n1i nimum. She suc-
ceeded after force feeding for
three weeks.
Colombos when the incident occurred.
The four . returning from an Ital ian-
American Civil Righi! League rally in
Madison Square Garden .. had jus~ parked
their Cl\r in front of their father s home
in the Bay Ridge .section of Brooklyn.
A foreign made revolver o~ un-
determined cal iber was recovered 111 the
stre.t by police.
Anthony Colombo, the <lldesl o[ Jo_seph
Colombo 's four son s, is a vice president
of the civil rights league. Anthony was
with his father when the elder Colombo
was shot and seriously wou nded at a
league rally last year. .
Joseph Colombo has been r~upe~allnA
ever since from V.'OUnds received 1n the
attack by Jerome Johnson , 24. Johnson
was shot to death shortly after wounding
the elder Colombo.
Today's shooting was the latest incident
in a resurgen ce of underworld activity,
touched off, according to some
authorities, by the shoot ing of Jooeph
Colom bo. and the killing April 7 of Joseph
••crazy Joe" Gallo.
... According to officials, many members
of the Colombo fa mily, considered one of
!he most po~>('rful in the city. blamed
Ga llo for the Unity Day rally incidenL
Gallo "''as believed kil led by mobsters
~s~oci 11.ted with the Colomho family at
Umberto's Clamhouse in lower !\1anhat-
tan as he celebrated his 43rd birthday.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Oe!ivtry of t he Dally Pilo t
!s guaranteed
Mon<hy·Fri4ty: 11 'fOU do ~01 hlVt \l!IUt
Pl!Nr by S:Xl p m, c1111 •nd vou• copy wlU
b9 bttl<Xlhl 10 yg u. C1tl11 1rt l•~en un!ll 1:111 p,m
s..rurctay 1nc1 Sunday: If vou do .... ~ recelvt
your capy by 9 • m. sa1urd•~. o• 1 11 m.
S!lncl•Y, Cit!! ltnd 11 CODV Woll ~ b"'Ullhl tu
l'O\I. C•ll1 ''' t•~tn until 10 1.m.
Telephon~s
,ilos! 01"1""11 Cnunly ArP1t1 • , • , , •4l-ll21
Nar!hww,t Hun1lr>01on Beach
and Wt1tmlnlltr , .•••• 140-lut
S•n Clfmen!t , C1t11l1tr.,>0 Beach.
S.n Ju1n CA~lll•tno, De"a Poln!.
SOll!h l lllUM, ltlll.lnf Hlgutl • 4'1·"11
6 l(illed iI1 Red Rocket
Attacl{ 011 Plmom Penl1
From Wire Services
PliNO.'vl PENH -Commw:Wet guer-
rillas marked the apparent victory of
Marshal Lon Nol in Cambodia's firsl
presidential election with a rocket '9nd ri·
ne attack on the capital today in which at
lea.51 six: persons were killed. three of
!hem children_
One 122mm rocket hit the ?i.1inistry of
Defense building, killing an undetermined
number of others. ;ind a round of
recoilless rifle fire hit a children's
playground abou t 70 yards from Lon
Nol's home. Another rocket exploded
harmlesslv. One scored a direct hit on
the third ·floor of the defense ministry.
"''hile the other tore apart a tree on the
far side of an iron fence in front of the
ministry. The blast shattered nearby win-
dows.
Terrified "'orkers, many of them
women soldiers, fled from the building.
One man with blood streaming from
gashes in his face and scalp was rushed
to l'.l hospital on a motorcycle.
One soldie r displayed a jagged frag·
menl or !he missile, v.'hich v.•as
recogniza ble as a Soviet 122mm rocket.
The Defense Ministry has been the
target of repeated night rocket attack!! In
the past, but the missiles have landed
either in the railyards across the street
or in a densely packed slum area to the
southwest, causing a number or civilian
casualties.
The attack came as ballets were being
counted from Cambodia's first presiden-
tial election. Incomplete u no ff i c i a I
returns from the voting Sunday ga\·e
Marsha l Lon Nol a smaller portion of the
vote than had been predicted and a
surprisingly large vote was going lo a
dark h ors e "'ho campaigned for the
return of the former chief of state,
Prince Norodom Sihanouk.
Broadcnsting partial results from
Phnom Penh and eight provinces , the na-
liona l radio said Lon No l had received
332.214 votes, or Sl.17 percent of the
ballots counted so far. A ma.jority is
needed to win, but the government
nev.•spaper had predicted the marshal
1\·ould get 60 percent. This is Cambodia 's
first preiddenllal election. •
Lon Nol's principal rival . former Na·
tional Assembly president Jn Tam, got
181,326 votes. or 27.92 percent of the vote,
the radio said.
Secret Army f!ulz
Second Viet Massacre
Near My Lai Reported
fl.1E\V YORK (AP\ -A secret Army
report on the f\1y Lai massacre says that
.1 second 1nassacrc took pl ace less than
two miles 11way on lhe same morning and
involved th e killing of as many as 90
rivilians, 1'he Nc•v York Times said to-
day.
The Times said the so-called "Peers
Report" ('(Incl uded that troops from
Brnvo Company-a sister unit of Cha rlie
Con1pany whic h was involved in 1\1y Lai
~ entered the hamlet of /11y Khe 4 on
r<.1arch 16. 1968, and began shooting in-
discriminately at civilians.
The report is named after Lt. Gen.
'Villiam R. Peers. who headed the
Army's four-month inquiry into My Lai.
The Times said a complete copy of the
still-cl assified document had been made
nvai lable to it.
Pulitzer Prize for first reporting the 1fy
l..ai s!ayings. The Times llself won a 1971
T'ulitzer for its publication of the secre t
documen ls on the origins of the war
known as the Pentagon Papers.
No details about a second massacre
were given when the Peers panel publicly
announced some of its findings on March
17, 1970. Pee n told a news conference at
the time that he had "no knowledge'' of
any incidents similar to My Lai.
The Times quoted the Peers report as
saying that although most members of
Bru vo Company refused to testify or
disclaimed recollection of details about
the assault at l\fy Khe 4, "both testimony
and circumstantial evidence strongly sug-
gested that a large number of non·
cornbatants were killed during tbe search
of the hamlet."
$15 Billwn
Debt Hike
Requesred
WASHINGTON !UPI) -The ad·
ministration asked Congress today to
raise the na tional debt Lim it $15 billion -
to $-465 billion -to meet a continuing
eovernmenl deficit.
The House Ways and Means Committee
called hearings to consider the request.
Jts list of witnesses included fonner
Treasury Secretary John B. Connally and
Cha rles E. \Valker. the acting treasury
secretary.
Earller th is year. Congress raised the
debt limit from $430 bill ion to $450 b11l1on,
IN SHORT. • • I
making the inrrease effectlve only
through J une 30. Al the time , the ad-
ministration requested a ceiling or $-180
billion effective through June JO, 1973.
e Aide TakeK Over
MONTGOJ\1ERY, Ala . (AP) -~t. Gov.
Jere Beasley, his differences y.·1th Gov.
~ge C. Wallace pu.!ihed into th&
background . took control of the Alabama
go~rnmeT1t today and said he woold
report to work although il is a state holi·
day.
Beasley, 35, became acting governor
under the state constitution , which pro-
vides for the lieutenant governor to step
up when the governor has been out of
state for 20 consecutive days .
Wallace was shot May IS in Laurel ...
Md., "'hile campaigining fo r I h e
Democratic nomi nation for the preiden4
cy. Since then he has been recuperating
in Holy Cross Hospi tal in Sliver Spring, .
Md. The 2Jsl day of his absence began at
12 :01 a.m. today.
e Chavex Ends Fast
PHOENIX (AP) -Farm labor leader
Cesar Chavez has ended a 24-day protest
fast and altended a service for the late
Sen. Robert f'. Kennedv of New York.
Mexican-American farm workers from
throughout Arizona joined Chavez in
paying homage Sunday to Kennedy, who
was assassinated in Los Angeles four
years ago on the night of his victory in
the 1968 California Democ ratic presiden-
tial primary.
Chavez, chief of the United Farm
Workers, started his fast last month lo
protest a new state law which forbids
fann strikes at harvest t.lme and secon -
dary boycotts.
e Jet Aee Killed
WASllINGTON (APl -A member or
the Air Force's precision nyi ng team, the
Thunderbirds, ha s died in a fiery crash
"''hile performing for tens of thousands on
the last da v of the Transpo '72 exhibit ion.
The craSh Sunday was the third fata l
accident to mar the huge exhibit of air
and ground tran!pOrt systems at Dulles
International Airport in the Virginia
countryside outside Washington.
The pilot v.·as identified as 1.faJ. Joe
J1oward, 32, of Ahoskie, N.C .. a veteran
of 322 combat missions in Southeast Asia
including 69 over North Vietnam. He held
the Silver Star and the Distinguished
.Flying Cross.
Visit by Nixon
To L·eland Seen
DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -An Irish·
American industrialist says President
Nixon has accepted an invitation to va ca-
tion in the Irish Republic th is fall , but
Florida White House spokesmen say they
know nothing of such a trip.
John A. Mulcahy, host of the President
and 1.-trs. Nixon during a trip to Ireland
two years ago, said Sunday the Nixon:,
would return to Ireland for lwo weeks in
September, after the 1'epublican National Convention.
Mulcahy is president of Quigley Co.,
Jnc., a dlvl.slon of the Pfizer Chemical
Corp. of New York.
Most of U.S. Fair, Dry
JI was the newspaper's second :story
based on the report . On Sunday the
Times disclosed that the report accused
two generals of more than 40 acts . of
misconduct or omission in ('(]nnection
with the fi rst field investigation of the
atrocity. .
Royal Funeral
Huntington, W. Yll., Sollked by l1icli of Rlli1i
'Dmrf.,. ~·"' ~......... .., .,. 1 _,,, ""'"' of tr•lctl
• ..._.. """"""' .. Im\', ho! Wf•lnfr !o ,
NA110NAI wtAIMltWl'YK110ltC,U1 te 7AMIS1 '•6 •7J
' "
""WT .r.t .. t POTOC:.Ul .
l-Ol/llltf"PI CtUfonllt , It. -llltr bur11u .. ~,.
lllll•nl,.,. f•OM W\dH11rt1d 11111"• E,......,,.., 1..,11 .. ~11 11111 iwo ilrt1 11 In !ht 8t1r t rt1, U.$. l>'"e1T '-1'¥1f'f ofllt t it Jtld
"•111•0,,,.1 ,.,, • ..., -~...,. tr>OUlll•'~ """' ot••" ,.~ ... ,.,,I'd 100..01 •~•If el
of ttlt Milon !Gday. toetlftr.., ll'lcllWn
1111d lllurldero!orm1 WS<t •tPOrled 1<1
ITll"" 1ra11.
Tiit 1tortT11 wsrt r1P01"lt'd '" scat.
t.fld Iott!~ !rom Illa UPPlt
Ml11l11lppl V1l11V lo lllt RocllltJ, from
Htw E1191tl'ld to tht 'llrpl"l11 •!Id In
"""' of !ht Seulllwn r Tl\ouoll rtlnttlt from !~ 1torm1 w11
111111 I" l'llOll &l"M!, Hu"Tlf>OIOI>, W. 'It ..
rellOl1H tlmotl 111 lnc:h Pl rll" IPI •
alx•"aut PttlD(I.
Tiie r11t ol ~ ntll°" WI! Cir\'. E1rfv morr1!ng 1tmper1!utt1 r1nttd
from "° dfolrea1 •' T•tw•H Cltr •l'ld
Ptllllon, MICh • la .. °'''"' •I BlvlllL C11u.
Coastal Weather
Partly a.unt1y tod1y. l ll!llt v1rl•M•
winch t1lllf'll Mid "*nl"ll l'lour1 --1"11 wt1t1rtr I to 11 t "Ol1 In 1111n1o.11
today •1'111 Tuttd1y, Hl11h lod•r 111 ""'"'.,.. Co.1111 ""'""uurtt rtl'llll lrvm Q
to 70. !r1t1nd ttm~rah.lr" rtn;t trtm
*J to 11. Wltw 1tm1*'tlur• U.
Sun, llfoon, Tide•
MOfilDAY
Sl(O!ld hlllh , , , f ;lt P·"'· •.t
5tcond low -II :$111·"'-1.1
TUUOAY '
,tral hlOll l::b '·"'-S.• '''"tow ...... 111111.m. 1.1
SPt;ond hlllh .. S; .. p m, S,J
l«Ol"lld low ' •• lt:J.4 '·"'· l.l '"" at'" J·4' 1 ""· S•h 1 n p m .
MOOt! a 111i 17·11 t ""-lttt It.~ o.m,
Both stories appeared under the byline
of Seymour J1er:sh, who won a 1970
Wick•
Want a fBUflh? &me fJUYS
out thera have tust ~
• $pllC8 tf'llllfy.
Quee1i Mour1is Duke of Windsor
WINDSOR, England (AP) -Brlt1in's
royal family mourned the Duke of
Windsor today at a funeral service in
Windsor Ca stle, with Queen Elizabeth II
sitting next to his duchess, tbe woman for
whom he gave up the Brltlsh thront.
The service for the former King
Edward Vlll undencore<I the fin1l recon.
ciliation ln the royal family controversy
over the king's decl1ion to abdJcate to
wtd an Amtirlcan divorcee.
About 100 officials ind· f 1 m 11 y
moumel'I Joined the roy1J potty In St.
George'& Qiape,I on the ground.I of
Wlndtor CUtle. 'lbe much mamed
Henry Vlll 1nd other British IDOllll'chl
are llurled In the cb1pel.
Among leading olflc!11I II l h e
ceremony were Prime M1nllter Edward
Heath, opposition !elder H1rold Wilson,
•nd the Eorl ot Avon, who 11 Anthony
Eden was foreign &eeretary 1t the tlme or the abdication.
Two hundred other gutltl wm teated
In the nave of the chapel. Attendance w11
bv Invitation only . 0 'Mle queen sat facing the tataralque
•here the coffin lay under the duke's
personal atandard and a sheaf ot whlte Illies.
At htr tert 11t the d~hess. MW 75, R
slender figure dressed ln black, veiled
and composed.
The queen hernlf had been tn--
slrumtntal 1n bringing about the roysl
family's reconciliation with the!: duke and
duchess. who lived in voluntary exile
since tht 1bdlcatk>n. The queen visited
her uncle, the duke, In 'Parl.s 5hortly
be/ore his death. Sbt Invited the ducheM
to atay at Buckingham Palace for the
first time In the days prt<tdinl the
funtral.
At the left of the ducheH sat Ille
queen's husbond, Prince Phlllp, th en
Kf111 OJAI ot Nonr~ 1ttendin1 u 1 mem·
ber ot the roy11 ·1amuy, ~ Mother
EllZI beth, the qllMll' 1 cta111hltt Prtnce ..
Anne, the QllMll 'I ~lier Prfnce51
Morgaret and Mergonil'o huoblnd Loni
8-doo, the Dudllll ol G!ouchntu, thl
't>uctie.11 of Kent and Prlnce.11 Alexandra.
Prlnct Cblrlu, the heir to the lhnlne,
royal dlltes and oilier mile momben t(
the royal family sat ....,..,. the Cl9
falque.
'
r •
,,
• t
q .
[)
' w
Ix r' b<
0
"' gl
c
of
y
h
A
' •
lo
...
h
h
bl
in
n
c
sh
w
at
se
Id
a
ta
se
pr
ho
al
al
D
lh
Ju
v.·i
lo
au
ju
Sa
A
m
ha
$2
• '
DAILY PJLOT
Angela Davis Cites 'People's Victory ~ Speei4t .,
' ' SAN JOSE !API -The
1urors who acquitted Angela
Davis on murder·k.idnap-con·
sp1racy charges had oo major
disagreement on her IMO·
cence from the start of their
deliberations, the forewoman
$aid.
Hy,.,rical sobs ol joy II>-.,...""l!"...,,,
terrningltd w i t h ltuieks ol
happiness in the courtroom , I
~lary Timothy revealed the
lack 01 discord 1vhile atlcndlng
a festive party celebrating:
Sunday's verdict. A Mexican-
American on the jury said he
related to defense arguments
aUout the persecution o f
blacks.
Another source said the all.
white jury voted at least three
t imes before handing in its
verdict. On the first ballot,
taken Friday afternoon shortly
after they began deliberating,
the jurors voted nine for ac·
quitlal and three undecided.
'rhere were no votes for co n-
viction during th c balloun_p,
the source said.
-:r :tr --~
Nig l1t Club
Celebration
Lauds Davis
when the verdict waa return· ,
ed .
Miss Davis wept quietly,
tears streaming down her
cheeks.
She was found innocent of
engineering the bloody Aug. 7,
1970, Marin C-Ounty courthouse
escape attempt in which a
judge, two convicts and their
accomplice were slain. She
had spent 16 month.s in jail
before she was freed on
Sl02,500 bail five days before
the trial began Feb. 28.
The tall, black C.Ommunist
hugged and kissed members o[
the seven-woman, five-man
jury when they met for the
first time at a news con-
ference sho rt ly after the
verdict was announced.
"This is the happiest day of
my life," sbe told a crowd of
300 supporters outside the
courthouse who had been
chanting: "The power of the
people -it set Angela free."
The jubilant Miss Davis
declared the acquittal "a
people's victory" -not a
triuinph far American justice.
At a pivate post-verdict
party, t~ lone J\1exican-
An1erican on the jury, Luis
SA\f JOSE !UPI) -A11gcla Franco, told attorneys he was
navis sipped champagne in a moved by the defense's final
victory toast with the jurors arguments, which centered on
~·ho acquitted her Sunday or persecution of blacks in
murder-kidnap charges and America for centuries.
celebrated later at an ear· Franco said be related it to
splitting public party. Mexican-Americans.
The black militant made her Prosecutor AJbert Harris
public appearance at a J suburban night club where r., an assistant state attorney
general. declined comment on more than 500 boisterous sup-the verdict.
ur1 T•l•P"°'° WI NS ACQU ITTAL
Militant D1vi1
pounding or anything like that.
It "'as on a very civilized
level."
1'he verdict climaxed one of porters packed the <larkened During the prl\•ate cctebra-
dance floor. dancini:: to the lion .• 1t the h<Jme or friends
beat of a three-piece band. here, Miss Davis toasted het the longest, costliest and nlOsl
J\1iss Davis sat quietly in 3 acquittal and the jurors wi th controversial criminal pro-
booth wi!h her family an<l champagne. ccedings in California history.
friends while a dozen s trongly All' but three or the jury It spurred a worldwli:le n1ove·
built security men \varded o(( members sho\\.ed up .at the inent that rallied to the cty
onlookers <lnd dozens of 1 1 d M. 0 · "Free Angela!" newsmeo tryin" to get 8 pr va e party, an tss av1s
1> told The Associated Press that Miss Davis credited Utat
glance at her. the jurors received her warm· -;~~~~~~~~~::OJ Television and newspaper ;:
cameramen were ordered out ly and brought along their I husbands and wives to meet of the nightclub and three
Yugoslavian journallsl<I flown he~~ror Robert Seidel. 69, the
here by the U.S. Information oldest member of the panel,
LOCAL
EDITORIALS
Agency especially ror the The DAI LY PILOT verdict were rought)' pushed said. '"This was no slipshod
decision." Q 't Oft a"·ay from r-.Uss Davis' table. UI e e n
Dressed in a sleeveless red lie added, "I would say "'e F h C H II
top over black slacks, the had very few disagr,.ments ig ts ity a lima~nd~~th:e~y~w~er~e~o~f ~a~m~i~no~r~~~~~~~~~~~I bespectacled Miss Dav i s nature. There was: no table-
several times clutched her
hands to her ears and pressed
her head against the table to
blot out t he amplified musical
instruments.
The crowd. which included
numerous whites· and small'
children held on parenls'
shoulders, cheered 1 o u d I y
when f\.fiss Davis, 28, arrived
at the Safari Room, almost
seven hours after she had told
friends she would make the
appearance.
friends said she rested and
talked with colleagues for
several hours after a 31h hour
private victory party she
hosted for nine jurors and one
alternate.
The quieter party was held
at a friend's house where Miss
Davis had been staying during
the almosl 14 weeks of trial.
Jurors toasted Miss Davis
with champagne and the
former defendant s I rt: n e d
autographs. Some of the
jurors later arrived .at the
Safari Room fest.
A spokeswoman for the
Angela Davis Defense Com·
niiltee said that the defense
h<id cos t approximately
$25Cl.OOJ. She said contributions
would not meet all the costs,
but that the deficit would not
be known until the final book-
keeping.
(rlill ... Ill~ Allvtfll--0
TO ALL
REPUBLICANS
Remember:
CLAIR BURGENER
VOTED FOR AB 724
(Now state law, effective March 4th)
AB 724 me11ns busing to 11chieve eth nic
bal11nce in schools, costing California
taxpayers 11 BILLION DOLLARS.
BURGEN ER'S VOTE MEANS BUSING
GAGE HAS FOUGHT
BUSING
Elec t FRED GAG E
YOUR CONGRES SMAN in the 42nd
Burgener's Not Your Man!
COMMITIEE TO ELECT FRED GAGE CONGRESSM AN
605'/J Mi11ion Av•. e 0<11nid• e 714-722·1496
UNANIMOUSLY ENOOA51E D 8 Y CALl ,OllNIA 11•,UI LICAN ASSEMILY
Ch•les H. Boulanger +
Norman Ginsburg +
' John Hulbert +
Sharon Sircello +
for Irvine Unified School Board
Irvine Schools for Irvine Cbildren
I UNIFICATION I YES I + I
...... "" tty lmM y_,_ 11l1Ct"'°' Cl-nfM. Hthll H9"1, C"*-. 111•1 ~r W1y, lrTIM tttM.
'
movement for her acqWtlll .
"As w~·ve sa.ld continually
the winnmg or an acqulttal
would be a people's victory,"
she said. "It shows a people's:
struggle victorious."
The black militant said she
has not planned the future but
added. ';I guess we 're going to
celebrate some and steel
ourselves for the struggle
ahead ... I can begin to give
all I have to free all political
prisoners as oppressed peo-
ple."
!\1iss Davis said she had not
changed her bit ter feelings
about American JUStice. con1.
menting : "The "cry fact of an
acquillal means that there
was no fair trial -because a
fair trial \l'OU!d have been no
trial at all." She said the state
had no case against her.
It too k the jury 13 hours to
reach a verdict after a 13-
week trial. The prosecution
put !~ wiT''hesse"!; on the stand
and inlroduced 201 exhibits in
its seven·week presentation.
The defense put 12 witnesses
on the stand in Its three-day
"abbreviated case.'' '1'
\J,I T•l.,.hotO
SHOW S J UB ILATION
Attorney Leo Branton
tr ied to prove that Miss Dl!lvis
~-driven by passionate love
for convlct·author G e o r g e
Jackson to t'ngage 1n a con--
spiracy to free him and that
sbe plotted with George's
brother, J onathan, 17, toward
that end.
But the plans went awry, the
prosecutor sa.ld, and violent
death was the result for
Jonathan, c<>nvic ls J a mes
McClain. 37. and WiUia m
Christmas. 27, and Superior
Court Judge Harold llaley.
Ma gee was wounded.
Four guns found 111 the van
In which the escape \.\•as to be
made were registered to J\liss
Da vis. She had 'anished. and
on Au g. 18 she "'as placed on
the FBl"s list of 10 nwsl·
"'anted criminals. On Oct. 13,
she was arrested u1 a
downto\•:n New York hotf'I
"'ith a man later :11·c1u11tc-d of
harboring a fu)'.:!1ll\'t'.
' -,
\\'hen the jury 1t•ft 1 he
rourtroom for th1• la st !1111<'.
l\1iss Dal'is joinl'd her family
l!nd fr1tt1ds in sustained ap-\
plause, with drft·usc altorney
Howard Moore Jr. 'ho"tin.:' '
'·Po1ver lo the JX.'Op!l'! 1'01ver
,
'Pu{di
'·
•• .a.~
S~cla/
CJJrters ,1
;,
' ·'
·~
,.....,.now for ··
• c:h•ll•nging C•rMr 1,
... MEDICAL ASSIST· •:. I
ANT,MEDICAL OFFICE ~·.
RECEPTIONIST,OI' DENTAL ~~I
ASSISTANT/RECEPTIONIST in ~· ,:. I Clllf rnod ... n fKillt*. An el+tibWI indi-
tution und•r 1tw-FEDERALLY INSURED
STtlDENT LOA N PROGRAM M.t APPROVED 1
for VETERANS 1/Mf d•IJllncMntl. T"ition PAYMENT ., 1 PLANS 1\t11l•bl•. Lil1t•m8 EMPLOYMENT REFERRAL
SERVI CE tt no •cklitiorwol CXJt.I.
ACCREDITED
~ th• Accntlltlnt C..n.SNlen •• IM
Notloriol Al1•dotl•11 of Trt1H •IMI Techftl&•l ldtHZ.
Wrrt• •t Pk no r•r ,,... ,,_..,,..
,.
i " '
··There were no arguments,
just discussion." said f>.1r s.
'fi1nothy, 51, a Stanford
University medical research
assistant and wife or a Palo
Alto attorney. "It was
unanimous. \Ve talked for
quite a \.\'bile." .
thr jury's think in~ in reaching
the verdict. Sile t''.plailll'd tlns
n1 ighl ha\'C ar. e!fe>ct un the
upcoming t r i a ! of convict
Jluchcll r-.Iagee, \\•ho \.\'aS in-
dicted on the same charges as
Miss Davis.
to the jury ~"
Just before shl' \\':'IS engulfrd \.~~iii~!i~~~~i~~~iii~~ by the sobb ing. eh('t>ring
cl1:inti11g thrun).( ~li~s f)a\J:.
!i<l\V her nephe"·· llenj1l·. son
of her brother BL'll ll:'lv1s. a
defensive halfbaL·k \1·1th the
Cleveland Bro'"·ns. She swe p1
him up, nuzzled her \11rgc Afro
hairdo in his little une, th1·n
held him 'back and said
l\<1rs. Tin1othy, a women's lib
ran who wrote after her name
on some of the verdict forms
"ForeMs," refused to discuss
During seven weeks of
testimony, the prosecution quietly. "\Ve .,...on~··
(
a -c
' . •. _.>.. .,, ellVI
' .
... , ,...;..,, ~ -
Its one reason we need
additional power: plants.
-'
'l'here are days in Southern pollution controls.
California when some Electricity for more
kids aren't allowed to play. sewage treatment plants.
'l'he air is too polluted. Electricity to recycle
What will it take to clean waste products.
the air? New inventions Edison must bepennitted
for on~ thing. More ' J to build additional power
electricity, for another plants now.
, ' h • • d And transmission lines to In~_recentl.2-mont peno , deliver that power. for instance, more than •
500 patents granted by the Nuclear power plants are
U.S. Patent Office dealt in onewayto provide
someway with environ-additional electricity.
mental problems.And more They're clean, proven and
than half of these-275 smog· free.
of them-need electricity Otberways tO generate
to make them work. electricity are under
Electricity for new air int.ensive research or being
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
developed now.Meanwhile.
the technology of
conventional generating
plants which bum fuels is
steadily being improved.
These fossil fuel plants
still have some adverse
environmental impact, but
not enough to outweigh
the contribution they
will make for a cleaner
to morrow.
Electricity and a cleaner
environment.
The two go together.
E
•
•
,,
j
I
I•
..
'
•
•
I
l DAD,Y PRO'l' EDITORIAL PAGE
Wenke and
Two candidate races In .Tuesday's primary elec·
Lion have signltlcance for all of Orange County, although
not all Orange Countlans will be cutlng ballots In them :
11.t SuperviSOtlal District: Because ol Robert Bat ·
tin's extraordlnarily bad performance in county govern·
ment, the DAILY PILOT believes it ls urgent that he be
replaced as county supervisor.
The outstanding candidate opposing Battin ls Wil·
Jiam Wenke, a Santa Ana attorney wi th a broa d gras;1
of county government and county affairs. Wenke h;
hi ghly recommended.
39th Con9ression1I District: Re~ublicans will be
selec t.ing a nominee fron1 three Candidates. ln view or
incumbent Rep. John G. Schmitz' sad record of rep re-
senting the radical right and not the citizens of Orange
County or his party, the DAILY PIWT recommends
Andrew J. l"Jinshaw.
Ten Ballot Pro1>ositions
Ten propositions will be on the ballot for voter
action tomorrow. One of these -Proposi tion 9 -has
become highly charged with emotion because it purPQ.rts
to be the answer to California's envifonmental prob-
lems. It therefore warrants the most careful scrutiny
by-every voter.
The DAILY PILOT continues to oppost Prop. 9 for
many reasons: _
Prop. 9 would impose so many restrictions in the
name of "improving environment" that transportation
would _..be l!(jppled, food production would be endan-
gered "an~ ~er shortage would be almost certain.
Even new anti·poUution programs will require inc.reas·
ing our electrical energy supply.
curulled. Tho result would be jeopanlizing many
thousanda or Jobs
ThC><• hardest hit by the job dWocations and by
th& arbitrary gasoline slandard.s would be the loYt'er
income and minority citizens.
A NO vote on Prop. 9 is: imperative.
On the other nine measures, the DAILY P!WT's
recommendations are as follows:
Proposition 1: Bonds for farm and home aid for
Ca lifornia veterans. Co!lts taxpa yers-noth ing. Vote YES.
Propo1ition 2: Orange County districts will need
loa ns from lb.is source to build needed schools. Vote
YES.
Proposition 3: Assures, adequate defense for ci ti·
zens charged wi th the most serious crimes. Vote YES ..
Proposition 4: Open primary would deprive candi-
dates of right to decide which primaries to enter and
would weaken party responsibility. Vote NO.
Proposition 5: Req uiring Senate approval or UC
Board of Regents appointees would inject more political
considerations into UC governance. Vote NO.
Proposition 6: Would permit n"aturalized citizens
--. .... to vot~ after they,, becon1e citizens instead of 90 days
later. Vot e YES.
Proposition 7: Pre vents forcing homeowners to
5e1J to commercial and industriaJ developers by prohib-
iting taxing property on basts or potential use. Vote
YES. '
Proposition 8: St ricter standards for state Board
of Chiropractors members. Vote YES.
Proposition 10: Eliminates obsolete and unneces-
sary provisions of state constitution. Non-controversial.
Vote YES.
The two key elements in the state's economy, ag-
riculture and truck transportation, would be seriously
In summary, the DAILY PILOT recommends YES
on Props. I, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8 and 10, but NO on 4, 5 and 9. 'fRllON? THIS I~ AN ASYLUM1 (O~RAbf) ANb THAT> OCCUPATIONAL THEMP'l'
Nixon's Exceptional Document
.Idealistic hut Practical
KIEV, RUSSIA -If anyone had said in
1959 that Richard M. Nixon would go to
Moscow 13 years later and work out what
amounts to a trea"ty of friendship and co-
operation with the Soviet Union, he would
have been called a foolish dreamer.
That is the effect or what one time Red
hunter Dick Nixon
has done in an ex.
ceptional document
defining the tone and
spirit of America's
relations with Rus--
sia, It is not strictly
a treaty and will not
have to be confinned
by lhe U.S. Senate.
But it is a statement
of b a s I c principles of relations
between the U.S.A. and the USSR
which is a kind of moral and
ethical code entered into between the
Nixon administration and the Brezhnev
regime.
AS PRESIDENTIAL Advisor Henry A.
Kissinger, the leading drafter of the
declaration, said it is nothing that can be
waved In the face of the Russians to
cause them to desist from bad behavior
in the future .
But the Nixon administration and the
Hrezhnev Regime would make them·
seJves ridiculous to the Point of
venanty in the eyes of the world if the 12
basic principles of the new relationship
become merely a scrap of deceptive
prose.
The great superpowers have told the
world they wi ll avoid con frontations
v.•hlch might lead to nuclear war. They
have taken with the utmost seriousness
( Rl(]JARD WILSON )
their responsibilities to exercise restraint
and negotiate and settle differences by
peaceful means.
IT IS AN IDEALISTIC document with
few precedents in relations between na-
tions which have conducted their affairs
in degrees of extreme hostility for most
of the 50 years of the Soviet Union's ex-
istence.
Can this all be believed? Is it con-
ceivable or possible th.at mutual trust
between the two bristling superpowers
will quiet down the world and Jet
mankigd proceed with the work of im-
proving the condltion:1 of llife?
There are ,practical reasons why this
may be plawible. Agreem'ent on coexis-
tence as the guiding principle in a dozen
areas will in the future bring toaether
thousand' of American and Russian of-
ficiali on ongoing meetings, conferen ce
and studies for a period of at least five
years.
THE COMPREHENSIVE figure on
these contracts may involve directly and
indireclly tens or thousands of technl-
c i a n s • scientists, environmentalists,
diplomats, military officials, economists,
space experts, astronauts on both sides.
Contra cts of this kind can be expected
to cut far deeper than the cultura l ex·
changes of the past decade or so. Those
contacts fringe on ideological questions
which arise over the nature or art,
literature and theatricaJ and musical
works. The Russians have different
Ideological concepts than the new thought
of the West in this fie ld and the only safe
areas are in classical music, ballet, opera
or in non-controversial popula r en-
tertainment.
JN THE FUTURE the men and y,·omen
on both sides are to be brought together
in those areas of cooperation where
Ideology does not COlUlt for much. Even
in economics, the Russians and
Americans know where and why they
disagree and can move on from there to
consider the practical questions of
economic relationships between a
capitalistic state and a socialist state.
The Russians and the Americans wiU
meet on their O~'Tl respective grounds and
in other capitals to begin the develop-
ment of complex relationships. They now
know it is possible to overcome dif·
ficullies whic h were previously con·
sidered totally insuperable. The nuclear
agreement is evidence or thlit.
BUT TIIERE IS perhaps even a
stronger incen ti ve. Both sides know that
if they unleash nuclear military power
they can destroy the world's society,
which includes their own.
The way ahead is not easy. It is still
difficult for Americans and Russians to
find common ground even in non-
ideological fields. Nou.· the m any
thousands of Americans who will be mov-
ing onto common ground have a set of
principles to go by. Idealistic, yes.
Impractical, no.
Candidates and Charisma
..
In a year like this. political writers
have more fun than non-political writers,
but If the latter will cast about they may
come on news which touches the political
scene without getting tears in the eyes
over some candi-
date. "'1ost of these
fringe observers.
though. are sober
folk. without much
charisma .
So take the word
charisma. It isn't in
the 1940s dictionar#
ies. but it's In the
!970 dictionaries, and
came into use when dea lin g with Jack
Kennedy, l t means a quality of leader#
1hlp whi ch inspires or captures the popu-
lar imag ina tion.
Here is Dr. Abraham Zalenik, a
Harvard psychoanalyst, who avers not
(Ille; or the 1972 Presidential candidates
OllAptOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
llobert N. Wted, Publ;,htr
-, Thomas K<<Vil. Editor
AU>m w. Batu
Jdi!Ofial Page Editor
-edltodal -" the Dolly J'Uat t«kl to Inform and 1Umu-late ~ by prNentlng this
~· oplnlonl alld avn-tnlftUll'.)' cpa topics of lnt.!re.t and ~ by pnWldinr a forum
for -~fon o1 ·our T"l"llidr.rs" "IJ!nlonl. ilnd by pramting thl! ~..,_ vlll'Wpolnta ot Wonned 00..
-.... """"-"" lDplal ot lllo cto¥.
Monday, Jun~ 5, 1972
•
•
( ROYCE BRIER
) • candidates to guide them. True, they did
so in the past 'vith Millard Fillmore,
Rutherford B. Hayes and even Cal
Coolidge, but those were different times.
You might include in the foregoing,
George Washington, who didn't have
much personal charisma. All he had
going for him was that he had won a war
that needed winning if there was to be a
President. Winning wars. howe ver. is not
much admired in our day, aeid you'll
notice there isn't much ol it going on,
either.
has c,harisma. He classifies the charismic
as "n1aximum" men': aod the non-
chari smic as "minimum'~ m'en. lie says
the latter are always trying to ~:ear a
predecessor's mantle, at present lhe Ken-
nedy mantle, John and Bobby.
BUT IT JSN 'T WORKING , and nobody
Is choked up. Fifty years ago it was the
Lincoln mantle which was up for grabs,
but this manlle was a little large and
burdensome for everyday wear. and most
public men have now abandoned it as an
awkward garment.
Another word related to charisma, but
al the negative Pole, is "effete," which
tht Viet President coined a couple or
years ago in the phrase "effete, In-
tellectual, sop histicated snobs." Jn San
Jose recently a meeUng ol lhe United
Republicans of California, which bas a
Jow opinion of Richard Nixon, endorsed a
J ohn A$hbrook cf Ohio for the Preslden-
cy: Mr. Ashbrook straightway said the.
Nixon admfnL'ltration contains some effete
snobs, and that be was alluding to Dr.
Henry Klasing er, the Pruldtnt 't chief
foreign adviser.
U Dr. KWln1er'1 friends , u la
reported, include Mlsa Jill St. John, the
comely, intellectual actress. ht may have
to confess. Anybody who can escort Miu
St. John to solrees, has not only come
down with cbari&tna, but is perhaps en-
titled to some momenta of e111lted snob-
biahneu. But of course KIQinger Isn't
runnlJ1i for office.
So we may have to rail back on com-
mon sense, clear thinking and int egrity.
Yet these are qualities even harder to
come by than charisma, which can be
projected by .any featherhead. Possibly,
therefore, the people will have to supply
the common sense, clear thinking and m.
tegrlty. On the last walk to the palls, they
always swear they are going to try, and
now and again they have succeeded, or
we would have been snowed under , but It
i.!D't eaay for a whole people, who are oc ..
culonaUy a little short on c)ulrisma, too.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Those night bike riders (and I
don't mean kids) rtal{y llk'e to
live dangerously, Riding without
a renector ju~t might be as bu.
ardous to their health as careless
drivers and smog.
-B.O.
SO TIIE QUESTION retum1 to how lhe n rt tNtvn , .. ""' ,...._. .,....._ ""
American people are IOln& to elect a uc .... ro, .._ " 1t1e ............. s.-
Prtsldcnl this year without charUmlc -'--___ ,.. _ _... __ .,_•_-__ .... __ ..,_•_•_""_·_,
• i
Communists
Won't Allow
A Free I!ress
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
LONDON -The Communists like to
call it "objective reporting.'' Anything
eve n slightly Wlfavorable to the Com-
munis t position must be excluded. lf a
we stern correspondent finds such stric-
tures difficult to observe, he loo must be
excluded.
When the Sovlet Foreign Ministry
recently expelled David Bonavia or the
London Times, It accused him of
''systematic activities incompatible with
the status of a foreign correspondent.·•
Bonavia, who had been reporti ng from
Moscow since 1969, was persistently at-
tacked in Literatumaya Ga zeta
(newspaper of the SoViet Writers' Union)
for his lack of objectivity.
The British Foreign Office stated that
it "deeply deplored" Bonavia's "un·
justified and unjustifiable'' expulsion.
And the Times editorially questioned how
"restrictions of freedom or in formation
are compatible with Russia's Professed
desi re for closer East-West cooperation."
AN ASTUTE FRENCH visitor. the
Marquis de Custine, wrote 130 years ag o
that "to enter Russia you must deposit
you r free will along with your passport at
the frontier .'' LitUe has changed since
the overthrow of the Tsars. A reporter is
regarded as a guest first and a cor-
-ttspondent second, and thus is expected
to conform wilh local custom s.
The reasons for expulsion vary.
Newsweek co rrespondent \V h i t m a n
Bassow was ordered out of ~loscow for
cabling a joke about Nikita S ,
Khrushche\'. Norwegian reporter Per
Egil Hegger was kicked out for in·
t er v i e wing au t ho r Alexander
Solzhenitsyn. CBS correspQndent William
Cole wa s ousted for filming the views of
di ssidents.
Roger Bernheim, fonner correspondent
for tbe Neue Zuercher Zeitung, recount s
how an American journalist intending to
take a picture of a queue in front of a
Leningrad vegetable stand was brough t
to trial and fined 30 rubles for
"rowdyism." There is no law against
photographing queues. But an "olr
jective" correspondent does not notice
queues, wooden houses. drunks, poor peo-
ple, or even the innocent-looking abacus.
COMMUNIST EASTERN Europe has
taken up the Soviet call for "objectivity ."
The Czech government ousted three
l tallan journalists for "smear reporting''
earlier this year: one of them was
Fernando Zidar of L'Unita, the Rome
Communist dally, Pres ident Nixon, who
is scheduled to arrive in Warsaw on May
31 , was refused a visa by the Poles Jn
1967. They gave no reason .
When this correspondent asked Polish
university students in 1"5 what the·y
thought oL the .electoral procetS, Foreign
Ministry officials were incen.~. Such
questions, they explained, had no plate In
''objective'' coverage of a major political
event -ip this case, an election in which
Party Secrttary Wladyslaw Gomulka was
assured or at least-ti percent of tht vote.
DISCVS81NO the--• 1 b u r d e n or
responslbUlly . on the reporter," Pope
Paul suggested 'In 8 speech marking
World OommunlcaUons Day that the
weight ts becoming Intolerable. A
reporter "Is called upon DOI only to give
the atmple facts of a cue but also &o ex~
plain )t!I lmpllcatioos wttb com~t,
assessment or forecast." Communlat
editors cannot betln ·to uotlentond this
role as It applies to western cor-
respondentt. To them, nPGrlln« ls not 1
responsibUlty but a licensed ptfv1l•1•.
Doctors Need to
Learn to Listen
There have been a lot or advances in
••medicine'' in the last half·century. bu t
not nearly as much progress lo "doc-
toring." The treatment of diseases has
made great strides; not so the treat1nen t
of palients.
U· I \\'ere running a
medical schoo l. the
first thing I would do
is institu te a course
i n communica-
tioos'' for entering
students. By "com-
m.uni ca tiom," I
mean not only teach-
ing the medical stu-
dents ho\',r to talk to patients. but, n1ore
i1nportantly, how to listen.
SOME 50 YEARS ago, Dr. Joseph
Collins pointed crul to his colleagues that
a patient may have a very common
disease in his own very personal way :
and that it may be less importaol v.·hat
disease he has than how he has it. S1me
doctors, he said. plot their ··cures" after
!he na mes of i!lnesses -which is like
judges who decide cases after the names
of crimes.
Psychia try, which should know better,
ls often guiltier than general med-
icin e. Terms such as "schizophrenic"
and "iovolutiona l" may say more about
our present ignorance than about the pa -
tient. Labels belong on bottles. not on
people, but how often v.·ill a doctor re-
fer lo "the cardiac'' in 193 or "the gall-
bladder " in 510?
WllAT MEDICINE needs-in terms of
effective communication -is two sets of
languages, one for internal use among
SYDNEY J. HARRIS
the profession, and another for external
use y,•ith palieots and their families. The
layman simply does not understand
medical terms. and is only confused and
£rightened by them -as he should be,
because medical terms deal only in
generalities. and he feels himself to be a
specific person, pot a "case."
Indeed . there shou ld be no "cases" ir
medicine were as rational as it pretends
to be. There are only particular perwn5
v.1ho respond to particular illnesses in
particular ways; and the kind of person
\1'ho gets an ailment 15 as important to
the full diagnosis as the ailment itself.
And lt is in this area that conventional
medicine falls short.
WllAT WE CALL "lhe healing pro--
cess·• is a seamles11 web of the physical,
the mental, and the social. The tota l
personality. and his life-setting , is what i:'I
bein~ treated. not just the disease. And in
this holislic approach, the communi cation
bet .... ·een the doctor and the patient is at
least as important as the drugs or the in-
jectlons.
There is enormous public resentment
against the medical profession for its:
<illeRed placing of profit above the pa-
tient's welfare. I think this resentment i.!I
IJrgely \\'hat psychologists ca 11
''displacement" -it is not really the fee
the patient objec ts to. but the feeling
th at he is just a number or a "case,"
and that nobody is listening to him.
Prop. 9 Widely Opposed
By J\IJKE ABRAMSON
Californ ian.!! from all "'alks o( life.
from both major Political parties, fr om
labor. Industry and business, from city
and Jarm -have joined together in eom-
mon cause· to stop destructive Proposit ion
No. 9 from t h r o w i n g the state into
economic chaos come June 6.
' ·This list or people and organizations ap-
posing No. 9 reads like a Who's Who of
California.
The top echelons or state government
are against the measure. starting w.j th
Governor Ronald Reagan, Lt. Governor
Ed Reinecke, ControUer H o u s to n
Flournoy and Norman L iv e r m o r c 1
Secretary of the Resources Agency.
THE PREVJOUS Democratic ad.
ministration is welt represented in
former Governor Edmund G. (Pat)
Brown, who' calls Propasition No. 9 "fan-
taty." · COn(resBmen opposing tt I n ~ 1 u d e
DernoCrats Chet Holifield and B.F. Sisk.
Republican representatives include Craig·
Hosmer and John Schmitz.
In the state capitol, a host ol Senators
and Assemblymen frorn both part.les have
come out · against it.
&aunch all!I· mpeclecl conoervatlon
groups such as ~ Audubon Society/
Westem· Relion: tbe-Soutbem·Counell o
eoi-vatton Q.ubo; and tbe Cillfornla
Wiidiife Fed<nflon have Joined tbe rising
chorus agalnot No. I. . ' BllSINl'aS Am> t.All(lll hn• Joined•
the roroltont ol Ibo' lipt through the
,Colllomlo Lobor f.,.llon, . AFL-CIO:
The C81Uornla Chamber of ..COmmuce
and the Calltomla M anuf actu f e rt
~lion .. · .
NeW>peper oppositloit to Proposition
No. I bas been vlrtuaDy unanlrnous. 1be
Los Angeles Times. the I a r g e s t
ne\vspaper in the West, editorialized ear#
Jy against No. 9. Others include the
Sacramento Bee, the San Franeisco Ex·
aminer and the San Francisco Chronicle,
lhe San Diego Union. the Los Angeles
Herald-Examiner, the Sacramento Union.
the Bakersfield Californian, the San Jose.
Mercucy , and News. the Long Beach
lndependent·Press Telegram and the
Orange Coast QaJly Pilot.
RADIO STATION .KCBS, San Fran-
cisco. opposes No . 9. Three leading Los
Angeles television stations -KNBC,
KNXT, KABC -do, too.
All of them !eel that Proposition No. I
Ir; ~elf-defealing, counterproducttve. bad·
ly drawn up, confusing aDd ambiguous. It
takes a .shotgun approach to en-
vlrorunentaJ concerns that haJ caused
r,esponsJble c611servationlsts to crtns:e.
Proposition No: t is so Inimical to co~
servatlon, to employment., to the welfare
of minori~ and tO every C4UforniAn
that jt's no wonder all ooncanec:l'dtlunl
who haVilludlicfllie 11.UO.,. Joliiln1
forces against ft.
catUonla Fu0are Servlco
B". Geor,,e --
Dear George:
PJUse aJve me aome IJ'OUnd• for
dlvarce In Ne" York. . SOE
D<ar Sue: o .. , Sire, I'm eo buoy out here I
don't tli1nk I Ull.~ Id •!fay.
-1 ••
(Do you ha .. problems of 1 con-
lldentlol ...-i Write lo Otorge.
if ~·thlnt you .,..... __ st the big
blabbermOutfi).
A
B
on
m
mi
B
im
Co
Be
ci
lo
ca
ti
th
Ba
at
ac
co
Co
Gi
by
ba
w
ha
m
Po an
m
he
w ..
"'
re.
QUEENIE By Phll lnterfcmdi Big Chain Named
In FTC Charges
WASIDNGTON !UPI) -
1'hc Soulhland Corp. has been
·accused of illegally using the
purchasing clout of its 7-
Eleven grocery store cMin to
forte food companjes to buy
Southland chemical products.
venience stores in more than
30 states plus Gristede's
Groceries, Charles and Co. ·
Stores and Shops, Bradshaw
Supermarkets in San Diego,
and Barricini candy shops.
According to the FTC,
Southland "used the substan·
tial purchasing leverage of the
Southland Stores Division to .
promote sales of the chemical
division ... to the supplier cor·
porations of the s t o r e s
'
•
DAIL y l'ltO~ T
'fhe complaint alleging an il-
legal "You buy from me, I'll
buy lroin you" reciprocity
syste m was announc:ed by the
Federal Trade Commission
(FTC), which said compeiing
chemical companies ''have
lost substantial sales" as a
result.
div ision ." -----------1
''You can't refuse to have dinner with me. I've already
had a bad day ~my artificial plants all died."
~urderer in France
Facing Guillotine
Reached by telephollf! at
Southland's D a 11 as head-
quarters. John P. Thompson,
chairman of the finn, denied
the allegations .
"We don't have a n y
reciprocity,'' Thompson said.
"It's strictly against company
policy.'~
The FTC, however, cited
'Thompson and five other ex-
ecutives as we ll as the cor-
poration itself, claiming they
"planned and subsequently
entered into the manufacture
of certain specialty chemical
products with ,the objective of
selliilil8 such products t o
Southland's suppliers cti the
LIM OGES, France (AP ) -Cousty confessed to bolh basis o f ree.ipr.ocal
A French court has sentenced crinles. During the five-day purchases."
Bernard Cousty. 42, to death trial, he tried to retract his Tbe FTC sai d Southland
on the guillotine for the sells food c""micals through
d f h. ·f d h-confessions. '"' mur ers o 1s w1 e an 1s one division and operates or
mistress's husband. The last person executed in franchises more than 4,000
The mistress, Yvette France was a man ~uillotined stores through another. The
Balaire, was sentenced to life in tfarch 1969, also for a dOU· firm's stores include more
imprisonment for helping ble murder. than 3,000 ?-Eleven con-
Cousty kill her hu sbqnd, Rene1 lj;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1r1 Belaire , in a faked auto ac-1
cidcn t Feb. 23, 1!170.
The prosecution claimed the
lovu s shot Balaire. pusbed hi s
car into a ravine with the vie.
tim in the driver's seat, and
then set fire to the car while
Balaire was still alive. Police
at first aSsumed the death was
accidental.
Two months earlier, ac.
cording to the prosecution,
Co usty had killed his wife
Ginette on Christn1as Eve 1969
by giving her a lethal dose of
barbiturates . Ginelle's death
was alS-O thought at first to
have been accidental.
Yvette's son by an earlier
marriage, Gerard Belaire, put
police on the killers' trail. In
an attempt to clear his
n1other 's name of suspicion.
he fi led a complaint against
\Yhat he described a s
''malicious r u m o r s ' ' con-
cernini;t: the auto accident.
Cousty and Yvette ~·ere ar-
re,o;ted a few days later and
For
Weekender
Advertising
Phone
6424321
tP•ld Polill<il Advert1 .. m ... r)
For the Orderly Administration of
LAW & JUSTICE
,. . ,,
ELECT ATTORNEY
Fred M. Nelson
JUDGE
OFFICE NO. I WEST ORANGE COUNTY
MUNICIPAL COURT
Plld for ~y Comm!"" .. elKI l"rM M. Ntl-
Oorh; Hltks, c n1irm1n, )U )nl Stl'Mf, 1-t•llnglto! •Mell
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
1'11C1 PoHlk•1 Allv1rtl,•ment
FR·ED GAGE tviff te
A GREAT .CONGRESSMAN
(In the .John Sch,..ltz Tradition I)
REPRE$ENTATIVE IN CONGRESS 42nd DIST.
---~-
fFRED GAGE l81 I
UNANIMOUSLY ENDORSED BY ORANGE COUNTY C.R.A.
Paid For By Committee To Elect Fred Gage, Jack Noble, Chairman,
605 V:a Mission Ave., Oce•nslde, C1liforni1.
It said the firn1 even com-
piled a list of prospective
chemical customers by l."().
pying a list of firms that sell
food, beer and other products
to Southland stores.
Kids Like
To Ask Andy
P11C1 P111!k1l A1h·trtls•m"'I
·WHO'S FOR CLEAN ENVIRONMENT?
labor, environmental11t1, Industry, educators, scientists, government officials and
agencies, proteulonal and civic leaders, private citizens.
WHO'S AGAINST PROP. NO .. 9?
Labor, envlronmentalltts, Industry, educators, scientists, governmenl offlclal1 and
agencln, prolU.lonal and civic leaders, private cilizens.
They opeak torlhernoelveo and lor Calllorn ia.
Here is a sampling of our concerned fellow citizens, and
their organizations,, wh o have studied the pollution initia·
live and know its extreme danger 10 jobs, the quality of
'" California Ille and th e economy. That's why they 111
on • No.
•
AGRICULTURAL
Agricultural Council of California
Callforriia Agricultural Airer.alt Association
California Canners & Growers Association
Calllornia Cattlemen's Association
California council or Growers
California Farm ers, Inc.
Callfornia Farm Bureau Federation
California Fertilizer Association
California Grape & Tree Fruit League
Californla State Grange
Western Agrlcultural Chemicals Association
BUSINESS
Associated General Contractors 01,California
Building Industry Assodatlon ol calilomla
Califomia S!Jilders Council
California Chamber of Commerce
Ca!ilomia Gas Producers A5'0Ciation
California Manufacturers Association
California Real Eslate Board
Calllomia Retailers Association
Caliloroia Taxpayers Association
California Trucking Association
Far West Equipment Dealers Associa tion
Home Bullders Association ol Central talifornia
Pacific Coast Electrical Association
CIVIC AND POLITICAL
Americans for Democratic Action, No. canJomia Chapter
Black Leadership Forum, 5an Francisco
California Chapter American Institute of Planners
CaUlornia Republican Assembly
Civic Lugue of san Francisco
san Francisco Bay Area CouncR
San Joaquin County Economic DMlopmmt Association
Republican State Central Committee
ENVIRONMENTAL
Associated Sportsmen ol ca111orn11
California Association ol RISOUret C<Joseivation Ols~lcts
California Association of Sanitation Agencies
California Environmental Htalth Association
Galifornla Waler ResourGtS Association
California ~ldllle Federation
Eel River Water Council
Environmental Law Section, Santa Clara Bar Associ ation
National Audubon Society, W-.i l!eglon
Regional Antl,P~lullon Authority, Palm ~ngs Area
San Dltgo county Wlldllle Feclo!atlon
southern Council or Conservation Clubs
Sportsmen's Council ol Central talllomll
Sportsmen's COUncll ol 1111 Roclwoocl Em~re
GOVERNMENTAL
As..clltlon ol Bay Area Governments
Bay Araa Air Pollullon Conln>I D111tlct
Bay Arla Rapid Transit Dlslrlct
C.llfomla Stats Boan! or Agriculluro
County SopeMsors Association ol talilornla
lnigallon Dllbictl As..ciltlon ol talllomla
Kings Colrlty· £CGOomlc COmmlsflon
LNglN ol C.H1omla Cltit1
Los Antle1es Air Pollution Control District
Los Angeles Department of Water and Power
Metropolilan Water Ol$trlct of Southen1 Calllomla
Municipal License Tax Association
Plumas-Sierra Rural Electric COoperativt
Port of Oakland Commiss ion ·
Sacramento Municipal Utility Dlstrl'ct
Southern California Rapid Trwlt District
State Afr Resources Board
LABOR
California La bOr Federation, AFt..CIO
&allfomla State Council of carpenters
tallfomia Teamsters Legislative Council
Clvll Service Association of San Francisco
Federation Are Fighters of Gallfomia, AFL·CIO
lflt'I Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, San Francisco
lnt'I Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union
lnt'I Union of Operating Engineers
lnl'I Union of Petroleum & lnd'I Workers SIUNA. AFL·ClO
Los Angeles County Federation of Lal'lOr, AFL-CIO
Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers lnte1national Union
Sacra me nto Labor Council, AFL-CIO
State Building & Construction Trades Council of tallfomia
SCIENTISTS, EDUCATORS
Dr. Dan Aldridge, Chancellor, U.C.·lrvlne
Dr. Watter Ebeling, Prolessor of Entomology. U.C.l .A.
Or. J. Gordon Edwards, Professor ol Entomology,
San Jose State College
Or. W, L Faith, Past Pres. of Air Pollution Control Assn.
Alexander Grendon, CaUfomla's first State Atomic Ene rgy
Coordinator, now Consultant Biophysicist,
Donner laboratory, U.C.·Berkeley
Dr. Lawrence M. Grossman, Chairman,
Dept ol Nuclear EnglneerfnO, U.C.,Berkeley
Dr. S. A. Gunther, Prof. of Entomology, U.C.·lrvine
Ot ~ J, Hagen-Sclwnldt, Prol. ol Engineering.
talifomla lnstiMe of Technology;
Chairman. State Air Resources Board
Ot Allred C. lng0!$011, Aa!OClale Dean,
Engineering & Applied SCI""", U,C,•Berkeley
Or. Thomas H. Jukes, Professor-In-Residence,
Medical Physics. U,C,'8trkeley
Ot ~llard F. Ubl!y, Pro( qi ~lromnental Sdenca,
U,C,LA, and Member, State Air Resources Boarf
Or. ~ L London, Prol. MectianfcaJ E"'ll-lng, Sfanlort
Or. ~lllam ~ Nit1enlle<g, YJce Cllancillor,
Marine Sciences. U.C.-San Diego
Or. Rlcflard Pelley, Prof, Mechanical Englnterlng,
Unlvtr~ty ol San1ll Cla11
Or. Roberl Prati, Regional COordfnalOr,
Calll. Dept ol Agricutturo
Or ...... _ Ruby, Prof. Nuclw Engl1*'1~
U,C,,Berl<eley
Or, Leonard Sagon,~ OlllCIGr, Dept o1
Envlronmen1al Medicine, Pelo Alto MedlCll Clinic
Or. Vl'llll Scllrosk, Prof. Nuclear Engl,..ring,
U.C,,Berkelty
Or. Glenn C. 5eabOfV, Former l:halnnan, Atomic Ene111Y
Commission. Prolessot ol Chemistry, U,CAlfrkeley
Or. Chiuncey Starr, Dean, School ol Englnetfing, U.C,LA.
Dr. Edward Teller, Profusor at Large ol Physics and
Anoclite Director, Lawrt!lCI Radiation Labora1Dry,
U.C.·Uvermore
CALIFORNIANS AGAINST THE POLLUTION INITIATIVE
170 Market 8tr'9tt, San Franclteo, CA ~102 • 1127 Wllatllre Blvd,, l.ot Al'lgol••· CA 90017
233 A &rtiel. 8an Diego. CA 82101
Co-Chalm1en DR. IMIL M. MfW<. Chance.Jl9!..£merttua, UnMrtity of C1Utoml1, Davia
JOllPH .I. DIVINY, tlrtt V~reiklent, lntem1llonal Brotherf'looel of l111mster1 DR • .I, L McKEt:, Profea.ar of Envlronment11 Engineering. Former Member,
Advt.ory Committee on ftMOtot'8afegu1rd1. Atomic Energy COmtnl11lon
MYRON W. DOORMIOI, Pt'Mldent,, l«ltMm Council of Conaerv1Uon Clubs
•
•
-, I
I
. .
..
DAILY PILOT Mond.11, Jwnt .5, 1972
Officials
Lose Sleep
On I nflux
87 PAUL ROBBINS
PROVINCETO\VN, J\1 a s ~ .
(UPI ) -Jim Jlav.·kins hos
been with the Na tional Pa rk
Service for 14 ye1trs and h11s
sttn little or no trouble with
illegal sleepers on park lan ds.
He may be in for a new ex-
perience.
Hankins look over I n
January as head ranger for
the northern section of I he
Cape Cod National Seuhore.
The cape, with its miles of
beaches and acres or roadsi de
treelands, has become a
magnet in recent summers for
the ''sleeping bag set ··-young
persons who try lo grab a
night'.s sleep under the stars.
' -· --"~
UPI T.twMle
•
Executive Lauds Sh oppers
MILWAUKEE (AP\
(irocery shoppers aren 't us
1iupid a1 televis io n ad-
vertisemenUI s o m e t 1 m ~ 11
portray them, the pre!udent of
a Ca11rorn1:1 su pcrntarkct
<'hain sa~i
i..('O .\lu~~o acldrr;.S1111{ IJ\t•
~<1tu;n;d Chtl''c :-wm11\.1r ;11.I
JM pn.Klucers 1\1.11.1id J!lrJrl
rnore eon!lumcr 1nterrlit 1f
package labels carried rcl1oll lc
data about contents.
•1e r c c o tn m c n d e d in·
formation conceming nutri-
tion. calorie counts a n cl
pAc'kaging dates.
\\'om~n in nuencc 80 percenl
of cl('<:i!"ions 1i:ovcrning the
itf·ms 1n;1dl' ;n ail;iblc on
grocery shelves , and they "arc
not su<·k 1·rs. dcspit£• \\ hnt
:.01nr lth'V!Sion ach er\ls1ng
\1·ould ha\e you believe ,"
t-.!11S.'i•) :O.il\d.
llr is president r1f th1· Q F'. r Sturt·s Ill ,\(1rt h1·r11
C;1l1forn1;1
e 'f 'o f>rop ,A<ls
'
Actually, the F1'C a.a.Id, tbt
faltrat standard had not been
1~ed at lhe !Jme of the 1970
ad5 , not all Toshiba ovens had
been checked , the FCC merely
:1ss1gned the mic rowave band
1 .. r 0\'t:n nperation. and some
T··~h1b<1 O\ens lea k more than
1111· 1n1Jl1w<11ts radiation.
e Pills Deluhaed
NE WARK , N. J. (UPI) - A
n1aH-order firm that claims its
na tionnlly advertised ''Skin1·
r-.ltnl" diet pills wi ll help users
luse 10 pounds in two weeks
has been charged with fal se
rcpresenlalion.
In ;1 co mplaint filed in U.S.
Dtst r1ct Court, the U.S. at-
torney 's office said the '"Sk\n1-
J\Iin1s ·• will not perform as ad-
\"t'rt1scd. and stated that the
"i:onsrnsus or i n r 0 r nl c cl
1ned1cal opinion" is t ha t
they arc "not an effective
n1ea ns to control appetite."
from Chrysler told a Society
ol Automotive Engine er~
meeting that the: new bumper'>
will per1nit Chrysler cars to
withstand barrier cruhes of S
milts per hour in front and 2 5
mph in the rear without any
sign1ficant damage.
The standard calling for the
!"t-2.5 1nile bumpers on the 1973
mod els will ~ further stif-
fened in the 1974 line.
sunply recogniud "the con-
sumer's right to know ."
e itJUeoge Nore
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI)
In an attempt to prevent deal-
ers from tumlng back the
odometers en u!ed cars,
Pennsylvania has aMounced
th at in 1973 it will become the
first state in the nalion lo list
au tomobile mileage readings
on motor vehicle titles.
NIVI• AGAIN Mt tkk t..11111
wh.911 ~r ..SMt •••~W• e l>rug Bill Dies TOILAFLIX•
SACRAMENTO IAP) -The • Aide in QHlce Toilet ~Plunger
ph t. t ·nd t h Unlike ordln1ry pluna:en , 1"billllc~ armaceu tea 1 us ry as SACRAMENTO (AP) does root pe•m•I comprn•cd •'• o< won a battle in the death of a J h K hoe G R Id maoy,.,11rr1011.1luh t..k«eoc•pc.. bill that v.·ould have required O n e • ov. ona w1mn.;1,nr~1hclullp1c .. u1ei>1•w•
posted prices of the 100 most Reagan 's former legislative throu rh 1h<: clo11in1 m••• and
I d secretarv. , has been sworn in 1withn it down. common y use prescription as California's director of con-• suc110H-fltM sroll'S 5~st4.1Ac1t drugs . • ClHf[lll ITKLF, CAN'T P.ID AllOLIHO
T b·11 b k b h sumer affairs. • T•-11[0 TAIL GIV[S Alll·flG14l FIT he 1 . ac cd Y r P k r ti · th "
R Jn a short ta\ o ov.·1ng e Get thl o.nuint 'Tol llfl•.., l'agan administration. v.·as h · I h
d d ceremony. Ke oe Sal(. e 12•• ... , HAIOWA.11 STOllS vole own by the Assen1bl.v hoped to take "emotionalism" 1-..:.:;...::;:.;::;::.;;;;;;;..;;;;.o;;;.o..1
after several legislators said it out of the c 0 n su mer I"==========]
would hurt business. niovcmcnl. t, ~ ~
Ba ckers of the bill con· •le said he \vould inventory Andy's Fun
YOUNG PEOPLE SPEND 'NIGHT UNDER STARS'
Ma1Mchu1ett1' Cape Cod Area Is Popular
TOWN OFFICIALS llAVE
complained about the nuisance
factor of the sleepe rs who not
only leave garbage in some
places but also add little to the
economy or ·beauty of tht
\~'ASlll NGTON <UP I)
'The nl<1rketer of Toshiba
1-.ficrO\•:a ve ovens has agreed
to stop a\legedly ralS(' ad·
vertising 1-l'hich claimed s::i fcty
fron1 rad1::i tion leakage, the
Fedl'ral Trade C<Jrnmi ssion
The government, acting on a
request of the U.S. Postal
Service, obtained a temporary
res!raining order to detain a!l
1nail of the marketers, the
lnstitute for Weight Control, in
Englev•ood. K. J.
tended, however, that it would existing consumer laws in Ask any kid. "Ask Andy" is
fa vor consumers. hopes that California shoppers run. Sec it Snturdays in the
Co-author William Bag\rv could be protected without ad-DAILY PIL01'.
(R-San Rafael) said the ~b~;1;1 ~d~;1~;o~n~a~I ~\e::Jg~;s~l~at~;o~n~. ===_:*:;::;:;::::;;:::::;::::;;;::;;;=:=:"
'
~---.
Prll i1ic•I AdvtNiwmtnt
RE-ELECT· YOUR LEGISLATOR
ASSEMBLYMAN ROBERT E.
BADHAM
area.
Favorite largets for thr· h:is announced.
sleepers are the sand y The FTC said Toshiba fal se-e Caut iotl Vrgecl
beaches or wooded sites al a Jy advertised that all its
roadside rest area. rflicrowa1'e ovens had been DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler
che<>ked and met federal Corp . says the energy absorb-'The roadside sleepers who radiation standards ; had been ing bwnper system (In its 1973
plague the cape area ap-approved by the Federal Cvm-cars will meet federal stan-
parently aren't lll'I much of 3 municalions Commission, and dards but cautioned motorists
problem el.9ewhere across the would leak no more than five against expecting a dramatic
country, ace-0rding to a UPI milliwatts radiation per drop in property damage.
ALL·DAY CLASSES
Kindergarten thru 8th Grade
• Teachinf th e 4 R's with phonics
• Door-to·Door Bus Servic e
• Befor1 and After School Care
•Reasonable Tuition
IH FOUNTAIN VALLEY
It.Ill llrtlakhuril Slr~tl
1714 ) 962-3312
HAWTHORNE
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOLS
Keep yCHJr childrtn
in good hands.
Alk about our Day ca~
and Summer School. survey of state and local ". q"a•e centi·meter. Tw · t· ~"~"'.'.'..'.'...:'.".'.'.''.'.'.'.".'.':'..:....~~~~~'..:o'.....'en~g1~ne~e~r~1n~g~e~xeou~~·:''~''.!-.~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::=::=.o:oc=,,-,c::'.~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ police, park official s and other 1_
recreation area authorities.
Chairman: Joint Committee on
Atomic Development & Space
Commillee1:
Ways & Mean'
ReVenu e & To•otion '
Government Orgoniz.oflon
Wafer
EXPERIENCED RESPONSIBLE
REPUBLICAN
YOTEFOR
'
The eastern tip of Ne\v
York's Long Island rnay bl'
the ¥.'Orsl spot aside fron1
Cape Cod although authorities
in Callfornia also have had
trouble with the roadside cam-
pers from time to time in !he
Big Sur and Monter ey
Peninsula orcas.
"NORMALL V IF YOU find
someone sleeping where they
shouldn't be, violating a law.
you just point it out to them
and they move along ," the 40-
year-old Hankins explained.
"You're going to run into your
hard core who don't care fo r
anyone or anything and your
potential for troilble is always
there. But most people a·re
generally cooperative.''
Hankins supervises day and
night patrols of the woodlands
and vast beaches, including
the famed dunes outside this
~ ti#-the-cape community.
Hankins said his staff has
advised him the !!leeping bag
brigade posed little problem in
the past and he doesn 't look
for trouble this summer.
ROBERT E. BADHAM
1\-IICHAEL FR UCCI , ex-
ecutive secretary of the Cape
Cod Chamber of Commerce.
has a different view, however.
"It's a problem and has
become an increasingly more
serious problem ," he said. Member of tht A11embly
7 J st District, Colifornio Police in several com-
munities on the cape said they
don't have too great a problem
"'ith the sleepers, but public
outcry has lerl to tighter en-
forcement of the anti-sleeping
ordinances.
Sportwtd by lodhorri for Antrnbly '72 Choirrrlorl< 0iarWs P. Toylor
Ult •. CN1I Hwy., CM9M •1 M•r
A YES VOTE
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
FOR UNIFICATION
A ''YES'' VOTE fOR
LOCAL SCHOOL CONTROL
OUR own school district. --Local control of our schools. -TrustHs elected from our area. -Cantlnulty in educational planning ond
programs for grades Kindergarten
through Twel~h.
One tax rate iMtead of two.
A Financial Bonus from the state.
Vote ''YES'' on Proposition ''I''
'
June 6, 1972
T.l.M.E.* for Unification
*TUmN -IRVINE -MISSION VIEJO -EL TORO
COMMITT!E FOR UNIFICATION
"•N lw .., T.l.M.I . tw V.K.,... ~
.llftll L. --.. CMlnMll, 17"1 ,..... It.. tr¥•
I
'Has never voted for a
iax increase since first
elected in 1964.
,
•
-.
(~01..ITI C AL ACVERT1SEMCNTI
UThQS9
who will work
ought to
live better
than those
who won't!''
John Sch.m.iu 1964 1
"My legislation, H.J . Res. 651 and H.R. 10614,
to stop busing for racial balance fulfills a
promise made to the voters
in 1970 , .. an idea wlwse time has comer'
•
KEEP THE MAN WHO
KEEPS HIS WORD
•
'
,•
g
r
T
c
s
w
b
th
m
th
1; s
I
b.
g
hr
m
"' th
y
•
L. ltl. Boyd
Tuesday Biggest
Day for Divorce
,.fen who have become prematurely gray usually are
good natured. A ligh t-hatred man is always conceited.
Dark hair on a man ls a sign or loyalty. The best husbands
will be found among those with fine brown hair. Such are
the personnl convictions of a St. Louis theorist who aQ..
mits but rare exceptions.
IT WAS NONE other than Wilfred J. Funk who listed
10 or the nlost overworked words in
the English language: I. Okay. 2.
Terrific. J. Lousy . 4. Definitely. S.
Racket. 6. Gal. 7. Honey. 8. Swell. 9.
Contact. 10. Impact.
AGAIN AM asked if it's possible
to load transparent dice. And if so.
how? Nothing to ii. Just soak a side
or each selected dle In an eighth of an
inch of castor oil for about 30 days.
~ That \veights said selected side.
QUERI ES-Q. "\Vhere does the name 'Kiwanis' come
from?"
A. An lndiaf'J· word meaning "to make oneself known.''
The Kiwanis Club members are proud of this, you know.
They're also said to be proud of the generally accepted
contention lhat Khvanians are better lovers than Rotarians.
Q. "DID YOU say the water skiers outnumber the
snow skiers?"
A. J)id that. By five to two, they do.
Q. "\\'110 SAID, 'To my embarrassment, f was born
in bed wilh a lady'?"
A. That was \Vilson Mizner. He also said, "When a
woman tells you her age, it's all right to look surprised,
but don't scowl." And, "There's something about a closet
that makes a skeleton terrib ly restless."
BURT -Burt Reynolds Is a swirty. That light-lipped
portrayal of the now defunct Dan August didn't reveal
much of him. Neither did the naked centerfold photo , for
that matter, not really. Reynolds' ad libs bounce around
like a bucket of spilled ballbearings. Bucking "The Tonight
Show" on a neighboring network, he'd ruin J ohnny Ca rson,
I suspect.
UNDER CALJFORNIA la\V, a \\'ife can bea t her hus-
band \\.'ith a broomstick without fear of arrest. But he can
go to jail for slapping her on the bumper v.·ith a hand
brush. Isn't fair.
SA ID FREYA STARK. sagely : "Like the zero in aritb-
n1ctic, manners may not be much in themselves, but they
nre capable of adding a great deaJ to the value of every-
thing else." Nod, nod.
CONSERVATIVE bunch, the British, no? Then how do
you account for the fact Great Britain has more nudists
per ca pita than any other country in the world?
Add re ss mail to L. hf. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New·
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
VOTE JUNE 6th
FOR
C. William "Bill" Carlson Jr.
FOR
JUDGE
West Orange County Municipal C0urt,
Office Number 1 •
Endorsements:
v ;(tor ltrry, R••' E1t•t•' lnYtltmtnh, H1111tin9ton •••<h
Jam11 O'Bfi•n, Altorn1y, W11lmin1t1r
Chas. A, Endler, P•1lor, G1rden G10Y•
Dr. D•YI D1in1, D1n1;,1, Huni;nglo!!_ B1 1ch
Walter Young, A1ro1p•c1 E:r1cutiva,\Huntinglon 81•ch
o,. Jack Thomp1 on, UniYer1dv Prof11 1ot, W11tinrn1t1r
Dale Bu•h, Allorn1y, Hun!in9ton B11 ch
Eu91n1 Yin O.nk, A1r o•p•t• e:r1culiv1, Hunlin9ion B11cli
Ste•1n Ho lden, lnsur1nc1, Huntington B1•ch
P1ul 800 1, M1d«:a! l1bor1lory, Hunlin9ton le1cfi
Dr. M•ri1 Heng , Padielri cien. Hunlinqlon lttd1
l<en l11w 1on, A!lorn1y, Hunlington 811cli
P1ul Oard1n, Retire d Polict lt., Hunli119ton leach
01 . Ch••· Hell er, Orthoped;, Sur91on, Huntington l11t h
Relph H<9h1m ilh, Alto1ntv, Se al 81ech
M ... Marlene Bock, Ho u11wift. Fou11tein V1111y
J1me1 01len91, Pe,lor, Hunlinglo11 le1ch
Or. Ell a Mov• S1nd1r5, P1ychclo9itt, Hunlin9lon 811ch
Robert Sa1 1on1, Attorn1y, Fcunlei11 Velt1y
Lon Or1y1r, Accounl111t, St1nlcn
Norm Lang••••. Offic1 Equipm1 nt & Supply, W11tmin1trr
Pele Pe ler,011, Contrtclor, Hunl i11gton ltoch
Or. Donald Sliiplty, Co1111cilmen, H11ntin9fo11 lt1ch
Mr1. Yolandt Co11tr•rt1, ln1lructio11tl Aidt, Stinton
Al Coin, Mayor, H11nti119lon 8e1(h
Al Holli11dt11, Me yor, Fou11t1in V1ll •v
J erry B•mt , Attorn ey, Huntin9to11 lttch
Dr, J 1mt1 W. Me1011, Scienti1t, Huntin9to11 ltl(h
C1rroll Mohr. l 111lne11m1n, G•rd1n GroY•
Gtorga Scott, Co11ncilm1n, Founl1in V1llry
Jim• OtGuellt, DeGutlle I Soni. S.ltu, H11ntin9ton le1tlt
Ed J111t, Co11ncilm111, For.tnl1i11 Vtlley
Jotl Swi99111n, P11tot, Wt1imind1r
J1ck Gr11n, Co11ntil1nt11, Huntington l1tch
Cy Peltrion, Dr1199ht. Hr.tntington l1eth
0011 L lyr11t1, Jr., Viet Ptt1., H1111tin9tori H1r .. our Corp.
lornlt Sv1l1f1d, Cov11cllmtn, Fou11fei11 V1llov
YOUR VOTE
AND -YOUR SUPPORT
ARE NEEDED IN THIS
IMPORTANT ELECTION
Pohl '°' t1y ...... 1ttw te .-.Ct C. Wllllo111 "tnl"' CorlNll Jr,
Jffte: l9"rt J. 1'""'1' Cltttl"'"'"· 1 IOM' a.-11 11"4.
DA.fl Y PrtOT 8
Challenge the News Quiz
... on Saturday's Family Page
TUESDAY &
WEDNESDAY
ONLY! '
I'"-'" l"olltlU1 AfV~•--11
V o I e ''YES'' on
Proposition ''I'' June 6
hlll P•r ., T.l-"".I . p.,-Vfllflelt .... CMIMttl ... Jim L Mein, CMll-. 1,.,, M-St,. I...,...,
"
DAILY 10 • 10, SUNDAY 10 • 7
r:·· , .... ·$-~'l .~ l.._ '.<:.
r
,.~. . ,,, . . F--• • • '· .. ,~_ .... ", =; . l: ·~· '. (. -.
14" REDWOOD TUB .. -~~ .
SEAT /BACK , Clj!LD'S, MISSES' SANDAL
2 DI)'>
Onl.y 2/3 00 REPAIR KITS Regu/orl.97 --,DoysOn/y SOC !1
3-Strap sling-bock sandals made 1
4/FOR $7 .77 f of vinyl. Groat fashion,. 9-3. 1
Ideal redwood plain planter for house or patio. ~
Buy se Yeral at this low Km art price! .
" ... ,.,,.,,.. ' .~•¥¥1R1P~
• ~-
CASSETTE RECORDER
Reg.
26.BB
2 Doy• 19.88
c:onlpil l'i \\'4}l).l·~r.1in rl'~'t>rdt•r \\'ith rl'l'unl
lfl[t•r l<'fk ~\\ il lh, ru~h-\iut ton ''Oflfrt11~, •
60·minuta Blank C.sMtt • •• , • , , •• 16c
L "IAC. A•,.• Jltl ~
~~-.... -~: •• .:'1· -r. ......... ~-'f-"l?T~ ....
; • • ~
~ HAIR
Fit 'A" or I" screw on or slip.on ch•irs. With hardware. •·
Meny colors to choose from. Us• your Kmert Charge.
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
FRIED SHRIMP
DINNER
Fren ch Fri1d Pot•foes, Cole
Slaw, Roll & Butt•r, Tarter
Sauce.
'
r
I
I
I~
l
2'~" sterters.
colori.
1 """"'Z""""llll""'"""""-'""""""""""'" ~
~
PAPER PLATES
·' '
1,1
126/12 FILM
R•9. 1.24
I! t1 r. 77c ~ .. • 77c 46c
~ h1ir conditioner. 8 fl. 01. Kodak• canrldgc·lotd 116
film, 12 color print•. Savel or 16 applic•tions.
100 nine·inch, grease-re•
iistant white plates. Savel
(
FUSCHA PLANTS
17' ea.
PAPER NAPKINS
Pe ck•9• of 250 luncheon·
site, 1uper·1tron9 p•per
nepkins. In white a colors.
'
M Alberta Balsam® instant
lillllltf ..... lrf-.---........ ' ·"1:°-
.,.,..,,.....,__,,,,Ji •• "PA~IO HOURS: NOW OPEN 10 to 10 DAILY. 10 to 7 SUNDAY
.. .
' •
'
J 0 DAILY PILOT
Fo1~ The
Dissolutlmas
Of Marriage
I'• ...... MllY '
~Aond1y, Junt 5, 19n
Trnhill Namecl to Head Up
Unemployment Grant Group
' El Toro School ____ -'-~··~":'.'.'";·::·-~·------
Sued by Firm
SM"TA Al'A -An El Toro
achoo! has been sued for '5,000
by • Newport Btach firm or
c.'On.sullants for a 11 e g e d I y
ref115ing to pay the costs of a
financial feasibility study ap-
proved in a contract.
Does More Than Help. ShrinK
\Swelling Of Hemorrhoidal,
1Tissues Due To Infection
1.Also G.ives Prompt, l 'emporary Relid in Many ,
' Cua &om Pam, lrchin11 in Such Ti>Suu ...
and itchi nt in theae Liulle~ 'Pe:!l~ by Joct•r• J)toved thaf
true in n:vtriv •·a~t'!, _.
Sou111wit~. C~nTr.I• Ann .ofl<l .Jim•• C. a1n.-.11, J1•n,..tfe L. u1c1 1"1111 o.
1'1rr111, w11111m Mic,. .. 1 "'"" Helen
Lucien Truh!R, O r a n g e
County Chamber of Commerce
president and a e D e r a I
manager, has been namtd
chairman of an interim com·
mitlee charged with activating
machinery that eould lead to
$1 million in federal gran ts to
relieve unemployment in the
county.
minlstrator, Manuel 11feodtz.
Anaheim a r-c hit e ct and
member of a coun ty group to
aid millorily hiring, and Clin·
ion G. Brame, bu sints~
manager or the Internationa l
Brothe rhood o r Ele<>trical
\\'orkers. V.'Cre appointed vicc-
chairmen.
community leaders is charged
with developing an overall
economic de\'elopment plan
fo: lhe county, a mandatory
requirement to obtain federal
monl'y for public \11orks proj-
ects u n d e r the Economic
De velopment Act of 1965.
John Davidson, chief of the
planning division for the
EOA 's western reg ional office
111 Seattle, told conunittee
n1embers that some programs
niight be qualified in time to
Hubbub Sued
In Hubbub
Hennan Smith Associates,
359 San ?.1iguel Drive. Nen•port
Beach names the Parkland
Residential School. 23442 El
Toro Road. as defendant.'! in
l)octon hav~ found • rematl>·
ably suCCt":safuJ mdie11tion that
actually helps shrink .swelling
of hcmorrhrrid al fi$SUea whe n
infected and inflamed. And 1l
doe1 rr:o1e. In m11 n y CllSf'1' it
pvca; .rt·l1cf lt1r liour:i fiom pain
1'he mediNStion used was Prep·
•r<it1on H. And no ptaeriµliofl
is ""r<ded for Preparation tt•.
Oinlrl'lt'nt or :;uppo&ilorin .• -
the Orange County Superior =======================: Tner1w Drl•~.r. i•PICI•• M, 11\d Tlrnoll'IV L.
L .... ,, ... r. Glorl•ti• M. Ind L.•111' L.
Fr1loe, lt•!Jt •l'ICf Hll'l111 S.
Tticm11, ltl~rd M, 11'111 Gto•O•I Je1n
0. Greif. Jlover 0. '"" Nh1 M. Chi n. ~ ~ •nd E. Co.
WenlWot!'h. Yol1nd M1r11 11'1<1 DIV.cl
E rwin
H1rbc4, tlln1 An11et!e 1nd 11.tlllft Erll~}•
G&1P<"r. M1ri1 A, I nd Wl \!tr
F•rt, M••l'll• -._,.,. llnd flllly Evt 1ne
1'-te, ltOO.rl .nd Lvc•
Turl<A:, J~lt L. 1nd J•n•
tfoUf, O-J•1 Lft •"4 S!tollt nle Jef\1
M<.F1r1_,,,,, JOl'ln Htr~tl 1no:i L:ndd
'" lt11M. r ..... J11r1 •I'd OT!o f1i10rlt11
'" ll"•el!on. 1(1tllf'llf\ Jtnt 1nd fillel\ltl
Ken!
Jo;it>mon, '"'""'" l vn •l'KI S.:n11Yl.,. Wllll1m
ToOd, J1m11 E11ttM 1ng Vonnl1 L.e
kflltn, Cr•to<Y S, •I'd Oenl>~ I(,
nenst, Do•orliy I. 8fld L••ler L'.
Oo¥1, L~n• '"'" 1...:1 Jurin l"1ner1on WOOC:COCk, 'LI.... """"" 1"'1 l'lll!lllJTI J11rn1s
8ow1!n9, f u1ent i::. 11P'ld Alv•••
Wlntlo.e, Di•nne •rid llvr11t1 1,0,_
<ll•l1t1n10<1, O•vlcl l lovc •nd J1ne111
Al!ct
Nobl10. Sr., f'r1,,.,,lin £u11ot •l'!CI
Yvonne Clauelil
C1n~. NOl't Florene• •rid St !e,,no
(9tl'{nf, Th<>mi• l e • 1<1<:1 Sy1\t11 M•e
Olllund, Gregory P, 1r><1 Otn,.1 L1yne
Koohll!, MIJIO •net M•rl•dtfll .
Jal'lnt.on. 8e'vt rly Vo•nne i nd li on1ld
Ed'll<lrd
Deatla Notires
01 ROULHAC
David D. Rov.'landa, Hunt-
ington Beach city ad-
Th e group, eomposed o f
county gov er nmental,
business, industry, union and
In for a Shock?
Electrical Shocks
3rd Cause of Fires
re ct•i\·e gr:tnts in the fiscal S.\~T,\ AJ\'i\ _ A hubbub
~C'ar bcginr,Jng July I 11v1· n1on!l1s ago 111 the CostJ
lhe interim committet' \.\ill !\lcsa ~tore oJ tlH1l niune has
;:1ve \Vay even tually 10 a re.sultc·d in the filing of a
pl'rn1anent group ~·hich n1us1 ~5U.IJUO [;111 su1t by the mother
h:t\'C re presentatives or any (If 1wo grr!s \1·ho allegedly
minority group \•:hich ntakes \1cr c hnl tcd and sea rched by
tip more than 5 percent of the :>turc t·niployes.
population, Davidson said. ;i..1rs. Diane Lea Sink, :Jl09
The EDA progrum \\'a s tip-i\·lonroc \\'ay-. Cost;; ,\-!csa,
Could-Y!>U be tn (or a real baseboards'. Get rid of these proved by the Board of \1·:-u11s the darnages from the
shock because-o"the-condition . S upervisor s Tuesday _ Hubbub store, 33:~3 Bristol St. hazardous eonditions by hav· Supervisor Da1,id 1.. Baker of :ind e n1 p Joye s Karen
of electrical appliances and ing a qualtr_lt'd ('!ectr1clan In-l;arden Grove called the pro-J\"or11bci'g. Judah Lcnry <lnd
eords in )'OUT house ? stall new outlets where needed gn1n1 to the atten tion of board Dolly Sect·Q
0on·t wait for a shock or a and bring the e I e c tr i ca I n1en1hers more than a month !\!rs. Sink claun~ in hC't
flash of flame to inspect your service in your home up to the Jgo and urged act ion. Orange (;ounty Supcrior Court
home for electrical hazards -approved standards of the N<i-Thursday's s e s s 1 o n \1·as action 1h.1f h~'r daugliters.
when these things happen, it tiona l Electrical Code. collcd by County Administ ra-Gloria Lea tlendrrson. 17. tind
could be too late for both you e For :a final electrical safe-1ive Officer Hoben Thon1as fol ~ J<in<i J->nris Suik. !I. \\'ere
and your house. This is tbe ty check, look at the fuse box. lowinl? a board directive to hallt'd by ll ubhu b en1p!oycs
warning frorn Orange County Get rid of burned-out fuses. '"get the progr1un n1ov ing. ·• Jan. 21 and accused of stealing
Fire Chief Carl M. Downs as and make sure you ;ire using Baker said the count y's con· five S\l'f'aters from the store.
he sugges~ • check of the only those marked "IS ;unps" tinuing high unen1ployme nt She contends the employes
home electrical situation on except on speci al circuits status made it eligible for the later atlrnittcd their error and
the spring dean-up schedule. designed to carry heavier EDA grants for such projects allov:ed the t\\'O girls to leave
Court action. ..:
SHARON SIRCELLO
VOTE
Last on the Ballot
First For Children
First For Irvine
Vote "YES" on Unification
Elect Sharon Sircello
Irvine Unified School Board
June 6
1"11d F•r •v CMnmln" 1'• 11 .. etKt s~,,.. Slrceut.
••111 '•lk•nslt l" TrH~11r•r, 11112 Glllm•"· l r~i"•
VOTE l 11lrict W. OtRoulhl<. "" 11 , of 141<K Or~-Ave., Coste M111. Dtll ol del!n,
J unt 4. 1912. Survived bv hu.btf>d.
Gl t 111 1 0."91iltr, Ntr'ICY StV•te. S1n11
ANH lwo •t-1ut Mt r1, ~·~ Ke1;k •rid
111· 1:-.1 Jord•n. b(l!n of Ar~~n·.i";
SllPtoQn, JOHph Ot Roulllt(, ll!!lt Roe:~;
tl'lret t r1nclclllldr1!11. Mtmorltl 11rvlctt
Will be lltld Wl'dnesd1y, 10 AM. St. John
Int Olvlnt E<>i.C9"dl Cnurcll, 1n1unm1ll!
11 Ille Abbev. Or1n91. 8111 8 r111dw1y
Mortu1ry, Oiretro ...
Quoting the National Fire loads. f uses are electrical a~ industrial parks. tourism Both \•;ere searched publicly
Prote<:tion Association, the safety valves -never abuse fac:ilities. Flood control proj-and humiliated, ~frs. Sink '------------------------------------_,
chief says electrical defects· -~th~e~m~.~---------~"~'''..."'~nd"__'v~oc~at~io~n~a~l~:;<~h~oo~I~•~· __ c~h~a~r~g~e:•·~--------~==================================::.
OONALOSON
Rev. JOiin YI. Oon~ld""". Vic1r 01 SI.
John "'' Ol~lnt fD,!.£GPll Cnvrc n. C.n<.t•
l'IPll. Re5IOerrt cl 114 E. Wii sen S!,. (Q<U
M e••· 01te of dtl!I>, June I. 1'1?.
s~,Vltf! penoing •' Bell 8ro•OW•v1
Mc.rlutr1.
GillAVELLI!
..,ilGrta H11n1 Gr1vell•. lC1 Clift Ori~e.
Laqunt ll•ac.11. 01t1 ol cl••th. )une J.
1912, Survived by l!usblond, Earl l .
Grev•llt ; two 1on1. T.O. of C0<on1 011
IM •; Gtorte. S.n11 Ane: tiller. Elm•
M1rtl.,, Por!ll'fld, 0.-tton. PriV•t1 f1rnlty
1t1vlc11, TuttOly, 1 PM, P1ctflt View
Cl>•l>ll. En!Ofntiml n!, Pa(llit V-
M,tm~lel Park, P1tlli< View Morl1J1ry,
Q.r<~.ors.
HllH1'l
i~··e:1 H411nll. "~' ,I, of nJ0 Mlnf'f' SI.,
CO';ll ~w. 0111 of <1t1t11, J<J.,. 3, ''11.
5L,V.Vfd by d&Ulllll•r. M1•1 Mollen. ol
11!• ~om11 ..,,., Mlrtln ..,,1nr1, Ml<11l9"n,
sl•tor, Anni Sell1nlt11 brollltr, Frink l ll·
tvun~: .even ••t llCIU.liOren. Servlc~ •llCI
ln•,rmtnr will l>e l>elo In Pltl!'On.
M :<ni~e.~. Bell 8ro.ow1y Monu1r1,
Oir,...!o•s.
IT&:N JI(.
F r..O l!fn Jr. 1?<1 YGr~lown Lane, Co-ill
M•-~. Oal• of O!o11•, Jun• 1. !tn . Survlv·
ed by wile, Pet; 1-0n, How1rd F. Hen, N'""""'" le•th; Oeu1n11r.ln·l•w, Sus1n lien. Mi>nl>1t11n lll•t l>; 111..,.r, Fred lten
Sr . C~rl1b10; ll'llldfO<\, l rltn Fr..:1 tltn,
M1n1>1!11n 811di; sl1~r1. L1uri1 ti~,
Newport 8ttthl J1ne A.dims, Los Osot.
Mernorl1I :S1rv;cu, l ut..i11y, 2 PM,
Podflc View Mernorl•I Perk Mtutoleum.
lnurnenl, P1cifk Vi"' M•rt'l<lrlt l P1rk .
Peclfk l/itw Moduor~. OireClor~.
MOOlll
Vk 1or,a E. "'""''· ,t.11e loQ, of .01 Hun· t int!or. Ave .. Hunllno1on ll•1ch. 011• 01
<1 ... 1h, Jun• I. 197). Sur,,lve<I tiy hu">•nCI.
Frem<>nt; 1-0n, Jury (1r1tr, Foun!1ln
V1lley; tiro!ht r. J•mtri /II.. Pirtle, Co.n
M t11; 3f1t1r, Lorrlln• H~v\n!, 01kd111,
C•llf ; !wo frtl\dchlldrtn. StrvlCI ! will be
htl!I l utld1y. 11 AM, srnn n, C111MI,
IMerrnen1. W111rnl,,.1tr Memorl•I Pork_
Sm;lh! Monuarv, Olrtcl0<1.
OQUIST
JO!l'l>~int M. ()(lult1. A~ loO, ol 19U (our!
SI .. Newp-ort ll•ocn. D•!t <>l de .. 1h, Jun~
•· 19n. SurYl v...:I by douuh!1rs. Abbie
f'1:1 ~-°'" Corone Ot! Mor; Johonnoh
Oouh!. llewp-or1 lltftch; M v • •
It.· -~Ch ien, Vt" Nvys; •on~. K•rl
O<lui11, Stn Frtnclsco; Sltfll'ltn Ooul1I,
SI\ Y, //l.ustr1111; brolll1r, K ~rl S!lrck.
COSll Mt lll 1!111r~. Mr,. l!lrn1r Pi t· 1~r;on, Nt woort Eleac~; M'I. P•ul Hint,
01n1 Point i fhr" 11r1nckh1l~rtn. StrYIC•I
wOI: t>fl ht•d W'1:1nt!dllv, Jun1 7, 11 AM,
8 1lll·Coron1 Oel Mer (hl HI. l"r1vttt Jn.
l•rmtnl &! P~ciflc View Mernorl•I Ptrk.
lll1f!•·ll1rg1'on Funer1I Horne. ((l!"On1 Ot1
Mor, O"ectors.
"'" 111< I! It G.orot ~. P1rku, 1t'I E, Cllk tto SI.,
Coldw1te<, MlthiQtn_ 0•11 ol 011111, Juoe
J, 1972. ~urvlv~ 11v wit.., Marvertr El ,
Porllei. of Mlcl'll11an; •on, Ge-or111 8.
Par~t•. C'lro""' Ot l M1q llOl!ll l\Jer, JNn
H. Sorrl" l-luntino1on Beetll: five
or~Mc~Olortn. Serv:ce1 wer1 htld Sund1y,
J unt I, 1! fh1u-Ber11tron Funertl H<>mt.
1 .. 1ermen1 w•I! b~ htld 11 0 1k11rove
Ctmf!~r>. Colaw~Ter, Mlt l'llt •n. ll••lz·
8~r11er;m Fut>•r•I l-10fl"lt• Cor~"' dt l Me•,
For,.~rclinv Oireclo•~.
P!Kf
Dominic J. Pl'••· ln!an! 'on of Mr. i nd
h\". Sdn!<1'd P•Kt, ll'lO TJtt W1y, Co,!1
/lit~•· Ot!e or d~11n, Jvne 7. 1972.
Gravt~ldt ,.,y,ce• we'• ~·rc1 lod•v. t,\on-
clilv. 10 AM GOOd Shwhe'd Ce,...~r~'•·
81ll1-Ber11ero" Funert l H~mt, COS!f
Mttl, OlreC!orJ.
SCU LLY
M1rvl" fl. Scol•v. •ve ~8, QI 11' Cole Ci•·
cit. Co.ia Me••· 08!e of d•am, June l
1912. 5urv;ved l!v wife, 1a1 M, 5cullv; two
oeu~nter1. 09<olhv McCo<r.>ac~. I/Ion-"°''; Me,,hl FtMrn1n. MIU V•lley;
rnolher. M11ll1 Sculfv, Artlsl1: !•lier,
11:.••e-on l/ln<ent: 1IK tr1nacnlld•tn,
!>H"~i'e' wl u l>e 111ld to<Mv . Me<>d•v. J
pm, P1cltlc Vltw Cll111t!, with ll:tv. Loren
F llck1n<>tr otllclttlnt, Eltll Br,..dwav
Mortu1rv, director•. W•U
l ltll1n "Pat" Well. ••IOVKI Wi ft or "''~l'I
I. Wt ll; motlltr of cnr11tol>Mr 01vld
V/111; 1i1!11. of MrJ. Gerl Ptslt l.
S11rvlc11. TutsdtY. 1l :30 PM. in In' ll!llt
Churcti of me Flvw•"· Forts! ltwn
GltnOalP. FamllY 'u•trJtr. thoM ....,1,~1no 10 rr>•ke mernor;,1 con1rlbullon1, 111,•Se
conlrlbu1t to llM' Gltn011le Gula1n.:•
Clinic. 210 N. G!tt'ldlll Ave., Glend1lt,
C1Uf. 91106. Forut L•wfl Mortu1rY.
~AL TZ BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Coro na del Mar 173·"50
Costa l\lesa '4f.UU •• BELL BROADWAY
MORTtfARY
lit Broadny, Colla -LlwaJ
. M<CORM«l LAGUNA
BEACH:40RTUARY
1715 La .... ca.;, .. l!d.
49'.lllJI
i . PACIFIC-VJEI'.
MEMORIAL P"RK
Ct.melery ~ftdmry
ChaP<I , :9 Pldftt \:kW _Drive
Ne.,O,~~~ . '
rm f.um. v OOLOMAL rUNERAL
' -w11111aA ...
...... rl.., ••
-~· .LrroABY .......
? ·~:.llloq
!
are the third most frequent:
cause or the fires which
destroy or damage a n
estimated 50,000 homes in the
United States each year.
!!ere are some important
check poiuts listed by the
chief:
• f'rayed insulation and
loose tonnectlons on lamp, ap-
pUance and extension cord s
are .danger. signals. Repairing
-hke taping over frayed in-
sulation -is risky. Replace
the cord and be safe. <.'heck
cords hidden by fumJture as
well as those out in the open.
• Cords under rugs are in-
vitations to fire -wa lking and
vacuuming over eords in the
line of home traffic \Vears and
frays the insuJation to the
breakdown point. An equally
dangerous practice is rigging
cords over nails and hooks or
tr a c k i n g them 11 J on g
Professor
To Discuss
High Cou1t
Stanford University 1 a v:
Professor Gerald Gunther v.·i ll
diS<:uss tht outlook an d
pltilosophy of the U . S .
Supreme Court under the Nix·
on Administration June 8 in a
talk scheduled for the Santa
Ana Country Club.
"The Nixon-Burger Court :
\Vhere Is It C'.oing?'' "111 be
Gunther's topic in a forum
organiied by the Stanford Club
of Orange County and the
Stanford Law Societv.
Gunther, author Or "John
1'Jarshall's D t. fen s e of
1'IcCulloch vs. J.Jaryland, ·· is
one of eight legal scholars cur-
rently writing a hilltory of the
U.S. Supreme Coort. lie began
his law career -ar. l<11v cltrk to
Justice Learned f-fand.
Program ch ti irman Robert
A. Monzingo said the 8 p.m.
~cminar is open to all alumni,
p;irents <ind fri ends or the
society. The offering ~·Ill in-
clude reniarks by attorney
Robert S. Barnes of Newport
Beach. president of the Stan-
ford Law Society's Orange
County chapter.
Building Funds
Transfer As ked
SA.i'i'TA ANA -The Orange
County Civic Center Com-
mission has been asktd to
transfer $700,000 in the county
courthouse bond issue reser\"e
funds to the construction fund
to pay for completion of the
third Ooor of the new 11-story
courthouse.
The construction c o v e r s
33,000.square-feet In the north
winj? of the cour thouse
butlc!ing. The ,,·ork 'vill be
similar to that on the second
floor Of the structure \Vht:t~
the Central Pi'unicipal Court
racilitits are located.
Wbo's Voting for Clair Burgener?
_, C.•~"
''"'"'"' i ~4,,.. J..,,, •lb..:< "'"''I ........ . ro11.,1D ... , ..
,, .. ·1J_ ,_
D•l>'<l'I'
M ~ -~ ~ ... ,, ,., ....
~m1:1t ""'"'" 'w.a-' ,,.,..., It••
I ! '"''" "'""l wa .>. ' ••• , C...)to1' \ ""''! c ... ..
! "''. t~ ... .. toro:p,,(IOI"°" .... o. ...
•''""'"' n, .... l~1.1h"''"
.' ' f~ .... 11o1 .. , •• 1 .. ·J-'''""' ~ .. .,. G..,.
T.ll.,1111"°"'•" ..,.,.e,.,..,.,.
C I r.r'"'lllt
...... ..i ""'"-Now H,"" ... r''"'"' ""'' °""'". Jtll t..il.K•o.JI. ... ,,,.L_...,. -.l•'"'" ... i11 ............. n .. 1.H.~~af
~~.ir~~;".·
t>..i -'-".:""' O:rt I, Pr..~:, .. ~~~~lilo1 ~ t"·t:.t'tJ~·-j wu .... e ~ ••
... ,ty . ~ ••• ,,.,,, ,,.,; ..
~·" ~"':~ !(,,., :,., "'
l·~~'ltl•""" P:Nttr1._i., •ill!la-... ~~""'"' '""'~ Jf!l•.l.Yilt<I , ..... 1111-
l•ll J,~ __ _..
:'t'~~-•-•.t. .... .,.,..,._ ··-,,_
'''"'"""' ..... ~ lltr,IJ!n.lltwt...,_ 1.J....,_ .
lltilll .. I. ¥/!-JI.
4-''"'" •~t i lort!!Uf"4,ttl • .. ,.,,, r. ....... ....
~···' lot·e1•
"'""''' ...... hv 9<!gtt .... ~ .. La l;.loy
a.1t<h H ... lllt ..... -, • .-1., r.11 ... ..
-~·"•11><1 t 1 ..... .......... -... •&. ~ ........ ~., '"'""•J ......
.r ..... "'""'"' ~ ........... ,i, ... . ... ..... _,;. ~
~· a..-a.10· .. . ""' , ... ~ ~,~ .... ,
1.,..1,ol• · ' ... , .... ,~" ........ ~ ._ ........
",,' ~·· .,
'"" ! .• "' t 11 t:o • '"'° ··~ •J.o>o .,. ................ , -'Ct. I .,., Vott o JOI
J ·~ .,.. .... tor r,l•n .-..,1-
tor r. I II<'.!. l-"''"'1 II<·-·· . l..,q ''""" ........ II. s.a..,i .... ._ .. __
t·""'lo"'"' • ....... , ........... 11
~.T..':"l ..... ·s, .. 1 .. ., ......... ..,_ Jo_,..,.,
h illy h<ll<TI II' IM'1.-'1 0 lt1<•I v· 1 tor•o,,..,,e 1.,," ~-O'lot• ~"';)"It
I"•\. "" II I ~1' 'l.',I !J ~ "" ~ & " ' t • • • "' ~ ......
'1 ; I. ' •,.-., ~ c.-i"" ~ I ~ "''''~ ...... ,.,,. c ... . """' ,: ... .. :o~I R, r..•.Y
J ... e c."'' '' , w. a an.Jt01t-.wi ......... ._C...10!
M t.I"' ,...l .. t,J I C-...,t11111
"" ..... -1 r.w l""" t ~. ~.....,.~ ..
01111••·~ .... _ ,.,.,n a...-••. , ... """'! c.-• ..... ,~~\•'l
r .... , ..... t>""'"'"" •• • ••• llfwlfj ~ .........
llt I io'l •P.....'• l (11 •• 0
11<. 1..11t)t\1 '.lnort f, C1w. Q!!ll.C!
'""10 t _. C°M!ITJ"
11.f, I "Ii ,,.. """ "'·.I, 1"tl l'\'lNJ<(.et i. , ... I II l •.!II• I ::t ·-
•f:'wl 11. (fo-
..
-'"""~ ~ ~ . .,.~1..,
11 .. ,.-.
..... 11,.,_......ie-:
llt I lln °""' Co!I .... I w_eo. .. 1 ....... """' • .... r. .. ~ • ' c .. is 11!1 11 ..... t ~ .... ... ' •• , h •••t' •: .• ,,,
P,.,ool W, C'IM • .1 ••tNr.;.-... ,
'" I 11 .... Y.1 , l'' • r;_, • ... ,w,•_,;,,....-i '"'' c •.• 1,.. co.,,: .. -
"' lllr; h .1i:.--
/.l C"I'°"'" '" 1111;, ! t c.-.. .... Doh•· t,,,. .... c.,,,
torr.•"" Coto c.i."r Dr. I llo; C llo¥lf ~'IOl'""'I .,_ ...... Ml•i .. o.-,. ----l-1~~ loolj-!.-.. ~.
M• I 11,._ ••ti ... ~ .. :rt
!·'"'' '~· S1·~1o:I '"
D D '"""~"• 11< &II" llooM1 t;"'"' "· ~-,, .. ,. Ill ....... •>Ir-l f;....,. J&-... ,..,.,.1
Ml .... 111 ... f .... «<ft
/' .. F<J;•-
0,,.1.llr•.•,,_...,,,,
flc l "'~"'·0.~6""· . ~·~ ..... , ... . ....... "" ~
r. ' ~"'·'•'• "· , 0 G•" '
,, ••.•• J '" ' .. .... , r,,., ..... :. ,,,, ·-• !!O!l G•.-·•·•·~n .,.,,,.' . ' ~.1:r :.• ;·., , ......
.. 1"'""'"' "'A U• ...__t.o-•• lltl-~l"'l'tl [looof~,, ..
ll>IU<t• t r,.,,,,,. I f
M;lll"1'll-tlqo(· ..... ··-·~t-1• .... ~ .. v ... -.... "'·""" •''""'L'°'• e,""~1 ~ .. ''t.':11 ... c. ~ .... ., '"" ~ .. ,. ..
111 .... ""'""" ""' W1Ullll>'11"' W•IN "llt• I i)o>•G-,. r1 I ¥• l' [ • '
t .' -·-· ~ . . " 1 \'' •I''" Vl"f'I •...,~•
V I !J ' ••.,. •• -,, ". u ...... ,.~ ....
~·~··'''·•· •• ••• ,.. ... 1 ~··-l•. ~""' ' ..... Ill~ lff<-..... •.• ~ f'"'" ................
1 -h.-t.~
, __
\•""•-11 .. "'·I •o. l,_.. """"'-•· 1 1111. ,_ ..... """ J_ii..,.t;I . .. ~., ....... -.. ., •• ,.. t. '· ~ .. ,, __ _
:,. ! ':' C'! ~.:...~ "''"""°"'""-Cl11\o M>''° r10': .. ••rt"""
lb ••• , ··-"'· .. 'm"'·"""·" -~.in:t11tOllW1 111'.l.111'~1..MU ... ,, .......... " ••• f .... ~
to I "1<·1• • , ............
;
Weare.
Just about everyone is. Because Clair
Burgener is the finest man we can possibly send
to Congress.
We're not about to let our friends read our
names here without being one hundred percen t
sure of the loyalty, honesty and performance of
this man .
Clair Burgener is a life-long, loyal, working
Republican. That's a fact.
In fourteen years of elected public office,
State Senator Burgener has stayed close to his
constituents and lived up to his commitments.
That's the record.
We're committed to Clair Burgener's election to
Congress. So are thousands of other Republicans.
Let's make it unanimous on June 6.
Clair W. Burgener
United States Congress
........ c llo•' • Jr "'' .... f..,., ....... •>ti""' !!r•O~"~'' .,, .... (or1N-«-l""''""""Jr . ... ,..._,.,,rt_
o.-'"'''-•~m ... "°"''*' '"'·I .... ci-111 ... '""'111111 ••• ............ .. 111,,,.N__._ ... ........... -"' ' .. , '-ft Htlli.t .. ........ .-.... 1 .... ... , .. ,., ........... -M II • .......... .. ~ . ,, .. '"''' Y. I• ( ... ~; .. ,. M '"" ... _ .. ,,,_
""""' v· • 1•~ •! "'-""'' ... . .... ~., ....... ~ ,.. ''"' r._...,,_
tor• 11'1'1 ,..,..,.._
t •. "' c i.,u.o .,,,1,~i.. ..
°'1 1'11 ,~I --~ d, ...... 1 .... ..
...llll'l ...... -.......... u..,. .... -. ... """' ., ..... , ....... -...
J I!-. !Ir ..... .....,. ........ .••• ,..,.,.,,.,r
.......... .1o11.-
... 1 1111 ..... .-. "''"'"o•.-"''",...,.....
M' , .... ··~--.. . "· '• ····~ " • .,. ,'flo ........... -.. -...
... 1 "'" ... .. " l !lh ....... -,, ... , . '" .. ·-
P11id for by the B111aener !o.r C0'19fes-; Cc "'~' 11 ~~
.l eRoy Kru1tson, CMirmal\
:J•21 East Coast ~ti!l liwav
Co1on.;r Del "-!11r, CaJifor11h1. 92025
11< IM.-l .. ,J<. .,,_,.,. f•tflte ....
..... l. l<••" ... l ""· WIH1"" l~;i" t"'"""'·l•..._ J ..... l ...
l""""'l-"''-1.i<'t •.&•r-.i.; .. 1""'' ,.,,,,,..,,.._,l•"I "
!-., W, l"I • ""-' '""'i .. ... •icof1 lt'" ........ ,_ ........ .
•' I II!< V"""•• "(C."1 ~· 111<t1t-
.,. '.,, .• ,., llrC-.,
.. . I •ra.ll"lo 1 llct ... ,,
,., I lllO. [\M tol~lo-... .l .. .• •ri. lot••'"' ... O• I 1111 . .loo'1 M"'""*
1:.;o 1rY W;:oo1ri 0<.1 .... .-111A .. ~·M•.•-~llU··~ .... ~.--K T, ...-.,...., ....... -... . ...... ~ ..................... !. .... ..-.... ...-•ort .... • ••11.1 ......... ........ -..•.. ,....., !W,. .1 llft, t,_.. M•!• -:W'"'-tll! _,...,_
ftl'll , .. c .......... .. •.. ' ... .
..... j ""-'
' ... tor .. llt •·.••·; ........ .. ,., ..... "· '~ ..... . "'.~ '~~~~''' "' ··~ ............ • '11111, 1:.;, .w-t-•·"""'"' -----=--::.111,-,,r..t -~~··=~ •tu•--..... -11 ....... . .. ...... """' .... ........ --•r.lfr•I..,._ ... ~""--., , .. ,. , _ _._ .. ............
tr.f!•t1-----.... ~ Cllll.:-4...,... ......,,.:H . ···-· ~, .. , tol"fW
..... 1 .. t • .,,.,
w.i:•-""'"°'1 ...,,11
"" 4 "· Cl' ....... . ..... -.,, ..... ,:_..,, ..... ,._ ...... ,,.
-• ... 1 ... ......... 11v_l. .. 1>•1
l <-1~•\o ••••• 11 ''*"" 9;1 ... M• I"''· l >f -..,.~ .. ,,. .. ,,
l •I 'M•o. -.. ,.. .• ~ '"''•~
.... l'I.••''-":( .... ...... ,~ ... ·18•·"" : ... ,,.oi.u-.ot
' 'OJ"' •Ill·•! ~~.'~ ~1"-· O.·.~
.... 111 ... "'°'' J ........ ..... :,. s. ~ ....
1#1 w.,.,.,,. 'l<;.!.CO.tM
''""""' 0,)H ll r 1a..r••-·' "' ..... ..,.,_1 ....
(i .. lor<I--·-~ ·~-"'· 1 lln. t. •. Mr<\ 1 .. 1'\111 ...
l•"tt<l'°"V
N;t. Ila" J. -.. ....... D l.""11 .. ,,.,.. ,,,, ..... ,, .,. , ..... :,,.-.... J __ ._
• • h l\11
... _ .... ~-~,, Ml l•,..-a.,c;;•"· .... -1 .. ., .....
a.II 10,;
I J•I•~• ~"fl.I'll><-:; Cl!.1 11:-: ,._,,.._.
l>f_ I Ille '--~"' ••"-"s .. , ........ ,.~ ... ·--...... ,.~-. ...... ~,,,.:., " ...... """'"'"' ~ 111 ... w,,,,..,Sdt_ ... ,.
~ ·~· .,.;;.:1,-... " IW· •'• ,,,,., .. ,
~ '" c .. 1.-.. ~ .,.,.,,,,·,11• u 'I< .. , ...... , ... ' .... , .... _,., ...
Y• I 11 lu .. 1 ;1<.-"'•• :~ ... , .. .... ,: .... . "''·'»' J •-r ~''" W". I .... ,._,,., t, ~-'"
... ;oo ~ .... -1,-.;,J.:>1 ... .. _,.,., __ _
"' llt!<:,l•lf-111 ~s·-ur.1 .... t..-1.:>wlf ......... """" !>........, """"°''"!._ 11.1 .. s .....
'
A
fr
B
a
p
\
fun
gyr
or
Spr
f"
Cul
s
the
bal
lhe
str
" the
for
l"
Walt
H a nt
Mars
Now
of
Ooo
Fran
0. Ri
Mary
Robe
C oro
Ki
s.m
Jerry
John
Or. E
Bon
Com
Gere
Ooo
Marg
D•vi
H•I o.
Dick
John
l1e9
West
Now
Ba Ibo
H•rb
' DAILY PILOT JI
Theories Grow for Life • Ill Space
\\'ASlll:\(:TON 1AP ) -Ex-
c 1 t ing a s t r o n om 1cn l
discove ries of the past seven
years add up to a high prob-
ab1hty that intelHgenl life f'X·
ist.s elsewhere in the universe,
a c.ommittee of the National
Academy of Sc iences has
reporte-d .
P\'Ol\tng picture of "general ot tht possible ex 1stenct ,
co.s1n1c '10Jence" being in· na ture and ~ehvltle:!I of 1n-
volvl-d in the forni auon of all dependent civLIWiUon.s In
stars and perhaps a planetary spare," the: report said.
systems around n1any of "At this instant, through thLs
the conversatioos o( di~tant
creature. -conversations that
we could record 1r we but
polnled a radk> telescope lo
the richt dirtetlon and .••
tuned ..• to the proper fre-
quency," It ukt
lndted, 1he e<>mrn•u .... 1<1,
even u1ltin& radio teletcopet
could detect "the radJ1tklnl or
a clvtliu.Uon no more .0.
vanced than ours o v • r
d~tanc<J of many hundredJ ol
ll&ht years .•. ''
theu1. ve ry document, are perhaps
In a 129-page document, the
1
_passing radkl wa ves bearing
group. by in1pllcation, called
for 11 spei..:ial national proje<'t1 that would "ha\'t' as its gonl I
!he detection of intelli gent hfe l
elsev.'here."
. .-
UPI Ttitpllole
'rhe academy·., ~slronou f-
Survey Corrunlttet · s
, ~·niy~~ ng mn-
(jor 'lhcreases in f~eral fund-
ing for astronomical probing .
The committee said re search
should include developing new
instruments that co u I d
enhance possibilities for detect-
ing signals f r o m any in-
habited world:i beyond the
solar system.
The con1mittee urged an in-
crease in ostronom1<·:d fund ing
fronl thf current $270 m1\lionj
per year to an average of $355
million O\'er the next decade
further disCO\'er1es in space.
•·o ur civilization is v.•ithin
reach of one of the greatest
steps in evolution : knovdedge
l ll egal School
Looi~ at the People
As support for a life-0ut-there
theory, the commlltet cites
relatively recent discovery of
primitive, suggestive chem~
icals in intersolar 11 pace.
'J'he report also refers to the
strange. violent celestial ob-
jects called •·quasars" and
"pulsars." although these are
not decn1ed inhabited.
GABORONE. Bot s w a n a
(AP) -Goverrunent C'duca-,
tion o(ficiab discovered an il -l
legal private school the y sa!d
was run for 40 years in a rural
area v.·here pupils v.-ro\e their
lessons mainly by scratching
in the ground with sticks.
At San Diego \Vild Anin1al Park, the ~ople are enclosed and the animals range
free in sett ings similar to their natural habitat. Here, riders on the Wgasa
Bush l.ine rnonorail have a look at the white-bearded gnu. The project is used
as a laboratory for study of animals as well as a place of entertainment for
pcoplP.
The scientists 5uggested
these object s' existence con-
tributes, however, to a newl y
Ex-teacher Belly Dances MA~SHALL
HOUTS
TA:\lPA. r !a. (AP) -Anne
T.tppr. u leggy blonde from
TJmpa·s social register, once
d:in('ed as a dehutanle. No1v
sh e's a bcj lydan cer who says,
"l have found my niche."
\\"rapped Jn billowing chif-
fon. the 28-year<ild Anne
gyrates under the br ig ht lights
vf <1 nightclub at Tarpon
Springs. a Greek sponge
fishi ng village near here on
Gulf Coast.
She v.·caves and undulates to
the ti nkling of her finger cym-
bals. coin-spangled bra, and
the 1vail of a Creek pipe in-
strument.
''It v.•as the challenge.'' said
the curv aceous b l u e -e y e d
v.·hen asked what led her into
bellydancing.
A debutante at the annual
Tampa Bay area festival in
1966. Anne later w a s
graduated from Lake Erie
College. a private girls school,
and took a teaching certifica te
from UCLA.
She taught high school for a
year in San Francisco, and
also worked as a management
c<lnsultant for a telephone
company.
All that fell by the wayside
after a trip to the Mediter-
ranean where she became e1-
posed to the ancient art of
bel lydancing.
ima ge 1 have of myself," she
explained , adding that she had
studied acting but never quite
made it.
Miss Lippe said she learned
the dancing art lrom an Arab
woman.
"Jt took me 18 months."
''But I found n1 y niche and
decided then no 1norc soc ial
''or k • management -teach-
ing· jobs for n1e. This 'vas
challenging and I v.•as bored
with offices and routine."
Will
Copies of His New x·· ''KING'S
at
DILLEY'S
BOOKSHOP
460 SO. COAST HWY.
LAGUNA BEACH
Tuesday, June 6
2 to 4 P.M. "l suppose it satisfies some
subconscious or uncon.sciou!I forme r high school teacher
-----°--------------------------------------;.;:,;;.c;PtlUlc:tl Mlv«'l1oeTMfrt
lier boyfriends and mother
approve, ·Anne claims. ''But
some uncultured men see it as
a hoochie coochie," she said.
"It's not at all that and I am
Very conde5cending to that at-
titude."
Les Steffenson
Walter J. Koch
Hant Lorent
Marshall Duffield
Newport Harbor Chamber
of Commerce
Don Mclnni \
Frank Robinson
D. Ric hard Button
Mary Alice Culver
Robert Sangster
Corona Del Mar
Kiwa ni s Clu b
Sam Grasso
Jerry Wooters
John Semple
Dr. Edward J . Miller
Ben Deane & Co.
Commodore Ed Hayes
Gerard Van Hoven
Don Koll Co., Inc.
Margaret Setterholm
David S. Tingler
Hal Glass
0 . W. Ric hard
Dick Newell
John S. Swe in
leegue of Wotn•n Voters
Allen Betk
Raymond l . Watson
Ma rgot Skill ing
Richard A. Ree se
Earl Hardage
Bob Shelton
Milan Dostal
Carroll Seek
Mon t L. Sw t in
John M. Colt
Ginger Pag•
G. 0. Bue.col a
Hall Seeley
Newport Harbor
Exch ange Club
Pa ul Martin
Mike Manahan
Bill Grundy
Mary Betty Fisher
Patrick Fosttr
William Barr ington
Je1sie Hill
Hixson Met•I Finishing
Claudia Owtn
Bill Patrick
Mrs. Rogtr D. Brown
We Proudly Present
a roster of some selected Individuals and
groups who have examined Propositions F,
G, and H, and chose to give tfiem unquali-
fied endonement.
U.NITY
These supporten are leaders of civic groups,
polltlcal organizations, business, and indi·
viduals. They clash in controversy on issues
of frHways, high-rise, density controh, and
back bay use. Now tfiey have come tocJetfier
In CICJrffment on tfiis one community lssu-
that tfie development of parks, view sites,
blcycle trails Is a major ul'Cjent necessity for
enhancing our lovely city.
Father's Day is June 18
Give Hin1
Your Photo
a " 10
Life.
Color
Portrait of 1or2 People
only
Regultrly lS.00
Moke the Fo th er's Do y live fo rever in o por fro.t of
you ond you r chil d toke n by cur owt1 rd-winn l,,g
p hotogrophe r~. And , we mig ht odd. we're 5pecit1l!s ts
in larger fam ily groups else. You have everything
goi ng for you -unsurpo5~ed beouty of l ife.Color®~
profes~ionol ligh ting, the l1ow-hov1 of fine st1!on
portroifure. Speciol Pri,es on lr emes too!
'
it's at tl1e broadway
Huntington Be<'lc h, Portrait Studio 1st· Floor, 192-3331
John Mecnab
Jo• •ncJ Judy Ro1ener
Coal1on end Jean Morr is
Dick Clue••
Carl Kymla
Th• Irvin• Company
Glen E. Travers
Mrt. Mand y Cole
Morri Mol ho
Rolly Pulaiki
Bill Dootson
Donna Gallant
H•rry H. Fredtrick
John D. Lusk & Son
Sally Lyon
Th om as R. Malcolm
Mrs. Alice Kin9
Donald L. Breen Co.
Jim Wood
Edgar Hill
Bob Goodwin
Mary Ann• Nath
James En1i9n
Edward Cooke, Jr_
Bob Paley
Bunster Creely
Robert C. Gravts
Howard Rogart
Dick Croul
Mr. •nd Mrs. Tom Houstn
Ed H;rth
Paul Ryckoff
Elaine l inhoff
John Stort
Dora Hill
Doretn Marshall
Mr. and Mr1 . Da vi d Doane
Mr. and Mrs. David Ballard
Mr. and Mr1. Mike John1C1n
Mrs . Frank B. M•i•r
Mr. and Mr1. P.A. Petty
Mrs . T. Duncan St•wart
Mr. t nd Mrs. John She•
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil O.kd•n
Joyce end Jack ka1parek
Broadmoor Homaa at
Big Canyon
John and Nancy Skinner
Mr. and Mr1. John Killefer
Robert H. Grant Corp.
Hal and Joan Coverdale
Jecqueline E. Heather
Mr. and Mr1. Walter Samanlulc
John Baker ·
Allen Palmer
Beacon Bay Community A11ociation Bd. of Directors
Newport Shorei Commun ity Assoc iation, Bd. Directors
Corona Highland s Pr operty Owner1 Association
West Newport Improvement At1oci ation
Newport Heights t?Jiprov•ment A11oc iation
Balboa Island lmr.rov•m•n't AssoC:iation
Harbor View Hi l s Homeowners A1sociation ~=========================:!! Pa rks, Be•ch es end Racr•ation Commiss ion
arks, icycle rails,
VOTE • VOTE ( • 1ew • 1tes
LETS SAVE SOMETHING. FOR OURSEL YES ,. Citizens Adv isory Park Bond Team, Ginger Page, Chairman, 424 St. Andrew Rd ., Npt. Bch . '
I
AZ DAIL y PILOT
" <9•• -.... _., ,_,
.,.Hf: Ac:C.ENT lbDllY IS ON YOl..ll ~.Bur
I ii& SiK,£,S5 IS oN lHE. Ptll2:E.N f5 ! •
State Get s
U.S. 'Title'
In Erosion
MEfl.'LO PAf-tK IAP) -A
10..year study of the naJiqn's
n1ajor rivers concludes that
the Eel Hi vtr ha sin nf
northwrstern Californi.ii 's
eroding fastest.
A report by the Department
cif )nterior hydrolo,glsts .said
more than 310 million tons of
rock and soil were erodea '
B"'ay from the 3, 100-square-
rnile basin.
Based on suspended sedi-
ment measurements, th e
I EC OLOGY
average erosion rate for the
basin ranged from four to
eight inches every 100 years -
et lellst 13 times the national
average .
• AHti11olse Bill
-SACRAMENTO !AP) -An
antinoisc bill has won IJ..O ap-
proval of the Senate Com-
mittee on G o v er n m e n t
Orga nization.
The bill , titled the California
Noise Control Act of 1972,
would n1ake it state policy to
provide •·an environment for
all Cali fornians free from
noise that jeopardizes their
health or welfare."
It moves to the Finance
Committee
e OK l\'eeded
SAN FRANCISCO (AP )
After July I, the Bay Area Air
Pollu rion Control District 1vill
r equire smog c I ea r a n c e
permits for construction of or
alterations in bui ldings whicft
emit air poll utants of more
than 100 tons a year.
The regulations. adopted by
the nine:county district, give
the district discretion to deny
permits for construction
where emissions would add to
ai !ready high pollulion levels.
J\1ost construction, including
h o us in g . a pa rt ments,
restaurants and o r f i cc
buildings. 1rill be exempted
from the perrnits for four
years. said :\'l.:\lt \Valker, !he
agency·s attorney.
e S mog Copier
LOS ANGELES I AP ) -The
count y Air Pollution Control
Dis trict is using a hc]iCQpter
fuJJ time for smog patrols.
On the $75,000 craft's first
fl ight. lln apparent emission
\'iolation fron1 a manufac-
turing plant ~·as spotted.
In the past. the count v's
nerial smog inspcclions hcivr
been confined to limited use 11(
a sheriffs d e pa rt m e n t
helicopter.
e Bid Defeated
SACRAMENTO IAPI -A
proposa l for state government
to help private i n d u s t r y
finance anti-pollution efforts
has been rejected by 1he
Assembly.
The Assembly voted 42-6 to
kill the constituttona! amend-
ment by Asse1nblyman John
Knox, a Richmond Democrat
who asked for and was
granted reconsideration of the
matter later in the session.
It would permit issu'ing
, revenue b6nds to aid pollution
cleaoE_p by industries.
e .C..trols E11e4
1lOS ANGELES (AP) -The C!I!' Council /13>'1 it will not
approve -w cantraCtl for
~tloo Ii> ""' t/$0 mllllOll ~ ,....lllr!i stati o n
~~-rPage, .~ until lbo1 . cootaln ... vln>nmental ..,.an1,_
'l'be <iOuncll 'dllded a request
lipon the city Dlportment of
'lfJi(or lllCLEvwtr ,....approval
,d ~Qil1:"""11 with four ·GllW 'ltii Mllona and
Nev .i a lbe ftdtrnl
Ill btllldl"i the ant, which wlll ..... -
,
•
I
•
Mondq, June S, 1971
•
summer-ized knit
Remember when you discovered the
comfort and non-crush resilience of
doublekn its? You probably wore them
a '
in every seoson except summer! McGregor
hos changed oil thot ... with lightweight,
righ t-weight designs especially for the
Broodwoy, especially for summer.
do11hleknit
sJa~ks
The perfect complement to
o hondsome new summer sport
c oo t ... polyester doubleknit
slacks in eig ht great colors.
From our Impact ?O's group. 25.00.
Men's Sport Clothing
' \)
' \, H
1·1 .,.
I.' ii:
Feotured ore 2-button models with wide
lapels. deep center vents. 55.00-65.00
Men's Sport Clothing
• • ::-.... •
~
,,
I ~ • <
!l \
\
' \I
•
~
lianttllii®JJ?9b) ciilan~
~11ne 18
ti •
I
~
i1~s a11-he hroadway
HUNTINGTON IEAC .. I ORANGE, M.11 •f Ot•111•
2100 No. T1nfl11 Str••t t 114) 991.1311 7777 EJi119et AwellU• 171 4) 192.]J]I
ANAHEIM NEWPORT
444 N. E..,clid 1714) 115-ltll 47 F•1hio11 ld•nd 1114) 6-44-1212
cu~rros
500 lot Cenlt•• M•ll tl ll) 160.o414
SHOP tO A.M. to t :l O P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, SATURDAY 10 A.M ... 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to I P.M.
-
"' . ·-
i ~ '"" I
I
DAILY Pll OI f
He Writes Letters J ets Bomb
•
P<Ltrioiic Exile Fro1n Pola1ul Wiel.ds Pen, Btdlot 30 Miles
By PA1\1 ELA HAU.AN
01 11 .. Dllir ,IOtl l l•U
Thf're are few public offlcials who
ha ven't heard of Stefan Pronasko.
If they haven't , they don't read their
mail.
Pronas ko's pet subjects are crime in
the streets, support of the space pro-
gram, noise and air pollulioo and the
danger of motorcycles.
The San Juan Capist rano resident has
an entire folder of letters (and anSwers)
to officials ranging from co u n t y
superv isor Ronald Caspers to President
Nixon.
"I write IC'Ltcrs bccnusc in a republic
we elect representatives to be our
spokesmen and how else y,•ill they knov,.
Y.'hat we want?'' he said.
~lr. and Mrs. Pronasko are both ad-
voca!es of involvement. If one cannot be
involved phys ica!ly. then do it V.'ith a pen.
"Participate in government," he said.
"\\'riling letters is the next best thing to
voling, but voting is still the best way lo
convey your reelings."
The Pronaskos earned their rig ht to
vote ... the hard wa y.
Stefan Pronasko once sent his v.·i fe a fl
box of powdered milk from ltaly.
Tuc ked neatly inside amongst the y,·hit~
(;rystals were several wads of money.
An unusual. gifl ?
The money and a Joi of incredible luek
enabled Mr!. Pronasko to get out of
cnemy--occup1ed Polt\CI m the early years
of '\'orld War l 1.
The Pronaskos, v. .fOW live at 26000
Aeropuerlo, look back on those years
~·ith a great dt!al of 3\li'e.
Their experiences then and those tt1<it
follov.·ecl hav e made them thankful for
their adopted country, America .
.. \\'hen \Ve lost Poland \\'e chos{' thl'
United St11tes to be our second country."
said 1~ronasko, strid ing ac ross his mobile
home.
··Because v.·e chose 11. \\'e arl' very
loyal and probably appreciate it mOrl·
than some who were born here '
The Pronaskos ha\'e a grea t bel1<'f 111
people . Their \var experiences-full of
miracles-reinforced ii
Pronasko v.'as v.·ounded defending
Warsaw in Sep1embcr of 1939. Recovering
enough to continue, he v.·as transferred to
the eastern front wherl' Russians \\'Cre
attacking.
He y,·as captured.
Marching to a prison can1p throllgh
Lithuania. Pronasko seized a moment's
opportunity and rolled into a ditch full of
stagnant water at the edge of the road .
Newport Will Study Boo st
In Buildh1g, Moorh1g Fees
•· By L. PETER KRIEG
• 'C; • ~ Of rl'I• Daill' P'll91 Slatf
~ A $6 per foot mooring fe4 a utility tax ! ""' and a three-fold hike in the build ing ex-
~--ci.!le tat: on commercial projects are in-
'· ...
cluded In a major revenue rnessage
delivered to NeWpOrt Reach city coun·
cilmen this morning.
City Manage r Robe.st L. \V ynn unveited
the new taxing proposals Friday, say1r\"g:
that the mooring fee s -to be charged
for both offshore and onshore moo rings
over city tidelands -would alone pro-
duce an additional $202.000 a year.
He made no estimate ur th~ additional ..
tncome to be produced by raisifig the
<.:on1~ercia\ building excise ta~, fr om
three fo IO cents per square fool.
!·le also proposed :
-A hike from 5 to 6 percent in the
bed tax.
-An increase in the da lly parking fees
:it Corona de! r-.tar City and State Beach
Park.
-Re structuring the excise lax so
hotels and motels are charged on a
living-unit basis "to more appropriately
renect their impact on community
services.''
-Changing the same tax so that
residentlal developments, \vhich now pay
a Oat f,!00 fee, be charged on a square
footage basis ·'to reflect the numlx>r of
people each ne'v d'velling uni! v.•ill bring
into the city ...
A utility users tax. \Vynn said. on a five
percent rate, y,·ould produ ce about
$600 ,000 a year in ne w money iI applied to
all utilities. including v.1ater.
\Vynn, who is under il".struclions from
council men to present a budget th<it re-
quires no increase in lhe present $1.20
per $100 property tax rate, couched his
proposals with the \vords :
"'You will find some information con·
cerning revenue sources that the counc il
ma v want to consider.
•·This is not intended as a blanket
recomn1endation," he said, '"but only an
inventory of potential revenue sources for
council consideration for current and Jong
range ri scal planning. •
·'In evaJuating these sour ces. it should
be kept in mind that one penny on the tax
rate raises approximately $31 ,000."
\\'ynn did pre sent the council with a
bala nced budget -which they must act
upon by June 30 -holding the tax rate as
1nstructcd.
l-lov.•ever. the budget is probably th6
ntost austere in the city ·s hi story and
\Vynn had lo cut back proposed ex-
penditures by various departn1ents.
He has taken out an addition of six:
uniformed police1nen sought by Police
Chief B. James Glavas and the veteran
chief has indicated he'll fight for res tora·
lion of those funds .
\\'ynn may get furthest with his moor·
ing fee proposal s. He points out the
charge only parallels a fee enacted
recently by Orange County to cover
moorings over county tidelands.
'\'ynn noted tha t the county charges
Sl.20 per foot for boats on city <Jffshore
moor ings a nd 60 C€nls a foot for boats on
onshore city moorings because it ad-
ministers them fo r the city.
He suggests il is possible to have the
city take over the administration of the
city tide lands. which includes overhaul
which costs mooring renters $100 per
year.
Councilmen will be mee ting at 8 a.m. in
City Hall for a specia l study session on
the budget.
Mrs. Hanson Continues
POW Quest in Sweden
The li~ht continues to fade for 1\lrs.
Carole Hanson of El Toro.
The wife of a pilot who v.•as shot down
over Laos in 1967. Mrs Han son is in
Stockholm atten1pling to get in touch
with North Vietnamese offi cials con-
cerning Am erican prisoners of v.·ar.
"We are demanding information of our
·tmpri.soned and missing next of kin in
Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia ." com--
1nented r-.Irs. HanSOfl of 24112 Birdrock
ST
DAILY PILOT
Ttlt Ortnoe Co.st OA!l.Y Pll.OT, wllll wt.Id!
It combined ftlt N~Pl"tU, h PVllllshf.4 ,.,
1111 or•IOO*" 01111 P11blllhlno (OlftPlll'f', ••~
ra!t .cllfl0n1 •r• Sl\lblil,._, Mtnd•'r' l'hr11wvtt
Frld1y, tor Co.I• Mna, NIWPtfl lllcl'I,
H1111lk'llton h..:tl/Fol.wlt•fl'I Vtller, Lfflltll
llftdl, lrvln1/S1ddl1b1clt _. '41n Cltmtnt1!
S1tn Jllll'I Glpl1!r-. A 1lntl• r'9lonll
"'"'" h P!AllllMd s.tUtUrs t"4 hnd•'r'I· Tiie 11"lnc.10tl eiulllbhlr"I pfanl II •I »II Wt~!
11'1 ltr"I, C01l1 Mttl, C1ltfl:>rnla, fMM,
Ro .. 1rf N. w,,,
l'r•sk*ll •nd Publl~
Jac.k R. C11rt1y
Viet l'rnlCl9"1 n Gentr11 Ma111ott
llio"''' K••";r """ llioll'l 1t A, Mvr,'9tn•
M1Nt1r41 ••nor
Ch1rl•t H. loo1 Riclri•rd P. N•ll AM1"1nt ~ IEdtlorl -Coslt MeM: DI W..t lt'y S"'"' Hl'ffpOrt lffdl: ~ M--1 ...... ,a,,
lot.-B..ch: 7D P.trnt A\Oln\le
" ............. a..tfl: l>f7.I ... ci. 80\lllYll'l"ll
itn (llft'ltlllt: at "°""' 11 c:.rrw.. ll ...
Ttl ........ C714J '41-4aJt
C'-HW A41trth19t ....... ,.
l'rtftt , ..... "'"' ...... " """"' .... .. 4tl-44H
l'rtftl """ Or•-Cf¥111t¥ ~In 140.11!1
ceirmtt\f, tm. er.,,.. CM.I 1'"'41.tllfls eatlllll'l't. ... IM'Wf ,..,.... lu.tl"t!IMI, lllltwltl mlMw ., "-"--" ,... ...
""'I M ~ •f"*'I ...-..U ...,.. "'"*""' ., UllY"Wlt .....
....... dHt ,..., ... Hl4 " C.... ,,.._ C.11......._ MK"-"" IV c»"1W SIM Me!ltPll'r W rn.11 P.IS "*ltt\'11 ...,._ •'""'*"' a,., """""""· . ·-,··-·.
Dri\·c. ''ln Paris v.:e tried t() ge t in touch
y,·i(h the Norlh Viet na mesC' leaders but
they did not v.·.:inL to meC'! with us . It
looks like the same is going to happe n
her e."
Efforts to contact representatives or
the North Vietnamese embassy he re have
proved frWl\ess, she snid.
Mrs. Hanson beg a n her search lo
determine the fate of her husband in 1969.
when she met with President Richard
Nixon , Se<:retary of State WillllJm Rogers
and Secretary or Defense ?fdf.,, Laird in
Washington.
Then in 1970, Mrs. Hanson and three
other American wives of prisoners or
war, encircled the globe to seek help
from world leaders for men imprisoned
in Southeast A8ia.
They met with Pope Paul in Rome.
then visited Romania, Cairo, New Dehli,
Moscow, Saigon and Laos.
While the signs fr()m the North Viet·
namese have been less than heartening,
Mrs. Hanson said ''My love. and devotion
have given me the sLrength to pursue
these efforts. but l reach out to others.
for these men so desperately need the
help of all Americans.''
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dellwen of the Dail7 Piio t
Is guara.nter4
Mondty.4'rJdlfJ tt YOll oo root ,.,..,. t"0!.11'
... .,.,. by l !JO 11,m,, (Ill 1'10 YoVf Cllf!Y ""Ill
.. l!rlWM .. ...,. c.111 •r• ''"'"" .,,,,n
l :IO 11.m.
S.lvrdlly •flll $vnd1y: II you do !'IOI rtct lYI
Y011r aroy .. t •.m. Sllvrcl~Y. or t ,,..,,
Slll'ld1r, etll .... • Cllfl'I w!!I a. brOllQt'll to vw. CAllt 11111 •ken unlll lt 1.m.
Ttlfphontt
Molt 0r1n11 CDuritY M9M ........ '"'''tn1
... It!"'"' """""'°" llldl ft ..,...,...... . .................. Int
lift~~ .;..c,..
..; j.;_. c:.111r-. 'Dtliii '-1111, ... -.... , . . . ,. -l'!,flll-"""" ·-........ .... '"
• Sy a m1tacle be-was not detected.
Olhers Y.ho lried the same lhlng were
:shot.
'"When it was safe I made my way to
an empty house and hid in the basement
for fi\'e days." sald Pronasko.
}le ~·as eve.ntua!Jy di9covutd by a
Lithuanian policeman. But the man was
of Polish descent and helped him contact
the underground network that ~·as mov.
1ng people to Stockholm.
Dressed in rags, penniless, and marred
by self-inflicted facial wounds so he
1rould not be reC<Jgnized . l)ronasko finally
1node it to England.
Mis adventures didn't end there.
/·le "'ent back to v.·ork ror the Fiat
t-.1otor Company where he had lx>cn assis-
tant teC'hnical advisor for the Pohsh
subsidiary. bu! he ,~·as also assigned to
the free Polish government in France.
His job: organize all Polish so ldiers y,·ho
find their way to France.
Through Fiat, he was able to travel
back an d forth to Italy. 11e chanced upon
a friend ly Gestapo officer "·ho had access
to Warsaw and through him smuggled
packflieS to his wife.
He Tater served in Israel and Egypt
under !he British and even Africa y,-here
he was in charge of moving troops from
Capcto\vn to Cairo.
"A(!er the \Var he joined 1he Canadian
National Ri•search Council." said !\1rs.
Pronasko. B('('ausc of his backgr ound in
auton1otivc technology he \Yas assigned to
lest lead.free fuel. 1
Pronasko \\·ent to \VOrk as a r{'seatch
engineer in the Uni ted St:itcs in 1949, first
at Chevrolet then Ford. Al w a y s
outspofen, he convinced the management
to m ke some improvement!! in thr.
cngin testing laboratories and \\'rote a
manual on dynamometers.
'"Remember, he still could speak very
little English at this time," said Mrs.
Pronasko.
"In 1957 a man from NASA came to
Detroit looking for bright engineers for
the space program," she continued.
"Stefan \vas ready to go the moon."
lie joined the Design and Development
Laboratory at Rocketdyne as a research
engineer and he moved to Canoga Park
111 gear development work . His work in
Huntsv ille, Ala . promoted him to senior
engineer and he moved to Caonga Park
10 organize, plan and coordinate building
of the Hazardous Test Cell facilities.
Il e beca me a research specialist and
had a great part in building the Rocket-
dyne Rotary Test Facilities.
One of his most memorable incidents
\Yas v.·hcn he was once called to work
with the Von Braun group, early in the
space program. A German who was
hostile at first, later kissed him when
Pronasko discovered why the early
Redstone rocket was then not functioning
correctly.
Pronasko. \\•ho i!I 67. retired in 1969.
But he couldn't sit still. He obtained a
realtor's license and launched another
ca reer.
And he still v.•ritrs let te rs.
OAIL V l'llOT Sit!! Ph•T•
LETTER WRITING 15 ·GOOD BUT VOTING 15 BETTER
Stefan Pronasko KNpl in Touch With Legislators
.Women's Lib Sco1·es: Ma11
Of Year Ca11 Be a W oma11
\\'omen"s liberation scored a quiet victory !his \1Cck 111tll the llunt1ni.:ton
Beach }IQJ\1E Council, an organlzaLion which for the past six yea rs has dut1·
fully honored a selected "f..1an of the Year."'
Two weeks ago plans were announced for the sr.\'r.n1h ;i11nual se!C'Ction of
a "l\ian of the Year."
Th is week, however . the governing body or the city1~·idl· hornco1vnrr.~ as·
sociation announced that the criteria has been expanded to include women
.. The counci l action expresses the belief that women should be ellg 1blc
for the same honor as men for their civic service," reads the brief press re-
lease.
HOr-.1E Council members also moved the deadline for submitted names
from June 10 to June 17 to accommodate the expected flood of ne\Y applicant.!!.
The "Man . uh. Citi7.en, of the Year" will be announced during a banquet
Jtme .23.
Wflen asked if there were any male chauvinist ho Id o u ts in the vote to
change the rules, press chairman Ed Kerins carefully repUeQ:
this way, there ?.·eren't any 'no' voles."
SPECIALS . .
i . From.China
SAJCON (lJ Pl l -American 8"
bombers flew abo ve ground-huginj; rah'
clouds near Hue Friday to pound Com-
muniJt troof)! btlitved massing for an at-
tack on the former imperial capital.
Heavy cloud! lhtH grounded the mw.
flying fighler·bombers fa iled to stop the
B52s. U.S. military spokesmen said the
bon1bers flr11• 11 n1i!Sions west and
southwest of Hut>. including three .!!trike!
:igainst tar~ets inside the A Shau Valley,
11 Traditional Comn1unist sanctuary,
Thr l! S comm:ind said earlier fighter·
bornbers swept into North V1 etnan1 .1~
rlose as JO miles to China "here lhe
\\'Cather v.·as clearer and had one of th111r
most successful bombing days of the cur-
rent Communist offensi\'e. A spokC'sman
sai d thr planes knocked out lv.·o int·
portant railroad bridges and badl y
damaged a major powe r plant.
Air rf'!iCUC teams atso dipped do\\'Tl into
North \1\etnam to rescu e Air For('e Capt.
noger C. Locke:r. 25, of Sabetha, Kan ,
~·ho parachuted into Communist territory
23 days rtg<J.
,\ n1l l1ta ry source said Locker. \1ho
!Ja iled oul 70 miles northwest of •tanoi on
r.1ay 10, was 1n "surprisingly good
:>h:"Lp(' '
In th r ground v.·ar, gove rnment
spo krsrnen sald South Vietnan'lese troops
kill ed 55-0 C-On1nlunists on fOur fronts
\1·h\\e losing 31 men . The Communist
ctrnd inC'luded 286 in Quang Ngai province
332 miles northe11st or Saigon and 137 at
Kontun1 in the Central llighlands.
llraviesl governn1ent loss es we re 12 kill·
Cd nrar Kontum.
A U.S. spokesman said the B52s also tut
near Knotum and An Loe, 60 miles north
of Saigon.
McDonald's Told
'ro Drop Prices
'VASHINGTO N (AP ) -The Pric e
Commission h8s ordered h1c0o~a 't
Corp. to cut prirrs of its ' 'Qua f't r
Pounder" hamburgers and chee burg·
ers.
The commission said the popular fas t·
food chain had increased prices on these
items without obtaining requ ire d advance
permission .
Pri~s on "Quarter 'roundtt'' ham-
burgers and cheeseburgers. which aren't
sold at aU ol the chain's outlets, must be
cut back to ba.!le price levels by June 15,
and by Jun11 30 must be reduced below
that level by eoougb to give back con·
sumer& the amollllt of money d1rlved bf
the price increue found to be Improper.
'!be C<IO?ll1llulon dldn1 apedly wbal tho bue. price Js, or .bow .mucb mooey must
be r$nde41 ... , '
• • ~ --,. • ;,
FRIDAY -SATURDAY-SUNDAY ONLY! ' >
T~E YOUR PICK ... ALL BRAND NEW!
... 1972 ~IERCUBYS . • •
MERCUR)''fH IS WEEKEND ONLY
COUGAR • • • 2 DR. HOT .... LOADED, INCLUD ING AIR COND.
MERCURY THIS WEEKEND ONLY
MONTEREY • • • 2 DR. HOT .••• LOADED, INCLUDING AIR CGND.
#2Z46H574402
..---TAKE YOUR CHOICE. • .EXTRA SPECIAL---
1972 CAPRI ... or 1972 COMET • • • • 6,.\ECLJ\1 94009
2 Dr. Sport Coupe
2000 CC Engine, Decor Group
52699°0 Beautiful Metallic Brown
4 Dr. Sci. ,Radl!> 6: Automatic-
HURRY! PRICES GOOD THIS WEEKEND ONLY!
Home 01 The New Ca r .• •
••Golden '.Fouch"
•
292S HAAllO!! Bl VD. c:osri MESA
. . . ~ •·-r· . , -........ ·-
Home Of The New Car • , •
"Goltlelt '.l'-Ji" ' -
....
)
-
• ..
,
. • ' . •
t ' •
• ' I
j
l
J
j
~
'
J 2 DAil Y PILOl
ANIMAlogi<~.,....,. ' .
-ni£. ACC.Etlf 1bDA~ IS ON 'IOUfl4,!1Uf
[ ii. ar~s-; IS ON ft-le. PAIZ€.N rs !.
State Gets
U.S. 'Title'
In Erosion
MENLO PARK (AP ) -A
JO-year study of the nati<Jn's
m ajor rivers tonc!udcs that
the Eel 11ivt'r Oasin of
northwestern Ga!iforni3 is
eroding fa stest.
A report by the Department
or Interior hydrologists s~ud
more than 310 million tons of
rock and soil y,•erc crodea
away from the 3, 100-square-
m ile basin.
Based on suspended sedi-
m ent mcasurerncnts. t h e
I ECOLOGYl
average erosion rate for the
basin ranged frorn four to
eight inches every too years -
at least 13 times the national
a verage.
e A111h1obe Bill
SAtRAMENTO (AP ) -An
antinoisc bill has won 8-0 ap·
proval of the Senate Com·
mittce on G o v e r n m en I
Organization.
The bill. titled the Ca lifornia
Noise Control Act of 1972,
would make it state policy to
provi de "an en vironment for
all Californians free from
noise that jeopardizes their
health or welfare ."
l t moves to the Finance
Committee
e OK l\'eedecl
SAN FRANCISCO (AP I
After July I, the Bay Area Air
J-'ollution Control District 1vill
r equire smog c I ca r a n c e
permits for construction or or
allerations in buildings v.'hicli
'mil air pollutants of more
than 100 tons a year.
The rcgulatlons. adopted by
the nine-county district, give
the district discretion to deny
permits r or construclion
\Yhere emissions would add to
already high pollution levels.
Most constru ction. including
ti o us i n g . a p a rt ments.
restaurants 1:1ncl o ff ice
build in~s. v.•ill be exempted
from the permits for four
years. said ~tatt \Vulker . !he
agency's attorney.
e Smog Co11IPr
LOS A'.'IGE l.F.S !AP) -The
county Air r:'ollution Control
District is using a helicopter
full time for srnog patrols.
On the $75,000 craft's first
fiight, an apparent emission
violation from a manufai:-
turing plant v.•as SIXJlted .
In the past. !he count~··s
nerial smog inspections ha\'e
been confined to limited use of
a sheriff's d c pa r t m e n I
helicopter.
e Bid Defeoled
SACRAMENTO iAP I -A
proposal £or slate government
lo help private i n d u s t r y
finance anti-pollution efforts
has been rejected by the
Assen1bly.
The Assembly voled 42--0 to
kill the constitu1ional amend-
ment by Asse 1nblyman .John
Knox, a llichmond Democrat
who asked for and w:is
granted reconsidera tion of the
matter later in the session.
It would permit issuing
r evenue bonds to aid pollution
cleanup by industries. -
e-c-trols E11ed
bOS ANGELES (AP ) -The CltJ Council aaya it wW not
•ppftWt anel ccmtracts for
_.c1oo "' 11ie mo mUJ1oo Jllnajo tenorollnl I I a t I O D bollll ..-...i near Page,
Adi., unlll llleJ C<>lltaln Oii·
vircnmental aafeauards.
The councH denied a request
.from the city DoportJnent or
•Wat.er and Power for approval
ti • agree-. wlih four otber utUJlleo lo Atllona and
Novadll ...r Ibo feder al
1oven11D..i I~ i.udlng the
coal-llufnlng plant. llbkh will
..... Loi Anplos.
,
~ ' • '
•
doubleknit
sla~ks
The perfect complement to
o handsome new summer sport
c oa t ... polyester d ouble<na
slacks in eigh t great colors.
From our lmpod 7ffs group. 25.00.
Men's Sport Cloth;ng
·,
•
' I>
~
-
summer-ized knii
sport ~oats
Remember when you discovered the
comfort and non-crush resilience of
d oubleknits? You probably wore them
in every season ex cept summer! McGregor
hos changed oil that ... with l;ghlwe;ght,
right-weight designs e specially for the
Broadway , especially for summer.
Featured are 2-button models with wide
la pels, deep ce nter vents. 55.00-65.00
Men's Sport Cloth;ng
• ::-... • •
l'i
~
it!'s at the hroadway
ORANGE, M.11 •f Ot•t1t•
2100 No. f ,,.ti" Str••I 11141 ttl-IJl I
ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTtN6TON IEACH·
444 N. f11clid 11141 IJS.1121 47 f•1hlon 111•1'14 1114) l44-1211 1111 E.Ji1t9•t A•e1111. 17141 l f 2-lll l
SHO, lO A.M. +o f tlO ,,M • .MONDAY THR.OU6H FRIDAY, SATURDAY 10 A.M. t.' P',M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 5 P.M.
•
. '
•
•
CERll.llOI
500 lot Cerrlt•• M•ll 1211) 160-0411
'
' IF one vertebra was
this large, just
the size of the • • 1mag1ne
whale, say Harbor
View fifth grade students.
r,
6men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor .. ,. "
l Prehisto .ric Life Revived
~ • i
i
I
I
I
•
An artist's rendering and
11 fossil of
a claw help Mrs . Alic e
Culv er d es cribe
the extinct ground sloth.
By L1\URI E KASrER
01 1111 O•il, PLlol $1•11
Have you ever touched a mastodon's
femur?
Maybe you've felt a sloth's claw? Or,
perhaps the vertebra of a whale which
probably became beached in ~uff,
now 100 feet above the sea?
Thanks to a smatl crew of volunteers.
more than 1.500 students in the Newport
·· esa Unified Schoo I District have
touched these rather strarige but scien-
tiricallv true fragments of life l'rom as
1nany as 100,000 years ago in this coastal
area,
Since the first of ~1ay, 16 women, refer-
red to as paleo docents, have traveled
with these relics to classrooms at the
teachers' requests.
In addition to a number of fossils. they
carry a bag of sand fro m Eastbluff digs.
a story of the local foss il beds and an ex·
planation of just what a fossil is.
BASICALLY INTERESTED
Mrs. Joan McSumis, one of 12 docents
from the J unior League, descri bed the
group as "people who were basically in·
tercsted but who didn't know an awful lot..,
i\·lrs. Alice Culver ihad been wtliappy
that deve lopers' bulldozers were destroy·
ing 'the canyons and plants ~·hich had
held back the cliffs over the years.
Then on a walk through the area one
Sunday about a year ago, she met two
boys who had found a bison's skull and
v.•hate's rostrum. She has been involved in
efforts to preserve oc mark the dig,
located behind the Newport Tennis Club,
ever since.
\\/hen scientists showed an interest,
Family Hate Makes Waste
DEAR ANN LANDERS: When I was
nine years old I lost my father in a truck
accident and now I am 16. After the ac·
cident my cousin told me I was lucky -
that she hated her dad and wished it had
been him. I told hel'-if she ever said that
to me again I'd sock her.
When I hear kids at school say they
hate their parents, It makes me sick.
They don't know what they are saying.
Sure, all families have disagreements
and people get mad, but I can't imagine
holding grudges and not being able to
forgive each other.
I hope you will print my letter soon,
Ann. Il seems there I.a a Jot more bate for
older people today than tllere ul<d to be.
Or am 1 WTODil -QUINCY TEEN
DEAR Q.: I doa1 bow If tllere II more
bale for older pttple tUli ~re Med lo
bt, bat kkb are more ..tlpoka aboat
lllelr 1 .. u.11. EvefJ day I .... tve al
-•-.1.U.rslnolteeaqon-
Hy tlley ute tWr mot•r tr /alller -w
boCll. I •lew tlds a tra1ec!J IOI ..., be-
._ Uae klU 1Uffer,.bol tloolr,......
u wen.
Tbe belt ...,.,. ol -II to lry to re-establlall comualOldom 1& die point
wbere It broU don. .__. !lie
whole family mn& pt eemtellng in
order to aooomplll• dds. If eertafll mem·
hers rtfase, Ille ooea D rK'Opbe the
lle<d1lloald1onpnlleu.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband Is
having an aUalr wilh h1s secrewy. This
•
'4•.L~ •• •
has been going on for over a year, but
I've been looking the other way, hoping it
would wear ltsell out. I see nothing to be
tgained by confronting him. nor do I have
any intention of asking him to make a
choice.
Two weeks ago the secretary's 14-year·
old 900 heard about the aUair and told
our IS.year-old "'" who promptly told h1s
grandmother.
Now my moEber·in·law is pressuring
me to telephone the secretary and insi!t
that !he resign from her job. I bell.Ve
this woold be humiliating to my husband
and place me 1n the position of having to
.. lake steps" should ahe refuse. -My
mother-in-law also wanll me to a1t down
with the two boys and uplain the sltua·
lion "objectively."
I've shed a bucket of tears over this
mess and Sm confused and sick at heart.
Advise me, please. -INSOMNIA IN
IDAHO
DEAR IDA : You've alrea dy had too
mutb adVtce. All bad. Don't telephone the
secretary. Don't have any !lummlt
meetJag1 with the children. llold your
bead up. Issue no ulUmatum!I. If your
mother·lD-l1w c:oatlnate1 to harangue you,
tell ber IO buH oul
•
'
, ..
·~
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I hope il's not
too late to put in my two cents worth for
the mother with the two beautiful
daughters who sat home a lot because
they were too ta11 for mO!t guys.
I know who wrote that letter and I'd
Jjke to remind her oi. the lime I arrived
at the house and she told me in very plain
language she would not allow her
daughter to be seen with a tong-haired
gorilla. Then she shut the door in my
face.
The girl was nice and fa irly attractive,
but her mother's mouth was her
downfall. I never called her again. What
do you think of a 17-year~ld who would
let her mother make aucb .decisions for
her? -1'2" IN ALABAMA
DEAR 11": I'm aot sun tM &lrl "let"
btr. It llMdl • U m1m1 ll dwi tlke--
over typi and sbe look over. J feel IOITf
for her daa&bter.
Discover how to be date bait without
fallrng hook, Hne and sink er. Ann
Landers' booklet, "Datlng Dos a n d
IJon'ts." v.·ill help you be more poised and
sure or your5eH on dales. Send 35 cents In
coin along with a long, stamped, self·ad·
dressed envelope and your request to the
OAll .Y PILOT .
..
• '
publicity was generated and many in the
community became involved in the
prehistoric past.
For some, such as Mrs. Lyman Porter
and 11rs. Bob Montgomery, digging in
this lieavy sand became a fa mily hobby
spurred by the finding of an "enormous
vertebra."
GLORIOUS FEELING
"It's a glorious feeling to find
something," Mrs. l\1ontgomery expl ained.
And, she claims. ''It's such fun lo dig ."
Since the area was designated as an or-
ficial dig of the Los Angeles County
l\.Yuseum, many of the fossils were re.
moved.
"Meredith (~1rs. Porter) and I began
to think how marvelous it would be to
have these, things come back to Newport
Beacll," Mrs. Montgomery exp'Iained .
The patr, a1mg with Mrs. Richard
\Vallis. learned that some of the fo&sils
could be loa ned back to the area. 11ley
received the enthusiastic support of the
school district and enlisted volunt.eera
from the Junior League to start the pro-
gram.
Voluntee rs have attended a training
session every Friday for the last two
inonths. Curators at the Los Angeles
CoWtty Museum of Natural History, the
La Brea Tar Pits and the Ray All
1fuseum, Dr. Harold Fitzwater from the
Biology Department at Golden V.:~t
College and school district penonnel.bave
helped to train these indi viduaJs.
Once it began, the program was "S(lld
out" with teacher requests in the first
two days, according to Dr. William Sarr
The t hrill of •
fi nd ha1
addicted (from lafll
Mra. Richard
Wal ll1,Mn. lob
Mon,_ry•nd
Mn. Lyman
Portor 19 ditllnf.
born, the school district's dirl'<'10r or in-
structional 1nedia.
EXCELLENT llESPONS E
Response lo it .so far , he add<'d , h;1s
been excellent.
Dr. Sanborn said the progr,1111 1~
"perhaps the only thing like it u1 the
slate.''
l l is unique. first, because it \1:l s
started by the \1·omen themselves. Thl·
district, ha\'ing an "intense interest" in
fossils, helped the1n along .
It might be a one·Of·a-kind thing also
beca use of the natural cause or it all -
t he East bluff fossi l beds y,·hich ar<'
located on pri vate properly y,·ittnn the
school di strict li1nits.
This site, explained Dr. Sanborn. is
''one of the most remarkable on egf\h "
Remai ns of both land and sea animals
have been found there. Normally, these
are found far from each other.
Mrs. Culver told fifth grade stud ent s al
Harl;lor View School, "They say this is
the largest collection of mcgafossils
found in the whole western Americas."
ENVISION A BEACH
Docents encourage the children to en-
visibn "a wide sloping beach 1Yhcre a
large river flowed into the ocean through
a bay or estuary which was partially pro--
tected, and near which there were grass~
lands for grazing animals and shrubs or
woodlands for the browsing animals.''
Paleontologlsta beli eve the bay was fed
by streams whlch washed ln the bones
from land animals and mixed them wit h
marine animals which also had died
there.
Bones from a man1moth, horse, tapir
:ind raincl have been found In ih£'s e dies
v.11h 1he remains of a \\'hale . turtle, shark
alld 1nany shells fro1)1 fish which no
Jongf'r tan be found living in this area.
"lt"s really l'Xt'iling !o see the
l'hildre n's p\casu rt• in seeing and touching
all thl' fossils and in sudden ly realizhlff
1hi1t lhese are llart of thei r 01~·n town.'
f\lr!' l\lonti;:om1 'ry said, "and they begin
'') 1111;i~ine ho11 N1·11'1>0r1 Beach and Costa
i\ll·s:i looked 100.UUO YL'<lrs ago."
"The trou b!t· 1s ... said l\·lrs. Culver,
•·1ou get thcrn so cxt·tll'd thC'y want to
gcr nght out !here en 11 " ,
S1n1:e the d1~s art" located on private
11n•JM'rty, this 1s 1n1possible for most-.of
the t hildren. 'l'he docents, however, do
t;1k1• a bag of the sand and al low the
:;tudents to sift .through It and keep all
the shells th ey fi nd.
This evokes a common question,.
''\Vhat's this'?"
CONTINUING HOPES
Although the question often ha1 to go
11nans1vered, the volunteers and school
district officials are hopeful of continu in&
the children's education.
A program on the La Brea Tar Pits
111ill be orfered next year in addition to
the two which have rilready started.
A site for the stud<'nls to "dig'' also ls
"a highly desirable thing," Dr. Sanford
said. For this. hoy,·eve r. they 'A'ould haVt
to fi nd a bed or fossil!! not In an area
scheduled for development and !hen alio
obtain the owner's permission. •
Some residents. loo, have voi~.=·
for a junior museun1 which would •
bine displays of fossi ls and Indian
\.i:ith classes in arts and crafts. ·=-··~· ·:r •.•
I
i,
. ~
• • • • •
' '
Mond&t, Junt S, 1972'
Charity Funds Ballooning
•
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Pisces: Debt Will Be Paid
TUESDAY
JU NE 6
Actor Robert Mitchum, a
Leo, has had a varied career
and on~e wrote astrology
articles and speeches. Robert
Cumming!. the v e rs a I i I e
C.emini actor, is a keen 1tu-
dent of astrology. 0 I h e r
celebrities, who have openly
expres.!!ed their inte rest in
a~trology. include . Marlene
J)eitrich. Kim Novak, Wa!ter
Slezak, '-1ae West , Ann Miller,
Susan Strasberg and Glenn
F'ord.
ARIES !March 21-April 19):
Take in itiative in making new
cont acts. Take chance on
ptrsonal abilitie!, ta J e n t s .
Communicate. Play active
role. Express yourself. Be in-
dependent. original. Le ad
rather than follow . Be in-
ventive. dari ng.
TAURUS <April 20-May 20 \:
Family member shares con--
fidence . This can lead to great ·:Jie ol affection. However, you
mull respond in mature man-
ner. Don 't cut first atone. If
GEMINI (May t i-June 101:
ac~nt now is on friendship,
mutual interests highlighted
with Piacet individual. Accept
social 1nv1 tat1 on. l;et around
-rome out of emotional rut.
CANCER !June 21 -July 22 1:
Your inn11te abilities come to
fore -)OU are appreciated,
rewarded Nothing now is apt
to bf! halfwa y. Instead. it is all
or nothing. hot or cold -no
I u k e w a r m temperaturf's.
LEO I July 23-Aug. 22 1:
Good luna r aspect now CQin·
cides with added information,
higher education and journey.
Yoo make progre.s.s. You in-
lipire confidence. You get
communication from a r a r
which verifies theories. You
are vi nd icated!
VIRGO jAug . 23-Sepl. 22 1:
Concern indicated in area of
finance~, partnership, the hid-
den. Get accounting. Remove
doubts by surveying facts,
figure s. Take inventory. Leo is
Coast Groups
New offict1r1 still are being
lmtllled and coast groups are
adding fashion shom and in·
tere.!iting speakers to lbe
calendar for extra Jli,zzazz.
ORT
American Busniess Women'•
Asaociatio n.
The 7 p.m. gathering will
take place in the Villa Sweden
restaurant, Corona de! Mar.
Home ma kers
in picture. ~take known your
views. Be specific. One who
cares will respond.
LIBRA (Sept. %3-0ct. 22 1:
Trust hunch regarding con·
tract, partnership offer. Teach
and learn. Share knowledge.
r·ollow through on hunC'h. Be
diplon1a1Jc. Let others ~et
p<1ce. (;et second wind. Canrer
;ind Aqua r I u s individuals
figure prorninently.
SCORPJ() (Oct. ?-1·NO\". 21 1:
!l;ew 11.'ork pn.iN>dures are
featured Sr>C1<1J l'On ta cl pro\'es
meaningful. You learn and
earn. One \Vhu serves you
deser\'f'S break 1n routine.
Know il and act accordingly.
SAGfTTARIUS \Nov. 22-
Dec. 21 1· l're<it1 ve endeavors
succeed. Break !hrough: get
lo heart of rnatters. i\1en1ber
of opposi te sex <:ould issue
ultimatum. Re con~i deralf'.
but don't give up son1elhing
for noth ing. &orpio is \'f'ry
much in picture.
CAPRICOR~ I Dec . 22-Jan .
19 1: Be ready for ch.ange of
scenery. Message or call gets
you going. Home environment
is subject to adjustment. What
was settled is revived. Check
details. Don 't pr o mise
something you cannot deliver.
Be punctual.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb
18 1: Accent on short journeys,
develnpment of ideas
Relati ves are much in picture
\'ou "\.\'Jll be doing plenty of ex -
plaining. Key is ro be patient
and dip!on1a11t· Forces tend lo
be scattered. Finish one task
at a lin1e.
PISCES ! Feb. t9-March 20 1
Cua rd valuables. Consolidate ·
gains. Take no unnecessary
risks See in light of reality
Avoid brooding \\'hat appears
a setback cnulrl boomerang in
vour favor. Dtht "'ritten off as ios.~ "·ill be repa1rl
Tn fond O<JI wnn' IHC~V tor WIU I~
m onev end loV•, "'""' 5Yd'lev o,,...,.., bool<••f ·-seer~• l-<•n•1 IN M•n •~<!
l'/om•n" ~end ~·""de!1 e nd 15 (1'111
lo Om•rc A•l•o•oov -S•(•.,I, tne Ollll" I
I'll.OT. Bo• J2.tl, Grenet Ce~tr1 I 5••·
''""'New Yo<<, N, 'I, 10011.
Seat Off ice rs
Panhellenlc's Min erva A"·ard
will be announced cl uring the
June 10 party and the "'i nner
will receive a silver medal and
$350.
Students from various col-
leges \vii! be present to answer
questions on campus life.
lnforma11on ma y be obtained
frorn J\·1rs. Wilfiam Budd or
Mrs. Roy June.
National A .s soc 1 a t ! on of
Insurance Women 's persona!
business cards projec t.
Telephone ..
• .. I
' WE'VE
• MOVED ' • I l • • • • ' ' • ••• ' • \ • ' ' • •
' • • • ' ' ., • I • • 116 ' • f STEPS
• to our
' NEW .,
• \ • I • ' •
i I
•
A game night will be presented by Clip ped Wings, for mer TWA hostesses, to
raise fund s for the Hum an Growth Foundatio n, \Vh ich aids ch i I d re n with
growth problems. The party \viii take place at 8 p.m. Friday, June 9, in Hale-
ciest Park, Costa Mesa . Practicing skills are ~trs. Jim •Anderson Oeft) and Mrs . f\a y Campbell.
Bob Bu rns re s t a u r a n I ,
Newport Beach will be the set·
ting for the third annual in·
s!allation dinner of South
Coast Chapter of Women·a
American ORT.
Seated as president during
the Wednesday, June 7, affair
will be Mr.!!. Norman Ham·
mer. AMisting her during the
coming year will be the
Mmes. Stan Berman, ex·
ecutive v\ce president and
tre a s u rer, and Jame~
Klayman, Mik e Pleskoff and
Al Resnick, secretaries.
New officers will be in-
stalled by Coast Homemakers
cluring a 9:45 a.m. meeting
Friday, June 9, in Villa
Sweden restauran1, Corona de\
Mar. Miss Susan Schablf'ill
will speak on her recent
voyage on World Campus
Afloat.
lnsura_nce
Feminine Idenlity -We 've
Come a Long Wa y will be the
theme for the luncheoo-fa:ihion
show to be .given, by the '
Panhelleni c Jnsurance Women or Orange
C.Ommun1cations and Com·
mun ion will be the topic of ac-
tress Jeanne Cagney when she
addresses the Telephone.
Pioneers' Orange County Life
Membe r Club at noon Thurs·
day, June 8, in the SaddlebaCk
Inn, Santa Ana .
Mi ss Cagney, a Newport
Beach resident, played the
leads in foor major Broadway
stage producUons and ap-
peared in more than a do:r.en
movies.
Soutk Coast
Plazar
Location
•
l '
I • ' .,
\
Service
,•
Awards
Given
Mrs. E. Mortimer Gherman
Qf· Newport Beach has been
8'Iected to receive the
.Ic.eadership A"•ard of the
Orange County branch of the
:Arthritis Foundation for her
_;;ork as chairman of the
~omen's auxiliary.
: ·The award will be presented
lo her by -::lane Wyman, cam-
paign chairman of the Foun·
dation's 1972 f<"und TJrive, dur-
in_g the organi7.ation 's annual
Mteting at 7 p.m. Tuesday,
J'u)ie 6, in Disney land 's Club
a:l.-'
"Mrs. Marian Fu ller, also of
NeWport Beach, will be given
t 'ti-e Outstanding Volunteer
Mtrard for ha ving worked
1110ri than t"·o years on the
Men Not Liberated:
Two Special Information County at 11 :30a.m. Saturday,
Parties will be sponsored by J une 10, in the Peek Family
Newport Harbor Panhellcnic Colonial Terrace Room ''i';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ill in June for all girls entering a Westmin.'itlcr. II
None to Join League
four-year C(Jllcge in the fall. nolls in costumes from dif-
Mrs. Robert L. Koehler will fere nt periods will be loaned DTERY Business Women open her Ne\vport Beach hon1e for decorations by the Young
A fashion show and talk on from 2 to 4 pm. Saturday. Adult \Vorkshop of the United AIR STEP_ BE RNARDO
The League of Women
Voters will remain just what
its name implies, a lf'flguc for
womf';n voters, despite a mo-
tion by delegates at the league
convent ion In Atlanta that
men be given "equal rights."
The league also voted to
adopt lhree new cn1pha.~es in
its nat ional progran1: policies
on solid "'a.s le n1anagemcnl,
equal rights for \\'On1cn and
special needs or An1eriran In-
dians.
Currenl league a c t i o n -
studies include air qualily,
welfare reform, equal housing,
education and emp!oyn1ent op-
port uni!ies, congressional re-
form l'lnd normalizing rela-
tions with Red China.
Delegates also reaffirmed
the league'• nonpartisanship
June 10, for the fir st, and !he Cerebra! Palsy Association of -KIMEL EDWARD$ )low k nd hat l l k -GERBERICH -. to psc a w o a e second will take pla ce at 7:30 Orange C.Ounty. Pl"FLYERs -u.s.i<eos
ix>lic)l. by rejecting a proposal on a trip will be pr~nted at 7 p.m. Wednesday. J une 21. in The luncheon is a public 0·~:;;~r 0~~c~=
wh ich would have allowed p.m. Thursday, June 8, for the Costa Mesa home of :\1rs. relations project to further the C•rnctrv1 ,_.for Clllldru
board members at all levels to members ol the Newport Lloyd McCollum. 225 L 17th St.
undertake political activities Beach Charter Chapter of the Th e rec i PI en t o f,lfr~~~~~:S~~~~5~~~c= .... ~~M~-~~·~·~"~·~'="~'~~m in addition to running for of-
fice. ,,
Mrs. Lucy Wilson BenMn11;::======================;i( Want To Solve Your Decorating \\"as re-elected president for a NEED HELP?
third l\\'O·year term. COM?LETE COME TO
Army Low
LAF A YETIE. Ind. <UPI ) -
The nation's teen-agers don't
go along with the Pentagon
plans for an all-volunteer
army, accordi ng to a survey.
In fa ct. the number of high
school pu pils who plan to go
into military service after
graduation is at a 20-year low ,
the mo!l recent Purdue Opin·
Ion Poll also reveals.
SHOE & LUGGAGE INTER'i:;~9h~~~b~~TI NG
REPAIR CLASSR OOM 5 2-HOUR WEEKLY
SESSIONS '"'
RESTYLING
••
Rob inson's Shoe Repo ir
U1 1 Yovr Robi"'o" C~•r9•
:~~~~Th ird L1v1I of El1vt tor
$29.95
!ftt•Ml11<tery ~•it•
Day or Ev•"lng
/?~ &I-W-n-/~
420 ·3ht St.
Newport Beack
Newport l11ch
(on Lido P1nln1u1•)
Make Reservationa
PHONE 673-1722
Now -Class•• are l imited
i YM. Wt'r• u-·-v ,, ..... M "' 8rl"el • Sir.el lkt )16'1. SPKI-
I l it•lly, • •Mrt w•lk
"°"~ row•rd1 I~• ~Mro
lf'd. °" !~t le_. mall .. Wt're !!<r91;lly •trou • ,,.,,,, Woolwo""-·
• \ ., • ' \ • • YOU'LL LIKI ; OUI NIW LOOK !
The House of
SAMI 'IALUI, QUALITY,
S!LICTION AND SIRVICI
STARS
Sydney Omarr is one ot
the 1vorld's great astrolo-
gers. His column is one ot
the DAILY PILOT'S great features.
organizalion's act i\'ities . 1--;::===================================;-I
nO i .~ I l n g u ished $er\"ice ~~rds 11•1]! be presented to Dr .. Sanford H. AnzeJ and Dr.
!Apn B. Kiitz, both of Santa
~-
: ...
, . . .
: -~ ., ..
(Awd if you insist nn Oil
04rdvark, 11011 'll fi11 d 011e
ii,, the DAILY PILOT'~
~day comic section in
~er'• Ark.) ..
·, " .
;, " •,
"
Phone
6424321
For
! 1
J J
A POLITICIAN
LOOl<S TO THE
NEXT
LE CTI ON
A
STATESMAN
LOOKS TO
THE NEXT
GENERATION .
Weekender ;
Name one of Frasi er's cubs and win lotsa prizes!
Enter bt any store now! Stiturday. Jurie lO is the
day to see Frasier's cubs , •. end find ou t if
you're e winner . , . prizes inc lude pas~e s to l ion
Country Safari , Fra sier bee ch towe ls . T-shirts,
mugs and more. Get a Frasier Club card. too. TM Schmitz FtJmily, Ea.w, I m •
RE-ELECT JOHN
SCHMITZ
CON BRESSMAN
Advertising SANTA ANA FASHION SQUARE
·-Santa Ana / C''rden Grove FwysatMaln
' J
'
1'1onday, Junr 5, 1972 DAILY PILOT JG .
Mother's Job Might Sweeten Family Life .... ~ .. .
•• ~~
.. ••
By CAROL MOOR E
Of fflt C•llr l"ll•I 111111
A mother's job outside the
home can be the icing that
. holds the cake together if the
family's financial and enio-
Uonal layers are fi rnL
But lf ntarriage o r
personalities are a J r e a d y.
crumbling, the extra job is an
unwise .escape, 0 o r o l h y
Wenck, Orange County home
advisor, explained to the
Motherhood Mystique class
presented by UCI University
Extension.
Fringe benefit s or
homemaking were listed as
"being your own hos.!, working
at your own pace in a variety
ot tasks, having unrestricted
priv ileges such as TV .
telephone and coffee. dressing
comfortably and working for
people you Jove .''
Mrs. Wenck listed these
reasons that compel womC'11 to
work :
-Cost of living. Her income
is nee<led to help support the
SCAnER AND AREA 51%£ RUGS
TYPE CONDITION
Abad eh ........... : ........•... N
Pala ce Esfahan ········-···--·· N
Dargaiin -·---··--··········--··-·-·· E
Palace Kashan -·-·-···-·-·-··-N
Morocco ........... _ -------.-·-· E
Shiraz _ ----·· E
Ash faque , _ __ N
Imperia l Palace Kerman ... N
Super Rekha ....... N
Prayer Rug . . N
Cornet . . N
Kerman .... ____ N
Hamedan ··--· .... . ..... E
Palace Ka sh an ··-·····-·· ...... N
Eba louc h -·········--·····-··-···-··· E
Bokhara ----------·--·····--··-····· N
Palace Kashan ·---·····--·--··-· N
Quom -···-·-·-·-···· .. ·--········--·-N
Quom -··-····--·· ................... N
Mazleghan -··-········-···-······-E
Abadeh ······················-··-·-N
SIZE SALE PRICE
5'3"x3'6"
5'3"v3 '5"
5'7"x3'7"
5'7"x3'5"
S'J "x3'2"
5'2"xl '9"
5'x3 '
5'x 3'
5 'x]'
5'3 "x3' I''
5' x 3'
5'x)'
6'3"x3'4"
5'2"x3' I"
5'2"x3'3"
5'x3'
4' I O"x3'
S'xJ '
5'x3'6"
5'2"x3'7"
5'x2 ' '
199.00
350.00
165.00
450.00
69.00
199.00
75.00
199.00
125.00
179.00
95.00
175.00
99.00
350.00
6f.OO
199.00
299.00
399.00
350.00
165.00
159.00
FINE QUALITY HAMEDANS AND
FERDOUSE POUSHTI RUGS
Limited Quantity
Size Approx. 3'x2 '
22.50
AREA SIZE AND THROW RUGS
Kham se h -··-····--·-······-·-··---·-E
Hamedan -·-·-··--··--··-·-·-·····-E
6'7"x4'4"
6'10"x4'7''
199.00
199.00
6'9''x4'4" ···-199.00
6'8"x4' IO" 165.00
Mahal -····-----·--·-·-·----··-·-····-E
Afsh ar -···-·-·-··-··--····----··-····-E
Afshar -·-·-·········-··············-·· E
Shiraz --·---···-····-·-···········-·--E
Abadeh ........................... N
Bal ouch ............... -·-·--··--·-N
Cornet --·· .... -------. --,---··-N
Ellack ...... ---·-········--···· ..... N
P .. lace labriz .......... __ N
Bakhti ar -----·---··--····--· ...... E
Roya l Pl. Saruk ····----·· ..... N
Saruk Mahal -········-··----·--·-· E
Kashan ----·····-·· ·····---·-------· N
Boteh Mir ........................ N
Ashehan ... ···---·····-···-·····--· N
Pak B•khara ·-·-·-········-·-··-N
Ha medan --·····-····------···----· E
Quom ······-·-····-···-·····-·--····· N
Meshk in ··-········-·---······-·-··· N
Karman ............................. N
Zarand .............................. E
Shahrbaft -···--·--·······-······-N
Kashan ···················-·········-N
Ba khti ar -·-·---·····--··-··---------E
Angelus ....... ;; ..................... E
Armanibaft ········-···-·······-E
Shahsavan ·-······-·---·-···--·····-E
Mahab•d ----·--······--··········· E
Malay•r ·-·--··-·---··--········ S.A.
Malayer ·-···-··········--·--···-··· A
Bo khara ······-····----·--·····-···· A
6'4"x4' 11 "
7'x5'5''
7'x4'10''
6'1 l "x 3'1"
6'x4'
6'x4'
6'2"x4' IO"
6'9"x5'b"
6'9"x4'3"
7'x4 '8"
6'4"x4'3"
7'x4'8"
6'8"x4' IO"
6'3"x4'3"
6'2"x)'2"
6'7"x4'8"
6'9"x4'5"
7'x4'
6 ' r l"x4'2"
6'6"x3' r l ''
6'9"x-4'5"
6'8"x4'4"
-6'1"x4'6"
6'J"x3'5"
6'7"x4'3"
165.00
299.00
450.00
169.00
165.00
89.00
450.00
299.00
499.00
199.00
325.00
325.00
550.00
179.00
99.00
599.00
399.00
'299,00
199.00
350.00
399.00
199.00
199.00
199.00
299.00
6'6"x4'6" <.t 199.00
6'JO"xl'JO" 299.00
6' I O"x4'
6' 1 "x3'5"
225.00
499.00
FABULOUS QUALITY KERMANS
Mede Ilion Design end V ese Design
in Very Rich Kerman Colors
Size 4 'x2 '
79.00
ROOM SIZI RUGS
Balouch -·····-···········-··-··--·· N Shirai. •......... : ..................... E
lmpar ial Pl. Karman -········-N
Ard1b;J .............................. N
Karm an -·-----··-··-···-·--·------N
Prin. Pak. Bokh1ra ····-···-N
Pa•istan Bo•hara ··---·----N
Corn at ...... ·-···-----·---········ N
Chines• ···•··-·-·------·---··-·-A Ard1bll ............................ N
Kiva ........................ -........ N Afshar ___ : ___________________ .. ___ E
8'3"x4'4 "
1'2."xs··1·•
8'l"x4'fO''
8'9"x5'3"
8'2°x5'
8'5"x4' I I"
8'l"x5'1 '1
8'x5'
8'8"x 6'
8'1 l"xS'711
8'3"x4'2"
8'5"xS'I"
350.00
·450.00
550.00
550.00
450.00
599.00
2H.OO
245.00
399.00
49'.oo
450.00
2H.OO
family , provide medical ca.re
or save for college.
-P e r .s o n a I lutfillment.
Women need to use their
talenls and training , "be you
in another "'ay" and broaden
their vi ewpoin ts beyond ho1ne
and children.
LOST INCOME
(A family with two chlldren
with a colle ge grad u a t e
1nother who does not work for
14 years actually loses as
much as $100 ,000 incoine,
based OD her oon-.salary anti
the cost of raising the child·
ren.)
-~1ental Health. An outside
job solves women's borfodon1 ..
isolation or any gu1ll about
"nol cuutribu ling her sliare ur
pulling in ~.Juli day.·•
-RelierfOr h u s b a n d
Providing he approves or ht r'
job, a wife can preserve IK·r
husba nd's health by relieving
him of economic pressures
and provide herself with
"einergency insurance" by
bting skilltd In a job if she
should become the sole pr!>"
vider.
TliEN CONTROVEllS Y
As arguments a g a I n s I
""'tITTlen working. Mrs. \Vr1)t'k
rnenlioned conditions ""'he-rr
the extra salary nu.•ans 11
h1glwr tax. braeket . child cart•
is unava ilable, socia l s1ign111
or n1an's t"go sa.\S stay al
ho1ne and preschoolers need
influt>nel.' in your particular
\"alues,
~trs . \\'cntk countered the
rontentlon tha t teenage years
are a new critical ti111e wh en
mother is needed to supervise
at honlt, saying, "You can't
fl)llOw lhem for Jiff'. Values
should be already instilled and
1he child ren should have a
chance to be in<lt:pendent."
She also noted that one-rifth
of working women with bac-
calaureate d f' ~r te s 1:1rr
employed as1 clerical or f1u·-
tory workers. And actual
money earned is about half a
salary, after ded uc!ions, jot.i
expenses and hig her t.'Osls or
livi ng are figured.
Alluding co the current
punch Hne that "Ms. ls the 11b-
brevlat.ion f o r miserable ,"
Mrs. Wenck repftd. that life is
wNit ')'OU make it.
"Every wornan must make
her own choice where society
needs her most ; what ht-r
physical stamina will allow,
ho\lil: to use time most ef·
rtci('nt!y and which is more
in1portant, people or things."
said r..1rs. Wenck.
"Also. a v.·orking \\•ife (and
her fan1 ily) have to rralize she
t'an'I do eve rything. S h e
should establish priorities and
-~: ~ 'tnleDl(eot .. '
doing 1hlnp no better:Jlln
lh<y need be done -nol;ti!n
sheels, for lmtance." ::~:
A Southern Ca II to r~a
survey oC pro!wlonallf ~
cessful mo{hen of two iboijc.f
they shared these assets Wtlch
b o l s t e r e d their "dodllle
life:" eac h ant h:>d
understanding and oooperitsTe
husband and children, ~I
mental ~nd physical ~e • ,
s uperior organ1za o
abilities and basic seU-<f.1-
fidence. .,_:
').; •·.
l:
.!·.
$750,000 ORIENTAL RUG SALE!~:
TYPE CONDITION
Zanjan ------· -----·····. E
Palace Esfah.sn •······---····--E
P.sk Bokhara -··········-·····---N
Sup er Re kh.s -···-····-······ ... N
Bokkara -·-··--· ...... N
Shahrbaft _ ... ········-····--N
Golden Bokhara ····---· ... N
Pak . Bok hard . N
Shll:d1; ~ .. ,,...,.'........ E
Cornet N
Pr, Pak. Bokh ar" _ N
S.sl im ar .. N
Sangam . N
Ardabil .......... N
Ma ighan -·--·-··--···--·-····------· E
Kerman --···----·-·-···---··-·-······ E
Kokhara ····--··---···-··-·-··--···-N
Palace Kashan .... ---···-·-···-N
SIZE SALE .PRIC E
b'3"x3 '8"
b'IO"x5'1 "
b'2"x4'2"
6'x4'
S'x5'4"
B'x4' I"
8'4''1r5'3 ''
8'4"x5 ']"
8'9"115 '
9'x 6'
9'6"x6 '
9'x6'
9'x6'
9'6"x5 '4 ''
9'6"x5'5"
9'3''x6 '2"
9'116'
9'7"x6'9"
199.00
599.00
275.00
199.00
450.00
?99.00
399.00
499,00
399.00
325.00
999.00
299.00
250.00
499.00
299.00
999.00
599.00
1099.00
A VERY RARE C.OLLECTION OF
ALL NATURAL SILK QUOM RUGS
W ith Famou s Desig ns Such As
Tehran , Mohtasham, Pr ayer,
Hun ting and An i mal
Size Approx. 5'6"x3'6"
1,999.00
Afg. Bokh ara ....... _ .......... N
Im perial Pl . Kerman ...... N
Ouom ...... ··········-···----· -·-N
Shirax .. ·············-···--· E
Shiraz ....... ......... . ..... E
Pa lace Kashan ·--······· .... N
Vis s -··-·· ___ ........... ___ --·-·· E
Imperial Pl. Kerman .. --·· N
Afg. 8'5khara .................... N
Kerman ......... -·-···--··-N
Ghazvin .. __ N
Palace T abrit •.. -........ N
Ardabil . _ N
Kerma n .. . ........... ..... N
Bakhtiar ............. --··-E
Jowshekhan -·---·······-·-------· E
Afg. Bokhara -·-·--····-···-·· -· N
Kerm an -··············-·--·········-· E
Saraband -··--·-·--··-····-·····-·· N
Mahabad -···-···-···-·········· E
~h~;;; ::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::~ ~
Mehravan ···-·····-··--···-··-··· N
Ta briz ··--·····-·····-···-·······-···-N
Viss -·-··-···----·-··-----···---··-·· E
Balouch .... -·······-···-······-··. N
Oehji -····-·····-·-·-··-·····--.. E
Kerman ·-·-·······-··-···-···· .. _ E
Moonlight . ·-·-·---······--.. . N
Pa lace Heriz -·····-·······----·· N
Kerman -····-·--·-····-··-·--···-·· N
Kerman -···--·-·-··--··-··--·-····· N
Ta briz ·····--···-····-·····-···-·····-E
Bokha ra .... -··--·-·-············-·· N
Afg. Bokhara -···-·--··-··--····· N
Heri:r. -----··--·-·····-······· .. ······ E
Saraband ........................ N
Tabriz ···---··-·-·-·-····-·---··-···--E
Ahar -··--·-···-··-·--···-·······-··-N
M•hravan -·-····-··--··-·---·····-· E
9'9"•7' 499.00
9'3",6' 825.00
9'x 4'9" 999.00
9'8"•5'3" 599.00
9'7",6'7'' 399.00
9'J"x6'J" 850.00
0'10 "•8' 725.00
0'3")(6' 899.00
0'•6' I I" 650.00
O'l",)'J'' 1199.00
0'8"•7 ' I" 1099.00
0'2"•6'8" 1199.00
0'2"•6'4" 5>9.00
O'IO "x8' 699.00
0'2"x 7'4" 599.00
0'6"x7'2" 495.00
0'7"119'3 '' 550.00
0'2"11 7'2" 599.00
0'7"x7' 8SO.O O
0'5"x7'4" 499.00
0'4",6'9" 1199.00
0'5"x6' JO" 399.00
O' I O"x7'8" 850.00
0'8"x 7'8" 799.00
I 'x8' 699.00
I '9"x7'6" 599.00
I '5",8'8" 650.00
1'4"•8'2" 1099.00
r r 'x8' 599.00
I I '4"x7'9" 999.00
I J'JO"x9' 999.00
11 ',8'2'' 7SO.OO
I 1 ·,7· IO" 650.00
11 ·,5· 799.oo
I 1'2",8'5" 450.00
I I' I O"x8'2" 549.00
I 1'6"x7'8" 899.00
I l'JO "x7'JO" 799.00
I 1'9"x8'4" 1199.00
I I '2"x7' IO" 6H.00
PRAYER RUGS
Limited Quantity
Size Approx. S'x3'
179.00
ROOM AND MANSION SIZE RUGS
Kash an ... ··-·····--··---·---··--·-E Royal Pl. Sanik ................ N
Palace Esfehen ------····· N
Tabriz -.·--·--··-----·---·--·---···'" E
Su per Rekha • ---·------····-N
Satulr ··-····-·'·······-··--····-·-E
Cornet . ·-···-··-········-··-·-·-··· N
Royalty Pl. K•rman --·······-N
Tabriz .......... _. .................... E
12'J O"xl0'5" 899.00
12'6"x9' 1450.0~
12 '9"x8'4" 1699.00
I 2'5"x9'4" 750.00
I 2'x9' 675.00
12'J"x9' 999.00
I 2',9' 575.00
12'9"•9'3" 2200.00
I 2'4"x9'5" 899.00
TYPE CONDITION
Imperia l Pl. Kerm an --· ___ N
Hamedan ----··-----·--·---··-··-E
T abriI _ ...................... ,.. N
Imperial Pl. Kermen -·-····-N
Heriz. ·--................ --. N
T abrit .. E
Tabriz. _ E
K a~han E
ONLY AT ROBINSON'S
NEWPORT STORE'
BEGINNI NG MONDAY, JUNE 5
FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY.
Nothing mdtches the be dul y of a ha ndma de Or;ental rug. These on e-of-a-kin cf
· treasures, som e centuries ol d, continue to dazzle and delight discerni ng eyes;
·· today. Why not see for yoursel f? We've 11sw mble d an extraordinary collec-
tion of new , used and ant iqu e Oriental tugs. With the exqu isite charrTt
of handwov en pure wool pil e fr om Persia , Indi a , Pakistan, Turkey and
more . A i.u perb selectio n of Kermans, Bokhar•s, Q uom, Ta briz, Chinese,
Sarou k end Indi an desi gn rugs. And now we offer them to you at
lre mendoui. ~d11in g s. Ru gs Cdrpet s.
All items subject lo prior sa le.
E.,ch h<1 s been c dre ful!y ex<Jm ined ~nd labeled
dS to condition. El Excellent ), G!Good l.
N (New ), Fl Fair ), AIAntiquel , S.A.(Sem i-anlique ).
USE Ot>E OF OuR CONVENI ENT CREDIT PLAN S
SIZE SALF. PRICE
I 2'x9' 1650.00
il' 1 '',8'9" . 899.00
I 2'x9'4" 1299.00
12"8'9" 1399.00
I 2'8",9'2" 1299.0 0
IJ '4",9'JO" 1299.00
J ]'5'',9'7'' 99?.00
I J' Io·-, I 0'5" 1550.00
TYPE
Sardb __
O.srg .sz in
Super Rekh a
Super Re kh 11
Meshk in
Meshkin
P;,l.t cc Sarab
COND ITION
... E
••.. E
SIZE SALE PRICE
I 0'8"113' I"
I 6'11 )'7"
I O'x 2'7"
I 1 '7"•2 '6"
I l '5"x 5'2"
I I '9"•3'7''
I 8'4"x ]'6"
I 4'4"x4'3''
I 2'11 2 '7"
ALLOVER PATTERN LIGHT KERMAN
Extremely Fine
Shdhs dvan
Meshkin
Azd rb dij an
Gh draieh
Ange lus
LCJmbaran ...
lamba r1u1
Azdrba iian ..
Azarba ij an •
... N
N
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
.• E
. ..... E
I I')" x 3' I"
I O'x l ' I "
!2'!0"11 2'5"
I 0'6"113'5 "
375.00
S99.00
199.00
250.00
899.00
450.00
825.00
550.00
299.00
299.QO
199.00
299.00
2SO.OO
299:00
299.0b
450.00
169.00
Size 21'4"xl3'8"
5,999.00
Saruk .......... ---·-···-·-·-·---·-· E
Tabriz ····--····-············-·-··--·· E
Saruk ·-··-···--·----· -·-----E
B<lkh+iar ----·-········· .... E
Afg. Bokhara .................... N
Saruk __ E
Darg<izin N
Palace Esfahan ·---N
Palace Kashan N
Mashad · N
Kerm<in E
Palace Tabriz . _ ..... N
Golden Bok har a _ .......... N
Imperial Pl. Kerman ...... N
Tabriz . . ................ E
Imperial Pl. Kerm an ,_ .... N
Pak. Bokhara -·-·· N
Super Rekh ., ... N
SL.:n light -·-····-······'····· N
C-:irn et .. . ..... ......... N
S11r uk ... E
Hdm edan N
Royal Pl. Sa ruk _ N
Ka\han E
Imperial Pa l. Kerman .. N
Pdl<tce Esfahan N
Ba khtiar .. , E
Palace Kashan .. . N
Im perial Pl. Kerm an N
Ker man ---· E
Turkish -··-·-··············-······· A
Bakhtiar ____ _ ___ -·-······ E
Ma shad _ . E
Imperial Pl. Kerm an ....... N
Kerman ..... .. .. ....... N
Royal Pl. Sa ruk ............... N
Kashan ---······ ............ , E
Kermanshah ····--··········-··· A
Cornet ---··-·--····-·--·······-· .. ·• N
Palace Kashan ···--···-·-.... N
Meshkabad .............. E
Ghazvin ·---···········--·--·······-N
Meimai ---·-··-····-·-·--····-..... N ~:e::ii:~ ~.1.' ••• ~.~-~~~.~-:.·_·.·.·_-.. _-_ ~
Chinese -·········-·---·····---····-A
Imperial Pl. Kerman -·--·-·-N
Kerman .......................... N
Kerman ·---··· .. ·········-··-··-N
Imperia l PL Kerman ···--·--N
Quom -·--·-·······----·······---·--·-N
Kerman ·-······--······--.. ···---·· N
RUNNERS
DarCjlatin -·-··--···-·-·-·-········· E
K•rmon ··-··-·····-······-·--·--·--N
Kerman ...... --·-······-·-····-···· N
Kerman ............................. N
I J'J"x9'9" 1099.00
ll'8"x lO 'J" 1099.00
I 3'4"<9'7" 899.00
I 3'4"• I 0'3" 999.00
IJ'IO"xl' 1099.00
I ]',9'5" 899.00
13'JO"x l0'7" 1450.00
I 3'2"~9 ' IO" 2250.00
I J'2"x9'7" 1799.00
13'6"x9 '1 I" 1299.00
I ]',9'2" 1099.00
I ]'2", I 0' 1799.00
I ]'2"•9'6" 1199.00
13 '9",8' IO" 1999.99
14 '4 ",10'5" 1599.00
14'7",9' IO" 2250.00
4' I 1''x 12' I" 2200.00
4',IO' 899.00
4•,10· 1099.00
4·,10· 7SO.OO
4'J ",l I']" 1099.00
4'x l0'1 I" 999.00
4'3"ir l0'5" 1999.00
6'7"xl 1'2" 2499.00
6'2"x9'9" 2599,00
5'2")(9'9" 2750.00
6']", 11 '4" 2099,00
6'7"'12 '5" 3600.00
15']",9'9" 2450.00
16'8", I 2' IO" 2200.00
J5 '10"x ll'JO" 750.00
15'8"<10'1 I"1499.00
16'1"<11 '6" 1599.00
16'3'',9'1 I" 2199.00
16 ']",9'10" 2199.00
17'8"x9'2" 2699.00
I 7'x I 0'7" 1999.00
17'x l 1'3" 1299.00
I 8'4"x 12'2" 1299.00
17'5"xl0'10" 4999.00
J7'6"xll'7" 1899.00
17'1 0"xJO'JO" 2499.00
17'x J0 '8" 1999.00
2 I '4", I J'S" 5999.00
21'3"•1 4'8" 2299.00
J9',J2 ' 850.00
26'4"xl l'.10" 5999.00
19'x l J'S" 3999.00
19'9'', I J'l" 4500.00
lJ ',12'6" 4500.00
I 7', IO' IO " 3999.00
19'•1 I' 3250.00
I 0'4"x2' IO" " 259.00
IO'x2'6" Jff.00
9'7"x2'5" 32S.OO
I 3'3"x2'8" 3H.OO
GARDEN OF EDEN 'NAIN'
· The Finest Quality Persian Rug
Size I I '3"x7'6"
6,500.00
Kerman .... ·····-······---·-····--N
Serab ·····-·-··········-·--·-····-··· E
s.,rab ····---·-··-········--·-··--.. ·-E
Mishki n ·······-·············--··-·· N
Royal Pl. Saruk ····-··-·-······ N
Gber•ie h --···--·--·-··•·····--·•• E
G1r9azin •........••.....• : .......... E
16'l"x2'6"
I I 'x3'6"
10'5"'3'5"
10'9"xl 'S"
2 I 'x2'8"
10'8"x )" 10'7"x2'~
550.00
299.00
325.00
350.00
1099.00
299.00
299.00
Gamaneh ...... .
·•····· E E
E
....... E
I I '2"xl ' I "
IO 'IO"x l 'I"
I 5'8"x3'2''
8'8")(2'3"
ANTIQUE MANSION RUG
RAI SED DESIGN KERMAN
Truly a Collector's Item
Size 19'3"xl 2'6"
14,999.00
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTORS' ITEMS
Pa la ce Tabrit .• . .. N 6'5"x4'2"
Saruk ........... , .. A 6' IO''x 4'b"
.Lil ih an -·--···· .,.. ----A 6'4"x5'2"
Quom -········-... N 7'x4 '8"
Palace Kash.s n .... N 7'S"x4'9"
Hemedan _ --·-_ -··-·-·-A 6'x3'6"
Palace Kashen --·---N 14'3"x l0'8"
Mala ye r -·-·-· A b'8")(4'6"
Casak -·-·-·-· A I l'IO"x3'7"
Sar uk ... ....•. S.A. 12 '119'6"
l il ihan ___ A 4'l "x3 '4"
Casak .. ·-·-· _. A 4'9"x3'7 "
Ch inese ............ . .. A 5'6")(3'1"
Saruk _ --·-·· S.A. 15'6"xl0'1"
Af. Bokhara A )'x3'
Cabestan • A 4'9"x3'9"
Sil k-Wool Quom __ ......... N 7'7 ''x4'7"
Chinese ··-······--A 5'9"x3'
Chinese -·--.. . A 6'x 3'
Hamed•n ... ····-------·-·-··-···A 5'10''xl '5''
Sarulr ····-··-·-·-···--·-·-·····--···· A 6'1")(4'6"
Caiak Pra ye r ................ A 4'2''K)'2"
Roy alty Saruk-Animal ··----N 12 'x8' r 1 ·1
Ch inese ............................ A 5'10"x3'
Chin•se --···---··-.. ·-····-····---· A I 7'7"x I J '9"
Chines• ··---·-·----···-··--·--·---· A I I '""x9'
Ch;nH• ......................... A 5'JO"xl '
Ch;n111 ......................... A I 3'8"x9'2".
Silk-Wool Quom . ······-·····--N I 2'7"x8'9" ~I.ace Tabriz -··----···--·-··-··· N 10'3"x6'6"
Ch1 ne1• ---·--·-·----···-······-·---A 9'x6'
Palace Tabriz -········--·····-· N I I '5"x8'"'i
Chinese ···--····-····-··-····-··-·· A 1 l '7"x9' IO"
S99.00
550.00
3SO.OO 650.0~
825.oQ.
199.0t
2999,oO
399.00
899;00·
14SO.OO.
110.90
110.~0
350.do
1350.'0d·
69.0lf
45o'.o;O:
1199.UO
175.00
325.00 •
199.00 .
750.00-.
199.0o· ..
2999.oa = 299.~~
2999.00 !-
1399.00 ,,
165.00 1. .. 1399.00 1:
3700.00 ..
1199jJO i:
550!• 3250. :
950 -'. • ,..~~~~ ... ~ ... ~~~~~~~~~~ .... :
ROYALTY PALACE KERMAN . :
A Very Rich Red Background '
Very Fine Quality
Size 20'7"x 12' IO"
5,999.00
Chinese ··-·-··---·-·--·-·-··--·--A
Chines• ..... ·-·-·········---···--A
Chin•s• ···-····--·-·--·····-------A
Princ•ss Bokhara ········---· N
Ghar!i!h ·-·--·--··--:·-···--·~ f-.
Silk.Wool Nain -··--·······--N
Chines • -··-·-· _ ··--··----·--···· A
Kash1n -··---····-··-·--·--··-----A
SUPIR 9UALITY INDIAN ,
Eve rest ........................ ,. N
Everest ---·-··--·--····---··-·--··· N
Everes t --·····--···-·-··········--N
Eterest ----····-·-·····-·---······-N
Everest ··-·-··-··-----·-··-·----·-· N
Evere st ····-···-·-··-········-·-··· N
Ev•rest -·-··----········--·-···-··· N
Ev•reit ···-·--···--··-··-·-----·--N
Ev•rest ···-·-······----·-·······--N
12'd"l''
l .. 'xlO'
14'x9'
8' I "x5'2"
1·~~:_
8'8"xs·2··
8'1t5' I"
7'2"r4'l"
2'x4'
l 'xS'
'4'x6'
5'x8'
6'x9'
8'x IO'
9 'xf 2'
10'•14'
12 'xl8 '
. '
'•
-,,,,oo'l ttt.oo I
lft.OQHI m.oo·
m.~ 3600.o& •.
Jtt.00
lltt.aa: ...
1s.oo·
11.00 :
125.00.' lH.00 1,
245.00
J75.00 ! 4ts.oo I
5'5.DO ~
fff,00 '
ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-8200 •
. ..
,
•
DAIL V ,.iL.OT
.. • '
: MRS. LAULE MRS. FOUTCH MRS. TONKINSON ,
!.
MRS. KAANAPU MRS. HAYASHIDA MRS. KINNE MRS. COLLINGS
•
··················•••! : 11.AUTIPUL IOPT LIGS :
·: Tlll'tllf-..... let .... 1,., !MINO•
e Ollk "' "' •Hloll -llt. : • • 1 NATIONS COIPPUllS : e J0$ Wttt (CM11t~ >;-..~, Nt•POfl llU('ll e
: 642.0144 • • ••••••••••••••••••••••
l First June Brides Start Procession Down Aisles
~ , ,.
LAULE-ROGERS ·• ~ St . Andrew '5 Presbyterian
.. Church. Newport Be1ch was
(the setting for the nuptial rite:s
~inking Leah Gal!! Rogtrs and
~ger Ke ith Laule: !: 1be Rev. Or. Charle11
'!.Dierenfield re1d the vow11 for
{!be daughter and eon of Mr.
~and Mr11. Paul Milton Rllgers ,
"
·:
'
BEAUTY TIPS
~· hev, a littl t MAGIC IAND
ye11 1lip on -ye11t httd end 101•
·i o v••" Jn tO 11c:ond1 . lt'1
~.11,4 "FACEUP". Coll'!• i11 •~d
fry if,
Al .. try • 11t w lool in m•~1 11p
f. to elo119 wit+. th• NEW
\i'OUNGEk YOU, At -yoyr MEklE
\toRMAN COSMETIC STUDIO
.,.,. will 4't1i9n • 11tw loek for
;.u, f•tc:h -yell hew fe ac:hit v•
ffte 1•111• tt111lh at ho111•, Celor
M·e!n-4'11111• -yo11r 1111k••ll JI to
.,.ur wtrdrebt. ,,.
WIAPP\.Y i INDIVIDUAL HILAIHll
t TUJ.DAY, JUNE IGtft. I te J ~.M. FJ.EE EAi "lfRCIN6 with
:;.. ,11r•h•1• .r e1rri n91 $9.91 ~$"·"· f.: MIRLE NORMAN
·'..COSMETIC STUDIO
1 •. 17tlt Street c.... .. _
, ••• , ..... 644-4026
of Newport Beach and Mr. and
Mrs . Gera ld Frank Laule of
Beverly Hills.
Miss Paul& Ltt Rogers was
mai d of honor and
bridesmaids were Mr:s. David
Cook. Miss Lynne Wolfrom
and Miss J udi Takageki.
Russell Gerald Laule served
111 best man , and gue st:s were
seated by Kent B r o w n .
Douglas Hobbs. Ed w a r d
Hollowa y, James Herzikoff.
Michael J on!!s and William
Swan.
The new Mrs. L 11u1 ~
receivtd .11 masters dtgree
in communicalive disorders
from the University of South-
ern California . where she
!edged Alpha Ph i. She was .11
1965 National Charity League
debutant-t .
The br idegroom is a
graduate: of USC in economics
and served as a U.S. Navy of-
ficer.
They will reside in Hermosa
Beach.
FOUTCH-COMSTOCK
AlliMn Comstock and Da vid
Leroy Foutch exchanged wed·
ding vows and rinfl:s during
ceremonies read bv the Rev.
Dr. Ch1rles Ditrerifield in St.
A11lhtnlic:, H•nd M•dt, lll'l~ort•J
Andrew 's Pres byte r i an
Church. Newport Beach.
Their parents are Mr . and
Mrs. WiJ!is G. Comstock and
Mr. and Mrs . Theodore
Foutch. all of Costa rvtesa .
h1iss Nancy Comstock wa s
maid of honor and
bridesmaids were Miss Karen
Jackson and Miss K i I t y
Mc Vicker.
Harry Foutch was best man
and ushers were D o n
Comstock~ M i ke Kirchner.
Doug Kirchner and Scott
Thomas.
The bride is a graduate of
Newpor1 Harbor High School.
wher~ she was a v~rsity
cheerleader and her husband
is an alumnus of Huntio..glon
Beach High School and was a
member of the \•arsity football
team .
He served wi th the Army in
V·ietnam and at tended Orange
Coast College.
Tbey will reside 1n Sedona.
Ariz.
KAANAPU -PO RT ER
Linda Porter ~ame the
bride of David Ka anapu nf
Newport Beach d u r t n g
cer'emonies read in the Com-
,.
PERSIAN RUGS
KERMAN PERSIAN RUGS & IMPORTS
2161 I . C"'t Hwy. (AT HELIOlROPEl c., ..... ,...,.
471-7J40
munity Un!led .~f e l hod i s t
Church. Huntington Beach by
the Rev . r.harles L. Rose.
Their parents are 1\1r. and
1\1rs Thomas Porter o f
(;arden Grove and Mr. and
~frs James Kaanapu of
Kaneohe, Oahu, Hawai i.
Honor attendants were Miss
Jackie Garrett and Thomas
Pryor. Bridesmaids were the
Misses Sue Porter. Mona
McKeever. Joanne Houland,
Rosemary Climie. P h y I I i s
Feeley and Michaeleen
Sarzynski .
Serving as ushers were Ken-
neth Russell. Regina 1 d
Bagobe. William Blue Jr ..
Jack Vick. David Upham and
Arthur Grunbaum. Ring
bearer and flower girl were
LeeAnn Kaai and Dale Porter.
The new 1\1rs. Kaanapu at-
tended Garden Grove High
School and her husband at·
tended Kamehameha schools
in Hawaii. They will reside in
Newport.
TONKINSON.McCOMB
l\tichael James Tonkinson
and Pamela Lee McComb ex-
changed wedding pledges dur-
ing ceremonies read by the
Rev. Constantino Salios in the
Harbor Trinity B a p t is t
Church. Costa Mesa.
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and f>.1rs. Robert Edward
McComb of Costa Mesa, was
attended by Miss Patricia. Ann
Durham. maid of honor, and
Miss Lorrie Saurwein and
Miss Ona Durham, brides-
maids.
The bridegroom. !On of ~Ir.
and l\lrs W N Tonkinson of
Tustin, asked Tony Chicklo to
be hesl man Ushers "·ere
Dale Durham. Greg Tonkinson
and Jeff Tonkinson. while ring
bearer and flower girl were
Tresa Morris ancl Robt-rt
McComb,.
Santa Ana will be home for
the newlyweds , who are
graduates of C0.5t.a Mesa and
Tustin High School11.
HAYASHIDA·
GORMSEN
S a n d e r Sunao Hayashida
claimtd Jennifer Kathleen
G<:irmsen as his br ide during
ceremonies read in the chapel
of the Mar ine Corps Air Sta-
tion. El Toro by the Rev.
Patrick J. Callanan.
Parenll! of the couple are
f\.tr. and Mrs. James Hill
Gormsen of Laguna B~ch and
Dr. and Mrs. T. Hayashida of
Gardena .
Honor allendanls were Mrs.
Taras A. Bursztynsky and
Michael J. Scanlon Jr .. and
bridesmaid was Miss Phyllis
Hayashida.
Guests we re slated by
David and J ohn Ha yashida
and the rings were C!.fried
by Andrew Bursztynsky.
The new 1\frs. Hayashid a is
a grad uate of Laguna Beach
High School and earned her
BA degree in psychology from
the University of San Fran-
cisco.
Her husband, M alumnus of
Gardena High School. earned
bis bachelor of art! classical
................................................ ~
•· •· • • • • • • •
INDOISID IY
THISI CITIUNS:
Spenef!r MarquU
Carl Hansen
Lucy Watabn
Georre R. c.ama
Kenneth SrnJth
Either A.. :!by
Mrs. Curt :Pinekert
Wal ter T • .Umut
R&ymond La.R.OChe
C. R. Forbes
Sue Stoddard
Joan McCiinton
Rh~a Martin
Uila Solomon
Mary E. Rez
Marrar~t WUN.nk•
Juliu!I Evan&
W. James w~
KIW«n E. ~ker
Frances 8. Asm us
M. W, Stoddard
H oward CrO&Un
Betty L. Frei
Den AJbrtrbt
Mrs. MJmi Middleton
Jewel Jackson
Hai:el P'orbH
Lola B. La1toche
Darrell Humistan
Wanda. Smith
ROiie Ann Carns
Curt Pincke.rt
Jotl c l:by
Ralph Watson
Jean R Hans@n
J ohn F. Vorel
tmil W. 1'oust
Harold S. KHl!!r
T. D. Wilb&nks
RandolJ)b Jte-z
Ow. A. RobtMoo
l!tJbort M. Docktr
Patricia Wood
W. H. Tuato
BONDS MEAN HIGHER TAXES
BONDS MEAN A MORTGAGE
AGAINST YOUR PROPERTY
JUNE
6
YU NO
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Propostion F ; • Propos ton G • ~fi-•
=:-A~b.~~~ .. •· Propos lion H ;
Y\loMe Reca,n ~~ . F.clnaN~u •
hd!Brwndt • .reu M'enzt,.· Suppcrt.d l>y: •
-Smitll WUT NIWPOIT ANTl-PUIC COMMITTU •
ak11 Balley H• SwMts.r -4 Norn1 Crewe, C..ch lt12111 • -Alvwn· . • v-Ahfflll Ult ...... ._., New,_, _.
l!llMl»tll ...,., •
• Jo Aon S<lmlopp I I •
degree in government fr om
lhe U of SF' and was a ROTC
d 1st i n·g !11 sh t d military
graduate.
They will reside in Fort
Bragg, N.C.
KINNE-KING
Santa An a will be home for
Carl H. Kinne and his bride,
the former Debra Lynn King,
who exchanged nu ptial pledges
during ceremonies in the Cen·
tral Bible Church, Costa Mesa.
The Rev . Edward Beatty
read the vows for the daughter
and son of Mr. Bnd Mrs.
Richard D. King of Costa
Mesa and Mr. and Mrs . Henry
E. 0 . Kinne of Algona , Iowa .
Miss ,Jeanne Rulh and \Vall
Jones were honor attendants,
and ushers were R. Da\"1d
King, Charles Allen. Gary
Wood and Bruce Beyer.
The new Mrs. Kinne is a
graduate of Estancia High
School and attended Prairie
BiblP Institute. A I be r 1 a .
Canada . Her husband is a
graduate of California State_
College at Fullerton.
COLLINGS-BURBANK
Immanuel Lutheran Chu rch ,
Orange was the setting for the
rites linking Donna Jean
Burbank of Costa Mesa and
Joseph Zane Collings of
Newport Beach.
Parents of the couple are
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis L.
Burban k of Orange and Mrs.
Forrest Chastai n of
Williamsburg, N.M.
Mrs. ruchard Correll was
matron of honor a n d
bridesmaids' were the t-.lisses
Chris Simons, Sue Moss and
Kim Burbank and the Mmes.
Marshall Bell, Terry Burbank
and Gene Bush. Flower girl
was Marcie Dial.
Best Man was Tom Collings
and ushers were Te r r y
Burbank . William Coll ings, Ed
Munson , Aldan Col!ings, Da\'e
Merchant and Bell. Ring
bearer was Jimmy Correll.
The bride is a graduate of
Orange High School and her
husband is an alumnus of
Cali fornia State College at
Fullerton. They will res ide in
Co6ta Mesa.
Cotton Jamboree
Polyt 1t1r/C0Hon. •4/4S, 111 tl.1~1 ..,,,i,
COOL VOILE PRINTS
Cotten. 44/4S, "'1c:h ;.,, w11i..
TRADITIONAL PR INTS
Cotten JS ']6"". "'1ch ine ""••"'
BEARDED WOMEN
ARE OUTll
DON1T BE !Ml.A.ltMUED.
LET US SHOW YOU HOW
EASY IT II TO N!MOVC
V<CllS HAI ft WITH
MOOEftH ELECTAOl.'tsll1
MEDICALLY APPl'OVED
••• sAl'r:, l'"AST,
GEHTL!0 COHSUt..T
WITH OUft LICENSED
TECHNICIAN IN oui.
HAUTY IALOH.
fltOBINSON'S
NEWPORT
CAMPUS CR I SKAY PRINTS
IOO'f. (!!Hen, 44 145. "'~th in e wt1h
COTTON CHINTZ PRINTS
Cotten l Ce+ien bl•nd1. 44 15··
SPORTSWEAR PRIN TS
100 ~~ Co++on, 44/45"' w id t
LITHO COTTON PRINTS
VA.LUIS FROM $1 ,lt te S.Jt YD,
SAVE UP TO 81c YD •
POLYESTER DOUBLE KN IT
SEERSUCKER
STRIPES e MACHINE WASH
NEEDS NO Jl\ONING
60"/62 " W IDE I J.f 11/i OZ.
Rl!G. $5.98 YD. SAVE $2.10
SJ~
II HOUSE OF FilBRICS
always first qual~ty fa,brics
.
..... C.-,._ -lrl•tol •t St11 0'-t• ,...,, e.... ..... _ 141·1116
...._ ,._ -17th •* l ri1t•I _.__ .. , ..... =!E. COMMl'ITEE TO STOP TAX WAST£ 5
Or:" • ........._ ....__ 1--A l .rLaJ • 0111;0F .. , .. .., .. _-°'-'"'i!!":u'''• .1114' Htrbor ..... PM_c-,~--'•,!:''!',•u•* S••~•e~ »,;;.-;;;;,;;;' ·~0
• Carl rt ofer, ,.,.. ...... -· ~ ·-
• .T,t r _..,._ JIOI Dever Drive, Newpert lleaela • N..,.:;:-C:E,\!~!,' .~'::!~l:'it1 ~~~·~:=.t~ s:.!:~~~~ .. 011 ·····················································"'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-•
•
r
•
I
s
s
Cali
J"'
unit
rep
ing
Si
197
Rea
per
7--0
pen
fin a
di sc
. I
Wn
una
H
tou
scr
5ide
sig
\Vri
to c
O>u
un ti
g<n
at I
T
pen
J .
;.1
Sea Lyin'
A sea lion basks In the sun at San Diego's Sea \Vorld as the temperature hit a record 79 .
California Court United
State's Top Jurists Often Seen as
By LEIF ERICK SON
SAN FRANCJSCO ! AP 1 The
Califomra Supreme Cou rt, under Chief
Justice Donald R. Wright, is increasingly
un l!ed in reaching decisions building its
reputatio n as the nation 's mos t pioneer-
ing sliltf' supreme court.
Since Wr ight joined the bench :Vl ay I,
1970, as Re publican Gov. Ron a I d
Tu!agan's sole appointee . more than B2
percent of the court's decisions ha ve been
7-0or6-L
Decisions which struck down the decilh
pen al ty and declared locdl prope rty ta x
financing of pub lic sch00ls to be
di scri minatory bo!h v.·ere 6-L
··r rn surprised. re<illy surpr1 srd:'
\Vright said v.'hen told of a study
reporting the court's reeord o n
Un fl nim1ty.
He sa id one expla nat ion ma~· he a
tougher policy the court ha s 1n1t1ated on
screening from Supreme Court con-
sid eration all cases not invol ving a really
signifi cant issue of law.
"All my colleagues agree on this.''
\\'right said in an interviev.·. "We do have
to consider our work load.
"t.Iv colleagues agree that the Supreme
COurt"s attention should not be involved
unt il the case has been decided 11t trial.
"'Ve are cons istent." he said. "in
gen erally denying he11ring on issu~.s raised
at !he pretrial or motion stage.
The unani mitv record for a comparab lf'
pe riod unde r \Vi-ight's predecessor. Roger
J. Trayner, \l'llS 73 percent unanimQUs or
&-! decisions .
There has been a sha rp drop in 4-3
decisions. from 53 under Traynor to 22
undcr Wright.
J\1ost of l11ese 4-3 s plit .~ involve illegal
~earc h and seizure in drug cases under
the fourth Amendment.
··\Ve don't accept these Issue s now until
they·ve been deci ded at trial. That means
there are not so many for this court to
decide," ·wright said. -
In almost all of the 5-1 decis ions. the
lone dissenter 1-1'as Justice Marshall f .
McComb. the court's oldest and most
con servative member.
\\"hen Rrag;in named \\"right. 6~.
Rt·agan said he 1-1•anled to cu rb !hf' courts
from usurping the roles of the lf'gislative
and executive branches of go\'e rnment.
\\'right has surprised Reagan and other
1-1·at chers of the court.
He joi ned la st August in the 6-1 Serrano
vs. Priest dt>eision decl11ring that public
school financing by local properly taxes
di scriminated against pupils in poor
dis tric ts.
Wright personalty wrote the 6-1
decision holding the death penalty to be
un constitutional .
One of the chief j ustice's
responsi bilities is to assign the writing of
opinions.
''When 1-1·e know tha t a decision is going
lo be publicly unpopula r. I think it is ap-
propriate that it shou ld appear over the
signature of the chief ju stice," Wr1ght
sai d.
The California court v.·as the first 1n the
U.S. Pio1ieers
nation to hold school property tax finan c-
ing uncon stitutional. Courts in Texas.
i'vl innesota, \Vyoming, and New J ersey
fol lowed.
The issue reached the U S . .Suprem e
Court first in an a ppeal from a three-
judge federal court in Texas.
Thirty other slates joined in attacking
before the U.S. Supreme Court what they
called a usurping by the courts of power s
that belo ng to state legislatures.
Att v. (;en. Eve!le .J . YoJnger appe aled
the Cali forn ia court 's abol ition of the
death penalt y to the U.S. Suprerne Court
on the san1e plea that the courts we re
usurpi ng leg islative authority. The court
this "'eek. decl ined to hear the appeal.
t\ pioneer ing court like the Californi a
Supren1e Court inevitab ly stirs <.l ebate
and controversy.
Traditionally. the court's mf'rnhc>rs can-
not ent er debate on their decisions ex ce pt
in the language of the decisions
lhemse!ves.
\Vright's death pen alty opinion firmly
declared that the CQurt 's responsibilit y
"to confront and resolve constitutional
questions ... is a mandate of the most
imperative nature."
He said the death penalty issue was •·a
queslinn ,., .. hic h c<>nnot be avoided by
deferring lo an y other court or to any
other branch of government.''
The consistent unanimity record of the
\\1right court is impressi,•e because the
seven individual justices range all across
the spectrwn of social philosophy .
ANNOUNCEMENT Safe Bus .~~~--.~~~~~~
WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
Of
ORANGE COUNTY
Program
Scl1eduled
OAJLYPILOT Jf
Arms Pact
To Affect
1,200 Jobs
S. Africa CensorshiJl;
Program Under Fire
ron1n1ented : "I do think "''e
CONRAD , Mont. 'UPI! -
President Nixon 's agreement
with Ru ssia on I i m i t i n g
IltH:lt'ar ari ns v. iii thro1v 1.2(~)
oui of 11 ork nnd 1'ancet
i!nO!her J.8!1() potential jobs HI
c;AP E
Africa'~
Ca h lnL,t government will bf
South are reaching a crisis 111 South to strike out the right of ap.
renSfJrsh1p J:.y~tflm, Afr ica The Scope case rnakes pPii! which WlH.Jld be verj
TOWN
one of the most stringent 0 n e won d er v.· h e l he r dan,i;:troos. If I h;i.d to choose
outside 11 · I a C"enso1r·sh11) 1s praef k·able. The bct v.·ee n oo censorship and USSlil, IS a · b b d
nOr th·centrat f\.tontana ho •.in1 11:'rlf is a kind 11f court cens11rsh 1p y a oar crossroads af\er e Supre1ne and 1, t)(\\\' hl'Lv ing it!! df'<'i~ir111., rerre~nt t n!{ Pf'Ople who are
l-Ourt verdir1 setti n~ aside a up:-.t·t bv the courts (If tht• ;i l1'a1d nf the facts of life and a rea .
The Pre.'>1dent's ej;lreemen t
"'ith the t tSSR closed do11·n
the Montana S af t~ u a r d
Missile Project, .,.,·h1('h wa s on-
ly 5 percent comple ted
nlaga zi ne bl!n land • :1io-han1ed of the htunan body, I
A color phfltogr Rph of a ... !'hr-ten1p1;11 111n 11r n 11u1d rl el1ouse no censorship.''
bli1ck man v.1t h his ar rn~l-~~-~;~;;~~~~~,....;;.,...,..,..".;~';~~;o;;1
Contrat'lS to;i li ng 1nore than
$200 rn1!11un had been a11'ard-
ed, and honie sit es and schools
\1·ere plan ned . Some v.·erl'
undfir eonstrurtion . !\1otf'\s and
bars were being bu ilt ~nd
others renov::11l'<l.
A ~1'01\l-:S:\t .\"J f'OB. l'('I C'r
around 11 v.·h1te Rlr l 1 n i:
(;ree11 11·ich \'il lagt'. :'\.Y., lrd 1 ~
to Scope n1ag;1z1nc bt>1 ng '
banned. l
In its jud~1 nenl uplxd U111µ
the publ1 shf'r 's <tflpf':il, !hi·
Durban eourl rf'fl t'<'!f'd H1L'
vaw n1ng gap hel•1·ern 11 h.it \hi'
l•ens<irs and tnt 1'our1., df'1·111 1
ubJt(:\1111u1 ble.
J\1r11'rt 11nd Sous of ()n1tihil. 'r II t: .J U I) 1; E \\' ·\ ·"'
Neb, said its work for ce !otals p;irtu·ulnrlv se-.1·r1• \1h1·11 rlt·<1l
1.200 in the project arti here ing "·1th the n1a1n 1·111ir11 f,,r
anrl nearb_v Shelhv. Mont thr h:111 1'he Puhl 11·;it11111 ... (4,n
About 900 workers 1-1·rr·e on trul l\oarcl 1·nnh'11d•'d !!11 •
tht> 1nh v.·hl'n the 1vord c;11llf' 111 (;l'l't'1111·1<"h ph4•1<11 :1:1pl1 111"11\•l
c·lnse do11·11 State off ici als .~;i 1d 1•111·oi1r:igf' S o 111 Ii .\!111 ;,·
that nurnlX'r v.oul d h;i1·e JOlll l1 tu 1·11111!111! 111111\ ,1;ol t1
grown tu J.000 by su 1nn1f'r. "I n·g:1rd Iii•·'" 111"11• .. 1 lht>
Suprrvisory p<'rsonnel 1vill ho;ird as f:ir fl'1 l'lit•d 111 1h1• 1'\
be rec.i lled to Orn.aha to 11ork 1rrnH'. . qu 1tt' IH·1•1111l 1111
on other projects; the rest 11·1ll 1·oinprt.'he11s1011." .... 11d I li '
be ou t of \vork . Jtirt ~f>.
'!'h e area alre:i dy is h.1rd hit '!'he' pho1ngr;ipli 11 ,1 11( :i11
by unemployn1en t. !'Vent 111 New Yt11 h ,111d ni11
The closure of a 7.inc pla nt Johannesbu rg , hi• pc111111·d l)til (
in {~reat Falls, south (lf ~lt 1r:i s a fapt of lift' 1n ;111 .. 111••1 1 recently added 600 workers to country and 1101 I ,.. 11 d
the depressed job marke!. sal<H·ious, i 11 d ('ct' 11 t , 111
obscene.
T\'fO TOWNS \1l1'~1lE to bl' '!'he ('Our! did 1101 d11lll •1
huilt . east ~od northe as t of niany readers \\'(Hild rrg.11{1
here as 'homes for personnel of the photograph \1'ith d1sap--
t1\'o rada r fa cilities. prov;1l, hut th is did no! n1;1 kc
A few weeks ago, a $10.7 -it undesi rable in ter1ns of thr
millio n contract \vns awa rd ed l;lll'.
for construction or basic con)-'!'he succe~sful ;q1rw:·:1\ h' 1
n)t!nity fa cil ities for the t\ro Scope's publishers 11 :1..; !h•
missile co1nm unities. n1ost ignomin iou s dl'fl':1: 11 ·1'
Conrad has a populat ion or for the Publications f'unt nol,
little more than 3.000. About P.o;ird v.'hich bnnl\t'd 111··
4.000 1nore were expeC'ted to magazine eight tirnes an d 1111 1
1000 i -ORDER ,,
,, Beautiful •
' Stick-on I YOURS L LABELS
TODAY!
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Order For Your$tlf or • Friend
M.,y be u ~ed on envelo pet. ilS tefurn _a.ddr~ss
ld bol~. A bo very hci ri dy as ident1f1caf 1on
l.!l bols for rn.!l rkln g perional items l UCh as
books, record1 , i:ihoto~. etc. Label~ •tic k on
qla~s ll nd may be lJ ied for mark1n 9 ~om•
cann ed foc.d item~. All labtls a re pr1nt•d
wit h ~ty li ~h Vogue type on f ine q ua lify whit e
qumm ed paper.
r----::l~n-:-~:-C:Po:,:.:-.::::,~~:;----,, I Polo! i-ri~!ln9 l lbrl D•v., r.o. an. 1l't I
: (0111 Mnl, c1111. 1'2126
1 I I
I I r I
I I
I I
: PILOT PRINTING J L----------~-----------beco n1e permanent re si dr nts. each occasion lo..<;! the C':I ~~·. I
Conrad Mayor Robert Arnot AUl"HOR .ALA N l'ATCI\ !:::~~i::~~~~~~;;~~;;:~~~~p~ s11 id, "H's disappointi ng. \\"e --~ :iiiiiiiiplliii.~!""~llllflll had a lot or wondrrful peopl e •
come in and we'd like lb keep
the m."
Perrv Rllys, executive direc-
tor of ·planning and econornic
de vel opment for the state.
said in Helena. t.he state
rapital, that many people in
the private S('(tor would be
'hurt.
"TflERf~ HAS BF.EN a lot
of investment in housing
development. remodeling of
bars and businesses in an-
ticipa tio n of an in fl ux of peo-
ple," he said. "\\le had hoped
the ARM construction would
lake some of the economic
sting out of a state unemploy·
men! rate of around 8 per-
cent."
Arnot sa id farmf'rS are ex-
pected to gel a ,.-:O()Cf crop this
\"ear <ind th e town v.·il l survive
ihe closedown .
A.K. Conrad. a realtnr, sa id,
"We're sitting on 10,000 acres
of irrigated land . If anybody
can stand a jolt. we can."
PHARMACY
WE QUOTE PRICES
OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME
-CHICK TH ESE SUl'IR SALi Sl'ICIALS-'"'"· 11•1· I Our Rt1. Price I
Co!9alt To o!hp~de, 6.75 Ol. •·••···········••••• S l.09 91t
lubriderm lot;on. lb o .. ···•••••···········•·• \] ~O Sl .Dl ·
Di.I Anti.P1•1pir1nf. 6 01 ....•...•.•......... ,., S l.1'1 119t
V11tljn1 lnl1n1iv1 C1r1 Ba lh O il Be~d1 , II <l 1. •••••• S I 1'1 ''' --
2700 E. Coast Hi~hwav. at Fernleaf. Corona del Mar
• !!!'! -AMPLE PARKING IN REAR
Ho111"1 -9:JO • 4:00 D•lly
Clesctd S••doy1 •d Holld9y1
644-7575
..
-· ,• now .1cc•plln9 min .. .,a wom•" who .1r1 •ilh•r:
e •••• 11 wit!. 2 Y'"' •f u rtph~lo ce llett
"''"" (601; •• e e••• 13 •~d h••• •"•·~•tl •~ •PP•"~t ,~.
!oll0<!\.ol .~rlloy '~' •'lvi~o loM •f •1"•• I'•
1 ~. I 0. or ll ~ d•g••• "~ ho •"'n·~ •n 4 Y''" o! r tr' ''"'•
1101101 J c!11H• pt 1 w•••. J ~ hou,1 pt • d tn
J uli a Hart of the Foun.
lain Va ll ry School District ha.~
been selected to pa rticipat e Jn
a statewide pro~ram to he!p
reduce school hus accident:-.
school officials h a v e an-
nounced.
RE-ELECT SCHMITZ
.. -. . .. •
A Sp•• ti P·~';I '''"" of ti,,., d in., on St•vrdoy •I a•a1l1bl« for
f•tt•·ytar uudtn,.,
Apply Now for September 7th
Day or Evening Classes
800 South Brookhurst
An1heim 92804
17141 63S-34S3
Gr•'.lu•'•• •• , .1.g,ble •o ..... ti,. c.1.1.,, .... ~I•'• f,or l •J'f'l'n•hO"·
l'IOVISIONAUY ACCl lOITID IY TMI CALIFOIMIA COMMITIH
Of IAI IXAM INllS JULY 1, 1•72.
·~~~~~~''-•-•o_v_R>~•-•_•_v_r_n_•_••-•~~~~~~11
At the California Highway
Patrol Academy in Sacramen·
to this summer. Mr!!. Hart is
slat«! to receive 120 hou rs of
c\11.ssroom 11 n d behind·thP-
wheel instruction In the safe
operation of school bu ses. Shf'
will then return to Foun.
lain Valley "''here she will be
responsible for conducting a
school in safe bus driving
le<:hniques, officials said.
The aim ·of the proirram is
to reduce the number of school
bus accidents in California ,
There were J,m in the state
in 1970-71, an increase of 7.9
per~nt over the previo us
year, schoot officials liaid.
CONGRESSMA COMPLETE REPUBLICAN
Highest Rating by
~A ction (98%)
Americans for CoMtitu•
~"\Vatchdog of Treasu ry" -Natwnal Associ~
~Businessmen
l!JJlever Broken a Prom ise to Electorate
lWeve r Vot.ed for a Tax Increase
~!jpver Supported or Voted For a Democrat
[i!"tndorsed by All County Volunteer Republi;
stereol03FM
the sounds of the harbor J J:d~~7.youve never heard it so good
-.-
·.
.· .· . _,
:-.-.-----
i
I
.
I
JI DAI LY PI LOT ·• s Mond.iy, Junt 5, 1971
Isolation
Solution
For U.S.?
By DEAN C. MILLE R "''....._•11111w
NEW YORK -Every '°
often tomethlng that hurts our ..
natklnAI pride comes along
aiind some of us say, "Why
don't we retire behind our
borders and let the rest of the
world go by?"
That's easier 1a.id in a mo-
ment of pique than poMible to
effect in a country that ex-
portl about $43 billk>n worth of
goods (13 percent ol the world
total) and imports aboot the
sa me amount.
1be United States con-
ceivaby could go it alone, but
the re's no guarantee for ho w
Jong. And the cost to its sLao-
dard of living would be high.
ISOLA TIONISM Y.'OU!d 'af-
fect everything from jobs to
the way you travel find
whether you could top the
morning dish of cereal with
Perso11al Rapid Transit
bananas. ·
Your automobile. for in-
sta nce, is li kely 10 contain 31
ma terial s imported from ,'!2
Department booklet on tr:ide
C'Ountries, according to a Sr.1rr
policy. You r telephone has 48
mater ials lrilpOrted from 18
countries. Your ncy,·spapcr
probably Is printed on in1·
ported ne\\'sprint. M i s s i l e s
defending the U.S. incorporate
10 materials fro m 15 foreign
countries.
We also depend on in1porls
for lar ge amounts or mercury.
zi nc, lead and iron ore. About
40 percent or the agricultural
products imported are not prcr
duced in commercial quan-
tilies ln the Un ited States:
bananas, coconuts, jute. cof·
fee, tea and cocoa beans, to
name a few.
Then there Is that al l-im·
portant question of jobs. Some
or them, or course, are being
t:;;ken away by the goods
foreign countries pour into the
United States. But it's a twcr
way street. !\ofany U.S. plants
would shut down if their sup-
plies or imported r a w
.. materia ls \\'ere cut off. At
~ least 90 percent of the tin,
· diamonds, chrome, bauxite,
~ cobalt, beryllium, n i c k e I ,
asbestos, manganese a n d
crude rubber m ed in the
United States is imported.
THE U.S. Department of
Labor has estimated that each
bil lion dollars worth <lf exports
creates 91,000 jobs. In 1971, the
United States exported $43
: billion worth <lf goods n•hich
: figures <lUl to 3.913 n1ill ion
; jobs. The department's ()verall
: data includes the estimate
· that In 1969 more than 2.65
: mill ion jobs were relateCi to
: merchandi se exports. or 3.8
'. percent of total private em·
: ployment.
• Farmers would be espec ially
·: hard hit if the United States
'. adopted a "go it alone" poli~y
·· Jn trade. The United States is
:: the largest exporter <lf farm
product!, accounting for about
o ne -f i f t h lht> \\'Orld's
agricultural exports. ~·1<lre
than one-t hird of <lur lvheat.
rice, soybeans, coll<ln and
tobacco a re exported . The
· crops fron1 one of every four
acres harvested are exported,
and those exports provide
employ men t for one out of
· eight farm \\'Orkers.
CllE"IICALS. aircraft. com·
putcrs and other electrical ap-
paratus are amo ng our prin-
cipal exports in the area of
manu factured goods.
General fl.fotor s displayed its fou r-to-six passenger personal Ra pid Transi t Ve-
hicle (PRTV) at 'franspo '72 last wee k. The sn1all people 1nover may find its
first use in central busin ess distric ts, shopping centers and air terminals. The
vehicle would be programmed to deliver people non-stop to their desired des·
ti nati on at the push of a button.
Raising Business Taxes
'No Solution' to ProbleTri
By RICllARD l\'ENN1':1'itA,'l'
Cllr.lt1l•n Sdt nce Monilor S••vlc•
()11c <lf !he Dt'mocratir c-:i n·
dldates for pres1den1 has sug·
gested one \1•11y to 1n<.:l'cast?
government fC\'cnucs: l;ix
bus iness more.
tie appea rs to favor in-
creasin g the present corporate
income-tax rate from 48 per·
cent to 52 perce nt , and to end-
ing both the investment tax
credit , wh ich al ready has been
off and on again a t<luple of
times. and the li beralized
depreciation rules tha t the
Treasury just put into effect
this year.
Why nol tax business some
more . if the government sore-
ly needs additional re\'enues
<lr wants to cut d<l1111 the tax
burden ·on l<lwer-income in·
dividuals?
IT WOULD be a severe
mistake, in this writer's <lpi-
nion, to take out after business
profits in the next round of lax
reform. There are at least two
reasons:
First, it \vould h<ivr a short-
term, negative effect on
busi ness. not so much fro111
th e increase in taxes as such
as from che constant changing
of th e rules.
Second, business taxes are
not so simply "business" t:ixes.
In the end . they are bclrne
by individuals. and when n•e
see \\'hich individuals. \\"C
n1ight 111ell wonder why higher
business taxation is such a
darling of the political left.
Some legitimate arguments
exist for increasing pers<lna l
inc<lme taxes for the rich. But
just bec;iuse businessrs shov.•
profils, this does not ptJcc
thcrn and the effects of tax-
ation <lTI thrrn in lhe san1e
caleg<lry as the rich . llerc's
\\'h~': .
CORPOR AT IONS have lo
strive for a certain profi t on
their investments. on their
capital. C'tich year. If profits
are unusua!ly high in one in·
dustry. additional competiti<l n
normall.v comes along until
pr<lf1t rates get down t<l the
n<lrm . Sometimes, in nel•: in·
tlustries, a few companies
rnakc unusually large profits
ror a time and then so many
('on1panies come in that pro-
fits sng belo\v the norm for alt
bus iness.
·rh cre are exceptions to this
economic rule, <lf cours~-such
as in industries where it is dif-
ficult fnr a ne w company to
get established after the
market has been split up by a
few big giants in the ind us try.
This is the place for the
gove rnment to step in and
regu late or contr<ll. to ('()Ill·
pensate for the absence of ef-
fective competition.
BUT "'ITJllN the general
framev.·ork that an indus try
has to achieve normal pr<lfit
lel'els to attract capital. the
income taxes it pays are only
one m<lre cost or doing
bu siness. And, if laxes go up,
indus try has to try to find
some \\'ay to pass <ln th is ex·
tra cost <lf d<ling business.
Either the "'·or kers get Jess
pay. <lr the stockh<lldcrs ge t a
smaller return, or the price of
th e product goes up. Some of
eRch probably happens. but
economists th ink that for the
most part. the taxes are
ult ima tely paid by the con·
sun1er.
So. if v.·e \•:ant to increase
c<lrporale income taxes, we
are <lnly g<ling l<l pass along
the higher tax. at least in lhe
l<lng run, to the public. And
\vhich part of the public? Since
people <lf n10<lest incomes
spend almosl nil their pay,
and wealthy people don't. it is
peQple at the l<lv.•er end of the
income sca le who in the long
run W<luld bear a dispropor·
tionate share or a higher cor·
poration income tax.
TO Tll E extent business
taxes are paid for by the
\\'Orkers in a business. they
hold down purchasing j)O\\'er.
·ro the cxtl'nl they are paid for
by the shareholders, the latter
group (rnany of 'vhom arc
retired persons) are penalized
by there being less earnings
around for re--investment.
On economic grounds. it
,~·ould make much Jll()re sense
to l<lwer co rporate taxes tha n
to raise the1n. One reason
many corporations favor the
value-added tax (VAT) is th at
they see it ideally as a
substi tute for part <lf the cnr-
poratc i11come tax. As sueh.
its e f f ec t would be
econo n1ically neutral (.,.,·hl\e
the income tax penali zes the
more efficient. highC'r-profit
firn11 . The VAT also could be
rebated <ln exports. mt1king it
easier to sell abroad.
Mo11ey's lJ'ortli
How to C11t Hi gh Cost
Of 'Horsing' Arou11d
By SYLVIA PORTER in itself, has come up from
nowhere to second place.
Fl<lr ida. an<lther state where
leisure-time activit ies are a
way o( life, l'iiso has gained a
place in the top 10. wh ile
Alaba ma and Lou isiana have
sli pped ou t.
ORDER \J.·
.1 ',;.
1000
Beautiful
Stick-on
\\'ilh the r unni ng of !he Bel"
n1on t this coining Saturday,
!he horse racing se<1son 1\•il!
rc<1ch its exciting annual peak.
But to the vast majority of
h<lrse lovers the nation <lver .
tilt animal that wins the thi rd
of the three great classics
June 10. \vi ii be of far less in-
terest than the <lne they call
their own.
Ownership of horses in the
U.S. is in a perpendicular rise.
Th e horse
population is
exploding.
\Vhole new
industries
tied to horses
are springing
up. Old, 81·
most forgot·
ten h or s e
busincsse.'I
" The 11•age bill in the horse
industry has soared lo more
than $1 billion :. year and an·
nua l pari-1nutuel taxes are
now in the $500 million t<l $600
milli<ln range .
• \Vhile the num hcr <lf
veterinarian s practicing in the
U.S. has jwnped 15 per cent
since 1968, the nu m b e r
treating "equines only" has
climbed 35.4 per cent. YOURS ·.;~ . ~
TODAY! ,_
Personalized • Stylish
LABELS
.f'ONLY~
$125
~Al INC~
• Efficient
Order For YourHlf or a F rlend·
>tfay be uted on •nvelop•s •• return eddr•ss
le.bels. AIJo very hendy •• id•ntific1tion
lei,.fs fw m1rkin9 person•! items such ••
.books, record1, phqto1, etc. Labels stick on
gla11 and may be used Jor mar•ing home
canned locd item1, All libel• ere printed
with tfyU&h Vogue typt on fi ne quelity wh ite
gumm•d ,.per.
(-;,.";.~;:::";.:;:,-;;:;:;;:;-;;;---1 I ...... ,,...... ...... DI• ..... o. I OI IUI 1 I c-t,e --. c.w. ,,.,_,
I I
I I ! I
a r e staging P'ORTIR
a fascina ting comeback. And
the horse-connected boo1n is
apparently still young. As
documentation :
• The horse pnpulation in
the U.S. is now up to 7 ,000,000
more than twi ce the number
co unted by the CeNus of
Agriculture in 195&. An in-
rormed estimate Is that within
another rive years, l h e
number of horse3 will be
10,00J.000 or more.
• lJorse racing attracts
twice as many spectators as
majo r f0<i tball games. More
than 74 million attended races
in 1970.
Enough. ~Iorses are "in" -
and it's no secret to any<lne
that this ani1nal is an ex·
cee d ing l y ex p ensive
possession. A $500 horse will
eat and slee p it,, way into a
$1,000 investment before the
end or the first year Biid 8
horse <lWner will spend f750 to
,l,000 annually to keep each
horse In rood and lhelter,
estimates R~ M. Oliver,
vice president <lr Oiagnotlic
Data, Inc., a nrm which·
develops and manufactures
pharmaceuUcal.! and animal
dietary supplements.
Japanese
Ships Roll
Off Line
TSU. Japan IUPI ) -An
enormous sheet of heavy steel
comes rolling down the pro-
duclion line.and stops unde r a
device which au tomatically
tra n s p ose! 8T<'hitectural
diagrams on its surface. Tiie
s'iecl then moves <lVer a series
of roll ers and is cut by an
au tomatic acet!yne torch.
!luge magnets are next
lowered and, with a snap. pick
up the sheet, allo\ving Its
\\'eight to automatically bcn<l
it into the desired shape. Ribs
are automatically welded onto
the sheet of twisted metal, and
one module <lf a supertanker is
ready for sea. Thus J apanese
ships are born.all untouched
by human ha nds.
IN JAPAN, a maritime na-
tion. shipbuilding is major in·
dustry and an impo rtant
source <lf for eign revenu e. In
less than 30 years, from the
thne 1vhen Japanese shipyards
lay in ruins at the end or
\Vorld \Var II, the shipbu ilding
Industry here has grown to the
largest in the world. capturing
48 percent <lf the world
market.
Despite a recessi<ln in the
last 18 inonths and the
revaluation of the yen. which
resulted in losses of about $1
billion for the industry. the
immediate future looks bright ,
and there is a three-year
backlog of ships to be built .
Three -hund red • thousanrl .
ton ships no\V are co1nn1on.
One industry expert foresees
the day whe n a one-mi llion·lon
ship will roll down the Wll)'S.
Japanese shipbuilders have
been able to build new
shi pyards based on the com-
puter age. Whereas shipyards
in other C<lOntries have to
struggle in confined space and
oullnodcd building techniqul's,
the ,Japanese h~ve designed
and built spacious shipyards
1vhich are almost entirely
com pu terized .
ONE SUCH shi pyard is in
Tsu. abo ut 250 miles south west
of Tokyo <ln Japan 's eastern
coast. where the shipbuilding
division <lf Nippon Kokan
Japan Steel Co. has bui lt a
shipya rd wit h a drydock
capable of building I w o ,
600.000-ton ships at the san1e
time.
The real work of building a
Japanese ship is done before it
ever reaches a drydock stage.
1'he entire · shi pyard spra\vls
over 465 acres. most of v.•hic:h
\1·here the ships are built in
\vhere the ships ar built in
mod ula r fashion.
Everything is co1nputerized.
and the sheet metal rolls in
one end or ll building and
comes out the other end in the
shape of a 50-foot high section
or a ship. The n1od ules then
are taken to the drydock to be
welded together and the shell
of lhe ship is completed.
It is with these shipyards
that the entire Japanese ship-
building industry was able to
construct 232 vessels in fi scal
year 19'11 with a total gross
tonnage of 11.2 million tons .
De s pite thi! br ight
pe r£ormance, economic ex.
perts foresee harder times for
J apanese shipbuilders .
They point to the slump in
the international s h i pp l n g
market. There is a three--year
backlog oow, and experts note
that ord,ers beyond that period
have dropped sharply.
Art Row
Decided
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
The work.! of late sculptor
Beniamino "Benny" Bufano
bel"!ll 10 the Bulaoo Society
of the Arts and not to a Fin--
nish journalist who said Jhe
arll!t lived with her two years
before he died, .. ya • court
ruling.
Finance
Briefs
• Lltto11 IA,,.ff
BEVERLY HILLS -Utlon
Ind ustries Inc., which recently
reported a three-month loss of
Sl4.2 million, says it will lay
off 1,000 technlcit1ns and
engineers this summer.
The gi ant conglomerate an-
nounced that the layoffs wJU
be necessary because the
company's emphasis is shift ·
ing from design to production
on two Navy contracts.
About 1,400 white collar
employes in the M a r i n e
Engineering and Production
Group will be ftsked to
transfer lo ils Pasacag<lula,
Miss., shipyard.
e S<'hool Bo11d•
S A CR A l\1 ENT0 -Cal-
ifornia has 5eld S!M .9 milli<ln
in school building aid bonds at
y,•hat State Treasurer Ivy
Baker Priest calls an ''ex·
cellent" net interest rate of
4.4753 perce nt.
The announcemen t said the
OOnds were taken by a syn-
dicate headed by the Bank of
An1erica. lt included the Bank
of California, Croc ker Nationnl
Bank. First \Vestem Bank.
Sccuritv Paciric Na t i on a J
Biink. 3nd \Veils Fargo Bank.
The bond s are the last of
$275 mill ion appro-..ed by
voters in 1966.
e Add-meat
SAN FRANCISCO (APl -
Del Monte Corp. said ii has
entered the packaged dinner
business, sell ing prepackaged
dinners fo r four that need 6nly
meat added, usually gr<lund
beef.
The v.·orld"s la rgest ca nner
of frui ts and vegetables, Del
Monte said it will sell four
"add ineat'' dinne rs in
California an d Nevada wilh
ten tative plans for national
distr ibution ne xt year.
Add-tneat dinners are <lne of
the ra stest growing mark ets in
the grocery business, said
Gennaro A. Filice Jr .. vice
presidC'nt of U.S. m:irkeling.
''\\"e rstimale a national1 potenti:il of ni<lre than $100
n1illion by 1973."'
e Northrup
LOS ANGELES -Northrup
Corp. l'ays it has purchased
Page Aircrt1ft "taintenance
lnc. and all of its t1ssets for an
undisclosed amount or cash.
Pt1ge, headquartered in
Lawton. Okla .. has current
sales <lf $20 million with about
2,000 cn1p!oyes in aircraft
helicopter mainte nance for the
n1i lita ry. g<lvernn1ent and alS<l
civilian aircraft, Page is to be
onerated as a u n i t <lf
Northrop's J{ 21 w t h o r n e ,
Aircraft Division. Northrop
spokesn1en said.
e Cot1011 Gro111
BAKERSFIELD (AP)
Cotton production research
gran ts totaling $426,750 have
been al\ocate<l by California
l'l a nt i n g COiion Seed
Dist ribul<lrs.
Much of the research funded
v.•il/ seek reasons for declining
yields in recent years and a
S<llution t<l ve rticilliLnn \\'ill.
The 1972-73 grants include
$240,000 to the United States
Department <lf Agriculture
Cotton Research Slation at
Shafter and $167,500 f o r
lJnivcrsi!y of Californit1 proj-
C'CIS.
e 'S .. 011t ' Contract
SUNNYVALE -Lockheed
Miss iles & Space C-0. has
received a $12.85 million U.S.
Army contract to build four
"Scout" armored vehicles, the
company has announced.
The Scout Is a prototype f<lr
a new reconnaissance veh icle
carrying a 20 millimeter gun
and designed to move <ln
water as well as ground.
In nearby San Jose, F M C
Corp, will be working on a
parallel develompent under a
$13.35 mlllion contract.
enep11bllc
LOS ANGELES -Republic
Corp. reported net income <lf
$556,000 or 5 cents a share for
the three months end ed April
30, the thlrd straight profitable
quarter.
The conglomerate earned
$972,000 or 10 cents 1 11hare for
the aame period a year ago,
but a spokesman said the
figures were not comparable .
e S11baldlea
WASHING TON -'l1le Civil
AtronauUcs Boald has IP.
proved an $8.2 mllllon lncrtlle
1n annual subsidies for tbe
local ..m"' 1trllnu wllh 111
estimate that they wlll need
165.4 million In govtr'MlOlll
aid for the current fiacal year.
I PILOT PRINTING I l____ _ _______ ...
• Although the horse con·
tlnue! to be a work animal in
some parta of the country,
more and more horses are
being railed for the pleastire
of riding or racing them. Jn
1959, for lnstanc4:!, the leading
horse atates were basically
rural and Included In this
order : Teus, North carouna, Kenluckf, MWlaslppl, Teo-
....... M'-'rl, Alabama.
Oklahoma , Loulslona a n d
Montana. Texas .uu leads • -de loier, but Callfomia.
where recf'!ation I! 1 business
One of~the Jastest iJYwjnc
horse-connected n e w In-
dustries is the manufacture of
vltam1n and health products,
by the way. Sales of food 3up-
plements, Oliver r e p or t • •
average $75 a year for
pleasure bar,..~.~ PIO • year !or __ _ (~Che old
staging 1 CQll\ebad< • re
blacUmlthln(,, aaddl<mlklng.
,professional vet er I a.a r 1
service!.)
SupOllor Court Judge Walltt
CarpooeU ruled that '2,000
Tabe Sllor claimed abe paid
!or, Che 30 pieces of 9CUlpture
WU ''ff~ inlsignlflcant"
compared to t b • Ir con-
~ble volue.
'!'ht jadp Ibo declined to
1coept 111 txlra conalderaUon
Mn. S11or u1d ""'Involved 1n
her llTlllC•menl with Bulano
-1 biography of lbe aculptor.
More lhan half of tbe II>
crease, almost 14.t mllllm,
will 10 to blfll.bll Frooll..,
Alrli-, Denver, to rlloe lhO
mulmum ~ to M to
fll,711,G lot Ibo fll6ll ,.ar
that ollrlod lat ~ulJ L
H ...... At Wm!, San Fri&
cloco • .tit ree.Jve ttJ.JQt,OGO.
an Increase of f700,000. -. --
FAME-LESS
FACES
HELEN 8. SHAff[R
NATHAN MILJ..Eft RALPH C. DEANS
Think You Don't
Know Them?
•
Yo u probaby don't recognize a sing le nam e or
face in this group and yet, if yo u're one of the
DAILY PILOT'S very well informed ed itorial page
readers, it is this tale nted team of writers which
helps you keep informed. They write th e Ed ito ri-
al Research Reports. Though their own names
don't appea r on the articles which are published
under the Editoria l Research Reports heading,
these are the real pros -diggers who go after
all the backround fact s which put today 's lop ·
issues into perspective -without thought of
seeking the lame that goes with th e name when
you 're a national colu mnist.
They're Your
INFORMERS
Yes, they could be your "informers." It's features
like Editoria l Research Reports which make the
DAILY PILOT much more th.n just the most
important hometown newspaper avaiiable to ·
residents along tho Orange Coast. The .DA ILY ,
PILOT is the total pac•age. It makes whatever
h•ppens in the world 11local news" and delivers .
it daily right lo your homo. Let this team of dedi-'
coted "informers " help you kHp informed. Read :
Editorial Research Reports on the editor ial page :
-and an the other Informative special ftalvrH •
in other parts of the
DAILY PILOT
• • . .
.
..
Here's
What's
in it
for
You
. ,._ . ~ .
-.
•
•
....
THIS SUNDAY AND EVERY SUNDAY
SUNDAY SPECIAL
Stories by, of and for the Oranga Coast as only a DAILY PILOT staff writer can tell them. These page-topp ing stories set the
pace for Sunday's in-depth apProach to news reporting, DAILY PILOT style.
PEOPLE/QUOTES
Kings or commoners -they're all people. And, sooner or later, they say something quotable. It makes comments that are
highly readable ... just part of the exclusive package of staff-produced features tailored for Sunday DAILY PILOT readers.
ORANGE COAST ROUNDUP
Coastw ise, no one is more coast wise than the DAILY PILOT. Weekly roundup of significant happenings from Seal Beach to
San Clemente helps readers keep up with all the communities of the Orange Coast.
SPORTS
Latest deadline for sports news in Southern California assures Sunday readers of the freshest and most complete overnight
coverage of local and global events in the sports world . Still offering the most in-depth coverage of local area sporting events,
the 'new' sports section now offers more scope and depth on Sundays.
YOU
Focus on you and your friends and neighbors through this lively 'Section 3' every Sunday. Feature article leading off the sec-
tion is exclusively available in the DAILY PILOT, often is staff written . New 'AT YOUR SERVICE' column answers ·the hard
questions , can even help you fight city hall. Other 'YOU ' features in section include 'You and Your Health ', 'You and the Law',
'Good Deed People' (your neighbors who have taken on the commitment to help their neighbors). Columnists range from
Erma Bernbeck, quickest wit in the west; and Count Marco, the man women love to hate; to Rex Reed , the celebrity-turned-col-
umnist, who tells it like celebrities wish he wouldn 't. And the 'YOU' section also offers locally oriented and exclusive entertain-
ment and travel news.
PLUS ••• EVIRY SUNDAY
e Ilg, Loc•I Cl•11lfled ... Section
e Color c .... lcs Section
'
.• TV Week (With Pull WHk's Lep)
• F•1nlly WHkly M•1a:slne
All in -the Big, New DAILY PILOT SUNDAY EDITION
•
•
. . .
'
• • .
•
'
n DAILY PILOT Monday, J unr 5, 1 m
bt1 BU Keane
' Cl!> "Hurry, Doddyl Jack Lalanne's on! Time for
our exercises 1 •
B~k~ Baptist
Student Leader
Finds It Rough
SAN DIEGO (AP)
Dorothy Florence says it takes
10meone a little diffettnt to be
student president at a Roman
Catholic school like t h e
University of San Diego.
Someone like a woman who
ls Baptist and black, a work-
ing mother who adopted her
own son alter the annulment
of her marriage. Someone like
Dorothy Florence.
The students agreed. It took
~rserverance and a lonelv
fight, though, for Dorothy to
get thfcugh the March election
campaign and an APril runoff.
SHE SPENT $5.ZO, buying
bookstore paper on which she
c arefully lettered her own
name and goals.
But a silent supporter who
never identified himself or
herself to Miss Florence
showered the campus with
pro-D6rolhy publicity and she
fin ally won, 287-210.
Bitterness ensued.
"Bastard was the word used
ever the campus radio station
to describe her son, Michael,
3.
"I've been called even
worse,"·says Miss Florence, a
pretty 29-year-0ld history ma-
jor.
"But I try to overlook it
all," she said in a n interview.
"It has gotten worse, but 1
think these are just those
same 210 people."
THEY'RE MALE A N D
white, she believes. A
IJ)Okesman for her election
rival denies any knowledge of
such accusatioo.s or tactics.
She believes her biggest
t rial will come next fall
because new Student Senate
must ratify her appo intments.
"I've had to concede a lit-
tle'' since the election, she
says.
A white male sbJdent whom
she named 110Cial chairman
was rejected by the senate for
that post.
She surprised Mme by a
veto or her own, rejecting the
$1,500 traditional pay for the
Associated Students president
in the form of a scholarship
financed with student funds.
SHE PUTS IN six hours o{
work daily, on the average,
plus l.S-hour-weeks for which
she is paid $126' monthly as a
clerk in the history depart-
ment. Htt grades won her a
scholarship of $350 e a c h
semester and a federal educa-
tional opportunities grant of
~.
A few say she's trying loo
hard, as the first black under-
gradll'8 te student president ::it
her school, but Dorothy ~ays,
"With this administration
under attack, we ha ve to be
good. We can't be average."
Also on her agend a :
Improvements in dormitories.
"rap sessions'' involving pro-
fessors and their wives and
students, and other programs
to keep the university and
community closely involved.
THERE ARE ABOUT 1,200
students, or whom 65 percent
are Roman Catholics.
Each morn i n g ~1iss
Florence delivers her son to
his nursery across the street
from the picturesque hilltop
campus overlooking I he
Pacific Ocean.
She has held jobs in banks.
is a merober of the San Diego
Board of Realtors and wants
to be a lawyer.
IRS Will Z ero I n
On Business Trips
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Internal Revenue S er v ice
fierved notice that it will begin
cracking down on businessn1 en
who claim deductions for
b u si n es s trips and con-
ventions t h a t are vaca-
tions in disguise.
The IRS said its aud itors
and agents wil l start checking
these deductions closely to
mak e sure that the
businessmen are not trying to
cheat the government.
A I o t of professional,
business and trade associa-
tions have been sponsoring
trips and conventions during
which only a small portion or
the time is devoted to business,
the IRS said. The organiza-
tions sometimes go so far as
to advertise that the cost of
t he trip or ccnvention is tax
deductible.
The IRS said that the ex·
penses are not deductible i(
the main purpose of making
the trip is fo r n vacation.
Minor business activity on a
pleasure trip does not make
all lhe ex pense tax-deductible.
it said.
The expenses of business ac-
tivit ies only are deductible if a
taxpayer engages in them
•Nhile on vacation. the I RS
said, but wbether all expenses
lire deductible depends on the
facts of each case.
Agents will focus on the
time spent in business and
personal activities of people
who claim these deductions,
the agency said.
Stolen T axes
VIENNA (AP) -An
Austrian tax official was
sentenced to three years in
prison for pocketing $17,800 in
family allowances for nonex·
isting Yugosla v workers he
had created on paper.
Bras Change
Keeping Up With Times
NEW YORK (AP) -More than half the women In
&be United States wear the wrong bra size, according to n.earch whlch hos brought about the lint new concept in
tile dealgn of bras since their inlr'Oductlon in the 1930's.
From its beginning, the bl'llNiere lnduotry has always
IDlde bras in even numbers, JO, S2, k ' and so on.
Wlly? Tradltioo, money-tn..ived In stock and just
-~· BOnftr, when the NaUonal Bureau of St.Jdarda an·
r-.eed eorty In 1971 that in the past 10 years the Amer-
ican WOIDllD't bu.st increased one lnch. making the average
bust no ac.:.i.-84-B but 35-B, one manufacturer of lnU·
mate appare:I. began developing a bra for the odd sited
bust o1 "· as, " and 39. Kay--Penna-Llft t .. led It on approximately 300
wtme'n. employes acroa the coun try and discovered that dllilb' more tllln fl JlOI'C"llt wore odd sized braJ .
•
/ , ..
HURRY! SAil PRICES HONORED TUES. & WED. OILY!
11 Ft. x 11 Ft. Famil y Size
UMBR~LLA TENT
"Plenty of Room for The Big Fa mil y!"
• 11 ft . x 11 ft. tent with 6 ft. 9'' center height.
•Sewn -in water & mildew resistant floor.
• Nylon rear window with outside flop.
• Nylon screen & fabric door with zippe~ed clo sure.
• Full size owning canopy with aluminum poles.
REG. $49.95
WOW! ~3995
SAVE $I 0.001 TUlS. & WED. ONLY! '
Assorted
HAND TOOL SALE!
•Precisi on made do-it-yourself, fi x-it-yours elf and
bui ld-i t-yourself tools. _ 1 •Scoop 'em up by the armload & get lo work .
REG . 87c
49~ ..
S Piece
PATIO TABLE & CHAIR SET
11$uperlor Quality Patio furniture!''
• Open me sh (ex panded meta II ta ble to p, chair seat & back.
• 42" dia . table & 4 chairs-folds for easy storage.
• New baked-on , chip resistant finish-snawy white.
• Sturdy, a ll steel constructio n.
•Dress up
your patio
today!
SAVE $20.001
REG. $69.99
TUES. &
WE D. ONLY!
SEE OUR FULL LINE OF BEAUTIFUL SUMMER FURNITURE!
Made-in-Mexico
.FANCY PLANTERS
Fiesta -colored imports-sel REG $2 49
the m around the house ' '
or_ garden .. They'll really $ J 4 9
brighten things up.
• Hand-painted ceramic pols. la.
Slightly Water Damaged Lawn Furniture
Pkg. of 12
TRASH CAN
LINERS
•He avy-duty, sanitary
and odorless.
• Will fit 20 to 30
gallon trash conlaine rs.
REG. 79<
39~ ..
TUES. & WID. ONLY l
1 Lb. lag
SHREDDED FOAM
• Stu~ 0 cushion, 0 pillow ar a cudd.ly toy.
• Shredded poly-foam is featherweight
& washable.
REG. 49<
J9~ ..
TUES. &
WID. ONLYI
21/2'' BENCH VISE
''Some Have A Little Rust-Bur
You'll Save 3000/0 Sy Steel W oolln gl''
• Suc tion hose attac hes to ony smooth surface.
• Sw ive ling ja ws will lock in any position
• Heavy duty enam el fin ish,
Made To Sell
For $4.99
Without Rust
Slightly
Rusty
TUES. & W ED. ONLY!
Extra large 2 Gallon
ROSE BUSHES
''Healthy Patent Ro•et-ltfKtdy 10 ftlantl''
,ei
• Bloomin' beoutlet--all your
favorite patent vorieties,
• Pfont them now fo r instant
color in your yard I
RIG. $2.49
YOU' $199 CHOICE
TUU. & WID, ONLYI
WEBBING KIT
• 17 ft. of 2.1h inch webbing--enough to do o cho ir
one way,
• You r choice of
several poplltw-r--
color1.
REG. 19c
15'
TUES. & WID. ONLY!
Genuine ''Church''
TOILET SEAT
111he a.n S•crP In 1h• Ho.•~I''
• High gloss-bake d enamel white finis h.
• Complete with hordwore
ond polyethylene bumpers.
• Replace those Old seats-
todoyl
REG. $3.99
JIL YON C!.l~~l'l
CHURCH TUIS. & WID. ONLY!
"THC BtST SEAT IN TH E HOUSE" '
,
' .
OAIL Y PILOT ll
JQ.~t Made It Formal, Says Newest 70-f ooter
At Swngel Day
43,818 Watch LA
Hon·or Ex-stars
LOS ANGELES tAP ) -Unifo nn
numbers 39 of Roy Campanella, 42 of
J ack.ie Robinson and 32 of Sandy Koufax
were retired Sunday by the Los Angeles
DJdgers, the first lime the club had so
honored any pl ayer.
And the Dodgers also honored Casey
Stfngel "'ho managed an American
League old·timer team made up mostly
of form!'r New York Yankee!! against a
National League squad of primarily ex·
Dodgers.
Thal garne end!'d in a J-1 tie after three
innJngs as a crowd or 43,818 watched.
"I am indeed plea~cd to return to Los
Angeles," declared Campanella who was
partially paralyzf!d several years aJ;:o in
an automobile accident. "I'm still a
DJdger and ahvays ".:ill be ."
Robinson, who Oecarhe the first black
pla,Yer 'In the big leagues when he joined
t he Dodgers. commented. "l can only say
this is one of the great moments in my
life."
Shortly before the c ere mon i es ,
Dodgers Off
' After Gibson
Tops 'e1n, 4-0
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -'I'ed Si mmons,
the St. Louis catcher, is grateful for a lot
of things but most of all because he's a
C::1 rdinal -and thus a tf!ammate of Bob
Gibson.
"I f I came up to the major leagues five
)•cars ago and had to face Gibson all the
time, l 'd probably be looking for another
job." he said.
"I've caught him the last two or three
y<'ars. They say he used to be faster.
Boy, I'd hate to have seen him then."
Simmons' praise followed Gibson's 52nd
career shutout, a 4--0 trium ph over Los
Angeles Sunday in wh ich the veteran
pitcher also h.it his first home run of the
year .
Gibson wasn't as thrilled about the
homer as he was about his pitching.
"If 1 have to depend upon my hitting to
win. I'm in trouble," he said following his
20CJth career victory, one short of the all·
time Card ina l club record.
The Dodgers, not schedu led today , 'vill
continue their' homestand Tuesday night
against the Chicago Cubs.
Gibson's victory was his third straight
after losing his first five decisions. But he
insists he'4 doing nothing dllferent now
than he was at the first of the season.
"I'm no t pi tching any better and I'm
certainly not getting any more runs," he
said. "It just goes in cycles. In cnly two
games have I pitched poorly. The others
could have gone either way."
In his last three victories he's allowed
onlv tv.·o runs in Tl innings, along with
onlY 14 hits.
SI. LO!tl\1 (~) .. ' II rbl
Lt1 A119•lt1 Ill .. , "'111
II rod. " ' • ' • V81enllnt, ,. ' ' ' • Sl•......ore, "' ' ' ' ' 8uc~ner, " ' ' , • (tendtnon, " • ' ' • w 081111, " ' • ' • f lOrl , " • • • • Cr•w!Ord, " ' • ' • Torrt, 3ti ' ' ' ' W.P1t1o:•r, " ' ' , • $1mll'lllN. r: • • ' • Ga•uev, " ' • • • Melendt•. " ' ' • s;m~ . ' ' • • • J.Crvt, cf • • ' • R u•~' ti, " ' • • ' M11•Ylll. •lo • ' ' ' 01•een, ' ' • • • G lbM!n, ' ' ' ' Richer!, ' • • • • Mot~. '" ' • • • TP11l1 n • ' • lo!al1 " • • •
S,. Loul5 .. "" 10~ -•
L~ Angele) .. .. .. _,
E -Ostll'tln. OP -SI. LOUii J, LOI Anvelt l I.
LOB -St, Louis 6, Los Ano•lits 1. 78 -Sl1emor1,
l imrnon1, erock. Hll. -Torri 4S1, Glbt.on (1).
''° H lit Glbtotl (W,).S) • 5 0
Otletn (L,6-J) ' 7 7
Rlchlrl l 1 2
T imi -\;Sf, Allendenct -4J.l11,
a• II SO . ' . ' ' ' . ' .
Robinson had been hit in the head by a
baseball tossed by an autograph seeker.
He first frowned and tben smiled at the
beaning.
Koufax , who gained his fame with the
Dodgers in Los Angeles, commented. "I
just never thought I'd play with somf! of
the men whom I so admired as a
youngster. And I never thought I'd get to
stand with them today."
Sandy, the great left·hander, pitched
the first inning of the exhibition game as
each hurler worked one f rame.
"Koufax: is very good, outstanding,"
commented Stengel.
•·some people wonder \\'hY he had such
a slow start but that was because
everybody wanted to claim hin1 and the
Dodgers used him at fi1st just to weaken
other clubs by hilling a couple of your
men.
.. ThenJie got better control." Old ~a~e,
at 81 , jogged fo home plate for hts in·
troduction and during the game did some
pacing in the dugout. stopping to chat
with such former Yankees as J oe DiMag·
gio, Mickey Mantle, Don Larsen, and a
host of others.
Larsen. who in 1956 hurled the only
perfect \Vorld Series game with a no-hit,
n~run performance, knocked in the run
for the American old-timers.
Casey talked of his former players:
"Joe Dil\1aggio was the first real great
man I ever managed." said Casey. "fie
could go to right, to his left, go in or .go
back over his head. He'd get a start like
he had a radar beam .and he'd made
those catches two-handed. He didn't need
to make one-handed catches.
"Mickey Mantle hit 'em the furthest
I've seen in every park, from both sides.
And Gil A1cDougald, he could pl ay second
base shortstop or third base. If we
couldn't buy two ball players. we'd just
put McDouglad where 'Y.'e needed
somebody.''
And when Don Larsen, famed for his
\Vorld Series perfect ncrhit. ncrru n gam~.
batted in a run in the l·l Old Timers tie
game, Stengel commented. "He was
always a pretty good hitting pitcher."
"Everybody talks about Stengel and his
double talk," recalled Ford, "But when
my roomie Mantle and I were late for
curfew, he made himself perfectlY
clear."
For1nula I Run
To Brazilian
NIVELLES, Belgium (AP) -Braz il 's
Emerson Fittipaldi, driving a John
Player Special Lotus, won the Belgian
Grand Prix for Formula J cars on the
new Nivelles circuit Sunday and in-
creased his lead in the world driving
championship.
Fittipaldi. who started from the pole
posihon, covered the 196.~ miles in 1
hour, 44 minutes, 6.7 seconds for an
average speed of 113.35 miles an hour.
Francois Cevert, driving the Tyrell
Ford of Scotland's Jackie Stewart, who
was forcro out of the race because of ill·
ness, finished second. Veteran Denis
Hulme of New Zealand was third in a
McLaren Ford .
lie was follov.'ed by Mike 11ailwood or
Britain in a Surttts, Carlos Pace of
Brazil in a PoUtoys Mardi, ~eter Revson
of New York in a McLaren and Chris
Amon of New Zealand in a Matra.
The victory gave Fittipaldi 7.8 polnl! in
the race for the world driving tiUe.
Hulme is second with 19 points.
Unser's Eagle Screams
To Triumph in Mays 150
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Bobby Unser of
Ali>u<iuerque, the man with the fastest
rnadllne but bad luck at the lndlanapoli.s
:::., bad the same machine and &ood luck
"Smy aa he captured lhe ISO.mile Rex Mi1* speedway car race at the
Mlllflakcc Stale Falr track.
1blser11 Eagle Offenhauser kept run-JUita:,u he stayed out In fron t"from his
.~og spot oo the pole. finishing wilh
aft "lverage speed cf 109.131 miles per bc:icr-~ He won the race by four seconds
oW cbarglnfl Mark Donohue.
_ ~ won flJ• for his effort, wbicb •. Came be.fore 38,099 f8J'll and a naUOTI;•I 'E audience. Unser had led era Saturday wllb a track reconl
.4114 m.p.h.
i1'he race was delayed 45 mlnutel after
u -llps when a half..hafl broke on Johnny
'I1111herford's Eacle-Offy and the car
chshed Into the wall.
;"1e vehicle's gas and oil spilled out,
~ burst Into names just RS Rutherrord
~peel cle11 r or the wreck. He was
,..Uted ond rtlcascd at a holpltal for
.llims on his hands and f ....
nser called the·race ant or bis most
trouble free after he 1ed ror all but six
lapo. He had led the Indy 500 after quail·
fying ror the pole position, b!!-t was forced.
out of the race with mechanical prob-
lems.
"I had a little engine miss at hlah
speed,u he said. "I didn't know lf tfie
engine could last but I had plenty ol
power. It didn't hurt my speed."
"It'• too bad we bad that red flag delay
becaUse this could have been Our fastest
race here," Unser added.
The only time Unser wu 'OUt cf the
lead was for a brief period afttr bis m~
da~ pit stop. But he Piiied both
Donohue and Mario Andrettl on the &1st
lap and had m aerious cballcncers the
reot of, the way.
0...,. BetteobaUICll of Tinley Park, DI.,
bad been nmnlnl ICCOlld to Unser most
of the race, but car handling problems
forced hlm to 11ow down and settle for
thin! behind Donohue.
Donohue, of Newtown Square, Pa .•
passed Bettenhausen with only six laps to
go. Both drove McLaren-Offenhausers.
Billy Vukovich cf Fresno, fini!hed
founh In an Eagle-Offy, and Joe Leonanl
of San JOI<, fifth in a Parnelll-Ofry.
•
THE ANGELS' ROGER REPOZ REACHES FIRST SAFELY AS CHRIS CHAMBLISS TAKES THE THROW.
MONTE NITZKOWSKI
Olympic Post
To HB Man
tfonle Nitzkowski, "'ater polo and
swimming coach at Long Beach City
College and mentor of the Phillips 66
Olyn1pic development league cham·
pionship tf!am, was named head coach or
the United States Olympic team following
conclusion of the circuit Sunday Tiight.
Nitzkowski, a resident ol Huntington
Beach, will direct the U.S. team in a
br ief training camp prior to departure for
two European tournaments around J une
15.
Following the tournaments, the team
will return he-re to continue training ror
the Olympic Games with the final selec-
tions made early in August.
Art Lambert of De Anza will serve as
assistant malting the combo the reverse
of the 19611 Mexi<o "City Olympic team
coaching staff when Lambert dir<cted
ttie squad witll Nltzkowsti as assiltant.
Mike Martin of the NlMA water polo
team and former UC Irvine player, bas
been selected to the 15-man roster with
other area players Eric Lindroth a.pd
Dean Willford also selected. Llndroth and
Willeford played for Nitzkowski'• Phill!po
team in the development league.
All 15 players wlll make the trip to
Europe and will Teport to the training
camp where the final Olympic team will
be cut to 11.
Rice Blows Stack
Halos Skipper I rate
In 6-4 Loss to I'ribe
CLEVELAND (AP) -It v.•as a suc-
cessful visit here for the California
Angels, who won two· games out of three
lo run the ir current skein to eight out of
IO. But that did '1othing to Jessen the
anger of manager De l Rice.
The Angels' skipper 'blew up In lhe
eighth inning of Sunday 's game and
wound up spending the final frame in the
clubhouse; at umpire's invitation, as the
Cleveland Indians completed a 6-4. vie·
tory.
Thf! immediate cause of Rice's anger
was a disagreement with the plate un-
pire, Jerry Naidecker, about the Angels'
batting order. But the manager's disposi·
lion couldn't have been improved any by
his team's fail ure to take advantage of
scoring opportuniti~s. They tied a club
record by leaving 15 TUnners on base.
Rice had changed .his lineup in the bot·
tom of the seventh inning, bringing in a
new catcher, John Stephenson. and
pitcher, Lloyd Allen. Since the pitcher's
spot was to lead off the eighth, Rice
decided Stephenson should bat there. But
C11ltornlt !~) Clevtl11nd t•I •• r II rtil .. , h '111
ll lom&•. ,. ' • • • McCr&w, " • • ' ' O'Brien, ,. ' • ' • 81'Q!\ame•. ,. • ' ' • Ber•v, " • ' ' • Dully. " • • • • E.F'lsll•r. o • • • • A.Johnson, " • ' ' ' Pinion, " ' • ' ' Un~r. .. • • • • R.Oll•er, .. ' • ' • F Cl'H t , C ' • • • McMullln. .. ' ' • • cnambl>5!, 11:1 ' • • ' S!enron. r1 ' ' ' , Nt llln. ,. ' ' ' • (8rdC1>11, 11 • ' ' • aeu. rl ' • • • l(uin,.er, c ' ' • ' leon, u ' ' • Spencer, "" ' ' • • Wllco•. ' • ' ' SttPl!enlOll, c ' • ' ' .... ,,.., .. ' • ' • R.C~rk. ' ' • ' ' Repo1, pt! ' • ' • Fo.1.,, p • • • ' B1rb1Jr, ' ' ' • ' L.A lltn, ' ' ' ' • Rluen. " ' • ' • Totals • "' ' Tottls " • ' • Cellfornl1 .. .., 301 -~
Clt'll•l•nd '" "' "' -. E -erona!Nr, Wll«I•. K1111nyer. l OB -c11t-
ftlrnlt 15, (ltveland f .. 18 -Plnton, WUco•, Be<ry.
Hit -A, J°"""°" (SJ, SttnlOn (6). J.B -A. Jon,._
_,, McCr•w. S -WllCOJC, McCrtw. SF -Chim-
bfl••· " " • .. .. ..
R.Clt rlt (l,4-SJ ' ' • • ' ' Flllff ' ' ' ' ' ' 81rlMlr , ' ' • ' ' L.AUen ' • • • ' ' E.Flll'ler ' ' • • • ' w'""' IW,S.4) •·2/, • • ' • • "'"'"' 2.111 ' I I ' • Altlndtncl -ll..617.
Neudecker, who said afterward he had
·only heard Rice make one substitution,
insisted Allen bat in th e pitcher's spot.
After a meeting of un1pirc s ::iffirm('d
1he decision. !lice charged out of the
dugout shouting and WJ\'ing his ~irms. 1\s
Neudecker was thumbirlg him out of the
game, Angels coach P~an~ts Lo1vry
grabbed the manager from behind and
pul led him away.
The AngelS' ultimately had to use a
pinch hitter for Allen. and Rice was still
fuming afterward. "He (Neudecker) real·
ly loused it up," he said. "What it made
me do is use three players for one."
But nei ther the advantage in numbers
or in hits -12·9 -helped the Angels, as
they dropped behind 6-0 in the first five
innings and frittered away too many
chances to salvage their five-game win·
Ti ing streak.
Ex.teammate AlelC J ohnson started the
assault with a fi rst.inning home r un , and
win ning pitcher Milt Wilcox, 5-4, doubled
home two run s off loser Rick Clark, 4-5 ,
in the second inning.
Padres Pull Off
Rare Triple Play
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Randy Hund\ey's
first home run of the year, a tie-breaking
shot in the fifth inning, powered the
Chicago Cubs and Ferguson J enkins to a
3-1 victory over the San Diego Padres
Sunday .
The Padres pulled oft a triple play in
t he ninth after Carmen Fanzone reached
first on an error and JoSe Cardenal
singled. Hundley grounded to shortstop
Rafeal Robles, who tagged Fanzone for
the fi rst out and threw to second base-
man Derrel Thomas to force Cardenal.
Thomas' throw to fJrst baseman Na te
Colbert retired Hundley and completed
the tri ple play.
Giant George
Steals Show
At Coliseum
LOS ANGELES (Af>) -Giant George
Woods shrugs it olf and his coach giggle!!.
Yet th(' rn assive shot putter has cracked
the 70-foot barrier.
\\'oods is a f>.foot-2, 300-pound veteran
\'fho has been America's No. 2 thro"·er
since he ''on !he s1l\·er medal in the 1968
Olymp1c:s. !!e's still No. 2.
But his 70-1~" effort on his fi rst throw
Sunday at the C'ornp1oi1 Invitational
placed him in co1npc1111un "'ilh only ltan-
dy ~1atson, the wurld r1·1·ord holder. and
A! Feuerbach. The fnl't !h.'.il \\'oods. 29,
bccan1c the world 's th ird n1an ovC'r 70
fet.'I doesn't impress h11n.
Another top shotputtcr. Ne\\' por t
lfarbor lligh's Terry Albritton. shook oft
lhe disappointment of havillg-lost i11
.Saturday's state n1cet al Ornvtlle.
lie shoved the 12·pound ball 6.'i·I Sunday
lu 11·i11 the prep event at the Colis"wn.
"It 's nothing," \Voods .says, ''I've t.lone
It in practice at least scv('n tirncs. So
!his is really nothing 1norc than rnaking
ll offici::1L ln ract, it wa sn't even a very
good effort. I didn 't 1:1et things together."
"it "'as just a matter o[ lirnc,'' said
Paci fic Coast Club coach Tom Jennings,
"·ho 's been saying for three tnonths that
Woods wa·s without doubt his second best
shot putter. Jennmgs also coaches
l•'euerbach.
The sparsely attended meet sa1v a
number of fine perfor mances including
\'111cc ~1atthev•s' upset of once-beaten
quarter mile champion Lee Evans.
(\latthews surprised !::vans and \Vayne
Collett wtt h a burst of 5pced 20 yards
from the tape. His winning time in the
400-meter dash was 44.8 and ltiattbews
said:
"l haven't got a great competitive
record agaiMt ·Lee but tha t's because I
live in the East and don't have the money
to travel out here where all the big meets
are. Some meet promoter could make me
well known ju~ by inviting me."
Seconds later. Matth!'ws "''as invited to
corn pete in Friday's Von's Classic here.
~lark \Vinzenrcid ran !he second rastest
800 meters of the year , I :46. Hoell
r-.11c·hacl :r:ipped 3:40.1, for 1,500 meters.
Former college d ivLSion sprint champ
('huck Smith clocked 20.7 for 200,
ri-tadclyn Manning Jackson won the
1vome11's 800 in 2:07.6 and Jost by an
l'Yclash to Kathy llammond ln a 52.2 400.
Summ1rl" of Sundin Cornoton llWltetfoMI tr•cll
1no l1eld "'"' 11 tn. LOI ~ .. Goll-.wn:
H1mm1r throw -I H1I COtMIOl/r S.!'!ll llfloltlu AA. 211-11. 2. Sr.-,. D•Avtr_,r, ste!W. TC -.... a. 11111 Schull, U.S. Arm.,, lf?..(. '
110 HH -1, l'1ut Olblon, un1t11cllfd, 11.7. t , 'Tom-m•r Lrf wnn1, Soutti.rn C~.Jllornl1 Jlrlchn 1).7 Ji,. Pon Dr111e" Chl(tgo TC, 14.0. • '
Womfn'1 !.500 m1tv. -1. Jl,ldy Or1"9m L~ /ln<t•IP> TC, 4:2'.1. 1 Dlllblt .JoflMon A111t1 ~~~o;unnff1, 1:1'-'. "' Ruth 1u1111111....,., 11ut1to RR,
J~vflin -1. Ftrd Lule:• Hu1kv lplkt Club, 2S..I. 1 J~ro Bftcon, N-York AC, :ulM. l, .. II L1vlll1 sC srr,o•"· 241. . '
Wom•n's l<>na lump -• Merlh1 Wthon 20-0. i. e~rb8•1 Ftr,..11. lo. Anqeltt M ... cur1tl•, J~IO'Vo. ),. Vocklt II.it!, lATC. 17-11'4.
GI ITil«rMdl111 hurdln -I, Jotwl Altll-11\NI Oo-n-
dl.a.fi'.6. 1. V.a Wllll1m1, S..n DI ... TC, •.7, ~'-8ov"' om'•ni.. C01199r TC, oft.f. I , Okk ••\lll'tftNln. .ft t &. l<•lp/I Mann, SC Slrldtn • .50.0. • '
aoa -1, ,.,,_rll Wlnr111rl9d, Club Wfll, l :•A. ~ Juri1 Luzln.1, Mllrlnes, 1:.i.t . J, Slll'Y9 Strtl/O, H111kY So:kr Clu' l :•.t .•• Jo. MO(k, Huilly l plk• Cut:t,. I •8 1.
Sho! Piii -'· Geo•QIJ .aoc11. P•clllc CO.II CJtlb, 10.1• •. 1. l:Uir;twrd M1 rtr.1, Pee, u.Jr. J, 11rua w1 ...
t>elm, 6J.l\:o. '· Frid 0.11,,..l'll'rdf, T1••1·EI PIMI. 67·9. S, S!i!YIJ Wllllelm, Mld-1! TC, '2·1~.
W""'en'1 100.mPlt" da1t> -1, M•fll'le W1!1«1o 'AT C. 11.7, wll'ld 1 ldld 6.1 m.pd•., 11.•.
100.muer d11h -Riv ROblnK1n, F10rld1 Aa.M, to.r.
1 Stevr ll:!'ddlci<, Norfolk Stall . 10.7 l. WIUll McGH
Alcorn A&M, 10.3 •• hllC Curl/1, Ei1y ArH S!rldef'.;
10 l .
Lono lump -1, Jerry Prottor. SC SlrkMrt, :rs.ou,
1, ,lion Colem•n, A•mv, 24-7~1. 3, St111 RO'ltl•r, 8" 1rr11""' 7•S. •• Jame1 McAll111r, ur11tt•chld, J).\0'4.
Womltll'1 IOI) -,, Mto.11,... N.111111"9 JICllton. Columbu• TC, 2:0'.6. 2. $_,. P1rk•, WO!wrlfte TC, J:C7,t. l, Ann G1ll1her, Phoefll• TC. 2:11 ...
Women'1 .00--1, IC•lhv H•mmorMI, Secr1""""'
Ro11drun,,.,r1. S7 7. 7. MIJd1llM M.1nnlr11 J .cluon,
Corum bti1 TC. Jl 7. l, J••uf1 Scott, LA Mercurl lles ~· l •
700 -1, Chuc~ Smith, SC Strld.,.1, 20.7. 7, Be,. ~i"OQ~ln. Georgl1 TC. 71 0. l, Jim l(.m11, IC Strlderi,
Pole vtull -I, B<ltl Se.oicrrtnj SC Slrldtrr1, 11·•. J, Boo Rlct>11rd1. PCC, 11·0, Tl• &mof>Q 511.,. Caru•~s. Ct!llO•nla lnt1r1W1tki1W11 8-0b Sprung, Mann11. •l'ld ll:ol11'1d C~rler. unattochld, !H .
..:xi ~ L Vince Mtt!t>tw•, 8•00k lyn Qwr 1r.. Hiil
AA, U.I '· W1vne ca11.11. Slrkl•··· .as.o. l L•• Eu•n•. BAi ilfiO••I, .as.s. '-OtUI Ntwl\ovll, lrmy.
•5 !.
DllCUI -'· Tim Von ...... Airmy, 20$.I, '· J1y Sllv~•ltr. lnt1rmounl1li1 TC, 70).10. l , G1r..-C1rUtt1., i C $1rldtrt. 109-J. ,, John Po-II. PCC. 1 .....
1.500 -1. H-.11 Mlchetl. M1rl ... 5, J:«l.I. 2, ~
cctn M1cOoNld, West V1ll1v TC, J:.O.t . l. J l"'
C••wtord, Army, J:.fl.O. ~. Jim Gorm•n, Orl'gOn TC.
l:•l.l .
S.000 -I, Tony 9-, .-.1111r1ll1, 1':03.2. 2, SI._.. Sav11!1f, Or~ TC, 1'.0l.I. J, Otv• TOl:her!, NorthlJrn Ar!lOflf, 1':07.2.
Tr)plt lum-1, Moh!rdt'I' Giii, Ct lll. l11t1rn1tlontl,
51·7. ,, Llfl"OV 8uro ..... J11Ntl(I , D .5, '· Jl lllH Smllh. un.111d>fd. 46.0.
Wom1n'5 100.mtltr n11rdle1 -I. Dfftn,... C1rt.1n, .5.ecr•mtfl!O ll.oldrurw.r1, ,,,.., 21 Cll'l;tlnt Crowdtr,
un•ll•ched, IS.7. l , Ctm COl'lly, LOl'IQ 8Mch c-t•, 15.6.
Hl9h lu np -I, JtrrY Culp, C1lll., lnt1r11111ot>e1, '· 0. 7, •tv1111d1• 8row11. C1llt .. tnl-ti.nef, ,..._ a,
Dill, ll11rr1ll, 81Y .fr11 l trlctll'I, 7-CI.
lllCI rtle'I' -I, SC Slrldel'i, Frid 1Cull1r. J ll"! W.em.p,
WIY ... ColllJll, Chuck Smlr!I 1 :22.J. L Clllf. l11twrr1eo
lioM1, l:tl,6. J, florlff Al.M, l:Zl.7 .
Mllt r1ltt -li. Bly Ar11 Sir~, l :ttA. 7, COft\PfOfl JC, :s1·~2. J, Chllfly JC, ~lU. ..._ L• AncNIM CC, J:I .l.
, . .,_
BOBBY UNSER SPEEDS TO REX MAYS l~ILE CLASSIC VICTO RY IN EAGLE·OFFENHAUSER SUNDAY
'
"
I
'
Q DAii. Y PILOT
Proved Can
Still Pia''. . ,
Says Sanders
O:IARLOITE, N.C. (AF 1 -There wa.!I
just a tract ol a amlle around the il l>! at
Doug Sander s announced 111 ob• 111u s but
r estrained delight:
"I've proved I can still play And l '\'C
proved I can stlll win. You l'a n'l Imagine.
what a wonderful fetlil18 it is ."
The dapper guy had ju:st scored a
dramatic, one-stroke victory over L~e
Trevino with a long birdie putt on the
flnal hole of the $175.000 Kemper Open
Sunday, con!oondlng the critic-s who had
written hi! ~lftng obituaries scores O{
times.
He'd been derided for his admitted
playboy attitude toward life, comple!f"
with late hours anO\_l]quor. Pur ist!\ sa id
his uoorthodox. short swing would fa il
him with his advallCing years. lie lost his
exempt status when he fail ed lo play well
enough to make the top 60 money winners
1&3t sea son. He hadn't won In two _veurs,
And he'd bet'fl forced into a month
layoff earlier this year because of te n~
doniUa in hill wrists.
Men~r, J11rit 5, l972
His 19th career victory. worth $35.000
and a congratulatory telephone call fro1n
aometimes playing partner Vice Presi-
dent Spiro Agnew, solved it all.
BILLIE JEAN KING CAPTURES THE FRENCH OPEN.
•
"When that putt dropped, il wa s 11k<' n
blessi ng from heaven ," said Sanders. "I
don't know how long it was. Some people
eay 40 feet. Some say 20, but I th ink it
broke that much."
Final Major Crown
H\11 wtnnlng bird ie' on the 72nd hole.
before a huge gallery o1 some 2.1,000
basking in the bright, wann sunshine and
11:weatlng out one of the most exciting
flni!hes of the year on the pro tou r, ga ve
the 3Pryear--0ld Sanders a fou r-under-par
&8 on his final round.
l(ing Halts Goolagong
For French Net Title
,.INt tcorn '"" rnon.1 wlnnl,,g• S~ndoy In 11'111 KMnptr o....,:
Dolll Sand..-. LM lrn lno Lellr'lln H1rrl1
c ... r ianudo
Brvce O.v!ln
G1ry Pl1yer
Dllv1 Hlll
Ton'! lt11w
11•'1' ,.loyd
BOb Lunn
lom Wthkopf
Ari Wi ll
K..-mll Zlrlty
~bbr Ol!W I Jwry H"rd
· LOii Gr1h111t
J lnt Dint ...... ... ..,,,.
Biiiy Cl\lMI'
Larrr Hinton
ll!'ry Wll<o.o:
MUM1' l•rblr
Cl'llrl .. Slttord
llrvc• Cr11n11tCHt o.-B~n M11t1n ll udcllllft
Tony J1cklln
ll1tpft ll•ktr
John Mltlt r
Cr11rJ 0..r ,,..,, loOtn
Jun.,. Boros 18\lflky M..,ry
8oO ltrbll'CllU
Joe Pon.,.
lllclr: Mttt ..... i.
Rod PUl'llirtll
&obby Cole
""' ll1fldtll "Tommy "''°" s~m Sr.l9d
Bob C~rlll
On1lllt Moody
!lobby Nkllc>lt
Llonel MIMt1 J.,.,y ltrrl..-
Mllr.t Hl11
Jt rry McO..
tl,.ODCI
l lt,,J.o sn.as 11,2J)
11,Jl)
11.2l l
11.1•2
15, 16?
IJ,162
14,JIJ
IJ,111
IJ, na
IJ,1'H
11.1 2• IJ, 121
SJ,121
w ,121
Sl. l:HI
12,IU
12,IM
11,l tS
11.1\J
11.TlJ
11.llS 11,:n1
l l,l2l 11,:111
1 1,111
11.:111
11.J'll
11 .0JS
11,0JS
11.0SJ
11)(115
SIMS
18'1
"" "" .. ,, .. ,,
"" 1111
"" .... ..., .... .... .... ...,
7J .jt·d .U-?JS ......... ,,-116
., .... 11.u-211
•S-71·11 ·11-211
7J.704-6t-l71 11 .... 10-1.._,,.
7°"'4-72-11-2/t
7J. .. -61-70-27t
JJ.10.10...--2~
7U t -6&"61-1IO
11·7'-'6-71-2'1 ,, .. , .. ,.,,_,.,
11 .. 1.11 .12-211
6&-.17-71-7.1-:l'll 71.11.-11-211
70-7 ...... 71-211 , .... , .. ,_,,_2•1
l:MJ-71 .. t-211
70-t .. 11-11-111
'6-ll>I J.1>-212 , .... ,.,,-6f--21) '
70-4t -71-I0-21l
70-71·11 ·11-:l'IJ
"-12·7J.I0-11l
11·10-11·1-214
73-71> 70-71-lt4
74-70.10·70-714
6f-1J.-70.7)-.714
JJ.lf).71-61-2'4
70-11·72-11-214
11-11-10-11-215
7Mt .. 7-1J-JI S
11·1J.J'O.I0-11S
ll>IJ.IJ-10-215
11 ·111-11·12-115
7J.1l-70.7J-1t6
11.11.11-n -*
7MS-70-7.l-7U
1 ...... 12.n -1N
72-IJ-11-71-216 , ...... ,, .. ,._,..
70-1l-11·1l-116
7ll-1Mt·lf.-217
7J.~11l-l'-217 , ........ ,.._,.,
70-7•11-11-217
70-7•11-11-1t7
IJ.6&-7•72-217
7J.ll-7l-ll-2111
FORMER DODGER
SHOOTS HIMSELF
AUGUSTA. Maine -Del Bls.!lonette,
former Brooklyn Dodgers first baseman.
remained in crltlcal condiUon at an
Augusta hospital today with what pol ice
described 8.! a sel£-inflicted gu nshot
wound.
The 72-year-0ld Bissonette WR! found
wounded Saturday In an apple orchard in
his naUve Win throp , Police Chief
Linwood Baker, said.
Bl.!1.!lonette was reported to have been 1n
poor he11Jth.
He broke in with the old Brooklyn team
ln 1923, and had compiled a .305 batting
a\'erage before his majqr league career
was cut short by an injury in 1933. His
be st season was 1930, when he hit .330.
PARIS (AP) -Billie Jean King aveng·
ed an earlier defeat and won the only
major crown that ha! eluded her when
she defeated Ellonne Goolagong 6-3, 6-3
and captured the women 's singles title
Sunday at the }trench Open tennis cham-
pionships. ·
It wa.!I her first tri umph after si x years
o[ compe tition in this tournament, rated .
as the world clay court champions hip.
and avenged her loss to Miss Goo!agong
in the final al Wimb ledon last year.
Mrs. King said :art er the match that
hot h she and f.1iss c:oolagong ai med for
their opponents' forehand :ind that she
\\'BS attempting to keep the AustraliA n
ay,·ay from the net.
"Evonne told me 'You nev<'r Jet me
get in lo 11'.'' the L-OJJg Beach, Calif.,
veteran said.
In a dozen years on the internal1onA I
circuit. ftlrs. King has \\'On t h e
Wimbledon title 1hree limes, lhe U.S.
championship twice and the Italian,
German. Au stralia n, Sout h African , Irish,
Argentine and Austrian crowns.
J\.tiss Goolagong. \\•ho won the f r<'nch
title last ye ar . had won every set this
year in her matches through the semi-
finals.
Andres Cimeno won the men's singles
title \.o:it h a 4-6. 6-3. 6-1, 6-! "ictory over
Patrick Proisy ·of France. lt was worth
$12 ,000.
Mrs. King said she \\·as suffering from
"a terrible ~Id., and frequently stopped
to blow her nose on the court Sunday .
\\'hen a reporte r suggested the crou•d
appeared to be with her . she retorted
\Vith a laugh , •·Yeah. they \rere sorry for
me."
The key game of the match, l\f rs . Ki ng
said. was the third game of the second
set \Vhen she fell behind 0-40 on her own
service. evened it At 40-at\ with a drop
shot and \/Olley and then got .a .service
v.•inner.
She broke ftliss Coo/agong's service in
!he first game or lhc first l'!el and again
brok e her opponent 111 lhc ninth game.
The triu mph earned f\-Irs. King, "'ho
has been ranked l'\o. I in the United
Sta tes five times, $4.000 v.•hi/e 1'.1lss
Baseball S landings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Ea st Division
w L
New York 31 13
Pittsburgh 27 16
Chicago 24 18
Montreal 19 24
St. Louis 17 28
Philadelphia 16 28
\\"est Division
Doq:e:rs 21l 18
CindnnaU 27 18
HOUJ'ton 26 19
Atlanta 20 23
San Diego 16 29
San Francisco 17 34
IUlld1v'1 ll'111t1t
Clnic'"M 1 t , Phllfdflpl\!t O
Houltie!\ J, MontrN I Cl
A""°"e ,, N"' York J Ch--), Sen DI ... 1
It, Leith. ol. Loft A..-1 .. t
Pl,.._..,,. "'' S.11 P'rt nc:l14;0 J·I
TlllltY'I 01"'91
Pct.
.705
.628
.571
.442
.378
.364
.609
.600
.578
.465
.356
.33.1
GB
3" " 6
t I ~i
1 4 ~l.i
15
" ' 1'1
6h
111>
13 \i
"'~ t•nr1 i.2i 11 .J•n Oltff (Norm111 '"''· '""' °"tr Nft'le KllMllMd
T ...... Y't OtlMt
Aftetd8 •I Motllr•J, nlohl
CJM:ll'INll lfl N.,_ Y'°"'· nltl\I ~ et PllllHifttlt!le, nl9h!
OikMle lfl l ........... """'' ""'*"""' II a-Di..,, "ftolll
.,, 1.#16 .t .. f'flfl(ftco. "''"'
A:\1ERICAN LEAGUE
l::nst Uh•lslon
W L Pel. GB
Detroit 24 17 .585
Cleveland 20 19 .513 3
Baltimore 21 20 .512 3
Boston 17 22 . 436 6
New \·ork 18 24 .429 61,);
~1il"·au kee 15 23 .395 7!~
OaklA nd
Chicago
~finnesota
Ange ls
Texa!>
Kansas City
\\'est Dlvls ~n
28 13
25 17
23 16
20 24
18 26
17 25
5ul>Cl.1''' llttUI!\ Oa~lt11d 1·1, 8~1t•m0t' l).g
C-•~•~la o\d ~. Ctl!lcrn!t '
T•~•• 10, Ml!w1u~tt o
IC 1111t 1 c11y 7·0, Bouon M
~!rel! J, Ml1111t1oi. 0
Chlt•10 .. J, Ntw Yook l·.1
M ..... IY'I OlmlS
.683
.595
.500
.455
.4-09
.405
31\
4
9'h
11 \j
11 \j
Mlnnt tol• !Woadi.o11 ).J) t i ••lllmort (~
Ntll~ S-~l. nltM
01-l~nd (000m ~-11 ti Cltvtl•rtd CPtrrv f.J),
l'lkll'!I
Only t tmt1 1clltmot~
TllftdtY'• 01111 ..
MllWl\111" t i K1nltl City rtlt lll
N..,.. Yof\ 1t Tt lt t, !'llt lli
8 011011 ti (lllQ", !1!1111
C1U1tr111t t i O..rro!t, '· lwl-nl1ht 0.kll l'ld t i CltW!t "ll, rtllll!
Mlmtl>Ott t i lllllmon, nltllf
DEAN LEWIS
• 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303
S.rvlce ind Ports ,., All lmportld Ciro
Modern Body Shop for All C•rs
Orange County's Largest and Mo!rt Modern Toyota and Vol1·0 Dealer
OVUILU DILIVIRY l'ICIALISTI
•
. . ..
Gootagong, ranked No. 1 in the world,
collected 12,000.
The 100 points Mrs. King picked up for
the victory pushed her to the top of the
\vomen 's Grand Prix .standing.!! with 229
points. ~tias Goolagong is second with
205.
Caliente Track
Ready in Year
TIJUANA (AP ) -The new Caliente
race track should be built and r eady for
horse racing in a year, says tbe president
of the trac k's controlling corporation,
Jfi podron10 de Agua Caliente.
Fernando Gonzalez Diaz Lombardo told
a news conference that the new $8-mill ion
facility won't get under construction for
at least two months because it will lake
that Jong to finish clearing away what 's
left of the old track.
Caliente \Yas destroyed by fire la.!lt
Aug. 5. Conzalez, a nt'WspBper publisher
ln Mexico City, and his corporation took
co ntrol of the facility lasl month.
Gonzalez said he is anxious to get goi ng
on the new track. shop ping center and
1nuseum . t
"t want to hove days \\'i lh 48 hours,'' he
said. "I "'ant lo speed up the building.
\Vhen will "'e race agaiJl? That's the
$64,000 qu estion. The sooner the better,
but I would estimate in a year from
now."
"\Ve are -p~nning to build a race track
that will be a pleasure to see," Gonzalez
said. "We will adjust to the needs of the
people. We \viii ha ve the best food, the
best service and the best hospi tali ly.
\Ve 'rc going to prove that Mexican things
are clean and beautiful. \Ve are hope rul
\1·e can ra ise the !eve! of racing."
DEAN LEWIS
1972 TOYOTA CARINA
WITH FACTORY
Al R CONDITIONING
s7200 PH MONTH
Sf4.70 Total Down -$72.00 Tetal
Monthly Payment, •JIS20 tor
forty light Mos. Def•rred -
$JSSO.OO/C•1h -$2794.70 AP•
12.76 on approved cr.dlt,
1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN
WITH FACTORY
AIR CONDITIONING
PIR
MONTH
Sll7.4' Tetal Down -Dtftmld $60J1M. cutt•Prfct $4246.27 Incl.
T a L/APR 11..M ..... ,,.. credit
1972 TOYOTA MK 11
STATION WAGON
WITH l'ACTORY
5
A
9
1RSco;;·o:NG. (
MONTH
1147.U Tet1I -/tfl.U Tetel
Monthty lllymt. fw Porty ll9ht
Months. Olftrrtll '41UJJ Al'lt
12 ... l1T79* -14ff7 .... ,..
crtlltt. RT7tCIO
..
Sports In Brief
Anaheim Considered
2,000 on Hand .
For Adoption
Tenni s Finals For ABA Cage Return
Nearly 2,00> fan5 were on hand Sunday
to see the finals of the l llh annual
Orange County Adopt ion Guild tenn1~
tournament in the center court or the
Newport Beech Tennis C.oub.
NEW YORK - A tW1>man comn:ittee
has been fonntd to screen and interview
applica nts to suceeed American Basket -
b:!!ll Aswci:!llion Qmunl!sloner Jack
Dol ph, who announced hls fe!igna tlon
last week , the ABA announced Sunday.
Trustees plan to award franchises to
1e\leral major cities in an attempt to
stabilize the league. Chicago, St. Louis,
Anahe im , Connecticut and upper New
York State are among location.s being
con.!l idered. The Natlonal Basketball
A!SOCiation bas teams in C1:licago, Buf-
falo and Los Angele.s.
•
KALAMAZOO. ~1ich. -Derending
champion Bob Chappell has been seeded
No. I and teammate Greg Jablonski of
UC ll"\line No. 3 as the NCAA college
dlllision tennis chempiOl'l.9hips got under
way at Kalamazoo CoUege here today.
UCI is defending team champion for
the past two years "°rrd-.... has Greg
Schneider .!!-nd Jim Ogli: a I s o
participating in the singles competition
along with double s combines or Chappell
and Schneider on one squad and
J ablonski and Glenn Oipe on the other.
Schneider is the only UCI singles
pl ayer in action today as he fa ced Larry
l~lneberry of Oht Dominion in fi rst round
action. 'The others have been .!leedecl into
the sec~d round.
UCI's dtki bles co mbinations ·b<llh Played
second round matches today· (allowing
fi rst round byes. •
S'IOCKHOUit -Pole vaulter Kjell
Isak.sson or Sweden, who hol<U !he
recognized world record of 18 feet 2 in·
che.!I: and who ,ea ped tM1h-along with
Bob Seagren -at El Paso in May, said
Sunday he hAs cancelled his proposed
United State.s tour, which would have in~
eluded competitions at Los Angeles June
9 and San Francisco June IO.
Isaksson said he feared he might injure
his sensitive back because o( the Jong and
troublesome fl ights inv9llled. That is
what happened to hlm last year, when he
made man y trips lo lhe United States.
•
SPR INGF IELD. JIL -J eff Cherry
hnrled a two-hitter and Marty Friedman
doubled to drive in two runs to power San
J.'ernando Valley State to a 3-0 victory
Sunday night over defending champion
fo~lorida Sout hern in the NCAA College
Division World Serles. ~
The two teams meet tonight for lhe
championship in the double elimination
tourney. •
. VANCOUVE R B.C. -Early reports in·
dicated that three or four bor.!les were
killed Sunday night when fire raced
through the stable area of Exhib1!ion
Park racetrsd: in the city's ea.st end.
Pollcti <.'OUld not confinn the report.
saying the .situation was "confused." but
lhe spokesman said it appeared certa in
lhere were no deaths or injuries among
racetrack personnel.
Abou t 15 horses were reported in the
stables when the fire broke out in late
evening. The panic-stric ken animals fled
the horse barns and Jed police on a wild
chase through city stree ts.
•
EUGENE. Ore. Al Schoterman·!
NCAA hammer U1row record of 231 feet 3
inche.s and poS.!libly others set at last
weekend's colleg iate track and field
championships may be In \I a 11 dated
because of facilities said to be improperly
measured . it Ila! been reported.
Neil Amdur of the New York Times
mad e the assertions following the three.
day track meet wh.ich ended Saturday.
Among the charges were that the
•layward Field hammer throw circle was
a fraction of an inch too wide in
diamete·r, the steeplechase water hazard
was seven inches too shallow at its
deepest part and that some lanes were
une\len on the turns.
The charges were denied vehemently
by University of Oregon Coach Bill
Bowerman.
Bennett Hold s
Decathlon Edge
LOS ANG ELES (AP) -Li llie Jel!
Bennett ran one of the fa .!ltest ~meter
runs in decathlon hi.!ltory Sunday and took
a narrow JS-point lead into tOOay's final
r ound or competition in the national AAU ·
decathlon championships.
Summtrl" of !hi flril !lu t '""'nt• !urldtY In
tt>t /\AU dtct thlon cht mplon1lllPI ., !ht LQI An-
01tt 1 CQU H um:
100-mtlotrl -Pt ff'r G•~!t, Envl11'd, 10.7. t it
polnr1. J fl'11 Rennell, u .s Army. 10.1, 113. "O'Y
1e ... w1rc1. Club wnr, 10,1. UJ. J11r a.,,nl1tt r,
0Kt1'11on Club OI "'mt rlc1n, 10.9. 121. RtK Hl rYtY. Air For<t , 10.t, 121.
L.,.... Jump -l!ltnnt!t, 11·1"1, ''°· Gt rv Kint , lJ. Of New H1mp1lllr1. 11-l'~, •ll. Frt<I Ol•on, un·
11!tcllfd, 12-11\l, 120 Jo!'!n W1rlc tnlln, Soull!t rn
C1tl!arnlt !!rillt rl, 21·111t., l h . G•bbttt, 72-5'1•, ~-Silo! -Ille!< Wtn1mt~fr, •·m•!!t cht<:I. 51-1, m .
fltrrv k ing, Enel1tld, 49-~. 7'0. 1(1nw1rd 4-t 't
711. ll1nnlt1••, 41-111), 7JJ. Alen AoblnKWI, Ne-#
York AC, 46-5, n1.
Hi.II lumo -Rt Y Mlll>!I, Club Wt1I, ... , 140.
Ol•an, 1-6, MO. Wt tktnlln, '-' UO. Wt n1m.tter 1-'-
'40. GordCHt Sttw1rt, unt !ltdltd. Ct nei11, 6-l, ns.
400 -11..,,..11, 4'.1, tl't. Gt bbt!l, ~7.1, t '1, fl•"·
nttttr, •1.7, tll. W1r~mtln. 41.0. H1"'t V, 41.l , "l.
Fln l-<l•Y lolt b -a.n ... 11, •M6; OIJCIO'I 4,0ICI
!tnnl1l•r. 4,0Q!li w1,...mtt1r, J,N01 w.ftttfl!ln.
l ,9S.; Gt~tl, J,f<IO; Kmwtrd, l.m .
In the final event, the 1nixcd open, the
host club's Mr. and Mrs. f.1ark Elliott
had a surprisi rigly easy time wit h f\·fr.
and Mrs. llugh Stewart of the Balboa
Bay Club as they defeated the vi.!litors 6--
2, 6-3 1n le.!ls than 5ll min utes.
The mixed A ellent proved to be the
most excit ing of the Sunday finals when
r.-ir. and 1'.1rs. Ben Krueger of TorTance
defeated lfal Buckey of the Newport
Reach Tennis Club and his partner Alice
Evans 7-6, 2-ti. 7-6. The two tie-breaker!!!
had the capacity cro"·d on the tdge of
their seats until the fina l point.
The charity ellent sa w Newport Beach
touring professional and recognized world
professional champ, Rod Laver, join with
his doubles partner. Roy Emerson, and
mo\l ie .gre,at John \Vayne in the.a\llirsJ.!1:
circ le U'ilh Newport Beach Club owner
Georgt llolstein Ill and former women 's
tenn is great Nancy Chaffee Ki ner.
Earning cu ps were : f.1i;{cd Open-1\fr.
and Mrs. Mark Elliott \Yho defeated !\tr.
and 11rs. •1ug h Ste1Yart; Men '.s Ppen:
Robert Duesler and Henry Lcilchfried def
Doug Vereck and Robert Peacock; Mixed
A: Mr. and Mrs. Ben Kruger def Hal
Buckey and Mrs. Alice E\lans.
Men's A: Thurlow and Willow def
1'.fcCalt and Dowd le; Men's B: Kent aJtd
Dunn def f..fcWhirter and Reinhard;
r.ten's C: Harris and Bancroft def Beiden
and Burr; Men's D: Terada and Jenkins
def Garrett and Daley.
\\'omen's A: Atiss Linda Cushing and
1'.1iss Maryli n Straw def f\.1rs. Roy Em-
t>rson and ?\1rs. Mark Elliott. Women 's
ll: Peggy r.-tcKay and Betty Anderson def
Foster and Prigge; Women's C: Adams
and Schrier def Dillon and [)J]ey;
\\'omen's D: Doerr and Panagotacm def
Goody and Ran ella .
tvtixed B: Mrs. rvtarg ~fyer and Mr.
Soth def Mrs . Jay Burchette .and Jerry
Parker; Mixed C: Mrs. Reim and Mr .
Jones def. Mr. and Mrs. Phil Case;
Mixed D: Nancy Schlllig and Mr. Pom-
mell3 def J\fr. and Mrs. Tucker.
Mays to Be OK
NE\V YORK -Willie May!, New York
r.-1ets centerfielder who injured a finger
on his right hand sliding into base in
Chicago r.-tay 25, underwent a series ol x·
rays Sunday at Roose\lelt Hospital.
The x·ray.s proved negative and ~fays
returned home to his apartment in New
York.
INTERMEDIATE CARS
'1950 7.75-14
7.75-15
WA.$ $27.00/127.50
$T AND ARD CARS •2200 l .2S-U 8.25-15
WAS $30.00/$31.00
TubeMs. MWw .. Pf~ pllili
11.76 kl $2.-46 Fed. Ex. lu
per 16re, dependlnQ °" 1lu
LARGE CARS
12300 1.5 .. 14
WAS $32.50
Charge it at General Tire ... e~u • m General.Je1'4-PLY NYLON CORD
•Long mileage Duragef'I• tread rubber
•Famous duel-tread deaign for handling ease
BOAT & CAMPER
TRAILER OWNERS
We hive th• Jet-Alb Nylon Cord
tr1l11r t~re In popular sizes,
VW SPECIAL
General Dura-Jet'
WHITEWALL
ONLY.~15;~:}~·::.
4·PL Y NYLON CORD BODY
lllW P!ICU Oii SllU TO FIT I OUT Of 10 IMPOl!T CARS
Prkn a ~ At 0-.tml Tire Stores. Competlll\lfl ly priced '' lnd~ndent Oe1lert Olspllylng 9't Giner .. 9'gn.
DON SWEDLUND
CO·AST GENERAL TIRE
585 West 19th, Costa Mesa Phone 540·5710 or 646·5033
---Thesaj!-drivertirecompany.---
. .
•
Baseball's
Top 10
•• ..., IR .. I I ••t ..
AMl!ltl(Aflil L•AOUI
Pll'1'4'1', Cltoll • •• • • Pd. f'lnl11t1, ICC .. •M ,. .. ..,,
D. AU1t1, (Ill •• "' .. .. -'" Jl:llOI, O.k ,. "' H " "" "·Kill~. (l>I " '" ,. ,. .lit Mc:Cr1w, Cit » m " .. "" f'lnt0n, C11 ~ '" ,. " .111 F>ftNn, Dtl ,. "' " " "'' l r11'"' Mh> ,. .. • ,. ....
C. M1¥. (.1>1 ~ "' N .. ·'" 0 . N•IWl<'I, Tt~ " '" " " "" M1nM RllM
Duncan, 01~l1nd. to: R. Jlc~•on, O•~land, 10; C1gll, Ot!•Dll, t ; 0 , Allen,
C"1c110, t ; 1-if rptr. Booton, 1; 8. C~· !Qlltro, MllWtuktt, '·
NATIONAL LEAGUE
f'l•r•r. Clu• • .. • • I'd, l>•noutlltn. Pgh " "' " " "' M . Alou. 5! L • '" " " .J~?
lOfft , St l ,, '" ,, " "' lH, SD " "' .. " .J?6 c~"""'"e, P111> " "' " .. m
A. Oll~t,, Pglo . , "' ,, " "' 5!1\lt>, t.IY .. '" " " .)11 B•~t r. ,f,!I " .. " ~ .ln Tol•n. <on .. "' " " .)11
Mol1, LA " "' .. " .l!O
H<>mt l.wn1
Kinomu1, Sin Fr1ncl1co, 1•; 8tn(l'I, (<nclf>nU•. ll, St1rgtU, Pl•llt>urgn. II: Colt>erl. "" Do ego, 10: H. A•r11t1, '" ltn!I, ~. WiliGn, How11,,.,. f : L. Mtv,
HOW>lon, t .
-
DAILY PILOT
Doagherty Ill No. 2 Spot Monto ya, THE BEST WE MOVED
I.BOAL NOTICZ
ll'VILIC H•AaUolQ
Ploffc1 11 M•orll'I tlv•n tn.• • wt!~
"""''"-wlH .. ,.... "90t1 Ille ,.llNH ...
,_,....... " ""' C'lt'I' -tno1.... ... T1Wrtc11,, J1,1,.,. lJ", Int. 7:» ... M. h1 t~-t
Orr co...""11 ct\Mnill'rt 1nrwll, 4101 {om
-Dr1w , lrlri"", C.llfotllit . to c..,t'dt:•
Mesan Bids for Elim,s Lead Sinda Mix HeadersbUt po J I 1 prove
''Peanuts"' ls ~ ot the "'Or'kl'a m09t popu_tat comic
1trtpo. Rftd It doily In tile
DAll.Y PD.DI'.
TO 1M fAIR ORIVI
~ ,,_(..All ....... ,,,,.
Pa.lip...,... O.ff l•nte • ._., c..,. ,._.. Oelf •• ,..
Costa M .... , Frl!d Oougber.
ty bid3 for the lead In the 11th
a.nnual West Coast Match
Game Eliminations tourna-
ment as acUo. resurnes at
Kooa Lanes alt.er a (\1.'o w~k
break.
Aft1tr two rounds of tx:>v.•ling
Dougherty is in the No. 2 spot
with 1,694 pins, just 25 behind
..
lhe ~der -Rlvtnlde's Chris
Lowry.
Dougherty '<''4.S 24th after
!he fi rst night or bowling , but
had a four-game block of 869
to jump to the No. 2 spot. He's
averaging 211 for the eight
g.:imes.
Two other area bov.•lers are
in the top 10.
Costa h-1 e s a ' s Brian
Deep Sea Fish Report
OCfAN510E -lJJ 11'191tr~: •l b1r.
c.i.cvot. t oonllo. lJ.I ~tip O•U. I wr.nr
1101Ntt, ' ~•llbu1, JO roc~ coa. 124
mdrttr t l.
A:EOO"IOO -221 t n9ltr1• 1,067
ca•ico tMu, J ~d1:1>o1. 120 m...::~er11, 91J rock <oG l.i.r1e -11'• 1111111r1: m
rn .. ck•••I. l.090 ·~c ~ «1(1.
HUNT IMGTOM IE,f,.CH -Sl angltrl:
I ~ .... cud1. 1"3 •oc~ cod, JS. t..u, 4
mtc:kfrtl.
S.t.M DIEGO (MUfticlp1l ,.Mor i -513
111111t": 861 yrllowl•h. 12 whht •oanau, •I& ~!o. Jn rock coo, !J
c111co blst
NEW,.O•T 1•'1'• l 1Ml l1K) -ll•
t'llllt•1: l'tO ban. 70 f'«k c:oa. ll
mac:kt•tl. 25 wnfle fllll, 193 tlolu .
DAN,f,. WHA•P -ltl l'll!llrt: 1.0.-0
f1ld< CO(I, 11 ,._nd fl.Ill ....... -•I
•no11r1: m rock coo, 611 rnacktrll.
SEAL I E4CH -111 t l'l91flo: too
•ock cod, •~cod, In tlolH. • ll•llb\it.
..... -14 1 ... 1er1: IO llt llbw!, 16
1Nrr1<:\ld1, ll !Nu.
LONO •E ACH Cl llmlont "lt•l -11
•noltt1: I .:alke 11111, M>I rock coa.
11,..,1 -ti 11\fllfl: 11 bln'IC\ldl, •5
14ind lllM. I lltllbul, 15 ffll<:ktr.i.
P.tc~1abon ls plaoted In the No.
8 position with l,171 pin!, just
three abead ot Bud Rose of
Hunting14n Beach.
And Westmln!ter's Fred
Riccilll (14th and Cos ta ~lesa's Cha<Uo SibJJJlng i115th )
~re in range of the leaders.
Although defending cham·
pion Jay Robin.son Is not co1:n-
peting in this year's Elims
(he's on the PBA tour). three
olher pa st champions are
doing well.
P'lt. •.-.ter CllY f'111S
1. (l1t l1 Lowrv. Jtiv.,,lo• 1,1 19
?. Fre<I Oougl>erty. (OJ!I MtJI t.6••
3. Oove Fr1me, All.St 1~
•· W•ll BIOCk. C1r1011 l,'80 s. Dow• Jorin.i.on, LOllll ~ltfl I, ..
'· Gwr .. \f•llolvlftl1, G1rntn1 1.61l '· G_ .. $1\0rt, Pico l!lve·• 1,611
I. l rl ... McMfl>on. C0>t1 Mttl 1..611
t . Ill.Id Roi•, l--!vn11..,.1..., 8tKn I .Ml
10. "RUii F .. 1110. Woool•roo ft!!lt 1.MI
Ol~fti U t <l'G Plc1tll
{Wetlmlnsterl 1""31 U. Chl •ht ~1hllt·
11111 t(o>t• Mt~) l.6Jll; J5. L1rrv
s.ci-nfeloer fCost1 Mtt•l 1,613. JI.
C:tY.tl l .. Cflrr !O..n1 Pol~!) f.610; Sl.
RtY B•Y!Mlfl (WtUmlnJ!t•) l ,S601 $1.
Ow1yne Hld<.1 {Mlttlon Vlt lo) l.!.17.
Cfflr Sinda. Africa'1
lightweight champion. Niu 1s
a 10.7 cboioe over Rlul
(Loblto) Montoya of Atu.ico in
the 10-round main e v e n t
tonight at The Fourm.
Sinda has a J&-3·1 ring
record which includes vic-
Meet the Man
Behind the
Safeco Smile.
tories over Felipe Torres, Dele Yachtl.ns: llabllily C'fl""r"ll:" 11t
Jonathon and a knockout wln tip to ~-or n·hal you nuiy be po,ying J)OY,' !
II IHICUT OJ IALU Mc wi..t.11..,._v..,.......,. -"''"'"""... ot 11.. .,.. .. ...... n .... t!Httlort H9 I lfl•"IW ,,_,,,..,, 1
-cetlltill llll•t.i ., llfld ,,.,. a.-C.Ou!t
IV lonlfte Cl .. llfkttbt A·I C~t•I Altltvnl/11) •1'111 M·I IL191'11 MUWh(•
lurl"'l 10 f!\e Cllw of 1n1l,... z.,,.,.n.t
Clas1lflc11\ot< •·1 ~~111 ,f,.1rleu11v•t)
-M·I (Lf.,t MallUfac:hlrlfll) dl11ric•1.
,.,e-&011ln.1 n I
bV" JEllU L WIL50"
,.,,~\t ltnl ~·••••v lo
Plolnn•"' C.om•Vllt.l-
( ,!f of lrv1.,.
Pvbll•lle<I Orin~ C011t 01111 '"•IOI,
Juf\e ~. 1'11 l<.>e·ll
1.EGAL NOTICE over former featherweight Smi'le,
champion, Sugar Ramos. PICllTIOU• •UllMl!I$
Pi1ontoya, holding do\\'n 111 32. You're Wi"th .,. ... ""e ITAt•M•NT 9-2 mark, · \ll3S a former •• :r.• 1°''°"'">111 oeroon h oolf>!ll w.""""
Califocnia light11.·eight cham· S fe-o 1-1 rw1>0 11r ee ... c•; 11:101Nc. c Lu1. a ... l1!711 •<•Co• SI . Senl• An• l!•l.,,n. pion. Raul realizes that a \\'in • ... i.ce .. 1 F·n<ilty. 19;,1 Port'"'-Pt ..
over Sinda would put him in ~ t1 ..... .,...,, 11 ... ,,.
h he BOB PALEY H"• 1>0.nlnr-1 ., ,,.,.,,. con<1wc!tc1 l>v I line for anot er shol at I I L ..... 1e.i ,.,.,,.,.,,,,.,~
California championship he 1 s. & .t.i.M<litn, '""'· ... 1 ... ,.,, F1rd1•1
It>•\ ,l•'•me•.I l•leo wl'n lftt Cou.,11 once owned. 474 E. 17TH STREET ,,.,, "' O•enoe '"""'on Jun. l. "" Al f l ed 0 t ' hl'S ti~ llevl•IV J. Y.•-• ~ ..... ,. (°"n1T so ea ur n onig ' COSTA MESA c.••••. card in separate six·rounders SAFECO " 111~•
•'' undefeated Jimnl.V Ha1er t A 642-6500 -546·3205 PuD1•11>td D••,.11• <0••' 0••11 ,.,,<11 NSU ANCE Jvne '' U, II, 76. 191~ h4S·li of Tgnocio, Colo. and San [~~~-~~~~~~~~~------~~-~-~~~~~~['.::'.:::~~:
Fernando's Bobby Chacon. L k k A d LEGAL NOTICt-;
They'll both 11')' lo •ITetch win-Kids i e to As 11 y
ning streaks. P 1(Tll10VS IUSI N I!~\
. . .
•
N,f,.MI!. STA.lEMEMl
lllt follo-..,ng P'll\On~ I'• OO·••
bulifllll I S FULLCI RCff l l'iO~lll ~~t P•rO. L •·
c.11, Irvine 911'•
Oevld 5oln•nori, J"JOJ !VIOi O·.
Leovne fl•t<I•
t!ugh \I Jo•~rn ~'lo 1'?1 ... lot \ ,
sen•e Monlce ' Edw~r<l I ~olOrJ><I", IJll"' So. L••l'O"
Aue .. fl !!dl •~OI .
fMs bu<in•··• ,, bt1 ~a <O~d..c:ieo "• •
llmllld P •rln~' .r.•p
DftVIO Solon\~n '"ii 11ltom~n! hloO .,.,111 !n" L'"'"''
I (llfk of 0 '1n<1e (oontv on· June 1 ,~,' av e1v1rlv J . />lo1<1do~ ~outy CouotY
(ltfk.
LEGAL NOTICE
PICTITIOUS IUllM.15
HAME IT,f,.TEMENT
I" U l1l
Tiit follow l11t Jlf'IO~ h. doing buslne11
11;
VISTA 5UflPLU5 al5 w. u1r. s• .•
Co.I• Mt.11. Col. nllU N1ncv t!ow•rO. 10~ W. 11111 SI., (0\11
Mna, (1111 •1011
Th!I t>ul•"~' 1, b"'n~ conovcl•d b• '"
11101v1ou.i.1
N•""v Howord
!~II 1!~lemon1 1.1~ ,,.,in !ftt
(It•~ ot O•tnut C.c.w"IY 0" Ju~~
BY 1'11vert1 J. M~. O•PUl"I'
Cler~.
PvDlllhld
J1,1n1 S. 1,,
LEGAL NOTICE
Coun!v
' \91"/ Cowntr
HOTICI! OP .. uaLtC •ALI
OP P'l!llSDi'olAL ,.ttoP•lllTY
CUnlawtut dtllll'Wrl
Nollet 11 l\ertCv glv1n 11'>11 PU'l'Juent ti
51<:1.o,1 !II~ of lllft Clld1 of (lvll
Procedv<•, 5r.Tt ol C•llfofnl1, the
A four year hitch in Armor, Artillery or Inf an try will do it . It's
V"'"'"'""I "''II 1e11 I I Pvollc tall DV tom1>11i!!~t b•<1<10ng on "" 101h d•'/ ot J1,1(1t, 191), ., • O"C IOC~ AM on it'IP.
ortrnlte1 ... ntre ••Id prootrlv 1111 Dean
11nreo, •"ti """h A•• 1<1<:11eo ~t 1110 T
Wt>llller, C1lv ol (o,t• M•••· CooJnly ol
Qr•11u1, S••t• 01 C111lo•m•, lt•e 111o1n<10,...4
ooods, c~11111•. or o>e••Dfl•I P•Ol'lt•I.,.
descrlbf.O helnw a special enlistm e nt that d e mands a special man . A man the Army is
now able to g ive more to g et. $1500 more.
• If you 've got what it takes, you
.:.. may qualify for this bonus, paid when
.t:, you success fully complete your training.
)
"' -. i '
The bonus is ov er and above the
Army's new starting salary of $288
a month. Over and above the Army's
many benefits. Like free meals, free
housing, fre e medical and dental care,
and 30 days paid vacation each year.
This special enlistment in Armor,
Artillery or Inf an try offers other
advantages, too . Like your choice of un it,
or your choice of location in the States
or abroad. And the choice is guaranteed.
We'll put it in writing for you before you enlist .
Find out if you're the special kind of man we'll pay a special
bonus to get. Talk it over with your nearest fumy Representative.
Local quotas are limited, and this off er may be in effect for only a
short time depe~ding on fumy Ai•111
COSTA MES.A
542 West 19th Street
645-1163
WJl••ta JOll.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
18530 Beach Boulcvf'rd
• 962-8821
lroclvOon9 •edWOOO llOlt I. blncll, 11t•I
torm P••• mt lAI <lamP,. fl>ll• O{ P•Hr
•n<I l1br1 91111 n~r ulO mut11 more.
Dlte<I lh·~ Slf\ P.<~ ol JUf\t . ltn.
C. R. NATTRl!SS RLT. t•1·14U
Pl1lnltl!
POl!llltllnl Orl l'llll Coti! Ot ll'/ P'1ta1,
JU"t J, 1972 li51-7Z
LEGAL NOTICE
HOT IC• TO Cllt•DITOl:I su .. 1.111.1.0• COVlllT ... ,....
tTAT• OP CAlllllotl .. IA P0tt
TH• COUNTY Ofl MAN•I
Ne. A•7MU
EllAll of WESLEY M. •lltOTT,
Oec1•...t.
NOTICE IS Hl!!••tY OIVI N te ll>e
cre<11tor"1 of tl'll 111o¥9 Mfl'IM dKtdt nt ,.,~, all perao•t 111vh11 c.t1lmt 1•1ln1I 1111
•t<d decld1nl ''' r..v!rld te Ille 1t11m,
w11n int nKll!Art ~lttr1, In IM offlc1
of th~ tlerk or thl •boYt lt'llllled court, Of'
10 PrtHnl lntrn, Wiii\ 1111 nt<llllf'/
vouclle••· to 1111 un.cr.rtl11*1 et tnl office
01 tr.tic 10!!orne•, Paul A. H1nn1 • .t.ttor....,
11 L1w. ~•••bor l aw a ullcllne, Alf l!lrf
11111 sr,.11, co111 M111, C•lllornla, ""'1<11
11 lllt Ol•<t ol l>u1IM11 of tnl undenll ntd
In an m111er1 1>t•ltlnl111 to Tiit .. ,.,, of
11ld dec..otnl, w ill! !Our "'°"""' l tllll'" Ille llrtl i>uDllc •llon of 11111 11<1t\ce,
Oiied M•• IS. lt l2 WI LLIS Mi!!LVIH l!LLIOTT
VElllALfE IELLIOn McDON!L
Co·E~1<:vtor1 of '"' Wiil ol 1hl lboYt flatnld OKIOent PAUl A. H,f,.MNA
Alteni.1 I I LIW
Mt rltor Lew lulNl"t .,, ••11 11111 ,,,..,
Co1t1 M111, Cttlf,
Tai; IJUJ 5-1 .. ltfl
Att1r111r1 l0t C1-E11cu11r1
Publll~ed O•t,,.• Co•ll Oell"I' P'llol,
M11 11, 1t •!Id Jun• J, 11, 1tn ll•ll,12
LEGAL NO'l1CE
PICTITIDU I •UllNlll
NAME I TAT •MENT
The lollowlnt P1r10n, 1r1 <10,,.1
bu1lne11 11:
LA REMUOA $,f,.00LERY, 711! I!,
Co.oil Hlthwitv. Co•on1 dtl Mir. t?•15
Oanlol Jo1t1>11 ~or1t1, t'lt1 Downin•
Cir .• w111mlr>s•1r.
,f,.ndy P1trlt-Jl.omero, 92'1 Oownifl'9
Cir., Wttlmlflller.
Thi• 0011.,.,. 11 l>t!ne condutlld "w • Gener1I P1rl,,...U.\P.
DANIEL J. SPflAli
Tf\!1 sr11emen.1 fllld wllll ll'le County
Cl••-of D•1nv1 Countv on: M1y 11. l•n.
By Arthur E. Krag1r, 011>11ty COl.l"l"I'
Cl•rk. ,. 111,,
f'ublltl'oed Or111M COHt D1llY ,.!lot,
M11 n. 2', •no June s. 11, 1t7? 1l1t·12
LEGAL NOTICE
PICTITIOUS IUllMf:SS
MAM• nAHM•HT
TN h>lloW!ne ,.,...,. ••• 90•"• 111111,,..1 11:
I Xl!!C UTIVI OPPICE. M7 S111 Nlca--
111 DI"., Newoort ••e.tll nuo.
Mr1. Petric.la J .. n l retl(IC, '6!117 Paui. or1 ..... MlhlOll Vlt lo, Ct llfWnl• Mr1. 1Ct t1Yy11 Mlr\9 W.h:M, 17151 L•
Llm1, P01,111l1!" Vlllt"I', C•lltornla.
Tf'ol1 bull,_.. II bllt11 CMlfW.I .. " t 0«wr11 f'l'111W1lll"'
K•tllfyn M. Wltltl
TI\11 •llflmlnt "led Wltl'I tfle Countv
Cink M' Df'"llt>OI COV!lty ,.., M1y 11, lt7J,
by ltt\l'lf'IY J. Mafdtll, 0.ll'lllY C9\in11 Cltrk.
Ill 17H4 ~•l'lld Ora,.., C"1111t O.lly ,.nor, Ma)' IS, 21,, '9 end J-I, l97J IM1·7'1
LEGAL NOTICE
KIDS LOYE
UNCLE LEN
Saiurday1 in
The DAILY PILOT
I
I I
' • '
, .
" ' •
•
' '
• .
j
•
•
DAllY PILOT Monday, Junr 5. 1972
Welcome
.4board
ly ALMON LOCKABEY
ln all the cootrover1y about how much -if anv -
pollution is poured into harbors by marine loilets -CorrJ.
~y known as "heads'' -none of the "eco-freak'' poh·
Uc1ans who are rushing to legisla te ho lding tanks, etc .•
have ever come up with just whal the pollution in Ne.,.,·port
Harbor and other areas consists of.
They talk blithely about "coliform counts'' but neve r
de!ine it nor tell where it comes from -fi sh, birds, the
runoff from city drainage systems or sewer outfalls.
We have tried diligently in the past few v.·eeks to find
a scientist who would offer a sensible answer to just how
much human waste is pumped through a marine head -
and how much It would pollute. A few doctors have stated
frankly that . urine -which is mostly what is pumped
through marine heads -is sterile and non-pollutin g.
IN OUR SEARCH FOR more specific answers v.·e
came upon an iS!ue of the now defunct yach ting magazine "Skl.~" •·1hich had conducted an investigation into the
realities of boat-created pollu tion and the justifica tion for
the present spate of laws against marine heads.
The primary question wa s: Just how much pollution
was added to the water s by the discharge from one head
in one day, presuming th e average h<>althy skip~r.
One reader who answered the question rather bluntly
was. Dr. 'Robert S. Schwab of Massachusetts General Hos·
pltal in Boston. Here are the pertinent p a r t s of Dr.
Schwab's letter:
"A very critical point has never be{'n ('{)Vered on th i.1'
subject:-narnely, _the identification of just wha t the JXltlU·
tlon c0n:s1s<s ·or. '111 order to cover th is. yo!l sirriply must use
a four-letter word, at least once. even if much is left to the
im~ination .
"HUMAN SEWAGE IS caused by 11~·0 forins of hocli!y
elimination. The first is· urine and the second is feces.
Urine is a sterile filtrate of waste material in solution
with the kidneys and is essentially no problem as far as
pollution of rivers and harbors is concerned.
"In exceptional cases where it is infected with bac-
teria from a peM10n with .an acute inflammation of the
b1adder or the kidneys, one might argue that it is a pub-
lic health danger.
"But such people are usuall y in hospitals and not on
boats.
"Contamination is essentially made up entirely of fecal
matter and, to Ind ulge in on e four·let ter word, we will
call this "one average crap'' -or if you prefer to use the
Mexican wo rd , "caca."
"This. can be used essentially as a unit and is defined
as the average defecation of a norma l human being at
one sitting. This. will now be abbreviated to AC.
uTHE POTENTIAL POLLUTJON cha racteristic.~ of
this unit are very well known to bacteriologists. It is lite r·
aUv a concentration of the normal habitant of th e human
ccl'm -bac!\lus coli, or B. coli. and giving this AC a
v~J .. ...,e ot 50 cubic centimeters. the re are five billion
bac"1! In it -100 million per cubic centiineter.
"This is a rather consistent aver,irre and accepted by
hea lth experts throughout the world . The deg-ree of poJtu.
tlon in ri vers and harbors is alv.•a vs measured hv an esli·
mation and count of the num ber of B. coli pe r i 'bic centi·
meh~r in the water.
"I have calculated !he possible yacht <.'Once !ration of
our own harbor at Cohasset. Mass. which conta s approx-
lmatP.lv 360,000 cubic feet of water at hi.qh tidf'.
"One cubi c foot of sea water has 28.3 16 c.c. in ii. sn
one AC will pollute one cubic foot \11ilh a count of 176.000
:!. coli per c.c. One AC will therefore put .5 B coli in our
whol P. h s:ir~"r.
"FOR BOATS TO account for 1.500 B. coli per c.c.
(the limit safe for swimming) l.500 boa ts wi th toilets each
would have to fluSh twice in each 24 hours with an AC
in e"ch flush.
"Therefnre there is a safety factor of one in :l.000.
assuming there might be 10 bo..1ts moored there. each
nushin~ once durinq-the dav ."
Skipoer's comment : "CohasSl't is a sma ll harbor.
READY TO GO-Bill Ficker, guest of honor at Westlake Yacht Club, snips start·
ing line r ibbon to indicate that the firs t \Vestlake Cup Regatta )S aoout to get
unde r \vay.
W estlake--
Yachti1ig .
For Viewi1ig
By ALMON LOC KABEY
ao.u,.. Editor
If yachting is ever to
become a spectator sport in
Southern California it will be
on such places as Westlake.
And where is \Vestlake?
\Ve il, it's an inland body of
water with a small island in
the center , and the lake itself
surrounded by plush homes of
Westlake Village, a residential
de\'elopment off the Ventura
Freeway -virtually astraddle
the L o s Angeles-Ventura
County lines -a nd just 38
n1i les north of downto1-•:n Los
An geles.
\\'esllake is rapJ.dly becom·
ing the inland sa iling center of
Southern Calif. -limited, of
course. to sailing yach ts 15
fee t and under.
\Vesllake Yacht Club proved
Its enthusiasm for yachting
and the ability to stage a good
regatta, with its fi rst \Vestlake
Cup Invitational S a tu r d n y
which drew more than 50
boats in s~ classes from as
far sooth as San Diego and as
far nGrth as Santa Barbara.
OFF AND SAILING -Residents of \Vestlake Village vie \v regatta ac tio n from
their homes as Co ronado-15 Class get s starting signal in first Westlake Cup re-
gatta. Inlan d body of \Vale r is fast bcco1nin g lnland sailing center of Southern
California.
Night Racing. 7:45 Mon.,.Sat
Starts Wednesday, June 7.
Of all the tracks in California last year, Los Alamttos had
the highest percentage of favorites in the money. And,
the percentage of winning favorites topped them all,
too : A wh opping 38%' So, come out and have the night·
time of you r life with the chart-smart set this season.
For advance reservations: Call (213) 431-1 361 or (714)
527-2231.
3 Exactas I Turf Terrace Dining
Divide tile 176.000 B. coll per cub ic centimeter in a cub ic
foot of water by the cubic footage of most harbors. and
the boats required to bring the pollution count up lo anv-
thing threatening. becomes astromo mical and generall y
lmP'"15slble.
Guest of honor at the event
was Ne wport Beach's Bill
Ficker , 1970 defender of the
America's Cup. As an
architect, Ficker acted as a
consul tant on laying ou t the
lake for sailing purposes.
Percentages lumished by Dally Racing Form, Triangle PublicafiOM. fnc.
"The only flaw we ca n see in the argument hine:es on
another unanswered question: How long does it take tfl
dls<iolate an AC? Obviouslv there is a time e I e m e n t
before the harbor assimi lates an AC and possibly there is
a pollution potential wh ile it is concentrated.
Virtuall y any cou rse on the
Jake is visible frorn shore and
many residents watch the ac·
tion from the picture windo\1's
or patios of their homes.
And the action sometimes
gets pretty lively as the
\11esterly v.·inds wh istle ln fro n1
thr Pacific and over the hills
"But scien ce. so far as 11·e ca n deter1nine. hasn·1
bolhered to answer tha t QU f:!itio11 -:ind cerl.ainlv the
quick·trlggered JawmRkers hRvf'n't asked it... ·
surrounding the picturesque
0 loo Y h E commun ity. ver ac ts 0 ter Tac king on the nanow la ke
someti mes becomes a ma lt C'r
5 h R S D• of "hand-to·hand combat " as t ace to an 1e«o crev.·s are kept busy fend ing b ufl compditors whi le ge lling
More than 100 yachts \.,.ere San Diego race l\'liich starts ready fo r the next tack.
entered within the first JO July L First 11·i11nf'r of the \Vestlake
days of registration for the Hacc off icials or th e Cu r \ras Dell Parker of the
fifth annual Marina del Rey to s P 0 n sor ing \\'lndjam,,iers host cl ub in the Coronado-15
13th Bahia
Regatta Cup
To McCord
Bill McCord of Balboa Yacht
Club won the 13th annual sail·
Jng of Bahia Corinthian Yacht
CJub's Open tJido-14 Regatta
Saturday and Sunday.
As the Class A ~'inner
McCord took home the ,Jim
Berk.shire a nd the Herald Ex·
amlner perpetual trophies .
Final results:
CLASS A-(1) BUI McCord .
BYC: (2) Chad Twic hell ,
LJYC; (3) J im Tyler, LIYC.
·CLASS B (W.D. Schock
Trophy)-(!) Neil Lohr,
IJYC (!) Bob Ucifer :. SI
BYC; (3) Bill Brook , BYC;
"JUNIOR (Hyde B r a i I y
TiOpliy) (I) Matk Hinshaw,
LIYC; (!J Tony Perez. BYC;
(3) Carol McCord, BYC.
Hughes Victor
Mark HugM! of Balboa
Yach! Club "°" the Harbl3on
PerpeluaJ Trophy for the Met-
calf. ~II Ill 1 three-race
Yac ht Club said :ioo or niore class \\'i th the largest nun1ber
:ire expected by l hc tirnc en· of entries in the regatta.
tries close June 23. Other claSS<'s pa rtici pating
Among the ent ries arc so rne were the Banshee . two classes or the hottest racin~ sailboats of Lido"14s and 11\''l Sabol
in Southern California, ranging divisions. Final re sults:
in size from quarter·tpns to J()... CORONA[)().~5 -(1) J?ell
meters. Including are ,.,.inners .. Parker. \VlYC: (2 ) J 1 t_n
of such recent competition as llolder, \VlYC: (31 Beattie
the Linton Cup. \\'hitnry PurcclL Anarap<i VC: (41 .Jeff
Scries. Overton Series an d Ille .Jones. ABYC: (SJ Dan Clapp,
Commodore Series. CBYC.
Race festi vities start ,June RANS~fE E -( 1) Norman
:JO with a cock tail party and Sears Y.'l\'C: (21 Dan Kinney
kickoff dinner at \VYC. The W\YC; (3) Sid Drasnin. \VIYC;
race starts slarts at t0·3fl (4 ) Ar t Sha w. WIYC: (5 ) John
a.n1 . July 1. !\1ost of the fleet J1eard. \V\\'C.
is expected to be finished bv LT D0·14A -(1) \Villard
~unday. J uly 2. Trophies ~'ill Hell man, WYC; (2) Bob
be presented at the new Spero. KHYC.
Southwestern Yacht Club July LID0-14B -(1 ) Tom
3. Pollack, WYC ; 12) Dick Bear,
WIYC; (3) Larry Dunn, WlYC.
Avalon Race
Attracts 22
T1\·cn l y·l \vo b oa t s
p..1rtic1pa ted in King Harbor
Yacht Club's King Harbor to
Al'a!on and Retum race Sa tur-
day and Sunday. llesulls:
PHRF-A -(1) Legacy.
Carter Gage, KHYC: (2)
Sandoioer. Brett Page. KH YC.
PHRF·B -(I) Qu issett
John Trag er, KHYC. '
SABOT SR -(I) Kevin
Connelly. SBYC: (2) Steve
UlthM , SBYC ; (3 ) Blair Fran-
c~. SBSC.
SABOT JR . -(!) Briggs
North, l~IYC; 12) Pele r
Eshleman, WIYC; (3) Jim
Yabsky, SBYC; (41 Da vid
McGee. SBYC: (5) A. Lin·
nemeyer, WlYC.
Lenhart Wins
,--,
61
•
Los Alamitos ruest to ror • .eetjel held Sunday ~I Bal boa
• I YilChl Oub. j ,1 ~~w11 JohnThorne:
t I ~;;~w='.·J~
MORF -fl ) S ec o nd
Escape, Hamilton B r o !I • ,
KHYC; Cll Tequil a. Chff Ek
PMYC. '
Jeff Lenhart of Ml!!!ion Bay
Yacht lub ~·on the District 6
Sni pe Championships sailed ln
the ocean out of Balboa Yacht
Club, Sunday. Bunner -up
was Tom McL;iughlin of
?-.·IBYC. ;ind third was Dave
West of Disneyland on Katella, near 605 Freeway
-BYC.
CORONA00-25 I 11
<:apriccio. Bob VinuH. KHYC. Peterson. MBYC. , /-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
' . ,-
.
"
.
l i.
I . i,:
TONIGHT'S
I •
l! TV illGlillGHTS
I ABC fJ 8:80. "Young Rebel of La Mancha." !I Part 1. Horst Bucholz, Gina Lollobrlgida, Jose
! Ferrer, Louis Jourdan.
KHJ fJ 7:30. "The St ory of Mankind ,'' Ronald
,~ Colman, Hedy Lamarr.
1 j NBC 0 8:00. Laugh Tn. Guest Sandy Duncan
turns up as a clown and ·bank teller. Cameo guests
• include Johnny Cash, Paul Lynde, Terry·Thomas , 1~·, and Jack Durant. .,
KCET !lJ 8:00, "Together: A Chuck Mangione
Con cert." Jazz mu sician Magione conducts Roches· r ter Philharmonic as \Veil as performing with own
group .
CBS 0 10:00 , Son ny and Cher, Art Carney por·
trays President Ri chard Nixon in musical spoo[
at current state of the political world.
IL"
Monday
Evening
Tuesday
DXYTIME· MOVIES
t:llO ·-..... 1" • -(com) '44 -Amit lmlf, john
Hodl1k.
!:IO D (C) "A Dly ~ ,,..,.. CwnJ ~
D1t1 Roberlson, M1r1 Corda,,
ll:OO (I)"Jr111ca Covers tti1 II& T...r
(com) '5~0on1ld O'Connor, Yyette
Dutt'f.
10:30 e NSfCOlllf fidd\t" (rDm) '58 -
Liu G•~.1eni, l ~Ofltf' W•lttn., .....
Itri Attlvrim:·" !111S) ·~$--John
8trilltJ, r1trck Ho lt .
•
1:aoo(C)-t1111e ..........
(wn) '&C -Robert TQlof, ChN
[vtnft.
GI "A...,.., ....r {dr1} '49-
M11UW1t O'H1r1, Mtlwp 0ouam.
l:JO ..... b ..... (lllS) 'S5--MJI01
H11!y, Doll t. ttlMy,
l:GO (I) (C) ..... ,_ "" t (*1)
·~•l'I Htfllft, SIMri1 M1npl'IO. Iii "'Alf "*"' (4rt) '51 -•ock
H11bon, Stt,htn MtN1lly, G1R RIIS<
stll.
4:0011 (C) "A Tl• " u.. 11111 1 11w11
tit JM.• (tem) •sa -.lo~n Carrin.
l llo l'L1lvt1.
... ..........., ....... (ftl\I&) ·u-
Ptttr Brod.~ Beker.
C:JO l}) SI• t1 lOAM lllCl111
' •
I,
DAILY PILOT Siii! Pl>Olt
EVIDENCE -Jack Ogborn confronts a transfixed
Walter Orang& with~·some damagtng evidence as
Sharon Heu sinkveld winces in a scene from th e lr·
vine Community Theater <.'Omedy "You Can 't Take
It \Vith You."
---CtNEOOME ?O "·'
.. ~-"• '.1-~.;:r'T..:; --CtN/OOME ?f ,
llt...·.·L.1"~7
---If• SrAOIUM I '
'_...,'tY •. ------... $140/UM ? .. _..., ...... .,. ----,, SrAP!tl+f ,1 .. ,, . ..
"WAil •IEtwl!~N Ml:N & WOM•N"
St•rrl ...
J•tll Ltmmo" lrld "SKIN GAME"
E~Clt.IJIYt Or1tttt Co11nty
ll.......,M Seil En1avt1Mnt
NMftlnltMI Hr I AcMtln' Aw•rf•I
"'IDDL£1l DN THI: aOOF"
"Ill.NT •ulfNJNG" ~ .
.. AND•OMEOA STllAIN"
"ICLUTI" • .. suMMEll (),. • ., ..
OAILY PILOT
'Ca•a.'t Take It With¥ ou'
Irvine Revival Hilarious
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of "" o.ur J>tttl s11n
Perhaps the h.lghtst com-
plJment I can pay the Irvine
Community Theater's pr~
ducllon or "You Can't Take-It
With l'ou " i5-that eve-n ir l
hadn 'l been assigned to write
the r~view, I would have liked
to haveJooe.
In fa . I probably v.·ould
"YOU CAN'T TAK• IT WITH YOU"
" C(>l'nl !IY by M0£1 H1rl 1nO G.Orll• s.
Kllulin.n, <llroec!f<I by Tom lllu1. 111
Ot•ltn by Pain Prov,., s1111• m1<1•11er
11><1 produttlo<1 11u1111nt JO¥tt Ccn+
r\Olh, IH'-•H•• EnJO Pl\liUp1, ll)lm!I l:IY
Rich8•<1 ()oow, H~h1in9 bv Cllucl (le,,._
le<i. ,,,,..~IVI> bv B••. Tt&!o•O •n<f
Ba•b1ra Gt f!ltn, 1H11en!l1I bf 1n1
11~lne Ccmmunlly lhea!•r ~rh;ll•t anO
s .. 1ur111v~ 1 t I o'tlO(~ 1.. "''
t+umanlh•~ Halt Playll<>u•• "" ·~ VC
l •~lne catnPv> throutn .Ju•w 2•
Re>e<\161tor11 5•1·11)1
lHE CAil f'enelo~ SVt-'mor~ Jo~""f wo1co11
E'u1r C~rmicn~tl Sn~•on H'u"n~\Oel<I
flMeba Zell1 Pall•••on
f'avl Sv~•""''' Jolln P~111,p1
Mr De p,,,.,. .. L•'•Y El"""
Eo C~rmlcllttl .... W~I!•• O•~n~•
Oon .. 1.i Jo\e"n .J~'"'"" J r. Marton V•nde•MOt Ton1 lHv•
Alitl SY'"ftlOfe Ctldrln!Te M .!<he1I
Mr. tter><l1rs.cn ...... ,.. J J<k Oo001n
lonv Kirby .... .... Su<l l(n~""
Boris KOl•tlkllov •••• .•• .0.!8n L••V
G~• Wtlllntton .••..•• N""I Fiii•""" n •. l(lrbv .... V."lter Duo••
M" •Orbv JOV(I Connol•Y
Tl'irH Men . . .. George Spo!vln, 1<.•a1•
ll lt ~tl1, 01vld Wll•on
,,,,.---::~~ • "POSSDSION OP
JOIL DIU.NIY" ;;
"'
keeps on sha king his body
after th(' sound is gune. A
small poin t. maybe, bt1l it's
the addt><.l touC'hes !lutl rna!..c a
good perfonnancc.
II is a play full of ch;1rat'll'l'S
and perl1nps I should n1l'l111"n
the ones lhat wert' 11 l111Jc tlal,
a lil!le olf (·en!rr. son1e!1n1~_.s a
little lrss energe1!c than \l':t~
needed : Zetta Pat\l.:rwu ns
Rheba the n1a id: Just'plt
,J;i('kson Jr. as [)on:ild : .J;n·k
Ogborn as 1\!r. /lr1111i•1·soo,
\Va ltt~r Orange as Ed; Sharon
llcus1nkveld .:is J~ssir: {'.·lark
Jtickcls and [)H vid \\,.tlso11, in
•
walk-ans.
Noel FlllaJtre a~ the drunk
actress, Gay Wellington, and
Jleth Titus as D.K:hcss O\g;i
Katrina were colorful but the
drunkentW!SS t1nd the sti1tt·li·
ncss W<."t:r just too untX'IH·v.
able to be effective,
13u1 that h.'D\'eS •1 lot of good
l'haractrrizations whil'h, v.·lule
lla•v n1;1v not h:i\·t• bt·t•u ~r:fcl'lly n1au1ti11ned, 11·erc en·
J!)\',1hlt;>.
:10:1nflt' \\ ulcotl as Pf'nt'l~>pc
S11"an1or·1·, the tlw\tirr 1rho
11.t1les pl :".s bcc:1u ~r ;1
11 µt .... ri ter 11-;ls onct• del11·er('!t
!1i lht· tinust'. has n t~·ni.1 rd1J ll\
('Xprt'SSlll' ftl('('. !-ihc I >;
J)('t'1 L'l'lly rn;11thed h1 .J.,11 11
l'h1!lip.s as hl·r hush:1nd, l':ilil
S1i·:in11•rv Ile sct1t'rt1'." :ir11Ut1d
n1:tk111;.: f1rec1«1l'k('t's. like il
~fl lllt"l't'I, S{jllCt.'l!llg hi<;; ('.ll'S
tq.:hrll 1'hr1 're really fillt'.
L.11'!"\' Eldon ;is ~1r llr l'1n
11:1, .'.I r"11rn1!r fr1rnd . .shuidd ).!cl
;111 :1 11 :1rfl for nrr1't'. lh· 11t';1r.s
:1 .st.::1 11ty Jt~11n1111 toga v.1ttr
~orh 11nturnlness ~ _ .. h •
dt•S(.'r Vt·~ 1 hr :ippl:iuse he g('t::>.
\~ thl' lover~. A 1 i cc
TV Gi ,ves F1'ee Tirrie
To 'Extrcl' De11iocrltts
By CYNTlllA 1.0\\'RY 11n111('diate!y fol!o1vini; lh<lt
NE\V YORK (Af') -Three progr;_i111, NBC pre s en l rd
Democrats running for the t::1ped ~!:1t rn1cnts by \'ort
presidential no n1 1 n .1 I i 11 n ;111il \tr·s ('hisholn1. boUt
received bonanzas of I 1 •·1· 11n1r d1· a:11c·d hl 111ake 111> for its
on the three 11alional nct1111rks ":'lli'r! the Press'' program
Sunday. It wns the result of a "'ith Humphrey and McGovern
U.S. Court of Appeals ru ling in last \\'erk. Then CBS pre·
an action brought by Hrp . f"ll\pl1·d "fin :'11inutes" 1vithout
Shirley Chisholm, seek 1 n f: :1d\'a l1\"t' notice ;ind for :l half
equal time to n1~1tch th;il hour• g.11c ~1 rs. Cl1ishtl\in tirne
received in the Jlurnphre~-\1·ti1ch :-he filled by be1nl,! ques·
McGovern confrontatioos or t1vnl'd by a pane! of New York
lbe past week. 11e1\'Stnen. Th is wa s to corn·
ABC. set to hold the t111rJ pen:.ate for lasJ Sunday's
and last of the l!ubcrt "Face the Nation'' v.• it h
Humphrey-George Mcl.ovcrn l lu111phrey and ?-.1cGovern.
interviews, complied "'lth the Thrre 1vere so 1nany people
rt1ling by opening its hour-lung tn h<• qut·~tinnc<l in turn on the
edition of "Issues .:uid ~:1n11· :;uhjt'('\ d11r1ng "Issues
Ans\vers" to include fl·lrs. ;111d /\11s11c·r!'" tl1;1l there 1vas
Chisholm, Los Angeles Mayor llt\lc lizne for c ofm p I e le
Sam Yorty and Gen. Ta ylor answers. Lillie new developed
Hardin, representing t h e and the hour was nellher good
hosp italized Gov. George C. __ ,_,_1e_,_1s_io_n_n_or_:po_li_li_ck_i_n~g-. --I
Wallace.
"KLUTE"
Plus
IOTH COLOR
IOTH 111
K•rMr II Ad1ms -Cttll MHI
.... flt2
MOn<I•¥ · Frldt¥
l:Depm
S1ryra1v t :oo pm S~•'I' 1:00 pm, 3:00 pm 1:00 pm. 3;00 pm
~:00 pm, 1:00 pm ~;00 pm, 1:00 pm
l:OOpm, ll:OOpm •:oopm
"THE TEAR'S FIRST REALLY SlTISnlNG.116 COMMERCIAL
AMERICAN FILM. ONE OF THI MOST BRUTAL ANO MOllNG
CHRONICLES Of AMERICAN llfl EYER OESllNIO WITHIN
THI ltlltTS Of POPULAR INTIRTltNMINT."
-Vincenl C11nby. New York Time5
'"'THE DOOfATHIK' IS A SPECTACULAR 11or11. ONE Of THI
ftll!ST IUISTIR llOTIES lftR MAOll"
-Gene Shalit. NBC-TV
(OP)
"PATIOH"
AND l.f-""::°:':::".'.AN• IOPJ "GRIAT WHnl HOPI"
"FRENCH
CONNECTION"
1---AllD
.. 11n1N• TA••rr
SycllJT!Ott and Tally Kirby,
Charlotte MJ.~hfll and Bud
Knapp are appropr~ttly corny
<ind gushy.
Alan U vy as the Russian
dant·cr Boris Kolenkhov has a
boornJng voice and delightful
stage moves.
\\'11llf'r Dudek and Joyce
Conolly are the elder Klrbys
find exude the proper
;1r1;-;t0<."ra uc tones. although
y, fiOcver did A-lrs. Kirby '~
~t ;igc makeup opening night
Plight to chrck it from out
11 Prl!. 1'()o J1ar~h.
1'hr t'nding is a little drawn
11111. hut ~till ir1 keeping l'i'ifh
;111 ex ;1ggerated t'l'eninj.(. And
11ho ('~irt·" .-tn'fv.':t)!. as Ion~ :1~
you g('t tv !Jugh as mu ch ;1~
you d•1
"You Can'l 1·ake It \\'11 h
'i'ou" runs for three r11n1"·
v:eckends. V r I d :1 v s .111d
~aturd :i.1 s ;1t R u't·lnl'k. lfl lh!"
L!C lr11111· J!un1an1tu·s Jlall
Playhoust•. ------
IXCLUSIYI INOAllMIWT
WOODY ALLEN IN
Par1mo11nt Picture• pr11ent1
.,,.~~~ ... '""'""'° ~' DE881£ llEYNOlOS.JAMfSGAltNUt
"NOW sw1n IT IS" (l'G)
v ,n, .. , Jtcd~ravt:. c1.,.,s. Jacki!On
Mary.
Queen of Scots
~~• • Sldn•v 'oill" In ... UCl AID TMI PllACMlr'
.. M.llT, tUlllOI KOTl .. I "AINI
O• T•l 111Q DATI" Al .. •t IDWAIDI CllUIA YIUO
Mtlttoll YlllO • l ... ffl
.....
"ANDIOll41M STU.IN''
EDWAIDS CINEMAS
~ ....
Af"°"""' t4COSTAMESA
546-3102
KOCM stereol031'M
..f the soundsoftheharbor
~~~~7 24 hours· a day
'!
llAll'r r llO'T
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS>
WUNNER
WHAT t.OTSA
LUCK'S VOON
UP 'ERE ON
1HE: f f'f'K?
'f
I
.......... ,, . I{ ':i 1'1
HE
APP!'ARS
10 BE:
WRITING'
r
11
l 1 ' • ~RISR.E ~ SCl'fl~f" i ~1iJl11.e ,
t ; ,!
\ ;
J l •
By Chest« Gould
AMO I RE6£NT BEING
QUESTIONED WITMOU1'
8EMEF1r OF AN
ATTORN EY.
By Tom K. Ryan
GASOLINE ALLEY
SALLY BANANAS
. I II.----/
6-S t---J..... _ _J...:;_,.li __ ~ -:/?#
By Al Smith
' l
MUTT AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
~ 1)111&-NA
AJl.Nb-NA./'
IT'S A STE'ADY
INCOME Fot<
YOU. MIJT!AND
WHEN I'M
SIXTY· FIVE
x;~~~-
SECURITY/
OJNllNll6 ~\Nb··· Ala. ICE ctf.IM.
/Mli ... WAIT !
NANCY
ALL THE
BIG-BOYS ARE
WEARING
FLOWERS
. IN THEIR
HAIR
YES,
IT'S A
NEW
FAD
f DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by • A. POWER I
ACROSS S2 Clvll lar
1 Flat, thick battlt: 1
pltcts word~
6 Htt!r'rw lttt« 54 Prruining lo
10 Perlumt In--11rowth
grrdlf'flt: Vat. S8 Air
14 Ht avtnly 59 Tuming:
body Prtlht '
15 Rip 61 Lovt , in
l& DilUQhter of Florence
Zt11s .._ bl Ont wM
17 Active '-., ,Prtd!c ts
18 Mexican dish -b~ -The Rt'd
l~ NClUll tnding 64 Metal 1lloy
20 llaiass M G~an Nazi
;!2 Movtd with Jeadrr
haste Mi Of SOlmd rnlnd
24 E~peri Pnte &7 Become 1
2b Palms off mtmb«
27 BurlesQue
JO Le;tndary bird
(lf prey
31 Burning desl1t
32 By Illa\ vtry
file\: 2 words
11 Collection:
Suffix
38 Rouodabo\lt
41J Help
41 Put wrong
lddrtss on
4l Uncommitted
44 E9;11
~5 Workshops
48 Fruf\S
5l ParamQllr
DOWN
1 Crusl covering
wound
2 Thtaltt
section
-3 f rtnch frltnds
"4 Havt faith 5 Slow
Ii Mindful
1 Meadow
• 8 Aplrct
9 ElaborMt
dttOl'.itlOll l ONDrth -:
11 AtrJcan
capit.11
• •
U Somtthing of
valut
1J Ortliestr1 I
'"'' 21 Gtntnl
rdft~: Abbr,
2J Patts of bulldlrtg
25 Characltflstlc
Z1 British
strfftc• 28 E•t lndlM VIP 2'J OttOMln .....
offlcl1l1
JJ Very softly. 2 .....
34Coo<n
, 3S 8Mk of Rats ,.,_,
' . • •
J8 Acapulco
J:thl tlt
39 Dtltllons
42 llonrtvy unftJ
43 En;illttrS'
llrlpers -'& Tlmt of day 47 Olllclal
tmlsmy
"' Put to shtmt 49 Thick soup
"' """ !iJ Actms-
81YIS
S5 Dwrltgt don• ~lloent1y 56 English op«a ,..,_
57 Lookasim
60 Kind ol
contaltllt
I ...
•i
..
•
•
PEANUTS
NO, BUT IF THINGS
DON'T GET BETTER
SOON r M GONNA IW:NE
OVERSEAS AND LIVE
OFF LINC E SA M!
By Dale Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
I INSIST
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
I B·Bll<DIE.. ~
-· . -,
~ ,
' -.
'
THl>.T's Rl61·11i
l..Ol)IS-A»D
lXl !JOO KOOi\\
WHAT KIND
IAM?
-~--
By Charles M. Schulz
SCHOOL
ISOUT!
NO MORE SCHOOL!
SCHOOL IS CXJT!!
WHATEVER AAP!'ENED
10 GO<NG Hll\\£ ? . . . . . . .. . .
,,_,
JUDGE PARKER
-"''
A s LEE BORGSON
STA RT S lNTERVI EW-
' ING HIS PROSPECTIVE
'STARS', HIS IN TER-
EST PEAKS AS TAN YA
INTRODUCES HIM TO
BEVE RLY 6ARSTOW!
MISS PEACH
l""' 00 )(X..( l<EAL.IZE'
YOL{ Al<E loMONU-
'T'HE MOST
CHARMING
OF PBOF'l-E ?
PERKINS
($
By Harold Le Doux
BEVER LY HAS HAD GOOD!
NO FORMAL lRAIN!NG•f-_,..-~-, [
IN THE THEATER, :
MR. 8 0RGSON! -;i,.
NOW, IF YOU Will WH AT
SIGN THIS CO NTRACT, KIND
MR. BORGSO N CAN OF A
WE WILL ACT AS YOUR AGENTS
•.. RECEIVING lEN PERCENT OF
YOUR EARN INGS WHEN W E
PLACE YOU! NATURALLY,
TH ERE WILL BE A CHARGE FOR
THE STILLS A .. SCREEN TEST .. ,
11oALLY?
'THANK~
A LOT"!
START HIS TEST S, CON-
B EVERL)' ! ~ TRACT
'/, IS TH IS? II I ,
DON'T T HANK ME.
L.INDA -"ND J: ARE
THE MOST CHARMJN~
OF PEOPl.E, ANO )Ol.f
HAPPeN 10 ee
ANON(; US AT T1£
N,OMENT,.
-!o TEMPCl"AllY
SITTJATION
WHICH IS
AJ:IO!AT
TO ~ND.
SO LON(,;
900R:.
HOLO IT, MISS
BROWN! WE'LL
FOREGO THE
USUAL CON"TRACT
W ITH M ISS
BARSTOW.'
By Mell
By John Miles
By Dick Moores
By Charles Barsotti
~--..,.-----,...--, C l)-ml2 O'Yl I Turon~ \)wrn£i 2a.-n$1 R~ ~1 ~-W~
~.
By Ferd Johnson
OtlE 'THING IIVE LEARNED IS N£V.l'R -ro 'TAKI' A C,ANDIDATS FOR TH,;: PRoS l t>ENCY S~R\OUSLY UN l-oSS
HS ,APPoAF<S ON 1-A UGH-IN AND
'5/'YS,"SOCK ITTOMe?' ,,..-....._.,,.
-~Gl ~~~ .. ~ ~ rt ~ ,,
---~"'~=--::=. ,-;:.;:;.-.
By Roger Bollen
... ;rusr tuHE!l :x:. I'M A Cl>.TBIRD!
-I 'M A BIF:DIE
WHICH IS A
CATBIRD!
\l.lA~ 'STARTf/.lGO TO
t<IAl:'.E SOME SENSE o ur OFTHllJGS! ...
THE GIRLS
~-· -.·· ~,....., ""
'
"1',. 6-5
''Almost every place you go In Italy looks a1 U our kidt
bad been there first."
DENNIS THE MENACE
·.· .
•
..
t.
' '
0
3
b
in
w p
E
r
b
c
e
D
3
di
th
ni
St
r
R c
tr
it
• Ge
f
$
'
4
l
" •
I OAILY PILOT ~7
Everyone Ha•
Something That
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Want Ad
l The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642·5678 for Fast Results
•••••••••••••••••••
IRVINE TERRACE
ThrH Bedroom
Let us show yo u this enchanting home.
Atri um entry, sp at'iou s li ving room \\'ith fire-
place. 3 Large bedrooms 2 baths. LOVELY
DINING R00~1 -1-room to store your trailer
or boat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $62,500.
"SO RARE"
Fee land -Turtle Rock
3 BEDROOMS, family room, 2 baths, atriun1,
builtins with self cleaning oven, shag carpet-
ing ·and custom drapes. Large covered patio
with super landscaping. MUST SEE TO AP-
P RECIATE. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . . .... $47,900 .
SPECTACULAR
Back Bay View
EASTBLUFF -a truly lovely home. 4 Bed-
rooms, 2 baths, FAMILY ROOM , fireplace,
builtin kitchen with breakfast area. Custom
carpets and drapes, beautiful patio for your
entertaining pleasures. . . . . . . . . $55,900.
VIEW OF ALL THREE???
Catalina, Bay, Caqyon
Delightful family home. Lovely slate entr)',
3 bedrooms, 1% bath, FAMILY ROOM (or
dining roo m) large gourmet kitchen with all
the builtins. FIREPLACE plus many other
nice features. See and compare .... $63,500.
HARBOR VIEW HOME
Somerset Model
Stretch--0ut and live in this two story 5 bed-
room. 3 bath, FAMILY ROOM . DINI NG
ROOM. Buillin kitchen , 2 fireplaces, NE\V
CARPETS and DRAPES plus so many ex-
tras you have to see it to really appreciate
it. Fee land. $72 ,500.
~ NC ASSDCIAJD
REALTORS
644-7270
2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF • •••••••••••••••••••
•
ABANDONED
3 + FAMILY
ONLY $13,900
COUNTRY GEl\1! !
Nestled beneath 00 It shade
trees; STAINED GL.As.S
BAY WINDO\VS heavy
BEAMED CEILINGS, rich
walnut paneling & 11·aJls of
cork galore. Encha11Ung
enclosed LANAI plus adobe
brick patio, 2 CAR garilge.
Con1plete \\'ith block 1rall
fencing. 5 f>.1IN. TO BEAOI
set>ing is believing call rlOw.
{714) 962--5585.
I ORI. \I L OISO\
" PE'ALTORS
I Newport Shores
-Exquisite!
\\!rot iron gate and quiet path
10 superb Franciscan tiled
entry! Giant garden livin~
roon1 y;i1h gorgrous 111a~s111l"
glazed tile lirC'ptace .. Fran·
ciscan tiled dining a.rca.
Gourmet kitchen with pass.
thru serving bar. \\'inding
stain\'D,y IO upper level and
4 king size bedrooms. :1
baths. Decorator's delight!
Large brick Jlat io plus extra
large sf'Clud~I sundeek. Pri-
vate beach, pool, tennis and
much n1or c -l·al l quiek~
645-0303.
.. ~ . . -.... HIKI s·1 L Ol.SON
" REALTOR S •
General
IT'S GOOD TO
BE HOME
rspt'C'll1lly 11 hen honu· is as
luvrly as this J\1C'S<t \ll'J'fh.:
livni1·. 3 hug1• bt'Clfl){)111s, dhl
l1r1t·k f1rcpl<1<·e, 111 u rl 1• r n
hl t1n kilcl\l·n, o v f' r). 1 / t' d
f;in11Jy roon1. lllvl·ly g.111.ss
sl!d111g doors to flUl k1 Ju,r
rt·1m1nt!'<'I inside a11d 11u1.
\'f'ry N"ason;ihly pr11·1•1I.
CALL us lor fu11her dl•t:11l~.
546-5AAO (Open El't's.)
~~HERITAGE
REALTORS
EASTS I DE
$26,000.
A l'f'i'1I bt'<JUly 1n !hi., <'Hill
forl<iblo' :\ l11•iln•1111 111 11 111-.
_,_ .. I~ I -·-l~I -~-I~
General General
* C()UNTRY 3 BEDROOM
CLUB HOME CONTE MPORARY * ATRIUM MODEL [..o(·uc1..·•I 111 ,, 1111" :\{'"l'Ort * GOLFERS H1«1<.:h 111•11.;hl11•!l~ ..... t 11! lht•
PARADISE 1·11<1 .. r u 11111,,1 1·ul·th··~;1•:
* WANT· A
CUSTOMIZED
HOME?
~ll'l'l'l l .. 1<1''.'0' !l\'11\•..; l •t,)111
"l!h \.11.1lr.•d '" 1],1n.: nnt!
111,i ........ 1\" :o:lt•n•· 1 1r•·r1l.~t·1•
(l1·Jt1ltlhf" !•·r1;1:1n t'll\I'\,
1 .. r1nnl 1l1111ni.: 1'111111. llui.;1·
"''Ptll'H I~· ranu!y r•••l11 111th
!1uilt.111 11<'t hnr. L.1ri.:1 Jl"li"
an•,1 and rwl for 111hi!'!l\dl
ho11u• uf l~·,iul) 11nd 1!1 ~t 1lll'· i'l1 ti·r1:,1n1ng. l'f'th·•·d 1•',•~
!1011 111'\l 1v i.:nl f c11u1':-<.' .tnd ),+r•I f,w tht• .. ,111•1,1,.1 •• I
Thi.~ \11•1•k11id fln\1' !hi:. :1r••a
,dll! fir~I )<Hll'M'lf l'!iOtJ'illlC: ll
:; U\ltlUh '' ft\1111 lilt• 1110-.! \\llh l<['aC't' f••I' 1111 !II.!\
h<.•aut1f11I bt.':u·h Ul South•·rn huUM', l'll'n1v .. r "~"11 r. d1.:
Cal1 ful'r l.1 lluriy and I ;ill•I 11'•••'.: .. ",'. fl1111l1. :-.•h·l 1
n1l·1111 hlu1·~· {)nl~ s:;:,,:i00 \.ihh· .ii Sl(J .. /.J().
General Gen•r•I
THE BLUFFS-CONDOMINIUM
Xl11t value : 4 bdrms., 2 baths. Located uu
quiet cul-de-sac street. handy to corn111111 111v
puol & lovely gr eenbelt. Load s ut :.1 or;1~·1
!'j,j\j ~)50.
COLLEGE PARK-COSTA MESA
Single -sty. 3 BR. & fa1nily r111. hon1P . \~ult·
fiO ft. lot : db!. garage. Quiet street. \(1U u\\n
lh1~ land. $30,750. "~1~1 :·Im: ~'i'.!";ii"".·~'il"'-''.·'.0~ C .&F.CCoRlesw11orthy
N•·;•r 11•'11· 1·arp.,1 •. 11.11d· _ o ea ors
i1uvd 11"<11'~. ''"t.Y lll•Jll.u", Fns!hh111 illl 1•·1· tlfl1H\'1) 1· •• 11101111'1111inrk1111.:---f'n.sy lobe 675 3000
•.. ' I "'' ,, ·I ll:lll '·L~ ·a t Bay & Beach Healty • I 1•n1·Ju.<.ed ~:1nl nnrl 1.i-.1 11-.1 1>.1.1 ,1d1• l)llu •
. ~~,~~.~~,,,~~!~.~ 0::,"~~~ ~~~~~~~~c;~,~~:: '?,~·:5?:'.'.'..'.::"',',:;·~:::::::·:·::,: :: 1 1 ~!:~:~1 :.:·F-~~ ':':~:..~~ ~~'.~~~~~~~~.11 l IB:ml1ij•D&Ml 1
4 Id U I " I pi"•h .. ,.,·ptg., 11 .. ,.11,.,.,,,,,. Cal! ~-J5:-:·l'..1t 1t 11•1•11 )\, · tt 1 I t •ti 1 ,, t 1 yenrso. pgraceu~1ag ..... ~" ~ 1ou111 1 111, 11111··· 11"J I •'~'"""' ,, 1'""1111
carpets, family roon1, laun-drapes: lJ!I". fa1111Jy rn1 .. I 11 •. 1111 1·, il11h;. 11:1'~·· 1•, ., 11.i .. 111 ullo 1 1,, r· 1 .. v neral Generi1I
dry room and all built-in ap-\Vorksn.ver kilch. J!ui;:-~ L'f11·1t. lin'1•l>11 '1• .ilh1 11•'1 lo.1r. l'l• .1 .J, 11, r 0•11 1 I•• 1 :.11 .. 1.d
pliances i n c lu ding patio.Cus1on1thruoul! \\'alk h.1•·!..1,1111 111111 ).\\1111111111c:t •1111!11' I• ''·, 1• , 1.,u.
<lish\\'asher. Creal art'a for up thf' brick \1·a !k l o this 11<••1 H•Hl!•' 1s unpr .. 10·<1 111 ' 11:1111.H·•·.... I'! I -.
f:unlly fun. J ust $31,500. beauty. you'll never 111ant to 1•\•'1,\· 11;11 lrMln·•·•'11~ Ii! l;il 1 :.:"!'I.!•'"'" ).11111111 1·~.t
Red Carpet, ri. ea 1 tors . leave! Abst"ntee owner says •·!it'tl. plu-. u1:1lll'.1• :.h.n.: "lifi p\lll•···d b1· ... 1 ... , I 1. in•
546-8&10. sell at $75,000. $26 500 t'11rpo•t, !f .1••11 11 i111t 1111 ,.,. 11.111~. 11\:11110 '1'• :11·'' I••·•'
Co·RBIN-' e1•pl111n:il li"ill<'. :.,··,·, ,1111,,· lr1 •l l1.;, 111d,1' ~.,.,., ;1 11,1 111!
uni·. (Jtf«n •tl ;11 537, II {1·1 lh• lalld, 1•il"n1· .lh ~ ... :
1111.t'k shag-f'arpt'llng, \\'ond LOW DOWN .. • W:~~ ~ MA. RT IN "~;;;::;"';~.;.;;, b•:~~;;~~· "::.·,;~ c""':'_ ""'."'"~ -'~"'""' ~1~~-~!·~-
stunglc roof. aJut <1uu't 1·ul· I AN!) i\SSU~"lt-: \'A 1.0AN _ l fb. !~~~~~~~~~Ii REALTORS 644-7661 df'·Sal' s!rct:•!. \':H·anl :11nl I Nu·t.' :t hcdrollH f'.:is!sidi' · ' j REDUCTION #2 ready to SC'e anyli111"· \'A ho111•· 11 1th IH'li'k f1n•plac~', * DU PLE X* I That·~ .. ight, !hi' •u•tom built BU''i'ERS NO OO\\'N' PS: ll l1 (~1·: ~ ;1 r jJ , i ·u!·dl'·~al' ·°' mv~. ohl, ... 111d 1 • 1,1 ~" 1
"• ... Jl'i; clean ;is a 1u11: 1 1
Exc:ei)tional
Pool
B., h h • 1 !ox·~1tJ1 )11 n{·1:1 .. 111·d 110111 I' 13111·111~-. 11, 11 .. 11" , "Ji. Home 4 ~,,room on1e as JUS
bf'enrcduced for lhe second ,i.:al'ai::c 11·11h ;dl"y t•n!ranc1· 11·/pnv. pa 11(1~. 1·11111 .•I
time. No1v only S52,9'J5 & Newport i'r11·r rt only S~.000 Cull ,.h<'n~. l'ncetl . .i 11
this 01vner 11·anrs to niovr! a t 11011· lnr lur01<'1' <lc1.'\1ls $1'.l.:io.I(),
'•lfi.-!'~'"'"' 1 OJ)('!l 10:\'c..;, I C;1ll : 67:;... ~'"jJ This Ne11·po1t Bt"ach hon1C' .. •:>-...., ""'
includes a family room. din·
ing room & a sparkling hC'at-
ed & l.iltered poo l. plus many
more ft"atures. Call 646-7171.
646-8811
(a nytime)
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
IRVI NE COVE
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
2025 W. lalboo 67l•Jl6J
* * * * * TAYLOR CO.
EASTBLUFF SPECIAL -$44,000
*
Best buy in area! Enjoy the privacy of this
lo vely 3 bdrm. & fam. rm. home on quiet cul-
d1•-... rlt' s! reet. flight size for sn1all fnn1ily.
\111'\I nr rnounl ains. c:rea t Kitchen.
"Our 27th Y ear"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
1111 San Joaquin Hills Road
NEWPORT CE NTER,
0
N_._Bc.... ___ 644-'1910
Gene ra l
JJ,,c/a
Beautiful healed and fil1er~d
Anthony 'pool. re I a xi n g
lanai, CQ\'rred an<I lavishly
lnndscnped. H om e is
absolu!ely spotless. 3 lnrg-e
bC'droo1ns, 2 baths, built-ins.
g-arage door opener , lots of
extras. Keep cool 1hi5 i;um-
rner. Rest Costa l\lcsa loca-
l 1on. !l ed Carpet, [lf'altors.
546-8640.
:.0' THE REAL 1~~!;)TATERS 7-HOUSES llt'l'!Ul Vlt'IV hu111c Ill
priva1c CX'l';i11frunl
•'011Hl1U!li!y \\Ith
CUSTOM
SPANISH HOME
,. PRESTIG E WATE RFRO NT HOME S
. . . ' .
MONEYSAVER HELP!!! O\\'ner says sell! Nef"ds work
O\\•J1(>r bought new home. but priC('d r ig h I . 3
!\1ust sf'll NO\V bt'autiful 4 bedrooms, in Costa Mesa.
bedroon1 home on C\]l-cle-Asking $22.500. Red Carpet,
sac. Carpeted throughout. ReaJtors. ~O.
hlock 1>.•all fencing. roon1 for
1railC'r. near shop p in g •
S31.4[JO. Red Car pet ,
Jteallon. 546-8640.
TRIPLEX WITH
GOLF COURSE
THESE AftE
F'IXERUPPr:JlS
but produce xlnt in('on10.: &
lax sheHer. 5-2 BR & 2.1 BR
homes on a double Jot. ss-;:1.
n1onthly incomr. SI0.000
do\.\·n. Asking $79.500. Ph: I
642· 1771.
Bayfront + Pier I
Charining 5 Br bt'ach home. 1
Exciting harbor aelion. I
:l Df'droorns ,ri,, 3 halh~
ra1nhl1ng "U" Pl;111 11'1th
"fll'n bc';"1n1 <·C'ili11~s
In!<; o rlu::.ht & ;ur
farnily roon1 plus
room ror a pool.
Sl65,000
REALTORS
SINCE 1!144
673-4400
2301 Bayside Dr. $16.~.000. __ -
Only c 1µ'ht mon111.~ tlf'\1 ,i,,
('lose In a lovely par k. 111<'•'
sh••ppu1;;: nreas ,t· 111ll11n
11·11Jki11g di~ t An CC' of
i\1t'a1lo11 J.ark CA>lf Course.
!!a~ lhrt't' lovC'ly hrrlruonis,
1ncludnrn: la~<' 111 .t :. l c r
su1 ll'. Cal! for an .111-
poin11nC'11t ·roday. S·l2-:l."~1:1.
EASTSIDE TRIPLEX
SHOW N BY APPOINTMENT
51 Lind a I 111 Drive
('u .~torn 4 RI{ .. 311:.! ba. home on Lagoon. Mstr.
l{Jt . ha s sitting area & frplc. Waterlronl fam-
ily r1n . \\'/conversation pit around the frplc.:
lovely garden, lge. slip . . . . . .. $189,500.
For Complete Information
On All Homes & Lot1, Please C•ll :
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR .
341 Bayside Dr., Suite l, N.B. 675-6 161
G1·ne ral uoneral
~"~1~~R~U;:;::R~A~L:;:U~V;,l~N~G;;::lv,,.., ""1 ~~~~' ttedroom
home, l h<'droom unit over
Bayfront Condo A Snooty Address
3 Br. 2 Ba, pool, piC'r & .~Jin,. In Ne1vfXJl'l's choicest arl'a
Delightful S7!l.500 with an ourstanrling bay +
EMERALD BAY ocean v1C'11'. Custom dC'-
/'rivary for all . Spul'ious 3
l11'drill>111 'l ha1h ownf'rs uni!
plus 11\'<>·2 b~·droo111 r{•n rnls.
T 110 ;.ra1·~ ~nu11g . You
1·,u1·1 l•f'"t !111s "pndr-0f·
011111•1.-.hip" l•H'<i1 1on. 111 J[ar.
tior ll u:h Sl·hool d1~rru·1
llAYSHORES--A WAY OF LIFE
Completely priv. community. Walk to
beaches. See this 4 BR . 3 Ba . home. Cozy
frplc .. garden patio. Ready for summer.
$59 ,500. LaVera Burns
LIDO ISLE 6S' CORNER LOT
Beaut. remod. 4 Bil. \v /lge. L.R. & kitch ..
sep. din. rm . Huge ups tairs tnstr. sui te
with adj. study, l'.P. & deck. $129,500.
Eugene Vreeland
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
4 BR, 3 ba .• formal dining, fantily rm. Su-
perb, custom •·one of a kind.'' on lge. lot.
Room for poo l. Sec this truly great home.
$68,000. Al Fink
LIDO ISLE
Lovely fan1i1y home located on 50' lot nr.
priv. club & beaches. 4 BR., \v /lge. family
room. South patio. $89,500. Mary. Harvey
BAYSHORES
Top corner loc. 2-Story, 4 BR., 3 ba., prof.
dee. home. Lge. mstr. suite on 2nd level
w/dress. nn. & study. Surrounded by lovely
lawn & trees. $92,500. Kathryn Raulston
LIDO ISLE OUTSTANDING BUY
Smaller home Joe. on one lot tn add. to vac.
lot. St. to St. location . Steps to priv. beacb
& club. '78,500. Edie Olson
FIRST TIME OFFERED
Fantastic view In beaut. 3 BR., 2"" ba. home.
Cozy lam. rm. w /!rplc., fom\al dlning.
Courtyard entry w /lush lndscpg. $'72,500.
Harriett Davies
DOVER SHORES BEAUTY
Like sf.ace, privacy, view? Sp~c. home on
lge. lo . 5 BR.. 41h ba., huge family nn. w/
frpl. Room for pool. $178,000. Carol Tatum .
EXCELLENT VALUE -$44,500
Park-like settlng describes this cozy 3 BR.,
1'14 ba. charmer. Lge. lanai overlooking
lh34 pool. The best for the least.
Mary Lou Marion '
...--
Coldwell,Benker
&44-2430 ~
lll-0700
SSI NEWPORT CENTER DR ., N.B.
PRIVATE POOL gm•g• & ""''"" l bedroom
Best Enslside 1ocatlon. This unit on ground floor. All like
3 ~droon1, 2 bath home !IC'flRrAlf' hoUSPS, CnrnC',. Int
fea1ure~ built-in kitchen. Ideal for retired couple
srparAte dining r o om,
fireplHC"t', <louble gnrn~e.
17xl~ paol, Home has IX'C n
beautifully cared f o r .
f>mfes~ional Jandsl'aping 1s
outstanding. Ar f.' R I~
country·likc \\'\th tJ1g 1rt'l's
and 4uie t slret!I. E:-:ccll{•n1
\lalue in this atta. $..16.~l)(l.
\\'anting hOUSf' & incon1,•.
S57.950. Call 646-7ln to 11ee.
~-I OPEN U'lTll & PM
Paint & Save
$17,750!
This one \\'On 't last. Call The fixer-upper or '72! Sec
now? Red Carpet. Realtors. it 10 h<'llC'VC. GrC'at starter
546-8640. chalf't. F'llA buyC'rs -wel-
PANORAMIC
OCEAN VIEW
In Nev.•port Heights. 3
bedroom, 2. baths, formRI
dining room, 2 fireplaces.
lot or wood paneling. Just
listf'd • only $45,000. llurry
rome. NC'f'<ls lots of TI..C.
Please wipe your fC"rt on tht'
way out! Cail 645--0303.
HIRl.\.I [ Ol\O\
" RCA l TCR.'>
on this one. Red Carpet, l=--,;-:---:;:--;:;;---
Rcallon. 546-8640. Eastside Dollhouse
So clean II sparkles. 3
bedroom, 2 bath, new gold
shag carpel. rich warm
paneling and bea11tlful
landscaping -plus gate and
~a for your boat or
camper. Jusl !isled !or
$21.950.
=WALl<IR I\ IH GO INVEST • !Walton &I0-77ll
YOUNG MAN "'" w .. tcliil Drive
In !his rare opportunity. -4 Open 'Iii 9 Plt! '"°'"" 2 bedroom 1m11v1d...i What 0 Barnain!!! homes on large lot • ":II
B e a u tl!ully landscaped. Buy this J bedroom home
Each with private )>fltk>fl. below market .and rJnlsh I~
Convenient locaUon, ~ar bonus room ynuneU. Th11
~hool11 and shopping center. home Ms ovcr 2.300 8Q. f.t.
Fint time offered only Tht' formaJ dlnlng room '' 1
$62,150 Call for abowing. great for aJI types of en-
6'J3...S550, tmainment. Priced at only
$3 -4,95 0 . Cal l
O 'I H L Rt.AL
"'\. ! >"TA T[HS
LUXURY
Now ... 842-2535.
o 1THC RE AL-~).< l:STATE R~
LIVING STEPS TO-BEACH-
3 BR. 2-sty. Rt'Cently decor.
ntar new f'arp. Open benm
ceil11; l.'H'f'<' r :-tlO. $33,900.
CAYWOOD REAL TY
"BY THE SEA"
SplraJ stalrcase, S BR, 3 BA ,
front room "'·ith pnrcnl rf'·
treat and carefrM", fully
auton)9.lt'd, ht!al~ pool
VftcAnt. One b\oek to heorh.
REAL ESTATE FAIR
(714) l36-2ll1 ----
* SU-1290 *
Any day Is the Btii' DA·Y lo
f\ln an a<l! Don ' I
1lt'h1y .. .::nil loday 6-12-567!!.
Imn111cula!c 3 Br + fan1 r m.
Ocean side at h11y, VIC'll',
J\1ust SC't'! $11!1,000
TF:D !I L~nEnT & AS.i;;()(',
:t471 Via Lirlo £j,/.R:J()O
TRIPLEX
Very nicl' 3 BP... 2 BA 01vnrr'!I
unit + 2·2 BR l BA . Goo d
location.
$51,500.
Roy McCardle Realtor
1810 Ncv,:porl Blvd., C.:\I.
548-n29
LARGE FAMILY
PROBLEMS?
Forget your problems In this
2 l!lory, 5 bedroom. 2 bath
·home, lntercon1 1ukl fire
e q u i p m e n t throughout.
Located on quiet tr«! lilwd
.strec>t. Priced a r only
$34.500. F"HA/VA l<'rms.
Call S47-ffilO.
SOUNDS LIKE
WISHFUL THINKING
But It's !rue. A 3 Bedroom. 2
Bath home for $26,000. No
Do\.\·n to Veterans or Lo1v
Down FHA. Covered Patio.
Planter acro1s n.enr of
Yard. Fruil Tree!!. Refi nish-
8:1 Kitchen. HURRY, HU!!·
RY! Call &J&--O:i55. Evt'nini.::~
≪-5226.
c·oLUJELL
PROPERTIES . INC .
REALTORS
MODEL HOME
Drive by 6062 R.ol'<'mont.
Prestige 11reu • So/Wnrm·r,
E IS pr Ing d fl I c. J'Mt. f
I nd~. nr. schl k sho11
ping.
l' Jilage Real Est~te
531-5!01 ( ::::.1 531·5!00
signed and bu ilt. :l la r.i~r
luxurious bN:huoms, 2 1 ~
ba th., 11 fun('1innfl l 11rn·1ngf'd hon1~: SPp, fonnal dinini:: j
roo1n. l.ovl'ly all PIP1·1ric
hft.1n kH eht•n \\·i rh r ('frigrr·
a!nr. Sp;u•ious living roon1 -
11 11 h quah1y 11· 1v epts &
drps. Prorl•ssionnl landscap-
ed. Ask111t: $110.000. Call for
~!40-1\;jJ !0[}1'1\ ~:\'I'' I
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
FIESTA ROOM
,\lf'~:t VPrdt 3 B 'T-P!an 11 in i
A l l/ttllVU: li().~f
PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP -This one hns It'
4 fjedroo111 , paneled den. sunny brcnkfast
nook, formal dining roon1 and a yard tha t
gives the privacy of a Sierra back pack trip.
If you don't believe it, call to see it and hope
il's stil l available. $47.950.
hu~I' h<1n11s n:ion1. 11 1•1 h.1r.
a ir ('iJnd unit lll'IV oii·n~ ;ind l'HONE_UNIQUE HOMIES, MESA VERDE 5 .. 6.5990
c· -, THE REAL
R:ESTATERS
l''""h JJ,.y ""''' ,, """""'"I for Act1"on • Ca 11 -642-5678 or <lo l1<1rs of t':-:tr~t S.'.:li.999 • •
l"f'l 1J UllTtL o PM
~M-1-GETTING-
i:,)OC! v~I U•'' Yl"s, definitely
so~ 111is n<'atly ll<'W 3
&>droon1, 2 Bitlh llomt" v.·ith
F irep!a1·c is a must on your
Shake Roof. $33,000. Call
\isl! Bil Kitchen. P atio.
Shake Roof. $33,000. Call
646-0555, Evt'ning!, 646-522ti.
COLWELL :
PROPERTIES. INC .
REALTORS .
FOUR BEAUTIFUL
BEDROOMS
P hone' ~>IG-211 3.
INVESTORS
PARADISE
12 Units in Costa :\1£>sa on
large lot. P otential to build
lfJ additiona l un1 rs. ChC'('k
thi11 our a l $1G:.,OOO.
540-1151 IOpC'll Evrg,)
.-u-, ... HERITAGE
' • REALTORS
-*-ONLY$3('soo•'
This elcgan1. singlC' s1ory, ~ lrnrnne. 3 BR. 2 ba. tam . nn.
beclroon1 homl' In H prune On closc·in R-2 !of, walk to
sretion or All'S:\ Verde 11 ilh cvi•rything, Convert lo du-
fin(! Jnnd!t('ap\ng aml cool plf''=. ,
shaded back yard. The ! BALBOA BAY PROP.
spotles!I lntrnnl' .will t'n11~e * 641-7491 *
you and lh'' ki tchen \\1ll
cap1ure yo ur w1 f1•'s hear!.
Stonc11·ork. panrl1ng llnd
carp<'!~ ni~kc 11 seen1 mor<'
expe n5ivr 1h<1n $13.500.
COATS
&
WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pon Evenings)
M * L * s
The fastest,
mo1t efficient
way to BUY or SELL
ilh. l .. TIPl .. E Ll~TI Nf;S .
"GINNY" MORRI SON
557-4 130 REALTOR 540-22'~ \
for that Ir.em unrter t50,
try tilt-p,.nn.y Pincher
•
-SBR .-~soo -
Nrat nf'lghbor . 21~ Ba.
r~rpl. din. rm. Spacious!
CJ fVCI< CAR01'1 n·~llS
REAL ESTATE
TREASURES
1831 \\'eslchU, N.B. 61S-!'iLl2
INCOME -PROPERTY
Triple'( or 4-plex, i;:ood C.1\1.
10<·. Try Kl'k down or mnyl
cx1·hung<'. Fortin, RC'ul10r
642-!j(QJ, 545-~.
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
Y/ANT AD
642-567B
---~~-----
General General
MACNAB
IRVINE
F1NER HOMES
NEW BAYCREST HOME
Beautifully decorated, fUlly landsca ped. 5
BR's 4 baths. Bkfst. room w/bullt-ln buf-
fet. FR, separate DR. Large master suite
w/brk. fireplace. $129,500.
GREEN TREE HOME
Lovely new Bren home in new area of
Irvine. Close to park & pool. Including
land. $41,950 -Lois Mille1 642-8235.
IRVINe TERRACE
LOWEJT PRICED 4'8R.
Gorgeous comer. Easy bicycle ride to Big
Corona Beach & Fashion Island. Designed
for California llvinc. '67,500. Tom Queen
644-6200.
TWO BAYFRONT LOTS
Ulness forces dras~ic price reduction. UU-
li ze existing 8 BR house or demolish Cor :Z
now baylronl homes. ·Gloden Fay 642-8235
for appt. Price NOW $215,000.
[Irvine [ -•-1...i .. """"'eom •• ., I
tOI Dover Drlv• 142·1235
1144 M1cArthut 144·1200
N .. port Beech, C.llfornlil l211S
'
I
I
I.
I
O,ijL\' PILOT
Buy a
to
Border
Bargai
Every classified want ad in the DAILY
PILOT appears in every edition every
day. That means your ad w;ff be seen
in papers delivered to homes and sold
from newsracks from border to border
all along t he Ora nge Coast ••• all the
way from
Seal Beach
to
San Clemente
You
Get
It-
All • • •
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
Costa Mesa
Beach Newport
Lalo(nna Beacl1
Irvi11e
Saddle back
Sa11 Cleme11tf'
Capistrano
(Plus the daily
newsrack edition)
For One Price
With A
I DAILY PILOT
-
Classified Ad
Phone 642-5678
YOU CAN CHARGE IT, TOO
•
A ' .
[ ~~~,~~~---]~I ---l~l l ---l~f I -·~~~ [ co ....... de• A!r ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,:;;~ 1--. ------
..._.lorS••
..,....--------1 cott• Mew Huntington &t•ch
WHICH HARBOR
VIEW FOR YOU ?
Hunt in~ton Beach L...guna Stech Mobile Homea Income Property
---------1-:....-------1 For Sale 125
166
Lusk llarbar Vic"''
Smi!h l lnrbor Vie-"'·
$29,900.
M£SA VERDE
*SPECIALS* 00 LA LA MYSTIC HILLS --21 Unit-Nr Shop•g.
• -\\'lul•· \1,1h'r v1l'>A, u11•flool1 IXJL'Bl.I' 11 1dt• Flan11ngu 2 4 3 BR, 2 Ba. 8231 Ellis
Int: ··l1y &.· 1.Wavl1, 4 [klrn1.i;. n1uIi 11 1• ti l'.l rTI • • 11 a~ Avt, l ffi. S4.20 1.1. 847-3957.
!)r1i.:1nal ll11rbor Vit"W $64.~J
Hren Jlarbor V1E>w $J7,Wl
Call 67"";7Z?j
l~·~t liuy 111 till' ;11'•:.1' C'o1.y
J;un11y rotin1 \1/t'l'at·klu110
f11't'pl1tee! SeparatE> m1u1tt·r
bt•1lr1n v.·/bath~ J)un't "'illl,
rn.ll t<1r 11rfi! 97"J-lltJ1J
ft;U J~ SF.ASONS Bt:Atf'/'Y.
'4 HI<. 1 BA, Ji,: ftun r1n v. /
lpl, forrnl di11 •1r dr n. A~
SUlflf' VA loru1 Suhrnil '.t.'111
(\ov.'n. Nl·ar lkach. Quit:k * • * • • •
/1 (lf'auutul 4 bt."tlrou~ ~!u:.
d1n11>$;, tiiOm SJ)tlnll!lh dt•ai1R;n-
t·t! hu1n•·. Fu·1·p\;11•f'. t :aro .. ti;
<anJ UrUPt-"111. 1~w 1~ullt Lhru
()\It, r••111odcl('(I I\ i I (' I! f' II.
ov1·r~1t"'t ho!, 1•ln:-I' 1•)
l'l'e!)111 1ni;:. <':-111 M7·121t.
2 baths: formal dining & ''''1•rv1hu1•·. ~t ~lJ' 111 n1<--e ---• ~--1
fanHly rnl:.. Liv111;;-n n. has ram;ty pa~k 1'1·1<; tll\ SIS500 , FOUR ~'LEX all 2 llr, l Ba. .. ,,_-.• ,, inc $.l70/mo, 111,1 On VA. lrp!1·. & tt•rl'L11l· v1e11•. f'rop-~ •·· · CRV :P2,000. Nr occ.
erty in nunt 1,_'Qflll.. CQn1-1171 l\trk\\uod :l..J."<60 Jow 557-6151
COLWELL ~ Br.:tiH:0.1 <'UNI)() 1,,l(j(_!
plel•'ly r«d1«•ur, I )'•'llr 11g0. dv.n. 1ak1• o'µu~llll'llti;, cor 1~---------
1·'.as)' (<I.I'•• lan•!St·l!p111i,:, 111,1. 1,11 x~i:-1-1 ·~l: .. 13, UN 11' S .. ln1n1acula te,
$6.l 0110 tJasts1r\e, clOSf" Jn. Btu'ga!n
PROPERTIES. INC.
lo:tn ;,,...,Hnp!1un 1':1yr11 ts
!I"'.'< !hi:!! f!'l'~!, f;~j "''ri'!
("rp•~. tlrr~. & 1»·!r1~ ;o;111al!,
dn " ~nd \,,,,1 t, I
. • 499. 'l~)'J .. Efifl l.hll• •T ~~)\+~). IU\\ di\ n ' Pl1U Sulhvan. n (' a j I 0 r -
.. !<.ik•• o'Jl:t)'ll1t'll l~. <'llVll't' liJ\, .$-l8-67Gl.
REALTORS
* R-2 *
L
A
5
5
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
•
8
~.'.. f!.~ )(',l::-!'o!C _ T.!LJPLl-::\~'.-,-.;;-.-,,~~B~R~.I
:_-.LE~~..;t' (JUI 11 1tl•' n10!1il•• !J1111t<". .. u.Jul1 11· 1111li(ls. Nr sto1·~s. $6 .900,
....... ~11;'~~;~·~~~ 1..Tf., :ill' 1\11\d. llu111 . LI 675-01-14 Agf'nt 646--74)~ • • " • 17111 P~·at'l1 nh .r. I! n . • •
NOT FANCY-
JUST HOMEY
$ Instant Cash $ · I !•.II' )•1ur f·Qu 11y, \\,. p.1y 0·11~1s ! WALK TO BEACH
:.!-1 ht :-•·r\. (1'<1111 th1:-: :: JI/{. 2 Ila. (rpls.
_. ... e.t.-.ic..-... SIO,"~XJ S-17--,l\Xl7. - ---~---= ______ ,-----.-Industrial Property 168
Lido Isl& ON:.: P;1r g0ll ,.,..,11'!1•'. Ol'l'<tn ----·oc-----I
----------·I a•·ross s1rt't'. 11 B, 2 Br, :.! * J\1-l CO RNER *
t'tl\ll'LL~rEL\' )l'llHMll·h·d S: h ;1.' l ;l Ill I I\ ,.., n JI\' \V1th older OOUSf'. Prim(' * " " • • • f drpi; und 11 i.;uod ('orrH•r 111!
i '.\LL :-.~7 .-..-~i-; f,,r l1'"•HI i)r 1r.'11it·r ~111r:i~··· I ·rry SLIJOO dn_ Trol,d pl'I•'''
$·:~.91)11 I
~~-5800 I;;:;) 531·5800 I
11,dt\\Jr. Jradil ional. h<>lll~'-:; 1Ji~l111a.~hcr, :, S1:1r J'ark'.~. i0l'<1tion. Costa l\.les<1 .
i:.irrn.;., din. nn, di•n lx'~t Joi , SlZ,,'(i(J, Ca I J ('orhin-r-.larlin Realtors
~l.i-19."-il ;i/l1•r J, ,\dul l.~ G-\-l-71i6:.! ur &12~ll!l 11/11• 1 l'\11', l • .:in.c" l't.ll'!lL'r ~ __
1~,1' J· •• 1~1 t'!ll..l. S~):1.~,00 SACRIFIC~ L1tt(l 111;dl'rfron t Mount air., Desert,
Total Down Paymt fi :::o 11kdy.". • ... ) SlS.JS .
Eait Bl uff If> all~ Lil ln l~•'f', r0r 1111.~ ., ----------1 twdr!x)111 ,t lanilly f'l>0n1
ACT NOW!! tiurnt' \·Ins(· t11 1'V1'1)·th1ni:.
llcli1,;hlful .~ Bit, 2 h11 , ,..,. ;i-.J,in~ pl'Jl''' t•f only S~l .\KJ(J.
rianrled fa1n1ly nn.; 1-levt·I J<t·llC'l'IS (j\\lll'l''s a11:»1ty.
Pnn11· 1(11; 11u11·h f'S(·riJ11 LEASE \\'IT!l OP1'ION
~·1b,OOO. '-i!.rg.-·: l1,.drnnr11, fornliil
1J1n1ng :ind 1111nily roo1n
li<in1~·. }'ull h11iltu1s and onc
ul hle clcanf'~l ln 'Fountain
Vallf'y. VACANT Payments
or only s21;;,_ [rst :' ~.~!11f'
:..,,_.:::', i-cnJ ly
:.z,11·1 VisL'l df'l Un,
Nf'11'J>0rt 8;'at'h
014-11:'\:! ANYT!MJ~;
CALL r-Ao-w·,;,5
SHERWeeD REAL TY
1
i~'.111·1 Rrookh11rs!. F.V.
KIDS
SAVI·: S 1.M
Sell ur lo ·a~P '.l Ill(, (\u11lo.
1'1'1' {'IJT~, .'\liH 1' o 11 d.
S:!l/,5()/1 0\\ l!•'r, !J!hq...~IG1 I:
',:;t;...1'.'~lS.
-----~~ :'\r. l ~•·(11 ·1i .. ··lt·~:JJ1 l 2 Iir.
•'fl('I. p;1l 1•i. ept, drp, 1l~h11 1·,
& sprinklrs. $27,000 962-219·1.
Ir 1 Bil, :~ 13a, "1 story, ~h,lg
1·rpr s. /lllns, nr schOoL~ s,
beach. !168-G;x.s. -----Irvine
A RARE FINO
J·Slo~·. ·I Btlrrn , .1 !J;,, 3 1'~11'
gar. &·autiful · BrO.'ltimooi·,
Tur!lcR~·k. Dr ciJl'a [or
d raf)C's, Xl11L loc. \\'aJ king
dist. to elern .• ~ high school.
A MUST SEE AT $48,'i;)()
INCLUDING THE LAND.
1J o~'-l \•!11L
1so· Back Bay View!
Blu ffs '.:·2 1 ~ Condo. On Pl•'·
tur<•sque bayfront Sl'C'ludril
1·ul·dr-sac, Lavishly upgTad·
f'd,·1~·/11c111 crpt~. \\/all pap1•r,
!1,ght fixtures. frC'sh pain!.
&k11v mw·kc!. 011•nt'I'.
$54,750, (.44 . .1\449
---'l {rullor WANTED ' 'SINCE 19'6 ' ~ l s1 \\'estern B11 nk B!d~.
Big. hig !i h('drrnnls. :: ba1h Univer~i ly }'ark, Jrv1nr
honH: 111 xh1t <trea -\Valk to O"Uli SS2-7000 Nights
(;nth0f1l' srhool~ F ireplace.
"'/11• c:i rp<>ts & drap<'~. b!lin
1:10. pat.IQ. :-,-Int l11ndscap-End Unit Townhouse * LOVELY :~ BR., family 1n~ Pr1('1•d r(1r iiuirk sal(' at All on onl' Iloor; :1 bdr111,:, '2
m 1. Lusk. Decorator in· s:~"l.!XXJ. :-;u 1111111 -~•1ur 1crn1s? ha. Close lo rl'eN'ii11011,
!Prior. Jk'au!. I n d s i.: p ct . <..:all l\ !i-1:.!:!l schools & shoppi11g. S4l .~JOO
:~:~i~Y ~~·1;:~ &112«<. I .@OOMI Ji g ''""d· h•11
POOL TIME 17J.1l Be"'" Blvd .. H.B. • re I
No kiddi11 g. lhis is the REPOSSESSIONS REALTY
sharpest pocil home in Fo1111-For information and .locution Univ. Park Center, lrvinC'
tain Valley. fr-at u r ing or thr!i'e fl-IA & VA homes, Call Anytime, R33--0820
absolute privacy in the rorn1 contact _ Qf[ice hours 8 AM to i! Pr<T
(•: tall sl1ad1' lrft's._ ., 11\ce KASABIAN
sized h(•drooms. din r nr., I
fan1 r rn., Jiv rm .. all eh.'c Rea l Estate 847.9604
GOV'T. OWNED kitch. Tastf'fully (i('roratcd
1\'/a n ;1irC' or clcgancC', T.ir
!11l' fussy buye r. S49,!)9.i.
I A skin~ Prirc. Submit yo111·
111.i:
I' 1llage Real Estate
,62-4471 ( ::::i 546-1103
Grecnbrookl', 5 Br. 2600 sq rt
housl'. A!;>king $2000 lrss
rha11 ~1rkt Pric;'. A~s11n1-
;dilr frl.4 -;;., loan. S1l'in1 Clb.
Onr trans. !16~·07.'l.1.
DECOllAl'OR'S 3 Br, 2 Ba,
l'l\lras, upgrades, shag crpt,
rll'ps, frplc, patio. B y
Q1rnrr. ~15,0CIO ( 7 1 4 )
~i2-3j2J .
\\'A;.;T A POOL HOJ\11::?
Rl'possessed honll'S. Lo1v
du11·n. Go1'rrnn1;'nt pays
t·losing: r·osts. Call %8-4•1•11 .. * Crest Realty
SOLD
All my li.~lings. Need homes
to advertise and se!I. For
professional, t:f!iciC"nt ser~
vice
Call June Blair 968-7833
15 yrs in Real r--:sta1r-Sales
llED CARPET REALTORS
962-7771
Do you have $3,500. to put
fl0\11n? Can you afford $2.15 .
r>er tnon!h? J\Tovc in today ~
J BR, paneled den, Ian11ly
area, 2 tiled BA. 011•n('r 11•ill
install i·arpcts ul your
choicr. 4 Br., 2 B;i.. tTpls. drps,
""vd p:.ilio. 011't1t:'r. 96&-1219. Roberts & Co. 962-5511 BY O\\'NEH. 4 BR .• l~.l DA. 1~~~-----~~
l.11n. rni. 'shag l'pt ~ .. t.q(J() BY 01\•n1•r. :1ssun1e lo t'l-1/\.
sq. IL $:::1.500. 91i3-2146 or 3 BR, 21 ~ BA. fan1 rin .. elf't'
J2 L~1 '.;7!'\-lji21. hlln.~. cq)ts, drrs. d in., rn1
4 Br + Lrg Bonus Room
C11111·enirn1 to ~-,vy~. lrg lot.
s:: l.(l<!(J, ~47-.i~57.
HuntinA ton Beach
fur l.oat/lrlr. !.(i.11-3!1-l:l <'1·1·s:
BY 0 1vner. 2 SI)., 11 bJrn1.
Xlnt cvnd. ;;oo.-! IPl'a!1on.
il1;1 ny f''(!r:is. S~2.!100. 9911
.\1•H•I'\' C1rt'lr-, %8-30.117.
:: BR., 2 ba., a trium $32G/3:l:i
:~BR .. 2 ba., fan1. rn1 $335
\VE llAVE OTHERS
"[.] 0 h 'l )I'll ii,
---"llrullur
"SINCE 1946"
]st \\'eslet't! Bank Bldg.
University Park, Irvinr
Days 552-7000 Nights
BE:ST Buy, .J br, 3 ha, film.
Turtlerock. nr schls. $-17,·100
Lo cln pyml, 01~·nr !13J.-29Z!I
Laguna Beach
BRING
YOUR HAMMER ..•
•• , .& hrlp finisll your 11<'\\/ :J
bd1·n1.. 2 bath h i 11 Io p
J't:'trra!. If you have f'vcr
11a11lctl 11> b11ild your 01\·n
hnn1(', this is ~our ch.incc •
lht: easy 11•ay, for $11,;,r:tO,
AG tan
REAL ESTATE
1 J:l(J Cl!'nllr)T\'
1.1a.rk niolul~· !io1n(• ,11,: 2::· Resort 174
howana lows on J1t. ~ailh1x1L $7,000. 673-3817 I ""°'""' ,-,.·~i.-i·,2 1 ·.~-~-~-~~~~~~~--~~12 Lots, secluded s2,4·i0 3-116 V1;1 l.oclo ,.. d · -~-c----,, ~ Moonr i $'.:e cabin $15,7~1()
:; BR +f111n. & din r111s. '!~,' Reill E1111t, Lakeside cabi n $'.l.i,0001
Lll t. strrel to s1rl'Ct $();),500 C.ntrill Cnll 8664641 or wntc:
7S Ft. [Ht, h:.•'. hOl1l<". ~lrrrl Sl)C'ncf'r Real Estate, P . Cl.
to ~!rl't•t ............ ~90,000 Box 2S2S, Bi:: Bear Lake,
LIDO REAL TY Acr eage for sale 1SO Calif.
::377 Via Lidu, N.1::. ---·~~· ------I Rancch-.-,-,~F-a_r_m_s_, __ _
673-7300 FORECLOSURE Groves ISO --"c,\c\ct~.1WNT 1 c,0c,c1~C--1 40 A('rt's in· Northern Ca!ofor· i ----------
p . & Sl ' si •grJVl 111a's ou tdoor fJar111'Ms•'. bor· FA'.\1 1LY ~111d !1v1ng room'
-If'!' lp ., •"""' <l«l'illt: nar1on:il forl'SL 2 \)1·1! SO!a, thncttc set, hn1: KEN E RITIJNG!IA:-.1 REALl'OR £7:'>---0123 n11IPs, lo Pit Hivf'r, l!orsf' s tool~. F.xl'f'lll'nt conditton.1 Crr o'k, !onl'n, $10,1;:1\I C;1sh !162-061)(.
Mission Vi~io pri•·1., :':i 1111ply p;1y $239. R al E-,-,-.-,-w-.-,.-d-1-84 FHA-RE PO 1!uw11 & tak.~ iJvl'r p::iyn1rn!s e e n
4 Beliroorn. r('<'Onditiollt'd. or S.'1!.I a ino. Tri·mcndous EASTBLUFF
$J2.2~)() opport un1!y to apquirf' 10· \\',\NTED BY JUNE 18Tl-I :
KAT ELLA REAL TY d<1y 11'hat rnny not be avuil· _£.1\t-cutivc & family is seek-
·1· . ..1 T able ton1orro\I'. ing a year's lease on a 3 or " 1ss1o n Viejo E oro Ed ,. l d ' . J • _ _( \1•11r s, ..... ni 1vay. '1 hedrn1 Eastbluf! home Office .... , ...... , . , ••• 837-9400 -14· 8'0 9S40 .,,. "2'' 1'1" "II. 1500 . ~---~-~----1' -., · 1 · u -·" J \\1 1ng to pay up to • a
Ne wport Beach so ACRt:S. Ne\v i\texico, nr. month, C.ALL 644-7438,
EASTBLUFF nation;il forest. $61.25 PERI~~~~~~~~~' ACRE. $·19 i\lo. 008-0017. ,
1
~ ~
EXE.CUTIVE _ESTATE :l~-lr ACH r.:s Antl'lope Valley, rinanciat I•
Unbelievable h~H aere \V/52 only $25(). <loivn. Owner L-------' l~el's surrounding the prtl-nius\ sell. 546-3086.
llest yard ;you'll ever see. G
BR, 3 BA, 2100 sq ft. \\'hut Cemetery Business
more can we say! By app't Lots/Crypts 156 Opportunity
only -Call ll7ll·l050. I ·,-.D-ll-&<_"_l-,-.. ---,-b-"_'_'"_ll-01-,-inl--'.;...A_V_A_l_L~A-B-L-E---I 200
II/' Rest. Call £42-3360. Ontu imrroved area. H a r b or NOW "'21 '-.--,.-0-R-E_S_f_La_"_"_-G_l_,-,,,-a~lc, Large Corporation clcsir_es
2 plots in Co1nm. Section, re.sponsibll' per.son t~ . ~IS·
$750 for both. 711: 968--2172. inbul~ TENCO (a D1v1s1on
of CO<'a-Cola) COFFEE
PH.ODUCTS. .PENINSULA Comm .. ci•I
Exclt'lsivc Ralbon Peninsula Property 158 . . . Can start full or part time
Point. Imp.n.•ss1ve 4 _BR., .l $905 A MONTH 15-10 hrs. per wk.) Company
lo;iths, extra lar ge llv, rn1. • 1 11. 1 b · f d '
JI "' Jll ·40 f ·1 . GUARANTEED cs a 1 is res us1ness or JS· u,_1 . x anu y .1111. lribu1or.~.
P..Pan1 cetl1ni::s. 111».sslvf'\• 11 f 1.
'
. ·c. l es, 1e 01vnel' o t 11s al-frplc., ;i rgl' patio. :::>11u>1'n 1y l . 1.. 1 ·ii NO SELLING! t s-9 '-.(}{) r,l(' lVe proper y 1\l gUil.f· . .
app. i... . ant"t> !he n1·1•· o1vnrr $90:1. n ~ f1slun,1:: or S)M'lld mo.re
CALL @ 64~·1 414 111,.nth in J'('ntals And the time \1'1lh your favorlle
· ~fi! pur!'ha~i' prlee is very kiiv hobby and let lhf' n1achine -dlfM& a"'e l'tirn you money, CASJI in eo1n pa 1•ison to that! The "
Rt:ALTV , J;ir<?c lot (60xl40J has ~m,,I~ REQUIRED $2498. ~cured. Ntlr Ntwporl Posl o rr1 ct .,.. " ~
SAC RT F ICE parking. a nd n surprise Lli\T1TED OPPORTUNITY
bonus of a eute little duplex \\!rite no1v !or infom1ation,
a! thl' hnck nf the lot. A Ill'\\/ includt' phone number .. P laywuund 11ear !hl' P::cific.
1 Bf!, 21 ~ baths, pool, ten-
nis. CornC"r lot, roorn for
your boat & lrailt•r.
$4.000 Do1\·n
University Realty
::001 J·:. Cst. J-hvy. li73-6510
BR., 2 BA. 3 car garage.
Nr111 cpts, dl'p:o; bltns. Pool.
$32,000. &M--1136, Day s:
o\\·ner 1·oulrl live there, or in
a niodrrn apar1 mrnl ah<H'f'
1h1• 1nain 1Ju ild1ng. Ca.JI
675-7225.
COLWELL
PROPERTIES, INC.
REALTORS 645-4664 rves. 1--~========~1 Laguna Beach
PANORAMIC VIEW >J X ll3 C·2 ZONE
Beaut. maintained home One of last do\11ntown parcels
2 Berlrooms & large family for r!evclopment.
rm. Poot $64,500. ~
George Williamson E. 17th S?., Costa Mesa
Realtor AAA Tenant. $115,000 Dn.
548-6570 645-1564 Cash spendable return
RF.Of-BRF:\\'
CO RPORA TION
!001 Howard Avenue
Sun Ma teo, Ca. !M40l
NEED CASH? $1 ,000. Or up
lo $3,000, SIO.OOJ and mo~.
See Avco Thrift 'fur a Real
E state Loan, Upon ap.
proval, u;.c 1he money
tiov.·e\'('r you like. Also ask
about our unsecur e d
f)f'rsonn l loans. AV C 0
'1'1-I RIF·r . 620 Ne1vport Ctr.
Dr., Sr.r ile 101, N™JK1rl
Beach, Ph. 833-3440.
-OPEN DAILY 1-S Rl'alonomirs, Bkr. 675-6700
38()?; fi lVE R AVE. * 8'/2 ACRES * ~~~~Ii.
SM Sptsv.T H i s-Hers.
Present Costa Meu Joe 1
rent. 5-18-4775;
Charu1C'I fron t, pil'r & :-Lip 3 Po1t>n!i;;l C·l. fi27 ft. f.rontagc l~---,.-,,----=ol
BP., :l ba. Plan:<: for 2nd unit on Brookhurst. $450,000. Call Money to Loan 240
incl. SS7,:iXJ. J\g!. '."i~:X.~. 11or-.1EOWNERS~
"'" loc Belly 67C~1'1"l SHERWOOD REAL TY BORROW
THE-F INEST HOUSE Duplexes/Units
In All Nwpt Bch sale 162
E:o.qu1si1f' 2 + <lc-n. 1dra] rc-1-----------
11rPn1ent. frf' land. Tnp Lo-
•·alp
$1000 -$10,000 Up
LOW MONTHLY
PAYMENTS
LO ANS on ANY l lOME,
nY (}.1·nf'r: 4 Br., 2 ba. I C";iJhr<rl ral f.('1! lam rni.,
frplt· 1n l1v rn1., din O!'('a,
r<111'1'd !1ll t;.'. Full 11 lr
lhruou! ('I\', A Sc;ihury
h•11111' nr E:dison Jfi, other
.•1·hls .V. 12 n1i [rorn heh.
:~10-:;392, 21.lil Sand Dollar
L11. SJ.J,9::.0.
~ HP.. Prl's!it.::r hi1nl(', nr SL
&>1111v('nturc. Price rl'fiu(101I
$2j()'l. By (}.\·1l('r. Only $2MO
dn. or le•1~1•/opl. 163i2
Duchrs~ Ln .. ,~-1&-lOKl.
1i27 Anti$:u;1, i\'.B. INCOME HOMES BEACH HOUSE--0f)<'n !lousl· Daily 't1 I Sold. NE\V DU PLEXES $48,950 PAID FOR or NOT
$29,500 $77,:i!O. Rkr_ 646·553.~. NC\V TRJPLEXES $67 950 C0h1PARE OUR C 0 S T S
Q · I · --. . ' FIRST! u:1 1nt 1(1111~' :u·ra; rlo:<:r 111, * H arbor View Homes 1'001v und"r construction at FIRESIDE LOAN GUARAN-
P...cam cr"il's., fir . 10 cei!. J)rama1ic 2-story on llUG E 151 E, Bay st., Costa Mesa . TEE·
lrplc., p1c!ure \1·1ndo1v, rt•f., · 1 4 BR 3 BA T c I 1• J l 6'" Ann· · v1c1v ot. • • op onip e' u y. .,_.. . ...,,r. If you can get lht> SAME $14,000 -l Gr Medallion Con-\~·:i~hc>r . .I Ar \V/ha!h. Q 1. Tl 1 $67 9" A '·llSSlON REA L1'Y• ·l". I 0-,31 ua ity iruou · · ,JV. NE\\' DellLx Triph•x • 2-2 l . .OAN Jron1 any vTllER <lo. all blt11~. r(•[rig., Pile! " . .,. -v p<1tio. pool. quiet. $1 000 dn.. 0\l'ncr. 644-6249. Oeclmwn1 . 2 Ba., 1-3 LENDET< in California at l~t TD S.<;90(} S~i 'i"-b.r l. Be achfront Great View r·oR. sale hy 0,,.,·ner, Upper bedroom 2 Ba. Dbl. gara~c RATES LESS TI-IAN WE
7\1.!':fl 2nrl TD. fi7S-50:::1. 2 BRP, 2
1
BA
1
. ow,n·Your-O:wn Bay, 4 BR, 3 BA, fam rn1 .. each unit. $72,;ioo, 407 OFFER. r eturn the
Like lo trade? Our T rade r's
r•aradise column is for you!
5 lines, 5 clays for 5 bucks.
apt. oo. e eva or, security. \\'et bar, din rm & beaut. llamllton. C.l\1. 0 w n er· MONEY within 15 days, l!l.nd
5 Br ,i:, 3 ha. Heated pool. O v.• n er w·il l I " a :i1 f!, landscaping. Call 633--2233. agent. 645-4203, 833-8447. YOUR LOAN with us i&
Frpl in i\lastrr B . R., S4G 500 Dkr 21'· 84°5~ ' . "'· ;,-"'""• OPEN Sun. 1·5. 3 Br., den, BY Q,,.,•ncr, Cnp i strano ,FRE.E! Jt.C. WERNER $42.000. 9£8--2365 afl 6 pm. 714 · 499-3005 Pre d 1 -:;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;::;;;;;;:;;::;;;;:;;;;;:;;;.:.:;;:;::;;:;::;::;;:;:;::::;;:;:;..!.;;;;;;:;· :::::·;;;;· :o;;·O::;:;;;:;;::;;;;:;;;;;:;;= I din. r 1n .. POOL! 1618 Irvine Beach. 1 yr. old -~ Br .. s1 en
"" Ave. $49,950 .. ~9108. $50,000 or tradf! for lot. f'IRESIDE
IMMAC. 2 Br., 2 ba Condo, 536--034G. Thrlh
$~\\~N\-~'BirS"
The Punfe with the Built-fn Chuckle
O ;lear1onge letter$ o;if lh~
four Krombled word1 be·
low l o fi;,rm lour simple words.
FOYLEN I I I I I I'
I HUDON I ~!t ' I I I' I . .}
~-.-1 N-..ll_P..,l_O..,Alr'-ll ! The mon who is as busy ps
• • • • • -<1 bee' moy wake up 10 1ind
r---------.his -missing. . 4-.> I DELBIR I 1--,1.--.1-~1 -~_,~-i O Complete tne druc.~!e quot.d I IJ by filling In the rniulng word
_ .. . .. _ • .. You develop from step No, J ht!ow.
8 PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THfS E SQUARE S
0 UNSCRAMBl E ABOVE lEIT fR5 10 GET ANSWER ..
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800.
rrplc., bar, pool. $29,500 or Income Prooerty 1t.6 7128 Har~r-Bl .. C.M.645-1000
best offer. Ownr. 979--1478. 1!19 N. Main, S.A. 547--0684
Westclllf 32 UNITS 1 I TD L ----~~~-10vo• 2 .,,,.,, of easy livlnc. s oans • garden apar1 men!s near ·
RELAX·ENJOY Snnlo Aoa Counlry Club. 6'!<% INTEREST
u avE.' time with that family Sch<'dule shows 15% re1urn 2nd TD Loans
o f your! See this -4 bedroom. on 15~0 doWl'I. May ex·
3 bath home with large sett change. Listed pr i e e : Lowest rates n-..-Co. cleaning pool and cem('nt $445 000 <'all In estm t ..., .... ,..,
paddle tennis court. En!lre Dlvfaio~. 546-~. v en "WE. BUY TD'S"
yard sprinklert'l'.I. • • .S81.~ Sattler Mtg. Co.
14l2 LINCOLN LANE 642-2171 -11 \-0 T H I: RCAL
''""-ESTATCHS PETE BARRETT REAL TY Serving lfarbor area 21 yn.
642-5~ 911-95•;.
Conventiona l real estatt
W __ •_s_t_m_·_,._,_,_•_r __ ,---:!'' duplex facing common Joans. Mr. Adam!, bkr.
SHARP. squeaky clenn! 3 c'Otu·1 yru-d. Makes fine &44-7477 or 833-9303.
,__ home a.nd i n c o n1 e in-1 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
6 UNITS
BR . J ~ '-"'·· enormous 11 custom fam rm., patio rm vestment. All 2 bedroom in ~------~
ror camp(t't/trlt. 3tortge top condition. $9360 Annual I JI~) close to cverythlnc, priced inoome. $67,000. · HcMMefor,._ .
for quick tale!! Qwncr. Walker & Let; Inc. "-;mmmmm.::m~l 897-3672. s.4$-7131 •
ATTENTION Gl's * 6 u-N1t s"*.--IHou.., Furnished 300 '
IN EASTBLUFF Corona del Mar
'
!
!
'
'
!
'
' ' j
~
2
0
2
' "
I. ' "f J11nt 5, l 1'72 DAILY PILOT =· L'::::::::::.,,..~'.::'.':~:::-:::::=:--::=---::.:~~·~ .. ~=·~'"'~I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ [ _,,,_ l ~ [
r • ........ ...-....
I~ I..__-_ ... _ .... ___,,~ -·o:·~ ~~-I -"'"""'"""]~ [ "'""""1"••·c< j~[ _. ......... .,. I ~ :.[ iiiiiiiiiiii.'"_ .... _ ...... l
Hou1e1 FurniiL-~ 300 Houses Unfurn. )05 1 ••••••••• r_, Houses Unfurn. ltlS Apts. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn.. 365 Apt. Unfurn. )6J Apt. Unlllm. 365 Rentals to Share
A~ on Joi. Singlf'.1 or fam-
ilies, 2 Br &: Dc:n
Rent-A-Hou,. · 9794430
~-1 ~8~--
1'hrff bedroom, 1 btllh
rh8.J'Jnl'r with llll'g'e fcll(."C'd
yard and garage. $210 ptr
1nonlh.
Mes• Verde Coron.
I .l Bil., 2 a.., ga1nf' rn1.
Lt.-'1!11:" $300 mo. or M:il
$~.!150. <h~·11C."r, M:>-'1 1~2
M ission V iejo
del Mir
-~ ..
Costa Mes•
HARBOR GREENS
General G•neral
HIDOEN VILLAGE APTS.
Ho~llke l iving
Families Welcome!
2 BEDROOM-2 BATH
\\orli:UlJ:: girl 10 m..1rr bf.au.I •l'Ll.J.Y LICENSJ.:D•
i iiiiiiil ttpl \\ '·1111" l\nnht'll!I ~o neoo11orlt'1l lllnclu $p1r\tuahet. ohJer t f\I 5el)l'M •I "ii:r t..h1ltl ~~1 :t~Sj or Stl ·I.SI~. Sp1r11usJ Hrnd1ng.c 11'-'t'n
1------,----1 dai.ly, 10 A)I JOP:l-f. Ad\lke
SllAHl-; i'e1lt June, great i::h'l'n on all 1n;•Hl'rs. I can
hou.~t In La~1na. blk lron1 IK'lp you
ho·arh. $S'.:. 4!»-~167. 3!:! ;-., F'.J f":Hl\1 00 fll'al
4 BR -2 BA-POOL I C VVALl<lR & tH f'OI{ J,r:ii;t<. 3 Hr . 'l H:t ,
t:rpts, ilr,1pc-s, patio, ler11;1,,_t
ynl 11~lk lo ~chis -l\:o Pt'IS.
S~'liO n10 .'C7-!lli'I.
~
ON TEN ACRES Furnished &
Unfurnished
From $159
C'arn<'ts · Draoes ~ Air <;ondition ed · l~nc los
ed pat11J$ • J-leated P oot · 1-'orced 1\ir Jlcat ·
Carport & Storage.
Garages for Rent 415 S.-111 l 'l•·u rn1r
<l'rl-91.1\ "r 19:.!-~31 2ZilO SQ. fl horn(' ~·rplf' Nf'W ' n.caltUl'3 &Mi-77ll
furn1turi' Brau!. )ntls~·r:ict I zo.t1 \\'estcblf Drhc ' 1 • 2 BR. Furn, A Unturn. , l'l~1 :1·:'."T' \Vanlt•d : ClU'llS:"
f,1r 1~n11<••hol.1 ~10rls i.torai.;r
t;i J-JHJ.I : 67~.
l'l.'ll) Y()U RSEl.J."
)'ard. Pa tio. Gar a gr , OJX'n '11! ~ PriJ
:.; Br~. ~ 1::11J->,~l:1-,,-,,7h-· -,-.n-,.
p.11 •<'; tr•1wed y;1r~!. '\\lah·r I
rd. N" 1x'1s. 1\\ 1111. .July 1.~1.
$!~~i/11111. 714 , ~13-i !tU.
Fireplatta I priv. patio&.
Pools Tennt1 Contnti Bkfsl
900 Sea Lane. ~ &U-2611
(MacArthur n.r Colut H\l.·y!
From $120 to $215 mo
2500 South Salia, Santa Ana 546-1525
I\' W~11·:f):';~: F.LSF:.
~~i](l/IX'f ok. l 1111 , O{·i'1u1 e F>Z 1.1 \"'I~ 2 Ur. 2 sty,
$3.iO. I crptlrlrps, sto""· rt>fri~ ..
NU-VIEW REN TALS pet ok. Sl4:..
673-40.10 nr 4!'4-32-IR ALA Rentals e 64.S.-3900
B achelor, e 1 Bdrms
2 Bdrms • 3 Bdrms
(enler 2 bl ks \V. of llristol, off \\'arncr on
Linda \\"a y, sou th to \V. CC'ntral) Office Rental 440
DISCOVER
DISCOVERY
;11 1,;;., ti.'i.\.J 213/387-3393
Lagun1 Be1ch
Sl50. Lt ,t-Airy I Br nr tovon.
\'t'ry qu1C't. r-.la!tu·c & Pl'rn1.
Sl iO -l 111L pr!. 1 Br. apt,
"It ,, .. ™'"11 n & park .. ,
$1 •0 · I Br "'/fqil upr dplx
111'11 rul'n. \'u. r:;1r/\'rd .••
NU-VIEW RENTALS
1;jJ-IO'.IO 1)1' •1~~1-32.Jii
1-1~1 . O<'ran \'1'•11. I hlkV1c-
h1ria Bt'h, nirf'I~· furn. J.g
frpl. $235. 6'l2-12i2.
--,~ \\'alk lo •)<:('<Hl. 1 Hi·. pri\'<ill'
h<unr , SlnR les ok.
Rent-A-House 979-8430
N:?wport Beach
LJDO l sll!--4 BR, 2 BA.~~ blk
lron1 priv bench/club. An-
nual or hy m(J. li73-915!1.
Singles -1 Br unit SllS. +
Oi·E'an Vie\\' Sl2:'> uril pd
Rent-A-Haus~ 979-8430
Houses Unfurn. 305
G en eral
$75 · UNBF.l.IE\' ABLE l Dr
at th<' bc>ach. S!ovc/crpts.
flurry!
l 130 -COZY :.! Br., patio.
1'1"p!/rlrps, kitl:i/[)<.'ls firlC'.
Sl·lr'l · 2 BR OOLL!IOUST':.
en('! J:;a r, fncd yrd for child
&. pt·!.
~169 -SPAC IOUS~ Br. 2 Ba,
Lllns. crpt/rh·pi;, singles ok.
$Z1.-, -PJl!VATF. 3 Br Jlo1nr,
lrpl, ~ar, ch1!drE'n &. rct
\l'C'l!"OnlC'.
LA)l;l)LQR IJS! Do )'OU h111•r
a va('<111cy? \\'e can fill 1t.
~!any dcsirahle tenants fln
our v.·aiting list. Absolutely
l\O CllARGE.
BEACON RENTALS * 645-0 '.' 1 *
LANDLORDS!
\\'e Specialize in Newport
B&<tcli • Corona de! Mar •
& Laguna. Our Rcn!al Ser-
vicl'.! is FREE to You! Try
?\U-Vlf!'.\•!
NU-VIEW RENTALS
673-4030 or 494-3248
S190 l\lonth. 2 Bedroom.
Ne1,·ly d('{'()raled in~icle and
out. l'\o Fe<'. 842-66!11 or
962-5566.
Corona del Mar
SJ&; - 2 Br .. frpt , :-;lv/rt'f ..
C'/D, gar. child/pt"! .. _ .
SZOO -2 Br. Tll. h1\11s, r!bl
c-11 rport. pool. .. _
s22:, . 2 Br., 2 Ba. rcnr hi1c.
•;11'/r('f. ctn. gar, )I'd.,
p;il
$2'.lO • U111. pd. rear hse.
Slp/rrf. CID, patio, gar.
~27.i -:.! Hr .. frpl, 1111 cpl. yrd,
i.:ar., pa1io, 2 blks oet•an. -.
S290. 2 13r, ,i::.ir , )1"d .. p;d1fl,
o(X'n hm~ .. frpl. Nlc'C' ..
~:-.6:1 -2 Br .. 2 Rn .. 2 frpl.
bms, hu,i::r J./H. A 11
rea!u1·rs~.
NU-VIEW RENTALS
Gi:t-40:1() or ilfl-l-324S
•• Dl!PLEX BflA N D
NE\V. llU.':e dlx (l"'f'l('r's
unit. 3 RR.. 3 8 A .
F ireplace, bl lins. 1800 sq. ft.
+ 3 d~ks v.·/view o( bay,
OCi'an , & hlUs. Walk to bch
& shopping. l yr lse. $25.
Refs. require<'!. 673-0960.
e SPAC, 2 Br w/!rplc, f.ncd
yrrl. 1>nrl gar, S22S.
ALA Rental1 e 645-3900
e HEAR This! 2 Br, encl
gar. nu c.rpti1, ulil inc $230.
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
S.'i.'iO per mo. Exc!u~ive
Irvine Terr. 4 Br .. 21 i B3 .,
forn1l din rn1., 2 lrp!c.~ ..
v.·nlls of sliding glass pnl'lt'ls
OJX:'J\ onto spac. gardens &
brick patio!, even a large
~ize playhouse. 0 w n e r
67~90.
2 BR, stove/refrig .. prl\'a\e,
cozy, frplc. Rear quar!en
'""'/bath for mothtr-i n-law
or student ~ L s e .
67~JJ:'j],
2 BR + Dl'.!n. Ila~ rvery-
lhing. Bring !he kids.
Rent .. A-HouH 9794430
Cott• Met•
e BEST BET! 2 Br. fncd
yrd., encl gar., kkf!/pets.
$1 42,
ALA Rentel1 e MS-3900
e JUST RELAX~ 3 Br., 2
e CC):\IF'OllT! 2 Br , frple, t,"""' Ct'1J , ktds/pns nk.
$1&")
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
t:ASTSJDE, 3 llr, l·\ Ba,
bl!n~. l\'ashl'r & r!J"~C'r. lnrgl'
ynrd. 1:0. '\ 26 'J"i'1'e shad"tl
<leek \1·/B!lQ f1~h pond. 2
Clir dr1:11·h~i' ~;u-., all1'y :u·-
r·r.~s. S2'l:l ,\lo. U'asi>, \\1:11rr
pall!. AL«HI 6-1. 5J7-7i6!t
e BJ-:LJEVE? C'.:izy I Br Co1-
!:1g£'. \\'alk lo slores. s~.
ALA Rentals • 645-3900
e f.·n1::~ll & Clean! 2 Hr.
fnNI yrd , encl g a r _ ,
t'hild/p<"l. Sl-10.
ALA Rentals e ~5-3900
BUSINESS
ZONE
E-sidr . ruli', 3 bf'd1'()()m,
f1r1•pl<1t'P J1{lll~"-Cornl'r.
Principals only.
BllOKER G42·999fi
l\tf:SA DEL !'11AR 3 bfil!'Q011l
home v;ith carprti;, drares
and big CO\"t'ff'd patio.
J-"amilies only. Ganll'ner in-
('luded at $2'75. per month.
Call Agent, 546-41-11.
2 BR & 3 BR, crpts/drps,
r ice. frpl., r~frig., s11J1c,
patio, gar. fncd y r d .
\\'asher 6 ,16-6961 or
&16-1246.
EA"TRA n1cl' J Br., 2 baths,
lov('Jy pa!lo. B!rns, 'll'llhr ..
dryer. Avail. June 6th $350.
1110. incl. garrlcncr.
Burr \\'hite Rltr. 67'.>-46'.lO
2 BR "'/gar. Sl-10, fncd yrd
v.·/palio. \Vtr pd. 2228
Placent ia Ave (8). Call btv.-11
1 & 5. G.'16-4120,
~---~ /\:!C l·: 2 BR, fenc<'d yord.
Prl'f('r young coup!(', $95
1110. t).lj...J863 C\"C'~.
EXECUTIVE 2 BR & tj(~l.
S'.l7J, Adj. S1\·in1 & tennis
cluh. Avail !lO'ol'! :i.'ii -4-l!i7
2 B1L • 229;. Orange A\'e.
$18:i. 1no. A1·aii 6/j
642-064~ or 678-3261.
Huntington ileach
*'VE have a large 3eJectio n
or 3 and • bedroom homes
!hat can be n'ICl\'ed into
almost immediately on our
R<'nt·Optlon plan ,
SHERWOOD REALTY,
54~555
3 Rr., 2 Ba., bltns., drp~.
\\'/1v crpts, fnccl, rt b I
garngE", nr sch! & shop'g
center Repaintcd. $250.
Open 10 ;1n1-3 pm. 17631
l\l 1sty Ln., 118. 962-1391.
3 Br, 2 Ba. Elff. bit-in r ange
& oven. Forced air heal,
Crpt.~. 60x100 fl'ncl'd lot. Dt:i
l gar, landscaped, vacant·
movl'.! in today. $225 mo.
A$:cnt. 962-4411 or 546-8103.
t;O\\'~ 3 Br, at Pac Sands.
Frplc, patio. bttns, v.·1\v
.<ihng, c-nhana clh, \Valk In
OC'C'an. !tent or Option, S199.
536-7511, 8341 i\1unstcr. ll.B.
:fbr townhouse for rent,
2 Ba, bltns, frplc, $185
19742 Coventry, H.B.
833-1103, or 5#-9754
'1 STOHY 4 un.3 h.:i. :1 ,·ar
~arag~in rm-ran1 rm ..
frrlc, bU ins, crpts, dr:i(X'~.
l\r 11 r J')('ach. Avail afl 6117.
$.".6."i. 968-672!)
3 BR CONDO, 1 Y~ BA, pool~.
patio, dbl gar, trpl. nr
OC<'<in. 962--0086 a ft 5 pm.
$130 -Single.'! or couples 2
l~R ho mf'. J''rncert H.B.
Rent·A·Hous e 979.1430
Irvine
2 BR., 2 bath.!l .• ,. •.•.. $]()()
3 BR., 2~ baths .... , , . $3'.IS
3 BR., 2 baths ••• _ S.150/365
(ired hill
REALTY
Univ. Park Center, Jtvinc
Call Anytime 833-0820
Office hourw 8 AM lo 8 Pi\1
:'\'E\\' ? i!rc·ond", sini::le st.\·,
t·1·p1, drp, bllns, par10, i::.Lr.
povl pn-. S200. S3()-:,.~1
Newport Beach
Sli."1 -:.! Br , Z Ba., over gar.
hltns, c-rp!, drp.s. . .
S?IJ -2 Rr .. 2 Ba. dplx IJ!tns,
r/d, gar. l'\µt Shor<'!'.
:? RDIL\IS., 2 baths: frpk·.
}'an1ast1c O<'t'an vil1;1'.
S·l2J :1-\onth. No pi•ts
\\'illlarn \Vinton Rl'all-01'
2'29 :\lar1nc A\<'.
Ralboa Island 61:>-:331
Sl-IARP & clean 4 Berhoom.
2' ~ hath \\'alk to beach.
f'an11ly prrferrl'<I. :\!<on!h tn
n1on!h. $390 pr month Call
\lr Haik'Y. 673-S:Ul.
I Y2 o r 2 Full B•ths
1 :\lastL·r ~11c h1-droorns ".;
li!g h lx·a111 t•eL1111gs, l11ri.:1·
l l\lllJ; l'OOTI\ \\/l;llS 1•r1
11 uod bul'n1ni; fil"<'j )l:\l'•'
Cllnvcni<'nt lnundry Il l'• ;1
uff kllChi't1. }~neloS<'d p1i-
t1os. 2 S\L'in11nu 1:: p.11.i~. '
,,:"tuna, r c.-rrahon fa1·il1·
tit's. Sccu1·1t) gu[1rd.
Models Open 1til 9 p m .
VILLA MARSEILLES
SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEOROOM APT.
Furnished & Unfurnished
Adult living
Oi .o;;h\\·asher rolor coordinated appl!an r es
Plu~h shag ~arpet • 1n irrored "'a rdrobe doors·
1nr\irert lighting: in kitc hen . breakfa~t bar •
hu ge privijj.e frnrt>d pl tio . plush landsl'.;1p-
ing: • brir'k Bar·be·(.)U<'s · large heated ponls
& l:in<ti t\ir con ditioninc.
Lll·:SK spatt ava.tlable $50 l'HllBLJo:l\I Pregnancy. Con·
100, \VIII provide tuntitutt JJd('nt, ~yn1pat.~Uc. prega.n-
at $.'i mo. An.~~·er'-i:ig Sl'f\'iC"f' 1·y rou~·lu1~. Abortion &
8\'a1lsble. 17875 Beach 8:\'d. Adi•!1!11111 n •f. APCAJlE_
!·lunting-lon Beach. 6-12-1321 f..l~'-lflfi. -------Df-:SK "f'o'IC"t" il\':Ui:ihle S50 !)() il \'IUl'Sf.'!r <l Iv 0 r c ,.
rnn. \Vtll provide fumitutt Nl'1\por1. C.'o~'" l\I f'' a
rir $.i mo. An~~·er1ni:: ser.rice l\lau.ic•'IUt•1\I ('111'p IJ73-1it,1.
a\'aill\bJe. 2Z! f ofl.'i;t A\'l", ---1...,,l!llnn Beach 494-!)4f-.6 AW)lll.)1.1(."...; Annnyn)f)U•
---Phon•' d~-1117 pr '1 r 1.-
BAY VIEW OFFICES P.O. 1~'' l~J:~. (\)i;t11 ~h·~.1 $Z7J -2 llr hs1•. 11 /frpl ,
blrrh. r1n. i blk r•l'l'an ..
S:l2~) -Lr::. 1 + loft. blrns,
fr•p!. dt't'ki; On 11'/\ll'I' .
2 BB, blt1ns. poul. \\'alk t<• 12700 Peterson Way, CM
l>f';irh . $200-111), O ran.!? c nr H arbor Blvd &
3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana 557·8200
COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 535 Soc ial Clubs 1:, 1,,,,,,,1,..1 l~ulo :1 r1•a.
sioo . 3 'f" FIB. 2000 ft., dbl
lrp!, (lo<ll. K1ds/fx'l.'i.
Co..i~t R!.'al Estate, &\4-.l,"-IS. Adams MANAGING AGENT _,.,,1,.,,,.1111,·..;, 1:;.1·. /,jj tiiOO ?11F.i\1Bf..ltSllll' l'\.B. ·r,•111,,
l---:;--:\IHP1\J\'l" ,\t{t;,\ .-f "tul> .. ~700 llli'I. fN'. ~:l::.-'iOill1\
$•12.i -Jl arl'Klr Vic1v 1
F/H, 2 bH, li!lns, lrpl, gar,
yrtl., patio. !'ool pr11·1L ..•
NU-VIEW RENTALS
1 Bn, J."rankli11 lrplt:.,
i:nr, ~101·c/n.'frig.
rq1!, ln1J~-vny, $200.
675-ll"JO.
nvcr
~hllg
""'
.~~~=~~-, DELUXE DUPLEX. 2 Ar, 2
B<•. ~21i.1.
32:! Jasn1111f'. {;7::.-8550
546-5025 _A_p_t._U_nfu_m_. ___ 365_ 1 Apt. U r1furn. 365 ,,rU. A 1q~qlt·1· 11,oi"l. nt;i~1~f' ~·1·~ ~.:~n--l~l l7 H:1rh11r;i. ,
1-'.!-.1 f1"<0n1 su11° '· 1.0\\ F.~r T ravel 540 I Costa Mesa Newport Beach * LOOK * LISTEN * LARGE *
* LIVE 1 NEWLY DECORATEO
Beautiful Grounds
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
l{ATJ·:s. 11>::.!. r'h1r .. 11 r Dr.,
1T11ln1 II. ,r:~-2:':·111. (l~~Fll,F-C.-S.-~:,9 &·--$0~.~~l.~17\'~H'll SET SAIL
TAHITI
.1.-•1•1wu l1•. Nr;1r lith .SL, bank Grand t!I l\1n.~lf'd Si·hl'\f'lt l• 1
6i3--4030 <tr· il91-32•1S
Three to !:I B1•droorns, 31 ~
baths, pool, 2700 ,o;q f! J\vln~
!iJltlCC'. Suilsihlr for large
fan11ly. n1othcr-i n-lu1\'. hil-
liard roon1 01· n1;iid c1u:1rtr1·s.
\\'ill lt!:.LS1·, OJ' J('aS(' optJOTl,
or sell 11 it h low cash do11·n.
$-175 IX'L' n1onlh. 64!i-7171,
C0:\1PLETt-..: Bach. Apt., 2 LOOI\ at the big lrC'C's, hti.;
lilks Bii! Coron;1. 1 Adult. rKi I
111 i\1111ulC's 1n {)(•£•an
Clos1 · to l1u~ lnl(' & i-trirr~
(~!IS lil'HI r..· :'ho\'•'. ,, .1ti·r.
l~;11·;•A1'. 1~1·1· lt111, L;Lundr.\
ltuon1 1111:IU•h•1I.
on the bay ,\ -h··pj) ng. :.1s-SJ!S. C J'{'\V & (;ll(•"ti; ~h:u';• ('(JS[,
Business Rental 4CS (213) 378-1239 iv1n~ noon1 11•1th f11·cpl111·1'. p<'t~. ~130 ult! ptl. yrly, ill" p:i!1(1, "\ hrdl~l(llH!<, t •_
t.u...:111',\' ,1p:11·tn11·11! 1111111.: 01·
1•1 )fotJ!,111>: rh,· 11 .11, l' J:ni·i~
S~~~l,()(Xl hr;i!rl, "/J.l. ';° ~II 1111
1n111g 1~~·!', 7 !1..:!1!•'1 1 l•·n
111s , 0111·1-.. r•lu.. 1111i.-, .. r
hl•'Y• h· H'n1t". pulll111'. ~lu1I
rlrl•IJl'd , 'r·~ILI• I .JurlltH' 1"«
fn1111 ~Jt..1 -~1 n1011lhl}: 111, .. 1
and 2·1M•1 lr\KU11 plan-. .11111
'l \IOI\' 1(1\\ 11 hou_,,., l>'I····
lrh' k11, 1i .. u ... , Jll l\al•• 11ar 1"~
nr halruna·~. <"ilr[l•'l1111;, 11/',1
[)<.'llt•s. Sul111·1T.1r1•'i•ll p;,rh
NOW LEASING 61:! ...... .-),,'0 .... .~---o--~ b.nth.~. \~'ill 11111~11 h • ~111! l' ! trnnnt. , lost and Found jlr\l
3 Bdrn1. housc-, lrg. yard,
~uil lrel's. fu!l IJasemenr
for hohby nr 'll'Orkshop. Neil'
BACllELUJt :1pt for q uie!
n1an, I)() • .O)(lk1n~. Utilities
11aul. Pat1(1. Cl•1!(l' to ~tores.
6+1-i7t!J..
1--UR:'\. ApL S14f>.Util l'a.i<I.
1 ~ bfrlC'k to Oct-an. l'\o pets.
2;i00 Sc<av1e'>I', Cd~!.
Costa Mesa
11 /w t'rpt'~. 2 \\'ks free rrnt * $30 WEEK & UP *
in r:.:t"h11.nJ.:I' f o r i•n-e Studio & 1 DR Apls
provcn1C'nt 11·ork. 1 chikl. no e TV & ?<.laid Scrviec Avai l
prls. C;dl Crori:e. 61f.-70il. e Phone Si'rviet>-H !d Pool
IRVINE Tcrra~c-gr,t('\ousl.v 1 • ·c;1ildren & Pl't section
decnm.tcd J:1m1ly hoinr. 4 2376 Ne11·port Blvd, Ci'tt
Br, 21~ Ra.~ f11ilc, p;1 tio-lrJ.: ~148-9755 or 645-3967
yard S5j0/n10. O 11' 11 c. r HOLIDAY PLAZA
6T":i-03ro.
ii BH, fan1 rm, din rn1, 2 ba.
l larbor Vie11• l\1ontt'~. Pool
privilcges $435. 83:1-.1894.
LSE or Opt. 2-WO sq. ft, ii
BR., s.12: .. 220-1 Donnie ll.d ..
N.B. B.1ck Bay. Avl. 6/26,
642-261'1.
2 BH .. I f!a. t rpts .. 11111~. stv,
1~·f1'1g. yr lse. I blk 10 bch.
&. hay. 673-6620. -----LEA.SL llaroor V1l·11•
llomf'~. 2 BR & Il<'n. 811 im
Club. S'.l75. mo. 64'1·5791.
Houses fum. or
Unfurn. 310
Newport Beach
BAYFRONT
5 ilr, .11~ ba, pirr & float.
1\11nu:iJ ll';i:o;c• SllOO 1110. St11n -
111er only Sll,OCKI for 4 nio"s.
THI:: IH\VIN CO.
RP.AL TORS lit\1-6111
~----Condominiums
Furn. 315
Newport Beach
PAP.K Lido 3 BR. J BA, I,~
rnLll' fro1n hrat·h. ul1 I pd.,
pool. Avsil 6/15. $500.
64:>-1522 or &15-3639
DELUXE Spacious l J3R.
furn apt. $135. Hcatrd pool.
Ample parking. Adults -
nn pets. 1965 Pomona Ave ..
c.~r.
-2~B~,,--~U71~il-.-p-a~;d~.~!~l-~,,-,-
Tn7 Maple St.
Scl8-5913
ONE Bdr1n . Adults, no pets.
Pool & utiHtiC'S included.
Sl4:rS150. 645-6424. Garage
+ p:u·king & slora~e
Furn. Bachelor & 1 Br's
especially nice. 2110
Newport Blvd., CM.
NICE 1 & 2 BR Trailers, S80
& up. !<.1ature adults, child
ok. No JX'l.S. 642-1265.
LRG nicely fu111 . 1 Br. Encl
g:ar. Quiet. Adults. No pets.
24!'i2 El1l<'n /\V<'. 646-2768.
NE\\'LY remodeled Bachelor,
utir pd. Quiel. Gar. Sll5. Nu
cpts. 548-8251 or ~S-1405.
1 BR. S1~. 2 BR. SHiO. Ideal
for h:irhelor.::. i;pac., s/ponl.
: .. 1."\-96.ll 1993 Church St.
NEAR OCC. Bach" Io r ,
Ca rport. laundry faeiliti('s.
$11;,i. No pets. ~-
Huntington 6e•ch
Condominium'
Unfurn.
G eneral
320 LaQUINTA HERMOSA
Span1i;h Country Estate Liv·
UIJ.: & Spacious Apts. Tcr·
racr<l pool: sunkf'n .i::as
BBQ. Unbchev;ible Living -
Onl;y
2HR. 2B A. 2 story. cnrpt.'I~.
clr:iprs, i:;in1i:c. JlOOI. I\!C'S.'I
Vf'rdr Villa., S200 n10.
:>l:->-{006
Irvine
NF:\V pl11!ih 2 Bil Nlnilo.
Adults. $18.i. inn. :121-li612;
R71-IWG or s2:1--t!34
1 BR · FURN. $175
ALL UTrt.JTJES PAID
(4 hlk~ S. of San Diego Fl"\I')'
nn nr•;u:h . .\ hlk \\/. on Ho/!
10 Hi2l1 Parkside L.1nc.)
(714) 847-5441
Duplexes Unturn. 350 I
----·------Sl'.l."1. I BR. M('dallion Condo.
Corona del Mar 1\ll hllns, refrig .. encl p;i!lo,
pn•ll. Quiel, no r rt s -
2 BIL 2 RA. rlrps, \l'/v.·, I 6i:i-.:ll3-1.
frplc, sn1l patio. \\'alk 11) N,,---rt-.=---~h----
llC'Rch. Artulls, nn [)<.'!~. ewpo uwac
S225/n10. Yearly. &12-fG~. e \VINTER RENTALS e
Ne wport Beach 1,2,3,•I BR. R.c>scrve No\1":
ABBEY ll EAL TY 6-12-38:i()
VERY nice 3 BR., 2 Ba ..
frpl.. bltn~.. cpld. Closl' to
channel. $275 mo. Adults, no
pets. 979-4190 f'Vt'.
2 BR, 2 BA, bltn.~. p111in,
Sl<'PS to OCC'nn. frplr:. $250. I
yrly. 644-T:f.17; 675-~.
Apt. Unfurn. 3 65
G eneral
ON THE BEACH!
I BR. Furn & Unlurn.
FROM ONLY $175
----, r -OCF.AN QUEF:N
LISTF:~ lo !hi' ,,pJ;ishini.: J
fnunt<ii n in !hr j!n1·df'n, th1'
friendly ehn!IC'r RI lhr pool.
l!IC' easy-lo-takt• l'('lll.
LlVE a llttlc--al lh£' "in"
pl ace kno11·n for unmRtchcd
managen1t'nl, 1mp(.'£'cnblc
1lrtu iJ.
Ll!\J-: IT '. Call fAG--6:?15
FAIRWAY VILLA
APARTMENTS .
20122 S11nl;i Ana A1"f'.!'>'16-(,2Ei
west.BAU 20
Sparkling new adult apts.
1 RR ................... $160.
2 BR. l ba1h ............ $183.
Also avail fu rnished
Pvt. patios, lush fof'f'St S<'I·
line-. c.1rports, gai; pd . I
1.14 E. 20t h SI., C.~l. ~~\R--0\3j
NJ:~\\' 2 Bil Tn1vnhOUSI',
<'llrloSN:I palio and g:tr:igf',
l"arport, pool, rrpts ,'.;
drapes. C.ootl lor'al1on. S210
monthly. l\1r. Ca r s \V c 11 .
54~7507 e\'l'S.
LUA'URY upr 2 BR frip!x,
$13.i. \\1/w, drps, bltns.
encl. gar. huge closets.
Perm. t1d ults, no pets. Avail
6/16. 5411-005!1.
f'RPLC. fJvcrsizetl sunkf'n liv
rm, 2 BR. 2 Hn. \V/W crpt~.
hltns, fl..'\1iCl, encl gar. S17:i.
673-5629.
--~-~~-t Dr 1\'/den-2 B:t.
2 Br. Ad11l1s, no !l('ls
R1\ 'i' rilF.i\DQ\\'S AP'TS
387 \\!. Bay St., C.\I 646--007.1
UPSI"AIRS. 2 Br unfurn.
arlulls only, no pets, Sun
deck, Private g a ra ge .
545--1:191.
1 BR. Sl40
2 BH. Sl l~l. $1ll:.. s1::;
H acienda de M esa
lf,O \\I. \\'1h11n, A11t. 1, ('\1 -----
N ew Villa Pedro
Fnn1il11•::; \\"f'lcon1e
2 Br., '1 full Ba. sha!':' rrpl/
drps, patio, beam l'C'll, car·
ages.
Fron\ s 1~:;.
23'.::2 Elrl1>11 Avt>., C.1\1.
!°>'18-8224
l\1ovr in all1111 aner, !his J<I.
T!0:\1E sizr•d apl., :; B~:z
h;1. C1•p! /drps., dislnl'shr.,
1l1i;po;;!, frplc .. 1ihl g:ir .. e nel
y.1n!. Childrrn ok. $2'60 n10 .
~IG--0·169 or :,~7-10-l4.
JlATIO or DEN-2 Br,
2 Ba, S150. A1lult~.
Call 546-7331.
Huntington BeaCh--
ON BEACH!
FURN. & UNFUR.."l.
2 BR. From $263
ADULTS ONLY
F'umitl.1re Availablr
C a r p ets-drapes.-flish1\·ashcr
heated pool-saunas-tennis
rec room-0e@a.n vie\\'S
patios-amp!!'.! parking
Security Guard~.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
711 OCEAN AVE .• lJ.B.
(114) 536--1487 ore open 10 am-6 pm Dally
\VILLIAil WALTERS CO.
BC: ONC: OF' 1'11E rnu,-r
TO LIVF. lN THIS
JUST COMPLETED e Luxury I br apt.
1~·:1,111i.: IM•11. :I I' :I l I ;i h I~ . . LJJ ~1/l • 141\l + :->11 ft.IL-------' l\1,~)kh111'!\t at C; a r r 1 ,~I d • I•••••••••••
f-"nun1a111 \'.111".'· C J\ LL Found (frff ads I SSG
.>1(1...":•.~·-
SH E RWOOD REALTY
E:-slDE
C.M.
t 'ul•·, fil"l'·
Ull.: \\1th t•ll'V!tlOrs. ()pl11111:1I pl.h'I' lulu .......
FOUND F r m "le
Chihuahua, tan. Near l~!h "-
ll-1onrovia, C.1'1. 645-0565.
BIG hl;u·k n1f1lt• !ah. Vic !'.1111-
ta Ana A\'f'., C l\f. No ool-
lar. :-.1i;.373~ •.
nudd s•'rvi1•c. ,Ju;;t n1ir!h uf l'rint"lplll:-; only. ~·a st11nn Island at .Junlhorrl' BltOJ,J-:Jt 642-9996 1'--0UND man's 1vatch v lclni--
1-----------1 ty Main Strett. Hullti.i'lgton <n1d San J•111q11in !1 111.; 1:n11il s·1·<11t1-:s f•ir !1•1\'"', l'IOO or Brach. 642-92X7.
'/',•l1•pho 111•· 101 ~! lill l'"~I :.:_~~~· ~q . 11 , ('p!,; ,(,, :-;ign, -.---.--, ~~---1
(or r1•111:L1 1111tt'n11 1111"1! rr;idy 1., ~o. ,\l<1Jt1r ..,hnpping foun1l ~ 2 VI<'. l.llh & Ornn~i',
A t ,.,.111,,r, s:,11 (' l r Ill,. n le , C.i\·l. ."inl. 11·h1~1' m.a.11• beige PF~·;n. or Unfurn , J 70 _l'.11-31:,;. " ('ut·s & !'>l)(Jl s .. >'l:-1-I:i.s2.
Costa M esa -i\!'i ._ { .se •I~"' i>q. !.. , 1\1 ··1·1·1 I 1••• I 1 2 Lri.:. tnnlt> Coll1c, viC'. Santa
11r:: l't't;,11 u1 11i~ .. \l<·~'adci<'n Ana•"-J-:11i11i::cr 11.B. 1146-3611
SqUfLl"f' 111 J\\'111)\")J"! Beach S..\I \LI. i,:1'{'y ki!t('ll. Vic 23rd.
Summer Rentals _1 ·~~~1.~-.-~~.i.•,. .~ San r11 Ana A\!'('. &WH>219.
PALM MESA APTS. * * Store/l)ff1ci'. g IR! s f'ND. Blk & "'hi puppy, \·ic.
~llNUTES TO Nf"T. HClf. 1 l1~pl:.y 1·a~·-no11n1own Boys' Club in C.!\1. 642-4703.
FlillN. or~ U:'\Fl'HN 11.n. :?11\-~th st. ~11., !X'r mo. lost 555
Unhr/iev11bly la n::r ;q)I~.. ._:i;....(A107.
huge pool, J acuz7.1 e!ert hi!-fli-:1·,\lcL-,1-,,-V-.,-,.-.,~,.-.-.,,-Th~C' R E\rArtD. \\'h1!f' male, ff'y
ins, sh:1i; crpts, tlrp~. SlllHli\ }"actul'}, $l7."J. 1110, Sec No. 9 poo<llr . T11.i.:: has n a m~
cl<·. Arlults. no Jl('ls. fo1r 1nfu fJ r 6i3-~)G. '',lot·ko.''· Nr. !\·tagnolt.11 le
SING LES ,, ..• t~n:un $11i • ()F FICF-f"M' fl ·I GRrfil'ld. 962--4140, 962-17fi6.
l fll"IJrt M •·· !140 · """·"11 ;ii noiv. I:~~~~~~~~~~ ·• ' ••..• r roin ,'\10 Y], Ft, J.\'[)lJ:O-,TRlAL
2 B~R ~'I. • "• l-_'rom $1fi0 :-;\l()f' uvl A11 . fi46-'.ll'.l0
You re r li.?h!, llu•y re under-J:. • I 1114']
priced! 1561 Mesa Dr. Industrial Rental 450 lmtructklll
(3 blks fron1 Newport Blvd.) · 546-9~ NEW DELUXE M-1 Units. 3
P, h,. "°-'.'e r. 1733 Monrovia School• A 1 .t l HI{ furn or unfurn 3 836-f'hildren's :;f't'l~1n. J'qoJ. .i l,,-, l·l.i. 9798 eve~. ln1tructfon1 575
$140 Up. EL:\1 GAHDENS Rentals Wanted 460 ~""REE auJ!a.r, voice or pWlna
le11sons with thll ad. (1lf) APTS. 17i 1-::. 22nd St. C.:'11
r~12-3&r1.
NE\V 0-,,-, ~!Jed~,-'00-m-~!I~<-:).
Ulililic,o; pd. i j\J 1-.J<lC'n,
C.1\·I. 5-1.'t-1657.
Huntingto" Be•ch
NEW SANDPIPER
HELP! HELP! 847-9562.
HELP! 1~~~~~~~1 JO to 10 Prr,·1·111 nf the Hun·I.:
dn·d ... o( Pa1·ilic Mutua.I [ s.rv· nd ".,...,. l~
en1ployr" rnov1ni: to this ICU • ~
nren ptTli'r 11, rcnr before
• Adult Early hird S!)('C!a!s-1 BR
tlley buy. if you have a •••••••••••
IK1n11> or . lln apl.u1menl Babysitting
an}'\1•hel"l' 1n rhr greater ""'""°"'"'°0"".,_, _____ 1 e Dish\l.·ashers from $'12.i, 2 BR from $155
• Q1oic<' of 2 color schemes Furn/Unfurn, cool color In-llarbor area thnt you wish BABYSITTING in my home. * • BEAUTTf-UL l & 2 BR. e Custom carpeting 1cr1ors, pool, Jacuzzi, more. to rent, ,.,:ould you please Bt·Rch & Parle lrip!'I
Contl."mporary Garden Apts.
PRlios. frplc., pool. $11-...
SliO. Call S.l&-51f .. '1.
• Jacuzzi 8081 llolland Drive, Jlun-
• lleatf'cf pool linglon Beach. S.17-9a95.
call u~. \\'c have particular ~Tesa Vf'rde art'a. 557-'54S
need for hon1cs 1n Corona VACATION l\IOTl·IER catt
lirl !\tar.
SPAC!OL:S J RR ;1pl hu1n1'.
Frplc .. gar .. lrg priv. patio.
B1•1n1L l11d.~l"PI'.:-Ad ul!:;. S:l\l."1,
~.1r..-1016.
• Dcart-bolt IO<'kf: I Newport Beach e On!y Sl-10 prr mn. _.......,. --------
BAHIA PUERTO OAKWOOD GARDEN
2S10 J7t.h St., H.H. 5::64 8'\':i I A partments
Ln:-. 2 BR. Crpti;, rlrp~. h!lnl'I. Adult.-. Only)
COLWELL
PROPERTIES, INC .
REALTORS
fnr your hon1e It chlld~n
11·hi1C' _\'fJU V:\t'fltion. XJ11'l
refs. IX.~rxla ble, drives.
&1:i-~1·1i 1. ----~---Carpet Service
$170 -2 rhildrn ok . .1 Bil. l'\
Ill\. !ndr:r. c r p t Id r r s ,
r!sh\\·shr, no pc'!s. ;,.1:-.-:i21~1-
SEA AT R APT s--=$11s· 1 (lll·surt L1\'1ng for
1 hlk N. of Adams orr Brach NE\VPOllT BEACH WANTED JULY 1
Blv. 729 J\'11. 6 Ulica. !Gth nt Irvine
1-~===~~~~-JOHN'S Carpet I: Uphob'tery
r-):16·27~ flr ~~16-7070 fl'15-0!'{'I() or !~12-SliO RESPONSIBLE
:.! UH. np1 unfurn-l'h1!dT'('11 r0k ;~~~~~~~~~~! WORKING COUPLE -11n rwt~. 126 :'11onlr' \'is!a 2 nri A11I. Closl'd "Ur. (''pt:-;, I " nl'cc ont or l\\'O bcrlroom
A1·i'. <lrps. Child & sin. prt ok. 1~ hnusc 1vif h largl'.! fenced
Sl"AC!OUS 2 Br. nr shops, ~'='~"~"='='='~="'~'°=· ~---~ Rtntals~ .vard (for two VF..:nY 'VELL
hl)"S, o.c.r .. /.: U.C.I. SH'i~l. llEDF:CORATF.f> 2 hr TnAINF~D doi;::s) S13.i most.
C:ll! [)i9--0l:t4. rlup!('x, nrar bch. $1:-~. lob Vic-: bf'hvrcn 19\h & VlcforlA
LR • 3 3 2 9fi2-T.'l4~ Rooms -lnrar \\I, Bny St.I COSTA v .. I r.. Br1, f'-1 JICIS. . ·~~--------------1 Children ok. Nr srhls & WALK to Beach ROOi\lS $Jj v.·k UI" 11·/ki!. $30 _>_1F_:._sA._ 54R·7R.'ol_l_/aft 6 p.m.
shopg. $1 70/rn(J. 515-8!'191. 2 Hr. crpls, drps, dsh1\·hr_ \vk Up Apts, 2376 Ncwport EASTBLUFF
1 BR. Gara~e. Yard. Crpt..;, ifY.J Palm. * 847-3957. Bll,d, C:\1 548-97;).1. \\"A-..;1·~:n BY J UN.I'..: 18Tll :
415 ~~'\l't'utl\'C & family is
~1·,,k1ng a yar's lease on a
Cll'aner s. Extra
Dri-.o;:l1<11npoo Ir~ e Scotch-
guarr1 1~11 RC'tnrdantel.
DC'grraser.o; ,i;._ all color
brightcnrrs & 10 m inute
blrru·h for \1·hitc eru-pc.ts.
Save your money bJ .saving
mr t'Xl ra trips. Wiil clean
ll1•111g rni., dining nn. &
hli!t SL'i. Any nn. $7.50,
rouch $10. Chair ~-15 yrs.
exp. is \\"hat counts, nol
me!llOd. l rlo v.·ork myself.
Good ref. 531--0101. drps, $130/mo. Avail Junf' 12 RR. duplC'.'< dcJ1\·nto1vn, Guest Home
8. 316 E. 16th St. rrpt.~/!lrp~. s!O\'(', S140/rno.
NE\V 2 BR. 2 BA $1!13. Nn f,;lf,_~;i(Ji. *PRIVATE ROOM*
JX'ts. No childl"l'n. 2293-B ZRR i;ludios dE"lux-adu!ts, 2 for amtiulatory Pt'fsnn l.iocMI
Foniham. 5-13-614S <:vcs. olk.~ from ocean • call aft food, nicc chrcrtul i;11r1"Qund-
J or 4 bcdrm Ea.~t:iluff STEAM Carpet Cleaners,
f)('!nt£'. \\'llling ro pay up to profcuional at I o \Ye s t
S:OO :i n1onth. CA L L prices. 3 avg rms complcie
Ii f,1-743.~-$39.95. "9C--067l.
l.ARGF. 2 Rr., crpt/drp:i;, !:1:30 962-306."• ings. * Call 5'1S-4i53 + WANTED Carpenter $ 130/ mo. 2'°"B~D~R=>71.-, -,7h.-,g-«°""l>I-, ~&-d7'P-'·
• Cnll 548-7W9 * Sl:iO mo. Children OK NO , l"ouni: coup\£' \VOUld like to1-----------
CO:l-l1', Scot.'. have ~ur parent rrnt 2 nn. unrurnh11hed hou~ LARGE OR SMA
2 RR \l'/rncl iiunporch. Sep.
un it 11·/01\·n f11(·r! yrl. at!:ich
r.:ar. SIJO mo . S.18-9695.
pt"l:i;. Ca.II !).l;--5763. .
Laguna Beach
carPrl /or as you '>1'0111•1 110 ivilh glll'agc in Cf\.1 Up 10 All Ty W lrt· LL
1!n1r pcrnillllng. &12-9'.!78. 1150 n 0 ~--• ,.,·, Both pea or . Cut doors. 1 • UVUI• • • , panel, remodel, 11 n \ 11 h Ap.artmel\ls lor R'nl i;;i 1830 E, 0 Cl'lin CJ vd.
__ , ~ Long Bra('h (2)3 ) 435-584:. 2
I •••••••••• [ Bit, J 1,; Ua., Jnund 1111.,
* NE\V 2 BR • blk to bench.
Spectacular \'ic11'. $250 up.
493-3.'lll3 or 4!H-23.39
Summer Renta ls 420 1>n1ploy<'rf. ~>57-9105 nft 4 PM. frume, r e p a Ir~, eel:
BAY VIE\V 2 bcrlrooni, PllYSJClAN, wife & 18 mo 962-1961. !'llng'd by \VJl!la1n \Vallers Co. Lr~ liv rm & kit. SIO\'e,
Apts. Furn. 360 Balboa Penins ul• rrfrii::. )i1-1rage. 2 C'hilrlren
4 BR =~ ~ fl I I ok. Off Baker. $16j mo. • ~ -.· ·• am. rm., YEAR rt 5 B 3 B dining, 3 Ba., pools, tennis \;ener•I ~ nroun • r.. a . 646-20j6.
LARGE rnodern 2 BR. nr
beach. Adults. no pets, SIG::..
nlO. 544--2339.
sle<'p!I 4 complrlely rurn!M-old daughtl'r, seek 1-2 yr.1--;e.-~C~A~R~P~EN=m=~y-.~-1
C'd, Avo il June lo Sept. $750 rental of 3-4 Br. home In Rough &. Flnlah Patios &
pr month. AduHs only ·rur!lc Rock or \Univ. Prk.) Cement. 5 "41 -1 5 9 4 or
crts, In a 44 acre prk. ""'00 lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiii-iiiii f~rplc., blt-in11. 2 car gar. I =z~B~R~l7'1'"""--~=-.~.-~$~175~1 .., &at sli11. Brand new, · ' ot1. ' .. '!l !M!. • mo. 833--0300 clayll, S33-0550 A Br, 1 & apt $'145. l Br, 1 eves, ask for Jack. braut. viev.•. Avail. AUg. 1. f"or info Call {213) 799--0034. Ba. apt. $160. Ol!hwhr. shag,
J s~ .. 2\l B•., .. ,.,, c1..... Bold New Concept P""'· hll o..
f('nnis ct .l comm pool $300. Capistrano Beach 377 \V. \Vilsan 5-18-3605
I• .... Ag!' 54<l-1lS1. FURNITURE RENTAL NEW dnplox 2 BR, "'""· ** Condo 3 Br., 2 Ba ..
lagun• 8e•dt drp11, bllns. ~ min. lrom bll n~. pool, e I b h s r ,
Onne Point M!Lf1na. $190. & k id,;/IJl·i~ ok. $2.'1.i. ~'15-5270. • ~fonlh to ~fonth $15'1 • 1 Br. over 'gar .. \vnlk ('I( S21:i. 642-4474. ;)J6.-3710. • 100 .o Purt hru;e Option
hl'h . .t~ town, chtk l/pet ok .• • \Vide St'.!l<'cl!on. Costa M•N SPAC. 2 & 3 Br. apt $140 up.
S2G:'1 • N. encl 2 Br. ln 4 plex., .!:!yl@-Color. Pool, cpl/drp11, bltn•. kldll
nu CID. gar, vu. . . . * 2.I Hour Dei!vrry P ark-like Surroundln; ok.
$2:"!0 • 2 Br .. 1~ ba. dlx Apl. QUIET -DF.l.UXF: 1996 Mnp1e No. l. 642--3813
pool, vu, 250' water.,.. rfE iaJ{il l, 2 .l 3 BR APTS L·REE •1 . R •
.$250 -1\1. Vi('jO 2 Br. frpl., @ • Prv. patios * Hid Pools * " ~ "0 ' ent on yr•
bl' ~ 1 lse. 2 Br, den, frpl, pr\ ns, gar., Y•u-, pa , V\J , • • Nr sho~'p: * Adull' Only II 1• -•--Ah S.'1ZJ 3 B 2 Ba t l bit l'fl o, cpl urp, ,,,,.._,.. ·
d k '··, · "'.. ns. Martinique Apts. '·><'-">i t ., 21.1, 59z.sm ec. !I, gar en, gar .. vu. ' . • 517 W, 19th, CM ~3481 -NU~VIEW RENTALS 1777 Sturtn Ana Ave .. C.M. LRG, 2 Rft, Sl!IO. Nrw crpt.,
673-4030 or 494.:i248 2756 N. ~f11tn ~A 5'17-0.114 ri1irr. Apt , l lJ 646-5542 prlv patio, fnctl yrd .. no
lido Isle
DELUXE 3 BR., 2 ba.
yearly lense. $300 m<>.
REAL TOR 673-3663
M es• Verde
DELUXE 2 & 3 Br. 2/Bn.
encl i;:nr. $1:-i5 up. Rent:ll
Of•·. 30'J5 Mace A v e , .
;,.is-1034.
N.wport Beach
l &: 2 BR. APTS.
In rl~tblu rr. 1''rom $185
•< ns.&oso 0 ..... =wmca..&
ng<'nl. Gi!"r49:".0. 8.'\8--7359. 646-59'71.
BAL Is. Stud io 111 pt \VATERFRONT home, min.LcuM'i'sroOiV;;M:;-::wood:::::;:...,=:;;R-:pane:::'.:-;1.f
w/complete kit. Aval! June ol 3 Bdrms It baths. Month lng. Cablnecs. Cen'I repain.
• S<'pt. or monthly. 675-0074 of Auir. or Sept. Xlnt Ph. Duke D a Dur~ a,
or 6i~3i70. rtlerences. C'\11 Stauffer 846-7598,
ml W. 0c.'CAnfmnt. l.J)t 1 (2Jl) m-44S8. 1'JC=IU'=.-=a.mo.i.c-.....,.,lhto'"'"-. -.. -b-...... --I
Bft June $17:)/mo, J uly F'AM ILY neerlii horn~. SchJ1, rep&lnr malnt. No job lOo
SI S0!11·k. Aue:: S l 7 j ! wk . 11hopping TI.t-l's. Call Bill m'i. ReU. &t6-o(22.t. G~1-:l.".07. Parker, Agent 956-X!OO.:_ MINOR home "pain. Plum--
LA KE Arro\\·head dock for bing · ClU'pf'nlry • palnlinc •
rent for M:'MOn, l'.:a&y ac I A.Mouncements ll 5') m)fln&. C&U 540-5500 ces.~. -A·L carpenter, sm~I Job
&t•l--2942 · ~cl.&lllt. Pbonr Gotdon
C'°O'°RO=N7Ao-o1lt-l ~1or. \Valk to 8f5..6545.
bea ch & stores. l br. furn A~ lUncementl 500 c=-e-m-.,---.. -.-c~---,-,-.,---I
rolt.;ige. Sl.''I() \l.'k. 67.>-l!J&I . I
Vacation Rentels 42! Nantecl Dead* CEMi:NT WORK. no Job 1oo
n1in11m caM that ha\•r ~1nall, ~asona.bhr. Freie
RIG Rcl\r Loke. 0 1armh rvt-d you \\'eU & provi{le<I ~;sun1. ll. stulllck, 543-8615.
aptA., 1-omp. v.·/k111·h. r 11JN of pleasure. RUN~!! 1311 ., crpt/d'rt>s. , a r, kld~/Pf'ts. $170. Mes• V1rd1 * * $170 * * l"'I•· 7'~B II'. Wll•m,
'.l Br, l'S Ba, newly palntNI 673-717R.
2 RR & f'/R, Tv.'nhse np!.
I'\! Ba. Yrly lea 11r
S.'ix'J/mo. J!Otvllth Realtor:
6ij...19i2: t'\'e 6fa-407l
1lny or 1\'CC'k. Spt'elnl rule 1 11 1060 Clenneyrt St., La-
1,rrc-ct . 714: fr'6-cr~~~'· i.;111Hl Bench. No i,:lou91 11·hat-DAILY PILOT
ALA Rentel1 e 645-3900
Havl! snmethlng you 1vant to
.ell1 Clusllled ad1 do It
111ie.U .. call NOW 642-5678.
* 1 ~1MACULATE 4
OEr>ROO:'l-1 home, Lta~C',
AVAii. rn\<l. JUJl('. $285 per
mo. Agrnt: 540-7327.
e SXi \VK & UP-On Ck~nn e
Lll\•l'ly Rn th • 1 nr .• Hno1ns
~laid ~('r\'lt"t'·l'r '''1 I Pfl. e Call 67~!17111 e
B!lln11, crp1 /drp~. encl f)l:lUo. 3 Br, 2 Ba upper. Int,
Nr i1chl.~ & shnp"g. Ch\lrlrcn cpt rlrps, quirt. Art11J111 , no
nk. nn JX'I~. $..'() Crnlf'r SI., pe111, $200. ZJXl f orrlh11m.
C"'I 642-.\140 nr f,4.1\-2&!2. !))·~ &1fi-l!)ll'!l, t'V"~ 6-IG-4!139.
' " -
Sell !M old srutl Buy the
ll('IV Jtuff
VacAnc1r~ t'Q'lt money! lt1·n.1 ~r aeceplt'd.
you r htnz~C'. np!.. ~tnrr Dime-A-Lu~ &.12--~78
hlrlg .. r lr. !l1ru 11 DnUy l'llnt IJfl ily Pilot \Vant Ads ha.".,
Ch1'l•ifiert A•I J hargnin.~ Jll.Jol'el""
WANT AD
642-5671
I
r
I
j ,
.I ' ..
.!.
l
Cement, Concme
1~~! ~~~"··~l~~u1 ~1 ~-~-,-~,~~n 1 1~~~~·-·~~~~1~~u1 ~1 ~-~·-~l~~u1 Stereo Rop.1ir I Help Wentod, M & F 710 Help Wonhtd, M & F 710 Help Wantod, MA F 710 Help Wa nted , M & F.JIO Help Wonted, M & F 710 Halp Wanted, M & F 710
JOHN'S PaUo& & Block
\VOrit. An, ali9X'. of Ve.n'ii
l..andac:iapif\I C.l\f. 83.14l!ll
PATIOS, ~'8.lk.\, tlr1vt', install
Jl('W lil\\115, Ml.\\ breU,
M'movt". 5'18-8668 for "'"'.
~. Yard le Go.rage
Clean Op, fue Ei;t.
Reu.. It.ale.. ~3488
ST~~~ I I BOAT TOUCH-UP ENGIN~ER M l l rt HAIR dreuer wanted. Full KEYPUNCHERS SAi.ES <'LF:ttK: (:;rowin .. .:.n.r..v ,,...u 1>mern rt'"'-"1N <I • rJ : anu ac u It( l•tne. 6~1•w (-'i 6) -·11 1.r --' •. 1 f d t "I ·• compl•te f"1·1l11Je• fot' 11ll l,1k·uu1 1'\IX'r. rcc:iu n f')r n'lf'clll1.n1caJ 10 df'lvt"'""' ,..._1 _1_ h ,.u '""' ,., ., •-I ' ·~ ..._, .., """"' n~"\Jt'\I nune .IBie ). n.i PRESS OPERATORS 11•"1111 1-·" fu1n off<·-.,.,., .. -v ...., ........, IShtHs, must ave e.x-per t 1 t · I makt-a It mockb • d16CO'Unt Coa.stal H•·• fl'(lllQn, lne. 11ailboat prOOucllon linei;. · \\un11 11 lo 1111rk vr 11 <l.11 l' poll'JLC1al to a< Vttlll"t' to YARD & G11ni,,. Cleanu1< 1 ,4., ~·2 !'"" ••<·t /·"· 1 ,A xlri't earninii:1. ,_,,,, ~J·u ,, d 1 1_ rail'>. 8 Ira.ck ti.a pt~ dl"<·k, 9-W \\1 I th Sr~ __:: ~..,..... °"Rte4l' ttq'd. Top pgy 1z. uu.r. a,,..,. "' ...,...n e.._.. mold111~ plant. ._....,..,,. • . n1nn!.'IJ:l'r. i...:1r.::r •·p • 1 ,,.,..
frt"t' est. 1 days. Call 1 I · 1 '' ..ro SW.tlon avail. 70%. Aak for Call Sue --· 1 <lis1·ounts. Start $1.!:!5 hr. 1 548.-:iC.rr cran .t adJust $.'1.00, llus U O OKK~;J<Pl'.,l~...('vu~trtH't. x nt UlUJ'('. • ao:u~ KELLY GIRL PROr ES~lO:-.lA. ~ny Unt',
3
' l\!'l'k Sl.00 oil to DaJIY P tklt }(In, thnl 1· H li•·ll\'y J\ I'. Yacht Corp, 1631 PlaL-entia, Norman, 673.5930 NB. SlJ..J
44
l r_F:STfl UH.ANT &. llOT'EL '-'nil Jt>an Urown, 510-6055,
Hou1ecle1ning r e u ti .. r :t , (lteJ1hu•t>m1•11t ~Ju,t t.M> .. ,1,.,, Jnun•tl. ('~! HOUSEKEEPER~ £'.11PL0Y)lE~T AGESCY f'.,a ~1:d t11;:l"ncy, 2 7 9 0
n1·1,dll's & ctirtr1dg1'" •·:t i;ll1. l•fll'lllnl: Call \ r I• n ,. , --PART TIME w/rar, live in. 673·9033 2061 Businl'ss Center Dr, llourly Empluyc>('~ H!'111·flt llar!~w Bl fl t Adllitl:!, C.M.
YOUNGSET School.~ 1-ll."'SA Clear11n~ C<'f"P"t,., U.S.A. S1tc1·~'\J E q u 1 p. :~;2-'~\:l:-!. v Good Starting P a y AULIC ___ _::Irvine____ By U:ii\' f ,., . .; --SALES MEN
\..hild c ....
141, 0J)C'n 7 Ov.y11. 6i\'.\1-i <3-0 \\'1ndo\\·~. t I ritl r <t r t<·-\\'.;rC'h(lU.'«" 17!1 E 1itt1 SI., R{}()Kk"hl-:J•F 11~11--;;;;:-\l .F ('HA N C ll LL y l.'\' H'i"DR test tet:hnician Keypunch Oper1tor1 A~;t. ~1l<f"S. $tOO to SiOO mo. L\"t•t•il
11
"_.11 \i!o(l 111't: ready to
!•\t. ~parate prvl'ru111 6-ltl ,. :.e~:dtmm'l "" i -•i i~:'· 1 C'vsta '.Tr~ .... Glj..Z l-lZ. H··i:ul ~l'K)rl!ng g ori d ~ !'l.IN!•:L> & NF.:AT. NO EX· !or asM"mbly & testing Full & pt 1in1e, Oexiblc hr~. Mnster Chef ....... $11 00 nl'' lr arn the cnr buslneu and ~rs. Pru!. teache.111i S2u .tlS-lJJl ') -1'\l·s'J"l"lll·:<i -f{l-.1'1\ul bu•1n,,<:•. Sahu•y h:i!>-f'd UI"" l 'l<H ~L'('PS~ARY Al'rospace Hydraulics. Mw;t Isl. 2.nd, & 3rd shifts. EXPf'I' :!nd Cook , .......... s2:1, sh111 IH'I" \\l!ling: lo tr.iln. Must
61fi-.370ll. -O&dicated-Cleaning
1
Holla nd Bu•. Sales •' >. p :. r 1en\:t". Jl un1 ini.;;;;n , ' • ·~ ~7:°'314 · ~i~J~ar: el;:s~-~~~J~~P . IBM Alpha & Niuncr1c &.: Uro ilrr r.J nn ....... ~1~1. !(hif1 J1;1ve good p<"rsonnlity, M
C.:onlraetor • \\Ii·: VO ~:V F:HY'rll/Nli * "Th•• n1X!kr·r \11th J:'.1np11!hy" Bt':l("h locat ion , Cal l r:d I CMC key to disc. Pan!ry J\l:ol) ....... $27. i;l1ifl i l1 1<'1"1"~1ed In ll future, rll'f!~
llrrs. l'rl'r '~'. 6-lG-~.~9 171!.i Or1u1~e i\1,•, ('.,\I, Clark for app!. '.*i2-:~·l:ll. I E•perienced INJECTION lntl'rg:rated Data Cori>. Train1•e Cook ... , ... $2-$3 hr. ,11.11. ~i.lr!'niintled. Benerits:
R00'.11 Addi!lons. E!itimates, --1-IOUSf'. ()}" rLF.A:"' 645-4 170 ·~l(/..{)(,(JR l'l f'S. BOYS I co'?°,,hkw'••hers MOLDING 228.1 Fairview Rd.,(' \1, n ar1PJldt•r ..... l\111Jll'l1·dg" nr 0 ('1JI!!., J,":l\J\l fl In s., hiAh lilaus & W.vou l single or 2 64fi.7425 51!i·f.O.'\O t'-1''"";,, i;1n d1·1 11k" .. sz:,, slii tl .~,1,"1,·, ..• ,·,,,,, .. U,J;mHed in-, •. Floor.~. crrii,. 11 111<l<i,\s .it-Television Repair A 1014 d t OPERATORS " " ~" '' ·'
)C!ory, LT Ct>nstrucUon. , .11 o ., , ... .,,2 ,,11 ge • ro e l\'eJ' Pariers & Bus boys LEGAL &treJarv: P/T1~ Fa;t Food /'llgr 1'ra1n•'e ('lllllf'. /lpril.v in Person. o•"•-ljJJ \,I s. J ~r.. <J I '.._'~:__'.'._"'_~_,_ • fl' •1,·1··.·s ·1·v • tn the Dana l'olnl San Cle--I (Qr Trainees) . I " ~ / -L.J• ' Apfi lv Jn J>1·r"'111 may lead to FI ti n1 e . Ov<'r 21 ............. ~ ic.,. mo. t ' :-.; I \I F. RS.TTY OLDS· -, 1-1-. 1 od-1-1-LADY \\'fi nts hr,us"' l1·<1111ng n1en1P lll"f'as. · 2 · · For Plastics f..Ja11ufacturer,
t 111 1 · • '"11 '-' ~ .... r\l('lng \IJ fJ1" nd~ 0 '>7 J4 Or1""0 lll1·v Young, x!nt I ypi.st. die. \\'aitrri; ......... ·· .~l.t,:i hr . !llOHll.F:, '..'~50 Jlarbor Blvd .. ( Ol;, ' '.I -n:;. I l\"fll'k. f':xf)<'ricrn··.,I, (111 1! • , " DAILY PIL T I .~ : •' I graveyard shift. MU!t be r ,t;i~;~·1tk : :wn. ~~~2110 ~an~ ~li-3G~i. __ ---l\11•:~11'.:ri;~1;:;(1::n;~~;;n;1.~i~;.i::1~ -coNS~~~~TION J--'f:JnAJ"c"'T'Q .ap1.~Rrr;1y"-"--~~;;.d~ ~~~~~a:~~~ ~c:.::~ ~~;~~~· &t-1-0J~J. N11·p1 ~~~1t'.~;.'~'M·;.1~;1 ; .. ;opc·.,'.:;;;~·1•; c,.~1a ~~·~~S_M_A_N __ _
~AC 1-:-T~u-l a iH•-fl,.pa1f La ndscaping Tile LOAN OFFICER Sat. or Sun. Lr:: GAL RI·:CEP'f!Oi'\IST· ,,··· ....•.......•..... ~1.1,;:: :::: REPROGRAPHICS
: ren1ocl . <1dd I 10 rrs rxri. --XI Apply t PM· 4 P~l \Vould you like to hclv 11Wsr o.<t~_,~~ ............... ·:: , / · TOP SOIL -540-0097 ('I·:P..Ai'.IH' Til1'. f\i11·lu·n~. nt l•f)fl(•f. fur «Pfll'ill .•f'r 111 / TRAINEES ,,.1,,1 1,, .. ,,.._ ,,.,.1h 11, .. 1,. (';1 ~Ju[·r . , ........... ~!. ._.1 ht Full SI'!'\' it·'-' platc>maker f'l'· Li(''d, My \\':oy Co .H7-0ll:~i. I l ('tistn ti.1esa, Calif. " ' • •.J •
6
I · ,_. ! f i 1c~~~::..,._:_____ J.al\'ll J-tf'n1oval, Roto11JI liarh~. f.~n1r;.s, r 11 ~ 1 ,, rn l'L'~1dc11 11a ctin~lriio t1n11 t t•pl fanious c 1 i e n 1 g Tlic> J~u~l}l)yS 18 & n1·1·r ... SL .i ir. ~'~P''..',',,·,,,'.,,-"fl 11
0
:a,•r•,m•
1
",
0
~·.11 Electrical \\u1•k. Hcaw11i1L>h•. c:ten , Ill Cosla '.'\1[•Si!. /{t'•jUll'f'!i" ti S50 \Vl'st 18th St. . • ~·1'.1·: ,. ' ,. " P · t' & o • Or e C 1 Pl ,. • plt'<'l sant 1a1.I gf'ts JOb. ~trt rt , . a1n 1ng '''·" -,,,,,.,,. nun. ol 2 )l's!'-"'"'!". 1n ;_if)· N f'.xn.<>nt'llC'" nf'rtssn"'', ang oas as !Cs ROYAL SEllVtc·~ AGF.NCY Bat·k!!ro11n<l in nrintin~. ~LECTR C \\'O I ~ .,_ •o. ,,. ,.. •J $1:;(}. Call Nancy r.f<l\.'. . · · '.·· ·. ., ,. I -r.. I AL RK. Al Paperhanging pra1~1nt:' l'l'Slrlt'nl1al & .sniall I in m" d 1 a! e po s 1t1on 540-60:'6 C <:t 1 Ao , ~anie A_gi•i\ry . f\r1v t)lf1('e · a drrr!isin~ or reln1ed sa!f's kinds. Blg or sni:itl Llc'd & Tree Service I 111._·,.-,111<' unil.' 11 /~1ne con· Rva1lahll' on 3 fih ll!s. Cosl:1 · oA . a ,.,f'ncy. T h •!t('r' (iPlds. !'•'nd "'sume to th"!
-~ \'OU S I "-f' I 2790 !!arbor Bl at Arlnm~. 0 serve ;.ou 1 _ · Ins. f'N'e CSL :,....;....,~11. . llflfl Y tr....-aint. Hm~ su·u~·tiQn lrr)(lillt: pl'i•f('!'ahlt'. ~lf'~a. Irvine & Ne11p(JJ'' ~RVfNE PERSONNEL ----------3tM.~ Can1pus Dr1\'(' l'r•'~ldr,nt , l l•l}1 ~ 11Rrbor1
EL ECTI{fc1A~:lccn~"rl. pa in tC'd SJO c;i avt:. Al so. <"I:-I . TREE SERVICE 'f'll1~ 1~1~1r 1on ini>lurl<'s l\1n11 a1'\.'a~. No f'~f>t". $ NlAINTENANCF. COU/'LF. Sui!• ll9, Nc·ii"i1nrt B1·nrh F.11'~·1-.1\·ing, r . 0 . Box 11.iG";,,
l .. · 1 1~·r101'. Refs. :l,(J Yr~. •'X(X"r Tr1mn11n.c;. Pruning & Clean· 1 CD\"CES•ArC•iry • hondt'Cl. Sn1:dr 1nhs, 11...111 I solw1111!ion i\· b(1ildi•r '"fl-9 TO 1 ?!11 ONLY L.f'\YI 1~""'-Exp~d in rleaning, p.iinlin~ t<· 5.'"l7-21iil0 Snnta An;i, 1!2i!J. & .... . . -10 .. ,,1.. · 1 !",!O-iO-IG. up. 642-51$ or 842-R442. ---i ~pau s .. ~.,-.J-... _ _ 1; .. ·r. \!11~1 Ji.;\'(' llppr;11s•·d S.J.S. TE:\1.POR.ARY .Frf•f' .~ l''t'c Positions main! Apt+ ~alnrv . P hnn<"
• d . --
1
Ptd:'llTl:"'.·r.,. fnt. ,. 1-: . ..:1. "111< ~ f1n;,n1 '<nl ·,,,,,,,11,.11 SEP.VJCF. ~1on-Fri 9--4, 21!:33.~>-2~iq, !'l tO}'l:;.'iSlO~AL Ph 0 .11.t' S \J.f.Sl .. \Dl ~'.~. ('•:pPril'll< 1-rl, a en g ., " .-Ext·~. $<'.'ty Adn1 Asst 'c':iO+ · IJ I' t '' 'l" -I ll "' r in H('a.'. rat~·<;. \Vu rk Ii:. Uilr11 n'd. [ II if JI Lid / .\11·. !)111\son, ;,it;..-1.·,oo. 112 1 SO. GH.Ai'in -----------solicitor • :in:i 0111 . ,,.(n -" 10 4 1 11 1111H•.
QUALITY · , l.1M"a l rrfs. Lie. p h I I , E-'o-CALIFORNIA Sc1nlJ i\na :J-17-;i7~,6 S-c·-a~ 10 .,.50 1,11, .,, <" 1 u .. , ,,
0
·•·1'"" 1 .. 111c; ~I •'I . · . ·. Exel'. &cr('!ary to $650 MF:CHANIC-Cl:is.<i A Lir .. ClrHl l'ntc, Car'.ll:;IT.~no a rr:i.. p r C! 'lrlr 1-i Storc· 1
""' 7""''" ,-'' •J .-J. ·. ~-· " " \\'ri rk 111 your 01111 H1•111" ""•. Cu11~1 PJ;in1 , Apply \J:~J GARDENING
1 l'll~S>i!JI. FEDERAL SAVINGS LPgal ~Cl'f'1 n ry to $600 iv/scope, air conrl, c~1rl1 , D":<l tie-I In ai·c,1, P1 101.,_ l<I l';in!!n<1 1~••:11, Tuslln.
& 'Yrs c.-.-.:r>t·r. 1n 111·,•:i I:,... 20', •l1s•" P<1per & hanging, CO'.\'CESSION-:-t ~bo..: <iffitt FACTORY St>r'y/'.l·lnrkrtinit $:.oo brakrs, front end alis:;n, loµ S:l.J·141i:"1 IX'tl\'('en !l :OIJ o..nt. ~lun llu·u fri onl.i .
planling, haul a\\ay, i,.:t'nf'rel 111 .. li il<' ~T•1t'l'. \1nyl, flock. Job ~'iantea, .=emale 702 ,girl ii·:in t<'d ininierli;ilel.v. On lht' JOb training. Lite far· Allditor T111r Degree to sr;;,o pay over $17:j. No f;a:'. r. and noon.
lands!'t\P<' 111;:11n l1•n;u!cr. ~i!T-.'18-!6 Thi, II an gm an Port Tlle:otre, Corl)na de! tory 8r fl .SS('lllb!y. Ill yrs. & Payroll Clerk \o !§:JOO day~. no Sun. Arco 1!!1 h &/,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,.-... _.,.,..,
r·rl'e f'Sli111fl11's_ 816-21/l'.'. GOOD TYPIST :'ll;-11·. ~;.,.. .\li:.,'l' aft 6 P'.11. 0\l"t'. l\lany operungs Jn the Accounting-Clerks to $500 Nc."\1·port, C.l\1. 64>.1.l.12. REAL ESTATE 540-7873 646 ~76 W 'll d t · lrvinc·Nf'11•porl BeaC'h arr·a. ,.._ Of 11·1 Bkp t s·~ or ·7v No \\'asr1n;.: 1 o your yp1ng at ------ - -....:n c 1 <' r1g o ·"-N MECHANIC, exprr. Align-
---;;-L-:-:'i.-GARVE.\L\G--*. WALLPAPER * er ome, 1 I pickup Construtuon " scrow uce s utcs o 'J ment, tuneup, brakes. & • • h h W 'I I Shor! .~ Ion" t e r m E "-d IN I s-1-SALESMEN
Sl-J ~VlCf.; Stal 1011 attendan1 ,
t'.\ll\'l'. lub~ & lt n1N:hanical,
~dl .shifts. in('l, graveyard,
lull & part 1in1e avail. Ap-
11!y in p('rS()n only, La Pnz
Ur1ion, La Paz ltd. It. San
Dirgo fr\11·.
d assignrnents. Paid \Vk!y. K h 1 $4-5 for "ardr'nin"' & s mat I \\'lien you call "f..tac·· an deliver local H .B ., \ b 1 1 eypunc 0 · 1 V'IVs. $700 mo. -comm. Ap-\''ork ii·ii h an €'S1abli sh· • ·~ V NST UCT ON ' so IJ I e y nn !e('. Rccep</Tyist $-100 landscaping services, ca!J 548-1411 646-1111 F .. ,,West, 75c per pg . J CO R ( KELLY GIRL ply In person only, I.a Paz e<l office 1vi!h a group or
510-5198 f'Ves, Se rving PAINTING. Honest, C"lenn. or will work by hour 20til Business Ctr. Dr. ~~:!,e~o~~;.:~ g::~ Union, La Paz Rd & San Chris1ians. SC'e the dif.
t\'e\1-port. Cd:\-I, Cosio i\'1esa., ~tiaralll!•rd 1iork. Licensed call 847-3095. Irvine 833-1441 Diego Fwy, fPrence! R!'pliP.~ 1.:onfi· St>r
Do1·Fr Shores. \Vc stcllf!. g, insu!'•'d. (ll~.i7~0. NEED l~f'hi ~t honi('; \\'r• I \\'r ari• now sralfirii; OU!' nc>i~ 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) Ol tl1ECHANIC W,1.n!cd f o I' de111lal. Ask fOI' !·:d. ''HELP WANTED'' PROFE~SIONAL l l'P(' ~~. J.:xr1.::1C'<'onipllil' :! ('()alt>. 1 have A1drs e Nurws e r·1)1ri.panl('S Jacilily ('ngugea FASHION .\ohxll'l, n('iv 1At'1', 642-1470 foreig~2c;~ Costa Mesn N t jl\'~inl Ex-lypl' ~l'ei·etary 10
Pr 11 11 ' n b ·I r 1 nl i)1 1 n >:,I ~1orv $210, 2 ~rory $300. llousekprR e ('nn1p11n1rins 111 th(' prnduC't1 on of fa ctory-110 c>xr..erienrf'. Jnlrrnational area. -ewpor 1 n1nn:'lg(• 4 ~lrl offict'. Kno11 -
.c:praying, s Pr 111k I1' rs· i\'t>ui 11 11rk. Hoy, X47°-ll58. • II o in ~n1akers-Upjoh u hu1lrl 1nodul;1r hou;,ing. Our Conipa ny, Sizf' 7 10 1 ~. At-INVEST IN /'lilanug:er Traint'CS •t lcdg,. of f (,~al .Estalr hclp-
J..ands1·apin!!,. ,. ! "11 ll u P . :-.47-6681.. 1•x1.~t ll1'' bar·klo" enahlc>s us 1 1· • _,,,, 1· l51X> ""'r 1110. to stnrt, local lul . l'o•· ··•Pl<I , , ... ,II -.-46-1600 /'llO~'. p111nting. in!er/cxter. '"' ,.., rae 1vt' ,.., J.!•IVIJ lh'lJff'. ,..~ f•irview ·'
f;('(lri:c>
64&<ls9:t ·-__ Qu;il il _v \\'Ork. Rea.c:. Lic'd HOLJsLl\'ORI\ h_v day '"I lu Olf€•J' l)('l'lnanrnt pos1!ions !<62-~83 for appL YOUR FUTURE Orange Co11 nty Co, hn.c: 2 Ask foi· ~lrs. Allen. * NEW LAWNS * C Jo tho~" \\'ho hnvc rcccn1 ex· F II · openings for aggrcssiv<' .1..16 881 1 Jns. ;,~,7-7•1j;,, :HS-2759 aft 5. 01npa11ion. \\'I' I ! f"X· FULi .. Limr d1•ntal ass!. Hu n-u or p/t1n1 c. "" • Sl'r rct:1rial VaL'l11ion Rf>l 1cf
Sod . !)10lo11s . &Pdig,;;:, "l'ard l'AINTER "EMI RETIRED periencrd I p1'r1r11('(' Jn rhe follo\\"lng t1n<>ton Bea,.h ""''f''', n1ust BE YOUR OWN BOSS! men & ivomcn, who are able ( t ' ) f111• .<\d\"L'l'tisin ... Df'p!. Take
1·l"n1odr1ing. ,<.;lat e Lic'd, REAl:.JSl'IC ·~)Rrc.Es _ oo0D e 646--tjiOG e Mn1ed !rarlt•.c:: ha~e .Y>m'e e~n. &1~97. Men or Women to meet the public.· f\ru sl 1ny 1me SJ l, IY/ll'. rlt:
1
:;
11
"''ork, /lp-
"'4 1~?1 ·----hnve car. No expcr nel'eS·l.!!'!!"""~""""""~"""""'I ·I·• .:.'....:..:...· __ • __ --\\'Ol'.Ki\1ANSIHP 642-1255 Help W•nted, M & F 710 I PAINTEHS c;EN'L Off If'(' p n s i t i 0 n Lease A Yellow sary C.ood Co beneril~ R I E I I Career 2prox. 6 \ICCks. Starting J une Gt-:;'1. <:arrlc>111 ng. \1011 & ~---1 bl · A 1 De t Ca!· _ · · · ea s a e fi. 1~172. ~:dge. ~-rr·(' f'~!. Jlqn1<' & WALLPAPER HUNG Adu/1 pl 1tin1" poorlll' s1!tl'r-ELECTRICIAi\." ~v:ikap: / ~cc ~cg~· exi:r: Taxi Cab 1 Tifi·O•OS lO-l2 noon Ne\V or experienced, join the Call '.llargart•l Gi·l'cn1nan
Con1n1,,!'c1al. 1;.1~,_:;.-.;:1.J. C'ill'l RPbko 6~6-2449 )uur hun1{'. fi7:)-021;t, Only, Ask for Mr. f.Iorgan. Company that's growing. IJ fvl' Anpo lnlrncnt helpful. Typing & 10 key arl -1· ('J , 710·f PROf''_ pointing, also roofs, -Ad --Ca ll for Appt ~1.T.S.C. Opcralnr for 11·kly you do not ha,·e a icense, DAILY PILOT vertis;ng Sec'y PLU'.l·JBErtS fling n1::ichinc a rnu~t. Op-k
-t co ''t'L!.. ;"l""/0,1°1·. 546 1Jl1 ne\\'5p<l""'r. 5 dav. \l'k Jn chec on our AL'S Landscapin!!. T r e r , '1" /Ju~. ... ",., ~ Grr ;11 oprwir111nit.v lor a 1n· flll!'. to l<'fln1 1·0n1pnlt'r. I -'" ''0 J S ,.. f ~C' n~ Frf'f' "~' £:1 'J-~\!ll Ir1·in<' area. Salai·y nego. S49 .... II'. 'i:iy · 1·· ~ ~ t'f'n1oval. Yard ri·n1(){fr'lin~. _ _:. . . . .:__ ·_· lu11ou~. 1111:!1/y ~k illed ~·rl !:Ou r;rr & ~~JNI Sll Call •l'.):'.-411Sfj or npply :\3012
8
, ..
3
.,
62
fi!::!...J:::n hf't11 rf'n ~l·l r'.'\f
Trash l1aul1ng, lot 1•!e:1n1111. FOR r·lean & nett! pa1n!ing. Braul.', uuliu!11·r & sh J"C•I (',\P..PLNTEftS Calif' Pct le•·To, San Juan Ask for Hl'rman ,,,,-.,, .·----------·
Repair srrinklr rs. 6i::-11iiii. intr rio r or e.xtt•rior & reu ~. r1uJn•d, ('am :::__ __ NJ-:EDJ-:1) A~~ic;t:int to l\clly Real Estate l D. k ~· 1,,,.. INSUHANCE Girl, some exp. Tc l<'I: ·1h 1 -1 JA rift./..,1f:s E-<;ariJ"-""-"~ rars. i<··. '"'°"va:>, Call 833-1670 I l)R'i \VALL G ENf-:f{/\L O FFJC I:::; rcq'd.PcrsnnalLinrs A.r::e11cy nir on \\'1 oppor11111.1 L icensing Course SECRETARIES C I \ I k & to b('('Onle slyl1 o:L f\1•1 ~t ('<<II '·.·tic·•. ,,.0,·1,,·,," 111·1,::r:i 1n on1p "'" 'ar1 1111r · · Plaster, Patch, Repair i Beautiful n1ode1·n o f f i c" 111 Costa l\1f's11, 54:>-5614 have Ca 11 r 0 r n i a ·' ~ · Clean-up. frl'f' t.:st1111utts, Art·ounling f:lrru·aJ i\l/LL \l'Or~I\ overlooking !he 11cc>;111. This cc·
1
k d Earn Your P ay
&12-3102. * PATCJ·I PLASTERING Inc;. i\gty /f'.'>fit''f l ~" SiOI) ro. offers lhc OCsr henrfits INSUJ{,\.'l L C rr , ays, Cosmclnlogist Ii c en se .
Al! types. Free c~Hn1ates Billing C!rrk s.i;il P lease Apply Jn f'er!.un f/tin1e. PPrsonnel Dept., &!2-01 ~!-!. EX l'ER Japfl.M'st' Gill'<k'lier ,, 111 the are<1 . Stai-1 S43J. Fee Ji 1~ t I N rt --.-.-N-E--EDED
-no t.'OsL i\[ana;;r:111cn1 OP· The Kelly Girl Way
por111nillf'!'1. Ask for 1\Ir~. (Jn,. T1nu·. Pn1 t T1n1e
Joni'<: for i11 for111a1ion ;:11 u \II ·1·1 T Cnmpletf' yd servirP. Neat CaU 5-'0-682:J Asst Bookkl'f'fi<T :'j.
0110 J an1-4 pm l'aid. F'ec J obs Also. Call oag osp1 a, ewpo
,t Relia. Fr.:'f' f'.~t. 64 2-4389. Plumbing Gt·ner:il Offl("('. ~4:-;l Jean Bo\vn, 5 4 0 -6 O 5 5, Bch. Two Office Girls
!'l'.'(TPtnry 10 S~DO ~~.';;E~f~U. ~~~~ Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 o Jr. Clerk Trainee
84--.i581. Just See ··)--I I ,,... ll!ll' I
Tarbell Realtors I // J//J /7 f
REAL ESTATE J\e{f';! ':Ji1· COMPLETE Lawn & SAVE on home repaiN;. F'l·ee Cl('rk Typi~I $.120 !!arbor Bl. at Adnms. COUPON SOltT!'.;R~. Nwpt
Gardening S<'rvic1•. Hnuling est., plumbing, paint, in· Loan p,.,.X'..,.<iS(11• to S75fl "Bch. $1.75 hr & merit incr .
& cll'an·up. J im 54&-0405. 1, 1. 1. 11-"opl<o<><·.·t !I~" 17822 Gillelle SI. GENEH.AL offiec, part 11mt>, ,. .1. 110 k dd s r 11 , a 1 on .s, Jiau 1ni;. '• ·' .... , ami 1ar w cy a l'r. -:1<:)!-f N.~-O-NS' <:ARDENING 83~::Ji2. .St;•tii;t1<·,,J Clrrk s:i7i! frvinP fnrlus. Complex ni:tture "'on1an, frvine Ind. Pass simplt' nrith. test. F/
~=~-~ 1· S;i ita \na Cali/ Cl"ln1pll'.'x, 5 !6-i091 ; 9 am/3 'Yarrl i\ln1n!rnt1n('('. Planring P"Lt1:'11BING H.J·:P,\Ji't · 1'~*' .~ f r•• Pn~1!it1n-. · · 1 / • · tirne only. /'11u.~t be attr:tC'·
f'l<'Hnops 962-20:':5 No job too sni~·i1 1 RUTH RYAN AGENCY -"p~m~·=--~=~~-tive & neat. Call Beverly
SPRINKLER REPAfR * 64z_3128 * lifl:l Nr\1·port. C'~t tl·lli-4s:>1 I Equa l Orpor. Employrr Gl::NERAL OFFICE. Spend &l:i-~OO.
N S ,. 6 •• ---I 1i9.':! BPnrh, !1!3 847-9fi17 < .... ..,--_,..,..,..,..,,,.I Pf•l'\ nf Ilic rlay at lhr bl.'ar h ,_.., _______ _..._ 'riv · Y!-.IP11is * .)4 ·-.;i?,;J NJ 1•r '.l·JQney, S11vt'T)11~ 1\r!! COfJf\; J'os111011 open for l'X· rt1ls ~l1111 rt1l'r & get paid on * LANDSCAPING_*_ l'lun1b1ni:: rrpair~ S9 P"r hr A s s r: :\I 8 L i::n:..nliniahin> per . r·ook 1n pvt. club. Thls !h is p:ir1 111ne Joh. i\lu.st bf'
Nf'w !1!\vns, Sril'inklf'r~. df'1'k~. 1 li~:!-17.i:i nr &12-1-llC pri•r1,11111 rn " ch a 11 1 c ::i 1 J.~ yr, round position in· nver 20. ~l<tl'I $2 hr. Call
r lrAnu11. Stall' !i!''d. 536-122'>. -aJ[E-PLLi"MlflNG ;1 1-l'..,nibl il'~. A[lp!y Tn ?ll iern volv111g buffrt, bruilcr & Llnfl<t R;i y. 5 4 O-6 O 5 5 ,
EXP. lla11·a1111n (;ardl'tlc>r 2·1 hr. ~e1vt<'I', ii·\j .JJlll "'llo!nrs, Yll No. c ~·f'r Rrl .. i;,1nd11ir·h prl'parnlion. Call Coa.c;tal Agen,·y, 2790
Corr.pl•te gardening se!Vl(."e S<inra Ana. ;1f1. 2. iO p.111., Tues. lhru llarhor BL tit Arlams, C.M.
• Remodel & Repa ir "11n :.."';,...llfl ! Kan1<:d1.ni, 6-lf.-1676. /\l'rlirn t 11 ,11~ · ., . " ·=----GIHL FRIDAY
General Services RE:0.10Dl-.:LING, atlch11on!', i\\•w Bt•111g TaJ.i1•n For COOK Altractivc young-g i r I
patios. pro1npl srrv1c('. ?f'(:'P e Host ,"'1111,. f'\PL'r. ll"Cf'SS, Apply \\'/brains to h"IP young
TH INGS By J\oloose : Fenc", •'sl1nH!le~. T<'fr1'e111 ·(·~. lo{·aJ l e Hostesses 111 fl<'l"~n11 , Love's BBQ. businessn1an. FreC' f o
t:'f'n. crpt repair, app! 1ns1Jn, builrl<'r, 1·10 p.n1. 968-9067.
1
1 e Busboys 1 :rmkh111'~T & Adan1.~. liB travel. Excel. possibililirs ~<Irr .. p~h_._l_ilr_. _:i:)~!f.l!:_ !163-096'1. e Dinner Cook &
1
C-OOKS for right gal. \V r it f'
·1·c ''L "L"RVJcc·s CO · C 1 Classified Ad No. 413, c!o '
1
" •
0
•-' '-• Roofing e Coffee Shop l\FC nr Snuth Coast. all or Pl ·,n,bi: Install'S-Carpcntry ___ .c,.______ Waitress ::ippQ int niPnt . 6,~H%0. Daily Pilot. P .O. Box 1560.
F:lt'c n~a 1r • &1r,..1S11!l e T r.,,, 110011· .. "" .-.A,1 C.M.
''' • ' • .. ,.. Vt'" MOK I'S CC)ltPLES-hn1h i\lgr. ,!',, Dn~·1. 1 do n1_v 011 n ~·ork. Hauling 1 !00 ~i F Hr1 -.1.,1 ll~l'1~L \h:r r rq a 1 n t . i
LOC,\L f\Jovt'.~. 11 a u I in g,
rleanup. 1':..'<p c n I l P ~,.
R!t1dent. Lri; trul'k. rtcs.
5:{4-J 846.
64:1-2780. 5'18·9590. Cnsr:1 \l,.~:i rouplc~ 11f'l'ded for lrg co n1-
Sewing/ Alterations -AutorTlOt i;e-Cashier-
f:,pr rH'nrr!I. "'' •·ll1 •11 r .-i,1rt-
1ng ~l\!111')'. l'\Pr'Ji•'llf <'0111·
pan,v hrnrf!t~ C:ill ~111 1!y
Bell , 'YARD, ~ara !:l' i·l ,...anu p~.
Rl'mo1·e lrl'f'~. rl1ri. ivy,
!' k r r I oa d p r , h:iekh(){'.
~1 7-2666.
* * *
--D f; S IGN ER -E uropean
tr:i1nPd , 20 yrs. l'Xp., ne1v in
l !uni in.c!nn Hct1.r h. !.16.~--0739.
Hr.Ye ~omeTfl1ng you 1v;;nt tu
.~ell! Cla~sifleri ad.s rlo II
"·ell -rall NO\\I 612-5618.
* * *
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
HAVE: 2 br h.~e. valuable
Joi, C.M. Eq, $10.250. \Vanr :
Local duplPx 10 4 unit:i:. or
land a n)'lvht're ? M€'yeri;
(blaJ 67:!-6756.
:i:i' ,.~1ber,l\l ass Sail0011t as
<lr.1\ln paymt'nt on income
prtlf)f>rty,
Z1 3: 4.12-0126 or
714: 846-26.'l()
WILSON FORD
\'\2.'i:i RrA.ch 1:11d.
l lt1nt 111~!11n Ht'.1!'h
.~·12 f,(111
BABY ~fTTER. ff•r h • ..,y..,; 7 A-
ll. l lunllng1on B" 11 r b,
\\'psln1111ster nr~'a f ()r 1111n1-
n1l'r. Afr ~ pn1, 11 krln.vs, al!
d11y \l'('f'kends. ~~17-?117~.
Bi\BYSIITER n1•f>•ff'd 11n·
n1rrl, ror 14 1110. •1lrl. !\Ion.
F'ri, ,II.;, pn1, Nc1q11w1 Art'n .
<Clay ,I[.. Jrv1n<'l. F•qJ·rr. +
rrf. or t-t)u1v. ft-16-91~1 A;\f,
Bal)ysil!f'r, 5 rlilys 8 1vk, O\\'n
trans. !)6S.JJ!IS
Call f\londny
* Bahysittrr, 111y .1p!, i\!on,
Tht1rs. Fri n1tes 5 to 1.
R47·2916
BARMAID. 21-26. Nighls 6
PNl·2 Al'\'!. Apply 11 I
Snoopy's 649-9407 beror<' f1
P1\1.
ril1•x. A/ii + ~:ililry orwn. '
l 'l\<lll(' :\l o n -f r1 9-1 , / /
21 l:r1~2,9;;,~1. 1 _,A/otv .:1
('\ 1STODIAN"-:"111nr: :o;h1f!
Pf'l"SOllflt"l flf'pl . 11011 /:,
1 1.1~r11nl. l'>r11ro1r1 Brar•h.
DE BURRER
!'.\Jl"1" 1n hfln<I F.· pn11 <'r tnol
1lrh11rnnr. nf pr" t" 1 ~ 1 o 11
n1 r('h.:inital ftllll fYJtl{'ll!~.
'.!!Ir J1;1y
4!"1 lln11r \\'Prk
Profil Sharing
THE
J. C. CARTER CO.
671 \V, 17th St .. <"o~ta il·Jesa
548-3421 I
1-:qual Opportunity E'.n1ployer I
If your math's in
9ood c:ondition,
we c:an use you.
Good typin9 & in· • surance exp.eri·
enc:e helpful, but
n o t nec:essary.
Apply now for:
DELIVERY 1 • Figure Clerk & General Helper . .
f\fust be neat, dependable & l nterestin~ openings for Jr.
have good driving ~cord. I & Sr. sk s.
$2.25 hr to starl I • G 'I Cl • I Arpry 1.4 P~t en er1ca
Orangf' Coast Plastics Varied openings include, !il-
KEYPUNCH
Day Shift
Ava ilable Now
6 ~·!on!hs actual 1vork exper.
on l'ither !'I kt>:vpunrh.
ke)iape or key disc device.
ALSO
Day shift until move to
I
Newport in Septe mbe r
then swing shift 4--12
I PM.
, Srl1'10l trn 1n1 n~ ""I"<'"~ . .5<1mf'
11·ork r'rirr. t1f'IJ'>h1I,
INTF:f:VI F:\V{:-;C
/'11nn & Tu"~ 9 am·2 pm
\\.'ed rhru f"r1 ~ t1n1 12 pin
n'
SITE OF' OUR
~E\V BU !l.D !~G
PACIFIC MUTUAL
F/ISlfIO N ISLANI)
fCorner Santa CMJz k
Ne\\'JX)r l Center Drive)
* FRF.E daily h us
traruportation for v.'O rk in
Lo.! Angeles unlil move to
Nc\VJX>TI, Sept. '72.
TIME FOR
' QUICK CASH
Must be 25 nnrt able to drive
-/IPPLY -
JS6 F:. 16!h !'l., C.l\l.
-NevrFACTOR_Y_
EXPANSION
$508-$650 Per Mo
Full Time
-SALESMEN-Thl'n Plek Thr I lours, Days,
Nel'd 1 or 2 experienced L1>nR'!h 0( F.:111ploy111Pnt
sal e~peopll". l nccnth·e l'Onl· That Fits "!'our Nerds
niission sli<ll ng scale plan, Yc1u'll \\'ol'k For tis
pcrso11ali1.l'd traininK IJ.I' :i On Our Payroll
professional. ALSO 1vi!l train rn Our Custo111rrs' Of!ice~.
ne1v li.::ense<'s. SmaU offit't'. \\'e'll Plan A \\"ark
/ pleasant 1\·orking conditions. .~·hl'dlll•• To Suit You '{otin~ ni"n-n1echa11iral ap-PerS()na\ intervie1v -A~k Un<' Thal Is Tailored
tit111le hPlpf11!, bur not for il!a11agrr. 'fo Your Ability
rf'q'd. :r..iu~t b(' 19 or o\·cr. U.S. AFFILIATED 'i'our Time
Abll' lo -~tart ll'Ol"k in!med., Brokers Realty \'our Tran~por!ation
if aerl'pled, F·or job in-S4i.8j(]7, Eves 96S.]17S Call Or Visit
formation --------·-~-I
Call T11P!':. !\1n1-lpm
776-8551
NUR:"E'S aide', e..:p. prefrr-
RECEIVING
INSPECTOR _}{e/4 (fir/
Yi! Business Ccntrr Dr.
red 3 !o 11 pm. J\Tes;i Verd€' Rf'Cl'i\•t's k. inspf'CIS vl'ndor
Conv Ho~r. 661 Center St., nu1rerill.ls, mac>hined pRrl s,
C.;\I. :HS-;158,'i. l'!Cl'!ronic [larts, rll'int rd
Irvine 83J..144J
PfllNTf:r. -fast p:llnlC'I' fnl'
]~. 11pL bldg-. F'11\I fi111<'.
Phonr Mon-Fri 9-1. 213:
l'.\l~T l1111r 11<'lp.fe 111alc. 13-
2."i .\T.~. 1'o \1·11rk 1 n
r1hri10.gr:1rhy ~t11dio a ti rl
rlr !iv••rif'~ Tn!••rv1('11·~ '.:-:.
rl:11ly. S.'iS f'rnrl11r!ion r:a'""·
N.B.
.-~~~-~~PIZZA Corok~ ,t· Oc1i\"<'l)'.
n1[d•' ovl'r 21. ritt1111r. Ap-
ply Hl.-132 B!'ach Blvd., Hunt.
Be-;ir·h.
• •
t•irru1! IXl::irrls 11!i!izini;:
print!'. sp,.ei firalions, san1-
ptes & processes. ln!f'!TH'r !
b111eprints & sc hcmn!ic din·
grnn1s. 1 year l'XpPr. <1s re·
ceiving C'lt'rk or 111spec1 or.
(',:i Jl f'Dl" 1\ppl ,
ln<!ustrial P.elfl!:rins
(7 14 1 494-9401
TELONIC
INDUSTRIES
Sec:retaries
& TYPists
lnte1·vie11· !li)u1·s
9 .:in1·11 an1 & 1 pm -4 pm
\\',)l'k II hen & 1vherl'
_vnu 1~·ant '.
Interim
Personnel Servic:e
778 W. 20th, C .M .
642-7523 546-2592
.~CJ·erary/Bkkpr
Laguna Beach Constr. &>('y
to $700
to .$650
to SG.iO PLASTICS
MATERIAL
HANDLER
Equal Oppor. Eniployer !\1ktng Srr rrtary
1.,...,._...,_..,.,.,._.,....,I F!C Bookkc£per
-RECEPTIONIST Trnvel Agrn!
$650
$600
$600 ll1u.o;t be neat. clependablP &
possC'ss stable 'vork record.
Lifting r rq'd. \Vlll lrain.
Apply l -4 PM
Oran~e Const Plas!lcs
850 \V, 18th SL
X-Ray Tt•ch-.\led lcal Llte Typing
Call Lon·aine l..egal &-ry Trr1e
\VESTCLIFF F:xec. S<.'l'y·P/li1ni>
to S.'i7:l
1300
Persoimel Agency NEWPORT
2043 \\'estclifr Dr., NB Personnel Agency
1===645-277_0 ___ 1 833 Dover Dr., N .B, Costa "i\l esa, Calif. 642 '"70 '"!!~""'~"""""""""~"""i RECfl..PTTONIST: This nt'\'"l ~~~~~·':;-~~~~1 POSTAi~ Carrier.~. Deliver plush office needs }'OU lo/;--, , , ~
gt'f'l'I thl'ir cu ! 10 mer 11 • SEC\ for Na! l l!eadquarlcrs your O\\'n area. Costa 1\·lesa, l I I 1 · Grait boss & good future in ~-es ( ept. ~ 1nanc1al ser· ~~~\i•i~-~ref~d~t~i: th l.~ gn>al job. To $384. C:a.IJ vices organ1zn~lon. Diverr..
San Cleni 400.5903 aft J Linda Ra)'. 54 0 -60 :>5, pos. ~d oppor. 1~ gro1v!h co.
m Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 o R~u1rement~ include: gd
P ' llarbor Bl at Adams, C.M. skills & previous bus exJK>r,
P RE-School teacher . Strong Pref. in sail's act, 644-4360
music. bckgrnd:MiMion Vie-. RECEPTIONIST I SECRE· Miss f\1aT1fn.
'?i5'T..Sird not too good, not
l!IO bad. can't \VOrk on hf'r + Ctrlvr her too, \Vant '68 l.fw Squareback, auto or !
'
I BEAUTIFUL 30' T\V[N
I SCREW CHRI~. fCLEAR).
I 'rP..ADF. Jo-UR 11.U., CAMP· r;n on ?
BE1\UTTCIAN 11·ith <:lien!P!l'
wantt'tl for Krn Tf'mplelon
R50 \Vest 18th SI. ing, typing & good com·
Costa Mesa, Calif. munication skills.
J.Jair Stylisl. J70l \\'e.stclifl ,,...,,,....,..,..,..,..,~,,.
Dr. NB. DENTAL Assistant, Chair ,
BEAUTICIA NS rn>l"dl.t/ for side, 2 yrs. exper, Mlary I THROUGH A
"' Mrs Diehl 837-2993 TARY. Medica.1 0 ff Ice . l:s=""'=~"c~~-~-1 ' · · ' ' Laguna area. State age & ERVICE Sta.lion Attendflnt
QUICK CASH
qunl. \\'rite Classlfled Ad full . or pt llme. Cheveron
No, 451 clo Dally Pilot-P.0 . StatJOn. 3IXMJ Fairview, C.~t.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Cali(. S ITT ER-HOUSEKEEPER
R EC E p TI ON IST-Typig~ "'Oman 40 to 55 to care for
f/time pcnn. H.B. Conv: 2 children in niy hon1e. 5 yr
liosp, 18811 Florida, lfB. old & 2 n10 lnfant. f.ite
• 1 548·8506 eves
Green ml'!tal Oa.k"
Flbtra:laM dune buggy
w/ktfil bar & many exlra:i:.
Tnde for 110 boal
847·1'921
DµflBR 3BA, 1am nn. Mt .
llOmti tit Run. Sprin~!I.
"5;000 tQ.·1or ClPnr molor
home or~. wn8.l l home
fi,16.'l90l/6'r.J.2Zll. ''" 29.
l;{AVJ::: 4 unlll, Al!Mlf'nit ,
SOOM'. WANT: local dupl""
lo 4 µnits or 1.se t"Omni 'l or
in00.11.-or T l\b'ers rhkr)
"1Ul56. '
* . _..,,. * •r
!162-4283
J \\li.nr.he11ter sho! guns.
n1orlPI 97 A 25, 12 gauge, 3().
?.() i\1arlin, 30.1 Savagl', !)Ft
f\·Jau.~l'r, 303 Briti.~h. trade
for P.U .. rar or ? 548-45SJ
HAVE Sterling ilem~. 1\1aple
pieecll, 4 speed automatic
phoflQR'rnph, Trade ror Rlue
Chip or Green 11.amps.
5'16-1584
('f "··i. P.LDG, Ba!d\vin Pk.
i•' · 7\000. \Vant home,
" 111111e lo $75,000.,
!'O '1 Agt , 2913 LR
\r"ni;, ;;:c, 496·-4.'W.i.
* * *
•
L~TERVIEWING
b ho I -h u.' opf'n , 83 0-373 0 El usy :i:. p. 1.6:-i r or ·"''~" H 11
1 f'omn1 . Pd v11c. c 11 I I Toro-Laguna i s !'lrell.
548-9919. DISHWASHER ,
l\fon & Tues 9 am·2 pm
\Ved lhru Fri 9 am· 12 pm
Boat Builder!! F/tlmr Nit.es
Cabinet assemblers & mill Apply In Penon
men. Top \\'11.ge~. Colony Kitchen
15192 Gotcktn \\'est Cir. 321 1 Jtarbor Bl., CM
\Vestminstr r aw....1ri ESCROW dFFICER
BOOKKEEPER: Part lime. PO!llnlons avaUe.ble fn sever.al '
Jtor the gBl with childn."11 in <1( our <Jffi~ for E!ICro\1'
schall loC'RI xrowing lH"-Oflicefll w/tl min. nf 2-5
rmtnting firm, f'"" i b I e yn;. ('Xptf, In conventional
hl:iur11 for ,klllM pPrson. lottn!I. Must be t apablc or
S.t11rt $3 lir, CAii Nancy h!ndll~ OIA'TI de!tk. Satacy
i\lay, ~~. (' 0 a ~ 1 " 1 rommensur11te w/l'XPf'r. Agl'tl<'y, 27!K1 H11rb<Jr Bl. i.f ,.,..l!iOO
C Call Mr. Etchillon . .,.._ .
AO.oi•, .M. CALIFORNIA
N"-.'tf 11 "P1111'.c.,~P~1c--,,.,.-,-n-,~d! FEDERAL SAVINGS
<":ill ~~2-5117~ ------
ON
SITE OF OUR
NE\V BUILDI NG
PACIFIC MUTUAL
F ASlllON ISLAND
(Comer Sflnta Gn.t1 &
Newport Center Drive)
* FREE daily b u s
tMlMJ)('lrtatk:in for work In
Los Angdes until mow to
Ne\\'porl, Sept. '72.
Like lo trade! Our Trader's
ParAd~ column Is ftlr you!
5 llne11,..S dRYll'. tor ~ burk!!.
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
Tf'!I: always l:he rlE"ht tlm~ &:
ah,·ays the r lgh! place if
you \\'1\11! RESULTS! 0111
642-11673 A place thnl ad
today!
' I TlfROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
ROBINSONS
• NEWPORT •
BEACH
h(}USC'l\'l'll'J\. j d::l\' V.'k. 'i:JO
11m to 5:?.0 pm. Own trans.
SG:,. wk. 8 pd holidays & pd
vacation. 1-luntlngton Beach.
~36-<mll.
I-lag O!Mllling For SNACK Bar A It e n d Int 11
COSMETIC SALES ooeded. Fem."""' 21, lull &
If )'OU like maJ<C·Uf) & in· p/tlme. 549--0377.
dlvldual la8he11 A you ":ant STF.ADY \\'{)rk, good µ3,)'.
-----------1 to get ln!o a gl~morou!I [1old ReporUng time 7:4S am daf..
It's always t~e right time &. '''/a nat I cosmetic co. We ly at Lido Car Wt1sll. l48E.
will train. Sale! expt:r. 17th St. C.M. always the r!eht plal>e II nl'Cf!ss. O:>~mellclans Ucc-nsel "'.---'---'~'-"-'-------
necded. Part or f/tlme. From "Chrlsln1as Necktle5"
)""" ,~·nnt RESUl.'rS! CaJl Salary + eomm. B"netlts llt to oulJ:t'Q\\•n Levis -you ca.n
~12-:3678 It ph•~ 1baf ad All J .\\7 Roblrulon'l!. turn ''trash to ca11h" In a
644 • .'2eoo, •xt 326 DAILY PJLOT clA!l~!fled 11d
-call 642-6678
'
•
-;
M
T
0
I
h
T
llv
c
pl•
'° 11-1 ...
tit
I
"" A
'" d
w
Al
p
B
$1
• m
I
le
•
·;
j:
' I
'1 '
I·
.r u ·---·,J !~.,1---.
•• TT
c~-~ -l(fi] C '"'*-=i[Il]I .__ _-_______,!~ I
1 .... ---Htlp Wanted, M & F 710
-· I~ ~I ;;;;-;;;;;::!~~~ I -~ l~I;;;;; ~-·--..... ,..~JiJ~1;;1 ;;;·-;; .. ;; .... ~J§l;;;r~'----;;-"';;;;;"'"~l~§JI
Help W•ntod, M & F 710 Ania .... ill evv Mlsceltaneout 118 TV, Radio, tflFI,
Stereo
llooh, S.11 9" Motor Homes 940 Truck• H2 Auto.. lrnponoel 970
Swltc,hboard Opr \VAITR.ESSES. No op. req.
Top WAI"' and tips. Must
Kelly Girl be neat Ii \\'tll 0001ned.
APPiy In pPnlOn. Dally, ll
Need.I you tor ahort tenn 1t.m Open Sesame. 244() WPSt
ltmpor&ry aulgnmenll. Pacific Coast Hwy .. New·
Must have exper, Xln'I. port Beach.
y,·o:Jdng l'Onds. Top earn· 1 ~11"' A~l=TR=E~SS'°.-~-,-,.,-,-.-0-,-,-, ~271.
ing-,.;, \reekly paycheck. Ab. food & rocktails. Apply 10
.solu:L•ly no fl'e f.;>r«om , 'rht> Bl\1P Rff1, 1fli
Kelly Girl 21st Pl , N.O.
2061 BWllnl'&s Ctr Dr \\' 1\ IT HESS, cxpi-'l"ient'('
Irvine 833·1+11 over 21. Apply At Ulves,
TELEPHONE Salt s. Top Brookhurst &. Adli!t1J, Jlun-
a,mmluklna and bonu.s. Ap..
ply in penon between 9.00
and 12:00 noon a1 8381 Bolaa
Avenue, Mtdway City.
lington &ach.
WAIT R~E~s=s-
Exper. over 21. Apply in per-
son af!er 2 PJ\1, Deli .Shef,
--------SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
STElU:OS
1-972 Cunu-d, systemi..ud, SPEAKER 1)'1iem1. ab.ippin1
fully autolnatic cbar~l'r, d&m~" 10 bn.u-s I: packina;
A.\1/}nl /MPX nldJ(I, llt'11.I-only. 6'' 1-way tf> U" J..way
rd air SUSpt"nslon 111)('a~n 11.ir suspension s y • t e m • ,
Ftlony -Hound -Piano -plus tape dttk. Still bra.00 fJO 'ff off rt11'.· n"tail 5 Year
Bridle -l-JONEY nt".v & guurnn!et'Cf. \Vas guarantee. 892-ll'1.
The man \\'ho is as busy as le!t uncla1mf'd. Originally -=-=-'-~S~T~E~R'"E=o--
a btt n1ay -.·akf' up to fJ nd priCi'<I ftt ovt-r $300. N™· Compl<'te syste-ms, 21 to 40i;f
his !~ONEY n11~s1ng __ 1
1
SlOJ. Cash or s ma 11 o!f rtt:. rt't1til. Speaker f!Y!-
F1JR ,l~'RE GI pt1ytnenl~. Credll Dept . .. ''-' ~ -a~~ -1 ·tl 1/:-193-lf.ill. le1ns. 35 10 50•-C olf reg. ~!1.-.c. 4i0 0 1<1 Ke"'JlOl'I Rl\'d. ---------retail. 7804 \Vestmlnste.r
Nev.·port Bch, Thurs -r·r1 -* AUCTION * Ave., \Vestminster. 892·~2.
* 8' SAILBOAT* "BILL WHITL!l>Gl:S" '67 DODGE I'> TON IMW Ex~Uent coacUUon. New Suftlet Motorl fl1dc\Jp. vtengjne, automat1el--,,=,._,,.=.,-,..---I """""·Call: 54UT!!. ORANGE couNTY """""ius""'s·99<si.uwi. t70 BMW 2500
17' 'lb.l.ltl~. Fb/gla ftady 10 l..(>CATI0:--1
aa.U, new low price. U.275. Layton Travel Trailer's DAVE ROSS Au tomatic, P..adlft.i T!tt11,
Call !J6Ull6. 1' '1'. 19 >'T. 21 '1'. & 23 >1'. PONTIAC A1j~f~w 1P .. dlo. """
Pl.KE .,.,./trailer. $500. Good Lu.YUrkM.111 home fll1'1t.Y lron1 ....,.._
J'M)rue "'"" H bo u199 condition. Prlvilll' party. _.,.,, ar r Blvd, ...,.
833-lfil> As lonv u M months Co"• M"• 546-ROll CREVIER
'"" • JJ I '-··· to pay, Nt-":W ll' MOTORS w sioov. •• "Y & "~"' Motor Hom• 's l'ngine. f1,1lly e-q u J p p e d "'°" \\' Nln1binHUon KIL~ t. r]f'1·!.
SZ.:«J /off(l'r. 61:>-1393 Cornplf'!t-hnl.' nt .'!\ll"\'t'}•'r·s ri>frig. C-Ornf'r h}llrau!ic
O"'flff"
Sat. 12-5". F'-F'·-• ·uie ·w•uture COLOR TV $95. 71'' 1V $29. ?1' Sloop. $300. 2-~
Victorian Dresser & Appllll!ll.-es 19" port. .,••/stand $39. AU Ana Ave., Costa
Santa
P.tesa
Eldorrido M!ni ;\iotnr 1!"1114'• J3l'ks.
,~ ~\·era! U!l'll n1u1t11· ON LY $!~(,
::.nl \\", Tsf SI .• Sa.n t11 Ana
BJS-3171
l--CAP·R-1--
homt"!t. Scott s CamJMrS
SPECIAL ! 914 NSa~~~~11 Blvd, '71 C'APRl ;ro), llL'< utl, vin.
~'larble top. $300_ 557-4467 Auctior.s l'riday, 7:30 p.m. xlnl cond. 557-399.J. 540-5886.
Appliances 801 Windy's Auction Bo rn HCA Colur TV. Xlnt rood, VICl'ORY 21 ' Daysatlt>r.
TYPISTS
Temporary
Laguna iilll!I Plata, J::] Toro. J\1A'l.'TAG rrpa1rman ha.~
\\'ANl"ED, v.·oman for PT v•ashers $:l5. to $100. Can
job Jn Doctors urfic-e. Lab dC'li\·i:r "'11 yr. cuarn-
tech. Jll't'fe11·ed. l\·lust be 839-tn30·~-~-~~
fnmille.r 11•/lab. r-1ost du!ics h.7£/'.':\tOnE ,,ashf'r S 6 O ;
20751h Newport, CM 646-8686 SlG:i. Of!er. "-'/Cr!r. 2 gets salls. Fixf'd
13eh1nd Tony's Bldg t-.111.t'l I * &42-0584 * keel Ai;klng $1400. &15-2&49.
[llCTAPliO:\E D1cl.11•11· ,r., * Lido 14 S59i 111
11·1111scriber likr nt'~' $!00or 11 ][S I Bn.lhott Island moor ! n g
best ol!er. Refng. 10 i:u fl. Fm to You _•_v_a_il_ab_I_o._67>-_1_32_3.:.. __
\'t•ry clean $30. 4 hranl.! neiv '-------Boats, Slips/Docks 910
$2533-top, :1,00) u11, pvt pt/. $2215.
.-, , . 'j; l)odge pu·kup, 1; r.11, runs r~i.t-:il.12
Bili\!" D NE\V LA \ r 0 r.,; $it'llid. ·;,1 1•or1I rirkup, 8 Cl I, CITROEN
'rRAVEL TR1\lLf<Jt ('IU\Vll."1 ('/JfTIP•'r un h;il
Fully Se lf ·Co n (111 ried l\fake nHrrs. ]IJ\ t'f'IT\t\J.'> •
locludu1£ !Jr !.,ii.: B. Citroen.Sports Maseratl
3.\\'ay 1{£'frtK, :-ih't"p~ t~ -;-: -·-Orange County headqulll1.er.t
Ser 818llfi7 ti7 '• h1n lru1 k ).' t l':un1~·r, fOr IOf'1_1l ,(.. r·; u r 0 pc an r-.rust be poised, well groom·
ed. L<i1v pressure jobs. Start
immedlate-ly. X I n t op-
portunity !or housewives re-
entering the job market or
in betv:een jobs,
to be lab v•ork. 492-7520. \l'P~!inghousc 1vasht:i' $6.-1: (;ooiJycar tires 8.75-16.5 6 3 LinWf, 2 Times, $2.00 Ptvine &15-4-'~;~-; 111 ni t. Xhit \·111k!. .SIJJS ·!. deli\.'t'I')'. \\'ornrn 1'l'1gld. or \\'hir!poo! 1\n~ilt'r
EnJoY glamoUr p 1 / 1 i n\ e $40. Guar. & de!. 54G--S(i'j'.!,
pl y. Servisofl auto wut~r Cl-IOICE slips in new ,\laruu.1
1•ond., model 220, 11·i!I in-I•••••••••• I !or 25-70 fl. boats. 1970 Harbor Ul\'d. J~~.t.wi. Ph. )!fl.l·•;ft'.i·I J im Slemons Imports
i·arf'C'f, Show Bf>C' Ii ne ELECTRlC washer & Dryer.
fa~hions at $~$30 "'kly in-\\lhite. excellent condition.
~·onie + qualify for !r1•e Private paMy 979-2:AJO or
staU , Pfaff heavy d,11y S('W-I Female Clji!iC.'O long hair. 673·6606.
ln't 1nachine ~100. S.92-4213. 3 n1onths old, BlaC'k, Rrd,
DAN fSl-1 Modern livini: room Brown, \vhite, Call 646--4268
DOCK w/ba!hrootn up 111
~'. $7'5/n10. No. 2 Balboa
O:>ves. N.8. 675-43..11.
Costa MeS11. ·1•1 t 'h1•v .'..:. c-:1n1p1·1" "1•'11 2201 So.1-1.ain, Santa Ana
C•llhl11i••rt. 1·:~11·1 1\' .SXllJ 557-5242 Open Su n.
or h1''! 1,ff<'r. •lv--,::.!77 DATSUN
Cali Or \.'isi! 1vardrohf, 893-2317 o r 979-7245 ask for Casey.
Jj7-9733. 'R~.-n-t~w~.-s'h_e_r_s~;=D~r~y-er_s_ group. Includes 90fa, chair. _a1_1,_,_2_0._n_>. ____ _ Auto Leasing 9114 1 --~~~~~~-lamp table and coffeE' ta h!e . CUTE KITI'E!'-;S
KELLY GIRL
2061 Business Ctr. Dr.
WRITER $2. \Vk. Full mainr. l'rl pty. Al l for $7;'i. 2 ma.!r-1 fen1. Crey,
gl'('y/"'hite. 9ti8-90i3.
SAIL BOAT SLIPS
hlk, t>.'ev.•port Bench 5·18·Z'2S3 '71 240 z
I LEASING) PROMOTIONAL * 639·1202 * ~)::l-i194.
14' Ski Boal. 65 hp l\lCITUl'y,
FREE v.·ood . .!\1odel (;lalis Xlnl cond. $700. 4 ~pd. 1·!lnnry ytl!o111, rilu~h
blk, Interior. niait \llhet-ls,
frnt & I'f"ar guarils. !fl1¥ nii,
aacrilir('~ ~:r80.'l9. $4195 full
prict. Barwirk J)atsun, 998
So. Cot1;'1t lll\'y,, Laguna
Beach. MG4051 /494-9Tn.
Irvine 833-1441 Display yaur creative talents OVER 200 washers, dryers,
in !his job, Promotional rt'frigerators from $39.95.
TYl'IST, financial srrvices 11Titing & litE' clerical 545--0780.
t;:;._.d Jl(IQI JlU', filter, tl1v1n~
. brt!, mise., so!a 96". grl
CQnd, Ne1v r.ustnl drps &
rods 90" x 30 It. 673-6640.
DOLL (.'lothes -Barbie
forn1als $1.25. Cuddly IO~'S
$1-$5.00 SC. 492-13211.
Cc1np.1ny. lG-14 ~\1perior, * ~7---0318 * Try our lease E''(P<'rls tor
l.3G::l t-larbor, Garden Gro\•e Sa\'ings . Satisfaction -Ser-C,.\1. 6-lG-3231.
organization Opening for duties, To $444· Call Linda -R=E=rn=.1=G=E=1~tA=ro=n~.~,~D-r.-
typist, lite steno. Diver!. P.ay • 5:1<Hi05."i, C 0 a s t a 1 Auto Defrost
17' Schiada SK \Vilh 110
To qual. hon1e, kittens Beaut. Mere OB. Canvas COV("J', l Blk. So. ot r. G. Fr.1y. vi ce,
6.'IB-1133 \VE LEASE All POPtn.AR
pos. Oppor for advance in Agency, 2790 liarbor Bl. a! * 893-9060 *
gr'O\vth Co. Appli cant must 1..:A_::d::o:cm.::•,:.• .::C.::·'.:_!._~~-
have gd skills & previous XL.NT ()ppor. Nat'l Concern
Bus. exper. Call 644-4360 has openings for route
Miss i\iartin. salesmen in C.M. 962--0416.
n1<Jiked 8 v.-·ks box & outsd Sharp! $1750. 962-JS9.I
tmd. Long. shorl ha1r. PACE-ARROW •. Cl!INOOI\ Jri'.! i\IAKF::-::: AT COMPF:fl.
All top bran1Js • , Dlst."-.1unt 1'!\'F: RATES.
VIETNAM VETERAN: Start YOUNG MAN over 18 to
a management career in a A s s j s t Maintenance
local branch ot a nationally Man, must be neat ef-
known co. On the job ficient & reliable. $1 .75
training. Earn \Vhi le you hour. Call S46-501S.
learn. Approved GI job I----------
training. To $7500. Coastal
Agency, 2790 Harbor Bl. at
Adams, CM.
Don't give \lp the ship!
"List" it in cltwi!ied, Ship
to Shlre Results! 642-5678
••••••••••••••••••••
For an ad in Woman1s World
C•ll Mery B•th 642·5678, ext 330
Top-to-Toe News!
lfa\•f' fu n in 1he sun in !his
l!vely. quick--erochet trio.
NEW top-to-toe treats~
Crochet midriff top, shorts.
playshores of ~rstE!tl in 2
eolors. Pal. 7•85: top, sizes
8--14 incl.: 1hoes s. M. L Incl.
Side-laced shnrts adjuat to
fiL
8Evmn'·FIVE CENTS
far each pattern -add 25
cents for each pattern for
Air Mall and Special Hand!·
lnK; othetWi!e third-class
dellvery will take three
weeks or more. Send to
Allee Brooks, the DAILY
PU..OT 105, Needlecraft
Dept., Box 16J, Old Chelsea
StatJon, New York, N.Y.
10011. Prinl Name, AMreta,
Zip, Pattern Nmnber.
NEEDLECRAFT '72! Cro-
chet, knH, etc, Free dlttc-
tlons. 50 centa.
NEW! ln11tut Macn.me.
Basic, fancy knols, p.attttnJ.
11.
Eu,.-Art of •talrpl11 Cro-
el\et -o-.'tf 26 deslrna to
mnke. $1.
Jnlltant Crochet Rook -
learn by pictures! Pattma.
$1 .
Completfi Jut-ant Olh &Mt
-more than 100 glJts. -11.
Complete All ... --$L
II 11111 ... --SO """"· Boole of 11 P"rtH If ......
50 cent1.
Q1dll Beek 1,-16 pattema.
50 ctnls.
MaeUln Quill Booli: I -
50 CCII.
QUiit• tor TfMl&y'• U•l•I
-15 btauWul patttm&. 00
ttnts.
Five For Fun!
9377 EACH FROM
ONi: MAIN
8-18 PA1TIR!'f PART
In, 11f,..i .... 1lf ...,1"-
It'11 true? JUST ONE
MAIN PATTERN PARl' for
each -tunic, dress or
jumper, hotpant11, s k 1 r t ,
pants! \Vhip up these
parlneNI in ea syca r e
polyeosters in prin1 s. solid~. . Printed Pattern 9377: NE\\
Jl1i!lses' Sites ll, 10, 12. 14. lG
18. Yardages in pattern.
U::VENTY·FtVE Cf:NTS
for each pattern - add 25
cents for each pattern for
Air Ma.LI and Special fl11ndl
ing; otherwise third-class
dellvery will take three
weeks ar more. Send I to
Marian Martin, the DAILY
PILOT, 442, Pa~em Dept.
232 West 18th St., New
York, N.Y. 10011 . Pr!n
NAME, ADDRESS w Ith
ZIP, fllZE and STYU:
.
.
t
NtlllfllEK.
SEE 1'-IORE S pring
Fashions and choose one
pattern tree from new
Spring-Summer Cata.101. All
sizes! Only SOc.
INITT'ANT SEWING BOOK
Rew tode.y, wear tomorrow .
IL
r INSTANT FASIOON
BOOK -Hundreds o
fashion racUI. $1.
CALL 642-5678
DAILY PILOT
. CLASSIFIED ADS
••••••••••••••••••••
-·
Furniture 810 s.\8-0813 1\36-449'.l. Boats, Speed & Slcl 911
~ GOOD true k tires ~riO-lG.5 I'i:iltens-r~ree to someone \\'ho SK l-Crnft \\•/30h N S U * HERC U L 0 N Sofa Goodrich 8 ply, ovf'r W'1~ of cares. \Vankel engine Dr ive your
w/tnateh lovt<seat. Worth tread ren1alns. $30. total 548-75.10 own ski boat as you ski.
$600, Sac $22'5. Velvet !iv, rash rice. 536-9831. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii j Sieck imported fiberglass
rrn fu rn including sofa nr:LL ntolorcyt'le helniet, hull. Really Snn1ething!
loveseat. chr. Also. tbls, .,.,,hlle. siie 7~. $25. j j[~j Value SROO. Sac. $500, best
bkcsc, king & dbl beds, 3 546-4478 Ptts and 5LIJlPliM _ ~ offer . 675-6506 /673·3404,
t> c c o r n e r s e c t i o n , . . ';mmmmm;;;:.:;~~ I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ,v/ain/frn, game 5ct & j GIRL S 3 speed bicycle, hkc I
·price .,.. !Mti1EDIATE DE-Ca.ll ~Ialcoln1 R(•!d for
LIVERY. , ft1rU1er d('ta\Js.
BEACH CITY DODGE R6~~~SD~~~D
16555 Beach Boule1·fU'd
lluntington Beach
{714) 540-2660
TEST DRIVE
THE MIDAS MINI
MOTOR HOME
4'XlO Harbor Blvd.
Co!ft.a r-.tesa 642-0010
Autos Wanted 968
WE PAY TOP
'66 DATSUN PICKUP
l.Doks & Runs fine! Excellent
transportation -C"Utc littlt;:
truck (SLU47!l). Make offer~
Bkr. Before 7 pm. 645-4J9i
()I' 644-2950.
'72 BIG 510 SEDAN !
l·Jll\fALAYAN female, 1eal Distribute-cl by
point, produces top kit-Ken Craft Product!
more, Al! like nc1v! Pvt new. $30. Cati 852 llsttJ
Pry, 645-1701. 531-7294 ----------Trampcwtalion .
VELVET tufted sofa, never Miscellaneous CASH 4 DR, -4 spd, low mile~.,
Radio, heater (#337908)
S2349 tnll price. WlU finance.
trns, CFA regislered. Also CREVIER MOTORS prrsian kittens and per. Aircraft 915
used, s1.~:1: matching love Wanted
.seat. $85; ve!vet hi-back ----------
820 tor UMd can • trocb, 1'111 Banvlck Det..m, 9911 So.
call U! for fret! e!lt\mata. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beaeh, . chair $85; C'OC ktail !able~.
''85 ~a; lamps, $20 ea.
USED GARBENSTANGEL sian stud service. 208 W. lst SI., Santa Ana
l\1ust h ave r ight·handed 892-2970 I-IALF interest in a '66 Cessna 835-3171 GROTH CHEVROLET 5'M05114'+9m.
$3S-6281.
REFRIGERATOR, \Vasher
& Dryers $30 & up. 182'2
Newport ?!lvd. 6-16-71\20.
zoenstift v>ith po1ver dip-SfAMESE SE-a!point kittens 150. $500 &: take over --M--"","-'po'--'----I
poleck. Would accept early $10. ea. Call alter 2 pm. payments 546-5038 Gregg. * arvln earce * •n Dat11un, silver xln't cond. '.
Ask lc:w Sales Manl&'er Loarled. Must 'sell. Ca.II i
1nodel with battery operated 646-2781. Campers, Sale/ Rent 920
pidd leb ottom. \\'r ite: D 154
Clnsslfied ad No. 174, DAT-ogs S' Cabover. Has flink, ict
11UA1. hl'adboard, beauliWI LY PILOT p 0 Bo 1560 , box, carpet, wnt!l. propane
P I 150 Cali II -· · · x ' OUTSTANDING champ ,;,..d ta •-h t ta" ~ I ei:an \V()()(, · a :J C 1 "!esa CA 92626 I · n"'°• ea er, .... e ruts o
p nt "'kdays, all day os a" ' · A[ghan Pups. Show qulllity. storage space + 31,~"
weekends, 897-817·1. *Wanted Dead* S250 up. Terms. 821-1360, fiberglass insulation. You
Sofa 8' Lovesea t, nevrr used. I Aluminum can! that have _a_,_k_fo_r_l_0.1_. ______ 1 pane'l tM inside & save.
Both $150. Sewing n1ach. $25. served you wt>ll & providE'd IRISH Setter Pups, reg. $295, firm. Wetkdays call
P ri pty. 968·7910. I hours or pleasure. RUN~!! American Field. M & :F, before 3 pm, 536-7749.
8 12 1 to _1000 Clenncyre St., La· shots, rcasonablt'. 673-(K)SS '69 V\V Camper-pop top.
Garage Sale guna Beach. No glass what-_a_f_l _6_. -------·I .. New eng" still on war-
\VASJfER, dresser \1"/mir-soever accepted. IRISH Setter pups, AKC top ranty. New tires-stereo tape.
ror, couch, nr ne1v clothes 5-Musical Instruments 821 show Jines & qual. Perm. $2550 or best o I I er.
7 baby stroller, can·h.'r & shots. 3 mos. 962-4145. _7_1_41_83_7_--0778 __ . ____ _
misc, Park in str'ef't. m FULL SE't of Rogen; drums Tiny Cock-a-poos 6 wk! old '65 Ford 2SO % T. Truck
Sierks C.l\t. l pn1. to du~k. includuig cymbals. $10 & $20. 642-4818 nr 534-3885 \V/8i,,' · Cabovu Westway's
S.15-3192 Alter 7 P .1\'f. eves. camf1er unit. 4 speed. R/.H GARAGE Sale. You "'ant it?
We have it! Some real
goodies. big & small. 319
Monte Vista, C.M. 646-0494.
Jewelry 815
DIA.i.'10ND&-Buy Direct * WHOLESALE PRCCES *
Dana Diamondg 496-W'JO
Machinery 81'6
Office Furniture/
1 Equip. 124
* * OUTSTANDING Great Xlnt Ct'Jnd. 54,00) mJ. $199'S.
D a n e p u p s , A K C .1.:54;;;S-rol:..;:;::.:;6· ______ _
reasonahle. 540-2894 '71 VW Campmobile. Pop
OFFICE clost'tl, perfect of-SILK--.-Y-T_
0
_m_.-
0
,--N,p-p-,,-,-AK--.C-, 1 top. ipec. 3-way refrlg., fire furniture for sale Call L ,,,_ ... ~
rrl8-5861 after 5. Show qua!. $100 to n25 or radio, camp. gear. 499-1951.
P . /0 826 n1ak£" ortC'r. 962-7057. ALUM . Camper, 4>.ii, $125. 1anos rgans -'-='--'="-'==--Bunk, louvered windows.
-----------AKC Pedi,;;rec Silky Terrier ~732, GOULD MUSIC CO. P"P'-1200.
PRESENTS Call 644-4806 Cycles, Bikes,
OXYGEN -Acctylerie -LA RRY ROOU AKC Silkie T<'rricr femoi!c Scooters
we lding and cutting ouUit. Premiering the spcctaculor puppy, 11 viks old. $l50.
$79.95. AC ARC welder. 225 New Conn Organs &.14-256(). •
ampi. $95 827-~MO. Sunday, June 4, 2:30 pm '72 HONDA 175 CC
Motor Homes
Sales • Rentals
558-3222
1411 S. Village \Vay, S.A,
MlNI Motor Home for rrnt.
Sleeps 6, 11elf cont. Pvt. ply.
49'7-2384 aft 6 pm.
lml Beach Blvd. 96&-7903. I
HW>tlnston S.ooh FER• &RJ lW7-608T Kl 9-333] """" •
\VE buy all makes ol clran l----------1·
used sports cars, p.1tid fOJ' '69 Ferrari, 36.5 GT, 2 + 2,
or not. Please drive in for ailver, Ai\1/FM, air, full j
free appraisal. pwr., new Mlchelln, Tl<I: I
675-&110, early mornln1.
FIAT
'n DODGE hohday m;ni '71 Flat 124 Spycler
home 20'. Sell contained. Sleeps 6, $150 4 ,.,eek. 5c 3100 W. Cout Hwy., Mag Wheels w/new Rad!all,
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
mile. Avail aft. J une 15. Newport Bf'acb 4 Spd', Ml.lit Be Seen (88t).
_:m-:"'::''.1832':"._ _____ J--;;:;;;;;~64:;';2·,940;;;';;5="'°-I DNQl.
Motor Homo R1ntels IMPORTS WANTED $2590
Available for dally, weekJy Oran&• Countlu COAST TOP l BUYER or mm,1thly basis. 21', 23', BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
and 25 sell <.'Onta!ned Mo· 18881 Beach Blvd.
tor Hnmes, all equipt with H. Beach. Pfi 347_S558 IMPORTS :~7to;llie:OO~x::~. a~~: \VILL Buy your 1:~~ pald for
C.oaches are 1972 models, nr not. Call Ralph Gordon 1000-1200 W. Padftc Cat. Hwy. plea~t call &39-9560. 673-0900 -445 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beadl (nt> SC-0406
945
Ne\l.'por1 Beach. 546-4529
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR 1 FOR TOP USED CARS 69 Fiat 124 e ARISTOCRATS II "°"' ,.,. I• """ c!oan. Sport C-e NEWPORTS tee U1 tlr!t. --r-e AUTO-MATES BAUER BUICK 4 SJ>d, Radlo, Heater (YZN-
Also, leVeral used $395 6 up 2925 Harbor Blvd. 07Q),
al Ehi>ll Club of Santa Ana TINY Teacup Toy Poodles
TABLE sa\~' 10" Craftsman, 1 625 French Street AKC registered
1 h.p., 3500 RPM motor. I fr('t' admission 5-17-3851 * 547-9".f.ll
WORSHAM TRAILER SALES Cnata Mesa 979-2500 $1590 Less than 500 miles. Absolu!· 2709 w. 17th S1Jftt
t>ly cherry! (BEE030). $549. santa Ana <n4) 531.2595 Auto1, Imported 970 COAST
$1 l ~i. 8~1-3315· prizes, fun. ST. Bernard, female, 3 !-!arbor VW. 11!711 Beach
Blvd ., Hw><iOlllon Beach. 1911' TERRY, "'U..:on\alned ALFA ROMEO PO\\TER n10,,.,·er, 18 inch i;elf-* * * * * months old. AKC. All shots. 8424435, w I c o m p I e t e towing ----------propelled reel lype 540. \fr. T~on11 rnnrlu<"!.~ frrr" 11·ork-+ 534--3017 *
l:;wJ_r i~~~~ff~~,~~ $~~ pac~. $l900. 548.mJ. 5 :~~A!~: !~i!.~-~~ IMPORTS (i..12-4970. I I . SI JO :-; 1up 1n our · nre a111 (;RE'.AT Dan(> !'>ups. AKC
Miscellaneous 818 i\londily, Ju11e 5. Call for "(;iants". ALL COLORS.
res<'rv111lon. VEnY REAS! 968--0590 644-1514 after 6. 1· ........ Ir;;, & Soft Tops, fVIn't!:l~J. ·n su,,k; TS 90. Gd. rood. .~ $1690 1000.UOO W. Paclfl< Cl!. Hwy. ----------GOULD ?>fUSIC CO. S A N S U I · 20' N 'I · S LABRADOR pups, $[(!, AKC.
•loo '68 Honda 125 '!'win nd•. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~9;5;6 1 COAST NewportJBeA~GchU(7!AR4) -,\ ?.I/ 1'"tl1/STERF:0/:'1·1PX-''5 o. "ain. .A. 547.~1 -•* Sine(' 191 1 rapnhl(' or tl1ro.,\'l ng gold $139.95. Ainbassador floor
standinJ{ SpeRkers. with U"
bass, 6" midran11:~ and 3"
super \\\'CC\rr S~~.9~ pr,
BSR l\frDonald prolesslonnl
!able, 310X l'Omplelf' 'vith
base, dustcover and Sl-lURF.
M75 cartridge $ 8 O. O O
Complr!r ~slem, ell nr.,...,.
no111 $2'39.9S. USA Steffi)
F.quip \Varehouse, 179 E. ,
17th St.. Costa Me s a .
645-2442.
OLDER Singer II e w I ng
machine-\Val nut cons o 1 e
model-Straight stitch plus
att.at"l1ments II em mer,
pleater. ru!Oer, buttonholer,
hernslicher pinker zipper . .
foot SlJ, Call mornlngs c r
after 5:30. 645-215-1.
labs. 616-5337. ,,.,.k. both $300. 548-:->204 alt 4.
1970 Yamaha 125 Enduro. Lo Dune Buggies
mi!t'I!, Sharp! 673-3401 or FREE
ORANGE COAST
HAMMOND STUDIOS
0ffers
:;1 !1en1ard, male, no papers.
l yr. old, $75.
531·~46 "'":':'BSA GoldSt". ~~2NESPBEUCGIAGLY IMPORTS
Fast & Sanitary $700
'66 A'KE 2 + 2. Olerry
condlli.on. One nwner . Auto
wire whls., lo mile1, beat '
o tter. Must sell, 673--0832 4 Adult Evening Classes e Beginners
• !ntcrmedia!e
e Theory
• \Vorkshop
Coll for information
644-a930
..,~.., J[• JE' J n4-495-4640 radio, & top, 209EOJ.
'liii-iiiiii._ii. iiiiiiii.:~"";;;;;;; -s,;;~z~;1~~,':'~N~~~1;,:o_:_;d-"~,,...,-'--L-l,-JSO $1599
I 540-5886.
Boa ts/ Marine
Equip. 904 '69 Yamaha 250 Enduro Io
mi. Pert. cond. Reblt eng.
Extra11. $525. 646-6649.
2854 E. Coast Hwy, CdM \VANT ED: YAOfT JUNK BELL motorcycle helmet,
*PIANOS*ORGANS* nn consignment. Clean out white, size "l 1A $2S.
Going Out r·or Buaine~" your garage or dockbox. 5-i&-4478 ~ ~
Best quality • price!! • acrv. Bring good used marine -----~~--"\I"
Kawai·Sleinway·Baldwin, etc equip & hardware to Sara's SUZUKI 50ce 445 E Co8Jlt H
lOOJ..1200 W. Pacific Cst. ltwy. 19n XKE
Newport Beach (TI4) 642-0406 A/C. \Vire \I/heels. AM/FM
546--4529 White "'/blk lnt.
Alfe Romeo Excel Cond. ~4-llm
KARMANN GHIA
KARMANN Ghia '70, sm
conv,. good eond, below bk,
$1300/otfer, leavUW entry.
67S-8679.
Marine SAlvage, ill·30tb St., Like new $165. · wy • Playt'r P ianos & Rolls N.B. 675-4684. Sll-1"294 NE\VPORT BEACH NOW ON DISPLAY
Rentals ••• We Buy .. &>ll 673-0!m Ext. 53-54 Sales sen.tee 1969 IAtuJ EJan. red. low
L01US
Daily 10-6 Sun 12·5 Boa ts, Power 906 '66 BSA 441. Xl nt cond. Ovrr (Open SUnday) Parll Body Shop mUeage, «Keel eond. c.ii FIELD'S PIANOS __ .;.,.. __ ,____ hauled 6,oo:l ml $450 flnn. COAST IMP ~ da;yt
r Costa i\1esa <TI-4) &tS-325() pn.JCE Slashed for quick 673-0461. '61 V\V Bug, good for ~· 100).1200 W eo2RTS : •mT ew:
sale, froni $1.300 tu $800. l8' ---~l~l.-H-0-m-1-1--~w= I No engine .l has front end 11 • t Hwy. MAZDA
POOL table, antique 11!yle,
4x8 state. $325. Will delive
tree. 8?£-8102.
USED BICYCLES
All types, larg<' selections
• &42-1212
CARPET FOR SALE
by Carpe't Layer. Call
• 546-5745 ·--LATE model refrigerator. 1'1
cu. ft. Good coiid. Mn.hog.
table, .seats 8, $15. Ex. cond.
673-2972 aft 5 Sun & wkdya.
M£.'TAL tennis rackrl, ntw.
T·~ \Villl()n $20. . .#. SU:.2400 •
PAINTINGS from Italy, an·
tique bowl I: pitcher, gold
lea/ cred~n:n• & m i11C.
645--3522 OI' 64.')-3639,
TRAMPOLINE
for aale, prof 1b:e
S400 • 548-1825
DAILY 11LOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR ACTION. • .
CALL 642-5678
UPRIGHT 1-lardrnan piano. Kel110n c&bin c r u i 1 e r dMlaied. Rest of body ls' ewport Beach 842-0tOS
~:;~'.on. $250. or of· ~j~,lr, N~~~Y Jpn:~~ :: DOUBLE wide Flamlngu =·c~o:eS:'·Mi:·,:~ AU~TIN HEALEY ROTARJ'S
mobi l e home . Ha 11 lmmMl•'Del.__ I PRIVATE PARTY WANTS upixil'l:lered. S & S radkl If t-verything. Set up In nice this weekend, 548-5380. '80 Austin Hea1ey, Bug-Eyed ,.....,ry
j TO BUY PIANO FOR many extra.I. 543-1503. family park. Pets ok. $S'5«l. Trucks 962 Sprlt., ronv/hdtp, x 1 n t Rum IEAal
CASH. ~ms. STARCRAF1' 16' f/glass. 65 531-7294. BRAND NEW body/ena. $475. 347 .. 7793 aft
STUDIO Upright Plano hp Mere 1kl/flsh, lfl whl Mot H 940 ti.
I POii 0' bell ofter. '"'· all Juot Ilk• """· llliOO or Omol '72 Ford Va nsl----=a"'MW=-=---
536-8775 lirrn. Take car on trade. ---------
1
Sporting Goods 130 >l!>-l704. BRAND NEW Eronolln ... 2 lo choo1< Irom.
BEAlITIFUL 30' T w; n 1972 M•lman lmmodlate deUvery.
IMMEDIATE
DELIVIRY
SCUBA tonk $45. J·Valvc for
I ~i" nf'ck $10. 1\\'ln bark
npek $17. Connct.11ng yoke
for twin's $20. 675-3174.
RUSSELL Surfboo.rd Crcnt
Screw Chris < c I ear> BUY OR LEASE s.crm,,. 1or l65tlO o' '""' MINI Motor Home
for P.U., c:nmper or ? Ood&e chai1sl!I, Sleeps 6, fully
I cone!. 5'8" $35. 673-«>52' or
673-<220.
TV, Radio, HiFf,
Stereo 136
962-4283. sell contaln('d ,
C S {B31BF2U529857l 160 entury, Fllh •t 0' PRICED TO SELL runabout, xln't cond. 170 hp
eng. Mu.t ,.11. ll<'tt otr. DEALER'S COST
541-4345, 552-9589 eves. COAST 14 IT. Fiberglas!! 30 hp.
New trailer lla:hts, $375.
•e<~•
Plt V. Pty, Stereo 200 watt 1--_::...;c:.=:...:=---IMPORTS ~::~~/~~~;; re~~dx~~~ :.~::s# ::::~h~nrt'~ra:
l;nrrard <:hanger. hrnd· P£i11n..~ Yashlr,A S . L , R.,
phone1 $.2Z>. KCl l 11\r !IU~p. enla.rger $15, Nlde proJ. 1000.1200 W. Pacific Cs!. lhvy.
f'T'OSllOV('r i:pkN., IT'IAll $370-lflkt!I both 35 A 2,4 , m3 Newport ~~4) 642-0400
SZ20. \Vii i deal on a ny ar ttll Belgrave Ave., C.C., Bch. It
646-3..q;di rlny, 549-3591 rvl"~. Chapmnn, Sat.-Mon. c-la.Wfler! ..• 64Ui6i'_3 __
I
·-.
Cort~Fox SEE &
2586 Newport 11 Fair Owrse1s Delivery
Coot• M... 1145-!66! CRl.VllR MOTORS 208 W. l"t St .. Sl\llttii Ana '54 Ford II Ton. NfW •'1!lne. ~In
Good condition S<OO. 50 USED MIRCIDIS
64&-2663 VIJii our "'"' home! ON DISPLAY NOW
• '67 }~ord. 1 Ton Truck, G Le•se Mew M.radet
ctibln C'hossls. power h1kt $118.71 Menthfy
otr. 111:>0. &1&-1000. 54._m, HOUSE 01' IMPORn
Put a little "loot ' ,n your 6862 l\1anchtl•ter. Buena Pk
Lev11. ••U 100.. bauht., fo• ROY CARVER, Inc:, ~Zl-'1250 on Sarua Ana J'(wy •
"buckii".
&.12-567B.
Call Onulfletl 234 E. 17th St. ~I tdlt J!*lnl
·----------Cns1a 1'11'!1:t 546-4444 641-SS13 N°"'l
•
'
•,
'
•
--- -'
1.1onctay, Junt s. 111 , ~
--~ .. J§J I
A...,.., lmporttd 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Aulot, UHcl 990 Avtos, UMd 990 Aulot, Used "° Autao, Used 990 ....... ......,....;.. __ _
MERCEDES BENZ TOYOTA
'67 Mercedes
25 0 S Sedan
Exquisite R1ld btlge 11,Jth
luU leather interior, factory
air conditioning, au t o.
!rans., power slPrnn'=·
J>O"o'f'r dh1c brake&, A:\-1/~·~t
radio, radial "'hlte s1dt· \.\llll
ttrr:i;, l{)(·al beauty tlif1!
'lhov.'K lmpcccablc ('ll fC' ul
side and out. ~T\VJ978J .
$35 55 • '67 Merce des
230 SL
Fut't
1njPcl1on, auto. t r ans .,
1xni.·cr ~tt'l'rint,:. p11r. c.hsc.
bro kr~. full leather interior.
A:\-1/~·~t S\V r a 'I 10.
Hf'Hut1ful interior & show~
lllt'lt<'Ulous care 1ns1de &
out. t735BEJL
$48 88 • '70 Mercedes
280 SEL Sedan. Vrry lov"
mlleage.· Exquisitl! Tobacco
liro1vn finish 1\ifh natural
full lealhcr in!C'nor. JIO\\'er
s1N.'rin11:. hrakC's, rh•('tric
V.'indowli, Jaclory air con·
ditioning. A.\ff}';\I stl'reo
multiplex. Ah so I u t l' I y
sh01\TOOm fresh throughout.
(53SCEI)
$7222
~ Nabers
!!iii Cadillac
2600 lfARBOR BL,.
COSTA MESA
546-.9100 Open Sunday
'61 MERCEDES
190 SL
Rdlrs, AM /FM radio. restor·
ed condition. 1IDT429.
$1999
'" 445 E. Coast l h\'Y.
NEWPORT BEAC:ll
673--0900 Ext. 53-~
Classic 170 • S
Cabriolet conv. Completely
restored. $3,950. ;)49-2::.26.
PEUGEOT
* PEUGEOT * As k>w u $2,299. {No. 5545)
FR.IT": WARREN'S
Spart Car Center
e oRANGE co u NTY • s
LARGEST
710 E . 1st St., S.A. 547--07&1
PORSCHE
'66 Porsche 912
4 Spd, A:vt /fl1 Radio, Like
Ne1v Concht1on, lYLU546J.
$3290
COAST
IMPORTS
'70 TOYOTA II
4 ~. radJO, 7tf7CVW.
$1599
~ o~
~.,
4-15 E. Coast Jh\)' .
l\'~l\'POJlT 8£,\Cll
673-0900 E.\L ~;.j4
(Open Sun(!;,y 1
--,72 TOYOTA
$2029
4 spred trans. Lllx AA! radio.
llC'uler, 1lf'frosters. tin!ed
.:lass. \\'h1!c \\[lll l1rcs.
}'op-0ut !'<'ar 11inde>11s. Vinyl
trun. Carpels. front dtsc
brakes. Reclining-hucke!
scats. KE 2()..30071\J.
~Wt lW!iA W TOYOTA
1966 llarbor, C.M.
liitl!] m Qf\\llS
~5' mo\•tS
Toyota & Jaguar Dealer
Aulhorized Sales & Servic~
900 s. Coast lli,i;:hwa.y
Laguna Beach 540-3100
'Jo-TOYOTA WAGON
$1495
SANTA ANA TOYOTA
Service Dept. open
7:30 am 'til 9 pn1
f.fon-Fri. 540·5212. 417 \V.
\Varner . Santa Ana.
'69 Corona, 2 cir hn:l·top, auto,
air, 27,700 mi. Very clean.
Orig. owner. 557-1196.
TRIUMPH
*TRIUMPHS*
'71 CLOSEOUT
SPITFIRES AS LOI ·,1 A.r::. S2199
GT-6 SAVE $500
FRITZ WARREN'S
Sport Car Center
OR A NGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
710 F.. ls!, S.A. 5-17--076-1
VOLKSWAGEN
'66 VW BUG
4 11pced, radio. sharp & ready
to go! (598EEXl. $795 full
price. Barwick Datsun. 998
So. Coast l hvy.. La1!U11a
Bt'ach. 54&-4051/494-9m.
'66 V\V Bug, xlnt cond. 4 rM'IV
tires. new hrakei;, less than
JOO milf'S on new rings &
\'alve job, rK'\\' mulner, ln-
lrrior xln!. i\lust &>e to ap-
pN'ciatc $S5{1 548.-53$0.
'&~ V\\I 13us. sunroof, lug
rack, xlnt t•ond. $1695 or of·
f('r. 536-Jj(]l
'65 Bus, crpled, paneled, rc-
blt, 1600 Eng. \Viele Ovals.
Gd rond. $1125. 61:).5116.
1967 V\V, beige w/sunrool,
radial til'Cs & modified ex-
haust system. Call J im,
riS7-3737.
'70 V\\' Bus. Excel eont!. ·
$2200 &H-rifice.
5tG-008j
'66 V\V Camper, reblt f'n::;.
$1100. 67H970 Aft•'!" 6 P:-01 ·1
494-48JS.
'69 VW Bug. R&H. Crc1'n
1v/"·h1. int. Gd. con. Only
$1099. 675-6213 all 5 pni,
'66 V\V SI'A. \VAG.
R/11. GOOD CONDITION.
$S50 962-3822
·r.:i V\V Bus \\'i!h 'G.11 f'Dg.
Sll'rro. panel!ng, rrp!s,
v.·ood hump!'rs $950 or ht•st.
54S-S92·1.
lOCJ0.1200 \V. Pacific Cs!. Jflvv.
Ne1\'JXH1 Bf'nch (714) 642-0-100
54&-4529
'70 Porsche 911T '68 VW BUG
Stereo, l\1ags, Privale Party, Sp::irkling v.·hitr, 4 SJ)C'l'd,
Oay:i; 839-9560, aft 5 _ radio. heater. (\\l\'11824).
833-3155. $895 lull price, Ba.r.1•ick Oat-
1957 Porschl', Top condition. i;un. 998 So. Coast Hwy.,
Compll'le!y restorerl. Laguna Beach 546-4051 /
• Call 6i3-8593 * 494-9m.
'63 F\)rs<"h" rorivf. t't'blt '61 VW Bug, good for buggy.
engine. Call Dr. Cassidy. No rnglne & has front end
548-9319. damaged. Rest or body is
l":oocl. Good trans. S100, or
PORSCllE. '&I, Jjtj.C, engine best cash orlf'r. r.1ust 1clJ
in CXC('llrni <'1nd., new th is \\•ct'ken<l, 54S.53SO.
paint, $27~. ~2-~. ---~-'-~-'-~-'&I V\V Bus. w/68. 1600 cc
RENAULT eng., tnrns & '""' ""'"
Renaul t Sa les & Service
for over a drcade in Orange
County
&>rv. Dept. Open til 8 p.m.
Monday
Jim Siemon~ Renault
2201 So. r.fain, Santa Ana
1 blk. north o( \Varner
Service Departml'nt 546-4114
Sale11 Department 557-5242
SAAB
'70 SAAB 99E
Jikr new, Sport CP£>., faC'I air,
New whls., lircs, brks.,
bearings, ste'l"CO, c r p I ,
panelling etc. Must see to
apprec! $1300. Call any day
&.ft 6 pm, 642-4036, CM.
'69 Bug. Automatic. Excel.
cond. $1200 or berl offer.
M.2-4729.
'6.1 V\V bug Good condition
S.i25. 545-4147. 276 Prln-
ton, Clif.
'SR VOLKS\VAGEN. good
condition, auto. Clean. Best
orfer! 536-4273,
• , ... d. Si99·9 QUICK CASH
Q TH ROU GH A
'-' WANT AD ~·15 E. Con~t 1-h\'y,
NEWPORT BEACH 642_5678 g7~ ~ 5.J.5'
• I Open Sun1Jay)
•I
VOLKSW AGEN
'6J V\V, l<1w n1ilM1, 4 new
1 ~n·5, vt>ry clea.11 cOOd. S;iiS.
6T.>-ll'U
'66 V\\' B~·nU r blt t'lll{, brks,
lrans, (·[ut<·h & 4 nu tlte1.
Takf' bst o!r. 893-767tl .
'63 V\\1 Custom painl Sl:Al.
•·tt~h RQ3-.• ,%~ ;:ill & r 111 \!-~~
or \\knd~. -------'6j BUG, re·d. Xlnt rond.
Sunroof, runs greof. $6j(j or
off••r . &1.\-172'!. -----------'6..'> eus \.\'/l\lailhu tampt·r
k11. .Goat-I cond. L o \I'
m1lrngt'. f,4µ268 ---'69 Camper $1800
or best oflrr. 540-8657
VOLVO
1972 VOLVO
BUICK
BUICK Rtvif!nl 068. Spotln11
black lilndau on \\'hit~. All
power, air, $2195. AtW1t seU
!119-1445.
'68 .Riviera GS, a.ir, (ull pwr.,
whls. stt!too, clean, I 0\\'11er.
$2095. 499-3445.
'68 BUICK RJVJF:JlA, full
pov.·t"r, 1ur, clean 1 o""nr
t•ar. $a>ocl. Pri p!y. 557-Jl!)j)S,
CADILLAC
YOUR ONLY
FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
CADILLAC
DEALER
Largest selection of Cadil-
lacs in Orange Coun1y.
Sales-Lea.sing. Look for o ur
full page ads every \\lr•d.
&:. Friday for our specials.
C HEVROLET MERCURY
'68 Impala Custmn ~.~: ... ~:0~9
power tt teerlnc: &: bra.kH
2 door hardtop, Radio, heatf'!!', Luggage rack. Xlnt cond:
p<)\\•er nttring, faclory air, Wk days phMI! 544-TIJO,
extra clean. \\'BJ267 $12!ll. after 6 & on v.·knds 492-3187.
Tommy Ayres Oln'l'Olrt, 946 1966 Colon)' Park Station
S. Coast llwy., La.guna \Vagon. Clean. Extras! Low
liPAC'h, 494-T144/546-9967. mileage, I owner 541t-32AA.
'liti 4 I.Jr. Bel Air, r/h, auto
tran!\m. J{un., good .. Priced
ro M"ll. 549--20.iS.
CHRYSLER
'70 Imperial 4 dr., s!rJ'f'O, e!r.
1 ~!.CXXl miles. r..t lnl cond.
$1:.'95 !inn. 96S-3037
BEAIJTIFUL!
h1USTANG 2+2. This
cur is immacula!f', 1vilh "
new V-8 t'ngine, new paint
job, (done by a 1'"ord deal·
er). lo"ulty equipped ""'ith 4-
spced transmission and tach
a ir con<11tiont'd, tnag 1vhrels.
It's U1t• popular fastbaek
n1ndl'I anci 1t is beautiful.
$900 firn1.
638-1132
O Lp SMOBILE
1967 Olds Cullaa!I Wgn. 360 cu,
4 bal'ttl. 4 sp stick. P/8,
P/S. air, F~f. :\-1ichclln
tires. pri/pty. 77~3713 Bus.
5.14--0647 Res.
PLYMOUTH
NO !\loney Oo1-1•n. T.0 .P. 1971
J-'!yn1outh, 8 cyl, 2 dr. Y\Jry
JII. Chrorne style road
whttls. Air cond. Buckl't
sents. 5-\a-4518.
LADY 'S pan1pt.>nxl ·~ Conv.
ATR, auto, Jo mi!f'll, A."J
n1ech. Belo1v book. 637...a.120
PONTIAC
~68 Pontiac L• Mans
Ilardtop coufit', VI'!, 1J01-1•er
steering, radio and hcall'I".
tVGY221).
$1299 Lease Today at
Best Rat•s
$88.74 Per Mo.
O.A .C. A.\f/F l\1, Auto. trans ..
disc brakes. 36 JlKI.
COUGAR ~ Naben ----------1·57 ~1USIA.~GJ:·as1ba~k1011 DAVE ROSS
gi Cadillac 196.1\ COUGAR 302. 2 bbl, niileage, good con<.!, nl'\\' PONTIAC
a u!o trans., lo n1i les, vinyl llN's. 8·12-3402 alt 4:30. 2480 Harbor Blvd.
2600 JlARBOR BL., t11p. Xlnt cond. i 1450. C:Jll-~~~:..:c:.:::~.:::--Costa :!\l<'sa 546.S017 Far Leasing or buying
;ow. lW!iA fl VOLVO
COST A 111 F:SA 837-3370, after 5 p m . * '66 Mustang. Xlnt cond.
540-9100 Open Sunday 830-2621. Good tires. Radio '6& GTO Big eng1nc, vinyl
'Ki Cad sedan deVillr. Silver DOD $700. 499-3.ll86 Anytime top, factory air, factory
w/hlk vinyl lop. fuJly equip, (;E '69 !\lus!ang l\lach I. Green. mag ""'heels (1vith locks)
lo miles. :!\1int c 0 n d . ----------1 In good condition. Best of-37,000 n1iles, :!\1ax-X. tires.
496-2812. '66 Ooclg• Ccronet fer. G73-1959. Brauliru1 cond, $1500 or best 1966 Harbor, C.!lt. 646-!JJ03
VOLVO '71, 14-4 sterro tape,
R-11. Auto, trans, 1<1,950 mi.
lm1nac. $3200. PR· pt y.
61:r-m1
-1963~-C--.1------1 500 h:.rd!op 1'0upe. 4 i;pf'cd,I--'-""-"-=------offer. 826·1256.
ad1 lac Fll'l'hvood, radio an<! heater. !RUC330J. Full po1vl'r. S550.
559 9
OLDSMOBILE ·~ J>onliac LeMans. P/S.
6-15-0953 R/1-T. Excellent c..'Ondilion.
CAD '69 Convoniblo, low DAVE ROSS '68 Cutlass Supreme Low mil"•'· $9'15. 61'-1!162.
Autcs, Used 990 milf's, Hkt-TIC\\', all extras. PONTIAC '70 Le !\1ans Sport Coup('; s:um. 673.-0083. 2840 Harbor Blvd 2 Dr 1-1. Top, dlr. fa ct air, PIS, P /B, air cond., auto.
AMERICAN '69 EL Dorado, vinyl top, Costa Mesa a.16-8017 lo mi, (XIPOOl). Take small I ,CXl;c'::;"o,1 ""°:."::d:.. 54:..:C()._:00:_1::':.· -,-.,,-,-
leather. A.\1/FA1, Sentinel. -~~'-~--c.c..:.:.:.1 down, \Viii finance Pvt Ply '66 GTO, 4 spd, lo n1i, looks
Xlnt cond. $38:il. 6-16--2854. '69 MONACO Call 546-8736 aft 10' ~ sharp, runs well Just tuned.
American Motors
VGremlin1 ,.....Harn•ts
"'Matadcrs a,;Javelins
CA O 4 Dr, 11. Top, cllr., fact air, .~";,':..·"=''.:.·c-~-~--SS95. 646·5355. MAR loaded. Under 26,000 nii. \\llU.. sell white Toronado. -• .,=B::O_:N.:_N:..EV=!L'-L-E-,-.-,,-.. -nd-,
Leisure \Vor!d Special (VQC· In1mac. cond. At Blue Book PIS, P/B, $450.
4:l5l. Take clean car or ? price. !\lust see to appre· * 645-471-2 * VAmbassadcrs
1-Iuge stock of '71 's & '12's
'68 CAM'QO Z28
4 speed, po11•ci" steer ing.
rarlio, heatl'r. 1vide oval
tires, mag 11•heels, (XCE-
2311)'
546-ST.'16 aft 10 am 494-6811. ciate. 548-1503. '62 PONTIAC TemP<'St ronv.
Big-Big Savings
Harbor American
'69 Dart CT, V-S, aulo. air. f'ii ~I results are just a pbone New brakes, cng reblt-E.'\C<.1
l~ed 1\·/.,..ht Ip. l mmac. ] call a1vay .. &12-5678 e,'()nd. S37J. 646-4629
()\\'nt>r. Sl69:J. 6-l-1-1.123. A I U 990 u os, sea Autos, Used
· Home of Convenient
Payments
1969 Ha rber Blvd.
Co"lta Mesa 64i>-0261
BUICK
$1699
DAVE ~oss
PON11AC
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costa f..I esa 5'16-8017
SACRIFICE! '68 Camaro SS.
Rt.'built 396 eng. 4 SJXI.
n1ags, Gdyr!i. air schocks.
P.B. gauges, custorn int.
$1599. 893-6460.
CHEVROLET
FORD
1970 Toronado. Con1rortalion
• air cond. Ar-.-11rri.1 stereo
radio & tape deck. f ·uu p\\T
equip. Tilt 1vh<'t'I nnd Vinyl
top. $3600. ~Ir. Gray days
S.10-9892 £\"CS fi42-320J.
1966 Forrl St,1 \l'gn. fJS/PB,
air/cond. Good cond. J\tus1
sc!l-lt>a1·ing \o\\•n. $ 4 0 0 ,
673-9-170.
'6~1 LTD \\'agon. 6 Pass.
R-1-1, au1o transnl, air CQnd.
Xlnt cond. A real bargain al
$2'5-fO. 5-19-2()..18,
'67 Ford LTD, ruu po"'·er,
air , stereo, immac cond~
$1200. One owner . 494-7081.
990
THE Impor tant Dif f erencc !
This Shield Me ans That
We Are Your Only Factory
Authorized Cad illac Dealership
Four and one.half a cres of total authorized Cadilla c facilities des igned
to better sell o'l nd service C adilla c automobiles. 80 !work stalls) .!Ind 45
fa ct ory tra ined technicia ns. ,
Larges t Selection of late 1noclc l Cadillacs
and other Luxury cars in Orange County!
'69 SEDAN DEVILLE
le11 then I b.000 mile1. locel I ow11er cir •old
& ••r.-iced bv u1. Full power, f,,ctorv ej•, tilt·
lele whetl, 1!e•10 lepe. AM/FM 1t1reo r1d;o,
¥inl¥ lop, le .. tho,. inltrior, vo9ut prim. tire1 . Too
cl11n to dt1crib1. I JJK-51
'70 COUPE DE VILLE
Vinyl fop, cloth I l1eth1r interior, full pow1r,
door loc•1, 111tom 1tic 11et r1l1111. J0,000 mil11.
Loc1I I owner. EJ:tremely b11utiful. (7t4AKXI
'68 COUPE DE VILLE
Factory eir cond itio11in9. full power, 11! l11th1r
interior, p1dd1d fop, tilt & lel1 1copic: 1i1•rin9.
1!1r10, door lock1, light 11nlin1I, lm"'1c:ul1t1
thruout. IVVM 171)
'70 EL DORADO
Full powtr, feclory t ir c:11nd., t1l1.tilt wl<i11I,
tf1r10 door loc~1, ¥invl lop, l•alh•r i"l•rior.
AM/FM l!'lultipl•ll'-Show1 m•li<ulou1 <•••
throughout. (-4037761
'71 EL DORADO
SALE
PRICED
$4555
SALE PRICE
SALE PRICE
$6888
SALE PllCE
WE'RE MOVING
EVERY CAR
MUST GO
BY JUNE 12
'67
'67
'66
'66
'65
'63
'63
'63
PLEASE-NO TRADES
CADILLACS
~~~~~~Cr.Blue wt $1565 While Lendau. (UPK470)
CADILLAC
Seden o"Vlllt. Fult pcwt r, 1.,111h.,r, elr, L.1ndeu. (081-
AEKl
CADILLAC
Cpe:. OeVlllt. Full pc•ur.
{WAK•ll
CADILLAC ' Seden c.v11i.. Full pcw1r, "ir. tSZH'31)
CADILLAC
'Cr., F\111 pcwer, •Ir, I'm)
CADILLAC
t JMH18J)
DODGE SED.
v-e, R&dio, H"ftttr, ,._uto. Trftnl, (llF1 .. l
FORD WAGON
Snarp. Full Power, Air'Cofld.
{FMGSl'I/
$1795
$1125
$1095
$895
~ ... ~,
~
$395
$395
$325
-VANS · PICKUPS-
'62 ~;~~~s~~!~!. UHllty $645 Bo~. (OA~16/l
'64
'64
'62
'63
'62
'64
'65
'65
$788
$675
$1095
$995
~~~1.ER;?~~1!~N $.I 095
IGG:2011J
FORD RANCHERO
t0RH220)
ECONOLINE PICKUP
ECONOLINE
VAN, Bt11Ullful "'"" llnbh
P1neled '""· (L4ll39)
FORD VAN
FORD VAN
(P11H21
FORD VAN
(Olr. t .W)
CHEVY EL CAMINO
Auto. Trem. (Tl!G15)
$885
$595
$495
loo•1 I ru"• Ii•• ft•• d•v flrit 1oldl Full po w•r,
f•<tory air <ond., t•l•-lil t 1l••rin9, door lo<k1,
crui1e co"trol, vi"yl top, full let lher i"terlor,
( 109AGCJ, New w1w tlre1.
'6B FLEETWOOD Brougham
Fl remi1f pei"t, "'i"yl top, ftpe1trv I letther ;" ..
t•rlor, full power, f•<fory eir, till wheel, AM/
FM Stereo redio power door lo<kt. IWWEt251
$5222
SALE PRICE
SALE PRICE
1 '69
'70
'70
PLYMOUTH 4 DR.
Clot #1) Allla. Trtnl. C.CI.
""· Pl. YMOUT!t 4 DI.
Fun Ptwtt', Air Cond., Lot :t# CO CAr.
PLYMOUT!t 4 DI.
Full Powtr, Air Cond., Loi #51.
$745
$935
$845
NABERS
2600 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 540-9100
'
$425
2100 HA RBOR BLVD.
COSTA M ESA
I
. I
64.5 ,.,,
7
'
•
7
'
San Oe111enie
Capistrano -
VOL. oS, NO. 157, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Teday's l'l•al
•
MONDAY, JUNE 5, 197 2 TEN CENTS
Niguel Heist Possibly Related to Ohio Ca·se
By PA TRICK BOYLE
OI lllt ()Mly PIW St1N
Tight·lipptd federal agents today con-
tinued tbelr investigation of the spec-
tacular Laguna Niguel bank burglary
amid speculation that the suspect ar-
rested frklay may be tied to a similar
bank heist in Ohio.
The suspect, Charles Albert P.1ulligan.
38, of Youngstown, Ohio, was scheduled
for arraignment Ulls morning before a
U.S. magistrate in Los Angeles in con-
$78.3 Millimi
nection with the Llguna Niguel crime. He
is being held by FBI agents in lieu of
fl00,000 hood.
An F'Si 1pOkesman in Lot Angele~
would S.y oothing aboot the ca.. otl...-
than that the man was taken into custody
in Tustin after being trailed there from
Los AngeleJ. An unemployed barber,
/¥1ulligan arrived at Uls Angeles Interna-
tional Airport Friday from Chicago.
FBI agents in both Los Angeles and
Cleveland refused to comment on any
Mail Unit Calls
For Rate Cut
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Postal
Rate Commiss ion today called for a $78.3
million r~uction in postage rates pro-
posed by lhe U.S. Postal Service.
The decision, first of Its kind since the
Davis Lauded
By McGov ern
LOS ANGELE$ (UPI) -Sen.
Geol;P S. McGol\lfll told • crowd
of cheering b1ad:I at a rally in
Watts that lhe ocqultlAI of An&•I•
Davis should be "cause for · re-
joicing."
ti.tcGovern, speaking two hours
after a juTy in San Jose cleared
Miss Davis Sunday, of involvement
in the Marin County courthouse
shooting, Was greeted by a crowd
chanting :
"Powtr of the people ha.a freed
Angela."
"This is a happy day which 1 can
understand," he said. "This is
another demons tration that we can
be pleased about.
"That's not a cau.5e for mourn-
ing. That's not a cause for protest.
That ought to be a cause for re-
joiclng."
See story on Page 5.
Oemente Guard
Aids Two Boys,
Boat From Rocks
A San Clemente lifeguard captain
saved two JKJn!Wimming youths over the
weekend alter they had become .stranded
on an expensive cabin cruiser in danger
of being wrecked In !he slri lineJIOr1h of
!he munlclpal pier.
Besides nrlmm!ng the yooths to salely
during the Incident Satunlay night Capt.
Phil stubbs abo helped save the vessel .
from major d1ma1e in the brellers.
Olfidall uid the incident bet:a:n Marly
i mlle norlh of the pier '""'1 the cruiser
being operated by Bob Brimbaum, 38. or
Garden Grove, Jost power. 15rlmbaum
dropped In anehor and IWtm to lhore for
help.
As he wit gone, ll!eguard1 were sum-
moned to the acene when witnesses notic-
ed the veasel mulna anchor and
heading toward the turf with tbe boys
aboln[ Tht youtba w:•• Steve McCory ,
18, -ai\d Ron Brimbaum, 13, both of
Garden Grove. ' .
Stubbs swam the youths to safety thtn
belped guhle the vo ... 1 toward the beach
without d11n>1e.
Hlri>or plln>lmen from Dana Harbor
lbon trTtved to to1f the ta-foot cabin-
cruller bodt to '" and th<n to th<
harbor for npoln o! Ibo qlne. No olber
._. occurred to Ille ..... 1.
Tht ,_ Wll lhe tllllJ majoc locldent
In an overcast weekend at the beac:bel
where w1ter te:rhpenture1 nearly ex·
cee<led the · air nadlnga.
The waltr readlnp topped 'l1I c1esree1
both day1. m•k\nl awlmmlng warm, but
1CC0111panylng jtUyfl1h crfft,i IOIM
problom1. •.
DeepKe the oY!T"C<, 111 t I u a r d I
nporled moderate CTC>Wdt 11 dly and
<owlly beaches both dayl.
SUrf c:ondllioo1 wee relaUvely ll«bt. I!
were l'UCW:S1 parcl lpOk~smen uld.
\
Post Office Department was reorganized
in 1970, called for cutbacks in the Postal
Service's proposed rates for parcel post,
airmail letters, ordinary post cards end
items handled by second-class mall·usus,
primarily magazine and newspaper
publishef's.
The commis.sion, acting unanimously 1 overruled Hs chief hearing ei:aminer in
recommending that airmail farts be Dpt
at 11 cents an ounce inatead of the hear-
ing ua···~ 1',.Uand tbat ordinary. post c~arry only alt: cents
postage imtead of the Po.QI Service's
requested. !le.Ven cents.
lt estimated tht u•ttlft alone on
ordinary post cardt at '$25 million.
Tbe Postal Rite Commission let stand
(See P08TAL, Pap %1
HHH Criticizes
McGove rn Vote
On Civil Rigl,.ts
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Hubert H.
Humphrey today accuaed George S.
McGovern of voting to "emasculate" a
key section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
He also tcheduled an hour-Jong telethon
on election eve in a last · ditch effort to
slop McGovern.
McGovern, confident of winning the Im-
portant California primary and its 271
delegate votes. broke off his campaigning
in the state to schedule a four-hour !wing
into New Mexico, which also holds a
primary Tuesday.
Aides to both senators looked for a
common break in the hectic schedules to
arrange a fourth "debate," which
Humphrey auge!ted and to which
McGovern agreed.
In 1 speech prepared for delivery at a
rally in Oakland, Hwnphrey accused
McGovern of "a brazen and full-acalr at-
~mpt to emUCtllat.e the voting right_,
provision of the Civil Rights Act."
'Barking' Dog
Found Hanged
In Backyard
A Costa Meun whose terrier
puppy's barking hid C a U I I d
neilborbood complains arose Sun-
day moumlnt and found it de.ed,
~eel In his bockyard. ':1...,Y J. sianley, of 920 Cedar
P11ee, called poltce at I a.m., when
be feuld the pet dangling from th<
backyard clotlieallne.
Ofllttr Gerry Kocbendorfer aakl
lbe """'1>.ancl-wblte pup had lhe
eord -out flnt to slYt ala<k -
wound --111 oedr. -· The -pel4laytr then -cbed the renialnlng lenclb over tho
clotbelllne pole, llOiltJnC the dof "'" to tho air and ~ It.
Pollet Ina the ... alOl)I )!Ith SPCA offklala
fa< ~ -I dlall'" ·aatd two pdor ...iainta bod been
roc<lved about tho dot!'• barking.
Cruelty to ·on1ma11 11 punishable
by a Jail term. fine, 1><060tlon or •II
three.
possible connection between the March 25
burglary in Laguna Niguel in which an
e!Umated $2 million in cash, securities
and jeweJs were taken, and a May 4
burglary in Lordstown, Ohio, in whkh
$430,000 caSh was taken.
Lordstown, 1 one-bank town some 15
miles north of Youngstown where
Mulligan lives, is the site of a General
Motors production plant.
According to Sgt . Joseph Murphy of the
Trumbull County Sheriff's Department,
the Lordstown branch of the Second Na-
tio1a! Bank ol Warren was burglarized in
much the same manner as the l.a.gun:1
Niguel Branch of United California Bank.
Jn a telephone interview, Sgt. 1'turphy
said the large amount of cash had been
brought to the bank in preparation for
payroll check cashing following Friday·s
payday at the G~f plant. SOme time dur-
ing the night, burglars cut through lhe
roof of the bank into a utility roonl ad-
jacent 1fo the vault. They then broke
through a concrete wall , used a torch to
cut through a half inch ol steel plate and
entered the vault.
Sgt. Murphy said the thieves connected
a jumper wlre to the interior alarm and
sprayed foam on· the bell of the outside
alarm, disabling both systems. •le also
noted that invt:stigators found four sacks or mud on the roof of 1he building the
next day, inchcaltng !he burglars had
come prepared ~·ith explosives to blast
their way into lhe \'auJt if necessary .
• •
Mud is used to muIOe the sound ct an u-
plosion. the sergeant explained..
0111ce inside the vault, ~ thJevts toot
only 'the cash, leavi ng behind checks, food
stamps and a large amoun t of coin, Sgt.
~turphy !la.id.
'I'he FBI in Cleveland on ~fay 26 ar·
rested a man in connection with the
Lordstown burglary. Agent in charge
John Burnes identified him a!I Sidney
iS« BANK PROBE, Paae 2)
' 1sm1ssa '
•
DEATH VALLEY WAGON USED TO PUSH FOR PASSAGE OF PROPOSITION 9 TUESDAY
From Left to Right Are Sk ip Zicc1rdy, Tina Azou1, Stave Ai.o uz and Joel Hurd
Wagon Finds New Mission
01ice in Deat1i Vc1lley, No1v It's For Propositio1i 9
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of rt-. D1H1 P llol Sl1H
A small, home-made covered wagon
drawn by a single rhan brought public at-
tention to Joel Hurd of San Clemente tv.·o
years ago when he lugged the contrivance
across Deal.h Velley.
But on Friday, the mini wagon went °"
a different mis6ion -but roughly for the
same purpose.
Hurd hauled the wagon to the San
Clemenlc' recycling center accompanied
by a small group of friends.
The aim was to push for the passage
of Proposilion 9 at the polls Tuesday.
Hurd and three adult companions, a f>..
year-0ld boy and a dalmatian set out at
t100n Friday, hauling a symbolic cargo of
caru. bottles and newspapers -destina-
tion the San Clemente recycling center.
Small placards urging a yes vote
finished up the tableau.
N. Viets Admit Prohle~s,
Vow to Continue Figl1ting
From Wire, Services
North Vietnam admilted loday lhal ll
b having "YU')' difficult" economic pro.-
blems becausa of the intensified U.S.
bombing, bul lnslsled that It has tbe
capacity to continue its war efforts.
"Even IJ the eDemy aucceeds in the
bomb destruction or our cities and our
IMgo Industrial Installations, they can
never paralyze our economy to the point
of pr<vontinc our survival and our ablllly
to a1pply the IOUth," the olficlal
nenpopor Nhan Dan declared In 1 com-
-iary broada11t by Radio Hanoi.
"We have fort1ten and have calculated
In advanu foe the very dlffk:ult altuatlon
WfO\llht by the most cruel and dangerous
maneuven o! the enemy In lllelr·fl.,...
escallUOn of the war," Nb.an Dan con
tlJMd.
"Bul our peopit can wali, can use
torchlJghts, can eat diluted congee cwatu
rtce ,,..1), alld atlll defeat--tbe· U.S. ac·
IJ'tSIOl'I."
Tht ltll< of walklng, aslng torchlights,
and 111bsbtln1 on ric< gni<I were obvious
•
referencts to heavy damage inflicted by
U.S. bomben on rail lines, highways,
brld~s and electric power plants.
In other war developments : ·-
North Vietnamese troops retreated
under a ba?Tage or South Vietnamese
gunfire and government troops wtilked
unopposed lnto a Konturn church that had
hem used u a Communist headquarters
for 11 day1.
Kontum, 1 provincial capital 280 miles
north ol Salton, baa botn under Com-
munist siege for aeveral weeks.
Military 1pOkesrntn l!ald government
lrOO(>I we~ fighllng to-clear the two ,..
malnlng Communi.at pocitts: inside the Cl-
ly.
Two Communist artillery rounds Sun-
day neerly scored direct hit.1 on a U.S .•
guided missile destroyer oU North Viet-
namese water1, cau51ng "moderate shock
damage" but no casualties, military
spokesmen said tod•y.
The Navy said none of the 3S4 crewmtn
aboard the USS Joseph Stuill!a wM In·
jured and the 1hJp remained In the
Too!l:ln Gull.
•
"It's a personal effort to do something
about the environment," Hurd said
before setting out with the wagon and his
crew -Tina Azous. her small son, Steve,
Slip Zlc.ard y and Myron Osgood.
All agTeed that the lnltialiYe was a
"sincere" effort to clean up the en-
vironment.
''What we urged," Hurd added, "was
that people read the entire proposition
and not rely on the campaigns by the
polluters to shoot it down."
The placards borne in the 1mall march
urged citizens to read the entire initiative
berore deciding on a vote.
Hurd hauled his home-made wagon
bearing slight modification ln the written
message first seen during the Death
Valley trek.
"Stop Water Pollution" has been amen-
ded to read "Stop All Pollution."
The local resident pulled the wagon and
Its original message across the burning
sands of Death Valley In the dead of~
m\r last year in a general gesture to
focus public attention on the mvlronment
and attacks upon it.
Alter lin i.thing !he abaust1n1 trek In
temperaturts above 150 degrees, Hurd
made Impassioned pteas for an end to
po llution.
'"I haven't •lo!>l>td doing that and
mysell and my lrlendl -beards, hip
trappings and all, are 1Ull lrylng to plead
for a cleaner environment.
While the carjO of lbt.amall .....,. -
relatively light, recycling center•opm-ator
Lionel Burt welcomed the materlal
nonetheless.
Bui the Hurd party had to wail ror a
short time.
They we re prl!empted by two men a.nd
their pickup truck who had Juat brou&ht
In et lenst 500 empty aluminum beer
can.s.
The pair In lh• pickup !Niiied the cana
were lhe remn•nta of only a two.month
suppl}' ol suds.
Capistrano
Board Faces
Irate Group ·
Citizens demanding the reinstatement
nf Charles Johannsen. director of pupil
personnel services. will confront trustea
of the Capistrano Unified School District
tonight.
Three partnts will make preuntationl
st the 7:30 p.m. board meeting at Serra
School at Capistrano Bt!ach, all ••kin&
how each board member votlng for
Johannsen'• termination made hi 1
decision.
Mrs. Wllllam L. Robertaon of San
Clemente who wW make ODe of the
preoontatlona, lllld the VOit m 44 In
favor of the cllJtnJaaaL She ~ that r .. l'nllllM Bemdlcl, .. "' ·-...11-...i . r:; -;:~the matter. ,,.,..,
The rrou~~· ~ to written sta , are that t h 1
di.sm(OaJ WU noi CNl tho l'OUndl of 1J>.
competency, but only because of
•·personality conIUcts."
Those making presenlation1 tonight
will claim that Johnannsen'a "outspoken
approach and his honesty and integrity
worried and irritated the adminiatr.:
ti on."
They intended to point out that In U,.
past Johnaon had "e i: c e 11 e ri t per.
rormanct ratings and was 1 b I e to 1ec
along well with everyone until the current
administration took over."
Superintendent Truman Benedict hu
slated publlcly that "competency and
personal conflicts" were the rea50na for
Johannsen'a "reassignment." But board.o
president Bob Hurst hu aald competency
did not enter the picture, only whither ~ ~t the admJnistrator was right for the.
]Ob.
"We are all vitally Inte rested Jn why •
was dil!lmissed," said Mrs. Roberllon
"We hope to get some answers tonight.';
JohaMsen. who remains in hls CU1Tent
positi?D until June 30, has given written
permission for the issue to be di.scuaaecl.
in public.
Os trich Rotten Egg
GUILDFORD. England (UPI) -The
smell got 10 bed Jane Barney 21.
couldn't sleep. For two weekJ ahe 'tried.
to trace It whHe it sat worie ~nd worse
Finally the called a public bealth rn:
.spector, who over the weekend found an •
ostrich en. glwn Jlfte by her .... !rtencl
.. • birthday ,.._, tucked ...i 1or1ot~
ten on • beclniom lhell wltll Ill ---intact. , "'~Mir
"···
More hazy .tuNblne alon( tho
Orange Coat ,._.y, followlof
low .-and toe at tbe beaches.
lllghl of 'IO aJoni the -rt.me to 111 ln1ud. Lows 1ML
INSJDB TOD~ "Y
Sho'r black, a !laJ>lilt, a -it,.
Ing mo!Mr ""4 n~w Mo...,
rl•cud 11udcft1 Jl!dflktlt::M._,~,,-~-+Roman C'illiolfc ~Uillwriltw a/
San Ditgo IA a bflttr ...,.po1p.
Su llo'l/, Pope 20. · --" ...... . --. -~" =-=! r=-·--.. ............. f
--t r
-
'; Dlltv PILCr SC ----
Leonw Gd I •eio. u. c-. oruo.
According to Burns, the sus.l)ef:t
al.._'liii, .... lo M dillmnl bonU
In tllo c.t..-.. (-ii just lo Ulo
b'OUthwest of Youngst-0wn' e:tchangini;:
small bills for $100 bills and sayini.: he
needed the larger denominations for a
trip to Europe:. Burns tl1111ns !hr ~Pi 1.1!
numbl:n of ttw Wlil l! bllts mntrh tho<:<' c:t
~ome of the cash taken iu the Lord.sltlv. fl
burglary and that Goldstein ;illt'gedly t>X·
t'.hangrd sonie $120.000 in s mil 11
de nomlnatkms for $100 bills.
Burns refused to 6pl'<'ulatt \1 hcther
there wn 101 conoection bet~n Gold·
~tein's arrest and tht arrt!fil or Mulligan
cxartly-ooo week later.
Mullig an is allege'd to have pl:J)'ed a
role in a weekend burglary in Laguna
Niguel. wbkh police offk'ialJ have
described as a "MWioo Impossible" type
of operation.
The bank. hidden bthincl a v.·a!I of
laodscaping on busy Pacific Coast
1-flghway, serves residents of Monarch
Bay and Niguel Terrace, two exclusive
C'Ommunitlts where some homes sel l for
$350,000. Many of the residents buy bond!
and invest in JeC'U.rities , items commonly
stored in sale deposit boxes.
Some time during the \4'ttkend or
March 25-26, thieves blasted through the
roof of the bank vault and rirled soml' 450
safe deposit boxes, taking jewel ry,
negotiable bonds and securities and at
least $50,000 in cash.
Estimates of tbe total lO!s have ranged
from $1 million to SS million and none of
the Contents of lbe safe deposit boxes \4'as
injured.
Inv·estigators noted that whoever com-
mitted the burglary· had extensive
knowledge of alarm system electronics
and explosives and was able to
descriminate between negoUable and non-
negotiable securities.
Officials in Ohio said J\.1ulligan has an
arrest record dating back to 1962, when
he pl eaded guity te charges stemming
from a rash of burglaries of strip mines
near Youngstown . In addition, he aerved
time in Ohio Penitentiary after being
convicted in 1964 of receiving stolen
goods in connection with the theft of
$1,000 in drugs and cash from a
Youngstown drug store.
That same year, he was acquitted by a
federal jury of robbing a.bank.
South Coast JCs
Seeking Queens
The South c.ut Area Jaycees today
began their aearcb for San Clemente area
girls aa candidates for queen of this
year's edition of the Fiesta La Chris·
tiaMa, and the winner wiU emerge
~uly e at lhe fiesta klckol! -er and
pageaht.
·Jaycee President J im Ortler said ap-
plications for queen are available at of-
fices of·the chamber of commerce .
Interested young ladies must be single
and 11 years old or more~by 4uly a. •
Local service clubs will a!!Ume
sponsorship of each candidate for the
crown. The winner will ride in an honored
t in the annual fiesta parade and will
prizes from local merchants.
J. Barbara Cheatum wa.s last year's
,fiesta queen.
~ !w' omen,' s Groups
:t
,,iform Voters
:! Two South Coast area women's groups ~oday launched a last-minute effort to
· rovide accurate, non part Isa n in.
: ormation to area voters today and Tues-
:pay on the long list of ballot propositions
:tonfronting voters. :1
1 The. telephooe service began this morn·
; ng urider sponsorship of the local
:i:hapten of the League of Women Voters
·11nd the American Association o I
'University Women.
:1 Anyone interested in pros and cons
:regarding any or Tuesday's ballot items
'.it:an obtain information by calling 496-
:1563. 492-5078. or 496-9885.
:: The service today will be orfered until
·ll p.m.
: On Tuesday, calls will be taken until :;pous clo!le.
·' " .. ..
:· . " : ' '• ·~
SC
DAILY PILOT
TM Oflflf't C..I DAILY P'llOr, wttn which
Is ~!"'" !he N1w1·l'r11t, 11 Pllbll.ntd 1tY
:.. Ill• Or•11V11 Co111 Pvt1 n1111n11 CGrnc••nv. s~
' r.
r111 M llk>n• 1r1 pubU1lllO, Mond1y lhro1191'1
Frl•h '(. ,., Cotl• Me11, Ntwptt"I ••.ell.
Hllf'llf!f!On ll'tcllll'..,,,.1111'1 Y•lltV. LI~•
hKI'!, 1rvlne!kdifl4ibKJI. Miii kl'I ClefMf'tt/
•1 Sin J1.11n C1pl11r1no. A 1ln911 •fl!•on•I * ~.:~;1~:1=~~..,~~~~i::,· i:":. ~;~~:;
=',-••t $1tH!. Ctlll Mew, C1IUornl1, t:tl•. ;~ aoh•rt N. W114 •l 1"1niden1 •!Id 1'1.tOlltlltr 1 -i J •ck It. Cwrl•y ·i: V·~• 1'1111d.,.,i '"' Gtnlf•I Mln.,.r
Thom 11 K•••il
IE:dlltt
Thom•• A. M11rphl111
M1nqJnt Editor
Ch1il•1 H. loot JU ch•td P. Hall
A11lt11ni Min.tine (lti1or1
S-Cl....,.OHke
301 North £J Cr1mh1• lt•~I, '2l12 --. ~•: m "'""' •·r '""' •• ~ US1 ,......,.... IOV!.t•tr• "~ ...-o: 11111 ... ,~ 10\llf\'tt• ' liiiiebT m -PiiliM A'l'tl'l111
, ..... , •• (714) '41o4JJ1
ci ..U _1..., .. 1,u11 .
S.. C( i:; Aj D111a: ... 1t1: ;< ...
• •
•
•
, Ji'L, _ ... •t2-44n
~I, fflt, °"'"" Ctt'I l'vtlllltllnt ~111'. ... .,..... tt9Plft Utvitrf !lon-. ......,lfol ~ ..... ~,1""""11 lltt"t ll'I
""' Iii . ,_.. c• wl~t "*'kl ..,. ........ ~t .._.... -...,_ 4:-...... MW ti ( ... • ~ • =~·~•:.;, ~l~~~mil!:: ... .... ""'"'"'"·
'
Cutting It Close
A North Vietnamese fishing boat brushes past the U.S.S. Nev.1port
News as the cruiser fires its guns at Thanh I loa, North Vietnam . ln
foreground, U.S. Marines watch the. small craft go by. 'fhe fishi ng
boat, which got in the \vay of the ship as it \vas n1aklng a firing run
at the coast, \Va s not damaged.
Employes Claim County
Lis"8 .Used by Battin
' Orange County's primary election cam-Davis have also called ror a grand jury
paign wa!I enlivened over the weekend by investigation of the incident.
charges that First District Supervisor Sawyer said today that the associa·
Robert W. Battin had used a list of coun-lion's directors view Battin's action as a
ty employes and their addresses pro-''misuse of county property and an illegal
duced by the county's Data Services expenditure of public funds."
Department at county expense. Otherwise. political campaigns in the
Battin allegedly used the list to mail a county in the last weekend before the
letter to employes in reply to an Orange election were largely routine with a rash
Couniy Employes Association bulletin of last minute advertisements and closed
mailed last week to 2,000 workers in the door meetings with supporters by the
First District urging them to vote against various candidates.
the incwnbent supervisor in Tuesday's Registrar of Voters David Jntchcock
primary. said today that everything is. in readiness
The 6,51»-member OCEA planned to for counting the county's largest election
file a class action suit in Superior Court Jn history, from the standpoint of the
today against Battin to recover the cos0number of registered voters a n d
or providing the Jist of names. precincts. There are 661,000 potential
"nte supervisor's office said today thal vo\ers compared to 612,000 in the 1970
he plans to reimburse the county for the general election and 1,619 precincts com·
estimated $30 cost of the tapes. pared to 1.070.
OCEA general manager John Sa\\.'yer Polls will be open throughout the coun.
said the ass()f,!iatlqn will also request a ty from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m., Hitchcock said.
grand jury investigation of the use of the He predicts a vote of 443,000 or 67 percent
employe! address list. Two of Battin 's of those registered.
opponents, John W. ''Bill" Hill and Wally He hopes the ballot count will be com-
Searchers Find
Final $160,000
In Reno Hijack
RENO, Nev. (AP ) -Searchers have
fou nd the $160,000 balance of a $200.000
ransom given an airline hijacker '4'ho
parachuted into a desert area after col·
Jecting the money.
Vern F. Loetterle of the Las Vegas T-'BI
office said Sunday night the money \vas
found stashed in !iagebrush in a remote
area 20 miles south of here near \Vashoe
Lake.
The other $40,000 was left 0n the l'nited
Air Lines 727 jet when the hija('ker
11.'lr.'lt huted -apparenllv bec<iusc there
was no room to stow all° $200,000 into his
pleted by 9 a.m. Wednesday morning
which would be a new record. The unof.
ficial tally was completed at 9: 10 a.m.
November. 1970.
Hitchcock said new computer equip-
ment should speed up the process and
overcome the larger number of voters
and precincts.
Major interest in the county has been
centered on two hotl v-contested races (or
the First and Third district supervisoria l
seats and the battle among Orange Coun-
ty assessor Andrew J. l·linshaw, school
trustee Earl Carra\\•ay, banker Larry
nenna and incumhf>nl Rrp. John G.
Sc hn1ilz for the Republican nomination in
the nrv.·ly aligned :i~tb Congressional
District.
U.S. Pl<111.e Do1v1i
111. Tai1>ei Areu
backpack. TA!Pf:f <UPI) -A U.S. Air Force
Robb D. Heady, 22. was arrested Satur-C130 transport plane \Vilh six men aboard
day and charged with the Friday night crashed early today near the Pescadores
hijacking of UAL flight 239. which Islands into the Formosa Strait, an air
originated in New York and was headed force spokesman said .
for San Francisco. The Vietnam veteran The Nationalist Chinese government's
v.•as taken into custody a rew miles from re9Clle center said some wreckage of the
.~here the money was later recovered. A transport was found and the body ol one
search for the money began immediately crewman was recovered.
after Heady 's arrest. There were no signs of survivors, a
After \\'B iking aboard the airliner at tht> spokcsn1nn snid .
airport here, the hijacker -hi s fac e A spokesman al the U.S. Air Force
masked by a pillow slip -let the 1 base in Taipei said the crew was flying
passenger~ leave but held the pilot. co-1 the four-engine turboprop plane on a
pilot and three stewardesses at gunpoint / training mission.
f()f' the $200.000 ransom. With the money ,
delivered, the airliner took off on orderf
from the gunman who parachuted rrom it
a few miles from the airport.
Head y, a student at Western Nevada
Communi ty College near here since his
return from military service in Vietnam,
was arraigned Saturday on rederal air
piracy charges a nd was being held in
Washoe Cottnty Jail in lieu of $100,000
bond.
Mrs. Baker, 93,
Rites Conducted
Funeral servlces were scheduled to
lake place in Montana today for Mrs .
Frances Esttllt Baker, 931 of San
Clemente, who died after a long ll!nes!t
last week at her home in San Clemente.
Mrs. Baker, who lived at 3921 Via
~lanzana, leaves two S()ns. Cyril D. Baker'
of New Orleans and Wilfred Baker of
Reed Point. Mont. and two daughters .
Fanny Johnson of San Clemente and Ruth
Antonsen of Bozeman , Mont.
The funer11 I rite! were conducted ol
Dahl Funeral Home in Bozeman today
with burial following In that city .
Lesneski Mortuary of Snn Cl mente
\l't in ch:irg<' of loc.1! nrr::t nr.r1Mr1's.
Truck, Copter
Damaged in Fire
A gasoline fire Saturday caused an
estimated $4.220 damage to a fuel truck
a nd a parked helicopter. the Orange
County Fire Department reported.
Firemen said the blaze was evidenUy
Ignited by a spark as the helicopter waa
being refuled from the truck.
Dale Williams, 29, an employe of Santa
l~ellcopter Company, who was refueling
the aircraft, escaped injury, firemen
i;ald.
The nre occurred adjacent to the
airport tower where Santana htl\copters
havis their headquarters.
NEIGHBORS DIE
IN 'DOG' FIGHT
ARCEl.JA. Mexico (UPI) -Adrian
Benitei shot and killed a dog belonging to
his neighbor, Ernesto Brito, and Brito
lhen klllW two of Benitez' dogs.
Both men <.'Onfronted each other, open-
('{! fire nnd both died in the shootout.
' '
Connally Mission Set
,World Tour to Emphasize Econorriy Issues
KEY BIScA YNE, t'la. I AP I
Secretary of the Treasury John B. COn.
naJly will leave Tuesday on a round-the·
world mission to some IS n<itions for
i~resident Ni xon to discuss •·n1atters of
c6mmon concern " and economie issues,
the \Vhite 1-iouse announced to<h1 y.
The trip will take Connally to si1 South
American nations, the Far East, SOuth
Asia and Europe.
But, Presidential Pres! Secretary
Ronald L. Zieg ler said , Connally '4'ould
11ot go to North Vietnam as sug~ted
Sunday night by Democratic presidential
candidat e, Sen. Hubert Humphrey, ~·ho
proposed such a mission to discuss
release of prisoners of war.
•(That is not the purpose of his
1ni5sion,'' said Ziegler. although the press
secretary said Connally would be ready
to discuss any matters that the foreign
leaders want to take up with him.
'fhe month-long visit \\'ill start with a
slop in Venezuela.
Connally was flying to Key Biscayne to-
day for an afternoon conference wHh
J>res ident Nixon and national security ad·
visor Henry A. Kiss).nger.
In making the announcement, Ziegler
said Connally would meet '4°ith chiefs of
state and .heads of governn1ent with the
emphasis on economic issues. But, he
said. the :ietretary also \vould be in a
position to discuss "developments in the
international field ," including Nixon's re·
cent visits to Moscow and Peking .
"The President re1Js that the ex-
changes whi ch Secretary Connally wi ll
hold with the Jeaders or the countries as
special representative are timely and will
be or great va1ue," Ziegler added.
· Nixon bad hinted that he would ask
Connally to undutake special missions
and tasks for him when it was announced
last month that the Texas Democrat was
resigning from the Treasury post.
Ziegler said Connally would spend June
&-14 in South America. After Venezuela
he will go to Colombia , Brazil, Argentina,
Bolivia and Peru.
Detail! of the itinerary after that 'A'iil
be provided late'!', Ziegler said.
He would JtOt say firmly that Connally
would go to South Vietnam, but on
response to questions, the press secretafy
said it could be assumed that India and
Pakistan would be among the countries
he would visit in Asia and he would not
rule out the possibility of a stop in
Bangladesh. Connally ill due back July 1.
K.iSllinger is departing Thursday even-
ing for a June 9-12 visit to Japan.
The two emissaries wilt confer with
Nixon, who is continuing a Florida stay,
despite four days of rain since he arrived
at his Key Bi!ICayne home Friday. He is
to return~ Wubington Tuesday.
3rd Delay Given
In Drug Hearing
Of Oementean
Another delay was granted today in the
preliminary hearing against a San
Clemente biochemist charged w i t h
operating an illegal drui factory in his
garage. He has pleaded innocent.
Lawyers for George William Cox, 25. or
4105 Calle Abril, won a week 's con-
tinua nce in the hearing \vhich has already
been delayed twice before in South
Orange County MunicipaJ Court.
Cox, free on bail since his afl'aignment
on the charges last month, is charged
\\'ilh producing about $26,000-a -month
\\'Orth of methamphetamines (speed) in
the laboratory set up in the fa shionable
ocean-view house.
J.fe v.'as arrested early last ,month by
narcotics detectiv es and federli l agents.
One man is still at large in th e alleged
production ring which asserted\y involved
offices in Costa Mesa, a Laguna Beach
residence and the San Clemente "lab",
officers said.
Allhough <.:OnnaUy has announced his
decision to resign from the Treasury
post, he remains as secretary w1til his
surcej:sor. George P. Schultz . is COil·
t1r1ned by the Senate.
Connally is considered a possible vice
presidential runnit1g mate of Nixon in the
Nove1nbcr ele<·t1on. Fore ign mis.<s1or1s on
behalf of the President would J1ave the
Rdded effPtl of enb:.1ncing Connally 'i
l'eputalion <:1nd Of keeping his name
before the puL!1t_..
By Avco Develope1·s
Capistrano District Gets
25-acre Gift for School
A gift of 2S acres of land for a junior
high school has been made by Avco Com-
1nunity Developers to the Capistrano
Unified School District.
The land, valued by Avco at $650,000 is
the first gift of this type received by the
district.
Trustees of the district will consider
the offer at tonight's 7:30 o'clock board
1neeting in Serra School, Capistrano
Beach.
In a let ter to school trustees, Avco
Con1munily Developers states it will offer
land in th~ vicinity of Crown Valley
Parkway anq Niguel Road.
In addition it '4'i\l offer $100.000 to
rough grade the site and an additional
$15,000 to landscape the r-.1oulton El<~mcn·
tary School acreage which the district
currently owns.
"We did this because of the need ror
schools in this area," aaid Raymond A.
Peloso, general manager and assistant
vice president of Avco Community
Developers.
"This is our contribution to the school
district."
He said voters In the past made
mistakes by not voting for school bonds
during the years when there w.as turmoil
at the college level. "Now we are trying
to catch up." he said.
In a statement to the board Peloso said
From Pagel
POSTAL ...
the temporar y eight-cents-per-ounce
charge for first-class mail.
The impact of the commission-proposed
postal rates was not Jmmeqwely known
because the Postal Servick'S board of
governors can overrule the Postal Com·
mission by a unanimous vote to set rates
th.at would pay the cost of moving the
mail.
The Postal Service proposed its rate
hikes in Felruary 1971 rollowing the
reorganization· of the Old PMt Orfice
Department. The commission considers
only postal hikes recorrunended to it by
the Postal Service.
Many objected to lhe proposed ralt>
hikes, especially publishers of magazines
and newspapers who argued that the pro-
posed Posta l Service rates would severe-
ly cripple their industries.
For second-class mail-users, the com·
missiori urged the service to simplify its
complex rate structure and recom-
mended that the propa.sed 1.9-cent·per·
piece cost be reduced to 1.6 cents, with
the zone rate spread for advertising
reduced from 11.8 cent s to 9.9 cents
bet.ween 7..ones 1 and 2 and Zone 8.
For parcel post it recommended thert>
be no increase and that the cost remain
at 21 cents for the first pound and 10
cents for each addjtJonal pound , a one-
cent reduction from the Postal Service's
recommended 22-cent and 11-cents rates.
The commission also urged that the
third-class bulk m·ail rates proposed by
the service be implemented immtdiately.
Stilt Championship
LITTLE DOWNHAM, England (UP!)
-Fraser Gilbert, 16, won the Bri tish
stilts championship Sunday by walking
480 yards on aUlta.
•·we recognize fh e need to meet the grow-
ing educational needs of Laguna Niguel
families. We .also appreciate the heavy
responsibility the district has to provide
racilities not only to Laguna Niguel but to
fan1ilies in adjacent areas of the
district.·•
The statement also says that the ac·
ceptance of the offer is contingent on
ter1ns and conditions mutually acceptable
to both developer and school district.
District trustees have been con sidering
building a junior high in the Shoreclilfs
area of S8n Cleinente.
But they have hesitated because most
of th e diBlrit t 's growth has been in the
northern parts of the district, Laguna
Niguel. San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point
and Mission Viejo.
Two Santa Anans
Die in Separate
Crashes Sunday
Two Santa Ana residents lost their lives
in traffic accidents Sunday, the Orange
County coroner's o[fice reported.
The dead :
Craig A. Jeffrey , 14, of 617 S. Toy,·nsend
St.
David D. Yoder, 22, or 1000 E. Bishop
St.
The Jeffrey boy was killed Sunday
morning when he drove his go-cart out of
an alley into the street near hi s home and
was struck by a car driven by John C.
Branham, 24, Santa Ana , police reported.
Branham was cited.
Yoder died when the motorcycle he was
riding with his wife Sheila, 23, as a
passenger, collided with a car at Warner
A venue and Fairview Street Sunday noon .
He died of massive head injuries shortly
before midnight at Santa Ana Community
Hospital. the corner said. Mrs. Yoder is
reported in critical condition in the same
hospital.
Police said the driver of the car,
Esteban Cabajal, 24, Santa Ana was cited
ror driving without a license.
He Finds New
Life in, Jail
LEWISBURG, Pa. ~AP) -
Anthony De Angelis, \he ma n
behind a caper labeled "th e biggest
fraud to hit the world of finance in
American history ." was paroled to-
day. a fit-!ooking 80 pounds lighter
than when imprisoned .
"Con1 ing J1ere actually saved my
llfe, '' De Angel is told ne\vsmcn at
the i?;ate to U\vishurg Federal
Penilentiary. ··1 can1e here
\veighing 250. and T leave at 170.
Spiritually, physically and morally
this prison has saved my li fe.
"I have no sorrow for coming
here,'" the 57-year-old former Ne\v
Jersey "Salad oil king ·• said. "I did
wrong and 1 paid the penally."
.Tired of the way your rings look?
Why Not Have Your Rings
Reset In Beautiful
New Mountings?
-We ·can ~e1ign • ring especially f~r you with your
old di<1mond1 . W• <1110 hive loose di1mond1 and
c•n <1dd to your pr11ent ones. Chack our prices
<1nd S<IYI. '
If .,.. ---"'"""' ''" ,...... of • •••od -.. la ••• --cllecli _ ........ -.. ,
AU DIAMONDS eUAU.NmD TO APPIAIU AT 41,,_ MOii THAN YOU PAT.
DIAMOND WEDDING
AND ENGAGEMENT RINGS 29~,
1002 RiMS TO CHOOSE FROM • RND rT,HEllE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
OPlll DAILY t to 6
1838 NEWPORT ILVD •
t:OME IN AND IROWSI AROUND
PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA -._ ... H-l ......... ,
DOM IACm
OUR MOST
UNUSUAL
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
Wlttw ,.. IM!r ......
,from lllS We wfl tuum-
IH _ d_ to ....
proha et 40'/o MOH
-,.. pold for It ..
your money back. C.
toodo .. woll alsewllere7 · ,
COM~All!.
I , •~!P• .. ·..A ·C..·-....
• • '
{
Ja DAILY PJlO r
Isolation
Solution OVER THE COUNTER
NASO llrtlnes for Wocfnad•y, Moy 31, 1972
For U.S.?
By DEAN C. Mii.LEK
"~' ...v.n. ... ,.
NEW YORK -Every so
often somelhing that hurts our
national pride comes along
and some of us say. ''Why
don 't we retire behind ou r
borders and let the rest of the
~·orld go by?"
That's easier said in a mo--
ment of pique than pos!l\ble to
effect in a country that ex-
por ts about $43 billion worth of
goods ( 13 percent of the world
total) and imports about the
same amount.
-.. (.WI.I Mllll '--CMM Cllt·
S.1"("'0 ._ • .,_ Low Lf11 (hf, e11tl So¥1 \ 1) ~,!!' !!,~ ~ \ !'~IOI' -'°t
1 ffl •• J: •-r, "'fal~ Cfr.1
A.lltiotrt. 1.11 -t ';;-1•"' 1•t'I-'.t. !~11 • .f0•.; ltM ~ Jt . I~ ~;1;1 ·:; ~a:2: N r~ ~ ~~ r= •.S ~ J~: ~ ~t:~?~\l: .. ~'I r::!· ·'i .a! :;~ :ill :;:E,E ~l~ ~~TI 11~ !Ji. ~~ ?k~·: i~!!1 ~E
A(ltnlr1f Cp 2t 11 20"4 10'-\lo 11••1• NY j 100 )l)'o 29to :Iii) l'tdclw1 .st -. ~!!:!!~', ,.'·", M .,.,'I t.1 • .,....,.,. '• ... l<M •1 ~1. 51'• st'.•.~ ~·~-.. Ko •,·.5 ......,,..,.. 1 S.l't S<ll• )41-('I lMI I IOd :'I ~' )Yo !.-I ,.. Mo A .... irrt c9 ,. !J\fo lJlo 111, 11 ,24 111 1•'• H\, 16'1.+ ._ idNTIMI . Al'-> 11'1<1> .. U>o ll 141'-''I '*""'" .0 IJ 1410 :t-'. :1.'4-I~ eel,._, 1 Alt Ped ,!09 t JIO'o 1t14 ~ .. 1'11'1'11"'1' 2 • S1 1)11 $)>>' ill-I• dPl!f& 1.10 AIKO o10cf O" ,~ >• IO _ ,, llft Co ,1,.~ l 11'• .. )Jl.,+ I.Iii eel Slon ,.0
A J 1f>CIU1rr1 ij ;:; O'I <M-•: ~= l~OI ll !~~ ~;~ it;;-1 ~ :.i1",•lt1 ~" Aluon•ln l• :io 30~ ,..,. •"i" ... E IM ·~ I lOl. 101. \llol, ~ l."' OtYt<:1.1 AlaG•11 10 1 1 ..... I• , • .,..+ .... ,_.Mllw C• 2• ll'o l]L, \\'•-lo Ferr1 Co 10 I( AlaP '°' 1.21 121'0 lN 106 106 /\IMllC' pf l )l.\o l' ... '1 l',bf"..,.bcl 10 AlaP.• lnht 591 421'1 ~ tl -1\o 11 Pnwin 2 UJ .... .., •l'ot '• F,~.~1110 ,',.~ ' Albt>rto( .l1 ,, ni.. f-WI 2~-I W lllfl:t cl \JP 1 1~ 2(1 10 le un ·-.. • :~~. :341 , ~ ,: .... ~~ ~rh_.'4 ~~ ~~ ,; 't,1 2i·• ~ •• ·: ~,~,~t~ I: \ 1 Alto Sid .3' '1 12V• 11~ 11 -\.o J llrl1 Cr~ll S ,,~ t.l. •• , -• I" ncl ~HI JI Alcon lb .26 )I t3\'I t J 4Jllo+1V. llrom• M 24 1•i.. 111, 191,_ \, !:: •~!o" .t l <• Alex•n .)Od 3' U \\ 12~ 11 -'Ai 11,-.,1i.r l :)Cl!. )l~o !11-h l'~ r ll 11•1! 5~ "'.J A11AmL -'~ JI 11~ 1114 l lh+ 'I\ lln"•I ... ""' IS 1j'• 1 ~\· I~.; • ~"Ille 15• <i Alloe$Cp .lOd JO 12 lit. ,, + 1-o !Ml~ 1 l<IG '° 1µ. 14' 2.ol -•'I F•I I"~ All_,.LOO ' '' -,. ''" '''' , !fl lie-II 1.)0 > ....., .... ~ '• ~ Fi!N-lllo~ J .,.., ..,._ '"" G <V"O ..,.., :IOl, I '• F1tNCll 11> Alig LU<ll!f J t ~ Jtlo. 3911 •n •• I s.I 61 N 'o 7J .. 1J"-\o F•l .. 151 1 n Alie Pw 1.tD 11t lll~ 10f'o ll~ \o lnG pt '·XI fXIO 111 !Tl ti• I' " All'n (;rp d JG ,St.:. 15 JS -1, •nG pf 1.44 1120 !Ol IO:J IOJ ' •!NSll•n 1 AIUO(h 110 l~ Jl~. Jl)J\ 31 \~t-lo /!'.'.i:-llepf,_.! l}(IQ 11·~ U \i ~·-1 FiP•Co !l6
l Alld Mnt .4S ., .t()h -tOl'o ~-• c ...... • ·-ti ll1... lib JI\,,' !\ l~ru'R1J·0:1f, : AllOMill1 .IS 1 lf'• 19\• 191• (I T Flncl 1 Xltl .f'I <ti\. 41', l '·• FOV•llk 40
l,IPI T........ ...ll!t<!PCIPI ) 1 49 ................... , v.,. ., •1 Ill no•. 111 I u, Floll•rSr . 16
The L:nited States co~
ceivaby could go it alone , but
there's no guarantee for how
long. And the cost to its slarr
dard of living v:ould be high.
JSOLATIONJS~1 "'Ottld ar-
rect everything from jobs to
the lvay you trave l and
\\'hether you could top !he
morning dish of cereal \\'ith
bananas.
Personal Rapid Tra1asit
u A11e1Proe1 ... 11 l,~. ,,.,. ltt\-l•l:fr~ '•~' .1120•1 1201.11011•i•,1F1,1"F Os~
AllltdSI I ~ 46 j.lol.\ ))\0 13"0-"l11!•~Sv ,.N 1ll l5'4 lS» lS'>-'• Flfflfnl U AllO Supm~l •s s... s·~ !'>-'I ,11·1 0 I. Id • lJ 11: •. H •o-•• Fl .... ina ·~ AUl1C11 .11)d 46 lJ:t 111, lJ•,....1~ cil~ 1'::: -~: lot 11'' 17~ 111 .... •,1Ft,n!~o•PC '1 AlltAU!O .d l 11>• 21\1 ll'>-'' 1llV Inv' t ti l '1 n 11"-'>Fl• E (o••T "IP/It,. Ind lO 11'" 11 II -t \~ I... ' •• 51 ]• )''' n .. ' '1 F l~ r.., !' General Mot d·splay d 'l ( t · 1 R 'd T 'l V "'1~"" LIO ,,.. sl1 s,., sP n. " • • 1" ''· it. '1 Fl• Pw 1 • ors 1 e 1 s our· o-s1x passenger persona .ap1 rans1 e-:~~!e .:~ .ss 11 ~ 1\•• ls•:-. ~::;~ ~11 1.: '~ f::; tr.: ;~:: ~ ·: ~1:~:Zt' 1~..;,
hicle (PRTV) at Transpo '72 last \Veek . The small people mover may find its ,. e. pt '·'° ~ !t:~ ~f 1 !t:~; :~ ~:!~~~'1 ~:~ ,J ~~! ~.1 ~~·; :: ~\~~1.c1~~11 ,:
fi rst use in central busin ess d istricts. shopping centers and air terminals. The ~';'.1~1:1 ·~~ 'JJ 1~ 1f~i~ 1f,i~ ·· ~~~iti:,;·:' 115~ 1 0~ 10~ 1~~ , ~.11~:~.01~:~1 ,~
vehicle \\'Ou!d be programmed to deliver people non·stop to their d esired des· A"1 Air F111 lo .;21• •I'·• .;1~.-~, c10•0• co 1 10 19 "" 1n,_ •• ~,1v1 01 1 io linat'on l th h ( b tl A"1 Alrll1>e-• 391S U\1 •1•. tl·~-1') (lu•ll p to 13 18'1 II« 1 ....... M( (11 I)
Your automobile, for in-
stance. is llkely to contain 31
materials imported from 32
Department booklet on trade
countries, according to a Stale
policy, Your telephone has 48
materials imported from 18
countries. Your ne\vspaper
probably is printed on im-
ported newsprint. ~1 i s s i 1 e s
defending the U.S. incorporate
10 materials from 15 foreign
___ , __ • ___ e__:p_u_s __ o __ • __ ,_1_o_i_1_. -------------------------:a:~~ i1.~ 1~~ ~~~ ~~:.: ~~;~~ " ~~:n:111o1 :Ji ,~ ~j}: ~~t ~!~ , :;l ,~:':1~' 8 J~ A Brest 1.20 ll n 1, 1D>.. 11)-\..-2 (NA pf 11\1 IS! J!'i ll'• Jl'•' '•I oo•r Mlnrl
Raising Business Taxes
/,m Bldg .JS 11 'i •llo 47'-l-'• Co.11 SI Gs ~I ~'• .;.; .. •5 1 10 ~oo'•""" tl! AmCan )20 1"6 19'• ",,,., '2'1'1\-.. C.,tSGptl.lt •~ .;7 46 , ,1 OfdM 71<1 A Can of 11, al lJ>, 75~.+ '• Coc1Coll.f 4 69 tl1 Ill: \Jl'-'•~,','•~~I('~ Am Ctrn .;I J.I µ;, 1'• P..t '• Coc1Sot1 .J.I 7l .,.,, ~~· ~I ..., A (llM 116d 21 ll'o II~ 11~ '1 Coldwl 11'111.r ••' · ., 19» 11 FortMP~ ~I Am Cl'l•ln 1 12 11>,; 1': 21~+ \i Colf'Colfl .Ol 1} l •'• lll.o il•,-• l'o•!,•W IO AmClSg 1 .;o I Jl\lo 1 '~ )1\lo-'• Col(jat, l 411 • S..'o J.l•o "'•· '• Foobofo <O Am(~1>I I'> 1:00 '6'• '61\ '6~o + ••Col1!P..1>t j •, ~• 61 '• .a t>A•, '• Fr1n~ISI .n "m(y1n 1•, 1..:1 -"'• 35 JS . ->.. Coll&AI-~ 1•0 !• ~· 5• 1 Freo1Mn JO Arn Olilllf 1 It )I 7•'-'> 2•''• , Collin Railoo 11 l•'• 73•1 '''•• '• Fr~~~~I l )1) AOi11r1 ,"lO<I lS 6,'',I '°',,· 00>01.-1,.Colonl•ISI 1 ?1 ~:: !i),'•, ,',&::,-, ~.1Fu11~•ln<1 '' A O~al .110 15 ,,,• • ,,,""7" i' Collnll! 1.60 :J& JI•, )(I 2 AOv! ol ..... .; • i<l''o '<T" •Coll ln<I 60 1, '''• ,,:•, "0'• '• ••bit lnd•I AmEltt I.I' 2&1 27'4 '1'\> 26~r-')Colli!A 1"oo 1 1'1~ • A( (("P Am E~t>0t1 /l S\'o •\~ •><. •t. · 2 11 11 11 -'. GAF (p .O Arn Ewpr pf tlOO Uh 11\" l!\,.::l,Collnpf 4''• 1 Sl J\l, !l'•t-•1 GAFpf 120 A FlnSv ,,~o 14 IP.'• ,., •• 11•.o+ •• t R l Df~/°l '9', ~~ .. • 12 !1 -l•o GGem s~ I }U A fjn pf 1'~ rlO 19V1 lt ''I 19'\ t '' Col Go, ' ,, ""' ' 16 31. -1', •rnblpf I•• "'Gn80 .I Sd 95 21·• 21'1• 11'h l o C, '' l 6 JO·• 1Y ' ~o 'oiG~mS1>I I &O
'No Solution' to Problem
countries. •
V.'e also depeod on imports
(or large amounts of mercury,
zinc, lead and iron ore. About
40 percent of the agricultural
products imported are not pr<>-
duced in commercial quan-
tities in the United States:
bananas, coconuts, jute, cof·
fee, tea and cocoa beans, to
name a few.
Then. there is that all-im·
portant question of jobs. Some
of them . of course , are being
taken au•ay by the goods
rore ign co untries pour into the
United States. But it's a l"'O·
\\'BY st reet. l\1any U.S. plants
would shut doy,·n if their sup-
plies of imported r a "'
materi als were cut off. At
least 90 percent of the ti n,
diamonds. chrome, bauxite,
cobalt, beryllium , n i c k e.1 ,
asbestos, manganese a n d
crude rubber used in the
United States is imported.
TllE U.S. Department of
Labor has estimated that each
billion dollars wort h of exports
creates 91,000 jobs. In 1971, the
United States exported $43
billion worth of goods which
figures out to 3.913 million
jobs. The department's overall
data includes the es timate
that In 1969 more tha n 2.65
million jobs were relatea 10
merchandise exwrts, or J.8
percent of total private em -
ployment.
Farmers y,•ould be especiall y
hard hit if the United States
adopted a "go it alone'' policy
in trade. The United Stales is
the largest exJXlrte.r of farm
products, accounling for a1i1l
o ne-f i f t h the wor 's
agricultural exports. ~1
than one-third of our whea t.
rice, soybeans, cotton and
tobacco are exported. The
crops from one of every four
acres harvested are exported,
and those exports provide
employ ment for one out of
eight farm workers.
CHE!\flCALS, airc raft. com-
put ers and other electrical ap-
paratus are among our prin-
cipal exports in the arta of
manufactul"N goods .
'
By RICHARD NENNEl\tAN
Chrl1ll•" S<itllCI -it•r ltntlCI
One of the Democratic can-
didates for president has sug·
gested one wa y to increase
government revenµes: tax
business more.
11e appears to favo r in·
creasing the present corporate
income·tax rate from 48 per·
cent to S2 percent. and to end·
ing both the investment tax
credit, wh ich already has been
orf and on again a couple of
times, and the liberalized
depreciatior. rules that the
Treasury just put into effect
th is year.
Why not tax business some
more , if the government so re-
ly needs additional revenues
or wants to cut down the tax
burden on lower-income in·
dividuals?
IT WOULD be a severe
mistake , in this u•riter's opi-
nion. to take out after business
profits in the next round of tax
reform . There are at least two
reasons:
First. it \\'ould have a short·
term. negative effect on
business. not so much from
the increase in taxes as such
as from lhe constant changing
of the rules.
Second. business laxes are
not so sin1ply "business " taxes.
In the end. they are borne
by individuals, and when we
see which individuals. we
might well wonder why hig her
business taxation is such a
darling of the political left.
Some legitimate arguments
ex isl for increasing personal
income laxes for the rich. But
just because businesses sho\Y
profits, this does not place
them and the effects of tax·
ation on them in the san1c
ca1egory as !he rich. llcre·s
why :
CORPORATIONS have to
strive for a certain profit on
their investments, on their
capital, each year. lf profits
are unusually high in one in·
dustry . additional competition
normally comes along until
profit rates get down to thf!
§ -1000 ORDER ~ 'eautiful
Stick-on •• YOURS .
LABELS
, l?"oNLY~ TODAY! ~ $126'
~Al INC~
' Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Order For Yo11nelf ,or a Frland
'
M•y De u•ed on envelop•• as r•furn •dd,,_,,
label1. Al10 very harny es 1identificatlon
label1 for markint p nonaf~ item1 ·such ol,S
books, record11 thotos1 .. c. ltb•l1 1fic~ on
9la11 and mey e llted for merkin9 hom•
c•nned focd items. AU laltels are prinf•d
with stylish Vo9ue type on llne qu1lity whit•
gummed piper.
1--;.:::-=~:-=:..~;;:;----,
I "'"' PrtMlllt u•• DI•., P.O. ... IJM 1 I c.i1~C-.IJG6 .
I I I I
I I I I L __ ... ~~L~!-'R!~.!IG __ j
'
I
'
norm. Sometimes. in ne\v in-
du stries, a few co mpanies
make unusually large profits
for a time and then so many
companies come in that pro-
fits sag below the norm for all
bush1ess .
There are exceptions to this
economic rule, of co urse-such
as in industries where it is dif-
ficult for a new company to
get established after the
market ha s been split up by a
few big giants in the industry .
This is the place for the
government to Sl<'P in and
regulate or control, to com-
pensate for the absence of cf·
fective competition.
BUT WITHJN the general
frame\vork that an industry
has to achieve norm 11I profit
levels to attract capital, the
income taxes it pays are only
one more cost of doing
business. And , it taxes go up,
industry has to try to find
some way to pass on this ex·
tra cost of doing business.
Either the wor kers get Jess
pay, or the stockholders get a
smaller return. or the price of
the product goes up. Some of
each probably happens. but
economists thi nk that for the
most part, the taxes are
ultimately paid by the con-
sumer.
So , if we want to increase
A Gn Ins .!1 :l'l!l l P • 21 11\•t •1, 0 tlu•t• 2;3 1;'>, 11'• h•,, , G•nn •n oa :~~~Is ':!: 1~ 7?10 ~i1t ff~_1 ,i ~:~b0i \-.~~ ,g: ~~'· ~·· ~~.:-,,lg:~r~;: 1 ~ corporate Income taxes "'e A Home 1.11 191 to.. •01'1o 1ol'lo-P. CmE "' 1.10 t 6J "'3 6l ,,GA1 sv, ' 11 . . A Home pl 2 J I.SW. ls.IV· 1S•t.7i ·~Cm So!Y '° 16 21 11 .. 11' I' G•!tWtY ,.,
are Only •o,n• to pass along "'mttoso ..27 1s .... ~. ,..,,,. .. ""' "'Coms1at .90 1 11 11 11 ·-, GCA Cota
'heh. h "ta" lJ . lh Am Inv .2Sd JI 10\i 1o•t. 10','o-\•CmwE"o tlO Il l J•'• 1310 ,_.1~1~Geml1>l Coo 1g er x. a east 1n e A Mea1c1 11 ..., .. ~• ... ~~-1•,1, Comeo"' 1 M u•, 21 2,,,,, ... \, ~'"' in .su
I h bl' And A M<!altD•D •l 1tr. lt ,,,,._\lo CwEdpf 1.41 1 11 11>.0 12~-,.. f\Aln l.t!i' ong run, to t e pu 1c. AMWIC• 1.~ 212 ~o ,,..... :io -,.,_ ~wEoP1 1 90 11 :2•'o ,, 26 _ "' n "~ .
Wh'.ch part of the publ,·c•. St'nce ~~ic,, 0! .. 3,i:;'\ 11 "'" "''° ,.,.._ v. wEd 71 "'11 '1 11'1 11•1o. 11·~ enA ' 1. ..,,. ,.... sn I'~ I V. • ...._ V. ComEO Dwl 145 1!Q0 11'4 11\. • c;..,. 11•11 ... y
people Of modes' mco. mes ~mm•G•., '·.n 13 16l4 :Ji!\~ l6'0 •.. C0"1w 011 41 111 JT'o 11 '> 11. '• GnCt~ .IO " $e 13 21 2110 J1,.._ ~ CwOllpl l.n 111 14>, 14 1 ,_ • Gn Cor 1.20 spend almost all their pay Arns~1p ·'°" i~ J)V. 36•,. 36'·•-v. '°""'' .!6 l l'I e.. .,. •• .:; ,_ '.· J;i lnD•v•I 71 • A Sm.it q.20 '~' 20!0 :io\lt ~ \~ CPm9Vtr Se t so 7'1.0 1•, 1,:-' ~~n,1ovn•,,':l and wealthy people don't it is Ams Al• .10 " ~ 11v. sn~+ v. com1111t ?.on 30 21 ~ ,,,,, rec ..., • Am f'nd AO J:"Jt 1 .. \lt :iv. 14 -Iii,_ Miii• 1 • m o ~p • .<V<o-~ .. G'" "'' .. "' people at the lou•er end of the Am~ °"' •\I. JJ _.,,.. sev. 5114_ \4 cftf'N.1, .MO 30 ,.." ""' ~. ;-; ~ ~G~F11~ 1 ,og , I h . th I Amf't•lt .!2 ll 3i6'llt 3'\.'J ~ V. Con••cC •.a I lt'• l< 1' _,_, .,. 1111r 21 income scae. W 0 In e ong Arn "T 7.60 ll:M 0'4 ~ a~ ..... ~•ConEo llO 110 24•• 74r1 1,,,, enlnilul 3 run would bear a dispropo r-:~Tfa.Tr"1 ~ 410 ~ se-. stto-"'° CooiEd ... 1 1 61-• ,,, .,~,;. •• .,. Md .IOCI · h T h. h AmWerr 60 #JI 71' l l,I, 1°" '·' Cont FO l''• 41 3''·) JI JI''•-'• G'n.Mlll1 .t 6 tionate s are o a 1g er car-Awirof !•, 2 13'4 13"' 1J' .. • CooFopf" t'• • 100'.< "'' """-i•. GMoll 1>1 ''• 1110 1•~ 16\4 16'4 .. Con Frtle~I JJ 1J•1 ?J'• ;3•, ... ·'• G1>Mol I IJ.d poration income tax. ~~:i~ -~ ,! ~~ ~it~ i~ ~con L•••lne J.o 10·~ 10 lG\..-'· G ... Mut 01 ' AMF lncp 1 llt 6t 6.Sl i •S'•·;. '·~ Con•NG I.ts lO 21'• 11·, ~•'• r '• Gen Puri 10 Arnl1t .60 6' 31\~ J6~~ :llMo-o,;, Con1m Pw 1 !St 1' 11'• :111,, •1 ~ PubU 1 60 TO TIIE extent business ~Mm',,',~, .. ,u, t" "''• 91')+ "'con PP• 4'• 11111 e1•, '""1 .,.,, ·, c;"n R•l••t1 " 1 1 1... T>i Co11H Air Ln JCI 211·. 2!, 1j•, p , Gen Sgl •1 taxes are paid for by the Amp'~ cu 119 l'I~ 1•1 1~•-;, en C•n 1 60 "' 1ri:. 21·, '''•-n 51ee1 1no . A"1reo. Coro o 2~\lo ?;>o 11•,_i\CnCtnPI t'. 1lJO loll., 66>, b6'• .... g y'!o.£1 t l7 u·orke rs in a hus1ness !he y Arn•I•• 1.10 ~9 J.O'io lO'• 30'-·~con Cc1>oer 19 6'• ~'· 6•• .. P :i ' • • ' A•l•fl!I 2.61 xl ,1 41 '1 +\,ConllCorp 1 91 ~6 •>'• •S\,_ '•G onT ht IQ hold dou·n purchasing power. Am11ro1 .41 ~11 ''• 9 91·,+~~cn1 1co pt;•, , ,1.~ ~1,, 57,1_ .._Gen~>( 110
h lh 'df Amiledln 1 ;) 31 lPo 39 , CC11of8 71, 'O !7'o ~1 ,, 57,,~ '•Gn•l•r 6(b To t e extent ey are pal or Amiri rn .:io 16 6'• 6'~ 6') con111 1 ;10 '.l9 l2'1o 111, 111,_ ,, Gonv•nP H
b lh h h Id lh I ll An•<;.Ond• J!1 10\i lt>< 10\~-.... Co~t!n~1i 11 40 1111 10>, 71 _ Ge P~, ICI) Y CS are 0 erS, e a er Ancflor Ho l ld t ~]'.• Jl Jl . -l,j, ConMt~ Sld 7SI! 1 )'~ l.l IJ'·•-I,(,, Gb .. wpl 11)
group (many of whom are:~"'cf 1·.~ xn 10•, 10 1011+~i con11011 ·1 ·., i.;1 21~ u u 26'"•-'•G~•t>er lll ,..., 1 SJ\• SJ ll -V. Con! 01! t 7 1 ~1;, "°'~ ~·>I "Goll~ I.lid retired persons) are ptnalized :~~~fi ·11 :io 11 1'" 1• .• en st"i •o , IG't io>.< 1~ .. '• Gl1n1P! fOd
by th.re being fess earn1·ngs Aotco .120 li -ran r~t P~!---\\ conr T•I :.. so '.JO 1•1· 19\o ~ '• Glbttlf ln !I A "L Coro If '2l'I• 111\ 2Jl'o-y, COlllrl 0•1• M llV. 1P,. 711/•-1 \.o G1<1d Lt\'"'
d f ' ••l nl APLPfC 1 06 201,(,, 20v. 20'.(. Con.Olof •'I• 1l60 St SI se···+ '• GlflH lll .1)CI aroun or re-mv...., me · AQOll9d Mo '! ,1.,.. lll'i. 1a-.-·~ conwc1 1,90 1 33,._ 13 131,..._ ,, Gilt.err F10~
On economic grounds, it ~!A,,•,~ 1 ~1,1 1 l' 1u IM -1\l Cook Un .so 11 1t•,. 1~ 11:0.:.-vt GU1011r 1 '° '"~ ,. ,, It I!'-" 11 If -~ C-Ind .IO l•J ?l'oit :D'4 )m G/mbel Dr I would make much more sense Arc11 ... 0n1 1 l• • «114 4 t 1,1; c_.1n "' s 1 to '° '° -1 G NH lncor ArCTk Enlo " 2'~ lt\• '"' \lo c-1...•b )I lll 331J1o J:Jllo lJ4lt.--Vo Gl•n Al .:Kid lo lower corporate ta:zes than A•Ji Ps 1.ot u 11~ 'I 1• -.,. c_.T .w :u '"" 1~ 1•\.\.-i\ GltnAtd 01 1 Arlt .... 0 St ,, .... \'o $\.\-.... c-lnd ~ , .. n ... \lo .,._I GleMpl "" to raise them. One reason A•• .... 1t110v " :JOl • 70'llo 2~ v. '°"" Rtn.p " 2iM lf'Yo 1•~-11o Gk>b91 M•r . f h Armo:o sn 1 23' n,.• •,.n• n -~ c-stt 1.10 " »•.r. ~ 25 _ '4 GloGllJ" .... many corporations avor l e Arm 01 ,,10 u! ~~• JI"• l2.,.,t ;z corn c; ,...,. 1• '"':• J-d 24S -1~1 Gl>lown Fe! value-added tax (VAT) is that ~~~:.~k 1::& 11 \1' :19'" Jtv.-v. C\!U11n1 .~ 12 2Y>O 1sv. ~+ '~ <:.ooctr1c11 1
he ·l .,_II Aro Coro .l"CI 11 v. ?O''t 7G'·o ,, Cowl11 Com "' 111'1a 1~ 10\.•+ ~Goodvr .N l y see 1 1~a y as a "'"'1n Ind 1 1 1 so•• so..-iv. Co• erc1 .JO "' 44\'-4l•• " + 1 .. GotaonJ .1. · f [ f h "•hi 011 \.20 11 2•:1;. 241't 1•~ .. CPClnll 1.10 7l JP,"a )2.\io 31¥.-It Goul<llnc 11 4 substitute or par o t e cor· A~aoc 8rtw i 1 ,., ,,, ,,, ' C••~.Co .10 11 n•·, Jl\'o 21•,.._ \~ G•~c• w ,, , · l A h A1 OrvG I'• 'l 5J''t 3l\• SJ'I•--~ CrfClll Fl .1' 41 11'>11 27''• 27v,+ •,f Or1nb1 . .o porale income ax . s sue , A1sosor 1.20 :tt•. 1110 .n•-v, Crock•• 1.M 10 34U Jl~• J.lto+ 1, G••nG u .IO
'
.[S e r f e C [ WOUid be ',',!"",_,,,.~ l j ,... 11,'o f'1'-'-'• Crorno K . Ill lJ 2•1o 241/• 14\o>-l• Gr•nllv!le I ,. u" ovv I l ~ lll'o l .._ •.~ CrO<.ISt Hln<I •1 19\o 191.1 It•, .... '!Jo Grenl W Ii • economicall y neutral (wh ile ~t,'"",.!,1·,'.~ s1 'nlio ,, n '4 crowen c ti 26t 10'.!0 1111-. 101>-•1G•1v o 1.10 .. rc1~ .., 1• 21V. n n -\'oCrClp/ 1.10 s ,, 22 n -'I GAMq 11\CI
lhe l·ncome lax penalizes the "'1c1ve1o1 ' 10 s1 s1 s1 .. crown Cork 211 1•"• 7J'1 211.,_ ~• Gr1 A&P 11<1 Al II.it/I/Id 2 UO U1• 61 •l\io+ '-'tCrwn ZI 1.:10 I'l l 31 "1 JO'o ]1',.+ l >GILl<Ot l Y. more efficient. higher-profit ARch 01 1>r. ••JO u•' s.i•i 14'~+ \~ C•0<1Zpl t.10 1100 st S• 19 -1 Gt NoJron lb
f. T I Id be AIRC ol 1.to lt '9\l fl tO>j-\\ CTS Cp ,4t 21 31 31'~ ]l''e-1 GtNNtk 1.60 1rm ). The VA a so cou AllRCh "'' ) 1lo.3''1 101 lGJ\i ... Culllo•n .2 I u 1 ... 11lio 1~' ..... "" GIWFln .ISO
k. · ATl•s Co•1> 11' 2:i-a '" "I'• ... Cummlfl U Jt 47!'1 t l.4\ •11->-'~ Gr!Wt1I \Jn rebated on exports . ma tng it A To inc .12 s1 lJ''• 11•. 12u ... cu..., oiVQ 11 11'4 ·~ 12~--. owvp1 .•111
easier to seU abroad. :~:~, q~~~ ~l lj:? •J:: '1i':= ~ !Cu't!"w w~ 2~ ~J ~~ ~-J~ ~1 W.'1\!n :~~:co'!'i~ 7! lS~O IS'• 1!1~-.. ~~I~~ '110 JS 5<1') ... , -~-Jl'o rnGl1nl I
Avco DI J.10 'J i!t~ 4~1• .fl+~ yctoosi.1·1~ ~ ll.,. ilt,! ~i ~ f~;~/,!, 1:2: Aver~Pd ,]t 1f \lo. .M•~ l!l/o--1-V. yprui 1 -D o-'r~m"~ .//hO Avnet .1S<I 111 ' •o l~I u:z:: \lo 0. c 150 u " .., ~~~~~d Pi'.li ,11 1fft~ 11!;~ 1?t:,,,::,'i o.!illTvir ~ ,n, J~.· J~. ':~'~ u•1,l1,'"."·~,·:~ Alie<: 011 " 5 11111 1711, 111<+ Vo O.n1Cp 1.30 ...., ""' Jt~'e . II ,. B B Otr! In .lGo 10 S~ .. SS!.4 SS:\lo-¥t If &. Ch
Money's Worth
How to Cut High Cost
Of 'Horsing' Around
tlAl>&Wll .SJ -;;s ii;;\ 21 \'o 71l'll-.. Oilrll..O pl ' ,, 57~'J !7 JI\~+ .... 1111 •• Aetf tl•c~ lOrt li 1r.o 1t\t i.-'' O.vco 1.14 S !fl·• It~ I'~ \.\ llR at ~" ~=~=~~ :~~ 1! ni: r7". ~r.=1:: &:~:~~ :~ :ri ~l:': = ~ ~ u~tf1~ !·~ B•l+G8• ,,.. ,, ,.,,.. "'"" , ........ :i.. OeyPLI 1.1, 1J 22•1 ,~. 21"-\'o u11s1uo1 s B•nC•I \ 3.; 1 ,,,, 21'• 11'o OP LplA 3~, 140 Sl'o !l''• SI'•-'Ii. UfWI ~ lltlltO<" p,. ,, 1J u>~ U li-10 O.Plpl l .90 z)O S1 '' ,, -I Y, utt•W•. wt Bnk o1 NV 1 11 J'l'i )ll''J ,..,.,._ \'> Ofln W .111d I I 11"• :IO~i ~ 1" GllW1 pl J'i Bn~• Tr Z.l' l~ SI ·'\57 51 -1 OMrt •c1 1 101 65'~ '4Y• •Siio.-\lo. Guttl>fl lr>e111 BArbtrOll 41 'I Jj\., t] .;] -11\ OelP&I... 1.11 21, I••~ 16 lt'I•;. '!. Baro (II. .ll tS l~ JS>i lA .._ \'o O.t Mn! 1.10 t! ?l~'J ?2 t2loo \.\ H•ckW• 7 20 Basic In .«I I 11;, I'~ 1\,..J. Ii, 0.11• Ar .SO •Sl SS11 I)\, Sl -2" k1llP• 1 .Ot B••lcPI ,., ,,,, l! ll Jl 0.1111; lnrn ., • l<o •"•-1/o H•ltlbl" 1.0~ B11e•M .100 l3 11 •.:.II'• 11\\+ '!o Oel10t1• Cp 12 ll 37'\ 31V.-''Hamilton W Bal•~M Df I I 1•'• 1~ l~ -'< O.nnl1" .61 'lt lS'~ )4~ ll\I;-'Jo H•mP19 .SO in itself, has come up from e .. 111 1nc1 :xi 1s '"' ..0•1 •o••-1 "1 o.nnyiR .().I it• 11• • ,....., '""'-"" 111me1 c .•o ll~VlCllL .•1 x1., 6'"" 611-'· 6'"'-1'~ Oenholy I :U "8'• •No •I~~ ~~ndlon1 .6' By SYLVIA PORTER nowhere to second place. B•x!tr L .1J 12 'l'1 •l '• '-.i•+ l, o.r1to 111 11 2 .,,, .. ..,,.... " 111ov H .n llavu~CP .-0 • l?\lj 17'• ll''> . OeSotoln .•0 11 ~ 20lil 10lll '" •nt1Co l" Florlda . another state where Bt1r1no1 .57 11 47•• ""''' "'·-\~ Oel\tdl• 1.•o ll ™• :io·.~ 10•1, H•nn• • s
l lh. · s l d I' le'>sure-l',me acl'>v·,,·,,, are a •,•,•:..F,', ,'.·,',' 1J ts:i-a tt'• t•:.:.-•• o.re P1 9 J2 110 111v. 11111> 1111 1 "" H1rcuu•1fl 1 man IS coming a ur a. • r I lO'l 103 1ro -It• 0e1e pl 1.•S >100 100•,> 1ocv. 100•11 H•rn111or 1
f l.f I h • d B..:km .lS<I lJ $11'~ 5'!1; Sii'•-·~ Ot!E at 1.fl 1110 ICM 102~~ 103 . H•rrl11nto 1
\Vtth the running of !he Bel·
the horse racing season \1'il l wa y o 1 e, a so as ga1ne a Bet1ono .>0 10 «»~ t0"• ~-·~ °'' e p1 ,, , 1 79<• rii. 79'" . H•rJ<o co r
I ' the [ 10 hJI lleechA t.0o 21! ?3'11 11'~ 1~ ~ '~ 0.•lr (:p .14 J7 21'/1 '20'-21 t'erlSM• IO reach its exciting annualpcak. pace in op • w eB,1coP1 :$0<i ,., , • .., 1••• l•'·-••0111F 1n .s1 :io 16'1 1&'• l~••H•wae1 1.-t.t
Al b nd Lolli.,, .• a have 8t!Ot"n '10 11 ~ ,. '9'Jo.i. '-01• Intl l 10 IS :w ""' 1511>-.. ~IYfl Alb 1
B lb st · · f a ama a n Det<l<IH .»o J'll 1••1 1 ~1; " + '' DI.Im !llm · 1 ,, 1"1 1tv. it• .. -v. H•1tltlne , ut to e va ma}Or1ty o slipped out se11 .. H11 llO 17 "'" .s•.1 •si-t·1 0,,5""' 01 2 ,0 191,1 29~• 19r, HCA 111<1u11
horse lovers the nation over. · a.miico ·"' 11,J :,~ !r" ~!L ,4 0;1Sl'lpt 1.10 11 i•i• u\~ 1,,.. •. :· ~1111 T• ·* , ~ b'll • lhe ho Bllld1• l 60 '" '"' ~\~ m•~ ..... Olct~ll11 C• 61 11\'e lO''> 10.,, ee11 Mn 21 !he animal th at wins the third iue wage L m rse 1...,,1~ "' l •s 41•0 u~; u i•, .... Ol1beld .IOv 1121 .iov. ., ~+ "' e1n1 H ! Ot
'
'nduslry has soared lo more .~,I'..!. 1,·]e ,, ........ ,.v.i, -~.:.-"" 01G1oteo . .o » 1s1. l>''> u v.-~ •1""'" 1
6 Or lhe three areat cla ssics .... _, • .., ...... ..., 01,1111 £qp1 U• u \.\ M\~ u -1"' 1111rnt curt e than $1 bill ion a year and an-L~~ ~r, .,J 1ri 1~'4 1~"'"+1~ 01111~ .«1 st 11 ... ll\• nv.-1-t ~=~~1 n1 ~ June 10, will be of f2r less in-1 l 8.,.•u•• 1,. 144 ,,.. 1,.. 5v. ... on1,.,. p1e 1 1 21~. x 21 -1 11.1 .. Pnt1 30
teresl than the one the y call nual pari-mutue axes are 11~rtev 1>11o 111 ,,,4 111i, 12 _ v. OHlol'IC' .IOlt 51 36'~ »"• J6'• .. Hem!IO C•o ' the •~ ·11· lo tAM Bl'lh Sii I l'O , .. 11~0 )1 31\-. ~ Oli.nVW .10lt ~ 117 11<1'9 IM.\'o--~ Hfrn ff\ 200 their ow n. now in 'foNV m1 ion ,.,...,.. Blt1 3 rrn:1 ·.~1 ,1 ''t. I'~ ~?v.+ 1,. 01i.ion inc 153 ·~~ u v. 1t + •t. H••cllle :sic1 ·11· g 81ttk Ok< I i<2• t1\l 7 t7\.'o-~ Ollf!lk1 .10 4 lf JI )I -~ Htrillv 110
Ow h, f h · lh m1 ion ran l'. Bt•lr Jn .41 111 f: 11:\1; 21"-1.11 01ver11ld 1n 101 •·~ •~\ •'1+ "'H•ub ltln ·., ners 1p o orses in e . 1111,1t 911111 , ' 1~ tnt 21 ~" o;vM1 '·* 3) 11~ ,, 11'to+ v. 111wJ11 P ·xi U.S. is in a perpendicular rise. • While the number of a1oc11.HR .1• 600 111o '""' 11 + 11. 0r P'"'r -~ 11 so 411\f tt'"-" 111,hvott En
I , , he lll ue-11111 60 1S1 42 (1 ti"+ ft Ool'11M" .IO ll 1Sllt 7J 71 -I HlllOll 1111 1 Th e horse ve erinarians practicing in t Debbi' B;t, 111 11i'o ia•.1i 11 -"'aomFo .s10 •i e"" ,,,.. ,.,. .. "'Hao. 1 1 » ao.r ... c ., 7 ' ll" !'~ " -Vo Donl...11J ,OSd ' lOl-0 10"• 1°"+ "'Hoer:;., :'° population is U.S. has jumped 15 per cent e1>1•• c" :11 4S. •Vt T./t u:-r"' 0on,..uv ...u 12 21v. :zs~, 2s\.'o-2v. Hon l1tt.tn
explodmg. , s1'n 1968 the number flonO •tldvt 1 ~ ,,. •·· · 0or1~c .n 21 JJ ,...,. lru-u, .. ~, ce , eoot11.0 I ·~ ~ \~ 10 ll!l -"• ,, , ,. ,1 :»'.. 11 + "' ..... "'" .11 ' J 11 I.A B c1ft1 11) 11 r 2t?lo 19'"-+ \"\ r v r !' ,_ ,~ '' _.. •L Hollfl A .1.511 Whole new treating "equines on Y u~s tl:' wr i•· ,_ :Ji: u~ ... 8:..c. J~ , ~l; si.,. 51..,.::: ~ HoFtvsu .»11
lndustrl·., climbed 35 4 per cent Ol'man• '" ,•, -• """ .,,.Dow Ch 1.eo 7• ""' n w. n~ '" ~·,• ,·,." . • I £d 2·" t~ 1l'W, 11"°" 1~1'"' 0 PF !!IC.. •1 7t'o ~ 1 -\"\ ~ · tied to horses • Hone raci ng attracts !~.!~ ~= 1 1m 16 " _ u. 0r1Y c '·~ 6 ~ )(l"' xiv.-1.6 ~ 1c.°1° """' t 71 I 11~ 17,,_ "'° Or, ... r l .-40 U ):Ni 27\• J~ I>') ~r.I .A~ are spring.Ing twi~e as many 11pectators as=~=~ ,,,: 1 Jt Jli'!. siv.-,.. om"' 1.2t1 J1o •211<1 •1-. •n-.+ • H\!•Pll•I co
up. Old, al· maJOr football games. More er11 MY 1 20 ,,, ~ "''' 4.l'h+ \lo R:~:::f r..J ~ g:: ~~ ~~ ·ij =°'' 11111 .,.
most forgot· th"an 74 million attended races t~l;,.':t ".',J ,,: 1m ~ ~-;;\ m~,..,~.c~ J ~ ~ :~ !;It:~ .. :='~ :: ten hor s e In 1970 l!JroadH•I• l • ,. ~ 5'01-1V> • Jtf 1:20 i11a 106 iow. '°' + 14 H\!U1 tt1 1.20 · &o,.;a_HA pl 2 12 •s t:W. " -1* n'Dr I.~ Jt 1'>4 1'V) 16~ •.. ::::;::: .~\It ~.sses P'O•TIR Enough. Horses are "In" -:rUftG• 11::: ':1 f~ m: r + ... ~1,:.:', c, 'k in lg 1W! 1l~ttt. Ho.iUcf 1:,.
•re staging &ild it's no secret to anyone=~ crv; ~ :U~ ~· ~ ·• ~:.e' 1~ ,.J tI~ ;;~ G\O:!".. ~ tt:=., ~ a fascinating comeback. And lhat this animal is an ex· ..,,. $1\rp .20 21 lR• IF~ '"'+ I.la Duclt.i 1;1! 110 1' " 29 + \.l HowJllM .1•
lhe horse-coMkted boom Is d . 1 . 11rttlfr l1 .04 u 31"'9 Jno 32 -" Ou4!Lht •' "*' ''"' ""' i~ . ~ ,,,, c e e Ing y el p e n s Ive. BfVnlwk ·'' 1tt SJ''-SI~) !IV>-..., fi!LDI 1.0J J.100 '7\k f1U 71'il .. Hllbeld 1.lld apparenUy still young, A• i A ·~ ho UI BlltY E 1.10 ., 21•' 2ru 11w.+"' r...Df , 10 ,29 ,. .., ,. + •• Ht.Id •• .».i possess on . """" rse w lllldd comp 10 1•~~ i6'9 ,.._.."' YIM 1..!..11 t1 n 2u• n + ""t+ltt"'9H .c documentation: eat and sleep Its way into a =~:1z' :~ 'J "" '111 "4-Yr riwnk c.. • uo 7\'I w-,. 1-tu .. 1 c11 .1•
• 1'he horse population ln $1 .000 Investment before the B.~~· '1\t... 21 -• ld•ho" 1.11 """ -1"' ICIH!~ .~ the U.S. ia now up to 7,.000.000 end or the first year 11.nd a eunR Df I IV. tot•l 4\\
more thin twice the numDet;_llD1rse owner wUI spend f150 to :;1',r1~ 1 1°~ "" ~" "' 1 -~~ 1'"'1,~1 ~.:.,,.:< ',lj!.:~ counted by the Census of SI 000 II lo k _.::. ... &Ui'1 "' •.?! ,,. + .,. •K l 114:t, 13f!"l , I" , annua y eep ~I llul'~YC ' ,a,, ·ll, ... A lH" 1,,-.' ,ll., : 1111 ~ 'I 4,'!.G• .• ;:a:~ ; l!PW JI !,.10 Agricullure In 1958. An in-horse tn food •nd shelter, ~ll'l•u"i~ .... lO ,. _ ,,.. ,~w11 (,;II
formed estimate is thal within estimates Robert M. Oliver, c ,, --c.c-c · 11 ' -t: •HA c 1..-.
another five years, th e vice president of Diagnoetic ~ 1;.,., 1 .uv. ".,.. 14 ' U' IMtlM c ..
number Of ho-·· will •• Dall ••• • firm ~·~ c-. Wd 'll , "' ..... • ...... -lm ::;:~ 1·,!;
'"" ui:; 1 u"'-'., wwur C11tt P'lfllftc $F J\4 1!1* ,nt_•\6 ts. "' ~ ~ " I~ ,~ 10,000.000 or more. develops and manufacturel ~="u Mj~ • lm 41 + .. :.-.i1 .N
• Although the hone con-pharmaceuticals and anlmal rN s.,1.1t l1 .,.._"' ~ ~ sl"\ ... t·tl
tlnues to be aofwork anlmal in dietary supplement!. ~~ 11 :rt ,m ~ -jS!1~ j.,~,~ 1 1 r-" .,n = r.: DIOfllhe~~-~aole~.~~~~~.~ -!! f ~-f!·~ ~' J ~~~I=~~~
being ralled for the pleasure dullries ii the manufacture. of ~:~:f: n = ;;.. = -~ 1t. t ,, *""~ 'l\t .... :\4 l11tri.-· l:Ja
of rlding or raclns them. J.n vttamln and health products, c:~ll' 1: n a~• = ~ ~ ~. ·~ ~ i !fa+ '"I .t: to;
1969. for instance:, the leading by the way. Sales of food sup-c:~~~ ~'.to Jr ~" :" =+ tJ •::1'.!"'o•.i 1 ~• 1, ~t ·~ 1~~~ 1;~
horse atatu were ba.slcally plemenls, Ollve.r reports . !'Gift. .• 1 , ... 1,Ji6 l~ ~ ir~ao"' ·11 • ~ ~ , -· , 1~Hold ·:W
rural and included In this average $75 I year for .,."Wit 'r. ~ mi ?J:+1t: :r.. . . ID! I m ~,~. ':I
or<ler : T .... MNorth ea .. uoa, pleuure horltl aod alrnoll j 'c:.': ~:Ill . ".=ij rlr.1 · f, ~ lt!,lj ::iJltoi"• =-~~Pfii~ ~-u.!~o~= . c':-1 ~ l a J:c'. Im 2' ~ ~1m~ :=·,...1:'~...d.": =:u~ cm=.:;,:. ~'fll . Ill~ \S+·~~\:l"l'.!l =~II ~t!r:; :;'!:,~ •t 1erI•1 r J ::lt1 ,fJ y •• "" • '" ~ ! ,i;::: ~ i~•j
.. r
=----.... -I,._) Mi.ti .._ QIM 0..
\ •
I
.,
I
I
, .
I
Sea Lyin'
A .sea lion basks in the sun at San Diego's Sea \Vorld as the temperature hit a record 79.
Califo rnia Court United
State's Top Jurists Often Seen as U.S. Pioneers By LEIF ERICKSON
SAN FRANCISCO IAPl The
catUomia Supreme Cou rt, under Otief
Justice Donald R. Wri ght, is increasingly
united in reaching deci.sions building its
reputation as th e nation's mo st pioneer·
ing state supreme court .
Since Wright joined the bench May 1,
1970, as Republica n Gov. R on a Id
Reagan's sole appointee, more than 82
percent of the court's decisloo.!1 h11:ve been
7..0 or 6-1.
DecUiions which struck down the death
penalty and declared local property t<1x
financing of public schools to be
discriminatory both were 6-1.
"I'm su rprised, really surprised.''
Wright said When told of a study
reporting the court's record on
unanimity.
He said one explanation may be a
tougher policy the court has initiated on
acreening from Supreme Court con-
1ideration all cases no t invol ving a really
1ign1ficant issue of law.
"All my colleagues agree on this,"
Wright said in an interview. "We do ha ve
to consider our work load.
''My colleagues agree that tbe Supreme
Court's attention should not be involved
until the case has been decided at trial.
''We are consistent," he said. "in
aenerally denying hearing on issues raised
at the pretrial or motion stage."
The unanimity record for a co mparable
period under Wright's pr,ed~ss~r. Roger
J . Trayner, wa s 73 percent unanimous or
There has been a sharp drop in 4-3
dech~ions. from 53 under Traynor to 22
under Wright.
Most of these 4--3 splits involve lllegal
search and seizure in drug cases under
the Fourth Amendment.
"We don't accept these issues now until
they've been decided at trial. That means
there arc not so many for ,this court to
decide." Wright said.
Jn almost all of the 5-I decisions. the
lone dissenter was Justice Marshall F.
McComb . the eourt"s oldest ·and most
conservative men1bt'r.
\Vhen Reagan named Wright , 65 ,
Reagan said he v;anted lo curb th~ cou_rts
from usurping the roles of the legisl ative
and executive branches or government.
Wright has su rprised Reagan and other
watchers 1of the court.
He joined last August in the 6-1 Serrano
vs . Priest decision declaring that public
school fina ncing by local properly taxes
discriminated agains t pupils in poor
districts.
Wright personally wrote the 6-1
decision holding the death penalty to be
unconstitutional.
One of the chief j us ti c e · 1;
respansibillties is to assign the writing of
opinions.
''When we know that a decision is going
to be publicly unpopular, I think it is ap-
propriate that it should appear over the
signature of the chief justice," Wright
said.
fi.-1 decisions. -~~;;;:;;=-n;rr.r.iftr.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiili The California cour t was the first in the
nation lo hold school property t11 x financ-
ing unconstitutional. Courts in Texas,
Minnesota, Wyoming, and New Jersey
followed.
The issue reached the U.S. Supreme
C.Ourt first in an appeal from a three-
judge federal court in Texas.
Thirty other states joined in attacking
before the U.S. Supreme Court what they
called a usurping by the court s of powers
that belong to state legislatures.
Atty. Gen. Evrlle J . Younger appealed
the California court".~ abol ition of the
death penally lo the U.S. Suprrn1e Court
on the same plea that the courts \.\'l.'re
usurping legislative authority. 1'he court
lhis week dec lined to hear the appeal.
A pioneering c.'Ourt like the California
..Supreme Court inevitably st irs debate
and <.'Onlroversy.
Trad itionally, the court'.!! members can-
not enter debate on their decisions except
·in the language of the decisions
themselves.
Wright"s death penalty opinion firmly
declared that the court's responsibility
•·to confront and resolve constitutional
questions ... is a mandate of the most
imperative nature."
He said the death penalty issue was ''a
GUcstion which cannot be avoided by
deferring to any other court or to any
other branch of government."
The consistent unanimity record of the
\Vright court ls impressive because the
seven individual justices range all across
the spectrum of social philosophy.
.~~~~~~~~~~-
WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COL LEG E OF LAW
OF
ORANGE COUNTY •
Safe Bus
Program
Scheduled
DAIL< PILO T l 1
Arms Pact S. Africa Censorship
To Affe ct •
i ,200Johs Program Under Fire
CONRAD, J.iont. (UPI ) -
President Nixon'• agreement
with Ru ssia on Ii m it i n g
nuclear arms will throw l.200
out of work and cancel
another 1.800 potential jobs in
this north-central Montana
area.
The President's agreement
"'i th the USSH closed down
the Montana Sa f e g u a rd
Missile Project, which was on-
ly 5 percent com pleted.
Cont racts toaling more than
$200 million had been award-
ed, and home sites and schools
were planned. Some were
under construction. Motels and
bars we;e being bu ilt end
others reno vated.
A SPOKt:SM AN FOR P('!er
l\ie\.\·et and Suns of Omaha.
Neb., said its work force totals
1.200 in the projN't area here
and nearby Shelby. Mont.
About 900 v.•orkers ·were on
!he Job v.•hen the word came to
close down . Stale officials said
that number u·ould ha ve
grown to :J,000 by sum1ner.
Supervisory personnel will
be retalled to Omaha to \\'Ork
on other projects; the rest u•i!I
be out of \\.'Ork.
The area already is h<1rd hit
bv 11nen1ploy1nenl.
·The cl osure of a 7.inc ph1nt
in Great falls. sou th of hrrr.
recently added 600 workers to
the depressed job market.
cw1111111 Sc+•"'• Mt~li.r Wvlct
CAPE TOY.'N -Soutll
commented : "I do think .,.,.e
are reaching a cr11i1s in South
Africa's censorship system, Africa. The Scope case makes
one of the moot stringent one wonder whe ther
outside Russia, ls at a censorship is practicable. 'fhe
board itself is a kind of court crossroads after a Supreme and is rtO\.\' having its decisions
Court verdict setting aside a upset by the courts of the
magaiine ban . land.
Calvinist government will bt
to strike out 1he right of ap-
peal which ··••ould be very
dange rous. H I had to choose
between no tcnsorshi p and
censo rship by a b o a rd
representing peopl e who arlt
afraid of the fac ts nf life and
ashan1ed of !he hun1<1n body. I
\1 ould l'hOOse no censorship." A I h h f "'fhe temptation or a
co or P otograp o a l ;r~~~~~~~~;~-~~-;-;;..,.;;.:-;.;;~~~~~~~·-~""'l black man with his arms ¥..
·around a white girl i n f 1 0 0 0 'JI Greenwich Village , N.Y., led 't
to Scope n1agaz1ne being ~/ ba~1Ls judgment upholding ORDER ;~, Beautiful
Stick-on the publisher 's appeal, the · '·'
Durban court reflectehd lhhe YOURS (·,\ J' yawning gap between w at t e I.,
censors and the courts dee1n
objectionable.
LABELS
T H E JUDGE \\'AS
particula rly severe "'hen deal-
ing "'ilh the rnain count for
the ban . The Publications Con·
t rol Board cont ended th e
c:recnwich photograph would
ent ourage Sout h Arrica·s
)'OU!h to cornmil imn1orality.
"! rrgard these \•ie"·s of the
board as far fetched in !he ex-
1 reme .... quite beyond n1~·
corn prehension," said th e
jurlge.
1'he photograph \l'as of an
event in New York and nut
J ohannesburg, he pointed out.
lt 1vas a fact of life in anoth er
country ;:ind nol I e w d .
s;J\aeious, indece nt, or
obscene.
TODAY!
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
· Order For Yourself or • Friend·
May be used on envelopes as return address
la bels. Also very hand y as identification
la bels f or markinq personal items such es
b ooks record s, photos, etc. La bel s stick on
9fass
1
a nd may be used for marking ~om e
canned foc.d items. All l abel~ are prin ted
with stylish Vogue type on fine quality whit e
9 umm ed paper.
TWO TOWNS WERE to be The court did nfll dou bt
built, east and northeast of many readers wou ld regard
here as homes for personnel of the photograph \.\'llh dlsap-
two radar facillties. prov<1J. but this did nol make
------------------·-----., r Fill in lhi• (OllPOM. clip Ind mt ll w!lh tLll lo: I f PHo! P•i•llnt l.1~<1 Div., P.O, •~l JU~ I
A few weekJ ago, a $10.7 -it undesirable in terms of the
million contract was awarded law.
for construction of basic com-The successrul appeal by
munity facilities for the t"·o Scope's publishers was the
missile communities. most ignominious defeat yet
1 Co111 MH t, Ctlil. ntJ•
I I
I I I I I I
Conrad• has a population of for the Publications Control
little more than 3,000. About Board v.·hich banned the
4.000 more were expected to magazi ne eight tin1es and on
become permanent residen1s. eaC'h occasion lost the case.
I I
I I
: PILOT PRINTING J L-----------------------
Conrad Mayor Robert Arn ot A UTt101t~.A~L~,~,N~~1:·,~1r;o:'~'~ij~~i~~~iii~;:;;;;;;;;~~~~~F~ said. ;'It's disappoint ing. \\'e --------
had a lot of \.\'Onderful pMp!P
l'ome in and \.l'e'd like lo keep
tticrn .. ,
f'e111y Roys, ('Xecu\ive direc-
tor of planning and econon1ic
develo pment for the state,
said in lfeler>a, the state
capita). tha t niany people in
the private sector would be
hurt.
"THERE HAS BEEN a lot
of in vestment in housing
development, remodeling of
bars and businesses in an·
ticipation or an innux of peo-
ple," he said. "We had hope-d
the ABM construction would
lake some of the economic
sting out of a state unemploy-
ment rate of around 8 per-
cent."
Arnot said fanners are ex-
pected to get a good crop this
year and the town will survive
the closedown.
A.K. Conrad. a realtor, said.
"We're silting on 10,000 acres
of irrigated. land. If anybody
Can stand a jolt, we can."
PH ARM ACY
WE QUOTE PRICES
OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME
--CHrcac THIS( SUl'ER SALE Sl'l!CIALS-Sug9. Ril. ' Our Rff, Prkt
Col9•I• Tooihp•1t1, 6.75 or.•••••••••··••••••••• $1,09 98c-
lubrid1rm lotion. 16 01. •·••••••••••••••••·••• Sl .50 $J.Ol
Oi.I Anli-P1rapir.tnl, 6 Ct• .••••••• ,.,,,, ••••••••• $1.29 99t
v.,,1 ;,,, lnltfl1iv1 c .. ,, 8ath O il Ba1d1, 18 01 .•• , ••• S 1.1 9 991'.' I ''" '''" 71•
2.39
79c
73c
2700 E. Coast Hi!!hway, at Fernleaf. Corona del Mar
• AMl'lt: l'ARMING IN MEAR
Ho1rs -f :l O • 6:00 Dollr
CIOMCI S1ttdcrys Mel Holhhrrs
644-7575
now •C<•pllng me" •"d women who •'• oilhor:
e ever 11 with 2 ~e1ra 11 l«e~!•lile <oll .. 1
«ollllh (tO); •r
• ovo• 21 '"' hov• ""'"e<I 1., ''~'""' ;.,.
tf ll1<luot oliUlly th• '"ulv•l•fll ef olitv1 jle
lio cl1t1r..,ln14 liy 1••11
The J D '" ll R. d~rt• cl" be •l•fll rl lfl ' y11ri of p1rt.fil!lf
rl"lll• .) d ont• p1r w11~; 3 . .( ho"'' t>•• <1111.
Juli a Hart nf the Foun-
li!in \'alley School District has
bttn selected to participate in
a statewide program to help
reduce school bus accidents,
school officials ha v e an-
nounced.
RE -ELECT SCHMITZ
•
'
• •
A Sc•t••I F'oQ••'Tl of t~re• cl1u •1 011 S.lvrd•y ;, 1v•il1bl1 for
firir y••' 1!.,den11.
Apply Now for September 7th
Day or Evening Classes
800 South Brookhurst
An•htlm 92804
17141 635-3453
(;.r1dJt!•• .,. ~1.g.hlo •o t1lo:1 1'1• (1l1foml1 $11111 lor f,1min1tio11,
P•OVISIONAllY .11.cc1101no ,., ™' CAU,OINIA COMMITTR
O~ I.ti.I IXAMINllS JULY 1, 1 f72, •
At the California Highway
Patrol Academy 111 Sacramen-
to this summer. l\frs. Hart is
slated to receivP 120 hours of
cl11ssroorn 11 n d behind·lh~
wheel instructlon in the saff'
operation of school buses She
will then return to F'oun-
lain Valley \\•here she \\'i!l be
responsible for conducting a
school in safe bus driving
lK hniques, o(ficial~ said.
The aim of the program is
to reduce the number of !'!Choo!
buJ a~ldents in California.
There were l ,777 in the 11tate
in 1970..71, an increa.se or 7.9
percent over the previous
year. school officials 111id.
CON&RESSMA ~Na tio n 's N umber One Congre ~sm an" -
!f!!)i.onol Economic Council
L!I Unanim ously Endorsed by United R epubli-
cans of California and the California R epublican
~bly
~JOO% Rating by Citizens for /Vational D efense
~Best Attendance Record of All California
~essmen (97%)
COMPLETE REPUB LICAN
1-Ii ghest Rating by
~Act ion (98%)
Americans fo r Constitu•
~"\Vatch dog of Treasury" -National Associ,
f w Business men
Never Broken a Promise to El ectorate
!!Jffever Voted for a Tax Increase
ljf"~ver Supported or Voted For a Democrat\
!inndorsed by All County Volunteer Republi:
l!J Lifolong Republican can Group Leaders
P•l4 ,_, ~ C.111111ftfw M,....., e. .. ,....... J•htt 6 . Sch1ttltr -CM C. ICorchttr, 221 If C•1ttl110 Kool, T111th1.
stereol03FM
_, the sounds of the harbor
JdS~~youVe never heard it so good
•• ' •
I
M
IJ
M M .,
M ~' M
"' M M M
M
M ::;
·~ M
M
"' •• •• ~= •• •• "' •• "' "' "' "" "" "" "" "' ...
" "" "' "" "" "" "' N" •• No No ~! ~~ N "' "' "' ...
N• N" N" "" NC·
NC "' "" NM .. ..
"' N " " ·~ N.C
No f'l~!I
N" " NoN
"" No No$ No$ •• N .,
·~ Nw N•• N~ ·~ Nwo Nw N• N
Noc N" -"' o .. O••
"' o~' "'' ~?o
8: O> Ok i• O•
g1i:11 "" Omo 0~11 o~' 8;11 g::,I
8~· Ow o~ Oxl'r .. ,
"' '" '" ..
" ,,
'" P•I" "' "' ''" ••• "" • .... ••• ""' :~ P41". P f~ ... Pm ;: .. "· "" ... ••• ·~· p
' ..
""' '~ Pill "" ;11'
P•lr '~ p'
. : 'I( ~t' "I '" '"' P'Pllll
N -'" • ...
•• Lo•
" u '"
-· 1.1..W, Jone ~. 1'72 SC
Monday 's Closing Pr~ces-Complete New York Stock Excbang~ List
'-~~~~~~~~-1
Stock P1·ice s Off
Jn Sharp Decline
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock pnces declined
sharply today as the market reacted to profit tak
ihg and d1sappo1nt1ng economic news Trading ""as
moderate
AnaJ)sls blamed the drop parlly on news that
mflat 1on and unemployment last month '\ere at
about the same rate as they ~ere before economic
controls JAere imposed last August
lJAl lnc1> ~
U •L <>IA .o UGI CIO I 1
UM( hod IJ ,.. c~' "" ., 1Un!IL!d .ffd
llnlNV 1.6 d Un C~mo ! ..C •tbO• ?
VnC""" LoO nk" ((<!"" Un E tc 11
Un E "' ) -. Un E 1>! t'~
UnEl~all
Vo I " """ , vc• Co •~ ...... ~ .. 1 6~ ..... ,,,,, t()o:I ., V JO (1> I ib
v t com '"
•• l' ·-' . u . " -
• ... . .
~~r'" ' I ~; ~~.
,1 ..... ~ '
•
' • "
• " • .. ., . " . '
I~ •
'
DMLY PILO r Jfl '
-·"l-• • ' J' • ~ I 1 ' ·~ " • l " . ~ ""
...
. .. .
,
' '
;
" ~ l' ' . ...
' ' ... " ,
•
•
Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exc ha11ge Li st
<l•~ [1111 • 01k l~Pr •o ~(d t 111 Occl ,., pl ' a.:, .. ,~ lbO 8!o~c11 llO I<> Ell 1 S• ep1 Jon
81\fpfl.0 ~E P' '" ()II E pl • Y. 0~116£ I I o~ GED! ~o 8kl1WG 1 l •
llnCor~ 88
011111'11 ·~ 8"' chl 11; 1>el,_,1 M
8r lil'k 10 ll$E.I Cn7
81,1tb0rd M I
t.nlt l c ~! 8ver T•n ~o w...W:f is 8"Vet1l I 1 Ml \"'Ill pf •'4 Odrdlnd 60
s11.. 1r1t1
CIMh 1 Hltll L•w Cle1t Cllt
..... Nt!
tMll.} Hlt ll LIW Cle.-cn1
• • ' ' . ' '
" '" ' ,
'" • .. " " ' .. .. I
• " ' ..
" '
' •
• 1•
' ' ' •
Sit" Nt• (lld• I H ... Low c~,. C~q
' . " ' ,_\ II ;
,,
" ' '"
1 1~1~·~
9 ') .; !i;:~. . " ' . ' , " . ' '! : ~ .1 :
" 1 , " 119 1M
201 '"" " ~ 1J 1' 11
'I l'O ' 14 11 • " -?• ~ •
' l~ • 11 J • " . ' ,. ' . • • ..
"
ll ' ' . ... , .. ... "'
W
':: :
' " . ,..
•• ,. • " ' '"· ' . '" " . • " " .
THE BEST
" • p .. " ' " . " 1'>'•-.. ·1 •
" ,
" • •
l, •
11 • • • &"'-• 7 • " . .. !,,_ . ·-. ll'IJ+ ••
\ -.. '~~: ;&'"i.;_ 1.
11 ~-'• , ..
' '~ ..... t . ' . ' I• -''" "~ '" " . " 1• , I " . • • . ' ' 11 ·-'•
• ' ' '" " . 1• ,_
·~-• • ' • • !I
'" n··· ••• ' . I ' -'
9 ·-' "' .. fl-\. • " ... ,,
1 -·~ • • .. l l!"•-... ...
11 ~-., ·~ "" ,,,_ ...
" " 1m:-1 \
R~ad.inhfp p o 11 t prove
"'Pnnuta" ls .orM of ttwi world 1 most pooular comtc atTt,,._ Rm It daily In the
DAlLY PILOT
H DAILY PILOT Mand.It, JuM 5, 1972
blf BU K eane
' @ "Hurry, Doddyl Jock Lolonne's onl Time for
our e>cercises 1 •
Bl.ack, Baptist
Student Leader
Fii1ds It Rough
SAN DIEGO (AP)
Dorothy Florence says it takes
10meone a little different to be
student president et a Roman
Catholic school like t h e
University of San Diego.
Someone like a woman who
b Baptist a nd black, a work-
ing mother who adopted her
own 90ll after the annulment
.of her marriage. Someone like
Dorothy Florence.
The students agreed. It took
perserverance and a lonely
fight, though, for Dorothy to
gel through the March election
campaign and an April ~noff.
SHE SPENT $5.ZO, buying
bookstore paper on which she
carefully lettered her own
name and goals.
But a silent supporter who
never identified himself or
herself to Miss Florence
showered the campus with
pro-Dorothy publicity and she
fin ally won, 287-210.
Bitterness ensued.
"Bastard was the word used
over the campus radio station
to describe her son, Michael,
3.
"I've been called even
worse," says Miss Florence, a
pretiy 29-year-<>ld history ma-
jor.
"But I try to overlook it
all," she said In an interview.
"It has gotten worse. but I
think these are just those
same 210 people."
THEY'RE MALE A N D
white, she believes. A
s pokesman fu r her election
r ival denies any knowledge of
such accusations or tactics.
She beLieves her biggest
trial will come next fall
because new Student Senate
muat ratify her appointments.
"I've had to concede a lit-
tle" since the election, she
says.
A whi te ma1e student whom
she named social chairman
was rejected by the senate for
that J>OSI.
She surprised wme by a
veto of her own, r ejecting the
$1,500 traditional pay for the
Associated Students president
in the form of a scholarship
financed with student funds.
SHE PUTS JN six hours of
work d aily, on the average,
plus 15-hour-weeks for which
she is paid $126 mont hl y as a
clerk in the history depart-
rQent. Her grades won her a
scholarship of $350 e a c h
semester and a federal educa-
tional opportunities grant of
$400.
A few say she's trying too
hard. as the first black under·
graduate student president at
her school, but Dorothy says,
"With t h i s administration
under attack, we ha ve . to be
good. We can't be average."
Also on her a gen d a :
Improvements in dormitories,
"rap sessions" involving pro-
fessors and their wives and
students, a nd other programs
to keep the university and
community closely involved.
THERE ARE ABOUT 1,200
students, of whom 65 percent
are Roman Catholics.
Each morn i n g Miss
Florence delivers her son to
his nursery across the street
from the picturesque hill top
campus overlooking the
Pacific Ocean.
She has held jobs in banks,
is a member of the San Diego
Board of Realtors and wants
to be a lawyer.
IRS Will Zero ln
On Business Trips
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Internal Revenue Se r v i ce
5ervcd notice that It will begin
t racking down on businessmen
who claim deductions for
b usine ss lriP' and con-
ventions t ha t are vaca·
tions in disguise.
The IRS said its auditors
end age nt s will start checking
these deductions closely lo
m ake s u r e th a t the
businessn1en are not trying to
cheat the government.
A I o t of professional,
business and trade associa.
tions have been sponaoring
trips and conventions during
which only a smaU portion of
the time is devoted to business,
the IRS said. The organiza.
tlons sometimes go 80 far as
to adve rtise that the cost or
the trip or convention ls tax
deductible.
The IRS said that the ex-
penses are not deductible if
the ma in purpose of making
the trip is for a vacation.
Minor business acti vity on a
pleasure trip does not make
aJI the expense tax-deductible,
it said.
The expenses of business ac-
tivities only are deductible if a
taxpayer · engages in them
while on vacation. the IRS
said, but whether all expenses
11re deductible depends on the
facts or each case.
Agents will focus on the
time spent in business and
personal acti vities or people
who claim these deductions,
the agency said.
Sto]en Taxes
VIEN N A (AP ) -An
Austrian tax off icial was
sentenced to t.hree years Jn
prison for pocketing $17,800 In
family allowances for nonex-
isting Yugoslav workers he
had created on paper.
Bras Cltange
Keepi1ig Up With Times
NEW YORK (AP) -Mori lhao haU the women In
the United " Slate& wear the w""'8 bra size, accOrdlng to
reoeardl.11hk'h hu brougbt about. tbe flnll new coDc:ept In
the deslp Gf bras since their lnlrOductlon In tbe l~'s.
P'rom lta beglMlng, the brasste!e Industry has alwayi
made bru ·m even numbers, 30, 32, .. and so on.
Wily? ·Tradition, money Involved, In stock and Ju.st pain untltlnklni. '
~/;when the NaUonal Bureau or Slandards in-
llOUDCOd • In 1971 that In the plai 10,yean the Amer-
ican. _....,, bU1t-lncreued one inch, ,making the average
bull •no loneer H-B but 36-8, one manufacturer of lnU-
lnlilil 'PPlll'!, bqlll dev.eloplng a bra for the odd slied
bast of SS, Ill, 11 ..i ll8.
s.,...,..""1m-Llft t'8led It on approximately 3()0
-~ -the oountry and discovered that lfl'''f mw U. II ,.,...i wore odd aiz,ed bras.
f
.~ ~.
•
HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUES. & WED. ONLY!
5 Piece
l 1 Ft. x 11 ft. Family Size
UMBRELLA TENT PATIO TABLE & CHAIR SET
· ''Superior Quality Patio Furnlturel11
"Plenty of Room for The Big famllyl"
• 11 It. x 11 ft. ten! with 6 ft. 9" center height.
• Open mesh (expanded metal) table top, chair seat & back".
• Sewn·in water & mild ~w res1~tant floor.
• 42" dia. table & 4 chairs-folds for easy storage.
• N Ion rear window with outside flap.
• N~lon screen & fabric door with zippered closure.
• Full size awning canopy with aluminum poles.
• New baked-on, chip resistant finish-snowy white.
• Sturdy, all steel construction.
REG. $49.95
WOW!
SAVE $I 0.001
Assorted
TUES . & WED. ONLY!
•Dress up
your patio
today!
SAVE $20.001
REG. $69.99
TUES. &
WED. ONLY J
SEE OUR FULL LINE OF BEAUTIFUL SUMMER FURNITURE!
HAND TOOL SALE! Made-in-Mexico
~ANCY PLANTERS P . . ode do 1·1 yourself fix-it-yourself and • rec 1s1on m --'
• Fiesta-colored imports-set REG. $2.49 build-it-yourself tools. . -1 •Scoop 'em up by the armload & get to work . them around the house
REG. B7c
49~0•
Pkg. of 12
TRASH .CAN
LINERS
• He avy-duty, sonilory
and odorless.
• Will fit 20 to 30
gallon tra1n cont ainers.
REG. 79c
39~ ..
TUES. & WED. ONLYI
1 Lb ....
SHREDDED FOAM
• Stuff a cushion, a pnl~w or o cuddly toy.
• Shredd ed poly-foam i• featherweight
& wa1hoble .
REG. 49c
39~
run.• WID. ONLTI
or garden. They'll really $J49
brighten things up.
• Hand-paiQted ceramic pots. la.
Slightly Water Damaged
21/2'' BENCH VISE
''Some Have A llttl• Rusf-llut
You'll Save 300 °/0 By Steel Woollngl''
• Suction bose atta ches lo a ny smooth surface.
• Swiveling iaws will lock in any position
• Heavy duty ena mel finish.
Made To Sell
for $4.99
Without Rust
Sl;gh1ly $149
Rusty
TUI~. & WID. ONLYJ
''Healthy Patent Ro1e..._,,eady To l'fantl'' -• Bloomin' beoutlet---oll your
favorite patent varleti.1.
• Plan1 them now for instant
color In your yordl
REG. $2.49
YOUR $199
CH91CE
TUU. a WID. GNl Tl
Lown fumfture
WEBBING KIT
• 17 ft. of 2 1/J inch webbing-enough to do a choir
one way.
•Your choice of
several popula r
colors.
REG. 19c
15'
TUES. & WED. ONLTJ
Genuine ''Church''
TOILET SEAT
''flle lelf $ .. f In 11te ffot1Nf''
• High glost--boked enam.t white finish.
D.LYONr!l~
• Compl•t• with hordwa,..
and ~yethyten• bump•rt.
• Replace those old seat~
today I
RIG. $3.99
CHURCH TUU. & WID. OHi.Ti
E BEST SEAT IN nil~
•
' .. .. . . . . -.· .. .. .. .• ...
•" ...
. .. .. ..
. . . .. . . ..
.. .. .. .. .. ..
. .. ..
.
•• . :: ..
~ .-.. .• :~
. .. •• :: •• •' •• .. .. .. •• •• •• •• . . :: • r
.. ... · . ... ... · .. .. .
' ,,
Yo ur Horos cope Tomorrow '\ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
·'
Pisces: Debt Will Be Paid
\
TUE SDAY
JUNE 6
Actor Robert Milchum. a
Leo, has had a varied career
and once l'Tote astrology
articles and speeches. Robert
C\Jmmings, the v e r s a l i I e
Gemini actor, is a keen stu-
denl of astrology. 0th er
celebrities, who have openly
apressed their interest in
astrology, include 1'.1ar\ene
Deitrich, Kim Novak , Wa lter
Slezak, "-fae West. Ann Miller,
Susan Strasberg and Glenn
1-'ord.
ARJES (MarC'h 21 ·April 191·
Take initiative in nlakin~ new
contaC'ts. Take chance on
personal abilities. t a I e n I s .
Communicate. Plav :i rt1\'C
rote. Express yourself. Br in·
dependent, original. Le a d
r!lther t han follow. He in-
ventive, daring.
TAURUS (April 20.Ma~· 201:
Family member shares con-
fidence. This can le!ld to great
tie or affection. However, you
must respond in mature man-
nt>r . Don't east first slollt'. 1£
GEMINI i"-1ay 21-June 20 ):
accent now is on friendship,
mutual interests h1ghl!~hted
\\o'it.h PlsC'tS u1d1vidual. Acc-ept
social in v1!;1t1un. (;rt around
-come uot ~if e1not1nnal rut,
CANCE!l 1.J1111r 21-Julv 22 \:
Your innalr abiltt1rs coine to
fore ·-~ou an· apprecialed,
rewarded ~uth1ng now is apt
to be haJf.,..ay . Instead. tl ls all
or nothing. hot or cold -no
J u k f" .,... a r n1 temperatures.
LEO 1Ju!y 2.1-Au~. 221:
Cood lunar !ISflt'C l now ro1n-
cides' with added inforrnation,
higher ('ducation and journey.
You makr progress. Vou in-
spire co11f1drnce \'ou get
ron11nunit·:11io11 front afar
whic h vl'rif1es !h('ories. \'ou
arr vi nd1eatN.I'
VIRGO (i\ug . 2:!-Se pt. 22 1:
Concern ind1ca1ed in a rra ,,f
flnancr/:. partnership, the hid-
den. Ge l arcot1nt!nj:(. Hemo1·e
d oubts by surveying facts.
figures. Take inventory. Leo is
Coast Groups
New o(fiei!r! still are being
lrustalled and coast groups are
adding fashion shows and in-
teresting speakers to the
calendar for extra pizzazz.
ORT
American Busniess Women's
Association.
Thr 7 p m. gathering \vill
lake place in the Villa S\l.'£'den
restaurant. Corona de! ~1ar.
Homemakers
in picturr. !\iake known your
views. Be specific. One who
cares will respond.
l.IBRA ISt>pl 2.1-~·t 221·
Trust l!Ul\l'h regarding con -
tract. pa rtnrrsh1 p offer Tcarh
and learri. Sht1re kno11led,i:l'.
Follow through on hunch Be
d1plo rna1a'. Ll'l othl'rS srl
pacr. e.;ri second v.1nd Ca nct'r
and A q u a r I u s 1nd1viduals
figure prominently.
SCOR l'ICI 1<lr! 2.1·.~nv 21 1·
r\e1v 11,·ork proC't'durrs ::irl'
featured Soc:i.11 ~:nn1.1c-t pro11~<;
mean1ngluL \'tiu lt'arn ;ind
t'arn. {lne v.ltn s1·r11•-.; 11111
deser1I'" hrl':il\ 111 r1111!11i\'.
Kno11' 1t ;~nd ;u·t atTt11 d 111~l1
SAGrrrAHIL'S ~ '"1 ~:.?
l k'r 21 I ('rt>:Ullt' 4'tld!':ll•'I ~
SU('('C'l'd n1·1·;11\ lhnHIJ.;h !.:• l
lo heart of niat!cr~ \h·1nli• 1
of 11ppo:.1te :>CX l'llllld I'-Ill'
ullunalunt. ll1· t·11n,1d1·1 :111·.
bul don't ,1:11r up \<1111t'th111g
fnr nothing S1·orpio 1~ 11~1y
ntuch in p1cturc,
CAPRICORN 1J>i.•c 2:.?·Jnn.
19 ): Be ready ror change of 1 scenery. l\lessage or call gets !
)'OU going. J~ome environmen t
is subject to ad1ustmenl. \Vhat
was seltled is revived . Check
deta :ls. Don't prom 1 s e
something yo u tannol de liver
Br punctual. I
AQUARIUS IJan 2Q.feb.f
181 . Accent on short journeys.
dt'\ elnpment of i d e a s .
B<'ln!rVl'S arr much in picture
YH(I \1111 b~· do1ni:: plrnfv of ex·
pl:unin,.:. Ke~· 1s 10 be patient 1
;ind d1plnn1at1C' F11rcp<; tend to
be sr;111errd. Finish one task
at " !!Ill"
1•1 ,cr~ 1 l"rh l'l \l;ir1·h :zn
i;u.ud 1.1li1:1blr' 1',1n 1·l1da1e
i.;;1111 '[".1J,,1• !H• llllf\!'\'!'~S{1r~
li'J..., :0-1'(' 'II !1,.:li( 11f t1•altt 1
\1<11d h:n11d111•· \\h;ll .tl/])(':ll<i.
,I ,,.•)1:11·1,, fo 11ld 1~,,,,.., ... !fl~ 111
\•!!II l.1\1'1 ll1·l1! 11:1tlt•:J 11f! ;1!'
•' ' •~·I
' '" ' -" '" '' ·~· ''"'8" '
I ' " • '' H • ' •• •· ~ •
1 '•· 1 c "''"'" • , ... , '' re•'"
'" ('~, ~,,. •. ~Q< '>•· ,., '"·· t'AIL\
r 1LOT, n~· 12•n, Go~'" Cent<~I $If
'''"· l>l~N \01 •. ''· Y. 1()()11,
Seat Off ice rs
Panhel!l'nic's !\1 1ner1·~ 1\\\·,1rd
will be anoouncrd r!urinJ! !lu·
June JO party and thr \11nnt'r
"'ill f('{'£'11·e a sih·C'r r111'd11I :1·1d
IJ;O,
\d1 U•11;1l A $~tl('lilii!"ln <l
ln'>ur anvr \\'•1ll1t'n -~ person.ii
1111,JI\('"" •':1rd-; pr••lt't'1
Telephone
• .. I
' •
• ' I • • • ' .,
• \
• I • ' ..
WE 'VE
MOVED
•
• I
' • . ' ' • ' • ' .. ~.
• I I 116 ' f STEPS
• '
to our
NEW
• '
• ,
•
• I
I
Charity Funds Ballooning
Bob Burns r £' s I a u r a n t ,
fl.1e"·port Beach will be the sel-
ling for the third annual in-
Stallation d inner of South
Coast Chapter of Women's
American ORT.
Ne v.' 11fficers \\·ill be 1n-
stalJN.l by Coast Jlom£'1nakcrs
during a !):45 a .m. meeting
Friday, J une 9, in Vill;i
Sweden restaurant, Corona drl
""1ar. Miss Susan Sc:hablcJ11
wil l s peak on her recC'nt
voyage on \Vorld Campus
Afloat.
S!Udl'nls fn1n1 1a1H1u.., 1·.,\
l<'ges 11•111 be presen1 1u ;111,111·r
questions on can)pus ~1f<'
Infor rnal ion may be oblainl'd
from h1rs. Wilham Budd or
Mrs. Roy June.
('111n1nu11u·;1lllltl~ ;11u ! rom-
1nun1on \\'Ill he !hr tnp1<· nf rlC-
1 rl'SS Jeanne Cag11C'\' \1 hl'n shc1
;iddress£'s the Te i r p h on c
Pioneers' Orange Coun1y L1f£'
J\1ember Club at noon Thurs-
South Coast
P lat a
Loc•tlon
• I
1 nsu r• nc e day, June 8, in the Saddleback • '
A game nig ht wi ll be presented by Clipped Wings, former TWA hostesses, to ' ,.
raise fund s for the Human Growth l''oundation, which aids chi Id re n v.•ith Seated as president during
the Wednesday, June 7, affair
will be Mrs. Norman Ham.
mer. Assisling her during the
conling year will be the
Mmes. Stan Berman. ex-
ecutive vice president and
t re a sure r , and J ames
Klayman, Mike Pleskoff and
Al Resnick, secretaries.
u Inn, Santa Ana.
J.~eminine Identity_ We've ~1iss Cagney, a Nev.•por t •
gtdwth problems. The party w ill take place at 8 p .m. l'~ri day, J une 9 , in Hale-Conte a Long Way will be the Beach resident, played the
then1c for the luncheon-fashion leads in fou r major Bro.'ld"·ay
sho1v to be given by the stage productions and ap-
• ' &est Park, Costa Mesa. Praclicing s kills are Mrs. J im Anderson (le!t) and Mrs.
!lay Campbell.
~ ' ~" Panhell eni c lnsurance Women of Orange peared in more than a dozen!
County at 11 :30 a .m. Salurda1·, movies. I ;
Service ., ,
A.wards
$iven
·Mrs. E . Mortimer Gherman
_ 0£.~ewport Beach has been
:: s~ccled to receive the
__ U adership Award ol the
:: ·a· ange Coun1y branch of the
: thritis FoundatJon for her
•· . rk as chairman of the
:: :1imen's auxilia ry.
;~ l.ti>e :1111ard v.•ill be presented
:: : to her by Jane \\'yman, ram-
• · paigp C'hairman of the Youn-
. dlM)n's 1972 Fund Dr ive. dur-
inQ •Jhe organiz;:i tion's annual
_ meePng at 7 p.m. Tuesday,
•• Jlill'E:. 6, in Disneyland's Club .. 3J;,,.
~s. r.1arian Fuller . also of
;: NEivoi>ort Hench . will be given
•• t b:'.e Ou!standinj.! Volunteer
A ~·p rd for having worked
T\\'O Spectal Information
Parties will be sponsored by June 10, in the Peek Famiiy
Newport Harbor Panhellcnic Colonial Terrace Room '''r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1,
in June for a!I girls entering a Westminster. I, Men Not Liberated: DTERY four-year college in the fa ll. Dolls in costumes from dif.
Mrs. Robert L. Koehler wil l ferl'nt periods will be loanM
None to Join League Bus iness Wome n open her Newpoft Beach home for decorations by the Young
A fashion show and talk on frorn 2 to 4 1>.1n. Saturday, Adult Workshop of the United A1R's1E P-BE'1N-'llOO
J une JO, for the first, and the Cerebral Palsy Association of -KIMEL EOW-''10S
The League of Women
Voters \l.'lll remain just what
its name implies, a league for
women voters, despite a mo-
tion by delegates at the league
convention in Atlanta that
men be given "equal rights."
The leag11e also \'Oled to
adopl three new emphases in
its national program: polic ies
on solid waste management,
equal rights for women and
special needs of American In-
dians.
Current league a ct i o n -
studies include air quality,
\ve\fa re reform, equal housing,
educa tion and employment op-
portunities, congressional re-
form and normalizing rela-
tions with Red China.
Delegates also reaff irmed
the league's nonpartisanship
ho k nd b t to I k -GE '18E'1 !C~ -w lo pac a w 3 a e second will take place at 7:30 Orange County. ,.,. F'LYERS-u.s. KEOS
policy by reject ing a JM"Oposal on .!!I trip will be presented at 7 p.m . Wednesday. June 21 , in The luncheon is a public °'"11~:i!io' 0~~';-~~
wh ich "'ould ha ve allowed p.m. Thursday, June 8. for the Costa Mesa home of ~1rs. relations project to further the Cernctlv• Mn''' cttlld•••
board men1bers at all levels to members or the Newport Lloyd ll-1cCollum. 22S L 17ttt St.
d I k 1·1· I 1· .,. Colt• Mesa· 541-2771
un er a e po 1 .1ca ac 1v1 1es Beach Charter Chapter of the The re c i p I en t o f/,fr==~~~~==~S:~~==~~=~:§~;~~~~~f
11
in addition to running for of-
fice.
Mrs. Lucy Wilson Benson11;::======================;I( W•nt To Solve Your Oecor•ting Problems? was re-elected president {or a NEED HELP?
third two-year term. COMt>lETE COME TO
"---.. Oi;i,
SHOES
sHoE & LUGGAGE INTER~~rh~~~b~~TING
REPAIR CLASSROOM 5 2-HOUR WIEKLY
SESSIONS
RESTYLING ,, $29.95
l"lrocllictofry ~•le• D•y or lv•nlnt
Army Low
LAFAYETIE, Ind. iUPll -
The nation's teen-agers don't
go along with the Pentagon
plans for an all-voluntecr1
army, according 10 a !"iurvey.1
In (act, the number of high
school pupils y,·ho p!iin to go
into military service after
gradual ion is at a 2(}.year low,
the most recent Purdue Opin-
Robinso n's Shoe Repair /?~~:IV~
Ltv1I of El1v1tor
ion Poll also reveals. IL----------------------'ll
420 ·3ht St.
Newport Be1ch
N•wport l••<h
fon Lido Penln1ule)
Make Reservations
PHONE 673-1722
Now -Cl•sHs •re Limited
• Y•t. W•'rl 1tte>1 • ..,.,
' "e"' w "' !•IUo! • Strt•! locll·an. Se>K I·
I I C&l'V, • >"O•I ..... ,~
l'C•ll\ !CW&•O• !l\t ~e•r•
e~o. °" !l'lt klw•• """II .. Wl '•e d l•eUly •cron • ••om Woolwor!l'I ..
• ' .. , • I \ • • YOU'LC LIU , OUI NIW LOOll
SAMl 'IALUI, QUALITY,
llLICTION ANO SllYICI
STARS
Sydney Omarr Is .one ot the y,·orld's great astrolo-
gers. 111, column t!': one or
the nAlLY l'lt.OT'S .-reat
featurf'~.
--m,dte than 1 .... ·o years on the·-;::=====================::::::::::::::::=::::=::::=====:; oit.!iniza11on·s activities. I -· l5 i s t i n g u ished S<-rvice
~~~~~~~~~~=--=~==-, ,. .~ P•ltllc.11 AdvertlM"'eftll
·· Aw'erds 1.1•111 be pre~entcd to
:: Di•; Sanford H. /\nzcl And Or_
Ledn B. Katz, both of Santa
. --~-
•'
-· •• .. .. .. •• ;:
•' , . •• ;. . .. ••
1:
. ' •
. ' . ·.
"
SHOW
YOUR
FACE
... wilh no fear
Iha! brigh! lights
will reveal
; unfeminine hair. II
: you are lroubled
wi th unwanted
.hair, lry our world-
fa mous method of
.elecl rolysis ••. the
·Idea l way lo be
permanently free of
l)a ir on fa ce, arms
'and legs. Come in
or call the May
:Co beauty sa lon
:t\earest rou for a
;persona anal ysis.
:~los.d Sund1y •
~OJ
"""' c.... "'" · .. ·. • C•lh MeM,
" ....... ---------~ ':· .,
Name one of Frasier's cubs and win lotsa prizes !
Enter at any store now! Saturday, June I 0 is the
day to see Frasier's cubs .• -• and find out if
you're a winne r , . , prizes includ e passes to Lio n
Country Safari, Frasier beach towels, T-shirts ,
mugs and more. Get a Frasier Club card, too.
SANTA ~NA FASHION SQUAR:.6.
Spnta Ana/ Garden Grove Fwys at Main ,.g".'W
•
.
\
I I
,
T"! &hmltz Fom iJy, Etwkr, 1m
A POLITICIAN
LOOKS TO THE
NEXT
LE CTI ON
A .
STATESMAN
LOOKS TO
THE NEXT
GENERATION
RE-ELECT JOHN
SCHMITZ
CON BRESSMAN
I
If one vertebra was
this large, just
the size of the • • 1mag1ne
whale, say Harbor
View fifth grade students.
6men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
•••• u
Prehistoric Life Revived . -...
An artist's rendering and
a fossil of
a claw help Mrs . Alice
Culver desc ribe
the extinct ground sloth.
By LAURIE KASP ER
01 lht 0 1llf PllDI $!1fl
Have you ever touched a mastodon's
femur?
Maybe you've felt a sloth's claw? Or,
perhaps the vertebra of a whale which
probably became beached in Eastbluff,
now 100 feet above the sea?
Thanks to a small crew of volunteers.
more than L500 students in the Newport
Mesa Unified Schoo I District have
touched these rather stral'!ge but scien·
tifically true fragments of hfe from as
many as 100.000 years ago in this coastal
area.
Since the first or ~fay. 16 won1en . refer·
red to as paleo docents, have lraveled
with these relics to classrooms at the
teachers' requests.
Jn addition to a number of fossils, they
carry a bag of sand from EastbJurf dig s,
a story of the local [ossil beds and an ex·
planation of just what a fossil is.
BASICALLY INTERESTED
Mrs. Joan McSumis. one of 12 docents
from the Junior League. described the
group as "people who were basically in-
terested but who didn't know an awful
lot."
l\1rs. Alice Culver 1had been unhappy
that developers' bulldozers were destroy·
ing the canyons and plants which had
held back the cliffs over the years.
Then on a walk through the area one
Swiday about a year ago, she met two
boys who had found a bison's skull and
whale's rostrum. She has been involved in
efforts to preserve or mark the dig,
localed behind the Newport Tennis Club,
ever since.
\Vhen scientists showed a n interest,
Family Hate Makes Waste
DEAR ANN LANDERS: When I was -
nine years old t lost my father in a truck
accident and now I am 16. After the ac·
cident my cousin told me I was lucky -
that she hated her dad and wished it had
been him. I to ld her if she ever said that
to 1ne again I'd sock her. 1J When I hear kids at school say they
';. hate their parents, It makes me sick.
They don't know what they are saying.
Sure, all families have disagreements
and people get mad, but I can't imagine
holding grudges and not being able to
forgive each other.
I hope you will print my letter soon.
AM. It aeems there ls a lot more hate for
older p<aple today than the" ll!ed to be.
Or 11D I wrong? -QUINCY TEEN
DEAR Q.: l ... '1 bow if there is more
.... '" older ....... IUa ~ ....... to lie, llOll lldl on ... lllllpollea abooi
-ledlop. JCYerr day I ....... al l8IR a .._. leCtal frem teeaag:en wbe
"'1 Ill<)' llole IMlr -or latlltr -or -. I Ylew 11111 I tnaodT DOI GDly be-
eame Uae kids 1Ufftr, bat tltttr parentl
u well.
Tllo llfft...,.. ol ldloa .. to try to , ..
ellablloll com11111-II U.. point
...... 11--.-.. lhe
wllola lamBy -pl -line In -to-.illl•W1.u -......
'-' refHt, ta. w' wliirt 11e1ptM llle .......... NPi.••
11' DEAR ANN LANDERS: M1 buobond Is
bavlnc an affair wttll hll --.ry. This
' .
•
tl•.t~ ....
bas been going on for over a year , but
I 've been looking the other way, hoping it
would wear itself out. I see nothlng to be
gained by confronting him, nor do I have
any Intention of a.sklng him to make a
choice.
Two weeks ago the secretary'• 14-year·
old son heard about the affair and told
our 15-year-old son who promptly told his
grandmother.
Nw my motber·~law ls pressuring
me to telephone the secretary and insist
that she r..ip lrvrn her job. I believe
thi1 would be humlll1t1nc to my buaband
and pla<:e me In the position <I hlvln.l lo
"take steps" should she rtfule. My
motber·in-law also want.a me to ill doWn
wltll the two boys and exploln the llilu.
lion ••objectively."
t've1 shed a bucket of teafs over this
mess and am confused and slck at heart.
Advise me, please. -INSOMNIA IN
IDAHO
DEAR IDA : You've already had loo
macb advke. All bad. Don'I telepbone tbe
teeret&ry. Don't Uve any 1ammlt
meetinga wUla tbe chUdren. Hold your
kad , ap. Issue ao utttmalumt. tr your
mothtr:&Maw eoaUi111es &o Mn.ape )"OI,
l<U lier to bait oul
J•·• ' I
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I hope It'• not
too late to put in my two cents worth for
the molher with the two beautiful
daughters who sat home a lot because
they were too tall for most guys.
I know who wrote that letttt and I'd
like to remind her of the time I arrived
at the house and she told me in very plain
language . she "'ould not allow her
daughter to be seen wilh a long·halred
gorilla. Then she shut the door In my
face.
The girl was nice and fairly attractive,
but her mother's mouth was her
dowlilall. I never called ber again. What
do 7"'I tblnt ol a 17.,..,.,ld who would
let ber motb<r mab lllCb decisions for
her? -l'I" IN ALAllAMA
Dl!:o\111'1"' rm 1o111n ~sir!:.;· et• Hr. It toalld1 u u·mama ti tbe ke-
ovtr type and abe took over. I fttl
for her dau1bter.
Discover how to be date bait without
falling hook, line and sinker. Ann
Landers' booklet, "Dating Doo and
Don'ts," will help you be more poised and
sure of yourseU on dates. Send 35 cents 111
coin 1l9r11 with a long, st.amped, Rlf·ad·
dresoed envelope and your nq-to the
DAILY PILOT.
publicity was generated and many in the
community became involved in the
prehistoric past.
For so1ne, such as Mrs. Lyman Porter
and T\lrs. Bob l\Iontgomery, digging in
this heavy sand beeame a family hobby
spurred ·by the finding of an "enormous
vertebra.''
GLORIOUS FEELING
"It's a glorious feeling to find
something." ~1rs. Montgomery explained.
And , she claims, ''It's such fun to dig."
Since the area was designated as an of·
ficial dig of the Los Angeles County
Museum, many of the fossils ~ re-
moved.
"Meredith (Mrs. Porter) and I began
to think how marvelous it would be to
have these things come back to Newport
Bench," Mrs. Montgomery explained.
Tht:! pair, along with Mrs. Richard
Wallis. learned that some or the fossils
could be loaned back to the area. They
received the enthusiastic support of the
school district and enlisted volunteers
from the Junior League to start the pre>-
gram.
Volunteers have attended a training
session every Friday for the la.st t"•o
months. Curators at the Los Angeles
County f\1useum of Natural History, the
La Brea Tar Pits and the Ray Alf
Museum, Dr. Harold Fitzwater from the
Biology Department at Golden West
College and school district personnel have
helped to train these individuals.
Once it began, the program was "sold
out" with teacher requests in the first
two days, according to Dr. William San-
Thi fhrfll of I
find his
1ddlctod (from loft)
Mrs. Richard
Wal111, Mn. Bolt
Mon'-'Y•nd
Mrs. Lyman
Porter ,. dJwlnt·
born, the school district's director of in·
structional media.
EXCELLENT ltESPONSE
Response to it so far, he added. has
been excellent
Dr. Sanborn said the program is
"perhaps the onl y thing like it in the
s tate."
It is unique. first. because it was
started by the \\'omen themselves. The
district, having an "intense interest" in
fossils. helped them along.
It might be a one-of-a-kind thing also
because of the natural cause of it all -
the Eastbluff fossil beds which are
located on private property within the
school districl limits.
This site, t:!Xplained Dr. Sanborn. is
''ooe or the most remarkable on earth."
Remains of both land and sea animals
have been found there. Normally, these
are found far from each other.
Mrs. Culver told fifth grade students at
Harbor View School. "They say this is
the largest collection of megafossils
found in the whole western Americas."
ENVISION A BEACH
Docents encourage the children to en·
vision "a wide sloping beach where a
large river flowed into the ocean through
a bay or estuary whi ch was partially pro-
tected . and near which there were grass--
lands for grazing animals and shrubs oc
woodlands for the browsing animals.''
Paleontologists believe the bay was fed
by streams which washed in the bones
from land animals and mixed them with
marine animals \\'hich also had died
there.
Bones from a mammoth, horse, tapir
. :·
.:~
and camel have been found ln these dii6
\.l'ith the remains of a whale, turtle, stiirlt
and many shells from fish \vhich, :JK.
longer can be found living in this ar~;·.~
"It's really exciting to see l;ie
children's pleasu re in seeing and tou~
all the fossils and in suddenly realir.1~
that these are part of their O\.l'n towft1\
f\frs. Montgomery said. "'and they begin
lo imagine ho\v Newport Beach and Cost.a
f\.1esa looked 100,000 years ago.'' , •
"The trouble is," said t-.lrs . Culver;
"you get thc1n so excited they want tiP
get right out there in ii." · .·:
Since the digs are located on privitl
property. this is impossible for mQlt:'6«
the children. The docents, however, ¥
take a bag or the sand and allGw · the
students to sift through it and keep all
the shells they find.
This evokes a common question,
"\¥hat's this?"
CONTINUING HOPES
Although the question often has to go
unanswered. the volunteers and school
district officials arc hopeful of continui.D&:
the children's educalion.
A program on the La Brea Tar P~
will be offered next year in additioo tp
the two which have already started. •
A site for the students to "dig" alMJ fl
"a highly desirable thing," Dr. San{da;I
said. For this, however. they would ba~
to find a bed of fossils not in an aret
scheduled for development and then·iJiO
obtain the owner's permission. . ::!
Some residents, too, have voiced ~
for a junior museum which would ~
bine displays of fossils and Indian ~
with classes in arts and crafts. : : :.f
-:.:·
--• (
• '
-' Lagl•n·a Beaeh
EDI TION
Teay'• ...., •• '
N.Y. Ste•• -
voe. 65, NO. ·151, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES .
ORANGE COUNTY. CA!.JFPRNf>; --MONDAY, :/UNE·s, ·rm TEN CENTS •
Niguel Heist Possibly Related to Ohio Ca-se
ly PATRICK BOYLE
0t IM 0•11'1' 1"1111 Slltf
Tight-lipped federal agents today con-
tin11ed their investigation or the spec-
tacular Lag\1!18 Niguel bank burglary
amid speculation that the suspect ar-
rested Friday may be tied to a similar
bank h<lst in Ohio.
1be .suspect, Charles Albert Mulligan,
38, of YoWlgstown, Ohio, wu scheduled
for arraignment th.is morning before a
U.S. magistrate in Los Angeles in con-
• 1er
I
Proposal Due
nection vdlh the Laguna Niguel crime. lie
is being held by FBI agents in lieu ()(
$100,000 bood.
An FBI spokesman in Lo3 Angeles
woutt!I say nothing about the case other
than that the man was taken into custody
in Tustin after being trailed there from
Los Angeles. An unemployed barber,
Mulligan arrived al Lo3 Angeles Interna-
tional Airport Friday from Chicago.
FBI agents in both Loa Angeles and
Cleveland refused to comment on any
Laguna to Study
Aide to Council
Mayor Richard Goldberg "'ill ask the added, "but merely to provide a person
Laguna Beach City Council Wednesday who i.s very familiar with the operations
night to approve the new position of "ad· of the city and the city council, who will
mini!tralive aide to the city council." be ()n duty at city hall every day to
"[ have talked to lhe councilmen in-represent. the council when people come
dividually about this and they seem to in with various problems and questions.''
think it ls a good idea, one that would be 1be mayor said the council probablJ
he~ul to everyone," Goldberg said to-would make the appointment, if the new
day. position is approved .. from the present ti·
"It is In no way intended to conflict ty staff.
with tbo duties of tlje clly manager " he In his request to tilt ~. the mayor
· ' · &lites, ''ft>e" Woitload of the city council
.------------...., ~ -may havit~-lncre1sed, gradually., over the
'Barking' Dog
Fou11d Hanged
In Back y ard
· pUt year. Now it Is virtually lmpm;sible
for the council to stay on tW> of all mat-
ter.i: coming before It ••. the~ t1 a very
real need for general 1dmlnistrallve
agslstance to the council."
pos.sibJe connection bet~'een the P.-tarch 25
burglary in Lagwia Niguel in which an
estimated '2 million in cash, securities
and jewels were taken, and a ~1ay 4
burglary in Lo('dstown, Oh.io, in whi ch
$430;CKMJ cash was taken.
Lord!town, a one-bank town some 15
miles north of Youngstown where
Mulligan live.!, is the site of a General
Motors production plant.
According to Sgt Joseph Murphy of the
Trumbull County Sheriff's Department,
• a1ns •
the Lordstown branch of the Serond Na·
tionaJ Bank ol Warren ~·as burglarized in
much the same manner as the Lagun'l
Niguel Branch of United California Bani.
In a telephone interview,,Sgl Murphy
said the large amoWlt or cash had been
brought to the' bank in preparation for
payroll check cashing following Friday's
payday at the GM plant. Some time dur-
ing the night, burglars cut through the
roof of the bank lnto a utility room ad-
jacent to the vault. 'Ibey then broke
through a concrete wall. wed a torch to
cut through a half inch of steel plate and
entered the vault.
Sgt. ~furphy said the thieves connected
a jumper wire to ~ interior alarm and
sprayed foam on the bell or the outside
alann. disabling both systems. He also
noted that invesUgators found four sacks
of mud on ·the roof of the building the
next day, indicating the burglars had
come prepared with explosives to blast
their way into the vaul t if necessary.
A Costa Mesan whose terrier
puppy':!! barking had c a used
nelgborhood complains arose Sun-
day mourning and found it dead,
hanged in his backyard.
The new aide would report directly to
the mayor, and in his absence, to the vice
mayor and would serve the: council ift·
dividually ,and as a body to maintain
coordination with the publJc and other
facets of city government. Duties listed
incll1de:
-Arrange for council agenda schedul-
ing of advance items, coordination
between the City Council and the ataff,
including the offices of city manager, city
attorney, treasurer, planning commission
and board of adjustment.
DAJLV ·~ ..... ~
CAPTAIN'S HOUSE FIGURES IN LAGUNA PLANNING COMMISSION MIETING TONIGHT
Pl anners Will Discuaa the Pouibillty of a Moratorium on SINPY Hol low Area lulldJne
Jerry J . Stanley, of ~ Cedar
Place, called police at 8 a.m., when
he found the pet dangling from the
backyard clothesline.
Officer Gerry Kochendorfer said
the brown-and-white pup had the
cord -cut first to give slack -
wound around it!I neck 20 times.
The 9adistic pet-slayer then stret-
ched the remaini ng length over the
clothesline pole, hoisting the dog in·
to the air and strangling il.
Police investigating the case
along wi th county SPCA officials
ror possible criminal charges said
two prior £omplaints had been
received about the dog"s barking.
Cruelty to animals is punishable
by a jail term, fine, probation or all
three.
Commission Asks
Cuts in Posud
Rare Proposal
WASHINGTON (AP) -The ~ostal
Raio Oommtaolon today callocl lor 1 $78.3
mllllon· nducUon ID llOitM'e rates pro-
poeed by tho U.S. P,oitlJ S<rvlce.
The dlcl1ion, flrlt of Ill kind llince th<
Poat Ollico Department wu reorpnlzed
Jn 11'111, a.sled lcr cutblcki tn tbe Postal
Service'• ProPoeed rates for parcel post,
ainnlll liltois, onlhwy pall Cardi •QC!
items hudled by aecood<lass mall-uaers.
prhnarll1,. :mquJne and newspaper pubU~.
The cmunlaaion, actJnc unanimously,
overruled tti chief hearing examiner in
r«omll1<ildlq that •innlll lares ... kepi
1t 11 ceqll .. ounce Instead of tbe hw'-
lnl cumlntr'•~ 1.1-.llldthat iJri11n1r7 pool Cllf1 only lb! ...i.
pat1lge lllileatl ol tho --·· .....-.i~---...., t•
It ~~_Iha_ 11viJlp.,...f1_<!0t_..,.
ordinary "'I conb· 11 f2$ muuon.
Tht Pootal Rate Commiulon let Nod
the ( • m po.,. a r y el1ht.-centl1*'-<11DOt
chlr1• lor ,lir•t<lau mall.
The lnipoct of Iha commbalon-r.=
postal rates was not immodlllt ;;;;o;m
beet-tbe 'POlllal Service's boar<! of
governors cen overrule the POltal Com.-
mluion by a unahlmouf vote to Mt rat.es
·11111 would pay the -of movlo( the
mill
.. .,
'
-Undertake special I e g I! I a t Iv e
research projects, as required.
-Assist in preparation of reports,
maintain records, logs, files.
-Assist in preparalion of operational
budget for this function .
-Assist in preparation of press
releases and other public relalions duties
for the council.
-Audit regular council meetings and
such other meetings or events as
directed.
-Write routine correspondence on own
initiative and prepare memoranda from
brief comment!: of councilmen.
-Provide secretarial assistance, serve
as a receptionist, inake appointments,
keep activity • , make travel ar·
rangementS, aintain calender or events
and r ions for council·chambtr.
-Receive and distribute mall and
messages for coWlCilmen .
Tbe suggested job description lists
minimum requirements u including ten
years experience as a leCl'etary, the last
five at a level of responsibility at the
grade of '1eartl" oecretiry, and ha•·
iRg I thorough knowledge of city
govenupent meetings, minutes, cor·
respmdence and reporta .
Suspect Held
In Murder Ca se
Coalition Sought
I n Bid to Block
Path of Freeway
Representatives from eight coastal
communities, from Long Beach lo San
Juan Capistrano, will meet next Saturday
to fonn a "coastal communities coali-
tion" to fight the proposed Pacific Coast
Freeway.
City councilmen from all incorporated
cities along the Orange County coast are
expected to attend the gathering, to be at
the home of Newport Beach councilman
and freeway fighter John Store in Corona
Highlands.
store said this morning the meeting is
spon90fed by the Freeway Fighters
Citizens Coordinating Committee. The
meeting "is by invitation only" and will
nOl be open to the pteS:• and public1 Store
1aid.
Wally Cox, chairman ol the CCC could
not be reached for comment on the
meeting this morning.
Store decllned '9 identify 11-who
have been invited.
"Some might feel that to ha\fe their
names bandied about in the paper before
organizing would be a difficulty," he said.
But he said that councilmen and other
residents from Long Beach, Stal Beach,
Huntington Beach, Newport Beach,
Laguna Beach and San Juan Capistrano ll AKERS F 1 ELD (All) -Eugetle will allend. •
Le-iue. 25, has , been booked for in-Jn adcUUon there will be representation
\l"tstlgation of the inurdtr of Nathaniel from the unlncoipOrated oommunitlee of
Pollard, '3, 1"'ng Buch, wi-body ,.., Dena Poliit and Lapna Nigud, · StoreT
found In 1 remote foothlll aru May le. said. .
· Leogue, lrom Batenlleld, wu a!Taled S!On. and Newport Beach Vice Mayor
Sablrday at bis home by of-.. Hqianl ·~'lllll' 1'eprtS<DI Newport Poflmit bid been boata lo doalh, of. • Well at Ille ~. I ~ ~ ' '• ' • . ' "'111,..1 BOad[ICll'tijor'Donild 'A. Mclr> rilftber llllll1I wtn'llD( anDabla. n1a iald thlJ molDlng bo u awire ol 11\e
• satherl"i bul wlD not attend. lie will bl at-me«lll: · • ·~ ' Poll Service Offered "l "1!1<>rH.wboi U..1.,.1ry1 .. \o c1o."'
Mclmll ald, nplainiltl t'1at the;p!rpoH
cl the latblrtilt is 0 to get efllfbodY tn
tbe ClOillll Ciinldor to come toitdi<ir to
hopefully a.,.. to the deltfion1>f 'tbe en-
tlr• lrffwa1 lrom Lon( Beach IO San
D1ego."
~Uon to the pol1s llftd lem-
PCl<ll'Y ' bobJllltln( will be provided to
W,... Beach voltl'I 'l'uNday from 7
1.m. ·to a p.m. 'l'ueld.ly by the Laguna
C<lnmltlea Ill' McGomii.
The lfOU.P alto will answer voters•
questlcns ondla-. ll<odqllllten 11
al !SIO S. ~ HJcbway and the
telepbone -.. .-i.1711.
"If they can get all or moat of the com·
munitlts dlrectly alfec\fd to agree 11 •P-
peva to me it """1d make a good Im·
llloo P'JIUWAY, Pqo II
' . ' ' ' \ . " '
No Constru~tion?
B uilding Moratorium Consi.dered
Laguna Beach plaMing commissioners
meeting at 7:30 tonight in City Hall will
consider a possible moratorium on con·
s truction and .. unconstruction" between
the Hotel Laguna and Sleepy Hollow.
The action was promised by two com-
missioners, Carl E. JohMon and Larry
Campbell in a candidates' forum last
week. Both men are candidates for city
cooncil.
The area involved holds two 1880 vin-
tage homes known as the "Captains
House ,'' 563 S. Coast Highway end the
"Moulton House,"~ S. Coast Highway,
Residents ol the house have been told
to leave. by Upland Industries, a subsidi-
ary of Union Pacific, which owns the
homes.
Also on the planners' agenda:
-Request by Paul Westbrook, realtor.
to permit parking for festival exhibitors,
on tiis property at the Eucalyptus Grove.
-Public hearing on a rezone reques t
for Glenneyre Street, on OOth aides
bttween Anita and Calliope streets from
C..5ALS, R·i, and R-3 to C.l and C..5ALS.
N. Viets Admit Problems,
Vow to Continue Fighting
From Wlre Strvlu1
North Vietnam admitted today. that It
la having "very difficult" .economic pro-
blems because of the intensified U.S.
He Finds New
Life .i11 . Jail
f ~ ' •
. LEWlllMIG. PL (AP) -.uthooi (De Angelll, lhO man ,
~ ...... -,"Ibo blgp!l
-lo 1111 a., world or llnance In·
Alilll lclill llbtary," -pan>l<d IO-~. •:#-!ookllc ....... 11'1i1<t 111111 ..... ~ • "ClonM hen ac:IUllly Av<d Jll7f ' ~ ,life," ~elll to~ newsmen at. the gala / to l;owlsburg ·Federal.
..... •"l ~ bor.o . ·...S ·x: 1 .... ,111 1'111,.
, . . r.·~J~a~~!><
"I have no IOITOW for comlng
here," the 57-year-old former New
iersey "Salld oU tkig" said. "I dkl
wrong and I paid !be ptnaily."
bombing, but h11istod that it bu Iha
capacity to continue lta war effort.I.
"Even if th< enemy lllCClOOdl In the
bomb dalruction of OU( dtlu· and our
large loduslrial loatallatlona. they can
never paralyze our eooDamy to ·tbe pOlpt
of preventlna: our IUl'Ylvll aod our ·ability
to supply Ibo ... tb," Ille ·ofliclal
newspaper Nhan Dan dlc~\in a.:..-
t0en~br~"'•"·•"'""""'·· ··a,,; , 7-"'"'"<""";T"""'~ .u , "' ve 1ort111D•mna ,,. u;q, ljl.adv..Ce foo; thi nry • -·
. ,,,.joJhl by :r:ri ~
,_...., IDOlll)\lll• ...... ~of tm _war," ~ ~eost-·
I ~--piople ;m; ~.ti uoe ~.CM ul 41Wtad _ee-(wale
; rlco """'· arid llllf Clielea1.:tb0 v:,. ac' grtllion.• > •
1'lio 111); of wal~ ~ torclium11,
and 1UbliltlDC on rice ,.,..1 ·wm· Oklowl
.,,,.,.,_ to htavy. 4''11111• lDtl~ by
U.S. ~*-"" rt.11. ~ ~. \( .Ud . powei')illbfl, ·=-her War evelopmenl3: North Vietnamese troopl rttreated
under 1 barrage of South Vittname.e
gunfire arid government troo'pa Wllked
unoppostd Into a Kontum church that bad
been uiied as a Q:mmunl!t httdquarter1
for II days.
. I\
-'fud is used to mufne tht souod or an ('1·
ptosion. the sergeant ei:plained.
~ mside the vauh , the thieves took
only the caah, lea ving bthind check~. food
st.amps and a large amount of coin, S(l:L
f\1urphy said.
The FBI in Cleveland on May 26 ar·
reded a man in connection "'ith th•
Lordstown burglary. Agent in charge
John Burne:!! identified hlm as Sidney
!S.. BANK PROBE, Page I)
Business
To Continue,
Says Owner
By BARBARA KREIBICH
01 "'• o.n, P'!l11 ll•ll
Laguna's fame<! Pottery Shack, an Art
Colony landmark since 1936, has been
sold to Pier l Imports, owner Roy Childa
announced to his staff Saturday.
"The Pott.ery Shack will continue as a
separate corporation under its same
name. ilpage and staff," Childs said to-
day. "J'm JUst happy we were able to sell
to people who want to keep It at Jt hu been ... ¥ • ~~
The oe• Rli:m! .....,. bot moro
than Zit retail ltcns Ii flie U.S., Alm!ro·
Ila, Canada, ~ and ,.,.,,...,
~ldli;; ~~:..the=
empl>Mlrod lblt ho and bis wilol ~) bl~ llO ~ tor pmona reU~ uml*JI wt~lt."
"Wt'lf be r.lioundi'' be said today,
"dolrw: tome youth wort, and some lm-
portinC and serving as consultant! to tM
Pottery Shick."
Their daughter, Carol Lee TiJTe, who
became a part owner or the bu!Jness
lttrec years ago, will remain in .her pOal-
t ion u merchandl!ing manager, Chllm
said.
The Pottery Shack has occupied ii!
present location at 1212 S. Coast fllghw1y
since the year after the busineu wu
founded in 1936 by Childs and his brother,
Van Childs, and their wives.
They started with "$80 Jn pottery, a
few homemade shelves and a great love
for Laguna Beach and faith In its
futw-e," aays Childs, who, In 1H2 bought
out bi! brohter's 1hare of the buainela
and became aole owner.
It remained a family project and wu '
run by his wife, daughter and parent.
while be was overseas with the Seabets,
Chil ds recalls.
"We decided when we reached 65 we
would spend part of our Ume as con-
sultants to the Pottery Shack and running
a ranch where underprivileged kids coukt
get some fr~ education and recreation.
and allo do some land developing and im-
porting and jade and gold mining,''
Childs told his empioyes Saturday.
"It wouldn't be in the btst lnter!st of
the Pottery Shack for me to continue
owning it when I am eolng to be in other
activities 80 much of the time," be ad·
ded, but nolod he '"11 main ownenblp of the land OI\ wblcll the -i. locatect.
Childs bu Jorw -oCtho In yout1I wort In the Art Colooy, bu .-a pn<'
ilce ol employing ,_ la amnmer
and parl-time jobs and takes prldt bl
. (lee SllACX, .... ,, • ' . ft
•
•
,
,
-, , , ,
~ , , ,
'
. -
. ..
Z Di.IL• PILOT l!
Fro ... P•9e I
BANK .. .'
Leona.rd Goldltetn. $2, Canton, oruo.
Ac-eord.lng lo Bums. the I USpe<'t •a; &Oii< IO II d!fltl"Cll1 banU
In-,&r'H (can'°" II · jull to Ille
s "cif Young"°'"") uohangtng
~mall bills for $100 bills a nd .s1ty1ng he
need~ lhe la rger denom1nalions fur a
trip to t:uro~. Uurns claims lhe seriill
numbtrs of the sn1all bills match those of
some of lht cA sh 1Aken In the L-ord~own
burglary and !hat (;old stein <11lege<ll; ex·
changed some $120,000 in s. ma 11
denominat ions for $100 bill s
Uurns rtfused to 1peculate whe the r
the re v.•as any coMecllon betwttn <;old-
~tcin'g arnst and thf' arr"t of t.1 ull1ga n
<':>.ar1Jy one 11 et·k later.
.\lulligan is allei.:t•d lo havr pla}l'd a
role 1n a 'A'eekencl burglary In Laguna
Niguel. which police offici al" huve
described as a ''Mission Impossible" type
of operation.
The bank. hidden be-h ind a v.·all of
landscaping on busy Pacific coast
•Ughway, serves residents of Monart h
Bay and Niguel Terrace, twG e1clusive
communitirs where some homes sell for
$350,000. Ma ny of !he residents buy bonds
and invest in securities, items commonly
stored in safe deposit boxes.
Some time during the weekrnd o(
l-.·1arch 25-26, thieve s blasted through the
roof of the bank vault and rined. son1e 450
~afe de posit boxes. taking jewelry,
negot iab le bonds and securities and at
least $50,008 in <"ash.
Estimates of the total Ion have ranged
from $1 million to SS million and none of
the contents of the safe deposit box e& was
injured.
Investigators noted !hat whoever com-
mitled. the burglary had extensive
knowledge of alarm system electronics
and explosives and wa11 able to
descriminate between negotiable and non-
negotiable securities.
Officials in Ohio said Mulligan has an
arrest record dating back to 1962, when
he pleaded ~ity to charges &lemming
from a rash of burglaries of strlp mines
near Youngstown. Jn addition, he served
time in Ohio Penitentiary after being
convicted in 1964 of receiving stolen
goods in connection with the theft of
$3 ,000 in drugs and caslt from a
Youngstown drug store.
That same year, he wa!\ acquitted by a
federal jury of robbing a bank.
From Page I
FREEWAY ...
;ft91iOn on our legislators," Mclnnins
:said.
The California Legislature is con·
sidering a variety d. a11ti-freewar bills,
four of which deal specifically with the
·Pacific Coast Freeway.
One bill ... k. deletion or th< Loog
'Beach segment of the route ; another
would kJll the Newport Beach leg , and .a
third sponsored by state Senator Dennis Ca~ter (R·Newport' Beach) would
ellmlnate the entire route .
Aseemblyman Robert Burke (R·HUft·,
tington Beach) has introduced leglalatlon
call ing for a three-year moratorium on
freeway planning while a consultant
takes another look at the coastal cor-
ridor. . J The bill to kill the Newport leg, which
)hag passed the assembly. has just woo
!endorsement from the Seal Beach ~ty
JCouncil which wants tt amended to 1n·
~elude their community.
I
tLaguna Musical
)
!Program Slated
' · "Music 'n" a musical presentation of ~ all instrumental and choral groups in th e
•Laguna Beach schools will be on stage at
'8 p.m. Friday, June 9 ln the high school
1 auditoriu m.
Several original C(lmpositions by
students "·ill be included at the program
to be directed by Deane Boffort, eleme11·
tary music supervisor; Jeff Forster,
'Thurston music in structor and Fred
·Stoufer, high sc hool mu sic instructor .
' Among the performers is the Art ists
~Chorale, a group of sl nger.i from the high
school "''ho will visit six European courr
·tries this summer and perform American
'music.
'.-~~~~~~~~~~~-..
OlAN•I COAST LI
DAILY PILOT
'""9 0ral'IOll C011! DAILY PILOT', W1ltl Wl'I~
11 corntilntd ll'>e New1°Prn1, ll pUblllol\N fl'(
-Or•nte (NII P\lbll1hln0 Cll'T'l.,.n'(. ''"°"
r•t• «llllon$ •r• P11bll1Md, Mond•Y ll'lrOVOll
Frld1y, r.... Cos!• Mt11, Nt,,.....I llttc,.,
Hunlll!llhll'I B11rll/l'ounl•I" V•ltlf'(, L•oun•
Bttdt, lrvlnt/Suklltlbl<k ind ~"' Clemtnle/
Slit Jll9fl (1plllrl niL A t lnct!e HQlanl\
m ulon •-~ P\lbU111t0 s1tvrt11y1 •!Id Svllll•Y•·
TPlfJ prl11clp11 Pllbliihl.,. pltnt t~ •I »:J W"I
111 .Slrn l, COlll Mai, C1Ulom!1, fl61'.
lll:ol:iert N. Wied
Pr•ldr<'ll •'Ill Publltllff
J 1c .. It. Curl1y
\lk.t Pl'eldtl>t 1od Gene1""1I M1nt11er
Thom•• )(et •il
Editor
7110111 •1 A. M11rph in1
M.IMl!ftl Editor
O•rfot H . l.001 Rich1rd '· Nill AltillM!t M11191lng 6dllll'I
L..t .. .._.OH\~
222 Fore1t A"'1n1•
Melll11t A.Uro11: P.q . lea•••, 'J:•ll --C.fl .,,_., I» WMt 1-V SIT'W
·5~1 SUS 111,,..,orT louifol>"'
""" "9cft: ,,.., .... di '°"'"''"' '-' M: ltJ Hirth II C..l'rlint ~NI , .. .,.... en•, ••2-4121
c~ ••-11.a., 64J.1a11 a..,.. ................... :
, ........ 4t4-t466
~t, "12. Ol'Mtl Co.t•I "VbU.iil"'
•• ~f. Mo ,_.. ,...,.._ 11111'11,..lltnt., ...-111 _,.., Ir .,_llMl'I*"' l'ltrM
,J •f M ••Mlal w\"'°"t IPl(lfl ,_. .......... ~.,..,..
.. > ...... °""" ,..,.,. ,.w ., <•'• M-. .. (dfrtnll'4 .._,..,.Ifft ..., c-•,,.litr PAI
f -"""'' llllf -II al.IS. """"llllVI fftll,,.,., • .-w1-. UM rntflfhl~.
' -
VPI Ttlt,lltll
Ct1tti1ig It Close
A North Vietnan1esc fi shing boat brushes past the U.S.s.-Ne,vport
Ne\.vs as the cruiser fires its guns at Thanh Hoa, North Viet na1n . In
foreground. U.S. fl.1arincs watch the small craft go by. The fishing
boat, which got in the \\.'ay of the ship as it '"'as making a firing run
at the coast, \vas not dan1agcd.
Employes Claim County
Lists Used by Battin
Orange County's primary election cam-
paign was enlivened over the weekend by
charges that First District Supervisor
Robert W. Battin had used a list of coun·
ty employes and their addresses pro-
duced by the county's Data Services
Department at county expense.
Battin allegedly us ed the list to maij a
letter to employes in reply to an Orange
Cou nty Employes Assoc iation bulletin
mailed last week lo 2,000 workers in the
First District urging them to vote against
the incumbent supervisor in Tuesday's
primary.
The 6,500-member OCEA planned to
file a class action suit in Superior Court
today agaiMt Battin to recover the cos t
of providing the list of names.
The supervisor's office said today that
he plans to reimburse the county for the
estimated $30 cost of the tapes.
OCEA general manager John Sawyer
said the association will also request a
grand 'jury investigation of the use of the
.e111ployes address list. Two of Batt in's
opponents, John W. ''Bill" H!Jl and WaUy
Davis have also called for a grand jury
investigation of the incident.
Sawyer said today that the 8ssocia·
lion's directors view Battin's action as a
"mi suse of county properly and an illegal
expenditure of public fund s."
Otherwise. political campaign! in the
county in t~ last weekend before the
election "·ere largely routine with a rash
of last minute advertisements and clos('d
door meetings \vilh supporters by the
various candidates.
Registrar of Voters David Hitchcock
said today that everythinjil is in readiness
for rounting the county's la rgest cl('ctinn
in history. from th£' s!andpo1nt of th e
number of registered vo ters a n d
precinc ts . There arc 66 1 000 potenti al
Searcl1ers Find
Fi11al $160,000
In Reno Hijack
RENO, Nev fAP ) -Searchers havr
round the $160,000 balance of a $200.000
ransom given an ai rline hijacker who
parachuted into a desert area arter col-
lecting !he money.
Vern F. Loellerle of the Las Vegas FBI
office said Sunday night the money "'as
found sta shed in sagebrush In a rem ote
area 20 miles south ll f here near \Vashoc
Lake.
The othe r $40,000 \\'as left on the United
Air Lines 727 jet when the hijacker
parachuted -apparentl y because there
""as no room to stow all $200.000 into his
backpack.
Robb 0 . lieady, Z2. was arrested Satur-
day and charged with the Friday night
hijacking of UAI~ • flight 2.39, whi ch
originated In New York and was headed
for San Francisco. The Vietnam veteran
was taken into custody a few miles fr om
where the money was later recovered . A
search for the money began immediately
after Heady's arrest.
After walking aboard the airline r at thP.
airport here, the hijacker -his face
masked by a pillow slip -let the
passenger.i leave but held the pilot, co-
piil,lt and three stewardesses at gunpoint
for\the $200,000 ransom. With the money
delivered , the airliner took off on orders
from tilt gunman who parachuted from it
a few mHea fli:im the airport.
Cities Win Awa rds
WASHINGTON (AP) -Th e alale or
Wisconsin and the cities or San Dltgo and
t..ong Beach, Calif., and New Canaan,
Conn., have won awa rds for pcdtslrlan
safety Jn th' 33rd annual American
AutomobUe "'SM>Clation Pedestrian Safety
Inventory. T'he awards, .announced Sun-
day, are made on the basis of pedt1lrlan
casualty records and -acc ident prevention
programs for 1971.
voters compared to 612,000 in the 1970
gene ra l election and 1,619 precincts com-
pared to 1,070.
Polls will be open throughout the coun-
ty from 7 a.n1 . to 8 p.m., Hitchcock said.
He predicts a vote of 4:43,000 or 67 percent
of those registered.
He hopes the ballot COWlt will be com-
pleted by 9 a .m. Wednesday morning
which would be a new record. The unof-
ficial tally was completed at 9:10 a.m.
November, 1970.
Hitchc9ck said new romputtt equip-
ment shbuld speed up the proc'" and
overcome the larger nwnber of voters
and precincts.
Ma jor Interest in the county bas been
centered on two hotly-contested races for
the First and Third district supervisorial
seats and the battle among Orange Coun-
ly assessor AQilrew J . Hinshaw, school
trustee Earl Carraway, banker Larry
DeMa and iDcumbent Rep. John G.
SchmitJ for the Republican nomination in
the newly aligned 39th Congressional
District.
Two Great Lakes
Sliips Collide;
One Goes Under
PORT HURON . Mich. (U PI) -Two
Grea t Lakes freighters collided early to--
clay sending one to the bottom in 35 fee t
of water near the Blue Water Bridge and
tJ!ocking the narrow St. Clair River chan-
nel to traff ic todav.
ThC're V• l' r e rio injuries to t he 60 ·
t•rewinen aboard the 3J9.foot Parker
Evans or the JJO-fool Sidney E. Smith Jr,
\~hich lay on its starboard side \\·lth about
J2 feet of its superstruct ure shoY-·ing.
Diesel fuel oil from the ruptured tanks
:iboard the Smith \\'as float ing down river
:ind salvage crews set up float ing booms
:it Algo~c. aln1ost 20 miles downri\'er, l()
L'Ollect ii.
F'ollO\\'ing the C(l]Jlsion shortly after 2
:i n1 .. the 33 crewmembers aboard the
Smith. of the Erie Sand Steamship Co.,
were hurried off the Vessel and taken to
the nearby shore by U.S. Coast Guard
craft and the tugboat Auburg as the ship
sa nk in about 35 feet of water.
The Evans was towed to the American
side of the river and tied up.
T~ St Clai r River form s a ronne<:lirtg
link between Lake St. Clair and Lake
liuron and frei3hters of all nationalities
tied up both north and south of the col-
lision scene. At least 15 freighters stood
al anchor in Lake 11uron awaiting
clearance.
Davis Lauded
By McGovern
LOS ANGELES IUPll -Sen.
George S. McGovern told a crowd
of cheering blacks at a rally in
\Vatts that the acquittal of Angela
Davis should be "cause for re-
joicing."
McGovern, speaking two hours
after a jury ln San Jose cleared
Miss Davis Sun<la}', or involvement
In the Marin County courthouse
Hhooting, was gr~ted by a crowd
ctmnllng:
"Power of the people has freed
Angela."
"This is a happy day whlch I can
understand," he said. "Thia ls
another demonstration that we can
be ple,sed about.
"That's not a cause for mourn·
Ing. That's not a cause for protest.
That ought to be 1 c.11use for re-
joicing."
See story on Pagt S.
•
Connally ~lission Set
W o.rM Tour w F;mphasize Economy Issues
Although Connally bat announctd his
deeislon to resign from the Trea.9\lry
post, he remains as stcretary until his
successor, George P. Schultz, is con-
firmed by the Senate.
Connall y Is cons.Jdered a possible vice
presidential runr1ing mate of Nixon in the
Nove-mbe-r election. Fortign missions on
behalf of the President ~·ould have the
added effect of enhancing Connally's
reputation and of keeping his nan1e
before the public.
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP1
Secrewy of the TreuUry John B. Con-
nally will Je~ve Tuesday on a round-the·
world mlssk>n to 50mt 15 nations for
Pres1dent Nixon to dl!lCuss "malteni of
c.:ommon concern" an d economic Issues,
the \Vhite llouse announced today.
The lrip will take Connally to six South
American nation,,, the Far East, South
A~1a and Europt.
Council May Have to Name
But, Presidential Press Sec reta ry
Ronald L. Ziegler said, Co nnally \\'OU!d
not go to North Vietnam as suggested
Sunday night by Democratic presidential
rand idate, Sen. Jlubert Humphrey. who
propoted such a mission to discuss
release of prisoners llf war.
Lo1~r Successo1· After Vote
"That is nol the purpose or hls
mission," said Ziegler, although the press
secretary said Connally would be ready
to discuss any matters that the foreign
leaders want to take up with him.
The month·long visit will start with a
litop in Venezuela.
Connally was flying to Key Biscayne to-
day for an afternoon conference 'vith
President Nixon and national security ad-
vi sor llenry A. Kissinger.
In making the announcement. Ziegler
said Connally would meet with chiefs of
state and heads of government with the
emphasis on economic issues. But . he
said, the sec retary also would be in a
position to discuss "developments in the
international field," including Nixon 's re-
l'ent visits to Moscow and Peking.
"The President feels that the ex·
changes which Secretary Connally v.·ill
hold \\'ith the leaders or the countries as
special representative are timely and will
be of great value," Ziegler added.
Nixon had hinted that he would ask
Connally to undertake special missions
and tasks for him when it was announced
last month that the Texas Democrat was
resigning from the Treasury post.
Ziegler said Connally would spend June
6-14 in South Am~rica. After Venezuela
he will go to Colombia, Brazil, Argentina,
Bolivia and Peru.
Details of the itinerary after that \\'ill
be provided later, Ziegler said.
He would not say firmly that Connally
would go to South Vietnam, but lln
response to questions, the press secretary
said it could be assumed that India and
Pakistan would be among the countries
he would visit in Asia and he would not
rule out the possibility of a stop ln
Bangladesh. Connally is due back July 1.
Kissinger is departing Thursday even·
ing for a June t-12 vis.it to Japan.
1be two emissaries wilt confer with
Nl:lon, who is continuing a Florida z;:tay,
de!:pite four days of rain aince he arrived
at hls Key Blnyne home Friday. Ht ta
to return to Wuhlngton Tuesday.
3rd Delay Given
In Drug Hearing
Of Oementean
Another delay was granted today in the
preliminary hearing against a San
Clemente biochemist charged w it h
operating an illegal drug factory in his
ga rage. He has pleaded innocent
Lawyers for George William Cox, 2$, o(
4105 Calle Abril, won a week's con-
tin uance in the hearing which has already
be en delayed t"•ice before in South
Orange County Municipal Court.
Cox , free on bail since his arraignment
on the charges last month, is charg ed
\1°ilh producing about $26,000-a·monlh
\~·orth of methamphetamines (speed) in
lhe laboratory set up in the fashionable
ocean·view house.
He "'as arrested early last month by
narcotics detectives and federal agents.
One man is still at large in the alleged
prod uction ring "'hich assertedly involved
offices in Costa ~lesa, a Laguna Beach
residence and the San Clemente "lab ",
officers said.
If the July 25 vote to recall Laguna
Beac h city councllman Edward C. Lorr is
insufficient. none of the candidate! seek·
ing to replace him will be considered
elected and it will be up lo the city coun-
cil to appoint his successor \\•hen his
res ignation becomes effective July 31, ac-
cording to City Attorney Tully Seymour.
Seymour and City Clerk Dorothy
Musfelt explained the mechanics of a
recall electiGn lo the large audience at-
tending a recent forum for candidates in
the new council electi on.
Mrs. Musfe lt made the point that no
vote for a candidate can be counted
unless the voter also votes for or against
the rec~ll-o:Jhe same ballot.
HHH Criticizes
McGover1i Vote
On Civil Riglits
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Hubert H.
Humphrey today accused George S.
r,,icGovern or voting to "emasculate'' a
key section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
He also scheduled an hour-long telethon
on election eve in a last -ditch effort to
stop McGovern.
r-.tcGovern. confident of winning the im·
portant Californ ia primary and its 27 l
delegate votes, broke off his campaigning
In the state to schedule a four·hour swing
into New Mexico, which also holds a
primary Tuesday.
Aides to both senators looked for a
common break in the hectic schedules to
arrange a fourth "debate," which
Jlumphrey suggested and lo which
i1cGovern agreed.
Jn a speech prepared for delivery at a
rally in Oakland, Humphrey accused
f>,1cGovern of "a brazen and full·scale al·
tempt to ema!culate th e vo ling rights
provisio" of th• Civil Rights Act."
He said McGovern joined 22 senators,
including 18 southerners, in voting
against a provision that allows the al·
torney general to require that aU courts
expedite lega l complaints on voting
rights.
··1 challenge Senator McGovern to deny
to any black or any Mei:ican-American or
to anoyne else in the state of California
that he did not cast this vMe," Humphrey
said.
The hfinnesota senator, tr a 111 n g
f>.fC'Govern by 46-26 percent in the
res~ted Califomia·Field poll, scheduled
a prime-time 8 p.m.·9 p.m. television pro-
gram during which listeners can call and
ask questions.
The program will be shown on ni ne
commercial TV stations and 32 cable
television sy5tems with an estimated 1.7
million potenti al viewers.
Humphrey surfaced his own poll, taken
in Los Angeles County by Pubilc Affairs
Communications Associate !I in
\Vashlnglon. D.C. which showed the Min-
nesota senator trailing by Jess than l per·
cent.
llis campaign manager claimed the
survey. taken Sa turday, showed a
Jlumphrey surge but also documented
that llumphrey surprisingly tr a 11 s
McGovern among blackJ and Chicanos
and runs even with Jewish voters.
.Tired of the way your rings look?.
Candidate votes will be cou nte<f. she
said, even if the \'Oler expresses himself
against the recall.
"The ballots \\•Ill be very difficult to
count ," she told the group at the
Coordinating Council's forurn, "and it \vill
be a great help to the election boards if
every voter marks his ballot yes or no on
the recall , then indicat('s his choice
an1ong the candidates."
Asked \vh:.1t would happen if the recall
should fail , Sey1nour said it then woul d be
up to the council to aJ.lpoint someone to
serve out the balance of his term.
There would be no obligallon. he said,
for the council to appoin t the successfu l
candidate in the vote, since none would
ha ve been officially elected.
However, it would appear likely that if
one of the candidates scored a clear lead
this could be regarded by the council as a
direclive to appoint that candidate.
In response to a question. he said that
councilman Lorr's resignation now is of·
fi<"ial, having been accepted by the coun·
cil an d filed with the clerk's office.
Since the resignation is effective July
31, Lorr would not be sitting on the coun-
cil that voted to appoint his successor
should the recall, and therefore the elec·
lion. fail, Seyn1our said.
To a suggestion tha t Lorr might
"change his n1ind," planning com·
missioner Larry Campbell, now a can-
didate for council election, said he had
talked ~·ith the retiring counc ilmen who
had assured him there is absolutely nG
possibil ity that he \Viii change his mind
~nd that he probably \1•ill be leaving the
area.
Laguna At1thor . ' Appearance Set
Marshall Houts, Laguna Beach author
of "King's X" will be at Dilley's
Bookshop, 460 S. Coost liighv.·ay, from 2
p.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday to aut.ograph and
discuss his book.
!·lou ts . who lives l11 Emerald Bay, has
linked the Duke or Windsor to the famous
1943 Oakes Murder Case and the Mafia .
Only 25 copies of the book art
available, James Dilley, shop owner said .
lie noted that the volume is in short sup-
ply everywhere.
From Page 1
SHACK ...
having trained many who have gone on to
successful careers in retailing.
He has maintained a profit·sharlng ~
gram for employes and told them Satur-
day that he, his wile and daughter will be
giving them an added special bonus at
the end of this month .
The dollar amount of th(' sale 1o Pier 1
lmports was not revealed by the prirr
cipals.
The sale was arranged ,,:ith Luther
Henderson, who became president of Pier
I ImjXirts In 1966, One of Its 2;,o stores l!'t
located in the sa me Laguna Beach, block
as the Pottery Shack .
General manager of the Pottery Shack
will be Charles Sudolsky, who will make
his home in Laguna, Childs said .
The sale became effective today, he ad-
ded.
Why Not Have Your Rings
Reset In Beautiful
0
New Mountings?
W• ctn design • ring 11p•cielly for you with your
old dlemonds . Wo 1110 h1v• loo•• diemond1 end
c1n •dd to your present on••· Check o ur P."''•'
end ••••·
If .,.. .... Moo -""" ... ,....... of • 111 .... -.... ,.. -
..,_. chclc ... dl-o•ll ,,...._
AU DIA~ONDS •UAlAKTllD TO Anl.A.111 AT 40% MOii THAN YOU PAT.
DIAMOND WEDDING
AND ENGAGEMENT RINGS 29~,
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY aild LOAN
OPIN DAILY t "' 6
1838 NEWPORT BLVD.
r,oMI IN AND llOWSI AIOUND
PHONE 646°7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA -lolw1• ~ I .. 11l:oor
,
DOM ucm
OUR MOST
UNUSUAL
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
Wilm '°" ...,. • ·-··· front ••• wll .......
tH -di-le op-
pnoite ot 40% MOii
-,.. peld fer It ..
,,_ -" bock, C-
y .............. ,
COMPAU.
• ' I
..
Saddlebaek
voe. 65, NO. '157, 3 SECTION S, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1972 TEN CENTS
•
Employes Charge Battin Used County Rolls
Orange County's primary election cam·
paign was enliv ened over the weekend by
charges that First Oistr1c.1 Supervisor
Itobert W. Battin had used a list of coun·
ty entployes and the_ir addresses pro-
duced by the county 's Data Servites
Department al county expense.
Battin allegedly used the list to ma il a
letter to employes in re ply to an Orange
County Employes Association blllletin
mailed last week to 2,000 workers in the
First District urging them to vote against
' C..-tting It Close
the incumbent supervisor in Tuesday's
primary.
The 6,SOO.member OCEA planned to
file a class action suit in Superior Court
today agl!inst Battin to recQver the cost
of prov iding the list of names.
The superviso r's office said today that
he plans to reimburse the county for the
esti mated $30 cost <Jf the tapes.
OCEA general manager John Sawyer
said the association will also requ est a
grand jury investigation of the use of the
A North Vie tnamese fishi ng boat brus hes past the U.S.S. Nelfl>Or!
~ews ~ th~ cruiser fires its guns at Thanh Hoa, North Vietnain. In
foreground, U.s: Marines watch the small craft go by. The fishing
boat, wh ich got in the way of the ship as it was tncilting a firing run
', at the coast, was no t damaged.
Viejo Voters Face Board
Elections, New District
Voters in Mission Viejo, E) Toro and
La~a Hiils Tuesday will be asked
to approve formation of a new unified
school district and elect a fi \'e member
board or tn1stees.
There wi ll be 20 j)('rsons listed on the
ballot. Of these 15 are actively seeking
election to the Mission Viejo Unified
iChoo l board.
The DAILY PILOT has prepared brief
sumJ11aries of the qualifications and
backgrounds or 11 of the active can·
didates who responded to a questionnaire.
'Q_ie candidates' profiles appear in today's
edition.
The Mission Viejo Unified School
District will be fonned if voters from
throughout the Tustin Union High School
District vote Tuesday to approve the prcr
posed, three-district reorganization plan.
That plan was approved by the school
board1 of the four existing districts serv-
ing the area, the Orange County Com-
mittee on School District Organization
and the state board of education.
U, voters approve the reorganization
plan, tbe Tustin Union High and the San
Joaquin, Trabuco and Tustin Elementary
d11tricb would.be dis~Jved on June 30, 1m.
In their place would be three ocw
unifled, IC'bool diBtricts, each serving
chlldr.o lo grades klnderllarten to · 12.
There '11ould be one 1D1lfied district Jn
B(!QrdH opefuls
Profiled Today . '
•
EteVen or the 15 active can-
~::. -=ecl~'f.~ ~n~~
SCliOol-UiitiicrBOll rd lirEdilfatfon
are p;ollled l!l1 pogo two ol today'a
DAILY PILOT. '
,SlmJior ' plomes for the Irv! ..
ll'lllfied achoOI lioord race appeared
In Friday's J>88es.
On 'l'llesday, votert I r o m
throughout the Irvine, El Tan> and
Mllllon Vltjo ftl wiU vote oo Ibo
..-gaolzation .pjan for the 'l'Ullln
Union Hll!h sC6ool District. The
plan creates lhr<e nn unlll ed
ocbool dl.slricts, each with Ill own
bolnl ol educailon.
each of the communities of Tustin, Irvine
and Mission Viejo.
Upon uni fication, the property tax base
of eac h of the proposed districts would be
appro ximately the same. Over the next
seven yea rs the growth of the ~fission
Viejo and Irvine dls tricts' student popula-
tions would exceed projected increa ses in
tax base. making them relatively less
wealthy than the Tu stin unified district.
That district is not expected lo ex-
perience much new growth.
Provision of locally ele<:ted school
boards is seen as the chief be nerit 1rom
the three-district unification plan.
However, Mission Viejo residents by
establishing their own distriCt, will be
divorced Crom the rapid growth expected
to occur in .Irvine. The proposed Mission
Viejo di strict boundaries, however, do en·
compass nearly half of a proposed 1.600
acre industrial park lying within the 9,600
acre area Irv ine city officials_ seek to an·
nex.
That industrial park would thus benefit
bot h the city of Irvine and the Mission
Viejo school district, since· taxes on the
indu strial properties would be paid to
both entities.
Presently. 12 elementary schools , one
intermediate and one hi gh school serve
the com murllties elK.'OmpaSsed by the.
boundaries of the , proposed unified
di.striet.1
Outing the.197).73 ldlool~ear -or in
the event unification fails these school!
will continue to be con lled by · the
Tustin Union High and San Joaquin and
Trabuco Elementary district school
boartfs . · ·
tf unification passes, the MiS.'lion Viejo
\!nilled boi>rd, and \he <>!Mr.new boards.
-Id ·oversee dlvisloo o! properlles and
IWI amoq lbe lhr<e ditlricl.I.
1'h!,na~mb alto wlll bave .,,, .. r 14 -pion.~! _.m. io-. lilincbed-• wlth tlie~log,ol-the 197.H4.odoool-
year.
· .Guitarist Left Behind
A lbortqli ol ._ aboard Iha 71cht
Sea ' Era bu led 1he rrnne Ezchange
Club 14 caac:ol tlle , llJlllrill "WOO W81
ldledult'd 14 slog and llrum while
tnembor1 lmlaUad their lltW olflcero 11 eea June lOi
"With _,.._, dlattlllg,.bt 1'n>bUl1
would be .....,. 14 bl-1111\YWI)', '' tbo ~-:a 1iaIIelin aotod. I
employes address list. TwG of Battin 's
opponents, John W. "Bill" Hill and Wally
Davis have also called for a grand jury
investigation of the incident.
Sawyer said today that the associa-
tion's dire<:tors view Battin's action rui a
"misuse of county property and an illegal
expenditure of public funds."
Otherwise, political campaign! In the
count y in the last weekend before the
election were largely routine with 'a rash
of last minute adve rtisements aod closed
door meetings with 1upporters by the
various candida tes.
Registrar of Voters David Hitchcock
said today that everything is in readiness
for coun ting the county's large:i:t election
in history, from the standpoint of the
number of registered voters a n d
precincts. There are 661,000 potential
voters compared to 612,000 In the 1970
general eltction and 1,619 precincls com-
pared "' 1,070.
Polls will be open throughou t the coun-
ty from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m., Hitchcock sa id.
He predicts a vote of '443,000 or 67 percent
of those registered.
He hopes the ballot cOWlt will be com·
pleted by 9 a.m. \\lednesday morning
which would be a new reco rd . The unof-
ficial tally "'as eompleted at 9:10 a.m.
November. 1970.
Hitchcock said new <.'Om putt r equip-
me nt should speed up the process and
overcome the larger numbe r or voter~
and precincts.
~1ajor interest in the county ha s been
centered on two hotly--contested race! for
the First and Third distric t su pervisorial
!!'eats And the battle among Orange Coun-
ty assessor Andrew J . Hinshaw. :!!Choo!
trustee Earl Carraway, banker Larry
Denna and incumbent Rep. John G.
Schmitz for the Republican nom ination in
the newly aligned 39th Congresaional
Distr ict.
Bombings Gain Edge?
North Viets Admit U.S. Attacks Taki~g Toll
From Wlre Services
North Vietnam admitted today that it
is ha vin g "very difficult" economic pro.
blems because of the intensified U.S.
bombing, but insisted that it has the
capacity to continue its war efforts.
"Even if the enemy succeeds in the
bomb destruction of our ci ties and our
large induStrial installations, they can
never paralyze our economy to the point
U.S. Environment
Aide to Address
Irvine Citizens
An olflcial from Ibo Environmental
Protection Agency Sah Fiancisco oifJce
will address niellibetl.of the Irvine .,.
virorunental quality citizens advisory
co-at tllelr meeting 11 7:30 p.m.
Wednesd1y ill the IJltei:olth IJJu-
Jrvine Town Center, 42(11 C&mpua Drive.
F. M. Covington director of the fedora!
agency's West Coast office is the guest
speak er at the committee session which
is open to t~ public.
Other committees charting meetings
this week are:
RecreJ!tion: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in
Crawford Hall on the UC Irvine campus.
Public safety: 7:30 p .. Wednesday,
room 210, UCI Humanities Hall.
Youth opportunities : 7:30 p.m. Wednes-
day, in the University C o m mun It y
A~ociation Clubhouse, 4530 Sandburg,
Way, Unive rsity Park.
Charter: 7:30 p.m. Thursday, room 306
of University High School, Culver at
Campus Drives.
The newly established c i t i z e n !II
coordinating committee, made up of the
chairmen o[ t!1e 10 advisory groups plans
a bre akfast meeting at 7; 15 a.m . Thurs·
day in the chart room of the Airporter
Inn.
The new committee will organize the
activities of all the present City Council
authorized study committees.
Carpenter's Tools
W ortb $300 Stolen
A Laguna Niguel carpenter lost tools
valued at more than $300 during the
weekend when thieves broke into his
parked truck and carried off his tool box.
Orange CoWlty 1berllf's <Jfficers said
August M. Berman, 48, Of 25182
Armagosa Drive, told them intruders
smashed the lock on the vehicle parked
outside his home and removed the heavy
wooden tool box.
Berman estimated his total loss at
$309.75.
. An Editorial:
of preventing our survival and our ability
to, supply the south," the official
newspaper Nhan Dan declared in a com-
mentary broadcast by Rad.lo Henoi.
"We have foreseen and have calculated
in advance for the very dlfflcu1t situation
wrought by the most cruel and dangerous
maneuvers of the enemy in their fierce
escalation of the war," Nban Dan con-
tinued.
''But our peo ple can walk, can use
torchlights, can eat diluted congee (water
rice gruel ), and still defeat the U.S. ag-
gressors."
The talk of walking, using torchlights,
and subsisting on rice gruel were obvious
references to heavy damage inflicted by
U.S. bombero on rail llne.s, blibways,
bridges and electric poWer plants.
Jn other. war developments:
North Vlelnameae .. ..lroopa retruled
under • borr1ge ol South vi.~ ~!il':=ce=, .... uMd U a l)immunist beedquutAn
for 11 days. ' ·
. Ko~a proY!nclal <11!1tal lltl mllea r¢li of . ... 'i-; ... Oxn-
munist siege ~ wttb. ·
Milllary •l'OkWlleo aaid gofllnunenl
troops were fighting t6 clear the. two re-
maining COmmunist pockett lnskSe the ci-
ty.
Two Commuajst artlllery rounds Sun-
day nearly ICOred direct bits on 1 U.S.
guided missile destroyer off North Viet.
namese waters, causing "moderate a:bock
damage" but no casualtlee, military
El Toro Youth
Held on Nine
Felony Charges
An El Toro youth whose home was
described by Ora nge County sheriff'• of-
ficers as "a place for 1a1e and use of
narcotics" was booked on that charge
and eight other felony counts during the
weekend.
Deputi es lodged Paul Jeffrey Schramel,
19, of 26352 Cavanaugh Road. into the
county jail on charges of maintalni~ a
place for sale and use of narcoUcs,
possession and poasession for sale of
dangerous drugs, possesJon a n d
posession for sale of marlju1J11 and
possee~n of narcotics and nart0tlcs
para~la. The possession of firecracken to
the II! when they allegedly found !IO II·
It.gal ftrecr1cker1 in Sc b r 1 m e 1 ' 1
poueulon.
Booked lnw Jill with Schramel on
chargt1 of cultlv1Un1 m1rtjuana wu
Ronald Steven P1ul.san, 11, of 2SfD
Cavan1ugb Rold, El Toro. Both young
men were cbarpd with growlntl the Jlllclt
weed !! the arrut loc1Uon.
School Reorganization
Would BenefitAIIAreas
spokesmen aaid today.
The Navy said none o£.:t8e SM crewmen
aboard the USS Joseph Strauss was in-
jured and the ship remained In the
Tonki n Gull.
The destroyers USS Bausell and USS
Sarsfield were also fired on by Com·
munist shore batteries but were not hit,
.spokesmen said.
The U.S. Command announced a partial
pullout of troops today from its
Coalition Sought
In Bid to Block
Path of Freeway
~H•t• from eljht CQP.!JI comm-., ·&om Lant Beach 14 Sta
Juan Capisirabo, will maet nell -.y
lo fOrm I "coutal eomm..Qie. colll-
tion" 14 llcfif tbe proposed Paolllc Coat
n..wey;
Clly COllllcllnw! from all lnoori><>raled
cities alq tbe Orqa County coasl aro
expedtd 14 ati.nd tbe gathering, to be at
tbe borne ol 'Newport Beach councilman
and lreoway flgbter John Store In CorOOI
Hlghllllda.
store said thll moming the meeting is
sponoored by tbe Frttw1y Fighters
Cillzen• Coordinating Committee. The
meeting 0 11 by invttatton only" and wUl
not be ope11 14 the press and p.ibllc, Store
said. •
Wally Cot. chainnan of tbe CCC could
not be reached for comment on the
meeting thia morning.
Store declined to Iden.Uy U-who
have been. invited.
"Some might feel that to have their
names bandied about in the paper befor•
organizing would be a difficulty," he said.
But he said that councilmen and other
residents from Long Beach, Seal Beach,
Htinttngton Beach, Newport Be.ach,
Laguna Beach and San Juan Capla:traoo
will attend .
ln addition there will be represe ntation
from the unincorporated communities of
Dana Point and Laguna Nlr;uel , Store
aaid.
Store and Newport Beach Vice Mayor
Howard Roger• will represent NeW}Xlrt
Beach at tbe meetlng. Ntwporl Balcll Mayor Donald A. Mc!J>.
nt1 said thl1 mornln1be1a 1ware of the
1atbering but wW not attend. He will be
al lllOlber P*tlog. ·
"I endor1e wbal Ibey are trylntl 14 do,"
Mclnnla 11ld, nplllnlni tllat the purpo,.
o1 tbe g1therio( II "14 get everybody In
the coastal corridor 14 oome together 14
hopefuUy a(lft 14 the ddellon ol tbe e"'
tire freeway from Long Beach 14 Son
Diego."
"U Ibey CID get 1U or motl ol the com-
munlUes directly allecled 14 .,,... It ap-
pears to me IL would make .. good im--
preukln m our lfllalatOrl," Mclnnins
.. 1cL •
Tbe Callfornla ~-.:la ·con-aiderinf I nrielJ of _,,_ billl,
four ot wlilcb doal .1peclllcoll1 ,..._ Ibo
Paclflc Cout Fnew1y. . .,
Ono bW -kl· cltletloo ol 1111 Lon&
Btacb -I ol" the IOUle• lllotlier
-1d·klll tbe Ne;wport -·1.1, ... I
t.blid, llJIODIOl'ed by llatc -Dlllnls Ccponler , (R-Newport Batli) ....Wd
eljmlule the enllnl ro.te.
'" '' N ....... Rpberl ~(Jl;Jlun' . . . ~bN introducod lfPlallilrl = fOr I three-yeor ,_.torliDD '"1 (llOe l"llBEW AY, .... II
·nu~get Talkg Slated
A 11*111 meetJns ol the Tultil Union
llfCb'!Icllool Diltrlcl --tc> -·~ ·ini-d 1~'13 ~I wlll tlko p_!lce toaflht 11 7:!0 o'clock In the 'lllslln l"!"' School conlertnce .room. Tustin Uolon dlitni;t'Includet MlaAlon
Viejo Hllfl School a.-i Unl .. rs11y HlRh
-In Jrvlnt,l ( 'i
northernmost major base in Vietn.m -a
to p-secret communications cmnp near
the threatened former Imperial ~tol ol
Hue.
A command communique aho reported
th11.t U.S. troop strength In Vietnam fell
last week by l ,100 men to 63,700 -the
lowest level since the 59,900 figure <Jf
June, 19&5, but still short ol.. President
Ni xon's targeled ,.9,000 by the end of this
month.
'Barki1ig' Dog
Found Hanged
In Backyard
A Colla M-· -terrier
P"P!'l''! IJa!lllni , bad CI U I l d
ndlf>Cl'hoocl complolill ..-Smt'
Ud louod II deed, ~~ ~. i.r • Cedar
Pllco, callecl'poilee ai 8 a.m .. when
he '!clund thO pot lfaniUng from the
blckl'ard ciolhetlme.
Officer Gerry .Kochendorfer aaid
Ibo brown-<Uld·whlte !'IP bad !be
cord -cut first to give 1lact -
wound around its neck 20 Umes.
The aadistlc pet-slayer then atret.
ched the remaining length over the
clotbe1line pole, ho.Isling the dog ltt-
to the air and strangling it.
Police investigating the cue
along with coun ty SPCA officials
for possible criminal charges said
two prior complaints had been
received about the dog's barking.
Cruelty to animals is punishabl•
by a jaH term, tine, probation or all
three.
Poster Contest
Deadline Moved
Irvine summer recreation program Gf·
fici ala have extended the de11dl lne for
poster contest entries to 5 p.m. Thursday.
The contest, open to young people i•
grades one to 12, is ror design of posters
to advertise the city's summer programs
and the free bua service for kid! and
adults from North Jrvine to the beach.
The awnmer bul service comes with Lbe
one-Ume enrollment fee.
Winning 111trtoo lD llVll'al categorit.s.ol
the j>Oller coolest ,will be given fl'H
reglttnUon In the ·lllDUllel' recreation
program.
Entries may be -.itlod either to city
ball, OJl Campus Drho or ot the Alpha
Bell market lD Uolvtrlity Part ShopPlnc
Centor.
Fµrtber lnlonnatlon on the contest la
avallollle fr<m Carol Ooodiln at m11u.
.......... -..
-I CllilllMil9 ' *' .. ~ : .=c.... !! -::r . ••11 ri • ,..... . •!!
:::.: ..... ii
c .....
• .
i •• , 0.6.ll'f PILOT . .
FUtetn candkl.ates are in the ract for
the '<11111' 1n Viitio Viii;,<!~ Dilu\ct
board"lf-, 1r .tltmtien ,....., ·fWe ,,wtu he
elected Tuesday to assume leadershlp or
the ne\\' dis1rict that "•ill cover the
r.tission \'ieJO . Et Toro, and TrabUl'O
areas.
f,l.ve M..-e officia lly dropped out of the
race Isom.an ori&Ula.120 candidate:s. They
a.rt: Don ~1cGregor or Laguna Jlills.
Jesse R . .Nori~ga of t.iission Viejo, Dora
Anne Lee of El Toro, Deols Duffy of
Mission Viejo, and Leigh E. "Zahn of La ke
.Forest
Tbe D,AJ.L Y PILOT unt qyestionnaires
to each of the remaining candidates.
Responses \\'ere not recci\'ed from Jiuel
<lei Castillo of Mission Viejo, Lucinda
Canaway of El Toro, JOiClph Peteraon
Jr. or El Toro and Vincent McCUllouah or
El Two.
All olbtra rttpondecL
• IJhPttt&I ii. iU.a•C In
~s J . Martin, 2$, Uvts at 2601 5
CA>rr~ Lane. MLsiion Viejo. He is an
ar~rfl dtslan adml.nlatrator and
received h~ls education at the University
of California. He is married and ha s two
children.
He has Jived in the Sa ddJeback Valley
three years.
What do ,... IHI moat i4lll&Ufles "'u to
be a milfted ..-..i.4111deUr-•?
''An interest .in all
childNR including
my ow.n, to see that
they receive th e
bett possible educa·
•_$.ion. Haytng worked
.with tbe s , .. -fl
Joaquin, San Clem·
ente .and Tustin dis.
1lrl<ll for 1 •• , .. ,.....
. ..-iio .. ...,., '•f
the •\"Je;o ·'1••.,"8 ..wt.,l;tllfl
well awar.e of the problems facing .•
ecW Alofrict lo •"-µ Jllllllllat.lon
gNllllll 8Cll'tilll :Ille Mbool la~W..,
I 1M1 1Wt Jllllll!Witl' of UJ<ir ,p.-m wil~•·rne lo MlilfY•leo;gQllla ~f ~ IMIW «llQoll IM our
c~."
What att: tht molt lmportant pro~
facing the Mis.~lon Viejo Uoillec:J School Di-"'Due to the ,r.apM;l growth Qf the Sad·
dlebaak't....,,,!t .h•J>ton~oi,ble<lor
lht ~!Choo! di(kiet to keep up with
thiis growth in wnns of adequate
laeillliJll, lj is 111\Y -.11e1 tilil lb<O\tlh
-ac1r..,..i ,.iannlllt!, • -utttzation of pr.~sent facilities and
~·'*'..ilt!~laclliU..· will ho!P
lo alleviate tliM& WJCl'C'l"OWded a>P·
dltk,.S/' .
11 ..W. ..... ,.. ..... ,.a clo ·lo lltlp ......... ~
"I -d,olw -'l1l!' tdtlal\ion ud t~ to pJWW. .. ,..,.. qd llojp .. t
.,d9'e1iln•JI wer .tfilt 1U111 ,1oal of b4tler n•I~ ct ladllll¥..1!11 U.... "Ill' ·I>.:<
doilW ·""51 IM """1/.WI."
SU!ped Held
l n Hurde,-Case
''
: : BAKER.SFIEil.lil(<\Pl -Elll!""•
' :~.,.. 25, baa --ed for in·
: : vesUp1ioo of fle -Of ·Nalboniel
; :F<>ll~ 13, ~ lleach, -llody was
: : found ill,o -lc»tlllll ""'8 ·llla,y~.
' 1-.-~, W&Sautoled
: . Sotui<lay .. his i-e 1>31 -·
: · Pollard had been beaten to death, of·
' : ficials said.
· ; Further details \vere not available.
Fr-Pagel
:·f BEE \V A Y ...
: lpMUY plaonilig wblle a COMUllllnt
:ta1ce1 -look at 1be coastal cor-
!rillar.
: ·-~ to 1'lll tbe lllaport leg, which
':hot J*Md tbe --11:. has juat -· ca..._..,t ·from the ·Seal Beech 1Cit.Y
. Onmcdl 'friliell waats a mneaded ·to In-
' dude their cornmuaity.
·l '
'._.._..C... lotltt.V f'&l/f ...... ._
k OllMifled ll'le N-.P,,_, Is MU_... 9
........... .C'oMlf h91illtllll ~-.....
.... ... ,.... ... Olflllil ...... MoldW """"'
~-~,..._~ .......
H...n..-k •ctLIFOUl'l .. in V1lley, l .. llV!M
........ ..,.,,.IS1~rt wt * C'"'-tttl
.,... ~ C1plllftoM. ,. •'-"' ...-..1
edition Is PVtlll•,_ a.tvn!•" and SUl'll$1y.,
1119 l'flft<INI 111 ·~ •11111 h 11 330 W~l
• •
j
I
t
• l
1
.. ,. ,...,, c-.-. .... C.lllornlt, tID6.
•.wt ... .....
~ ... ~lahet
J •c• R. C1trl.y ,¥119,._. ... ~ MIMta--~ -t•• A. M.nlitlil• ..... ~-
Ch•rf• H. t.... ......... "· _.... ............... IN"'9 -. --=c:ct:i'J= .• ·::Ef!ftcw=
...... -. (1,MI ..... -~* -er MW· ... ,,.. AOM,. ..a a Al ...,.,,., ..
1t;t c-utt
~~;:=..~·~»·=·=·=··=··=· =' ... .,._"":.r":; ..,_..I .... .
,._,,~ ...... ... . ~d..:.z.~-=
"'
•
•~t~ o n Mission Vie jo Board
•111 . .JI. '8ert' LU111
11.J.!(ier.ll UDJilr.J to,J1m"'1 wr
lllld -u 1'llh Iii 1111• {)lw,md• ....
ch ildren1l.WllVJO.Violllo;Mll*"•V.
jo.
Ile is a gradua te of 1'1tassachusset.'J
Jnslitutc of TeehnoJogy and bas hvOO in
the. SJddleback Vallty live years.
\\'bat do yo u reel mo~t <1Wlllflt1 you to
be a un ified school dlstrlC'l lrw.:I«'!
··1 am ti o ne s l .
truthfu l, ha\lt 800d
common se n s e
l'OUpled \\•1th h!gh
moral valut's. ·•
What are the most
lmpcidut probh1m1
laclag t~e MM1~n
Viejo Uow.ct Srboot
District?
"f{apid gro~·t h .
overcrowding. efficient man11ement.''
If tlec:ted, wbat would you do to help
solve Utete problems?
"f would stress quality education
(retention of aµper ior tucbers at lower
grade levels whete-lhe child fir1 L Jaarns
lhe basic fundamental s by equalizing pay
scales bet\\·een grade levels and by closer
screening of new teachers and ad·
minlttrators).
"I .would stress elected respon&ibillty
(the most efficient use of exiating
facijilies and su pplies).
"T would stress elected respon!i:bili ty
phasizing the basic moral· values in both
students and teachers).
"I would strems electedresponsibility
(;not to voice one's own peraonal opinions
and ar~ their merjts bat t.o c.a&t your
vote per the will of the electorate of
wbom you represent )''
~ l"""l ....... , : t!limln•tlltl the
1'111taful om1ap o f JMtmiaicnUw
_. .... , •cldlnii ·PlW .... -,_.
,hllMf'Jnttlly : JnlullhW t•w•1 I a.-
1btu'b'i iUd hulldiQ& I oJJS , 't) W.. 1lw.
"Miciency is ihe nrlt :rtt1' ~
promotion of schoo l site contribulion by
developers. denial by planning com-
mission of muJtJ.f:unlly dwelling project
request!'!: implem('Trt:rtinn of ertn1"friod
day at inler1nediate and high sthools, and
increasing, temporarily, uae of portables
to minimize double sessions.
"P'undinc' .b another step. Relie..-e pNP-
ett,y owners by 'broadening state flnmc.
ing "\.vithout strings" and reviskng stm~
financing to help di stricts like ours ;
retention of long term bond sales.
''Tod33's achools must prepure vw-
children to survive alone withoUi aid.
Paramount is emphasis of ttte three R's,
the ability to erpre!tl ooetelf, aim-
munication wtth others. tmd tiat DR al
numbers practically. Altio, aa aqpentflfl
AJMrlcan and California .btrita&e ~
gram is f!tlential to r-einforce oor
children's cguntry and community Ues
exemplifying developmot Of traAitions
and values.
"At the secondary k>vel. provide op-
portunlties to develop work ~kills . and
provide opportunities for 1nd1v1dual
.specialization under qualified guidance."
e GeorflC Benrt1
George i-hmry, 52, lWl'I at 2MOI
Macedo, r..1ission Viejo.
J·le is a princi pa l at El Toro ?11arine
School and is a graduate of Arizona Stale
College. ~le is married anG bes two children and
has lived in the 8addlet>eok Valley a ~ear
and a halL
lie is past pre si·
dent of tbe -
Joaguin !dmioim'a·
icml' Aalociaticm. Dana A. Oari:ey. 45, is a com· 'Mmt do feel
munications engineer mak ing hiS:,bome at mOli....,: ,_ .&o
25125 Eric&M Way in Cap.ia-trano Jbe 8 anBiell C-..
Hi&blands and holds a bachelor's d<att< llilllOOt -T
frQDl Los AQteles State OOUege. "As at1 educator
Carkey, an employe of tlte Plildfic In 1he San Joaquin
T~phoae Compatny, is the fatbtt of ~-' > School District for
~~-~ three thildren and I? yeat'3, I am famUiBr with the kind of
' he and hi s wife. probleOlli 1hat .might arlae. J have ,been
, Doris, have been involved in 1be aolutiona to some fJf the
, area ~ts ·far problems of the past. By virtue of my
the past six years. experieooe, I would be an auet to the
He ci&es 1ervice in new ·Saddleback Vulley School D.irtrict.''
ICOllting aDd ~ Wha1 are tff mwt tmportut ,..aile11t1
, ··'.I served as executive lacing tbe ·MDldom \\lieje Uallled icboel
board member of District?
' Ille ()rouge E.,,.,., , Councll for the ·Boy ' We need to develop a perceptive shcrt
Scouts. Car.k.t also bas worked on the and lq·ranae proeram b' our students.
"Yes Cemml te fer SChMI ·-"~ If 41ectM, •t -,_ do to 1ioQt as t~ et. tbe Saddjebeci: ·v solve tt.e ... tt-•• i!epobbn Mo<mbly, -·.
''I am far enhlati~ the ahernativea
Wllllt d9 YID Mtl.-oat,_.lfles )'4111 to and ~LI of varioUI modern me1:hods to
be •·UlUld .U..l ~ct l....._? alleviate our oveix:rowded tehool con·
"I have cont;nuously attended Mhool ditioM. I feel the new board cbould con-
boenlmotti...., for tl>e lasll~ in si<ler .tl>e fOllowin&: fllod\Jlar con·
tt»Jtiah,.Mhooldi.ttrict. I,have-Kquireda struction; leuine ri vacant bowies or
\vorltiDg lu\owltdge of operations and planl.ls ; inveaLi&ate the b"mJ of aU ·year
problems of a school board. I was a school.
member of the Wt two eitBens com· "Tbe most economic way of financing
mittees for bonds and was a ruember ef school comlruction ia by uae a! icllool
the steering committee and are a ~ bonds ."
cbainnan in tbe Jut bond and override~
c1ec:tion."
"I undmtand the problrtms <1f .school
finance and budgels and am well·a c-
quainted with the problems and op-
portunities unique to our d~triet. I·
believe in fiscal responsibility and as a
trustee will berespomive to.the people."
WMt art tt.e most lmpertut problems
facing the !\fission Viejo U1ifild Sel!MI
Dist\'ict?
"Th e construction of a new hiah ac bool
and.adding on to tbe existing high H:bool :
continueci.conslruc\ion of elementary and
intenntdiate neicbborbood schools.
.. Raising educational s t a n d a r d s ,
particularly grades on through eight ; ac-
countabilHy of teachers a n d ad·
minislrators to lbe board: expansion of
ca!'ffr education proiram to provide
job entry-le ve l skills."
lf c!f.cttd. what "tVOQfd you do to help
solve ,tbtff .)K'Oblem11?
'.'I will seek every method possible to
bwkl neae5S&r:y eclloob,; I would inai.ilt.on
the best SUJ*intendtnt and ·staff to
achieve goals of quality ,fducatlon; I will
miw for ·!ilea! ...,....,iblllly with a
balanced .educational p&"Q8Rm. '*
e C..""'1 T. Bt11 .-11
G'ntig T. Blown, a;, lives .at SIC Vis
Cereea. Missk>n Viejo . .lie. is an aquatiics
Suptnfisor and is singie. lie Sffeived his
education It ·Stanford UnlvtrS!ty wbos'.e
be ®tained • bachelor's degree .
He Ms \Vorkcd and lived in the Sad·
d)ebect •V·aUey for two •yeen. 1li~illg in
lll'a11J!e COunt.Y for
'2(1,
He is on the ·boerd
" or directors of ·the
firsl vico J>teoident
ol ·!he Or-'°"""" t)'Swim-. ...... ~ .... -...-,.. .. lie. _ _....
dllllldfttrttr
"Jim iD ,dollJ Clllllaot -wllll -fll all ages lnmi lltls ,dillcid alld 1llll _.
COGOtl '''ilb .U.ir :lllluft, L--1111 .... .--1 •'""'q•-~ lrqm .ti~. ,Nav;y, Jl!Y ,J1<.'llt<'ll-.J-
and comnwnlt;j .,i•11liaallc•,.: ·
"I have ability and wllllnrness1to listen
and time available to serve." "'"'-....... -...-~ fa<log th< Minion Vie)< Unfllad S<•oGI n•-'ll!
''111lo:•itle .............. .. .........
conslrue\l .. .eltloens wllb plolol in ,.,.,
••dety,"
II .ahot ... -.-Jilll ... lo ..... .......... ,, . .,
"Unlflcalkln Junt 6 Is ilio ~ 119,IO
strengthen our neJgh~ schools wUh
e fhitt"'" A. S•iat
Dennis A. Smith, 'Jl . lives with his wife
~larilyn and !our children at 25182 Laa
Bolsas St., Laguna Hills.
He is a teacher in the Ocean View
School District and an estate planning
con sultant. _He received ·hia education at
Stanford University and has done
~raduate work at Princeton and Univerlii-
"'11 ty of Southern Cati·
fomia,
The Smiths have
lived in the 6addle-
. back Valley fDUr
years. He is a
mMJlber of the Stan-
ford Alumni Maooi&-
tioo , Jloy Scout l n·
stltutional 6ervice. is
• Uu3tee of the San
.losquin Elementary s c ·h o o I Jills-
ttict .. nd is a m•eim!b er of the
CaUfomia and Notional School :Boanls
Asaociation, s c h 10 o I admini.atratou'
organW!twn and e homtowners' usocia-
tion.
1'bat do ~'" led -g111Uflel 19u 1o i.e • ulllfied 1chtol dlllrid lrulad
"My interest in children i.!l e~.ln
my rt«Jrd .., ' San tJoaquin trua\ee. I
blYO lltlPld•JmlVide ie-1hip to,.,..te
Uwi 'tri!Unification iplan, ·ea:iablis11 JWO-
groms ID·1timulale qualtly .teachinc .wilh
emphasis , on individuallHd ·iMllucUon,
and to begin pl1nning on l6:new IC'lteola,
including ooe !..-retard~,chlldren. l , ,
have worked for responsible use or
district funds in San Joaquin and wi ll
continue that p:>licy in our new Sad·
die back district."
What are thetmost important problem'
facing 1lllt .-.II. ,llalfied 8alaool I
tDi&tricf?
"Overcrowding, communication with
!parents and taxpayers, budget control,
,and local control."
u .... wliol ·-_1191 'do 1lo lbalp
ftolve tbue problems? ·
"I wJU work /or a broad range o{ solu-
ltiOM ,.......,. ~ ..,._......,.
1u •aortabl• .a.I ,...,.... -
11udi IS neJr<i!llll!IMl1-dllllldbie1lltl,-
1El lffffJ •= llctlool ,Is Jho, ,key ,to :;aYOldblr-~tr:l&tlifDI tt•UleisJah'ldlDol
tleveJ. ~e need a itehool board that can
1-:0 Jlold 1-." "We llOld ·lo tlo ;t -btUtr :iob of 1 ..
formlllll -tnl.! "8d ·~1 IS ID whal1l&.,.q,..,,Jn ,llle .oJMiroomo, coo.
trol of spending tax dollars Is essential. l
wUI demand accountability, and will
d~ -4 ""'iq,y rto dtll•-w-IU -Me ,,.l .1ltOdl di children.
'U-h•irtl!1111our ...,..,._I
lial 1lo ·avoid ·~ JllllQI end 'lo
as1urt1 programs-to develop pride In our
~merle!rn 'herltllt!•· ,_
e SMrlq &. Blrrel
Sllltlef ff. HimJ, f7, I Uftl It -
Y.,,,..ood Ill., Lile Fons. lillt it ~
lor Ill eclucaUon In !he, 33rd District
CaUforola Con&J'el• ot Parents and
Teachers, is married and has two
children.
She .... educated
at IM· Univenity ol
4 South~·rn CaUfornia
and h41s Jived in the
area t1.vo years.
She .has JetVed II
y ea r s in Santa
, Morti ca in all pbasa
, i'"i' ~ of edt1cation and
;r A"".· 1~ school financing. She ~-has wor'\1ed with the
Los Angeles County School Boerd,
par1jcularly in area of vocational
guidance and rectntly on the four county
l'Onference on pupil personnel.
Whit • you feel most qnaUfies )'OU to
bt • ..ttied 1chool diltrlct trast«?
"My experience has been totally in
uni£ied districts, Title I program!!,
Jnember of Committee for Carrer
Guidance Public RelaUons for minority
i;:roup s. Initiated volu.1teer teachers' aide
program in Sant.a l\fonica and an educa·
tional drug abuse program starting in
fifth and sixth grades. Directed parent
activities resulting in two successful bond
and override e.lectklris.''
What are the mOlt importut pn>bltms
f8<'1n~ the Mission Viejo Unified School
District?
"Overcrowding, continuity in pn>
gramming, better communications v1ith
parents, makinJ our secondary schools .
competetive with other districts. ex·
panded vocational program, counseling
services. legislation that will belp school
districts ."
e .loftll L. Baus
Judllh L. -, », llvet at 2$242
TMmen Road, Loima lllllJ. She is t
homemaker and community voluntetr
who was educated at Callfontia State C.ol·
l~e, Long Beach, and ii married and h:is
one daughter.
·~·· -!"'l She bas lived in
i ~~; ~~dd11:,~cky~:~
and h83 been on the
board of directors of
her homeowners' as·
socJat lon. a volun-
teer teacher aide at
the former Park.lane
Residential Sc hool.
. •. i.1: a n d a volunteer
<]rive r for the American Cancer Society.
What do yo u fetl most quallnes you to
be a unUied licbool dhtrlct trustee?
"C.0Jl('ern for the welfare and educaUon
of children, two years regular attendance
at school board meetings, being active in
volunteer organiz.alions, board e.1perience
from two other groups, Md time to
devote to necessary paperwork and study
requ.ired of dedica;ted t.rustee."
What are the mo1t Important problem•
facing the M111lon Viejo Unified School
District?
"Cond ition of overCTO'w\'ded schools,
drug abuse, lack of curriculwn and pro-
gramming in meeting the needs of the
mentally handica pped and gilled as well
as the average learner, young people not
prepared with a skill upon graduation and
mediocre oounsellng services."
II elected, wb1t would you do to help
aolve these problem1?
"I woo Id support passage ol emergency
legislation ; increased use of relocatable
classrooms: when feulble, productive
dellberatlons with the county planning
oommlaslon: lmplemtfltatlon of all-year
school where parent support exisll; dou·
U elected. whal would )'Oii do lo b<lp ble ..,.,110111 1hould be kept to t
solve lheH problenu? minlmlllll.
"I would support •ll PftVainS ex· "Young people need to develop I,..,.
eluding double sessions, an unmedlate of· self-respect and be educated early to
bond isiue, consideration of more the hazards of drug abuse. All yoong peo.-
porta.bles and three-year middle-school pie are entitled to the l>Ht education
<ind year·round school with parent ap-available regardless of mental abilities.
pr'O'faL "Young adults who choose not to
''I believe we should strea develop-further their education beyond high
ment of a !luperior reading program, and school 1hould have the oPPOflunlty to ac-
the ability w think an d solve problems. quire a vocational skW . Improved
Curricu lum should be structured , well-counseling services at all grade levels
roUDded, creative and enriching including t with emphasis upon early adolescent
proven innovative techniques. Ther f. yeara iJ very important.
should also be an expanded vocational \
prog ram."
"l !eel board membm!, working
throug h citizens conunittees should
become very active in making the com·
mun1ty aware al. the dirtrlct'a needs."
e Cheater G. Britae1"
.Tired of tlw way your rings look?._
sessions staning in Stptember of 1t7S.
U r:Leckd, wbat would you do to help
solve these problem.a?
"I would insi st on an academic 1p-
proach to teaching ai; opposed to tht
!()('iulogica l approach.
"Too many educators arc of the opinion
that a thild shou!rt recP1vr 'socia l Rd·
justmen t' and be will then learn. I ta ke
the oppasile µosition, that a student who
receives an l'<lucation can make whatever
adjustment s arc necessary to society
because he ill better able to understand
the world in which he Jive&.
"Convinced that bonding Is the mOlt
economJca1 method of fmancing school
construction. I v.·ill work . whether or not
elected. for the e;irly passagt· of a bond
issue in the disiricL Then I will urge that
the board examine newer method! of
construction, such as modular , to tht end
that schools cbn ~ built faster, more
economically and to fit the needJ of t~
community ."
e Pre1t,on Bowell
The Rev. Preston Howell, CWTent
member of the San Joaquin Elementary
School Di5trict Board of Truslet'3, ii a
pa!ltor of the First Baptl!t Church in
Mission Viejo and a four-year resident of
the Saddlebac k Valley.
Howell, the father or six and grand·
father of three chil·
dren, Uves at 26495
Naccome Drive ,
Minion Viejo.
He cites a bache·
lor'1 degree from
Stanford University
graduate study at
Cal State Fullertoo
and Chapman College.
Ht ii 49-yearM>ld.
Howell polnll to affiliaU0111 wilh the
Oranae County School Board Alloc!allon,
The Camornla SChool Board Association,
the National School Board Asloctation,
ministerial anoclatlons and Kappa Phl
Kappa fraternJty. Howell has ierved tor
several decades u a minister in Orange
County churches,
Wbat do yoa feel mOlt qualifies you to
be a ualfled school dlJtrict ll'ustee?
"f have an earnest desire to help
children become the best po11sible
citizens. I am concerned about children's
lntellectual, physical and 1 p i r I t u a 1
development. My experience working
with children over the past 30 years gives
me wight into their need& and how to
meet them. I strongly believe in the
public 1ehool 1)'1l<m in America, My ex-
perience as a trustee hu givtn me ex·
cellent 1ra1n1ng tn boardlmanshlp an<1 r
have taken advantage of every op-
pcrtunity to learn by attending cllnlcs ,
seminar• and conferences. I know the
needs of the dil:trtct and how to meet
them."
Why Not Have Your Rings
Reset In Beautiful
New Mountings?
w. ·qn a.1i9" • ri"9 ••peciafty for you wit" your
old di•mo"d 1. We 11.o hav• loo1 e dlamo"d' and
can add fo your pr•senf on••· Ch.c:lc: our pric es
and ..vt.
• ,.. .... -I tl•"'9 ... pe ·•r > of• -IOI -W .. lh -
..,.,.. cHd .,.. ...... a1 .. ..
.W. tlA...,•DS •UAIANTDD 10 AIPIAKI AT -MOU TIWI YOG PAT ••
DIAMOND WEDDING
AND ENGAGEMENT RINGS 29~,
1tl2 lllMS TO CHOOSE FROM 0 FIND n HERE FIRST
COST A MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
ailil 11111.Y 9 tt 6
1tJt ICIWPOllf II.VD.
r.otn IN AND nowu AROUND
PHONE 646-7741
IOWIWaWli COSTA ~ -"'*'• ..... I ••••••f
DOM ucm
OUR.MOST
UNUSUA~
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
Wlte. ,... ..., • ·-··" "°"' ... •• wfl .....
'" ,..., ·-··· .. ..,.. ...... .. .r 40% MORI
-""' ,.., for " • .,.. ..., ..... c. ""' ......... .,
COMPAU.
)
1 7
17
I Huntington Bea~h
Fountain Va.Dey
. .
•
N.Y.S....._ •
VOL 65, NO. 157, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE couNtY. CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1972 TEN CENTS
Huntington Seeks to Put 'Haiter' on Horses
Three brand-new city ordinances aimed
at throwi~g a haller on runaway horse
stables will be presented to Huntington
B.each Planning Commissioners Tuesday
night.
"There is no current city code affecting
hor.ses or stables,·• Richard Harlowe
assistant city planning director, explains:
"In fact. very fevr cities in the county
have equine standards."
There are 35 stables and a bout 626
horses in \O\\'Jl, according to the best
Coalitio11
Against
Route Eyed
Representatives rrom eight coastal
corr.munities, from Long Beach to San
J ··-'l Capistrano, will meet next Saturday
to f·irm a ''co11sta l con11nunities coali-
ti on" to fight the proposed Pacifi c Coast
F reeway.
•
planning department estimate~.
"The stables exist illegally, or by
variance or a11 a nonconforming use,"
Harlowe says. "Only recently has the
planning commission forced some type of
standards on the construction of stables."
The proposed laws divide stables into
two categories, commercial and non-
commercial.
Any stable with five or more horses is
automatically a commercial venture. Any
stable used for riding rentals or boarding
An Editorial:
someone else's hones is also com·
mercial.
The new laws would allow a non-com·
mercial stable -for a family that keepa
its own horses -almost anywhere in the
city, except heavy residential zones.
Commercial stables, however, would be
limited to locations next to an established
riding trail, or the stable would have to
provide its own riding area.
Jn effect, this woukl' cut down lhe
number of hor.ies now found galloping
Yes Vote)lecommended
On Fluoridation Issue
Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley voters will find local measures as
well as state and regional candidates on their ballot Tuesday. The foll owing
are the DAILY PILOT's recommendations:
Fountain Valley fluoridation of water supply. Vote yes.
Huntington Beach fluoridation of water supply. Vote yes.
City councilmen from all incorporated
cities along the Orange County coast rre
expected to attend the gathering , to be
the home of Newport Beach councilm n
;ind freeway fighter John Store in Cor_ a
lli1,;hlands.
Despite wild scare talk, fluoridation has been proved by virtually every
dental and scientific organization existing to be an effective and safe way of
preventing cavities in the teeth of young children. At the present time, fluori·
dation of the water sutply is the only means of achieving widespread reduc--
tion of tooth decay.
Huntington Beach charter amendment on councilmen's pay. Vote yes.
J~untington Beach Charter sets councilmen's pay at $175 a month. Th is
amendment would merely bring them in line with general Jew cities of the
sa me population. The raise would be from $175 to $300 a month -certainly
not an overwhelmingly expenditure in the 11th largest city in California.
Store said this morning the meeting is
spon.50red by the Freeway Fighters
Citizens Coordinating Committee. The
meeting "is by invitation only" and will
not be open w the press and public, Store
said.
Wally Cox, chairman of the CCC could
not be reached for comment on the
meeting lhia morning.
Store declined to identify ill06e who
have been invited .
"Some might feel that to have their
names bandied about in the paper before
organizing would be a difficulty," be said.
But he said that councilmen and other
residents from Long Beach, Seal Beach,
Huntington Beach, Newport Beach,
Laguna Beach and San Juan Capistrano
wiil attend.
In addition there will be representation
from the unincorporated commnnities of
Dana Point and Laguna Niguel, Store
sald.
Store and ~ewport Beach Vice Mayor
Howard Rogers vr'lll represent Newport
Beach at the meeting.
Nev.•port Beach Mayor Donald A. Mcln·
nis said this morning he is aware of the
gathering but wi ll not attend. He will be
at another meeting.
"I endorse what they are trying to do."
Mcinnis said, explaining that the purpose
of the gathering is "to get everybody in
the coastal corridor to come together to
hopefully agree to the deletion of the en·
t.ire free\vay from l.Qng Beach to San
Diego."
"If they can get all or most of the .com·
munities dirertly affected to agree 1t ap-
pears to me it would make .~ good i!11·
prcssion on our legjslators, Mclnnins
i;aid.
The California Legislature ts con·
sidering a variety of a~t!·freewar bills,
four of which deal 11pecif1cally with the
Pacific coast Freeway.
One bill seeks deletion of the Long
Beach segment of the route; another
would kill the Newport Beach leg, and a
third, spomored by state Senator Dennis carpenter (R·Newport Beach) would
elfrrunate the entire.,1oute.
As-blyman Robert Burke (R·H1111-
tington Beach) has introduced. legislation
calling for a three-yea.r moratori~ on
freeway planning while a consUltant
takes another look at the coastal cor·
ridor.
The bill to' kill the Newport leg, which
haa passed the assembly, has just won
endorsement from the Seal Beach CllJ
Council which wuts It amended to In.
elude their conunwJity.
U.S. Deficit Drops Some,
But Still .at $26 Billion
WASlilNGTON (UPI) ~ Th•
Administration told congress today that
the government would run a $13 billion
smaller deficit this fiscal year than
originally estimated but that the deficit
for fiscal 1973 would be ~1.5 billion
grea ter.
The revisions in the Administration's
red ink bLJdget estimates, made public by
the OffiCt' of Management and Budget,
placed the deficit for fiscaf year 1972.
whlch ends June 30, at ,$26 billion instead
of $38.8 billion estimated in January.
For fiscal 1973, the deficit was
estimated at $27 billion rather than f25.5
billioo estimated earlier.
The administration planned a big
budget deficit th is year on the theory that
a big dose of federal spending would be
helpful while the economy was sleek and
unemployment high.
The rate of goverrunent spending had
been expected to Laper off in 197S u a
revived private eooncmy picked up lhe
!lack.
But an unexpected increase in cor·
porate taxes and individual
overwithholding taxes -plu.s a delay by
Congress in acting on the
Administratioo's revenue sharing ~
po sal -took most of the steam out of tht
go vernment spending plans.
The result, as shown in the revised
budget figure, is that the fiscal stimulus
in fiscal 1972 and 1!>'13 will be about the
same.
In testimony before the Ways and
flfeans C.Ommittee, acting Treasury
Secretary Charles E. Walker t'laid the
twin deficitl "will continue, a~
propriately, to stimulate an economy in
which unemployment is too high and
plant utilization too low.
Con~ert Quiet
Sto1ies Open U.S. Tour iii Seattle
)>EA TI'LE (AP) -The Rolling Stooes, malclng their first United Stoles
appearance in their North America tour here Sunday night, were greeted by
an enthusiastic but comparativety quiet sellout crowd.
The night before in Vancouver, B.C., a rock and bottle throwing melee
<erupted outside the Pacific Coliseum during the first performance of their
first North American tour in three years.
The Britlsb rock group performed two concerts in Seattle's Coliseum Sun~
day night for an estimated 28,000 per90ns.
On Saturday ln Vancouver, some 2,000 young peT10n1 tried to crash the
concert, and pnllce said 11 officers were hospitalized as a result of the scuffle.
None was seriously Injured, police said.
Eight pe'r900S were arrested. police reported. The disturbance apparently
began when two smoke bombs were tossed into the lobby soon after the per~
formance began.
Score 46·0
down many of the local streets.
"By the time this goes into elftct, we
hope to have a thorough equestrlan trails
system established," Harlowe says.
The no street riding would not affect
riders who board their hones on their
own property.
The new equine standards would apply
to mules, burros, ponies and jacks, as
well as hones.
Most of the proposed laws are devoted
to the type <Jf stables to be built and ho\iv
much area is needed for the boarding of
horses. The requirements !or stable con-
struction are essentially the san1e for
cor.unercial and noncommerc1a\ uses.
The minimum building site is two
acre!!, and the c.ity would require an acre
of land (for riding) for every 10 horses,
when the stable is oot ne xt to an
estabilshed riding area.
According to the proposed ordinnncr:
-There should be one corral for each
horse.
-The minimum size of a corral ls 28'
square feet and it must be surround ed by
a live-foot high fence.
-The stable must have a combination
manger and feeder, with a permanent,
automat ic watering system located in a
shady area.
-There has to be 96 square feet cl.
(See HORSES, Pap I)
Fluoride Top Item
Issue Heads Ballots of Two Cities
The injection of fluoride into city water
gupplies will be the chief local issue for
thousands of Huntington Beach and Foun·
tain Valley voters in Tuesday's primary
election.
Both citi~ have placed the con·
troversial fluoride issue on the ballot. In
each case, the voter is asked to say
"yes" or "no" W the direct question or
fluoridating city water.
Huntington Beach voters also will bt
asked to grant a pay raise for their city
councilmen.
An amendment to the city's charter, if
.npproved, would put Huntington Beach
council salaries on the tame level as
citieJ guided by general law.
In effect, that means a pay raise for
each COWlCilman from $175 .a month to
,$300 a month.
The. aalaries for general law citu
(cities wit,i)out charters) are set by the
state Leglslaturt, based on population.
Hµntingtoo !leach, with mor• than .is;llllll
ralcloMjl, ·f,U. Into tJie liiaJ!oll P87
bracket
Fountain Valley votera will have the
add!Uonal task ol aelecting a county
supervisor !or the Fiisi Dbtrict which
cov~ their city u well aa S&nta Ana
and parts ol Garden Gn>Ve.
Incumbent Robert Battin Is facing a
field of five cha.Uenger1 -Paul Balch,
Wally Davi!, John illll, Sadie R<id and
William Wenke.
There are 5'1307 Huntington Beach
residents eligible to vote in tht election,
while Fountain Valley counts 16,623
registered voteni.
Three state Assembly di!tricts touch
portion& ol the two cities, and all feature
primary ·races.
In the mh Aasembly District, m.
cumbent Kenneth Cory ( D-Gar d en
Grove) faces no challenge from h.is own
party, but two Republic am, William Dan·
nemeyer arid Jim Sartin are seel<.lng the
right to battle Cory in the November
election.
Cory's district covers a small portion of
Fountain Valley.
The major Assembly race features
Robert Burke (R-Huntington Beach), the
Council Weighs
Transit System
A public transportation !yatem for
Huntington Beach will be one of the
issues explored at tonight's regular city
council meeting.
Councilmen have been asked by the
city plMllling commlstlon to eJJtablish a
public transportation committee.
The comm!tt .. would rtudy Ille possible
types of publtt: transportation needed ln
Huntington Beach, and pot..U.I routes
auch a syatem would follow.
Esaentially, the committee would work
with · the establilbed Orang• County
Transit Oiitric:t in trying to coordinate
the needs of Huntington Beach with the
r.•t of the county, occordlni to city of·
ficialll.
incumbent in the 70th Assembly District,
who is challenged by another Republican,
Paul David Jesllow. Democrat Terry
Moshenko has no challengers in his bid to
face Burke, or Jesilow, in November.
Burke's district covers most of Hun·
tington Beach and F ountain Valley, as
well as part of Costa f\f esa .
The third Assembly race features
flobert Badbam (R·Newport Beach),
whose 7lst AssembJy District b:lt1 a miaU
part ol Huntington Beacll. He .I• llllOp-
poS«t for the GOP nomlnotloo. Two
Democrats, Fred G. Cunard and James
Jo,. Thorpe, are seekiJ1g their party's
no mination.
Bot1ibing Discounted
N. Viets Admit Problems
But VowtoContinue War
Frem Wlre Sen1cts
North Vietnom admitted today that It
I> MviN ''*7 cllUlcllW' ~ . blems 00couse or !lie' Jiltl.nslflid c m:
bombing, but lnllmd IMt· It hu tlie
°'paclty to eontinue tu wor -.
"Emi u U.. enemy iucoeed. In th•
bomb deitrUclion of our cities and our
large industrial -1nstallatioM, they can
never paralyse our economy to the point or preventing our 11urvtval and our abllity
to supply the south," the official
newspaper Nhln Dan declared in a com·
mentary broadcast by R.Rdio Hanoi.
''We havti foreseen and have calculated
In advance for tbe very dlfflcult altuaUon
wrought by the most cruel and dangerous
maneuvers of the enemy In their fierce
escalation of the war,'' Nhan Dan con-
tinued.
"But our people can walk:, can Ute
torchlights, can eat diluted congee (water
rice gruel), and still defeat the U.S. ag·
gressors."
Tut talk o{ walking, using torchlights,
and subsisting on rice gruel were obvious
references to heavy damage inflicted by
U.S. bombers on rail lines, highways,
bridges and electric power plants.
In other war developments:
North Vietnamese troops retreated
under a barrage of South Vietnamese
gunfire .nnd government troops walked
unopposed into a Kontum church that had
been used aJ!!I a Communist headquarter•
ror 11 days.
Kontum, a provincial capital 280 miles
north of Saigon, has been under Com-
munist aiege for several week!.
Military spokesmen said government
tz:oops were fighting to clear the two re-
maining Communist pockets ·Inside the ci·
ly.
Two Communist artillery rounds Son-
day nearly scottd direct hill on a U.S.
guided lnlssile d'5{royer off North Viet-
namese waters. cawilne "moderate shock
dalNg•" but no cuuoltl.,, mllitary
spokesmen said today.
The Navy uid none of the S$4 crewmen
aboard the USS Joseph Strauaa wu U...
jured and the eblp remained in the
Tonkin Gulf.
The d•stroyera USS Bau,.11 and USS
Sarsfield were 1dso fired on by Com·
munlat &bore batterlea but wve oot hit,
spokesmen aald.
Tbe U.S. Commaod onnounced • partl.al
pullout ol troops todoy from Ila
norlhermnOll major bue ln Vlttnom -•
U.S. mllltary oourcea ul~ other brld,_
on bolh tbe.nortbwtat and .-nll .... ''""'-· tO ,.,,_ ......... t-· ....
•hd u;Jri.ict ~d.d Iii lllo ~
A ll!V-olrcrfll curler, lb•
TIC<lllllero@. bas joJned !bi U.S. 7tb Fleet ..... illl .m .. .,, ...... ., Wet-
nam "1thlll a -k, U.S. mliltuy sources 11id today.
•
Home Ordinance
On Tracts Slated
For Council Eye
An ord~e aimed at protecting pro-
spective home bu yers in Fountain Valley
wiU be introduced to city councUmen
when they meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the
community services building.
The ordinance will require a 11
developers to build tract.homes under the
same .11peclficationa used to <Xlllltruct
model home1. It wlll alaO requlre that •
developer <fuitribute a map of the area
the home ls In and a copy of the city'•
master plan.
The ordinance wi ll guarantee that the
home a person buys is of the same quali·
ty as the home he originally sees, ac-
cording to Clinton Sherrod, city plarming1
director.
The map and copy of the mast.er plan'
will al~acqualnt the prospective buyer•
with the neighborhood they are mov~
Into. "They11 be able to see where the
schools are and If a shopping centtt ts
scheduJed to go In across the street in tM
future," said Sherrod.
Sherrod aald the city had received com·
plaints Jn the put from r~t
homeowners who !ell Ibey bod been mi.-
led about the quality-of their bome1 and
the ne18'>borhoocl la wbicll Ibey w•re
bull\. . .
Ollly homes.bunt ~r .lhe ordinance iJ
pesaecl w)ll be requtred to.IJeoa por with ·
their models, acoorcu., to-lllMm>cl. .......
-
4 Ca:1ulidates
Beat Deadline
·.Beach Seniors 'Stomp'
top-leCl'et commun.lcllkml camp near
!)le threatened lmner lmperltl cap!W of
Hue. .
A command~ alio ~
that U.S. troop .trtni!h Jn V1e1nom fell
!all weelt by 1,100 m111 to 13,'lllt -Iha
lowest level 1lnce lbe _1t.i...11pre ol
Mon hazy ...-,oJiinr tho Oranc• Coast ~. loJJowJnr low douda ......... &Ille ..........
lllgba ol ~ ...... a. ~ r1aln(
llLIO'lnlud..Lowl !Ml . -
Four canclldato. met the 5 p.m.
deadline Friday for filing nominl·
. lion papers for \he Aug. 1 election
to flll a vancy·"' the Boan! of
Trustees of the Huntington. Btacb
'City (elem•ntary) School Diltrlcl.
The last two to fDe Wm EduWdo . ·
011 Silva, • n 1ccountant, tlS2 Star
Drive, and Roger Darceau,. a
teacher. 1612 RIJll>Ude Lino. •c-
cording to the om .. of the Onngo
_County ~gtstrar 0~ Votm.
The other two caMldllel-ote
Louis Kidder oncl It. Dole Blllh,
who had filed ••II before the Fri-
day deadline. ,
Alllllllll1& • poUcemon la CODlidered·•
preti, -crime, but a twn of eenlcirt Id ,Jluntingtoo Beoch Hlch School
clldn't heed lbe law Sit~y aflemodil u tbeJ clolll>end the Bunllnglon Buch
~ lllparllheol 41.o In the !Int annual
"Sow lloWI," ll•g_ foolbali contn1. .
•JI -•twell1"•7'il ·pme but the '* were Jml ·In helter physical con-dllton.'•,..r.! Gary Wright. tho police
lffm c.ptala. •1 think they enjoyed kick·
lag the floclt aal of us."
.Aalde !?om.the""""· the poli~ depart·
ment bad 1wo other caaualtlea.
PolrOIJua. Jim ·Pnce'1 lhin --' llleppecl m and be bad to have 2111ltche.o
to polcb...11 up. Crlmlnolopt Km God·
clard lnjuncl the Ucoments Jn his l•g,
wblell It -In a cut. Even tbcqlr Ila police were badly
mauled Jn the nae lootbell contesl btl~
about 350 fans, Ibey mADlled to retain --.,·-· Duflua one port o1 the pme tbeJ put a
nteM1W lootboll lnlo the game start!·
in& the high ochool quort<rbeck when he
received a "beaVJ'" _,,..ck. "We alJo
bad 1 helium tiall, but we' dldnl have a
·chance to 11'1 It In," 'Aid Wrlgh~
Also on bond 11t~' tbe pig. of·
flclal mllCOt of the l1Wmeft•1 team. Pw.i
dlcl a let ol snortq, llCCOl'dJnc to Wright,
but wuai oble to rabe tbe spirits of hll
tam.
J
June, lie&, but sWI tbort ol Praldelll
A pedtly wapt morloed with • rod Nbion'1 taraeted tt,GllO by the end ol ililt
croa wu fUlb' at the 1eene and a meter month. · ·
....... lod .Pim -tila lleld •in ,,... .n;.~eoannun1quo ..muioed Ibo,.......
-•-'!lit h 11 11 Unllotl of the -Ulth' AmtiOri pme ·-~·-• ·• m "' Compeny, ihe air Int-'.•.-m ...,. ol tho e........nleo _,. marUd by • bellcopter """' ~~i*;\anbjthopollce. ~· lj-Ith Radio ""-· . . , ,..., bl 'h a-n!h llatloil a Piii! Bal, 11 miles
""' Sow Bowl rollfd I* l<r .,-I IOUth of Hue.
school's senior 11!1 aod v_. ceremony _ · EIChf U.S. Alr Force jl!tl 1treoked to u-. accOrdlni to Mr1. Helen P11· ' within IO mlla of lbe Chine• bonier
!Oii of the 1ebool'1 llnlnclol om... &mdoy and demollJhed twin brlclgu on
Wri&ht 11)'1 tho police cleoartment Haoo1'1 northwest roll line. to Oilna with wan~ another try •t the lludenta but five 2,000.pound INer·plded bomllo,
nexl UJM they wont to play tackie. mililory spoMsu>en ,.id today.
"We had • hord time lflhblnl t-"Wa koocl<ed the hell out ol them," na10. w .. mlght do bolter u,.. could jult Wd one om...-. ·on-laser.guided
lf&b lbtm.'1 boi* doD't mba.11
INSWB TOMI' • . ·~
Sh<'• b!act, a Bi1p111t Gj IOOrJO.
fflll ""'Iller ""4 "!~ 1M -electtd 1"*111 pre~ 'If IM·
R°"""' C~· ~ 'o/
San Dltl/O llo 4 blliO:-pG!va.
S<t 1lory, Page 20.
~...,.. .:
~= ~ CMwk• • ._ ..
--If ...............
.......... IFI • ,_ "'" ,,., .......... ,,
1 ... 11 Ill tt
'
"
•• ~ OAILY Pl1..0 t
'More Responsive'
Judge Hopefuls
Propose Reforms
An eight attormys comptllng for the
\\>'est Orange County Municipal Court
:1tat being \'acated by retiring .Judge
Ctlia Baker ha ve called for reforms that
wirl make the courl.'I more rellponslve to
,. )he needs of the people.
Expressing thf:ir concern over the clog-
ging of the courts, the eight candidates
have pronused to "'ork for changes in the
judfc_i.al system if elected to the si x.year
lerm ln Tuesday'• electlon.
Follo'A'ing 1s a sun1mary of f'ach can-
didate's background &ld a statement or
his. beliefs about the court uat he 1s
seeking.
Jame1 J. Alfaoo is currently s member
of the Orange County Public Defender's
Office. He is a 1954 graduate of UC
Berkeley with a degree in cr iminology.
Alfano served with the IA! Angeles
Police Department for 12 years before
pa&sing the bar and jolning the Public
Defender's Office in 1965.
Alfano believes his experience as a
police officer and public defender has
given him an insight Into the judicial
system from both sides of the court. He
would like to see prosecution and defense
attM"Dey& settle more cases before they
come to cot1rt.
Glen T. Bashore has a private law
practice in Stanton. He graduated from
the University of Alabama Law School In
1954 and practiced law in Alabama for six
years. He wis admitted to the California
State Bar in 1960 and has served as a
judge pro tern for lhe Orange County
Municipal Court.
Buhore cit.es his wide range of ex·
perienoe in the court...
JUcbtd J. Beacom is head of the West
Orange County District Attorney's Office.
He received his law degree from the
University of Southern California end
wcrked as a legal asslstant to California
Atklrney general from 1963-65. He was a
deputy district attorney in Los Angeles
bef_ore coming to Orange County in 1965.
Beacom believes his experience as
district attorney has given him the ad-
ministrative background and fami liaritv
with the daily actions of the municip81
court necessary to become a judge. He
would like to see tighter procedures in
the courf.l!I to move oases more quickly.
Paa.I M. Bell ha! pracUced law in
Anaheim since 1964. He .is a graduate of
the New York Law School and ha.s eerved
.as •• judge pro-tern In the We!t and North
Orange County MunlclµAI Court.5. He is
al*> an arbitrator with the American
Arbitration Alaoclatlon.
Bell cltea hi.a wide range of experience
In crlmlnal and clY'll law -among his
qualifications for the court seat. He has
called for a greater we o( the night
~s and believes many Judies &rl' in·
~~Ive to people's time in the c:ourt
C. WIDiam Carlson Is a Huntington
Beach attorney. He is a 1958 g.raduate of
the University of Michigan Law School.
lfc>·joined tlle Huntington Beach law firm
Jones nnd Jones In 1961 before open.
his own practice in 1967.
Ison believes h~ 11 years of private
ctice and oommunl ly involvement
ve given him the background to be an
eclive judge. He is ~luctant to suggest
~reform program for the courts. but
bflleves night courts should be expanded
W better serve people wbo work in tht
djy.
.fKennetls J. Golden has practiced law in
Westminster since 1968. He is e cum
ljlude graduate of the Boston Univen:ity
aw School and practiced ln New York
bifore coming to California.
'Golden would like to !tee the courts ex-
pfnded to handle small claiTis and traffic
ctses on a nightly basis. He has also sug·
~ommissiouers Sought
' Fountain Valley City Councilmen will
hold interviews fron 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
'1\Jesday for persons interested in serving
oft the city's Parks and Recreation Com-
n!lsalon. ?Jbrte four-year positions on the com-rrilssion will be open beginning June 30. 1'e interview will be held in the city hall
ctnference hall .
OIANGI COAST ••
DAILY PILOT
"Tht Or ..... Co.ti DAILY 'ILOT Wliti Wh~
It Ql'Mlltall JM Ntw1-Pr"R11, b ~ltflN tty
ftl9 0'1ll'lfl C0.11 l"ublllhltlg Cornptny. s_..
r•te ...,,_.. ,.., fl\lblls'*t, Ntondmy ThnluDll
~ Frs..y, f« Orel• Mn11, N-.iorl &1.r;h,
H11ntl11111D11 l udl/Fount•ln .... u • .,., U tUM
"-h. tNIM/Sldllltblc-•nd ~" C....,.,,11/
.. ,. Jvtn l:aplslr1110. A ,Jriolt '119k1MI
.. MlllM 19 P'Jblblltd 5'1Vrd1y1 •lld $1,11'1(11yi.
'
l
TM pr1nc)ptl ,ubll11111!11 Pltnl h •I :)JJ Wt\I
a.r JtrMI, Coal• Mal, t•lll01ni•, m1&.
lt•h•rf N. w,,4
,r.kltnt .. 111 f"Utlllllltr
J,c.)( R. C11rl1v
VIU·,,.IO.nl •lld Otntrll M«ia~r
lhetr11tl tc ..... il .....
.,..m•t A. Mvrphlne _..,,,,
a.tW ~"-. ._, l lch•N P. Heft
-idl>M "' ...... NtOn
T•rrr c;..,;11, w..o..-..~·-
H ......... --17t71 ... ,. a.1111..,,,,.
, ,.,~ AIUNU: ,,0 . ••111 7t0, t1641
~ • °"'9f om.. ., ......., IMcti• ,,. ...... , ~
• 1 c.... Mttt1 m w.tt hy :urttt
"IWllWI ... du It» N~ '-.VlfWl'lt r JM ~It: JOI Horll'I II CtmW. ltNJ
:J t1l1J••11 17141 •42-4JZ1
' C'11i,,,,,._. A.t.•ll*t '41·1171 ,,_ _..,.... c:.-tr c."' ... ,,...
14 .. 12tt
Cll¥'11M. 1m. 0r.,.. e .. ,, "'*""""" Ol:J'll•: P• ... Mn ,,... ... , hMlrtl .... ...... .,....,.., .. """"'-" ..... • ~ ........... Wllflilut ........... ,, ..... ,,~--
I t=ea ..... ,. .......... ..:!:'._"'t, If~: M:.:.
~I "' ..it U ,lS l'l'illlllh'I mltlllln' '~ ..............
gestcd the court should have a duty Judie
available 24 hours a day to handle Rarch
warrants and hail. As a judge he u·ouJd
speak lo !he com munity on lhe court
~ysttm.
Thoma• Keenan Ls a rormtr member or
the FBI and a 1961 graduate or the UCLA
Lalli' School. lie served 11i·1th the Orange
County District Attorney's Office for a
year before Joining Orange County Pubhc:
Defender's Office in 1963. He has prac·
tired law privately since 1965.
Keenan believes his wide range of ex-
perience in criminal and civll law at all
judicial' levels qualifies him for the court
~at. He believes Saturday and night
courts may be a way to make the courts
more responsive to the people. He says
he would like to see judges reform the
courts before the Legl.slature acts to do
so.
Fred M. Nelton is a Huntingkln Beach
attorney who graduated from the
University of Michigan Law School in
1945. He practiced law in Missouri for
nine years be fore coming to Ca lifornia in
1958. He has served as a judge pro-tern
for municipal courts in Orange and Los
Angeles Counties.
Nelson favors nig ht courts and believes
judges should explain the ir rulings to
defendants in each case. lie cites his
wide range or experience at all court
levels in criminal and labo r law as his
quallfications for becoming a judge.
Davis Lauded
' By McGovern
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Sen.
George S. McGovern tol d a crowd
of cheering blacks at a rally in
Watts that the acquittal of Angela
Davis should be "cause for re·
jolcing."
McGovern, speaking two hours
after a jury in San Jose cleared
Miss Davis Sunday, of involvement
in the Marin County courthouse
shooting, was greeted by a crowd
chanting:
"Power of the people baa Creed
Angela."
"This is a happy day which l can
understand," he said. "This 1s
another demonstration lhat we can
be pleated abouL
"Tbat'a not 1 ca111e (or moum-
ln(. That's not a cause for protest.
That ought to be a cause for r~
joicing."
Set story on Page 5.
Two Great Lakes
Ships Collide;
One Goes Under
PORT HURON, Mich. (UP I) -Two
Great Lakes freigftters collided early tcr
day sending one to the botlx>m in 35 feel
of water near the Blue Water Bridge and
•tocking the narrow St. C1alr River chan-
nel kl traffic today.
There were no injuries to l he 60
crewmen aboard the 359-foot Parker
Evan,, or the 550-foot Sidney E. Smith Jr.
"'h!ch lsy on its starboard side with about
12 feet of its superstructure showing.
Diesel fuel oil from the ruptu red tanks
aboard the Smith was floating downriver
and salvage crev.·s set up floating booms
at Algonac, almost 20 miles downriver lo
collect it. '
Following the colli!lon shortly after 2
a .m .. the 33 crewmembers abo&rd the
Smith, of the Erie Sand Steamship Co.,
were hurried of! the vessel and taken lo
the nearby shore by U.S. Coast Guard
craft and the tugboat Auburg as lh.e !hip
sank in about 35 feet of water.
The Evans was towed to the American
side of the river and tied up.
The st. Clair River forms a connecting
link between Lake St. Clair and Lake
Huron and freighters of all nationalities
tied up both north and 10uth or the col·
lision scene. At least 15 freighters 11tood
at anchor in Lake Huron awaiting
clearance.
Truck, Copter
Damaged in Fire
A gasoline fire Saturday caused an
estimated $4,220 damage to a fuel lruck
and a parktd helicopter, the Orange
County Fire Department reported.
Firemen said the blaze wu evidently
lgnUed by a 1park N the helicopter wa.s
being N!fuled from tlle truclc.
Dale WWl1tn1, 21, an employe of Santa
Helicopter Comp.at\)', who wa1 'reruetlng
the alrcrtft, eocaped Injury, Oremen
said.
The fire occurred •cU•ce.nt to the
airport tower where Santanai helicopters
have their headquarters.
Youth Dies in Surf
A l~yeaMld Long Beach youth col·
1apaed in the surf o(f HunllngtDn city
beach Sunday afternoon and WM pro--
nounced dud on arrival J1t Pacifica
lloapilll.
City llfegu1nls aid Richard T. CulllOll
collapoed at 1:40 p.m. after telllna a
lrlend he was having dmlculty breathing.
UleguardJ said !he dead youth bad a
hl5tory or asthma.
•
Humphrey
Rakes Foe
'
LOS ANGELES !UPI) -llube•t 11.
Humphrey today accused George S.
fl.1cGovern of voting lo "emasculate" 1
key section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
l·le also scheduled an bour-long telethon
on election eve in a last -ditch effort to
stop h1eGovern_
~1cGovern, confident of winning the irn-
portant Cali(ornfa primary and its Z71
delegate vo tes, broke oH his campaigning
In the state to schedule a fou r-hour swing
into New Me:tico, y,•hich also holds •
primary Tuesday.
Aides to both senators looked for a
common break in the hectic schedules to
arrange a fourth '"debate," \lt'hich
llumphrey suggested and to which
l-.1cGovern agreed.
First Fa11iily Worship
In a speech prepared £or delivery at a
rally in Oakland, llumphrey accused
r-.1cGovern of "a braien and fu!l·scale at-
tempt to emasculate th e votini; rights
11rovision of the Civil Rights Act." President Nixon and family talk with the Rev. J ohn
A. Huffman Jr. after attending services at the Key
Biscayne Presbyterian Church. Hearing the sermon
"Blessed arc the 11cacC'ma kcrs" \~'ere. Edward Cox,
left, his \\•ife 'J"rici:i, Mrs. Nixon. the President the
Rev . .l-Juffn1an, Julie and Da vid Elsenho\ver.'
lie said McGovern joined 22 senators.
including 18 southerners. in voting
against a provis ion that allows the at-
torney general to require that all court~
expedite legal co1nplaints on voting
rights. Mesan Fatally Stnbbed, T'tt'O Santa Anans
Die in Separate
Crashes Sunday
"'I challenge Senator McGovern to deny
to any black or any f.1exican-American or
lo anoyne else in the state of California
th~t he did not cast this vote," llumphrey
said. Woman Friend Charged The Minnesota senator, tr a i 11 n g
i1cGovern by 46-26 percent in the
respected California-Field poll , scheduled
a prime-time 8 p.m.-9 p.m. television pr<r
gram during which listeners can call and
ask questions.
One man was repeatedly and fatally
stabbed in the chest at his Costa Mesa
apartment over the weekend, while a sec-
ond victim. knifed in a separate Lions
Club Fish Fry incident, survived.
The series of violent attac.ks reported
Saturday Jed to the arrest of the slain
man's female companion, while police
are still hunting a suspect in the
downtown Costa Mesa Park stabbing.
Murder charges were being pressed l<r
day against Trinidad D. Crane, 30, of 131
N. Everji!;reen St.. Anaheim, resulting
from the predawn slaying Saturday.
She was arrested at Costa Mesa
~femorial Hospital, where doctor! pro-
nounced Lionel Martinez, 2.1, dead of
multiple woun~ inflicted by a kitchen
knife.
The indicent at Martinei' apartment,
976 Mission Drive, was: first reported to
the Costa Mesa Fire Department about
2:30 a.m., as a medical aid for a possible
heart attack victim.
Rescue squad members arrived. took
one look at Martinez' bloody, mutilated
Ma1i lndicred
l1i Attorney's
Deatli Kills Self
OROVILLE (AP) - A man iodicted
for killing an attorney and wounding a
judge and a wilness in a courtroom
hanged himself today in his Butte County
jail cell, jailer Jack Kent sald.
Minard C. Rutherford , 57, a rural
postman, used a mattress to make a rope
with \Yhich he suspended himself by the
neck from a crossbar on the cell door,
Kent said.
Rutherford's cell was being checked
('very hour, the jailer said, and the hang-
ing occurred afler the 2:50 a.m. check.
1-fe tried moulh·to-mouth resuscitation,
but the prisoner was dead before
reaching Butte County Hospital a few
ht1ndred yards from the jail.
Jn the courtroom shooting May 25, at-
torney Perry Fanner. 44 , was killed by a
pistol shol in the head and other shots:
caused arm wounds to KarolYJ\. Garrick
of nearby Thermolita, one of the plaln-
tiUs, and Judge Jean Morony, who was
passing by.
The shooting climaxed a dispute th at
led to a civil •uit over attachment of a
tractor and other equipment owned by
Mrs. Garrick, whom F a r m e r
represented.
'Barki1ig' Dog
Found Hanged
/n. Backyard
A Costa 1tfesan whose terrier
puppy's barking had cau sed
neigborhood complains arose Sun-
day morning and fowid tt deod,
banged in his backyacd.
Jeny J. Slanley, of 920 Ced&r
Place, called police at a a.m., when
be found tbe pet dan&linr from tbe
backyard cloihesllne.
Officer C.ny KoCliendor!er said
tbe brown-and·wblte pup had the
cord -cut Ont to Bl•• llildl -
wound around Ill neck 20 Ume1 .
The lldlltlc pet .. layer ll1trl slttt-
ched the remalnlnJ length over tlle
clotbesllne pole, holrtlng tbe dog In-
to !be air and strangling IL
Police investlcaUng the c11J1e
along with county SPCA officlllt
for -l~lo crlmln•I charges aald
two prior compllinll had hem
....ivecrili>llt t11e clo1J'fl>•rt1n1-
erue11y to animals 11 punllhable
by• lall tenn, nn.. ~ « llll
thrte.
chest area and notified police of foul
play.
. Detective Lt. Harold Ficher said today
that a witness placed the initial call for
fi remen.
The name of the individual present in
the s a m e laborer's apartment besides
the suspect, Miss Crane, ""as not releas-
ed.
A quarrel immediately preceded the
fatal wounds and Lt. Fischer said in-
vestigators said they suspect it involved
lhe releaUonship between Martinez; and
fl.1iss Crane.
She i! a cashier at an Anaheim rubber
products firm, 11,·hiie the dead man v.•as
unemployed.
Miss Crane ,.,.as booked into Orange
County Jail on suspicion of murder after
being placed under arrest at the hospital
by Office r Hubert Hogan , first palrolman
to reach Martinez' apartment,
Roughly three hours earlier. Charles A.
11arrell. 16, of 3761 Cosley SL, Santa An11.,
was !tabbed in the abdomen during Fri·
~ay night's Fish Fry celebration open-
ing.
Suffering from i n tern a J injuries.
the young vict.im didn 't report the stab-
bing at first, bu t later went to Tustin
Comm unity Hospital :i:eeking help.
He was admitted to the intensive care
unit at fi rst but today is listed in satisfac-
tory condition, according to nursing
personnel.
Detective Lt. Fischer said the knifing
resulted from an argument at 18th Street
and Park Avenue, near the Fish Fry
carnival area.
'.'Over what. we're not too sure," he
said.
A young male about 18 to 20 is being
sou ght in the attempted murder case
assigned -like the fatal stabbing -to
detectives George Wilson and J im
Strickland.
1-Jer AO'c " Precious
ROCllDALE, England (UPll -I\la\·1s
r-.tcCormack has been fined $26 for refus·
ing lo divulge her age in court in con-
nection with a driving offense. Two weeks
ago. she was fined $19.60 for speeding and
$2.60 for rtfusing to give her .age and told
to reappear in court la ter.
Two Santa Ana residents lost their liv(!s
in traffic accidents Sunday, the Orange
Cou nty coroner's office reported .
The dead:
Craig A. Jeffrey, 14, of 617 S. Townsend
St.
David IJ. Yoder. 22. of 1000 E. Bishop
St.
The JeHrcy boy \vas killed Sundav
morning when he drove his g<>-cart out ~r
an alley into the street near his home and
\vas struck by a car driven by John C.
Branham, 24, Santa Ana, police reported.
Branham "·as cited.
Yoder died when the motorcycle he was
ridi ng with his wife Sheila, 23, as a
passenger, collided wilh a car at Warner
Avenue and Fairvie\v Street Sunday noon.
11e die1l of massive head injuries shortly
before midn ight at Santa Ana Community
Hospital, the corner said . Mrs. YOO.er is
report ed in critical condition in the same
hospital.
Police said the driver of I.he car,
Esteban Cabajal, 24, Santa Ana was cited
for driving without a license.
From Page 1
HORSES ...
shelter for each hor se.
--One wash rack ~or every 35 horses is
needed .
-Exercise rings will need a JO.foot
diamater, while arenas mus t feature
10,CKXI square feet.
Several sections of the suggested code
involve fly control and also give the
Orange County Department of Health the
power to inspect all stables, commercial
11nd noncommercial.
Conunissioners will get their first
glance at the horse control measure at 7
p.m .. Tuesday. in city council chambers.
llar!owe says the measures are not in-
lendecl to reduce the number of stables or
horses in the city, but control them for
!he safety of citizens and the animals.
Still Cha111pioush ip
LITTLE DOWNHAM, England (UPI!
-~·raser Gilbert, J6, won the British
stilts championship Sunday by walking
'480 yards on stilf.l!I.
.Tired of the way your rings look?.
Why Not Have Your Rings
Reset In Beautiful
New Mountings?
The program will be shown on nine
commercial TV stations and 32 cable
television systems with an estimated 1.7
million potentia l viewer!i.
Humph rey surfaced his own poll, taken
in Los Angeles County by Pubilc Affairs
Communica tions Associa t es in
\Vashington. D.C. which showed the Min-
nesota senator trailing by less than 1 per·
cent.
His campaign manager claimed the
survey, taken ·Saturday, showed a
Humphrey surge but also documented
tha t Humphrey surprisingly t r a i Is
f.tcGovern aniong blacks and Chicanos
and runs even \Vith Jewish voters.
lfumphrey's suggestion for one more
debate was made spontaneously during
the third show on ABC's •·Issues and
Answers" Sunday, which included other
candidates for the nomination Rep.
Shirley Chisholm, Los Angeles 'Mayor
Sam Yorty and a repr~entative of
hospl!alized George C. W3.llace.
The candidates sparred over the
release of American prisoners-of-war;
commitments to Israel; support of the
Democratic presidential nominee, and
other issues.
Humphrey urged President Nixon to
send former Treasury Secretary John
Connally to Hanoi with a filed date for
the withdra\val of American troops if
North Vietnam would at the same time
release the American POW's.
But Mrs. Chisholm and McGovern said
the withdrawal of American forces :i:hould
not be dependent on the release of the
prisoners.
"\Ile have to say lets get out o[ there
and at the same time continue negotia-
tions for the release of the prisoners,"
l\-trs. Chisholm said.
Landscape Arti st
To Address League
Carl 1\lcG arth, portrait and land.scape:
artist. "'ill address the l·luntington Beach
Art League at its meeting at 7:30 o'clock
tonight at the Recreation Center, 17th
Street and Orange Avenue.
The public is invited to the meeting
\Vithout charge.
We can design • ring tspeci•lly for you with your
old diamonds. We elio htv• loose diemonds end
cen •dd to your present ones. Che~k our prices
end s•ve.
H yom lll'n .._ c..W1 let tW pa 1b 111. ef • .,_, .. , ... • Ill tH ... ..,...dtd:_. ...... .....
ALL DIAMONDS •UAIANTUD TO Al'PIAISI AT 40 % MOll THAN YOU 'AT.
DIAMOND WEDDING
AND ENGAGEMENT RINGS
10.02 mMS TO,CHOOSE FflOM • RND IT HERE RRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
' OPIN DAILY t r. 6 t:OMI IN AND IROWSI AROUND ,
1838 N!WPOIT ILYD. PHONE. 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MIS.A ---H-• .,.....,. '
DOM u.cm
OUR MOST
UNUSUA~
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
w... ye. My ...... .
from .... wll , .... '"--... pral1a at 40% MOU
-,.. paid ,_ It •
r-_., ..... ._ c:.. ,.. ............ ,
COMPAaL
•
I
"
•
• A~e ID Bole
Radarman 'Hits' First MIG
By ARTlllJll HIGBEE
ABOARD THE USS CX>RAL SEA I UPll
-Chief Petty olfice.r Larry Ji . Nowell
helped a flight of Phi:intom F4 pllolt that
included a llunt ington Beach man. shoot
d0\\11 their first J\11C JCt over North Viet-
nam nearly three months ago. But he
rnet them onlr last 11 et"k
That v.·as v.•hen :'\011·cll. a radarrnan
11ho o;>crates ab..i<ird 1he •,:rul:;er C11i .. :ig(I.
<:::i ught a chuppt>r out lo the carrier Cor:ll
Se;'t 1rhc re !hr FI pilots are based.
During !he three rnnnths 111 bet11·ccn ,
!\01rcn -II horn a L' S. :111 rlcet pre5S
release calls "the hottest :ur controller u1
the Gulf of Tonkin'' -has guided U.S.
pilots in the downi ng of 11 other ~l!Gs for
a total of an even dozen.
Thi s n1akcs r.:ov•ell, of Dothan, Ala .. a
double :ice. so 10 s1)(1:ak. even though ht
\.\'Orks in a control roon1 on shipboard and
not in a lofty cockpit.
E\·en li"hlugh he nu~t the partners on the
~1arch ti ~II(: ''kill " on !v Int \reek. fl iers
all over lhe (;u1r kno1v his voicr hv nov,.
and 1hcy c.1!! hiin by his nlc kiiamc,
"Ac('." \l·hich \s his c:ode nn 111e as well.
\\'h en J'\oy.•cl! 1111·! !he l\\'O pilots ;i nd
one of the na vi'"[at ors :ibonrd the U1r;i!
Sea, they desc rJ!x'<.I the :O.J:irch 6 do11·nin.:;
of ~Ire; 17 lik<' thii:
LL (;arry \\'r ig;i nd of (<,Jumbus. Oh io,
the pilot who shot do\1'11 the J\1 J C~ 17: .. \re
were out O\'Cr the Tonkin Gu !r escort ing a
reconna issance mission v.·hcn Ace ga1·c
u,; the 11·ord."
I.t. Bill Freckleton of 6072 Briarcli ff,
l-Iunt ington Beach. Calif., \\'eigand's
navigator : "The dogfight itself happtned
just a few hundred feet over fairly flat.
sparsely-inhabited fa rmland. It was about
1320. (l :?O p.m.) on a sunny but hazy day.
\V, were about 90 miles south of ll anoi."
Nowell : ''I painted \picked up ) the blip
of a MIG on my radar ~creen -of course
I y,·asn"t sure it was a !\l!G at the ti1ne. It
"'BS a very fai nt pa int.''
\\'eigand: "\\'e turned hard t o
starOOa rd a nd headed inlnnd. TI1e chief
wa s prett y su re it was a :\11(1 .
Lt. Jin1 Stillinger of Pun1ona . Calif.,
leader of the rligh i: ''Ace re11 ll.v c:;i.1ne
through tor us. Ile krpt our airc raft 1n
SllCh I pollhlon t.b>t nobody could lliut
up on us. He was our eyes. Al1 the whlle
we HC'ed inland, he wag feeding us in·
form1tk>n."
Weigand : ••Jt.ln Stillinger l'.'a! iM fir st
to actually !ee the ~UG. fie called out,
'Tally ho, there he is ..• _ · "
Stillinger: "1 stayed behi nd the J\11G
for three turns. On the serond tlme 1 took
a shot at him <1 nd missed. An F4 goes
faster than a i\llG but a t.1IG makes
tigh~er !urns -up t!osc oor speed ad·
\·:intage isn't much help. So the third
t~'lle I putpOsely overshot him. That 1=ot
h1m to reverse his tum and c:,hase tne. All
his auention was del'oted to me I
looked at him coming arotmd the corner
and starting to put his guns on n1e.
Fortunately he was still out or range ."
\\leigand : "lie got his afterburner
going, which gave him an l!Xlra burst of
speed. He was nose: down at about 500
feet and charging staright at Jim."
Stillinger: "Garry said , 'He's r1ghl
behind you.' I remember that \'ery "'ell
indei!:d."
Weigand : "I was a bit y.·orried beeause
1 1vas afraid I wouldn't be able tu get
there in time:'
St ill ing:cr · "Then s:11v Carry·s
Sidcy.·inder !heat.seeking missi le\. 1 don"t
thillk the l\IJ(j fi red at int• at all··
\!.'e1gC1nd; '·] rolled in ~·nd hr c:nn1e up
in nty gunsights. I fired :ind !he rnis~de
f1e1\ right up his tailpipe:•
Freckle ton: '"Garry yelled. 'I got him '.
T got him!' The tai l f\e 1\' off and a lot of
dC'bris y.·cnt past us on the starboard side.
The rest or the :'\11G just sort of v.·ent into
the ground 1n a long slide and exploded
on impact in a gout of orange name and
b!ack smoke. \Ve didn 't see any
parachute but he was only a fe1v hundred
feet up:•
\\~eigand : ''\Ye got him all right, but
Ace \\'as lhc nrst to spot hi m .•• .''
Still inger: ''Ace really did a super joh.
\Ve were all prelly happy about it. It 1-1•as
the first r-.11G for Garry. for Ace, for the
Coral Sea and for our squa dr on. And it
\\·as the first time 1ve had flO\\"n toge ther
against a ?lllG. \lie'd trained so long and
our training really paid off:'
Connally on World T1·ip
To Air Ecorwmic Issues
KEY Bl SCA YNE. F'la. (A Pi
Secretary of the Treasury J ohn B. Con-
nally \\'i ll leave Tuesday on a round-thc-
11·orld miss ion t" son1e 15 natioru for
Presiden1 Nixon lo di scuss "matters of
common concern" 11 nd economic issues.
the \Vhite !l ouse announced today.
The trip 1vill t11ke Conna lly to six Sou!h
American n<i!io11s. the Far Eas1. Sot1th
Asia and Europe.
But. Presidential Press Secret ary
Ronald L. Ziegler s:lid. Connally v.·ould
nol go to 1"\orth Vietnam as suggested
Sunday night by Democratic presidential
candidate. Sen. Hubert Humphrey, \.\·ho
proposed such a mission to discuss
release of prisoners of v.•ar.
"Thal is not the purpose of his
mission." said Ziegler. although the press
secretary said Connally \Yould be ready
to discuss any matters that the foreign
leaders "'anl to take Hp with him.
The month-long visit wi ll slart "·ith a
lilop in Venezuela.
Connally 1\·as fl~·ing to Key Biscayne to-
day for an afternoon conference 1vith
President Ni xon ::ind na tional secur ity ad-
\ 1sor llC'nry A. J\i~singC'r.
ln making lhc <111nou11rc111t'nt. Ziegler
said Co11nal!y 1-1·ot1ld rnett 1rl\h chiefs uf
st::t te and head s of govcr11n1e111 1rith the
einphasis on cco110Jnic issues. Bu1, he
said. the sec reta ry also 11·ould be in a
position to discuss '·del"e\opments in the
international field ," including Nixon 's re·
cent visits to f\.1oscow and Peking.
"The President feels tha t the ex-
changes which Secretary Connally will
hold with the leaders or the countries as
special representative are limely and v.·111
be of great \1alue," Ziegler added.
Nixon had hinted that ht> would ask
Connally io undertake special 1nissions
and ta sks for him \vhen it l\11S announct'd
last month th;:it the Texas De1nocrat \.\·as
resigning frorn the Trea sury post.
Ziegler said Connally \rou!d s~n<l .June
6-14 in Sout h Ameri ca. After Vene7.uel;1
he 1\•ill go to Coloinbia, Bra zil, Argenti11<1.
Bolivia and JJeru.
Details of the i1inerary after lhat 1-1:ill
be pro\·ided later. Zie gler sa id.
He would not say firn1ly th.1 t Con na lly
1\·ould go lo South \'ietnam. but on
response to questions, the press secretary
said it could be assumed that India and
Pakistan \.\'ould be among 1he coun!r ies
he y.•ould visit in Asia and he would not
rule out the possibility. of a stop in
Bangladesh. Connally is due back July I.
Kissinge r is departing Thursday e\'en-
ing for a June 9-12 visit to Japan .
The two emissaries \\'ill confer 'lrith
r\ixon, ll'ho is continuing a Flor ida st;iy,
de!':pile four days of r<1in since he arri1·rd
at hi:i1 Key Biscayne home t'riday. He 1s
to return to \.\'ashington Tuesday.
Although Connally has announced hi~
decis ion to resign from the Trr:1S l1: 1·
p.Jsf, he remai ns as SCCl'('!a ry unl1) h1.s
successor. c:eorgr P. Sc:hul1z. is con-
firmed by th e Senate.
Connally is considcrrd a possi ble vice
presidential running rn:'lle of Nixon in the
November election. Foreign missions on
behalf of the President 1routd hB\'e the
added effect of enhancing Connally·s
reputation and of keeping his name
before the public.
Postal Commission Seeks
$78.3 Million C11thacks
WASHINGTON ?AP ) -The Post<il
Rate Commis3ion today celled for a $i8.3
million reduction in postage rates pro--
pJEied by tlae U.S. Postal Servi'ce.
The decis.i>n, first or Its kind since the
Post Office: Department wns reorganized
In 1970, called for cutb&eks .in the Postnl
ServiCt's proposed rates ror parcel post,
• aifl}'lail letters, ordinary post cards and
items handled by second-class mail-users.
primarily magazine and nev.·spaper
publishers.
The com mW ion. acting unanimously,
overruled its chitf hearing examiner in
recommending th.at airmail fares be kept
at 11 eents an ounce Instead of the hear-ina: examiner's proposed 13 cents Md lhat
ord1nar)' Post cards carry only six cents
post.age Instead or the Posto! Ser\'lce's
requeated seven cents.
ll estimated the savln&ll alone on
ordinary post cards at US million.
The Postal Rntt! Comml!lsion let 1tand
the tempo r fl r y tl1tht·cents·per-ounce -
c:llar&e tor first-class mail.
The impact of the oommis1lon·pro~
pa1taJ ratts "''' not immediately tnoWn
beeall .. lbe Poatal 5ervl<11'1 boon! of
goY.rnors can overrule the Poetal Com·
mlmon by 1 unanimous vote to«t rites
1ti;1! Y:ould p<iy the c:osl of moving the
n1a1L
The Postal Ser1·ice proposed Its rat,
hikes in f cbruary 1971 fo\101-1·i ng the
reorgani zation or the okl Post orfice
Department. The commisaion considers
only postal hikes recommended to ii by
the Postal Service.
Many objected to the proposed rate
hikes. especially publishers or magazines
and newspapers who argued that lhl! pro--
posed Postal Sttvice ratel!I would :ievere-
ly cripple their industries.
For second-elast mall-users. I.he com·
mission urged the service to &irnplily its
('(Lmplex tale alructure 11nd recom-
mended that the propolled t.k<nt·pe<·
piece cost be rtduced lo 1.6 cents. l\'\'h
the 2one r11te spread for adverti!i ng
reduced from 11.8 cent s lo 9.9 cents
between Zones l and 2 and Zone 8.
For pGarel:l po.!lt It recommended there
be no increase and that the cof'!l remain
at 21 cents for the first pound and 10
cent& for each. additional pound . a on~
cent reduct.ion from tbt Po!lal Str\'ler:'i1
reoornmtnded Zkent and 11-eent.l!I rates.
'the commi.Mion also urged that th~
t1Jir4.d,us btllk m1il rates proposed by
tlli llOl'Vloe bo lmplementtd Immediately.
•
C11tti119 It Close
:\ 1\'orth \·ietn;1n1cse fis hi ng boat bru.s hes past thl' G.S.S. !\('\\'port
:\l e\\·s as the t ruiscr fi r('S its gun s at 'fhanh lloa , J'\orth \iietnan1. In
fo reground. C.t;. i\larine s 11·at r h the stnall eraft go by. The fisll1 11 i;
b.)a t. ,,·hic-h got in the 1ray of the ship as it \Vas making a Iiri 1J.g run
at the c:oast. \Vas not damaged. b ·
Niguel Bank Heist Suspect
Linked to Ol1io Burglary
By PATRICK BO,'LE or •he 0•!1">' l"i!OI SI•!!
'fight·lippf'd federal agents t oda~· con·
11nucd their in1·cstigation of -the spcc-
lacular Laguna i\ig ucl ban k burg lary
arnid spe culati on tl1at the :-.u~pc('! ar·
rested Friday n1a y bl' 11ed lo a ~unil;ir
ban k heis t in Ohio.
The suspcc!. C.'harll'S Alhert J\\ul!q.:an.
38. of Youngsto11·n, Ohio. v.·as schctluled
for arraignn1e11t this n1or111ng bl-lore a
U.S. n1ag islrate in Los Angeles iu con-
nection \Vith the Laguna Ni guel cri1ne llr
1s being held by F'BI agents 1n lieu 111
1100.000 bond. · '
A.Ji FFH spokesma n in Los Angele~
would say nothing about the case other
111an that the man wa s taken into custody
in Tustin after being trailed there front
Los Angeles. An unl!mploycd barber,
Mulligan arrived at Los Angek!s lntenw-
liona l Airport Friday (rom Chicago.
r~Bl agenti> in both Lo." Angeles and
CJ eveland refused · lo coniment on :in~·
possible connection hc!1reen !he f\.1a rch 25
burglary in L;:iguna Niguel in \rhich ;in
cstimatt'.d $2 million in c·ash, sccurilies
and 1c1vels were tnkcn, and a r-.·la.\/ 4
bu rglary in Lord sto1-1·n. Ohio. in which
$430.()00 cash 11·as tak <'n.
Lords1ov1n. a one-bank tov.•n sonle JS
1ni lC'S north of Youngsto11·n where
~lulligan Ji ves. is the site of a C..rnera!
~totors production plant.
According to Sgt. Joseph r-.111rphy of the
Trumbull County Sheriff's Departtnent.
1he Lordstown branch of the Se('()nd Na·
ti011aJ Bank of Warren was burglarized in
much the same manner as the La gun·1
Niguel Braocb of United California Bank.
In a telephone interview. Sgt. :~turphy
said the large amount of ca sh had been
brought lo the bank in preparation for
pAyroll c:heck r11shing folloY.:ing F'rida y's
p11}orlay' a! the G~1 p\<1 nt. Some time dur-
ing !he night. burglars cut through the
roof nf 1he bank int o a ut ility ;oom :id-
i:1rr·n t tu !he vaulL Tht>v then broke
'11irout!11 a conc:r~l t· w:ill. 11Sed a torch to
eu t !hr"u~h a h~lf inrh C!f steel plate and
f'n!rri:d the vaul1 .
Sgt. r-.1urphy :;a id !lie !h1cves connected
;i Juniper v.·ire to the interior ala rn1 and
spr;iycd foam on the bell or 1he outside
alarm. disablin g both systerns. He also
noted lhat in1·estigators found four sacks
of mud on the roof of the bu ilding !he
next day. indicating the burglars had
c:ome prepared with explosives to blast
their way into the vault if necessary.
Mud is usl'd to muffle the sound of an ex-
plosion, the sergeant explained.
Once inside the vault. the thie ves took
only the cash. leaving behind checks, food
stamps and a l<irgl! amount of coin. Sgt.
/.Jurpby said .
The FBI in Clevela nd on r-.1ay 26 ar-
rested a man in connection with the
Lord stown burglary. Agen t in charge
John Burnes identified him as Sidney
Leon::rrd Goldstein , 52, Canton, Ohio.
According to Burns. the .suspect
allegedly had gone to 14 differl'nt b:inks
in the Canton area (C anton is just to the
southl'.'t'St or Youn,'.!Sfrn\'ll l e:l'.ch:ingirig
small bills for $100 bills and saying he
needed the l::irger denominat ions for ;i
trip to Europe . Bums claims the seriAl
numbers of the small bill! mat ch those or
some of the cash tnkr.n in !he Lordst0\\11
burglary and !hat Goldstein allegedly ex-
changed some $120,000 in 11 ma I I
denamtnatiocs·ror $100 bills.
Burns rtfused to speculate wti;etJ'ler
there was any C<lnnechon bl!tween Gold· stein'~ arrdt and tbt arrest of ~tunigJn
e1'actly· one Week later.·
~t ulllgan is alleged to have played 'a
role in a weekend burghu;• in l,,.~una
Ni guel, which '-pollce ofticials hive
descr ibed as a "tltlsslon lmpouiblc" type
<if operation.
The bank. hidden behind a wall of
11ndsca~ing on busy P11clUc Coa•t
lll.r.:hway, serves residents ol Monarcll
Hay •od Niguel Terrace.1 two exc.lmive
communities where some home~ sell rar
1350.000. Many of !be resident s buy bonds
And invest in muritlu. Items commonly
1tored in safe deposit ij!)xes.
Some timt during the weekend or
Marolt 23-ll, thitv" blasted lhrouch the
roof of tbo blnk vault 111<1 rif.led -450
sa fe deposit bo-xe~. taking jewelry.
11c:.;01i11ble bond s ;ind securities and at
lea.~t $5-0.000 in cash.
l~st 1 ma!es of !he total loss h;ive rangrd
front $1 n1il!ion to SS n1ill ion and none of
the cont ents of the safe deposit boxrs 1vas
1ni11rf•d.
lnvest1Aa!ors noted that whOC\'t'I' c:om-
n1ittcd the burglary had extensi 1·e
k no1~·Jedge of alarm system eJectron JC'S
and l'Xpl osi ves and 11·as able tu
descriminatc bet 11·een negoriable and non·
negotiablt' secur it ies.
o rricials in Ohio said ~1u lhgan has 1111
arrest r~cord dating back to 1962. wh en
he pleaded guit y to l'harges stem ming
from a rash of burglaries of strip mines
nea r Youngstown. In addition. he served
ti1ne in Ohio Penitentiary afLer bc>ing
convicted in 1964 , of receiving stolen
goods in connection with the theft of
$3.000 in drugs anrt cash from •
Youn gsto\.\"n drug store .
That s;ime year . he was ac·quillcd by a
federal jury of robbing a bank . ·-' BE
$l o
t.1ondU, June 5 1CJ71. H r . 'Mis11se of Funds-'
OllLV rllOl •
~.
Employes Charg~
• Battin. Ill Suit
OrangP Count y's primary election cant·
pa1gn \Vas enlivl'ned over the weekend by
chHrgt'S lh.a t rir~l District Supervi,•or
ltollt•rt \\'. Ba\1111 l1ad u:-.fd 3 list of C:OU,\·
1~ t•111ploycs and their uddres!lts prcr
tllh'cd by the tvuntr s IJat:• Strl'tt·cs
ll.-Jh'•rtlllt'llt 3L ("0Ull1~ c:XIH'nse.
Ual!111 all t.'J:e<tl:-o u'rd t11f' 11,1 111 1na1! ;i.
lt•ll('r lu f·nip lO}t'S 1n rt·pl~ lo .iu ()1uugr
l"••un!~ E111pl11.1cs 1\,~ 11·iatu111 l)ulle1in
1n<11ll'd l:l't 11<·t·k 111 ~(loo \1u1 \..t'rs 111 llh·
First l>1str1c1 urging thcn1{I\101r N:;n111.;1
tht• 1nrurnben1 :-ur>cr1·1~.11 tn Tue,d:t} 's
prin1ar~
1'hc 6.fKlo-1nf'n1ber LX..."I·:.\ phtnnf'd lt1
file a t·lass action :o.u1t 111 Su1>erLl)r <.:11urt
today ag~inst Batt in to rcC Ol"er the i.:osl
of pr ov1din& the-h~t of nolll\f!~
Last Ru11so111
Mo1iPy Fo11,1i<l
111 Desert
HI-:\:\), \t'\ \I'. '.'>t•.11 i·hCI'' 11;11 I'
r11u11d th1• ~11;111111() ti.11:1111·(' pj a ~2uo 1"i.l11
ran'((\!11 J:llf'11 :t11 a1rhnr hq;u·I..• r 1111<1
p;iraC'hutcd 111h1 :t d<'~1·rt :tr1•,1 :iltt'! 1'1jl-
lecting 1hr n1•H1f'.1
\'ctn F. J.oetlf'rlt' uf l h1' I.as \.'!'ga..; FBI
offict' :<<ud Sunda.\" n1~h1 rhe 11'n111•\ 11 ;1c:.
found ~la shed 111 sagebrush 111 a r('r11111r
area 2ll rnLle-: sou1h of hl'rf' n<'ar \\'a.;h,,1·
Lake .
The 01her $40.000 \Vas lefl 1111 tht> l,111\t'd
Air Lrnes 727 Jel when the hij:lcker
pa ra chu!C'd -apparent!}' beC'..:iuse thl're-
wa~ no roo m lo slu1v all S200.000 into hi,o;
b<il'kpoil'I-.
Robb J) l!C':ith ~~ 11,i., .1 1·r1·~1vil S.i1 111
dt1 ~· '111d c:Ji:1rgrd \1 !1h lhl' r rid Ry 1111!11!
hi jacking ol \f1\L f11gh! 2:1'."I. 11 J11cti
orig1n:ited 111 ,\:r11 1·(11'!.. ;1 nd 11•:1:-ht"adi·d
for San Fra 1u·1..;e11 The \'1 r1n a1n 1 r 11•r';ll1
"'aS ta ken 111111 c·u·to>{I\ :l f('\\ n1il<'~ ln,i-1 1~here the 1111u1c1 11:1~· !:1 trr rrc·1J1·1·1c<l \
se arch lur 1111· /ll(•t1r1 lif'g;i11 11111nl·d1.1tl·h
after lle;,itl~"s arrc .. t
Aller 1\·alkiug abi1arc! the a11·h11c1 al rhe
;11r port herl'. tht' h1.1:11,:~1•1· -his tat't'
masked b) a p1llo11 slip -It-! rhe
passenj:ers lea1 r but ht.'ld the p1!,11. t·u·
pilot and lhrl't' st1·\.\'iU"<l esst'S a! b'\I P1po1111
for lhe $200.000 ranson1. \\'ilh 1h1' mooc1·
del ivered, lhe airliner took ot'f on ordrr~..;
from the gunman \\·ho par;iehut ed lrom 1t
a few miles from the airport
lletidy, a student at Western .'it'vada
Co mmunity College near here since his
return from military service in Vietnan).
was arrnigned Salurdoy on federal air
piracy charges and w1s beinA held in
Washoe Ctiunt y J;iil in lieu nf $100.000
bo nd.
The suprrvlsti1 .. ~ ufr1l·~ said today that
he plans to rc1111burse th!! cou nty for lhf
t sliniat&J $JO l'ost uf tlw. lapcs.
ocr;A t!Cllt'l'<J! ltl3/l:lj.lCI" John Sawyer
S<Ud t.bl• a~suc1a1Lon will <1lso requel!lt •
granri JUt) u11l·st1t;•H1u11 of tht' use of l~
t_n1µlo.v~·s ;1ddfl'~S ii.,\ T "'O or Battin 's
upp1)1\Cllls , .Jolin \\ lllll ' 11 111 and \\'ally
l l;l\l~ h.11c• :.il -u l.1ll1·d fur a i:rand JUry
Jill f''ll~.l!JUll tll th,· 111l·1<l1•n1
S.11"'}•'' 1'°!11<1 1.11J;1 ~ th.11 U1t associa·
l1tJn ·., 1l1rt>t'lors 111·11· ll ;11t1n ~ a1·11on a~ a
llll~U,t' of COUJI!~ j.lt"Ojli'l'!I illlfl an 1llt'gal
C'>:Jk·JldJ!urr of public tuud.;
Othcr111se. pohl 1eal l';unpc11gn~ in th,.
1 ounty tn the lasr 1~'t't'kt·nd IK·111rr 111~
1•!1..•t•t1 un l\'Ue largely routint-v.1th a ra~ll
nf l<'lst 111Jnute adverti se1ne nt~ .:ind l'IO:.rn
dt1Vr Tlll'etings I\ 1th supp1;rler:i1 b1 !he
vanou~ t::11Klidafl'S.
lll•g1strar of Vo1er.oi lla\'1d i11tchcoc:k
s:urt 1od:iy that everyth ing JS in readines~
l\JI" <·vunt1 ng lhe 1·u11nr y:; la rgest elcct io11
111 his tory, fron1 the stundpoint of lh~
111anl)('r Of fl!ll,JS ten.'t.I voter~ and
µrt•t·111ll~ Thcl't' ::in· HU l.000 potent1oil
111l1•rs e"1npnrcLI t•i til:!.000 111 the l!J7jJ
;.:<'ll1'1.d t•li::<·tion ;11nl I til!I ptl'l'l11CIS l"Olll•
l';tt •·ii 1i1 t ,UiO.
l '1 1ll~ II di be LJpt'll !hrOUAhu11\ !he t:OUlf•
11 !r'ull~ 7 a .nl. tu 8 p tll., /ltlt·heock li.aLd.
11,· pr1·11i~ts .1 vol1· ul 4~:1,000 01\ti7 percent
ul lht1~1· l"t'SLSlt'l'l't!
I lt' ho1>es lhl' b;ilh\I • OUlll II 111 be t'Ulll·
pl1·l 1·<! l)y 9 a 111 \\ cth 11·stlay morni n~
11h11·h v.u11ld Ix-a 11e11· rerol'd The unof.
t11·1aJ r:illy \\'.'.ls 1·01111lll"trd at 9· HJ • 111.
'\u\'eniber, 19i0
ll11t•hcoc k s;:11d llt\\' 1·on1put e.r equip·
rnt'nt should spet•d up the process and ..
01·erco111e the larJ:t'r nu1nbtr or voters
and rrt"C1n tls.
1\la1or interest 111 ll1t' t·ounly ha' been
centered on 11vo hotly·Ct>ntested ra~ ror .. ,
tht• First and Third district supervisorial,.1
"·:its l'lnd the hnttlr a1non~ Orange Coun<(.,•
11· :i~scssor Andn•1v .J llinshaw, school .
!ru~iee Earl l.':t1-r111\ay, hanker Larry ,
llcr111:i and Hl!'t1111h€·n1 Ht·p John G . .,.
Sc·hr111 tz for the Re µubl1rnn nonunation JD .•
thr newly a l1~11cd Jflth l'ongrcssion•l
IJ1:-:1r1cL
f ,i ·ve • Protest Lii.
OF.RKELf;y ~U PI f -Ues1de a "Stri p .
for Peace" sign. about la personll held a. -
nu de -in at the newl y fiberated "Peopli>'a •
!'ark '' near the Universi ty of California .•
A c:rowd or ~ pushed and lhoved Sun-
day to get • pttk at the undraltd -•
mostly men from lht Sexual Freedom
Lea1ue ahd Aphrodite Love Church. ·
Three Berkeley policemen f!lbowett 1
throoWh tht crowd and said only fiv~
111 irute.s of 1 fJu~jty_ 1vould bf!-allowed.
01--
~~
I
$1)
54 FASHION ISLAND
NEWl'ORT C.ENTER • 644-4223
UM Y•ut N-.r a..,. e ._.._..._
e H ... lillftC ....
I
•
•
• -
'
•
-
<f Olll V PILOT Mond11. Junt !> l~i"'I
No C:omnaenLAlgeria
U.S. Sees Return
Of Hijack Cash
ALGIERS (UPI) -The United States
beolleves Algerian officials wlll return the
$500,000 given in rAnsom to a pot·smo~in~
Black Panther and his blonde girlfriend
who hijacked a jet from San Francisco,
an American diplomat said Sunday.
Algerian orriclals today refused to com·
ment on the statement of Yi'ilham
Eagleton, chief of the U S. interesls S~·
l ion of the Swiu emba!l:i1y, who is
negotiating for return o( the n1oney and
the hi jackers.
The hijackers >A'Crt identified as
William Holder, 22, San Diego, a Vietnam
veteran and a member of the Black
Panther Party, and Katherine May
Kerkow, 21 , of the same address as
Holder. They were taken away for ques·
lionlng by Algerian authorities as soon as
they landed Saturday.
Algerian government officials said they
were ''thoroughly investigating'' ~lolder 's '
request for political asylum but offered
no other indication as to 1he hijackers'
fate.
Eag1eton said the United States had
asked for return of the money, and "'ol.'C
assume they Y:ill return the money ."
The hijackers commandeered a
Western Airlines Boeing 7Tl in the air
over Washington state Friday night and
demanded the ransom plus a longer·
range Boeing 720 to take them to Algiers.
Hall the passengers were released when
the hijacken changed planes in San
Francisco and tbe rest got oft at a refuel·
ing stop lo New York.
11le plane returned to Los Angeles Sun·
day night.
Al a news conference, a weary Capt.
Laird Claims
Huge Russian
W eaponsLead
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird testified today
the Soviet Unk>n had "far out.stripped"
the United State! in numbers or nuclear
weapons and served noti~ l h e
Admlnistration would proceed with crash
programs to develop new submarines and
bombers for the 1980s.
Laird told a Senate appropriations sub-
committee t h a t the Strategic A r m s
Limitations Talks (SALT) would lead to
an overall reduction in defense spendlng
during the next few years by eliminating
IO planned installations for the Safeguard
antiballlstic missile (ABM ) system.
But he said the admjnlstration was still
1n need of full fund ing for other strategic
programs in the offensive area.
Despite t h e SALT a.greement, L~ird
testified the Soviet Union has acquired
such ~mentum in weapons production
since its buildup began in 196.'i "that the
Soviet Union has far out!tripped the
United States in tenns of numbers of
weapons both offensive and defensive."
The Moscow control agreement "puts
i;ome brakes on the momentum" by
freezing numbers of certain offensive
weapons for the nei:t five years. he said.
"lt is eMolutely essential during this
period that lhe United States be in a posi·
tion that it can go forward with new
weapons programs." Laird said, "and
that the United States not take unilateral
ection'' to halt tmprovement.9 and
replacements of its offensive weapons.
Laird singled out $1.5 billion requested
for the next fiscal year to develop -on
an ae<:elerated basis -t/1e Tridt•nt
mi.'\si le·firinJll' submarine nnd t h e
.su!){'rsonic Bl bomber.
~le said the SALT RRreen1ent v•ould
lead to no r<'ductions in those progran1,c;,
noting th<il neither of these weapons
would be r('ady for use until after the
fiv~year offensive agreement expires.
The SALT agreement limits both sides
to t'ol.'O AR~'! installations. Laird said the
United States "'·oo\d complete its
Safeguard site at Grand Forks, N.D.,
where 90 percent cf the work is wxler
contract. He did not indicate whether the
administration would pr cc e e d im·
mediately to deploy the 5eCOnd permitted
site -to protect W;ishington, D.C.
William Newell sajd the hijackers were
"cautious but r.asily agitated." ~Y
.. methoc:hcally planned everything. They
.,11rote all their demands down," he said.
During thf night, lhe two hijackers
!'imoktd at least six marijuana cigarel!e11
and "the smell completely lll lt d the
<:a bin area." said n ight officer Dick
Luker. The hijackers rejected the crew'll
efforts lo have t.hem return the money,
:>aying it was "goi ng to a good cau!e to
help n1any people ," said Ne'ol.·ell, of San
f\1ateo. Calif.
ffe said that duri11g the 7,4<H·m1le fhght,
11older talked about his dishonorable
discharge from 1he Army and his:
dissatisfaclton with it, his arrest on a
marijuana possession charge and his
v•1fe 's leaving him.
Ne"·e!l. 48, said he knew of no demand
lo frre Angela Davis, the black Com·
mun ist "'ho was found innocent of
murder, kidnap and conspiracy charges
two days after the hijacking. The . chief
of security al Seattle-Tacoma Airport
said Saturday the hijacker demanded
i\1iss f)avis' freedom as pa rt of his
ransom package.
In San Diego. Edward .,~ord. manag£'r
of a 12-apartment complex, said llolder
and Miss Kerkow had been living
together in his building for several
weeks He described her as a n
oceanography student.
Other members of the crew were co-
pilot Donald Thompson. 47, Capt Walter
"Bud" Bro'ol.TI, 57, of Seattle and route
chief Ira MacMiiian, 55.
They said Holder was calT)'ing a black
case with cables, which he said contained
a bomb. Algerlao authorities said the
briefcase only contained two books and
some toilet articles.
Thompson said the hijackers told him
the $500 000 ransom money paid by
Western Airlines would "be used for a big
cause and would help a Jot or people."
All the crew members deseribed the hi-
jackers as generally cou'.teous: but
Newell said Holder was easily agitated,
especially by delays.
The \\>'estern Airlines jetliner carrying
the crev.·men arrived here late Sunday
after stopping in New York earlier on the
way back from Algiers .
1l'eigl1111 CampaifJH
Kathy I,. 'f'.1cl'hcsncy puts the
finishing touches on her can1-
paign lo ga in v.•ei ght as ~he
do\vns lasagna and other high
caloric roods. A graduate of
\Vashington State University,
Kathy passed all the written
and oral exams for a police·
woman's job. but she was un·
derweighl She was given a
month to add the necessary
three pounds to make the 98·
po u n d m inimum. She suc·
ceeded after force feeding for
three weeks.
.0.: .t;&
V~I Ttl9"1c119
North lrela1id Dra1na
A British officer aids a man hit during a confronta-
tion betv.1een troops and about 50 youths \•i ho at·
tacked them \•:ith stones and bottles. A \\'Oman
kneels to pray at Jeft. The attack came as about
1.000 Catholtcs sta ged a m ainly peaceful march to
protest internn1cnt \vithaut trial of suspected IRA
members.
Sons of Mobster
Leader Colornbo
Gu11men Targets
NE\V YORK (UPT) -Shots were firrd
today at the eldest two sons of ailing
underv.·orld leader Joseph A. Colombo Sr.
as they drove up to their father's house.
There \.\'ere no injuries, police said.
Police said an unknown person fired
several shots at Anthony, 27. and Joseph
Jr .. 25, at 1:15 a.m .. hitting the right
front door window of Anthony's car.
There were two other persons v.•ith the
Colombos when the incident occurred.
The rour. returning from an Jtalia~
American Civil Rights League rally 1n
Madison Square Garden, had just parked
their car in front of their father's home
in the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn.
A foreign made revolver o~ un·
determined caliber was recovered in the
street by police.
Anthony Colombo, the oldest or Joseph
Colombo's four sons, is a vice president
of the civil rights league. Anthony was
with his rather when the elder Colombo
was shot and seriously wounded at a
league rally Jast year. .
Joseph Colombo has been recuperating
ever since from wounds received in the
attack by Jerome Johnson, 24. Johnson
was shot to death shortly after \vounding
the elder Colombo.
Today's shooting was the latest inc.id~nl
in a resurgence of underworld acllv1ly,
touched off. according to some
authorities, by the shooting of Joseph
Colombo. and the killing April 7 of Joseph
•·crazy Joe" Gallo.
According to officials. many members
of the Colombo family, considered one of
the most po"·erful in t.he city, blamed
Gallo for the Unity Day rally incident
GaUo was believed killed by mobsters
associated with the Colombo family at
Umberto's Clamhouse in lower r.Ianha t·
tan as he celebrated his 43rd birthday,
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivtry of the Dally Pil ot
~s guaranteed
Mondey-F'rkl•V ' H VOii do not "•v~ VOii• pe~r oy S:~ P.m . c•ll ~rn:I vou• cmiy "''II
l>t DrOU9111 to yov, C•U1 1r1 "-~n unhl
7;30 p.m.
Seturdey •nd $11nday: II you !lo not tKflv•
yovr copy by f n.rn, Seturlley. or I • m.
.!O\lf\dey, c•ll eroll 1 <011v wm ti. brov;M to
rou. c1n1 ••• l•~•n unrir 10 1.rn..
Telephoo!s
Mo,1 Onrioe Counry Ar111 ........ '4l-4n1
NCH11'1-I Hunfl"IJ!Oll !>Hell
1no:r Wntrn1Mt1r ....... . ....... S40-1nt
S.n Clomtni., C.1>l1U1no Buch.
Sin J~t'I CaPlll••no. °'"' Polnl,
.S0...111 L11111t11, L'11un1 Nlow.1 ... ff1-4(2t
6 l{illed n1 Red Rocket
Attacl{ 011 Phnom Penh '
From Wire Services
PlINOM PENlf -Communist guer-
rillas marked the apparent victory or
Marshal Lon Nol in Cambodia's first
presidential election with a rocket end ri·
fie attack on the capital today in which at
least six persons were kil!ed , three of
them children.
One l22mm rocket hit the ~1inistry of
Defense building, killing an undetermined
number of others. and a round of
recoilless r ine fire hit a children·s
playground abou t 70 yards from Lon
Nol's home. Another rocket exploded
harmlessly. One scored a direct hit on
the third floor of the defense ministry.
while the other tore apart a tree on the
far :i;ide of an iron fence in front of the
ministry. 'The blast shattered nearby win-
dows.
Terrified workers, many or them
women soldiers, fled from the buildir.g.
One man with blood streaming f-rom
gashes in his face and scalp was rushed
to ia hospital on a motorcycle.
One soldier displayed a jagged fra g-
ment of the missile. which was
recogni1.able as a Soviet 122mm rocket.
The Defense Ministry has been the
target of repeated night rocket attacks in
the past. but the missiles have landed
eit her in the railyards across the street
or in a densely packed slum area to the
south"·est, causing: a number of civilian
casualties.
'fhc.> attack r'ame ~s ballots \\'ere being
counted frorn Cambodia's first presiden·
tial election. Incomplete u no ff i c i a I
returns fron1 the voting Sunday gave
J\1arshal Lon Nol a smaller portion of the
vote than had been predicted and a
surprisingly large vote "'as going to a
dark horse who campaigned for the
return of the former chief of state,
Prince Norodom Sihanouk.
Broadcasting partial results from
Phnom Penh a nd eight provinces, the na·
tional radio said Lon Nol had received
332.21 4 votes, or 51.17 percent ot the
ballots counted so Jar_ A majority is
needed to v.·in, but the · government
newspaper had predicted the marshal
would get flO percent. This is Cambodia's
firs t presidential election.
Lon Nol's principal rival. former Na-
tiona l Assembly president In Tam, got
181 ,326 votes. or 27 .92 percent of the vote,
the radio said.
Secret Army Quiz
Second Viet Massacre
Near My Lai Reported
NE\V YORK (AP) - A secret Army
r eport nn the My Lai massacre says that
a second massacre took place letis than
l'A'O miles awa y on the same morning and
invQlvrd lh<' kill ing o( as n1any as 90
civilians. TI1c New York Ti1ne s said to-
day.
The Times said the so-<:al!ed "Peers
Report" concluded thal troops from
Bravo Company-a sister unit of Charl1<'
Company which was involved in My Lai
-entered the hamlet of My Khe 4 on
J\.1arch 16, 1968, and began shooting in-
discriminately at civilians.
The report is named after Lt. Gen.
William R. Peers, who headed the
Anny's four-month inquiry into My Lai.
The Times said a complete copy or the
still--classified document had been made
available to it.
Pulitzer Prize for first reporting the My
Lai slayings. The Times itself won a 1971
Pulitzer for its publication of the secret'
documcn!s on thr origins or the war
kno"'n as the Pentagon Papers.
r\u details about 11 second massacre
\\·err gi ven v.·hen the Peers panel publicly
ann11unc('d some of Jts findings on March
17. 1970. Peers told a news conference at
the lime that he had "oo knowledge" or
any incidents similar to My Lai.
The Times quoted the Peers report as
saying that although most memberis ol
Bravo Company refused to testify or
disclaimed recollection of details about
the assault at J\.1y Khe 4. "both testimony
and circumstantial evidence strongly sug.
cested that a large nwnber or non-
<'Ombatan~ were killed during the search
of the hamlet."
$15 Billion
Debt Hike
Requested
WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The od-
ministralion asked Congress today 10
raise the na.tional debt limit $15 bill ion -
to $465 billion -to meet a t·ontinu111i.:
QOYenunent deficit
The House Ways and ~leans Commilttt'
called hearings to consider the requ('sl.
)ts list of wit n<'sses included forn1f'r
Treasury Secretary John B, Connally and
Charles E. \\talker, the acting trensury
ieeretary.
Earlier this year. Congress raised the
debt limit from $430 bi llion to $450 billion,
IN SHORT ••• I
making the increase errective only
through June 30. At the time, the ad·
ministration requested a ceiling o{ $480
billion effective through June 30, 1973.
e Aide Take• Over
f\.fONTGOf\.tERY, Ala. fAP) -Lt. Gov.
Jere Beasley, his differences "'ith Gov.
George C. Wallace pushed into the
background. took control of the Alabama
governmt11t today and said he would
report to work although it is a state holi·
day. 1
Beasley, 35, bf came acting governor
under the state constitution, which pro-
vides for the lieutenant governor to step
up when the goYernor has been out of
state for 20 consecutive days.
WaUati! was shot May 15 in Laurel.
Md ., while campaigining for , the
Democratic nomination for the preiden·
cy. Since then he has been recuperating
in Hol y Cross Hospital In Silver Spring,
Md. The 21st day of his absence began at
12:01 a .m. today .
e Cha.,e: Ends f'11sl
PllOENIX (AP) -r~arm labor leader
Cesar Chavez has ended a 24--day protest
fa st and attended a service ror the late
Sfn. Robert F. Kennedv of Ne"' York. ~fexican-American f3rm workers from
throughout Arizona joined Chavez in
paying homage Sunday to Kennedy, 'A'ho
was assassinated in Los Angeles fou r
years ego on the nigh t of his victory in
the 1968 California Democratic presiden.
tial primary.
Chavez, chief of the United Farm
Workers, started his fast last month to
protest a new state law whi~h forbids
farm strikes at harvest time and secon·
dary boycotts.
e .Jet Ace Killed
\\rASlllNGTON (A P) -A member or
the Air Force's precision nying team, the
Thunderbirds, has died in a fiery crash
"-'hile performing for tens of thousands on
the last day of the Transpo '72 exhibition.
1he crash Sunday was the third fatal
a ccident to mar the huge exhibit of ai r
and ground transport systems at Dulles
International Airport in the Virginia
countryside outside Washington.
The pilot was identified as f\faj . Jot
Howard, 32, of Ahoskie. N.C .. a veteran
of 322 combat missions in Southeast Asia
including 69 over North Vietnam. He held
the Silver Star and the Distinguished
Flying Cross.
Visit by Nixon
To Ireland Seen
DUBLIN, Ireland <AP ) -An Irish·
American industria list says President
Nixon has accepted an invitation to vaca.
lion in the Irish Republ ic this fall , but
.Florida While House spokesmen say they
know nothing of such e trip.
J ohn A. Mulcahy, host of the President
a nd Mrs. Nixon during a trip to Ireland
two years ago, said Sunday the Nixon:'!
would return to Ireland for two weeks in
September, after the Republican National
Convention.
Mulcahy b president of Quigley Co .•
Inc., a division of the Pfizer Chemical
Corp. of New York.
Most of U.S. Fair, Dry
Jt was the newspaper's second story
based on the report. On Sunday the
Times dlscle>!ed that the report accused
two generals of m?r~ th~n 40 acts . of
misconduct or om.t.ss1on 1n connection
with the first field investigation of the
atrocity. .
Royal Funeral
Hiuitiug ton, W. JI a., Soaked by lncli of Rain
Temperature•
Hlfll LI"' ,.rte. n 60 11 ., .. :: f '-" 11 ,J a r. II ' ·" H ~ ...
ll ., r: ·" H ~ ..
I II ,U
i -" ·" ... ...
ff I ...
·" ,,
(; ... , .......
·.a.-f -......-1111 """'*"'~"'! ~ eff iW I !Ml'! IMll .. 1 .... (11 * lltW IWWlftf ... lrnv. hi>! -!fief hi
•
.. ..
HAllOMAt WIAlMll W:t'll(f r0t1C.Ul I• 7.t.M ISi • -6 -11
l011 ,
OAl ... A• •
\ \ \ ........ ' ......... ,.,,..,);ii"'-
............ llOINO----., ......... ~ . .........
........ ,OtOCAil.
~....,..Ill '""'l:flOW
..
of the nt!IOl'I IOCll\I, tc1lr.rtd 111owtrt
1nd tl'l~r1torm1 _,.. reparltd In
rn111y 1r111.
Tl'lto 1tvm1 _. •-It'll ln •e•f·
19.W loullonl lrorn 1111 LrP-
M IN l111.,i V1lley' t• Tiii Roc:•lei, from
N..., E1111llN to fhl \ltr1lnl11 I nd 111
p1rt1 ol rlll $GUthwftt.
T'*'Ofl rtlnllft from 1111 '1orrnt WM
l!oht lt'I '""'' 1re1t. Hvnlfnoton, w. v1.,
,--Itel 11rMtt 111 lntn ol r1!11 In I lf1t~r -1«1. Thi r"t of llM 111tlon w11 ctrv.
Elf,., tnOrrtlnt l"°""r1lur11 rlntld
1'n1t1'1 «I ,,.., ... 11 Tr-r11 Cll'r 11'd
'•Ut!Of'I., MICfl., lo U fMrMI 11 tty~ C1llf.
Coaat•I Weather
,1rfly 111MY llld1y. Ll!Jhl Vl •ll ...
Wlt'lch nlOht •lld l)'IOrfll.,. hour• Mcom-
1.,. _,twly I 11 1• kl!Olt lt'I llhlr-
IOCllY llld Twld1y. Hloll lolll)I Ill _, ...
(OIJlll """""'Tlll,lret TlflOt ft0m ..,
to 70. lnl1nd ttm9e•1tur111 r1noe lron1
fJ lo 11, Wlllf hlmpet1tvr1 "-
Sun, M-n. Tides -... h<'Ofld flltitl • . . . . . SIU •• rn.. 4.1 SIC:ond 1ow ., ,., •• ll:J1p.m. l..t
TUbDAY
P'lnt llfflt ..... , .. ,. , .. l:JI 1.rn.. a.•
P'lnt low , ............ 111111,m. I.I hnind lllOh ........... t : .. ,,,.,. I.I
ltiCond low ............ 11:"1 t ,m. I.I
11111 II-S:41 t .ffl. Slh I :"''""
MOOll l lMI IJ.11 1.11\. llh ll:#o.m.
Both stories appeared under the byline
of Seymour Hersh. who won a 1970
Wicks_
Queen Mour11s Duke of Windsor
WINDSOR. England (Al'l -Britain's
royal family mourned the Duke of
Wind!Or today at a funeral service in
Windsor Castle, with Queen Elizabeth Il
sitting ne1t to his duchess, the woman for
whom lie gave up the Br!Ush throne.
The H:rvtce for the fOrmtr King
Edwenl vm under>COl'<d the fln11 ,..,.,.,..
ciliation in the royal family cttitroversy
over the king's decision to abdicate to
wed an Amerlc1n divorcee •
About 100 offldlll1 Ind 11 m 11 Y
moumen joined the roy1l porty ., St.
G<orge'1 Chapel on the gmmda of
Wlnd!OI" CMlle. The much married
Henry Vlll and other Brlllsh monarchl
are burled In the chapel.
Among leading olflctala at t h e
cere:mony were Prime Minister F4ward
Heath, oppos!Uon Jead~r Harold Wltl()n,
and the Earl ~f :Avon, who 11 Al)thony Eden was forelg .secretary at the Ume
of the abdicatkln
Two hundl'M t r guests were .ttated
ln~he ve iii chapel. Altendance was by viiitfon only.
e queen .. 1 racing the c1t1llllque
•he the coffin l•y undor the duke's
'-'
personal standard and • sheaf ol white
lilies.
At her left sat the duchess, now 75, •
slender figure dressed in black, veiled
and composed.
'I11e queen herself had been In-
strumental In bringing about lhe royal
family's reconciliation with the duke and
duchea, who lived In voluntary txUe •inc• lhe abdl<atlon. 'Ille queen vlslltd
her llllCle, lhe duke, In Paris shoi1ly
before h11 death. She Invited the duchesa
to my ot Buckingham Palace !or the
first time In lhe doy1 preceding the
funeral.
Al lhe lefl ol the duche!s •at the
queen·s husbond. Prince Philip, t he D
King Ol~f or Norway attendlng as a mem·
her of the royal fAmUy, Queen Mcthtr
Elizabeth. the queen's d1ugh1er Prince,.
Anne, the queen's sister Prmctu
Margaret and Margaret's bw:b&od Lord
Snowdon, tho Duchess ol GloudloaW, tht
Duchcs1 of Kent and Princess AleUDljr1.
· Prlnoe Charles, the heir to the lllr"!><f
royal dUkes and other male mtmberi o
the royal lamlly sat ....,.., lhe cat ..
f31que.
)
17
•
17
-·
Orange ~ast
voi.:. 65, NO. '157, l SECTIONS , 32 PAGES ORANGE· COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1972 N TEN CENTS
Coastal Coalition to Fight Proposed Freeway
Representatives from eight coastal
corr.m unities, from Long Beach to San
Juan Capistrano, will meet next Saturday
lo form a "coastal communities coali·
tion" to fight the proposed Pacific Coast
Freeway.
City councilmen from all incorporated
cit~s along the Orange County coast are
expected to attend the gathering, to be at
the home of Newport Beach councilman
and freeway fighter John Store in Corona
Highlands.
Store said this morning the meeting is
LEGEND
*EXISTING BIKE TRAILS
•UNDER CONSTRUCTION ~
~
spon50red by the Freeway Fighters
Citizens Coordinating Comm.l.ttee. The
meeting "ls by invitation only" and will
not be open to the press and public, Store
said.
Wally Cox, chairman of the CCC could
not be reached for comment on the
meeting this morning.
Store declined to identify those \\·ho
have been illvited.
"Some might feel that to have thelr
names bandied about in the paper before
organizing would be a difficulty," he said.
> •
i !!
'!.<
But he said that councllmen and Other
residents from Long Beach, Seal Beach,
Huntington Beach, Newport Beach,
Laguna Beach and Sall JQan Capistrano
will attend.
In addition there will be representation
from the unincorporated communities or
Dana Point and Laguna Niguel, Store
said.
Store and Newport Beach Vice i tayor
Hw •ard Rogers will represent Newport
Beach at the meeting.
PROPOSAL FOR ELABORATE NETWORK OF BICYCLE TRAILS GOES BEFORE NEWPORT VOTERS
50-mllt Biko Routos Wlll Enoblo Cyclists lo P odol Thr0U9hovt City ond l9noro Automobllos
Deadline Nears;
Still Only One
Scl1ool Hopeful
With the dead1ine four days away, only
one candidate has filed so far for o
special August election to fill two vacan-
cies on the Newport-Mesa school board.
The empty seats ~·ere left by the
retirement or longtime trustee Donald
Strauss in Area Five and the recent al>"
polntment of Area Six Tru stee Selim
"Bud·' Franklin lo the municipal court
beni:h.
1'tichael J. Ashe, 106 Via Xanthe,
Newport Beach, a manager of. educa-
tional systems, is the only candid~te so
far in Strauss' district. No candidates
have filed in Franklin's area.
Robert Sangster, a Newport Beach at-
torney, has taken out pape rs for the sixth
district post but according to the Ora~e
('.ounty Clerk's office, be has not yet filed
for the election.
Superintendent or Schools John Nicoll
has already voiced some concern t I 1t the
Tuelliay primary electioM h a ~ e
overshadowed the lpecial school election
filing date.
••A board member probably will put in
five or lix hours a week on the average
but at certain times the load will be
heavier -such as during budget con-
&lderatkml," Nicoll said. . Franklin'• diatrlct basically takes 1n
the area along 'coos\ High ... ay lo 21st
Street and Newport Boulevard to Dover
I>rive. • Diltrlct ffve, Stn.un' area, takes in all
the -'""' tbe senta Ana Rlver to the Newport Beach je\ly, south of Coast
Hlgbway. 'lblJ in01ude1 tbe Balboa
Ptnllllula,lJdo Island ond Balboa Island.
Newport Voters Decide
Fate of Bicycle System
Voters in Newport Beach Tuesday wHI
decide whether or not to ra ise the money
to pay for the most elaborate system of
bicycle trails ever to be established in
Orange County. ,
Some $600,000 of the proposed $8.9
million bond issue on the ballot will be
eannarked for property acquisition and
construction of a 50-mile network or trails
that will enable bike ri ders to get
virtually anywhere in the city they want
with minimal contact with automobile
traffic.
About 15 miles of the total will be for
actual off.the-road bikeways, exclusively
set aside for two wheelers, explains
Calvin T. Stewart, director of Parks,
Beaches and Recreation.
The remainder will be created off to
the side of the tfavel lanes of existing
and proposed roadways.
The proposed l>ike trail network , which
eventually will tie in with a massive
system of bike ways throughout Orange
County, was adopted by NeWport Beac h
back in 19'!6, Stewart aald.
"But before It could ever get im·
plemented," he explained, "the nwnber
of bicyclists and the auto traffic grew so
much that the flflt master plan was out·
dated," be nld. .
He explained that the reviled system,
which, when adopted by councilmen, will
be an amendment to the master plan,
was devised by many long hours of work
by the Citizens Bicycle Trails Committee.
Councibnen have yet to fonnally act on
the amendment, but have indicated they
will do so upon formal recommendation
by the PBR commission.
Stewart said the need for a bicycle
trails system is obvious.
He pointed out that there are today
more than 11,000 bicycles registered in
Newport Beach alone. and stressed there
are many others that aren't registered
with the police department.
Stewart stressed that the prime ad~
vantage of a complete bicycle trail
system is the safety it will provide for
the ever-increasing number of petsons
who ride bikes for recreation.
"We hope this polltt will be taken into
consideration by voters," be ta.id.
stewart said the $800,000 figure was
established on the basil of recom-
me ndations from the bicycle trails panel,
whi ch initially had asked councilmen to
appropria te $75,000 a year for the next 10
years to get the bikewaya.
He explained that actual off-the-road
construction will take place in various
areas of the city, along Jamboree Road,
Ford Road and San Joaquin Hliio Rood,
as well u in new subdivisklns whose
(See BIKl!!J, ftp Z)
'Down' fJf $J3 Billion
Newport Beach Mayor Donald A. Mcin-
nis said this morning he is aware of the
gathering but will not attend. He will be
at another meeting.
"I endorse what they are trying to do,''
Mclnnls said, explaining that the purpose
of tbe gathering is "to get everybody in
the coastal corridor to come together to
hopefully agree to the deletion of the en-
tire freeway from Uing Beactt to San
Diego."
"If they can get all or most of the com-
mWlities dlrtctly affected to agree it ap-
-pears to me it would make a good im·
pression oo our legislators," M<'lnnin!t
said.
The California Legislature i! con·
siderlng a variety of a11ti-freeway blll!,
four of v.·hich deal Sf>t!Cifica\ly v.·lth the
Pacific Olast Freeway.
One bill seeks de-letion or the !Alng
Beach segment of the route-; nnother
l\'ould kill the Newport Beach leg. and a
third, spon~red by slate Senator Dennis
Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) would
eliminate the entire route.
Assemblyman Robert Burke tR-Hun-
tington Beach) has introduced legislation
calling for a three.year moratorium on
freeway plaMing while a consult.mt
takes another look at the coastal cor·
r idor.
1'he bill ta kill the Newport leg, which
has passed the assembly, has just won
fndorsement from the Seal Beach Cily
Council which wants it amended to in·
~Jude their conununily.
Top Turnout Seen
Three Bond Issues to Head Ballot
A record number or Newport Beach
voters are eligible to east ballol.s in
Tu~y's primary election \bot wlll be
highlighted locally by three park and
bicycle trail bond propo<iopl.
The voter registration figure, according
to City Cllrk Laura Lagioo, lops the high
for the April councilmanlc election when
29,282 persons were on registcara' rolls.
The ope1 <space and recttation issues
will be listed as Propositions F , G and H.
Proposition F seeks authorizations to
spend $3,560,000 for acquisition of about a
dozen park sites and bicycle trail right-of-
way.
Proposition G would provide $2,05,000
for development of those parka and bik-e-
ways.
Proposition H would establish a $3
millioR reserve fund for acqulsiUon of
!IA<k . silos qot ldentifled now but wbich
· • · 'ajli!bie i¥ tJ>o.~
' "' ... '" . ror Pi'Opoitiloiii ;.'t ti. cJty =.=
used rotommendatlono contained tn tbe
~= muter plan , ol par~. just
While Ille etty 11 not boulld lo follow Ibo
plan, the c:ooncil has indiCotad !bot JI will
be used pntty much as tbe_guldellnt toe
whet< the money will be spent.
Accordin« to the perb plan, the follow·
ing park sites will be bought and
developed with the funds:
-West Newport (PE right~f-way)
-West Newport (interim, near santa
Ana River)
-W~st Newport (Seminiuk Slew)
-West Newport (V«Millet1, view park)
-West Newport (38th street Park ei~
pansion) ·
-Balboa Island (Methodist Olurclil
-Balboa. J5Jand (unspecified)
-Promontory Point (view park}
-Newport Height. (view park)
-Peninsula Point (expansion)
-Corona del Mar (ne.ar Fifth Avenue)
-Harbor View Hills (expansion)
-Spyglass Hill
-Corona Highlands
-Harbor View Hill! (to be annexed )
-Irvine downooast (to be annexed)
The latter two are contingent upon the
ultimate size of the Newport Beach city
limits, according to Calvin Stewart,
director of parks, beaches. and reerta·
tion.
The plan dots not break down the
specific costs of. each project.
Support for the bonds has come from a
variety or sourcts, including all 1even ci-
ty councilmen. •
Mayor Donald A'. Mclnnla has been IC·
tively campaigning for puaqe.
"I highly r«Olll1l'lend aP!l"'•ll ol the
park bond propositions because,' tbrwgh
the years, it la an· investment for the city
and tt's an investment' for the future," he
said.
Mcinnis atressed that the bond issue
was put on the ballot because the people
wanted It on the ballot.
"It nally devtioped from the ......
roots," he nid, "the concept of acquiring
open spoce, parb, and bic)'c1e tralla w u
proposed to local government. It didn °l
come the other way," he .said.
Opposition ha~ come from three
sources, residents in the vicinlly of
Marinapark, the city--0wned trailer park
that may be converted to public use and
residents near the 38th Street Park, who
oppose expansion.
1'he third source has been an in-
dividual, Carl Arthofer, who hl1 been
running a 1eriea or adverti.sementa coo-
taining erroneous informaUon.
Fonnal sponsors of the bondl are ~
Citizens' Park Bond Team, headed bJ
1'.ir.!. Ginger Page, a Newport Heijbt•
resident.
Approval of Park Bonds
Would Benefit Newport
, For YJ!ars; Newport S..ch ,,.idents bave been c:oa;>lalnbll aboyt the lact
'·of\)llltl'land -_,,... ,.,., ~·-....... llll ·c117 ·11 llulld blcycli 1rai!s. . '
They're eolnt lo pt the chance tomonvw to allow bow badly t1ity want
tbom. ' , I "I'be ·nlue to the city ol tbeae parlu llMI lrallt.-"'· 1' wtll. '" '
'!lloyil h<lp property value•. They'll u1l9 ua~·, l!W&ty, llnca
lhey'll be bought at today 's prices. They'Q jive . ' hoodl •o place for
chll4rtn to play. Besides their recreational Yalut, bike traDa will alao
provide a new, and safe, transportation network through the city.
Endorsemenll ot the bonds have have croued traditional lines, ranging
froui homeowntt groups to the chamber of commerce to the Irvine C.Ompany.
Despite thls evidence of broad support, paaage of the measures will be
difficult. A two-tblnls majority is required -and only a strong tumout can
give Newport the parkl tt truly needs.
Here are the issues and the DAILY PILOT'• recommendation s:
Proposition F-$3,580,000 for land acquisition, for parks and playgrounds,
view parks and blcycle tralla:. Vote Yes.
Propooltlon G-42.425.000 to develop these parks , playgl'O\IDds and bicycle
trails. Vote Yes.
PropositloD H-$3 mUUon for future acquistlons. Vote Yes.
N. Viets Admit Problems, 1
Vow to Continue Fighting
From Wirt Senlees
North Vietnam admitted today that it
Is having "very difficult" economic pro-
blems because of the Intensified U.S.
bombing, but insisted that it has the
capacity to continue its war efforts.
"Even if the enemy tucceeda in the
bomb deWuction or our cities and our
large industrial lnsta.Uatioas, they can
never paralyze OlH' economy to the point
of preventing our survival and our ablllty
to 111pply tbe south." the olficlai
newspaper Nhan Dan declared in a com-
. mentary broadcast by Radio Hanoi.
"We have fortllNll and have calCtJlated
in advance for the very dUficuit 1ltuatlofl
wrought by the most cruel ond dangtrQ.U•
maneuvers of the enemy ln thelr fierce
ucalaUon of the war/' Nban Dan con-
tinued.
' "But ouf. people ~an walk, can Ute
torcbllgbta, can eat diluted CO!liee ( .... ter
rlco gruel), and.llill defeat the U.S. I&· _ ..
The Navy said none of the 354 crtwmm
aboard the USS J oseph Straus.s was in-
jurtd and the ship remained in the
Tonkin GuU.
The destroyers USS Bausell and USS
Sarsfield were also fired on by Com-
mun.I.st shore batteries but were not hit.
spokesmen said.
Tbe U.S. Command announced a partltl
pullout of lroopa today from ii&
no<themmOll mojci -ID Vletnom-~
lop.IOCN!t coannunleallolll comp nt1".
the threatened former Imperial capital ol
Hoe. • 11 A command~ also,_
tbol U.S. lroop ~ ID Vietnam fell
(lloe VImWI, h,. I) .• ...... ''
candldates for eltlter r.:st mast live 1n
tbe trustee area to .run or that aeat, the
county c1.-t·s office said today. several
lnquirle! abool t\>e !)!Ct have been ruled Federal Def i cit Lowered The talk of walking, uoinC torchilgb!s,
and aublilting on rlco trruel were obvloua
references to heavy daml&• lllfllcled by
U.S. bombm 'Oii rall linel, bll)lways,
bridps ond oiectrlc power p!snta.
More buy ~ alOOI Ult •
Orange Cout ~. lol1owtq
low clouds ...t loj:91,ll•H>eodito.
Highs of 10 alq Ille. -rillol
oUt for geographical reasons. .
The filing deadline tor the apec1al
Auguat I election Is 'Friday at 5 p.m. m
llie County Clult'• olfico in Santa Ana.
No papen will be ~ after thal
limo . s.~ual· 1chool board member• ha••
almdy •ll"'!•Md boptl tbal tbe posts
w11r be llDecl by _,,..i, nlJl'lillllllt
oommlllllty·--. ...
WASHINGTON <UPI) Tb e
Adlnlniltration' told Oongreu today tbot ,
tbe go-nt woald ·run a fl} billion
amaller dOllCit 11111 lbcaJ ,Oar than
ori,lnally est~ted but that the deflclt
ror ·lliW 1m -..... ,d be •1.s bUUon
..... I.tr.. . ' . 'Ibo mlllons ID Ille Adinlnlstntlan's
Grant's Kin:: Dies .;:~:1:!""~it.m:t:::: · • 1lla<led Ille defidt ... lllCal .,.., li'l2.
LA JOUA (AP) -'!lie~ which ends J-JO, al tu bUllcln inliead
of ~•111,... 8. Grant bu died at ol .,._, bllllon ntlmated in January.
ber hJme ot lbe • °' "-SIM! wu Ntllio For lllcal 117:1, the deflcll was ' .u.._ ~ o1· l. Root. ..itmit.11.ot.ar lli1llaa rallis tban.$25.i
• ... ol tr.. aallooi'• llUI ....... billion ""11mlled -· deui. ft, Cronan, wbo died '1'111n117, 1!ie ,.,.,d!lntl&n ...... a biJ
WU boni in Elbmo, NJ. lladget delldt Ibis xear .. tbe 11-J tbol
a big dose pf federal spending would be
helplut Olli lbe economy .... 11ac1< and
unemployment blab. , 'l'!lt rate ol eoyernment l!IOlldini had
been npecled to taper oll In 1173 ., •
revived private -Y picked up tho llact. .
But on tmetpecled . lncrtase Jn """' .P"""le. taus 'ond lndl•lduli OVtririliboldlaa ta._ -plus a delay by
Co1·1 re11 in · 1dlnc on the
Admtnlstration'a rtTt.DUe 1hari11g pro-
posal -look moot of·tbe lieam oul ol lbe
govornment _..,. plw.
The rtsul~ ai •hi>wn In the revUed liold&ttJlcun~!s. \ba(tbe llscal stlmuliil .
in llical ll'1J and 1171 wUI be abOUt Ibo ...
In !esllmooJ before the Wt.11 lllld·
Meana Com~e. acllng Tteosury
Secretary· Charles E. Walar Hid lbe
twin dellcJts, "will · ~. .P.
PfOlll'lately,.to allmulall an.~ ID
which, unemployment Is too hJ<. lllll
-pllnl'.Utllllitlon too low. ' . '
"But·..., flie·nme period '"..., on4
"'"" ~·that man 11 the riiuter o1 Ibo feelers! budget -\bot u. oponillnc
rt1lralnt -IOI')' lo pent aphisl tbe
relllm of dtminCI lnflalklh con l)o rl·
m:iled." W a1ker said. "U we fall ID
doing lhls, ... lhall --b ol Uit
&ood work of ""'111 .1"'• -t<i.rta
"1lcll alf"lilo•ll\l"lf1..~ lqlf~ Ollt
uljlmate gool ol ldcb -le ~b .
•'lfith low UMlliplotill<lll Mid itablo
prkes." ; ! •
In other war 11<ve1opmenta:
North Vldnamele 1n>otiO '*'81od m.t. o bomc• of Soutb Vittnlmele
'tlimflr.'IDll.p1trmnent "-"-"'"" ~ into a.Kontum l'lnlrdl,QioUJOd
·Mili uled 'U I ComJDunilt '-lquortora .... 11...,., .
· ~m. a pro•lnelal coptal 111 m1loo
•nortli .,. Solgon. ..... -'under Com-
.munllt llegt lor ...... a1 wetb.
Mllltary 'l'_OitelllllOn 111d government
ttoOpo ... re llJl!lintl to oleor tho two ,. m>ininc Communltl pocb!s inlllda lbe cl·
ty.
Two Communllt ortlilery rounda &n,.
day neuly ocored direct hits on o U.S.
guided 111i1Sllt delllvytr off North Viet·
ntmtM w1ter1, causfng 0 modera'te 1bocl:
damage" bul llO <..allte., military
apokesmen. aald todoy.
I
I
to ao Inland. Lawo -•·
INSIB' Ditll
• ••
•
Monday, J11nt 5, 11)72 •
Trutl1 Squad
Recreation l nequities Eyed Report Eyed
By Schmitz N .. r!y hair ol th< peoplo participating
I• !IOfne Newport J~ach cJty recreation
programs are ootoQf-town residents and
city councilmen think they're gelling too
&\)Od • de.11.
~ T'hey'rt going to ~e what can be done
about it
Councilmen Saturday asked thr c11v
s arr to present recommendations <.it "
.«udy session next Monday on "'htther
the lees for non-residents can be hiked or
at least if local residents c.·an have first
c:ract at registration.
"In aome sense we're ~ubsid111ng non·
rtsidents." said Counc1lnu1n Carl Kvm!a,
·i am subsidizing somebody from Costa
"Mesa. While I realize the. programs arc
public and have to be OfX'n, there 1s somt
ihequity."
. While aty Attorney Dtnnis O'Neil said
Newport Beach could bar outsiders from
l~ programs, councilmen indicated
they did not want lo go that far
"I don't think ~·e should do thaL"
Kymla said, "but on the other hand, loca l
residents ahoold not be penalized."
·"There should be some sort of ad-
ditional fee to put in on an equitabl e
basis," he said.
Newport Beach taxpayers "provide and
maintain the underlying land and
facilities" used for recreation programs.
noted Dostal.
The fees paid for the variou! cours~
are the same regardless where the
participants live, though. he said.
Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis suggested
the possibili ty of at least al10"·111g pre-
Humphrey Gets
Yorty's Support
In State Primary
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -·Mayor 5am
Yorty is one of eight candidates listed
Sen. Hube-rt H. Humphrey in Tuesday's
Ji"esldential primary election in a stop-
McGovern effort.
Yorty is one of eight candidates liseld
on the Democratic bRllot in the primary,
but was given no chance or \V inning.
"I have decided to ask my Democratic
supporters to cast their votes tomorrow
for Sen . Hubert H. Humphrey," Yorty's
statement said.
"Our Democratic party is threatened
with suicidal radicalization by Sen.
Qeorge McGovern's lavishly financed
campa ign of decept io n and
demagoguery.''
He said Humphrey "appears to be the
only candidate in a ~ltlon to prevent
the radically !parked, money-powered
McGovern juggernaut from t a k i n g
California by storm before the voters
f.&ke up to what is happening lo them."
He called Humphrey a "realistic, 1oyal
.&.merlcan'1 although he said he has
''50me dllferences" with the f\.finnesota
senator.
• He said of Humphrey, "he ,plays
p:;uucs as do most politicians, but he
'tops far short of appealing to extremists
Jlnd confused idealistic dreamers to
:earner votes.
, "The senator (McGovern) set out to
:Capture the radical left and he i.s now
lthelr captive," Yorty said. • • I
µoint Meeting
' iSet in Newport
I : The Newport Beach plannlng staff
;tonight will brief a joint c-lty touocll plan·
·n ing commission meeting on the status of ~he city's general plan.
~ "This will be str!ctly an information-
;gatherlng 5'ssion and oo votes will be
. taken." said City Manager Robert Wynn.
''They do this pe riodically to keep in lu ne
iV.·ilh each olher on the general plan's
!progress.''
l The mee1ing is open to the public and is
!e xpected to consi~t of a question and
~enswer sel5sion on the general plan in ad·
ldition to the briefing. 'The meeting is at
•7:30 p.m, in the city council chambers at
;City Hall.
•.--~~~~~~~~--.
OlANGI COAST •
DAILY PILOT
11'le 0,_,.. CO.II DAIL'¥' PILOT. w11h ~i.
b corntolnecl ftM Ht•i·Prtu, It S>UbH!lltd lly
fllle °""'" COfd ""1111"-!"9 C~ny, ~
r nite lllllllkln• •r• Pllblli.t..d, Mot'dall "'f'Oll!I"
Frldlly, fw C0.11 MllM, N-rt Bett~,
Hwl!lfl9fafl Btec:ll/FOlllll•Oll V•ll•y, ~~
Mkh. 1,....1,,.1s..sc11e1M<k. •l"ld S•n C'-ttl a. J-CIDll!rario A •lnvl• rf(lloNI
dtfM II publlill«I S•tvfd1y1 Ind S1t111t.n.
The PflnclNI S'Vbllitl'"9 Dllnl I\ •I )JO Wcsl
l•Y SITMI, ec.11 ~. C•lllornl~, mu.
~
i i
I
I
! J
J 1
ltoMrt N. W11i
~rinldtftl Ind ~ubllther
J•cli It. Curl•y
Vkt Prftlde111 l l'ld ~r•I Mt~rr n,.,,,,., IC11vil
Etl!Of
llilfn'l l S A. Murp~i111
MIMtlnt ECllJW
L. P1ttt Krl11
H•wporl kKt1 Clly IOClllOr
N..,......_.~
l)JJ NewpM'f hlll1vertl
M~ ~:P.O. l ot 1175, •2661 --_, • w.tt•ky Strt.1
:. m t'«ett AYM!lt 17'1•~~,.,. a. C...... Nw111 El Clml111 111 .. 1
T .. .,.._ l.7141 642°'4Jl1 a ... ~..u.1,11 °"*""""' , ""' Ot"'l!wl Co•st Pu11n11t1111t
r °"""""'• "' """ •lortn. IM1111ra111.,., ~ ...,,.,. II' ......,1,.-tt hlrt111 _, ............. .-17hM 'Pldel W · ..... "~' -......
.... ~ ""''" .. 111 .. c:.t1 ,,,..., t-""'44-~!i~ ........ Ii.ft '" ~ a.~ ,....,, !Nfl l l,IJ ~f mltlft,y
..... .. ... ll'Onlf\ly.
.I
reglltrlllon !tr local 1'<114ent1, IO that
local pt<>ple -d not be left ..,I ol
classes tilled partly by outllden.
llt>gistration is scheduled 10 begin June
2~ for !he varlou! summer progratnl, ex-
pla111ed Calvin Stewart, parks, beac~s
and recreation director, noting that the
brochures 11.tting regis tration dates have
.already been printed.
"~Iaybe we could have a pre-registra-
11011 day for residents ,'' 1'.1t lru1i5 sug-
~t·Stt'<I
Counc1Jrna n ~11tan Dostill .~uggested
thnt in the future perhaps the city could
:illow local resldents to register 1n ad·
\a nee by maiL
'"\'()"" many people complain about tht>
l<1n~ lines they have to Y:ait 1n and find
011t the claM has been closed, Pre·
regislration by mail would save son\e
!1r11e," he said.
The campaig11 director for C-00--
gressman J ohn Schmnz today charged
the r ival Andrew Hinshaw camp wil h
producing an anonymous smear of yet
another 39\h District. Congressional CO P
hopeful , Earl Carraway or El Toro.
ffinshaw's campaign manager. in tum,
denied the assertion and cla imed C()/·
lusion between Carra1va y and Schn1111
forces.
Stcy,·art agreed the lines are Ion~.
noting tbat for some classes, especially
!ennrs, people begin arriving at & a.m.
"11egistration opens at 9 a.m. and by
9· 10 the classes are filled," he said.
DAILY PILOT Sii" Pfllte
RETRACING THE PATH OF CAR'SnRATIC JOURNEY WHEN DRIVER 'BLACKED OUT' AT WHEEL
Newport Physici•n Sheken but l nlnjured u Aulo Rips Up Front Yud of Mormon Church
William S. 11 u!sy, Schmitz' campaign
chief, said today he had asked the Tustin
Police Department to investigate a docu -
n1ent produced as the "Republican Truth
Squad Report -43C. ''
l!ulsy alleges the unsigned report may
have betn typed by someone at ~!in!haw
campaign headquarters. Further. the
Schmitz aide notes, distribution ot the
"disparaging campaign m a t e r i a ) ' •
without the name and address of it!'!
author being attached to it, violatll6 the
state elecUons code.
Wh ile <lnly 10 percent of 1he tennis
('la.':is participants are non1esidents,
Stewart said 40 percent of those taking
sailing le ssons live outside the city,
Ron \Vhitley, recreation superintenden!.
explained that's because Newport Beach
is one of the few communities than can
offer sailing instruction.
AmoDg the other programs offered this
summer y,•ill be swimming instruction -
for the fir.st time nt the new olympic poo l
al Newport Harbor J-ligh School. surfing,
arts and crafts. fishing. bridge lessons,
dog obedience, guitar and yoga.
l'ro111 P<1ge 1
VIETNAM ...
last week by 1,100 men to 63,700 -the
lowest level since the 59,900 figure of
June, 1965, but still short of President
Nixon's targeted 49,000 by the end <lf this
month. ·
1'he communique announced the deac·
ti vation of the 200.man 138th Aviation
Com pany, the air intelligence arm of the
.~ecrecy·shrouded 1,200-man 8th Radio
llesearch stalion al Phu Bai. 17 miles
south o[ llue.
Eight U.S. Air Force jets streaked to
within 50 miles of the Chinese border
SUnday and demolished twln bridges on
Hanoi 's northwest rail line to China with
five 2,000-pound laser-guided bombs,
military spokesmen said today.
''We knocked the hell out or them,''
said one officer. "Those Jaser·guided
bombs don'l nUss."
U.S. military sources said <lther bridge.!
on both the northwest and northeast rail
t.nes linking to China· have oot been hit
and they ~·ould be attacked in the fut ure.
A seventh aircraft carrier, th e
Ticonderoga, bas joined the U.S. 7th
Fleet and will arrive off the coast of Viet-
nam within a week, U.S. military sources
.said today.
The Ticonderoga Is now in Subic Bay,
In the Philippines.
The sources said the mission of the ship
Is to "hunt and kill submarines," Md her
twin·englne planes are not equipped for
air strikes against the railroads, road3
and industrial lnstalletioru: in North Viet8
nam which are the targets for the plane.5
from the other carriers operating in t he
Tonkin Gulf.
Landscape Artist
To Address League
Carl 1\.tcCarth, portrait and landsca~
artist. \viii address the Huntington Beach
Art l..('3guc at iLs meeting at 7:30 o'clock
tonight at \he Rl'Creatio11 Center. 17th
Street and Orange A venu('.
The public is invited to the meeting
without charge
Three Arrested
l 11 Bookmnking,
Hors e Race Cnse
Charges against a trio arrested in con·
nect1on y,·ith an a lleged horse race and
professional sports bookmaking opera·
tion are being studied today by Newporl
J1each police and Orange County authori·
ties.
1'hc suspects \Vere arrested Friday,
when uJIC!ercover investigators raided a
Hawaiian Gardens novelty comp.any with
a search warrant.
Booked on suspicion of conspiracy lo
commit bookmaking we-e James J , Sro-
tella. 47, of Long Beach, Carl Rebkowitz,
42, of 738,Center St., Costa Mesa and Bar-
bara J. Krutch, 35, of 3881 Green St.
Los Alamitos,
Scotella, owner of Klasscot Inc .. \\'here
the evidence ~'as seized, is free on $5,000
bail; Rebkowitz, a self-employed paper·
hanger, is out on $2 .500 bail and a $1 ,200
bond was ))09!.ed by Mrs, Krutch, Scotcl-
la 's secretary.
Complaints accusing them of illegal
possession of pornography are also beiag
reviewed today.
Newpcrl Beech Pol~ Vice and lntelli·
gence Detective John Simon and District
Attorney'! Investigator Jack Marwin
made the arrests, to climax a joint tw<>-
month investigation.
Simow daimed t.cxiay that additional
charges could be forthcoming, based on
seizure of about SO stag movies confis-
cated under terms of the search warrant.
He said Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
police. District Attorney's investigators
and the Los Angeles Sheritf's Depart-
ment combined efforts in the al1eged
bookie probe.
The alleged operation -whic"h Simon
claimed to be fairly large in 5C&le -
reportedly took bets on Hollywood Park
races and other Southland or out-Of-state
.sporting events.
Several bets were allegedly placed 11t
a s pecific location in Newport Beach, be--
fore authorities issued a searcil warrant
lor Scotella's Hawaiian Gardens plant.
Defendants in the case face arraign·
me1tt June 12, or soooer if they wish
following issuance ol formal compla.int!'I
expected to come from the Di!trict At·
t.arney's office Tuesday.
Crash Kills Builder
BO ISE. ldaho (AP ) -Bertram I,.
Perkins. 49, "·ho rose from canal project
foreman to board chainnan of one of the
\vor ld 's largest construction firms. died
Saturday in an auto accident. Perkins
had been president and board chairman
of Morrison·Knudson Co. since 1969.
Gross of $93 ,000 Seen
l n Fish Fry Proceeds
Thousands of t icket etubs were being
counted today by members of the Costa
Mesa-Newport Lions Club to determine
the amount of money raised for chll:rity
by the 27 th annual C<l!ta t-.1esa Fish Fry.
lndlcatlons are !hat the gross take
from the three-day extravaganza will be
about $93,000, the same a$ last year, ac-
CTJrding lo Stevt Perrin, publicity
chairman.
AH proceeds will be turned over to
Harbor Area charities and youth
organizations, among them the Boya ll:nd
Girls Cl ubs, YMCA, Fairview State
Hospital. Boy and Girl Scouts, and
Services for the Blind.
No official crowd estimates have been
given by the Lions for the weekend af.
fair, but It is believed that the parade on
Saturday attracted 50,000 pertons.
Marguerite Marsaudon, an 18-year-old
bnmette from Costa Me!a, w11 chosen
Mils Mennald of 1972 during a beauty
pageant Sunday at Oosta Mesa City Park.
A drama 11tudent at Oranae· 1Coast
College, Mias M.arsaudoo won the title
over a field of nine contestants. She
received a trophyll!d • $250 merchandise
prlu.
RuMert-up were Cmnle Wlggina, 11,
the former A-1111 Hunti ngton Beach, and
Jackie Frasco, 20, Orange. Both wtre
awarded trophies and $125 merchandiff
prizes.
Afothers tu~ out in force Sunday for
the. traditional baby cqntest which
featured a record 180 tnlrlts ln two
dlvialons.
Winner 1n the six month to 12 month
age group was Angela Marx, the 1t>-
month-0ld daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Sieve Marx, 2147 Westminster Ave.,
C:0..11 ~"-Another C:O..ta Mesa g~I.
Paraela Young, the 2 3 ·mo n t h 1 • o Id
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ro!s Young,
983 Spring!ield St., won first prize in the
J3 month to 24 month divLsion.
The runner·up in the younger division
was Kristin Carlson, 9 months, daughter
of Mrs. Mary Alice Carlson, 22652 Jenova
St., Laguna Hills, with third place going
to Davk:I P. Martin, 12 mooths, son of Mr.
and Mrs: Raymond M1rtin, 581 Wea:t
Wilson St .. Cost.a Meaa.
In the older division, the runner-up
trophy wa3 glven to "Mark Erwin, 14
months, daughter o[ Mn . Ciro! Erwtn,
2420 West Aurora st., Santa Ana, and
third place to Stephen Benclvengo, lJ
month•, oon of Mr. and Mrs. Mlchatl
S.0Clven11V, 1114 Viola Pia«, Costa
Mesa.
A bind conlut Friday nlghl on the
park stage WIS WOD by "Central," whk:h
caplured 1 $S0 cash award. Second place
and a f25 cash award .wa1 won by "utb
Our." The third and fourth place wlnnm,
"Ruaih'' and "Btklcee:" eech won tis. The grand prtze, a 1112 Fon! Ptnto ata-
llon wogon, wu driven borne by Kltk
D•)'lon, 30!1 Ooollclge St., Colla M ....
Dtyton held the--locky tlctll 1tub IDIOlll
thoounda of fiah dlnnera sold durllli the
festival. tach penon who boulht a 11111
dinner wu eligible for the grand prbo.
Auto Slams Into Cl1urcl1,
Totaled; Physici an Oka y
Chip Cleary, a Santa Ana public rela-
tions ma n who heads the f-{inshaw can1-
paign, said. ''I don't know anything about
the 'truth squad' repcirt." li e denied that
cinyone on the county assessor's cam-
paign staff would have produced the
clvcun1ent. A Newport Beach physician walked
away this morning after his big sedan
left Do\'er Drive, jumped the curb. ripped
out a wall, climbed the stairs and hit the
From Page 1
BIK)s ...
developers will be told to dedicate ad-
ditional street righl~f-v.·ay.
He said .special bike lane! will also be
built across the three major bridges in
the city, Back Bay, the Arches and on
h'larine Avenue.
The remainder of the tunds will be used
tof¥1.int roadways and erect signs along
!he majority of the ne l\vork,
Endorsements for passage or the
bonds, which wi!I appear on the ballot as
J>roµositions F. G and H. have come
from a variety of soorcea, including
M•)'ll" Donald A. Mcinnis.
The mayor, hizmelf an avid bicyclist,
has pointed out that the impetus for the
bond issue -cmtrary to most spending
proposals -d.Jdn 't come from govern-ment:
"Jt reaJly developed from the grass
roots," he said, "both the conCfpt for
open space and the bicycle traiJS.
"The movement waa generated by the
public, the guy in the street. The 'ailent
majority' has consistently asked the
council lo do something to preserve
view sites and park land and Ule like,"
Mcinnis said. "Doing it now before it's
too late ls so important," he &aid.
P roposition F on the ballot asks ap-
proval of $3.5 million in bonds for prop-
erty acquisition; Propositioo G seeks
$2.4 milJion for park and bike trail
development and Proposition H proposes
$3 million be set aside for Jnpe;ly ac·
quisi tion in the future.
U.S . Plane Down,
Jn, Taipei Area
TAIPEI (UPI) - A U.S. Air Force
CIJO transport plane with six men aboard
crashed early today near the Pescadores
Island! into the Formosa Strait, an air
force 1poke1man .said .
The Na tionalist Chinese g<lvemment's
rescue center said some wreckage of the
transport was found and the body of one
crewman was recovered.
'There were no signs of survivors, 1
spokesman .said.
Church or Jesus Christ of Utter Day
Saints' flag pole.
The 8:25 a.m. accident OCTurred
simultaneously with another, in which the
ViC'lim wa sn't so lucky.
Police said Dr. ll. Marshal\ Bro11·11, !ill,
y,·as eastbound on Do1•er Drive al JUth
Street when the mishap occurred.
The physician heading for hi:i nearby
office at 601 Dover Drive said he just
blacked out, while a witness following
directly behind also told Officer Don
C.'handler he aaw Or. Brown s uddenly
slump over.
Investigators said the car ripped out
about 30 feet of wall. damaging Ja~·n
lighting fixtures and the turf itself before
hitting the Mormon Church's flagpole.
Estimated damage to the church prop-
erty was about $1,000, police said.
Officer Chandler said Dr. Brown
declined medical treatmenl, iiaying he
wasn't hurt.
A 13-year-old girl r iding her bicycle
eastbound on San Joaquin HJ!ls Road
near Newport Center suffered head in--
juries at 8:25 a.m., when she collided
Y.'ilh o. car.
The victim's name was withheld by
police. since she is a juvenile and ap-
peared to be at fault, reportedly cultlng
across lanes in front of an eastbound car.
Officer Tom Stewart !aid motorist Mrs.
Sigrid Hilgem1tn , 34, of 4331 Wintersweet
St., Irvine, skidded and swerved but
couldn't avoid colliding with the girL
Police said the bicyclist't mother took
her to their family doctor.
"U is interesting that it isn't Carra1v;iy
himseH \1•ho 1s protes1ing , bu I
l:ongressman Sch1nitz. To n1e that spells
collusil·e attion l h:.tve long suspected."
Cleary sald.
"ll tends to confirtn my belief that
Carraw:.iy is Schrnitz' stooge. entering the
race to draw off anti·Schmilz votes as a
candidate \Vho claims to support Presi·
dent Nixon." Cleary said.
l\1eanw hil e, observers of !he three-way
GOP race for the non1ination for Schmilz'
congressional .seal, recall tha t Carraway
has charged that llinshaw entered the
race to assure a Schmitz victory.
Cleary rebuts this view, s.1ying that In
1970 Carra\.\•ay was a "substantial con-
tributor" to John Schmitz' re-election bid.
The questioned ··trut!t squad" report
alleges to be a recitation of entries in the
pi1b!ic record,
The report presents nn unnattering
personal history of Car raway.
It lists seven entries alleged to be part
or the voter registration records whicb
detail Carraway's voter registrations in
Orange County since 19;,4 when he
registered as a Democrat.
Cities Win A wards
WASHI NGTON (AP) -The state of
Wisconsin and the cities or San Diego and
Long Beach, Calif., and New Canaan.
Conn., have W<:ln awards for pedestrian
safety in the 33rd annual American
Automobile Association Pedestrian Safety
Inventory, The awards. announced Sun-
day, are made on the basis of pedestrian
casually records and -accident prevention
programs for 1971.
Con~ert Quiet
Stories Open U.S. Tour in, Seattle
SEATTLE (AP) -The R-011\ng Stones, making their first United States
appearance ln their North Amerlca tour here Sunday night, were greeted by
an enthusiastic but comparatively qu iet sellout croy.•d.
The nJght befor e in Vancouver, B.C., a rock and bottle throwing melee
erupted outside the Pacific Coliseum during the lirst performance of their
first North American tour in three years.
The BrJtlsh rock group performed two concerts in Seattle's Coliseum Sun·
day night for an estimated 28,000 perSClns .
On Saturday in Vancouver , some 2.000 young persons tried to crash the
concert, and police said 11 offi cers were hospitalized as a result o! the scuffle.
None was seriously injured, police said.
Eight persons were arrested, police reported. The disturbance apparently
began when two smoke bombs were tos.sed into the lobby sonn after the per·
formance began.
.Tired of tlw way your rings W<>k?._
Why Not Have Your Rings
Reset In Beautiful
New Mountings?
W• c.1n d•tign I rint ••p•ci.1fty for you with your
old di•monds. W• •Ito h•v• loos• diemondt .1nd
cen afld 'o your prMtn' on•t.. ChM:k our prices
and ••ve.
If .,.. -................ Ille .... I tA • •• sl -°'la "• -..... ctt.a ..... , ... ......
AU DIAM'OMH atAUMTllD TO ...,...,.,.. AT 41~ MOii THAN YOU PAT.
DIAMOND WEDDING
AND "ENGAGEMENT RINGS 29~,
1002 mMS TO CHOOSE FIOM • FIND rr HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
OP1N DAIL T f ,. I r.Old IN AND ROWSI AIOUND
' 1131 NIWPORT ILVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOM uem
OUR MOST
UNUSUAL
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
w...,....,. ·-··· hell • we Wll ;m ..
'" ttw ........ .,.
pmse et 40% MORI
.... , .. ,.ufwlt•
,_ '"°""'back. c.. ,.. ......... --.1
COMPAllL d
~
17
1
..
-· '
Ora11ge Coast Teday'• Pl•al
VOL oS, NO. ·1 s1, 3 SE.CTIONS, 32 PAGES ; ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1972 c TEN CENTS
• Bevenue Frona Fish Fry Near $93~000
_1 ·-,~ ...... ,. .......
MESA'S MARGUERITI MARSAUDQN NEW MISS MERMAID ,
OCC Drama Stutlent Bests FiM el Nine ConlHl•nh · . ' . -.
Coast Coalitio.n Forming
To Oppo se Pacific Route
Representatives from eight coastal
corr.munlties, from Long Beach to San
Juan Capistrano, will meet next Saturday
to lonn a "coastal communities coali-
tion" to fight the proposed Pacific C.oast
Frttway.
City oouncllmen from all incorporated
cities along the Orange County coast are
expected to attend the gathering, to be at
the home of Newport Beach councilman
and freeway fighter John Store in Corona
Highlands.
Store said this morning the meeting is
sponsored by the Freeway Fighters
Citizens Coordinating Committee. The
meeting "is by invitation only" and will nOt )?Copen to the press and public, Store
said.
Wally Cox, c!lairman or the CCC ct1uld
not be reached for comment on the
meeU.DB this )Jlomlng.
store declined to identily U-who
have been invited.
"Some might feel that to have their
names b1n4ied.about in the paper before
OrJlll'*'&,woold be a difficulty," he said.
But l»e Rid that councilmen and other
resldala Jiom Long Beach, Seal Beach,
Blllllinif<>n u..ch, Newport Beach,
Laguna Beach and San Juan caplstrano
will attend.
In addiUon there will be repre!entalion
from the unincorporated communitle! or
Dana Point and Laguna Niguel, Store
said.
Store and Newport Beach Vice Mayor
Howard Roger.i ·will represent Newport
Beach at the meeting.
Newport Beach J.iayor Donald A. Mctn-
ni! said this morning he is aware of the
gathering but will not attend. He will be
at another meeting.
"l endorse what they 1re trying to do,"
Mcinnis said, explaining that the purpose
of the gathering is "to get everybody in
the coastal C{}rridor to come together to
hopefulJy agr!e to the deletion of the en-
tire freeway .from Long Beach to San
Diego."
uu they can get all or nlost of the com-
munities diredly affected to agree it ap-
pears to me It would. mate a good im-
pression oo our legialaton," Mclnnlns
said. · · -.
The Cali!omla l.qi&Jature b ·con-
sidering a variety .of IO!i-lreewaf bills.
four of wblcb deal specifically with the
Pacific Qlut Free-fay.
Thou.sands of ticket stubs were being
counted today by members of the Costa
Mesa-Newport LiORs Club to determine
the amount of monty raised for charily
by the Z1tb annual Costa Mesa Fish Fry.
Indications are that the gross take
from the three-day e1travaganza wlll be
about $93,000, the same as last year, ac·
cording to Steve Perrin, publicity
chairman.
All proceeds wiU be turned over to
Harbor Area charities and you t h
Man
organizations, among them the Boy! and
Girls Oubs, ntCA, Fairview State
Hospital, Boy and Girl Scouts, and
Servicts for the Blind.
No offkial crowd estimates have been
given by the Lions for the weekend af-
fa ir, but It is believed that the parade ..on
Saturday attracted $0,000 persons .
Marguerite Marsaudon , an 18-year-old
brunette from Costa ?\.fesa, was chosen
Miss Mennaid of 1972 during a beauty
pageant SUnday at O:>sta Mesa City Park.
A drama student at Orange Coast
College, J\1iss t.1arsaudon won the title
over a rield of nine contestants. She
received a trophy and a $250 merchandise
prize.
Runnen·up !'-'ere Connie \\'iggins, 18.
the fQnner J\1iss Hu ntington Beach, and
Jackie Frasco. 20, Orange . Both wer~
awarded trophies and $125 merchandise
prizes.
Mothers turntd out in force Sunday for
the traditional baby contest which
Stabbed to
featured a r{'('()rd 180 entrie! In two
di\·lslons.
\\'inne!" in the six month to 12 month
age group WI! Angela li.farx, the IQ..
month-Old daughter of 1'.lr. and !\Ir~.
Steve ~fan, 2147 Westmin!ter Ave.,
Costa hfesa. Another Costa Mesa girl.
Par.iela Young, the 23 ·months ·o I d
daughter of Mr. and hirs. Ros! Young,
983 Springfield St., won first prize in tbt
!See FISH FRY, Par• I)
Death
Woman Held in Mesa; Second Knifing Probed
One man was repeatedly and fatally
&tabbed in the chest at his Costa Mesa
apartment over the weekend, while a sec·
ond victim, knifed ln a separate Lions
Club Fish Fry incident, survived.
The series of violent attacks reported
Saturday led to the arrest of the slain
man's female companion, while police·
afe still hunting a \~spect in the
downtown Costa Mesa Park stabbing.
Murder charges were being pressed to-
day against Trinidad D. Crane, 30, of 131
N. Evergreen St., Anaheim , resulting
from the predawn slaying Saturday.
She was arrested at Cosla Mesa
Memorial Hospital, where docton pro--
noonced Lionel Martinez, 23, dead of
multiple wounds inflicted. by a kJtchen
knife.
The indicent at hiartinez' apartment,
976 Mission Drive, was lint reported to
the . Costa Mesa Fire Department about
2:30 a.m., as a medical aid for a possible
heart attack victim.
Rescue squad mernbtrt anived, took
one loot at Martinel'· blood.Yi mutilated
chest area and notified potice of foul
play.
Detective Lt. Harold Ficher said today
that a witness placed the inlUal call tor
firemen. ·
The name of the individual present in
the same laborer's apartment besides
the suspect, Miss Crane, was not releu·
ed.
A quarrel immediately preceded the
fatal wounds and Lt. Fischer said In-
vestigators said they suspect it involved
the releatiouship betWeen Martinez and
Miss Crane.
She is a cashier at an Anaheim rubber
products firm, while the dead man was
unemployed.
Miss Crane W&.! booked into Orange
County Jail on suspicion of murder after
being placed under arTe.st. at the hospital
by Officer Hubert Hogan, fint patrolman
to reach Martinez' apartment.
Roughly three hours earlier, Charles A.
Harrell, 15, of 3761 Cosley St., Santa Ana,
was stabbed in the .abdomen during Fri·
* * * Suspect Nabbed
In Knifing Case
A suspect in the attempted murder of a
Santa Ana teenager stabbed Friday night
at the Costa Mesa.Newport Harbor Llons
Club Fish Fry was captured shortly
before noon today.
He was identified u John G. North, 20,
who s&d he is a transient and has no OC·
cupation.
Police Officer Bob Arnold arre!ted
North at a 19th Street bar aod he w11
turned over to Detective Geo,~ge Wil!On
for interrogation after being booked.
The arrest was made on the basis of
the suspect'a car, police IBid.
day night's Fi.sh Fry celebration open·
in1.
Suffering from 1 n t e r n a I injurie!,
the young victim didn't report the stab-
bing at first, but later went to Twltin
Community Hospital seeking help.
He was admitted to the intensive care
Trio Charged
With Betting
Investigated
Charge! agaid!t a trio arrested in con-
nection with an alleged horse race and
professional sports bookmaking opera-
tim are being studied today by Newport
Beach police and Orange County authori-
ties.
'Ibo ... poc11 •en: o'"8lld hldoy.
when Ulldtroover investigatorJ raJded a
Hawaflan Garden! novelty company with
a INfdt wan-ant.
Booked no ausplc\on of conapl!'lcy to
commit bookmaking were J1111et J. Sco-
t.Ila. 47, of Long Beech. Carl Rebk...itz.
42, of 781 Center St., Costa Mesa and Bar·
hara J. Krutch. 35, of 3881 Gre.n St.
Los Alamitos.
Scotella, owner of Klasscot Inc., where
the evidence was seized, is free on $5,000
bail; Rebkowitz, a self~mployed paper·
hanger, is out on $2,500 bail and a $1,200
bond was pooled hy Mu. Krutch, ScoteJ.
la's secretary.
Complaints accusing them of iHegal
possession ol pornography are also beiJtg
reviewed today.
Newport Beech Police Vice and InteUi-
gence Detective John Simon and Disbict
Attorney's Investigator Jack Marwin
made the arrests, to climu a joint two.
month investigatioo.
Sima. claimed today that additional
charges could be forthcoming, hued on
seizure of about 50 stag movies confis-
cated under terTr\5 of the search warrant.
}fe said Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
police, District Attorney 's investigators
and the Los Ang eles Sheriff's Depart·
ment combined efforts in the alleged
bookie probe.
The alleged operation -which Simon
claimed to be fairly large iA scale -
reportedly took bets on Hollywood Park
races and other Southland or out-of-state
sporting events.
Several bets were aHegedly· placed 1t
a specillc location in Newport Beach, be-
fore authorities Issued a seAtth warrant
for Scot<Jla'.'s Hawalian Gardens plant.
Defendants in the cue face arraign-
ment June 12, or sooner If they w!Jh
foliowtng IJluanc.· of formal complaint&
erpecltd to come from lbe District At·
torney's office Tuelday.
unit at fi rst but today is listed in satisfac-
tory condition, according Lo nursing
personnel .
Detective Lt. Fischer said the knifing
resulted from an argument at 18th Street
and Park Avenue, near the Fish Fry
carnival area.
"Over what , \ve're not too sure," be
said.
A young male about 18 to 20 II beinl
sought in the attempted murder cue
assigned -llke the falal stlbblna: -to
detectives George Willoo and Jim
Strickland.
Bo11abin9 Discounted
N. Viets Aclmit Pro~ems
But VowtoContinue War
From Wlre Services
North Vietnam admitted today that IL
is having "very difficult" economic pro-
blem! because of the intensified U.S.
borribing, but iruisted that it has t~
capocl4' 1\1 ... ntlnue It~ w,r f,f!ort1.
"Everi !f 'lhe enemy lucceeda in tbe
bomb ~cliou of .... elllel ud ...,
largo tnduttrlal lnatallalloiil, they can
nev .. poralyie our economy IO the point
of prevtntlni our 1UTViva1andour1bJ.Jity
to 111ppiy lhe IOUth," lhe OlfleloJ
newspaper. Nhan Dan declared in a com--
mentary broadcast by Radio Hanoi,
"We have foreseen and have calculated
in advance !Of' the very dlf!icult situation
wrought by the moat cruel and dangerous
maneuvers of the enemy In their fierce
escalation of the war," Nban Dan con-
tinued. .
"But our people can walk, can ~
torchllghts, CAl\,eat diluted congee (water
rice gruel), ana still defeat the U.S. ag-
gres.wra."
The lllk of walking, mini torchllghll.
and aubsisting on rice gruel were obvious
references to heavy damage lnflicted by
U.S. bombers on raU lines, highways,
bridgts and electric power plants.
Jn other war d'evelopment!:
North Vlet111me1e troops ~
under a barrqe of &Math V1ebws:i111.
gunflft and:r~ ~ "'=1 unoppoood ~I --.. ·-=-"*!•••rt. for n day~ -'
KOolum, I provtncloJ capital -= ~ of ..... 1111 .......
munlll litll 1'!f . ..mar-a.·
MU!lary ~ llld pvermnon&
lroopt """! llchtlni to clear the two ,..
malninc Communist pockell inllde the ci-
ty.
Two Communist artillery roundl aw..
day nearly scored direct hit.I on 1 U.S.
guided mlaslle destroyer off North Vlfto.
namete waters, causing "moderate lhoct
damage" but no casualties, milltlf1
spoteamen said today.
The Navy aald none of the 3S4 6ftwmea
aboard the USS Joseph Stnluu wu lf>o
jured and the !hip remained 1n the
Tonkin Gull.
The destroyers USS Bausell and USS
• Sardleld were al80 fired on by C.Om-
(See VIETNAM, Pa .. Z)
V.S. Deficit Drops Some,
But Still at $26 Billion
WASH!NGTQN (UPI) The
Administration told Congress today that
the government would run a $13 billion
smaller deficit this fiscal year than
originally estimated but that the deficit
for r1sca1 1973 would be fl.5 billion
greater.
1bo revlllons In the Admlnillr1tloo'1
red Ink bldiet atlmate1, made public by
the Offla. of Management ud Bud1et,
plaoed lhe deficit f~ ftJcat year .1m.
which ends Juno 30. at 12& hllllon Instead
or sa..a billion estimated In January.
For flacal 1971, lhe defi<il WU
estimated al 127 billion rather than $25.5
bUlion estimated earlier.
' return of demand inflation can be e1-
erclled," Walker said. "If we fail in
doing this, we shall undo much of the
good work of recent years -efforts
which are moving us steadily toward·our
ulUmare goal of high «<>llCl<!llc gruwlh
with low UD8111plO)'lllelll and liable
prices."
'll>ere-lt-leta tllan-a-maallrmnaiDioC
In fllcal im t.it Iba lilldlll office c-
tlonod lbat 111 eallnlatu could be reviled flu1bei boca111e ....tJili alid outlays la
the lao\ wioka of lhe llacal year· ...
1eaerally-1ioovy ml dllflcult to -II
with ~laian. •
A ' ...... C.M·
Cou'ncilmen to Get Budget
The administration planned a big
hud~el de(lclt this year on the'the«y that
a b dose of federal spending would be
help ul while the economy wu alack and
unemployment high.
The rite of govmunent tDendina had
been expected to taper ofr ln JJli u 1
revived prtv1i. economy. plcl<ed up Ibo
alack.
•
· .A·P'llP.l'i,budpi C1f·$JMSIPll will be.
-led to CGota M-c!IJ counctlmen '
~&Ill. by, C11;~1etil'Nifib'iitiil. CouDciJ.inen &fe o:peeted1 t.;'take'DO IC;
lloa', an tlio blldfet'dUrtnc lllalr,7:Jo p.m. ftlldmc In di>'. COllDCll ...,,,"cl bal are .. ,...,.mt to rm-ta>lodl-.Jtema
f
pollible to eiprea 1n numbers," be 1(1..
ded.
"SlmplJ lllted It I> llU: I 1i...... ef.
fort by the -.,.ment Uld penonnel Clf
lbla dlJ fo.coollnue to pn>V\de tho NlllO
hlcb level "' -. wltll • minimum In-~,In NqlleOled """'4'Cel. 'llllt ....
jeotlff •-tllat I believe to be realiltlc
and ltt.alnable. 11 I •
'Ibo $10.t , million .IJudiel Includes both
cjj>ttol· lm-Oinent-liill--.-r<I fund
H)><lldlbna but· not the CCll«·llflnC tn-
-I« cHJ employes. Any ailary ad·
~ ~ will be In addition
to tlio ftcure• Sc!nlbal'• • lladgtt .,.._. employe
Ina ...... la l'erivol dty "'1>artlll«ttl
tillt~be llfect Will be•~. In 1111 ~
he does, bowu .... rtdimmend comblnm1
lhl -Plrb ~. Recrea-tion ~ and-die Goll CourH De-potli ____ """.,.. .. itid, to be
' ..
•
called the Leuure Activity Admlnlltr•·
lion.
'Ibo 'bolonced ~ calla for caP\lal
lmpnmrnenti of ft;7c,eo, up !oar .,<..
emt """ lat yesr. lmplowmenl of
.-. porb IJld Iha -bllthment of a ...... ralrile,. Park land acqllilltloa fund
.......i for the outlay.
-.. peeled durq tho lflS.71 • ti.cal year tot1I fl0,ln,!lf7 which II ...
ICUJ fllt more lhan tbe ~ tr·
pendltures.
'I'be. revenues Include $3,17.0,000 from
mall 111ot ta:.ies IJld $3,031,000 trom
pn>pe:rty tnet.
· '!be current )ll'Ollttly lu ''le of $1.12
per $100 of ustllled valuation ii recom-
mended by SOrlabal to be beld II lhat
level. 1bo figure tnctud .. 17-centa for the
Parlr: and ' RecrtaUon O\strict and 15--
cenll lor the -Uchllnl dlltrict.
•
But an unexpected lncruM In cor-
por1te taxe1 and I a div Id u.a I
cmnrlthhoidi"I taua -p1 .. •a-delay by
C9ngre11 in acUnc on ~ -lion'• revenuo llUriu Jll'O-pooll -toot moet of Iba __ oaf oflbe
... .... -~ plana. no mu11, .. ......,.. 1n 111o .. -
budgel.flgun, 11 that Ille l!Jcal atlmui111
In ~ tm IJld 1m. wUI bo •-I~ same.
ln testimony before the Wa11 IJld
-Means Qlmmllt .. , ectlnl Tffuury
Secmary Chari .. E. Walker said the
twin dolldia "wlU cootlnue. ap.
proprlatety, to atlmulate an ecooomy in
which unemployment 11 too blgh IJld
pl1nt uUll11tlon too low.
"But over the aame period, we <:ll'I and
muat prove thal man la the muter o1 Iba
rederal budget -lhat the spending
restraint necessary to guard 11alnR the
L•..... t :::::... ~ -,, .. ....... c-.. ~ ....... ,. -·-.• 1...,,..wi ,... ,..,, .,., ......... ~
1•111111 . M
• ..,
. '
I
l
;i'-.VAI L Y ~ILOT t
Trut\1Squad .....
Iteport Eyed
By Scl1mitz
·n. campalp direc:tor for CM·
l rtSlman John Schmitz today charged
the rival Andrew lllnshaw camp with
P'roclucin& an anoqymoUJ smear of yet
.another ~ Diatrict Congreulonal GOP
hoptful. Earl Carraway of El Toro.
Hlnshaw's campaign manager, In tum.
denied the assertion and claimed cot.
lua'°n bttween Carraway and SchmilJ
fortes.
William S. Hulsy, Schmitz' campaign
chltf, said today ht had uked the Tustin
Police Departme nt to Investigate a docu·
ment produced as the "Republican Truth
Squid Report -43C."
Hu!Jy lileges the unsigned report may
have been typed by someone at Hinshaw
campaign headquarters. Further, the
Schmitz akle not.ti, distribution of the
"disparaging campa1gn m a t e r i a I ' '
without the name and address of it!
author being attached to it, violates the
atete electlt>na code.
Chip Cleary, a Santa Ana public rela-
tlonJ man who head3 the Hin.shaw cam·
palgn, said , "l don't know anything about
the 'b'uth squad' report." He denied that
anyone on the county assessor'! cam-
paign stafr would have produced the
document.
"It is lntertllling that it isn't Carraway
him.self who is protesting. b ut
Congressman Schmitz. To me that spell!
collu.si.,.e action I have long &uspected,"
Cleary said.
·"It tends to confirm my belief that
C'1'1'away hi Schmlti' stooge, entering the
fllCe to draw off antl-Schmitz votes as a
candkilte who claims to support Pre!I·
dent Nbon,'' Cl...-y said.
. ·Meanwhile, ol>Jervera of the three-way
GOP race for the nomination far Schmitt•
congressional seat, recall. that Carraway
bas charged that Jlinshaw entered th e
race to assure a Schmitz vic tory.
Cleary rebuts this vi ew, safing that in
1970 Carraway was a "substantial con·
lrlbutor" to John Schmitz' re-election bid.
The quettioned "truth squad" report
allegea to be a recitation of entries in the
public record.
~ report presents an unflattering
personal hlltory or Carraway.
It U1U ,.ven enlrles alleged to be part
of the voter re1iatraUon. record.I which
detail Carraway's voter registrations in
Orange County since 19f>4 when be
r~istered u a Democrat.
Mesa's Fish Fry
Winners Told
In Float Parade
Second and third place wtnnera in float
Clatqorles during Saturday's Colla Mesa
~h Fry Parad~ were announced today
~ Oiff 'Wesdorr, parade chairman.
t in the Commercial OtvL!ion, won by
~rial Bank, second place was taken 11f Carvel lee (ham, and thi1d pi11<e was
'-Ue between Shai:ey's Pizza and MIUa's
l(exlcan Restaurant.
••The City___...t Dlvlti.., was won 11f Huntington Buell, with WetlminJler
.iicond, and Orange and Fountain Valley
&red for third. The Garden Grove
llrawberry F'"Uvai, ~ eni..red In that
~tegory, won the awee}:Wtak:ea award.
t Second place winner Ill the Youth
Di.,.ision, won by the Newport-11-fesa
.furuor All American Football AskM:!a-
tfon, was the noat entered by the Future
F armers oi America, Costa Afe1a.
:Second place ln the Civic Division was
rded to the Red Barons ol Orange
nty. and third place to the U.S. Navy
crulting Service. The winn<?r in that
c!Jvision was the Balboa Bay Lions Qub.
Stilt Cha111pion ship
" 1LITl'LE DOWNHAM, England (UPI )
.J. Fra8er Giltxrt, 16, won the British
ts '<?hamplonship Sunday by walking
yards on &tilts.
DAILY PILOT
'The Dr.,.. C-.t Dia.IL 'f ,.!LOT, wlffl ~
hi ""'*Ind IN NIWI-,.,,__ b PllMI.,_ ""
"'-0......., Ctfft Ploltll!Vo ..... t ""'"ny. ~ re,. tldll*" •re -'111\fd, MWllfty "'"""""
Frid•'/'. liar (oat• Mn1, N.._, lwcfl.
HuntlnGlvn BNCttlF01111i.l11 V•li.-t', LI~
l•cil. l"')'le(S.dd~clr. end S111 Clenw.iltl
S.11 J-C.plOt•r.a. A 111191• , .. .,..,
MlltfDn k Pllbrl•hto! S.lllnl•'l'S t nll Sllllll1y1.
I T ... prlncl.,.I publt..11.,_ pt.111 It 11 llO Wnl
. l•Y Strnl, C-. Mn11 O llfomll, f )'fl,
"•"•" N. w •• ~ l'r•ld9r!f •I'd l'Ul:lllthtt
Jtck A. C•rl•v Vkt ,.,._ldll'll W Chntnl Mtntrttr
Th•"''' 1Ctt¥il ....
' '"'-·· A. .. .,.,.1 .. M--1 aert .. H. u.. .,.M .. '· Nin ........... ,M ............ c-.--310 Wnt ,,., lhet
! ... ;:"• ~·:.:: ''''· ti•l•
t ,.~~~"=l,1:!:-11
t .. ~.,... ....,.1 11111 '-"' aeu..,.,.i ,.. c.~ .. -~ •• c-IM ......
I Toi-17t41 '4l-4JJI
Ct SI .... ~ l'I MJ-1111
~t, ,lfrl. ~ CMll ~ ~. Mt> """ tlllrlel, 11~""*-· ~ fNtlW .. ......,,...,,... ,.,.....
""' 1111 '"'" M•• wt"*ill INtlll ,.,.. ...... ., ..,,.., ...... .
--~ ..... c-. .... Cll fl •"---.... .. ""... .,., .........,, "' -tl.11 .....,., _,.. .... ,. ..... .......,.
'
Moncs.y, J1111t S, 19n
DAIL 'f PILOT Sten P"'""
Humphrey
Rakes Foe
On Right,s
LOS ANGELES IUPI ) -liubert H.
Humphrey toda y accused George S.
McGovern of \'Oling to "emasculate" .1
key section of the 1964 Clvil fUgbt.s Acl.
lie also scheduled an hour-Iona telethon
cm election eve in a la.st · ditch eUort to
atop McGovern.
f..IcGover11 . confident of "'inning the im-
portant California primary and its 271
delegate votes. broke off hi!! campaigning
ln the state to schedule a four-hour swing
into New Mexico, which also holds a
primary Tuesday.
Aldes to both senators looked for s
common break in the hectic schedules to
arrange a fourth "debate," which
Humphrey suggested and to whicll
McGovern agreed.
Jn a speech prepared for delivery at a
rally In Oakland, Humph rey accused
111cGovern of "a brazen and full-scale at-
tempt to emasculate the voting rights
provision o! the Civil Rights Act.''
He said McGovern joined 22 senator~.
Including 18 southerners, in voting
against a· provision that allows the at-
torney general to require that all courts
expedite legal complaints on voting
rights.
"I challenge Senator t1cGovern to deny
to any black or any Mexi can-American or
to anoyne else in the state of CaUfomia
that he did no t cast this vote/' Humphrey
said. ·
ANGELA MARX TOP TODDLER UNDER ONE YEAR OLD PAMELA YOUNG, 2, PRIZE WINNER OF OLDER ~S
Winner Held by Proud F•lher, Steve M.trx of Costa Mesa Mother Mrs. Rou Young of Cost1 Me11 Shlr11 in GI y
.--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Fron i~agel Con~ert Quiet From Page i
The Mlnnesola senator, tr a i 11 n g
McGovern by 46-26 percent In the
respected California-Field poll, acheduled
a prime-time 8,p.m.-9 p.m. television pro.
gram during which listeners can call and
ask questions.
VIETNAM . . . FISH FRY ...
The program will be shown on nlne
commercial TV stations and 32 cable
television systems with an estimated 1.7
million potential viewers.
munist shore batteries but \\'ere not hit,
apokesmen said.
The U.S. Command announced a partial
pullout or troops toda y from its
northernmost jlajor ba!e in Vietnam-a
toir.secret ~municat ions camp near
the threatened former imperial capital of
Hue.
A command communique also reported
that U.S. troop &tre:ngth in Vietnam fell
last week by 1,100 men to 63 ,700 -the
lowest level since the 59,900 flgure of
J une, 1965, but still short of President
Nixon's targeted 49,000 by the end of this
month.
The communique announced the deac-
tivation or the 200-men 138th Aviation
Company, the air intelligence arm of the
secrecy-shrotided 1,2{)().man 8th Radio
Research station at Phu Bai, 17 miles
.south of lfue.
Eight U.S. Air Force jeta streaked lo
within SO miles ot the Chinese border
Sunday and demolished twin bridges on
Hanoi's northwest rail line to China with
fi ve 2,@ pound laser-guided bombs,
military spokesmen said todM'.
"\Ve knocked the hell oUt" of them,·•
said one officer. ''Those lastr·guJded
bombs don't mJss."
U.S. military sources said other bridges
<ln both the oorthwest and northeast rall
11nes linking to Ollna have not been hit
and they would be attacked in the future.
A seventh aircraft carrier, the
Ticonderoga. has joi ned the U.S. 7th
Fleet and will arrive off the coast of Viet·
nam within a week, U.S. military sources
15aid today.
The Ticonderoga is now in Subic Bay,
In the Philippines.
The sources said the mission of lhl" ship
Is IC> "hunt and kill sub1narine.~." ~nd her
twin-engine planes are not eq t1ipped for
air strikes against the railroads. ro;ids
and industrial installations in North Viel·
nam "'hich are the tarJ!e\s for the planes
from the other carriers operating in the
Tonkin Gulf.
Humplrrey Gets
Yorty's Support
In State Primary . \
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor Sam
Yorty asked his backers today to vote for
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey In Tuesday's
presidential primary electlon in a slo~
McGovern effort.
Yorty is one of eight candldate11 lisetd
on the Democratic ballot In the primary,
but WA!I given no cbance of winning.
"I have decided to ask my Democratic
supporter! to cast their votes tomorrow
for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,'' Yorty's
statement said.
"Our Dtmocratic. party Is threatened
with suicidal radlcalhation by Sen.
George McGovern's lavishly flnanctd
campa i gn of deception and
demagoguery.''
He said Hum phrey "appears to bo the
only candidate ln a position to prevent
the radically 1p1rked, money-powtrtd
McGovern juggernaut from t a k 1· n g
CaliComla , by storm before the voters
wake up to what 11 happening to them."
Jle called Humphrey a "realistic, 1oyal
Amerk:an" althouf h he aald he has
"90me dlfCtrtncts' with the Minnesota
senator .
He .. Id d. Humphrey. "he plays
poUUc• 11 do mo1t politicians, but he
stops far short of 1ppeallng to extrtmilts
and eonfused kteallltlc dreamer1 to
1arner vott1.
"Thi aenator (McGovern) set out to
capture the radical left and he is now
their c•pUve," Yorty said.
Stones Open U.S. Tour in Seattle
SEATTLE (AP) -'The Rolling Stones, making their first Un ited States
appearance in their North America tour here Sunday night, "'ere greeted by
an enthusiastic but comparatively quiet · sellout crowd.
The night before in Vancouver, B.C .• a rock and bottle throwing melee
erupted outside the Pacific Coliseum during the first performance of their
first North American tour in three years.
The British rock group ~rfonned two concerts in Seattle's Coliseum Sun-
day night for an estimated 1.8,000 persons.
On Saturday in Vancouver, some 2,000 young persons tried to crash the
concert, antl police said 11 officers were hospitalized as a result of the scuffle.
None was seriously injured, pollce &aid.
Eight persons were arrested, police reported. The disturbance apparently
began when two smoke bo mbs were tossed into the lobby soon after the per-
rormance began.
Barking at Home Not
Canine-Just Pet Seal
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of Ille DtllJ l'lllt SI.tr
\Vhen lifeguard J im Stauffer arrives at
his Costa Mesa home at night, the bark·
Ing that wetcomes him isn't of the canine
variety. Jt"s the seal in his bedroom.
The seal is probably spluhlng ln his
pl!lstic klddy pool and waiting for J im to
get out the blender and grind up his e\'en-
ing ration of fish, evaporated milk, oil
and vitamins.
lt '\\.'ill probably be administered along
\Y it h a shot of penicillin and if all goes
\\'ell, J im's roommate soon will be well
enough to rejoin his furry pals in the blue
Pacific.
Stauffer. no111 a Laguna Beach life-
guard, is effi cient and "'ell-trained in hi"
profession but his avocatioo as a se-al
doctor developed almost accidentally a
couple of years ago when he was life-
guarding in Newport Beach.
people at the pavilion. They usually re-
quire addi tional forced feedings of tbe
~peclal blender mix.
His house guests apend most of their
time "just walking around the house''
Vr1th occasional dips in the plll.!tic pool,
which he doses with evaporated sea salt.
Jim takes them oot in tile yard ror an
airing once in a while, but this usually
results in l!I barking contest with the
neighbors' dogs, which is tir ing for the
convalescent and must be curbed, he e:r·
plains.
He regularly consults veterinarian
friends to keep up \lii!h the latest
de1·elopments in seal care and gets his
medication at cost from an interesl('d
Costa ~fesa vet, This expense is reim-
bursed by the Newport Beach Surf
Lifesaving AssociaUon for seals that
beach in that area, but so Car Stauffer
has been footing the bill for his Laguna
pa tie~.
13 month to 24 month division.
The runner-up in the younge r division
was Kristin Carlson, 9 mon ths. daughter
of Mrs. Marv Alice Carlson, 22652 Jenova
St.. Laguna ·Hills, with third place going
to David P. Martin, 12months, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Martin, 586 West
\Vilson St., Costa Mesa.
In the older division, the TUMer·UP
trophy was given to Mark Erwin, 14
months, daughter of Mrs. Carol Erwin,
2620 West Aurora St., Santa Ana, and
thi rd place to Stephen Bencivengo, 13
months, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Bencivengo, 1814 Viola Place, Costa
111esa.
A band contest Friday nig ht on the
park stage was won by "Central," which
captured a $50 <?ash award. Second place
and a $25 cash award was won by "13th
Our." The third and fourth place winners,
"Rush" and ".Bridges" each won $15.
The grand prize, a 1972 Ford Pinto sta-
tion wagon. was driven home by Kirk
Dhyton, 3018 Coolidge St., Costa Mesa .
Dayton held the lucky ticket stub among
thotLSands of fish dinners sold during the
festival. Each person who bought a fish
dinner was eligible for the grand prize.
Antique Clocks
Stolen in Mesa
A Cost.a ~1e.sa man called police Sunday
Rboul 6 p.m. to say he wanted to cancel a
patrol check, requested as a burglary
preventive, in person.
John Den~more, 73, of 141 Monte Vista
Ave., was contacted at his home by Of·
fice r Jack Watson.
Densmore said he wanted to cancel the
patrol check becau.'!e he was now home
from his ramping trip and. he noted, it
hadn't worked anyway,
Officer Watson took a burglary report
in which he said two antique clocks worth
$100 were stqlen from Densmore'& home
by someone who climbed through an
unlocked bathroom wlndOw.
"A little harbor seal came up on the
beach near the Balboa Pier," Stauffer
recalls. "It \\'as obviously slck and a little
girl kept asking me 'Why don't you do
something to he.Ip him -you're the
lifeguard . , .' "
He tried to load the ailing baby Into the
lifeguard jeep, but it wiggled out and
.splashed back into the water.
Tired of the way your rin.gs look?
Humphrey 11urfaced his own poll, taken
fn Los Angeles County by Public Affal rs
Communications A s so c i a t e s in
Washington, D.C. which showed the Min·
nesota senator traUlng by less than 1 per-
cent.
His campaign manager claimed the
survey, taken Saturday, showed a
Humphrey surge but also docu mented
that Humphrey surprlslngly t r a 11 s
McGovern among blacks and Chicanos
and runs even with J ewish votera.
Humphrey's suggestion for one more
debate Wa! made spontaneously during
the third show on ABC's .. Issues and
Answers" Sunday. which included other
candidates for the nomination, Rep.
Shirley Chisholm, Los Angeles t1ayor
Sam Yorty and a representative of
hospitalized George C. \Vallace.
Davis Lauded
By McGover 1i
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Sen.
George S. 11-tcGovern told a crowd
of cheering blacks at a rally in
\Vatts that the acquittal of Aneela
Davis should be "ca~ for re-
jolclng."
McGovern, !peaking two hours
after a jury in San Jose cleared
Mis.! Davis Sunday, of in'o'ol.,.e.ment
in the Marin County courthou5e
shooting. was greeted by a crowd
chanting:
"Power of the people has freed
Angela .''
"This is a happy day which I can
understand." he SA id. "This is
another demonstration that we can
be pleased about.
"That's not a cause for moum·
Ing. That's not a cause for protest.
That ought to be a <?ause for re-
joicing."
See story on Page 5.
By e'o'ening it was back on the beach
and this 1ime Jim captured it in a
blanket and took it to a veterinarian who
adm1nlstered antibiotics and vi tamins,
along with a brief lecture on seal
ailments.
Why Not Have Your Rings
Reset In Beautiful
New Mountings? lie gave Stauffer a supply of medicine
and suggeslcd he take the anima l home
and nurse it for a fe Yi' days before return~
ing it to the WRter.
The seal responded promptly to the
prescribed treatment and Stauffer fOUJKt
he'd become the resident expert in seal
care. "From then on," he says, "any
lime a seal came up on the beach, they'd
call me."
Wa can de1i9n • ring espac:ieUy for you with your
old d iemonds. We e lso have loo1e diamonds e nd
can 11dd io your pre11nt ones. Check our price1
and save.
He is currently tt!aling his 10th patient
at his home on 154 Albert Pi>ct. St.uller
has also given emergency first ald to
animals too large 11:> hool home Jn hi& car,
Including one 300 pound ,., lion lhlL
beached at Irvlnt Cove and wu 1lven an-
tibklClc shots Oil the •pot, tr1th the aid of
a Lagma Buch police orflctr.
Stauffer'• hou .. fllelll ""'" nncod In
:the from a 20-P"l!ld berbor -1 to • IIO-
poond sea elfllbant. The UIUal NY Is
about a week to 10 day1.
Most of the hart>or aells are sufferlnc
from pneumonia while lJ'l6 MA flont
types of distemper which require
-•lrhlt lonpr tftatment-.
~recovery rate ff'CP1 pneumonia ·ls
uctlltnt. "U 10• can pt them put the
first l.W days. and pl lbein Nrtod
eating. you've 1ot il mod<,'' a71 Stauf-
1 ....
The barl>or •Ill -u.., nimmlllC food, -be ,.ca fnJm tbe u.,. bolt
"~---......................... _., .. ,.._ _ ..... _ ............ ...
ALL DtAMOMn MAIANTllD TO .,,.., •• AT •o'lt MOii THAN TOI PAY.
DIAMOND WEDDING
AND ENGAGEMENT RINGS
1002 rTIMS TO CHO_OSE FIOM • FIND IT HOE FIRST
COSiA MESA JEWELRY and.LOAN
Ol'IN DAILY ' 1e 6
1111 NIWPOIT ILVD .
COMI IN AND IROWSI AROUND
'
PHONE 646·7741 --
f
DOM IACm
OUR MOST
UNUSUAL
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
W....p..., ··-··· frWI .. •• wll 1n _.
... .... .U..tt•• ... .,.
pniiH n 40•;. MOH .... ,..,.i.i,_,, ..
,_ -oy ...... c.
,.. ....... -.?
COMPAU.
-
\
lo
thr
at
me
A
C()
pe
pie
r:i.i
.67
acr
coa
Gr
I
per
<Ill
rec
El
hit.
I.
.04
Ji
pat
F
wiU
last
die!
N
cou ..
w
Ile
Fri
Bar
~