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1973-05-01 - Orange Coast Pilot
7 a ' • • VOL M. NO. ttl, t SICTllONSiW p.1.e•S • • • Huntington - Guarding Fil.es ~FBI ) Positioned -:. )•,.)>f.:....,_ ... • . At White House From Wire Services WASIIlNGTON -FBI agents were posted outside key White Hou,,e offices today as President Nixon moved to pro- tect files which might be needed in the expanding Watergate investigation. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler maintained that this was "a safeguarding procedure" and was "not to cast aspersions on any individual." He said the · FBI agents were posted wherever White House files were, specifically at the offices of Nixon's fonner top aides H. R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlictunan and counsel John W. Dean 111. E1isenada Boat Race Entries Lis.ted Today .shortly before dlsclosure that FBI agents had .been given the job of Insuring seauity of the filles, Haldeman and Ebrlichman wve seen leaving the White House in the back seat of a chauffeur- driven limousine with piles of documents in their laps. Their destination was not dlsclosed, but both saJd earlier they were arranging meetings with federal and Senate in- vestigators. . The new procedµre, Ziegler said, was put into effect as tip! result of meeting yesterdiy afternoon with Nixon's new GOV. REAGAN SILENT ON WATERGATE-Pap 4 ---Watergare probe supervisor presidential special consultant Leonard Garment, who took over counsel Dean's dutits; Defense Secretary Elliot Richardaon, whom Nixon has nominated as :attorney general and put in overall chirp: of. the Watergate investigation, and the newly -named acting-director ol the FBI, William D. Ruckelshaus. 'lbe aim , Ziegler said, . was "to By ALMON LOCKABEY physically protect the ru ... to make sure """"' r111or that accesS and removal or any files Barring last-minute withdrawals, 581 were supervised in '&CCOrdaRCe with very sailboats are expected to answer the strict procedure.' starting signals Thursday at noon for the The Watergate investigation bas pro- 261h consecutive sailing of the Newpott to duced allegations that some vital Enscnada yacht. race, the largest in· documents were removed from the White ternational sailing event in the world. , House ancf destroyed. Asked why the White House police had . Th~ Daily Pilot today publishes the en· not been -given this security duty Ziegler tire hst or starters .on Page 4. Yachts are sai4 b:e Wi\S not sure. ' listed by name, sail number, class, skip-. But he said thi1 "was an Initial step" per, yacht club and type or ~t. . -'orde~ by the three Watergate probe Thousands of spectators hne the shore chiefs. from the Balboa Pier to the Corona del The &gents moved into the White House Mar bluffs to witness what has come to . and . the oext door Executive Office -be known as the Southland's greatest Building. yachting spectacle. The aaents. wearing visitor's -The massive fleet Is ~ivided among were if)otted near ,. the offices of five classes of ocean R~cmg (!OR), five Haldemall, outgoing chief of staff; clasaes of Padfic Handlcap (PllRF) two Ebrlichman, NW>n'• domestic adviser classes of Midget ocean Racing Fleet and.Dean. ·..L . ' ~{MORF) and one class of ocean racing FBI agents .atso· were ~r the catamarans. , mailroom ln the EOB, where Nixon bu a ..... First group to slart wiG be the hideaway office. t:atamarans at 12 o'clock. Thereafter, at Haldeman and'Ehrliclunan were.on the 11}.minute intervals the starting .signals job today an'd are expecltd to rtmain at t<ill be for Class A ocean Racing and (See FILES, Pap Z) .PHRF, 12:10; Class B 01.\ and £11RF, 12:20; Class C 01\ and PHRF, 12:30,; (;Jass D OR and PHRF, U:!O; Cius E OR and PHRF, 12:50, and Class A aid B MORF, I p.m. ' SHE tlTEIULLY · RUNS FOR-OFFICE Two starun·g Unes will be used -one the extension or the other ......,, with a com- mittee boat stit16ne<l 'In the center .. PHRF )'llcbts will use the line nearest shore extendlng !tom the entrance buoy. Octan Racing yach~ · wlll use the out-- ---~iOiilllllOl'!lolrol'1JIOJ~:--- The average yacht will carry a ....r6r six which means that over S,000 penons will be Involved In the race, not COllllling cacort vesaels and nee committeemen. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Julia Fi.her, st, 8JUlO\lllOOd llhe would nm for a ... 1 .., . the dty -o( education and lll'OIDPllY dld ao, loulng JI llllles. -oniedaiiihter-cll tho late Rep. D. S. Saund (IJ.Call!.), stopped porlodlcally along· her roule ¥oaday to wit with pooslblt voten. . ' • . \ • , • -. -c0111plete List ol 581 . Ensen~dO Boats Today ' .. :•· •• . , • • •• . . :• • • . . Munitions Routes Baptis111 By the Sea DAiil' "lltt Sttff Pllolt . Several hundred of the faithful turned oul Mondlly evening to-participate in and watch baptisms con· ducted under the au&picos of Calvary Chapel at Pirate's Cove near the entrance to Newport 11arbor. The ceremony for those being baptized _involved full immersion. Water temperature Monday hovered around 60 degrees, according to Newport Beach lifeguards. Coast Panel Head Views Possible Ban on Permits • By CANDACE PEARSON Of ._ O.llr '°ii.I SIHf The chairman ol the South Coast Regional 1.one Conservation Commission said Monday he will investigate poultil!itles of imposing a f I a t moratorium on ~stal permits until in· itlal planning can begin. Robert1F.: Rooney or Huntington Beach, chairman of the commission created by Prop. 20, said, "The Jaw was written in a very poor manner because it pieces lhe permit prvcess long before planning.'· The commission bas jurisdiction over developmept wJthin 11000 yards of mean hlch Ude One In Orange and Los Angeles counlttt .• 11la e.lu!ornil' ~ Zone Conserva· Um Act ~!20), passad by volers last ~ber, c&arges tbe commission }Yith nau&attag coastal zone construction .... de¥tloplng a land use plan by 1915. Dr. Rooney, an aaoclate professor or <oooomlcs al cal State Long Beach. con· tended Monday the oommlssion. has been hampered in some permit decblons by the lack of an overall plan or its own and / I of some cities involved. , He said he will write to the State At- torney General's office to see if a tern· porary moratorium on permits would be legal. His comments c~e following a discussion of ocean front projects in Venice and Redondo Beach. C.Ommissioner Rimmon C. Fay of 1'-1arina dcl Rey charged, "We tijlven't done anything at any one of these com· (See PERMITS, Page ll Tax Expert Guilty PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP.) ~The author or a book describing how to ·gtl around federal income tax we found-guilty Monday on three cotltlta o! !ailing t~ file redcral income tax returns. Marvin Cooley. 45, of lliesa, Ari1:, was charged with falling to file income taxes lor the years 1967, '681 and '69 or income of more than $50,000. ,I Woman, Killed At Beer Party Near Chico State CHICO (AP) -The body ol a oollege- age woman who apparenOy had been raped and murdered at an all-night beer party was found today in an orchard near the Chico State College campus, sheriff's investigators reported. The victim was not immediately iden· lilied. Officers said they discovered the body when they were called to the scene this morning by a Wo~an in a nearby house who reported she )lea rd screams late last night. It was the third homicide reported in Chico in four days. The bodJes of MYron Allen, 70, and his wife Emma, 64, were found In their home saturday. Olflcers said Mn. Allen appar- ently was killed with a harbmer and an autoP!)' Is under WRY to determine the cause of her husband's 11eath-.- Aulhorltles Sllld ~ Allens apparently had been dead 31,~ weeks. Their automo- bile wDs reported missing. • ' Bared Explosives G h D .... :1 . Q Y. ,..\i.IP- • • In Beach . By TERRY COVILLE Of Ille Dtllr "not Stiff U.S. Navy offlciaJs admitted today that eiiploslves are shipped by rail from the Seal Beach Weapons Station through residential neighborhoods in north Hun.. tington Beach and Weslmlnster. Commander Harry Madera, execctive officer or the weapons station, said about 10 to 20 percent of the shipment of ex- plosives is by rail, while the rest i8 by truck. Commander Madera also said the rail line used crosses five streets in Hun- tington Beach and Westminster at which there are no safety sJgnals or cr088ing gates. "The Navy Is financing a 1190,000 pfo} ect to put up automatic safety gates '' Madera said. "lt's a safety factor we re. quested a year.S:nd-a·half ago, Work on it should start any time." The· streets involved are Edwards Springdale and Rancho Road in Hunting'. ton Beach and Bolsa Chica and Golden __ West in Westminster. Since Saturday's s p e c t a c u I a r ex~ plosions in a railroad freight yard In Roseville, northern California, residents in north Huntington Beach who rttently learned or the Seal Beach shipments have expressed deep concern. '11:ie city clerk's o£Ilce said one woman was at city hall Monday asking about the procedure for approaching the city cotm· cil on the issue. She did not leave her name, but she (See EXPLOSIVES, Page l) Orange Cout Weadaer Did you like the weather today? Well, It'll be the same on WecJnes. day, following some patchy low clouds along lhe coast In the morn- ing hours. Mostly sunny with highs of 67 at the beaches rising to n inland. INSIDE TODAY 011 Law Da11, 1973, the Slate Bar of California ha! drawn a bead on the "1poil1 '"stem" of selecUng judges for muntdpal and supcnor court bniches • .The olttrnativt7 An advisoru com. mittee °'' judicial oppoftl.tmentl. See Page 3. T - ., :I OAILY PIL01 TutsdU, MO)' l , 197) I 3-·NY-Gunmen.-·Ner· 0,000 in Jewe1~s ·~mtm;~o~ and nve employes on the night lhitt were whipped~ iokl-t.o move fas~. The gunm'll "seemed ti> k~W the Murdered; - NEW YORK ,(AP ) -Thr ... gunmen walked into the Air India cargo terminal at Kennedy Airport Mooday nlght, lruss· cd op the employes ·anc1 made of! with shipments of diamond!, emeralds and stones worth an estimated $SOO,OOO. 1"'0 bandits forced the'111ight aupervlsor to open a vau lt and remove Sl Un boxes of gen1s. The third stood guard outside aod tied up a truck driver aild security guard who arrived during the operation. 0 We know you got the diamonds ln this afternoon and we want them," 't>ne gun· man said. lJ 1ua1ai11aous l' o.te •N rt appeared to be the biggest jewel rob- bery here since five men took $3 million in gems from JUHll' ulety dopoolt bo•· cs at the Hotel Pierre ln 1972. .. One airport empt.Ye said that a bandit \\'anted t.o cut up the trussed worker• before leaving, but was restrained by the leader. Police gave U1is account : The gunmen entered the terminal at the edge of the airport at 9:45 p.m., about 15 minutes before the supervisor Senate Outside Proposes ~ Prober WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate voted today to cn ll on President Nixon lo appoint a special prosecutor from outside the government to oversee the in- vestigation of the Watergate case. Without dissent and by voice vote, it ap proved the proposal i n tr o d u c e d minutes earlier by Sen. Cllarles H. Percy (IHU.), wbo quesUOD<d whether the_u· ecutive branch should inv estigate itseU. The action came just 24 hours after President Nixon named Secretary of Defense Elliot L. Richardson to becom e '* * * Cheerful Nixon Greets Brandt In Washington WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon gave We st G_erman Chancellor Wlllf Brandt a relaxed, inronnal White House welcome today and they im- mediately began two days of talks. Brandt drove from nearby Blair House lo the !OUth side or the White House where Nixon and Secretary of State William P. Rogers greeted him, standing on a short red carpet. During the first minutes or the 've\come, it had the trappings of a state visit, including honor guards lining the driveway and U.S. Army trumpete rs, but the atmosphere was warm and relaxed. On the morning after removal of· three to;> aides because of the Watergate bug· ging case and what he acknowledged was a difflcull broadcast speech to the nation, Nixon ap~ared to be In a cheerful mood. He chatted with news photographers and cameramen while waiting for Brandt -,,·ho was 10 minutes late. He later jok· ed \\'ilh Brandt about the chancellor·s unsuccessful fishing trip on Chesapeake Bay Monday. While talking with Brandt; Nixon gave him a half einbrace. Then, 'vlth his band over Brandt's shoulder, they slowly walk· eel down the driveway toward the 'vest v.·ing of the White House. As they were strolling to his oftice, he placed his arm around Brandt's shoulder !i second time. Frona Page J FILES ... least a week more while they gather their belongings and ea se the transition to lower echelon staffers as Nixon ponders the organization of the \Vhite House witi)out those two c I o s e s t assistants. It cou ld not be determined if Dean, who was fired , was at his office. Richardson remained today at the Pen· tag on where he is Defense secretary . However, a Justice Department spokesman said he talked by phone in the last several days with Richard G. Klein- dienst , whom he is to succeed as attorney general, and with William Ruckel shaw . OUH91 COAIT " DAILY PILOT attorney general and gave him fuU power to conduct t~ Watergate probe. Percy said he \\las not quesLioning the integril}' or Richardson but added, "ilc cannot be regarded as independent o( the executive hr an ch." Percy said Rep. John Anderson CR- Iil. ), planned to introduce a similar resolution in the House. During the brief Senate debate, the move received strong support from Republicans, including Sens. Barry Goldwater (Ar iz.), and Pete V. Domenict (N.M.). "\Ve must proceed quickly to remove !hi:,, case from the Auspices of the at- t(\mey general." Domenici said . Goldwater told reporters he feared Richardson might "find himself in the same position" as Richard Kl eindienst. \vho quit as attorney general Monday be· cause of his close association with pe r- sons involved in the Watergate case. A senior Republican senator, Carl T. Curtis of Nebraska, urged Nixon today to name former Sen. John J. Williams of Delaware to oversee the investigation. Curtis said in a statement he feels the situation calls for the appointment of someone from outside the Administration -rather than Richardson. Republican Williams, who returned from the Senate two years ago, was re- spected by his colleagues for his opposi- tion to corruption of all kinds. Because he is not an attorney, Williams would serve as chief in· vesUgator, not prosecutor, under the Curtis propOsal. Nixon gave Richardson power to ap~int a special proseculor if he feels one Is needed . An aide said Cu.rtl3, a. ftrrn Nixon backer who however hu: been critical of the way the 1972 election ca mpaign was handled, called the White House to in- form the president of his proposal and was waiting for a return call. From Pagel • EXPWSIVES ' .. told the clerk's olfice ihat a petition against the Seal Beach shipments may be circulated in northern Huntington Beach. Commander h-1adera said the Navy ex· peeled such quesUons after the Roseville explosions, in which 21 freight cars, load- ed· with live bombs, erupted ln a fiv~ hour seriesOt explosions, destroying sur- rounding buildings and spreading debris up to one mile away. . Commander Madera said he could not say what type of explosives are shipped nor how often, though he said the shipments are regular. "We have never had a safety problem here and we follow the tightest safety precautions, including federal, state and our own regulations," he said. He said the Navy is paying for the rail c r o s s i n g safety equipment though Southern Pacific Railroad will help in- slall it. r>.1adera said the weapons station has ah•:ays considered those safety crossings a "high priC1rity·• item . The Na val weapons station is an am· munitiOn depot , \li'here explosives are loaded onto ships in Anaheim Bay. Canada Oil l{oute Hit SA N ·FRA NC ISCO IAP ) -An oil pipeline across Canada would create more environmental risks than the pro- posed trans-Alaska route, Jn t c r i or Secretary Rogers C. B. J\.torton sa id here J\.1onday. to tock up. Each ahtpmerH was contained in 8 tin operation of the airline pretty Yi' ell," one . workmao commen ted later. H SUpervllor ~ Rodriiuez and four . bo• about i by 3 by l Inch. The stolen Btfore leaving, the gunmen took the p . • · ld ·others were handcuf[ed and gagged with gems included about ~ 5!'lpment5 Of cut wallets, wJth about f2SO total, and keys air e adhesive tape. Tbe 1ixtb employe, and and pollshed diamonds and six of rrom the eight bound men. Ulff truck driver .and security auar<f who emeralds and semiprecious stones . They "Let's cut them up a little-'" one· gun- arrived later,· were tied wlth rope and were sent from India to dealers in the 1nan was said to have suggeaied, but the gagged. All were herded into a washroom United ~I.ates, JnosUy in New York. leder d¥:uaded him and the ~an fired a and forced to lie on the foor. The tin .boxes were placed in t\vo shot into the ceiling instead. Rodrigue,z was led to the vault at gun· cardboard cartons. Rodriguez also was They left about 10:45 ·p.m., an Hour point, uncuUed and ordered to unlock the forced to go to a file drf:iwer -and turn after errlvitJg, It wasn't tinW 11:~ p.m. door. Ins ide, he was told lo unlock th e over ducments listing the value and that one of the men tied with rope work- aafe. When be hesJtated, be wu pistol-destination of. each shipment. ed himself free and called police. ' •• "!I • ~fr:) Ul"I TlltPl'lolo Beate1a Baby T1·e11ted A nurse at New York's St. \'incenl's J-lospital treats three-month-old Kim Cruz after the tiaby was taken there in critical condition after her lather allegedly tried to sell her fo r drugs. The tot had been se- verely beaten, but is receiving the best possible care. The father is awaiting his fate in jail. Baja Plane Crash l\ill~ Pair~ 2 Women · Rescued 1'.texican villagers may have saved the lives of a pair of women, one from Anaheim, by building a shelter around them on a windswept Baja California beach Monday after their plane crashed, killing a pair of male companions. Townspeople also helped Mary M. McCammond, 26, and "Margaret J. Rowles, 30, into sleeping bags at the coastal crash site 225 miles south of the U.S. border. The women were airlifted out by a U.S. Coast Guard helicop ter along with the bodies of. pilot Patrick L. Kelly, 28, of From Pagel PERMITS ... mission meetings to improve bel!Ch ac- cess." Santa Clara and Eric Otten, of 170 Evelyn Drive. Anaheim . ·An Anny doctor who flew along in· itiated tr~atment for MitB' Mc<;ammond and Miss Rowles, both Of Whom suffered multiple lacerations, Shockitand exposure. Miss McCammOnd also .suffered a leg fracture in the ~b. wbJcb was wit- nessed by a gulf ~iJnP ~I crew. They said the small Q;asna 172 was at· tempting a takeoff fr~m the isolated, windswept beach after making a landing earlier. The pilot, whose home airport and destination in Monday's fatal crash were not expliined, just got off the ground when a blast of wind .hurled the plane back to earth ln a turn. · Investigators pinpointed the crash site as being in the San LtUs Gonzaga area, . on the Gull of California side of the Baja Peninsula. Laguna Beach Comic Book Ban Repealed By JACK CHAPPELL Of 1111 0.llY ,Ii.I Stiff "Holy cow, Batman. The Laguna Beach City Council is gonna repeal the crime co mic book law." "Yes, Robin. It's part of Mayor Charlton Boyd's cleanup of the city la'v books. Now \Ve, Superman, Dick Tracy and all the other crime stoppers of the world will be welcome in Laguna Beach." A city ordinance now on the books in Laguna Beach prohibits in language nearly. like that of drug or alcohol possession laws, the possession of minors of crime or horror comic books . Pages of official language, spell out the prohibition, but for years the statute Chapter 8.32 of the municipal code has been nothing but bookworm (odder. Consti tutional interpretations long ago overturned such municipal -attempts at censorship, Tully Seymour, City AttOrney said. "This is an ancient old ordinance that was apparently passed in the 30s or 4-0s in a fi t of community indignaUon1" Seymour said. lie noted that Newport Beach, wblch had a like ordinance, repealed its comic law about 10 years ago. ,The repeal of the crime comic book law is on the city council agenda for il!l- meeting at 7:30 p.n1. Wednesday at city hall. The comic section of the code was first spotlighted by Co u n c,i I worn an Phyllis Sweeney. f\.1ayor Boyd has pointed lo the statute as one example of the many old and useless Jaws which clutter the code book. Boyd has embarked on a campaign of "cleansing" the municipal CQde of such musty laws. . . . In the city's best officlalese langilage comic books' are carefully defined and punishments set forth. 1 "It shall be unlawful and an offense to sell, offer for sale, attempt to sell, ex- hibit, give away, keep in his possession with intent to sell or give away, or in any way furnish or attempt to furnish to any child under the age of 18 years any crime comi c book, horror comic book or licen- tious book ... " the code states. The ordinance was apparently kept in the code when the munifipal code was updated in 1964. Seymour said that if the code was strictly en forced, which it may not be, it would prohibit sales of B a t m an , Supennan or even Little Red Riding Hood under definitions provided fot crime and horror. · He likened it to many laws enacted by munici~ities during the early 1950s ban- ning the sale or purchase of goods manufactured in countries with Com- munist governments. Seymour said that council action Wednesday would remove the entire chapter wlUi "a surgical stroke." "Old comic books have achieved a cer· ta in status among collectors," Seymour noted. A team of'homlcide detectives prabinl the automobile dragging death. of a Tustin youth in the San Bernardino eoun: ty desert three days ago was en route to Las Vegas today rollowing leadl. ·' , Sbertll's l>omlclde Lt. Ron Forbus~ said his men W8Jll to find and queatio,> usoclates of Jimmie L. Mannlni1 IT, who may be able to heJp explain the hor: ror that happened last Fridliy. A pair of youths \Vith whom young Manning was acquainted surrendered to Tustin police within 24 hours of the bi- zarre death on Interstate 15 outside'. Barsto"'· ·· Lester L. ~arker. 19, of 8242 Katherine' Drive, Huntington Beach and ~elvin 0. Deem , 19, of North Las Vega~. wert booked on suspicion or murder ' pending further investigation. A decision on whether sufficient evidence exists to issue formal COD)a plaints today was expected by evening or early. Wednesday morning. · The youths cannot be held longer than 72 hours for investigation without either is!>uance of complaints or dropping of the charges . Drugs \vere invo lved in the incident . al:eges Lt. Forbush, v.•ho so far has not explained exactly in \\'hat way. Investigators do say Parker and Deem were with the Manning but claim they cannot explain his grisly death. Manning, whose father-lives at l2IM2 \Voodlawn St., was found lying in the highway at lhe end of a traJl of scraps of flesh and shredded clothing stretching out nearly a mile. Viejo Company Named in Suit I Of $1.5 Million A Mission Viejo homeowner who claims he is. one of 4,000 local residents who are victims of antitrust policies practiced by the Mission Viejo Company sued the company Monday for $1 ,545,000 in a class action . The company is one of four defendants named in the Orange County Superior Court action filed by Alton H. Suer, 26501 h1ootecito Lane. He also lists the controlling group Phillip Morris Inc., the MVC Financial Corporation and the MVC Escrow Corporation. Saxer cl aims he was unlawfully com· pelted to use both the financial group and the escrow cen1.er April S, 1972, when he bought his home. That conditiona~ sale violates provisions Of the Cartwright an-i titrust act, Saxer states. · And he further alleges that he was similarlly compelled to use the Mission Viejo Company's Decorating Center to obtain floor coverings for his home. More than 4.000 homeowners in the 11 ,000-acre area have similarly been victims of practic"s that are speci£ically barred by the Cartwright measure, Saxer claims. He asks that claimed damages of $1 ,545,000 in his class action be tripled if he obtains judgment against the defen· dant. Parole Plan to End LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gov. Rona!~ Reagan plans to abandon a controversial program that subsidizes counties to teee prisoners in local probation programs; the Los Angeles '[imes said today. The newspaper said the Reagan cabinet would consider today a proposal that would give unrestricted grants to c<>Wl- ties to use for any correctional program they chose. Unless the commission begins taking signific ant steps to solve the problem, Fay said , It "won't have anything left to plan" during the planning phase. Fa y said the lack of parking lots near beo.ches or proper roads to get to such lots in all areas concerned him. The com- mission has been \vrestling with ques- tions of density and high rise near the beach. AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET Individual applicants can't build lhe f{~ds or parking lots. commented Com· missioner Jud y Rosener Of Ne\vport Beach. She suggested cities in the coastal zone be told -of the commisison's con· ccrns. A suggestion of a coastal permit n1oratorium, Rooney added, might force some planning solu tions !rom local govern ment agencies. . WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED ·0llR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." f hl Or1119t Con! DA ILY PILOT, with wh ich It CGmDln.,t !hi Nlwt.•Prt1t. It P1Jb!111\td by tflt O•~~oe co111 PubB1n1n11 ComP1ny, ~Pl rite 1<1lllon1 l rt P1,1bll1hllll, Mor.city 1flP'Ol.IQh Frld1y. tor Co111 Mi.-, NtW110rl 8ftct>, MUl'ltlng1on B11eh/Povnt1ln V1ll1y. LIQ....,.. fl .. ch, lr;IM/Slddll'bltl 11'111 S.n Cl«Mllte/ Stn Jlfln C.plt!rtno. A 11ni11 '"~I Ml!lorl It l)Ubll•llfid S•turdtyt Ind Svno•vt. r11t pr1nc19111 11Ub!lth\nt "''"' •• 11 no wn1 B1y Slr.-1, Cotti M1.-. C1ll'9rnl1, t'M1'. lleb1tt N. W1H l"tft16t!W Ind Pi.tblbhtr J1eti It Cr.1rl1y Flip of Coin? SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, THERE IS AMPLE PARKING ¥¥1TH LITTLE TRAFFlC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. , THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR FIFTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. ' Vk1 l"'*'ldlnl •nd ~rll Ml ...... Tkomlt Kt t ¥11 Eclflo< Tkorn11 A. Murpkin1 Mt ... Olrltl EClllOt Ck1rl11 H. Loot ltrckorcl ·r. N1U ""1t1!1~1 M1n1g(fll lt:cll!on OHk• Cottt M.,,.: JJo W•1I •1y S1r1t1 frftwOOl'I hldl: WJ N.-.pan lloul•v•ro l.i9llM llNdl; m P'ornl A- "*"''"'"""'ltoef'I: 11'11 •Md! tovltvt..V Sen C*"""'t•: •J Nl•ttl I!! Cornlnt 11: .. 1 , .. .,.... 1114) '42-4121 era11WW A~ M2·&671 ·-~ ,,,... Mtfl " L..-1 ._.. 4t2MZO .. ,_ ... ,....c....,c...tti. . .... .... ~I, 1'11. Ort"" C:...t ,_,a.,._ """"""· -... ...... ,.,.,,..,...., ..... i.i lftftfW "' ................ """lfi ,..., .. .... ••• """'*" .... "' ..... !lllttlOn If .,.....,.. --' ..... d9M ............. teN Mtt.t, ~ "*"""""IWI ... c.tntlf ll!M """'™'' .,. IMll lil.lf -"'ifr1 11111,,.,,. .... u .......... ......,,. Mexican. Mafici Jiiror Re1noved • LOS ANGELES fAP ) -A Superior Court judge has .removed Joy \Vilderson Cardoza1 an actress and part·tlme race driver. from the "Mexican Mafia" jury after 10 jurors accused her of suggesting the verdict be decided by a Olp of a coin. Judge Arthur l.. Al{lrCOn sa id Monday the buxom 35-year-old blonde Wl'IS guilty of "serious, gross, Inexcusable mlscon· duct." lie said h(!: took the action after nlne jurors and . the foreman wrote him com- plaining about her acUona. But Miss C.idoza, whc regularly dri ... at A!oot Raceway In Gardena, said the coin·DJp suuesuon was made "because of coercion, rorce and insults" from the other jurors. She said she 'wu convinced that GUbert 0. Sancliei, 31, accusod of the • March. 1972 slaying of a city of Com- merce man, was guilty, and "lt woold be as just and proper to flip a coin to decide the question of guilt or Innocence as It would be for the other jurors to force me to change my mind when l really was convinced" of his guil t. Prosecutor Michael Genelin told jurors during the trial that Sancbez wa s part of the Mexican Mafia, and the . murder of Raymond Ochoa was a revenge slaying ordered 'by the gang . The tett-.r by Jurors to Judge, Alarcon acoused Mrs. Cardoza of wanting to "hang" the fury, ari(ll!lllllilhg to-ltold a news confertn~ at the end of the trial. Ill COS,A-MnA llllCI 1tl7 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES -1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 The JU..Y resumed dellbenUons when an alternate replaced Mfu C.rdo.r,'and Mon .• Th1rs. ' to 5:30: l'rf, t to ft s.t. t:JO to 5 was tocked trp ln a downtown hotel after ~ · , ending Its fifth day of deliberations. !~ _______________ ... ________ ,_ __________ ~ • , ' ' : "Aft may!>. ino n: realiz1 it. .. Just lawye1 Ve11 ly "' lawye1 Sacrai munic the & lt.aga AJI I tit1:Ve ' Repuh eount: re min· beoorn goven Rep fonne appoir court tcnn Broce judge Court. But ed ti; defeat adm~ ..... , Demo Ju<ij DemO ly a 1 appoil as yo\ judg~ ror a sort o "[I l\Dd s by th Willia Said. Stanfc pOint~ count! him ii state . 'llle Chief Il.8.~ iJointr PresiC to ur1 advisf appoi1 "W1 roitte• !.os I Wedn meeti plan' pre ti) "!l broug new Janof look& ago.'" Jud Calif< nothh ccnst 8nd ~ to a 1 Jtep I . "W to c persu impl't bencl point E'. i n. Calif· Sudg• lood r,agu bis li ; "T pid. make iourl he n 'l>hat t'om1 their • M' . ·' quali tmln pne = Chat his I : Tb Mun llas: ilso • Ju Supi: $1ru• ~ ctat• bte bms : Tt flon )i!UI! S>lst, J'OllC l"d t:' : ~ kbai }'l!ai ~~ ; • l"M~~~:~~~ ~~!swm Co mes Un~~ m~~v:~ ~rt· of niaybe the governor rtm.embered set. Callfornia t' attend their meetings, i11g me b~ my mini.skirt. But then I "may be '°"-ie distance •way." f~?,lized it was just pure politics, darn ''I won't hold my breath-until they -Los Angeles Judge Noel Cannon come out lvlth ~them," oommenteQ a veteran Santa Ana judge who preferfed By TOM BARLJ:;\' not to be identified. "Sure, I'm a vi· ctitn Of ... a.ny l"lfltt St.ff f he Justice may be blind-but i·udges and o t system too but what's the use of complaining? This is the age of the lawyers aren't. Republicans in tenns of court ap- Very few Democratic judges and bard· pointments and I guess the Democrats' ly any Democratic Orange County turn will corile." lawyers haVe troubled to apply to Thl! attitude was almost universal Sacramento fo.r_ appointment t o municipal court benches or elevation to among victims of the system and tPe Superior Court since Gov. Ronald Municipal Court Judges Richard Reagan took office. Hamilton of South Orange County and All the vacancies in those seven years David Bach of North Orange Couhly h~ve _ with one exception _ gone to were no exceptions. Republicans. And tight lipped Orange Both judges are Democrats. And both Coim.ty Democrats do not need to be ~ were repeatedly pointed out by fellow reminded that the party line traditionally '?J~~" judges and county lawyers as men who becomes finner In the last year of a today would be on the Superior Court governor's tenn of office. bench under a Democratic or non- Republican lawyers concede that political ·adminJstr8tion in C8lifornia. former Gov. Edmund G. "Pat" Brown Judge Hamihon, 49, has been on the appointed a number of Republicans to read like a rewrite of the hlast decision Laguna Niguel bench Jor the past seven court vacancies in California during his years but has no complaints about the. term of office. Among them was Judge to do it. system of appointment.ii that seems Bruce Sumner who is now the presiding And Judge Mast sits today in the same guaranteed·to keep him there -at leas~ judge of the Orange County Superior municipal court chambers where he com· under a Republican administration. Court. posed a decision that called, as a fellow . ..'It cuts both w~ys," he ~id. "I'm not But they also point Out that Brown us-going to complain about ttie. s,ystem and ed the months between his. election judge put it, "for the kind of courage you none of us has any delusions about' it .. I HOLLYWOOD .PRODUCER WILL LIVEN SAN J UA N CELEBRATION Bud Bootticher Aboard Ho rse$ of Ltte Carlos Arru11 • Trained. Horses s DAIC PILOT :J Dingaling C~s l ri Micliiga1i BIRMINGHAM, Mich. (AP) - This Detroit s®urb may loo~ be lilied with sounds of huildredo ~ tiny bells - all In an d'fort to atve lhe birds in the town a break. The Birmingham City Com- mission voted unanimously Mopday to direct the city administration to d!)l.W up an ordrance requiring all cats in the convnunity to wear at - least one bell. \ Commissioners said they hoped bells would warn birds of -ap- proaching ~ts. Briggs Poses Non smokers' R ights Bill .defeat and the takeover or the Reagan don't seem to encounter from the bench don't think we get very m8ny b~d -ap- administration to fill every existing these days." ~ pointments J.Oder it and, looking arourid, vacancy in the court system w i t h But Judge f1.1;u;t has no recriminations I feel it tends to balance out over the Democrats. to offer and he sees no workable Jong run . : ·Capo .Fest to F ea(ure .B~oodless Bullfight SACRAMENTO (AP) -Asse.mbiyman John Briggs (R-Fullerton), ~ in- troduced tv.·o more bills aimed at pro-' tecting nonsmokerS rrom those \1-'ilh-th\ habit. One n1easure would require plibiic \ higher education offiCials·to ban_smoklng Judge Sumner, who has since become a "I didn 't like the merit system idea," Demoerat-, -Oeplores -the appointment-alternative to a syslem.Jbat is, OO_grins. Judge Hamilton said..~'Really, I think we system while stress-"purely political . and probably always have to go along with whjt we have and will be. if some of us beoome . victims of the iDg that it has put passover then we just have to live with .. some excellent jur-"No sour grapes from this office," he it." By JOHN . VALTERZA cooked in a deep pit for 24 hours will be lsts on his 31-judge said. "I condemn Reagan as 8 hypocrite Judge Bach, 44, a long term incumbent • ·~ Of lfl• 0•11~ Pll•I 5''" served. The (ood \\•ill be available until 7 bench. . who is more closely ·committed to politics on the North Orange County bench, has • Sponsors of the · major cel~bration of p.m.· "My objection to ,8 cronyism than any governor we've nrit applied for elevation to SUJ2Ct,ior the Cinco de Ma yo in San Juan Through the afternoon 'special events . Gov. Reagan i.!I that had but I don't know that I could recom· Court. , Cai>istrano Saturday have added yet \\•ill be held as \\-'ell, including a tortilla- he has-never at-d 1 tak ·•• 1 unl "Frankly, I'm pretty happy...bere,:'. tbe another. allraction to_the day's activities ,...~ating contest, Spanish-dance concerts. ·tempted to imple-mencoula syds emtheto N eJ1""' Pace 1 ess fonner assistant district attorney said. :-the appearance of a Honywood pro-pinata-breaking for youngsters, mariachi ment the merit sys-we _ d a apt ew ersey·sys em·to "I live close to1he court, t enjoy my post ducer w.ho,Jights bulls f~om hors'eback. music and exhibition squa re dancing. SUMNER tern that wa.!I actual-C&llfarnia." although I would, of cour&e, move· to the ' Bud .Boetticher·. and ·several of his T)le bull right and Mexican rodeo will Iy a campaign promise,'' be said. "His Judge Mast, appolntedio his bench by Superior Cow-t bench if I were assigned specially trained horses will t be part of . begin at 4 in the afternoon under the appointments are purely politica1, and, Gov. Brown in November, 1965, explained to it. • the 4 p.m. blood1ess bullfight .at Rocky~s direction of San Clemente bullfight as you can see, a worthwhile Democratic "And I think, whatever t?ie drawbacks Arena Saturday afternoon. · -m<igaz ine publisher Lyn Sherwood,' who judge or lawyer is going to have to wait that the New Jersey method seeks to might be to the present system or~ His demonstra"'tion wj&h an ••artificiaf" .will join the other amateur toreros in the in enclosed school buildings on their campuses. The ·other would requlfe ~iifines, railroa~s and buses operating iii the state lo set aside one-third of their pu~lic ·space for fionsmokers. Briggs is author of the s<H}alled "Nonsmokers' Bill of Rights,". currently awaiting action on the Assell}bly noo.r. The new bills introduced Monday are AB 1887 and AB 1891. . Ike's Grandson Now Journalist · ror a Democratic governor to get some ensure a balance of Political influence on judicial appointments, we've seen saie bull made up of horos bolted t.o a ·specfal a_rena. · . sort of scrutiny of his qualifications." the state's benches by imposing the rule pretty good Judges named to our ben:-· cart' will add a change ~of pace to· the . Sherwood has promised an "educa-NEW YORK (UPI) _ o avid . "It gets even worse at the appellate . that a Republican appointee must be ches," Bach said. "A merit system that capework on foot which performed with tional " atmosphere at the spec!acle. · Eisenhower, "''ho hopes to dabble Jn ~d Supreme Court levels as f:videnc;ed followed by a Democratic appointee and satisfied everyone would definitel:Y be an live fighting bulls by. a club of amateurs Two specially-bred f~ing bulls from journalism, has made his writing· debut by the case of Supreme Court Justice improvement but what would it be and froi:n San Diego known as · "L<ts A1exfco will be used for the bullfight and \Vith an essay for the Ni;!W York Times on William P. Clark Jr.," Judge Sumner vice versa. who would devise it -one of the Muleteros". will be returned lo the ranch once the the collapse of the '·'student revolt" Said. "Here's a man who flunked out or "But that ha.I its drawbacks," he laid. parties"?" The entire corrida will be one of caping is over, Sherwood said. 1no·vcment. Stanford Law Sc hool and oll'C'I? was ap-"You see, there you have the concession Mean\\•hile, an Orange County Bar several major attractions at the ctiamber Boetticher, who produced t\vO ·well· The President's son-in·law, v.· h 0 pointed to serve as a judge in another that politics is at the base ·of all judicial Association committee is looking at the or commerce-sponsored event marking known bullfight [ilms i.n the 1950s ("The recentl y completed a tour ftf active duty county and yet Gov. Reagan pressures appointments and bow are you going to county 's municipal courts for a successor the Mexican holiday. · Magnificent Matador" and ' ' Th e in the Navy, wrote 'Mondai'that campus him into bis appointment on our highest to the late Superior Court Judge Ronald The day's activities will start \Vith a Bullfighter and the Lady") \\.'ill be revolutionaries "have lost their my. state court." get arowid it?" Crookshank and to the county's lawyers huevos rancheros breakfast in downtown performing atop steeds whiclr-once were tique.'" .. 'Ibe aark. furor led to supreme Court Former Orange County Bar Associa-for successors to former Municipal Court San Juan from 7:30 to 10 a.m. the prized possessions of the late, Carlos "The apparent collapse of the student Qi.ief Justice Donald Wright voting lion president c. Arthur Nisson was Jtidges Everett Dickey and H. Warren At 11 a.m. dozens of Qorseless cat-Artur.a, Mexicp'ti most f<\lllOUS matador. revolt; whlc"'b j\llt two years ·aao ttiiainst his appoin"tment in a m~ of ~erwbelming majority of Knight. . riages · will uwnble for a specia1 BoeU!cher has performed in r.¢ fights threatened to stop 1be,govemmmt, ls an tbe state's C.Ommiasion on Judicial. A~ who see little hope for a Only one -thing is certain. And that is parade. The owner-drivers of the in Mexico atop the Arabian horses. . -abrupt and significant ··development," Ptments. And it led Leonard Janefsky, that an apparently resigned number of machines will be decked 9ut in period After the bullfights street dahcing will Eisenhower· said. . · President of the State Bar of caiifom.ia, change in the system. · · Democrats on the bench and in the bar 'costume. start downtown ·.with Mexican and Eisenhower drew on his eXptl'.ience as to urge the creation of a committee to His organization responds to the are not · in contention. At nopn a pit barbecue offering nieats Western music being perfonned. an undergraduate at Amherst COilege. advise the governor on appellate court governor's needs in the field Q(, judicial 1 -,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii-;;;;;;;;;;iiii; ____________________ iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-..;;;;;;ii""- appointments. appointments by naming a slate of. can-" We've got nine members of that com- mittee together," Janofsky said from his didat~s. 111.at slate ·is sent to the State tos Angeles office. "In fact, they met Bar's board or govemorS in a time Wednesday although it's going to take a honored process that always ends with meeling or two for us to put tbgether any the governor's telephone call to the hap- plan of campaign on what is becoming a py appoiniee and the later announcement pretty heated issue. , "11 may be that the Clark appointment of his appointment. brotight this into focus but this issue isn't Nisson's group and all county bar new to the org~ed California bar," associations in C&lifomia screen ap- Janofsky added. ' In fact, the bar first pllcants and silt them down to a short looked at the problem some 40 years list 'bf about four names. ago." He ruefully agreed with Judge Mast Judge Swnner made it clear tba\ that GOv. Reagan has been known to pick cautomia's legal fratemlty has done the fourth name on the list. Both men nothing in those 40 years that could be felt tt was hardly a compliment to local construed as lessening political Influence lawyers who endeavor to provide the best Bnd emphasizing the qualifications vital possible material for the county's to a man about to don a judge's robe or benches. itep up to a higher bench. Nisson, a Democrat, felt that there , "We must apply a set of qualifications ·"should be limitations on the governor's to candidates of whatever political · powers of appointment, particularly iii persuasion,'' be said. "It would be a big the cases of higher judicial offices. improvement if men already on the "But how to do It is something else,'' bench could have some say in these ap-he said. ''Judges who have been passed potntmen\s arid I believe that my over are among the first to tell you that • • • • Immediate Delivery • Big, Big, Selection ~rspective has definitely sharpened to yes, they are the victims of a system; t extent since Gov.-Brown appointed buLcan.anyone come up with something . " • better that will please the Legislature The longest list of credentials in and the public?" California would do a candidate left to Janofsky feels that his newly fonned Judge Sumner's discretion very little State Bar committee "is sure to come lood if he did not ha\o'.e the quality the up with some pretty controversial sug- f,aguna Beach jurist puts at the top of gestions on this whole issue of judicial qualifications.'' bis list -courage. ""That is vital," the presiding judge But be quickly agrees that these faid. "He must have the courage to recommendations, to be forged by nine inake a decision, he must have the eourage to stand behind that decision and fie must have the courage to make it "hatever reaction it may bring from a ~mmtmity or agency that finds lt not to D:ieir liking." : Many judges and lawyen who gave the quality of courage the same pre- tminence also pointed out that more than '-"e mwlicipal court judge in Orange '®nty has paved his pathway to juperior Court on the strength of a ruling &hat called for guts and gumption from his bench. : They ruefully con<eded tbal Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge Paul Mast is the ~lassie exception to that yardstick. He is llso a Democrat. : Judge Mast, 45, predated the CBlifornia Supreme Court by several years when be Jjruck down abortion chall!es filed 1_gainst Or. Robert cummlng Robb of pana Point on the grounds that the itate's TherapeuUc Abortion Act used to ~te the Laguna Beach physician wa1 '!II' loostltutlonal. ROTC Goes Coed 4.t Penn State UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (AP) Pennsylvania State University's five-year test ofa sexually Integrated Army ROTC is off to a good start, with 42 reasonably shqrt-aklrted g~ls enrolled. They'll take the same military courses as the mfl but for weapons handling. Said their Instructor, Capt. Stephen Llnlhwaite: "Except for little things Jike deciding llle lengUl of the uniform hems -a good two inches above the knee is acceptable -and finding shoe$ that weren't thick, rubber soled clunkers, it's gone .. pretty smoothly;-Some men were skep~ at ftrst, but now the seniors are wondering why it didn't happen three years ago." : The ruling WU made long before. abor-Nu(!lear Test May 17 fioo became an Issue that divided coin· )nwliUes and-spawned lawsulis. An l\JllVY " ' " S>istrtct Attorney Cedl Hick& roundly WASHINGTON (AP) -The Atomic ,l>Ondtmned Most, went to the Grand Jury En<rgy Commission llllllOUll<ed Monday Jlld 11JShed through an Indictment that It ocheduled May 17 as the touch-of! date P.Jl Robb out of'Mast's reach and..J,nto. for .. Project ruo Blanco/' ID DrF jiUperlor Court. . derground nuclear pa atlmmulatlon test, • Dr. Robb is cleared of all thoso near Meeker, Colo. The lost wtO Involve ~rge.i todA)( but It took nearly three the 1imultaneous <1ploston of thtte JO. )'<an1 of legal skinni>hlng and a kiloton nuclear eiplollves having a total t!attlornia Supreme Court niling that yield eqn!valent to 90,000 tom of TNT. , I • Import Luxury, plus Economy! • ,See One ... Try On e ... Buy One! • !tome Of The New Car , , • "Gold eft 'l'n cW• I "Orang? Count~1.t Famifll oJ Fint Cart" ohnson & "son C1\fli~I 2'821 HARBOR BLVD" COSTA MESA • 540.&e30 Hc.ne Of Th~ N't• Car • • • "Golde• Tot1ch" , I • ' " • \ ;I ' •' " The ·President Lo ses Color · REFLECTIONS DEPT. -We have thi.s one teevee set in our family where the color knob wiggles around a 1ot. When it does that, You can lose the color and if you fiddle with it too much, the ~·hole picture goes , reducing the video screen to a crazy-qu.ilt jumble of purples, greens and reds. Somebody slammed a d09r o r something last night. The color went. Just faded away, leaving the screen in old-fashioned black and white. The choice was to fiddle with it and lose the whole thing maybe or leave it and watch in black and white. 1 chose to leave it. That was an error. RICHARD NIXON loo~ terrible in black and white. In black and white he reminds you of the famous Checkers talks: to the nation in 1952. In black and while, you recall th e man who agreed to television debates and then came acr.Dss in grays; who seemed to blend into bis o.wn background ; who seemed indecisive; who too often said "I agree with thl! senator"; who took a public beating in debate with the late John F. Kennedy. He took another beating last night. At our place: it was in black ·anQ white' 3nd maybe that made it worse because of !he other memories. Maybe it was just bad ~ause of the words, or the look of the ~an: or the real meaning of the thing, or who knoWs? Maybe, maybe, maybe. Perhaps black aod white was ap- propriate; encapsulating the mood of the n1oment. -HE BLEW ABOUT six lines. Indeed, it must have been difficult reading. At moments, some fleeting moments, you wondered if he would really get through it. His mouth looked strange as he stam- mered through_the ,words. His lips form- ed" peculiar, twisted lines·: almost grotes- que as the words, sometirr.es haltingly, came out in black and whlte. , Il was not the race iO familiar in news photographs from Orange County lnlre- cent tunes. · / THE SMILING, WAVING figure from the top of a ,stairway pushed up to Air Force One on the landing strip at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. The smiling man jogging along to his Casa de PacilicaJn a golf cart at San Clemente. You remember how short in stature he was, yet marveled at the ar.imation of the man. as he swept into the empire room of the Newport.er Inn on that gubernatorial campaign; laughing, jok- ing, feigning horror at the high prices per-plate paid at the fund-raising arfair. This was not the same man on the television se l last night. And you have to suppose some are gleeful today. Some people always get their kicks out of tragedy to the other side. When Muham· mad Ali fights on and loses with a broken jaw. When Johnny Unitas limps off the field. When Jess Unruh's son gets ar- rested. OR WllEN A PRESlDENT faces na- tional humiliation . J\1ore correctly, it is a national tragedy. For me, it came across in black and \VhilC. IIealth Plan Pushed SACRAMENTO (AP) - A compre- hensive $9 billion "gra\'e-lo-<:radle" health care insurance plan has been in- troduced in the state Senate. Sen. George R. Moscone (D-San Francisco) reintro- duced virtually the same plan Monday that failed to get through the Senate last year. Rockies .. UPI Ttlt!llloi. SHOPPERS IN SOMERVILLE, MASS., PARK CARTS TO WATCH TV President's Nationwide Addres1·Watched by Miiiion• lrritatimi Shows Reagan Says Watergate No Embarrassment SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronalc. Reagan remained silent today on Presi- dent Nixon's Watergate speceh after brushing aside questions about the issue -but insisting it was riot an embarrass- ment to him as a Republican leader. TIIE REPUBLICAN chief executive, listed as a potential GOP presidential * fr * Nixon:. Will Rely On Old Frie1id As Law Adviser By United Pren InternatlonaJ President Nixon fell back on a trusted friend and former law partner -Leonard Garment -to be bis acting legal counsel after he fired John \V , Dean Ill Monday. GAR~fENT, 48, has been serving as special consultant to Nixon since the start of his first adrnin- ' ', islration. •!is job has been a catch-all for a variety Of Willte House project! par-ticularly civil and human rights. The ·sandy-haired, stocky, Brooklyn born lawyer w a s oARMl!NT Nixon's associate in the firm of Mudge, Rose, Guthrie and Alexander before joining Nixon at the White House. He. became Nixon's political ally and one of his most active campaign staffers \vhen Nixon ran for the presidency in 1968 and won. GAR!\1ENT llAS been untouched by controversy in a \Vh ile House where some of his colleagues al that level have not enjoyed equal popularity. He iilso has been a link for Nixon with the American- Jey,•ish community. The President said in a statement Gllr- ment would represent the-\Vh ite House "in all matters relating to the \Vatergatc investigation and \\•ill report directly to me.'' Garment alrendy \Vas familiar "'ith the probe as the liai$0n \\'ilh the Senate's special committee conducting a separate investigation of the \Vatergate affair. candidate in 1976, continued to~ irritat· ed by Watergate questioning. Asked about the affair by reporters in Los An- geles, he said there is no reason he should be pressed for comment since he knows nothing more than reporters do about the affair. Later, Reagan went to his Pacific Pal· isades home to watch the Nixon address on television. His press office said there would be no statement. But a state GOP official said Nixon's housecleaning action came "not a mo- ment too soon" and Welfare Secretary' Caspar Weinberger retracted an earlier statement in which .he scught to mini- mize the affair. Weinberger, appearing in San Fran· cisco, said he had been mistaken to call Watergate "ephemera]." He added, "I don't think that can be said any ,longer." WEINBERGER, FORMER state fj. nance director under Reagan, called the bugging and burglary scandal "a very painful episode." Paul Haerle, No. 2 man in the state GOP organization. said Nixon did exactly what he had to do "and not a moment too soon." . What he did was to accept the resigna· lions of Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst and White House aides H.R. Haldeman and John D. Erlichman, both former Cali- fornian s; and to put Defense Secretary E:lliot Richardson in charge of the Water- gate investigation. Reagan has insisted that \Vatergate has been "blo\vn out of proportion" by the news media and Nixon's Congrcs.sion- al critics. Asked Monday at a luncheon appear- ance if he still felt that \Vay, Reagan said. "I haven't changed my mind about any· thing." Did he think that his chances for presi- dent in 1976 might be enhanced because Watergate might have "tainted" Vice President Spiro T. Agne,v? "I DON'T TlUNK anyone's been taint- ed" any more tharv those involved in Den1ocratic ~lection scandals in Chicago, Reagan repbed curtly. Did he think it would hurt Republican chances in the 1974 elections? "No, gentlemen." \Vas he surprised at lhe scope of Nix- on's housekeeping actions? "Nothing surprises me after six years in the job I'm in." Is Watergate an embarrassment to you? "No. l'm just amazed you're still not asking me about the tax program." Get Spring Snow \ Tornadoes, Rai1t, Hail Bri1ig Wa~1iings to Plai1is Ten1perat11res ""' Lw Albin'( n " Atrente n " lloiton " " 1111tte10 " " ChMnll)tl " ., en.none " " <>"'°' ., " Clnclnner! .. " Cleftlefld " y °"""' ~ " """"' .. u HOl!Olulu •• " ,_..., " " Jkbonvlllt " " l(flf!UI Cllv " y L•• Veou " .. Lllflf Rock '" .. Loullvlll• " " Ml#ml " " Mllw11uli;H .. " MollrSt • Pt11I .. 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Pli-9, Kt11 CfNn. ClYC, EX• ctUtllH" J.tCOt"N!r. 27757, OR-1. w11nem Edw11'$, 'MYC. "'°' ~Count1rP01nt, 31'XIO, OR~. 8111 ... ..,.,..,. IVC. Cel Cour11r Ill, 27557, PH·1. F. J. Dotnlnoutt. $SSC, S1 "'' ~wrt Time "· 316". MO-t. John H. Ewtn. CIYC. Ce· t1 '~'!· 7JOJ, PH-1, lt1ymond A. Atlr111tm, LBV • 4 Cr ac.' Y.,.. ....... Jolin ,._ IUmblt. I CYC. ,_,, ~rl~?toO, Ollt~ri a , t:::'• SDJ5t,.~•' 37 :M 11 •• 27..C71 d II tlltl Jr., , 1t11r CytOn1 2. 17*-PH-7, lltltf Reffl, ICYC, Col M Mii II G1brtltl .. m11 ,H ... , l!.d Sltveni. "MYC, l!I'(. '1 c;.tloPlft G ... , 1Jd, MO-A, IKoblrt I . Mii"• SIYC. Ctl 2t G~. 32.!!!, 'Kofi' MIU c-.in. LIYC. Col • Glvlot1, MUI• .. , Jotln M. ICr*&I, SOYC, C.I " Gellfll, 1"'3. Ptf..f. ,-rtM 111:. Oiilr, CIYC. Alblr9 "~1 • Mink 11. s1n .. MO-L Let .. rtt'". CYC. ... 11111 t111"' 11. ma. 01t.1, c. L LMvttt, eve. ·~~ Gold Dllt.,., 11m. .. H .. , L. Ed'Wlnf ic-, SLIYC, Olrl, '7'N7, 'H·7, Hennen ' Mllr1N11t. C.Wh' SMY Ere 3S ~ H1nd, n;n, Olt·2. M. V. o\lldtrlll\. 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'H-9, WOClt/1. C1tl"NI. VVC, Ei:fu~ ~. :mu. , ..... , w. It. Olrhtoltt. ovc. C.I 2' H111kv, 11Nt ,H .. 1..f'llrlt H. Sl'f'llltlo tYC. h 1e M.,,. Husll11r Ill, S1m P'l-M. Kerl G. ~ ;Ll\tw '" " JK'OUlll:f• '7501, .. H.._ Arttwr ltt'l'Mldl. CIYC, at;:041"7sl, , ..... , Dtnltl L. 0111111'1\, IWCC. Col " Jtlfl Ltf'lttt, S740S. '""°' Jtmt1 N. Wlttoft, LAYC, ~r 31 '6 11reml1h, sn27, P'H"'-lllfdl ltltcMtoft. CHIYC, 111 Jnl!W Teo, J77JO, ,H ... Mett VOOl't, AYC, lln U JIN!tr. 121.3 PH--7, Cl•ttt s~ LIVC. Aux Cvlllr j' T~. 1~, '"·/f lf'"'•:t:·\C,YC) L .II FY~ 3' rJll, 7 , ,. -• rt • 111dt, Joie DI M .... 21110. """°· l!d A. writt., ·ssc, Mir .. Jollfltll'W, ""'· """" "-!Un Mclumer YAYC. c~~1nfi ~ .. utlt 1! Oii. 701 .. H.f. OU~ T. lm1HI. OYC, C1I Jubfl'lt .. mn. MO.L Ttd M•l'lon, AIYC. Ctt :J1 JUPtf'(I, 17t0t. ,H_,, '9:tvMOlld M.. •run •. CIYC. Col °'IUlllC'I, 17W. 'H.7, JMt• A. llodeett, YWC, Col M Mk II • ( B D LOS Rentag dants An I hon Oisma) thal tt ea~e month difecto U.S. Molt I told m• rilinist1 sider ti trial ~ :He 1 .. LOI .Edwa 17. h; otand Sia yin obser of raC "MU! Walte- rullilg 11reHh Tay)~ publl< 'been 5hootl '~bo&I! ship Jiarbo Pe ' W: SE .SAN Indoch wound "teach Diege JIUI. • great ! An e: tended Ymeetln ctimpu! build In was hE The ' campu: ~nler Wlth I 5fructo :i!>pear llHll bu ,. ' , • '. In \ • ' : , I \ f· ·- • • . - 11' • ,' • .. I I Byrne DiSclOsure . f!isutQJs .. El~per~ LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rentagon Pape.rs trial defen· dants Daniel Ellsberg and A.nthony Russo say they were Chsmayed by the disclosufe that. the trial judge in their cas~ was approached last ~~nth about becoming FBI d1tector. •U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne said Monday he i?ld members of the Nixon ad· ministration he would not con· sider the appointment until the trial endl. ' ··He said he went to. the Murder :Trial Set LONG $EAOH (A'P) - ~dward Ei.lgene Taylor, 17, has be.ti ordered to pt>nd trial Oil a cberge. oi ~laying he)icopter tr<if(ic observer pilot Jim Riek.tin of radio station KMP'C. ' I Western White House at San Clemente a . month ago and met with Pr~ldent ?jlxl!'rl. ~ FB1, job was discussed with then-1>5"sidel)tial aide J,ohl\ D. Ehrllcrunan, Byrne said. · I BYRNE TOLD attorneys in. the Pentagorr Papers trial at the opening of court. Mondly that "I did not ruscuss with the President or M r . u,1 T.....,. Ebrllcbrnan any aspect of lhl• Panther Chief case." ' David Hilliard, chief of But Ellsberg told newsmen staff of the Black Pan· outside the courthouse HI can'l tilers, has asked the agree tha! this 1~s no .erfec~ state Supreme Qourt to on the tr1aL H.; is .going to, reverse his conviction have to make d· e c i s i 0 n 5 of atsault with a dead- rd . ly weapon. Servin~ a rega 1ng materi"al from the· IO-year term, he cla.ims FBI .. " his constitutional rights Russo said he' was "quite' were transgressed. sbockM" t9 learn of Byrne's -----'=------ m~ting with Ehrlichman and 1 Nixon. Attorneys in the case declin· ed ~mment on Monday's · developments. ' Tutsday, May 1, 1973 DAILY PILOT 5 "'.~o Far ltaexplicable' Witness In Fear Of Killer Agents Invade· Blast~ _Site SACRAMENTO (AP ) .. cause or titanic blasts from a PoSSi~le to explode. It would Qne squjlli-lof demolition TORRANCE (AP) _An in~ Arson inves.ti~ators and munitions train that .r ipped take sqme time for the heat 10· men scl!l'ried to safety late formant who identified the fede~al author1lles have begun apart a railroad switching get through the ·casing. · Monday after finding 8 split sole suspect in the grisly · p~bmg through 8. i.naze of yard. . . ''As we stand now, the thing open bomb still smoking, slayings of four t beater twisted steel, seeking the Investigators 1 n c Jude d is inexplicable in 8 lot of employes was in "mortal agents of the FBI. Naval ,, sheriff's deputies said. fear" of testifying until the intelligence. the N at ion al · ways, Sederholm added. AuthoriUes quickly barred suspect was found dead in his Reagan Plan Transpc>rtation Safetv Board In Sacramento, where the everyoile from entering a ceU of a drug overdose, police the Treasury Department'~ explosions had w a ken e d three-mile area around the said. Alcohol. To b a cc o -and residents on Saturday nlorning Southern PaCific rail switching -Jnvestiga'tors said Monday M T Firearms section. and the and forced closure of the 103· yard, but the security ring that John Roy Maheu, 29. or e8l)S 8X Sacramento County Sheriff's year-old State Capitol building, \Vas lifted about 20 minutes Torrance, has been po&tively Office arson squad, Sgt. Bill Gov. Ronald Reagan declared later after firemen hosed linked to the Feb. 11 robbery Hike-Post Roberson of the sheriff's office the blast area a disaster area. down the smoking bomb. of the Rolling Hills Theater in said· Monday. making re s l den Is and A grass fire also sent up which four employes were businesses eligible for tax renewed i;:louds of white found bowtd and their throats SACRAMENTO (APJ ALTHOUGH foul play could relier. smoke, but that blaze \vas slashed. Gov. Ronald Reagan's tax have caused Sa.tun;lay's quickly contained. He also has been linked to limitation plan would aln1ost series of explosions, there is MJLlTARY munitions ex· the March 27 robbery of a surely lead to sharp property no evidence so far of any perts moved into the central WfllLE TlfE investigation TG&Y department store here tax and sales tax iiiJ:rcases, cause, said Southern facific area of tll~ blast Monday to and cleanup con 1 i nu e d . in which the ass is tan t says the i,egislature'S top tax spokesman Bob Sederholm. pick up raw pieces of high ex· residents of the Grand Oaks manager was killid in a exper t. "One of the problems with plosive and unexploded 250-subdivision. which begins sintilar manner. In a 118-page an a I y sis the arson idea is, I wonder if pound bombs. Spokesmen said about t,000 yards from the Police Lt. James Foster said released Monday, Legislative anyone \\'OU!d know that these they would be taken to a yard, began to clean up their the principal Witness did not Analyst A. Alan Post said bombs are just about im· remote are3 and exploded. concussion._,hat1ered hotnes. come forward with in· Reagan was using "misleading\---:~-············ .. •••• .......... ~~~=-fori'nation helping to link and highly inflated'' tax data! ~laheu with the crim'es until to promote his tax limitation arter Maheu died from an ap-initiative. -. ·par~nt drug overdose after he If the Reagan plan were was arrested on a traffic adopted, Post said, state pro· charge. grams would have to be cut by SOMOlllNG BEAUTIFUL NOW IN PROGRESS ... FLOWER SHOW APRIL 27 -MAY 7 •. Mdn!cipol Court Jlldge Walter Binns made the ruling Monday after a :preH.mlhafy h e a r i n g . Tay)or, a sell-employed publtc .i'elallohs man,• has 'been cliafted witit fatally shootl61 l!lclilin, 3 4 , 1'-board a lllxtiry cruise ship last April 2 in the .harbor area. Beaty Trial Jrulge Hits. Maheu was arrested at his up to $420 million by 1974, and T S·L . •' home April 2 on·tnisdemeanor local property and sales taxes ~ th ~ t ?tau 0 · 1~ym·2s tramc warrants. and was "almost inevitably" would he oOU OIS . . . C/ rilo~u~n~d~d~ea=d~m=· ~bis=·~ce11::~t:he~ne=x~t~f~or~ce~d~u~p~.i:.:'.th:c~n:o•:pa:::rt:is:•~n l__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 'Naive' Git:Is Led. SANTA CRUZ (AP~ _ Ed· morning analyst said. m]!lld Kem~ m,, cb,~rg.ed " 'Peace Group • Winds Up SD Crusade ''SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Indochina peace campaign has wound up an extended run of "teach-ins" on and off the San Dlege State University cam- pus. Supporters called it a great success. An estimated 150 persons at- tended the sixth and last meeting Sunday night Jn the tatnpus social s c I e n c e s building. An earlier class il:lsO was held there. The others were in the off. cam.pus Liberation House, a c.i:nter for anUwar groups; ~Jtb Tom Hayden as in- structor. Actress Jane Fonda 3f1Peared once, speaking in llitll building April 15. ' with•the murder or h1S motlier and seven other women, told ,.. authorities he would not have Prosecutio1t SAN BERNARDINO (AP) gone ahead with t.he .. sl.ayi~~s -The judge in the Ronald ex~ept f?r the ava1\~01hty. of Wayne Beaty murder-escape n~tye ,iprls . who were hitch· trial has criticized the pros~· hik!flg:i.... f?i~t. Atty. Peter ecution for its handlifl« of a Chang Jr. said. witness' report. but bas denied Ke ·"'~ er.. whom two a defense motion for dismissal psrch1atr1sts eight months a~o because of,it. said was not a. threat to soc1e. , Superior Ct\urt J ad g e ty, w~s arraigned Monday. 'l'Piol'0'8'!' M. Haldor~n said E.x~pt for one woman, 3:11 the Mondtty it would be against vict:t.~ had been decap1_tated the interest of ·ustice to and s1~ wer.e st~d~nts picked disri'liss charges inJ the case. up id while h1tchh1kmg, Chang But he add~d !n relet'~nce1 to 58 M~nicipa\ Court J u d g e t.he pro~ecullon s handling tltit Donald o May set M y 21 r attet. ttie case ends "we should Kemper lo enter a pf ea art: :~kt~!? the matter at greater Chang requested a three-week ~ · · . 1 1 .... continuance to take the case to e cr1t1c sm ~om tu~ the grand jury. bench came outside the presence of jurors. who have KE'IPE!t 04 6- be :t , .. • foot-9 and en ei:cused for several dayS 280 poundS~ was arrested a during arguments over certain "'eek ago. in Pueblo, Colo., e'*:1iibits the p r 0 s e c u t i 0 n when he telephoned police fianted to introduce. 1 here to admit some of the Benton Dougl8s Burt. 30, deaths. Since hi& arrival in and wife Andrea Holman ~· ' Santa Cruz Saturday he· has ~8, both of the San Francisco Jed officials to the bodies and Bay area, are charged with ' parts of some of the victims 1!J~rder, assault and freeing Chang said• K~mper h~s pr1soher Beaty, who was later denied responsibility in any recaptured. ·other ~layings in this area. wia,!Jl~~([!/~ . . • Promises Tu Pay You A Guaranteed .. '. • .. Income On Certificate Accounts At Their :: ·· . Jtighest Interest Rates In 38 Years! ~ I .lallrtl-: Gran Torino 2·Door Hardtop with new Luxury Decor Package and WSW tires. Higli' wire artist demonstrates Torino's incredibly smooth ride. ·•· It took a lot more than ll smooth ride to make Ford Torino the be$1:.selling car in the mid-size field. The closer you look, the better vve look. ' I I I I '· I· \ '4 Right now, whilecummt high interest tit"' prevail, select theeerti~te ' account that best suits your needs! Start making the most olyour'money at Orange County's largest, first and strongest independen't Federal ..• I where your psrsonal welcome is warm, yonr financial 8eCU1'ity is Sure, and your earning growth is guaranteed for t!ii> lull t.erm of your accowit. Plnllooll Acclounlt In •tlJ 1mourt $900 tntnltntlm ..... ""90 dlys $5.000 minimu m 2to6,..n• ' ................................................................ . -• " .. ·' • c.rtlflelta Elmln1 0 AND eyu:-peld 1nnutMJ Oft depolitl Inquire •bout 1 to I Y11r 73 · of $100.000 or mon. -"I nowt• Hurnbtr of th ... ·~ountl limited. .. . INTllRlillrl' 011 ALLACOOUNTS I•COMPOUND£ThDAILYi,PAID QUARTERLY · •90 dat interest forfeiture far Mrly withdrawal !!£~~~ AND LOAN Alll!CIATION I I •' HOME 01'l'IC8: 2CO °"'" A..nuo, Llll!.DI Beoch. Calif. 926Sl 1-Hll~ 8rl0dll'2..031Calle4• I• P)<ta. i...tuoa Hit!' Calil,JUSl J.&&bti• N'l1uc:l Brlt1Cb 1 l Monarch 81y P)u.a. Soutb Lasuna. Calif. t2671 SaoCllmtn~ 8~! 601 N. EICamloollal,SMOtrotntt,Calif.,2612 l.dl Ultfnort Br1nch: oon:1!W Ortham and Llod.111. WATCH FOil ORA.NO OPFJ'{INO I . • • Optional AM/FM ltoroo radio with front and rear dual speakers. Surprlllng IUJµty In a mld·llze car. Pictured aboVo la tho lnlorlor or tho Gran T0<ino with Luxury Oecor Pac~ago. Front disc brakes are stan· dard on Torino. Power front disc brakes optlonat. Optional electric rear window delrost11.(Torlno't major compel· !tor donn't oner It.) Torino offere op .. tlonal •teel·beltod radial ply tires on all models. A longer wheelbase and wider Iron\ and rear track ttlan mafor competitor, for a smooth, stable ride . Torlno'1 I0111unent penol. All g1ugee 110 eay torMCI, controls within easy ieacti of Clfiver. Behind Torino':; smooth rkM are better ideas in engineering. Like angle mounted shock absorbers for Increased directional stabllily. Rubber body/frame mounts that help Isolate the passenge1 compartment from road shocks. And a coll spring rubber- insulated front suspension that helps minimize noise and ro.ad vibration. Inside you'll find expansive room up front Plus the kind of luxury you'd expect from high priced automObiles. So take a good. close look at Ford Torino for 73. Discover why it's become the best selling car In the mid-size tield. The solid mid-size car. FORD· TORINO FORD DIVISION 49 See Your Local Ford Dealer! . ' . ' • - • • DAII.Y PILOT EDITOR·IAL PAGE ' , l Support Needed No.w THE DEFENSE BUDGET IS AT RCcK BOT.TOM. CUT ANOTHER • PENNY AND NATIONALSECU"1'f GOES DOWN•THE DRAINI TODAY WE ARE CUT.TING· OUT 274 MILITA!l\' INSTAL!,ATIONS ••• ' U the University of California at Irvine is going to have an on~mpus~teaching hospital, and indeed if the California College of Medicine -U!e UCI medical school -is to remain an Orange County institution, it's going to have to have a lot more support from Orange County political and n1cdjcal people then so far has been evi· denced. And , this support must be marshalled within the next few "-'eeks to be effective i.n Sacramento. The badly divided front which Orange County so far seems to be presenting on the matter of providin.g even a modest teaching hospital on the UCI campus lS playing nsht into the hands of U!090 in Sacramento - in the legislature and in the department of finance - who would just as soon see Orange County and UCI get little or nothing. to the UC! hospi\al. There also Is considerable concern among Orange County dootors that a strong university medical school would become the dominant voice in Orange County medicine. Owners and investors in some private proprietary hospitals, who have the ear of some county supervisors, reportedly would just as soon have the county contract wilh their hospitals for serving the patients the county is obligated to take care or. Several city councils in Orange County and some other organizations have vol'ed to support the UC! on· campus teaching hospital by adopting resolutions favor- ing it. Every voice, public and private, will be helpful in getting the me~ge to the Orange €ounty super· visors, •to the legislature and to the governor. The elements of the Orange County situation are many. Sadly, not too many o( U!e elements have the least thing I<> do. with di;veloping a good ipt'dical sch"!'l and •·good teaching hospital. Law Day, U.S .A: THE DEFENSE DEPARTMENT COULD EASILY CUT THEIR BUDGET BY MILLIONS •• , I PROTEST THIS CUT.TING OUT MILITARY BASES IN MY HOME STATE! - When . Law Day U.S.A. was first observed 16 years ago today it was at least partly intended to be democracy's response to the raw displays of military might on May Day behind U!e iron Curtain. AND SHOULDI Some of our supervisors apparenUy could care less about a good teaching hospital or~ good. medical St:hool -U!ey JU>1 want to be bailed out of the coun ty's own follieo at Orange County Medical Center. Other hospitals around the county are fearful of having any more hospital beds built -even teaching bed&---for-fear the~JDi~some_polentiaLl!at.iIDlts. Yet for the most part, the either hospitals are either physically incapable of or philosophically unwilling to make a major commitment to proVIde patients and facil- ities for teaching. , The university's propasal actually would not in- crease the number of beds in the collnty because the beds provi~ at the on"'3111pus teaching hospital would be offset by phasing out of a number of sub-standard beds at OCMC. ll.tany private doctors in the county are frankly concerned that they may lose patients or prerogatives ' - Those icy days of cold war games have thawed a bit since then but Law Day U.S.A. stayed on as a viable hat _tip \0 tqe Americ;.n leg~ system. Law Day now is directed toward tbC AmeriCan people in a time when a struggling system of law most needs support and guidance. The stated objectives of Law Day include such things as the advancement of equality under the law, encouragement of citizen support and education of the people as to their rights and responsibilities. The real !Deaning of Law Day U.S.A. is that the legal system of America is striving to be responsive to change, and to continue its role as a viable tool of dem- ocracy despite many nagging problems. P arenis· .Set Peace-keeping Teams Face Fiasco Pattern for Self-esteem Dear Gloo1ny Gus The Ludicrous Vietnam Ceasefire ~YDNEY J.HARBI~ Almost anybody you might designate as "difficult" - a trQ\lble-maker, an apple-polisher -suffers from the same deficiency, no matter how different the symptoms may be. All these people -and others like them -suffer from what the social psychologists call "low self-esteem." Such people basically Jo not like themselves (wheth· er they know it or nol), are not satis- fied with them· selves, and seek to achieve gratiricatloo by manipulating ttie out side world, rather than by refonning their own personal· ity structure. Of course, It cann ot be done that way. No more than the miser can ev~ have "enough" money, or the glutton "'enough" food, can the person with low self.esteem ever be satisfied with ex- ternal arrangements. He is always see king for more; and, in doing so, usually manages to end up with less. JN FACT, in his thoroµgh·going study called. 'The Ant ecedents of Se If· Esteem." Prof. Stanley Coopersmith of the University of California found that few of the objecti ve norms \\'e commonly <issociate with self-esteem are actually important. He discloses : "Self-esteem is Qi1otes ED~1UND G. BROWN, Jr., Calli. Stcy. of Sia~ -"Democracy is in trouble around the world, and California. perhaps more than any other state, is a lest vehicle for meeting the challenge. What will Billy Graham's text be for the next White House sermon? -J.A.W. OloiMI' GUS C-tnts trt S.Ubtnlll.. tlY l'Mdllf'I "'d N not "tcuurllY reflKI ftl• Ylews ., 1'111 l'llW...,_-, Stfllll yevr 1111 -· '9 GlffmY 011t. DtllY ~1111', not nlated to height and physical attrac- tiveness ... and is ooly rather, weakly re- lated to social status and academic per· fonnance ." There ls only a limited• relationship between self-esteem and ,sllth Indices as material wealth, education and achieve- ment. This is why self-made millionaires, college presidents, and movie stars can remain lacking ln self-esteem for a lifetime, no matter what their objective achievements. Privately, pertu1ps even unconslously, they do not believe in their success, and it does not ally their deep- seated anxiety. \VHAT GIVES a person high self- esteem? Tl is almost entirely the way he is treated by his parents as a child: "The most general statement about the an· tecedents of self-esteem can be given in terms of three conditions -total or nearly total acceptance of the children by their parents, clearly de'fined and en· forced limits. and the respect and latitude for individual actil>n that exist \\'ithin the defined limits." That is, children are fortified for a lifetime with good feelings about themselves when parents h8ve definite rules and values, but permit free in- dividual expression and greater deviation from conventional behnvior. The "strict" parent fails by inhibiting freedom : the "permissive" parent fails bf setting no adequate gu idelines. The successful parent knows how !() maintain a "creative tension" between these two extremes. Nothing we can do for a child is more imporl(jnt than instilling in him or her a healthy sense of self-esteem: without it. no later success is gratifying, and no adult therapy is more than specuJalive. SAIGON -Some recent indiscreet remarks by a Hungarian army officer assigned to peace·keeping in South Viet- nam only confinn thQt the ceasefire en- forcement fiasco chaUenges the rationale of both the Paris agreement and Nixon- Kissinger diplomacy generally. It \vas a Hungarian national day celebration f o r members of an In· ternational Commis- sion of Control a n d Supervision (ICCS) r eg ional team, and the wine flowed freely. The colonel hecfding the region's Hungarian delegation, a b i t tipsy, approached a Sout h Viet- namese officer and loudly explained why Saigon's complaints of Communist ceasefire violations arc doomed. "\Ve arc assigned here," he declared , "to prOtect the interests of the PRC" -the Provisional Revolutionary Government. the embryonic Communist regime North Vietnam is trying to establish in South ·vietnam. WHAT mE Hungarian was indi screet enough to admit subverts the foundation 1J'icks / ( EVANS·NOVAK ) of the Paris agreement. U.S. officials here believe South Vietnam can survive the ceasefire negotiated for it by Dr. Henry A. Kissinger only if Moscow restrains· Hanoi, but the two Communist members of the ICCS, Hungary and Poland, are under Soviet direction and have been energetically torpedoing peace-keeping with cold war fervor of the 19405. - Accordingly, U.S. officials here fear what this implies aboot Soviet adherence to life-and-death interna tional agreements, including anns limitations, negotiated under the grand design of President Nixon and Dr. K_issinger. As we reported earlier, North Vietnam began systematic violation of the ceasefire from its first day -seeking land and people for the PRG 's bare bones and preparing a future general offensive. Frustrated by its Commwlist members, the ICCS has become protective col· oration to maintain the fiction of a ceasefire -the real reason many Cana· dians and some Indonesiam want their nations to quit the commission. OVER TIIREE months, lCCS's Com· munist members have excelled in the ridiculous. When Communist sappers destroyed a bridge, the Poles claimed the bridge had been weakened by transporta- tion over it of Sooth Vietnamese artillery shells. When Sappers sank a South Viet· n~se naval vessel, the Poles claimed fhad struck one of its own mines. ' Those two reports were so ludicrous that the H~arians did not concur. But usually the two Communist nations cooperate in scuttling the ICCS. Com- munists shell a hamlet; the Hungarian- Polish explanation is a provocation by South Vietnamese artillery. A South Viet· namese outpost is attacked; the Hungarian-Polish suggestion is bandits at work. Waterga\e Hampers Foreign Policy Unti1nely Sca1iclat Casts Slicido-iv 01i Visits of World Leaders WASHINGTON -Conventional wisdom has long kept national security and diplo- 1natic; affairs as distant as possible from the political arena. Secretaries of St"te and Defense arc expected to stay aloof from ordinary politicking. AJthough the principal is some- times hooorcd in the breach, the conven· tional wisdom on thi.!1 subject is sho\\'Tl to be e11pccially valid at the mom en I. Nothing Is more Important to t h c PrC6ident lhan that Secretory of Stati William P. Rog<!rs, National Security Adviser llenry A. Kissi nger. and Defense Secretary Elliot Richardson· remain above the fray 'and untainted by the Watergate seni;atlon. Otherwise, as Kissinger fears, a pall will fall over what remains to be done, and with precious litlle Ume In whlcb to do J~ In creallni a "acneraUon ol peace." Who are the leaders of the world 10 Im!""" trull In President Nixon if the Amencan people dlstrUSI him and those who represent hhn1 THESE LEADERS ""' coming 10 W""11lngton In ... ody lllC<eSIHxl clurlng Nis:on's dilCOIDfiture. Fint came Prime I -(rucHARD WILSO~ l\1inister He11th ol Britain, then Italian Prime 1t1lnlster Andriottl, and now West Gennan Chancellor Brandt, to be fol· lowei;I by French President Pompidou, and Soviet Cltainnan Brezhnev. Then Nixon plans a "grand tour" of Europe, hope$ to go to Lalin-America, Japan and Africa in separate trips' later on. Every one of these leaders will be com- pelled to form his own judgment on Nlx· on's reliablllly and authority. Let us sup- pose, for example, ~ a half doze n of Chancellor Brandt's closest associates were being named dally in scf!ndals which raii questions on the legitimacy of his elec on and lhe JUOrality oH!Js political ethods. There ii not the sightest doubt these clrcumrt.ances would figure In bow much I al lb and trust the White-.Hoose wou!<LinVC3t in_ Brandt's reliability. More -than that, easily in· flammable American public opinion on the probity of foreign leadm would fig· ure in the equallon to • grealu degree than the~ wave cl anll-Ammcan· ilm In w ... Germany. TlUl INTllllNATIONAL po I i l i ca I clilnate is sensitive to scandal.~resident John F. Kennedy's visit to frime l\.1inister Harold MacMillan in 1963 was kept private,-unofficial and low key to avoid conclusions that Kennedy was bolstering MacMillan at the time of the Profumo scandal . (A British derense ~ minister. John Profumo, was forced to resign in a .sex scandal involving one Christine Keeler. allegedly used by the Russian KGB to ex· tract nuclear secrets-while in the lists ol love. MacMiiian, lncrdentally,.was forced to tc.11 an to the ll~o( Commons. M!ich gave him a vote of confldmce on handling of security aspects of the scan· dal, and that is more than Nixon can ex - pect from Congress In the Watergate case .) Nixon has much more on the line than had Kennedy in 1963. Ile Is trying to define and codify In a new Atlantic charter, a modem identity with We.,tem Europe consistent with new U.S. rela- tionship .to Russia and China. ·This In· JO ves not only dlrect negotiation with t'he European leadership. but the sympathetic r-of European opin- ion In varytng eounlrtes where pro- AmerlcanLsm had already J>8SSed its peak before Watergate. THE r~L European (; rtsponse to this idea, put forward publicly by Dr. Kissinger in such a way as to give it great weight, has been rather tentative. The propo..al to Include Japan In the scheme of Utings at some-future date has not produced much response. In fact, it has done nothing to change the Japanese decision ·against having Em p e r or tlirohito visit this COWJtry for the time being, although Nixon Is anxious to receive the emperor so that the way will be opened for Nlxoo's visit to Japan. KIMinaer, up0n whom much of the rcsponsi6lllty will fall in creating a new Atlantic atmosphert of cooperatlon, ex- pre..., the hope that a long period of recrimination over Watergate won't mar the elfort. This ls more w1shf\ll than Dr. K!Mlnger usually permits hlmael/ to be. The Watergate sensaUon ls not likely to wear out for a long,J:lme. 1bere appears to be no greater dlsposIUon on the part of Nixon•• oppoclllon to be for1Ivlna than there was tO be gralclul wben the Vlei· nam ceasefire w11s Onally achieYed. In any e>se, trials and beariQ11 will be going on lor a long Jim• an.r Nb:on cleans up the mess, in.stalls a new set of advisers and lrl<a to establlsb a nobler tone ,on the pollUcal side of bla ad· ministration. The European! will Judge him , to • certain degree, on bow wen he succeeds at that . Failure to be ridiculous is not permit· ted. When the ICCS investigated fighting over the important port of Sa Huynh, a Polish colonel sigJJed a report stating it wa.!I under Saigon's control. He was forthwith relieved of his duties and seen no more in Vietnam. His blunder has not been repeated. MOREOVER, the P o l e s and Hungarians are in intimate rontact "'ith Vietnamese Communists -and alerted to some violations before they occur. Communist ICCS team m e m be r s departed hamly fn:,.i.Hang Nu near the Cambodian border jum before North Vietnamese troops launched a major assault there. All this has profoundly influenced canadlan ICCS peace-keepers. Arriving here as genuine neutrals, many Canadian officers have beccme emotionally anti· Communist in reaction to Hanoi-Warsaw- Budapest collusion. One Ca n a d i an regional delegation chief now habitually refers in ICCS open meetings to the ~ · called PRG -an Insult not even mat~ ed by the Americans. One experienced Canadian diplomat assigned to the ICCS fully expected the cripplihg Communist obstructionism but nevertheless advocated joining the ICCS in deference to pleas from Canada's most important friend, the United States. Now, however, he thinks it is time to leave. 'lb.is is no ceasefire, he told us. This · is war. By participating in the ICCS Canada participates in deception. WE FOUND no Canadian here who disagrees, and Indonesians are coming to feel the same way, "The ICCS is an absurdity," one Indonesian colooel says. "We must go. home." A feeble joke circulating in di plomatic circles says the Swedes and the lndians will be the new ICCS members because only they are hypocritical enough to stomach HWlgarian-Polish sophistry. ln fact, the ICCS may be finished . if Canada and Indonesia leave. testimony to the Kremlin's true attitude about In· temational agre.e.ments and a dark omen for the future. How to Tell the Good Commies from the Bad As if we didn't have enough trouble in Cambodia, the hereditary Ratt of Phynkia has patriotically requested that \Ve blow his country to bits with our B- 525 to save his beloved people from Com· rnunist guerrillas. The President, of course, immediately dispatched Dr. Hughes Kisslngernow to consider this new threat to the Free World. First of all, Ratt," 1 began Dr. Kissing. emow, taking out ap appUcation f o r m , "do you believe ln democracy?" "Anybody says l don't," said ther Ratt. "gets a bullet in the noggin." "G<>OO. Now, as yw know, we describe our bomblng(in Cambodia as 'cease-fire activities.' And ... " , "We got no ceasttfire," said the Rau nervously. , "That's all right. We don't have one in Cambod ia either. The question is, are yo\1 wijllng to negotiate?" 1'SURE/1 said lhe Batt, "I'll negotiate with anybody but the en<my. Anybody. Gas station attendants, ®9.nnen, Ameri· can tourists. Anybody but the enemy." "You're a regular Lon Nol," said Dr. Klssingernow admiringly. 11Now for the crucial question :-Are they good Commies or bad Commles? Because of our high moral standards. we only bomb had Commies these days." ( ART HOPPE J they good cooks?" asked Kissinger now. "Show me a Commie who can whip up an excellent Peking duck and I'll show you a good CoIMlie.'' "TheY never invited me to dinner ,'' said the Ratt. "Hummm,11 said K.issingernow . "How · ;=r ~:':!Y~Roin;~s ~pse?~~lrcling. "Seven," said the Ratt. "But they're tough." "That does it. They're bad Commie.!!, all right," said Dr. Kisslngernow, triumphantly. "You see, when lt come! to bombing Oriental Commies, the way we di stinguish bad ones from good ones is that there are a lot rewer of them. Our B-S2s will be here in the morning ." "JUST LIKE THAT?" said the Ratt, surprised. "Doesn't your President have to ask Congress or somebody?" "If there's one thing Cambodia's proved1 Ratt," said Dr. Kissingemow, "lt'1 that our President can bomb anybody who believes in our form of Constitu- tional democracy. You do, don't you?" "More and more," said the Ratt, rub- bing bis hands, "every day.'' ORANOI. COAST ".They all look alike to me ," sald the Ratt with a shrug . • DAILY PILOT "Not so. Flrst, are they Oc:ddental? They mlgbl be our lrienda and trading partners, the Russians. We wouldn't want 10 bomb good Commies like them." "Occidental, hell." ~ the· Rau, whose Engllsh WU llfDlted. ••They're revolting on purpose.~ , "Ah. then they're U11entsl. But while all had Commlea aro Orientals, not all Oriental Commlea ire bad. Tell me, do they play Ping·""'1gl" "Pin1~Pq1" . : "Good COmmlea plat Plng·Ponll." ... · plained Klsslngernow Jl!tflenUy. "They're also excellent acrobats, .and sing operas In which the people overthrow us o~ presslve CspitallsUc running dogs." ''These gu)'1 never 1 tlng;'1 sald the Ritt, "Believe me." ' · "Do they carry lllUelrel boob and are ' . I • Robtrt N. Wfed, Publi$1ttr Thomo1 K ttvit, Editor Barbara KreibfcJ\ Editorial Pag_r Editor The editorial pt1.Rtl or the Dally Piiot seek& to ln(orm 11.nd ttlmu· late rl'11.dnrs by 11re.iwntlnir; this M"'1paptr'1 opinion~ and com· meontar)' 1111 tn1>i'-2 of lnlel'l'lt and aiapllkla~. by providing ll foru~ tor Tf.e exprnutun t'lf our N'Rder5 oplnlont, 111nd b)' pr1t11C'ntlng lh1· dlvtne viN•prilnla oC lnformt'CI Oh· 14'rvtn and a:pokHmcn on 1opics Df tilt. day. Tuesday, May I, 1973 ' -' ' ' '• ' ' r • t ··-' i !. ., 1 I I I . l "/ #Klmit tMre's some llight inefficiency •nd time-Ioli. But !"'.-. c.rtainly disptJJled the cura of bOlfldom on W.... m.rflblylintf" r,. ., ' Will Be Vice Presideat . Bay Ouhs Name Marlin McKeever, the Los Angelts RaIN' footbaft star who makes his home in Corona del Mar, has been ap- pointed vt~re.sident o f Intematlooal Bay Clubs, Inc. McKeever's apJ)Ointment was announced today by D.\Y. I is with ~reat pride that we welcome him to our ei:ecutive staf' " Subsidiaries of Jntemational Bay Clubs include the Balboa Bay Club, Newport Beach; the Balboa Bay , Club, Indian • McKeever ... Wells; the Balboa Bay Rac- quet Club , apd the Bl!!l>oa Bay Isiah<! Club, u n d e r con· struction on Catalina Island. McKeever plays llnebacker for the Ram s, and is a forrrier star at USC. • Ray. chalrman of the ·board for lnternatlonal Say Clubs. "McKeevtr, 8! a Balboa Bay Club member, has been instrumental in the planning or many Of our athletic programs for youngsters;" Ray said. "It Tliere' s Limits DUBLIN, Ireland (AP\ ;.-New Irish laws limit women workers to lifting about' 35 pounds, while men are allowed to lift 121 pounds. NAMED EXECUTIVE Mlrlin McKMvtr •••••• • \ _..,,, • 1ut5day, Mat l . 1~73 OAJLV PILOT 1 A Co ver Up? Woman T,weaks Beards LONDON (AP) -The first woman to bead the British Guild of Hairdressen has administered a bit of a tweak to lbe bearded male. "What are they trying to prove?" Kay Wellstead asked a gulld meeting. "Could it be they are merely trying to cover up facial defects? Or arc they just too lazy to shave?" f\.1iss Wellstead said she's not against the longer hair styles ror men, "but as for wearing !hem with beards as well - definitely no! ffind it quite repulsive." . Nearly Everyorie Lisrens ro Landers • -· -----•---1 Poultry .Yield~ i Arse nic Traces • .. WASHINGTON tAP) -The Agriculture Department says illegal residues or organic arsenic continue to show up in about one out of every 20 ' chicken livers, but officiills say the chemical poses no Sedative. Controls Propose d WASHINGTON (AP\ -The Food and Drug Administration has recommended lighter con- trols on nine barbiturate drugs, including three ranked among the JO most abt»ed drugs in the United States. The FDA said Monday il based its recommendations on a Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs report show- ing substantial dll:ersion of amobarbital, secobarbital and pentobarbital. SIX DRUGS which woul d fall under tighter regulatory cont rols because the FDA said they have "sin1ilar abuse potential" are butabarbita l, cyclobarbital. heptabarbita\, · probarbital, talbutal and vin- barbital. The FDA said the nine sedative drugs account for the __bulk of the 1.1 billion O arbiturates prescribed an- nually. The bureau said that durig the 12-month period end- ing in April, 1972 more than 7.3 million dosage unit s were stolen. The FDA said it expects the bureau to approve the recom- mendation , to move the nine drugs from Schedule Ill . to Schedule 11 of the Controls Substances Act, which would prohibit refillabl e prescrip- tion s, impose manuf11 cturing quotas and require extensive records of sales and distribu- tion. TllE SCHEDULE II cont rols would be !imilar to those in effect for amphetamines and most narcotics. "Since these drugs have hfl· portant medical uses, we an- ticipate working closely \li'ith the BNDD to insure adequate supplies are maintained to satisfy medical and scientific requirements," Dr. Charles C. Edwards, assistant secretary for health in the Department of Health , Education and Welfare, said in a letter. SINCE TIGHTER controls on the nine barbiturate drugs "may lead to an increased de- mand for illicit use of other central nervous sys tem depr essant 81.Jbstances," Edwards said, the FDA soon will forward a recom- mendation for additional con- trols on Doriden or glu tethimide. ~ FRANCIS- \,ORR J' F E STATIONERY MOTHll"S DAY Gll"TI -c.t.•os 1,.ICIAL °'"I• Lg:au911 Mlr:fS ·-~7 11111.ttAll .. IWAl lfl~llll CHiii Ill IU ·tMfll1(af •Allllt hazard for poultry consumers. Organic arsenic is not the potent· form of poison com-~ monl}' associated with the chemical's name. The more deadly 1ol"m 'is · inorganic arsenic. THE ORGANIC form is commonly used in'pOultry and hog feed as a growth booster. Federal rules allow up to one part per million as a food ad· ditive. ' • Officials said Monday that tests during the first three months of this yea r showed organic arsenic exceeded the permitted level in 48 of '90'l flocks of broiler -fryer chickens. • H you've ever had second thoughts about the hr~nd of cigarette you smoke, here's a quick way to find out if it really delivers what you want. The first quarter rate, 5.3 percent, was down ~~ly from last year when• arsenic residues were found 1in 15.5 peromt 9f'lhe·dllcken lloclu. DR. HARRY c. Mussman of the department's Animal and Plant Health Inspec,tion Setvice ·said he did not; know why the residues might be showing up. He said, however, there has been speculation that chemical overdosesi may have built up in feed bin& and other faciliti~ used , by growers. "But we want to emphasize that this is extremely low in toxicity Md that the levels we're talking about iren't going to · cause anyone· any trouble,'' Mussman told a reporter. OFFICIALS SAl.D ii t h e arsenic findings have ~been turned over to the Food and Drug Administration, which enforces federal regulations on food additives. I Toy Firm ' Deceit Charged WASHINkrON (UP.I\ - The FedJaI Trade C:Om- mission sa~s four manufac- turers or toys, hobby items and similar products are using packages which deceive the buyer into thinking he is get- ting more than he really is. Nained Monday in the com- plaint were-the Milton Bradley Con1pany, East Long Meadow, Mass.; Pasttime Industries, Inc., New York City; Edu- Cards Corp.; C.Ommack, N.Y., and Avalon Industries, Inc., Brooklyn N.Y. 11IE COMPLAJNI' ·did not speci£y which ptoducts were involved, but it said in each case the firms depicted on the exterior of lbe p~k.ages cer- tain · length!, widths a n d thicknesses which did not cor~ respond to what was in the package. It said these packag· ing practices were unfair, false, misleading and decep- tive. • 1n1 s .• ,..,...... tt. ... , .. ,..,.... CM. ,... P\. m • 1 tn.1111 These five simple tests will tell you a lot , about quality, freshne8s, and taste. • •I ~ ' Arid If you m~ these te~.s with a Winston, they'll tel~ y~u why Winston . smokers can wc>tnt to their brand and say, "How good it is!" Test #l Sniff It Take a'whiff of the tobacco. Does i(smell rich and fresh and appealing? If your ciga· rette is Winston, you'll recog- nize the aroma of costly Vintage Leaf Tobaccos. Winston chooses the most nearly perfect leaves money can buy. Then we age the se rare tobaccos in wood en casks. We do it for the sa me reason you'd age a fine wine. Aging makes our tobaccos mellow and brings out that extra dimension of natura l goodness. Test #4 Light It Does it bum evenly? Here's a • critical test-of the way your cigarette is rpade. A cigarette rolled fresh, packed full and made with care will bum evenly, draw easily. Winston always does. How does your brand shape up ? ' Aska Winston smoker. He'll tell}'OU . .. Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determ ined That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to You1 Health. Test #2 Feel h Roll the cigarette in your hand. Pinch it slightly. Does it feel stale? A cigarette that's been wait· -ing in a warehouse1 or on a shelf, can lose some of its freshness. Apd some of its taste. But, because Winston ;. sells so fast , every pack comes to you fr esh. The fac t is, on any given day, Winston is likely to be the freshe st cigarette your money can buy. Test #5 Smoke h What could be simpler? That's the real test of a cigarette. Can it deliver good taste and real. sat isfac tion every time you light up ? Winston can. Ask a' Winston smoker. Any time. He'll tell you in four simple words: How good it is. l • ' . \ Test #J Take a puff ••• before lighting Take a puff-without lighting it. : That's a good way to leam I about the tobacco and the liker. If you can taste the : tobaccos without lighting up, you know there's rich· . ness up front And that the filter doesn't get in the way of the taste. Winston's exclusive Filter· Blend, a . top-secret blend of different tobaccos~ works with Winston's modem white ' lilter to deliver ~tisfying taste in every puff. t i . • ·~ :' _,. • •• O lt ll •.1.•C11tOllllG•ACCOC., 20 mg. "tar", 1.4 mg. nicotine llV. per cigeran, FTC Repon FEB.73. ., • f DAILY PILOT T-.llUl,1973 PofftU!al Notes Transit System Backe~ by L WV. • • For the· Record Dlssol•tim.u ="· r. ... "'M:l:. ~ .. 1;.,:... r:,_.,~~ ... " ........ ~ Jr..~'""'"' 11" Of Marriage a=:~t:::.:·t::. "· '''"'°' =~--r.:· -.... Ot'I.,., '... . • / INT•ltLOCUTO!kD•Kllll ......., 0. lllt«M Jl:llcNt. &~M. 111'1111 Rilil l . e11. Jt•nnlne o • °"'" o , I~"'' • ll:M..,. ft Oh Ottt SilooUlra~vntlll.J ,,,,. '"" RMitld J. It !,!• ra1M111 s.,. •• ~" IMTI 11. Cot1111rn, ''" o. •l'ICI ""~ D.._ r. ,, .. ., _, Otrllllll 1tfll"" 11.0lt ind "'tl'IMlll !"'"", ,.,, 1nd1 M1rt1 H(lllltlnl ........ Llnl'I_!. \... Ind 1.lc .... 11rll E. • f';ftilllkY, Nr•I J. INS Sllt•rv • • ....... .., Mh~l\ell, M1rv Ltt E. 11>11 J1mn · Htf'Mlldtr. Dorl Ind f\rtlll.lr tttMV Croloof, (1rolt Ann.fnd MltHn Vtrnon ~'"'""· Ofot>r1 l!'ld Tony Nvr-. Ooril lcf1 Md Ah'ln J(lfW! lutlet. Alie• M. llld 'tll.m. M. De MouLln. Oon•lcf c . Ind Wlncll E. AUii, 0~1...,,,, •lld li11rlCW1 Al!rtd Florn, C1rmtlll1 ll'ld Olvkl Kl'11;, LI 111 I",. erldti1rold L" "~-·· 1(1ttl4r1M JICkloll Ind "-•Y· Huni.r, 1toliolf"tl Ind JOM AIDerl MkilHt c ......... d, ll1rti.r1 ElllM Ind J1me1 T"°"1050ll. Aubl'IY A. Ind Jr.n T. Ctlwln • Tin, Ml•V Elciln Ind Hit H ~· , ........ 1. Afllll Ind GrtclOrV R1Hv, Kl,..,, AnM ltlll Lto I l ollOll, H. "~ ..,., J1ne C1fM;rin1 Motiles, JOI trod Dtbrt 1Mrt1 Ar11,11, 6="'tnd R\Jdltf9 L. Mlllno, C.ndke L. AM ,..r1nk, r, D1v11, ,,,.y ll!d Arll'lur WlllQl'I •11ter1111 AMII a.I T111rtl'A'; Ll1'11141 l . Md $1,,,_ E. Crlv'lll, Frink l11'nffl tnd Joyce Hull, Roblrt Wllkltf' lflCI C"-I• R. 0 11111.W, Vedl Marie Ind ArllMlr F-. ~vii, ColltHn Ind Gord/II'\ A, PF\llllfl. Dirtior•h C. Ind Ollwr T. CIJl'rl1, Jlfl 1'11111 K.,.rv Adrienne ' TAKES COMMAND Mlrln• Quinn Wffd. Lor.ill JMMI Ind L•w~• Bri, Sholrrl L. 1fld Tllomll s. B•~ Mwforll ... Ind Rolllrl c. ,,.,. Bell, M1rg1•d To!1«1 Incl Gtoroe H. ... MIK•V-, p1..,1 v . i nd Jllll Howttl, ,.hvl1l1 D. lfld Wllll1m Frl,.dl G Q Wllll. AlllOlllllll R. lfld W11!1r Rabtrll, Rklllrd LIWil tnd Miry Sue e1i. lt;nn MICIWlll Wtch111m. l-1 l . Ind Willi'• L. .. L••50!'I, ~ Morrla llld li1Mll flyM, Mlldr• S. and W111" T. Eiltlf'4' H9fld~ ...,lftM, ~h'l'ltr I II ti 87 O.C. RVSTINGS Of .. o.lh' ......... The Orqe C.WUy League ol Women Voters ha& eooe on record in support of "measures designed to achieve a b a I a n c e d transportation system, OD the ifOund and in the air, for Orange O>unty, while recogni.Zing tbe Influence of transportation on land use and the urban development." The league emphaslud that the ·~ 1-' or transportatfon systems must like hlib prlorit;y. The pooltloa stal'10Mlllt was made after a conoenaus was ruched among the league's 900 members In the seven participating local Ieaeues in the county, a spokesman said. ·~league supports a dual- purposo public transportation system to serve the transit dependent and to_ provide a Coast School Districts To Share Federal Aid Hol'le, RllWI A?,:l Riii R. .., 0 " ... Bvrton, Forr111 . ,,., TtrM Dt JtMlt "''' N Ch• f BifM!Ni,., ..... 'f.l and Clllr!H N. """''" IMU• I. Ind WTlllll'll e. ew ·e Good r w h" N ~--I . ed that Will, AM Mir 1 Jftneti Huber! , ,1111111'1, l"tlrf(.11 M. trod ~onttd I(, (I ntWS tom ti 1ngton erQUR e<>mp &Ul E1lot1, Al111 •rid 1 rlc • Gl111W, P'r1nctt Olontll 1f\d E1rl M-• f lne Or -~·•• ·• utt11 ron1T•F!C' \..Ind Joe Ch•rltt A•mlfltt came uyuay or n ange Conaress has und~~eh:v Hefti, 11ow1n:1 o.t d Ind Norm• JMl'I ""fY· J1141"' H. _,,., l11P'l911 H. Coast school districts awaiUng s;~'~e!.!. J~• ~~.-v.fuo. inr::;.,:1•nnt ·111nor ,n11 RodMY At El Toro 18 much 81 fl million 1n the funding in recent y~, Smllti, flirl11r.;'lvnn ....... 1. T•••·-. T•~1 J ..... Rtlblrt F. J d I Id and said \.a }J.....W 'he a ... S1>1Qnol1, ELl•nor Cir 1nd Ch•• 11 "' · • "" e era a "" ·~ Thom•• .'f,aur .... T•ud't' J. 1nd How1rd L. •• • d"t\ I "" "\I' th" Wt\111, Joi"' c1vd1 ind tren• M1rl1 H111. Ferna J11n •nd 0on11d Elwood EL TORO _ Bri" G"n \Vil· President Nixon signed an 1 ona 'f'\IU mi ion IS year Griuer. Rlch•rd o. •nd s1n1 1'1or11n ~luk, P1ut F. •nd ROO.•t• L. o • ~ · would restore those cutbacks. Hobl ... Mlrlorle Sui•" Ind TMlmll Ptrls. Donni M1rlt Ind Elmo Leroy 11'am R Qu"11111 11'111 assume $593 appropriations bill that F~ll E1Uotl, Elv1 and J•mtl F • ·n 'd d' t t Next year San Joaquin's 1---:~~~·Dol:: ~::n :: ~%--01·c:;:;;!J,~~~ ... ·~L. -.--'-c.ommi'!rulQf MaJ:looJM~Afr -i~at~.ffi~~~t~~~~~ har.e...o!JheJnilitary funding Rl~lllrd T le-,o, L. J., Jr. Ind EtttM s•·t1'on (MCAS ) El Tor -~ . . I . w1"ll be. div1"ded between the Vlftl1nd, Melvin tnd Shlrlav J. t!ll 11ml, K1rln1 Ind Sh•hrolcll .., ' 0 ""'"" Ch1Jdren from ffi l It a r Y Frttch. Dorothy J. Ind Eclwtr<I G. St let. J1mn J. •!Id '•trklJo A. Marine corps Air Bases Welt· families new}¥ created Irvine, Tustin, Kl1111, Cr•IQ c1r1rr 1nc:r 8onn11 RIJlll Clovd. Lindi o.r1e111 Ind ....,1n D•vld ' · and. Saddlebeck Unified school ,J~1~t T•mtr• ..,,.,. ind · JDhn ~~~1!~ K:~~1:11,:'1~-::;:' L•rov ern Area, during cerem onlel The money, which wlll apply districts. ••rL•7~,~r1111 A .• nc:r AOlllrt c. T1111i. Arnn1 v . ..,. c.,.." here Mar 4. toward the scttool year ending LI r1. ct11rv1 Jo end Ron11d w1111r, D•rk. J11U• R. ind tt11p11 A.. • th" ; h -h Id Other Orange 'Coast school r , • l'llll"Vltl"· Wlllltm G. Ind~ I. For the put year and a hall JS me, al e up un-Robln-on. o.t1or1h L" •nd 5t.phin CIM. Ed1111 L. '"" Dewwot o. t"I lat m" Ille ~--• ar r&etrlct1 'that will get fed eral w P1ul W1tl, Mlt'lt J11n llld T...,_ C..-.otl L~ ""'° i...-...0 ..t"f oned In w~t.. I e 1~.. ye F"•nk1. ll'Cll!lfltl E. •nd CwH!dolvn ~M OOnn••·-'•ltllll w. lll: -~ -I ~ became 0 t clbagfetDl!ltt a J>~ropdatlons: Capistrano .Clltton. Cll\lde b11C Ind Mlrtlll E airb.ri LllC1• irtc. , ""' · gt 0 C d" ~ · ol U • -000 H t" t At""'°"· J~ Mlrl• •nd Jchll wn11.,., v,an•.:...., v · in on , · ., as 1rc:i.;•Or • between President Nixon and n • ...,.,, ; un mg on T111, Miry Lou Ind Wttti.rt Do!llld fl!"" G · Be ch ~ H' h $85 000 Rooen,Llovd er11111, Jr .. •nd Su,.,.,... Systems Support roup at ~ta-Congr~ on•the stze of the.a~ a USMOn 1g ' , ; o/t':,,'"!M1ro1r11 M. •nd orr1kl A. Jine Corps headquarters. ·propriation. Foum.t:a Valley elementary, Robol'rt1. 01rrv1 M. 1nd Gtor11nnn T E Th fi I I t I $86 $75,900; Rtmtington Be a ch Tllor" """ 0. •!'Id .-.11111 Fl" ax xpert Quinn will replace Mai· Gen. e ma 0 a was 11'11...-.,..11 u . · ·i1 · th p ·d t elell8ltary, $23,~ a• d M1uro. 01,.,.t."" •nd Andrewl"'" H S H'll ,.;.,,. m1 l~n more an res1 en G10fflb, wu111m •· •nd J-. ome r . l ' comman~'!Jo .Nixon requested from Ocean Vi ew elemeatary, L1loe>11. C'/l'lthl• J. 1nd Wllrl•m G. Pleads I ol th Thi d fi.1ariBt? $50 000 McCleU1n, ElllM A. Ind Llrrv D. eenera e r Congress. ' . Mllll!'f', Tlffll Ann 11wl ~I RIV · mft... h h id ~ • --·· d" " ••• ..... GrMl1m, Glorl1 Ann 111d Leon Arcl'Dft n 111g, \VtkJ fW. e J ~ biagtSt appropr\afiOll LlllirX lStrictS Q-~ ·on Llfld. D•vld Nell 11wl N•ncv Lvnn · -~r I •~ ~" Sa ~ · the ~ • J h"ld -P.1rktr, s111dr1 J. •nd RotMrt w. Jr. other pcMll!S 1n uuu ... 1on O 1is;, ww go to the n -qum aiSJS • C I ren Burl!tv, Michell L""nd D1vld L. ' · A '\ • ~ \..._ ct-a-~A\ .,.,._ ' -· ___.. 6 .... a fed J Hont lns, J••n e11e111 •nd J1rnn G-!lty owa suice pr1 "· •Wmm uc -mentary ~ u.tr1ct, pa •. ..,._ ~-. ..:or -era .. ~f111~·M1•l•n 0. •nd Rocco F••n• IW tormer commander, Major which · npecti at I ea s-r ~govtmJDellt., but do not live on · s"F1~~nwn~•ncv Jo•n •nd Ch••._ ... • GenJiil: J'rank c. Ladg, was M24 ,000., " .. a dt.y bale. Schools are ~~~u~~.~"R!:.1\i""A. A Senta Ana: tax pnparer transfemd to. Ja~ ''Tht.. is onty fair,'' seid S. mma...se11. f« education .t' a111r111mtr. J1mt1L.1nc1 e1v1rlv A. has pleaded guilty to aiding Quinn, 49, a native of Nev.• Joaquin Business Manager these children at a lower rate Death Notice• . and assisting in the prepara· York. has been a ?-.1arine offic-]{ex Ner11on on hearing the 1han for children of parents tion of a false income tax erend naval aviator since 1944. news. ,.We have 1,500 kids wh~ actually live on federal lwlble allen>aUve to prlv1\e car llllfl•· Meml>erl urged 11111 11&e ol .-dlu mxn Ill level> of government" to reach that goal, tlie opokesman lllld. The league 11ld lt was also pleased with the prllfll"OSS made by tbe Oronge County Transit Dlltrlct in meeting community needs. * * * SECRETARY o! Commerce Frederlct B. Dent wW speak to lilt Republican Asoocllltes of Orange County at a diMer meeting 'l'llunday. The meet- ing will begin at 8:30 p.m. at the Newporter Inn. * * * ARTHUR B. WRIGHT of Corona del Mar -has been el~ed president . ·of t-h e Ntwpott Democnillc Club. Other ctficen art John and I -READ-RECENIL Y Jl:iA L 1URJALS .. JN...ARUl'l61.0.li .A OTHER NATIONAL CEMETERIES WERE BEING RESTlUCTED. IS THERE ANYTHING I CAN DO AT THE PRESENT TIME WHICH Will ASSURE ME OF A GR.AVE SPACE IN A NATl0)'4Al CEMETERY 7 by EUGENE O. BERGERON ' a.tW .-e la • Nftl ... I CetNtery k alloccn4 Oftly at tM ti• of .&eatll. n.r. h ao provhle11 t. tlloe ,.. • ....._for udtMlt 1rave spoce hr fshr,. -.cl. To occet.,... a req...-f6f tpoc• who• tMatti occ.,.,, tt w•.W be weft for n te tine • copy of ._.., discll.,.. record 111 011r flies. We wlft .... • ,.ofK.,, hell yMI °""9M 4fldrMup. TMre h M ckrflo 1or oi.11tatlot1 for do ... tMs. T11ere •re 1bty-llx Natlonal c......,s.. located 11 Hilrty-ofte item. HQW 10119 it wlll take to All tMw c•...._Mt ., tM PfW911t f'Olte k _. .. _... co...-h pi•••itt co111ldet'l11t tile expctMlo0 Of tlie N.,..._. C.Meterr tytl't'm. Wa win hn• tho 4ott!M1 when ••t challCJH occur. HMu c&tl •tit ~.l11J!!: for tdot1nC1tlo11. Whffner po11lblt-, ci11etr.._ wlll M •lllW9fHI " tkh c&t911m. Balt%·Bergeron Ft1neral Hotne COSTA MESA 2 LOCATIONI CORONA d•I MAR 646-2424 673-9450 •ILL JoM G. Bell formtr1v ol L1 lwr1 world . Olli' DI oe1•h Nwll lO, ltn •II FIUDrool!, c1111. S11rvlvte1 by wlf• R0$1nn. A e1.1uaht1r Dorothy Ono of Lt Hibl'•. Two i.on1; Robtrl Fin" QI W. Covlnt1 Ind Wllltam Finn ol NIW Yort<. SI• QTllldc!llJOrltll Ind Oftl t>ralhtr, HI Wll 1stl1t111t Dvllneu tn1n19tr ot Looc1I No. 11 °' 1.a.1.~¥1~ ...., ArtMI"' ..., _ _..,. ooi'l'!Tld tlJ! ulLAGWT• Allll!Dr11\' 11¥ c:io., Pl'! Br-It' In,,..._ llfwtr M -'''"" ~ r1llremenl. Strvlcn Tftun.cllV 11 1 o.m. lit P1clllo-View Cl\lpel. lnlombmenl If P1cltlc \lltw M-•l•I P1rk. VlllllllOl'I WedMMllY ,..., p.m. P1cUlc VllW• return for a client and to fail-A veteran of World War II , here whose parents live on the property. . ing to file his own tax return Korea and Vietnam, he hii.s El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta· President Nixon had askedl --'-~~=~===========--'--..C...-'--'== ::=====---== for 1968 of $60,000, U.S. Atty. nov.'TI propellor-driven and j"t tion, but who don 't pay five Congress to .e1iminate this Mor1u1rv Olreclor1. · Ml!Yl!R lilltn A. Meyer 191 '9 Qf COlll Ml$1. D•I• of di.1th Aorn :zt, im. Stli'YIWd DY'' "''" ~hen: /Dlln H. Mlv•r J;t_'· GltOl'M W. ~ Clrfl' ""'1fff. 111 CQ1t• MtM. Sl9'• Mt;!51f1M n 11r Ind "'-' "'-\I. -~ .... , fllfl1 Portltncl, Oi'i: Slrvlc1t ldMM=. Y 2, 11 2 o.m., 'Win II!' F 1mUy I 1ry C1'apel, Dr. Jev ~'"'" «11.., Lclall!'IQ. ln1ermtnl 11 F1lrh1wn Mernll't .. f'wt. Wlnbla1« fMt'l~' -• 0eu1 e. UNF •1r .. """""· ..i bv h ltd' Udo : C1 1' Two d1UQhl1r:.'\:1e11 Jan• onclr• 1nd~rr.1d1 Shtrm1n. 0111 i.on Audoll)h H. L1nge. Thrl!'I borhl1r1: Arthur, Git0t91, Incl E. w. Llnoe. SI~ 1l1t1r1: Ern1 Atdm1n, Mllrlll• Sw,nouen, H1r1! Hoclg11, fll1 w11u, Ml•!• Winton, Gurl•ud• s1wvar. Six 1r1nckhlldrt" Ind $1• D , • I •. or11•11Xlll1dr1". Cr1ve$ld9 s Ir v I cf t w1c1..-i.dlv. 2 p,m, It W111ml"S1~• Mffll<!rl1I P1rk. orrecltd by P .. k F1ml1v Colot1l1I Fu..-r11 Hom~. Wutmln1ttr. LOlllODON C'learltl« L. L°""*" -a• 14, ol Coo!<t Mesi. D1t1 (If ~II! A .. 11 . 31).,, 1911. Survived b¥ w!l<t M~ Al'llll•n'. ~; • d1UQht1r Mr1. lelty, J, Sdll!IWllr .. belll of tod1 Mt11. Ohl 1011 ... i..,.1 D'. LGnllllon of El Mont.. Ttnl/'8rlddltl*'11 •nd !Ive o•eat_""'*"'.,. ,......_, ""'II bl Wldnt-. ,,_.,,, 2. 1111! I It!. In Woo.tr.tiff Ch!IC>ft wffft ..... llotW "'9' Clffk t.illlf, 1n1ermtnt 11 H1r110r Ant Mtmor1•1 P .. r~. -,_!~tiff ,__IV Dlrlel.,1 ~. .tllllUl!lltE I> llON WESTCLIJ'F MORTUARY m I!. 1'lltl llt •• c.nta M-11..- BALTUfatil!Rm. PUJllllML BOMI! Carma de! Mar l'IUl!G com Men •zut • B1!LL BROADW.W MORTUARY llt Broadw.,; CID Miu LL~ • MtlXJllMICll LAGUNA llllACB MOB.'lllA&"I: 1'111' Laguna Ciayo11 Ket f!M-9415 • P"ACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK CmnetwJ Mortuary Chapel -· l'llotllc Vin Drive N-&Jlcll..- IH-Zlll • PSHFMm.Y COLOl'llM> FtJN&IW. -1111Bol\Jo-w-•• l!Mll'llB' ~.\BY ..,_lk . ilmdlnpJD -··- William D. Keller annOl.Ulced fie:hter planes os 'vell as heli· cents in property taxes toward •second category on grounds today. cootcrs. suppart of their kids." lhat""these ~ts do pay Dtu:tng the year.s t 1'6 s HI.a personal decorations in--Nerison said the d1str1ct ha!· property taxes and 5Choob: through J971 , ~1arvin T. elude three awards cf the Dis-assumed since July 19'n that it therefore had 'tlo right to be Stinson, 43, of 1217 W. Camden tinguished Flying Cross, the would get the money, and has retmbursed. Pllce, oPef'8tecl a fbx prepara-Bronte 9lar Medal wlth Com· spent accordingly. BUt he said,. However· Coogress passed a tion and bookkeeping service bat "V." the Merilorita Ser· "We were never completely meosure including fuhding in known as Orange County \'Ice Medal and· to a\vards 'Of sure it· was ·going to -come both categories of Public Law moome.Tu.S8rvtce at. rus E. the Air Medal. throuib-We wind qp hotcilng, 874, as tDe bill authorizin& JjlnMln .Kva.,.Aoaheim and. at Quinn ~ his \9ife, Mary our breaths everr fear,. but it fede.l'af relmbunement to 808 E . KateUa Av~ .• Orange. J'ane, have three daughters was worse-than usual this scliools ·ts called, l&d Presi· In Januaiy -1974 Special ond a soo. year." dent Nixon r;igned it. -II ol 1111' Iatelllgence ' • Dlvl1h111 or. the I lf't ~ rn,a· I Revenue ·S.rviee searc:hed the premises and.seized:numerOUI copies or' allegedly r a I s e , returns. 3 SUulents Wi1i Honors SANT A-ANA -Students from three oranae Coast high scbooi» were sclieduled to r8Clive-dttzenship awards tod>y wlil!n the' OranlP! Coun- ll' Bir Assoctallon held its armuaf Law Day luncheon at tft• Slddltbaair Inn bere. Atnallg nr orange County llla!i· ICbool students named tmi the-honor · wmi: Debra Y~, San Clemente High Scho&J~. Terry Watt, Corona del Mar High School and Michael Lloyd Davies, M.arina HighlSehoel, Hunting ton Beach. U.S. District Court Judge Wm:en • FeJ'1119111 v.•as the featured speaker at the noon IWlcheon. lD'S I( fllENDLY D J'Oll' •• new ncighbon or ltnow of anyone moving to our area. J)lrue tell us so \hat we ml!)' extend a fttendlf W'tteom• and h('IJJ them to become acqUAintt'd ht, their new suaounttings. SI. Clast Mr 49Ml19 -·369 -. ~Dey at -ley-slone. Keystone Savings ts more tohan a place to save money. It's a place to make money. We're here to rtlaka J1llllmOJk!Y grow. lqstwwW111JDs· the lay •dd• Nowyou can get $25 cash In S seconds 24 hours a day. Just Insert your special cant'tn Xeystone's Monev Machine and. oat comes your $25. This is a tree service to our eustomers who n\alntatn SSOO In their regular passbook savings ar::count- it's deslgned to save you ttme and reduce your check writing expenses. Stop by Keystone soon. Open your savtngs account, choose the free services Vo'1 ~ant, and get your Money Machlne card. You feel r richer at Keystone. With good. reason. OKEYSTONE SAVINGS ANO LOl'll ASSOCIATION ltarllor Visitor 646-0174 lolllll<l,W. c:npm, Ch•lrm1n of 1!111 lloArd , txecullve 11Ulte! W!!!itmlhtler, 1401] 11e~c~ Blvd .. 1111u 10 11a·rcnnv Inn, rhon11 B9.J.2(9f. A111hef1n omctt 155 N. tlidld-upp()~lre llroa11 w.1v Roblnso11·~, l'honr. 772·7~~0. Alrporl Ccmler, N1wpon oflk•H 4301 MacArthur Blvd.. l'hont IU.0567 Asscrs o\or 560 mnuon. Color portrait of your child, 1.49. Truly professional portraits. Select from several poses. • Large 5 x 7" size photo . . 1.49 each • Set of 4 wallet size . . . . . 1.49 set \ .... '· . . ,b,,. ' • ,, 'il ./ ,; . "~ l"•r .. /' fJ.'.'-.• ' . . , reasury llfff;-lf"d lood- IANTA ANA NO ot so. COff! Plaza Two children photographed together ••• Z.91. f•ll color ,ortniltt I• o 1111 1•lt1l.l1 fer fremiitl - ptrflct for glfh. All ptrtrolts 4tliwtrt4 to y.1 at our :tore by . Treasury a11aclatts. PHOTOGRAPHY HOURS 111!1. 1111. lllUll. I Ill. 1111 1-l-l-! FllOll 1111 4 lltll 18 5 P.I. I !.I. 11 HI P .1. IUENAPAll '""'"'°"'"!lo<~ OIANGE G-GIMBhi.lllM- o,.1w11•11p l:JI 111131 • su~•rs 11 te 1 • •. FROM Fash ion Island N.ewport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR L " • \ ( ' ~ ~ ~ ' ,. . . ' . ' • . ' ' .. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ~ ~ J i 1 ~ ~ ~ ~ ' ~ ~ -~ ~ -~ 3 ~ , ' i ~ " ~ ~ ' " ' ' < • ~ I I ... B w •ho! beOJ org1 wile rout IU day w Ma! Hig .. R will tea< bod exp gra 8' five Siu• .... 'J to m fr SU .... 150 gen 1 pro COii occ pro spo ( plo be< COi s Jef Wo s arx the 1 ... ror vit. 1 Sta ch< ti~ ME ne• K~ ' . I utSday, May l, 1~73 DAILY PILO r 0 . Sp. anking-Heyday · Has Met Its End cEEEDHead --· . · Sets Talk ., . By WUlJAM SCUREIBER frequent" to "fairly often" punishment Is "on the way out to break up a scuffle at the ~trs. Earl Hubbs, pB't vice among principals contacted. because It ls a poqr but quick school several years ago in-president of the Harbor Coun- Elvin Hutchison of Kaiser way to solve problems." volvlng some non-students. 'ell of the PTA. Gil Ferguson, director ol c;EEEO. an orgaoizaUoo that ~ Stern t9th century classroom dtsclpli~ns were convinced a good "caning" with a stou~ birch rod Was the best way of dealing with a roomful of rowdy students. -Although principals In the Newport-Mesa School District School in Costa Mesa says he ' All the dlstrJct's high school "When you see a fist coming Mrs. Judy Riley, president useS it about 10 to 12 times a principals say corpOral punish-at your face, there's not much of the Davi~ Middle Scbool xear. ) ment a~ .. thelr level ls not a time to decide whether or not .PTA, also said her group has "It is a last resort effort and useful tool for discipline. ·you are going to defend never had any negative feed· represents business a n d development interests, wiU ·;. spea k at noon Thursday to the Huptingtoo Beacp ())amber ol ~" Commerce. ~ l' .. say those days are long past, most admit an occasional pad- dling is eUecttve when they need to bring ,around most in- corrigible students. Newport-Mesa d l s t r i c: t trustees are c urr e nt ly . weighing the pbilosopby - and the schools ' policy -Cl! phys.lcal punishment. when l"'USe it, I try to make a "It ls counterproductive to yourself," he said. back. good enough impreS$ion so the the self..<flscipline these kids According to several Parent-SEVERAL SCHOOL tnl5tees 'l 'tie used it, but 011ly as last resort a11d-tt'ltla parents' 11pprot'af.' ...... ---------- student won't be back tomor- row," he said. "But it never comes without a lot of talk beforehand." art trying to develoP." said Teacher Association offi cials have voiced strong opposition Ne wport Harbor .mgh Prin-contacted, cor poral punish-to any use of corporal punish- cipa, Charles Godshall. ment bas never been a con· ment call ing it "demeaning" rLrivo HARRl)tAN 0 f cern because lhe rules govern· and ·'entbarrassing." Estancia High in Costa Mesa ing it have rarely ~n nbused. District officials admit. the said corporal punishment in "We've heard plenty of flinal discussion on the policy high schools "becomes a mat-other gripes but ne\•er once a \\'ill be he a t e d an1 ter or 8 game and 50 that day complaint about un~·arranted philosophi('a\ but none v.·ould is gone by." · corporal punishment," said speculate on the outcome. The meeting will be at the She raton Bench Inn at 21112 Pacific Coa~t Highway, Hun- 1ington Beach. The New York steak lunch is $4.25. . ., Deadline for reservations IJ : Thur5dav. ,, CE EED stands for Council ' for Erivironment. Empk>y- menl , Economy and Develop- ment. ''I wish they never invented chick en pox." Without exceptioo, the prin--1~~~~~----=--H=A=··~-;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;s~ .• cipals contacted said this is a distinct possibility that some TB E y • V E ASK E D Wll.LIAM RITTER of Lin-teachers use coriporal punish· • Superintendent John Nicoll !or ment in the classroom without .coin School In Corona de! Mar u1 · th · · al a report detailing the feelings cons ltng e princtp s or "S G od It w ·11 says he almost never uses t o o . . . l of school principa ls a nd paddling because it "isn't a pareltn sh. d 1. t . Haunt Y;oii 'Tit l !s Gone.'' Huntington High analyzing the effects of-it. th hil · f . " appcns an tn no wor w e means o getting a naive enough _to say it SPECIAL OI' THE w111e. ----: Almost all principals in-change in behavior." doesn't," said Reece. "If I get ·spiral Sli~ed I o1:11 .. 1c1ous. TASTY 9 Mini-Course Day: terviewed by the Daily Pilot Horance Ensigo Mid d I e an incident where a teacher • HAM SPREAD · .. ·· · · .... 1 f Li. say paddling is rarely used to-School Principal W i 11 a rd backhands a student, I usually Whole or Half day -85 a last resort. Reece says he uses it off and try to handle it with reason." e Ready to Serve with Honey 'n Spice Glaze "Corporal punishment is on but sometimes there are ·• Spiral Sliced From Top to Bottom generally a no-win game for weeks when he used it often. GODSHA.Ll... SAID it prob-e We Package and Ship from W id f 'F . everyone tnvolved," said T.J. "So much of the need for ably happens occasionally 00 Coast to Coast · Farris f Coro d 1 M an athletic ·field but if it were -or o---op11·cs--'Elemeniaryo sctioo'i-"t~e us!f ythioo'ungdstere,f:---ehen sad~,d•-. 'l/!It'sthae seriou!,"-Pd-be-the-first one-to e Full Service Delicatessen " h bot · ( tbe • lmportedCJieeses anCfWlnes-'it, but only as e last resort thing some actually enjoy and ear a u it rom -and with the n!l .... n•n• an-parent." • Catering· --A Speciality r--..... 1-:1 r brag about. I can just sense M 1100 E. CCHHt Hlthwoy, CorctH d-8 M• -673-9000 proval " when to do it to a child." Don Achziger of Costa esa &lodl of c II: t By CANDACE PEARSON Reed , Pub Ii c-infonnation . High said he and several ___ _c'= wnt r rown• i 111ur1n ot ttw °"'" Pt"' '''" director for Huntin g ton WILL I A ~f ILUllLTON, REECE SAYS c orpor a l teachers l_iad to use their fl!t.S 1222 s. lroolh11nt, A1dfl• 635·1461 Where can a student learn Beach; representatives of principal at COsta Mesa'sl-~':'.".~~~.:_:."_'..~~.'..._~~"'.:',.':".'.'.'._'.'.~~~'.:_"""'.~"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'""'""""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'~ about bonsai • trees, laser Assemblyman Robert Burke Calllornla School, generally beams, drug abuse, macrame, CR-Hunt:ingt.on_._Beach);_ -Dr. agreed with Farris' assess- organic foods , e v o 1 u t I o n , Louis Serrano of the Jet ment. wilderness survival, comedy Propulsion .Lab 0 r aHt 0 tb~ ; "I haven't used the paddle routines, television news and representahves of 0 1 e in two years because you can 141 other subjects all in one Newport Boat ~es, Gene:at usually reason w1th 99 percent day? Tele~one,. Famlly Service of the kids· and solve the pro!> Why, at Mini-O>urse Day Or~ani~tion, <>i:ange Coast !em that way,"' he said. "The May 7 at Huntington Beach Daily-Pdot and Disneyland. ~-best-means l've-founa is· o High School . THERE ARE classes to ap. bring the child Jn and then let -._Regular faculty members peal to almost _any mterest, him talk to his _parents on_~ will be joined by g u e s t During the same period, one phone." teachers from the student class may study c a k e Su r p r I s i n g .1 y: in the body and community for the decorating, while. a n o t he r ~ewport·Mesa district, the experimental, fir st-year pr1r discusses c o n s um e r pro-highest frequency of corporal gram. tection. One group of students punishment Is not in the SCHOOL WILL be 8 special will learn contract bridge, or el~mentary schools but at the synchronized swimming while nuddle schools: None of the five-period day, to allow each another hears "how to make It district's high schools use any student to choose five of the in show biz . ., form of fonnal c 0 r p 0 r a I ~ A class in history of the punishment, officials said. There a.re elases bari>ershop quartet cootrasts MIDDLE SCHOOL paddling with "Is Peace Possible?" to appeal to al• ranges from " v er y In- most any interest, CULTURAL INTERESl'S from t r 1 " I a I to are served by classes in music ssooo :&·1ear certillcate ' FRU: FJMAMCIAt;'IEllVICEa lneiude 8ale Deposit Bos, Travellers' Cbeelu, NotarJ hrvloe, Mone7 Orders, COpJinl nmco ... and The Capital Clull Hrvln1 rtlre1hm.ent1 evel')' daJ and lreq,ueat e"Yenh and trips ••• wltb qua1U:rln1 accouat. • •ublln•e. the 0, y. c o.m e d y im· Clerk Gets personations, magic a n d .. ~ s howman~hip, ~unity theater, theater workshop, Greek folk-dancing, hoh-or films, a showing and analysis of the move "Patton," modern tap and jazz dance and portraits and caricatures. Goose Bumps At Debut 150 classes offered in nine general areas. Those are academic inr provement, arts and crafts, community concerns, hobbies, occupations, p e r s o n a I im· provement, sped.al interests, sports and field trips. (A similar event, Ex· ploratory Leaming Day, has been held for a few years at Corona del Mar High School.) Student coordinators are Jell Schlicliter and John Woodlock. SCHLICHTER SAID stall and students suggested classes they wanted to take «r teach. Tlie course catalog was organlzed lrom those surveys; community lecturers were in- vited where necessary. Tho.se include officials from Standard Oil; William Fit- chen, Orange eouhiy air pollu· tion control offteer; Jess Marlow, KN BC 'televi sion newscaster; James F o y , KNBC editorial direc tor; Bill Students lnteresled in instant SAN DIEGO (AP) -Estella help can take rapid spelling or Snowden i.s a department store speed reading. Those coo-sales clerk who's dreamed cemed with how the campus is since childhood or starting as run will be able to take a class a concert singer. Her boss has called "DiscU:ssioo with the made her dream come true. Principal." She drew hearty applause A few teachers appear to tie from 120 formally clad music taking advantage of summer lovers in a weekend concert, vacation m a t e r i a I s or arranged and firi,anced by l\le specialized bobbies. There are store owner, Goerge A. Scott. offerings of a look at France "I got goose bumps," .said a slides of East Germany, slides fellow saleslady, Jean Stevens, on bird lixldermy and slides who was in the audience. o! Europe. Mrs. Snowden's JS-year-old The catalog was presented Do declared · "Our last week to Huntington Beach son, n: . · Union High School trustees. .... whole ra~1ly 1s very proud of After reviewing it, board her. I . think ~he ma~ ev.~n president Dennis ~1angers said tually hke to sing full tune. he planned to attend at least Until then, however, it's part of the day and added back to c:lerklng for Mrs. "I've already seen about ii Snowden -in the store's things I can'~ do without." china department. WOMEN'S COUNCIL OF NEWPOR.!, HARBOR-COSTA MESA IOARD OF REALTORS Sponsors a Comprehensive Course in Professional CounselinCJ Techniq&!eS MUCH MORE THAN A SEl!llNAR-Not Just A-er Sain COYne WOMEN, AS WELL AS MEN, NOW HAVE AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY TO SUCCEED ON A PROFESSIONAL BASIS, WITHOUT THE NEED FOR "SA LESMANSHIP" IN THEIR PRESENT FIELD OR PLANNED ENDEAVOR. Tlir•• full d1ys of i11+.11tlY• ln1frucfion te1ch- •1 you how to quickly 1chi1v1 mor1 inc::orn1, 1horl1r houri, man•.9• your c1itnh, ind bu ild 1 p1rm1n1nt, lif1-lon9 c1r11r. A1.1thor1d end in1h-uct1d bv C. Ch1tl11 Ch1th1m, S.E.C., Re1ltor, 111tionelly known for hi1 out· 1fe11din9 1ucc111 with hundredt of m1ture 1tud111h in ]'4 1t1t11 whose incom11 h1v1 rhen clr1m•- tlc•rly 1ft•r t1ki119 hi1 cour11. Thi• opportunity it now offered you ••. but yo11 must act TODAY. MAY 18, 9", i 0 -8:30 a.m. -5:30 p.m. CALLINS AU WOMEN ••• 1M MEN ! Thi1 coutte g•h immedl1te re1ulh if yo11 ere now in or pl•n to 1111 r11id111+i1I, coft'lmer· ci1l, i..d111trl1I r111 11t1te or land. If yo 11 1r1 '" 1xch11t9or, bfo .. et, •ppr111r, 1•le1 , manager, 1Hor11ey, CPA. 4odor, l11111r1nc1: •gent in•11tm1nt l»roker, •fc. Portion of tuition goes into SCHOLARSHIP FUND, Women's Council, Newport Harbor • Casta Mesa Board of Realtors. LOCATION• NEWPOllT!l INN 1107 J ...... R4 •• N..,..._ .. ...... '4+1700 M.U cliKb ,.,... ·._, 't:fJ•11114il of N'""''" ~Cit M111 loerd of Re1 ltor1. ..... .,....., ... , Ch1 rl11 H. C1lll1111, S.E.C., R19l1tr1r 211f New,.n II~ •• Newport l11ch 926•1 REGISTRATION APPLICATION L• ••••'!I•••••••• • ::=:"'..:. ~=-..: 'jJrn:i: =: :'~".: • t, 11, I w411 ,ar lltf.11 MllMI Vl'ft lllf9l1ilt Tllll1 httl..... 111 Witt lt\l._..IL coffM ilfMkt • • i.ncttM!lt. . "-................................ . . ............................ . • • City • • ••••••.••• • • • • • • • • Zip • . • • • • • • • T•S,P••• Ne ••••••••••••••••• • M"Mf Ctw1'9t If' l•nl!AIMl'klrt _, .. 11M11 .... NMllKI If f\1111111. Telephone 615-4t•I .............................. ~ ............ •, ' ' ( It could be a _nice .~latlonshlil 2744 .I.Coast R~J· Corona .de ar plentiful, free on·site parking \Vestern Federal Sa.\•ingi; • Assets over $300 million • Hugh Evans, Jr., P resident Head Office : 6th & Hill , Los Angeleai wi th 12 branch offices serving Los An geles and Orana:e Countiet. l ' . .. . ... "·~ .. ~. •c .. ' . . • ' .. • .. ' ,. . l • • ' • • r I • I ' . ' • ' Jf DAILY PILOT . ~Senator's Good Deed -Reve81ed - PEOPLE ) ( . - Everett banker knew the iden- tity of the donor. --r Because the 1971 Federal Election Campaign Att re- quired disclosure of con- tributions and expenditures -begihning in April 197'l, it--was revealed that Jackson put all hi s income from writing and speaking engagements into the Gertrude Jackson Memorial Fund . . The fund is named for the senator's sister, a third-grade teacher for 42 years at Everett. * The daughter of the late Welsh poet Dylan Thoma• married a !aCtory worker. ·Mal'l"iage-vom-were ex- changed in London b y Aeroawy Tboma1 and Trefor Ellis. The coopl e -bolh 25 - met last year when Miss T h o m a s accompanied a Wel!h choir on a U.S. tour in which -me read her father's works and Ellis sang tenor . * Norwegian .Crown Prince e.-.ld spent an afternoon relaxing and sailing with friends on Galveston Bay and attended a private dinner. Crown Prince Harold is in Houston to attend the firth an- nual 0 f f s h o r e Technology ""'1:onference. * Dr. Jobn R. Bopess, a veteran of some tumultuoua collegiate times there, was named as president of the University of Washington . . Rogness, 50. a former top aide to retiring president diaries E. Odegaant. will assume the head of the 34,QOO. st udent university in spring. 1971. * The strains of ... "Take the A Train," "Mood Indigo" and "Don't Get. Around ~1uch Anymore" filtered through the Clark f.ollege auditorium . It was Duke Ellln~n's 74th birthday and Clark College observed it by having its band perform a few of the 1,®plus aoogs_EJlington has wrilten. The college also bestowed an }mnorary doctor of human ities degree upon the still-active Ellington. * Peggy Sue Wallace, the 23- year~ld daughter of Gov. George C. Wallace, said she is engaged to marry Mark KeD- nedy of Greenville, Ala. Peggy sakl Kennedy gave her the ring on Easter and they planned to marry in December. * President Ttto cabled his syrripathies to President Nixon for floods that ravaged areas of the United States , the presidential office said in Belgrade. * A Nevada miner who sold or arranged the sale of numerous mining clai ms to billionaire recluse Howard Hughes has been indicted in Las Ve gas by a federal grand jury on in- come tax evasion charges. Eldon Qevelaod , 64, of Beatty, Nev., was charged with failing to pay $181.271 in taxes in 1968 and $168,597 in 00. * Astronauts on future Skylab miMions will bring along toothpaste they can swallow, the space program's dental surgeon says. · "The toothpa ste is ingestible because there is no provision to empty one's mouth in a spacecraft in zero--g gravity environment," Col. William J. Freme of the Nationa l ,.\eronaulics and Sp ace Adminlstratlon said in Boston, wheie he addressed t h ~ Massadl ... tll Dental Society. Kids Like To Ask Andy . I ·~ . ' Tuti<laY, May l , 1973 I \ ' Burlesque Douse Grinding On . Merrill ·L~ch .handpicks 10 stocks for investors who like . . ' ~ to get-&% onthe1r 111oney-• but wouldn't mind seeing their capital grow, too. · ~ We've picked these 10 stocks for four good reasons: One. Each is currently yielding at least six percent or more. Two. We expect the earnings of each of the companies to show gocx:I increases in 1973. .Three. We believe these stocks are undervalued in relation tp their . ' eammgs prospects. Four. Nine of the ten recommended companies have been paying regular di vidends fo r at least IO years. (The other finn has paid dividends Dividend Yield 6.2% 6.9% *9.5% 6.4% 6.3% Projected Growth, Earnings ,Per Share 1972 • 1973 - Up133 $8.50 u 93 p $2.95 Up453 ~--$4.10 Up123 $2.10 Up23 Company General Motors W.T. Grant First Wisconsin Mortgage Trust U.S. Shoe Solithern Pacific I every year that it's been in business.) We're not suggesting that you clean out your savings account In fact, we think that having a good, solid cash reserye is a must ·But if you'd like to give the rest of your money a chance to grow, we think these 10 stocks could come through for yotL Of course, there's a de- gree of risk involved. But there's also a risk in doing nothing. If you'd· like to know more about these stocks, call a Merrill Lynch Account Executive todq y. Dividend Yield 6.8% 6.1% 6.0% 6.4% 6.3% Projected Growth, Earnings Per Share 1972 • 1973 Up6% Up19% $3.15 Up6% Up123 Up143 Company Marine Mi~land Rockwell International Aqierican Brands Mohasco W.R. Grace Dividend yields based on prices as of April 25,1973. Earnings projeaions by Merrill Lynch Research. •Bamf on estimated 1973 earni ngs. I \ Merrill Lynch is bullish• America. /1 <copvrltlht 1913 M•mll Lynch. Pl...,., F...,.. &. Smhh Inc Member, Sc<.rltia In_,,. l'lotcctlon Co.por.tion (Sll'C) NEWPORT BEACH : 4501Blrob81., Collfomia 92660, (714) ·~o.a121 l. , • . , • ' ' • .. .. ,, • ' .. ·' , ~ ~ -.. • • ' ! ( f ~ I l ~ t ! ! ' ' " $ " ' ,. ) ' ' ' ~ " ' -~ ~ " .. .. " " . •' ., { ' --= - • • - . ~· SIL~ l STORY·•-.-.i - -~-..,., .... ~ SIWlr' ,..., _ .......... .,.. .\."""9d ~----------.... . ,.. .... ~ ...... .,.. ..... ..., ........ .. :w ~..,.,.. -, .............. ,. .... Ulilllllll., ...... • Wll:/NESOAY -Mtri 2 -7:3C> P.M. , NIWPORTER INN ' ll!ft'IPIN Rlom) [1107 ............. •11ooi. .. ,...-~ - THURSDAY -Ml.y 10 --4;30 P.M.... ( PIKE'S VERDUGO ·Of.KS -- , (Vlf'Wlllft RGonll 1 '"'" .................. ...... MO ~ION N•ClllAllY -AISOLUT•LY Pll._l PW _.. llftnnllflM. CMlkl , , , U.S. PRECIGUS META~S E)(_(li_ANGE JJJ .. 1WWtJ Dr. -._.., .. , .. I~ NIUt. C•llr. tom (llJ) s.;:... , TUflfQ, M.117 l , 197-l . • DA!LY PILOT =~_I, IV Refo1·m.Packcfle OVER THE COUNTER ])rilling CretIJt Propbsed · ..,.._...,....., ......... .. . , . · .J ,.!!: .,"':!: ... ~~~· t II.. :f" ... 11 1ll! ,. ~.: ' Ir.: • • FOlt 1 ~t,w f lk N Ale m;: " WASHINGTON (AP I -Ali • wwlll -be a .IOQIPlelntlat.vy , •• -A llml~Uoo on. l!'IUJ9al -A In credit IOI" the er-::'° """::" " r.:::lt. "" ' !!"' ' :::\.~"I f tnveftmeot <ftdit for u-credit of s perceat of•la;. accounting losses to prevenr IY,fOr-rtalty.tu: P1YmenlS u .!::"C'_...J*JC =::_-'I: _ 1~ lJ 1 ~ t.-rlf" ~I plO!"atory drilling for oil lllid tanllble drilllnC colts . to )le lndlvlduals from uslni a loss coedlng 5 porttnt·of houxllold ~=~ ':!'"'"" ,\\\), ~ ::ii(',, •,. l'l"' ~= 1 • gas In the UDita:l States wu takm aptmt the ftnt tu on one business as a tax.offset ipcome to a maximum '$500, 1 ,,...<-!="' ~"'l i. 12: t::; ~ 11~ 12" :'~~ ~ !14 • proposed by ·tJ>e -Nlloa •-payabae an net {DCGO'l9 ttom against other, unre1ate4 hr Wi~ . equivalent rtller for "9f•;~~1nc,J..=1: ~-;;~'&,. : : :F• ~" w ""'111.'lr1 m!nlstratton Monday lo pro-pniduclion. come. elderly renters. ii:: " '.!:"'"'• ~-' :!':"'[-l:l i 'l:.m ll !li' mote the 1e11rch for new If Oonlri!Si aPProvu. the -A simplified income tax -A tax credit for tuition r,E:m~-~ A 1.1 r ~£ lt\li "'roe ,. ~ energy reserves. crtdlt will be effective for al1 return called ICHOs for the ap-payments to nonprofit, non· ''"* • 1;1kr ~. ';a tz owr. Mt i"' 1&~ The credit propo881 Wfl COi). drlUJng started after Mrll 17. pl'OXimateJy 20 miJiiOn tax~ pl,iblk: elementary and Secon-..WrfN'1l\ttls I -i =:~rn CP II ;~n ~~ l 1"' talned In the ad.mlnistfation's in the United States, lndudlnl payers with simple family and dary achooJs equal to ao )>el'· .... w., "'::1. 1 ~ R•J.r.1 17f.1111Yv. rn ~~ 1 • tu reform package oent lo -offabore, 1D Puerto Ria>, and Jinanclal tnnsactiOns. cen! of !YJPQ!l !<>a mulmom (~ h>I ~~" 111 :~.o'l: ~ 1l"' " c~ l 1 ' congress. in U.S. territorlM and -A miscellaneous-deduction $2:00 per child. ~ n ~ 1 ,I~ ~~ -~ ~ :;c-e1~-vi: ~~ I ~ "' k '"===========:::=::::::========~--UNLDER--TBE P-LAN ~· --· . allowaoceof$500pertas:payer ANINTER.ESI'aubsid··,.,~ ~ 1fn 11o1 ,1 11F;~ ~~=.i• i~ ,,'-1~~ ~~.r.~t It I' -...--'-'oti1~i1l!jj!•lll!'Wol"l!le Nlr-04 place me -er!stlng -,...,. ..,,_ ...,. " ll? ""-"r<~ ~"'-.!l',-- drilltzs ol new dcM:nestk: ~J:· on tu reform pactq:e ~ deductions considered dilflcult. 30 pe:cent for s~•te or local t"'.._!t'.J: i'j~ I'"'" ~,!it,_ F~ ti~ m :r::i }.t rn! 1111;9 '" ~ ~,' KUh Like To Ask Andy ploratqry wells would rectJ.Ve elude· to Itemize . secuntU:s on w1lich lhe state ~ira ' ,.M• r~ = :=. gr, u l~"' v'" s'm I llQ: a 7.rwrcent investment credit · · or locality bas e1~~ to pay Am f'lncl 1 1a 1 ~ 1 211111 22\4 11.o111111 8 1N 1 vf:toi-1 st 14 r-. . I:'\:~ Am '~" v. al c ROUlt f,• 16'6i I vi:;: Svs \'f Iv. on intangible drilling costs -A RBQ1J1REMENT that -AN AGE CREDIT for federally taxable interest. ~Ire 'l: ~· 1~ HomWd x11f: 1ffi~ ::::r ;~ ~~ 115 .,. ~11t:'Nl• " I~ "~ • plus an allowance for tupayers pay tuu on at ,.,.rcnnfl 65 and over to replace -New re-·1ations for com-..,,, T.i•v l'~ JN ~r 2•>ii. ~ Rini stov ~ 2 W'Mll " 1§ "~ eol . ph , ,___ r-~ . l!i.._. Atn WtlO 7w. lt'lli H1,1nl MIO I~ '"°' S141 A.ch '1\ Wutt t f' g OllCal and geo )'SIC8l el• Jeasf; one-half o& their ULVUJe, the existing retirement-income mertlal preparers Of income ~ 4)\t. .. v. Hv•tt C 1~ lj!,;. S•lenl CP '~ Wtxmn l c· d • ...u. the of · , ~~ I_!! 4-. S H'f'1)91' C '22~ 2 t, •manll 1~ 16V. ll:e • penses. ~ amount ex· credit. tax retW'JlS, 1ncludlng civil ffl'ii ir: '°"' ion. 11161 w11 ~1' 20" IW9f" i.Yi tm 11\ • • lf \he well proved com-clusions and deductiom they -A liberalized child-care penalties in cases of negligent :rJi ':~ 1;\~ 1jrt 1~1,IC1 ,,,~ H~ ~~1 1~':. ~:~ «~ ::Z,. r!a "'Z ~ ~,~~ . ~ merclaUy ptoductive, there might claim. deduction to Include all child-or intentional disregard of the 1'i~ "if,. \2 1'C! \l lfil:~Rc£~ ~~\ ~ 1~ ~ M~ ~~ =::c·~U:.' ,::: 1P:: ------------------'----'----"--'------=='---'-'-----------=::..:-=:::.:---:..::::_ ______ , .. 800 I Arvldt 1 11--1ntml G• 1~ ''" rloto I r· ,,.. # ttr Fit 2tl//i 20J, care expen ses up to .,.., . aw. . A•t0 Col• 2,._ tn4 n1 Alvm 1 '"" W•ld t 17'h 'l1m1 j l'" l'~ • "" G1 LI l'l' 1'~ 11 8kW A m '"' v Merell IS ' WI H •I' ~·: . \' • '~p for .. i>eoPle 'That's why I joined lmperiaC' s::=~~,I,___ 6.00' 5.19' 5.29' 5.00' .,. __ ,.._ -===-:~,,:::. s1.-....... --,..,,.. .. --. 6JSX' 597! 5.F 5.1.Jl' ...... _...,..... ---............ JWll • ---"'!"_, ___ .., .... ,,.... A Plan for All People. N ...... _. Otllce: 3366 Vlo Lido, N...,... lleorlo. 714/67J.3131 NtwfOll Cater otlce 550 Newport Centtr Drive, Ntwport -. 714/"4-1461 Other offices in Claremont • Downtown 1..0s Angeles • East Puadcn1 • Glendora • Pasadena • RCdlands • Sierra Madre Choose the insured ~plan that is best :for1'(>u. Saving at lmperia1 is convenient because we now have~ 60 offices ~the llf:are. Imperial dftts oret' 20 helpful services, too -most of them free. Come in soon. • Topanai Canyon •West Covina • Whittier • Woodland Hills. A 'MllUYOWlillD IUMJOI,..., OFf,1111.llON OOUN1. llWllU~ COIW'OIUoTIOlfle-9" M81CA 0111!1 ,, --.- ' ....... manager of the bank's new office in Hunt1ng- ton Beach. T h e .Qr. ange County branch, opening May 14, will lie the nlnUl in •• the <lb!den Slalle Dant l!)'Slem. Prior to bih~ent. Fra- zier, a vice ~~ was as- sistant manager ol the Downey office .. He and his family reside in Huntington B<ach. . * Damll . G. M""lfaocli has iroller-and was io-charge· of the aocounling and data pro- ~ departments. Hardy, a %&-year employe and general manager or the industrial hydraulics division, w i 11 as'sume the added respoaslbll!ty of e.ipandlng his I.Ito Trn :i~• l)~'t fl~I CD I 1!" Vll'IMlr 1' 2' Wini l'1fT """ \.io o~nl Wf ~ f91•nd R ven UD '9 21'4 WIK PLI l~ , rd r 1 l~ •me1b 10 10"1 !llellr CD 1'• ~ WOOd Ltlt 11~ • t er • SS l 11 •lrFr Sl4 • ~ 1 ,l\W~d Sv S 6 , ltWf\ L lljl'• 4 oslvn M 17\'I 11\t lrnPIOn 1?\/o lj M W N fll • IY Mft l \'f :M'h ·1-St "" N ntp l oll li0''1 l "" On'I~ CD 1e l!Hl Ilk 811 Uo ,,_ K• v•r c 4'1 s !Ind PIP 'tt• "' 111c1 Fri 451\ -W' '"" R j'~ ft 1<. .. rn Tk 7~ I OCll'•v I• 1~ Ziil! r Co I" t ''"" 4 KlllWDd 161i• lr.: C>lctr• 11 It J:lons'Vlh t ""' JI :r.n I'~ ~ ~9<1 Col'!n 14 1 ,,,_ ~· 4\.\ Ir 0•1• 1v, ~ JO •f t A ti "\1"' , ~ 6 •Y'I• Fb 11\/o 1• ir: oa c ''e ell r. Cp x)11 7~• ev C1,11t 8..... t :~l " .. ~ 1!~~ ll~ ~mt ::::i 1!v, 12tt NEW YOfl:K (VPIJ -TM 10 rnD!Jr ell L•b ~ 3.1 K.ii.P. Vt 1• 11 .Kllvt 1lock1 tr4dld On....IM OTC tl'lllrk•I ll>b co $ r,1 ogtr Pr lj 17 MOtlcllr •• wPPlltd_ br NASO. o ~ I 1' I~ l'\lllltr '4 ti-lo V.illfM Ii. AP .. Cftt, ir d 5 ~ m ...£1_ I I ii tnnJ..111_ -~~4 ,,., Db vns -tdd P•I ~ ,._ Cr\JmFor1lr I ~ 2"11 ~ " ooth Np Ill!" mt~ •ni:11I lit~ It Am E~pr 10'1 •I~ .ft\o \9 rltflCD I ~ '"'' I" !Jiii Docu•el u· Jilli :MY, ~ rink• In 1 3\li ew11r C R•nk._Oran 1,tOO Kio lOYI>-illli. tOWft Ar .i. N Lerw eov \l JO\to ean~1r ,.IOO ~" 4'~ W 1.ICkbl I~ 14" LI0911 Pl ~-l•IM Cmti &Arn 41,tol) 12t• It"-~ 111:k1v B\a Ml! t~bel1Y H j~ m F\l>\k 1 47,600 11 11l't-~ mp SI 20lol 21\li I Ctlrn.P ~ 9~\ PcArn lnc:m QMO 16!11 171Jo-'l ... M ~ 41'.N L nc 8dll t t'h Ant..v. 811Kl'I .Q.100 ~ 4'\ll+ t' ll')Ttq "ilt C~o it t% -• • ... ill ""'~ c ~ " NASD Vohmw Tod•'I S.llS.:IOO ~ \ .. H GJ 1 h I -· D !\Vo Alhl•ncM Jft VtftS 1 I ~ G11 •'4 14~ Oectlllll ,,,. Pl 1i _j =hjl;ltv 6'M ~'h Unc:"'~ed last f. c! t ~ ~ M1.ii" 1 Frt f'w, l~'-'"~'1---------'"'"'1 * c-11 3i°tt :w1:4 rv 1ev --tw. "" ...., I _._ • _ Ir Ir 76\; )1 Mc Cmck 47 Uft Ker• ~ &JV•er8 n. h hrll Ste: McQlilv 17\l llYI dimion. NeWport .D'IC'aC executive 1u 111 Meocrn • u~ 11 1----------- Jolm W • -~-J ha ltll u A l9VI ..a ltrn ..a 4 NIW York CV .. 1) -Tiie IOll(Ml!ng 11'4 . ._._, r. s been 1-pk, 1211 121111 d In ... 7 $l'IOwl Ille 1tock1 ""' ht\l'I 11IMCI ""' appol•nted VI.CO pr'es1"dent Qf IN/ CrP lS'h tt\4 ,.,._,,.r Fr-~' 21:\ll mDll •nd IOll 11'111 motl blled on pll'Clnt oc:.C Le 1, 1 ~ Mllll-464 41~ Df cNn;e on I l'1 0-•l'*'-llt' Property develop t f oml Shr a MPi1 Gt1 ~ ~ rn••kll •• QUOl«I bv t11eo NASO. men 0 r mwll p 2At.\ Vo Minn F=•b w. I"' HM •nd 111<n:•nl• chtl'l!ll• ,,. tri. n--.•11. Inc. OIHlln .P 16~ !"" MD!lul Co lt\'J M t:llll«enc• b9lweln The-.,. .... iov. 1 .. 1 bid ~, .., DUILn•, ""' l • M-· ,1n 31\'i ~ P('lc• •nd ,.,. C\lrflfll It• 'bid prke. Land". jo'•ed the food ~" J. It •• = 1 22 ... O•IN•llS .. , rutch J" ii; Ill 22Yi 2JV. 1 IM!'Ldl•n .&Id •••+ lV1 VP lt~' service company in 1969 and urt N t 1 1 M~ er iov. i1 l Siltt'lw Airline 41.+ 1 UP n.1 "J Intl 261,\ M 1 )2•1• 'u. ~ 3 Cllnlc1L k l•n l:Ht+ 2* u11 fl.I bas served as manager of real '" w "" tt'< N uvst ,...., 10~ • NII conllfte!tr •1-t• "" UP ,~ .. estate since June 1971. .r: ;· 'i~ ~li ~!' ,.,.J~~~ l&v. l~Y.I : r1~~~~n:~it. ~l'!l :: ~:-{ ~ '! n 35 N P•f9nl 6\.'I 'f"' 7 CO!'nPll1r Olrntll 4V. V. V• 1l:i * c I • 13~ '1~ N~hrn 13\.'a ljVr I MICI Tru1t wtl I'-< \i Vp j ·' ~ ·~ , .... H I c~ 1411.i I 'Clltf Pl•r•• If! 16 1\lt Up OJ Santa An a businessman •r A 4D\4 ' 14 ~ 11C1 ° 17 17~ 10 Amer Nuc1"r ''" ~· v1 10.0 Im im "4 !r:ii' I~ l1'4 1l 8111: Ltbt .16 33 3 VII 110 Norman E. Nelloa bu retired ux• C· t c In 9"' lOVi 12. For-.1 Oil C:ro Ill.lo ll'I Up ':! .. _--. :~ )l'~ 1 ~ 1 ~111::;i Q *i: ~~ U Gr•pt\lc Scl1t1 7\ii , Up t . aS •WGUWI " II 29~ Nonlltr ;2 :12\':i 1' 01t1G9fl Coro l5 2\0 VP 1.5 wt SCI 1• m "lwt NIG ~ tli 1! 0.11'11 Intl 011 4\\ \,tP V11 I.! manager ol tel 33 ,. Nc.tll CP •v. "'" IA Arn lrKOIM ~ 10'4 ~ UP 7.• Ir Gtn 9"' Nuctr R• l 2V. 17 Ftorldt Rock 10'~ ~ Vp 7,t Home SaV• •ldt ¥.: lf:~ 1kWd H ~ 11 Prof"ll Goll a3'~i • Uo t:". JOl'I• °"' e•n Dr Sl\/o ni.. If 01,1•lllv 1111111!1 -71~ \.\ Up .• -9 unkln o 2\lt nor Mt 5111 6 " 11•11 P'lfltn<:•I J\.'I t'I Up 1, f-O D d e Dll 4\4 ~ ''" Ex 1111, V. I'll 'T'111 Commun fVt 11' UP ,,., t ..... ,. .....+ CGn Lob ,.IM 11111 Lei• 7 1:\11 '1 v11n•I sci.nc1 M \.\ UP '·j • ~ ~ ....... !~ due Ex j1V. V• llYV M 231'1 2•'h 2l Ml Ttch llld.... l ... t ~~ Up 6. ~ be held or I PISO ~, .. 1i•• Flf'ro 8'h t V. )I '"•Ill lncor11 nr. 'h Uo 6,, more than 11 M~l C V. l\i II COii! 11'1< lt\lo 1S Mt;lnVWll'I wt 1 + W VII •. 1 been elected a vice president of Califorala C o m p • t e r Products, Ille. and will 'head a newly created p r o du c t mahagement position. The r1J11l Is located Anaheim. * Kent Doolittle has been named manager of Grubb and EIUs Company's first residen- tial office in Southern California. Doolittle, an executive for the fU111.' I Newport Beach of- fice for four years, has opened headquarters in Corona del Mar. The South Laguna resi- dent is currently selecting and training personnel !or the new facility. * McDoanell Douglas Autom• tloll Co. has ~nsolidated the management of Its two data proces.sing centers in L-Ong Beach and Huntington BeacW. DoDBld E. Anderson of Hun- tington Harbour has beep given responsibility over the c o n so Udated organization aloog with a Long Beach ex· ecutive officer. He has been director of the firm's Hun- tington Beach data center since ' 1970. Anderson joined Douglas in 1955.p.s an engineer. Plllrkk ~e h.as joined JAK Olu1tmctlon' Company of Costa Mesa as operations coordinator. His responslbilities include property research and manageQ'lent or all activities relatln'g to the develi>pment of condominium and apartment projects in So u thern California. * The photographic products and electronic instrumentation firm of Colemaq Systems has named R. E. Tackett as treasurer and A. J. Hardy as vice president or the Jrvine- based firm. Tackett was forrneriy con· !11.1 .. L V. 13Vi rnont 6\.\ !$. LOllllS years •KV In ·~ tlli N• 2l• '" ' l llDk Cornrtn ~-... .I • z P•lnt t 10 OJ:tte era j''t 6'11 3 Redl•ton Ttch 1~ "-1 A ,,,.,. " lo'> JO\I, vr m 1 I T t!IY Corprtn l.._ 1 '~ I ~·' Active ·in 1!r Lne 7~1 P:i P•bst Br 6 'Ill 70\~ ~ "" P•P r n 811 11 -2-14 If '°·I • . lrlOl'I El ll~ im F'ilCC•r 3'V. j1'~ $ 11:\ICklf' '°"""' U -' II, CIVIC a n d •rm 8r 1 VJ I \lo PK G•m 11 1\0 A Jlldvt lllCOf'I 5 -I JU 1'1'1 Oro ~ P" Lym 3'1'h n~~ 1 Sysltmt Ctllll "'6-1"' U comm u n • NILM>N 1111mt 1S\ll ,,..., P•So 11n:1 11 1~ v. , t•11r1111"lc s~. ~ "" I" •t ff · N I " filln ''~ 17YI '" Q((M 12'11 \ t Tr•nt Cat Inv l~ l'I 1 1 1 y a 811'5, e son presently 11 1n »'Iii t71Jo P•lll -~ l•V• ·~ 1~ , .. '"" Hind .,, -' i1:1 Serves on the •--d of ..11-.• lit 1111' h ~"•ulev ,p ' _.u 11 Ol'hMr LOlltl 1 -"" , 11.1 UUi1U uu"l:\!· ~h\KP Inc 1 1 P•Y'llLI l'MI 2\.\ 1' Am T•I~ 111~ \I' tors of the Uptown Lion's Club, ~ ~ ~~ \~ \ ~:1. cs': l1* \~ \1 l~r ,:,-?' 1 ~~ is a memb!T of the Santa~Ana \~ ~~l~)J 8l\ ro l·-~ l Chamber of Conunerce, Com-Kids· L 'k. ::=~-'~'T', '[,, ~ ,=: I, munity Chest and bu served . 1 e to ,. i.':l!:.\" ,.:..,, 111~ = 'j . • I · ..,, W1nnOl'IHIC Co .. On severa committees for the " srn111111d PDO<t '"' organizations. Ask A••dy ~ ~:~~~· it;t--11 I~' '" ~, 1'11111 Coro •l.,_ 111o 1$ F1lr Lint Inc ~ '14 Union Oil's 1 ......... _,..... _ _. ___ .. lst Quart.er _ .. ""', __ M_u_T,,._u_A_L_F_U"'"'N_n_s....,._ Report.ed ~~:i-i~ ,~: 'i1 11:t '1¥.i'if~I~~" 1~J~·~ltAi'; , .. , 11 WOl'ICI bY Fd lj.O 1 '3 ull Kl '1 ' ~ .12 Spedal to the DaUy Pilot ""' N•_o_inc. 1l'ds. 21~ li~ :l Ki2 J,t 21.u c 11TY 1 "1 . ~y c MGMT OllP1 Ull I~ 10. 11.M IN IV j<I LOS ANGELES -Union Oil .._ A~11.'Tr 1tn 11tv jt 1:t; . . ""' H 1. l:' U\''"' . Ji Co. of California's net earn-lff!~ ~~ff 2~ ~·0rf ·J:., ::· ,.=1o t.ij s.~ i•t°•'~o 1· ings for the first quarter of I:~ 1.1!' .:;;: cir• )!12.4' lJ.S. (~ct';.* !:a ::11 e Fd 1!-111 :ll 1973 were $38.3 million, 28 per-:r.~J:erFd ffi f:tt i~Trr 12Ji1 4ji ti]! G;~ I·• IJ 1{;f11~" 1m l::Il cent more than the $29.9 :n1ur 1 Fd Hi m~ ·~w P 1 :: 1tn L~XL~f~s.n 11 fl ftfA~~,.rL6'·i/1:~ million in the first quarter ~f :1~1·F~ lt.~11 ·1 ~~rll,~ J ;1. rh 1J:p1li !;; t{l I 1972, Fred L. HarUey, pres1· :~~ ,:U1 .1!p~-~rlY t.tA .. -t.v,,.fd ;·~ '·1 itbf'Pd 1',, 1· dent. reported Monday at the ·~ 1iif .• ·w~ .l5 0 : fl G~ f:2 t ~1' ·" company's 83rd a n n u a I OcuN a I 150 120 •11~~1 ,r,.~ 12'U :Ji ~= 2:il ·1:61 n: Fi,. t:U : shareholders meeting. 1-'.\'·'l ;,s :"is'.c :.. 1.tt · ... vt'~\1 ·~:.~:"'i,~'D\J.·j' Th t din nv11m x .I I" " 3.22 ,. C•1> Ov \'-"\"' ij"'"' 1 fl! 5 ere were no ex raor ary i:i' .11 ~ M•• 1 J.3 MuhJ•I 4.42 4:4t nv~!.. '· 1 ·12 gains or losses in either Am ~rttt I~ 1:i ':d" H:J111.n 21~1p,1•••1fll 110 de"Fd" 1'-· 1fil• period •m J"tln ~14 ~1~ urltn t .57 10.46 Arn ew s j '•j OMA J11Ui 011 • • •m "~ •.4 ·1 eternF ·~ A41 8ndt:lltl l u' 1 •oShr It rn Net earnings per common~~~ r li! ;::, ,1~Ti~ciACJ·'125·65 tu1111r11 1: n:" l"v 1 · 1. share '•land" f th (" t O~>U I •itOO ~S1 uthn In t . 10.n r1t . t , OUi.:s ang or e U"S •Dl't!. .. ··1 s.i. }" ·VII x' 17 Au MAON& fllUNrl V~tllr ,,,,, quarter ~re $1.14In1973 and ~"' z. •1:~ ,1~ 1~ 4l·:lt '!-il f:' : ... #:~ i'r't1.o~ 1,:t\ :u 84 cents an tm On a fully J ~I v1n1 ., :U P11Grm 1.n '·Jl IO °"'' • • Vll'\1111" Ii t:121115d V• 11:i112.21M•nhtn ! .. ' '· •11 .. )111 diluted basis the per share W• N1H 1 • 13 11 '' s·~ Mkt Gwt .Al 2-" IE!' Inv •1.40 t • • Alll'Dll 4,lt IN • •S· MASS C01 w Inv 0 6.46 t earrungs were 93 cents in 1973 l"x F 1.0' 91.c d tu I·" Frt""' 1.01· 1.1A '" 11~ • and 73 cents in 1972. ~ i:ll 1·n lr"iiFi ::u I~ k"::1 FF 1{:~ f2~ jrt"i~l. l, :.a T lal t a'l.f: und : ,I ' 11411 1:5f t.36 MASS PNCL1 fit• lND II"~ 0 revenues were .,._,.8 tock 5:& , lf'r 3.16 4.23 MIT 11.X 11..M Com Fd 4 n t." mill. . the fir t t f 1 SCI '.lS U UM Oll:OUf'• MIG ll·'"j·ll OlVllll 5 1 IO 100 ID S quar er 0 t~< "" ,,-., ,rn 1 ':::J "f.11 ~ FIO .ti! ~ ''"'" " -~ this year and $581.4 million In i:= 11'~ 1 :ll ~~ 1·.l 1:~ Z:t8 l~~ l jl f::1'n:; #.U ~·:i the corresponding t 9 7 2 Ej"rk or I -" ~.. 1,j il Metts 1v t t ,,t; sir "·" 4 .li en HI • .S6 Gr 4. 1 .0. ~llllt' 11 11 STIADMAN fll ' quar1:er. i~ IC l . 11:1' J~U Z:Dftv"'F"d 1<J.tli11 i',i41 ~:,1~ l§l .:ll Union's sales of petroleum '"' " I.a """"' s,., s.11 """ e nG L .,,lll invest 1~ 1 rodu •• . th fir t t or ondtlk 1· .ft Lncom 11.n lJ.~ MIF Fd 7. •·!t JT•IN 1101 S; ' p c~ m e s quar er r '"' . 1 :il ~ r.""I •y; • MIF °'' ':ll ''"~ 21. '!''!' 1973 were a record 506,300 bar· L~K .J FH;:~ 1l.~ 1i· =::8::i i: #:~ it.ot crp1: ;,." 1~:~ rels daily compared to 479,800 ~"1"'J.~ aj11•. ~',i8ilr~1 N ~ s~~ 1f~ 1f:U 1ls~~oUP:I·" 1·" barrels dally in the fll'St n ~~ . 4 23·~ TC Sr ,.4t ') at~ 1;'l't .. ~~ f.N t: :& :r. quarter of 1972. Vtn I ~ !t • ffrKm 2~ ' h1•nc • 11.ljt' ftch~ l· ·~ R U ~mhm · 1· S v 5 10:0!10 lond Sr " , s~ro F , 1. even. ues p Hartley attributed the in-G '""' !· . '""" .... l· "'''" ul •.• !M" .. I~ ! • •P1rnr . R" C•P 4.8S ~I Sitt ,.,,4' 1.~ 11(1'1rs .1 l . crease in earnings to lnl-•P j"~ f. • a• Eirtv '·'° 4 llCO!n 'to S. l'ITIPI G l "·!! •o l'lr• . M,t.dj t..31 t IDc~ Sr 6.t4 1. DWf:r C •· 21 Percent' proved average product fl .. \!lllNG1 . I : 3UJ1Mt'lt Ns':''lND t~ .7)6t~rv.c,1e l ~ T:~ prices, the beginning of UN'Di, fiornl'l'I •·'° t n E<tultv 16,ot \{·4 ~ il 11~l1 .u Indonesian crude oil pro-rn:.llCi~ 1~1'{li::t 1i;tr 1f::11'li ~~ lt~ J'47 !Otli~G I 11 ' Fol• Ti'mes ducUonandshipments,hlgher S~1h 1 ~.11 }111.1!:.,Y lii 1'.3,~~c~~ 1~~1~J8~~~ .. ,1z:ff sales of petrolewn products 1ncom ~ 00 1·!i &, •·t') ".l' · N1uwth • '] u ••• 1cll I · ~r 1·ti t:i ou a/:" t,n NHIDn 'I· 1' '' "'• and chem1cals, I n c r e a s e d '" . ,-,, ... Ntw Wit:! 1 . 13 8 5 IY ''·II 'm· • AM~ · · Nlchl•s 16.13 1 .. ~ N•ll Inv I· t • Special to tbe Dally Pilot r~fanery . throughput . a n d ~fr I°= i~· tj: 2::., Flit 1tt 1J:ri "'"' rv1r u .rJ u ~ c•r , ·'l ;£ LOS ANGELES -Net In-higher subsidiary earnings. r1 • •·,,' ~,F 1,: l#",' ,:·,w: • t:i. t uN1!/'lo ~~N 1 1 the H rt! 'd "th . !·JI f· " ,) .tJ N ltd 1t :S11.AS A«um 70. 14 come of 'Ilmes Mirror Co. a ey sat ese Im· S!n_rn Fd 1 • 1 • •rd w111 1•hl 16.o:i ~nc1 Pd 1'.13 1:•1 • for the flf'St 12 weeka o( 1m provements were partially )~N'b't\"-L. ••• ·· · HAMIL'°"xtlJl&~"' ,. E.i:\•ri1 :::: i: f-?J ~f:ff 1 advanced to $10.3 miJlkln from off!K!t by blghtot costs of labor. ':Ir; 10 : 1011·1 '~ :~· :~ 8: f= J~ 1::: m:: l1J{ 1f!J 1 ss.a lllilllfJb _.ID'llle·flnl· materlala •nd services and ~ •j.ff •l· := ,t;1jll IR'c: ,.. f•I' if' v.... 1:11 >:lli quarUJ ,Of mi. Dr.. rtankJtn Jower domestic crude oil and .vr::~r l H ,,: H•rt LY ,11 'tl :J'Vt' .. 10:: if::3 lil~~ ;:r tL~ I 'D. M~,'~ o1 · the natural 1M production. Jn ad-fii~t~ 1i.» 11.u Her1• f10 f:}~ :nn Ms"'c: 1:1: . , vv.~ \m,.. 1 s~'1f:tiJ ~~, ~;..;t 'U.....i:-•. dltlon interest exn.nu in• ~ 8 1.n 1.31 Hor1r 11'.r, 11:41 Phlll Fti !·fl .27 VII nc A.611 · "llU'CIN l~MNI f!'-1 ~ ~ t"""'-~ or ' 1." tmOI' CD t:lJ 10 7'I 'I"' St 1 :B 10.),1 b"' ~~ 1.\t .so EamJDp per 'share for the creiied due to the effect of oma "' ,: f'• •rn11 Gr 1. fti ~i'ONle\: lo. · vA-:.C,fr:IC 3-" 1"' first quarter amauD&ed to 31 the dollar devaluatkJll; on the om: ii 1':1 ,:n ::;, "~~ 'i:fl IJ:~ ~~ ~~ l~.~ 1~:n s::.o,~Si J.~ m ts red with 17 ts company'I foreign borfow!na. =rd' ;.\!. t:4' 1~.::m f:;: J·tt Pl:lr 11 t.~10.43 VS COl'n 1 Cell Comp& cen ._ Ol'll Inv n:7111Il fl 111 ..... t llt1:M£ Pl•11nd t . 10.,1 SDl(l , . .U r,-1~.m the nrst quarter :~~~~ fH J:H \~: ~e ~~3 1fll ~~,\.iti~ , ::; ~:':4~~ j~~ :; Revenue.! for the pttlod For """"b1U t~-tffl1•lr 0Joq~~2'i~'~~·'111·;:tt~!i~r ":i!A1 ti' "'ached •HU million, up !'It.AH 'Im I'll 1.ti ~''"• <IS ._!! '" ,., 1 . 11"' from '123 I million '··t -ar W k d &O~, '' m '-" "" ' '·" t.G w 'l'I " '"" • . -uq , .. , ee en e1· ., ii:~lkn .1 ,•. ~.n ~~ 10...w11.4 o1oil~':° • , an ,..,,..._,. of 21 percent. " ~ , l , II , , l:!l f, ~1-.,, lus mt_ Murphy said lhe nation's Advertising v ti st ,.;!~ •• P•v tn ~ COft..,., ,•.C11F..r- •trong economy In the first 11Ni'i-~"5--1t--o~r1er~-par11cu1ar11y...11lljf-~--l:!hen1e--~ con11nu1ng high level o/ ac- tivity In the romt p.--.ducts 6424321 area, wa1 a major factor In the Improved results • I l s Tuesd'1. Ml)' l , 1973 J,_% DAJI. Y PILOT t c Bo's and Don'ts Executives Can't .. Do Own Resumes By JOlrN CUNNIFF gives the reader.• reeling or .. ,. 1um.u o.1Y11 knowing 3 little bit about you. NEW YORK -The ex-In clude date and place or ec.utive job market is booming birth, n1arital status, chlldrcn, again, with perhaps s,ooo new address. telephones, height , openings a nlonth in the we igh I. health, r o r e i g n $15,000 and up category, but a languages. . Im-~ applicanl.i ar.e..-v.-rlling_ -~ second Jtem .!lhould them.'iel\'e s right into the be your e ~ u c a t I o n a 1 discard helip. background, with the na1nes of each Institution attended, ma- THESE OTllER\\'ISE ac-jors studit-cl and the 'date each complished cxec~tivcs haven't degree wa; awarded. These ntastered the simple art of two items b"hould use no more writing a resume that will thah one-third of the fifst give the facts cle.a~ly and co.n· page. c.lsely, says W1ll.1am Breit· Provide specific details on n1ayer, who sc:aOi thousands your career, starting with pre- 1?3Ch month. sent or most recent position A~ut 15 per.c<.>~t of thos~ and concentrating on the most received by Bre1!mayer. ~rcs1· recent 10 years. dent of Execut1~e ~g1ster, List the name of the com· "are messy ~nd 11legible .. are an . and the city and state sh~dy qu.ali ty n1 a c h I n e !he~e employed. Describe copies. or stmply are so poorly 'b"IJ · I b "'rilten that even we can't rour respons1 i ~es n ea~ make head or tail of them," JOb clearly, showing ·the ch~m of comma nd through which It's understandable , says you reported as well as Breitmayer, whose company functions reported to you. • colnpul er processes th e ap- plication~ for its corporate f'lGURES ON the size oft~ clients, that an executive, like company and your part or 1t. anyone else would find it including sales. numbers or awkward t~ write a b o u t units or people, will help give ,himself. weight to your story. Give the "When a successful person speciricS', .but kee p it brief and "'severs relations with a com· stick to the main points. pany it's 111ce a divorce, even it An emplO»er is interested •he initiated the action .. He only in the "what" of your lee.ls on the defenS'ive and he jobs, not in your own 'doesn't present his best. He qualitative judgment of how finds it diJficult to tell 3 well you did them . Try not to straightforward story. force your words I "BUT WHAT I don't un· Be straight forward, <1nd let derstand." he continued, "is the reader decid~for himself. why they don't make beUer -Speak for Yours e If. copies, why they send along Resumes produced by resUit"~ .the seventh carbon. why they writing "firms fall into_a sti 'give us those chea p black on paltern which is reclnized black reproductions that you :ind down grade by ca n't even read." c1n ployers. Since you p their The s a me cur i 0 u s bill . reS'Ume writers describe phenomenon has been observ· your v i rt u es too ex· ed elsewhere too. travagantly. d . It was discovered that men -Reproduce your rTiume and women who were masters professionally. Don't t to In dictating busi ness letters to save money by typin your secretaries were he J p I es s own resume or by using when it came to writing ol>-carbon copies or ch ea p jeclive reports on their own machine reproductions. Have careers. especially wilhout a it typed professionally and secretary's aid. reproduced on offset. ' Since Breitmayer, whose DON'T CRO\\'D the page headquarters are in New Ca· but use enough white space so . naan, Conn .. wilh offices in that it can be read easily and New York and San Francisco. quickly. Underline titles and ·makes his living by supplying company names. Use sho rt ·computerized data on ex-sentences and paragraphs. , ecutives to his corporate Remember that you want clients,·be would just as soon the reader to say: "ThiS not have to toss away several 'hundred resumes each month . person has put together a And so he sets s 0 me simple and clear statement or what he has done, and where guidelines: nnd how he has done it. -THE FIRST item should Therefore. he must also be be a brief pcrsonaJ sketch that well organized and effective." XEROX co0Ji~1~~T~NN: 4' :; SIZES UP TO 24"X36" MIN. VOLUME DISCOUNT e PICKUP & D~LIVERYw1"'~~~ DOUBLEQUICK 1400 1..i ........... ,.,. - 1110 N, Mllll 5s~~·l!n~! Anl ""°'" Allv1rtbem1nl Now ...• Plastic Cream Invention For Artificial Teeth Artificial T eelh N"er Felt So llalDrol Before Now. for the firsl lime, science oilers a pl11stic cream that holds dentures as ne\'et before-forms an elasticmem· brane that llrlps hold lhtm lo lhr "ol11rof liss11ts of )'Ollr mo11th. It's a unique d1SCO\'cry called F1XODE~'t9 that has revolutionized denture wearing. It lels you bite harder, chew bet· ter. eat more naturally. 1-·1 ~00ENT Jasr.s ror hours. Resists moisture. Dentures that lit ~ essential lo health. See your denust regularly. Get easy·lo·usc F1xoot:NT Denture Adhesive Cream. Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yourself or 1 Friend May ho used on envelopes as return •ddrest libels. Also very h•ndy as identification labels for marking person.al items such as books, rec;ords , photos, etc:. Labels stick on 91.ass .a nd may be used for marking hom e cenned fo <.d items. AU labels are printed "With stylish Vogue type on fine quality white· gummed paper • .. r-----------------------, , ,., .. Ill ttll1 cov!lefl. cHo 11Mi mill wlltl •l.U t1: I I ,.;191 ,.rlnt1111 l111CI Qlv., ,,0. I 0.11 U.. I I C.i., Mn•, C•llf. fl'a4 I I I I I I I I I I ,- I .• When • a Famjjy Needs I a Friend ... Sylvia Porter Do high food costs cause you to cut down on the quantity and quality of \ company dinners? Do you find yourself slighting your family's nutritional needs in order to meet financial needs? You can find help with these and many other problems of family finances in Sylvia Porter's column several times weekly in the financial pages of the DAILY PILOT. Yes , Sylvia Porter can . be a friend of YOUR family. Her nationally syndicated column, "Money's Worth," features im- portant ideas wh ich can relieve you r concern over monetary matters. For ex- ample, she will tell you how to save a consi d e rable percentage of your gro- ce ry dollar d espite spiraling food costs. Let a friend drop . on you tonight. in Sylvia Porter can visit you from ·the page s of the DAILY PILOT delivered right to your home. You will g~t your mo ne y's worth from Sylvia Porter's col- u m ~ and all t he ot he r special feature s in th e fina nc ial pages of the I DAILY PILOT THE ONE THAT MEANS BUSINESS • I v -• fie ""' skl d~ In on• of Co rel wa !l'I ... ... .1\ ' ... •'l:/tcl'I . ' ·- ~ ., . "' . . ' --. ·~ ·- W atergat~ Move Prop s Up Stocks New J'ork 15 Most Aeth•e ..... vo•• '"'" -"" " '""' • T • T ... "'' 1!:j M• "'lij ftflWi ..t1t<ka tr•OM on !Tie ~" York &io:on • . •.••.•• ~ -Slott •llCllll'!Ot Moltdtv. McDonekb , ••• + '•'" <Ml Clll. xerox ......... "· 1 -• Gulf Ort ........ It =·\.'I~ N • ;; 11... 1 • i I: 11 .. 'T ........ , M'.100 '4" -1" • •. -U:.00 T. .. ...... IM, I ~ .... " M .. , ""' -mr+il """•m Co " ... l!l:•'"' 11~ .:: 1" ' .. . ~;,,. fu"; C: 1 °"" '"' .. . .. ... 100 #\II \l '· l\'flt() J'ork Sale• VeluMe . .. ~·""J-·--Iv-... . ................ ~:m~ • ~....,,_ tl~I to1 ".. ••• • • . .... ltlll"°' , .. 1"'' ... . .. ,., .... •·.' ' 11' "'""'• ur .. , . .... .•.... ... ! 11! f'"' " hi• ...•••••••... 1 .f!! -900 ..................... ,1 171 te dtlt ,,, ........... ,•· ,·;r Month t0t , .. , ... , •• ,,.,, •• ,, 10.+&4 1111 ,. Olll ·• ,,. •••• ·• ..$1 \ . , ' ' I Aprll , 197) • ' DAILY PILOT ., • l.OS ANGELES (AP) - Ropubllc Corp. bu reached· · .,_nl with cr<dltor banks 1'hlch wW pennll more Ume to PoY beck its debU, the J.(J! Angeles·based nnn .. 1c1. RepubUc announced during the weekend it had readled qreemenl with. tbe banks, whkh previOU3ly had agreed to convtrt 90l1le of th' com· pany's debl• to equity u II> million was repaid In cash before De!:· 31, 1973. The"°"" pany &taggered lo the edge of bankrupley in 1971 under the weight of !GO mUJlon in bank dtbU. !'"! "" l'•E 11Gt Hloll Law L•lf C.1'11. -' , J4 DAILY PILOT .QUEENIE T"""1. May 1. ''t-b By Phil lnterlandl . · ''Ev~ry time I walk by the board room i~ a miniskirt,, l 'mglad I don'tbave stock in the company." L. JtJ. Boyd Julius Caesar First Journalist An electronic engineer of some skill didn't like all the factory-installed warning buzzers, lights and signals on his car. So he invented his own tape system. And installed it. Now when the gas tank runs low, no red light comes on, but rather his wife's voice ,Srells at him : "You're running out or gas." When he forge ts to buckle up, her voice says: "Remember your seat belt, honey." The list of her re- corded' 'Couri1Mrts--~·too~long to print here. But I like the one that goes: "Look out, your engine is too hot' I see steam! Do something, you idiot!" No journalist should forget that the world 's first newspaperman was Julius Caesar. He edited the original publication called Actapublica which circulated in the Roman Empire for ~years. You need a government license. to be a beachcomber in Australia. ' QUERY - Q. "I know what an inferiority complex is. And an anxiety complex. But what's a Poor Boy com· p\ex~" ·- A. Such is the lingering frame of mind that makes a fellow get aU shook up if the refrigerator door is left open too long, if a Ught is left burning in an empty room, if a household thermostat is left too high. Pretty common. the Poor Boy com plex. Just about everybody exhibits same by practicing some personal j)etty economy. Like the Lady~ friend , she rinses empty ketchup bottles~ I've got one, too. Don't ever remember throwing away a short pencil. Half the drawers in the house have penci l stubs in them. What's yours? Q. "I KNOW CHINESE is the most spoken language of all. But isn 't English the second most spoken?" A. It's third. There are 13 major languages each spa. ken by at least 60 million people. In order, with their num- bers of millions, they are: Chinese, 700. Hindu and Urdu, 280. English. 250. Spanish. 150. Russian, 130. German , 100. Japanese, JOO. French, 80. Portuguese, 80. Indonesian, 80. Arabic, 70. Bengali, 60. Italian, 60. One wife in every four votes as her husband advises. One husband in 2-0 votes as his wife advises. Or so re- searchers at the University of Michigan report. LOVE ANO WAR -What newlyweds ought to keep in mind are the four "C's," contends a lady doctor in London. 1. Compromise. 2. Consideration. 3. Communica- tion. 4. Cooperation. Interesting. Our Love and War man says she left out one. 5. Cooking. Now exactly 10 percent of the wives between ages 18 and 24 tell pollsters they only want one child, no more. And four percent say they don 't want any children at all. Were you aware that Kalamazoo got its name from the Indian word for "place where the water boils"? Dead on a stretch of Michigan highway, state patrol- men there found 445 raccoons, 140 turtles, 77 deer, 16 pheasants, 49 mu!lkrats, 82 skunks, 45 rabbits, 57 wood- chucks , 163 squirrels, 66 dogs, 67 cats, 137 oposswru, and 22 foxes . Address mail to L. ~1. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New-- 1wrt Beach, Cal.if. 92660. Clifford Irving, . . Publi-Shers Sett/,e NEW YORK (AP J -The ~1cGraw-Hill Publishing Co. has agreed to acet:!pt $130.000 from author CUfford Irving to reimburse it for funds spent during his writing of a Shaker Breaker HALIFAX, N.S. I AP) - nd Gillis a spuriou s autObiograph y or billionaire 1-foward Hughes. A-1cGra"'-Hill, in a suit in state Supreme Court. asked $173,821.89. The se ttlement was reached after three days · of trial. HOWARD A. Mc Gr a \Y , president of the publishing finn, said in court that his firm had gotten back $500,000 •of another $1$0,000 it advanced Irving, allegedly to relay to 11ughes. The rest. he said, has been tied up by the govern- ment of Switzerland where it -Irving i1 5erv:ing. a 2th-year f«leral prison lerm for his pert to the hoax and his wife , Edith. a two-year term In Switurland w h e re she deposlt<d the funds Wtdcr falseUmes. - l-IN~8ROO/t HARDWARE "4-LUMBIR· ::· Special Purchase! GYM SET "The Perfect Size for Small Yardsl" • Sturdy 2 inch dicmeter tubular steel frcme. •Two cool, comfortable plastic swing seats. • Two passenger glide·ride with steel ~ supported seats. • Easy assembly~olorful1 non.toxic baked enamel finish. REG. s29.95 SAVE ss.001 .. .... J' ....• ~ ••• ···"~ ... ...., . .... '.:';.."• ..... Slnkmaster• GARBAGE DISPOSAL "Engineered To Lost-Don't Confuse This With The Low-Priced Model Sold Elsewherel" • • Big, powerful V. h.p. heavy-duty motor. • Neoprene sound suppressors, heavy steel cutting assembly, drain & sink attachments included. • 1 yr., no questions asked, over-the- counter guarantee. • COmplete in- structions on every box-no need to call a plumber for installation. REG. $29.95 $24~ SAVE OVER $5.001 -. ·• Sturdy tubular aluminum frame with strong vinyf stropping. .. • 'Adjustable I~ m;n~ positions. • Choice of sfiveral cblon. REG. $12.99 HIBACHI 8ig 1011x17" hibachi hos plenty of cooking room, • Ad justable air vents, 3 position Cost-iron grills. • Toke it comping, on .Picnics, to the beach. REG; $6.89 Big 6 Ft. Long ·REDWOOD TABLE & BENCHES ''Buy One Now for S.ummer'Entertalnlngl'' • long lasting-weather resistant redwood ' is easy to finish-table & benches big enough to seat the whole family. • Benches and table are braced for ~ extra strength-:last-a-lifetime quality. REG. $32.99 WOW! SAVE $5,001 ' , ' ... IJ ' ' , -. ' _,, ' • , • BEA ANDERSON, Editor T\leM1r, Mlir 1, 1tn P1p 11 • Kicking the Habit -Smoker's Prayer DEAR ANN LANDERS: I prayed this prayer and then read it on the phone to a friend whose children have been ex- perimenting with cigarette smoking. She aald, "Please send Jt to Ann Landers. ~are it with her and maybe she will t~re it with others!" So -here it is: "Help me , 0 Lord, to put these ter· rible things out of my lile. Help IA> keep me bu.!y, so busy that I don 't have time \0 think about my need !or them. And don't let me tum to eating u a ~bstitute. I don't need THAT either. Guide me in the use of time, energy and " money I will have saved when I get these • l>l<feous coffin nails out of my life. Help ~. O Lord, to made good decisions. ~· ''I have tried to stop before, as you know, and have failed. Now I ask Your i>elp for I know I cannol do it alone. I am ... uhamed that I have caused others dbcom!<rt and concern. I hope I can make it up to them, some.bow. Thanks, O ~. f<r the ~ that I Deed to !!O!'<IUer this awful habir'.'iVith Your belp J. can climb mountains." -KATIE JN ,'INDIANA DEAR KATIE: Here It~ be ohattd 11J milllolll. My thaab ud bal wlalles. I • ..... ,..,. pray ... la ._ ..... Lot - • -la tlu'eo ... a0u. and returned to WOTk the following Tues- day. The dentures the dentist made are a work "of art, tlte most natural I have ever seen. Two steady customers have com- mented on my pretty teeth. Both said, "I never ooticed how lovely they are till now." I just smiled and said, 1'Thank you," but I feel like a fraud -especially since some of my colleagues know the truth. I'd like your a_ d vice. -SMILING THROUGH ' . DEAR SlllILING: Aeeopt lbe com· pllmonts graclomly. The l<dh are,........ YOU paid !or them. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have been the secretary and good rig)ll arm to a wonderful bos.t for seven years. Hi!. wife is a social climber who is also a nagger and a screamer. Ste has a habit of telephoning him In tbe middle of meetings, insists that I put him on, and hen voice can be heard all over the con- ference room. It Is humlllallng beyond belie!. As you may have suspected. I have fallen in love with him, altho 've !ought agaiosl II for yean. I .., an idea that he is somewhat a e of my feelings altllough nothl has been verbalized . Eventually tnan"iage Is ,going to coll&Jl"" HeJ"ll'I take tho abuse much longer. Last week ived a fine job offer across tho eel. Should I take it -or wait d and pick up the pieces! -F · , HOPE BUT NO a!ARITY. DEAR F.H. BUT NOC.: Tate Ille job ·DEAR ANN LANDERS: I -k wllb • tiler. Whu (or If) Ille -·• mirrtqe U.. public and my appearance Is an 1m.. collapoes be COD nlk 1m11 die ...0... 1>6ftint part ot mi job. J'Ve be<n wld 11 be •rtU111 IA>. . .. lbat !or a woman In her early 60& I am Don't gel burned by a "line" that's fA>o f-==d!~~ve._ __ -::hot lo lialldl~ll' It cool-with Aml-j~~~;.,,...::! Now I have a problem, wllkh la mo8Uy Landers" guldo to "Necking and Petlltig -· 1 malltr of conoclence. I had a serious -Whal An the Limits?" Send your re-cum Infection a lew months ago and ·lhe quest IA> Am Landers In care of the Dally " dentlat IA>kl mo I had ID have all my teelh Pilot, enclosing so cenlS In coin and a ulrlcted. I did 911 on a bolld1y -1<end long, stamped. 1tll·addre.u<d envolope. J • . I • • • Sari, ·-' -, • • • • ' No ·Buttons • • • '~. Riddle: Wbat is five to six yards Jong, ~es in many beautiful colors and exotic patterns and. is .worn wi.thoqt a pin or button to hold it on? · The answer Is the mysterious, graeelul- £loat1ng· sari that has been worn by Indian women from time immemorial. Worn because of the hea~ iL is an easily constructed garment since there are no seams, darts_or zippers. Only a tiny hem around each edge of tlie long pieee ol 45-inch wide mate- rial is.needed . They are generally worn over a long draw- string petticoat and simple blouse and come in 5. 512 and 6-loot lengths, depending on the fullness of the woman's figure. Variations occur according to geographical area.•said Manorama Shastri of El Toro. an American resident for the past three years. Some women \Vear bloomer-type pants and a short sari that <;omes only to the knees and some wear· 9-yard saris over their bloomers. Young girls drape their s aris to sho\v their beautilully embroidered slips. The versatile sari can be a wrap for a chilly evening, a covering for the head, a place to hide small articles or wh-atever else necessity decrees. It is a secure form of dress it it is put· on rorrectly. And therein lies the secret How does one go about transforming a long piece of cloth into a beautifully draped dress? Mrs. Shastri reveals the secret with the help ol Setsuko Crowell, an Orange Countian who came from Japan two·years ago and also • is the owner of beautiful native costumes. " Dilly Piiot Photos by Jo Oloon The sari IS wrappe.d around the shoulders (top left) then pleated and measured (top right). At left, pleats are tucked into slip. Below left, material is wrapped around body. Finished design ·is, shown below. ' • ' • i Jf DAJL Y PILOT For -By LAURIE KASPER Df llllJDCIUY .......... " I La,dness ~lpo the single pe<'IOn survive successfully. At ·least that was the premise of one of three lee-- lures on Singles Survival ol- fored through the Orange Coast Evening College. Although this lecture was about Conquering the Nilly .-Gritty, or, in mere realistic terms. housework even the single male must perform, Dorothy Wenck. Orange Coon· ty home advisor, said, "We're Your Horoscope I_ Taurus: T11tsday, May 1, 1973 Singles: Planning trying to learn how to be lazy.'' Htr audience may ha ve thot(gfit they practice this enough already. But lhen she explaJned lazlness as meaning ••using your brains instead of · your niuscles" to g e t houaewort done with Ollly lhnJted time and energy . She suggested they take a managerial view of the work -decide! which tasks are most ·important, set goals, make plans, perform the ~·ork and then evaluate to find a better way of doing the work . Don't lf ll seems thett's never enough time to do the work .which needs to be done , the homo eoooomlst advised them to re<ora how ll'<lCh tlme1hey spend doing what. RECORD 0TIME People waste time when they watch too m u c h t e I e v i s i o n , procrastinate tsome jobs get harder when they're left alone for awhile), let thcrnselves be bW.errupted, waste minutes, d a w d I e (somehow work expands to fit the time available ), fatigue and careless habit.I. "It aU Jdds up to poor management, 11 she said. The ftr31 otep toward good management, Mrs. W e n c k said, Is to save time for a purpose and .oel deadlines. Then, !he said, figure routines and set priorities. "Plaruiing is lbinking which is the most "'-""11 lhlng to do today," she JI.id. And a person should use "lnWligent neglect" and leave things out and koow it. She suggested the singles follow the advice of busy • Saves Time, Energy • mothers who say, "Flrst things first. Second things never.'' But small tuU should be perionned during -"odd minul.e dribble.s" ~_jfeven Uve housekeeping should be done to avoid oome work. PrevenUv~ mea.suree, s h e . explained, might be buying furniture and other lhlngs with maintenance in . mind ii' just "get rid of all that juol< that causes you work." WISE sBOPPING Wise shopping is the simple key to avoid washing and iron- Ing, she said. llnish or permanen t preas) Fabrics which cloo't show and by careful laundering soil o< have soil r..Utant · (wash small loodl In cool finishes are best in dothes, nt<r on the pntle cyde. she noted. But she aJ90 sug· remove from !be washer and gesled tliey 1lear aproas, dryerpmnptly and hang out change clodlOI for play, bang lmmediatel)'). and fold clothes after lhey're A key prindple in work wm1 and remove spots Im-slmplif!eatlon, she explained, medlalely. is "find aomeone else to do the Or, Mrs. Wenck said, a job f1>rcyou.~Singles mlghl ex- persoo's slandards ol how his change Bldlls or caJJ oo an clothes look may be too high outside agency. and in need ol change. She reminded them that Ironing too can be avoided, when it comes to houseclean· first by shopping (buying Ing. "You're the boss" and knit.s, syDthetics, easy care nobody else will motivate a • chonge In hablb. , • 11 I alway• thlnk if you &trlve for the.happy medlum,_you•,. ·doing quite well,'' she aavt.161. But_ tllen she ~~= ,...... w!iY 'they - clean. These Included · ' y thal "you enjoy living ~." It might give a longer Ill• to things or that cllsorder cames inefficiency, tiredness, ~ barrassment, lneds bugs and germs and is a fire hazard. Still. she said, "When )'OU get all worn ou~ the best thing you can do is ""P and take a rest." Redemption at Hand Repeat _ Error Stamp Coll~ctor Comes Unglued WEDNESDAY MAY 2 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 2t-April 19 ): Cycle is suc h that partnerships chan ge, a r e lnlllslormed and lnay shatler. Thia 111 a testing period . What is to last will have to prove ~ durable. Other relationships, situations will melt or flow &Yfay. TAURUS (April 2().May 20 ): Streu· independi!nce.., original approach. Deal with Leo. Find out what was wrong m..pW - be sure error is not repeated in future. Accent is on findin g out what goes on behind some closed doors. You will com· prehend. GEMINI (May 21·June 20 ): Older family member may be kicking up heels.' Means to ready for surprise requests. I What appears eccentric could be natural, if viewed with sense of humor. Refuse to be '· forced into impulsive action. Heed caution signals. . CANCER (June 21-July 22): r Be flexible._,.Highli ght versatility. Saglttarlan couJd figure pr~minently. Some of your desi re! are fulfilled - you find that friends are undergoing changes. One close to you couJd be considering a significant move. LEO (July 23-Aug . 22): Your creative abilities are utilized. You overcome what appeared to be a major obstacle. Aquarius and Sc<rpio persons may be in picture. • VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22), Be ready for change, possible travel, a vari ety of ex- periences, including intensified relationships. GemJni could figure prominently. fi.1oney situation shouJd be reviewed with one close to you, in- cluding mat e or partner. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221, \Vhat occurs is quick. Nothlng is apt to drag. Be ready for direct action. Don't attempt to block progress. Stre~ine ·your owo procedures. 'taarus individual could play key role . Accent Is on coming to term!I with one who holds opposing views. , SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Highlight diplomacy. Be aware of voice 'tone. Avoid shouting, chiding. You can win what you need. Forcing . methods prove fruit l e ss. Emphasis is on gaining access to privileged information. You learn -and gain through add- ed knowledge. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22- Dcc. 21 ): Older individual of· fers benefit of experience. Be recepti ve. Tbrow aside false pride. Friends who make, pro- mises may not be in position to fulfill them. Relative could "spill the beans." H a v e alternative at hand. CAPRICOJjN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19J: You e6n find more 'ef- ficient means for disttibution. People express interest In your ideas, concepts. There is greater demand for )S>Ur prod· uct. Ariea is likely t6· be in picture. Build on solid base. : . Sailors Head South of the Border Balboa Yacht Club Commodore George E. Hoeding- haus (~nter) and the Mmes. John Payne and Joseph Monigal pack sailing and south of the border attire for the annual Ensenada Race. BY C cre\vs for 40 entries will be honored with a sendoff party Wednesday, May 2, at 8 p.m. in the clubhouse. By ERMA BPMBECK AT ' There is nothing like a redemption center for trading stamps to see people as they really are. I . was in last week redeem· ing my one boo.k for a can of tennis balls. WIT'S . END , The Woman in front of me cruise to the Bahamas." said, "Oh, do you play a lot of 1 didn't want to talk to laer tennis?" "I don't play at all," I said. anymore. All my life I baYe "Then why are you getting been plagued by people wllh tennis balls?" infinite patience. _ .of which I "Because I got the Mexican have none. They have ruined maracas the last time." my life wilh their good ex· "I don't understand," she said. amples. · "They're the only two items I kne~ her type. She was the in the catalogue for one book." kid who. ate all the dry ca~e "Then why don't you save first and saved the neat ici.Qg longer'?" she asked, opening nd h"pped Iii her shoppin'g bag and reveal-a w 1 cream un ing at least 90 books. last. She was the ooe who iet "Don't tell me ," I said. everyone else tear into theµ- "You're a nun and this is your Christmas presents and baVe new station wagon." it all o;er and .then sl<>wlf, She shook her head. painstakingly opened hers "You're retiring from the 'tho · the bank and the whole town chip-WI ut n~ing pa~. ped in to buy you \Vest , She carried her bab1e~ 11 Virginia ." months and never complained. "No." she said. "I'm a S~e always allows enough houseWire and I've saved all time to ~ve a flat on her way these stamps for a vacation to . the au-port. She always waits for the "beep" on htr Po.laroid camera before rip- AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().feb. 18): Trip may have to be postponed or route changed. Relatives tend to argue. ~ mai n neutral. Be aware or your olvn needs. interests. Let others know you-do intend to live your own life. Leo may be in picture. Club Installations Gain Attention ping it off. She never get! in the express line with ~ven items. She never crawls under a pay toilet on her hands and knees . She paid half price. for PISCES (Feb. l~Marcb 20): Learn by teaching -share knowledge. You can rise above the petty. Aquarian could make surprise appearance. Money situation is not stable. However, there is roo!h fo.r: optimism. Situation is subject to favorable change. Juniors South Coast Junior Wo man's Club installed Mrs. Art Hoel- -derlin as president. Serving on her board are the Mmes. Cliff Brightman, Ron Carey, Nick Morenc and Dale Frye, vice presiden~; Jim Guest, secretary; DaVld K e 11 n er, treasW'er; Paul Johnson, Mike Bru.sseau, Frank FI e ck , Robert Jessings and John ReiUunueller. Jolly 60s Jolly 60s will visit the Kellogg Arabian Horse ranch ThursUay, May 3. A bus will leave the Central Baptist Church, Huntington Beach, at 10 a.m, returning at 3:30 p.m. All retirees may m a k e reservations with M r s . Bernard Gage. Girl Scouts Laguna Beach Girl Scout Assoc iation will sponsor a Cin- co de Mayo camp corps from Friday, May 4, at 4 p.m. through Sunday, May 6. at noon in San Cleme nte State Park. Brow n,i es wi ll participate in Saturday ac- tivities from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Council day, ~1ay 3. from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. and continue on con- secutive Thursdays through May 24. Topics will include f\-Ianagc- ment as You Shop. J\.Iaking the Mds t of Your Meat DolJar, Fruits and Vegetables: The Vitamin Team and Rounding Out the Menu (But not You). Holy Spirit the same coa t you paid full price for two weeks earlier. S c h o o I As she left the counter \vith her travel plans under h~r arm. I mumbled, "Lucky devil. She'll probably meet some dude on the beach and have a real rung." Santa Ana High audi torium. Performing will be Mark Denis of KEZY, Dick Dissel, the New Covenant Gospel Singers, Isabel Mancini, Guy Napoleon and the My ra Bren- nen Irish Folk Dancers among others. Languages "I wouldn't count on it." said the cl~rk. "A romantic beach doesn't mean much v:hen you have a pennanent case of glue breath." l-'atience isn't everything. Foreign Language Associa-,----------- Wedding Vows Recited • ! Cancer Society City chairman Mrs. Shirley \Vallon will be hostess Friday, May 4, at 1 p.m. for an American Cancer Society aP'" preciation luncheon in the Fireside Inn , Westminster. Honored will be ~luntington Beach volunteers for the April fund-rai sing drive. Officers wi ll be installed by \Vest Grove Area Council, Beta Sigma Phi International Thursday, May 3, at 8 p.m. in the community room of Golden West College. Mr s. Dennis Fine wil1 be installed as president. A variety sho w will be presented Friday and Satur· day, !day 4 and .5, by the Holy Spirit Parish or Fountain Valley, \Yit h performances scheduled for 8 p.m. in the tion of Orange County will make its second annual cul- tural exchange trip to Ensen- ada Friday to Sunday , ?\fay 4-6. • ' • ~ ROBERTS- CARRINGTON t Butler University students, Perri Anne Carrington and ; Bruce Evan Roberts \\'ere ,. married in St. John's Church, '· Osgood, Ind. with the Rev. Bernard Voges officiating. The bride 's parents •re Mr. and Mrs. George L. Car- ri?)gton of Greenwich, Conil. and former Newport Beach residents. Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Roberts of Osgood. Maid of honor was r.tiss Kalhleen Carrington, while bridesmaids were Mrs. David Elsey, Mrs. Craig Lowry and Miss Heidi Eikenberry. , Serving as best man was 1 Robin Fallis and groomsmen l were David Elsey, John 1 Vollmer, William \Vag11er and , Ted Sclnunan. ; The bride is affiliated with Kappa Alpha Theta and he is a member of Lambda C h i Alpha. SLADE-YATES· Estancia Park. Costa l\1esa YOUa CLOTHtMo-- DOi.LAa oou 'UITHIR HUI • MRS. SLADE MRS. ROBERTS was Ule selling for the mar- riage linking Lynn Yates and Peter C. Slade. and Mrs. Herbe rt Sl ade of Tustin. asked Patrick J. J\.·Jurphy to be his bes! ma n. The bride. daughter of l\-1r. and l\1rs. John V. Yates of Costa l\fesa, was attended by Mrs. Howard Rogers Jr. The bridegroom, son of ~Ir. The newlyweds. \rho will reside in Costa J\.·lcsa. are graduates of Nev.·port lfarbor High School. The bride nlso 11t- tended Orange Coast College. Golden Needle's S~t o1 tk 'illt.d ! J BUTTONS ! ! On1y 1-1---1-'1 ~tear. ... vRluc.1 up lo $2.00 PCI' card ... Tf!kc Rdvantago ot th is f&ntasllc price "°'''' Golden 'needle FAeA1cs IOUTM COAIT PLAZA • CAltOUllL LIVIL Of'8I IVlllMOI I lllNOroln llU I BSP Upsilon Omicron Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi will install Mrs. 1-fugh Davis as president Saturday, May 5, at a Mothe r's Day luncheon at 10 a.m. in the Chariot Room of Anaheim Bowl. On her board will be the ?\-Imes. Dennis KeMedy, vice president; Wayne Ruhnke and Tim Rogers. secretaries, and Bob Stofer, treasurer. Riviera Club Guys and Dolls section. Riviera Club \Vill host a Cinco d~Mayo party. Saturday, May 5, in Rancho Capistrano, private ranch of Mr. and Mrs. John Crean, San J u a n C.apistrano beginning at'S p.m. A hofexican dinner from La Paz restaurant will be served at 7. Demo!'rats · Orange Coun ty Democratic clubs will cosponsor a Charter Night Friday, May 4, from 7:30 p.m. to midnight tn the Tea msters Union Ha 11 , Orange. Elected officials and candidates have been invited . Budgets Getting the most for your grocery dollar will be the theme of a four-part lecture series offered at the UC Agricultural Extension office, 100 S. Harbor Blvd .• Anaheim. The series will begin Thun- OVERWEIGHT? 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS Undor Modlcol Supervision at the Omega Clinic HOURS: 9:00 • 7,00 :lUrlN"lPPO .COSTA MESA AMAHllM UNTA .. ,.... '"'..,... ...... '"' t 169 76'ii UM W .....,. 111m,,_r.A" 1M W, LllH1M1 ..... nMM . HT Vl.41 87~9347 · • 646· 163 I '6329 (2UI 691-17'1 I . ' I 20%0FF ANY CARPET CLEANING SHAMPOO GOOD Goo4 for '•h•t JNirtf touclli up, In b•twten 1te•m cl••n- 11191. Or for •p1rtm111t1. Cteani CJ'M~ter CA/t,.11 AND U,.HOtSrPY CLIANl/t$ Mosl9rc""'9• CEstablished 19251 STEAM CLEAN .IETTIR Quallty tkaMlf. IJJ.. tr1ctt h••"Y '°"· 12 10 24 hr. dryl119. St1rllltff ''"''· . HYDRA CLEAN "IEST 11it Ulfll'llate tl1tnl~ ..... t•1 trtct'en '6wtr. Quick 6 t1 I hevr 1 d...,lnt (most C•,.,.fl). Ho 1hrlM:.,.t Only the w111d •ntln Y"t ......_ 540-6011 OR 645-1313 FREE ESTIMATES e ONE DAY SERVICE Offer ........ to M"f lltl\,I 1740 Superior Avenue !Newport & 17th St.> Cotta Mela COUPON • • • ,• '· . • ' AMBLER TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI & JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY CAN I GO TO THE CIRCUS ' TODAY '? ,, ....... .. ....... , .. , ........ .. II - 1 H • :~ 'l J f l I -l j~ JI OKAY, Bur FIRST YOU MUST TAKE YOl,,!R BATH-: • 'CAN YOU DO IT FAST? TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 50 Bolt's 1 Ditto pa1tner 5' Kind of look 51 Europeans 53 Augments 110 Egyptian god 55 p .. 14 b . repos1t10n .• ·.~ -· --ii 0.u1. 56 Tawdry , Approximately 61 Participle: , 15 Moderated Abbr. : 16 The --·· of the 62 Jn a lively " game manner 64 lndi&n language 65 Absolute Yesierday's Puzzle Solved: .( 17 Mentally • · deranged ; 19 Rigid ' 20 Frequently 21 Harem room 22 Mante name 23 Primitive 66 Running l~IWlllr quarrel 67 -·· reckoning 68 Particular 25 Calendar abbr. 26 Great -- lake • 30 Edgar's nickname •JJ Rio---- •;14 School teMtbook · ;IB Not too clear "38 Now part of ....;-India -39 "Anneof --· ... 42 Income -·· ~43 ChooSe '44 De la ····< .. ; French '..r exp\orer r.,~s Tr,apped ~7 "Ben --·" 14'9 Insects ' • 11 l9 • ' fashion 69 Bri"1ant , .. ,,,, DOWN I Chicken····. 2 Coin of India 3 Unruly groups 4 Time !)f')riods 5 Mariner 6 Color 7 Fr igid: 4 words 8 Having a certain tone 9 Norse epic 10 Kind of ca1 11 -Harness paft 12 Forgot to mention 1 13 Julfls Ve1ne character 18 Falsehood 37 Panama CanatZo'ne lake 40 Not new 24 Broadway 41 Flounder productio n 46 Ollidiied 25 ARen and 48 Delight M1cMurr1y 51 Negative 26 Sheets of . phrase: 2 matted wool words 27 ,, F ., 52 Just befot'll ···-rome Sun. ·28 Indiana city 53 Copied 29 Sneaky 54 Ventura 55 Musictan ·--. person 31 Weapon 32 Creator of Sherlock Holmes ;n Fac~itates 35 linen item Weller 57 Hocir:ey gitrM VIPs 68 Conception 59 Bullet 60 ·--Park 63 !lad~Preli.11; 11 A .. by Tom K. Ryan Me#~~~=iri,imr 1.fol\C 1Nl>l&J:NOUS 1ll1!U' IJ1llE1! . Sl'!:C:l1'5 Of JNlllAN. ' • A .Cl.Pf/#~ by Al Smith by Dale Hale Ernie Bushmiller •· • DOOLErS WORLD , ... ~-Cl ., GORDO MOON MULLINS. ANIMAi, CRACKERS ... 00 qouf PEANUTS. by Charlie M.' Sc:hulz ' CUCK! "~"" ----,.,,._,,.., r----mil.!l-~"!';'!!-~ r::::~-----, WllAT'5 SO ~ AllOVT 5TUl'l0 WINNING iHll1TV 6AME<i OF &11(D ! EOO·Mu. IN A Rlllll ? PLUNK!~=? "lft .. JUDGE PARKER "l"OUR TAP>LE IS READY HOW, MA.. DRIVER! MISS PEACH I ~ ' IT~~~E U9S' THAN HUMAN; NF'fRIOft TO HUMANS ; -TM HUMAN caN91C&RATION. ·~l'IOUllOe.o:s 'TRUC~ UNTOUCMEO, ~-RYTlllNC; TOO -""'°ANCIENT l!Vl!N FOR STRIPPE'R!i." ~ ~ -------- by Harold Le Doux DO ••• DO ..OU AAV! ANOTHER 't--1 TA.eLf? by Mell by C.hester Gould TMEV REMO\IEOA TIRE, TM EN G"-VE UP I TIRliS -Al..L !iMOTI • DAILY PILOT J7 by Charles Barsotti ,--------. by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson ST,AIC> Fl'/-· · tT WON1T 8c I.ONG, NOW ... l,iy Roger Bollen THE GIRLS .. I, there aay pa.ce at all tbat, H tbe day yoa antve, doeu"t 1Udden.ly 1tlrt bavlD~ anmually rainy wea&ber?" • f ----;---I -· " - • ·' ...... ' * Or r o . 4;_,!iltl~ iS~t BeginS: . . , ciN6/iNATi !APJ . -"J'm not ti.e nel't Sindy !Coutu.. .l'm Steve Carl too."·. The Wori:fs came coldly: But lbe comparifons keep coming; as· Carllon, alr,eacly a week a~4 of. his l'ln· ning pace of last year. when Pe won 27 games. bids to become th& National League's first 30-game wiruler in 40 ytars. Dizzy Dean w8s 30-7 for the St. Louls C§rllinals in 1!!34. 'l11e shadow of Koufax bas beeo hard to . shake. ' It started -in 1965, when the Cardinals issued· Carll!>D uniform No. 32~ the same :1s: the Los Angeles Dodgem' great pitcher, and: heralded hµn as "the next • k.outai. '' ' . .. ~ dldn't ask fot'the 'humBer, ·: he says. ''They j~st gave tt to i;ne,". Traded to the Philadelphia Phlllies after hofdout problems, Carlton won the league•a Cy YoUng Award last year for his 'II. victories -Marly llalf the Phils' victories -and tied an all-time victory record fof a Jeft-lwtder .. ·The othe"r ~ southpaw to win 27? J).oufax. MEAN "NOTHING , "The records mean nothing," said car11on, who, at 18, is considered in "" pitcher's pr1m1i .,.. ... "!'Vo 'ju$! go\ qne goal: wiJ\. After that, everj'thirig"·else •\ takes care of ~If," he said. Carlton'• •tYle and second straighl 2(). · vict01y se,eson 8ren't tbe only things reminiscent ol Koufa1. 111ere is 'his speed. He's already in the record book ahead / of Koulax:fo~ 111<;1 slrlktou\k r 19 --iii a nine-inning game. He~ and Tom Seaver of the New York Mets share that mark. Koufu 'farined l& twice, before his retire- metll ·In 1986. c.rt_ton._and,Koufax,~.wbo never faced - each . other oo the mound, are the only Na~Ol)4! Leagile .Pllchm to ·surpass. th~ · 300-'stttkeout level since 1900. · Koufax, who holds the all·tiine inark of 382 for a aeaoon; Puled 300 three times. C.rlton did It Jaat year witaa10, Winning his first · strikeout tiUe. carJton's fou r-hit 3-1 victory over the defending . Jl{aU..ooa! League champion Cinl!itm.Sti Reds Frieiay night .lowered his earned run average to 2.47 this season. He Won the e:r.a. crown Jast year with a 1.98 mark. IS WINS .IN ROW His 'fourth victory last year did not come tmtil May 3. Later, with a 5-6 record; he reeled oft 15 straight victories, just two. short of. Ille modern-day mark set by Pittsbutgh's. EIRoy Face in 1959. Pbils _mana,g~f Danny Ozark, who. fias with the Dodgers al'mOSt 30 years and v.ratched Koufax develop, ·says Carlton has-"th& saJTie intestinal tertltude Sandy had' and tbe tremen~ stamina. And he's got the slider, which Koufax never had." C8 rlton went from a l~game loser with the ·Cards in 1970 to a 2().9 mark in 1971." His 1972 performance reaped an un- precedented raise of from $97,500 to $165,tlOO a year -the highest slngle- season salary ever paid a pitcher. VP/ Tt1Moto1 GREG LEE (5), FRED SAUNDERS (1 4) MOVE INTO RUSSIAN TERRITORY, BUT rr s ALL IN VAIN. Americans Weak Says US~R C·oach .. SAN DIEGO (APJ -"I'm an' old: alley Boloshey had tipped in a field gOal to tie fighter but l wan·t equal muscie;Y the count. All told, the lead changed declared coach Bob Cousy of the U.S. na : hands 20 times. . . · . The second confrontation saw three uo~al _team after Russia squ~red the~ Russians foul out, one USA player foul series in a rough b~ket¥" bat~. · ~ out, another thrown out and C:Ousy get On. t~ ,other ~nd, Russf8's coac~ .;, charged with 'a technical foul for Vla~un1r Kandr,~shin decla~ thro~g overzealous objections. an 1nte.~preter, Swen Nat~r .1s 8: dirty Ron Behagen of Minnesota was the ·~nie difference was simply a matter of pitc!ling regularly with !lie Phlls," Carlton said. player, and he made .. mottons with his man banned when referee Martti · elboKw.dr hin h Id 't t lk after Huhta.miki of Finland charged him with an as . w o wou n a elbowing Seattle Next ' ' ' NFL Addition? Expansion OK LOS .ANGELES (AP) .;_ . The 26 Na· tional ·Footb.Bll ~e owners have changed their minds and. now favor ex- pansion to 30 teams, with Seattle topping the list of contenders for a £ranchise, the Los Angeles Times said today. Owners generally agreed at the recent league meeting in Scottsdale, Ariz .• that expansiO!l . would µke 11ix to eight y~rs and tbal Seattle wod1d be the first ad· th7 fll:sf game, .di~ s~k at some length . Aleksallder Belov. the man best known this time and s~id, The USA has a in America as the Russian 'vho sank the . weaker learn this .yea~. than the 1971 final ficld goal in the 1972 Olympic finals team ~e Played against. y.·on 51·50 by the Russians, was the He did npt. elaborate.. player involved. "I kind of usi::ct my 1 The Russ1~s had 1ust l>ea~n 1~ elbow as a lever to get around him ,'' said Yanks, 78-~ in the second game I~ their Behagen arter the game, "but I didn 't series of six after the open.er m Los elbow him." A_ng~lcs \vent to the Americans con-Nater's teammate, Bobby Jones of v1n~ngly, 8.1-66. . . North Carolina, u'ho left the game with Bill Wakori,· the National Collegiate five fouls, conunented : Player of the Year thc ·past two seasons. "Swen's the most meek guy on the miss~. the second ~ame ~ause of .a team . He'd never hurt anybody. The knee lDJUry suffered in the first one. HIS Russians have some guys who really ~CLA un~erstudy, Nater, '"'as the starter sneak blows." 1n San .Diego. Cousy fumed agai n. "It's organized SOVIET SMACKS JONES. mayhem under the basket. Outside foul s are called closely, but the criterion under the basket seems to be blood." John Pitching Tonight .· Knicks 'in~mk Fa.rum, -I '• • ' * .. ~ --- Eoo=; =~.~FF~~l.ly ~Resred Foo INGLEWOOD (AP) -Defending cliampion Los Angeles was rat1~ a .soljd lavorl\e lo beat lbe New ,.Yc\!Jo..Knicks '.:"-•gajll ;~ retain Its Nallcqal Basket· -'1>!111 Alsociatlon title In the championship · serles!starUng tonight. -·-'l;oolght';·game ls the on1y one-01-the · Serlealnol scheduled for televising. For the opening game at the Forum before a capacity cto.wd of-.-J7,., the Lakera were listed four-pob1t favorites and ~Y were t-5 at Las Vegas and 8-5 in Reno 'to win the series. Game time is 8:115. A year ago Los Angeles beat New York Jour games lo ane in the finals . · Fully rested; the Lakers have had since last Wednesday for injurle's to Jim McMillian and Keith Erickson to heal. GLENN w· HITE ·: .,., Both men practiced with the team on : ".,i/, Sunday after the Knicks had upset spo· rts Editor .. :•( Boston 94-78 to win tbe Eaatern crown. ~ Reportedly Ned trisb, president of the ' Knicks, wanted a detay in the start of the , ~·:·:; fmal.s to allow his team more rest. average o( 23.8 followed by McMWl1t1.·· · · However, the NBA office said it had with 21 . Hopefully for Los Angeles, ·the~ received no official 'reqlfest. Also, the bruised knee McMillian auffered igainsi,;! Lakers want no more delay to the start ·Golden Gate has healed and he can see 1• r. of the finals. Coach BJll Shanrum feels his full service. . club might get state with too long a Frazier averaged 19 against the Lakeri ~ ,,. layoff and the Lakers were at a peak in in the four games of the regular aeaaon···.~ downing Golden State. and Earl Monroe 16.5. .., •".,tA That Western ~es ending Wednes· Money will again be Jn the six ~ day, went 4-1 while the Knicks and for the playoff winning team. From ~·1 ) -Celtics went the· full seven games. NBA record pool of $750,00I> for the three', Unanimously, the Lakers preferrlid. to se~s. the winning team collects $100,000 · · meet New York in the finals: They would and the loser $65,000. have the home court advantage, and Going in, the Lakers have alreadY won> :ii against Boston during the i::egular season $10'2,500 and the Knicks, who didn't win. they were M . -1 their division regular Season crown, "I guess you can say the law of $65,000. ·": averages has caught up with us,'' com-Last year the Lakers won $22.f.SOO aiid':~ .. menttd-La\'ers star Jerry West alter generally lhe pot Is divided about 12· watching the Knicks-Celtics game on wa~. "• television. "We didn't get a tot of breaks Happy Hairston, out most or the ye1t for so many years, but now we are get-because of a knee injury which required '~ ting some." Playofi home court ad-surgery, should be able to see limJted" r vantage is based on season records service against the Knicks. A year ago be: . , ~~;:ea!~ ~~~rs S:~:.e 60-22, New York fu~s ~k~ :=ndJ11~~~~~ ~: ·; Wilt FrazIU:-Who paced the Knicks bounder. with 2.5 points in the final game against • Erickson, the No. 6 man for the Lakm ":. Boston, commented, "They wanted us, this year, suffered an ankle injury in the •:-: now they've got us," ·and his inference Golden Gate series, but bpth Keith and ,\ \Vas that this 'vould be an entirely dif-McMillian were reported in good coo-· · ferent series than last year. dition for the New York playorfs. , ' '. ForO!le ~bing_, ~foot-10 Willis Reed is 'Mle Knicks averaged 100 points against •'• back and he might be some ansWer to 7-1 Los Angeles during the regular seaal '·' Wilt Chamberlain, the most valuable and the Lakers 97 even though the fourl player in tbe· 1972 fmal set. games split evenly. Both clubs bad sit''.·: However, during the season, Cham-players in double figures for the 1cortni »'1 berlain averaged 21 rebounds a game department. . ~ against New York While Dave -The Thursday game at the Forum :· DeBusschere averaged 11 to lead the slarts at 7:30. Then lbe playoffs p to:'" Knicks against the Lakers. New York for games on ~unday ml - In scoring, it was West with an Tuesday. . :· Sham T.rainer Hot Semantics Is the Issue I • . ·. -Kentucky Derby Nears :: LOUISVILLE (AP) -Frank "Pan· Warbucks, dead-heated ior third will".· cho" lii1artin, trainer of Kentucky Derby Impecunious in the Blue Grus; ALsco ' 1 contender Sham, is thinking about Stable's Royal and Regal, the ~:~ Secretariat and trainer Lucien Laurin ,-Derby winner, and . Pritchard, •1bomas ... one with respe<:t, the other with anger. and Resseuguet's Our Native, the F'1a· "; Martin, upset by a published remark of mingo winner. · _, Laurin's, feels Secretariat is the horse to Other possibles were Twice a Prince, beat in Saturday's Derby despite his Navajo, Starkers, Set~to., Forego and· upset in the Wood Memorial And he is Shecl<y Greene, winner of the St<pplng confident thal Sham can beat Secretariat Stone Purse last Salunlay on openlna.dQ and any other -3-year-old in the Derby. at ChurchW Downs. '~ "I know him 15, 18 years," Martin said One who definitely will miss the Dt~ Monday of Laurin. "But after that is Vodika, who had a colic atlack Salli!S remark in the paper, I don't want to be a daji'. 3 friend of his. I never make a remark "That attack was just harder m tit' about him. He called me a thief. I didn't horse than J thought it was," said trainlt. call him a thief." For~t Kaelin. "It's tough to tal(tl; In a story published before the Wood because you never know if you11 ever ~ Memorial at Aqueduct April 21, Laurin another horse of Derby caliber.:• :• --tUtion in the mid 1970s. Ownefs favor expa~ion because it preV'ent;; a rival league; from getting a foothold in the new cities. The coa ch of the Kansas City-Omaha National Basketball Association clubp declared he '"'anted to add a center and "muscular forwards" lo his naUonal team 'vhich Currently depends on finesse. was quoted as saying Secretariat ~~,: wouldn't, lose "unless they steal the \ .,2: 1 ' SeatUe o£fers another inducement . he said, a . $43 mjllioo domed stadium seating · 65,000 persoos due to be oom- pleted in'l975. The group which has been seeking a Seattle franchise the longest is headed. by llugb. McElhenny, the Hall of Fame halfback. He has ties to the financia. community tbei'e and in. the Midwest.. · McEIMnny and his group are said· to be 'tilling to-pay $13 million for. a cltise that may cost ·the eventual buy much as $26 million . Other c ' Qfy in the running tor franchises are Tampa and Honolulu. tt was also reported that NFL Com- missioner Pete Rozelle has resumed discussions with networks over lhe -league 's televlsiorr contract, '"'hich ex· pires at the end of this season. , The teams head for Albuquerque and Wednesday night's th ird game. , Before 13,895 fans in the Sports Arena, the deciding points came with one minute 52 seconds remainin g when Jaak Salumets sank two free throws. Seventeen .seconds earlier, AJeksander n n n USSR !7U USA 1761 O FT OFT Dvornl · 8 0.0 16 S&nllerl 1 /).0 2 S~lm\i s l·~ 17 JOl1!~ 1 J.• 7 &etov• 6 S-6 17 Niter S 1·1 11 Ellst>ko l 0·1 6 De0r1111'1oc S .5-6 l S S.t,,llrv 6 •·6 16 HtnllerilOll J 1·• t Zrm~orodv I 0-{I 2 McF1rl•nll ' 1 0·0 ~ Gn.£M•rv {I {l.Q 0 B-"'•g•n l 1·2 1 l<c.rkly& 1 ,., s l('.&rl • 4·• 12 Bo!olllv 2 0.0 • LH 1 0.0 2 Shksllln O 0-0 o O•l~r ' 0-{I ·I Tct!l5 33 17·19 11 TlllDli !(I lf·72 76 USSR .:i 31 -71 USA 41 35 -7f Foult'd cut -USSR, Dvorni. l<orki~•. Bclc~: USA. Janis l OT.!I 1ouls -USSR 35. USA SO Teoctinlc&I 10111 -t.!SA c~ch Cousv 11.111nC18nc! -ll~ts. As Dodgers ·Host Chicago LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Davey Lopes. I.he Dodgers' ne\v starting sccoi\d baseman, says he thinks he can steal 40 to 50 bases a year in the big leagues and that there are some striking similarities between himself and Maury Wills. And \vith seven stea ls in seven at- tempts since he came.up to the Dodgers late last year, who's going to argue? Lopes replaced Lee Lacy six games ago in the Dodger start ing line-up. He'll be there again tonight as the Dodgers seek their flfth win in a row as they open: a nine game home stand with lefty TOm- my JOhn. 2-1 , throwing against the t Chi cago Cubs' Burt Hooton, 1-2. Since moving into the lineup Lopes has hit a modest .250. His defense and bunt· ing. however, have helped in areas where manager Walt Alst-On has said the club could use improvement. He has fielded nawlessly and executed two sacrifice bunts on a team which has 10 for the year. Lopes has also stolen three bases in three attempts this year, however, and it is tbere be feelB he can help the team the most. "I think I can steal 40 to 50 bases in the big leagues i£ I play every day," said . the man who pilfered 48 and hit .317 for Albuquerque in the Pacific Coast League last year. "Not that Jim any Lou Brock or a Wiiiie Davis but I kn ow what I'm doing on the bases," .says Lopes .. race." Rnn. kn·e P'1-.yer··.!i'_ ... -... ·: '. Martin felt Laurin was saying that ·'"-" JB . . Sham couldn't win without help, and he became so upset that he scratched '. . , ,.._. Knightly Dawn and Beautiful Music, who Brill Is -De~d ;_; had been entered to run as a Sigmund ''< Sommer-owned entry with Sham. , 1 ~ Sham, the Santa Anita Derby winner: LOS · ANGELES (AP) -Marty Jirtt : finished second behind Angle Light, who an All-America ·blocklng bac~ ~ also is trained by Laurin. However, , Angle Light js owned by EdWln Wh il· Knute Rocl<ne at ·Noire Dame in !llO taker while Secretarial is owned by la.ter hoed -:_at· LI,' So& uCI ~ Meadow Sl;lble. University, is dead at 67. . ,. "I don't lhink he is 11 good a horse as Br1U died Mond'1 ol a'bearl attacll. '. : Sham Is," Martin .. td of Angle Ughl Brill starred 111 ·-. ',•· ,..,..,_,,.. ,· Bui of Secrttariat, he said: . --r.o "You can't ·knock him. How can you Notre Dame teams ol 1929 an4 11G9, ~ knock a champion (Secretar1at was 1972 outstandlhg blO<ller, he ~·bad-a ... - Horse of the Year)? You can only try lo cds!iil ~-.S.a'runner, ...,~ -Oeat him." ~-r Sham showed he is ready lo mak! a to~chdQWiis· u Noire ' 1Je!ne " strong effort Saturday ' -and he will PeM!Ylvanta, tll).20, In li30. · • gh"" D "I waa' -·t .lo prove -~"':°" .. ," ·, have Kni "V awn as a ~g mate .,.. ......... ....,.. _:by working thr<e-quarters ol a rnlle in said later. !'I attM<led Ptniiaylvanfl · 1:11 1/5 and going oul seventh -eighths freshman bul they weren'I iml~ Halos Toss S.inder at Tiders _T~ni.dht 1nc;~~.?"~1d Secretariat and Angle ~::.r.-~Wty.~ltralislimd to ~. • ' • 1 · • • Scheduled for ·today was the one-mil~ Brill was in ..Siltai1t coactr 11 ~ ~ . @!t -.Light will•WOl'.k out We<IJtesdey,.. _ • ~ ' ·'-Derby .Trial Stakes, the.final pttpfor-\he bla In 1931 and .lf3a. He~· " teres\ing dlcholomy shaping up between ly, ~old be lmptoved. only two earned runs in seven !Mings !Qr Perllaps surprisingly,· the An(tls are 15 tllte6-~. . . the caJJlomla Aniela .tarting and reUef Singer, Ryan and May have accounled a creditable 2.57. not neee$$8rlly dowh on !belt rtllcf A fiel d of ·II~. wt11 entered for the toyO!a 1"'f 191M!. • pit~aa.ibe;Jlalosopenaseven-game On Tl' Ton''"ht But lion Perranosltl 1s at U6, and ' corps. '' , _Derby 'l'rlal wlllLMr. ~apd · Br111,wbo llvidU·ln-WhlWer,wua ar m fol 01 m m 7> lo th st F' K c I) B p: tE ir a " le a d p 0 • b tt n c fl b u • • c ti • F 0 D • " c ,, i OETaolT (~) There's an in· The relief pitching. Winkles says polite· Second year man Dave Sells bas allowed. clin SIUI plloh In "'".t!!•Jor)cagues. Derby, '('hlch Jtf .. poclo<I to ilraw ~balrt man at La ,Salle.fl'om -·lf33.ID -~ roa lrlP t !'with BID Singer, 3-1, fir· Cbab•el 5 ~ 5 Stove 1larber and Lloyd Allen hate "W1> <erlainly hope ;'theytn iniprov.," Gpld 1111 lllt ·ll~e!y ·Derby c4n-lllllilai!r lot a qmr dlJtrlbUl1nl' • r11'1W~llOdlildliei'iPir..,...1tii>~n,;'l2ro----===~~~~~~===-•soarmnd~Wl:ts 111111t:1o··n1es111peo~tll-.•eelr..---nld-t-11pokttman."''Bul they <ill"""''\' ,.,..,di~llate~"11i-t'1111:f.Hl{l""'--!1>.,. -~·-·~"',."'t,'r-.c-1 ,:-.• -.-.:---'...:J!, ~"--~Lll~~~~===tl=-~ ll. ·' · . 1 for eiaht of ti., Angels nine wins. In 100 · ,Allen. In his third-year; haa bttn pltclied . muc_h, so !\'•··hard to:ooae 'loO .......-,...,...._ D ~ .._..,." •vm. dlildren llld four ~ Call/orni•'• to~· w ~· •laritra -iMlngS they have allowed 25 earned runs. ;particularly surprlS!Di. Aa a rookie he much·on their e.r.a. at .lhls polJ\t. ' l!:lkwoOd •'• ResUWi et1c wiljnor ~ Req\llem Masi 'Wlll bo eeleln1"d::f Slnpi', NC\114 R¥tn llld.'.&<IY Mil' -a l,lS e.r.a .• and have struck out 101 had 15 saves and a 2.49 e.f.a. Last year ''We ·stlll think the-t\IY'. we Ill~• ... R; Mra. ~•l'l<il!btr& • Holy c,rou ~ a..p.1 1~ have been aa· llOOd .. 'll)';lhreo startl,,. while walking only 32. he was 1-7 and 3.48. aO)lhe job. With I~ oew -~ted bll> • q .. 1 Jn ·lheMY'~nsll ••• ,.. -••• ---.i.._~H .: .. _' ~ plld1enl Jn t b • ~ according \o 1'ie sta!f's four rolicf pitchers, Perranoskl and Barber, old pros. are ter rule the starlers·ire gojlg"' pjlCh a 'AppleWn's· E~allont/ • -...~--·-""' -• m""ller 8obbJ ~lntfd'. · ' meanwhile. have combined c.r.a. of i.36. being put lo a severe test to eee if Ibey lol more lhan bef""I.~ the Blaecrm wtnner: Ed E · er'a Cro.r Cemet~'1·' • ' ' .. I I • New· Shuffle Of, Leagues SJihmitted By ROGER ~ARl.'QN Of ~ Datlr 'llot ..,. Huntington Beach. Costa Mesa 1'.1arina and: Mission Viejo· tilgh schools ~ve been moved about in the continuing proposal for ~ 1974-75 relcaguing problem among Orange County preps. ~e · Unified School District ad-m~.t~ator Lou Josei)b; in charge or the maMive reteaguing problem for the 1974- 75 school year, reYeals .a second proposal following a two-hour meeting with 36 of the~tY's principals. ... l{ere's the second -proposal is1ued for stuV: Sunset League E d I s o n , Wtftmlnsler, Fountain Valley, NewJ>Ort Harbor', Los Alamitos, Loara, Western, sania /\JJa. ' Irvine League -Corona d.,el l\1ar, Hun- tington Beach, Estancia, l\f a r 1 n a , Anaheim, Cypress, Santa Ana Valley, l\1isslon Viejo. Orestvlew League -El l\1odena, Foothill, Kalella, l\1agnolla, Orange, 'J'us1in, Villa Park, Saddleback. Outten Grove League -Boha Grande, Garden 'Grove, Santiago, Pacifica, Los Amigos, R8Dcbo Alamitos, La Qu.lnta. Freeway League -Lowell, Savanna, Ful)erton, La Habra, Troy, Sunny Hills, Kennedy, Buena Park. League D -Laguna Beach, San Clemente, El Toro, Dana Hills, Unlveni- ty; .~sta ~1esa. League E -Esperaor.a, Valencia, Brea1 Canyon, El Dorado, Sonora. Tbe major differences from the first proposal invol•:lflg Orange Coast area , teams are: C.OSta Mesa takes Mission Viejo's place in League .D. -Huntington Beach and Mission Viejo are ,inserted into the Irvine League, aJong with Marina . "We've shuffled several things around follQwing our meeting with the principals after the initial proposaJ," says Joseph. "Many of our principals expressed a desire to maintain as much of tbe- present leagues as possible with the idea of working in the new schools or trying to solve the individual problems v.·ithout breaking up the whole current struc- ture," adds the Orange County ad· mi.pistrator. This second proposal leaves the Garden Grove and Freeway loops unchanged from their current fonnat. Still in the Sunset League is Santa Ana, bul ,Joseph points out a need to SY.itch ~Saints with some other appropriate scliool. '1We're going to meet one more time Y.'ith the county principals before the close of school to finalize our ideas and then we'll go to the CIF Southern Section ~ith our proposal," su ms up Joseph. Sports Calendar Tilllnll•r IMn SI Sw!mmll'ICI -~lolt :~11lor col!lve lournev at FoothlU (t 1.m.J. p • .;:.rk -~!Qu•US Lff!I .... l>'OH""' It UC Irvine tl B•5'blltl -Corona det M•r at FOUfllaln V•lley, Oe<\a Hiiis 11 OnlYTf'Slfy, s..t111 Ant Valley 11 EdllOl'I, MHnolle 11 i:111nc:l1, H11nll"9lon 8Mdl 11 LO.ra, Wnfonlnst., at Wnlern, S.0.-1 •I l'9"""' 81Kl'I, 011111 Hiiis at IJnlvtrilrv, lO$ Alamllol al Cotta Mesi, 11111 .,, J:UJ, MllrllMI VI An.llwlm ,, LI Palma. Ntwcorl Haruor VI knl• AN I t Memol1•1 Park (bolh II 7:JO p.m.), ('l'Jll"ell ., Golmn Wnl, Pt.!OmU 11 SoddlebKk Cbotl! 11 2;JO p,m.). rtM!t -Fountain V11lev ti CCW"ona IH'I /Nr, Edhon al SA ll•lle't, E•tan<:lt at Ma11noll1, !tanta All .. ill N..,..parl Harbor, L(Mlra at Hunlrovlon Bttd'I, CO$-. ~ •' LOJ Alemltos, Anllllelm JI! Marl~. W•1tern It Wntml"51~. UnlYtnlty II Otn.t Hlll•1 L• ""°' 811th at Sonora, Mls1lon Vlalo JV at Footh/l JV (Dll at 3:15), South Coast CanlHtnc.e lourney al Ml. ~AC, Southern CaljlMnla Contfftnc:a lo~rnev ti Goldt'n Wnl Cbolh 11 l . .. T. i;: . -·---·~·· .. ~-·~.. .. . .. ...... _.............. .. . ' ' ' .. '-· ... , 1, 1973 DAILY PILOT J9 '•1 Uni's .:TiJle Hopes > ' ' Hit by Sonora -VI By HANK W!llCll Ol altt DtUY Pit• Steff Unlventty Rich spotted Soqora nine JURS and never recovt:red, looing a 9-5 dec\stoo and falling Into a second place tie In lhe Orange League baseball stand- lnp Monday at Unlvera!t}. University's 'I'rojans had defeated the defending CIF AA champions In lhe opening round of leape play, but found '72 AA Player ol the Year Jlm Pttt.rson a little too tough to handle. Petenon, a hanl-lhrowinc stocky rigbt- hander, held the Trojans to three hits and struck out nine ln am first four in- nings, and bad a 9-0 lead before Univtrsi- ty mounted any offense. The Trojans lined lour hits of! Peterson to -. thr<e Umes In the Ollh inning and struck. for t1,1,·o more off the Sonora star and re.liefer l\tarty Frailer in lhe sixth. University had a runner nailed at the plate trying to score on a passed ball to end the sixth inning rally and stranded· three runners on base in the final inning. It ·was a highly frustrating afternoon for ttie Trojans, and espectally for pitcher Kevin Moughan. • • end triple netr.d Sonora a run Ill lourlh. u. [ The Raiders then put the game away wltb four nms In tbe Mb as the mult of 1our bits. two walk! and another error. .11 University bad stranded a runner in ! r each of tbe first four innlnp, but flnaJly put together a rally tn the fifth. · Singles by John Densmore and Phil · ' Hancock and a fielder's choice by Dennis .n Brolhers loaded the bases for Joe Hollett ·! and the little left-hander bounced one .J over ftrst base to drive in t"'·o runs. . , A pop Oy double by Nick Perogud ,J plated the final run and though "*lerson setUed doMJ to end the threat tbe Tro- jans struck again tn U. sixth. Ray Hale's single and a .. alk prompted the exit of Peterson, and t1,1,·o NM scored • , later on a throwing error. ,. ,, llMra ttl UtWlftlty Ill '<I alt rllrltl ... r9'1M Hert, ct Ftllo. :lb ~.,, u Gon11ln, ti ft1rl1r, p e11rkt, rl eo1hn, c ftJ.on, 111 Peter110n, • Cornitll!JI, ~ enrom, 2b Tollll l 1 1 I ~n, ~ 2 O 1 O .:i 2111•r111Mt .. lf JIOI •lllHancod.,u 3111 2 0 t 2 Holltll, 111 J 0 2 2 lOIOP.,."lld.t 1011 J I 1 I K1t.si11n. tf 3 o o It 3 2 1 o San Mloval, Ill'! I o o o !,· 4111111Yl,M !ell ,1 J011H11t.cf 4121 o l I t Densmore, 311 2 I l o 1,i 3 o o a llob!M011, .Sb o 1 o o lp.2b JtO O 'I • tlO I Tol1l1 31 .Sii 3 •1 lklre ll't' M111M1 201 ICI ~ It ) •, C100 a» o-J 11 • LI • UNl'S PHIL HANCOCK CAN'T HANDLE HIGH THROW AS SONORA RUNNER SLIDES SAFELY INTO SECOND Nonnally a good ..fielding team, University committed two first innJ,ng er.. ron and ·Moughan was npped for four hits as Sonora scored twice to open the game. Another error aided a l'-'"O-ruir. spree In the third \nnlni and a double Laguna Tops Valencia, 9-5; Dolphins Bow ., '" Irvine Roundup . CdM Pitcher in Loss To Edison on l~hitter Corona del h-Iar's Matt Keough pitched eight Innings of no-hi\ baseball, then al- lowed a hit and an unearned nm In the · ninth as the Sea Kings fell to visiting Edison, 1--0, Monday in the featured Ir- vine League game; Jn other Irvine tilts , Fountain Valley was defeated by host Magnolia, 6-4, and Costa Mesa tripped Estancia. 4-3, in nine innings at C.OSta litesa Park in a night game. In the Edison-Corona del ~1ar tiff, the winning Cllargers scored in the ninth . when Mike Selwood led off the frame with a single and advanced to second on an error. Selwood then attempted to steal third and when the throw went into left field he scored easily. Dave White was the winning pitcher, throwing a four -hitter. He struck out three and walked two. Keough was nearly perfect going into the,filnlh, allowing only one Edison run· ner to get to third base. He struck out 16 and walked just two. · The Sea Kings ' John Andrews had l\.\'O of the four hits. Meanwhile, at Magnolia, the Barons of Fountain Valley couldn't overcome a ~ deficit. The losers scored twice in the filth frame, but the sentinels added two in the sixth for a 6-2 lead . Fountain Val- ley's final two tallies came in the seventh. In lhe fill!; for the Barons, a walk to Clarence Austin and singles by Bob Hardman, Bob Patison and Dennis Tress- ler got the two runs in. Then in the seventh, Hardman's walk, Tressler's single and Ray Eckles' two- run double did the damage. , Both teams scored early in a night game at Costa ?i.1esa Park then went to nine innings before visiting Costa lfesa s~ed the ~ing tally. Edl-...111 C..nt111 lltl MM (01 11t r111111 3 0 I 0 " 0 1 0 ' 0 0 0 3 0 O" 0 3 o O, o l 0 0 D l 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 2t 0 ' 0 •rtir.i H!oes. I• ' 0 0 0 Kohler, rt McCor. cf 3 o o o h!hns. 2b Nlctioli, rf A 0 0 O l(eo119h, p ~lwood, u : J l 1 0 Palmer, c Hlbblrd, II J o 0 O 1Mren, cl LOPG, 'lb l 0 0 0 NogRwt, SS Welnbtrgtf", 3b l 0 O o Davi•, lb ~,., ... lb 2 0 0 0 Malf, If wn111, P l o a o Andrews. 3b To1als 21 I 1 o TOla!s $cor9 bt llllllftt• ' . . Edl:IOfl 000 000 i))l-1 I l cor-dtl Mar ooo ooo llJCl.-4 A 2 ,wM1h1 VllleY 1~1 JM9Ma9 (6) H rllr'I •rti~ Trnsi.r, 2b A 1 J 1 Onth11fOS, ct 3 1 I 0 THtl;ar, d · -4· 0 0 .0 Randel. 14 ). 0 0 0 Ecklel. 3t; • 0 •1 2 P1IMer, I~ • 2 3 I Offter, lb A o 1 o Fl'8fldl, rt 2 1 o o S.llor, rt . 2 0 D 0 Miiier, rf 1 O I 0 P1nt1lone, r1 1 0 0 0 Valtrdt, If A 1 I 1 vai.ntl, If T o o o Shtw, 3tl • o 2· o Bl«itk. II 1 0 0 0 Nnvler, c ) 0 I 1 A111tln, c 2 l 0 0 Gflllow, p 2 0 0 0 Hllrdmlln, SJ 2 1 1 0 Riiey, lb 1 0 0 0 F!n~lea, p 0 0 0 0 Stark, 7b 3 1 2 0 M1vltr. ph 1 t 0 o P1!1son, p I 0 1 I Br1lnll'd, Ph 1 0 0 0 1o111s n ' 1 ' Totals· » • 12 s Sew• by lllltf1111 ' . Faunt1ln Vtllev 000 010 2-1 1 • • , M19nolla 300 102 11-' 12 Cfttl M ... (4) EllNICia (3) Hrllr61 tltrllrfil F1rnll, If V1ltnllne, lb ··-· P"I O.lany, c Schr11pp, t f Bl"tllltn, lb 5/wlrp, rt &lrbM, pr Cra~ll, II T~, 2b Cl~IL, ph fr1Q11$1, p Tot•I• A2200Mnes.11 lllG A GOOPU<1l'Ur1,p 1000 10101salu;tn,p 0000 3101Deven,:tti 3111 '0218al"Mft,lb AOOI AllOMorton,P< 3010 3012Sherwood,d' ADDO OO OOL.ostttl,tf 4000 3000Qh.lsen,rf JOOO J 0 I 0 Mldl;ltn, p.11 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 O Mt;Crlrlf\, C·rf l I 0 0 lOOORonq11Hto,3b )010 33 ' I 4 Tot•l1 31 l A I Su,. by l11111J191 Cost• Mes• Est1ncl1 ' 201 OOlt 001 -• 210 000 000 -3 ' • ' • ' ' Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Baltimore 10 9 Detroit JO 10 Milwaukee 9 9 New York 9 10 Cleveland 9 12 Booton 7 IO West Dlvl!ioa Chicago 10 s Kansas City 13 8 Angels 9 8 Minnesota 9 8 Oakland 9 ti Texas 6 10 ~•IY'• G1mt1 No 11111\H Ktltdvloed. TMIJ'I Oam" Pct. .526 .500 .500 .474 .429 .412 .667 .619 .529 :5211 .450 .375 GB 'h I> I z 2 2 2 3~2 4~2 • K""'s City (9Ulbr 2·2 or Wrltht 1-411 II Ntlll' YIH1!. (KllM 1-2 or Klltldl CM) Tlllll (Hand 1·1) ~I i!loston (Let I.fl A .. tll ($Ing« 3-1) .II ~roll (Frym111 2-f) Oakltrxl (HOltrmln Ml tf MllWl!JQI (~,,_.. 1..f) • CleWllnd (Strom 1·11 11 MIMllClll (WoodlOll , .. , . \ &tllll'Nlrf (Cvt'lltr l·tl ti Olltffl !Fllfllr l•ll Clevellndl 11 Mlnneosll <ffrnort ,, °''°"° Olllltld ill MllwtlAtM ""91t1 11 Detroit ICtl'IMI Ctty ti Ntlll' York T1iru .If '°"°" NATIONAL LEAGUE Eaat Division w L Pct. GB New York 12 8 .600 Chicago It 8 .519 \\ Pittsburgh 8 6 .571 I Philadelphia 9 9 .500 2 Montreal 7 ll .389 4 St. Louis 3 IS .167 8 w .. 1 ntvbton san Francisco 18 6 .'ISO CinciMati 13 8 .619 31> Houston 14 10 ,583 4 Dodgen ti II .500 6 Atlanta 7 13 .350 9 San Diego 7 15 .318 10 • Mlllldt'f'I G1m11 No 11mfl Khedultd. Tlllllri °'"'" HOlltlorl (ll:WH )·11 •• Phlltdtl~ (Cl ttfoft .. , Mont,_1 fMoOft 1·11 IT Att.!llt (Geftiry 1·2) SI. Loul1 (591'*1 0-31 tt Sin Dleeo ICCH11.ln1 1-21 Plttsbvreh !Moose ~I) 1t San F,..nclsco !lrv· lfll S.1) Cllltho !Hooton I·') 11 Defftn. !John 1-IJ Oftlr "'"" ~ltd. ......... .,.~- Houston ., Phll~iWI!• Clndrlnlll .t New YOlit Mon!rttl 11 !l.ltlftll Cllkl90 11 Detten $1. Lo\111 •I ltn CMfto PllUIMlrtl'I II S.n frl ncllCO TAG TO THE CHIN PUTS' OUT UNIVERSITY'S JOE HOLLETT HB Thumps Lions, 10-1; Newport, Vikes Tumble Newport Harbor High took a trip down play ground ball got ttle runner at se<:ond heartbreak alley Monday and as a result. but the relay to first was dropped as the dropped a 3-2, elght-inriing baseball run scored. decision to Sunset League leading Huntington &ttch wasted llttk! Ume Western High in ·action on the. loser's with five runs•~ the top of the tint and field. the outcome was never in doubt. Jn other Sunset games involving Brian Slagle started and· worked fi ve Orange Coast area teams, visiting Hun· innings for the Oilers, striking oul five ti~gton Beach toppled cellar..<fweller and giving up two base tuts. \Vestminster, llH, and host Santa Ana cratg Kennedy's .first inning double hal~ Marina, 3-2. .... scored a pair of runs after Doug Dave Vester drove · in both Newport Mansollno singled and Kyle Van runs as the Tars took a 2-0 edge after Amersfort walked to give Slagle all ~ four frames Wt the Pioneers ca:me back runs he needed. • with a pair in the top of the fifth to send At Santa Ana. Mike Molina belted a the game into·overtime. si.'<th inning home run to defea1.Marina. Jn the second, Carl Tabti tripled and '!'he losing Vlkes scored twice in the Yester's sacrUice fly brought him fourth innln5' oo a si ngle to Mike Rose, a across. In the fourth, Mike F.olsom singl· walk anU ~ngles by Ron Swanson and ed. and stole ~d with Vester doubling Kory Longnecker. to get hint home. w111m1,.,.,. 111 H111t11111t11 Sll(.Jil"fl•I In the eighth, Western had runners on lrldi.v, cf 't ,' ~ T Mlnlolll\O, 2b ·~ r ~~ first and second with one out. A double 1w1a1, 2tt-lb , o 2 1 van Amlttfort, ftlchlrdl, ..., 2 0 0 0 If I I t 0 Newport Golfer Leads Tourney . KOv\9, c 1 0 0 0 KIMfdY, lb J I 1 2 WIJJJl,C I000Stff11,• )000 ftllMOt lb J 0 0 D D\lllmclf't, "1 1 t .t 0 AcuorntMt. rf I 0 0 0 MUii, 11 I I I 1 ""'"'" 10t0Moll,lb-• ,, •• Walbrlnt, 1' 1 0 I 0 E111ftnirn, lb J 1 0 '1 Hiid-. .. J 0 I 0 Stelfl1'1119r, rt 3 I I 0 Hiit, • ft 0 O O -l"urrouoh .. ct 1 o O 0 Wtllt.llY, :tb 2 0 0 0 Vl~I, c • I I 0 Tol1l1 U I f l Tot1t1 30 It • t Inn ., ., .... ' ' • • • ' • RIVERSIDE -Newport Beach's ~tan ~':~=., Blldl : : ~'~ Tapie fired a four under par 68, including MlftM 1s1 k f. i•r•~ •rllrlll five birdies, Monday to \a e the 1rst w.im11n, ct 1 1 o o lAntMdl.,, c J o 1 1 round lead in the $25,000 West.em NtPo. 11 J o o o Foster, • J o 1 o SWlfilton, 2b 3 0 1 1 Ourti•, rf 2 0 1 O Tournament Goll Association tournament 1..tct11e. n1 J o o o ,._, a s 1 1 • al Quail Lake near Riverside. K~i.r. ss J o ' o Tot11s 2J 1 ' ' klrt "" 111111119• Playing In Ideal conditions . Tapie • r • • t'inished two strokes ahead of Greg Pitur ~kit AM = m ~ ; ~ of Los Angeles. w .. ..,, ~ , 11 .., "'""' ::i , 11 ,.. Tied for third at 71 wete Gary Vanier, Di;n.y, • , 1 1 1 11:oblmoft. .. ~ , 1 ft Oakland·, Jim Blanks and Moe Hl'""'and, e-v-. •• J • ' • Abtlt!f, • 3 o • .• &'• Wttlt&.C •Dl0("9nl,rl )010 <;'ullcrton ; F.d Marons, Anahelm: Jim --. a • • 1 • CMrv. •r o o o o Brady, Bothell, Wash., and Rick Tait, =· 1~ : ~ : : ~ib ct ! ~ r : Whittier •111!111. c1 • • 1 o v .. ttr. 11 J 1 1 ' _ • -,~0.-!lb 4 OJ L.1.liMt. 0 ' 0 Tournament favorite Oary Mccord, ull:l evtllf •rt 4 o .-. Mocllttt. 1t1 ' • t- Westem Tioumament Gol€ A.&9ocliUon's s1rk'U1rx1, •t • J 1 o 1 o Pltr. rt 1 • • • • Hook.• 20•0 leading money winner in 1973, shot a 72. , Mc0ont1d. or • • o o ~tcC.ord has won thrtt tournamens on Total• 3J ~ ~., ,: · 11 J • J the tour this year ror $24,519. Tapte bas r '• •, w111fltfl ooo mo •01-J ,,·on only one but has ,tamed $13,548. .......,, 010 lCO Ol)-f 4 2 .. :r .• •' ' ' ·' " Dan Quinn settled down after a shaky ·! start to shutout host Valencia In the final three Innings Mooday and Eric Hean! belt.<! a seventh inning home run to 1 .. d Laguna Beach to a u Orange League , . baseball victory over the Tigers. Meanwhile, Dana Hllll wu unable to overcome a 3-0 f1rst tnntne deflclt in los· '' Ing to Brea, l>Z, on the Dolphins l1tld In other Orange action. ,, At Valencia, coocl> Dam!! McKibbon's Artists came from behind with three runs in the silth to take the lead for the '• first time. In the si"th, Kip Tbompoon singled and \\'as forced at second by Btll McManus for the second oul. Marco Mendoza then reached llrst on an mw and ~ • I brouahl In a run on anotbermll<ue. Mickey Allen lben aJnaled ·.., c1r1 .. m , more.runs ecrm1. , Dana Hil!J bad strtlleout pnibltma tn . , : loslng to Bru u Clore)' Leyton lonntd 11 • while giving up lour blll:. ·' The Dolphins lcored both nm1 In lhe ' lourtb as Mitch McComb walked, Bill .. Springman singled and McComb scored on an infield out by Greg Thomason. 1be other run scored on an el'T'OI'. ·•• SrM UI Dua Nlllt (I) ~!!. N ' llrltl II r •rM MeulN, 'b 4 0 l 0 UllOI, 2b J 0 l I P1riouo,d' •I It M~b, •t It ft O t t HVU1t, 1.1 • D I O 5prlngm1n, ct J I I . 0 ~ld,c !lllMlktos,1• lll'O J ftr, If 4 1 I I Thol'nlaon, lb I 0 I I 8Ul1oll.'rf J D I 2 ~rt ) 0 e 0 J'r1Pt" lb 2 I 1 I lon'lfo c 2 e I 0 SI. ~ltfrt, )ti 2 It 0 ~t,tf 2 e 0 o· UYtofl. p 2 0 0 l V1n11111•, If 1 0 0 ft J RllW, Ph 1 I 0 I Hllllttod, JI I • I I . , Tot1l1 a3 J I • TO'll tl SI J • 1 "" ....... -' . . .... 01111 HUii JDO!Olt-3tl 11 ODO 200 t-4 A 4 t ' '-""" 1Mdl en "'""'" 111 1erfl l'M •lrllBI •12211:1ct1,cf AJIO Alltl'I, U Collin, lb M1rrlntr, cl Wllllt, 3b Heard, c Tl'KlmP5Dn, 2b Mc:Mlfll.ll, II Cr1i1, If Mll'Mloll, rt ~lnn," •OOO,-.,t111,rf )211 1 4021 Edwt~,lf tlll A210Wali.t•,c 4110 ' I ' ) N1vw1tt.. !II J 0 l 0 A, 1 0 G4tmltt,~P 4 0 I e Tott!S )!OOOllll"l,11 )000 tOOOJM11,11 3 000 3 1 0 I Hlf111tndtJ, • ) 0 0 I JIJJOrlrM,>b ttt t 349109 To!M1 Jiit• 1c9,. ., lllfMnll Lffllnt •Md! Vtltncll ' O'lt IOJ 2-9 220 100 t---j • • " ' • • Area Athletes ·' To Be Honored , I Fifty sonior alhlet"' from Conll1o de! Mar and Newport Harbor high ""'1ools will be treated to a luncheon and guesl speBker Blll Toomey Wednesday noon at lhe Balboa Bay Club. The event is sponsored by the Com-1 modores, a division · of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerct. Toomey I• currenUy the ·helcl lract and field coach at UC lrvtne and la a former Olympic decaUl1on · chamPon and world reconl holder In lhe event. 'lbe high ochool guest& ....... -wllh oonslde!'atlon toward lheJr athlttlc and classroom achlevementa. I The guesll: -Newport Uarllor Lee Ballon, Rocky Beek, CraJa Clarke, Mark Dalby. Tom D!Stmlslao, Mite Folsom, Charles Glazltr, Curt Herberts, Pat Honeywell. King Humann, Joe Leise, Mark . Marsing; Jim Neldhort. Tim O'Rielly, Warren Ray, Kevin Reeser, JbU Spier, Kurt !;pr.en, Dick Stoneman, Jim Swick, car! Tahtl. Ktllh Wal~...feder White, Bob Whitford, Jim Youna:. eor-... Mar > M>rk Attlesey , Bob Oark, Brian .. ' 'me , •. Dave Dolle~. Jell Dyar, llmt I rt • .r-~!t. ,:o Grower, MIR. HOmef, : ··~-Oltoro>-J-..llO'*"}<oM,.,;-d Matt Keough, Dou& Knapp,,,.,,., ~ Bnico Krwnpbol&, Sieve Matl, J I m McNally, Bob Palmer, Toni Pole, Joo i Tosti. Jlm Turner, Pal Wal~ hit Whart on. Greg Wh,.ler, Mark WY!*- -· ~ ..... ' , ... ~ ..... -. . . . . . . ..... ' H DAil Y PllOT T ....... Mu l, 1973 · • • PIJBUC NOTICE .. -. ""' ~ •M£SJJ II ....... .. ..... COU•T 0. TMI su•••toa CCMllT °' TM• it> Prep'Summaries aMlli lt.IJllP•lft' IT&H OP CMJ,_ML& flOlt ' ITAT• M CAl.IPOllMIA IPOlt " nw ......._ ,... • -. ..,..,.... TN9 couwrY °' a.MIGi THI couwn °' HAilN •. Ml ... ~ .... "'-"M ~· THI o•uootM. ~IOUll ..... , co.. llOhc• °" ......... Oii PITlftON MOT1t9 °' ......... OP •nlTIOM .. IOln Ml' r•A Ct,_ Hwllff:•flM ........ ft °' WIU. ANO Nill NI: HOl.t.Ttl OP WIU MD 1101: ~CalK.... ~ TllJTAMS#TAllY CM*O LITTllU ThTAM•JO'AIY j .. ~ lw!', 111F1 .....,.,, ... Qr.., ..,.,..l E1ttle of llHILU• SHOIE, OlcffMd, IWll\ ..... .-fl."""·'*' ..... fli HIDllll(K M.. HOOGOON, NOTICI IS HUl!IY GIVEflrl !!WI A.llltl Area Net Results V.1nlty ~ hedl ltO 141 VMtncle 11111 .. Tl'flof IL) iott to Okimoto 2-61 Cllf. Porlw '101 Ott". Coll ..0; def. Mllltnl ... Si*dlftll ILi llMI 1-4J _. ..0, 6"0, ... Oocldt Ill IOl l >•1 won ..O, 6-41 H , J1y IL~ !Git 2 .. 1 -..O, W , 6.<I, -lledlll·Pt .. ulOI !L) Otl. MKr!:G•Tly •1, WI def. !AOUN·lt,_ '4. 6-2. J1coblon·LOlll !LI -.. 1, 6"41 won 6-1, 7·5. . ...,., MarW 1aJ 1111 s .. 11 An.I ...... H1mt1.1kl !Ml lotl lo Cl.1r1 S-1; Cltl. • ' Tiii• MW .......... ""' -... o.c...1. Shor• .... mm W .. n .. petition for ..... • MoflC.E 11 Mlll!IY GIVEN ttlll Prllblt.1 llf Will end tar lll\laMe Of Ltf• JeM H. 1W't •YKllel' M. HOOOOON Ne flied ri.r.!11 .I ten TtllerMftl.lry to ttw petltlofw, • tNt 1t.MtMflt WM fli.111 wtttt the """• ... ........ Of Wiii .1nd tot r~ to whld'I 11 made for fl.wtt!er ty citt\ *' O:'llllt '*""'1 M ts. ~ of ~ J."1.tmtnrtry to tlM patllcul""" .Ind !NI ttlif fltn.1 and pltu 4-tfn.. ~ ..! """'*"' lbaftd::: Wl!ll'ld) rtttr'"" 19 Cf MltJllil fhl tltne flat bHn ttt tcr..Ji(iitV • ,,.. ~ ls'f'Mde .W ~ JM1rtl(l.ll.1r1, Ind lS. lfn. .11 f;OO .1,m., In the courtroom 01 r- JJllllllllMd ~ CoMf 0-11r Pltlf, ttllt IN time and pl.ct of 11Nrl119 11141 Gtp.lrtnltnl Ho. 3 of l.llCI (Ollfi, 1t J9D Mk'( I, •• Ii. t2. 1m tm·n ..,.,. -lltln Mt lor Mey lS. lfT!. ... Civic Cent.,. Ot"tv. Wnl, 1n fM Clly of 1 "-"-"-'-'--'-';:_.;;_; _______ ltiOO e.11'1., In "'* courttton'I of DeP.lrl· lenf.1 An.I, C.1UllN'nl• • -~"c NOTICE """' No. , of ... kl cwrt. •' 1C0 c1..-1c D•t• Aprll•u . 1•n TUDMI Ctnltir Drive w .... '" the City of ~nll WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, ·--An.1, C•llfor'lll•. CCll,lnty Cltl'k ,ICTtllOUI IUllNlll 0.'-' April U. ltn MINDLIN, LltYY, NAM11 ITATSIU'.lllT Wll:LIAM E, It JOHN, SKLUT8 I 11111.NSTalN Tiie f'olklrwil'll I*_. •1t doll\f Ceunty (!wk 1 .. c .. twr Pft IMI tlUAI-.ltl LlllPOLO, M•ND•UOtl 6 DINIMOOJt La A ..... cellt. ""1 COAITAL f'lllllONNEL AGENCY. All-~ at Law Tlli 11111 in.nu 27fO Herbof' llYG... klle "11, Coelt • •Mt 11'll "'-'• Wff 111 Attonwrt fw ...... "- MIN. Ct41t. ntM· CNte MMe.. ~I tUf1 Publltlled Or.,... Cotti Dtll1 P11ol. ChlMt J. Cll!l"""1 '174.S CetdlMPI T•ll (714) ltl-ntl M•Y I, l. •• tm ·~ orl..-e. Coef1 MM1. C• lf. '242' AfMnWll tw .... ...,,.... -• ~ cerol v. c,..,, 20M1 Tiiier c1m.. "*t!Md °"'"'* COit! 01uy Pllof. PUBUC NOTICE .· ., Hllfttlneton -..m. c..nr. f2t2' Aprll u. ti 111e1 IMY 1. 1m 116n, ____________ _ Tlllt IMllllU It bli/11 ~ ~ *l-'------------0· ....,.,, ,.~J.I~·"·-mn1r 'C NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI IUSINlll CM,... .._..... ~11,1ua.a NAM• ITATIMINT Tllh tt•ttJMnt flttd w1111 IM County Thi followll'IQ .,.,..,, •• dolno IMl•l- CleR of°''"" County on: Aprl\ ~l,im, SUPllllC* COUIT OP THll ii: WILLIAM •• fT JOMM, CvvNTY ITAn DI' CA.1.ll'OllNIA POI lil;AMOS .. ASSOC .• 1tn1 Airport w • ., ,• CURI(, ly Al'ftM.W E. Knotr. OtpUty. TMI COUNTY OP OUttO• So .. sen11 ......... C.111. '1H>7 PM-M .... A-1UM ll:uben -'dim ll:1mos, 1601 lllbm PUOl!IMd Or1ftf* COl•I Otlly Piia!, NOTIC• OP MIA•IMe OP PETITION ll'td., H1w.P0<1 Bl~. C.1llf. '1660 • Apr'll ''· 24 .Ind MIY 1, •• 1m lDU>n POI: ••01.ua DI' Will ANO PO• Thll bu••• II Conducted by •n In· LlnllS TllTAMl!NTAltJY WIESE dlVldu11Rut1tn A. llll'l'IOI PUBUC NOTICE E1t.111 of MILDltED • • Thi• 11.11emen1 we• f111d won ,.,. cowi-l ---~===-=:::::::::::----· 101c~~E IS HEJl:EIY GIVEN th.It Alvin ~Cl•rk of Or•l'IGt Counly on APf'll ~· lllCTITIOUS IUllN••• o, W1ne, Jr .. ti.I• nlld lltteln • petition . ••s , Barness Racing • It .._n't usually pay to 1hoot dlrltlly for a flaptlck that 11 pooltioned behind a hazard ouch 11 a pnd bunker. The chancH of hillln1 a perfect shot and Pltln1 up a birdie putt 1imply aro not equal to the rl1k of catchln1 !he 11nd and makln& a bopy. JtAMI ITATIMINT for Prob.II• of wm •!Id for' 1111/ll'KI o• Publl1111d Or•rqe Co.tit D.1lly lllfot ' TM lollowlfle ptrHnl e.r• doing Ltll•r• Tut1ment1ry, refffll'ICI lo which Aprll 14 •"" M.1y 1 It " l'73 ll5"1·1l , WtlnHt '" 11 ~· tor fvr!Mr pertlcut1r1, Ind lhll '?' ' ' • • CYCLE WOfl:KS l TO .. 1122 Htwporf 1111 llmt Ind plKI Of Maring In• Hmt l l..-0., Co-t.1 M..wi, C1lll, "'27 hit bftft Mt for Mir 22, 1t1l, .It t:OO PUBIJC NOTICE .. Alamitos .Entries In thin clrcurn111ncH I find that II helps to vituallzo -the fla11tk;k In a Pl• Position, well away from the hazard (1H lllu1tratlon). Thi1Yisuallnllon Stephen D, Klmblt. S22 S .In •·"1·• In lh.1 courtroom Of D,1pertment NO.(-------------ltrntrCll!'O Avt .• Hl'll'porl aucl'I, (1111. 3 of uld c®tl, et 111(1 Civic Cent•r Orlvt PICTITIOUI aUllNISS t'2'60 W11!, 1n trll City Of S1nt1 Ant, C1Utornl•. JtAME STATIMINT _ John M. Klmbl1, '1116 H1Wpotl 11..-d., Detld Aprll 30, 19711 Thi fOllOWll!O 1)1111111 11 Cllllng bu1l"'91\ Newport ltlCh, C1llf. t1'60 WILLIAM E, 51 JOHN , e1; , Thl1 bulltlli91 11 cond!Klld by .I 11-•I County Cllrk SM ITH &ROS .. 16.40 Suptrlor Avtnue. Alamitos Harness Results lllllfT •ACI -Orte milt. Pl(I, Cl11ml!!g .111 191'· P11r111 •1100, Voto Honor (K.1rm.1llfl 4.60 J.00 1.IO Lltlle Rll Dun (Cronk) '.All 3.IO aonnltl Ml1tlll !Meynerdl •.20 Time -J.117 2/5 Alto lt.IC8CI -C.1tctl Ml Fl11!, M19t Mef4ttW o , J.1cll Adll!IOll. Jll11 Cholc•. Ed!llWOOd Atnkwle ScrllCl'lld -llhVlhm C, Clmmy It Inell -s.v• N-.. •Llt!ll Ill• ........... tt4.4' s•COMD 11:.ACI -OM m111. PICI. Condition maldlnl, Pvru S\600. ltomtO Mc 01 YICI CD1n- nbl •.20 3,60 J.00 .AC1mlr.1t Mew !Bellevl 4.40 3.00 Rouvh HOllH Piii (Smlll'I) ,,IO Time -2.°' '15 Alto RIC.cl -P L Uri. Sllorl Trip, WH Stolly D, Perlt1 Htnover, Egyp. t1.1n Bun.1r. SC'rttcl'lld -Dl1monft ~-. GVP•Y w ....... THlltO IAC• -O!ll inllt., P1c1. Citlml119 .111 1gn. PurM t2000. su..-.,. A !Wlr10•rl t.60 ~.AO ,.40 Hews!Hd IBe11tlc:nJ 4A '·'° •111 Vince tMerockl) 4.00 Tl"'I: 2:04 "5, AllO Rtcld -C I" SlncOUt, Chlllf TltorPI'. Nt'tlde Biii, DlndY aoy T.111, J Biii. S<r1lcllllcl Prince S.lm ll:octtn POURTH llACI! -Onl milt'. Trot. Cltlmlng h1ndlc;ep 111 tOll. PurH ..... 7.00 Vic Ard1n l8.1rt-J Ll/fTIMr Son IW11111m•) H.1ncy1 Dernier (ll:VUtllJ Time -2.G6 l/S 3.60 2.t.0 s . .o 3.60 "'' Alt.0 R.1cld -And.,. Sl>MOlr, Flr1 T1'11 COfJI, F1•I P1y, L1tln Em PtH, S1belhl. kr.1lclled -Two Bllow, Atmbro 1n..-1c11. l'IPTH RAC• -One mlll, P1c1. C11lml119 .111 lllft. Pur1t 11400. A o.1r11 1e.111n 1 •.60 J.olO 7.80 VIP1Un {Dllotlltr) t .60 S.40 FrDly AYt1on (Longo) 3 . .(1 Time -2.l)C 2/5 Al10 11:1ced -R1!..-•n<t. Need k1sh, Armbro J1nlc1. M11• Amy Adl09, lrllPI C.1m. Scr.1tcllld -Wllcomt H.1no..-1r. SIXTH RACI -O(le mitt. Peet. Clelmll'lll 111 lllfl· P11r'• 12'00. He..-1Cl.1 J.1ck (MIYOC:k•l 7.110 4.~ 3.20 John OH (Bllll't'l 5.20 3.40 T1nn-Col.I (Todd) 4.20 Tlmt -2.04 Al10 R.1cllcl -8.1mboor, PnotnlK BvrCI, LM!n, Ael!..-.1 G•~•. H1rt.1n Lit. Scr.1!cllld -StYI~. SJ •••ti• -l·Ntvllcl.1 J1ck 6 7·Tlfl· --Colt. 1".11<111 1121.•. S.Vl!NTN llAC• -°"' mn1. Pee.. Cl.1lmll'IQ hlndlt.IP ell lll'ft. PurH """· lkllt ()tympj.1 (8.llW,J IJ.1111 1.00 1.IO Deotril'bub fQeonn11) t.00 7.211 Jelf.,.1ot1 E•P'ft1 (Cr1l11l 4.60 Timi -2.02 2/S Alt.0 Recllll -s"'°' Colby, Th•rp, F.1r.11 lloy, Erin FrOll. Ho Scr.1td'M1 EIGHfH •ACE -Ofll mile. PICI. Cl1lmln11 Ill 1g11. Pur~e $JOOO. Wi nter E .. p r11 1 !Glltll1n) H.IO 6.60 J.10 AllO'rl Ovd (Beiley) ,,00 2.llO l lt111 Ml11 Conni• (W!lllemt) J.00 Tlmt -2.04 AllO Rtced -Lumbtr B<tl, PIPPI~ O!'l..-*T1':1l11n11111 Chit!, G1n1r.1I Gr1y, F1nn/1 Fllr1. khllellld -Led If l••cte -f·Wlnter ••P'ft• & S· AllllYt Off. llal• 11».IL SICOND-llACll -OM mill . Peet. Condilloned 5 ..-e1r• ol<h • undlr non wlnMrs of 1 r.cn. AE $ r111r old• 6. under llwt ,...,., never won tliOO. PurM l~~· AcliOI (J. LIOhthUO NO Jus1111 IC. Grtnlj er.1..-.1t.1 (I(. Ort11.11 Std DI"' 0 IC. C.llllQOll11 Ptrttd T1mpo \L· Deul!on! attn Ann T.111 A.. Gordon JKkln Qunllorl IA. Wlng1rl Fr°'' Frost (G. Hon) . Aast ll_lflMe HttdllMr FrM ((I,; B«UI<) THlaD IRA.Cl-=-OM mllf, Trot. CCll!dliloolO ell ..... Hon_ wl_,1 UOOD In 27-37 comb. AE non wlnrler• of $4600 In 71-7J comb !1'1.11 .1r1 non w1Mlrt of 1.1200 f1r11 _., In l••I ' 11.1m.. Purt• 12200. 8ol'I Mo: IE. WhHl•r) H~U.1tor (J. Wllll1m11 Fr1lglll TtlT!QO (A.. WIH $IN) Centr1I Park IC. BOV4l 8v$llr 'T1u IJ. Llgtfl~UI) Roc:ke't Bl.111 (NI. Aubin~ Fr1lgh1 Milan•'• (J. R111MIU Fr.1ncl• MooCI (I(. Tlil>lrl l"OUllTN 1tACl=0nt mlll. P1c1. c.1um1119 .111 egn. Tep cl1lml119 prlc1 l l750. Purst 11700. CF\lmp Lell'lll LSOY (£. Sltw1rtl I Llnc&IM J.1mlt (It; Wltll1m1l Stoll'f LHdll' <t.r.-=1 S COlllln AM (J. ' LjnColn {A. Wlng..-1 ii M.lrlltll B1t11 (II:. Mc:Clll'IWMI cl1dt ~ ~ o-n.11 :; 1~1·&Si Go04 G~.1n A (M. Alltllnl Pll'TH ltACI -OM mll1. Trot. Condltloflld Jiii *lift. Non Wlrwllf'I of 115.000 In n-37 c.omb. AE l)or ... 10 bl cl•lmecl tor SIS.000. Pur11 $MOil. JOl'lns Jonn fl!, Wlllllttl l ·S..Uy Hiii (I. Wlilllmll e11c1w1n (J, 81lllVJ Dlr1 Held (L.. OlilllO!'I) Duke P'1"WI IM, H.1rP1r) A·ISerel O. Adl1rmenl <Hlrr P1ul Hoflm1n IJ. Dennl1J SU.000 Lumber Ptlt ifr· WlllJ.m.I •1-B·P•ec• Pict R, WllJl.1m1) ' A-Our Ro0er (J.. WlilL1m1J SU,000 A< MIVll., ownld tnlry B·R Wiilie~ lrl fMd 1n1ry SIXTH RAC• -Ont mlle. Ptc1. Concllllontd 111 1111'-Non wtllfllr1 of u. In n·n comb. At: non wtnntn ot 17500 In 12-n comb· ll'llt .,, r.on 111ln- Mr) In,. lest 3 ,1.1r11. PUrtl '2200. AllllY• S..l1or lM.~""'' Sir'/' V.1rlt1y (R. Clon) G1ll1nt Htnover K, C1rt.1nl) Count P1ree tit. l~m1nl T1rrv J1~n1 Rock.It . Dennl•I Tol1I Frt !ffhl IR. Wll l.1mtl Kiwi Avtr 1M. Aubin) 8Hl.1 Bret (T. C1r1wtvl SEVENTH RA.Cl! -Ptc1. (l1lm!rtg - .lti l(IH. Too Cl.1lmlng prlc1 ti2.000. P11ne SJ200, Glme J•c-fT. $hlplr11> 110i . He-rm1 81rrv JG· Hol!J j"· Dtrlng S..Uy I . McCrlO<lf) 12 p~ R•• IM. J-1 II Sh.1rp Sl1r .J 8.llley 1 ACllol C.lrl (.J MllllrJ l Big Rid Meehl"°' (J. Wllll11N) 1 EIGHTH ucr=-°"' mll.1. P1ai. Clelmtng •11 *"'"" Top cl.1lmlng ptlc1 S9l75. Purw SllOO . owver H1no..-1r (J .11:1/SMIU S750CI Mils Mllros1 J'"· Conroy) ,9000 8.1g of Gold ( . McGr19otl 17500 Goocl Wtiow 111:. wi111.1m11 sl'DOO Combo H1no'tlt I J Mlllff) S750CI Andr.1' Boy IJ. l lgl'lllllU) IHOO Hurrvlll9 Henrr CG, HOii) S9375 H.1rrochbur11 ID. Ml'fO(kll S1S00 ""' 1!'11911111 GrHI lrlsl'I (S. OelO!lltrl 17$00 L1CI (F. Todd Jr.) 19175 NINTH ll:AC• -Ont mil•. P1c1. Cl.1lml119 .111 ilOfl. Top d1rm11111 price "900. Purse 11000. Prlm:1 Sim \R· Slemtf'm1n) 15000 11:0 .. v !J. MU 1r1 UIOO Ol$1rmln11 tJ. e.111.,.J UOOD Ontv Sori (S ~omtr) 14000 ll:ocln S!oclliW,:;s {T. Oennl1l SJ.1100 Btnnock M1S;Ton (G. 8erkner) 14000 Mr V1l CO. M•VOCkll 14000 Polly Jinks IM. Herper) s.iaoo Baseball Standings -" Schw.1rl1-Gw!nuo CEJ def. Thomoson-Mu!ry1n ~2. ~4; def. l rown1on-M~•1&tlno 6-0, 6-1. G1v ner·R1v• (&J won M , 6"'i wori '" 1iw& m• a .pQ1itlw-yot safe-11r1et. . By u1ln1 this technique. birdie pulll will be aurpri•in&ly frequent and bo1ielconsp1cuously rare. "HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PUTTING"! Hera Is Arnold P.imer'I· fully illuStreted guide to puttln1 tleltCS, line,up, •trok•I S•nd 20t 1lon1 willl • st.mp.cl, s.slf,eddrn•ed •ll'ltloP9 to Arnold Pelrn•r, In art of thl1 newspaptr. Allison Makes It p.trln1rll'llP. SYYSICAL. Wll!SE I. MILCHIONI, Co111 M11.1, Cell!, '2627 S!tPl\.lft D. Klmbll 111SI Vlctlrl' ~. PRES.KEE. tNC., llMO Slf9$flOI" T1'll1 1t.1t11T11nl w11 flied 11111h tile Coun-Nlrlll M911'fW'IOllt, C•UIOl'lllll '1.0. Avtnut. Cotti Mt11, C.1111 . .U27 l ty Clltl1t of Or•rtll~ C011nty on .AprU Jj, Teh 1111) 1714tl1 'fhll bltllnH$ 11 btlrtg conducillcl by ~ 1m. ,1411, AltlfM'rl .., P1tllllfllr llR.U' e«por•~;e~:~i:,n1t~~. Put>ll1tlllcl Orlrtgl Co.II Delly Plkil, PubUsl\llcl Or.111QI Coast Delly Pllol. L.1rry L. KHlln /NV I, •• IS. 22, Im 111+13 Mey 1, 2 ••• 1m 1m.n Tiii• 1t.1i.m.nt flled Wlll'I tlM count-J Clll'k of Or.11'1Q.1 County on : Aorll 11, 1t73J •r Tlltt.INI M. Wini, Dlputy Count-I Cllftl, ' PUBIJC NOTICE . PUBIJC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSIN••• l---c,c"=T=OT=,=ocu=1=1=u°"•"··=·=·=·c---PvbUlllld °''"'" Co.11 Diiiy ~ NAM• ITAT•M•NT JllA.ME STATEMl!NT April 24, 11111,..Y1. I, 1S, 1t7J 1116-1) lti. followlll9 ptrlO/I ii doll'IQ bu•1ntH Tl'll lollowlnQ plrj,O!I II CIOl"'ll bvlintll It> LYLE'S OF 'N&WPOJl:T, IMO Orente ti: THE VELVET FROG SOl.,11 P11m1 ,i...-e., Cosl.1 MH1, C.1111. C I ( I 1 S.1nl-------------LYll E'tlrretl Ven di W•lkff, m Blff., 32151 .111'111(1 •PI r.1no. PKTITIOUI •us•N•ss S.1nll An.e Ave .. N~I Budl, C1llO. Juen C1pl1tr.1no, c ... t167S. . NAM• STATblNT t1'60 • Shl•llY• E, 6*rcl1, 1,11 l 1chbrook TM followll'IQ l*IO/I 11 clolrig bu1lne11 Tiii• bull11111 11 cOllductld by en llllfl· Dr lvt, Cl1remonl, C•lltornl1. .1s: '11CIUll, Thl1 bu1lne11 11 conducted by en lit: C11 CONDOMINIUM MAGAZONE1 111 L E Y•n di Welker d1'11du1I. SPECIAL DISTRICTS MAGAZINE, 5&l This 11~1-1 11111 nce11 wnn 1n.1 C:oun· Snlr11y '!. G.1rcl1 1 c w111 ll'lh SITH!, Co-1.1 M11.1, C1111. ty Cl k ot Or l'IG• County on AP"ll 2l Thi• t11t1m1n1 wa1 Ill.cl w in 11141 oun· tu2T ltn tr ' ' IV Cterk ol Otll'\lll County on April )II, CALIFORNIA ASSOC IATED ' Pt ... 1'7l. CONSULTANTS Publlihtd Or1n111 Coa•I 01llY Piiot. 1:M+OC ;.14t 17 !Ctlll. Corp.I, TMl•A M.11)11 Slr...t',! MIV 1, 1, 1S. :12, 191J 121).73 PVblllNrcl Ortna1 COilt 0.1lly Pllol, Cost.1 M1M. C1lllornl1 "'71 M•r 1, 1, 15. :12, ltn 1322,73 nir1 bu$1111u 11 conCluct9d by .1 corpor• PUB!JC NOTICE . eHon. PUBLIC NOTICE c'111110n11.1 Anoc:l.111d I Miit Conwll.1nh. Inc, PUBIJC NOTICE SUPt!lttolt COU•T OP TH• N. J. ZllM!', Pr.1ll)fnl Ind ITAT• o• CA&.l•OllNIA POlt PICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS Till• llllll'Tllnt Wit mtd wtlTI Ill.I Coun-TM• C01.IMTY OP OllANO• JllAM• IT.l.Tt!Ml!NT ty Cltrk of Or•fllll Couniy on AJN'll '· Y Nt. .. ,..,. The folloWl119 perlOl'll .1r1 doill9 1'73. NOTICI OP Hl.U!IM• 01' ••TITION MlMll 11• ~ 'OI: l"llOIAT• OP WIU. AND l"Olt SCOOT'$ INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY. l:ll P\lbllthed Orartgl COii! Otlly fl!llot. Look Easy at LnT••• TllTAM•NTUY w lttll SITH1, Cotti Mii.i. Cell!. ,f.Prll 10. 17, 24. end Mir 1. 1tn ".s.n '"" Est.111 II TH•RESA MAL/tll.l(Y, D• R1111.1tl H1..-11 Oh::ori. 1.3C1 Tvtlln PUBLIC NOTICE INDIANAPOLIS {AP) tice time is the only thing wor· ~~ice 1s HE1tE1Y GIVEN th11 Aj::'!. N~r:::i;;,c•~fn cirsoni--------------The most promising rookie rying Bobby at this point ffe Dan A: LlcMnblrvtr !tit flledw1ll '"',,,• SlrHI, Coste ~1. Celli. ITAT•MaMT OP WrrHOltAWAL · ed t Jn'°"""poli Sat In I llel111ori tor probe,. ot I T~lt 1Miitne11 t1 blll!ll conductld by 0, PAltTN•ltlHIP OPl:RATINe entered for the Indianapolis arrlv 8 UWlUG s ur-tor lltUlll'KI ot Llllerl T1111m1n1trv • GIM!•I P1tlntr1hlp. UNOllt ,ICTrrlOUS •UllNEIS NAM• ~mile race this year is a. day after qualifying a t 10 tltl petl!IOllll' r•tllf'111t1 to w111cn ll:U11111 H•Y" DlllDfl Thi to11ow1nu Pl!'ton 1111 wllhd••wn •• ' . 11 mid• tor turtlllr partlc1111r1. •nd Jemn M. Gr.1smeflr 1 i>enfr•I Plrtnlr lrcwn !I'll perin.tshlp veteran with more than 17· 1.tartinsv1lle, Va., for a 11111 "TM t1m1 end piece ot 1111r1nz Thlt a:e1tm.1nt 1Ued wlrh th• couni.,. OPlf•ll"ll under tl'll-11c1111ou1 bllllne11 Ye·-e~n·ence. southern stock car race Ille Um.I h.11 bllll .. , for Miy Clllf'k of or1111111 COltrltv on Aprll 11, Mm.I of AUTOMATION RESEARCH ANO cu.:> -,.-• • . 1'73, 11 f :OO .1.m., In !I'll courtroom lfT.I. er , Thereu M. Wlrd, Deputy DEVELOPMENT CO., 11 142$1 Gf.1q Bobby All'-, wflo started Afler CQmpJetmg most of his of Dlpartmlfll No. 3 ol u ld court, County 1:1erk. Street, El Toro, C1ltfornle t26lO -• ki h "·-~ Jo ti 100 C1'11c Center Ort..-1 W11t, In P14UJ The ilctltlou1 butln.e11 n1me 1l1tem1nl racing while he was still in roo e tesls, e re1wrn::u 11\e c1tr of s1n1.1 Ane, c1111ornl.1. l"ubll•hld o r.1ng1 C~!l 01Ur Piiot. tar 111e par!Nrtnlp wH 11111c1 on AU;ulf high -•··l, has fm" ally found Martinsville where he was 011111 Aprll :io. 1m. Aprn u. •nd Mart,•· 15, 1t11 1m-n 1t. ttn In""' County llf or1ng.1. ~ f he I WILLIAM•· SI JOHN, Full H.1m1 .1nd Ackl1.u ot Ille Pllf'IOll 8 "ride" he wants for the May knocked out o t race ear Y coumy c11r11 OTICE w1111c1r1wln11 : HENRY HAUPTHOFF, 28 classic. The 35-year-old when some track debris sbov-~.1.~,:",~.• 11a.uL PUBUC N :11204 E~:0~~.;:.1=hby, 0111o u:it' Hueytown, Ala. stock "'car ed .. hole in his oil pan. ~ Nlltt. C.1Ht. ""' SUfl!lltlOR COUltT 0111' TMI 1"1H74 Veteran will drive a M-' ·-n-He left Indianapolis Monday Tth (1111 11M1'1 .,........ ITATf. M CALlfOINIA POlt Put1U1llld 0r.1n111 coeu Delly Piiot ~.:: Arllnltyi ,.,, "'"....... TN• COUNTY OP ORAN•• April 1~ 17, i.e. end Mey I, ltn '°57-n Offy for Roger Penske's team. n1glrt to run at Talladega, Ala. l"\lblllllld OrM191 COllf Dtlly ,:_o;; NI. A:HNI Aprll 14, u . .1nc1 Mey 1. 1m NOTtCI op Mu11u11e OI' PnlTION PUBL!C NOTICE "I've had a couple of other PIJBIJC NOTICE 1110• P•o•AT• op wu.L &No Po• i------------ ff in th t to dri t L•TTIRI TESTA.MINT.1.aY •. _, 0 era e pas ve 8 Tilt wi•th e11111 of EL11AÐ TAG u E • PICTITiou1 •uiiNESI Indianapolis ," AWson said. •1n1T1ous aus1ti11ss PtcHlld. NAM• sTAT•M•NT "But n .. .,., offer came at a NAM• ITAT•MINT NOTICE IS HSAEBY GIVEN .., .. , T!Jot' lollowtrig perlOn II doing bu1ln•1• '""'& Tl'll followll'IG penon 11 doln11 bu1ln111 JAME;S T. MOULTltUP. JR., h11 fllld 11 :,i time When I COuld fit it in JDY • 1•: Mr1ln • pllltlon tor Pl'~ll of win tlld AYll:El' ,IHE CUTLEll:Y, 2•761 -hedule. .._ DESIGN SIGN CO .. 16A02-C Oothlrd for l11uenc1 ol Llllffl Te111mentary lo Menolelt, Mission Vlt!e, Ce!llornl• -w If k A..-e .. Hunl!l'IQIO/I BNC:h. Cell!. fU.17 P1ttt1ori1r 11t1r111C1 lo wlllcn 11 midi for '1'1S "Before I've always bad 0 paC ery.1n a.11pti McLeoct, !';1'· c1111 rurtl'llf pert1cu11rs. •nd 11'1.11 tM ttm1 •nd Aon110 Arris. 26761 M11"1o1111. Ml•1klr1 lll«l'r.1, Lff11nt Nlg\111, c•111. pllcl ot l\Hrlno tM ""l' 1'111 been 111 V!elo, C1tllornl.1 .U1$ Other commitments." Tllt1 bu.llln1q 11 conctucted by tn lrl-for M.1y 1.S, 1'73, •I t ;OO .1.m .. In fl'll Th l1 llullnna 11 conduct.cl by In In- mad Ioolt C11'114u1I. courtn:an ol DeJMirtm•nl No. 3 of Mid d!v!Cluil. Allbon e it easy llry1n Rtlph McLeod c-'• 11 700 Cl'llc Ctnltf' Drive W111t, In Ronlld Ayrn Monday as he completed his Unlikely Tltb 11.11ement """' flied wtlh till Coun· ,.... City ot 51n• An.1, c1111orn11. Tni1 111,_, w•i fllllcl wllh ,,.,. coun· ty Cllfll of Ot•l'IQI County on Apl'll U . Otltd Apr11 26. 1'73, ty Cl1rk of Or.1r111• Count., on April '· rookie tests. He finished ltn. WILLIAM •. SI JOHN, 1t7l Prac"·e -Ith a "comfortable" Pl41M county Cl«k . P·lWt u11.: " Pllblltllld Q.rlftf* Cotll Deity Pllol, C. A. NIOlll, PubU1tlllcl Orll\!ll Cot1! 01Hy Piiot.' 181.338 m .p.h. lap around the RALEIGH, N.C. If Mey 1. •· 1.s, n. 1m 111.s.n rr, ~.sn April 10, 11, 14, end M•'f 1, 1tn 1QU.n 2in-mlle oval. negotiations between UCLA PUBUC NOTICE T".,1"', on\"1 "",~1~:flrll1• '"The only reason I'm here," h I all and North Carotlna State NOTIC.• TO c1t•OITOllS Atl'llrle1 fw: Petitt.... Allison said, "is t at re y athletic officials· succeed, the suP••1011 cou11T ol' TH• M"""',, 1'.""'1. '· ?'m'• c111st D•llr ,r.1i~ P~ZJ..T~o~,s,,:~~~""":' bell.eve I have a cha· nee to win. sTATB o• <•·•••••<• ••• nation's No. 1 and 2 '-~sketball .. Tl'll 1o11crw11111 perton I• doing bull111s1 "I 've had an exciting, full 11C1 TM• couNTY 0111 OAANO• ••: Career, but raclng at Indy ls teams of last season will meet Ell•t• °' ~.:-:.'"ictLLIAN. •k• PUBLIC NOTICE ooueLe "D'' J" N 1To1t'" L on a neutral court in OOAIS EL11A•ETM KILLIAN, Oecusllcl. I .,. •,•,,•1.·. ·~ IJS62 Wl)'l'll Ave .•• ,...,,,..., one thing I've always wanted ERE•"<" orvEN 1 ,.... y'"'~ PUBIJC NOTICE December But indications NOTOCE IS H 0 NOTICI TO CltEOITORS Robert J. 0111, 17S62 W1yn1. lrvln1, J111111r ventty to do. From the time I was · CT'ICl11on ot 111e •bOYI 11.1rn111 CllUdltlt sul"••ioa cOU1tT 0111 TH• c.111. t1705 •1ta11e11 11•,1,,m,costa M..-seven or eight ye·-old, the were M o nday that the game ""' .111Pffton•111..-11111 d ••-.111•IMt 1111 ST.I.Tl°" cALIP01tN1.1. Po• Tl'lts bu1lne•• 11 conduc111c1 b'f 1n in- D, 6-l. '" -• I Mid dtc:tdenl ar.1 rtQUl rld lo fll• ll'llm, OltANO• di Id 1 H~fi'~on•fJ. 011. W•r"" a-~1 riff. big thing in racing was to would not be sthedu ed. w1111 tM MC.11wrr V011Chlrs, 1n tM ofllc• TH• co~:"L~:'.n " u• Rof)VI J . 011, Mcvrc~•• CE> won""· 6·•. listen to the Indy 500 on the UCLA was 30-0 and national of 111• clffk °' 1111 •bo"• "'1111111 t"OUrt, or Eit.11e of MAii El E. McLAll:EN, This 1111ement w11 111ea With tilt covr.: Stvalrt !El d1!. Ly1rn1 M : c!tl, . lo Pf'•Hnl llllm. wttl'I !I'll n1ensirv Dtc,..Hd ty Clt•k ot Or1r111• t°"'"ty on April -'· Armtnd1rl1 f.\ radio. Champion last year, wh1Je N.C. \tOlldllrt. lo !Tie undtr•llll'led .11 !I'll offlc• NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N to lMI 1f1J R. Porter (E)o':~.!;'· ''2• ''To me, It's the biggest State was 27.-0. But the fR 11e:~"t.':~u,D8~!L0,...~.,:,1~L~~~· crtdllorl ot the lbo'v! nemed dKedtnl ' '14Jtl Hellon·9onnl119 (El 011. Wrlghl· W If k blblted fr C ii'•onil• t1UO wnlch • 1, "" pttc• oi tl'lll 111 pe1&0ns htvll'IQ cl1lm$ 1g.1ln1! !I'll Pvbll1tlllcl Or•1111• tt Delly Piiot, G•rdrter 6-J; d•f. e!.der-Fr1ncl16-0. thing in racing," 0 paC W8S pro Offi t!.i 1 of lhl i.-M.ntgnld In en mtttlrl 11!d dtadent 1r• requlrtd to flit !hem, April ID, 17, 14, .Ind M1y I, 1t7) fJJ..73 Hou-s111111rd(E)won6-,,6-2. AlLi . th It t .. • g Jo the Nat ion a l M• 1 1 , __ .,., wttht1ttn1ee1111"/'llU("'4!rs,lntl'lloff1ce v.1rs11., son ts e a es in a gotn P111.1lnlng to '"' 111•'* 0 ... 0 ""'" n ' of 111 r k o11he 1b0 e entitled c011rt or PUBUC NOTICE CllM llJ"'-1 uivtJ t:d111n series of NASCAR drivers who Collegiate Athletic Association ;r;,hl~ 1::~ :,or~:.• •"•r 1111 "'1' pUblk:•· to p~ec:r.1 l'hem. w7in tn• n1e111~rvl-----~=~,.,----- 11"'111 ha ·~ed t . th J I Ifs bee 'I n Dtlld April 16 1t7l voucner1. lo lhl llf><krs111nld ti 1111 off1ee MOTICI TO Schiel IE) lost to Gerkin w 1 lost to ve u• o Win e n-P ayo ause I was O OOllV ANN KI LLIAN swl!.TT, o1 hi• 1111ornev1. N•oel. 11:111111 • CONTR,(c:Toas Gvllek 1-'i Iott 10 ll:osi :i-•; dtt 0•11 .. dianap:>lis race, including Cale one-year probation for a E11.cvtr1x ot 1111 wm o11111 0.1..-Jdson. lne .• 1010 Nortn Miln st., Sult• CALLINO PO• ••DI '· h Do .,. . I . • .. -,, _ _. de<:ed111! s10. l1n1.1 Ant, C1llfol'fll1 '2701, wllk:h I• ' ~ 0' ' ' ' NEWPORT MESA Z•l•c !El tost 1-4, 1-6. '"'· 1~. Yarborouah and brot er n-recru1 1ng v10 at1on. oo•••o w·· .,.",-oA• ,, · '"' p11c1 of 1MnlrteS1 01 tn• vrlllll'llllnld 111 c,.....,, • r c : • N1wm1n (El Iott°"; w11n •·2, 64.'" • Allllso"'' \"'Ill Ca thl tic di .. • "' "' ro' " .111 m11t1r1 ptrt1lnl1111 to fl'll Hl.lte of 111d UNll't&O 2• nie n. ,.,.1 s sey, 8 e rec-TttOM.1.1 K. CALLIS • Clecldent wltnln four month• tflllf' tlll lld OMc1Un11 11 100 e'ctock a.m. Ol'I tht D••ol• IEI 1os~ won 6-3. "3. 6-0. The younger Allison brother tor at the Raleigh school, said ~,..:!. "O'm. nr11 out>i1c111on of 1n11 r.otlc•. • ~i!'l; :'~r·•=pt: 1151 Pi.ctntie ANOELUI Ll!AOUI Etlmote-POl$0 {El •pt11 with Dr•r· was named Indy rookie ol the Monday however "UCLA is ................ C'4tftntll '2"' D.1tldJ~l~'ll~'l!,111 A,'tet\1,11, Coe•• MN.I. w L T 01 c1nner .. 1. 1.1, dlf McC1rty:Gus111son year In 1970, wi"th 8 fourth t ' •••• 1 1 for the T111 tn41 ~ ExtC\lttW-of"" Wm o1 Proltct 1c11n1111e1111on N.11111: FOUH· Miter ~ 1 ' 0 •4 ... 1. no on our oun;:uU e ... ...,,,..,. "" •MCWttt• tlM •boYI MINd Otetdent. DATtON WOfl:I( -A&:LOCATAILES. SI. P.1vt • ' 0 RWd·En1l11n (Ii) IOI! .... 3-6J Iott CM, place finish. DoMle. 32, was 1973-74 season.. Publl•Md Qr11t91 CHI! Delly Piiot. NA.OIL.. ltlOAM .. DAVIDSON INC ABll!AHAM LINCOLN MIDDL! ICHOOL. Bii/iop Amat 1 • D VI 3-4. ,·,-h tn" JM], but hasn't ···n Asked ha. th '"A-~ "''" 17· 2', .Ind Mey '· •• lm 11l7-7l •r : Jol'lll P, Kl"'' Jr. • • PIK.I Pl•n• on Fiii: 1'57 fl!ltttntl1 Plu1 x ' 1 1 l''r JIH'llW V.1n1lty .... J I ~ w t e Cll.d.ll\.--.:::S 1111 N1rtti Mlllll St .. Sult. Slf AYIOUI, COii.i Mell, C1llfornl1 servrte , 1 o ,., c•M 1111 !JI 1.i-back since because of sponsor were or a rranaing the game PUBUC NonCE s111t1 a11.1, c.01. m11 NOTI CE 1s HERE•v GIVEN th1t 11>1 SI. Anthony 4 1 1 21't Slflt!M e• ' T.ll t (114) M1-MtJ l bovl lllmld SChool Ol11rkl Of Or.111111 Mnty•s leore 'fll!tr IEI '°'' 10 Robbln1 11'1 lost to commitinents. Casey said "Barring some un-PICTITIOUS IUIUllSS Altlntl.,."' ••taltw County, C.11lfbml.1, Kling by .Ind tllr ... SI. Pavl l. P1u• x 2 • GUltfe •-6. y bo gh finlshed 10th f thin. • [ d 't kno NAMI! ITAT•MINT Publl.t'lld Or•l'lll* Co~nl D1Hy l"l\ot, Ill o.o..-.rrtlng •otrd, l'llr1lnener rtllrTM'" Tllcl•r'• G•""• Moror cei 1os1 ,,,, 1-6. . ar rou oreseen g on . w ™ ~1ow1119 PlflO!I 11 doll'IQ bulfn.e•• Mey 1• 1, 15, 22, ,,73 t?H-T.I 10 •• "DISTIUClH, wm r1t11..-. uP to, but 9 rvtte 11 Mite~ 011 M1t1ch <El 10-1 10 Shotm1ker 2-61 last year. aboul we won't be playing 111 not l1i.r llltn 1111 •bcWe •••ttcl llme. 1.111. s1, Antt>on., '' Bl~ Am11 lost to Newq uln ~•. For Bobby, bis performance UCLA" 1RVIHE VETElttNAll:Y HOSPITAL, UBUC NOTICE Id bldl tw tl'll .1wuo of • conttlCI tor Oll:ANOE Ll!AGUll Hyoe tE) '°''o0:-• .3.~· this year means a lot toward • :l. Moulton P•rkwty, 1rv1111, c1n1. p . ~~:O::.r.~~.C11vec1 In fM plec. IHn· w L o• LYllOlll•Dennr !E) lost ta MeN• h h he Ill t Jo 1 • ABA Tied L.1Wl'tl'l(I wirr«1 zerrun, 1'Jl 1 '"" 1111111 .1b0ve, .1nd wn bl OPIMcl Ind Soroor.1 t 3 mff1·8u111rd .S.71 dtf. O!Connol'· W et er W re urn n• . Jvol ... , S.lntt An.1. Ct. '"°'· IUPlllO• COUl:T OP TNI ~'," ... -•• -.lloud .II IM lbo..-1 lhfld Unl~1r1lty 1 4 1 w I hi ' 2 d ' II I future """ -· Brt• 1 4 1 ~~11, . .,v.,_ <El lost '-'J won ._1, • 1anapo s n years, o r LOUISVIlJ,E .4. rt i S Thi• butlft.lls 11 conduc11c1 b'f 1n In· sTAT8 OP C.l.LlfORNIA 11011 Tiier• wtll bf • NO depottt reqvlrld tor v.11en('!1 7 4 1 co11eg1et1 11no1n 1ne1 d 0 u b t •.• confine himself to stockers. Gi'lmore led all scor-s wi"th 29 oir1c11191l...wrtnc1 w. z.min. D.V.M. ™1 co3:-rv,.Jr,:•aN•• 1tc11 111 °'•'".i;;:"'--· 1,•, 1o ~~!~ntH Sllcldleb!ltk ' $ 2 l tl'!'lllln1l1 •nd f1n1t1 Sund.IV In tht "A decision will be made ... Thi• tllt.11'11111 fl11d wilh 11'11 c~ NQTICI! 01' H•A1tfJtO' OP PITtllON lfll rlfu!'ll " I on ..,,,..., -El Oorido • 7 4 ltnnl1 chlmplonllllps: s In O I•. points and dotitlnated the Cl1rk If Of•l'llll County on Mirt h», 1.n. POI lllOIATI olt' WILL AMO POI --~ .lftlf tllt cl Optnlng ffll. L11g~ Be1ch J • .s Stml"n&ll 411'1 0111 VllllJY. later," he said. P.MJI• Lan••• TESTAMINTAll:Y l:iKh bid mvtl eonfomt encl tit O•n• H1111 , , , JOl'ln Andrtw•. sou1tiern c11. 111t. A possible shortage of prac-backboards Monday nJght to PublllMd Ol'al'IOI co.11 oinv Pilot, "''''-ol IDA MAY 'DEISTER. 0tcM1-fftPOl'l•lve to"" contttct Ooc\lrnlnt .. Mon .. v•• score. At•11 M.,..,., s11nlord. ~ ... 7-4. '"'-11u1 give the Kentucky Colonels 8 M•Y 1,., 15, n. lm IJ»-7' 111 lllCll bkl w11 bt •ecomtianlld by 11'11 ' NINTM ltACI! -Ofll 11'1111. PICI. Cl1lmlng 111 1g11. PVftl S24QO. ttrt Luckr !RlclwnDNIJ 4 . .:t 3.'° 3.00 Sonore t . Unlv1r~llY $ ll1mlre1. USC, dtf Jim Dll111iy, Slllln· L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;·;;;;;,;;iil NOTICE IS HEllEBY CIVIN the! llCll!'lty refwnd to In 1111 tontr1ct Sldd•ebKtt 4, E1 oor100 , toro. ~ 6-1. 114-102 victory over the ln-11 Mertl'l.I M•r K\lllWll "'' t111c1 "'"'" • documenh .1nd by '"' 11•1 °' PfOl*ld / L111un1 8Hd! t, V1tencle .s lllltln Pln111 di p -•-th I 'SES ffllllon tor Prollllt ot WU! ellCI for ~IT.1tton. / H1lry Abbe (Cron~) s.eo J.IO lroecl S"-Oow (ACkffmtn) J,60 Time -2.04 1/5 AllCI RICld Wicklow Biii. SC111t11191f, Rod V Adlos, D1l11 Cholt1. Jf/OI Rk:l'lln Scr1kllld -S..br$1 G.111. Jell'trson T"" U ~11.1ct.1 -l·HJ• Llldly a t-Nllr., A ..... "•l• $',..00 Bobby Sox Opener Set 9, ... s. D•n• HUis 1 11:.1m1r1r. use."" An11r1wt, use 6,i, Rams Li"st ana acers, evt'lm•g e r NEWPORT LE" 1....,.11e1 .. Ll'ltlrl THtimtntary to 111t Mr. J11T111 M. Ht1111111C1, Dll"klor. T1turtt1•r·1 01""1 ""'· "1. American Basketball Assocla· "'"Kofltr -,,.._~ 10 w111ch 11 l'l'leot for 5ctloo' P.1tllltlll. Mal~lelllnc.• 11111 0per •• BrH ,, $t<ldlebl!dl °""'" ""'11111••• I I rr <Yaltr ..... & .,....., fllrttllr ~rtlcul1rt • .lllCI ll'l.ll 11'11111111 Md t\ont, wlll !1'111'1 wtfll "'°" ,.,... In· Sor'lor• 11 , ~....,, &elCh Slevt KrvltvllJ .1nd ll:.1yno $1191n, t Oq p &yo series at 1-1. r;:.c. of hlfrlne tM l.lml ilal bMrl Ml flrKi.d In iOlll'lfll , fM Ml• llf !!I.I ~ UCL.\. dll s11..-. Mell 1n11 Brltn Lusl-•II Vthlcl11 11 19-,,,. ·--.. Mel":'\':'; a. oPfn.llOM av1i.1no. V1l111tle 11 El 00rldo ' •·• M.ly • '"' .II • l .!l'I., "' ,. .. "-•"4 O -..... ·-r-11 ~ 0 HI.I I U ' 'IY H cl'I.,., UCLA. '"'· M . P11 Dupr.1 Ind '73 SJ t • ft -.:. courtrooll'I fl Otpertment Ne. 3 of 11111 ...... y-• .,_ • IM 1 * n 'ltr• Jolln Whllllnotr, S!.1ntord, !Ml Sit.hi a e e-.... 6411!2202 ~ .11 700 Civic Glntll' Ofl..-. Wnt In et 10100 """'" Ol'I lwedly, Mty 1, 1m, IJtVtNI L:AG"-1 T oe r.:.r.on •r>d JOM Andr1wi, USC, 1~. 3 .. , . ~ !Mo.C: t::";;, ~ c..n!On\le. ' I~ .:_'!"!~,T ~I ,f! ":.r:i'.~ ~~ Loi A!emllot t 2 0 DtW111 Pl"°'t1 l~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""!I WILLIAM E. Sl JOHN ~"., nf'llrmel t-111 .1ny bldt fllr ~:00.,~1~1 Mir : ~ g 3 01Cr'llll..-IU •IHI S1eg1n, UCLA. dtf LOS ANGELES (AP) [~ County ,C,""' __ ...,.,OllT ·,,, ,., .. ---•-· "" ' ' Uptl Ind Whl111noer, St.111lorC1, 7-5. 7-5. II be Chu k Kn • n t -· ......... ,., ·-01n• -e~7!!,An• v.i.., t ! 0 l T••"' JllnCllr!lll -Sltnlor\t 15, Thls wi c ox s rs .------------.. 1Jott......... r • '"'*"' fW$Vtlllne r.111 of Pit dll!l'I"""'" Founr.1ln V•ll•Y 3 I ! 1 SOUIMrn C11 1,, UCLA U. Ct ll!Ornl.1 2. year as h.."d coach of the :1:.='c:'Dr.,.11111 ,.. In 1111 locellty Ill Wllldl 1111 weft b ti b4I E•l•nd• 2 • I \) ....... d I See the brighter N-lltHlt. CllH ..... pwforTMd tor MCI'! (ttft ., iy,. °' Cott• Miu 2 t ,, , Rams, but the s c h e u e ....._ • . ' wortu'nln nllMld to UICVl9 tt11 C*'ltr'let. Ed' 1 -, ..,.. sc.r., ·--makers haven't shown him T•h cn4J ....-a TlllM "''" .,. on 1111 '' 1'57 Pl-'1• .. )"°" , Ot'0/1.1 0.1 M.1r in.,,.. In· F 0 , h R side of l!L. ~ "' "9tllMMr l1y llof """""" c.1r MtM ~ may M ._ m IS rt any mercy I IC ~lslwld Or•ntl COllSf De p ' teltlld on r1q1111t. i. cert of lhltt tttlM •• ~~ .. \.~'J'.nL~l~.~,:,ltot) epo The Rims• 1973 NFL Mey 1, t. .. Im IJZS-1) 11\all ........ •I tlle,... llM. Cost.1 Mew 4, Esltfl(l.1 3 «t tnn!ncul along he \ Tiie ._...Ill Kflldilll ef W ~ ThW'lhY'• oemn .. schedule, released Monday, t PUBlJC NOTICE ...... b ....,. upen • -"Int ci..,. of Opening day ceremonleS' for Corotl.I Clel ,,,., .. , Fount.11n V1U1y HIWPORT ID.....,.. UcMr1 -$l ho th he I b will pl lflhl (IJ '*"'· TM f'ltt for ho!NI)' $N the !rv'··Ei T Bobb So Lot A1•mllot 11 Cott• Ml'4 1nQ1,r1. 10 bonito. :is:t fO(ll eoc1: CArf't S WS at l C U 8}1 wwtll'M W0111 the/I 1111 et 51Mt tl!N Md u""-oro y x $1n11 {l;a vt111r •f ee11ton u 11<111i11tl _ 21 ~t11111t•: :xi fOCll COd. u three of its first four games llKnTlOut IUllNIU ••"-"• w , sortball league will start at 9 Miano• .~~flV'rit~~· L •• ca&:~1i1Po'l1 !! !:•~:en. :it~•• awah from home end aeven of n. ..:=•,:.:~£ ..,.... T~~~ .. to ~1o1 ~ ... W*I C*l~ectr.ott~ a.m. Saturday• at the Rancho w"•-·· ,0 1 IN•,l 11tilt1i111, > r.c11 cod. 1 mec . . t lghl -•-·t t --,.,. --·--san Jo a q u In Intermediate tn•n°';i';... ! • j '"N °1100 1~-,..,., -1" its rs e agai.1i.:1 earns .. : UJ1&.Y11._uutAlc't.-UIIJJt.1. ..... ';lm,_i._....,__._:;;._.,..:'B-·"M~ achool in Irvine. -• j · rmi':!!i ,,,.'C'.1""'~ , .. illrrlCVIM, . which bad wtnnin& records 1n ,.o. ~x • c.11 ,,,.., c.11"'""1 •Ptdfl., ,.liri.lolll 1ilii'tri'Ml'I ll •I.A 1-":1Tr!:: BIWI ; ' S '1Aiit''r-.'1f ~ \a _..,..! 111 1972 , tW7, --tliiil'it,. 'Qili" MM. QllF W IMm In tllt tllecvftoll ef tllt • .. .. , ~~. :pl ·a a Cl ., D 'ti "' jt 1: b g .. :I .. j .. " • • ' ~ ' 1 Fo owing u~ oeremon=, e=.:"·~ . ' . '9Cll.t'Odl,,M1ii1~111at111111t. • er .... , tlrYll•,.,. ......... ~ll'fflldr'ewN1·11MW1 """"' • DAN.A WNAa~ -'4 *"'""t IOJ Tiii ....,.., M9tOll tdledult el'll yr .. l'tll!Cl9 IA. DtitMf, ... Twtlft. -~ el ail"Y (al) deys lfttr the •'-f'::----~~~!!!-~~lll,ICJU.,.JtJlf<~l~mll'll~w!!!!!llt__~~:::::::..~ .... ~~--·.J__,1'-.,~1~~:~1lfo"~~· ,, llWTICUll.1, "°""°· 2 11Pf~-~M--=.1·~'i""""~~-;cc;;;;"~;;.-~--:~~~~~:;:;::-;;:'!.';~~~~~~!:;~llllli..Ultl_-ff;;Cof~l~•;N?•=~~·Cll~l~ .. ~ ... ~""'2:~-.......... -li"'~"'~"'~ ... ~~ ... ~w~ ..... ~~~!;l;?~'~--il--~M ----pliy an abbrtvl8'ied WilbiUOD • -(II""'*',.. fer ~*"'" ~I I I -~; -~I Mfl rlflCI--:--·r -pme. starting at JO. w"""' ,'!::, =.. I t...m, · "°"to. '-~ _.....·1 f : [.-_ • ~ · defea&ecl OiDe J.O In the opea-.. Slllllr 111111"'~~w111 ... o.a.... ""' . TM '*"'*" llonf .... _ .. "' ""'" will be Iii dlme+dlp Hurrtrt:: lkeC1'110. WWtn nttllf' I l>t... '*"'°' , l'l.IUIMlf, ~ rock • ,1 -,.. ... .,. lna came. oC a. tllmtnatioo Fl1 Dft.l.V' ,,. ....... , .......... ClunJy tt'I 0. flWM ... fwtlt In !tit CllllllfY'kl • hmch!on at the games with f:::~ •· ~..!i'1 1 i:~"fl',7.A~~~rl.:.Ztcuae. HOV.'1= .. ,' ... ~~r·· Itri~ for the 1974 World Soc--uni ~-: c;:a:~ 1t..,~ .......,.._ .-'n the: proceeds ping toward ~·..... SA• ,. OiO r .... 1 ....... 1 -ti No..-. 11 -'tr' rrMM?:· ~ ._ = ".,._..,. FtllW l\JPPOl't of the Jeaaue and Ma:.:g~~S.1"1t Ant ti :~;1.J.,f.t.t~i-l~r~~~~ mw: 112:,,t .. ~a!i::.. ~~~~ ied~ ~a: ii. ~I 1J °""'9 t* btltf "= r....... Orwllae ~ Dalty ,;.'-t -·-'--·· or oew N1uJpmenl /Nrin1 .. , Ane "" blrTIClld.I, =· llontto. 3 ltnd b.lu. 1f IC. 0 -""~ G/lnlt. I JI """ M. Ml ..., l , &., 11. tm ,,.,.,, ,..,,, ,, Ml ,,.., 1, 1m JNl.n ,..... .. !_ .. , Kun!I,._ ., LOlr.1 111t1bvt. . 1• -C1twf.1nd. ""· r 1' ' .. •• ,..,,.. • ••,•-•~' .... ~ •• •'"-• •~--.. o , •• _,, o-oo••-0 i .. -+ro •• -•--••-•••O o • . . .... . .. .. '. ,. .~ ... ~ :.~ . • runctay , May 1, 1973 DAIL V PILOT ZJ TONIGIIT'S - Chief's Role . HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Clllllf Dan George. oomlnated for an Oscar in "UttLe Blg Man," will star in "Wild Oat.. and lodian" for ·C l n e m a Dance Group Superb ~t UC Irvine t TV IDGHLIGHTS KHJ D 7:30 -"Tune Llni!t." Riehm! Widmark ;plays a major aceused ol being a turncoat while a pnsoner in North Korea. Systoms. By TOM BARLEY Of .. Dlift. Pilt lit" A New York crlUc rocenUy COllllll<Jlted thal tho Lar Lubovilch • Dlnce Company WU the beol thing to happen to ballet slrlce Nureyev's defection and he llns lhia writer with him all 1he way after just one exposure to lhls , I a.stonlsbing artist and his virile performer. splendid lrOOpe. Lubovltch, a gifted c:boreoirapher and a superb dancer, brou&hl his company to UC Irvine lait --!or a four-work program that brooghl cbeen from the audi- ence lhmlghout the program viewed by this writer. realizes that the fou r works so splendidly d a n e e d· last weekend were perfonnr.d by Just 14danceni. That la hard work aod elbow _.. by lt\Y yan!atlck but It was lmpoulble. to detect the s11g1u.,1 sign or Jading or fatigue as Lubovllch and his company gave WI that final magnificent 1'Messlah."' "And ·'I1le Glory" wU well ' chosen u their final aeament or a glorlous""1'f-hy this bright new force-In the world or ballet. NBC D 8:00 -"Magic Carpet." A ;ioung wom- an filla in u a tour guide for a group ol Ameri-cans and soon discovera a mysterious freeloader among them. SUsan Saint James, Jim Backus, Abby Dalton. KCET fl9 8:00 -Turning Points. The focus is oo "the Michigan university town ot Ann Arbor and its ~torts to effectively de<rlmlna!lze the use ot marl· Juana. NATIONAi GINIUL THIATIH I~. They-were all wortb It and ~ two were worth a lot more: ' "Joy ol ~an's Desiring," set IA~ to Bach's music ud "Some of HE HAS SOME no less g!llod girts in this clever eom· ~ aod an en~ audl· once made It very clear that GerTi Jfoullhan, Salty Tram· mell and the brilliant Jeanne Solan and the trllllant JeaMe ey~ ill tbe performance a~ 1ended by thl• writer. MY jllck .... Ml SS Houllban's work in the air from "Joy of Man's Destring." Lubovllich strove here for a touch of the ethereal and a dash of mystlCl.sm in his dance form and he chose well when he called on Miss Houlihan to draw these impressions from that moving Bach score. -ABC Q 8:30 -"Getting Away From It All." Two .)'?ung couples, fed up with the big city, buy an "island off the coast of Maino. Larry Hagman, Bar· bara Feldon, Gary Collins, E. J. Parker. · CBS II 9:30 -''The Gargoyles." An anthropolo- gist (Corne! Wilde) and b!J daugbt.er (Jennifer Salt) ·are menaced by horrific creatures resembling the : 1srgoyles ot ancient legend. DW PLAYING RISHVID SEATS On Sale OailJ 12 'Iii ! MARLON BRANDO .ltL 'pails "l.ody Slop th ..,_.. 1he ReactioM o! Some or the "Up ,.._ S•Aoi" People Some of the '11me on '""~~~~~~~~~ Hearing of the Coming or 1he I' . Messiah," gloriously staged 11> the mush: of Handel's "Messiah.'' Miss Solan, a hard working ballerina all e v e n l n g , partnered Luboviteh Im· HELD DVEll W 11• Wiii ___ ..... _ --· "DELIVERANCE" HELD DVER I I I t t i ' I ' ' ' ' ' ' peecably in "The T i m e ,. .. BefOre" without, from this ~· ~ • f5'i1 criUc's ,eat, ever approaching lkllMll tt.m. · Fr.:m_.,., 8rm.. 1!:!!J 1he -•··•'d standards .... e set ALSO IKI .,,....... "'' WILDERNESS" c~ ._. • in "Joy of Mao's Desii'lng" ,,._. .. N IN THE -•• ' •. ® ,::.=-Utut1tl "iol111' MDI. THAU TllURS. I P.M. FRIOU 1 l 9:45 SATUADll 2-1 & 9:45 SUNDAY 2-5 ·& I ALL SEATS $4.00 "SAVE TH• TIGltR" -"MAltJOaH LUBOVITCR PROVED· in that one pefrormance that he has a tremendously wide range as a choreographer bllt bis great Dair, to this critic, is in the. adaptation of the classical -and d e e p I y religious -Bach and Handel scores to a dance form. His Oowing, ~plendi d I y disciplined and impeccably costumed "Messiah" brought the house down and it was, for Ibis critic, the best thing of the evening and a magnificent finale to a memorable performance. anc1 "Wbirligogs." -"JO£ KIDD" ERNEST PAGNANO wasl ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;!!~.J. TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening MAYl Ill E Llltldo • """"' . Iii) """' 111111 -l!l M"": ... fl ru.-r (ch) '31 -H11mph!'f Bo11rt, M1rplt Undsly. • l:!OIJCIJ Hlwlll -Andy -l:m II D Olm mm> m New Ind Joyct Vin Patten 111rst as I " (}) llj Nin • trusll1nd 1nd wfft confld1nc1 taam e ..... """'" Contlnuts from wtio aet t1uafrt bftwttfl two of lh• 5PM with &An&tb II: Detroit bl1nd's ITIOlt powerful mobs. Cll ..,S..rt Q l])(l)!DMCT--: 0 W..W Dul w Ahl (C) <'GI "Cettl111 Aw., Fi.• H AD" ID 1\1 niltdMa <R> <com) ·12 -Ltrry Hl&lnaii,. •• .(I) Stir ff'lt; hrti1ra Ftldoft, Gary Collins, U. · fl) Ml Dllkl [lllllfld1 Pt1Pr. Two yo11n1 couples, f1d up @) llodflpod&1 Lldp With lif1 In lhl bl& dty, buy lft 1$- 9) TWM ...,_ l1nd ofl tilt coast ol Milne. l!Jt{I) .....,, ...._ . ID Mtr1 lfffftl AN Q-.. -,.~.,.-mam __ _ ,_, -..--tlon With lllhDP Futton J. ~ (d11} '66--Alln Blta, .luM. Rldll An lnlonnll dboJakMI tllUt tM Thor1 Hird. Alcl'lblqof who blclme ""°"" ta Cl) CU ,..., Wilt« CninkH1 millions at MM:rit1111 throush ~ !_HM Cl111 ft Tmll talmslon 1ppt1r1ncas. llVI ...,... Clrtffl1 Sit"!' a!> NoVlll m...,,..,.,_ _n.,.1 ·Wllltwl.l:IJ VIN CENT PRIC~ "' i"THEATRE !UFBLDDD" WHATS 6:15 SAT. I SUN. 12:1S "CHEER LEADERS" "SEOUCTIOI Of INGI" IOTH FEATURES una(XI .. ....._~~;;? "lhink of the pafedcrime ..• 'Jhen go one sJr:p further. TWt:NTl£Tl"1 CENMIV·R:»C Also {RI Clint Emtwood ' BARGAIN MATINEE Wednesd•y, 1 p.m. ,,_ . ..,,... ... Adults $1.00 ili)l1 .. ~-' t.Olll!lDn1M1 · Hebrew G Nino II:' .loulnt CarM... EEi lelll" IN U... U.A. CITY & SO\JTH COAST c:'INl.MA~TUElOAY JOc (ALL LAOlES & GOLDEN AOliRS OPENING 'TIL ~:Ml · e-m-. ,,,_ mn.r ... k'""' tJOIJ CIJ C&S T....., -(ti IS Ultlt ,._ <ID) -... -~ 1"'"1 72 J:111J m am---"""'' ..,,., -.. ""' ....,. (j) Tmtl w Celi• .. •• '°" Hitt. ¥ 1ntlwopolotbt 1114 ~ii (I} Slfirl w AIMtm 41111httr, tnroirt. from Clllf. ID 0 W\11'• My I.NJ Mako tG raureh 1 book on d~ m I LM L1Cy monoloD, 1r1 ll'l9lllC9d i.y horrific · · 111 1 .,..... ., ,..... tr11tu~n mtmblh'I "" ..,..,... f» Sl•pltlllll'lil MO of ltlelenl ~Ind. ;.: '°;jllll'! ' ' , 0111 Wt'lil Olll'fl Jacll L- "SAVE THE TlGEA" "QIJACKSER ,ORTUNE" ._ l11c.tlrt (RI mn..FmclCW 911PICJAI 1111c:111 -.... ; •• :::;:: · f.E 11111*1 hrlcln A docuJlllfllM)' OI tM 41$• %' o,.. a!> FonM I• rallllll tlMfJ of ~"' Pll'fect --UA ~ Dflty apteimtns In the c:o1st1I wtl1rs -,ft Soutft · 11» .. "" G) Uin' Qtrll Rincan, 1n lsl1nd ne1r VllllllrL Coast ·~~!9:1':." (f) lflld beer Whtn tht tptcillltl'lt lrl broupt lo 0~ .. ~:TCEHRO~ .. ~'II lobby~ ..., Rod Mo-Profmor WllH•m lrilb(1 _,,.,.. 1 • _,, II.Lien ruests. Moloo' class, h1 sets out lo ttt 1'~0 ,...,. ~;;-,... (}) Koclrr'• HlfMI pennis.lion to 1111 Ille INanrd • • I Y"°'...., oe:CT1~~1vr• CJ MC9 1'rpH "Hll(lt Ttnslon" d1uroom. ..fl'I In Colort Guat l.nli1 Hl11Mn pl11n JMlll' 1J 911w1 <Al wtitn ht kldnapa 1n mc:utM of I ID Pl ca., power comp1t'IJ'. ED IJICl .._. . ·o -. «> (2IN) .,._" m• ....... -·· C:..•dtt Cftd" (wn) '63--Alildlt GI Festini Ma1aM M11rphr. eo11ten Mlll1r. ll:GIO@l 8'Flnt ,....., w T• T.n ,.. Tnrt11 a m m - CIJ""' 1' ,,. uto Q Ill CIJ ID ..._ -IUI. 0 ·-~ ·-(2IN) "Tl• (R) A 12-IUf ... d "1 ... • ;.,... • ;"" ~ 57~!:m Wldnllfl 1n with rt11um1told arthritis mint '•.Im nst Qlrl also COpl With tonlllcts bltwlln lllit , , · llJ Dflll'fl. alrlnpd Plreftft. Let H. Mont· . m I IHCIA I 0. '-,_ ..... fDl'Mf'J, Jemn stleJ' Ind Undt "41 Fnnch MIStlrpitc:a" ll'QPflS· M1'1h 1uat. """ a""" """' """" sklnlst •nd poll.·lmprlllklnlst fl la Mol1M11 man up this colltdion whlcti brinp -Holl__. T i-.i..i..... Tittltn . to tht AIMl1ellil public for tN flm w 1-:; .... _ time 41 F1tnch m1stlrpjtca oa loln "Stiambltll (R) from the Hermil•t• Mus111m In l•n· lO::JO 1J T1lk Itek ina;r1d ind the Pushkin Museum In I!) McH11t'a Nny Moscow. II) a.iN ...... m-u.•a-llil_,_ ;; !~ JIMIJDIJlll&llD-. ~ mrna-.: lf)MUmFlllllr ........ _ UlllJ (I]--... of (I)--; 11111.,.,-. 01 ttle Modi II 8 1111111: ... II M" (•I) 'M for marijuana prr1 l'lfl,. ....., -Tony RlllMI...,.., IMll. ttll peopll'1 • .,...,, ..... I .T ... W C1n11 .. 1 I ................... of lilt • -"' D 9llJIUCT--(C) llil--•1111 (211) --,_, 72-s.s. 51,. 11..., -ll:lllJ(l]Cll i. --IO · Jim ~ AtbJ Otltiol. A 1 Tr*' l*t) '53 -G ..... fort _,,.. ~ .. ,,...,. "', ea•-- , _of ___ .. ··- .... -•• --,,... Q (J)(J).l!Jltcl ... Tlilll io14tr1111011tlhtM.. , -•t•tll .. Tflll D WCIJ C1T1 J ck u 12:11e ... tlkMcl ,_. (IO "°'* ........... "' ·-•• I Ii _,.._ .. ......., ·-· . Ill C111,rnrM • ~ • • • "*"nil ... ._..-__, --Joli. •41 --~ -i-. ·---··-...... -·--.• =..:;".t="-1•m11011J- •• "'11 Mor. A $5 Tllo'" 1111 -1'1111 -(C) -.. _. • t MlcMp11 vn!MnltJ IOwll'I (drt) '55 -StM CodhL . -.. lff-........ ..,tc)-1-• Dll ... of u1faflL -. ,. ........ t 1 ., • RoMrl l:tclfwnl (PG) c ... r "JIREMIAN JOHNSON" P•ul Newm1n/Henry l""'de "SOMliTlMES A GREAT NOTION" · 'GARY GRIME JERRY HOUSER ClaSs qf 44 11!!!1 11 "'THE GING THAT COULDrT SHOOT STRAJGHI'' EDWARDS I I\ f \1 \ t f \ I HI ... .I.~. • ~ " .... ; 'J • " "'' ! • • •• C. •a""""'-W. Meflfl .. • "Pl.Ta 'N' TILLll!!" ''THI! PU•LIC EYli" lalll In Colar (PG) •• AcNemy A••rd'I I • Lba Mlnnelll "CABARliT" "PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM" lllfll I" COfor (PGJ . ..... ······ .. , ;~~t:.·•·.;.~·:;·:.·.~ •.. -· ...... -· .............. . ._, . .,...,. • ""•'"'"'"'• ,.,.r;,. ~t'.H• T -·--.. -....,,.,.._1-_,~ .... lnlM-,.ar 2022. PLUS · JAMES GARNE ''lltlY ONLY KILL ntlll MASTllS" Lubovitcb gave us the best male solo work of the evening in the sqment "He Shall Purify," a sensitively danced adapµtion of the Handel air that a m p I y demonstrated, looking back to his earlier work in "The Time Before The Time After," the astoni!!Fhing versatility of this thorougly her partner in thou two ballets and they made a splen- did pair, mMt especially in the "Prelude" danctd to a ~rtion of the Bacll score. It was a demanding gram and one realizes how demanding when Lots of Duds HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) Lucille Ball will wear 37 dif· ferent cOstumes in her rol e as "Mame" at Warner Bros. ~ >-...~· PTOlllt«I by Pll.lA. Gl.X:KL£A n RICHNE w:.EA·Oirecl9d tiv f¥.l.l. GUCl<l..ER f 0..lrlluled tiv cHWinc»4 N!JS~ GM US AN @ CO-HIT AT BOTH THEATRES "THE SEDUCTION OF INGA" BOTH FEATURES RATED X DOORS OPIN WllKDAYS 6145-SAT & SUN T :45: tl11 a.r•" g,.,.. aou1-d CW*n Oro-..• 531-HOO MGM IN11100UCES A -FILM EXl'fl!IENC( DUO·VISI IO ._...I ·M..L. YOU J8I) ,,,. lCUI ITU WICKED, WICKED TWICll THI ,_IOlll TWICE THI TIRAOR! 2 d ~· ~r "IUZZ" l'<QlltL R ~~YNOtDS WELCH ••• "Fw-'1. I l11•1w" I Go) • ''Pick.., Oii 101" (RJ "Five Flngen of D-h" J PLUS DEL "Choto.' Lood" CRl "The Getaway" CPG l .... "i..dy Si ... Tiie llues" I I I ''Poseidon Adventure" •Ill (l•O) "Fuzz .. WEDNESDAY NIGHT* Ma~• W•dne1d1y night your night to e1t out. At 011 T1co, , Wedn11d1y night it Teco Night. You 111 1!• f11ty 011 T1co1 for j1ut $1 .75! Thi1 W•rl111M•y, dri'l1 tllru fut' f1111ily 1iM 1t111I yo11 won't for9et. At prkH yo11'U fl11d Mrd to IM•t. NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA Bristol (P1litadea) 11 C•mpus ' 4th St. and Newport Fwy. TUSTIN Red Hill N1ar S•nta Ana Fwy. ----IU)C[RS-. HAJIOUUDN"S .... . .. ., . -~0.\.> / -.,_,. "" . CXlJJI "Dl.1':1C ...... Ci) IXCLUSIVIL Y ~·····~ EDWARDS c·f\f\11< f\lfR ~•A •F(' ~· AliA...i', (.t TA Vf ,A • 11'14\41 • 1-- • , . ' • -····· ·-·-~ ............. ·~~ .. ~ . .,. . ......... I 22 DAILY PILOT .. TutsdaJ, May l , lfl73 / Pare.,ts ,Learntjj Too--No Color Barriers: MEXICAN-AMERICAN BROTHERHQOD AT LONGFELLOW SCHOOL • • 'Rudr.--Think_s She's White' Pare1its Wa1it Etlinic Pride as Well as Adva1itages of l1itet:{atio1t Christimi. Science Monitor Service children live on Franklin ~ across the Eight-year-old Ri cky. Armenta is Mex-street from Longfellow -in a modest ican-American . Six·year-old R u by but well·kept rental. Armtata is a welder Phillips is black. Both attend lhe and works 60 miles from his home, in Longfellow Elementary School in a poor Los Angeles. Usually he is home just on section of East Riverside \Vhere ethn ic v.•eckends. and racial prejudice .have been largely , \Vith only an elementary education part-time babysitting to earn needed ex- tra money. Beatrice Annenta tvanls Ricky to have what she and her busband did not have. ''To finish school. To go to college. To haye a career. Not IQ have just a job for money." And I want something good for him," she says. Leola Phillips lives over on "10th.'' She has seven children -tv.•o in Longfellow school. She v.·orks part time at school and collects some v.'elfare money . Right no\\', her biggest worry is her first·grader Ruby. 'Revolution' at Schopl j Has Mushroom Affect By CURTIS J. SJTOMER with the principal and teachers. School : Christian Science Monitor Service persoMel went to neighborhood home~ 'Md urged parents to become involved irl RIVERSIDE -"There's no color bar. school matters. rier here. \Yhen • I was growing up, "Mexican people, in particular, are everybody went his own separate way. reluctant to go to school," aays Mrs.: There was name-calling and fights. Now Beatrice Armenta, a Mexican·Americ8n outside or school when we give parties, mother. "Sometimes, they are em· we invite everybody." barrassed that they don't speak F.acJlsh Th.ls is Mrs. Jeanie Williams speaking weir." Afrs. Armenta is now an active -a young, attractive black mother of participant tn school affairs. , three grade-school boys, Who lives in a -:-Families were encourged to opel'\ poor neighborhood in this Southern their homes to groups of parents: California community with other blacks, teachers, and school officials for in· whites, and Mexican-Americans. _ ~--__ rorma~ discussions of school problems. 1 The good relationship people have with ......... N~gbborbood volunteers we ~ e each other here, adults and children, is a recruited to watch classrooms while direct spinoff from a revolution which teachers and school pc~nnel ha~red transformed the Longfellow Elementary out a thrce-y~r learn1n~ .Plan -w~ch School here in Riverside. was later ratified by a JOlnt commuruty · group. LONGFELLO\V SITS RIGHT in the -Special funds were raised to hire heart of th e ghetto in this desert-edge conununity paraprofessionals to assist town. It is drab on the outside blending in regular classroom teachers. with the lower--class neighborhood sur--Evening adult-education classes '\'ere rounding It. More than hall of its children established to teach English to Spanish. come from povefiy homes. More than 35 percent of Longfellow pupils a re Mexican-Americans. Some of these youngsters speak broken EngUsh and many of the parents speak no English at all. Overall there are 59 percent Mexican-Americans, blacks, and Orlen· tals in the school. But despite the prevalent idea that poor, minority, and socially deprived children are poor learner:s, Longfellow youngsters rank among the best elemen- tary-school readers in the district and well above the state average. Surveys show they are well disciplined and eager to learn. Inside, l..oog£ellow is alive with ac- tivity. IBERE IS A IIDBBUB or children, teachers, parents, volunteers -blacks, whites, browns, Orientals -all working together. Bla4'k, b r o '" 11 and tvhite children pla11 to· gether at school, on street11, in honaes. speaking adults and give instruction on consumer affairs and child·reading prac- tices. TIIESE PROGRAMS continue today wltli tangible results. L o n g f e 11 o .;, youngsters are learning more and getting along t>etter. A visit to this Riverside community reveals black, brown, and Caucasian children playing together in the schoolyard, on the strttl!, and in their homes. Eleven.year-old Patricia Vargas moved north of the border from Mexico three years ago. "I play with everybody," she answered nonchalantly when asked whO her .friends are. "Even her," she teased -pointing at classmate Carol Seegraves. "Patricia is my good friend ," the "Anglo" girl boasted proudly. overcome. • himself. Armenta wants more for Ricky ·--··-Both the ·Annenta and-Phillips. families and his other children. He's interested in Because of this, she's involved herself with Longfellow'a activities. NO\Y she's a member of the parents' huinan-rclations committee. And thi s keeps her in close "The kids say: 'Mama, Ruby n1ust think she's white.'" Some educational officials, including Riverside School Superintendent E. Ray· mond Berry, credit Longfellow's success to a unique program of individualized in- struction called Laser (Learning achieve- ment through saturated educational· resources). Instituted at Longfellow three years ago, Laser does a'>'·ay with grade levels. formal report cards, and almost everything that emphasizes •·passing" and "failing." Instead it focuses on success for each child -ac- cording to his abilities and needs . Bonnie Hutchinson. a 10-year-old, Is Canadian born. "You can learn a lot from other people and races," she said. "I'm even learning some Spanish from my friends now." w~nt the best or !>°th world~ for . their their school \\'Ork. But because he's away children. ~ey do~ t w.ant their c~so much. most of the responsibility for to lose their ethnic pride, but they also the children falls on hi s wife, Beatrice . want them to have the advantages of an integrated culture. The Armentas hope both can be a~hieved. Leola Phillips who is divorced and who must raise her children by herself, has fears. Manuel Armenta, his wife, and five MRS. ARMENTA is shy and withdrawn. She speaks only broken English, For a"•hile she took English lessons. But now her activities are centered on her children's school and in Schools· Put iI1 C1~ossfire In AntihusiI1g Dispute SACRAMENTO IAPI -Despite passage of California's antibusing in- itiative last November, buses taking students to desegregated school~ are roll· ing out as usual. The foes or the initiative -Prop. 21 - led by Assemblyman Floyd Wakefield. :i conservative South Gate Republican. cry foul and charge the state Department of Education with purposely failing to en- force the new law. Thomas Griffin, the department's chief 'Districts are la11ing ba4'k in 1veeds in hopes courts tvill solve prob· len1.' ~\ legal counsel , explains the situation this way : "Districts are just laying back in the v.•eeds letting the status quo stand and not rocking the boat in hopes the courts will solve the question.'~ GRIFFIN ADDED in an intervie\\', "The NAACP is gearing up lo sue anybody tvho doesn't bus, and parents' groups are gearing up to sue anybody who does. so districts are just trying to keep a low profile." Wilson Riles, California's b I a ck superintendent of schools, said in an in· E;tperi1nental Scliool .Soug ht SAN l\.1ATEO (API -Educators here hope a completely integrated elementary school will help prevent racial prejudice before jt can take root in youngsters. Five peninsula school districts have sponsored a proposal to ti,e federal government for funding, and If approved the pilot program would start thlo fall. San Mateo assistant superin· tendent or education Arvin 0 . Wlnterspoon said t h e proposal calls ror a school or 210 children, equally divided between blackl and whites. F'Urt!l<!", the races or teachers. 1dmln1strator1 Md aides would 1100 be divided 50-50 bot-n blaca ind wtitt ... tervie\V that Prop. 21 took away hi s department's legal foothold to advise the state's 1,067 districts on whether or not to bus. Hopefully. Riles said, the California Supreme Court \1•ill issue a decision on !he constitutionality of Prop. 21 before next f;ill because "I am sympathetic 1vilh districts that are n1arching lo different orders." Riles added. "The courts say do this and the initiative says do that. Unless we get together, the districts will be left in confusion .'' WAKEFIELD CONTENDS that Rites' opinions ory busing vary depending on how close he is to running for election. The slate supcrintendnet replied : "Mr. \Vakefleld has Only one issue -busing - and he spends most of his time writing open letters to me'' about it. Wakefield has sent two open letters to Riles and the nev.·s media saying many school officials "have ignored" Prop. 21 and have said they "will wait and see what the court says" before acting. Of California's 4.5 million school children in kindergarten through 12th grade. about one million ride buses le> and from sc.1iool each day. state officials estimate. But only about 50,000 of lhem are bus- eC solely for int egration purpases. ac· cording to Education D e p a r t m e n t figures. These students are in districts tvhere courts have ordered integration - like San Francisco -or where cities like ~rkeley voluntarily imposed busing for integration. Prop. 21. apRrQ.ved by a 4.7 million to 2.8 million vote. stated : "No public school student shall because of his race, creed or color. be assi gned lo or be re- qui red lo attend a particular school." Critics maintain the mea s11re is un- constit utional. denying children their right to an equal education. BOTH FORCED segregation and rorc· cd integration arc "evil, wrong and disastrous." Wakefield said, bul "the people spake" when they passed Prop. 21 and integration busing must cease. Riles has not answered the opetr let- ters. He says he never answers such let- ters because "I am interested in solving problems -not in making publicity.'' Wt1kerield' ~ys that he will take his gripe to the courts -suing to get back the money local school officials have spent on busing since Prop. 2t passed. In th< past, Wakefield has denied rePeatedly that ttie motive behind his an· tlbu!ilng crusade is fostered by prejudice aga~ blacks or Mexic.an-American,, '·[tell them : 'l don't understand it. We . 'What 11appe11s 1Vhe11 so11aehody sa11• so1nethi11g? You k1101v the11 1Vlll. l11ill sloe be h1irt?' • touch with school activities. Ricky is an active. normal third grader. "I like spelling. And I like mlth. And I like .to play in the back yard and climb the tree and watch tel evision with Jefr la white friend J." Ricky also plays regularly with Steve and Gary -who are black. He wants to stay in Riverside and at Longrellow. He knows no separatism or apparent prejudice here. HOWEVER, AIRS. ARMENT A says her family may be forced to move to the l\.1exicarrAmerican "barrio" in east Los Angeles. Her husband has tried to find work in Riverside. But with no success. And the family wants to be together - not just on weekends. The Armentas are afraid that ir they go to a conununity which is tot.a.Uy Mex· ican-American, they will become isolated and may backslide from the progress they have inade. Beatrice Armenta looks pensively at IS.month-old Eduardo. "I want him to finish high school when he gets bigger. • • have mirrors in this house.' " BUT BEHIND THIS flippant remark are some deep concerns. "Ruby goes lo Longfellow where everybody is mixed together. She sees people as people. And tbat1s wonderful ," Mrs. Phillips says. "Of course, Ruby k:J)ows she's black. But she's not particularly conscious of color. What happens when somebody says something? You know they will. Will she be hurt? I don't want my child lo be hurt. 1 just don't know if all this is good." Leola Phillips is hopeful -but cautious. "My teen-age son sometimes dates white girls. My oldest daughter goes on weekends to the mountains with mixed groups. And I have close friends -of all kinds," she says. "It's a good orn·en. I think we should expect it. But I still feel that I have to prepare Ruby for prejudice," she adds. #. 1/ '. • Other educators credit the intensive ef- fort to involve parents and the com· ~unity in the school's life. They say that as social barriers broke down, learning hurdles Cell also. Edna Waugh , a veteran oC 20 years of classroom teaching -eight of them at Longfellow -puts it more simply . "\Ye're handled with love from the top . And we give it out to the children -in· stead of criticism." TllE "TOP" MRS. WAUGH refers to is an amiable, sort-spoken YOWl&J>rincipal, David Tew. Tew came to Longfellow Cive years ago -when "love" seemed to be the ex- ception, not the rule, in this community. He faced a hostile scene. Teachers were disgruntled and fighting among themselves. Parents were warring with school officials. Worst of all, student achievement was the lowest in the district. And racial tensions -and sporadic violence and vandalism -in the wake of the .Watts riots in Los Angeles were a Longfellow trademark. Principal Tew set about to change all this. He pinpointed three basic goals for Longfellow : improve academic achleve- munity, and unify the staff. This is what was done: -ALL PARENTS -whites, blacks browns, Orientals-were invited to con!e; PUPJLS FIND FRIENDS-IN MANr SHADES-AND COLORS And ti.year-old Javier Angel has become big buddies with a black classmate, Jerry Johnson. "Everything here is sort of like one big classroom," says Jerry. "And you learn to appreciate all people. I like to go to the Javier's house. He 's teaching me things.'' AND THIS SPIRIT has rubbed off on the parents. Mrs. Romie McGuire, a Latin housewife, and her husband, a worker 1n an aircraft factory, came to Rivenide from a Mexican-American "barrio" in El Paso in 1960. "In Texas, it's really segregated. But here everybody gets along. The children all play together. Tbey don't care about col~. They don't see any color," she ex- plams. As a result of her Longfellow fIJ- volvement, Mrs. McGuire has made at least two close friends -of differerit eUtnic backgrounds. Lasting frlendshiils of this kind have blbssomed throughout the community. •: Mrs. McGuire is now working with a group preparing for festival at I.orig· fellow . "Everybody participates," she laughs. "And you should see the Anglos and blacks dressed up in Mexican cot-tumes." , Copyright 1!113 The Christian Science i Publlablng Society 4 I l ' • J '1 . ~ ' e I i •• • ' 1 ,, -. . • • • . I \ l 1 I { • • -E • c lo • [ .. Go• - , Ha: roo fan ga1 ope ,B•• ton poo ing Ne• Lm Chi are ' LO $3S hOI flO< 2 I sh cc ce~ -roe tw1 ily• Bu Dir rig ( y NI !!!! Gt • c • , -• • •••• IOO ·!lll .................... ,950 .990 ' • ' • louts & Marine l'Qllipmolf 900. 914 lt~nie11t • • • • • • , , 700 • 799 Financd • • . • . '. • • • 200. NQ Hor..ul for ~ . • • • •• 100 • 124 Lml & '°'-nd . • • • •• • ' s.so . 574 ' ~· ••• ·.• •• 800-849 You Can Sell.,lt, Firil It, Trade It With a Want Ad Genar1i Gtner1I RBEU REALK?ft' • GORGEOUS · 1 POClL HOME MOVE RIGHT INI Has everything. 4 bed- rooms, 3 baths. Huge !family room with ele. gant wood highlights.& {)p~n-beam c e i l i n g . 1Beautiful pool with au- tomatic chlorinator & pool sweep. Formal din- ing room. Fireplace. New custom kitchen . Loads of ppol decking. Cli6iCe East Costa Mesa area. $55,600. 540-1720 ' LOOK NO FURTHER $30,500. Ready for im- mediate possession. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. For- mal dining room. Cute family kitchen w it h built-ins. Re a r living room. Fireplace. Very I o v e l y landscaping. Plush n e w carpets. 540-1720 BEAUTIFUL MESA VERDE $43,950. Influential lam· ily home on an over- sized lot. Boat & t railer access. 4 spacious bed- rooms. 3 baths. Lovely covered patio. Family General General 'A~-Slltld ~ llllAmCIATIS REALTORS 2828EASTCOllSTHIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CAUf'. 644~7270 CORONA DEL MAR DELUXE DUPLEX Beautiful t ree-lined street in Old CdM. BOTH UNITS HA VE 3 bedrooms, ffen , fireplace, 2 baths, builtin kitchens, PATIOS, 2 blocks to shopping and sch·ooJs. Choice location. ' .. .. . .. .. . .. . .. . ...... ·.. .. .. .. . .. $98,500. NEED A POOL? 1B'x36' HEATED Great EASTSIDE location! Close to West· cliff shop(>ing. 3 Bedroom, convertible den, 2 baths, fireplace, plus ROOM TO ADD ON. 1010 down-owner will carry 10%-2nd. T.D. $39,500. Call for appointment. BE OCEANFRONT IN THIS DUPLEX Swim on your own private beach, a step from your front door. Two large bedrooms and 2 enjoys.tile fireplaces in each unit. A deluxe ·property like this only comes along once. in-a-lifetime. Call now for appointment. ·· .. , .... ' ........ ' ... ' .... ' ' ...... ' . . $140,000 ~ SUPPLY LIMITED. DEMAND GREAT! """"' Crest Condominium Hoqies,. clustered •boo\ ll1ndsome eourty•rds,. occupy one of the few rem•lnin1 l1r1e propertln In deslr•ble Newport Rt.cit. EocUy rilht tor perm•· ntnt residency or holld•J home. Su ndecks. flreplKa, wet birs, Su n·Utt• kitebens, tuck-under double 1•r11u. Huttd $Wim· min1 pool, llfhted tenals courts, saunas, therapy pool All ute· rior m1lnten•nct provided. A lastinf Uperiance ifl 11orlaus li'l'inr! · Two, thrH I ..., Wntms. from$65,495 $35,900. V e r y choice home w i t h excellent floor plan. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Drapes, thick shag carpets. Boat ac- cess. Lots of storage room. Large yard & two lovely patios. Fam- ily r o o m , fireplace . Built-ins & dishwasher. Dining room . Move in right away! 540.1720 AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS . , . . . . . 644-72!0 room, fireplace. Formal General dining room . All deluxe 1------------·-------General family kitchen w i t h built-ins. 540-1720 2955 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-1720 General Gftneral ** ** ** * TAYLOR CO. * LINDA ISLE-$245,000 Impressive entrance in this fine quality built bayfront home. Abundant de! Piso tile makes a minimum maintenance. Pier & slip for up to 65' boat. 4 BR, FR, formal DR, billiard rm & 4'1z baths. Luxury thruout. ''Our 28th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' ] .NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General General I I BAYFRONT-FEE Spectawlar view main bay & mountains . Sandy beach -pier -garden atmosphere. One block from N.H. Yach.I Club. Co ntact Bill Bents PRIME LOCATION-$89,500 5 BR's. Baycrest beauty. 3 Ba's., fam. rm. glass walled to sparkling pool. Courtyard entry. Lge. bright liv. rm. Owner trans. Mary Lou Marion DELIGHTFUL TOWNHOUSE . 3 Bedroom & lge : bonus rm., upgrad~ thruout. Sprinklers, gas fire pit, etc. Fine location in Univ. Park. $54,900 · -Fee. .. Chuck" Lewis A RARE FIND! Meticulous Lusk 3 Bdrm. with more con~ veniences added ti'lan you can count . This home is one of our best! Call now & see. Jim Muller EXCITING CQRONA DEL MAR Much more .than duplex -shiny new sea- side sensation. Beruns, brick & glass + inCQme. I Y.i Blks. to ocean. $135,500. Paul Quick CHANNEL REEF TOWE RS Luxurious waterfront condo. Corner loca- tion. Complete szcurity. Elev., pool, boat slip -breathtaking view of channel & harbor. Harriett Davies CAPISTRANO RAN CH HOM E 4 Horses O.K. 5 Bdrm. family home; pri- vate rd., country atmosphere. Views, 36' Pool. 20 Min. to Newport. $78,950. Call George Grupe ~700 ---Coldwell,Banker ~ 550 Newporj Center Dr., N.B. BAY & BEACJ.I REALTY " lll WlllCi 1MI ""1101 l~t• S"•CI "" CdM DUPLEX ·Ocean side of h\vy. -freshly decor. duplex ... 2 BR. each \V/encl. garages. Owner will trade up. $72:500. Please call 675·3000 . · . VIEW! VIEW! VIEW! This lovely 4 bdrm. home w/convert. den & 31h baths. has a panoramic view of bay & ocean. The price is realistic at $119,000. Please call 67:>-3000. BAY & BEACJ.l 1tEALTY " \!1«"4' '"I "·UIOt AUA \"<Cl "' General G-eneral FOREVER VIEW -DOVER SHORES Elegant, lge. bay view home; 5 BR, 4 ha. Comp. entertainment center around lge. htd. & filt'd. pool; locked wrought iron gates. $166,000. Land avail. From PICific Coast Hifhway, tlJI Super!Of Avenue to Tlconderor1, •nd directly ta #lZ Robon CollrL T-: (71') 14S<1'1 Slln Office ope• dallJ JO LM., tf Ml"Sft. ~·crnt b 1 Pflitctlf P'ldfit ILC, ........ rtH. ..... _ "---0 1m ratric ... c .• lit. THE BLUFFS ~ FOR LEASE • ~ Back Bay view. 3 BR 2 Ba. $475 MO/lease ~ • --CORBIN-MARTIN - REALTORS Call Anyt ime 644-7662 BALBOA PENINSULA POINT $55,000 General HEATED POOL $32,750 Sharpest 3 bedroom, pool home on the markl"I. at this price. Won•t last a week? Pool has automatic cleaner, heater, chlorinator, every- thing you could want. This I lovely home also has fresh paint. TIE.'\v carpets, and is J unbelievably clean and is priced at only $32.750. Call 842.2535 for infonnation. OPEN Tll 9 • IT'S FUN 10 BE NICE/ THE REAL ES TATERS ~ General RA MB UNG Five Bedroom ! ! ! ! Watch the masts go by from your private second story observation deck. Across Newly listed executive home from a secluded tree shaded in top Costa Mesa location! park. Wood paneled den. Beautiful used brick entry modern kitchen, s tone leads you into "another fireplace, and enclosed bortl world" of gracious living storage yard. Please call and serenity. Enjoy happy 1-now, as this is probably the hours in the 'beautiful se-l best value on the peninsula. eluded pool area. Formal 546-2313 dining room and LOTS OF' EXTRAS! ! ! Prici.>4 to sell! Hurry on this! . co:Ts . WALLACE REALTORS I • • • • • • • • • -546-4141 - NEW TRIPLEXES IN COST A MESA 3 Bdrm., l % .ijath 0LD FARMHOUSE I ~ .. ',,,o .. pe""n""E""v .. •n .. in .. s• .. >...,1 ... right In town. Unmrual e TOW""HOUSE pi:operty -141ftx107 ft lot. QI 2 Bdrm., I% Bath 1 Bdrm., % Balh. 10,../o DOWN Or•nge County Ap artment R11ltors 547-6791 with .3 c~ garage, 2 det~ch-Government loan 7%. no ed multi-pUI'JlOM: buildings 1 qualifying. t:k>,800. Paymts and old-fashk>n farm-style 3 $169. PiTi. Loan Balance ~m home. Don't miss • $18,900. Pool &. clubhouse SALES ASSOClATE the Wint cellar? A tre1!1en-.facilities. .. . , .needed to joln the dous value at only $35,000. e OPENING FOR Heritage Roal Estate team. Call for complete details. If you're ready to get with 546-5880 Open Eves, new or experienced.. licensed an active group, call Dane · • -HERITAGE . . R EALTORS . Real Es lat(? Salespeople. l\f y h r e , 5 4 O -l 1 5 1 Your O\\'tl private desk &: •r ER IT AGE RE AL phone, good walk-ins, free EST ATE advertising. Same location .;:.;=-=------ 18 ,.. .... fo• inteivicw • LARGE LARG~ ••••••••• I • CALL ANYTIME • BEDROOMS 646-3928 or E VO. 545-3483 NEWPORT BEACH DUPLEX 1-Bdrm. each unit. Near ocean & across ft'om park. Xlnt summer/winter rent- als. $52,500. Call: 673-3861, 673-6688 Eves. associated BROKERS-REAL TOR S 202S W Balboa •7l·l66J , Lac hen my er Rt'.dlor • Artist'$ Villo l\fajcstic 4 BR, 3 BA, plus fnn1 nn. •luge lxlnus room Ideal for studi&. Finest Blurf's Joell.le. Pr1Ct"<l by tro.Mfcrred ownrr 11t $77 ,500. Including ln.nd. Submit o.JI offen! 645-8400. are hard to find We have four 0( them in a beautiful I hornc In a pr esti ge neighborhood. Se p a r a t e family room, formal dining area. fanta.stic 1andscaplng and much, much tore for ooJy $37,9511. Call TODAY 842·2535. fi•ITTFWro ~~EI~ You don't need a gun to "Dra.w Fast" "''hen yoo ~~'~illil!iill!Ul!llJm•!.!!"L"!, "Wttd it & Reap" place en ad in the Dally I '~ F.. llt"M1ln1 & (.o. FroTum ""heas~snt to trahsh Pilot \Vant Ads! Call now 11;.. t.1 ... ....-l • ..,....,.. m t m 1 o cas • 642-ll678. '=======::::: , _ _;CA=LL::..::Dtl.::l;:.IY_;Pi..,'lo-"t-- -. • • • • ~ •• 1 ~ • • • r...i.,, M11 1, 1m DAILY PILOT • A U""IOOf liCMf BADMINTON IN FRONT, THE BAY IN BACK~This Harbor View Hills 3 bedroom has a room in the front and a view of views in the back. Jn between is an immacula~e. spacious home with a famil{ floor plan, colorful decor. The pride o ow nership shows thru in num- erous extra features, B.nd the Unique feature that you can see everything that is going bn-but nobody can see you. UNIQUE HOMH OP: co•ONA DIL MAI. 675·6000 A list of L"-9 ...... U~;()Ul tl()MI:§. REALTORS BLUFFS SPLIT LEVEL Rare (G) Plan-END UNIT with a vitw. 4 Bdrms., 2Y.i baths. Professionally deca:at· ed with select wallpapers, tinted windt~s. shutters & luxurious carpeting. Cto1ce greenbelt location. $74,500. BOB PffilT, REAL TOR 644-1905 !i'i2-7000 General BEAUTIFUL HUNTINGTON BEACH HOME 4 large bedrooms, huge !Ami· Jy roont \Villt lireplace. and formal everything: dining room, llving room. guest pov.·dcr room. Add a beautiful oonvenient kit- chen, scads of gorgeous landscapi ng and you have a palace for $51,900. Call 847-6010. OPEN TIL 9 • rr'S FUN 10 Bl NICEI I -••••••••• I MESA V~DE'S lowest price at $32,500. Best value, with formal din- J~g, large eat-in kitch<:n. fireplace, covered patio, finished garage woricsh>p. \Von't 1ast. long at this _price! ~5880 Open Eves. ~~HERITAGE "" REALTORS • • • • • ·-·.•_I ~ PENINSULA POINT HOME FRESH, CRISP, PENIN· SU LA POINT HOME ~ 2 Bedrooms and bath, features General SOMETHING-'. Sl'fl:IAL IN : ~LLEGE PARK A sparkJlng clearf \veil main- tained , 3 bedroom, 2. bath home with formal-aining, fa.inilY room, pool sized · yard and inside laundry on a lovtly tree lined lo\Y traf· fie sn·eet ONLY $33,950 can 67~79 Nigel Bailey & Assoc. VACANT & READY Rc::lecorated 3 bedrm &: fam· ily rm home on huge corner , lot· room for boat or trailer. King-size covered patio & private yard. Quick posses- sion. Low down. Only - $27,950 . huge brick fireplace, built· ..,~..,...,.~~~!!!!"!"I in B-B-Q m patio, tastetully * Newport Heights * decorated. Priced at $m.IXJJ. Swiu cha1et w/$panish motif. PETE BARRETI I 3 BR. 2 ba, remodeled to REALTOR perledlon! Extra lge. yanl, --room for pool. Hw:rl! 642-5200 BALBOA BAY PROP. ----* 642-7491 * General General I . MACNAB ,IRVINE LIVE W/THE PRESIDENTS Join the. executives that live & play in Big Canyon. Highly customfaed new Deane home w /2 master BR suites, pool sfaed yard, special carpeting, paint & landscap- ing included. $96,500. J o y c e Edlund 642-41235 . (N l3) PALATIAL LINDA ISLE Every weekend a holiday in this magnif- icent colonial style 5BR, 4Y.i bath Bay. front home w/50' boat slip & private ter- rac~. Owner transferred to NY & priced to sell now! OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 p.m. #53 Linda Isle. (N27) BAYCREST " Spacious 4BR, 3 bath-huge master BR. Close to schools. Frank Peralta 642-8235. lf121) ' Irvine M.cnab-lrvlne A•llyCompany • --r ....... m·•. _ ........... 5ZS·"' ........ S...00 . • • • • • "° -"' ,.... 1.-'"""""· •••• 1511 • "' ....... , ...... ··-~ Sd""h .......... • • • S1S • 5!1!J s.. ...... ... ·'!O·"" •••••• i . '115 -"" f.Ul~IDIAIT or TH( COLWIU. co. General GALAXY VIEW 1 Bedroom, 4 bath home. Beautiful deCQ ra- tor furnishings included. Large, covered pool with roll-back-roof ................. $245,000. BILL GRUNDY, REA~TOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, Newport S.och 675-6161 . • KNOCK . . .on any door and find a nice flf'ighbor. 3 Bedrooms. 60' by 130' lot. Low down. Payments $203. • OLD HOUSES ... never die, they just fall apart. Trade your old for this new, execulive, attention getter. 3 Bedrooms, fireplace. 2 story +++. • YOU'LL WALK ·, , .a country milr before you find a 6~4 ~~ loan with so little down. 1800 sq ft, shake roof, 2 baths, carpetJl & drapes thruout. $247. PITI. • 5-ACES ..• (CAN'T WYN IN STRAIGHT POKER.) 5 Bedrooms. HAS.TO- BE -A -WINNER. 2 baths, 1amlly room. builtin R/0, covered patio plus mu c h more. $32,500. • GO WEST MONT. That's right, a 4-bedroom, 2 bath \\'estmont. Hom e . Known for ultimate e lega.nce. spacious and spectacular. Loaded with exciting ideas and Door plan. Take over VA 6% loan. Keep paymts at $178. PIT!. Wm. McCabe, Inc. Re•I Estate * 842-4405 * SUPER DUPLEX EASTSIOE COSTA MESA. Pin Sharp from Top to Bottom. Each are 2 Bed-room, Dlnirc Room_ 3 Gar- ages. HURRY! $53,950. Call anytime, &t6--05i&5. REMODELED EASI'SIDE COSTA MESA • New Carpets a n d Drapes. Comer llorne. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath. WON'T LAST! Call now, 646-0555. ':i ·.· :. $UltlDIAIT CW tltl<OlWIU CO. ......... , EASTSIDE ()ou.HOUSE,- . $32,500 l REAL QUALITY CUSl'OM BUILT 2-bedroom, 1 bath with p 1 a s t e r \Valli, hardwood floors and large covered-paUo. Located on lal"Ke corner lot with a dou· blc detached garage. Plenty of room to store everything. Best location! For complete detail• ~SAO Open Eves. • · • ., HERITAGE . . REALTORS • ••••••• • 1 e lies! College Perk Locotlon • Excellent•Condlllon • UM Any Conventio"" Terms el Lender for Best • 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths family room, form•I ·d ining ' • Pool Sized Yard • Reduced to $33,950 e Coll 675-6679 Nigel Bailey & Assoc. IlEALTOR IDEAL FOR GUEST HOME 5 Bedroom, 2 ha !hs. Close to i;hopping. $.12,500. Roy Mccardl e Realtor 1810 Newi:!(>rt Bl vcl., C.M. 548-7729 O\VNER aacrilice. BcautU home. 3 bdrms .. 3 bathl. Family "rm., formal dining rm.~ FireplaCl', tile rool Built-In&, reRr livin&'. rm. bkl' $45,7'50. 540-1720. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I OWN ER despera te. Beautiful DUPLEX CDM 3 bdrm. in Irvloe. 2 baths. Dining rm., built -Ins , JUST USTEDI• dlshwashc<'. Family rm. Shag carpets: Cc n t r a 1 Grab the ph(lne this cute 2 al r-e-o n d I Uontng. brk bedroom duplex all ne\vly s:n.soo. ~2300. painted and c a r Pe I e d OWNER anxk>ul. Deluxe 4 throughout won't last long. bdrm. 2~ baths. Atrium ott Fireplace. Intimate kitchen muter suite. Famlly nn.. with range. Plus a large 1 fireplace. Formal dJnb¥r: bedroom unit over a double r m . Built-Im. BeeutlfUi garage". O-.Olce convenient Irvine. brk $52,900. 540--ln>. location only 173,500. EZ A SHADY DEAL terms. Call 6n-8,').j(), 3 bcdroon1s on a quiet shady it.reel. If peace and qufet are eggential& In YQUr borne shopping list chedc Ulla ad r ight OO\\'. It's absoluteJ.y charming and It's located cl08e to schoola, ahoppJ,., I and a aol1 coune. &n~ OPtN n&.t • .. 17'1Fl.JN10• ,._ ' . . I ' •• ' -·- I 01:1 \ 1 L 01 \0\ " I ~' ' <.-X I NEWPORT BEACH 2 B<tnns., 1 bath; frplc.; on lge. maintenance-free yard, w/lge. enclosed patio. De· tached 2-car garage plus rm. fC1r boat &: tra.ller. Priced at $37,SOO .. Call: 673-3663 642-2253 Eves. associated BROKERS-REAL TO"S ]f'l \ W Balb<1., 1.>11 lOf.l • • l,.1?1J ... S©V..~lJ.-1'r.trS'" That Intriguing Word Game with a Che.ckle 1J11Htecl ily QAY I. POUAN----"--0 ,..,.,...,. Jetton of .,. four IO'Ombled words ti. • REALTY A Company With Viskm Univ, Park Cent~. Irvine cau Anyt lme, 5.52-7500 Su ccess & Happiness Office hours 8 AM to 8 PM \Vill be> your'!? if you look no 3 BDRM 2 Bath , ·-furt her. Tius model home . ' • ....,..&e '~'ilh shake roof & decoraior Kitchen, Carpet thru-0ut. rrol. landscaped yard, at c55:::1:.:·3954=::.· ----'-- $37.995 • It's all you'll ever v•an1 ! !:_19una Beadl 847-3584 BKR $28;500 2 BR 1 BA TERRIFIC : • • • ~, to ;or0m ~ou~N;t; words,. I II I' I · I I \' . , . Arch Beach Ho;ghts. _ . • _ _ Doll house near the Heights Thl"! almost completed 2 *OCEAN BREEZE * , ''" of town. Sharp t. clean, bdrm. home is being built ·:.only ot1c mile from ocean. I p A D I R I i rnV·Ace neFH\ghAborhood. \V~niO by qua1i!ied, -~liable ex· Extra quiet nrea of lovclv • 1 or • says the _,,er perts, with design in mind, new hcMnes. rmmaculate '4 I I I I' or submit the new 5"-"' down for yoor distlncti tast bedroom. $45,900. I Pro Kram · ~ )'Ou Spiral staircase; ~uge :;.: GINNY MORRISON · I qualified?? Call deck, wood & glllS3 con· I 1 1 slJ"Uction. Plans are a must •***• -RZALTORS· W E T N I • to tnv..stigate. Price hu tAM~ v..:' Dr~:... ""•-.1 '""'1""'""'1 '-".1-l Confucius ""II '\et ho who R•altors 5454191 jun been r<duced. $«1.500. • 1111.:l• Q1ta Keaa -,...-· _. -·-·--· _ ~h ""!, alnned go out <Ill Open Eves ~~'(), I,,,,__.. "'**•** llT-CllO 1· r• ~ PROMISE her anything but ..,/TO~..,,,~ p~;ar.r~ .. ~~· i" rfsi" ~1 GI I oe"fr:::-... ~~ ~!:.~~~~~ ~!,A~!~!' nef&llbor on t1i1a cul..!::: ._...__. __ ........ -L . ...I. ~""'""'-""'-""'No. 3 btloot. on•rs. This eye ple8'lng 494'947.l 51t1-4316 In U.. ~ -;;:o;;;;:;;,.,;;;;:;;;;-;;:;;;;:;-=-r.:-r"'lt'..,r"Tr'"'"'lll,...-.. famUy home ii located on a MAGNIFJCENT BA ~ ... !~~ 11~ 8 PR~~~slf1T£1S Ii r r I' 1· I' r: b qulot ~~~ iJm H.B. er.~~u:;~~ =:. w/bJgh m.uomy w&lL 2 ! iiiSCiAMi! 1 OWNER, 3BR, 2BA, ·den, sunken Uv nn, bmd c1pa, >f. new, 3 BR, 111 llA, 7% TO GlT A~!li~E lfITfRS j I I I I I frpk, ttlce yar<I, nr Rhol" hllln•. $58,:IOO. 494-1962, VA J,llllmable loan or con--• • • • • • • ~~ & Schls $.16,500. NE\V 2 BR. 2 Ba home, ..-1 ,..,.. u1,900 SC",.M LETS ANSW "---"-"------: .... n vu, """""''• dln1tir, ::.:;lllto._,Jllll=.:ownr=·:-. __ 1 _=.::"'"=:.."=.:.::_:::;::,~E~RS:..!l~N_:C::'.!:LA::S~S~l~Fl'.::C~A~Tl~O~N~7~0~0'..._\ ~C!::"~F~~::.:...!~' I frpl c, ~ltna, $39,!500. lllOO. &12·5678 hnndles, --.ms. • I BEST llfl! c L A 5 5 · I F I E D 6 4 , 2 • 5 6 7 8 SAYI £Alll! " . ' YOURSELF / (You're Not Dreaming) But You <;:an PINCH YOUR PENNIES - with a PILOT PENNY PINCHER Classified J..d 3 LINES 2 TIMES . Any Item Priced $50. or less (If """" than ilM lllnt, Ille combined total cannot oxcMCI $50.) 642~5578 ' ' • ;· ~' ' ' 'l I ' ' ' t L ;. c ' '; ,. " ( ~ 0 l ,, •' " > • ' " , ~ ' . • -• • • ' . • . • . • . • " . • • • " • • • ' • • • -' • • Ever PILC day. in F fr on all • way B F c 1\ I ll s s ( Buy · . a • Bord.er to Border Bargain Every classified want ad in the DAILY PILOT appears in every edition every day. That ·means your ad will be seen in papers delivered to homes and sold from newsracks from border to border all along the Orange Coast .• all the way from ·· Seal Beach · lo San Clemente You Get It All Huntington Beach Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beach Laguna Beach Irvine Saddlebaek Spn Clemente Capistrano . CPlus the daily newsrack edition) for One · Price . With A DAILY PILOT · Classified Ad Phone 642-5678 YOU CAN CHARGE IT, TOO -1 •• f • • '-1, I T~, Ma! l. 1973 DAILY PILOT l~I " ... 1~1 ! _,._ I~·!~ ... _:..,~ I~ l ........ · ... -) ~;.;;;;;; San C....,,_ ' IU1IM11 -HouHI Unfurn. J0s HouHt Unfvrn. 305 Aplt. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfum. NEW LAQUESrA 3 br, coun-2 ~ocean, w/tBO' view. . Opportunity 200 General &..gun1 llNch ~C:.01:.:te:..:_Mosa.:::_:::_ __ _::::11;C:Oll::e~M~11~e~--~ try kitche~-lot A gar. 2 BR. 1 ba, lei Dcl Jtepou.. GIFT Sou~nlr & Toy Stoi'e ~ - '34.900. 0 60-37'3 Val\)e $55,000. ~ immed. on tieauW~ Balboa Island HARBOR Vlew Holhes - 3 $180 -~ l Br. apt. Cood a;wl! UP DatUD Lido lalo / ..,._ 831-21188 "' 213-316-2814 JIO,IJXl aqd It" youn! Good n,, 2 Ill. llun • d"1lll& rm. loc. N,. belldl, ~~.town. l!K & APA.R.TMSlfll. I L sellllOll just stnrtin,g! 2IT1h rlub/pool, $425/ino. 640-1'1'68 $22S -2 Br .,,, .. .,, 11,i blks •St Ir 1 BR Apta. Air Coad l'Ul(a a.i..i - 4 Bdrm --5'.H6'15. -~ ... BR, I BA. lrplo, w . e Phone S.rvlco-Htd. Pool To--•> ,.__G~ ---" * ~USIVE * . ~ Marine -Ave., 6 7 3 -8 6 6 8, Balboa Island beach. f>a.t.io. Viev>'. Sm1 pet. • TV & MaJd Service Avail. mlns Pools Hlllll .... s., plut den; 5 bathlli. ~""=--~--~-IYEARJ.y 'BR •~ 2 BR yard. Niee l'ond! ',._, .... e 0.ildttn Ir: Pet Section Billwlard __ _ 50 l''t. Nord co r n e r . -BARBER sbop a nd I o r A 1 --e · ~· • !fills. ~...... e $120 1'1onlhl.y , MagnUlcont, cuatom home. ~~; ~ ~'~J~·~ "~~.':;. ~;-O~~ng ccpt•, NU-VIEW RENTALS 2376 Ne"'!"'rl m vd., Cid J TaN nro.ooo. Mobile Homoa · ~·~~ « 8 i•--p 673-4030 or '94-J24' s.s.ms ., 615-3967 "ED For S.le 125 i Bolsa, H.B. • PQ4 enlnaula Ad Good For SS on Rent M • • RENTALS: Summer, winter Mo to L 240 1 BR cottagf!, charming, \:Al 1 A.ft.e. &: leases. niy oan IP.1ri.1Ac. 4 Br., 3 ha. Near quiel area.. $150 mo. + util. A1TRAC. 2 ~. Quiet. .,.,~vs · . LIDO REAL TY M 1 ff R Atal '''Y· y,1y. lease $525,,., Adlts oniJI. 494-4365. beam reillng 2 blks to ma-W1 !Wt>cr Blril CM. 3377 Via Lido, Np!. Beach 0 or ome e s 1 I TD L MARSHAJ.L Re~lty &r>-4tioo Minion Vlelo jm-ahop'g center extra "" (TlCJ lll!T-673-7300 S oa 0$ Corona dol Mar closet. New palnt, w/w RENTAL ()JTICE SALES & LEASING 4 BR. 2 BA . Loase S300 mo. ~itfmpl. tum. $159.SO. OPEN 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM T~~~E~~l~~~~;!uo tull service tacUHy • UP TQ 95% $260 -2 Br. house, bltns, \\'ater paid. $160. NICELY tum. 2 br, u~ More R._,,.,_ 2 BR. & lwo 2-bdnns. Danmar Motor Homes 2 d TD L ~~:ocean stde hwy. child/ *** 113!>-]55() *** per. CJi>t, bltlos, ..... Qui~! Le .. 'llM .. ••••YY 3 SI'ORIES, bayfrontfus ocean n oans $500 -3 Br, 2 Ba. 2 fireplc's, Newport B1•ch adults, no Jle'iJ, 2'l34 C COP.IE aee • real ptdtn view. 4 Bdrms., 4 ba 531 6800 dW gar 3 putios Pool 3 Br/2 Ba l"'\vly ,,.....:., Rutgers• Dr. l~~ apt! Uke Uvtr_11 ln a bome $230,000 • Lowelt retes Oran9e Co. Vie,v! ' · ' bltns, breaklst"' rm, 2 "~r alt 5 for $162.50/YO. 2 BR, 1!h LIDO REAL TY 12X44 BUDDY turni.shed in Sattler Mft. C.. NU-VIEW RENTALS gar, 11 ~ blk ocean, pool .~ BEAUT. FURN 2 BR S11S BA. 2 prit'1 places, ~v 3377 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach Costa Mesa adult park. Low 642 .. 2171 Sf5..0611 673-4030 or 4%-3218 clu bhse privl. Yrly. 213: Sit-ins, V••/w, Htd pool. pa.th>I A tee area.a. W n 67l-7300 space rent, $4!m., 10•;~ Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. * OCE,\N Vu •loml'. 1'""ullv 799-5973: 714 : 53&-0740 ~~no pets. (infant ok) ~t~a:'txir on· WU.On st.. '!· Mesa Verde down. Payments like rent. DON'T BORROW niainrd pool, deck rurri. SHARP "·aterfront. lg. 4 br H -- -... ~-.. ------Dealer 557-9390 'TIL YOU CALL US! 3BR, 2BA._ 2 fn>lc . \Vasher, shag cpt, blt!ns, frplc, dock untlngton 8Mch El P•ltO u-- ' .... 1 ' ' ' ' ' . ' . ' '' . ' ' ' ' ' I •• I ., DESIR£D Location. Mesa Borrow on your home equJty ~ryer,~tri~. l...l.!e gHr. Cpt~. avail. No pets. $450. Yr)y ......,. ·Verde No. 2 yr. Immac. 2 1 ~ for any good purpose. Serv-rps. $500 nK>. 673--fi635 lease. 673-0792: l,A.QUINTA HERMOSA I & 2 BR Apta. Unfum..: .-1' story, 2300 sq. ft. 4BR. 3BA, Ruf'IE1t•t.. ing Los Angeles County for 2 BRl2BA French Nol"ntan-BLUFFS, 2 br, den, 2~~ ha,-Spanish Countrv Estate Llv· $139 &. Up. - fam. rm. Nr. Elem. & Ce!*al over 20 years and NO\V in dy, lrg country kit., frpcl. liv. tn1, formal din. $475. Ing & SpacioUs Apts. Ter-All Utllttlea Paid • Intermed. sch!. 7% assu1n liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiii;m; OrWlgc Couhty! $.375/mo. 544-3463. &l·l--0573 / 673-3752 raced pool, sunken KM Pool A Recreation • I VA. Avail July. By O\.vner Acreage for sale 150 SI ~NAL MORTGAGE CO. Cost1 Mel8 \VATERFRONT, 3 BR pl~s BBQi ~~be#lf'~le l~ving. 1'59 Maple Ave, C.M. J j .:.:~=n55~=· 4500C~Ju~~N:a. VERY CL.EAN 4 bed-~~~fY}.Jy.8~w~~~ 2BR.' FURN S$215 HARBOR GREENS ! BY Owner, 3 br, Aliso ViUa Condo. Plan B , Appnt SlHlOTI Newport llHch HARBOR VIEW AO MES BIG CANYON VIEW The sharpest M o n t e g o Model! Immaculate adult \ home. 4 bedrooms, family room & dining room. Del Piso tiled entry and foyer, paneled garage with lots of cabinets. La.rge lot wilh covered patio and privacy ';'. room for pool· and boat plus. Call 646-7171 NOW -Priced at $79,750. You Of"· the land. ~~~~nF!?~A~~ k e 2ND Trust Deeds room home with fire-5 BR. 3 BA, FIR, DIR. Lr~ .ALLA~l~~~i>e'::10 ~~. t 2u~ .• ~M!:S ~ l PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. pl1ce, family room and yrd. Pool prh,I. Harbor Vu 14 blks s. of San 0 1 ........ ·~.... Open 10 'Iii 7 --"""""' I I Nacimiento near marinas & I f _..1 d Jlms $61)) 833--3894 ~ ........ "3 ...,.. 411N • • residential developments. Any Amount arge •nc-yar • Va.. · · · · 011 Beach, l_ blk \Y, on Holt Petenon Wl.y, CM. nr. HU'-• ' $850. per acre w/lerms. * CAIJ... 675-44!» BKR. cant· and • ready for lBR house, on 34th St., un-to 16211 Parks ide Lane.) bor Blvd. Ir Adams. ' I · Id "al rer f cl &: family now, Lease re-furn. Adlls, 'l no pets. (714) 847-5441 S46.o370 > • inc parn •e ause Mortg1ge1, • _..1 $ P.fonthly. Ref req. 827...()%3 $145 $165 _,,. small ~down. Bkr. 536-5000. Trust Deeds 260 qu1reu at 285. per mo. THE BLUFFS, 4 Br, 3 Ba BACHELOR &-1 BR., patios. ** 3 Br., I~ Ba. ** 'J/ Commercial CALL Agent 546-4141. cUst, crpt, encl patio fl'plc. frplc's prlv. garages -Large, ~ decor. tnel. : P Ope I 158 MESA VERDE Lse. $400. 644-1480 Divided bath & Iota ot paClotio, bltlnt, crpta. drpl. '! r r Y , PUT YOUR MONEY Lovely 3 BR, 2 BA. 2 !rplc, closets. Rec. hall, pool 6 ~ to· eve?Ytttu.. $110 A "'~ . ·s . 1 TO WORK FOR YOU I F_am Rm, bltin kit ch, ser-Brand New Duplex pool tables, sauna baths. soo mo. 868 Center St. ~ ~ _. 2 Unit Motel 1 Eam 10% interest on well-vice porch. encld patio, conv Ocean Vu, walk to bch, 4 See for yourselt. 17301 1, CM or call 548-11'$. ... Choicest J.larbor Blvd. loca-1 SP.Cured 2nd Trust Deeds on to all S<·W&,. 2 children, 1 Br. No pel'i. 646-0384. I<eelson Ln. (1 blk W. of l BR Free ln excha.nae air tion on 3.8 acres Bar &: Orange County real estate. pet ok. Gardener & \vatcr Newport Shores Beach, 1 hlk N. of Slater). light cle~up and buJld1nl Restaurant. ·Room' for ex-SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. pd. O(I quiet cul de sac, 842-7848 matntenance. Private Park. "•' pansion owner Is flexihlP, (TI4) 556-0106 $395. 6 mo lease acceptable, N'PT. Shores 3 BR. 2 ba .. $135 -ULTRA NICE Apt. 6 Retired ~ JNfl:rncl, 1~·ill asst In financing. Long 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. f>45...63.i2. frpl.: pools, tennis; 'l''nlk to Pools. 4 Gardens. Sauna 557"'3195 or~ beach. $325. Rltr. 642--..1850 T ni Pri t I '7,~~ii-i,;;:;~O;;--.-;:I tC'rm lease possible. !\tr. en s. v. P a o • EASTSIDE DUPLJCX. I Stine. 639-1501 30% DISC, well secured SHARP MESA VERDE Condomintum1 846---0259. 1 BA unit •vail. pyt ; ! S&l,000 1st on 40 ac Apple 3 BR : ba, fireplace, Unfurn. 320 Laguna B11ch &: yd. Quiet loc. $115 / Jiii). B~ ~II Valley. Pays $640. mo incl formal din & lar91 kitch --..-.. .... ~ ... ~ ~ -540-U51, HERITAGE I -.lJJ%. 4ll d"e 1978. Bx 3 Ap-$275 pe • , L•aune Niguel REALTORS. .. pie Valley Ownt'r 242-3144 · r mo. tnc. garu-HOTEL rooms, S.16 wk. Apts. r':::: -~,~B;;R;:---,--,drPl,......f· •.ii 1: ~~~~~~~~~~I ner, Call larry.~5880 BEAUT. decorated 2BR 2BA front $50 wk. Heated pool, ....... • c:rpts. , r ~ HERITAG c ndo he 7 hole near beach. Laguna Motor dshws.r, pool. 'lukt lnl. ~ ' . I ~ E RL TRS o -on I th of1he Inn, 1575 N. Coast Hwy. =~"~]!...only: $lBO tree UliJI. ~t SVBSIOtA•Y O' 11-1[ COl.Wlll CO. ltD&w far"-'t , ..-.. El Niguel Golf Course. 494--3537. . , . .._.. .,._ , ~ 2 -~JOININGincomeprop-. . n::::r NEAT 3 BEDROOM ~:~.alite4~ 1st. N port a ••• 11 e l BR.~Mct e erues. cent. C.M. $75,000. ~ome w/lar9e yard, ew -.-. New paint, crpll a: dnll. ~ 0"'ner. 64;)...2{r.ll/64U560. Houns Furnished 300 garage, c a r p 1 t 1 & Townhouse Unfurn. 335 $29.50 per Wk &: up. 1 BR, 2 Pool. BBQ. Lndry Rm. ,._., • ~,c:::===~====-1 lncom1 Property 166 drapes. $210, per mo. Huntington Buch BR & Bacheloi'!. Color TV, sShoppl.29 ~ & beach. Adult&. lido Isle Beauties Balboi 11l1nd Now vacant. c AL L maid aerv, pool, The Mesa ·Ce.JI ~2515. ON WIDE street; 4 bdnns .. 40 UNITS IN A PARK 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath , 540-1151, HERITAGE 3 BR , )~~ BA., recreation 415 N. Newport BL, NB EASTSIDE 1arae 1 BR. i 3 baths; features galore! Outstanding ga:den apts on utilities paid. Avail May REAL ESTATE facilities. $210/mo. · 646-9681 f~l~ beamed .ca LI In:'~; ,••• Price $135,000. Assumable 1.6 acres or lfllmaculately l5th J ~ 546-Gm or 557-0678 FURN Ne\V 2 BR Duplex." ·2 llatio, 1 adult, no pets. '11111 I 6% T.D. kept grounds. Pool., n/c. Real:~r ~~~· $260. mo, :l BEDROOP.f, 2 bath, double 2BR Townhouse, IV. ha, Br, gar apace, on bch. 60--853J '" 60 FT. GARDEN charmer. 77.· financing, 6.7 x gross. ' · gurage. nice yam." $250 bltins .. crpts, drps, fenced Adults no pets. Yr lse. Res: * SHADY ELM&-POOL' I 4 Bdrms.~ family room , 4 $495,000. Principals only. COMPL. Furn. 3_ BR home ~nth. Call 673-6568 even· patio, 962.-878'1 213 I 693-5743 or But: 213 J e A~ulta Poolttde Sle up. r baths $155,000. SparUng Investment Corp. on Canal. Avail 1'1ay & 1ngs and weekends or N 2 _ 442--4<150. e Oilklren dead41d tt. LIDO REAL TY 638-5662 June. $300/mo. No pets. 642~200 ' lwport B .. cfi \VATERFRONT. l br, on 177 E. 22nd St., CAI -WM • 675--ti737. -3377 Via Lido, N·pt. Beach Mountiin Denrt . 2 BR Honie, frpl, ~at. Also 3 ADULTS-LEASE channel. Priv. pa'tlo, $2'25. STUNNING t A J BR, J BA. · * 67J..7300 * R rt' 17• 1 Lo!!una Beach BR horse ranch in country, 2 Br. 2 ha. C"""'.... 1250 mo. 642-9683 days, 673-3531 Garden Apts, Pool Rec ~~. "° ~ S175 utll Pd. Agt. Fee. ~ ...... , eves TIO W. 18th APPLE Vall V lo Be $150 -Utll Pd. ~all cottage, 979-MJU 3 Br. 2 ha. gar, pool S300 · ~a. . St. Slf6 A ,, , STEPS TO OCEAN 2-Sty. A-Frame, 3 BR. 2 ba. Blt-ins. Walk to beach, poo\11, tennis. $45,500, CAYWOOD REAL TY desert knol~i, ~crti: ~~ ~~pie setting .. I dea l SHARP, clean lBR 2B A, REALJPR 642-5333 FURN •. 1 BR & Queen 80fa up. • , J . .,,....,...... .......... Dupl1xe1 Unfurn. 350 bebedach!rolnnt. I~ m'"o' .. Aval• 1". LACrpRG,,E, }_ ", 1112 ..... ~ = : f: cash. Eq $7000. 557~1 S200 ~ ' Util Pd Decorator crpts, drps, bltins. $260/P.fo. ....,., .... ~ .__ R . · Xlntloc.540-1151 untilJulylst646-8824 NE l7lbSLNo anch11, Farms, turn. 1 Br. apt. Beautiful HERITAGE REALTORS Huntington 8e1ch . r. · pets. 1111 ' G 180 ocean view! · Apt. Unfurn. 3'5 & $150 per mo. 61S-15'B Bkr. ~\) roves $325. 2 BR 2 BA frplc gar 2 BR, frplc, beamed ceilings, NEW 2 BR, 2 84. }drpo LEASE, Horse Ranch. 2BR yard_ Ve..-Y pr lv: & n1Ce! i patio, :f _small chil d ok, no NEW 2 BEDROOM Cororui del Mir crptg. PooJ. BBQ. cu' hse, nu 4 stall barn. 8 pipe nms. pets. $165 yrly 642-8520 l Bath, enclosed pvt prage -·--===··--·-Adult& only, no petl. !'78 w: * 548-1290 * NEW BALBOA • DUPLEX corrals. Owner. 644-5307 NU-VIEW RENTALS 2 BR, patio, ca r pet s. ii\ duplex bulldlng. $185. Pf"r -Bay. Real Estate Wanted 114 673-4030 or 494-3248 ~~46j~·sts..C Mmanager, 980 ~~~t=~&~ct~ Oswego, ...... ~ 1i'&~d;;;u;;p:;:Jex::-:.,::,.,..,::::,-csi=1S:-.°"N'o Newport Beach · ' · · 0t -.,,. children. no pets. Adultl 388 p,.;,,., Newport Peninsula lo-* Quick Cash * MODERN 2 BR, crpl,, rl'J>•. 536-<152 ~~ IV. Bly, CM. 61&-1!17. • .. , cation. $pacK>US 4 and 3. IV-II b 1 BR. Cottage-. kids/pets. fe~ced yrd, water, Ideal far S t An r ---LARGE 2 BR. L1h a home Deluxe fea~ include 1 uy your property, AH Also 2 BR Mobile $87. eh1ld. $185. mo. 642-3289. an a a ON TEN ACRES ~l lihie a•-:".111•. ~.; fiool' to ceiling brick fire-caah wlthln 72. hrs. Call Ba helor · · all 1"'1"-'"" 6S6 -... .._ ~ .place. Lavish use ·of t.1le in 962-88Sl c units in bch Fountafn V1lley SHARP 3 Br, 2 Ba. Extras. Apta. !urn./unfum.·Leu e kitchens and baths. Walk i t cities. Agt. Fee. 979--8430. Good location. $250/MO. Fireplace I prlv. patios, UNFURN 1 le: 2 BR o.Men in closets _ open beam cell. ....-••-••• Houses Unfurn. 305 3 BR, huge rumpus room, 2 962-5283. Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfat. Apbi:. FrpJc, D~......_ __ .Pl'fv ings. Laundry area for each ;111•1 ba. bltns, DW, 2 car gar , Cost1 Meu 900 Sea Lan, CdM W..-26.11 patio. Sl~S190. '57-illfti unit. Steps to the bcach.Q General S\\im pool, kids ok. $265. (MacArthut nr Coa.at Hwy) LG 3 B • S 091100 C --·--·-4-gt. &42-442! LRGE 1 BR, ulll pd, Sl"" ' R. 2 BA. cpb, 4ZiPI: •· ·1 1 · · all 646-TITI. BROKERS INC. 3 BR 2 BA 2 llk. .,.,., °" nr. OCC, u~. '179 -'' OPENnLf• fTS FUH 'TO BE N1CEI , ·, car gar, e ~ C East 21.st SI. NEWLY DECORATED l mo. 55T...c350 r-• • ~IJ ~ WANTED lll'\v. D\V, fplc, swim pool 548-8945 1 1111.l'l!f•ll $259 AGENT 842-4421. bedroom, utilities p aid, SPACIOUS 2 BR con-~ ~ i11ijJ1ijlf' rl~ ~~~M ~!; t?. .:= Huntington BHch ~~::,~~ mo-to-mo. domlnlum&#~th. ~-; ANXIOUS :~7. ~;1:; ~~~~'.g~ ~~,1 = 3 to~!~~'~-' $~10 bap~~ .,_, ....... '"-11•1 NB~~~~. if;'.'.°_";;;,,~ 3 d':.R;. 1 ~~-=-= l 1 Luxurious 3 sto"" all cedar 1560, Costa Mesa, ca. 92626. · Newly dee. Adu ta. $l30 To Kida ok. 9G--8' ' " -., mo. Blttns, fireplace, S260 yearly Owner 6444110 ~ channel home + rm for add-HOME south of \Highway I 43_:1 W.191.h Sl., Costa l\fesa I t d & I Agt Apts. Furn. 360 · 2 BR, carp ~ Dr adlt · • on + 1 BR luxury apt. Cdri..t pnfer near ocean J 1854 s._Coas~ Hw>'. .. Laguna X n · con oc, . 3 BDRMS below hia:hway, no pet,' NI'. ~/-· :' Pier & slip, many .xtra.s. front "sold oun, have all (Piccad1Uy Cin:us) 9624471 or 546-8103. Bilboa lslind (rpl, 1undeck, ear, adults. 84G-4387 or 848-Cl.22 -t' $198,000. Open Sat. & Sun, cash". Principals 0 n 1 y. Ask for Dale $285. 6~1418 eves 0 r NEW 2 Br Bit~ W !"' ~~c:·. !: n:9rnt -2 + ~~i.te~&: ~ 1287 Al ham-Sc~~~o!1aE~1~saOFJe!;;;rt 3 BEDROOM 2% bath, fami-~:rn1l;J, :;,au s ~': e ~·k: ~~s3BA, tire pl, bltlna. ~t·.:f-~ $185 mo. Av~ ~t • t d k Beach HWltington.Beach ly room w/lireplace, 16' x 67~1209, references W/accept alng le.1 or ' ' •,, gues rm + apt, oc for 2 $129 • i. BR partially f~ 32' pool, S.150./mo. on lease. fa ·11 ~"'M 6= -E·SIDE 2 llR $1.._-~ -5S'boats.dblegar,tennis, 1 · '3 BEDROOM 2 b th CoronedelMer mi ea.~ o. •.r-10711 • • ~ -11 I~ Nr OCC Carport & pool a 400 Marigold, CdM. Bltn1, w/w .u-1, hid _, -•, $165,000, 10% dwn, consider ha.ncW • s14.5 - 1 BR. All utli pd. Part. $26.5/mo. on lease_ Adlt u...--""""• trades. JMD, 838-2257 j . furn Baby & pet ok Priv 2 APARTMENTs AVAIL: SHARP 1 BR HOUSE 2 BR nr ocean, shag, retrg, a.~ JllO peta, 6G-95a), #"I CONDO _ Park-like s u r . ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ pa~ · 1-$140· & 1-$175. mo, completely furn incl util & Sl95 yrly. Adults, no pet, 433 2 BEDROOM, oo pell, adultt 1 roundings-pool, NB, 3 BR, 2 $145 : 1 BR. House Oilld RED CARPET 893-1351 gardener. $225. 'mo/Jse, Ma-Irla. Avl 6/L 6'4-4340 only. Month to mcatb.,, Sl«I. : BA. $43,000. Bkr. 673-5221, Buslne11 cat ok, Gar, encl patio, ' DELUXE 4 BR Garden tutt adult only, no pets. Coste Miu Realtor 644-7210_ 1 642-3645. Opportunity 200 $190. 3 BR house, part. furn. home, pool, hus everything, Avan Junel, Owne!'673-U65 2JR. AdulQ,•nc> petl, BAT i HILLSIDE home archlte<:t Kids/pets ok. Gar, encl 8352 Castllian, $395 mo. Lg 1 BR, So of hwy, bltlns, Bay~c:r ~381 W. •1j design. cUBtom built, 4 yn; yard. 963-2536 $200 mo. Yrly. No children · · ~ f old. 4 Br, 'J. Ba. 345 Catalina * PARTNER * CALL 645-0lll SINGLES or Families. 2 BR. C.o,spellts:...~ .. 5957 1_ .. , _11_""' •••. -. I Dr. Owner. Open daily, --w/evcrything. Also 3 BR mw 548--0272. Active u•ith $25,000 cash, LAGUNA BEACH OFFICE horse ranch in country $175 ·-e DELUXI e 1 I HARBOR. vu H 0 m e, (Secured) for managen1('flt / Serving Laguna, Dana Point, util pd. Agt. Fee. 9'19--8430 Casa de Oro 3 BR 2 BA Apt lof 1___ 4 Montego Model 4BR 2BA supervi90ry position. Created San Clemente, Capistrano 2 BR d 1 1 1 1 1·r u:.LR, .. ' ' ' 'by ~eading manufacturer. $90 ·CRASH Pad in l..aiuna. ' en, am. rm .. rpc. ALL UTllJTIES PAID nca apac. muter· auite ,. superbly upgraded. Shows State wide scope. Starting All util Pd. Ideal tor 5tu-cpts/drps, stove , $2'15/mo. C.Ompare before you rent Ovt• soo tall trt et din nn It dbl l&?'.IP' autO " ~~8 model ·Fee. $78,500. salary $15,000 1st year plus dent. 1st & last. 536-4116 Custom designed, featurlng: and lO •lftims wit~ door openef avail ~ Jt equal share of profits. $150 • CHARMING 1 Br col· lrvlna • Spacklua ldtchen with in-w1trr1au1 t1'1t• a Recreation lll'M.. : 1" HARBOR View Hms -To qualify: WIUingnes!'I to tage. Quiet area. Nr. ocean. direct lighting ;~~~:i~~~n~•~'1 • or 865 A:: W9.,y NB r MDoRnteg0°· 4 Br, 2 Ba, FJR, learn, be congenial, ready Adults. 4 BR. 2,, ba •n .. • Separate dln'g area 2·11edroom aparrmtnt. s111111 Mr= • I · wner. S 6 4 • 5 0 0 · to start at once & enjoy a S165 • WALK to Besch! F\1rn '11 " • •• ••••••• ..-.. e Home-like stora,a:e Pth ok. rrom $165. furniture bf 833-~. diversified participation in Penthouse w/view. Util pd. 3 BR. 2 ba. ·" ·' •• •• ··' ~ e Private patMls aw1lt1btt . Mod'''11P•it 9:00 WilJ.JAM ALTERS Co 1 ~ Duplexes neait the ocean bl-profit depression/inflation Singles ok. ' 3 BR. 2 ~a. tam rm ·''' $3l:;i e Closed garage w/storagl 10 &:00. 1300 f•lrvl•w Rd.. UNFURN Attr. l br a~ ;; P.fDes Larsoil, Realtor proof financial business, $250 -ON GoU Course. 2 Br, 3 BR. 21,1 Im. Deluxe e M&r1>1e pullman Ccsta r.trH. Phone: ~•5·2300. crpt/drpa, trp)c, 2 ltlll *6'13--856.1• that invites the most rig1d 2 Ba, Gar. Chlldren/pef ok. Bluffs, N.B. ·-··-: $47S/500 e King-a Bdrms NO DEPOSITS earprt_ $115. Call~. ' 1 N I H I hi Investigation. References CALL 494-9491 4 BR. 2 ba. T.R. Hills •• $4'75 e Pool ~ Barbecues • suro-Hunt!....._ = ewpor 1 9 1 exchanged. For penonal * LANDLORDS * 3 BR. 2 ba., furn. '·· ''' $400 rounded with plush land-Lovely 2 Br apt• w/a • ._,_.. .....,. "t SEA BREEZE conOdenttai lntavlew, wclle FREE RENTAL SERVICE IClplng. ~~!.=· ~ut~!~ ALMOST CJONll ? ClaMilied ad no. 656, '10 BEACH AREA Adults. No Peta. Incl In rent. Oilld up to 3. 2 BR. APTS. $1Wr-> Plus view of ocean & bay Dally Pilot, PO Box 1560, LARGE 1 BR $190 N •· \l Utll pd St 4 ~ from upstairs family rm. Costa M e 8 a . California, 2 Bedroon1 .& den -cul de 365 w. Wilton 642_19n ° pe.... 11 bUc E. of ' ove ~IDcl. Charm. 2 BR ~!--' 18 $295 Harbor. · Recreation tacn • .... lrd U\g ·• " u cu ~ and include phone c -· * SHADY EL1'¥fS-POOL CASA GRANADA Floor n..1u .. ....::.: .... _ baths; lge. dining area; number. 1 Bedroom -40· dock -~ -laWS frpl c. w/healolator, & F.A. fumlshOO _ $295. • AClulls Pooblde $145 up. 400 Merrimac Way 55T-9559 )"OUn& '4ah1 • moderate heat. Extra lge. kitchen & 3 Bedroom. -CD1t -• Chlldten dead-end •t QUIE'T 2 BR, crpq, <!rps, ::iana. &nan infant,,~ brkfst. area. walk-In pan-e Liquor Lie Off Salt yean -$315. 177 E. 22nd St. CM 642-3&l5 hltns near trwy, &: ahc>pping come. 4 try, birch cabincOI. & &11 • Coin Clee-r1-Bu1y 3 Bedroon1 -• COM E/$IDE Attrae Furn, 2 Br, $150 incl. uur. Sl~ .,; VILLA YORBA bit-ins. Extra Jge. db.I. .... "Townhouses" -$450. l* Ba. htd pool. Nr achls, 548--8992 Huotbwba Bea.ch · I ·garage on alley & extra ~ Butcher Shop/Mkt Bia. 67r>-72'25 shp'g &: frwy. No pels. SPACIOUS 2 la: 3 br A''U (714) MS-Mn , I pal'klng, SM.1100. e Bldra Supply Inv On $:ISO -2 BR 2 llA blms. --641H>114. 1996 Maple Aw., *MOV C4LL Q U•·l 41 f HOLLAND Bua. Selea Newpon ShO..a. 0:ild/pet. 2 BR. I Ba ....... $2501~ NICE 1 & 2 BR 1'"allen . ss; Coll ... Av.. 1140 4 up. & IN ~y* ' 9 \;I'~ 64!>-4170 or 5"0-0608 eve.· $395 • !t + Oen f:rplc bltns 2 BR. 2 Bath1 ·---· · · • · S325 & Up Mature adults 133 E &$-4.107 or 642-3813. S~ 2UI~ si..-.a-. fmt fAN.e. ln6 Jlranio?, C08ta Meaa gac, yard, kids/pets. 0 ll'Vln l'. 3 BR. 1 balhs · •• .. -126512!5 t61h Si.. CM. 642-1265. . SPACIOUS APT. ~·· i=°, ~· ,l_'.Ool. RI A.L TV $5ZL-4 + Den. Peninsula 3 BR. 2'-iS ba ....... SlOC/~ t"B=-:;.=c-::=--:-,.---... ._. ...... ~ .... (1 Nt•r Ntwport Po •t Offltt e BARBER SHOP -6 Pt., NB. Beautiful 0oU5t.'. 4 BR. 2% ba. ····-· S375/450 R,, leap, crpll. dl'pl,. p.1 l Br in 4-plu_ Lrg kft~ . W •• Of Belich BmJ. • chain: Prime Costa Mesa priv OOach 5 BR. 2~• ba .•••••• $3651395 & water pakl. Adult. only, bhn ranae. lfU'IK!t .. fik1ey Slater), •mo * tEASE OR BUY * ohoppJ'ng center. Best equip, NU-VIEW RENTALS IV• Hav<• s"mmer Rentals no J1<lla. 1140-~ nn, no """ 645-7..,. WALK lo -j 3 BR. [«e. family nn. 2 Full good lease -moneymaker. 67?r4030 or 49+l24S i d h•11 1 BR. f\Vn. apt. SUS. Yard. :> BR, 2 BA. w/patio. Lrg It apt. w/prqe. Br l\llRll)' ba'a., 2 frplc1. Lge. yard. Ownt'r will finance with low re I No pets. quiet. Immtd. occup. Kktl a...st? 1 Bost N)L H't& locatlon. . down. ED R tp D LE LANDLORDS! · Call 64S-<1172 alttt 5 pm. A"'" Gk. S\79. Mana&"" 1 BDRM -_ Abo, will lt:~/option. RF.ALTY, ~ \Ve Specialize In Newpor1 • BACHELOR apt. $113 I: up. 1040 C Valencia.~ 1111..,. 'P..tto.-• dr:pi.. : BALBOA BAY PROP. ESl'ABLlSHED S<=cretarial Beach . Corona d~l 1-1r.r e REALTY No children or petat 2135 LRG, quiet 1 Br $140. Nr lee ~ * 642-7491 * S<!:rvk:e for sale. Best Offer. I: Lagun11... Our RenlAI &r· A Company Wit h Vi11lon Jo::lden Ave, CM Apt 1. Mopg A hwy. Nn pets. 2872 trvine , OWNER, 3 lJR., 2 BA, tam 833-2840 vice 11 FREE to You! Try Univ . Park Ccnt€'r, trvlne Fat Profit Is attained when LaSalle, Apt 2, MT-1584 rm v.·/FP, cuL.de-aac.. nu .Don't give up the ship! Nu-View! Cal l Anytime. M2-r;,00 you sell through reault-get-2BR, &pt, blttn ltOV\>, Otan 2 en. t~ bl air oimd. cpts. ""'9. ,..wne VA 7%. "UJI" 1t In classl!icd, Ship NU-VIEW RENTALS O!lice houni s AM to 8 PM tlnR Delly Pilot ClauUled fl50mo. BOB 0PE1itr . ' $45,000. S48--052l. to Shore Results! 64)-5678. • 673-4030 or 494·~2~S Ads. &.-12-5678 ~ntT art 6 R£ALTOR ... ._ i I ' . • ' DAIL V PILOT , Tuud11, M11 i, 1'173 ~~~~~~"" lltl1 ~I ;;;;-;;;;~·1~~!~1 ....... t .... _ .. ~I~;.;~ 1~ ....... _tloo ~I~~~ i;l .. Lootiiiiiii .. -•. ;;;I~~ 11 ~ ...... J~ I ........ lflIJ I ti•·"-JrtlI-:i us._ '400 Sc'-1• & .Sc'-'• & Lott 555 Houli,,. 11e1,w .. ltd,M&F7IOHe_1pw,n1..i,Ma !'no .~H;ol;;;pW;Ml;i;teil;_;.;M;&~F~7~1;0,..~.I ln1truction1 575 , IMtructJon1 515 IN private home, tu.mlshedl l~~~~~--;i~~~~~~--~~i l~~~i!\:~]~~ FAnfER & SONS, trM -LI REW n 0 -~ ••• ·~-------·iBoal>ud ~I rbom. With or without A . C e rm a n w~., lro .. :-u, yard A pr 1• k1tcben prlvilc-. Workln,.. Sbtphertd, blk, lite ch&'.st, s clean -up. FJ'ff ~ W ate r fr 0 n l -b Q •l.YU'd n......i-"'"...i-r $l2K "'1 DL."( I • 3 ar., 2 Ba. Encl •·· • • ••• ··-Announc'-*** •-orkrrs "'"""'' ~ .. --~ J\ lady. Mission Viejo area. mo. Abra1km on Jett h1nd ~uw. ..._ Exper. Ferd. Perm. Utlme Ottttal t"mt ore 10 ~ · 1 -~J~S:.~~-~~ik0'°" 58&-mflauerl:30PM Would You L•1ke ~[~~~~:~~-. y~ g~. ~lU1lljl01~·. FACTORY orily. Trainees '""""table. -~~~\ttk i520 ; i Newp.ort Bnch ROOMS $18 wk up w/.ldt $30 548--015.') .. .,....... ,,.,....., ~ • J Mull have short hatr I: Girl Frlda,y to $700 1 wk up apts. Chlldm & pet 1 Drivewya. grading.-M'l .. '6&6. clean record. Blaclde'a Bott , (J ~Z •• 1 "Rent A Pltce c:.'°~;,N~\.Blvd, To Work n A ~~Tl=le~oy An.':1.:~ SKIPLOADER • dump truck ~~· 2414 N~. t: >sec·~ ~~k to-!f~ ' I _of a Palel e'' "A L" 'I . \l.'Ork. Conc::rete, asptw.11 General OWce -y COM, 11 tceping nn. Priv. nge •" v C. Van Dyke le &awing, bre;tldng. 84&-1tW. ~~~ g,J BOY or GIRL Carrier need· Rece u-~ •~Ulo+ • ' bttttt tr entry, pat to : T I &unmlt. Leig Deb. Reward. ·32' ruRNJTURf; Van tor ed for Delivery of the Seer:.;;"'~ ......,$600 ·1 ! OCEAN ·and 6~.'.':"', k~rs. 18 0 I M 0 . rave Age'ncy?. G75-<l28S day, 49FIJ53 eve. local furn hauls & geo'I ti 'I i 6 Dally Pilot ln vicinity of ROcepl. Typist $500 " HARBOR VIEW 1..-w1 h!ALE Sealpolnt Siameee haullng. 548-1862. Srilltol &. Alton·Bri.llol & Jo,/C Bookkeept'r -$600 ! 2 ROOMS w/'-th, furni•hed, cut, nr. llell Ave.· & Algon... Segcrstrom. Call Mr. Bitler M-' Fmt o{c ••~ I El d ~ 1 JI B Bel d f ,,._ GEN. Haullng. Tree/Shrub" t "" '321 = -egant apru.'lnH~nls eslgoed C.rtt. $100 Inc util's. Older 11u n, · · ovc pet 0 u1e trim. Car & Yd cleanup. a ..,..,,_. Prod. Conll'OI C. Algr S20K ' • "'ilh a Mastc·r's 1oucb, SU· tenant. 615-2020 I 642-6,;60 ~ves~lga~e ~ur Short CourH ~~~~~s. Ph. 8<16-2637. Est. 531-63TI,·5.5?-6904. , New Lite lndU.itrlat CAFE'TERIA Help, full lime, .E)(tt. Secretary $600 . .-: perb house sccurily, exclu· JDEAL for studt'nt, close to aug t Y renge Couhty Tr1vel H Olvlsion .for Women 5 day, l\1ature won1an. ~es EflRT, l>tgrt'e $18K "'~ Si\'e Vcrsaillf'A Club Md OCC F o•·"·d ""' ,....... Aients • , • • LOST Alpha Beta, Co!ta ousecle1nin9 644-1991 NEWPORT .. , 1 nlV\I with unique Aquabar, · ur "''"" · -1.J ... ~• M N--..ted I --..11 t I 1;;;;ntains and formal gar-nll>nth. 642-85..?0 esa, Samoyed. Female, HOUSE OF CLEAN ~ mtll9U • • y ca $ . Per1onnel Agency de .... All part oflhe Soulh PLEASANI' quarters for Class Convenes May 22nd ~;,,;;-''"'·" Reward. FltXH'l!, windows. wails, car· Jobs By Phone reer ecretanes 133 Dover Dr., N.B, Coast" finest opartn1eot employed man over 30. 3 Nights • A Week far 14 Weeks LOST female Samoyed, ans !'!!' & drapes. 7 Yn. area. 642-3870 con1munlly. ' i;641Hi689:.::.=:.,,.~---~= "Kim" vie. Adams & -6824 or 646-2521. ~1/C. Kelly Girl is now regbtering Average rab.Be $500-$150. Topl "!~~~~~~~!!!!~I I Bedroom/studios from $195 Room ·& Board 405 Cell For Quallfic1t ion Brookhurst, 4127. Reward C1rpet Cleaning \\'Omen \vhO v.·ould like to do $. NO l''EES. N.B., C.M., DffiECTOR OF NURSES i\J~e~:;:n; l~~ t~usk rl . Interview NOW I 9CiH492 Floor Care & Windows clean lite industrial \I.Wk. Irvine, .Orange & $.A. Call Progressive convJles. hosp. M.4TURE \.\'Oman, Ch J1l1an ] Dutch 1'talnt SerY. ,.~7_,Cl'>ll ,.._11 Al Our ofilce ooce only I!Jlrned1&.telyp. p S Xlnt bent!fits,. oo wk-enm. pref to •hr apt for room & um·1ted T 15 St d ts ~ -~ Cali 642-2UO, Mi-. Snyd .... board. sml sa:tary. 646-291'9 0 u en I ~ Dtdlc.ated Cle1nlng to fill out an application & •. • • •-~ ... -· I * 1•~ DO EVER~-·G * sign up for wo. rk. After_ that DISHWASHER PRIVATE Room for ~lady. A" I" Sch -.-•&... i ..... ,, .. M 1 ' E.'<cellcnt meals & TLC. Ir 1nes ' ools 'Pac"1f1"c . Refs. Free est. 646-2839 all your Et.SSlgM1ent5 will be 500 Ne\vport Center Dr. ust be neat & c ean. Ove.r ' ON T "E BLUFFS '°"~:;:...:c:,::c..:=.::.::'.:::'.:=.._ 1 made when our stall calls St.lite 900. N.B. 21. Apply in person, SUrf '°' ! ~ n $325 nm. G-~l Ll\t COMPLETE H 0 USE you. Work iu assembl,y line, 640-1970 ·S:;.h·:;\oc,in_,_59_30~\-V._c_oas_t_H_wy_._.11...1' AT NEWPORT Uuest Home 415 610 £. 17th St. BabYsitting CLEANING SERVICE.· packaging, inventory, gen'! 24 Central :rower, Orange _.!"-B· Sa * &16-5943 * 548-3068 * unskilled \\'ork & PC 5'f..6446 DOMESTIC Jlelp George j nta Ana 543-6596 lro•lng a8'embly. Equal Oppor. Employer Allen Byland •-ocy, 106-B I ' Licensed Day Care ., ,... ... / ~· Unfum •• Mes• Verde ;~~~~~~~!~!Licensed day care n1othcr IRONING Your paycheck will be mail· CLEANING WOMAN E. 16th St,. S.A. 547--0395 has au opening ror one ed to you each week, so It Er11p loyn1ent t <:hild, age 11,; yrs _ 4 yrs. 6 Pi~s far $1.00. 1vill not be necess. to can al Dci_>endabte, mature tor ofc HEIRWOOD SHUTTERS " * * LIDO ISLE * * .--t'cnced yard, private roont • Phone 557-1198 • our office for your pay 01· sw~es. Nwpt Beach. ~al 1977 Placentin, C.M. ~ l , 2 BR, 3 Ba. OR 5 BR. ltentlll r.tSONtt jre:.l fto' na,p, .PlaymHates, will pot-J•nitori•I "·ork asskid""me,•ts,. _!e2ngisd1~&r =~bt: ~· Nights. ESCROW TRAINEE . 1' 3 Ba. Both avail. June. July ~;;;;;;;:;;;; . ~ Y rain. 01 lunches, any \Vt;C ay or ~·. · · \\thy not use your good typ- f1'0n1 Newport Blvd., 1u1•n tll PRIVATE apts or roo1ns for Hospl1aJ Rood (1 block ' senior citizens, n1cal1 & above Pacific Coast llwyJ 10 maid serviC(!. 642-ms entrance. 9Q.1 Cagney Lane, Summer 'Rent1ls Newport Beach, Ca. 92600. Telephone: (7141 6'G-006<I EXCLUSIVE BIG CANYON & August. snacks and TLC. Week daY.s CARPET Cleaning Special! 3rd shift. CLEAJ':IUP & deliyery boy.· Ing skills to start a career D. Franklin Rltr. 673-2222 only. Shore Crest Tract. Sc sq. ft, Min $15. Complete A 1 Full time. Apply Ul person. in the fascinating field of Vacation Rentals 425 a __ u_si_n_•_ss __ R_e_nt_e_l __ 44....:_5 _P_•_rs_o_n_•_l• _____ s_3_0 Between Indianapolis and Service Specializing ln Betwn 9~Y & noon Hutcheson, 140 Industrial escl"O\v'!'. Start $450. Call !~ Luxury Golf Course A,.rtment1 NE\VPORT BEACH :.a4~~. off Brookhurst. floors 642-0036. 1 \Vay, Costa Mesa. Helen llayes, 54().6(1'6, ' : • BIG Bear" attrae. 1 & 2 ,DESIGN CENTER VE·TERANS OFFICE cleaning, 11 c' d' Kel y G"1rls COCKTAlL waitre8', Ocean· c ... tal Personnel Agency,' ' Br. cottages w/frpl's. Day. Fine location \V/country at· Earn $4.58 to $?.00 per hour Licensed Babysitter bonded. 7 Yrs exp. in area. front nite club, exp'd 21-27. 2790 Harbor Blvd, O t : \Vk·ltlo. 714/866-7222. mospherc, Id ea I for guuranteed by using y<iur Ucensed care for yotl:ngsters ~or ~2527. ' Apply Beach Ball. 2116 W. *·Estimators needed for 31'1 : =R-e"'n-t1~1-s"t"o~Sh""'-1"ro'-'--4~30~ I architectural. environment· G.I. Benefits v.•hill' at· aflcr school. Robert Burke Masonry Oceanfront, NB, Wed-Fri, Company . : al, interior design, advertis-tending Santa Ana College. School Distrlct in Hun· ___ .:_ ______ 1061 Bu1ines1 Ctr. Dr. l-5 pm SCOTCH TIN~ Sw1 P<'<> ' · bl' 0· tlng1011 Beach. Reserve now BRICK \ lrvl-1•1 9107 " UNF. · 3 BR., 2 ba.; close SHARE Apt or House & 1ng, pu 1s 1ng or related Call "°"' -for next fall. ~-197l t vebnel erk, s umphs~ne, A ·-fro 0 C ~ CONCRETE form setters & tect!ve window film. Hours ' : $350 UP. -,. Phone 714/644-0509 to bay & ocean, son\{' vie\\'. SAVE s s $ Ho 1'1 E fiel~s. 1260 sq. ft. at 50c. D. 5'17-9:-,61 Ext 370 concre e oc • \\TOug l ll'On cross m .. Airport finishers. Custom concrete your convenience. Com-• , Brand nei\". $400, yearly. PARTNER Lie. Business \Vnght, 644·7955. FUU..Y . L!<'ENSED YOUNG Set School -Open fences & store ironts. 1237 So. Main St. \\'Ork. 675-5516 missions. 644-849-1 l ~II 836--1194 or 548-1419 I •SPlRITUALlST .-6.•i:n-?pm. 6 day!.. Ages U. custom work only. !ll}S-786.5. Santa Ana 547·9535 CONVALESCENT p/time, EXPERIENCED sean1stress ·•: associated I OFFICE 19 f S · ·t ... , d' 10 10 Pro. teachers. $21 weekly. Pao'nto'ng & · ' ARE my 2 bed r 111 . cents sq t up. p1ri lUI rea 1ngs am· 6-16-liOG or 645-1057. P ASSE'IB!.ERS t d f r overn1ght care. Elderly to \1'0rk in factory or \viii Nc\\'JlOrt apt. 1>1a l u r (' , 900 sq ft or more. individual pm, Ad\.·icc on all maltl'.!rs. 1perhangin9 1 ' "'Wl e 0 man. N.B. 8l'Ca. 673·3506. train qunlified honte &e\\'et. • 1 enlployed ,roman. Pool. aft heat/air, near all freeways. 312 N El Camino, San BABYSITTING in my home. _;....:.""'c.:;.::;;,~~---1 fast growing boat co. Apply . Apply In person Sunflov.'Cr • l 5 , S46-.fi0 55 >ant parking Shol"t terin Cl<'incntc. '1 9 2-9 l 3 6 , day or nitc. Nic.'1:' yard, llot No Wasting at Oipper 1\tarlne Corp. 1919 COO.,--g,,.i 111 \Vear. 148 L 0 s lease. Agent, '8.ll-4422 A!l2-fl03-L lunch. 646--8706. * WALLPAPER * E, Occidentnl, Santa Ana. R 1'tolinos, San Clemente 17 BR., 2 ba. 1 Blk. to oocan. 4BR hse, w/2 others. H.B. --~-~----·PROB!D1 P.regnancy. Con-BABYSITI'ING n1y home, \\'hen you call "Mac" ATTENTION male over 18 BR OKERS -REALTOR S 10 ZS W 8olboo 1171 )bt J I"!~~,.. ... ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!; I WANTED -2 guys to shr · F I N ·-a. $80 + uto·i. 9G" "'"". ARTIST'S Studio, Jge rn1, lidenl, s y n1 pal he tic anytime, Hot meals, phone ----548·1"'1 eves. must be clean cut, Openings F/tin1e dependable day rp c. ew carp. & drapes °"'" v-oo<JO f ard ---.... fl &ho f,.., k newly.painted; yearly; $29S' G plenty of light, patio, So, pregnancy counseling.' Abor· 968-0887. PAINTING & repair, 35 yrs or grave y ,,.an-;-a:ia1S· co ee p ""'~ coo·, . Ask for ~1ike 1r1ges for Rent 43S Lnguna. $50 mo. 645-2280. lion & adoptions ref. Business Service workmanship guar. Take tant manager trainee & Apply In Person JONES REALTY 613-G210 ALLSPACE Industrial Rent1I 450 APCARE 642-4'136 advantage of my exp. cooks. Apply in person, TO LISA WERNER: PROFESSIONAL Typing ,536-.""'7=:0;;;'6:;.. ~-----Jack In The Box, 102 Ocean, ON Bay 2 BR, 2 BA, large Self 5tor19e L"b Of 1 = Hntg Bch patio. Stove, refrig. Adul1s. Ml i NOW LEASING HAPPY BIRTHDAY I 1 ra f ce Services. 2588 PROF. painter, honest work,1.:.:=:;.· =:::·------ Yearly. No ""Is. 223 19th n W•rehouses WE LOVE YOUI Nc"•port Blvd-B. 645-8850 reas. Int/ext, b-ee est. ~ ...,. Vlllious sizes from $25/1\10. Huntl~ton Boach c •-R f °'8-=9 ''7 7 • St. S295/mo. 613·2706 or ··• MOM, DAD & JASON arpet ~rvlce e s . .rt LI~ , ""' -455, 675-1849. Ulockit.Ukeepthekey. NEW M-1 INTER/EXTER. Accous 0 On site mgrs · 2-1 hr. access n•n Sq F U ALCOHOLICS Ano JOHN'S C I U hol BRAND l\t>\v Oce11n front No move in. No niove out fee :ro<J • t. & P · nymous. i arpe & P stery ceilings sprayed. Lle, ins. Co llan1ilton & Nc\vhu1d Phone 542-7217 01· write Dri·Shainpoo free Scotch· Joe refs. f-est °'~ ndominiun1, 2 Br, 2 Ba, Sec-urHy Pa1rollNI p ·o Bo •')')'J c M rd fSo 'I ·-~~, $400/mo. ''ea1· 1 case. 0j)('n Daily fc:-Jnspeclion 646-069? or 83.3-05!9 · · x .u.~ osta esa. gua 1 Relardants). TOTAL SERVICES co. 6Ta-769-t Han1ilton & Ne11·land St .. f!B S\VINGING SINGLES bDcgrel ,asers && !Oall color Painting lite ,............,""' T_ransn1is~io11_ & line n1echan-16 Fashiqn Island 1\1-1 CORNER 1 21 x 9 o Call "Leah" 2.3 pin. rig i e1M?rs mi nute · ~-r-.. ~3· 1c co1nbumlion. ~tust have N t Be h aJR ChanneHront duplex _ 3 833..0519, il nu ans, &46-0697 \\'/bldg, 991 \\'. \91.h St ., 539•3122 bleach for ,1•hite carpets. 616-00TI or 646-1809 3 yrs. n1inin1unt experience ewpor ac ! BR. 3 ba, den. bltns, frplc, t G1rage for Storege co~ta ~1esa. 642-3400 '-'oung .. oup\•s club. lS·3S + Sa\'c your money by savin)!; l~TERlOR, Exterior. U:i\\' l<'ord, Lincoln MeITu1-y. BeEqt\vn ~ ~ 11 am or 3 & 5 pni j patios. gar, sn1 boat dock, 1878 Placentia, CM i ... ~-nie extra trips. \Viii <elaen rates. Local rcls. Phillip, Health &: life, dental insur· u ppor. Employer $41:>. yrly. 67;;..-0120 5..')1-7969 ~1·1, 1680 sq fl, 1670 Placen· 1 539.3344 living rnt., dining rm. & 642-0~ aft 5Pl\I ance bcneUts. ~~ shop uni· NE\V Baytront·priv Bch & Office Rental 440 ~~: ~1~-1 ~"fi~Vood~. Call "Leah'' 2·8 pn1 hall $15. Any rm. fl.50, * PAPERHANGER * forn1 expenses paid. 5 days COOK Pier 3BR, 2BA, $550 ino yr-·" · ja. i Social Clubs 53S couch SlO. Chair S:i. 15 yri;;. week. 7:30 to. 5:30. Excel· E 'd onl t Be fits ly. 642-31881642-7914 UNION BANK SQUARE 4001-H BIRCH, N.B. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; exp. is what counts, not Carl Rebko 646-2449 lent \\'orking conditions. Call x~ y,. op ~y._ l_"IC • ORANGE 4000 sq. ft. 541.5032 !1 method. I do work myse\1. Ple~1er, Piitch, Repair ~Ir. AGrt "'cConnfsick at ~d~~cA~°i~~tiOn & ~~~cc~~R clos~A.to g~=~~: 2000 sq ft modem office bldg, Rentals Wanted 460 LO~!,~~N DISCOVERY Good ret 531--0101. * PATCH PLASTERING USta on SAM'S SEAFOOD yearly, GTJ-6640. will divide. All services. PROFESSIONALS in a field Carpenter Lincoln-Mercury 16278 Pacific.· Coast Hwy. Carpeted, panelled. 6fh WANT to rent house on 1 A t M 1 h k All types. Free estimates Huntm-n--• S.nt. An. n o ma .eur a c ma crs. ALL TYPES Call 540-6825 .. -e ........ PCo.w• l----'------·I 1oor._ Sacrifice suttlb-let. Ideal Balboa Isle or vie. Young (Est. 1966). 714-142..a&44 or 1nS\ll'ance o ce. Call family j u s t lransferred. (714~ 835-6885 (213) 387-3393 CARPENTRY Plumbing -..,.,=o,:..;c:;.:,;.;.,.,.,.--ICOOK, experienced, I o r NE\V 2 BR, nr Harbor (714) 547-0039. Don't drink or smoke. \VIII I ;_.;.:.;...c;:;:.:;~-----1 AUTO SALESMAN hospital. ln1med. opening. /htcFa~den, upstairs, bltns, take good care or your Large or small. 536·16-18 L.R. OTIS PLUMBTNG Due to an Increase In our Costa ?o.leSa ?>.1em 0 r j a I D\\', au'. pool, 11.dults, baby SPACE available, C 0 ~ta home. &l6-J.l71 ,-------, GENERAL CARPENTRY Remodels<& Repairs. \Vater lraUic and sales, \\'e need Hospital, 301 Victoria, C.1'-1. OK, no pets. $175. 968-7465 1'fesa & REPAIHS. heaters, disposals, furnaces, tY{O e.'<perienced. salesmen. COOK To Prepare noon meal • t WALKER&' LEE BL 5 BP.. house, prefer pool, Lott and Found 675-5211 dshwaBhrs. 64H263 M/C & Free Demo -\\eekly. and for 20. Assistance Lcam1e "'P s., DG. Doctorate of En~inecrinrr, 3 monlhly bonuses Good b' Fum. or Unfur.,. 370 Ti90 Harbor Blvd, Harbor a! children, June lst 10 'Aug !lllNOR hon1e repairs. Plum· B/A. Con1plete Plumbing comm plan 1~.,.. in Day Care Center. ~70 Ad Firs l d 1 bing -Carn••ntry -Painting Service. · -b y • mon1ings ams. t en sa e uxe 31st. ,... ventory. Sell New and Used. ""'""'""'"-·.,.,-~-=-~~ Corona de l Mar suites 1ncluding air. music, Dick Tyler BTI-1444 Found (free ads) S50 -Tile. Call 54()....5500. PLUfl.IBlNG REPAIR See Bob Meador, Harbor COOK, exp"d only. The Cot· carpets, ample parking full WE NEED A HOME C.Jment, Concrete No job too.small AmericM & Jeep. 1969 tage Coffee Shop, 56~ West LIVE on ocean sidr. of h\\'Y· 2 service. Call Gene If ill, PLEAt£ help~ Foond in my * * 642-3128 * * J1arbor Blvd .. COsta ?o.!esa. 19th St, Costa l\Iesa BR pool atllts ,~ 642 -I '"l~l""' \Ve are a quiet, adult fan1ily PATIO~ PLANTERS ' ' ·' L.:.J ..,,~ .,.,, "~ f 4 · h l 3 b garage -Very frightened &. • Sawirw1/Alterati?ns AlITOl\10TIVE COUNTER HELP: in beer Orange Coast R. E. 6-14-4848 FOR LEASE o ' 111 searc o a r n be t th All C k -•3533 "• t -" t mot cl home on yrly lease. Belt ervous au . mo er cat oner e v.'Or . °'""" -, LOT MAN s auu a . . orcy e races~ l ;C;;o;;sl;;;;•;;M;;;;•;n;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\orfice space ground floor. local refer. 6TJ.9119. (gray, white gold patches) PATIOS, "'alks. drives. Saw, Alteratlons-642·584S Experienced A pl bl person every Fri. rught from 6:30 Union Federal p In z a, and her kitten. I cannot break, remove & replace Neat, accurate. 20 years e:<p. to Don ~:r, Y to _10:30 at Orange County Broo k hurst/San Diego RETIRED la<ly needs apt keep them 'and must find l 5"8-866S f T'I TIIEODO.RE Fwwoonds. Must be over * * * Freeway. Carpets. drapes, reasonable, Crestview Sch lhem a home Plse call bet concre e. · or est. I e ROBINS FORD ~0yrs9006old. $2.50 per hr. Cati SPAR all utilities paid. ca 11 area. 008-1884 art 4 7pm & 9pm Contractor ~ KLING NEW M ·1 s II 548--7881 CERAMIC TILE NE\V & ~ Harbor Blvd., an yn tova NE\\ILY\\1EDS \1•ant 2 BR JACK Taulane _ Repair renioclel. Free est. Small Costa Mesa OJUNTER help: Need 6 (714) 832-5440 unfurn house. Obedient dog. 1,~ COLLIE, ¥.! Gern1an Shep b I 26 v."Omen to \l.'Ork at foOO con- • AUTO Employment Oppmiunllies At Saddloback College In Mission Viejo Clerk Typist I $418·$502·$521 {>ft' mo. Clerk Typist II Extended day program S50Z..S527·$563 per mo Plus S12 Differential llrs 1:30pni-10pm Alon-Thurs. 8am·5pm Frida¥· Custodian 11 S56i·S596-$625 per mo Plus $25 Differential firs 10;30pm-7am Groundsm•n I $553-$:->81-$610 per mo Maint. M.tn II Air Cond/heating. $690-S724-$1GO per mo -, These a.re 12 month positions , v.•/attractive fringe bene-.. 1 fits. Betenninatioil of start-. j ing salary is made from l tho.>~. li~ed according to ;i( quahficat'ions & experience. Cali Mn. Radner ·r! 831-9700 ; ; ! , I Electronic Technicians • 11' ii ., f Poaihon req's indepth . •1 knowledge o f electronic 1 circuitry \\'/special em·~·! phasls on digital & logic · 1 ! functKlns. Includes testing ': i o[ printed circuit board • 1j sub-assemblies & completed '\1 systems. ·, .J ' ,, Xln't fringe benefits. 3 .. • ·Weeks vacation, paid med, : dental & life ins., paid long term disabil.it.y. ' .Av SH Dow Cl R \··bl 1 0 t 1 remocl.. atidlt. 20 yrs exp. jo s we come. 536-24 . AVON WANTS YOUI . A S 44·1 OLD Ne1\·poo·t, 3 blks No. ean, e 1 .. e, > 1 B&\\'. Vic S Corona de! ~tar ceSSJons every Fri. rught I l R f ,, n~oo Lic'd. rity \\'"ay Co. 547-oo36 or Coast H\\)'. Approx. 900 en1poye< · es. 6-lu-u.xio. _C0coccli'--644-=c:"cc63=.'="----Be an independent AVON from 6:30 to 10:30 Orange Apartments sq. ft . incl 4 priv. ofJiccs & YNG. v,.·hite F. kitten. Gr. NE\V, remodel, repair. Slore I Iii JI Roprese~tatlve & E_arn County Fairground~ $2.50 SUbmit resume t~ Spacious, Lli::ht & Cheery! recept. r nl. Great for eyes. 1'~lea collar. Mesa fronlS, cusl. patios. oles, . [~ money 1n your spru·e Un1e -"""=r~lu'~._,C.::O::li-'64C:2-:::::9006:::.__ Reynolds, I BR's FROM $157 engineering or d rii \I' in g I[...-) V I CM 546-4478 etc. Lic'd. 962-1961. I ~· i!ii~ .. ~~~~~~1:n~ea~r~h~o~m~':·iC~a~ll~:~~~ CUSTOMER I foci , business. $:"100/mo. Uti l incl. Annauncementl . ""''::"'::oe.:.·=·=·="-"""-'--Drafting 11 S40-7041 or 546-5341 n etics, Inc. !'if r . ' .. 2 BR's FROM $177 S-18--5300 eves. 1 :.mmmmmm~iiiii~ a·TALE cat, light orange & 1---''-------IJob Wonted '"·le 700 BABYSl-ER d d SERVICES An•hl8,',·'n1,Soc.,.Manchester92802 "h.\• 2 •ks· • 1TIC1 11 -nee e • ~·fao·1 order do'v. Perm0-nt 0 FULi. SERVICI'. . 1 ~. \~'l". ai::o. R 'd C 'I I d be 2 ho " _,_ Beautiful apPolntments In· 494-5752 es1 , omm • n us. teac r's sons, my me tun time position for er-l;;;;iEqiiiuaiil..OO;lippoiiii;rio • .iEiimilp:iiloiiyfierii..f elude Decorator Fireplaces. Westcliff Building Auto Transportation S25 Roon1 Additions, Remodels. SCRAM LETS or yours. 675-3998 a1't 4. ficient gal w/xlnt typing Shag Ca.....,ting. Private Corner \Vestclirt Dri\'c & FOUND female Samoyed Design Drafting Assoc • CdM. --· skills & good phone voice. .,..~ Irvine Bh·d., N c iv p 0 r 1 l\1AN \\'ishcs ride daily to LA llusky vicinity l\vo Guys, 2G!l0Al B Patios. Pool . Jacuzzi • Beach. l\lr. ll 0 \VAR D front S.1n .Juan capistrano. Hunti ngton Beach. 979-3576 Andolph Ave., CM ANSWERS ABYSrITER, loving care CM. 714: 979-1560. Volleyball coUl'I Gtu 645-GlOI. Arrive by 9 A~I. '196-9229 Lost SSS 557-0626 or 557-9695 for 2 s~all children. 1 day CUT.TER, SAILS I BBQ's. Closed Garages. Electro'cal per wk. in my home. Refer. •JcKibb' S . I 18ll Adults, No Pets. FRONT corner suilc -2nd -·---id · desired 644--6Ta3 " in a 1 s • •ly, Const H\\"-', Cd'!. 2IOO LOST SINCE 4/18, vie. ~ -Rap -Twine -. Reynolds Ave, S.A. 540-368-1. 409 W. BAY St. sq. ft. crpt. dr)>s, ai~/CQnd.-Ptnonlls II•·} 1'"ou10C1tainLValley, male box-Ei!'~~~~~N;Obs.1;:;.,~ ~~lu; ~~~he who ~!!Yi~~: t!::ie.'a!r!: * D~Y BUSBOYS * Costa Mesa n1usic, elevnlor, p I' k . g. . r~· tag, ic n=~e l~Bc~~.~ repairs, 548-5203. hath not sinned go out and 12;30 to 6:30 pnl, no Full t~e: apply after 3 M security patrol. Can be get STONED." housekeeping, 962-9960 pm. Tonio s, ~O Newport anager Bldg E-103 divided. 1--ront Jic sq. ft. Please return lo 6 Gardening Center Dr. Fashion Island * 646--3317 * 2711 E. Coast ll\\'Y . 673-4120 Personals SJO heartbroken people for PHARMACIST, full or part BABYSITIER for 16 mos old ' , 1 ..,,.."!o~~~~~;,,,,.., I i\'1\·ard. 962-2'283 eves ; EX PERT Japanese time, Call after 5:30 Prtf, girl ?o.1onday thru Friday, Dental Reception 1st 1~ TI-lE EXcrrtNG TWO Availabfe, reason~ PREGNANT? Th ink ing ab-9i9-1211, ext 262. days Gardener. Complete Yard 646-1456 nzy home, own trans. Exper., aggressive & enthus- * Escrow Ofer to $800 * Bkkpr/TB to $7 "' * PBX/Cord to $450 · : * Soc'y/5-los to $625 • : * Cr Manager to $90D;: : * Soc'y/Rocopt. to $650 • , * Order Clork hr$2.2S, , ! * Cshlor/Drg hr $2.25 . • HELEN SCHAFFER . I : PERSONNEL AGENCY 1 : 42.62 Campus Drive. No. B ,t: Newport Beach 507.2711 · : PALM MESA APTS. ablo. 1664 Newport orlion? KOO\\' all the fact!' WST Irish Setter. \Veaiing Service. Free estimates J b Winted F 1 702 673-8881 ia.stic 'in all phases of dental ~11NUTES TO NPT. BCH. Blvd., Costa Mesa, first! Call LIFE LINE -2·11 l.ic. tag. Vic 17th St., l!B, 5-18--2661 o , ema e BABYSITTER part time Oc:· ofc nrroc~es & m~ag~ Bach, 1 & 2 BR. from $l50 HERITAGE 83 , 2560 hrs, 541-55..?2. $.'"il Re\vard. 536-1644 EXP1• ERho. Japanese Gardener. WORK \VANTED • 2 days casKlnal weekends. ssi-0212 ~~eiits Someope~is 1~e EXPERIENCED ~ j Adultli, No Pets. .r GENT. 55. paraplegic in MALE Irish Setter, Vic : \no\Y "'· Tr Imm ing · week·~· care: for Costa Mesa. area. 84&-3540 8-10 8.m ·0~ NOTE TELLER 1561 ~1csa Dr. wheel chair. \\'ants to ml'et l Ne\\"port Beach. 4/25, C l ean-up, Sm a I I ederly m Balboa, Ltdo BANK ~7 pm. · •:•i (5 blks from N""'llTV\rl Blvd.) PESK space r..vailabl<' s.-i0 loving gal any age. 646·33601 Needs medication. 646-458.'i landscaping 968-3486. Island, Corona de! Mar area. S t M I S A I , .. .,_ mo. \"o'l\ po·ovo·dc fur•t'lu"c E Have own transportatlon. ta e utul avin91 DENTAL Assistant O p\l n Person ' • ~9860 ,v " • XP. Japanese, 1nain· -SEC R TY PACIFIC '1' at SS 1no. Ans\\·ering-seL'"\'icc I Call ~1368 btwn 10 & 2. Will be moving to Newport Newport Beach Orthodontic *" CASA VICI'ORIA 1 e nan c e' c ea n -u P · Be I I Sc be W !" . BANK ' ' 1 S.· 2 BR. Furn & Unlu•<•. available. li875 Beach Bl\'<l. Landscape. Free ext. NEED he! t ho ? W ac 1, n pte~ r. e o uce, chair: side. App~. 4 . • ; Huntington Beach. 6-12-4321 ~T d 1 Pa d• $42-8442/114?-M:IB h .dP a · me. e nrc now Interviewing for: Days I wk. Top salary, 3475 Via Udo Corpcls, drpes, D/\V, TV ra er s ra 1se ave a1 es, nu r II es' • Loan Service ' liberal fringe benetlts, con· JQ'cwport Beach anl. Pool, e1c. Conte by & 1617 WESTCLIFF JAPANESE GARDENER ho u 8 ekprs, comf)tnions. • Escl'Olv genial environment, Dental inquire nhou! our Move-In 3'200. 1294, 1:J6 & 540 sq. f1. CNI. NB. AREA tromema.kers UP J 0 h n • e Personnel exper. reqiilred. No smok-Equal Oppor. Employer AlJO\\'ancc. 525 Victoria St. A in p I e pr kg . U ti I • • 1 • • 645-1196 e 547-6681. . • Data Proce&Sing lng. Age ro.3CI. 642-2626 at HnrOOr, C.1'1. 642-8970. 138.urugardner No. 104. Ines EXPER. Japanese Gardener. Help W1nted, M & F 7\P • Accounting EXTRA LARGE 1 BR. 54t-5032 Con1plete yard srv. Relia. & 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1ca11 us lo discuss excellent Department Store Healed pool , Fron1 $115. OFFICE & garage 'for rent. • neat. Free est. 642-4389. Position with .top Salary & Mature adult~. Infant ok. No 195.11 Campus Dr., Santa ti mes Ancient Mariner Benefits. . THE BROADWAY pel<;. 1881 ~ion r o vi a . Ana OC Airport, General EXPERIENCED Japanese 8 521~1300 Now Hfrlna: ln 66-2174 . Aviation Bldg, $255 mo. Gardener Complete yard us Boys-D1y1 \Ve are an equal employment • TROPICAL POOL • 9'14~~. d.ol lars ::~~enl\;::e e ~i~~~~ AKltche,~lte1 opportunity employer SAW 2 Br Studio, 11,, Ba., trpl, ORANGE County Airport, 64:">-0347 pply n Pe('son BEAUTY OPRS (2) • spin\! strcat(.. Gas & 'Ntr Office suite. •l r o o n1 s G 301 N. Tustin Ave. No following ne«S5, Comm/ Penn., tu:ll Ir p/'time pd. E/side on 18th. 54S-ll68 \v/vie"" ~ sq. ft.. 43.tl ~DEN ER S:k 22 yrs ex· Sant• Ana guarn. Busy shop. ca 11 06.Y* If eventna• 2BR lBA furn $Z!J Birch St. SUI!(' 200, SIG-39-13 l.'i'~us, ne1\' ('n". tires \V,\NT JS ' fomtl• -~-1 f1 . '""'1. al s 4-j5 bad· 645-1050. Experlenct ""eft.tfted 2BR I BA unfurn $190 " ' ' / 'J , ..... uva 1 ttonU. ..., m nt. o !! • APPRENTICE th las I APliY Ptnoanel Dept GOO Sq. -~·1. OFFICE u./kil & ::-lute , batt, 5 sp truns. Val trd 'GS V\V bug or Bajn bug • 5 4 9 -20 1 5 * George • . • en U! l C BEAtITY operalors. 1 with 10 iun-12 & 24 pm · 151 £. 2l~t. C.M. BA. $\.,,-,. Al.SO 600 Sq . Fl. S6i\t 'rade for smoJl r-.1otor 1~gla.ss kil & wide tires, lfampton. ~ uldustriOU~ to \l.'Of'k on an· following to manage. No. 47 Fuhion Island * 64&-8666 * STORE $155, C.i\1 , 646-2130 flon ·, Cnmpcr, Vnn or ?? hrl""'t yellO\V pao'nt & hlk hque autO!. 548-66ll. u-n•• .. needed manicurist N-·-·a-·h H I •' n=~~--~ -·-untington Beech l & 2 RM. dlx. surtcs. Adj. ~""'c.:.;l,::IO~e'-vc::•::,· =~--Interior. 962-2273 or 962.()538 Gard · s .. * ASSEMBLERS * for 11 operators. 830-1010 1;.co.:.;;;;;~::.:...:;::;:;:::.;_ __ , H :-:-, en!Jlg e rv ... tain-Assembly -•ition open, fil· BEAUTICIAN wanted for DISHWASHER. Maltltenance f Bn I Af_r1>0rter 01e,I. No lse~ req. llAVI-.: DUI~ 2-2Bll. tgc 21' cabin cruiser, & trall•r, tcnancc & Laodscaplng ~ M • D··••-Cook A • I)(> uxc. Adult poolsldt> 2112 DuPont No. s. 833·3223 ya~,. A-·me VA loan, '" ting hardware onto boats h1allie't w1... &: Beauty an 'OL: ...,. ..... e · J>-garden hungu.1-0w, ntnr ... -" ~HP, VS. Oiry-'ler trans, 645-1930 etc. Apply at Co a at oelo h. ,_,.,i ply in penon. The Rusty oct"an. Frplc., lrg patio, 6 Busines1 R•nt1I • 44S $7000 t'Qty. Want larc model Pvt. head, Classed hull, EXP American Ja~!le Cafamamn Corp. 3 3 0 12 Sa1on. exptr. ai.r 5U<A.1 8 · Pelican, 2735 W. Cout Hwy, pool!, sauna, tennis. $160. luxury ~ar or cun1pt:1', n1lr. Gocid cond. S31XX> trade 4 glll'dellC!r ror clcart""l.lp & Calle Perfecto San Juan S&I oornm I: \Ille. 543-3446.N •::;·Be;·c...,,,.,..,=='"""=--"~ ~ SEPARATE building + gar. '1ome??? 545·8625 01vncr. plex, TD, Car? 546-20U. t N R c M •M "~ BOAT BUILDERS --· • JOOll 11 1 dJ man. . ., . .. & H.B. Capistrano --· Omtact DIRECTOR 3 BR, 2 Ba 2 ~--Kl sq • PlUl g, crpt~. a 2.S4 Acres 111"'h\\'8Y 74, llAVE prime 8000' commer-M0.7313 · J-'"' Haaard ot Jim Lomls. Need 3 v~ u;er. flnllh • gar., ~~-t. busy comer. t;1;.002Q / N "' ~ ""'OD SEiRYJCES Carpel!!, drapes 5292 Sluon. G4H500 ear Lake Elsinore Ulll· :!al lot in San Clemente. General Service• e ASSEMBLERS e carpenten or quality sall· -rv ~ . fUa (TI 4 ) 84&-31!6 or 5008 . it.les. for properiy 11UntJng. $.17,500 equity. \Vant clean 1st & 2nd lhtft In E'lectronle1 boat manuf. Westsa~ Corp., o-.. ..ible --'lion for CX· $23S mo. 3;) FT. 01'' off!t·e or stort ton Beach. Eastsidc eo.rta MeM! ml· PRINTING _ \:i,,.;us-bclI ~. ·•-t ---'•-of· 1626 Plamitlli, C.M. '::;',:~ w""",,'._-t~·e ot fmnt•tn'O, 145 £. 1Sfh SI., "'°'243 dentfal in~meBkr s~-Sadd '°""" ~1•" y•oc•uuui t'""' ,.._.~, f ftllU .. ~ Newport Buch -~ O'IO"""I ...... • ,.,.,_. you. leback ntlng tered. No expP.Tience rtq, BOOKKEEPER F/C. thru school cafeteria oraanlia· C.~t. Awr·· 21»» gq. rt. •t ! 14'ke 10 b'adt'.? Our Trader's * street Dunc sum. xtnt Graphics. 83ir9386. Apply Jn Penon financial 11tatrment ~rt UOQ " admin. S&Jary com· \VT?(TER. SUmmt'r, · Yrly, 2& sq. ft. .J.S. Rtal £stat<\ Paradise column is for :rou! cond. Trade forChev;v. Ford Hauling Potter & Bnunfiekl Div. llmt, Balboa I 1 l & n d • mensurate w/~. $100- Anlta'• Renta ls, Bkr 2003 ~1168· !"1 line!!: or Dodge Sporti Van In AMF" Incorporated 6'5--2870 $900 ptt month. SubmJt \V. Balboa BJvd. 677~~ lt'.11 a bret'%t. · • sell yoor 5 day• x 1.n t cond. 640-0786 or. J,.OCAL n1oving & haullna by 26181 Am>puerto Ool'l't ~ up· the abh>! resume to Irvine Unified $ell Idle lle.1'1'11 ...... 642 _.i6i 8 items whb ease, use Dally for 5 bucks. 644-0.m. • 1tll1<lent . Largt trUck. Rt!M. San Juan C&plstrano "Llal" lt ln cl&JllOed, Shlp School Dts1rlct. ~l M1chrl· :..P:::llo"-t_,c,,,1a..t1,,,,,!!ied~. ~64!!z.o678~.!:·e-..'••••••••••••••••••• S:W-1846 or Sl-1-2164. An equal oppo.n cmi>i M/J' to Shore R9Ull:I! 642-5678· 800 Rd. Tmne 9266t, • EXPERlENCED braek1ast cook, apply l\fon thru _Fri.. Denny's, 3170 Harbor l1lvd . ., C.M. FLbJUST. lyl Shop, Westmlnt ·~j 'll<tltlays. m&t[ren. FRY CJ P/time. nent. HI Apply, 5 \\. eoe.. N.B Ora No Fee1. oay stt gravc)'BJ • 500 Nei SU 2.1 Cent£ tquai I GENE fine cO person t G1'E'at I 14"5· c f>-w-fil}55, 2~ncy, Gene1 Part tir bookkee 402 S-12 CbMt H GENER. eyes fri &, Kilct: irt pel'S( 11th St, \ViNTEJ Iite P nien\. ~ u •to, ¥f,.9171 GlRL I v.ttk, ~ .... ., over. b per. $2• Appl. E GIRL F) ptoon<. Start 5 Jf.j 'Sew! \\'ell kr fihn le J>laz.a, would sample display Please &1""33 Ho11 f.g ' !ooh ....-,icon rtsider vtrtisll hlust ti 547~ -HG'l'EL N0Wh1 Nt\w H,i H~usck ~lillds Houseb Front I B<l11 M< P~X 0 Co>hie1 HOit est iiff.:' = ~~-boy 1(£ "' Sau~ ""' Broll Sala< kit ct 'NC I AF ' H: I 2' ' ' ' :'.Hi Eiiatls! doi;s, ti Rot tiome e ~ = !IElei 1j!W lf,00 !fomf ... ~ mu~ ~ -~ tit 7 l Ho l •· I• ! .-1 1~1 ! > 1 ' I lt ~ l .• f=- 7 . • • i-.,,',....•t_eh_•~7 l[Il] ( ,. Tut1<101. MAY l. 1973 DAILY PILOT ,H l -·1 l[Il] ;;;I _Iii ... _; -· ~llllJ~IJ!I~!! J. .. , •, U~ i.:!1 .lp·)¥onitd,M",. 710 HolpW.-,Mt. "7lltlolpWonled. M" ".710 Ho•eW•nted._M a,. 710 Holp W...itd.M&F 710 HolpWanttd, M" F 710 HolpWonttd,M a,. 11:/HojP wani.l,M.&,. 710 Hovoohotd -II• ! ' • . NllRSERYMAN wQ.ted • WAITRESS t2 PLACE Sol~, MJld , appl;y Peek Fam'-LABORERS • MANAGERS m.ln. 2 yrs. exp. _for Uoyd'a RN'S I: LVN'S SECRETARY Exper. Must be over 21. Ap. painted chlna. 0 r e ~~, ... - l[fi] I OJ] ( .,,, ' .. )fll}l ... 1 $1)11 A l!DJ ( • 7 I 5' 5 s 1 t I, I J ;~e1:'1 llolsa A,., TEMPORARY WORK TOMORROW : ~SJ.L=::s ~4i!'' CM Call"" appt. ~~.mi~~·•pplyln l'll'olnJ.'c::';,8:f.!,.~,SlN:S~· j;'~,;""" P<ll DWER Vendo<, "'""" We need men to accept temp. as'slgrunen'!s as: • GAS ATTENDANTS NllRSERY IOb-OutltandJna SALES -An ooe'nini ...... atly WAPTRESS, Graveyard, Mlscollonoolll ... -~::'C.~0~""°ir.~~u c~ : Cllt._4 '1)11ck Unloader Metro Car Wash parent t<JOperollvo nun<,.Y SP ARE T IME '"' In tho Irvine Ind:: ~·~,:i:~w~'1Ui ~/: USED bshl"" tadde. """'• I .,. ..... m-2164 alt 6. • Warehousemen -7 Growth Cll=-4 bcatlol.s ~oeeka.QUAI ~ -:-1'~~ .. ~ISI G -L 7 tria? 90niPtex for .. ••• CM ~~· ~!.:~~-,.1:'~ .. '• ~-• Btg &1 you Pii!lp p<rt~ MU1tet!nrf -~-,~--•,' S:RY COOK, EXPER. e & General Laborers CALL 546-1191 chW'Ches, schools, etc. Turn Sec.retary. Outlet in\IOlve \\'AITRESSES Y/ANTEO hardware, and man;y c:Oim' .. I (tUne. Must be clean I: Daily Draws Optional 2 OFFICE GIRLS your spare time into cblt customer eommunlcatioii, r-:e2"~t ~&'hrtlfull ~'1948 uema too numerous to 9: , nqat. lloun 9 am-1 pm MARAUDER MARINE ..._NEI DED by ~P~ communi~y tilingand.typ!natorone. t)('ln, All very,....,.._ .. 1•. Apply, Surf & Sirloin. 5930 Car Helpful But Not Necessary Need molders. Hand lamina-Radk> telephone dispatch groups Jll your area nu.ae regional and two area \\'M'TED llvetn hou9ekeeper 36Z \V. 5th St. ~ ~· w. e.out J.hvy., N.B. Apply In Person lion. 4nll Placentia Ave. CM Must be 25, able to drive funds U1ri>ugh the sale ol sales mana.gers, Require-& f compank>n 5 4 8 -6 3 3 O 9:30 to 6 PM. 1 WDa': • ~: MED RECEPT A ~ppJJ.~? Penon l'tntdy, candles. cards. sta· ments tor rotWdcratton re erences. J-larbor Blvd. 1,, between 6:30 & 9 am tomorrow · • · SSNT. YELLOW CAB CO. tlonery, ntM'!lties, etc . ~: Two years &ales WANTED an experienced "G A .. Doormatl · [;ENERAL LABOR MANPOlllrll INC f~~k:'.J;~!..= =~ 186 £. 16th, Costa 11-tesa Proven successful pfUG:rams St'Cttlarial e."\')>Cl'ience pabttt'r full lime. Call 0 way . ~ nu, • ,.... .... lt'Onl 3 ~ 1 rated company. typi11¥ and shorthand. ' 892-3870 J & H Paints. Guea:ts enter laUahJna' • ' : N.B:, C.M., S.A. 441 W 19th St C t u~ 35 pref. 642-4950. \lie train. No lnvestment. For Consideration '""'&t lecbreekBt .. Jbdl loYe I , Orange &: Irvine • •1 OI a m.l a P..1EDICAL Transcribe .OFFICE HELP-Wrl!e,. including phone num· ....__tact: \VHO WANTS TO WORK? .,. ~ too. 'o. Fees, Wee<ly Payoh<'<:k 1 ~!.'!'~~E~qi'u"ral~Op"ipo!"!rtuni!'!"'!!·t~y!""!E'!!m:Op.lo.;y'!'e~r~!"!!!'!!'! Froot Desk Recep;.,ru,f Part Time her to • P.O. Box "'· Canoga CENTURY DRIVE A CAB I ~'i:l' ~ :1rcue""":'n at j Day sh~ ,2nd shills & ! i S.A. area. 547·7164. SEAL'S FURNITURE Parle, California 91304. ·CllOOSE )'OUI' hours, ..._wk $+& 2S or doZ at $9.00 (tell i il;'aveyard.~ Help Wanted, M l F 710 Help Wanted1 M & F 710 . Cal~~262 Sales Management DATA SYSTEMS ~ss~~~~~lrOr ~'O~eu:. ~~ ror '$1'.is.s2.ooi. C9f.3105 eVd ., • P.P,S. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; MOBILE HOME TRNES e OPENING e TralnH bo ~lghlly handicap-• or wkenda. '• e INS'I'AU..ER --<>e! • 1, Il l · 2 1270 No. Kraemer Blvd, N ...., to"'"'• 1 door operators, -in~~ MACHIN.ISI'S NEW RESTAURANT \e "' tram young men Anaht>im ea '"'ean Appearance. 'OOKINO , , system, ex Per 1 e "c.ed . COMPLETE STAFF for career posltk>ns v.ith one Off R' 'de ~ ) Vts, retired. Age 21 to 70. ,.. , ' ; " DAVENPORT NEEDED L\fMEDIATELY of America's leading Life 1 lVl.'r'3l r••"Y· Supplement your tnconlt'. for aomemtnc to http ~' , 642-3490 --APPUCATIONS between 11 Insurance Companies. Some PllONE: 63.2-7000 Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a look A: teel betttrtT 500 Newport Center Dr. Suite 900, N.B. Set-Up Men II am &: 3 pm; Mond~, :P..tay Sales exp er I enc e ad· Equal oppor. employtt m/f tltty. Apply in person, our "'·allc·ln wbirtpool 7; Tuesday, May 8. \•antagrous. Prefer nlarried. Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th sauna, fOl.SowN by a fan-1 BROWN THE CANNERY Centra• Orange Count Y SEC'Y _ Recept. Boating St., Costa Me88,,. t11SUc tull bod;y toa.IUP• ' & 'SHARPE 3010 La.layette . Resident. Starting salary up business, 4 day wk. Some "rop.,tA.i.'J, lite llOUsckeeper. C:aU &fS.7502 any day nooa , ' 640-1970 2.f Cenb'al Tower, Orange INTERIOR DECORATING ~7·6446 STUDIO • !-'lual Oppor. Employer Needl:I combination recept, i,.~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!~ I bookkeeper &: sale1 person. f 645s66B6. • Newport Beach 1 to $800 .,..;th increases based \\'knds. S:IS-2253 Care roi· bed patient, liv~ til 4 am. I · on perfo.Mrui.n~. Phone tor I boerd ' i gmaficj PAINTtiR ioterview• 838-8791. SECU.RITY GUARD ,:;.y,'~~,f he ."'•~~~ * AUCTION * , GENERAL OFFICE fine co. needs versatile ~ ' Set-Up Men person to assist accountant. Good \Vages, Xln't co, bene- Grcat co-.,.,·orkers. Start ~ PERSC>NNa. fits. Penn. steady employ. S.fPS. Call Linda Ray, CCD\IV"'rt" ment. 2nd shift openings. 5'J0-6)55, .Coastal Personnel JU\J/1\..1:"..J•AGENCY REXNOR I C A¥•ncy, mo Harbor Blvd., F • F D N • QI ree • ff Positions Specialty Fastener Div, Temporary Jielp 500 Newport Center Dr. Suit(' 520 Ne,vporl Beach Gonoral Offlco Girl Micimvave sales, ntkt engr 3130 W. Harvard (Car &: Expenses to S18K Part time. Typing &: lite Acent/RE/CPA exp to S25K Santa Ana [MOTEL Maid!. Will train. bookkeep'g. APPLY, Suite Management Tme to $800 TI4f546.5IOO 2131585-2184 Apply \n person only. Costa 402 S..12 AM ONLY, 333.3 \V. F"/C Bookkeeper $700 Eaual oppor. eniployer m/f Mesa. Inn, Jrozi Harbor Blvd, Cbast Hwy, Newport Beach. Dental Ofc Manager to $700 ":::::::;:===~ CM. Gli:NERAL Help, pltlme Sec'rtno sh/~nabelmto $600 • ;l,;iiiii;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;;;;;;; •v•• 1rom 5pm oo. Drlvon Ge• 1 Secretaries 10 S650 MACHINISTS Needed &."1 Kitchen. Over Zl. Apply Typists to $600 p.,1 ta! ill, person, Me n Eds, 410 E. 1nven, Control Clrk $450 e part& manufacturer is 11th St, Costa Mesa Rccept/~n·1 owce $45() looking tor pre cision lmmed"1al I P/ . machinists: w/min. of 3 yrs e y I GIRLSll Time Jobs to $3._50 hr. exper. Must have own tool!\ \VANTEO t take part. I Loll Angeles Companies & heavy exper. on 0 • ln co: Moving To The Beach T • lite psychological expen-Sec'ys &: Gen'I Ofc to $700 Bridgeport, Verticle Alill & ypistS nlCl'I~ Mu.<rt be at least s:s". CALL: TRTSH HOPKINS Engine Lathe. / . -- ~.~e~nan~ Pru~~e::~~i Exp~~ii~~WSn. £~i{:~~~~~~fuir: =ts11~ec1a~ oos~931.aPeJJc ~~ i l\'IB~~a Bay Club FABRICS 1221 \\I. Coallt H1vy., N.B. \VOJ\lAN ~lotel P..taid \\'Ork, Auctions Frfde1, ,1:30 P:·m. '. 1m \V. Coast H"''Y·. N.B. 2610 E. Const li\vy., Crll\1. SECURITY guards full or !~~~:iic~ Resort. 6 day Windy's Auction Barn ,; SALES Lady, ntust ha\•e e:\· part ti.Inc in Costa ?.1.cAa 2075~5 Newport, CM 646-8686 : PARTS/Stockman nc ed ed, exp. desired but not re· quired. \Vill train. Phone for appt. 541)..7639 Equal opportunity employer PART-TlME help for donut shop, m(lrnings. .!\-lust be fast & dependable. 548--0&58, 557-9186 per i en c e in hl>tter area, Phone (213) 381-6407 -Behind Tony's Blda Nat'l. , ; ready-to-wear shop. Good SERVICE Station Salesmen I ](~} PLEASE· HELPI ; d l\t t ... _ ... h -ft· •c:NMi• . working con i!ions. 673-2990 1 ~s. U\: exper. "" a~e "°"'cs · Found In nl)' aanP• V«Y , ·cdl\1 ability. 1 t? 7 P.l\>1. a days: frightened and 1Ml'VOUI SALES -~Ii Fi: Prefer 2 yr also, experienced graveyard beaut. mother cat . (lft,1 : II I man. Apply: . A ti aoo -.a ... ...:. ' co ege or component sales 3190 Harbor Costa l\tesa n ques ''·hlte, gold patchea) _.. ua. 1 exp. Aft 12, 646--8897. • very sml kitten. I cu DOC ; I SALESMEN SERVICE Station SaiesnUln. keep \Mm and MUST FIND •• E:,:p'd, neat appearing. l''ull EUROPE,\.i'J Ant l q u es • TJ-IEM A HOME1 Plait ca8 Silver Springs Wate1· 1~de 6 or pa11 time. See Don, 700 Armolres, Stained Gius, bet 7 & 9 _ 548-1911. I This position req's i.ndiv. salesmen, $100 week West 19th Costa lo.I Benhvood, Desks. access pm .,. ... Yi/a knack to deal withe gua.i·antee plus rommission, ' esa Lge Burled 1.lirro1· 644-1658 '1 T\VJN ~ with f'rlmelL 11 PERSONNEL CLERK public. screen applicants, full tinic-. Part ti 111 e SEWING Machine 0 Pr 11 • or 979-0T<>S • Guaranteed, tor 1 more · I accurate typing. Salary to ava ilable. Apply in person: \Vomens spol'tSW(!ar. Top PAINT G years. Good q ua 11 ty $540. Call Gloria Gray, SlLVI'.:R SPRINGS \\IATER pay. Steady work. 890 W. IN S, clock.a, irons., or t hQ_p e d I c ~, 1' 540-0055, Coastal Personnel 9li.i N. Bala\'ia, Orange 18th St., Costa Mesa. pewter,~. copper.•183Tl Make otter ~n aft 5 i • Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, __ •_7"14: j32-£501 * Sl-fARP, attractive gal need· &~\e.f:~ri~ay HB No. 2 "'eekdafsJ 1,'nytl m c t; C~I. SALF:Sl\'IJ-:N ,vanted , ror ed to manage Newport \\'eekend!I. -~--; - Up 1o $20 per evemna-. JERI WHIITEJ\lORE 847·9172 ~t. 6-7 PM. 4il8 E. 17th St tat Irvlncl Cl\1 Apply In PersOn • Clerk Typist GIRL Friday, gen. ofiice Suito 224 642,1470 SHUR,LOK CORP. • Sr. Typist \.\1)fk, lite typin.si::, tiling etc, •~ ,., good phone wice. Age 21 or ,;.... '4f\l" ,,-... •tj 640 So. Senta Fe • Tech Typist over. Must have 80me e11:-JANITOR pvt country club. Senta Ana e R T I P ress S.t-up Man NE\VPORT BEACH per. $2. he. to •tart. Call for near beh. Work week Wed eprO yp St Appl. 642-4088 thru Sun. $2.2S hr to start. (1 Blk \V. of Grand & So. of • Secretaries Y.'ill train. Mwtt hav.e-me- cha.nical aptitude & some machine exper, Xln't bene. fits & potential. 642-1877. GIRL Friday, lite bkkpg, typ, For appt, 545-1161. Santa Fe Railroad Tracks) VOLT phone, good personality. JANITOR Equal Oppor. i:::Ei:::mi:::pi:::loi:::yei:::r~ J •'-~ n •• , DANI. I ~ Instan t Personntl Marl 5 • V'I 'O'tVV. Expcr. in indU$lrf. Wa.'C &: lliiiiiiiiiiiiii PRESSER, I!:'{PER. Pa.id vacation. C.M Call Jan. 642-3472 •. ;Jiand Crafts &: Goodies scrub floor. Run scrubber. 1'.L\CHINIS'I'S ' Temporary Service ""·!table for boutique, also drive forklift & lin. 75 1 ... ~. LATHE OPR 3848 Campus Dr., Suite lOO ~" l1lJ Ne\\'JIOrt Beach 546-4741 : Sewing Piece \Vork. Apply betv.•n 8 &: 12, L. 'M. Equal Oppor. Employer \Veil known interior design Cox l\fanufacturing Co., Inc., fihn located In the Design 1505 E. Warner, S.A. Equal Plaza. Nl?ll.'JIOrt B e a c h , oppor. employer. would like lo pre.1ew 'JUNIOR SALESMAN, samples or your \\'Ork to • display on consignment. Earn_ $20-$40 per \Veek Please call Jan ?.tarks, v.-orkmg after sc~I and 644...SJll bet 10am & 5 pm on Saturdays getting new REAL EST ATE SALF.S ?ilust do O\vn &et•Up & have NEEDED SUCCESS CAREER own tools. Good oppor. for TJ-iE BEST New or experienced. Join the advancement. XJ~·~ working HOUSEKEEPER \Vorld's largest and fastest t'OJX!s. Perm. position. Gootl IN CALIF 11. . . h 1 growing resale organization •·-•t•(•'I". • 1v~1n tn e P wt'th a ~·--rk of o·-~ ~ •REX" NORD 'INC n on -w o r k In g 'iiiolhc1· ollices '""~ beco;~ ~ 1\·flarge happy fa m i I Y • member of our Millionaire Cllstom(.'l'S for the Daily Ho1pltalhy Hoste11 Pilot. Thi.'i: is not a paper Specialty Fastener Div. ; Service route and does not include 3130 W. Harvard Beautiful new home in Club. :P..Iulti-million dollar Ne,vport Beach. Also light advertlslng program. Free cooking, laundry. i rolling. guaranteed licensing school. Excellent refs. req'd, Reply Excellent sales training. to Classified ad no. ~o Please call Vlrginla Jones Is , lookirla tor "'omen to deliveries o~ cc;>llecting. Santa Ana v.1lcome &:: lnterview new We have operunp Ill South· n4/546-5100 21.3J585..21S4 rtsidentl.. Sale• or ad· west Costa Mesa and South vfrtlsing exper. helpful. Hunt1~n Beach orily. equal oppor. employer m/1 lo.lust bave car & typewriter. ApP!.y now! ,968-9641. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box , 835-4811. . Costa Mesa, callL '2626· RED CARPET MACHINE NEED resPO!tSib?e manager RHl!on . 547"11)9;, HFiLHELP . N W htring for the Beautilul N w Hilton-Laguna Hilla. Housekeeper ~Ikid11 Hduseboy11 Front Desk Oe.rkll 6811 l\fen • PfP' Operators ~lers i ..... ee Shop Waitresses Ing Room W.altresse1 0'1¥!1 Room Walters CQcktall Waltreaes Banquet Walters ~boys "-Sl:~O!ef :;aucler n-y Cook 13roUer Afan $a.lad l\lan Kitchen ltelpel'll: ' NO PHONE CALLS. ' APPLY IN PERSON I i Hilton-Laguna Hills 2.S202 La Pa.% Road ; 11>-4 ; '.'HOUSEKEEP£R Efli:lish speaking. Live-in, 5 d:a11· Gen'I hsework, 2 sch.I Kelly Girl Ute Industrial Salclerers Need knowledge of N.A.S.A. requirements certified or co~parable. . Elec. Assemblers Able to \\'Ork under micro. scope. Needed Immed. 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. lrvlno 833-9107 Across from O.C. Airport I ~ KEYPUNCH Swing Shift (single) retired fireman or ---a:..::==-=----OPERATORS-policeman pref'd. 17 units. PLASTICS ~ Corona, 2 blkBJo beach. Openings 9n bot.h 2nd & 3l'd ,.:::=1 .::645-=-1624=::.· _ _,, ·=--- shifts for exper. oprs & NOW going through planned trainees. Clean lite work in expansion. Need e x p e r . modem ne-.v bldg, shift finish cabinet m a k e r s . borlus premium for nite 540-2860. 11>'0rk. Oppor. !or advance-.iiii;;iiiii;;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;iiOiO ment & xln't fringe benefits NURSING including profit sharing. CRITICAL CARE NURSING ' Apply in person 9-11 am & 24 pn1 Calil, Injection ~loldir!z 200 Briggs Ave. Il'\-ine Indus. Complex: Costa Mesa REAL ESTATE SALES FREE LICENSE TRAINING Famou11 Real Estate Lleens· ill.i Course 1!0\V available thru Tarbell Realtors. Free Placem~nt Service. Free Training Program. Earn while )'(IU leam. Call Al Sloan <714) 832·5440, on \V~nds (TI4) 832-7000. REAL ESTATE SALES New & resale. Newport &: •luntington Beach. HARBOR VIEW HOMES MAN to work full time in rental yard. Neat in appear. "'/neat handwriting. \VIII train. Apply moms, 19:11 Newport Blvd, CM • 1829 Port Sheffield Place Newport Bea.ch 83J..D780 MAID F /time. ~ prerd. Apply Personnel Ofticc 10 am·I2 & 2:4.~ THE BROADWAY No. 47 Fashion Island Nc.>wport Beach ORANGE COUNTY MEDICAL CENTER POSTI10NS AVAILABLE JN: -Cardiac Care Unit -Pediatrics Intensive Care Uni! -Neonatal Intensive Care Unit -Neon at a 1 Intennt'diate Intensive Care Unit -Burn Unit -Respiratory Unlt MAIDS WANTED -Intensive Care Unit wk·days only * Real Estate Sales * 2 Offices -Laguna Bc«ch PI.ACE REALTY 494-9704 Recept Typist For Newport Beach Person- nel Service. Must be good typi,t. Good t e I e phone personality. No exp er. necess. Cable 1'V \vork. Good pay, Beach Office. ' Neat ~p· E:~QUISITE Antique Grand TWELVE place I et t i ft·I ~. flexible hrs. Apply in pearance, shorthand & lyp-Pta~. Must See lo· Ap-China never uaed Reltored ·: person. Teleprompler, 2621 btg essential. Hours lO:SO to prec1ate! 67!)....0012 , 1939 Chevy 2riR , aedan .: \V. Coast Hwy, Newport 3: 30 Mon thru F1·L Salary Appliances 802 645-1368 ·• &h. $3.50 he. S<MlM. KENMORE E1e »•-" SHIPPING Receiving Gener· R W h $150 3 p u I c · ._. .... , SALESMAN ~ M,grs. m/~. al Production Worit, also ent •s er1/Dryer1 . c v ns nn aet I , $206 & up "'klY guarn if t . Cut'-divin 'ts $2. \Vk. Full maint. $275. B&W TV/lrteftlo ._ qua,].. No exp. nee. l\1r. Lee ramee ...:r, g SUI • • 639-l202 548-5846 ' ! 213) TTO-S543 Startlng $2.5() per hr. 825 * 'j .:.::=.:.::==·-----' W. 18th, Costa Mesa. Apply FREIGHT Damage Sale on HOBIE 1urfbd, c ,a mt r • SALE;S reps for floral rental 8 a.m. til noon. new Hotpoint &. \Vhlrlpool tri-pod, KE bldn tranllt, 'I . service.· Commission. Call r e rr I g I wa sher1/dryera Burmughl adding mach. 1 &4&-2612 or 642-2516 SH IPPING Packaglne Clerk 5.J5--0780 •.,:4!>1~-8894-='""' ~-=~--Pal Electronics. 6 3 91 · 1= SEA.i,tsrRESSES wanted to \V e 8 t m in s t e r A v • , K l-::Nl'-IORE wuher/dryer TENT trailer $000, stereo I SC\v at home. Should be \Veslmlnster. $79 ea. Over 200 waslwrs, $30, rolor TV $75, wood I good home sewers. Steady SUPERVISOR dryers relrig from $3995 ~lar,lnet ~. 962--5885 •! work for those who qualify. 545--07lio . . ""SEO llCYCLRS • ' Call 646-1910 bdlwn 9 & 5:30 Boat assembly for large sail· · . "'\I I SECRETARY-Rece 1 boat manuf. Must have $801 Yll. gtl~rn, de! & install. All Types * 642-1272 F Orthodo I. Of P , proven boat bldg back Late mod. Kenmore washer. FOR We ne-.v 2~"x311" ....._ • or n 1c c. Age .. · 636-2840· ~ ....-30-40 Newport a re a ground &: direct iine super. ' · molding, 996 lin. tt.., 1'c pc · 1 547~. ' visory exper. REPAIRMAN has washer, ft. 4~138 aft 6. __ i Islander Yacht Corp electric dryer&. dishwasher VACUUM i eaner, HCIOWI' Secretaries Newport Bead! Tho I rvlM C~mpany ·Hai Openings 777 W. 17th St., C.M. · $45 ea. 646:5848. Dlal-A-Matlc, $~. 510 Dt ( TEACHER,o:perent parUclPft· e DISHWASHERS, wuhen, La E.trella, San Cl,emat.. tion, pre....chool, Fountain ~· reblt, au.am & MEDITERRANEAN caam1t ' Valley, Must have nursery de v'd, 839--1620; 546-5218.· color TV. Plcrdt: Table A: sch o o I cert I! 1 cat e. * Kar!'s Appliance Setvlce,.. benches for aale. 831)..6111 I! 839-4229/646-3326. serving growing Co s t a Ml TECHNICIAN .1 0 r slen-Mesa only. 646-4980 1ceOaneovs ; dc1izing salon, full time, FRIGIDAIRE. •lde by side Wanted l20 01nega Clinic, ~1634. Refrigerator &: ~zer, 6 \VANTEO • Shirl~y Temt>Je TELEPHONE Intervie""~rs years old. CaH 645-3146 buggy, cereal bowl • re! , e e For Secretaries 1v/niin. "·anted, no selling, v.-ork KENMORE electirc dryer. art. Old Soulhem Paclflc 2 yrs. related experience: from yottr home ... Hours Xlnt. oond. Wlll deliver. $50. dinner am&. Dion:tll! doll · Escrow Secretary \Vllh exper. W/a bank. title ro. or Independent eSCl'O\V co. Typing fiO w.p.m. Finance Secretary \Villi background in finance. Emphasis on a.ccouhtlng oriented schedules & reports. Exper. in budgel preparation & fl nan cla I statements helpful. Typing 60 w.p.m., 10 key by touch. Secretary \Vlth background In manage .. ment training programs. 1 Girl office. Req's pleasing personality. Type 70, sh 80. flexible. Write Ciass1t1ed Ad ~ (cloAed mouth> • aood. ; No. 684, Daily Pilot, P.O. * 20 CU M' Admiral retrl reaaonable. Pleqe reply ~ 1560, Coata Mesa, Callt coppertone, 3 )Jean $l~: M..S.2368. . &16-2668 \VANTED DANISll Tolophono Sollcltora Bulldlng Matorl 1 I06 bookcase, helt .........,, Part·time work . Hourly -• 1 child's kitchen appllancu. , wage, Good worlclng envir-• SuR.Pws· B~ING 968-M91. ' onment. Excellent summer MATERIAL. 1000·1 Of NEW no;;RIENTc;;;;:;;;:AL...,-;;R"u"G"s".""'Prl=-....,. 1 job. 536-2591, 10-5. ITEMS! Doors. lumber, Pb' party will pay cuh tar all TELE. sp.les. Will train you . wood, alum sheetfna mold-sizes. 6~4 S326 I lo earn $25, daily, comm. at Ing, windows, etc. ' \VANTED Lu G GAGE home. 558st1271, BUILDERS SURPLUS RACK for Vw hue. Call .THE IRVINE COMPANY SEEKS 2406 So. Main St., S.A. il75'6lll6 Mon tbnt Sat 11).S n 4, !M6-1002 Mualcal lnatrvmonta m . Camor11 & SPEAKERs , g,u " A1teca tn ' Equipment 808 2 bmtes. New, Call Bill> • 64H810 . • NIKON F·2 BODY HOHNET Aceordlan. UO : -. S300 67.1-Sm hue. Good oondlUon. $S0. RECEPTIONIST Fumlturo llO Call 963-4062 , . . Offlh Furniture/ \\'1th min. 2 yrs exper. Must DOVER Shoni1 1 o l Id E I 14• t ctrlld.ren. Own rm, ba, 'pd vac. $70 per '\\"le. 3550, 7 6 ?>.fo's actual work exper. on keypunch, keytape or key disc device. Hours 4 pnt-12 midnite, 5 days a week. l\Iature. Must b1:f exper. Full -Emergency Room time. See Personnel Mana· ger. Tearhing hospital, Univ. or Calir. Irvine affiliated. Con· tinulng of education with Critical Care tutoring. Well supervised in service train· log program. Advanced step appointments available with appropriate exper. Calli. RN Required. have front off l c e ap-tru:l.t-v.'"d, dbl hdbd & tram@ qu P• 6"' ' VOt. T pc a r a .n c e . VI vack>ua S25. Nite Atand $25, ladiea EXEC swvl cbn: SlS-25 "'-· Instant Personnel Xln't benefjts & \\'Orking pcrso11ahty & ab!Hty to ban· d~~ f100. Mirror $40. chrs $8/J2 DeW $Xll95 Off iiousQCEEPER -ca.re or lPrne & 3 children . Jtlbn..Fri, Turtle Rocle area. Gwn trans. !)79.3942 or aft 6, Apply In The Personnel Department Monday • Fri. 9 am-12 Noon ~EPER / Prac, PACIFIC MUTUAL tJW Nurse. Live-in or 8 hr. 700 Ne\vporl'Center Dr. !ibltt for euest ho m e . Newport Beach Iltfm>t>C"' required. Call ~KITCl!EN~!!'!!!!'!"'!'!IELP!'!!l'~!!-!!!!!!!'p!!!!nrt ltf2-&Sl lime. Apply ln person Sam's ~~ USEKEEPER, live-in. Italian Market, 1909 Harbor i"me Engl.iJh. Own nn & Blvd., C.M. w. 2 dilldm. $175 mo. _ ___,=~~==~-lj4Hlri LEGAL SEC'Y Balboa Bay Club 1221 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. MAID -P/TtME Hou.sewU:e pref'd. Call in person, Huntington Shores Motel, 21002 Ocean, HB Maintenance . MECHANICAL MAINTENANCE MAN Temporary servtce: contls. di': busy d~sk. . . l\fen 11 dreuer $125. 1..ge Sup! 867 w 19 CM.642-3'(18 3848 C ~ S . 106 Xln I \\'Orking rond1t1ons It naugh chr $'15. Red velvet -;cio:;;:s;::::;;;;;:7,';f:.~3::;./ ampus v<., "'1' Call Mrs. Smoot co. bcnelit8. .wag lamp m 121 go?d MUST ncrillce o~ dealc A Newport Beach 546-4741 vinyl chr# Sl0 • .1.4" steel desk match.Ing credema, OtJJ, Equa? Oppor. Employer 644-3389 Or Ca ll 644-3389 & Ille cabinet $l5 ea. Gu 644--0635. RECEPTION1ST 1, typist, 644-3317 Btwn 9am " 12 noon logs $25. 64Gs:l668 TY""'P"'EWRITER""'="'"'"RoyaJ=,...,,s-"'-"' . accounting back gr 0 u nd Be 1-BEAOT. mahogany dining danl $CS. 510 De t. ~ h e I P t u 1 . Work ~:eek twn 9am & 12 noon only I ~ room aet. 1 leaves, 6 Estrella, San Clemente. I' Cootact Donoa Zsd""he Wed-Suo. 9..s. Mesa Verde TRAINEES ,_back chril, fupp pod, Pi1nos/n....n1 1261 1: Country Cl b ~77 Mrs SECRETARY, administrative Newly reuphol.itered cJub'--':'.".'.~=,..-'----.;.;;;:1 (714l 633-9393 Myer. u · • · to assume responsibilities or Wi).l train dependable V."Omen chair Child' 1 Q111'111 HOUJ •• Ext. 697, 6jO or 336 1 girl oUice of manufactur· lo become lnjection molding rocke'r &: mile' Ca~ ftlllft 101 City Drive South . RECEPT. SEC'Y ing c.'Oncem in Anal1cirn re. operators. Day shUt. Must leave no. for ,ippt. : M&--0231 after 6 PM. n1anager. Good S/H &: typ-O\\'Tl car be able 10 stand DECORAroR Mo v Ing r pl ·Zin untu , "~~ li · Fee Paid. Beautiful prestlg· HOU~·"'"" ve-in, lo r Alto ed t ngtl.sh apealdng, 5 day us o c. rney ne s in- week. start at $45. 640-064i7 dlvidual w/bllBiness like at. Orang~, Calif. l\f.D.'s office part time. Call porting directly to gt>neral be neat, dependable, have · Don't buy any r .. J An affirm e R E c E p TIONJST/SECRE· ing skills required plus rnthie shi.ft. SI.SO per hr to ~e~ Orating. cwito~ ~~to :iend~ Some nlUlwright exp er. action oyer TARY i\ge 3CHO. Apply In knO\vledge of bookkeeping start. Raise ln 30 days. Love furniture at cost. 2 shops For inlO:rm Uon • prcI'd. Should be thoroughly i:mmmmmmmm::I 3'95 2nd s La pref. Min of 3 yrs exp. Apply 1 pm-4 pm seata. Glau top, lg cof. Co iact T ~-....I : familiar w/mills & lathes. i person, t. Iii:· B. a.o; adn1inistrative scctttary * Ornnge Coast Plastics* fee table. Unusual dining n . ~0:a. ~Jcb. ' Jobwillrun 80% machine NURSING RENTAL AGENT required. Hou" 7''0-4 . 850Weotl8thSl. ~·Many aoUqu.,, C tM-•·-1 ~-; tltude. Great benefits Jn. tft 7PM eluding profit sharing. Start IHoutekffper, T/tlme $650, Also Fee Jobs. Cail ;,.. ·Call 549-3061 Gloria Gray,~. Cout• maintenance, ~% plant J Salary open. Call 9j6...2Q90 Costa Mesa, Caiit or 919--07$ Ml UI c .. rvla maintenance. lo.hat have STAFF ..,.. TRAINEE for appointment for in· PAIR. of annle111 orange Newport Blvd. at Ha.n. own hand tools. Long term · :P..1ultt.M11Uon Dollar Ren I tervle\V TRAINEE for ruM::ier hose upholltered occasion a I Costa MHI. JI contract. Nu RSES Est.tie Develop n1 en t Se<:retarics $50().$1000 products a111embly. Good chain -w/tall be.ck11, like _ _ , Corporation hu an opening Clerk Typists $400 oppty for advancement Call new S35 the .Pl.tr. 541)..2279 BAIY GRA'"NDS-'. iffOUSEKEEPING. LITE al Penonnel Agency, 2790 Aftemoon1 Mon thru Fri. Harbor Blvd., CM. tiu" have car. 6'4s$94. IJTE HOUSEKEEPING HrUSEKl'lEPER !or ~. & """' of 2 mtal? boys, clustve motel. r CdM 61S-3998 aft 4 pm . . *** ~ *** LIVE-JN companion for HOUSEKEEPER A: maid, widowed msn. Lite duties. temp., dub work, 12.50 per Prefer older male or Ts., In Costa Meaa for a Girl Ft1 • F/C Bkpr sum 54()..7639 . aft SPM Now.. to S1 I: versatile woman or man lOQO/o FREE Equal opporturuty emplo~r *Luce new!! HERCULON lain .n'!o~P mode~on~ ! ORANGE COUNTY with a minimal of""" aod TYPIST sofa & loveseal, also vh\y! Grand PiMoa ln>m v.._ J; M E DI CAL CENTER busine!s background. U~~:fir~ NntionoUy known firm offen aofa. lolust •a c r i 11 c e ! Thete and~ 1DOl'.t: ~ ' f .. Appl)I Wed&. 720 w. ~ female. $150/MO. room & ve Balboa board. Apply In peraon. 226 " · Cabrlllo St., Costa J.tesa " INSTALLMENT attemoons. I· LOAN __ MA .... C .... Hl .... NIS .... TS~ I 3303 Hatbor,·Slo B-2 Costa Mesa (S. Diego Frwy llarbor Exit) 979·3660 !:, CLERK I • f _ -UNITED-'. f~ALIPORNIA BANK ! . '7902 Edlngor Avo j, ;, Huntington Beach , 147.2511 ' ' I Equal Oppar. Em(lioyer -"Wted It A ·Reap" r '··:rn.n lreuurea lo lraJ;h . 'l)trt1 ""'" lnlD cub -CALL Dally P11ot A Div. of Courte1y Temp. Service Inc. Needed for the following: e ffydrotel li-fAlNTENANCE ~ ... h1eer, e ProWa """' e Milli,.-M.tchln.e1t days. F/ttme. Pel'90nntl Smttil Shop, Work. 50 hn aept, Hoag Hosp, 'NB week. Good bene.tits & MAN train for window tint· "'II.Its· AeromU Englnetrtnr Ing lMtaller. start $2 hr. Co., 1409 E. St. <krtrude ~llM!s monthly to M.60 ttr Pl., S.A, within 1 yr. Over 25. Tall, 5*1262 "°""'""t. _,64,,;4;cSccl!H"'.'--,~-~ I MANAGE Apt..-Older Cpl . "\Vhlte E1epbantl" over-ltandy, bondable, Newport nuuuna YoU1' h:xiat? TUm Jtght.s. R.mlme to l2427 them into '1Cuh" .•. -sen Ventur& Blvd, Studio Clty, them tltru a Dally Pilot Calif. 9160! or coll C2!3l chwlfled ad! m .. ta or ru-9811 I ' ' ' THIS JS A PERMANENT r:u!.2Jl8 Newpot1 Beaeh outstanding oppor. tor ad· 675--0869 WaRichs Music "'"ii: r -fmmrdlate Staff Nurr;e POSmON .J'"N vanccment. Good benefits. * * * SOFA & Loveseat · \..._,, 1 Posi1ions Available with an opportunity to SECREfARY $650 Sta11 $490. Call Unda Ray, never u.te<l, booth for SlM'. South O..t Plua ~ -En1ploy from PMs &. Nisthts tecei\'C personal recogTII· Good k"U ~ Coastal p I 968 7910 all tw -Con1prehcn.'1ve, p s y' c h Uon. g 1 8 -' """" er~nne · ' usu y me. EXQUISITE • "•~~ West.cliff Agency, "'""' Harbor Blvd, MATCHlNC 90fa &: ~ Pl ~~-C.- program STARTING SALARY Pcrsonhf!I Agen<'y CM aea• 8 monthl old. n~ of· ~.·, 1P..~ -~ to ~ -Univ .• of ca1u. Irvine $8000 1~1 E Edi .. DC'"-P~~· e UI~ affiliation Send Re!Wn\e, In c I u d Jn g w · ngm-, S.{\. TYPIST -Receptionltt. fer, 01'1(' or both. 673-3500 -Full & Part Time Positions salafY history: C?i.tark III Center) Gen'I ofc exprr. Need«i inl· CUSTO!\f sofa 2 swl el hrs Se!rtlnt Go0ci1 iii Available Writd', Cluai!led Ad No. 648 54z.as.15 nlcd . CAii 5"<>--8365. Equal BR Rt club chr v ~xei PENN .: = In surgical units & PC'dia· Dally Pilot, P.O. Sox 1!560, SECRETAnY - Girl Friday Oppor. Emp\Oytt. cheat. Mucb more! 833-2581 ll).(I Iri~~etL trlc general service. Calif. Coeta Meu., Calif, 92626 for Interior Di-signer, lite UNDERGROUND CATV ln· DANISH wal t .. 2 f S:J3..i~' ~ 11 R.r.~ Ired shorthand. l'ICt'Urfl.tc typlnit. slallera, exper. Trainee• nu ..,rop ea I requ · · TIME FOR call 9 •m to 6 vm. Laura eontldored. 642-3ll!O. ~ tab?e. 4 cha1ts Sl25. 640..0192 TV, Rtdlo, Hlff; • ; Contact DIM!ctor or Nursing FOR tCTION M!rlo & "'""'· 1714 l w.. Cout Hwy, N.B. Gar ago Salo 112 St--' (7141 6.13-9393, ext 336 • • • 64541706. Teleprompter, Equal Oppor 11 DA LY PILOT Uk• to Trade? Our Trader's Employer ' MOVIN<;: AllM>. '66 Poot & STEIUOO• Unclalmod lfl3 1 101 City Drive South I Paradise column ls for you! y ER s AT 1 L & 0 ff 1 c e v.-omen 1 c1oth1f111: sr 14-16. GIUTard model, fl.ID · a Oranee, Calif. CLASSIFIED ADS s 11,... 5 days for 15. Cal? •~!/reoept tort @rl 0m,,. !1!!J'.Jlarbor CM. -· iumtob?e, AM/FM· .. fbno ' An afflnnstlve .6 2 5 todg .' .• &U-J678 1 'yr. t:itp. C&ll .for appt. ~94. receiver, full ~ air action employer 4 • 6 78 "Make Room ~·or Daddy'' 541-228.\ • "1RNTT1.TRE l !\tlS<'. Startll ~~~~ t;rw t'* Md t!!!!'""'""!!!!'!"'"'""'""""'""~ I Fat Profit la attained "''hen ••• clean Olll lhe g1rt1ie Fat Profit I• •tt.alned -~ Fri. 12 Noon thru Sunday. Bnnd new ua 1n I::':-: The faatest .draw ln the Weit. you IC.II throuih result-:ret· ..• turn that junk into cub you .en tbrouab l'l!aUlf..nt· 31.l ~le-sa Dr •• 01. l\llll'9.n~ Ori& prb !!i ... a llallY Pilot Claalirled tAl!W Da!Py Pilot Clwl!J<d wtth a Dally Pilo1 ct .. 11rled tloa Dal!y Pilot Ouaffled COUCH & CHAI R oow, $93 •. Cuti .,. • A_d_.~-~=c.· -----' ds. 6CW67I ad. c.JI 64)-6678. Ads. &42-6618 Brown. $35. 6'2J670 pay111tnl1. 89:MG0l ' a 0 77 -' 7- • , .. . ..;; - i . , , I l 11 7 I I f l I :1 ' • ·I . , • • . I " . J --.. . ~~--.. I~:~ J ·_,,.._~...:._·lli ,l''·~--·· ·I~ .-.... ~11 _.._ .1§J1~L;i-;;;i-;iiii--.;:~ 'bdw, Htff, ~ -· '1·U-.. iTI_,..,( ......... ~.. . ,... C.J:J-. :~ ·-Antkj-/CIHsles "Alltoi, I....... ·-·Imported 9111Aum, llllP"r1od 910 Autos,1Used s-. -• ....,,. ......... - . -~ .. . ~ CONTINENTA~~ -L, --~ • 1.<11llh -BEAVT. -!ik., 4sF PVPPr.Q:: uo·-. ..;._ lBll FORD ~-1• ,.: ~ _ ' M:l:A.~OMEO . MERCEDES IENZ VOLKSWAGEN _ , • ,.,.,..c1e._-.A11 eat & ltltten, lqondft ~----~~3IO.HO~ '"" w/'U> Mere eoa!ne, now .... ' · . atall-mod<la In -& oo iir-can't lloOp·. Help! . "$1), ·~· ~ ~-~ ~· .~lator. need• ... bod)' 1967 1~, ~ "64 MB 220 SE. Xlnl cond. '6fvw"sug.'Sunroof & need• '!r 4 ~th~~·.!!! dllplay.Pri<N-lhaD· 54&-'l881 • _ --~.Bull -Terder, --•11»=.fu; work. Muat .. n. . or ·-ll!.-.P...,.car Perfect mecllan. am/Im someenginework.$150.01· ect, er.........,..-~_with 3 YT pie-~ ~-~ l'l>odle, Cb1lluoluta,, bill. II ........, u:;.'j -olfer,847.ftl after&& i1i1illaf'c01'!.W-1>< _. •Mich0b!·--6l«'i trade, 4!!&'~ _ cnll alt Spm. ~-" ~---! :i!bt.~YTJ\r~ colllo, 2 mo ;.i_ &; ;o,.b:~ ~ .. Save ,..neu-~ or ';O .;~DtL A For.I '2 ;,.. c~e. Plllue. call ·MG · '67 VW CAMl!ER.. COUG,AR ~ •• ooior onteona w/-Olli> WWett Ln. H .. U..c tlii. -8!"· 531-!I@ oa -Jiik<. <>nit ,$100. OialBi> ·-"' .; . oo)g.c . ' , ' r.i< tletalll , $825 919-1752 ·so XR1, 1a6ded. ~ -- oolo """"""' <offer good Beocb ~ .\11\EDALE Pupo AKC 7 e -e new u...., all or'~ · . --IMW "66 VW Fa.otback. oound """" .... .. thrU 30 Aprill ABC Color D~G litti~ jlupp ..,.. per • 1bc,w Wat ' John's R_... Cyclei many -em:u ~ C:Ohd •• ,-'69 MGC, Must tee and driye engine & body, nev.' radials prlwte .. party. Daya, ..,,. TV 19046Brookhurst beiglelpoodl•,6-ksol, dlamp1r.cl<IH ·l7 U: *IULTAtO'* siwatter.&21194. . sALIE•>tlMWLEASE 1peclalperfecteood.$!500. Must..U.494-6782eves. 5135, ...... oo--. -;. -~ & 9021 Atlanta lookli>lr for ,_.., !557-40lt 567-ml ' HEADOUARTEas "OR . ' Ca•h ealt 646-81ll8 Now! VOLVO DODGE ;•~' ~Huntington Beach art I pm . -Git.EAT Dane Pupl, AKC, DESERT, MOro-x. Tr '51 CHEV PlanJp, Travellng ~this aum· MGB ' ·• ' : 1973, roo Watt FEMALE w~lte ... ~~· 8 Ch., · tawna le b'l'1nd1ea. AceHeoriea. A real cherq}. $795, nierr We can arrange tor . -1967 DAR,T, hrdtpp, V..i. QttodrUOnlc. Garr a rd ~.::;:; ~~ Grand Sire "Cannibal". Harl>o< .. w~<~M. BANKERS oyTLET . delivery ol lhe BMW o~yolll' VOLVO SALE' pis, auto, alc.-liood mocteJ, systemizcd auto ~ ~-· , ¥"'':' Reas. 968--'ll16 6t6-e5 or ~ 2151 Harbor, Cada Mesa cboic~. inciudlng: ahlpping '69 MGB' <'.?T, AM./FM, lUUJ, • ning rond. ST"JO. 6.~ • tumfable. AM I FM I MPX 6 . . OOWE tern, 1 yr, sable, J'OR SALE _ 1968 Honda 551-1915· by phone. Detiv~ 1a av~· new· ~ial.s. $1600. DlY1 • '68 DODGE Charger te1"Q, lb«lvedr :...! Q~a~'4':7; 3 ~-uMos, •• ~ old~ . ped. must .... -with CL 350, 8,000 DI!. Good -Roc--·tlonol able . In most foreign 644-3185 eve• 548-5008 Hu· ge Savings ma ... air, vinyl to~ .. $llil&: • tape ~·. ~ "'~-• chtldreu. Best offer . dltlon. New llaklr, --·-OOWl)ries. PORSCHE * 67'>-1059 " unclaimed. still brand ne~ muc:. Ne«t( · • homt. Lovable 540-0583 tor -. Ju.It ttmed 'Up Vehicles 956 Bob M'c.Varen a.utborized 1 ·Iii box and gu.ranleed. Orig &!2--0552 . -• -·--,. • BMW J)ealer ovrn Ifft FIREBIRD ' . price $t00. Now $185. Cash Sn.KY Pqppiea -(7 wkl) !?,ect:rl<\~ r. ~ orAbest ... 850 North Beach ·Blvd. La pO~ 91'°"' APRIGRP Ei'll '1V .. ·.' or small payments. 893-050l IRISH settei: 1 Mt~ r[&bou.t '4 Int ell pets. Ez groom, PO ..,uer. ~ . =:;:e ve., . Habra • spoiler am!!Jn, ma g't - *SPRING'SPECIAL* rv~;::.~5.J1~fe:~ .. •bed,noodor.551-2821 ~A::~eo.u~~nglO 4 whiel ~~bar, can-879-5624or522-5333 ~~~ lntenor $3,300 '72 ·& '13 ·~1~?'°~t·~:' Rolwllt-Plcture Tube · 7 Week old Kittens. ~AUZER Pups, ahol>, -Campognojo parbl VOS rop, $2950 . WS£ A 1961 PORSCHE Super 90 ' J.9,000 m;, 13700 • ~ •\ ' $8S-21'' or 25'' Color Long black hair, box: trained. 8 . aemri·~ light•, rackl. Opaque ~ ·~ ~~J1'4 whl dr $1250. Roadster. Silver. Must sell. VOLVOS '68 FIREBIRD 400. R/s, * 2 YEAR WARRANTY 963-4769 { . wired letters. 25 mL 1 for BANKE8S OUTLET Only $1400. Call wkdays on· disc, wry good cond. Must Installation Available BABY bunnies & kittens:, au oie ~i•h !iheep Dog Ii':" 1200 or $315 for both. Phone 2151 'Harbor, Costa.Mesa 1973 ·BAVARIA ly, 833-3362, ask for Steve. PRICED AT , sell. Eves 839--8105. R1ce.'r-Te1evtlion Service colors, eome caUco &: red. ~~ .... ~~ppt.t ~444 ' 61J.5TI1. 557-1975 '64 Porsche Sup 90 FORD formerly M•sa North C'"t" 646-3513' • . ' ., BICYCtE SALE CREVIER BMW $2400 PR'.E DOLLAR . . 1 Bick S. o( Baker 546-6002 e To giV&1o•gOod bomes: 2 • -NEW 10 SPEED ITALIAN FACTORY B;ullt street type Sales. Service. Leasing ~1481 after 6pm DEVALUATION GREAT 'CAR! •70' LTO 'open &-5 C& days) fluffy orange kittens, T I ,__ ........ I[•* I BICYCLES $59.95. Beach ~"llffntwl:nd& ;.!,~ 208 W. Isl SI.. Santa Ana 1967 PORSCHE 912. 5 •pd. PRICES! · Squire wagon. 32.000 ml, weeks, 64z.t846 , . --~ . tr.. Bicycles, 800 ·E. Balboa ·u i2oo ' • f3:5.4;171 AM..-FM, stereo tape, Weinakeoverseasdeliverles new tires. $2000. Al80 '67 RENT TO ~WN Blvd., ~boa. 675-7282. m~ ·~ 640-0'7i6. Visit our new home! peberltecttt .. LowDmiles.551372001~r &;elt-_YouJlBuylt £?,,,n~ntat, all· power . TV'S & STEREO '71 .YAMAHA 250 MX Xlnt ' 0 er. ays -~·: l ~. $10 I 11~1 .... h, Gonerol 900 oond., 3·rall trailer, be!mel, ~·· Raco, Rods 959 & eves s.lG-1!161 4'"'••11 •...:1 '69-FORD LTD, 4 cir hardtop, t'm .... _... · boots, ape'.c prlce.Sfnl takes :10 PORSCHE 911T Targa. 4 lU\Ul'o Ulfl8 ale am/fm stereo rad~ -' all If get before my busbaOO '66 CHEVEI.LE SS 396 eng., Spd. 44,000 mi's, BRG. 1QL10 vinyl top. delux int, pri pty. No Credit Check k 9' RIGH speed inflatable leaves hospital. 644-6470 4 spd, mags, 2·dr $750. Mags. Immac. cond. $5i50. lft 5:30, 897-6226, $750. Free Delivery. Free Repair Cob · *$2 boat, fioorboar•" & oan. MOVING • m""t sell. J.970 ROY CA.RYER I 4~· 1966 Harbor. C.M. 646-9303 MAVERICK, A-1 lhruou~· Monthly Rentals Available Only u.eed 3 times, ~. Honda CB350, Xlnt cond. nu '63 PLY 2 dr, J>OS trac, lll't • nc. '60 PORSCHE Carrera, 72 VOLVO . fact _air, autom .. ~ de' Open Ev11. 543 4444 PLEASE "EL.Pl 642-3776 after 5 pm. trans, $450. or best offtt. Kar Trans, headers, Hirtz 234 E. 17th SL $2300. Must see to ap-. . luxe, low mi., 1 owner, xtra '• W ANu:n: Good used Avon fi02W Iris, Corona del Mar manifold, Holy carb,. dual Costa Mesa ~ predate. Aft 6, 613.-0800. 4 dr sedan. Sacrifice iro:>. whb & tires. $1650. 4~· AM/FM 5I'EREO. with 8 track, 2 speakers, romplete. Pay off balance $129.88. $6. monthly. U.S.A. STEREO, 3721 S. Bristol, S.A. 5'£-<)420 ' 179 E. 17th St. C.M. 645-2442 F~ in my garage ~ Vrey Redcrest. KAWASAKI, 360 -'70, dJrt feed, mags. recent eng. ·n BMW 2800 CSA, pigskin PORSCHE •n, 914-4, I\e . t.o.p, Pvt Pty 96().1072 aft 6. 1970 T-BI rd• Blue/w~ frighl"1ed & "r""" beaut. ' Call 842-7650 biko. Compl•tely cberrted. o~A~KERS' o"l}T'L·t,.5°· Int oomPl•tely recond lhnl tire'-good cond., $3100. Autos, UHd 990 vinyl top. lull pwr. ~ ;:;t~) =her~ Boat1/~r,ne 160llmJ~onpb,.dbtt~~1·""M~st 2151 Harbor, Costa Mesa out, super cln. tm1Stereo 548-4955 ,. . BUICK peberll6eet, l owner. 645- •mt kitten. I ean Mt, 1reet> Equip. 904 ,. · -.. sys~· 557-J.97> tape. 31.000. 17.500. 613-5m TOYOTA -~•~m'------ them ~· and l.!ll:n' FINO MOiOf Homes · CAPRI . • "61 FORD Fairlane, 29,000 THEM A HOME! P2ae call 'S•lt/Rent 940 Tru_._1 962 . TOYOTA· SALE '70 Buick Riv.er• act. miles. l owner. $990. bet-7 pm a: .. g.pm, 548,188l. %OZ. Spinnaker, hoist 40'-""--Power . Steering, power 536-3832 aft 5 pm .. 4 SEAL Polnt....Slarriese kit-646-1151. 27' TRAVCO 'TI DATSUN pickup w/alr , Brakes, Tilt wheel, on1y '67 FORD Sta. Wgn. delux Walker Log, like new. ~ AT t 8 .. --•--·~·.-in apt 25' UJS<X)VERER rond., large wheels, step Pr•Devaluetion 39,CXXI miles, Mag wheels, p/s, p/b, air, A·l coDd: 84 , ... 7 -..,,MwlCC,IUIJ, ow • ...., ece, 11~·.11, a. ower 906 • PRICES "· ~-d V I 1895 "'0 ••- I I '""t,:Jll.1--DU rr ~"22' CONTINENTALS bumper &-Six-Pac cabover , · l"UI .... vu • ery very c ean, , "'""="'"' ''"to You S 20' PRll)E i: JOYS Camper. Sleeps four adults. 9n1110 NEW (S75BHT). 1';969:;::"'FO""RD~4;...,d,..r._,429~e-ng-_I I<------' Dogs 854 22' CARAVEL w IM ere VAN CON>ERSI~NS Icebox, '1ove, boot, roof BRAND Nl:W Mn $3695 Xlnt cond. S800 or maJre of. 00 _,.. cruiae1 r 110, blg_rad.whl trailer, """ e s.rV)ce e Rentals nck. $2350: or offer. Will . . t-•• DAVID J. PHILLIPS ·fer. 557-- 3 Lines, 2 TlmH, $2. GREAT Dane, """•· Fawn, cab n, head. lo. like nu. * Da In * separate. 496-4123. . '73 C·APRI 1972 =..::::;.~:;;:;··~==-! I·-------AKC .. g. ~ months, $75.' $ 6. 5,o 0. 64!>1401 646-n!J. n-r c. '68 ll TON Ford Ranger, BUICK PONTIAC OPEL,""'· LINCOLN II 8lJ'2-3'M6 •. " . I (Dort F) 13Sm Harbor Blvd., G.G. camper Spec. Hvy duty lmmecliete. 0.liverJ' · 546-1975 6t•~=to~~'! .. "\:; Go~~fw~upl ~10utb~HJ;; Next t.;3'G.~Dals\m :J;'~· good cond. 839--0183 GUSTAFSON ~~ .. ~~S.~dlo~ct.,:. .,! s11erk Custom '"'.l'.1;."'~,M~°'Ui!; ~~R& :.::,=. ARC Reglite~ Pekingese ;::·~ .. ~8~ 155p or MOTOR 'HOMES '67 FORD PU.11> ton. long Uncoln-Mercury glass. CTE21$25006JS0763 >. Br.I ... '~,k,~i:; \;"..:;:,, 8'Q· ~b',:.!;. 8 wks, very cute. To a good pt1ppies. Show atocJ:<. 7 wks 1967 27' CRUISER,• laaded! Apollo, Pacesetter, 8 a r 0 n, bed, real good cond. $1095. 16800 Beach at Warner tilt wheei, Super clean car Power Seatt, Vinyl Top, .. home. 495-5592. . old. 84.2-ll28 $4000 cub & Take over 5% Jamboree, RObinhood -Call ~7102 842~t*ingt(}1fJ5~-5544 C646AFV )$. 1795 leather interior, white .~ 1 ADORABLE black kitten AKC Afghan pups, 8 wks., W.00 loan, pymnts $107 mo. We've got 'em at y..,, 963. ''Home of the Viking'' $AVEATNOW. walls, Air Conditlontnc netds good home. Call shots lo wormed, ,. ... to 846-2634 · KENDON DAVID J . PHILLIPS (ZSN408) . 14989. dlr'. 84IY.>819 good home•. 645-<067 25' CABIN .Cruiser. Suitable MOTOR HOMES ·;:,, FORD v-8• p/s, p/b, DATSUN BUICK PONTIAC OPEL, iJlc .• ~-~;:;;;;,· =,.-,~---l FREE Basset bound, 18 MIN. Schnauzers 12 wks old, for holding a mooring. $!i,Ml. tu~i~nt•cf.1ulti~: ft.a ..... La1.:1 546-1975 .. ·n LINCOLN 2 Dr, V-3 ~n:.,Jnvos children. Call AKC, 3~~7-451! 675-7158. 107 N.=, S.A. 557~22. l>ATSUN ~ WllD '61 BUICK =.J:"i>o"!.'™i:: V'I~ 18' -GLASPAR, Sea fa l r 1970 F:QRD .Van -New titts NEW 1973 -TOYOTA white side wa}U, Air eor:. TTJT£F£T7 J£7A911 ~ ledan, 10 hp. mere, lrg 19•0 p•~ •nn~w. ·22· ··II Rtms good. $1850. or best of. . . 2 ,5.,V&-81, AtuRto. R~cl•ls250n . ditto•'•• . (988. BUB) •"- -------- --Wbee1 traU.r; 836-7915 ,. ~~~ -I 11 54 "'"' PICKUP 1966 H bor CM ·-9303 ~ . n uns •-· · ·-~ contained, --'rator, root&: , er. Must.se . 8-.l't:hl ar , . . O'tl1' • • .,, ·~ • dlr M.2--8844 Boots, s.n · · 909 eng. air :;;;;;, root dock '67 FORD Van Camper 289 NO DOWN '68 CORONA-J.900. Radio. ,59 BUICK~~portati "MAVERICK . A CONVf.Nl£NT StiOPPING BEWING CUIDE FOil ntE CAONlHEGO. For on od In Women's World C•ll Mory lath 642-5671, .. 1. 330 Sew and Crochet Knit A Y'5tl CATAMARAN nL!on, . all wnadder, tle'1 ·crw:s, drps V-8. Ice 'bx,' stove, sink. t.:o 23 1 48 auto, Beautiful cond. $T;iO. car. Good. motor. Neown -::0-:"'.".':'.:'.::"'~;.;;..;_.;__J u-.& upholstery .. 8·track stereo $1400 64fr.2297 ""°' per mo . .<Or mo. 644--6432 ·~ alum & fbrgls. 20' lor\g, 32' & xtras ~ d. · · Def. payment price $3273.fiO. ·='""'=--~~---transmission & brakes. $175. ·70· MAVERICK R/J{, mast. $1175 firm. Complete. tell.~ · ~-.ce to 'TI CHEVY VAN A.P.R. 14.34%. \70 "Toyota Landcruiser 642-4312 (5-9 pm) · cond. Good cond ,St:anct Xlnt cond. 645-7991 eves. V-8, 350, clean, asking Xlnt co~ll.D ~~w book. '72 LE SABRE most optkms trans. $995. Pb: s0--1l08. 'T.I HOBIE Ca!. 16' ouper 1913 Dlocov<ror '-&mdlal fl'l50. *963-4769 TRIUMPH ~'918oneor837den!:.,,13100. MERCURY condition. GoOd buy at MotorHomes1rir'rent make Autos W1nted ' 961 u1.-~ $1325.. Call 1"'1. days ............... 1or sUmmer J9"IO RMERA llhal1> one '71 U<Drnno -·-•--' 496---6177, eves ·45'3256. riow. Phone-Mia.Bennet at ,WE PAY 1'0P OOU.AR TRIUMPH TR4A '61, Good C790CPG) brk ~ 1pa ··~-... ~ ....... ......_... FLYING Jr No 2194 3 ·ts Bob limtPre Pontiac FOR TOP'USED CARS ptckiJp w/air concl, Extras, mag wheels , I Tak~' = ~Welo mLO.·. sails. n-t· -u · .. ~ 892-6651 or 636-2500 ' If your car 'is extra clean, cond.. large wheels, step Ask :for Phil, 675-7118 . CAD 1 1 AC U'Clt ""lier Ol!'tl' ........,. , • see us first. bu & s · p hove ·----.;..·...;.;._,.,..-I putmue. Mlllt· Se 111. 673-3903 72% -3'.Y ESCAPADE BAUER BUICK mper IX-ac ca r '68 TRIUMPH 4 spd Trans -,.. ~3466 CA1r20 with mooring. Fully CUstom, air, all extras. By 2925-itarbOr Blvd. Camper. Sleeps tour adults. Radio · Heat;r <XNHl.52:) ·72 CAD. Coupe DeVllle.'FuU -'""M""'U=ST~A-.-N-G __ , •. 1 equip, 6hp OB motof. $7005. owner, sale or tr a de . Costa Mesa 979-2500 -~::x$~~r ~;. mi~ $1189 dtr. 842--8844. · ~~ Xln:ia~: !ve~ 5'9-2526 494-2142. 761 Temple Hills ·separate. 496'1123. VOLKSWAGEN wkends ~ •M• -------.....:! Or., Laa: B. ThfPORTS WAJ\'TED u•..-.-.o ·n MUSfANG VS, aufo, air Lido 14, Xlnt, 2 sails. trailer, Orange County's * * '69 Datsun 510, 2 dr.. '72 ELDORADO Oi.brolet & lo mi, Br-new tires. Pit: some terms to responsible FOR rent 22' Wi~. TOP $ BUYER r/h. xlnt running cond. $'1'95 VW' s u n roof &. leather top Aft. 6, & all day weekend party. $995. 675-6.349 Sleeps 6 air, self-contained BILL MAXEY 'tOYOTA or best ofter-557-2568 • s am/trn. stereo, tpe deck,' 979-4588 $.25 day 10c mile. Pho~ Be ch Iv Bo'1b, Sp..d & Ski 911 846-&133 18881 a BJ. MAZPA &.lr,etc.MU<tgreenAwblte. "71 MUIITANG, perfeei "R;::..;•nt=;.,A-Mo-to_r_H~o-m-•-1 ff, Beach Pb. 847.$ Pr!. pty. 56-3446. cond., auto, air, vinyl to;. 14' RUNABOtrr, Glass o/wood, Mere 55 hp ~ & trailer. Runs good. Can be aeen 223 Marine, B.l FI§HING Ski boot, 14', 40hp Johnson. Must sell. 673-2'05 lli Ceinpors, Sele/ Rent 920 24' HOME built camping trailer, great buy at $900. 499-4355 '72 VW Adventure camper. Xlnt cond. 22,(0) ml, Priced right. 675-2348 · We p•• •u•~er cash price• · NEW & USED "69 CP OeV!ll• Landeau, lull Many xtra.s. 494-%1-.• fo you V ~1on ~ ·-· * Me~• '73 Rotary * " r r •••• for cl•an !ate mod•l can & pwr air AM/FM "'"° tape OLDSMOllLE . * 531-6800 * truoks $66·MONTH 2 Big Locations dk leather int $2600. Prl p1y. RENT my new l 9 7 3 HOWARD Chevrol•t 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE _,,642--0;=-:"'129;:;;:a:::llc;6P::-7M:._-:-=,-I EIDorado Mini M 0 b 11 e Newport Beach " cl: ~~~~a~ 5 MINUTES ·68 CAD. Sedan DeVllle. ·=LD Toronado, all ""' H Sl 4 All MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree Fully equipd. Stereo, vinyl control, am If• ta:edeck~i'ra4 power. 13U5ss Hunt·., Beach top. $1950. 675-2733 stereo.• much more. u Rent ,or buy 24' Pace Am>w. JUNK CARS WANTEt! · , • • FROM COSTA MESA ;675-::..:28::;;12"=:--::c:-~-=--~~;mt. ~ ...= V~ rea71!004 "'~~1;;.~ed w/ I 1!lY top $$ for junk or .MAZ' D" A ·~~~ta~~..., oVIU.Ep•~-.· 644-"415 _x_u_=·--'~~"'-=·---I wrecked cars. n-t/547-4365. -.1 .......... '64 OLDS CutlllBI. VI~ T II T I 945 Blue w/white top best of· A · 16~1....:: ra •rt, raw Autos, Imported 970 fer. 673-5569. ~~~ =~ ~il~: ~e;1 ~~;:~~e~rtra~~ e THE FINEST IN 17331 Beach Bt. 842-6666 ~~ ~:: ~j~<;;) l:,l~. ~Jing all~ !e~N:ds ne:ea~~. Demand ;, good now. Mesa USED IMPORTS • MERCEDES BENZ 15 MINUTES FROM Europe. M""t sell. 846-9518 $150. ~between 9AV Camper Sal.,, :m6 Harbor, e THE FINEST IN '69 SEDAN do Ville. Cnrise "and=;::6P:.:M=:·.;""==..:::1Dr:..:;Jo1Ul=-•l Costa M•.a 646-4002 IMPORT SERVICE e 50 USED &· climate control, lo mi., PLYMOUTH · ,· 23' KENSK!LL travel trailer, Do yourseU a favor and oom• M. ERCEDES MISSION VIEIO AREA loaded! $3195. SIS-3lli. lu!Iy cont Twin beds. Im· see us tint. Open Tuos. ·10 COUPE OeVIU.E. All •• p· LYMO'~ ~· mac. Call 493-1089 . and Thurs. til 9, Sat·Sun ON DISPLAY ~ """ 2 cir. 0 -til S. xtras. Only 34,000 mi. $3600. WAJOn. Radio, beatlel'· h 197J TRAVEL Trailer, 20~i'. Sharp New Car Ph: 530-8540 snow tires.A "Smooth~ f:SS~td, air, awnmg. ~ KAN ALITC) Trade!-ins (S.A. Fiwy. East on CAMARO $175/ofler. -NTI · ,t - '73 CZ'S ON SALE NOW 16' .E~INGO trav·e1 2!00~~:::0 Comfng In Every Dey 1st St.% mi.) '68 CAMARO PO AC .'". If#<> ,_..-._" ,;;,., ~1:.:;:lgood oondltion 'fr,;), Ask. Abo~t our Unique COMMONWEALTH 6 cyl, g-' cond. $1290. Call \l§il V-... V W ·~ ALFA ROMEO Used MorcitcM1 LHM ~i'.'." •n Grencl Prix :. Cycles, Bikes 5-ltlrs 925 73 cz 121Mx 400MX Auto .Service, Ports 9491--------Plans MOTORS LTD. '69 CAMAl!O, ,.b!teng, new '= ... ~~ . .!:,"~ 73 CZ 250 ENDURO PARTS ONLY 'SO ALPHA GTB, Xlnt. House of 1111." Orts clutch, headers, am/Im. Bucket ..,.... AM/FM Pri pty. Stereo, On display at ···T' $1500 963-2627 anytim'e 17 CO) mU RaHye ' Flnancp. av~l, 10% dn 24 mo. FOR: SALE CHEAP Road & Rallye. 16 0·9 6862 MlhancSanheBte.-,AnaBuena Park SANT A ANA c' HEYROLET-. tilSFWiil ... . Join ete s Racing T~m From l.969 SEDAN de Ville cPo.;o;;;mon=a:::•,,:CM;;;o,=5'16-7=3=912=--on e ta Frw)' · Add a n.,h of dash lo 2334 N•wport. CM. 645-8008 CADILLAC TIME FOR 523-7250 '68 vw 7 PHI' Bus . . $4695 separates with this vest! '72 HONDA 500 Four -near Transmission '72 MERCEDES White with red interior, AM/ BEADTIFUL silver grey '68 DAVID J. PHILLIPS BU'ITON UP this trim. new, 2700 mt. '69 Kawaoald Radio . DAIL y PILOT 350 SL Me'1llllc red. Call FM Radio. low mu..,.Hld.. Impala. Xlnt cond. NC. BUICKJ>ONTl'AC OPEL, lnC " shapely little vest ov~r pants, 500 Mach III -New tire, Afr Conditioning Unit _64().:.100.f t.·Bed and Tab 1 e, dlr, Very low mileage. $1250 or ~1'15 : -L. 111'...i .... 11ft.C!"... sklrl•ted· dr""'"' Knit of ~~· u""tt'!l;7278Xlnt cond. 1212 SoUlh Ross St., CLASSIFIED ADS. m HB 250 s. lull ...... ounrr; 494-1075. -best offer. 552-9511. '·'~""'SAF=ARl""~"'s ... :-:..:w"'----==i _ "'f 1111 wors in '"" soed stitch ~· o en ... ~ Santa Ana 642 5678 xlnt cond. $3850. 673-{;620; Laguna Imports TAKE over ·-·i.. ·so •• --- Everything you. n~ -~if!e!·ib:i~~ l~~~e~l.7439: '10tt MAV~d CKExMini-bndike. \====542-='=:"°====!.;;=====·====.,.:-'E:;;v::;•;;•·;;·6;;7';;,~:0728,;:.;:;;.,===;\=-=,_-'.·4~9~4-~l~0~7~~'.,-..,..-Che~ SS. A Cl~-'--vinyExJ ~~· ~ ~w::- k g o roa . . c o • top. JW eng ... on .uuu,-. • ................ -•-alt 4 slimming. s 1 ""! min • w/bumper caITier. $125. '67 VW Bus w/beds le or traa: 543-6889 .-.-. ~ · low-pleat dress, tunic, pants SEVENTY·FIVE CJF..NTS 646-4329 aft 4 !,,,;;.;_:;;.;::=.:-...,--,---:--,-e '6' 1. ... uans con"'"'""' plus easy-<0rochet •bawl to for each pattern -add 25 · _ S...,. :._R G Al .... E ... ~""~ .. ai.. Ice box. New \Jn!'-!986 MALUW, 4 cir,~• cyl., ....i -.;;;;.n11on,:..:'.JT~. • toss over a11. cents for each pattern for HONDA ClrlOO, 30 orig. ·.a. .cJL ,rs,.~ ~,.. New battery. Full rack. auto. ale wls/w · 8100> 64&-lCM. Printed Pattern 9 2 O 9 : Air Mall and Special Handt. miles. $400. or best ta.sh of-1. lbw miles. Perfecl cond. mi., $475. 714: 847..fil«. 8.tt. .L!""l" 1 • .: Misses' Sizes 10. ll, 14. 16, lna'; otbel'Wi&e third-cla.u fer. Days 540-1312, eves 213 ,Allll .-CLAY Ulii. $J.450. Ph: 646-MU aft 6. 6PM '65 PONTIAC Catalina. Sl9 18 . Ho.II Sizes 121>, 141>, 161>, dellY'UY will take Ihm -943--0587 cAt ;..._ M Y•·Dolfy-0.U. M wr. "Q" e •70 VW BUS e ,;67~JMP;.,,,;.,= •· -."'P""JS.-, "'P"tB"',-alr.,.. pa/pb, auto, new paint 2'l% PLEASE ks or Send to ~ • ..: n' .,-A~ne fo·fk SNtt. ~ -_ _t 2J n.o..on., air ~ good oond. ' 18~. 20'.>S. · wee .~ore,,.. DAILY '71 Yamaha l:JO street~~·· ' ,.,,.. Todlwlop-forW-...1---.L... ocr. * $1700 * cond., radio -wf'teer spkr, sell! flM 89f..9118 · • 8T~-r:~~C.:NTS .~r~~ci' ~eedlecralt good condition. rwll liood· ,_1"7 90 no:it-i..;;.·;;;;:;.ii..j;;",.;;;;; 11-21 e 644-2140 • mu'1 .. u. !J6t:ioll'alt 1 pm. ·.~ ' · tor each pattern -add 25 Dept, Box 163, Old Cbel!ea New 1"l'tll' tire "Iii-chain. $500 of~ZodiocblrtnsJO,.' '70 TOYCYJ'A Cttolla, r/h, "67 CHEVELLE-SS396. 4 spd. *.~~~~~ 1 cents for each pattern for Station, New York, N.Y. or make offer. 546-211;4. . 1 ~ 31 ~ 61 Ccul4 vJnyl toP, Fastback Bucket ae4ts, map, teblt 548-0905 Air Mall and Special Randi· 10011. PriDt N--. AClcJnlf, '6'9 HONDA CB 450 Needs llt· 2 y 3l, 62Sut-. Sprinter, clean, $ 9 5 0 . eng $850: ,613--7564 · otherwise tlUZd-clUs Zip, Po...,. Nambet. tle a11em)>le work. Good ~,;:. iJ!= :J::...... 646-;1842 '68 CHEVY !'oVll,.alr, PIS RENAULT ~~ will .ta,ke three NEEDLECBAFT •i2! Cond. 492-:-4916 SA 3'1Mt 65Mob ·n VW SQBCK radio, tow mileage, ~ ~ka or more. Send to Crochet. knit. etc. Free 1972 HUSQVARNA 400-CR, ~~--r,~ ~~ red, like new, see to apprec! Pvt party, 518-3009 '62 RENAULT, .,od: ru Marian Martin; the DAILY dlttetlons. !IOc. good cond. $l«<O. or !felt ol· .......... _.:JI...... ....... $1800 <164>-2280 "69 2 .0R, 'N..0, .. below oond~ton. Good IDtmor P~ 441, P.....,. Del.;• ---. ter. 545-7:118 '°"'" ,,_ •:t;. .66 vw Camper Bus, good Bluo Booli. v.-, auto, alr, "64"'~"·-=..;;<ill""2P;.;M;;;._ __ _ MAME. ~oaaa wtth , mtUt o...ew 11.ot _ m. ~~ ...... , ~~ I: ~1470 ·so arEVY 2 door ~~1-----w;~_ ..... .., r ..... -;:_.,.~~· ~ ~· $1~y -· ~t-BAS converted mini hike, w~ ~~ . i.... cond. $1100. or best offer. Rib. 830-JSIS. SHEi.BY ZIP l!IZll and 8TYUl Loam by p!ctum• Pit S31-64'11 ' "'"'"' "'"°"' '°"' "T.I VW ~bile, lo .283 3 llPd. l"lllll good. \.au '911 SHELBY GT !ICI. ~ ' ' 1em1. Slbt.. ' · '72 HONDA 350 SL. -xlnt I 15Nid ...SOrl ~ mlleage, 'xlnt, warranty, Pbll...&M-0986 mUes. Vf'f"l lb&rp. ·Belt · SEE MfJRE Qulc~ Cot>lplele-.t 0111-oorid. As1<lnr-Call Jell l~ll/"" :lf'l;.' 77,\:::, &U-8U9 ~ 1'30 or Wken<li. CHRYSLft' 1or ·..,... iioo..t-. ., ~ li'1il c:= ·qne --Ilion 100 itfta --' "'" AINow """ f "69 vw new u..a new T-llRD = -our $LllO cusroM~~ _,,_ "°' "'"" "k L-•-,,'...., co~'1uoo. '71 Ch·~ •, . • ..,ma CataJoc.. All ·~-&-~ .,...,,..., ... _,....,t u..,,~1·, .I 2011 80Vur tt·tt DVt onun;: l!o"""' -.rOatr l50c.-$1.GO ~ -holds 2 bikes, '73 Uc .. IPlft! ~ ·-,,.1 21~ r&1~11e ,,, ... ..,:ai °iii:•MJVS Call 545-0030 -Town & _ 1971-!I! BlRD,·t --dr*t JNSTAMT SEW'tNG BOOK ..JI 1itt;y Rae IJooll • 51c.. ttre $100. &17~. ' .. ... ~~ ~~' n=-..._ ~,a rt 'il VW Van. 7 pa111 .. amltm, Station Wa,aon ·Power Stet'!" 16,fiOO milts, fill pwr, l'IJ -todoy, -......,__ -or u Piiie &I-"11> 360 MX Ylllllltha , ~!::" ~~ := ~~:;MIH· lo ml-xlnL_ cood. $2250. in,, Power iir.-._ CruLte am/Im ilmroo. Xlnt cond, IL ··-FASHION !IOc. . -legal.x!ntcond., 1·~ .... ~~ -~ 963-3105" <dlttrol: -m:gway -"1· ""-..Yllll>~ .o,.,; 8()()JCDIST-u ~-"" of qdt -l -18 -1415. * 114tH158 -.,,~-~ 16 ~ '66 VW But . ))OWcr -·.. , , 54HIUI • -~-~ Mo -···""".. .."r-.,.~ ___ , ---~ S ,iMIWan flctl. $L r ft1111 Qlillt ._.. 1 _ . torcycle tr•O.r izr=L• ;;~ ..,=::-$l50, ~' ent _... ~.-$3 " ' ~ ftlr-~~ ui.toTro11e¥0ttr'l'ndor'1 50c. . 3 rail · 6C-059il , ·llla.. .. ...., • ,.,._, m-4!W14!> xi DAViD ·J ,f!HIL~fPS ····--~~~-~ -Iii :l:"1 ~ 1tr 'l'ollot•·lhloc. 'Tl YA!d>.HA 3C10cc DT•L ; .O.~-• 16\,~ 6\--'12 ·,, •n Super BeeUe VW, ft! • • • ... ---.\.:"iM.l-· iii41 5 -~5 Ii I""' • •-mJ•o. 11 ~~ \81...--'-'Nnml cond. $1.100. all~ titraa. BUtCK·PONTIAOOPEL.Uic. wttha0.U,,-¥110t" -•• ----83&-'161Xiiir213''<11»-8193 --L---~lm -.:14!.!!>• ..i::-~l:;i>tlMlll;.=~-...l~C::U t I ' • • • -• -. • VOi Sat n"d disp• larg1 occu man Th of P Bea< Com dom NE men I ho Di De bh ed au In' Bl H M le It E ol pi •• 01 It q 11 I• tl 0 I< I. j I t I i I -.Joo.-------..... --. . ----• ' San Clemente , Today's F inal Capistrano ·EDIT.I O N N.Y . Stooks. ' VOL.·66, NO. 121 , 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES -ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDA~ MAY I, 1973 TEN CENTS New Clash Erupts on · Clemente Condominium San Clemente city councilmen Wed· nesday will be asked to mediate a new dispute surrounding the construction of a large condominium project on land once occupied by a Spanish 1 a n d m a r k mansion. The flap involves proyerties at the end of Pa~adena Court overlooking Trafalgar Beach where the Aries Development Company has begun work on a con- dominium. • local lawyer that the comtruction is a nuisance and has brought out "hazardous conditions." Charles insisls that the council reconsider Its long list of BJ>{rOVals for the project which stre~ches down into the canyon. hi! buildings to shift and parts of the small street to collapse. He also criticized the firm for bringing a construction trailer to the curbside and leaving it there. That flap is not the only hassle sur- rounding new construction to come before councilmen WedneSday. In a similar complaint, councilmen will be'ar charges· by homeoWfl.er Gordon C. Hieb asserting that a sign sellng units ln mcks also insists that construction ac-- tivity has created noise, dust and visual pollution along Avenida Santa Margarita and Avenida Magdalena. Other items on tbe packed council agenda include: - conunWiooers (a standard one which comes in advance of each summer season) that the council Install air con- ditioning In council chambers. -An offer from tile lfJ'plstrano Unified School diit:rict that the.~y ·purchase the abandoned 1'1anzana School Site in northerly San Clemente. Nearby, Richard Charles owns apart· ment units and he has charged through a A companion letter also on the agenda comes from Aries which rebuts ·several points in the origina't com· ' plaint. Charles, on the other hand, has charged that e1cavation on the property bas .caused fences to topple, land beneath · Presidential Heights obscures bis "choice view." -A request for a zone change for prop- erty now occupied by the city yards on Avenida Miramar. The land° was sold two weeks go to a firm whlch seeks a change · from central commercial to central apartment zoning. -A recommendation from planning -A letter from former City Engineer Joseph MacDonald s ugge st in g im· provements to the acoustics in the clubhouse auditorium. , ~oas At Dana Harbor Marine Center Gi-ven Backing Plans for a $2.3-million pennanent home for the Marine Smdies Institute pt Dana Harbor have won approval by the Dana Harbor Review Board, but the real bl~ssing by investors has yet to be realiz· ed. ~ The board late last week approved ol all but a 40-loot observation tower in the ' inUtial plans submitted by .William Blurock and Partners. The firm -which designed Dana Hills High School -has dralted plans !or the MSI building calling for 46,000 square feet of floor space on three"levels. The site for the pr_ojeCt sponsored by the Orange County Department of Education has been set aside at the base of Dana Ppint, seaward or the fishing pier. Ultimately, thousands of pupils and adults each monlh would take advantage of the science complex. Although the site has been reserved, the .cash for the construction of the uni· que educational facility must still come · from nonprofit foundations. The entire MSI concept was launched ,four years ago, but thus far the bulk of the money has not been obtained. The institute, however, bas been operating in a small upstairs office struc- ture at the harbor where classroom and laboratory space is ·available f o r Y.oungsters. The observation craft Fury JI also has operated out of Dana Harbor. The special rev iew board was set up by the County Department of Harbors, Beaches and Parks. That panel's president, department bead Kenneth Sampson, found fault with only one part of the Blurock plans -the 40-foot-h1gh crow's nest observation tower . Sampson said the structure looked like "a prison tower" and won promises from designers that the structur:e would be changed. The director of the entire project for tht county education department is Dr. DonaJd McLean, who told the panel last week that construction or the building would Probably be done in two phases. If plans for completion by 1975 materialize, he added, an estimated 40,000 pupils a year would take part in the programs held in the institut~'s labs, aquarias, lecture hall and museum . Dr. McLean added that be expected an average of 100,000 members of the Woman Escapes • .!l-apist:s Attack In San O emente ' A young woman motorist from Laguna Beach Monday wss attacked in San Clemente by a would·be rapist on North El Camino Real who lured the woman (nJm her car. l'Olice 811id the incident occumd In the aftemoorr hours near Avenida Estacion 11 the woman was driving north. ,:'he victim told ·officers a metalllC- lif«n pickup truck with a toolbox In the bed and balloon tires pulled beside her car, and the men driving pointed to the tlr~s on the v.'Oman's car.· Tbc victim said she then pulled over, beli<Ving she had a lire prob1ebl. The man, In his mitt 208, then gralibcd her. "She broke loole, ran to her car, hopped ~· and locked the coon, she said. • 111aoRrlbeD Oed In hi! truck. general public to use the facilities each year as well. During the period .that the funds are being sought for the institute, another use will be made for the parcel beneath the bluffs at Dana . Starting this summer an interiin lease will be ~ in!<> en.ct whereby the finn will convert the a~ge into a Cllmpgrvuod to serve·Yislti.llg yachtsmen. Mocrings will be pmided to patrons of the campground in the bay at the edge o! the MS! site. Old Laguna Ban On Comic Books . . To Be Repealed By JACK CHAPPELL Of ni. °'1111Y lllllt s11t1 "Holy COW, Batman. The Laguna Beach City Council is gonna repeal the crime comic book law." "Yes.. Robin . It's part of Mayor Charlton Boyd's cleanup of the <.1.ty law books. Now we, Supennan, Dick Tr.acy and all the other crime stoppers of the world will be'welcome in Laguna Beach." -A city ordinance now on the books in Laguna Beach prohibits in language nearly like that of drug or alcohol possession laws, the pOssession of minors of crime or horror comic books. Pages of official language, spell out the prohibition, but for· years the statute Chapter 8.32 of the municipal code has been nothing· but bookworm fodder. Constitutional interpretations lqng ago overturned such municipaJ attempts at censorship, Tully Seymour, City Attorney said. "This is an ancient old ordinance that was apparenUy passed Jn the ~ or 40s in a fit of community indignation," Seymour said. •He noted that Newport Beach, which had a like ordinance, repealed Its comic Jaw about 10 years ago. The repeal o! the crime comic book Jaw is on the city council agenda for its m .. ting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at city hall. The comic section of the code was first spotlighted by C o u n c i l w o m a n Phyllis Sweeney. Mayor Boyd bas pointed to the statute as one example of the many old and useless laws which clutter the code book. Boyd has embarked on a campaign of "cleansing'.' the municipal code of such musty laws. In the city's best officialese language comic books -are carefully defined and punishments set forth. "It shall be unlawful Md M oUense to sell, offer for sale, attempt tO sell, ex:· hlblt, ·gtve away, keep In his pouession with intent to sell or give away, or in any way furnish or attempt to furnish to any child under the age of ta years any crime comic book, horror comic book or licen- tious book •.• " the code states. ·The ordinance · was apparently kept In the code when the municipal code wu updated in' 1964. • Seymour said that II the code was strtc£b' enfbrced. which it may rm! be, 11 would. prnhiblt sales of Ba Im• n, Slij>Cl'Ulan or ev<n Little Rtd Rldinl Hood under dellnllloas provided ''"' crtmi and hol'TOI'. · He likened II to many laws en~ted by munlcipaljtles during the early 1950s bar> nlng the ssle or purchase of goods (Seo REPJW. Pap I) I ' II Baptism by the S~a • Several hundred of the faithful turned out Monday evening to participate in and watch baptisms con- ducted un der the auspices of Calvary Chapel at Pirate's Cove near the entrance to Newport Harbor. The ceremony for those being baptized Involved full immersion. Water temperature Monday hovered around 60 degrees, according to Newport Beach lifeguards. Origi11 of Bulls For 'Bloodless' Fight Protested By JOHN VALTERZA Of t11e Diiiy l"llot Sl•lf The leader of a San Juan Capistrano civic group which has sparred with of· ficialdom in the past picked a new battle this week -a scrap over the origin of two fighting bulls set to appear in a bloodless bullfight Saturday. In an open letter to city councilmen distributed to media today , San Juan Citizens For Actio'n President William Hicks asserted that the animals obtained for Satunlay's bloodless bullfight during the Cinco de Mayo celebration come from a ranch In Northern Mexico which has an assertedly shady ownership. Hicks has asked for a cit~ council bearing Into the charges. But the counter charges already have been heard from the man who arranged for shipment of the specially bred animals. He aJso is the man .,.,·.ho will do battle with the animals on ~tUrday, writer and publisher Lyn Sherwood. "Let me put my answer this way ," said Sherwood, "I believe that there is no truth to the rumor that the letter on which the · Citizen.!' for Action protest was written originated on stationery that came from Red Olina." "I'm not afraid of a fight," said the (See BUILFIGHT, Page %) SHE LITERALLY ' RUNS FOR OFFICE SA!i' bIEGO (AP) -Julia Fisher. 39, .........S she would run for a aeat no the city boon! ol education and promptly did oo; Jocging 18 miles. • The illughler of the late Rep. D. S. Saund (l).Calil.), stopped periodically along her route Monday lo talk with pJU!ble voten. FBI Agents Guard Offices . Housing -Watergate Files From Wire Senlces WASHINGTON -FBI agents were JXISted outside key White House offices today as President Nixon moved to Prcr tcct files which tn.igbt be needed in the ex panding Watergate investigation. Press secreta ry Ronald L. Ziegler 111aintained that this was "2 safeguarding procedure'' and was "not to cast aspersions on any individual." He said the FBI agents were posted wherever White House files were, specilicaUy at the offices of Nixon's former top aides H. R. Haldeman and Women John D. Ehrlichman and counsel John W. Dean 111. Shortly before disclosure that FBI agents had been given the job of insuring security of the filie s, Haldeman and _,GOV. REAGAN SILENT ON WATERGATE-Page 4 Ehrlichman were seen leaving the White House In the back seat of a chauffeur· driven. limousine with piles of documents in their laps. Their destination was not disclosed, but both said earlier they were arranging (See FILES, Page %) Shielded Lives of Crash Vic ti1ns Saved Mexican villagers may have saved the lives of a pair of women, one from Anaheim, bY building a shelter around them on a windswept Baja California beach -Monday after their plane crashed, killing a pair of male companions. Townspeople also helped Mary M. McCammond, 28, and Margaret J , Rowles, 30, Into s1 .. ping bags at the coastal crash site 225 miles 90Ulh of lhe U.S. border. The women were airlifted out by a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter along with the bodies of pilot Patrick L. Kelly, 28, of Santa Clara and Eric Otten , of 1711 Evelyn Drive, Anaheim. An_ Army doctor Who flew along in· itlated treatment for Miu McCammond and MW Rowles, both of whom sufler.0 multiple lacerations, shock and exposure. Mis:! McCammond also suffered a leg fracture it the er~ which w11 "tWit· nessed by a gulf shrimp boat crew. They said the small Cessna 172 was at· tempting a takeoff from the isolated, windswept beach after making a landing earlier. Tbe pilot, who5' home airport and destination ln Monday's fatal crash were not explained, just got off the ground when a blast of wind hurl"1 the plane back to .. rth 111.a tum. Investigators pinpointed the crash site as being In lbe Sin Luis Gonzaga area, on the Gull of California side of the Baja Peninsula. Kellr, had llled no prior flight plan and invest gafura were unable to question either of the two-women at length due to !heir Injuries. -.:Both we"' llSted in scrtoua condition to- day at Pioneer Memorial Hogpital in Brawley where tbey were delivered by the Coast Guard hellco~ter. ' ·1 -- -A requesf for 1 study session with the council from the traffic.parking com- mission. • --&1rvey of a revised agreement with the state department of parks and recreation over the furnishing of city water to st"ate lands at San Onofre State Park. A previous proposed contract con- laine<I language of which the council disapproved . -Discussion of the development of the new city yards proo~ed for acreage at the water reclamation pla9t. Chairman Considers Moratorium By CANDACE PEARSON Of fl11 °'11UY llUet Sllff The chairman of the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission said 1\ionday he will investigate possibilities of imposing a f l a t moratorium on coastal permits until in· iUal planning can begin. •• Robert F. Roooey of Huntington lleo<b, • chairman. of the comm1aalon created by ;:.,. 20, said, ''The law wa.s wrttien in a poor manner becOIMe It placea the permit process lolJI before planning.,. The commission bu jurisdictioo over development wlthJn 1,000 yarda of mean high tide line in Orange and Los An(eleJ counties. The California Coastal 2'.one Conserva· lion Act (Prop. 20), passed by voters last November, charges the commlsslofi. with regulating coastal zone construction while developing a land use plan by 1m. Dr. Rooney, an associate PrOfeuor of economics at Cal State Long Beach, con- tended Monday the commission has been hampered jn some permit decisions by the lack of an overall plan of its own and of some cities involved. He sald M wjll wrtte to the State At,. torney General's ofllce to see II a tem- porary moratorium. on permits would be legal. lfis comments' came • following a discussion of ocean front projecta in Venice and Redondo Beach. , Commilsioner Rlnunon C. Fay of Marina de~ Rey charged, "We haven't done anything at any one of these com- mission meetings to_ improve beach. ac. cess." . U~l~s the commission begins taking s1gruf1cant steps to solve the problem Fay said, it "won't have anything left tO plan" during the planning plwe. Fay said the lack of parking lots near ber.ches or proper roads to get to such lot!: In all areas coocerned him. The com· mission has been wrestling with ques-- tions of density and high rise near the be11ch. Individual applicants can't bu.iid the r1 -ds or parking lots, commented Com· missioner Judy Rosener of Newport Beach. She suggested cities in the coastal zone be told of the commisison's con· cerns. -· ~ruge Weatlter Did you like the weather today? \Veil, it'll be the same on Wednes. day, following some patchy low clouds aloog tbe coast in the morn- ing hours. Mostly sUMy with highs of 67 at the beaches rising to n inland. INSIDE TODAY On L41D Day, 1973, the State Bar of California has dnnon a bead. on the ••spoils a~stem" of selecting ;lldoe1 /&r municipal and 1vptrior covrt btmhe1. 'the alttrnaiiVt? At& advtsorv c~ mittet 011 Judicial appointmtn:•. See P"lle 3. J , .. ,Z DAILY PILOl SC T"8dl)<, M'1 I, 1973 • • Senate • Outside P~oposes Prober \\'ASHJNGTON (AP) -The Senate vot~d today to call on President Nixon lO appoint a special prosecutor from outside the government to oversee the in- vest!gaUon of the 'Vatergate catt. Without dissent and by voice vote , It approved the-proposal Intro du cc d minutes earlier by Sen. Charles H. Percy tR-1\l.), Y:ho questione<i whether the ex- eculi\'C branch should Investigate itself_ ne action came just 24 hours alter President Nixon named Secretary of Defense Elliot L. Richardson to become attorney general and gave him full poy,;cr to conduct the Watergate probe. Percy said he w~s not questioning the integrity of Richardson but added, "lie caMot be regarded as independent of the executive !:!ranch." Percy said Rep. John Anderson (~ Ill.), planned to introduce a simllar resolution in the House. . During the brief Senate debate, the move rece ived strong support from Republicans. including Sens. Barry Goldwater (Ariz.). and Pete V. Domenic! tN.M.).' -. "We must proceed quickly to remove thi:. case from the auspices of the at- l(lrney general," Domenici said. Goldwater told reporters he feared Richardson might "find himseU in the same position" as Richard Kleindienst, who quit as auomey general Monday be- cause or his close association-lvith per- sons involved in the Watergate case. A senior Republican senator, Carl T. Curtis of Nebraska, urged Nixon today to nan1c for1ner Sen. John _J . Willi.an1S of Dela.,..·are to oversee the investigation . Curtis said in a statement he feels the situation calls for the appointment or someone from outside the Administration -rather than Ri chards-On. Republican • \~iilliams. who returned from the Senate two years ago, was re- spected by his colleagues for his opposl· tion to corruption of all kinds. Ensenada Boat Race Entries Listed Toda y By ALMON LOCKABEY •oatll'll l!d11or Barring last-minute withdrawals, 58 1 sailboats are npected to answer the starting signals Thursday at ooon for the 26th consecutive sailing of the Newport to Ensenada yacht race, the largest in· temational sailing event in the world. The Daily Pilot today publishes the en- tire list of starters on Page 4. Yachts ate listed by name, sa il number, class, skip- per, yacht club and type of bc?at. Thousands or spectators line the shore from the Balboa Pier to the Corona de! f\1ar bluffs to witness what has come to be known as the Southland's greatesj yachting spectacle. The massive fleet is divided among five classes of Ocean Racing (!OR), five classes of Pacific Handicap (PHRF) two classes of Midget Ocean Racing Fleet (PYIORFJ and one class of ocean racing catamarans. First group to starl \\iiL be the catamarans at 12 o'clock. Thereafter, at JO-minute intervals the starting signals \l'ill be for Class A Ocean Racing· and PHRF, 12:10; Class B OR and PHRF, 12:20; Class C OR and PHRF. 12:30; Class D OR and PHRF, 12:40: Class E OR and PHRF, 12 :50, and Class A and B MORF. I p.m. Two starting lines \viii be used -one the extension of the other -with a com- mittee boat stationed in the center. PHRF yachts will use the line nearest shore extending from !he entrance buoy. Ocean Racing yachts will use the out· board portion of the line. The average yacht will carry a ere.,..• or six ,,,.hich means that over 3,000 persons will be involved in the race, not counting escort vessels and race committeemen. OUN•I COAST K DAILY PILOT 'tM or .. >0• CO<l~l OAILY PILOT, ... 1111 ""1•<11 ll COll'lllllled tht Nttfl-Pren, I• MlllllM bY "" Or•nos COii! P11blltlll110 CO"llMl'IV, ~ r•I• t'lllllon• •re 1111bll•ll«f, MON11r th•0\1911 Frid•r. ror Co1i. MIU, Ht'"'PO•• Be1cll, Hwn1h,gton Be1<hlFoun111n V~ll•y, l.ll;lffll 8Hcll, INlneJl.lckl~ W S111 C"'"""lt/ S,.,n JUll'I C1pl1lr1110, A 1"'911 r11910MI Miiiion II pybU1heO $1Nn11r1 ll'ld Slll"o(llya, Tiit prlnel1NI Pllbllfhlflo pl1111 h ti 3:11 W•I lly $ttfft, (0611 M ... , C•tlfonllt. 9")t, Rob1rt N. W11d '°fftiOttll ll'IO PU!lllll!t• J 1ck R. C11tl1y Vkt '°'"ltllnl lflll GIMrtl M11111" Tltom'1" K11vit !"ClltO• Tltom11 A. M11rpltin1 Mt"'11inl ECll!or Clt11l1t H. Looi Rldiar4 '-N1U Anl1!1111 MIMOI"' Editor~ s-c: ...... Offk• J05 Nortlt El C1111h10 a:11 I, '1672 . \' Beca111e he is not· an attorney, Williama would· serve as chief In· vestigator, not prosecutor, under the. Curtis proposal. NixOn gave Richardson power to appoint a 1pecial prosecutor if b~ feel• one· ii needed. ' An aide aatd Curtll, a rtrm Nixon backer who however has been critical of lhe way the 1972 election campaign was handled, called the White House to in- form the president or his proposal and was waiting for a return call. Curtis said he does not think , anyone fro1n the Justice Department, even if he" ha s not been Involved in any way, could adequately convince the country that some facts were not hidden from view. FILES ... meetings with federal and Senate in- vestigators. The new procedure, Ziegler said, was put into effect as the result of meeting yesterday afternoon with Nixon's new Watergare probe supervisor prealdentlal special consultai;it Leonard Garment, who took over coUllllel Dean's duties; Defense Secretary Elliot Richardson, whom Nixon has nominated as attorney general and put in overall charge of the \Vatergate investigation, and the anewl'y named acting director of the FBI, William D. Ruckelshaus. The aim, Ziegler said, was "to physically protect the files to make sure that access and removal or any files were supervised in accordance with very strict procedure.' The Watergate investigation ha! pro- duced allegations that some vital docwnents were removed from the White House and destroyed. Asked why the White House police had not been given 1his security duty, Ziegler said he was not sure. ' But, he said, this "was an Initial step" ordered by the three Watergate probe chiefs. The agents moved Into the White House and the next door Executive OffJce Buildlng. The agents, wearing visitor'• passes, were spotted near the offices of HaJdeman, outgoing chief of staff; Ehrlichman, Nixon's domestic adviser, and Dean. FBI agents also were Posted near the mallroom in the EOB, where Nixon has a hideaway office. Airport Thieves Steal Jewels Worth $500,000 NEW YORK (AP) -Three gunmen \valked into the Air India cargo teriTiinal al Kennedy Airport Monday night, truss- ed up th e employes and made off y.·ith shipments of diamonds. emeralds and stones worth an estimated $500,000. Two bandits forced the night supervisor lo open a vault and remove 31 tin boxes of gems. The third stood guard outside and tied up a truck driver and security guard who arrived during the operation. "We know you got the diamonds in this afternoon arid we want them," one gun- man said. It appeared to be the biggest jewel rob· bery here since five men took $3 million in gems from guests' safety deposit box- es at the Hotel Pi erre in 1972. One airport employe said that a bandit wanted to cut up the trussed workers before leaving, but was restrained by the leader. Police gave this account : The gunmen entered the terminal at the edge of t~c airport at 9:45 p.m., about ts minutes before the superviso r and fi ve employes on the night shift were. to Jock up. Supervisor. Luis Rodriguez and four others were handcuffed and gagged with adhesive tape. The sixth employe, and the truck driver and security guard who arrived later, were tied with rope and \' gagged. All lvere herded into a washroom and forced to lie on the foor. Rodriguez was led to the vault at gun· point, uncuffed and ordered to unlock the door. lnside, he was .told to unlock the safe. Wh'en he hesitated, he was pistol• whipped and told to move faster. Each sh\pment was co9tained in a tin box about 6 by 3 by I inch. The stolen gen1s included abou t 25 shipments of cut and polished diamonds and six of emeralds and semiprecious stones. They were sent fron1 India to deale rs in tht United States, moatly in New York. The tin boxes were placed in two cardboard cartons. Rodriguez: also was forced to go to a file drawer and tum over ducmenlJ listing the value end dcstlnetlon 9f each shipment . The 51nmen "seemed to know the operation of the airline pretty well," ono workman commented later. Before leaving, ~ suiuncn look Iha wallet., with about 12.'~l Iola!, and key1 from -the eight bound men. "Let's CUI them up a illllc," one gun- man was said lo have suggested, but the leder dlsu&ded him and the man flred a shot Into the celling instead. They left about 10 :45 p.m., an hour aner arrlvtna:. It wasn't until 11 :20 p.m. that one of the men tied with rope work- ed hlmseU free nnd called police. • ·- Co~nty Hit ' ' For ~olicr- ·on Growth ' By L. PETl!;R Kl\I!:G °' ...... "" ...... Orange County government 11 trying IO usurp \ aulhotjty from cities, Newport Beach: Coundlman cart KymJa charged Mond.iy nigh!_ Kymla lel fly with a bllltertnr attack on !he controvmlal ·~wtb policy report" that he said is "riddled with at- te1npts by the county to reglonalize government. '"They want to take over local control. They're making wumptJons regarding property rights that concern me,'' Kymla said. He cited several recommendaUona in lhe report which be says ~k up his charges and puahed for councilmen lo have a publlc hearing on the report scheduled May 21 at 7:30 p.m. In city hall. "It says general plans adopted by cities· must be consistent with adopied growth policies -whose adopted growth policies," he asked. "It says the courts are going to con· tinue to m'Jdify private property rights as interpretations broaden regarding public health, safety, and welfare." ---• i , • / ' .. ' • \ ' l ' U"I TtlWMlo All That Renaains "The county Is assuming the courts wlll llberally interpret the taking away of property rights," Kymla said .. "J don't think so -unless government says it should." He said the report also forecast the "number and types or services perform· ed by all levels of government will con- Laundry still dangles from Antelope, Calif., homesite which was de· molished by recent explosion of ammunition trains at nearby Rose - -viUe. tinue to increase. "That's local government groy,•th and I don't see it," Kymla said. He said even bigger concerns deal with what appears to be more and more coun- ty government interference with local S. Laguna°' General Plan • govemment. The report says "It is the policy of Orange C:Ounty to plan for and ac- commodate the distribution or population among sub-areas of the county to em- phasize the existing urban areas, to en- courage diversity by individual C<>m· munitles, and to separate developing com munities in southeastern Orange county by major open areas. Set for Public Hearing "What they 're saying," Kymla con- lended, "ts that It'• going lo be their policy to have population distribution within cities." A public hearing on the South Laguna General Plan will be held before the Orange County Board of Supervisors meeting at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday in Santa Ana. The plan drawn 'up by a committee of South Laguna residents working with staff ·members of the Orange County Planning Department calls for preserve· lion of the South Laguna hillsides and an While the report says addltlonal com- mercial flights at Orange County Airport should be restricted until the noiae pro!> lem is solved, it also says: · "In order IO ... ure acc ... for Orange Navy Conf:rms Colmty to air transportation service at " levels anywhere close to those an- ticipaled, it ts necessary that as many Courity Sh;pp· ;ng options as possible be kept open for as ., ., long as poulble." "That," Kym:J a said, "could be tn- !erpreled lo be lncOOllftenl with our own Of Explosives policj." Kymla was also crlUcal of "pollcles to By TERRY COVJLJ-;E take over and regulate public utilities °' 1111 o.nr ...... '''" such as electricity." , Kymla, who manages the Moulton \!.S. Navy offlcials Bdrnltted today that Niguel Water Db:trlct in Laguna Hill.!1, explosives are shipped by rail from the disagreed with the report's 'recom-Seal Beach Weapons ~talion through mendaUon urging the oounty "to plan for r~identlal neighborhoods ln north Hun- water service and constructlon lines and tlngton Beach and Westminster. : fa cilities only in support of general Commander Harry Madera, eirecctive ultimate population for the seaside com· munity of between 10,000 and 13,000 persons. The plan was recommended for ap- proval by the Orange County Planning Commission after hearings, and has been a foca l point in a conflict between a num- ber of land owners and residents. If the plan is accepted by supervisors, it \\'ill become an amendment to lhe county General Plan. South Laguna is unincorporated. The measure covers about 1,400 acres bordered by the city of Laguna Beach, the Moulton Ranch, Monarch Bay, La· guna Niguel and the Pacific. It calls for a total of 814 acres in· eluding 45 a·cres of beach to be preserved as open space. Housing normall y scattered across the open acres in a tract develop ment would be clustered into smaller acreas of higher density. Most or the undeveloped land is zoned for betv;een one unit and four units per acre. Another general plan, th is one forward· ed by a grou p property owners proposing higher density use of the hillsides, was turned down by the planning commission. purpOse government plans." officer or the weapons station. said about "Local special dislricts should comply 10 lo 20 percent or the shipment or ex-Closin!!: De lay Urged with general plans for general bet-plosives is by rail, w!iil~ the rest is by '-' terment," he said. truck. 0 Mil" B I have no quarrel if general govern· Commander Madera also said lhe rail 11 Ilary ases ment adherea to that general plan. But line used crosses five streets in Hun· they don't do Jt." tington Beach and Westminster at which SACRAMENTO tAP) -The Assembly Kymla called the entire policy "an al· there are no safe ty signals or crossing has sent to the Senate a resolution urging tack on home rule. gates. Congress to hold off on military cutback!! ... Tustin Boy'f;; MJtrdered ; · • 'Pair Held A team ot homicide detectives probing the automobUe dragging death of a Tustin youth in the San Bernardino CoWI· _, ly desert three da ys :igo was en ruute to Las Vegas today following leads. Sherllf's homicide Lt. Ron Forbush said his men want to find and question associates of Jimmie L. Manning. 17,, who may be able to help explain the hor- ror that happened last Friday. A pa ir or youths with whom younR f\1anning was acquainted surrendered to TustiiJ police within 24 hours of lhe bl· zarre death on Interstate JS outsidt Barstow . Lester L. :3arker, 19, of 8242 Kathertnr Drive. Huntington Beach and Melvill 0 . Deem, 19, o(· -North Las Vegas, were , ·booked on su!plcion of murder pending ·- fu rther investtgation . A decision on whether sufficient evidence exists to issue formal corn· plaints today was expected by evening or early \Vednesday morning . The yout hs. cannot be held longer than _ 72 hours foJ\ investigation without either is3uaoce or complaints or dropping of tlie charges. • Drugs were involved in the incident, al'.eges r.t. Forbush, who so far has not explained exactly in what way. In~tlgators do say Parker and Deem 1 • • ' \1•ere with. the Mannlng but claim they· cannot explain his grisly death. .... ~fanning, whose father lives at 1294: \\loodlawn St., was found lying in the .. highway at the end oT a trail of scraps of f! rlesh and shredded clothing stretchinc-f. out nearly a mile. · , !i A rope had been used lo bind his leel-i and be was then lashed to the reaf.~ bumper of a car and dragged down ~ highway on his back, bouncing arid scraping on th~ asphalt surface. ~. A passerby helped the skinned and ba~'' lered victim to the roadside, where he died , unable to tJ!11 what had happened. ' I': From Pagel " BULLFIGHT. ·-.. • • '., amateur torero. _ · • . ' ~. Hicks and the group he represents · specifically asserted In the Jetter that the · ' animals come Crom a ranch which is on ·• .. · ., land controUed in the Juarez area by 8 · ···. ~ crime.figure John Alessio, now servtng a· · ·· term for Income tax violations. · · ·· Hicks asks that the council "find out • · ~ immediately who offered the use or ··.' (these bulls) and on what basis." · ·· # Sherwood said thls morning that &r" ·• ·: :· rangements for shipment of the 'beasti "11 were made With Miguel de Anda, a Mez; · · " · ican-American who ships cattle fronl ... ; Mexico. ":· .. • · The animals, Sherwood added, comt .",:·- from a ranch in the Interior of Mexico~ t..:. "' for from the ranch detailed in Hicks' Jet~" ~~ ' ,_ .. , ·The flap could be a moot tempest, it . · · seems today. • . : · " Unless councilmfn choose to call a spec ial meeting in advance of the legal: · 1·:: bul!Dght which they have authorized, the '~ arguments would take place next Mon-. day night. ,. · ·. 1 By then, the bulls will be on their way _' _,. back home. ·'..:·· From P11ge I , • REPEAL ... ·l',1 ·~ ", ... -, '.·'.. '"'rhere's a lot at stake," he said. "We "The Navy is financing a $190,000 proj-like the shutdown of Hunter's Point should carefully review it." ect to put up automatic safety gates," manuractured in cowitrles with eom~ Of specific concern to Newport Beach , Madera said. "It's a safety factor we re--Naval Shipyard. The measure, passed munisl governments. · . ., - he said. are the stated policies dealing quested a year and a half ago. Work on it Monday by a 42-10 vote., was sponsored Seymotw said that council action-.' \\·ith Orange County Airport and should start any time." by Assemblyman John Burton, (0-San Wednesday would remove the entire ··• freeways. S The dstlreetsd RainvolhovedR arde. EdHwat~ds. Francisco), who said he did not lntend to ch'~Optledrcowmithlc·~~ksurghlacalve'atroch~:v·ed" acer~ :·. ~ I The proposed policy statement says the pr1ng a e an nc oa m un ing-. uuu ie county should: ton Beach and Bolsa Chica and Golden suggest the nation stay in the business of taln status among collectors," Seymour'· • · · "Encoruagc the construction 0 f 1 _w_e_s_I _in_w_es_l_m_in_s_tc_r. ______ . __ w_ar_. -------------__ n_ol_e_d·-----------~· · ~ - fre.eways as part of a balanced lransportatlon syste m to safely and ef- ficiently move people and goods in response t to county-wide and sub-area needs ... " "They said •freeway s,· not 'transportation corridors,' " Kymla said. '·\Ve have a mandate from the people to discourage freeways." He referred to the March, 1971, elec- tion in y.·hich Newport Beach voters . AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET cancell«i an agreement with the state to a\lo\l' construction of the now·deflWCl Pacific Coast Freeway through west Newport. County supervisors had asked all municipalities In Orange to conduct public hearings on the report and repor t their findings by July l , Budget De fi cit Rev ise Sliows Ec onom y Uptre1i cl 1 WASHINGTON (AP) -The govern· ment loday revll!Od sharply downward Its estimated budget deficits for 19"73 and 1974 as a result or rialng 1ovemcent reclpts. Secrelary or the Treasury George P. Sbullz '"td the 1973 budget de/loll It now put a\ 111.8 billlo'n or 1.1.7 billion leP than the original estimate. The etllmaled 1974 budge! deficit Is I.I billion, he aald , an Improvement of '7 billion over the oria:lnal estlmale. Sbultz atlributed the Im proved budiel figures to a rlii.ng now of tax recelpls "prtmartl~ becau .. or the •ll'Ollll uptrend Ip lhe economy." He said tolal budiel espendllureo should be u )>n!Vlously budreted - $249.8 bllllon ·ror 1971 and $298:'1 billion for 1914. •, WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF .TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." • SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS .ASTRONOMICAL SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAI N MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATI ON . THIRDLY, THERE IS AMP LE PARKING WITH UTILE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OU R VOL\l ME EVERY YEAR FOR FIFTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXVANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATtON. ·ALDEN'S CARPETS o DRAPES ' 1663 Placentia Ave. IN COSTA MIS.A COit.A MllA ll"GI 1117 646-4838 Moo. -lhn. t le l:JO: Jlfl. t to t; Set. t :JO le S •' , ... · ' ~·· • j -. 0 .. ' --' ' .... ' " ' t • j •· . J2 OAll.'f PILOT Gas Firms May Sue SC PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -An esllmated 100 o! the nation's independent guolln• dealen lll<t here MMday and the rtsult of their session may lead to a mpjor anU·tnlst lawsuit against majcr 911 com· panles, a Phoenix television station reported. Station KTAR-TV said the dealers met behind closed door.s to discuss their growing problems in- volving gasoline shortages. The group formed an organization to -tie called Save our Supply. No Po we r Plants On Coast SAN DIEGO (AP) -Public opJ)OSitlon was cited Tuesday by Sand Diego Gas & Electric Co. for its decision to drop plans for any more fossil fuel power plants along the coast A pair of electric generating plants will be built by Im as planned but somewhere in- lancl. company officials told a group or environmentalists Monday night. -THE PLANTS -costing about $80 million each - would be big enough to pro- duce 800,000 megawatts of Power, enough for 700,000 peo- pl e. A spokesman for the utility said Prop. 20, the 1972 coastal initiative, "indicates that the people of California don't Want" power plants on the coast. UNDER consideration are eight sites including five in the northern part of San Diego County, one near Santee and two near Otay southeast of San Diego.· All are considered close enough to the San Diego County aqueduct which is needed fqr large amounts of water for cooling purposes. The ulilit)l.'s official.! met with representati11es of \() en- virorunental groups. , .• Tllt!dq, lilq 1, Im Complete New York Stock List NEW YOU <UPll -l'dlowl,. '" .... "" ' "'" ... .... Nof ' •"-Oii"' HfW Ycwt SIOdl E~: ,. .. (I*) .... L,., l.nl CM. ,. •• il'll1al Hloll Low I.All (flcl, P"E CMll HIGh Low l..t '"'' Push Steelworkers • I . G•,o'p.' e u· n1· on Pr' ~he1 :w.l'<I !;;··~~~: :~ ~~r,~~_-71 ... :1 1· ·~,· i ~~ ~·~ !ir~t~ 11 j i ~ ~q"~~ 1iil:~~ :~ ,\~ ~ ~ .I.. ta =.:. 11 n tit? tli. tt"'+ \• '~ !E ~ H.~+ ~ ~1" rE\~ ,'.~ 1 ~ ~ u.: u~., + 1.-J~~ 1:l 1p If l~ ~ ;n~ ~1 .. ~ ~i fl~ ~ : ~ ,,.. ,... ~ " t .J: lf, u R Re-,.. CWILC1911 I 11 I .!l.~• .fi . ~. · · 'I m ~ ·~·~ ~ ;; f! ~!t: illl='l: ~=M Jt 1l ,,u :°' :f :m ~ =~tJ ::t\\ ;.1~ tt: From AP Dbpatcba JJNot.-llle are now being appeannces ~king support ~::,ti ~i ' ~ ti +-" h"~',_q :t: ' : ,Ju. I~ lj.,.._. ~ Fn11'l!:~ 1 • 1~ ul! i.h 1•v.-'• ~t'.~'"' ~ 1~¥ 1.-1.-1..-+ -· U·' • •r_.,_·-;J b ••• for his llnfon. ~(.O 24 I ha ~ f~ ~ akf' .IO. ,. i ~ m ~ .. ·\t ~~ Q,, ~ll J ,i = ~t~ ?~ ~ ~J~ ~to f ,, ~I\ 51N ,,.-! ••JO w~ Sttelworken repttsen~ · y ~ same· ,.1~ ·: 11• int.-1 \.'I';!; "' !;-l':c ~ .. d ·· d j! !' j' .. 1.,.., 1.• ,, ~,. 1i'" » + ~\iccr:m -• f 1~., it .. lt...~ UnJonhasjoinedwithAFk negotiators that represented ArP '2 1n ~J~ ~ + ~API :: •\•1·~ ~1 -r"l:p~hl:l:'*·~~r:n~r· ""~m't1t'a 1: ~~r~ir:·]1~ .. r CJO President n--e Meenv lhe Coachella -.... Most MEANWHILE, Kero County :·~~1~i~ '1 1$ 1~ 12\11 Nt •· lr~rpf : , Ii ~ ~ ~ 1uar CP 5k •1 131 l1t. ~ 1,f •, Kfi.LLot L\; tlOO Ii ~ H; ,1, ~-·· -v ol the ... ___ hoeni fl' I ed M ·-ha *-110 'I ·~ n·· ft r, 1 '' ~pt s I n \'I n~ ' 'mllllf l 5 '°'' '°~ \,:'. +, l(C So Ind l • ~ .... In condernnin.,. e,lli>oed ''union grano• In P 'x O tCia s report onuoy t t ,. 1· 0 •• , '·" ' 1., >Ot• v. ,, Flv ci.r .:io. 11 1~ 11"-i.111 21 1, 1<an GI! 1.~ • I\~ ._ ,., .• 1 ""e -,..._ -Y:f .l ~ 't\ 1 \o ltr wt itij '-11~ " FM CP .IS I ltJ lN lt•~ ll'lt 4 IC1nNllb 1.02 1? !'" l lt ,.. busting" by tbe Teamaters belong to Tenneco Corp. which $600 damage occurred in ~l'EP 1 1~;~ ;1· 111 12!~ 'ftv. '~ . :. 1-,"7Lb 10 , Ii-11"4 2. r-11 fM of ''• 1s "" l11t1 n 1,_.1 1(1nPL1 1 ... 10 ~ .~ 2 1, 1~ .. Union In. dn've ag·•--t ·~ signed wttb the Te.amsters in the Edison area through van-~. rlOC .l5 l Jt 1;"' 1• fr'" "~'I.·!:',! s 111. ltt-1, foodFr .:roo u 1\, '"• '"l'.<I+ '• KaN 111e1u" 10 " fil. j I ~"' u"=-.. .. .l6a ,, 20 ~·· ""'' l•" ,, , , -v. 1••· 2••-. '001.ca .~ n ' t'o t\1 ,,.._ •\ ic11 ... 114' 1.~ .j ' ' t ~ Coacbella." daf f · trees and th t -'A.1 .IO l• xl\5 ••uh 26'+ v, 't[ !:" l' j1 :W\.'I ;w{Z )•l't+ "'fooi. MlnPl . "' ~ ,.,., 11'1-11 teaut&er .l'l' 20 xn u,'t 7 \.'I .. , United Fann Workers in ISITI o CJtrus a ~~:'std ..36 / 1,. "' 1 1 _"' 1 F" ·20 0 1 "''"' a 4214 FooltMln of 1 U\• 111. 11~-~. (--.• .20 11 ' f:wi ~ California. Chavez told newsmen that 2.600 grape vines had been cut Altori·Lb .1• ~ "3 isv. 37 + ~ 11nsv ji· it 111n 4f\lo •1'Jo ,,'4-.vt Ford M 1.to • as. •111 stl!i i.1 -1• 1<a...w,1t ·'° • l 1N 1"' 1 ~t ard A .. x<lfl .I~ 11 :ID '"' S ~ . ltbSo I IJ lO :lt\t JJ'"l ~ ~, Ffll":r.I( ,f• 7 1.1<1 l•l• I• I• -I• (otOlar .70 ll $8 l1 2 211 ..• I. W. Abel, president o fthe labor peace will not come to at a Samoso area viney . Alison 1.•1t1 10 u "" $ 111.t 11v 1nv • ,.. 11\.'I 11 114--•, F~M i.to 1 ''"° 1•'1 U\~ icaerwe11 _i o / 13 ~·, ,,__, j' .. -.,.., ••· tab! Ind til H II' Robert I bl~ the AllAmLt .lt I u I'-t\i trv I"" • 31 7~ ?lot ,,..._ 11 fort Pa .. 2t '' St Si 51 -i.. ICel .. r In • • 11 IJ .. ,,.,. I ._ 1.4 million-member U$W, !leC'" ~ e gripe ustr)' un 0 15 S llC., W l..'1.\ AlleQCp .2'd 10 1 1'J 1 v, I~+~ ~ nvpl 2 :n 'H\\ lW. 7Si t-·~ For!HPa wl 21 2tl• 2t ,.; -~. l(ellooo Co 11 ~ t 1)"' IJ..,_ 1i ond . . I t the the Teamsters Unlon "get• out UFW ,-, p1'cket'"g, ~·ates ~·, ... ' ""' ,• ' • ~· ·~·" i.s . •.• ' ot J,ll , :z..i ,. 21 -4 "'°',_ ''° u J~' ll\' -»~• n1• i •• K111v'"' LXI 1 • 11 fil:1, 2~~ • m srie on y o ... -r--.. 1o Ludof .. '"' tv s16'-tt 11 ,, '\"' tl1' •"-\. Fos•erwof 1 l6 ~ 221, 2)'• .. •• 11:.,..,.,111 •• 1 s n11.. t. 23\o I B he hood o( Or those areas here we have the fields. ~·.·, Pw l.'-t ' •.s . 20Yt-,.. *••kEO 1111 11 ,. "" ... '-IV. Fo•OOto .olO I' n I' i·· 1···+ '• Ktneo11 1 '° • JM 1;1 1 ~> -·~ lnternatklna rot r w ,. ff'IOro JJi; II ' .,,,.., I'\.\ ltV, . Cl••kOll ·"° lt '° ni,.:. 21\o\ ~-'• Fr1nllM ,l'O • 1S , •• )14 l'• IC V VHI \.I• • lt 2S 2S 21 .... T.amsters' sal.d Monday ·In contracts. ,·:We will not sur-At the Coachella Valley, a AUid c11 1.tt lS 1n l<I " 33t•+ ~' cLc of Am 5 M ,,,.. J:l(, ' + '• F•1M1s1 . .o is 1t ,.1.. ~. u 1.-t 1~ "'''Mc .60 XI 291 W -• "'"' ~"'---i.o . AUdMn. ··~ :n lt 32\\ :JI~ "\\+ \• il'IClll\ l.t2 11 12 •1"' '° :t. .1..,.... •• FreotMn 90 I 11 1•'"1 13\.'. 2"••+ lo ktrtMDI 11 , I IXll> llO'"> 130·-~"'11 Pittsburgh the uswa ex-render our members to spokesman for the Riverside ~t,•,, .. P•ad . 1 21 17"11 fJ•\ 11'1to+"" ltv E '·lJ ll 17 3• l3~~ l!l:i-'• Frvthu! 1.10 I ll 'I'' 7'\-?ti.-'• l(ev,tn .litl I 1 li'• 1.P-t 1~.+ 1. h r... h If' ((. 'd .. SI I. 1 48 2S 2ll/o :r.i~-lt:. i0t0« . 27 60ol " 30 ~-~ Fuwllnd •1 I l lo Jl'\ 11 + \41 ICludtW 1>(11 • 19 19i, M\1 l'»<I e c ti e b 0 a rd v 0 t e d t em." • '-'VUnty s eri s o ice sa1 AHd suomkt 12 *l !~I 3\ll 3%+ .-, c1..,.11 P .to 10 :i. 13 12t. ,~,. -o ~ · · 11: a111w 11t 6 1 ,, ~' s1 -"' u v The UFW chief was in· the pt'cke"ng M 0 n d ay was •'l',',•.Ch .nb 11 11 '!i • ~-t \a Cl11tl!P pf 1 2 111\ 131'ii 13i;+ ~. able 1na11 1 1l 111\ 111, 1H'r--.., K!n' c1 120 11 90 " .a~. 6-.-'"" unanimously "to supp or l " u10 ... 10 " 10 ·~ tt cM1 Lnv co 1• o10 n~ 11 11\~ '• GAC c.oro !l ~ l'lt 1~ K·oo~cs .XI • s1 '"' •'• ••·-1• Los Angeles area l·n personal peaceful, with no arrests. ,•."M,1 1.1, 11 2't '11', ss'1 ~+1v.cNAF1n .~ 1 1111•.l.ll 1•\.\ 1 •'-+~.GAJ' c11 «i 1 1)4 n•• 11'"' l'"t v. 1<1r.chc .1111 6 21 ll" tt• Meany's COmdemuations.'' Su 1.60 I 1 26 16 L • (NA ol 1.10 lSJ If~-19\• lt•.+ ', GAF Ill 119 UI l""" I .., t\lo I• Ii: L M A!rl 6 36'\ \to 361.-1 • Ambac 50 I 21 10\'I 10'.~ 10"•-\•a (O<lltl SI GI I .lilt l7it 161• 11"+ ', Gam .!.k I JO 1 II 11""' 21>• 27\t+ " li::nla~I N .111 21 II 4-1 •3 •4 +1 -Am.,K 1.20 1 6 20loli 20\lt 20'4-'• C•t5GPI 1.19 . ff lil~ 211(, 1'\t-lo Gamblof l:t. 1 21'1' 1111-t 71111 Kothra .!Oii 9 10 UI} U"9 16'-.., ALSO 'd be usw ~ Amaro/ 2.60 '31'~ 3JV. 31 -~ C'11$Got l.IJ J1 ~ 2t "ot.19-1.;i-u G•"""" .1s )0 II• 31•, :w•. )7 + ~. IC090otr 1 11 I ""ll'• :Uh 3.S\1 + 1'1 ABEL sa1 t • i Am Hes~ .XI i. 2IO 31\t 31~ 17'-1. Coc&Col 1.70 I) 17' ll1"1 131~i l»'·-1~. GG~dOt<I .10 Ll l6 1ei, 111• 18), .... l(or .. coro ,,, ' • •'• • • - \. ba k M ' 11 l "! u s-•-s 'al-.. .., __ , A Hll!U' JV, • lJ U \li .. ,.. .. ~. Coc•8ot1 .:M J~ n 19~ 19 lt:U+ \lo G•doxl!. ·'' I 2 1•'• 1•'1 16'1 l(ranco 1.77 u ,. -O't 411') U\O"t-'"' cs eany s ca or a U -Ute' l .ic;... l Yv-• •• ...., AmAfrFI .•l 11 s' 19\o 1111t 11'1f.-·~ gldwBk .1t 1 1 1 ~ 1•1.t 1••1 G••Sve 111 9 ' 11·, lJ\• 1i>o .. 1, ICreioe .20 11 110 31u. ~i.;, 37\.a.,.. 1• I g r e SS f 0 n 8) in-Am Afrllnes 90 •72 llti 11\'I 11 -"" lfcoln .N 19 SI Ul• 131• 13lt+ 0.. G"lewa y In 6 a 6\o 6t-, 611 IC•Of'lller .80 1 l 11•1 11\t 18....._ '• SC3 e C 0 n Arni!~ ,·.\1. •, ,L -~ 7"t 110 ot11•l1 I.SI l1 3n t•"t tt\', t•\~-1 F:A Corn 10 11 1', 1', /' ,_ • • Krllllt'f" I lO U [I II' I 17 Jr,.I II -... Ve'tl·galt0' n" of an alleged deal c ABr1 • ., ... ~·-391-\ 39:t.~ ~~Colo•«• wl , ll ~JI~• JI~-'• mini C111 • 121, 1~ l?lo . -,_ • G L Amil~" .6'. 11 9S 2• 23~) 231._ 1:. Cotl&.A lk .st t Jo1tt 12 10-" 11~ \lo tn Am Inv JI 151• U\o U .. -•, Lfcif'de 1\1 I Ii 11' I 11\o 2111-Yo between the Teamsters and onsumer roups ose Am Bkkl .2t 11 ?S UV. IJ 1S -'• Cotllns Food I• .S. 13\\ 11\o 13 \lo AOI ,toa 16 S 391, 38h :Je'i-~ L1m1nSn 10 U 11 U 11 • Am Cfn l.20 10 t2S J'J1'o l \t'o 31'1 + '• Cotlln Radio )Cl 11'11 17 'i ll'k -lnATr I 61 12 JSI 10\> .0 •O" t •~ La,,.,Br .6SQ ll i 2•' I 71\'P 11Y>-1.41 the majority of table grape .\..C•nor 1~~ 3 2••• ••• 2•"'+ '•co Ptnn .10 ~ m #1• .st ; ...Slo 1nB1n<: )• 1 I• 1y, 1J•-•1 L••Mlq .69b 10 2 26'• 2~·-. 2•'•+ '" growers l·n Jhe Coa·"-lla A Ctm .OSb 9 69 SI~ S1~ Po ColonSt 1,0• • ·11 16!1 16l4 ltlli-~~en B1!1tr¥ 13 31,1 3l l-l l-1 -t-'• La!robo! Sii II 1 1!• ~" 11, tale A C11M l .16b 10 ISO '°V. 201• 20"'1 \\ COii Ind 10 I n l ~i 17\\ 11•'-"'-nC1ble .ID 10 11''. 101, 11 l e1r~leci 2 'I "8 G • e'1 6:\o , Valley' B M B ACl>aln 1.2 11 lS 2'll't 22"io ni, '•Collp/A 1"60 l 21 2! 71 nCQ• 1.20 t 1~ 1•i1 14'• 16'• Lta•!.gl 2". 1 is·. 21'1 '9\1 .I ·1 . t tt AmCv1n l '~ 11 110 'M\11 ?S\il 16 19 Ce 5 1'•6 11 16.S JI\~ 31'\ 31'1/o "'G<lnDt.,.I 21 10 12 9i, I ') 91l'-,, Le•~oC ,• s i<><I' \0.,. 10 • 10\,._ ~ -Teamsters have been I e ID ea oyco Am OIUIU l '1 ! 2S Ullo :U\1,--:lo; Cot G11 1"to 9 jf ~ :)!)\\ 30\i-,, C.n Ovn•m I •9 19.i, 19 19>..t "-LtllrD! ] '10 JI "'. ,, .... 1''•-·~ 1ue AOl•!Tel .43 27 20 •919 •t '9 -\\Col Pcttiri:i 12 10 S S\11 5~ ~Gn El&C l,olO 10 10~3 S9>o S11t 5'1'• •o Le,.1wv iOcl 11 lJI l•'• 33•.-, l•'~i·~ attempting to organize grape AmOuar 11s1 1 1>9 1"1 ,,., .... ,, co1so~ 191 9 31 16,1 ""' ~+ "'GnF~ 1 . .io 12 11• 2~). ,S'• '~'·-1, Lte<h&N so 11 14 !J'> 13•. 1J~• ~ · A.Dul Ill .l,1 6 ll'• 13 13•,~+ \,Comb E 1·51 17 l•t '5;, 6oll.-> 6514+ \.o G.en ro .•lb U l6 I)>, 1~'~ 1~••-•• Let11on~ .• 10 IJ \11., 1111 lflt I,\ Pickers in the California AmEIK I.I 10 434 261.fo 1S•, 16\.. ComSolv "111 II q lS\i , ... l•S-' Gn 061 Co 11 I) ll 12 ... ir -., Le-11 Pt C ·'° • 10 I&'• t& 161 ~ ... "". LOS ANGELES (AP) -A "GENERAL · Am E~oorl 60 1\0 i1 I"'+ 'i CmwEd i:io 10 209 3l l2'111 :r.1•1-;•Gin ln1 lr 2k lS 221 111; 161• \l 'lt-,1 Lfh VI! l..d , 6..1 ' 1-llo 1\o-~ vineyards who are represented -Jue price pro-A Fl~Sv 1.10 t 1 16 1y, 15to-1, cwEll 7·1• 51 91,.., tn 171 • Gan1n11111 l 1 11•, 111, 31•1 Lth1n 1.•~P JI \&'o uto 16~.+ "~ test" 'II be ta'ed h AGnBd .IOP 1• 11 26t• 21 .,-•, C d ' 1 • ~nMtd .12 j1 16 7411 ,, 1•'• Le-nne~ Co 5 ~I 911 t \o ,,,._..*to byCesarCbavez'UFW.About nation's second meat boycott WI 5 g ereAGCv!..6sb 11111i1o11~)1a1._,, om 11'"2 726"26\•26'' GtnMHri 1 l 111o1G1,s911.60i+11 Lem» ..Sl)ci20 '\J~1 1 :i.o\o~s·•-'" I I ed Saturday by WOmen's groups AAGG',rn1 .52 t HS 17-1>11 16\li 16l.:.->.lo CCw Edpl 1·',.2 2 2lh 211• 21~-Miii r' !•, )101 101 101 '+1 1 Liv fd Cao , 10 1D4 1011 1·~ _,. 75,000 workers are nvo v • finds food retailers reporting pf 1.ao lSf 21v1 261:. 21 -.., -llf" 1· • 1~ uv. 2sa~+ <1 GenMo as11 10 765 11\t JO't 11•, Ltv lnc .1s. 15 1~'-'I ir, ?'• Meany has charged. that 8 from UCLA. The women will :~Hohr . .o • •2 121~ 11 121.~ u1~::;:~~dB:Z: 11 \~ :=: l~ . GenMotr' s s 1~.,., 1Jt, ,, ........ ·~ L•vl!.••1 ..11 14 "6 11~. :n~ 32r...-1~ near normal sales at meat .-.ome 1.M 36 1.u 1211t:i 1n,.111 + •1 cornw0u 11r. is ,ri t \ •• ,.... i Gen Por &o 1 1• 11 111. llt.-'• Lewnz J'uni " ,n 111. 10•1 11:i...+ -ntract recently negotiated tnareh On supermarkets t'n the AmHome wl 17 41 IO\~ •O•'>+ ,_.,, C.Ol ' . ...-t g:PubU 1.60 t ISO 20¥. 10\il 20\o LFE Cor1111 .. I •'• •'• •'t-i-t ..... . . A H11mtt of 2 2 l•IVi lkl\ll 111\'1:+111> ll)f 1.n 127 :n"' 21~ tJ + l-n R1i•KI 31 611 6 6 -+. LFE Ill .so I ~·· !'-, .... _ 1, hy the .Uru'ted Fann Wol'kers coonters. city's Echo Park district and A,m.",,oxo .21 ""° 211 .i :>t'4 .i +1~~:11''~ ,.~, 1• ., .t6>42,. ~," ",1~-+ '• nSIQnal 1s 1t 60 •J •2 .,1,+ \, LlbllVO 1.20 1 11s 1~1, J.1•• Jsi.+"' •· oceed h ed Vll .SO I 1 10'h 10\lt 10..., mour c · 7L q "i It. l1GnSlftt 111(! 11 l'• Ji, JI.. LOF pf •I.I. 1 794 ~'• ,,.,., was '+clearly superior in every Various approaches were tilt'.ft pr . to t e r era! A M~lel .12 ll 15 It~ 19 19 -·~ c,0t1•11r, .• 2~ • 1 '~ 1S\'\o 1Sl'o-I• G T E 1.60 10 J11 28''• 211. 21•. Llbbv cNI 7 s •'• ···-a instance to the sweetheart being taken by consumer 1 1ng own own or a AM11c~ i ~~ 11 ~ 3311. 31"4 n~-·~c,onnM1,.1eb u 10 20. 2.,,., 2•i.-.-1, 111tlr• 111 • 11 20 ~.10,,. 10+,__,, Lj11r1,Ln .sos 11 11 10\·, io••-bu'ld' . d t f A M~!coro s 3•9 S'iil ··~ .,... -\1 oneM ·-1 IS lfV1 It 191\-"' ITE ol ,,, 2 .cl\" .o .... •O' ·-i,, LlpnyCo .10 9 2 11 11 17 - h delDonstratl.On. AAmm'Nr Mo!or 11 305 I'~ 11.\ S~j,+ 11 onrac ·'° 10 1S 11114 17" l"'-IV. 1"'"4; .].lb 59 101,., \0 101,,+ \l L qg Ml ,.,, \' 616 6?\o •O lo:, .o 1-1 contract11 signed by t e gro11ps in the boycott which G1 2.•o 9 119 ltl'• 36.., l6'l+ I'• c,~ e,d 1.aa 11 11a 26'-i i.~• U-\0 enu!n, .'6 )2 s.s l1 36'" J7 _ lt L uv El .7• •O l71 11 ,,,.., 111 ' t-~ Teamsters after "-llusive, ·However. no special· plans A,~ ',est .12 11 s i1" 11t~ ll'I\+ ··~ c"'e'• pf' 1 «l11i flll>.• IO'lll+ ~• • P•c .10ci 1s IJ• 321• 3,,,. 31·, Ll~"I 1.~ 11 16 1s•~ :i~ 3) w be M d .• ·~ hlo .68 9 2'9 10 19"1 20 oru of S 4 6S ~ .. 65 1Pwpf 1,11 1120 103 lOJ IOJ -1 L nc Nt pl ) ~ 13J. 71•~ 13••+ tt secret meetl·ngs" w'tlh some gan • on ay: were . being made by local •'mm,e11 1.1 10 90 ''"'° n•1 19••-'"cone Pf •.6s 1uo 60'4 s9v. '°"' +1~ Gerbar I.JS 9 •2 19•\· i•'·• iai..-. ~. Llone1 corp 11 11 ~ J'• , 1 ~ Fight Inflation Together Air .10 "6 n'\ 11••.11\\-l,comFd J.30 11 U• :lj\fo lll't Js . Gellv 1.,1 11 H 101 11a•.111 111lotlrt. unoo 2·~111 us 11, 1>.o .,._ -supermarkets in anticipation A,•.!Stn<1 .4 t 33 11 10'1'1 1014-v.ConFdl'I 4ilt 2101 100 100 Gett .. 111 1.10 11 10•, 111•'o 10•, Llnn c~or l 1 l6'l 36" lll<.-1'1t growers. (FIT) began an open-end olh 1c11114v. ,,61v,,1 61\r• c,onFri;ir .s11111•t4>.'o lJ 1Jv.-1v,Gl'Bu1 ,111ti111231~1 ''• .L111nc .. 1112 . 12 19 ~.,,,, ..... ._ . t e new boycott. Am tern .s2 16 l6 i!'' 2111, 7J\:--'·" om.NG 1.03 1 ti :rt\\ ~ 21 + v. gl•n•PC .10 1 1t ll'• 111, 11" ·· Ll11on1n 111A .. 1 10•, ro•• !O•• -I.I; boycott and FIT organizer AmT&T 1.ID 11 161 1.1,; ~i~• s1•~+ .,can1mPw 2 10 :w 27'1! »'Iii 21~+ ~ lbrFl~I Sk 6 61 19 Uh 11•.-1. Loc:•l>ffO 6 ,5 6,. 6,1 ''" .• · CHANCE, meanwhile, says he thinks the table grape strike probably will be ex- tended to all of California and Arizona ir: the dispute with the 1'eamsters. "I think it's just a matter or time before they all sign 'sweetheart' contracts with the Teamsters," Chavez told a news conference Monday in Los Angeles. Chavez' AFl.rCIO union has been picketing grape ranches for several weeks in the Coachella Valley, where .most growers declined to renew UFWU contracts. "GROWERS A R 0 U N 0 Fresno are refusing to even talk to us," Chavez said. "Growers around Arvin and AmT&T of • t• ~ S'1i 59t1-""Con P Pf 4V. 11llt ~ llQI." 60.,..__ ~ l<ld Ltwl1 . )9 71,~ 7t• 1·'• LOtwlC 1,1, 1 6"' 21 211• 27'• -"lo June Donavan said her group ''FRANKLY, WE'RE not :rmTftA 3.64 u s11., St¥o s1~~+ .,.. c,onP 111 2.n .. tJOO 1o:n., 103\l:l lllJlll-.,,, 1"'•""1 .24b 1 12 "~' l"' lllo . Loma1FI .:u 11 ""° 11 int 1111o-" Id " th ff t" &T WI 1•82 ti>ii 6 61ii . anPpfL.52 l100'3Vt'5t.\6.JV.+Vi II fe•Jkl stll\\11 17~-loLomMl:>ttoU l0 1• ~11tOllo+l l'9 wou conunue e e or un· doing anvthing,'' said Ralph :~w,111r ·"' 1 • 11i1 1p·, 1p, '°""Air Ln n 1ao 11111 UM• 11111 1, ui.ne 1.so 20 :m S6\• s. s.11.-" Lon.J.On Mil , 1 13,,. 13 •. ~ lj\'f -\lo.. tilsometh·ngg·ves " 1 • r11fl'lo . 140 17 16'-\ lt'':--l'!CnCan l.'<I 10 1o.i 1'14 7n11 • -~-. lmbllllr 111 2• 1~0 nv. 17'-""L-Slnd , to 11lo 11 l \o'J-W. l I • Liebman, vice president of :;:~on .M ' 1 l•l i 1110 H1-I\ Con COPOer .n '"" ~ :S.i.:. - ,, G!noi inc°'" 11 n M''> lt\• 19••+ ·~ Lon !.rG l 11 •1 32~ 31 31 -I~ -The National Consumer k • 1 h st .10b 6 ' 1 6\'• 6~+ ,, CantlCp 2.16 1 293 :w.. 31 :27 =,..; Gle•son .u 17 ~l 21·, 2l 211~+ •1 LOOPILt 1: .. 10 91 2111 10 11 •.+ 1~ mar eting or Ra Ip 's Ame1e,~ ......... 10 lO 131,• 11\'\o 13••+ \ii CnllCp,17•,<, . 1• O V, ~I •1•<,+1 GlobAI Mir 11 loo 12'1 12'-'> 12•-\• Lono1~ .... •1 ., 69\1 .. 61\i-"" Conar .. ss, c I a j ming mem-G € . So h AMF .. "" 10 83 XI'• ,.,,,, '9'4-\~ c COiii 2i,, 1 •II~ 61ot.__ 41~+ 1~ GIObeUn .llO • i. it 11\. 11•~-1, Loral Ol'P 11 2• J• .. 1 l'• ~ ~ """" rocery 0 :, a major ut ern Amtae .64 • 11 1 11~ 1n" lJTi"-~-. 01111A1 .I.Sb 11 . 1s 11~ ll\t 11,.._ ,, 0o1.:1w11 Fcl 11.1 n 1'\) lS''• 1'1-•• LaL;1/ld 11 1 22 380 38"' 111• '.ll•i+" bership in the mill i 0 n s' c !'I ' food h • ""' AMP Inc .6'1 :JI •70lll.V.111'141111,0--1~ ContlnvH 21 JO SS 1 .,, ,· + •• i>OOCltlc~ 1 ' •S 211 .. 11 1• -\, L• Par.Ille I 109 2)\1 ~s 15'-... a 1 orn1a c a1n. ~·e Am11CoP .l6 1 .•1 11, 111, 1•r.-1, ConMtq .s.11 , 1n 10\~ 9o/; iot + ,• Goodvrt ·'' • •43 2s~1o 25'~ 2s11 LouG•• l.IO 11 14 XI'• 30 30~+ '• declared a one.week boycotl have no( taken this boycott too :m.1111K Cp .. 14 •~ .. •1• •'-+ ~• conu 011 1•1;o 10 264 rn• 33,r. "~+ .: t;or<1onJ .2• 10 • 14''> h 1• -"• Lowen•t 90 , i• 1t•r. lS'• 1i•.-141 'th~ -d · d f f"lll Corp 3 22 1"1 1•.-. 71" Conl Sii ,.0 1 2 121.'1 11'1' 12\.\-\.gV\d Inc I ' -N !~''-'12 77'Ji-'!'t LTV·--;:.W. J2• 10<• 9\'i 1~+, w1 • uUf'! ay as a ay o no seriously, because there seems ~:::::r'r 1.70 • 6 1lf-2s 2s . . COl!t j•t .tL 13 318 11" 2114 • 11'l< '" G••c• w P ~ 11 26, 2'.I'• 1111t 23•·-\, L rv cor11 A 10 11 11., 11..., -~ f-"" N••ChaSCS at ail "11 • '.·'°,. 21& U •Ht 401.:. .0:1.li-1111 C0t1!r Diii 10 333 ~ •2V. '3\.'J-11 Gr1nbv ,60 17 I 1114 11~ 11l4 l T'I Co S ~· 3" 40•:. 351~ lJVi-!ll .,,...... r-• to be less awareness of the A.~.•,e " 6 sv. JV• 5\(,-•.i. ConOtpl 4'1t 120 " ss ss ·• r.r•nd u .IO io 1s ''""' ui.:. 1•1•+ v. Lublliot 43 ?1 'IS :i.•. 1s~. l6 h " on .12b ' 471 191'1 11\) lt\:o-1\lt C0t1Wd l.90 t s 21li 11li l7'i Gr1n!v I 20 6 •l 23 . Vt~ '1?'-1 LIKkYl .sOii 11 6' 11•0 11 II ~\ -oi boycott t is time." An.cnHc 1.09 I 12 2.3 n v. 22'4+ I'> Cllllil u" s2 6 21 , IV. ii.:.+ ,4 Gren• w l '~ 1 161 n~. 11'• 11'i-1-·~ Llldlow I.Ill 1 5>t u•• li l•\•-,._ 'ttl E AN w HILE. A Local beef slaughtert'ng ,·, ~~.Cl1vlon 7 31 lt'i 19~ lt'llt+ i1 C111111 IM . .• 11 :w 29'1/o 291, 29 \li (';reYD< 1 '10 9 2 1~~ ,,., 11"'+ '• Luken!.11 ·.., II " 17(• 2t>\ 211.;i+,1 -. .... le• .10 11 11 ""' 1,... 1~-•4 Coooer \•b .. '6 II~ 11\(o .,.~ •\ G!AMI l.Xlb n 29 l-1'~ ;i.1;. :M"+ "'L 110 cO,.p 1~ b2 ,,, ·~ ~--+ , ... SPokesman for Safeway back to its normal level after :~o"'oii'~ • 11 u~• 12\ff 1J11t+ ~• C011C>Tr . lb 1 16 1•~ 16v. 1~ ., Gi A&P Ta• s• 11\lo 111• 11i. .. -"• Lvk• Yatfll u3 Ill• ,0,,. 11 _ " • .... • , 35 16 15'4 IS\'•-... COllC>Tllf I~~ 1 II>\ ,,,,. lll't GILkO 1.201 1t l 26\ll u•.; u...,_ ·~ Lvk• 111 2V.C .. ~ .)Olli '9 .. lO~-., Stories reported business m a 30 percent drop during the :~oe11 .1, 11 ,,, s•• s;,i 6'lo-)') c-1ni1 ,32 14 ,, '"" 19v, 1,» G•N 1r 1.10c1 12 • 10~ 1~ 1ou+ v. Lv~11s.,. . .o 23 , 10~. 10"' Iott+ "' most of Safeway's Southern ,. 1r ck: 16 21 11 "" 11 ·• 1111.-u; cooo R•noe · 21 11 t6'1t 11 + " GINN.it 1·60 13 11 ..s .w-. otS _,.,. M-. . , first boycott, said Ray Zim-AWA t' 1 22 ,~ ,. 6ii 6\'o ,.,.. , i-ld 1.21 • •7 26"" 26\" 261.._ '~ GIWtFln ·40 t 20 lt~ """ 1t4!i+ '' MacAJ' .011t '• 2 n "12•• 1,1.lo+ ~· Calilonua meat a isles was '-ennan o[ the Federal .,,,,• . ,st111 .• 121 in~+\• ordur• cos 1~1 7'M .... , ,,Gt We11 Un .. 1t s •~ s -\•Mt1:Donld 62 )S 3'• Jt .. li.. ..,11 .. !lfll .u 8 SO 6~ 61.lo ~'lo ornOl•l.1231 :mto. r tt\i.11)1 +2.:.iG1W11Un11t l6 17 16'~ 17 +-l'Mtcllt 30 1 J 1q 11~ •"-Ito "very nearly no-•! for a. M k t N •-. dd' Areat pf c 2 s 14 1• 1• -'1 Cou11n ' 17tl 13 61 11 16\9 ,,.. '' Grt W••h t~ 2 l•• J'1 l'• .. KMll ,.,. ' '" 1'-1i... ,,,+ • ....... ar e ews .:icrv1ce a 1ng AttherO .~ 11 11 2l''< 221.l. 22•,-.+ ... C:awte1 Com '' 1 7 ~ 6~ Grn Glint 1 11 n 24'• ,, .... 2••...-''• Macv rt~H l ' ·~ ,,~ 11 21'11+ \41 Monday,"traditionallyastow thataprt'cedi·punre'laledto :~f,"'sEnto 5 s~ 6\• si. 6 C0Karr.Js12 2021 21"tn.\O ··G...,.11111 ,°' 9 1111s•,(o1S•\1J•, McvotAL•M llS05' sa1.S111t-1A~ p 1.16 • 69 1111> 21 \.io 211•+ .... CPC1nr 1.71 11 76 l04t. ,." ~·+1 " Gr1yhnd WI IS? ]'flo ,,, J • Mfd Fd 2Sl:I .. 6J 11\"f nv. 11 Vt+ IA' day in the market business. the boycott may be "renected .A~r,,eeii ·"° 1 " I• ,. . u + ~· c raowc .eoci 1 11 1w. 17 '"""i v. Griol!er .90 / JO 12•-. 12 11 -v. Mid SOl.iara 16 s. 1~. 2 21• ~ f Sa 1 D S1 10! 7 "• Ir. Crldl! Fl .38 10 3L 10 t!i lO 1, Grumm1n 11 9'h I 9'-l.'o MaalcCh .:n I ~ JO>• IOI\ l~+ I~' 111e manager o a n in some retail advertised A•'•'men AllDv 11 211 7'• ''• "'"-') c roc.ker 1.'6 • 4s 26\11 15"4 26'\io v, Guardl•n In it ao 23 ""' 22~• , M~nav 1;;-201 293 15-1-1 u"" U'l'I • F do V 11 I ada Cp 7 51!. l•t Sl:i+ '-.• Crom11 K .eo I 59 J'1io ll¥o I'" \!/, GuMt11 2.0211 9 32 391'1 3!1''o 39V._.. '• Mil1orv .ff· 11 io;20 21•~ 21 jl -\'t· ernan a ey mea specials this week." A.rrmosu l 9 491 11"'.• 2~·• 7"\'"t '•'•°""'H .s. 1! 20 lth 11,, i v.-t.tGulfLlf•.90 6 91 J1 lh lO'lf. 31 -''M•lon•Hj lt 1,1 21v. 26"' 7 -Vt· market, hit hard by the first · :;:;: i>I 110 16 JO", l0t1 311"" \lo c rown Cork 1 .SL 2n'i 21v. 2i·~-~~ Guu on lilt 11 aio 2si., 1•"" x ,....,nr.i!ld . 1 10 12,... 12 12~,+ '• urof •'• 1100 60''1< 601.'o 60\11-·~ Crwn ZI l.20 11 na VV•· 26'4 26'1/o+ \.\ Gulf Ae&Ch 10 1~ B'h l"i •~ . M•nPOW 1 3 u_.., 2oM• 2A\• • boycott. said his business y,•.as !~:;:~Ck .BO 13 62 22\i 22 ,21'1-"'° Crwn Ill •.2 160 '6V. 66\'a "6~~ GUltofb .6Sc oil 1J'• 12"4 13·, \. '·• Man Hn f I 103 3'14 31V. J1V.-I-.... 11~ 1,60 6 S lO ,... .. ""~+ V. CTS CP .60 I ff UV. 1S\'\o lSV.-\' Gt.IUSIU l,IM 12 116 ltY, ll'llt 11'111-\k MAPCO 5' 2-' 26 1·~ lll'o ).41.'o+ 1'41 down ·slightly. but added the. BI'l•Ils• hers :~.Jn1nd .si 11 26 11~ ,, , 17'47 v. c11111oan .lit 1• 1 1w ,,..., 13vo+ u G su pf • . .a . . 1rn 61 61 61, M•r•tl!Ofl ·"" 1 St ieu 1~ 11~ \It ?J! \.~• 0•3 213 2111, 2S'o 26 ... "ti ~umlns .U1 16 13' 36V. lt"" 35\lo-~U pl S.OI 160 '' 6t 6t -1 Mir on 1..0 12 713 $ :M :U...,_I new boycott "doesn't seem to A5Dr.... "' 6oC 42~ (}l\ ~2~+ V. Ulltl Druq I 21 71.lo 6V. 6"' fl.W1 .64 • 143 ~ 2314 'l\lo +" Marcor 10 10 2St 221-'ll'I u·+ - have the l·mpacl of the ';rst •,'~.~11· 1.20t< 9 5' u,,~ M,,~. ",,,,+ !? untu Wrt 35 37'1) 2$\.lo 2.3\/o 2•v.+ Gti r&Ws wi ,, 6V. t\.\ !"-Ito M•rcor p( 2 15 4SVI 43'1f. 6 +11.11 • u on.e .olO s ... '"" --unt11Wr A 16 2 30\0 JoMt "JO'\ Gl1W1pf J¥o .. l !S'h SS~1 S "i-\li MarMt111t 21 11 131 l.t n _,_ -." htO M .!Ob I 41 10 19'1/o 19\0-''o CutltrH ~.21 t 2:1 311'1' )0 XIV.-~ GllWI pl Siio . 3' 76\li 76Vt 16,,.,_ V. Ml MJd 1 ICI I JlL 171,\ 26 ..... j7Vt+ 4' • -" E R II .AnCtvE 1.i1 • is nv. 2n~ n v,+ ""C~I~ 1 5 13 nv. t:l 131,__ il Guuon 1111111 It 12 si.;, l 'l'I S\4+ 14 ma~lonL ·21 l1 19 3'V. :ui-. 5.,. 1 , , Marv Weinstein, manager of ye 0 S ~k~c::1.:13~ ~~ ~~ ~1.1o ~f¢. mt-.~ CvPrVs 11 ~61 ~ >0" ~+ HackW 2.» 11~"37 36~ 37 +i Mar1.ro l .1111 v 3sv. Jav. :uv.=.-.~ Triangle Meats in Hollywood, • AtAc ot 2.IO .. t.J ~ 6SV, SJ'i'o+ ·~ 01mon Cp 24· l~ 31t't 29v. lOV.-:m H•lllblrl l.n 16 12213<1 111 1:n""'+•l• ~~~ifc1,,;L1~6 '1:i: 3~,;: 'J: 3~!: 'd I l ::1:ih r!-J 102 61,213~: 1~ 1~+ Vi g•nAtv' ,·~ 11 ' 'Ht ,,,, .. ~1mP~11 .~ 13 135 11\/l 12 ll'llo M•rrloll Cl! ~l 311>1 ,. .. ,,\4 ,. -~ sat sa es were near norma LONDON (UPI) The ~.~.9 Inc .16 ' "6 n• IV. ,,,..:_ ... o:~ I~ :ioa ,; :i u~ JS.,_ llv. .... H::f1~ ~ : ~ :\. ,•,''." ',,,-"" M11'1hF 1.11 12 ,. 2111'1 21\• vi.-"' d th t the bo tt "d 't -.. ~m D•• 4. 199 70 '8V. '91h • 2. 8 llrid ·, 2 3:1.,.. -" H ' ' M1rtl11AI . .0 37 I tit 1'1 I,,..._ \.\ Conserve Gas Sliortages Still Possible WASHINGTON (AP)· -Secretary of the In- terior Roger> C. B. Morton Tuesday urged Ameri- cans to start conserving gasoline if they want to avoid shortages this summer. Morton did not directly mention the possibility of gasolin e rationing, but warned that shorta~es could affect "the freed o m of choice of our citi- zens." In a statement issued from his office, Morton urged that Americans save gasoline by·driving cars on[y when necessary, planning vacations and camp- ing trips closer to home, slowing down on highways and limiting the use of auto air conditioners and other powered equipment. In a separate statement prepared for present•· tion to the Senate lnterjor Committee, Morton said the margin "between experiencing energy short· ages and not experiencing energy shortages is very small." an a yco oesn company making Rolls·Royce •,',',om' Inds ,,, 111 ·~ ...... 11hf It :~co 01,IL 6" lr 1:~ fJi n~ ~ H:==~ :~ 11 'I 1;;:; :~~ 1~~++~ ~arrr ':M ,: 2:1 ~m ~i; g~:: seem to be as drastie as the o CPrP ' 121 11 lOb 101,-. . 01vt1n1n .24 ' 2 '"' m t.\io H1nn• 1.u 21 · .a 4 ,111, •l"~-n• ~ 10 :n 13 ~ .. 14 4 "' ~ ..,.- first." motorcars those stately sym· 1~~: ~ r'.~ ··. ~ ~ ~ ~\l+ '~&:~~err 1::: :? 1ri 11~ ~ bn.-,,., ~:~~~18.1~ 1~ ~ ~:~ ~~~ i':? +~ ~~,: :L3 1' 29 1.~ 2m 1•\.-" ALPHA BETA Market s. with 209 stores throughout California, reported normal sales Monday. Despite these early signs of faltering support by con- sumers, Mrs. Donavan re- mained optimistic that FIT's indefinite boycott would be successful. "It's impossible --to quge anything because it's only the first day," she said. Mrs. Ethel Rosen, a spokesman !or the National Consumer Congress, s a i d groups in Chicago, Washington and New York plan rallies Thursday to protest high food prices, and to urge roll backs and an ·end to export of meat and grain. A.Yerv,~ '.~ ~ ri~ ~~ ~,,.. ~~' ~~wu ,·.!. '• st ~ s"" ' + ~ H••n1111 1.20 , t 21v. 21 l~ht ._ =::t:I :m 10 1~ 1,~ i111o ~·u.-·1~ bo]S Of quiet elegance, Will re-:~::er in.c lO 7 lt:a I!-S'Mo Slt+ v., D:ii & ·"" r.l6 ... ~ 36¥1 37&+ ~ H•rr•h1 .n 11 11 19 11 ~ t f \4 Mat Ml -'Ob 11 ~ 22 n ?; · · B ·r h ha d b ke AVO!IP• 1:•0 59 3901l0 111•, llO + \'f o.1':,..,,l; /·/B : ~ lli'+i 16\."I I•~ V. H1rrlslnl!> I 11 It '9\<o 71V. 'lt -ir Mitwf ,~ 10" 53 2114 "1t 21\t• +'4 main 1n r11s n s, an rs ~011 6• ST_f,,,'-'• 20t.:. 21..-.+ 14 De111A1r :so 11 11, ~ ~ ... l:.,.* ~ ~:WMx .a 1l Ji~: 1'l: JI:= ll :!~'6 t • 'R ~ ,:-1 J\;.:: ~' acting for the finn announced B111&W1 1 c:.14 ~ 21 211,11 21,_ '• g:t'K '"1" 6 21 '~" ,.,,, .1 i% artwt .0$1:1 • 63 II\\ '°"' !oat.--l'f M•:"'-~ 1~ 1 ~,,. 11 21 --. 8•che .lSb ' m ' 5'~ ~'~-'• ~~~ CP ' 197 IJ,1 12i.-1sv. ~ . ewaEI 1-56 II 10 1$h 26~ 6!i +""' M1;:.JW .Jo I ,,, !l1; '"" ~-\4 today, 80o0•,tr In .16 2• 106 :U:W. 1•'• ?•'O-'• Oennvi ·~ 1\ I~ it'll rP-: It ·\'o Hav:ri1Alb I 11 2'16 IS 1•'111 IS + ~t M•vf~ 1..30 15 2.S "'-~!"9 31 +'iii , erOU .J7 27 x:Jt9 JIN 30 :l01>+ ~I Oenrsptv ·61 16 10 Xi!llo 20 -•1 119 f S i'1t 6'1'1 6~+ Ito MCA Ilic: ·" t a 23~· -, A Spokesman for N M ballG111 1.96 10 •5 21\• j P.i 111\o.,.-'l CeSO!Qln ·olO 9 '' <•~ lO\,'J "· -h HCAT llld~. 11,t ~37 ~.\'J 211 .... 20'' Mc.Cord ,11 t .S \t 1• J•l._ "19 . ' B11nC111 1.J.6 11 t 2• •~• 2•h..-', tEdli 1·..s JO 207 ~ 20\li ~ ~ ~~Kk In "' J 16 r. i 48'' ol&'t+ Vi MCCf"fN 1.20 5 t t2111 2J ~ ·• Ro~ild and Sons, Ltd., sa.id c::::~ ~~ 31 :1 l6t .. 12r" ll .! ~: ~e:~ :: 11I .. g: '~:ic. l~\4 1~ + ~ ~·· :f./l',,' r.jf ?l ,1,s I~~ ~I~ !11. . m~c~ z ion ~~ tJ~ =~ !? . f ' r· b 'lted B•oorP pf 2 1 2S 2S 75 IE~ S'h . 2 n"-7'" I' II.I • • •U'I ol(IVI 41'.~-\4 MCS2!!!0 «I ' 1,S 3•!-<o D" ~'!\--l'~ no ore.ign 1rrns su nu Bnk of NY 1 6 J5 J.1 1\ :IJ~ ,. + v. Kfr t: 2s lt 3 ~1 16'.U 1 -:,i ,.:;: c · t 43 ,111~ 2l~ 26~~+ ..., Mcx;'i!D W1 , 2 v~-.-56 l! -2 ~ tenders when Rolls-Royce ii~~T~tst~ l~ ,t n~ ~~ ~U::1a 81:1 1~1r ,:~ 1; Jt ji~ fr'" ,, + ~ :t:l~~t u.~ 'l rf ?JS 11"*' Jj\l+·'-4 ~~G~ ~· 1 ·~ 161 it~ ~ 1"'= ~: ti:i1'1.li~ ·10 rr ~~~ J~:Z ~~:;:-. ,,_ g llm !.hm· 1 10 3lf ·!llo l9YJ 20 -!! Helm p~y',,e JJ !If 2)\4 2lr~ bi-+ a MeGrfQr 12 aJ_ J~"'° ! ~ ~L\."I.:!: I'-"' Motors, Ltd., the highly pro-g:~~ CA .13 40 ~9 30-lo 29v, 29~-,,. gj~f:~n IJS 12 ,", ~ 16\.li ","-"'" •"r: c10 . 11 \Y1' ~ i~ . ~~~f'l'r• 3511 11 r .,.,,,. 'i u -~ fitabl d .. ' f th Id Bsllc In .•a 21 27 7<.i ''"' 6~-...., ' ·-~ ....... em ti ,m • Vo ,,,,, 11.'I+ v, '° ,, ll .. • • ·-t e car 1v1s1on o e O e111es Mf :i& 22 1 11'1/o 11~ 11,,.+ i. im:4r~o-~ 2~ ~ ~· ~ ffitt U; ~ev.:, .1~ It 2l 70\fo "~ tttt-" ::~L "Pt. Sil 1 1~ 1 j ''-1 t bankrupt Rolls-Royce group, g:~~ :.l 1! ,~ = ~"" ~ }i llm::.'r. EQ~ LfL 1'.l. ~ 1•~ n;e.+~ ;;~:. 1.'fi~o ~ lit., !P 1~ ll:;.... h ~ .. ~:I, f 1f x~ l• l~ .~l ·~ went on sale to the highest i~~"kc~ .kfo 21! ~~ 1~ tm-.\'o fH°'!S .. ·.oci ,',' .,,s 31.-. ''"" 31'h-·~11;;.ffl:i'i111;: " .1~ R~ #1t.=l~Mt>M1M !· .. 11.2 i:.." II ! :r b'dde tod ee.~11111 60 17 " J2:1N .sNro-\'J sne~n .12 ~ U ~+I~ H l!Vott n JO Si 5\io iF:: ~ H I • " 1 r ay. Be•t Fm ·62 11 a 25.,.. :u~• 25v.+ v. I"'°" .llllb 11 ~ 'l 14,. IAii H '"t.r .11 is 11 ,.. 1514 <11o MeOuM "' ' \' u-. ~ ~ A Statement issued hy 'a!O',""' .'so 21 112 31~:. ]IV! 31~-\ii tfllS.1 .70 2 j! ' ~ 41 -+ Yo H!tton-HU 1 11 21 2SVi 25 -V. M &: I Cor9 ~ 0 m ~ I -~ ..._ onD :U 27 17 l6'111 lJ:IN l6'11 l"'"l'f In ·. 3J 2\'. 2~ 1.\\-\t '.!_."'1.~ 11'111111 It 1..l N )... ,,._ Mtl VIM •..U 1j '1 2 2 ~, .. Rothschilds said at least one L~'" :~ •. " " ... " + " f ~ ;. 'I! \'~ "" ~· .. 11;:"M ·II " ii I!" 1!" ""t'~ r 0 " ' ~ ' = bid from the unidentified e.id!~'' 1~~ •, 11, 1~1i. 1;r 'l : : r "' :eo u · 1'i -i5 lf•1• ""'"+ ~ ='11tt1.Ct~ 1J 1, f. 'l• ~"'+ U: Mer~ 1.40 21 ,J 11 1 1 ~ British firms which submitted i:mtw ·~ 1& u lYV· 18 ~~""+ ~ LfiJ~ ~ ·+ I f,;. ~;. f:.Z+ ·11o t= ~T .11 1 . ,, n~ ~it =lit! 1JI '1 2k rm m"' =+ ~ tenders exceeded the reserve ',',!!IJ5Co .IO I 12 1"" ti= 1•~ ~ 11<1 IY •-" IS 8 71:ic. 20it 11 -1 Hollv!.u .2Sb 1 12 .~ ~¥. l¥o f.Mlrt~lv ,$6 t '31 mt; ' . 1 ,,...111 \'<I 10 21 Jt~ 38 Jt\14-._ le' II ..J'J 6 J !"lo Ii ""t v, Homntk olO 24 132 •:Nt •l'llo •2lii+ \'o M~a I ,lOQ 18 71 60~ 14 Y.-~ S.le pr·~ estahlts. hed by the •,•,"', I~ 01· l . 2 St~ St:W. St:W.-'"' 0 r liver, 10 7 II I ~ 11 v. liorivwl \·.., 1J 2n lOT'llo 105 101'.)+2'!. Mew I ,$.lb l ! llO ·~ '"" '"' I .... ._ Co 115 7 :nt JO 25'rio 2~2"11 OIM .l ! L9 iV. ""' 1\lr V. Hoover H 10 13 34 32~ 37',-1-o M911a M&el'I 14 1 ..... 14\1• 1''.'•-•, · d ":EDlll j117 12()0 :J1'h :n ~'h+ \'• ~lt'Cp .M I 31 41'4 '1V, •l'lo Horl1on tr, ? 12• l~l t I , MGM Inc 11 13 11\/t l1l4 1''l'o-~ gov e r n me n.t ~pJ>01nte ee 01 •. 30 :·. 4 71 70l/J n _2.,.. • c11 1.10 24 1~ 102"" 1oov. 102:w.+1'h H01Plr.1 ~ I 39 1011o 1! 10•,:.~· ,~ Mttlro .soci e ~ 17'\/o 11v. ,,.,.,_ ~ · (th Id R II Ro Ben l!Df •h . z'ZO 57 57 j1 • wt ·· 4 J2V. JI~ 52'11+1 HOll!Co • 1 11 16 I l'o 1& + '°" MttlEllf 3.to z200 SO SO .SO t • r eceiver o co o S· yce Be11Que1 tnc , 11, J11o 3 J _'Ac g P 11\CP • ~ • '·"'-,., lioll tntt ,.,, ' ,, lJ.\il '" 1.s -MGIC 1n ,to 41 331 st ,..,.. st 1 eer~er Pr.o t lll ,,,,., 12 13 ·+~ ,,..., 1\ll ' .21\'o v ~Yi HOUd•ll• .eo 7 53 111~ 1111t 111.,_ Vi MlchG1 l 04 11 t ll"Vt 11 11 -, BtlhS I.Mia t x31 :tt~ ,..,.. ~ 14 OrtsMr l.«I 16 11 41~ Jm lm+ 14 ~~ M ~ t 5,l 12.._ 11 1 v. Mlczr-Od :..i a 1• 1n • n l211t--,,, Bio 3 Ind ,52 21 J 0V. '"'" 4M -\'o gra pf 2.20 .. II •2V. lo\ + Yt Houle F'abl' lj 70 6" Pio 6\ 11 \'o Mid C I ,. 11 1l 17 16~1 17 + '.I Black&Dk I •• 1 102 11'9\lt 102 + 1'~ l'llt&tr Ill 2 · 1' 311'. l Vi J HouwJ'n · I 2SO ll"' '6'14 16' • 1 Mid I 10 10 7l 1!"1 21~ 11'._ v, Bllllr Jn o18 Ii 66j I'll nit I -Ill D<e•fl l.Olb . 14 21'4. 21 21~+ \\ Houn of 2"11i ' ''• 51 S9'-"+1\~ MldMta ieb t ).I 1w, 1j\ll n>.o 8UssLol>ln· l 1 l~ 1 ''• 11'' ll'A Ortl'fUSCo l ' •JI 1011; 1014 1~i '" HO\lsl"nl 2''1 1• U \1 U ''• •i•1 M dRot1. to t 31 13~ ll 1~+ ~ Blot-HR .2L IS 182 I ... ,,,. 1~ \(, ~a p l.olO 11 '1 21¥1 21 '4t 11"' Vi HausLP l.•o .. II •11} olOVJ .o01>-ll.:. MllnLto (:is 16 14 ~, ~s·'J 116~ BlueBell .65 8 162 19"o l"'-I~ V1 a l)f 1.70 .. JIOO 111 111 11\ \i. HO\IN1G1 .:M 'HI 3 J01io 201'f 30''t-1Y. Ml11onBr '.J6 1~ 61 '''lo '.II"" Jf''t-'• Bobb le llrttf 7 l7 .R'o Jl>li. 5" +l.'o Ukt pf 1.20 .. zllO lot'llt 1061? 106~ ~ HoNG llf 2"'.I S 60>.0 60'r< llO'~-~~ Mlnn.¥&.M I ].I .JU 71111 76'• 11lt-\~ Entries for Ensenada Race Listed Botloo c . .a 12 211 1g 11v; 11 Dukt l!f t.IO .. z'f 102tfl 102111102\'\o . How•rdJ .I• 2$ 111 11·~ n i.-. 13'•-'• M!nnP~ 1 Ll 9 11 11 20 ~ 11 + ,1 Bobe Cased t 2'! I ~ 10\t lMll +•,. DvkPllf "'< . '' t• '' -1 HOwrntl -.10 10 1 12"9 1?\'o 11\~-'•M11111 a ·1, 12 :M 11 1~ 1671+ 1., !~ IMui 5% SV• S'to + 't Oun8rd 1.41 11 162 nl4 1• 14'1/o-1\o\ nul)brd .76b 11 t7 lJV. ltt. 20 + '' MIH v '90 lit 11 15\lt lSV. lj~ (Continued from P age 4) !.11rlt1, 7'22. PH-4.._ H1rrv LI.Ind~, sevc. !.•n J7 Walmtrto. 2nn. PH.(1, lt!cherd Compton. 5BYC, °"""Ma 1.olO ·, 1 !* 21 11 Ovillan Cp JL n '"" 1 1 -"' udll•Y l.~ 11 31 \i 221.:. 2j'A-•.', Mo Pac A. s , 2 71.l'o 7''1'1 7 ,._ ""'' I p ..6 F C A 1 LBYC S1,r, 1714 011.:1, L. POWIU/J. Lvn.cn, L8YC, EK lt P!frwn Bor01<1 1.20 101 243 l'i 21 \'o 21'1/0-\~ §uPonr l'Mb 11 l1j 1'f~ 164'4 167 .. aUllM!iH , I 1 I MPCtm I'° t 3l 251? 2~ Ul'o-\.t 'c!111a4mar, )"36, H ' rink • Ul)Cltr. • s.~r 21•nr. j1174, PH-t. P. H. Novoavonky, NYCLll, c:tr.o:Jer•, 7561. PH·1, Aleh•rd E. Ollnlt1$, HHYC, 1:~~51.~~ 16 ~ 2ll7~ 2im6"" 2r::: r: ~e' I~~ lo '° ~~ ~~'(': ~ :·· ~l'r11 T~ ~ 2tl rg~ ~ ~~,,..t ~ ~:i:.iiis2:: 11~ ,.~n lf4 Ls:.; ~ ~ Sh1Um1r, 10st, PH~. Olek Sf~f'll>Ofl, CBYC, Mar jrlnktl, 11'llll..._P._H~ Aob-.rt Crllchlowf.S5A, Ctl 36 Warpath, lnt7, PH.(1, AOlll!f' C•1werl, AYC, Shark Bos! Ed 2.u 11 59 '14 'Ai Im +11, UllLpl'll JO lXIO 31 30"• 31 uUon E . • 31 1 tV.. 10 +Pio Mol!sco f20 f 62 21,,.. 10llt ll<ft+I;" " ' SI FYC c roubadour, '°"· l'"H'4, lt1111 E. Mii r, SSSC, 6S 2• BO\lfn5 Inc ' 19 ••/• ~~ •"•+ \4 gVQLhl .,; l .. i3AO 21 214'. 21'<1.-\'• HuvcltCll .1• 30 116 ~· ~ Ullo+ :ti Mol!•wk 'or J92 ll!J ~ $ ,:. Sllatom, 2n11, MO-Z, D1vl<1 !vermin, • or, Cu_11om Warrior, 1919, OR·1 , Al C•nel, BCYC, lO Cu1111m er,~"llAlr 31 'l Uj ll:V. 101"' 1\4-t4 vmo In .20 1a I 11\'o 11>,(f 11.,._ ~ 11ydrml ,l)tb ' 17 9>/t IV. t'AI M:r•• ~b 1 ·5 10 ll\'t 11~ 11,1-r• 2S YC l .. Trvly kfllf!1Pllov1, 721 .. Ptf.O, Oll7IQ l , Cflvart, WHltf'ty, '9000, PH'4, RQberl John Bond, CBYC, 8 \005 l.'10.I 1 2 $2V, 52 S2 -ii -· --1 I--Mo'' -o 02 '' '''' 13,. O•>'+· .. • Slllbtll, 7521, OR·t Tlld Roell-. LA • Cl OtC' Triton l<et<h Brj! Mv 1.J2 2 194 6-C'i'o 631'4 641h + Efl!ll Pl .t7 10 3' 17"1 27'\lo 27tioi "' ICH 'Nrm C2: • 99 10'4 lOV, 10l\ +\.lo Molv llf '2c I a.IV. 3-1,;• l•V. i~ ShDrt Fu1t. 27569. M().Z, Roti.rt D. Rotl{ltld, SS.SC, '1 iuneml, 37!16, PH-1, Poltv &fl\lon, KCVC, ~ Whlftla$'.\o lf7,S6, PH·f, Jeck Plnllero, ~Y'C, Cal 2$ =~{ipMv Ill 2 S 7 ft't fl'" f V. + 1" E•KoC .700 , 11 Im lPJll 1~ n ld1lla P 1.76 10 51 2t~ 'Wi'o ttl'ti &lo MOflarth ' «I n 7 1•~ 16y, )61\:j: ~ Not 11 • ,/!h~f L hi n, ~7S60. MO.A. C. J, merv. AYC, Brod ft ·~ ~ TI ll ~ ~ .., E•51""" Air 1 uu 12'19 llfli 12~ ldl•!Ba1 .10 t ltl 1414 1• 1• -1'• Monoi;iralli 7 n n. 1..,_ 1\io 'A S'-baal, 11891, OA·S. Rvuelt, J1t1wo, HHY(, Hp1, Wiid °'11, Jml, Pfi.f, VOl"lovnl/Dtlwvier, VYC. Bd Hrl 'II I 1j m· S6 SdV. +V. E1t!G11F JI IS .Sl ~ ll'IO U'llo dial Tov •I t '2• S\'J •!'o S -\Ii McnroeAi 4-1 11 143 10 19~ 20 -30shr.w, 7"51. PH·l, Ftlld P. Eu11r. AYC. C•l 3' us N•VV. ,,.,~, l"H-t. u s H-.srr1tton, HAVYC, Brltlol 2:1 Br:t! Gl11 ' '6 ~·· 11\t ll"t "" E•ilUllt 11'1 IO • '° 1"" lt!i't-.}', !'~"''" l.'2 ' t2 l'O\lo lMt 2014 llo\on1nl "'° 12 •11 sn ·1 JI"' 5"'+\i;' .ye C 'I ~·· Wllld Chlld. 760', PH•. let Afmlh'QftQ, VYC, Cor Bru-. 1' 10 ,, ~ "" f1ll(o I.DI• 37 7'2135\11 131~ 't!+l\lo I «I l)fA • s " t6 ff -2\\ MO!lt Pl ,... 11 '3 61"" ~·· Silver HHll, l7427. PH-t, Mlc.hHI Ham11ton, • ti Bra:.,~ co;im 7 37 ,. m !"I-\" ffloCP 1~) f :N :U'lt ; + t,') II an of JV. 10 ~YI 4$111 46 \o'J+ ~. MantDk 1,9~ )1 Jt l4V. 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(II 1' wOOci Echo, Jn13, PH·7, l(..,..,.lh Lltblr, KHYC, j? lildenal nd. 6i • fil ™ 14 E11111 Fln SI!. S 5' t v1 9\, t•tt-" 111,t l11v .-IQb t 5 1~ U'• I•'• --H M • s~:h1f'r!" 31029, PH.f. o. T. V•n Houahton, "VI r'¥;Jl'5· . b!:"'l..~ Yt'vs.ustom.. 'Y.e~. 7..,.,, ,H.J, P•u• F Jac:clbl. PMYC, L·l6 c:M''..'1JVJ .s 1)0 •'I • '"+ ~ i:::I~ G:J 11 1J 11:~ {h, ~~ t(o l~'r: :·u ,, 43 42~ ~,..., •11'.ol. Toto "46!)11(~2.JO lS Sl ;;-.. , .. *"' +•• ~J.'i, ~--· 31613. Pt+--0. L.wls W. CONW1n, ~ ::r0us. 17\1•. Mb-Z. 111t0bfrt It. ~)~~1 llt.. Call•M8 ', , .. ,. 'ooi '~ J t1 2:1~ 2t~ ~ Enola i' ··~ l lOSyt lOS\'t '°',,..:: '.<I I 8 ~ 1 5;441 ~ L~ ~w~ JtV. .!r" ,.] ~:~~~ h ::3 ~ 11 n"' lilt ff'-· · ~: _3': tlCll C1I 21 Y1nllet1 Glrl, 37$.U, Olt·l, Art L1r1011, DPYC, EK Cam · • 60;\ )t stt,._1',., Enr1!1 111 F 10 1 s.>\ r, S~ 1nFtaw ,ttt n S1 •1 It\' .... ~ Nasllu .S1 20 lO ..S\o\ 44\'i d \.\ +llllo ""'" rQSI, 27UO, PH-t. Alvmotld A. Ntv•rro, Vlktf'l, 1!1]: PH-t, M. 1. 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Ill l '1 l6Mi l'Mt-"'f~"""°'' .~ .. •l'I 8\tt-''l"~ 1 ''{''" ,,.., '~-1.\N•llTnc.s•l ~ .S\6 -\\ SIDS• UP TO 24"XJ6" MIN. w. ... as IC r am ~:r.,.;0 ··~ ' 1H ~ 11~ ~1~ ~:r:i\T!'F ~ , 22 it:: l'lt 1'11\ +. :! ,1~~.·.·~ I l' ,, tl1·~ tl + ,, ~::~, :, .J 111 ~ ~\t ~ ~ m.n• t11n•:1 •Vt l !"' ,,_ lsf\.\..i. \\ F-r..t I' I 1 1~ 'i th ..._,, n._, ·~ • 5l l'\lo '' •'•-1111 Ntoi~ro. ?1 l• 7 ·1 11 VOl.UME DISCOUNT e PICKJI_• •DJEU' Vllv•l'lnl11.-I • o f A "f" a I J th #llc.o 111 26 j! 'll 5Mi 14>\ ~lto+ .. .,.,. W11 "n SI I)\ !~~ ' 10•11•1""', 151; n 1• '!' 'I' 'l'• ~ '' N1v Pw l.J1 10 1 u 11t u..-~ Ou LEQUICK J4ft (~ ..... M .... -nvention· or rt11c1a ee· :::lli:.';'",t I 'l ~:: m: •1~+~~=..M~' '1J""' . ~~ :i .,:.~.ij·~"''of • .: .:; " ::~~=i·.:"Y.';:0 .""1·'~"'1.'l...'l, +i~ D B • '°"-~Ii' , . ., l 17T ' H n -;, '""'0 \·~ ! P," •t" ~· ~ ! " n» '' 1 '•' '· NEoT '·! u " • ~ ~v,..u Jl 7.ZS67 I r ~\'J 110 ' f l 61 -1 """'Mn · I \\' ''~ •l 1ow-l" 'i l'~' 11 1·~+ t., Ntw~,. t . 16 ...._ 111• N. M•M st • .,,,._.,. -L Mft•.W , ..... -•-" lh•L bu rcvolulioolicd denture ~t I" \.i 1:it 1 'l f u1-. FdHllMt . I • !SIA 4"' A"t+ '' IH"P .u •t• ltt'! 1 '• Nwmnt 1 13 uo ~ j"'+ • ..-u..,.. WUI ,....... nnL tnh: '(l ~ a 1 ,, 2l>.lr 2P4-· .. "'"'P•oer '°" l•\'t t\i-1 °"'' l .6' l lJ l3 'n~ 1J + 1~ NwmmJI •I\ / t -~ .:::~::~'.::'.~~~~'.::'.~'.::'.~~~~~~~~~'.::'.~'.\ .. ..... ...... ·c:t~~fflllblleharder,dlewbtt· ~ii .. ~:n \ 1 ~~t ~ illt! ~ ~=Jlr 1 : 'I n ,, __ ~~ l~~~ :~ :':r.!,.,·~ I Ji ,.~ m'°\1o 'r·-·~ ~lv;;~ i:~ 10 ,,j, ~l ~t.,_ tft'A_!:, da ' N Now.fortbefintllme.lldenctatfma let, Ult more natuta!Jy. F1xoocn $1 r.riJ 13 ."!t "1, tt~ ~ ~= 1· f) i 1 4uf'" iii .,"' .... \ll 1t'or~ 11 2" bi, .: l'l::; ~~ ~ ~J ~-:: ' ,11~ ~~ ~· ~ !. l Tr y Satur Y S .,,..,8 Qui•,., platic:atamlhtthohMdlrltlhln ~for ht11.1t1. R<Mta moltl~ · '' . ' I l1ll !' ")ju '"'" .Js 12 11~ 241'1 "' ~·~ ., N•MDf i t!. ~ J lm CiRf M neftrbefore.-fonMJnclMC:kmmn-DCnlurt1 that ftt are cmmtial to :;'!td ·~ i 1J If.? l~.-1~ = f'MldMf 4111 'i 1 · -fi"" ™+ 1• V ~~JP A I JI"" I"' '8111 ~ '• Nl•Sh•rt -,, t4 rn '"' bnne \bat "'-1/Jf """-,~,. ,..., htalth Set yciur: dtnlilt rtrululy --... n !aU. »'to,.. l!'lfi'1/'o 'ao T '~ Im~ \m +v. u ft! ''• -.J .1-3' +I ~Mt~~~.3' ,; J " I We Dare Y ou NlMfcltW...J1fltlt...,.\ Jt••• ~ .. •-•co-~FaxaHTOit:riwN ,:::.""',,,P111t 1~ , I .~ 1~ JfJt Cr,:~t=t J ~ Dl~-~ ':~" ~ 1f 't ~· ~ Ii ~rJr .l ' !' "I •t. UD}quedltc:ow:ryCalJodFJ~ • ._.... pf IJO .. • it; 70 \t,-5~'1 0 ~ ~ 1,1..,IW'l,'l! It~ "t )\. ~"f'-I. ht Iii t t )!rnSPl 1.11) " .n\41 •I~ .,,._ ~ '•W".Mc . 11 . ~ ... "' If/pr,,, " " " ... J "IA CHI A" " ~ """"'' • 11 ,., "" t••+ ""'M• ,,,, '" i•• ,,..., • "' 1 ·~ 1 ", "' •• •• · " l'I ;i.tf'!t'MY ' ,. )ll'o 2)\lo ll + .. 111.Nlot 1.•1 I )6\\ .tw ~ -...,;w C,.Lof 4 r!O Jl'4 Sl 51 N ..... ,,~I • '" • ' ' ' ' • • J • ' • • llLYIR STORY: ••• ~-.::r. :::.~ ~= ~ ~ l:w~ "9tKt • r""1'.:,.·' ......... ""'-r-..... ~ ................ " • .., ........... """' ............... ., tblllt• .... 1 • I WIDNISDAY -May 2 -7:30 l'.M. NIWl'OltTIR INN , .• ,.. ·-· 1tt7 J1el1 • ..... Naz,.,,._. :THUllSDAY --..Moy 10 -7'30 P.M. PIKl'I VDDUOO DAKS (V .... lt .. ltoofn) 1111 N. 9°1 ••• ........... , NO llll•lVATIOll NIC81U.l'I" -AllOLUTIL 'I Pllll .......... ..,.,,........, ftfttl(f ••• U.S. PRICIOUI MITALS EXCHANGE WASHINGTON (AP) -Anl lnvKtm<nt credlt !or ex- ploratory drilling for oil and gas 1n the Unit~ states wu proposed by,. !Iii'· Nlso1r ad· ministration ·MOnday to pro. mole the aearch for .. ,. energy reserves. wculd be a aupplimeatary credit ol $ perctnl of ln· tonaJble drilling co1t1 to be !Um ogalnll ~ ..flnl lex paytble on ntl Income from produclloo. ' 111 t. """1y Dr. -PMtll111 .. h¥Wt'r MMI" C.llt, ttl11 (HIJ UW111 The credit proposal was con- tilned-ln tht admlnlatratlon's' tax reform package sent to Congreu. • II Congress approves, th• credit will be effective for all drlll1nc 1tar1ed alter April 17 1n the United states, lncludlna offa:bore, 1n Puerto Rico, and in U.S. territories and ' Kids Like To • Ask Andy UNI.DER 'nlE PLAN, drillers of new domestic ex· ploratory wells would receive a 7·perctnt Investment credit on Intangible drilling coota plus an allowance f o r geological and geophysical ex- penaea. . . lf the well proved mercially productive, com- thtre • pOllel...,,, ' Other bl&liJlghts ol the NI•· .on tax reform package In· elude: -A REQUIREMENT ll!at tnpayers pay: tues on at least one·ball of their income, despite the amount or ex- clusions and deductlons thef · mlglit claim. '~p for people. ThatS. why I~ lmperiaC' ~t-4P~l- 6.W 5:8' 5.29 ~ .. -.. -. .:;':.U. ~-=-tt,OOI......._ --,.,,,, .. _.. 6.F 591!' 5.Y 5.11' ......... ,...... Mlllll...,... rllN• ......... )WM. Mlull ...... ,.... • ........... _ ......... 11y ......... 1,..,, A Plan for All People. Newport BHcb (lllkt: 3366 \/lo Udo, N"'po11 icarll. 71,1673-3130 • Newport Cenltr Offttt: 550 Newport Ctnttr Dri.-e, Newport .... h, 71,16«-1"61 Other offices in Claremont • Downtown Los Angeles • East Puadena •Glendora• Pasadena • Redlands • Sierra Madre • Topanga Canyon •West Co.,.ina • \Yhittier • Woodland Hills. Choose the insured saving<; plan that is best fur)'OlL Saving at Imperial is coqvenient because we now have over 60 offices throughout the state. --Imperial o£fen; over 20 helpful services, too -most of them free. Come in soon. ' '--.&.'I' CMNG SUUIOl"-llY OF1.t l.llUON DOI.LAI\ U .. 'f:fl;l"L (:0.-0ltATION Of' ,....lllCA om Closing . Price< -Complete New York S10<·k Exchange Lisi ......,,,,,...,=,,....., • ••C4 ,ll"I , Golden State Bank has nam- ed Glen E. FrlU.l,er a s manager of lhe bank 's new office in Huntfng- ton Beach. The Or- ange County branch•, opening \\iay 14, will be lhe ninth in • ,iuz111R- the Golden State Bank system. Prior to his apfJointment, Fra- zier, a vice president, y:as as- sistant manager ol the Do\vney office. • He and his family ·reside in Huntington Beach . * Darrell G. McCollough has been elected a vice president of Calilomla Computer Products, Inc. and will h"ead a newly created prod u c t management position. The firm is located Anaheim. * Kent Ooollltle has been named manager of Grubb and Ellis· Company's first residen· tial off.ice In Southern Cal ifornia. Doolittle, an executive for lhe finn's Newport Beach of- fice for four years, has opened headquarters in Corona del ~1ar. The South Laguna resi- dent is currently selecting and training personnel fOr the nev.• facility . * McDonnell Douglas Automa- tion Co. has consolidated the management of its !\YO data processing centers in Long Beach and Huntington Beach. Donald E. 1\nderson of Hun- tington Haf.bour has been given responsibility over the cons o lidated organitation along with a Long Beach ex- ecutive officer. He has been director of the flrm "s Hun- tington Beach data center since 1970. Anderson joined Douglas in 195S as an eIJ8i neer. * PaU'ick McGuire has joined JAK Coustructlon Company of Costa Mesa as operations coordinator. 11is responsibilities include properly r esc arch and management or all activities relating to the development of condominium and apartment projects in Soul her n California. . * The photographic products and electronic instrumentation firm of Coleman Syste ms has named R. E. Tackett as treasurer and A. J. Hardy as vice pre sident or the Irvine- based firm. Tackett \vas formerly con- Revenues Up 21 Percent " For Times Special to the Daffy Pilot LOS ANGELES -Net in· come Of the Times Mirror Co. for tile flror Ii weeks of . 11171 advancecMo ·SlOiS million from $>.& million earne!l,in the fin,t, quarter of im, Dr,... FrapkJjn D. Murphy, ch{li.nnan of the boon!, l't!ported MO!ldgy. ~mlnga per aliAre for tho rlrst quarter amounted to 3l cents compared wlth 17 cents per 1harc 1n .the nnt quarter of 1972. Rcvenuet for tilt period reached SI4U, million, up from Sll3.I mllllon ln1t year, an lncreose of 21 percent. Murphy said the nation's strong ccooomy fn the first quarter, and parlleularly ·thc oontlnuilti high lt•el or ac- Uvlly Id the forest prod nrea, was a major factor In the Improved results. U nio1i Oil's 1st Quarter Tut1doy, May 1, 1913 -• MUTUAL FUNDS · .. Yo:__., t.;:. C'\..-:1t~••• .. -•..,•~W3-lllf'9B11Dmm;·- R d ,.,_ York -Fol-aeln Fd ••• 71G.3j Kl"VSTOMl t kPwt ,. t.00 .... eporte lowlni:i J1 • 1111 ol Q.,..th F ll.S6 U., !ult Bj "·ll 20.14 SCU DDIR ,Ill: bid Ind lskld prl-tncme ,.20 6.71 UJJ I ~-21~ ~Ir Inv 11.n 11.lt ces 1111 Mutu11 So.-c:H F .~ 1.20 111 ' j·• t. 11111<: l"'!l l'.51 Fuoch ., QVO!td llY Skk l"d 17.4713.~ Ult 1(1 ·'° I. om 10. 10.13 • llie NASO Inc. Ebef'sld 9.U 10.1. u11 IC1 3.71 6.3.1 ~11 ,R l0.31 Special to the Dally ~not Mtnll•~ ~~teJ&Mi-1:f112~;$3 ~:: !~ ~l~~it:: e~~r,1Tv 1.~•=3.1, LOS ANGJ::LES -Union Oil ,0t',,",' ,»,._ 913 1Qtv G•' ,,.~,, .. . utt Sl 1.10 t.•• 1nw1 6.ts 7.61 C r r-1 ·r . ' ... T: FQIV r . ... "'' S4 '·'I •. ,1 li!llr• " I.ff 1M o. o "'" 1 orn1a s net earn-frwrh ~A !·': E n<t1 "ii" "'' .. Pl!Gllo •.1 s. • s.rL•CTl!O 'DS'. ings for the first quarter of 1~f~ •. "Id .:~ are I xn.~ 13.5' <n?~t~' l:{I ::ft 0:0 ·t~ 11:!111ta" 1973 were $38.3 million, 23 per-::r~~Fd :3~ ::t~ ~E~~GTrl 1ti3 4.52 ~~"~; ~~ I:~ l~ rm''11~t· :~'l Jt1 Cent more than 'he $29 9 ,.,tu1t.1r1 '·r. t .S4 nll'llV II.st lj.st L Ill GROU1"1 ~(Y F 14. S 15.2 . AGE Pd '· ··" oultv F a.u .:rz II L~' "~2 17.~ lll!MLD RI' I mi'llion in the fir st quarter of 11.1J5l•r• 11. 111.13 F•1r1111 a.52 9.Jl rwt 1• 1., omit :t.3J 3_61 Al1>h• Fd IJ.15U.37Fm Bure 9.6l 9.61 e5rc 13 11S 7 nrror 5.71 62' 1972, Fred L. Hartley, presi· ::;:cH'vr: :::: 1~:1°1 ~ra1~1Vv '·'' "· -Jr,rv1,,)11 f·ol .,:,, ~··1 Fd •,:11n ,.:U d ' led M da t th Am Eql_y j.lt 4 I GllOUjll· ·1 G v . • trbr . . en . repor on y a e AM ll!x,111 s · ~nd dib 9 15 111, ·,. crw j·S: .oo •rbr 1. 1.5 e<>mpany's 83rd an nu a I FuNDf= ..., •0111 n:" 1 :ss :r~ ,.~ 1Jl 1·63 egr:'1,_Li lij :·n Capl8 x7 SCI a .• ~ (11'1!" ''3 OOMIS •.. IH • ,. s . shareholders meeting. lncorn xi.1• ,.ss v sec :... 7.91 °AYL1s, ,.,11prc 1 ~!1 zii 21 Th t di lnv9tm xB.U .'9 Oe1! d.tl Cap Dv 12361,:M lncorn 1 191! ere were no ex raor nary spec1 1.n 1.86 euex 10.5'3 Mvtu11 1,:.1 u:,1 inw51 : 10:, . I . 'lh Stock 7.65 1-36 Ever~! 11.52 12 . .YJ OltD All· Sh ONn 10 10 " gains or osses 1n e1 er Am Grth 5.i. 6 . .a Fun.d 15.71 11.11 Affllat 6 !1 71! ilf." JU' (ii ~r'ood Am 1n1ln (r (rj Puritn 9.57 10.•6 Am 8 .. , 1.,, 3·, ~ ' 01 , ,,~ • Am nvs.t '·' '·' Sa!cm F •09 4.•1 " · · ·"' N Am Mvt t.•6 927 Trend zf•72565 Snd deb I .4811.lS Ci11> hr 8.116 1.11 et earnings per common AmN! Gr 2 . ..0 2:62 Fl,,.ANCIAL · · Lutl\ern io.6' ll.61 Inv 10.so 11.s.t h t ta d, f th f' t GltOUP· PltOGR.l.MS· Lullln In 9.IO 10.11 Tr1r 1.2.5 9.ltt s are OU s n 1ng or e 1rs Capl1at" A.t7 t" Fin ovn xJ.17 ,_11 MAGNA FUND': V"11vr t.•210.:io quarter were $1 14 in li73 and l"nd Inv ,.,., .s.i Fin 1nc1 '·" '·ll c10111 1·" f·l' !'11"~ e 10.0• io.<W • Grwth .01 ·R F'ln nc ~-·1 j:u lncom 11 . 0 a ~&.Gr 11.•4 "'" 84 cents in 1972. On a fully ~n:::Jr ·U 1~ 1"1VJ V• 1ff; 1 ·21 ,:~::; · ,;:J '"F 1111.1312.,, diluted basis the nt>r share we N111 i2:6:i lJ0l7 F511tsT • • · Mitt ..Gwt 1.•1 2.41 SW$! Inv x\ . .O t.OI ' ""~ Astrpn 3 Bl • 19 INVESTORS· MASI CO: Sw l"v G .46 '·" earnings were 93 cents in 1973 ?:ciax F 1:21 t :os OIK Fd i 6s d.1• Frttm 1.01 •·•• Sovr In 11.Jt12.•7 . • 'jrlh Fd 711 7 19 llld11 F 7..>4 I Al ltitlrl J.Jt 5.t1 and 73 cents 1n 1972. und~ A '-ft J·H tock F 1:GJ 1:.0 M••• F ,11.4112.ss Pr""•'""'•'·~ T I "'° 8 uftd 9 7. .I ~·~ Mvlll 1.36 t .:M MAIS ,N l : l • 9 D 0 I': ota revenues were .,.,._,. s1oct1 s. 1 •· • srerr J.u .n MIT 11.a l':il ~-" j·n l"' 'jj" ' th fl t t f -'•• SC.I 4.IS •.S RUM GROUP· ~ G 12.fl '· lvnll . ·'° J!11 100 1n e rs quar er o !Le 0111 n,.o 11·"' 1 Fnd 11.:ri 'j" .11 o 11_,115. roart. •.• s~ this year and $581 4 million 1·n •bt(ll'I 1a.~ '-g 1 , Fnd. 1.1s .1s FD , .021•.il !'· ,r Gr •· · •v•oc 1. . ji"'vm '·j, ti MCO u .r, 'j-" 'r.·•~ J·" tti the corresponding 1 9 7 2 "" " I· · '"" " • """' '' 1 ·" " Sff • ·"•' ·'·' 11cn HI ·ff . '(,Gr •. 1 =t:'""' 1 t 1 .tt l'T A.DMA • qua~er. 81:~o::i" ll:t;\1:,,~~o~~~Rs ""§!IQ""'td 1'111\~l1 :;n.o'~ l11 f. • Union's sale s of petroleum .,kshf' ti! '"' Gr.wth s.29 ,.71 M 1 BnG '·ff '1·10 1nrt•t 1.40 •'"' od . th fl t £ ondSlll 3. !·"' tncom 11.n 1 ,OA MF Fd 7. i IT•IN RO• HO ' pr ucts 1n e rs quarter o ost Fd" '· 1 .•1 F Mtu•• !·!' 1s M F' Oro •·• ' e11111C 21. 11.01 1973 We rd ·~ 300 bar rOWTl 3.52 J.15 F SCIKll 1 . 0 1 . i Mm gt •.71 5. C•Plll I'· I·" re a reco \1\1\11 -IULLOCK F~aSQ F 1.17 .. M fn '· lD. Slotll 4. .t2 rel' da.oiy compared •• 479 800 "UNDS: P NK~IN Mui hn 15 11.ts SIS OROUI': ~ • i~' Fd ll·l' 1•.•1 1 UI'. Mun 'IP. 1. .tt Orwth l·'a '·" barrels dally in th·e first : ~~ ':J 23:ff' Rw!11c:sr 1·" 9:30 =1~1£1~ ,.t 1 '·" 1~~ t 61 I:~ quarter or 1972 \ltn 1 .1111. l!'r l1>em ~j1 ,,11 1•••nc ' 11 .2• ft<hnf # . •nhm 1111 . S vS l0.1 . oncllt' I . roF . • 10.mr ! ! 11: .. Ceo AM rel Siil u . . tKP\rt ,l I > crease in earnings to 1m· •P !"... ·t? .n "'' EQ1v I '·" l'leam '· s. '"'"' o . .1, proved Average pr 0 du c t ;Kt ~~.· 1 :d 1i·U e~c:r :6sdfHC'I' ' 31 i~h Sr i':t: ~ ~:,,"(: ... ~ : .131! · be I I f O'M'llHCI Ii OUP: NIW IN• '' r1,vl Eo 1 ,, I . Pr~~ces .. the dg nnlnlg o s11nc: 1111z.o. :nm f·ri'° 'JJ ~~1,r~ 11·"\''9 401-t n .. n :11 uµOnes1an cru e • o pro-8fld td t . 1l•2 1if 1r 1J. 1j·R S!dt j:ll 1-IZ ~1 J· J·l! ductlon and shipments, highe r &:'.:"" l" i:; .~.:'~ 1 I : .. ~~ ::1 1,:1<1 ',::r 8' ,,. · :ri sales Or petroheum producLB incom . §r. •·1 ,. ''· ' . 11-)" 1w '·~ u s1 'Vfc I . 1. K 6.11 6,11 a-· i • 1··· •llQ l"I , and chemicals increased c M' r · •· R.,ou•,s&c111 , ., "Wkl , s. ef"d I'' 1. ''" • ~ • S. .. lchl11 • 16 Nli1 fty ~1 refinery throughput and ~"' ,, '\\I 'i:!l ::.O's'l'I ol:ll 1!:q ""' '~' '·II'!· l ii! ''P', · I higher .subS1dlary earnings hTr e1 f;r. . 'St!t FAm •·iJ #·U §1mf ~ ; uNIWb " : Hartley said these im· ~ f 1l:ll 1f:!i!Vlrd1 1'1d 1'· l . ~·.uw 1'.,,t.:Ol ~~~d . :Wi provetnent~ were partiilly >c: ~ L~ ... it.&4 H~LTo~~,~~ ~ o•mM10~'•1·p f:I = I : \ ~· ollset by higher costs of labor, ,.,m !~ r·J! C •:JI '"' f.= ' 1 !.'fl:'! I' materials and services and ~ l . 1 :ll llCQll'I ':ff 1f·~'f i c re ti l v~ 7~' ~' lower dome•tl• crud• oil and ~. i' :It ::~· ·1~·· 1 ,: ~:rs·~·~~ ~ ul,8~.~ ; .. natural ga5_E_roductioo. In ad-~lfsT: · H!l"ltQ• f: T:, Jt~" e.1i :r, ..,., ~ J. -~· dition, interest expense . in-.,,/~ l~ ~:fl ~~CD 1:· t:~ ~~1 1 \J 1&:li 1l:.U ~v:~ ~ t :II creased due to the effect of om• ' '· UJ Imo Gr 1.1 '1l ~ Nlil'i. ~fi · ' 'A'c 3· ·., tht dollar devaluation on. the = ' I' 1· 1 L,~ '!~: 'j:ll ~~·ll 1 :, ~:II ~••H:O"{I! 'M compo1ny's foreign borrowmg. oncnt T·?J . " t . -"' t/innlr 11 • ·fl om fi : ~ ::r, \'.: ' -''.. "'2:'~ !!: 11::: -~~o :ll m· ' ' onMI I" ~ s' 1 ·•111 Ould •; '1:4 <: ._O :::i'' '· :1~~u ~.,. ' l"v !!'Idle ~~-1~ A; r• : .H ~':'1tc1 !. 1.K '}' 01" •1:,~ • tu : ~o I· ' '"' {J" '· 't:ff 111!1'1'; l:ll ~~,··· 1gr 'lJ~ t •" ~:::l''c t l ·H = ~· IH 'tJl Weekender \I~ ' •1i:11:11 ll',.il· .·~·il:lhr!ll.A'' 11: n;ii r,,..,' ·" d · · '" ~ .1· ! .l:ll 1:1'"• f :ll tjJ! •••••· " ",,,. 'HI 11 -A verll8lllg ~'f<'.i"'co ~: il:lil~~~."" ,r. :l! ~:: "f~I'. , '. 'I .. ii"'· Ph m 61 I " u ~ l:!l l:ll ~!:.. l ii: " jt j~ · one ro I , 1,.~ ~"Mt fj Int . . lln ~; 6424321 ~"2E '1: • : :& ~1.:-t~· .l;:tj~· ~!f.~ .. .'{'i .. ~ /j ' Gr .o. llM°'7 'I· 1tlJ Jt 1 • ~ J:UJ: N a H•n I"' ·' I. SHiii"' • l·"i..._-<'MdtN. WAlDt _JH1n .. '·'° '·'' l(flVI '" Jif r-41Mwtlftlt. • - ' • -.-....,_,....,_ - ' ' • .... .. l-. 11 ... l , 1973 Tuesday's Closing _ Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Nixon . Economic • Plans Anticip.ate<l NEW YORK (AP)-Stock morlmt prices opened '•l\'Ongly higher Tuetday, took a deep nosedive, then .bell!' a ropld recover/ at the announcement that PN&ident Nilon would malle an announoement on the economy at 7 a.m. Wodneoday (PDT). SoDIO brokers called It one of the most emo- tional market dar,s they bad aeon in years. The market 'Is reading to the uncertainties of the econOllly by go Ing up and down everytlme there's the all8htest bit bC news," said Louls Abt of Granllf & Co. • '1 think that there's Utue doubt that It wH the announcement about the President's press con· ference that sent the market back up" said Larry Wachtel of Bache & Co. ' SC DAILY ~llOT "~ - : . ' .. • • ' . • < • • if DAILY PILOT .. ' • ;QUEENIE ''E'very time I walk by the board room in a miniskirt, I'm glad I don'thave stock in lhecompany .'' L. M~ Boyd Julius Caesar • First Journalist An electronic engineer of sonie skill didn't like all the factory·installed warning buzzers, lights and signals on his car. So he invented his own tape system. And installed it. Now when the gas tank runs low, no red light comes on, but rather bis wife's voice yells at him: "You're running out of gas." When he forgets to buckle up, her voice says: "Remember your seat belt, hooey.·~ The list of her re- corded comments is too: long -to pt here. But I Jike lhe oae that goes: "Look out, your engine is too hot. I sec steam! Do something, you idiot!" No journalist should forget that the world's fjrst newspaperman was Julius Caesar. He edited the original publication called Actapoblica which ' -:--~ ci rculated in the Roman Empire for • 600 years. , ~ ·' Not . many ~zens realize that the item Of apparel known as the ear muff is only 86 years old. Chester Green- wood of Farmington, Me., invented it, ~ did. You need a government license to be a beachcomber in Australia. QUERY -Q. "I know wba't an inferiority' complex is. And an ·anxiety complex. But what's a Poor Boy com- plex:?" ~. Such is the lingering frame or mind that makeS a fellow gel· all shook up if the refrigerator door is left open too Jong, if a light is left burning in an.empty room, if a household thermostat is left too hi gh. Pretty c001mon, the Poor Boy mplex. Just about everybody exhibits same by practici_ some personal petty economy. Like the Lady. friend, he rinses empty ketchup bottles. I've got one, too n't ever remember throwing away a short pencil. ... alf the drawers in the house.,have pencil stubs in them. What's yours? Q. "I KNQW CHINESE is the most spoken language oC all. But isn'l English the second most spoken?" A. It's third. There are 13 major languages each spo- ken by at least 60 million people. In order, with their num- bers of millions, they are: Chinese, 700. Hindu and Urdu, 280. English, 250. Spanish, 150. Russian, 130. Gennan, 100. Japanese, 100. French, 80. Portuguese, 80. Indonesian, 80. Arabic, 70. Bengali, 60. Italian, 60. O]le wife in every four votes as her husband advises. One husband in 20 votes as his wife advises. Or so re- searchers at the University of Michigan report. LOVE AND WAR -What newlyweds ought to keep in mind are the four "C's," contends a lady doctor in London. 1. Compromise. 2. Consideration. 3. Communica- tion. 4. Cooperation. Interesting. Our Love and War man says she left out one. 5. Cooking. Now exactly 10 percent of the wives between ages 18 and 24 tell pollsters they only want one child, no more. And four percent say they don't want any children at all. Were you aware that Kalamazoo got its name Crom the Indian word" for "place where the water boils"? Dead on a stretch of Michigan highway, st.ate patrol- men there found 445 raccoons, 140 turtle s, 77 deer, 16 pheasants. 49 muskrats, 82 skunks, 45 rabbits, 57 wood- chucks, 163 squirrels, 66 dogs, 67 cats, 137 opossums, and 22 foxes. Address niail to L. i\1. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Cati/. 92660. Clifford Irving, • Publishers Settk NEW YORK IAP 1 -The McGraw·Hill Publishing Co. has agreed to accept $130,000 from author Clifford Irving to relmbui'se it for fund s spent dwing hls wTiting of a Shaker Breaker HALIFAX, N.S. (AP ) - SandY Gillis, an announcer at.-a New Brunswick rndlo stallon, claimed he sllook 1,m hends, beating the --~ ol Ut3 "" lit' n-i.n ftoollevtlt ID 00. spurious . autobiography 0 r billionaire· Howard Hughes. ~1cGra'A'·Hj!J, in a suit in stale Supreme Court , asked $173,821.89. The settlement was reached after three days of trial. HOWARD" A. McGraw, president of the publisbtng !inn, sald in court that his !inn had golten back $500,0QO or another 1750,000 it advanced Irving, allegOdly to relay to Hughes. The rest, be said, ha s b<en tied "" by the govern· ment of Switzerland where it was banked. Irving is serving a 2~-year fedcraJ prison term for hi$ part in the hoax and his wile. Edith, a two-year term In' Slriberland w b e r ~ &he d<poo!ted tbe funds under fa1Je names. ' , • • . HARDWARE~ LUMB~ .. Speclal Purchase! GYM SET "The Perfect Size for Small Yardsl" • Sturdy 2 inch diameter tubular stool frame. •Two coOI, comfortable plastic swing seats. • Two pa;;enger glide-ride with stool supported seals. • Easy assembly-colorful, non-toxic baked enamel finish, REG. s29,95 SAVE s5,001 . ... :t r':;. ··~ .... ............ _ . . , .. ~:,,··· ..•.. • Slnkmaster• GARBAGE DISPOSAL "Engineered To last-Don't Confuse Thi• With The law•Prlced Model Sold flsewherel" ' • . ' • Big, powerful y, h.p. heavy-duty motor. • Neoprene Sound suppressors, heavy steel cutting assembly, drain & sink attachments included. • 1 yr., no questions asked, over-t he- counter guarantee. • Complete in- structions on every box--no need to call a plumber for installation. REG. $29.95 s2411 SAVE OVER $5,001 • • • • Sturdy tubuJar alum inum frame '1ith strong vinyl strapping. • ~djustable to many posilions, • Choice of several colors. REG. $12.99 HIBACHI Big. 1O"x1 7" hibachi has plenty of.cooking room. • Ad1u1toble air vent•, 3 position cast-iron grill1. •Toke it camping, on ,Picnics, to the beach. REG ; $6.89 Big 6 Ft. Long REDWOOD TABLE & BENCHES • "8 uy One Now for Summer Entertalnlngl" • long lasting-weather resistant redwood is easy to finish-toble & benches big enough to seat the whole family. • Benches and table ore broced for extro strength-IOst-a-lifetime quality. REG. $32.99 WOW/ SAVE $5.001 " .· .. " .. .• ' 1 • I -..... ---................. .... , ,• ) , . Lag1111aBeaeh · EDITION • "' . . Today's Flnai . N.Y. Steeb .. -Vl)l. 66, NO. 121, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORA"t~E COUNTY, CALIFORNI,._ TUESDAY, MAY I, 1973 TEN CENTS -... ' ~agunti Welconaes Bat1nan~ BobiD et-al. By JACK CHAPPELL Of Ille 0.1" ~1191 Stltl .. Holy cow, Batman. 'nle Laguna Beach City Council is gonna repeal the crime comic book law." -•11ves, , Robin. It 'S part of Mayor Charlton Boyd's cleanup of lhe city law books. Now we, Superman, Dick Tracy and all the other crime stoppers of the world will be welcome in Laguna Beach." A city ordinance now on the books in Laguna Beach prohibits in language nearly like that or drug or alcohol ~on laws, the possession of minors of cflme or hQrror comic books . ~-of.official language, speU out the problbltton, but for years the statute Cbapter a.:a of the municipal code has bee!t nolblng but bookworm !odder. Con!tltuttonal 'titte'l'relatlons long ago overturned such municipal attempts at censorabip, Tully Seymour, City Attorney said. "This is an ancient old ord~ance that wa! apparently passed in the 30s or 40s in a flt of community indignation," Seymour said. . He noted that Newport Beach, which had a like ordinance, repealed ib comic law about 10 years ago. The repeal of the crime comic book law Is on the city council agenda for its meeting at 7:30 p.m .. Wednesday at city hall. The comic section of the code was first spotlighted by Coup c i I woman Phyllis SWeeney. . ' 1.fayor Boyd has pointed to the statute ~ one example of the many okl and useless laws which clutter the code book. Boyd has embarked on a campaign of "cleansing" the municipal code of such musty lawll. In the city's be6I o!!icialese language comic / books are carefU.lly de~ and punishments set forth. "It shall .be unJawfuJt&nd an offense to · sell, offer for sale, attempt to sell, ei:- bibit, give away, keep in his possesaiorr- with intent to sell or give away, or in any way furnish or attempt to furnlsh to any child l.Dlder the age or 11 years any crime comic bctok, horror comic book or licen- tious book ... " the code states. The · ordinance was ap~nUy kept in the code when the murucipal code was updated In 1964. Seymour said that if the code was st rictly enforced, which it may not be, it would prohibit sales of B a t m a n , Superman or even Little Red Riding _..oas • Silverado Canyon • $5,500 Ill _Drugs ~ . .. Seized; 3 Held Laguna Beach police and Orange Coun. ty Sheriff's officers seized more than $5,500 worth of c.ocaine, hashish, am· pbetami11e and mwijuana . today during South Laguna • General Plan . ~earing s-." '.A public bearing on the South Laguna General Plan will be held before tl)e Orange County Board of Supervisors meeting at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday In Santa Ana. The plan drawn up by a committee of South_ Laguna residepts working with staff members of the Orange County Planning Department calls for prese.nra- tion of the South Laguna hillsides and an ultimate population for the seaside com- munity of . between 10,000 and 13,000 persons. The plan was recommended for ap- proval by the Orange County Planning Commission after hearings, and has ~n a focal point in a conflict between a num- ber of land owners and residents . If the plan is accepted by supervisors, 1" will become an amendment to the .;aunty General Plan. South Laguna is wlincorporated. ·The measure covers about 1,400 acres bordered by the city of Laguna Beach, the Moulton Ranch, Monarch Bay, La- guna Niguel and the Pacific. It calls for a total of 814 acres in- ctJuding 45 acres of.beach to be preserved as open space. 'Housing normally scattered across the open acres in a tract developm~t would be clustered into smaller acreas of lilaher density. ·Most of the undeveloped land is zoned rw between one unit an~ four units per acre. -Another general plan, this one forward- ed by a group property owners propo1ing higher density use of the hillsides, was turned down by the planning commission. * * * . After 2 Y ~rs, plan l\tay Face lts Final Test ; After nearly two years in preparation, .I tlv! South Laguna General Plan 11 la~g wllat may be Its fmai test. · It bu been two years of concern, anger, and confW1ioo over the plan, largely drafted by residents of South Laguna wotklng with stall member> of 11iO Onmge County Planning Deporiment. Those wbo support the phm claim that It will establish a balanced community, wU pieserve irreplaceable natural area, and will prevent tUnaWJlY growth. Prlmonents Include the South Laguna Civfo As'°"lallon, and professional plan. oers. ' \)J>ponents say the plan would amo1!"l • to inverse condemnation, that it denies property rights and Is too ecoloSY cll'Wlted. Opposition is generally by 50 landowners who hold 715 acres which " ' . (See T&W, Pap I) an early morning raid at a secluded cabin\ in Silverado Canyon. Agents arrested three occupants of the house thf,Y identified as Nick Charles D'Amico, 27, llichard D'Amico, 23, and ~e Wilkerson, 20. Each gave their ad- dress as ·29321 Silver~do Canyon Road, .. the place of the seizure. Sgt. Neil Purcell of the Laguna Beach Police Department asserteet. the trio was using the Silverado Canyon location as a base for distrillulioO •lli oocainoADd other druH In Laguna Beach. ije_alloged that memi>eJ;a of .~ group traveled to ·Laguna Beacll, rented motel ~ tn4 IM!)d .dtup, then retui:ned to SUYerado Canyon. • Oettctive John Saporito said arrest of the three climaxed a week·loog in- vestigation of cocaine sales in the Art Colonll. "It'll the biggest thing we've had in qllitt ~ while," commented Saprito. The detective said four gr8ms of cocaine valued at $4,500 were "cleverly" 1 stored in aerosol spray cans, outfitted with special removable tops. The cans, he said, were uncovered in trash con- tainers in the rustic house. Agents also claim they collected one powld. of marijuana, three ounces of hashish and 15 "mini-benny" am- phetamine tablets, apparenUy manufac- tured in an "underground'' laboratory. Detective Saprito said agents were forced to break the front door down to get into the house. The arrested trio, be added, offered no resistance . Each was booked into Orange County Jail this morning. Arraignment on charges of Possession of marijuana, possession of marijuana for sale and possession of cocaine for sale will take place in Central County Municipal Court !ednesdaf or Thursday, said Saprlto, Sevel'i F qreign Students Now At Laguna High Laguna Beach High Scbool has picked up an international flavor this year with seven foreign studenls attending classes and four · rocal students on their way ov""etseas . Senior Bryn Barnard, 28892 Top of the World Drive, departed for Malaysia two weeks ago, while Lyn Haven, 670 Catalina Street , also a senior, left for Japan early in March. Both are members of the Amencans Abroad program of the American Field Service. This summer Pam Tait of 2876 Chateau Way wiU leave for Deqmark under the Youth For UndenW!dlng piogram. Doreen ijaggard, 2975 MO!.D'ltain View Drive, alao.a junior, wil travel to Fnnce for the summer as another YFU partlci· pant. 1be seven foreign student& attending school in Laguna Beach are Jorge VaUablanca, Chile ; Anmee Klatalumbon, Thailand; Anders Rundcrantz, S-1en: Harri Silodberg, Finland: Anne Larsen, Derunarkj Glalo Wuelhrlcb, Switzerland, and Lena Touroutoglou, Greece. "The comlng and g<>lng ot foreign students and our own students to and from abrO&d greatly enriches the higb achool program," commented Art Wahl, high school cwnselor for exchan~e lllUdmls . "The Individual student s ability to share his experiences with his friends here and abroad adds another dimension to our educatJon l)'ltem, 11 Wahl added. Baptfsm~fJy the S~a ' . Several hundred of the faithful turned out Monday evening t-0 participate in and watch baptisms con· ducted under the auspices of Calvary Chapel at Pirate's Cove ne:ir the entrance to Newport Harbor. The ceremony for •those being baptized Involved full immersiop.. Water temperature Monday hovered around 60 degrees, according to Newport Beach lifeguards. FBI Agents Guard Offices Housing W at~rgate Files .. , Ensena,da 1Boat". Race Entries , Listed Today From Wire Services WASHINGTON -FB! agents were posted outside key White House offices today as President Nixon moved to pro- tect files which might be needed in the expanding Watergate investigation . Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler maintained that this was 112 safeguarding procedure" and WR.! "not to cast "'"'aspersions on any individual." He said the FBI agents were posted wherever White House files were, specifically at the offices of Nixon's former top aides H. R. Haldeman and Jobn 0. Ehrlichman and counsel.John W. Dean m. Shortly before disclo1mre that FBI ·Wo111en . agents had been given the job of insuring secu rity of the lilies, Haldeman and Ehrlichman were seen leaving the White Hapse in the back seat of a chauffeur- GOV. REAGAN SILENT ON WATERGATE-Poge 4 driven limousine with piles of document! in their laps. Their destination was not disclosed , but both said earlier they were arranging meetings with fed eral and Senate in- vestigators. The new procedure, Ziegler said, was put into effect as the result of meeting (See FILES, Page %) • Shielded Lives of Crash Victims Saved Mexican villagers may have saved the lives of a pair of women, one from Anaheim, by building a shelter around them ott a windswept Baja California beach Monday after their plane crashed, killing .a pair of male companions. Townspeople alao belped Mary M. McCammond, 26, and Margaret J. Rowles, 30, into sleeping bags at the coastal cruh site 22S mlleJ aouth or the U.S. border. The women were airlifted out by a U.S. Coast Guard beli®pter along with the _bodio:,s or pilot Patrick L. Kelly, 28, of Silnta Clara and Eric Otten, of l~ Ev.elyn Drive, Anaheim. An Army doctor who Oew along tn- IUaled treatment for Mist;McCammond aild Mis• Rowles, both or ,iiorn sljllered mu1Uple lacerations. sbact and exposure. Miss McCammond ai.> sullered a leg fracture in the crash,' which was wit· nessed by a gulf shrimp boat crew. They said the small Cessna 172 was at· tempting a takeoff rrom the isolated, windswept beach alter making a laoding ear11er. .. The pilot, whose home airport and destination in Monday's fatal crash were not explained, just 'got off the ground when a blast of wind burled the plane back to earth in a tum. .. Investiga tors pinpointed the crash site as being In the San Luis Gonzaga area, on the Gulf of California side of the Baja Peni"'ula. Kelly had filed no prior flight plan and inve,tlgators · were unable to quest\ofi either 0£ the two women at length due to their lnjul1es. • Both were listed in serious condition to- day at Pioneer Memorial Hospital In Brawley wljere they were de:llvered by the Coast Guard hellcopt~r. By ALMON LOCKABEY ... 111111 l!flllf Barring la st-minute withdrawals, 581 sailboats are expected to answer the starting signals Thursday at noon for the 26th consecutive sailing of the Newport to Ensenada yacht race, the largest in· temational saUing event ln the world. The Daily Pilot today publishe! the en- tire list of starters on Page 4. Yachts are , listed by name, sail number, claas, skip- per, yacht club and type of boat. 'Fhousands or spectators line tbe Shortt from the Balboa Pier to the C.Orona deJ Mar bluffs to witness what has come to be known as the Southland's greatest yachting spectacle. The mass~ve fleet IS divided among nve classes of Ocean Racing (IOR), five cl~ses of Pacific Handicap (PHRF) two cla8S;'S of Midget Ocean Racing Fleet (MORF) and one class of ocean racing catamarans. First group to start wit be the catamarans at 12 o'clock. Thereafter. at 10.mlnute intervals the starting signals will be for Class A Ocean Racing and PHRF, 12:10 ; Class B OR and PHRF, 12:20; Class c OR and PllRF, U:30: Cla13 D OR and PllRF, 12:40: Class E OR and PHRF, 12:50, and Class A and B _MORF 1 1 p.m. Two starting lines will be used -one the extension of the other -with a com- mittee boat stationed itt· the cti>.ter. PHRF yachts will use the Une nearest Shore extending from the entrance buoy. Oceap Racing yachts w!U use the out· board portion or the line. The avcrag' yacht wUI carry a crew or six which means that over 3,000 persons will be Involved In the race, 1101 counting escort vessels and race committee.men. llood under definitions provided for crime and horror. He likened it to many laws enacted by municipalities during the early 1950s ban· ning the. sale or purchase. of goods manufactured in countries with Com· munist governments. Seymour said that cOuncil aetlon \Vednesday would remove the entire chapter with "a surgical stroke." "Old comic books have achieved a cer· tain status among collectors," Seymour noted. , Chairman Considers • Moratorium By CANDACE PEARSON Of .. DllY ~llet '''" The chairman of the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission said Monday he will .investigate possibilities of imposing a f l a t moratorium on coastal ~its until in- itial planning can begin.· Robert F. Rooney of Hw:ttnatoo Beach, chairman _of the commlaslon created by Prop. 20, said, "jhe law was91Vrltten in a very PQOf manner 1l"<8use It pl~ lbe pmntt procesa ~before p\apnlng." Tbe epnmlaalon bu jllrildlclfon over • deieltiplnelit wlihln 1,000. yarda ol Win higb tide line In Orange and Los Angelea counties. ... The californJa Coastal 1.ooe Conterva- tion Act (Prop. 20), passed by voters last November, charges the coinmlssfoo with regulating coastal zone construction while developing a land use plan by 1975. Dr. Rooney, an associate professor of econ6mica at caI State Long Beach, con- tended Monday the commiss.lon has been hampered in some permJt decl!ions by the lack of an overall plan of its own and of some cities involved. He said he will write to the State At- torney General's office to see lf a tern· porary moratorium on perm.its would be l<1£al. His , comment! came following a discussion . of ocean !root projects in Venice and R<dondo Beach. · Commissioner Rlriunon C. , Fay of Marina de! Rey charged, "We haven't done anything at any one of these com- mission meetings to Improve beach ac.. cess." Unless the ~ission begins taking significant steps to solve the problem Fay said, It "won't have anything left t~ plan" during the planning phase . Fay said the lack of parking lots near beaches or proper roads to get to such lots in all areas concerned him. The com- mission has been wrestling with ques- tiona of density and h18h rise near the be&cb. • · Individ11al applicants can't build the r1 _ds or parking lots, commented Com- missioner Judy Rosener of Newport Bea~. She suggested cities in the coastal zone be told of the commisi.9on's con- cerns. Oruge Cout Weatlaer bid you like \be weather today? Well, it'll be the same on Wednes- day, following 90me patchy Jow clouds along the coast ln the mdrn· ing hours. Mostly sunny wltb hiths or 67 at the beaches rising to 72 Inland. INSIDE TODAY l>n Low Do~, 1973, the St<Jte Bar of California ha.r dnHD71 a bead on tht '1ipoils sv1um •• of selecting judge1 for municipal and superior court benche1. The altema.ti~? An cdvi3ort1 com· mittee on judicial OpPOintmenlt. See Page 3. • . 2 OAJLV PILOl LB T ..... ay. May I, 1913 At Dana BarlJor ,· Sofnns Ask· Marine ~Center r 'Ouuider' -. .._ -. I 1 .,. .. Given Bae king For Probe Plans for a $2.3·m11Uon pennanent hon1e !or the Marine Studies Institute at Dana liarbor have won approval by the Dana Harbor Revi ew Board, but the real blessing by investo rs has yet to be realb- ed. ., . The board late last week approved of all but a 41}-foot observa tion toi,1,·er in the intitial plans submitted by William Bl urock and Partner&. The firm -which designed Dana Hills Hi gh School -has drafted plans for the ltiSI building calling for 46,000 square feet of floor space on fbree levels. The site for the project sponsored by the Orange County Department of Education has been .!ftt aside at the base of Dana Point, seaward or the fishlog pier. Ullimately, thousands of pupils and adajts each month" would take advantage oHhe science compl ex. · Although the site has hcen reserved. lhe cash for the constructi on of the uni· que educational facility must sti ll come from nonprofit foundations. The. entire ft.ISi concept was launched rpur years ago, but thus far the bulk of lhe money has not 'been obtained. The institute, however. has been operating in a small upstairs office struc- ture at the harbor where classroom and laboratory space is available f o r youngsters. The observation craft F'ury IJ also has operated out of Dana Harbor. The special review board was set up by the County Department of Harbors, Beaches and Parks. · That panel's president, department head Kenn eth Sampson, found faul t with on ly one part of the Blurock plans -the 40-foot-high crow's nest observation tov.·er. Sampson said th e structure looked like "a prison tower" and won promises from designers thal the stru cture wou"ld be changed. The director of the entire project for !he county educa tion department is Dr. Donald McLean, who to ld the panel last week that const ruction of the building would probably be done in two phases. ' If plans for completi on by 1975 materialize, he added, an estin)ated · 40,000 pupils a yea r would take part in the programs held in the institute 's labs, aquarias, lecture ball and museum. Qr. McLean added that he expected an average ·of 100,000 members of the general public to use the facilities each yesr as well . During the JX!riod that the funds are Viejo Company Named in Suit Of $1.5 Millio11 A A-1iss ion Viejo homeowner who claims· he is one of 4,000 local residents who are victims of antitrust polic~ practiced by the Mission Viejo Company sued the company Monday for $1 ,545,000 in a cla ss action. The com pany is one of four defend8.nts named in the Orange Cou nty Superior Court action filed by Alton H. Saxer, 26501 Montecito Lane. He also lists the controlling group Phi llip Morris Inc., the i\1 VC Financial Corporation and the MVC Escrow Corporation. Saxcr clal1ns he was unlawMly com- pelled to use both the fi nancial group and the escrow center April 5, 1972, when he bought his home·. That conditional sale violates provisions or the Cartwright an- titn1s1 act , Saxer stales. And he further alleges that he v.·as simi larily compelled to use the Mission Viejo Company's Decor ating C~nter to obtain floor coverings for his hon'l e. More than 4,000 homeowners in the ll,000-acre area .have similarly been victims of practicE's that are speci.iically barred by the Cartwright measure, Saxer claims. I le asks that claimed damages of $1,545.000 in his class action be tripled if he obtains judgment ~gainst the defe n- dant. OIANGI COAST LI DAILY PILOT Tl>~ O'a~ Co.lll OA.ILV PILOT, with "'~•cl> 11 tombl'*' lht Nn<s·Pri u, II PllbllloMd by tt.1 o,.~ Co111 PubllsMnq com~ny, Sto• '"" Pdlllont tr~ ~blltlwll;t, Mond1y thrO!fU~ Frld1v, for Coslt Mri&, Nt"'PO•I Beach. Mvntl119to~ 8t1th/Foun"I" VAlltv. l•Qvr11 Btach, lrylntlS..ddltblc~ •rd S.n Clt mtnlt / S~n .JY~n r•~lltr•no. A l ll!Qlt teglona! Pd•110~ b 11\<0lflhtld S1!Yrd1y1 Ind SYndtyf. rn1 11""''""' 1Nbll1hl'PQ Pltnt 11 11 3JO Wtl! 41•Y 5Trttl. Cos•• Mtst, C•llk>tnlt, nu.. Rob1rt N. W11d PrMldt~t ""' f"llC!lisr..t J1ck It Curl1! V>ct "'"ode.of 11'111 Gt!wr1 M-..r Thom11 k11vil Edl!Ot Thctf!l11 A., Mur ph;,., M111191ftt l!tllllOt Clt••l11 H. lff1 ~iclt1r~ '· Nill "''I"•"' ~o ..... 1:1111n ---122 F1r11f Av1,.u1 M1111~9 A4tlr1t11 P.O. t o.'''· •2•sz °"'"' Oftk" c..·~-~"-.W:ttt ..... s ...... Htiiijiii;f lijHllT")W" Ntwpori 9oul1v1!'9 H.,,.,tlfttltn BMdt; llf1J I~ lovln1,. s.n Clwnfl'lfli IM Ho!1~ El Ct fl'llrio ltwl , ........ f7i4i '42-4Jl1 c~ MNftl.a., M2.1•1t --.. ·--· , ... ,. .. -4t4-f4'6 c;w,..lfht, 111s. Ortl'ltl Cottt l'llO!lll'll"'f C....nr. Ht MWI ,..,..... 11rw.1r111DM.. ...... 111 mlffW' ., ........ 1-lt """"·--... bf ~ Wltt'IWI ... ltl Dir· ""'""" • CllPt'I' .... -· 11ai1111 ell ..... ,... Htlll at C.11 Mf .. 1 c.11,.,1111, ........... ""' _,. ~ tl.w _.,..,, "' flllll U I} -'Mrl f!'lllftwy •lll'lttloM UM m11111f1.,., bilng BOllghl foe the lliaUlute, lllOther use will be made for the parcel beneath the bluffs at Dana. ' Starting this summer an Interim lease will be placed into effect whereby the firm wlD convert the acreqe into a campground to ..serve visiting yachtsmen. ~1oorings will be provided to patrons of the campgJ'OW'ld In the bay at the edge of the MS! •lie .. f'...,.PflfleJ TEST ... ' would become subject "' the regulation of the plan. The Qrange Counly Board o f Supervisors wil: hold a publcc hearing on the proposal at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. If adopted, it will become a part of the cot:nly general plan. It has been recom· mend ed for adoption by the county plan- ning commission. .. Jn recommending the plan, the com- mission nixed an alternative plan presented by the lando\vners' association. Follo~·ing that negative action, the lan- downers' association has begun an 11th hour campaign swing public opinion a·way from the plan now up for adoption, Said Fred Lang, a prime move·r in the formulation of the remaining·, general plan. Lang charged that the owners are deliberalely· clouding aspecls of his plan and he cites several misconceptions forwarded by opponents. Lang and Al Wiehle, a P<Qfesslonal pl8Mer, said opponents have charged the plan is the work of a "small group:" He cited petitions signed by l,400 persons supporting the· general plan. ~'They are promoting a misconception !hat their development ls being reduced over what they have now," Wi ehle said. He explained that lhe land involved is now zoned for between and and four housing units per acre. "To do what they proposed to do, they would have to get higher zoning for the . property,'' Wlehle said. ~ He said the developers have hit the general plans requirement for restricting high density housing to about just under 10 percen t of the land area. "In reality, only 10 percent is developable without massive grading that would wipe out ecological elements of South Laguna," Wiehle said. Lang said that although the develo]r ment of an estimated 3,000-units on the undeveloped hillside areas would be con- structed on 50 percent of the land area, the remaining land,. called 0 open space" by developers, would be "raped open space" consisting of cut-and.filled slopes and ditches. Speaking for the opponents, Helen Hawkins of a realty firm , and Frank Canker ~ real estate broker, have at-· tacked the general plan as a ••insidious demonstration of the removal of proper- ty tights!' Roger Howell , an attorney for the land- owners' association, charged . in a hear- ing before the planning commission that "the pendulum is starting to swing," and government bodies ca nno longe r "step indiscriminately on the rights of the Iand- O\mer." Laguna Resident Held in Theft A Laguna Beach man "'as arrested ~1onday n'ight in connection with a burglary in \vhich a television and guitar 1•.or!h S265 \Vere taken from a residence on Y Place in the Art Colony a \Veek ago. Vietor Henry Ara, 23, of 350 Third St. \Vas jailed fvllowing an investigation by detectives. The victim told police Ara had been seen in the area. -Police said they found a television and gu itar matching the described stolen goods in Ara's possession, Ara was book- ed on possession of stolen property and sus picion of burglary. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senile voted loday io call oo PIJ!Sldtnl Ni.on lo appcWit a special proaecutor from outside the government t() oversee the tn- vtstlt!alloll of the Wllel'gate cue. WJthout dissent and by voice vote, It approved t~ proposal l n t r o d u c e d minutes earlier by Stn. Charles H. Percy I R·lll.). who questioned whetbtr the ••· ecu tive branch should lnveatigate ittelf .. 11le IC!ioo came jUJt %4 hours after Pr.,ldent Nixon. named Secrelary of Defense Elltol L. Rlcbarclson to become attorney general and gave b1m full power 10 con11uct the Waterg1le probe. Percy said be was not questioning the inlegrity of Richardson but added, "He caMOt be regarded as independent of the executive l:iranch." Percy said Rep. Johp Anderson (R-- 111.), planned to introduce a similar resolution In the House. ' During the brief Senate debate, the move received strong support from Republicans, including Sens. Barry Goldwater (Ariz;.), and Pete V. Domenici (N.M.). "We must proceed quickly "to remove thi !> case from the auspices of the at- tC1mey general," Domenici said. Goldwater told reporters he _ feared Richardson might "find himself in the same position" as Richard Kleindienst, who quit as attorney general Monday be- cause of his close associaUon with per-sons involved in the Watergate case. A senior Republican senator, Carl T. Curtis of Nebraska, urged Nixon today to name former-· Sen. ·John J .. Willlam.1 of- Delaware to oversee the investigation . Curtis said in a statement he feel s the situation calls for the appointment of someone from outside the Administration -rather than Richardson. Republican Williams, who returned from the Senate two years ago, was re. spected by his colleagues for his oppos i- tlon to corruption of all kinds. Because he is not an attorney, Williams would serve as chief in· vestigator, not prosecutor, under the Curtis proposal. Nlxon gave 'Richardson power to appoint a special prO!eCUtor if he fee~ one is needed. An aide said Curtis, a firm Nixon backer who however has been critical of the way the Im election campaign was handle<!. caJled the White Hou,. to in- fonn the president of his proposal and was waitblg for a return call. Curlis said be does llOl think anyone from the Justice Departmen*, even if he ·na:; not been involved in any way, could adequately convince the country that some facts were not hidden from view. FILES ... yesterday afternoon with Nixon's new Watergare probe supervisor .presidential special consultant Leonard Gannent, who tOQk over counsel Dean's duties; Defense Secretary Elliot Richardson, whom Nixon has nominated as attorney general and put in overall charge of the Watergate investigation, and the newly named acting director of the FBI, William 0. Ruckelshaus. The aim, 'liegler said, was "to physically protect the files to make sure that acces9 and removal of any files were supcr\rised in accordance! with very strict procedure.' The Watergate investigation has_ pro- duced allegations that some vital · documents were removed from the White House and destroyed. Asked why the White House police had not been given this security duty, Ziegler said he was not sure. But, he said, this "was an initial step" ordered by the three Watergate probe chiefs. The agents moved into the White House and the next door Executive Office Building. •wrong' ~Ziegler Spokes 1na1t Apologizes to Post WASHINGTON (AP) -While Hou•e Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler publicly apologized to the Washington Post lOday for past harsh criticism of its investigative reporting of the Watergate con- spiracy. Asked ii he would ap-0logize in the wake of President Nixon's TV-radio statement Monday night that a "vigorous free press" helped uncover the truth about Watergate , Ziegler replied: "Yes, 1 would ap-0logize to the Post." HE THEN VOLUNTEERED an ap-0logy to Post rep<>rters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward who. he said, vigorously pursued the sto ry, deserved credit for their work and are reoeiving it. ' 1\Vhen we're wrong, we're wrong,'' the White House spokes· man said. Last Oct. 25, Ziegler characterized one Post account as "a .bla- lant e!fort<lt character assassination and I tto not think h..-a been \vitnessed in the pontical process In some time." WHEN ASKED ABOUT another Post account on Oct. 16, Zieg- ler ~aid, "I wlll not dignify with comment stories based on hearsay, character assassination , innuendo, guilt by association." In bis remarks today, Ziegler said, "I think we'd all have to say mistakes were made . _ . I was overenthusiastic at that lime in my comments about the Poot ... It was an overstatement." He lat:er said his apology was not intend<!<!" to render Judl[ment On indlvlduaJs riamed 1n VariOltS artloleti pubUsbed by tbe De-paper. (, I UPI f llll>tlti. Beaten Baby Treated A nurse at New Yot'k 's St. Vincent's Hospital treats three-month-old Kim Cruz after the baby was taken there in critical condition after her father allegedly tried to sell her for drugs. Th e tot had been se- verely beaten, but is. receiving the best possible care. The father is awaiting his fate in jail. ~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~- County Trying_ to ~surp ·Power, Official Declares By L _PETER KRIEG Of Ill• D1llr Plltl Sl•tf Orange County government is trying to usurp authority from cities, Newport Beach Q>uncilman Carl Kymla charged Monilay night. $2,500 Captured In Dart Cont,est A total of $2,500 in prize money wa s captured over the Weekend in the fourth annual Jaycees Far West Shootout, dart tournament in Lagun8 Imactt· · -' Some 380 '(lart-Wfelding h CfJte f u I s , mostly local, competed in four categories in the Riviera Room of the Hotel Laguna. Some participants came from Los Angeles, San Bernardino and ,Riverside. In the women's ca tegory, Mary Ellen Yloodman won $100, first . place ; Marie Vraheza won $50, secoiid place; Pat Thompson won $25, third place: and LaDonna Hemple won $15, fourth place. In men's singles. Jess '1Super Mex" Hernandez of Riverside won $400 for fir st place. Other winners were Bernie War-_ rt11, Laguna Beach, $200; Javier Gopar, San Bernardino, 1100; and Bill Leonard, $50. . - · First place win of $300 in the doubles category went to Chuck Harrell and Mark Bollas of Laguna. Other winners were Larry Kerbs and John Hedges, $20!); Ed Snyder and Conrad Daniels, $1°" anti John Knigh t and Glen Jones. $50. In the six-man team division, $300 for first place was shared by th e "Fat Man Team " of Laguna Beach: Conrad Daniels, Ed Snyder, Craig Dusenberry. Chip Harrell , Chuck Harrell, and Mark Bollas. · Kymla let fly wilh a blistering attack on the controversial "growth policy report" that he said is "riddled v.•ith at- tempts by the count y to regionalize government. "They want to take over local control. They're making assumptions regarding property rights that concern me," Kymla said. He cited several recommendations in the report which he says back up his charges and pushed for councilmen to have a public. hearing on the report ·scheduled May 21 at 7:30 p.rn. in city · hall. "It says ·general plans adopted by cities must be consistent with adopted growth pohcieS -whose adopted ·growth policies," he asked. , ••Jt says the courts are going to con- tinue to m'J<iify private property -rights as interpretations broaden regarding public health, safety, and welf2.re." "The county is asswning the courts will liberally interpret the tak ing away of property rights." Kymla said. "I don't thin k so -unless government says it should." He said the report also forecast the "number and types of services perform- ed by all IeveJs of government will con- tinue to increase. ~ ''That 's local government growth '. d I don't see it," Kymla said. He said even bigger concerns deal with what appears to be more and more coun- ty government interference with iocal government. IT The report says "It is the po1i of Orange County to plan for and ac- commodate the distribution of populjtion among sub-areas of the county to em- phasize the existing urban areas. t ' en- co urage diversity by individual tom- munities, and to separate devel~ping communities in so utheastern Orange County by major ope n areas. .. Tustin Boyt,, Murdered; ·-~ Pair Held A team o! homicide detectives probina the automobile 'drDgglng death of a Tustin youth in the San Bernardi.no Coun· ly desert three days ago was en route to Las Vegas today following leads. . ,, Sheriff's homicide Lt. Ron Forbush said his men "·an t to find and question associates of Jimmie L. Manning, 17~ who may be able to help e1pla in the ho':'" · · ror that happened last Friday. , A pair· of youths with whom younl / - Manning was acq uai nted surrendered to. . : Tustin poJice within 24 hours of the tH~ -;. zarre death on Interstate 15 , outside · Barstow_ Lester L. ?arker, 19, of 8242 Katherine"" "'"' -1 · ;..•''{ Drive, Huntington Beach. and Me vm ~-: Deem, 19, of North Las Vegas, ';"e~ .. 1.s booked On suspicion of murder pending,,.,_: further investigation. "." \ .. · A decision on ~vhether sufficient" ~.~~ ·evidence e1ists to issue formal com..;:_ .. : plaints today was expected by evening or. •\'1 early Wednesday morning. · -'\. The youths cannot be held longer than '( 72 hours for investigation without eitbet~' ~~. "· I~' is~uance of complaints or dropping oft~: .. , charges. , . , ; 1 Drugs \Vere involved in the incident, al:eges Lt . Forbush, who so far has not' '; explained exactly in what way. ~ l nyestigators do say Parker and.~~· ·¥.'ere with the Manning but claim cannot explain bis grisly death. .r .. Manning. whose father lives 1t Woodlawn St., was found lying in highway at aie end of a trail of scraps fl fl esh and -shredded clothing stretchllt~ oul nearly a mile. A rope had been used to bind his fetl and he was then lashed to the relP"' bumper o( a car and dragged down the highway on his back, bouncing an~ • •. :"' scraping on the asphalt sUrface. :··"!' A passerby helped the skinned and bat:' ·. ~ · tered vict im to the roadside, where be" ~R·:''. died, unable to tell what had ~appened. . . .... ._,. A young woman motorist from Laguna: ·'rl • Beach Monday was attacked In ~. ""'~ ... 1 Clemente by. a would-be rapist on Noqh -.: .. 1 El Camino Real who lured the wo~\vw (rom ~~~r." ' · . ~ '.,.v., Po{i~e,~id the incident occurred 1n t~ ....... aftertlOQll, ·hours near Avenida E.!ltac!OJ).., •·u· as the woman was driving north. . -~ .r·~ The victim told officers a metall1e;."". green pickup truck with a toolbox in the, . , bed and balloon tires pulled beside her .... car, and the men driving pointed to the ; •,.'• l tires on the woman's car. ' 4 , ., The victim said she then pulled over, ~ · ~ believing she had a tire problem • ._,:'-:. I The man, in h1S mid 20s, then grab...,.-. her. ___ ,i•, ... ,; I She broke loose, ran to her car,'~ ...... I in.!lide and looked the coors, she said. •~ ... . The atlacker then fled in his truck. :·.::. '. Auto Tape Stolen In Laguna Beach -. ~·" - ·: -_:~ I Teacher Dee Ann Jennings of 144 · .:·· Wendt Terrace, Laguna Beach, to~;.'' • pohce Monday that a tape deck and tai:,e. ~· valued totally at $105 was stol en from .. ~: her car after the windwing was pried':;,..~ open during the weekend. ; ,.: ;. .----''---------------------·~,--------------..:'·~~(!!\ . c ··~ • •j. " AROUND THE CORNER AND. UP YO-UR STREE'J/ ' WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVERAL ANSWERS 'pop UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWR~OM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. TH1°RDLY, .THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH UTILE TRAFFlC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR FIFTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION •. IN _, ...... llNCI 1117 ALDEN'S CARPET o DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4s1i Moe •• 1'1n. 9 "to 5:30; FrL 9 lo 9: s.t. 9:H 1o I -- . .:4.; .. =~~" .......... ~ .i "; .;: .. ,··1r:Y I . ' ! \), , ·~"i u '··: .... : ,.}· ..... t":· ~~;1•' . ' ~·"'"' -..... ~:~ " ~; ... . --. . -. -. - .;':. .. ~..;: ~ •'" ' . ~t: ... ·~ , .. , ' .: .. : .. ; ·.; • .r~ ' !.f#' ~ I + ;.1.j-' ... ····'· .. ·· !' i•i~ ... ~ .. 1 •• ,..,.... , . f ... 1•' .. ---. '.: ....... , ~v . ' :-c-. • .. "-f '·---------------------~~-----:------------~ ' - .. . ... t'\·, ' t • • • .. ' • __ .._ ----~ --'"V>•--' . ' • , -saddlehaek ' Today's Final N.i~. S.toeks . . ·. VOL 66, NO. 121, 2 SECTtONS, ,7~ PAGES ORAN,6E COUNT'(, 'CALIFoRN1A ' . ---TUEsDA Y, MAY I, 1973 ' - TEN CENTS . Exi)e.rts to Clear Ak 10b. Uni Pai-k G~s -Leaks· By GEORGE LEIDAL Of Ille O.Uy Plltt SJI" Southern California Gas Company of- ficials today declined specific comment on questiorls about gas leakages in University Park until a May 9, meeting With University Commuruty Association homeowners takes place. r James Decker, spokesman for the South Orange County portion of the coun- ty division of the gas · company, said to- day, "Any and all questions about prob- lems in Irvine will be answered at the May 9 meeting . "Experts from both divisons of the company will be there that night to 1fiscuss the situation," Decker added. Decker acknowledged that he had been" aware of the disintegration of at least one University Park hOmeowher's meter installation since arthitect Arthur Millier of 17604 Queens Wreath Way wrote city officials and the gas company last Feb. I. • Tb;il letter clled '!hat ·16illlor claimed a&Ud city atalt to look Into the matter wao ·,a '.'din&erous age!_ ~ coo-and Millier. citlzena wlatance ollicer diUon" In 'ihAI bis .1,.-meter, .lnolalled Richard Dorris and Deeter of the gu less than slr~Ytiar• ago, beJoW giide, in a company met. sidelfillk vault bad been ·Jeaklni. Because Prior lo that meeting, Decker lgrted the vaults do not drain and meten and · today, he bad written MWier lo assure piping are ffequenUy Immersed In water, ·him that the. leakage In bis meter Jn. Millier contenda, g~ leau deveJ\>p as stallaUon was due ooly lo the failure ·of electrolysis aestroy!l 1he metal parts. an Installer to. "take an e:dta turn on • One lrvlnet.(lty· Coobcilmai!, Henry wrench." . . Quigley, r .. ponded lo Mllller's Feb. I re-Decker today said that ~tstemenf was quest !or study o! the situation. Quigley (See GAS i.EAK, Page I) Air Noise ·claim Filed Newpo~t Group Asks $150,000 in Damages ., '· By Jo\CK P!IOBACK Of Thi 0.llY Piiot Stiff The Airport Action Association of Newport Beach today filed a $150,000 claim for damages with the Orange County Board of Supervisors because of jet plane-noise from the county airport. The claim was described as a· pro- cedural step necessary to clear the way fer a class action suit on behalf of all county citizens. · • ·Attorney Gerrold A. Fadem, represen- Viejo Firm In Antitrust ' Policy Suit A Mission Viejo holneowner who claims he is one of-4,oOO local residents who are victims of antitrust policies practiced by the Mlssion Viejo· Company stied the company Monday for $1,545,000 in a class action. The company is one of lour defendants named in the Orange County ·Superior Court action filed by Alton H. Sax er, 26501 Montecilo Lane. He also lists the contr:otllng group Phillip Morris Inc., the MVC Flnancial Corporation and the MVC EScrow Corporation. : Sax.er claims he was unlawfully com-· ,pelJed to use both the financial group and the escrow center April 5, 1972, when be bought his home. That conditional sale violates provisions .of the cartwright an- titrust act, Saxer states. ~-And he further alleges that he was !lmilarily compelled to use the Mission Viejo Company's Decorating C.enter to obtain. Door coverings for his home. • 'More than 4,000 homeowners in the ti,000.acre area have similarly been victims of practiCf's that are specifically barred by the Cartwright measure, Saxer ~aims. r He a:;ks that claimed damages of $1 ,545,000 in his class action be tripled if he obtains judgment against the defen- dant. Hearing Slated On Bid to Shut Child Center • A move by a state agency to halt the operations of.an Irvine child care center ' has been scheduled for hearing May 16 by an Orange County Superior Court Judge. Judge Robert P. Kheeland will rule on ; that date on the demand by the State ,.._Department of Social Welfare for a preliminary ·injunction that wou1~ halt operations of the Colony Club Community As sociation 's 1'Pixie Playtime "'O:>operative. Program." ~ · State lawyers claim that the child care center at 3611 South •Mall, Irvine, is ope.rating without. a license and has ig- nored demands that one be oblalned. ~ It is also alleged that the seven to 12 children of three to five years of age who attend the day care center are not suf- licienUy ptotected lrom fire buards and two nearby sWimming pools. · The state action identifies president Robert Purtz, 3746 Proudline Town Road, Jrvine, and mother's group president ,~J Haitlns. 3'72 South-:MaU, ~ .... principals In the COiony Club operation. ting the associat~d that if the board did not lake action the sWt would be filed within 45 days. Marshall Ouffield, AAA chairman, said - the present noise and pollution from jet aircraft is an intolerable burden. He said the residents had tolerated the noise for five years with the promise that the county would d. something. : He admitted the proposed suit was en- couraged by the. success of similar suits in Los Angeles and Santa l\.tonica. Board Chatrman Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach, disagreed that the coun· ty bad not tried lo solve Ille problem. 2 Attorney Fadem wbo filed the claim on the basis of nl,lisance explained ''nliisance is anything that offends the senses or in- terfereS with the free use-and enjoyment of your property. There has been an un- broken .line of decisjom since 1884 stat- ing that govenu1'81t is responsible for its noise." The current legal action comes on the •wrong~ -Ziegler Spokesman Apologizes to Post WASHINGTON (AP) -White House Press secretary Ronald Ziegfor publicly apolo~ized to the Washington Post today for past barsh criticism of ifs-investigative reporting of the Watergate con- spiracy: -, · Mkftd if be.woulg.apologjze iii. Ill~~ NiW!>;( TV-radio statement Monday night that ~ "vl~ous.tree. p,ma'.: helped , ·uncover the trutjl about Watergate,.j:jegler~: 'Yes,-¢ would · apologize to the Post." ~ .,.. · c-_ l HE THEN VOLUNTEERED an apology to Post reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward who, he said, vigorously pursued the story, deserved. credit for their work ~d are receiving it. "When we're wrong, we're wrong," the White House spokes- man said. Last Oct. 25, Ziegler characterized one Post acrount as "a bla. tan! effort at character 'assassination .. nd I do not think has been witnessed in the political process in some time." WHEN ASKED .ABOUT another tfost accol!Dt on Oct. 16, Zieg· ler said, "I will not dignify with comri\.ent stories based on hearsay, character assassination, innuendo, guilt by ~sociation." In his remarks today, Ziegler said, "I think we'd all have to say mistakes were mad~ . . . I was overenthusiastic at that time in my comments about the Post ... It was an overstatement." He later said his apology was not intended to render judgment on individuals named in vari_ous articles published by the news· paper. * * * * * * . FBI Agents Guard Offices • Housing Watergate Files From Wire Services WASHINGTON -FBI agents were posted outside key White House offices today as President Nixon moved to pro- tect files which might be needed In the expanding Watergate investigation. Press secretary Ronald L. 1.i.egler maintained that this was "a safeguarding procedure" and was "not to cast aspersions on any individual.11 He said the FBI egents were posted wherever · White House files were, specifically at the offices of Niion's fonner top aJdes H.• R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrllchman and couniel John W. Dean III. Shortly before disclosure that FBI Co1icerns Told Over Mental Care SACRAMENTO (AP) -Fears of "a potential threat lo the quality o! care" of the state's mentally ill and o -r Hwarehousing" of patients have been ralsed by a""Citizens council appointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan and the Legislature. The IS-member panel of sociologists, age;nts had been given the job of insuring security of the filles, Haldeman and Ehrlichman were seen leaving the White House in the back seat of a chauffeur- GOV. REAGAN SILENT ON_ WATERGATE-Piii" 4 --- driven limousine with piles of documents In their. laps. Their destination was not disclOMd, but both said earlier theY. were arranging meetings · with federal and Senate in- vestigators. The new procedure, Ziegler said, was put into effect as the· result of meeting yesterday afternoon with Ntxon's new Watergare probe supervisor presidential special consul!A'nt Leonaro Gannenl, who took over counsel Dean's duties; Defense Secretary Elliot Richardson, whom N!Jon bas nominated u attorney general and put In overall Chari" o! the Watergate Investigation, and the newly named acUng director of the FBI, Wllllam D. Ruckelshaus. '!'be aim, .ilegler said, was "lo physically protect the files lo make sure thaf 8C<lOl8 and temoval o! any files were-1UDel"V1Md.tn accordaooe with very strtcr~:O heels of an announcement by the City of Newport Beach that it plans legal action a·gaiJ'lst the county for alleged damage from j~t aircrajl. A third lawsuit pend· ing trial ·m November is the $27 million inverse coodemenation lawsuit filed by 900 property owners against the county. Fadem explained that the n_e w · threatened suit is quite different from the ·pending one in that it involves the nuisance angle. The attorney suggested (See NOISE, Page Z) Culver Drive Interchange Hearing Sei Design bearings on the proposed . OtllY l'llol Stiff l'Mlo ·~~ti~~.,~-ft\lffJ9j,ijf,ES IJ\Lo.Jil!fl.\'-fl!Jl;rt'. PARK )(AUL TS ILMIQ FC!!!o LEAKS ~·~ J» . .lieh!:a'i 7,30 ion13ht Jn : . Mrs,ct" S\coll, lrvl11e C'ouricllm•n Henfy Quigley Chock Miitor1 lf!lP·tJ11~1 ~lS&nJ1W1·ilrl•t. 4;• -~. Stste Division o! HilJtways officials BAY :the 1nterchinge project moves a on .. m11e , IY~wport Conncllman portion · o! ~ freeway southward, pro-_ vldes for widening and reallgmnent or Culver Drive and the widening of Tcabuco Road. 'l1le present design reflects changes suggested by the· north I r v i n e ~ Homeowners Association freeway study committee ::. a c:Orninlttee salfctloned·by County Growth Report tbe City eouncil to study the original f~way pl~. . . Tom Glenn, a Racquet Club resident, headed the study effort and suggested the present design which prevents the alignment of Trabuco Road more· than 100 feet away fiom bat::kyard fences of Racquet Club homes. The freeway project was first sought by tbe Orange County Road Department prior to incorporation of the new city of Irvine. The present alignment is blamed for a high rate of accidents in the interchange -both on tbe freeway and at the jogged Culver Drive intersections with on and off ramps and Trabuco Road. . Because of the accident rate, state highway officials said, Federal-Aid Interstate participation in the project was justified and was approved in March, 1970 by the Ftderal Highway Administration. That body also approved ~ negative declaration of environmental impact in June of 1971. ( The redesign incorporating suggestions of the city and Racquet Club sttidy CQm- mittee eliminates the need to relocate Trabµco Road, a state spokesman said. Tcabuoo Road reconstruction WQU!d have been done at city expense, councilmen were told more than a year f!go. - Tonight's hearing wW be conducted by the state division of highways. No more than two Irvine councilmen may attend, since tbt hearing ls not an adjourned city council meeting. The city is lending its council chambers for the hearing, a spokesman said . Court to Hear Camper Issue A dispute . between three El Toro residents and the Lake Forest Com- munity Association over the alleged ll· fegll parking ol a mobile borne camper Outside a Willard Avenue ·home Is lo be decided In Orange County Superior Court. I '· --Hit as Play for Potf{er By L. PETER KRIEG Of 1111 DlllY PIM! lllff Orange County government is trying to usurp authority from cities, Newport Beach Councilman Carl Kymla charged Monday night. Kymla let fly with a blistering attack on the controversial "growth policy report" that he said is '!riddJed with at- tempts by the county to regionalize government. "They want to take over local control. They're making assumptions regarding property rights that concern me," Kym1a said. He cited several recommendations in the report which he says back up hi s charges and pushed for co\Ulcilmen to have a public hearing on the report scheduled May Zl at 7:30 p.m. In city hall. { "It says general plans adopted by cities must be consistent with adopted growth policies -whose adopted growth policies," he asked. "It says the courts are going to con- tinue lo modify private property rights as interpretatjons broaden regarding public health, safety, and welfare." . "The county is assuming ttie courts wW liberally Interpret the taking away or property rights," Kymla said. "I don't think so -unless government says it -~should." He said the report also forecast the ·~"number and types of services perform- ed by all levels of government \Viii ·con- tinue to increase. '"Miat's local government growth and t don't see· It," Kymla said . - He .said even bigger concerns deal with what appears to be more and more coun- ty government Interference with local government. The report says "It is the policy of OrAJ18e County to plan !or and ac- Paper Drive Slated For Valencia Scho9l commodate the distr ibu tion or population among su b-areas of th.e county ta 'em- phasize the existing urban areas, to en· courage di 1.1ersity by individual com- muniti es, and to separate developing communities in southeastern Orange County by major open areas. "Whcit they're 'saying ," Kym1a con· ter.ded, "is that it's going to be their Policy to have population distribution within cities." While the report says additional com- merci!I flights at Orange County Airport should be restricted until th e noise prolr lem is sol ved, it also says: "Jri order to assure access for Orange CoWlty to air transportation service at levels anywhere close to those an- ticipated, it is necessary that as many options as possible be kept open for as long as possible." "That," Kymla said, "could be In- terpreted to be inconsistent with our own policy." Kymla was also ci;:iticltl of "_policies to (S.e GROWTII, Page Z) ·Orange (;oast Weather Did you like the wea ther today? \Vell, it'll be the same on Wednes· day. following some patchy low clouds along the. coast in the morn- ing hours. Mostly sunny with highs of 67 at the beaches rising to 72 inlahd. INSIDE TODAY • psychiatrists, psychologists and private __ Navy School Closes ciUiens Monday endorsed a Reagan ad· • .,_mlnlltntlon plan lo ~te-llate- The Waterplll lnvesllgatioo hu pro- d~ aJlt&•llOns that some vital doc:urneoll.Jiere l'Oll)Oyed from the White ~cd,de1tr9yed: Named as defendants In the lawsuit fil- ed by the association are Jarries L. and Betty M. Kuebetbach and Raymond 8. Plier, 22896 Willard Ave. _ It I.! alleged that the parking ol a c8mper oulilde the home 0and oir Its drivewl)' la In violation o! the assocla· lion's community standards. It ta also allged .that the defendants have Ignored requests that Ihde practice be dlacon- Unued. A paper drive to raise money for new, equipment-will be held Friday at Valen- cia School In Laguno HWs. On La w Day, 1973, tht State Bar of California has drawn a bead on the "spoils svstem" of selecting judgts for mu11icipal and· superior court btnchts. The alternative? An advi.Tory com~ mittte on judicial appointments. See Page 3. L.M.' 9"11 14 -" • ·: CORONADO (AP) -The Navy has care for the mentally lit ~ two of n 1hul down Its Vietnamese language state hospllllls next year. achoo! where 3 300 Americana had been But the council qu..iloned an ad· trained to speak Vietnamese 11nce 19M. ministration plan to clMe those two . re- " spokesman said Monday a iz.weet malnlng hospitals -Napa In tlie north. bluntertnsurgency course ottered at the and C.marillo In-the oouth -by June :JO, tanguaae sehool wm continue at the 1977 aild to tramfer the patienta lo public <:oronado Amphibious 0Bue. and private local care centers. • Aaked why the Wlilte House police bad not been given lhll aecurtty duty, Ziegler said be was not sure. But, be said, tbJ1 "was an Initial 1tep" ordend by the three Watergate probe chlob. · ~ 48"0ts movod lnlQ the White House -.(,lee FllJ!8, hp ll ' •• The ·IAlJt notes that a common storage lot II provided by the uaoclation !or the paitlng or campers and heavy vehicles. Students will be available fro m 8 a.in. to 1i p.m. to accept newsprint from local residents .. The schOol II located at the corner of La Paz' ROad and Paseo de Valencia. Proceeds (rom the sale ol the newsprint Will go Into stUdenl body IUnds ror purchase of equipment. • c111,.,,..i. s CllUI"" 2).)1 (-le• 17 Cr9H-.I 11 Delll Miiion • ...... '•" . ., .. ._, 11 ...~ 11·11 ,., "" "'°"' • "~ 11 Allf' 1.4111dll'I 11 '• ' M~hlll ,lHl!lt. 11 Hltlffllll N~ 4 OrlnH (IUJlty I '"'" , ... $i.dl Ml,..... U.ll T4lt'lftftlll H TtlMttn n ·-. ~Mews1S.l• Wtriil ....... 4 • r' ' ; ' 2 DAILY Pll.01 IS Munitions Route-T ol,d -. For Coast By TERll Y COVILLE • 01 ft1t D1i1r "litt S11tt U.S. Navy official! adinitted today that • explolives are·;hipped by rail from the Seal Beach Weapons Station through _ residential neighborhoods in north l~un tington Beach and Westminster. Commander Harry Madera, execc\i\'C ofricer of the weapons station, said about 10 to 20 percent or the ship1nent or jX· plosives is by rail, whUe the rest is by truck. Commander Madera alsO said the ran line used crosses five 11treets in Hun- tington ~ch and Westminster at which there are no safety algnala or crossing gates. "The Navy is financ1ng a $190,000 proj- ect to put up automatic safety gates," Madera !aid. "It's a safety factor we re- quested a year and a half ago. Work on it should start any tim e." 'Ibe streets involved are · Edward!, Springdale and Rancho Road in Hunting- ton Beach and Boise Chica and Golden West in Westminster. Since Saturday's spec t a cu I a r ex- plosions in a railroad freight Yard in Roseville, northern Callfomla, residents in north Hunt ington Beach who recently learned of the Seal Beach shipments have expressed deep concern. The city clerk's office said one woman was at city hall Monday asking about the procedure for approachlng the city coun- cll on the issue. She did not leave her name, but she told the clerk's office that a petition against the Seal Bea&D shlpmentl may be circulated in northern Hwttlngton Beach. Comritander Madera said the Navy ex- pected such questions after the RoSeville explosions, in which 21 freight cars, load- ed with live bombs, erupted in a five- hour. series or explosions, destroying sur- rounding buildings and spreading debris up to one mile away . -Commander Madera said he could not say what type of exploslves are shipped nor how often, t.lill:l:ugh ~he said the shipments are regullrr. • "We have never had a safety problem here and we follow the tightest safety precautions, including· federal , state and our owa regulations," he said. He said the Navy Is paying for the rail c r o s s i n g safety equipment though Southern Pacific Railroad will help in· stall It . Madera said the weapons station· has always considered .those safety crossings a "high privrity" item. The Naval weapons station is an am - munition depot , where explosives are loaded onto ships In Anaheim Bay , Old Laguna · Ban 011 Comic Books To Be Repealed "lloly CO\V. Batman. The Laguna Beach City Council is gonna repeal the crime con1i c book law ." · '"Yes, Robin. It's part of ri.1ayor Charlton Boyd's cleanup nf the city la1v books. Now we, Superman, Dick Tracy and all the other crin1e stoppers of the world ~·ill be welcome in Laguna Beach." A city ordinance no\\' on the · books in Laguna Beach prohibits in language nearlv like that of drug or alcohol pos.se.ssion laws. the possession of minors of crin1e or horror co1nic books. Pagi=s of orficial language,. spell out the prohibition, but for yec.rs the statute Chapter 6.32 of the municipal code has been nothing but book\\1orm fodder. Conslitutional interpre tations long ago 01•erturned such n1unicipa l atte1npts at censorship, Tully Sey1nour. City Attorney !aid. ''This is an ancient old ordinance that was apparent\)' passed in the 30s or 40s in a fit of community indignation,'' Seymour said. lie noted that Newport Beach, which had a like ordinance. repealed its comic la1v about 10 years ago. ORANGE COAST 11 DAILY PILOT Tiie 0r81>1Je Coal! OAILY PILOT, will! w/11cll •i tombl~ mr Nt"'1°Prtu, 11 11Ut>Ui11fd ~ "'' O••"lle co.,1 Pvt>li1lll"11 Comptny. $"Pf· •tie tdih0<11 ••• p;ibl/1/led, MONhy lll•ol.IOfo Fddty. for C°'t' M.,,., NewPQr1 Bfltll, Hunllnoton 8etd1/Founttln Vtlley, L111un1 BNcll, lrvlntlitdlll.twld< t l\d Stn Cltmen1e/ Stn JIMl'I Ctpr11r1no. A i1no11 ro:g1on1r tdil<On 11 Ql,lbllill..:I St111r6&n •11\d Sutld1y1. flle princi11t! pUb!f•ll!flll ol1nt ,, 11 lJI) Wert 8t "t' StrH!, Coit1 Mt.,., Ctllforn1t, nut. R11bt 1I N. W11d P1tildtnl ttld P11Dlli1>..- Jt<.k R. Curit~ Vl<t Pr"IO...,, Ind GtMrt l Mlt110t' TJ.0'"1i Kttw:I Eo1t"' ThomBI I\. Mu,phint Mtn1g1no Eo11or Ch1'4t1 H , Looi lili<.htrlll P. Nell AMl1!tnl MtnaQl"ll Edll1111 Offket C.ettt M"t UO 'N111 9t"t' St•ttl N"'11Q'f 9ttcll• J1U Ntwptr! lloul..,flO LA1Jll'lll 91~c11; :n For.it A""1ut M11111i..tt"" &Hell· 1'17i IHcll eou1 ... ,r~ S..ft Clt.....,tr: Jill Ne>rtll El C..mlno l:ttl , ........ C7t41 '4J.4JJ1 • <../' Baptisna 'fJy the Sea • .. • Dtll"t' ll'IJtt Sllff '11ole ·•. ~ . . ......... -r •-·<'-W: .. . ~ . (Jnanimous Vote ·. ·Senate Proposes Outside Prober WASHINGTON (AP). -~ Senate VOied loday Id call.Oil Prelldent 'NWln lo appoint-a special prosecutor from outside the government to oversee the -in:. Vesti/lllloo or lhe Watergate ..... Without dissent and by voice vote, it ipproved the proposal i n t r o du c e d minutes earlier by Sen. Charles H. Percy (R-Il)!), who questioned whether the ex- ecutive branch should investigate Itself. The ac tion came just 24 hours after President Nixon named Secretary of Defense Elliot L. Richardson to become attorney general and gave him full power to conduct the Watergate probe. Percy said he waa not questioning the integrity of Richardson but added, "He cannot be regarded as independent of the executive branch." Percy said Rep. John Anderson (R· Ill.), planned to introduce a similar resolution in the Hguse. tbia case from tbe auspices or the at· t(lmey aeoeral," Domenlci said. Goldwater told reporters he feared RichardsOn might "flnd -"himself tn the same position" as Richard Klelndl'enst, who quit as attorney general Mooda~ ~ cause of his close association with per· ... sons involved In the Watergate case. .. A senior Republican senator. Carl T. ' Curtis o! Nebraska, urged Nixon today to , name former Sen. John J. Williams of , ., .. Delaware to ove rsee the investigation. Curtis said in a statement he feels !he . situation calls for the appoinlment of someone from outside the Administration -rather than Richard5on. Republican Williams. who returned from the Senate two years ago, wu r~ · .... ; spected by his colleagues for his opPQ!I· · lion to corruptioo oC all kinds. Frotn Page I .... :i- " . . GROWTH ' • •• • • • Several hundred of the lailhlul turned. pul Monday evening to participate in and watch l}f:fptisrns con· ducted under the auspices of Calvary Chapel at Pirate's Cove near the e ntrance to Newport Harbor. The ceremony for· those being baptized involved full immerJion. Water tempe1ature Monday hovered around 60 degrees, according to Newport Beach lifeguards. During ~he brief Senate debate, the move received strong support from Republicans, ~#luding Sens. Barry Goldwater (Arlz:), and Pete V. Domenici (N.M.). . "\Ve must proceed quickly to remove .•· ·~ take over and regulate public utilities '·· · ~ such as electricity." • 1 Kymla, who manages the Moulton Niguel Water District in Laguna Hills, . : disagreed \\'ith the report's recom· ~ .~. mendation urging the county "to plan for . • water service and construction lines and ·· ,, facilities only in support of general , ·., ,. Wo111en . Shielded Lives of Crasli Victi1ns Saved Mexican villagers may have saved the lives of a pair of women, one from Anaheim, by building a shelter around them on a windswept Baja California beach Monday after their plane crashed, killing a pair of male companions. Townspeople also helped Mary M. 11-1cCammO[ld, 26, and Margaret J. 'Rowles, Jif, '.into sleepihg bags at the coastal crash site 225 miles south of the U.S. border. The women were airlifted out by a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter along with the bodies of pilot Patrick L. Kelly, 28, of Santa Clara and Eric Otten , of 170 Evelyn Dri ve, Anaheim. An Army doctor \\'ho flew along in- itiated treatment felt' ~1iss ~1cCammond and Miss Rowles, both of y,·hom suffered multiple lacerations, shock and exposure. Miss McCamrnond also suffered a leg fracture in the crash, which was wit· nessed by a gulf shrim p boat cre w. "' They said the small Cessna 172 was at· tempting a takeoff from the isolated , windswept beach a.fter iii8king a landing earlier. The pilot, whose hon'te airport and destination in ti1onday's fatal cra sh were not explained, just got off the ground y,·hen a blast of wind hurled the plane back to earth in a turn. Investigators pinpointed the crash si te as being in the San Luis Gonzaga area. on the Gulf of Californ ia side of the Baja 'Peninsula . Kelly had filed no prior flight plan and investigators were unable to que stioh either of the two women at length due to their injuries. Both were li sted in serious condition to- day at Pioneer ?i.1emorial Hospital in Brawley where they were delivered by the Coast Guard helicopter .. 3 Masked NY Gunmen Net $500,000 in Jewels • NEW YORK (AP) -Thr« gunnien \\'alked .into the Air India cargo terminal at Kennedy Airport J\ilonday night, trus~· cd up the employes and made off' With shipments of diamonds, en1eralds and stones \vorth an estimated $500,000. T"·o bandits forced the night supervi sor to open a vault and rcn1ove 31 tin boxes of gems. The third stood guard out side and tied up a tnlck dri ver and security guard Who arrived during the operation . "We know 'you got the di amonds in·this afternoon and we want them," one gwt- man said. It appeared to be the biggest jewel rob- bery here sloCe f\ve men took $3 million in genis from guests' safety deposit box- es at the Hotel Pierre in 1972. One airport employe said that a bandit \vantcd to cut up the trussed workers before leaving, but was restrained by the leader. Police gave this account : 'rhe gun1nen entered the lcrn1inal at the edge or the · airport at 9:45 p.m ., about 15 minutes before the supervisor and five employes on the night shift were lo lock up. Supervisor Luis Rodriguez and four olhers v.•ere handcuffe d and gagged with adhesive tape. The sixth employe, and the truck driver and security guard who arrived later. were lied with rope and gagged . All "·ere herded into a washroon1 1111d iorced tu lie on lhe foor. Rodr iguez was led lo the vault at gun- point. uncuffcd and ordered to unlock the door. Inside, he was 'told lo unlock tlie safe . \1/hen he hesitated. he was pistol- wltippcd and told lo n1ove faster. Each shipment was contained in a tin box about 6 by 3 by 1 inch. The stolen gems included about 25 sh.ip1nents of cul and polished diamonds and six of eineralds and semiprecious stones. They were sent f1'01n.Jndla to dealers in the United States. most ly in New York . The tin boxes "''ere placed in t11·1J ca rdboard cartons. Rodri guez also ~·as forced to go ui 11 file drawer and tu rn over ducrne nts listing the \Pi1lue and destination of each shipment. The gunmen "seemed to know the operation of the ajrline pretty \\'C'll," one \Yorkman commented later. Before leaving, the gunmen took lhe \Yallets, with about $250 total , and keys from the eight bound men. ·•Let's cut them up a little," one gun· man was said to have suggested, but the leder disuaded him and the man fired a shot into the ceiling ·instead. They left about 10:45 p.m., an hour after arriving. It wasn't until 11 :20 p.m. that one bf the men ti ed with rope work- ed himself free and called police. Laguna, County Officers Seize $5,500 i11 Drugs Laguna Beach police and Orange Coun- ty Sheriff's officers seized more than $5.500 worth of cocaine, hashish, am· phetamine and marijuana today during an early morning raid at a secluded ca bin in Silverado Canyon. Agents arrested three occupants of the house they identified as Nick Charles D'Amico, 27. Richard D'Amico, 23, and Lee \Vilkerson , 20. Each gave their ad- dress as 29321 Silverado Canyon Road, the place or the seizure, Sgt. Neil Purcell of the Laguna Beach Police Departn1ent asserted the trio was using the Silverado Canyon location as a base tor distribution of cocaine and other drugs in Laguna Beach. lie alleged that men1bers of !he group traveled to Laguna Beach, rented motel rooms and sold drugs, then returned to Silvcrado Canyon. Detective John Saporito said arrest of the three climaxed a week-long in· vcstigation of cocaine sales in the Art Colonh. "It's · the biggest thing we've had in quite a while," commented Saprito. The detective said four grams of cocail)e valued at $4,500 were "cleverl y'' stored in aerosol spray cans. outfitted '':ith special removable tops. The cans, he said, were uncovered In trash con· tainers in the rustic house. Agents also claim they collected one pound of marijuana, three ouncts of lu.shlsh and IS "mini-benny" am· phetamine tablets, apparently manufac- tured in an "underground'' labora tory. Fro11a Page 1 GAS LEAK ... made on the basis or ''misinformation and I have apologized to Mr. Millier." fl.1illier says that discussion came dur· ing the meeting with Richard Dorris "when I was convinced I -was the only one in University Park with such a prob- lem." Millier 's problem stemmed r r om disintegrated .pieces of piping taken from his mete r installation -pipe both owned by himself and the gas company. The meter is thC legal di\•iding poin t between the technical ownership distinctions. One elbow. \\'hich Decker today said he had seen, has a hole in it one-sixteenth of an inch in diameter. Decker agrees he said at the meeting this was a case of "one badly manufac tu red piece of pipe." Millier, who says that once convinced him he was alone, is not so sure anymore. Not since he talked V.•ith UCA President ?i.1 rs. Elizabeth P. "Lee" Sicoli. who has heard from other · University Park residents about gas leaks. he said. From Pagel FILES ... and the next door Executive Office Building. . The agents, wearing visitor's passes, were spotted near the offtees of Haldeman, outgoing chief ' of staff; Ehrllchman, Nixon's domestic adviser, and Dean. FBI agents also were posted near the mailroom in the EOB, where Nixon has a hideaway cifflct. · Haldeman and Ehrllchman were on the job today and are expected to remain at least a week more while they gather thei r belorigings and ease the transition to lower echelon staffers as ·Nixon ponders the organization of the White House without those two c I o s e s t assistants. It could not be determined if Dean, who was fired, was at his office . Richardson remained today at lhe Pen- tagon where he is Defense secretary. ltowever, ·a Justice Depart rn en t spckesman said he talked by phone in the last seve ral days wUh Richaid G. Klein- dienst , whom he is to succeed as attorney general, and with William Ruckelshau.s. purpose government plans." · _ "Local special districts should comply.:; \vith general plans for general be~· tennent," he said . · ' 1 have no quarrel if genera.I gove , ment adheres to that general plan. But !hey don't do it.'' . J Kymla called the entire policy "an at', tack on home rule. · 41There's a lot at stake." he said. 1'W\_.: • should carefully review it." ;,:->:: · .gf sp..'"'Cific ·concern to Newport Beach, . .. he said, are the stated, poijcies dealilll,. ',. ·:. \vi th Orange County Airport. a n d.' ·• ·· .... freeways. . · · .,,.,i,.. The proposed policy statement .!lays the •. •"\,' county should : .... _ "Encoruage the construction of .: frfeways as part of a balanced· "··:..- transpcrtatlon system to safely and efJ · ficiently move people and goods 1n • ... ·response t Lo county-wide and sub-area .. , - needs ... " .. "'They said 1 freeways , · not ··....-·r . 'transportation corridors,' " Kymla said.·;· -· "We have a mandate from the people to· ,; discourage freeways." .. •\,_ He referred to the March , 1971, elec· 't~ tion in which Newport Beach voters ·· ·~·~ cancelled an agreement with the state to.1:!:1·r. allow construcUon of the now-defunct· ·· Mrs. Sicoli brought the gas leak prob- lem to the attention of the Daily Pilot last week. She said as many as a third of the wtderground meter vaults , in her tract -Village 11 -ere similarly af· fected by the electrolysis and drainage problems. Fr1>mPagel ~.Pacific Coast Free111·ay through weJt•. "·T Newport, ... ~.r;-NOISE ... With CowtcilmBI) Henry Quigley and a Daily Pilot reporter, Mrs. Sicoli last that the county had a wide range of op- week toured a random selection of lions. sidewalk tneter vaults in her cul de sac "You could shut down the airport, street -Whitewood \V3y. change the pattern of operation or paL_ In each vault opened, new dielectric those damages," Fadem said, He siid couplings - a special f1'ting intended to the payment of damages was the least halt electrolytic action between galvaniz-satisfactory of all solutions because it ed pipe and metals containin·g· copper -doei not solve anything. had been installed. Decker today said he The AAA announced that a public rally was wiaware of any replacement pro-will be'" held at Newport Harbor High County supervisors had asked a1J1.• ,. municipalities in Orange to conduct_.,.~ .. public hearings on the report and teport :::.'-" their findings by July l . ·' • •. ,1.,' . " Court Remodel ..... ···:· ' ........ Bid Turned Down :.:-:· Jl:r!m. School on May 23 at 7:30 p.m. At that The Orange County Board of." " He declined comment on why the new tlme attorney Fadem will present legal Supervisors today rejected an offer ol '' · couplings .would be installed \\•ilhout actions be proposes to take. the Don Koll Company to remodel tht ·., · .. replacing rusted piping Oij either side of Duffield said the association would use current Harbor Judicial Dlstrtct1 tern· ·.:;. the couplings. "That's not my depart-all possible legal means to force the porary courts building. 1be board moved · : ment," Decker said. supervisors to solve the airport problem. to call for bids for a new $2.4. miWOft' • : Millier urges> relocation of meters "We don't :1eed any more studies. To say struct\ll'e. ' ;·-'.·.., above grade or provision of adequate that he wave no problem is to fly in the The' Koll Company proposed an e.-.:.··: drainage of each vault by drilling down race of facts. To say that we can main· change between the county~ e.lght: ._,.,!" through the compact soil native · to lain current levels is pure fantasy." acres on Jamboree Boulevard near the ·· '· University Park to a sandy substrata. Supervisor Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton temporary courts for the present bulldln8.:'.'~'" Decker disagreed with an earlier stlite-said the county should make a and the 11 acres upon which It stands. · • r ment by a gas company offi cial that the detennination on keeping Orange County Supervisors said they believed the Kott t' company opposed undergrourid meter Airport in operation or building another proposal would cost the county more . '." f vaults. · ai rport. money in the long run . ~========~::::::::::::::~~~~~~~:: AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET I WE HA VE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE d LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH.'~ SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH ~ITTLE TRAFFIC. co,!'l~ESTION LEADING TO US. THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAV6.. INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR "FOR ' FIFTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. . . ..·. ·' .· , ... '" ' , . .,,... ... . ''· '"' • ... l •• ... . ' ··.~· .... ;• t ' " .. ., I ·, -, .,. • ALDEN'S ., ·"'-· ' C .......... A""9t1tlhf MJ0117t S..-C........_ Aft hp9r'-Jlh~ SHE LITER.ALLY RUNS FOR OFFICE SAN DlEG0 .1APl ;_Julia Fialuir, 39, rnnounced she would run for a seat on 1he city board of.education and promptly did so, joqlnJ 18 miles. Detective Saprlto aald agents were forced to break the front door down to gerintOlhc house . CARPETS o DRAPES 1663 Plactlltla Awe. !: '':.-~.,: I , , ... ,. .... 492-4411 , (OO"f'"ltfll, lfn, 0.-t... Co~ll ftubU""'flt (Ol!ljMlll)'. frrlo """ l!Of '"· lllVtlrtllon1, .Ollerltt inti!.,-or ld"l•lltt'Mnh ~l'rfi" M41"t' Oil ,..,...llCtd •l!l!Olll N*lll ..,. 111U.t!M ., C1$1'tf1(1t11 o..,..r. k(llnCI ci.M --"11:1 t t C...Jt M"'' '"'~· IUlilcl'lltllM ti. e."'~ ttfl -. / 11111 MIU tJ.lf ononitll'ltJ '"!lllt'Y *ttl lt>llt •12M ~IY. -.. The daus~ler or the late Rep. o. S. -Saund (l).Calil,), •lopped periodically along her ~oulc Monday lo talk wilh possible voters. ' The 11rrestcd trio, he added, offered no resistance. Each was booked into Orange C.ounty Jall this 1nohling. Arraignment on !rges or possession of mar1Juan!"1 salon of marijuana ror aafe &{JO po esslon of cocaine for sale will take place in Central C.ounty Municipal Court Wednesday or Tllursday, said Saprllo. ''{, .,,, COSTA MIU SINCI 1tl1 COSTA MESA 646-4838 Moo •• 'llloli:" t le S:lO; Pit. t te t i Soil. t :JO te I -. '------------~~--~~~~~--~ ,., .. . .. ~.·~ ... .. ··-·-' ' 7 -. ·-. \ -. Today's· Final • N.Y. Stoeks , - Ypl. 66, NO. 121, 2 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY~ CALIFORNIA TUESOA 't', .MAY I, 1973 TEN CENTS ~dison ;plan~ to Us~ Alter;nate Fuel Source Southern California Edison Company's Huntington Beach generating plant will be converted to bum crude oil direct1y to provide an alternate source of fuel, com- pany representatives ~d Monday. . But tbi.s move doe9(1 't m~an the ~m pany is iacmg a poos1b1e shcinage 01 ruel, Edison official Dan Fogarty said. Fogarty was testifying about a pr~ posed mu1ti-million dollar expansion at Edison's Long Beach steam plant before the South Coast Regional Zone Conserva- • Ellsberg Tr.al. tion C.Ommission. The commission created by Proposition 20 has jurisdiction over development within 1,000 y~ of mean high tide line in Orange and Los Angeles coonties. "We have enough low sulphur fuel for ·tbe next several years.'' Fogarty assi.ired questioning comrnr,· ~ unlike the fuel shortages p 'cted by the Los Angeles Depar:tme t of Water and Pnwer and other agencies. The sulphur fuel is most commonly us- Pentagon Papers Dismissal Urged LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Daniel 8Usbe.rg 1s attorney moved for dismissal of t~e Pentag_on Papers trial indictment today 'after a revelation that just-resigQ· eQ presidfntial aide John D. Ehrlichman told FBI agents he knew that Watergate * * * FBI-Protects White Hoiise ' ) .Office Files conspirators had broken into Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office. Ehrlichman's interview with the FBI.. Friday was handed over to defense at- torneys by U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne. (Earlier story, Page 5). The attorneys then revealed that Ehrlichman told lhe agents he hired Watergate conspirators E. liuward HUnt and G. Gordon Liddy to conduct an in· vestigation "directly out of the ·White House" into the Pentagon Papers and other similar leaks to news media of classified documents. Ellsberg's chief attorney, Leonard Boudin, further re v ea 1 e d that Ehrlichman, who resigned Monday, ad- mitted knowing that Hunt "was en· From Wire Services deavoring to prepare a psychological pro- file relating to Ells berg." WASIIlNGTON -FBI agents wer>e Boudin added, "Although Mr . posted outside key White House offices Ehrlichman said he was not told that today . as Pr~ldent. Nixon moved to pro-~ese individuals had broken into the tect n1~ which m1gb~ be n:eeded in the r psychiatrist's premises until after· the jn- expandmg Watergate mvest1gation. cident. had taken, place, he says that he Press aecretary Ronald L. Ziegler then told them not to do it again." maintained that this was "a !Bfeguarding Boudin calling this a "shock.ing11 procedure" and w~ "oo,~ to cast develo~nt, moved for dismJssal of the uper.;Jons on any lnd1vldual. ' ·' -lndiclmenl aplnat Ellsberg and Anthon)'"' He sald the .FBI agents ~ere po8ted Rusto, stating that be believes the White wbereyer White . Ho~ files .wer~, House _ "I mean the President specif1c_ally at the offices of Naon s speclfK!ally" _ was indirectly responsi- former top ~Ides H. R. Haldeman and ble for Hunt's and Liddy's action. John D. Ehrhchman and counsel John 'Y· Byrne took no immediate action on the Dean Ill (Related story Page 3.) , · ·dismissal motion saying he wanted to Shortly before . disclosu:e ~t f'.BI see further resuits of the government agents had been g1~~n. the JOb or msunng probe into tbe m&tter before acting. secw:tty of the f11les, H~ldeman a~d The judge said he believes the contents Ehrli~an were seen leaving the While of Ehrlichman's interview are "ex· House 10 the ,back seat o( a chauffeur-culpatory," that is, useful in proving the GOV. REAGAN SILENT ON WATERGATE-Pogo 4 driven limousine with piles of documents in their laps. Their destination was not disclosed, but both said earlier they were arT3llging meetings with federal and Senate in· vestigators. The new procedure, Ziegler said, was put into effect as the result of meeting yesterday. afternoon with Nixon's new \Vatergare probe supervisor presidential special consultant Leonard Garment, who took over counsel Dean's duties; °'fense Secretary Elliot Richardson, whom Nixon has nominated as at torney gener&l and put in overall charge of the Watergate investigation, and the newly named acting director of the FBI, William D. Ruckelshaus. The aim, 'Ziegler said, was "t<f physically protect the files to make sure '!lat aceess and removal of any files w.-e supervised in accordance with very strict procedure.' "' The Watergate investigation has pro- duced allegations that some Vital docwnents were removed from the White HQUSe and destroyed. Asked why the White House police had not been given this security duty, Ziegler said he was not sure. defendants' innocence on charges of es- ·pionage, conspiracy and theft. The government turned over the in. fo nnation in response to the judge 's orders for a sweeping inquiry into the ci rcumstances s u r r o u n d i fl g the \Vatergate-style break·in . at Ellsberg's Beverly Hills psychia trist's office. The judge demanded to know more (See ELLSBERG, Page !) Edison Boosters Raf fie Motorcycle A Kawasaki G3-90 motorcycle will· be given a"·ay May 8 by the Edison High School gymnastics team and the school booster club. Team members and booster club mem- bers· are selling 5G-cent tickets for a drawing on the motorcycle. The money will be used to buy uniforms and equip. ment for the gymnasts. The team hopes to raise $500. The motorcycle was donated for the charity drawing by Kawasa ki f\.1otor Corp. of Santa Ana. ' Tickets will be sold by gymnastics team members, primarily at the campus. • eel In ~Ison plants, Fogarty said, allhougb ~ upansloo al L"'1g B'each would allow use of cleaDel'-burning liquid lire I. . All Edi.son syslem3, lncludln& ltoe pr<> • posed f!untlngon Beach expansion and Long Beach modernlzaUon, wlll meet air pollution requirements or Air Pollution Control Districts (APCD), Fogarty said. The ·crude oil to be used at Huntington Beach wouJd also meet standards. ' The proposed H~ntington Beach com- 0.lly l'llot Stloff l'llllM APPOINTED CITY CLERK Huntington Be1ch'1 Wentworth Cotmcil Proposes Ma~g _Elective ' Posts Appointive A sweepins charter change which \\'OUld eliminate the elective offices of the city clerk, city attorney and city treasurer and make them appointive, \Vas proposed A1onday' night by the Hun- tington Beach City Council. Such changes in the city charter would have to be approved by the voters, but no specific date for a charter revision elec· tion was set. C<iuncilmen ordered the resurrection of a charter revision committee and ordered it to develop ballot pPOposals to make those changes. All seven councilmen agreed on the ci- ty clerk's proposal, but they split 4-3 over the city attorney and treasurer's office. Mayor Jerry Matney led the opposition to changing the status of the attorney's office at this time. He was joined by Donald Shipley and Henry Duke. "The attorney (Don Bonfa) is up for re-election in April (1974), it's unfair to him to bring this issue up now," Matney said. "When Bonfa was appointed (in 1968) we told him we'd try to make it an ap. pointive office. •v~ich is what he wanted, but.we failed," Matney added. On Nov. 5, 1968, voters defeated a, charter proposal making the attorney ap- PQintive. The vote was 19,264 to 15,037. Bonfa was up £or election in 1970 and easily retained his post. There was no op. position . "Times ha ve changed." replied Norma Gibbs, who along with Ted Bartlett, Al Coen and Jack Green favored a charter election. "That's your personal opinion ,'' snap- ped Matney. Matney said he preferred to delay changes on the attorney and treasurer (See CHANGES, Page!) But, he said, this "was an initial step" ordered by the three Watergate probe chiefs. Pending Planning . I btned-cycle system would produce fewer emissions of al.r poUutants than ~ modernized LOllg Beach plant by about one ton a day, he said. n: ·Converting the LOllg Beach plant to 1m more sophisticated HunUnaton Beach proposal wouJd take two years, Fogarty Said and then another t• years to recover from the. increased pollutants released during the changeover. .Coastal commissioners are also con- cerned about effects of power plants on marf~ life. Vp!.imp a1 the •luntington Beach station to Some marine animal! are s1.1tked up remove live fish from the screen area and into plant conduits and killed on screens . pump them back into the di scharge and while others are damaged by thermal into the ocean, Fogarty said. discharges, commissioners Donald Bright No fish pump has been planned at L<?ng of La Habra and Rlmmon Fay of Marina Beach because the existing plant is in the del Rey, both biotogists,'sald. inner harbor and shouldn't ha\'e as much Fogarty confirmed that about 420 proble111 . pounds a month are klUed at the Hun-Tile comn1isslon continued voting on tington Beach plant and a lesser 27G-Edison's tnoderniza tion or the two Long pounds a month at El Segundo. Beach po'lol·er generators through the use Edison officials are installing a fish of gas turbines until Moy 14. . Routes Revealed Munitions Go Through Huntington By TERRY COVILLE Of ti!• Dallr P'ilot S!ttf U.S. Navy officials admitted today that explosives ·are shipped by rail from the Seal Beach Weapons Station through residential neighborhoods in north Hun- Ungton Beach and Westminster. , Commander Harry Madera, execctlve officer or the weapons station, said about IO to 20 percent of the shipment of ex- plosives is by rail, w~ile the rest is by truck. Commander Madera also said the rail Hue used crosses five streets in Hun· tington Beach and Westminster at which there are no safety signals or crossing gates. "The Navy is financing a $190,000 proj- ect to put up automatic safety gates." Madera said. "It's a safety factor we re- quested a year and a hal£ ago. Work on it should· start any time." The streets involved are Edwards. Springdale and Rancho Road in Hunting- ton Beach and Bolsa Chica and Gold~ West in Westminster. Since Saturday's s p e c t a c u.la r ex- p!--In a railroad lreljlht yilnl In Roseville, northern California, residents in nortb H1,1ntingt9n Beach who recently learned of the Seal Beach shipments have expressed deep concern. The city clerk's office said one woman was at city ball Monday asking about the procedure for approaching the city coun· ell on the issue. She did not leave her name, but she told the _clerk's office that a petition against the Seal Beach shipments may be circulated in northern Huntington Beach. Commander Madera said the Navy ex- pected-such questions after the Roseville explosions, in which 21 freight cars. load- ed with live bombs, erupted in a five- hour series of explosions, destroying sur- rounding Luildings and spreading debris 111-1 to one n1ile away. Con1 rnander Madera snirl he could no l say what type or explosives are shipped nor how often, though he said the shipments are regulat.. •·w~ have never had a safety problem here and we follow the tightest ,safety precautions, in cluding federal, state and our own regulations," he said. He said the Navy is paying for the rail . - c r o s s ing safety equipment though Southern Pacific Railroad will help in- stall it. Madera said the weapons 11tatioo has always considered those safety crossings a "high privrlty" item. The Naval weapons stanon is an am- munition depot, where explosives are loaded onto ships ln Anaheim Bay. ' Board Reorganizes Ocean View Dismantles Zone A'd1ninistration By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ttlt Otll'r Plltt St•tf Trustees of Huntington Beach'•· OCean View School District emerged from a three-~r executive session MOltdey and announced a major reorganization of the dlstrlct's top admini.!tratloo. Tbe d.J.strict's zone administration, in which the responsibility normally hand.I· ed by an assistant superintehdent was delegated to three zone adminiJtrators, was partially dismantled. Monte McMurray, one of the zone ad- ministrators was named a s s i s t a n t superintendent ror instruction. The district's other two zone administrators had previously submitted their resigna- tions. Or. C. Gordon Bishop aMounced he is leaving the district to sperid a year traveling and Dr. Robert Lindstrom is leaving • to become assistant superin· tendent of the Cupertino district in N"orthem California. Superintendent J1mes carvell uld the division of the district's 24 schools lnto zones will continue, but the ad- ministration of the zones: will .be handled by the district's top personnel. McMurray will repJesnt the schools in the north zone; W.oodJs Chaddick, assis- tant superintendent for admlnlstretion, will direct the schools In the east zone, and Ken Mebetg, assistant superin- tendent for peraoMel, will be in charge of the schools in the south zone. School board members also appointed a new assistant superintendent for business. He is James Jones, a replace- ment for John Rajclc who reslRJ}ed to take a post with the Irvine Unified School Distlict. 581 Vessels to Set . Sail Jones, a graduate of USC where he is "'Ork.ing on his doctorate, is currently a business assistant in the Artesia·Bell- Cerritos Unified School District. The salary for the 32-year-old ad- ministrator was set at $2-4,000 a year. For Ensenada Thursday By ALMON LOCKABEY ... fllll Editor Barring last-minute withdrawals, 581 sailboats are expected to answer the starting signals Thursday at noon for the 26th con secutive sailing of the Newport to Ensenada yacht race, the largest in· ter national sailing event in the world. The Daily Pilot today publishes the en- tire list of starters on Page 4. Yachts are listed by name, sail number, class, sklp- per, yacht club and type of boat. TholW.nds of spectators liae the shore from the Balboa Pier to the Corona del Mar bluffs to witness what has come to be known as the Southland's greatest yachting spectacle. The massive Oeet is divided among five classes of Ocean Racing (IOR), five classes of Pacific Handicap (PHRF) two classes or Midget Ocean Racing Fleet (MORF) and one class of ocean racing catamarans. First group to start wlL be the catamara ns at 12 o'clock. Thereafter, at 10.minute intervals the starting signals will be for Class A Ocean Racing and PHRF, 12 :10; ClaM B OR and PHRF, 12 :20; Class C OR and PHRF, 12:30; Class D OR and PHRF, 12:40; Class E OR and PH.RF, 12:50, and Class A and B MORF, 1 p.m. Two starting lines will be used -one the extension of the other -with a com· mlttee boat stationed In the center, PHRF yachts will use the line nearest shore exteod..ing from the entrance buoy. Ocean Racing yachts will use the out· board portion of the line. In addition to the changes at the assis-- tant superintendent level, trustees a~ pointed Golden View School Principal Barbara Dolph to serve additionally as director of staff development. The new position "has the primary responsibility for the. management and leadership in facilitating district staff development, planning, implementation and evaluation of instructional pro. ¥rams," Carvell said. _ She will be aided in her duties at Golden View School next year by Joe Condon, who was appainted assistant principal there. He currently is a teacher and acting assistant principal at Vista View School. Coast Weather The agents moved into the>White House and the next door Executive Office Building. ·'The agents, wearing visitor's pa•s, were spotted near the offices of Haldeman, outgoing chief of staff; Efitllchman, Nixon's domestic adviser, Coast Permit Ban Viewed The average yacht will carry a crew of six which means that over 3,000 persons will be involved In the race, not counting escort vessels and race 'committeemen. Did you like the weather today? Well, it 'II be the same on \Vednes- day, following some patchy low clouds along the coast in the morn· ing hours. Mostly sunny with highs of 67 at the beaches rising to 72 inland. ancl Dean. · · PBI agents also were posted near the trla.itrooro in the EOB, where Nixon has a hideaway effice. •1~aldeman and EhrUchman were on the joti today and are expected to remain at le!st a week more while ·they galher lh~lr belongings and ease the transition to '-lower echelot 'staffers as Nlxon pooden Jhe organization of the While House without those\ two c I o s e a t aalstanls. It could not be determined lf Dean, w)o was fired, was at his office. -Rlchml!on remal~ \lldlY al tbe Pen- lapt where he is Defense secrelllry. However, a Justice De p tft men t spokesman said he ulked by phooe In the laot several days with Richard G. Klein· d!ensl, whom lie Is to succeed •! attorney general , and with wnnam RuckelsbaUI. t By CANDACE PEARSON Of ..... ~l!r Pilot Sltlf The chairman of the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Com1nission said tl1onday he will Inv es tig a te possiblliUes or imposing a 11 a t moratorium on coastal pennits until ln- IU•l planning can begin. Robert F. Rooney or Huntington BeRch, chal.rman of the commission created by Prop. ,,, said, "The law was written in a • very poor manner because It places I.he ptrmlJ proc~ lnng before plarullng.'' The commtsolon hill jurisdiction over development within 1,000 yardl'I of mean hiflh Ude line In Orange and Los Angeles counties. Tho callfomia Coastal Zone Conserva· lion.Act (J'rop. 20), passed by voters laJt November, charges lhe commission with regulating coastal zone construction while developing a land use plan by 1975. Dr. Rooney, an associate professor of economics at Cal State Long Beach, con· tended Monday the commission ha s been hampered in some permit decisions by the lact or an overaU plan of its own and of some clUea involved. He aald he vllll wrlle to the Slate Al· torney General'• office to see If a tem- porary moratorium oo permlls would be le~al _ His-comment< came lollowln& a dl9CUS!lon o! ocean front projecls In V enlce and Redondo Beach. Commissioner Rlmmon C. Fay of Marina del Rey charged, uwe haven't done anything at any one of these com· mission meetlnp to Improve beaeh ac- cess." Unless lbe commission begins taking significant steps to solve the problem, Fay said, It "won't have anything left to plan"-durlng the planning phase. Fay said the lack of parkin~ lol9 near beo.cbes or proper road s to get to such lot! in all areas concerned him. The com- m\Mion has been ~tling with ques- tions of density and high rise near the be&ch. · Individual applicants c~n't build the r1 .. ds or parking lots, commented Com· milaloner Judy Roooner ol Newport Beach. She suggesled cJUes In the coaslal zone be told of the commisilon's con· cems. A suggestion or a coastal permit moratorium, Rooney added, might force some planning IQlutloos from · local government a~ncies. •• I Littte Leaguers Get New field - Young basebRll playe11 In lhe llun- tlngton·V•lley Uitle League are tesllng their akllls Oil a new ltague field this year. The new field, on Yorktown Avenue; west of MallllQlla Street, wu dedicated Saiurday, ditring the league's opening day ceremonies. Huntlnctori-Valley League covers most o( southeaat Huntington Beach. The league Is holding a "dime-a-dip" poUuck style lwicb from t p.m. to 3 p.m., ~!ax 20. in Munly Park, to raise money for league operations . lNSIDE TODAY 011 Law Day, 1973, ti!< Slate Bar of Califon1ia has drawn a bead o-n the ''spoils ·111stem" of sel«cting judges for municipal and iuperior court btnchet. TM alttrnative? An advisorv com- miltee on judicial appointmentl. Set Page 3. l \ •• , _1 DAILY PILOT " County Hi' For Polky On Growth By L PETER KRIEG Of Ille ~lly f'IMf l!Mt Orange County government is trying to usurp authority fro1n cities, Newport Beach Councilman Carl Kymla charged Monday night. Kym.la let fly with a blistering attack on the controversial "growth policy report" that he said is "riddled with at- tempt& by the cowity to regionalizc government. "They wantTo take over local control. They're making assumptions regardlng property rights that concern me," Kym.la said. · He cited several recommendations in the report which he says back up his charges and pushed for councilmen to have a public hearing on the report , scheduled May 21 at 7:30 p.m. in city hall. Baptis111 by the ~en \ . \\ Teaelaers' Request. , ~ -.tr Trustees -to Take ·. Poll on By JOANNE REYNOWS Of 1M O.Uy f'llel llatf Af the urging Ot the teachers at West· mOdt School, trustees of the Ocean View Sci16ol District Monday nlgbl decided to . ' take an additional survey of parents on a schedule change in the 'all-year program ' FronaPageJ CHANGES ... until after the municipal elect1001 next April, but he was on the short end of the vote. Bonfa said J\fonday night he preferred to "reserve comment for the appropriate lime ." · The clerk 's office was vacated April I. "·hen Paul Jones1 y,•ho held the job for 12 years, died. ' All-year at the school. School board members voted to send ballots to parents asking If they favor the traditional scheduling or the year-round cycle "ith all studt:nts aftending af the.'~ same time. • Westmont is currently a 4f>.15 plan. • \\'ilk the students dividix:J Into four groups • ',.. "'hich attehd staggered sessions of ~ days with IS days off. ·:<· The staggered 4.5-15 session is also in' use at Crest View School. lt is a means· :·•.i·' of increasing the student population at a · .. school wlthout crowding the classrooms. • ·; The pilot programs at the two schoois: ··~- started last July. Trustees are expected .~ : to make a decision next Monday night as ! , to the future of the continuous schooling. · • "' That decision, according to distrk~f-' . -· ficials, will be based on the resul or . tests administered to students before an "'. after the year-round scheduling was started: an attitude survey taken of studen ts, parents and faculty, and a poll "It says general plans adopted by cities must be consistent \Vilh adopted growth policies -whose adopted gro\Vlh pollcies," h'e asked. "It says the courts are going to con- tinue to m~y private property rights as interpretations broaden regarding public health, ·safety,,and..welfare." ?.1any huruireds of the faithful turned out J\IIonday The cdremony for those being. baptized involved evening to particip?,te In and watch baptisms con-full immersion. Water temperature Monday hovered Councilmen did appoint . A 1 i c i a WentwOrth; 46, to fill the city clerk's post until the April election. She '"as deputY clerk and has worked ln the clerk's office for more than 11 years. She will draw a salary of $1,329 per month .. of parents asking if they want the all-. year scheduling to continue or ff they : ' want to go back to the traditional .. ~ ' "The county is assuming, the courts "'ill liberally interpret the taKing a~·ay of property righl s," -Kymla said. "I don't think so -unless government says It should." He said the report also forecast the. "number and types of services perform- ed by all levels of government will con- tinue to increase. "That's local government gro"•tli and I don't see ii," Kymla said. He said even bigger concerns deal with what appears to be more and more coun- ty government interference Ytith local government. The report says "It Is the policy or Orange County to plan for and ac- commodate the distribution of population among sub-areas of the county to em- phasize the existing urban areas, to en- courage diversity by individual com• munities, and lo separate developing communities in southeastern Orange County by major open areas. ""'hat they're saying," Kymla con- ter1ded, "is that it's going to be their policy to have population distribution Y>ithin cities." \llhile the report says additional com- mercial flights. at Orange County Airport should be restricted until the noise prob- lem is solved, it also says: "In order to assure access for Orange County to air transportation service at levels anywhere close to those an- ticipated; It is necessary that as many options as possible be kept open for as long as possible." "That," Kymla said. "could be in- terpreted lo be inconsislent \!t•ith our own policy." Kymla was also critical o( "policies to take over and regulate public Utijities such as electricity." Kymla. "'ho manages the 1'.loulton Mi:ue l Water District in Laguna Hills, diragreed with the report's recom- mendation urging the county "to plan (or \\1ater service and construction lines and facilities only in support of general purpose gqvernment plans." ''Local special districts should comply "''ith .general plans for general bet- terment," he said. I have no quarrel if general govern- ment adheres to that general plan. But they don't Jo it." Kym.la called !he entire policy "an at- tack on home rule. ''There's a lot at stake," he said. ''We should carefully revie\v it." Of specific concern to Ne\vport Beach. he said. are the stated policies dealing \\"ith Orange County Airport and freeways. The proposed policy statement says-the county should : "Encoruage !he construction of free\llays as part of a balanced transportation system to safely and ef· ficiently move people and goods in response to countywide and sub-area needs ... " DAILY PILOT Tftt Orin-gt Coll! OAll'I' PILOT wilt> w~k.ft II (omblllfd. ftll NIWS·F'ttH. ot pUClii.1'1..i C1 "'' 0••1111• CCIII! F'utlll1hil'lo Complf'l1. klif· •Ill .Oltlon1 lrl l!llbllt!IH, MGftelly thr0119h Frid•'· for COS!• Mew. N•wll0!1 8•1(1'1, HU!l!lntltn 811ch/P'-11~ Vtllt1. LllgUM 8Mcl'I, lrwlnt/S.Wie'lloldl 1"11 Sin Clemtn1t/ S1f'I Jlllft C1D111t-. A 11f11111 ntklr>ll f!Cllllon i1 pUb!llll«t S.h.lrdtn 111d SIH\d1ya. flll ,.,111e11NI P\llllltl'l)fll )loilftl I• I! lJO W"I t1y ilrnl, C.11 MIN, Gllttor11i., m». ' 'Rol>1rt N. W11d P'r9'lffftf ltftd P'llllll.,,., J•tk ll. C11rl1y Vk1 P'rHlcMnl 11'111 G1t1tr11 Ml~~·· Tholl'l1t K11wil EOllor TI.omit A. M11rph i111 Mtn~ln~ E011or Ch1rl" H. loo1 Rlc.h1rll f'. N1U AH1f!tnl MIMOI .... EOl!ofl T1rry C1•lll1 Wiii 0.11191 CWnly EOllOr ............ Offk. 17171 l11c.h lo11l1 .. 1rd M1lllni .. dr11u f',O. lo• 790, 92•41 ·°""' Offtc• l."""9 lllkll: m "°'"' ,.,_ C.tt M ... 1 S)) Wt" 11¥ llrMl ........,., htdl1 »JI Ht'#POf'f &lule¥1t11 i-.-(IM!wlf9; JOS Horftl fl (lmlnl 1111 .. 1 , ........ 17141 642-4121 0.,,.. ...... thief MJ.1,71 ,. ...... -Ot'9"1 C""'IJ C•m ..... 1111111o Mf.1220 c;wrrJtfrlt. tnlo Or.,. C0t11 "1Nltllltlt ~. NI MM ,,.,le,, !!!111tr1tl°""' .....,... INnw tr Nvtirt~ llweltl ""'' .. , • ........., w1lllollf """'' ,.... ~., ~°"""'· 1tcW ............. Niii 1t Cotti Mtw, Qltflrftll. lelf~ Ill' <arrltor Q.6S .._....,, W INll U.IJ -'111¥1 lflAllll'1 •lf•il••ll tut -"'"'· I ducted under the auspices of Calvary Chapel at around· .60 degrees, according to Newport Beach Pirate's Cove near the entrance to Newport Harbor. lifeguards. schedule. That parent vote does not ... . Hu1iti1igto1t Eyes Dissolutio1t Of Water U1iit l~untinglon Beach will ask its fellow members on the \Vest Orange County \Vater Board to dissolve that ag_~ncy and turn its operations over to the l\1unicipal Water ·nistricl of Orange County ( l\'f \\I DOC ). City councilmen '"ere in unanimous agreement J\.fonday night that the West Orange Colinty board no longer serves a useful purpose. Dissolution , of the district needs ap· proval from the cities of Seal Beach. \\lestminstcr and Gnrden Grove. as \\'Cll as Huntington Beach. The water board will also ask the MWDOC to buy its two major feeder lines at an estimated cost of $1.6 million, which \\'OU!d be divided among the 1ncmbcr cities. Jr MWDOC agrees, lluntington Beach could receive $719,780 for its share of the feed er line. \Vestmiruiter could get $348,429; Seal Beach. $196,667, and Garden Grove, $106.416. . David Ro\vlands. city administrator or Huntington Beach. said this morning he's not sure how the money, if it comes. \\.'Ould be used. "We know legally il can ~ used for our own water services, but .we need a legal op(Jiion to der.trmine if it can be us- ed for anything etse." The oity handles all w:iter service within Its borders. The West Orange County Water Board was established in 1955, when all the communities were small , with its primary mission to deliver Metropolitan \Vater District water. from its entry point in Orange County to the communities involved. Colijlcilman Al Coen, "'-'ho has been on the \v::iter board for a year. said Monday : "1'~rom the inception I've felt there "'as no justification for it. It 's just a rubber stamp for the payment of water bills." All councilmen agreed that the ~t\\IDOC can handle all fun ctions of the \rrst county board. Dissolution of the water board would also n1ean a savings of $11,073 a year on costs paid Car admini strative functions of the board \\•hich \\·ould be absorbed by the 1\1\VDOC at no a'dditional cost. Magee Reqziests Cliarge Dis1nissal SAN FRANCISCO !AP l -Black con· vict Ruchell ~iagce has asked a judge to drop th e re1na ining charge against him in the bloody 1970 i\1arin County Courlh1n1se escape attempt that left a judge and 1hrcc other pcr!;ons dead. l\lagce"s :ittorney, Hobert Carro\v . argued i\tonday !hat it "n'OUld be double jeopardy lo try l\·lagee again for ag- gravated kidnaping. contending Magee already had been tried and acquitted of that charge. Jewelry, Furnitu1·e Worth 81,250 Stolen Police arc "looking for the thief \vho broke Into a Fountain Valley home and \ralked awa y "'Ith more than $1 .250 \\'Ot1 h of jewelry and furnishings. June Anderson, of 17346 Poplar St. told police she found the screen pried off a sliding glass door and the door forced open when she returned home Monday from a \fetkend outing. Listed as miss· ing in the burglary "''ere a silver tea scnrice, a color television set and various pieoe• of jewelry. Principal Satisfactory Dr. Paul .Beraer, princlJl"I of Fountain Valley High School ls listed in aatlslac- tory condition today after under going gall bl•dder surgery Monday Al Hoag ~1emorial Hospll.81 In Nt:wport Beach. I ~~~~~~'-,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ make any distinction as to the type of ... .,· year-round scheduling. . :-· ~ Beacl1 Residences Okayed Prior to Monday night, there reported- ly \.yas a split between· councilmen on "·ho lo appoint because of the political nature or the office. The new clerk sa id she had no com- ment at this timt on w~ther she might seek electlof! to"the llffice in 1974. The new survey voted on Monday night · ' - will go only to Westmont parents. A ..... ~~ district spokesman said it waS ma!Jed'.-"'."•" immediately following trustees' approval':',.. and they hope to have the ballots returg: :. ' ed to the district by Friday so that t~ : results can be given to the school boai4:;_ along \\'ilh all !he other test and surver...:J; - Witl1out Yitai Parking J\.1atney did underscore one point l\1on· day nig~t \\'hen he made }t clear that the charter revision committee is not being asked to determine whether the offices oui;ht to be elective or appointive, but is being asked to write a ballot argument for an appointive oUJce. results. .. The teachers at \Vestmont. with t~ backing of the school's Parent-Teachet> Advisory Council, made the request for • vote on the single cycle all-year pro- gram. They said they believe a non-stag· gered system would guarantee that ._ child keeps the same teacher for a ru'tt'!~ year. More than 20 planned residential developments ha ve been built in Hun· flngton Beach since 1965 wilhoµt legally meeting the city's parking requirements. They were all okayed by the city, ac· cording to City Attorney Don Bonfa . Bonfa told councilmen Monday night that the cit y has incorrectly 'allowed developers of planned com munities to build parking: spaces on private streets and count those spaces in the development's parking requirement. ;,The main difficulty with this opinion." said Planning Director Ken Reynolds, "is '\that every project since 1965 has been approved on this basis (counting private streets for parking)." Bon fa's legal opinion was spa rked by a challenge from Huntington Harbour residents to tract 8029, a project of 175 one~bedroom condominiums planned by Huntington Harbour Corporation. · Several residents told the council on April 16 that Hun tington Harbour Corporation could not count proposed parking stalls on its private streets to meet city code. At ttlat time, Reynolds told the council it had always been city poHcy to allow it for private streets, though not on public streets. l\1onday, Bonfa told councilmen the ci- ty code makes no distinction between private or public streets, therefore the code says "no on street pa rking" can be counled. Bonfa said the issue is still in question on tract 8029, beca use the trtct maps do not clearfy indicate if the questionable parking spaces are really on the "private" street or might be considered priva te driveways. His ruling left the City Council \\'ilh three options, "'hlch will be considered next Monday night: -Leave the code as it is written and declare that tract 8029 does not meet !he parking requirement (by about 27 spaces). '> -Change the code so that private streets can be COLUlted for parking. -Define the parking spaces in tract Old Laguna · Ban On Comic Books To Be Repealed '"fioly cow, Batman. The Laguna Beach City Council is gonna repeal the crime co1nlc book Jaw." '·Yes, Robin. It's part of tvlayor Charlton Boyd 's cleanup of the city Jaw books. Now we, Superman, Dick Tracy and all the other crime stoppers of the \\'Orld \Viii be welcome :n Laguna Beach." A city ordinance no'" on the books in Laguna Beach prohibils in language nearly like that of drug or alcohol possession laws, the possession of minors of crime or horror comic books . Pages of official language, spell 04t the prohibition, but for ye&ri' the statute Chapter 8.32 of the municipal code has been nothing but bookwonn fodder. ConstituUon al interpretatlOns long ago o\·erturned such municipal attempts at censorship , Tully Seymour, City Attorney said. "This is an ancient old ord inance that \Yas apparently passed in the 30s or 40s in a fit of community indignation," Seymour said. Ile noted that Newport Beach. which had a like ordinance, repealed its comic law about 10 y~an ago .. The repeal of the crime comic book Jaw is on the city council agenda for Its meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesaay at city hall. The comic section of the code was llr<t spotlighted by C o u n c II w o ma n PhyUls Sweoney. Mayor Boyd has pointed to !he statute as one example 1or the many old llld useless laws which clutter the code book. Boyd has embarked on a carnpal8J1 o! "cleansing" the municipal cOde of 1uCh musty laws. I 8029 as not on. the street, but rather in a private parking ai:ea, even though next to the street. Reynolds said that when the planned . community ordinance_ was originally established in 1965. the parking 1e- quirement y,•as depicted with a visual graph. He said. ho"·ever, the attorney's office at that time took the graph out and replaced the description with words. ) "If we take away the right to count private streets, "'e are going to hurt some good projects now coming into th e city," Reynolds warned. Mayor Jerry Mat.ney ordered that the \\•hole subject be brought be£ore the council 's regular meeting next Monday for action. Councilmen did not act at this time because it was only a study session item, not scheduled for any £orrrtal action. Budget Deficit Revise Sho ·w~ . Eco1iomy Uptre1id WASlflNGTON (AP) -The govern- ment today revised sharply downward its · estimated budget deficits for .. · 1973 and 1974 as a result of rising governcent recipts. Secretary of the Treasury George P. Shultz said the 1973 b1,1dget deficit is now put at $19.8 billion or $5.7 blllion·Jess than the original estimate. The estimated 1974 budget deficit is $5 billion, he said, an Improvement of $7 billion over the original estimate. Shultz attributed the improved budget figures to a rising flow of tax receipts "primarily because of the strong uptrend ln the economy." He said total budget expenditures should be as previously budgeted - S249.8 billion for 1973 and $268.7 billion for 1974. -The mayor also was atlthorized to develop a list· of, charter revision com- mittee members. He will be aided by Hrian Parkinson, a past member of the committee. Green asked that the comittee not be the sam~as th previouse one. "I un- derstood som of them opposed the ap- pointme these offices." "We've lost some members," Matney said. "Some of them I'd like to lose,'' replied Green . Frona Page 1 ELLSBERG ... about the involvement of Hunt and Liddy as well as other officials who have been named as principals in the investigation of the Watergate break-in and bugging of Democratic headquarters In Washington. Byrne had said the results of the government investigation would help him determine whether the trial of EUsberg and Russo \\-Ould go fonvard as schedul- ed. Boudin said Ehrlichman stated in the FBI interview that he was asked by President Nixon to make Inquiries into the P~tagon Papers and o t h e r disclosures "independent of the FBI investigation." The interview quoted Ehrlichman as saying there was "information available that Ellsberg had emotional and moral problems," and Hunt and Llddy were lo find out "full facts relating to his conduct traits." Ehrlichman was quoted as saying the. ·tw.o were lo develop a "psychiatric pro- file" in relation to Ellsberg, with an "in- depth investiga tion ... to detennine his habits and mental attitudes." Even before the break-in in September 1971 , EhrHchman told th~ FBI agents he \vas ay,.·are that Liddy and Hunt were making trips to the West Coast "to follow _up leads.'' Boudin said. ----- . There . .has been no request f0t B.dlange.. · ~-:; Ill the year-round schedule in USC 8t ..... Crest View SchOol. Cheerful Nixon Greets Brandt In Washington ··' WASHINGTON (UPI\ -Presideol . , Nixon gave West German Chancelloi: .. '- Willy Brandt a relaxed, informal White . 1 , , House welcome today and they im-· -"~.' mediately began ty,·o days of talks. " .:• Brandt drove froin nearby Blair House . •· 1 to the south side of the White Hooee ... ;~ where-aibcon and Secretary of State · ~: \\'illiamP. Rogers greeted him, stand ina on a short red carpet. . . ...... During. the first minutes of the · lvelcome, it had the trappings of a state .'·• visit, including hono r guards lining t?le • driveway and U.S. Army trumpeters, but-... _.: the atmosphere was warm and relaxed. • .. . On the morning after remqval of three -: ... to;> aides because of the Watergate bug-· •. : ging case and what he acknowledged was·· a difficult broadcast speech to the nation, .. , .. ; • Nixon appeared to be in a chefrful mood. : N. He chatted wit h news photographers~_···. and cameramen while waiting for Brandt • -.. · -who was 10 minutes late. He later jok· ·· .• · ed with Brandt about the chancellor'• .-· unsuccessful fishing trip on Chesapeak&;. ~. Bay Monday. ~··.:· While talking with Brandt, Nixon gave ·-:: him a half e1nbrace. Then, with his hand . ·· over Brandt's shoulder, they slowly walk-.. • ed down the driveway toward 1he west . , . wing of the White House. . ' As they were strolling to his office, he placed his arm around Brandt's shoulder . , a seoJnd time. • ; ... ------,., AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET .. •: ,",: ' -''·•'· : .. ~·•: I WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, e>FFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. 'THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOL.UME EVeRY YEAR FOR FIFTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. IN COSTA MBA 'llNCI 1tl1 ALDEN'S CARPETS o DRAPES 1663 P'lacentla Avl. COSTA MESA 646-4838 M111. • 'lhn. f le S:JO: r.L f te f; hf, f:lO te I ' . ' ·' " . ... '. ·· .. -: .. · .. '• '·" .. ~:.,.' .. .. ...... •· .. '·:·(: .. '.,I' . ·• •• .. ; .... " .' . ·, ;'J· ' • ',. .... ···~ ' . ,, ' ·"· ... . '•· ~ .. • ., --. •. .. " '· gove Rf fonn •PPo COW' term Bru( judg Com Bu ed def a aclm "! aod by Will said Stal poit cow him stat n Chio age tbe , poll Fol adv app " mll LoS :~ plm pre " bro nev Jar: loo: age J Cal no~ OOJ: ani lo I ste lo pe! Imr be! pol pel th• mt so! mi C<i bO wf "" U!j q. en OD ~ th hi M cl al ~ ~ .1 cl Ci J ni (j d al ~ ' • ... ' T~. M•1 I, 1973 H DAILY PILOT ' ~udgi :11e. ,~~ppoi ,~·tees. Solo~· ~sk · •wi-Ong!)~Ziegler · 'Our,s.: ;i ""r ' Patro'!fage Syst,em Co mes Unde r ·Attack : K(.e Spo~man A pologizes__w Post :1 ' ' W ASHJNGTON (AP) -White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler 11'!bllcly apololdled to the Washington Post today for past banb -cnllcism of. its Inv..Ugativ\. reporting o( Lhe Water&•~ con· _ lpltaey, "Mv'firsl h<IPW rtccdon """ Iha& be the go.,,..or r.,,,.mbtreil ,,., g me in m~ minbkirt. But thtn I 1oliud 11 . .,.. j1Ut pure polilits, darn t" , -!As Angeles Judge Noel C8nnoo By TOM BARLEY Of .. DlllV '"" ,..,. u3tice may be blind but judges and· ~en aren't. ery few Democratic judges and hard- Jy any Democratic Orange Cowity lawYm ha ve troubled to apply to Sa~ento for appoint~t t o municipal court benches or elev~tion to lhe Superior Court since Gov. Ronald t I Reagan took office. All the vacancies in I.hose seven years have -with one exception -gone to Republicans. And tigbt Upped Orange County Democrats do not need to be 1 reminded that the party line traditionally becomes finner in the last year of a governo'r's term of orfice. Republican lawyers concede that former Gov. Edmund G. "Pat", Brown appoliited a number of Republicans to read like a rewrite of the ~last decision court "vacancies in California during his to do it. tenn.Qf office. Among them was J~~ge And Judge Mast si ts todaY in the same Bruce Sumner who is now the pres1d1ng municipal court chambef'3 where he com-- judge of the Orange CoWlty Superior posed a decision that called, as a fellow Court. judge put it, "for the kind of courage you . Bu~ ~Y also point out that Brown us-don't seem to encoWJter from the bench ed. tll(:! months between his election these days." defeat and the takeover of the ~gan administration to nu every existing But Judge Mast has no recriminations to offer and be sees no workable-vaca.J>fy in the court system · w 1 t h alternative to a system that is, he grins, DemoCrats. . alw Judge Sumner, who has sin ce become a "purely pollti~:I:batily ways Democrat, deplores the ·appointment will be. system while stress· "No sour grapes this office," he ing that it has put said. "I condemn Reagan as a hypocrite who is more closely committed to politics some excellent jur-and crOnyism than . any governor we've ists on his 31-judge had but I don't know that I could recom· bench. mend a sys tem to take its place Wliess "A1y objection to v•e could adapt the New Jersey system to Gov. Reagan is that California." . he has never at-Judge Mast, appointed to his bench by tempted to imple-Gov. Brown in November, 1965, e"tllllned ment the merit sys-· that the New Jersey method seep:~to "iuMN•• Lem that was actual-ensure a balance or political inOuence on Iy a .campaign promise," he said. "His the state's benches by imposllig the rule 8ppoiptm,ents are purely political, and, . that a Republic.an .appointee must be as you can see, a worthwhile Democratic followed by a Democratic appointee and judge or lawyer iS going to have to wait vice v~rsa. for a Democratic governor to get some "But that has its drawbacks," be said. sort of scrutiny of his qualilications." "You see, there you have the concession "It gets even worse at the appellate that politics is at the base of all judicial and Supreme Court levels as evidenced appoin tments and how are you going to by the case of Supreme Court Justice get aroWld it?" William P. Clark Jr .. " Judge Sumner Former Orange CoWlty Bar Associa· said. "Here's a man who f!Wlked out of tion president C. Arthur Nisson was stanford Law School and once was ap-among an ovef"A•helming majority of pointed to serve as a judge in another county lawyers who see little hope for a COWlty and yet Gov. Reagan pre,ssures change in the system. him into hi s appointment on our highest His a,rganization responds to the state court." governor's needs in the field of judicial 'l11e·.Clark furor led to Supreme Court appointments by naming a slate of can· Chief Justice Donald Wright voting didates. That slate is sent to the State against his appointment in a meeting of Bar's board of governors in a t-i m e the state's commission on Judicial Ap-honored process that always end s with pointments. An<I it led Leonard Janefsky, the governor's telephone call to the hap- president of the State Bar of Cal.if~a. 1 py appointee and the laler announcement to urge the creation of a committet to1"" tu hit appoinbnent. '. advise the governor on appellate ~rt·· · Nissan's group and all county bar appointments. · ·• " nssoclations in California screen ap- "We've got nine members o1 that com-plicants and sift them down to a short mlttee together," Janofsky said from his list of about four names. Los Angeles officf. "ln fact 1 they met He ruefully agreed with Judge Mast Wednesday although it's going to take a th~t Gov . Reagan has been known to pick meeting or two for us to put together any the fourth name on the list. Both men plan of campaign on what is becoming a felt it was hardly a compliment to local pretty heated issue. lawyers who endeavor to provide the best "It may be that the Clark appointment J>06Sible material for the county's brought this into focus but this issue-isn't benches. new to the organized California bar," Nis.wn, a Democrat, felt that there Janotsky added. "In fact, the bar first "should be limitations on the governor's look«d at ~the problem some 40 ·years powers of appointment, particularly in ago." the cases of higher judicial offices. JQdge Sumner made it clear that "But how to do it is something else," Callfornia}s legal fraternity has done be said. '.'Judges 'who have been passed nothing in those 40 years that could be over are among the first to tell you that construed as lessening political influence yes, they are the victims of a system; and empba'sizing the qualifications vital but can anyooe come up with something to a man about to don a judge's robe or better that will please the Legislature step .up to a higher bench. and the public?" "We must apply a set of qualifications Janofsky feels that his newly formed to candidates of whatever political State Bar committee "is sure to come persuasion,'' he said. "lt would be a big up with some pretty controversial sug- improvement if men already on the gestions on this whole issue of judicial berich could have some say in these ap-qualificatkms." pointments and I. ~lieve that my But_he q~ckly agrees that lhc;se perspective has def1rutely sharpened to recommendauons, to be forged by nine that extent since Gov. Brown appointed me." The longest list of credentials In California would do a ca!'ldidate left to Judge Sumner's discretion very little good if he did not have the quality the Laguna Beach jurist puts at the top of 1 his list--courage. "Thit is vital," the presiding judge said. t'He must have the courage to make a decision , he mu st have the courag\; to stand behind that decision and he m49t have the courage to make it whatever reaction it may bring from a cdmmOnity or agency that rinds it not to their qklng." · Many judges and lawyers who gave the cjuallt~ of courage the same pre- eminqce also pointed out that more than one municipal court judge in Orange Count:w· has paved his pathway to Superipr Court on the strength of a ruling that c,Ued !or guts and gwnpUM 1"1!" bis bench. They ruefully conceded that Sauta Ana Municipal Court Judge Paul Mast is the clatJSid exception to that yardstick. He is al9o allDemocrat. Jud~ Mast, 45, predated lhe cali!omia Supreibe Court by several years when he struck.1 down abortion charges filed against Dr. Robert Cumming Robb of Dana ~int on the grounds that the state's'Therapeutic Abortion Act used to cite t~Laguna Beach physician was un- COll!Jli tional. The ing wu m>deJoag~r- tlon btC&me an issu"i" that divided oom- munlliis and spawned lawsqlts. An angry Dts!rlcf! Attorney Cecil Hicks roundly conde1'ned Mast, went to the Grand Jury and rljllbed through an Indictment thal put Rtbb out o! Masl'i reach and inl4 Superitr Court. Dr. Robb ts cleared ol all u...e charg" today but \l tooC nearly lbM ynrs ... r lepl sklrmishlng and a C.llrornla supreme Court ruling Iha.I , • Villagers Save Women in Baja Airplane Crash Mexican villagers may have saved the lives or a pair of women. one from Anaheim, by building a shelter around them on a · windswept Baja California beach Monday afte"r their plane ciashed, killing a pair of male companions. Townspeople also helped Mary M. McCarnmond ; 26, and Margaret J. Rowles, 30, into sleeping ba)s at the coastal crash site 225 miles south of the . U.S. border. • The women were airlifted out by a U .. S: Coast Guard helicopter along with the bodies of pilot Patrick L. Kelly , 28, of Santa Clara and .EriC Otten, of 170 Evelyn Drive, Anaheim. An AfT/ly doctor who new along in· itiated treatment for Miss McCammond and Miss Rowles, both of whom suffered multiple lacerations, shock and exposure. Miu McGammond also suffered a leg fracture in the. crash, whlch was wit- nessed-bra gull shl'lmp boat crew. - They sakl the small Cessna 172 was at· ti!mp.\!J!i a takeoff from the Isolated, wtnilswejif iCJi afler m•ilng a landing earlier. Tbe pilot, -home airport and dt!:Unitlon In Monday' a fatir crash were not explained, just got o!! the ground wbm • blast or wind lrurled th• plant back to earth in • tum. ' Jnvesllpton pinpointed the crash site .. being In the San Luis Gonzai• ...... on the Gull of calilomia side Of 1he Baja PeninsulA. men wbo must travel from all ports of Calllomla to attend their meellllgs, "may be I01'e ~ •"1·" ··r ,..., bold my l>reath ~lll .they come out· with them~' ~ veteran Santa ~ judge 'who preferred not to be jdentlfled. "SUre, I'm a victim ol the syslOm IA>O but wtiat'a lhe .u,. ol complalnJnc? 'lbJ.s is the qe ol lhe Republicans In terms -'11 coort ap. pointme'nts anc1:1 guess the Democrats• tW'n wUl come." . \ . ... The attitu.de . was, a&nost universal among victim.. of the system and Municipal Court Juflges R l ch a r d Hamilton of South Orange County and David Bacb of North Orange County were no exceplions. Both judg'3 .are DemiiCrats .. And both were repeatedly pointed out by fellow judges and county lawyers as men who tOday wo"uld be on the S~lor Court bench under a Democratic or non· political administration in California. Judge Hamilton, 491 has been: on the Laguna Niguel bench for the past seven years but has nc, complaints about the . system of appointments that seems guaranteed to keep him there -at least under a Republican administration. "It cuts both ways." he said. ','I'm not going to complain about the system and none of us has any delusions aboUt it. t don't think we get very many bad ap- pointments ..nder it and , looking around, I feel it tends to balance out over the .tong run. ' "I ctidrFt like the merit system idea," Judge Hamilton said ... Really, I think \\'e have to go along with what we have tnd if some of us become vfctims of the passover then we just have to live with it." Judge Bach, 44, a long term incumbent on the North Orange County bench, has not applied for elevation to Superior Court. "Frankly, I'm pretty happy here," the fonner assistant district attorney said. "I live close to the court, I enjoy my post although I would, of course, move to tbe Superior C.ourt bench if I were ~.ssigned to it. "And I think, whatever the drawbacks might be to the present system of judicial appointments, we've seen some pretty good judges named to our ben- ches," Bach said. "A merit system that setisried everyone would definitely be an improvement but what would it be and v.•ho would devise it -one · of the parties?" Meanwhile, an Orange County ·Bar Association committee is looking at the county's municipal courts for a successor to the late Superior Court Judge Ronald Crookshank and to the county's lawyers for successors to fonner Municipal Court Jl.idges Everett Dickey and H. Warren Knight. Only one thing is certain. And that is that an appatenUi; 1"!gned number or Democrats on the DenCll and 1in the bar· are not in content.ion. For Probe 'I WAS!DNG'l'CN J The -- yot<!I t9<iaY to ~l on 'President Ntxoo 14 appoint a speclal-utot from outside ~ ~i l4 Offnee tho ID- vooilplloo ol Ille Wiltergal4 c-\ Williout dl!aeot and by voice '°le, ll aPIJ"'Ved tl)e proposal I a t r o d u,c e d minutes eat~ by l\<n, (liarles 11. Ptroy 1 (IWll.), who queatltlned 1'betheribo .,. ecutive braDcb should lnv.,ugate ltaeU. The .actloo came just S4 hours alter President Nixon ~ Secreury o1 • Defeeae Elliot.I..~ 14 become attorney goneral-and,gave·him full Powtr to cond~ Watergate probe. Perey Sllic( be was not g9e1ti<>niilg the integritf of Richardson but added. "He caonot be regarded as bid.pendent of the executive !>raneh." · , Percy said Rep. John Anderson <R- ill.), pl anned to introduce a similar resolution in the House. During the brief Senate debate, the move rece.iv~ strong support from Republicans, including Sens. Barry Gold,vater (Ari!.), and Pete V. Domenici (N.M.J., "\Ve must proceed quickly to remove thi~ case from the auspices of the at· tcirney general,'' Domenici said. Goldwater told reporters he feared Richardson might "find himself in the same position" aS Richard Kleindienst. w'1o quit as attorney general Monday be- cauSe of his close association with· pe ... sons involved in the Watergate case.· A senior Republican senator, Carl T. Curtis of Nebraska, urged Nixon today to name former Sen. John J. Williams of Delaware to oversee the investigation. Curtis said in a statement he feels the situation ca11s for the appointment of someone from outside the Administration -rather than Richardson. Republican Williams, whO returned from the Senate two years ago, was re- spected by his col!e•gues for his opposi· tion to corruption of all kinds._ Because he is not an attorney, Williams-\Vould serve as chief in· vestigator, not prosecutor, under · the Curtis proposal. Nixon gave Richardson power to appoint a special prosecutor if be feels one is needed. An aide said Curtis, a firm Nixon backe r who however has been critical of the way the 1972 election campaign was handled, called tbe White HouSe to in· fonn the president or his proposal and was waiting for· a return call. Curtis said be does not think anyone from the Jmtice Department, even if he has not been involved in any way, could adequately convince lhe country that some facts were not bidden from view. • • • • Asked if he would apologize ia the wake o! President Nixon'• l'Y:!'!dlo statement Moad~gbt lhat a "vigorous f"'6 press" heli>ed -uncover the U,.lh •00\!l}Vatergafe, Ziegler r<!plled: "Yes, I wotifd- , ap(>loglze to the Post.''· ' - ·• ~I. THEN VOLUN'rl~ID an apology to fost ~eporters Carl Bemstela and Bob Woodward wbo, he said, vigorous!)' pursued Ille story,• de!erved credltlor 1belr WQi>k and are receiving 11. "When we're WTOl!Zo we're ~ng," the While Rouse spokes- man said.~ _ r · 'Last Oct. 2:1, Ziegler characterized one Post accou nt as "a bl•· • tant effort at ~araelei-.assallB!nation that I do not think has been .-'l!'ilnes$911 In tlie political' proceu in some time." ..,,.. WHEN ASKED AIOUT ,another Post account on Oct. 16, Zleg- .ler sai~ 111 ~ nOt digriify'With comment stories based on hearsay, character as.saSsination, Innuendo, guilt by ·association." In 'bis remarks. today, Ziegler said; "I think we'd all have to say mistakes were made ... I was overenthusiastic at th"at time in my . comments about the Post ... It \Vas an overstatement." .He later stld'his •{>Ology was not intended lo render judgment -on · indivi'dµals named m various articles published by the news- paper. 3 Masked NY Gunmen Net $500,000 i11 Jewel s NEW YORK (AP) -Three gunmen \valked into the Air India cargo tennlnal at Kenriedy Airport ?-.1onday night, truss- ed up the. employes and n1ade off with shipn1ents of diamonds, emeralds and stones v.•orth an estimated $500,000. Two bandits forced the night !lUpetvisor to open a vault and -remove 31 tin boxes or gems . The third. stood guard outside and tied up a truck driver and security guard who arrived during the operation. "We know you go~·the diamonds in this afternoon and we want them," one gun. man said. It appeared to be the biggest jewel rob- bery here since five men took $3 million in gems from guests' safety deposit box· cs at the Hotel Pierre in 1972. One airport employe -said that a bandit wanted to Cut up the !J'USsed workers before leaving, but was restrained by the leader. Police gave this account: The gunmen entered· the tenninal at the edge of the airport at 9:45 p.m., about 15 minutes before the su~rvlsor and five employes on the.night shift were to lock up. Supervisor Luis Rodriguez and lour others were bandculled and gagged with adhesive tape. The sixth employe, and lhe tru~k drivl)I' and ..curily guard wbo arrived later. were tiCd with rope and gagged. AJI \\'ere herded into a v.'ashroom and forced to lie on the foor. Rodriguez was Jed to the vau lt at gun· point, unc urfcd and ordered to unlock the door. Inside, he was told to unlock the safe. When he hesitated, he was pistol· whipped and told to mOYe faster. .... Each shipment was contained in a tin box about 6 by 3 by 1 inch. The stolen gems included about 25 sblpments o( cut and polished dlamonds and six of emeralds and semlpreclous stones. They were sent from India to dealers in the United States, moStly in New York. The tin boxes were placed in two cardboard cartons. Rodriguez also "was forced to go to a file drawer and tum over ducments listing the value and destination of each shipment. .. The gunmen "seemed to know the operation of the airline pretty well," one 'A'orkman commented later. Before leaving, the gunmen took the wallets, with about $250 total, and keys [tom the eight bound me·n. "Let's cut them up a little,'' one gun· man was said to have suggested, but the leder dlsuaded him and tbe man fired a shot into the ceiling tnstead. They left about 10 : 45 p.m., an hour' after attlv.in1. It wasn't until 11:20 p.m. that one of the meo Ued with rope work- ed himseU rree and called Police. .. · • Immediate Delivery • Big, Big, Selection ·e Import Luxury, plus Economy! _ ~ See One ... Try One ..• Buy Pne! • • • "Ora:np Cmlnt11'i 10,,.lily of rh,e Ca:r1" Rome OI The New Car • , • "Golda. r owc:J." ' ohnson&son Home Of The Ne• Car • • • "Golde" :l'oMC .... r\ 1 I 1 l ( I I f, ,- t .\i't\ I l 2121 HARBOR ~LVD~ COSTA MESA • ll40-lil30 ' • ' ' ' • • • -.... 4 ' DAILY PILOT 581 Vessels -set Sail ~ Newport to Ensenada B oat Race Thursda:y · lll"fly L.Hv. 37406, PH..(I, W•Vnt Roottllll. eve. SS The President Los.es Color • REFLECl'IONS DEPT. -We have thi.1 one teevee set ln our family where the color knob wiggles ·around a· lot. When it does., that, you can lose the color and U you dtdle with it too much, the whole picture goes, reducing the video ~to a craey'<julll jumble or porpl.,, greens and reds. Somebody slammed a door o r something l.ut night. The color went. Just faded away, leaving the screen in old-fashioned black and white. The choice was to !iddJe with it and lose the whole thing maybe or leave it and watch in black and white. I chose to leave it. That was an error. 1 RICllAllD NIXON' looks terrible in black and white. In black and white he reminds you of the faroous Checkers talks to the nation in 1952. In black and white, you recall the man who agreed to television debates and then came across in grays: who seemed to blend into his own background; wtio seemed indecisive : who too ofteR""sald "I agree with the aenator"; who took a public beating in debate with the late John F. Kennedy. He took another beating last night. At our place, it was in black and white and maybe that rilade it worse because of the other memories. Maybe It was jll.!t bad because of the words , or the look of the man , or the real meaning of the thing, or who kn~s? Maybe, maybe, maybe. Perhaps black and white was ap- ~lale; encapsulating the mood of the moment. HE BLEW ABOUT six lines. Indeed, II must have been difficult readfug. At moments, some fleeting moments, you wondered ii he would really get through jt, His mouth looked strange as he stam- mered through the words. His lips form- ed peculiar; twisted lines; almost grotes- que as the words, sometirr:es haltingly, came out in black and white. lt was not the face so familiar in news phot<igraphs from Orange County in re- cent tunes. THE SMILING, WAVING figure from the top of a slairway push<d up to Air Force One on the lallding strip at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. The smiling man jogging along to his . Casa de Pacifica in a golf cart at San Clemente. You remember how short in stature he was, yet marveled at the anim~tion of the man. as be swept into the empire room of the Newporter Inn on that gubernatorial campaign; laughing, jok- ing, feigning horror at the high prices per-plate paid at the fund-raising affair. This was not the same man on the television set last night. And you hav; to suppose some are gleeful today. Sdme people always get their kick.s out of tragedy to the other side. When Muham- mad Ali lights on and loses with a broken jaw. When Johnny Unltas Umps off the field. When Jess Unruh's son gets ar- rested. OR WHEN A PRESIDENT laces na· tional humiliation. More correctly, it is a national tragedy. For me, it came across in black and white. Health Plan Pushed SACRAMENTO (AP) -A compre- hensive $9 billion "grave-t()-Cradle" health care insurance plan has been in· troduced in the state Senate. Sen. George R. Moscone (0.San Francisco) reintro- duced virtually the same plan Monday that failed to get through the Senate last year. Roc_kies Ul"I T•i..fto'- SHOPPERS IN SOME RV ILLE, MASS., PARK CARTS TO WATCH TV President's Nationwide Address Watched by Miiiions ·1rrit ati0ti Shows Reagan Says Watergate No Embarr ass ment SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronak Reagan remained silent today on Presi- dent Nixon's Watergate ·s~h after brushing aside questjons about the issue -but insisting it was not an embarrass- ment to him as a ·Republican leader. THE REPUBlJCAN chief executive, listed as a potential GOP presidential * * * Nixon · W ill Rely On Old Frie nd As Law Adviser By Unlled !'ml lnleniatltllal President Nixon fell back cm a trusted friend and fonner law partner -Leonard Garmen! -to be his .acling legal counsel after he fired John W. Dean Ill Monday. GARMENT, 48, has been serving as special consultant to Nixon since the start of his first admin- istration. His job has been a catch-all for a variety of White House projects, par- ticularly civil and human rights. The sandy-ha.ired. stocky, Brooklyn born lawyer w a s OAIMENT Nixon's associate in the firm of Mudge, Rose, Guthrie and • AJexander before joining Nixon at the White Hoose. He became Nixon's political ally and ane af his most active campaign staffers when Nixon ran for the presidency in 1968 and won. GARMENT HAS been untouched by controversy in a White House where some of his colleagues at that level have not enjoyed equal popularity. He also has been a link for Nixon with tbe American- Jewish community. The President saJd in a statement Gar- ment ""ould represent the White House "in all matters relating to the Watergate investigation and will report directly to me." G~rment already was familiar with the probe as the liaison with the Senate's special committee conducting a separate investigation of the Watergate affair. candidate in 1976, continued to be initat- ed by Watergate questioning. Asked about the affair by reporters in Los An- geles, he said there is no reason he should be pressed for comment since he knows notbing more than reporters do about the affair. Later, Reagan went to his Pacific Pal- isades home to watch the Nixon address on television. His press office said there wou1d be no statement. But a state GOP official said Nixon's housecleaning _action came "not a mo- ment too soon" and Welfare Secretary Caspar Weinberger retracted an earlier statement in "hich he sought to mini· mize the affair. Weinberger, appearing in San Fran· . cisco, said he had been mistaken to call Watergate "ephemeral." He added, "I don't think that can be said any longer." WEINBERGER. FORMER state Ii· nanee director under Re&gan, called the bugging and burglary scandal "a very painful episode." Paul Haer le, No .. 2 man in the state GOP organization, said Nixon did exactly what he had to do "and l'lot a moment too soon/' . What he did was to accept the resigna- tions of Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst and White House aides H.R. Haldeman and John D. Erlichman, both former C&li- fornlans; and to put Defense secretary Elliot Richardson in charge of the Water- gate investigation. Reagan has insisted that Watergate has been "blown out of proportion" by the news media and Nixon's Congression- al critics. Asked Monday at a luncheon appear· ance if he still felt that way, Reagan said, 111 haven't changed my mind about any· thing ." Did he think that hls chances for presi- dent in 1976 might be enhanced because Watergate might ha ve "tainted'' Vice President Spiro T. Agnew? "I DON'T THINK anyone's been taint· ed" any more than those involvrd in Democratic ~lection scandals in Chicago, Reagan rephed curtly. Did he think it would hurt Republican chances in the 1974 elections? "No, gentlemen." Was he surprised at the sco1>e'°of Nix· on's housekeeping actions? "Nothing surprises me after si:< yeai:s in the job I'm in ." Is Watergate ail embarrassment to you '! "No. I'm just amazed you're still not asking me about the tall: prog ram." ~et Spring Snow Here is the list of the ~I yachts scheduled to start '11nind8Y aCnooo In the 26th Newport to Eosenada race sponsored by the l'jewport Ocean Salling Aasoelatioc. An explanallon of the abbrevlallorus : OR I throllgb 5 indicates the yacht is entered ln one of the five classes of Ocean Racing UDder the !nternaliooal Offshore Rule. PH (IHI) yachts sailing under the locel Pacific Handicap Racing Fleet measure- ment rule. MO Ls for yachts 30 feet and under sail- ing in the Midget Ocean Racing Fleet role. MH indicates the ocean r a c i n g catamaran division. 'Ibe number after the yacht's ruune is tb·e identifying sail number which must be on all sails. 1'71 1E11MMda R•e• Entr•nls A11trt1. 375113, PH.f G. L•fll'IOll, NYt:;l_~1.COl 3A "-O•tofl, 31~1, PH~. Fr•nlt Dr.at!', KTC, C•Lk1n1 " Aeg .. n Se.i. 17621, PH-0 ,Elrl M. $chultt. l&YC. ,, Ke ten A~lr, 374S2. PH-9. Ch•rln Ttlorflbeck. VYC, Wn!1all 32 Aeol~I. ~7'939. MO.A. J1mt1 L Kt!ly, ave. Rj•" Aqltvmbe, 1053; PH-6, N1ncl' K. H11lel'I "'°"' NHVC, C1I 36 Alktflli 1898' OR..3 Arthur J , a.f.r'ld, ABVC, NZ 37 Ak•~, 31211. PH ... O•l'fd C. Honay, LAVC, Kl'I 50 Alegrt, 2761t, OA·2, Jotin McAIU1lff, SDYC, PJ 43 Atl,l• Ill, 7631, OR·S, H~rv 811t11rl OCY.i; Cal 2-30 Aloti• 376"1, PH.0, S•nd•• A<11m1, Lav ..... PMr~fl Am1rfo, 1914. PH-6. Mlcl'la•I Abran..m, CLYC, Ere " Ambu1h, 37191. OR-4 Ed11•r D. Pe~ry, MBYC, Yankee 38 -And1l1, 1507, OA·l, Torti Y.clO<°, LBYC, C1llf :n And•le, 7896, PH·7, W. Grayt.G, Gr1Mm, S.SSC, C•I ,.~ Andlamo. 214'15, OR·A. BOb Sodaro, eve. En: 2.:is Andl1no 27551, PH-9, Thom11 J, LIVOTI, PMYC, Cit 15AnQll!Qut, J7U4. PH.t, Brian J. B•hl•r. cave, ere " Anltre, 21137, ,PH_., Fred C. Preist. PMYC, 12 Meter .OAnOfl•. 11, Ja3.t, PH ... Fred le!chlfu11, PMYC. Cal AM1rtt. 31070. OR-<I Al•n v , Andr1w1 MO. eve, R,or 33 ~ :19Anllcl.,.llon, 3nP9. MO.A. Jim .HlflUlll, !.MYC, C•I Antorranlt, 7026, OA·l, 81.1rke S1wy11r, NHYC, C1llf " Aohrod!te 313-(1, MO.Z, J1mts Grwnwald, SDYC, Cit 27 AllOQH, Jnis, PH·9, ·Jotln c. •ld1rm1n, NVCLB, Cal 23 Apophll II, 7956, PH·1, JlrM$ C. Hllrt Jr, CYC, Cor ~ . Aqu11rlu1. 7A82, Or-4, Or. Jonn H. Holld1y, lBYC, Ere 3$ Agu11rlu1. 373$2, PH.f Miii B•thr( SBYRC\~or 2S :WAoullo11e, 27613, PH-6, RGCert C. Yl\Cl'I, l C, Ere Arqon1ul1. 373S7, PH·7, Frink R. Ollm•rs, PVYC, Cel 34 _.. . , Arltl, 375JS. PH-9, H. 8 . Mclnfyrt, .SDY RA , Ere lS Arriba, 7327, PH·7, Br11ce. 811SOl'I, SMYC, Cll 3" 30Al1IOl'11111, Jn7f, PH-t. Pell Je~1cn, LBVC. Ntwl>Ort Art~•rk, 11ln, MQ.Z, .Ar1hUr Clear, L&YC, C1I 2S "'shley T, 312AS PH·9, Roblfl J, All!fl, AYC, Cor 25 v:a'.rie;,•· 176111, PH.O, Norman c. Bunker, SLBYC, Auror•, 1199, PH..Q, Rolly Pul11kl, NHYC, Mar 32 Auror• Bolrfflll, 1695. PH·7 0.fllel E Al'lderSAA LBVC. Col !M ' """ Auwnt1, ro271• OR·t Lou Comvn1, CBYC. C•I ' Ausclclo111. 7..,1. 8'oc-5, ROb Belcher, .sw-VC, Mor ll Avooo•. 3754, M ?, P1111I Melnl0$1!, DPYC Cott 27 51~v;;ntura. 21U2, PH .. , Jton.rl't M. Wood, SLBYC, Awelqh, 2789.1. MO·A, Stuart RIOPIPOrl, SMYC Rqr ?9 ' 26 Ayee• 11, 1552, OR°·.S, John T. Sirmolco,, SDYC, Rgt B&B. 21516, 011:·5, BOb Hitch, LAVC, Ert 2-3? B•bY Oumpltng, 31016, PH·9, Joupl'I 8or1y SB· VAR. ire 27 ' 811CchM1I, 17301, MO.A, G. Kaneko D. Levin, WCYC, Ar 29 - Blllendre, 7191, MOZ, Glry SlmPiQn, VVC, Cal 25 lllllandra, 373'/J, OR·S, McCl1lr1/Ullman, LIYC Chance 30 , ' ~1n1, 37S'76 PH<d{: ()oug1H Birr, OYC, C1l Jl 33 II, 21961, R·4. Prey M. Mye-r Jr., ave. Rgr 36e•flll'IM, 73'6. PH-6, Robert L S11'Qall, SSSC. Cal c:i•v·BH, 17555, PH-9, Rol>trt M. WIUl1ms, lAYC, ee'fr.r 81.rnca, lnSS, PH-<!, C1rJ li•llSOfl SGYC Trll"" • • Bennie lee, 2T.IM PH..Q B. F, Syt1n, BYC Isl 29 Brollched, 757,!i.~H .. ,.Norrnan Scot!, lBY/;:, Cal 36 c:i 111 Ko11hyna, rPW, PH .. , M•rk Town•end, OPVC, BlkJnl, 27UI, PH.7, D.tn B. Secord SBVC C•l 34 Black Bird, 31162. 011:.1, Allen E Pucktri eve Ere 46 • ' ' ,0,1~~'~'kk,11277'1. MO.Z, Mlcnae1 Sklnfltr, save. BUgl'l's SPirJt,, 762,, PK-61 Roller! H LenJOn CORVC, Cai 36 • ' 378111 Moon, 31221, PH-6. IUc"-rd w. MOO!!, A'r'C, Ill Ca~'~:~ocket Jl, n15, OR-S, Wm •. E. Bluroc!(, BVC. Er~l':--nM&K. 7121. OR·S, Htrbtrt R, H1rr1,. WVC, Arllllle1 ~Ix, 37171, PH.t, Mii• S•vln MO, OYC, 39ri:• Sl•r, 37S?t, OR-3, C•rttr & Alklrd, BCVC, Ere Bii.ii Streak, 27694, DR·2, G•rv L M~en NHYC Cl\ 39 ' ' N~~' • .f!aurm3rrr 1, 37800, OR ..... Tom Blackall•r. 2~odectouJ, 2nn, OR·S, Willl•m Grimm, .AYC, Ere &Otllll. 17310, PH-6, Goldi• oJsepfi, LIYC, PCC .SIOOP • M:ro~~le 0 II, 2m6, OR·S, Carl E Stew1rl, llYC. Borba, nao. OR·U Mll1n T. co11c11, eve, Col ~J :19Bozang1, 79611, P -t, 1<1rl F. Hellstnim, C8YC, Ror Branra, 7357, PH~. Olde Rl'lflem1n SSSC, 10 Mater Br1vq II, 7781, PH .. , GtqtQe B!ssell, l!YC, Np! 30 er~'iAh' .Siar. 3no1, OR-I. w. T. Pascoe 111. NHVC, Brlosa, 1117,, PH .. R Ed Whel'loc k,,CVC, C1! 28 v~A'~~'e'·38 J1311, 0 ""• Leonard·~l!Sfffl\1tr, BYC. H~~~h.w~;~k1], 27631, OR_., Robert C. O'Brien, B1.1tchfr Bov It, 110'27, PH·7, Jottn 'fl _ Snoo~. BWCC, 37 ft va"'1 , . IJJ.?, PH·7, Walter Cl<lt>.. SOVC. J'i' 1 .. wl " , ., ,,.,.,, +'li·O. Jo/,n -· M~~"~''-' J•., \.il, ~· ,. . 21~.,lc(l~n•B. ~7lij~. PH-8. Uen H. G<Jrr~tt. NHV(., ~JI L,,:,1,1,1. 7'lL, PK~ Geor~~ t 11111r'"'· BYC. r ,u ~~ AfiJ.rr:·~;· ,1.1~1 . -8. R ChflfCI W. L-<J•IO, NH'tC, I ~ ... 115<12· PH-0 R:itlolir! Ros~,,, w··ic. C o·'~ Cambria, ln S7, PH·7, WIUl1m f:I. La r1.0n, PVI'(, M~r ..., .;J'""'llt1•:a, 173]9, PH·1, John HerfinQ10 n, PV~A Cal " \.antllfllir, 1191J, PH·~ R. S c;a,cs, MBVC, Cor 2S L"Ol'<l<t, )7,le, PH-0, VL'<lrqe V. Barr, BVC /,' . .;,r :l2 C1orlce, 37?'11, MU·•" <..r.ll<t s1aeiter, 50Y(. 1..a1 12 C..i;lrtce. JJ718, Pli-7, non Moore SMYC, Ere 2-31 Ca!'rlcorn, ns1, PH./>, M<lrcel HM"ss1v. BCYC. "'"' r ararnw. 1669, PH·t, Frederic w. Martin, BCYC, cor 25 ,_11.,ere, n84, 0~·2, Slf.ontn N, Barrl~td, NHVC, Col 'l Ca rron•de, 7095. MO·A., Earle O. lempe\);i, AYC, Cal "9 '°Ce1ebr!lv. 195". PH·6, Maru'n H11ward, l(HYC, Cal Celebrltv 17873. PH·9, Jame' A. Rody, BYC. Cal 18 Cen~orl'f~ 7/foS, ~AO-Z. Earl H. Smll >, C•YC, s.111 n L tta ~;ls, .181Ji Pr!-, •hO•Y!~S R. H~rl .. CYC, Erit JIJ Cho1>11rr111, 7 3S, PH·6, Rober! O. l'lfl lr.n, LAVI.. Cel 40 Ch.JSQul, 370,6, OR •J, Dennis Choo11re. BCYC. Ill 36 ltCttce!att, 1%.4: OR-3, O•C~ Pen11ln11!on, l(HVC, Ere 29 cl'.lc;in'!rv. Jn90. MO·Z, ft•,•\? Johan'Otl' VVC. Ere Chlndlt, )7~. +'H·9, JOlm M r<e-cu. J",1, $1!.VC, :11' Cult et Ch!Pll•, )1111. OR-3. Fover/Eltls, wvc. RGe J7 ~hOUllj 7091, PH·6, R. Car.Iker, OVC, C•l 32 H~, 11•3. P'i-7, JOil I(, Lanudon, CIVC, Col 3' lre1, 1tlSI. PH·I. Charle~ Slaughter, AVC, (or 34 c lmll(, ''°"'· ORCA. Ri>OOrr c . C•~ron • .SGYC, Trlm1r11n Tetnperature1 ""' LN ... ··-" " 30.1-' l"\t-: __ .,___ ·~~ fodfll' &1!11 lr:r;,•red lomldl:lll "''" •nd CIOwf!f)OUrl \•fn .crott ~ Plllns •l'td ni. Miu u pp! v111.-... Ne1r1v a loot 01 1now bllnkl'"' WYomlna •n<I ne1vv-i11CW war" ni:i• wtr• oos1to for 01r1i of wvomlna •lld Co!O<°ldo. C•sritr, Wvo .. weJ hit wlth 10 Inches of llWW. Thrff l~CMI 1•11 at r omtorl, 1'1SL PH.0, Roqer flln1111am, SSSC, 8S' Sch ConYllOllOll, llCM8, OR_., Mer$hell Beclc. BYC, Ere ... . COn TOClo, 176'19, PH•11, .Alt• Hard'Y, SSSC ,Mar IO COl'ICl•t•, 37..0.. PH.O, Rlcho11rd C 8 .rown, CSYC, P"r~ Concr11111t, nu, Olt·2, eoht.cl/Ntlson, C&C •1 COflQu1$1<tdOr. 1654, MC·A, Keith C. Gtr1rC1. l 8VC, All•"'' " .. -" " •utl•lo •• .. c~ton " " C .... ffOll• " " ,,,._ " .. ClntlnMll .. .. ,,_ " " .,.._ .. " -.. " -~· .. " -" " JICbollvfll• " " KMMI City " M l..M v,..., " .. llttl• Rodt " .. lOiif,11111• " " M .... I 11 " MIJWMM .. .. Mflfs..41 • ""' " .. Ntw OrlHn• IS .. -v"" .. .. Oklllto!M Cltv n .. -" .. !i~ " .. I D -CllY \1 "' .tt ·" ... ·" " 1.04 " " llCINO----~ ~t•JN fj~',~11,SNOW f77'?J • ...__ ..... ~llfOWltJ '"It llOW A1wlln1 Ind two •I L•l'tder. • H1Qhw1vs ~·-!tit two clt1e1 w•,._ bl0<;ked tty s~. •nd 1toc::~men t~Pressed te•r ll'lel lht!r •!ready s~v1relv dam~ged l'llrdi m•v llkl •rl<lTMr beellr.n . Travtl ildvl1orle1 were PMltd for lh• Wlllle M11unlaln1 of Arl1on• a nd parts o! New ~. Wl'llrt snow of 1r11 lfl· '"'! M -•i• 1110.Cled, S!11Ckmtn'1 •dv $0rltt Mrt 111111d klr C(lld r11,. ~nd ~'l:liis.ln!O int D•kof11 •nd centr1t \floltfll ftn.111cterstorm1 tr I Q Cl• r • d MVtfl ton11<10t1 In norlf'lt •n Ol\l11hom• afld .OUlhtrn K•llSll Mond•Y r.tol!l. C•l 2·30 • C011t•olous. 21261. PH.f, 1<en G1H11, cave, E11· cat~~lr, 21151, OA·2, Wll!l•m Edw••ds. PMVC, Mor " 23 coun!tr110lnl, Jrooo, OR-3, 8111 Headden, SVC. Cal CoutlM Ill, 27~7. PH·!, f', J. Ooml11Q11U, SS.SC. ~1 '" Coor1 Tlmt II. 31689, MO·Z. John H. Ewttl, C8YC, ,., 27 Coven•nl, (.505. PH·7. R11vmond A. Abr1hllm, L&YC. Cal 3 • Cricket, 3 •76, PH•9, Jolin F. Klmbl•, 8CYC, L't~~,,~7600, OR .. , Cl"rl!l'I 'Ii HON. SDYC,.Rar J7 Cumtn.1w, 214'11. f,l;O.A, Ed llflkl Jr .. SDTC, ltr ~ . . --c~ 2, mot. PH·7· Roll l:otl'I, llCYC, Col 34 "" " ' JorntdoQ .,.,..,. bl•rntd tor lnt ur '' to v• per-son1 •I Jtt, Okt1., •nd lhtrt wt1 M.wy orooeriv d•n'Wlllt •I ~· fot'll, OM• .. wlltr• • ~hOol root w•s bloWn 011, rnooll• hon\tt Ovtr1Vfl'lfd 0.IMOll 11. 17402. PH.O, Chrl,IODhtr Ru~I, Cl'(C:. •lld 1•l"trll bln11'1ff"I d•mllltd Trlldl 31 TP\t llood.pilOl*I MISl lHIOll•f° V1!11y D•mn Ya11kH, !net, PH•7, "'-rv J-S~, w11 dl'tflCfltd=•!n •• nt•W 1t11.11i. sivc. 'f! 36 c ·~, .. ~, ·.~u ua 10 lllrH !~Pitt OI' L~;"'.:." • 7«J1, l'H•7, R. M. h1Wnl11111, NHYC. ~~I~ II '"f= =Its on llOrlf'IW-.t•rfl •r•, noo, PH .. , O. W•lt1r B«k, LAVC, lltcll 50 oosrt11 .. ,_.1• l'IOl''=m w•ffl::::C. -:.; nttts•. tJOD, i-H-t. Alt)I W•lr, Jr .. SMYC, co1 -.o1.111Mrn WtlC~ll • D{l!_·-tfna, lnol, MO-Z. Tlvlor Hohn®llt. LBYC, ldyUwlld. lltlnol1 •nd ltd ua-to I foot ·I I Colorft, 31291, MO-A, Jim EllCl'lafl. lOYC, C•I d•V, wfll'I •n lnill of intw rtcotdtd 11 L•r_qt hlll llllf'it of~o C~;t'i!' TM lllOl1 ffmPJrlM1! Moncl•r.tn Lo• G•IV~ wl!ett trtetor• wtrt -to T/ Ano1l11 wi• 63 dtarH1. T NQl'I pUll\ ~ f'OKW•VI .... ..,, o.IM"1. 27'02, PH ... ll:ldl•,.. 0. ll•uff, •ssc, R .--. .. d ,..., 10 Wol A _y TllvrldtrifO!'M wnt wfrd1 C111s1 ._ ......... °"' l'lttlltv. ., 10 m l!f "' •t1our TllrOl.IOh Fl. OWl.lt•fll•, mt, OR.a. H1nd'tetf!K•td'llm. LAYC, 11.s. su111111a1{ L"-"""'· "'b· ''e:il A llO ....... NI 1"'1111 Ila.mt II-I Ttn'IWlflll'll Hwft fllnotd •nl, 3'1Mj Olt-3, Sl!tklofl Golltotl. '/IYfu..1•136 1±~------'------------------------'--"""'~"':.:-::::~~=·~·~":::."'"'::::.""::::'~'..::":::":":__~·::.""':.~:.:. '· ... :.· :!t.~~:1~r:.=m~· :~·~~~·_ .. _·_··"_'''_'_·_ w._._· ~" ....:::::;:· ''"·PH·'· H. H. eurrtl' AT\,, COi' ec:--n ! • I '"!ISY IUi;Nr, 274' .. PH•7, l"•ul Mllltr, LIYC, Ere i- EI 8ot1'1Cf'lel"O, 31:1'°-MQ.A. loblrt H•rdwlek, SSSC, 111 XI Mk U 37el Tlgre, 21"'/, PH ... <l'll'lttt A. W•I"' OCC, Sin :IOEll• Soe.cl, mm. MO-A. JI:_, ll. LlnDOt•. $$(;, Col Ende11'Wr, .27$52. OR-<I, Sl•Dhtn Cook. WVC., £re, rn ·~I-S11m1N1r, 1766,, PH.O. J1mn J. 61U1tl)l•, NY a, 111 J2 E 1tU S1Jm1N1r, ~1'14, PK-I, 0."'4 ~lllln, DPYC, C•I 7' Ent1,11, 1'H'l, l"H-7, L" 1. Knne. ave. C•I S.i Erin, 2101f, OICA, W. loWll Houelllon LYC, Trlm1r1n ·' E1t;•lild•, 311lt2. Olt-1, JtlcMnf Ootrlna. NHYC, Ere 35 ESCllpt, llfTI, PH..0, E. Rl!CIW/0 R.mti.rii. eve, «I Ft i'Ct!Ch EsaH, 27219, PH-t, R .Adams/( Blum.ti, SLBYC. ''" " E1orll, 7131, PH·7, £rnt" A Nqntt, DP'(C, Rhodff ~1 Est,._u •• 79", PH' ... J .•. WOOclllull C:YC, 41 Ft Yawl Evl•"· 37269, PH4i Cheri•• Ullm•"· avc1 q Stoop_ E~PKll!lon, 17$1:1, PH .. , Don S. kliel, Wvt:, Yorktown T•l>U·LIL :mM, Oll·l, llldllrd .A, J•MPOf, ORVC, Col '3 F1d lll!Y, mu. MO-A. A. Slractl•n. CYC, Vriee " . FlnHM, 17J23, PH4, H•I l"ucltw•. C8YC, Vll'IJIV-rd Flrckly It, 21162. PH-I. Ptttt E•W'ntn, IYC, Ere " Fll'lbl"lnd, 2711), OR.J. O.vld £. Cuckl•r. NHYC, en: '1 Flv• J'•• 11t27L Pl-MbHtnY lH, WCYC1 Npl » FlllTll. 1HS, PH... ldl ll•tnfft• IWJC, Cbl ~ Fl1rt>l"Olt1, 3102\, MO.Z. Wllll•m 01ffnlll, SI SC, Ere 21 • ' Flntwlnd, 115.tO, PH .. , Johfl P•ttlnon, Sl&YC, Ere 3S Flvlt111 Cloud, 1511, OR-2, E~ ftlm•r, eve, C1I «I Fll'lnt flM, 216'S. PH-t, etll R•wl, VYC, 'Ere 30 F11'1no Ltctv. 27~ p~. lt•Y &urae ... OCY, Ere 35·Ftvtna· ToM 'II, 21612, PH-0. SM kOut ShlO '°" BCYC, C•I 2-t Foll, 17»9, PH·7 l!lob M&llenL CIYC, K31 Fore• S.Vlfl, i1rw, PH... ltd Z.llmtr, -CBVC, Lfpworth 32 . Fortunt. 7555, PH-', W•VM T•rrv, SDYC, Col SO FollV L•av. 27617. MO·A. llruc•, Grovw, PM'r'C, C•I 21 FOl'f' Lady, %1625, Mo-Z Dr, ltrt L.ocltwood, PMYC, Ere 29 FrM Spirit, 37299, OA...i. H•rl•n l.M, WYC, Ere 2-» FrM Spirit\ 37293. OR-3, Rov '-' HUI, aYC~ En: 39 • Fretclom, 1002. PH-6. Chlrltt &•um, R1'r'C, .U' ,,_ fl"lllHI, 2333A. PH,7. ~rd J 81k•r. CCC, C.•1 :M F1111 Houi.t Too, ID6. MC-A, Rolltrt J. Huflltr, l.AYC, Sen 17 -• G1brl1lle, 1167, P!:!~, Ed Sllvtrs,r. PMYC, Ere 41 G•tlOPln Gae1, """'· MO-A. KObllrt $. M&9M, l&VC, C.I 29 G•nd1ll, 3~ PH·7, Mlk• Chopol11, l&Y~ Col 30 G•Vlol•, J1-ui. PH-f, John M. Kras., SvYC, C•I 2'I . ' • ~!1h1, 17793. Pt+-4, Fr•llk R. 011r, cevc. Albtr• » Gl~r'I Mlflk II. 3752', MO.Z. Lts 8•r11•11, CVC, S1n 1S Gollll Tll1.W II, J1212, OR·l, C. L LMVltt, C'r'C; Ere «> Gold D!iratr. 278U. PH ... l . EdW•rd IC.Int, SLIYC. (el 27 Golden Glrl, 21'67, PH·1, Norm•rt.·P M•nhall< SM'r'C. Ere 'Jj Golden Hind, n33, OR•2, M. V • .Arir:ttnon. C•I CJK Gr1cl1, 1335, PH+?. Jol!fl HOwe-11, acvc, Ht1K•llv Gr1vee Irene, ll'OOJ, Pl;l-9, Fr•flk P. Colem1n, ' LSF, SCI Culttl' . Gr11' E1111t. 3751f, OR ... Fr•flll V•rnum, AYC, Rgr " t G11lo1m•"-· m1, PH-6, Birt 1.1111•, BC'YC, 111 37 Gumpt\orl, 37592. PK-6. Robtrt C. Groff, LSF, 111 M . GYDll'. 771'. OR·1, H•rrv c. Mototl!co. llYC. Col " . Hamihl'lt ... ROM, 27912 PH~ Otnnl• J. 811'1'11tlt. SSSC. :u· Slooo H•DPV Tlmt. 2151f. PH•7, E .... rttt ComlflOI, CIYC, ca~.~pfeffer, Jl'•16, OA..S, cart Elcf*IOllub Jr •• SOYC, Ere 32 Hll'lll, 1'06. OR-3. V1l-l-81U1"11, ORVCLU--40 Her Tfllnq, 27666. OR·5, Mtl W1Hs, CORY~ RJ1t5'2' H•xt, 1156, PH-9, ltWh o . w~r. ~Ye, n Juan 24 HIOh flytr, 1ffS. OR·S. S.rlno/M. C•111ltt., KHYC, Yan~ee 30 Hobo 11, 37281. MO.Z. Robtrl D. loaln Jr, WYC, Cat 21 Holld•v Too. 172,, PH"6, Klflnttll f . Cl'Olln, LAYC, C•~otonul. 31.tSO. Pl+7, G~• l . P1scoe, ~· " 35HOtlkY T01'1kWOn'""· 2m1. MO.Z, J , L. pHr1, SWYC . Nol 17 • Hor!ZOfl, 371•Z. PH4, HD'IW1rd E. Fr.,.,klln,. l &YO, 15~~\n Owl, 3717S, PH-f, WOoCl/I. C•rron. VYC, Exe 26 Hubba H11bbe. 37755, PH4, w .•. Cflrl1topl'I, ovc, Cal 29 H111kv. 1116$. PH.f. Fllnt H. Smtttl. eve. £11~ ,, c HllS!ltr 111. 37S3l PH-6. K•r1 G • .AndtrlOll, SLIY , ,. ,. . Uank•, 1901, OR-4, Mlch1tl a 1oomfltld. SMYC, £re ,.,, lml Lot, 2102-t, ORCA, or. Vic sttrn. SLevc, Cetam1r1n lm!'>l~se •. 27•60, OR-4, JOllDll W•lll'l/ROl'I Stwiw, cave. Ere 2-35 lmotlvous, 7955, 01·!, C•rl W. Cot NYCL8, Yankee 30 lmoulse. ;7<.(16, I IC'·l . Rick Kl_,.., WYC. C•I 21YC lmua, 210'n. ORCA, AOf\lld F. 8oblflltcY, l , C~°,.8~~·1~~. J7l1,:, PH·1. V. p. Cunnlno!IMTI, VVC, Col lO lnr~~lll!e Cai1!t. l i!rO PH.(I, Jol'lfl E. Cr1t, SGYC, 0, n '.IO l'Vl•,.,.nd~n{e. 1600. OR-4. J. llfl9~tYfA . N1111t. w··-,,., ...... ~~ Indian !>u,.,,mer. 11891. OR,.. Jerrv Ti1111s, LSF, Niii l' ln~t1me. J7S::~. OR-S, Steuo11 H. t ur·•n, CYC, NPI 771nUtlude, 1ll6S7"0..<·1. Forlr"I E. Olson. NHYC, Col 51rn•~·,.,~uo 100?:. OR-1, J1Ck e1bb, &VC, Col 50 1 "1r•~.1d, 17611, OR-3, Dell MeSl>H, CVC, Cal 37 ln•:i'lu~. 27'1' MO·!, Chrl1 Jol'lflson, SLBYC, Nol " ln!rln11c. 7177~, PH.0. Edmund Frefleh, W'NVC. M~r JI l!l•n~ Girl. 37593, PH·9, A11'11on H .... 1umon1. CIYC. l l/ders 36 291s.ostela1. 17~70 PH·t, Jol'ln H. 01wl0fl, WCYC, Col IV Runner, 7"50 PH·J M!chlfi Orlscoll, ABVC, Cal :19 lwel1nl. l1l:J2, PH_., Bnl Pelton, !>MVC, ISi 37 J•~autnne. 37507, PH.O, Att1111r R1vnotd1, cave . Be•.,,uda lO Jano II 151, PH·O, 01nltl l . Giiium, BWCC, Col " Jean l1fl1te, J7«lS. PH.0, J1rne1 N, Wiison, LAYC. M~• Jl J~•eml•l'I, 31327. PH~, Ritch Rllcllffol'I. CHlYC. Isl " Jt~I(!!' Teo, 3n:lll, PH·9, M•lt Voore, AV(, Sin 25 J!nker, nu PH·7, Cl•rk S~t1 LIYC,.Au11 Ci.rtttr Jo Too. 11033. PH·7, Fraflk S~tv, l(ATC, L )II J'>l!enflll M1rle, 21141, PH·J, Robtr! .J. Al1ndt, FYr . C"f 3~ Joie 0• Mer, 27810, PH..Q, Ed A, Whit•• SSC, Mir ~ Joseplllne, 7765,,.._ PH-6, ftollln Mc8Urntl' YAYC, r.~1~•n•. Y.I J11bU&r1~. 145 PH_., Giibert T. Smith, OYC. C1I " Juo!lff, 21172, MO·Z, Ted MallOfl, A8YC. C1t 71 Ju1111ro. 11509. PH·9, Ravmond M. Bruni. CIYC, Col ••• Juslke,-J1.s!15. PH·7, Jamu A. Blod111t, VWC, Col ).I Mk II k•rlll11, 21'03. OR·A, w.wrtQl'll/E. Frlt11.1r. HHYC, (al.J3 1C11 Nur: 7n69 .... PH..Q, lit. M, H11m111on, LIF. 111,, ~lllnl 111, l17ot, PH-t, Edmulld Loewy, CVC, Cor 25 l<•lu• lllO, 1)44, PH•7, MtMll• 1!1111, C'r'CCM, C•I 341<tlvn, 11195, PH-6, Jotln G. Murlll'IY, HHYC, AJl"llthe lJ l(alfl• l<•nl. 2724'1, PH4, OIVld Roo•ni. LSF, NPI ~ " l<•rl 11 , 1N1, OR-3.'fillcllflrd K•llofl, LA'r'C, Ctwlnc• Keio!•, 7T1}}i PH-41 Er!'ltll Mlnntv. SSSC.1 6! Ket(l'I 1""11'·~. 2h.,,-, PH .. SDOOl'lv Slllfb, PMYf:.. Col 3' Kismet, 1Jfl, PH•V, Bob WflU&. CVC, Cor ~ Kvltna, 17331, l"H ... Vtrn0n $, RuoDert, WCYc;., •s, '"'' 1, t1m, ....,.., ""· $hll • .s y, • Cor ., ·e . ~ -•i 71d, OR•2. ~lltr G. D:1J, lot!, ~ll''ff L-•1, l731s. Mo-A. ,,.,.. Jo•I. ca-~. vc lortltl 1. 21eOI, OR-3. Oon•ld D, !AWi" ~ • Corn '2 LUC:kY ,!If,, 1'78. OA-2, RlcMrd M. Follll. IYC. Mi:u--•t --' • Liii! TQ, 37dH l"H.f. H•rold Rof!'\)l!ra, t.AVC. COi U, Mii: II , tu1i.r. 21394, l"H-.•, C1tl F, A. l•tl,. vvc. Cor " umer1n, m3, '""·'· 8111 Roh••· VTc.,c1·~c31c• 30 Lun•ttt. 37.504, PH·7. A. e. ll<\mttero. • M&.M't, 31013, OR.S, Mtt'llrt J1me1, MO,' MBYC, C•t 27 $tt=tc, u:io. MO-A, Srtv• Mulf'lolllfl, AIYC, 30 ..,MH'fe u, nse, OR·2, ltkh•rd Tlom1!1nd, A~C. c11 MNllti._. 31)04, PH·1, Sl•phfn Chadwick, La'(,C, cn.nc• #.I Mii H11>er, 272$1, PH.t, HeflrY Schw1r1& U, 5BYRC, Cit 2t Mll~o Ut, '7S21, PH .. , GordOll Murl)liy, PVYC, ¥111 )l)l"H LI 'l3Mltanl, 273$7, PH.(I, H•rold N. Madison, SSSC, ;1.i lf>Mlko 111, 37530. l"H.O, P•trlck M•rlltf, P~'ttc, 'f" M•llhl11I, 13M. Mf>.A, .Edw1rd Zimmerman, CBtC, C1I :19 Mllolo, 372.41. PH,., Jortfl Jakcskv. Jr .. BYC1 Er4).. " . . M1ml1, 21701. OR·2, MUI Smith, eve. •c•t ,,, M11n1.1 1<11, 31131, MO.?, w11t Goc11h111, s ieve ~·' • • M1re11, '21'21, PH .. , ed Vellebl• l<HYC, hl•3t·ll M&rill'n. 37697, PH·7, L1$ Gr•flt, VYC 1$1 30 Mii. II M&rlonett1 Ill, 17837, MO·Z, J•m•• H. Ber~• , FYC, C1I 75 . Mlt1ngl, 2711t' PH./>, id Cerpenllr1 eve. NZ • Mtd11t• 111,27.U7, MO.?, DOtl•ld A. Ad•rrll, D, $MYC, E~ 7' MtlH, 7110, l"Ho6, Gtnt Cunnlnoh1m, L Yt$C Ce! M•rlln1 ,.,, .. , Olll·S. Ernlsl J, ltllcf'I, SMY , Pl'° Mldl'fr, 11142, MO.Z. K•llf'I .v •• Ptet.50n, YC, Col u Mii ti K~l~ldY. 2n12, PH..Q, Roy l. KloMt, CBY~. CN ~~l•r• 11, 17611. PH-6, Pav! L. wermer 11\D. DAd,'· C11t;1de •2 · , "M ntrV•, ln.c>, l"H ... Alcl!erct E. T1111., SW'(C, Cl•• K~l~•m1r: t.&17, OR·l. Jnlln P. Scrlppt, $pVC.!7' c~JI l !1, 17619, PH.t, H•rrv R KllP&lrlck. SaYfC• Ml•• P•m, 117t7, ~H..(I, ROl>•ld Tldmen. Ls5 111'2 21M<Nwk. tt719. P .,, Gtrv e, Dennev, m"Yc. 1n S Monopoli', t.19', OR-), Wlll1•m G. Klmbilr,7°SF1'C, •n 37 l MOnloDn, Jl'46t; PK.f, G. Hlrrv Ad1\lan. Wf'YC, Ott ... «J ~,-~ CUIMr, 1156. PH·7. Cl•r,.J. C011neLI, ss&e. T1rt•11 31 ., Moon Slllfle, 37002, PH-7, BUI VOil Kl1lnr1\ld. NHVC , Col 30 f . ' Moubt<;k. 11U1, PH-6. Dan11d M. Mou ...+c, 11131 -:r N•lk•. 17912 PH-9, Gtor11• e. Ptdoltt. uE;Ho/" SIN1n!loe. 11ifl1, PH.f, Huoh .S. Wl>lrrlll,-S VC, XI _'1:',.1n1r, ~77, Oll·J, Dick Pl1v•nMBCYC, !~ $1Naull-N1I ~. 10-CJ, PH·1. Robtrt urpl!y, , C•I N•llr11. T.174, DR·l .. H1rrl1011 $11:11!1, BYCi...l...u 50 N•llY 81Y, ''"'· t"H.0, Ricl· .. rd Ououv. t'YTC, .. '" . Ntma_lt, 1982 OR-l Or. Tom Tobin, SOYd Ere 3' Ntotnlht, 27ib0, PH'-6, Dr. S. W. DavlH, lfl"C• Ere .. . "5rw.;:1~ J711:', PH-7, How•rcl R. O'O.nl•~· $8YC, Nr:h':boY' nit.&..PH.,., Jack B•llll!i eve. 12 Mtttr °"~t"SOtlfl, 1~n. PH·'· Leon M· CCM»tr,..LA.vC, ~l/:M1.1:U1. '"Ptt~1 ~1~·:,~-:.~·~t'1• c~T',.,.. Nlmblt LISI, 1,_, PH ... Jtck L. Br nk, WVC, C.I " . No N1mit, '76'5, PH .. , A. C. Moulton NYCll, C•I 27 ' I P+onk•. •1m. PH-6, Erlakon-8rown-N•ioni ·ave. l(et Al · NI/I NUI. 7521, PH·7, Ch•rles R. Miller. L.AYC, C.I " NllQOel, 27'1'7, PH-9, Paul J , Mlllfr, ABYC_. C•I 27 Nunki, 17013, PH ... Pit llWll. MCYC. ct'C 35 OOd COllc!e. 27l1JI. OR..5, Ron•ld M. lei, DRYC, Ere 2·"5 • O<lln, m,, OR..S, w11111m Mc:N1u11ht011, sssc;.. Ere ,.,, Orltnt, 11°', OR·T, J•mes B•nn•tt eve, &r SleolJ Pacific•. ~. PH •7, Slfflltl' e. WlllL• MO, sovc. Isl Clpr PKl!ltr IV , 1801, PH4,,8wron L. Jttsup, CYC, E~ " P1nter1L.n,t0' OR·2, Vin P1lmer, LBYC, C&I !fO Paotr uoil, 21"90, MQ.A, Glitter! H. ThOl'nplon, HHYC. Ror 26 • ' P•r.ooit:, 213'11, OR-A, Tl'IOmei K, Armtlrong, CYC., er,2U • • P1rtdox, 17'11, PH.f, Fred Gell•r, DRYC, C•I 2t P•ttv.C1! II. 271).j1, Oru, Or. John P. Purstll, llYC, C•l1tm•r•n P•lt. 7'90. PH4i J11Tltl Emmi, BCYC\ bl rr YC .._ .. SUI, ~7m, PH.t. Ben w. l'V!l'lP. ,K • Cot :t P"'""ln•. 7U.O, l!:H·7i Rew e . Ol1nev. C'r'C, "'°".cl l"MlarODt, 27' 4, P".f• All" f , Cl'"'' NYCLB, l•~f.c-:li.113, MO-A. Frtd Poon CBYC 111 *> Mil; II . 21 P1,,11, 31027, OR.&, Cliff W. ThofllDSOfl, SW".C• C1I • Pin. P•rt Trrnt. 217M ,PH.. RGCerl 11:. lt111, NHYC, Ere 2·3'l Phwtr, n~1. PH·9, H. lanpdl)n Smllh, CPrVe COi 2t PojynHltfl COOUPI. vim. ORCA. Olrlitl•fl EbMn. eve. C•t11YW1r•" PoDh &ti\ 11, 21590, PH·7, RO)Otr S. l•ncat'-'• PY\IC, Col )A ~·· 1JC3. PH-t, Mlctlffl Baum, ave, ltl n J'.rl!Y!11lrnt, 31!M7. CWl_., J PlntkMY-H Demlno. $'p~:. 37!>66, PH-6, Ttiomhson-NorlOfl, 8CYC. Ce~1':!f.., 17611, PH·f, Kif! 8rock1, DPYC, Col Olf PZIG'Vno, PH·l, David M. St°"•· BC'r'C. Rtlr » pllff. 37Dff. PH-9, P•I Shltldl, O'r'C. Ccr 27 -m-dMn. 37m PH-4. Or. S•ndY Cl•r1<. SCCYC. ltlQ~rterlettont. V•lt. OR·S, $, Cr•fl• -J. Smith, &C.YC En: 25 QlleWr, :r77n, PH .. , W. C011w1y-F. Wright, l8VC, . " Annt It; 21951, OR·S, OU!'P ·~"" ~ e, 'P'161, PH·f, T. 0, Bii"' FVC, B• Queen' M8b. 7'71, PH.6, John Mllll'!', l&Y SCBuest, 3n5s, PH.f, Wlnll'lroo Joi!"~' SOYC. 15Qulll Tl'll1f, 19•1; MO.A 1.0lck H•Y• PMYC C Ol.llf1i11s1enee, 1 116, PH4, J, AddL1on LAYC: "·n · Ql.lltt•Jt. 11480, PH4, Jol'lfl Trot11er, KHYC, • Raa Doll II 310U. OR ... Sl•n Pl•••· SMYC, » R1gllmt, 7960, OR·l, R•IJ'llmt Syndlldt, LB 12' sir.Id ... , 3m2, OR·I, J, Hooltn-J. Hirt. SCY " ~ . 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G u, 1 PVYC, Ere 4'I Roi!111nt1, 1:197, OR-3, Tom alsHtt.,PDYC, fl ' S1b1•, '21J65, MO.A, Grant D. ltd!Ord HI, ... " . !!isbrln•, 1206, PH·7, John E. Todd, lSF, Saa•cloul, 7157, c. H, M•)'-B. Ovlly, CoJolfnt TMdrv, 37111, PH..f, Conr•d 0, SeYRC' C•I 2$ S•lttn1ktr. 3nse. MO.JI., WllU•m BOVts Jr .. RP.r 29 $1h.ICI•. nol1J'H4. u ,.N•vv, USN .,. v-i S•nc•u•rv. ;u.!3$, PH· • OOMld Novtck VY ~ . S.nderllno IV, "°'' OR-2, B. Pool-.1, J BCYC <• " MK II S.iidplDfl', 21"5. PH .. , Nl•Ol'I G11/lcwi1y, Ere 30 "'"'"''· 1""-M<>A, ... HoloJ WCY'i: " S«ottrrt, m1; PH·1, Ttd l . 1•aa, BV Slooo , 5-corolo. S1302, OR-31.~'otl" DOrl llMVt, LSP 1' Se• orHm, mt, P,..., A. loQl•btr. a'(C, .. l4™ ~•wt1.J7*. PH·7, Jolin Doddrtctot. sovcjl.c.t S•• NYmol\, 1422, PH.f, R1vmonc1 Wellac•. ~c A!\111111'\_lll ' B~~. \•9~,, 3107', OR..C, RObtrt \/, St .. 1~ r,. SH hw II 75'2, PH•7, Jordafl S.\lnd1n. !"' (fl $1 2•S:x\:"' 211«1. PH.o. Wnlev .A. 8~, c c, '1 ·~; ;;;;;.;,·~ ~$Mblrcl, 27055, ORCA. l:olitrt-D. Hifl1', \ C\'~!M'!!r.,. ilm.1. PH ... JK!t Myrick. OCC, Col ' : 'Fif":'rw. 3101,. M,o.'L Andrew E.ourtntft, C, ~ Wind. W'4. PH•1, Jol!n s . si.e. L8Y ~re j S~tn '\T°'• 27"1, PH..(I. C~IM Y}g\~."Dio~O;ll.t•~.J-\r:vic~~~·c 'ltS«lw.1'1. VJU.. ,M.7,.J•m .. ,_ MOOrl. U$ W.111• II. nS3. PH ... e1u ltttV, ICYC. COi hn!lt, JOn, l"!M, $ttwn entff, $CCYC. I=: ~·,~.'.ti~.=· ~~"YW.J:! E1fir'Tolho. msol ~H·1. lt•IP!t L Ttfl!'I• (See ENSENADA, Pop U) 1 1 • ' • • T..tay's l'l •al . N.Y. Stoeks - • VQL. 66..._NO. 121, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,'CALfFORNIA ~ESDAY, MAY I, 1973 ~ N TEN CENTS ' Newport .Unit Files $l.50 Million Noise Claim By JACK BROBACK Of tM DAllY ~_. ll•H The Airport Action Association of Newport Beach today filed a $150 million "'claim -for damages with the Orange County Board of Supervisors because of jet plane n1>lse from the county airport. The claim was described as a pro- cedural step necessary to clear the way for a class action suit on behalf or all county citizens. . Attorney Gerrold A. Fadem, represen- Guarding Files tlpg the wociallon, sald that U the board did not .lake adioD the suit would be filed within 4~ days. · Marshall Duffield, AAA chairman, wd the present noise and pollution from jet aircraft is an intolerable bm'den. He said the resldenlf had tolerated the noise for five years with the promise that the county would d_ something. He admitted the proposed suit was en- couraged by the success of similar suits in Los Angeles and Santa Monica. .. Board. CbairJnan Ronald W. Caspers of Newport ~. diUll'ee<I that the_coun· ty had not tried to sofve the problem. Attorney Fadem who filed the claim on the basis of nul.sance esplained "nuisance Is anything that offends the senses or In· terferes with the .free use and enjoyment of your property. The.re has been an Wl- broken line of decisions since 1884 stat- ing that government is responsible for its 110.ise." The current legal action comes on the_ heels of an announcement by the City of Newport Beach that it plans legal action against the county for alleged d&nage from jet aircraft. A third lawsuit pend- ing trial in November is the $21 million inverse eondemenatioo lawsuit ftJed by 900 property owners against the county. Fadem explained tl)at the n e w threatened suit is quite different from the pending one ~ that it lnvolves the nuisance angle. 111.e_ 1J,ttom·ey suggested that the county had a wide range-of op- lions. "You could shut down the o.jrPQrt, change the pattern of operation or pay those damages," Fadem said. He said the payment of damages was the least satisfactory of all solutions because it does not solve anything. The AAA a~ that a public rally ~·ill be held at Newport Harbor High School on May 23 at 7:30 p.m. At that time attorney Fadem will present legal . actions he proposes to take. \ FBI Positioned . At White House From \Vire Services WASHINGTON -FBI agents were pasted outside key White House offices today as President Nixon moved to pro- tect files which might be neededJn the e:ipanding Watergate investigation. Press secretary ~ Ronald L. Ziegler maintained that this was "a safeguarding procedure" and was "not to cast aspersions on any individual." · He said the FBI agents were posted wherever White House files were, specifically at the offices of Nixon's fonner top aides H. !l-Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman and co~ Jnhn W. E11senada Boat R ace Entrie s Lis ted Today By ALMON µ>CKABEY INlllll E911or Baning last-minute withdrawals, Mil sailboats are expected to answer the starting signals Thursday at noon for the 26th consecutive sailing of the Newport to Ensenada yacht race, the largest in· ternational sailing event in the world. The Daily Pilot today publishes the en- tire list of starters on Page 4. Yachts are listed by name, sail number, class, skip· per, yacht club and type of boat. Thousands of spectators line the shore from the Balboa Pier to the Corona del Mar bluffs to witness what has come to be known as the Southland's greatest yachting spectacle. The massive fleet is divided among five classes of Ocean Racing (IOR), five classes of Pacific Handicap (PHRF) two classes of Midget Ocean Racing Fleet (MORF) and one class .of ocean racing catamarans. First group to start wlli be the catamarans at 12 o'clock. Thereafter, at 10-minute intervals· the starting signals will be for Class A Ocean Racing and PHRF, 12:10; Class B OR and PHRF, 12:21>; Class C OR and PHRF, 12:30; (l}a'ss D OR and PllRF, 12:40; Class E OR and PHRF, 12:50, and Class A and B MORF, 1 p.m. Two starting lines . will be used -one the extension of the other -with a com· riilttee boat stationed . in the center. PHRF yachts will use the Une nearest shore extending from the entrance buoy. Ocean Racing yaChts will use the out- board portion or the line . The average yacht will carry a crew of six which means that over 3,000 persons will be involved in the race, ~t copnting escort vessels and race committeemen. -Boy~ Club Asks Land for Home Newport Beach Parka. Beaches and Recreation Commission tpentbm will be asked tonlght_to give,another 2,500 square feet of Eastbluff Park to the Harbor Area &ys C1ub for-ita new cl\lbhouse.. Parks Be~ -alicfRecreation Depart· ment Director Calvin Stewart found last week the club was short of Janel area needed for its plonned 13S0,000 fJlcllily. -'I'll< CllY 1\118 already given the club 21!,000 square feet of the park. Comml881onm will meet at 7:111 In the city council conference room. Dean Ill. (Related story Page 3.) Shonty before disclosure that FBI agents hBd been given th'l job of Jnsuring security of the files,--..flaldema~ ... and Ehrlichman were seen leaving the White House in the back seat of a chauffeur- GOV. REAGAN SILENT ON WATERGAT:E-P• 4 driven limou!ine with plies ot documents In their laps. . Their destina.Uon was not disclosed, but both said earlier they were arranging meetings with federal and Senate in- vestigators. Baptisna by the Sen . . The new procedure, Ziegler said, was put into effect as the result of meeting yesterday afternoon with Nixon's new Watergate probe supervisor presidential special consu1tant Leonard Garment, who took over counsel Dean's duties; Defense Secretary Elllot Richardson, whom Nixon has nominated as attorney g.eneral and' put in overall cbe.rge of the Watergate investigation, and the newly named acting director or the FBI, William D. Ruckelsbaus. Many hundreds of the failhfuJ. turned out Monday '-rining to participate ln and watch baptisms con- \ ucted under the auspit"<!s of Calvary Chapel at · ate's Cove near Ute entrance to Newport Harbor. The ceremony for those being baptized involved full immersion. Water.temperature ~1onday hOvered around 60 degrees, according ·to Newport Beach lifeguards. The aim, Ziegler said, was 11to physically protect the files to make sure that access and removal of any files were supervised ln acgprdance with very strict procedure.' The Watergate investigation ltas pro- duced allegations that some vital documents were removed from the White J:louse and destroyed. Harbor Trustees To Beg in Budget Ou tli1iing Chore Cou11ty Trying to Usurp Power, Official Declares Asked why the White House police had not been given this security duty, Ziegler said he was not sure. But, he said, this "was an initial step" orde~ by the three Watergate probe chiefs. 'Ihe agents moved into the White House and the next door Executive Office Building. Newport-Mesa school trustees tonight will review a proposed $37 million budget for the 1973·74 school year. Superinendent John Nicoll is expected to begin '{IUtlining district programs and their costs. Trustees are expected to come up with a preliminary budget this month. By L. PETER KRIEG ot Ill• DallY 'llol Stiff Orange County government is trying to usurp authority from cities, Newport Beach Councilman Carl Kymla charged Monday night. Kymla let fly with a blistering attack on the controversial "growth policy The agents, wearing visitor's passe.s,_ were spotted near the offices of Haldeman, outgoing chief of staff; Ehrliclunan, Nixon's domestic adviser, and Dean. District officials have yet to clear one of the biggest budget hurdles -demands by district teachers for a to percent pay . report" that he said rs "riddled with at- raise and other benefits -but they say •tempts by the coun ty to regionalize negotiations are going smoothly. government. · FBI agents also were posted near the mailroom ln the EOB, where Nixon has a "There is nothing coocrete right now • "They want to take .over local control. and the talks are at a very sensitive They're making assumptloniJ regarding hideaway cffice. r Haldeman and Ehrli!hman were on the job today and are expected to remain at least a week more while they gather their belongings and eaie the transition to lower echelon -staffers as Nixon stage but I'd say we have a better rela-pro"perty rights that concern me," Kymla tionship with the staff than ever before," sald. said Assistant Superintendent for Person· He cited several recommendations in n~l Kevin Wheeler. the report which he says back up bis Nicoll ls asking for $3 million over this charges and pushed for councilmen to · ponders the organization or tht White House without those two c I o s e s t assistants. (See BUDGET, Page %) have a pu}llic,_ hearing on the report It could not be determined if Dean, who was fired, was at his office. ·Richardson remained today at the Pen- tagon where he is Defense secretary. 'However, a Justice De pa rt men t spokesman said he talke<Y>y phone in the last severaJ days with Richard G. Klein· dienst, whom he Is to succeed as attorney general, and with William Ruckelshaus. Skipper Charged Newp or t l11vesto r Take11 From Boat A wealthy Newport Beach Investor was relieved of command of his 41-foot cabin cruiser Monday afternoon by authorities Transit Group Eyes who charged he had exceeded his day's rallon of grog and was generally creating N havoc In the harbor. -ewport Traffic Pl!lll The •kipper was flnally carried off"his , vestel after It was forced to dock at the ~· to ~·Ji~alltmali.v.e..r...__0cango-""'1n!Y. ar~pa~t, omtnendailona In the city's new lraffic neai:ly knocklnll do!ln a p~ In the proc- plan will be discuisect by tile Newport ..._ • - Beach Tramportation Plan Cltlif.no AO-Harbor Patrolman Tom Schupi>P.cb - visory Committee tonight at ?:30 tn New· who alleged big small boat was nearly port Beach CUy Hall. 1wamped by Ole bigger cruiser's wake at A consultant bas prepared three alter· one point -•U~ed the owner had nates and Is now starting to aelect a singl6 nelthor bis land lep nor bit ,.. legs. recommeodailon for a "'8d network to Schupbach claimed he and a policeman try to '°"' tljli growing crush of traffic had to wist the del<ndant in atanding tbr°"ibout t¥ city. up. ' ' "J - The Harbor ·Patrol officer also said he had been traveling at 1.5 knots in a five- knot posted S"peed limit area, creating a two to three.foot-high wave perilous to smaller' craft. . Harbor Patrolman Schupbach said he use1:1 hjs blue flashing light and screamed CQm1nands while circling the big boat before Ill sklPW •w~x!!>i!Y surrelJ.dered o o ers o go ashOre. He a1so· said the 54,~eaM>ld Onancler carne to the rail at one point to find out what he wanted, nearly fell overboard through an opening and finally fell flat on his plush-carpeted deck. The de!endanl was booked and later released pending court appearance on the charge, a maritime equivalent or drlnken driving . scheduled l\1ay 21 at 7:30 p.m. in city hail. -"Tt says general plans adopted by cities must be consistent wlth adopted growth policies -whose adopted growth policies," he asked . "It says the ~rts are going to con. tinue to m!:ldify private property rights e1s interpretations broaden regarding public health , safety, and weUare." "The county is assuming the courts will liberally interpret the taking away of property rights .'' Kymla said. "I don't think so -unless government says it should ." He said the report also forecast the "number and types of services perform- ed by all levels of government wW con- tinue 10 increase. "That 's locaJ...government growth and I don't see it," Kymla said. He said even bigger concerns deal with wf14t appears to W more and more coun- ty government interference with local government. The repart sa ys "It is the policy of (See GROWTH, Page %1 Co11rt Remodel Bid Turned Down Tile Orange County lloard 0 r Supervisors today rejected an offer of the Don Koll Company to remodel the CWTent llarbor Judicial District ttm- _poraryJ:OUN bulldin&. The board moved to call for bids for a new $2.4 million structurt. The -Koll Company propiloed in ex• change between the countY-owned eight acres on Jamboree Boulevard near ihe temporary courts tor lhe preS<nl building and the 11 acres upon which It stands. SUpervlson said they believed the Koll proposal would cost the county more money in tilt tong run . VI Duffield said the association would utie · all possible legal means to (orce the supervisors to solve the airport problem. "\Ve don't .• eed any more studies. To say that he \\lave no problem is to ny in the face of facts. To say that we can main- tain current levels is pure fantasy.'' Supervisor Ralph Diedrich'<lf Fullerton said the county sh6uld make a determination on keeping Orange County Airport in operation or building another airport. Chairman Considers Moratorium By CANDACE PEARSON Of "" Dtlly Piiot ,,.., The chairman of the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission said Monday he will investigate possibilities of imposing a f I a t moratorium on coastal permits until in- itial planning can begin. Robert F. Rooney of Huntington Beach, chairman of the commWlon created by Prop. 20, said, ''The law waa written in a ' ·very poor manner becau.se It places the permit process l.ong before plannl.ng.1• The corru!)isslon bas jurisdiction over development within 1,000 yards ol mean blah Ude line In Orqe and Loa Angeles counties. Tbe Californll Coollal Zbne C-.t• tlon Act (Prop. 20), passed by votera IHI November, charges the commlu:Jon wilh regulating coastal :r.ooe construction while developing a land use plan by 1975. Dr. Rooney, an asaoclate prof es.tor of economics at cal State.. Long Beach, con- tended Monday the commission bu been hampered In some permit declsloni by the lack of an overall plan of its own and of some cities involved. He said he will write to the State At· torney General's office to see if a tem- porary moratorium on permllA would be legal. His comments came following a discussion of ocean front project& ln Venice and Redondo Beach. Commissioner Rimmon C. Fay of Marina del Rey charged, "We haven't done anything at any one of these com- mission meetings to improve beach ac- cess." Unless the commission begins laking significant steps to solve the problem, Fay said, it "won't have anything left to plan" during the planning phase. Fay said the lack of parking lots near bet.ches or proper roads to get to such lots in all areas concerned him. '1be com- I?ission has .been wreaUing with ques· t1ons of density and high rise near the be•ch. . Individual applicants can't build the r1 -ds or parking Jots, commented eom. missioner Judy Rosener of Newport Beach. She suggested cities ln the coastal zone be told of the commisison's corr cerns. I A suggestion of a ~coastal permit moratorium, Rooney added, might force some planning solutions from local government agencies. , Orange C:.ut Weather Did you like lhe wealher loday? \Vell, It'll be the same on Wednes· day, following some patchy low clouds along the coast in the morn- ing hours. Mostly sunny with highs or 67 •l the beaches rising to 7l inland. INSIDE TODAY On Law Day, 191S, the State. Bar, of CaUfornia ha$ drawn a bea4 on the ".tpoils sys-temH oj se~cting ;udge.t for municipal and auperior court betteht.t, The alternative? An adois0f1' com- mitke on judicial appoJntmtnts. See POIJ• 3, 1• . . • I : I ' DAILY PILOT • Tutl4ay, May 1, 197) ' Ehrlich1nan Role , Lawyer for Ellsherg • " \ Calls for Dismissal LOS ANGELES (AP) -Daniel Matt Byrnt. !Earlier story, Page 51. Ellsberg's attorney moved tor dl.smjssa1 The attomeya lhen reveale.d that of the Pentagon Papers trial Indictment Ehrllchman told the agents he hired today after a revelation that just-re~ign. \Yatergate conspirators E. ijoward J~unl td presidenlial aide John D. EhrlichmaQ.) and G. Ciordon Liddy to conduct an in- told FBI agents he ltne\li' that Watergate vestigation 11dir«tly out of the \\'bite conspirators had broken Into Daniel Heuse" into the Pentagon Papers and Ellsberg's p.sychlatrlst's orflce . other similar lealu to news media oC Ebrlichman'a Interview "''ilh the FBI classified documents. Friday was handed over to defense al· Ellsberg's chief attornty, Leonard torneys by U.S. Distrlct Court Judge Bot.tclin, further rev ea I e d that · Firm 'Confident' Bay Club Condomini~m . . On Catalina Attacked Bal~ Bay Club International officials are ·•a little confused" but fully confident today their Santa Catalina Island CQn· dominium development is exempt from Proposition 20 coastal permit re· quirements. The 415-condominiwn unit project on Hamilton Beach by the Newport Beach fjrm drew sharp attack f.fonday from one commissioner of !he South Coast Regional 7.one Conseivatlon Commission. for the Bay .Club, said today the company \rill cooperate completely with Carpenter. Clark said much of tbe \l.'Ork on Catalina has been in preparing and grading a "\'ery ruggeC: site" ror the 415 lots. although only 157 condominiums will be buill in the first Increment. The company poured some foundations on-site before the Nov. 7 election when Prop, 20 became law, Clark sal.d today, and has a building pennit from Avalon for the first increment. Ehrlichman, who reatgned Monday, ad· milled know~g that Hunt ""as en- deavoring to prepare a psychological pro- file relating to Ellsberg." ' Boudin added, "Although Mr . Ehrlichman said he was not tol d that these Individuals had broken Into the psychJatrist's premises until after the iD- cident had taken place, he says that he then told them not to do lt again." • Boudin, calling this a "shocking" development, moved for dismissal of the indictment against Ellsberg and Anthony Russo, stating that be believes the White . Kouse -"I mean the President speclfically" -was indirectly resPonsi- ble for Hunt's and Liddy's action. Byrne took no immediate action on the dismissal motion, saying he \vanted to see further results of the government probe into the matter before acting. The judge said he believes the contents of Ehrlichman's interview are "ex· culpatory," that is, useful in proving the defendants' innocence on charges of es· pionage, conspiracy and theft. The government ~ed over the in· rom1ation in response to the judge's orders for a s•,reeping inquiry into the ci rcumstances surround in g th1:: \Vnt~rgate:style break-in at E)Jsbcrg's Bc,·erly Hills psychiatrJst's office. The judge demanded to know more about tbe involvement of Hunt· and Liddy as \\'ell as other officials ·who have been named as principals in the Investigation or the Watergate break-in and bugging of Democratic headquarters Jn Washington. The comri1isston created by Prop. 20 has jurisdiclion over development !n the coa~tal zone of Orange and Los Angeles counties, including Catalina ISiand. Commisslone'r Carmen Warschaw hfonday accused the Bay Island Club of "a violation on a very large magnitude." He said he couldn't remember when that building pennlt was Issued. but the date would be in a full release .Bay Club - offlclais were preparing. Byrne had said lhe results of the government investlgatlon would help him determine \\ihether the trial of Ellsberg and Russo vro.uld go forward as schedul- ed. Mrs . \llarschaw said the only permit the Island Club has requE:sted from the commission is for a latrine on the beach and major hillside grading appeared to be for much more than that. Mrs. Warschaw said she saw !he grading last Saturday \.\'hen she vlsjted the island. She flnally got some in· formation on the development at the Avalon Chamber of Commerce where an official supposedly told her. "We're playing lt very low-key because there's "We almost welcome the opportunity to have our case reviewed.'' Clark said, "because this probably could tum out to be a model example that could be used fr•r others to follow ." For Instance, Clark said, the company is building on only 20 percent of a 125- acre site, leaving the·rest in open space. From Page 1 GROWTH ... some problem with Prop. 20." Orange County to· plan for and i<J· The condominium project is a od te the di ibu I f l I ··.flagrant violation or <1ne of the last comm a str ton o popu at on areas of coastllne. marine areas, fishing among sub-areas of the county to em- areas and ought to be taken care of im· pbasize the exlsting urban areas, to en. mediately," said Airs. Warschaw of Los courage diversity by .individual com- Angeles-. rnwrlUet, and to separate developing She asked for a State Attorney communities in southeastern Orange General's investlgalon and possible ac· tJon. Violalors of th e Propositlon can be C Y by major open areas. subject to SI0,000 penalty and additl al What they 're saying," Kymla con- $500 a day fines for each day of vJolati n. l rided, "ii that it's going to be their Other commissioners agreed any aJJe•"---'~llcy to have population dlstrlbution ed violatioo should be investigated but \\1thin cities." re perts from commission ~members While lhe report says additlooal com- shouldn't be given special treatment over meiclal flights at Orange County Airport citizen repor ts. \\"hich are handled by Ex· should be restricted until the noise prob- ecuti\'e Direclor A-felvin Carpenter. !em is solved, it a!So says : Jon Clark, vice-president of marketing "In order to assure access for Orange Did Ban.k Ban.dit Cfiicke1i Out? A v.'ould-be bank bandit either Jost his nerve at the last minute or some prac-: tical joker has a grim sense of humor, but they don't think either Mswer i{ lWJny at the Imperial Savings and Ulan Association. Newport Beach police were called to the financial Institution at 3366 Via Lido about 4:30 p.m. Monday 1'·hen malnten· ance man Charles Beason foWJd a hand· writen note. ScFibbled on a bank 1\•illldra"·aJ slip, the note written in black ballpoint pen on a counter top read: "This is not a re- quest. Jt is a demand ... holdup. , , "If I am disturbed , I ""ill start killing people,'' the not1 concluded. with the ll·ord killing und~lined for emphasis. oaAN~I COAST ' DAILY PILOT 1h1 Or11191 COii! OAllY P!lOT. will! Wl'li(fl 11 tdomblllld lh• HIWl·f'•tu, II PWlllltll9d ev 1t11 Or•n~t CIMlll Pwllll1hl119 COn'INnr. Stpa. r1l1 lldllio"' 111 PllOl!1hed. MOr.111~ fhrOWQl'I Frfd•r. /or (Olli M'''· Newr:iort 9,1,11, Hllf!tlngton 8ffCl'l/,..OIJll"lf! v.i11y, L•own• e tten, lrvlt\t/$fodlll1back •nd Sin CllmeMtl SI" J111n C1pl1lr1no A •lnglt r.,gl_. •• , ed11ion It PVlll!lhed S..rwru1rt 1nd Sun4ey1. T"-prlnc:ipll PWbll1llTno Dien! 11 It lJD Wnl ••r l rtlfl, (0111 M••• Cllllornll, ,._ ltob•rl N. W11d Pr111dtnl IP!d ~ubll1#11r J1ck R. Cwrl1y Ykl PraWlnt lfld Gtoi.i-11 M_,... Tholl'l•1 K11vil l!'llilef' Tho'"'' A. Mwrpliin1 M1~1"9 Edllor L P1t1r Kri19 NIWpal1 81101 Cl'l' Ed!IOI Naa,_. ltacll Offlc. lJJJ N1wp1rl lowl1v1rlll M1ill•t Addr111 1 P.O. I•• 1175\ t266J Otllar Offkn · (esfl M ... r UO Wnl 11~ l!ltt~ ...... -...cfl1 m '9rMI A.,.,,.,. "'9rtlr!ifM "'9dll ,,.,, lfkfl 80UllY•l'd ..... ~ J0,S Ntrlll El C..mlfw RMI , ........ (7f4) 642-4121 er-~ ~ uz..1•11 ~. 1m °''"" eo.n 1"vOll111fl!f t ~. ... .... l lOrlts. ltl111t••t'-, lif'•llt Nti.r _. M"""lt•IMll" llttt!~ fM1 !lit , ... tlLJCIM Wlll\ew! • llllCl91 Oii" """""' ., _.,,,..,, lwntt. • ...... C'-.""-Miii It Cleft INN, ~ ..-a-1p+W. w t•"'~ n.u __,.,, .... IMlt U..11 fllOfl!lllY/ lllllltwy ........ ,.. .... .......,.,, C<lunty to air transportation service at levels • anywhere close to those an- ticipated. ii i.! necessary that as many options as possible be kept open for as long as possible." "That," AKymla said, "ci>old be in- terpreted to be inconsistent with our O\m Policy." Kymla was also critical of "policies to take over and regulate public utilitles such as electricity." Kymla , \vho manages the Moulton !\'.iguel \\'ater. District in La~a Hills, disagreed with the report! recom- mendation urging the county "to plan for "·ater service and construction lines and facilities only in-support of general purpose governmen t plans." "Local special districts should comply \1"ith general plans for general bet- terment," he said. • Students 'Buy' Time i11 United Fund Week Bid Ne\\'port ~!arbor High School student s wlll participate in a number of fund rals· ing events -including a chance to buy t~·o hours or free time -during United \\'Sy \\leek on lhe ca1npu.s next week. The Jlme ·"buy-out'' Is scheduled for the last two periods on the last day or the drive. according to Activities Director Les Van Dyke. The students hope to raise more than $1 ,000 during the, week. "\\'e should raise $600 with the buy-out event alone," he said. "For every thret pounds j about $4.50) or pennies the kids donate. the 'l:ampus gets Ont minute of free time during those last perlodi of the day.'' Van Dyke said a dance and other cam· pus aclivilie& will take place If both periods ere bought out by the students. United Way Week Chairman Janie Hirata. said events will be held each day or lhe week to go Into the fund cofler. Among...otber ihinp, coeds wUI make lunches to be Auctioned orf 'l'llcsdsy 10 the h!ghest bidding boys. A sports day Is scheduled Wednesday with a !O.C.nt ad- mission charae ·for each parttclp11nt In athletic events. A raculty.student liasketball game will lake pla<o Wedneeday at 7 p.m. In the 1Jr1'1 &Ymnulum and tht tbne bUJ"<lllt will start Thursday. Miss Hirata alao said carnations wlll be !Old all week for 25 cents each to add lo the fund . Bciudin said Ehrlichman stated in the F~I interview that he was asked by President Nixon to make Inquiries into the Pentagon Papers and o t h e r disclosures "independent of the FBI investigation.,,. The interview quoted Ehrlichrnan as saying there was "informatlon available that Ellsberg bad emotional and moral problems,'' and Hunt and Llddy were to find out "full facts relating to his conduct traits." Ehrlichman was quoted as s8ying the two were to develop a "psychiatric pro- file" in relation to Elisberg, with an 1'in· depth investigation ... to determine his habits and mental attitude•." Even before the break·ln in September 1971, Ehrllcbmao told the FBI 'jgents be "'as aware that Liddy and Hunt were making trips to the West Coast ''to follow 'UP leads," Boudin said. Budget Deficit Revise Shows . Economy Vptre1id WASHINGTON !AP) -The govern- ment today revised sharply downward it! estimated budget deficits for 1973 and 1974 as a result of rising governcent rccipts. Secreta.ry of the Treasury George P. Shultz said the 1973 budget deficit is now put at $1~.8 .b.illion or $5.7 billion leM than the original estimate. The estimated 1974 budget deficit is $5 billion, he said, an improvement of $7 billion over the original estimate. Shultz attributed the improved budget figures to a rising flow or tax receipts "primarily because or the strong uptrend in the economy." He said total budget expe'Oditures J should be as prevJously budgeted - $249.8 billion for 1973 and $268. 7 billion for 1974. The 1974 budget, however, has not been approved by Congress. The in~~s~ rev.enues primarily will be from mdivtdual mcome taxes which 1vill increase over earlier estim~tes by about $2 billion to $101.4 billion this year and by $3.1 billion to $ll5.3 billion In 197( Weighty Burglar Gets Diet Pills A burglar \\•ho first unscrewed hall~·ay lights to hide his activities inside a New- port Beach weight control clinic·escaped. with $68.1 in loot, Including 15,000.plllS appetite suppressant pills. fl.tanagers Peggy Leone and Jerry Eak· ins, or the Weight Clinic Inc., 2!WS W. Coast Highway, dis<:ovtred the break-in when they arrived to open up Monday. The loss included several different med-I ications. including 1%.000 of one· type alone, plus 1,000 hypodermic l)ll'lnges. a typewriter aod a 1988 edition of the Physician'' Desk Reier.nee. Investigators lheomed the burglar •~uld check the book to determine what the several varieties of diet pllls wotild do in what quanUUes. FrotnPflfJe 1 BUDGET ... year'• budget for the ntJI fiscal year to help cover Inflation and support some program• that will lose federll fundlng neit year. The board meels at 1:311 In the T•Wlnklc Middle School multl-purposo room. ,, . . • t THIS IS .I ""':'!_ -OlllY Pllol PIMllO bY P1h-tck O'D•MIM VIEW .OF BUc;Jl!: GUL ll.Y FROM LOT AT 215 EVENING CANYON ROAD SHORECLl.FFS Property Owner Plan1-lennis Court on His Land; City OfficialJ Say It's His P1roperty Munitions Go Th1·ough .. Hunti11gton by Rail-Navy Buck Gully Tennis Court Plans Told By TERRY COVILLE 01 the Dilly Plklt S1111 U.S. Navy officials admitted today thnl explosives are shipped by rail from the Seal Beach Weapons Station Utrough residential neighborhoods in north Hun· Ungton Beach and Westminster. Commander Harry Madera, executive officer of the weapons station, said about 10 to 20 percent of the shipment ot ex· plosives is by rail, waile the rest is by truck. • Commander f\.1adera also said the rail line used crosses five streets in Hun- tington Beach and Westminster at which there are no safety signals or crossing gales. · "The Navy is financing a $190,000 proj- ect to put up automatic safety gates ," Madera said. "It's a safety factor we re- quested a year and a half ago. Work on it should start any Ume." The streets involved are Edwards, Springdale and ·Rancho Road in" Hunting· ton Beach and Bolsa Gbica and Golden West in Wes tminster. Since Saturday's spec tac u 1 a r ex- plosions in a railroad freight yard in Rose ville , northern California, residents in north Huntington Bea'ch who recently learned of the Seal Beach -Shipments have expressed deep concern. The city clerk's office said one woman v.·as at city hall t..1onday as.king about the procedure for approaching the city coun- cil on the issue. She did not leave her name, but she told the clerk's office that a petition against the Sea l Beach shipments may be ci rcu lated in northern Huntington Beach. Commande r Madera said the Navy ex· pccted such questions after the Roseville explosions. in which 21 freight cars, load· cd 1\'ith live bombs, erupted in a five- hour series of explosions, destroying sur- rounding buildings and spreading debris upio one mile away. Commander Madera said he could not say what type of explosives are shipped nor how often , though he said the sh ipments are regular. "\Ve have never had a safety .problem here and we follow the tightest safety precautions, including federal, state and our own regulations,'' he said. He said the Navy is paying for the rail c r o s s i n g safety equipment though Southern Pacific Railroad will help in· st all it. Tennis and Pri vate property rights teamed for a straight-set victory over ecology Monday night 1n Newport Beach. City CQuncilmen and planning coin· missioners, mee ting jointly, were told of plans by D. C. Graham. of 215 Evening Canyon Road to b;uild a tennis court in Buck Gully, a ravine between old Corona de! Mar and Shorecliffs, Calling the undeveloped ravine an "cn- vironmen"tal\y sensitive area ," Com· munlty Development Director Richard V. ffogan asked councilmen i£ they wanted , an environmental impact report on the court . Neither councilmen nor planning com- missioners batted an eye. "It's on private property isn't it," ask· ed C.ouncilman Carl Kymla. Hogan said it is on private propert y, but said he is concerned about the prece- dent it would set. He pointed out it would be far deeper into the gully than anything built now. Flip of · Coin!' He also pointed out that construction or the court would mean a cut and fill pro- cedure involving about 400 cubic yards of dirt . Hogan also noted that Graham, originally asked to have lights on the court. Mexican MU.fill Juror Removed "That request was withdraw?): after consultation with staff," Hogan said. LOS ANGELES !AP) -A Superior Court judge has removed Joy Wllderson Cardoza, an actress and part-time race driver, from the "Mexican Mafia" jury after IO jurors acctlsed her of suggesting the verdict be decided by-a flip of a coin. Judge Arthur L. Alarcon said Mond ay the buxom 35-year-old blonde was guilty of "serious, gross, inexcusable miscon· duct." He said he took the action after nine jurors and the foreman wrote him com· plaining about her actions. But Miss Cardoza, who regularly drives at Ascot Raceway in Gardena , said the coin·fHp .suggestion was made "because of coercion, force and insults" from the other jurors. She said she was convinced that Gilbert O. Sanchez, 31 , accused of the · March, 1972 slaying of a city of Com· mercc n1an , was guilty, and ·~it would be as just and proper to flip a coin to decide the question of guilt or innocence as it would be for the other jurors to force me to change my mind when I really was convinced'' of his guilt. Prosecutor Michael Genelin told jurors durini the trial that Sanchez was part of the Mexica n Mafia, and the murder of Raymond Ochoa was a revenge slaying ordered by the gang. The Jetter by jurors to Judge Alarcon accused Mrs. Cardoza of wanting to "hang" the jury, and planning to hold a news conference at the end of the trial. The jurY resumed deliberations wheii an alternate replaced Miss Cardoza, and was locked up in a downtown hotel after ending its fifth day of dellberations. Hogan said after .,the meeting that he interpreted the official silence as a go. ahead to Jssue the building permit, bul City Manager Robert L. Wynn left the door open ·ror a rematch. "Any ooe of the plannnig commission· ers or councilmen could still request an EIR at their next meetings ," Wyrut said . Hogan said he has received one letter in opposition to the court. He also said there are still two official hurdles the court must clear. Graham will have to go before lhe Modlflcalions Committee to get a permit to build the 10.foot fence he needs. Normally, fences are limited to six feet ~· height in residentlc~l zones. He also will have to win app val of the court from the South Coast Regional Conservation Commission , Hogan said, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~ AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET , WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH:• , SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FJRSTL Y, THE COST OF STORES JN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, THERE JS AMPLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MqRE COMPETITIVE AND WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR FIFTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. ALDEN'S CARPETS o DRAPES r • I IN COIT.A MIU lfNCI 1917 1663 Plauntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 • Moe.· Tllm. f le 5130; l'rl. f le 9; Sot. f :JO .. S \ • I ' \ ' I • • • • · Oriande tof1Mt 1 e EDITI O N ·--VQL 66, NO. 121, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Merchants Objec t .. ' Costa · MeSa Sign Law Comes .Under Attack By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of rtlt Dlll'f Pllll Staff Costa .Mesa's ·sign ordinance en- countered rough water Monday night im- mediately after its first launching during a T joint city council -planning com- mj.sslon study session. The meeting was attended heavily by businessmen and sign industry lobbyists. The sign proposal, described by Mayor Jack Hammett as "one of the biggest im- pact ordinances we will ever have in the city" became the subject of immediate criticism -most of it negative. ·Move for Dlsm.lssal ~ Ehrlichman -'Aware' ' Drafted over the past six months, the ordinance would impose tight' sign con- trola throughout the city and order all ex- isting sJgns not conforming to the new ·Standards removed within five _years. Although a recently conducted. survey by the planning department showed. that about eo percent of Costa Mesa's ,.tJusinessmen and about 80, percent of the -..>reSidents favor stricter sign control, that majority was virttlally silent Monday nigbl • • .. -... ,. TUESDAY, MAY I, 1973 • Of Papers Burglary Le-: Kidder, speaking for the retail merchants of the Chamber of Commerce, summed up the feelings of the sign critico by telling councilmen, "The retail merchants object to the ordinance as it presently Is. It's too drastic, yet a ma· jority of the merchants are in favor of the general idea. But at this point. Baptism '1111 the Sea TQday's l'laal N.Y. Sioeka e 'TEN CENTS--- ' DlillY Pl'91 ltd! ..... .. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Daniel Ellsberg's attorney mo'ved for dismissal of the Pentagon Papers trial Indictment today alter a revelation that just-resign- ed presidential aide John D. Ehrllcbman told FBI agents he knew that Watergate conspirators bad broken into Daniel Ellsberg's psyc~trist's office. Boudin said Ehr&hmaii staled In the FBI interview that be was asked by President NiXon to make inquiries into · the Pentagon · P~s and · o t-h e· r disclosures "independent of the FBI investigation." they're better 1ban 60 percent againsL it" Hardware store owner Kerm 1Uma suggested that buslnesomen who will have to live with the new standards were not suHiclen Uy coosulted by planning staff member Arnold Hamala and Bryan Austin whom he called "young punks Many hundreds of the faithful turned out Monday evening to participate ln and watch baptisms con· ducted under the auspices of Calvary Chapel al Pirate's Cove near the entrand! to.Newport Harbor. The ceremony for those being baptizeif involved full immersion. Water temperature Monday hovered around 60 degrees, ·according to Newport Beach lifeguards. Ehrlicbman's interview with the FBI Frt<l!'Y was handed over to defense al- tomeys by U.S. D\strict Court Judge Matt Byme. (Earlier story, Page 5). The attorneys then revealed that Ebrlichman told the agents ·be hired Watergate conspirators E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy to conduct an in- vestigation "directly out of the White House" into the Pentagon Papers and other simllai leaks to news media of clusified documents. Ellsberg't cbie1 attorney, ~ Boudin, further rev ea l.,e d tba.t Ebrlidanan, who ~ MOnday, ~ mltted knowing that ~ eo-dUvOring to prepare a psy )ri>- flle .relating to Ellaberg." Boudin added, "Although M r - Ehrllcbman said he was not told that these individuals -had broken into the psychiatrist's premises until after the In- cident had taken place, he says that he then told them not to do it again." Boudin, calling this a "shocking" development, moved · for dismissal of the Indictment against Ellsberg and Anthony Russo, stating that he believes the White House -"I mean the President ~cally" -was indirecUy responsi- ble for Hunt's and Llddy's action. • ~yine took no Immediate action on the dismissal motion, saying he wanted to ... further results of the government probe into the lllhtter before acting. The judge said he believes the contents or Ehrlichman's interview are "ex· culpatory," that is, useful in proving the defendants' innocence on charges of es-- Pfonage, .conspiracy and theft .The government turned over the in· f()Mllation in response to the judge's oi-ders for a sweeping inquiry into the circumstances s u r r o u n d i n g the Watergate.style break·in at El.IJberg 's Beverly Hills psych1atrlst's office. '"111.e judge demanded to know more about tbe involvement of Hunt and Liddy pk well as other officials who have been pimed as principals in the .. investi~aUon cf the Watergate break-in and bugging of ~ocratic headquarters in Washington. •• B)'l'lle bad said the resulta of the government investigation would help hlm iletermlne whether the trial of EU.berg '1id Russo would go forward as schedul· """ • ·Orange Coot ' Wea ther Did you like the weather today? Well, it 'll be the same on Wednes- day, following some patchy low clouds along the coast in the mom· Ing hours. Mostly ....ny with highs . of rl1 at the beaches rising to 72 Inland. INSIDE TODA 'Y On Law Day, 1973, the SU.ta · Bar of Calif&r11U. hm drawn a beod on the "tpaill 1111tem" o/ selecting judger for municipal , and 1uperlor court btncM.s. The alternatlo¢1 An advirOl'll CO!>l- mltt., O'll juditjal cppoin""'71tr. See Paa• 3. • L.M. ..,,. 14 ,. ' Catlllnrla I • Clatillfflll 2).tt Ctmkl Ir C.....,.. If ci.atll Nltic.t • '•....W• ..... • ............ " ...... 11·1! hr tM ...,,. I Mii I "t 16 ... W.W. 11 -n Wteel..... Tl H ....... ,.... 4 .,_ _,,, I '""" , , ... IHdt,,.#+ .... 1'-'1 ·-n -n ·-. ............ 1 .. 1• ---. The interview ~ Ehrlichman as saying there was 'information available that Ells~rg had ·emotional and moral problems," and Hunt and· Liddy were to find oudull facts relating to his conduct traits." Ehrlichman was quoted as saying the two were to develop a "psychiatric Pro- file" in relation to Ellsberg, with an "[n.. depth investigation ... to determine his habits and mental attitudes." · Even before the break-in in September l~l . Ehrlichman told the FBI agents be was aware that Liddy and Hunt were making trips to the Weal Coasl "to follow up leads,.. Boudin said. * *' *-flll Guarding Office~ With Scandal Files From Wire Serviee1"" just out of college." "We're getting a little tired ol. having everybody tell us what to do," asserted Rima, adding that the sign ordinance draft is still in its embryo stage and "it aain't light yet." Jet· Noise Fighters File Claim of $150 Million Ccn.siderable critical comment about variouS details of the ordinance were also offered by representatives of carter Sign Co., Santa Ana, -and Corl;y Wells, Sacramento lobbyist for the sign in· By J ACK BROBACK ~hool on May 23 at 7:30 p.m. Al that dustry. Of "'' o.11y Piiot staff time attorney Fadem will present legal It W8!$ suggested that the portion of the -The Airport Action. Association . of actions he propases to take . ordinance dealing with tbe amortization Newport Beach today filed a $.150 million Duffield said the association would use (il!IMUic; '!!'_l)'-~ ...... '!llBY <~,.._ ~'~,~~!" Pl\t!Dll'• -1hRGllil1,lh1'(al ,,....., to t-.-U>e constltulklll81 aioce a federal '"8lrlcl_ ,Ccll!!!ly · m · btciluse of supervisors to oolve tlie alrporl problem. court jU<lge in DeQver ruled recenUy that jeli>lane no1se·1tom ,the county OirpOrt. "We dOl>J Jeed any more sttldi ... To say a 'shnll~r~ lo tliiit city's aijn '!'Ile-clSl!D. Wu dtscrlbed u a pro-that be wave no probfem II to_ flY'ln the ordinance violates the ''no just com-cedural 1tep necessary to clear the w.ay faee of facU. To say that we can main· pensatlon claiise" .of the 5th Amendment. for a class action suit on behalf of all taln ,a.uTent levels ls pure fantasy.'' While the ordinance appeared to have a county citizens. , Supervisor Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton champion in COuneilman Dom Raci~ the Attorney Gerrold A. Fadem, represen--said the county should make a document as dralled did not •ii well with ting the association, said that if the detenninatlon on keeping Orange County either Councilmen Robert M. Wilson or board dJd not .take action the suit would Airport in operaUon or building another Alvin Pinkley, be filed within 45 days. airport. Wilson charged that one of the stated Marshall Duffield, AAA chairman, said objectives of the ordinance "to promote the present noise and pollution from jet Ch rful N • commerce,'' was untruthful because its aircraft is an intolerable burdeD. He said .J ee IXOD real objectives are to improve traffic, the residents ~ad tolerated ~be noise fo~ appearance and community identity. five years with the P!Omise that the Pinkley expressed his dissatisfaction county would d. something. (See SIGNS. Pa1e Z) He admitted the proposed suit was en- couraged by the success of similar suits ·in Los Angeles and Santa Monica. WASHING TON -FBI agents were posted outside key White House officis, today as President Nixon moved to pro-', ~~i!m,~~gw;a~:f.'l.': .. :;tt!.1n the lJ<:~man Kil'led Board Chairman Ronald W. C3spers of Newport Beach, disagreed that the coun· ty had not tried to solve the problem. Greets. Brandt In Washington Press !eel'etary Ronald L. Zlegler ==tha.!.r"'w':'':~:ifet:ar:~ At ~r -Party aspersions on any individual." ~~ He said the FBI agents were posted N Ch~~ S wherever White House files were, ear WV tate specifically at the offices of Nixon's ~ former top aides H. R. Haldeman and CHICO (AP)_ The body ((a college- John D. Ehrllchman and cowisel John W. age woman who apparently h~. been Dean m_ (Related story Page 3.) raped and murdered at an all-nigbt beer Shortly before disclosure that FBI party was fowid today In an orchard 11ear agent~ had been glv.en the job of insuring the Chic:o State College campus, sheriff's secunty of the files, Haldeman and inve$f.igators reported. Ehrlichman were seen leaving the Wbite The victim was not immediately iden-- House in the back seat of a chauffeur-tified . • · · -Officers saJd they discovered the body GOV. REAGAN SILENT when they were called to the scene this ON WATERGATE--P199 4 morning by a woman In a nearby house who reported she heard screams tale last driven Umousine with pilea of documents in their laps. Their destinaUon was not disclosed, but both said earlier they were arranging meetings with federal and Senate In- vestigators. • Twu the third homicide reported in Oiico in four days. The bodies of Myron Allen, 70, and his wife Emma, 64, were found in their home Saturday. Officera said Mn. Allen appar· ently was killed with a hammer and an autopsy Is under way to determine the cause of her husband's death. Authorities said the Allens apparently had been dead 311' weeks. Their aute>rno- bile was reported missing. Attorney Fadem who filed the claim on the basis ol nuisance explained "nuisance is anything that offends the senses or In· terferes with the .free use arid enjoyment ol your property. There has been an UD· broken line of decisions slnce 1884 stat· ing that government is responsible for its noise." The cllrreiit legal action comes on the heels of an announcement by the City of Newport Beach that it plans legal action against the COllllty for alleged dainage from jet aircraft. A third lawsuit pend- lng'trial in November Js the $27 million inverse condemenalioo lawsui t filed by 900 property owners against the county. Fadem -explained that the n e w threatened suit ls _quite different from the pending one in that it involves the nuisance angle. 1be attorney suggested that the county had a wide range of o~ tions. "You could shut down the ~irport, change the pattern of operation or pay those damages," Fadem said. He said the payment of damages was the leut satisfactory of all solution$ because it docs· not solve anything. The AAA announced that a public rally 'viii be held at Newport · Harbor High Taken Through Beach WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixoa gave West Gennan Chancellor Willy Brandt a relaxed, informal White House welcome today and they im· mediately began two days of talka. Brandt drove from nearby Blalr House • to the !Olllh side of the White House where Nixon and Secretary of State William P. Rogers greeted him, standing on a short red carpet. During the first minutes or the \velcome , it had the trappings of a state visit, including honor guards lining the driveway and U.S. Army trumpeters, but the atmosphere was warm and relaxed. On the morning after removal of three to;> aides because or the Watergate bug· ging case and what he acknowledged was a difficult broadcast speech to the nation, Nixon appeared. to be in a cheerful mood. He chalted with news photographers ·and cameramen whlle waiting for Brandt -who was 10 min utes 1ate. He later jok· ed with Brandt about the chancellor's unsuccessful fishing trip on Chesapeake Bay Monday. While talking with Brandt, Nixon gave him a half embrace. Then, with his hand over Brandt's shoulder, they slowly walJi:. ed down the driveway toward the west wing of the White Hou se. The new procedure, Ziegler said, was put into effect as the result of meeting yesterday afternoon with Nixon's new Watergate probe supervisor presidential special consultant Leonard Gannent, who took over cowisel Dean's duties ; Defense Secretary Elliot Richardson, whom Nixon has nominated as attorney general and put in overall charge of the Watergate investigaUon, and the newly named acting director of the FBI, Willlarn D. Ruckelshaus. 1be aim, ,'lieglet said, was "to physically prot.act the Illes to make sure that access and removal of any files were supervised In accordance ,with very strict procedure.' Munitions Route Revealed 'lbe Watergate invesUgatlon has pro- duced allegations that some vital documents were removed from the White House-and c!eslroyed. I Asked why the White HOUBe police had not lieeo given this security duty, Zlegler said he was not sure. But, he said, this "was an Jnltial step., ~ by-the three-Watefpte probe chiefs. - '!be agwits moved Into the White llou9e and the next door ExecuUve Office jullding The agents1 wearing vialtor'~ p&Sl!I, ere spotleil near the offices of !WdeDWJ, outgoing chief . cf -naff; Ebrftchman, Nbon'a -le advileT, By TERRY COVILLE Of tM O.ltr Plllt IMH U.S. Navy officials admitted today that explo&IVM are shipped by rail from lhA! SW Beach Weapons Station through "8ldontlal Deigllborboods In north Hun- Ungton llucb and Westml111ter. ~ 8arry Madera, eucuUve o!Ocer of the weaponl atatlon, said about II In :IO -poreent of the shipment of'••- plootves fs, by rill, while the rest ii by truck. •. Comm-Madera· alao said the nil line Uled .....,.. fiw atrilcb In Hun- lin«ton llucb uil Weitinlmler irwhich then 11n1 m llftl1 ~ or c:roulna pteo. - ) ect to put up automatic safety gatet," Madera said. Hit'•. a safety factor we re- quested a year and a half ago. Work on it should start any time!' 'nle streets involved are Edwards, Springdale and R3ncho Road in Hunting· loll Beach alid Bolsa Chica and Golden West in Westminster. 'Since Saturdaf.'S 1 p e c-i a c u 1 a r ex· ploslons in a ril11r0ad frelgbl yard In Rooevlllo, northern Csll!ornl8, residents In north Huntington Beach who recently l..,..d of the Seal B<1ch shipments have expressed deep concern. She d1d not leave ber name, but she told the clerk's office that a pelitlon against the Seal Beach shipments may be circulated In northern Huntington Beach. commander Madera said the Navy ex· pttted such questions after the Roseville explo&iona, In which 21 freight can, load- ed with live bombs. erupted In • nve- hoor oeri'9-of explo&loos. destroying sur- rounding buildings and spreading debr is up to one mile away. . · Commander Madera said he could not say what type ol explosives are shipped nor bow often. thOugh he. said the shipments are. regular. !--------------' -and Dean. .. ,,,. Navy Is fil1m:lllr • ~·-pro~ '!be a1y clil1i,1 office uld one woman '™ at city hill Monday uklng-aboul the procodure !or approachlng tb6 city coun- cil on tlle 1 ..... "We haft! never had a safety ·problem here and we follow the tightest safety (See BXPLOSIVES. Pase %) -• • ' ,, • ' 581 Y ac11.'ts To Set Sail On Thursday • By ALMON LOCKAllEY •Nlllll ••Hlf" Barring last-minute wlthdrawajl, Ml sailboats ara expected ·to anawef the starting ~gnals Thursday at noon for the 28th constcutive saJIJng of the !fe'irpart to Ensenada yacht race, the largest m. tematJonal saJllng event Jn the world. The Dally Pilot today publlshe the en· tire Ust or starters on Page 4. Y cbta are listed by nai;ne , sa:ll number, , skip- per, yacht club and type of boat. Thousands of spectators line the ))ore from the Balboa Pier to the Corona del Mar bluffs to witness what has come to be known as the Southland's greatest yachting spectacle. The massive · Oeet is divided among five classes of Ocean Racing (lOR), five classes of Pactflc Handicap (PllRF ) two classes 'of Midget Ocean Racing Fleet (MORF) and one class of ocean racin& catamarans. First group to start wil~ be the catamarans at 12 o'clock. Thereafter, at !~minute Intervals the starting signals will be for Cla" A Ocean Racing and PHRF, 12,10; Class B OR and PllRF, rz,zo; Class C OR and PHRF, 12,30; Class D OR and PHRF. 12 ,40; Class E OR and PHRF\.12:5(), and Class A and B MORF, 1 p.m. Two starting Jines will be iued -one the extension of the other -with a com- mittee lxlat stationed In the center. PHRF yachts will use the line nearest ahore extending from the entrance buoy. Ocean Racing yachts will use tbe ou~ board portion of the line. The average yacht will carry a crew of six wbJch means that over 3,000 penoos will 6e involved. in the race, not counting escort vessels and race committeemen. 'Trust.ees Study $37 Million Sc liool Budget ' Newpo rt·Mesa school trustees tonight will review a proposed $37 million budget for the 1973·74 school year. -t Superlnendent John Nicoll is expected to begin outlining district programs and their costs. Trustees are expected to come up with a prelhnlnary budget this month. Dlat.rlct officlals have yet to clear one 1 of the blggeot budget hurdles -demands by district teachen !or a 10 percent pay raise and other benefits -but they say negotiations are going smoothly. "There Is nothing concrete right "now and the talks "3.re at a very sensitive stage but I'd say we _have a better re1a· tionshlp with the staff than ever befort," said Assistant SUperlntendent tor Persoa- nel Kevin Wheeler. Nicoll ts asking for 13 mlllion cvtr this year'& budget for the next fiscal year to help cover inflation and support some -programs that will lose federal lundln; ne1t year. Tiie board meets at 7,30 In tho TeWlnkle Middle School mulll-purpoM room . • r l . ,, ' i ' ' ). .. ' •• " .. .. ' .. • •' • • • • Edison ConVersiOn Se~ ' ' Beath Plant to Burn Oil in Emergency S...thern cautonilA f:dlaon Company's lluntlngton Beaclr generating 'Plant Will bf converted to bum crude oil directly to provide an alternate source of fuel, com- pany representativ~s said Mo?f.y. But this move doesn't me com- pany is facing a possible shorta e of fuel, Edison offic ial Dan Fogarty sai . Fogarty was testifying about a · pro- posed multL-million dollar expansion at Edison's Long Beach steam plant before the South Coast Regional Zone Conserva- tion C.Ommission. The commission created by Proposition 20 has jurlsdlction over development within 1,000 yards of mean high tide·Une in Orange ~ Los Angeles counties. one ton a day, he 1<:lid. Con .. rtlng the Long lle>cb plant IP the more sophisticated Huntington Beach proposal would take two years, Fogarty- said and then. another 14 years to recover from the increased pollutanl5 released during the chanieover. Coastal commissioners are also •con· cerned about effects of power plants on marine life. · Some marine animals are sucked up inlO plant condui.ts and killed on screens, wnile others are damaged by thermal .discharges, commissioners Donald Bright of La Habra-and Rlmmon Fay of Marina del Rey, both biologists, said . . Fogarty confinned that about 42i> PoundS. a month are killed at the llun· lington 'Beach plant ·and a lesser 270- pounds a lnontb at El Segundo. . Edison ofUcials are installing a fish pump SL the Huntington Beach station It) remove live! fish from the screen area and pump then1 back lnlo the discharge and into the ocean, Fogarty said. No fish pump has been planned at Long Beach becau§e the existing plant is in the inner harbor and shouldn't have as much problem. The commission contin1.1ed voting on Edison's modernization of the t\vo Long Beach power generators through the use of gas turbines until May 14. CLASSIC MERCEDES IN COSTA MESA: WAS IT FIELD MARSHAL ROMMEL'S? Vint• Auto Coll-r Tod Ritlond L .. da Up for Long Trip to Florida "We have enough low sulphur fuel for the next several years," Fogarty assured ~ questioning commissioners, unlike the fuel shortages predicted by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and other agencies. Newport Councilman ' .. . :, .. ~"" •• i•. ;. . . Couniy Growth Report ,. IM'llY Plla1 Si.Ir Phalo1 VINTAGE PACKARD ROADSTER, CIRCA 1933, PACKED UP FOR FLORIDA TRIP Collector Found Rare Example of Automobllia in Trip to Salem, Ore. Mystery· of Cars Solved A1itie1it Autornobiles Make Sto p iri Costa Mesa ThrrC old cars mysteriously sho\ved up on a Costa Mesa street today but they definitely -\vouldn"t qualify for the city's proposed anti·junk automobile ordinance. Costa Mesa is currently considering a lav• to eliminate junk cars from strl!ets and vacant lots and if age is a con- sideration. the 1nystery autos might. seem to be candidates. Of the three. one was 40 years old, another 33 years and the third, un- distinguished limousine of unko\vn vin· tage. · · Any mystery surrounding the rhystery cars was cleared up today. ho\\.·ever. by Hal Slatton of 3n·E. 18th St. 1-lis friend, Ted Hilland of Fort Lauderdale, Fla .. had parked the old autos on a transport truck along 2Qth Street during an overnight layover. Ritland is ~ dealer in antique cars. Apd his cargo clearly qualified. It is hardly your mine run of junk. On one side of 20th Street. Ritland had parked a black 1940 Mercedes collpe "'hich he said at one time was the personal staff car of famed Nazi Field l\farshal Er\vin Rommel -!he .. Desert Fox" of \Vorld \\'ar II. "I know." Ritland quickly conceded. "Everybody \\"ho has a pre·\\lar J\lercedes claims it either belonged to Hitler, Rom· me! or Goehring. But 1 think this one is authentic." on the opposite side of the street. Ritland had mounted upon his transport truck a 1933 Packard V-12 roadster in near-perfect condition. He said it was one "Of only 50 manufactured by the no\v defunct Packard Motor Car Company. Behind the Packard on the transport ~ OtANal COAST DAILY PILOT Tiie 0••"9• Coell DAILY PILOT, wllll """•(h i• combined ,.,_ N•ws.Pr•n, 11 Pllbl!llle<I •¥ 111• Or~nQ"e Co.tit Publl1hl119 Ca1111Mny. SllNI• r•te tdllion5 11r1 pUlllljhtcl. MalldilY lh""'9h Frldi¥, tor COii• Mt11, Newport 9e1{h, HunllnQ"lon lleach/FCH1nl1ln V.tlley. LI>llllf'I• llMCh, try!n1/S1ddleblock Ind San C!ementt/ San J~n ·c1plltr1no. A 1!111111 reglana1 fdlllon II JIUbll5hMI ~1Urd8yl Ind .SUndlyt. 'fM princlPl!I P11llli1lllng Pllnl ll 11 lJO WI$! .. y St'"!, COll1 Mtu, Clllfot'11il , '2111'. Rob1rt N. W•M P••llknl 111'111 PubUil\tr J1ck It Curley Vice Prtildtnl encl Gr111r1tM-w Thom11 IC1evil Editor lhPtnill A. Mutph!/I• M.tn1g1119 Edl!or Clt11rles H. Looi Richard P. Ntll A11IS1111I M1ne-ol119 Edllo•1 C..r• ..__Office JJO Weit ley Street M1llin9 Addt1\!;"P'.O, l o• 1sso. 9241241 OtNt-Offk" NfW'POtl 8~1 ~l NtwPOrt 9oultvlrd ~""" BMdli :m Forni Avtnve ""''""'°" 9HC:ll! 1711S lltKll 110\lllYlrd ,... °'"*"fe: :.:is N~h El C1m1no 11 .. 1 -........ 1 1141 ,.2 ... J21 c ............. ,, .... '42·5671 c.r""1. ltn.. or1.... C0111 Put~u,111,,. ~y. No MM •torJn, !11u11r1li0n$, .-.Wit! ""'"" .,. ~l"'"'"lt tttrtln .-,, w ~ wltllout tMl.tl .,.,, ....... -' tw't'l'lfllt ....... ......,,, dMe •• Nill et Castt Mfat, ~ •• ~-by Clrtltr 12 • ., ..... ~ tir ""'" ai.11 IM!1!hlt'1 m11tt1rr ·--,..;.,,.. q.u "*"""'' \\•as a truly battered limousine of vintage somc"'herc in the 1920s or 30s. Rit!and didn't re ally \\•ant to talk about that one. Ritland today \11as loading the aged \'ehicles up for transport back to Fort Lauderdale \vheu he operates an antique auto business. Slatton will go with him. And those classic vintage autos ·will be safe front any scrutiny by aJ1: anti-junk cur Ja\v. Coast Panel Head Views ~ Possible Ba11 on Permits By CANDACE PEARSON 01 ftl• 01ny Pllal .s11111 The chairman of the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission said 1!onday he will investigate possibiliti~ of imposing a f 1 a t moratorium on coastal permits until in- itial planning can begin. Robert F. Rooney of Hur:tington Beach , chair1nan of the Commission created by Prop. 20, said. "The law \Vas written in a r'ery poor manner because it places the pl'rmit process long before planning." The con1mission h<ls jurisdiction over development \Vithin 1,000 yards of mean t,igh tide line in Orange and Los Angele s counties. The California Coastal 7.one Conserva- tton Act (Prop. 20), passed by voters last November, charges the commission lllith regulating coastal zone construct ion while developing a land use plan by 1975. Dr. Rooney, an associate professor of Viejo Company Nan1ed in Suit Of ~1.5 Millio11 A i\1issiun Vi ejo hon1eo\vncr \rho cl;iin1s he: is one of 4,000 local residents \\'ho are victin1s or antitrust policies practiced by the ~f ission Viejo Conipany sued the company Monday for $1 ,545,000 in a class act ion. The con1pany is one of four defendants named in the Orange County Su1>erior Court action filed by Alton 11. Saxer. 26501 Monlecllo Lane. lie also lists the controlling group Phillip Morris Inc ... th e lo.1VC Financi;1l Corporation and the MVC Esero1v Corporation. Saxer claims he \.\'i s unk1\1•fully com· pclled to use both the finan cial group and the escro"' cenll!r April _5, 1972, when he bought his horn~. That conditional sale violates provisions of' th e Cart\Vri~ht an- titrust act. Stixer states. And he further alleges that he was · similarily compelled to use the ti.1isslon Viejo Com pany's Decorating Center to obtain floor coverings for his l10me. More than 4.000 homeowners in the J 1.000.acre area have similarly been victims of' practlc~s: that are specifically barred by the Cartwright measure, Saxer claims. lie asks that claimed dama-es of II ,545.000 In ,his clas(acllon be tripled ii he obtains judgment ag:tinst th~ deftn~ dant. economics at Cal State L-Ong Beach, con- tended lo.1onday the commission has been hampered in some permit decisions by the Jack or an over\lll plan of its own and . of some cities involved. • tie said he \\liU write to the State At- torney General's office to see il a tem- porary moratorium on permits would be legal. - His co mments came follo wing a discussion oft ocean front projects in \·enlce and Redondo Beach. Commissioner Rimn1on C. Fay of r..tarina del J{ey charged, '"\Ve haven 't done anythin g at any one of these com· mission meetings to improve beach ac- cess." Unless the commission begins taking significant steps to solve the problem, Fay Said, it "won't have anything left to plan" during the planning phase. Fay said the lack of parking lots near beo.ches or proper roads to get to such Jots in au areas concerned him. The com- mission has been wrestling with ques- tions of den sity and high ri se near the beach. lndi\'idual applicants can't build the r< .ds or parking lots, conunentcd Com· n1i ssiouer Judy Rosener of· Ne\\'po1t Beach. She suggested cities in the coasta l zone be told of the commisison'.s: con· i.:en1s. A su~gcstio11 of a coastal µer1nit ., 1nor;.1!ori 11nl. Roone.v added, n1ight force I ::.onlt' planning solutions fro1n local governn1ent agencies. 'M . C ' aruie orps Solic itor Not Related to U.S. City Attorney RoytE. June has issued a wa rning that an organization soliciting in Costa Mesa uoder the name or "~1arine Corps Assistance League" has no en· dorsemenl. rrom the £\<tarines. The group has l>een selling advertising for a publication and has call~d on st'verol t":osta Mesa Merchanl s. June -said the Marine Corps Air Sta- tion. El Toro. has been swamped \11ilh telephone calls from persons attempting to find out lhc bac~roUnd of the group. He added that he Oad been advised by the U.S. Marine Corps that it has ll-0 ;n. formation on the group, that It does not endorse the group, and that it will not lend its name to the group for any sM!citaUon of funds. The sulphur fuel.is most commonly ~s cd in Edison plants, Fogarty said, ;ilthough the expansion .at Long Beach would allow ,use or cleaner-burning liquid fuel. All Edison systems, including the pro- posed Huntingen Beach expansion an_d Long Beach modernization, w.ill meet ~ur pollution requireme.nts of Air PoUutt.on Control Districts (APCD), Fogarty said. The crude oil to be used at Huntington Beach would also meet standards~ The proposed Huntington Beach com- bined-cycle system would produce fewer emissions ·of air pollutants than the modernized Long Beach plant by about From Page l SIGNS .. .' \Vith several parts of the ordinance, especially those which in his opinion take a "big daddy" attitude toward business- men. . Chamber of Commerce President Eugene o. Bergeron received assurances from Citv l\>fanager Fred Sorsabal that the city ·staff will ·answer individual in- quiries from businessmen over how the proposed ordinance will affect them. Bergeron stressed that any ord~an~e \Vhich may be adopted by the council will have its heaviest impact on .the local . businessman. "Ir you people who make !his ordinance ah wrong, it is we who must suffer, not you," he said. Of those offering their opinions Monday night Councilman Dom Raciti and Phil Evan~, chairman of the chamber's service station committee, were the only pe!'sons to :.ack the ordinance. Raciti attacked the appearance of the Costa Mesa side of 17th St. and told bis fellow council members that anyone driv· ing to C.OSta Mesa from Newport Beach immediately knows when he ha$ crossed the city limits because of the profusion of signs . This morning Raciti added that he has a few disagreements with the present document but that he is solidly in favor of 80 percent of the ordinance. Evans indicated his group may also have questions about certain provisions but ''\ve do think there is a need for some kind of sign ordinance." Fr~Pagel EXPLOSIVES • • • precautions, including federa1, state and our O\vn regulations," he said. He said the Navy is paying for the rail c r o s s i n g safety equipment though Southern Pacific Railroad will help in· stall it. · J\1adera said the weapons station has always considered those safety crossings a "high priurity" item. The Naval \Veapons station is an am- munition depot , where explosives arc loaded onto ships in Anaheim Bay. Hit as Play for Power By L. PETER KRlEG 01 ftl~ 0111)' 'llot St.ff Orange County government is .JYing to usurp authority Crom cities, Newport Beach Councilman Carl Kymla charged Monday night. Kymla let fly with a blistering attack on the controversial "growth policy report" that he said is "riddled with at· tempts by the county to regionalize government. "They want to take over local control. They're making assumptions regarding property rights that concern me," Kymla said. He cited several recommendations in the report which he says back up his charges and pushed for councilmen to have a public hearing on' the report scheduled May 21 at 7:30 p.m. in city hall. "It says general plans adopted by cities must be consistent with adopted growth policies -whose adopted growth policies," he asked. "It says the courts are going to con- tinue to mOO.i.fy private property rights as interpretations broaden regarding public health, safety, and welfP.re . ., "The county is assuming the courts \viii liberally interpret the taking away of property · rights," KymJa said. "I don't think so -unless government says it should ." He said the report also forecast the "number and types of services perform· , ed by all levels of government will con·· tinue to increase. "That's local government gr.owth and l r don't see it," Kymla lllld. He said even bigger concerns deal with what appears to be more and more coun· ty government interference with · loca l government. · The report says "It is the policy or Orange County to plan for and ac· c;Ommodate~ the distribution of population among &ub-areas of the county to em- phasize the existing urban areas, to en- courage diversity by individual com~ munities, and to separate developing communities in southeastern Orange · County by major open areas. "What they're saying," Kymla con- tended, "is that it's going to be their policy fu have population distribution within cities!' . ·. While the report says additional com~ B d D f . . merclal flights at Orange County Airport u get e icit should be restricted until the noise prob-lem is solved, it also says: "In order to assure access for Orange R'evise Shows eounty to air transportation service at levels anywhere close to those an· ticipated, it is necessary that .as many Eco,tomy Uptrelicl options as possible be kept open tor as long Wf ~sible." "7¥1,.',' Kymla said, "COllld be in- WASHINGTON (AP) -The govern· terpreted.to be inconsistent Ylith our own ment today revised sharply doWnward its policy." , estimated budget deficits for 1973 and Kymla was also critical ot "policies to 1974 as a result of rising govemcent take over and regulate public utilities recipts. such as electricity." Secretary or the Treasury George P. Kymla, who manages the Moulton Shultz said the 1973 budget deficit is now Niguel Water District in Laguna Hills, put at $19.8 billion or '5.7 billion less than disagreed with the report's recom- the original estimate. mendaUoh urging the county "to plan for The estln,ated 1974 budget deficit is $5 water service and construction lines and billion, he said, an improvement of $7 ... facllitJes ·Only in support of general billion over the origina1 estimate. ptirpQSe go'\>ernment plans." Sbullz attrlbuted the Improved budget "Local special districts should comply figures to a rising flow of tax receipts with. general plans !or general bet· ''primarily because of the strong uptrend tennent,'' he said. io the economy.'' I have no quarrel if general govern~ .. He said total 'budget expenditures ment adheres to Uiat general plan. But should be as previously budgeted -they don.'t Jo It." ~!:9i'k~~ion for ,1973 and $268.7 billion Kyrnla caUed the entire policy '\an at- tack on home rule. The 1974 but;iget, however, has not been approved by Congress. "There's a lot at stake." he said. "We The increased revenues primarily will should carefully .. review it." be from individual income taxes, which Of specific concern to Newport Beach, will increase over earlier estimates by he said. are the stated policies dealing about $2 billion to $101.4 billion this year with Orange COunty Airport and and by $3.7 billion to $115.3 iilllon in 1974_. __ lr_e._w_a.;y_s_. ----------- AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET WE HA VE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEAT.EN PATH." SEVE·RAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS ~IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION . THIRDLY, THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFlC CONGESTION LEADING· TO US. THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND ·WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED· G>UR VOLUME EVERY YEAR. FOR FIFTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. • ALDEN'S . IN COSTA Mll4 llNCI ltl7 ' CARPETS o DRAPES 1663 Ploctntlo AYt. COSTA MESA 646-4838 • M ... • TIMon. f to S:JO: Prl. f to f; Se!. t :JO to I ,I \' / I . ' •