HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-06-06 - Orange Coast PilotMesu Vendor Eludes Death ...... -'--""'I
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Candidate Denies First Smog Alert
Stand on Busing Issued • I l l
In •s111ear Letter!' Elderly Warned_ • --·
DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON , JUNE 6, 1972
VOL. U , NC!· 151, 2 St:CTlONS, :tt PAGES
County H'¥
Y ear's First
• OSIOll
• Ille
Denies Charges
S mog A lert Wenke Attacked
Scattered thundershowers v.•il\ continue
to hit the Orange Coast in brief spury 5
through \Vednesda)'. weather forecaste{s
at the Orange County Forestry Depart-
ment said today.
A series of freak showers. some ac-
companied by lightning and thunder. aP-
peared !\·Tonday in some areas but co~
plck'ly missed adjoining cities. . ,
San Clemente recorded .12 inches 6f
rain, v.·hich brought the year 's total up tQ
.67 inches. Bolls of lightning streaked
across the sky about 3:30 p.m. over the,
coastal city, as v.·ell as O\'er Garden
Grove and Anaheim.
Hun tington Beach and Cosla 11esa ex-
perienced light brief sprink les. v.·hilc only
an overcast sky cove red Laguna Beach.
El Toro ~tarine Crirps Air St ation
recorded a .02 inch reading of rain for the
El Toro-lrvine area Monday. I
Nearby Trabuco Ca nyo n was harde&.t \
hit. The Forestry departn)ent recorded a ·
l.12 inch rainfall there. in contrast to a !
.04 inch count in Irvine Lake. •
Lightning started a tree fire in Holy
Jim Canyo n. burning a six foot by 12 foot
patch of ground before rain put it out.
Forestry officials said there is an 80
percent ch ance of more rainfall today •
and Wednesday. l
The freak weather Monday also in-1 eluded the first smog alert or the year
issued by the Orange Count y Air Pollu-
tion Control (OCAPCD) District at about ~
1:20 p.m.
The ozone count rose to .42 parts per
million (PPM) in La Habra and schools
were warned to keep chi ldren from
strenuous exercise. The alert was ended
at 2 p.m. when winds cau~ed the count to
drop be.low the .35 ppm level .
Edward Camarena, engineer for the
OCAPCD, said the same breezes today
will keep the smog COWlt down, although
last night the department was still pre-
dicting an a1ort today.
Next Monday. said Camarena, an ozone
count of .20 ppm will replace the .35 ppm
as the warning point. -
the 'Dew OCAPCD warnings will also
be· Lssued to elderly residents and those
with respiratOry or heart conditions,
camarena aaki.
Delalls on the n•w syotem will he rt-
1~ Friday.
~(}range County Harbor Department
nlforted that a llO!Jlhw"' iwell was
crutlng six IO eight foot wives along the
OOUI today.
Long Beach Man Dies
WASHINGTON (APJ -The Defen•e
Depar1ment reported Monday that Sgt.
Francis C. Brockman !II, son of Mn.
Barbara L. Hauaaven of Long Beach, wu
killed Ill •<tton. . ---
i
In Smear Letter
By JACK BROBACK
01 lflt D•ll'J l'llot SllH
A last-minute smear letter attacking
First District supervisorial candidate
Willian\ Wenke was repudiated l\ilonda y
by one of the three men whose signatures
were used in an eleventh hour campaign
letter .
In the Jetter. mailed rrom Los Angeles
Sunday and received by First District
voters Monday, Wenke is accused of
revoring 6Chool busing in Santa Ana.
The letter admits that Wenke has Mt
mentioned busing in his campaign to
unseat incumbent Supervisor Robert Bat·
tin but charges that. "If he is elected, the
first thing he 'll do is to start the wheels
in motion to establish a massive busing
program for all of Orange County."
Wenke branded the letter "a deliberate
smear and a lie ."
The candidate said. "I am not for bus-
ing and have made it clear many time's
r,&. Ulat I am for the neighborhood schools
., ->*-'concept."
UPl..'lll!fl 11 , •'. '' . ':)~-1·,... -. .. ...... ,-..
' Challenge r Critical Daniel Ellsberg tallis with re-
porters at'lhe U.~.:$ur\4!>i!l•
wbere be appearid for final
pre-trial motions on charges
stemming from the Pentagon
papers case. He . Is t harged
with conspiracy an'd theft of-
confidential U.S. 1documents
wbile an ernploye ol. lhe Rand
Corporation.
SAN '· Ii1tGO (AP ) -The · oi\Yy"
cha11enger to Assemblyman Bob Wilson's
renomination today was reported "quite
critical" in Clairmont General Hospilal,
five d~:s. '1'ter .a ~rt •attack.1 earl 'G.
Lutz, 61, opposed a bid for a full term In
the CaUfomia Legislature for Wilson, who
won a runoU last March lo become the
onl y Democrat ever to rtpre!'lent the 76th
District.
Costa~esa Vendor Spared
. . )
. Despit~ Gunman's T..~unts
. '
_ By AR'J111lR lit VINSEL -
.• Of .. .,..,, 'r' ..... ' '
• Sittihg with a J'Old rifle barr•I at his
temple, a catering true\ operator waited
!or his-late late Moodly In Costa Mesa.
1s one bandit held ·the gun and the other
urged him tc shoot. .
Shennan W. Vandeman. 28, of Fountain
Valley, !llMl!ved the harrowing l111S p.m.
ordeal. •
m -rffliiin •• cfi<iOe-oiiljlO lii&t h1m
~~. lbat!«ln.8 l!lf Pl)rl)alb: -• truck window, the dmd. Vl<Lbh IOld.
police after be regained consciousneu.
Vandeman -who said he lost $40 in
the armed J"'ObOtry -drove to a, 'Harbor
Boulevard doughnut shop se"veral hundred
yards from the darkened area where he
was attacked and robbed .
He awoke to apot Officer David Walll;er
~ke<LalJl>c..abop_ 911 a cou.. break.
(S.. HOLDUP, Pa&• I)
...
T HESE DRINKS
·G<ktu-rott:,'mt'r"'"'" ·
C1l!CAGo (UP I) -· Coclrtall customer•
may how take Vitamin E capsules at the
eiil ol, a toolhplck, llke . an o1i•e. or
floating like a cherry or lemon peel in
Uleir drinkJ at Sage't East restaurant.
The restaurant saJd ·lt would make the
vltamln1 available In drinks startlng
~-
•
•
4
• ur1es
Death Toll
Feared High
111 Rl1od es ia .
Variable cloods are Jo the pic-
ture througb Wedotad>y along the
Orange Coast, 1'1111 ~Uity ot
showert in the e\'onlng !lours.
That moist, warm 1lr will con--
linue-with highs of 70 at the beach
rlsin~ to near IG Inland. Tho
weatberlady also reminds coast •
weather-watchers to be rure to 1
vott. '
INSIDE TODA 'Y -
•• ~
. • ' ,
" .. Lal< rtporll how·/lll<red Olll
of th< A!"-• npublic •I B• • ~l.Joflftf{~i~=: .· ')
Set stor y, Page J !. ,
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f
2 01.h • ""•\.Ut •
McGoVern Seeks Unity . -
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Unschedul,ed Meet Held With Governors
, HOUSTON, Tex . (AP l -In a bid ror ,,,my uolly, presldenUal front runner
~e McGovern met wltti DemocraUc
d'OVemon early today and nkl hJ1 cam·
,paip will be ..,. ol cooperation Jn<!
..-ecooclliati()l) rather than dlvislveness.
! 'tbc South Dakota senalor alU.-rtd lu~
-rampa.Jgn .chtdule And new into this
'
sprawling iOtlthealt Tfxa:1 city late Mon-
day nl1ht !• a meeting wllh the
DemocraUc govtmon:, most of whom
hive remained neutral (Ir oppostd to
AfcCovem '1 candidacy.
When the meeting was over, IM8t of
the Southern chief exl'.'Cuiives were 1ttill
voicing doubt! or oPPQ!lliOO t o
htcGovem, claiming hls cancudacy would
assure Southern strtnath fOr Pres.Sent
Nixon and other GOP office-seekers 1n
November.
* * * ,'.{ *
But !itcGovern, whose liberal \'iev.·s on
several issues ha\•e been an ilii-~ue amonf:!
DemocTatic governors attending !he (111-
nual bipartisan Naltonal (;ovemors'
Col1ference her'e, apparently did not hurt
bl! cause by lhowing up.
Voters Flock w Polls McGovern delayed his departure from
Houston long enough today to attend a
prayer breakfast with all the governors
-Republican u well as Democratic.
Early in Crucial Race
He wu introduced but did not speak.
Aa he prepared to ttturn to the airport,
McGovern said of the discussions V.'llh
Democratic governors:
"It was a good, u!l eful exchange. \Ve
established a good v.·orking relationship if
I bfcome thf nornlnet>." LOS A.~GELES (AP ) -Voter s "'ent lo
the polls early and in large nun1bers in
California's cruci(ll primary election to-
day with the hopes of Sens. lluberl •1.
J.lumphrey and George r.1 cr;overn !or the
Democratic presidentla! no m i n a l l on
riding on the result.!.
In thf firs! hour of voting in populous
l..oa Angfles County, allout three percent
of the 3,233.8'l5 registered \'Olers cast
ballots, the county registrar reported.
Skies were overcast and the air was
warn1 and muggy over me.et of the state.
President and Mrs. Nixotl voted by
ablentee ballot.
A spokesman said Monda y in Key Bis-
cayne, .Fla .. that they sent in their ballots
afltt returnlng from the Soviet sun1mil
trip,
The "'inner of today 's president ial
primary carries a bloc of 271 delegate
volts into the Democratic National
Convention at Miami Beach -one.sixth
of the total needed to win !hf nominalio11.
i'he polls are open from 7 a.m. until 8
p.m.
The vole count may be slow because of
a Jong ballot in some areas and a W£ile-in
campaign on behalf of Alabama Gov.
George C. Wallace.
Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown
estimated that 3.8 million of the state's
5.1 million Democrats -or 75 percent -
would vote today . lured mostly by the
presidential contest. He forecast a record
turnout of 73 percent of the 9.1 million
rfgistered voters.
Because San Francisco p0lling places
may be open as late as 10 p.m., Brown
Jr. asked the three major broadcast
networks to hold back their computerized
winner projections for several hours.
Jodlcatk>ns were his request would bt
turned down .
In telegrams Monday to ABC, CBS and
NBC election officials, he said he feared
the network predictions would swin g the
votes of late voters in San Francisco,
perhaps even deciding the outCQn1e or lhe
1tate primary.
President Nixon is challenged on the
Republican ballot by Rep. John ~f.
Ashbrook or Ohio but Ashbrook is not
Frorn Page 1
HOLDUP ...
11bout ll :30 p.m., according lo in-
vestigators.
The truck driver said he had pulled into
the industrial area on \Varehouse Road
about JOO yards off •!arbor Boulevard to
dump stale coffee after completing his
rounds.
Vandeman said he complfted the
C'hore. turned off the gas bumers and
climbed back into his cab "''Ith hls win·
dow partially down .
Suddfnly he felt the rifle against his
head and heard a menacing male voice
v.•arn him not to turn or he would blow
his brains oot.
"Shoot him," Vandeman quoted a sec·
ond bandit as urging.
Officer Walker and Detective Richard
}'redericksen rftumed to the holdup
:-;cfne and found nothing but Vandeman's
tlun1pcd coffee c<1rgo and the shattered
\\'1nd1w glass.
Investigators theorizing l~ bandits
knew Vandeman's rounds and timetable
before ainbushing him planned to in~
tcrvie\\' the vietim again toda y.
He saw neither of tile bandits, ;i.c-
c:o~dinl? lo l)O!icc.
ST
DAILY PILOT
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Mt""91llGI Editor
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'
considered a serlous threat to Nixon's
winning California's 96 delegate \'Ole~ to
the GOP <.'Clnventkin.
\Valla ce failed to file in time to make
lhe Democratic ballot. but a write·in
campaign Yla! under way on behalf of the
Alabama governor, still In a Maryland
ho1>pital recuperating from gunshot
wounds suffered at a shopping center
rally in Laurel, Md ., May 15.
There was no chance or Walla ce's col-
lecting any delegates in California whtre
the winner reaps the enlirt 271-vote blOc:'.
But his campaign managers hoped tor an
expression or Wallace strtngth in the
state where busing of school children for
racial balance has been an emotional
issue in some areas. but not a m:ijor
point of dlscu.ssion betwetn McGo\'ern
and Humphrey.
A victory for 11-fcGovfrn in California
would propt'1 him toward the Democratic
National Convention in ~fiami Beach in
July with a commanding lead in delegate
votes -more than half the 1,509 needtd
to win thf! nomination.
llumphrey had to win to remain a ma·
jor contender !or the nomination althou gh
he vowed to fight on even if he lost.
"I'm going on to Miami Beach," vo\1·ed
the 151-year-<ild campaigner.
McGovern's hopes were buoyed by a
California Poll that showed him trouncing
Humphrey by 20 pePcentage points Jn a
public opinion sampling -a lfad so big
even McG<lvem expressed skepticis m
about it. llumphrey denounced the poll as
totally unrfallstic and produced hi s own
poll showing him neck and neck with
~1cGovern.
From Pagel
DISASTER ...
deaths but mine sources said they believ-
ed the toU would be high.
The world's worst mining disaster oc-
curred in ~fanchuria in 1942, when t,549
workers were Jtiiled in the Honkelko
Colliery. The wor11l in the United States
was on Dec. fi, 1907, when 361 died at
~1ononeaf\. W. Va.
Wankie is 350 miles '.\'e6t of Salisbury.
lt ls Rhodesia's major coal supplier and
adjoins the Wankie game reserve near
the Victoria Falls.
A Rhodesian Air Force plane !Jew can-
isters of liquid oxygen to the mine lo
help In the rescue operations which began
in1 mediately after the blast.
A spokesman for t h e c:ornp1.ny in
Bulawayo, speaking to UPI in Brussels
by telephone, said he had no firm
casualty fieures. '
James Parke, divisiooel manager for
\\'anJcje Colliery, said rescue teems from
mines all over Rhodesia \\'ere converging
on Wankie.
"Four rescue teams also are coming up
from South Africa," he 1a.id. "I can't con-
firm or deny reparts that there heve
bttn heavy ca.aual ties, but as yet we
really don't know."
The mine recently lnstallfd special
rescue apparatus. Rescue "'orkers u·ear·
ing oxygen back packs moved cautiouslv
through the gas-filled shafts of the No. 2
colliery.
The spokesman said: "The rescue
teain s are being hampered by the pres-
enc(' Of lt>tha! methane gas In the mine
shaft, \\'hich cannot be extracted because
the extractor fans ~·fre damaged in the
explosion."
lff said he had no immediate in-
fonn11tion on how the explosion occufTed.
The httJ!e mine employs 4.500 Africans
and 4GO "'hites. Jt produces about 3~~
million toru of coa l a year, and supplies
all Rhodesia's coal needs.
It formerly \\'as also the main coal sup-
plier lo the Zambian copperbelt mines,
but the amount of \Vankie coal imported
by Zambia has been drastically reductd
in the last few years as Zambia
developed lls own coal resotrces.
The \\'ankie mine al!'<l produces about
400,000 Ions or coke a year, which BUp-
plles Rhodesia's needs and also is ex-
ported to South Africa, Europe and
elsewhere.
"l thi11k it \\'as good that he came,''
Georgia Gciv. Jilnmy Carter said in an in-
terv1ew. 11'The hest point W85 just the fact
that he lfft California and came here . It
mov.·ed he was coocerned ."
But Carter, generally identified as the
leader ol the anti·McGowm for c es
among the Democratic go\'ernors. said,
"! really can't say that my attitude
to1•,.ard him has changed."
~1cGovern on A-tonday pr e d i ct e d
primary election victories today in
CaUfomia, New Jersey, South Dakota and
New Jl.1exico.
He told an Albuquerque rally ~fonday
tluit wins in the four statt"s "'ill ''build the
kind of momentum to carry us all the
way lo the presidential nomination."
The Sooth Dakota senator may have
tacked down a popular-vote victory in
Nev; Mexico's first presidential prin1ary
election with his late-hour campaign visit.
An estimated 3.500 persons were in
AtbuquerQue's Old To"'" Plaza to see and
heHr the senator during a late afternoon
rally .
J\lean~·hile Sen. J1ubert H. Jlurnphrey
optin1istically pr~scd a last-minute
pursuit for vole s today in suburban Los
Angeles.
Meye1· Lansky,
Part11er Cl1arged
In Tax Evasion
WASHINGTON (AP) -Meyer Lansky
and a reputed longtime associate \\·ere in-
dicted by a federal grand jury today on
charges of conspiring to avoid paying
taxes on monfy allegedly received from
gamblers on junkets to Grorgc Raft's
Colony Sparling Club in London. England.
Lansky. 69, and his reputfd associate,
Dioo Cellini. also were accused by the
grand jury in U.S. District Court in
~1iami or conspiring to obstruct the
Internal Revenue Service from assessing
income taxes. Cellini also wss charged
with filing two false incomf tax returns.
The Justice Department announced the
indictment action.
Lansky is living in Israel and lighting
attfmpts by the Israeli government to
deport him. }le was indicted in 1'.liami
last year for refusing to appear before a
grand jury in Aliami and in Las Vegas in
connection with alleged illegal gambling
activities.
Cellini, 57, a nat ive of Steubenville.
Ohio, li\'es in Romf where he represents
an American slot machine manufacturer.
lie wa1 a stockholder and employe of
llaft's gambling casino which operated
from 1966 to 1969.
According lo the indictment, Cellini set
up a firm called Travel and Re.sorts
Enterprises lnc., in Miami to organize
gambling junkfts to the Colony Qub end
other !orelgn casinos.
Emplo)'es Seek
Battin 'Damages'
Damages of $10.000 were demanded
!'.1onclay in an Orange County Superior
Court lawsuit that charges Supervisor
Robert Battin with unlawfully using a
county mailing list !or his own election
purposes.
'Ille Orange County Employes Associa-
tion also asks in its action against the
F'lrst District supervisor for further
damages to be awarded ll'hen the
organization can assess the value or
clerical and mechanical help allegedly,
ul!l\ied by Battin.
'Tht complaint states that Battin ol:r
fained the computerized malling list la!t
week and used the county information to
1nall liter11lure to First District voters.
Members of the OCEA were urged last
wee k in a pn!cedent·setting bulletin
issued by the county "vken group to
vote against Battin in today's e.ltction.
Governor Better., Gets Own Room
SILVER SPRING, Md. (UPI) -Doctors deeided lod Ry to tran sfer Gov.
George C. WallaCe from the Jntenslve care unit at Holy Croa Hospital where
he has been undergoing treatment since being shot May J5 to a prtvlite room .
''The significance ii that he 11 conUnulng to recovtr," a WaUAce prtss
aide, Elvin Stanton, aa1d ol Ibo trlllsftr rrom a $117-l-<lay room in lbe in·
tensive care unJt to lbe '81..a.day private room.
A hooplt&I rpokerman u.Jd Wallace's doclarl report that dtainaae from
Bn abdominal 1nfectJon bu been gre1Uy reduced. Walla ce was crlUc:ally
wounded-and ii paral::;_rom the walll down-in a May 15 auaufna:UOn
attempt.
SUtnton !aid Dr. Jostph . SchMno, Wallace's attending phy1lclan, re-
ported that the Democ:ratlc presldtnllal ca.ndldite's weight ($ steady. Wa'llace
lost abou t 20 po<mds from his admission ,..iahl of about ttlO pounds, in part
because d the lnlectlon .
•
DAILY PILOT Siii! PIMI•
Jtlighty Big Posies
Like J ack's beanstalk, those little green shoots nursed with plant
food by f\1rs . Elsie Wedge\vorth of Costa Mesa produced more than
the cucumbers she expected. Bil!y Wedge\vorth, 5, admires the huge
crop of sunflowers now blooming at 834 \V. 18th St.
Candy Buy Precedes
Armed Robbery of $167
T\\•o shal>bily-drcssed men. '" ho
purchased a roll of liffsavers from a
lluntington Beach delicatessen Monday
night. returned to the s1orf one hour later
to rob it of $167 at gunpoint.
Hobert.1 Carter told policf she wa s
\Vork.ing in the H&B Delicatessen. 1774l
Beach Blvd ., when the two men in their
early 20s first entered tbe store around
8:30 p.m.
One of the suspects. v.•caring a gray
hat , bought a roll of lifesavers from J\1iss
Man. Arrested
At Payoff Site
RENO. Nev. <UPI 1 -A suspect
\\'ho demanded $50,000 on thf threat
of blowing up a plush casino was
arrested when he arrivl?d to pick up
the payoff under a big rock east of
hfre. police have reported.
The suspect was identified as
Atonf Souza, :Ml, J·lalfway , Ore.
Police said a man earlier
tflephoned llarrah's Club Sunda y
and warned th11t a bo1nb had befn
planted and would be set of( by
remote control unless the ranso m
wns paid.
Carter and talked a bout ho1v priers \rere
rising, according to poli.:e.
An 'hour later, the two men rfappeared
in the store and the man with the gray
hat walked to the counter and cocked a
blue steel automatic pistol. He then lean-
ed over the counter holding the gun with
boLh hands and quietly asked Miss Carter
Jot the money, police said.
Miss Carter told policf she froze and
was not able to follow the commands of
the men until one of them touched her on
the arm and told her to open the cash
register. She did 90 and the second man
grabbed the cash drawer and the two fled
the store.
A regular customer of th~ store, David
flenson , found 1'-1Jss Carter in tfars
minutes after the robbers had fled. He
told police he had passed the store earlier
and noticed a dark gretn car parked
across the street from the store with its
lights oo. The robbery i.s still under in-
ve stigation. according to police.
Record Auction Total
SAN FRANCSJCO (AP ) -KQED, the
educsliooal televi.olion station-here. took
in $433.035 in its IO-day auction v.·hich
ended J\.1onday. station officials reported.
It was the largest amount raised in the
13-year history of the annual fundraiser.
Viets Rout
R ed Troops
AtKontum
SAIGO\' l lfPI) -T\\u lhous;ind South
\'ietnamc.;;,, troops st-nl the last Com-
n1un1st holdoots srurry1ng out of Konturn
t'.lty today cndin~ a 12-d:iy North Viet·
namese atte1npt to overrun lht strategic
Central l lij.th.!and s prov 1nclal capital.
A government spok esman 6aid 2.397
North Vie tnamese troops died during the
1>1ege, including 166 in Tuesday's action ;it
e tank base and a hospital.
... rhey (the N()rth Vie tnan1ese ) ju~t
gtarted running when \l't' movtd in. \\ f•
ldlled the1n as ll1ey on•erc running a1\·ay."
4:1 J.!(1\'e rnn 1rnt spokcsm;111 sa id.
1'hc Suuth V1 t·11111111eSl' vi1·torv al Kon-
!tun cndt'd the l;1test Co1nnnu11;t l!ri\'e to
(;<l plurc the t'.i\y and it.s sister-capit;il,
Plt>1ku . 30 n1iles to thf sooth.
·rh\' Noi·th Victnarncsc wanted to over·
run the !1110 cincs, tht>n send troops
fastward to the coast and cut South Viet-
nan1 ~n half.
Jn the air \'o'ar. A1neri c:i n fighter
bo111bcrs flev.• 220 n11ss1uns in i\urlh Viet-
n:1111, 1nos\ of thctn against rot1ds and
ra il wa ys near Vinh, the Cotninunists'
lie<.'Qnd largest port.
Clearing skies in lhf south allo\\.'etl
more mi ssi on s but the 2117 strike~ flo wn
l\1onday \11err still only half lhc nun1ber
f!0\\'11 durin~ J\·[ny.
The U.S. Comrnand ~;1l<l An11•ric.10 jets
also boinbed a railroad ~ard h::iJf v,.a.v
betwfen the Norlh Victna1nese capital of
llanoi and Hai phong, the country's
largest port. l)ilots al so repo rt£>d two
direct hits on a bridge on Highway 1, JJ()
miles south of ltanoL
In other dev elopnients.
-U.S. warplanes rfporled destroying
11() Communist bunkers and foxholes
;;1rowid Phu r..lv. a district county capital
in Binh Dinh Province alona the centra I
coast 280 miles north of Saigon. South
Vietnamese ground troops droYe thr
Communists out of the town Olle day
earlier.
-North Vietnamese troops shot do,1111
two American hel icopters near Phu 11y.
wounding four Americans.
-Radio Hanoi said c.ommunist gunner~
shot down two American fighter·bombcrs
over North Vietnam. 'The U.S. command
refused comment.
-At An Loe, the battered provincial
capital 60 miles north of Saigon. South
Vietnamese spokci;men reported C()m mu·
nists lobbed 289 rocket. inortar and ar-
tillery rounds into the city -one of the
lightest shc!llngs since !he siege started
in early April.
-UPI correspondent Donald A. Davi~
said from Hue that go v er nm e n t
spokfSITlen claimed 62 Co1nmunists killed
in two clashes northwest of the former
imperial capital. TY.'O Sout h Vic1namese
troops were killed.
Prisoner Strike
111 Co1111t y Fails
/\ rumorr<l strike of Orangt' C.Ounty Jail
prisone rs failed to materialize \1onday,
according to Capt. Will iam A Wallace,
head of the facility .
Wellace said about 50 prisoners offered
"passive resistance" against going lo
court but did not struggle "'hen they were
J1andcu ffed and walked oul of their Cflls.
In an unsigned note la:i;t v.·1."ek to jail
authorities. an unknown number of
pri sonfrs th~alened to begin passive
resistance Monday unless 15 dfmands
were met .
They included better food . longer
eating periods. longer \tisitation periods
anrl the piping of hi fi and radio into cell
blocks.
\\lallace said !here are about 125 in-
mates scheduled for crun. appearances
~1onday Rnd that most of them offered no
reslstancf.
IT'S HERE • • • Y b3TERYEAR!
SELECTION OF CARPETING WASN 'T
<FANTASTIC WHEN OUR GRANDFATHER
STARTED HIS CARPET STORE. ORIENTAL RUGS
WERE "IN," AND GRANDFATHER SPECIALIZED
IN THEM.
OUR FATHER GOT INTO THE ACT
A·ROUND 1918 .AND DEVELOPED A LARGE
VOLUME OF DOMESTIC CARPETS, MOSTLY
WIL TONS AND AXMINISTERS.
LATELY WE HAVE SEEN A RESURGENCE
OF AXMINISTER CARPETS IN B EA UT I F U L
FLORALS AND PRINTS. THE EFFECT CREA TED
BY AN UNUSUAL PATIERN CAN TRANSFORM
A DULL R 0 0 M INTO S 0 M ET HI N G
SPECTACULAR .
PLEASE STOP IN AND SEE OUR LARGE
SELECTION.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 l'lacentle Ave.
COSTA MISA
646-4131
HOURS: Mon. Thur Thur1 .. 9 to 5:30-Frl. 9 to 9 -SAT .. 9:10 to 5
I
Phys E d Now Elective
Saddleback Trus tees Nix Mandatory Class
By FREDERICK SCHOE~IEllL
01 '"' Dt llW Pllal Sllll
f\1andlltory student pt1rtic1pai1on 111
phrs1cal cduratioo c I u:.:. e ~ wa:i
eliminated ~1onday night by a split \'Ole
of lrustet>s of the Saddleback Con1munity
College District
Tru5lees votrd 3-1. with Alyn Brannon
of Tustin dissenting, to do ;iway with the
physical education requircn1ent fur
students over the age of 18. ln11teacl,
trustees appro,·ed a set of .. attracliYt"
phys ical education <'Ourse~ tMt .'>tudents
may take as elect ives. if th<'y y,·1sh.
Board members acted on a recooi·
mendation from a comm ittee of trustee'>
Patrick Backus of D<1na Point and John
Lund of Laguna Beaeh in taking the ac-
tion.
Only l'.'.'O c:nurscs in the proposal -
small boat sailing :.tnd :-kiing -failed tu
~et the approval of the board becStusc of
the high estimated course of instituting t hem.
/\n1ong the 11cw courses 111hlcb v.•erc
givC'n approval are backpa!'king, surfi ng,
bov.·!i ng, bicycling , badn1inton, and a
number or professional courses for
students plannin).! on physical education
or recreation major~.
Trustees also agreed to !'ontinue all
physical education courses that 1\•cre of-
fered this year such as archery, golf,
volleybaU. modern dance, body building,
basketball, bas~ball and football .
To make all the physical education
c:ourses attractive as elecllves. the board
;1~reed to boo1t the unit value of eacll
t.·lass fro111 one-half unit to a full unit.
George Harltnan, chalrman of the
physical tducation department, told the
board there \Yere many oth~r courses of
a recreational nature he would hive Uk~
to offer next year but couldn't because of
a :-.hr>rtage of facilit 1rs.
.. \lost of the lhese new courses \.\'ill be
conducted off ca1npus with students pro-
viding tht>ir ov.'n transportation," he
poin!ed out.
Brannon ~!lid he voted against th~
change because of the cost of instituting
some of the new rourscs, for example a
$200 cost to set up the bicycling class.
It was lhat com1nent truit led trustee
ll1i chael Collins of Mlssion Viejo to offer
a n1otion that any course rosting n1ore
th an $1 .000 be dell'lcd fro111 the proposal.
This motion v.·as t1pproved . nixing the
sinall boat saili11g and skiing courses.
with pricetags of $5,000 and $10,000
respectively.
Though he voted for the motion,
Backus said it was '"incuinbent" on the
board to offer such <'Ourses because of
the college's proximity to the sea. He
Friendly Robot~
Sc liool Crea tion Sliatters Image
By CAN DA CE PEARSON
Scieni:c fiction h:is given rotxits <1 bad
na1ne.
Latc .. night "f'l" 1novit'S have 1hcn1 sa p-.
ping the l'lt'ctrical supply. crushing peo-
ple in their paths.
Short stories <lepict thf'm as rhe coming
of the con1putcr age 11hl'll n1an and his
mind 1\·lll be obsolete.
But Jeanir. a blue:> and sil \'er rntxit rrsi-
dent of Universily lligh School in Irvine
refutes that 1miigc
'To electronics teacher Jim PO\.\'Crs.
"she" is a friend -at least he programs
her taped voice to make her seem that
v.·ay-and a valuable learning tool.
Jeanie, a sinking seven feel tall, is the
prod uct of I! student s Jn Po1~·ers' nd-
vanccd elcttronies i:lass, \\'ho began
designing her last September.
So far she ha s lin1ircd hut impressive
capabilities. She blinks lights. rotates ll
diamond·shaped antenna, can be pre-
ta pcd to speak in a high·iptcvhed voice,
11·his1lcs a11U sings.
Po1Ycrs 11·on't tell hov.· c1·crything is
done. ("Can 't give H11·ay our secrets''\,
bu t he v.·ill talk glowingly of the robot's
future.
She "·i ll soon be able to \.\'alk or glide
along by rrmotc control on wheels
po11·cred by lawn n1011·cr gears and clec ·
tric windo111 raiser motors.
"'There·s always something to do to im-
prove it," Pov.·ers said. "Tha t's the in-
teresting thing about electronics -yotJ
can go on and on."
Next year's students \\'ill also work on
making her head nod yes and shake no in
ans\ver to questions by i n s t a l l i n g
windshield ""iper motors. and on equip-
ping her with arms able to raise a person
by using convertible ca r lop motors.
Po11•ers experimented by having her
sing carols at Christmas. give an in-
lroductory electronics tiilk to \•!siting
eighth graders and hopes to use her more
next year to make announcements
around school .!Ind at essemblics. She is a
good attention-getter.
Pov.•ers has her call him "master" like
the genii in the bottle on the old "Jeanie"
television series.
'"!\<line <loesn't have much of a figure,''
he said of Jeanie, looking at the bulky
fiberglass body , "but l can dreatn."
Students involved In J eanie's creation
to date are Scott Millis, l<evin Hassett,
Stc\'e Kozloff, Rik Boose, Mike Cochran,
Terry Wilson, Dave Boucher, i\>lark
\Vh iting, J im Colucy, Wayne Be rnhard
and Jay Fov.·ler.
suuesled 1tudent1 be charged a fee for
t1king COW'Ma Ullt would co&t con-
siderable mopey.
Voetl ooted the "'31 or setting the two
cour1e1 up Would be a ••one time colt for
two vrtry appealing programs."
The new: rourae changes, noted Supt.
Fred H. Bremer, will go into effect when
school reopens thLs fall.
Fiftl1 Toddler
Dro,vns in Well;
Vendetta Feared
BITONTO, Italy (AP ) -Giuseppe
Sicola, a 35-day-0ld boy, was taken front
his cradle and dro'o\'ned in the well at his
grandparents' house. Police held the
grandmother for qu estioning.
Giuseppe was the fifth child drowned in
household YleUs in Bitonto in nine
months, and police believe they are deal·
ing \vllh a vendetta in Bitonto's slums.
They say they naven't a clue to 1vhat
unl eashed the seeming cycle of revenge.
Giuseppe'• 18-mon!h<(Jld brother died
the same way last September, and a
month later a nine-month-old boy was
drov.•ned in a dlffcrent section of town.
Last month, the bodies of two girls, 3
and 4 years old , w8"e discovered In a well
in the home of Raffaele Chlumlrlllo. an
uncle of the Sicolo brothers.
Chlu mirillo was arrested and charged
wlth drowning the two girls, who were his
niece and a friend.
All the wells were covered by heavy
stone slabs.
Cu1np Shut Due
To 'Incidents'
DESCANSO (AP) -An honor
camp in the south-central moun-
tains. of San Diego County is being
shut down because the men and
women pri90ners got together, a
spo kesman says. ,
"\Ve have caught a few men and
1vomen together at the wrong
time," said Frank Panarlsi. ad-
ministrator of the county's Human
Resources Agency.
But camp Director Frank C.
Woodson said "only four or five"
incidents have been discovered in
two years.
Details of the "incidents" were
not dlsclosed.
ideal
Tllesd11. Junt 6, 1972 s
J1cst Horsing Arotind?
\·Vhen horses start moving through the air in L.1
guna Beach. it's a pretty good indication !hat i1's
about tin1e for the fan1cd Pageant of lhC' l\la~lt'!\
at the Festival of Arts. llcre 1.c; one of 1110 mou11!.,;
that will form the Vi rginia State ~1onun1cnt 011
the \VOOded h illsi des of Irvine Bo,vl, a natl1ra l :in1·
pll1 thcatrr. l'l'O<ltH:cr !lo11 \\'i!liamson. lt~ft in dark
1a1 kct, and 1'1.'.lgl' c:on~ultan t Stuart l)urkee, r ight,
11 ;it ch a ~ tc<'hn 1c·.:1 l dircrtur Carl lalla\\"ay adjusts
rope~ 'J'!l c fcst1 \al \1111 run fron1 Jul y 14 through
.\ug, '27 1\·ith thr pageant :;hawing nightly.
Six Join Transit District
Key Stnff Me1nber s A fJJJOi ntec l Fro111 Field of 248
By JACK BROBACK
01 1111 011tr ~1101 Still
Ap1>0!ntment of six key staff members
by the Orange County Transit District
was made Monda y by district directors
upon the recommendation of Gordon J.
"Pete'' Fielding, general manager of the
authority.
A consulting firm was used by the
dist rict to screen 248 applicants for the
six jobs. Bruce K. Bennett, president of
the firm of Tom McCall and Associates of
Orange met with Fielding last week and
narrov.·ed the field from 23 to the final
six.
Hlred by the board 1ionday were :
-Frank K. King as bus operations
mana1er. King has 25 years experience in
the transportation Industry and is cur-
rently superintendent of the S a n
Bernardino Transportation System.
The Sa n Bernardino system has won
many awards and King was given credit
by the consultant flnn for a significant
dtcrease in maintenance costs despite an
Increase in route mileage.
'"He used innova tive methods to ad-
vertise the system, including giving
Green Stamps," the report stated. Th e
job will pay $1 ,439 to $1,790 a month.
-Jeanette A. fl yatt. of Laguna Hilla as
adminis1 ra1il•e assistant. Shf' i.~ prrscntl.v
an Orange County lll'Countant in lhl'
Administra1ion-Financial section an d
supervises a staff of 25. Her ~alary range
will be $1,187 to $1,479 a month.
-Danif'I nrn.~nn. as pr inc i pa I
transportation planner. He is present ly
manager of the Chicago office of the
planning nnd lranspor!Ation department
of North J\mcricn n Roc kwell . He acts at
a consultant 111 sla1t', rrgiona! and local
governrncnts 1n n1ass transportation and
urban plann ing. Hts pRy v.·ill range from
$1 ,372 to $1.695 a month.
-David R. Shilling as transportation
planner. He has been a teaching assistant
in the Department of Urban Pl anning and
Civil Engineering al lhe University of
\\lashinglon and 110111 live~ in Gardena.
Previously he was with the. San Diego
County Pl anning Ocpar ln1enl. llis salary
range will be $1 ,0JJ tu $1,290 a month.
-Gene Donovan as senior civil
engineer. He has had ID years manage-
ment experience in engineering and con·
stru ction and is currently with Lockman
and Associates of Downey. Previously he
had 13 years experelnce in englneerlng
with the cities of Pico Ri vera, Gardena
and Downey. Salary range for the post is
$1.439 10 $1,790 a month.
-J:1tnes R. Curr. as operational
analyst. He is presently a marketln&
analyst for the Coca Cola BotUln1 Cc>Jn.
pan y In Los Angeles, His duties illclude
measuring size of potential martell~
sales forec asting, designing samples and
1node1.~ <ind analyzing route dellverle!.
The job will pay $1,063 to $1 ,326 a month.
The six new staff members will usume
their posts in the next few weeks with all
on board by the beginning of the new
fiscal year J uly 5.
Consultant Bennett s1ld th at more thin
112 interviews were conducted In reduc·
ing the field from the origina l 248 can-
didates and that all 23 finalists were in-
tcrvie\ved at least three llmes by the
firm and by Fielding.
'fhe worklnl staff will aid In the In·
iUation of the district's '$31.6 million pro.
gram to provide community and Inter·
community bus transporLatlonlln Orange
County.
Selection of the succeuful candidates
was based on e1perlence in public and
private agencies, !! d u c a t lo n a I •
background, iOll orientaUon, public ex·
posu re and leadership 1billty, the con-
sultant said .
GRADUATION GIFT
... 1600, 2000, 2600 V-6
Bes t Selection of the Year ...• on the "Import Cai· of th e Year"
0.-11.Y "llOT 111tl ,.,..,. JEANIE, THE ROBOT, CAN SING, WHISTLE , BLINK
' Teicher J im "PoWlrs Acliv1te1 School Cre1tion
Home Of The New Car ••
"Goltk!1a l'olldl"
Drive one home or ask about out •••
-EUROPEAN ORDER PLAN
lley! You Folks Going toEurope this year,
,We can arrange for your new CAPRI to he
waiting there for you and save $ $ $, tool
"0""'!1• Co1mf11'1 ramav of Fl!lt Carr"
2826 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540-6630
'
Home Of The New Car .••
"Goltle11 To.ell"
• l
•
.f DAILY ~ILOT
•
Sound, Fury
Comes to Head
OFF AND RUNNING DEPT. -So Irr
deed this WU Election Day' 72 and If yoo
haven't cut your ballot by now, folks.
you are awfully close to having missed
out on the Urlll and ei:cltement of it all.
Why , t spent hours studying my sample
ballot this year bciore going to vote. I
spent mo.st or that time just trying to
figure out how to unfold it.
I've voted In the same place for maybe
the past eight elections. So naturally,
that's where I'd go this time, right?
Wrong . They moved my polling place into
a basement. I'm paranoid enough to
figure they did it on purpose, chortl-
ing, "Old Morphine will never find us this
lime .•• " Wrong again. I found them .
AC1'UALLY, ONCE there, the ladies
and gentlemen of the precinct were very
pleasant. They have several Innovations
for thls elecUon. One is a new way of
signing up for your ballot which causes
the precinct workers to read the book
upside down.
Also, the ballot box looked different.
1've always been to a substantial-looking
baUot box, composed of either steel vr
wood. This one was a cardboard box.
Well, you have to get used to change in
this day and age when everything is
disposable.
SOME THINGS at my new, secret po!J-
ln.g place haven't changed at all. They
haven't made the voting booths any big-
ger, for e1ample. All that time I was
practicing unfolding my sample ballot -
I should have been going through the ex·
erclse in the closet.
Also, they haven't put any more ink on
the little green stamping pad since the
last election.
That mearu: you have to pound the little
rubber marker into the pad five or six
times and then give .it a real whack on
your ballot in order to make a mark.
That's okay, I guess. It give! you the
notion that you're votlng more times than
you really are and be!!lide1, when you
hamnier tbe marker into the ballot, it
really feels like you mean it.
THERE WAS some confusion whi:n I
voted, caused by the chap in line right in
front of me. He •anted two baJlots. He
explained to the voting folks that he
didn't like all the cand idates on hi11 ballot
so he wanted his and another one, too.
That required that he get some ex·
plaining from the voting board folks.
Well, there's a lot at stake on the ballot
today. For the Republicans, President
Nixon's delegation is challenged by
somebody named Ashbrook or Ashcan or
something. No matter. It's a real yawner.
nie big GOP eJCcitement is Cong. Schmitz
versus County Assessor Andy Hinshaw.
The way the countryside has looked the
last few days, it actually seems to be a
con test as to which one of them could
hang up the most ugly signs in the most
places.
THEN THERE'S excitement for the
Democrats too. Like for example eight o[
'em are running for the presidential
nomination. Most folks see it as
J\1cGovern versus Humphrey b u t
remember Sa1n Yorty 's on the list too,
and Yorty. in one of his last-minute
1iatented moves. has tried to fling the
f•lection to Humphrey. He even gave ad·
vit·e to the Wallace believers. They didn't
appreciate it much.
Then v.·e have 10 propositions on the
ballot. Most fol ks are watching Proposi-
tion 9, v.·hich has seemed to be an argu-
ment bet\~een smogless and jobless.
Anyway, it v.·ill be interesting to see if 9
loses its tai l and becomes a zero.
And so lo bed with Election 72. Until
November, that is.
Hijack Fund
To Finance
Latin Cause
MIA.1\11 (UPll Frederick W.
Hahneman rtportedly told an FBI agent
he ls strongly anti-Communist, but that
he channelled $30.1,000 ransom from an
Eastern Air Lines hi jacking through a
Communist bani: to finance causes he
back! In Latin America.
FBI agent Norman Bliss testified at a
hearing Monday about his interview with
Hahneman, who is accused of hijacking
Eastern's Oight 175 May 5. The hijacker
got the ransom money, parachutes , Jump
tng gear and survival equipment in
Washington, and bailed out over Hon-
duras.
Hahnem an did no t have the money
v.hen he sur rendered to U.S. embassy of-
ficials in lfonduras Saturday.
Bliss, who interviewed Hahneman whil'l
returning him to ~fiaml , said Hahneman
told him he landed near the town of Tela,
Honduras , "took off all his gear , sat down
and had a smoke and waited until
da ylight."
"11e said that by Mond/l'Y. the money
was out of his hands." Bliss said.
lie said lfahneman never told him what
he did '"-'ith the money, except that "he
said it would go to the bank of Com-
munist China in Hong Kong.
"He said it would eventually wind up in
the hands of the people with whom he
was working for causes in Central and
South America," Bliss said. lie said
Hahneman told him the money would be
channelled to the unidentified "causes"
back through the United States,
At the end of the hearing, U.S.
t.fagistrate Michael J. Osman recom-
mended that Hahneman, 49, be taken to
Alexandria, Va., to face charges of air
piracy, kidnaping and assault with a
deadly weapon .
11ahneman will be moved from Miami
as soon as formal papers are signed. pro-
bably In the next day or two,said U.S. at·
torney Robert W. Rust.
Black Hijacker,
Gi. .. I Get As ylum
-Not Ransom
ALGIERS (UPI) -Algeria, traditional
haven for political dissenters, will grant
asylwn to a Black Panther hijacker and
his girl fritnd but will return to Western
Airlines the $500,000 ransom it paid the
hijackers, Algerian officials sald Monday.
The U.S. government has asked Algeria
both for the extradition of the two hi·
jackers -William Holder, 22, and
Katherine Mary Kerkow, 21 , an
oceanography student, both from San
Diego.
Government officials said llolder and
h-1iss Kerkow, who hijacked a Western
Airlines jet over the West Coast l''riday
night, switched lo a longer-range jet in
San Francisco, then released their 40
passenger hostages in New York before
flying to Algiers Saturday. were certain
to be allo~to stay as political refugees
with the B k Panther colony he re.
The Bl Panther mission, head-
quartered a hilltop villa ln El-Biar
district of Algiers. is led by Eldridge
Cleaver. former infonnation ntinlster or
the militant moveme11t and now head of
the Afro-American Liberation Army.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dell..ery of tht Oal!y Piiot
Is guarantttd
Mond•V·l'rk11y: II you Clo not lllYI Vol.If'
JMpe r by 5:)0 'un,. call alld your copy will
be bro\.ghl •• ~u. C•lll 1r1 liken 11n111 1:JO p,m.
S1 turt11y 11>11 Sunday ~ If y111,1 do root rtctl.,.
yaur caiiy by 9 1.m. Saturday, ar t 1.m.
Sur.dl y, cell •NI • CCPV will be bMIOl!Jhl Ill
~u. C1H1 1r1 l•~tn until 10 1.m.
Ttltphoncs
M01t Or1ngo1 Counrv Are1t ,, •....• "241
Northwnt Hunllni;rron 811cll
or.cl Wt1lmln1ler ..•. . ........ J.60.lnl
$.In ,,.....,.,., C1pl1tr1no 8tach,
Sin Juon C1pl1tr1no, O..n1 Pein!,
Soulll L1g11111, ~uni NLQl>tl •. 4t2-4Gt
•
Vessel Goes Under
The Gloucester, Mass. based fishing boat Rosanne Maria, takes her
last breath before sinking 23 miles off Cape Ann afler beinJ in a
collision with an East Gexman fishing trawler. The· 86-foqt Maria was
worth $250,000-and was not insured.
Lebanon Ciies Israeli
'Stepped-up' Campaign
NEW YORK (UPI) -Lt>banon con1-
plained to the United Na!ions Iha!
Israeli warplanes overflew its territory
three times Monday and accused the
Israeli government of a stepped up
"can1paign of vilification and pe rsistent
threats."
Lebanon and the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) both
previously denied that Japanese gunmen
IN SHORT... I
"'·ho carried out the massacre at Loci
lnternational Airport in Tel Aviv la111
week were trained in •Lebanon.
Israel has threatened reprisals against
Lebanon charging the gunmen hired by
the Arab guerrillas came from across the
Lebanese border.
e Tito Visit
J\10SCOW (UPI ) -President Tito of
Yugoslavia today opened formal talks in
the Kremlin with Soviet Communist par-
ty General Secretary Leonid I. Breihnev
and other Kremlin leaders who we!C<Jmed
him with hugs and kisses.
Diplomatic sources said the talks, ex-
pected to run sev«al days, would cover
eJCpanded Soviet-Yugoslav tade, technical
cooperation, world events arxl other sub-
jects.
Tito arrived Monday on a five-day slate
Rich1no1ul School
Pl,a,11, Overturned
lri Court Revieiv
RICHMOND, Va. (U PI) -The 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals today overturn-
ed a sweeping district court order that
would have merged Rich mo n d 's
predominantly black schools with those of
two suburban counties with mostly white
school populations.
TI>e 4th circuit, in reversing a COO·
troversial decision by U.S. District Judge
Robert R. ~1erhige Jr., said it believed
the last vestiges of state-imposed.
segregation had been wiped out in the
public schools of the city of Richmond
and the counties of Henrico and
Chesterfield and unitary schools systems
achieved.
"Because it is not established that the
racial composition or the schools in the
city of Richmond and the counties is the
result of invidiow state action, we con-
clude there i!!I oo constitutional violation
and that. therefore, the district judge ex-
ceeded his power of intervention," the
court said.
Merbige had. directed lhe three school
systems Jan. 10 to set up a metropolitan
sd>ool district which would haVe 104,000
students. About 78,000 students would
have been bused under the plan, about
10,00> more than the three localKk!s now
transport.
visit de signed to show he and Brezhnev
had ended lhe friction that beset Soviet-
Yugoslav relations following the 1968 in-
\'.'.lsion of Czechoslovakia.
e V.S. Arralg11ed
STOCK110Ll\f (AP) -Premier Olo(
P-ahne of SWeden arraigned the United
States before the U.N. conference on the
human environment today for what its
1niHtary forces have done to Vietnam.
"The immense destruction brought
about by indiscriminate bombing, by
large-scale use of bulldozers a n d
herbicides is an outrage sometimes
described as ecocide which requires
urgent . international aUention," Palme
declared.
He did not mention the United States
has been bom bing and using bulld ozers
and herbicides in Vietnam, it \.\'as ap-
parent which nation he was talking about.
e Belfast Battle
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI )
British troops battled rioting Protestant
and Roman Catholic youths today in
Belfast and Portadown, 25 mi I es
southwest of lhe Northern Ireland
capital.
The army said at least six persons, in·
eluding a 14-year-old boy. were wounded
by gunfire from unidentified sources dur-
ing the disorders in the lwo cities.
The fighting broke out after three
&man Catholic housewives presented
British authorities with a petition signed
by 63,500 Roman Catl)olics demanding an
end to violence waged by the Irish
Republican Anny (IRA).
-
VP Post~
Connally 'Tour'
Prompts Queries
By DON i'ilcLEOD
AP PollUcal Writer
WASHJNGTON -With the Republican
convention little 111ore than two months
away, President Nixon has stoked
!ipeculation about his 1972 running rna te
by sending John Connally aroW1d the
world .
lndk:alions from the '\'hil e House that
Connally might also be explaining to
world leaders the President ·s Peking nnd
I NEWS ANALYSIS
l\1oscow trips add to the importance of
the trip aod to the outgoing treasury
secretary's stature as bearer of such
news.
This is the kind of mission traditionally
handled by a vice president if not a
secretary or state. The \Vashington
rumor mil ls have Connally available for
either post if Nixon is re-elected.
Regardless. the trip will give Connally
public exposure in the foreign-poli cy
arena: Among his stops will be South
Vi etnam.
Nixon 's announcement Monday that
Connally will represent him on a 15-na-
tion tour beginning today came a day
after another key Republican said it is
possible a Democrat, such as Connally,
could get the GOP vice-presidential
nomination.
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford of Michigan said Sunday in a radio
interview that he disagrees with Vice
President Spiro T. Agnev."s assertion that
a Democrat on the COP ticket in his
place would be inconceivable.
With the time of decision dra\\•ing near.
Nixon has never sa id whether he wi!I
keep Agnew as his vice president, and
Connally has not definitely been taken out
of the picture.
The White House said l\·londay that
Connally \vill travel as a special
representative of the President. meeting
"with ch iefs of state and heads of govern-_
ment ill various nations for discussion on
matters of common concern bet1,1·een us
and the COWllries v.·ith emphasis on cur·
rent international economic issues."
However. \V hitc ~louse Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler said in Key Biscayne,
F1a ., that Connally \\'ill be ready to take
up "any subject which his hosts wish to
raise," including Nixon's trips lo China
and the Soviet Union.
1be complete itinerary has not betn
announced. Connally's first stops will be
in Venezuela, Colombia . Brazil, Argen·
t111a Boli via and Peru. To follow will be
\'isils to South V1etn:1 m, Austrt1lia ,
Singapore and Ne\Y Ze11 !and.
Ziegler expla ined lo 11e1,1·smcn that Con-
nally 1,1•ill not visit Africa beca~s~ fflrs.
Nixon an<l Secretary of Slate Wilham l'.
ftogers already have made offici~I stops
oo that continent. lie did not mention that
Agnew had visited Africa las! year.
Nixon had s;:ud \Yhcn Connally turned in
his rt'signation fron1 1hc Cabinet last
month that he would be used for !!lpecia /
n1issio ns. The President said Connally
could handle any public office 1n the land.
"No mem ber of the Cabi net has been
n1orc closely assoc.inted \Yith nie in a
perso1111I se nse,'' Nixon s11id, and added
that Conn:ill y had advised him on a "'idc
range of fo rl•ign and domes! ic issues -
not just the C'Conorn y.
Connally said he hnd no political
aspirations , but. v.·hen asked about the
vite presidency. he ducked "that kind of
speculation at this point in tin1e."
Jn any c:ise. he said, "I'm not going to
\1·i1hdrav.• fron1 the hurnan race or fron1
the politic;il \ife of the nation."
Tll'o days l:iter. Agnew said it "'ould be
''totally unrealistic to expect t he
Republ ican convention to accept" Con·
nall y on its national ticket.
The closest Nixon has come to ad-
dressing the subject directly was in a
television inlerview last 11•inter when he
said he sa1,1• no reaso n to break up a win-
ning combination .
But in April Ag new said he v.•asn't sure
he \\'ould \\'ant the job and hadn't b::cn
asked to keep it.
Wicks
Jt·s a-ra1 Motors. U.S.A.
Your p"1S8flt from Nixon
has been recs/Jed!'
Fair, Dry • Ill Most of U.S.
T11.understorms Whip Great Lakes, Colorado . Areas
Temperatures
Low l'r .. " " " " Ii M .,
" " ff .. " M n " .,
H
" " ll " " n ll ti
.k
" ·" ·"
·" "
•
UPtWIAMt~· l~I
...
• Plan a prosperous future for yourself bjrpiclcing one or more fast.growing GUARANTEED
INCOME certillcate acrounts at Lagunj, F~ while these all-time-high lo~ rat.. 11"-
vail. Intere;,t on all aqcounts is compound«! •daily; paid quarterly: ,I_
•90 day lo~est r~e for early withdrawal.
• ' ~tul(l;~g~=
LACUNA NICVEL BRANC!l
3M-B•yl'lua s.a.i. i:..gu... Colli. w.m
Tdoplioqo: '116-1201
•
AllDL~ llOCIATICJll
BOMEOl'FICE
!ea 0.... AVO!luo La...,. .Beech, Celli. 928152
Teloj>boao1 .494-7Ml
• '17' v
• SAN CLEMENTE BRANC!l
lllll North Et Camino Ra.I -Son·Clementc, C.IJJ. 9287i
Telepbone: 49Jl.Lt115
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WORLD & NATION
Pollution
Warni1ig
Reissued
BIHl\ll NGJIA.\\. Ala 1U PI 1
-Dr. George E. Hard_\' Jr ..
.Jerferson Coun1y hcallh of-
ficer. has declared an ai r
pollul1on alcrl fur rh c si-cond
t1n1I' 111 fo ur di1.1's
Hardy had ti«c:larcd ;111 a lert
Frl(Jay, invoking for the first
!1111!' the sta te's new <11r pollu-
lion control la11
Crin1inal
Decili11 gs
Examined
WASHINGTON (AP ).-Ttie
Senate Commei;ce Committee.
investigating what r o I e'
organized crime plays 1n
business. turns today to Poly-
Cl4ian, a cleansing product
sold through supermarkets.
In his hearing. opening state-
ment, commiltee chair man
Sen. War ren Magnuson ID-
\\lash). said:
.. Though much of lht> public
today rs a-vare of organized
i-r ime t hr o ug h television,
t>00ks and movies
rhere is 100 little aporeciation
ut how thei r acti1·itics affeet
leg1t1 male busi nessn1en ;ind
:.ill of us. as consuffiers . . \\If.'"
h(J!)C to bring that point
hu1nf'"
:'llagnuson said the hearings
\\'Ill foc us on Polv-Clean, made
by the f;NR cOrp .. Paln1er.
r-.1ass. The product is sold
under th:1t name or under
ofhrr labels.
As an exa 1nolc of induslria l
usf nf Poly·C!e;1n. Magnuson
said !he product ha s been used
!o ("lf'an telephone booths
acro~s the nation.
'·
Tutsdol'f. Jont 6 }q7z DAILY >!LDT lf .
Welfare Costs Fall Ag-ain
WASHINGTON fAP l -Th<
nation'• welW'e cost! dipped
in January for the flfth time 1n
six 1nonth.,. allhough 60,000
1nore persons joined relief
rolls, according to goverrunenl
figures releaseJ today.
The Department of Health,
Education and Welfa re said
unpredictably lo"'·ei-costs for
providing rned ica.1 care 10 !he
BRIEFS I
fecti1 r Conrrl''' \('El 1 said
becJJ;.f' of 1-i..r 111format1vn
abou1 tht· 11.iu'r 1ntrnbffg and
11rtuallv u,,._ h·~s 11 1!urnlill1u11
a.bout ~t'l!Jlurs there \lo ere 11t-
dicat1on.s that the percentage
is e~·e11 hii::her.
NCF.t' ~aid !he eongressmt'n
with oul11ide interests should
end ttM.•111. uollng that l\lo'O-
th irds of the "n1en1Ders 11p-
parenlly have found no 1n·
convenience. or hardship 1t1
rrfrninlng from suc:h ou t.s ide
nctivities. · e R efu11d Set
BO STO N iUP l 1
~tassachuse!\s car o\\·ners will
receive an ('st 1mated $.30
1n1Jlion • to $40 million in
refunds fro1n auto 1nsu ranct
con1panies under a court
decision that 11·a s a \ 1ctory for
the "no rau!t "' concept.
'!'he r-.i1assi:1ch11 ..;ctt s Suprcrne
Court. ba~lni: 1t..; _n_:cision un
poor resulted in the $12 . .f-
mil lion decrease fron1 the
pre \·iou~ month.
{·ash pa_vments in .January
rosr nearl.1 ~I 7 nllll 1on~for a
total inonthl v \.\"f'llare bill or
Enroll
Now
Fall
Semester
ALL-DAY CLASSES
Kindergarten thru 8th Gra de
SI 54 billion ·
Pr('v1ous n1onrhh• wel fare-
cost decreases ul s1"5 n111l1on in
Aui::us1. $10 rn11!ion in Se-p-
te1nber. $19 1nill1on in
November and $! 3 111 1l11on in
Deccn1~r \.\"Cre 1norc than
offsl't. ho11 r1er. by a Slt.I0-
HtGISTRA.TION ~EE
ONl 'I
$10
1nillion hike lll October. m· ·~ . e Gif1s 1-;!1,.,: ... TJ.f,',.'"
\VAS HI NGT0'\1 i UPf \ ffe,S~; ·
• Teachinz the 4 fr s with phonic s
• Door-to -Door Bus Service
• Brlorr and After School Carr
• Reasonable Tu1t1o n
I 'I f " '. A 1 •, \
s .... '"
(7\41 962-3312
•n excess prof1t3 statute. ruled
.\.ionday insurance comp&nieJ ,
would havt' to reduor tht.lr
tm compulsory auto"" in--
suroinct rates by 27 .I percent
and refund the difference to
t ht insured.
"It i.s an absolutely tmnen·
dous victory fur people/~ 1aid
Insurance Com1n rssloner John
c;. Ryan. who:te decision to c~t
the rates in·as challenged 10
<'Our! b~~he indust ry.
HAWTHORNE
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOLS
Keep your children
1n good hands.
Ask about our Di v Ca mp
and Su mmer School.
Oon;_ttion~ of $~3.oOO to the ! ~''1~
prcs1denl!al c;i1np<uc:n of Sen. i~
Jlubert II. Hu111 phrcy Juive YJt!
resulted in the first Justi{"C' §'~• ;
J)epartn1cn! 1nl"oh crnrnt in · "'
rnforcerncnt of Ilic 1u~1\· !ti l\' lo ·4· '1
control pol1t1cal <"Ont r1but 1rins ~·.t ~
SINCE M Y HUSBAND'S RE:Tll~EMENl WE: Tr.A VE L RATHE R
EXTEN SIVELY IF-ANYTH ING SH O ULD 1-!A PP EhJ TO US W E
WOULD W A1\ll ro El PE TU RN ED TO TH E H/l.r.BOR AREA.
C AN W E M A KE 1'11 A RR ANGEMEN T WJT H YOU THAT
W OULD TRAVEL \t\'11f1 l.JS?
ll ;inly halted the lirst alert
Su nda.v when the !cvcl of air
pollution dropped br!o1\' 375
1nicrogran1s of parl1culatc
matter per cubic meler or <\Ir .
The h('aring. which \\'il! run
for thrf'r da1·s. follo11·s a probe
of the N£'1V · .lersey detergent-
n1akcr. 1\lorth A merican
Che111 icat .
The rirst hearing. Magnuson
sa id . showed how "onr gro11n
of persons associated 1ri th
organized crin1e .. .e:ot the '.:o;i p
int o sever al m ajor
supennarket chains.
UPI ,.et.i>h01• MRS . ONASSIS PASSES BUST OF LATE HUSBAND
Center Offic:ial Roger Stevens Escorts Her
·rhe Office ol Federal Elec· ~ ''~ !
liens tur nrcJ 111·rr tn thr1 ·
.l u':ltice Dcpartnicnt ~l unday , , 1 by EUGENE 0 . BE.IG ERON
t'irst Vi s it
ev1rlence alleging tha t :\:cwt ."'
York in vestmen t brokP r Jahn ~
l. Loe~ anti his \\'ife. F'rances 1 ;..,
Through our aff!1io1 :on ! "'''h ihe Norio11al fu11e•ol Dirc ct cirs Auoclorla11 wr havr
repr•Hnfofive~ 111 !he "'~101 cilici of the U11il cd ~lute\ and Canada. If a11y1h ln<;1 1ho wld
hap,-n .,.hlle you "'e r ~ •:o•clinq the ,,,ottic1an In lhar camm1111lty .,.ould cantocf "''
immediately. l
1-!ov.·ever. 24 hours later. lhc
pallution level cli1nbrd to 42.1
n1icrograrns and II a rd .v
declared another a!crL direc-
l1ng some 80 plant.~ to reduce
emissions by 30 percent
!·lardy said 1ha1 alerl s would
he declared. ended a n.,d
declared agai n according to
flu ctuations in thr pollut ion
le1·cr until a!I loca l 111ch1<>tric~
in.~tall rollution euntrol cq11 ip-
men1. He said the 1n.~l;1 ll.1t1 on
or control ,.q111 pn1cn1 1.~ re-
quired by 1975.
One <.'hain . l\lngnuson ~aid.
referring lo A & P . ..,. ...
pcrienced a di s<islrous serie<:
of 16 arsons. and '111•0 store
managers were murdered.··
··111 the hearings todav and
in thc_hillr. ;1·c intend !o
sho1~~~ by no rneans '111 isol ~·· if!fqncc. ·' ~1 ai::nuson ~~:9Jir f'o1n1n11tee ha s in-fo~~...LIJ~ many other eo111pan~.ad products arc
i11 1·ol 1·cd W,r s·im1 l;:i r situa\ inns .
JJ?[( 'Muss' Heard
By Mrs. 01iussis
1.. rnade ci!!ht tlonat1on<: of
S6.000 in t he~ na1nes of ot her
1:crsons. .. ;~
e Cu11fli .. 1 ,o;,.,... '•
\\IASHI N!:TON !UP I ~ A L"'r'Jt'.
ri ti.-.ens' group savs abo ut one '· _;
third of the Housr ·s 4.1.1
r11en1bcrs are involYcd in
businesses and law tu·ms that 1 • '~
could be pot ential confl icts of
in terest \\'ilh their lrg1sl;1 th l' l
du1 ics.
We ho•e de~igned o •mo11 w•llcl (<u d which may be \"cured by !tlr phonin<;i 646-2424
or 673-'1450. Th•\ .. ..,lr<Jcncy ccl'!d corr;.,, '"'"uctian' that we a rr to be natified and
gwora111 ee1 the! w (.' will rna~e all of the auanqc menh fa• 1/>e rrlwr11 ro thr Harbor Area
Dlld will OS$U~ The •CSp011$jbiiity for a ll "'P"'"'"'·
If you have a qwe1toa11 abowt lwnerol se••ice. p lease write or call. Whl'llC•<.'r pa•sible,
q uestions will be answered ln 11111 colum11.
B1ilt.::-He 1·~1ero1i f '111ie1°Hl ffo1ne
"A.~ rnorc and rnorr 111-
li u .~lries cn1p loy !h(· r<1111p-
n1cnt. thr rm1 ~sions should b1~
less and less."' he said. · <ind
hoJ)f:'full.r thc.~c ;llrr1s 11'11!
be:on1c history ··
··Thesf' con1pan1cs lo,l'.!r1hcr
h<l1 c annual sales in the hun-
drrfl~ rJf 1n illions" of dollars.
lw added
Over 100 Pa y Tril1ute
' .
At Bob l(e1111ctlv Grave
•
V.'..\SI JINCT0.\1 !:\Pl -).1 1'5.
l\r istntle On<i.~sis has nt tendr<l
a pcrfor 1n~u1rc of Ll'onard
Bcrnstcin"s ··~·la ss " nl lbc
.Jchn F. l\en ncdy l'f'nti'r ;ind.
hr r ae<1u;:~u11 ;i11ees !'ii11d. li kcdj
bo!h The opcr.r housl' nnd th e
performance
This \1 as lhc. furr ncr ,\!rs.
Kcnnedy"s lirsl vis i1 tO' the na·
tional eullur;1! center 11·hic h
he,1rs her husband·s na1ne .
.:ind her flrs1 v1e\11ng of the
Bcrnslci n 1·on1posil 1on 11·hich
.~he asked him to corn pose for
the openi ng of the Knenedy
\VASlll N(;TQN iAP I frtleral l"i !y. Center last Sep!. 8
h I Berns tein told ;i reporter ~lore than 100 Kennrd~·~. A m n n i:: ! o s I' 1v 1 n
;ifl er the pcrforrn;i ncc. that friends and follo~ers gat hered 1cn1cmhcred was 20-y ear-ol d fl lrs. Onassi ~ sccnicd 10 lik e
on the gra11J1c terrace a1 thr To111 \lonahan "'hosr I rip the v,·ork. Out rn:idc no specifi c
grave of t~oberl F. Kennedy lron1 his ho1nc in Cl1nlon. ('On1n1ent.
loda~· to rcn1c111bcr h1 rn \\'ith !1111a. ;irnotul!cd t n ;o. She entered the ccnlcr. as
do most visitors. through the prayers. flO\\Crs and sc ngs on pllg rini;:gr H.:ill of Na tions. a huge cor-
thc rourlh :1nn11 ersary or hi s .. I bcla'1ed in c1'crything he ridor hung with the fl ags of
dea th stood lor.'' ,,aid .\lonahan as inore. t;i· n 100 countries, and
:\l;iny 1rhu t <1n1e for !l1c lit helped <idJUSI a plywood -turni g a cofner -sa1v for
hour·!ong folk rna~s m.idr pla tforn1 for this rnorning's 1hc rir time ·a six·foot -high
bust of her ·]ate husband. their l'o <'.ly through the rarlv n1fn1orial mas:.> ... , loved hi1n sculptured by .Robert Berks.
morning mist !o the grii\C of 11•ith al! 1he Jo1·c and ad· i\lrs. /loger L. Stevens.
President .John F Kennedy mir at1on I could have for \\hose husbnr\d is chairman of
several hundred feet t1\1·;1y. an}onc. J eanipa igned . rang !he board of trustees of lhc
The n1ass began 11· 1 I h do0rbclls, everything .. , t"Cntcr <inti \1•ho shared a box
i::111 \ars :l nd singers \.\"ho ~cnl \\'i1h ~l rs. Ona ssis. sa id the
the nole~ or ··\Ve Shall Pirst I rollo"·ed Johii l\en-forrner i\lrs. Kennedy declined
Q1·erco111l'·· and "'The l3at1!e ncdy.·· he said. letting his e_ves to ro1n1n enl on the bu~!
.. scan the nravesite of the latr 'I o · t 1 I l/1·n1n (lf the Hepubht 01 er " , r., nas11J!> 1v~ru ec 1er
the .:;on1ber rraches uf Ad · President. several hundred 11 <11"' du"·n the stairs :11 rhe f\·CI :i1\a\ '"Then Scr.a tor Bob · I ington ,\at1onal C e n1 e t e r y qpei:a 1uusc a111I 1v c n 1
;o.rro.!'s the PotonH1c fn11n the eanit' ;diing. and 1 brga·i b <1 (·ks I <.1 g e aiter !he
11orku10 ft1r him ThC' Krn. / federa l c1!1 "" per ormanec to grt•c·1 soinr o. Them~-~s eel d by nedys brr~in1r a th 111 :.: i1i1h lh1· rne1 nbcrs of tbe 2!~l-pt:rson rnc. No11· J"1n i11 1r1·c:-.icd I" thrit Albe rt •. err1ra , " <·a~! politi cs. in the )a11• Ill tlJr 11 ·' f (h "' h . pasl of Sl. Luke·s Rom;in "1e \\'1uow o e ,J;,t presi· ,1 L th 1n.e:s thr.1 stood for · J I d be ed l JAi"! lolic Church in 1' c can. f en! ia en e:icpect o ap-
\':.i .. the \\'ashington suburb pcnr 11hcn rhc ccnlcr 01>ene.d
ll'hrre l\enned y's \\·ido1v ii nd la.'! Si'ptcn1ber . but s he
children li1·c. and by flt sgr. \\T~ll ' f .,O CS ~·:..1 i I declined the invitation .:it -the
( ;eno C. Baruni. d irector of the lasl mi nu te on grounds !hat
Nation al Center for Urban Af-l\OHFOLI\, Va . (AP 1 -A!· /hcl· appearance wou ld a rouse
fairs in \\1ashington. !empts hy 11'ar protesters tu .~ utrlsc emo110~1al exc1ternent
Some 15.000 people did their th11•art the depa rture of the) a ng the audience .
remembering i\1onday. the an· aircraf t carrier Arnerica for-1 1onday nighl's performance
n1versary of the day in 1968 Viclnam with a ''pe a c J Yltis perhaps better than those
when he 1vas shot down by an blockade ·· of canoes and smif. which opened !he center tu
assassin. by climbing the boats has fizzled with most ,,ff s lout crowds last Sep!ember .
J!rassy hi llside lo the gral'e !he demonstrators ending pp T e cast ~was essentially the
a.cross the Potomac from the in the dri nk. e, with direction 11gain by -------------
4 times a day from Long Beach. Or sm;1 , away lo Sacramenlo or San o;ego. Coll
your travel sgent or PSA and ask abou.t our easy-to -bea r, low fare. PSA glv11 YoU • Jilt.
(:or(lon Davidson. conductin,I'.!
hi' i\laurice Peres.~ ;o. n d
ci1orcopgraphy by Alvin Ailey.
btll the score and the direction
had been polished. -----
1'he ~roup ca lled !he '.'ia·
tional Comm1 Uee for an Ef-1 o;c.;>;. _,.
Manager M. F. Oney or Home'1 Arcadia 0111ce reminds a cvslomer how $20,000
in accovnt insurance can be increa&ed to $280 ,0001or 1 lam 11y 01 1001.
COST A MF.S A CORONA del MAR
646-242 4 "2 LOCATION S 673-9450
Helpl ng 1 cualorrlt!r enjoy one ol Home"s many tree SftrV•cos-11 ~e rree
money orci.11 with 1 Sl ,000 account-•s Te ll er L•nda Adams 01 Comp1on .
.. ·,, ..
•
----~
-. .,
Teller Diani Bedwell ol Long Beach informs a saver \hal 111 lunds deposited
by the 1 O!h at Home earn f1om !he 1 s1 when held to lhe l!l'nd ol the qua rier. As1•111.,1 Man•O'tl'f Mar1h1 Hav9ela11d ol Garden Grove servils •customer
whose gre at gr1/ldpllr9f'lla slar1etd a family tritdlllon Of saving 11 Home,
1he People at Home do more for ~u
$41A Billion
Strong
Guaranteed, .2 1 t'll" minimum
1•rm. on de191ta a( $S,OOO pr """'· ..
5%%
Cuar1hte«t. I year term, Ol'I
tleposjta of $1,000 or more.
!A MIRADA tAJ8~1mA?e.
111.1110
SANTAANA
laCIO North Milli St.
641-Hll
BUENA PARK
t!ilO 8-:h Bh-41 .,._ ....
GARDEN GROYE
llt21 B"1oklu:rl'lll.8t, -ANAHEIM
101 &ouLh. H...00. ~1rd
""""
Americas
Largest
BOftm: Acc:ounts. Youutn 1% for title first 90 ·d.,.._ 'nm!. a
bonua brh:i.J!s your intaftrtrl to ~1A %. 'Which thttH.f.ter la i:aicf
to dMy ol w11hdrawal.
'
• J)AU,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Skyjackings continue, Jiespite
agaltut. them the airlines have thus
dev lse.
all prttaut ion~
far been able to
The Reno hi ja\·ker is in custody and lhe $200 ,000
ransom money he derr1anded and received from United
Air U nes has been recovered.
The sky pi.rate who highjackcd an Eastern Airlines
jet and parachuted wlth $303,000 in ransom rnoney
over Honduras a month ago gave himself up and is back
In the United States under custody, But the money was
reported en route lo a Hong Kong bank.
The third recent air piracy case, the man from San
Diego and a young woman from Coos Bay. Ore., "'hO
hijacked a Western Airlines plane from San Frant.:isco lo
Algiers Friday night with $500,000 ransom, will appar·
enUy end with return of the money but asylum ror the
hijackers in Algeria.
ll Is diffic ult to foreliee what the end of continuing
skyjackings will be. Co llectively. the hijackers have
put the lives of many hundreds of travelers in Jeopardy
an d the cost to the airlines has been astronomi cal. It
would be a pity to have to come to such a thing, but it
may be that to travel-by air will mean submitting to
thorough search of both person and baggage. Even that
might nol be foolproof.
R asl1 Campaig11 Rhetoric
However today's Democratic primary turns out.
the performances of candidates Jiumphrey and McGov·
em will be memorable for their flights of demagogu·
ery and, at times, nonsense.
A great deal of TV ~·debate" time was \11asted on
Frustration
who was lirsl lo lake a pro-war or an anU·w.,. po1ition
and in argument over the cost of McGove.rn'1 hu1e wel·
rare giveaway.
In earlier prim aries, Humphrey declared he would
never say anything bad about his opponents that could
be used by the Republicans next (1ll. But alarm ()Vtr
McGovern's sudden rise in the polls 1pp1rently w1s
back of hh~ switch in California. He denounced McGov-
ern repeatedly as "an unreaJisUc radical who doe.sn't
understand his own proposals."
McGovern made the rash. vote-seekin& 1ss1rtion
that if be wins the presidency he can gaJn a reJ111e of
U.S. prisoners of ""ar v.'ithin 90 days ()f his inaururation.
Considering I.he intransigence of Hanoi on that
issue, McGovern is either overconfident or he hu h..ad
communications \Vi th the Hanoi government which he
has denied.
If McGovern does indeed have lluch a plan, it seems
t~ us as almost a mark of inhumanity U he keep1 it to
h1mseU. It is obvious that everyone 111 America -the
President included -wants the return of our prisoners.
The Democratic candidates would be well advised
t.o hold their fire until they see what may come from
Ni_:'Co~'s summit meetings in Peking and Moscow in
br1ng1 ng an end lo the war. As Richard Wilson, who was
with Nixon in Moscow, reports in his column below,
not everythin g about the talks on Vietnam has been re·
vealed.
\Vhen the full revelation does come. it's possiblf'!
It wil l considerably embarrass political candidates with
simplistic sol utions to complex problems.
\
More t o Cotne F ront S uni1nit1 Basic Political American Dream Air of Cautious Optimism
WARSAW, Poland -Presldent Nixon
came Into a different world in this Polish
capital than when ·he arrived here as vice
president after his visit tv ti.toscow in
1959.
(RICHARD WILSON)
br ing the Vietnam war lD an end .
Realig nnmen't
On Horizon ? \ Harder to Realize
Wara:aw is not the same, its rela·
tionshlp with Ru&sla Is not the same and
Nixon la not the aame . Thirteen years
ago tbe stresses of
the cold war were in·
tense and the emo.
tional reception he
received · re(lect~
the restlessness of
East.em Europe 1m·
de r Soviet domina-
tion .
In 1972 his rect)>"
ti o n was Jer11,,
wa rm and friendly , without the overtones
of ten.slon and emotion so plainly evident °" the earlier visit.
THIS TELLS A GREAT deal about the
calming down of Eastern Europe in the
post-Khrushchev era. More is told by the
fa ct that the Russians in their relations
with the United States urgently desired a
codification of principles.
Precisely why th ey desired this
declaration of coexistence is somewhat of
a mystery. But it i.s related to the at·
mosphere of calm and restraint which
the Soviet leaders wish to create in SUC'h
satellites 81 Poland and in their more
general world relation11hlp.
They undoubtedly also wish to wrest
from Communllt China leadership in the
world peace movement and sho w that
they can come to agreement with the
United States on a far broader basi.5 than
the leaders of China .
IN FACT, THE imporlanC'e General
Seeretary Brez.hnev altached to the
general principles is at the root of renew-
ed expectation! that even more will
emerge fro m th e summit mffiing than
was recited in the final communique or
than Presidant Nixon is presently dlsclos-
ing . tu If the external evidence mea
anything, tl)e Rus!ian leaders ap~ o
be preparing tht Soviet peopTeand the
"fraternal countries" associated with the
Soviet Union for basic changes in policy
over a longer range of time.
The organ of the Communist party,
Pravda. gave priority to th e declaration
of coexistence on the first day following
the conclusion of the summ it talks. The
Russi an people were lo be adv ised of the
concrete agreement! outlined in the joint
communique on a aubsequent day.
"fR. NIXON ANO his associates take a
reitrained view of the general principles,
viewing them as a reaffirmation of the
policies toward Russia which the United
States was already fol\owlng. But running
deeper than this surface reaction is the
feeling that the Brezhnev regime may
adopt a more active role in trying lo
from all that was aai d in the various
documents issued in Moscow and brief·
ings of the press by Amer ican officials,
two views could be taken.
One view was ·tha t all the verbiage
merely hides the fact that no progress
was made with the Sovie t leaders on the
war. Contrary indications can be found
th11t pe'thaps some progress was made
after all.
THE BEST ADVICE available on this
seeming contrad iction iJ that the posltive
should be emphasized : in other words,
there was reason lD believe that the
Russians may translate their deslrt for
coexistence and .a reduction of ten1ion1
into as yet undeflned measures which
may lead to a solutio.n in Vietnam .
American officials are very cautious
about this, but it i11 clearly evident. for
what lt is worth , that their hope1 have
risen. As much as Presidential Advisor
Henry A. Kissinger \\'lll say. Is that the
Brezhnev-Nixon discussions at th is point
were long and "pretty tough" with no
reticence on either side in expressing
conflicting views , but w it ho u t
belligerence.
A logical next step would be anotl'ler
cycle in the Paris negotlatioM 11uch 11
followed Kissinger's pre-summlt visit to
Brezhnev April »z.t.
In that context. tht pr inclples of cotx·
istence may prove to have re1l 1ubstance
as a preliminary to finding a formula for
settlement of the \\'Br.
Season ~f Political Spleen
The best study of the somew hat
mercu rial Ap-terican temper presents
it self in an election yea r.
It is then the public!sts and politicians
appear to have forgotten large and im·
port.ant areas of American experience
once offertd to them in the publlc schools.
Even bright pol1f 1.
C'O-'SOCiaJ thinkers of
the recent past man·
ifest alarm and dis-
may over the pres-
ent. Take the ceses
of Eugen~ Roslo·.r.
Undersecretary of
State unde:r Presi-
dent Johnson . and
McGeorge Bundy,
adviser to both Mr . .Johnson nnd l'rc•s1·
dent Kennedy.
Mr. Rostow think& that unless tension
is eased betweea public opinion and
"what Presidents think they ought to (lo,''
t.he safety of the natioo is imperiled. Mr.
Bundy believes reJatlons between lhe
White tlouse and the Congress arc neat
)
•. ou.HOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robere N. Wied, Publilhtr
Thonw Jii"11, !:d~
Albm w. Bain ·
Editortal P09e Ed.itor
~e OOltorial pl'CC of the Dally Pilot S<.~~ to thform aod 11it.lmU-lat~ ~de~ by preACnUnc this
newspaper'• oplnlona a.n4 com-
mMlt.Ar)' on topics of lntt!l"Nt 11nd
fiig-nlUt.'lJ1•·1:, by prov1dlni a forum '°" thr ulm!Nlon or our ~drra" . nplnL!ma. and by preRflt.lbt the 41.,_.. ,·lewpofnta or Informed ol>-
lltt'Wn and 1pok•men on t.op(ca
otU.."'1.
Tuesday, June 6, 1972
( ROYCE BRIER J
the breaking point on foreign affairs.
Yet since the day General Wash1nR!Otl
took office, "public opinion ." l h c
Congress and the President have been at
odds over policy.
PRESIDENT WASHINGTON.
particularly after the Ter.ror. was turned
oH by the. French llevolulion. But many
•lf his congressn1en and people were for
il , and ~·anted lo fight England, which
\Ya:--i then in a ctesultory war with th e
French Only \Vashington 's immense
rrest1gc and so me common sense, saved
him.
President Madison wanted lo fight
England, and did in 1812. but all New
England ,,·as bitterly against hi m, and
almost seceded. Pre11ident Jackson hated
a pool of capi tal and credit called the.
L'nited Stales Bank, and killed it, but all
his eight yea rs were topsy-turvy with
violent controversy. Tl Is h a r d I y
necessary to men tion President Uncoln,
and some mll\lon11 of Llncoln-hater1,
north and south . who cheered his murder.
Lincoln as a congressman looked on Ult
Muican War about as Senator F'ulbrlght
Jooks on Vlclnam, aod even though
obscure gave President Polk 1 bad lime.
Theodore Roosev elt, Wi1'9fl aod Franklin
Roosevelt quarrf.le.d wit~ the Congress.
and often enough with "public opinion."
ALL OF THESE WE!U!: i')"olved In a
"breaking point." and were tile llrgell of
abuse . and frequently atrocious .tlander '
Quotes
Lyndon Jobn1011 -"The most pros·
perous, tht be1t houS<d, the-be.1t fed the
most lntelligtnt, and the mo11t stcure
,;eneration In our history. or all h~tory,
Is dlscontenttd."
for their acts. It wa s a free country, and
Americans of every period have used
freedom.
Mariaruie Means, 1n exceeding ly !Klund
\Vashington re.porte r, quoted FBI Dirtc·
tor Gray as saying Yo'e need more
moder ation from political candidates.
Miss f\-teans then upheld him. saying
"inflammatory rhetoric . . . ltads to
tro uble." She referred specifically to the
California primary cam paijn of Senators
McGovern and Humphrey. Yet without
such rhetoric in political contests. we
woulc1 hardly h8ve a country, etrlalnly
not one we would recognize, or could en·
dure for it1> com placency.
This column cannot comment on the
political goals or the candidates, but they
seem quite 1noderate in polemics, when
compared with our past 183 years.
Vituperation. denigrfttion of motive. 1ros1
intemperance of viewpoint, raw prejudice
have marked our political life from the
beginning.
Haven't thtse good folk rt1d any
American history , at all! The young c1 n
bt ucused -they evid ently artn 't
tauabt nowadays -but early In this Ctn·
tury tht young had ac~ss to It. and It's
spellbinding.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Pollution solution starts al home.
Our street sweepers can on ly be
partly tfflclent bec'111ust of can
parked Ill curbings. Ut's fine
Lhose who don'l move their cars,
sa.y S2. and start an environmen-
tal Improvement rund.
-D.S. T.
'
' Callforula Feature Serl-ice \
'l'htre has been 1 ireat deal of sptcuJ1.
llon •bout John Connally's political am-
bltk>ns. Few doubted ht bad them ; few
also knew with any sense of certainty
v.·hat thty were.
His resignation trom I.he Treasury
sec r,tarysh.Jp has lncrea.std that specula-
tion. To Washington observer Joseph
Alscp the answer i!r simple, however.
John Connally and Presldent Nixon, he
says, ha ve formed a remarkable close
relaUonshlp, W\hampered by any staff
reitrlctions or party bonds. Alsop noted
that s!nct Nixon was P r e s I d t n t
Elsenhower's Vice Prtsident "one of his
grandest amblUons has bttn to contrive
a basic political reallgnment in the
United States." The writer adds that it
would be extremely surprising "if Pre11l-
dent Nixon did not pretty well expect his
friend to ch1nge p.1rtles ."
THAT, Al.SOP SUB!\flTS, can add up to
"somelhlng like a political earthquake."
Such a change by a man so lone kltn-
tifled w:lth the Democratic party, and 10
effective as a top aide in a Republican
adminilltraUon couldn't help having 1
tremendoull Impact on the v.·hoJe pattern
of U.S. palltia. it is trot.
Somt will ask however, "why now?"
Again Alsop hi! an answer. A ''simple"
one.
"THIS WAS THE time he and the
Pre51dent had agreed upon". Alsop holds.
''And If you are probably going to change
your party. it~ better not to bt holding
an office v.•lth the party which you mean
to join."
It is a stimulatlna theory that perhaps
the first concrete atep haa been taken
toward the (Teat rtallgnment "° many
people have talked about.
How to Address
Our Lawmakers
u .1. llNAto•s
Al111 (r111.,.,, !01, ll1 H. Jprlnt S!, l ot
Anttltt f0011 1nct '""' V. t-tr {DJ, It"'. 1•'23, 11,000 Wlltt!lrt II~ .• Ll1 1,,,..1,, fOO)t, Du•l11t
C-rtt1'-'11I 1H1lorl1: Ntw .... ,i., Oflla lllft.,
W11,,ln11M, O.C. 20501.
U. S. ··~•ltlNTAtlVll
IOf"l lltf Ct!.1111)" 0111'1'1
iltlch•r• T, H111u l:MTll 0111r1tt -rn . ••tt
Grlr>e1l11 !t., ''"'''' tot:I01 Jflln I . lclllllllt \lJlh Oltlrltl -It ). OIO C1m1'UJ 0 r Iv t ,
Svltt 11•. Ntw.orl llt1dl t7UO; Crtll N•-
!J1nlf Ol"rlcl-11 ). St<urlly ll1n~ 1111111 .. Sul!t 11(1,
111 1'11'11 Avt., Lt,,. l111;c" f0902. ourlllt Co,..
1rtul1111I .... 1tt11 "'""'· 1!16 LOllfWOrttl HDUll Ot!l(t llds.1 kl!m!lt UOI LOM11WCrlh HeuM Olfltt
l lClt ,/ Het m.r. tt11 A;tybur,., HOUJI Offkt llldt .•
w11111n1ion. o.c. lOJlJ.
'TATE ll!NATOltS
'ltOM O•AHOI COUMtT
~ Ct ,.,..nfw (:Miii 01'1rl(I -It). I I»' ((, lrvl~ ~. Commllft'tt: Attlcultur1, Loc1t GCIVl!'n·
mt M, Slt«f Ctimmlt'" Oii l 11vlr011m111111 C.,.,lrOI. ~lect Commit!" Oii s.u111ty lmrvtlotl Ill A1rlcu1tur11
Soll, Joint Commlttt. °" Ed11t1tltfl IYt luttkln I/Id
J .. lll (t.....,lltte Oii l "ltl1llv1 Rl'tlrMMlll, JtnMt
•• Wlttr-. !Ulh OfJtr!Cf -RI. UIU ll'ldllPIU"I,
G•rdl'll o ....... nMI. c-•n'": lllllfMM ...-
P'Tlftul0111. Ht1llll •llCI Wl'ttt r1. Tr1rt1MrttllfH'I
tl'Wll ll'Cl1111'rf1I ltlltllOllt. Ourl119 l"ltltfln Mt-
l ltfl: 11111 Ct,l"fl, $t'11rroe111o, Ctllf. HN7.
ITATI A11•MaLTMaN
,..OM 0..ANel COUNTY
....... I ......... 1'1tt Olttrlct-JI:), !Mt Wttl· •It" Or., N...,..,. ltlCfl. ""°' Commln•11 l'utllc l!m,ltYIMM ..... ltl'tlrlll'l'lff11, w.,., ..... Olllmitfti.
Comtntrc1 1111111 l'ullllc UllllflH. ,.,.. •· .,....., CJ.Siii Ol1lrte1 -1t i, 1.00 Nlf1fl tt.r-.r •IWll ..
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t r.(t. LtW A:9'1tlol'l1 ..... It~ _,.. TIQflM.
hltct Ctmmlttw en l1M1t111111 ...... I Qulltl'tll, 11'1111
Chl lmi911, i.1111 CMWl'llMM Of! A,Mmk ~':"')
mt11t .... $~1 . ..._,.. "·s;UOttl Oltn~,...... , 177» l..ct\ ltwl.. """" hlOt ..,.,, C9m· m1,,_.1 lfuuli.tl. IElktllllt 9M c.Mtltvlllflll
A1t1tlllln1111t1 ..W vlct cl'lll , ''""""""''.._ K-'ll cwr l#tfl Olt"let-0), '" H. 1vc11t1. l'.O.
tow 4aA. AMflttrfl '*'°· comm1nta1 lductt!M.
Lt lllr lttlafllM lfl4 lttwnue 11'1<1 T11.i1tr1. Ourllltl
IH l.lltlw WttMnlt St... C•l!Olt 5-cr1--.
Ctlll • ..,.,. H••• c tulfTV IOA•o ., su,aavno••
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l'tufttl 01•1~ ...... , ....
'Im! Oltl,. •-1111 W. C1...-
Afllf"ttt1 Orll'IM Ctv,..., ~nlmtfltll ltdt ~ ·--... "·~ ..... Mt,,,..,
•
Of course I know about the fellow \\'ho
15 tarted out with two hamburger stands a
dozen yean ago and now comma nds a
f\amburger empire worth $100 millio n or
more . I could also tell you about the
\\'orld 's fa stest runner. some years ago,
"'ho had Infantile paraly sis In his youth.
Such. exceptioos
prove not.hlng, ell'·
~pt our chronic
weakness for dra-
matk: exceptions.
The plain fact of the
matter is that It be-
comes harder and
ha rd er to realize the
"American dream"
as the demand for
capital -or wha t the boys in the batk
room call ••front end money"-increasrs
exponentiall y every decade.
THERE ARE FAR fewer farn1ers in
the U.S. now than ever before . for t110
reason1i fi rst, the remarkable increase 111
productl,ity, and second. the inability of
tht smaU farmer to make a liv ing. Forty
acres and a mule (or even a tractor ) are
ridiculoull nowadays, when you need hun·
dreds and hundreds of acres to make the
modem farm pay off at all.
Country newspapers that used to go for
a couple or thousand now sell for JO times
that amount ; the start-up money for
almost any "'orthwh i!e venture is beyond
the means of even the ordinarily affluen t
man : If your modest ambition is merely
to drive a taxi cab in New Yo rk. the price
of a medallion is $30.000 in hard ca sh, ;ind
up . these da y&.
WHAT THE APOSTLES of free en·
te.rprise fail to grasp is that the prite of
such frecclon1 has mounted stea dily.
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
dt<'ade by decade. until it is almost out of
!'ight for the n1ajority of American s.
i\nybody \\'ho opened a papa·mama
grocery today, in the face of chain·slore
('Om-petit ion. ""'ould be suffer ing from
nostal~ic neurosis, other1Y ise kno""·n as
holes in the head.
Thi s is not so mu<:h an in herent naw of
capitalism as il is the inevitable trtnd of
a technnlog!ca l society. which not only
groY..'S bigger 1n tot al. but al!o deals Jn
bigger units all the time. Smallness has
becon1e uneconomic. whether in the U.S.
or Russia. and our ad van cing technology
hA." nnt. come to renllstlc grips with this
knotty problem .
1'HE .EQUALll'Y of opport.unlty. on
\l'hich ot1 r nation ll'as based . is being
eroded dail y. because the ante. keeps
going up out of proportion to the ab ility or
most people lo enter the game or stay in
long enough lo beat it. Yet the only wa y
capitalism can survive. in my opinion . i.~
by giving more people an economic stake
in keeping the game going.
I don't know the answer to this. or even
If there is any answer . given the in-
d13putable fa ct that \lo·e adore our
ma.,.sive technology. and Ill.at it has in-
deed provided us with varied material
tx-nefit s. All I am bleakly :1ure of i.5 that
increasing productivity w i thou t in·
creasing participation in the profit-struc-
ture -so that ea ch man can become "
caritalist of a sort -contains that "seed
of self-destruction ·· Marx gloated about.
Ligh ts on D ay and Nig h t
To the Edllor:
I thought perhaps I have what migh t be
a newsworthy item.
In th is safety age of vehicle s. the
llghts-<>n theory on highway vehicles has
been proven many. many times . The
1970s ·will see many new laws in thi s
regard. many of which ha,·e already been
enacted.
I HA V'E A DEVICE that turns on the
headlights when the engine !larts and if
the engine should stall, the headlights
turn off and all nasher lights begin
ope.rati ng. When the engine Js re-started.
the safety fia!her lights tum off and the
headlights turn back on.
THIS CAN BE operational by cont rol
on the Instrument panel the. ••me u
heldlichll (patent applle<i for ). II has
27.000 mUes of UH and te sting on
highways. I havt many figures and fact!I
on this su bject and the operational devtce
Is now installed on a pickup (third vehi·
cle).
WALTER R. STEVENS
Sa , Cr11e l Worltl
To the Editor:
How humane ill the Humane SOClety of
Oranc• Cot;:::t T I nalb' -and am very udd Someone dropped a cute
klllen In my k yard: IO I first phoned
our poUce department and they, In
tum, referred m< to the Oruge County
Animal Shelter.
I phoned and they wlll not pick up cats
or kittens. I asked what I should do with
Jt and they told me lo "just Jet It go Jr I
couldn't drive 1tl the way to Orange with
It."
I PHONED TIIE animal ahellers In
MAILBOX
J,eL!ers from readtr! are we-lcome.
Norrnalt11 writers !hould convru thrir
messa~es tn 300 words or leu. Th•
right !o condense letters toj~t rpocc
or eliminate libtl i.! reserve . All lrt-
ter! must include signature• and mail·
ing address, but name8 may bt with-
held on req1te1t ij !Ufficient rtastm
i.t apparent. Pot tru will not bt pub·
lishtd.
HWlti!lilon Beach and Lquna and lhty
would not take It either-so I let it 10 u
told . but what a 1ad, cruel world for poor
defen seless anin1als. I. have a dog, so
could not keep it, ?,lus having to leave for
work so could not drive It to Orange.
A. JOHNSON
Bu Ge orge
Dear George :
J Just bought what " a s
represented as a purebred Siamese
-C1t1 btlt my girl say1 I wa11 cheated
because Sia mese cat1 •re alwa)'J
twins. Should I take the cat back?
De8r Concerned : CON~NED
No -but can you trade In that
airl friend?
(I.el Georre'o trained staff ol
nervous wrecM 1how )'Oll how to
COpt With lift !)
. ..
-
~~ '' Running-Free
•
Winston's finer flavor
Winston's real, rich , satisfying taste makes any occasion
· a little more pleasurable.
Because Winston always tastes good, like a cigarette should.
Warn ing . The Surgeon tleneral Has Det ermined That
Cigarette Smoking Is Danger ous to Your Healt h.
e '11i"t.J. ••1•ol •t 101•c<o t o•••••. •••t•o•·I•• ••· "· c.
llNG, 20 mg. "tar, 1.4 mg. nicotine. BOX. 20 mg."1ar". tJ.mg. rncollne. a.. per c1gare11e. FTC Repon APR.71
•
•
l
I
.
Ellsberg Lawye1·s
Say Leak s Occu1·
LOS ANGEL.ES (AJ>1 -American inYolvenM1t ·tft'1tf,
Leaks of cJassUicd document'! nam. U.S. OlJttlt4 QiWri
such as the Pentagon Papers Judge Matt Byrne .. tbi ,.,
art made roullneJy by quest under su~
military and government of-AttorneYl for tht ,.,, con.
ficials without prosecut ion, at-tended the govemf'l'ltM Jt: ,,,,..
tomoys for Daniel Ellsberg eculhlg Ellsberg ~
and Anthony Russo say. opponents of the W11, ac-,
The defen se made the statr-lions which are not ••" ... , • .., ~1 c·rim~ when n.ov..J..-...i ol· 9' ' t ' r,, ment in requesting th a I E>' "'.''l.."""H'
charges be dismi!Sed as ficials commit therti. llan. JJ ubtrt Jl umphrey .
pretrial arguments opened Leaks of c I It I j I It d In lht ll1n Yr1nci.tCO ~tonday. Ellsberg and Russo. documents ~ur ''•t ~-I 1topover of hl1 Demo·
former coworkers at Raod level that it anumll J".'ft" (l r•llc primarJ cam-
Corp .. are charged ~·1th con-porlion . or patiern~IOtkrl ri•IJn atthtduf• took
· thef 1 11 and policy. and yet II no I' ' d !>piracy, to ~O\erntner prosecution," said It l#t tt !me trom t1 ainJ to o
property and violation of 1he Javwer Charles ,,......,.. llt 10.m• chewln& -If
Espionage Act in lhe leuk to aSserted leaks ar~~' "to thOtt ehqp1Ut!k1 work
ne"'s media of the secret ad\•ance the gov ,,,. -in I Chln1lown fll·
Defense Department study of teresl and se ll tht tfi': . t1ur1nl.
-[ Prosecutor Oavlf fflllltn ----THE BEST 1 '"'d the governP,M!!I "'/,et•
r.eadeNhip p 0 J J s provr lhe concept or dllqrtfnlftltory M 11 . I
"Peanuts" is onr Qf tht> p~osec ution. "Som.ttnt! Who ft •()f'UCI'
"'Orld's most Popu lar r on11r· violates a rule mutt lfl~·
1trips. J:e11d it daily in thr ecuted regardless • r DAILY PILOT '11 'iiim;;;;;;;. •• .;..~~o~lh~e~rsjhaiiivicibeeii;jn," hi Nl4 ;, --iFlliiii
Your home
has another
Mlniittcr\1
Cu1·h11 Off
Nader Backs '9,' Suit Filecl
Hits Ad Campaign :ga~:~i
SAN F'RAo'\iCISCO lAP I -after midnight." ug
~=~-ir,P·I/! ,;.r: ·=-M \~ =Im AN= ·::i1: U.. '" I I •• -4/ilirla ii Nn Yon lt ~...;.... T. ilv111.i •nil .. ' .. ~ ,.,... -. ....,.
Jlllbll• ,t[jjjn llfll! fl ~•1111 dMQJf!f "hollltlr Wli · r ••f!WICI him durlnf. • "':l ;:;:r• la!!l~ t• Cifl•ll II 'Jn t IPIM VllllCfd thl iOOJtlf'• iTilf:.::t,'fil',l~': ~rilon
. •r'• Colllorm1 tlnlltft. •<NII OI rtthlc.t. l•Wll!ll 1111011 Ill• former
N • d • r 'I F""""••ll!!t••• Pr,,. t •t1111d &\if •ll•i>or• M1,...,, trial P"ll"""'"' from hi• WuhlnJ!f•, D.C., •II rirllllnt, ileft , pl,.. a lllilllali tif"1rlbod Jho oc!Nm htt•flc1u~rt•rt Mood•1 •~rid ll••1•1r mer1tor;um on •• "4 !Ht dt1p1riit1 1t11ruJlf
c1.,,, Whl!tl>r, Pt1•14fm fff nutlH1 ""'' pl•nl oon· la d1l11J "'' conrtidocr." WMll~tr 6 ll1111r , lh< l"'blle 1Jr1Mtltft *"' JmpoN 1 hool ol l\'illl•m• ,.Y, 1 lt•llm•nl ))y
rol1li<1111 llrm OCJ!1t'lln11Jn1 ep-ethfr 1ntlpollullon r11trletloM llul1I01l on April If h" ••·
po1111on lo lhe mtlllJf,. an tndu•n . POtfd him lo t'flfll•1npt and
·· R1Jph N1der'• p I I II u I ~ 01 1 11 1 ,,,..,. rldk<\11•. Th• •ull wu lil8'1
Wuhlnl{l!ll 11111m1nt I• .... ilJOll~,.nt .,.,1 ll>an II MOtJdiy.
•boul whl ,...,141 bo upoetld mJJlt on tlffrl! It 411ttt JI '!!lo •uil cl1lm• Du1lin1i
fro m • m111 who m•, ho•• I JI • J 1•:• ~·1 J J · '"" I day bul llndo II ii 110W 1 Ill 1. ~~II 1 -'""" In nv11t llllon
Slia1a1n-
lt'11 Html
,,..,,. •If• 01• .. UN ol WJlll•ml bJ Diii. All y.
mq111r1 ....... fl K WOUid J., P. IUll\lll Jr., tllO pr.,.
ill llltll•Jn 1r "'" t1tord •<lrlir't •-Ill •ntf lhlfl •1111!'11 It Jmpron thf ••· 11id. "I 11.,, lplllt'mtllo!> lhal •lt-nt. Jn1 , ..... Mr. B"'flh hOI
N'ldtir br•ndiH u 1111111 r•fuifd µ. 1c•t I• be£1~u1ie
1 •• •. FOR THE FINEST IN ll ~'J: •MEXICAN FOOD '1 ·;!> • snAK' LOBSTER
i-----+-___,HEHRY' S AEROPUERTO !fl ~ CELEBRA'l;,ING
JUNE · JULY · AUGUST
OUR TWENTY YEARS
JN BUSINESS •.••.
MONDAY, TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
S PM -9 PM
AU-YOU CAN EAT $225
MEXICAN
· BUFFET
l "aco,, 1'o,taJJ,, I ,1111.df',, I Ill h1l.ulJ,,
r:hdr \'crJe.<.h1lt (.olnr.1Jo. l\1t·e, l1<."an ~.
T11r1ilL1' \\1th H ll!ll'r ;u1d ~al.ul
\'ITEL\'
ENTERTAli\MENT · lJAi\CJNG
2122 PALISADES (BmlOI) SANTA ANA
NEAR ORANG[ COUNT"f Al~PORl )~~ 5~/9
LOI ANOlll~l!:I f AP 1 -
"All my 1111 I know lhl•
would ~•pptn." rnu"d
w1J111m ~t•rvel as he put
on the 1J1ht s and c.11pt ha
11lld friend• h11d d!al~netl
with th1 help uf 1 comic
book.
1!111-11 ulfd Jn Ult Intl· Rolph Wlll11m1 ls b 11 n 1 Prqp. f OlntJlt!llll.Jhlli tho ,... r~proNhlod b~ atwrnay P•ul POlfid b1" en PJ7I' Ind ilmllitr Caruao, an .~oliv1 tupporter of
P"'llo14• polllltJnl• w o u J d Joe Bu1<1.::h_. -----·'-------------cr1a11 • 1,Dhotd din~.
lhre1t or 1 mil.•11 I~,
I poHJbJIJJ, fl/ flJJow '"" and a 1erl0\l1 llrmltt problem .
Marvel. 15. pl11nned an
Alr ~·orce <·areer as a
leenafer. lie graduated
frorn lhe Air l1'orce
Ac!ldemy, beramf 11 se r-
ond lieu1ena111 . rhen 1
fir11t lieutenant Then -
8hazarn ~ t:apt111u
In 1n1wer lo lhl1, Whll1k0f'
in 1 .1t•Jarnent lq f'lilw•m!itl
ouotl!d Dr. ~mll M r 1 k ,
chancellor •~It~' of UC
Da via and t ,,..i1it114t1 "pert
" lffln1, "01i1 ol l!lt lrl•;;i ml111k11 ol Pl'fltl. t 11 JTii
aen1eltJJ tifift on c&rUIJll
pesllcrl!MI . 1btll u .• 1 f u I P."1~1d11 1Ji4r111y 1~11 Ill• qr
ij .. 111 "' mJJllrilitl ~ M'
'
''buH"'. '' 1-1n:
lfrOCK'roN 1AP 1 -Th•
Re v. Klrby J. tl e11.1ley, the
m11l·order m I n I 1 t e r who
ch1lrn1 W h••• ordained LI
mllllon ptrton1 In h i •
Unlvtr1h1I Lile Church, ha•
obl•inod Jhf dlomlwl of 1
lhree-y11r-eld ltmporart tn·
Junction that had barr~ him
fron1 i11uJn1 doctor of divinity
d11rH~ Jn Callfornla.
Citpl. ~larvel *Ore h1a
001tume to a p a r t y
t•elebralln11 lli1 prorpotion.
''Holy Moley." said 1orru1
of the gut11l1.
~it:: :Ir ,::: .J ~
COlttrll fl/ •11111i." !========:::::::============= llentlty'1 attorney, Peter R.
lltromer ol ~an Joie, ar1ued
!hat the three-year atatute of
llmlt11fon1 on !he uourl order
had tapir~ and U111 l lfen11ley
had nol "lolaf ec.J 1111 restrlt-
llon1.
81!1n ,Joaquin Superior tlo1.1rt
Judi• fflll Jlo•ler wranlod lh•
dl1ml11nl Monday wl lt1m1t pre-
Judlt,., n1eanln1 the 1!11te can reln1Utuh! 1cllnn • h & u J d
{1n1l11~ r e 1 u m " nrda inin11
per1<1n1 by mail
On ~onda y hr w,1111 bll'k
al wo rk, tor the fir1t time
In hi• ne~ rank. 11 an
astronauliaal •11S:ineer al
!he ,\Ir Foret Sp101 and
Misaile 8ystem1 Or11ni11-
lion. ti e anawerad lht
tele phone and tcld !he
call{!:r who he was.
".flpre," wa1 lhe anpwer,
1·a nd l'n18uperm1n.'
"* 1. hi• "•lillr-; •llttl!!tlll 11UI Ptn. t · ·
"rMrf ""'k '""" Vile" I pravldH 1mpl1 J u d IF, I 1 I .. , ••• .,d. • ft' "'" •""1 rovl••• I<) Jltlllj/t ~orperoJt
lnt1rt1J1. H1 11 Jill rUtri9-
ll0111 on il'll<ik IJl!i IUlO l11ti. f!tRll 1nll>IJ1ft1 II d ., I I
ri ~llllltl . •i11 J•bbH _, 1114
llllffl Cltlil • !!t!ltiit•1tkln111 <Jrfllillllili'il ., .. .,,. 111,lltlt ,...~ ..
Money. Ver1lit!t Celebrated
One ol tha built-in features of your home is the
equity you've built up over the years. You can
con vert that equity into cash with an Avco Hom9P
owner's l oan. Cash !or any reason you can lhinlc
of. And pay it back conveniently over a period of
years, ralher than monlhs like most personal loan1.
Ifs our business lo lend money to homeowners.
Whal you do wilh the money is your business.
110MEOWNEFI LO.ANS
TO 125,000. OYer SS,000
on Real fsl•le &
Per.on•I Properlf
AnF~~.f~o1•1. L.../UsERVICI!.
500 N. An1he im Blvd., An•heim
2SD $. Eu<lid St., An1heim
1179 H•rbor Blvd ., Coit• M•11
617 W. 17th St., S1nt• An•
2G 17 S. M•ln St., S1nt1 Ana
)\!:bdie\ein~ .t
•lf.N1't
n1oHH
'41'Ul4
547--4431
549·3361
Mi1111 Da·vi11 Half Freedom, Some Tlireatlf
. .
Orumaa. ont of the !wo
11ur•IYln1 8ohtdad Brothers.
Druntf• 1114: "PQr •ittor
and CQ"1Tjdf. Antlflip•t.ed vlo-
tory. ft1volulionary love and
IO)Jll.lrJJy ."
!»Jn1 lhe ll·w~~ Ir 11, Ille
J>!tlllCllilon •011t · lh•I
Mill O.vl1 h1J . PIDI tho
•Ollf'lhou11 '"'£' In iJoMt of ll'fl!ll!ll Jhf tllit lootd
-lill..... • ~°""'' J.,Pet!, Wi>o WP td itil
year durin1 an I e I e d
breakout attempt from San
Quentin Prison. Dru m go
testified for the defense that
he kne1v nothing of the plot to
free the Soledad Brothers_
Dont be SW'.eril•d fa 1e-*l gas man
·comes~ on ...... sas man's work.
ln this world \vhcre so ma ny thing~
don11 work rjght and break before they're
.)>.lid for, where so niaJJ)' people don't do th~ir
work righl and break you be fore lhe y'1c
' pajd, it's nice 10 know 50r;nrone 1~ ~1111
interested In doipJt a good job.
T he Gas Con1pan)'·
We won '! :.end a Cl1s tonlcr Scrv14.cn1.111 10
(
'
)
your hou,. ~ ... Wt ftll Iii kllow• his job
thoroughly. •
Then we ukc another NJ.At goCKI as our
men ar('-newcomcrs and oldtimcr.r; aJi.k('-
wc check on their work . Fronl titnc to time
each man gets fol lowed up by :t Scrvi t.:e
Inspector.
The ln~pector'~ :t h:lrJ m:tn to rlr;l\C
Armed \\'ith a sharp eye and a pencil 10
match. he goes over ('v('ryLhing the Scrvic~m.an we nt over. ;;.,;. __ _
1-lc d()('sn·l mi ss .t t.hing. And 6
h e u:;ually finds what h(''s
looking for.
Perfection . QOS
Southern Calllomla Gu Company
j 1.. ..... , •••• , .... ,.,\• ., c.. ....... .
D OF GIFTS~~
flitlcdt,
t4~!,!lr ®
•
FOOD GIFT PAKS
PREMIUM PAK $3.89 MIDNIGHT SPEC IAi. S6.98
A long·liml' f~\orilr ~iii , ii h ~~ an !'dam A.1r,
(;ou<la, Sm oJ..1· 1~n1uJ..rd 'h··"~r. bar1, ll"lo
t:hccse Sprcad5 and S1vrrl·l lot ~fu~lar.!.
The ALI, CHEESE plus $8.98
Bl!He Fleur Cheesr., Buller Kae!!e L'beese,
Edam Bar, Smoky, four Cheese SprelKl:o1, two
Goudas,.boi:es of old-l11s hioncd cntcken Ml d
Cheese Sticks plu5 imported ca ndies.
Make Dad':i Gift More Attraclivc
SPECIAL
WRAPPING ·
O!" Dad "''ill bl'I lmpressod with hit wel.._
l\'repped 11if1 lrom llit:~ory ferms of Ohio.
We'll ~·rep your girt io snit.bl• az»d ditti.nc·
Ii"• piper ind 1!11ch • decor•tiT•_(•nd Jll•
•hie) corn r:ob pipe, cigar or pncticc golf
bill. Just i s l.. 115!
i·, Jh BEEF <,1·!(.f.: \1ild ~h<lj!,.' l,oni:hom.
I(, , I•• J l •11.-( .hrr· "· ~m"lc y /~m•1J.. .. d Cheese
H.>'J ~nrl irnptirlrd (.lnrl.e~ to •d1I :.[' .. ri..11'!.
• .:_•. ~ .r
DELUXE
HOLIDAY CLASSIC $12.95
114 lb. BEEF STIC K, Rel lr Flrur Cheesl'!
(;oud.a, Edaoo Bar. !':J mol..v (SmoJ..ed Chef'!~;
Har), Criu::J..rrs, llu1trr J...11 rsr Chci:se. "f ild
"fidget Longhorn, ~ Chrcsr. S11rc1ds. ~lrp
Cheddar Sprc;id plus imported candies.
ft(t~ttr1 t•!!!!:
C:--61. I'. .... .. 10 A.M. te
MESA ...... \Ola: , 1UI .:.:!;t1...
COSTA · c'"'' 'Tll LOWER CAROUSEL MALt-1 P.M.
BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FRWY. "'" 140·0'1
eL..;A~M~E~:aICJ~!~:'S~I~iE~lDIN~G~C~B e~:ES~E:.,.=S'I'O~RES~..J•
M
D
M
y
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• M
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G
'" °' M
" Go
M
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D• "' ,, .,, ,, ,, ,,
W• w. o·
" M•
" •• A W' ••
'" A
"' "" '"' 0 Ow
;~
G
G" ' " '" " '" ""' '"
l '"'" "~ ;,M -~.tnl• ,., ,, .. ~ ,.,
••rv!c
5t Jo lnurn
~~r,r
lomtri ;111r1t mrs.
lftv.
/ohn I '""' D1Tt ... dlt,
Gokl!I
0$vl<I
day, I Ckvrc
m~kto
rrll)u!e M•-EPl•c Mortu
Frink
d~le. " . M•ers ~~~~ cnurc "-!ltroer DlrKI
5unnlt Vltj<> . .. " -· da!JQhl
P1lrkl
lht ho
'·A E. Ro
strvlc
'" J . Ba Mtdlca ltrmtn
Cor
Cos
II
I
N
For The
Record
Births
HOAG Ml!MO•t ... L MOS .. ITAL
MIT I. 1"1
MJt •'WI Mr1, lfov C Cu1l•11ewin. SOl\.'i
M••111rl!t, C11rori1 dill Mar, Olrl
Mr '""' M", Ch1r1,1 0. Sl•t1, 1911 Mcv1r Plact , c,,.to M911, bOr
Mr Ind Mro ('leorg' L. f!li1, IG7
Nor111 C1•ol Oflv1, AIWl ... 11'1· bcw
Mr llfld Mr1. Joa1p11 A:. Er..,.,, 11~
Wtil Bin, Sift.or, Sp.ct .M, MNIXl"f
Bt&Cll, l><lv
Mr. Ind Mr1 Otnnl1 I. Tl\OmplOll, :n2
IJlll. S!rfff. API 1 Hunllnt tan lhl<ll,
1111
N,r and M" WoiJIH" L. Turner, 1117
l'/1.r Sle1<1. 511111 An1, boy
'"' In(! Mt• W1UPr T Tvltr, "' S1n<1tl!tl1 0.1 ..... Cororw 0.1 Mir,
~-M1y ,, 1'71
Mr. 11'd Mri, 8ruc1 Schelln, 17l7
1,1tuourl. C01!1 Mew. bo'I
.Y.t •nd M1• OMilel B~'°""· Jl:it Soutll
Pork Odvt , Son11 An.1, boy
Mey It , ltn
Mr Mid Mri. RO<l&td YDUnt, &112\'ll W11t
!8111 s 11..,1, Co1ta Mew, boy
Mr llnd Mr1 Phlll11 Snvder, •11 West
8albo4 8oultv1rd. B11bo1, boy
1<1r 1nd M•1. John T1vlor, :n1111
.Y.Od~lo Drivt, M!11lon Vl1!<1, 11lrl
Mr. &nd M•s WllU&m ll•n•cllow!c1,
1l0i. We!! S!•nlord Streft, S•nt1 Al16, oo>
Mr ~nd Mr!. Evfrt11 Con ..... 1y, 1505
South Bliler, Aol. C, S•nt1 A,...,
girl
Mr ~nd Mrs Rot>f'r! G•e11orv, 2100
Pe!er~on Pl11ce. No. 61·8, Coll& Mt••· vlrl
Dissolutions
Of Mart•iage
IEnttrtcr ..,.., 11
D11vits. J 11me1 Ktnne!ll &nd J1nlce 1(11ye
Mitchell, June H1rrlel •n<I Miilon Wlll111m
Yearick, Waller Lee and Jtnft M&ry
Simmon•, S.tndr1 L. 11nd D1nnJ How1rd. 1(1tJe 1nd Korrv
6011Hla, Juli • llnd Cru•
Gta!'ll, S!u1rt Loren 11nd "lanc:v Ell:1 Clark, R~rt W. •l'ID P.\!rl<oA fl.
Bre!'lnlln, Maurke An1110"' &nd ~llr~ll
Jenn
Btt k, Larrv L. al'ld Slllr!ev L.
Muttin•. Wiima S. end D11nnv L.
Tllomo1<1n, Wand• B. end Bvron H.
l.llul!en. Jl l1& F11ve 11nd llloma• Roger
Hiii. Dor!s 1<11tllletn and C1rl MtlYln
Bult<. Wrav A nnd 011,.el 0 .
Tllorl>t', L&vet1 May Ir.cl Andrew
Gwroe
Himmel. Gertrude H•ldeoorG nr.d Roger P11ul
Wiison, Oawvn Marte i nd W&Yl'l<I
C&•lton
Gunn, P111rlcl11 Ann 1nd Wlllle Gobl1
'furncauyh, v,olPI A and Norman F.
Grier. Them•• G. and Nrtl1• !>. Mot ~. D11nna K. &no Arlllur Anlhonv Leath, Su•en and Floyd, Jr.
Golltr, LoreHe end Rawlln Adam
M1>ry . ll'>om&• F, ;ind Heltn
8 re ... er, Jimmy Clitilon and B"tv
JoY<e
~•all. Ar!t n ... ~nd GllDert Coll•ni. Jr,
8 all11nce. St mu•I M end N•ncv C.
Sc,.vin, P•m•I• A , •nd J<>11n F
LOOfltV, Sh.rl•Y Anne Ind Benn!ll
Frank
King. Jtrald H and Kllhletn M.
O• SuucY. Al1•vln O. ano J•n~! J_
Newc1>mb, Beny J . and Ctufle> l ,
C11r l10<l, Ell•e M•e ano Oon•IO A
Allen. Fr.cl MlthMI &nO Slli•lev Ann
lau1erbo<n, l•rrv JI . llnd sn~tla JI S11ul'oder>, P11,,c11 A. &no M.cnael 0 .
Ritt. Bun1 Marlof't 11'1<1 J1<k £
F•M!G May n
Wilkerson. J&me> L. &nd Ann M1rlt
W1>rren, Anne E_ ""° Cl'l•rle~ R O'Andref, Lau•• Ind Rknard O.
Jacooson. 1(11ren G .... no lhom,t> f ,
Magruder. Oonolef D1lworlhy Jr, .,..,
lolar1or.e Ahce
Newman. Rober! Wavne •nd K.i11tvn '"° Wickey, Let An~ end Ser! £.
Baoe. Robert H and Cerol A.
FU .. M•Y U
Larts. Sar•h E>lelle 1'111 Enrique AvelO!.
Totten, C\lf!ord end E11Jabelh M.
D1c~1er. Samuel and Bev1r1v D.
En1lon. s1epn1nle K1l1 AN:! Don1ld
Owen
Owen, J~nf! L. •n<I Cov M.
Jone•, William M. and Ju•.,•I&
Goddard, B11rb1•11 R. &nd Merle E. C.~••nver, Jotin l1vror &nd J1n1t Ele11nor
Roge,., ~:t~fn J . 1nd S~ndra L.
Brlgg1, Ltonlrd J11v ano Helen
,...,gdalind
$1amp•, Ju1nl" Ind Bobby Jo.
Herl, Thoma• A. &Jiii Olebec<• L. 5u111. Jllth1rd R. 1"<1 5&1'1<lrt L.
Death Notices
DAILY PILOT 9 lo\• lttu•CU'I'' f 0 .10•0"1rt>1•d
Pulit%er-1v·i11ni1ag Prof: Man Suing Mesa
Attorney, Wife
Real Es tate
Soi ,· rJr.c1 (!I Hru&crr L•CC't11e
Society Deserves Its Crime TRAIN ING
f'· ,-.. ,, I ,r fr 1·•· lold C'r
I AIR-SCHOOLS
KU.IOI com.•
By TOM BARLEY
Of 1'Mo D.iry 1"11-1 .ll1lt
SANTA ANA -Mushroom-
ing cl'lme rates in tht> U.S. are
terrifying Americans a n d
destroying our system of
criminal justice, but "our
lf()Ciety is getting the crhne it
deserves," Pulitizer Prize v.•in-
ner Leonard Levy told a Santa
Ana College audience J\fonday.
"A society that tolerates
white collar crime at the
American level and practlca\ly
supports 1 organized c r i m e
should not be surprised at
what is the ine\'itable reaction
from desperate dwellers of the
ghettos," the Claremo~t
College history professor said,
Levy, who ~on _the 1969
Pulitizer Prize m history for
his book "The Origins of t.he
Firth Amendment," was in-
vited to speak at Santa A:na
College during a lecture senes
sponsored by the student body.
LEVY SAID FBI analyses of
mounting crime rates. prove
that Jll06t crime~ of v1ol~~ce
are committed 1n the ~1hes
and that most of those C~f!le~
are carried in those cities
slum sectors.
"It's perfectly true that
blacks are involved in crime
in numbers far beyond their
percentage of the population,"
Levy said. "But it's also true
that they are the principal vic-
tims of the soci~conomic
degradation in those areas
that provides the impetus for
this shocking, alarming wa1'e
of crime."
"And nothing is more cer-
tain than thrit those statistics
will continue to grow if we do
not act immediately to provide
the equal o pp or tu n i .t y ,
educati on, health services,
social status and recognition
that is so often talked about
---..... -.-but ne\'er Implement~," Lt'vy tilnuit could not be mt"Ssured. SA~'TA A.\'A _Costa ~tl'SI that Hanna'• llCti00$ led to his "-t7lfl f7t·llU
Le id nd I.I i..-~ ' •-II ,·u and •\..-1n1 L ·~ ll. .said. vy s& · attoroey Paul Hanna a ui ~.vn11ng tnenl41 Y Uft:' ........... c.1. ,...
Levy said FBI analyaes "Organized crime throogh wlle have been !Ued for loss of Iii.! job al North P\. C7141 "'·NII
show th.at "a murder 11 com-the syndicates and the Mafia $250,000 by a man "'ho allegcs ,__:A~m~er~ic~an~R~oc~l<w~e~ll:._. ----~~~~~~~~~~~ mitt~ every S3 minute!, a brings in an annual $8.7 bill ion that thelr "tortuous a n d
rape every 14 minutes., a rob-through the betting rackets malicious actions" t.'Ost hirn
bery every 90 seconds. a alone," Levy said. "You get ORANG[ COUNTY his sanity and his job.
burglary every 15 seoonds, tile significance or those Lo\Jis E. Krart named lla n-
and an assault ol some kind figures il you compare them nll , Mrs. Harriet J ane l-lanna
every two minute!. to the profits made last year and the plaintiff's estranged
"NO WONDER Americans by our 10 largest corporations Uatherneck wife , Agnes R. Kra!t. 111 nn
are terrified," Levy said. "But _ $7.2 billion after taxes." Orange County Sup<:'rior Court
it's no use pretending that the The drive to "eliminate T } action \vhich clu1rges Jlanna
answer to this kind ot problem discrimination, siclme.53 and Faces ria with .. c re al 1 n g false
lies in wall-to-wall co P S • u.A h evidence." k poverty and replace LUCffi wit
--· Now .... Plastic Cream
Invention For Artificial Teeth
•~ T-....... felt that has reVolu11un1itd den ture 111unum waiting.
St llt.al ltf... It !ti' you l•1tr h ~rol"r. rht-w bet· No•.fortbefint~.llC'~<'l'~trsa ler. eat mort' n.1(Llr.1llv t'tXllOf.l\T
plastic a'l!&m Uiat ho!d1 rlt:n.1ure11 •ll last~ f..,.-hour• l~r,1•1~ m01slurt.
11otverbtfClft--fom11an el11s11cmcm-l)enturw tha l f1 t .. 1~ ~nt1al to
l:irane th•l Mlps 1111/d II"'" /11 /llf ht:i!th. ~ 1 .... 1 ol11.t15t rrruhirly.
1'!elwrol h1111u uf _)'COW• "'""Ill. lt'J 11 {;cl t'll5Y·l• .. u-r J-1,00£1\'T Denluro tougher judges and the 'ba~ hope and dignity" .should coih-S,\t\'TA ANA _ A Canlp The lawsuit indicates that
to law and order' platform a -cide with effeetjve gun control Pendleton Marine accused of ftanna al'ted for r-.1rs. Kraft i11
vacated by
50
many of our laws, the hi.story professor the murder of his two-year-old ~a~di~·,~o~r:""~':c~l~io~n~. ~K~r=a~rt.:st~":t,~·s~:;==~==:~====;;;;;;;;;i:iii:. __ =:::.._.; political candidates today. urged. son has been ordered to facel1I
"\\
1hen we remove the filth , "THIS IS THE ONL V nation trial Aug. 16 in Orange County
idleness, ugliness and despe.ra-in our Western civilization Superior Court.
unique tlisco,·cr y called F 1.(\lllt.N r"' Atlhts1''' Crl.1rn
tion from those who are forced without such Jaws," be said. Judge William Murray set
to become slum dweller! we ''More Americans have been the trial date and a pretrial
"'ill. in one dramatic dec-isive shot in this country with non-hearing Aug. 4 for Steven
step, cut deep into the con-military weapons since 1900 George Coleman, 21 , after the
ditions th at produce this crime than were shot in the armed young Marine pleaded in-
rate ," Levy said. forces in every war that the nocent to charges of first
"Crimes of violence and U.S. ever fought. degree murder. Coleman will
property cost this nation $1.5 "Houstun, Tex .. has three be represented. by the public
billion a year," Levy said. times the number of murders defender's office.
"But that's nothing compared every year than are com-Coleman was arrested at his
to the cost indicated by what 1 n1itted in the whole of Great S.'lnta Ana home ~larch 13
think are very conservative Britain,'' Levy said. "\Ve are shortly after his 30-month-old
estimates of the annual take a gun crazy nation and we arc son. Brittain John Colen1an ,
or white collar and organized recognized today and used as d ied from what coroner's ln-
crinle. the world's chief market for vestlgators said were massive
HAMS
" _ , So Good It Will
Haunt You 'Til It's Gone"
Ou• h~m' '"e tn• !intSI corn·tf<I low1 llOr~r 'I -Our t lo w Dry
cor1110 "1tlnO<I. ''·"' W1sc.on•!n hlrkorv Ml'ld "~'~'' ,.Ood ,n100.lno;i and Ju ncur oven t>~l<H!g honey •n ~p!c1 QitJe ,,,, "'l"IV~ m oil tlla
"'"Id So de1lrrno1 M\d 81lfl'!ll•nQ Wt lu•t W<lu•<h•'t """W !low to
h\\ll•OV~ HIO• prooyU w''"" ,,..,~ •n8k•ni;t 101 I' 1• ,,., ~l'·•~I llltfll
!uo. Jrom IOp 10 oollom •o !lin t e•tn delect,,t Ir '""'~"" t hee c~n
ll~ r~1""Yfd eUortle"lv Ccmpl~t•I V bl!O.M ••rn ''·"!v 1,. •fr"t Of·
111r 10111 Honey H8keG t-<~rn 1o011r. All IOvtMY•• •n h~m IOYm&nl ~~"'II "•""' !OfOtt,
ll:ETAIL STOlllS
J7QO f. Coo•t Hi9hwoy, Core110 dtl Mor -67]-9000
"liow can we expect honesty ,_!gu~n~s~used~~ln~c~r~im".'<!e~.'~' ----~i~n~le":m~al~in~j~ur~i~os:· _____ ~~~~~~~~.;.;.~~~~-----~~~~~---~~~~---~~~~ from the slum dweUer when
1222 S. lr11okh1ust , A11oheiM 615-2461
we see incalculable profits
being niade by many of the
nation's businessmen and
public officials -men from
\1·hom v.'e are supposed to
drav,r our examples," Levy
said.
HE ESTl1.tA TED the annual
"white collar take" in fraud at
$1.4 billion, with the loss
through I h e f t and em-
bezzlement slightly lower at $1
billion. Other forms of pro-
fiteering in such fields as an-
Political Notes
People
withpla11s
save at Imperial.
Co1nmittee to Re-elect •
Nixon Moves to Action
Bv 0 . C. HUSTINGS
01 fll• D•llJ 1'1111 Sl•fl
The Orange Coun ty Com-
mittee to re-elecl the Presi-
dent moves into action tonight,
with i:ommittee C h a i r m a n
Victor C. Andrews of Emerald
Bay and his staff holding open
house and watching I he
primary election returns at
the same time.
Orange County Nixon head-
quarters half the ground floor
of the new 18552 Building on
MacArthur Boulevard across
from 1he Orange County Air-
port. The telephone number
is a,,3-9050.
the President's 42 ·year -old
brother saJd, "it is time to
come together in the party of
your choice and work like
everything for your man,
whoever he might be."
He said the President's
other brother, Newpart Beach
resident Donald Nixon, would
only work part time on the re-
election campaign because
business interests requir~ his
attention.
* * * State Senator Clair W.
* *
Burgener, an aspirant for the
GOP nomination ... in the new
42nd Congres~donal District, * issued a last-minute press
The great American vacation. It's whatever people
with plans make it. A welcom e opportunity to
unwind from our work-a-day world. A custom-made
plan for active recreation. Relaxation. Whatever.
And no matter how you enjoy your vacation, you'll
probably agree it goes by too fast. That's why
proper planning can really help out. And that's
where Imperial Savings comes into the picture.
At Imperial Savings we believe in sound financ ial
planning. Because we think you should get the
most out of life now and in the future. So we
maximize your saving interest with a full range ol
programs to flt your needs. The highest rates on
insured. savings. And friendly full-family savings and
' ~~. loan service. . i~f.. These are just some of the reasons why so many
" · people with plans save at Imperial. Why not come . . in, start saving, and see what we mean. We're
The President's brother, · \..-b ed oe 11ouLHAC release nohng 11e as wag llt61r1c1 w. °" i:iou1n&c. A~ n, of 2..0 c Edward, was in Orange Coun-his primary ca..mt.•tgn without
sure you'll like the association.
)••no• Av•., C0i!1 Mt11. O..tt Ill <11a111, I I t k ,,,,...
J un1 4, 1911. Survivfll by ""•bind, y as wee . . benefit of bi 11 b 0 a rd ad-
c;..c..09; one d•1>1111ter, Nano s1v1g1, Nixon. a Seattle resident. 1.. ts ~anti An•; rwo stePO&uvhr•rs. M1ry Keck full · verti.xmen .
.,.., M1rn11 Jord•n. borl'I ot Arkan•••: said he plans to work time "\Vllb all of Its beaches, llepson, JO$el>ll De Roulhac, Liiii• Rock ; th · tl) the
Ind tf\ree gr•ndclllldren. Memorial On e campaign Un v-ffiOUn(at'•• Ind Valleys <1rvlces will bo Mid Wfllne1d1y, 10 AM, • t li CO ...,, ·~ ' >1 Jonn rne Divin• EPtsCOP•I Churcl'I. November election, rave ng the 42nd ls easily the most ln~fnfl'Wlnl •I Ille Abbay, Or•l'l<Jt. F1m•IV RrOUnd the COUrrtry and Speat-iucrg"t' tl10•e wlsning 10 m11te rnemorle! beautiful coogres.slonal district :on!•lbvl!on1, Pit••• contrlbutt lo 11\e "tng on behalf or his brother 'd B ~menc&n C1ncer soctetv or 11111r f1vor1" · in California," sa1 urgener. r:,~nv. !lell Bro&dwov Mgrtu1rv. Olrec· He said President Nixon, due "The use of billboards in a
DONALosoN t-0 a busy schedule, will have Id d ~ t fffY. John w Donald•on. vie•• ot s1 I . d campaign WOU emon.:i~ra e
John '"' 01v1ne Epls(up11 cnurc11. R ~~·· li Ile time for stumping an insensitivity to that beauty." 'en! o! 21 4 E, Wll1on Sl.1 (0111 Me11. 'II " 'g f om the 0.te cl death, Jun~ l, 191 , Survivf'<I Oy V.'I Campa! n r * * * Nlfe. 1<&tllrl11<1 : d1uor1 ter. Mrt. Penny \Vh't Hous " Goldstelr1, HullllnQ!Dr! Be1ch; OrllnOson, l e e. Cl k I N rt
Oevld Jlllln, o11111 llome. Services. Thurs· Asked about the maverick Walter ar S ewpo
d11y, 11 AM, I'· John lfM Olvlne Eolr.c:o11•I cand1·dacy or "-p. John Ash-Beach cha irman of the ini-Cl'lurcll, F8m II U>{lll!'•t1 ff\Q11 wl1hlng to 1"\C m•~e memo.ii con1r11tuuon1, pl•A•• con· brook (R-Ohio), Nixon said he tiative drive to reinstate the t•IOute lo the F11Mr John Don1lds011 I H be
Me,.,orl•t Fund. st. Jo11n 111e 01v1rie felt the Congressman had a death pena ty. e can con-
E111scOP6I Cll~•ch. fl•H er o • d w • Y !acted at 645-3910 or 8'73-1727. Manu&ry, 01rec:to••· right to express his conserva-
Ml!l!llSMAN t•'ve vt'ews and to try to \l'in \Vritten inquiries should be Fr&nk MHr\m•"· l.oU W. Dorin SI , Gl•n·
Cfale. D•te 01 dt•!ll. Ju'M! ~. t9n. Survlvf'<I support for them sent to P . 0 , Box 479, Balboa by ions, Robl!rl J .. OI l~lnt: Jol'ln S.
Meersman. of Cary. llHnois; •nd •l11hl "But after the convention." Island.
prtndtlllloren. Rl'qulem M•u lnd1y.liiii~:;i~~~~§~§i!ii""":L~~~~~~~~!i!~~~il Tvesday, J.lO PM. Hoty F1mUv C111>o11c
(fturch, C.ler.dAlf. ln!frmenl. St. Jcneol'l'I ,... Cemetery, Jllvfr Grove. 1111nol•. (111!1 lltroeron Funer1I HQ<M. Corona dtl Mar,
OlrKlori. TOMSOVIC
5unnle A. Tomsovlc. Reslden1 of Ml11IOfl Vl111l. 01•e gl <le&ll'I, JUM s. 191). 5ur~IV· I'd by hus.,...cl, Dr. e"""aro J . Tomsovlc;
!<In, Rlc,,.rd L. l om.ovlc. Io u r
<11111111\ers, Fr1nce1 C., 8&rl>lra J.1 Patric!• L. •nd Judllll L. Tomsovlc, 111 Of 11'11 tiome: o•r•nll, Mr. •l'od M,.. J•'"IS T. AnderMm, Oakl1rl<I; 1l11er. M,,. Allitn IE. ROif, Ridding; lwr nlec:tl. FuMr•I
.. ,..,1ce , Wl'dr>tsefAV. 11 AM,_ Mc:Corml<k LloQUM Se.ell Ch1pel, with >11~. Her""'" J ll•er11 (ll1olaln OI Dr111g1 COl.lflly Mldltll t11111r, Olflcla1ln<;1. Prlu&t• ln-
t11m1nl. •
8ALTZ BERGERON
FUNERAL HOM E
Corona del !\tar 673-9451
Costa Mesa Mi-!U4 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa Me11 u g.3433
• McCOmflCK LAGUNA
BEACH ,~ORTUARY
17t5 Lagana Canyon Rd.
UHllS • PACIFIC VIE\\
J\tEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery J\tortuary
Chapel ssoe Pacific View Drive
Newport Btacb, Callfora.la
144-!700
PEEK ,AMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
DOME
7a&J Bol11 Avt.
Westrnlnattr 19345!5
SllflTHS' ilfoRTUA RY m Main SI.
lluntlngton Beach
~
I
1,
Free Demonstration Of The Two
Remarkable Systems Of Y91a
per -.nnum on $5000 deposits held 6 OO QL two,..rsormore.Actual annual yleld • 70 when aavlng• and lntere&t accumulate one year.
per annum on $1000 deposits held 5 7 5 QL one to two years. Actual annual yleld • 70 When aavlnga and Interest accumulate one year,
5 25 ~ per annum on 90-day certlftcatn. Ao-
0 tual annual yield when savings and
• lnteresl accumulate one year.
per annum on paaabook account1
compounded dally. Account• tam
from dale of deposit to date of with-
drawal. Actu1l annual yield when a~
lng1 and lnt1re1t 1ccumulatt one
year.
fl
D 1mPERIAL sAv1nGs
and loan association
ExecuUve Office: 3366 Via Udo, Newport Beach, (714) 87'-3130
Newport Center Office: 550 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, (714) 644-1461
Otller otnc• In Paadena (main office: 81 South lal<i Avenue)
East Paaadena, Glendora, Redlands, Woodland Hiiis
6.18%
' 5.92%
5.39%
5.13%
A WHOLLY OWNED SUBSIDIARY OF 2 BILLION DOLLAR IMPERIAL CORPORATION OF AMERICA Hiit
I -
·-1unoar. Junt 6, 197?
(. ·--· •·-:: By Phil lnterlandi
:·1r a ~rl refuses me wilh toasing curls, I don't believe
111 lcttiqg the ea.rill take a couple ol twirls -I i'uat fire
her."
L. M. Boyd
Gals Cl1oosier
Pickll1g Mates
\Vhe~ it comes to picking out a romantic partner, a
woman 1s far choos ier than a man. The widespread notion
she is. more apt . to be susceptible to love at first sight
than is he, that s erroneous. The matrimonial experu
know this, but lht!y say they don't know why. Our consult·
ing authority on the topic 1uggests it's because 1 woman
is inclined first to consider a man's eligibility and aJt,
''ls he or isn't he?" A man , on the other hand, is likely
to .loo k over a woman 's physical attributes, such as her
hair possibly, and ask , "Does she or doesn't she?"
AF'TER LENGTHY study, the American Psychologlca1
Society formall y issued the followlng
statement: "Extensive research h,11s
shown that, on balance, women who
are by nature cooperative and easy
going. tend to be most likely to pro-
;luce children in rather greater num-
bers.·· lllum\naUng!
OBSERVED old Ed Durling: "It's
continually claimed the color or eyes
can't be used to determine character.
Possibly not. Still. I've noticed girls wi th brown eyes have
certain char11cleristics in common. An inclination to flirt,·
an inability lo make their eyes behave , for instance."
(tUERIES -Q. "!low n1any electric motors in a fully
lofld('d cnnvertihle'?''
A. About 16. And about 44 lightbulbs. Push all the but-
tons on a jrib like that <1nd you pull enough power to light
three housts.
<!. "HOW much did Butterrlv McQueen get paid for
Iha\ \\v i!tering performance of hers in "Gone with tht
\Vin d?"
i\. Ex:ictly $10.000.
Q. "\\'JIO is Coke's blue eyed rountry girl?"
A. A .1'.liss Dollie \\'est from Nashville. TeM ., I'm told .
She sings
REPORTl'.:ll sometime back that the left leg of the
chicken l<'nds to bt• tenderer than the right leg. 1'ie
chicken sleeps on its right leg, thus developing tougher
muscles. it's said . Now a Boise client wanU to know who
made this scien tific discovery. A hotel chef named Pablo
San:t.enis In Mexico City. that was the fe:\low . His rt.anding
order for <!inner parties is to serve the guest of honor the
left leg, always.
l\tAYBE YOU, ton. were ignorant or the fact four oo t
of five American families only eat in the dining room when
company shows up. But pollsters claim such.
A1 ... i:;n, NAl\fE the highest state capital In the United
States. \\'hnt. you thought Denver? Likewise. That's wrong.
Chr-yenne is No. 1. Santa Fe , No. 2.
A!l!lr•'I/.~ '71nil lo L. /11. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, Ne1v-
porl Jlcuc /1, C:n!1f. 92660.
Wha t's New at Harbor View
0 11 a. J.-.•111 HOii 1"4,
Juf .. t ef M91Arfhw ltYtl.
The shops out here streu Mrvlce & the fa ct that
they like people, which means you! •.• RICHARDS
l\.IAHKET wanls you to know they feature only Black
Angus or \Vhile Face Hereford USDA Choice Beef
fron1 U1e l)C Anza Ranch in El Centro, specialWng
~ in beef for 35 years. This means you get only the
h('s1 ... SC'w nO\\'+frnvPI later. Start with the pat-,. irrn c11t11lo1o:s at THE FRINGE l lNIFIT then plC'k
th1• (1111 fnbri<."s: onl" scam (!) ahlrred dresses, bikinis
r,i• hy 1hr bolt, \are for 1and 1~·eepers, i;pecl&l atutt fur
Joni.: skiru;. Pr,.roe.re rf!d, white Ii; blue for a fire-
";'. , t'Al'kf"r \\t'l'kt'nti .• , °"'11 your home have an l'mpty
'-/•UCC or 11•'1~ Complete the decor with a beautiful
ll\ 111~ p I an l 1.r a "like-repJ.. artificial trtt.
FLOWERS IY MORll hu a bountiful telecUon.
Come & 11lck one up this ""·tek •• ,
Talk about Sl•rvicr.s!'Dld you know that R1CHARD'I
f\1 ARKET has a bakery, dell, fish market t.nd liquors
!' all under thf' same roof aloni \Vlth their Q'J'O('try
ite-m1! Savelli a lot of time for th e shopper by pro-
v1dtni; thl" hf'1t quality, tl'rvicc, and courtesy to
htlp you crr:ate a happier family •..••
Mio.
•
•
1Janlt1Jn®IP9~ cllJ8D~
~one 18
I ~
A
hy rohl ~
Hel p him put his hsel foo t
forward with one of these.
A) the Grond Prix. boldly
buckled end stropped , 28.00.
B) the Gronger. • si de-zip
boot perfect for flores, 26.00.
Men's Shoes
•
t
1 I
• .
..
•
' ' • • j
{
i ' l ! ,.
<
. t
>
l
•
\ I '·
B
eve•·~· dad •
nee d s a
good
boot
h y hallmark
Hell be on soli d foo ting
with a choice, here.
C) The Vego , en easy-into
side-zip, soft leother, 21.00 .
D) The Swomi, broad-toed
bold boot with strop end
dashing buckle, 2 t ,00.
it~ s -at the broad way
S~OP 10 A.M. lo 9:JO P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, SATUftDAl' 10 A .M. f• 6 ,.M. SUND'.'-Y ,11 NOON t• S ,,M.
CERRITOS
c
ANAHEIM .(4~ N, Eudi\11 11141 S.lS.-1121
HUNTI NGTON BEACH
'1111 Edin9t1 Avtnw• (7t 41 lfJ..Jlll
NEWPORT
47 Fe1hlo" l1I•"" 171 4) •44·1111 600 L..1 Cerrilo1 Mill 12 tll ltQ.041• ORANWi, Mell •' Or•l'lf• aioa N•. Tu1ti• Str••I (7141 ttl·lll I
l /·
'
'
~' Li
"' \rh
ba
ap
la
tr
l.i r
"h
'"' 1
th
tol
pe•
);01
ch.
au
n1i
for
'"' ar
pr
pfa
I
S" hol
Au
try
'
Fa111lly Cirrus b!I Bil Kea11e
•· ..... -..... ..._ ......... ,.
"l'mglod you're feel ing better, Gra ndma ••• No,
thi1 is DOLLY --that was BILL Y you just talked
to,, ,I think Jeffy wonts to say hello now ••• "
Tensio11s
By JOI/'\ l'l.ATI"Elt
NA!HfJHl. I\,. ·1 1LP l1
1'he nigh11n<1"l' 11! l r 1 b a I
slaughter u1 tht' 111ou11tau10us
rcntrnl Afrlrnn repubhr nf
Btll lHHti ha . .; bl'C'll C';l!'r1cd nu1
1\11 h!tu! !ht· t·unstrai111ng g!;1 rt·
of 11111:n1<1t1on:1r p11hl1c11 .'
Univ slu1\'ll' and 111 cunlused dr11i1e1~. ;11 !1r~1 b~ n11ssu1nar~
:ind thp]omat1c-r;1di11. 1h1·11
fron1 first-hand aecoun!s I)\
fleeing rl'fugr<•s. has th~~
SJX'Clt:r ;irut n1;1 g111tudt' ol 1hr
te rror unf::ildl'd
1.a!t>!'..t rr pt.:r ls s11\ 1:)0.11rn1
frit11·sn11'n h;11 1· bC'f'I\ killl·d
,.;lllt'I' 1Ji\' ;1lii1l'll\" ;ll!t"ll\11 111
1\pr1l to 0Vf'rlhr1J11' !'rl'Sidt·nl
~lic!iel !'il1l·1 H11bi ·r11·~ ,"i l.\·)t;11-
old govcrnnH'!ll
D1pl'11n:1t~ ill'l"l'. ;1b11ul iOO
1111lrs frnn1 1hc landlocked cof-
fee produ <'1n::: n.'.l tion. sa.v thl'
pr1 neip:d hJpc for :1n r1ul lo
1hc kil!lnr, 11011· l11·s 111th 1111rld
public11.v ;ind d 1 p I n 111 a I 1 c
prcssurl'
Tribal t l'11 ~111th h;11r l't'UJltt•d
intrrrnillt•n:ly s111<·e Burund i
111111 1ndl'pe11d{'ll('"' undf'r :i
l 111tt'd \ation n1ouul:11r i11
J'.lfi2
Li1 iklette r
Cl"i 111 .~ ,4<./.~
K A:\SAS CITY I Al' 1
'rclel'i!'l1on pers011alirv Art
J,inklctler says that he&llh 111-
surancc advert1sernents 111
'"hi1:h he is featured anri 11011'
banned in OhilJ 1\ere originally
approl'ed for that state.
The Ohio u1suriHlt·c Jirci.:tur
last 1veek ordered thr ads
l(•mporaril~· 1vithdr;111•n. sa~·1ng
Linklelter was no! 1cll ing !he
l'-'holr s!c•r~· ;.ibou! hcal!h 1n-
!lt1r::ince 111 1ht ad~
L1nklrtter. hrre Ju ancnd
lhf' l\lid11'est llralth Congress.
lo!d an inter1·iev.·cr, "The Ohio
people asked us lo rhan~c
so1ne of the ;ids, :ind 11·e·rc
changing !hen1
''Hcrc·s the tunn.v lhint:.·· he
added_ "'These ads nrc s11h-
n1ittcd to :1 sltJ!r co1nn1ission
for approval bf'forc 1hcy arc
run. If thev think the ad.~
are \\Tong. 11hy did they ;1p-
pro1·f' ! h r 111 in thr flrs1
place':'"
School Plan ~
l{c un ion Pa rt v
'!'he \\"l ut1i<'1' Hi!?,h School
gradu;iting clasi:: of 1962 '"-'iii
hold il s tenth clasi:: reunion on
Aug. 12 al the California Coun·
trv Club in \\'hillier
'r or f u r I h er information
write t-.1 rs Susan Counts
·o gdcn. 635 Chip pewa Avenu~,.
Anaheim. or ('all 774-6052.
The regal \Vatutsi tribe
11·hich elaims d'scent from the
Egyptian pharoahs and '"-'hose
n1cn average seven fee.t in
height, represents only 14 per-
1·cnt of the 3.6 million popula-
!1011 but ah1·ays has ruled the
n1ajuruy \Vah111u tribe.
:\\1combero's official voice.
the He1·otution Radio has S<lid
the squat , agri<:ulturall~·-n1ind
cd \Val1u tu (the \Vatutsi are
cattleinen ;ind fro11•11 on the
hil!sic!e culti1'ators) ha'' e
11nlrashrd nighttime tit u n I
killings of the \\l atutsls. sli!-
t111g ~1pc11 the s:!onlachs of
preg nant \\On1 l'n. n1aiming the
old <incl in u rd c r i n g in-
discrimlnately .
Thl' ra<lio re port ed 50,000
\\latutsi killed by rebels high
on drugs and v.·itchcraft. It
char~e<l they received outside
support No countries were
nan1ed
Bnt refugees. their entire
'''aridly possessions in bundles
r1lop their heads and their fee-
hle infants tied ti<.::htly around
their backs, hnve told dif-
f11 rcnt s!ories as they arrive in
1he safetv of neighboring
·ranzanta. i1ear Kigoma. v.·hrrr
United Na tions officials have
establ ishl'd transit camps lo
administer food and rncdical
reli'f.
Villages have been pil\ag_ed
h1 un idcntlfied rebels ~·1th
hn1rs and poisonous arro\1·s.
kni1,es <1n d spears and even
guns.
:\Jaraudin~ units or the
\\';1tutsi .. domi nated Burund i
;irn1y hal'e opened fire on
to11·n~folk. refugees say.
The civil 11·a r as pieced
toget her by diplo.nnts. began
111 April when a Ugandan
hr:limpter set do1\'n at the
Burundian lake-side capital of
Bujumbura. a sleepy tov.·n of
abou! 100,000 French speaking
cirizans.
The aircraft carried e>:-Ki1lg
l\1 :1rc V. deposed by
l\l!combero in r-.·ovember. 1966.
Presiden t ldi Amin said
later he had a promise from
t-.1icombero th8t the exiled 26
year-old ex-Mv.•ami king and
descendant of the !~th century
royal family would be safe.
Swiss-educated Ntare. who
n1lcd Burundi only f o u r
n1onths during ~1966 after
deposing his father. l\111·ami
~fw111n1Jutsa : was arrested im-
media tely.
He was killed in• cross-fire
1vhen royalist elements unsuc-
cessfu~Jy tried to rescue him
from his Gitega palace.
Until then. diplomats say, it
appears to have been a
st rictly interial Watutsi quar-
rel, although Micombero ac-
cused Ntare of plotting an in-
v asio n with white
mercenaries.
By early May, the long-
disgruntled Wahutu joined the
mayhem and Micombero's
subsequent orders to quell
trouble were t1ken literally b}'
loynl troops.
I See by Today's
Want Ad s
• EL!-:GANT ACCENTS:
Paintinit' from Italy, an·
11qu" bowl & pitcher, Kfficl
leaf crMJenza and much
more,
• SPEED rr UP in th!.~ 17'
S.·hfuclu l\K 11·it h 110 i\lrr·
•·11ry O B , canvas covr.r,
llharp!
• KNOW HO\V to have tun?
Try thl11 1970 Volkswaaen
hu <c 1!'11 In t:<ctltt:nl <.'tin·
d1!ion.
'
,,
I
)· ..
' .· ,· ,... ' •, '
' ' -"
'
-. ..-. .. -'·
/'
--·
-~ •
ti ,j':
i!' ' I
-=-'If--! I I ·
! I-=
. i i /' I .
--
~
underscore his Image
with munsl11gwear
There isn't d Ood in the world ···•ho wouldn 't
appreciete the cool comfort of underweor
o.f cotton/polyester . Mun singv1ear guarantee:::
t he quality fit for 2 years. Kangaroo T-shir t,
won't bind , pucker or twist after wa shing .
S-M-L-XL, 3/4.50. Kangaroo Brief, horizontol
fly, no b ind ing . sizeo 30-42, 3/4.00.
on "-8Y feet with
Jlffles·f qr-men
G iv e Dad some softness underfoot
with a pair of ligh tweight J iffies .,
The Squ ire, wide wale cotton corduroy.
The Sportster. oil cotton terry.
Machine wo sheble ond dryoble. Sizes
S-M-ML -L-XL. fashion colors. Each p•ir, 5.00
Men's Furn ishi ng s
' ' ' ' \ • ' '
•
Tw.sd11. J1.1M 6, 1972
• •
'
• • •
DAILY •ILOT J {
•
it's at the broadway
Ol AN•E. MAll OF 0 RAN6E
2)00 N. T~ttlt1 Strttf 171-4) ''t·IJI I
ANAHEIM ~l{WPORT HUNT INGTON I EACH
444 N. EutliJ ~71 4 1 515·1 121 47 F.,11 •• ~ 111.ftd &!71 4 ) 64-4 -111 1 711 7 i:d i~ttr A••nut 11141 191-JIJI
SHO~ It A.M. '• •:JO ~.M. MONDA Y THAOU5H Fll lCAY, SATUA0.4.Y 10 A.M. It 6 ~.M . SUN DAY 11 NOON._ I ,.M.
'•
C t lllllTOS
SOD le•Ct•i ltot Mill l l l!l lll·Mll
•
IWlV PILOT
I.EGA!. NOTICE l'..EGAL NOTICE
PKTITHK.11 •us1•••• r1c-TITIOUS aut1t1•11 ~ ITATaMINT !'llAMa IT•TSMINT
'fll9 ............ ,,..,._ \I Mi"I ... •!Nil IM t(ll-llltl "°''Wiil ••• 0->I"•
•l ............. I • ll"U. llUUllANCE TllUSt. l].tS Gl.Ek (ANNotO IMTElllll•T•O•""~ ~ •lwd,. ~ 9""°' (.1!11 IU V•• LJnd,,... "I...,_, fl••<".<• • ,__ IW>l•f 0. 8r....: •• lH II·• uroc IW
T"91Nit N~, t'2 Y••'-" lll , "'""""°"' 9t•<fl, Ct lll c .. ,. ~ C•lll JoM It. WI-II, ;IO' Evtftl"' (111
T-la -.llW .. 1.i 1o91ft1 COB1k.OC1~ o~ t n ~OO'I lld . C0ton. Ol'I W..•
._~ wuu-N sn.nun, » .+111110r 1.1.no
T~ NUGIEMT N•••'llOrl •••1;11
Tlllll ··--111-'d ... "' '""' c....... TPl•I ou11nn1 lt i.1nt COl'ICl<>CIN b• " ~ .. Or-(011nly 91'1: M•Y If, 1t/t l lmlltoel P••l.,.r.i.ip.
9v I.tty J. lera1ttn. O•Wrr Counri ll USTfll O. 811.UCI!
(~ T llli 1ttf-f'll Ill_, wll~ II,. (o.Jfll>
''""' Clt/11 ot °''"" coumv on: M•• If, 1t11 PW.1111911 °"'"" C-! 01111' PllOI, 8v 8t!!f J fltrtllrn °'""'' (OoJntv ,,,..,, n. •· •nd JuM., "· un '-"!;,11 Clt'1<. · ' FlltU LEGAL. NOTICE P"t>hV>ed o ...... C~•l O•l!y l'•I<.• --------------IN.av z~. 30. IM Jur., ,, 11, tt1'1 lHC ll
S tate Schools Flappe1· Recalls
G1·011nd Said Lost Her Era as Star
llv CURTIS J . SITO~fE R
Cli•ltlllR ScltfOCI MOf\1111' )•rYlCt
been re.moved from the br11ch
as a result {If an ele<·t1un
\,·here the
busing.)
princl pnl i~sue ;\·as
IN TflEfR
PASO ROBLES (UPI! -her third husband, Jtomer
The date ~·as. 1923. Jt was the Hargrave, a Chicago broker
start of one the mosl famous who taught ber aboul the stock
fashion revolutions o!lhe cen-market.
lury. BEFORE 111S DEATlt in
At the v an f u 3rd of the 1967, she learned enough about
change -hidden bosoms, money to write a book. "I-low
skirts nbovc the knee and Women can Make Money in
waistlines duv"n to th!!! hips -the Stock Market" and to 'join
·was a youn1:t actress with one a a brokerage house.
argun1enls, dis!rk·t offi<·ia\s bl ue ;u1d one brown eye, J~ecently recalling the nap.
say 1hey ha\'" no con-;...:; .. ·;;.:;·:,:::..'.:...:;:::.;.,·;.:'·:~.::.c:~.·:i Colleen r-.1oorc. per, }.1iss Moore, now 70 and
stitutional mandate to ------------1'+1iss Moore wen! t q 1\ho makes her perrnanent
I
. . llollv\\·ood at 16 and apprarl'<l ho'''' 1·n this Caf1"Jccn1·a city. e 1m1nate "de fa r io" sf'grc ga· · T 'I · in a string or 01n 1• ix said :
!Ion lthat caused b.1· hou.~in" 1 Sh s th• e • CJ • l\'l'S crns. · e \\'tl ... pur "Actually all she did \\'llS
p:itternsJ. 'rhey further argue '13Irm311 hf'roine 11ilh long,(·urling locks drink a cocktail and smQke a
Beer -Win•
Fin• liquor
Groceries
Peerless Produce
Mannings Beef
HOME
DELIVERY
675-3510
3347 E.COAST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR
that lhe lo"er cou t Is of dark h;i;r who :i.\\v:i.ys came cig::irette in public.
desegregation Nii<'! c·an only i•u! sttond best lo Mix's horse. ;;;...;_ _ _.-;-;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;•••••-;-;.,ii;;;;;., ____ ;;;-i
be imp/ementrd 'ia massive AppoinlCil 1·ony. I,
LEGAi. ~OTICE
NOTl<I' TO c••DITOltl /' ••· •-n'" LEGAL NO'l1CE /IJ 'h J 700 S\111tr1or Court o! 11'11 Stat1~ornl1 O r e • Gil . !
tor 11'11 Couf!•v ot ORANGE. • C I I ( I h I Etlltt of CHAALES AL e Ell T l'ICTlllOU \ BUSIHl\S a o r r• Q 111!' 0 0 Jf
HEAMAN, tllo known I• (H..-,ALES A. NAMI'. ST•Tl!MENT "" d • HERMAl'I, •nil •t C . ..-,, HERMAN, 1:""' klllowlnti oerwn " dOlnt bv1ln•11 fi r e f. (f f! r ft•
Dtc•~HO 11· I 11 • IJ I Nllllct '1s ht•tbt glwen M credlto<s ol THE JAVES COMPANY, 1\Si S. f!' 0 fl I Jl l ft • the ieovr n•m.-11 dtco.Hnl "'81 811 i-lllh•W•V St., S~nu Ana, (nlll t'/IOS d ' poor.Ono h•v\1\9 ct•lms 1glln1f ftM ••Id Jimes A. G"''"· 3141 ld•hO L•""· Ollt"t" • dKIOdtnl ••e ,,,..vlrea 10 Ill• them, wl!h Cotlt ,,.,..., c111r. "''' -_____ _
tll• n«tt•••• wouchtrl, In ftM ofllce f>1 Thl1 bvslnts1 h w •nu ,cndu~Tl'd by ·~ ... ~ lht c11r~ 01 !ht •bov• 1nr111e11 couri, or lndlwldw~1. c• and ~luberl II. llun1phrey -to Prnenl th'""' with lht lttc•lllrl' .,AMES A. EEN . . d I · h vcuche<1, 1o 1n~ vnotr•lgntd 11 ""' olllc• Thi• •l•lll'fntnl filed w!th lh• Counlv ,ir C 0 W n -P a y I n g f e
111 AOllERT M. L. BAKER, s10 W11' Clerk 111 0 ••nfl• c~u"'v on M~v 11. 1971· trnnsporling of youngsters for Sl•m S1fff1, ~ultr 5n, l.Ol A""'ltl. BY lli1v ... ly J, M611dox, 0.p"IV Cou'11V . . ' . C1lilorn11 t00u wnkh 11 me 111.,. o1 Clerk. 1n\egrat1on purposes in C<lffi· b\lil~•• o1 n.e u,,.,...11tr>111 In •II m•tl•r• P b!llhtd 0 < , 0 11 "J~17~1 paign oratory. pe.i,.,nlni:t kl rr1e Htare ot s•lll dac.O.n!, u r11n'llt O.\ I Y o • • , within four morith' •ll•r 1n1 11r11 Mllu· M1v 1•. 13, :JO, •nd Juna '· nn '''•·12 -Confhcltn~ re s e a r ch
tlon 01 thl1 notlt•. LEGAL NOTICE reports on the educational D•lld Mt~ If, 1917. , '"' A Deck•• benefits of school d£'segrega.
busing-at a prohibili\'e cost of millions of dollars a year. AT llER l\tOTll ER'S sug· }leggy L. Staggs of l'\ewport gesllon. ~liss Moore, then 21.
A further point-and one lkach has been e I t ct e d trin1n1ed her curls and the era
v.•hich is l.>eing focused on by cha1r1nan of the Acadl'mic of 1he nappi:•r was born.
oppon£'nts or sc·hool integra-Senate 11t c:u!<l1·n \Vest College After ht·r appearance in
lion throughout the nation -111 l!untin~ton Hc:lch. '·Fl:iming Youth ," inillions of
involves acadeJT1ic 11chicve-A !C'a{'htr in l'ruted States ,1·omen across the country
n1ent. I · t '' SI c••P'~I h•• Out.-·h bob 11..,; .. 11s ory. : rs. , ~1gg~ 11";1s ,..,, ... .. ....
Anti·integr:iHonists in s i s I gradu;:'dt·d fron1 Or:inge: Co:.ist style ;ind the pert air of the
that the jury is still out. on Ilic l,'ulle ~;e in 'l\15!:1 an1l earnt'd her naughty f1<1p1><'r .
educational hen e fits of IJ11t"helur's and n1<.1sll'1"::; ti c· Included in her rlnp1:>er·im-
classroon1 desegrt·gotion to grces al Cal St;:it(· Vullerton. agr roles \1 crc appearauc<'s in
niinority voungster.<;, and they She \Viii f.('!'l'C 101· thl· 1972·13 "So Big ," "Synthetic Sin,"
cite studies -such as on!' sc.:hoo! year as ''hr11rn1an of the "Lilac 'l'itne'' <.ind ''\Vh y Be
being conducted by Dr .. Tan{' J.1-1ne1nber lx1dy \.\'hi c J1 llood."
CUSTOM TAILO•S & SHIRTMAKERS IN OR.A.NCE COUNTY
PlRMANEHf SHOW ROOM
lh114.t1Uen4 C.,,,_ Ml••
2 SUITS $135 D0U8LE KNIT
SPlCUl P•ICE 11.•g. Dooblt l("ij •••• ,9S
s;•k ,,..,~ol• .• , . , &9 Co>h.,or• , ..•.• • 98 Sl>or••O;n ""''" IS Silk Wool ...... , E1
~ki•h ........... 10
"'" "' " " " " • "'~· "°''",. • ""'' 1000 f\Nlil IMPOl.llD
WOOllNi I DOUILf IOllTi
SPRING SALE
Jv"' ' thr\I 11 (t 1.m. to I p.n'I.)
SA YE UP TO 50%
•~ Ho~d la11.r•d Co1•om Mad. ~oito, Spo<l<O<>U, 51od.,, S~u,1,,
•WI fl1 ANT SIJ.l
• ANY STYLE COPUCI
• f REI ALTERATIONS
•EAST PAYMENTS
Mercer at the University or represents the c:1mpus' 177 ·\Vhere is Co 11 e c n Moore
California at Ri verside tc.·i•·hers and counselors in the tod"y'! 2
1
11 ouoon1 O•l~R '-for Appolntm,nt l•k lor VilhHOpp0•lle Orange Cov~1V Aorperr
EKKUIC>r of Int Wiii PICTITIOUS llUllNESS ticn
of 111d llKlden! HAM~ STATEMl!NT ' 11101e•T M.. L. •AK•• TM toUowlnv Pt,_, 11 do1n1 bullr.n1 -Unresolved litigation over
511 W11I Sl•lll SI,. Ut. '11 •s: i..~t•-"d f t" " t~ Lit A1111111, Ctllf. *14 l"ET IT POINT JUNCTION, ]10 ...... Wu.; 1tcr e ac 0 segrega n.i
which so far indicate 1hat in-/ormulalion of a cad em j c She retired fron1 the screen suue ::12 r..e.hlnd .o.np0r1cr 1~n1
t t. d l t Phont IJl-0111
egra ion oes no nppear o -~po'."_'liS'Y~-----------i~n'.._"t9:3~7;a~f~te~c~h:'_•~r~m~a~c~c~ia~g~e~to~=======================~ be significant to academic
/lttor"'v tor l'•Kwlor o. u E1r,...1i., s ... c1emen1•. c •. "1611 school districts a re con· ,.ll·t-12\o'.i ~rt1rd lrtnt ~l\ITIMS~. 31l01 AUp11 · t" JI bo nd h" PuDHll'H!d Dr1nga '°'" D1llr Piiot. st., No. 206. s.n Ju•n CiPlllrtno, c1. st1tu 1ona y u to ac 1eve
#My n. 30 and JYnt '· \3, 1•n 1J.41.ri tt•1s racial balance in the i r
LEGAi. NOTICE
Thb bu1l,...11 11 behtl ainclvClfd by en 1nc11v1c1u11. classrooms. (A suit against
Mtor11r .. lrt,... SlurHll ti ' -A J h Id" I · I n.11 llllffl'ent tlltd with ,,,, counlY 1e LNS nge es SC 00 JS rte
9Alt 1'•S Cl••ll of °'"~ County on: M•v 12. nn. will likely finally be decided ~r.rtv•r1~ J , Mtddox, Otpvrr COYnir by the U.S. Supreme Court.) NOTIC• TO CR•OITOltS SU,.•ltlOlt COUltT 01' THI! STATE o,-CALll"OltNIA l"Olt THI! COUNTY 0 1' OltANO• N•. A·n11•
p1m 1
Pvbl!lhe<l Or•~ Co.II Dall~ Pilot. M•Y !6, 2J, 30, Ind JUM ,, 1'77 11'1·'7
E1t1I• ot ERNEST J. LA ROSEE, 1b11 'EG .. NOTICE known II E. J . LA ROSEE. DKe•1•d. l ---c~==~=...:.===---1 NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN to th• FICTITIOUS 8U51 Nl!S$ Cre<lltO,I of 1he above n•'lled dectden! N.lMI: STATl!M•NT that •II prr1111n1 h1vlnQ t1•lm• l'lllin>I lht 11 , I ..... • ,.,Jd dec,,.,en! •re ,..,ulr ... to flit theni. The lo ow.nt ~rwn 11 do nt ...,s,ne11
v.llh tht l>Ktll•tl' voucM:tJ, ln lht o!llc• ••: ~ , , ol the cltrk of the 1b0v• entllltd court, or REE .. , l'lO W. ltoh SJ., Co\ I Mtl• to or•••"' thtm. wllh th• nK tHltl' Ffnll~ G. 8everl<!gc, 225 An1helm vouc"-•1. lo !ht underlltned 11 lhe olllct 81\<d .. Anahe im. ot htr •llornt'I": RONALD ti. PRENNE R, Thi• tMJsln111 II bel"11 Conducltd by 1n
3\S W11I Third ~''"'· ~·"'" Ana. lft!llYldual. Call!Mnl• 9'1101, which (1 Int 11le~ ol FINLAY G. llEVEltlOGE b<J1lf>ftl ol 1111 und~r1ltMll In •II malt•ti 'Th l1 11a1,menl 111...i wllh lh• Cou11!Y PMJ•lnlnti fo tht •1!1t1 o1 ••Ill dKedent, Cl•rll of Or1oge County on M•v 11, 1,n wllhln tour months 1!11• 1111 tlr1I publlt t· BY ll•verl'Y J. fil•OllO•, Depu!v County flon ol thl• norl~e. Clerk. D1led May ,,, 1911. \1)011 A. LI Rotff
Allmlnlll••lrl~ ot 1111 E•l•le o! 1r.. •OOVt nl'nO<I llKltdfnt
l'ln lt Publhhed Dran;t Co11! Dally Pllol
Mt~ 1,, 11, lO, 1nd Jun• '· 19n nu-n
LEGAL NOTICE "ONAl.D H. ,..C.NNEll
'1 s w111 Tlllrtl StrHI S•,.11 Au, C1lll•r"lt '1101 l'ICTITIOU$ 9USINl!SI T1t11,,nw.: 11111 $ot1~1 NAME STATEMENT llllWMY fer A4ml11lllr1lr l• TM tollDWlr>g peno11 11 dolr>G bvllMll Pvbll1t>tod Ortn111 Co1or DtllY Pl!o!, ti: llo•V n, 30, •nll Junt I, 1J, ltl1 1US·11 JACK MISHLER .. 1u111date1, '" E. 20111 St .. Costa Mt••· Calll. 9J617 Jack Mill'ller, 06 E, 10111 SI .. COlll
M•••· C;alll. 91621 LEGAL NOTICE T~I· buO!nfll II btlflQ cood..,c!fl'd by •n tndlwldu,.1.
),IOTICE 01" THE TIMl AND ,.LACli 01' JAC I{ MISHLER HEAltlHO 01' THE LOCAL AOlNCV T~I• st~temen1 !lied wl!I\ !ht coun!Y l'OllMAT ION COM M I$ SI O H 01' Cltrk ol O•u'9t Coun!Y on; MtY 11. lt11. OllANOI CO UN TY , CAl..ll'OltN1A, Bv l!evtrlv J. Maddo•, Dt11ut1 (Ot!ntV WNlN l'll0,.0510 DISSOLUTION 01" (ltrk. THI TALllEltT DRAll'IAOE DISTRICT 1'17711 01" OltAHO• COVNTY, AND 09· Publl!~fd Or&n111! COAll Dally Pl!o!, Jl!CT IONS OR ,.ROTl'.ITS THl!ltl'TO, May 16, it, lO, and June 6, 1972 1275·11
WH.L •E ,. ... seNT .. D ,o. HI••· ... LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N lh1I •n 1---~---------•1>11llcet111n n11 l>ffn flll'd wl!h 1n1 LM•I 1'1CTITIOUS IUSINESS ""'ncv Form•rlon commlnlon ol !he NAME STA'TEMENT CounlY ol Oran••· State ol C•ll!ornla, ti· The totlowlnll ""'"°" J~ Oo\ntl bul\'1"11 11u•1!1n11 lh•I 11ld Commlulon •PPtCV• II: the prCPO•e<I dluolu!lon ol 1h• T•lbe•l 'fl-IE LE\SIJllETTES, •lt·O Avtnidft Dr•ln•'ll• Ol11tltl cl Or•n11e Counh. Sevlllt, L111un• Hllt1, C•lltornlt t26Sl C•ll1ornla. lnt ct<'>P!llll encom11•H•• II•• All• M. \<tn Loo1bt"act , 'l9·0 t11llowln'11 pentrtlly d•urlbed a•e• whlcn AYitnldl StYlll1, L•IUfl.9 HIU .. C•lll.
h mar• ptr!kularlY Ct1trlbed bY • 111111 i1W de•(rlorlon •nd mtP on lite with lht-Com· This b111lnt$I 11 cOl'lducted DY •n 1,.. ml1olon; dlvldv•I TIW m1lpr POrllon ol Ille 'T•!btlrl AHi M. Vall Loosbr«ll Dr1ln1111t Dl1!rlct 11 t1ner1ll~ l«•ll'd Tl\11 st•lt-mtnl w11 lllftl will! I~ Coun· WHI ol lht S•nl• Ana l'llwer, In the tlll ty CMrk ol Ortn99 Cou111Y on MIY 12, Hullfl11111on Bt•th lrtl •nd In lne Cllv 1912. ol Foun11\n Vtl\ew. 1\0<1'11 wUll ¥1t!ou1 parceh allO bttlnt loc•l..i In !ht east Wt1tmln1ter •re•. t~e 1ouln G1•den
G111Yt ••••· lht Wtll San•• An• 1r••· lht wtsl Cott• Me11 1re1 •nd the we11
.. 177 .. PybUttled Or1no1 Co.11 D•llY Piiot, M1v 16, 23, JG.t-o Ju111 '· ltn 12ts.n
NtWPof'I 8••01 •r••· 'EG.. NOTICE Al Ill• lime al !he ne.,..1119 notic<'d 1.. lt...1..1 tif•tln 1ald bounlltrle• ma¥ btl modllltdl-------~------1 bv rhe alklltlon ol o!her t1rrl!ory In !ht Iii 1N6' vkln\!Y cl lht prooosal. ..ICTITJOUS llUSINl'lS NOllCE IS FURTHER GIVEN, thtl HAMI' SlATE MENT s~ld Comml11lan ha• fl•ed' WadnHlltv I~• T~ follawlntl 119r1011 11 dO!n1 b<J1lnff1 14th da~ 01 Junt. ltn, ti ftM hour of 2:00 11: o'tloc~ PM. ot lftld d•Y or to tOOn •1 IMPERIAL T.V., 19J Glrnntyrt, ~ftl~ "11'1ter (8n be n11rd In llOllll'I MtJ In L1tvn1 ll•adl. Calltorni• the O••nt• (ouMtv A II m I n I I I r I ! I o n Wolltlntl F l>Ch9r, 11 01 North Ma1rlon Buoldlnt, 51) North SvctmD<I Str""°l, S•n· L1111, FuU1<!1111. Ctllforn11. t~ An•. •~llfornlft, •~ 1n1 !!mt •nd cl•c• Th!1 bv1ln.t1ss h conducttd by I LJmlttd
tor th• "'•dtong o1 1alll OIOPOlll twetMr P•r!Mrlhlp. ""''m dil P•ot•1•1 and ollf~l1on1 lher•lo WOLFGANG ~ISCHE~ "'"k~ n'IY ~ filed And 11 wtilc.h tl"'4t ind Thi• 1!1l•m1nl w11 111111 wl1h In~ Coun.
p•to<• •It <>"•son1 iMltresltd !"-t1ln lf\IY tf Cltrll. ol OI'-County llf'I Actll 21 , •Mi••• and bl" ~11rd 1'77. Dt!O<I: M~w 21 1911 NOit.MAH S. l l!E,.l'lt llV ORD ER OF THE toc.-L AGE NCY Ill W•U WltJl'llr• r ORMATl0"1 COMMl~~ION OF ORANGE ""'''"°"· C•llfon11a COU NTY. CALIFORNIA Ttl ....... ltf.11H F 11431 J!l(H.-!ID l ll)RNER E•1cvll vr 01/lctr Pvbllsn.d Ol"1n• Co11t 0111¥ Pl!ol,
l.oca~ A~enc>' May ?l. 30 1ft!I Jv,... 1, 1J. ltn 1n 1.n
Form~l·on Comm.11ion of Or1n1• couniv, c.+u LEGAL NOTI CE Pvbllih~ O•tnoe Co.nl 01Uv Pltot.,l ----;;~~""""'~~~---1 MIV lO Ind June •. ltn llSl·ll l'ICTITIOUI llUllH•Ss NAMIE STATIMl!NT
LEGAL NOrJCE
TM following '""'°" Is dOlhll bu1!n~u 11 : GOLDE N FINANCIAL CO., 11111 ee.ch Blvd., Huntlt191ort !••ch. C1111. 9Alt Jt1o1 ShlrltY A. C1rdf!'I, 1\lelJ Ntwp«I
SUPl!ll\Olt COUltT 0' '1'HI! BIV\t .. tltWPOl"I. c1n1. STATI! ()!< CALll"ORNIA FOlt Th l1 b<J•lntll ls beln9 <oolluclfll by •n
THE COUNTY 0 1' Oll•NGE lrldl.,.ld\l~~IR.'EY A CARDEN
He. A·1•4' '-· tfOTIClli 01' Hl!A Rli.rQ ON PET ITION This U•1..,.,•nl lllfll with lh• (oulllv FOR PllOllATE "' WILL AND FOlt Cltrk of Oran;e Counly on· M11v lJ, 101]. Ll!nEltS OF AOMll'IUTllATIOH ev l!tvtrlv J. Malld011:. Dfculy County
WITH·THl!·W1LL ANHEKEl'.I Cltrk. E1tat1 ot Ai'INA LOU1SE PELLETIER, P O" ·-~ O < O " '"l~,,tn l)f'(t&Sl'd !.I "$n..,, ran<i. Of11 1,.y ,. O!,
NOT!Cti IS HEJ:IE!Y GIVl':N th"! Ml~ 16, ll. lO, •nll Junt I, lt12 1'7l·1l
LEON4.RD J. PELLET IE'R ha• tiled herein ;a peU!lor> tor Prcbat1 of w'l!I ~no LEGAL NOTICE
I"" lnuanc:e ol Le!!~r• cil Admlnl11t1!1on l---~----,-~,.,----1 wllh·lht·Wlll Rn nt•ell lo oe!Hlontr. ,ICT!TIOUS IUSINES' ,1ftrt11C• !o which I• m&dt for futlht• NA.Ml! STATEMENT p1rtlcul•••· Ind lh•! lt>e '•ml ind 1>\•c• 'T"e lallowlnq Pi!•IDn• 1r1 Oolnt
111 he1rln~ !ht 11mt II~• bl-ell lfl for June bullntss ••:
?O, nn. 11 •·]O • m., •n the cour1room or 1UH1 COMPANY. 11l11 s~nl• 8•llnd1 DtPlrfll"lf'nl No. J ol •tld courl, 11 100 C!rclt, Fownt1ln Vtrt•v. '210I Civic Clflltf Drlwt W1tl, 111 fh9 Cl!v (11 StfPhen Mkllatl Brown, llJ1' Santi 1i1nt1 Ant, C•l!lornl•. 8etlnd1 Clrci., Founttl" V1ll•T, '270l De1t'd Junt I, un. te1lhlf!9n M•r te Brown, 11317 S•n'• Will i.AM E. St JOI-IN, Bellnct1 CltCll. Founl1ln \11111~. ~ County C ltrk Thl1 tMJ•lnts1 ll Dti"11 condll(llll by a DUltYE.t.. CA.,.ENTlilt a •AANll PtrlnlOhlP. (IY1 EltNllilT J. SCHAG, Jlt.J s~ M. Brow11
4S2S MtcArttlur llvi!. K1"'letn M. lrown
P.O. 9u 17M 'T~lt 1111.,,,.nt llltd with lht Cou"I•
"'-1 •••<ll. C1111, nt4J C!ttl of Drtn91 Countv on: June J. lt/1. lltl-\'I !« ,.tllllto't•t By BfYfill' J. Macldv•, °""'Iv Counr,
Tel: (1141 5J1·t'MI Cltrt, Pvlll!IM<I O•an'll• Cot1! Dtllv Pllol. Juflt 6. 7, n. ltn us1.n Publ1""'8d Or•n9f' cci11r Junt •· 11. XI, 11, 1tn
DAILY PILOT
"lllH D1HY Piiot, ,_.,_)]
STATE DEPARTMENT of
Education officials her-.report
that s c ho o I desegregation
may have actually lost ground
in the last few years. As a
result of housing patterns, "de
facto" segregation increased
m some areas.
More than 1,700 California
schools are ta bbed "racially
imbalanced." (The percentage
of pupils from one racial
grou p differs by more than 15
perc-ent from the district-wide
percentage.)
Two-thirds ol all black
~1oungsters and half of all
ifexican-American youths go
lo such echools. Many .!!lttend
where minority enrollment ex·•
ceeds 90 percent.
The StRte Bu reau of Inter·
group Relations reports th.!!lt
just the nerke\ey district -
\1·hich encompasses a liberally
oriented un iversity communi·
ty' -has completely integra-
ted ils schools.
And only after prodded by
court orders. s u b u r b a n
southern Ca I i torn i a com·
munities of Pasadena. Oxnard.
and Inglewood made major
strides toward desegregation.
H OWEVER . SCHOOL
DISTRICTS in large urban
areas-like Los Angeles and
San Diego-merely m o v e d
toward "token" desegrega·
lion .
Only San Francisco amonJ;'!
the big California cities has of·
fered a comprehensive plan
for racial mi:t in i t s
classrooms. And this bav area
project is being launched amid
strong racial tensions and
sporadic eoinmunily conflict.
In !he end. Ca lifornia's pace
in thr :ir1•a ni school in-
lcgra!ion u•ill likely hinge on
the outc on)e of Ole: Los
Anaeles ca.~e-now be i n g
flelibcralrcl by the State Court
of Appeals.
This mammoth district -
the nation 's second largest
behind New ''ork -was
ordered to bring its schools in·
to racial balance in 1970.
Superior Court Judge Alfred
Gitelson ruled tor integration
in a case brought against the
school board by the American
Civil Liberties Union.
(Judge Gilelson hl!I! since
SOFf·SELL SAM
achievement.
American Civil Libcrtirs
Union defendants. ho11•ever, in
the Los i\ngeles a p p c a J
counter that similar studies
in Berkeley, Roch£'ster.
Hartrord. Pittsburgh, a n d
Boston do point to po.<;itive
scholastic effects of nn in-
tegrated school setting on
minority youth.
T<ilk Set
By Artist
At Mee ti1 ig
Sally Cox. v.·ater color artist,
wilt be guest speaker at Thurs·
day's meeting of the ~1issioo
Viejo Association of Artists
and Craftsmen at 7:30 p.m. in
Linda Vista School, i1ission
Viejo.
Mrs. Cox. \\'ho is a member
of the La Habra and Riverside
Art Associations, majored in
art at the Univ£'rsity of
California, Los Angeles. She
has studied with several na·
tionally-knO\\'n water color
artists and has painted and
sketched in both Europe and
Mexico.
She has received awards in
Los Angeles and Orange C-Oun·
ties and has sho\vn in several
Southern California cities.
Mason Ne,v
Boy Scoi1 t
President
\\7illiam R. ~Jason , president
or the Irvine Company, hns
been £'lecled presidcn! of a
three·slilte region of the Boy
Scouts of America
The v.·estern rej:;ion includes
the local Orange Empire Area
Council of Santa Ana and 22
other co u n c i 1 s throughout
Southern California, Arizona
and Nevada.
to.1ason was elected at 1ht•
organization's annual J\l:iy
meeting in Los Angeles. lie
has served on the executive
CQmmittee of the local council.
the regional Jong-range plrin-
ning committee and several
study committees or the Boy
Scouts.
b y l'llarvln l'll yer s
I
~,,.,.,,,.,.. .... _ ,._ .. ~ ..
' J THE HELfFUl. _GUIDE • FOR TODAY'S
HOMEMAKERS
I KNEW A 5ECOHD HctfffMtXtf k/OIJLP ENO
LIKE Tl//S ... Tal Ytt!! Mr?Tf/€1. S/{f~ cror
Fll:ST Jl»f P/ 11
Think of the possibilities.
Your favorite snapshot, design, illustration or whatever, printed
right there on 200 new checks. Free.
Open an account with us now during our 9th
Anniversary Celebration and they're all yours,
complete with your choice of 18 handsome check
folders. To add to the festivities, we're also giving
away a 10-day Princess Cruise for two to Acapulco
and four electric "Char-B-Ques"!
Free Photo Checks for sure. And
a crack at some exciting prizes.
From Centinela Bank.
Personally yours.
r ---------Check appropriate boxes, then b I Hours: 8:30-5:00 PM Mondlly·Thursdwf, unllt 6:00 PM Fri
Your
0 Yes, I'd like 200 Photo Checks, at no charge.
Here's.my opening deposit {$100 minimum
please) and the negative of the piclure I'd like
prinled on them.
I
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0 Enter my name in your Sum mer Giveaway,
please. I could use a 10-day Princess Cruise or
an electric "Char-8-Que"!
""~------------"''----
0 lncidenlaily, Happy Anniversary.
~ ........ _______________ _
Enter now-This i.s • limiled Ume olfor. Drawing Joly 31, 1972. ()ptlll1'Q DlpollH (lllcioled) ~----------
WIN A PRINCESS CRUISE! WI N ELECTRl C CHAR·B·QUE!
Unwind st sea aboard lhe plush Pr1ncets ~ l!alla on a ten-day cruiso to Pueno Valler1a, •
Acapulco and Maza!len! Giscover the pag-
oentry ol Mexico on-board and on-shore!
Clean. quick. plug.In unit mekes food taste ss deliclous
•• the meaJY, okt·
tashlD neCI barbe-QtAR-11-QlrJE
cuotdc.
llJ Centinela Bank Member
F.D.l.C.
Inglewood Newport Beach PllJI Doi 1197; -lleldl
524 East NutwOOd 3333 Wost Coal Hlghw1y 8117 West Mtrtehostar 1103 Avl•tlon A...nue
674-4660 IM&-7121 823-9281 372--2102 -----------------·--
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nan
an
me
did!
F
cce
Pea
0
boat
Caru
don
Se\\•
that
the
A
sho•
rem
mun
"J
final
!her
fishe
spok
Seo ti
On
quiri
ing
holdi
Sum
prob w
fro
1vint
with
,;ay t
is o
pollu
Al
Oalg
rible
Qu
leg is
olw
of a
R
B,
P.O.
c,r1r
Interesting Viewer
The queen on the board gets more attention U1an the one on the 'velk along
l ,ake i1ichigan as Chica go's beathes open once more to sumnler. '!V.•o veterans
or the chess \1•ars along the Jakefront seen1 to be n1ore interested in their gan1c
than in Doris \Vhite.
Pregnant Women 'Decide'
At Bob Pearson's Expense
HONOLULU (AP) -Sandra
is a prel!y , petite 15-year-old
brunette with soft br0'>11l eyes
;ind hair that flows over her
shoulders to her wai st.
She lives in a five bcclroon1,
ocean-front house on nearby
hlaui Island \\'here she spends
her time swimming. ca1nping
and studying such sc hool sub-
jects as mathematics and
sociology.
lier doctor savs she can ex-
pect her baby J"uty 9.
"You get pregnnnt and
C\'erybody thinks of you in a
rtifferent '""RY -like you're
dirty ," Sandra -not her real
name -said in an intcrvie\v.
"i\ty motlier told n1e to ha\"e
an abortion. The hospital loll.I
me to have an abortion. But l
didn't \Vant to kill 1ny baby."
For saving her baby. Sandra
credits the familv of Robert J.
Pearson, a building conlractor
who lost his antiabortion light
in the sta te legislature when
llaw.i:iii became the first state
lo 1nakc abortion legal and
;n•ailable practically on re·
quest.
In Lhe first \'l'3.f after the
law 1\'ent into effect l\1arch 13,
1970, the re were 3,643 abor-
tions in Hay,·aii, and, unlike
J'\cv.· York, there is no
substantiiit mo,·ement here to
repeal the !aw.
But Pearson has continued
his fight hy inviting \.,,omen
contemplating abortion to
tr;1vel to. live and •continue
their educations at his 412·
acre residence until !hey have
their babies-a!\ at no C'X·
pcnsl'. Pearson and the anti-
abortion foundation he in-
corporated even pay f o r
prenatal and delivery ex-
penses.
"'fhere are no obligations,
Canada Boating Season
Means Litter, Garbage
no strings attached. We jll!I
want to show the girls there
are alternatlv~ to h.!lving an
abortion." Pearson said, add-
ing 1hat the v.•omcn Jean1 of
his home through doctors.
relatives and social agencies.
"Some "'o men from olher
states found out about it while
waiting out a 9Ckiay state
reisdency requirement for
abortions," he sHid.
Bob Pearson estimates his
fight has cost him personally
son1e $20,000, but he plans an
even larger investment-a
$200,000 home acco mmodating
JOO, \l:omcn. It \Viii include
recreation rooms and facilities
for cleve!oping such skills as
typing and shorlhC1nd, as well
as academic training -"We
\\•ant to help then1 get back on
their feet," he said. '
Al the home. whith now can
h<indle 20 girls, Pearson pro-
vides a full-time nurse. llis
y:ife Kathleen is a teacher And
in cooperation with nearby St.
Anthony's lfigh School is help-
ing the girls keep their school
work up.
Of the 80 v.·omen ran~ing in
age fron1 14 to 36 v.·ho ha\'e
lived \l'ith them, Pearson says
OT'TA \\'A IAPl -A new inslsts, "I think littering by only one has decided to go
boating season is opening in p~asure craft is a highly through with an abortion. a
Canada but not n1uch is being overrat~ problem." decision he sl'!ys Is left up to
done about thl' legacy of But some government of-each girl.
se1vage, garbage and litter fiCials disagreed. They main· "All the other without ex-
that many per.son.~ bestow on t<ii n littcrlng is not only on en· ception were overjoyed when
the country's v.'aterways. viron1ne11tal ha1.ard but a they had their babies," he
A Canadian Press survey potential thre.1t to life. A bob-said .
sho>tt·s !Mt no area, however bing beer can could gouge a About 10 percent of the girls
remote it is, seems to be im-hole in a motorboat traveling keep their babies, while the
mune from refuse. at high speed. they say. others put them up for adop-
"Just when you think you've Empty drink bottles are the tion, Pearson said. Sandra is
finally found an isolated spot. most visible and numerous in the \alter group and plans
there are beer cans that some pieces of watern·ay refuse, but to return alone to her mother
fishermen have left." says a environmentali sts say plastic and stepfather after having
spokesman for the Keep Nova containers ranging fr om her baby.
Scotia Beautiful Society. bleach bottles to garbage bags "It was bad enough for them
Ontario has le~islat i'ln re-pose the most serious threat. to bring me up," she explains.
quiring water craft with sleep-In northern Ontario. "I don't v.·ant my baby to
ing accommodations to have canoeists are provided with suffer. I want my baby to Slly,
holding tanks for sewage. plastic garbage bags and 'I've got a mom and I've got a
Summer boats are not the only asked to tea\le them at de.sig-dad.' J never had a dad. I
problem. On Lake of the nated spots. want my baby to have a dad."
\Voods, garbage left on thc 1 Jiii!ij;wij!jf!jjij!j!ili!ij"jii~ijij~iiil frozen surface during the) I
\\linter drops into the wattr
'vilh the spring thaw. Officials
say trash left Uy ire fishern1en
is one of the most serious
pollution prob\e1ns there.
1\lberta officials say litter on
Calgary's two rivers is "l'I ter-
ri ble problem ."
Quebec has no provincial
legislation to control cluttering
of waterwavs. The commodore
of a privale yacht club there
Reunion Set
By El ~fonlc
The El Monte Union High
School class of 1961 is spon-
soring its tenth class reunion at 6 p.m .• June 17, at the Sad-
dleback Inn in Santa Ana .
For further inform ation call
(213 ) 442-5064 ... (714) -· or write El Monte Union High
School Class Reunion 1962,
P.O. Box 542, Temple City,
Cjdlf. 91780.
•
Harold's a Great Steno
' SACRAMENTO (AP !
When a computer Cool eJV'Oll·
ed. Harold Jones in an all·&lrl
•leoogrephy dw In high
achoo!, bl mad< the bett of It.
scored an "A" and today hs
the only male atenographtr
for the Clllfornia Le1i•laturt.
"Ht dots a beautiful job,"
reports M•da:e Alberti , boss or
the Assembly steno pool ol l~
secrtta.riea, all women until
now. "He's very ra!t .. He has a
vuy pleasant personality. The
glrb ju•I Jove him."
The computer foulup OC·
curred when Jones was 16
years old and a !lar hurdler
on the Sacramento High
School track. team.
masculiM mon1h civil i&t"Vlce job by thoru for the • mtmbfrl of
.!ICOtlng well on ff<'rttarial the Al.Mfnbly U..t ihe.lt own
tut.a and receiving ~ ap-Jl.affJ can't bindle.
proval ~ the a 11 • ma I e "No r1aaon 1 tuY abouldn't
Assembly Rulff Conwnittet, be hired a1 • llC'rttlry, jult
he1ded by A.slemblyrnan John became hi'• I IUY," uJd
he m1~5 some
company.
Janes typH 71 words per
minute and takes dict.atk>u at
130 words pet' minute on a
.stenography machine. . Burton (O.San FtanciJCO. I Burton. "He '• a quall.Oed
"At flrlt It was kind of Jt involves handling clerical se<:nta.ry."
tough because they \.\'ere all _.:-=::::;:;;:::;;;;;;;;;;:;:-:;-:::::;::.:=::;:::;:;;;====;:;;~~II watching me. to see how I Ar
would do,'' he added. But once ~
he proved he wt1.s e top-·grade
sttretary, "the go.sllip just
keeps on. You get to hear All
their problems. And. like. if
they buy cologne they've got
to try lt out on you. fhey
pamper you sometimes."
That atttnt!on sometimes
prompts teas ing from his wife
ar one )'tar, Andrea . he ~ays.
JoMs landed the $505-a·
Ifs Tiit
11rf1tt Tiw
To ~i~ if
S1i/co WI tell ......................
11 ...... ......, ... ...., .... ......... -....... ". Y'"" • ..._.. l•• ...... , ··-....... -CM-.... lllh ,_ ~ ... ..-. ....... ........... -. • ....... _, -1111
··~ Passtrl!l-by do a double take
"'hen thev see the lanky youn~ ;;:====-~-=--=-=-====o:I
man with a modish Afro and
~tylish bell bottom trousers at
v:ork in a sea of feminit y.
'" 11 -· .......... :-:;.r.;:~::i ··• HONIA JEWilE~I Andy's Fun
Ask any kid ... Ask Andy" is
fu n. See it Salurdays iu the
DAILY PILOT. "It's fun because !here are a
lot of girls," says Jones, ad·
mltting at the same time that '========~=-=
SE IKOOO. 1, ....... ,,,., ......
l lOOllMV•ll & •fl>AMI MUllllM•T911 lt•Cll H6-U\1
---
DAJLY PILOT J;J
l£T'S BE FRIJlll Y
U )'OU hive MW ndlbbon
or know o( anyone movlllC
to _,,,. .,.., p&ea,. tell ~
10 that w~ D1&J" ft1d a
rrt.ndly •·elcome and M\p
them tt> h«ome aCQualnled
in lhetr MW S\lJ'J'Q\dtdtnp.
TAKE THE
NEWS QUIZ
We Dere You •.•
Every Saturday
r c;,\Pe~
'2.
I,
~~
tP
not ~~
• JUStanum er
e
Every one of our thousands of account holders is a real person, a very
important person to us at Mutual Savings.
We offer many free services to our savers, in addition to pnying
the highest interes t on insured savings.
WHERE YOU SAVE DOJ!S .MAKE A D.IPl'EllENCll
5% dayintoJay.out
put book aann1-1 53/0Q oncyearter:m. ;41 $I,OCDminimum 6% ""'.,..,,.,... 7 $.1,IJOOmllllmum
~ ~ ,
I' ~ ' ii THE en; M
MUTUAL
SAVINGS ....... _
CMODa del.Mar: ,.a67Ea1t cout BJ.glJ.-y/67J•Jt1!0
Otlierol!iccsinCavina,We>t Arcodla,fwdc:na,Glcnd'1eaml~~
stereo103FM
the sounds of the harbor
~d~:---7.youve never _hea~ it so good
,
1
Tutlda1. J"" 6, 1972
UP'I T• ... i.
WED AGAIN-Actress Edie Adams and trumpeter
Pete Candoli celebrate their marriage in San Fran-
cisco. Sunday's wedding ceremony wa s performed
in Miss Adams' suite at Fairmont Hotel by state
Supreme Court Justice Stanley Mosk. It is her third
marriage, his fourth.
Official's Ulcers
Delay Ceremonies
From Wlre Services
The inauguration of Wllllam
D. McElroy as chancellor of
UC San Diego was postponed
unUI fal1 after he widerwent
surgery Sunday for peptic
ulcers.
A spokesman at University
llospital said McElroy, 55. v.'as
in good condition but will re·
main hospitalized s e v e r a I
days. His lnnugurallon was to
have been Sunday.
The co mmen cemen t
ceremony, planned jointly
PEOPLE
with the installation o f
?.-1cElroy, will be held as
scheduled.
* * * Actress llayley ~1llls, 25,
and her director husba nd Roy
Boulting, 59, are expeeting
their first child in January.
"We don 't mind what It is,"
Miss ri.1ills said "But right now
we are calling it Folly.
* * * Dr. Paul Dudley Whitf!, ll
hea rt specialist fron1 Boston,
\Yill receive the American
~1edical Association's annua l
Sheen Award for contributions
to medical science.
The $10,000 award will be
State Gets
'Fr ee' Park
In Obispo
SACRA~1ENTO (AP) -The
Calirornia st;ile p::irks system
has acquired a $460,000 ad-
dit ion \1·ith ou t cost to Ille
:-;t11te. \Vill iar n Penn ~1011 Jr.,
stat(' pnrks <lircc tor, J1as an·
nounced .
:-..to!t sai d th(' R5·acre Los
Osos Oaks proj C'ct in San Lui s
Obispo County \~·as paid for on
a 50-50 basis by D a r k
lndu strics. Inc.. of L os
Angrles. and !he Federal Land
nnd Water Conser\·a!ion Fund .
The area. populated w i t h
native Californi a live oak, con-
tain s a Chumash Indian Shell
archeo logical sltc. which will
be preserved.
Earns Degree
Daniel H. AfacMi\len, 2465
Elden, Costa r..1esa. ha s
graduated v.'ith a Bachelor of
Arts degree in speech /ron1
Baylor Universi ty in Texas.
presented to \Vhitc, 86, June 18
at the AMA 's annual cuon-
vention in San F'rancisco.
* * * First Lady lmelda R .
Marcos ol the Phillippinu was
released rrom a M a n J 1 a
hospi tal two da ys after suf-
fering a miscarriage and los-
ing what would have been her
fourth child.
Accompanied by President
Ferdinand E. Marcos, she was
weeping as she lefl the
hospital and entered a
presidential limousine for the
trip to Malacanang palace.
* * * Parachutist K e I t h l.an·
caster, 36, jumped from a
small plane over Sydney, fell
three feet and one of his
socks caught on the step
besi~e the plane's wheel.
He hung there upside down
for 10 minutes before another
parachutist in the p I a n e
managed to cut him free with
a jagged piece of metsil he
tore from an aircraft seat.
* * * Gov. Ronald Reagan sai d
those who protest t h e
American system of justice
should have "second thoughts"
because of the acquittal of
black militant Angela Davh:.
"! \vould hope that man y of
those who have demonstrated
and protested and ha ve found
the United States g u i 11 y
\\'llhout a trial may now ha\"e
some second thoughts." the
Republican governo r told a
press conference in Sacramen-
to.
"I think they've had pretty
good pFoof that this societv of
ours leans over backward to
gi\'e the accused an even
break." he said.
* * * Chancellor \\'Illy Brandt of
\\'t'sl Germany announced the
establishment or a German
Marshall Plan memorial in th<'
United States, ~etting up a
fund of S47 million to be usi>d
to finance joint American-
European st u d i e s and
research.
Making his announcement at
a Harvard Universlly con-
vocation celebrating the 25th
anniversary of the Marshall
Plan, Brandt said the fund has
been "incorporated and con-
stituted in the District of
Columbia as an independent
American foundation : I he
German Marshall Fund of the
United States -A Memorial
to the ~1arshall Plan."
In his speech, Brandt paid
tribute to the late George C.
Marshall \vho 3S secretary of
state launched the plan to
rehabilitate Europe a ( t er
\Vorld War IL
Ike "'Naive~~
De Gaulle Al.so Rapped
LONDON (AP ) -Former Prime A!inister Harold Mac.
millan had a low opinion or his fellow statesmen President
Olarles de Gaulle of Jo~rance. ·chancellor KOOrad Adenauer
of, West Germany, even hi s old friend, Plesident Dwight D.
Eisenhower, according to his memoirs ju.st published.
De Gaulle ht et1lled a "pinhead,,. Adenauer "vatn,, SUl--
-plclouo and gra'Ping." He took Eisenhower to task for hJI
i·rooUsh and incredibly naive amateur dJplomacy." As
for Lyndon B. Johnson as vice president be &aid: "Not -r WOUid JuctRe -a ffian Of any intellectual power.H
The lllt6 volume of memoirs -"Polnt.lni 1tbe W1.1" ~ .,..,. 111o period from Maantlfao•1, ...i..tlcm ln bctO-
ber ... lo /IOYtml>er 1961. • . ' .• , • •
Mr Orw•....-, critic of tbe coiuOrv.u.e DaiJ1· Elf. !!:; lod lllClllillan's eol!lllMlll' oo Do Goullo an 1" '''I llrlUcbm from &rpenriic," , ,
' .
•
•
'Dr. llhyth1n!'s!' New Beat
SACRAMENTO (Al'J -lf it
hadn't been for so rn e
discouraging words from t'lt'V.'S·
caster C.'btt J~un1ley , ;i dl&e
jockey nicknamed ' • D r .
Rhythm" might never have
become head of California 's
public schools system, the
lar&est In the nation.
"Dr. Rhythm" v.·as the
name \\'!Ison Riles used b~ck
Jn the early 1950!! when, as a
young elementary school pr1n-
c::lpal in Flagstaff. Ariz., he
moonlig hted as a disc joc key.
For half nn hour. /i.1onday
through Friday, "I played
rhythm and blues . . . pop
songs ," Riles recall ed to an in-
terviewer.
TllE STAT IOS \VAS 1.000-
v.'att KGPII. v.•hose call lett.t>rs
have bttn changed since Jlil es
was thert.
"I &Old spots lL'01nnll!rch1Jsl
on the statlon-Jt was a very
good show. The spots were
always sold out, .. Rile.s said.
During the suvme r of 1951.
when school was out , Riles got
a coveted assignment. F'or 21i
hour.i a d!!y, he beca~ a st<1fl
announce r.
"I camt• lo !ikC' that sort of
tf1ing and I be~an lhink ing
about a career." lliles said.
One br oadcaster he adn1ired
v.•as 1-luntle y, then a radio
newscaster in Los Angeles.
"I KNE\\' llE \\'AS in \hf'
business of doing !he kind flf
things I v.·ould enjoy doing-I
...00 to iu"'1 to him all the
time," Riles said.
So , when he visited Southern
Calif0tnia, JUies &eQ.Jred an
appointment with Huntley to
talk about a caretr in broad·
ca11ting.
"He talked to me at length
... I asked him what kind of
future I would have in this
bu!!iness if I stayed in it.
··He discouraged me. fle
said there were lots of black
disc jockeys, but v.·hen it cam1•
lo staff v.ork, there simply
weren't any openings for
blacks.
"Secondly, he said radio was
~oin~ out-the coming lhinq
.,.;as trle\'ision," Riles sa id . "I
gave up the idea at that
point "
RILES THEN MOVED to
Los Angeles and worked lor a
1 etigiou.t-pacifi5t organuat1on
called the Feltowsrup of
.Reeoncillation.
In 1958, Riles took n civil
service eumination for a job
in the state Department of
Education. He worked his way
up the OOrPaucratic \adch·r.
and in 1970 be ca m e
superintendent or pu blic in-
struction and the fir:st black to
win a statewide election in
California.
The 3,2M,365 votes he polled
topped incumbent ?\1ax Raf-
ferty by a half million.
Ill-:: \\'AS Al.SO. hr S;l\"S. \hf'
firs1 blntk to he lured in a
...
professioaaJ job by the sUtle
Department of F.ducation,
which oversees a $5 b11lloo ·
educatlinal system for 4.3
rnillion children in grades
kindergarten through 12.
Huntley went to New York.
teamed up with D a v i d
Brinkley, and became a
houiehold name before retir·
ing to head a recreational
development in his native
f..1ontana.
Drugs Banned
BRASILJ,\ (APl -Brazil
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irnport and export of LSD and
Sllllilar drugs.
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EX·DISC JOCKEY
WilM>n Rile'
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..
fr
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BEA ANDERSON, Ed;tor
..... IJ
Ticklish Situation
Fad Gets Brush-off
DEAR ANN I.ANDERS: Thal Jetter
from "Ohio Teen" could ha\'e been \Vrit-
len by me.
I also a1n a high school senior who
hates to Jtiss a guy ~-ho has a moustache
or a beard. But let's be honest -we girls
are responsible for all that hair.
It all started when the Beatles came to
this country and the teenyboppers
shrieked, fainted and went completely
ape over the group.
The American boys felt they had to im-
itate the Beatles to win the favor of the
girls, So they let their hair grow long and
tbe Jnevitable happened. In true
American style "bigger ta better and
most Is best."
The youtb or our nation became bair-
worshippers. Hair became a symbol of
the New Culture, Uldepend<nee and
rebellion. Most parents hated It. Sample
dialogue: "Vet a haircut or leave Utls
house.''
So now 11'1 up to the girls lo get rid of
tne hairy problem. And ll JS a problem .
Keeping all that hair clean ls work, and
most guys don't bother. We girls mu"-
nqw •ay, "Oii wllh the brush -°' there'll
be no kisses." Are you with me, Ann 1 -
THE ALL CLEAR IN EAU CLAIRE
DEAR CLADIE: I doa't aeed to be
wttlt yoa. Tltere's aobody wltli • beard
or mou1tacbe I care to kl11. But lot1 of
lack.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A few years
ago we went to Canada for 1 vacation.
There was a guided tour -courtesy o(
the mole!. The gu;de kept referrt111 to the
Canadian side of the Falls a nd the
I
American side of the Falls. My father
called the guide's attention to the fa ct
that Canada is j;.ist as much a part of
America as the United States.
This is my question, Ann : The in·
habitants of South America, Centra1
America and North America e r e
Americans. The inhabitants of Canada
are ab<> Canadian!. The people of Me.i:ico
are called Mexicans. But what are the
people of the United States called -
olher than Americans? -LANSING
QUERY
DEAR Q.: U.S. cltl.r:eu.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You ha>o
waged a rn o s t successful cam-
paign against drop-Jn.visitors who
don't even knock, for which we con-
gratulate you.
Many people who thought they owed It
to friends end relaUves to be on 24-hour
call have come to realize that they were
being taken advantage of. Your columns
gave them lbt c:Wrag¢; kl put an end to
it. Now will you do something for those or
us who own small yachts?
A great many landlubbers don't know
It'• oot only bod malJner•, but a legal ol·
fenae lo 8et foot on 1 boat until the words
"come aboard" are spoken. For thole
who don~ wlah to shout, a light lmock on
!be bull can be beard Inside.
And now the matter of shoes. It ls an
Wllpeakable garre to come aboard a
yacht wearing ordinary 1tnet shoes. It
could cause pennanent damtige to
painted and varnj,1:hed .surfaces.
I am aWare that a rather small seg·
ment or your readers own yachts but
since you are read by people in every
walk of life t felt this was the very place
to go for help to get my meMBge across.
-OLD SALT IN KEY WEST
DEAR SALT: Never let It bt 1a~ lhat
I dlacrlmlnaltd ag1ln1t 19'e rich. Here 11
your lettu -for the one teatb of one
per'ct.Dt.
" ._-:;
•
., .. ,. '\• .. • ••
Rompollo, the mnster
of matte jersey,
offers " bins-cut
horseshoe necklined
gown ( nbove) nnd n
jersey dress with nn
attached plented
skirt of tweed.
Clouds Have Silver Lining
Outlook Brig ter
By MARIAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK -There's a new breed of
fashion designer who b Invading the ~n
ner circle of celebrities. Most of these rn-
dlviduals are under 40. They've toiled
unrecognized and unheralded _in the
ahadow of America's greatest designers.
But now, thanks to a twist of fate,
they're beginning to emerge as tomor·
row's fashion heroes.
One of tht boys to graduate from
hackroom lo boss of his O\\'fl bustling
salon is Dominic Rompollo. an unas.sun1-
ing 37-year-old ex-dancer from Detroit
Rompollo spent most of his "'orking years
creating new ideas for Geoffrey Beene
and Donald Brooks.
Today Rompollo's J8-month--0ld firm,
backed by fashion entrepreneur Ben
Shaw. boasts 500 store accounts to the
tune of an annual multi-million-dollar
business. With h.is success skyrocketing,
Rompollo is out of the dark and into the
limelight .
AllITllM~TIC CLASS
The gerrn nf Ron1poll o's fashion in·
terest started in the fourth grade of his
arittunetic clas.~. Instead of mastering
rnathematical equa!ions, his teacher
found hirn forever filling his notebook
v>'ith meticulouslv dressed female figures.
\l.1hen she asked' \\•hat he thought he was
doing, he replied that nudes bored him.
"The principal immediate!~· sent for
my father," says Rompollo \\·hose family
ran an Italian food market called, ap-
propriately, Rompollo's. ~ s te r n
patriarchal lecture v.•as delivered and
Dominic 's new after-school job was to
wrap and dellver meats and cheeses in
the neighborhood -after adding the bill
under his father's stem eye.
Eventually, after an Army stint in
Korea, Rompollo divided his time
between designing parade floats for J. L .
l1udson, Detroit, and teaching ballroom
dancin g nig hts at Fred Astaire studios.
But fashion continued to mesmerize
and beckon. Rompollo made the big
decision. He enrolled in Parsons School of
Design, New York. }le was 24. It \\'as now
or never.
NO NAME
Upon graduation from Parsons, Rom-
pollo was grabbed by Beene. Then by
Brooks. Then by Teal Traina. Things
really got bad at Traina : "They \Vere
unwilling to use my name on the label."
he says. "But for five years I did the
designing and the company grew. It was
rewardinl<! for everyone but me.''
Rompollo quit Traina. He was so de--
jected he wanted to quit fashion.
Ont night, when he was brooding at
home over a martini, the telephone rang.
It :was Ben Shaw whom he had seen at a
dl!ltance but never met. Shaw. who bas
an astute eye for ripe talent, asked to
stop by Rompollo's apart1r.ent.
An hour of impromptu negotiating end-
ed in a gentleman's agreement that Shaw
would invest. $200,000-plus to launch Rom·
polio as a designer.
Now that he's fast becoming a "name"
••
I
I l I
f
designer, Rompollo has his eye on a
charcoal Mercedes-Benz and a farm in
Ken t, Conn. His wife, Neica~ v.·ho used
to swear by blue jeans, wears his line
\
' < '
l
' \~,·
\\)'
..
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I
I I
•
f
• l l
almost exclW1ively. And their fi ve-year-
old daughter is doing what comes natur-
ally-scribbling elegantcs in her school
notebooks.
Bullocks Design
Colorful Careers
By JO OLSON
Of 1M Di lly l'llfl Iliff
While Marvie Bullock has provided
much of the "background music" In her
sister Georgia Bullock's designing career,
she haS emerged a star in her own right
Fabrics are her forte, and she loves her
work of selecting dJfferent kinda ol ck>th
for her sis~r's designs.
A resident of the Newport's Back Bay
area, she and her husband left Beverly
Hllla 20 years ago for a three-day atay in
Nowport, which turned Into 1 permanent
love affair with the ocean.
The Bullock ailter1, including Annette,
1 housewife, are third-generation Califor-
nians and gre'tf up in Pasadena.
Marvie attended a small private school
ln PaMdena, which was formerly the
Bullock family home , then went to wor-k
u her sister'• partner.
Now, ahe reviews all the fabric llDM,
spending about 200 dayti out of the year
looking and comparing and attends all
her sister's operungs.
1.iarvie buy1 "grey good1," or fabrics
wltbotrt color, then 1elects htr own colors
.... deslgno.
IMPORTS PREDOMINATE
"Nlnely peroenl or all our labrlcs are
Imported," she said. Germany !Uppll ..
1>0lye1ter, llaly offer• cotton, and the
Orient, all.ks. Raw silk la one of the most
dlfflcull l1brlc1 to obtain, she added.
"I think the<e'1 a definite trend back to
pure fabric1," Marvle predicted.
allowed to now or draped by Georgia In-
fluences what kind of fabric she will
select.
To test the colors. ~1arvie holds them
up to hersell and looks at them in the
mirror.
Llke the proverbial shoemaker whose
children are shoe.less, Marvte surpris-
ingly said she does not have a closet
bulging with Georgia BuUoclt designs. In
fact, she said abe doesn't b.ve tJme to
even select fabrlcl for berlelf.
GET TIRED
"You get ao close you don~ hne Ume
for you rself.'' abe. explained. "Alter a
constant sampling ol fabrim ad e1:-
perimentatlon from. I.be tint maaun to
the first dre!!, you ·111 a Utlla tired ol
It."
Marvle and her busbond, '1beoclore
Rogers, • former yacht broker, hive
three cblldren, a 1011 at the UnlYValty of
Ulal!, a aon In HaWall and a claiibter In
Aspen. Her )'OU!lgest ..,, attendod Oiap-
man College'• World Cam]IOll Afloat and
this now Is one ol J\larvte'1'f8VGl'llo pn>j-
ecll. •
• To be!' huaband o1 29 yun abe o1J1n
credit for beJng "very undln&and:bCI' of
her work in Loa Angeltt with her •lsttr,
which io complete encrosslng foe her.
And, she bu a u~ "hol0>ll>-t11eon!ltt
in Costa M.,. where lhe and Shlrley
Steen, ber partner, oiler I« 1811 lllrplU
Bullock !abrlCI al""I with ..... o1 their
own.
MARVIE BULLOCK MAKES CHOICE Whit dots abe look for In a fabric?
'1Surface ln~ml' how It feel s, the
pattern and color.
Monday ;, he< day olf from fabrics, bat
H you catch her on a Monday, look close-
ly. There probably .,.. some l1brit
swatches aomewhehi .round bf!(ause her
worlt Is what weava her life toge~ber.
''Color 11 ablolutely essential." ahe ad-
ded ... And , what you do with the fabr1c Is
Important." Whether It wlJI be tailored,
.. • I
<
'
r
I
DAILY PILOT Tut $d1J, Junt "· 1'9""
Biting Comment
Sinking Teeth
Into Crusade
By ERMA BOMBECK
111y new dtntilt gave me a
questionnaire to lilt out on my
first vl&ll and when 1 got tll
question No. 11, I peused
momenlatlly. It asked, "Are
yoo Interested in saving your
teeth?"
My first react.Ion was , where
wert they 20 years ago
when my body was starting to
go. Aloud to tht nurse 1 said,
"A commitment is not
something l take llghtly, you
know.
"Frankly, J don't know if I
can 11.i.e on soother cause or
not. Already I am saving the
Caliromia redwoods, saving
my glass bottles a n d
newspapers for recycling, sav-
ing the whoopin,a: crane and
savina: myself for P e u I
New man. Let me think about
it."
For the last 10 years I have
been caught up ln a series of
a'\Jsades ranging from aaving
the frontage of a historic
cemetery from a I and
developer who wanted to erect
a fruit drink stand with a neon
sign reading "GO REFRESH·
ED" to aavlng our children
from centerfolds.
Suppo11 I did decide to nve
my teeth. The first thing_ I
would have to do 11 engage
eight or 10 fl my frlenda to join
with me ln the cau11e.
(Crusaders are Ute nurui .
They alway• travel In pairs or
groupe.)
Then we would fonn a car
pool. Even If we never needed
a car pool, we would fulfill the
first obli1atlon of a committee.
AT
WIT'S
END
TEN (Reach Out to Teet h.
Encl Neglect.) A charter would
be dra"'·n up to list the alms
and goalJ of tbt organization
and immediate pla111 would be
made for a bake .sale to build a
treasury so the group could
visit Will iam:sburg.
A publicity chairman would
be named to make public the
work of ROTTEN. Even--
tuaJJy, we would entice a na·
tional figure to sit in a direc·
tor's chair and make an ap-
peal on ou r behalf.
Subsequently, R 0 TT EN
chapters would start all over
the country to save Ernu1 's
teeth. There would be a con--
ventlon in Detroit and we
would ell gather to eat fat·
tening foods. drink Vodka for
lunch and run our charges up.
~ing the founder , l would
have to travel around the
country lnstalllng new officers
and miss my six-months den-
tll checkup.
My children, lonely from
neglect, did tum to Mlss
Louise. a physical education
teat'her and a trequent vl1itor
to the house at the t11vHation
of my husband.
On a rare trip home. my
younge!t would anawer the
door and say to me, "Leave a
vegetable brush and come
back later. Mama isn't home."
The Warmth
Your Horoscope
Sagittarius: Basic
Issues Will Dominate
WEDNESDAY
JUNE 7
By SYDNEY OMARR
Ll!o is 11trong ln the !trelch
run. Natives of th.11 wdlacal
sign exctl when there is an
audience. Leo needs a public
and private cheering section.
ARIES {M'arch 2l·Aprll 19):
Stabilize money !ltuation. Cor·
rect budget leaks. G e t
cooperation from Taurus and
l.Jbra per!Ons. Pay and collect
debts. Genu ine bar11ain In lux·
ury !!em is available. Family
member Is preparing a
surpri:se.
TAURUS (April 20-~fay 20):
Get going with your own
rh ythm . Adhere to individual
style. Perfe c t techniques .
Insist on quali ty. Elevate selr·
esteem. Don't !ell yourself
!hort. You have much t{) offer.
Know it -act like you know
It.
GEMINI (~fay 21-June 20 1:
Court appearances. activity
connected w i t h institution,
club, organli.ation -the!e are
highlighted. Work b e h i n d
scenes. f'ulflll obllgatlon!. One
with experience will lend help-
ing hand. Capricorn is in.
volved.
CANCER (June 21.July 221 :
Accent on friends, desires,
potential income from OC·
cupation. You are able to rid
yoursel! of burden. You can
compll!te project. Don 't hang
on to past. There will be new
opportunities. Respond ac-
cordingly.
Coast Couples
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Set
.!l ights on goal. Professlom:I
a!s<>clate sets example. Strive
for originality, independence.
Another ~ figure1 prom·
lnently . What appears to be
opposition i! due to melt . You
makl! significant gain!.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22 1:
Formulate Jong-range plans.
Look bey{)nd c u r r e n l in-
dications . Be aware of poten·
ti.al. Aquarlan i! likely lo be
involved. Journey may be on
agenda. Catch up on cor·
re!pOndence. Check rtstrva-
tiorui. Trust hunch.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22):
r..1oney affectlng mate, partner
is featured . You are called on
to choose alternative. G iv e
full play to Jntelleetual curlo!i·
ty. Ask question!. Answl!rs
will be forthcom ing. Check
policy.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 2l-Nov . 21 ):
Do more listening than
usual. 0 b ta In hint from
Libra mes,,age. Accent now is
on relationships of permanent
nature. Be aware of details.
including legal requirements.
Take nothing for' granted. Be
thorough.
SAGfM'ARJUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Practical discus:s ion
>M-'lth one who cares will work
Y.'Onder!: No time oow fo r
di!play of false pride. Get to
19): Good lwiar aapect now
colncldea y.·!th creatl\'C efforts,
romance, cMJlie ol roulint.
you come a I i v e . Rela·
t lo nships with family
men1bers will be more ml!an-
ingful. Be diplomatic. Ge1ture
of reconciliation is on agende.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb.
!SJ: Stubborn individual tests
you. J\laintain aplon,b. You
may be \\'alking fine line. but
odds ra,·or success. Know it
and be confiden t. Emphosi:s i3
on property, security, com·
plelion of assignmen t.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 1·
You settle niajor point wilh
neighbor, relati\'e. Plans arc
revised. You are on move.
Key no111 is to be ver!atlte.
Sense of humor is your ally.
\\.'hnt appc11rs mass of con·
fusion 11·iU be righted. Don '1
pa11ic.
IF' TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTllnA Y you tend to be in·
trospcctive, at li n1es overly
active, often a contradiction I<>
fr ien<is and ;issociates. You no"· ha\'t: n1ore freedom . rela·
lionships are intensi fied and
you htl\"e a great need for
reassurance. By next month.
you \1·ill be socializing. ullli-
zing n a t u r a I abililies. If
single, marriage is on horizon.
heart of matters. Basic issuet -----------
dominate. Gemini and VlrgoJ.-•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;; ___
person! figure prominently.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. g STITCHERY
SALE
1h OFF ....
Sat11rdcry
Aft.er that, we would elect
officers and sel~ a cati;:hy
serle1 of letters that would
spell out a word , but still ex-
plain our caUJe. (Usually this
iJ done before an organization
ls even conceived.)
We would call ourselves
aomelhlng dramatic like ROT·
Everything I had worked
for .. my home, my family and
my sexy teeth woul d be gone.
I looked at the que!tionnaire
and marked, "No I am not In·
tere!f.ed in saving my teeth."
Under explanation, J wrote,
"Ask Louise !"
Girl Scouts fr orn Troop 146. Cos ta Mesa \Vilt be losing their le ad er o( five
years June 22 and decided to "sew up" their friendship \vith her. The 25 troop
members s pent hundreds of hours mak in g a quilt for ~1rs. David J-loeft (left),
'"'ho will be moving to Florida. Admiring their handiwork are Kathy l\.1urphy
(center) and Li sa Gianerakis.
Vows Recited GIFT GALLERY
G iff, & Cr1ft1
411 I. 17tll Skeet
Ca1t• MeH, C•llf. GOODYEAR-BLACK TOMLINSON-KEENAN Phone: 548·G·l·f· T
Recreation Tops Vacation Agendas
Virginia Black Austin of
Altadena and Nelson Goodyear
of Huntington Beech ex·
changed marriage \'ov.·:s in a
hon1e ceremony ('{Induc ted by
Dr. James Daane of Fuller
Theological Seminary.
Maureen Ann Keenan ex·J~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~-changed vow! with John David I~
Tomlinson during ceremonies
performed by the Rev. Ronald
Collaty in Sts. Simon and Jude
Catholic Church. ~luntinglon
Beach.
Want To Solve Your
Decorating Problems?
NEED HELP?
With a year of hard work
behind, 0 ran ge Coast
organizations are turning their
thoughts to recreation, while a
feow are Installing oU!cers.
BSP
From Me to You 111ill Iheme
the Secret Sister Revelatlon
Party planned by the lt1u
Upsilon Chapter of Be t a
Sigma Phi for f\.1 onday. June
12, in the Garden Grove home
of Mrs . Steve llumphrey:s.
The outgoing e x e c u t iv e
board will present a gift to !he
chapter and an award will be
given for the best program of
the year.
Beta Alpha Xi Chapter of
Fleurette
Clltch a •Plrkl•
trom th• momlng tun.
Hold th• m•glc
of a tuddell b-ze.
KHp thon momenta •llvw.
TM(~,_. tor• I/lot/me
"1th a diamond
, .,,,.,.,,_,,ring trom -""'--·
Beta 'Sigma Phi will reveal
secret sisters during an 8 p.m.
gathering Monday, June 12, in
the Yorba Linda home of Mrs.
Barton Sharp.
The chapter will honor
husbands during a poolside
barbecue at the Anaheim
home of Mrs. Jack Love on
Saturday, June 17.
Fuchsia Society
Guest speaker fo r the r..ton·
day, June 12. mee!lng or the
Costa f..fesa·Bay Cities Bra nch
of the National Fuchsia Socic·
ty \\'iU be Loren Paulsohn of
Hawthorne.
DurinJ;! the 7:30 v.m. Rather·
ing in the American Legion
•tall. Costa P.·Iesa. Paulsohn
\viii sho\v slides. 11e is slide
librarian for the National
Fuchsia Fan l\fagazine.
ti.Iembers \viii particiuatc in
the 18th annual Fuch!ia and
Shade Pla nt Show Junr 23·25
at Cerritos Sh{)pping Center
!<.1al!.
Indian Maidens
!\1{)nd11y , June 12. is the date
of the [,onghousC' n1eetlng of
!he Kahnee Ta Nation Indian
Maidens of the Orange Coast
YMCA.
Junior Leagu e
Acti\'e members or the
Junior League of Ne111oort
flarbor will be entertai ned by
th~ Sustainen Monday, June
12, at the Balboa Bay Racquet
Club and Irvine Coast Country
Club.
A social hour and awards
luncheon will follow the mom.
ing of ,l?olf. tennis and bridge.
Mrs. Winston Severson i.,
chai rman and Mrs. Edwnrd
Kelley is archairman.
PEO
United :r..tethodist Church of
Laguna Hills. Th is will be the
520th chnpter in California .
Golden Key
New officers will be in·
stalled during a Tuesday, J une
13. meeting of Golden Key
auxiliary or the Ch i Id
Guidance Center (lf Orange
County in the \Vhisl ling Oyster
restaurant, JI u n I i n g t o n
llarbour.
J\1rs. Cy Petersen will be
seared for her second term as
presid£'nl. and installed with
her \\•ill be the r..1me!.
Sherwood Bailey. Don Elder,
Richard Gardner and Ray·
mond Morehouse. vice
presidenls : Richard Steele and
.f,qck (;rrrlcv. secretaries. and
1'.1ichael Hobbs. treasurer.
First Nighters
Laguna Moulton Community
Plavhouse's First Ni~hters
'''ill. celebrate Year's End with
n lunclicon Jn the Old Brussels
restau r<1nl. Tuesda.v. Juoe 13.
New offi cers >M-'il\ be in.
stalled including the Mmes.
Zachary ~1alaby. president;
Violet Adams ;ind R1chard
Broe. vice prei;idenl'>; John
Nichols and Craig Ketcham.
secretaries and H a r o I d
f..'fcNeughton . treasurer.
Director:s will be the Mmes.
Abraha m Covin, Ed ward
C.ammie. Lee Kin ca Id ,
Frederick f..fcConnf'\I , George
Thompson and Don Van·
derbllt .
SC Christians
Tip! on summer hair care
\VIII be the special fea ture at
the Tuesday, June IJ. lunch--
eon of the South Co a s t
Christian Women 's Club in
Ben B r o w n ' s restaurant,
presented by Mrs. Ruth Whip-
ple.
Eastern Star
•tarbor Sta r Chapter or the
Order of Eastern Star will
celebrate Orange County Par.
ty Night at 8 p.m. Tuesday,
Jun~3, in the Newport Beach
Masmtic Temple.
It's Swanderful will be t.he
evening theme
Town1 Gown
New homes on Linda and
}!arbor Islands \\'ill be visited
by members ;ind guests or
Chapman College's Town and
Gown as part of the group's
annual membership drive.
Those attending will gather
at 1:13 p.m. In Fashion
Square, Santa Ana for a coach
ride to the beach. Festivities
will conclude in the Kenneth
Reaf:snyder home w I th
refreshments. Assisting with
plans is Mrs. Leslie I. F'errell.
South Coast
Chapter TF will be welcom·
ed by Oranjl:e Coast Reciproci·
ty of the PEO ststerbood al 1
p.m. 1.!onday, June 12, ln the
J\.fuslc will be provided byJ-----
lhe Mls.sionairl'!, and guest
!!pe&kl!r will be r.1rs. lIUda
Callender.
~ ............... ..,._ .. .._.. ...... ~ .. -._., ......
SUJl'trbly unuaua.I ••• an·
tJqun. pa.lnUntu ••• -.nd
loll or \l.'ild •tutti
f:u•'r
/tlar11 Royer
A.l.D.
INT ... IORI
Featuring unique nf'\I' wall·
flllfl"r dcslwn1. f\.1nny only
awllableo throullt'h clrror•·
tori •.. mti.tchlng fabrics
. . . metal ecuJ.PlW'e . . .
.. ~ iq Ind unUfUa] •t· .... .-...
0.. .... ll1"t.1-J2 ..... .....
... ,.... .,. .... 11-.... ' .. -.. ........................ 111 •.
summ'.tr Fun bqina
with
SUMMER CLCmlllS
from
n!E RED BALLOON
'""fP':". ~
...... , •~1t1litr•U, -·-·' .i.1w .... •• "'-•• 1.,. ... , ..... ,
llunUn&ton Hirbt11r
(ll!J 14J.IUI
Town & Country
Oranie
(711) 511-1$1$
representat iv e ; Earl
Fusselman, social chairman :
John W. llensley, Junior
F'riends; Horace Benjamin,
historian, and Mrs. T. Duncan
StewRrt , parliamentarian.
Author Alice Wellman "'ill
be guest speaker.
CHS
Las Brizas de[ Mar Aux-
iliary to Children's Home
Soc iety will install officers
Thursday, June I, at 7 p.m. in
the home of .l\1rs. Gary Convis.
To be installed are the
ri.tines. Alan Kriz, president ;
Art Caplett. Convis a n d
Edward Lavalle , vice
presidents; Don Himes and
Honor attendants \\"ere r.,,frs.
B. J . Cook and Leonard
Boettcher.
The couple honeymooned in
S,1n Francisco.
TI1e ne\v ~trs. Goodyear
teaches sixt h grade at
C<tstelar School. Los Angeles.
She is a graduate of Grove Ci-
ty College, Grove CHy. Pa.
C.oodyear is dean of the new
Cali fornia Christian College,
Los An ge les, where he is com·
pleting his PhD. Acth•e in
rnarket planning and research
for a Westwood firm . he i:s
the great grandson of Charles
Goodyear. founder of the rub-
ber industry.
T'he bride is the daughter of
fiir. and ~trs. Richard Keenan
{)f ~Iuntington Beach. lier hus-
band is t he son of Mrs.
1.1adeline Tomlinson of Tustin
and Thomas Tomlinson of Tor-
rance.
~trs. Sheldon H. Phelps wa~
the matron of hon o r .
Bridesmaids y.·ere M is s
Colleen Keenan and Miss Anne
Tomlinson. Best man was
Steven Srrtith. Ushers were
Bradley Hornl!r and Richard
J-llldebrand.
The bride is a graduate of
Edi!on High School a n d
Southern California School of
:r..1ed\cal and Dental
Assistants. The bridegroom is
a graduate of Huntington
Beach High School.
Larry Kopriva, secretaries: l-r:;;;:;;;:;::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;\;11 ::~~~~~~;:~ I Jackie Bowman . treasurer,
and James Ackley, parllamen· ~
tarian. FRANCIS-
\,ORR J
. METH/NC SPECIAL
COME TO
Maggi Cobb's
Interior Decorating
Workshop
5 2·HOUR WEEKLY
SESSIONS
529.95
D1y or Evoning
/;~~~ /:J
420-lht St.
Newport Beach
(on Lido P1nln1vl1)
Make Reservation• now
Classes ere Limited
tor a very special day-a new hairdo from,our exclusiv• Softies Collection.
Try it. .. he'll like ill By our Master S!ylists:
Cut without shonening, shampoo, style $9.50 Shampoo & Set alone $5.25
#AGIC Ml~l\lJ~ 13tauly.Salon.~
Ctll for en llM'Oltllrntnl, 1U0 NIW MK Arlfllll' ltw,1.~ Vint S"°"l"I C'tnl'lr,
.. n JM41Vlfl Hltlt .... .i 1WW 111!..i Aftflllt
0oen """"·. h~ .I:. .. f'flliA. .-. • ., ..,,.,,..,,,..,,. Clll ,., ..,. ~-
•
DICK TRACY
'"PfANUT&UTTER''
IS lllGMT. ~ONE
MAS A LEGAL CLAIM
"TO IT BUT "fOU.
TUMBLEWEEDS
I ll'JOfRSTANV YER COMA'JSWG
A LITflE TOM·lDM 1UNE1 UJTSI\ lUCK!
..... .. ,
MUTI AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
K.IT,
WHEN I
TELL YOO 10
CQ\\E RIEtff BACK,
I ,\\EAN CO\\E
Rlb4T BACK I
• .,, !".
NANCY
MY. POOR DAD-·
HE'S ON HIS
FEET ALL
DAY ON
HIS .JOB
l'M CREATING-, VIA SfiFER
MW IN..~NT, A MOMJl>'EN-
TAL MASTERl'lfCf
VESTINflJ TO SflntE W}jfC
\\!JRJ.P A60€i, lf:AV!: CRfTICS
SPEflHLfSS, ANV J3ECOME
AN A&HE5S CLASSIC.
1 WAS
"TALKING
-ro MAO
oNo-HE
+\OT LINE!
Maolse-tung?
'
YOUR
HOMl~rTY
IS OVER·
WHELMl/',I;
By Chester Gould
INSIDE IT ~ FtLM
CA.5SETTES, MEMOS,
FINGERPRINTS, MY CAMERA-
By Tom K. Ryan
NJ AlTRIJ3U"Tl':
IN W/flCH 11ilKE
&Rl'AT l'RIPE.
11flM' 1)1!11P
\~?'-~
By Al Smith r--,-----
ND, MAO LEVY
MYC~INESE
'lo LAUN DRY
. ,;) · MAN.' . ...:;,
•
' W.J.JJL-U!.L...<--.1....1-.1:.!::..::=;.:__..:.J
~LS
HAL£
ISN'T HE
ALLOWED
TO S IT
DOWN '?
. .r""'if•E'-a oc:;:H .... ,~.
HE IS,
BUT HE
DOESN'T
DARE
PEANUTS
By Dale Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
THAT'S
WHERE
HE
WORKS
THUMBTACK
-FACTORY
-·
I DAILY CROSSWORD~. ~b:-: •• POWER I
LOOK AT1HIS
CAMP ... Rl6HT OUT
IN THE W000S !
I'll llETIHIS PlACE 15 FIU£D
WITH 61!1.l~ CATS JllST ~TING
TO ME A f'ER50N 00 lHE ARM
ACROSS
l Part or plaot
5 Bottlr tops
'! T11r "''h·firnd
I• Fired cl;1y
1) Perta ining \o
\hf rat l~ Marry
inlorm~lly
11 From -to
rlchr s
1B City in
~~ t.lrsh
4S BOl!lb that
failor to
e1plodl'
41> Ego
47 Yma -
49 1¥arn1ogs of
.1ttacks
53 Pun9"1t
podlike fruit:
2 words 57 Watchman JUDGE PARKER
GASOLINE ALLEY
lhat'i keeµiriq ,
that
Themk~
40U qiv<l 'im .. ~~II t' t11\ock th'
front door?
man?
It's
Wes 4er car ke4
on-that
rinq? 'les!
been ten
minutes!
SALLY BANANAS
arreNTION.
WORLD!
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
I \\IMlT lK)\) TO
TELL l./Q)f1SELF
THAT IJOO'RE. &Ti'ER~
HE IS / ,___.,,
Bv Charles M. Schulz
.---..-----~
ON
IHE AANt?
6W.~ CATS KNOW
111AT 1ENNIS RAc~S ARE MADE WITH 61.U~
CAT GUT ..
By Harold Le Doux
Vugosl~ia
)<j Nrar
58 Be of value
S<J Mint ""trante
bl Very short
I'M SORRY, MR . SORGSON JU51 ~ow COME YOU 'RE BfCAUSE I 5EE POiEMT\,A.l
20 AllPt'~
22 Poor ar1istit
~·· 24 -CMal Zont
2b Sharp
P'otllbtraitr
27 Slor.119"
plKtS
2CI Outer ed9t
JO Havlng '1ort .,., ""
nitmMr: Abbr '
lJ In I nldf ......
TI Flow
CQ'ltlnUOIJSly
38 Fair prier
J9 Coln of , .....
•O "-of thr
Y11ton"
41 "ROOlll to
swlnv--"; ,_,,
42 loud md
noisy
9armtnl
t.2 Behll'rrn lheri
""MW !.3 R~te: Latin
M Kind of colla.-
""" &6 The mouth:
Sl1111~
t.7 ~rman
·a11c1rs
DOIN
1 Ualhl!I' strip
Z Crown1lkt
ht11dpl«t
l City of
Scotland
4 Fon! around:
"''"'' S C•tch: ll'lfomal
6 On top of
7 Sit«
8Showlng PO
marks
'laura -o
Cmadi<Wl
htroh1t
10 &!shrd: 2 'Ml'ds
11 Devier
12 ~CtSS lJ At no limt:
P0ttic
21 lllr. Zola n Gai.nt
25 Tropical
cix:koo
28 Rtmaln 1loof
fronl: z "Ofds
30 Marto-
Jl Rtm•klbl•
ldta: Sia-IQ
32 Custams:
Obsolrtr D -Tbt.T«Jlblt
" """':1 )5~0-,
36 Alrpo.-t code
for Erle, Pa.
37 Rtl!IOVed .il1
dtfects
40 Chath
iostrumenls -..1
42 Collldt
43 Armiatrc
u~'r.tth ·-· 47 Star Jn Virgo
48 E-mgrffll
SO S.ltsman's
flxtd tmltary n Prim.
lnstMtor
52 <mrwhrlms 53 Carpent«'s
tool
54 .:rE. """' SSC ¥n
cit nn
56 Attms -
"""'"" 60 Otliver penl1t
blow
PERKINS
:rS •• '. ' ~
... BUT MAY I TALK W ITH WAIT HERE,
YOU FOR A MOMENl PLEASE!
BEFORE YOU G!:T TIEO
UP W liH M!55 BARSTOW? .!I
~&3, 181S, 805TON1 IMS$.
AL.El<ANOEI<
GllAHAM Beu..
"5 A&OUT 10
"11N OUT HIS
N!W l).rveNffON
ON Ml£.
A~S T N"'T,.
A~THUll A.
WATSON •..
NOT HAVING HER THAl W 1Ll MAKE HER
51GN THE CONTRACT 1 A M OST VALUABLE.
PROPERTY! YOUR PHONE'S
RtNG1 M6.' ANSWER IT!
By Mel
By John Miies
Tu"da7, Jun< b. 1972 DAIL V PILOT J -----~------~ By Dick Moores
01' "Liqhtfinqer;;
Jai.e· ain1 or.et' walk
if he 1,i;ln r ide!
By Charles Ba!Wfti
~---~--~
'i~"l)R. \1('/C.E f IT
SC'L!/IJ(',.'3. l../)...f •·
•• L.1"-E ·• \V li'JC' tN T~E: F'J1'JE5!
By Gus Arriola
•. -·.~:.:.,H ;: rHATl,s
°,,.ILL 1 A,i,f1,A.IOW.'
,.J. 6.J.LEPUL
' ' !!WEE =E .' .4
"lf..::3E:tA5.LE
Af/5Tf2AL!
-
By Ferd JohnMln
By Ro9er Bollen
~5'C()MO~ ..
Wil<BE !al ~~R
il-111.Q¥.l ite. llEXT
FOOi<' Pn'CHES
OVER 1i ~ STOl'-
1{
THE GIRLS
"J'vr: bad wonderful lu.ck wHb my 1ardr:a UU1 1tato11 -
..
l
' I
so far, 1·vr: managed &o raise my JOit breeelet. pne., rinl
and 1cilsor1." .
DENNIS THE MENACE
~ 't:i '~~~"" ' '
n
I
..t• Olll Y 'ILOT
Anteaters
Topple Foes
h1NCAA
81""1•1 to tllr !JAJLY PILO'l'
KALAMAZOO, fl1 ich. -UC Irvi ne
epened deCen11e of it~ T\CAA i·vJJewe
division tennis championship ir1 uii·
prestlvt fashion P.1onday at Stov.·I' 'l'rnn1~
Center on lht campus of Kalarnazoo
College ~re , "'inning a s1n~les cintl 1110
doubles matehes.
Greg Schneider. the freshman A1l!l'•d~r
playing third !ingles, defeated Larry
Lineberry of Old Dorn inion Collegr . 6·4. fi..
1 and played f'red r-.·larrh of t-.'icholl.i;
State in second round action toda1
UC!'S other three si ngl es playt~s drr:1v
first round byes. bet::inn1n,1; c.:on1pf'lil1un
today. No. I r11ted Bob Chappell fuced
Steven Bruhn of Southern Colorado S!ale
1 Pueblo ).
L1Cl's second sini;:les star. p1n1ru (;rcr:
Jablonski (seeded No. 3 'in !hf' tournt\' /
drew Bob Moon of Olivet College in liis
aecond rouud match today
Senior Jim Ogle, UCJ's fourth ~1ngles
player. faced Alex Terras iif thr·
University of Chica go .
All four singles player.~ \\.'ill ret urn tor
a second match today if ~ucc<'s~1ut 111
their initial encounter.
Both UCI doubles teams l\'On ::;ecoud
round matches Monday. Jablonski and
Glenn Cripe defeated Ward'11:nd Jordan of
Old Dominion. 6.... 6-3. Chappell and
Schneider topped March and J efferson ol
Nicholls State, 8-1, '-2. Both tean1s dre111
first round byes.
Tursday, Junt b, 11172 --------
11~1 lol~p~o!e
•
Baseball Hot
In Windy Cit)'
ClilCAGO (AP) -The mighty S\\•ing of
Richie Allen's bat, along \Vllh a hot home
surge, may be tanning the (.'hicagu \\1h1te
Sux into their first clitnb ov er the ont··
n1il!Jon attcnclancc mark :;1n<:t" 1965.
'fhe :;1xth largest paid CfO\\'d in Ch1c.-ago
b;.iseball history, 51.904 , Sunday \\'atch('d
the \\'hitc Sox trim the New Yor k
Yankees 6-1. 5-1 "'ith Alten·s drama1ic
nu1th-inn1n&. th ree-run pinch homer 11•1n-
n1ng the nigh1 c::i p.
'l'hnt l>oostt'd the \\!h ilt :o;vx' hon1e
record lo 19-3 and their horne a\lendance
for 20 dates lo 331,!148, compared with
195.486 lur the same period Inst year.
TI1e Jure of "b;1t day." causing n1ore
thnn 8.flOO fans to be turned ;1wav <tl th r
g:itc.'>. undoubtcrll.>· w ~is a mi\jor i'a ctor 1n
lht• liii.>gL'.\I (111'110Ul Sil\l'l' 51.067 a!lt'flfh•d
it YJnk .... e.\\'hile So.\' 111gJ11 gan1c .July 26 ,
195-1.
Bu1 the fnct 1h<1t Allen has p111npcd llt•I\'
lite 11110 the \\'hitt Sox hasn ·i htu·t 1ht·
!urnstll(' spin. rithl'r
Alle11, Attl\!l'ican League leader in runs
baltl'd in 1rilh :i7. has hnffled. int r ig1Jed
and no1v a11·t'd the \\'hiTe So.\ since he
signed fur a rt'pur11~d ~!:l:i.OOO l:ist 1\pnl I.
TtH' fo rll)Cf lrotililP<i sia r ul 1h1•
Phil:idelphi<i Phils. S! Ltll!IS C:1rd111;ils
a!ld Los Angc!t>s l)(xlgers missed !hr 1·n·
tire sµri ng lraini11g periud_ Ht• c;une lo
terms just as the play('r .-;1n k1> derailed
the sla11 of the !972 season.
RICHIE ALLEN
A11gels Test
Re surrrence b
The Anteaters closed fir st day action
y.·ith five points, the maximum they could
muster from the number or rnatchcs
scheduled. Each bye is a\varded a point if
the player or doubles combine i'J !lUC·
cessful in second r ound competition.
.J:~rl-, 1Jru!l;1nu.:r. for1nt'r ll untingtun J~cath High
alhlclc. ue t ~ thr uul <1t second base on Oakland's
i\like t:p~le i1\ 1\Jonday night Oakland downed Cleve·
ta11cl, 3·2 in
four a! hat s.
IO innin gs 13ro'1an1cr had 011r hit 1n
But since then. t•verythin~ Alltn h:i~
done for the \\'hitc Sox hns bl'Cll 1rith
clr>ss c1nd clout. Ill' h<1S bl'C n c:har 1n 1n~
11·11h !he lll'l\'S 1ncd1a and i.': !Ii<' l'l11b
lt·:1dcr for !ht• ;;urpri..;111,l! 1c:1n1 11·h 1ch 1s
spcond 1n the Arncrie~111 Lcagur \Vf•st
11·1th a 25-17 recor·d
111 Detroit
Leading the team standings are Rollins
College (Fla.) and Cal Poly (San Luis
Obispo), each with seven poi nts follo\v ed
by Samford with six.
S1torts 111 Briet:
Rain was predicted today in the hot.
humid midwest territory where lhf'
NCAA con1petllion is taking place 1vith
11ction in the tournament subject to
p1>5t'ponemen1. The championship is r>:·
pe:cted to be completed on Friday, ha r-
riftg a turn in the weather.
F or1ner Fig liter Caught
. 'r ... With Bu1·glary Tools
First Round Singles
Greg Schneider I UC! t dt-f. Larry
Lineberry (Old Dominion !, fi..4. 6-L
Bob Chappell. Greg Jablonski and .Jun
<Jgle all drew first round byes.
Second Round Double~
Jablonski and Glenn Cripe ~·UC!) def.
\Vird and Jordan (Old Don1iu ion) 6-4 . li-3.
Chappell and Schneider IUC I) def.
r-.1arch and Jefferson (Nicholls State! 6-1.
6·2.
Tea1n Standings (fi rst dav) -Cal Poly
(San Luis Obispo) and Rollins CollcgC
(Fh1.) 7: Samford College (Ala.) 6:_ UC
Irvine 5.
FOX GIVEN OK,
RETURNS TO DllTY
SAN FRANCISCO -Charlie Fox.
manager of the San Francisco Giants,
11·<1s told Monday by doctors at St. Luke's
llospital that he apparently v.·as free of
the kidney stones 1vhich hod hospitalized
him last v.·eek .
rox, 50, is expected to be back manag-
ing tonight when the Giants open
a three.game home series against the SL
Louis C1rdinals.
r-.lO L'i\1T KISCO. N.Y -Forna·r rnid -
dlc,,,·eight fighter Joey Archer . J4. \\'as
arrested ea rly Sunday by poli ce 11·ho said
he and another man ll'erc surprised in an
apartment hou.se laundry room
burglary tools
1rith
Arther and Anthony Lupo , ;;J, 1rerl' ;ir.
rested after an 1111\0 r·l1a.sC' hy r:1·dlord
'fown police
Archer hasn't fought ~inre 1967 1\·hen
he lost to Emile c:riffi1h . his secon<l
straight unsuccessful bid for the 1111d-
dle1veighl chan1pionship.
Jn !970 .. '\rcher "'as accused uf cun-
tcn1pl for refusing to ansv.·rr question s
before a grand jury probing a theft ring.
Archer \l'iJS i1l'ld on S2.WO bn il u11
ch<1rgl'S ot second dt•grcl' burgl;iry and
possession of burglary tool.<: ,,.
OE:'\VEH. -1\lcx Han num, coal'h and
general manager of the Denver Rockets
!\tonch1y reports 1hat Denver's American
Baskt'tb:iJI Association franC'h ise hRd
ask ed ro be "put on ice" tempvrarily
were "e/lmpletcly un fou nded."
Hannun1 1ras res ponding to a report in
~londay's edition of the Greensboro. N.C ..
Da ily 1't111's 11·hich .said the Nar1011<1I
Basketball Associ;Hion 1rou!d i'Jbsorh
Dodge1~s Test '71 Ne111esis
As Cl1icago Invade~ LA
LOS AN'GELES -At best. the Los
Angeles Dodgers were med iocre at home
against most teamfi list year. Bul
against the Chicago Cubs, they weren 't
even that goocl.
The Cubs. 1vho arrive here tonight for
lhe first of a lhrt·e-game series, "'On
Jun' i Junt ·1
June 1
J une '
Dodgers Slate
-'" Ol"'M tn l!:l'I l'40J Dodgtrs VI, C~lc•uo 7·SS P.m.
Oodgers v1. (h;cego I ,5 p,01.
l>Ddprt VI. Chl(IQG J :SS p.m. OodO•r1 v1. l'llhbu•u~ ___ i ·ss ~.m
eight games out of 12 fron1 tht
Dodgers in 1971. the best rn;irk of an.v
team against Los Angeles . In Dodger
Stadium Chicago won five out of
six, contributing heavily to the Dndgers '
disappointing 42-39 record at home.
Particularly disastrou s to the locals'
hopes w~ a four·gnmc series \\.'ilh U1
Durocbtr's men just before the All-St11r
breek. when the Dodgers had closed to
within 3~1 games of fir st-place San f~ran
cis<o .
1be Cubs won alt four, none by more
than two runt, and Los Angeles never got
!'loser to fir s! u11t!I H1P last thrC'c 1veek!'
of the Sl"ason.
Al Downin~. 2·2. 11ill :slarl againsl
Ch icago's Bill 11.:inds. 4-1, in tonight's
opener. l'i'lirings for the next tv.·o gamei
\\•ill be Bill Singer against Burt Hooton
and Tomn1 y John ag<1inst Fergwon
Jenkins.
Despite taking l\\:o out of three from SI.
Louis l:ist \.\'eckcnrl . the Dodgers lead
streaking Ci ncinnati by just one-ha lf
game in the National ika~ue. West. es the
Reds go for their eighth straight win
tonight in New York. The Houston Astros
have dropped 111 games back.
The Dodgers wind up their homestand
this weekend with three games against
!he Pittsburgh Pirates. Manager Walt
Alston, pleased with his pitching, is hop-
ing that three key pl ayers -\\lillie
Davis, WlJUe Crawford and Bill Ru ssell
-will break ool of hitt ing slumps.
Devis' average has dropped to .2SO and ,
Crawrord is dow n to .23.'l Russell. well
over ,$00 most ol the se<1son, has dipped
to .276.
suinc ABA tcain:;. 1rh1lc o!hers 1roul<l lX'
dissolved.
The report said IJenver had asked 1u br
"put on ice" for three yc<i rs until ;i
suita bl e arcn<J could be built and ;ip.
proved b.v the NBA
'"It's con1plelely u11J1lu11dcd ." ll;111nu1n
):aid. "It sounds l1k1· su1ncone's p1p1.·
dreani. -"You c;111·1 Just g11 arounU s<·u11l111f(
franchises li ke that. .. ,,.
EYSS ES, France -A prisoner dur 10
be fref'd this v.·eek after st>r1·ing a Jl)..yrar
pris011 ter1n a~ked the 1\·arden to keeµ
hi111 !oc ked up !1vo n1ore weeks.
Th<' reason? He is a star pl ayer on tht'
prison soci.:er tcan1 and his release 1rould
depri ve his team of a va!uabl(' pla~'f'r 111
lh!' French rriSQns Cup tourna1nc111 ,,.
i)ENV EB -Sport parachulisL Tony
llamiilgucbi bailed out and went up -nol
dov:n -4JOO feet 1rhe11 he >1as caught 111
an updraft. He \1·as carried al ofl for
<ibout 15 minutes in a h<iilstorn) as lightn-
inR flashed about him. Hamaguchi. 25.
finally rnanaged to spin his chut f' an t.I
d•·stcnd sa fely Sund:i .v. ,,.
Sl'lll.\l!,FIJ·:Lll. Ill -I-' I <1r1 d :1
South ern reta111{'d its hold on !he NCA1\
College Df1·1s1011 \\'orld Series baseball
c·ro11·n late ~'fonday with a 5-1 drubbing of
~an Fernando Valley Stale.
The victory cnmc on the fou r-h11
pitching of Jay Smith and a three·run
double in ihe second y.•hich 1viped out
Valley State's early 1-0 lead . The fourth
run caTne 11·hen Dancy scampered across
!he plate at the end of the inning on a
si ngle by John Carroll. ,,.
i\LGUSTA, i\1ainc -Fonner Brooklyn
l:>od&er first basen1an Del Bissonette re·
1nained in critical r.ondition at a hospltal
~fonday with what police termed a seH-
infllcted gunshot l\'OUnd.
1'he 72-rear-old Bissonette \\'as found
1vounded Saturday in an a pple orchard in
his native \V inthrop. He had been rC'-
1>0rted in poor health recently. ,,.
i\11NNEAPOLJS, Minn. -Former L:.S.
Olympic hockey coach M u r r a y
Williamson is expected to become
general manager of the Philadelphia
Blazers or the ne1v World Hockey
Association, the J\1inneapolis Tribune!
reported today.
\Villlamson. who reti red after coaching
!he U.S. Olyn1pic team to a silver medal
last \Vinter, m11 y also be c0tich of the new
team, the Tribune reported.
· La~k of· Work B11gs l'lantle
TUCSON (AP) -For 18 yea rs. Mickty
Mllltle kept busy knocking out homers
and tnU:lng batting marks for the New
Yott Yanke<is.
Mantle said ht 'fO.uJd be particularly recoptlve to a monagln( olfer.
"If I WJI offered a cood deal. I woulu
t o-nlider it," he said. 1'Bueball l1 all I
bave ever known. I lrltd 'vo rk ing ii
month as a coach with the Yankees. I
didn'I Uk• that loo much."
One thing J\1antlC' knows Is behind him
are his d•ys as an active plnyer. ·
"It was time to quit," Mantle said. "11
got to where I couldn't score from second
on singles. I couldn't drive in runs the
way 1 USCd to. I hated to gjve up the
$100!000 a year. but It wa.1 lime. I didn'I
real y pin y very gOOd thole last four
years."
fl1anUe played in an old ti mers came in
L.~Ji Angeles Sunday "nd he came to
1\1cson 1t'londay l-0 award trophies to Lil ·
tie League adn1inistrators.
"I'd rather be busy," he l'!Aid. "I don't
like loafing around. I'm onl y 40 and I reel
J1still have !half my life to lead."
Mantle said he lost tats Job as a SPorts
announcer ror NBC because of the loss ot
cigarette advertla1Qi revenue.
''When they took the clgarette ads out,
thtJ hld to cut out I lot al othtr thing•."
he said. 111 was one or the things they cut
ou : '"
ABA to Fold?
Owner Lashe s
Babbling Idiots
Hl CJl.\10'.'l"D. Va . ~A I' i
l'ort-in:in. O\\·ncr of tl1e V1rg1111 ;1 Squirt•S
of the An1cr1c<1n Baskct.b.'lll A.~s,i(·1:1t1011.
s:11d .\lnncl:iy reports th;1t tht· ABA >1 111 llt:'
nbs:lrbed b.1· tht· :\n1111n;~I B:isl;ctball
A.-;soc1::il1on t\'ert• The "h;1bllli11g of 1d1nt:-"
A story in lilt· {;n·en~bflrn. \' C. Uailv
1'"rw~. <.:l!inp. ;in 11n1d rnt111cd sourl'C. s:ii(l
\lond;1.v the AHA ll'ould t·ea.-;;' tu ex 1 ~!
af!cr ,\BA n1eet1ngs .lunt' J:l-Hi
'['he Sil fl)£' report ~.1id the Virg111i:1 tr<in·
1·l11sc y,·as "heavilv In rlebt to Ille ABA
And n1ay not bl' ac.repterf"' into tl1c NBi\.
Foreman said this w;1s a "misun·
derst.:Jndi11g·· b,v the peopl e 1vhu <ll'l'
sa~'ing 11 "
Ill' s<1id lhe f1nane1al sitt1nt1Dn ul lhr
Squire;; is al! righl.
Tiu• Daily .\'('\I'S s ror.v s:11d C;lr(Jl1n;1
c·ougar,<; j1\111rr 'f'edd 1-lu11ch;1k. un hrhall
of thr Al-~A . h:1 ~ bCl'll llll'C'llng .'il':tTl'lly
''1th 1\'BA cu1nmissionl'r \Valtrr l\enn1.1d1·.
1'he rc1X>rl said they have reached
agreement to allo1v six or scvf'n ABA
el ubs to enter the NB . ..\.
Squires admi nis trative l'il'c pre.>iident
.Joh11 Kerr sa id "we h;i1·e no knn11·ledgc u!
a111· TIC\\' plans lor :1bs:irption by Ilic :\'L\1\.
"f<~arJ Fore1na11 1a lked to Kennedy and
il'1unchak ;ind b.1th of lhPn1 ~aid they
did11'L kno11· :-111,1 tt11ng :ibout JI . ' l\('rr
said
'\\'c feel l1kr its a ru1nor, ·hf' added_
"'It 's ju.~t Th(' f1~111rnt of son1ch1dy's 1n1 ·
o:ig1n;1\JO(l -
As for thl' Squ11·1·s fu1:1ne1al pos1l1un
J\L'l'I' said lhl' h '<llll ha s ··~olJ rn ir•·
se11son tickets than any othl'r team in tht
ABA . \\le feel like we are one of the bet -
ter franchises in the leagur.
lintil ~und:iy·s Sl'l'Olld g<init·. Alll'n h;1d
~>layed every inning of lhl' tcarn·s firsl 4!
ga n1es. Then, Chie:igo n111n;igt'r Chuck
l'anner elected to re st hi1 n.
\\/hen Allen's name failed to appear in
the second game starting lineup, Chicago
0>11ner John Allyn al;iriningly asked 11·h~·
Tanner repiled . "l'n1 just going to rc!'i1
hirn . I'll use him 11·hen 11·e get tht• basf'.~
loaded. He'll hit a homer :n1d 1rin 1t for
us."
The base,; \\'t'l"l'n "t exa ctly loaded
Rill r-.1elton h;id 11;1Jked and J\J:kr
1\11drl•11·s s1ngltd -11hen T;innrr sent
Allen in to pinch-hit for Bich i\loralcs. 111
;1 rare pinch-h111cr role. Allen blnstcd ;i 1-
1 pitch bv Sp:irky Lyl" for his ganH.'·1rin-
n111g hoffier
"Allen hits thr ball hurdcr th:.-:n
;111ybody r 1·{' evl'r :;een. and l'on-
sistcntly." said AndrC\\'~. "lie can n1akr
,vnu fee l very \1·e:ik. just \\'B tching hiin. J
l·an'1 e1·en handle his 40·ounc1• boil and h('
swi ngs it like a JO-ounctr"
l'he \\lhite Sox last broke 1he Olll'·
rniHion 1nark al the g<1 te in !~l65 11'i!h
l.!30.519. The ir 1971 attcnd<1nce 11·ns
83JJl9J <'Ind 495.355 in 19/0 IV h (' 11
rumors 1r!'r(' ::;trong that the \\'hilr So:o..
inight be shifted to anoThcr city.
Hennelt Cops
AAU Decathlon
$""''""'·'"" o• Iona ''"• ··~oh Mcrniav '" I"• 1.AtJ d•c•thlc,,
l lO·m•"·r h•Qn nv•al•• t, (";eorne Pann•I. W•<· '"~"'· TC I•./, !II I'!>"" 1, John W~·~·nTLn, ',ov:he'n c~r.1 ,:,,.,,, l•S. SIY J, Jeli ii•nn,,••• C•c~lnl~n Club of l.m••ic , ,, 8. a/o. •, Fr!'d D"o'" lt><. ~'<t•I•, s• l\\l Bd ~. R'c< W"nam.i~e•, une•
l•t "'"d. 11.1 EJ I
t).,1 u• I l"o•v i<;•~w~rd, (lub W~!I , \31 s. 8'6 I W~n•r.i••••, lSl·•. 8111!. J, Borry l<ino, Club West 1$0·1. 196 •, 5~nnlsl•r. l•S·I IOI. 5, P•itr Gt l:>boo!t
G•-•M 5•it•in, l •l·), 716
Pel• V~Vll-1. J•!I l1e•1n'1• ''"my 16·C'" 1.0l• l.
Jl:•< H3rv•Y A;r Fc-c• IS·C, ~SO. l, W•n•m•~!!<. 1•
e'. ~I ]_ ' (;,1,,b!'I', 1 .. 0, •. ~I" l, W••••M•n, P~nn•I
•n<I i.;.n~. IJ·O, J• ~
J., "'"' I. W ·~·n1,n 1CC-11. 11~ 1, Bann•'i''·
.,. 1' r• 'J. VJJn"'' 1ke1 •'>-t. " P~ntt~I. !9!·1. 75'> l. l>•~nen. lli-W ~9'!
I ;.r<J m•1•" 1. 5,,,,,.11 • Of ' Ju 7, l'l•nnl~t~·,
• ,, •.Ill. J, f/Jfl.<n n, • 11. I ~II •. He•vey, • ll.' \.65 ;, K•nwMd, _,39 l, 5;i;
T;!•I t>l'MS I, l!~nn•IT 7.9rn. l l!~nn.,1-.. J .e~.
' Wl•l<•n!ln, 7,tol. '· W~n~m"~"'· 1.M)J ~. K•n...,•rn,
l,J.!i(I, 6. P~nn•I. l,]16. I H~•v•v. I.Ill I, R~v HuPO,
Clut> W•"· 11,!!1 0"'"" d•n nc1 tln•M'>.
Just Gettitag Acq11aitated
])).';!'HUIT (:\l'I Thr s uddrnl ~
rcspcc1able Cali fnr111J 'Ing(']., niay fi nrl
OU!. tOlllf:hl If liiL'J''!'t• rpad,V (OJ' th(' big
t1111e .
l 'h(' Angel~. 1v1t11 t•1ghl victori es in their
!<Jst HJ g<tn1c,;. t;il'e 111·0 nf the bc.,t
pHcl1C'rs in th(' An1c: 1c:a11 Lcaf:l!C in a
fy.·in1ghl doulileheadcr <1ga1ns1 the Detro it
'l'igers. leaders in the AL East
.loe Colenu1n. 20-9 last year ;111d 7-4 lh 1~
.lUfl• ~
.Ju•·~ I
J<Jfof t
"'" Garn~< o" llMPC 11101
A"Q~I' ~I 0-h~ t l?f
"~~~I ~! Oct,Col
(' '" ( '"
. ]\ ~ '"
~\ .: n>.
:-ca110n. <1nd ,\J1ckcy [..(>lich. ot! 1'1 nn 8-.1
;;t;irt .J.fter his :.µcc!.J.cular 2:r14 :.(•:1!i'on nl
19i1 . take thl' 1nound as the Tigers lr.v t 11
Pxtcnd !heir surprising :i·~·g;nn<' 1(~;1rl
o .. ·cr Baltl!nurc and Cleveland
C!ydC' \\'ri ght. 4-2. and rookie [Jun 1:0::.(',
1·!1. slar1 f11r lh1• Angels. 11h1 I!·~.~ 1ha11
t11u \\.'eek~ :1gr) 11·ere flound r rin <:! 111 la ~t
pl<Jcc 1n the \Vest. 10 gan1es beJiJ11· /h1•
break-even .5Qll figure.
C;~lifomia's reco rd is now 20 ·2~ 11111'1 thP
f.Jurrh-piJCl' Angels have apjl,1rt·n ll v
discol'ered rhe long b;ill ·
!\en .\!c.\lul len. their leading hJn11· run
hitter J11s1 yc.1r. hit his fir,;t !11u h,•n1crs
of the season l:i~t 11·eckend to h1·lp thc111
t:Jkf' two out of three fr(llll Cl('l'Clanrl.
Hookic Ll'f' St;inton h:i s rehnundcd fn11n a
11•otlul slart <Jnd st;1r terl to provi{tc thr
p;1\\·er 1hL' Angt ls \\'ere hoping for 1vhr11
1h1'.v g(>I hi111 lron1 ,'\t•11· York in the J1111
J•rcgosi trade.
Two mol'c new add111ons, Vada P in~nn
and Bob Oliver. have <iddl'd some punch ,
l-'i11.s1111 wtlh a clutrl('ad1ng :n2 b<1tr1ng
a•·er.1gc :ind Oliver \\'ilh f11ur hon1r run~
and 21 runs hatted 111 Sec:ind bas<:mr111
Sand.~ Alnrn:1r has pullf'tl his average up
to .293. and ccnterfield1·1· !\en llerry,
recovered fron1 an injury. 1s hilling .310.
On lhf' nlht·r hand. the 1\nge1~· pitching,
supposrd 10 he their strong 1xunt. 1s still
~ulferlng fron1 injur1•·s ,, n d v
~·fesser s1nith·,, ai!inr:: fini,:rr. \Vright:~
.~ore ~h.iulder -anrl irv·o11~-•~!<'nr.v . \\ith
1\lolan R.1·;111. Rick Clark ;:ind Hudy ,\-lay
.sharing !he label.
Cemal K1m1ci, of 1'tanbul, /right) lands a right to
the head of Angel Robinson Carela , of Venezuela.
during their IO-round bout here in New York ~Jon ·
day. Kan1aci scored a unanimous decision in 1 ho
fi ght that was the Amclican deb ut for both llghters.
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DAILY P'ILOT l"lttl9t ·~ Olt1111 wttl11
U.S. Polo
U1iit Has
Area Aces
The Oran&e Coast area will
be well represented in a pair
of international '4'aler IXlln
nM1tches between the
YugO!!avia National tt'an1 and
United States National ag.
gregation to be pln~·ed :it
Ney,·port Harbor Hi gh &:hoo!'.!
new Olympic poul, June 13-14
Mike ti.larli.n, one of the nU·
lime great sv.hnnung ;1nd
y,•ater polo players at UC
Irvine and a mernbt-r uf l'(lHt:h
Ed Ney,·land's Nlti.1A te1un 111
the devt\opment circu it. is 11ne
of the stBrs.
Area residtnts ~:ric 1.111
droth (a former co-C I F pl;iyer
of the year at Ne111por1 H:irOOr
Tut1'f•r. J~nt 6, lt72
e ~ Tett • D11in l A1tiU
fluid • Remove Pin • Visu1I
ln8'11Ction • Ad just Binds &
Link1gt • Ntw Pin G1ske1 •
C1"• S11"'' I Scr .. 111.
"C•11t1lltt-Pff11dttlltll ...
lnt1rn11ion11I / Co1 st-to-Co1st
@~an
TRANSMISSION
'
•
DAil Y PllOT jf)
COSTA MESA
1934 Newport Blvd.
645-7570
SANT.I. AN.I.
~~~• l>l~S
lONCio If.A.CH
''" F Pu,,•~~·· h , 011)3'
WHITTifR
1 ..... H W"•'· •.1 L• ••1 "tW.'1
DOWNfl
n i.1 L•~'"'OOC! e·.~ w• 1)t1
MON. THR U FRI. 8 lo 6 e SAT . 8 lo
EDISON HIGH'S DAVE POWELL OVER A HURDLE INT HE STATE MEET. HE WAS 6TH IN HIS HEAT IN 14.8. -----
and current UCLA star) and
Dean '\'l l!eford, are 11!so 1ncn1-Blll,d 11cs .~ Co nquered
A:\i\cll NC INl;: Tri tons
Miss Title
CH IND -San Clemente
High School missed winning
the CIF team gol f cham-
pionship by one st roke ~1onday
on the \Vestern I/ills Country
Club course, here. whl!e Hun-
tington Beach Jligh placed
fifth, three strokes off the
pace of champio n S an ta
Barbara Jl igh .
Santa Barbara. paced by
medalist Tom Flanagan who
fired a three-under-par 69 and
runnerup Bruce Bla key in sec-
ond pla ce with a 71. copped
the team title with an ag-
gregate score of 383.
San Clemente tied with Rio
Mesa. San ri.1arcos a nd
Foothill for second place ~ith
:JM. F'oothill won a playoff for
!he team trophy but all four
schools \\'ill be li sted in second
place.
Individual scores for the San
Clemente tea1n included : Scott
Johnson 78, Steve Rli1ger 75,
Marty Morganllli 77 , Duane
liilborn 79 and Ri c h a rd
Bernard 75.
Huntington Beach, all alone
In fifth p1acc with 386. had
these individua l s core s :
Rawn \Vanamaker 77. Phil
Clark 78. Kelly Gifford 78,
P...art deBoe 78, a n d P a t
Galvin 75.
Other Orange Coast area in-
dividuals competing separate-
ly and their scores included :
Mark Les (Estancia) 75. Tony
Campergher rMarina ) 75,
Dick Mitchell (Mater Dei) 76,
Larry Collins !Estancia) 77,
Terry Knight (E!ila ncia) 77.
Don Brown (Fountain
Vallev) 78, Jim Cote (Corona
del ·~tar) 78. Mark Hoeg
(Laguna Beach ) 79. Tom
Martin (r.lission Viejo) 79.
Ken Kal mbach ( Ne,, .. port
flarbor ) 81 and Gerald llannon
(\Vestminstcr ) 90 .
Horses Run
At Alamitos
Wednesday
Los Alamitos Race Courie
opens its 22nd year of quarter
horse racing Wednesday night
as a crowd of 12,000 persons
is expected to take in the
opening nine-race program
that includes the featured
$10,000 Inaugural for 3-year
and older horaes going 350
yards.
First post for the 79 nights or racing will be 7:45, with
nine races being sf.aged night-
ly. The track will be open six
nights per week. '11onday
through Saturday, for the 13-
wee k session that e n d s
Wedne!day, S.pt. 6.
'I1>e nl&htly double, or daily
double, haa been dilcarded,
being replacod by a SS oxacta
on the flrst race. There al!O
will be '5 exactas on the sixt h
and ninth r&ee.s .
Royal Doulton cnptured the
Inaugural lut year, ed&lng
Bklndy Rockett by a n ... In
11.9 second• tor ~ yud1.
Royal Ooulton is _ ellgible for
the 1n1ugur11I again tlilt 1r.1r.
Following WroJ1esda)''I 'pro-
gram, the feature r a c e
schedule at Los Alamitos in·
eludes $8,000 War Chtc for I·
you and older distance run-
ners going 870 yardl around
one tum Frldny nlaht, 110,000
Shue Fly for S.yenr and older
sprinters racing 350 yards
S.turday evenln;: and the
18,0C» Leo for two-year-oldl
clashlllll SIO yardl Monday
nl!lht.
.. "
..
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.,!-~~-,
'r ';
·1'. !'~. ~I y " • ,,A·.~·· t• . }' ~ ~·, ~~-. ,
bers of U1e team. Buth pl:1yrd
Horsn1an Hits 2 Ho1ners
In Legion Baseball Tiff
t'or P hillips 66 duri nt-: lht;
develop1nenl circuit
Cuach of the U.S. Sfjllad 1~
f\Ionte Nitzko1vski, a res1dt'11t
of ~luntington Beach ;int.I he:id
s\.\.·inuning and \va!t·r po!u
coach at Long Beach L'ily
Colleg,. His assista111 1s Art
Lan1bert of De A117.<1. h('ad
Olympic coach in 1968 at r-.lt>X ·
ico City when Nitzko"•s ki \\'as
his assistant.
POLYSCALP 0
Wayne Horsman belted a
pair of home runs to drive in
three run.s but it wasn't
enough as the Fountain Vatley
Am'rican Legion J u n i o r
baseball team dropped a 9-4
decision to host Tu~tln Sunday.
San Clemente split a pair of
weekend games. losing to
Tustin Saturday. 3--0. and
defeating Saddleback Sunday,
5-1. San Clemente is now 4-1 in
league play. Westminster also
split, losing to Buena Park, 4-
1, and defe11Ung Anaheim Hef-
fern, 3-2. Westminster is now
3-2.
Jn other action. Newport
Harbor dropped a p a I r of
games including a htartbreak-
er Sunday, ~5 to Santa Ana .
In this one, Dale Kubeska had
a homer and John German a
triple that !COred ~tark Stam-
bra and Mike Yos t.
li'1Wt1t1111 V111~v 1•1 .. ' ' ' • • ' . ' .. ~ g
g ' ! f , ' ' . ' . ' . • • ' . " .
• 8 ' ' f g
1 ? • • . ' Sew. •r 1nn1t111 ' ' . Foun!t!n V1Utr 010 20I) ~I-• $ • Tl,f1fln 010 lG.I JOx-t 10 J
Cl1rk, 'lb F1rrltll. If KUbllk1, c St1mbr1, lb Voit, lb
Em!r•Y. 11 l.llC o, 211
PatCl..,lk, rf Smith, rl
G1rdn. ct LW>dllon, ~
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J a o o ~ g f l
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s ... n~•v
w11tmln1._r (I)
flrt Clley. cf
Whlltlty, u
Nodl1nd, I!
811k1l1y, ~b
Oeotnhlro1, lb
Tt!lltr, rl-c
H1rrlt , 2b
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ltoHn, 11r
1!1pln(JJ1, rf
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' .• ' . • • ' . ' . ' , • • • • ' . ' . • • • • • • ' ,
Bob Gaughran. a t h l r t i c
director at Santa Ana Col!el(e
and water :sports coach. \\'tll
serve 8.!I team manager .
Phillips will hav·e eight
players on the team after
defeating De Anza Sunday, 5-4.
to post an undefeated record
(8-0 ). Others include Bruce
Bradley, Stan Cole. Hu ss
Webb, Roy Saari . A n d y
Deguise and J lm Slaton.
From the DeAnza leArn arc
Jim Ferguson, Peter Ash,
Gary Sheerer, John Parker
and Barry Wletz.enburg.
Concord's goalie. Mike llog-
gins, completes the l 5-man
U.S. roster for the Europc11.n
trip and the games a I
NetA,.port.
In Europe, the U.S. squad
\Viii play in two tournaments
before returning for a pre-
Olympic training camp. Only :...
11 members of the squad will .
make the Olympic team.
A.n• H•ll•dn 010 ioa oao _ ~ ~ ~ The two games at NewJXlrl
w11rm1n111r oao 002 1ow _ l , 1 will climax a four-ga n1e series )
'''"'"•v 1vith the Yugoslavs i n
s111 c111n11111 111 California. The first two f •• r llrM
J Sprl11om1n, 10 J o 1 o games will be played in
1.:;1 .. q , '' 0 0 Northern California, June lO-wM11k1r, •I 2 o o o
Wtlthtr. rf 1 0 O o IL
Re•c ~en, c l o 1 o Tickets for the Ncv.•porl Wright, cf l o o o
• >. ,,,.n•ilu,.Uy d•••I
oped l<on •pot•nl
••cond 1<olp
•uppotling no1v•ol
hu"1on l\oi•, r~a! "oo
nolvral "' you< own.
New ~oh opp1<1t1 IO
. b1 11rowin11 fro"1
y••'••doy'• boldn1u.
'0lY SCA.L, 11 in•h lbl•
lo 1h• ey• O• loud>.
!>ltep. owim, p loy,
>h<1w1<, 111 the ,.;nd
Or her loule your
hai• und•1•ctobl1.
e POLY ~(.fiLP m.-,..,
"'H Vl'IO, •urot •1', l~re,
nylon. "'" ~ord wue ~·lirl>•IC~ ~b•OlllO
Hair rolar wdl npr l1d1.
~•t POLY ~CA LP
l~EN YOU OECIOEI
•
12 MONTH LABOR & MATERIAL GUARANTEE
HAIR REPLACEMENT CENTERS
Costa Mesa
21 29 H1rbor
CALL
642-1781
T • prov• IMlr 11.t•
p1rlor 111u1llty 111d
1v1r1nt11 )' o w r
11ti1fKtlo11 •.. We
tompl•t•lr flnlth •••ry pl1t1 Mter•
"'' l(Ctpl I """II W1 1rt tftt •11 'f
01111 who lie.
Anaheim
3132 W. Lincoln
s 11v• Mlkto1. lb 1 o 1 o games are currently on sale at ,,.
fl. SP•lr>Gm•n, lb 1 o o o the schoo l or from n1embersl=---"-
CALL
827-1120
·'"'' ~ ... ~-~;,,..~-~.;;~~-~~~;;-
OOV'PI•••· lb 7 0 0 0 K d L k A k A d
seolt Mlk1ot, 11 o • • General ac;mi!Sion is $2 and
I
I
!
M<C~O. " ' • • • of the NIMA water polo team. 1" s 1" e to s n y
lhO'l'll lle'I, 1' 0 0 9
s11vro, u o o o -~r-~:v~ed~~oe~a~l.!~ar~e~$3:·:_ __ ...'.::======================== N;1h111, 11 4 0 0 0 ,• Tol1h :n o S O
JI • 6 4 Sew." lft11l1ttt ' ' . N-por'I 010 OOll oo.1---t 6 l
TO!lll
G1•d•l'I Grovt 105 1oa 0111-1 • 1 le.,.. •l' IM11t111
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Tu1!111 010 000 011 -3 ' O
S1n Clt mt nlt 000 0011 OOG -I t O
HB'S TONY CIARELLI
Placed 10th in State Shot.
• ' ' '
Fish Report
N•WP'Oll:T IArt'I L •ft~lll l 1 -6 1 t l!Qlt rt: 3'2 11nd b111, 26 rack cad, u
m1ct11rltl, I bonito. I D•••l''•
l.Mklf~ 1n1l1r1: 2 b1rr1cud1, 30
bonito}. D Cl llCO btu. ,, ml ck•••I.
DANA. WNA•l'-t't 11'11'1' •10 c1 ll~ "-"• lf b1rr1c!ld1, h1ilbur, t m~~A''/i11Dl!-10 1119l1rr: 12 !>fir· "j 1, 5 bonito. ,,, c• lco b111, I
II• I yt, ~ m~o;_kerr), I AN OllO<J (Mv1t1c l11I l"ltrl-ll j
1no11r1: ~ v1\lowl1ll. 7 white 111
btu, ff bof'll!o, l"4 ctllco b1••·
·-· 1111 C\111'11111!1 Ill ..
J. Spr1nomen, lb •
Kin;, II ]
ICfOUClh. Cf,p
•11eh1n. c
Sttvt M!klo1. lb a
Wr111ht, lb-cf "•'"'*'· lb·c Wtlllt ktr, 1t
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'
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Grlfl!n. rl
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.5tn Cl1m1nfa Olll ll'O 101 -S I 2 ,.--------
Baseball Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Ea.st Dlvl.slon
W L Pel. GB
New York 31 13 .705
Pitl!burgh Tl 15 .628 31,~
Chicago 24 18 .571 6
Montreal 19 24 .442 11 \2
St. Louis · 17 28 .378 H\I
Phlladolphia 16 28 .364 15
West Olvl1lon
Dodgen 28 18 .609
Cincinnati 'll 18 .800 ~~
Houtton · 26 19 .578 1 'h
Atlanta 20 23 .466 61yl
San Dle50 16 29 .350 11 ¥.i
San Francisco 17 34 .333 J31f.i
Mtftf1v's ll"vlh P'lttlburtll 11 Sin Ol@'Uo, r1!n
Orlly lllTIH KhldYled
TMllY'I cs.im11
Hik11l'tltl t•oblfl• ~3) 11 PhllldtlJllll1 !frYl'l\l'I 1-J), ll!fhl
All11nr1 Utltod S..) ltf Motll•l•I CMc:AMllY l·Sl, 111t11\t
Clll(INWlll fNOIMI l·1 11 HllW Vtr't fMcAndrtw '-1 1. ni.t11
1'11Ubul'llh (~ ~21 If la!! Di-{1(1,..,. M l.
11111'11
ClllCIN (Hindi •11 11 l• .-...... (()owftl.,. 1·2), llltl\1
Sf. Liii.ili IWIM 4-S) t i kn '''"'1-.. IStone Ml, 111t1'11 ......... .,. .. _
Hll'.lltoll ., f'hlllldtll:ifllt, ""ht
A!IM>ll II N«ltr..,, .rilttft
Clflc1-H at Htw Vlfll, nlfl'il
f'ltttllovf'lft I f Stll Olefe, I, tw1'4'!W.l
(f!ICffD 11 \Ae MilMt&, 11"1111
SI. LIUll It Sin ''•riti..
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Detroit
Baltimore
Cleveland
Booton
New York
Milwaukee
Oakland
MlMesota
Chicago
Angel•
Texas
Kansas City
Eut Dtvl1lon
W L Pct.
21 17 .585
21 21 .500
20 20 .500
17 22 .43CI
18 24 .429
15 23 .395
.690
GB
311
311
6
6\1
7Y,
Weit Olvl1lon
29 13
2116
25 17
IO 24
JS u
17 25
.600 4
.595 4
.455 10
.<09 t2
.406 11
Mt>IMl1,•1 •ttull•
O•~llrid ), Cltv1llf!d 7, II 1111111"9•
MlllMllOll J, t1ttl1Ntrt ! , ... , .. ·--C•lt .... 11 l'NrlfM 4-2 ll'd ll-1.0) '' Ottf'llt
(Ulllch 1-J ind C•llml11 1-4), 2, twl-nltl'lt
M/11nnot• (Ktlf 6-11 11 h ttllTllll'I (f'lllflolr ~I.
ftll hl
Olilltnd 111119 0-U 11 Cltvttaftd fCltlltrt •ll. n1111t
MllWevti;et (lf'fft HI 11 .:._ CM¥ (Ml/l'JrlW
1·11 n~I
Ntw York f~ttitnM ~TJ '' Ttx11 (loJl'l\111 Ml, ,.M
lotftn !S1'9trt 4-1) It Chkl N (WtOll 1-)), ....
DEAN LEWIS
1966 HARIOR ILYD., COSTA MISA
Service and P1rta for All lmporttcl Cora
Mod1rn Body Shop for All Cira
646°9303
Oranro County's Large•t and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer
OVlaHAI DILIVUY l,_CIALllTI
DEAN LEWIS
1972 TOYOTA CARINA
WITH FACTORY
AIR CONDITIONING
s7200 .... MONTH
SM.71 Tetal Dewn -172.11 Tetal
Mtlftttlly hyfMllf. #*21 hr ·:m lioht -_,.,. -1-11/C"Mh -127MJa API 1176 .... ,,..., ... cNlt.
1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN
WITH l'ACTOltY
AIR CONOITIONING
~o ....
MONTH
1111.4' T.-tal O.W.. -Dlhf1 ..
""1M. CMll ~ ~ IML
T & L/APlt 11.M "' -....i1t
1972 TOYOTA Mii II
STATION WAGON
WITH l'ACTOltY
AIR CONOITIONING
sn300 .... 7 MONTH
1147.U T ... I -/IHM T .. ol
-""' Pymt. '°'J:l! lloht Menthl. Ditfwt.. Alta
12.61 (1179111 -.......
cf'tllllt. RT7'fM
•
~ Ricing. 7:45 Man.-8lt.
9tarll -11clly, .u. 7.
Ol 111 -"' Calllomia last )OW, Loe., .... hid the highest per-
centllge of winning 18'f0ritel. The
percentage of faYOrltn In the
rnonoy -them ail, b>: A whapping n'f.I So, come out and
hlY9 the nightim9 of yoor rrfe wtth
the ctwt-snwt l9l Fcx" ldvlnC9 -= Clll '213) 431-1301 or (rn) 527-2231.
3 -I lllrf-Dlr*'v
;
Loa AJamltOs Trues t to Form
Wlltlf Glll•)tlnd on~ wa ,...,.,,
•
•
:t8 DAILY PILOT s Twsd11r. Junt 6. 1*'112
OVER THE COUNTER
NASO Li lli .... 10< Monday, Ju,,. 5, lt72
FINANCE
Parker Gets
3rd A,vard
For Buildi11g
The American Institute of
Steel Consiructlon presented
Its ahnual award for outstand-
ing steel framed buildings to
Parker Hannifin ln Irvine : the
third national award presented
to the facility.
The two preceding were in
the field or ecology' presented
by , Mrs. Ri chard M. Nlxou tn
\\la shlngton, D.C. for the
American In s t i tute or
Nurser.,-men; and in indu stry,
presented by the publishers of
Factory Magazine for the best
plants of 1971.
The award was presented to
Charl es E. Cleminshaw and
Paul G. Schloemer, group vice
presldent11, for Parker, and
John Oay, partner for Albert
C. MaJ!tfu and Assoclates.
meet the $10,000
Microdata
Eyes Move
panther* .••
PANTERA
by deTomaso , .. Imported for Uncoln-l\fercury. Italian
ooachwork c1·eated by the brilliant Ghia Studlo1 of Turin.
Ford designed thr. 35 1 ClO .JV V·8 engine. Four ,vh~l ln-
deJX"nent &uspension and mid-ship engi ne placement Five
speed gear box, fully synchror.lzed •••
•Pantera .. , Italian tor Panthrr .,.
i11 +h• opinion of mtny nation1ltv known tccountin9 firm1, tli•
moil w11iq1,11 l11r•1li1U1r i11v11tm111t •v111.bl• tod1y i1 111 Fl-IA-
111> R.•lrl•bilit11ion limit•d P1rln1rihip .,.Ith 1p1ci1! fiv1 v11r
writ1-o ff for r1~1 bilit 1tlo11 1xp•ndt11r11.
Limited Amount
Av.1ilable
M. f'. KRUSE &
TlllM P,.IM" M1•t MMf
,. ... r11 •111111lr1nitn11 fl•Ullll
U .... r '"'-""' JU ., 1111 Ha-t-I ......... Acl,
co., INC.
M~MI ER PAC IFIC COAST STOC K EXCHA NGE
2100 N. M.lln StrHt
S1nt1 Ana, C1llf. 92706
JOSlrH T. ACONl/JOHN f, •••AN
'" , ... ,..,. ........ ., '""' 147•1f41
r - ---- - - --
I would lik1 :nformtlio11 conc1r11l119
FHA-l J6 • llmit1d '••f111"h!p.
.,
N''"' ... , ... , ......... , ... , , .. , ... , 'hi111 •••• , •••••
Addr1'l , ••.••.•• -, •• , , , • • • • • • C ity ••••• , , , , , ••••••
~-------------------~
MUTUAL FUNDS
rm ,.
•
COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST
• -•
•
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p
'J. . ·' , .. ;.1.
l." • •C-
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Monday's CJosing Prices-Complete Nelv Y ol'k Stock Exchange Li st
Stock Prices Off
In Sl1arp Decline
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock pnccs declined
•harply today •• ll>• m1rket r•actcd lo profit tak
ing tnd disappointing economic nev. s Trading "as
moderate
Analyst.3 blamed lht drop partly on n e \VS that
Inflation tind unempl oyrnent last month were at
about the sa me rate as they \\ere before economic
controls "ere imposed last August
Con1plete Closin11 Prices-A111erica11 Stoel' E:xcha11ge List ~ ~
Sl l•t N•I
ChlllS ) H l b L•W Cl•I• Cnt
'•IN NII
tntlt I H tll L•w Clel.e Cnf
'
l •ltl " tllllll J H Ill ltW (;It I (~I
l •I• "' !hi> l tl '" I,.., t 1 • C t
OAll.V 'fLOT
-i!Tf -
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jhfl I H tn LI W C l \I C
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" ''" .. ' '"' ' . • • ~ 1 • 1! •••
t
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS
I •
CBS • 7:30 -Election Coverage. Continuou~ J
COYer11e of the important California primary is of·
tend tonight -on the presidential' race and !S01l'le r,
hotly e:ontet;ted ballot proposition s. , ABC D 8:30 ~ .. 'rhe Hound of the Baskervilles." ·
A new version of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle 's cla ssi C'
starring Stt"•art Granger, \Villiam Shatner and "·
Sally Ann Ho\ves.
NBC e 11 :30 -··fate 1<; th e 1-lunter," Glenn ~
Ford and Nan ry KY.'a n star in this 1964 drama .
KTLA IJ I L30 -"Virgin Island." This 1958 ad --.
venture sto ry features John Cass avetes and Sidney
Poitier.
KTI'V m 12:00 -"The Li ttle Minister " Kath-
arine Hepburn as she was nearl y 40 years ago in
this old time-romantic co med y with John Beal.
s:•
Tuesday
Evening
JUNE I
D CALIFORNIA PRIMARY * News/Election Covt••c•
st1rt1 at 5 PM.
t:e•:rn eaa "••• "' .... ..., I (I) WIW Will W•t "'"-"""' ... ".
CD Mery 4inft111 SM• 'Couplt~"
GuHts: N11icy Sine!rt ind Hu1li
L1mb1rt: P1tty Dukt and Jo~n A5l1n;
l•c~it ind Htzt! V11non a Codlt1y Piie•
t:OO B KNIT Eltdion Cllre111• Jerry
Dunphy i nd n1w1men ccntinut with
1t1!4wld1 and IOCll results.
(j) KIWlll Fift.O (R) S!IVI prepue'
to cope with 1 c:onvid's escap1 hem
prlton ind llis sus pee\1d 111-up will1
• nold·lime mobster
I!) Lt Cri1lll l itll Cri•d• 9 TM Ylr1l11lan
~ ......
9J 1-! t :30 IJ S.C.IMI lttk
I ltoiil&tPIQe LHtt CIJ Ill N•n e fl""'* {jJ) Sptcill If tfl• Wttk "To1ether,
i """'"' lf"I A Chuck M1n1ion1 Conctr!'.
Te 11 All11t11•ctd Im Aw11tu11
U,. .... , OJ bci111 Ft111 Koll)"ll'Ood r11t
l:lO D lihrit: (C:) (90) "'1'111n1 R.W 10:00 CJ Callftn1la Pri1111ry Livt tove1111
., LI ........ Conti (dFI) '19 -from t ltttlon cenlrtl 11 KNBC.
Horst l uchotr, 6in1 Lollobri1id1, 8 m Nnn
JoH fttrtr, Leuis Jouuhn. D CIJ (j) rill Dictio n '72 Calilor-(() en""" Wsl1r Crankit1 nil, Ntw Jtrscy i nd New M1x1t0 I MM' lrtffht SIMw primary reports,
TM llflll NII C1J llldlon C.W.r11• Harold Keen
YM1 P..,l1'1 FilM F1stlv1I (R) i nd R1y Wil1on report hvt from eM "911111 "Frink G•llo" fl Cort!l.
Ill Tf'Nltltt G litly 4ir1h1111 Cn11.l41
ft INlll Actt1 ~ Dtcti111 ?Z News Di11clof Carl CllD QuiM Cert.I Ettl C.llCion? Sisskilld tnd newsm1n Jchn Beatty
U)Vldttla ,,_ Sho• ho$! this loc1l 1lection cover1rt
• N111btr., Elliot Minl1 (It Stl1rl ll Ad¥tntut1
(I) Tnilfl • Con111utnus
~::;:'Mr Ullt?
IDI LM Lucy
.............. t
f£I ,.,,,. llp
B> u .. llllpril t11 ~ Cimini
ft !GI Tilt
7:J08 Dtctlell C.-11• Cont1nuou~
cov1r111 of th• C.lifomil J<lmary,
Otll of tM most hnportant 1ltctions
In tll• P'rHldlrrtl•I Itel II Wtll IS
1111 UwoMnc hotly COllfnted h llol
proposltiOl'IS,
D CALIFORNIA PRIMARY * ELECTION COVERAGE
D Clllftfllil f'rllllfJ Liv• aw1r11t
from tleetloll t111tnt 1t KNBC.
It Mwll: (C) {Zhr) "Ac:ddent"
(dra) 'Ii -Dirk flo11rd1, St•nl1y
ltktr.
D Cil 00 m Th• Mtl s,iud
"0.Ult et t Nobody" (II) A wom1n
Is kill•• b1 • flit·r11" driver 1nd Pet1
II 11111 IHI • ., tilt tur•t.
[Jll s,.cill tf tht WeK (R ) "To·
11thtr, A Chuck M1n1ionr CcllCUl~
Ql! Wl1111 II Adwnturt
a!) ,utlval Ml•icln1
qi La LIJ'lldt d• lal1m1t
10:3011 c.ti• P11t111•'• J1Jk-l•c•
D Cil (j) ED M1rcuJ Wilby, M.O •
"[ello from Ancthtr Wcrld" (RJ The
lilt ol 0111 of D1, Welby's p1tit nh ''
11W11n11red by !ht Wfon1 diaznosis
b1 • ,oun1 n1urolo11st
QI 1111 ea., Shtw
IE LI Sttanio m C.11 er tllt West a Mn: "ff11t111n h &irt" m C..dt11dt C11l,lbl1
IJ M"": "C"'st 1 Cr~td Sflld.
1w" (mys) '53-llichird Todd, Anni
Bider. m TrllUt tr C.ittiutnttt
Ill Dtrid , .... $htw
(]I) c.111, FJKtient
ti) m Jl1ws
lJ.I Ktltllllo, (R !
,
j
ENTERTAINMENT
ft1 onty I I <1ll
P erfor111.s
On .S r1e,:iul
Uy C\'.'\TlllA l.IJ \\HV
Nf<~\V Yt)HI\ IAI '• -··Tl1r
~1 onlv llall Sn1 4Jk10'-Stok1n'
firt> P.ni.;ode." <111 h1Jur-l0nl;
.s pecial on AB(' .l\l{)nd;1v night.
n1av no t hrt1e n1~1dP trlcl'i:>in11
his!or,v hu1 11 wa!> 1·crla1nlv
one of 1l1c blt~JC'SI .shov.·.s on
r ecord
It at lea~I dtni<1nstra1t•d 1 li;1!
riitont_y Hall 1~n·1 JU.St a fe llo"·
\1·h-0 tu rns up e1·rry rla\ on
ABC 's "Lt>t'.s Make a l)i·;tl"
v.·ith hi.~ pockets full nt n10111'V
10 give lo ga1ne .~ho>1• 1•1111
testanL~
1'hcre is a Mont i· lbdl 11•ho
<'<10 si ng. folk d <in~c -rvlcx-
iean and Japanesr -f111d
v.·histle. And a i\fonty Hall who
('llJOYS dressing up in curious
costun1es every hi! as much a"
the hopefuls seeking to atlracl
attention in the audience of his
gan1e show
The hour f)pc11 ed \V1ll1 a
parade of fire rng1ncs. and
11 ith all the noise and ex-
f'iteinent fl/ a !our-alarin
hlaze. Then i1 <·111 lo a
fa csin1i!e of a t-.1 t xi can -
American J1e~l:i. con1plcte
v;Jth tacos and (){Ta.~1onal ol!'s
and even a stuffed bull. 111hich
i{a~·e Jla!I ;i ch:ince to dress up
like a rna tador and stamp
around in a lii tle dance with
the natives in their colorful
costun1es.
OCC's Tevye Returns LEGAL NOTICE
flCTlflOUJ •t1SUllll
CLO Stages Fine 'Fiddler' MA.Ml ITATIMl"t
T~ !OllOW"'9 _.,_ l fl M l'ltl
iluti<'IUl •••
J • 1' EMJE4'Plllil!l, IU1 1 """'"~• 1'11f' O•lvt, 1.M IW•mll-. C•hlo<.,,1
~"' '""" Edw•fll ()'0-. 11$12 M1rtn1 1'1'11 0.111• . ..__. At•ml~. Cl '9/20
liv (.i .. _;0 1\(it.: LEll.IAL
'01 11\o Df UJ "•11'! \l•U
An y !)range Coast
"F1drller'··ph1lcs 11·ho 1n1ssed
( ;;iry Vordon·s Te1'ye J;i~t )ear
;11 (J rrir11;t· Co<1s\ l'ollcge c·:in
1·;..t1;h up >Ailh tu s truly fuw 1n-
IL·r1H·ct<it111n of Ute pre·re1 olu·
11011 Hu~s1;in .Jew v.hn n1:ike~
up ,scripture, unH~11,Jwdly c1ir1
\'t•rse.~ v•11h (;od nnd _11elds to
tl1c 111nds f1f 1·han;;t· !hat
i.11eep i\r,;ite\ k11
'J'l1t J,1111g B tiit ti ('11 H' Li ght
f lp•·ra unve!IP1! 1!~ prn.
rl\1•·11•1n ~it "Fuldlf'r 1111 111.·
I«~;! ' la :-\ I· rirla} !H~~h! 111
I 11 rd :t 11 JI 1 ~ Ii S 1· h O o I
<\tJd1 t0rLUJ!l, ti,'100 1\ 1 ! <1 n' It:
Bii d l.nng Beach
1t ~l<1rs rl'atl\ :-t;1r~. !:;1rv
<;ordon ;111d B~·J!f E!hf!. <1S
Tevvc·s wile \\'1:t10LJ! /J doub t
1;-ie:-'c two 1·01111·11Jt1le the n1osl
ou1s1:1nd1ng ~H·t111g <1nd voc:nl
tion1ir~ !h;!l 111:11, hr heaped
up(Jn a gl'n t·r;illy flrsl r:itf'
l'Olllfl\Urli!I" 1hr•<ilt•1' UlllSJf'al1·
A proft•ss1on:il l_1 sounding
nrl·ht;;11·a 1n lhe ovcr !arg1~ p1l
1.; cerl111nly not tf1r. least of thf•
SlK'<·cssful t'le1ne,1t~ of this
'"F1di!lt·r ·• .\!11s1t d1r1·<·tor .J;in
f\1l <;r!u·I d1·111:ir1d.~ ;111d get.; ;i
st!nse of l'fl'if'inb!t lrorn thr
rr111~u·i<111~ 111 1111' r11 t n n d
11nstage ~rld11n1 •t'i·n 111 1·nm·
1n11111t v pnxluet 1or1~ Th f'
Orl'hf'.SI r~ dt"Sf'rl ('' ~<ll'!I C'Ul<ir
1·rcd1t ro1 1!s ;1lw;11.s prrfl'ct
'F . <11r LHd y'
A 11<litio11.i11.g
A11(J111on'> \•1!1 hr h c I ti
loni&ht and \Vedne:.da~' for thr
S<111ta An;i Cullf':.!f' .~un1nu·r
p1·oduct io11 or '•\Jy Fa I r
Ladv"
'fi·youl,<. .:irr ~r·hi·dulcrl ror .1
"P IOOl.111 ON THI! 1100f "
A "'"~'(fl JI• JP~oOI\ ~!P,f\, J•"Y &odt
~O(I ',flt lllOI' 1-l••~·C> 01•~<1,0 Of c,.,.~ ..
0••11, OIOtCC>lltfpny O• 11.tll••O
l••tl"•lot. "'u'""i O<t•('•CW' 0• J8~ ll<l i(/,.!, P•t•eoleo b• It>• LO~ll &•a(:~
{,;:~~Id Owt•o f.,1.,, ••·d
~"lut1U•• •I I ).J ••o<I S~'l<l•Y• •' l )0
!11•0<.gll limo 71 •I JO•(l•n l'i<CI~ ~UIOOI
""a1101 "'"' "'"'n''I s• "'''""· lont fl••~" i;i,,.,, c~, ,. •1 ~Jl It)~
THE CA.$1
, • ...irt ur, .-s
Y~nl•
~··1 ,. .. ,~ .
I .•:~ flgll
''~'d<n•
IA,n•_.•I c,.,n.., .. ,. ! ,. lfl
I '< ''·' '·••I~~ (~"'!•~I•
(;4•' r,01~""
flt nr £ l<r~
l'' ""~ 1<1 I O•et o Mo~lr• (_,,, ............. .
1, • .,. l v<f<'ll
G'•nn 8r.l~i••
C•'"•n .C:•ll•
J"" ......
ll~rnaru $+mon ' ,, !!•~"·~" f<•run t..0100'1
I""' F'r..r•.••
• .1•c~;" l •~>o•
P~ ii~· '"lo,
Do~~ L411<•
;u·1·u111p<JllllJ'lc11t :u1d Fi 11 e
U;ila11('t' ul sound t/1;i t nel't"r
c·o1'e1·s up lht' s1ngf'r!l onstagt:
~qu<i!ly f irst rJte <tre tht
n1en1her s ol the l'hnrus \1•hose
;1c!11l;.t t·hnres as assigned b!-'
1J1re<·tor (::iry O;ivii;; arc ably
~lnd belt1·1 a lily <l t' 11 Y e r e <l
,1rn1d s ~ ;:1 pe1·fe1·tl'
1•0r-p!1·as1ng_ II 1 ii I 1 n c l I y
;:irtit:ula tcd chor<1l sound
Tht' (•"1;rcut1on ot B.1ch;irrl
'J':1ro.;1.v 11·;k 1 ·~ (·hor1·og rap!1 y
;t1~11 1·c1n k~ tlus 1:1d dl1·r ··
;1111ong lhl' ~re:1 1 ~ o( lot ·:il
lllll~ll':<I l il l' il 1 (' r I\ 11Ji
p<Jrltrulat'I\ f1n t· perfnnnanrrs
11! 1J1" cldf1cult h<°•!tle dance
:111d tl1r lt11ss1an s Cossack
;1 I illf'l II' 1.•·1n
011i y thl' n1ere!_v ;ici.:eptab\e
t'"'lUllH'"· the skin1 p~·. lost-
up~t:1g1· ~:ets -1111aginati ve.
h11l poorly rxer·u t1'd -and the
11nrven lighting in .-ir the
nthe1'1\'1sc perfect produt:tion.
'fhc unusual ~eating ar-
t ani;cnit•rlts 111 ihe h u g e
Jordan rtL1d1toriu1n no doubl
have contributed greatly to
1h1.s Cril1c's rating of the
technical aspects of lhe shO\\'.
t\nyone .~eated to the right or
lf'ft of thr center 40 or so sea ts
and 7 f:J.n1 hrilh ll<iys at the v.ould certainlv be di stressed
1·0JJege·s l'htll 1ps Ila!!.. Con1-bv the freque;1t glimpses of rnun1ty perlornH•1·s 11'111 be __ . __ _
auditioned as v.:ell a~ eollege eo111tE1 ,.1.eim co.a.ST t11G-.1.T & mi w
1'1111 I.ff O'Dowd. 11512 M••ll'I• Anl\ Orl•t. loo 1'l1mllo,, C1. 90120 hackstage going s on and the characterization are t ht ini. D.,,,,,,._,, I• c•<>C1 .. c1N or •n ~n1r1-l(°""'.1"" •uocJ•tlon Olhll• 1111n • failure of lhe sets to providl'! a ..... rformance.s ofll'!red by • .,,,,,.,.,,,1, .
t"'-Sotntd'. A.nn ltc 0'0.Wd background ror singers staged Diana ~1onter as J~odel . Joan-1~i. ,1.1•m•nt w•• "'-d w11" 1ne '°''"· 50 fNI Jn rront of thern from !y Cler~ 01 Or•n.v~ (O)<,jn11 °"' M•'f •J. na l·lall <is Tzeuel, Cozelle 111i JllY seat , and those of probably h f moc rtnother \,000, the most fre-\\'alker as l.:ha va and eat 0 •o•t•t P. •VHHitT. •'"·
the d<1ughters' respective u11 C•~•••ftll •••""' quent backdrop.s \\'t'f'e the lovers, Darren Kelly a s s ... 111 o.i1, c1. "2• ,11,.s
SidewalLs of the house. Perchik Glenn Bradley a s PuDli•h~d O••n~· co''' 01111 """'· Othrr minor , but · d G B M$Y•6,ll,'••AflJunet,1tn nn11 nt-verthclcs!> (_'ruc1al. dlsa~ to.tote! an ary ruson as
h Fyedka. LEGAL N01'1Cl!; po 1111 rn e n I s "·ere l e All harnes~d you th and fintl------------screechin~ chu tzpah Yentf' wlo vo ices to produc e P 1~I::.~of~ ... :~!~~ls
ct1araetcriza!1on bv T 1. i Vi a hel·,,,·a l>le •eadtitgs ,f the The ro11-1n1 perocn 11 dclnt b110<n111 Turrrtt :ind the obvious need ' " •1. crucial characters. MY Tt-tREE SONS JAN!TOll lAt , ltSS for n1ore technical rehearsals 1'he l.ong Beach CLO'" ex-w.11~,t . co"• M,,., {•Ill
lo shorten the ti me lag for the trnded engagement of "Fld· M~:'."c~,1~••1 Jr., UJJ W•ll•ce. co.1•
Jrequent s<.·cne thanges. dlcr" will conllnue for three T'11\ ~u1ln1n ,, 0,1,.., (c<1<1u~11d ov •n \J1ss Turret!, "'hose Yiddish 1 1nc11v•o1111 .
k more >1•eekends. fridav an< Jonn 1 l t•1 Jr. ac cent o.-;ten.sib!u \\'Ould ma c · nd s d ' · c 1 Saturday evenings a un av ~.~ >IM•m•n1 !llt d ,..,,~ 1n~ oun11 lier perfect for !he n1eddling ' J d · c11rJi; c1 Or1r.q1 Countv on M•• 11. 1tn.
h k 1 f .1 . th afternoons, at the or an ev 8t•er1v J M•oao.1r, ~~111 , cwn1v 111a1c ma er roe. a ~ s in _e auditorium. c1er~.
I.fl og Beach prod11ct1ori. Thts -------------
''cnte calls up a distressing to
htar fa!s t"tl o voite in order to
proJCl't across the acres of
;ip1·011 1n 1he .Jord;1n !heater.
]\lore th;1n n1ak1ng up for
lli1s 11eek sup porting
1'a kl'~ Stage
l!C)l.LY\\'t>C>U 1LPf 1
.Jn~t.'µh Canipanella signed
11·1th !hr racif1< Rl'pertr.r1·
Cnrnpan.1· to s!ar in a sun1n1rr
sltiek presentation of "~1 an of
La !\1ancha" frnm June 22-Ju-
1.1 5 Jn Bil!lngs and Butt0,
!\Joni.
' i I I l
...... ········ ....... . ' • •R"'-" •<YO At ''"' • • ~·' <<>••• .. _. • ··~ '"f 00 .... •• , ••o• . .,.,.,,,,.,.,.,,., "~u-_..
lllCLUSIV( INGAGIMINT
WOODY ALLEN IN
P•r•mo11nt Pictures pres ent•
P!Jllt
PVbll•ll•d Or•no• Coe~t Oa11 y Pllo•.
May la, 2), lCI •no June 6, 19n ll 61·11
LEGAL NOTICE
HOTICf TO C!l:f"DITOll
No, Ito 12ltl
Supt no' (wrt 01 tilt St.rt col (•lilor ni t
10,. 11't (oun!y 01 O••~n•
E>!tle C.I Fii.ED MA.DISON, OllCe•H<I, Nolie~ 11 t••r•~• glv1n 10 (r!<1llO•l o•
Int 1bove nam1d aece<i•M l~•I •ti
ponon1 navino cla1n" •O•in1t !~ 111,.
d•cedent '" reoult$0 to lilt 1hem, '1¥<11•
tho n•<•"•r• vwch•"· •n tno ot1lc1 el
tn1 Clerk ol Int! •bov1 entllltd court, o•
IO Prt\fn! ·~~m wl!h Tht n1'Ct111rv
voucnt r\ ro '"• und~"'IHltd •I lht clflc• ot F_ LAWRENCE PLOTKIN, 1'"3 •
Pfone1r Blva . No•wal~. Collf., wt.le~ I
'"' Ol t(t O! bUl•n•~· OI '"" und•t1,gr\1<J '' ell m•ttt" p1rlalnint lo me 11!1!1 ef ••Id d•cf'drn1, wllnln •our mcn111 > 1 H1r 11
l.r•! oubllcahon Gf m., nolot f,
Doted Mov II, "11.
(a,ol Lorene J1yn•1
on(! Ocnald Jonn l~adr•on
Exe<:u•o•1of11'1 \'11 1!
Of •olr! d•C~r!f~I
f'. LAWll ENCI!' PlOTKIN
1 till• jl>lo"'"' fllvd.
Norw.ik, C•lil.
1'1!otntY for IE••<ulo" Pl-SJ0\1
"ubli,hed 01enve (O••I D•·I~ '"'~' May 1l, JO. and Jun~ •· iJ, 1171 !'!•I
LE GAL NOTICE
The reno11·ncd Lt·rncr-Luc1ve H•rbOr '' AO•nn -C~••• Mn• .stude11\s. ~--..
" $46-3101
I n1usicHI \VJll h<' µrl'sl'nted July ~ • ~ Mond~~. Frid~V
II h ~ ~-
! i!~l I D 0 ..... 26-30 at the <'O cgc. '"t an j '""''" "°"" ''"'" afternoo n mall!l('C carded for I ChartH lroMOll-Jaclt Palancot 1.00 p..,,,1_oopm 1 ooom.J:OO prn -~uly_29_. _____ · I ·.. . 11 __ ::::::;_:,_,1·:'~~';;, l :oj,o":o·:mooprn
"Ol'P'OltT 8 £ACH • OR.J-8350 _
I HELD OVER
EXCLUSIVE
Charlton H9ston
Yvette Mimieux
Jone Fol\do
t"
"KLUTE"
"SUMMER OF '42"
IOTH COLO"
IOTH IRI
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
alsa playi1tg
ENDS TONIGHT
Clint Ea1twood
"DIRTY HARRY"
also
James Garner
"SKIN GAME"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
LEE ~
MABVl:N
··xo:NTE
WALSB'•
J(ANNE MOREAU-
1lso (R)
ttl THE W ESTMINSTll!'R C t:NTER
<~1
•1~n .. ~sn~ ' GOlDlM Wl,1 .,l Utl .,,.,,.(,"RI• ~·O~l i .llJl....Q.ll!a.1JL.L1.
1 ..... Rrtl c:r.i\C ·(,1, .~.Jac~~on
~lary.
Q1iePn or Scots
""' • 5odn•• ~0'''" I"
LEGAL NOTICE
l'ICTI TIOO~ IUSIJffS'
NllolAI" ST.l.TEMEN't'
Tne lollo"lln11 ~er,on I• doln1 bu•ill•H •1 : TH Rl~TY CA.ll PEf C.LEAN f ll., 1'151
Glovcei•er t•110. l<vnHngton 8e•tll.
(•Ill. 9)6-16
I]) I h• "Jtennie 11:30 O MM: "F1tt h iht Hunter" I Ill MHtll $ llMit.: (CJ (Zllf) ''l1nd (dr1) '64-Gltnn Fo rd, N1ncy K1111n. I
el AAP•" (adv) 'S7-Cl11k Gt blt. 9 Lt MMt l utton1 i t-~---------------------.
Ywonnt D'ftarlo, Sictnty l'oi!ltr. Cl) MlrsUI DilloR Weekdays -6:00·8: I S-10:25
®' ffetilltal htp'llic "Miss Good· s s H ltd all 111d tht Wlld Chlm1J111Ztes" 0 Cl) OJ flln1 or. . Uit. • o oy• -
"FURY ON
WHEELS"
rated' l'Ci
Samantha Eggar
"THE DEAD
ARE ALIVE"
Barg•in Matinee
Wedne1d1y, I p.m.
Free Refreshments
ADULTS $1.00
"IUCC AND THI 'liACMll"
"MAIT, tUflll OF SCOTS" & "ANNI
O•TMl 1000 OATS" Aht 1t
(DWI.IDS CINlMA VIUD
MISSION VllJO · IJ0-6tto
Jo1ep~ R D•tWl(~I. !•11! GIC\IC~sl•r
l•ne, HtmlinQT011 e~8<h. (•Ill, 9'.l6~6
Tiii• bu1ineu 11 boin11 condueted by '" flldividu,,1
Jo••D/\ •-Oorwit~i
Tlli' "~!emtnl fll~d witll lllt C01Jn!v Cl•r~ of Or1not Cwntv en· Jun• 1. un.
Av '°'tVttl• J Maddo•. DeD\llY Co1111t1 clerk. CD K.,.11•1 "'"'" (j) Election Cov1r1a1 1 :Jo.J :45-6:00.1: 15-1 0:20 p .....
OJ) Thi flt'lfll Sta• O N•• If tit• l1m1
m ••: "City"' fltlnlS" m Tt T1ll lh1 Trvtll
8 I• '-•JMll I 1:4S 0 Merit: (C) "Vir1i11 ltllne" ltdv)
GD~ c:.r.10" 'SI-Johll C.suwtes, Sidney Poi·
9l Mnll: (Zlir) "lrtllltr b l ind 1 tier, Vl11lnlt M1s~1U,
ltbJ"' (eom) '40 -Eddie Albert. 12:00 B Mtwtl: "PriMI., O'R111tit1"
Priadllt U11t. (com) '43 -Robert Cummint 5,
1:00 ([I Rtlllw' • tllt •iv•r B.B. Kini
IUltb .
m Metlltr·ln·Lt•
13 Celttnlit P'ri111ry EIKtion ttv.
lfatl UMI 11 ~M. ., .............
~--t
l:JI B ([l.....,.. '1Z cas Ne..,
OOh tifSUdollllt Wtlfer Cron•tt1 with
nltlolltl tl:dilt lttums.
D 1111 Cl...., ht""
D (JJCll QJ -" ., ""'' cq (tit""" .... " .... .,.
:ill:" ~) (IUS) '71 -Sltwtrt Gn•rw. Wifiit111 S111t11tr. Silly Ann
Hewes, .ldlct Wltllems, lem1rd fo..
All .ii... .... tf Sir Al1h111
CM.111 DD,ff's clmic tilt 9' 1 tam.
lty'1 Mies .... b cumd tllrouaft the .....
Ollvit dt Ht'till111d.
(!)Ci) m Dick Clvttt J1ek11 llob-
inson cunts. m Morit: "llttlt Ministef" (rom)
'J4-K1thfrin1 Htpburn, Jchn 8t1I,
12:31 fJ H C."8 Actitss Rita Hty-
wortll !1 1 u lttdultd 1u11t.
ID C.11•try M11sic
1 :00 ([) @} Jll1111s
1:l0 II M0\'11: "ftttrna el th• Dtad"
(dr1) '6S -John H1c~ett. Conr1d
1'1rkllt m.
CD II N••1
Z:OOGfh., m All·Jltl1ht Sflew: "Girls In tti. w•a." (C) "The Dtllf1l1111," H£•·
dltllW Ctttafl"
Z:JS 8 N11rt
Wed--~-y RorrC1lhou11, lti11i1 Kaz1n.
,_...., • (C) ....... " ....... (•"i '64
-Joe Slllsfli4t. Hlff•kl Ntt1nJ. dlffW ldVid J:JOew <mrsJ ''° -Dni• ldwft, CXM1 M HavillllMI. ... _ i-_,. 1«•1 J:Ol(J)(C) "l>o T• ...... c..d (d!O)
ii -Awl ..... Pllrlllt Cll'ntt '!it -V•11 fftflln, Sllv1n1 M11111110.
............ ...,.. (dra) 'U ... ., ....,. Pttt I (com) '62 -
_..... Mdfdy, TMllll ll!tter. "°""'" wi.o.. JIM1if1r Jqnet. -(J)1'1!1-........ ( ... i 13 1111., T• ... _. (d!OJ 'IO
-Jiii .... , Flltft D:fwp. -.Sp:ID' Trxy, HWy l11111n.
_ ........ _.( ... )'!7-........ l-I"•) •• ._ ....
lillllll ....,, .., FriMI, tel Ortis, Htrbttt M1rsNt1. , ---ltr-CM•l '17-fl (C) "Ill( ..... Hor W•l '17 ,.. W !)d. ltlllit hlnlfl. -Dtu AMtlWI. .letnnt Ctaln. 1J11•• ... , F< -( .. ) 'II 4:•(1)-• IMll -
-·-
Showtime 7:00 p.m.
Sundoy Motinff
Starting Z:OO p.m.
---r> STADIUM , f ··
.. .-:-:;-; :Tl':lr"" :Ir::-::;"~ ----;-,
''WAii lliTWll!M MEN & WOMEN"
St1rrl"9
J•dl: Ltmmt"
l l'd "SKtN GAME"
5•cllnl•• Or•"!• ~nty
., .. ,.,., Seit E11t1St-ftl
N•mh••tMI ,., I Ac111tmr """'''" "PIODLllt ON tH(J 111001'"
"Sll.l"T ltUNNINO" • "AHD•OMl"DA STllAIN"
"KLUTE" "ANOIOMIDA ITRAIN''
1'11111
Publl•/\tO' Or1r.9~ Co.11 D•lly Pilat,
Jvnt 6. 1), 10. n, i•n 146)-7!
LEGAL NOTICE
I.I.II ,,13
SU,lt:lllOll C'OUllT OF THlt:
STAfll 0,. CAl.ll'OllNIA POii!
tHI! COUNTY 011' OllAHOI
N•. A-7J041
NOTICE 01" HIA•tNG ON jl>l'TITIOH
POii! jl>!l:O•ATt OP WILL AND POllt
llSTTl!RS Tl!!TAMf_NTAlltY
Ell•lf ef FRED Wll.ll.t.M STEINI(~,
•lie kt1owt1 •• FREO W. ST£lNl(l!, ~Cl!8SIH1,
NOTICE IS 1-lEI E&Y GlV€N lfl•I
ELSIE SMITH 1\15 llltd ~ertln • "lltl11n
ftlr Prob1!" ()f Wiit •ncl lor lt•U•"CI of
Lf'tte•l ll!llemenl•ry I~ lltllll-r, r~l•,1nc1 !~ w~k~ 11 m•d• lor fvrtl>tr
p1r1;c1111r1. 1nd 1/\tt t~e time ind ~1.u
STADIUM 2 ' .. -~~--.-.--.~--
• "SUMMI"• 01' ""~
of ""~'I"• th e s•m• 1\11 b"'" s•t for Ju~~
10. lt12, •I f ;JG •.rn .. I" "'" cour1,_ or O.O•rlme"t N1. ~ of s•ld court, •' XIII
============!!Civic C~nt•r Orlv• WtJI, I" tl'I• City or S•nl• .lna. C~lltornit.
---C o STADIUM ·J .. . ..... , ,.. -----... SIAD/UM J .. __ ,__ .. ,__. .. -
EDWARDS CINEMAS
"THI. LAST jl>ICTU!l:I SHOW" "••to• • ,., .o..,,.s IN COSTA MESA
546·3102
"SOMlttMIS A 011111.T NOTION" '"' ""'LAY MISTY l'Olt Mt" ..
You need not ·~
know Spanish to enjoy.,,.
TROPICAL. • 11eraer1z
A fi••l• with t xotrc C.rlbMMt rhythm•
•nd th• folktor• ot rom•nllc Vtr1cruz
JUNE 7 thru JULY 22
Wed· Thurs· Fri · Sal. ... 8:30 pm
Wod •Sal• Sun Mallnees , 2:30 pm
Admission , , , .. , , , : , , .. , , $2.65
Padua Hiiis Theatre Mt-ric1n & Am•rlr:1n Lunchton A om.
,.., Jn rhe. Padua Dining Room IHlort
th• •how.,...,,.,..,_,, (7141 flfoflll
1 t '
-~
Otlecl Ju"• I, lf72. -
WILLIAM E. SI JOHN. c°"'"'' c11r1t 111011111.TIO"' HOWSllt a OAltLANO
•>M c't,.,1u1 Orlff
N--t •••ell, C1llfwnl1 n"' T•l1 17141 S41-Mtt
AltwMTI fir: '"llllfltr P~bllllh•d Or•n'fl Co•it D1Jty "llo'. JUM ,, 7, 11, 1'12 14,U-12
LEGAL NOTICE
HOTICI OP ,.UILIC
SALi 0,. COLLATlllAl. ICotUf9ml1 C-"'9t'tl•I C...
hctl111 "" UIJ t+OT ICf: IS Hf:•E&Y GIVEN tllet •
1111bllc ••t• of coll1t•r11 wlll bt Mi. '"
11'19 itll\ d•,. of J11111. i•n. ,, ""' """' or 10 O'(lodl; A.M .. •I »ff l \!IC'.Otn A-..,.u.,
Cll1 of C~r111, '°'30, Ctll,.,nla, 1111
J•JOll H011l1, S.c""'C! P'nty under .,,. llvl"~u•nl lo tl\11 ctrl•ln 1•c11rlfY "fl'ff-
"""' ,...,.~ o" tll~ Flrtl •~v of Jut,, 1tn, ..,. J•rrv ,l1vln ......, M•ftflJ Oltlc'fltr.
T~ COll•ttr1I le W fllll It teKtllld ••: T,,. cfl1ce •111'"""111, f\ir"""r• •
110o1111 rtcMllf, wotltlfll P•lltfJ, (0"
r••DOftCl•ne1. 1""""' t1!f rtk!rn,. t•lt~ num.,.r.. tot••• on '"1111..,.,.rrt,
C-0\llnl !IOI lo com,t11, ~tutft llt•
1r11•11 9'111 I OOll Wllf Hfllllllfle .. tlle
aooll:kMlllnt .. lnc«N TtJ PrMflc•
loutHI tt ')N l.'11col11 1'v1nue. C1<.,.u.
C•!lfornlt '°''°· D•IH1 Shi ell, of M1y, 1e71,
JtlOll N ... 11
tlf<11rtd P'•rtl') WILLIAM I. SCULL,., Jr,. Alf1.
Of! "'"-PAllltl• I IUlllllllLL 41,.,,.,. ,... , .......... .
... -~'"" ... ,,..,, )1111 ,,_
............ ~""""'· MtJ -l'Vbtllll'ltd Or1ntt cattl D11t, JLin9.,
JWM: I. lf11 1""12
I
DAILY PILOT 23
Everyone He1
Something That
Someone Elie Wanta
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It, Tredo It
With a Want Ad ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
General Gener11I
••••••••••••••••••• ,. ..
IRVINE TERRACE
Three Bedroom
Let. us sho\v you th is enchanti ng home.
Atr1u111 entry. spatious living room \Vilh fire·
place. 3 Large bedrooms 2 baths. LOVELY
lJINING R00~1 ,! room to store your trailer
or boat , . . . . . ~62.500.
"SO RARE "
Fee land -Turtle Rock
3 Rl=:DROO!\lS , farnily room . 2 baths. atriurh,
~uilt ins 'vi th self c leanin g oven, shag carpe_t·
1ng and custo1n dra pes. Large covered patio
\vith super landscaping. J\.IUST SEE 'J'O AP·
PREC IATE . . . . . . . . . . . !47 ,900.
SPECTACULAR
Back Bay View
1~;\STELUFF -a truly lovely ho1ne . 4 Bed-
rooms, 2 baths. F".>\f\11LY ROO!vJ, fireplace,
built in kitchen \v ith breakfast area. Custom
carpets and drapes, beautiful patio for you r
entertaining pleasures. 555 ,900.
VIEW OF ALL THREE???
Catalina, Bay, Ca nyon
Del1ghtful fan1ily home. Lo vely slate entry,
3 bedrooms. l;Y.t bath. F':\i'vl!LY-ROOM (o r
dining roon1 ) large i::ourn1 el kitchen v,;ith al l
the builtins. F IREPLACE plus many other
nice features. See and compare . S63.500.
HARBOR VIEW HOME
Somerset Model
SI retC'h-o ut and live in thi s t\vo story 5 bed-
roo1n . 3 bath. Fi\!\'llLY ROOl\1. bINfNG
fiOOi\·1. 13uiltin kitchen. 2 fireplaces. NE\V
(:.A.RP I•:ts and OR!\PES plu s SQ many ex·
t ras you have to see it to really appreciate
it. Fee land . $72 ,500.
~ Niil A::SotJ~ru
REALTORS
644-7270
2121 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. ••••••••••••••••••• General Gener•I ·
•
ABANDONED
3 + FAMILY
ONLY $13,900
COUNTRY l:l·:,\I''
Nestled benea!h 60 ft sh11rlf'
tret>s: SfAINEO GLASS
HAY \\'INDO\\IS heav ~·
BEAMED CEILINGS. rich
walnut paneling & 1valls of
cork galore. Enc hanllni.-:-
encloscd LANAI plus a dobe
brick patio, 2 CAR ~al'ng<'.
Complele 1v11h bloC'k v•all
fencing. 5 t.11N. 1'0 BEACIJ
sre1ng 1s hf·hev1ng call no\.\.
(714) 962-.>585.
I OUl.\"I L Ol.\O' " RE At , .. O R 5
VIEW -CONDOMINIUM
.located on quiet street 1n the popular
'"BLUl-"FS". \Vilh c:ounlry c:lub at111osp here.
Ray & ocean vie\\' frorn thi s 3 lxtrrn., :!11:! bath
"FRANCISCAN MODEL". S59,900
CHINA COVE, Corona del Mar
... just a stone's thro'v to the beach . vet
it's quieter than a loser's locker room 2·Sty.
view ho n1 e. 3 BJ{., 3 baths; co n1plete \l'ith
elevator fron1 gara ge to top floor. Loads of
s torage -oversized 2 car garaxe. $98,000
Convenif'nl parking -rasy tu hr
<---~~~~~--<a "DROP-I;.;" a1 Bay & Beach nr11lty
LARWIN
675-3000
SPECIALS I I
TO\rNHOUSES Ll
:? BP.. 2 ba, sharp. sharp,
:-harp! Chork fu ll of
t.:OQ(lir~. /\ "11111~1 see .. at [~"'""'"~"'""'""'""'""'""'"~"'"""'"'""'""'""'""'""'"~
$17.!Y.,O. All trim~. General General
~ Bl~ -?1:: b11. D1·sp<'rR1<'
n·1111.~r"rred .•rllrr. !'\ o 11
redUL'('d bf'k111 t"QS1, S32.9 .• l(J '
,':;ha1,w.st :'11onl<'rry n1ndc! in
Tiburon. Call f[Uil•k!
4 sic; Hr:.-·i12 ha .-1 .~00 sq.
rt. up;:radi"d. They had lh"
1noncy & they s pent it. ThP11
thf'y goi tran~fcrre<!! Murr;,
to SCf' 1h1~: It's 11·hC"rr :'llrs.
Cit";in ret1lly Jive~ S36.500 ,t•
11•·ll pl"l<'('d'.
• larwin rea lty e
968-4405
-~H~AVE~A--
SPLASH IN!
Buy this 4 hf'dnJ11n1 formrr
modi"I ,.,.1th li '"~2 hrat1tl .t:
CAPE. COO ESTATE on a sandy bea ch in Ne\V·
port. .A.JI sh ingle exterior and a remodeled
interior that belongs in I-l ouse Beautiful. 3
bedroms plus den plus stone fi replaces and
exciting views. Bonus: a yon·never·kno\v·1t's·
there 2 bedroom apartment that's darling!
$2 15 ,000.
rHONE UN19UE HOMES, CORONA DEL MAR. 675-6000
ritirr<'d fl')OI 1111<1 you e:in REAL TOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. ha1·f' you1· O\\ n lami!y
~;~~~h-1nh l'I~ o tn~ sm i ~~;<·G~.-n-.-,-.~,-------G-o-ne_r_a_I _____ _
~arpl'lr1!. ~ar,1gc Mn1ple1rly NEW LISTING EASTSIOE
f1n1shcd 1111h a separate $26 000
ut1litv area. All l<'rms. Call • •
817...0010 Jor mo re in· Ocean s.1de ol H\.\')' .. Corona l A 1·ral Jx.auly ln this oon1·
formation. del ~Iar. Beaullfully rurn ., rnrt11bl<' .1 bedroom hon1r.
\O 'THEREAL ~ESTATERS
, ' ' '. ' ' ' I '
plush 1·;irptg., d<'corator Near new carpets, hard·
drapes; li;c. fa mily rn1., wood floors, rozy rireplaC'c,
w orksavf'r kitch. Huge cot•d. enclosed yard and just list·
patio. Cuslom l hruout! \Valk Pd! Assumr Jo1v 1nlPresl
1-N~E°'W~P°'O"R"T~H~E'°l"G'°H~T~S'I 11p thP brirk walk to lh i.~ loRn. $194/1\lo includ€'s 1axe.~.
hea11ly, you'll never 1vant to \Vith min1n1um do1vn. Be!!!
TRADITIONAL l('a\'f'! l\bs<'ntce 01~·ner says hurry!'.!
CENTRAi. Hall Plan. For· S('ll at $75,000. Call 5'1:i·S42•1 (0pf'n I::ves.)
mal Dinin,1: Roon1, Li\·inp: COR B 1 N-Roon1 11·i th r1rcpl;:r re. 2
BC'droo1ns Larp:<' Doublr
Garagr Plus \\'ork Arc;i,, MARTIN l"""~~"""~""'"''I Covered Pal io. Excellrnl Gi-ounds. /\!lf'y At'Cl'S".
$35,0CIO. Call 646-055.">. Even· 1 _R_E_A~L~T~O~R~S-~~--7_66_2
\outh , (-oast
--
$28,950! lilrj·~~_.. ... ~I ;""' "'·""''· SEPARATE
FAMILY ROOM COLWELL
BAYSHORES-A WAY OF LIFE
Co1npletcly pr1v. community. Walk to
beaches. Sec this 4 BR. 3 Ba. home. Cozy
frplc:.. garden patio . Ready for su1n1ner.
$59,500. Lavera Bu rns
PROPERTIES, INC.
REALTORS
Units! Units!
NEWPORT
S26,500
·I Brdl\)0111. '2 b<il h, II 1lh ht<rd l
11oo<! rtoor~ ('()\'l"rrd 111th !
lt\U"k _!<hR\; l':t l'JH'Oni:. \l oo•! I
~h111g)c 1onf. and l!Ull"! t 111
•!1•·•.t1 •;!l'<'<'L \'..1r;UH lUlo(
1·1':\<ly tn ~r·r anytnnr. \' \
B! \"t:r.S NO 11()\\','\' I'S
J I ~ i·lf•an a.; n 1110'
** ** ** TAYLOR CO.
EASTBLUFF SPECIAL -S44 ,000
Be:,t bu,\ 111 ,11cd' l-'111111 llh' p11\~L\,\ n! 1111 ...
lovel y J bcl1 rH. ,fl,; Lirn r1n hor11l· un tj!lll'I rul·
de·5;)C "''"l'l'1 l{1hlll ... 11i· !or .z11<-1ll !;11111!.'.
\.iC\V Of !)!llll!ll.11!1~ I oJ l'1d l-::t1\ fii'l1
Newport I "Our 27th Year"
•1 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
Fa irview I 2111 San Jo;i qu in Hills Road
646-8811 NEWPORT CENTER , N.B. 644-4910
I I. I I General General any 1me
IT'S GOOD TO
BE HOME
'''J.11"'1·1all) 1\1\C'n hu111<' i~ as
h.J1·rly "·' lhis l\le&"I \'C'nlr
ho nu•. 3 huge bedroonis. rlbl
br11"k fireplacl', mod ,. r n
bllln kitchen, o 1· ('I's Il e d
lan11ly roon1. IO\'l'ly glas!I
sliding doors lo pal!o. Ju.<il
rt'pa1nted 1ns1dr and out.
\"C'ry reasonably pr11·t.'<1.
C/\LL us for further dc1a1ls.
:1~6-5.'tSQ tOpen f'.\"C'S.I
·>~w. HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
HARBOR VIEW
MONACO
SOLD OUT!!!
1'he ,folln11 Ill!-' rrn11rrt1t•.; !i.1\ r l1t'1'!\ !1 I t·•I fll
sole! h.v nu1 <ll'f!!c 111 1111· p.1 1 t('\1 ·.1 rt>J..
429 \'IS'l't\ l·"l.C ll{ \ 11:1 ·ll ~t S'l'J\J · l:·r
714 ll l·:LIO "l'H()l'I·, ;11" 111·:1.l<l'I Hlll'I :
142 47th ST l1J·:J·;·r tiO:i l .. \J{K :-O i'l 'I!
1628 \l f S'I' \ 1·:1'\'I B \I ) \ 1;;:i 1 110:\i\ I I< I H l{ ).\ J·:
1707 'fR :\lJJ·;\\"L\'ll~ l lf1 ;\l.\l11:L l<.:ll /'l'I·'.
"llH I l.'T\ L.-1111<1>0
\\.'c ;n·c 111 ru·t'd ul 11r1 1p('rl 1r~ 111 ,..,.11 tn n11r
qualified bu.' rt ~ If 'nn hil\'(' ~1 ,•c•11 a11 \·
thou_gh l In ~cll1nc . 11<' \1 111 be h:ippy In J!l \'f'
you the 111arkr1 ,;il11 r o f \(lt1 r propt•r1.1 l·11r
courteous & pcrsonal1 ;i;ecl ~er,·1ce , ple~1 ,c g 1\ e
us a call -
MORGAN REALTY
673-6642 675-6459
Surpr1 ~('! \\'h<'n yot1 :if'f' a ll .,.~~~------.,,.-._,..------rh,. goodic.o; that th 1~ drcan1 General General
General
PRIDE OF
OW NERSHIP -
TRIPLEX
. , !.·•\•'/~ l\i•lt f'laf\l)Pd
' I f\ /)11f' Yl'11T
·1 I \ <' c l I r n
l·.,\"1'1111· t 11 ... 'J \ \ll:.SA
l:•n' I \ 11r, Tlll:l'.I
Hl'JIJ ,,
ll/111 II lo
h.dh \111~1,.,
I:• 11 "h;o I
(<tlllo ( I ' I I • 1
J'1a11. I 1111~ !:..~•·• I
111 111 I ' ii ,, ' 1 •. 1 I\.;' I
l\llCh• 'P• r • 1,. ] ',LI u ,•,
.frn•' <I 1:1·,t1 Y 111,
I 'I. I " I
J\1·0 ~ Hlil.1_t111,o1n \p.1 1 l11i.111
1v1th J.,,~,. l .11 1ni.-:-HLo01'1'
Con11 ·1111·11t t\111111•11, 11 1 .•
Sun lJC'l:k~. All c1e."l!.ll<'d ~t
Pnv<1t',V :ind l<n.•y :'1!11 111
11111111• •' \I/ l>,ll f' I n<'ln,r·
i :.11 ,, i.;.• • 1'1 •11 \' 11I11<' : , 1,
Sti.<1 ~~I (' . .II blto-{l\•1 ~.1rri
''Dramatic View''
111 t!('<'llll, l><t\' ;in<! (".1 1111111~ I An ,1111"1' h;it"h ,·ould n,.11•1·
car111n • thf' •rarkl 1n:.: n1i;:l11
l 1~h1.~ ind IM•aur~ ,,f I ~, l'ra
\\"r 1111<'1 ttu~ f our
bN!to>Ollt-.1 h"!h hon1r for
s;; '"~· ·r1... lanilly 1non1
llu • 1111.h "IW'll hf'nn1 1·r1IH~~
a11d .i .: 11.1~ ,1011.-f1n 'plai'<'
Th•· I 11·1:1' 1lra n111l11· l1v 1n~
1u.1111 11 1,1kr, lh1.~ thr rno<.I
r lo. 1· 1 ! 1 n ~ homr /'IO\.\
a1·..;1labh•. ror Mppointmtinl
call 671-8550.
\-0' THE REAL
'\:". E~fATERS
h11s to orfer. 4 bf'drooms, ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
r!r11. fH1111l y room. rornu1l • ----oiiiiii ... iiiiiiii~I
rlin1ni;: roon1, Pat in kitchen. ~ !. _J ~ IRVINE COVE
2 r1rt>plal'ro;. PLUS II • ' (.)c·t'all Vjt'IV hon1r 111 till Cl j I! i::ori::rouo; s11·1 mmin~ pool 11r11 a ir n...•t•urifrnnl
sur1'Qu11clt·rl hy sl un1p:..tonc PRESTIG E WATERFRONT HOM ES •'lu11n1u11iy 11 1fh
11·all~. plan!<'r~ and lovely ': nerl1'uo n1s &· .: h;1 th~
trrlli.". only $jij,9j() 111Cludes SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT t 111 11hl1n~ ·u·· Ph1n "11!1
thr land, phone 546-2313. f\fl('1 1 l'K'n111 ··r1l1ni;:i.
101 Linda Is le Drive l(lts n! 11~h! ,t· a ir
7-HOUSES
THESE ARE
FIXER UPPERS
I,ovclv 5 l~R. .. 4 bn . hon1e \\llh dfJ \\n~1t1 1rs f;u111!y 1'0<lnl pJu,
\\'ater'front 1n.slr. s uite S .. • lgc gan1 c r111. or 1·"1n1 lur ,1 puol
stud y. l'rtexican ti le flonri,, bc1.11n C'C llini;:s. s1s:1.f'XIO
quality c:onstr11 1.:11on. slip 5155 ,000
For Complete Information
On All Homes & Lots, Please Call :
but produt·t .'IOln! 1ncon1t-~· :
1ax !!hcltr r. 5·2 BR & 2.1 Bn
homr ,<; on <i doublr lot. Sf17;1,
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 B•yside Dr., Suite I, N.B. 67~161 REALTORS
SINCE !!M4 n1onthly in('Q tnr. .~10,000 ~..,"'""."""'""'""'""'""'"-~..,..,,..,..,..,..,..,....,.
<lnv.•n. Asking $7\l,500. Ph: General General 673-4400
642·1771 .
* Mesa del Mar *
Deluxe palio 1Y /beautilul
back yard. J lrg BR, 2 BA,
se-p fan1 rm. + hv & din
area, cler bltin!>. firepl, up·
gradrd crps & drp~. shake
roor. $32,000.
CALL ANYTIME
646-3928 or Eve. 548-1651
Lochen my er
Realtor
Have A Larr;re
Family? I This oou~ is a \\'l!l!lCI" \\'\lh
rivf' l!'lrgf' bedroom~. and a
h<'atccl. filtered 61\ 11n tn1n.i::
pool, lols o f ronn1 fnr .'SUlll·
mer tun, 11·ith giant k1l rh<.'n,
and a \01v n1a intcnan<'f'
yard. Thro11• in frPsh paint
anrl nf'1v ~hag 1"iU'pt'IS :incl
the piclurc. 1s complete. Call
now to see~ :>i&-2JlJ.
1o ·THEREAL \~ ESTATERS
\.. ', ' I ;
LANDSCAPED
TO PERFECTION
Anothr-'r :::o~l'f'l\LS nl"w !1.~t ing
in :'ll<'.~11 !Jr) \l11r. l'ine
11t>i~l'KY1rho<Jrf rlo~I" m 11.JI
~hools an<! p11 rk ;1rf'R with
l rnn1~ cou1·r, ;i nd
pla;).ground. Thi~ rlt!at J
bedroom 2 ba1h home
fea1 u~ shak<' 1'oor and
hardwoOO floors. 11'11 OUR
EXCLUSIVE at $31 .~llll.
1 ACRE WITH
1 HOUSE
(;,.,.If"! OJgta l\.1esa loca11on -
$:!1.'.1::,0 Bu1lclcrJ1 -Gt'f1!!
polcnlial for 12 unit~ plus ~
~ 2 Bcdroo1n hou1SC. Ca.II
616-71 71."
l-Ol THE REAL \~ F:STATERS
* MESA-VERD-E *
COR NER LOT
COATS ;i HI{ -: ha. St·rrrnrd·in pa.
&. 1111. !:<~1n1 f<,r bo<1t
Home + Income RWEAALLLTAOCRE5 \ i·1~ 11" rl1'111•n s:12,:ioo
BALBOA BAY PROP. Cr.am Puff --.546-4141 -* 642-7491 *
Fron1 riua1nt fronl porrh In 1 (Open Evenings)
lush shag carpl'l.~-supr r! j,, --.----.--,,-- _ TIME FOR
LIDO ISLE 65 ' CORNER LOT
Beaut. rcn1ocl. 4 Gn. w/lgc. L.R. & kitch ..
sep. din . rn1. llu ~c upstairs mstr. suite
with adj. study. F.P. & deck . £129,500.
Euge ne Vreeland
PP.l \IF. IJF.:'11/\!'\D RJ::\'.
TALS! 1 block !11 bay or
ocran. Tdral location. Clo~c
to ('\"Cl)1hing. Al!r:ic1h·C'
and all 2 bcdroon1 unit. Call
rl()\,\' 645--0303.
Three !ar;::t l::lf"drooms plus
fam1ly roo1n. C 11 r r" t "rl ,
throughout. 1'€'1\' floor in lhc
k11ehen & 1hnini; arra, plu;,
11("1\' paint 1n~1dr. On qulf't
rul-c!C'-Sill" only 2 n11nu1cs
.,...llik1ng d1~tancr to );('hools.
Only 127}.00 -ALL tcrn1s.
Call 8·12-2.'i:!:J.
4 BDRM+ DEN
ranta~llc hon1c -frl'shly
p<\lnted insirM:-& ou!. 4
Bdrrn, '2 pullman baths.
r1rPan1 k1 lc:ht>11, rl e ! u x r
huilt.1n 1·angr, fl1·rn &
rf1~h\\'a~l1er . family 1w1n
1v1tJ1 in! pr in g lirepl;ic('.
Lo1·c!y patio. Pt>ol !li7.ed
gn.:H1 nd~. !'\c11· tarpeting.
Exprrtly ! 11 n d s r 11 p e d .
:,,10-1;w. I =~~~~~~~~~ Hu~e hv1n£ roon1. t;1a n1 I \V h l re Ll!'phants over·
hedroon1s. Chrf's k1tchr•n. r unning ,your h1tuo;r~ Turn
Laundry 1'00111 . Pl.US 1·cn!al t~n1 inln ''CA~ll " -~cl! J· DAILY PILOT
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
4 BR, 3 ha ., forn1al dining, family rm. Su-
perb, custom "one of a kind ," on lge. lot.
Room for pool . See this truly great home.
$68 ,000. Al Fink
LIDO ISLE
Lovely family home located oh 50' lot nr.
priv. cl ub & beaches . 4 BR .• w/lge. family
roon1 , South patio. $89,500. iVlary Harvey
BAYSHORES
Top corner loc. 2-Story, 4 BR., 3 ba .. prof.
dee. home. Lge. n1str. suite on 2nd level
w/dress. rm . & stud y. Surrounded by lovely
lawn & trees. $92,500. Kathryn Raulston
LIDO ISLE OUTSTANDING BUY
Small er home Joe. on one lot in add. to vac.
lot. St. to St. location. Steps to priv. beach
& club. $78,500 . Edie Olson
FIRST TIME OFFERED
Fantastic view in beaut. 3 BR .. 21h ba. home.
Cozy fam. rm. w/frplc., formal dining.
Cou rtyard entry w /lu•h lndscpg. $72,500.
Harriett Davies
DOVER SHORES BEAUTY
Like space, privacy, view7 Spac. home on
lge. fol. 5 BR., 4'h ba., huge family nn . w/
frpl. Room !or pool. $178,000. Carol Tatum
EXCELLENT VALUE -$44,500
Park-like selling describes th1$ cozy 3 BR..
1 'I> ba. charmer. Lge . lanai overlooking
18x34 pool. The best for the leasL
Mary Lou Marion
~
Coldwell,Banbr
644-2430 ~
133-0700
550 NEWPORT· CENT!R DR., N.I.
'
I ORl\I I Ol \O\
µ t A • • r> ~·
LOW DOWN
AND ASSUJ\1E \IA LOAN -
Nice J bedroom E astside
homt-with brick fireplace,
HUGE )'II rd' c ul-de·J!RC
loc11.t!on. Detached double
garage with alley entranCf".
Priced only $26,000. Call
JlO\V for furthcr dctail:o;.
546-5880 I Open Eves. l
, HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
Exc:eptional Home
Pool
Bea ulilul heated anrl liltered
Anrhony pool, re I A " I ng
lanai, covered 11.nd lavishly
landscaped. Hom e is
absolutely spot!eu, 3 lam
bedrooms, 2 baths, built-iNJ ,
garage door opener, Iota of
extru. Kt!e!p cool this sum-
mer. Best Col!ta Mesa loca·
I ion. Red Carpet, Rt:alton.
'16-8&10.
$23,500
4 BDRM+ DEN
A~'umf' 5%. ~ k>tn. Entry
hall, drea1n kltchf:11, built-In
range & oven, PK=tu~llq\Je
yant. ~to-1720.
TARBELL
295:.i HarOOr. Costa Me~R
INCOME-PROPERTY
Triplex or 4-rilex, good C.1\1.
Joe, Try 10'i~ down nr m-.y
,icrhi.n1ttt. rort!n, flf"allor
642..f:mO, 5'5-1,62.j,
TARBELL
Have something you 1vant to
1ell! Classified ad~ rlo U
1vell -ca.II NO\V 642-5678.
29.'i> !·!arbor, Costa 11esa
Sell the old sfutt Buy the
new stuff
Gen•r•I Gener11f
MACNAB
IRVINE
~~-------""'--------
FINER HOMES
A RARE FIND!
Out o! the ordinary Ivan Wells Baycrest
home . Extra large 3 BR.. 3 bath -3 car
garage. Perfectly maintained. Delightful
garden & patio. The perfect setting for en-
tertaining. $79,500. See it TODAY -* BALBOA ISLAND BAYFRONT *
On Jee side -lovely outlook. Pier & fl oa t.
Just what you've been waiting for ! 3 BR .
home & 1 BR. apt. Don't overlook this
exceptional value. Sl55,000
YOU WILL LOVE
lhe Karastan carpet in this 4 BR. beauty
in HV Hills. $72 ,500 includes the large cor·
ner Jot. Chatlene Reichman. &U-8235.
FEE SIMPLE
Vacant canal-front lot -Newport Shores.
R-l-30x80 -$25,000 -Suggc•t terms.
Gloden Fay 642-8235
[Irvine I M ........ '"'"""•"'"'""'""' 'J
IOI Dover Drtfe 142·1211
1144 MecArttwr 144•1.200
Newport aftctt, C.llfoml• 12111
*DUPLEX*
8 mo.<. old, studio 'YP"" 2
Bdrm11 ., 1 1 ~ bath!! f"ach,
11·/priv. pa l10~. hltfn kit-
chens. Pr1red at on J y
112.;.(l().
unit. ONLY sw.~~')'l ra!I thl:'ITI .. !hn.J 0~11:~ p i I 01 WANT AD
!10\l"-6-lj....()J()J. 5=1R.'5S lfJed . 642.-.'JGi.11. 1---~------I
Call: 673-:!66.l 67;)..8886 evf!!I.
associated
BROKER S-REALTORS
2025 W Solboo 67l ·166)
-STOP -
lnvestoni; can stop lookinK
Jor that perf~t 4-pll!'x
becaulie ~'e have ii. 3 block.Ji
to beach. exoellent ton·
rlltion, 3 yrs. old. Ca.ll ror an
a ppt. to att. $715 per month
lncomct.
C:WM IOH & I H
I 01:1 \I I. Ol \O\
/.' r A, r v 1-<;
Bayfront + Pier
Charming 5 Br beach hon1e. I
t:xciUng harbor a cUon, 1
2301 Bayside Dr. $1 68.000 I
Bayfront Conda
~ Br, 2 Ba , pool, piu &: slip.
Delightful $79.500
EMERALD BAY
Tmn1aculate .1 Br + tam r m.
Ocran l'lidc of h1vy, Vie1v.
M ui'lt t>Cf"! $149.000
TED HUBERT & ASSOC.
3471 Via Lido 615-U:IO
Reallo!'ll 646-77ll I liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir
204.'\ \\o"ei;tclifr Drh·e I °""" ·m ' PM TRll'LEX
S BR .• $48,500 Very nice 3 BR, 2 BA owner·~
NP.Ill neighborhood. 11;, Ba. unit + 2·2 BR l BA. Good
Frpl, din. rm. Spaciou!!! location.
OlUCK CAROTHF.RS $51,500.
REAL ESTATE
TREASURES
I 18.Jl Weslcllff, N.B. ~152 ' ------OCEANFRONT
3 8drms .. n.2 lot. Plana lor
Roy McC11rdl• Realtor
1810 Ne"''port Blvd .• C.l\.t.
S48-7n9
lnd unit 11v111I. w.t.500. l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!f!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
BAYFRONT -FOR -
5 9"""'·· J•\ """· Pl<r A YOUNG COUPLE floal. $268.IXK! • Or Jea.o;e
THE IRWIN CO. Eutoridr -J Bcdrrn. <lol l
RNltors 644-4' 111 hou.,. for $26.950, Try 10%
610 N1w.'port Ctnter Or. down, 90'hi k>M. 422 W1l·
Suite 445 Nt-wport Beach nut, C.~T. A nlc~ frirndly
$TEPS TO BEACH ""'""°"'°""·
3 BR. 2-aty. Recently decor,
neat new carp. Optfl beam
«lls: l8.f'ie patio. $3.'\.900,
CAYWOOD REALTY * 541-1290 *
General Gene rel
GUEST SPEAKER
Hunti ngton Be1ch Bo11rd of Re11lto rs
HARRY H. WINTt•S, Ill
!larry H. Winters, 111 wUI be the guest speak-
er at the Huntington Beach Board of Real·
tors at the Mile Sclua.re Country CJub in
Fountain Valley, \V ednesday, June 7; I a.m.
Mr. \Vinters has :spoken at numerous flute.
lions on Real Estate in Californla, Including
most ol the Realtors Boards In the local
areas within the past year. J-le is a Gradi.aate
Realtors Institute Instructor, and serves on
various committees of the California Real
F.state Association .
J-Je 's very active in. the community ••• ~.
was president o! the Pony League Base~!
for two years, vice-president of the Sertoma·
Club (service to mankind), Charter member
of Toastn1asters, me1nber of Junior Ch~
ber of Co1nmerce, member or Cortac (State
Committee o! County Tax Colleclors), mell'I'
be r Orange County Chamber o! Ci>mmetC..
member of Board of Di reclors of Newporl
1-larbor-Costa l\tlesa Board of Realtors, mem-
ber of the Real Estele Million Dollar Club
and won Top Salesman Awafd In 1968 for
The Re al Estaters of which ,he ts the Sal.,
Manage r ol the Newport Boulevard office.
OWNE R tren!I, assume 5!4 ~ 'v"•""c•"'n"c::-.,-,-.,,.:-,:-,::m"••"~-'Y"1 ""'1'"i,.""""'""
lo11n, 3 Bdrm. df'n, 'l bflth~. your hou~e. t'pl., lll'll"e I
rl!n1ni: rm, hrk. $13.900, blrl~ .• "tc. thru • De.Uy Pilot I
f 714 l M2-Ti61. Clasii1fled Ad . l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!l!!l•l!!I•
j
4 ONLY PILOT * Tur\Clay, June 6. 1972
I .. [a~ r.aJ r-1 ~I
--~ [ ............ I~ I _..... I~ I
ean View From ~-miiillliimiii;;;;;;;;;;;j !·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j ---I~! ------.1 ~ .. ~ L -... ~~! ~-----~1~~11;;-1 ;;--=--~---;;.-;;;.I ~~
Al An~ r.. , 1 ···-Hunt.-llMdi Ol loolitrc'a1 ilefi;,bor', --• •rt ... ~,
alll? Cul ,.,.,.. .,... °" FRESH AIR l!ASTBLU,F REAL UTATE
thr IPlrldlnl blue Padflc WAA'1'£0 BY JUNE 18'rn: SALESMEN-lrono &J\Y .._.. of lhlS COUNTRY Excrutl\~ l l•mily i. .,.k· -
eust.oaa Temple H 1111 $180 • mot1lh Will buy lhif if1a a year'1 lea.w on a J or Nttd l « 2 uperiencecf
hilhsion. \Vatch the aun tel cule little tour bedroom In 4 btdrm Eastblutt hon\e. aale1people. Incentive com-I ;bthlnd Catallrw Island. Buy ont' ()f fluntinrton lkach'$ \V Ulln1 to pay up to s.xxi a misi;ion sliding scale J>lan,
I a te.letlCJl)pe. Words C&ll't grei! nf'ls:'1100rtioos. Nt'ar month. CAU. 64i-7"3!. pel"llOMllied traininc by •
delcribe the beauty, ttils 3 gf>Od sehoolll, bf' a r. h r ' , El Toro pt'ofc11~io1'18.l. AL.~ wlD !rain
bedroom hu jt aJI. Forma.J perk,, !lhoppln&. f!'f'('\\A)'S oew licensees. Small office,
room, tush carpets • • • E'ven 11. c:oupk-of J BR. 2 BA, cpts, drp~. lgf' pleasant V.'orktng conditions. ,nd matchlne drapes. We beauutu.I 11nle l<ikc1 is p111to, IK" pool-11 ite kit Ptl'$0J'\ILI interview -A.!k
ill trade anythlhi; you wilhin waJk1nt ()f b~cycllng el'K·losM bY block '~all, for 11.fanagw.
haw for this 100.000 caatle. dl~tanee. Subjt<:I to 5~ .. cloM" 10 xlnl a c ho olr., U.S. AFFILIATED
lrvlno Nowpert llMch ~II• ~ Income ,....,.rty 166
"9;;;:;;;;;:;~~?1'= For S.lo 115 .. * 6 u"'tTS *. l BR., 2 ba., atrium 1325J~ • I '.".=,.--~~~~ N
3 BR. 2 ba., tam. rm 1335 IA YCREST 1970 1.a,,.,.,. :io.<o, low dwn., IN !:ASTBWf't'
\VE HAVE OTHERS Over 'm:l 1q n of luxury Jn a take o'paymtntl, choice lot. ' • • ..._.. 0
3 bfdroom, 21,S bath., family S'»-1593. ><. 7....-..
and dining atta. Bonus of Obi wid(" mobile home. a.dull -rt .....
a spark! ing pool and low ert. air tond HWlt. B.
' I I ' ' I
I ' I I 1 I I' II ii '
---·1: 1111llur
"SINCE 1~"
ls.t \Ve.11rerr Bank Bldg.
t.;ni~rsity Park, Jrvi~
D1ys 552-7000 Nights
maintenanct 7:i' x UO' yard. s10.r.oo. 847-8817: * Triplex Sy Owner. 2 Br,
All the usual Baycrest =~-0:---..---::=:--c= large yards, car age~ .
fea tures. F ull pl'ict $64,930. ON 3 Par golf rourP, OC"e&n 10-'20cr dn 5-15, ;m offff.
and an assu1nable lOftn of &eroas sfl·ee, H.B., 2 Br., 2 2233 Ruti::ers 01·, C .. \J. ~ooo J ba.., fam ily room , ... ~7-SlOO. appl'.'Q:Qmalt'l y $:.U, · ust d ishu·a.sher, :.:i Slar Park'11, ,,,,
listed -hurry. be!! lot, SL2.800. ca. 1 11-~2"1~u~n'if~."N~r~S"h-o-p''g-.-
ca11 S40-llfi1 •Open nt~ll.) 5.16·1981 after 5, Adult'!. 2 A'. 3 BR, 2 Ba. 8Zll ~"'llis You will agrtt. CaU lor ap-t11A Jottn • , • ThiJ homf.' marketa. new rn a I I .
pobrtmenf. boaat.11 heavy cedar Miake Rea!IOMble. 84 7 -1 7 j 3,
..-...,. 'I I' ti roof, IU ~lht.. 494-2116 aft 5:30 &: wk~111f.o;.
Brokers Really
847·8507, Eve11 96S-1178 Laguna Beach _< ~ .. HERITAGE l ~~~~~~~~~~I Ave, }IB. $Q) .rrt. 847.:J907.
[j] TRIPLEX. ea. 2 B R . • , 'I ' ' ' _ .. EXCEPTIONAL BUY . . REALTORS R••I E1t111, w1patios. ,''ir. 11tores. $45,900 .
, Reallon 54~
' 1790 l tarbor Blvd. at Ada.ms
, Open D.'t'S.
' Executive Special
: for this s11perb l beQroom
· home ne1tled among tree11 1 and i;;hrub!\. Sparkling quall-
-0 THt: PEAL
"-ESTATERS POOL TIME
--~~==~~--I No kidriing, th.ls IS The VA TERMS ~harpe~I pool home in Faun·
SparkHn1<: -l bl'droom, ramily lain Va!IE"y, f ea t u r i n g
room, 10' x JS' !CteFned e~solute privacy in lh!! fonn
alumirn..1111 lanai, fireplace:, of tall !.hade trees. 4 n1ee
full builtin! inc I u d 1 n g !>.llC'd bedroom~. din 1·n1.,
dishv.·111ihl'r, new Rll vl11yl ram. 1111., liv rm .. all f'ler
floor in kit. & ran1ily rm -kitch, Tastefully decora led
Offered "'Ith 1'1lA or no 111/an air of elegance, for
riovon VA term ~ or roursf'. rhe JusJiy buyer. ~.995
Call 540-J15! (Open [ves.) Asking Price. Submit your
-00-LA-LA Appl'O.\. 1000 Ft. of fanuly
A htau!itul 4 hetlTO!lm plu! 11:ving: b!_t-1~:· !~~· dining
fl1n1 ng roont Spanish de5ig11-l!ll .. den, li>c. I \log r n1.
er! hon1e. Fireplace ca1·pets \\/fYplc.; .3 e.'<t!'a !gr.
end drape>.~. J)(>w p~!nt ~hru h rl 1· m ll. C ? m r l e 1 e I y
ou1, rl!'moc.l<'lf'd k j t ch en , la11<l:,cafJ('IJ. NIU! patio an'a,
EASTILUFF
EXECUTIVE ESTATE
Unbelievabll!' halt af're ,.,.152
fret>& SU11'0unding the p1·et·
tiest yard you'll ever see, 5
BR, 3 BA. 2100 sq rt. \\/hat
n1orr can ,.,.e say! By app't
only -Call 979-JOJO,
';;;°"';;"';";";;~;; 675-0144 A~nt 646-7414
• lndu1tri11I Pr~rty 161
Acre•a• for 111le 150 * .M·l CORNER *
--FORECLOSURE With.. older house. Prime:
. 1.1 locatl(ln, Costa ~lei1a.
40 Acre.-; m Northern. Ca 1 or· Corbin-1\fartin Real 1or~ ,__ ocean v i e111 Cood QVl'rslzed rut. clost> to nla'11 outrloor paradise, bor· 644-7662 or 642-$989
de:ring natlooal forest, 2 ~--~-=--,-
mile!, to Pit River, Horse Mount11in, Desert,
ty for fine tnlE"rtainlng.
Lu.sb deep pile carpeting
with CU!tom mat c hing
drapes. all electric kitchen
•Nlth all the trimmings. tan-
.,,·erythiJig. Call 8·17-1221. n"1ghborhood, C"lo~r Io
6(·hool5. S42.9j().
} tasric fireplace. What a
I' $howplace for $39,500! Seller
·ls prepared fer GI and IBA
/ terms. now'a the time. Call
171~1 Beach Blvd., H.B.
bid~
•
-~ -HERITAGE
' . REALTORS I'
I ..,,,..,...,.":":"..,...,.""'I 'U-4471 I :;:: ) 146-11 OJ Real ton 545--0465 = M
Harbor Blvd. at Adan1s * L * t:rl.'enbrooke, 5 Br, 2600 5(1 II
Open Eves. i S lmuM". Asking $2000 le~~
WATER FRONT 1
The f•sfest, ~;;;: 6~1;~t 10~~i_c:~..,,·i~s~~:
4 BEDROOM most efficient Onr 1ran,<;_ 9fh~·D781.
• 1 wa y to BUY or SELL
VACANT
3BR, 2BA. $20,9-j(), FP. $6.'JO.
dn. Ol!ln elec RIO, "'/W
C'rpt~ & dftJ S, cozy liv nn
\l"/USf'<i brick firep/, FA ht.
v.·alk to shopping a n d
school,.;.
I' 11/age Real Estate
'62-4471 ( :::: J 546-11 OJ
is most u_nusual llon.1(' 1~ I \IL'l:IIPl.E l.!STl,NGS , .. 01-;coRATOR'S 3 Br, 2 &. I t --0\VNER n1u~t s('IJ ! 4 BR, lge ', 'dtsigned ..,,1_th the u tu11a.: "GINNY" MORRISON extras, upgrade~. shag (•rpf. nd h , l iv r1n, imn1~C'.! New 1\/11• '.in personality a c aJ n 55i·~l '.l0 REALTOR 540-2286 drp5• frplc, palio. R y ,..,..,,, dl.,.,s. :'llany flo"·trs & muct be ln11pected to bt ap-Ov.·Mr. S33.000 I 7 1 ~ ) -·,. "
' J!teciate:l. Mode rn all ele~ Baycrest 962-3.'>21. tl'N's, near shppg, park &
, .-trlc blt·in kitchen. Lovtly & public Ca tholic s c ho o I s .
\\'ti OWNER must ~JI. Spanish •29 ~,· C-'I !or ·~1 1: bright living room -·1 1 CUSTOM -# •'"'' dJ .. ,.,.. • desigo, authentk arch'\\·ays. ,,.._··-1 f bro k' rs : qua.Ii'"" sh,, ... v.o/w cpts & · '-<llll. esy o •
'.1 •0<>& COMMODORE family rm, dining rm, cozy nco1••• d-pes . Used brick frplc -;JQO-........ ... Offered by original 01vner -A den-library. garden ldtche'n, I~~=~---~~~~ Choice location-Prlvate great plan for a /aniily. 4 brk $30':;oQ. 17141 9i32-5.l66. VACANT -Beach Cottage.
.dock anty $98,000 Call .. _,., I I d · · ' ' Knotty piTlt' kitchen. used 673-••~. ....,.,room. orm_a t n l n g O\VNER , , c r ., 1; c •.. 4 --·' J il brick fireplace. bath & room a11<.1 am Y room. • • bedt~m•. 2 b•lh•, d'"'"' 7
+.
0 THE REAL
"-f.STATERS
"'
DREAM HOUSE
• SPl!CIAL
ow yo1.1 can buy her that
;.dream house because this is
it. 4 huge bedroom:'!, 2',1 lux>
uriou11 bath11, lots of extra
room. Prestige model ,vJth
ankle dttp carpets thruout,
drapeti to match. H.uge
separate family r o o n1 .
Trade in that old model on
lhis $49,500 sf)('cial. &>ll,.r
\Viii consider all offel"l!!i. Cnll = \.\11'111 ~il l
Realtor's 545-9491
2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adam11
Open Eves.
164 CJ\rl ""' ... vanity. Custom shu!ters ,r,.
PETE'BARRETI' REALTY r111, bu ilt -ins, fireplace., brk, cab i nets. Art\is t-o\vner
642-5200 $27,900, 1714! 847--061}t says," sell last so I can
\VANT A POOL HOME? travel." BKR! 962-5511.
Coron11 del Mtir 4 Br .. 2 Ba .. crptii, drps, S-0LO
---------rovd patio. 01vner. 968-1219. All my listings, Need homes ATTENTION BY O\VNER. 4 BR., 1 ~,.'. BA. to adverti11e and sell. For OWNERSI lam. rm . .shag cpts., 1800 professional, efficient ser-
• sq. ft. $31.500. 963-2146 OJ' vice
Do you have one of the oldtor 1213) 3i9-ti72l. Cell Jun Blair 96S.7833 hon1e11 or dup!exe!? Do you I -· • -
"'Onder ivhat your property 4 Br+ Lrg Bonus Room l:;i yrs in Jleal f.sta1e Sales
· 11 · 1h' "' Id Convenient lo f\\'YS Jrg lot. RED CARPET REALTORS 1.~ rea y "01 . VIOU you . • 962-77TI like to kno"'' of a govern-S34.000. 847-3957.
mc-"'l'lt spon11ared plan to Huntington Be•ch
allow a 100';~ loan on your1-----------
property if you s hould ~ll ii JUST LISTED
to anyone of many millions Owner's out of ·state An<1
of ellgfblt-buyeM? fl you must sell this sharp, clean 4
would like to ~ar thf' bedroom home, large corner
anS\\·eri1 to the&e questions lot 1vith boat & trailer ac-
call 675-722>. ccss. Priced for q uick sale
at S29,9:j(].
O\\!NER an)(ioU!. Redwood
paneling, elegant interior, 4
hedrm, 3 baths, den, family
rm. dining rm, Brk, $36,900,
1n41 962-1373.
SAVE $1.00J
$19 950 SUCH A DEAL COLWELL ' Totel Down Peyml
&II or lease ;:; B~. Condo.
N£'\.ll cpt~. Xlnt con d .
$20,500. Ov .. ·ner, 96&-964.1;
536-4298.
r,. th~ low, low price for this $78.JS
-3 bedroom, 2 bath no. PROPERTIES, INC
REALTORS to any CI buyer, _for this '.t maintenance home in east d:orta Mesa. AIM! featul't'~ I -~=~~~~--==~I btdroom & family room
WHICH HARBOR home clo"' lo <V•rylhiog, built-in kitchEm, dish\.\•asher VIEW FOR YOU? 11.sking prl~ of only $29,900. & double car garage. Better
Rtofl('C'1! O\\'nPT's AnXit'I}'. check this oM TODAY. Lusk Harbor View . S89.500 LEASE WITH OPTION
Smith Harbor View $69,950 Large 3 bedroom, formal
Original Harbo~ Vle\v $64.950 dining and family room
Bun Harbor Vw1v $57,000 home. Full buillins and one
J8MM11111
,Realtors 646-71ll
1 :MMJ WestcliU Drive
Open •w 9 PM
Call 67&-7225 of th~ cleanest in Fountain
Valley. VACANT Payments
or only S26S.
0\VNER leaving, a~sume
61 ;-;;., loan, low payment.oi. <I
hedrm~. lamily rn1, dinln~
rin, covered patio, Brk,
$33.900. (TI4) 962-8865.
OWNER desperate. Family
rm, 4 Bednns, entry hall,
dining rm, Park like yard,
Brk. $28,fiOO, (714) 84~91.
BY O\.\•ner-. as!ume lo IBA.
3 BR, 2% BA, lam nn., elcc
bltns, crp!s, drp.oi, din., r1n
lor boat/trlr. 968-3943 eves
* 499-2800 •
SO. LAGUNA
2 Bdrms., 1 bath. \\'oo1 burn·
10~ firrpl acP. Loi.·atrd In
prunr So. Laguna area.
Ju~t steps fl um rhc hcao·h.
All !his plus g:uf'sl ;t pl Jnr
SJS.500.
AO/an
,,.947~~1~,~~l~:~, I
-BEACH HDUSE--
$29,500
Quainl hon1e area; C"l<Jse in.
&an1 cE'il's., flr. to ceil.
lrplc., picture \\·indow, ref.,
\Vasher. I Br \Y/balh.
MfSSTON REALTY 494-()731
Legun• Niguel
EASTSIDE TRIPLEX
Privacy ror all -Spacious 3
hedroom 2 bath O\vners unit
plus 1Wo·2 bcdroon1 rentals.
'l'll'o years yflung . You
1.:an·1 bell! rhis "prid<'-0f.
011·nrrsh1p"' lot.:<t1ion, in Har·
lxir ll1i::h S<'hool di s!rirt.
540·1151 f0p('n Eves.)
., -~"' HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
PENINSULA
Creek, town. SlB,639 Ca~h Resort 174
priee. Simply pay $2.39. 2 Lots, secluded $2,450
do\\'n & take aver paymPnts J.foonridge cabin SJJ,730
ot 189 ~ mo. Tremendous Lakeside cabin $35,000
oppon.un1ty to acqu!l't' '?" Call 866-4641 or \\Tit~;
day 111hat may not ~ a\•8Jl· Spencer ReAl E state, P. O.
abl.r tomorro1v. Box 2328, Big Bear Lake, E.d Edv.·ards, l.anrll\'ay. ca1·r
714 : 830-9840 714: 622-1815 ~-'-·~-~-----
so ACRES, Ne1v Mexico, nr. R1inchts, F•rm s,
nalional ror~t. $6 1.25 PER Groves 180
ACRE. S49 l\1o. 96.3-0047. YA:\llLY and livini:; roon1
21 ~ ACRES Antelope Valley, bed sofa, rli11ett(' sel. b11r
only $2j(), dov.·n. Owner stools. E.xcellent condit1ort.
mu'st iicl!. ~..\6-:;{136. 962--0628.
l ', Al'res near Pa!Jn Springs. Real Estate Wanted 184
,11·ill acrrpt ~.·:() for $'.?.'iO r q. ••••• lTBLUFF
B..1l ~lS!l.J. s20 nio. 536-11~1. EA
;;;---;--------1 \\'ANTED BY JUNE 18TH:
Cemetery Executive &. fainily is ~f"ek-
Lots/Crypt1 156 ini:; a year 's lease on a 3 or
FOR Sal~ • 3 burial Jots in 4 be<lnn East:bluU home.
Exclusive Balboa Peninsula impt'Oved area. H a r b 0 r \\'illing to pay up to $500. a
Point. Impressive 4 BR., 3 Re st. Call 642-3360. month. CALL 644·7438.
baths, extra large !iv. rm. • FOREST La"·n-Glendale,I~~~~~~~~~~
lluge 18x40 family nn. · I: I ~ 2 plot.'! in Comm. Sectton, [ &am ceilings, ma s 5 iv e Si~ for both. 714 : 968-21"i2. f inanci1I •
frplc., largP pallo. Sho,vn by : 0 ,---..,-.-----!~mmmmm;;m~m;I appt. S"i'.J .. )(}ll. Commercial
FOnS1\LEby0\\'tlC'1'.58R., CAL l 0 6-46 ·1-4 14 Property IS&'
21:1. BA., n1ag11ifir·ent vif'1v. ~ • ~ BUsiness
ht'aut1f11I laDrJst:aping, ::: Pll· I dJfeiilfC. Lagun11 Beach Opportunity
tins. Principals only. S?.S. 7J-0. ii AL TY r 50 X .113 C-2 ZONL l --'"'-:-"'."0~-'-:'."'."'7--
714: 49.:>-4414. N11r N1wport Pii i orrlct I One or last dov.•nto1vn parcels AVAILABLE
700
Lido Isle -PANORAMIC VIEW ror developn1ent. NOW
Beaut. maintained ho1ne E 17th St C t M Large Corporation des1n:-s
COY!PLETEL '{ remodeled & 2 Bedroon1s & large family A.AA T ., 1°11'.· aOOO ~Se ref JXJnsible person to di:<·
rf'rl<.\'Or, trarlitio.nal home. 3 l'ln. Pool $64,500. C' ) enantd. bl a, n. tribult" TF.'\CO ta Oi\·ision &Jn11~.. (Jin. rm., den G . W"ll " m asi spcn a t relU l1l of Coca C0 la1 COFF".E. eorge 1 1a son R · Bk. 67-6100 · · u "' l>'/1,et bar. l...arg!" rorner Realtor ea lonom ics, l , ·>· PRODUCTS.
lo!, East end. $9!1.~. 548•6 .~70 '4S·lS64 * &If.! ACRES * .
Poten!ia! C·l. 627 ft. frontage C~ start full l'.!r part tun!' hOWORi) lowson jR.. -OP-EN-DAf[v -1:5-on Brookhursl. S450,000. Call !.rlD hrs. per irk. 1 Con1 pany
34l6 Via l=ttoR ~ nTVER l\ VE. 540-8555. estabhi;hl's bu~incss fol' dis· ""'"""-o----c,.-,~-"-5-_l-,-36_2 Channl"I f1\Jn1, pif'r & ~li p:: SHERWOOD REAL TY , h·ibutors.
3 BR + fam. & din r111s. 4J' BR 'h Pl• 1 flr 2od '"'I I OC"-c--~~~--... a. 1
·' ( l" --1 ~o :cJO:LLING! Lot, ~treet lo street $69,500 incl. SSi.~J()(). ,\gl. Duplexes/Units '·'
75 Fl. lot, lge. homr. S1rcet Ask for Bet ty tili-1!172 s•le 162 Go tishini or :-;pend morP
to srr eC't .••.• , , ..... S!J0,000 ~~ ----timt \\•ith your favorite
LIDO REAL TY * H a rbor View Homes hobby and let the machine
Dramali(' 2·slory on HUCE ~ age earn you money. CASH ::;3n Via I4ido, N.B.
673-7300
BA YSIDF. HO~tf.:
( BR. pool. dock $lj7,j()(I
KEN RRITTINCHA.\1
REALTOR
6iz..-0123
Mission Viejo
FHA-RE PO
4 Bedroom. reconditioned.
$.12,250
KATELLA REALTY
Mission Viejo El Toro
Office ............... 837-9400
vle111 lot. 4 BR, 3 BA. Top REQUIRED $2498. Secured. Qua.lily Thruout. ~67.950. INCOME HOMES
o,vncr. 644-€2~!1. NE\V DUPLEXES $411,950 Lli\llTED OPPORTUKTTY
NE\V TRIPLEXES $67,950 \\'rite no1v for infor n1alio n, BY O\VNER, nea.r tloi:iit. ;:; No1v under construction II.I includt phone number.
BR., 2 BA. ~ car garage. 151 E. Bay at., Co!ta Me&a.
Ne1\' rpt.~. (]rps ])ltns. Pool. Conlpieff' July. 642-490.i
S32,00J. &14-1236, Da y s ; REDl-BRE\V
COROORATION NE\\' Delux Tl'iple)( · 2-:Z 100.1 llo\vard Avenue
Bcdrooin. 2 Ba.. 1 • .3 San J\lateo Ca. 94401 b(~room 2 Ba. Dbl. garagt '
each unit. .172,500. 407 NEED CASH? Sl,000, Or up
Hamilton, C.:\.f. O '" n ~ r. lo $3,000, $10,00'.l and fTKIJ'f'.
agent. 645--420~. 833-8447. See A V'CO Thrift tiJr a Rta!
'YOUR CHOICE '· • 5% Down
COLWELL
PROPERTIES. INC
REALTORS
CALL 540-&'l55
SHERWeeo REAL TY
18964 Brookhut"8!. F .V.
FOR Sttle by owner. Upper
Bay, 4 BR. 3 BA, lan1 rm ..
v.·<'t bar, din nn & heaut.
landscaping, Call 633-2233.
t\1?-.IAC. 2 Br .. 2 ha Condo,
lrplc .. bar. pool. $29.500 or
best offer. Ownr. 979-1478 .•
BY Owner. 2 !ty., 4 bdm1. S•nta Ani
Xlnt cond., good loca.tion.N __ •_w..;po-....rt_B_ .. _cll ____ I---------.,,.
BY Owner. Cap 1st ran o
Beach. l )T. old -3 Br ..
$50,000 or trade for Jot,
53&0,.146.
Estate Loe.n. Upon ap-
provat, use the nioney
ho\\·ever you like. Also ask
about our unaecu rerl
personal loans. A V C 0 * 5 Bedrooms, 2 Baths * Walk to New Park * Priced to Sell Fast * Only S:B,500
1t r.ta.ke your own tenns * Vacant -+ Make Offer * Call 8474"i01D Now!
PAD AD
r!eal location for bachelor or
hide a\\'ay. Sharp a.'l a tack.
1 bedroom home \\"ith plush
earpet.11 and dr11pts. \\lash('r,
'dryer, 11.nd refrigrrator in·
'clodert Jn this low price or
$15,950. ]deal location close
to pool & rec room. At this
pri~. why rent~ Call
Realtors 54:>-9491
' Open Eve!.
I· CONTEMPO.
Costa Mesa
Many extras. $32.900. 9912 CALIFORNIA 4 BDRM, 21; BA, Jiv nn, din
r.toore Cirele, 968-3037. rm. fain rm. patio kitchen,
NOT fANCY-
JUST HOMEY
4 BEDROOM
$38,950.
$14,000 -1 Br t.Jedallion Con· LIVING AT IT'S 2Zi)(l2' bonu~ rm (finishrd\.
c1o. aJI bltn!, re!rlg., encl nrsT.I 3 car gar. $12,500. 54~973
patio, pool. quiet. SlOOO dn., D'~ af!rr 4 pni.
La\"e!y 2 11tory. Z'(l() sq ft of !st TD $8900 514~·~ bal. \\.'ail until you see this lovely 3 BR & family rm .. 2 ha. Lg.
corr1f'r loL $29,500.
--GEMM--
CLEAN HOUSE lli!:h )(tra 7 ~~<;0 2nd TO. 61:>-5034. 5 bedroom home in Newport
Jrg kifc-h & fa.m nn. AIS'O . B ._ 3 b H 1 d I ~ Beach -Grt'at cen1ral loca· ;:, r "" a. ea e poo . ,. ll'lh ., I has a formAI din nn & 1 BR F pf . ,1 1 8 R ion -i r s scpara e r in 11· a s er · · , 1 ·i I ,. 21 p I 1610 \V. Coast 1-lwy .. N.B. t BA downstairs. Gd crplJi: $-$2 000 968-236-ft t <in11 Y roon1 an( . .ix oo,
Rl-":•\'.TORS 642-4623 & drps. Patio is or red brick ' · J a pm. 111!" Big fan11ly \\'i.11 really
, · 1· n n r. -1 H Nr. Beach -ele11:ant 2 Br. rnin;· tfus Ti~""·Story home BEST College Park buy -"".inc ~ a 1:......-...i p1 . omr ·~v " II II lh GI ....... Hv encl. patio, cpl, drp. dSh\vr, 11i th 2$)) """a.re ree-t. On 8 O""n v..·knds. Sha ..... 3 br. Lo ~ 11: v..·i or """ · 962 2 9 ~-~ • • fi & sprinklrs, 327,000 · I 4. Cul de Sac and pri«d 11t on. do111n, .S.11.950. 293 Bowling nancing.
Westminstet
ATIENTION Gl's
No do,vn payn1ent and oaly
$500. closing costs. 3 Btdrm.
den, 2 baths, firepl, ideal
loc. £47-8531. The REAL
ESTATE MART.
1"6 TifRIFT. 620 Newpc;it Ctr. ---3-2-U-N_IT_S--·I Dr.. Soll• IOI, Newp01·1
Bea('h, Ph. 83.1-3-140.
Income Property
Over 2 acres of easy living, Investment
garden · aparbnents near Oppo tunlty 220
Santa Ana Country Club.1 -......:..:....;.'--'----
Schedule shcrlv.o; 15% return CATTLE feeding program,
on 15<;,~ down, May t.'<· t.lay '"i2. Annu~tl Profi ts.
change. Listed Price : Appro)(. -1:i'lt, Trd Lock
$445,000. call our Investment Cattle-Co. 714-&1-1-6289.
Division, 546:-1600.
Money t o Loan 140
HOiWF.:O\Vil'ERS?
10 THE REAL
\"-l:STATERS
BORROW I' * 4 BR. 3 Ba, 2 story, shag .ly $30,400 -\\"ill go qu ickly.
Green Dr. crpt.'l, bltns, nr S('hao\! & 64&-TI7L EASI' C'OSfA MESA
4 BDR.M. REPO. 531 '"111-J 531 5 II beach. 96S-0558. I~ 2 BR. -& duplex. Vk. $1000 . $10,000 Up E -!lide, huge master, sharp .. .,. -. " I 1---.--------MobiltHomes JiillP 19th & Newport. Xlnt for LOW MONTHLY ~~~11:7l9.Try $33,500. Bkrj!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!K~l!."!D~S~!!!!!!!!I!!! •l;;rv;;i;;n;;o:;;:;;;;:;;::;;;.1 -'='='"='===~=====-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~ home or investment. $31,500. PAYMENTS
._,_. • 0wM,r/Broker. 636-5&40 WANS on At'llY HOi\.lE,
3 BR. 2 Ba. Xtra Jrg lot. Xlnt FREEWAY EASTBLUFF Mobile t4emei FOUR-PI.EX all:.! Br, 1 Ba, PAlD FOR or NOT
cond. $32,cm. 546-6321 afl WANTED ORIENTED \VANTED BY JUNE 18TII: For S11le 115 inc $570/mo, no dn VA. COMPARE OUR COSTS
5:30 wkdy.s. Low, Low Price EKecutive & family is seek-_ --------CRV $52;000. Nr OCC. FlRST:'
E Bl ff Come see lhis 4 BR-. 2}i ing a year's lease on a 3 or DOUBLE wide Flamingo 557-(i151 tlRESIDE LOAN GUARAN· •st u · b' • ~d 3 bath balh. 2200 ••. tt. tow11housto, • •-~-m EastblufJ ho-·. b · I h H ACT NOW!!
Delightful 3 BR. 2 ba., ~X·
pR.n<lt'd la1nily rm.; l-lf'vcl.
PMml! lot: quick e.oicrow.
346,000.
Big, Ii u ""' rooms, ~, .. 11"1.uuv "~ m o l e om • . a s 13 UN 1 T S .. Immaculate, TEE:
home in xlnt area -walk to for only $3.2.!00. O"'J1er ls WllHn,g to pay up to SjOO a evttythfng. Set up in nice Eastside, claee in. Bargain. If you can get thf SAME
Catholic school! F'ittplace, .anxious. Make oiler. month. CALL 644-7438. lam Uy park. P ets OK. $8500. P hU Sullivan, Re a I t 0 r , 11).\.~ Crom any OTHER
w/w carpets & drape~. bltin oG"LA...,M~O"'R"'o"u"s~T"nrue=:--;9;--;a..;;:-, I, ,;531;;,-·-7294=.:;:::=:o,-,o;::o;-o= 548-6761. LENDER in California al i LAGUNA HILLS ~tip adult community
, adjacent to Leisure World. ,).,
Beeut sum>Undfr1g1, all lux· -"'tl'..,,
RIO, patio. xlnt landscap. 214 ba. POOL. S.'lS.000 .10% I }911 Kirkwood 24xfi0 low RATES LESS THAN ~'E
ing. Priced tor quick SEile at cash or trade. 0 w n e r dWn, take o'paymentll', cor-HOQlt Hunting? Walch the OFFER. rt l urn the
S.18.!nl. Subn1it your temui! 64&-7'667. ner kit.·89~1593. OPEN HOUSE column. MONEY ,vilhin 15 dR~. and ~::tle·::i~1:=-~1:'4 '--st t-_'_.· .. ~/:i· tl 1.f\ 'billiard tables. M u c I·! (ff, I Q!!JJ
Call S.17-12'21. =~~:;;;:=====~.=;::;;;;;:;;;;:=:::;:===;::..!.,;;;;;;:;;:;;;:;;;;=====1 YOUR LOAN '"'ith US i!
. yjRE! ;{. ;:, r cnlty S-the "Award • winning" -..:-1n41 Beach Wvd., H.B.
1imnlabed model -.. oN 2m v'"• "'1 o..o l!J ACRE •SALE 'nlIS WEEK. l"t'l\•port Be11 ch I .. IJ0.3llOO "I' 830-M> 644-11'3 ANYTIME POOL • POOL· POOL 'fi'!"!!~~!C~""i&iii• -~,-====--..--147' Aluminum covered patlo r e DELUXE e with e-s.q. 16' , 32· poo1
l SR. 2 BA Apt for lease. '\i th dttsslng room. • BR 2
Jncld .11pnc. mt\llltr auitt, din BA. it " .11ha.g ca T pt t s
rm Ir dbl garage.; auto dOC'lt' thrnout. Conwnation pit
Ol)e:nf!I" avail Pool It \\'ith v.·et bar It. flrepla.ee,
Reereational area. formal dining. A l'ft\l tun • sm . home! J>rlcrt reduce d .
81).) AmJ20B Way, NB SM,950. All terms. * CALL
i\fiui.pf Jiy 847-8507 *
IVILLIAM WALTERS CO. U.s; AFP'ILIATED
IW lack ll<ty View!' 'BROK~ REALTY
"SINCE 1946"
ht Weatn-n BanJc Bldg.
Unlvenity Park, J~
D•yo 552-7000 Nlthto
---·--·
M•r~Modol '
3 Bdmu~ .. 2 ba .. In excellent
condition. DKltable location
near grttnbelt .. A a. k i n g
144,650.
ired hill
REALTY
tintv. Parle. Centtr, lrvinrt '
. cill AnytlMe, m.om
Oltict halsrl a AM to a PM
FRP.E! R.C. WERNER
Presidrnt
FIRESIDE
Tltrltt
2.m Harbor 81., C.M.fi45..JOOO
819 N. ~ta.in, S.A. 541~
1st TD Loans
, 61!< °1" INTEREST
2nd TD Loans
Lowest rates Oni.ng• Clo.
"WE BUY TD'S"
Sattler Mtv. Co.
642-2171 54M611
Strv(Qi Harbor aiea 21 )'n.
~""'
•
llST
llYI!
c
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
Blatt• 3-211 Condo. Ou pie. REPOSSISSIONS· 1uret11 .. ""'1fom Mcloood
cui-dHlc Lavt.b'1 lt1ll•ad-For Information and Jocalloa
ed, w/~ apca. •'&llpaf>tr, of lhe11e F11A & VA homtt.
light ftxlUru. frnh pajnL contt;ct -
UN IV ERSI TY P ark
dtterated 3 BR .. 2 ha,, Fam
Rm.. P ro f . landscaped.
Conventional rtal estate , U •y ID
loerl$. ~fr. Adfl.ms, bier. l 8 ft Ill
644-7411 or 833-9303. 1
-m....... °"""· . ICASAllAN
$51,l!!it, -· ltHI l!sl•to 147°"'4
• ...... ~ ~.,:.am:~ GOVT. OWNED
ta1or. Bent. I n d 1 r. pd . Reposaewd hotnH. Low
G.1,m 9'" Ownier. 644.nfl. down. Co\'ff'nment ~·
A 11*1 ... '° ,. • lood closh~ co1t1. Call 961-+Ml.
1n'""1 • * Crest R!tilty
-QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
WINT AD
9UICK-GASHt-t• CA.I H !
rl41ou•H A •
D,AIL 'f PILOT
CLAS.Slfi•D ADS
: .,
1: I
I' ,1
I,
•I
I
' " i ' i1
l
{
-' .. '""""·-" l'ln * OAll Y l'ILOf
I -------·-l~I
j ll~lo~•~•~•~•~f~unUsloed~~~==~=D=G ~lt~t~IM4l~"~~Unfurn.~~~~~-~l 1 ................ . r .. Mw c.....,. 6tl Mor Hou-Unfvm. as
3 BR., 2 bt. beaulilul bom<. LOVELY hon>o 2 a.. CIJM>. lfuntlrt!rton tlNch
H.V. IUUa. oceaa v w. Walk 10 beach. AdUfta. No •WE baw a lalp 1electioa
July/Aug/Sept. SIOOO mo. pets. 673-llM. ol 3 and 4 bedroom b:lmee
Oauified ad no. 374, C/o * 3 Br nr mrktt: I acid.a. thal can be roo"\'fd lnto
D&lly PUol, P.O. Box 1560, f'ncd yrd. Family only. almmt lm.medlatf'Qt OD our
Costa Mesa, Cal 92626. UlOJ.mci_ Agl. 837-1211 . Ren I· 0 p 11 o" p I an, * 1 Br, trplc, hardwood Costa ~·· SHERWOOD RE ALT y .
t1oor1, llO!a bed, b~ yard .... -----540-ISSS
w/ BBQ. l250 otll pd. FREEll
55l·MOO. L•ndlords.-Owners
Huntington Be.ch 'Ye 1'..tll f'f:fer t.tnants to you
f'REE of charge , •. 1'.Iany
4 BR-2. BA-POOL dealre.ble lf!Jtauts on our
2500 sq. rt home. Frplc. New "'aitin11; list,
furniture. Beaut. lnd3cpd. ALA Rentals e 64S-3900
yard, Patkl. Ga r age .
ChUd/pet ok. 1 mi. Ocean EASTSIDE. 3 Br, J ~ Ba,
$350. bit~~. ~18..uher ll dryer, large
Nu VIEW Y3•u. x 2G Tree shndcd . RENTALS deck "'/BBQ. Fish pond, 2 , 673-4030 or <194·3248 ca r detached gar .. aU~y ae+
' UgUn• ISMch ccs~. ;2'25 Mo. Lease. \Valer
paid . Avail 6-1. 557-7768. · $150. Lt & Airy 1 Br nr l01\•n.
Very quiet, ~1ature &. 1>enn. BUSINESS
ZONE
$170 -UliJ. pd. 1 Br. apt, E·side, cute, 3 bedroom,
steps ocean & park. . . fireplace house, Corner.
$180 • 1 Br w/frpl upr dpLx PrinC'i pals only.
well furn. Vu. Gat/Yn:I .. 'I B-.RCi'O;;c;KE-;;;ll;;o=c=-""'642~·.:9996=
NU·VIEW RENTALS MESA DEL MAR 3 bedroom
I 673-4030 or 494-3248 home 1vith carpet.~. drapes
•1 1 Bd, ocean view, 1 blk Vic· and big covered patio.
toria Bch, nicely turn. Lg Families only. Gardener in-
frpl. $2.15. 642-1272. eluded at $275. per month.
Call Agent, 546-4141 . Newport Beach AVAIL July !st. 4 BR, J\lesa
LIDO Isle-'! BR, 2 BA, ~~ b!k Verde, nr all schls, r11Jlc,
from priv beach/club. An-crprs, drps, bltns. 1v8 rer
nual or by nto. 673-9159. paid. SJOO/n10. 673-4706 aft
HouMI Unfurn. 305 6 pm.
l Br., 2 Ba., bJtnA., drps,
\l·/w crpl.5, fncd, db 1
garage, nr schl Ir: shop'g
Ct"nter. Repainted. fl50,
Open 10 am-3 11m. 17631
J\.1 isly Ln., JlB. 962-4391.
Irvin.
3 BR., 2 ba., tam. rm ... $325
3 BR., 2 bflths ........... $335
4 BR., 21.., ba.., fam rm SJ15
4 BR., 2i,,, ha., lam. rm. $390
WE JiAVE O'JHERS
"I l11t1'I11·lld
---'I\ 1·11\lu r
"SINCE 1946"
1st Westem Bank Bldg.
Unlv",.sity Park, Irvine
Doys SS2-7000 Nifhts
2 BR., 2 bathll ......... $300
3 BR., 21,1. be.Uu •••••. $350
3 BR., 2 batlis .... $350/365
(ired hill
..._ fum. -Apt. """'"" )65 Apt. Unllwft. 16$ Apt. Unl\lm. J'5 Apto., ~""'"""~~~~==3=10:r~G~·~--i--~·'"'i-.-;~-~-;;.-.-.-~o~-~ .. ~-.. ~-;~-• ..;.,.-.-;; • ..,;..-./~"'=·:..:-=::..----'"=':;"""::;;;;:~;;""'""":---3-70 ~wptrl Btod! * * llEAllTIFUl. 1 A J BR. Coot• -
BAYFRONT HIDOEN VILLAOI Al'TS. Contemporary Canion Apu . _ _,•"""'SP"A"'c"'m"'u"s"•--
s Br, 31,S ba, pier • Onat. ttome Like LJ.l"I Padol:, frplc., pro!. $U5-Well--JAoalp!d Apl11.
A11nual lellM' SllOG mo. Sum-FaMiJ&elWelcomef $170. C&ll ~163.. 1 • 2 BR. w/Tf"ITt.ce._
mer only Jll,000 for 4 mo'1. 2 llDltOOM-2 BATH * 2 BR, l Sa TownhouM'. F"rom U<kl • Sl75/mo.
1llE LRWLN CC'J, From $l59 Pa1k)/aat1:ae/pool. U05-Sha&" cpls., drpa, aauna~
REALTORS 644-6lll Carpets • Drapes -Air Conditioned • Enclos-$22$. Child ok. 557-3400, ''°°'· jacuni, t"nct a;ar.
Duplex•• Unturn. 350 ed palios • Heated Pool • Forced Air Heat • H 1 IEI -Quiet Adu/I llvini:,
Carport & Sl<>rage. uni ngton --MERRIMAC WOODS
Corona clel ~r 2500 S.uth S.lt•, S.nt• Ana 546-1525 425 Mertlntac \\'ay, C.Al.
tenter2 blks W. oJ B•islol, off Warne r on ON BEACH! Huntlngtor Btuh -2 BR, 2 BA, drps, w/w,
trpte, 1.ml patio. Walk to
beach. Adulu, no pets.
$225/mo, Yearly. 642--8520.
Newport Be•ch
VERY nice 3 13R .. 2 Ba ..
frpl., bltns .. ep«l, Close to
chllnnel. $275 n10. Adtills, no
pets. 979-4190 eve,
2 BR. 2 BA. bHns, park>,
atep.a to ocean, frple. $250.
yrly. 644-7597; 675-3906.
Linda Woy, south lo W. Central) •·u nN. • UNFURN. NEW SANDPIPER
VILLA MARSEILLES 2 BR. From $2>5 Early bird 11pecL!IJ.s.l BR
SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM AP'T. ADULTS ONLY irom ll:!;. 2 BR lrom $!;;
Furnished & Unfurril1hed Furniture Availa ble l-~urn/L'nfuni, cool rolor in-
Adult Living C a r P el5-drapes-ftlsh\\'l'ISM.r 1rrlllrs, pool, J acunl, 111.--.re,
D. I h heated pool-sauflall-tennta SOS I Ji Ii nd D H ts 1was er color coortlinated appUances a a n ve. un-
Plusb shag carpet . mirrored wardrobe doors-rec room-0cean \'icW$ tin~ron Bl'ach. 847-959:i. patlo8-ample park1na indirect lighting in kitchen -breakfast bar • Securi1y GuarW>. Newport S.•ch
huge private fenced patio • plush landscaJ>-HUNTINGTON OA KWOOD GARDE N
ing • brick Bar-JM>.Ques • large heated pools & lanai. Air conditioning. PACIFIC Aportmonts
3101 So. Bristol St., S1nto t.n• SS7 ••oo 7U OCE >\N AVE 11 B tH(•!l()l1: Living for >il-' -~·· ·.' A<lult,; 011lyl
--~~ , COLDWELL, BANK R & CO. UH i 53&-1487 Nf:WPO RT Bf:AOI
• .;";';";-;.'.'·'M·"·'•"'~~~;;· .i:e~~~~!ll!J!MA!!!i!N!i!!!A~G~l~N~G~A~G~E~N~T~~!!!!!!!!~: Ofc cipen 10 a111-6 pn1 011.il y l&lh 11.l Irvine
FURNITURE RENTAL Gener•I
I~
Wll.LlAlal \\!ALTERS CO. -................ .., ......... 16-i:i-O:X,O O(' 642-Jlli'O
Apt1. Furn. Apts. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfum. >'5 BE ONE OF Tll E rlRSf _,.;--.,.------3'0-IN·--.w-po_rt_Bt_o_ch----I Cost• Mesa TO UVf: IN THIS
~enerat ~-~~M&~ ~e~;;~~r :sr;1~~-J~~ P.S. eJ~1~!ryC~~~~1~TE D e Adult A pd. Adui\fi, no Pe 1 5 · PEACE AND SECURIT'{ -• Dishwashr-rs 6-12-5:)83. Bold New Conce t Yours to come honit> to! P Apt. Unfurn. 36S tlerl"s garden-llvlng at its
bes!:
Rooms 400 e Choice of '.!: «(l!ol' svhcmrs ----------
• Custoin t':l.rpct111g ltOO:"llS Sl3 \\'k up \\'/kit. $30
• J11.cuzi1 11 k up Apts, 2376 Nt\\'port e 1.fca\("d pool 13!\'d, C~l Y18-9i55.
e Dend-bolr ir1l'k!I PVT room for fen1aJe in J-1.B.
Bus.._. Rtntll
NOW LEASING I
\\'ill flnl&b to tult C·l tfnl.ft~
Lea•lfll now, av a 11 ab It
9/1.5. 1400 + Ml· t'
Brookbunt al C 11 rl I 'ld'.J
Fountain Valley. CA J...t
5.~ !
SHERWOOD REALTY1
!ndust rlol ~ontol .~
COOL WEST COST A ?.fES-4
l:W & 2-IOO MI· ft. M-1. PW
ing--Otlice-3Pll p o .,. e f,
fi.46.-6540. 981 W. 18th St, Cl fl
NE\\' DELUA"E M-1 Units; j
ph . Jll)\\'1.-r. 1733 Monrovi•
:i.13-'.J.l.\~1: 8~ e\'('I.
Rental' W•nted
WANTED JIJ I
R ESPONSIBl E
WORKI NG COUP LE •
need one or c 11·0 bedroorrl
houlit' \\'!lh ]:lfi:' f('rlC'{'I'
yard (f<Jf 11vo VEft\' 'VEl..L
TR..\INf'::tJ •!<·~~· 1150 most.
Vic: tw111·et'n lllrh & V1eloria.
?tti~~,~r ~-~~~ ~1it1 ~o:~·
--EASTBLUFF
WANTED B'{ J UNE 18Tll ~
E:ltt>culive & htn\il y is
teeklng a yt!'Rr·,. Je115e on 11:
3 or -I be<inn Eastbh11t
home. \\'illlng to pa,1 up to
$500 a nl(lnth. CA LL
644-7 !3.~.
WANTED
REALTY DH TllE BEACH! 2 BR & 3 BP., crpts/drps, • MonCh to Month General elee. frp\., t~!t'i~ .. 11m11e, Univ. Park Center, Irvine * 100% Purchase Option
* Sn1al1. \\'ell-managed lu.x-
ury apl units in a con-
veni~nl, establi5hed area, * Big lrees, great pool, oy·
posi te a golf course.
e Only Sl40 Jl('r nio kitcht•n. laundry & pool
BAHIA PUE RTO privlleJ:"es. 1!41-8472.
Young rouplc 1vou.Jd l ik~ ICJ
l't'Jlt 2 BR un(urn i~ed house
with ~arage ir1 C!'ll. Up ro
$150 n10. Good refs. Bott>
en1ployed. 557-93(};) aft 4 Plat.
PH\'SICIAN, 1\'lt{' & 18 mo
old daugh1er, seek l-2 yr.
rental or l-4 Br. homt t
Turtle Rock or lUniv. Prk.)
83S-73."ll. Hou1e1 * Apta. * 145-0111 *
W W.111h COSTA MESA
$115-Across !rom Beach, t Br
turn trlr. All util pd ~tay
take ~t.
patlo, gar. fncd y r cl • Call Anytime 833-0820 * Wide Selection-I llR. Furn. &. Unrui-n.
Washer. 646-6961 or Office hours 8 AM lo 8 PM Style-Col.or. FROM ONLY $175
646-1246. """"'""'""'""'""""'""'""'"" * 24 Hour Delivery OCEAN QUEEN
EXTRA niN? 2 81· .. 2 bath.~. CHOICE Irvine property-3 • 1830 E. Ocean Elvd.
I I . BR, 2 BA, crpls/drps. ~ ~ Long Beach {113} C5-5845 ovc Y pa tio. Bl tns, wshr., Almost new. All bltns. S26(} dryer. Avail. June 6th $3j(I. 1110 to mo or "'ill sell. il Mna'd bY William \Yalters Co.
mo. incl. g;:r rdel1('l-. -----Balboa Peninsula
Burr \\o'hitc Itltr. 615-4'30 833--UOJ, 833-3886.
2 BR y,•/gar, $l40, fncd ~nt 3 BR., 21,~ BA., patio, c lbhse, 517 W. 19th, O.i 548-3481 YEAR around - 5 Br., 3 Ba.
,, tennis ct & romm pool $300 ~2756~~N~·!!'!!'!!"'~"i!· ~Si!A!!!!~5<~1~·0!!3"14 1 'Fl'p\c., bit-ins. 2 car gar. iv/patio. U'tr pd. 22'28 1 A-"'"ll5l · · Boal slip. Brand lle\\', Placentla Ave CB). Call btlvn ease. ,..: .,...,... · 1 & 5 "'"' L---'~8t~-h----1 B•lbo• Island beaut. vie\\.'. Avail. Aug. 1.
$125--E/side C.M. 1 Br furn ,=;;;,:;·-;~;:;:-:;120;,=c·-.,--.,.--a gun• •c :r or info Call (213) 799-0034.
duplex. Adults. Avail 7/7. 3 BR, 1 BA . Play area & pool YEARLY-Studio apt \\'/full . $150 -1 Br. over gar., walk kit~n. Ava•'I , •• .,.· !5th 2 BR, 1%.be. .. patio, balrony,
$140-Cozy 2 Br Cottage, encl
gar, fncd for chiJd/pet.
$180 Su.per 3 Br. 2 Be., priv
paUo &. yard. Kids ok.
S22J.-CIL\f. 2 Br pri hon1e,
sto\·e rerrig. Crpts/drp~. 2
blk~ lo ocean. Yearly.
BEACON RENTALS * '4.>0111 * LANDLORDS!
\Ve Specialize in Newport
Beach e C.orona del 'Mar e
k Laguna. Our Rental Ser-
vice Is FREE to You! Try
Nu-Vl~v!
NU-VIEW RENTALS
673-4030 Cit 494-3248
$190 Month. 2 Bedroom.
Ne9:ly deccirnted inside and
out No Fee. 842-6691 or
962-5566.
2 BR + Den. Blln. kitchen.
Garage. Kids OK.
Rent-A-House 9794430
Coron• del Mar
$185 -2 Br., frpl, stv/ret..
CID, pr, child/pet. .•.
$200 -2 Br. TH'. bltns, dbl
carport, pool ...•
$225 -2 Br., 2 Ba. ~ar hse.
"Stv/ref. CI D. gar, yrd.,
pat.
$230 -Util. pcl. rt-ar hse.
Sip/ref. CJD, patio, gar ...
$215 · 2 Br., frpl, nu cpl, yrd,
gar., pat16, 2 blks ~Rn .. ,
$290 _ 2 Br. gar., yrd .. patio,
open bms .. frpl. Nice!.
$365 • 2 Br .. 2 Be .• 2 frpl,
bms, huge L/R. A I I
feah1!'f'1;.! ...•
NU-VIEW RENTALS
671-4030 or 494-3248
S550 per mo. E.xclusive
lrvine Terr. 4 Br .. 211'.i Ba.,
!onnl din m1,, 2 frplcll.,
walls of 11liding zlau pe.nels
open onlo spac. g11.rdens &
brick patios, even a large
siu playhoust. 0 w n e r
61'Hl390.
** DUPLEX BR AND
NEW. I-luge dlx 1Jwner'1
unit. 3 BR., 3 BA.
F ireplace, bltins. 1800 sq. ft. + l detks w/view of bay.
OCNn, &: hills. Walk to bch
I: shopping. 1 yr, lse. $425.
Ret'a. requjred. m.-0960.
for childl"f'n. 1 car gar. heh & lo h.ld/ -•· " · 5 E Ba 1~ hi
F d . \\.'fl, c 1 pet ut\, • ~,,5074 'or ~-3770 31 . y . ~ mont y on enced y . ~142'2 aft 4 & $205 N ~ 2 I u•,,.-u•J-. '-''knds. -. euu Br. in 4 p eK.. =-~-~--~---yrly lease. Inquire at Apt.
nu C/D, gar, \'U, • • • B•lboa Penrn1ula c. 673-1521 or 548-7771.
NICE 2 BR, fenced yard. $250 -2 Br., 1% ba. cllx apt. • S2S WK & UP-On Ocean • Capi•tri1no Bei1ch
Prefer ""Ung ~·pie. $95 pool vu 250' waler "~ .. ,,., ' ' · ' · · Lovely Bach -1 Br .• Rooms mo. &15-1863 eves. S250 -M. Viejo ~ Br. lrpl.. Maid servlce-Pool-Util Pd NE\V duplex 2 B1:, crpts,
$135 VACANT 2 Br, gar-bltn.s, gar., yrd .. pat, w . . . • Call 675-8740 • drps, bltns. 5 min. from
age. Kid.,/pets.
Rent-A-House
$325 . 3 Br., 2 Ba, lrpl., bl1ns, ~----'-C:.:-"'--"--Dana. Point ~!arina. $190. &
decks, garden, gar., vu ... , Coron• del M.ar $215. 642-4474. 979.1430 NU-VIEW RENTALS
2 BR House. Carpets, drapt>s. 673-4030 or 494.3248
tl55. No pets. 1963 \\'allace.
or call 557-2360 e\'es. Mesa Verd•
Dan• Point * l l\IMACUL ATE 4
BEDROOl\.I home. Lease.
VIEW HOME for Lease Avail. rnid. June. S285 per
l BR, 2 BA, Jrplc., fam. rm. A t c m -n10. gen : ....,.,....,.,..,_
$250, mo. 496-5023 2 3 BR., Ba., game rm.
Huntington 8ei1ch Lease t300 mo. or selJ
3 Br, 2 Ba. Elec. bll·in range $34,950. Owner, 56-3182.
& oven. Forced air beat, M i ssion Viejo
Crpts, 60x100 fenced lot. Db -----'-----) gar, landscaped, vacant-NE\V 2 Br Condo, ai!l'Rle sty,
move in loday, sm mo. crpt, drp, bltns. palio, gar,
Agent. 962-44n or 546-8103. pool pr'\'' $2CKI. B.»-5891
NO\\'! 3 Br, at Pac Sands. Newport Beach
Frplc, paLio, bltns, w/\v Three to 5 Brorooms, 3~~
sha.g, cabana clb, Walk to bathll, pool, 'IIOO sq ft living
Oeean. Rent or Option, .$199. space. Suitable fnr large
536-7511, 834.l Munster, 1-1.8. family, mother-in-law, bil-
r>.'R. Golden 'Vest & Edinger. liarcl room or ma.id quarters.
3 Br, 2 Ba. Sharp, sharp! WiU lca5e, or lease option,
Nice yard. Vacant.t2~$ ITt'l or sell with low cMh do1vn.
to mo or '-''Ill .sell. Priv prty. $475 per month. 64&-nn.
8?..1-1 103, 8.13-JSlki.
2 br townhouse f:o_r_r_t_n~t,
2 Bo, bltns, lrplc, $18S
19742 Coventry, H.B., _IR_V_IN_E_T=,= ... =.=ce-=gra=c=iou=&=y
133-1103, or 546-9754 decorated family home . 4
2 SI'ORY 4 BR-3 ba. 3 car Br, 21~ Ba. 2 frplc, patio-lrg
gll.ta ge-di n rm-fam nn., yard $550/mo. 0 \V n er
frp!c, bltins, crpts, drapes. 675-0390.
Near beach. Avail aft 6/17. l BDR~f houllc \\'/pool. 2
$365. 968-6729 ~·eeks tree rent ror im-
Sl l.'>-2 Br duple.."(, tcn('ed, prov<'ments to work I n g
child, pet ok. New pti in!. single man or \Klman. Xo
18754-D Beach BI v d. pets. Call George 646-7071.
&H-R392. 4 BR, fl\lTl rm, din rm, 2 ha,
2 Br, 3 on lot. Bltins, range,
crpts. drapes, fenced
yn:l-enclo£ed garage. $160
mo. 536-1947, 213-241-8647.
3 BR CONDO. 1 % BA, pools,
patio, dbl gar, frpl, nr
CICean. 962--0986 aft 5 pm.
WAIJC lo O«an. 2 BR. F"ire-
plAC\!, gar, ki~/pet&, OK.
R..,t·A-HouM '79-MJO
JA mile t() beach-2 BR. $140.
K1ds, •ingles ok.
RENT-A-HOUie
Harbor View Montego. Pool
privileges $435. !03-3894 ,
LSE or Opt. 2400 sq. ft. 4
BR., $425. ~ Donnie Rd.,
N.B. Back Bay. Avl. 6/26,
642-2681.
l BR., 1 Ba. crpta., drps, stv,
m.rtg. yr 18l". 1 blk to bd!..
A bay. =-i.
SINGLES or families. 3 BR
w/evtt)l'thlng. Walk to heh.
Roni-A-Hou" '79-MJO
COMPLETE Bach. Apt., 2 Coron• ftl Mar
biles B!g corona. 1 Adult, no•1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim pets. $130 util pd. yrly.11
641-8520
BACHELOR apt for quiel
man, no cooking. Utilitie&
paid. Patio. Close to stores.
6#-7701.
FURN. Apl $145-Util Paid. 1 Ir 2 BR. Furw Ir Untum.
>,; block to Ocean. No pets. Flreplacel J ~-paUoa.
2500 Seaview, Cd~1. Poot. Tmnlt O:Jntnt1 Btfft.
Costa Mesa 900 Sea Lane, CdM Ml-El (MacArthur nr COMt Hwy)
* $lO WEEK & UP * e Studio & 1 BR Apb 2 BDR?>.IS., 2 baths; frplc.
• TV & Maid Service Avail Fantastic cicean viww!
e Phone Service-Htd Pool $425 Month. NCI pet~
• 01ilclren & Pet section \V illiam Winton Realtor
2376 Ne~'}lOrt Blvd. CM 229 Marine Ave.
se-9755 or 645-3967 Balboa Island 675-3331
HOLIDAY PLAZA SllAR.P & clean 4 Bedroom,
DELUXE Spacknu l BR. 2% bath walk to beach.
furn apt. $135. I-leated pool. Family preferred. Month to
Ample parking. Adults -month. $390 pr month Call
no pets. 1965 Pomona Ave.. l\ir. Bailf'Y, 673-8550. ~c=·'-'=·~~~~~~~-:,·~B-R-.-.-lt~,.~,-.-poo~l-.-W-alk~~,o
NEAT, clean, crpt'd, turn. J l:w-11ch. $200-up. 0 1' an g e-
Br. v.·/gar. $]10, Back Bay Coast Real Estate, 644-4848.
area, 2SO Del J\Tar.
GE t-9568.
2 BR -Util. paid. $170,
2Zi1 l\faple St. ,....5911
Furn. Bachelor & 1 Br's
••peci•lly n ice. 2110
Newpor t Blvd., CM.
LRG nicely furn. 1 Br. Encl
gar. Quiet. Adults. No pets,
2452 Elden Ave. 646-2768.
BACllELOR Apartn1ent
Net pets.
17.J Mont~ Vista.
Cost• Mesa
HARBOR GREENS
Furnished &
Unfurnished
F r om $120 to $215 mo
Bachelors • 1 Bdrms
2 Bdrm• • J 84frm1
I y, or 2 Full Both•
l BR. $U), 2 BR. $161l Ide.al Muter alze bedrooms w/
for bachelon, apac .. a/pool. hig h beam ceilingi, Jarge
548-8633, 1993 Church St. llv1J\R room w/gu or wood bumtng fittpllce.
$1lS-Nlcely furn. 1 Br. Convenient laundry area
trail.er. A.du.Its, no petA. ott kitchen. Enclosed pa-
~-132 W. \Vll1c>n, 01: ttoa. 2 twimming pools.
NEAR OC'C. B a c h e I 0 r . sauna, recrtatlon taclll~
Carport, laundry facUltiea. ties. Security guard
$US. No P<IL 546-&S94. Moci.11 Open 'Ill f pm.
ONE Bdrm. Adults, no P<IL 2700 Pottnen Woy CM
Pool I: utilldft included. nr Harbor Blvd' & $145-~. 548-'1689. G&rqe Aclam1
. S@\\.~}A-~"B~s· + parking A •t:ora.a'e
Huntington Btodt 546-5025
' .
'
The Punle wilh lhe lluill-ln Chuckle
~ "\~s~~~s UllW ."' I' r I' I~ r r I
Ct G'fI'W";~ tnrus 10 j j j j • I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700
LoOUINTA HERMOSA
Spanloh Country Ettste u .. Porlt-Llllt'"'"9unollnt
Ing It. Spec... Apls. -QUIET • DEhUXE
racod pom: sunlt<n Pl 1.. l ~ 3 Bit APrS
BBQ. Unbelievable um. -Prv. pa&. • Htd Pool.I
Only . ' Nr "'°"'I * Adult& Only
I BR -FURN. $171 Martfn'-.a-ALL tJTJ1J'nES PAID ..... -r••• ' lm Santa 'Ana Aw .. C.M.
14 blka 9. of San Dlqo Frwy Mgr. Apt. lll 64Jl.5542
on s .. cll; 1 hlk w . .., Holt * * $17• * +
lo 16211 p-Lant.) 3 Br, 111 Ila, -11 .U.rtcl
, {tt4) 847-1 Bl-crplldrpo, met potlo.
Nr ldm a -·•· a.n.,... $:!35. 1 BR. Medallion O:mido. ot, no Pet•: lllO Centw St.,
All bltnl, ,,.frl( •• -potlo, CM. ·6'U34Q vr '43-:1682.
i;;!~~litt· no Pet•. 2 J'R. 1% Ba., taund nn.,
Lrr llv rm It kit Sto~.
New pert IMch ntria. · IArnge. 2 cl\11drt.n
-ok. Ott Baker. $115 mo.
9 WINTER. R&NTAl.'I • 6*-2006.
l.2.3.4 BR. R<leNe Mowl I l·2-BR.--lll-lla-.-----. S-175.-l
AB81'Y REALTY llQ-3850 Br, l. 8a •Jll ll4S. 2 Br, I
1 Br., Channel front. Ba. apt. SlfJO. DlhWbr, •hi&.
s~ a month. ""iearty patio9. tN\111.
67J...:5n m w. Wlh1on
Lib to traaeT Our Trader'• • * Condo 3 Br., 2 Ba.,
PuadlM c:ohunn 11 tor you! "bltna, pool, c I b ti•~,
ldcfs/ptta ok. S23S. Sl.S-6210,
5 -· s cloys for 5 bucb. Sl&-3710. -'--------
* Th~ bedroon1s, i1,;
baths, personal patio, laun-
dry-~'Of'k!:hOp, spacious liv·
ing: room '-'•ith 1ireplace.
P .S. The price will 11urprisP
you!
FAIRWAY VILLA
APARTMENTS
20117 Sa nta Ana Ave.546-6215
DELUXE
APARTMENTS
Air Cond -Frplc'' • 3 Swim-
ming Pools • itealth Spa •
T~nnis C.ourts • Game and
Billiard Room.
1 BEDROOM
FROM $165
MEDITERRANEAN
VILLAGE
2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
CTI4) 557-8020
RENT AL OFFICE
OPEN 10 AM to 6 P~f
* LARGE *
NEWLY DECORATED
Beautiful Grounds
lO Minutes to Ocean
Close tn bus line & stores
Gas lleat & Stove_ '\later.
Garage, Rec. Rm. Laundry
Room included.
l BR. $140
2 BR.. t160, $165, tl75
H•clend• de Mesa
160 V./. Wilson, Apt. 1, Cl\1
2810 17th ~'t .. Jl.U, a.11\-4815 Q E I ---UI .T roon1 or entpklyed
SEA AIR APTS -$115 inan. Close in.
Lrg. 2 BR.. Cr11ts, drp11, bltns. ~1598
1 blk N. of i\d11n1 s o!t Uf"ach G 1 H 415 Blv. 729 No. 6 U1ic11;, ue1 om•
5J6.m6 or ~1<>1010 *PRIVATE ROOM*
2 BR· Apt. Closed gar, Crpts, for ambulatory Pf'l"IOll. Good
drps. Child &. sm. pet ok. food, nice cheerful aum>und·
$145. 847-2940, lngs, * Call 548-475.1 *
FAi\llLY 1ieffi8 hon1e. Schls,
shoppi~ Ret'a. Call B
Parker, Agent 956-%()0. ,..
WALK to Beach
2 Br, <:rpts, ch'p!i, i!~hll'hr. C0;\11;; See. ha,•e your parent I Announcement•
709 Paln1. * il47·3957. <:arrd for a~ }'OU "'·ou\11 do .
' Bil d I do t =t_i m_•_,p<_•:.c·'"c.'~"-'"_,Kc.· ~•_12-_927:..::&~ , up r-x 11•n 01vn,
crpts/drps, sto,·f', $140/mo. Summer Rent•I• 420
53ft..3..'i07• BAY VlEW 2 bedroom,
2BR siurlios tlelux-adults, 2 sleeps 4 completely turnlah-
blk11 from ocean · call aft ed. Avail June to Sept. $7SO
5: JO 962-3()6j pr month. AduJts only
$155. 2 BR 2 BA, d!!h'-'·shr, a.1:"e11t. 67~0.
pool. KIDS OK. 2 3 2 0 fut '"· Oceanfront. Lrg 1
FLORIDA. 536-3191 BR June $173/rno. July
2 BDR.i.'1 .. shag c111t~ & drps. Slfi0/1vk, Aug :J 17 5 /wk ,
$150 mo. Chnrlrcn OJ< NO &l.t-5307.
pets. Call !l36-5~. LAKE-AITl)-"~he-adc-<loc,-.k~lo~r
LaguM Beach ff'nt for sea110n. Easy ac-
LARGE JTKWkrn 2 BR. nr GW-29-12
beach. Adults, no pets. $165. CORONA d I , •·• mo. ~2339. e .. 1ar. '\ruk lo
beach & atore•. 1 br. furn * NEW 2 BR. -blk to beach, ccillage. $150 Mt. 67~19&t.
Spectacular view. $250 up.
494-3383 or 494.2339 Vac•tlon Rental• 425
Lido hlo BIG Bear Lake. OU1rming
aptA., comp. \1•/kltch. By
DELUXE 3 BR., 2 ha. day or 11·eck. Special rate in
yearly lease. $300 mo. effect. 714: 646--0585.
REALTOR 673-3663 Rent•l1 to Sh•re
Announcements
Happy
Birthday
Sweet
"Benjamin"
ifii Jani' 1st
*Wanted· Dead*
Aluminwn car11 tbat haw
aerved you well • provided
houn of pleaaure. RUN!!!
lo 1000 Clenneyre St., La-
guna Beach. No a;lass what-Mle81i.BJIU 20 Me11 Ven:le Working girl 10 shnre beaut. 80ever accepted, '--'-"'......;...;..o;. _____ , apt. w/senle. Anaheim No liiilliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiir
Sparkllng new adult apts. DELUXE 2 • 3 Br. 2/Ba. object lo school·11.ge child
1 BR · •· ·· ••• •• •••• •• ••• $]60, encl pr. $155 up. Rental S.'M-3885 cir 642-4818. ]~
2BR, 1 bath ............ $185. Ofc, 3095 Mace A v•., SHARE PenOMls
AJIJ() avail f'Umillh cd 546-1034. Apt. Pool & frPlc. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~·I Pvl patios:, lush forest aet-..::..::....:::::..:c._ ______ j Age 3$-55. Working girl. I
ting, carports, gaa pd. N;..,;.•.;.w.;po;..,;.r.;.t_Bt;.,;;•:;.<;;h;.... ___ I Charac847 ,.<;. ref, Rfts. rtint. Pertoni1l1 SJO
114 E. 3'th SI., C.M. MS--0137 PARK NEWPORT ~ ________ ...;.
HOME sizefj apl. 3 Br., 2 SHARE ttnt June, gi-eat •FULLY LICENSED*'
ha. Crpt/drps., dlshwshr., APARTMENTS houte in Laguna, blk from Reno11'llt'cl Hindu Spiritualid'.
dtspxl, frplc .. dbl gar .. encl Oft the bay be111ch. $83. 4!»-3467. Spiritual nr.iding1 given
yard. Children ok. $260 mo, G •-R nl .,5 da ily. 10 A~-IOP~I. Advice
546--0l69 or 537_1<»4. Luxury apartment Hvlng ov-•r• .. • ••r • -given on all me.UeI'll. I caft
erlooking the water. Enjoy URGENT! Wanted: ~ help you.
LUXURY upr 2 BR triplx, .S7SO.OOJ health spa, 7 S'Nim· fot houtiebold goods atorage. 312 N. El Camino Real
$13.5. \V/"'• ctriis. bltns. mitia; pools, 7 lighted ten· 67l-3404; ~-San Clemenkl J
encl. gar, huge clo5ets. nl• cotlrt5, r~ua mllu of 49"l--9136 at .m-403.C. .,
Penn. adults, no pel:!I. Avail bicycle trails, putting, &hut-Office Renti1I 440 FlND YOURSELF
6/16. 548·0059. fleboard, croquet. Junior 1'a JN SOMEONE El.SE
F1lPLC, oversizetl 11'.unken !iv from $164.50 monthly; alJllO J DESK IJ)llett available $50 ; ~. • • •nd :i.~-~m p'·-· and mo. wm prov\de turntture DISCOVER rm, 2 BR. 2 Ba, w/w crpts, ~"" _... .., · DISCOVERY blln~. patio, encl gar, $175. 2-•lory town hoUllt'll, Elec-at .,, mo. ~ llft"Vice •
673-5629. trlc kitchen.a, private patk>S ~vallati bJe. 17!75 8Mch Blvd. 714/8~6885 713/387-3393
cir balConies, c•......,Un., dra-un ngton Beach. 642-021 PH.OBI.EM Pregnancy. Col). UPSTAIRS, 2 Br untum, -,.,.. ·-. adults only, 00 pets. Sun perles. Subte.JTanean park-DESK apace aTlll11bSe $50 fidcnt, ll:)'mpathetic pregan-
deck, Private gar a K' t'. Ing with elevaton , Opti()nal mo. WW provide tumltun cy cou11eling. Abortion A
391. mak:J snvice. Just north of at SS mo. ~ SU"Y\ol Adoptkm ref. APCARE.
S45--4 · Fuhioll laland at Jambortt available. 222 Forest Aw, &Q...44..18, • •
SP AC. 2 Ir 3 Br. apt $140 up. and San Joaquin HUls Road. I..ncuna Beach. ~ _ DO It )'0Ul'9elf d i v Cl r c & •
Pool, cpt/dtps, hl tns. kida Telephone (714) &U-19lJ BAY VIEW 0 ... FICIS Newfx>rt, \ O>Ata Me s it
1:; Maplf!' No. l . &n-38l.3 for rental lnfonnaUon Deluxe, air-condltmd M~(:orp. 673--llfA. '
Redecorated. Ude> arta. ALCOHOi.JCS ==-,_~ .......... ; t * FREE Mo'a Rent CID yr's YEAR-AROUND Realonomica, Bkr, l7M700 J>tlone s.c-m7~;·"' .. ;;j''
lte. 2 Br, den, frpl. pr1 l BEDRM-2 BATHS . * AIRPORT ARZA * P.O. Box 12Z3. 0.ta Meaa. I r~'~iiJ~fl builtina, new carpet, 114 Adj. Ah·porter Hotel. Delu:w Soc ClvlM l'•R
toocka to beach. $3(1(1 per l-~ room .Wtes. LO\\'ES't' -· , -;
LRG, 2 BR; $150, New crpt., month. CALL 1 a r w In , RATES. 2182 DuPont Dr., MEMBERSHIP. N.B. Tnmla j'
prlv paUo, fbcd yrd., no 968-440.5. room 8. ~2840. Club. f100 incl fet. m.. ::-n11~B w. WU.On, --,-,-,...,,~=~--1 0FTICE.S, $59 • 1tl9. WU\ or~ -7 Barbu&. '.
2::-;BR:::'"•"'P'"t.-~=~'". "'~=-""•'d~• I 1 le 2 BR. APTS. dK'OT'&te, Near 17th St., Mnk Tro-I -•L#J ..... .,.. • n EaatbluH. From $135 I: ahopplna. ~8-8U8. .... .-
drps, atove/11."lrlg. pool, ---------~l l ~~cU. CbJ.irn ok. I, . ·•7"'0111 0 Buslntn Rtnltl 441 s~~\L SPACIOUS 3 BR apl borne. -..... E·51DE Gnnd m lllloled ·--C.M. Ctt.i•~-~ F'rpk., pr., Ira prlv. potlo. 2 BR A FIR, Twl> ... apJ. , (ll•I _1_
Beaut lndacpr. Adults. ·$265. J~i Ba. Yrly I ea• e Cute, l bedroom, fire-, • •!• -f'"1 •
M&-«116. $300/mo. Horvath Realtor' place bowie. Oorntt. l ~~~~~;~;,i~l
$110 • 2 chlldm olc~ l BR, 1% 67$-1972; ~ 8'15-4Cr73. ' ~~ orily. '42-!1998 .
BA. lndr}'. crpt/d r p1 , •-a. [ ·-~~ ..,.., ' · STORES fOr ~ 1400 - -
dahwsbr, oo pe:ta. MS.-3215. FUf'ft., er Unfvm. m DX> sq. ft q,u' A-1,;. l-~~~=;~;~1
2 Br. Adult&, no pets. Cotta MeM nady 1o So-Major shopplrc I zj
BAY MEADOWS APTS. center, San C l emd n te·. Found lfN. .. t-511
38T w. sa, sl CM 646-0013 Slimmer Rentals .....,.,1.
2 BR apt lllJfurn. d!.Udnn olc omr-c-BEIGE atriped ldtttn. • no P<iL 126 Monte Vista PALM MESA APTS. ~. .1o.... nr. N·pt. v1c, MMlotla A .... .eaq
A MINt1l'ES TO NPr. 11C1!. Pool 0111«. 450 Sq. IJ. Good o ... collar • l ""· old.
""· FURN. OR UNF\/RN. parklnJ<. SJ.31 month 544111. ;~-
SPACIOUS 2 8". nr abopl, Uqbelteval>IY • tarp apta., Crah'am Rea.It¥ ~2'114
"""· O.C.C .• A U.CJ. JllO. hllp pool, Jutml •loci bit, MA.<m:R LM 4000 0q, ·fl .• l, 2 ~~nn"::.i"," .\:1'.J~ Call m-cJU4, int. &baa crpta. drp&. aaum or 3 ntlll units. McFadden ., .......... _,
etc. Adnlta. no peta. Square at N91'-port Beach Beach. 6C-8211. LRG. 3 Br., 2 Ba, no pm.
Chlldttn ok. Nr 'schla •
-· nrotmo. ~
PATIO or DEN-l Br,
2 Ba, $150. Adultt.
Call ~!3Sl.
NEW 'l BR. 2 BA $185. No
pell:. No chl)dnn. 229l-S
Fordham. Ml--6148 eves.
LARGE 2 Or., ""t/dri><.
$13J/mo.
• Oii 548-m! *
SINGLES •••• , horn $1l5 Mer. ~1ft....SJ!n Found612vie. l.9thAOftlwtJ
1 BWRM .••••• From f.140 St C.rtf. Sml. White mPe bdp
2 BEDR.M.. • , •• From fl60 * • en/Office, a I a • • t'•.r·• A lj)Oll. 548-IJl1 You1re riaht they're uncJ,e,.. dlaplay CM@. Downto"Wn I ~---,'....,..C:..O...:....:.:.::.....-.u
prioed1 1561• ~aa Dr. H.B. 21J.ith ~t $17~ per mo. J..ra:, mall!' O>llie, "· liuJta l
(S bib ti.m N•._ Blvd.) ~S36..oo=='-· -----Ana A Ed~ H.B. -I ~9860 Rl.i All. ~ avail. al Tht FND -Ml ot kt)'I.
1 A 2 BR runi ar unfurn }"'actory. $175. mo. See No. 9 near Viet~-~
Q\IJdttn't $tt0on. Ptiol. ,for tntl or 613-9606. $\fAU.. '"1kitten.Vic23M.
$140 Up. EL.\f GARDENS * OtTlCE-600 aq ti avl now. I Santa Ana An. ~
AP'IS..lTI £. 22>wl SI, C.>I. 800 Sq. F.t. INDU>rrlUAI. MALE !Ul<Jo. -• ~~-SHOP a'1 ADJ'. 646-n.30. 9fW..Si.
l
I I
• I
' ,_
Jf DAILY ~ILOT Tut1d1y, Junt 6, nn ~ .... ~ ... ~-~al~!-.... ~ l~ ~-[ ... -....... -_.-1~1111111111 :1 -.. ..... -J ~ ,__I _ ... _ ..... ~llillC~......... J[IJJ I llllJ,;;.[ --·--~][IJJ~tJ, ](Il] [ --
SSCI Carpet S..rviu
1-~~~~~~~
D. PL German Shepherd
P"PPY wlcollu. Jo' u" :t y
eara. Brown vie. lGtb Place
It. Santa Ana Avt, C.M.
646-<:!JB.
TND nf!ar 23nl I!. Tu~rin.
N.B. Jo'E"ru. UJk poodlr. type
cJui ""''/f(t..r'IC'y l'OlJ&r 5-18-~
or 64616988.
STJ::AM Carpet Cea.ncrnr,
prote111}onal at 1 o w • • t
prlC.'ftll. 3 •vi nN complelf
$.."11. !IS. !J62.-0672.
Car1>9n ter
LARGE OR SMALL
AU Typt~ \\1ol"k:: C'Jt docrn,
po.~!. ttmt>dc:I, f I n l 11 11 ,
ltnmc, repairs, FN~malie kitten. Dark 9G2-l96l.
bro"·n--approx 2 mo. Vi(':
Califotn!ll. So'.:hool nr f' 11 • e C AltPENTR't e
eel.
fo.te'aa Vtordt> arta. :i57-110.I. Rou~h &. Flr.i11h Patlol'I I.!
Cen1ent. 548-1S9 4 or t"'Ol!ND: I~1a:t11t ,.. ta11 & V.,.,~11 (;.46....5971.
fema.lf', .111nal JCrrier. I<'. ·~---~-~ · • CtiST0.\1 y,·OOlJ .... wk panE"l· \Vanier & M1un St., S.A.
.ill--0328. Ing. Cnb!Mt!i. ~n'I ttpairs.
Ph. Du~ Da.Durka, Fnii1ALE dog, ~olden oolor, 646·75911.
part doxle. F'ound tn Hun. =---------tington &ach, Brookhur11t & f:XP. Remodeling, cablr1e1~.
Yol"klown. 968-TIOO. n-p:tin, main!. No ~b too
11111. !tea!. 646-4224.
QUALITY
GARDENING
S Yr~ exper. In Artit. Re·
plantlnr. haul away, aenl!ral
la11d1cape rnaintrnnncc.
J"rt!c 1!8t!malf'l:1.
540.7172 or ""-9076
AL'S GAltUENL\C-
!or ganlmlna &:: a m a 11
lar.dacaplni services, call
5'0-5.193 ~vt&. Ser \1 I n I
Newpo11, Cdi\f, r oata Me;;a,
Dover Shorf'R, \Vl!fl.Clltt
PROFE:SSIONAL lr'e work,
11run1na.r rin1111 i 11 g ,
:.prayina. 1pr in kI1, 1· >
Land!1;:'1pin~. t• le a rl u p .
{;ffirr~ &tG-:.893.
*NEW LAWNS*
Sod • Stolon• . Sel!dine. Yard
rrm()(lellnz. State l.u::·u.
5.14-41121.
S.win9/Alter•1'ton1 __ ,..._ ... --l> Y. S I (; N 1: R -t; uropean
tnlnell, ~ )'I'll. exp., new in
Hunlin.l:"ton Bt:ich. 968-0739.
A111r•lion1 -"42·SM5
Nt>,11, ai'\'Ur;.i tf', 20 )'t:art 4!ltp.
Ster90-R•p.1lr
S:Tt:REO l'tlUljlml'lll rrpo.iri;,
ron1p!ete tarillliell for all
n111.k1?s & rnode\11 • dl~coun!
rate.~: 8 tr;·1ck 1.1p1• dl·C'k.
clean It. l\dju~I SR.00, this
11·1·ek $1.00 oU IQ Dally Pilot
1· 1• " rl !" r a. IRt>plucement
n<'•·dlcs & 1·lll'trii.Jgc11 ~I ofJJ.
tr,.;; A. Stcrt~ Equ i p .
\\';.i·chotu·:e, 11\l E. 17th St.,
Co.,\a J\\es3, &-l:r.2-1.JZ.
-TV:STt-:1\f;I) ltJ-;1>AJR""
Holl•nd Bua. Selea
"The Broker y,•i1h E1npnthy"
1716 Orange Ave., C.~1.
Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & f 710 H•lp Wanted, M '-, 710 Help Wanted, M & f 710 Help Wanted, M & fl 710
Boa! BuildeN
CulJinrt aut"mbltrs A mill!----------
men. Top wap1, t:Krow Ofritf:r
ism Coldun \\1e111 Cll'. \Vrltf':r/Ot~. MRT"
Wt1trn1nat1?r 8!W-47.f7 F'/C Bookkeeper
-BOAT-TOUCH-UP mrl Fridoy
Gelcoat elq.ier, r~-.1uire<l Se~'y-Market\ng
r.<.:.\1111 R"" ... "'"'"'"· fnc. 1 .. ·1:111 ~·1·,.t111ry
9'Ml \V. 17th St, 642--0:i.12 Tri!.vt'! Agr·nt
ll 0 0 K KEEPER.-Con•truct· Stf'no-~Jarke!ing
1on, thru T-B. l·lf!avy A IP . Rcccµ!lonist. G, Ofc
Opeo
Op<o
S100
""' """ ,.,..,
1600
IJOO
$17$
r-.tu~t be exper. Imnit'd. NEWPORT
openln11:. Call Ar I e n.c , P•rsonnel Agency
~Z-6i28. 133 Dover Or., N. B.
-BOOK KEE.PER-642-3870
110, ... '"lUld )'Oll I lkt· ;, f~1~i· E I -,
lion l\'hert' \'OU ""ou!d Ji1<vi· JCptr tnCll'Q
complete ;hat'!:'." nf tlM! Cook1
bu!Sines~ & l1n:1nc·1n! aff:11r& Oi1hwtsh&:-1
of a very successtul your)!.( & Busboy•
executivl". Start to $730. C';1!l Apply in Person
N11.ncy ~1a)', 5 4 0-6 O 5 5. 271·12 Ortego H1o1·y.
11AIR drt111er want~. 7ull
time. 67$-7438. laft 6) c.11
557-3831.
-HOUSEKEEPER
w/ca.r, live In. 673·9033
HY!)f\AULIC lest ti!'Chnician
for as.embly & te!ltin&
Aerospace liyUrauJ1c11. !'.lust
hal'e 2 )T!. min, exp
1'tll11ary r.~p. ok .. 557--43Z1, ·
ICE C It E A 11 STORE -
)'ou.ni,: n1t!l1 to \l'Qrk even-
ing11 t<) 1.n.ldnight 5-IS-!1236 or
67.;..s567,
INJECTION
MOLDING
OPERATORS
(Or Train•••)
MECJlANIC wanted
f(.)relgn c&r1. Coil&
area. 6-l!-J133
t.ianager Tralllf!e11
$500 ptr mo. 10 1tru·1, loc:il
()r11ng" COl1 nly ('o. has 2
openingi; !or a~!Ssive
men le \.\'Omrn, \l'ho Me able
lo mt>et the puhllc. r.·1us1
have car. No exptr necell·
s.vy. Good Co. benefil.11.
Call 776-0708 10-12 noon
Only, A~ for ~Ir. r.1orx11n.
REAL ESTATE
·SALESMEN·
\\'ork wllh an establish-
ed oftict' 14·i1h a gn:iup of
Chrltlians. ~ lht' dlf·
tcre nce! Rl!pl!~.11 (!()llfj.
denlial. Al>k fur Ed,
R. E. Sale~
Newport
••
Fairview
646-1111
l1nytimt)
WANTED
fu\fAU. Black & White kl!!en
found near Flo,ver & 'rustin,
Costa Me1a, S48-l516.
~IINOR home n'palr11. Plum-GEN. Gardening. 11-!o'\'
hinJ! ~ ca~ntry • painti1lg • F..dgl!. ~e est. Honie
(;45-4170 54G--06Q8 eve!S. •I ~~--~-~~~ & Television Rep1lr
Coastal Agency, 2 7 !Io San Jullll Capisrrano
Harbor Bl at Adu!l\8 , ('~I. E.:-.'P. nurses-aid-back olfiN
llOOKKJ::1'-:PE.:R 4 1''ull tl111e. preferrtd. \V iii 1 r a I n
f or Plastics hfanu!uctur('r,
graveyard shift. r.tust be
netst &:: dependable, .1"emale
prefd, Muat be able to \lo'Ol'k
Sat, or Sun,
3 Land Salf'!Jl\\('11 \\'ith pro-
Vl'fl expei-, Plenty or le1u.l11.
\\'holrsale acrt't\ge4 all ~l?l!ll.
C:ill (7111) 776-J.IOO
&!\\'('en lOan1-l2prn
MALE Weimll.J'anl!t found
vicinity Brookhurst I War-
ner. 962.a272,
f'f.o!lng. Call ~-Co1nme rclal. &\';>-58.jj,
A-I cfl11)entrr, 11m;dl JObc ,~'·~'~'-'·~' ----~Spt'!Clallst. Pho~ Gordon AL'S Landacaplns,::. T rec
846-6545 removal, Yard remodl>ting. 1-L_ .. _, _______ s_ss Cemen;, Concrete Truh hauling, lot cleanup.
R@palr apriniderw. 67l-ll66.
EXP. Ha'l'-'alian Gardt?ner
Complete eardenin1t urvice
Kan1alanl. 646-4676.
LOST Cat, large, 1 re y
strlped with wht pAWI &
merkings. Vic N w p t
Rlvtt-"rft. Collar 14·fLA SPCA
ID No. 443. Re"·a r d
645-1081.
CEMENT WORK, no job too
small, reasonable. Free
EaUm .. I1. Stuflick, 548-.11615.
JOHN'S Patlot &-Block
work. An al!wc. of Varo's
Land&caping C.M. 833.0291
PATIOS, walks, driv!!, in.1rtall
ne\v lav.·n11, saw, break,
ren1ovtt. 518-8668 for est.
General Services
TI-IINGS By 11oose: Fence.
gen. crpt repe.l.r, appl lnstln,
t!l~c .. plumb, tile. ~9.
TOTAL SERVICES C'O.
Pl urn b: I"' tall' I-Carpentry
* BLA INE'S TV *
Servicing All Brands
Aurhorlzec\ Magna\·ox,
Known 1or honl!sty 540-4313
Tllo
CERAMIC Tilc, Kilchenii,
Baths, Entry.11, Cu 11 Io m
\\lork. RelUiOnable. Glen,
5'1,'\-726::.
Tr" S•rvic•
TREE SERVICE
Trimming, Pruning & Clean-
up. 6'2·5196 or 842-3442,
Jlet1til 11por!ing good s responsible & outgolni;.
husinea1. Snlary ba ~efl upon 962-..1531.
c x per il'nr,... J/unt ing:ton --~Ec .... ,~ .. ,-R~A~H~E~L~P--
Beach location. Ca.II UI PART TIME
Oark for appt. 962--5511. .... Good St•rting Pay
htf:CHANCALLY lN·
CLJ~l'.:D &: NEAT. 1''0 E.'X"-
Age 10.14 10 deJ1ver papers PEn. NECESSARY.
In the Dana Po!nt, San Cle-5-17.0914
BOYS
mente aren:o..
DAILY PILOT
492-4420
nusnors \\'nntcd: 1\pply l11
FACTORY
TRAINEES
Apply 1 PM-4 P r.t
Cottta Mesa, Cali!.
850 Weit 18th St. * 01·nnge Coast Plastics *
INVEST IN
YOUR FUTURE
Full or p/tlme.
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI
Men or Women
Le11e A Yellow
T1xi Cab
W• are now •ccepting or 2-1pn1 011ly
•ppllcation1 for --Real-EStat• Sale•
BCR'boys
Busboys
Nite Cooks
Dlshnwn
Day & Nite
Please Apply
Between l & S P .M.
r II v t!S l 111 E'TI t D ! vil'lion
Bcuch/SouUiern C (I u n t y
1trea. EnjOy the High in-
con1", & prtstige of a sail's
c:iret'r ln lhe 1nveslment
dl\'ll'llon of C 0 L \\1 EL L
PROP INC. An OUll'ltandlng
(Jppo11unlty for the qua ll!le<l
s1K'1'l'!SS o r i c n t I!' d
s11lP~1nrn to join en txcltin11:
growrh con1 psny. Call Linda
\Vrikht at !TII) 8~:1--126.1.
"A subsidiaiy of the Coh\'Cll
Co."
LOST: Gerrnan Shepherd
mLx, malt, tan &: \\'hi, 75-..~
lbs. Ana to "Shawn", Las!
aeen vie. 19th &: Anaheim,
0.1 Family pet. 646-4983.
SIL VER grey male poodle.
Vklnlty Suntlower &
Fairview. $!JO. Re"-'&rd. 3478
San Rafal1 Cir., Co.ta Mesa
Child Ciro .......... ·-···-YOUNGSE'T School, ages
2-6, Open 7 Daya. 6AM-7:30
pr-,f. Separate projrnm S.10
yrs. Prof. teac hel's. SXI
646-3706.
Elec Reiin!r • 646-1809 [ l[IJJ
SKIPWADER wlth or ~ IJ
without operator. L. mmmm;;;;~~~
person, Feliciano'.~ Rest. NO experif:'nce necessary.
1617 WestcHtl, N.B. See J\·lr I mm e di at c p 0 s ilion
Ross!l!'r. a\'ailable on J shif1s. Costa
Ca!!hler--SUle l\feso, lrvinP. l: Ne;\'pDr!
Call for A PJll
546·1311
Full time position. Must havl' area.~. t<.'o Fee. Ask for Herman
1852 l\lat·Arlhur
(Across fron1 O.C. Alrpor1)
Ney,·port Beach
Equal Oppor. Employer
COLWELL
PROPERTIES. INC.
REALTORS Call 545-9993 I prrvious ca.!rhier expt;r. Ap.. 9 TO 1 Pr.1' ONLY -· * METAL frame e y e
glaues, ln case, Pacific Csl
Hwy, Newport Beach area.
673-7654.
HB area. Brownle white cat,
aemi-long h a I r. Aftl
"Cagney", Reward l J 0 •
842--2349.
REWARD! Lost amaJI blk &
wtrlte ma.le kittt!'n. Near UIU\
A Ora.nee. C.AI. 548-15IG.
Haullnt
Contractor LOCAL Moves, ha u Ii n g,
cleanup. Exp c o J J e g e
ROOM AddllioM, E1Urnates, atuclent. Lri truck. Res.
plan1 &: layout, 1ingle or ~ 534-1846.
i;tory. L. T. ConHtruction.
8-li-1jll, YARD, ~aragc cleanup.!.
Remove ~"• dirt, Ivy, Add!Uoru; * Remodellni 1 k l p I o a d er , backhoe,
Ger.vick & Son, Lie. 847-2666.
67J....Q141 * 549-2170 Hauling
JACK Tau I a ~Repair ----..,.-~..,,..
remod., add!t. 20 yn exp. Gardening. Yard & Garage
Lic'd. My Way Co. 54t-0036. Clean Up. Free E st.
I~ Electric1I Reas. Rates. 6-16-3488
.. ----------YARD &: Garage Cleanup. j~;;;;;;;; •• .::;.;. ELECTRICIAN, 1!cen1~. Free est. 7 days. Call I 1 bonde<l. Small jobt1, maint. anytime, 548-5031.
I ~&~"'-=·""=!n~·~548-0-~>J3=. ~-~I Housecle1nlng Schools &
in1trucfion1 575 ELECTRICAL WORK. All
FREE guitar, voice or piano
ltnoM wltb this ad. Cn4J
847..ai62.
k:ind11. Big or 1m1a.lJ Lic'd & MESA Cleaning. Carpet!!,
Ins. Free es!. 5'16-0211 . \loi ndo"·a, f Io ors etc.
Girdenl-Resld/com'I, :i S 7-6 7 4 2 ,
... 548-4111.
JAPANESE Gardener · Dedicated Cleanlns
! ]~ Complete . Yanh\'ork &. * WE 00 EVERYTI?ING *
Srftcel •nd ~ Clean-up. f'rte Estimates, Refs. Frtt est, 6't6-2839
. . 6'12--3102. ~=~~--~~-HOUSE OF CLEAN
Baby11tt1119
BABYSJ1TING in my home.
Beach I: Park lrlps
Mesa Verde area. 557-7548
VACATION MOTIIBR care
for your home & children
v.ilile you vacation. Xln't
refs. DE.'pendable, drives.
645--0574,
EXPER Jap1tnese Gardener FJooni, crpts, \1.-lndo"-'S t-;
Complete yd .ervice. Neat ll o "'" •~•
& Rella. Frtt eat. 641-4389. wa s . ..1 yrs. atta . ............,., ....
BAY & Beach Janlforlal.
PROFESSIONAL Crpt!!/11.-indoWi/floors etc.
Japane.e Gardening Service Re1id/Comrn'l, 646-1401 .
F'rff Est. * 646-0019
co111>LETE Lawn Ir Land1c1pln9
Carctenlna sel"\l'i~. Hauling TOP SOIL -540-0097
& cleA.n·up. Jim 548--0405. Lawn Removal, Rototill
JOHNSONS' GARDENING Pelnting &
Job Wanted. Malo 700 ply ~tanager -Cl-IRI S -S.l.S. TEMPORARY lt>.'SURANCE Clt>rk, days, MOTHERS
Souli1 Coe.at Plaza. SERVICE f/timc. Personnl!l Dept., Earn extra money \VOrking Re•I E1t~te C•r~r SCR•AM-LETS CONSTRUCTION 1·124 SO. GRAND 1-long Jlospital, Ne;\·port trom you home, part lime. New l'.lt exper1e.nced, ~m the
LOAN OFFICER &tnta Ana 347-5736 Bch~·===-----No door to door sall!s. For Company thats grow.ing. If
ANSWERS Xlnt oppor. for apprai&er In F'ry Cook, F.xr \VhrPln1an INVENTORY CQl\!rollrr, interv iew call 5'l0-092S. you do net hnve a hctnlk",
resicienLial conatroctlon dept e BLUE DOLPHIN e male, Pr iv at e C'lub in chttk on our ,... .,_ M.T.S.C. 0Pf!'rator tor 1vkl>· $49 Ab ... ~_ M-·-_ Ll••go _ in Costa Ml!sa. Requires a 3355 Via Lldo, rLB. .,e1\•port °"ach. $550. mo.
"wu ,,. .... ~ min of " r · Call for appt. ~Ion t!u·u Fri. nev.·.spaper, 5 day "-'k in Koshtr -SKIN US · 4 Y s exper. in ap-FASHION Model new face Irvine area. SaJary nego.
Fact: We took the country praitlng re'!lidential & small no expcrienCf'. J~terne.tionai ~u.,·.,•.,64.>-iiiii5000iiiiiii·ii•.,xt.,1.,7.,6•iiiiiiiiiiii lc8~3~'1--~3~36':2:.. ~-~~~~ R•1I E1f1te
away from the Indian~. l\'hO incom~ units . w/!l(lme con-Company. Size 7 to 12. At· -NEED J S!yHsts, Clientele Licensing Course
scalped us, and gave it lo the struct1on lending preferable. tractive &: too::I ligure IRYJNE f>ERS{)NNEL prefd, but not essen. Top Full sales tralnlng program
""'litlclao• who SKIN U~. This position Jnclu<lell toan 962--5..1183 for appt. ' 5 no co5t Managrment on.. ,...,, solicitation & builder con-.c.:c.c.==-'"-----ERYfCES•AGEJ\IC:Y earnings. Shopping Ctr loca--, . ' .. Job Wanted, Femile 702 tact. :'rl u.st ha"'e appraised l'!lY Cook/exper. Apply in lion. A.~k for David, porlunlties, Ask for Mrs.
wi!h a· financial in.,tllution. ~rson, 2633 \V. Coast H""'Y• Fref' and Fee Posilions !>IO-S888. So. C.st Plaza, Jl33 Jn?ne~ tor Wormatlon at
GOOD TYPIST Call Mr. Dlnv.son, 54fr1500. N.D. 2-4 Pr.1. G. Ole. Comm'l Ins 0Pt-n Bristol CM. 84-·5581.
Will do your typing •f CALIFORNIA F ULL time dental asst. Hun-F'/C Bookkeeper $700+ NEEDE.D Asi;i11tant to Kelly Tarbell Reatfors
her home, Will rickup FEDERAL SAVINGS tington Beach area, mu.st Office Manager $550 Templeton \vlth opportunity
nd d II I H 8 h ••• ~97 Secretarie11 to $650 a • ver OCI • ., CONCESSION & box office ave some exp. <MU""V<l • to become 1tylist. l'ftust
F V W. I 75c ~r ~ G Auditor Trne Degre 10 $650 ha .. , C • 1 ., 10 r • ,. a · '' 1 ' r--,..,. girl v.·an1ed immediately. EN'L OU!ce Po s i Ii on p l c k • " Ill 0 k b ho r ayrol ler $500 Co•m•lolo.,.ist I f c e n S"' •
RECEIVING
INSPECTOR or w w r V u Port 'J'1ieatre, Corona de\ available in Acctg. Dept. Gen Ofc/lite. Bkpng to $500 &t2-{ll!J.I. "' '"
call 147·3095. Mar. See Mgr alt 6 PM. Bk k Pg I Acct g · exper, Receptionist/Typist $400 °"~~~--~---R . & · NEED help at home? \Ve ............................... helpful. Typing & 10 l«>y ad· Ke)'punch to $475 NEEOED girl \\ith .son1e ece1v~s inspe.rt11 vendor
have Aldi!!! e Nurse.11 e Con11truction dlng mathine a must. Op. Sec'y fleceptionillt Open fac~OI')' t"Xp. to lf'arn LAp n1ater1~.s. machined parts,
llo .. ••kp-e Comp••loo• por. to learn computer. Tr I A , 0 O""rator dutil!s. Start at $.2. e~ecl~nic pan s, p~·\n~ed ..... ... ...,, av' R' 11, exper. pen ,_,.,_ circuit board t H
• Hom e1naker1-Upjohn CONSTRUCTION Call 493-4586 or apply 33012 P. TlmefP.R. Sec'y $3 hr. hr. ~Iany extras. 545-1)4()1. p-rints, ,pcr;tfc:t\on~. 1 s:1~~ 5'17 """". Calle Perf('{'to, San Juan •00 E J71 h ( 1 1 · Cl't ~· ""3ol • ll rv1ne) •Y e e NEEDED ple11 & proeesst'11. ln!('rpret
HOUSEWORK by day Qr _c_'-"°-·-------'42·1470 Two Office Glrl1 h\uC"prints & ~chcma ti<..' dia·
Companion. We l 1 C':\:· \Ve are no1v staffing our new GE.r'llERAL office, part time, gramll". J yf'n,r exper. as re-
pe.rienced companies facilily engaged mature woman, Irvine lnd. r.fust be 25 and able to drive C('i\'ing cll'rk or inspector.
• 646-8700 • in the production or factory· C.Omplex , 54~7001 ; 9 am/3 _APPLY _
Help Wanted, Ma F 710 build modular housing. Our -•~m_.________ KEYPUNCH 1 __ 1..:S6.:..::E:..._1_s1_h_S_t..:"..:C..:.Mcc... _
Adult P /time
Poodle Sitter
Your I-lome 675-0215
cxi!tlng backlog enables us General Office NURSE, part ttme, for back
to otter permanent positions Light bookkttping, pleasant 11· •u d I k n N
t tho ho h o ice, _.711 ays "" , .; . o le w ave recent ex-phone. voice. E\1ening.s & I hi . pre ., sta e pe.rl(ln only. penence in the follo\ving weekend~. salary negotiable. \Vrite
named trades: Apply ""fhursdo.y 2-5 pm D Sh 'f Classified Ad No. 431 , Daily
At CARPETERIA •Y 1 t O Avall1ble Now P ilot, P. . Box 1560, Costa 1TI4 Newport Blvd. I\ C r t 92626 PAINTERS
Call For Appl.
lndui;trlal Rl'lation.s
171 4) 494-9401
TELONIC
INDUSTRIES
Carpet Service
Yard Maintenance, Planting Piperhartglnt Cleanup~ 962--:l0.35
Advertising Sec'y
Gr.at opportunity for am-
biUoug, highly skilled girl
Brains, initiative &: ab re-
quired. i:'.:LECTRICIANS
Costa Me11a 6 1\ionth.s actual work exper. lesa, a 1 · .
1 --~c....;:...,.==-~~ I on either A keypunch, NURSE'S aide, exp. prefer·
GENERAL OFFICE: Spend k('ytapc or key disc devict. red 3 to 11 pm. Me!IA Verde
Laguna Beach
-Equal Oppor. Employer
JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery
Clt!•ner1. Extra
Ori-Shampoo 1 re e Scotch·
ruard (Soil Retardants).
Degreasers &. all ('.()[or
brlghteners & 10 minute
blench for \Vhlle Cllf'PE'IS.
Sa\'e your money by saving
me extra lrip11. Will clean
livin~ rn1., dinlng rm. &
h1dl $1ii. Any rm. $1.50.
Much SlO. Chair $5. lj )"Ts.
exp. ls \.\'hat counts, not
me111od . l do work myself.
Good ref. ~31-01 01. I
* * *
SPRINKLER REPAIR YOU SUpply the Paint. Rm1
New System.11 * 546-253S painled $10 ea avr Also, e'X·
terior. Refs. 30 Yi-s. exper. * LANDSCAPING * S«i-7046.
New lawns, Sprlnkl"°', decks,
I St t li 'd "~" ,....,,. PAINTING. Int. & Elct. c ellf'lup, a e c · ..._.~. Reas. rates. 'Vork guaran'd.
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
Local tet!J. Lie. P h i I ,
49-1-8691.
~% disc. paper & hanging,
mobile store, vinyl, flock.
5-17-5846 The Hangman
846-2182.
No V.'!l.Stlng * WALLPAPER * When yau caJi ''Mac"
54!-1444 646--1111
* * * PAI~"TU..'G • Ilon4:'st, c!ean,
guaranteed "'ork. Llcen'!ed
&. tnsured. 675-5740.
Call 133-1670
Appllcatlon11
Now Being Takl!n For
• Hoof
• Hostt••••
• Busboys
• Dinner Cook &
• Coif" Shop
W1 ltre1s
MOKl 'S
1400 So. E. Bristol
CORI& Mesa
Automotive C•sht.r
Expe.rienced, rxcl!!Jent 11lart·
ing salnry, excellent rom·
pany bt'nefit !I. Cali Molly
&-11.
WILSON FORD
PLUMBERS
ROUGH & FINISH
CARPENTERS
DRY 'VALL
MlLL \\'ORI\
PleaSl' Apply In Person
9am-4 pm
OMNJ lfOUSTNG
SYSTEr.1S, INC.
17822 Gillette $1,
lrl!lnr lndu!I'. CnmplP.x
Santa Ana, Calif.
Equal Oppor. Employe.r
part of the day at the beach Co Ho 661 c st 1 ..... ,...,...,..,.,..,..,..,.1
thi11 summer 6' get p11;id on nv sp. enter ·· RFCEPTIONISf: Front of-
this part time job. Musi bf' ALllO C.l\f. S48-558S. fice lots ot public contact.
over 20. Start $2 hr. Call D h 0 RN A MENT A L IRON ~p.<irk!ing penonelity v.·ilh ay 1 ift until move to tab · t ~ · d I n Linda Ray, 5 4 O - 6 O 5 5 , nee or, exy~nence · or a1r !or learning, A career,
Coastal Agenc-y, 3 790 Newport in September position. Call bet 9 & 12. not a job. To $400. QUI
11 arbor Bl. at Adams. C.M. then swing shift 4-12 ~76. J-ietrn Hayes. j 4 0-6 o 5 5,
GIRL, live-in, Newport
Beach homt', ~lot he r ' i:;
helper for summer .
642-9000.
HOUSEKEEPER
"·anted. 962-5531
'/jour
PM. ORTHODONTIC office: Ex~ Coastal Ag('n<:y, 2 i 9 0
School training ~ce1s. ~me per \ en c e d rec-eptiord!!lt Hrirbor Bl at Adams, Cill.
v.u rk exper. helpful. ;\·/maturity. Top Wary. RECEPTIONIST: Thi~ ne"'
lNTF:RV rE\V ING
!\Jon & Tuei:; 9 run-2 pm
\Ved thn1 1-'rl 9 arri-12 pm
ON
SITE OF" OUR
NE\V BUILDING
PACIFIC MUTUAL
Fashion T11Jand. 644-1406. plush office nt<ed3 you to
PART timr. J-lc':.p "'anted . .srree t the ir custo mers ,
Ev's alter 5 pm . :\1a.lr. Grf'at bo11 & good futurt in
O\'fr 21. Apply in person. this R"TeRt job. To $384. Call
r.tir & Ed's Pizza Parlor, 410 Lir11la Ray, ~ 4 0 -6 0 5 5 ,
E. 1iU1 St., C.~f. Coa s1lll AgC'ncy, 2 7 9 0
PIZZA Coolra &. DC'!ivery, Harbor Bl at Adan1s, C.M.
ma.le over 21, pltime. Ap-RF'.cEP'J'TON~ST I SECRE·
pl y 16532 Bearh Blvd .. J-funt. TARY. 11('d1cal o t 1 ice,
Beach. Laguna• are!l. State age &
Trader's Paradise
EXTER. Complt"'le 2 coals, I
atory $240, 2 11tory $300,
Neat work. Roy, 847-13:18.
PROF. paintln&", inte.r/exter.
Quality \\'Orie. Reas. Llc'd
Ins. 5.57-7455. ~2'759 aft 5.
PAINTER 4 SEMI-RETIRED
REALISTIC PRICES -GOOD
\VORKMANSHIP 642-1255
J.11255 Bea ch Blvil. COOK: Poslllon open for ex-
lluntlnglon Beach per. cook in pvt. club. This:
FASHION ISLAND
<Corner Santa Cruz &:
Newport Center Drivt)
qua!. \Vrite ClnJ11ified Ad
POSTAL Carrler1J. De.liver No. 451 c/o Daily Pilot-P.O.
your own 11rea. Costa Mcu, Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif.
Hunt. Bch., Fntn. Vly.
HAVE ; 2 br hs,.., \'11.luable
1ot, C.M. Eq, $10,750. \\'at11 .
Local dupl('X to 1 units or
land an)'\\'ht'l'e ? !'off'_v1·no;
(bkrJ &n-6756.
'55 T-Bird not too good, not
too bad, can't v.ork on )11•r
+ drive her loo. \\"fin! ·ri~
VW Squareb3 ek, 1111h'J or ?
f>484l5()6 ('.Vell
Green metal nakf'
FiberJ:lau dunlf' huggy
w/tow bar A n1any P~trus
Trade lor 1/0 tx>e1
M7·'19Zl ,
DUC 3BR 38A, f11.m nn. r.11.
home at RllD. SprlnRs.
(QI eq. lor clear niot11r
Mnie « smaU l>0n1e:
Ji16.190Clm-2Zll, Ext 29.
VE! 4 anltl, Alt..Cltna,
tD(. WANT: kN::a.I ~lupleir
ti 4 111i1tt or .lH COh'ltn'\ fir
iallll or ! Myen (bkr)
I N-•wpor t
WI '1". l Br.. 2'ii Ba.
POOL p&,OOD. $1,llllO "'"'
17, -Jbr """"""· C..S 7, ft4111t. Aptt.., ~
till, ..... , Ot ' '46-19i7
* --~---· '
WALLPAPER HUNG
C;irl Rebko 646-2449
342-6611 is )T. round position in-
BABYSITTER, for boys 7 & volving buflet. broiler &
Jl. Huntingt<ln Be a ch, sarxl\\•ich preparation. C.all
\Vestminster area. For wum-att :2:30 p.m., Tues.. thru
mer. Aft 5 pm, wkde.y1, all 9.tn. 545-ll6l. If h' .
day we-ekends, 897-3174. COOl<S-Over 18, no exper your mat S lft
BABYSITTER want c d : neces11. Apply betwn 2 & 5 good condition,
* FREE daily bu 'I
lraflMPOrtation for \\'nrk 1n
Loi:: AngE1es until move to
Newport, Sept. '7:Z.
Hou&e'l'-'ive1 pret'd. 530--0402. R E'. CE PT I ONIST-Typi.st.
San Clem 496-5903 aft 3 f/tnnr perm. H.B. Conv,
pm. I1os1>, ]88ll _F!orida, HS.
PRE-School teacher Strong SALESMEN
lines
times
dollars PROF. pe.inlini, alto roofs,
accous. ~II., inter/exter,
Lie/In!!. Free e~. 64N191.
Mature & patient, my home, pm, Sne.ck Shop RsetaUl'&llt,
perm. MOO-:J.'ri. 7:45 to 5:30, 230,:, E. Coast 1-lwy, Cdl\1
Girl 5 yn:, boy 16 JOOS. Equal Oppor. Employl!'r.
Own transp. V)c Culve.rdalc COOK
music bckgrnd. M~ion Vie--N'ttd men who are ready to
Kentucky Fried Chick· jo. Mn. Dlt'hl, 837-2993. lenm the car buKlness and
en of CdM, needs men PRESS OPERATORS 11.re willing 10 train. MU!t
over 1' yra for both full have good penonallty, be we can UM you. & pt/time, duri~ Sum-Women to \.\"Ork tor plullc interested in a t\Jture dress
Good typln" & In• moldiog plaot, ~70. wol' oa!Hmlnded. ,.;,,.m., ., mer & afterwar t. Ap-..
I I b 12 3 M PRINTING, Ott!et printing Demo.. group Ina., blah 35' Fiberg1;1.1111 Sailboat &8
dO\\'n payn1enl on inCl'.ln~e
Pl'lf)l!rty,
In Irvin!!. Call 552--.7522 aft FOR clttln Ii neat painting, S:~. Some exptr. necess. Apply SUrance exper • p y twn • pm. °""' pre11 opr. w/A.B. Dick ::1M comnduions. Unlimited in-Fri. 2929 E . Coast ence helpful, but exper. lmmed. opening. F..x-rome. Apply in Pen;on. interior or exterior le n!as. -::':=:=.,,..,===..,..,...,...-in peraon, Love's BBQ,
21.1: 4?.2·012& or
714: 846-~
rates, Dick, 968-4065. BABYSITTER I hskpr, Brookhur1t A: Adams, HB
live-in. Mu.~t enjoy c hildren. DENTAL AssiJtant, Chn.lr Plaster, P•tch, Repair Ref -. & fllrn. !37-3771
l-H~w=-'cy,:.-,.,C.:..dM __ • ___ ~ ct'Jlt10nal oppr. w/wrowlng UN I VERSITY OLDS.
ft 0 t ftKessary. LEGAL Secretary: tull time. nat'l co. Penn. Xlnt v.'Ofk.-MOBlLE, 2850 Harbor Blvd,. Apply now for: Young, xln't typilt, die-ing cond1. le outstAndine Co81a Mesn. • ~'1 side, 2 yrs. exper, salary
BE,\l-r!FUL 30' T\VIN * PATCH PLASTERING l =•~v=e.~·==~----opl!'n. 830-3730 El :¥"P.~:\v CtfRIS, (C LF.AR). All types. Frtt e1tlmate11 BABYSITI'ER netrled im· Toro-J..quna Hill1 ana.
TllAn>; ron P.u .. CAMP-ca11 -med. for 14 mo. old. Moo-1 ·0.:.1.::SH.:.W.:.A:::Sll=ER=, =A::.pp..:J:cy.:.0..-1. • Fl9ure Clerfc
ER OR ' Piumbl"I F1"1, 8-S Pm. Newport ArM. Dillman'• Rest., 8(11 E . Interettinr openihas for Jr. 962"4283 (Clay It. Irvine), EJCp'd, + n.~-Bl ~-• kill :---=..:.:.::.... ___ I 1 ! 64&--9194 AM QUUl1a ' peu, ' Sr. 1 8' ~ \\'inr hesl('r ihot aunit, SAVE on home npt.ln. Free re . or ~u v. , DISHWASHER.
nl()(lel 97 & 25, 12 gau.n. JO. tllt., plumblna, paint, 1~ BAR MAID tuU or part 1ime, F/tlmf! Nitti • Gen'I c•-rlcal 30 M I" .,n~ S a t a I I • t l O n I , hauling, (i&y & nl-"t shlft. n. ...... n f9'
Ill' in, '""J • avaa~. 9R 839--0372 Bee ~" ........ ~ Apply In PH'IOD yaritd openlnp include, Iii·
Maul\f"r, 303 Orililh, !ride · -=~·~-~~-~~· ~~~--1 Colony Kltcbrn Ina, typlnt A: good com· fnr P.U., car or '! ~"4003 PLUMBING REPAIR BARMA.lD. 21-26, Nights 6 3211 HarD Bl., CM munlcatmn ikilL~.
No Job too mW1 PJ\f.2 AM. Ap•'·· a t lJAVE StrrHna 1t•.rn1, Maple * &tW12S * ....,.
l'i"<'t !I'., 4 1P'""d automalk Snoopy'• 6'~9«>7 ~ore 6
phoOOftn:iph, Trsdf' for Bluf' Savt Money, S..vt'Thl1 Adi ;;P;cM;:,·===--:::-,-.,-,.-
Chi p or Grt>f'n 1tamf)4. Plumbke repa.1n St per hr BART&~DER Wanted: Ap-
:rl6-l?i84 642-7i55 or &a-1403 ply in pertOn <m phone
INTERVIEWING
Mon A Tue1 9 am·2 pm
Wiid thru Yrt 9 am·U pin
COLE PLUMllNG calls! Fl'llclano'a lte11, 1617
(.:0M'L BLDG. BAidwin Pk, ~ hr. n:rvlce. 6'5-11& \Vesrcl lff. lj.B. Ste Mr.
t•!ear,4 $1 75,000. '''•nt hoo••. M""-~ ·
ESCROW OFl'ICIR
POl!Uon. available 1n 11Vtt&I
of our otticu ttt Elctow
otnctn w/a min. cf U
yrs. t.XPtr. 1n convention(Ll
lolnt. Must be capable of
h1.ndll1'1K own de.irk. Sahu;•
oommenrut'llte w/expf!r.
CIU Mr. Etcht80n, 546-l!rOO.
ON
srrE OF OUR
NEW BUll.OING Re,,,..I a lt .. lr -~--· 111nall lnMm!! to $75.000., DE.Atrt'[CIAN wHh cUenteJe <'f111.,1 11r1:11 . A,;, 29l3 La nEMoo~ ~·a -•~tJo . • .,,..,...,~ , IWUl ns:, wantft:I Mr Ken Templeton Vcntanu, SC. 496-4:145. ••·· pt-•-~ II Ir s I 1~1 pa._.._., prom -::iv.._ ... ,.,--. a ty l1l 1u Wtttcliff CALll'ORNIA
l'IDIRAL SAVINGS e1timatr.s, l'!.f!l'encf't, Joell =Dr='-~NB=·=~,----
bulldu, 1·10 p.m. 9e8-«lr7. BEAUTICIANS neec:M!tl for """"'""""""'""'"'"""'""'""'' 968-0964 ENGINEER: Ma.nut.acturh'lt
PACll'IC MUTUAL
'l"ASIUON ISLAND
(Comer Sant& Cruz •
NewpottCOll..,.llrM)
TRADE )'OUr home for
Co~!a filr~ lriplex. Enjoy
tn.'C Jhtolter, appttclatfon I
iMOme. Aa:cnt.
67~11'4
· bu1y ahop. $1.SS hr or SO" or mechanical to dewlop
RMflftt comm. Pd vac. ca 11 MilboAt production unu. * rnEE dally bu• 54g...9919• Derrecr nq'd. Top pay A tn.naporlltion tor work tn
lt'a a hnlt.e • .tell )'OUr xln't tuture. MacGl'ftOI' LOI Antfltt \U'ttll move to
""""with ouo, use DAILY Yacht Q)<p, 1631 P'-ntla. llewpon. Sept, '12. *
I
•
* e T. Guy l!Doftor. O.al * ot .... l 1 do my ..,. work.
64;.7780, 54.!-iilioo. Pila< 0...Hled. ,.,_, CM.
laphone. 644--0:l23, NW11t bfne!ill. No. Amtr. Cor-5ALE~S~MA--N---
Center. re!!ponclence Schools, 4401 Rl!l'ROGRAPHICS
J\fAN or '"'°ma.n to work in Birch St., N.B. Mn. Mlle1, Full •-I k ~7300 lttl"Vl\.-.: p fltema er N:-Donut Shop afternoon. No · gu.ln!'I exp'd gaJesma.n for
phone calls please. Wlf>. PROFESSIONAL expand~ op e r a t i o n ,
chell's:, 2947 Harbor Bl, CM. RESTAURANT i: HOTEL Backamund in prlntinr,
MARKETING TRAINEE: EMPLOYMENT AGENCY adve-rtlalna or related se.le1
Fine company with many llourb' Ernpkl)'eta Bene.lit fields. Send resume to the
sales offices Ii ~ve By Lnw Ffft PreAfdtnl, Hoyt11 Harbor
indlvidaul c 1 n p:roareu AUL Mrnr. $600 to S100 mo. E~vtnr, P . o. Box 11567.
·rapidly. Car turni8hel1. Fe., Muter Chef ••••••• $1100 mo. Santa Alla, 92711.
Paid, Other f'ce PosiliofllJ. ~ ... Cook ·" •• ··"' S:z70•hllt Sale• F.nglneer
$700, Call He.Im Ha.yea, 540-B~I ''.'M'· ••'' '' ••' •1·,;_; .~In Pref 5 yn. t xpr_r (R. 'F'. 6005. CoAtUtl A ... ru...., 2190 roi er an '' •''' · ...,, .,, .iaJd) B S J rt ·--~ ~· Cook I" " hr • ....., .. e~ nee ng, ex· I-f11rbor Blvd. at Adamt, CM , .... nee ••••••• ...,. · tl'nlll\'e fl'avel req'd. Send
Bartender • • • · · Kno\Vledfe of re.suine only 10 a t t n · MEOlANIC-OllP A Uc .. Polyne1landrink:1 •. S25.thlft P•rsonnel 1tAl\U2e~
fully exp .. In tun tu P Waltfh , , , ,,, •• , ••• $1.85 bt. A!rwt.)' Avt Coma M
"'/Scopt. air cood, cerb, Wa1treoe1 ...... Top Dinner 'cnllt ~ '• t"Sa,
bmlm!, front tnd a.lip, top HOUSH Food & COOJcta!I
PAY over $175. No rat. 6 ......... , ........... $l.6S hr Equal Oppor. Empl.oytt
days, no Sun. Arco 19th • Holt.ta ••.••••••••••.•• $2 hr ~-~S: HEAL'M-1 FOODS
NltWport, C.M.-145-lm. CUhler ............. 11 .75 hr Mutt have co mp J e. t e
MEOIANIC, uptr. ~ Busboya lJ 1i; O\.'tr,,,fl.GG ht. knowledl" Of vita mim 4
ment, tuneup, bt&kt1, A n:E U«JC:lalf'd Jlem1, al.80 uper
VW1. $100 mo ... eon:un~ Ago noYAL SERVICE AGENCY \n O'Y9J'othe-cot1111er Ml'8.
ply ln penoti onfY, lA Par Sanle Aiericy • Nsw Otncil • M~ oppnrtuntticl.
Unlon. IA Pu Rd A San To terve )'Oil bdtrrl Call: m-949J be:twn 10.S
Dlqo Fwy. 3843 Camput Drive 1 .,:;•~m'-. ~------
For that Item WXlft $50, SUlte J19, Newport Beach Sell Ida. n.m. now! CalJ
try tbo 1'<"'11 Placbor !11-2fl00 -N .. 1
f
n
0
I s
1
I
I
Tund.<1.-6.1m DAll Y I'll.CIT f7
.~'" .. _ .. -_J[JJ]I .___ _L .... _ ...... ____ j[jJJI .___ _ ...... _, .. ____ ][Ill [ --J~[ ........ I~[ ---J[B I ....:.-~~-· l~I T-
Holp WOfthld, M & F 710 Holp Wantod, M & P 110 Holp W..,,_, M & ~ 110 l'wmllv,.. 111 Mu.lul Intl,_., m Doge U4 8"11, Sllp1/Docks tlO Motor H-MO Trvcb ..
Set-,\.ANTED 90IMOnt' to dl'l.ve VELVET t\lfted 10tf.. n1ver t"UU. 91t of R.ottn drwN OtJTSTAlfOlNG champ aired ONt.Y • t'tW ltllJ19 11vatlablP, ··BILL WHrTUDG~" ''1 t'ord Pk.-tvp. t• IOI V-' ~~~· ~=: "HELP WANTED" car ""°""' to Holloton, ~ SUI; ... tchlne lov. lnclodlno eymbolL A""'"' Pupo. Show quality. :IO', 25' • 38' 1n Back Boy. SaMet Moton ou10 """'· '"° Y-
Bentrom.1 C'bIJdn:na StorP, Texu. 6U-0891. 1at, $85; velvet bi--batk $U..3192 Alter 1 P.~1. ~ up. Term1. 821-1300, De Ania Bay•lde Vlllalf' OR.ANGE COU1'i'Y money'• w or 1 h at -.
So. eo..,t Plaza. Apply 6:iO \Vant Ex-type RO"tt&ry to 'w•ANTE==o~.-..,-...,-,~l<>r-•PT~ chfl.lr, '85: coclrtaU table•, Offlt• Pumltvrt/ uk lor 103. 300 E. Cst. II"'>'·· Npr. Bch. l..OCATION ~--,.,..,,...77--=-=-...,,-
!:t Camino Real, 'l'ustln. mana11:e 4 &trl ottice. Know· job In Docton olttce. Lab $35 ta; !&mpA, W .a,, l'fulp. 124 lRISH S@Ur-r Pupe, mi;. CllOICE a.llpa in i~w ~l&rina L•yton Tr•v•I Tr•ller'1 ·;c ford'·' Ton. Nf'W e~.
Mon th"1 Fri only. ledge of Real E.tate ht-Ii>-tr-ch. pttferttd. MWlt ht 5,38..QB}. American Field. :'II & Y, for 25-70 fl. bu•t•. 18 FT. 19 F'T. 2'l F'T. k 23 fT, Good rond!Oon S«)O.
Se Ice fut. For nppt. cal.I 546-leo:J fam.llle.r w/lab. ~lost clutie1 01r•1• S.le 1 12 OfrtCE c10H'd, per1ect of· tOOb, l'ta.aona~. 67l-OOS5 673.-6fi06. Lu..1u.1r\vtU ho1n«' n11o·•y lron1 &t&-a!
rv SIAlll>n Sa..lttman, · · · A!lk for-Mn. Allen. to be l•b 11.'0rk. 492-7520. __ .;:._______ lief' tum!tul"'t' lor u.lt-CAll alt~-lX>CK w1bathruon1 u11 10 hc:1111e Auto L•••.__
Jo,ull ro part lin1e. UI yr old. SNACK n •• A 1 I d I GAR.AGE Sa.le, 1•·--1 pm '" '~1 an• ' • ._ Some exp. needed. Al llO ..-.. "n a n 1 W•J'l'houMman, ahlppins le ThUh. 1292 u..;';rt Dr. _,...,.,,.. r "· lltJSH St'tter pups, AKC top 26'. S751mo. No. 1 &J))()fl As long •s M months
Mechnlc part \hue. Apply 1n nff<led. Fem. over 21, hill A ~lvlng, a:eneraJ mdtt, H.B. Btdroom Nb, ~-JB~f Exec. Type\lo•riter-Oc. ihow lint'll ,\ qu11.L Pl'rm. C..We1, N.B. 675-4331. to pay.
pel'80n. 3001 Newport Blvd. ~'='"117m"e"'. ,-54>--03-.. n_._ .. _ ell'.p nec.1281 Bid&" E Lop.n, ta-ble8, l•mpi, mlm:rrl. hair w/carbon rl.bbon. Sell or abots. 3 mOI. 9GZ-4l4S. 14" Sld Boat, 6.5 hp .\lercun. Motor Home's
SERVICE Slation: Po1ltlon1 STEADY \l.'Ork, aood pay. Of. <k°).·tt, krnrk-nt.clu, books, trade for alr rond. &rl-421~. * * OlITSTANDlr\G GN'at Xlnt rond. $700. R~porting time 7:45 am dl.i-Women 1 P iano1/0r9ana 126 Dane pup 1, AK C, • !i:i7--0ll~ • open tltllnt'. D r i v e w a Y \y at IJido Car Wash, 481 E. • c. bl •" -· aaleaman / J!le mechanical. Enjoy 1\amour pt / t Im 11 w~ ..... r-... .._ rt'a90na e . ......,...~ 17' &11fndl' SI\ ·w\lh 110
('ornplele Ju~ of sur'\'~)'-ot'!'I
Eldor1111<> ~!1111 ~lql l)r llnn1r 11
& ~''t'ra1 Uf:f'd n•l!l)r
Try our lea,. e:x~ru tor
Sb.vtni:1 • SaUsf11C1\Qn -Ser-
'""· 11th St .. c.~I. I A.Jonc.l"I., w-.:•ter wfmlr-FREE Must have Pxper. Gd. earn-caret>r, Show Bee In e ror. couch, nr new clotht'S s. Sl LKY Tl'1·ru·r pupplt'.& AKC. :-Olrrr Oil. ran\'AR 1..-i\1'1",
lng potenlial. Apply 1--4 pm TELEPHONE Salu. Top huhklns at $20-Ul willy in-7 baby atroller, carrier & Sho~· qu&I. S100 to Sl25 01· gharp~ Sl';":'JO. fll.;2-3...~JI
only, Jerry Parhain, J\ltsa a..mmlsslora and bonua. Ap. con1e T qualify tor fret ml1e. P•rk in strut. 22l ORANOE COAST makE' Clffer. 962-7057. ii(l;\T UJl to ~1·. \l11r •U!> ,\\t"
<.'han111.1. S.15/n)O.
llomt".'I.
SPECIAL!
-$2533-
I \VE Lf.:ASF: ALL POPULAR
19'1l !\IA.KF.S AT COMPi.I\.
Tl"\'F: f':A1T.S..
Verde Sht>ll S<".1'\'. .3.131 ply tn penon between 9.00 v;a.rd.robe, 893-Z317 or Slerks C.i\f. 1 pm. to duU. HAMMOND STUDIOS
Harbor Bl. Costa 1tesa.. and 12:00 noon at 8381 Bolsa 557-9733.
AKC Pedigree Silky Ttn-\er
pups, sm. otters f>i:J...~71 PP.A \'P Xt:l\I t /I ,-'f () \ Av·eou• Mldwov C\N ---~------825 Prt1KOO Dr., Cotta J\1eu, SERVICE station attendinl "'• ~ 'J· \VORKING mother nttd1 re-546-TTIS. Toots. books, •59
Shell Station on beach In TRAINEE Hable a.'ISistancP 3-7 p.m. c·-• 3 I , __
4 Adult Evenln& Clas1t1
• Br-i\nners
Call 1).14.....\SOli ------'-------·r 1t.\Vf'.t. Tlt.\ILEn
Bo•ts, Spffd & Ski ti 1 f ull) ~ (' J f -r •In I ii I t1 f' •1
Ll uo::\'-v, couc !E'S, m.....,,
Laguna, College :\ludent ·1e typing. L..ocal except SUn., .Sl.:15 hr. turn. 311 Qi9\'. e n 1 . ,
pret'd. 494--9003. Call Lorrainl' 4!J6.JT29 clothes, lots or mite.
e lntennetllal•
• Theory
Al..:C, 1 mo. old malt', Seng!~
lrl·t'OIOr, $35. \\ !30h NS l"
\\'ankt'I rn~1ne Dr1'·" y1l11r
O"-"" 11kl hwll as ~·uu ,.k1
Sh'<•k 1n11l'lr!ed f1ht·r~tas~
hull. Hri11l~ :--i<111u•lt1 orn.:'
lnl"lud.11;!
ll\a.~· H"lrh: Slf>f>P~ !>
$(-r St:-1051
I'!~.,~ 6-1.~17 SERVICE S . \\'ESTCLIIT .'" "T Oppo,, Not'I Co--m ~=='~ .. .:::=:_ __ tallOn altendant, p 1 ......... '""" ANTJQUE buffet .SlS. retrlg
exper. lube & It mtt.hanlcal ersonne Agency hes ope:nltl&s for route $10. Maple chr S5, 616 to
• \\'orkshop
Call for lnforma!ion ·rINY Teacup Toy Poodles
S-17-3677
all shilt~. incl. graveyard: 20-ll \.,.:;~~j7~r., NB s.ale11men 1n C.M. 962--0416. 6110 180 .Apt 'A' Rochester
full &. part tln1e avail. Ap-a t.
644-1930 Al\C rrgistered
18M E . Coast Jlv.-y, CcL\f ~7-3S5l * 5-17*9591
l~l"ill llnrbnr Hh·lL
VaJue SSOO. SAi'. s:.or1, 1,.•."11----'-"-~-"-' _1_1'-"---
otter. 67~650fil673·340-I. ply in pel'!!On only, La Paz TYPIST-Clerk for ore in
Union, ' -Paz Rd. & Sa.. N1v11t Clr. \V ill train nn ll~j GAR.AG E Sa.JP, You y,•ant it?
*PIANOS*ORGANS* ;-r. llernaro. ''"'"1'. 3
Going Out .For Builness 111011tbs *old. A
3
F:C. All sho!.'I. ~ " " , _______ ._...J · · \Ve ha~ It! -'cme real Diego F'rn•y. Pl:iX. Hr s 7am-3:30pm. .
Xln't r1·ingl" benefits. CaU """" ........ 11 1 iO(Xliea, bi&: & sm..aJ.l, 319
Best quality • prices • aerv. 534--, 017 *
Kawai-Steinway-Baldwin. etc LABRADOR pup~. S5(1. AKC, l[i] Secretarial V.'.lcatlon Relief Hft 2pm, ask for Personnel , IOO Monte Villta, C.M. 646-04S4. AntlquH J 1 'ats for Advertising Dept. Talce Dept, ~. ewe ry
Ph1.yt.r Plano• & Rolla capable of throwing gold
Rentals , • , \Ve BUy * Sell labs. 646--5337.
Tran1portat1on
SH, type, detall YlOrk. Ap-VIETNAM VETERAN : Start Ol.JJESI' known or I g In al DIAl\iONDS-Buy Direct
prox. 6 wet:ks. S1arting June a nianagement career in a Norman Rockv;ell cover * WHOLESALE PRICES •
Dally 10·6 Sun 12-5 St Bernard, ma.le, no p:ipt.•rs,
flELD'S PIANOS 1 yr, old. $7S. tlS
26, 1972. IO<'al branch of a nationally pAl11ting on the market. 21 x Dena Diamonds 496-3000
Call l\larg11.ret Greenman knoii·n cc. On the job train-2G in original lran1e. Also
Cotta 1tlP1a (TI.f.) 645-3250 5.11·5446 JIAU, in!rrrst In 11 '!i6 Ce.~snfl IJ£:1 Harbor, G.w1en Grovf'
UPRIGHT Hardman piano. 6 COCKAPOO puppies, nttd 1:-:Al. S~-,00 ·'-!;1k1· l•\•t•l' 1 Blk. So. ot c: G. FN-y.
for ApJX1intn1rnt ing. Earn "·hl!e you learn, Oc1 1, 1921 issue or ·rhe M•chlnery 116
DAILY PILOT Approved GI job training. !"->a.1urday E\•ening PC1sl or "°'==.,.....------
Good condition. $250. or of· ~ home ~, f'Rt•h. can paym<'nl1; ;~;....;,o:i~ l:rci;(i::. 6.16*2_,_3.l~=='°' ·-" ---· -__ _: .-
330 To S7500 Call llelen Jfayes san1e. Best offe.r over OXYGEN --Acetylene -W. Bay St., C.:l\l ' ' •28,000. w~, Cl•••'""1 Ad ldln
fPr. 546-+178. 54S-ro02. C•mpert, Sal•/ Rent 920 PACE·AHRO\V •. C1111'"00K
UPRIGHT piano, xlnt cond., TO-Y--F-ox-T-,-,.,.-,-.,-.. -p-pl<-,-. 1 All top hranrl.<i •• Disco unt ~ruS'r SELL. .Fir.st Sl50 Champ sired, beaut. mark· 8' Cabovf'r. JIA• ~Ink. IN.' prire .. 1:-.1:-.1EDlATJ: DE· 642-4321 bel'A'ttn S-4 pr.1 54().6055, Coastal Agency, " •" ..... we g and cutting CIUtfH.
2790 !·!arbor Bl. at Adams. No. 432, DaUy Pikl!, l'. O. $79.95. AC ARC v.'ddtt. 225 •-'-..,., """"' box, cllJ'pel. ,·eni~. p11111alle LIVERY , .
Secretaries
& Typists
Interview llours
9 am-11 an1 & l pm-4 pm
Wark "A'hl'n & where
you want!
Interim
Personnel Service
na w. 2oth. c.M.
642-7523 546-2592
C.l\1. box 1~, Costa i\1en., Cal if. a.mvi. $95 827-3040. ..... es ... ...........,.,,,. t'd. 2 left. S25 ea. 54~9702. k h 11 lo 1 PR~ATE PARTY WANTS AKC toy poodle pups, shots. ~~r:~'" e;~~:~·rt:i 1: ';1~~-BEACH CIJY DODGE
TO BUY PIANO l'OR black or silver. male or f!herglA~I insulntln n. \'ou
CASH. 835-2278. female. $1'5. 837--8910. pane'! the in•1<lf' & sa\'f'.
\\'AITER Wantf!d: Apply inl _m_'.16_.==~ss~~-TABLE aaw 10" Craftsman,
JK'rron, F"ellciano's Rest. OPENING SALE 1 h.p., 3500 RPM motor.
1617 \VestclllJ, NB. See ~Ir Warehouse ot Eastern Oak. .Sll5. 833-3315.
Rossiter, Commod e 1 . clocks , POWER moy,·er, l8 inch ~If* SfUDIO Upright Plano MALE York!h1re Terrier. S29J, fin11. \\.'rekcl1ty5 call
before 3 pm, 5J6....7749.
]6,*[i.') Bellch Bou.levar,I
llunl\ngtC1n Heach
(7141 M0-2660 \VAITRESS, e:c:per. over ~l. dreasers. tabln & cha.!rs & propelled reel type. $40. $JOO or beet otfer. AKC, stud service. J\ton
foori & cocktails. Apply In many unuru8.l iteml!I. Also 642-4970. 5J6-877;j thru Fri 10 to 3. 60--0404 . '71 Ford mini home, Crul.s-Motor Home Rent•I•
person, The Blue Ettl, 107 primitives and collectiblell. Mi II :S_po_rt.,,.lt19-"'G'a_-ci_.d's--°'13=o·I H~o-rM_l __ ..;.:-'-'.:.:.c..::156~ I aire 1\-todel, auto, P/S, A/C, Available f<>r d&ily, weekly
21 Pl N 8 Falr prices & free delivery. ICI 1neou1 111 ____ ..______ AM-FM 1tt-~ tape, tollet, or monthly but1. 21', 23',
sl ' . ' ~aJers "A't!lcome. ~ 13 5 ______ ....;.___ RUSSELL Surfbofu'd Great QUARTERHORSE GEID-al\·nifl$:", htt<"h. U,!XXI miles. and 25' self conlalned Mo-
WAITRESS South GrRtld, Sa.nra Ana. 9 S ANS U I : <.-ond. ~'8" $35. 673--6552 or ING WITII 0 VER 1,000 $5200. 67T.>--29l6. 1or 1-lcmes, ll.ll equip( \vlth
E.'l:pe.r. over 21. Apply in per-to 5 w~k dnyl'i. A ~[I FM/STEREO/MPX-67J....62JJ. hours ot tro.lnlng. A beaut\· ~enerator, roof alr, and
r
'
PM n-11 Sh f '69 V\V Cun1p('r*llOP top. ron a l<'r , u-c: e, Appll•nCel 802: S.139.95. Ambauador lloor TV, Ridlo, tllFI, ful animal for only $400. "New f'ng" .s!il! on ,\·ar-many other f'XfrAs. All
Laguna lfills Plaza, El Toro. .standing: speakers, with 12" s~-I"'" Tnt'k al.!!O tor salr. SC'l' Coache1 nre 1972 mode.la, ,.,_ -ranty. N<'W tirr.!!·5ll'1'('() tape.
FRIGIDAIRE custon1 deluxe ba111, 6" midrange and 3" 1----------1 horse in paddock No. ll 1 plea.•e rail Sl.q..9560, tz550 or bes! offer . ·=-=-==:;,,:;;:,,.:=:.::.::::::-...,~ upright 1 rel' z er 15' super tweeter $299.95 pr. PRV. Pty, Stereo XlO wa.tt Jrvlne 1table'll on Pacific 714/837---0778. TI DODGE holiday mini
UFPCI>-150'N & re f rig BSR McDonald professional AM/FM/MPX, older but Coast Highway. Cll.U Jean ho :lJ'
w/minl freezer 1 .f. 8' table, 310X complete with good, 3" br&&ll reDex spkr.11., Curley, owner. 644--1742. '65 Ford 250 ~.i. T. Ttuck me • Self cont.alned.
FCD!\1-148.N Matching "'iit ba.'lf!, dustcover and SHURE Garrard ch anger , head-"A'/8%' Cabo\"t'r \\1e~\\·ny'r. Sleeps 6· ~150 a wetk. 5c
b-1. ' ol c•m-, unll. 4 S""~rl. Tt/.11 mile~d_:vail aft. JUI)(!' 15. ca tke new, yrs. d. l\175 c&rtr1dlt S 8 O. O O phones $225, KCll alr llusp. ~------.. -,.. 97'--~
$350 lor both. 5.f0...6651 1' Complete ~em, all nev.',· crosAOver gpkn., retail S370. I ._I:.=-.,. litC] Xl nl cond. !>-1,m> mi. $1995·1~=~~...,--~--~ ill J all -5'18--0316. l\111'\I i\1olor l·lomf' for rent. MAYTAG rtpairmAn has now s_...,95, USA Stereo sm. W dea on any or
wuhers $35. to $100. c an Equip Warehouse, 179 E. 640-3936 day, 549-3591 eves. i 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;:,;~; '71 V\V Camp111oblle . Pop Slet-ps 6• ikt'H cont. T'vl. pty.
17th SI c~-M II to p, S"""". J..wBy refrig.. 497--2384 au 6 pni. dell~r wfl yr, gua.rn. ·• ..,,...... e •a• SPEAKER 1y.11tems, shipping General .. ~~ ~lm. ·""'----·===~---damage to boxes • packing I---------'°°-racBo, ca.mp. gar. 499-l!Y.il. '72 WINNEBAGO 27·, slttps
For an •d in Woman's World
Call Mary Beth 642-5'71, axl 330
Cape Fits 10-42 For Work Of'
KENMORE washer S 6 0; STEREOS only. 6'' l*\\'&Y to 15" l-"'8Y FOR Sftle or Trade-for ALUM. Camper, 4x6, $125. 6· a!r/cond. Del ux, Rese~
\Vesfinghoul'.f! y,·a~her SGS; 1972 Garrard, wystemlud, a ir auspenslon 1Y1tem1 . smaller boat .. w ft hull. Bllnk, louvered windows. 00\\'. 833--ll>70.
Frigid. or Whirlpool .,.,·asher fully automatic chanaf..-, S!o/o oU reg. Mall. 5 Year ~7-1690 bPtwttn 3 and 6 5484i732, NE:W 23' &: Z ' luxury N. H.
$40. GUM. I del. 546--8672. AM/FMIMPX radio, Hal· guaranttt. 892--1191. PM. '70 Ford % T. Van. Sundial Air, loaded! 8f'111 ralt!'!!J
ELECl'RIC wa.cher & Dryl"r. «I a1r su1pension speakers STE RIO •-12-· _F_IB_ERG--L.A-SS--B-O~'A-T conwnk>n. Bl& 6 e,.-ine. J>091lble . Pvt pty 968-1397.
\Vhite. excellent condition. plus tape deck. Still brand Complete syrtema, 20 t~ 40% w/outboer<l et'lgl~ & 16-MPG. $3,450. 842-37911. Tr•ll•r1, Tr•v•I H5
Prl I .. -. ........ 2500 nf.'W • guarani~. Wu ott rer. ~tall. S ... aker INS-trailer. ~')U,. Eve··· .~9352. Vile p ..... ., : .. ..-or left unclaimed. n..;...i .... 11, r--,, _.... ,,,... 9~ ~•• osk fo• Ca-y ....... ,.,.,_.. terns, 35 to 50% ott ...... Bo
i:J-•-.. "'"' • pr~ at 0,1u $»:). Now ttlail, 7804 Weatmln~;r et1/Marlnt1
Rent W•sher1/Dryer1 $105. Cash or small A~ .. Westminster. gn.7952. E111ulp. to4
$2. Wk. Full maint.. payme-nt!. Cr@dlt Dept. * 639-1202 * 71.f/8!13--0501. COLOR TV $95. 21" TV $29. WANTED: "XACHT JUNK -~~~------19" port. w/rtand $39. All on consignment. Clean out
Gas 1love-2 OVlllnt. WANTED JULY 1 xlnt cond. 557-3993. your garage or dockbox.
6 yn. old. Sll9. RESPONSIBLE Bring good \Jted marine
Calle,·ea --644--1838' WORKING COUPLE RCA Color TV. Xlnt cond. equip I hardware to Sara'a
OVER 200 wuher1, dcyers, NEED one or ty,·o bedroom $165· Otter. ?.1arinp SaJva1•. 411·30th St., • 642--0:">84 * rdrlg-eraton from $39.95. house .,.,. i th lA.rge f~~d ~~~~~~~~~~ N.B. 675-4684. 545--0780. yard <for 1 .... '0 VERY \VEU. ; 'ao~1c-1-,,~p-0-w-,-,---,..~
REFRIGERATOR, 2 Dr. TRAINED dogs/ $150 most. [ 1r' Auto Defrost Vic: between 19th &. Vic· FfM to You PRICE Sl.ashl!d tor qukk
7479
Cycle1, Bikes, Scootoro 915 e ARISTOCRATS
--------e NEWroRTS '72 HONDA 175 cc Al••>...,,..:.~;~·::
WORSHAM TRAILER SALES
Ltss than 500 m\1111. AblO\ut-2709 \V. 17th Street
ely cherry! (BEF.OJOJ. .S5'9. Santa Ana <n4) 531-ZOO
Hllrbor VW. 18711 Beach 1913· TERRY, M"lt-contalned
Blvd.," 1-lunllnglon Beach. .,.,.1 C'0 mP 1e 1 e towing
842-44.15. packaae. SJ9~. 5414773 .
19n HONDA CB-100, xlnt CA.i."dP Crart Pop u ~
cOnd. !Wst offer owr $775. refrla .. 1tove \\'&ter~ Utu :
644-1514 after 6. S785. 642--2149.' 979--8474.
1970 Yamaha 125 Enduro. Lo
Call :\1alcolm Reid W
fur11lt'r dt'1aJl1.
THE ODORE
ROBINS FORD
DAI I !arbor Blvd.
Cotta J\lc-~ t;U.(J)lO
Auto• Wanted Ml
WI rAY TOP CASH
.... ,.. ..... .,._.
Im1 Beech Rlvd..
Hundnaton S..c:b
Nl.... IO o.Jltl
WE buy all tuakes ot clean
uRd IJ)llrta can. paid f«
or not. PlPMe drive in for -·-NEWPORT
. IMPORTS
3100 W. Cout Hwy.,
N ....... Beocll t.a••
DIPOR1l! WA!riiil
Oranse O>lultielt
TOP i BUYER
BILL MAXEY TOY()'fA
lSUl Beub Blvd.
R. -I'!<-141-815
Wll.L Buy )'Olli" car paid ftt
er not. Cal Ralph Gcrdon
~ -'45 E. Cout Hwy.
N..-pmt-<h.
WE PAY TOP 001..LA.R
FOR TOP USED CARS
U yoor car ls utra clean,
let U1 tint.
BAlJER. BUIOC
2915 llarbar Blvd.
ec.ta .... 979-%i00 •
AutiM. 11101,..,.. '70
ALM IO .. O
Alf• 11-
NOW ON D!SPLA Y
St.Jet Ser.rice
Puu Boey Shop
COAST IMPORTS
1000-1.:IOO W. C...t Hwy.
Newport Beach -
.Antl11 Americcln * 893-9060 * toria -(nell.l' \V . Ba.y St.) . m.le, from tt.300 to $1ll(l, 18'
COSTA MESA. 54.8-7Ml/al!. 3 LlnM, 2 Times, $2.00 Kelson cabin c r u I 1 er Washer & Drytr. 6 Good cond. $145 both -~p_.m_·~~=~ .. ~~· I y,•/trlr, twin JOhn10n 35
!l<S-517' * AUCTION * O/B. N•wly polnt"1 A 1 f"emale cauco long hair. upholstered. S & S radio A
Kenmore washer It dryer. Fine Furniture l mon!M old. Black, Red, many extru. s.ig....1503.
mlle~. Sharp! tiTl-3404 or
675-6506. I AutosfwS. ][>=it] '89 Awtin AmeMc::a. 18,000
t,OR sale, Kawasaki mlni>I~;;;;;;~~;; mllet. Autom•llc, AM I FM
bWte", e:.:cel cond. i\1us1 1ell ,I .,""...,,'°.,·,.,'*"=.,· _&1&-.,..,",,",...· ,...,,=
..:SS>c.:... • .:.!>IS-c..;..:36.:.'-'_· ~---1Ant1que1/Cl•11lc1 953 AUSTIN HEALEY
Travel gaily alona: in We
flattering ne~· Ct1.pe.
INSTANT CROCHET cape
-fadlionable th\~ to fiing
0\1er pBnts, 11kirts, dreua!
Use wonted. No. 9 hook for
lacy, tolld bflnds. Pat. 7479:
Stze8 to flt 10-16 and 18--42.
$75. & Applla.ncei Brown, y,·hlte. Call 64G-U38 BEAlfI'lFUL 30' T w I n
4g.1--7858 Auctions Frid&y, 7:30 p.m. after 2 p.m. Screw Chris { c I ea. r)
Furnltu r9 110 Windy1s Auction Barn MIXED bffglP, Yoona. Ma.le' Sacrifice for S6500 or trade
1961 BSA GoldS!ar.
Fa.st & Sanitary $700
TI4--495-46f<i
1935 OODGE '80 Austin Jfpa.Jey, Bus-Eyed
Xl'7D1,~ Nl'!wport, CM MS--8886 Very goocl w / s ma J I for P ,U., ca.mper or 1
DUMP TRUCK. Sprite, ~nv/hdlp, x I n t
PRIVATE Party: A\l'OCaOO Behind Tony's Bldg M11t'l chllrtrrn. Lie & all shots. 961-4283. wlvet chain, g· whtte l7~=~-~--~-
'69 Yamaha 250 Enduro ICl'l:;;--...*_...;MS-3600.,:,:.::.:...-*-= body/ena:. S4'1S. 147-7762 aft •
mt. Pert. cond. Rebl t eng. Dune luggle1 t5' _s. __ -===,,.----
vc1vet trlU'l.siUonal AOft $25(), DANISH Modern living room 54;,...a54 1. 2·1' CHRIS CRArT' Cahln
Fnonch Prov. chln11 cehinet group. Includes ~ta. chl'l.!r, FREE "-"ood, 1.Toc!f.'I Gius O'uiM'r. Twin 95 h. P.
S25Q. King gT't'en \"f.'l\'et 1runp table and. coffee' table. Company. 1644 Supt'.rior, mar-int" ~ng. Fully equip.
F.xlrna, S525. 646-6649. IMW
upholstered hdhrrt, foo t P ri ply. All fl)[' $75. CJ.I. 64&-32:'11. SlfiOO. 77fK(Y.)3 1714 f.
CB -400 K-4 1971 '61 VW Bus, KOOd for bu.UY.
Perr. co1111. $600. No enrtne 1-ha• tront end IMMEDIATE
bencti & maid.ling chll.lr. 531--7294. TO qua! home, klltena Benul. 16' Century, F~h Ski or 5-1!1407~ damaged, Re1t of body 11 DELIVERY
B--E-LL--m-.-,-.O'C-yc-1-.-.. -1-m-.-t. I ,ood. Good tnuu, $100, Cir Burllngton Spe.nt1h bdrm THEM'·PROOF: car tape marlwtl g wki boll. Ir: ootld runabout, xln't cond . 170 hp
!luite, peC8.n, triple dnsser, de<:k, v.'1th 2 c h r om e trnd Jong, shOrt hr. 548--0813, E'hg. M111t r.ell. Beat of;. \lo'hltP, size 7\~ $25. belt caah C1tter. Must Nll
546-4478 th1J weekend, 548-5380. 2 nite 1tandl. Ht'litqe end 11pe-t1.ken-all new. S 2. 6. ~93. 541-4345, 552-9589 •ves.
table. Dining room RI, 6 Mfi.-6523. BLACK f!!mele miniature 14 IT. Flbergltut: 30 hp. BOY 'S Schwinn 5 lpMd DUNEBUGGY·MUllt .ell b)' upl'ol~tered cMln ..\ chil"ll. --7u"s=E=o~s~1=cv=CLE~=.--all s:hot1. New In.Iler lights. $37!i. Stln.gn.y blke. rood cond. Wed! I-fa1 Puat•. ott·rw.d
cablnel. Upright freezer, All typei, la?'gf! sel~ ~~ 5 )'1"1, • 6t2-6829 • $40, 549--®I. &: ltl"t"ltt tn1, xtru. otter.
self defl'Olltl.ng. All in A-1 e gu..1272 . -"',-S"94fl:.c:,_;_· ___ .. _,= cond. R.ea!IOnAble. 91 21 F"E~lALE cockapoo, 2 )Tl 36' GRAND BANKS, $36,000. 1969 llONDA lThcc, lo ml .. f k H2 ~1..Uard, F.V, {Btwn EWA & CARPET TOR SALE old. Gentle, good with Xlnt, condltton. Dana Point eleen, $37S. or be1t oiler. rue 1
l\tagmlia) by Carpet ~· Call children, 644--6370. Prlv11.IP.. 714: 492-2667. .!'.646-~71~92::.'.0":'~646-~25.1~7'.:.·---11 --::-.;;7,:;;::-::=:-::---* HE RC U LON So1a e S4&-S745 e 546-Xl86 FREE klttera . .f 94 • 4 l 71. lo1t1, Rent/Ch•rt'r tOI SUZUKI SOec SUND NEW
BABY • ~ cr1• ____ ..._ Like 11l'W $l6S. '72 Ford V w/rnatoh lov.,eat. Worth ~~ •~ Blaek i """" • .,..,.. app. GUNS _M In d< !ill-7291 I ftl
Zip Into thil 1kim fin:t $€00, Sac .S225. Velvet Uv. ""n w/mattreu. Uke 7 v.·ks. Pentax •y;;;;; S . L ~~. '. ___ ..::::.:::.:_ ___ ,
thing in tbe morning and Jed rm turn lncludinc tofa new! SOO. 147--1056. TOO do .,._, '68 TRIUMPl-f 500cc many g1, lllWll ....... enlarger SlS. ii.Ide proj. Xl nt cond t5!i() tre1h all da.y! Saw &nd !tt!W loveseat, chr. Alto, tbla, 00U. Clothe• • Barbie good bomP.. 3 ye a r tAkea both 35 A: 2~. 7752
.everal In 1tAy·ftt!lh. bltcildt! bkc1e, klna: I dbl bfdt, 3 f«irmals $1.25. CUddly tcy1 hound 847 3677 &16-8526 or MZ-4895 grey . · · Belgrave Ave., G.G., Bch. Ir
ln cheery .oUd!!, prints. pc c o rner 1 e ct Ion Sl-$5.00 SC. 492-1!24. SPECIAL hma needed; 2 Cho.pma.n .• Sat.-Mon. 'BG BSA 441, Xlnt cond. Over
checks. v.'fam/fm, i~ ~ I: I ~GOOD""'~-• ...i~----m'",-n:~lll-cpt h1tuled 8,00'.l ml $450 nnn.
Printed Palte"m 9330: NEW rnore. All like ne~·! Pvt I. •.• ~, ~. 3_ No. G coon lxlundi, 1 letT\P.r mlx, luts, Sill tot 673-0461. O~ 645--70 l"WNli\" _. ""' ..i ScoUJe Poo pup&. 548--QlU. ;..,;..;...;.;..;....;.'----_;.;;; -===-----~-I
Ha.H Slitt 1 • l4~. l6~, 1 ~P~ty=·==' ~'·,.,---,-Birch, N.8. 541-lllO. bl , * 8' SAILBOAT* ]()l!p. New derailer11, cable &
Econollnes. 2 to choou trom.
Imm~ate dellwry.
BUY OR LIA51
&
SEE US ABOUT
Over1e11 Delivery
CRIVllR MOTORS • w. )illf St .. San!• Ana
ISW171
VllJt our new horn.et
ltOY cl, Inc.
234 E. 11th St.
C:O...M:ea ~
CITROIN
SEVENTY ·FIVE <Jt:NT8
for each pattern -add 25
~nls for each pattern for
Air Mall a.nd SpectaJ }fandJ.
Ing: otherwise lhlrrl-clu•
delivery v:ill take thrff
weeks or mere. Se.nd to
Alice Brook1 the DAILY
PILOT. 105, Needlecraft
Dept, Box 163. Old Chelsea
Statlcin, New York, N.Y.
10011. Prl.nt Name. A.cJdreu.
Zip, Pllttern N•MMP.
NEEOLE C RA1'T '72t
Crochet, knll, etc. Fret
dlttctionl. Mc
18\.i, ~~. 221it. Size 14~ SACRIFICE: Oia.nt redwood ~B"El~.'°r."'-mot-,-Ol'eye-al.:e;..,hal .. ,,,.-t, 2 CUDDLY, tllky, ac., ihittel'I, $:"JO, ~~.t 37) takes 1~ yards 60-ald<.-'hrdfhlll cab wlbkcese wblte, site 71Ai., $25. fem., C<K!ker pu~;729Free Excellent condition. New 646--6'153 Z86 NP.wport at J'alr Clt,...n Sports MaNratl
u ... .,, top $166. Fine wool 8' circle 546-4471 to kWlnl home. . rluln&', Call; 548-6773. '71 Suzuki TS 90 Good Cort.-Mesa 645-3661 Onnp County ~
NEW! , ..... t Meenme.
Balle, fancy knot&, pat·
ltt!ll. fl.
llal)' A.rt ot Ratrpl•
QoeaJliet -ovtr 26 des\J:!ll to
make. SJ,
IMta1d (lroeht!f Book ..
tes.rn by p\cture1! Patterns.
SL o.n~ tutaat Gift BeM
-more than 100 1lfta. -SL
Oompte.te Alp.a ..... ...
$].
Jt .tllty ft .. Botik1 -!(le.
Book er 1J Prb.e .,tr,.....
r.oc.
q.111 9°'* I -18 pallcrn&.
SO<.
MtMHm Qslh Beok I ..
Sile.
qallte for Todal''• Uvl• ...
U belutlful patttml. 50c.
SEVEN ll'-nt'Z CENTS rut $73.. Avocado etUahed Frtt kltte~ wka old. 17' Thls.Ot. Fblal• n•dY to 'tor b:a1 A European
for each pattern --add 25 velvet couch 11' I! 5 . GE Wuber Ii: Dryer, 3')'1'1. Trfl.lntd tall, 1V!W low price • $1,27$. condition. $Xl0. '67 DODOE 111 TON deUwry.
centa for each pa.Ite m for W/love•at $1!i0. Sp. ttyle old. Sl25 both. !lee~ &U-9'86 aft s. Call 98Ul16, 548--5204 After 4· Pickup. VS ena:lne, automatic Jim Sltmons Imports
Air Ma11 and Special Ha.~ tb1 $ISO. Comt' .ee 1; make w/Cf:lld $35. ott.r ~lS21 Si\1ALL Auitrall&n Shep,lO ~-. -Sloop~-.-gall...c_<y_&_ln_boal'd_ Moblle Homes '25 lrtmmlulon. (SUJU9). DU So. Main. Santa Ana
Ing ; otberwl.ae third-clua otter. M-8913. ClRL'S 3 speed bicycle, like female, 10 months, smart '-e-4 ..... , !ully e q u Ip p e d ---------$599 557-4242 Open SUn. delivery will take three $l'.I .... "" DOUBLE wide F1e.mtnao
weeks or more. Send IO TRAP ITI ON AL turn. new. · 511--7294 lovable~-satJJoUitr. ti1S-l393 mob 11 e h om e . Has DAVI ROSS COID
M.utan Martin, the DAILY ~ ba.ndcra!ted Ador•ble frM Puppys VICTORY 21 ' Drayu.ilrr, everylhlfli. Set up in nic. PONTIAC PIT..0'1', "2. Pittem 0.pt, In pine-from lhop Io HEAVY I>lly a-.i.. bell, * 146-'516 * w/IJ'lr. 2 "" nllo. Fix«! famUy pork. Ptt1 ok. Q500.
2480 Harbor Blvd. 2l2 Wei t 11th St., New :you-64M613. ~~ pd, 1-100 ..U 149 1 ~~~~~~~~~1 kM Atklng '1400. ~2849. 531-7294. York. N.Y. lOOl.1. Print DUAL headboard, beeutlful.1_________ ~ *Udo 14 .$595. * · Motor Homes
NAM!!, A.ODUl!l8 w 11 h PM:an wood, $rl0. Ca.II &ft 5 Mltcell•nMUS [ ~ j "L..t BalbOa Island I
940 Caal• M~ ·546-8011
\GP, l!IZZ and ITYLI: 'pm ~ all d • Y W....... 121 ~---~'~;4;1jjj1jjj'.:~~r.~1 available. 675,13°2,
0 0
' n' llV>llllllL .,...,.old& 11>7-&11'---------TEST DRIVE SEE MORE Sp•ln& USED OARBENWTANGEL SABOT, Slan Miller THE 'MIDAS MINI
J'asblona and ctmte one 8' OOFA..1: kM lt&t Nev.r a1un h • ve rlebJ·babdld Catt * U2 No. 6838--Tl\ce conct. MOTOR HOME
pottern trtt lrom . -....t. l!oth fl!IO. !ewlno ....,.tilt with ....... ~ ~-·-·-· $400 * rn.7361 DIJlribtrt<d by
Sprlnf.SUtnmtr Cata.Jor. All mtch.. $25. pt l -V, t '/' poleek •. Would accept e HiM;ALAYAN' 'teri'llJ~.* se&I BALBOA 20. Fixed keel. Ken en.rt Product.
11%e1! Only OOc. ::ci!fiATOR. Washer model with battety opttatfd =t.~~t~ tt;, Head, pulpit, lift' line•. CREVIER MOTORS
INSTANT SEWINC BOOK a2 p l Jdl ebo tt om. Write: peftlan kittens and per. SS>O. 51()...009J 208 w. lat St .. Santa Ana
.1ew today, ~ar tomomiw. A ~ Pl .I: up. l8 Ch1.1111Uled ad No. 174, DAI· liaD itud .1nvl<:e. KITE w/trail"r. $500. Good IJS-3171
$1. Newport Blvd. &M--'ld>. LY Pll.(Yf, P.O. Qox lSeO, , 892--2970 condltkin. Private pMty. --~.:;;:.::.::::..:... __ _
INSTANT FA s 111 0 N • BEAUTl>1JL Gold ..... Cat•• Meaa, CA 926311. SIA"""' s .. 1~1nt ltlti.n1 83>-3.115 *Marvin Pearce*
BOOK -1-fundredl of f $100 l'r' ""' r .. hion 1nct1. s1. "'•. 8'6-l096 *Wanted Dead* !:ri:: can •""' 2 pm. ao.11, Sllpi/Oock1 910
AI•m••wn. ""' .... , .,... -------··-, Motor Homes "Cotlch 'Ill' OUv• Gm. 1erved you w•D a Pf'>Vlded GORGEOUS Hlm1loyan ltlt· SAIL 80AT SLIPS Aey day lt tht BESI' DAY lo
run •n at1! Do l'l' I
delay. .all today &IS-$1!.
$40. • MMS16 ho r •· RUN'I tens 2 ma.lfs. 'J female1. Newport Be•i:h r>43-225.1 Ul'I 0 p"'U\O'f· • !
Ar da,y la lbt BF.ST DAY to to lOllO Clmneyre St., IA· 1tflabtert(I, ~. Havt IOtl'ltthlne )"O!.I w&nt to
run an ad! Don't fUJla Beach. NCI &luJ what-The "YtUow Pate•" (Ir 1eU T Oaslltied adt do II
Sales • Rentals
558-3222
'37 Dodge pickup, 6 cyl, runs
r;ood. '54 F'ord pickup, 8 eyl,
eMvu campu on bed.
Ma.k~ oftttt. 1431 Cerritot
lli., L4I B.
1.960 Dod&e P.U. 3 apeed.
Utility box.f's on 1ide. 6 cyl.
Fl\-\ 11tereo radio, Good truck
$lriO or bt1! offer. 494-\631..
• "67 rord, 1 Ton Truck,
cabin chusis. pl)\\'~t t11ke
of!. Sll.50. fi46..1000, ~t.
"67 ~Ion P.U. 4 1p, V....g, A I '
eabo\'f't c1.n1per, J a<' k 1 .
12000. !>311-186;,
'111 t'ORD C.ASSlC
Thi• car ta not tor "8)'0N.
-lor quick ....
WA)O. Call Mr. Httrldt at
714 , 8)1.uJO,
DATSUN
'72 816 510 SEDAll
4 DR, 4 1pd, low mlleap..
Radio, heater f a stllll)
Sl349 fUll priae. Will finance.
Barwick Oat1un, 998 !b.
O'.>ut llwy., Laguna BNcb.
~-405Vt94-9771.
'66 DA TStJN teOO MIU'.
Oood r::indlllon. WO. * !J36..TSM t
•••••••••••••••••••• -., • .QJI -, ICMm. -...,...,..i. daatfled •• , IU-ll67I ...it~ all NOW IO-llm . ltll S, Vlllag,. \Y~·_:_t..A .
·60 Chev Ir ta1nper, l{OO(I
CflNfl'ion. Ex1r1•: r.x:<l
or bett olJn. M0-1117
'71 Dauun 2«rl, 1Uwr, xln't
....... Load«!. &llllC .. u.
Call ,.._11CI,
•
-
,
TurM!ay, June b, 19n
Autos, lmPortod
DATSUN
'71 240 z
4 1pd, t;a:1&ry ~cUo1o1.·, plush
blk, interior, n1111 whePI~.
fmt & rear guards, low mi,
sacri!i("('! f."I'8089. $4195 !u!I
price. BaN·ick Datsun, 9911
So. Coast J.lwy., Laguna
Beach. f>46.4051 /494-9771.
'66 DATSUN PICKUP
transportation -t.:ute IJ1u~
lrut:k (SLU479J. 1'1akf' offer!
Bkr. Before 1 pm. 645-4392
or 644-2950.
FERRARI
'69 Ferrari, 365 GT, 2 + 2,
silver, Ai\1/FM, air, full
P\\'r.. new Mirhelln, 71~:
67>-6410, early ffiQrning.
JAGUAR
'66 XK.E 2 + 1. Cherry
con<lition. One owner. Aulu,
"'ire "'his., lo miles, best
offer. Must sell. 673-ffi32
KARMANN GHIA
KARMANN Ghia '70, gm
<'Onv., good cond, below bk,
$1:l00/offer , leaving entry.
675-R679.
LOTUS
1969 Lotus Elan, red, low
mileage, excel cond . Call
558-9393 days; 549-2157 eve.
MAZDA
ROTARY'S
Immediate Delivery
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Ren•uft S•le1 & Service CREW cab. Camper-AM/FM
tor over a decade in <>range N~ -·10 1500. ena. New 1.2
County volt. ey11, Must sell immtd.
Serv. Dept. Open til S p.m. 646-T.m.
Monday '65 V\\'. lo\I.' miler, 4 new
Jim Slemons Renault tires, very clean cond. $575.
2201 So. Main. Santa Ana 675-~
J blk. nonb. of Warner service Department 546-tll4 '66 VW Bws-nu rblt eng, b~,
Sales Department 557-5242 trans, cl utch A: 4 nu tires.
Take brit otr. 893-7676. '69 R-10, l owner, x.lot cond
thruout. Mwt see to ap-'63 V\V Custom paint $4.50.
preciate. 897-1786 alt ii. cash. 893-5994 alt 6 pm 114-F
~-T-O_Y_O_T_A __ 9."'-w~knd~··~~~~
'6J BUG, red. *1nt cond.
~~~~~~~~~~'
'72 TOYOTA Sunroof. ruM ~t $650 -0r offer. 644-1721. $2112'1
4 speed trans. Dix AJl.I radio.
Heater, defrosters. tinted
glas,oi:. \Vhite wall tire~.
l'op-out rear Y.indowli. Vinyl
trim. Carpet& Front disc
brakes. Reclining bucket
seats. KE 20-300785.
~w.lew\6
-TOYOTA
1966 llarbor, C.M.
llit!l ll•t,.is
~,, mettn
Toyota &. Jaguar DeaJtt
Authorized Sales & Service
900 S. Coast l llghway
Laguna Beach 540-3100
'70 TOYOTA WAGON
$149S
'65 BUS \I.' /11a!ibu camper
kit. Good cond. Low
mileage. 546-4268
VOLVO
1972 VOLVO
lea..,Today at
Best Rates
$11.74 Por Mo.
0 .A.C. AM /F r.t , Auto, trans.,
diac brakea. 36 mo.
For Le•sing or buy ins
:Ow. ltwiA e YOLYO
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303
VOLVO '71 , 144 s!ereo tape,
R.H. Auto, tran!I, 14,950 mi.
Immflc. $3200. P R -pt y .
61'-3384
YOUR ONLY .. FACTORY
AUTHOR/ZEO
CADILLAC
DEALER
L.arzeat .election ot Cadil·
laal in Orange C-ounty.
Sale.Leu.lng. Look for our
fuJJ page ads cwery W ed.
~ Frld4.y tor: eur ·specials.
Nabers
CiCllllac
1963 Cadillac Fleetwood,
Full power, $550.
645-095.1
CAD '69 Convertible, low
miles, like ile"" all extras.
$3800. 673-0083.
'69 El Dorado, 1'~ully
equipped-Orig owner.
$3850. 6'1:'>-3666
'69 EL Dorado. vinyl top,
leather •. AM/F'M, Sentinel.
Xlnt cond. $3850. 646-2854.
CONTINENTAL
'71 Continental Mark III, By
o"·ner.
714: 499-1554
COUGAR
SANTA ANA TOYOTA
5ezvice Dept. open
7:30 am 'tll 9 pm
Mon·Fri. 540-5212. 417
Warner, Santa Ana.
990 '62 cadillac A_u_,t•,,,•_._u_...,______ m a c u I a t e
·-·r BUICK "'7--0m.
CNVT. Im· 1968 COUGAR 302, 2 bbl,
C o n d ition auto trans., lo miles, vinyl
w. CA MARO
'71 Buick Riviera
Luxurious bardtop coupe with '61 CAMARO 128
top. Xlnt cond. $1450. Call
837-3370, after 5 p m •
830-2621.
CORVAIR
-.....
"°A-.~
MUSTANG
MUSTANG
'66 1\Iustang
Sacrilice-must sell,
897-0224 * '66 Mustang, Xlnt con<l.
Good tires. Radio
$700. 499-3886 Anytime.
'65 SQ back·blue \Y/\\•hite
vinyl tup. Air/cond, P/B
$795/ 548-1651.
'69 Mustang Jl..lach I. Green.
Jn good condition. &st of. rer. 673-1959.
'67 MUSTANG f'Utl>ack. low
mileage, good cond, new
tires. 842-3402 alt 4:Xl.
OLDSMOBILE
'68 Cutlass Supreme
2 Dr It Top, dlr. fact alr.
lo mi, (XlPOOl ), Take smaJJ'
down. \V!ll finance Pvt. P(y,
Call 54&-8736 aft 10 a.in
494--6811.
\\!ILL sell white Toronado.
lmmac. cond. At Blue Book
price. JI.lust see lo {jppre·
elate. 548-1503.
PONTIAC
'68 Pontiac le Mans
l1ardtop coupe, VS, fJO\\•C'r
steering, radio and healer.
(VGY221).
$1299
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costa r.1esa :1'1G·8017
'68 GTO Big-engu1e, vinyl
top, factory atr, factory
mag wheels (\vilh Jocks)
37,000 n1iles, l\fa~-X. tires.
Beauti ful confl. $1500 or best
offer. 826-1256.
'70 Le i\1ans Sport Coupe;
PIS, P/B, air cond., auto.
Xlnl c.-ond. 540-9015.
'64 BONNEV!Ll..E, air cond,
PIS, l~/B, $-150. * 645-4712 *
'68 !o'IREBIRD
XLNT COND. 4 SPD.
$1775 * 497-2357
RAMBLER
"1 .,, 1,"i
17331 BEACH BLVD.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'69 Corol'\a, 2 dr hrd-top, auto,
air, 11,700 mi. Very clean.
Orig, owner. 557·ll96.
TRIUMPH
factory air cond., full po~er 4 speed, po'ver steering,
Including door ·locks, vinyl radio, beater, wide oval
top, tilt wheel, stereo multi-tires, .mag wheels, CXCE·
plex, strato seats, spor\ 238),
wheels, etc., e tc. Very lo"'·
'61 Sta. Wag. 4 Spd trans. '66 MUSfANG, m in t cond.
Bu c ket sea t s , gd Ivy green auto trans orig
paint-motor, a nti roll ha.rs, owner. sH-5524 '
1963 Ratnbler
Ambassador 990,
rack, good trans.
552-8515.
' J M '' ~ "' '"" '" ,, 0 42 6666 *TRIUMPHS*
'71 CLOSEOUT
SPITFIRES AS LOW AS $2399
GT-6 SAVE $500
FRITZ WARREN 'S
low n1i!es. <707CPJ\t J.
$1699
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
$350. Cail 673-9004 alt 5pm. A. t U · u os.. Md DODGE 990 Autos, Used
Sport Car Center
ORA NGE C OUN TY'S
LARGEsr
710 E . l st, S.A. 547-07&1
VOLKSWAGF.N
'67 Mercedes '66 VW BUG
$4999
~Cadillac
U Nabers
2600 HARBOR BL.,
COSTA MESA
540-9100 Open· Sunday
BUICK lli\•iera '68. Spotless
black landau on \\'bite. All
power, air, $2195. l\lust ~ll
979-1445.
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 54&.8017
CHEVROLET
'66 Dodge Coronet
500 hardtop coupe. 4 speed,
radio and heater. (RVC330 ).
$599
·DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2840 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 5'$&.8017
250 S Sedan 4 speed, r adio, sharp&: ready '71 Buick Skylark Custom.
Exquisi1l' sand be ige \Vilh 10 go! (59SEEX), S795 fu ll Take over payments and
full Jca Uier interior, factory price. Ba rwick Datsun, 998 give me $200. 557-4690
'61 Chevy wagon with 2S3
engine -runs good. Good
wide oval tires. Needs head
gasket. Good tra.'lsportation
car. $85. 675-1345 eves &
\vkends.
'66 CAPRICE, 9 passenger.
Air, loaded. $800. \Vill ac-
cept trade. Aft er 5 pm.
84&-:ll:t3.
'69 MONACO
4 Dr. H. Top, dlr., fact air,
loaded. Under 26,000 mi.
Leisure \Vorld Special CVQC·
495). Take clean car or ?
546-8736 aft 10 am ~
air co ndi!ioning, au 1 o. So. Coast H\V)'., Laguna behvt'\'n 3 and 6 p).[.
trans.. flO"'cr steering, I ~B~'~'~'h~·~546---40~51_1_4_94_·9~m~·-1 '68 Riviera GS, air, :uu P"T.,
pl)\\'er disc brnkl's, Ai\I/.FM '66 V\V Bug, xlnt cond. 4 IJe\V whls, stereo, clean, 1 owner.
radio, radiaJ white side wall tires, new brakes, less Utan $2005. 499-3445.
'70 Nova, 2 dr, air, V-8,
~2050. or hlghest offer.
* 6«--0948 * JEEP
tires, local beauty that 100 miles on new rinp It
&hows impeccabh.• care in-valve job, new mutOtt, in-'68 BUICK RIVIERA, full
side and out. ('!VlJ978). ter ior xlnt. Must See to ap-power, air, clean l ownr $3555 preciale $850 548-5380. car. $2000. Pri pty. 557-8968.
'TI OJ.EVEU.E, loadttl, xlnt
cond. $3100. or best otter.
640-135B: 979-4151.
'&&JEEP. VI. Fut• rtrong.
Worth $2«11). Talf.e $1!00 or
best offer. 673-l<M9.
e '70 V\V Bu11, nu tires, Autos, UMCI 99G Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990
'67 M d sunroof, custm bltn bed, AM iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiii erce es radio, FM tape/stereo. xl nt
230 SL "'""· $560/T.0 .P. 97\hm8
Luxurious Cpe./Rdstr. Fuel Pri/Pty.
injection, auto. t r a n s • , '68 V\V Bus, sunroof, lug
power st~ring, p'>loT. disc. rack, xlnt cond. f1695 or Of.
brakes, full lea~ interior, fer. 536-3507.
AM/Fl\-1 SW rad i 0 · '70 V\V Bus. E.xcel cond. •
Beautiful interior & shows $2200 Sacrifice.
meticulous care inside & 546-0085
out. (735BEJ\.
$4888 '66 VW CamP'I'. "bit <ng,
$1100. 675-697'0 Aftl"r 6 PM.,
• 494-4818.
'69 VW Bug. R&H. Green
\\'/wht. int. Gd. con. Only
$1099. 675-6213 aft 5 pm.
'6.1 VW Bus w ith '68 eng.
Stereo, paneling, C'Tptl!,
wood bumpt'rs $950 or bes!.
548-8924.
'68 VW BUG
Sparkling \Vhite, 4 speed,
radio, heater. (\VVH8241.
$895 full price. Barn·lck Dal·
sun, 998 So, Cosst Hwy.,
Laguna Beach 546-4051/
494-9771 ,
'61 VW Bug, good for buggy.
No engine &: has fron t end
Lease Ne_w Mercedes damaged Rtst ot body is
$118.71 Monthly good. Good trans. $J OO. 0 '
HOUSE OF IMPORTS best cas:h otter. Must seU this weekend, 548-5380.
6862 Manchester, Buena Pk I .,;:~=--=-~=-o=-523-7250 on Santa Ana Frwy. '64 VW Bus, w/68, 1600 cc
eng.. trans & trans axle. MGB New whls., t ires. brks.,
bearings, stl'l'eO, c r p t ,
1972 MGB panelllag etc. Must 9ff to
\VIRE WH EF.LS -RADIO appree! $1300. Ca.ll any day
$3197 aft 6 pm, 642-4036, CM.
----~---6444 __ sro_ '69 Bug. Automatic. Excel.
r.1GB '65, gd cone!, wire whls, cond . $1200 or best oUer.
nc>w lop & paint. $800. 842-4729.
671-6110~. -------I •. c:68o-°"v"o"LKSW==."c"E=N",--good-:
1966 MGB. $895. Wire wllls, cond!Uon, auto. Clean:. Belt
flt'\\' tires, hi pref. eng. Ton-offer! 536-4273.
neau. 494-9354. '61 vw Bug, x1nt cond, n!bll
PEUGEOT • ._.. N•w llr<i & cluld>.
Make oHer. 642--0148.
PEUGEOT * '!8 vw With •. little work
could be treat. ~-Eves:
As low aa $2,299. (No, 55'5)
ran-; WARREN'S
Sport Car Center
•ORANGE COUNT Y'S
LARGES!"
710 E. 1.rt St., S.A. 547-0764
PORSCHE
'10 Porsche 911T
Stereo, Mags, Private Party.
Days 839-9560, alt 5 -
833-3155.
l~T PorM:he. Top oondlUon.
Compll'telY restored. * Call 673-8593 ..
'63 l'>rtche Convl, rehll
67~9352. ·,
VW '65 Bug, only 42,000
miles, AM/FM rad. xlnt
cond1 Orta OWbe'l'. 5*-9579. * * '65 VW Vaileot S Sqbdc,
'llXX> nti. on l'lj>lt <!II·· aooct
oond.830-el89.
'68 VW· -A·l COtld. • $950.
6'1S-3818 rvtl.
\ '69 Red vw euc· 36;ooo rnDe .. xint rond.
s;1cm. ~ (60-0089
'69 VW. bul~te new.
~ 830-5190
ert1t1ne. Call Dr. Cassidy. '63 VW ...-UUt, '6' 1rwtnc,
~WJ19. j l)('W painl $500. (2U)
PORSCHE, 'SI, 356-C, tngiM ~~9,_. __ =~
ln u:OOltnl conti.. ™""'' 'ff Ctmptr $1IOO
p1tlnt. srno. 4!16-!5685 or heJ1t otter. ~7
THE Important Difference!
This Shield Means That
We Are Your Only F actory
Authorized Cadillac Dealer ship
Four and ona-half a cr•s of total authorit•d Cadillac fa ciliti•s d•si9ned
to better sell a nd s•rvica Cadill1c au tomobiles. 80 (work stalls I and ~5
fa ctory t r1 ined techn icians.
Largest Selection of late model Cadillacs
and other Luxury cars in Oran ge County!
'71 COUPE DE VILLE
Viny l top, l••th•r intt rlot, fu ll pow•r, f•<fory
1ir, tilt whttl, AM /FM 1ftr10 r•dio witlt lip•,
powor door lo<li:1, twilight t•nt., lo<:ll I ow nt r.
Sold I 1trvic:t d by 1n (61 7CXV!
'69 COUPE DE VILLE
Vl1tYI ftp, f•P••frv & lo1H.1r i11ft tior, full pow.
1r ft<:fory •ir, AM/FM r1dio, powt t oloor lo<li:1,
till-tt lt wh•t l, low ll'lil1t f t , Ioctl I oWll•r <•r.
CYYRl 551
'68 COUPE DE VILLE
f::t <fory tir c:onJ itie11h19, f11ll pow1r, •II l•1fti1r
lntlrler, ptJrl.J top, t ilt I t.l~<opic •fMrhtt•
•t.t••, door locli:•, litht ••ntin•L IMm•cul•t•
Hiruout. IVVM 1711 '
'71 ELDORAOO
Full lllO••r, ft ctory •ir conJ ., ftl1-tllt whe1I,
tterto J oor l•c:k1, vinyl fo p, l11tfitt r l11hirfor. '
..AM/FM m11ltipltll. Sh•w. • ftlttTcul•111 · C•r•
H.rou9hout. 1'40l 7J6)
'70 ELDORADO
L.cik• I """ lilr• tt.. ,.., flrtt 1ofrl l Putt ,. •• ,,
f•ctory •Ir coll4., t1S..tllt 1ft•rl19, 'iilMf' leclr1,
crul•• co11trol, Yl11yl top, f11ll 1,,th.'r' ht'h rlor.
I IOtA&CI .' N•w wtw H ; ' •
SALi PRICE
SALi· PRICE
'2777
SALi PRIU ,
SALi NICI
*5222
NABBRS • t -' ! ' •
~· ..
2600 llkRBQR B~YD~·
COSTA MESA_ , _ -5.4.b-9100 . "
I _.-
WE'RE . MOVING
EVE.RY CAR
MUST GO u
BY JUNE 12
PLEASE-NO TRADES
'66
'66
'65
'63
'63
'63
CADILLAC
c~. DeVlll•. F11ll l»Wtr, CWAIC45J
CADILLAC
Stci.n o.v 11t1. full oowrr, Air. {UH.QI)
CADILLAC
'Dr., full OOIWr, 1tr. ('4lS)
CHEVY
(JMH71JJ
DODGE SID.
v ... lllfflo, 11,.,,,r, Al.llo. Tr1ns. (llF2'6)
FORD WAGON
Sh.,rp, Full Power, Afr Cond.
IFMG519)
$1795
$1125
$'1095
$895
$395
$395
$325
-VANS · PICKUPS-
'62
'64
'64 .
ECO NOLI NE
PICklfP, Sh•rp Rid, Utll!ty
lo~. (0AR167J
FORD ltANCHERO
(ORHtlO)
FORD ECONO.
(P71"U
'62 ECONOUNE • VAN, ... liltlf\11 l t"n flllltll
PMtl• """· (U!ml '6.3 FORD VAN (""913)
'62 FORD ICONO VAN
Nu P'llnt, ROI, P'tntllng. CGGaUIJ '64· FORD VAN ,.,,...,
'66 ~!!'..',~~=IT '..t.s· VAUANT WAGON U • :fc'4JANt9. .,_, Nial ,,, ~~~.~'""' • Ct271J '69 'Pl. YMOUTH 4 Dll.
' ~~)·Auto. Trt"" C.O.
" '70. , ~~!.u .. ~c.! .. f!-••
I 1 CO eu.,
$645
$788
$885
$1095
$995
$1095
$885
$515
$495
$615'
$145
$,035
-t70 Pl.YMOU'llf 4 Dll. ··$.45 1"111 ,..., Air COl'ld., Ut # ..
. '1' 9' Pl.YMOUnt 4 Dll. $795. ~-Alf OIMI,.. ~. Tr1nt. (Lof #nl ..
'70 PLYMOUTH 'Ot'f. fl'_ufl ,.._..,Alt COtld., (.0. . . ~eo, ,· ... ttn.
'
$995
$425
7
l
j
7
•
San Cle1nenie Teday's l'laal
Capistrano EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 65 , NO. 158 , 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAllfORNlA TUESOA Y, JUNE 6, 1972 TEN CENTS
Capo Trustees Firm in Ousting of Johannsen
Despite a public outcry to reinstate
ousted administrator Charles Joharut5en
trustees of the Capistrano Unified School
District J\1onday refused to reconsider
their decision.
Mrs. Phyllis Robertson, 1\.lrs. G~·en
Burch and Alan Schreiber, in prepared
statements to the board. asked trustees
to explain why they decided to reassign
J ohannsen from his prnit as director of
pupil personnel services.
Trustee Gordon Peterson said he did
not reach his decision on dispu ted facts
but on "undisputed facts." He said there
was "friction between Johannsen and his
32-cent Boost
superiors and with this friction existing ,
the total administrative body could not
Junclioo for the good of the whole."
"Johannsen admitted that in areas he
relt strongly about, he would not take
direction from bis superiors. 1 could not
vote for a person who cannot carry out
instruction or discipline imposed on
him." said Peterson.
"Even if the instruction is ~'rong?''
questioned Will iam Robertson.
Echoing Pete.-son's sentiments v.·ere
trustees Fred Newhart Jr. and Dr.
Robert Beasley.
Trustee Robert Dahlberg, \\'ho later in
Tax Hike Eyed
For Saddlehack
A tentative budget containing a 32-cent
tax increase was approved Mondny night
by trustees of the Saddleback Comn1unity
College District.
Trustees took tbe \'Ole at the end or a
rive.hour meeting· and indicated they
~·ould discuss the document in detail at a
special meeting June 11 at a p.m.
Half of the 32-cent tax increase wou1d
go towards the district's share. in paying
for construction o! a science-mathematics
_building.
A number or other permissive tase.s
\\"hich make up the total tax rate were in-
creased in the areas of coummunily
.11ervice, old age security and disabilitj in-
surance, health benefits, interdistrict
agreements and leases and retirement
programs.
lf the budget is not pared down over
the next few week.s, the new tax rate
may be set a 74.16 cents per $100 asse~
ed va luation. The current rate -the
lowest in the state -l.s 41.74 cents per
$100 assessed valuation.
A r11te increase of 32 cents would mean
a person owning a $40,000 home would be
paying $74 next year to support the col-
lege. That homeowner i.s now paying $41
in taxes lo the district.
Prior to the meeting. college officials
indicated the tentative budget included
only a IS-cent lax increase for the science
mathematics complex construction and
did not hint that other permissi'Ve rates
would be rising as well.
The entire cost of the -science math
center is estimated to be $4 .S million,
with half of the cost provided from state
junior college construcion bond money.
Orange Coast
Weatller
Variable clouds are in the pie·
ture through Wednesday along the
Orange Coast, with J>OS!ibility of
showers in the evening hours.
That moist, warm air v.·ill con-
tinue with highs of 70 at the beach
rising to near 90 inland. The
weatherlady also reminds coast
wealher·watchen to be !W'e to
vote.
INSmE TODA 1:'
Late: rtphrt.s have filttred oit.t
of the ,j.frl<on republic of B•·
rundi rtvealing the altiuohttr of
150,000 in bloody tribal killings.
Stt stoTl/. Page 11.
L.M, llMI " "''::I • C•lltenll• • -·-..
Clttll .... "'" ··--.. ._... " Ge• •&::• • ,_ "
_,_
• _ ...... • tt:r 1•1• . _.., ·-• --.... ..-.... , .. ·-• ·-..... -.. ,.. ... _.. ' -' l ... ilClfl " ......... 1.,, -..-. .. .......... ..
The remaining $2.2 million must be
raised locally.
The board agreed in December to fund
the building with a tax increase over a
two-year period, meaning taxpayers will
feel the plnch of the 15'cellt Jo# during
the 1972-73 and 1973-74 fi.sca.I y~.
1l'he budget, as it now standi, stows a
(See 1TAX HIKE, Pqt 11
8 Other Bank
Heists Li11ked
To Niguel Job?
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 .. Dlol1J """' fteff
The FBI is investigating a possible con-
nection between the Laguna Niguel bank
burglary in March and similar burglaries
at eight more banks around the U.S.,
federal officials said this morning.
A federal grand jury in Los Angeles:
late Monday returned an indictment
against the sole suspect in the Laguna
Niguel case. Charles Albert Mull igan was
indicted on one count of bank burglary
following a secret grand jury session in
which the FBI presented evidence
allegedly linking Mulligan with the theft
of some $2 million in cash, jewelry and
negotiable securities:.
The nature of the evidence wa.s not
divulged and Mulligan will be arraigned
"f>.1onday on the charge and a date set for
his trial.
Mulligan, an unemployed barber from
Youngstown, Ohio, with a Jong criminal
record wa.s taktn into custody by FBI
agents Friday in Tustin after being
trailed there from Chic.ago,
Federal prosecutor Elgin Edwards,
assi!tant chief of the crhJllDa1 dJviaion in
the U.S. Atl<rney's offlct In Loo Ango!es,
said today that Mulligan Is believed to be
a member or a gang that allegedly
perpetrated the seriu: of bani!: burglaries.
"He is possibly a member ot a gang <If
some six to 18 People running a highly
sophisticated operation/' 'Edwards said.
"We think the LBgUIUI Niauel bank.loat
somewhere between $2 • mllllon and SS
mllliolr and It appears that about t ight
Qlher banks around the country b!lve
previously h«n taken by the same
gang,"
Edward& declined to comment on
where ti-bank& ~.located or wbethtt
one of them flt lo t.Orc11town, Oh.lo, 1
small community llMJ lllulllpn'1 bome In v.......,_. On Mal., the only bank In
Lonlo"""1 WU burglariud by thieves
, """ ~ thrdllJh tho l'OOI ol Ille bulldlng,
entered the vault lild took IU0,000 In cath. ·,
Ectnrds 1l10 rtfUHd to comment on
wbelli<r or not 111)' tlf the lool taken In
the March U-• ~ml liUrclarY ol lba
United caJlfornJa Bant•lzl Laguna NICIJtl
hid been recovered.
the evening resigned from the board, said
he supparted Johannsen.
"I Lbink there wu a difference of
edueatlonal philosophy. My anal)'21is was
not llke Gordon's. My interest is for the
kim. Sometimes we have to overlook I.he
hierarchy. The admlnistration can't
disagree but as a school board member I
feel ~·hen you have a person who did an
outstanding job, you must ketp him.
.. J thlnk there has been a calculated
plan to eliminate this man for over a
year and a half." Dahlberg alleged.
Support ing the administrative stand
were Mrs. Clayton Parker and ?lifrs. John
Seer.s A•11lum
Catherine Kerkqw, 20, (s hown
in 1969 photo) and William
Holder, 22, sell-avowed Black
Panther from Oakland, are
seeking political asytum in Al-
geria after allegedly hijacking
a. jetliner for .$500,000 ransom.
See story, Pag~ 4.
Councilmen Face
Unpaid Overtime
Bid by Lawman
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 !M OlllY l"llM ll11t
A formal claim of 693 hours of unpaid
overtime by former San Clemente Police
Detective Burdell Burch will be taken up
by city councilmen at the.it_ meeting
Wedne!lday.
The claim, which also underlines a cur·
rent battle by remaining members of the
force for o\'ertlme pay, was filed three
"(eeks ago by regi~Ued letter, .sent from
Lakewood, Colo., where Burch now
serves as a police agent.
Burch ha.s stressed that he woold not
accept any settlement of the claim unless
it came accompanied with 1 new
(See CLAIM, Pare Z)
Ledier v.·ho both have children ln the
multihandicapped program administered
by Johannsen.
Mn. Ledger charged that Johannsen
had personality conflicts, had mishandled
personnel and was not responsive to
parents. Mn. Parker said she resented
having other people speak for her and
that she did not believe that the pro-
gram would be damaged by Johannsen's
reassignment .
"I resent having you use this program
to keep Johannsen." she said angrily.
In her comments lo the board, l"olrs.
Robertson said many parents \\'hose
County Has
Year's First
Snwg Alert
Scattered thundershowers will continue
to hit the Orange Coast in brief spurts
through Wednesday, weather forecasters
at the Orange County F orestry Depart-
ment said today.
A Mries of , freik show era. tome ac-
companied by li&btnloa. and tllunder, •!>"
peared htonday in 10me areas but corn--
pletely Jllliled adjoining cities.
San Clemente recorded .12 Inches of
rain. which bflOUlht the year's total up to
.67 inches. Bolts of lightning streaked
across the sty about 3:30 p.m. over the
coastal city, as well as over Garden
Grove and Anahaim.
Huntingtop Beach and Costa ~1e!8 e:r:-
perienced Ught brief .sprinkles, while only
an overcast sky coverM Laguna Beach.
· El Toro Marine· Corps Air Station
recorded a .02 inch reading of rain for the
El Toro-Irvine area Monday.
Nearby Trabuco Canyon was hardest
hlt. The Fore.stry department recorded a
1.12 Inch rainfall there, in contrast to a
.G4 inch couot in Irvine Lake.
Lightning st..,-ted a tree fire in Hol y
Jlm Canyon, burning a six root by 12 foot
patch or ground before rain put it out.
f orestry officials .said there i! an 80
percent chance or more rainfall today
and \Vednesday.
The freak weather Monday also In·
eluded the rirst smog alert of the year
issued by the Orange County Air P ollu-
tion Control (OCAPCD) District at about
1:20 p.m.
The ozone count rose to .42 parts per
million (PPM) ln La Jtabra and school!
were warned to keep children from
strenUOWI exercise. The alert was ended
at 1 p.m. when winds caused the count to
drop below the .~ ppm level.
Edward Camarena, engineer for t h e
OCAPCD, said the same breezes today win keep the •mog count down, althoogh
la.I nlg1!t t!ie department was still ~
dieting .. alort today .
Nm Monday, •aid Camarena, an ozone
count of .20 ppm will replace the .35 ppm
as the warning polnL
children had benefit ted fro111 Johannsen'.s
concern were upset aboul lhe rt:nto\'al.
"These parents rcalistirally ask \1 hy
you dismiss a person v;ho has achit'\ e<l so
much and they fear for the fu ture of
these progrruns." she s.:iid.
1\rs. Burch. a lc<ii:ht•r of h<111dil'flJ)pt ri
children, said she obli'l'trd tn tht•
dismissal lx'l·aust· Juha11n:.C'n had pro\'cn
his ability to pro\'idt' sµcc1al ('dt1c-:i t1on
and de\·otion in :tltt'1npt1ng to provide a
Good educn!ion fur :ill ch1ldrl'n
She sairl 111;111~· trnr h1•1·:-; ar;rct·ll 11·1rh
her but \l't'f C a.l'a\(\ l•l \ol\l'l": tl\l•i r Ob·
jections.
Schreiber. i11 111:; ro1111 n1·11ls. said hf'
RESIGNS SCHOOL PciST
T.rustH Dahlberg
Blast Traps 468
In South Africa
Mine; Few Escape
From Wlre Servtce1
SALlSBURY , ROOdesia -An un-
derground explosion at the Wankie coal
mine near Victoria Falls trapped 468
miners today and the death toll was
feared to be high.
Hospital sources rep:rted that some
mJners managed lo escape from one of
the several entrances to the No. 2 colliery
where the blast occurred at 1 a .m. PDT.
A sµokesman at the Wankie Mine
l~osRital said four miners had been ad-
mitted with injW'ies. They were four
surface workers injured u a result of the
undergroond explosion. The spokesman
could not de.scribe their lnjurie.s or .say
how they were cau.!led,
He said all doct«s in the area already
were at lhe 00.pital and local blood
donorl were alerted.
Dana Point Protest
'Long Distance' Calls Hit
A Dona Point citiun'1 (11>up today took
a shot at what they labeled "long-
d!Jtanco control" -toU cal!J rt<(Ulred U
Jocal rt1Mitnt& wlah to .call county of flees
or report a crltnt.
Citing mounlJng lMg-dlstance. pliont
bills to It& mtmbers and other rt!ldtn!J
of Dana Point, the community's Citizen•
For Action lodged 1 protHI wiUt FilUt
lllsl<lot Supervisor Ron Colptrs and
pushed !or 1 loll-I .... number l\ttween
Dona Point and' tho <lOllllly ,..t, .
The move came Monday nl&hl aft«
... .,.11 dtiztlis petltlooe<I Ute --'allon .,... !lelp.
"Why llJllll bw1nt11 .... llld.risidenta
of tbll community Incur long<liltan<e bury poinled out that bein1 charftd for
charit1" wbtn they find It -.y to a """"'fuJ call "is plllng enou&h. bqt
communicate wllh vulous c o u n t y ~ you call and 90me operator puts
department.?'' aebd the group'• board you on hold and then cull you off, you
of directors In 1 wrttttn Inquiry lo r .. Uy get mad."
Ca-s. Regelbru&11.• . '8id biJ ,ancl ¥ r 1 •
The board lntlmjlted that the sltu1tton Shrew•bury'• perlOnal phont ~Uh have
"glva the bnprwlon to cltlunl of our llhown 'to to l20 monthly In c!Wgos for
area that we are beJng penaliud for reo. county calls.
matning unlnooi:poraled.'' "But the most ridiculous examplt," he
Cltbont for Acllon Pr01ident Jim 1&ld, "I• th•t residents mlM pay long-
Ret!tlbnlpe llld tho p<>w"1g amount o! distance cbergeo to reach thtlr 'local' ""*-With count7 olflcts In hl• group mm.:•
hu CIUlod penonal 1'l10llO bllll of group The group's preslcltnt said be llopes Ute
olllclal1 to rile lfoldlJy. • group will rte<lve a reply fnlm Caspers
'!lie lmlP'• secretary Nancy Shrew.. bal<n 1 meetlni ott for next Tuaday.
kne\\' !ht' issue bo1Jc·d dO\.\.'ll to suppetrl of
lfll' SUptrinteildP Jll Or !'lllpport 0 (
.1d!lannsen but chargt'd 1hat tilt board did
1101 look objrctivc\y nl both sides of the
t;(irll ro\'C'rsy.
He s;ud he \\'a.~ surprised the bo.--ird
<!idn'I ma ke its 011·11 1n1·(·stil{ations into
honC'st_v in administration oi state-funded
pro~rams and drlrnncnt:i! po1\('ies that
JohannS!'n v.•as forcNl lo furto w.
.'\fu•r the meet in~. Hubl!rtson said h~
1!1d not ll'el his grou1) \1'!lS properly heard
or tlundlcd. lie snid his group intends ti:»
1ak1· f11 r1her artion "'And they rthe
bo;ird 1 ;ircn 'I going tu like Lt," he added.
oar
Leadership
'M edioc1·e'
-Dahlberg
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of 11'1• 0111~ l"llet Iliff
Jn an unusually candid statement 11on·
day Robe rt Dahlberg re.signed a:; a
trustee of the CapisLraoo Unified School
Jlislrict and blasted ita administration a1
''n1cdiocre and ineffettlve."
It was the tbJtd nllcnlUon ol a trustee
this .spring.
The Dana Point area reprtsentltlve,
who disclosed that he bas moved to San
Juan Capistrano, a.Id he ''cannot be ef-
fective with the kind of administrative
leadership that is cUrrently guiding the
school diatr:lct.
''Nor can J continue to be part of the
purposeful lack of effecth•e com-
munications that is obvious between the
staff and board, staff and teachers, staff
and community and even among staU
members themselves,·· he said.
Da hlberg, who was elected a little over
y~ar ago, said he thought a board 5al
wilh ane goal-to reinvest his ov.·n educa-
tional experience and lime to better lhe
schools.
"But my voice on behaU of ~'hat should
be our prime moti vation -the children
of this district -has too often been
raised alone.
''Quality in education is a term often
used In this district, philosophically and
in press releases, yet seldom are the
practical issues met wlth the dynanilcs
and realism necessary to achJeve thll
type of education.
"We are a 'comfortable' school district
anrl are apparently happy to remain so.
Excellence and co1npctcnce are not
primary objectives; but rather the paths
of mediocrity, control and 'keep the
educational waters quie t' detennine our
educational thinking and actions. I cannot
continue lo be a party to this type of
elucaUoo.''
Dahlberg said a public school board
must be accountalille and communicative
tti 'parenta and taxpayers. He said he is
enc<1uraging the community to conUnue
to express its concerns and demand
results from the boe1'4-
He said It is his coaclualon that as a
private citizen ht can accomplish more of
his oilgliiil goilllhan 11 a 1lngle trustee.
"I have always believed In working
•wJthln the tylttm.' However for the f1nt
time In my llhr '"otltlng wttblll the
system' Is ilOI poalble and yet tttaln my · -
educational belie/a ll1d pmooaJ fl>.
tegrlty."
Tnu!tee PeteflOO Hid he WU IOITJ
Dahlberg felt u be did IDd ,..., ary lo
see lilm it,. btcauae be bod made valualilt
"°"~~ Pr'tsldeOI 1lob Hint Mid
Dahlber1'1 realptloo eboolld -the
boan! to do some 1"VllaotlOn of ltaelf.
Dahlberg'• resl(nitlon la the thlld ill
the last few months.· 'l'nlllt.a ·IIOboJ1
Btastey ond Donalcf ~ b>th mill*'
for pei'!Oci al ,. ..... Wiler lllla 1.U:
An election to OU Dalllbe<I'• -1 wlD
take place IOIDtUme In s.i>Umber.
D.ahlbtrg, President of tilt Dona Pvllll
Marina Compal\)',· and former Tlaalift
Hll!h Sdlool auperprtenclen~ bu_ 111 mlnJ oeca•lms oppoeed ldmlnlltrllile -mend.tdons. ae llu,llllf '""P!71tr • '"°"'" etnlral admlnlatnll" &ill wlllo (lfet DAllUBRG, .... 11
Be Sure to Vote Today;· Polls Open Until 8
•
. ' I J .,
'
• •
T1.1ttd11, Jul'lf &, Im
~(luster Bott•ing'
st
_Rezone Hearing
Slated Tonight
A public hearing on a rezone of l..O
8C'rtl from various designations to plan-
rn;d development will take place at
tonight's 7 o'clock meeting ,of the Sao
Juan Clpistrano Plamting Commission at
city ball
The m:one riquest. made by Covington
Brothers or Fullerton. pertains to pro-
perty located between Mission }!ills
J~ch and Village 5an Juan 111 the
northern part of the city.
1be acreage wa s a conglomerate or
several zones ranging from single family
dwellings of \'atious-sized Jols to c:on\-
mercial.
Assistant Planner Mel Tooker said the
developer intenpa to construct "cluster
housing" if his r~zone is approved.
Also on the aaehda is a petition signed
by 65 resident! of San Juan 1--lills develop.
ment. adjacent to the golf course, re-
quutl.ng that garages be prohibited from
their development. The condominiums
were originally constructed ~·itb carports
and residents are asking that this be: oon-
tinued.
The Commission will also take tin1e to
honor tY.·o of its associates. Roland OIM.'n,
who filled the unexpir!d ter1n of C.
Russell Cook who resigned while in of·
fict. will be rte0gnized for his service.
Also to be honored iJ Jerry Gaffnty,
forrner chairman, "'ho has served on !he
commis!ilon since incorporation Jn 1961.
H' continues to be a mtmber, but Is no
longer chairman.
South Viets
Route Enemy
FromKontum Hospital S·kyline Rises
l'rottt Page I
CLAIM ...
SAIGON (UPI) -Two thousand South
Vietna mese troops !5('nt the last Com-
munJst holdou!s scurrying out of Kontum
t"ily today ending a 12-day North Viel·
namese attempt to overrun the slrategic
c.entra! Highlands provincial capital.
Shown is the construction of Saddlcback Community
l·lospital in J.,agu na J·Jil!s. The non·profit facility be·
ing built by the Lutheran Hospital Society is to have
150 beds in its first phase \\'ith eventual expansion
to 500 p!anued. 1'he $10 1nillion cost includes a $1 .8
ntillio~ fed~ral grant, land donations and private
do.nations. t:o1nplet ion of the first phase is expected
this surn1ner. 'fhe site is at (.'allc rl c la Lui sa and
Via Estrada.
overtime policy for lhc rest of the San
Clemente force.
Local officers rectlve neither cash nor
time off for overtime.
Councilmen Wednesday wl:I decide if
they will consider the claim in publil' or
private.
Generally formal doc•uments in litiga-
tion are handled in executive session. but
Burch has said that his clilim is not yet a
matter of actual litigation.
ln hla registered letter 1ent to several
c ity official!. including Mayor Art
Holmes. Burch said that besides his 0\1'11
accrued time, the other members of the
force logged about 8,397 hours overtime
last year for which they were paid
nothing.
His own records, he said, show that his
overtime -calculated to be about $4,000
\vorth -amounted to briefing! before
assuming duty, prisoner tr a n s po rt ,
Presidential demonstrations, fiesta du ty,
periods of mutual aid when all days off
were cancelled, plus hundreds of hours of
work after hours as a police detective.
"During the time of my employment I
did not neglect any task necessary in the
proper performance of my duties because
of the fact that I was not paid for time
spent above my normal working hours."
he :said.
The former officer's claim is the first
in the city specifically related to
overtime.
Tbe overtime claim is but one wage--
benefit Issue relating to public safety
department:s to confront the council this
budget season.
The city lawmakers already are aware
that nearly hall the local police force
either bu resigned or threatens to it
wages and benefits are not Increased.
Public Safety Director Clifford Murray
told councilmen last week that recruiting
for replacements is a "worrisome" task
this year because other agencies offering
much more are competing on the slim
market for qualified police candidates.
He said that in past months at least
eight of his best men have left to work
elsewhere in the police field because of
more enticing offers.
At least three have joined the city of
Laguna Beach \\/here overtime is offered
abundantly.
"I'm doing this (filing the cl11;im) for
!he rest of the men I left in San Clemente
\llho deserve overtimer" Burch said, ex·
plaining his overtime action.
"The actual amount of money I a!k for
Isn't important."
Record Auction Total
A government spokesman l!laid 2,397
North Vletnamcse troops died during the
siege, including 166 in Tuesday ·~ action 1t
a tank base and a hospital.
"They (the North Vietnamese) just
started running when we moved in. \Vc:
killed them as they v.·ere running away,"
a goverrunent spokesman said.
The South Vietnamese victory at Kon-
lum ended the latest Commw,Ust drive to
capture the city and its sister<apital,
Pleiku, 30 miles to the south.
The North Vietnimese wanted to over·
run the two cltit!, then aend troops
eastward to the coast and cut South Viel·
nam in half.
In the air war, American fighter
OOmbers new 220 missions in North Vlet-
n~. most of them against roads and
railways near Vinh, the Communists'
second largest port.
Clearing skies in the south allowed
more missions but the 207 strikes fl own
fl.fonclay were still only half the number
flown during May.
The U.S. Command said American jets
also bombed a railroad yard halfway
between the North Vietnamese capital of
Hanoi and Hrdphong, the country'•
largest port. Pilot! also reported two
direct hit.a on a bridge on Highway 1, 130
mJles south of Hanoi.
In other development-1.
-U.S. warplanu reported destroying
11 0 Communist bunkers and foxholes
around Phu My, a district county capital
in Binh Dinh province along the central
coast 280 miles north at Saigon. South
Vietnamese ground troops drove the
Communists out of the to"1l 011e day
earlier.
-North Vietnamese troops shot down
two Americ an helicopters near Phu Jvl,y,
wounding four Americans.
-Radio Hanoi said Communist gunners
.shot down two America n fighter-bOm~rs
over North Vietnam. The U.S. command
refused comment.
-At An Loe. the battered provincial
capital 60 miles north of Saigon, South
Vietnamese spoke!'lnten reported Co1nmu-
nists fobbed 289 rocket, mortar and ar·
tillery rounds into the city -one of the
lightest .shellings since the siege started
in early April.
Man Shot Twice
Opening Garage
Voters Flock w Polls
Early in Crucial Race
LOS ANGELES i AP ) -Voters \\'e.nt to
the polls early and in large numbers in
Oali£ornia's crucial primary election to-
day '~:ith the hopes of Sens. )Jubert Jf.
Humphrey and George McGovern for the
Democratic presidential no mi nation
riding on the results.
In the first hour of voting in populous
l..os Angeles County, about three percent
of the 3,233,825 tegistered vote rs cast
ballots, the county registrar reported.
Skies \11ere overcast ;ind the air '\'."IS
\\'arm and n1uggy over most of the state.
President iind t-.trs. Nixon voted by
absentee ballot.
A spokesman said Monday in Key Bi s-
cayne, F la ., that they sent in their ballots
alter returning from the Sovjet summit
trip.
The winner of today's presidential
primary carries a bloc of 271 delegate
votes into the Democratic National
Convention at Miami Beach -one-sixth
of the total needed to win the nomination.
The polls are open irom 7 a.m. until 8
p.m.
The vote count may be slow because of
a long ballot in some areas and a writ~in
campaign on behalf of Alabama Gov.
George C. \Vallace.
Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown
estimated that 3.8 million of the state's
5.1 million Democrats -or 75 percent -
would vote today, lured mostly by the
presidential contest. He forecast a record
turnout of 73 percent of the 9.1 million
registered voters .
Because San Francisco polling places
may be open as late as 10 p.m .• Brown
Jr. asked the three major broadcast
networks to hold back their computerized
winner projections for several hours.
Indications were his request would be
turned down.
In telegrams Monday to ABC. CBS and
NBC election officials, he said he feared
the network predictions y,•ould swing the'
votes 0£ late voters in San Francisco,
perhaps even deciding the outco1ne or the
state prin1ary.
President Nixon is challenged on the
Republican ballot by Rep. John M.
Ashbrook of Ohio but Ashbrook is not
considered a serious threat to Nixon 's
winning California's 96 delegate votes to
the GOP convention .
A victory for McGovern in California
\vould proP<'l him toward the Democratic
National Convention in Miami Beach in
J uly with a commanding lead in delegate
votes -more t'han hall the 1,509 needed
to win the nomination.
Humphrey had to win to remain a ma·
jor contender for the nomination although
he vowed to fight on even if he Jost.
''I'm going on to Miami Beach," vowed
the 61·year-old campaigner.
McGovern's hopes were bu oyed by a
California Poll that showed him trouncing
Humphrey by 20 percentage points in a
publie opinion sampling -a lead so big
even McGovern expressed skepticism
about it. Humphrey denounced the poll as
totally unrealistic and produced his own
poll showing him neck and neck with
McGovern.
378 Boys Attend
Camp Pendleton
Sco11ting Event
Attendance recently at the annual cam·
poree at Camp Pendleton sponsored by
the El Camino Real Boy Scout District
set an all-time record, s pokesmen said
today.
A total o( 379 boys from troops
representing the South Coast attended the
three-day event at the Juliett Wilderness
Area of the base.
Top honors in the competitive camping
events went to ~tission Viejo's "Toad
J'atrol'' from Troop 608. ''Eagle Patrol''
of Dana Point Troop 705 captured a sec·
ond place.
District spokesmen said that com·
peti live events included a r c her y ,
firebuilding, •Nilderness engineering. first
aid, nature lore, cooking and campfire.
Among the large group of scouts, 44
members were chosen as recipients of
the Order of the Arrow. the national
honor camper's society of the Boy Scouts.
Meyer Lansky,
Partner Charged
In Tax Evasio11
\VA SH!NGTON (AP 1 -fl>leyrr Lansky
and a reputed longtime asso<"ia!e were in-
dicted by a federal grand jury tod ay on
charges of conspiring to avoid payi ng
taxes on money allegedly received from
gan1blers on junket! to George Raft's
Colony Sporting Club in London. England.
Lansky, 69, and his reputed associ.iJte ,
Dino Cellini, aJso ;vere accused by the
~rand jury in U.S. District Court in
J\1ia1ni of conspiring to obstruct the
Internal Revenue Service from a ssessing
income taxes. Cellini al so was charged
\\'ith filing two false income tax returns.
The Justice Department announced the
indictment action.
Lansky is Jiv.ing in Israel and fighting
attempts by the Israeli government to
deport him. He was indicted in Miami
last year for refusing to appear before a
grand jury in Miami and in Las Vegas in
connection with alleged illegal gambling
activities.
Cellini, 57. a native of Steubenville,
Ohio, lives in Rome where he represents
an American s lot machine manufacturer.
.He was a stockholder and employe or
Raft's gambling casino which operated
fro m 1966 to 1969.
According to the indictment, Cellini set
up a firm called Travel and Resorts
Enterprises Inc., in Miami to organize
gambling junkets to the Colony Club and
other foreign casinos.
l'rom Pagel
TAX HIKE ...
genert1l fund or $6.9 million and a building
fund of $1.6 million, bringing the total
document over the $8.S million mark.
The approvaJ o! the tentative budget is
merely a formality for the district and
the document may be changed any time
up until the date. or final adoption. The
final document must be turned in to conn·
ty schools officials by the first week in
August.
Vote Pac f.
Described
As Steady
Gloomy skies which offered up some
drizzles along the southern Otange Coast
early toduy failed to keep voters from the
polls in the California Primary Election.
In spo! ('ht<:ks of voting in four com ..
munities. at least 15 percent of the vote
had been cast and election \11orkers
reporte<l the traditional "steady" pace of
c itizens at th' polling place.
Checks made 1n San Cleme ntr.
Capistrano Beach. Dana Point and
Laguna Niguel sho1ve<i that all the areas
prol"ided about !he san1e ptrcentage of
voter turooul.
Geuera!Jy, the figures pointed to a hef·
ty percentage by the time the polls cl<.»e
at 8 o'clock tonight.
Richard Henry Dana Elementary
School Polling place shovred the highest
percentage \11i!h 110 voti¥g out of a possi-
bl e 519.
\Vorkers in all the precincts chec.ked
said thnt no heavy lines had yet formed
but that tile sr.ring of voters wus g'radual.
~\'eral polling places in a recent
school district tax override election had
reported jammed polls.
"I certainly hope we don't ha;•e a
crowd all at once," said one worker at
San Clemente's Ole Hanson School. "\Vith
our close quarters here, I don't kno111
'''hat we would do,"
En1ployes Seek
Batti11 'Damages'
Oa1nages of $10,000 were demanded
Monday in an Orange County Superior
Court lawsuit that charges Supervisor
Robert Battin with unlawfully using a
county mailing list for his own election
purpcises.
The Orange County Employes Assoc ia-
tion also asks in its action against the
First Di.strict supervisor for further
damages to be awarded \vhen the
organization can assess the value of
cleriC'BI and mechanical he.Ip allegedly
ut ilized bv Balfin. ·
The coinplaint states lhat Battin ob-
tained lhe computerized mailing list last
week and used lhe county information to
mail literature to F irst District voters.
1fembers of the OCEA were urged last
"'eek in a precedent·setting bullelin
issued by the county workers group to
vote against Battin in today's election.
Art Exhibit Tea Set
The San Clemente Arts end Crafts
Club's traditional summer exhibition at
the community clubhouse will be opened
\\•Ith a gallery tea Sunday from l to S
p.m.
The free exhibit ion ,.,,ill feature wntks
by club members, and media represented
will include painting. crafts and
needlecraft. All entries were judged.
R,fre&hments will be served during the
afternoon. Everyone is welcome, s1id
club president Marie Crawford.
Breakfast Tossed In
Members of the San Juan Capistrano
Little League will spcnsor a pancake
breakfast to raise funds for the summer
activity Sun day from 8 a.m. to 12 :30
p.m.
The event. offering a full breakfast for
a dollar. will be held in the San Juan
Sc hool cafeteria. Tickets can be purchas.
ed from any member of the Little League
or at the door.
SAN FRANCSICO (AP) -KQED, the
educational television station here, took
Jn $433.035 in its 10-day auction which
ended fl.1onday, station officjaJs reported.
lt was the largest amount raised in the
18-year history of the Mnual fundraiser.
A Cypress man, preparing to go to
work, was shot and wounded when he
opened his garage door, police reported.
Raul Odin , 43, of 11593 Manila Drive,
told officers that when he opened the
door Monday morning a tall, thin man in
his mid-20s ordered him oot to move.
Wallace failed to file in lime to make
the Democratic ballot, but a write-in
campaign was under way on behalf of the
Alabama governor, still in a Maryland
holpital recuperating from gunshot
wounds suffered at a shopping center
rally in Laurel, Md., May 15.
IT'S HERE • • • YESTERYEAR!
OIJlll•I COAST 1C
DAILY PILOT
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ni. Or•llO• C"1t fl\1&111111119 ComPl"Y· ) ...
r•I• edlllon1 •rt ""'lllli.Md, M-•r 11tro1191'1
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Hvi'lf1110loll &11<1'1/l"i11"t1!tt V•Uty, l•VVN •••di, l""iM/hckllolJKk llllll ·S1n Clt'""'IR/
,.... Jl,llft C•llit lrlM. A ll"flll r1ti0Ml
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Tlle prlftd Ptl rtublli.1'11111 1111111 h ., l» Wtll
••r Sir"!, COiie MtM, C•l!l9r11ll, tMJ6.
"•borl N. Wood
Prot,.,tnl •114 P11Dll11'1ot
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Vko Prekler1t •!'Id ~•I M1"191r
Thom•• k,,.,if
Eollor
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M•""lnl Editw
Ch•rl•t H. Leo1 IUch 1nil '-Nill
ANlt!1"1 Mtftlllno Edllor1
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'
Odin said the man then shot him twice
in the atxlomen and fled. Police sald
there "'as no apparent motive for the
shooting as nothing was tiaken from the
home or garage.
Odin is reported in satisfactory con-
dition today in Los Alamitos General
llospital.
~ f 'rom Pnge I
DAHLBERG. • •
more control over individrn« school1, bet·
ter programs for gifted students and
those wJth learning di58biliUes, and more
uniformity in curriculum throughout lhe
district.
He was a supporter of Charles
Johannsen who was recently nttd from
his position of director of pupil personnel
services because of h.ls conlllcts wJth the
Bdministratlon.
. ,
Theft Problem Set
Two rtpresentatlves from the Orange
County Sheriff's Department will &how
members of the Capistrano Beach
Chamber of Commerce how to iwotect
lhe"l'•lves from robbery .
Tho dtmanatrallon "ill be ti Ibo cham·
ber"s monthly me.tirig Juoe I.I.
The noon ·event at Pete and Clar•'-' ca re In San Juan C!plstrano is open to all
chamber m~mbers and guW, aald
cbambe< lj)Okesman Georges H.Wl.
'
There was no chance of Wallace's col·
lecting any delegates in California where
the winner reaps the entire 27 l·vote bloc.
But his campaign managers hoped for an
expression of Wallace strength in the
state where busing of school children for
racial balance has ~n an emotional
issue in some areas, but not a major
point of discussion between McGovern
and Humphrey.
Inglewood Man
01arged With
Kidnap -Attempt
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A 1~year-0ld
Jnglewood man has been indicted for kid.
naplng tn an attempt to seize a Gardena
manufacturing tXtcUtlve. The executive
foiled tile attempt by challenging the kid·
Mptr to shoot, authorities 11Jd.
The co0nty l!Tand jury charged Bt"'
jam.in Davis Myers, also known as Ben·
No Bonfigluio. with 'st!veh counts of corr
apiraey, ktdru1Jping, forgery and perjury.
Myel'I ~eaded innoCtnt Monday .
~ullJorllles said a man ldenutled u
Samuel Weaver confronted Sherwin
MlnW!<r, 36, with a gun Au11. IQ oullllle
his au.burbsin Gardena office and saJd he
had been sent by Bonfiglulo to carry out
a kidMping.
SELECTION OF CARPETING WASN'T
iFANT ASTIC W H E N OUR GRANDFATHER
STARTED HIS CARPET STORE. ORIENTAL RUGS
WERE "IN," AND GRANDFATHER SPECIALIZED
IN THEM.
OUR FATHER GOT INTO THE ACT
AROUND 1918 AND DEVELOPED A LARGE
VOLUME OF DOMESTIC CARPETS, MOSTLY
I TONS AND ·AXMINISTERS.
LATELY WE HA VE SEEN A RESURGENCE
OF AXMINISTER CARPETS IN B EAU TI FU L
FLORALS AND PRINTS. THE EFFECT CREATED
BY AN UNUSUAL PATTERN CAN TRANSFORM
A DULL RO 0 M INTO S 0 METHIN G
SPECTACULAR.
PLEASE STOP IN AND SEE OUR LAllGE
SELECTION.
ALDEN'S
CARPns • DRAPES
1663 l'lacentla Ave.
CO$T A Mii5.f.
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thur Thura.. 9 to 5:30-Fri., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:30 to 5
•
•
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~·~ DAILY PILOT SC T""'"· ·-6; 1912
.. ...UO Uatlnto hr Moolclly, Juno S, 1m '
PANTERA
by deTomai;!) , , , Imported for Uncoln-Mer~ury. Itall~n
coach,,·ork created by the brilliant Ghia Studios of Turin.
Ford dNlgned the 351 CID 4V V-8 engine. Four v;beel in·
dBj:>enf'nt suspension t1.nd mid-ship eng,ine placemenL F.lve
1pero gear box, fully 1yndtronhed· •••
•Pantera ••• Italian for Panther , , ,
•
C0MPLETE-NEW .YORK .. STOCK' US'l''
'
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••
EJ.AILY P'ILOT .... ,_, a>J 0 ....... WlllM
EDISON HIGH'S DAVE POWELL OVER A HURDLE INT HE STATE MEET. HE WAS 6TH IN HIS HEAT IN 14.1.
Tri ton s
Miss Title
By Stroke
CHINO -San Clemente
High School missed winning
the CJF team golf cham-
pionship by one stroke Monday
on the Western Hill1 Country
Club course, here, while Hun-
tingtQn Beach High placed
·firth, three strokes off the
'pace of champion S ant a
Barbara High.
Santa Barbara, paced by
medalist Tom Flanagan who
fired a three-under-par 69 and
nm..erup Bruce Blakey in sec-
ond place with a 71 , copped
the team title with an ag-
gregate score of 383.
San Clemtnte tied with Rio
Mesa. San Marcos and
Foothill for second place with
384. Foothill won a playoff for
the team trophy but all four
schools will be listed in second
place.
••
• ' .
•
. •·
j
'
•
' -
...
• "
Horsman Hits 2 Homers
In Legion Baseball Tiff
Wayne Honman belted a
pair of home runs to drive in
three rwu but it wasn't
enough as the Fountain Valley
American Legion J u n i o r
baseball team dropped a 9.4
decision to host Tustin Sunday.
San Clemente split a pair of
weekend games, losing to
Tustin Saturda y, 3-0. and
defeating Saddleback Surxlay,
5·1. San Clemente is now 4-1 in
league play. Westminster also
split, losing to Buena Park, 4-
1, and defeating Anaheim Hef-
fern, 3·2. Westminster is now
3-2.
In other action, Newport
Harbor dropped a p a i r o{
games including a heartbreak.·
er Sunday, 6-5 to Santa Ana .
Jn this one, Dale Kubeska had
a homer and John German a
triple that scored ~1ark Stam-
bra and Mike Yost.
1'•111'11•111 V•lhv 10 .. ' ' ' . ' P•lllllQflf!, 's
T. Lucl'l•HI, lb-lb Carroll. 2b M1rlev, cl Ouett lle, p 'ttonma11. If ZJm..,.r, JI> H1lllt ld, rl
Htddow. rf Eckleii, p.!b
Mout1r, 0 Tot1t~
' ' ~ f
' ' ~ g
' ' . ' ' ' " . teer• llr l""lnip
' '" ~ g
' 0 ' ' ' ' i J
' 0 ' ' ' . ' ' ' '
. ' ' : l ~ . ' . ' ' ' 31 5 ll
Sc.,1 •t lflnl"'"
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . nfll) 110 0.»-5 ll ,' 003 010 20x-I 11
S1h1rUy
We1tmll\lltr II) .. ' ' ' ' 0
ll•tdley. cf
Whl!t l.y, It
"""""' r>r Nodl111d. Ir
lll1k•ley, Jb
010111htrc11, lb
Ru11go, c
T111l1r, rf
H1rrl1, 2b
E111lno11, ph
'llld1lf, 11
H1l1, 11
To!1l1
• • • •
• ' '
' ' ' 0
' ' ' ' ' ' " ' le••• •r ll\nlnt1
II rlli • • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • '
' • • ' ' • ' ' • 0
' •
' ' . W111m1,.,.t•r ooo ooo 100 -1 ' 1
eu.,.,• P1rk 012 100 oo~ -4 11 l , ....... ,
Wt1lml11tlt r (lJ
flr1alt y. "
Wl\lttll y, ''
Nodttnd. II
e11~11ey, Jb
Dege,.,~1rat, lb
T•••ler, rl-c
M1rrl1, lb
R111190, c
Ro•e11. cir
EW1l11011. rl
T11d1ff , 11
Ht le, 11
l o!1f•
..
' '
' '
'
'
' ' '
' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' '
' Ant Ho/lf rln OIO 100 000 -1
Wt1lml111l•r 000 002 10x -J
St hrr4t y
h rli ' . ' . ' '
' ' ' • ' • • • • • . ' . '
• ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '
T-,JuMl,1'72 DAILY PILGT J 9
U.S. Polo
U1ii t Has
At·ea Aces .. The Onutge Coast area will
be well represented in a pair
of international water polo
matches betwe e n the
Yug05lavia National tean1 and
Un.lied St.ates National ag-
gregation to be played at
Newport Harbor High School 's
new Olympic pool, June 13-14.
h-1ike Martin, one of the all -
time great S"-'in1minc and
"'·ater polo pla yers at UC
Irvine and a men1ber of coach
Ed New\and's Nlh-1A team in
the development circuit, is one
• Ao1d Test• Or1in l f111fill
fluid • R•mol/• Pin • Vlsu•I
ln1P1ct.ion • Adjust Binds •
Link1g1 • N1w Pan G1ske1 •
Clnn ''"'' & ScrMft. "C•Hlrl•• P•rmhtt-.."
Inter nt tional/ Co• $t-to· C 01 st
@~on
TRANSMISSION
COSTA MESA
1934 Newport Blvd.
645-7570
SAMTA ANA
f:t E Fir>! S! 15'·1C.U
LONG-llACH
ssa E. Prc!llC Co•SI H"'Y· Jtl·lJ31
WHITTIER
l:i0'l \Vnllll~r tl!V<I •91-Dn7
DOWNEY
121~1 Lllk•wood Blvd ... M,..IW
of the stars. MON. THRU FRI. 8 to 6 e SAT_ 8 to I
Area residents Eric Lin·!=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=""'.---~=-' droth (a former co-CIF player I·
()f the year al Newport Harbor 3,· ~ ... ,_ 'l',.~:l:o ""' ,_ ..
and current UCLA star) and
Dean Willeford, are also mem-
bers or the teai:n. Both played \
for Phillips 66 during the
developroent circuit.
Coach of the U.S. squad is
Monte Nitzkowski, a resident
of Hunting ton Biach and head
swin1ming and y,·ater polo
coach at Long Beach City
Co llege. His as.!listan t is Art
Lambert of De Anza, head ~
Baldn.ess Conquered
ANNOUNCING!
POLYSCALP ®
The Transparent One
Olympic coach in 1968 at Mex-~ ..
ico City when Nitzkowski was i'1 •A icie11!ilica!!y d.,.1.
his assistant. ;-op•d rra111po11 .. 1
Bob Gaughran, athletic l
director at Santa Ana CQIJege
and water sports coach, "-'ill
serve as team manager.
Phillips will have eight
players on the team after
defeating De Anza Sunda y, 3-4.
to post an undefeated record
18·0). Others include Bruce
Bradley, Stan Cole, Russ
Webb, Roy Saari. An d y
Deguise and Jim Slaton.
From the DeAnza team are
Jim Ferguson, Peter Ash,
Gary Sheerer, John Parker
and Barry Wietzenburg.
Concord's goalie. Mike 1-log-
giM, completes the 15-man
U.S. roster for the Eur<lpean
trip and the games a t
Ney,·port.
In Europe, the U.S. squad
\viii play in t"'<l tournaments
before returning for a pre-
Olympic training camp. Only
l l members of the squad "-'ill
make the Olyn1pic team.
The two games at Newport '
"'i ll climax a four-gaine series :
with the Yugoslavs i n
11cond uo!p
111 pporti119 nol11rol
hwmo11 hoit, lhor it 01
t10!11rol 01 yaur awn.
b• <;rowing fro"'
to 1he eye o• rouch.
51e1p, 1wim, ploy,
1howcr, I•! lh• wind
or har Joule your
hoir 11nde!ectobl• .
• POLY SCA.LP ma•e~
w1tvlng, •urgery, lace.
nylon, 1n<I nar<I b&1e
n~l•Pl•cet oblolt!t .
Ha ir color wl!I ,.,gr rad1,
5.., POLY SCA.LP -
THEN YOU OEC!DEI
12 MONTH LABOR & MATERIAL GUARANTEE
HAIR REPLACEMENT CENTERS
Costa Mesa Anaheim
2129 Harbor 3132 W. Lincoln
Individual scores for the San
Clemente team included: Scott
Johnson 78, Steve Ringer 75.
Marty Morganilli 77, Du3ne
Hilborn 79 and Richar d
Bernard 75.
' ' . l'ov11l1i11 Vtl!tY 010 700 001 -l S o Tustin 010 lo.I J(h-t 10 5
S•" Cll l'IM1'1t ti) .. ' , ' 11 '"' California. The first two CALL
Tt prvv• •ur 1u-
perlor ciutlity 1nll
1u1r1nfet Jou r
s1ti1f1etlon , .. Wt
cam,ltt1ly flnl1h
•Y•ry p i1c1 Mf11r1
•• 1ccept , ''""f ' W1 •r• th1 on y
ont1 who do.
CALL
827-1120 ' Huntington Beach, all alone
In firth place wilh 336 , had
these individua l sc ores :
Rawn Wanam aker 77, Phil
Clark 78, Kelly Gifford 73,
Bart deBoe 78, a n d Pat
Galvin 75.
Other Orange Coast area in..
dlvlduals competing separate--
ly and their scores included:
Mark Les (Estancia) 75, Tony
Campergher /Maripa) 75,
Diet Mitchell (Mater Del) 76,
Larry Collins (Estancia} 77,
'.J'erry Knight (Estancia) 77.
Don Brown (Fountain
Valley) 78, Jim Cote ICorona
del Marl 78. Mark Hoeg
(Laguna Beach) 79 . Tom
Martin (Mission Viejo) 79,
Ken Kalmbach I New port
Harbor ) 81 and Gerald Hannon
f\Vestminster) 90.
Horses Run
AtAla1nito s
Wedne sday
Los Alamitos Race Course
opens its 22nd year or quarter
horse racing Wednesday night
as a crowd of 12,000 per!Ons
is expected to take in the
opening nint-ract program
that includes the featured
$10,000 Inaugural for 3-year
and older horses going 350
yards.
First post for the 79 nighls
of racing will be 7:45, \1•ith
nine races being s111.11ed nig ht-
ly. The track will be open six
nights per 1veek, ~1ondny
through Saturday. for the 13·
week session that ends
Wednesday, Sepl. 6.
The nJ&hUy double. or daily
double, has been discarded,
belnl replllced by a $2 exact&
on the ftrst ract. The.re 11lso
will be SS e1:1cll11 on the sb:th
and ninth races.
Royal Doulton ca ptured the
tnau~al last year, edging
Blondy Rockett by a nose in
11.9 seconds for 350 yards.
Royal Doulton is .elig.lble for
lht In1Ufi1111 aaain tblt year.
Follow1ng Wednesday'• pro-
aram, the feature TIC e
achedule at Los Alamltoa In·
eludes te.ooo War Chic for s.
year and older dlllanoo '""'
nera 1olng 170 Y•r<l• around one lum Friday nl1ht, 110.000
Shue P'ly for 3-year and older
•llrinW. racing &IO yordl
Siotunlay tvenln1 and the
•.• Leo for 1 .... yetr .. 1d1 cl.uh"" SIO yardl Monday nlshL
I
Cl1rk. 1b
Ftr rttl, 11 Kubt'lkl, < St1m1>r1, lb Yo1!, lb Em1>rsy, •s Lucio, 1b Po111dulk, rl Sml!h, rt
G1rd11, cl L..ndrlOll, 11 Tollll
,.,..,,.,
""""-'!I) .. • ' •
' 0
' ' . ' • • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' .
' 0 ' ' " . sc.,t 111' ln,.int1
' '" ' ' g g
: f ' ' 0 ' 1 .. 0 ' ' f : • •
N-POrl G1r01n Cirovt
' ' . 010 000 OOl-4 ' 1 105 100 01~-1 ' 1
Clt rk. lbo?b Ft rrell. 211
Lucio. 11 Embrtt, 11 l(u"-5k•. c
S•IMl•Y
"-"" {JI ..
l ' • '
' • ' ' ' '
' '" ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '
Fish Repo1·t
J. 5prinom1n. lb
1C ln<1. !'
Whitiker, rl
Weill•~•. r!
Rtlth•n. c
Wright, er
Slov1 MlklM, lb
IS. S~rlngmon, lb
Doogl1 n, lb
MCCornb, ti
• ' ' ' '
'
• '
' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '
Scott Miklos. 11
Tnom1son, tr
Sl1vro, II
Nlt l•t n. Cl • • n ' Snre lly INnlnp
Tot•l1
' Tu•lln 010 000 011 -J
S111 Cttrn.nlt 000 Ol!IO Ol!IO -O
'"'"''' Sin ClemMle UI
J. Scirlr.qm111, 2b
1(1119, II
ICIOllgh, cf-II
Rncht n. c
S!'tvf Ml~101, lb
Wrlohl, lb·cf
P1lmtr, lb-<
Whl!tkt r. II
Sllv•o, 1b
Grlllln, rl
Wtl!her. rr
.. ' ' , • ' ' ' • • ' ' ' ' ' ' '
' ' ' '
' • ' 0
' • Scott Ml-los, ,,
Dovgl111, 11
McComb. 11 ' ' " ' ,,.,, lty 111nl1111
To!1l1
1 a games will be played in
~ : Northern Cali fornia, June 10.. 1
0
• ' ' 0 • ' ' ' ' ' ' • • . ' ' .
0 11. ! Tickets for the Ne"•port 3
o game s are currenlly on sale at ., .
0 the school or from members --' o of lhe NIMA waler polo team . Kid L'k l A k A d : General admission is 12 anc1 S I e 0 S 11 Y
:.-~r:e.ser"."~'ed""_~S<~a~~~ar':'.'_e~$3~.:__ __ .:.:_=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::=:=-
'
642-1781
• •• ' . ' ' ' •
' • ' ' • ' ' •
• • ' '
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' HB'S TONY CIARELLI
Placed 10th in St1te Shot. ' S1ddltr..ck 000 OlG 000 -1
St" Cltmtlllt 001 120 IOX -.S
' . ' ' . ' Nght Rmciig. 7:45 Mon.·Set.
S1stl Wtd 3911 clay, June 7.
Of 1111 tr9Cks in caifomil last yecr.
Loe ........ had the highest l)ef·
oantage ot winning f...ootes. Thet
percentage of favorites in the
money topped them all, too: A
whopping n'%1 So. oome out and
~ the nighGme of your~ with
the chart-smart -For advance
'""""'""'"" caa (213} "31-1361 or (714) 527·2Zl1.
Baseball S tnndings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Ea&t Dlvltlon
New York
Pittsburgh
Chicago
Montreat
\Y L Pct.
31 13 .705
27 16 .628 u 18 .Sil
.442
.378
.3M
St. L<>uis
Philadelphia
Dodger!!
Cincinnati
Houston
Atlant.n
19 24
17 28
16 28
\\'est Division
28 18
27 18
26 19
San Diego
San Francisco
20 2.1
16 29
17 34
MelMll Y'• lll•1u lh
P!ll•bur1h t i Si n Oll'<j<:>, r1ln
Oftly ••m11 IChfdult"-d
T ... Y'I Gtmft
.609
.600
. 578
.465
.JSO
.33.1
GB
3,, n
6
11 II
H I\
15
,,
J 1/z
61':1
11 1'.:
13~~
Mou1fllf'I (llcbtrts J..J) '' Ph/ltdflthl1 tFrvm•n I·)), nltht
All•"I• CAttd 3-6) •I Moftlrtll IMc:AlllllJ' 1-.Sl ft I Ohl '
ClllC!Mtll !NOiin 7·1 ti NH York (McAndrtw ~n. nlthl
PUl1bur1n IMooN ~JI II Sift Olett (l(lrby ,.., nlt hl •
Chk tM fM l"lh 4·11 •I lit """'" (0oW!11"9 1-ll, ni.t'lt SI. LCJOl1 O~lte 4·5) t i Si n FrentlKI fS'-
)...IJ, 11l1hl
WM .. H1r'1 G-Holll~ll II Phll.Oe111h!1, nlthl
All1n11 11 ,,..,,.,_.1, 111th1
ClllCl..,..11 11 New York, nlthl
"!tti.bvrel't 11 S.11 0 1...,, '· ••l·nlfhl Clllct" 11 Ltt A111ftl1, "llhl $r, Loul1 ft Sin ,,.~ISO
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Detroit
Baltimore
Cleveland
Boston
New York
f\tilwaukee
East DlvJskin
W L Pct.
21 17 .S85
21 21 .500
20 20 .500
17 22 .43&
16 2-4 .429
15 23 .395
.690
GB
31\
311
6
&II
711
Oak land
~finnesota
ChiCSi;!O
Angel5
Texas
Kansas City
Weit Division
29 13
21 16
25 17
%0 24
18 26
17 25
.600 4
.595 4
.455 10
.409 12
.405 12
Mlf!Olll J''I 1111!111111
01-1111<1 J, Cl1vel1f'Mll 2, 10 lnnll'ltt
M!nM•OTI J. llllllll'll!re 1
TMllY'i elffth
C1t1i.,.,.11 f.,.,...ltM 4·1 llnd lllote I.fl ti Dtlf'tll
llollCl'I .. , t nd COIMNN 7-4), 1, twl-nltl'll
Mll'l!IHOll (Ktt l .. 1) ti lettlmol'f (P'l l"*' ~l.
lllthl
Olltlu1d lllu. O.tl ft CIWlltP'ld (Celblt1 WI,
nltl'll
Mllw•ukM . (lrett 241 t i KtnNt C11Y (Mi.l,...,.r •·II "*•ht
N..., 'rlll'k ll"tttn.en •71 11 Ttx11 Cl o.,.,.,.. Ul,
lllt hl
llot"'" ISlelolr! '-11 et Cl'lkl ff (-.,, 11lef\I ' w.......,. .....
C1I011'1111 If Otltoll, nltl'll
Mlnnt!Ofe 11 lel11moni, nlel'll
Oellllnll If Clt!Wltnf, nlthl
Mll•t llllH I f Kent.111 ()ty, 11111'11
New Y0111 11 T111.., nltlll
9011M ti Chk ...
DEAN LEWIS
1966 HARIOR ILYD., COSTA MISA
S.rvlco and Partt for All lmporttd C1rs
Modern Body Shop for All C1rs
646·930J
Orange County's Largest and Most Modern Toyota and Vol•• Dealer
OYUllAI DILIVIRY IPICIALllTS
I
. -
DEAN LEWIS
1972 TOYOTA CARINA
WITH FACTORY
AIR CONDITIONING
s7200 PIR MONTH
$M.71 Tobi Doww -VJ.II Tobi
tMnthlr '•rfMllf. ••• fff ,.,..,. IS.ht M ... Def91Nil -
$Jlll,N /(aoh -$2794Jt APll
12.16 .... ,,NY*I crMlt •
1972 VOL VO 142 SEDAN
WITH FACTORY
Al R CONDITIONING ...
MONTH
,117.41 Tobi --_,... -M. C.... ""° """27 Incl. T & L/APll llM .. -.......
1172 TOYOTA • 0
STATION'WAOON
WITH FACTORY
AIR CONDITIONING
3 F-111>1 "l'lmlce Dining
I
1utsdu. Jcint •. Jtn SC '''" liLOI !J
Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
I
SI... JINI: Ml• H•I ( ______ .;_ ____ _
,. ' .
Slide Continues
On Wall ·Street
·:c _ , NEW YORK (AP) -stock market prices con-
tinued their"sJidt today after a J'1lly Mttmpt failed.
i Except for a brief fl urry of act1v1ty in the first
{. otagu of the rally, tudil!g wa.s moderate ~ A~alyst. said erofi! taking at the start today
;. gave V.'IY to batglln bant1ng around mld·sess1on
H-0 wever, \\'hen the ·advance failed to attract many
buyers, the market pulled back , they said.
1 • "· •• t"
•
Nearly Jtir~ryop.e
j
..., ,..,_ 1Mt.1 .._......, °"' ~ ,....,, .. 1,. u. c._ Qt. ttl•rket Trett ..
A-r•a ,'~"' .-. • 'j '!" -.--~11111 t '• , a~ •"' 111i1 ...,_..., .,,...., w.uv1 ,,.. ~ ;a r .e ~l, L'°. !!" m•·, !!"'~·~ •.•• ~ t ll, 1J:4 IJ Mt91 •: '" W.ut ..... ~ ~ r ii ~Toof ..c
1'i n1 .,.., 1r-:: ., ,....., it4: ff ,.~ -m:7"• :=.. •-·• ... ii!! 1a1flt .Ml
•ttJrl ,,._. .., • ~' ·1 r'I ffi'· ·~"' rm+'' Hh •'"".. It'• "' • ' ,.,.. .. ....... 1 W.NM. w ........... -;....c., 1t6 ,. lJt,14 _, -W•¥dl.lt : tJ"" i..21 1 '.ii lit ,,,...iw l f • u ~ M M ~ t t• 1tt.-'• •M.•• M.1.11111.n Tllllt110 Kl.Ill !s ~" ~·~ l•\~"-•i ul , •'•'; •• ,. 1n. 1,__ ,._ 'f111e.-..t M..-.r W.."""11• M :m:= l::t :u1 n:•R: 1,i 1'U "' °'-u ..... ~ .. ~u . . ~ lt"W•~ ..... '"" -2.n -.),ft _..47 t tJ T :fl CY : 14 ..., il:\9--t U , nl f:SI> d lil°* JI'• l4'"r ~I~ ~ WtY.rlll ~ -e.Jt -1.54 -4.6' =.. fr•llo'W .. 111 32 •• ..... ul""' 1 ,. 11 • ,, •• ,,... ... 11i1 111 WM'"' ...
IV If 1 1 $J J.1\!11 S.'° 1 ~ G,_ I•~ fl "" 11 ... 11' \.:,.\------WNl,111 ~'I ~f:IF' ,.u m tJ "I~ 4l'o U """" I • )t ~ jl 11•-~.
·-•• ~ ·.It.I IOJ .. "'" ill•" It "'.;I l"'::i:"' ...... x :n-;: 11'. l .. --1'. .... • .. w ..... 1s1~pt
flift.I ~tll '-"' Cltse Uf. Tri 11.,t •t 1 l':W \o 311 -, 0~ I 1 't II Jflo 2•\.o 1• • IWr l Mltll .._ .... CitJI Olt ... ,,',','"co ',", Tl _, 1 i;z tt 1't \ U lU "'"' 31'" ll' -•1 Wt.
Tri Sot 1 7111 !S tt tt ,. ...... 1,Ul .... , ll lll '"" o u -~ " -TT-Trl1"'11ln to 2$ *"\ '' 11 :=.\U lil6iii. I ~' ll o n. '''• '•wicM~ c 11 n n 1o>'11•1 11'•-'•>Vll("" OQoi
1 si•, ~I ~1'1 Trl•n" ,ISll ll"' ll'' 13'. ... 1,U '"'' :!Cd 1• n•. ZI•,.' ·~w.e11at t~ .? "",,·,·. "'"w." ·~~·_,,Wll•TC It!( J do ,,._ 171. 11"1. f foo.I(•"• 1 J.4 '•!<I r ~ U ~ t llt u V... ll "''-r UwaclU l:l't<I ., ,,_ 12~ II'• 111.. flW '"'" I u 3Aoo •It U'--·~ \" '"' 11• )61,. 30\t XI'• l'ltl4•ff~ \ 1n 1' I ~. U • •11Wll(r1" "
,, 17 1,. 11 + 4 fl"t'J"' ·~~ '' ,.,, 1' n Jb ~1 ,. "" ,. ., -"Wtl~H 12'1• I• '-Jll •S-:• ·~ ·-''l\''llllt l.le•O' •• 10'1" 20,.~ Jl)l;;-'-' TltW ... f,N l ti 15 tS .., 11 "'"" t• ?•' 111, ''''" 17•.._ '• Wt lt 1 u1 .o u f>to 11•• •\1,_ '• Vl~•t1t~r C•
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THE IEST
•eadonhle p o II • i;irovo
"'PM.nuts" ~ =SC Ille v:orld't ~ \llr t6mlc
•trim. RM di! in tM\ DJ.!LY P!lhr.
•
• .................................... ...,,
\ OCC's Tevye lletunas LEGAL NOTICE
• TONIGHT'S
TV IDGHLIGHTS
CLO Stages Fine 'Fiddler'
'ICTITIOVS IUIUllll
NAllll ITl,TIMINT '"'" iouo.... ..,_ .,. •1n11
Ml1111tu •" J .. .l C,.fE•,.llllES, IUU M•rt~1
"'""' 0.h>t. L.11 IYtmlt-. t 1l1Mt11 • •om
Jem.s f.d•••d o·~. 11sn M1•1'11
AM Drive. Loa Allll'llto&, Ct . t0110
CBS e 7:30 -Election Coverage. Continuou• !
CD1'tra.ge of the important California primary is of·
fered: tonight -on the presidential race and some ~
hotly contested ballot propositions.
ABC D 8:30 -·'The ~lound of the Basker.,.iJlc!."
A new version or Sir Arthur Conan Doyl e's classic
stirring Stewart Granger. \Vi!liam Shatner and
SaJly Ann Howes.
NBC D 11 :30 -''Jo'ate is rhe llunter." Glenn l:.
Ford and Nan cy Kwan star in this 1964 dram;;i.
KTLA D 11 :30 -"Virgin Isl and." This 1958 ad-it
venture story fea tures John Cassavetes and Si dney
Poitier. i'
KTI'V ID 12:00 -"The Little Minister." Kath·
arine Hepburn as she was nearly 40 years ago in
this old time romantic comedy with John Beat .. ~
1 ......... ,.., ....... ..., ,,; "' ..,._...,......,..."'t!:" ...... ,.... LJ
'"'
Tuesday
Evening
JU N[ I
D CALIFORNIA PRIMARY * News!Eltctton Cover1ce 1tart1 at 5 PM.
uee CIJ llD Iii•• .. ........ ,...,
G (J) ww Will w .. t ..... -·--(IJJZ-1
1 ........... lld1• ··-1-·· ,, ....... ctl -... ...
m Mn Crit11• ... "Coupl~ ..
Gr.IHts: Ntncy Sinatra ind Hu1h
L1mt>erl; ,atty Duk• 1nd John AJ11n:
llckit and H1zel Vunon.
9 Ctunlry "•u
1:00 1J AIOT a.cu.. Cn1r111 Jerry
Dunpll1 1rMI ntwsmtn continue w1rh
1t1t1wid1 11\11 1w l 1esults.
(t) 11-.li Fht.0 (R) Sttvt pupuu
to COPI wi1tl 1 c::on~1d'1 tlctpt trom
prison and hi! sinpected lit·Up wnh
1 nold-limt mobster
IE) l 1 CrltOt Iii• CNd1 a fllt Yll'1ini1•
Ql)llMlt
t:JO ., S.cer.4 lit-
" Cll .... (lj) Sptdtl el tilt WMk "To11ther,
A Chuck M1 n1ione Conct rf'
GI Awntm &J bcln1 fftfl H1Jlyw9od ,,,.
ENTERTAINMENT
Jlllouty /-/all
P erfor11i8
On Speci(ll
By CY\1-f lllA 1.0\\'Rl'
Nt-:\V YOBK IAPl -"Thi"
~ton\~' Hall S111ok1n '-Stokin'
F'1rr Br1g:idt'," an hour·long
special on ARC ~11111tlr1 ·" night ,
ma y not h111·e 111;1dc television
histurv but 11 11 ;1 ~ «rrl.11nl11
onf" ,)f lbr· bu~lr.~I show.~ o0
record
It at least dernonstrated lh<-11
frfoiity Hall isn't just a fel10111
11·ho tun1s up every d11y Qn
AB C's "Lei's fo.11Jk e a 1}(>;1J"
with his pockets fu!I of n1oney
lo g11·e to garnc .sho111 t:OU·
lestanl.5
There is a r-.1onr v !!all 111ho
can sing, folk danCe -r.1ex·
1can aod J11panes<' -and
111hi.~t!e. And a ~lonty Hall who
enjO,V.!I dres.sin~ up in curious
costumes every bit as 1nuch as
the hope!uls seeking to attract
attention in the audience of his
game show.
The hour opened with a
parade of fire engines. and
with all the noise and ex-
citement or .fl four-al arin
blaze . Then it cut to a
facsimile of a fll ex i ea n ·
American fiesta. coniplete
1<i·ith Lacos and ocra.siona! oles
and f'Ven a sluHed bull. wh ich
~a11e llall a chance to dress up 1:30 D MNt: (Cl (ID) '1'111n1 ltehel 10:00 Cl C.1Hml1 Pri111 ry Li~• CoYtr111 like 11 matador and stamp
trf La Ml.a." Concl (drt) '69 -from tlectlotl c1nlr11 •t KNSC. around in 11 little dan~ wi!h
llotlt l llCfltlt. Gin1 ltllobrl11dt, 0 m Nns the natives in their colorful
JtM Furtr, Ltuft .Jou11hn. 0 (J) Cl) aJ llectiot1 72 Ctlilor-costumes
(() cas· ... W•lflf Cron•it• nia, l'lew Jtr"' and th,., MtXICI 1;-... • -------------.-.-.-.--.· 9 ...., Ult!• ltlew primary reports I
II,.... f17tl1 N• (J) ~ C-1111 H1told l'ittn l!:~ I{
(IJJ Y-c-•fil•fo .... 111•1 ..... , w;i,,. """ '"' hom 1·, J I 0101
fbM "91111 "rr1n• G11lo" [I Cortez. ----• •
llTl"NAfl Q l illy Cr1b11 Cr11&aff lllEWH>ltT 1£ACH • Olt.3 8350
8 lnH Acttt 0 OtctiM 7Z News Di rte tor Ct rt
119 ..... C.. btt CMdt1tl SisskiM t l!d nt¥nm1n John l!ltttly
ID~ 11-SM host this loefil t lt ction cover111.
• ~lll1n,. fJllot Mlntt m Sd1ri ti Adwtalurt
(jj)Sptdll ,, th• Wiil (R) '10· I
7:••(J) D m ..... , 11lh11, A Chuck Manciont Concert~ e lllt .. a.cl m Wi•p ti Mftntur•
(]) Tndh '1 Ctlnt-11tnc11 6:) F11t!Yll Mtiklnt
~ = .. , 1Jn1r m ll l.,W• lilt l1!1tntt
1Dl lt¥1 l111q lO:lODS.111 P11t111•'• falk·lart
• Mlell 0.'1"'1 0 (J) !1) 18 M1mi1 Wtlby, M.D. IJD ,.,..,.. .... ,, "Echo From Another World" (R) Tht
E ._ ..... rll 111 ff C..11in1
BIN, .. ,
7:JI G blCtllll C...1,. Continll(IU$
CO'fW'ICI It th• C.lifomi1 ,ilmtl'J,
Ml of thl Most lmport1nt 1lldions
In tfll ..,.,...lllltl raai •• wtH I S
e111 ...,... llllly contnttd bl!Jol -
lif1 of°"' of Dr. Welby's p1litnls is
•rnhnttrtd by tht wron1 dit1nosit
by 1 youn1 n1111olo113t.
Cl 1111 CotbJ Shew
&I LI Sata11icl
m c.11 " Ult ""' a llllril: "M11a1n h sirt "
m CMdndl c.ii,.b11
HELD OVER
EXCLUSIVE
Charlton Heston
Yvet te Mimieux
By C.EO RGE l.t:llJAI.
01 !hi fhllf "U1I 1!1!1
Any Orangl' Coast
"Fiddler''·pl11les 1\ho rrussed
c;ary Gordon·s Tevye la$! year
al Orange C'oa~t College c;in
catch up witl1 his truly f1nr 111-
terpret:ition of the pre-revo!u-
11011 n.u351 an .lt'I\ who makE:s
up :-.crir.\tJre. t/l1!i ha~hecll11 ron-
vrrses 1~11h Cod :ind _\JC!ds tn
!he 11l11tls of i·h;111ge 1ha1
::.11 (-('f.1 Al!rlte1 ii.a
·rtie Lo nl: Ul«:1 !1 L'111c Light
(lJ)(•r .i uni ~·il•'d its pro-
duc1 1un uf ··~ 1ddter 1111 the
f{l)()f'' la st Friday n1i:ht IH
Jordan 111,g h Sehool
Auditorium. 6500 1\ l t <1 11 t ! c
UJv d . Long Uc;,ie/1
It star~ rea llv star>., r;arv
<;ordo11 and Bcl!r Elli~. as
Tev~e ·s wife \\'1'h11ut a dou hl
thrs(' t~11 eo11tr 1hule the rno sl
11u!Sl.'lnd1ng il{'tu1;:: ond Vtical
honors th1:1t. rnrn br heapt'd
upon a gener<JIJV lir:-1 rate
1·on1rn11n1rv 1hrat1·r n1 u .. 11·;1!1·
A profe.'\.~ionall1 :-ot111d111)..\
or<:he$ll'a 111 the O\'erlurgc· p1l
is certainly not the least of thr.
SUf'Ct'SSflll elen1e11ls Of ltlJS
"Fiddlt>r." ~lus1c direi.:tor Jan
Jt1!sc/1el <le1n<1nds and get" a
sense <1f ensemble fron1 the
rnusician.~ 1n the pit a n d
unst:ige .seldoni ~f'C'n in coni·
mu111ly producl1ons. The
<:rchrstra deser1 c~ parlicular
tredil !or 1l.~ 11h\·11ys perfect
'Fair Ludy' •
·Aullitioni1ig
Auditions will he hr l d
tonight aod \\lednesday for the
Santa Ana C-Ollegc sun1n1cr
production of .. ~1y F a 1 r
Lady"
Tryouts are .scheduled for ~
and 7 p.rn. both days al !he
college's Phdlips Hall. Corn-
munity p<.'rforn1ers 111ill be
auditioned as \1•e!I as t<Jllege
.students.
The reno1\•11ed Lerner.Loewe
musical will be presented July
26-30 at the rollcge. with an
t1 ftcrnoon 1natinee carded for
July 29 . -------
NOW THRU
TUESDAY
"KLUTE "
,hu
"SUMMER OF '42't
IOTH COLOR
IOTH llll
II CALIFORNIA PRIMARY * ELECTION COVERAGE
D Cllf .. """"" live COVlrlfl
from tltdlcNI Ctftlltl ti KNBC.
11:000 ht., kJIM /'~~~~~-~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:11 Cllll§-
0 MMe: "Clla11 e Croth4 Shai-
tw" (mys) '53--R1th11d Todd, Mn1
1!11•!!!1". 9 ""'1: (C) (2tlr) .. Atdlll1nl~
(itrt) '" -Dirk Bo1trdt, Sttnle~
laker. m frvth '' Co!!nque"'"
ID O.fld frost Show
Q]J C..llf. £11Ctien1
IDIDNIWI
0 {)) (j) m Tht MM S~IUI'
"Oetlh of 1 Nobody" (II) A wom1n
Is kHltd by 1 ~rt-run driver ind Pttt
Is surt Ill w1s the t1r1tt. W H11cbl'lo' IR)
0 MHllH $Merit: (Cl (ltlr) '1111d (dra).'&4--Glrnn rord, t1tnc1 Kwan. NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES (fl I ltftt11 ti J.1nnir 11 :JO r:J Mtvlt: "F•I• h the Hunt1r" 11
tf ••" (•<Iv) '57~11r~ Gt blt, 0 la Mldt l lltloni '-...,.--------------------.
Yl'Ollnt DtCarlo. Sidney Poitier. l1J Marshtl Dllloll
91 111t1eu11..,,1pllic "Min C:ood·
1H 111111 !.fit Wiid Ch imp1tU11f' 0 CIJ Ql ,.._, m ""911'e .,... ([) Vtdion t.Y•rtl•
aJJ ft1 flftJh SI&• @) "' .. tf HM l1m1
fe 111.,,..: "9fJ 111 Fla••.. m T1 ftll t11t f111tll
IHI Cltl C.1111btfl 11:45 0 Mwil: (C) ''rif(l11 lsll""' (tdv)
~ c.n.ftrt c.r.1111 '53-Jolln C.ss1vttt:i., Sidney 'oi·
QI Mtwit: (ltlr) "lnilhtr a.1 •1'1111 • 1111, Virrini1 Miskell
'4ib(' (c.om) '40 -Eddie Albert, 12:00 f) Mtrit: "l'ritlust G'ltt11lt1"
Prrscill1 ltt11. (r.om) '43 -Rtlbe1'1 Cumm•111s,
1:00 ()) ...... N !flt ltivtr I B. K1n1
tunt5. m 1WMr·l11•ltw
ID Cllttnltt P'Ml1ry Dedie• c.~
tfQt Until 11 P'M.
9'll C... JwpU
Iii) lsttcitl Ctlllr•I
l:ll B (I) c.-. 72 CBS New~
ClOtltSl'll!dlfll Willer C"n'it• ~ith
n1UOflll lltctlon n1urn1.
Dam Pr\-.ry ltellln!S
O CIJCll Ol"""""'""'' ·C<l 1111 ..... _•" .........
..... (ll) (1111) '71 -Sltwt r! enn,., Willit111 Shat1111, s111y A.rift
tto.a, 1Dfl• Willlanu, 1!11n11hl for.
All in-new vtrllon al Sir Arttlu1
Cont11 Oo,11'1 dllaic till of • tam-
llJ'1 '-cHdtnls airstd tlltouth tllt
.. IL
Olivie de HaYlllal'HI.
(j) (I) m IMc-Ciyftt Jttk1 t llob·
11190n IJ,M!Stl. m llltrit: "llttlt Minlstt r" (rom)
'J4--K1thJ.rin1 Htpb urn. John Btll.
12:)00 DIU Ctn• Actress Ritt
worth '1 1 scheduled t uts!.
m eou"'"' 11111K
l:OG ([)(JI Ne"'
l:JO f) MHI: .. ftltrtu ti the Dt1d"
(dr1) '55 -Jofl11 Htckelt, Conr1lll
'•lth1m.
Cil D"'.,
!:DOD-
O) Al-MPf lrMir. "Clrll ti ..
1'llilll1., .. (t) "nit "'"""' .. "(> ....... _,...
l:JS 8"""
'
Weekda'f1. ~ 6 :00·8 :15·10:ZS
Sar. ·Sun. • Hollday1 -
1 :l0·l:45·6 :00·1 :15· I O:ZO it.m.
''TM! nu·s FIRST RUllY UTISfllMS. 118 COMMERCIAL
AllllCU flllll. Oii Of TIE MOST IRUTAL AND IOllll
CNllOllCLIS Of AlllHICU lift HER DUllllD WITNll
TM! LIMITS DF POPUlAR IMTIRTAllM!IT:'
-Vincent C1nby, New York Times
"'THI iOOFITHIR ' 11 l IP!CTACULAR MOY!!, DIE Of THI
FllUT RAMUT!R lllDYIH lflll MADEi "
l llt. NBC-TV
•
"'IDOll• OH THf 11100'"
t. mu1kt1 II~ 101111t1 5te•11 . .J orry Bock
•"<I Jn11°"" H••"!r~ eor•tl"<I "" G•'• D1...i1. <hDrot0•••!>hJ bf lll lcJ>.,d lftCINIJ.~1. m"l"'t l <llr"(t.oo b> J•<1
lll!ocnt1, Pf« .. nt..:i IW 111~ Lono &ea<n
(,.,, l•Olll OP.•• F•l<I~•> ~<I
So•u•O••• .i a lo:! •llO ~VM .. •• .. 1 7 JO '"'Oli';I" JVl\f ~S ~I Jord•n H•~ll :.Ct>OOI
~,,c1,1or 1vrn A11f11llt •I A•lt ll•, lon1 lltat,. "•1••• ~"' ••111 'n·mi , .....
r.o'""
T • ·•1 .. ,.,,,
( ~ .... "•n t I' '•I
P••CI•·~
Lnrn ~G·'
Mo•d<"I r ,.,,. 8
Jf•Ob•
''tnC!•I
fl'ff' CAST
G"'' Gorocn Bell• Elh~
JC~,.,.~ ""I o.~n• ~.'11m!ft
C •••'• V11 ••• l •iv1 • 1 ..... .,
G•t nn B•.,'lllt•
Oorttn l(oll•
J ... l<.&•t
ll~rn•ra ~1r11c11 c.,,,. e .. ,,. . .,,,
Ro lan c..;,.1~~
J°' Fl•:tr'"
Gr•"<lm• ,,. !II C1rcnyn l•ylcr
P .. u11n• Fci•<
Dow L•nc t f "'"'" ~-· -~ Co11U•Dlc
;1ccon1p<1n1mrnt and
batanl'e of :-nund that
r i n e
never
cOVl'r s uµ lhr s111gl.'r~ onstagc.
J::l1ua!ly f1r~I r:i te <1re the
1n~nber" of 1he r·horus whose
acting {'hores a:-:is.signed by
d1ret'lor tiary U:1vis are abl .v
and l}QJicr:ibly cl c 1 i \i e r c d
arnid s 1 a perfectl y
r11r-plcasing. cl 1st 1 n c ! I y
articulated choral sound.
l'he execu tion of Richard
Tarstynski's choreogrnphy
also ranks this "Fiddler·•
a1nong the greats of loc<d
rnusical t h e a t e r 11·ith
particularl.v r1n(' performances
of the diffieult bottle dance
aud the Russian 's Cossack
athletici~rn.
Only the rnerely acceptable
costu111e'\. the skimpy. lost·
upstage i;ets -imaginative.
Ann LM O'Dowf. 11112 M•rth1 Aflfl
Oft ..... L•·A1""11M, C•. tono backsta"e goings on and the rharacter11.atl<1n are I he 1n1. 11.11r1W u 11 con11W1.ci ~' ... 11n111·
eo c:w-•IM t 11CKl•tltll """" frl•" 1 1,11ure of the se1s to provide a prrformance:s vffered by "",..,'"'1•.
I d ~1111o.<1· An11 Lis O'Do•d background or ~1 ngers stage Diana Monter as Hodel, Joan-tnl• "•t•m•nl w•• 11i.. ,..11~ 1.,. ce~"·
51) f+"tl in front of tlwn1. Fr(1m na Hall as 'fzeiteL Coiette \~,1~11rk or O•-'"""'' ... Mtv u.
my seat. and those of probably ncl h f ut oc
another 1,000, the most fre· \Va!ker 811 Chava a eac .0 1to1111T •· tUNN.-TT. Alh'. I h e daughters' resJ)C'cUve ui1 c1•1., .. 11 Av._ quenl backdrop) were the lo\•ers. Darren Ktlly a 5 s...1~ •111. c1. ttut
S!de\\'a lls or the h~use. Perchik , (;!enn Bradley a:; '°ubtl1n!d Or•"9• Co.11 Ct llp ·~r1~~~
0 I her minor, but Motel and Cary Bruson as'M•t ••· lJ, '••llO J ...... '-1'11 1?N.11
nevertheless crui.:ial. d1sap· Fi'edka. · t t 11 LEGAL NOTIC~ fl o 1 n 111 en s "'ere ie Al! harnessed vouth and fi11e1 -------------scr{'eching chut~pah Yentl' .so!o voices tO p r<1 duct ~1cH T1ous 1u11MRl1
characterization by ·r z J v 1 a bclJe\·able readings or !he 1 ~. 10110:f .. ~"~1~::~:4~~. '"'1111•11 Tuf'retl ilnd the ob\'IOUS need '" crucial characters. • , , ,, f'·t n1ore technical rehearst1ls The Lo•'i "·ach CLO's ,,. ,,1 H E so1.is JAN1ro1t1AL, lt!J V L>'C Wtll•C! Coil• f.~t11t. t 1111
to shorlen the lirne lag for the tended eng•gement of "fid· Jonn T. Le11 Jr., 1tu w111 1c•, ce111
I t h Mtu . (t ill requen scene c anges. dler" "'i ll continue for three Tn11 1>1111r>t" 11 H int u1M11CtH ~Y 111 ~l1ss 1·urrett. whose Yidd ish nd lndlv111u11
bl Id k more "·eekends, F'riday a Joton T, L••t J<. accent oslensi y l'i'OU ma e Saturday evenings and Sunday ln•• 11•r•rn1111 1,i.<i wun lh~ c.., .. ,v
her perfect for the meddling I I U J d Cler~ or Or1n91 Cou"•Y on M•v 11, 1t11,
h k I I .1 . h a ternoon.s. a 1e or an By B•v•rlv J Mic1c1o~. Dl•u1y coun1, 1natc ma er roe. a~ s in I .e auditorium. c1.,~.
l.ong Beach production Th1s ____ ---------,,n•• P'11t>ll1htd Oran9e Cot1I Di lly ,.llor. ~•1 16. n. lO •na .Jvne •· lt71 12U ·IJ
LEGAL NOTICE
Yente calls up a distressing to
he:ir falsetto voice in order to
project across the acres of
aprun 1rl the Jord:-in theater 11-----------i\·tore than ninking up for
1his \l'eek supporting
Takes ~la«c " llOLLY\VOOD 1 L1PI I
Joseph Campanella signed
with the Pacific Repertory
Company to star in a sununer
~tock presentation of ''!\-Ian of
La fltancha" from June 22-Ju-
l.v 5 in Billings and Butt~.
i\1ont.
; \ I I l I
............ ·······. . • ti•<.,. ••1rO I I l •Lot • •
•O ' CD~I• ....... 1 •1~ D••ID ••• 14' 1191 • HU .. "N .... I ..............
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMINf
WOODY AltEN IN
P11•mount Pk1vre1 pretente
HOTICI TO ClllEDfTOlll
N1. /l. IUll
!up1rlor Ceur! O'I lht !!111 el O.lllorni•
lor 1nr Ceunt~ OI Or1n<1~.
Eirai. of FRED MADISON. Dt<;et1H1.
'jofltr •I hor•bY glv•n lo cr1dl!Of1 or
I~• tbgvr n•m..:I dKtdtnl lh•I ejl
per1on1 h•vln1 <f1lm1 •;•i111! lht 11rc1
drcldlnt .,, •t<tYlr..ci re Ill• tlllt<'l'I, wtlh !ht ne<101••Y vouc~lfl, 111 1111 olllct 1r
ll>t Clt•lc <l'I lhe t bavt tnll!led coyrf, er
to Prt~11! l~rn wl!n 11\e nt,en ory
v<>11chtr1 IO !111 undt1'!t ntd 11 frl• ollit•
el F. LAWRENCE PLOTl<.IN, u~.
PIOf't tr Blvd .. Nor,..tllr:. Ct lll., WllltP, I\
!he 1>lect cl tiu1lntu e! !II• 111><1tril'"""' I~
•II rn1tte11 ptrl1J,.fn1 10 I~• •111!• ol tlld
<l«ffl•nT, wl!nln lour mc111n1 t !ttr IMt
11 .. 1 PUblitl!lon of '"ii notl«. D•!eG M1y 18, 1'11.
C1rcl lore111 J1~nc1
•"" Don11a J""" l.'-011011 EXKUIOl'S ol Ille Woll
ol •~Id Olttd•lll
F. lAWllfHCI!: "LOTl(IH 140J4 "lo11"r !Iv~.
MDf'Wtflr:, Ct lll. Alltr,..y ltr EJll(Ult•I
but poorly executed -and !he '•~
t1ne1 en lighting mar t he
otherwise per~1ct production.
.. i'
I .. 11 ~118011 SHOPP!Po L. Cf .. ![~
EDWARDS
HARBOR ,;,;;.1
""·»D'r
P'ubll'lh..ci 0••119• Co111 Dt ilY l'<lm,
M•y lJ, l), l oci Ju11e •· lJ, lt 11 1334-7'1
LEGAL NOTICE 'l'he unusu"J £ea ting ar·
range1nents 10 lhe huge
.lo rdan auditoriun1 no doubt
have con1rihuted greatly to
!his critic's rating of the
l.echnic:1I aspects of the sh ow.
Anyone seated lo the righ t or
left of thf' center 40.or so seats
\\Ould certainly be distressed
by thr frequent glimpses of
-1
oho playing
"FURY ON
WHEELS"
roted P<i
Showthnt 7:00 p.m.
S1111day Mcrti""'
Sta1tl1M1 2:00 P·"'·
H••M• II Adtm1 -(011• Mn•
54'-l lOl
Mond•Y · Fr>c11y
1 00 pm
S~!urd1p 9 00 Otn ~11nd~y
l OOpm,J001>m I OQpll'l,JOQpm
).00 gm, J:OO gm ) 00 pm, 1 00 pm
~.OOgm.JJ ·OO pm 9:00pm
ENDS TONIGHT
Clint Eastwood
"DIRTY HARRY"
al•o
James Garner
"SKIN GAME"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
LEE <a
MAaVl:N
-111o:NTE
W.&LSB ..
als.o
Samantha Egg•r
"THE DEAD
ARE ALIVE"
Bargain Matinee
Wednesday, 1 p.m.
Free Refreshments
ADULTS $1.00 ~I
E1cl111lv1 Oran,. C1uMy
- - -.Ii'> SIAD/UM I . .. -. ....... _. -
---·ll'•
111 ... rvl!I Sttl lfl'lt'e•1N11t
Nlmlnaltd Mor I Acffemy Aw1r~1,
"'IDDLl!lll ON THI ltOO'"
"SILINT ltUHNINO" • ''.ANOROMIDA STllAIN"
"KC.UT&"
WffllUNlll• j, 'OlDlll WIST · •n ·llll
~J~!ODl , l;OOI!! • S•• OUGO fs d
\ ,.., , Rrd::ravc · 1.1."d•Jack~on
Mar11.
Qurrn of Scots .. ""' ... """' .,,.
Plu< • S.dn~y Po"'"' I~
NIUC• AND THI 'llACHll"
"MAIY, CIUflN D' SCOTS" & "ANMI
O' lM I HIOO DA Yi" Alu 11
ID'#AIDS CINIMA YlllO
MISSION YIUO • I JO-'''°
:tHlllT
"ANDltOMIDA STRAIN"
LEGAL "OTICE
LEGAL ~OTICE
l'ICTITIOU\ I UllN•ll
NAM!' STATRMliHT
lhe "3U~wl"~ "''"'" It del"' bu1!111,, ••;
LEGAL NOTICE
IAlll .nu
I U,.flUO• COUllT 0,. TH•
STATI 01' C/l.ll•DllNtA llOll
THI: COUNTY Dll D•ANCll
HI. A-7>141
MOTi(! O• HRAllllNO ON "t:TITION
"0" ,.lllOIATW 0, Will 1,NO ,Ol
LRTT fRl TfSTAMIMTl.aY
Etl•l1 of Fltl!'D Wfll 1/l.M STl!'IHKR,
t 1'0 lrno,..11 11 Fll.lO W, 5Tl!!INllCI,
Dlc:•••ld. NOllCE IS HEllEIY GIYE H 11111
l!!LSll SMITH h11 fl lld htrt ln • pt11tltn
for Probtlt of Wiii •nd lor l11u1"t• ti
l etter• le•t1ment1ry lo p1t111or11r, r11fr1nct to wllkll 11 mtde ,., furflltr
p1rtlcuf1rt. 1nd th •! 1~1 llm1 •lid iei!Kt
ol l\terl"• !~t 11m1 l1t1 1111.,, ''' rflf' Ju111 'JO. 1t12, 11 t~JO 1.m .. In 11!1 c1111rtr-n 1r
Oeii1rtmt11• No. 3 of ••!Cl ceurt, t t '1IO STADIUM 't ' .. -·-....... ·~::'.'-
• "SUMMElll 0, '42" '"===:::=:==="':.=====!!Clvle Ctftter Drlv1 W11I, 111 !ht Clfy ef r S.,,,,. An1. Ct llklrn!t.
EDWARDS CINEMAS 0''" ~i'L(1!·~,~~-SI JOHN, ---~· S1ADIUM '3 .. -· .. ·~-----,, SIAD/UM ! .. -.... -
''THR UST "ICTUltl SltOW" • "TH& ANDl!llllON TA,.SS"
"SOMfTIM&S A OlllAT ltOTION" ...
"1"LAY MISTY '01 Ml"
HAOIO~ ·"'"°""'~ INCOSTAMESA
546-1102
·~ •
You need not •
know Spanish to enjoy •••
TROPICAL. • veraonz
A 11-ta wllh Nolle C.rlbbMn rhythm•
ind th9 lolklor• o' rOnMnllo VlflO(UZ ' JUNI!-7 thru JULY 22
Wed • Thurs • Fri • Sat. ... 8:30 pm
Wed •Sat• Sun Malinees. 2:3'0 pm
Admission .•.......•..... $2.65
Padua Hiiis Theatre Mtrlc•n & Am1rlr;1n Lunc:htofl & Din·
n•r Jn lh• P1du• Dining Room btfort
rhe 1how •.. ...,.,,i;~• (1141 t.Zf.f2U I lltlll NOlllfl 0' C4111.llf0 .. t" OJt •.AOll/l. JIYINUC , '
C011111Y Cle•ll. lllOl•lllTSOtt, NOWSllll A .... RU.NO
Q4I CIMMll 0rt¥1 N--1 lefflll, Ctll"""'4 t1U'
Tt41 11141 Ml-Mii
,.,,..,...,_ ftt1 htlli.-
PvllUll\tlf Orlnte Cot1t 011J~ l'lkll. Jl/fll ,, ,, ft. 1'12 1ASW't
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTtC• 0' "'ILIC
IALI °" COLLATllUL '''"""''' c~., Ctde SMf*I "'4 (Ill
NOT ICE IS HEllEIY QIYl!N ti.t 1
M lle 11Je "' c:ofllttr•I wlN " hl ld Ill llw ltlll city of Jlolfll. 1'72. II lfll llout II ll o'clKt 1,.M .. ti S1'f Llrlc1!11 ,.,,.,_
(11~ ti C't'Pr,tt, tol&)O, C1llfw11MI, '1
J•Wll Nonl1. ~ttd ''rty lllldtf' tfr1 lllVnvll'lt to 1'1111 clrttln 1K1.1rlty .,~
""1'11 '"'* on 1111 l"l••t 11v et Julv. 1tn, irl¥ J9f'f'Y $1tl>'hl eM Mtnny Oltlthfr.
TM coU•ltr~ .......... HKrlaM
'" ,... l'lflcl ...,lttrf\lflt, turnttvr11,
llookt. ,_,.. -1111\t H!t'!'•· ... rHPOlld~t. l11Cttnt1 I•• r•lllr ...
tllfllllont 11vm&.rt, lillM en ....,._"'•
tov<IN!ftt not le ~!1, COl'twt.r l'rl'!
t r1"'9 9N tDlf Wiii "'lllPllne l!J ttif fll>Glr:.1tMpjn1 I. inc""' Ti a llrldld
1oc11..ci 11 sttt Llnct1n Awn.tt, Cv0fft6, C1Ulol'nl1 tof.)O,
Dtltd: lhl 4tY el Mty, 1972.
JatOPI Nonie
(SICWM ,lf!YI
WILLll,M t, JCULLT. Ir.,"""·
0' HILL. Jll,llllllt a IU•ltlLL
.............. JHlll flt9!tl1
• 1•111 111-.. ltrlltl, Miii ,.lloW
lt1 ·~ce-..-1 ,..,,
l'Ublllflt1f °''"" co.11 01l1Y """" J11nt t. 1'11 l (JWJ
7
I
I !
I
I
7
.. . ..
•
Lagu;na Beaeh Today's F ina)
N.Y. Stoelul
VOL 65, NO. 158, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE CO UNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1972 TEN CENTS
Two Historic Homes Get T emporary 'Pardon'
A construction freeze request and a
pica to stay demolition of two historic
oceanfront ho1nes wa8 sought Mooday by
a concerned Laguna Beach Planning
Commission.
Commissioners sent their construction
moratorium rerornmendation to the City
Council , hoping to ha>'e it placed on
\Vednesday agenda as "rxtraoatinary''
business. .
An official letter from the commission
reques ting that the property owner,
Upland Industries, a subsidiary of Union
RESIGNS SCH OL POST
Tru1tff 01~lberg
Dahlber g ~uits
Capo T rustees-
'lnef f ective'
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of flHo D•ll)' .. llol SIMf
ln an unusually candid st&tement fvlon·
day Robert Dahlbe rg resigned as a
trustee or the. Capistrano Unified Sdx>ol
Distrlct and blasted its administratio! as
''medlocre and ineffective."
It was the third resignation of a trustee
lhi.!1 spring.
The Dana Point area representative,
who disclosed that he has moved to San
Juan Ca pistrano, said he "cannot be ef-
fective with the kind of adrni nislrative
leadership that is currently guiding the
school district.
"Nor can J continue to be part of the
purp:iseful lack of effective com-
munications that is obvious between the
staff and board, staff and teachers, staff
and community and even amolli start
members themselves," he said.
Dahlberg, who was elected a little over
year ago, said he thought a board s8t
(See DA11LBERG, Page Ii
•
Lag u1ia Girl
Fle es Assault
A ~year-old Laguna Beach
woman was the victim of an ap-
parent assault attempt while hitch.
hilting on Laguna CJnyon Road
Monday afternoon, polfce report.
Ofrlcers said the Wotnan esc1ped
w1th minor scratches 'and bruises
when a· man who ·cave her a ride
mauled her, but llnaUy lit ber oot
of his car when she threatened to
jump from the movlng vehicle.
Silo told police ah< was tryln( to
get to Santa Ana when tbe driver, a
man about 30·yoars old,l]llcUcl lier
up near the I_..., of LllllJD&
Canyon Road and El Toro llood
ahortly before 4 p.m. Re Im·
mediately made ldfances and
br\ll>ed her ...... lhe rallled, tho
wOman aald.
Pacific. temporarily wai\·e rights of
demol.it ioo was signed today.
The actions came after a presentation
by 1-lacry P. Jeffrey, president of the
Laguna Beach Historical Society, and
legal opinions by Tully Seymour, city at-
torney.
Seymou r told commissk>ners that they
could halt construction ol new structures
on the property but could not prohibit ·
demolition of existing st11J<'tures.
If they did. the city could be liable for
any alleged damages caused by delays ln
clearing the land. •
• es1a
College Unit
E11dor ses
TaX Hike
A tentative budget containing a 32-cent
tax increase was approved ~londay night
by trustees or the Saddleb.ack Community
College District.
Trustees look the vote al the end or a
five-hour meeting and indicated they
·would discuss the dOcument in detail al a
.special meeting June 19 at 8 p.m.
Hall of the 32-<:ent tai incnase would
go towards the di strict's .share in paying
rOr oon.rtruction ot a scienct--mathematics
building.
A number cf other permissive taxe5
which make up the total tax rate were in-
creased in the areas of ccummunity
service, old age security and disability in·
surance, health benefits, interdi.strict
agreements and leases and retirement
programs.
If the budget is not pared down over
the next few weeks, the new tax rate
may be set a 74.16 cent.I per $!00 assess.
ed valuation. The current rate -the
lowest in the state -is 4J .74 cents per
$100 assessed valuation.
A rate increase of 32 cents would mean
a person owning a $40,CXX> home would be
paying $74 next year to support the col-
lege. Tha t homeowner is now paying $41
in taxes to the di.strict.
Prior to the meeting, college official s
indicated the tentative budget included
only a 16-cent tax increase £or the science
mathematics complex construction and
did not hint that other permissive rates
wou ld be rising as well.
The entire cost of the science math
center is estimated to be $4.5 mill ion,
with half of the cost provided from state
junior college construcion bond money,
The remaining $2.2 miilion must be
raised locally .
The board agreed in December to fund
the building with a tax increase over a
two-year period, meaning taxpayers will
feel the pinch of the 16-eent levy dW"ing
the 1972·73 and 1973'74 fiscal years.
The budget, as It now stands, shows a
general fund of $8.9 million 11:nd a building
fund of $U million, bringing the total
document over the $1.5 million mark .
Hildred Gravelle
Services Today
Private family service• were held to-
day ln Pacific View Chapel in Corona del
Mar !or Hiidred Hunt Gra..,lle, I09 Cl~!
Drive, Laguna Beach. who died Satunlal
at Beverly Manor Convaltscent Rospita ,
Costa M"8. Silo wu 75.
Mrs. Gravelle la eurvlwd by her hlll-
band, Earl L. Gravelle; two tolll. Ted of
<;or0na dtl Mir IDd George o! Santa
Ana i and a slater, Etma Mar:tln of
Portland, Ore. '
A native o! Ore1on. lhe had llvocl In
CalilOrnla for 1.1 rtan: the put tight In
La...,. Beach.
Tho Rev. Hmnan J. Baerg, chaplain o!
the Orange Coont7 Med!cal C.nter, of-
f!claltd at toda7'1 itrvl<e, with blrfal at
Pacific View Memorial Park following .
Houses involved are the "Captain'!!
llou se," 563 S. Coast Highway and the
"ritoullon House," 583 S. C<»as t Highway.
J effrey, fill assistant professor of
History at Cal State Fullerton, told com·
missioners that no raiing of the 1881)s
vintage homes should take place until
other alternatives had been studied.
Residents of the houses have been told
to move and that demolition of the houses
C<1uld start as early as 30 days from 00\1·,
he said.
"\Ve're worried about the hasty demoli·
lion. These are important structures. \\'e
f'
I
jus t want to stop, look. and listen," Jef-
fre y said.
He noted that in recent conversallfln
with George Grahan1, an ad1n1n1strative
engineer with Upl and . no ilnmroiate
plans tor construction were proposed.
Demolition ol the properties "'as to be
undertaken to end the company's
mai ntenance problem "'ilh the old
houses. Graham said then.
Suggestk>ns at the comm ission he<1 rin;:.:
r.!lnged from moving the h<iuses to oth~r
locations in La~na Beach to preser\'ing
U1em where they stand as h1stor1cal
What Are They lflarking'l
museums.
"All our a!terntH1ves wi ll bt !O~l il the
houses are bulldolcd ." Jtffrey suid.
Harry Will ats. niotel O\l.'ller. urged !hat
the "who le thing '' needed revitw by the
cilr and that L'nion J':-H·lfir should Ile
assisted in evC'ry way 111 its dcvclopn1cnt
of the property.
·"\\'e have to he practical," \\'ill:ils
said. He rec;illed his re<:ent trip lo
lla\vaH and wh:i! he c:tl!cd tht> beautiful
development lhcrt'. noling that Laguna
had the potential !o be developed in such
a manner .
' I • • , DAILY l!'ILOT ..,._.. .-, Ltt Pil"tH
Voters throughout the state were in.-tbis ·stance to-
day, some whipping briskly thrOugh their ballots,
others a gonizing. This particular group was part of
t he tu~nout this morning at the Turtle Rock Ele·
!Tll'ntary School in Irvine. The Orange County Reg-
istrar of Voters has predicted a 67 percent turnOut
of county voters in today's primary. Polls are open
until 8 p.m.
Street Signal Ligh ts
R ejected by Plan ners
A taxpayer's penny saved is a tax·
payer's penny earned. or so thought
Laguna Beach planning rommissioners
Monday when they decided that signal
lights at GJenneyre and Thalia streets
GoUlberg Calls
Special Meet
A special closed meeting of the
Laguna Beach City Council has
been called by Mayor Richard
Goldberg for S:30 p.m, Wedn~1day
at city hall to discuss the i>Qsitions
of city clerk and city treuurer.
Represt.ntatlves of the State
Personnel Board orig inally were
scheduled to interview C I e r k
Dorothy Musfelt and Treasurer
Margaret Morreale On June 21.
Mrs. Muslelt said she and Mrs.
MQrreale wer,e ourpri,.d at the ad·
vanced special meeUng and did not
know why the mve was ~
dertaken.
'The mayor'I' announcement of
the special mecllng lndlcaltd
,.,,...,.n1auvt11 ~f the state board
would be pteatnl.
were not needed.
Funds for the signal would have rome
rrom a federal grant administered by the
state to provide highway improvements.
It had to be spent by June 30 or It
would be lost to the city and returned to
state cc!fers. '
The signal, comrnissloners decided aC'
tually would aeate a hazard at the crosg..
ing because it would increase vehicle
Bpeed through tho dipping zig.zag in-
tersection.
c:ommissloner Michael May said that
he peNJonally drove his car through the
intersection at the suggested speed and
that without road reconstruction to
eliminate the abrupt turns, a .signal
would cauae more 1ccideots than it would
prevent..
"Wllh two cars side-by-side at 25 to 30
mi lei per hour, It would be better than
lndianapoU1," he said.
Larry Booe, city manager, sugg.,ted
that It mRht be better to -get th< stgnal
now, perhapt prematurely, when the
funds were available than to wait and
root the ..tire bill (estimated at llLOllO)
alone when the signal was a necc.!.!!llly.
"! can, oee spending money or any
kind to create a haurd." May sald and
then movod de1i!al or the 1lgnal ploco-
ment. 'Ibe motM>n was a p p r o v e d
UDIUdmoualy,
Mother Rescues
Baby From Pool
Swift action by a Laguna Beach mot~r
saved her 1.year-0ld daughter from possi·
ble drowning Monday when the tot tumbl·
t:d into the family swimming pool , police
reported today.
Summoned to the home, 394 Weymouth
Place, shortly before t p.m., police and
firemen found Mrs. Mary Adams had
pulled her baby, Allison, from the water
after ft. had fallen into the pool while
pl aying nearby in a walker.
The toddler was choking and t'urning
blue, officer Larry Galat said, but quick~
ly regained her breath and color alter a
few sharp pats on the back.
"She iwallowed a lot of water, but she
recovered in a hurry," said the relieved
officer.
Bicycle Safety
Session Offered
A bicycle safety prorram will be
prewrted •t 7:iltl p.m. Wednesday by the
Laguna Beach Cycling Club at tho
Recreation . building, · t!I N. Coat
Highway. There is no admlulon chllrge.
A speaker from the Laguna Beach
Police Department will present pictures
of cycll.sts in town. The intent of the p~
gram ls to show ways of avoldine bicycl~
lrvt acc:ldents.
The Cycling Club, also will show sUdet
of the IntemAtlonal Competition held at
th< Encino Veladrome In May.
\\'i lia\.~ s:iicl that if the property were
devclopt·d 1n10 a 500-room rrsort hotel.
(hl' c11y could e1q.1ctel as n1uc:h as ~I
n1d\ion an nually in revenlle with an.l hfr
520 1n il!1on spent by touris ts 1n ~tores.
Condon1i 1uu m devt•lopmen t y,·Ou\d cost
the ell}' n1one}' fur sc:hool~ and other
puhlLc services, he said.
I-le said thal Union Pa<·if1c 11.•anted to do
wn1eth1ni.;: good (or Laguna Reach. lie
hacl !xof'n told by .. a L'n1on Pacific co;·
t'<'llli\'t " that !he ron1p any \VOUld
cooperate in mov ing the houses. \Villal'
~aid.
Deatl1 Toll
Feared High
111 Rl1oclesi a
From \\'Ire SfotvlC'e~
SALISBURY, Hhodesia -An un·
dcrR round explosion at the \\'ankie ('()Al
mine near Victoria Falls !rapped 468
n1 incrs today and the death tolJ \\'as
teared to be high.
Hospital sources re(Xlrted that so1ne
n1incrs 1nanaged to escape from one of
the several entrances to the No. 2 colllery
"'here the blast occurred at 1 a.m. PDT.
A spokesman at the Wankie r.tint
Jl ospital Said four mlntr1 hid been ad·
mitted with b:ljurtes. '1'1lej were four
surface workers Injured u 1 result of the
underground. e1p1os·1on. Th.e •Pokesman
oould not desclibe their injuries or say
how they were ca\lled.
He said all doctors tn the area alTf:ady
were at the ho!pltal and local blood
donors weTf: alerted.
A spokesman for 4le mine owner~.
Anglo-American Corp., said that there
\.\.'as "no further news" on the rate of the
miners -435 black Africans and 33
whites -working a full shift in the mine
when the blast occurred.
A spokesman for the Wank.le Colliery
Company also said jt had no reports on
deaths but mine sources said they beUev·
ed the toll would be high.
The world's worst mining di!aster oc..
curred in Manchuria in 1942, when 1,549
worker1 Wert killed in the Honkeiko
Colliery. The worst in the United St.ates
was on Dec. 6. 1907, when 361 died at
Monongah, W. Va.
Wankie is 350 miles west of Salisbury.
It Is Rhodesia '! major coal sL-pplier and
.adjoins the Wankle game Tf:servt: near
the Victoria Falls.
A Rhodesian Air Force plane new can-
isters of liqu id oxygen to the mine to
help in the rescue operations which began
in1 mediately after the blast.
A spokesm•n for t h e company in
Bulawayo, sptaklng to UPT In Brussels
by telephone. said he had no firm
casualty figures.
Orpge
Variable clouds are ln the pio-
ture through Wednetday along the
Orange Cout. with poealblllty of
showers bl the even~ hours.
'nlat moist, wann aii will con--
tlnue with hJghJ of 70 at the belch
rising to nur Ill Inland. The
weatherlady alto remJnds· coast
weather-watchen to be m. to
vote.
' INSmt: TOD.4 '\' • '
Latt rtporll haN·fllffftd 01'1 '
of the African ropvblic oJ Bu·
rundi rtvealtng the 1laU;ghUr of
150,000 'ln bfOOdv tribe! ld!Ungi.
S11 storw, Pog1 11.
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Be Sure to Vote Today; Polls Open Until 8 ~
• ' . ti•• -. • ..
J DAILY PllaT ___ LB
JJ BI Prob es
·" "'
• •
iguel Job ,
*' ~Others
"' • " By PATRICK BOYLE
Of tt1t 0.11-r rnoi t111t 4 'fhe FBI is invtstigating a possible con--
?..:tion between the Laguna f\'igutl bank ~;glary in March and similar burglarlts
·at e:lght more bank.s around U1e U.S.,
tlederal officials said this morning.
~ A federal grand jury in Los Ange-Jes
IJl:tc Monda y returned :-1n indictment
lJ:lf(ainst the ·!.Ole suspect in the Laguna
:,Niguel case. Charles Albert P..lulligan was
Jndicted on one count of bank burglary
i ollowlng a Stcret grand jury se.sslon in
avhich the FBI presented evidence
allegedly linking MuUigan wJth the theft
of some $2 million In cash, jewelry and
negotiable securities.
The nature of the evidence was not
divulged and Mulligan will be arraigned
Monday on the charge and a date set for
his trial.
Mulligan. an unemployed barber from
YoungstO'Nn, Ohio, with a long criminal
record 1V81 taken into custody by rn r
.agents Friday in Tustin after being
trailed there from Chicago.
Federal prosecutor Elgin Edwards,
assistant chief of the criminal division in
the U.S. Attcrney's office in Los Angeles.
said t«fay that Mulligan is helleved to be
a member of a gang that allegedly
perpetrated the series of bank burglaries-.
"He is pOssibly a member of a gang of
some six to 18 people running a highly
sophisticated operation," Edwards said.
"We think the La guna Nigue l bank lost
so mewhere between $2 million and $.1
million and it appears that about eight
other banks around the country have
previously been taken by the same
gang."
Edwards declined to comment on
where tho!e banks are located or whether
one of them is in Lordstown, Ohio, a
small community near Afulligan's home in
Youngstriwn. On May 4, the only bank in
Lordstown was burglarized by thieves
who cut throu gh the roof of t-he building,
entered the vault and took $430,000 in
cash.
Edwards also refused to comment on
whether or not any of the loot tak en in
the March 25-26 weekend burglary of the
United California Bank in Laguna Niguel
had been recovered.
Poets From SF
To Join Program
In Laguna Beach
Two poets from San Francisco \Vill join
the Laguna Free Poets in a program of
music and poetry readings from a p.m. to
midnight Saturday in the Laguna Beach
High School auditorium.
Visiting poet Andrei Codrescu was born
In 1946 in Romania. atLended school in
Paris and Rome and came to the U.S. io
1966. His first book was published in
Romania and he has published two books
of poetry in this country, along with a
volume of short stories and a novel to be
published by Harper & Row. His poem!
al!o have appeared in magazines on both
sides of the Atlantic.
Paul Mariah of San Francisco and local
poets Peter Carr and Robert Peters also
will be featured on the program. Music
will be performed by M i c h a e I
"Baldeagle" Dolen of San Francisco and
Mark Turnbull of Laguna Beach.
An original poetic production on the
subject of freeom, by the Laguna Beach
Free Poet.s and their accompanying:
musicians will be among !he evening'.s of·
ferings.
Tickets al $2 \1·i1l be available at th~
door and may be purchased in advance at
a number or Art Colony stores.
Thanks But No Thanks
COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo. (UPI\ -
/l.n an ony mous donor left 2.600 pounds of
sea shells in burlap bags at the Gocw:hvi!l
1ndustries headquarters, a Goochrill
!-ipokesman ~aid Sundav.
DAILY PILOT
fh• Onlnge CO.SI DAILY JllLOT, Wllh M )(ll
k comblntd fll• Nrn·Jlre,1, 11 Pllblllhtd toy
fll• Or•l'lff coasr Jlubll1hl~ Glfl'lllolnY. s-
••I• edlllofls •re Pf,lbllah«I, MOl'ld•Y lhrovtfl
Frld•Y, tot" Cosl• Me11, Ntwporf IHth,
Nunl1"'9toft fl'&dVFOYrlllln v111.y, L11vn• ••«l'I. '""'""'S.ddl•ck Wtd S•1t Cl"'*"'' S•n Jua1t C1pl1!r1no. A ffntl• reglon1I
l'Clllkllt Is P.lbll,htd S1t11n:l1yl •rd Suroc:ll Y!o,
tn. p(lnc:l1>11I 11Uhll1hl"' pt1nl 11 11 llO Wftl
e1y srr1t1, Co111 Mn•, c1ntornl1, f.M2'.
Rol.1rt N. We1d
Jlrn lcleltt 1!'111 Pllfllltlltr
J 1ck R. Curley
Yke """ld""I t.l'ld Gtner11 Mlnlftr
Thom•• Ke,,.il
l!:illlot
Tlio1t101 A. Murphi110
Mtneglnf l d!tor
Ortrl11 H. Looi Richtrd '· Na ll M1l1tanr M•rlllllnt 'Edl!ort 1
&..,.M IMcli Office
22 2 fe,..,t Ave11111
Moilhit "'4tlreu: P.O. 101 666, 92612 ..__
Cotti M .. t DI w-:.::t lfl'tlt
• ·=Md!: SW N hulevtr1'
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l're-tr l nl Talk
Daniel Ellsberg talks \Vith re·
porters at the U.S. Courthouse
\vhere he appeared for final
pre-trial motions on charges
stemming from the Pentagon
papers case. He is charged
with conspiracy and theft of
confidential U.S. documents
while an employe of the' Rand
Corporation.
Laguna Election
Turnout Steady
-Despite Skies
Gray skies and an occasional morning
drizzle failed to discourage Laguna Beach
voters who turned out in steady, if not
spectacular numbers to cast their ballots
tod ay.
By mid-morning, most of the city's 25
precincts reported a voter turnout in the
neighborhood of 20 percent and veteran
precinct workers predicted the figure
probably would approaCh the estimated
70 percent by the time polls close at 8
p.m.
Almost all the polling places checked
by the DAILY PILOT were brushing the
20 percent mark with the exception of the
north end of town and the Top of the
World area.
The Brads.haw residence on Cypress
Drive and the Anderson residence on •
Jlolly Street reported an unusually heavy
turnout ol almost 30 percent of their
registered voters by mid-morning.
By comparison, polling places at
Thurst<ln School and Top of the World
School had barely reached 15 percent of
their quotas by the same hour.
Meyer Lansky,
Pa11ner Charged
111 Tax Evasion
'rASHlNGTON" (APJ -l'\1eyer Lansky
and a reputed longtime associa te were in·
dieted by a federal grand jury today ~on
chargeS ol {'{Inspiring to avoid paying
taxes on money allegedly received fron1
gamblers on junkets to George Raft's
Colony Sporting Club in London, England.
Lansky, 69, and his reputed associate,
Dino Cellini, also were accused by the
grand jury in U.S. District Court in
MiamJ or conspiring to obstruct the
lntemal Revenue Service from assessing
income taxes. Cellini also was charged
with filing two false income tax returns.
'T'he Justice Department announced the
indictment action.
Lansky is living in Israel and fi@:hting
altempts by the Israel! government to
deport him . He \1•as lndicted in Miami
last year for refusing to e1ppcar before a
grand jury in Miami and in Las Vegas in
connection with alleged illegal gambling
activities.
Cellini, 57, a native of Steubenville,
Ohio, lives in Home wh(:re he represents
an American slot machine manu!acturer.
He was a stockholder and employe of
Raft's gambfi11g casino which operated
from 1966 t< !969.
Accordlftg to the indictment, C.Cllinl set
up a flrm called Travel and Re:iorts
Enterprises Inc., In Mlami . to organize
gambling junkets I< the Colony Oub and
other foreign casinos .
Slow-pitch Meet Set
A pre·season mttllng of represen.
tatives of slo~'-p!tch softball teams in the
Laguna Beach RecreaUon Ot!partment
ICAgut will be held at 7:.30 o'clock tonight
al the de~rlmenl buildtng, 175 N. Co11t
Highway, La(Unl Btach.
uaague rules, Policies and entry fees
will be discussed at the meellng...Play Is
scheduled lo start June 22 and end Aug.
24.
Per10ttal Pledge
No Campaigning
County Has
Year's First
Vowed by Official Smog Alert
Planning Corn n1 ls s ion tr La1-ry
Can1pbel! took the plc<l~e J\1ond~y night
-a pledge to Kt:i:p pcr::.onal polit 1~ vut
or te plannuig comrn lssion mee1 ing s.
"I Jet so1nething happen that I
shouldn't have.•· said Campell . v•ho a long
with planning commission Ch:-urn1Hn Carl
E. Johnson , ls seeking the C:ity Countfl
!lea! to be v<1cated by l·:dv•ard Lorr·s
resignation .
The pledge Campbell signed with a
flourish pron11sed 1hat neither the com·
rnlss1oner nor his supporters o,\'Ould at·
ten1pt to bring count•H politics into the
Capo Board
Nixes Airing
On Dis1nissctl
Despite a pubHc ou!f-ry to reinstate
ousted admi nistralQr Charles Johannsen
trustees of the Capistrano Unified School
District Monday refused to reconsider
their decisio n.
J\1rs. Phyll ls Robertson. !\1rs. Gv.'en
Burch and Al nn Sehreil>c.r. in prepil red
sl<l!cments to the board , asked trustees
lo explain \vhy they decid ed to reassign
Johannsen from his post as director of
pupil personnel servites.
Trustee Gordon Peterson said he did
not reach his decision on disputed facts
but on "undisputed facts." He said there
was "friction between Johannsen and his
superiors and with this friction existing,
the total administrative body could not
function for the good or the whole."
"Johannsen admitted that in areas he
felt strongly about, he would not take
direction from his superiors. I could not
vote for a person who cannot carry out
instruction or discipline imposed on
him." said Peterson.
"Even if the Instruction is v.Tong ?'1
questioned William Robertson.
Echoing Peterso11's sentiments y,·ere
trustees Fred Newhart Jr. and Dr.
Robert Beasley.
Trustee Robert Dahlberg, in·ho later in
the evening resigned from the board, said
he supported Johannsen.
"I think there was a difference of
educational philosophy. My analysis was
not like Gordon's. My interest is: tor the
kids. Sometimes we have to overlook the
hierarchy. The administration can't
disagree but as a school board member l
feel when you have a person who did an
outstanding job, you must keep him.
"I think there has been a calculated
plan to eliminate this man for over a
year and a half." Dahlberg alleged.
Supporting the administrative stand
were Mrs. Clayton Parker and Mrs. John
Ledger who both have children in the
multihandicapped program administered
by Johannsen.
Mrs. Ledger charged that Johannsen
had personality conflicts. had mishandled
personnel and was not responsive to
·parents. Mrs. Parker said she resented
having other people speak for her and
that she did not believe that the pro-
gram \vould be damaged by Johannscn 's
reessignmcnt.
"I resent having you use this program
to keep Johannsen." she said angrily.
In her comments to lhe board, Mrs.
Roberl3on said many parents whose
children had beneritted from Johanns.en's
concern were upset about the removal.
From Pnge 1
DAI-ILBERG . • •
with onr go:1l-!111'f'1l1\'rst his 0\11n ~dLIC'.1·
llonal e.,pt'rien(·e and tirn (' to better the
schools.
"Hut my \'Oice on behalf of what should
be our prime n1oti vation -the-children
Qf th is district -has too often been
r11i8ed alone.
"Quality in education is a term often
used in this district. philosophically and
in press releases, yet seldom are the
practical issues met with the dynamics
and realism necessary to achieve this
type of education.
"\Ve are a 'comfortable' school district
and are apparently happy to remain so.
Excellence and competence are not
primary objectives ; but rather the paths
of mediocrity, control and 'keep the
educational wa ters quiet' detennine our
educational thinking and actions. J cannot
continue to be a party to this type of
elucatlon."
Dahlberg said a public school board
must be accountable and con1municatlve
to )Xlrents and taxpayers. He saJd he is
encouraging the community to continue
to express its concerns and demand
results from the board.
lie said it is his conclusion that u a
private citizen he can accompllsh more of
his orlgin1l goal! than as a 8ingle trustee.
"l have always believed in working
'within the system.' liowever for the tint
Ume Jn my life 'worl<lng within the
system' ls not possible and yet rttlin my
educational beliefs and peraonal iJ1..
tegrity."
Trustee Petenoo said he wu sorry
Dalllberg felt IS be did and WU IOrry lo
see him go because he bad made va1U1ble
contributions .
Boo-rd President 'Bob Hurst said
Oah\beJl's resigna Uon should, move the
boml lo ·t1o 10me !'Hvalu•llOll'llf ltaell.
o.Illborg'a l'tllgnation Is the third In
the Jut lew months, Trustee• Robert
Beasley and Donald Inlay both· resigned
ror personal reasons earUer th.Lt year.
An election to fill Dahlberg'• teat will
tab pltct -•time tn S.pltmber.
comntisslon dtliberations.
Turning to Johnson. Campbell asked,
"1,.ould )'OU sign a similar one'!"
JohMOn said fhat he personally would
not bring political matters to the
n1eetings and that he would ask hi s sup--
porters to "confine themselves to the
facts at hand," Il e said a n1utual .s tate--
ment could be wor ked out.
The matter of bringing person3! polili('8
into the Planning Comn1ission was lht·
result of a statement by Campbell at a
candidates' forum last week .
Campbell had proclahned that the city
"'a ~ divided into "three armed camps."
He told William Leak. who questioned
the armed camp statement. that he had
a !ist of names of the people h~ cate·
gorlzed as "right, le!t, and 1-don't.give-
a·damn."
This list lie said he would produce at
the planning commission meeting.
Leak rose at the Monday night com·
n1ission meeting to !lay th&t it v•asn 't
necessa ry lhat the list be disrus~ed dur·
111g the meeting, but they could talk ab-Out
it af ter or before the session.
Cambell sa id that he h.:idn't broughl the
li st.
Leak said he still \vantC"d to see it.
Councilmen Face
Unpaid Ove1'time
Bid by Lawman
By JOHN VAL TERZA
01 fM CtllY l"li.t S11tt -A formal claim of 693 hours of unpaid
overtime by former San Clemente Police
Detective Burdell Burch \Viii be taken up
by city councilmen at their meeting
Wednesday.
The claim , which also underlines a cur-
rent battle by remaining members of the
force for overtime pay, was filed three
in·eeks ago by registered letter. sent from
Lakey,•ood, Colo., in•here Burch no\11
serves as a police agent.
Burch has stressed that he v.·ould not
accept any settlement of the claim unless
it came accompanied wllh a ne111
overtime policy for the rest of the San
Clemente force.
Local officers receive neither cash nor
time oU for overtime.
Councilmen Wednesday will decide if
they will consider the claim in public or
private.
Generally formal documents in Utiga.
tion are handled in executive session, but
Burch has said that his claim is not yet a
matter of actual litigation.
In his registered letter .sent to several
city officials, ~ncluding Mayor Art
Holmes, Burch s2i0 that besides his ou'n
accrued time, the other members of the
force logged about 8.397 hours overtime
last year for which they were paid
nothing.
His o\vn records. he said. sho\v that his
overtime -calculated to be about $4.000
worth -amounted to briefings before
assuming duty, prisoner tran sport,
Presidential demonstrations, fiesta duty.
periods of mutual aid when all days off
y,·ere cancelled, plus hundreds of hours of
work after hours as a police detective.
"During the time of my employment I
<lid not neglect any task necessary in the
proper performance of my duties because
of lhc fact that I was not paid for time
spent above my normal Y.'Orking hours,"
he said.
The ronner officer·s claim is the fir~t
i1\ the city specifically related lo
overtime.
The overti1ne claim is but one \l'age·
benefit issue relating to public safet y
departm ents to confront the council this
budget season.
Seeks A1ylut11
('atherine Kerko\v, 20 , (s hov,,11
in 1969 photo) and \Villiam
!!older, 22, self·avov.'ed Black
l'anther fro1n Oakland, arc
seeking politicaJ asylum in .1\J.
geria after allegedly hijacking
a jetliner for $500,000 ranson1.
See story, Page 4.
Laguna Planners
Refu se Festi val
Parking Request
Laguna Beach planning commissioners
hu·ned thumbs down on Jlealtor Paul
\V eslbrook's proposa l to al!o\'• parking in
his eucalyptus grove for exhibitors at lhc
sun1mcr art festivals.
Commissioners cited problems created
b>' dust, noise, car headlights, access and
a lack of planning by \Vestbrook in de-
nying the temporary use permit the
realtor had applied for.
In other action, the commissioners:
-Approved a request by the Sandpiper
bar to pennit live entertainment there
.seven da)'S a week.
-Approved a slte plan !or propos<'d
\varehouse facilit y along Laguna Canyon
ftoad after expanded landscaping \\'as ad-
ded.
-Continued a public hearing on a
re zone from residential to commercial
.ilong Glcnneyre from An ita to Calliope
Streets.
-Retained Pacific Avenue on the city's
select street system.
-Heart a report by Larry Rose. city
manager. on the status of the Aliso \Vater
Management Agency.
T,vo Viejo Men
Sue City, Police
For $100,000
TiA·o 1fission Viejo men who claim
Laguna Beach police roughed t~m up
after falsely accusing the younger man
of being a state prison escapee have sued
the city and three officers for $100,000 in
Orange County Superior Court.
Stanley Hietala and Larry Ranta claim
officers Norman Babcock, James Stinson
and Rick Kotzin used guns and un·
necessary force Nov. 14 when they halted
Ranta 's car at Pacific Coast Highway
and Agate Street.
The Jay,•suil claims that Ranta wa.s
spreadeagled across a Laguna police
unit, accused of being a state prison
escapee and th~n forced to enter the
\.'ehicle.
Hietala states he got the same treat·
ment and was accused of interfering wit h
an arrest when he tried to point out to
the officers that Ranta y,·as his nephew
and was clearly not lhe man sought by
Laguna police,
A claim for $40,000 in damages on
behalf or the l\\'O men was recently
denied by the ~guna Beach City Council.
Scattered thw1dershoweri;-will continue
to hit th' Orange Coast in brier spurt!
through \Vednesda y, weather forecasters
at the Orange County F'orestry Depart·
ment sa id today.
A SC'ries o( frrak Showers. :>omc !C.·
cornpanied by llghtnlng and thunder. ap·
1>eared ~fnnd ay in somr areas but com-
plttely n1issed adjoining cities.
San Clemrnte recorded .12 inche5 of
r ain . which brought the year'!! total up lrl
.67 inches. Bolts of lightning streaked
across the sky about 3:30 p.m. ov'r !he
coastal city. as v.•ell a3 over Gard'n
l~rove and Anaheim.
li tJntington Beat·li :ind Costa Mesa ex·
perienced light brief sprinkles, while only
an overcast sky covered Laguna Beach.
El ·roro f.1arine Corps Air Stnt ion
recorded a .02 inch reading of ra in for the
El Torcrfrvine nrea Monday.
Nearby 'frabuco Canyon was hardest
hit. The Forestry department recorded a
J.12 inch rainfall there, in contrast to a
.04 i11ch count in Jrvine Lake.
Lightnin g started a tree fire in 11oly
.Jin1 Canyon, burning a six foot by 12 foot
patch of ground before rain put it out.
Forestry officials said there is an 80
percent chance of more rainfall today
and Wcdnesdav.
1'he freak Weather ~1ondav also In·
clLided the first smog alert o.f the yee1r
iss ued by the Orange County Alr PolJu.
lion Control (OCAPCD) District at about
1:20 p.1n,
The ozone count rose to .42 parts per
million (PPM ) in La Ha bra and schools
were warned to keep chlldren from
strenuous exercise. The alert was ended
at 2 p.m. when winds caused the count to
drop below the .35 ppm level.
Edward Camarena , engineer for t he
OCAPCD, said the same breezes today
will keep the smog count down, although
last night the department was still pre-
dict ing an alert today.
Next Monday, said Camarena, an ozone
count of .20 ppm will replace the .35 ppm as the warning point.
Employes Seek
Battin 'Damages'
Damages of $10,000 were demanded
11onday in an Orange C.Ounty Superior
Court lawsuit that charges Supervi90r
Robert Battin w!th unlawfully using a
county mailing list for his own election
purposes.
The Orange County Employes Asmia·
tion also asks in its action against the
.First District supervisor for further
damages to be awarded when the
organization can assess the value of
clerical and mechanical help allegedJy
utilized by Battin.
The C{lmplaint statt.'J that Battin ob-
tained the computerized mailing list last
v.·eek and used the county information to
mail literature to First District voters.
t-.Iembers of the OCEA were urged last
v•eck in a precedent·setting bulletin
issued by the county workers group to
vote against Battin in today's election.
T ivo San Jose
Men Found Dead
SAN JOSE (APl -John Wilson . 39,
and William Arthur Johnston, 47, were
found shot to death in 'Vilson's apart·
ment. police said.
The bodies y,·ere found Monday by
Wilson's former wife, police said. Both
were salesmen for the same company.
Officers said they were questioning a
person in the shootings but declined to
give further details.
IT'S lIERE • • • YESTERYEAR!
SELECTION OF CARPETING WASNT
iFANTASTIC WHEN OUR GRANDFATHER
ST AR TED HIS CARPET STORE. ORIENT AL RUGS
WERE "IN," AND GRANDFATHER SPECIALIZED
IN THEM.
OUR FATHER GOT INTO THE ACT
AROUND 1918 AND DEVELOPED A LARGE
VOLUME OF DOMESTIC CARPETS, MOSTLY
WILTONS AND AXMINISTERS.
LAmY WE HAVE SEEN A RESURGENCE
OF AXMINISTER ,CARPETS IN BE AU Tl FU L
FLORALS AND PRINTS. THE EFFECT CREA TED
BY AN UNUSUAL PATTERN CAN TRANSFORM
A DULL RO 0 M INTO SOMETHING
SPECTACULAR.
PLEASE STOP IN AND SEE OUR LARGE ,
SELECTION.
ALDEN'S
CAJtPnS e DRAPES
'
1663 Plac:entla Ave.
f COSTA MISA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thur Thurs .. 9 to S:JO -Frl., 9 lo 9 -SAT,. 9:30 lo 5
!
I
•
•
Saddlehaek Today's Final
-N.V. Stee.P
VOL. 65, NO . 158, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • TUESDAY, JU NE 6, 19 72 TEN CENTS
( Trustees Air Cainpaigns at District Meeting
Tustin Union High Schoo] District
trustees clashed again ~fori<lay night in
discussion of a propost.>d 1972-73 budget
over a suggestion to increase the number
c( students per teacher but then cut the
evening short because of concerns about
today's elections.
Onl y one OOard member, chairman
Paul Calhoun, is not involved in an elet-
t!on.
Dick Bora n i a n and Robert
Bartholome\Y are boU1 running for elec-
tion to the proposed unified Tustin school
board; Chester Briner is seeking a post
on the Missio n Viejo unified boa rd and
Ea rl Carraway ls campaigning in the 391.h
Republican nomination in the 39th
Congressional District.
The evening !!tarted slowly as a result,
wilh trustees mainly discussing their
campaigns.
Tustin Superintendent William Zogg
al90 focused on the election by pointing
out that the l!m-73 budge t and $2 .11 tax
rat.e are "assuming unification is not a
reality.
"This indicates \\'l\8.l we know 00\1·,'' he
said about !he $.10.8 million budget , al·
most $1.8 million mol'e than 1971-72.
'"There are additk>oal funds U unillca·
lion Is a reality," Zogg told trustees.
A state incentive towards unlficatton
grants a bonus or $20 per student to ex·
isling district if the measure passes. In
1'u.stin's case, for one year this could
amount to about $170,000.
The proposed $2.11 per $100 assessed
valuation tax rate is 34 ctnts more than
the $1.77 levied in 1971-72. But Zogg con-
tends that this is only correct on' face
value.
Tiie di strict !his year spent out or
reserves another 18 cents per $100 asse.i;s--
ed \'aluation, \\•hich Z.Ogg said, really
• • .. l
DAILY PILOT PMfl.b.LM p.,_
What Are They Marking"!
Voters throughout tbe slate wete in this stance to-
day, some whipping briskly · through their ballots,
others agonizing. This particulat group v.•as·.part of
the turnout this morning at the Turtle Rock Ele·
mentary School in Irvine. The Orange.·County Reg·
istrar of Voters has predicted a 67 percentiiurnOut
of county voters in today's primary. Polls are open
until 8 p.m.
Erroneo us Crime
Report Prompts
Ne wspaper Sto ry
Crif!Je repor ts made available lo this
newspaper Monday by the Orange County
Sheriff's Office incorrectly indicated tha t
Ronald Sieve Paulsan, 18. or 23722 Cava-
naugh Road. El Toro, had been jailed
Saturday on charges of culti\'ating
marijuana at a nearby home.
Prospective Planning
Directors l 11 te rviewed
Irvine city · C'Ouncilmen Wednesday
night will Connally receive copies o( the
proposed $1.4 milllon budget and tl)en ad-
journ into priv ate .session to interview ;it
least thret persons for the job as Irvine·:;
first planning director.
the city planning chief applicants, the
planni ng commission will meet in city
hall annex.
Bol h the council and the plaMing com-
mission will meet in the temporary
ground floor meeting room at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday. The room, a former d.•;
cleaning establishment , will serve the ci-
ty ¥.'hile renovation.~ of the permanent ci-
(See INTERVIEWS, Page II
meam only a 16 cent tax increase O\'er
this year.
'l'rustee Bartholomew argued against
lhis point, saying it would still be 34
cents on the tax bill.
He again proposed an increase in
student-teacher ratl03 from 30.S to 1 to l3
or 34 to l, ·'which would save $415,000.''
He added that "lots of schools do It, our
teachers can do it" when Boranlan com-
p::iined that "60 perce nt of our classes
are 35 to 40 students no\\'.''
Briner sa id increasing !he ratio more
v.•ould "deteriorate !he quality of educa-
tion" and Bartholomew angrily in-
t~rupted, "Talking dotsn't mea n a thing
to me. You have lo prove it."
Zogg interjected that Tustin district
has always done \\'ell in testing 'vlth the
30.5 ratio, ¥.ttich he caUed a reasonable
number.
'Bartholome'v al<;0 cri1icized the :l.(I·
dltion cf one psychologist, 11hirh \\"OUld
drop the studenl -psycholog ist r!illl-O to
4,000 to 1 fro1n double that.
Zogg ex plai ned that the cvunty U\'trAge
is 2.000 or 3.000 10 1.
Bort1ninn ('a11tioned ;lgninst 11dt.!ing
clerical ~1aff nov.· be<"<Hl~C' "\\"e could
mak' it a lot easier un the unified board
if in hiring more people \\'e take Into con-
s1dt>rat io11 I\'<' ma~· funclion for on!y one
1nvre year. The ef fe1..·ts of this budJ]:et can
go bt>_rond that."
C:ilh1ll..IU s.iid the 011ly question "is how
111 1nake 1he tax O\'errid(' l11st three rears.
\\'t> :iav e 10 be \'er y c.'.lreful ho\\' we "sptnd
iL"
l.ast F'ebruary, Tustin district voters
11pprovcd a three-year txh•nsion of a M-
ernt O\'erri~ and an additional 49 cen ll
of t:ixes_
Tru sl~s have oche<l11\ffi ano1her study
!iess1on on the bud~et June l 9 at 7. JO p.m.
al Tustin lUgh School.
Tax Hike Ol(ayed
Saddleback Eyes T entative Budget
A tentative budget containing 11 32-cent
tax increase was approved J\1onday night
by trustees of the Saddleback Community
College DistricL
1'rusteu took the vote at the end of a
fi.ve-hour rrieeting and ind~cated they
would discusl!I the document in detail at a
special meeting June 19 at 8 p.m.
Half of the 32-cent tax increase would
go towards 'the district's share In paying
Reor ganiz atio1t
Issue Attracts
Voters Tur1iout
Irvine and Saddleback voters streamed
to the pcill.s early today and led poll
watchers 'to .predict a heavy lurnouL by ·
<losini at 8 ocl0<lr. tonight
Ei:l~~~~.l~
•olfn :111.,lhocTl>otin \!oloD Hl i!h School
Dljtrict today . will dtcldt the Ille al •
ptopoled reorganlutlon.
If a maJOr!ty of voters throughoot the
district ap~ve, three new unified -
ktndergarten to grade-!%-school dlstrlcta
will be formed.
A sampling ol pr~incts within tbl
proposed Irvine and Mission Vlejo unified
district! this morning indicated as many
as 23 percent oC registered votera were
turning out early.
At Marguerite O'Neill Elementary
School in M!S!lon ViejO, 2l percent "'"'
election early birds. By rrlldmornlnc '1 ol
the 400 votm had ce!I their ballota.
Valencl.i School pollwatchm reported
an 18.$ pe~ent turnout with 139 of 7SO
cliitible voting by midmomlng.
The third Mission Viejo Unified district
precinct sampled, Ralph Gates School in
El Toro, reported that %0 percent (lf the
111 voters registered in that precinct had
voted.
That heavy morning turnout, election
officers speculated, signals a heavy
"llilverall turnout 1dnce the area cla ims' a
large number (lf working mothers who
are expec ted not to vcte until early even-
ing.
In Trvine, three precincts sampled
{See SCHOOL VOTE, P11e II
for construction of a scicnct-mathematirs
building.
A number of other permissive taxes
which makt up the total tax rate wett in--
creased in tht areas of coommunity
service. old age security and di sability in4
surance, health benefits, interdist rlct
agreements and leases and retifement
proerams.
U the budget is not pared down over
the next few \\'eeks. the ne'' tax rate
n'ay be set a 74.16 cents per $100 assess-
ed \'aluation. The current rn te -the
lowest in the slate -i! 41.74 cents per
'100 assessed valuatian.
A rate Increase of 32 cerits would mean
a pE"rson owning a $40,000 home \\.'Ould be
paying $74 next year to support the col-
lege. That homernvner Is now paying $41
in taxes lo the district.
Prior to the n'erting, college officials
Indicated the tentative budget included
univ a 16-cent tax increase !or the science
mn.thcmaUca complex CtJ nstruction and
did not hint that other permissive rates
"·ou ld be rising ;i,, 'A'ell .
The entlte cost of the science math
center ls f:Btlmated lo be $4.5 million,
with half of the t•ost provided from state
junior college construcion bond money.
'l'he remaining $2,2 millioo must be
raised locally.
Theo board agreed in December to fund
the building with a tu increue (}Ver a
tw().year ~rl.od, meaning taxpayers will
feel the' Wnch of the 11-ctn~ ~vy during ''"ih< 1m h and 1m-14· lil<al yun.
'I1le budget, as it now stand.I, ahowl a
general fun6 of M:t:ndltfon and a building
fund ol fl.I ll)llllon, lril)glng the total
docullllllt over 1111 18.~ million m.rk.
us"loNs SCHOOL ·l'OU
TrutlM D1hlboty . . .
Dahlberg Quits
Capo Trustees-
'lnef f ective'
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of the °"lly ~IMt SI.., I
ln an unusually candid statement Mon·
day Robert DahJbetg r.!il'>ed H · I
tr:ustee of the Capistrano Unlfled·School
DistrtCt and bllsfed it.. admlnl.stratlon as
The new OCAPCD war¢nga will also
be issued to elderly residents and thou
with respiratory or heart condit ions,
Camarena aaid.
Det.allt on the new syY!em ~ill be re.
leased Friday.
The Orange County Harbor Department
reported tbat a southwest swell was
creating 1lJ: to eight foot waves along the
coast today.
The approval of the tentatlve budget Is
merely a formality for the district and
the document may be changed any time
up until the date or fina l adoption. The
final document must be turned in to coun-
ty schools afficials by the first \\'etk in
August.
Fitness Address Se t
"Physical Fitneas for l:lusy People" 11
!he topic of an address to members of the
~lissioo Viejo Men 's Club at 8 p.m.
'I'hursday at the Swin1 and Racket Club,
26221 Tierra Circle, ?.11.uion Viejo.
R. Jay Roelen, Saddleback College
phyliical edueati(ln iM lroctor, will give
the tall!:.
1be report was erroneous. Paulsan was
not arrested on that charge or any other
charge and was actually surfing at Salt
Creek Beach at the t.ime a neighbor youth
wa1 mested.
Sberiff's officers today confirmed that
Pa"ulsan is in no way linked to the drug
investigation at a nearby home and does
not -face charges in connect!Qn with that
incident. TI>ere was no explanation as to
why Paulsan's name appeare(t on the ac·
tuai arresl report. «>
1be Daily Pilot regrets the erJ'tlt which
wai baled oo Utls inaccurate information.
The lhree were sereene<l from a list of
candid ates from throughout cities in the
U.S. A committee including UC Irvine
Chancellor Daniel G. AJdr ich Jr., ~Iayor
William Woollett Jr .• Greater Irvine
JndustriaJ League President Charles
Cleminshaw and county plaMing director
Forest Dickason riarrowed the list from
six candidates to three , last week.
Fina l choice of the city planning chief
Is up to the City C.OOncil.
Wo0llett has said it may ~ as long as
JO da)'! before the chosen planning direc-
tor will join the city staff. That means
Irvine's planning : director, should the
council announce Jts decisK>n next Tues-
day, would come on board in mid-July.
Rhodesia Mine Explosion
Traps 468; Toll U~certain
••mediocre and ineffective." ·
Tt was the third resignation Of a trustee
this spring. ·
The Dana Point area repre5entatlvt,
who diaclosed tbat he baa moved to San
Juan Capistrano, said 'be "cannot be ef-
!eellve ·with· the kind of ..imlniatratiV.
1 .. ~rAAJp !hit ls. currenUY &Wdllll tbe
achool dillrlct.
.......
·-titer Variable cloud• ue in the pic-
ture throuilh W-y •loo& Ibo Orlng1 Cout, with JIC)lli>Wty o( ,,,....,.. in tho _... hoan.
cPreer Drafting
Unit Will Meet . -' ' ~ meetlng • .or 'lbe saddl.eback college
Arqilteclural Draf\ln.J ,car-er advis.~ry
comtnillee "11(111 I"' !!f!d at ~ p.m.
Weinesday In the c0b0ge b&rd'IOOm:
'l1'e ld•li<lrY committee ls coo_.i or
conlmunity and achobl ropr..ehtaUve5 ·~ iaeetl lo di....S. the $a#l~clt m~• oc1ueat1on1l procnm. · • .\
O>ii>inunllY. .-b'On of-1be~+llorY · aie:.J-s'Bl.r. o1 · • Jiiln
ono, Jack ~ of• . ,.Aflll, ~ of Santa • ' all
; Stqe ·MltdRD,1lll~<n.jo 111~ .school . lnltntCtOr; •nd -.J;eu
ScinOder, F-W . Hi8h .$dl06i in-.crht. •
'
Meanwhile the city has hired an
associate planner from the county plan·
ning staff at an annual salary of $15,000.
Mike Harris, 'rl, of Tustin began work-
Mc,xlay in the city office! .. A graQu.ate -0[
UCLA with a master's degree in
<:Umatology and g~gr:-&ehJ from' Cal state San Fernando, l!Jirril will be the
••number three man" in the Irvine plan--
ning' department, assis tant city manager
·Paul llrady said today.
Hanis "Ill do m~ll ol,t)!e ~I wor< In
planning lhal ta pres.ntly Ptlni don& by
!be.city'• planning adV$Mro. , ·
· ln 11\e,Qrange Oomit9 ~Ing de"port-
1~ Han:ls was aatlve In general pl11n r:;::,:';;. and contrl'"""" lo the ,.... .. t or Uie c.uht'Y"bliie' trails
li!Utor plan.
·~ A ~Uve of Callfoml1, Jlanis ls mar·
~ He and hlt ·wite14Jeri1 have OM
.lolll!hter. ·
W&IQe city counciTmeo are Interviewing
From Wire Sef1lce1
SALISBURY, Rhbdesia -. An un-
derground explosion at the· Wankie coal
mine near Victoria Falls trapped tea
miners today and tbe 1 death toll was
feared lo be bigq. , . . .
Hospital seuroes rtport.ed that IOMe
Tajners ~ mana~ · to ': eleflpe' from' (lne of
the several entrances .tO the No. 2,colllery
where-the blastm.curred at 1-a.m. PDT.
A spokesm at the Wankle Mine
Hospttel .. Id r Drinen had been ad·
tnltted With ill}~. 1'liey ,lftr• four
1urlace wdrk'era·inja'rtd' a a rault of-the
under-·"" upl<*lon. · Tlte •~man , oOuld"'not:'d~ llitlr Jll!W'lea; or ·•Y 1JlM' 1they were cauttd. ' 1 • ~
, H• sald •aU doctqrs in the •rea ah<\C\11
viere al 'the hospu.I' and~ loC-'1• blOoll
donors were aterted~ · ' · · · """
A spoknman !Of the · IT\ine olnllp,
Antlt.,Amerlcarr·Cori>-; ·said the!' tbere
woa "ho lurflier' llel'•'" o'trtho la!' (!I 'tile
miner& -• os-bilcllt 'A!ricma • ml'SS
whiles --kine 1 lull lhllt In the mine
whe.'n the bJut occurred.
A 1p0Uslnln I« lhe Wankle COUl<ry
Compon7. allo Oald II had IO M!por!a on
deatll& but mint a,buroea Oald they belley·
ed the toll wOOld be hll!h.
The. world'• ......i mining dlluter oo-
<W'rod in M'ancl!uria In llH2, When 1,HI
workeh wm killed In the lfookellro
COWety.' Tile wotot In lhe United States
" .. on Dee. ·•·' U07, when 3'1 d1td at MODOlllal>, 'W. Vo.
Wan& la lltl mllis weal of S.li.lbury.
It ii B1"1dl&l1'1 m.jor ·~I SL"Jlplier ""'
adJolno 'lht ll'Ulti• Cime · r•1<rv• near the VIC!Odl· Falll. • ' •
. A ~ Ati force plaJ\e fiew Cll>-llten 111 liquid · oxygen 'to lhe m1ne 1o
help in 1lle,..... oper.ilonl which btpn
briinedllft)Y' afttnJ!e• -· A opoto-fr'. t.l>e .oompony· ,Jn,
llUl-.i ,1p1U1ol1 to tlPI In Bru ... 11
by telephone, aald be hid nii firm
CUllllt)', ape.: ' . . . -'·
"Nor .C411 1 contll)ue· to, 'De • part of lbe
purposeful lack ol effective ~
111untcallon1 that II ob~ bettr-· the
sta!I and bolrd, •ta!! and lochen, lllff
""' -c0mmun11y and • ..., . """"" • ~u rq,emben ~mselvt1," i. aald.
D&blbera:, who was tlteted a HltJe over
:it~r OIO, • Hid be ti><>ilP!' a bolrd oat
wltj> ooe ,..i-1o rol•v.s.t hll on educa.
UoiW • •:g>erJence and , lime lo bolter , the aclw>!>ll. . •
. ''But •Ill)' voice on bellall of whit -
be oor lll'ime mollvaUon -tlto childr<;I>
of U>IJ ~iot ,.-bu ·loo """' . -rilled lloot. · -
... Quallfy In }ducaUOn ls I\ toml-
u...i !In :U..-cllsltlct. phlkllopblelllsl and
lo -i.it<l, yat -... 1111 prodlcll :i-m•t with the d,Jftamla
and .~ necepory lo achieve. · thla
type ·Cll-.. --.. '
"Wt Ire 1 ''calorllbf. • -,dlatrkt ·
and ~:1n;nnlly• him ·to 'rf!lllln '"·
EX<;oi~• and• compt-. 1rt not
, t.._DAlllllllllG,·Pop l )
Tllat moist, warm .ir wlD ..,,..
Unue wllh hi&)ll al It •I the beldl
rtalng lo near It lnlond. Thi
wealherlady also romlndl cout
weatbe.r-watchen to be IU1'I to
vote.
INSIDE TODAY
Lal< reporll ho•• Jbll,.,d o1'I
of th• Afri<tm •fl"'bUc of Bu-
rundi rw1ollno lhl slaughter of
J 50,000 in bloodv lrlbal lrilllflOI. s •• •IOYJI· !'"Vt 11 •
L.M. ""' lt ...... D ~ I ........ , .... .
a..tlilM U-.1' ..... ...... .. . =:... :; =-. ~~ ' ...... . .,. • .....,... r .. • , ... ..,.....,. ...,._ . ti T...,..._ • ,..... ..., ,.---., .
Pw .................. -• .._,IUf• lt _........, ..... dolt
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Be Sure to Vote Today; Pnlls Open Until -~:
.. ........_ --,,
• vi--. • , •' .. ..
l ' I
! OAIU PILOT J5 fond.,, J.., 6, 1'72 ""--~~~~~~~~
Reds Flee
' '
S. Viets 'Retake
• " City of Kontum
SAIGON (Ul'll -Two thouiand South
Vletnanlese troops scnl the last Cvm·
munh:t holdouts scurry1n1t out or Kontum
City today endlng a li-dny Nortl1 Vie~
namne attempt to overrun the stratt glc
Central Highlands provlnclal capital.
A a::overnment spokesman said 2.397
North Vietnamese troops died during the
sieie., including 166 in Tuesday's action at
a tank base and a hospital.
"They (the North Vletname!it) just
started running 'n'hen 'n'e moved In. \.\1e
killed t.h<!m as they were rut1nlng away,"
a government apolr:esman said.
11>e SOuth Vietnamese victory at Kon·
tum ended the latest Communist drive to
capture the city and it~ 5ister-capih1.I,
Plelku. 30 miles to the 50uth.
The North Vietnamese wanted to over·
nm the two cities, then send troops
eastwar~ to the coast and cut South Viet-
nam in halt
In the air wnr, American fighter
bombers new 220 missions in North Viet·
nam, moat of. them against roads and
1ailways near Vinh, the Communists'
Sonni e Tom sovic,
Wife of Doctor,
Rites Wednesda y
Servtcea will be lield Wednesday at 11
a.m. in McCormick LaguM Beach Chapel
for Sunnie A. Tomsovlc of Mission Viejo,
who died Monday at Mission Community
Hospital.
Mrs. Tomsovic was the w i re of
Dr. Edward J. Tomsovic. medi cal direc-
tor of the Orange County Medical Center.
Surviving, in addition to her husband,
are a son, Richard L. Tomsov!c; four
daughters, Frances C., Barbara J .,
Patricia L. and Judith I. Tornsovlc, all of
the Mission Viejo home : parents, Mrs.
and Mrs. J a m e s T ··-Anderson of
Oakland, Calif.; sister, Mr!!. Allen E.
Rose of Redding . Calif.: and four nieces.
A native of Salt Lake City, Utah, Mrs.
Tom110vlc spent most of her life in
Callfomla a nd was a graduate of the
University of Ca lifornia School of
Pharmacy at San Francisco.
The Rev. Herman J. Baerg, chaplain of
the Orange County Medical Center, will
officiate at the Wtdnesday service , which
will be followed by private burial.
Two Viejo Men
Sue City, Police
For $100,000
Two Mission \7iejo men who claim
Laguna Beach police roughed them up
after falsely accusing the younger man
or being a state prison escapee have sued
the city and three officers for $100,000 1n
Orange County Superior Court.
Stanley Hietala and Larry Ranta claim
officers Norman Babcock, James Stinson
and IUck Kotzin used guns and un-
necessary force Nov. 14 whl'n they halted
Rania's car at Pacific Const Jligh\\·ay
and Agate Street.
The Jav,isuit claims that Ranta was
spreadeagled across a Laguna police
unit , accused of being a state prison
escapee and then forced to enter the
vehi cle.
Hietala states he got the s:ime treat-
ment <1nd y,•as accused of interfering with
an arrest \\.'hen he tried to point out to
the officers that Ranta was his nephew
and \\'BS clearly not the man sought by
Laguna police.
A claim for $40,000 in damages <1n
behalf of the 1¥10 men was recently
denied by th e Laguna Beach City Coun ci l.
OU.N•I COAST 1s
DAILY PILOT
Th• Orfnte Co.st DA.IL Y P'ILOT, will'! wl'lk ll
h <'llf!'lblllfd ftl• Mew.1"rt11, t. DVb!l.ri.d t1Y ..... or ..... c ... , Put>lbl'll'"I C-l'IY. S.p.o-
rflf .. ltloM f rl' 1110.10ll1hed, Mond1y lllr611Dl'I
Frht1y, .... Coll• Mtu, N, ... _, ••e<ft,
H11t1ll119-8t1cll/FO\l!\rtln V•l11y, laollftt
8HCh, lrvlnt/Stddltbttk 11nd St" CloJrMnlt/
S." J11.n C6'11tltll..._ A tlntlt r191eMI
tdUlon Is ,ubllthtd S-tunh'f' tnd S\lndtY'-
f l'Mll prlh<cllMI PUllll.,,ln1J pW.nt !1 11 m W111
l1y Sirwet, Cotlt Mn1, C1l1lom1t. tl•2t.
Rob1rl N. W,,cl
P'rnkl9fl! •nd Putllls/'let
J 1c k R. Cur1,v
Viet 1",_1c1.,.1 trod G_,..1 M11oe9ff
Th•m •t K111•H
£0(tof'
1\om11 A. M11rp~ino
M•111111111 e.ouor .,
C h1rl11 H. looc Ri'~'"' P. Nill
A11hltnl Mtl\8911\11 EOITDl'I
o .....
Co.It M ... : »Cl W11l llty Sl!'Ml
.. ......,. lttKh: »iJ NtwOtWI IMl/11~1'111
1....-... di: m '°'"' "'-"''"u'"* 8t1th: 11US tff<l'I 80ul1Y11f .. II °'"'*'t.: JU Notftl El C..~inD lltul
Ttl ...... f714 ) '41--4J21
Cf•"'-4 A ... rtltl .. 642·1671
isecood lar2esl port.
Clearing .~kles Jn the .liouth a!lov.t d
more rnis~lons but the 20'1 str ike s nol,t.n
1'.fonday "·er~ stilJ only half the nurnbl:r
flown during May.
The US. Cammand 1aid AmerJcan Jt t5
also lY11nbed a railroad yard hallway
btl14etn lhe North Vietnamese capltal or
llano! and }lo lphong. the counlry·!'I
lcatgt'~t port. J'1lots al so rtported 1v.o
dlr ect hit& on a bridge on Highway 1, 130
ll'J!lcs south Clf Hanoi.
In other developments.
-U.S. warplanes repOrted destroying
110 C-Omn1unlsl bunkers and foxhole~
nro und Phu ~ly, a district county capital
in Blnh Dinh province along the centnil
coast 280 miles north of Salgon. Soutl1
\11etnamest ground troops drove the
<:ommun1sts out o{ the town ooe day
earlier.
-North \lletnamese troops shot down
two American helicopters near Phu ~1y,
wound ing four Americans.
-Radio Hanoi said Communist gunners
~hot dO\\'n t"'·o American flghler-bombrrs
ov1•r North Vietnam. The U.S. comn1and
refused comnil'nt.
-At An Lac. the battered provincial
capital 60 miles north Of Saigon, South
Vietnamese spoke.!tmen reported Commu·
nists iobbed 289 roc ket. mol"Ulr and ar-
tillery rounds into lhe city -one of the
lightest shellings since the siege slartcd
lll early April . ~
-UPI correspondent Donald A. Davis
said from flue tht1t govern men l
spokesmen claimed 62 Colnmunists killed
in two clashes northwest of the former
imperial capita!. Two South Vietnamese
troops were killed.
Party Unity
By McGovern
Emphasized
HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -In a bid for
party unity, pr"ldentlal front runner
George ~fcG<>vern met with Democratic
governors early today and sa.id his cam-
paign wUI be one or cooperation and
rocoociliation rather than divisiveness.
The. South Dakota 1enator altered his
campaign schedule and flew into th.ls
sprawling southtast Texas city late Mon-
day nJght for a metting with the
DemocraUc governors, m<:1st or whom
have remained neutral or opposed to
l\1('(1ov em'1 candidacy.
When the meeting was over. moat of
the Southern chle.f executives were still
volc lng doubt! or opposition to
McGovern, claiming his cana1dacy would
assure Southern atrength for President
Niloo and other GOP office-seekers in
November.
But McGovern, whose liberal views on
several lssuea have been an issue among
Democratic governors attending the on-
nual bipartisan National Governors'
Conference here, apparently did not hurt
hi.!1 cause by showing up.
McGovern delayed his departure from
l~ouston long enough today to attend a
prayer breakfast with all the govtmors
-Republlcan as well as Democratic.
Jfe was introduced but did not speak.
As he prepared to return to the airport.
?lfcGoven1 said of the discussions with
Democratic governors:
''It was a good , useful exchange. We
established a good working relationship if
l become the nominee ."
"I think It was good that he came,''
Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter said in an in·
ten·icw. "The best polnt was just the fact
that he left Callfomla and came here. It
sho\ved he was concerned ."
But Carter. generally identified as the
leader of the anti-McGovern for ces
a1nong the Democratic governors . said.
"I really can't say that my attitude
toward him ha.s changed."
rifcGovern on ~-tonday predict e d
primary elecllon victories today In
California, New Jersey, South Dakota and
New A1exiC<l.
From Pa11e 1
SCHOOL VOTE ..
averaged a turnout of slightly Its! than
20 percent by mldn1orning.
University Perk Elementary School
loggro 81 of 331 voters or 21 percent.
Tu rtle Rock Elementary School polls
drew 12.1 of 544 eligible voters showing a
23 percent turnout.
The Colony Club polling place reported
"steady" voting althou~ only 15 percent
-93 of 610 registered -had cast ballots
early today .
The issue of primary concern to
lrvlr>e and Mission Viejo partnls on
today's election ballot, ls the school
di~trict reorganlzfltlon.
Irvine's 8,818 regl1t~ vottrs wlll
select five persons from a field of 14 ac·
tlve candidates who !!ei!k to serve on the
Irvine Unified School DI.strict Board of
Education.
The 24,20.S registered voten Uvlng
within the boundt?lea of the proposed
Minion Viejo Unified School District alto
wUI select 1 nve-mtmber school board.
The new board wlll govtrn Khools in El
Toro. t...aguna ffllls and ~ilssion Vlt/o.
Tustin's 30,109 registered vottr.!I carry
the most clout in the dtcislor. to create
tht three new dlt.arlctl. 'lbQle v.oters too,
will vote on unlflcaUon ind aelect a ri ve--
member unified achoo\ board.
In order for any of the unified di5trlcts
to be creale<I, the reorpniu.tion plan
must rece ive . 1 majority of yes votes
from all the district voters.
DAILY 'ILOl' SllU ''""
Hospital S l,ylitae Rises
ShO\.\'n is the constr11 ctlon of Saddle back Community
J lospi!al in J.agu na I !ill s. '/'lie non-profit facility be·
1ng built Uy the J.utheran H ospital Society is to have
1150 beds in its first phase '''ith eventual expansion
to 500 planned. The SlO n1illion C'OSt includes a $1 .B
million federal grant, land donations and private
donations. Con1pletion of the first phase is expected
this summer. 'fhe site is at Calle de la Luisa and
Via Estrada.
V oters Flock · to Polls
Early i11 C1·11cial Race
I.OS A!'\GELES !1\P I -Voters 1renl !()
the polls early and in large nun1bers in
California's crucial prun:iry election to-
day ,~·ith the hopes of Sens. l·lubert ll.
Jlumphrey and Geor~e ritcGov~rn for the
Democratic presidential no m i n a ti on
riding on the results.
In !he first hour of voting in popul ous
Los Angeles County, about three percent
or the 3,233.825 registered voters casl
ballots, the county registrar reported.
Skies 1vere overcast and the air "'·as
warm and muggy over most of the state.
President and tl-lrs. Nixon voted by
absentee ballot.
A spokesman said ~1onday in Key Bis·
cayne, r~la., that they sent in their ballots
after returning from the Soviet sum mJt
trip.
The winner or today's presidential
primary carries a bloc of 271 delegate
votes into the Democratic Nat!onal
C.Onventlon at f\1iami Beach -one-sixth
of the total needed to win the nomination.
The polls are <lpen from 7 a.m. until 8
p.m.
The vote count may be slow because of
a long ballot !n some areas and a writ e-in
campaign on behalf of Alabama Gov.
F rorn Page 1
DAHLBERG. • •
primary objectives; but rather the Jklths
of mediocrity, control and 'keep the
educational waters quiet' determine our
educational thinking and acUons. I cannot
continue to be a party to this type of
eluctition."
Dahlberg said a public school board
1nust be accountable and com1nunicatlve
tu parents and taxpayers. He said he is
encouraging the community to continue
lo express its concerns and demand
results from the board.
lie said it is his conc lusion thal as a
private citizen he can accomplish more of
h!s original goals than as.a single trust~c.
(;e<:>rJj:e C. \Valla ce.
Secretary of State Edmund G. BrO\\'n
estimated that 3.8 million of I.he state's
5.1 million Democrats -or 75 percent -
\vould vote today, lured mostly by the
presidential contest. He foreca st a record
turnout of 73 percent of the 9.1 nUllion
registered voters.
Because San Francisco polling places
may be open as late as 10 p.m., Brown
Jr. asked the lhrtt major broadcast
networks to hold back their C<Jmputerized
\vinner projections for several hours.
Indications were his reque!t would be
turned down.
In telegrams Monday to ABC, CBS and
NBC election offlclals, he said he feared
the network predlctlons would swing the
\'Otes of late voters in San Francisco,
perhaps even deciding the outcome of the
.state primary.
President Nixon is challenged on the
Republican ballot by Rep. John ~f.
Ashbrook of Ohio but Ashbrook is not
C<Jnsidered a .serious threat to Nixon's
\Vinning California's 96 dtlegate votr.s to
lhe GOP convention.
Wallace failed to file In time to n1a\.:e
the Democratic ballot. but a TI.'Tite-in
campaign "'as under way on behalf of the
Alabama governor. still in a Maryland
hospital recuperating from gunshot
wounds suffered at a shopping ctnter
r ally in Laurel. ?o.1d .. Atay 15.
There was no cha.nee of \\ratlace:'s rol·
lecting any delegates in California. where
the "·inner reaps the entire 271 -vote bloc.
Dul his campaign managers hoped for an
express ion of \Yalloce strength in the
state ,vhere busing of school children for
racial balance has been an emotional
l~sue ln some areas. but not a major
point of disc ussion bet\\•een ?i.1cGovern
and Hum phrey.
A victory for 1'.1cC'.overn in Calirornia
\rould propt'1 him toward the Democratic
National Convention in ?o.1iami Beach in
July with a commanding lead in deleg ate
,·ot es -more than hatr the 1,509 needed
to \\'in the nomination.
Humphrey had to win to remain a ma-
jor contender for the nomination although
tie vowed to fight on even if he lost.
•
Meyer Lansky,
Partner Charged
In Tax Eva sion
\VA SHINGTON (AP ) -?-.·feyer Lansky
a nd a reputed longtime associate were in-
dicted by a federal grand jury today on
charges of conspiring to avoid paying
taxes on money allegedly recelved from
gamblers on junkets to George Raft 's
Colony Sporting Club in London, England.
Lansky, 69, and his reputed associate,
Dino Cellini, also were accustd by the
grand jury in U.S. District Cow-t in
~11ami of conspiring to obstruct the
Internal Revenue Service from as.seulng
income taxes. Cellini also was charged
with filing two false inC<lme tax returns.
The J ustice Department announced the
Jndlctmept action.
Lansk~ is Jiving In l!ratl and fighting
attempts by the Israeli government to
deport h.lm. He wa.s indlcted in J\.tlaml
last year for refu!ing to appear before a
grand jury in Miam1 and in Las Vegas in
connection with alleged illegal gambling
acti vities.
Cellini, 57, a native of Steubenville,
Ohio, Jives in Rome whe re he represents
an American slot machine manufacturer.
lie was a stockholder and employe of
Rafl's gamtrling casino which operated
from 1966 to 1969.
Man Sl1ot Twice
Op ening Garage
A Cypress man, preparlng to go to
"'ork, was shot and "'<lunded when he
opened his garage door , police reported.
Raul Odin, 43, of 11~93 r..1anila Drive,
told officers that when he opened the
door Monday morning a tall , thin man in
hi!! mid-20s Of'dered him not to move.
Odin s.aid the man then shot him twice
in the abdomen and fled. Police said
there was no apparent motive for the
shooti ng as nothing "''as taken from the
J1ome or garage.
Odin is reported ln aatisfactory con-
dition today in Los Alamitos General
11ospital.
County Has .
Y ear's First
Smog Alert
Scatttred thw1der1howers \VUI continue
to hit the Orztnll'.e Co.:i~t in brirf 3purl5
through Wedntsday, v:eather foreeaslerl
at the Orange County 1''orestry Depart·
men~ said today.
A serle.s of frea k sho"•ers. some ac-
companied by ligh tning and thunder. ap-
peare<t ~tondny in some area!i but con1-
plete/y missed adjoining cities.
San Clemente recorded .12 inches of
rain. which brought the year'.s total up to
.67 inches. Bolts of '1ightning streeked
across the sky about 3:30 p.m. CIVer the
coastal cfty, as well as over Garden
Gro ve and Anaheim.
lfuntington Beech and Costa 1'.Iesa •~·
perienced light brief sprinkles, while only
an overc11.st sky rovered Laguna Beach.
El Toro t-..1arlne Corps Air Station
recorded a .02 inch reading of rain for the
El Toro-Irvine area Monday.
Ntarhy Trabuco Canyon was hardest
hit. The Forestry department recorded a
l.12 inch rainfall there, in contrast to a
.04 inch count in Irvine Lake.
Lightning started a \ree fire in Holy
Jim Canyon, burning a ix fool by 12 foot
patch of ground before rain put it out.
Forestry offi cials said there la an 30
~reent chance of more rainfall today
and \Vednesday .
... The freak weathtr Monday also in·
eluded the Urst smog alert of the year
i1sued by Ute Orange County Air Pollu-
tion Control (OCAPCD ) District at about
1:20 p.m.
The ozone count rose to .42 parts per
million (PPM) In La Habra end schools
were warned to keep children fro1n
strenuous extrclse. The alert was ended
at 2 p.m. when winds caused the count to
drop below the .35 ppm level.
Edward Camarena , engineer for the
OCAPCD, said the same breezes today
will keep the smog count down, although
last night the department was still pN-
dlcti ni an alert today,
Next Monday, said Camarena. an ozone
C<Junt of .20 ppm wll l replace the .35 ppm
as the warning point.
From Pagel
INTERVIEWS ...
ty offices and council chamber are
unde.r way on the second floor of lrvlno
Town Center, 4201 Campus Drive.
Planning commissioners will meet the
new associate planner and continue
diSCUSSion! Of the timetable for-AC•
eompllshlng the policy plan portion of the
city general plan. Those devtlopment
guJdellnes are expected to be completed
in September.
Other matters for dl1cussion are the
pennanency of the city's development
preview cornmltttt, a school site, zo1.,~g
for Leadership liouslng Systems' parcel
in the window areas and a recom-
mendation on deri!ion making procedurt.s
to be presented by assistant city attorney
.John Murphy and planning adviser Ed
Haworth.
On Thursday night. the council and
planning commis!!ion will hold its joint
study re>slon.
Tonight's council study i; es s io n
necessarily vras canceled because of the
election. ,
Bottler Strike Ends
SAN FRANCISCO <A Pl - A six-month
strike against San Franci.sco Bay area
soft drink bottling plants comes to an end
today as \\"Orkers {rem six Teamsters
locals start returning to their jobs, the
unlon announced . Following tentative
agreement between the management
Food Employers Council and union
negotiators Saturday. the locals com·
pleted favorable ratification votes Mon·
day night .. "[ have al\l:ays believed in working
11\'i\hin the sys!em.' llowever for the first
time in my life 'v:orking withi n !he
system' is not possible and yet retain my
educational beliefs and ptrsonal in·
lel'!;rity.''
Trustee Peterson said 11e was sorry
Dahlberg felt as he did and was !Orry to
see him go because he had made valuable
contrib11tions.
IT'S lIERE • • • YESTERYEAR!
Board President Bob l-Iurst SHirl
Dahlberg's resignation snould move the
board to do some r~valuation of Itself.
Dahlberg's resignation is the third in
the last few months. Trustees Robert
Beasley and Donald Inlny both resigned
for personal reasons earlier this year.
An election to fill Dahlberg'1 seat will
take place sometime In September.
Dahlberg, President of the Dana Point
?o.1nrina Company, and former Tustin
High School superintendent, hes on many
occasions opposed administrative recom-
1riendatlons. He has long fought for a
stronaer central administrative staff with
mC1re conlrol over indlvldtn.1 schools, bet-
ter programs for gifted studmts and
those with learning disabUlties. and more
uniform.tty in curriculum throughout the
dl•trtct.
lie was a supporter of Chllrle1
Johannsen who "'as recently fired from
his position of director of pupil per1011nel
sr.rvlces because of his confUcts with the
admlni.stratlon .
THESE DRINKS
GOOD FOR YOU
ClllCAGO (UPI) -Cocktail cuslomcrs
may now take Vitamin E c.1psule!I a~ the
eod of a toothpick, like an olive, or
noatlng like • chorry or lemon peel In
their drlnk11 tt Sage's Eut restaurant.
The restaurflnt !iald it would make the
vitAmlns eveJIRhle-in drinks starting
toolght. ..
SELECTION OF CARPETIN~ WASN'T
!FANTASTIC WHEN OUR GRANDFATHER
STARTED HIS CARPET STORE. ORIENTAL RUGS
WERE "IN," AND GRANDFATHER SPECIALIZED
IN THEM.
OUR FATHER GOT INTO THE ACT
A·ROUND 19 18 AND DEVELOPED A LARGE
VOLUME OF DOMESTIC CARPETS, MOSTLY
WILTONS AND AXMINISTERS.
LATELY WE HA VE SEEN A RESURGENCE
OF AXMINISTER CARPETS IN B EAU TI FU L
FLORALS AND PRINTS. THE EFF6CT CREATED
BY AN UNUSUAL PAmRN CAN TRANSFORM
A DULL R 0 0 M INTO S 0 M ET HI N G
SPECTACULAR.
PLEASE STOP IN AND SEE OUR LARGE
SELECTION.
ALDEN'S
CARPns • DRAPES
1663 Plac•ntla Av•;
COSTA MISA
646-4138
HOURS: Mon. Thur Thuro., 9 to 5:30 -Fr i., f to 9-SAT., 9:30 to 5
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Bea~h Huntington
Today's Final
Va lley Fountain N.Y. St.ocklil
VOL 65, NO. 158, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOA Y, JUNE 6, 1972 TEN CENTS
Ocean View Trustees Adopt Tentative Budget
An Sll.43 million tentittive budget fo r
the 1972-73 school year was adopted ~fon·
day night by trustees of lhe Ocean View
School Dlslrict.
The budget proposes a spending in-
crease of about $420.000, or abo ut $33
more per child per year. But it contains
no proviston for tax increases and no new
programs. accordin g to Superintendent
Clarence Hall. The district's 1971-72 tax
rate is $3.73 per $100 assessed valuation.
Inflation, merit and step pay increases
.. for teachers contained in exis ting con·
State Vot e
Lool\:s Heavy
111 P1~imary
LOS ANGEl .. ES (AP) -Voters went to
the polls early and in large numbers in
California's crucial primary election to-
day with the hopes of Sens. ilubert H.
Humphrey and George ~icGovem for the
Democratic presidential no m in a t i on
riding on the results.
By 11 a.m. today. more than 16 percent
of the 3.2 rnillion voters in Los Angeles
County cast their bffilols·-far ahead or
the record primary pace in 1988 when
only about 11 perctnt had voted four
hou rs after the polls opened.
In San Francisco. the e,rly turnout
was running a little behind the 1968 pace
when more than 72 percent of California's
registered voters balloted. But voting
was expected to be slow In San Fran-.
cist'O because of an unusually Jong ballot ,
The early voting was heavy in Sacra-
mento, possibly in an effort to beat the
105-degree tem perature forecast for later
in the day.
Skies were overcast and the air was
warm and muggy Over most of th e state.
President arid Mrs. Nixon voted by
absentee ballot.
A spokesman 3aid Monday in Key Bis-
cayne, Fla ., that they sent in their ballots
afte r returning from the Soviet summit
trip,
The v.·inner of today's presidential
primary carries a bloc of 271 delegate
votes into the Democratic National
Convention at ~t iami Beach -one.sixth
of the total needed to win the nomination.
The polls are open from 7 a.m . until g
p.m.
The vole count may be slow because of
a long ballot in some areas and a write·in
campaign on behalf of Alabama Gov.
Ge(lrge C. Wallace.
:-.iecretary of Slate Edmund G. Brown
estimated that 3.8 million of the state's
5. I million Democrals -or 75 percent -
v.•ould vote today, lured mostly by the
presidential co ntest. He forecast 11 record
turnout of 73 percent of the 9.1 million
registered voters.
Because San Francisco polling places
may be open as late as IO p.m., Brown
Jr. asked the three major broadcast
networks to hold back their computerized
winner projections for several hours.
lndicatlorui: wer& his request would ht
turned down.
In telegrams Monday to ABC, CBS and
N1;1C election officials, he said he feared
the network predictions would !Wing the
votes of late voters in San Francisco,
(See PRIMARY, P1ge %)
CITY OFFICES
IN T RA ILER
Fount1dn Valley city ad~
mlnlstratlve offices have bffn tern~
porarlly moved to trailm in front
or tht police department 1t IlllOO
Slater Ave.
'Ille omces of the clly coanctl, ci-
ty manaa:tr, city •tlomeJ and
personnel deparlmOJ>t wtII be bcJul.
ed In the trall.,.. r .. 4P!"Odmltaly
four months wblle the in-I
facilities ere being rtmodeled and
1 new councll chambor ii bullL
tracts. and higher filed costs for supplies
and utilities were given by Hall as
reason.! for the increased cost for the
same basic educational program.
The budget i! not scheduled ror fi na l
adoption until after a public hearing in
lhe firs t week o1 August.·
"We're sure thert'll be changes be-
tween now and August," said Hall.
"\Ve're not sure.what they will be how·
ever." He pointed to the wicertainty in
the state Legislature concerning severat
tax refonn proposals, in current salary
May or Loses
Car, Gets Cas li
~Iayor Al Coen 's fellow Hun-
Lington Beach Councilmen took
away his city car Monday night.
But they replaced it with a travel
allowance of up to $125 per month.
The switch was made at the re·
quest of City Administrator Da vid
Ro\vlands who suggested it would
be more economi cal and practical
lo reimburse the mayor for the use
of his own car, than to provide him
with a car, which, while inactive,
could not be used by any other city
official$.
It has been the city's policy to
preserve one city vehi.cle ex.
clwively for the mayor's use when
he is on official business.
IS% of Beach
Voters Turn Out
By Midmorning
A spot check of sample precinct! in
Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley
showed about 15 percent of the voters
turnlng out by mid-momlng today.
Poll watchers, however, disagreed on
whether they considered it a light or
heavy early turnout for the Primary
Election.
One official in Huntington Beach,
where 75 of 453 registered voters had cast
their ball ots by 10 :15 a.m., termed ii a
"heavy turnout.'' and said she expected
75 percent would vote by the end of the
day.
Workers at ~1oiola School in Fountain
Valley, where 146 of 1,061 registered
volers had made decisions, said they con-
!iidered il a light turnout for the moming
but expected most of their voters to show
up after 4:30 p.m.
Paul Jones, the city cler k of Hunti11gton
Beach, said he expects the Primary Elec·
tk>n to draw a lot of voters, maybe 65
percent.
There are, however, some local L!sues
in lhe two cities. The <1uestion of
fluoridating city water supplies is on the
ballot in both Huntington Beach and
Fountain Valley.
Fountain Valley voters are also cboos-
(Ste VOTERS, Pa1e !)
negotiations with district ttachers. •nd in
the. expected increase ln the: tax base of
the district.
The tentative budget assumes:
-No salary increaises for teachers ex·
cept. those provided in existing contracts.
Teachers, however, are seeking pay
hikes.
-An increase in the taxable wealth or
the dis trict of about five percent, plilll an
additional $15 per child from the state as
contained in the Governor's proposed
budget.
Vendor Hit
B y Gunmen
In Robbery
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tlle DlllY ,.Ii.I S11ff
Sitting wit h a cold rifle barrel at his
temple1 a catering truck operator waited
lcir his fate late ~ionday· in C.Osta Ji.iesa,
as one band1t held the gun and the other
urged him to shoot.
Sherman W. Vandeman, 28, of Fciuntain
Valley, survived the. harrowing 11 :15 p.m.
ordeal.
The rifleffiaa choee only to knock him
unconscious, ·shattering h1a paiua.uy open
truek window , l!1t dazed victbn told
police after he regaJntd consclousness.
Vandeman -who said he Jost $40 in
the armed robbery -drove to a Harbor
Boulevard doughnut sbop stveral hundred
yards from the darkened area v.·here he
·was attacked and robbed.
He awoke to spot Officer David Walker
parked. at the shop on a coUee break
about 11:30 p.m., according to In-
vestigators.
The truck driver said he 'had pulled into
the industrial 11rea on Warehouse Road
a bout 100 yards off Harbor BouJevard to
dwn p stale coffee after completing hi!:
rounds.
Vandeman said he . complettd lbe
chore, turned off the gas bumers and
climbed back into his cab with his win-·
dow partially down.
Suddenly he felt the rifle against his
hcaC.: and heard a menacing male voice
"'arn him not to twn or he would blow
his brains out.
"Shoot him,'' Vandeman quoted a Se{'·
ond bandit as urging.
Officer Walker and Detecli\•e Richard
Fredericksen returned to the holdup
scene and found nothing but Vandeman's
dumped roffet cargo and the shatlemi
window glass.
Jnvestigators tbeorif.ing the bandits
knew Vandeman'• rounds and Umetable
belore ambushing hirn planned to in-
terview the victim again today.
He 1aw neither of the bandita:, a<:·
cording to police.
-A reduction of the district's 1'tserves
by about $300,000 to a year-f:nd level of
about 4.5 percent. Hall said cutting
reserves to Jen than 5 percenl is ··a
precariouis policy."
Hall noted that nett year the district
"'ill have less margin in the reserves for
i\aking up increased edocation costs .
"UnJess there is. equalization from
Sacramento by that lime. it is unlikely
that we will escape without cuts lo our
educational program." Hall said.
Even this year, Ha ll noted, I.here 1s still
• Ill
a possibility of a ta.\: increase in thr
district if the board of truS1ces d('('id.:s to
give teachers u pa y raise , or 1f lh••
district's assessed valuatlun is nt11 -a-.
high as it is e:<ptC!ed 10 bf-.
11al1 explain<'d that the sl~1te has rr-
quired sever;1! new employe benefit!i ;u1d
will all ow the district 10 raise !axC's h'' a
few cents to t·on1pensate. At present,
however , these increased costs are ('(111-
tained in the ex isting bU'dge! 11 1tho1H
drawing revenue frorn the se t1pt\011al, {!I'
"perinissi\'e," ta~<'S
0
Beacl1 Council Actio11
Here in capsule form are the major' ac tions taken 'P-.·tonday night by the
Huntington Beach City Counci l:
LIBRARY: Approved plans and specifications for the $.1.5 million cent r~I
library designed by Dion Ne utra. Construction bid s ll'il! he opened Jt1ne It
TRANSPORTATION: Established 11 special com1ni1tf.'e lo study public
transportation needs and routes in th e city.
TOWN LOTS: Deferred action on a series of planning ordinance changes
designed to improve apartments in the Town Lot nei ghborhood. Councilmen
want to wait for completion of Lhe Town Lot study before changing any Javis.
OIL WE~: Refused to allow seven oil wells near Hunti ngton l l~rbour to
begin pumping after being shut down for several months. \Velis had previously
caused oil spills in the Harbour.
· NO BOXES: Refused to allow a company that prin ts on cardboard boxes
to occupy the vacant Leonard 's Depai-tment Store on Beach BouJe,•ard. say-
ing. the company should be in Industrial z.one.
. . '"400~Ko TumeG down • request to build 2Q homes nut to lb<
runway at M!adtiwlark Airport. ·
EDISON PARK : Signed a rive-year lease with Southern Callfomll Edlson
for ,the uae of tight acres of land as part of the proposed 4Q..1dl EdiSOD
Community Part 1n southeast H1D1tlngton 8eacb.
CardboardBoxCompany
Loses Zone 'Semantics'
Huntington Beach Councilmen Monday
night crushed plam by a cardboard box
printing company to occupy the vacant
Leonard's Department Store on Beach
Boulevard.
On a 4·2 vote, councilmen decided that
Consolidated Eureka is more of a print·
ifli plan t than a. printing shop and
belongs in Industrial , not commercial
zoning.
Consolidated offi cials were appealing a
similar split decision by the planning
commission. which had labeled the opera·
tion as falling in the "twilight zone"
between industrial and commercial
usage.
''We make cards for Insertio n Into
packages and we print on boxes. Print
shops do this,'' Wallace O'Leary, a
Consolidated Eureka offlcla], argued.
Homeo'wners. who packed the publiC
hearing to oppose the appeal, presented
the council with a ~tition bearing the
signatures 0£ 182 nearby residents .
"We'l:'e. here to protect tile integrity of
our neighborhood.'' Albert Massey, BISI
Terry Drive, told councilmen. ''We feel
this is not a normal retail use."
Mrs. Hazel Cook handed a jar full of
paper dust and cardboard clippings to the
council which she said was collected at
the Los Angeles faclory of the company.
"We found the gutter filled with trash.
\Ve also found a si gn that proclnl med
'designers and manufacturers since 1919.'
J can onl y wonder that after 53 years
!hey are now trying to deny their stature
as manufacturers, '1 she said.
O'Leary said his company runs a clean,
quiet operation, and i! attempting to
move out of the Los Angeles area
bce.ause of the dirt there.
Ile hoped to move into the huge, ll,000
square-foot warehouse (almost two acres
unde· .. oDe. roof ) owned by the. family of
former state Senator ~oho Murdy.
Lid Shut on Beach Wells The faciJtty north of Warner Avenue
has housed three different retail stores.
Leonard's was the last store to use It.
and the building has been empty since
Leonard'a moved out several monthl ago.
Counc il Refuses Request for Reactivatio1i Permit
The Ud will remain abut, on seven oi1
wells near Huntington Harbour •hicb in
the paot have been lhe ....,.. of oil l]>ilil
ir1lo the hlrboUr channels.
Uuntlo(ton Beach councilmen turned
deaf earf Monday night to 10 appoal by Grover CoW111 to lllow hbn to reactlvlle
111• well• e..i of. Algonquin Strttt ond
north of Pearce Avenue,
"l still owe Ille blnk conaideroble
._ and I ba~e pa)'ll)ellil of 12,000 .a
moath, and the -...... , pumptnc,"
ColllN, • Loo ~ • ...,~~ llald.
Doo ~. a ttualln«ton Harbour
rttldent, oPIM*d the ofi Operltlon, c1&1mtnc thetr poor r<eor<1 1or on opw.
didn't merit 1ny --· City OU Field SUpertntendent Herb Day
auhmllted 1 report 1istlni 1 Mrl., o! oU
spllll And other problems with the aeven
weU. dating beck to 1187.
'Ille lut and targeat opllt octUrTed In
lt'11 wbeo oU ran Into the channela and
cotted 1 number of prtvate yachts, ac·
cording to Day's repcrt. Collins' in-
•urance agent paid fM,000 in damage
clalml for boat repairs. .
Shortly aftor that oplll, Contns nld he
llhut 1111 welt.I down W>luntartly btc1utt
ol the blgb cost o! operllhl& lhom with '°
many troublet.
HJa _.. fllr rtlcUnllon WIS baled
on the ourdwo of -.J)IJl1lpinf equip-ment whlcb he said would eliminate the
possibility, or oil spills.
However, ctty Attorney Don Boni•
ruiod thot ....... Collins Wll ... tin( I
zone cban&e {to utabllah aa '10" zone on
the property) the enlir'-hearing was ii·
legal.
"He netdt a rtactlvatlon ptnnlt, not a
zone change, to begin p<Ullpl111." Bonr1
11id. "And hi.a time haa run oul for that.''
'"Illen *"• does' he stand now?"
A9ked ec.Jncllman Jerry Matney, ·
"He'• out, no more remedle.s," replied
MayO.. Al Coen. .
'"lblo LI unbelievable," procl.llmed
C4><lndlman lltnry Dakt. "Wt 1 .. d a guy
to the lop ol lhe mounlaln1 ~ tell him
he should oner hl'Ve climbed it. 1 feel
the zonlJ1I 1'0Uld be wrong 1nyw1y, but
he ihoald bne been told about the pro-
c:edllrt ""' qo." Coundbri• wted M to suataln the
pl ....... COIMillllon'• dental or Collins'
zone cblna• request.
"It waa built In 1980. to 1960 stan-
dardJ ," explained James M. 'M>ompson, a
real .estJte 1gent. ·•Now lt'i out of the
circle of competition (the Huntingtop
Center area) for such commercial uses.t•
ThomJ>90n argued that the prlntlllJI
racllity would be a much better use than
a car tot, rurruture 1tore or rock concert
hall, which he said were poSJlble wm.
CooncUmen ab admttte<t· diff)culty .In
decidlM tht euct st•tur• or the pro.
pooed business.
Aile. councilmen voted 4-1 to ·deny Its
u,. (Norma Gibbs 1nd Ted S.rtiott op.
posed}, CouncilmAn Jury Matney asked
the city admini1tr1tor to he I p
Consolidated find another site on in-
du.!ltrlal land.
"It's too bad thil company" ii en ad·
versary at the mornent. We want In-
dustry and this appears to be 1 good one,
but 11111. ii on bnproper loco lion !or It,"
Matney s.itd.
"llt1t if so1nt·t!111i~ unl"Ipcc·tt>d hap-
pi.'1\s ·· ll ;1ll :>tllll "Ila· lloartl of truslees
1111gl1t 111<Jkt a det'1'1011 111 r:ust laxes .
'I hl'\' h:•\ ,. until Au~ust tu dc1'Jd1• ·•
Al't'orr.hng lo f1gu rt'S co11t;i1ntd in th~
1!•nt;1t 1vt• hudgcl, st al t• ~l!pport for th~
Ch·t·:1n \'1e1v School f)l.~lrif'l has sl1ppt:·d
rr\1111 ~8 fK'rcent Lil Hlii~·i0 lo ;:i prOJt<·tcd
41 5 !)t'rt·c111 for nex1 \P.'lt' ''
"\\'t"rt' still hoi>cru1 11 1111 th e
l.1•i.:1sl:1turt' will t.'Orne lhroOl!,b \\'Hh n1ore
th1.s )Par than ll1l' ~U\t·ruor has re-
que~tcd .'' /fall sa1rl. "There are se1er:d
rcforro bills pending "
• es1a
P11s h Begins
By Res cuer s
l11t o Mi11e
SAl.IS AURY. Hhoclesi a fUPI)
He:.cut· workers wearing \lqui d oxyge n
b11ckpacks edged through poison i:ias and
!i inoke fi lled tunnel.s in one of fihodesia ':ii
Ja r~est coal mines today. searching for
rnore tha n 400 men !rapped by an un·
derground explosion . There \Vere ex·
~cted lo be few survivors.
~1ore than 1,000 relatives rushed to the
\Vankie mine, located near the famed
\Van kie Game RMerve and Virt ::irla
Falls, to wait for the rescuer•' report.
Sorne wept while others stood 1Uent and
expressionle.!11.
Officials said 468 men -43S Alrican1
and 33 wbltes -were believed trapped. A
handful scampered out IOOn after the
blast, but there wa1 no offlcial count.
The blast occurred st I a.m. PDT "''hen
\v:;irk crews were operating ;it full
strength. The dull boom rattled windows
:i mile away .
Soon after the explosion. clouds of
lethal methane gas spread through !he
lunnels. The gas could not be pumped out
beca use the extractor fans \.\'ere damaged
in the explosion.
\Vankle is a major co;;l supplier for
holh Rhodesia and neighboring Zambia.
It is owned by lhe Anglo · American
Corporation or South Africa and emplr-'s
t1lmost 5,000 miners, most of thein
Africans. The mine produces 2.2 million
ton~ or coal a year.
Shrill horns blasled !he ne~'s l'lf 1he
dL<iaster soon after !he explosion bu t most
relatives felt the bl:ist and were on the
way lo the shaft.
New rescue equipment was installed
recently, including special suits and ox-
ygen masks. i'vlinr officials made a n
urgent call for <'xlrn supplies of liquid ox-
ygC'n.
Hhodesian Air Force planes carried
emergency canisters of oxygen and
special rescue personnel to the area. ·
Wankie airfield, in the middle of the
(Stt DISASTER, Page %t
Orange Coan
Weatber
Variable clouds are in the p:c-
ture through Wednesday along the
Orange Coast, with possibllJty of
showers ln the evening hours.
That moist. warm air will ~
tinue with highs of 70 at the beach
rlslnlit' to near 90 Inland. The
wea ther1 ady also remlnd3 roast
weather.watchers to be sure to
vote.
INSmE TOD-' Y
Late rt r>orts havt f Jl tctd l)Uf
of the Africa·n republic of Bu·
rundi revealing Vi e slouohter of
J50.00Q in bloody tribol killlngs.
See t tory1 Page 11.
l.M. •1t• 1• -.. C1l1M'lll1 I --.. ci.a11r1to11 IJ.l'I C_k, I, .... ~ .........
011' 1111111 I Cr........, I' --' DMllrl -...c.. • ......... ,... ' ....,.. ___ _.._ ___ ,.,,.
''"" _._. •n '"'*''•'-' tf
,_ n
11111.... Jt.JI
--n ,., ftM •ICJl"I • ......... . ...,.._ If ._,.Mewl, .. ,.
4*1~ IJ --..
Be SU.re to Vote Today; Polls . Open Until 8
•• •' • ••
'
.,
t DAIL V PILOT " TUHd•y, Juw 6, 1m
~ueing Seen
• ln Valley
Witl1 Rulu1g
Hv JOHN ZALl,ER
"" -tt•ltF ~ ,, ...
The pennanenl buslng of 2,000 childrc-n
a year may lie <ihfad for tht'. Fountain
\'alley School Di.strict uni~ it CJln
ptr3Ulde the st.al~ to revcrst. a recent
ruJing on nev.· school ("()n!lnictioo.
"This is one of the conclusions Tn a
series of JO.year prUJl't:Tion11 prf'Sf'nl<!rl to
l"euntain Valley trustees by district ad-
ministntors.
Known collectively as "The Cohort
Survlval System," the ne\ot' sta~ reguJa.
tiona provide that nt!W school con-
struction must be justlfied on the basis of
children already enrolled in acbool.
Old regulations allowed school distrids
to justify new constructioo on tbe buis of
projected enrollments.
The total effect fX the new regulations
will be to cut back planned construction
by t,5 K'hoob in the next five yean, and
hy about l\l.'O full schools when the
district reaches full sa1uration. the
district's 10-yea r study predicts.
"A fast growing dislrlcl such as ours
surges ahead suddenly \\•henevcr a new
housing tract opens." said Superintendent
Mike Brick. "'Under this new ruling.
however, we can't begin building a school
~·hen we see the hOU!5es going in. V.1e
have to \Vail until the children actually
show up and overcrowd our existing
schools.
"This is ridiculous," he continued. "If
it had been in effect during our period or
greatest growth it wouJd have put us on
double tellOM without 11ny question."
"Mle reuon for the prediction <lF
permanent busing, he explained, is that
the tighter restrict ions will cause the
etiminaUon of two schools. thus dimip-
llng the diatriet's master plan which was
drawn up under the assumption of the <lid
methods for·justirying construction.
Under the district's master plan. school
officials hope eventually to eliminate bus-
ing within the diS'trict in favor or
neighborhood schools which children
could reach on foot or on bicycles.
"Were 's no \Vay we're going to avoid
permanent busing even u•hen we are
completely staur11ted," Brick s a id ,
"unleu we can get this ruling changed."
Trustees have authorized Brick to
negotiate head-to-head with state officials
about changing the ruling,
Brick noted that state officiaJs said
they would be "open-minded" about con-
sidering changes.
"What they mea11t by that," Brick
charged, "i.s that if enough political
pressure is appUed, they'll be wllllfli to
change their minds."
Brick has unveiled a series or detailed
projections analyzing the dist ri ct's
growth potential in each school, in each
class. in each of the next five years. He
also listed fou r ways in which the cohort
survival system contradicts existing
state policie!.
"It's not going to be easy because'
\re're probably going lo have to change
the ruling for the enlire state before we
can get what we need.'' Brick said . "But
\ve're well-armed with £acts and we 're
prepared to make life unp leasant for
them .''
lnciided in lhe growth projections was
a predi'Ction that the district wou}d be 7l
percent saturated lvit h five years, and
JOO percent saturated by 1982.
Frotn Page 1
VOTERS ...
ing between ~ix candirl.11es for First
DistriC't supervisor,
An arid itional i!':sue . Cltv CounC'il r>f'Y
raises, ha!': been added to the fluntlngton
Beach ballot. The b<'lllot features a
charter amendment wh ich would allow
the slate legislature lo sel the salary
scale for Huntington Beach councilmen .
In effect , that would mean a plly rai se
fruin $175 a month to $300 a month.
Results ()f loca l. counly. state~ and na-
tiona l elections will be tabulated tonight
al the County I{egistrar ()f Voters office.
OlANGI COAST HI
DAILY PILOT
Th• 0!'1"91 Co.11 DAILY l'llOl wilt. Which
;, Ufl'llllncci !tie Nit-Pm .. is Wbllfl!nl lllV
'"• Or•l'IQe Co111 P11Dl11llin1;1 tom.,.nv. $•~
rile edlllon1 ''' PUllll•hed, MOndl1 lhr"Ollllh
Frid11, lor (0$11 MMI, N•wuorl ''''"·
Himl!"9!°'" Bea(l\/f'cu1'tttn Y•Ht y, L•ovn•
Btildl, lrv!nt/S•CldltlM<~ ,.,,cl 51n crementef
511'1 J111<1 C•i:>l•lr•r.o. A ,JnQlt 1•olcn1I
edi!iDn I• Pllllll•hed Sl'lurd•Y• 111($ Su~•~•·
The p•l1'c!p1! 1)1Jllti1MP'Q ~1~n1 ;, 11 3JO Wt•I
B•V ;$1,...1, Cc111 M1\•, (1111nrnl1, •int.
Rob1rl N. W11d
P1,t kl1n1 11'111 PubhW'lt r
J etk R. Curlt't
Ylce 1'tc~odent •nd Otntr11 MtlltOtr
lhom•1 K •• ,a
EllillW'
lhom1t A. Mur~hi11e
M1111111ne Editor
Ch•rlti H, Looi Ric1'i1td 1. Ntfl
A~lltl•nl M111t111"9 flllhlrs
l 11ry Coville
Wnt 0Afl0' Co..inl"t &idllt>r
tf•lttl"f'H lffclt Offlc•
I 7•7S l11th loul1v1rd M•U~1 Addr1u: P.O. lo• 770, ,2,41
°"-Offlces
Lt;Ut'll !HCf!· n1 Forni Aw11W1
Cotll Mffl: )Je Wnl l•r \lrMI
N..,.,.t !._.di: 2JU l"fWPOrf IJovlt ... rd $eft (llmlnl•~ JOS l"ortfl £1 Ctmlno llNI
T...,. ... f7,41 64J-4JJ1
ca..lfMtl A4"rfl1l"9 ••2·5•71
,,_ M~ or11"" <111•11r c"""'"";'~• J40·1Ut
~ltftt. 1t1t Or•nff CNtt l"IAllltllf'll ~. Na ~ llOtJn, !tlutlrtti....1,
-..,111 piat!tr Of M'ltnlt-11 Plett!'\ nw • rept"O(fu(ld WllPIOut ._.., Pt<'• ~ If eoftYtlftll ._,.,, ..,_.. c•••• "'"'"' Nlof •! Cotl• Me,., -'-'lfoml&... .Sub:Krl1>.flon bY t t•rltr U.6J
-fl'llYJ W ,,,,II ll.lS inantt11¥1 ,,,!lilttr
fJitlllMlleM Q .U l'l'IOllllllY.
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/""SOUTH \
I AfllCA
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C>
U'I T1l"l\4llf
UNDERGROUND BLAST TR.APS 468 MINE WORKERS IN RHODESIA
Re&cue Team& Hampered by Ga1 at COlll Mine W•1t of Salisbury
DISASTER ...
game reserve, remained open after
sunset, its runway marked by flares.
Game scouts patrolled regularly to keep
.animals away.
Architect Gets
Settlement OK
Over Lihrary
A $26.000 settlement has ~n reached
bct~·een flunti.ngton Beach and fJion
Neutra , the architect for lh(' city's $~.5
n1illion central library.
Jlospita!s and doctors \\'ere on full
alert.
. "'['hey probably ll'nn 't ~ needed. A
flert of undertakers would be more hke
h." on e mine en1ploye said.
The cause of the blast \.\.·as not im.
n1edlately determined but it could put the
mine out oI action for weeks.
Rhodesia seized independence from
Britain in 1965, and reJ ies heavily on
mining exports to evade United Nations
:sanct-ions and earn vital foreign' currency.
And any lengthy stoppage could hit
Rhodesia 's economy.
According to the Guineas Book of
records, the world's wor.11 mine disaster
occurred In China on April 26, 1942, \vhen
a coal dust explosion killed 1,572 men at
tbe Honkeiko Colliery.
From Pagel
PRIMARY ...
perhaps even decid ing the outco1ne of the
state primary.
President Nixon is challenged on the
Republican ball&t ,by Rep. John M.
Ashbrook. of Ohio but Ashbrook is not
considered a serious threat to Nixon's
winnlng Calllornia's 9S delegate votes to
the GOP convention.
Wallace failed to file in time to make
the Democratic ballot, but a write-ln
campaign wa.1 under way on behalf or the
Alabama governor, still in a Maryland
hospital recuperating from gunshot
wound.I tuffered at a shopping center
rally in Laurel. Md .. May 15.
There was no chance of Wallace's col-
lecting any delegates in f.aUfornla where
tht winner reaps the entire 271-vote bloc ..
But his campaign managers hoped for an
('Xpression of WaJJace strength in the
. .state where busi ng of school children for
racial balance has been iln emotional
issue in some areas, but not a major
point of discussion between McGovern
and Humphrey.
A victory for McGovern in California
would proi)"1 him toward the Democratic
Nalional Convention in Miami Beach in
July with a commanding lead in delegate
votes -more than half the l,509 needed
to win the nomination.
Humphrey had to win to rtmain a ma·
jor contender for the nomination although
he vowed to fight on even If he lost.
Meyer Lansky,
Partner Charged
In Tax Evasion
WASHI NGTON (AP) -Meyor Lansky
and a reputed longtime associate: were. in-
<llcted by a federal grand jury today on
charges of con:splring to avoid paying
taxes on money allegedly received from
~amblers on junket.! to George Raft's
Colony Sporting Club in LOndon, England.
L.ansky, '39, and his reputed usociate,
Dino Cellini, also were accused by the
i:i:rand jury in U.S. I>Wrict Court in
~1iami of conspiring to obstruct the
Jnternal Revenue Service from assessing
incon1e taxes. Cellini also was charged
\\'ith filing two false income tax returns.
The Justice Department announced the
indlctinent action.
l..ansky is living in Is rael and fighting
attempts by the Israeli government to
deporl him . He was indicted in Miami
last year for rtfuslng to appear before •
grand jury in Miami and In Las Vega! in
ronnection with alleged illegal gambllng
act I vi tits.
Celllnl, 57, a native of Steubenville,
Ohio, lives in Rome where he represents
an American slot machine manufacturer.
He was a stockholder and employe of
Raft's gambll•g casino which operattd
from 1966 I<> 1969.
T 1vo San Jose
Men Found Dead
SAN JOSE CAPI -John Wil!IOn. 39,
and \VJl\lam Arthur Johnston. 47, were
found shol to .death in Wilson's apart•
ment. police aald.
The bod!,. w.,. found Mondty by
\Vllson's former wire, police said. Both
w~re !alesmen for the same company.
Omctrs !8ld they were qu..ilonlng 1
person in the shootingt but declined to
give. further detaU1.
City councihnen approved the srt·
tlcment 1-.fonday night to avoid further
disputes between Neulr:i and the city.
"I'm convinced he did a lot of 1vork and
might have v.·on as much as $46.000 under
11rbitralion," City Administrator Da vid
!lowlands explained this morning. "We
would have had only hurt feelings out of
arbitration."
The fee dispute developed last year,
before Rowlands was hired as !he cit y's
top administrator.
Neufra claimed he had done con·
siderable work designing two additional
buildings for the library complex 11•hlch
won't be buil t.
Clty officials unde r then-city ad.
tninistrator Doyle Miller, claimed Neutra
111as never authorized to design !he ad·
ditlonal buildings and they \\'anted to pay
him nothing extra. He asked for aboul
$70,000.
The fee dispute had delayed some \Vork
on the central library it.1elf. Construction
bids on the estimated $3.S mHlion libray
\Viii be opened June 14.
Rowlands says he expects six to eight
bidders which should increase com·
petition and lower the price. The ad·
ministrator also believes the settlement
with Neutra will smooth working rela·
Uons during the construction phase.
Council Delays
Apartment Code
For Improvement
A set of code amendments designed to
improve apartment construction in the
Huntington Beach To\vn Lot sector was
delayed Monday night by the city council.
Councilmen said they would prefer to
wait for completion of the planning
department's controversial Town Lot
study before making any planning
changes in the area.
Councilmen voted 4-2. with Jerry
Matney and Al Coen opposed. to delay ac-
tion on the code amendments until the
Town Lot study is complete.
The proposed code amendments deal
\Vlth front yard setbacks and open space.
CJty Planning Director Ken Reynolds
said some apartments \li'ould be allowed
closer to the property line, it part of the
building u•ere fa rther back .
"This allo\l:s greater architectural
variation." Reynolds explained.
He said another one of the code
amendments would create more open
space.
But Councilman Jack Green, noting the
proposed. changes have been developing
for more than a year, asked, "We've
waited 1l year, why is it important to
move now?''
"lt will result in bttter projects,"
Reynolds said ,
Mark Porter, chairrpan or the planning
commission, warned councilmen it cookl
be another year before the entire Town
Lot study is completed.
The Town Lot setter is the area north
of the down town , from Palm Avenue to ·
Pacific Coast Highway. It is now dotted
\••ith single famJly homes, apartmenst
and oil \Velis.
Employes Seek
Battin 'Damages'
Damages of $10,000 wtre demanded
Monday in an Orange County Superior
Court lawsuit that charge.s Supervilor
Robert Batun with unlawfully using a
county nWllni lbt for his own eloc:tloo pu.,.,....
The Orange County Employ .. A!oocia·
tion also asks In it.s action against the
~·irst D!Jrtrlct supervisor 10<' fllrlhor
damages to be awarded whtn the
organization can aMes.s the yaJue of
clerical and mechanical help allegedly
utilized by Battin.
The a>mplalnl stat.. that Battin ob-
tained the compurerlltd malllng 11..t WI
week and used the oounty informatton to
mall Uter1turt to First Olstrict voters.
Members of the QCE.( were urged last
week-in a pr«:tdent·settlng bulle.ttn 1
lasuod by the county -k•MI group I<>
V<lle qainat BIUin In today" election.
McGovern Seel~s Unity ..
Unscheduled Meet Held With Governors
HOUSTON, Tn. (AP) -In n bid for
party unJty, / preaideotlat front runner
Ceorge McGovern met with Democratic
governors early today and &aid hhJ cam-
paign y,•jU be one of cooperation and
reconclliatio.n rather than divisiveness.
The South Dakota senator allered his
campaign .o;chedule and flew into this
sprawl!ng southeast TeJaS city la1e ?\ion~
day nlght for a meeting with the
Democratic governors. most of whom
have remained neutral or opp,'>sed to
i\lcGovcn1's candidaC'\'_
"I think I'll do better than thf-Polls
predict." Humphrey told newsmen as he
arrived at a job trsining t enter in the
San Fernando Valley .
Would he pre<lic t 'i'ktory. a newsman
a!ked.
"I'd like it, but T don'~ predi<'t ii," lhe
Min nesota senator said.
llumphrey's schedule included a half
day of campaigning before awaiting
resu lts of balloting in the .1tate's primary.
He watchtd a slide show depicting the
llccupa tional training \.l.'hich school ad.
1111rustrators s<1id put thouwnds of va lley
tesidents int.o job6.
"This is the kind <lf ~tuff that reall
gives you a lift." Humphrey bea n1ed.
The Cflndid1tlc ·walked through the
training facility shaking hands and talk~
ing to young men 8nd wome11 training fnr
such ocrupalions as nursing. auto repair·
ing and "'tiding .
In New Jersey, early reports appeart'd
to conhm1 predictions that aboul 840,000
\'o\~rs would cast ballots there, T'hcre
was a pos!!lbi Uty or rain latt:'r in the day .
In South Dakota . election officials :sald
1llC)' C-"JX'L'ted about JjU,000 per5(1ns 11r
-about half of that .statc·s thgible 1,•otc1 ,.
to go to the polls. \\'hen the n1ee\Jng ·\\<IS O\'C'r . 1nost of
the Southern chief executives were still
voicing doubts or opposition to
~lcCovern. claiming his c:ano1dacy would
assure Southern strength for President
Nixon and other GOP office-seekers in
Ncrvember. Unit to Send Observer
But McGovern, whose liberal views on
several issues have been an issue among
J)ernocratic governors attending the an-
nual bipartisan National Governors'
Conference here, apparently did not hurt
his cause by showing up.
To Unification Meeting
McGovern delayed his departure from
Houston Jong enough today to allend a
µrayer breakfast \.l.'ith all the governors
-Repuhlrran as 1o1-·cll as Dein ocratit.
He v.·as introdllccd but did not spe;ik.
As he prepared 10 rt !urn lo the airport.
illcG<Jvrrn said 0f the discussions v.•ith
[)('mO<'rat ic go\'ernors;
"It \Va s a gOOd, useful exchange \\'c
e:;tabl!shed a good \VOrki ng relationship if
l become the non1inec-"
"J think il v.·as good that he came:•
Georgia f:cv. Jimmy Cartt"r s:lJd in an 1n-
lerviev.•. ''The best point was just the fart
that he left California and caine here. It
sho;1,•ed he was concerned."
Trustees of the Ocean View School
District have declined formal participa·
Hon. but safd they \l'o ulc\ .send an
ubS<'rver to nu'elings of the propo sed
nrea\vidc steering eomn1itt et to pron1otc
school unification \n \Vest Orange County.
George Logan, president <lf the board
of trustees, said the observer v.•nuld he a
district adn1inistrar or, but he added that
"any trustee who Y.'ants to go c:an feel
free to."
'l'ruslecs of the F'Oltntain Va lley School
District had asked Ocean View lo appoint
tv.•o board members to the proposed
steering committee.
Atthough no fonnal vote was taken ,
other Ocean View trustees gave verbal
assent to Logan's decision to appoint an
administrator instead of trustees.
Logan didn 't shut out the JXJssibili ty lor
partic·ipation vf Ocean View so111eti1ne Jf\
the fu!ure, but ht said that there. wa!I
"'jL1st too n1uth going on right now " to
give unifi1eation much attention.
Ocean View's action no\v 1nefl.ns that
only the Huntington Beach City (elemen-
tary) and Seal Beach school distrlct!I
have given unqualified affirn1ative
responses to Fountain V~y·s request
for unification meetings. 'fhe rcponsc or
J{a]ph Bauer. pres ident of tru stees of the
tlW11ington Beach Union 1-ligh School
District. was similar to Ocean View's.
Trustees of the Westminster School
District declined flatly to participate.
But Carter, generally identified as the
leader of the anti·McGovem forces
a1nong the Democratic goveroors, said ,
'·I really can't say that my attitude
towa rd him has changed."
~tcGovern on ~1onday p r e d i c t e d
primary election victories today in
California, New Jersey, South Dakota and
New f\.fexico .
He told an Albuquerque rally r-.tonday
th t..t \\'ins in the four states \.\.'ill "build the
kind or momentum to carry us all the
v.·ay to the presidential nominat ion."
Candy Buy Precedes
Ar1ned Robbery of $167
The South Dakota senator may have
tacked down a popular-vote victory in
I\ev ~fexlco's first presidential primary
election with his late-hour campaign vi sit.
An estimated 3,500 persons we re in
Albuquerque 's Old Town Plaza to see and
hear the senator during a late afternoon
rally.
Meanwhile Sen. Hubert IL Humphrey
optimistically pressed a last-minute
pursuit for votes today ln suburban Los
Angele s.
Belgen Selected
To Fill Opening
On School Unit
Roger W, Belgen has been selected to
fill a vacancy on the Personnel Com·
mission of the Fountain Valley SL·hool
District.
He will serve through December 1974
on the uneJ:pirC<f portion or the term of
David Israelsk)', who ·resigned in April
after being elected to the district board
or trustees.
Belgen still faces a public hearing at
the July 6 meeting of Fountain Valle y
trustees and o!ficial appointment by state
education officials.
Trustees declared their intent to
nominate the 42-year.old Belgen over six
other candidates.
Belgen, 1868-t Santa Ynez St.. Fountain
Valley, is a project manager for McDon·
nell Douglas. _
TI1e three·tnan per::;onnel commission is
ch a r g e d with developing and ad-
ministering )X'llicies for the district's non·
traching workers.
T\VO shabbily·dressed n1en, w ho
purchased a roll of lifesavers from a
liuntington Beach delicatessen Monday
night, returned to the store one hour later
to rob it of $167 at gun~int.
Roberta Carter told police she was
working in tile H&B Delicatessen, tn4l
Beach Blvd., when the two men in their
early 20s first entered the store around
8:30 p.m.
OnP-of the suspects, wearing a gray
hat, bought a roll of lifesavers from Miss
Carter and talked about how prices were
rising. according to police.
An 'hour later, the two men reappeared
in the store and the man with the gray
hat walked to the counter and cocked a
blue steel automatic pistol. He then lean·
ed over the counter hold ing the gun v."ith
both hands and quietly asked Miss Carter
fot the money , police said.
Miss Carter told police she froze and
was not able to follow the commands of
the men until one of them touched her on
the arm and told her to open the cash
register. She dJd so and the second rnan
grabbed the cash drav;er and the two fled
the store.
Bottler Strike Ends
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A six·month
strike against San Francisco Bay area
soft drink bottling plants comes to an end
today as workers from six Teamsters
locals start returning to their jobs, the
union announced. FoJlo,ving tentative
agreement between the management
Food Employers Council and union
negntiators Saturdav. the loca ls com-
ple"te<i favorable Iat.i fication votes ~,ton·
day night.
A regular customer of the store , Davld
llenson , found i\1iss Carter in tears
n1inutes after the robbers had fled. He
told police he had passed the store earlier
and noticed a dark green car parked
across the street from the store with its
lights on. The robbery is still under in-
vestlgation, according to police.
School Burglars
Sti·ike 8 Times
In Valley Area
Eight or the 16 schools in the Fountain
Valley School District v.·erc burglarized
over the last f\\'O \.l.'cckcnds by th!eve.s
v.·ho apparently \\'ere more inte rested ir1
cash than in costly typewriters and elec·
tron lc equipment, school off i c i a I s
reported l\1onday.
All of the entries except one followed
the same pattern or using a small
crowbar or screwdriver to focce open an
office door, according to Assistant
Superintendent Jack Mahken.
A total of $1.250 in cash was removed
in the burglaries, incl uding such small
amounts as are involved in milk,
yearbook, and petty cash funds . Several
amounts were larger. hou·ever. including
$550 from the grad night fund of students
Rt Oka School.
l\lahken said he is presently surveyi ng
the district to make all door and windo\\'S
n1orc secure against vandal s.
Schools involved are Oka , Gisler,
Newland, \Vard lo111, Harpe r. Talberl,
Ltin1b, <inri 1\1iola. Gl.~!cr 1~·as hit twice.
IT'S HERE • • • YESTERYEAR!
SELECTION OF CARPETING WASN'T
iFANTASTIC WHEN OUR GRANDFATHER
STARTED HIS CARPET STORE. ORIENTAL RUGS
WERE "IN," AND GRANDFATHER SPECIALIZED
IN THEM.
OUR FATHER ·GOT INTO THE ACT
.A:ROUND 1918 AND DEVELOPED A LARGE
VOLUME OF DOMESTIC CARPETS, MOSTLY
WlLTONS AND AXMINISTERS.
LA TRY WE HA VE SEEN A RESURGENCE
OF AXMINISTER CARPETS IN B E AU TI FU l
FLORALS AND PRINTS. THE EFF£CT CREA TED
BY AN · UNUSUAL PAmRN CAN TRANSFORM
A DULL R 0 0 M INTO S 0 M ETH I NG
SPECTACULAR.
PLEASE STOP IN AND SEE OUR LARGE
,SELECTION.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Moo. Thur Thurs •• 9 to 5:30-Frl. .• 9 to 9-SAT., 9:30 to S
l
'I
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I
I·
I •
' I
I
,,
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•
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Tvnd.IJ', Junt 6, lm H DAJlV PILOT §
s. Viets Rout , Reds From l(ont11m'.
11th-hour
Bus Charge
Repudiated
By JACK BROBACK
Of ""' D1ltJ Pllot l tl ff
A last-minute smear letter attacking
First District supervlJorlal candidate
William Wenke was repudlated "londay
by one of the three men whose al1natures
were used in an eleventh hour campaign
letter.
In the Jetter, mailed from LOs Angeles
Sunday and received by First District
voters ~1onday , Wenke is accused of
favoring school busing ln Santa Ana .
The Jetter admits that Wenke has not
menti-0ned busing in hls campaign to
unsea t incumbent Supervisor Robert Bat-
tin but charges that, "If he is elected, the
first thing he'll do ia to start the wheel!
in motion to establish a massive busing
program for all of Orange County."
Wenke branded the letter "a deliberate
11mear and a lie ."
The candidate said, "I am not for bus·
ing and have made it clear many tlmts
that I am for the ne ighborhood schools
concept."
Two other campaign handouts zeroing
in on the busing issue were also mailed
ove r the weekend to voters.
Wenke pointed out that a11 such cam-
paign diatribes Ignore the fact the board
of supervisors have no jurisdiction ovtr
achools or busing.
A Jetter from John W. "Bill" Hill,
another Fir!>' District supervlsorial can.
did at.e, pltdfl Ii to "fight against busing
of our children."
A second mailing v.'as a card signtd by
~tary Pryer, a Santa Ana school district
trustee. In y,•hich she charged that Wenke
is pro-busing and urged a vote for Hill .
The letter charging Wenke with
master-minding the busing program bore
the signatures of three Santa Ana
resident!, Eugene D. Hanson, 1245 Huron
Drive; Harry L. Torgerson, im S.
Arapahoe St. and James R. Smith, 11'5
Arapahoe.
Han.!On, a postal employt said he gave
Torgerson permission to use his namt for
anti-busing purposes but was not told it
would be employed in a letter against
Wenke.
"I have nothing against Mr. \\'enke,"
Hanson said.
lie added that ht is oot plafJD.ing any
action at this time but stressed that lf
there are "repercu!!lslons in relation to
my job I might do !Orne.thing."
He said he wa!!I referring to a regul a·
lion which prohibits federlll employes
from endorsing or opJX)slng poliUcal can.
dldates.
THESE DRINKS
GOOD FOR YOU
CHICAGO (UPI) -Cocktail CUJtomers
may oow take Vitamin E cap&Ulu at the
end of a toothpick, like an olive, or
floating like a cherry or lemon peel in
their drinks at Sage's East restaurant.
The restaurant said It would make the
vitamins available in drinks start.in&
ton ight.
Pre•trial Talk
Daniel Ellsberg talks with re-
porters at Los Angeles court
where he appeared for final
pre-tria] motions on charges
stemming from the Pentagon
papers case. He is charged
\ ~~ith conspiracy and theft of
'--COtUidential U.S. docum ents
while an employe of the Rand
Corporation.
Priso11er Marked
Six for Death
-Including Self
WASHI NGTON (AP) -Minyard Owen
Ruther,(ord, found dead in his California
jail cell iionday, had marked six persons
for death -including himself and his
own attorney -in a letter written hours
before a court room shooting spree May
25 in Oro\1ille, the Washington PD!t
reports.
One of those on the list. opJX)sit ion at-
torney Perry Fanner, was killed by a
pistol shot in the head. Two others.
Karolyn Garrick and Judge Jean Morony
were \vounded .
Rutherford, whom police said they ar·
resetd as he was trying to reload his gun,
hanged him5elf Monday with a rope
fashioned from hi!!! mattres.s, according to
the Butte C'.ounty jailer.
Before any word of Rutherford 's
suicide, the Washington Post reJX)rted
Monday it received a letter from him
postmarked May 25 -the same day of
th< shooting.
Transit District Picks
6 From 248 Applicanf,S
By JACK BROBACK
01 tM D1ltr Plllt Stitt
Appointment of six key staff members
by th• Orange County Trarull Dtatrkt
was made Monday by district dlrtctort
upon the recommendation or Gordon J.
"Pete" Fielding, generaJ manq:er of the
authority.
A consulting nrm was used by the
district to !!lcretn 241 applicanl!!I for the
six jobs. Bruce K. Bennett, president of
the firm of Tom McCall and AMoclates of
Orange met wltli Fielding last week and
narrowed the field from 23 to the final
Bil.
Hired by lht board Monday ';'l'ert :
-Frank K. Klng as bus ()pf!raUons
manager. Klfll bas 25 years exphience In
the transp<>rtatk>n industry and b cur·
rently supulntendent of the S 1 n
Bernardino Tr1111port1lloo Syatem.
The San Bernardino system has won
many award! and Kine wu ,tven credit
by the consu!lont firm far a 1Jcnlll<111t
decrease in maibteoance colU duplte an
increase in route mlleage.
"He u9ed 1nnovaUve methods to 1d-
vtrttse the 11y1tem, lncludlnc 11vtn1.
Green Stamps," the report 1tlted. The
job will pay lt,'51to11,71111 .,...th.
-J•anoti.. A. Hyat~ of Lquno Hllta 11
1dmlntstr1Uve aatmnl Sho Is pre...,tly
an Orance County accountant ta the
Adrnlnistr1Uon-Fmanclal section an d
-npervtses 1 gtaff of JS. Her ulary ranae
will hr l1,t87 to lt,4'79 a month.
-Dani•! Benm, u p r I n c I p 1 I
lrll1!tp0<!1tlon planntt. Ho 11 prt,.ntly
manager of the Chtcaeo offlee of the
planning and t,....portatlon deportment
of North American Rockwtll. lie acts at
• consultant to atatt, regkml'I and local
governmenla ln mau tr1n1portation ind
urbln pl1N'Jlng. Hl1 pa.y wlii rlR1e from
$11372 to $1,G96 a month.
-David R. Shilling as transportation
planner. He ha!!! been a teaching assistant
in the Department of Urban Planning and
Civil Engineering at the University oE
Washlnaton and now llvu in Gardena .
Previously he was with the San Diego
County Planning Department. lilt .. 1ary
range w1H be $1 ,033 to tl,290 a month.
-Gene Donovan u senior civil
engineer. He ha!!! bad 10 years manage·
ment experience in engineering and con·
struction and is currently with Lockman
and Associates of Downey. Previously he
had 13 years e:rpereince in engintering
with the cities of Pico Rivera, Gardena
and Downey. Salary range for the post is
$1,439 to $1,790 a month.
-Jamu R. Curr, as operational
ana1y1t. He Is presently a marketing
analylt for lhe Coca Cola Botlllng Com-
pany ln Los Angeles. His duties Jnclude
meuurlna siu or potential markets.
sales fortea!!ltlng, designing samples and
modt ls and analyzing route deliveries.
The job w!U pay 11,1183 to $!,326 a month .
The six new stall members will a.mime
their pottl in the next few weeks with all
on board by the beginning of the n•w ltaclJ )'011 July 5.
~ltlnt Btnnett said that more than
tU Interviews wert conducted In rtduc-:::Llho !!old from the origtnal :148 can-
tll mid thlt all 23 (inaJl.W were in-
..,..ielred at Inst three times by the
firm and by Fl•ldlnf.
The working ltaf will aid in the in-
1U1tlon of the dlstrlct'l 13U million pro-
rnim to provide community and inter·
community bwJ transportaUon In Orange
C'.ounty.
Selection of the 1Ucces11ful candidates
was based on txprttience tn pubUc and
private &gencies, e d u c a t Io n a I
backlf'O\md, roal orltnt.aUon. public ex-
poouro ind ludorshlp ability. th• con·
aultant aaid.
County Has
Year's First
Srrwg Alert
Scattered thundcrsho1v£>rs \\'ill continue
lo hlt the Orange t'oast 1n b:ief .~purl s
1hruugh Wednesday, "'eather foreca sters
at the Orange County Forestry Depart·
n1en~ sai d'1pday .
A Series' of frCak shov<ers. some ac·
companied by lightning and thunder. ar-
peared !\1onday in some areas but com·
plctely missed adjoining cities.
San Clemente recorded .12 inches of
rain , \l'hich brought the year's total up lo
.67 i11ches. Bolts of lightning streaked
across the sky about 3 30 pm. over the
coilstal city, as well HS uver Garden
Grove and Anaheim .
Huntington Beach and Costa ~·tesa ex·
perienced light brief sprinkles. while only
an overcast sky covered Laguna Beach.
El Toro !\1arine Corps Air Station
recorded a .02 inch reading of rain for the
El Toro-Irvine area !\1onday.
Nearby Trabuco Canyon· \\'as hardest
hit. The Forestry dcpnrtment recorded a
l .12 inch rainfall there. in contrast to a
.04 inch count in Irvine Lake.
Lightning started a tree fire in Holy
Jim Canyon, burning a six foo t by 12 loot
patch of ground before rain put it out.
Forestry officials said there is an 80
percent chance of more rainfall toda y
and Wednesday.
The freak weather Mondav also in-
cluded the first smog alert of the year
issued by the Orange County Air Pollu·
tlon Cont rol (OCAPCD) District at about
1:20 p.m .
The oz.one count rose to .42 parts per
million (PPM) in La l!abra and schools
were warned to kee p children from
strenuous exercise. The alert was ended
at 2 p.m. \\'hen winds caused the count to
drop below the .35 ppm level.
Edward Camarena. engineer for t h c
OCAPCD, said the same bn!ezes today
wilt keep the smog count down, although
last night the depertment was still pre--
dlcting an alert today.
Next Monday. said Camaren a, an ozone
count of .20 ppm will replace the .35 ppm
as the warning point.
Long Beach Man Dies
WASHINGTON (AP) -Th< Defense
Department reported Monday lhat Sgt.
Francis C. Brockman III, son of !\1rs.
Barbara L. Hausaven of Long Beach. was
killed in action .
ideal
s.
VIETNAM .
' '
l •ll ~ c ..... • ••
SOUTH VIETNAMESE TROOPS ROUT COMMUNISTS FROM PHU MY
Tip From Viet Cong 0.fector Provld•, Major All led Victory
Suspect Indicted
8 More Bank Thefts
Probed in Niguel Case
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 lftt O•llY ,.Hot SllU
The FBI is investigating a possible con-
nl'ction between the Laguna Niguel bank
burglary in March and similar burglaries
at eight more banks around the U.S.,
federal officials s11 id this morning.
A federa l grand jury in U>s Angeles
late f\.londay returned an indict ment
against the so!e suspect in the Laguna
Niguel case. Charles Albert Mulligan was
indicted on one count of bank burglary
following a secret grand jury session in
which the FBJ presented evidence
allegedly linking Mulligan with the theft
of some $2 million in cash, jewelry and
negotiable securities.
The nature of the evideoct was not
divulged and Mulligan will be. arraigned
!\1onday on the charge and a date set for
his trial.
Mulligan. an unemployed barber from
Youngstown. Ohio, with a long criminal
record was taken ioto tustody by FBI
agents Friday in Tustin after beln&
trailed there from Chicago.
Federal proseC"utor Elgin Edwards,
assistant chief or the criminal divl!k>n in
the U.S. Attorney's office ln Loe Anpie!!I,
said today tha t Mulligan is believed: to be
a member of a gang that allegedly
perpetrated the series of bank burglaries.
"He is possibly a member of a gang of
some six to 18 people running a highly
sophisticated operation,·• Edwards said.
"We think the Laguna Nif:!uel bank lost
somewhere bel\ve.en $2 n1illion and $3
million and it appears that about eight
other bank5 around the country have
previously been taken by the same
gang."
Edwards declined to comment on
where those banks are locattd or whelher
one of them is in U>rdstown. Ohio, a
.small community near Mulligan 's home in
Young!!ltnwn. On May 4, the only bank in
Lordstown was burglarized by thieves
who cut through the roof of the building.
entered the vault and took $430,000 in
cash.
Edwards also refused to comment on
whether or not any of the k>ot taken in
the March 25-28 weekend burglary of the
United Calllornla Bank lq Laguna Niguel
had been recovered,
'
I
Enemy Loss, ,
In Siege
Ve1·y Heavy,
SA\CiO;.J tUl-'l \ -T•.10 thousand South
\'1t:tnanH•5t' troops S<"nt the last Com·
r nuni~t holdOUls st·urr\ ing •)U l <1f Kontum
t•1t~ today ending a 12·day North Viel·
na111es e atten1pt to O\t'rrun the strategic
c:entral Highlands prO\'J ncu;l capital.
A govern ment s!)'lktsmRn said 2.397
l\'o!'lh Vietnamese troops died during the
~iege, including 166 in 'IUe sday's acllon at
a 1.1nk base and a hospital.
"TI1ey 1lhe North VietnamtSel ju st
11111rled n1nnin g when we mO\'td 1n. w~
klllcd them as they \1·ere running away,"
a J.:Ol'crnn1ent spoke snuin said.
The South Vietnamese victory at Kon-
I 11n1 ended the lite~! Commucust drivt to
rapture the city and II!> sistcr-<:apital,
Pli>i ku . 30 miles to the south.
Tht Nort.A Vietna n1tse wanted to over·
run the l\vo citirs,. thtn st nd troop'
raslwa rd to the coast and cut South Viet-
nA 111 in half.
In !he air war. An1erican fighttr
bornbers new 220 missions 1n North Vlet-
11sn1, most of thtn1 aga inst roads and
r1tllv.·ays nea r Vinh, the CommunisU'
serond largest port.
Clearing akies in the south allowed
more missions but the 207 strikes flown
~tonday were still only halt the number
flown during May.
The U.S. Command 111d Amrri<111 jota
also bombtd a raUroad yard halfway
between the North Vlotnomese eoptta! of
llsnoi and Haiphong, tht country's
largest port. Pilots also reporttd two
direct hiUii on a brid~e on Highway 1, 130
m.Hes south of Hanoi.
Man Shot Twice
Opening Garage
A Cyprus man. preparing to go to
.,..·ork. was &hot and wounded when he
opened his garage door, police reported.
Raul Odin, 43, of 1151)3 Mani.11 Drive •
told orncen that when be opened the
door Monday momlna a tan. thin mao .iD
his mid-ZOI ordered him not to move.
Odin said the mon then lbol blm twtce
in I.he abdomen and fled. PoUce 111d .
thtrt was oo apparent motive for U.
shooting as nothing wu taken from the
home or a:arac•.
Odin i• niported In 11tlal1Ctor7 ..,,..
dlllon tOO.y In Loo Alamltoo General
lfospti.I.
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Sound, Fury
Comes to Head
OFF ANO RUNNING DEPT. -So in·
deed lhls was Election Day , 72 and 1f you
haven't cast your ballot by nov•. folks .
1ou are awfully cl'ose to having missed
Out on the thrill and excitement of it all.
' Why, I spent hours studying my sample
ballot thjs..]ear before going to vote. r
spent m&St of that time just trying to
~gure out how to unfold it.
, l've voted in the same place for maybe
the past eight elections. So naturally,
that's where I'd go this time, right?
Wrong. They moved my polllng place Into
a basement. I'm paranoid enough to
figure they did it on purpose, chortl·
~."Old Murphine will never find us this
lime .•. " \\'rong again. J found them .
ACTUALLY, ONCE there, the ladies
and gentlemen of the precinct were very
pleasant. They have several innovations
for this election. One is a new way of
signing up for your ballot which caUses
the precinct workers to read the book
Upside down.
' Also, the ballot box looked different.
I've always been to a substantial-looking
ballot box, composed or either steel or
wood. This one was a cardOOard box.
Well, you have to get used to change in
this day and age when everything is
disposable.
SOME THINGS at my new, secret poll ·
ing place haven't changed at all. They
haven't made the voting booths any big-
ger, for example. All that time I was
practicing unfolding my sample ballot -
I should hav~ been going through the ex·
ercise in the closet.
Also, they haven't put any more ink on
the llttle green stamping pad since the
last election.
That means you have to pound the Htlle
rubber marker into the pad five or six
times end then give it a real whack on
your ballot in order to make a mark.
11la.t~a okay,,_I guess. It gives you the
no~irin that you're voting more times than
you reall,y are an4 besides. when you
hamrher the ·marker Jnto the ballot. it
really feels like you mean it.
THERE WAS some confusion when I
voted," c:aused by the chap in line right in
front tA' me. He wanted two ballots. He
explained to the voting folks that he
didn't Jike aU the candidates on his ballot
so he wanted his and another one, too.
That required that he get some ex-
piainlng from the voting board folks.
Well, there's a lot at stake on the ballot
today. For the Republicans, President
Nixon's delegation is challenged by
somebody named Ashbrook or Ashcan or
something. No matter. It's a real yawner.
The big GOP excitement is Cong. Schmitz
versus County Assessor Andy H_insha?.'.
The way the countryside has looked the
last few days, it actually seems to be a
contest as to which one of them could
hang up the most ugly signs in the most
places.
THEN THERE'S excitement for the
Democrats too. Like for example eight or
'em are running for the presidential
nomination. Most folk s see it as
McGovern versus llumphrey but
remember Sam Yorly's on the list too,
and Yorty. in one of his last-minute
patented n1oves, has Lried to fling the
election to 11umphrey. fie even gave ad·
\"ice to the Wallace believers. They didn"t
appreciate it much.
Then v.'e have 10 propositions on the
ballot. Most fo!ks arc watchi9g Proposi-
1 ion 9, which has seemed to be an argu-
ment bet ween smog less and jobless.
Anyway, it will be interesting to sec if 9
loses its tail and becomes a ~ero.
And so to bed with Election 72. Until
November, that is.
TUHday, J11nt 6, 1972
Hijack Fund
To Finance
Latin Cause
MIAMI (UPI) Frederick W.
llahneman reportedly told an FBI agent
he is strongly anti-Communist, but that
he channelled $303,000 ransom from an
Eastern Air l.ines hijacking through a
Communist bank: to finance causes he
backs in Lalin Am erica.
FBI agent Norman Bliss testified at a
hearing Monday about his interview with
lfahneman, who is accused of hijacking
Eastern's flight 175 May 5. The hi jacker
got the rall60m money, parachutes, ju nip
ing gear and survival equipment in
Washington, and bailed out over Hon-
duras.
Hahneman did not have the money
when he surrendered to U.S. embassy of·
fi cials in Honduras Saturday.
Bliss, who intervieWed Hahneman while
returning him to Miami, said llahneman
told him be landed near the town()( Tela.
Honduras, "took off all his gear, sat down
aod had a smoke and waited until
daylight."
"fie said that by l\.fonday, the money
"'as out of hi.ci h!'lnds," Bliss said.
lie said Hahneman never told him \~:hat
he did with the money, except. that '"he
said it would go to the bank of Com-
munist China in Hong Kong.
"lfe said it would eventually wind up in
the hands of the people with whom he
was working for causes in Central and
South America," Bliss said. He said
•lahneman told him the monfy would be
channelled to the unidentified "causes"
back through the United States.
At the end of the hearing, U.S.
Magistrate Michael J. Osman recom-
mended that Hahneman, 49 , be taken to
Alexandria, Va., to face charges of air
piracy, kidnaping .and assault with a
deadly weapon,
Hahneman will be moved from Miami
as soon as fo rmal papers are signed, pro.
bably in the next day or two, said U.S. at-
torney Robert W. Rust.
Black Hijacker,
Girl Get Asyl1rm
-Not Ransom
ALGIERS (UPI) -Algeria, traditional
haven for politic"al dissenters, will grant
asylwn to .a Black Panther hijacker and
hls girl frlend but will return to Western
Airlines the $500,000 ransom it paid the
hijackers, Algef'ian officials said Monday.
The U.S. government has asked Algeria
both for the extradition of the two hi·
jackefj -William ·Holder, 22, and
Katherine Mary Kerkow. 21 , a t1
oceanography .student, both from San
Diego.
Government officials said Holder and
Miss Kerkow, who hijacked a Western
Airlines' jet over the \Vest Coast Friday
night, switched to a longer-range jet in .,,
San Francisco, then released their 40
passenger hostages in New York before
flying to Algiers Saturday, were certain
to be allowed to stay as political refugees
with the Black Panther colony here.
The Black Panther mission, head-
quartered in a hilltop villa in El-Biar
di strict of Algiers. is led by Eldridge
Cleaver. former information minister of
the militant movement and now head of
the .Afro-American Liberation Anny.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Oellvtry of the Daily Pilot
Is guaranteed
MCM'>day·Frlcl8Y: It You do not lleve Ytll!• pa~r br 1.JO p,m., coll •nd yo<1r copy will
be brcu9h1 !O yov. Ctllt ''' l&~tn un!ll 7:JO p,m.
Salurd•Y er.d Sund1v: I! you do no! r«elvt
your COPY by t 1.m. Sa!urday, nr I • m.
Sunday, call end I copy will ~e brO..,gM IC
you. Ca lli 1r1 18ken 1.mllr lG 1.m.
Telephone'
Mos! Or•noe County Are•• •...... , •tt-m1 Nort~we1t Hun!l"l:llon 8eacM
and Wt1tmln1ter .••••.•. 5Cl>-1U. h n Clemente. C1plltrenD llHch,
S•n Ju.\n C•PIJlrano. 01n1 Point,
South Lauun., L111un1 Nlgu•I . ..,,-'4,t
Vessel Goes Under
The Gloucester, Mass,, based fishing boat Rosanne Maria, takes her
last breath before sinking 23 miles off Cape Ann after bein~ in a
collision with an East German fishing trawler. The 86·foot Maria \Vas
worth $250,000-and \\!3S not insured.
Lebanon Cites Israeli
'Stepped-up' Campaign
NF.W YORK (UPI ) -Lebanon com-
plained to the United Na'tions that
Israeli warplanes overflev• its territory
three times Monday and accused the
1sraeli government of a stepped up
•·campaign of vilification and persistent
threats."
Lebanon and the Popular Front for the
Liberation oC Palestine (PFLP) both
previously denied that Japanese gunmen
IN SHORT. • • I
\Vho carried out the massacre at Lod
International Airport in Tel Aviv last
week were trained in Lebanon.
Israel has ihreatened reprisals against
Lebaoon charging the gunmen hired by
the Arab guerrillas came from across the
Lebanese border.
e Tito Visit
_ ti.10SCOW (UPI) -President Tito of
Yugoslavia today opened formal talks in
the Kremlin with Soviet Co1nmunist par-
ty General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev
and other Kremlin leaders who welcomed
him with hugs and kisses.
Diplomatic sources said the talks, ex-
pected to run several -.clays, would cover
expanded Soviet-Yugoolav tade. technical
cooperation, world events and other sub-
jects.
Tito mTived·Monday on a five-da y state
Riclimona School
Plan Overturned
In Court Review
RICHMOND, Va. (UPI) -Th< 4th U.S.
Circuit c.ourt of Appeals today overturn-
ed a sweeping district court order that
would have merged Richmond's
predominantly black schools with those of
two suburban counties with mostly white
school populations.
The 4th circuit, in reversing a con-
troversial decision by U.S. District Judge
Robert R. Merhige Jr., said it believed
the last vestiges of state-imposed
segregation had been wiped out in the
public schools or the city of Richmond
and the COUDties of Henrico and
Chesterfield and unitary schools systems
achieved.
"Because it is not established that the
raC'ial composition of the schools in the
city of Rlchmond and the counties is the
result ol invidious state action, we con-
clude there is no conslitutiona\ violation
and that. therefore. the district judge ex-
ceeded his power of intervention." the
court said.
Merhige had directed the three school
systems Jan. 10 to set up a metropolitan
sdlool district which would have 104,000
students. About 78,000 students would
have been bused under the plan, about
10,000 more Ulan the three localities now
transport,
visi t designed to show he and Brezhnev
had ended the friction that beset Soviet·
Yugoslav relations foll owing the 1968 in-
vasion of Czechoslovakia.
e U.S. Arrflig11ed
STOCKHOLM (AP) -Premier Olof
Pahne of Sweden arraigned the United
States before the U.N. conference on the
human environment today for what its
milrtary forces have done to Viernam.
"The immense destruction brought
about by indiscriminate bombing, by
large-scale use of bulldoiers and
herbicides is an outrage sometimes
described as ecocide which requires
urgent international attention," Palme
declared.
He did not mention the United States
has been bombing and using bulldozers
and herbicides in Vietnam, it, \\'as ap-
parent which nation he was talking about.
e Belfast Battle
BELFASI', Northern Ireland (UPI) -
British troops battled rioting Protestant
and Roman Catholic youths today in
Belfast and Portadown. 25 m i I es
soul h.,.,•est of the Northern Ireland
capital.
The army said at least six: persons, in·
eluding a 14-year-0ld boy. We.re vrounded
by gunfire from unidentified sources dur·
ing the disorders in the two cities.
The fighting broke out alter three
Rom.an Catholic housewives presented
British authorities with a petition signed
by 63,500 Roman Catholics demanding an
end to violence waged by the lrish
Republican Army (ffiA).
l'P Po•t?
Connally 'Tour'
Prompts Queries
By DON McLEOD
AP PolJdcal Writer
WASJ!INCTON -With the Republican
convention litUe more than two months
a .... ·ay, President Nixon has stoked
speculation about his lf72 runrring mate
by sending John Connally around the
v.·orld.
Indications from the White House that
Connally might also be eiplaining to
world leaders the President's Peking and
I NEWS ANALYSIS I
~1oscow trips add to the importance o(
the trip and to the outgoing treasury
secretary's stature as bearer of such
news.
This is the kind of mission traditionally
handled by a vice president if not a
secretary o{ state. The Washington
rumor mills have Connally available for
either post if Nixon is re-elected.
Regardless, the trip will give Connally
public exposure in the foreign-polic y
arena. Among his stops u•ill be South
Vietnam.
Nixon's announcemen,t· Monday that
Connally will represent him on a IS-na-
tion tour beginning today came a day
after another key Republican said it is
possible a Democrat, such as Connally,
could get the GOP vice-presidential
nomination.
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford of Michigan said Sunday in a radio
interview that he disagrees with Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew's assertion that
a Democrat on the GOP ticket in his
place would be inconceivable.
With the time of decision drawing near.
Nixon has never said whether he will
keep Agnew as his vice president, and
Connally has not definitely been taken out
of the picture.
The White House said Monday that
Connally \Viii travel as a special
representative of the President, meeting
"with chiefs of state and heads of govern-
ment in various nations for discussion on
matters of common concern bet ween us
and the countries with emphasis on cur·
rent international !economic issues."
~lo\vever, White House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler said in Key Biscayne, •
Fla., that Connally will be ready to take
up '"any subject whi ch his hosts wish to
raise," including Nixon's trips to China
and the Soviet Union.
The complete itinerary has not been
announced. Connally's first slops will be
in Venezuela, Colombia, Brazil, Argen·
tlna, Bolivia and Peru. To follow will ~
vistta to South Vietnam, Australia,
Singapore and Ne\v Zealand.
Ziegler explained to newsmen thal Con·
nally will not visit Africa because Mrs.
Nixon and Secretary of State William P.
Rogers already have made orticiat stops
on that CQn\lncnt. He did not mention thtit
Agnew had visited Africa last year.
Ni xon had said when Connally turntd in
hl.s resignation from the Cabinet Jasl
month that he \\lould be used for special
missions. The President said Connally
could handle any public office in the land.
"No member of the Cabinet has been
more closely associated with me in a
personal sense," Nixon said, and added
that Connally had advised him on a \Vidc
range or for eign and domestlc issues -
not just the economy.
Connally said he had no political
aspirations. but, \vh en asked about the
vice presidency, he ducked "that kind of
speculation at this point in time.''
Jn any case, he said, "I'm not going to
withdraw from the human race or front
the political life of the nation."
Two days later, Agne\Y said it '>"·ould be
"totally unrealistic: to expect th c
Republican conveution to accept" Con~
nally on its national ticket.
The closest Nixon has come to ad-
dressing the subject directly \\'as in a
television interview last winter \\'hen he
said he sa\v no reason to break up a \Yin·
ning combination.
But in April Agne\Y said he \\•asn't surr
he would want the job and hadn"t been
asked to keep it.
Wicks
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Orange f;oast
EDITION
.. To'day's Flaal
N.Y. Stoeks
* ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1972 N TEN CENTS
Okay on $34.1 . Million School Budget Sought
By WILLIAlll SCHREIBER
Of tfle Dalh' ,lltf 5t•H
Newpart·Mesa school trustees wiU be
asked tonight to adopt a tentative $34.1
millioo budget fo; 1972-73.
Jt could mean an increaae of more than
30 cents ln the di!trict's tu rate.
A1 requested, the new general f u n d
budget would be an increase of more
than $3 million over last year. It would
also mean a boost of 14-16 cents in the
' f
current general fWld tax rnte.
"Tonight J will uk the board to ap-
prove this budget, but I '!_Yill stress that
it fs tentaUve and can be changed any
time up to the point the final document
is adopted," said di.strict Superintendent
John NlcoU.
The general fund tax rate rise, added
to the district 's estimated 18 cent in-
crease in the school bond redemption
rate, could increase taxes as much as
,. -~
,' "~'
•
34 centa per $100 aSieSRd valuation ne1t
year to a total of $5.CM.
In tidditlon to the general fund money,
the school budget Includes cafeteria and
building funds paid with school bonds
and federal contributions.
1 The building fund proposed In n e x t
year's budget shows a decrease of nearly
$5 million. Wt year, the appropriation
was more than $10 million.
According to fiscal director Walter
Adrian, the decrease is shown because
,.
PAILY l'ILOT llfff ,.,...,.
Beautiful Candidates
Five candidates for the Miss Newport title make
qU.ite an eyeful A)..l of them are junior1, at Corona
de! Mar High School. From left to.11abt are Sharon
hfason. Bonnie Mosier, Debbie CODinson, Robyn
Child and Karen French .. A1iss Newport will be
crowned at tbe Commodore's Ball Jan·e 16, about 9
p.m. at the Balboa Bay dub.
Catering Truck
Operator Hit,
Robbed by Pair
By ARTH UR R. VINSEL
Of IM Dl !IY ,l!ol 51111
Sitting with a cold rifle barrel at his
temple, a catering truck operator "'aited
for his fate late l'\tonday in Costa Mtsa,
as one bandit held the gun and the other
urged him to shoot.
Sherman W. Vandeman. 28. of Fountain
\'Alley, survived the harrowing 11:15 p.m.
ordeal.
The rifleman chos~ only to knock him
unronscious. shattering his partially open
truck windo~'. the dazed vict im told
police after he regained consc:ousncss.
Vandeman -who said he lost $40 in
the armed robbery -dro ve to a Harbor
Boulevard doughnu t shop several hundred
yards from the darkened area ~'here he
was attacked and robbed .
Newport, County Working
On Joint Harbor Accord
Ne\\')>Ort Beach and Orange County are
"·orking on a joint powers agreement
that will spell out the responsi bili ty for
administration of the v.1aters and
tidelands of Newport Harbor, City
Milnager Robert L. \Yynn said r..tonday.
l~e said a rough draft of the proposal
will be ready "within 60 da ys."
He told a joint meeting of ci ty coun·
cilmen and plann ing commiss ioners tha t
the "memorandu m of understanding" is
anticipated to spell out these poi nts:
-The Orange County Harbor District is
responsi bl e for all navigable V•alerway s
and all bul khead<; on public property
essential to thost waterways.
-Newport Beach is responsible for all
sidewalks, bridges, streets leading to the
harbor.
will not affecl ownershi p of the tidelands
and wil l have nothing to do with the abili·
ty of either entity to charge tidelands use
fees or mooring fte.s.
\Vynn has prestnted to councilm'n a
proposal to institute a mooring fee of $6
per foot, similar to one already enacted
by Ora nge County, that he said would
bring in more than $600.000 a year in new
revenues .
Council men are scheduled to consider
this proposed revenue measure, along
l\'ilh others. al a ~pecial meeting J une 24
at 8 a.m. in council chambers in City
J !all.
The city controls the va st majority of
tidelands -and thus the moorings -in
the harbor. although under curre11t ad·
mini strati on the county perfonns and
charges for maint enanct of all moorings.
ot a drop in <.'Orutruction activity ove r
last year.
111e cafeteria fund will remain esscn·
lil'llly the same in next year 's bud get -
&lightly more Jhan $1 million.
The total 8udget inc luding 111! three
items is estimated at $40.5 million -l'I
drop of n1ore than $1.7 million over last
year.
Doard considerations of the general
!und budget are e'xpected to last several
1nonths . Tht.> !ina\ budget doc·w11l·nt n1ust
be adoplL'<i by Aug . L
In lhe n1cantin1t•. dis1ri<·t tt•:Jl'ht'rs ;111rt
employes arl' Sef'klng 1nore than thl• 4 ~
pt'r('Pnt pa y boost proposed u1 thr tt·11l~•
ti\'e budget.
Niroll said lhl' biutgct d<1lihcrat ions 11r~·
lwo \\'c1•ks ;·1h1·art or seht'l'l11l1' and th;il
severa l stl'ps ;trt• be111g c11111bu1<'d lo 1111-
prO\'r• cl f\ttC'llt'Y.
"\\'e ha \'e bt·t·n d1scuss111J: salar~· ::ind
other aspects ur the budgt'I since ];l:)l
ye<ir ." h" said. · \\ l' arc h\lpe ful to get
1h1· \1•nt.ltl\re bud i.: ~· 1 .1nd thr salary
sehed1i11 ·~ apprOVt'd t111\l~li1 ·
'\Jicoll said he i., 1101 i 1'r1111n 1d 1cth•·r
nr no! !he en1plo) 1·~ 11111 .11:1·1·111 !ht• i i
pcrc:rnl budgeted s1Jl:il')' 1ntr1_•;1s!'
"\\'e 11 il l just hnl'~' 10 11·:1i1 <ind s"''
about lhat tonight J1 th1•J ru111c lo th!'
Hl!·(·t111g. ' he sai d
TJ1 j• OOard lllN·t~ LOr11gl!I ;1! 7 30 p,tn
in th!' L y c e u 111 111 t:o~lil i\lcsa llibh
!li.:hool.
'Steady'
Record Voters Expected at Polls
A steady stream of voters across
Ney,·port Beach today gave every in-
dicalion that predictions of record
turnouts in today's prin1ary election v.·ill
hold true, a check of polling places
disclosed.
Better than 20 percent of the city's
32 ,354 registered voters had been to the
polls before noon today.
This indicates the 70 percent tumnut
predicted by state and county cfficials
\viii be reached in Newport Beach, tradi-
tiooally a late-voting community.
Besides the key presidential and con-
Rescuers Hunt
Rhodesia Mine
Blast Vjct~ ,
., .... .,: ... ,.Jo.'"' I\
SALISBURY. Rhodesia (UPI )
Rescue worker.s wearing liquid oxygea
backpacks edged through poison gas and
smoke filled tunnels in one o( Rhodesia's
largest coal mines today, searching for
more than 400 men trapped by an un-
derground exploliion. There were ex-
pected to be few survivors.
11·fore than 1,000 relatives rushed to the
Wanitie mine, located near the famed
Wank.le Game Reserve and Victoria
Falls. to wait for the rescuers' report.
Some wept while others stood silent and
ex pressionless.
Officials said 468 men -435 African!
and 33 v.·hites -were believed trapped. A
handful scampered oul .soon after the
blast. but there was no official coun t.
Th e bl ast occurr.ed at I a.m. PDT when
work crews were operating at full
strength. The dull boom ratUed window s
a mile away.
Soon after the explosion, clouds of
lethal methane gas spread through the
tunnels. The ga.s co uld not be pumped cut
because the extrac tor fans we re damaged
in the explos ion.
~·ankie is a major coal suppller for
bo th Rhod esia and neighboring Zamhin.
It is owned by the Anglo -American
Corporation of South Africa and employs
almost 5.000 miners. most of them
(See DISASTER, ·rage ZJ
gression;"t l pr11n;1ry trsls . and th1·
state11·ide propositions. 1·01crs in Nc\\•port
Beach are dt'cirli ng the fate of $8.9
mill ion in bond n1easu1·cs for pnrk.s nnd
bicycle traits.
Proposition F' on the ballot seek.s
authorization to spend $3.5 million for
land acquisi tion; Proposi tion G is for $2.'!
mill ion in dt•1·clopment costs nnd Propos i-
tion H is for $3 rnilli on for future ac-
quisitions.
The heav iest turnout in a spot check of
poll ing pl<"tcl'S this morning v:as tit
Precinct 88, the Corona dcl l'\lar Fire Sta-
tion, where 125 or 45U registered voters
U'I Ttlwtlete
Seek• Asylutn
Catherine Kerkow, 20, (shown
in 1969 photo) and William
H1)lder, 22, self-avowed Black
. Panther from Oakland, are
seekin g political asylum in Al-
geria after allegedly hijacking
a jetliner for $500,000 ransom.
See story, Page 4,
Nixon, M'Govern
Win High School
'Election Poll'
h:ld e.1st ballot~
Sint1l:lr 1un1outs 11 Prr rl•ported ;1:
ll 11rbor View F.1£'ntrntary S{'hool ( 11 2 out
of 510) and MRriners School (112 of 505 1
while the lightest turnout "·a.s reported,
as usua l Jn the morning , on Balboa
Island .
Only 77 of the 460 (lf'rsons registered In
Precin('l 92, voting olt the Unitrd
~l rl hodist Church on Aga1e Avenue, ha d
li!'rn to the polls.
l'o!l 11·ork ers at l'rrL"inrl RS at City Il a\\
t·harotr lerized tht· turnout there as about
norn1a l.
·ft .\. ·'. , '
Nixon Votes
'Absentee'
In Califol'nia
°' AP~1'' .-.~. • _,, •
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Voters'went'l6 " ' -
the poll! early and in large numbers !11
California'! crucial primary election tfo-
day with the hopes of Sens. Hu~rt lf.
1-lumphrey and George McGo vtrn for the
Democratic presidential n o m i n a I i o n
riding on the results.
By 11 a.m. toclay, more than 16 percent
of the 3.2 million l'oters in Los Angeles
County cast thei r ba llols -far ahead of
the record prima ry pace in 1968 when
only about 11 percent had voted fou r
hours alter tlie pol ls opened.
In San Francisco. !he ea rly lumout
was running a little behind the 1968 pace
when more than 72 percent of Ca lifoniia '.,
registered vote rs balloted. But vot ing
was expected to be slow in San Fran-
cisco because of an unusually long ballot.
The early voting was heavy in Sacra-
mento, possibly in ;in effort to beat the
105-degree temperature forecast for later
in the day.
Skies were overcast and the air wa s
w.irm and muggy over most of tht stalt.
President and ri.trs. Nixon voted by
a bsentee ballot.
A spokesman said ri.1onday in Key Bis-
cayne, fla., that lhry ~cnt 10 their ballot.'!
after returning from thr So\·iet summit
tri p.
The wi nner of tO<!ny '~ presidential
(See PRJ!\1ARY, Page ZJ
He awoke lo spot Officer David Walker
parked at the shop on a coffee break
about 11 :30 p.m., according to .in-
vestigators.
The truck driver said he had pulled into
the industrial area on Ware house Road
about JOO yard s off HarDor Boulevard In
dump stale coffee after completing his
rollllds.
!·le said the effect o! the ag reement
would be to make the Harbor District
responsible for all dredging and bulkhead
r epairs.
"This would be true anywhere In the
harOOr ," Wynn sa id. "including Balboa
Island's Graod Canal, the channels by
Newport Island or anywhere."
D-Day Re~alled Ric hard Ni~on . for the Republic&n.s,
and George McGovern , for the Demo-
crats. "'ere easy victors in a straw vole
taken this week at Newport Harbor High
School.
Or•nl(e «:o•st
Vandeman said he completed the
chore, turned off the gas burners and
climbed back into his cab with his win-
dow partially down.
Suddenly he felt the rine aga inst his
hea.i.: and heard a menacing male voice
warn him not to turn or he would blow
his brain.s out.
"Shoot him," Vandeman quoted a sec·
ond bandit as urging.
DOORSTEP AID
FOR APPLICANT
A young 1a1n who telephoned the
Ne'h>Ort Beach Fire Department with a
request Monday and was misunderstood
got rwl!t strvice with a big engine dispat·
ched to his doOr.
Only the caller -who had a sp<OCh
pr<>blem -badn 'I •asked lo. the kind ol
asslljance required, for • fire, bnlbn
waler pipe or ~ medlco1 aid.
lie nJ!la\ne4;)>e' ~._wanted u •i>
pUcolkm lo folinl>I nn dep1111nent.
'
Residtnts along the Grand Canal have
for years been trying to get someone to
dredge the canal but work has betn
stalled because of the jurisdictional <Us-
pute.
Wynn said the forthcomJng agreement
Poisoned ~hiJd
In Good Shape
SoOlet\TJ)es you get goodie.s • t'
g:r•ndma'1 house, but you should only
gobble what she giVes yoo , not., what )lt>u
crawl around aod find. , • .
This Is the lesson Jeal-ne:i by Wendy
Werner, ll roontht 1 who. iimpled aome
rat polaon Monday. ot the bOme or Mn .
Patrick ·wemer. 2121 Seiview Ave., Corona de! Mar. • ...
·Nowport Beach llrem<n gave the baby
ftrll IJd, alter which Weody went to
llOll«1"•morlal Hospital wh<re •he was
treoled and rent hOme In IOOd shape,
N orniandy La11di11g 28 Years Ago
Time, tide, wind and rain have washed
away the stains of blood and iron on that
picturesque, 6().mile solar plexus where
the Allied punch landed 28 years ago to-
day.
Combined force! -mightiest sea and
air armada in history -hlt the Norman-
dy Coast on June 6, 1K4, at 5 a.m., Lon-
don Ume.
Finally, D-Day had come.
Steaming out of a dark, mi!C.y mQrning,
the' monumenta1 1ask 'force slammed into
li4ht1y maMed Nazt Gennan shore
defenses.
Bombs, naval bombardment and reply-hil! "°"stal fire combiiied In a thunder
llke Gabriel's botn and •t 6;30 a.m .. the
cannon fodder -the doomed -hit the
beacbts. ·
Inching. crawling, falling , the first
asaau)I ~ drove lllrlfOrd, floundlni al
the line or .... 111 take ea .. ntan, Bayeu•.
c.en In • day,.• week, two-"Weeksi three . ' .
'Ille CIO by tO.mlle beachhead widened
bit by bit as Amerlci.ri1 • Brkl.sh, Cana-
dian , French and Polish forces began the
fi nal , crushing push against Germany.
Logistics for D-Day were titsnic: 1.000
planes and gliders dropped paratroopers
on the Care.ntin Peninsula.
Manpawer marshaled Wider Supreme
Allied Forces Commander Gen. Dwight
D. "Ike" Eisenhower totaled 2,176,.f.39 ;
with 5,049 lighter plant>; 3,467 heavy
bombers; l,&IS light and medhnn
bombers and others.
A total of 39 Allied divisions fiercely
fought the forcea marshaled by Germany,
65 dlvlsioo.s including reserves in the
Fatherland.
Opening up other rronts, Gen. George
S. l>atton and his bellfire-and-brirru:tone
Third Anny hit St. Lo, and on Aug. 14.
Allies Invaded FraJtCe aoutb of the Rhone
with t.000 more lhlpt. .
'lbe 'first terTlbie· crack •as heard on
D-Day, June t, 1114. but it was month.ti
until Gmnany'1 beck was finally broken.
1 Time, tide, wl:rid and rain have washed
.,,.Y the llalnt.ol thlol June 8 ol 28 yeart
p&ll_
ControversiAI Con gr e i!I i!I m a n John
Schn1itz (R-Tustinl, however, was a lo.ser
to Orange County Assessor Andrew Hin-
shaw.
The student body of the school was
polled by several senior clvlcs classes to
get thejr views on lb@ election and on
several issues important to young people.
In t1ddition to the presidential and coo-
gressionlil votes, the atudenta gave strong
approval to the legali.ution of mari-
juana, total and immediate pullout from
Vli:itnam and a ban on the dealb penalty
In Cnllfornla .
Nixon'a margin or vlctory over Sen.
John Mhbrook was S04 to 9.
~1cGovem beat Sen. Hubert Humphrey.
his neareot opponent, b)' • 349 to 4t tally.
The remaining votet were spUl among a
half doun other candidates.
Slx votes were cast for Peace and
Freedom Party candklAtcs including Dr.
Beri)omln Spock, · the anUwar baby
doctor.
Sj:!Jmltz lost to Hinshaw by only 44
"otes wllh a 2H lo 250 tally. tarl cana-Wll)'~1~l'\ISUD· ic"9ol board member-·aloo ~~t .. to .upect Sdunitz, WM • poor Wl'4. wll)I 111 votu~
we.titer
Variable clouds are Jn the pit<-
ture through Wednesday along the
Orange Coast, wJlh possibility or
showers In the evening hours.
That mot.st, wann air wUJ con-tinue with highs of 70 at the beach
rl!inl( to near 90 inland. The
weatherlady also reminds cout
weather-watchers to be aure to
vote.
INSmE TOD-' V
Lnte rtt><>rt.t have filtered out
of tl1e African republic of Bu-
rundi revtaling tht .Jlo11ph~r of
150.000 in bloodw tri/Jol kllllng1.
See story, Page 11 .
lM. l tyf 1•
C1llftonll1 t
C&lqffttf DJ"!
C-ln IP
(,....._., 11
.,.. • ....in. ' """"'' ..... . Cntwn•-1 n ,.,..ltU .,. ,.,. ........ ""'"'-'' A11111 L ...... lf . -. f .
Be Sure to Vote Today; Polls Open Until 8
• .. ' • .-
•
•2 DAILY P','.O!__ N T11Md11y, Jinw 6, 1912
·Plan Behind Schedule
Ordinances Delay Work on Newport.Project
Stepped-up work on hlgh rls~ and
den5ity ordinances ha.!1 thrown work on
an updated Nellrport Beach general plAJ1
behind schedule. city CO\Jncitn1en and
planning ci>mr11lssiontrll: were lvld 1'·1on·
d11y night.
g ... ral plan wbeil we gtt down Ille road
several rnonth1 from now."
llO¥.'ever. Community Development
!)1re{'lur J11chAtd V. llogan, whose
department is directing the new plan,
v•asn't so optim1stJc.
take into con11dtr1Uon that fires are a
fact of life and always should be a con-
1lderation. '1
Wynn aa ld the plan is about thrte
"'eeks behind sc'hedule , but assured
l\fclnnis It wUI be ready by early 1973 so
!he oommission and councll can begin the
public hearing process.
Despite assurances from City r-.lalla8tr
Jlobert L, Wynn that !ht> ti me spen t will
prnvt valuable later and will allow the
tvtaJ project to finish on time, the joint
eouocil-commissjon gathering was told
by the man in charge of the new plnn
thot he can guarantet nothing.
"JI we keep gelling throv:n tht>~
U1ing.'l , Jt may throw u.s more bthind," ht
s:iid.
Hogan also hinted at potential penon-
nel change.'! that "'might inttrfrre" with
work .
r.layor Donald A. i\lc:!nnis v.'as h~~·1ng
none of the e:ic planetions.
Planni9!t O:>mm issloner William Agee
also expbessed concern about the un·
CC'rtainty of the Pacific Coast F'reeway.
lie said both the city and potential
developers are handicapped by !ht~
"cloud" of the freeway. "\\'e had t-0 contend with brush fire~ -
high rise and deos.ity studies," \Vynn said,
"but they will work in niet"ly with the
"You always have fires lo put out." he
said. •·:-,fy concero ill, did we adequately
"\Ve don 't want another y,•asted study,"
Agee 1aid, adding that th!s is good reason
for promoting passage of a bill by
Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R -
Newport BeachJ des igned to eliminate
the Newport Beach leg of the coastal
route. Newport Council to Alter
'Ove1·stafr at Marinapark
Chuncilmen and commissioners also
expressed gratitude at an offer by local
architecls to help V.'Ork out at least an in·
terim height limit ordinance and agreed
that Mcinnis should v•rite their represen·
tative accepting the offer to bring Jn
recommenda !ions at the co1nmission's
June 14 publ ic hearing on the high ri se
ordinance.
Newport Beach city councilmen haved
served notice 1hey think Marinapark, the
cily-ciwned trailer park on Balboa
Peninsula. b overstaffed. They intend lo
do something about it nex t f~cal year,
which starts July I.
Councilman Paul Ryckoff led the at·
tack. going beyond City Manager Robert
L. \Vynn 's recommendation to do away
with a clerk and one of two gardeners.
Ryckolf insisted the facility doesn 't
nCed a full·time manager during a coun·
tjl di scuss ion Sa turday.
"There·s virtually no movement of
tenant!,'' Rycoff said. "There's no need
for a full·time manager.''
.. You'd be surprised at all the leaky
faucets, the complaints." said Wynn,
"and the problem with all the people who
come in and aren't tenants."
"A part time manager would do ; the
prcblems are .sporadic," Ryckoff said.
Mayor Donald A. MclMis pointed out
that the managei:'1 position -and pay -
were upgraded two years ago because the
Mesa Council1nen
Reject Freeway
Block Support
Newport Beach city councilmen were
firmly rebuffed by their Cos ta Mesa
counterparts Monday night as they at-
tempted to secw-e support in blocking the
pfoposed Pacific Coast Freeway.
A resolution calling for deletion of the
route through Newport Beach. as pro-
po!ed by Assemb lyman Robert E.
lladham (R-Newport Beach). w a!
lltlanimously rejected by the Costa Mesa
City O:>uncll.
Instead, the pr"freeway Costa Mesa
council threw its support behind another
piece of pending legislation, that of
AS!emblyman Robert H. Burke (R-Hun-
tington Beach), which calls for a three-
year moratorium to work out the frttw11y
conflict
Newport Beach councilmen, who have
labeled construction of the coastal route
through their city as "unequivocall y
unacceptable," have a!ked other cities tG
support their stance. To date, only Seal
Beach has compiled .
The Newport cou ncil's anti-fr eeway
sentiment, according to the resolution , is
founded on the results cf a speci al elec-
tion last Ma rch durlnjt \\•hich Newport
Beach voters overwhelmingly rejected
!he Pacific Coast Free\vay plan.
Costa Mesa. on the other hand, is seek-
ing construction of lhe Pacific Coast
Freewav as a means of siphoning traffic
from the Newport F'ree1~·ay \\'hich is
ullimatcly planned to connect \\'ith the
<"Oasta/ route.
Del etion of the route, it has been
pointed out by Costa ~fesa councilmen jn
the past, \vou!d cause l.ra rf ic to back up
In Costa Mesa .
The Burke bill proposes to restudy the
Pacific Coast Freeway plan by hiring a
group of consultant s who would !hen
m01ke a re<'on1mendation .
OIANGI COAST N
DAILY PILOT
managf'r, Norbert Re inhart. wa s also to
serve as a real estate consultant fo r the
city.
The clerk -Reinhart's wifl' -\Vas to
be a socretary for that end of the job.
"I don't recall having heard any of the
l'olarinapark manager's expertise on the
land problems we've had," Mcinnis said.
Philip Bettencourt, assistant city
manager, agreed that the position hadn't
worked oot as anticipated.
.. Th is wa s sold to the city coun cil two
)'ears ago on that basis," Mcinn is said .
Bellencourt noted. however, that the ci·
ty and the park residents have a
"landlord-tenant" relationship w it h
regard to services,
"We were jwt wondering who would fix
a leaky faucet In the m!ddle of the
night," oflered Calvin Stewart, parks,
beaches and recreation dlrector.
"If my faucet is leaking in the middle
of the nigtit, are you going to come over
and fix It?" asked Mcinnis. "Let it leak
until morning," the mayor said.
Bettencourt said there is a level of
services to tenants specified in the lease.
"I'd like to see in there where the ci ty
is supposed to fix leaky faucets in the
n1iddle of the night," said Mcinnis.
Bettencourt said of the 58 trailers in
the park, 28 are occupied on a year-round
basis.
Councilmen lnatructed Wynn to patt
down the job, either to retain Reinhert on
a part-time basis or to find another
tenant who wouJd be willing to do the
wor k.
Besides his $10,700.a-year salary and
his wife's $5,300 annual pay, Reinhart
also lives rent-free in a city-owned
I railer.
Bettencourt later conceded that a
reduction in services probably wouldn't
affect the demand for the trailer park -
even though the city bad ind icated it
might be turned into a public park in two
years. Bettencourt noted that there has
not been a vacancy for a single day in the
park since Jt opened in 195$,
From Page I
DISASTER ...
Africans. The mine produces 2.2 million
tof\.'I of coa l a year.
Shrill horns blasted the new5 of the
disaster soon after the explosion but most
relatives felt the blast and were on the
way to the shaft.
1'Jew rescue equipment was installed
rt?<·ently, including special suits and OJ:·
ygen masks. l\1lne officials made an
urgent call for extra supplies of liquid ox-
yg en.
Rhodesian Air Force planes carried
ernergency canisters of oxygen and
.special res cue personnel to the area.
Wankie airfield, in the middle of the
gan1e reserve, remained open after
sunset, its runway marked by flares .
(~ame scouts patrolled regularly to keep
<inimals a\ray.
flospitals and doctors were on fuJI
alert.
"They probably won't be needed. A
neet of undertakers \VOUld be more like
it." one mine employe said.
The cause of the blast was not im·
mediRtl':ly determined but it could put the
mine out oi action for weeks.
Rhodesia seized independence from
Britain in 1965, and relies heavily on
mining exports to evade United Natiomi
sanctions and earn vital foreign currency.
And any lengthy 1toppage cou ld hit
Rhodesia's economy.
McGovern Meets
Witl1 Governors;
Seeking Unity
HOUSTON , Tex. (AP) -In a bid for
party unity, presidential front runner
George McGovern met with Democratic
governors early today and said his cam-
paign will be one of cooperation and
reconciliation rather lhan divisivenes s.
The South Dakota senator altered hi s
campaign schedule and flew into this
sprawling southeast Texas city late Mon·
day night for a meeting \\'ilh the
Democratic governors, most of whom
have remained neutral or opposed to
Aft'Govern's candidacy.
When the meeting \Va s over , most of
the Southern chief executives 'vere still
voicing doubts or opposition to
l\lcGovern, claiming his cana1dacy would
assure Southern strength for President
Nixon and other COP office-seekers in
November.
But McGovern, whose liberal views on
several issues have been an issue among
Democratic governors attending the an-
nua l bipartisan National Governors'
Conference here, apparentl y did not hurt
hi3 cau se by showing up.
McGovern delayed his departure from
Houston Jong enough today to attend a
prayer breakfast with all the governors
-Repu blican as well as Democratic.
He was introduced but did not speak.
ks be prepared to return to the a.irport,
McGovern said of the discussions with
Democratic governors:
"It was a good, useful exchange. \Ve
established a good working relationship if
l become the nominee."
"I think it was good that he came,"
Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter said in an in-
terview. "The best point wa s just the fact
that he left California and came here. It
showed he was concerned."
But Carter, generally identified as the
leader of the anti-McGovtrn f o r c e s
among the Democratic governors . said,
.. I really can't say that my attitude
toward him has changed."
McGovern on Monday pre d i cl e d
primary election victories today in
California , New Jersey, South Dakota and
New Mexico.
He told an Albuquerque rally ~tonday
that wins in the four states will "build the
kind of momentum t-0 carry us all the
"'ay lo the presidential nomination ."
The South Dakota senator may have
tacked down a popular-vote victory in
Nev. Mexico·s first presidential primary
election with his late-hour campaign visit.
An estimated 3,500 persons were in
Albuquerque's Old Town Plaza to see and
hear the senator during a late afternoon
rall y.
Meanwhile Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
optimistically pressed a last.minute
pursuit for votes today In suburban Los
AngeJes.
"I think I'll do better than the polls
predict," Humphrey told newsmen as he
arrived at a job training center in the
San Fernando Valley.
WouJd he predict victory, a ne~·sman
asked .
''I'd like it. but l don't predict Jt," the
r.finnesota senator said,
1he 0••~1 Co,ut DAILV PILOT, wi!ll w~kll
h c:Hl'l!llned I~• News-"r"'· Is p~bllilltd by
~ Or•nge C0<!!1t P11b!l1hl"' Company. S~•·
r111 ldltlOn• •r1 Plloll~fd, M&l!d1v !hr0119h
f rlqy, lor Coit• Ma•. Ht..-POl'l •~•ch,
H11t1llnglon 8t1<h/Fount1in V1Utr. L11-
Bel(h. lrvlnllS.1ddlebad. Ind S•n Clernen!1/
S1" J11111 C1~IJJr1flO A slnglt 1'99iol'lll
ld!lifn h publlVH!i;I s.1vrd1rs '"" s..-.yi.
f l'te prirw;Jp1I PUbll1lll1111 pl.In! 11 11 )JO WH I
l •r $!rN 1, Coit• Mew, C1IUorni1, rM2'.
Rob•1f N. w •• J
Pr11kl.,,, •nd P111ul~r
J1ck R. Curler
According to the Guinesa Book of
records, the world's worst mine dlsuter
occurred in China on April 28, 1942, when
a coal dust explMlon killed 1,572 men at
the Honk eiko ColUery.
Humphrey's schedule included a half
day of campaigning before awaiting
rerult.s cl balloting in the state'1 primary.
He watched a slide show depicting the
oecupatJonal training which school ad-
mlnlstrators said put thousands of valley
re~ldents into jobs.
Vk t Ptetld..,1 el!G Gt1>«1I M•l'l'9f•
Tho111 11 K1ew il
EGotor
Thom11 A, M11rphin•
Monoolno t<ol!IW'
l . Pifer Kri•9
H"""llOrl 8tKh (i1y Edite.
N.w!M'f a.act. Oftlcf'
lJJJ N1wp1rt lo11l1v•rd'
M•lfhtt A"rlr111: P.0.1011: 1175, 92661
°"'"'O!ficoa eosi. M .. •; DI Wttl ••r Strffl ~ hach1 221 l'orftf """"'' """'"""'°"" l•tc'I: llf15 8~h &oli!Mfi:I .. 'Cl8ftllfttt: •s Nortll £1 Cimino "-"*
, .. .,.... (714J Ml-4JZ1
c:JwMacll A4"rtklflt "4Z·i671
QlvrrltM. 1tn. or.,... ce111 Publltlllf'IO ~. No new1 1forle1. lltvs1t•t1,,..,1, ..,..,..J ~flt ot •••l'lfMrnM!I l>tf-tl<! -Y' .. ""'1:idU(44 WJtfWl!,tf lpt(lf/ lltf• ,.. .... If COfl)'l'ltllf OWIMr,
S...W dfll potf ... N II ti Cot!• M#\8. ~ ~•ttori bY c1rrl1' u •.s '--1-!~""'l --l!r. ?Ji'! ll~U fflOQ!blr; mJJll•t v •• iitflf'tinii!i -,,-ll!CWllll'ly.
W alla~e Mo't·ed
Gover11or Better, Gets Own Room
SILVER SPRING, Md. (UPI) -Doctor• decided today to transrtr Gov.
George C. Wail•ct from the lntentlve care untt at Holy Cross Hospltal where
he has been undergoing treatment since beJng abot May J5 to a private room. ··ne 11lgnlficance ia that he ts conUnutng to recover," a WaIJace press
aide, Elvin Stanton, old of the transfer from a $137-a-day room In the ln·
tensive care unit to the $111-a-day priva te room.
A hOllpital 11pokesman said Wallace's doctors report that drainage from
an abdominal inftctlon his been greatly nidUctd . Wallace wa1 criUcally woun~ Is paralyzed from the wllit down-in 1 May 15 assassinatton attempt.
Stanton laid Dr. Joseph F. Schanno, Wallace's attending physician, ,.._
"°r1ed that tbc ~~atlc ~ruldenUal can4ldate's weight is steady. Wallace
!OSl aboOT~nds ffom his 1cfmlsslon weight of about 160 pounds, in part
because of the Infection.
'
DAILV PILOT ...... bV L .. P•rH VOTERS THROUGHOUT THE STATE WERE PONDERING THE BALLOT POSSIBILITIES TODAY
Th re• of the Elecforafe Ex•rcise Their Rights in Irvine at Turtle Rock Sthool
Fro111 Pnge 1
PRIMARY VOTING ...
primary carries a bloc of 271 dele gate
\'Oles into the Democratic Nationa l
Convention at Miami Beach -one-sixth
or the total needed to win the nomination.
The polls are open from 7 a.m. until 8
p.m.
'l'he vote count may be slow because of
a long t>allot in some areas and a w·rite-in
campaign on behalf of Alabama Gov.
George C. \Vallace.
Secretary of State Edmund C. BrO\\'n
estimated that 3.8 million of the staie·s
5.1 million Dernocrats -or 7J percent -
\vould vote today, lured mostly by th e
presidential contest. He forecast a record
turnout of 73 percent of the 9.1 million
registered voters.
Because San Francisco polling places
may be open as late as 10 p.m., Brown
Jr. asked the three major broadcast
networks to hold back their computer17.ed
\\'i nn er projections for several hours .
Indications were his request \vould be
turned down.
In telegrams l\1onday to ABC. CBS and
NBC election officials. he said he feared
lhe network predictions \\'Ould S\\'ing the
votes or !ate voters in San Francisco_.
perhaps even deciding the outcon1e of the
.state primary.
President Nixon is challenged on the
Republican ballot by Rep. John M.
Ashbrook of Ohio but Ashbrook is not
considered a serious threat to Nl :oton 's
v.1inning California"! 96 delegate votes to
the GOP convention.
\Vallace failed to file Jn tin1e to make
the Democratic ballot. but a \\Tite·i n
campaign \Vas under \vay on behalf of the
Alabama governor. still in a 1'1aryland
hospital recuperatlng from gunshot
\vounds suffered at a shopping center
rally in Laurel, Md .. May 15.
There v.•as no chance of Wallace's col-
lecting any delegates in California where
the winner reaps the entire 271-vote bloc.
.But his campaign managers hoped for an
expression of Wallace strength in the
~tale where busing of school children for
racial balance has been an en1otional
issue in some a reas. but not a major
point of disc ussion between l\IcGovern
and Humphrey.
A victory for l\fcCovern in C.:ilifornia
'vould propf'1 hlm to\vard the Democratic
National Convention In fl.Ua1ni Beach in
July \\'ith a commanding lead in delegate
votes -more than half the l,509 needed
.to wln the nomination.
J-lumphrey had to \\'in to remain a ma·
jor contender for !he nomination although
he VO\Ved to fight on even if he lost.
Employes Seek
Battin 'Damages'
Damages of $10,000 were demanded
l\1onday ln an Orange County Superior
Court lawsuit tha t charges Superviscr
ltobert Battin \\'il h unlav.•fu!Jy using a
county n1ailing list for his own election
purpo.ses.
The Orange County Employes As socia·
tion also asks in its action against the
}'lrst District supervisor for further
damages to be a\varded "'hen the
organization can assess the value of
clerical and mechanical help allegedly
utilized by Battin.
The complaint states that Battin ob-
tained the computerized mailing list last
1veek and used the county information t-0
n1a il literature to First District voters.
:\1embers o[ the OCEA were ur ged la st
\veek in a precede nt·settlng bulletin
issued by !he COW11y \\'Orkers grou p to
\'Ole agajnst Battln in today's election.
ACLU Denounces
Sinatra Probe
\VASHINCTON IUPI) -The American
Civil Liberties Union ha.'! denounced as
''character assassination" congressional
testimony linking entertainer F·rank
Sinatra v.·ilh an alleged Mafia leader.
The ACLU sa id Monday the testimony
giv en by .ioseph ''The Baron" Barboza, a
.<:elf-described "enforcer" for the Mafia,
before the llouse Crime C.Ommittee Ma v
2~ v.·as ;'a classic example of trial bY
public ity .''
It said the testin1ony should no t lla\'e
been made public until Sinatra had a
ch;ince to tell his side of the story _
Sinat1·:i has been subpoenaed to appea r
before the committee Thursday as I.he
committee continues its investigation of
underworld influence on sports.
Ne,vport Again
Looks at Balboa
Parkit1g Signals
Newport Beach is going to take anothe.r
look at a warning system lo tell potential
bcachgocrs that parking on Balboa
Peninsula and Balboa Island is all filled
up.
Unde r the proposal. flashing signs
\\IOu\d be installed at both entrances to
the peninsula -Balboa and Ne\\•port
Bouleva rds-ahd the Marine Avenue en·
trance lo Balboa lsalnd.
Cou~cilmen Saturday instructed City
l\1anager Robert L. Wynn to find out the
costs of the oft.repeated proposal, and the
best way to detern1ine \11hcn the parking
spaces are, in £act. all in use.
Wynn said he 1\•ould try lo have the
report ready June 12.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers suggested
the installation of regular traffic coun·
ters, but Councihnan Richard Croul sug·
gested 11 1rould be Jess l'xpensi ve if lhe
devices could be triggered by police in
lhcir hellcopters.
"The hel icopters could fly O\'Cr and in
one shot sac the situatlon and snap the
thing on ." CrQ~·;;airL
Public Works 'Director Joseph T. De v-
lin said the parking lot attendant at the
Balbo a Pier mig ht do ii, but councilmen
noted he could not ascertain the status of
street pa rking. Street spaces usually are
filled first, it was rrote -1_
Mayor Donald A. ~1rlnnis pointed out
the proposal to turn people back was
studied some time ag() and suggested
\Vynn might "pull out the old report and
dust it off.''
"Th(' signs should be i n s t a 11 e d
somC\\'hcre before 32nd Street ," Rogers
said, "so people \Vill at least know tfte
truth about the parking situation and can
bail ou t. and look for some ot her beach."
He pointed out that .'.!2nd Street v.'ould
make an ideal tum·around route_
Rogers represents the city's First
Councilmanic Dist rict on the peninsula.
IT'S HERE • • • YESTERYEAR!
SELECTION OF CARPETING WASN'T
•FAN1ASTIC WHEN OUR GRANDFATHER
STARTED HIS CARPET STORE. ORIENTAL RUGS
WERE "IN," AND GRANDFATHER SPECIALIZED
IN THEM.
OUR FATHER GOT INTO THE ACT
AROUND 1918 AND DEVELOPED A LARGE
VOLUME OF DpMESTIC CARPEJS, MOSTLY
WILTONS AND AXMINISTERS.
LATELY WE HAVE SEEN A RESURGENCE
OF AXMINISTER: CARPETS IN B EA U TI F U L
FLORALS AND PRINTS. THE EFFECT CREATED
BY AN UNUSUAL PATIERN CAN TRANSFORM
A DULL . R 0 0 . M INTO S 0 M ETH I NG
SPECTACULAR.
PLEASE STOP IN AND SEE OUR LARGE
SELECTION.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 'Placentia Ave.
COST A MISA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thur Thurs .. 9 lo 5:30 -Fri., 9 lo 9 -SAT., 9:30 lo 5
' ·' •
Orange Coast
EDITION N.Y. Steeb
.
VOL 65, NO. 158, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOllNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1972 c TEN CENTS
Okay on $34.1 Million School Budget Sought
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
CH the Dllltr ~llet Sl•H
Newport-Mesa school trustees \viii be
asked tonight to adopt a tentative $34 .1
million budget for 1972·73.
It could mean an increase of more than
30 cents in the district's tax rate.
As requested, the new general f u n d
budget would be an increase of more
than $3 mlUion Qver last year. It would
also mean a boost of 14-lG cents in the
No~ roversy
current general fund tax rate.
"Tonight I v.·ill ask the board to al>"
prove this budget , but I "'ill stress that
it is tentative F can be changed any
time up to the point the fina l document
is adopted," said district Superintendent
John Nicoll.
The general fund tax rate rise. addOO
to the disirict's estimated 18 cent in-
crease in the school bond redemption
rate, could increase taxes as much as
Budget Received
·~
By Mesa Council
Capita l improvements amounting to
more than $1 .7 n1il\ion and the hiring of
15 new city employes ranging from a
maintena nce man to computer pre>-
grammer ha ve been proPosed in the ne\v
Costa ~1esa budget by City Manager
Fred Sorsabal.
The ~page document \\'as formally
present~ to councilmen ~1onday night
and \\'&S r ecetvtid without comment . A
special study session has been called for
7:30 p.m. Mondoy night but no con-
troversy is expected on any of the
budgeted expenditures.
Topping the capttal improvements list
are several Items aimed at im proving the
appearance of the city, among them
$10,000 for the beaptifi cation of the city
enlrance at NC'WQ!)rt Boulevard, and
S76 ,000 for median ilndscaping on Adams
Avenue, Sunflower Avenue . Nc\vport
Boulevard, and Fair Drive.
The $10.6 million overall budget, up 1.4
percent when compared to last year's,
also projectJ the expenditure of $2.000 for
aecurit y \\'ails and electronic doors in the
main lobby of lhe police facili ty.
Bicycle rlders have not been overlooked
by Sorsabal, \\'hose budget recommends
$1,930 for bicycle storage areas and a full
$20.000 for the construction of bicycle
trails.
Fairvie\V Park plans, no doubt will be
advanced significantly by a budgeted
$250,000 land acquisition fund for the 257·
acres of state-<>1\•ned propert y behind
Estancia Jl igh School.
Councilmen. who are currently in
negotiations \\'ilh county authorities and
I.a1\•rence R. Robinson . stale.director or
gen<'ral services, on the property are
planning to use the money fot acquisition
eilher through lease or purchase.
SLreet improvements al so Ii g u re
significantly ·in the proposed 1972·73
budgel, and include i;J96,000 for the
widening of Fairview Road, $400,000 for
the widening of Placentia Avenu e, $32.000
for the widening of Red Hill Avenue, and
$20.000 for the extension of Bear Street.
In addition , the city manager's budget
recommends expenditure of a full
$200,000 for the resurfacing of various
stree'; throughout the city.
Various other public works projects,
such as stonn drains. traffic lights,
pedestrian walkways and street name
s i{,'llS push the capital improvements up
to a total of $1,742,490.
Although the budget d-Oes not break
then1 down by salary and a total figure
for the salaries was not immediately
available , there will be 15 new employes
al city hall soon.
They include a planning department
clerk. a computer programmer and
keypwfch operator. a duplicating equip-
ment operator. six seni or police officers.
a police clerk, an engineer and a
non-professional engineering cmployc,
tv.·o maintenance men, a recreation clerk .
cind a parks maintenance foreman.
Mesa Cou11cil Actio11
•lere, In capsule form, are the major actions taken by the Costa Mesa
City Council Monday night:
BUDGET -Received a proposed $10.6 million budget from City t\.1anager
Fred SOrsabal for the 1972--73 fiscal year. The budget, up 1.4 percent over last
year's, calls for the hiring or 15 new staff members.
TENNIS -Approved bid by a Costa f.iesa firm lo provide pro shop serv-
ices and tennis lessons at TeWinkl e Park.
CODES -Ordered a Tallahassee, Fla. firm to begin streamlining city
codes under a new $7, 707 contract.
FREEWAYS -Refused to back a resolution from the Cily of Newport
Beach calling for support of a bill by Robert Badham (R·Ne wport Beach).
The bill would delete the Pacific Coast Freeway.
ROAD WIDENING -Approved a $160.000 proposal to widen Placentia
Avenue betweC Estan~ High school and Adams Avenue with county Arterial
Highway Flnanclng Pltlt flDlds. •
PINK BUS UNE -Refused approval of a bus run through Cost.a Mesa.
C:Ouncl1men uJd they would bt in favor ol a temporary agreement, but not
a permanent nm.
APPOINTMENT -Sealed John Leonhardt on the city planning commission.
for another four.year tenn. -
Gl!NERAL PLAN -Awarded on $11,00G contract to the Manhall F. Linn
Co. to de•elor> houalnc, open space, and ocenlc highway elemen ts of lhe Costa
MOii General Plan.
BANKING -Accopted • bid from U.S. National Bank to continue provld·
lnfl bu•lir 11..ice. lo Ibo city ov11t the nest five years 11 lav..-able Interest
rates,.1.
3.\ cents per $100 assessed valuation next
year to a total of $5.04.
In addition to the general fund mon ey,
the school budget includes cafeteria and
building funds paid \\"ith iehool bonds
and federal contributions.
The building fund proposed in next
year's budget shows a decrease of nearly
$5 million. Last year , the appropriation
\\•as more lhan $10 million .
Accord ing to fisca l director Walter
Adrian, the decrease is shown because
of a drop in t:onstruction activity over
last year.
The cafeteria fund will remain essen~
liaJ ly the same in next year's budge1 -
slightly more than $I million.
The total budget including all three
it ems is estimated at $40.5 million -a
drop of more than $1.7 million over last
year.
Board considerations of the general
fund budget are expected to last several
• Ill
months _ Thr final budget documen l n1uSt
be adopted b.v Aug. I.
ln the n1eant i1ne, distri~·t tear hers :ind
employes l\l"e seeking more tha n the 4.5
percen1 pay boost proposed in th., 1enl;1-
tive budge t.
Nicoll said the budget deLiber:i tions are
two weeks ahead of !chedule and that
several st eps arr being combined to in1-
prove eUiciC"ncy .
"'\Ve have been discussing sa lary an d
other aspt.'Cts or the budget since Jasl
PAl~Y lllLOT Pll9te .W L .. P1rM
COSTA MESA 'S 'MOST DANGEROUS ROAD' SOON Wl~L BE TWO LANES WIDER FOR SAFETY
Sweeping S~urve1 Along Pl•centia Avenue (Estancia Drivel Mecca for Tr1ffic Accidant1
Placentia to Be Widened
Arterial Fi11w1ci11g Plan Provides $160,000 Grant'
The swooping 5-eurves on Placentia
Avenue. caltei:I by some the most
dangerous slretch of road in Costa Mesa.
soon will be widened under a $160,000
grant provided under the county Arterial
11\ghway Financing Plan .
Engineering specifications cd'l!ed for
v.·idening of Placentia Avenue between
Estancia i1igh SchooL and Swan Drive
from 11"0 to four lanes were approved by
city councilmen ~londay night by a 3·1
vote.
The on ly councilman to argue against
the project was RobErt ht Wilson who
contended, "We've had far too many ac-
cidents there so far , and I can 't see how
widening would make any difference."
Wilson proposed holding off on the proj-
ect until Costa Mesa had acquired some
'"Shoot
or its Fairview Park land and was then in
a position to eliminate the· S-bend on the
road's northern JX)rlion, near the
Republic Homes tract.
However. a June 15 deadline mandated
by state officials for putting out bids on
the project, prompted the other roun-
cilmen lo ignore Wil son 's suggestion.
It was held by the oth('r three coun-
cihnen that the proposed widening. ooupl·
ed with the installation of a center
divider and ban king of the curves, would
make the road safer.
"Time i.s of the essence." commented
Col.incllman Dominic Raciti who urged
•·we should push this thing through right
now."
N1.1merous accidents, including several
fatalities, have occurred oo the rciad ,
' sometimes known as Estancia Drive. lt is
heavily traveled , especially d
0
u r Ing
sh.chool hours, and many Estancia High
SChool students traverse the route on
their bicycles.
Since the road dips at several paints,
the vision of dri\'ers is obscured by
grassy hillside} all along the 35 mph
stretch.
Wilson likened the curvy road lo
Newport Beach's Tustin-lrvine Avenue
connection which also has been the site of
numeroUs accidenls.
"They widened that road from two
lanes to four lanes, iMtalled paddles
along the curves, and put in blinking cau·
Uon l!Shts. But it dldn 't work."
H • ~ G . 101-unn1an
Mesa Vendor Spared, 'Knocked Unconscious by Pair
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ~ 0•1" ,, ... ,,..,
Sitting with a cold rifle barrel at his
temple, a catering truck operator wai ted
for his fate late Monday in COsta Mesa,
as one bandit held the gun and the other
urged him to shoot.
Sherman W. Vandeman, 211, of Fountain
Valley, survived the Harrowing ti :15 p.m.
ordeal.
The riflemaw chose only to knoct him
UJ1conscious, 1hattering his partially open
truck window, the dazed victim told
police atter·he "'gained ""'111ciousness.
about 11:30 p.m., according to in·
vestlgalors.
The t.ruck driver said he had pulled into
the industrial area on Warehouse Road
about 100 yards o[f Harbor Boulevard lo
dwnp 1tale coffee. aJter completing hi.1
rounds.
Wig Struck Down
Vandeman sald he ccmpleted the
chore, turned oU the gu burners and
climbed back inlo hii cab with his win·
dow partlaJly down.
Suddtnly ~ felt !he rifle ag•lnsl hil
heat: and beard a menacina: male voice
wtm bbn not to twn or ht would blow
hi• bra.ins out.
''Shoot him," Vandeman quoted a aec-
ond bandit as urgiJ!g. .
Officer Walker ond Detoctivo Richard
Fi:edericU.n returned to lhe holdup
1cene ind found nothing but Vandeman'•
dumped cofl .. Cl!'f!O aod the lhallerod
window gl .. s.
_1'e.'.l r:• ht' said. ''\\"e are hoj)f'ful to get
lhl• Jt'nl:1111·e b udg et and !he '31ary
Sl"hedul<'s approved tonfgh! '
f\'1eoll said he IS no1 t"<'rtain \\'hrther
or not the employrs 11·11! iiCCf'jll the 4 5
percrnl budgeted snl:1ry inrrense
"\\'e \1·111 just ha\"t' to 11•rtit ;ind sf'1•
about lhnl tonight H lht>y eon1 r 10 thr
rnrl'!ln,q,'" he said.
The boa rd met>ts tonight <1! 7 .10 p Ill
in !he L y c e u 111 lll Costa r-.lesa ~!Jgh
Sch<X,J.
• es1a
Push Begii1 s
By Rescuers
l11to Mine
SALISBURY , Rhodesia fUPI\
Rescue workers "'earing liquid oxygeri
backpacks edged through poison gas and
smoke rilled tunnels in one of flhodes ia't
largest coal mines today, searching for
n1ore than 400 men lrnpped by an un·
derground exp los ion. There were ex-
pected to be few survi vOfs.
~·lore than 1,000 relati ves rushed to the
\\'ankie mine, located near ·I.be famed
Wankie Ganie Reserve and Victoria
Falla, to wait for tbi rescuers' report .
Some wept while other• atood 1llent and
express\onless.
Officials said 468 men -435 Africans
and 33 whites -were believed trapped. A
handlul scampered out JOOn after lhc
blnsl, but there was no offklal count.
The blaat ocrurred al I a.m. Pm' when
\\'Ork crews were operating al full
strength. The dull boom rattled 1vindows
1 n1ile away.
Soon after the explosion. clouds o!
lethal methane gas .spread through the
tun1;els. The gas could not be pumped out
because the extractor rans we re damaged
in the ex:plosion.
\V ankie ls a major coal supplier fo r
both Rbodeaia and neighboring Zambia.
It is owned by the Anglo · American
Corporation of South Africa and employs
al~t 5,000 miners. mos t of them
Africans. The mine produces 2.2 million
tons of coal a year.
Sh rill horns blasted thr ncv.•s of the
disaster soon after the explosion but most
relatives felt the blast and were on the
way to the shaft.
New rescue equipment was installed
rt>eently, including special suit s and ox-
ygen masks. li-11ne officials made an
urgent call for extra suppli es of liquid ox-
ygen.
Rhodesian Air Force planes carried
emergency canisters ol oxygen and
1peclal rescue personnel to the area.
Wankie alr!leld, in the middle of the
• {See DISASTER, Pare %) ..... ,. C.ut
Weadaer
Variable clouds are in the pie·
lure lhrough WednNday along the
Orange Coast, with poalblllty of
showera lu the evening houn.
That moist, warm alt will con--
Un"' with highs of IV 11 lhe beach
riling to near to Inland. ne
weatherlady allo ttmlndl~ coast
weather-w1tcherl to be sure to
vote.
INSmE TODA l'
Late reporlr ,,.,,_. flllertd oat
Of .,,, A/rl<an repubHc of Bu.-
1"Undl rtvtoli"g tht 1lottghtt1' of
J 50,000 in bloody tribal kllllng1.
See •t"'l/. Pao• JI.
" • ....
" ----·-n • .. • _,_ .
l•l• ==..... •g ,_,... n
Vandeman -who said be lost $40 In
the armed robbery -drove to a Harbor
Boulevard douahmrt ahop sevenlhundred
yards from the dark~ ~ wber< he
was 1ttaclted ond rob!>!d=
He awoke to 1pOt oilJc!Oi David Walktr
'~,•t Ille 'olfc>ti. "i>.• colfte break
BOSTON' (UPI) -A federal judge,
citing i U.S. Supmne Court ruling that
the Army II a ·~llud community
··govom"1 by• oeporate dlaclpllne," hruo
rejected a Harvard Law School student's
petUlon ,to weer a, abnrt.bal.red wig. over
hia lone bolt •l N•llonal Guard dtU~.
BNCI Friedrnatl, ·a leC'Oftd.year la tr .llU·
dent.who conceded.the Army had o.rlgM 'to·Ttfilai. aP!learances. said be felt the
wjg '(!Ollld meet the Artoy'1 neetDell
roplollom;
lnve1U,atcr1 tbeori?lnJ the handll•
knew V•ndem•n'1 rotmdl •nd timetable
~ore tmb</•hilll him plllllltd '!' ln-ttrvl.,, ihe-¥1Ctilri 11aJn today. -~_,,;;,,;...,
lie '*" -neltbor of tllo bandU., o---. ,,.,.. .. ,._ ,.,. _..,. .........
«rdin& to pollcc. ;;/j'""''. "·~--~~ :.r.''.. . • ~ -
Be Sure to Vote Tod~; Polk-Open Until -3-
' I
" ••
• • t
•
tutMia) Junt 6, 1912
Seek • A111hun
Catherine Kerko"·· 20, ishO\\'n
in 1969 photo) and \Vi!Jiam
Holder, 22, sell·avowed Black
Panther from Oakland, are
seeking political asylu m in Al·
geria after allegedly hijal'king
a jetliner for $500,000 ransom .
See story, Page 4.
Leonliardt Wins
Reappointment ·
To Commissio11
Planning Commis~iooer J ohn C. Leon·
hardt was unanimously reappointed lo a
four-year term on the commJssion ~ton
day night by the Corta Mella City COun·
cil.
He and rour rellow commission mem·
hers also received a $15 per meeting
raise from councilmen. By 4 I<> O vote
the council approved an increase in the
remuneration of cornmissioners from
$25 to $40.
Leonhardt's appointmenl appears to
have settled a controversy created tw o
months ago \11hen Mayor Jack ll ammelt
drafted a "job descriptioo" for planning
commissioners which included a fi ve-year
residency requirement.
Mrs. Myra Kirschenbaum, cootender
for the past, threatened legal action
agairu:t the council whea it became ap-
parent that Leonhardt was the only can·
didate to meet that requirement.
Mrs . Kirschenbaum claimed that the
residency requirement was "unfair" be·
cau,,e she wu able to run in the April 11
council election, yet was prevented from
applying for Leonhardt's vacant seat.
At the time she applied for the position,
Mrs. Kirschenbaum had lived in Costa
Mesa for 18 months.
City councilmen, who have meanwbUe
dropped the residency requlrtrnent, in·
terviewtd Mrs. Kirschenbaum during a
closed-door session prior to Monday
night's meeting.
Although she was not chosen. she said
s~ would be a candidate for other open·
Jogs on city boards and commis.sions.
Employes Seek
Battin 'Damages'
Damages of $10,000 were demanded
Monday in an Orange County Superior
Court lawsu it that charges Supervisor
Robert. Baltin with unlawfully usi ng a
county mailing list for his own eletUon
purposes.
The Orange County Employes Assocla·
l ion also asks in its aclion against the
f''irst District supervisor for further
damages to be a"•arded \'l'hen the
org anization can assess the value or
cl!!ri cal and mechaniral hel p allegedly
utilized by Battin.
The C()mplaint stntes that Bat tin ob-
lai ned the computerized mailing lis t la~t
"'eek and used the county information to
n1ail litera ture to First District vote rs
~1embera of the OCEA were urged last
\\'eek in a precedent·settlng bull,tin
issued by the county "-orkers group to
\'Ole aRain~t Battin Jn tod;iv's eltctinrt.
OUNal COAST t:M
DAILY PILOT
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Tiiv11111 IC11Yil
Editor
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,_
Only Ooo
Fil es for
Board Post
\Vilh lhe deadlin' three days a,.·ay, on·
Jy ooc 1.:andldale f1as fil ed 50 far ror a
spe<.•ial August clet·tion lo rill two vacan·
cies on lhe Ne"·port·~fesa school board.
'!'he e-mpty seats are le ft by the re-tlrt--
1ncnt of longtln~ lrwttee Donald S&.rau5s
i11 Areri Fl\'e and the recent :ippointn1enl
11f Area Six Trustee Sel1n1 "Bud"'
Franklln to the mun ici pal court bench.
'r'he Oling deadli ne for tht spe<:Jal
August 8 el ect ion is Friday at 5 pm. in
the County Cle-rk's office in Santa Ana .
No pa.pe-rs will be-accrpted after \hJ\
lime.
Michael J, A!he, 106 Via Xanlhc,
Newport Beach, .a manager of educa·
tional systems. is the only candidate so
h1r in Strauss' district. No candidates
J111ve filed in Franklin's area.
Hobert Sa ngster. a Newport Bcaeh at·
tornry, has taken out papers for the sixth
district post but according to the Orange
County Clerk 's office. he has not yet filed
for tbe election.
Superintendent or Schools John Nic:o!I
has already voiced some concern th1 t the
Tuesday primary election!! have
overshadowed the spee !al school election
filing date.
"A board n1ember probably will put 1n
rive or six hours a week on the average
but at certin times the load will be
heavier -such as during budget con-
siderations ," Nicoll said,
Franklin's district baJllcally takes in
the area al ong Coart Highway to 21st
Street and Newport Boulevard to Do ver
Drive.
District live, Straw;s' .area, takes in all
the area from the Santa Ana River to the
Newport Beach jetty, BOU th of Coast
~lighway. This includes the Balboa
Peninsula, Lido Island and Balboa Island.
Candidates 1or either post mwit live In
the trustee area to nm for that seat, the
county clerk's office said today. Several
inquiries about the race have been iu.led
out for geographical reasons.
Mesa Hires Two
' Consulting Firms
To Update Plans
~ta Mesa city councilmen Monday
night hired two consulting llrma to help
them update their general plan and to
streamline city code!.
An $18.000 contract was awarded to the
Marsha ll Llnn Co .. Fullerton, to develop
the housing, conservation, open space and
scenic highway elements of the general
pl an.
The Fullerton firm. one of three bid·
clcrs for the project, has been instructed
to make its recommendations within 180
days.
Public hearings on the propoJal.s will
then be held on the planning commission
an<.I city council level before they are
adopted.
The first part of the 1990 Costa Mes.a
General Plan, often referred to as the
\Vilsey·lfam report, was completed two
years ago ,
That report roncentrated primarily on
land uses, traffic circulation and. city
facilities but dld not include the other
state-mandated clements to be covered
by h1arshall Linn.
The other contract . for $7,707, wa~
:nvarded lo the Afun ic!p.al Code Corpora~
lion, Tall.a hassee , Fla ., a firm speciaJiz.
ing in the revan1ping of city codes.
Cit y J\lana ger Fred Sorsabal said the
firm "'ill be charged with making the
Costa. Mesa codes more readable and to
ferrl!t out dup\lcations and conflict s.
• I llf\.
ZAMl l A
IOUWAMA
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J SOUTH I
I I AfllCA
V'I Tolfllf\ll•
I "\JOERGROUNO BLAST TRAPS 468 MINE WORKERS IN RHODESIA
Rescue Teams Hampered by Ga1 Jit CoJil Mine Weit o f SJ1ll1bury
F rom P a ge J
DI SAS TER . ~·
game reserve, re1n11ined open after
sun~t. its runway marked by flares.
Game scouts patrolled regularly to keep
animals a1vay.
Mesa Councilme1i
R eject Freeway
Bloc k Support
Ne 1\'port Beach city councilmen ~'ere llospilals and doctor:;; 11·ert' ou-~l, 1. 1 b ff d b h -,.,
I ~ trm y re u ' y t eir ........ sta !\1esa arrl F , eountcrparts Monday night as they at· fJ;;;i~~Y u:il~~~~~!rs11~.~~ld b~ n;:~:diik~ !empted to secure support in block ing !he .
proµosed Pacific Coast Freeway. ll," ont mine employe said.
The cause of the bl ast u•as nol im·
mediately determined but it could put the
n1ine out of action for week s.
H.hodesia seized independence frnm
BritS:in in 1965, and relies heavily on
mining exports to evade United Nations
sanctions and earn vital foreign currency.
And any lengthy stoppage cou ld hit
Rhodesia's economy.
According to the Guinns Book of
Records, the world's worst mine disaster
occurred In China on April 26, 1942, when
a coal dust explosion killed 1,572 men at
the Honkeiko Colliery.
Teachers Admit
Giving Student
Vodka in Play
JENISON, Mich. (UPI) -Superin-
tendent of Schools David 11-fcKenzie said
today three teachers who spiked a 14-
year-old student actor's drink during a
play to get a better effect did it a11 1
"practical joke without thinking about
the ccnsequences."
The consequences resulted in a
suspension for the teachers and possible
firing, pending a hearing \vithin 30 days
before the J en ison School District Board
of Education.
McKenzie said the teachers. Lon
\Vaterman. John Fikkert and Kathryn
Headley, admitted to him they spiked lhe
atudent's ,;firewater" wi th vodka during a
cl ass performance last month or "Annie,
Get Your Gun."
The student was playing the part of an
Indian, \vho drank "firew ater."
McKentie said he saw the play and
thougtrt the unidentified. student gave a
''realistic'' performance.
After the play, .another student wtnt on
stage and saJd. "Hey. that firewater was
real vodka," but the audience thought he
was just kidding.
Record Auction Total
SAN FRANCSICO (AP) -KQED. the
educational teJ,vision station here, took
in $433,035 in its IO.day auction whlch
ended Monday. station officials reported.
It was the largest amount raised in the
IS.year history of the annual fundra iser.
A resolution call ing for deletion of the
route through l'\cv.·port Beach. as pro--
posed by Assemblyman Robert E.
Badham (H·~e"·port Beach \, .,.,. a s
unan imously rejected by the Costa hiesa
City Council.
Instead, the pro-freeway Costa f\Tesa
council threw its support behind another
piece of pending legislation, that of
A55emblyman Robert H. Burke (R·Hun--
tington Beach), which calls for a three.
year morat.oriwn to work out the freeway
conflict.
Newport Beach councilmen, who have
labeled construction of the coastal route
through their ci ty as "unequivocally
unacceptable," have asked other cities to
support. their stance. To date, only Seal
Beach has compiled.
The Newport council's anti·freeway
sentiment, according to the resolution, is
founded on the results or a special ,Jee·
ti~n last March during which Newport
Beach voters overwhelmingly rejected
the Pacific Coast Freeway plan.
Costa Mesa, on the other hand, is seek~
Ing construction of the Pacific Coast
Freeway as a means of sipboning traffic
from the Newport Freeway which is
ultimately planned. to C()nnect with the
coastal route.
Deletion of the route, it has been
pointed out by Costa Mesa councilmen in
the past, would cause traffic to back up
in Costa Mesa.
The Burke bill proposes to restudy the
Pacilic Coast Freeway plan by hiring a
grou p of consultants who would then
ma ke a recommendation.
Blaze Boosts
Pai11.t Job Cost
New paint jobs for several cars parked
in.side Earl Scheib's Auto Painting in
Costa Mesa won 't cost the·owne.rs as low
as $29.95, foJJowing a fire there late Mon-
day night.
Thick, choking smoke flooded the firm
at 1600 Newport Blvd., causing little
structural damage but blackening the in-
terior, paltlt equipment and vehicle.!!.
Total los!. estimate was about $700, in-
cluding one freshly painted car that will
have to be. redone, according to fire
department investigators.
The bla1.e was blamed on rombustible
materials in a trash container.
Big Turnout
Voters Flocking
To Polls Early
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Vote.ra went to
the polls early and In large numbers in
California's crucial pr imary election t(l.-
day with the hope.11 of Sens. Hubtrt H.
liumphrey and George McGovern for the
L>emocrutic presidential no m i n a t i on
riding on the results.
Dy II <1.m. today, ntore than 16 percent
uf the 3.2 million voters in Los Angel es
County case lhe1r batlots -fa r ahead of
the record primary Pi'Ce in 1968 \Vhen
only about l I perettt had voted four
hours after the poJls opened.
In San Francisco, the early turnout
was running a little behind the 1968 pace
when more than 72 percent of Califoniia's
registered \'Oters balloted, But voting
was expected to be slow in San Fran·
c:isco because of an unusually long baUot.
The early voting was heavy in Sacra·
men to. possibly iJ1 an effort to beat the
105-degrce temperature forecast for later
in the day.
Skies were o\'ercast and the air \Vas
\\'arn1 and niuggy over most of the stale .
President and h1rs. Nixo n voted by
a bsentee ballot.
A spokesman said ~fonday in Key Bis·
cayne. Fla .. that th'Y sent in their ballots
after returning from the Soviet summit
trip.
The \\'inner or today's president ial
prin1ary carries a bloc of 271 delegate
votes into the Democratic National
Convention at Mianii Beach -one·sixth
or the total nteded to win the nomination.
The polls are open from 7 a.m. until 8
p.m.
The vote count may be slow because of
a long ballot in some areas and a write-in
campaign on behalf of Alabama Gov.
George C. Wallace.
Secretary of State Edm un d G. Broy,•n
estimated that 3.8 million of the state 's
5. I million Democrats -or 75 percent -
y,·ou ld vote today, lured mostly by the
presidential contest. He forecast a record
turnout of 73 percent of the 9.1 million
registered voters.
Because San Francisco polling places
may be open as late as 10 p.m., BrO\.\.'n
Jr. asked the three major broadcast
net"works to hold back their computerized
winner projections 1or several hours.
Indications were hls request would be
!urned down.
In telegrams Monday to ABC, CBS and
NBC election otnclals, he said he feared
the network predlctions would swing the
\'Otes of late voters in San Francisco,
* * * No Local I ssues
But Costa Mesa
Voters Tum 011t
Although no local measures were on
today's ballot, Costa M~a voters turned
out In strong nmnbcrs to vote for political
candidates of their choice in the
California Primary Election.
The turnout, described as heavy by
precinct worken, ranged between 21 per·
cent and 30 percent, according to a spot
check of local precincts.
The results of the poll, taken midway
throoght the vo ting day are as foUowa :
Reid Residence, 297 Bowling Green
Driv,, 160 voled, ~registered voters, 30
percent turnout.
Hefner Re.t ldentt, "531 Fairway Drive.
100 voted , 480 registered voters, 21 per·
Ct'Tlt turnout.
llartke RHldence, 3234 Oregon St .. 152
\'Oled , 500 registered voters, 30 percent
turnout.
Cotad Rts\denc,. 3104 Vita Buren
Ave .. 11 4 voted. 403 registered voters, 26
percent turnout.
pe-rhaps evtn deciding the ootcome flf !hf
:;tale pr1n1ary.
President Nixon 1.s: l·hallengtd on the
H.epublican !>allot by J{ep. John M.
Ashbrook of Ohio but Ashbrook is not
considered a serious threat to Nixon's
\\'Inning Cal1forni:i's 96 dele-galt: \'Oles 1-0
t/1<.' COP con\'e nt ion
\\'.:l!lat e. [:i1!ecl tU iil(' 111 l lltl(' \O ITiakr
!hi.' Dem ocratic ballot. but .a "·rite·in
t'am(H1ign was under way on behDlf of thr
Alabama go\'ernor. still in a f\1aryl atK.I
hos pital re<'upcrHling fron1 gun ghut
~·ounds suffered at a shopping center
rall y in Laurel, ~1d .. h1ay 15.
There v.·as no chance of \Yallace's col·
lecti nt-: any delegates in Cali fornia ~·here
the y,·inner reaps the entire 271·VOtt: blot.
But hi s carqpa ign 1n;i nagers hoped for an
expression ~r \Val\act strength in !hr.
stale where busing of school children for
racial balance has been an emotionri l
issue in .!son1e areas. but no! ~ ma jor
point of discussion bellveen h1cGovern
and 11umphrey.
A victorv for f\1cGovern in California
would pr0Pr 1 him to\.\.·ard the Democratic
National Convention in Miami Beach in
July with a commanding lead in delega te
votes -more than half the 1,509 needed
to 1\'in the nomination.
lhunphrey had to y,•in lo remain a ma·
jor contender for the nomination although
he vowed lo fi ght on ev en ir he losl.
{( t.< fr
Nixon, M'Govern
Win Hi gh School
'El ection Poll'
Richard Nixon. for !he Republicans,
and George McGovern , .[or lhe Den'o-
crats. \\'ere easy victors in a stra\V vot e
ta ken this \.\'eek at Ne\\')>Ort Tlarbor High
School.
Controvf'rsi al Con g r e s s m a n J ohn
Schmitz (R ·TustinJ . twwcver, 1vas a loser
lo Orange COunty Assessor And re y,· Hin·
:;haw.
The student body of the school '1'a!'J
polled by sever8l s('nior civics cla3Ses lo
get their vie~·s on the election and on
several issues important to young ptaple.
In addi tion to the presidential and con·
gressiona.1 votes, the students gave strong
approval to the legaliw tlon of n1arl·
juana. total and immed iate pullout from
Viet nam and a ban on the death penalty
in California.
Nixon's margin of victory over Sen.
John Ashbrook was 604 to 9,
'?\.1cGovern beat Sen. Hube.rt llumphrty,
his nearest opponent , by a 349 to 49 tally.
The ren1aining votes were split among a
half dozen oth er cand idat es.
Six votes were cast for Peace and
Freedom Party ct1.ndidales including Dr.
Benjamin Spock, the anth\·ar baby
doctor.
Schmitz lost to Hinshaw by only 44
votes 1vith a 294 to 250 telly. Earl Carra·
way. Tustin school board member also
seeking to upset Schmitz, was a poor
third with 90 votes.
Two San Jose
Men Found Dead
SAN JOSE (AP) -John Wilson, 39,
and William Arthur Johnston. 47, were
found shot to death in Wilson's apart-
ment, poli ce said.
The bodies were found Monday by
\Vilson's former wife, police said. Roth
"·ere salesmen for l/Je same company.
Officers said th ey were queslionlng ii
person in the shootings but declined to
give further de tails.
Rugged Yukon Preacher IT'S HERE • • • YESTERYEAR!
John Donakl.son Dws
Tall, sturdy. rugged and stern, or
gentle and jovial as the tin1 e and pl;ice
demanded, the Rev. John \V. Donaldson
entered the world fro m strong, EpisC()pal
Nova &'Olia stock 64 yea rs ego.
lie left it lhe same way Sa turday, y,·hen
death ended nearly 40 years' service as
vicar to Arctic villn ges and Sou thland
suburbs.
He drove dogsleds through the rroz'n
Yukon Territory to preside at funerals
uver settlers who couldn 't be burled Wltll
spring.
He could pre&ch over a howling
blizurd In a backwoods chapel, or offer ~
eloquent prayers for guidance In Costa
M..,. Ci ty Council Chambers.
"He had a voice like Gabriel He1tter.
\Vinston Churchill, and Orson Welles all
rolled into one," says a lon.!!tlme friend.
The solemn servicH will be for the
J{ev. Donaldson hlllllflf Thursday, when
High Rcqultm Mass Is held at ti a.m. ln
St John tl1< Di vine Episcopal ChUtth.
Bishops from the Los Angele.. Diocese
will officiate at rites ror ~·r. Donald.!On.
whose term as vicar si nte 1959 was hi~
longes t anywhere.
He and his wile Kathrine, of 114 E.
\Vilson Si., Costa Mesa, were assigned -
fittingly -to lhe t<>wn ol Spirit Rlvtr tn
Nov!l-5cotlft-Peoce RfTer Valley tn 1915
afttr his ordination.
Ra nging on a circuit into lhe remote
Canadian wllda, Fr. Donaldson would
sometimes ride 400 miles on a single Sun-
day during the four summer months.
The other eig ht were too rough for
travel.
A native of Halifax, Nova Scotia, where
his father was also a vicar, Fr.
Donaldson served several churches there
and delivered the Gospel by dogsled in
the Yukon Tmitory.
l~e traded the snowfields, mountain!!
and frozen turxlra for farmlands of
Ontario, Canada in the 40s and flnaUy for
v.·arm Arizona in the 50!. 11 vicar at
ti1orencl.
Ttanaferrtd to Fontana in 1955, Fr.
Donaldlon cam• lo Colla M-lour
yean lattt wh«o he aorwd until his
dOllh ttsulling from I IOll( Illness.
Colla M ... ,. w!ahlng lo carry m lhe
stately, gny-hairtd vk:ar'1 eartbJy work
m.y rt•• lo the Father John OooaldlOn
Memorial Fund al St John lhe Divine
0.Urth.
"He wu a magnificent gentleman,"
remarks one friend or the bespocllclod,
moustached minister's sonorout In-
voca tions In City Council chambers.
Survivors be.sides Fr. Don11ldson'1 wife
Include a dauihter, Mrs. Penny Gold·
stein, of llunlinrton Beach, and a
cr1ndton David, ol hlJ grandperenta•
hom~ . BttJ ·Broadway'Martuary ts tn chanre or-
~uT1ngemenu and Jnle.rment will be at
Pacific View ~1emorlal Park, Coroca dd
Mir.
SELECTION OF CARPmNG W ASN't
f ANTASTIC WHEN OUR GRANDFATHER
STARTED HIS CARPET STORE. ORIENT AL RUGS
WERE "IN," AND GRANDFATHER SPECIALIZED
IN THEM.
OUR FATHER GOT INTO THE ACT
AROUND 1918 AND DEVELOPED A LARGE
VOLUME OF DOMESTIC CARPETS, MOSTLY
WILTONS AND AXMINISTERS.
LAffiY WE HAVE SEEN A RESURGENCE
OF AXMINISTER CARPETS IN B E A U T I F U L
FLORALS AND PRINTS. THE EFFOCT CREA TEO
BY AN UNUSUAL PAmRN CAN TRANSFORM
A DULL ROOM INTO SOMETHING
SPECTACULAR.
PLEASE STO, IN AND SEE OUR LARGE
SELECTION.
ALDEN'S
C.ARPOS e DRAPES
166] Plac:~ntla Ave.
COSTA MISA
64Mlll
HOURS: Mon-Thur Th urs., 9 lo S:JO-Frl., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:l0 lo S
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