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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-05-08 - Orange Coast Pilot7 .. ' • oun nee L • -' . " ~ ... • . -. I ' -.~. '· -. . . -.F11.1I--Ti111es En·diltg- • . . For Ba·l --Fun . ' . I Apart.i111en1·s ' DAILY PILOT * * * 1o c: * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON. MAY 8, 1973 YOL. '6. NO. 1». 2 S•CTIONS. 21 l"AO•S Indians Give .Up . ' lttdians Lay Dawn Anns; ' -.. . , ·-. -70-dn y Occup atio.n Ends .: WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (AP) ~ Jn. the mpation, 'locked ibemselves in the dian militants .in Wounded Knee laid .vehicle. down their ann.s today, government of· Frizzell said 1the ·Justice-De~ment fidals reported, signaling an Eild to the . would;not taiie physical amtrol of .tile 70-day occupation of the historic·hlmlet. · .. village fllt'til1 the problem >lfils tesOlvid. ! Federal law enloreement ollld,al~ )'!lo • :.\~illg to ." ag;eement under which ,..re to enter the v!Ilage folll>"'.'hg ;the the y1Il'le .. was. tcr change , hands' U.S. fumover of anns were delayed, how.eyer, : ·nlarshals, were to com& 'the b.a'mlet to J)y an argument with an~ insurgent ov.er make .sure Jt' 1 was ·safe before oosted the terms of his surr.ender. . ' reiid~t,..' I;l)tumed. · · K~t ~II, Intenor · Departm~t Frizzeli said Cooi>er boasted after the iouo1or·general,,sal~ a .wljite ~,n.idel/1 ,. w.flU!ldilJg 'of-.a lldenll mal.ha! .early .in lilled ·~ Al Cooper drove to a f~t the occupalion tha~ .be "got. bi~! a rlJjulllloCk and begm.pr&tesllpg terms-.of -~ig" and·•Jater· "pSraded aroUn<I ' and !>Ii'lrre!'I. and OOlld. Fri>l.eU said ~ · menaced" 'feclerat . • oeg0t181on · With · a '1Id an6tlier wllite !II"'!, a~ uhder. in-. fireaJm ~ they di~ed peace terms ~ctmeilt •on charg"".ini. ~'.wltlr ; With_leadets iof tho liocupati_on .. ·' '· r'-----...;, .... ..,.,., .... ,-'.--. :· ' Fruzell,,said: some:40 lndians .gathered ' • t . in the early morning by a church 'in the Musk• n * n. T"V village. He said ~Y were either "" ,11<V1 . •.!• • ,pO.\nanent mlderits of"Wciundecl1Knee~r Zoo~; OK!'d . ' Newport, Mesa Back Hospital By GEORGE LIEDAL Of IM o.llY l"tlft Steff Councilmen in both Newport Beach and Ccsta Mesa endorsed the proposed UC lrvine-Califomia College of Medicine on- campus teaching boopital Monday night. Bolstered by official support from Hoag Memorial Hospital d 1 r e c to rs , Newport Beach councilmen adopted the resolUtion of support on a 8 to 1 vote. Councilman Paul Ryckoff opp>Rd the re90lution, citing his fears that the ·hOspital . would encolD'age continued growth of the 'Harbor Area. Following a pi'elentatlon by UCl-CCM acting deih Stanley van den Noort, Costa Mesa city councilmen unanimously voted to support the university's view that the 138 millioo of statewide health sciences hond money allocated to the UC! medical school should be ·spent here. Resolatlons adopted by both cilies, and virtually every other dty in Orange Coonty, .note that -rs who lasl fall cverwbelmingly supported the 1155.9 millioo .UC _hond issue, believed the ~Y ·.would improve medical educa- tloi> at; II CI and ·would be spent to build Ol)d-pus~· g hospital and the ~·"'.tint t·clasaroom and liborilory b . ilinp. · -Y, the Assembly Ways and M~ . ~ittee ha& !Ieen considering the <UC Budget which includes a partial ~Q<aUon ·-17 ,1Dilllon of the total Jll rililfm -lo begin Cllllltnictloo'OD cam-pus of the basic medical sciences bQilding. Another !800,000 budget item to j\lan a teaching· hospital ls also before thal•comm!Uee. • _ • • I • ~eoi,. who WO<\ld be escorted Imm · ·. ·>II . •-oi.. • '!"~~ . ~ "tlje' tcseN~uoo. or \Ok~n.\~11> CIJ$l®Y,'" .11.gam in. ~u: ·'", .. ~1oe'lllt~-1.1iy · · , tbO lnd-. the village contained· 23 Flnall):, the fiacally-powerful W.~fusngand Melns Mabcomniittee ·al.lo is m a bW•by Alsen!blYman Robert Badham (R- Newpoi! BMch), til allocate JM million for teaching hospital construction in OrangeJ Ccunty, this year. The bill matches one by State Sen. DeMl.I E. e&rpenter,1i1ttodilced in the senate. • ~Each moasure, 1-ever, along with the UC budllet , provlsloos depend on Ille WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Ed-residents, 15 ncnresklents in<1 t'10 insur- mund S. Muskie (!).Maine}, said t.,. , lenta ladhg cl!argea aleqlmlng from ·the · (See H08PITAL, Pip I) day he would noi rule out a try for takover. At one time, some 300 pro- the JI.reslde~ID·lm """""I'!~ -.testers,-"°"' .,..ported In the hamlet. T nv.~ " .. ~ n. PE 'CE don't expec!JI ID ho-." ' ' Friae~' ~~ that the Indiana' UV r · A41'D .t.I Muskie Mid he received' cdh-1 , ann1 were t\i.med over to officials of the . , slderable enconragemenl lrom 1'!1· ' COJl\mul!Iry elations Service of the;~._,,.-yn.U ·TOO ten !oilowilllJ 411cl-of. •Po • JUlliCe· Depo.rtnie11l, as provided !or in v parent ac!S ol .pclltlOal ~e tbe ' _.i. signed &llday. Tho directed at him by President Nix-gQ.VOllJUlenl alJo pulled baCt armored 00'1 re-<lecllon cfpl\llatlool wlllle • pmomieJ carriers u!ed lo patrol Ille he -repnled II the leldlnc -]lerlmetor of-1llo village. Democrttlc presldentlll <Gllildol' ' nie OC<1q)Otion of Wounded Knee, In .1971 and lllt. wlilch bepn Feb. 'll, served to call na- He -inle""1wod .., tbt JlllC. lional attention to Indian complalo!a of TV Todl,y si-. poor treotment•by the,......,,.,,.. Two ~ • ' ' (llol INDIANS, l'lp I) • • KANSAS Cl'l'Y, Mo-COP!) -Po11ce charged" two c1rb Monclay with ..... 11 !ollowinc • &mdajr 'lllgl!I brawl In •Wlilch die suopecta and. two ether ........, were injured. 'Ille fllht oocumd at the "Love and Peace Featival "n.1' --" -• Newport: and Mesa • Couneils Endorse ' Dospi1al • • • • I •' " ' . ~- ., • NY Tim«!s Reports a1 IJCI . New Statute Apartments OK'd In Effect · • . As of Today -Fun Zone D1 es Nude°' semi-nude danchllll iDepl bl A split Newport Beach city council Monday night approved p-to build a 33-Wllt condominium that would replace Balboa's Fun Zone. With Vice Mayor Howanl Roger.i of Balboa casting the crucial ballot, coun- cilmen voted 4-3 for John Konwiser's plan to tear down the ferris wheel and bumper car rides that have made lhe Fun Zone an attraction. for young arid old since 1936. The amusement park· will probably be around for at least one more summer, however. Konwiser must still talte his proposal to the South Coaat Regional Conservation Commission. TesUmooy at the 90-minute public hearing oo the projOct Mmday night was divided, hut Allan Beek, a leading op- ponent who lasl fall took the project to court, did not speak. Beek sat silenUy in the audience listen- ing to Balboa merchants endorse the housing complex and most residenta , in· eluding the Ceolral Newport Beach and Peninsula Poinl -aaoocia-' tloos, come out in oppositloo. Beek, wbcoe famlly OWlll the Balboa Ferry that operates nearby, declined comment oo any future challenges to the project. Joining Rogers In support cf the residenUal development on the 1.4-acre site wer& Ma yor Donald A. MclMis and Councilmen John Store and .. Rlchanl Croul. Councilmen Paul Ryckof!, Carl Kymla and Milan Dostal voted no. Rogers defended the locaUon of the housing unlts, in the middle ·of a com- mercial district. "We've always bad mixed residential and oommerclal uses," he said. "It's part cf the unique character and charm of our city." The charge of opot ZC11ing had been leveled by several speakers. Others argued agalnsl It because of its (Ste FUN ZONE, Pop I) NY Ti~s Report . • . Nixon In voked 'Security' To Quiet B~glary Facts NEW YORK (AP) -The New Yorlt 11mes, quctlng Watergate sourees, said today that President Nixon twice invoked national oecurfty receuUy iD inlllally ,..king to prevent reieue to the Pen· tagon papen lrial details of the burglary of the office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychlatrlot. Tho Times oald the flrsl of the two alleged aUemjlls involved a JUJ!lce De- partment memorandum 'linking two con. victed· Watergate conspirators to the break-in. The' lecorrd 'lnVolYed a former White HOUie aide , Egli Krogh Jr. reports thal the President firot oppoeed releasing the Information "ir· responsible,'' the nmea said. The ne1'lplper said the reports were pro- vided by ..... of the principals, lawyers and JusUce Department officals. In the Orsi allqed case, Petersen reortedly was told at first by. President NlJ:on not to release the memo. coiJ. . tainlng Information said to have been dlsclceed by former White House counsel (See SECRETS, l>ago 1) Quintuplets. Gain The newspaper said the information In the first case was belatedly dlselosed to the Loi Angeles court after Asst. U.S. Atty. Henry E. Petenen, who beaded the PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI} -For the Watergate tnvesllgaUon, convinced Nixon flrsl time olooe their birth U day1 ·ago, to ~ blmttit. lll-ibt --case, -11\0"'Anderllon-qulntupletl 111 .. all IJhollu a tbe lnfonDaUon was reportedly provided weight gain during a 24-bouo· period. The to Ille couo:l al the Insistence of Elliot t.. five infants are "all approaching their Rlchanloon, J!Qlllinated. to he auorney birth weighll" and doing "quite well," general, Dr. ~ Nomura ol Bus Kaiser High Wblte House officials called the Hoopital, oald Monday. I Ccsta Mesa today. An urgency ordinance making It ao wu passed by unalmous ~ to O vote of the Q. ty. Collncil Monday nlghL The otatute, drafted by City Attorney Roy June, took effect immediately bul police officers did not make any alTOltl at either or the city's two nudie places, Papa Joe's or the Fire lloll8e, alter Ille action was taken. City Manager Fred Scrsabal Indicated to council members Monday nlghl· thal the two clubs would be given time to comply with the new faw but was unspecific over how much. Sorsabal met this morning with Capt. Edwanl Glasgow, assistant chief ol lbe Ccsla Mesa Police Department, to (Ste TOPLESS, Pap I) Libya Expels Y auk W ASHJNGTON (AP) -The LlbyaQ government apelled American diploma! Charles E. Marthinsen, State Depart. lll«lt officials aaid today. Tboy declined to disclose Immediately the reascns wilt Martb1nsen WU· declan!d persona ncb grata· by Ille Libyan ~ MUIDUIW' Khadafl. w ........ The weatherlady_ calls' for buy sunshine in the afternoon boun on Wednesday, wUh sligbUy wanner temperatures. Highs of Ill at the beaches rising to 71 inland. INSIDE TODAY Fr.<<d U.S. COlllvl Gm<rol Terrence G. Leonhard11 cmph<> riud the need /or oU govcrn- menta to cooperate in atcmping Ol;'t ititernatioMl terrorim. The <11""1/ """ rtltds<d ln Guado!o- jara late Monda~. s., ll011/ on Pagt 4. L. M. ..,.. 7 Clllftrllll I ,_ -.. _ .. c ..... ..,. n --. ....... ..... . . ....., ....... ,,.... ,...._ IN\ ............ u ,...... 14 ... IMIMn ,, = .... : --. .._._,, . ...... Mo.ti '""' MMlefl »" ·-.. -.. -. ............ ,., . --. ' • • • I • • I • . .. s T_.., 1111 8, 1973 • :~.Beach to Study ' Surfers' Proposals Wawrgaie , I Quiz Ope~ By TERRY OOVILLE Ot lie o.llr ..... ISltt ' Huntington Beach will consider a ''bloclt ball" fl•g l)'•ltm to _allow more """1m•" IUTf'mg and the city mar reduce the 2$-<:ent1 parking meter cbarie along 'Pacific Coast ,Highway. City COW>Ci1mtn agr«d Mond&y night to look into both proposals after nearly 100 YOUD8 surfers filled the council cham· btt to protest tJght surfmg restrictions. Mayor Jerry Matney did not promise Second Time that either requ .. t would be approved, but be and other COllDCi1men Indicated they favor the propoeiil. -~ curm~ surfin&J<iUlallMI says no 1urfiDg ls allowed from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., from June 15 to sept. 10, The city does illolr ~JI.day aurflng at the Bolsa Cllica blull1. "We'fe concerned with the city pier area because that's where the best waves are and the most enthusiasts," aaid Rus C&liscb, an editor on Lagwia Niguel's All-year School Gets Trustee 0 K By TOM GORMAN Ot .... .,..., '"" l faff AJJ.year clas,,ea at West.moot and Crest View ICbools in Huntington Be.acb will continue for another year, Ocean View School· Dls1rict 1ru51.., decided Monday nlaht. uwe have the potential for designing a system t~t will save money and im- prove education method!:," said Tru!tee Ralph Bauer in leading the unanimous vote. The decision to continue the pilot pro- Councilman Hits Critics, Backers Of -'Bullfight' By JOHN VALTERZA Of 9fle Dalty l"ltft Ir.ff San Juan Cspistrano City Councilman James M. Weathen Monday dealt some stinging criticism to both the sponsors and the critics of the Cinco de Mayo bloodless bull!ight that never really hap- pened Saturday. Weathers' comments, coming at the eod of a meeting, were the only dJacuasions occurring among t be members of the council about last weekend's chamber-sponsored celebra- Uoo. w~ flayed_..,,.. of the. even\ A>r assuming the role of defender of the city and legal expert in a letter se11t in l<!PIY lo complaints lodged by the SPCA fn sacramento. 1 ln a second attack, Weathers lashed out at the San Juan Ci tizens for Action, a group of residents often critical of clty government. That group I a s t week asserted that bulls borrowed for the event (animals which never were delivered) came from a ranch in Mexico with 11sbady'1 owner-ship. . "I see that we have a letter saying that the bulls came from a Mafia-run ranch," Weathers said . "And I also see that any time we need anybody in need of legal advice , we can send them to the chamber of com- merce," Weathers said. Then, In a parting shot he added, "I woul d suggest that if anyone ever has any quesUons about the Mafia, or bull in general, they go to the Citizens for Ac- tion." Weathers' bWt was the only discussion of the evening about the controversial event which took piece at Rocky's Arena , and was marred by a no-show of entries in the Mexican charreada and the lack of livestock for the corrida. The celebration in general, billed as the fll'!t·annual observance of the Mex· ican holiday, was financed through funds advanced by the council several weeks ago. Councilmen at that time stressed that the $3,000 seed money for the project might be ca1culated against the total an- nual subvention to the chamber which could be considered this budget season. Chamber officials have yet to arufounce the final tally for the weekend celebra- tion. OU.N•I COAST " DAILY PILOT llo• orano• Co111 OAtl't' PILOT, wllti wtlldl "' (OlllblMd !tie New1-,.t1n, 11 pUbllshed lly flW Or1nge, Cot1I ,.111111i.lllng tomplony. s.pe. r1t1 tdillon1 , ... p1,1bU1h«I, ,,,,.,...., ttl,..,,,,.. l'rlll1y, tor C01te M...,, Ntwport •1act1. HVl'lllnllllln INdl/'-11111 Vttlty, ~ ••di. l""lrltl'-*'~ Md 5'11 Cltmtnl•/ Sen Jlllll C.llfl,,...._ A "'"81• ntlliMI Mltlln It ... i.Md la!Ul'Nyt. and Surlda'l'L fM-prk!clHI ~ltlllllt pl,IM i. et 131 Wnl h l' Slrett, Cott• ""-• C.lllornlf, niu., 91.ottert N. WeM ...... klenl •nd hblltflet Jee.fl Ill:. Cvrley Vite PTetldwll elld Oenlrel Manlflf Tho111•1 Kee¥il Editor ThOflOtf A. M111ri>i11ri• MaMtlfll 11•1ter' Ch1rtH H. Loo i 1Uc.her1' .•• N.n Anlfl•nl Mfl\ttir. €dll0r• - gram, which began last July, was mark· ed with very litUe discussion. no:fr:i ~es= !· th~a=t~a:i:t the all·year issue has been discussed at board meetings since last December, and prohibited persona from the audience from speaking. Later he backed down from his ~land after being reminded that it was board policy lo allow comments from the floor. Only a handful of the about 100 parents present spoke in opposition to the all-year program. When the vote was taken many of those present applauded. The board decided to modify the schedule at \\'estmont, voting to hold classes there on a single cycle in which all students ~·Ill atte.nd classes at the same Ume instead of in staggered 9eS;SiODS. , Children ·at Crest Vlew will contin ue to meet in staggered sessions, in which a quarter of the students will be on vaca- , ti on at an times. The schedule change at Westmont was ordered after a "vast majority" of teadlers and 57 percent of the parentJ ·in the Westmont area requested the single cycle. Trustees admitted that the single cycle progrdm will not save classroom space, one of the ultimate goals of the all-year concept. "l hope Westmont will look carefully at staggered sessions next year," said Superintendent James Carvell. "That will be the ultimate space-saver. I see the single cycle as a transition." ,.. At both schools classes will be held in 45-day sessions broken up with JS-day vacations. The all-year schedule received 62 per- cent support among parents tn tlie Crest. View area and 49 percent support from parents in the Westmont area, according to results of a poll released last week. Surveyed in that poll were parents who htd opposed all-year school and opted to transfer their ch.ildren to nearby schools that followed the traditional calendar. In a poll of parents whose children re- mained in 'the all-year schools, 66.3 per- cent of the Crest Vie\v parents and 59.6 percent of the Westmont parents sup- ported the coocept. In addition to parent support, trustees \Vere told that the increase in costs of operating all-year s c ho o I s was ''minin1al" Test results also indicated an educa- tional advantage ~o the all-year program, tn..stees were jtold in a 37-page report. "Crest View and Westmont primary level students showed dramatic growth over their peers the-previous year,'' the report stated. "Reading growth patterns held true in the upper grades as well, although not to the same degree as in primary." • From Pagel INDIANS ... Indians were killed during the siege, and two feder.tl officials were wounded, one seriously. Frizzell said about 40 Indians were believed to have escaped the village Saturday night during a heavy rainstorm. About 15 others slipped through federal lines Sunday, he sa id. From Page l TOPLE SS ... detennine 'vhen enforcement is to begin . The reaction of the club managers to the news was not immediately known . Members of the council who have been battling nudity in bars since 1968 when the city's finit topless club, Ba by Doll 's opened, passed the ordinance without comment. The law was written to be in direct confonnance with a California Supreme Court decision a week ago wh.ich upheld the right of cities to ban nudity in bars. TOPL ESS OKAY- AT A DISTANCE SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Toploss and bottomless waitresses would be banned In San Francisco night clubs and bars un- der a Jaw proposed by supervisor John Barbagelata. He uked M-y !or a public hearing oo the propose;! law, wfifChne said ls 1imilai' to measures approved reeently by the courtl. It would pocmlt topless or bottomle11 eq>olllre only by entertainers on stages at leut 11% feet from palronl. International Surfmg Magazine, and spokesman !or the surfing crowd Mon· day. Callacll ..said..surfen re.IJRJbm.. !s a conruct between Sllrflng and awlmmlng, tut suggested there are times Jn the 111mmer "1ien weather COlldltlons liep swJmmers away trom the beach, but 1 surrera aren't allowed in the water because of the strict hours. "A priv!Jege is now extended to swim- mers in ~·hich surfers can be kicked Slowed Down out ol tbe water when thenrla a large crowd before 11 a.m.," Csllach safd. "We'd Ilka It !lall>io ao ,.. can QM the ocean when there b no croWd...'..'... The ciWcb propoeal woul4 leavo the decl1ioo up tO Ul~ who would· olnip!y·l'aiJe a ll'O-fOOI W ~~!IN with a )>lack ball m It when ,they f'""ted surfen out of !he water. When Matney suggested there might be a legal problem to that, Cali!cb read a letter from the Loo Angeles County Llfegoanl Service uplalnlng how the flag system bad been used at Hermooa Beacll loc 15 years. Mu»<>""'&!!. aaafltant dlr<ctor of the city's hari>ors and lieiC&s departmeli~ admitted to the oouncil he did ool know what •Y•tem was used In Loi Angeles Co\ullY. Jerry Smith, a local 811?fer, presented the second request -a reduction in the 25 cents per hour charge oo Pacific Coast Highway parking meters. Smith said the only place alq the Orange Coast with a similar charge ts the pier area 1n Newport Beach, and that city sells a yearly pass to reduce the cost to regular visitors. Smith's suggest.ioo. sparked a short, he'ated exchange between councilmen over City Attprney Don Bonfa's opinion that Huntlngtoo Beach could not Issue a yearly pass lor parking meters. Councilman Al Coen said he disagrees with Bon.fa's opinion and wondered why Newport can and Huntington can't. He was joined by Councilwoman Nonna Gibbs, al wblch point Matney In- terrupted, "Let's have a little respect !or the city attorney's office." "I don't," snapped Mrs. Gibbs1 closely followed by Matney slamming the gavel Oil the desk. Bowman then told the oouncil that Pacific Coast Highway is the only area with a 2Xent charge (and a $10 parking ticket fine). He said meters in the residential area are 10 cents an hour and in the business are a penny for 12 minutes, or fi've-ce.nts an hour. "I wasn't aware we had ttiat much discrimlnation," said Mrs Gibbs. "It's uni ... ""· Matney then asked city officials to come back in two weeks with recom· mendations on both proposals. Jack Green added the last word, saying .i1r we consider reducing the meter charge, let's ask the HOME council to represent the ta.Ipayers on it." Fro1nPagel FUN ZONE ... bulk and the fact It will take awaY between 2.S and five feet ol existing sidewalk. Councilman Richan! Croul pointed out that the five feet of the sidewalk there is actually part of the private property. But one speaket Kay Ewing, 1578 E. Oceanlroot, contended the public should have obtallled tiUe to the walk because of prescriptive rights.' Ryckoff said be fears the approval wil) lead to a rush of. similar requestJ by owners of margJnal commercial buildings in the area. OnMay17; WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Sam J. Ervin ([),N.C.), announced tnday that hts special Watergate investigating com.. mittee will open hearingJ May 17 and agreed to subpoena oosted Wblte House counsel John w. Dean ID. Ervin said that U the committee determines it is necessary Dean wUl be granted limited immunity from prm- ecution to obtain his t e s t i m o n y CONGRESS TO PROBE CIA INVOLVEMENT-Page 4 regarding . high-level administration in· volvement in the Watergate scandal. The committee's immuriity grant does not prevent Dean from being tried and convicted on other evidence but only from having his own testimony used against him. . Dean is reported to have told govern- ment Investigators that President Nixon personilly congratulated him I a s t September !or covering up the role of lop White House aides in Watergate. Tbe Wbite House Monday denied that the President bad any role in any ~ cover-up. Ervin said the Jong-awaited public hearing to probe Watergate and other presidential campaign activities will J>e held beginning at JO a.m. May 17 and will be scheduled three days a week thereafter on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and ·Thursdays. No witness list !or the opening sesalon was immediately available. Ervl{l said he has no evidence that Nix- on was involved in either the Watergate affair or the alleged cover-up which followed . But he lelt open the question of whether the Senate.· investigating cxm- mittee has the authority to subpoena the t President if it wishes. "I ·won't ·pass ... on that question until some reason to call the President is known tO exis~" Ervin said. Dean ts known to have adively Sjlllght Immunity from prosecution from both the Watergate grand jury and the Senate committee In exchange for testimony, some of whJcb reportedly involves NiJ:on. Sen. .Howard Baker <R·Terui.), the · committee's senior Republican, em- phasized repeatedly that the committee's action ls first of all an order to Dean to tell what he may or may not know to committee investigators in private. From Pagel Georgia Lt. Gov. Lester Maddox works at his desk in the Atlanta capitol .hobbled by a cast from injuries received while bicycle riding. Maddo)< ~ Presid"l!l Nixon and otrered bis services as chief in· vesbgator in the Watergate aHair. KymJa based bis oppositim on a strong planning commtssloo recommeodaUoo for retenUoo ol the comm04'clil zoning. Store,called It the "best comproe:n.be11 lor the property. " "We can't start building the. city born sand dunes," Store said?. .. r;1!·>"· + 1. SECRETS .•• John W. Dean Ill on April 15, the Times said. !?" From Page 1 Croul and others commended Koowtaer. !or cutting the density of the pn>jec~ from !7 when propolled last llUillllle<, and Croul called It "a good plan then. !l's a better plan now, but we should have ap- proved it . then." Petersen recognized the bearing of the informaUon on Ellsberg's trW and later took up the matter with the President, who then agreed lo forward It, acconling to 1he 'limes account. HOSPITAL ENDORSEMENTS ••• recommendation or yet another legisla- tive committee. Like the Ways and Means committee, Assemblyman Willie Brown Jr. (D-San Francisco} chairs this committee -the Joint Legislative Committee on Teaching Hospital Siting. To date the body tias considered ~d­ ing the UCI bond funds in a variety of ways, none of which would provide a teaching hospital on the campus. One suggestion would see the money spent e.ntirely outside Orange county at some other existing hospital. Most recently, however, staff of the Brown committee have suggested a com- promise may be considered and recommended to the Legislature. Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. agrees with the compromise proposal which would divide the teach.ing hospital money providing a 200-bed teaching hospital on campus for $18 million. Another $7 million of UC bond funds would be spent improving Orange County Medical Center (OCMC) the county-run, hospital in Orange which is medically staffed by UCI. The 515 beds there are the training ground for UCI medical students. The compromise calls for removing 200 beds from the "inade- qua te " OCMC facility leaving only 315 beds there and building 200 new beds at the campus, near the basic sciences building the remainder of the university. The no net-increase in hospital beds feature of the compromise broke the two- weck Newport Beach council deadlock over the hospital support resolution. Hoag Hospita l dingstars urged support, stipulating there be no increase in hospi- tal beds in Orange Cowity resulting from the teaching hospital construction. Newport councilmen echoed that view in their support action. Hoag directors meanwhile say they're not concerned about competition from new beds. They &re worried about the overhead or running a hoopital and the fact that the fewer the number of oc- cupied beds. the more each patient pays to cover costs. Costa Mesa councilmen also heard from Dr. John Farrer, president of tbe Orange County Medical Association whose members last February were poll- ed for their views on the campus teachng hospital. Re!ults of that survey given to the legislatlve committee ·suggested the county's llOO member docl<ln oppo>ed the Idea by a margin of 2 lo 1. · Dr. Farrer said since the university, sciled down Its j>lans no .,.... poll of QC. MA member• hu -taken. Costa Me.sa Councilman Alvin Pinkley uked how doctors would feel If the medical scbool do9e!l due lo Joos .of the funds to another county. ' "Doctors would be moot upool IO l\l'< the school," Farrer said. '"n»ere is no doubt about IL" • Other councilmen supported Pinkley's motion wh.ich declared "it is almost im- perative this council go on record in sup- port because we can't afford to Jose a medical school on what may be the greatest camPus of the University of California." Mayor Jack Hammett echoed the view, revealing his concern that the "teaching hOspital (might) slip away to somewhere in downtown Los Angeles." That somewhere, suggested by the joint legislative panel, may be Martin Luther King Hospital which has had dif· ficulty attracting medical staff. An ex- panded medical education program there is under study by the Brown committee at the same time the UCJ hospital is being examined. Konwlser, when ouUining the plan, said the bearing Monday nip t wu the 13th public bearing conducted by city boards since he first sought his use penult last year. Vets Change Tune WASHINGTON (UPI) -Members of the Veterarai of Foreign Wars (VFW), who sat In stony silence last August when Sen. George S. McGovern appeared at their national convention as a presiden· tial candidate, said Monday McGovern deserves a ••standing ovation" for in- troducing bills Monday to improve the lot of Vietnam veterans. McGovern in- troduced five measures to upgrade benefits for the three million men who served in Vietnam. On April 28, David Nissen, the govern- ment prosecutor In the Ellsberg case, submitted the memo to U.S. Di!lrict Court Judge Matty Byrne, who made JI public the next day. The second alleged case Involved Krogh, said to have supervised the burglary, who was reportedly told by presidential adviser John D. Ehrllchman last Monday that "the President doesn't want any more of this to surface for na- tional security reasons." The Times said Krogh received guidelines a few days later telling him he was not authorized lo discuss details of specific leaks or any Information about national security. After a meeting with Richardson, Krogh reportedly decided to draft an af· fidavlt that was released Monday by the Ellsberg court in Los Angeles. WHO'S BEHIND YOU? • How much do guarantees mean? It depends on the item invol ved and the manufacturer. A $I 00,000 house is guorantaed for ONE year. Most aulomobilot are guoronteed from 30 days to one year. Most electrical products are guaranteed from 90 days to one yaer, Guarantees on carpeting are complicated. The rule in the industry. Is TWO YEAR S for manufacturing defect s. The feeling is that manufa cturing defects will surface within that two yeor period. Beyond t his, these monufoclurers feel there ore too many variables in t he usage lo give coverage beyond that period. - Don't be misled by "Phoney" guarantees. They are pro roted, based on miU.i nvoice costs, plus paddin.g and labor to change. By the time you figure them up, it usuaUy costs more to change t han the original purcha se price. Carpet manufacturers tell us that 1 preponderance of complaints is not because of defacts but because of improper instaU..tion. We minimixe the number of complaints by hev ing the best installers around. Also, we deal only with more su bstantial mms, further reducirig probl1ms. Buyin g from Alden's wiU give you the greatest security. .. COSTA MDA • llMCI 1fl1 ' ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plocfftla Aft, COSTA MISA 646-4138 ..... • 'l1lln. t le l>IO; Fri. t ~ t ; Solt. t>IO te I B Col on Ne1 tole l ~ s L con has All! • can T Re1 re• me1 Sch ty sitic mo• s had dist vol! Rec Re1 5' filic prej boll non S.D T swi stat ml! ind1 Sou u l8J1 re• Cbi Chi !or con or wai I s gro Wet j sail I1 I I {j A h its fire nea ~ Sail lro1 ing. ll t.n 'I: ol I wil alu wbi m• T Poi the fr'o1 T N 'I. an il<!d c saic kna sail for ~ l w~ son cho Has L cru "" .~ •• t ~ ~ .q • Barhr Rotlte New Bus Service Business -Rolling By JACK BROBACK 'bf *M o.lfr ,1111 IWf Business is booming on the Orange County Translt ·Dislrict's new bus service on Harbor Boulevard from La Habra to Newport Beach, district directors were told Monday. Conservative Wing Wants Schmitz Back LOS ANGELES (API - A California conservative volunteer Republican club has issued an invitation to former American Independent Party presidential candidate J9fln Schmitz to 1•come home.'' ''Jbe state convention of United Republicans of Callfomia passed a resolutiOn last weekfnd stating their members "do solemnly urge John SchmJtz to return to the Republican par- ty and assume again his rightful po- sition of leadership in the conservative movement. Schmitz, who as a GOP congressman had represented an Orange County district which included President Nixon's voting residence, fell ou..t with Nixon over Red China and other subjects and left the Republican party. Subsequeriily Schmitz changed his af- filiation to the AIP and bec.r;.me its presidential standard bearer, blasting both Nixon and Democratic presidential nominee Sen. George McGovern (0. S.D.). ThenJ after the 1972 election, Sclunitz switched his registration to "decline to state," in a move some observers said might be preparatory to running as an independent or Republican in his Southern California home area. UROC, .which describes ilseU as the largest GOP volunteer group, also passed resolutions opposing recognition of Red China as the sole representatives of China and "pledged themselves to work for the defeat in the 1974 election Qf any congressman who supparts any payment or aid to North Vietnam" for repairing war damages. Several hundred delegates attended the group's annual convention over the weekend in ~ Angeles, a spokesman said. Irvine Recycle Unit Reopened At Fire Station Irvine Junior Women's Club reopened its recycling center at University county fire station, 7.ee Street at Campus Drive near Irvine Town Center. Marsha Poliu.i. of CalUornia Homes said the Irvine Juniors will donate profits from the center to health agencies serv- ing the community. It replaces · the unsightly center at- tempted at Town Center . . The. new center provides for placement or bins on· the fire station property and will accommodate do n a t I o n s of aluminum, bundled newspapers and glass which ·has been separated from any metal caps or rings. Timennor Recycling Service of Dana Point will service the Irvine Center, Md the ecology erfort has drawn support fr'om Associated Students of UC Irvine. Too Much Delegate, Not Enough Chair LONDON (UPI) -Delegates attending an annual conference of civil servants hl!d a complaint about overlapping. ;chairs provided for them, one delegate said Monday, caused a painful condition known as the "overlapping 'bottom." He said the chairs were "absolutely· agony" for heavier persons. More than is,ooq people used Ille new. bus servl<es during the last two weeks or April, Michael Valen, route contract manager, reparted. "Last Saturday we had to ad4 two buses to handle the customers on this busy route," Valen said. "During Easter Week we were fore¢ to add six buses to accommodate the traffic-." He warned that additional buses would be needed this summer to avoid disap- pointing potential customers. He urged a 15-minute interval service for the swn- mer (oow hourly} With nine buses available. Valen estimated that Z,000 ride.rs a day would be attracted during the coming months . He said the new West Central lines of the district were also veey well patroniz- ed. They were inaugurated on April 23 and connect Anaheim, ·Buena Park, Cypress, Fuller1.on and Orange. The West Central buses get added Im- petus from the fact that they serve Disneyland, Knoll's Berry F a r m , Anaheim Stad.iwn and Cypress College. District General Manager Gordon "Pete" Fielding said figures available for March showed the district's bu ses carrying an all·time high of 92,000 passengers. Th i s compares with the prevJous high of 78,0l)J for February. "We show an 18 percent increase in patronage and an 11 percent jump in mileage," Fielding pointed out. "The revenue per mile has improved from 18 cents In Jaiiuary to 22 cents today." Fielding commented. on the "very fine patronage" being experienced in the Newport' 'Beach, Costa Mesa and south Santa Ana areas. He said the Dial-A·Ride service in La Habra was carrying an average of 300 riders a day and that an equipment shortage was being experienced. Fielding , called. Dial-A·Ride "the"real solution to air pollution in Southern California." Dial·A-Ride offers pick up · f o r passengers to specific designations at 50 cents: a ride. It is a modHled taxi service with the average wait from time of telephone call to pickup about 20 minutes. Art l.inkletter Sues Ex-aides Over ·Bad Debt Entertainer Art Linkletter sued hi! former partners in a real ~state en· terprise for ·more than $1 million Monday in an orange Codnty Superior Court ac- tion, that clain\.s failure to repay a 1500,000 loan. Named as defendants by the show business personality on multiple causes of action are the Stanley G. Swartz Com. pany, the Swartz-Link.letter Company, Linkletter Enterprises, Swartz as an in· dividual and Mrs. Betty Swartz, bis wile. Swartz-Linkletter was the f i r m responsible for much of the townhome and single family construction in University Park between CUiver Drive and Yale Avenues. Later un1ts were sold by the Stanley G. Swartz Company and that firm's operation in Irvine has since been sold to National Conununity Builders, a San Diego based firm. The organization's last units: to be built in Irvine are now under constructioo in University Park. Asse~ly Passes Nonsmokers' Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -'filh one member puffing on a cigar, an Assembly committee Monday sent a "Nonsmokers Bill· of Rights" to the lower house Doot on a 9-4 vote. . The bill by Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R·Fullerton ), would require nonsmoking areas to. be set aside in places frequented by the public, such as government buildings, restaurants and theaters. Briggs' measure won approval from the Assembly Revenue and Taxation Committee without debate. Aasemblyman Frank Murphy Jr. (R· Santa Cruz), pu£fed a cigar throughout the brief hearing and voted "no" on Briggs' measure. Mother Gets 16 Years In Starving· of Baby MIAMI, Fla . (AO) -A ~Uaml mother who doctors said starved her 4-year-old son to death by feeding him nothing bUt cllocolate milk drinks !or three monlhs Has been given a 16--year prison sentence. J,ols Jean Noua wept Mooday as criminal Court Judge AllQi\so <;. liepe s&itenced her to six to 15 years In prison fof manslaughter and one year· for co"'" .trlbutlng to the dependency ol a minor. 11We didn't starve our aon:• Mra. ?tom said. 11Dean meant more to us tjl!n aoythlng In the world." 1 pean Noua died In November lrom '"8t doctors said.was malnutrlUon caus-~ by liYing on a milk diet. • . Mrs: Nom's 43-yeal'dd bustiolld. l'flchael, was acquitted ol the charges ~s year. , O\jrlng tht ·two trials, wltneaes described the home where the Nozzas arid their six children Jived as crawling wkh roocbts and strewn with garbage and human waste. Police testified ihere was no rood and no clean clothes In the house but they did !ind tWo ~ bags lilied with Mrs. Noua's coometlcll. Noua said d~ring his trial that Ito bought the family groceries, but that In lits or rage bis wU~ threw the lood aplnll the wall. now .. tr, Mrs. Nom said her husband re!uJed ber ploas to lake their aon to • doctor. Aller hb acqultlal, "Noua said lie ,.., going to try to regain custody ol bis live childml who were placed In the care ol local Juvenile 111thorilles. • • Old Band at Canoeing Dr. Homer Do<lge, 85, threads his canoe through the rapids of the Upper Hudson River in New York ;ust as he has for 13 of the 16 years the Hudson River White Water Derby has been raced. Dodge is con· sidered by many the dean of American canoeing and is the retired president ol· Norwich University in Vermont. Thirtr years ago, alter a heart attack, he was told by his doctor "never to run another rapid." Watergate Now One . of 'Sights' To See in DC Irvine ·ts ... Arts Drama, DU;nce Programs Offered Performances' by M dance organiza tiOns and ~ Irvine Community Theater ·· tlj!i weeliend mark ~ fively arts por· WASHINGTON (UPI) T h e · tioos ot·, llllline Is . . • a month-long Watergate scandal r.eached new heights cltywicle arts festival. Monday. · · .. · Unlversiiy High School's Renaissance Passengeni a'OOard United Air Lines FiW,' 13,iit w~kend opened the first Fiight. &12 · .'rrom. c1fVeland, desCendiilg cu Iha al festiv'al in the new city's history to draw on talents of high school and for a landing at Washington 's National untVersity students, conununlty artists Air Port, Were being treated to a chatty aad-, artisans and ·drama and dance commentary irom the cockpit on .the· organizations. sights below. ". Week~nd per~ormances of the Irvine 1 "Now those of you on the left side of Comm.unity Theater's drama of suspense thii ·aircraft may see some odd-shaped and violence "The Desperate Hours" will bUildings next \o the Kennedy Center," be given at 8:30 p.m. Friday and Satur- said second officer Richard',Martineau day in the ·Humanities Hall Playhouse af~r p;>in~g.out the White House , the · (Room 161) on the -UC Irvine campus. Washington MOf)ument and the Capitol. Tickets al $2.50 may be reserved by call- "Tbose are Uie famous -Or Wamous ing 646-3178 or the Irvine Is ... office, -Watergate apartments." 833-2166. Passengers were still laughing as the 1CT resident d.ireetor Tom Titus plane touched down and Martineau, new describes t}M; e.1tra performances of the on the CleveJ.and.Wasbington run,· Was group's April production as an "exciting; beaming. suspense-filled evening of theater." "First time I tried it," he grinned. Irvine ls ... dancer Hal O'Neal and the Young Dancers' \Vorkshop of orange County will present a p r em l e r e perfonnance of "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" as conceived in an orginal musical score by 1bomas Whitney of Irvine. Uni versity High School's Little Theater {Room 223) is the setting of the ballet performances at 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Saturday and again on May 19. Tickets ar't $1 and may be. reserved by calling 833-~66. Completing the perfonning arts of- ferings of Irvine Is ... this weekend will be a Sunday evening presentation by the Penrod·Plastino Movement Theater. The Irvine troupe led by two of the UCI dance faculty, will present ballets com· bining traditional and modem ·dance styles. The program is at 7:30 p.m . Sun- day in Humanities Hall Theater {Room 161). Tickets are $2 and $1.50 for students and may be reserved by calling 833-2166. The live theater experiences prelude the May 19 and 20 outdoor displays of works by 82 artists and ~raftsmen to be held in Irvine Town Center. SEE THE DIFFERENCE, IN JOHNSON & SON s DAILY PILOT Judge Ends ·Mamie's \. Marriage By TOM BARLEY °''" o.etw ........... Mlillonalre oil man R.os McQlntoct'1 maniage to Mamie Van Doren wu an-1 nulled Mooday by an Orange CouDly Superior Court judge who rtjecte4_ 1 repeated pleas for a del1y that would have enabled the shapely blonde 1ctres. , to testify in her def~. Judge Cliarles A. Bauer abo threw out pleas for financial support for the 40- year~d entertaintr after h e 1 r i n g McOlntock, 51. testify that bis wile ol 37 days refused to sleep with htm at night and spent their wedding night oo a couch. But A-fcCJintock, a $50,000 a year ex- ecutive with the Floor industrial chain who testified that his net worth was between $3 milliOIL and $5 million, ad- mitted under cross examination that be had sexual relations with· Miss Van Doren on other occasions , McClintock told Judge Bauer that he first met Miss VM Doren at the Balboa Bay Club and she agreed before the ir \Vedding last Dec. 1 to give up her career in $ow busineSJ and concentrate on being bis wire. The burly oil man said her first demands on him were for a $35,000 Rolls Royce, a SI0,000 chinchilla coat and a monthly clothing allowance of $2,000. The offshore drilling expert said Miss- Van Doren told htrn that the !uU length mink coat he bad in mind for her was "too cheap" at $3,500. McClintock, who testified that he was also asked to pay the actress' outstand- ing bills and back tuts, said he wal at a loss to explain her reluctance to aleep with him apart from her comments that she was "too Ured" and that be snored. And McCllntock ttstUled that he would not have manied Miss 'Van Doren at all if he had been aware of the sexual con- duct outlined In a RUlflazine article that appeared shortly alter they took up residence at hiJ Orange home. McClintock aald the article !rankly dlscusaed Mlss Van Doren'• past,.. Ure · in a manner that was "highly em. barrassing" to hJrn and led to I dJscul. slon betwen U1e couple on Its Implica- tions. Miss Van lloren's alleged uaoclatlono with colebriU.., who Included. pro- fessional footballer Joe Namath, bueball star Bo Bellnalcy and what waa clescrlbecl as her unmarried relal!Olllhlp with a• Navy commander in Londm abo ,were introduced Into testimony. STATION WAGONS I • · e Montego MX .:Villager "GoMen Touch" only at Johnson and Sons presents , These Beautiful Srotion Wagons At Their Finest e Marquis Colony Park ~ e Monterey Station Wagon SEE ONE • • • TRY ONE ••• BUY ONE ••• TODAY! • "Oranve-Count~'' Family oJ Fine Cari" llome Of The New Car , , • "Goldeat l'OllCN' Jlom• Of The Ne• CAr, • • ''GoUett r ... e~,. LI '.,(()! r .. C0\1 ,,,,, 2121 HARIOR l(VD.,l:OSTA MESA • &40·&e30 ' I I • I • • ' I I • • I • l • IWl.Y PILOT r...s,, . ...,. e. 197' • • Lebanese Jets Attack Guerrilla -Posts~ Casting Sin Out of Mesa THE BiG COVERUP' They bonnecl nudity In Costa Mesa last night. Thi& does not mean that Costa Mesans may no longer take baths or showers. It just means the can't do it out in pubUc. Actually, all this anti..nakedness came about because ol two night spots on the M ... ruuned Papa Joe's and the Fire House. In order to attract patrons, Papa Joe's hired dancing girls to perform semi-nude and the Fire House hired ..,,,. to dance nude, period. Costa Mesa's city brass tried several ways to suggest that the girls put some ol their ~otbes back on. The effort was frustrated in the courts. F l n a 11 y , boweYer, an Orange County no-nakedness statute gnt approved by the California Supreme Coort and the Mesa City Coon· di toot Immediato notice. NO? ONLY DID the good councilmen notice, they copied the wonll from the law that the jlllllces liked and drew It all up into an anti-nudity ordinance of their own. . Rushed before the council last night, it was a<k>pted as an emergency measure by unanimous vote. nua means the law talc .. effec\ immediately. Mesa aty Manager Fred Sorsabal, questiooed oo when enforcement wuuld • begin, mumbled aomething about giving the night spota "time to comply." IT IS UNCLEAR what this means . Probably that Police Chief Roger Neth will make a phone call to the places, in- dicating he's on his way down and those girts better have aomethlng more on thu. just a nice smile. The new emergency law is fairly ex- plicit about all this. It Identifies the human parts which wailers, waitresse9 or male or female entertainers may not expose while going about their appointed busioess. Scanning the human parts thus id~ tified in the Jaw, our bashful reporter on the City Hall beat exclaimed, "Good Lord, we can't print all these parts in the newspaper." Clearly, the Costa Mesa ordinance ls rated X. I agreed with him. SLOWLY, HOWEVER, we both realiz· ed that all t!JOee words will be printed anyway. 1be ordinance faces legal publication. It will thus be trotted out on the pages of the Daily Pilot some time later this week. Legal advertisements, however, are always published in very fine print somewhere in the back of the paper. Thus our good readers will have to look hard and read tiny to find all the X·rated pieces of 'the anatomy in Costa Mesa's official legal ad. IF YOU ARE ONE of those Wrong Thinkers who always figured the human body was a thing or beauty and joy forever, just read that ordinance. Then you'll learn just how dirty your frame really is. All this aside, you should know Costa Mesa's new anU·nudity dictum isn't ac-- tually air tight. There is an exception. It says while all this exposure can't go on in a place that serves food or drink, it's okay in a theater or concert hall . The dirtiness of public nakedness, ·you see,i isn't so much in exp<>sure but where the e1posure is expascd -if you follo\v tbal ' 1 11 11 mus ALL COSTA Mesa's naked nightspots may soon tWll into concert balls, with ticket boxes, curtains, orchestra pits and all that. I predict such efforts to circumvent the anti-nakedness law will evenutally fail . While they can still give nude perfonnances this way, the law says they can't do it and sell popcorn at the same time. And everybody knows a theater can't m' it without a popcorn stand. BEIRUT (UPI) -Le-oir fO<te warplanea 1lllng rockets struck Palestin- ian ruertjlla ltrvogholdo on the Weatem outskirts ol Beirut t<>dly , the anny said. Tbe announc:ement came several houri aftor the mllltary bad assumed control ol the country. NATIONWIDE BAN!I on printing, writing, publishing, pamphlet and leaflet distribuUon and meeUng.s, as well u a temporary closure or all cinemas, theaters, night cfubl and meeting hai~. were ordered by army commander-iD- chlef Gen. !stander Gbanem. 1be bans followed a state of emerg~ cy proclaimed Monday night by Premier Amin Hafez alter the anny and Palestin- ian guerrillas ....urned flibting, break- ing an uneasy fotll"-day truce. Belrnt Radio said today Hafez bad submitted his resignation. Beirut Radio, In IUlllOUllClng the bans, said anyone violating these orden would be referred to trial by military courts. Jt aho wamod against nimon being clrcul1led "to create dilorder Jn tbt country." Press censorship Ibo ta Jn effect. Aslled about repofta that -form ol. ctue-!lre bad been BK!eed upon by Ibo army and guerrlllal, a Delenso MlnfaUy spokesman said: "We hive no knowledge of thls at the minlstry.'' THE PALESTINE Liberation Organl7.atioo (PLO) Jn Caln> sald today Lebanese planes, tanks and artl!Jery bad mounted "ferocious attacks" on Palelrtina Ian camps on t b e wllklr1s ol llelnrt, killlng and wounding large numben of their residentJ. 1n a communique -the third laued by the guerrtllal lince figbHD41 ...umed Jn the Beirut area Monday .. ening -the PLO said the bombardment deltrvytd and burned IOOJ'eS of tin and mud-bricl: houses inside the camps ol. Jlar el-Buba and Tel Zaatar. The PLO command ln addition said, U,IT ......... U.S. CONSUL GENERAL LEONHARDY EMBRACES WIFE, EILEEN Four Days of Terror 1t Hands of Kidnapers Ended Monday Connally Not Appointed To Nixon Cabinet-Yet WASITTNGTON (AP) -A meeting between President N i x o n and Republican-convert John B. Connally has not returned Connally lo the Nixon Cabinet. At least at this time. Nixon apparently sounded out t.he ( IN SHORT ... ) fonner sec retary of the Treasury about taking a new assignment during a session Monday at the Florida White House in Key Biscayne. But Connally was understood to have DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlivtry of tht Dally Piiot is guar.antrtd MolMl1v·l'rid1r : If YtlY •• Ml Mw1 revr ,,,.. or J::IO p.m •• <•II 11'111 r111r '''' wllt IN Dro11911t le r1w. C1ll1 1r1 tik111 wnUI 1::16 p.m. S1r..nur 11111 Swl'lll1y1 II rH • 1111 r«•lwt .,..,, <•Pf PY ' 1.m. S1htA1y, H I 1.m. Swnd•r. call 1nd 1 tepy will !>ti ~"""''" 11 1'1U. (1Ht t rt 11kfll Wiiii! 11 1,m, Trlrphonts M"' or1~ c-tr Ar••• ·-····· "41.,.H, NH"'Wtll Hllfltlnfllll llltll .,.. w .. 1mll>J1fl' ••.••••••• M0-112' S.11 ci.m ... 11, C•lll•""-111th, SIR JNR (l p!llrllll, OIMI hlll!, 5oulh L11u111, t.11u111 Hltwl ••.• 4'2 ... 0t no interest in the only Cabinet-level post, now open, that of Secretary or Defense. e queen Returns ASHDOD, Israel (AP) -The Queen Elizabeth 2 steamed homeward through the Mediterranean today, half her Israeli cruise completed without any Arab ter· rorist attacks against her load of Jewish passengers. Stringent security precautions have been in effect since the flagship of Bri· tain's merchant fleet sailed from Britain two weeks ago with 620 Jews on a crise to attend Israel's 25th anniversary celebration. e Kissinger Talks MOSCOW (UPI) -Presidential ad- viser Henry A. Kissinger met for eight hours Monday with Communist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev and is con- tinuing talks today t h a t the two men started on Friday at Brezhnev's hunting lodge, the U.S. Embassy said. The embassy gave no details of the talks, taking place at Brezhnev's dacha at Zavidovo, 75 miles north of Moscow. But U.S. sources said earlier the talks: are covering the agenda for Brezhnev's talks with President Nixon in Washington next month and such issues as Indochina, U.S.-sovi<t trade, East-West troop redoo- tions in Europe, strategic anru talks and a proposed European security con· ference. Tornado Whips N. Alabama Two Persons Killed in Storm, Buildi11gs Destroyed Temperatures .t.1~ ..... Hitt! LOW Pr .. .. ....... " .. 81.'tf•lo " " ... ~llerktlt. n " ,._ ., " ·" lnc:/1111111 " ., ·" =~!WI n ., ·" " .. ~· " " ·" ""' .. " ·" "~"" M .. ..... ,"AMCt•co \. ,~~:\:.:.:;k( LC.I ...... Ill• l JKbonwll~ " .. llCIMll City " " '·" l.11 V-01' N " ~R oell: 1: " wH11 " ·" :rt'!.11:" " " .. .. ·" MlnM1POll1·St.P1ul " .. " Htw Ort.n1 .. " l.1t .... "'°"' " ~ • llOtHO•----.. so ~·riom.c1tv ,, " ii'' ,, •• 1 " ll .. " ltt ' °''· " " ·" " • . ,, m= ll ~ ,, tt LI-• CllV .. ~f 11 FrlftCI-•• tt• !l .. ,. ttitll'IOtorl .. CaHfornla .._..,M .. t fotOC;.Ul. .tAIN~...OW rr23MIOWf .. ',r;. C"Clfltr!IVtd w1rm 1-IN'l'l!Vfll I" l'f'IW.f -~co::rnfld ll'y MnOI II = A ~t n .. ~tw•rd ~ nie Mtll C•lifrwll 1 _,...., lvrt Wldl bider. I ~or. CC""'...:/' P••~.!frl c "' .. Ill~. ..,.._. I N moder•fl ~ '"°" .,.., ~ 'l'ttlblllty ltt .............. ..... ~ ""' ---~ .....,. '!:'::':. -i;-... ,. ,,,. ,:,. L.-......... ......... ......... , WHJI. I \ • "As ol.1:15 p.m. todly (S:411 a.m. Pl7T), the ~ anny ""'* ...... lt!U lhtlllnc·the camp o1. Burl el-BaraJna on the oullldN ol. Beirut. 'Die 1-ol. the Paleotinlanm'Olutlon.,.,_,.,tlle -of lire Jn Ill allallpl to lllence tbom." i . IN ANOl'llEll ~ V.- Radlo reportod the Syrian - Mlnlatry had IDllOUDCed that Syria cfnled Its berden wllb ~-"unlll further notice," but save no details. The Syrian benfer ....... lned opm !all -when the Lebo-. 8lDl1 and guenlllas begaa lhelr llght.~ Hale% announced the -of emergeo- cy Jn Lebanon cfurlng a cabfnet meeting under President Suleiman Franjieh. '!be cabinet was conalderiag a draft agree- ment for peace, drawn up in talks with guerrilla leaders earlier in the. day. U.S. Consul General Free A ft,er Terror ~ GUADALAJARA. Mexico (UPI) - U.S. Consul General Terrence G. Leonhanlv walked Into bis home late Monday in borrowed cloth1nlt' and a three-dav beard. freed bv lf':ftwinll ruer· rlllas whn held him nearly 100 hours as a political boota~e. Dlolomatlc colleagues said be was weak and tired, but "okay." . THE RELEASE of Leonbardv. tbe first U.S. dJplomat abducted-in Mexico in modem times, was expected late Sunday after 30 ~alled "pollUcal prisoners" - most of them accuse<l°-· lemlrlsts and bank robbers -were freed and fiown to Havana in e:r:change far Leonbardy. Leodlardy said in a staleQleot that his ordeal again emphasized the need for all governmonts to cooperato In stamping out international terrorism. He did not mention details of .bis kld- naplng -carried oot last Friday by four armed men who later described themselves as members of the leftwing People's Revolutionary Armed Forces. Bur BE DID express tbants to Mex- ican authorities who complied with demands by the guerrillas to free the 30 prisoners, among them four women. The kidnapers threatened to kill Leoohardy il the 30 were not fl"f':ed and flown to Cuba. Authorities hewed to tbe demands Sun- day, then started a long wait to see if the kidnapers would free Leonhardy. He appeared at 10:45 p.m., walking in- to his suburban home through a back door past two newsmen who recognized him. HE WAS WEARING a yellow shirt and pants and shoes -different clothing than be wore Friday when four Jeftwing guer- rillas stopped his cor and forced him away at gWlpoint. Leonhardy also was wtShaven, but otherwise appeared in good shape. Leonhardy later Issued a statement saying: "I want to express my feeling about how happy I am free, free again, reunited with my family, friends and col- leagues, both Americans and Mexicans. -= NllUI INlllNATIONAI Aill'Oll -----··= . .,g,c,.,., . . - PO((Utll• • :. : E "lilAll .::.·:· = Ul'IT....._i. LEBANESE JETS HIT PALESTINIAN GUERRILLA POSTS NEAR BEIRUT Attack Ne.rly Coincided With Military Takeover of tM Country High Army .Brass Linked to Theft WASllINGTON (AP) -Four Army enlisted men convicted of bilking military service clubs of btmdred.s of thousands of dollars todoy implicated high-ranking officers in a coverup of the activity. 'Jbe sworn statements, given to in- vesUgators in advance of a bearing today by the Senato Government Operations subcommittee, outline a pattern of com- mand infiuence that the men say was designed to make service clubs in Germany, Vietnam and at Ft. Benning, Ga., turn an illegal profil THE FOUR, Including former Sgt. Maj . William 0. Wooldridge, bad not testified publicly uutll n o w about bow they stole from slot machine operations and took kickbacks Crom military sup- pliers for more than 10 years. When called to testify bef.,.. the sub- cornmittoe in October 1969 they took the Fffth Amendment against • e If -1 n- crimlnattoo. that the t w o men should not be pros- ecuted. 'Ibe two were allowed to retWll to the U.S. and retire.rather than race courts martlal. Senate investigators quoted Wooldridge as saying there was clear evidence the men were guilty of Illicit behavior. One of them, Conner Sgt. Seymour Lavzar. was convicted with Wooldridge and scheduled to appear wilh birn. 1n Germany In 11166, Wooklrldge told the investigators, the commander or the 24th Infantry Divis.ion, Maj. Gen. Wllliam Cunningabm, was aware that a percen- tage of slot machine profits was being stolen by the sergeants who ran the service clubs. 3 Congressional Units to Probe Ellsberg Heist • All have pleaded guilty In-a Los Angeles Federal court to charges of cim-. splracy to defraud the 5el'Vice clubs. They have yet to be sentenced, pending' their agreement to appear today before the subcommlttoe. · Wooldridge, the fin! man to ever hold the job ol Army Sergeant Major said he used his position to cootrol the traosfer of his friends, ,who in turn were raking off the proOta of the service clubs. WASITTNGTON (AP) -Three coo- gressional committees plan inquiries .into the ClA's involvement in the burglary of the office of a psychiatrist who treated ~ Pentagon Papers defendant D a n 1 e 1 WOOLDRIDGE SAID that In Vietnam he c a m e to the aJd of two non- commissioned officen arrested for black market curTeDCY violations. He said Maj. Gen. John H. Hay, then commandei' of the U.S. First Division, was persuaded Elisberg. • All three convnittees oversee CIA operations. SEN. JOHN L. McClellan (D-Ark.I, an- nounced Monday that ranking present and fonner officials of the agency have been Invited to tostify on Wednesday before his Senate Appropriatioos sub- committee on intelligence operations. Cambodians Recapture 2 Towns Near Capital He said James Schlesinger, CIA direc- tor, and Dr. Bernard Melloy, chief of the CIA's psychiatric division, would be among the first to testily. The senator said his panel will bear later from Marine Commandant Robert E. Cushman Jr., who, while deputy CIA director, reportedly authorized the use of CIA equipment in the Eilsberg burglary ' case. From Wire Services PHNOM PENH -Cambodian forces recaptured two towns near Phnom Penh today and linked up wi\}l other govern- ment units to consolidate the posiUoos, field reparts, said. In the air war, U.S. fightor-hombers stayed away from the Phnom Penh area again today, but U.S. spolter pilots directed heavy raids elsewhere Jn cam- bodla. The U.S. Pacific Forces Command in llooolulu said American B52 and tac-· ,.0,. ... .St.mp HtlDdredl ot. lltmnp collecton gathered 1n Independence, Mo. for Ille llnt iaallng of 111 8-~nt stamp c:ommemqnliog ibe 89th annl""'11UY ot. .lfanY S Trwrwl'• blrtbday. Tbe town'• pool onb ....... 90,000 mall orden for the stamp. ~ , tical warplanes were active Monday throughout Cambodia. THE TWO TOWNS reoccupied by government ground units were Setbo, on Higbway 21 about 15 mil .. south ol Pbnom Penh, and Cbhuk Sar, 28 miles to the northwest on Highway 5. Field reports said reinforcements relieved 150 troops who had been sur- rounded at CIJhuk Sar while oiber ground units reestablished the garrison at Selbo. They met no rebel -'lion, the reports said. Meanwhile the Viet· Oong cbarged to- day that Saigon troops fighting In a com- munist-held area sprayed toxic chemicals that "ruined" more than 1,500 acres of Jami and caused aerious illness to "large numbers of perwns." THE AREA INVOLVED Is within five miles of the site where an International commission of Control and &ipemslon (ICCS) hellcoptor WU lir!ld on &mday. Capt. Phuong Nam, a Viet Cong Jn" offi<er, Mid the toxic chemicals -.. sprayed on an area In tbe Mekong Delta at Hoa ll\lng In °"'°"' 'l!deo _ l'""'- lnce, about 100 mllel -of SIJgnn. Tho ICCS chopper was tired on In ·the same area but It was not bit and I.here wm no lnjurlos. In WashJnstoo, Secretary of Defense Elliot L. Rfcfwdlon aays U.S. bombliig In Cambodia could cootlnuno even II Coniresa rejedl a propoeed ahlltina o1 mllitory lunds to pay for IL THE TRANSll'ER of t&00 mllllon !nim lonc-lerm programs to meet current needs II .......i Jn a ,.....a1 ap. proprlationa .,.. .. ,.. bef«e Congreu. IUcbanlsan aald Monday Iller a clooed meetlnc with tbe Senate A-11Uons Committee tbll llie Comho&i bombing ICtuall7 -lot • llDlll porlloll of the -tbe r.,._ -lrwfer. red. ANOO'llER WITNESS scheduled to testify iOter ls Richan! Helms, Ibo former CIA director who now is U.S. en· voy to Iran. "Serious allegatioos have appeared in the press regarding the reported Jn. volvement of the Central Intelligence Agency in the }>entagon Papers case " said McClellan fit a statement. "It is the purpose of the subcommittee to hear testimony as to the facts concerning those charges." Rep. Lucien N. Nedzl (D-Mkh.) said his Armed Services subcommittee ~ the CIA would begin hearing wilne,... Thursday. '!be. third inquiry was disclosed by Sen. Stuart Si:i;nington (D-Mo.), chairman of the Senate's joint CIA oversight com- mittee. "We plan to look Into tt," Aid Sy- . rnington.. "H true, I don't like lt." NEDZI SAID on Monday thal CIA Director Schlesinger confinned for him the involvement of Cushman. Nedzl llfd that Schlesinger oonflrmed that 01Vnnan had ordered the Issuance o1 CIA equipment for the burglary to Watergato conspirators E. Howard Hnnt and G. Gordon Uddy. lr Need a Job? Call Richard WASHINGTON (AP) -The ad l sald: 0 AdmJnlstratlve 1taff pod-• ~· lions avaJI. call Dick," and listed '* the White House tolephone number. ' T b e nritcflboud at lllflll l'alnsylvania Avenue Ht up MobdaJ with hlDldreda of call• responding ' to tbe cfuol Ded Id In 1be Washington Post, apparonU, placed ' bf a pra<tlcal joker. The Prtsfdent WU In Florlda. I• , , ' ' .\ ' • • p RI' ltve pria1: horn< Fore not I Cl~ to I for ulal test !st I pro SA 19-y<! admi ~ T N Ul setU1 nine- strilc segn lure to a In< agre as et S!I the I to I c preo The • SA une1 fragi up ; mun than ficer said An foun born Ros< Soul Sun< For< • SA Rea1 ask cons man bav1 T1' ·budi ecut 11.l Mon wou: tenn illar .- L( com will grar cord quo! Tlln Tl Am< proc vest clud fice, Seel mlSI • SA Brei ala)i Mill eel I .... M. Coll! aetl plea crdt PIY< ..... • • • ' liftlOr Bill Killed DAILY PILOT "' ., 'I 1Most of--March AFB's VOW sin Poor S~ape Longer Day Urged SACRAMENTO (AP) - The da)'3 are not long ellQ!lgh, •• y. ,._ blyman Bob W 11 sou t O.San Diego) who baa proposed a two-hour Daylight Saving Time each year, instead of the current one-hour shllt. Assembly Unit Backs Ofl 1 physical coodltlon, says the facility's cblel medical olflcer. infections a n d aslhma·like Jung condition. The average weight loas per man during Imprisonment was 60 pounds, he said. SACRA.MENTO (AP) -botUe of beer." row that moves to lower the l.eglslatlon to drop the legal lepl drinking age to IS bave drinking age to 11 In Call!ornla CALIFOllNIA'S mlnlmum been ltllted In L.egtslature, but baa been tilled by a n age of 21 for legal drinking Is prevloua proposals have pa,.. Aaaembl1 -after a "an anachronism -aomethlng ed the ·Assembi)' only to dle in bouaewlle told lawmakers they that can no Ionaer be the Senate. ' alcoholic b.Jverages. Fifteen• allow them to· buy and drink bani liquor. Five atateo set the minlmwn drinking age at 19, the committee l!>f! .aid. ·In Oklahoma, &iris aged ta. or over can buy beer, but> males. must be 21. RIVERSIDE (AP) -Forty- five of tbe ·&I America!! prlsooers of war who returned home by w~ of March Air Forte Bue near bere were not eonsldered in. g 0 0 i Or. Oley Trunlc aald l*fty all the men handled at M,arch suffered from par.• a !\I I c wonns, chroo1c diarrhea, Kin Trunk said be had learned througb COD~tioos with the POWs Ilia! theit priaon camp diets prior to 1969 averaged only about 700 calories a day. The 'men received an average Wilson says the Idea would give workers an U• Ira hour QI doyligllt at the end of their work day. His bill, AB 2298, Is entitled the "Wilson Sun ah in e Act." should be aahamed of even tolerated.'' Nimmo said. Thirty states now permit conslderlug leaH8e drinking. This Is tbe third year in a persons Wlder 21 to purchase "It's dlqustlng that you1-------'----'------'----------- memben of the Leg!slatunt would coodooe oomethlng like Pets~ Playmate Neutering Credits OK'd SACRAMENTO (AP) -After bearinl testimony from the subject of last Jamwy'1 Playboy magazine foldout, an Asseinbly c:ommlttee Monday appn>ved a bill giving tax credits to caiilornlans who have tbeii' J)els spayed or neu- tered.. . The measure by Assemblyman Lolus J. Papan (O.baly City) would provide state personal iacome tax credits up to '50 for the cost of spaying or neuteriag, u an incentive for owners to help cut down oo tbe expanding animal pop. ulaUoo. Micki Garcia, last January's 0 Playmate of the Month," tesUfied for the measure in ber part-Ume role as a lobby- ist for the Pets and Pals orpnizaUoo. The Assembly Revenue and TaxaUon Committee ap- proved the bill, llM. Man Slwt to Death, Burned; Woman Held of 1,200 calories after 1969 -1...,.,....,_.,...,.,..,._.,. · still UOO calories short of the average daily requirement. PAllASITIC pln. worms and round wonn.s -aome of them a fool long -were fOUl\d in the former prisoners, the doc- tor said. Antismog Super hoard Proposed Trunk said some of the men probably will have to undergo psychiatric treatmeot for the rest of their lives becauSe of SACRAMENTO (AP) -One the emotional stress of in~ new .i n t i s m o g superboard carceratlon and penooal prob-would be given jurisdiction lems encountered upon their over much of Sou t b e r n return home . California under a measure in- He also said the asthma-like troduced Monday by Assembly respiratory ailment found in Speaker Bob Moi'etti. most of the men was responsi-ble for the death Of at least The Van Nuys Democrat one POW while still in North also introduced a bill hiking Vietnamese hands. fines against industries which 'lbere was no indication of repeat air pollution violaUons. why six of. the 61 men proe-The area covered by the essed through March were in smog superboard would ln- good condition. However, two elude all of Los Angeles, Ven- of 'the men handled there were tura and Orange counties ~d in C.ommunist camps for less major portions of S a n than three months. Bernardino, Riverside and Trunk made his observa-Santa Barbara cowities. tions last week in an address The fine.biking bill would thi.a," said Barbara Mayne. a boosewlfe from the Sacramen- to suburb of Fair Oaks who h> troduced henieU to the com- mittee as "a l'Mther." "Yoo should be ashamed of yoW"Selves," she told the Assembly Committee o n C o nstituUonal Amendments Monday. SHORTLY after that, the committee voted 2-2 to kill the pniposed btll and proposed state constitutional amend· ment by Assemblyman Robert Nimmo that would h a v e permitted 18 to 2(>year-olda to possess and consume alcoholic beverages. The proposal Deed· ed at leut 1l1ree votes from the five-member committee. The measure would have allowed an estimated 1.1 million young californians to drink alcoholle b e v e r a g e s legally, the committee slaff estimated. Nim mo (R·Atascadero), said 18-year-olds can now serve on grand juries, fight in W'81'8, marry and r a i .~ e children, enter contracts and vote, "but they can't buy a • SAN ~CISCO (AP) -A llf.yeaMld woman police say admitted shooting and kllling her boyfriend, then setting to t.he River~id~ County replace the present $500 max- him afire with gasoline, has _ Medical Association. imum fine per offense with a ----------1 scale that would start at $500 RAISINS been booked for investigation !or ·the ftrst offense and in- Writers': Tieup Seen Near End of murder. p G crease to $10,000 for a seveJ)th Police said Marilyn Dawaon ot roup Qffense. HONORED admitted killing GI en n In a sta~L~ last Augustine, 21, after he beat Shuts Dnnrs week , Moretti said, "Smog FRESNO (UPO -The "'-' does not respect artificial world's largest raisin cookie -her up Sunday night fQi dating boundaries. Air pollution is a a six-footer shaped like the another man. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -regional problem and can only State of Camor'nla -Is being Miss Dawson told officers The group that campaigned be solved on a regional basis." sent to Agriculture Secretary Augustine picked her up and unsu<cessfully last November Earl Butz. slugged her several limes in a for paaaage of Prop. 19, the SIX AIR pollQllon control Smaller repllcU are being quarrel over her dates with s t a t e marijuana initiative, boards would be combined sent to government offlclals LOS ANGELES (AP) -A other men Miss Dawson told cloaed its doors Monday for under the superboanl aet up and notables by the camornla setUement may be near in the police she shot Augustine lack of funds.. by Moretti's bill. Raisln Advisory Board aa part nine-week-old Writers Guild three times in the back with a "All the big money in the Also introduced. was a bill by of National Raisin Week. pistol she carried, shoved the marijuana refonn movement Assemblyman J05eph Montoya Dick Markarian, a board strike that has brought large body to the passenger side, favors Jegalization," s a i d {0.La Puente) w h i ch would chairman, said o f f i c 1 a 1 segments of the motion pie-then drove to a service station Robert A s h f 0 r d , stale require smog boards to recognition for the cookie wW ~ally hers ... ,, ' from Norwlch,Connectlcut. JohnMeyer NellipOrt suit. all polyester. finely detailed shirt styling with matching pants or skirt . Com and Creamy Belge I I ture and television industries for a can of gasoline. coordinator. The iniUatlve, pUblish names of indUBtrial be sought in the Guinoesa: to a standstill. She drove to a hill overlook· which failed by 8 2-1 margin, poll~ 1n their area at least Book of -Records .. · \ • Industry .sources said an ing C&ndlesliclt Park, drench-fa vored only decriminalhaUon twice a ~· -,-.;._--------'-----------------------=------- ed the &d.y with gasoline and of marijuana laws. ·,Ass ~·m bl y m a.n Waller ':< ... agreement could be reached Ignited It. Mias Dawaon walk-NaUonal efforts to legalize ~.n g a 11 s (0.Rlvenide), h> as earJy as this week. ed more than a mile tb find '8. marijuana have ••steamron-troduced another measure re- Sl!OOld lhe strike continue, Pl!X 'j>hone to call· pollcO and ered lbe Califumia decriminal-quJrlng smog boards to publish the networks: would be forced liter led police to the body, ization organization out of the names of the top 10 to postpone the September,_,_poli_._ce_sal_d_. _______ ex_istence_-'-.'_'_Ashf_o_rd_~_i_d_. __ po_l_lu_te_~_in_the_ii'_ar_e_a_s. __ ( BRIEFS ) premiere of the fall session. The soap operas would run out e Bmnb Fouttcl SACRAMENTO (AP) -An unexploded bomb and bomb fragments ruive been picked up near the area whefe a munitions train exploded more than a week ago, sherifrs of- ficers -and 'military officials said Monday. An Army <rdnaoce team found a whole une1ploded bomb in a wheat field near the Roseville yards, of t h e Southern Pacific R a 11 r o a d Sunday night, a McClellan Air Force Base official said. e Money Asked SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Reagan administration may ask for another $200,000 for construction of a governor's mansion, legi slative sources have reported. That would increase the budgeted amount for the ex- ~Uve residence to more than $1.1 milllon. The sources said Monday that the added funda would be for a swimming pool, tennis court and other aux- iliary fac111tles. e Eqtiit" Case LOS ANGELES (AP) -The complex Equity Funding case will be presented to a federal grand jury here this week, ac- cording to unidentified sources q119ted by the Lo• Angelea Times. The Equity Funding Corp. of America, now in bankruptcy proceedings, Is being in~ vestlgated by agencle1 In- cluding the U.S. attorney'• of• lice, • the FBI and • t be Socurltles & E1cllanie Com- mission. er-tPIM • SAN RAFAEL (AP) - Brent ljedayan, charged with slaying lhtee member• of a Mill Vall1y family, hat plead- ed Innocent and 1Moct11t by reaaon of lnaanlty. · Marin County Superior Court Judge Dlvld Menary Jr. aet I July t trial date alteJ' the plea wu entered MolldlJ>. He ordered lleda,vao to .Wlderlo peydtlalrlc teota and llio rosulls 111bmll'*1 by M~ SI. i !#~~<!!/~ Promises Tu Pay You A Guaranteed Income On Certificate Accounts At Their Highest Interest Rates In 38Years! Right,,.,,.,whilecurrenthighintmestratmpll!Vail,aelectthecertificat.e account that boot auill your needs! Start maldng the moot of your money at Orange County's largest, first and strongest indeiiendent Federal •••. where your personal welcome is warm, your financ!al oecurity la llW'lt; and your earning growth la guaranteed for the full tenn of your account. ,. .. --In 1ny 1mount $900 mtnlmum -lor to """' $2500 minimum ltoSJMrl*_ · . $5.000 minimum 2to1,..,.·• .. INTER1!8T ON ALL ACCOUNTS 18 COMPOUNDED DAIL '/>PAID QUABTBBLY "90daylnterootlorfeltmolouolly~ ' ' BOMBOPPICll:2~0oeonA-1-Bed.CIUL'2651 l.qmio Hlllalnncb: 2M>31CallodelaPlata,1-Hillt, CalK. 926'3 l.quna Nl ... l Bnndl: 3 Monud> Bay Plau. Soutb 1.quna. catif. 92617 S.0Cbmtt1118ra.::ti: 601 N. EJ Camino Real,S..'Oemasta.Callf.'161% tabEldnorti!rudi:-OrohamaudLindoay.WATCHFOllOIANDOPl!Nll!O I ·. John ~&Sons Ltd invites .)OU to join tk/JewarSHiglfander Clan HU olkring a frmtamc low er_ a on hi8 fmnou&''White Label:' lfil pui a little Scotx:li in every Calilomian! •A lillJ. ~ SceWi "Join tht clan I" Join that happy brttd of pcopl• who know and appreciate the Me point.a of a 6ne Scotch whi1ky. For 30 daya. you can try thi• Aulhen11<·Sco1ch whilky at \& very •pecial price. That mean• $6.99 a 6fth. On June lat. regular price• t&ke over. Don't wait. Why doet a ca.utioua Hichlandcr make aueh a peroua offer) Becauae he know• that once you try one bottle of hia famous "Whit• Lab.I," he'• aot you for aoo<f. . Maybe you're aJrcady an old friend of Dewar'• or an m· thUJiutic: new friend. Why not buy a COit of 12 tifth1? Now'• the time:. You ttt an extra 10% dittount--evai off th• $6.99 p1ice. .fluthentic . 'DEWARS •Whtte Label" DeUHU' 1 ne-Nric1. 11119 ~WlllSO •&I..,• Osaatflfem t:O.\•.IY. 1 "' SPECIAL FlFTll PRICE lllAY ONLY $6?~ Regular ptl .. : ST.79 r . •• .. ! • ' • I ' \ l .. . • DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE· ' Take The food price numbers game is on again, with its customary contusion. U.S. 5e<retary of Commerce Frederick B. Dent, speaking ,In Newport Beach, predicted a "possible" d&- cline In fOod prices this summer, or at least a slowdown in the rate of increase. ~ The Bureau of Labor Statistics notes the index or farm products and P.rocessed foods and feeds went do n o. 7 pereent in April, an improvement over the ~-2 per· cent increase in March. This included a drop in livestock and processed meat prices on the wholesale market which could signal tower retail prices in the future, says the bureau. It's safe to say the March 30 ceiling on meat prices will keep a lid on that ,~cular cost area, but ~Ince the ceiling was established 10 a period of peak pnces, tnis is small comfort to the householder. But miserable spring weather in many areas may be creating new problems. Corn planting has been delayed by rain and snow in several states. This can. result 111 a smaller crop and higher pnces for corn, a pnnopal feed for beef cattle, hogs and chickens. Not only are high feed prices passed on to the consume~,· they also .~ bring about a reduction in herds which would limit meat supplies far into the future. The bad weather, or course, will affect other crops and some experis foresee shortages that oould .. nd produce prices up by the end of summer. One farmer 111 the flood area. asked when he planned to get around to sowing, replied, "I haven't even oeen my land for six weeks." This is one aspect of the food price problems that can't be blamed on politics. Your Choice Payouta to 5;000 Tena farmen amouotecl to •171.9 \ mil!Wn. In California. 1,861 farmers recet...i f80. l mi.I. lion. And th* include onJy ·indlvldual paymenta in ex· cesa of 420,000. A couple ol Hawaiian supr firma re- ceived more I.ban $1 million each tor growing ie.. sugar. . So when It comes to food price stati.ltics, "You pays your money and you take. your choloe," as the saying goes. - For sure, you'll pay your money. Speak Up for Daylight With Daylight Saving Time In force once more, Rep. Craig Hosmer (&Calif.) is up at bat again for hll year-round daylight saving bill. ll's Hosmer'S hope to get the bill throul!h so there'll be no "fall back" th1s fall. He wants the clocks to stay right where they are. When the oongressman started pushing his bill last year, he bad only 14 C<>6JlODSOrs. The number 'Wa.. up to 25 by January, and now be claims to have con- VJDced 31 fellow teglslatorfof its w'!sdDm. Hosmer argues that year-round extension of day· light hours would reduce crime and traffic accidents, save electricity and fuel, and provide workers 1111d school children with additional recreation time. The worst hours for crime and traffic accident.. are tbose immediately after dark, he assert., so it would make sense to get the bulk of. the work force home before dark. Opposition ..,,,, .. , "" usual, from the farm belt, where the animal-oriented population apparently finds the time change even more oonfusing I.ban city·bred types. ' • . , . , • • • • :/ - Quite another matter is news that 18,000 farm operator!! were paid $20,000 or more each In 1972 for curtailing cropa under Depariment of Agriculture pro- grams. "Weliare for the wealthy," Congressman Paul Findley called it, as he read Into the Congressional Record statistics revealing payouts for "non-growers'' Recen.t polls show popular opinion divided about 50.50--which are about the odds on getting his bill passed this year, Hosmer feels. Voters who don't want to "fall back" on the last Sunday of. October may speak up for Hosmer's bill by writing their congressmen. 'As I understand Seeretary Rogers, they are bombing us here in Cambodia aa an incentive to North Vietnam to uphold the peace agreement.' totalling $655.8 million for the year. · Nixon Moves Still • • Don't Please GOP WASHINGTON -President Nixon's belated purge of top White House staffers who betrayed him in the Watergate bug- ging and cover-up was an "adequate" start, in the word or a long-time associate, but major power centers in his own party are not jumping with new- found joy To the contrary, moot or the men of real power inside the RepubUcao party - as cmtrasted to the buttoned-down Nixon apparatchniks now purg ed from the White House -£eel that the President was pushed into action against his will. They fear he is still dealing with Watergate by a seri es of tactical ex- pedients, not b}' the grand strategy of full disclosure they want. Moreover, Mr. Ni.Ion Is under private but harsh • criticism by po we r f u 1 Republicans for the clumsy way he handled certain aspects of the two most important new assignments he has made : that of Elliot Richardson as At- torney General and William Ruckelshaus as acting director of the Federal Bureau ~f Investigation. RUCKELSHAUS, a young political ac- tivist with chann, shrewdness and a bright future in national Republican politics, has now been effectively barred from rWIDing for the Senate next year or perhaps ever by the President 's sudden, ill-considered decision to put him in charge of the FBI. Not wanting the job and feeling not fit for it, Ruckelshaus, nevertheless, was sent there for a few months as "acting" director (forcing him to remove himself from all possibility of re-entering elective politics in Indiana in 1974). Far worse, the President's quick decision to put "Mr. Clean" at the FBI - a tactical decision that fits into no discernible long-term strategy -has now guaranteed still another period or dangerous uncertainty for the harassed FBI, already clubbed into a semi"'°m- atose state during the hapless reign of ( EVANS-NOVAK) the unfortunate L. Patrick Gray Ill. Far mo.re revealing of lbe President's lna~llily to deal decisively and come sharply to aftps with his want}crisls was bis 1nuplicable re!UsaJ to ftali1<ra special Watergate prosecutor, but toiteave that presidential decision up to Richardson. GIVEN THE LONG and u g I y Watergate cover-up by Mr. Nixon's closest aides in the White House, it is underslandable that such Republican esta blisbmenlarians as Sen. B a r r y Goldwater, former Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, Sen. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, the Senate m i n o r i t y leader, and manf, many more are in- sisting that only an oostide prosecutor can clear the air of scandal -and clear Mr. Nixon of public auspicion. It was, in the word ot one such Republican, "shocking" that Mr. Nixon hung this decision on Richardson. Again, the President's refusal to meet the de- mand of a vast, perhaps unanimous, ma- jority in bis own party in the matter of a Wick• ' ·Dear Gloomy Gus Let us rise as one man to praise Gov: Connally for acting decisively in a moment of national crisis. By switching political parties he has raised the moral tone or both. -0.kM. special prosecutor smacked of cute tac- tics, not the grand strategy required to bring his administration and the country back from the brink. Finally, what has failed to give Mr. Ni.Ion a fully clean bill of bea.lth insjde the power structure of bis· own party is the continued secretiveness of the decision-making which culminated in bis commendable Monday morning purge and bis "adequate" Monday evening report-to the people. ·fllUS, MR. NIXON bas not once (as we write this) asked for political advice frOm the men best equipped to give it to him. Laird, Goldv;ater, former White House counselor Bryce Harlow, Scott, Rep. Gerald Ford of Michigan, the House Republican leader -all these have been kept, in the dark. Both Ford and Goldwater, tortured by wohy that the Watergate disclosures had becori1.i ... a t constitutional and psychological crisis spiraling beyond reach, had to beg Laird to take the Republican party's case to the President. But, uniDVited, he never did. 1.joteover, Mr. Nixon is known to be funous at Goldwater for his April 11 public demand that the President stop pretending Watergate would go away. It is that set of Mr. Nixon's mind which, in !pile or the laudable and hard decisions he made Jast Monday, deeply worries pare ty elders who want his clean-up to suc- ceed, both for their sake as well as his. For they see as yet no sure signals that the President is finally ready to open up bis office and his mind to the oulslde opin- ion -most particularly the opinioo of politicians in his own party -t.hat might have saved him much of bis and the country's present grief. Slush Funds, Secret Meetings, Lobbyists Reform Coalition's Targets I do not usually keep company with the likes of the Sierra Club, or the NAACP, or the Peoples' l.Obby, or the Women's Political caucus, or Ralph Nader. - And my acquaintance with Common Cause is, shall we say, an infrequent nod. But citizen action triggered by the ar- rogance of politicians creates strange alliance. So here I am, rais- ing their banner for aoespeciflcbat· tJe; refcrm. Because those groupa b a v e banded togelher iD seek a refonnaUoo that Is in lhe best Jn. inlor<St of responsi· ble, representative, and restricted, government. U conservatives have any smarts, they will join the crwade. First, the reform coalition wants to outlaw secret political slush funds. Hear, bear! THE ELECl'ORATE has a right to know just who is supporting what can- didate, or which party, and for how much. In politics, as in poker, everyone sj>ould keep their cards Ind their handa ' ~----------... But it was in secret session that his ( J Senate Rules committee recently voted RUS WALTON (3-2) Senator George Moscone· the tax-payers' money for a Los Angeles staff "-----------J and office. What's a senator\from San Francisco doing with an OffiCe in Los Angeles? Well, Moscone is running for governor. His southern Califorhia "non- campaign" office would have been closer to 60 pereent of the voters. above the table. Second, the group wants to prohibit lobbyist's gifts and campaign con- tributions to political candidates. Right on! Under ~lty of crimin81 ·action. Lobbyists can and do perform im- portant and valuable services to both the legislators and the public. The.tegi')lltors cannot possibly amass the 'facts ,ar'Wess the impact of the thousands of biUl that stream across their de'skl. ~·can supply the facts and (igures"and the pros and cons. But lobbyists should not be perlnitted to buy votes. Lunch, maybe; but not votes. Next, the reformers want to do away with all closed meetings of the state legislature. Dirned right! Open 'em up. THE PUBLIC tiusiness should be public. . The other week, Sena!« James Mills (IJ.San Diego) poob-poobed that idea. He said "there is no .problem't with secret meetings. Back to reform. The coalition wants all public records of all state agencies available to the press and public. You bet. And, the legislature's records, too. That's no~ a private corporation or a c;Jo~ shop those birds and bureaucrats ai:e 'i-unni.ng. It's our government, and our qoogh. Open tho~ books! FINAU Y, the group wants complete and honest reporting of all campaign funds and full disclosure ot all assets and income by all public officials. Why not? Every campaign contribution of more than $50 should be reported, in full and in detail. The voters have a right to know who. has what strings on which can·didates and which incumbents. Those are g,ood refonns and that is why I make pUJow talk with folks who usually travel in different sleeping bags. Vanity, Prestige Sway Name Styks A reader in St. Paul, propounding a number of word queries,,asks me this: "I have been trying for some time to .discover whY so many or my Jewish friends a r e named Milton, Sydney or Irving. 'lbese ....,.. all 1itenry figures ; maybe they are used because of the ad- miration of Jewish people for the in- tellectual?" The bisloly of changing styles in given names is a fucinating one, and rather scantily dealt w i t h, because It falll between the disciplines or philology and sociology. And also, I SUfll'OSe, because oo scholarship can determine why dlf· ferent names wax and waoe in popular!· ty. , I would attempt the educated guw that the Jews gave these names to their sons not because they were "literary" ~IDNEY J.HARRI~ but because they ·carried B r ;,.t i s h overtones, and were a way of saying, "See, we have assimilated away from the old Biblical names and toward Ang! .. Saxon family names." Further, as an upward-mobile people, the Jews liked to give what they hnagined were "tony" names to their sons (.just as many ' I ' Germans added "von' to their names when they achieved a little money and position.) OF COURSE, the trooy In Ibis is that qulckl~ names ceased tieing~,ony" and e identified with Jews ; whereupon the Anglo-Saxon folk began giving their sons Biblical names, like David and Joshua and Adam and Jeremy and so on. . THERE HA VE been enormoua name changes in my time, with the f1rst 10 most ~ frequently given fll'St names revenlng their positions of popularity. Interestingly enough, the most popular gentile names for hundreds of years were "John" and "Mary" -OOth from the Hebrew, but almost never given to Jewish children. (Matthew, Luke and M'arli, the other three evangelists, were also verboten es Jewish names, but in the past few decades, Mark has, strange- ly enough, gained many converts.) It is all a game of vanity and prestige, of course, and tills year's "chic" name may be totally outre a few years hence . Stumbling Congress Suffers from :Lack of Lea~ership . , I W ASlllNGTON -The 93rd CongreSI! has been in session four months, and has done absolutely nothing of consequence. After a third of a year and a cost to taxpayers of around $150 million, the le~­ i&laitve record is vir- tually blsnk. While thousands or bills and resolutions have betn Intro. duced covtring al· mool everything un· der the sun, they are meaningless; empty geatures worth no more than the paper they ere printed on. Few if any will ever ... the lliht of day. Their real purpose Is headline grabbing ud P\lbllc!ty grandltanding. This ertraordlnary situation prevails In the face of the fact that the Democrats have sizable majoriUet In both the Senata Ind Hoose, and thus are In posi· I loo to eun:ise tbla key control co .. 1tnicµva11 ancl ~ully. INrl'EAD, they have constanUy in- dulged In anUc:a and tact.If.! motivated .. primarily by venomous partisan politics and pel'>OllaiiUes along two lines: (I) Sniping, ti rad in g , fulminating agalnsl President Nixon and bis ad· mlnistratioo -zealously aided-and abet· led by a large segment of the media with endless rumors, innuendoes . and . <>ther hostile tricks or 11\e trade. stumble, flimbla 111111 bumble alOlll from ~ ~ one blooper and flop lo anolller. " ROB. ERT S. AI.I.EN or the Senate, 11 could be Biid the prob-tem there la too lllllll1 leaders. Witll a ball-doRn or man 1n1ldeattataaplran . · (Still Wldeclared but quilo activa) ind economy, budget balancing and reducing others who have equally blgh opinions of tax7' -particularly the latter. themlelvea,.,:,,,tbe '"upper" ,ch amber It • • rare day without a strident literally trlstleo with prima doonas. cacophony of Democratic clamor for tax Rkllnc 11en1 on them la 1 ma1HIJed culUng and "piuggtn.s up loopholes" ---1o11. 'l1tt .,,.t ~P an esI>OClally favorite rtfrainT~. •. liasn' pt wllat It. lokes ..:. Ind la w> BaSlc cause of the Democrats dismal """"""* iboul· 11. ~nal r<t<rd Is plain, &lmpte lack of effective leaderahip. (2) Deliberately provoking rancorous head-on confrontations with the President by reenacting l'lf!islatlon pas.!ed· lJY tbe llemocratJc.contli>Ued 9!nd Coogress and vetoed by him I! unwarranted, unsound, undesirable and excessively co.sUy. Considering and voting these measum Is all tbla Congress has done in the put IT'S rol'AILY wanUng In both the four months. ' Senate and House -gilringly so in the M.UOIUl'Y LEADER Mike Manlfleld, Mont., 711 llld m his Cooll1h1«m. doea't think lt'• -'lnrblle lo try to .craclt aey Whlpl, Oil the very IOUnd logic 11 wouldn'I do any ,.00 on,yny. So he casually lela things bmnp ailq more "' less as they ..,_, with llil committee cbalrmen (ban>ns In their own rifht) calling the Nor A SINGLE other piece or major legislation has been acted on. A few ha" been lal<en up in committees, but 1hat's all . They're stlU there. Total spending called for by lhe>e llemocraUc bills b upwards or $11 blllioo. Yel in rammi"i them through and clef~ty dlallenglng the 1'Mldeat 16 veto them, they have loudly and aaoctimonlously a~ the need for ·latter. In botb chambers there are leglslatort wlO. the ability, forceluhless Ind chlrlcter to mal:e leaders or the stature Ind decislveoesior the late Speaker Sam Rayburn and President Lyndoo Jobnloo when he ruled the Senate with a firm hand. But for varloua reuons thete mucb-needed potenUal lopaotob lMd<n are not in control -Ind not l1ke\y to bt for some time, at lust Meanwhile, e Senate Ind llouae &bots. I -f • - ' U Ibey 1nolll oo trJlnl to ovm!de a pmldentlal Velo, Mliistleld glv .. them lllelr --· u Mppmed iirty llil• -th. Aod wile tlllJ wind up With I bloody -. to -llmled ...,...., lhat'a Maybe they11 Jmow better nert ·tirl\e - although Jmowiedgeable Senfote -. ... wouldn't bet on It. There are tlmea when the lure of headlines Ind the porsuuion or self· deluding rhet«lc are lm!oistilite - especlally to presidential hopefuls. BOUSE SPEAKER Carl Albert wOutd llj<e to be a SOm Rayburn, but bu • long ~ay to.19.-and will never make it. - DAILY PILOT .Rob.rt N. Wttd, PubU.!IH T,.,,,,., Kt..U, Bdl!or ~raXrribldl .lidilorial Po~ EdflOr Tueldq, 1'111 8, 1073 • The Oklahoman's sad trouble is that he sorely lack! the guts and brains. ReeenUy, a veteran Democratic col· lea'"' derisively summed ii up another way. Aller the House blunUy slapped CloWn Albert and overwheimingly upheld the Presldtzit on stand-by economic con· 11:91 poWera, the legislator quiPl>ed, "The dlfficulty wilb Carl b that his feet aren't mates. He goes in all dlrectiona at the same' tune." The .edllOrial Pl&• ~r· ""'" D<11y Pilot 9ttks to 1nfonn. and stimulate -by -""' •• 111i.· .... dAu.e c:ommtntuy on topics o( Jo-""'I by ayndl<ated . colwnnlll> and • ~-!>,by proyldlnft. -.... .. .-· vi .... """"" prnentloe w. neWl1Jlper'• opWont and kteu on cwnat topks. 1b•,eclil0ri&l·o~ of the DIUt PUo! -r ohly irl the editorial column at tbe-.-top of the: ..... Oolnloro txpn!SO<d by tbe .... umnbls ud -&..! lct1..- wri1-s U"e Mt°""" ll'ld io etWbw- -ol -..... w lhe Doily Pilot -be ""'"""'" -.. . ,. .. "· ';(', .. •, r .. -·. ., -· ... .,. .. .. ,, • ., "• . "' "' .. , ' • 1 I • ' . ,, .. . ,. " ... ;.' -;. " .~.· '~- ·.·• "d' '1 •. ' ~· . ...... '" ... I ,~· -- ••As a m.alter of fact l do have a· request. Have him play SO?letlJing .with a ·message in it .. :'JiJe'go away,- or 'scram•.''. ' I.. M. Boyd No, Ro~in Hood • Wasn't 'Strange' To that long list of bright accomplishments by Leo- nardo da Vinci, add the discovery of the fact that the age of a tree can be determined by a count of its rings. Did I tell you a giraffe's tongue is about 18 'inches long? 'It's known politicians in general lip nooe too heftily in restaurants. But that elected politician said to tip best is the city mayor. Sur- veys show senator,s, still Up least. Wben reporters asked that re- nowned world. traveler Lowell 'Thomas to name the world's uiost beautiful and exciting city, be listed 10 candi- dates: I. San Francisco. 2. London. 3. Paris. 4. Bangkok. 5. Rio de Janeiro, 6. Denver. 7. Seattle. 8. Portland. 9. San ~o. 10. Colorado Spriogs. ROBIN HOOD -Q. "Is it true that the bisklrians now have proved that tile reai Robin Hood liked men. not worn- ~?'' . A. Not true. Tbe historians say they're certain·be never knew aoybody called Maid Mariao, that !le livl)\l a !'haste life iJ>. the woods with no feminine -:~shjp wbats<i-ever; bUt tliitt the· ballads of !iii lime · · -· · lie wai iledl- cated, devonUy ...ugious and exceeding • 'masculine. Bis ·· real name is said to bate been Robip.~ J<vm.."l\¢"\be English researcher James ·~ con~'J;.~_bOiD in WI, moot pl'Obably at Kyme in Lincolnshire, and lived in the reign of Edward I, not Ri,chard I. Ues. says he was no botsbot with a longbow, incidentally. Just.so-so . Average first grader bas exactly three cavities on sa.Jd child's first day of school. ANOTHER FEAR -Among the oddball fears; also list, please, something called "sight of sleep phobia." Be who suffers from that wen,! condition telii!Sto' get both anxious and irritated whenever .he notices .~~Y doze off. A husband maybe popi lh' temper, ii be 'sees.'blJi wife drill" off In ber rocker during bis preferred TV show. Or vice_ V~rsa. Dr. John Fleminger of Guy's Hospital in Lon- don says the malady is rare bUt real. Tbat turkeys staod upright wben laying eggs is com- mon knowledge. Less Widely known is the fact that SOB1• cbic!;erui do likewise. Thus the long faD, as• '°" .might Imagine, tends to .crack the eggs. So savvf cbiclterr farm- ers keep tabs on nests'wherein they regularly find cracked ~. then wring the craning necks of those most upright AddreH mai! to L. M. Boyd, P. O .. Boz 1875, New- port Beach, Calif . 92660. ' ' ' ""----.................................... --.................................................................. ,...,, -I, -"" ~ ........................................ ~ "'" .,........ st .. caaNoM.,.... ................................ ,..... ·---C"C'-................................ ....... ,..., .. Mlllll.... . ............................................ 1 '11 •• .,. .................................................... ......,. -r-.MU ...... la A"'-! ._,,.. ..... ··;ar·· ..................... ..... • ' Tut!dly, May 8, 1973 IWLV PILOT 7 .Off-road Vehicle -Clash ·Nears· Sliowdown~ · II)' THOMAS D • .ELW! Ing the line at Red Rock can, Lake, intq a >1ate park or a C8llfomla representaUve for --· e r 1 f d yon. recreation area. the Sima Club, dlaagreecl. ;1.ur;: 11 mm· n g eu U it's a park, the off-road "1bls art.a oootains: unmue . between conservaUonists aod A CONJl'.RONTATION will ., • owners ot off-road vehicles likely come at classiflcaUon vehicles 'will be Umlted to geological farmatioos a n d "normal •--· aod ·-to chaparral and Dowers that are who want freed.um to roam he•-'••• before the state · --~--... ...., and from: the area," while unique in C.Womia," he said over almost all of rural Southerft Catmia is about to ( SOUTHERN J cia.isificaUon as a ~tton in an lntervle,.. "Opening it come to 8 bo . CALJ,F(>n"", area wool? leave alinost the up to the off·rood vehicles 'IU.,AA entire acreiage•O to them. could result in the destruction Trail (like dune "'•ggy ~ocus· I ol many of these re·-·-s " entbusiast.S e seeri" en• I' I urrs to hike ...._ '-" ' vironmentalists led by ttte '--=;..;:;===~• -' through Red k Canyon," \ MOSS IS adamant in con- 1 Sjerra Club pressure the state Parks and Recreation Com-argued Robert Ham, vice· tending that the canyon should J;le~eot of Parks and mission in early Ju]y. presideot of the lifomla Off-be classified as a park. He Reereation into e x·c 1 u din g After those hearings, the Road Vehicles ASsoclation, in says this would not totally ex- their vebicle~rolii almost all co~mission wiU de c l de an interview ... To appreciate clude the oft-roaders. portjOn.s of region'~ state wh ther to make Red Rock it at all, you've got to be on a "The.re is a dirt route ·~· I · Ca <\n. a t,700-acre preserve trail bike or dune buggy.~ I througl\ the area that can be Now, tbey.sal they're draw-betW~n Mojave and China 1 But Larry Mon, Soothem used. The recreational vehicle -le want ~ccess to the en-prevl!>usly l!(lde Q~-"""' ol tue. conym. bolh parka to dune bugies Caught in the middle ts the and trail bikea. ~Earks .. aod Recrealloo.Jle~.U..eeok>gislaf«ced ment. lt.t o!Ocials have been cancellation of a p1...!&I in that pn6itlon before. off-road vehicle area at the Most re<enUy, the Sierra new Point Mugu State Park in Club mounted a campaign to Ventura County. force parks officials to clamp "They're simply trying to do~ on off-road vehicle usage phase us out," complains at the 480,00D-acre Ania· Ham. ••sut we can't let them• Borrego Desert State Park in do it at Red Rock Canyon. San Diego a~1Riverslde coon-Wben · the department pur-1 · ties and at~ Beach State chased it in 1919. they prom- Parr m San Luis Obispo Coun-ised us we 'd be 'able to con-- ty. tinue using it and now it looks T T CAMPAIGN resulted like they're going back on in the c I o s u r e ot many their word. ·ever .tastes:. .. , . • . < .~ .. ,. .. . , - .. . ' ' • .·, i· .. If you checked ~ny one of the above, better check your cigarette, too. We'd like to offer an alternative. Namely, a ~wikb io the refreshing_ taste,Q..lS_a_lem. ·Sale.ms Natural Menthol Blend refreshes your itaste naturally fromthe f I rst puff of the day to the last. We insist on using bnly natural men· thol,.not the kind made in laboratories. Since our golden tobaccos are naturally grown, it's only natural our menthol should be, too. It Is this blend of naturally grown in· greclieots that turns the taste of coolness into a taste that's "naturally refreshing:' A taste that's not scratchy, harsh or ~ot. A taste that refreshes like Springtime-••• . everytlme ... anytime! • • • • ese. t ~ a e I f • • • .. • • • • -• Salem's Natural Menthol Blend means naturally refreshing taste. Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smokiilg Is Dangarous .to Yo111 Heahh. ... KING<19 mg. "tal", t3 mg. nicotint. SUPER KING, 21 mg. "ta!", t5 mg. nicotiit. ev. per cigltette. FTC RltJtrt FE8. '71 ' 1 • I D.llLV Pn.or -For the Record-UC Irvine Elects PoHtial Note• Dymally to Speak af OOC Death Notices ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTIJARY U7 E. 171h SI., Colla Mesa 1111118 BALTZ-B,RGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 1'1:-NSO Costa Mesa MloUJ4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Meu u l-J43.1 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTIJARY 11111 Lapa• en,.. Rd. lM-9111 •• PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery M-..,. CUpd llllhdllc\llewDme Newport Budo, Collltnda -• PED FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 111111oho A'"' w----8MITBS' :ORTIJARY a!Molo 111. H..u.,too-uta For Sports The DAILY PILOT II the -per for rport.s 11.., the Orqe o...t ... complete stallsllcs C11 local borne and aw1y gamts, 1taH coverage, more exclualve ttorles on Orange Coast sports than any olher I o c a If y distributed l101rlplper. Coast Man Sentenced For Hashish SANTA ANA -A Newport Beach man accused on anest of having two pounds of hubllb In hll .,.-.., bas been aenl<Dced to two monclls la Orange Qiunly Jail and placed on Urte yetrs pro- bation. Superior Court Judge James Tumer sentenced M I ch a e 1 Paul Weagley, 28, of 166 W. 16th St., alter the defendant pleaded guilty to chal'I .. of poueuion of m1 r J Juan a. other allepliml Inwlvlng drup _., dl .. I ...... Judie Turner ordered lden- Ucal probation spell wllh a onHllOlltb Jail lenn f o r Richard Paul Schullman, rl, of the same· Newport address. Schullman pleaded guilty w identical drug charges with dl!:missal of other allegations being ordered by J u d g e Turner. Dental Care Provided SANTA ANA -Dental care will be provided Jail Inmates and prisoners at the county'• honor farm under a new policy adopted by the Orange C<unly Board of Supervisors. The dental program and other changes ln medical care for prisoners follows the review of a 1970 Grand Jury report, County Acbnlnlstrative Officer Robert Thomas said. ' Officers Bv O.C. HUSTINGS Of .. ~ ........... ' Student voten al UC Irvlae Slate Sen. Mervyn llymally have pk:ked three candidates (~L<>s Angeles) will di""'-'• the · legislaU.. process as from a four-man slate to fill practlced -~ our atate capitol top poe:JUons in s t u d e n t in a ~ achedultd for DOOO governmeot during the 1973-74 ORANGE COUNTY Thuraday la lhe Orange Coast year. COiiege FOMD. Ril talk ls James Armando Banuelos of open to the public without charge. La Habra, a junior majortng * In comparaUve culture, waa County Park · SlllRU!:Y KNUPPEL of elected Associated Students Fullerton, wbo once played la president. B d U a band led by Jimmy Whet· Two olbers -ran with U gel p more, bas been appolated treasurer of the Friends of BanueJos on a platfonn pledg-Whetmore Conunlttee. She ed lo "change" and slrengthen 22 percent was appointed by the the ASUCI also were elected. bandleader. taimed • pollUcian. They ar .. Raymond Joel SANTA ANA _ A 1m.74 Mra. Knuppel also set"Vea oo Swartz of Lakewood, a JUDior budget request for 15,4 million the RepubUcan Slate Central majoring n social ecology, and baa been presented to Orange Ccxnmlttee. The GOP state Lee Howard Solow of L<>s Qiunty admlnbtratlve staff by aenawr also ajlpolaled her 10 the coun"' Department of lhat post. * Angelet, a junior s o c i a I •J Harbors, Beaches and Parks. science major. 'Ille requested sum is $972,131 STATE SEN. Denn ts air piracy la wl1Jch serious in-..iJ no lllr1her beertngo on the $2,8'/ll bWion !tam califomlans I Juri '"' dealh occ:un. ~Ject ..,, meded. to pay !or those ~ SB ao, designed to protect "Balderdash," says the coo-+-==== I hunters, a.rcbera and others greuman. Re has called for . • tranaportlng w..poos fer sport further publlc hearlago. or hobby, maku provlalons !or * transporting firemm or otller REP. CllAIG Boomer (&- weapons by~ ::.i ~ i U: REP. IL\IR Burgener (Ro-coiled $l,srl la lases per I ANTMOllY -LS Rancho Sama Fe) bas crltlclz. Cllifornlan,) the flacal ear . HAllOI CllflD ed a, ~ by the Civil beginning J 1. o.U: :=-r Ji,::.. i AenioaUtlco Board (CAii) lo Bui, Hosm.,. polats out, la ,., 17141 t7W>SI · ellinlaale family and youth 19'14, the federal government fares on airl1nes by June. figuttfJ to pour $4.079 bl11ioo ln· ·~~·· The CAB bas ruled that to California la varioos aid ,,._ 17141 77'·- reduced fares on domestic• ~-~~ama~=w~h~l~I ~e=col~lect~~lag~~~ fllghls for youths and family~ members di flCriminates against those wbo do not qualify. In Ila rullng, ac- cordlng to Burgener, the CAB Will Rogers Tour Slated SPEND r.llTHER'S DAY AT Swartz, elected executive or 22 percent over the current Carpenter, who files his own vice president, served on this year's budget. plane, is piloting a group of year'• student government. Director of Harbor s, anti-air piracy measures· Solow, who edJta the "New Beaches and Parks Kenneth through the Legislature. SANTA ANA -A bu.! e1:- •·--"~~ devel~t, One, SB 59, which grants ufirporter G/nn CJlotel POOL-SIDE BUFFET 10 AM·l PM CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BRUNCH University" student newpeper ._....._. U1Ka.1 .,r ... -· cur.don to the home of late ~ -"-•·-·--and operat1'on ex-·peace officer statu.s to airport I~~ vi -•d t f ·~~ · ffi h be tor and American humorist was e C\:'.i.e\I ce I"'_. en o penses for the f 0 11 0 w1 n g security o 1cera, as en ·•·•-• aerv1 aaed b th Se ate d Will Rogers is plamed May 19 ~R .... .. _ .... ,. pa y e n an the ~--1 W Bow ,...._ all As bl t' by u= es . en &.."ent voters p J ck e d Mile Square in Fountain aw s sem Y ac ion. ~ Memorial M u s e u m Foun-Tlmothy Shawn Kelly of Valley, $215,259: University SB 54, SB 56 and SB 60 all datlon. Regional Park in Irvine, have won approval from the Dawney for the administrative $IS3,9lO; Laguna Ni g u e 1 Senate Judiciary Committee. A bus will leave the museum vice presidency. Kelly, a Regional Park, $ 3 5 o '5 81 ; SB 54 includes passenger at 200'l N. Main St. in Santa junior history major defeated Sunset Harbor, $ 1 0 4 '7 l 5 ; areas of airports among those Ana at 9 a.m. Cost of the trip, BanuelO! s lated candidate Niguel Beach Park, $70,469; areas where It is a crime to including lunch, is $7 for foun- Al. Beach M•• throw I d dation members and $8 for Dave Miller who served Oil ISO • _,119. or re ease nauseous an non-members. Newport H a r b or maln-offensive substances. this year's ASUCI Council. tenance and operation is listed SB 56 C3Us for life im-ReservatioDs and further in· 10 AM-3:30 PM . DINNER 4 PM-10 PM IN NEWPORT· IRVINE 18700 MACARTHUR BLVD. IOf'POSITI THI AllPOITI UJ-2770 . E~ed to open seats on the at fZ$7 ,936, up $62,578 over prisonment without parole for fonnation may be obtained by 1973-74 student council were : _:curren~~~l~11pe1~~tci~in~g~. ____ .:_· _::-an~yo~ne":.:co~nv:':';cted~'.'..."of'..:'.:an'....'.'.act::..'of'.'___:c:'.al'.'.'.ling'.::' !..'.the".'.'..lllllSeUJJl'.'.'.".~'.'.'.'..' .:&1:MOO.:::. ::'.~==============='===;== Dave Aullcino of Van Nuys1· representing fine arts; Pete Getoff, a social ecology major from Vaft Nuys, representing intencbool curricula; Don Frambacb of Long Beach, blolotlcal sciences: Debbie Williama of Irvine, humanities; Margaret Schwartz of Beverly Hills, IOClll aclmces, and nm Stephenl o! Belmoot and Howard Bldna of Northridge, councllmen·at-large. B o t h Stephens and Bidna are social ecology majors. UCI'sLibrary Friends ' Present Book Awards A former FBI agen~ a lAitheran minister, a husband- wUe writing team, a fonner educator and two UC Irvine htstocy professors are the wJa. ners in the Eighth Annual Author and Book Awards sponsored by the Friends of the UCI Library. The awards hon oring Orange County's top authors for the past year were an- noonc<d Monday night. Honored authors are : -Jane and Paul Annlxter of Laguna Beach, co-authors of "The Sea Otter." Since 1955 thia husband and wife, both recognized writers lhemaelves, have collaborated on nature novels for young readers. -,John P. Diggins of Laguna Beach, ''Mussolini and Fascism : the View from America." A native of California, D i g g i n s is an associate prOfessor ol history at UCI. His book has won the American Hlstorlcal Association's John H. Dunning Prize for 1972 and was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in History and National Book Award la History. -Manhal Houts of Laguna Beach, ''Common Law Md the Dealh of Sir Barry Oakes." A former FBI qmt and once legal altacbe to lhe Amerlcon Embassy la Ha•--11 a practictnc _.,,.,, Ril book Is an -· of the 1913 murder of Slr HllTJ OU:es and the su1-uenl trial 61 his son-Jn.law lhll polnll 1111 lhe meanla1 of the Common Law System. -.Jon Jacoboon of Fullerton, "lttamo Diplomacy : Germany and the West, 1925- 29." D. Jacobson is an associate professor of hl&tory at UCI an4 has been with the campus since it opened in 1965. Hts book has been awarded the American Historic a 1 Association's George Louis Beer Prize for 1972. This work depicts the personaJlties and politics of the Lacamo Conference of 1925 with an historical in- terpretation and synthesis of a cr!Ucal era in European diploma"'. -Vick R. Knight , Jr. of Fullerton, three volume en- vironmental science series: "It's Our Future," and "lt's . Our Choice." A former elemen- tary school teacher and assis- tant superintendent of the Placentia Unified S c h o o I District, Knight collaborated with John E. More in writing these books . Currently work- ing as a real estate investment coonselor, Knight bas been in- for med that his books have been accepted as the olflclal text in California elementary schools. -Rev. Thomas Mails of El Toro, "The Mystic Warriors of the Plains." A native son, Rev. Malla not only wrola hll boolt on lhe culture, arts, crafla and r.IJilont of Ille Plalns Indians but dmr and palaled all the Ul-atlonl. H I s palnllngo have been featured la one-man uhlblls bolh la Los Angeles and Sanla Fe. He ls author or 18 boob la lhe religious field. STILL ONLY $2.65 A MONTH ' Even On Prl~ Alone The DAILY PILOT A molar home loan <1td the Simone~ Sp1cfdl services.for SJ1 eclal people. to'"'111da_.hamoatapdprloa, bat I had to..,.. fael.Soleallodt11emanaavattllebanlr,p._.t..i1111 _,to ldm. Ba aalll, ._ m down,' and la hall an lloor lhad lbe-111, and the neatcJ., Ibid lhe-r I II 'I Nei say la I Die an. I ~ tro1 sev s chij c la Riv QUI diso 197: ~ poo spo • s m~ rec dl\I Ba: '°' tiOI Co! dee ~ Inc em its wh o! Cal me est COi rel FOICI Denre11e.t Late Newcastle Wave Detected ( ECOLOGY) in San Bernardino a n d. Riverside counties since a quarantine to control the disease was imposed In March 1972, the spokesman said. Newcastle disease is fata l to poultry but not to humans, the spokesman said . JOCKEY CWB 51111 Tops In Hermony & Originality I NIGHTLY! Mon. thru Sat. N• CM'Wtfe .w ... e RolJte Opposed LOS ANGELES (AP) - A Los Angeles City Council com- mittee says it opposes routing San Bernardino Freeway hlgh-1"''"·' •peed buses lbrough downtown Lo.s Angeles traffic in their ex- clusive street lanes. The commHtee, 1"jeetlog such a bid from the Southern California Rapid ·, T r an s it Dlslrlct, said that the besl It would n!OO!llmend would be installation of tow-away signs and stepped-up p o I i c e lane clearing efforts. The RTD compWned, however, that "failure to pro- vide priority treilment fol" the estimated 17,llOO public -I riders on this lacillty could spell the destb knell for the busway.'' ' e Penel Preposelil SACRAMENTO (AP) - A commission with veto power over developments 1n · a 200,000-aere slice of the Santa Monica Mountains would' zero in on subdividers and large landholders, Its author says. Freshman Democrati c Assemblyman Howard Berman Blid that two major changes In lhe"blll made fl dif- ferent from a similar blil kill- ed last year and.may cut down small landowner objections. A ROSE FOR MOTHER Son •• -..-,...i.f.- LUe •nd sweet temrtty. A 1"0tht.r1s tnder '°"9..,.. lerdl To bins Mrdllldrn's"'1s- No other gift can uy It bettw than ,.,_ ro-. Each gift.boxed with a special Mother'• Day poem. Gold color roM pin, $3. M1tching earringa. $3. l-*A"*1c«f WM""" a..,..., ... CNrtt ...._h l!Wlfillll -1 Al'Mf'kl• ..,.._ SLAVICK'S JC\1.-tlcn SlnCt! 1911 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT IEACH -6-44-1 llO 0... MMfy aM ,rilfly, M a.II\. It f 1a ..... Wiit! lotatlllrn or: Twrotnet, °"""'' La C.mtol. ~ ...,...... AIM: ,SM OllOO and I.ti Vton. I • Readin', Writin', Rockin' T-. Illy 8, 197S DAILY PILOT f It!)s All Military· Sclinauzer W at.ches National Security may read something like thi s: "Private Hargrave rePQl"\lng for duty, sir." "At ease, private. Perbap:1 you have been wonderb\ll why u.m, and -.,, me I wou!dlll.Mvt H & DJ ..... way. Bui -beR, -l'ffiai. Hargr<>ve, wbal yoo. ml lhe enemy, doo'I -la lhal llannlbol !iil'I 11!1Y -.,Y aclmouaer. "IWINIBAL BAS \, e e a trained to deteet the -.. elephants." "Elephants, Bir!" "Right. u any enemy aaents try to Infiltrate Ibis post disguised .. mahouts, Han- nibal wtll llllilf them out." Mother's Day 3 Days Away Think For Weekender Advertising Phone 6424321 UDlfJD ' l ' • I • I T-. Mll 8, b .. . •• • • • .. UCI Reveals ~Extension Classes .. ••:•, UPI T.-.Ole fltllek Change Elliot Richardson, in role of secretary of de- fense, takes part in ceremony in Pentagon courtyard. Richardson has been named to re· place Richard Klein- dienst as attorney gen- eral and take eommand of Watergate tnvestiga• lion. Publicity Scheme Not 'Legitimate' BOSTON (AP) -As far as LeRoy E. Christie is con- cerned, the whole scheme was Illegitimate.. , A series of hand-written notes on perfumed pink sla· tioneey were mailed to him from Pittsburgh, Pa., the first one reading: "Hi' Guess what? I think we're going to have a baby. I'll Jet you know for sure. J." mEN CAME a second note : "Well it's definite. The baby's on the way. What do you thi nk about a name?" And a third: "Here's a pic- ture of the baby. Let me know what yoo thlnk." A week later, Christie finally got an explanation - a PeMsylvania firm sent the notes as part of a campaign to introduce a new project. CHRim:E, A construction company executive, was not amu.sed . Manied and the father of three very legitimate children, he sued the r111Tl in federal court {or $50,000, claiming he suffered "extreme m e n t a I anguish, emotional distress. mortification, anxiety a n d agony." The !ollowlng list ol 11ctM- tles 10< the moolh ol May 1131 been announced by lhe UC Irvine Ex..,,.loo Program: TODAY "l(lbeh _. NIWl&o .. Jet Y. 01111'1'11140. a .S.., rnMlletlng ~, Huglln Alru•ll c..-, FllllfrtOl'I. P•rt of • UC: lrvlnl E1111!11111an Mctwt Ml'I"'" .1.....-A"*'ktn lnt.t,_I OurfMI world Wtr' II: A soci.HJttor'lu4 ,,.. qltflnl/' 7.f:Jll p,11\.., Rll'I. I 7 1 , H.-ntnltl.. KfU, UC lnolM UlftllUL Slnelt tcllnl,..., 5'.Jll. "Hl1lorlc•I NcllHolOOY hi Soulhtrn Ct111orlllt,'' Frtnlllln F_,,.., M.A •• profftaor o1 AnfhrGPOtoay, CaUtornlt 51•1• Unl~lly, L11n9 •tech.. Ptff of • uc lrv!M ex""lian lectur• "''"" "A,rclloffOMivy tod Enlltr-1 of Or•• c-l'f·" 7.f:IO ,. ...... Rm. 1t4, Pfl~kil Sclefic:es llldg,, UC lrvl1111 ctmpw. Sl"Dla idmlnlon, IS, ''TM Procau of AMtr.1Ctlan1 j.rt II," Judlty H1l1. M.A., lti1tructor In Art H11tory, Gl.....Ula CClfeoe. Ptrt of t UC lrvlM EXIMSlon 1-.CIUrl I• r I • I , "AldlHckeY w.d enwlr°""""'t ol Qrangt C-tw." 7.f:ll p.m •• Rm. UM, Pfly1lc•I Sclane:n llcllt.. UC lrwlM camp111. Slngle ..imf11ian, $5, "Tiii Proctu of Ab$1r9Cllan: Pwt II, " Jlldllfl H•ll, M.A., Instructor In Art HllfllirY, Glendlle CoHtQe. P•rt of a UC trvl1111 Ext1n1lon 1..c1urt·fllrn H rln, "Encoo.ml.,. Wllfl Art/' 7.f:JO p:m., Ut· II• The•lrl, Corona dtl Mtr High Scllaol, 2101 Et11b11,1ff Drift, NtwpOrl 8MCl'I. $Ingle iodrnlulan, S2.75. "Dv•ry," Edw1rd D. NltMn, M.O., •l$0Clti. cHnleal profes•or" Deparl· mertt ol GYllKOIOll\' •nd Dbllelrk1, CtHlornl1 Collt1119 of MtdlcJn1, UC 1rw!M1. P1rt ol 1 UC lnlne E•d'11Wo(! IKhK• Mrltt. "SCltflllflc Meellclnt For Tiie L.llyrntn: TN Endocrlnie 5'f'""','' 7·1D .p.m., 5opt1ornor1 L.tcture Htlt, Medic•• sur11t I a1c1o.. UC lrvlilt carn-P<Jt. s1111111 tdmlnlon. u . Wl!ONESDAY, Mly' "Mft'9"'1 •nd Acqublllon1;" MIC:Net Chrla!IMIOfl, LL .. I , tllwney, Wllltr, H•rP.OJa f, Cflrl1tl•nto0n, Newport Such; DeMll Kltrln. J.D., wptr"wfior, T•• ~rlmenf, Pl'•ctlclng C.P.A. with Ern11 &. Ernst, NIWPOl'I IHCh. PIM of • UC Irvine Ellltflllon llclllre Mrln, "Elffcll,... Alllef of Corpor1i1 Tt1t tlld Flnand •I Pf'061em1," 7·10 p.m., Rm. 174, c~ $d....a 1169 .. uc trvlnt umpul. $/n;lt Mtrnl1tlon U.JO. "UOOtr•l•ndlng "'°"'"l An•IYllcal Aopro.tehn to Fiim, lf'llm: "Blow· Up," di rected bf ~·~Ant. n!onl),'' Ptul Frlllw, Ph.D., tul1l.t11I professor of Engll$11, C~n CDl!ege. P•rl of I UC lrVlnt ExttflSion IKtur• lllm Hrles, 7·10 p.rn., Am. 100, Socltl Scltnc1 Htil, UC Irvine c1mpu1. Single Oldmlttlon, $.SO. ldml11!°"', $5.50. "Clleet ... llnd Lian,'' s,_· Cr•lt· ll•IN W1r<Mtl •nd rtl'l8tf, Lion Country Stl1rl. Part Of • UC LrwlM Exten1lon "'""' Hrlff, ''Wiid A II l m •I• I Coo1erv•llon, Mi"'ll'mtnt tnd Stttu1," 7-9:JD p.rn., S.ftrl C•mp Theitrt, Lion COU111rf Sal1rl, 11119 Molllton P•rt;w•y, L.logiUIMI Hllll. Sln8'4! tdmiMlon, M.50. "Analgnlc1.'' Henry ll!;llloll, M.O., Ph.D., 11rofHloOI" •nd clltlrman, Otpart· menl ol PharmK011111l, Ctlffornl• Col· lf<ll ol Ml'lllclM, UC rvlM. Ptrt of t UC lntlllll Ell'-'«! ltdvre ..,. .... "Mtcllanllml of Drvg Action." 7-10 p,m., 5optiomon Lectvrt HtU, Medleal 's'i!!I .,1 B1 ldll., UC lnlnt c1mpU1. ·-• m nlon, U.$0. , THURSDAY, MAY 11 'Employ1 Tr1lnl1111 1nd OIY91oo-mttnl/' H-1rd Wiiton, pretldtf'll, AC1m1nl1lr•tl,... AIHtrch Auocltln., l'nc. A ~•Y UC Irvine E1<lenslon Hrnln•r, t ::JD 1.m • ...i :JO ~rn., Holldlw IM. Br111ol St. •I San 0 Fr-ay, CO•'-MIU. FH: '"· Inc udes lunch, 111rkl119 •nd ln1lr1.1Cllon11 1Nlt!rl1I. ''Thll Complt11""Fc.ikt1nver," MICIUl~I Coot11y, minkltn. P•M of 1 UC 511ttwldt E1tlensfon IKtwe Mrlti, "Tiii Folk Minlcla111. PIM II" 1·10 p.m.. Am. 161, Hurntnftln. Hill, UC lrvlnt Ctl'NIUL Slnglt tdmlulon, $4.$0. "Wfltl I• !nc:lu:;d In TM C11rrtnl ArHflll Of Pltnnlng Toofl And Tklml· oun?," Cltl.ldt GI".....,, OtMMr, Gn.-, Gruen olus Auoclafft! Sin Frtnc:li.co. P•rl of I UC lrvlM xtl!llllon lect11rt serl.,, ''Tiii Pltnnlno ll:twollltlon In southern C•l\tom\1: Wtlil NIW Rolff for Loc:1I Governm..,1, tM O."'IOPtr the Clllren?,'' 7·10 o.m., Rm. 10, soc11I Sclen(• H1n. UC 1rv1nt CllmpUI. Slngl• tClrnl,tlO!I, M.50. "lnlKll0111 of--.;. Genll-lntrv Tr-.cl flncludlng \t-reat DIHIH1).'' L1urr D. T"""°"· M.0 ., ~•socl11<1 oro-fenor of M!dlclne, C•ll lornl1 Collllfl• nf Medicine. IJC lrvlnt. P1rt of 1 UC 1 .. 1ne Extensl°"' IKturt sen.,, "Selin· tlflc Metlkl1111 For Th<! L~Ym•n : Tflt Genllourln•rv Svttem." 7·10 p.m .. Lee· lul"ll H1H, Ml>dle>1I Suroe t Aldg .. UC lrwl1111 c1m~. Sinai• •dmls11on, lS. "ll:IDAY AND SATURDAY, MAY 11 AND 12 "A M1!1rl1l1 Wor k s ho11 on 1nc11v1du1tlrl11Q: Ga,.,.., Le • r n r n P. Centers and lde11 Which W0<k, • A-rl Dtw, Ed.O., president, Institute IM the Oev.IDQ<T\lr'lt DI Hum•n R•IOUrces and 1l1ff. A two-<l•w -ekend workshoa, Fri .. M1v 11, 7·10 i:i.,..,; s.r .. May 12. 9 t .m.·12 :30 p.m .. l· •:JO p.rn .. Am. 178. Hum~nltles H1U, UC Irvine c1mPU1. FH: I.JO. FRIDAY, SATURDAY tnd SUN DAY, MIY 11, 12, •ltd 13 "Tiii Brl!1$h Prlm1rw School: A Worklhop CHow ti Can Wark For You),'' Robert Daw, Ed.D., prn.ldenl, ""'"°"" Growlfl tnd Rkk Tllltlnq, Part Jt.'' ,..._..., Jo Woocifln, ll!;d.O., ..ocltfe proft1tor of l!duc•tlan. C•llloml• Sl•I• Unl-llty •t Lono lll•d•. Fr1dri, 5:JO.IO l),m ,/ S.turdty, ' 1.rn.-rl p,m .. 4-18 p,m.Jt Sundly, f •.111.·1 p.rJI,, Multl---l'Ol'l'I. Yorbli Lindi Oblrkt Llbr.,.y, lm2 L-.:>rlw, Yorbll Lklda fee: Mt. SATURDAY, May l2 "Marttlt11111 b'f" Oblklfva." G1111tfltt' w. l(ltut. l"fl.D .. rnantol"D director of Ille lllltillllt lor Adw•nctd Plint.1lllQ1 '""'''"~' ~lf•nl to American w.c! EW"CIOMn llNM. A -.dliy UC ln lllt Edtonlion lllmiMr, 9:30 •.rn .. 4:JO p.m., Rll'I. !OD, 5od•I Scledu Hill, UC IMlll Cll'l'!Plol'· FM: S3S. lnclvclel ll.llldl Ind Pirt.11'111. '"UtHIIlna Tl~ !ffectfytfy,'' Hll\lt~rd Wllllln. pr t '1 I cf •fl I , Admlfthtrttl,,. RHMrtli AtAAcl•tl!". Inc. A OfltV'••• UC lrvl1111 E~ Mml_, t :JI •.m . ..ol:lO p.m. Gold Room, ~ r.11"1'1· "'°"'' UC lrvlM ctmPW. F"; SJS, ln-duclts kmcfl, 0trld1111 •nd lnstrvctklMI mtl•rl•I. "HOW To Save Mowv Wt1tn Tr1,,.I· lno Abnl9cf. .. Robert •nd .IOM W1tldn1, 111thor1 .fll Ttle Wor1cl Trtvtl Pl1-r. A -4tw Ut: trvrrit EJrt-lfNI Ml'l'll,..r, l·S l).m., Rm. 140, Skl•I Scllt'IC« Lab., UC lrvfne Cll'l'IPVlo F": COUpl.,, Slf.5&1 Slnaln., SlO.SO. MONO.t,Y, MAY 14 •·une1ertlllldlng ttw Slock M•rkel," e•-A. i.r•llClllll, ".s.. J. o., fn•l\llllf(, Mtn'lll Lynch. Pierce, Fen-r11r • $ml111 Inc., trlHloorl S..Cn. PIM of 1 UC lrvlnt Elffenslln IK!urt Hrln, "ln'lfttmenl Alltrn.11 ,,.,: A Com.. parlMll'I of Current lnvalmet1! DP. oartunn1 .. :• 7 • 10 o.m., Rm. 101, Pll'f'lcal $denc:n 8111(1.. UC lnilnt c:.mDUl. Sin!llt .aml11lon, W.lO. ' "Tiii Affirmall...._ Obllo•tlan to lntt11r••• PVOlk Educalkin: Pvbllc $qloal.I C•n't L.tt 'Al' Do It,'' SI'™"' C. 5111111. LL.9., r1ltrff, Work~'• 1.GmPtllWllOfl . ~tll eo.rd, Depart• mtnl of Industrial Rt11llonl, Siii• of C•lllOl'nla. Ptr1 of • u ... LrvlM E1t· I-Ion IK!urt Ml"in, "Edvc•llon tnd 1111 LIW,'.' 7 • 10 p.m .. Am. 100, Socl~I Selene:• ".u. UC lrvlnt CllllpU$, Sfngl1 •dmlsslan, 15. TUl!'SDAY, MAl' 15 "Tht lmpt.o;l of the 1n11rnment ot the J • p 'n::.;1 Mmtrlcan Community," Gtorllt K lw..it. Pn.O .. tul1l•nr P<O> tenor. led B~vlOl'tl ScieftcH Ind coordln•jor• A1l1n Amtrlcan Studl"' • UC Dav •· f'trt of t UC lrwlnt Ex~ . ttn•lan ltcture i.erles, "Jaoane-A.merlQll Internment During World W1r II• A SOClo-Hblorlcal lftCll!lry,'' -I · ';)Cl l.l'l'I., Am. IT.I, Humanltln Hall, UC rvlnt """""· Slngl• ..irn11slon, M.$0. "Tht Futur1 of Archteoloow ·~ Enwll'Wlmtnt of <>rtr111t County,' CPlrf1IOPher Drover, M.A .. tnlhrgpology in1tr!,1Cfor, Cyprn.s JIH'llF Coll111D11, find G•n J•mn, M.S:1 b oloow division cMlrmtn. Or•noe 1.ot1 COllfllt, P1rt of I UC frvlM Extension IKl11rt Hf'ltl, "ArchMotovY •.-d Enwlronment of DrtnM \..Qlllltv,H 1 • f::JD p_.m., Rm. 104, PIM~I Scltrl<t 1169., U<.. llVIM cern- PUI. Sinai• •dmlnlon. U. "MUMVm Without Wtlls: Progr•m IV," Fllr'llt: "Lt CortlvJ.ler" tnd "Tiii Gr-... Ttrnlllt'I.' .ludftr. Hilt, M.A .. ln-11rvctor In rt H story, Gltndile Collaot. Ptrt of • UC lr'Ylnt Ell'9nllO!I Jectur•IMrn Hrln, "Encounter Wllfl Ari.'' 1 • r:JO p.m.1_ Lll11t Tlle•l-rf Cor°"' del Mu M111fl Sr:hool. 2.10' Ea1!blufl Drive_. NtwPOl'I Betcfl. Single tdmlulon, Sl.7,, M~~~J:J;te ~ !; ,.!'J:~ C•il'i0r'nf1 College of Medldnt. U1.. lrvlM. Ptrt of a UC l_rvlM Ext-Ion 1-.ctvre Hf'ie., "SC:1tnHtlC Mldlc.IM for ll'jt Ltvmtn: The EnclocrjM S'f'ltm." 7.10 p.m., ~ Ltclur• HtU. Medic.al SllrVll I Blda., UC lrvl111 ctrn-~ Stnglt lldmlulon, S.S.. "Aw1r-.. ind Vl1u1I Ptt"«Ollon.'' Judllll Hiii, M.A., lnttruclor In Art r.f1!ory, Glend•lt ColltQI. Plrt of t UC rvlnt l!'xMnllon IKIV,..fllm Mrlfl. "Encoun!Bf' Wllfl Art,'' 1.f,JO p.m., ~:..T~:i'~t.= D~,~i{,~ eff(h. Slngtt tdmlSlfon, 12. 5. "Test11,'' Donald Martin, M.D .. auocl1t• prolalor of S 11 r 01 r y {Urology), CaUlornlt Colleot o I Medicine, UC lrvlnt. P1rl of a UC lrvlne Ellltnslon lecture iar!n, "Sc:ltn-llflc MedlclM For Thll Ltymtn: Thll ElldOCrfnt 5vsllrn," 7·10 P . m •1 Soo11omOr11 Leclu,.. Hill, Mac!lc• Surqe I Bldoe., UC trvlnt Cll'l'IPlll. Slnole •dml11fon, 15. WIONESDAY, MAl' 16 "Undtrllt ndlna Mowln: Antlyllc•I AllOl'Okhlll OI Fiim, (Fiim; "If.'' dlrKted llY Lln1h1w "'"°'"°"/ "lffo For Condo(:!,'' OlrKled anCI wr llen by Jean VIOO), Pa11I Frhltr. Ptl.D •• tl511· tan\ profeuor of E"Yll1fl, Chapm•n Coll-. P•rl of • UC rv!ne £x"!en1lon lectur.-tllm 1er1t1, 1 · 10 p.m., Rm. 100, SO<.l•I Science H•ll, UC lrvlfll c1m11111. Slna!t ldml11lan, SS.50. .\ "C•11fornlt Endtnge.-.d Fish, AJ'ftf)hl· bltn1 •nd RIPllifl," J1m11 A. St. I DAY ONLY WEDNESDAY MAY 9th OVER100 PWfRS . and RUMAN TUPEZE· CLOWN 1m JUGGLERS ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS suown~s • 4:30 & 7:3o SPONSPRED BY THE COSTA MESA JAYCEES I f • "Mlllkal HlllwY of fl'lt lndlnlrl•I Wet.I,'' •rue.• (U. Uttl!J PhUll,.r llM(lel', g1Jlt•rl1! •nd compoMr.l •S wtl .. hlllori.n. ''" OI • UC :.t111ewlCI• EXl.,.llon '1Ktur1 urln\ "The Folk ~'ltn&o P1rt Jl.'' 1 -O p.rn .. Rrn. 161, Hvmanlllts Httl, UC Irvine ,,,,... ~· srno .. tc1m1n1an, $4.50. ' ''Wllit Does TM Prlv•le Pl•nner E1t· IMC! of L~t Governtntnt?,'' Larry Offne, "'91tcltnt ~ne HomM, lnc:.J Tllomu Moorl. PAl1Mr, D¥Jltllan, Moon, Samplrl, Ind lltl. P•rt of e UC 1no1nt e ..... 11on 1«ture """"' ''Tt'>41 Pl•nnl111.1 Rl'V!;llutlon In SOUtlllrn tamC•: Whet New ll:oln fol' Loc•l llftM1111 Ille Dlv-4_,, I ht 1rt?,'' 7 • 10 p,rn .. Rm, 100, SOcl•I ~ Htll. UC lrvlnt ct11'19\11, Slnglt tdml'Ulon, M.S. THURSDAY, Mey 14 "Counsellng Emptoye1," How• rd Wlbon, pr • 1 I d • n I , Admlnl1tr11t1ve ~IHlrch Anoclaltt. Inc. A °"'"•Y UC Irvine El<ltr1$1on Mmln1r, 9:30 ,.. TU•SDAY, Mty Ill "T1w ROid IKk Of"54MO),'' DoMld TtrUO Htlt, Jr., Pl'l.O., tuocltte ll'I'• fnlOr of Hl1lory, tfld dlrtelor, Asl•rt Amtrlc1n ReHtrcfl Prolec.t, C•lllornla 5ttte Collegt, Oomlngue1 Hlll1. Pert of • t UC lrvlnt Ellltn1lon lklurt Hrle1, ''J'liA-""*"'"" ln'--1 During World WW II: A SOC1o-Hl1lorktl In-quiry,", 7_,:JD p.m,, Rm. 17l , i-ll!l'Mnltln Hall, UC lrvlnt C'llftPua. Stnglt «Omlnlon. St.SO. "SOllll'l-tern At'chteology," .liek L. , Z.hnflef°, M.>.,. tlllUant prolflsor of Anltw'OllOlorY, C)lltornl• St•I• Univ.rally, 1'111191'.lon. P•rf of I UC -WEDNESDAY NIGHT* r M•k• Wedn11d1y night vour night to ••f out. At D•I Teco, Wedn11d•v night i1 Ttco Night..Yo\ 9Jf sl• t•1fv ,C•I !•cos for j111t $1.75! Thia W tdnt1d1y, driwt thru for• ftmily 1ist m••I you won't forget. At prictl you'll find h1rd to btat. NEWPORT BEACH Brlstol (Palisades) at Campus SANTA ANA 4th St. and Newport Fwy. l~ne Exltni!on 'lect11rt s • r I• 1 , "ArcKleology tnd Environ~! ot q Orllr'lQt C-ly," 7.f:XI p.m., Arn. llM, ~ f'hy1lc1t Sr:ltncn. 81cSO., UC • lrYlne ctmpu$. 51nglt .clmlulon, $S. "Museum Wlllloul Wall1 : Progr•m:I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ TUSTIN Red Hill Near Santa Ana F~y. \t.'' Fiim: "Tiie CUOlst Epoeh" and "Germ•n·Dtd•", Judlll'I Htlt, M.A .. ln1lr1.1Clor In Ari Hlslory, Gltneltle Collegt. Ptrt ol • UC lrvlne Exten1lon IKlur•IUm Hf'la, "Eneount•r Wltfl Art,'' 7.f::ld p.m.. Llttl1 TllUtre, cor-111>1 #Mr Hlgfl School, 2101 Etllbluff Drive, Newport BHCll. Slngle tclmlulon. U.7S. "Pllult•ry.'' Grtnt Gwlnvp, M.D .. Mid of Ille Mellon OI Endoulnology, proftuor OI Medicine (Enclocrlnology), C•llfoml• Cotlag.e of Medicine. 1·10 11.m., Sophomore LKtl.H'e H•ll, Medleat Surve I BldQ., UC Irvine Um· l)UI. Single Elmlnlon, $S. Kids Like To Ask Andy You can earn this high interest on $5,000 minimum two ¥ear certificates. The first year your $5,000 certificate willeam $309.15, and more for each consecutive year that interest is added to the account. You can earn $59.17 on $1,CXX,J.minimum one yearcertificate5, and as much as $51.26 on a regular passbook savings account of $1;000. More interest than banks ... more certain than stocks Plufree services .•. safedeposit boxes, notary service, travelers cheques, trust deed and note collections, and many more free services are avail- able when you have the required mi~um balance in your a~count at THE ~IG M. ' • • Plus j>ersonal service ... 'el(peri.enced and c9µipetent sav- ings counsi!lors in each office ' to assist yo'µ in planning , your Savings program. . Other oUl<.'tl In Covina, Wa~ Atcldlo, Puadena, Glenda! .. Canop Park-chatsworth and Tholltalld Oak•. • , 11 11 l - ' Robert D . .Miila vio. p,,,;,i,,,. ' Bnm<~M"""i" ' . • .ri :-i • • l I f l ! ., • • • 1 -- 'O J SAC Reags veiled. califo: bation rep la( ticrim The incent juvenl Ca life The < recei\ 18 lo class! Und subsic recei\ retun mittl\I Dr. secrer wellal 1....,.. {inaei peopli shoo! e1 SAi secti~ Diego 34 pe April , perlrr burgl perce A final) :polict time the a Th• home sugg1 again bus in pub Ii• teclm avert ., ES> .spokt India K Si v I •T • I\ •T n •P l' •S n • s • E •l c •I ~ . ( ( ( •I 1 • • I • I .I THE PICK OF Punettl t ~tw:Ja.--.s-.....-( . • • • • • ! l'UNQI -,,. l»lt WI can offr you ;, wl«9 membtnhip on our waiting list. ,, · 'On the Streets' Probation Plan To Be Scrapped SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Reagan administration has un- veiled · plans to s c r a p CaWornia's controversial pr&- bation subsidy p r o g r a m , replacing it with a tiroader an- ticrime plan. The plan includes a financial incentive feature for ending juvenile commitments to the California Youth Authority. The CY A would continue to (THE LAW) receive some offenders, aged 18 to 21, who are legally classified as adults. Under the present probation subsidy program, co u n't le s receive $27 million annually in return for reducing com· mitments to state prisons. Dr. Earl Brian, Reagan's secretary of health ct'n d. weliare, said some law en- forcement officials felt the finacial incentives "kept some people oo the streets that shouldn't be on the streets." e Burglary Down ' SAN DIEGO (AP) "I In a profit federall y funded agency , will decline to accept any new cases. / The spokesman, Barbara Fix, said two of the five of· fices in California are being closed and 12 staff members let go. One of the three at· torneys in the Escondido head- qUarters will also leave. The cutbacks were blamed on lack of funding by the Of- fice of Economic Opportunity for a land project which the organization sponsors for homeless Ind,t:~· e ~'9fier Sw,oni LOsf A!iGELES (AP) - Ricardo,Cruz, 29, a Meiican-- American activist and law stu- dent who passed the California bar· examination two years ago, finaJly has been sworn in as an attorney. His accreditation had been denied pending hearings into his background. He was con- victed in 1970 on misde- meanor charges of iflc}ting to riot and disturbing a religious service. Cruz said at swearing-in ceremonies he intended to work within the system to help the minority poor. Shakeup Thwarts ' College Fro'Tl Wire Servkes George Wasbin,gton University · President Lloyd Elliot put it this way: \0 We in- vited the ~etary ol 1Health, EdµcaUon ahd Welfare. The secretary of Defense accepted, but the attorney general ( PEOPLE ) declined. That may b e 90methlng of an historical ·first." In any case, the 6 3 5 graduates of the university's Qilumbian College of Arts and Sciences were left without a prominent commencement speaker by the cancellation of an appearance by Attorney General -designate Elliot Richardson. The versatile C a b i n e t member was invited last year, apparently because of creden- tials as secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. He ac- cepted after belng named Defense secretary. But he canceled after President Nix· on named him attorney general. * Now that Blau Starr is back in the nightclub business, she's decided to tell her life sJ:ory as one of the nation's most noted strippers. Miss Starr reopened her Baltimore nightclub after a chicken restaurant failed . She hired Huey Perry, a former West V i r g i n i a antipoverty worker, to write her biography. The title? "ntis Js My Life," says Miss Starr. She would like A n a • Margare& to portray her if it were ever made lnto a movie. * JoP, V. Lindsay and Joseph Alloto ttaveled h a t f w a y around the world and ended up touflng the Soviet city of Len- ingrad the same day. They came and went separately. Mayors Lindsay of New York and AJ!oto of San Fran- cisco toured Leningrad as guests of Vladimir Promyslov, the mayor ef ·Mo!COW. •, l. I ' I ~· . Tutlday, May 8, 1973 DAIL y PILOT II • • -. section of northeasterp San Diego, burglaries ·had pnnped 34 percent in 1971. Since last April, when a pol{ce ex- periment was launcMd there, burglaries have dr0pped 37 percent. e Se:r Offenders . . * ... The sWi&ili ·Che5s ·Federa· ;,:; tion announced it will apply to be' host at a world chess cbam- pionshlp In Stockholnt at which Bobby Fischer would put his ti· tie on the line with an undeter- mined challenger. · A $200,000 !~al grant financed the effort in which 13 1>0lice officers ~evoted full· -time to burglary, prevention in the area covering 25 miles. The officers talked with homeowners, door to doQr, suggesting ways to gua:rd egainst crime. They met with businessmen and spoke in j>ublic meetings, telling of techniques that have helped avert burglaries elsewhere. e No New Ca,es ESCONDIDO (AP) -A .spokesman says the California · Indian Legal Services, a non- SACRAMENTO '(AP) Mentally disordered sex of- fenders and convict,e d mUrder.ers judged to . be criminally insane would be locked up ln ~ifornia's state prison systemr :u;o6er a con- troversial bill infiodnced here. Assemblyman Frank~ Lan· terman (Jt.Lacanada) in- troduced the bill after ~·a cou- ple hundred patients . walked out of Napa State HoiPital" in 1972 because there weren't enough security precaution.s, e Lantennan aide sald. Lantennan's office said he also was prompted by state mental health officials who told him "it is more therapeutic" to keep such pa- tients separate from the other mental hospital inmates. ' According to rules of the International Chess Federa- tion, Fischer has to defend his tiUe in 1973. He won it last year in Reykjavik, Iceland over Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union. * JoAnne Elkins, a brown- eyed Mesa College freshman , has been named Miss San Diego of 1'73 and w i 11 represent the city in the 1\1.iss California pageant ·at Santa Cruz June 24. MiM Elkins is 5-feet~ and weighs 120 pounds. Make money at Keystone. Keystone Savings ls more than a place to save money. It's a place to make money. We're here to make your money grow. Lrstaae gifts fOll tuhA1b!e mtices fne. • Travelers ' checks with $1000 minimum balance. • Not~ry service with $1000 minimum balance. • Trust deed note collection with $1000 mln1mum bal1111ce. • Photocopy service for !mport1111t documents with SlOOO mln1mum balance. • Safe deposit boxes with $1000 mln1mum balance. • Save-by-mail postage. • Exchange checks. • Payroll savings deduction plan. • Parking while In our oWces: • Community rooms for civic, charitable 1111<1 educational groups. • h\terbr1111ch daposlts 1111d withdrawals at any of ouro!Hces. • Drive-In telle•. • Money orders. Stop by Keystone soon. Open your savings account, choose the free servlcM yo· ,,. A, want,.and get your Money Machine card. You feel rtclter at Keystone. With.good reason. . .. OKEYSTONE· SAVINGS created by estee lauder. Remember the dog-eared book of English poems you found ot o swop t;;eet ... o V{Otercolor garden of Canterbury bells end primroses .•• the Keets you reed her by the fire 7 Youth Dew recreates thet specie I memory with e Spring Gorden of Fregrence packaged in gingham and Old English florals. You th Dew' Cologne, 7.50. Fragrance Ensemble, 9.50. F;agrance Gala, 10.00. Crea\ny Milk Bath, 6.50. Bath Soap, 6.00. Cosmetics, 17 ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTINGTON IEACH ORANGE, MALL OF ORANWE Clll:RITOS 444 H. Euclid (71 .. 1 5J5-tl21 47 F11hlo11 hl1r1d 17141 ... 4.1 212 7777 Ed inttr Av1. 17141192·lJl12lOO N, T•1tl11 St. 17141 991-IJll 500 le• Cerrlt• Mill (2111 IK-0411 SMOP 10 A.M . to 9:10 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to • P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to $ P.M • . .. • , I . Ul"IT.._...1 WATERGATE REPORTER Carl Bernstein, 29 PRIZE WINNER Robert Woodward, 30 FF A President SAN LUIS OBISPO (API - A Ferndale youth, Peter Giacomiril, was elected presi- dent or the. State Future Farmers.--of America at their 45th ~ ccuention here. "'ontER'S DAY BUY today. We'll install . timtdor her use ,;:tore Mother's Day Tundiy, May 8, l~ .... . Arts and Letters Winners • NEW YORK (AP) -JaiOJi Miller's first Broadway play, -J.\.That-Champiooahlp-.Seuon," has won the 1m Pulitzer Prize for drama. It concern• the reunion of-"& high school Two P.ost Reporters ;,;- Get 'Service~ Honor basketball team with ill the 11th time an A P ing';acllvlties of l!oyo Town, coach. photoirapller wm a Pulitur, "8tlonally .......,, you t b The prize !or fiction -~ and the lourlll time In five ....... Topeka, Kan . Capifal.Joumal for hil series on cbild blrtb. Ronald Powers ol t h • ChJcago Sun.Times received the prize !or criticism on the basix of television coverage. In the _field of arbl, W.A. SWanberg'e · 14Luce and His Empire" WOD the prize for biography. II esplored the Ille of the late lounder of Time, Inc., Henry Luce. Monday lo Eudora Welty,.lor years. . • i,u 1'rankel of the New "The Optimist's Daughter." The annual awards were Yori< Times woo the Pulitur Prbie for t n tern at lo n a 1 THE HISTORY award went She lives and worts in established by the lat.e St. to Michael v----n lor «p...C reporting for coverage of .N1.11.u1a: ~ Sph'tll ~lleetl Wlaole or illdf • HAMS ")' "So Good ••• It WW: • lfal(nl You 'Tll It! Q~.· SOMSTHIN• U•CIAL FOi' MOTHER'S DAT SHOP US EARLY e· ""41dY to Servo ")With Honey fn Spice GI- .• Spiral Sl~ From Top to ~ e. W• PiCbgo end Ship from1 . e; .... , to c ... ,, • • l'WI Service Oollcalfl-, f : Imported Chu111 •nd W[nH . c.terlng ••• A SP,ec:lallty \' , 3700 L ~Hlt'••I" 'c-.. M•-6~ • 1 •IKll w ..... s ,,...,.. •• , ..... .,.. Jackson. Miss., and bas been Louls and New Y o r k Prelldent Nixon's . visit to pie of Paradox: An inquiry hailed as a leading exponent oJ publisher, Joseph Pulitzer, mainland China. concerning the origin o 1 1~==========================~ the so-called Southern school who died in 1911. Winners are The prize for e d i t 0 r i a l American civilization." 1_ of letters. chosen by the C o l u m b i a wriJing went to Roger B. James Thomas F I e x n e r trustees on recQDUUendation ~tt of the Berksblre received a special citation for · THE GENEIJAL prize !or ol a board composed ol Eagle oJ Pittsfield, Mass. "George Washlngtoo. Volumes non-fiction was shareCi this American newspapermen. and I through IV." he !dent of the · · 'l'tiere was no prize this year Year by Frances FltzGerald, a t pres wuvers1ty. Maxine Kumin was the poetry lor;edJtorlal cartooning. 32-year-old New Yorker, !or THE INDIVIDUAL awards -prize winner !or "String '"Fire in the Lake! The Viet· carryprizeaolfl,OOOeach.A T"B E FEATURE Quartet No. 3." Carter woo Try S:atlirday's· News Quiz We Dare You namese and the Americans in gold medal goes to the winner phOtOgrapby award was won a Pulltr.er Prize in 1960 for his Vietnam," and B o I to n Of the meritorious service by '1 Brian LanJter of the 0 8tring Quartet No. 2. '' psychiatrist Robert Coles, 4.3, award. The first nri"•s were:r--'-------'-------''-'--------------------------------- for "ChHdren of Crisis," r•-allllOW)ced In 1917. Volumes II and Ill. The Post became the first The Washlngton Post won Washington newspaper to win the 1973 prize for meritorious the gold medal. T b e public service by a newspaper ·new 1 paper's management for investigation Of th e gave major credit fo.r its Republican party's Watergate Watergate Jnvesligatim to tw9 scandal. Its columnist, David reporters, Robert Woodward S .. Broder, won a separate and Carl Bernstein. Earlier prize in Ille field of com· this year, they won Sigma mentary. _... Delta Chi, Drew Peanon, THE AWARD !or national Heywood Broun and George reponlng welll to lioliert BoYd Polk awards. and Clark Hoyt of tile Knight The Pulitzer Prize lar local Newspapers, for.,dlsclosure'OI reporting went to the Chicago the psyclilatrlc bac•d..I.""' ~ Tiibune, !or 1nv .. t1gation of Sen. TbomiJ El~T<i>-wting lrauds ljJlder the direc- Mo.), wblch:·'.]eci ·to· h.h . tiiln ol George Bliss, an In· withdrawal u ... Ilen)octatlc vestigatlve reporter who woo candidate•lor'~prOilclenl. the same prize In !DC. Three Tbe poigna¢:Jli4:61fe;of a ·II-persons have been convicted year-old Vlelnliri\ae·.gltl nln· In the aftermath and another ning naked and :m terror from 44 cases are pending. a napalm boxntilng· wOn the -THE SUN Newspapers of Pulitzer ·prtze iii s 'p o-t Omaha, Neb. won the prize for photography ·fof : Associated special local reporting, for an Press photographer Nick Ut, a intensive study of the financial 22-yeat-old Vi~eR. ·It was background and the fund-rais- 5 'loverly' choices • Built-Ins • Convertible • Portable ' I t Wina7day -' Caribbean Cruise for two at our new Huntington Beach Office ·. 6100 Warner Avenue in the Warner-Dale Shopping Center . May 14 thru May 19 ' ' Tocelebrateouropening in Huntington Beach, Golden State Bank will send two lucky people on a glorious 7 day trip to the Caribbean, including round trip jet flighfto Miami! Visit San Juan, Puerto Rico; St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands; Nassau. Bahamas.. J.. Come-In and register anytime during our Open House.1'olranoaction I ' nec:esaaiy. Drawing on May 19. Winner need not be presen1. • • ........... ..-~~~ . Open this Treasure Chest afld win one of 250 Valuable Prizes! Drop into our new office any day during Open House. We'll give you a key to try your luck. If you open the Treasure Chest you will receive your' prize right on the spot. No business transaction necessary."' Special Drive-up Banking Prize Portable Color TV Set We want you to disc~v~r the co.nveni.ence and efficiency of our modem, remote control drive-up banking system. As a special Inducement to try it, we are going to give some lucky person a beautlful, portable, color TV set No busi,ness transaction necessary. Just drive· up and register. Drawing on May 19. Winner need not be present.• Charter Accounts pay no monthly service charge All personal ch'll'king accounts opened during our first 30 days In business in ,Huntington S"8ach will be classified as Charter Act:ounts. On such ac- counts there will never be a monthly service charge, provided the account $f8ys active. .. ' A Souvenir For Everyone! V(.e want you to remember your good time at the Bank during our Open House so we have prepared colorful, useful "Remembrances11 for all who , vtslt·us•at any time from May 14 thru May 19. Refreshments for all! Co.me in .for a friendly visit and Join us In some tasty refreahmenta. Served every .day during our Open House. I • 3 level washing-a full size spray arm on top and bottom plus a center nozzle • Excluslva,Micro-M.eah™ filter traps tiniest food particles from re-circul8.Hon • Unique racking in .a deeper cabinet for real~ BIG loads. • A choice or cycles.. OME·sioP ........ ' ' ,• ' G,~l19n-State Olfers One Stop Banking ... G!>lllin Stat~· Bank brings to ·1-Juntlngton Beach complete personal and . e~mercilil bank.Ing services, utilizing every available modern technique to . ~~ke your ' l;:>ank1ng transactions efficient and pleasant • ~ . Ultra Modem &iltdlng; Latest Drive-up Banking System; ·Convenient Walk·up Window; . 2~.Hour Depository. More important, you will enjoy the efficient seivice , . • ' . 26 TEARS OF INllGRITT AND DEPENDAllLITT pri>Vlded by• our courteous, professional.staff. . Extended Uanking Hours In addition: io providing every modem banking facDlly, we .are olfinlng greatly [extended hours in· order to aerva you bettor. Open )louse Week, May 14 lhN Mi, 19 ' . ' . (Lobby~:DJlve-up and Walk-up.wtndowl) Monday. thrt(Saturday 9IOOA.M. tp5:00P.M. UnUl.6:00 P,M~ on Friday . . '1 -avis@brown After ·~ House wetik the aoo.9. echeduie wlll be altered somewhat, but .extended hours anc1 .Saturday banking will be l:Olltinued. I GOLDEN STATE BANK " < ! 1!. " , m.EYISION • ·STEREO· • APPLIANCES • SERVICE • SALES I COSTA MESA EL TORO i , ... , ...... , ... --I 4l 1 L 1, ...... ,, .. St. llT.,.1411 ........... • lllO(OlftlllD, !Nmto-1 ~· ,.,, Sot ••• , -· ••• , s.t. '" 646·1684 837°3830 ~r u.11 DlllGO m , . 'a-0·--ATCHID •ACTOllY AUTHO•IZID TV & A"LIANCI ll•VtCI ""'°"" .. J6l1 T • J ' Other offiqes in: Bell Gardens, Covina, Downey, Los Nietos, No. Whittjer, Pico Rivera, South Gate, W~ Covina. -11M71H11 .... F.D.l.C. ·--ltflll. "'"""'._.,.'°' ,,,,.""""-'"".,,...,., 11"1 _ - l • [ 1~ '· . - • , • • • • '~ 2 , l l ' • • • • • • • • • 'i BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tu..ur, IMY c. 1m P"' 1) Home on the Range Ta lent Roun.ded Up DEAR ANN LANDERS: When you answered that 1ad Crom Plainfi;eld who compl'"'1ed about bis mother's cooking, you missed a golden opportunity. Instead o! te~ him that hospltallty ls more im- 1 portaot ;than food, why didn't ""' tell him to ~am to cook? PiOoeering.in the kitchen can be f\m. While P.:'°cbing cows in the West, I was amazed 18t the men who could whip up a meal ib no time at all. We bad 'sheepherder spuds, sourdough bisCUils, 1 smooth, Iump--free gravy, beautiful steaks ·1and delicious coffee. When I started to cook my flapjacb:were lik~ linoleWJI squares, but when you begin like that, you've got to get belier. -Please tell your teenage-readers~a world ol adventure awaits them iji the. kitchen. A guy who can cook is ahead ·of the pacl: !or reasons that may·not come clear to' him for many yeirs. -BAR• U RANCl{i SUBLETl'E, IIL DEAR BAR U: Tbele,dllyt,a -who can't~llin-e.Hbe ... awwl<- ing wtle It'• damed .. mandatory. Thanks for the testimonial, DEAR ANN LANDERS: l\eceotly I saw anj advertisement in a respectable newspaJ)er for "oils" that pnl'liiled to awaken uanfmal instincts and arouae passion in :males." ·I read ~· ad carefully. 1be "oils" are made:of w~ blubber and secretions from skank. glands. For $10 plus tax you can get olie-third of an ounce of each. 'l1ie ad said u.e -oils -'l'eleas•-80me.....-I ·o!'-my~o<lor· that '11 "awaken the male's anbnal desireS,With a semuous power of a wave . / crashing upon tbe shore." · I can't imagine a r'eapectable neW!Jl'U)el' taking such an ad um. the product is ~e.· It ~ -·11 could solve my -biggest problem: Please tell me ii the stulJ will do any pod. -UNUICKY IN LOVE DEM UNLUCKY: 11le oils will de a IOI ol pod -lw the --lllal ~ • --~ ~ ~ ' , . .. . I tbom. They will get rlcb !rom. suckers wbo should know better. DEAR ANN LANDERS: We live in a small conununity where everyone knows eveeyooe .e~. At a dinner party last night_ a banker had a few e1.tra drinks and llarted to talk about people wbo ...... Wtre'.J$hie -financial problems. ) •'' Tbe·more,be talked the more Irritated I llecame. · Finally I told him that a banker ihould honor a code of ethics in tile san\e way lllat a doctor ls expecltd to. In otbei Won:ls, "Keep you mouth shut about your cllenls." Ills wile became angry -declared that lll<l!e)' l..,mi>'eraonai and In no way can ·u !JO Ociiipared with a person'• medical priblema. Sbo insllted that almolt l:'lf!f!Y busines1nun enjoys taltin1 about his Investments, bis profit• and losses., .In fact, she said, •1Money is the sum and substance of, lllOlll male con- versation." She was extmnely articulate but I still lhint Idle WU """'I· Your op;... im, please? -WF.s'loN, MASS. DEAR WESTON: 8-dodo tlljoJ talldltl ·alltid tlaelr· •1•id111, ...... llfe ad ether' per111f) IUbjeets. Tlda doetll'I mate It accoplable. A bubr·wtio'·'fall. to~ tk .... lld!m ... """...,.,... -···-. pmidple~.,..-...... ..-. d ..... JadpMal, ,11•1 -tlllac ltr-o -to lalt -....... "'"JT!ill-...11111 ll'•qalle ....... ....,_ ...... r &Olllpl .......... s-. ·What's the·.,.·.m,PCJt, LSD., cocaine, uppers and downe,., speed! Can you handle 11 U you're ~? Send !or Ann Landers' new booklet. "Stralgbl Dope on Di'uai·" Foreich~llllend,-I dollar bill, plus a lOll(, eel!...idressed, stamped envelop (16c postage) to Ann I.anders, Box :!Mt, Chica&<>. m. 111154. l .. • • She .Sells · Seas·hell~, ,, Stylized 1. • \ . ,, • By CAROL MOj)C)RE ~ .. ..-rHMsNH Barnacles were never more beautiful. The coolie bat shape of the prickly erustacean ls stylized by Elaine Schlup into IOlden curtlcue !ings-that re!lecl.,...- dlance and fit naturally into a single look. But why barnacles !or wedding rings! ·~Because .ol their · temeioos ·.at· lacbment," explains tbe petite goldsmith. "Tbe scallop ol the goooeneck ·barnacle r-13 ~-cup ol God's hand pro- tectln( ua, love that never.strays." The man's rings are smoother with webbing that ·resembles shave<! o!! bamacles, strands or seaweed or !oollteps in the 6and. . "Mostly tfie designs r e p r e s e n t rhythmic llow!ng,pl li!e," Mrs. Schlup· added. 1•Cooples th&.t. tiUy them go borne ' . ' i / Elaine Schlup m.oClels one ) of her 'fringe benefits.' ( · She, w,as ; i11spir~d by a / sermon to offer the liturgical design ['above) ' as the official · ba'dge· for national · cl\urch moderator. Tiny garden swivels to show full, blciom• Flip-si<led ring do~bles _ as miniature sculpture. • ... .. • •1 ' .. , . .. ' ' ' 1~. , : ··Re ecte,..· _.'{.. t ~'~ wllh a story -not just rings -colleges, presentlY the llamsdlll Arts , something beautllul that will make them and crafts Center In l<o Angtleo. . happy all the time they wear it." Mn. Schlup donated one of her NATURAL BENT liturgical medall.loos .to be lhe ollldal Other jewelry Jn her Balboa Island badge o! office o1 the Moderator of the j' shop incorporates fresh water pearir,-General Assemblr of the 'Presbyterian miniature butterflies and delicate flower Church of the Uruted States. 1 petals. SIGNIFICANCE · '' A "garden fence" pin seems more like- ly than sea motifs lor lhe mother oE four who got her masters of fine arts at Drake University in Des Moines after 15 years in the dressmaking business. 0 Artistically 1 was a very late bloomer,'' she admils. "Some force led me back.to school and everything tWTied to As and scholarships for graduate school," Her work has appeared in exhibitions :and competitions. She has taught ·m high schools, private art schools and junior .,, She describes the gleaming sunburst J effect of the cross going through a ~ faceted wreath: .v ~ "The circle is the worldi the hlghlights ·1 are areas where Ouistianity bas ' penetrated and the cross repreeents God's power going in and through. "The 12 points on the cross stand for the 12 tribes of Israel while the four in- side gold points (apostles) and pearl (purity, the seed, lhe word) cast rays out over the world ." Presenting things in an artful manner is another of her objectives. ''little 1 velve t boxes do nothing for me.'' A silver link vest and massive pen-1 dants of gold-covered sea shells stand out as works of art in her shop decorated . with hanging baskets of flowers. Rings ' are nestled in sand in the showcases. , ' ARTFUL MANNER ' '!'he 3-inch ltigh ·l!elting o1 one ring in-I ' dlcates Iler penchant !or !ree standing sculpture -"artifacts that exceed the 1 bounds of jewelry." Its centerpiece is a miniature overview of a garden that turns over revealing a single flower in lull bloom. "Nature is my mother aource d. 1 design, especlally. since moving to the West Coast with its wealth of fascinating sea ocganisms, '' Mrs.-Schl11p said. Commenting oo one ol her shows critic Beman!, Keoter said,~ "Translated intO silver and repousse necklaces and pen· dants, or !abricated into wearable ril!i• and ornaments ol gold, these works af • llnn a oommand of deslgn and technique of great beauty." It all happeru Jn her workshop -a science flCtion a,:JSOrtment of hJsslng and iW1Jliii electric plclde pols, fiery tUn· and molten metal In centrifuge. FULL GAMUT There she translates the thesaurus or goldsmithing -casting, solda'ing, lorg· Ing, m1ng, pollsbing, plating, mountllli ~ with the slrerig1lj ot. an ...u ·cr·lllt . , JIC'OClslon ot a surgtcaJ, pick. • , •I f'!bhe !~)Jtl'llft ,f~)J~~~ ciOn't ~Mn =--!~ lib la ' f<inn:~.ui""Mh. l!C:hlup, ~= mak .. her own tools when neceoaary. Her own cral-p ls so oomjJlele that clasps are bidden in the deslp or carry out tbe theme; adding Interest to the back. "Who woold tbinlc of just drill- ing a couple of h91~ ,that show?" With more sketdles dlan tlme, sbe ad• · mita to wlshlng her talent ' b • d manil .. ted ........ But as obe·wears an original, 01'118111el>- . -ta! llreastplate· --"one ol the ~· benefits of my job" -it's '1ard to tm-· agine a prettier 'advertisement for adult education. Barnacles are a frequent motif as are shells. The one at left is imbedde'd with fresh water pearls and amethyst. •J ·' • l ' Jj DAILY PILOT • Silver Screen ~ver trays-<1nd even s port s trophies for armchair athletes-will be part of the Silent Ailction at t he Thurs- day, May lO , rummage sale 1o be sponsored by tbe Women's Fellow- ship of SL Andrew's Presbyterian Cbureb in N~rt Beach. Mn. William Lee Wood Oefl) and lira. Gunnar By- .UOm are reflected in Ille ohlny merchandise to be offered along w It h clothing, home fumishings, b o o k s, plants, garden · tools, oporlB gear and jewelry from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. -• • T-, M11 8, 1973 .CHS · to .Expand Foster Homes 117 AlnllON DEEllll Herbert aald. Ra\!ler, It would • *' ..., "" ...... be mire aelectlve. A tthllt In oomnaunlty needs Eaaenllllly, th e P1q1n111 hu llrollght about a new pro-would servlce .lpOclal needs gram of aervices Io r children ma shorl term buiL Children's Home Society. Oirrently, O!S footer ...., Is 'lbe statewide family and for Infants and older dilldrto clilljt ..mce agency currently prior to adoptlm. off en a program ol pregnancy '!be npanalcm woold Include counsellog, temporary foster "Children who could or -.Id care, acloplloo aenlcea and not fit categories eervod by parenkhlld counsellog. the COUDty's foster bomel. Oo a statewide baols, said Thl.t would Include, be 111g- clistrict director Devid S. geJted, chlldren oompletlnc a Herbert, the need lor adoptlon hoapital stay-oould not yet semces bas greatly decreas· their •·--ed Each of the 10 CHS otfices return to own ~~. or · . abused dl.Hdren who s e were directed to study bow to families could not care for best use current resources. them. Rather than waste facilities, Care would generally be on funds and stalllng, e a c h the Iha district waa to survey the a short·tenn ra r n a commwllty to d e t e r m I n e Joog-tenn basi5. where these resources could TRAJNING be best committed. Planned ls a training pro- After consultation w i t b gram for foster parents .in representatives of v a r i o u a child development and dealing public and private agencies in with the child's knowledge of the county, the consensus was himself. a need for added foster care. Herbert feel s that many go FOSTER CARE Horoscope: Scorpio, Achievement Forecast The CHS program would not supplant the foster c a r e provided by lhe C 0 U D l y, Peering Around into foster care untrained or that the child and the home are not matched to the child's needs and the foster parents' ability to deal with these needs. "We can be more selec- tive," he said, "than the coun- ty, which can't always match in this way. Some foster parents work well with infant! but not older children. Some Jike older children and can't handle infants. -·Some work best with the handlcafll'ed child. WEDNESDAY MAY 9 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 191: You get results. Your en- cleevon l'"ve imprint. Know it lod don\ be frivolooa where emotions or money enter pie· lure. Stick-to principles. Ndhere to your own style. Marriage Plans Told Susan Moos and Cadet P. Scott Beaty are planning to Member or opposite sex plays key role. · · TAURUS (April ~May 20): You finish special assignment. You may also find that a rela- t.i9nship may be l't<J,ching com- pletion. Loot ahead. Make plans which could resu1t in greater self-sufficiency. Build for security. Check property values ; take inventory. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): You have more freedom of ac- tion. Journey could be on agenda. Strive lO make in- roads into new territory. Give f u 1"1 p I a y to intellectual curiosity. If you ask questions, answers are now likely to be obtain~., • CANCER (June 21.July 22): Money is much in picture. You seem abl e to make right con- tacts, to arrange conditions, to bring together persons who consummate special de a I . Specifically, you collect by refusing to make fooli!h com- promise. Leo and Scorpio might be in picture. LIBRA (Sept. 22-0ct. 22): You can do many things which, in recent past . were merely wishes. Key now is to analyze. Find what it is that really means something to you. Be selective. Gemini, Virgo in· dividuals could play important roles. Accent necessity for !change. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Accent is on achievement. Prestige rises. Goal is in sight aod family member can aid in reaching, it. Taurus, Llbra persons are in picture. Accept challenge . You have more going for you now than is ap. parent on surface. travel, fruitful study. Publish and advertise. Reach for wider audience. Your im- agination can be transformed inlO creative force. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19): Results are featured. Money, ere a ti v i t y are featured. Relationships in- tensify. Nothing o c c u r s halfway -it is all or nothing. Your individuali ty, uniqu e style ,become valua ble assets. Investment procedure i s clarified. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18 ): Accent is on legal mat· ters , partnerships, relations with public and marriage. Horizon s are broadened.· You can observe and learn. Some perso ns, who appeared in· different, act in a more Fr~ start is indicated. You can rectify past mistakes. One who serves your interests re- qu ires more attention. Don't keep feelings a mystery. The more you express yourself now, the better for all con· cemed, including you . IF TODAY IS YOUR BffiTRDAY you are drawn to law, medicine, the arts. You are a battier for justice. You s eldom d o a nyth i ng halfway-you are all wrong or all right. October should be one of your most significant months of 1973. You seem con- stantl y to attract persons born under Aries and Libra. During current cycle, you are learn-- ing valuable lesson, not all pleasant. DELEGATES from Orange Coonty attending tbe Women's Arcbilectural League State CmYentlon in C&rmel we r-e Mra. Francis Doyle and Mrs. Ari Danielian. THREE Orange Co a s t couples attended the birthday party honoring lier Majesty Queen Margrethe I ol Den- mark given in the Brentwood home o/ Consul Gen. and Mr>. Mogens Edsberg. They are Messrs. a n d Mmres. Ken Cllaney, Kenny Hanson and Roy A. McCann. "We hope to ~ able to train our foster pareilt! and match the child and the borne whenever possible." -- Other CHS aervloes will come into the picture as counseling for parents, the child and follow up counseling care provJded. Those interested in the foster parent program can contact the Children's Home Society for f u r t h e r in- formation. marry J'lt:~ St. Barbara Catholic Santa Ana. N.,.. ol the betrothal and forthcoming event bas been llll10UllOOd by her parents, Mr. and Mra. Robert J. Moss of Fountaln Valley. Her fiance's parents ol Mr. and Mrs. Bill Beaty ol Allen, Tex. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Cy- cle is such that you succeed through independence o f thought, action. Wear bright colors. Emerge from any eroo- tlontil shell. Get together with SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): Good lunar aspect now coincides with Jong- d is ta h c e comm unication, positi ve m~r: Be ·!eceptive. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): friends. f ))lvenilty, travel Is favored and so are new con-..-----m,;OP•l'lll•<s:Uuii;NliDijA~T;cS~l;;z;-T;yoii·-;s<-•;;;;;;;--"i\ Miss Moss attend~ Foun- tain Valley High School and the bridegroom-to-be w i l l graduate In June from the U.S. Military Academy, West Point. SUSAN MOSS tacts. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221: Strive to understand one who is emotionally disturbed. Look for reasons for the way some persons act. Remember a time when you needed patient, tender, loving care. Aquarius, I • ! for Mother In LARGE & HALF SIZES· from Ella Nor's, the store that specializes in those hard-to-find sizes. Sizes 3b to 4b So many beautiful blouses fo choose from you may decide on two. Unbe- lievable selection of prints and ,.~i. solids. All 9eneroully cu+ • .. = IMPORTED BOXED CHOCOLATES MOTHERS DAY IS MAY 13th ... MAKE MOM'S DAY SWEETER Give a gift that will fla!ter and compl iment • , • Hicko ry Farms of Ohio's imported boxed choc- olates. These superior chocolates shout of excellent Quality and ttste • • . the reclpient will enjoy the creamy, rich flav0<! 8cz. Ol.50 • • • l4oz. *2..50 14 oz. box available with sleeve for mailing! ff (Ckdt'1 c&!!!f • &oath~ st'PI COSTA MESA 01 ..... ..._co-.... ,_., ............... ...,. -... °"" _,.llJI Sv"41t y -4fff dlwcll 'tit S 11·"" ,.,.., S4Hf'1 I. • from $14.00 O!her G;ft ldtH • Dl!SSIS e SWIATllS e SLIP'S e IOllS e PAHT SUITS e ;GWNS UndocidH? Gin hw • ....... ooytlMo" '"' uttlllc.i.. Let ... a-. Frte 61~ Wrtp, Of c.,.,,. hffa . SHOP Nor'sHAJ,F-SJZE ·· COSTA MESA nos NIWPOIT llQ, fN.nll of ''" St.I I HUNTINGTON BEACH 14 HUtmNeTON ClllTlll IMmto ........... ) FUUllTON-ll4 01-.afelf' Motl, .rOr .,,....,,. • ....... , .. MN •• thn.. M. 1 .. t-T9tt. • Wofl. • s.t. , ... Bank•merfennl • Muterell•rte • • • YOU'RE INVITED ... .. MC MULLEN TRUNK SHOW WED., MAY 9, ·11:~3:0000-3:00 !:X .. ERJEHCE buR s\JMMEft'C0LL£CTJON OF BHSIZV, IEAIJTll'UL NEW SHAPES, SHJJSE•·AAc ~TYL.Es. IMFO.RMAL" MODELING HOsTE'O '1'f MR. JAY' TIU..OTSON, SHOWN: SMOO'TM SMIMMERY POL.V ESTER PRINT SHIR'TDRE6S wtrH RAYON LINING. IL.Ut/WHtT£• SIZES 10-zo, '$72. WOMEN'S DRESSES, ~------------------------.... NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800, .. Ml Cc Sc ., Prin Churcl !"!Uni Ing Sb ~arie The perfor for ti! Mis. Costa and M AnMe ~Bric Chaml Mills, the~ The, t)te I Sc!iOo: Unive,i busba Sold• will n · SC elm Captst Scbwt chang the Churc are 1 South ')!.cap! -The le! pis! gel rl ich. I' . . • • • • ........ Mor8, 197l DAILY '1LDT J§ -GI ! b Ga~elsl .IDomation~ Cna·AQe Hands . --~ ~ FRANCIS '\,,ORR J MRS. WILLIAMS Couples Say Vows SC Juniors Sooth Coast Junlon oH''oun- talo Valley won tbr<e awards dur!nc ~the Loa C 1 r r 1 t o 1 Diltrid Co a'v en t! o.n Ip Paaadena. The club earned a first place in mental bealth dlv!s!on and waa preR111ed third ploce awards !n the youth and porllamentarlan categorieo. Riviera Club Richan! Sh1 Idon and membero of the Opera a !a carte, wbtcb be loonded, w!B present a Gilbert and .Sullivan program ~ members ol the Riviera Club following a 1%:!0 p.m. !unObeon Wednesday, May 9, in the Balboa Bay Club. Philharmonic Wlllbe-11•- e_oa at ll *·"'-...... y. May I, la lhlo "Bali1a Corlm\llall YachlCblb. HeadliW the group are tho M.mee .. Lyell lv101 , chalnnan; Ianar M. Hill, vice chalrmajl; JI! e bard It Jobmm, lrtBBUrer; Devbl s. Robertson and Lawrence P. Ce.ley, MCretsies, 1 n d R!c!Wd H. Lee, parliamen- tary advbor and ~laws. Jr. J,eague Junior League of Newport -w!B -leagues from Bali:enlleld, Long Beoeh, Los Angeles, Pasadena, Riverside, Sah Diego and Santa Barbara during a joint boon! or!oJ>. lalioo. Mesa•Harbor A "'Pl'-tift .fNn tho ~ e.,. R~neb .w!B ....iwi a., -!Gr •1.1qo for the parebase of I Dougll Boy tYJI' pl !ram tho Mela· Harbor' Qub during !ta nezt mtellng at 10:!0 a.m. 'l'l>un- day, Moy 10, in the Mesa Venle Oounlry Club. New G1!!cen w!B be elected, and Mrs. Frank Martel bu planned I club version of the Price is Right for the pro- gram. LB AAUW ~ ~ presentatioo wm dell with various Illi!atyles available for women ouUide the TQles impooed by sebool, marriage, cb!ldbearing and widowhood. • • p.m. .......,, Mo:I .JO, lli 1Wlllilall llchrland, ·presl- Clubbue 3, Lac1lll HUJs. dent; John A. 0 I b 0 t De , I ...... the thr ... _.. "-"'-~ -••·-F puol will ·be Dr Inp Bell -........ ~. " ......... prat111w of *'°'°" 1i Bb:ber and Eldon M. Milter, Piiier Collep Qaremonl She vice lftllCleots; Betty Ha.- hao -;._..,... -eynian, ~ R. Heino. Ted and =· tnclllillnc a boot Ii Ttesaen and Berle V. ~" 01..... Wickham, secrotarleo, and on A; sauaa'.~ Jl:i!1nit G. Kv!en, Jrtuurer. with the ~ ol· Men-GOorse Stua!i will p«oenl tal """1th, · and cl n d y the Rom111o1t. of Russia us Inc Wutllolt. who' bu b •·e n bis unique b!stor!al flgur!lles ~ for -lllWyles be bas sculpted and costumed. tbrcuO . v1rlo11 drug rebliilJltaUoll -.s, will ln·dian Maidens eanqileto the -1- Thunday Club Olllcen ol the Thursday l\lornlog . Club" of Newport Beocli dllll M: !nstalltd dllrlng the fiDa1 meeting .,-the •IUb yeor. ~ Tribe of Ille Sad- -Valley YMCA Indian ,IWdem Will have a mother· dau«bl~" benquet at 5:!0 p.m. 'lliunday, May 10, !n the Rancho San. Joaquin intermediate School. Pi Phis New offieors ol the Soutll Coast Alumnae Club ol pj FINE STA110NZRY Beta Pb! will be lnatalled at 10 :.me~' a.m. Thursd.ay1 May 101 in the s1t1clM. ...,., · Newport Beach home ol Mn. •·-• ., .. WI Gory Myera. ,.- Mrs. Ralph Giii will' recetw lit) t.Cllll ... , ....... the gavel, and serving on her tlllll 11~ •·ant_.. Hll8I board • .., the Mmes. R!cbard\~!11""'~~~~~~~ Elliott, vice preaident; Peter Madigan and R<>nald Thom- marson, secretaries; John Ap- plegate, treasurw, and Will Hlgg!na and Dennis Wb!te, . recommeDdation chairmen. :· ~="""""===~ • Tbe' group w!B gather 1n the Bafboo Bay Club at 11:!0 a.m. 'lburldaY. May 10, for ~ bruocb. Lyle's is soon Secretaries !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mro. M8ri1yn Miller will belr Golden Needle's WILLIAMS..CLARK in&talled pmJdent of the QI! Bahia Chapter, Nat 1 on a4 mil S ~ -/ tJ.e 1'Ulf 'Ille session will be at 10 a.m. 'lbunday, Moy IO, in P8tk Newport and a !unclleon w!lI be catered by the Coffee Ganlen, the on-going waya and means pnljecl of the league. • The discussion is planned for the next meeting of the Laguna Beach Branch of the Amer!ean Assocl,ation o f University Women at 7:30 New officers of the women's committee of the Orange County Philharmonic Society Ollkers are the Mm<I. Pru:ice: of Peace Lutheran secretaries Aa!lociation "ntura-1i:...--t:!r-~--:,.,..-~--:--:---~~=t:I Church, Costa Mesa was the Tea rs 0 n .TV S .. h ow .Dr ·1 p . Dry day, May 10, in the Holiday A new thing this spring! !"tting for the marriage link· Inn, ~a Mesa. . lovely & versatile •• ing stan Wi!!iams and Dorette Social boor will be. at 6 p.m. Q. // l'larie Clark. , and dinner wm be served at 7. iana -Aniu . The Rev. Andrew Anderson others to be installed are Feels Uke sUk • washes tlke polyetttr. performed the single ring rites By ERMA BOMBECK for an "Inside Fly," I am a father who is sterile. the Mmes. Betty Esky, Harold Now available in auorted IOlld colon. for the da ......... of Mr. and Two Penn~!vania boys , going to reciprocate their INST A NT DAYTIME AT Re-·•··"• yd ...,.~ ·--, ldndne b · al B. Lea and Joanne Miller, vice •-"' · ••• Mi's. Kenneth B. Clark of Marty Wolfson and Chuck ss Y peaamg ong a DRAMA REPLAY: In the presidents; Harry E. Hansen Speciol Introductory Ptice COsta Mesa and the son of Mr. Livols!, just collaborated oo a small-guide on "How to Watch event you "miss Monday's WIT'S O 1 •~ 77 d and Mn. 'lbonuls Williams of book called, "How to Watch :'io·Py~as on TV · · · And series, you can catch up on and BeltY Hanun, secretar!e•, 01· ft Y ,.... Y • Sports on TV ... And Enjoy Tuesday, Wednesday, 1'bun-END and Ferris Granier, treasurer. Golden 'needle FABRICS AMheim. It." First, I.be tennlnology. day Or FridJ.Y~~ la~~ next. aoutM cout •t.AU • c""°"''·" LIVI&. 1 Brid81 atbmdants were JUdy ·They dedicated tt to "all the SUDS: This is not a 15 per-month. , l~~~iliiiiiiiiiiiimi_ii....,_iiiii'i'i'wii"iljiiiiiiiiiii~~ Chamberlain and Di an n e lonely women in America." cent beer, but a term used to SUDDEN DEATH: This oc-karate teacher who has been I----·------ ""~ and ..... Garde Two things prompted me to describe daytime drama run curs !rtquenUy when a fooling around with h • r ..A f ........ _ . "~· ll'U.U:. s was read the book. First, I have in the middle of the afternoon. character wants to be written . mother-in-law. ~ ~ ~ B Al •owJ"aT the best man: D<ver bad a book d'!licated to MEANINGFUL RELA-out of the script to a«ept a Watching soap operas re-l MAD a.a.. .l' • The bride " a graduale 'Of me before ·ani! secondly, I ;I'IONSllIP: Formerly called par! in.a mom or bas decided quires intense ooncentration, ! · ,,_i"l\\S GRA~D Ule -Ramona Convent mgh • adore fiction. . . · JivingJn,sin, but watered down to iDvest in a car wash and absolute silence1 a live-in · -.011'.. l.... . ScMot and California State As the cover testifies, Chuck for advanced prHchoolers leave show biz. ps:fchi4trlst and a generous ' MUtmN•TON · University at Fullerton. Her is a self~dmitted sports nut who spell in front of their So much for terminology. supply of nose tissue. llA.CH y_.1-.... ..,...... of ... ,_, h ba d · graduate of -(he once switched -Ut, Julia _ ~ents. Now Oil to the --Only one "sudser" -poet ... 1 .. i. 11o-. wlMrll "*' .us n JS a Child because he. be8rd she M J...SUNDERSTOOD . HUS;-. -o-.-· "Peyton Place"_. made it to YOUI. CLOTHING 111•1ic b ~lot.cl, .._. Golden West College. They wsu1 going to whip six eggs) BAND: Any man on the TV . 1be purposellfoi Soaltp 0perll· a!s prime time -or the Se1 DOLLAR 0011 ._..., of 4-lltn •" aofh~ will reside in Costa Mesa. a;I Marty has ~aged t~ screen between the hours of 11 15 to present e as rea Y 5 Olympics as lt is known in the fUl.THll. Hll.I •hi, .,. 1~· • lllWw4a "° pull together the bas! c and 3 who is married. jy' 'w':t~~t "='1" fu~: trade. · -'' ... _..Onl";':'uthoriool Bold.;. DoaJor loo,..,.~ • SCHWENN-VANCE · Claudia Vance of San Juan Capistrano and Don a Id Schwenn of Sooth Laguna ex- 'cbanged wedding pledges in the South \Shores Baptist Church, Laguna Niguel, and are making their llome in South ,Lagima after a cruise terminology and rul5 of "WHAT SHALL I TELL three lawyers, 8 mother who To the amateur viewer, I Mlill MelM" • .......,. I sports· fI'Olll Baseball t o DAVID?": This is an e1-drinks and a daughter who is can only say, "Touch that dial "'":',:.,".::,. c.c..:,:.. WOODWORTH ... .:rt,.:•"• Showers. I pression used universally on on trial for murdermg' her during 'Guiding Light'' and I'll Cit~ )M ll'rldey Ill ' l'.M. l'IAMO A•D DIGA• SAL!'I .......... .•. - Now that I know a "Right most daytime dramas and break your face !" fff.1111 ......... . End" isn' a kid who is aauced, usually refers to a nioe-pound 515 llOllTN MAii, SAllTA MA • 147-An or Iha! you don1 use Raid baby hem at three months toJP~uu;;Pill~a;;;~l-----------'----=~~~~=--J.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!"""1111!"'~~~ Forum Open ·to Public 'l.l capulco. A bl" f u·tled r 'fh · ts J\..f• pu IC onim en E etr paren are ·u S1 Cbildren _ Who Cares? will Jene Dodd of San Juan be presented bY theChllaten's p!strano, Jay ~vance of"U>s ·~1~ CoW!!ll of Orange · , geles and Mr. and Mrs.~ 91il$!y, May 12, J;afl Schwenn of Launum11.'f~,.j 30'ijin~2 :30 p.m. in :dich. ~ :. ange t college Honor attendants we r e'"t># . rlum:1·"" · istin Young and Don '·i'I\i<' purjiliSe~of 'the forum acQueen. Bridesmaids were ~ wtu 'J>e ~o· examine a problem UfFELL'S . UPHOLSTERY , .._Y•W• ·-tm--. c...--14M21• MOtlier's Day 4 Days Away Think · Vanpe and Barbara Rusi-facing many working par~ts : g, while Michelle Ma!ew!cki ' !l!e lock qi child deve!~medt J~ ~hi as flower gll'l. Ushers were and day cate ~services at an ·ke Wade and Gary Triano affordable cost-· ring bearer was Jeff · -Jli9C11¥.iiig the role ol the · wmcuFf l'l.UA ~ the role of the private sector. Participating will be Harry Block, Los Angeles Joint Board of Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America. AFL<:IO: Frank Kall! of Xerox Corp.; Earl Peterson; Gerber Products ; the Rev . Everett Williams, A f r i c a n Methodist Episcopal Church, and Maj. Helen Nightengale, Salvation Army. Registration fees of $3 may be malled to Belly Inman of OCC or paid at the door. oung. public seCtor will be Sen. Alan 1 M &: im-. N..,.... .._. The bride is a graduate of Cranston,, As:s~mb.Jyman Alanl ---------__::'==========-'I Clemente High S<:booI and Sieroty Of the S9th ASsemb!y s completing her AA detree Distrid, and • John G . t Saddleba.ck Coilege. Her Veneman, fo r.mer un- usband earned his masters dersecretary ·ot. Health, Educa-~ee al the Universi!y of tion and Welfare. 1.---f L zona. · . An afternoon panel w!1I ' ' I STllL ONtY $2.65 A MONTH Even On Price Alone The DAILY PI LOT : Deliv.ers The Most -· . ' For The Or~'ge Coast· SUBSCRIBE . NOW 642-4321 COr ,.._ ... DAILY PILOT1eHlet hi,_. 11: dfvl .. ut~ttl~1 GRAND OP.ENING OF ·WISHON-HARRELL STONEWARE •• th1 new SOUTH COAST Vlbl.AGE ' .. ' . (1tlll •Mier u...~.r ACROSS SUNFlOWER FROM THE-NEW BULLOCKS Al SOUTH COAST PLAZA FOR A MEANINsftJL GIFT ~ - " FOR MOTl:fER. LOOK FOR US ,.S AR8 LOCATt:D tH 1Mi HOUP OP C8DM IHllMU!D IUILDJflleS 18NIND Til8 HUft9RY TtM• ••ITAUltAMT, THE SEMI-ANNUAL u~z-aov SALE RECLINA·ROCKER, SALE NOW SAVE FROM s35 TO $75 . ••• An~ •njoy the famous U-Z-Boy Reclln1-Rocker of your choice. Only l1-Z-Boy gives you tbis faultless combination of recline 11nd rocking ease -:-just lean beck into the re. l~xing angle of your ·ch~ice, or use 11 the finest platform rocker. Now is the time to enjoy this often imiteted but never duplicated combinetion of luxurious comfort end car•· free good looks. Quantities ·~ limited, so be among the first. Sale Price S 199 .SO :·. • SA VE $37 .50 ---....... Sale Price 5199.50 ••• SAVE $37.50 1865 HARBOR . BLVD. '-"!! Downtown Costa ~ -iiiiiil Phone 548-5131 OPEN DAILY' 9 to 5:30,. FRIDAY 9 to 9. CLOSED SUNDAY . • , FROM Fash ion Island Newport Beach ST=EREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR " ' • \ \ l I Sham Trainer Blasts Derby . For Incid ent ·BALTIMORE . (AP) -The trainer of Kentucky Derby runnerup Sham has blasted Derby orficials for their handling of a starting gate Incident which he claims hurt his horse's chances In last Saturday's classic. "When all that trouble started at the gate, the man (assistant starter) who WU supposed to stay wJlh the horse disappeared and never came back," Pan· cho Martin, the trahler, said Monday. Martin arrived here with Sham to be1in preparations for the 98th running of the •t50,W...added Preakness Stakes, the second event in thoroughbred -rac· ing's Triple Crown, May 19. Secretariat, )'ho beat Sham by two length!, and ~le Ugh!, loth in the Derby, also arrived at Pim1ico Monday. -Martin was upset over the handling or the incident in which Twice a Prince reared up in the gate, throwing his jockey and cawing Sham to loosen two teeth and suffer a cut gum when he banged his head agaiDSt a suppllrt strut. "Such a big race as that and they don't have enough men to hand1e every horse ," the trainer said. "I would pay the money myself if that's the problem." "And besides," he continued, "when that horse acted up, they made my horse stay in the gate all that time and Secretariat's outside the gate, walking round and round. All that didn't help any ." Secretariat's r e co rd · breaking performance in the Derby, 1:59 2/5 for i v. mil es, is expected to scare off most of the opposition for the Preakness. At the moment, Sham U considered the only definite rival, although Champagne Charlie, Eight to Spain and Timeless are mentioned as possible starters. The question of whether Angle lJght will run in the 1 3116 mile Preakness was expected to be cleared up today, with trainer Lucien Laurin scheduled to arrive in Baltimore. .J11st Wants Win Dodgers Victimized Home Run Barrage ' Surprises Bucs Boss LOS ANGELES (API -Pittsburgh manager Bill Virdoo, blessed with a club !hat's hittiJm' close to .290 overall, even expressed amazement. "You don't see tilat too often," he said after his Pirates slammed five home runs, all with the bases empty and all off of Los Angeles ace Don Sutton, to trim the Dodgers 5-4 Monday night. It ended the Dodgers' mini-streak of three straight victories as well as six success.i.ve triumphs against the Pirates. The victory nudged the Pirates into a one-game lead over Chicago in the Na- tional League East as the Qibs lost to San Diego f.l Monday. The Dodgers had a 2-0 tead when the Pirates started hitting their homers. They still led f.l when the Bucs really pouredl t oo. Finally, successive homers in the seventh by Manny Sanguillen and Al Oliver pushed the Pirates into the lead 1"11"1111"11 UJ Loi Antl'ln !41 1llrllrlll 1llrllrlll C~ll.2b 5121 RU11tH,u '1 2 1 $a1'19"'lllen, rf • I 2 I Mol1, Jf 4 I I 1 A.Oliver, Cf ' 1 2 1 W.0.YI\, cl ' 0 2 0 Star°"ll, If ' I 2 I F1rvU10n, rt l 0 1 I Het>rMr, JD 2 I l 1 PKioAll, lD • 0 I 0 8 .RoDtrston, Jb 3 0 I 0 Cey, lb 3 1 1 O M.M1y, c ' a I 0 LKY, ?II l 1 O 0 Stennelf, u 4 O D O Y.,.gtr, c 3 O l O Alley, SJ 0 0 0 0 Gtryty, rl I D 0 0 L.Walker. p 1 o o o Sutton, p 2 o 1 o Cllnet,pll IOOOR1u,p 0000 8 .JCll'lnson, p o o O O MeMullM, pll 1 O o O D11111tllto, P11 I 0 0 0 Rooker, p I D D O Tot.tis J' S 11 S Toi.ls l? 4 10 3 Pi!lsburgll 010 011 :ioo -5 • LO\ Ar>Qeles 200 100 DOD -4 E -L. Wiiker. OP -Plt!sburgtl :t Los A1i9etn .,-4. LOB -Plthburgh S, l...0$ Ang1ln 7, 28 -Moll, fe<VUl(WI, R11u er1. lB -RUl\ell. HR -S111'91'il (II, C11h (2), H"'1ntr !Jl. Senvullltn (2), I>.. Ollvtr !5). s -Russell. ,,. " ill llt •• 10 L.W1lktr • • ' 4 • l ".Jonnson (\V,1-<ll 2 2 o o o l Rooker 300012 SulfOn (L,J.Jl 1·213 11 5 5 2 l Rlu 2·1/J 0 0 0 0 I HOP -by Rftu {Hebntrl. WP -L. W1lktr. Time -2:16. Atltndftn(I -17,7'5. and Jim Rooker protected the one-run edge with three hitless innings of relief. ~ "He hasn't pitched bad for us all year," Virdon said of the 3().year-old left- hander who hasn't given up a run in 13 innings. His save Monday was his third. "We've got a shot," Virdon said of the Pirates' chances lo repeat in the Na- tional League's East Division. "We'll give it a good race even if \Ve don't win ii. But pitching is the key." The Dodgers ripped into starter Luke Walker for tw o first inning runs on a tri- ple by Bill RusseU and doubles by 1'1anny A1ota and Joe Ferguson. After Willie Stargell hit his eighth homer of the season in the second, Los Angeles got two more in the fourth . One scored When Sutton hit into a double play with ·the bases4 1oaded and Russell doubl- ed home the second. But then Dave Cash homered in the fifth and Richie Hebner in the sixth to cut t~ lead to a single run . Sanguillen and Oliver wiped that aside in the seventh . SEA KINGS FLASH HEA DED FOR USC Corona del Mar High basketball star Casey Jones has signed a national letter of intent to attend the University ()f Southern California. Jones, two-time all-CIF perfonner for the Sea Kings, was heralded by USC coach Bob Boyd as the most fun· damentally soond prep player he had seen this past season. Jones averaged 17.1 points per season in helping coach Tandy Gillis' Sea Kings to a 274 2 record . Corona de! Mar lost to eventual champion Verbum Dei in the CIF semifinals. 6~. I Don't Have to Redeem Mys elf, Says Jerry Grant The young CdM ace was also highly touted aJ a defensive player. IND!ANAPOL!S (AP J -Although he missed a prize worth about $70.000, Jerry Grant says the past 13 months have been among the best in his race driving career. Grant lost about $70,000 and received considerable notoriety last May when he we) penalized from second to 12th place in the Ind ianapolis SOO.-mile race. U.S. Auto Club officials accused Grant's crew of adding fuel to his car from teammate Bobby Unser's t.ank. A driver is restricted to the fuel assigned his car for the race. Grant was leading the Indy race after 187 of the 200 laps when vibration from a tire forced him into the pits. The pit crew hooked him up to the fuel tank in Unser's adajacent pit Grant went on to take sec· * * * Brief Indy Runs For Posey, Grant lNDIANAPOLJS -Jerry Grant of Irvine and Sam Posey of San Juan capistrano made the.Ir first appearances this year on the raln-slick Indianapolis Motor Speedway Jn preparation for the 500-mlle auto rare Tueid_ay. ~ Neither driver was able to get tnp speed becau,. ol the .... ther as deCen- dlng cha mpion Mark Donohue took one lap In h(o Offenbauser-powered Bagle at 184.0U before Ille ralru hit. ond but later drew the penalty. "I don't feel I have to redeem myself for last yea r," Grant says. "I just/came here to win." He added, "Last year, in a sense, was a very, very good year for me. It wasn't good financially, but in every other way.11 Grant was hampered In his first few years at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway by poor equipment. Anti, like rnost young drivers, he had to hustle for a good sponsor. His world changed two days before the opening of QUB!ifications at the Speedway last A1ay when Dan Gurney hired him for his AU-American Racen Co.· Gumey and his crew of designers have developed an outstanding championship car -the Eagle. Gurney haa put Unser and Grant among the top qualifiers in nearly every championship race slnoe the beginning of last year. And Eagles sold by Gurney to other racing teams also have made their mark. Although Grant has plenly of speed at hand, be said he is not worried about becoming lhe first driver to break the 200 mile-an-hour mark at the Speedway. The 38-year-old drlVer aald, "Speed does not concern me. Speed Itself is iJ'lo- cidental to me. We've had a fine safety record recenUy a n d speed ls just in· cidental to the race." . Grant was the top qualifier for last yea r's Onla rto 500-mlle race but suffered another diaappolntment when his engine went bad before the race began. West Confident He'll·: • Play • Ill Tonight's Tilt 4 NEW YORK <AP) -.. , just may bave to t,ake the ball up more,'' said mWive Wilt Chamberlain, pondering a more ac- tive role orfenslvely whtn his ~ Angeles Lakers try to even lhrtr National Basketball Assodalioo cllamplomhlp series against the New Yort KiUcks to tooight's nationally televised fourth game at Madison Square Gardeo. "I don't know whether I can," said the 11&-yur-old Chamberlain, a powerful fon:e de/eN!vely and under !be bolmls In the first three games, "but I'll give u mucll .. I CID. That's all ~ CID do - give what you have." '!be Knlcks grabbed a :1-1 lead in !be 1eries by beating !he Laken IH3 in game three Sunday, as Los Ani!eles super-star Jerry West sat cul the fourth quarter with hamstring pulls in both bis legs. West eipects to be bock In actlco tcoight. Alter being treated Monday by Dr. Robert Kerlan. the LA team pbysi· 89-80 Overtime W in USA's Little Man Does In Russians NEW YORK (AP) -Even in ba5ket4 brawl, there's a place for the little man. Ernie DiGregorio of Providence, the littlest man on the floor. proved it Mon· day night as he sparked the U.S. squad to an 89-80 overtime victory over the tour· ing Russian National basketball team before 15, 734 at Madison Square Garden. "Ernie sure got us going when we rieeded ii, didn't tie?H praised U.S. Coach Bob Cousy, a pretty fair little man in his own ' right. "}le picked us up when we .. were in trouble, big tr:ouble. '' Ernie D. sank a p_air of baskets in the final minute or regulation play to erase· a 73-69 Russian lead, hit two baskets Jn overtime and set up two more to put the Americans out ahead, then stymied the Russians with his artruJ dribbling and ballhandling. "As I've said before, Ernie is the best player -pound for pound -that I've seen in college this year. Some of the things he does are just amazing." The Russian coach, Vladimir Kan· drashin, was equally impressed. "If we had hJ:rri, we wouldn't lose any games," Kandraahin said. From the time'he rHntered the game, with 2:08 to go in regulation, up until the finish, Ernie D. was the whole show. "At the eod I felt I had to take over - and I did." said !be six-fool All- American. That he did. His shOoting was deadly, his pusing brilliantly accurate, his dribbling dazzlingly deft. Jn the overtime, with the U.S. squad safely in front, he ran circles around the Russiam as they tried to take the ball away from him. None could catch him. "l don't think any ()f them can take the ball away from me," he said afterwards, with more honesty than braggadocio. "It's not their style." Ah, their style -basketbrawl. "It's not quite basketball as we know and love it," said Causby, smiling. "Blatant, dirty fools,'' said 6-9 center Len Elmore of Maryland. "They do everything they can get away with - elbows, grabbing your jersey, hitting in the back when you go for rebounds. Ifs brutal." 1•vou can really get hurt in this k.ind of game," observed 6-10 Ron Behagen of Minnesota. "It's rough out thEte," said 6-8 Marvin Barnes of Providence. "That's the way they play -that's the way they've been taught to play." What the Russians lack in finesse - and they lack a lot -they make up for in power. Under the boards they can hold !heir own with anyone, but they do not have the finesse or agility of the Uf'tT ........ American!. So they concentrate on what they do best -hammer away under the boards until the ball drops through, or a foul is called. "It's a rough game, but those are irr temational rules and we agreed to play by them,'" Cousy said. "Yoo have to learn to be as scientific as possible regarding fools," he ez:· plained. "Our guys still try to make the block, avoid the foul. \Ve have 'to learn to fool intelligently, like the Russians." A total of 75 fouls were called on the two clubs. Eight players fouled out. Five of them were Russians, including the team star, Aleksandr Belov, who had 13 points. OiGregorio led both cl~ with 15 points and. 11 assists. Barnes, in his best showing since injuring his knee in the NCAA semilinals, had 21 points, many .on spectacular feeds from DiGregorio. Elmore had eight rebounds and Behageo seven to pace the Americans, who oottf". bounded !be visitors 32-28. The United States led by as much as nine points in the first half, although the Russians closed to 36-35 at intermission. The U.S. team moved ahead by seven at 5&-48, but the Russians eventually scored six straight points to take a 62-61 lead. The visltors were abead by !oor, 'IH!I, before Ernie D. took over. The roughness ·of !be game went both ways. "The United State. was very fOUib out there, like they have been io the ()ther game,'' contended Kandrasbln, who was so upset at the cmctating of Renato Righetto of BrlU!l and Martti Hulttamaki of Finland that he threatened to take.bis team off !be floor and not play the overtime. Bebagen, Barnes and Elmore all called the series rougher than anything they've seen in college, or elsewhere. "'lbey're rough, but they do it for a reason ," pointed out Barnes. "'Ibey play hard, but I respect them for it." Elmore was a bit more upset by the pounding. "It was dirty, dirtier than the other games," he said. "They got away with a Jot rnore than they shouJd have." s.'tfet UllM!t {ffl U~ Sl91t1 lff) O' T 0, T Slmel1 o 0-0 0 8.t119en 1 .... 10 Slr!kov • 0-<I I DG9rio II 3'4 1S BllllllY 3 ,.. t Jone& I 0-0 2 Belov ' 1·2 13 K.lrl l 0-0 2 SlllMV 5 0..0 10 Mcffrllnd 1 0-0 2 Ovmll 4 1·4 f H'"6trll>ll ' .... 14 l(rkl~• 1 5-' 7 S.under• 1 W I Edsflko 5 0-0 10 •Niter 2 0.0 4 Gcllrov O 1·2 2 Oxley 0 0-0 0 Zl\f'lkdn 5 0.2 10 B1rn1s t U 21 lllklhn I 1·1 I Elmo<"I 2 0-0 4 Tollls 3' 12·22 to Toltl1 3" 21·21 ff SOllfel Union 35 3' 7 -IO Unlled Sletn 36 'JI I• -ft FOllled out -USSlll, S.tlnlkov, BeloY, Zlllrmuk-hlmodo~, Bolo$111'Y, Shlh'IO\ll USA, Elmort, 8tlllftr\. S.tunden Tote! fol.tis -USSR 3', USA 31 AlltrlOenc:t -U,7:M. Wright Bids To End Woes Against Tribe CLEVELAND (AP) -The caurornla Angels -hoping that Clyde Wright's back problems have ended -sent the stylish lefty against the Cleveland In- dians today in the opener of a two-gme series. Wright, tH, wlll be oPllOOed by Gaylord Perry, 3-4. as the Angili aeek tbelr !Hth - wln in six starts on their current road trip. Wright. who won II games for the Angels durina the last lllree years, got off to a slow 8'art In l!llS 1111!1, then com-. plained ol back pain !ollowliif bis fourtK appearance of the year tw9 weeks ago against Baltimore., · The back wu a contrlbullna factor as Wright mJssed a start Sa.y, rone of the few times In Met1t years tl1at"be bas been out ol the starting rotation . Sleeping co the floor t., correct the problem, he haa been .. ,.;o.i twtoe, the last time P'rtda1 in Balttmon. Findings bave be«I 11ef1tlve. , ~ !be pain ..-!be Angels "" bopeflll that WrJcbl will return to hla old form. 1•He really bun't bem hit too hard.'' ~!~~~1;;.'=~ Ibo bell up and they've boon blttlntl It ouL" clan, West lald, "I f,.l 1 lol bolter •.. J am conlldent I will be able to play Tues- day night." Weat"s pmeoce ·w111 certainly make a difference. A> Chamblrlaln said Sonday. when the Laken stayed close but could never overhaul the Knlcks in the final period, 11We're 10 uaed to golng to Jerry in the fourth quarter, It puts a lot of pressure on us to have him sitting on the bencli." But the bigest dlfference could be an offensively arou.5ed Chamberlain. ID the first throe games. !be huge ptwlman bas concentrated oo defense and rebounding, hauling down nearly 18 rebounds per game and clogging the middle on defeose. But he's taken only 18 shots from the floor, and is averaging a meager 7.3 points per game. .''I'm just happy he hasn't gone to !be hoop more," offered New York center Willis Reed. "We've been In enough foul trouble as it is." "The Knicks: play such good defense, sometimes I just couldn't go to the hoop," offered Chamberlain following Sunday's loss, which saw the Lakers score their rewest points in playoff history. New York coach Red Holzman, using Jerry l.JJcas and even rookie John Gianelli off the bencll to spell Reed, managed to keep a lresb man going ag~t Chamberlain. the only player on !be two teams to play every minute In an three games. ·"It looked like everyone was on me out there," said Wilt. Reed came up with an outstanding performance, scoring a team-high 22 points, hauling in 10 rebounds and calling it his. "most important game" since the Knlcks' championship season of 0 1970. Reed has 'beeri stowed by·1eg injuries since then. "Did going up · against !be musl'l Chamberlain provide special pniblems for Reed? "Sure he intimJdales,'' Reed conceded. "When you go up for a shot Inside agajnst WiJt, you have to think about bim bloCking It. "I just tried to move around a little more. and il I bad the open oho!, take il "Wilt's a big, strong man -all the time." One Knick who didn't seem intimidated by .Chamberlain's massive presence was Earl Monroe. the backcourtman wllo scon!d 21 points Sunday. "There's no getting around it, be polices the lane," said Monroe. "But if you get intimidated. you'd never get !be job dooe. Sometlm'" you've 11"1 to challenge him and go In. even if you don'! get !be layup. to keep him honest. I Icy to make him make the lnlUal move, then react. 1 , "But you have to know what you're ~· U you just go in shuckin' and Jivln , ·be"ll give it right back to you. I go in there business-like .•• Girl Won't Be Playing After All YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP) -When !be Ypsilanti LIUle Le(lglle plays its scheduled season opeoers today, 12-year-old Carolyn King won't he on the field: Carolyn's bid to become the first girl to crack the roster of a • Ypsilanti Uttle League team was baited late Monday when !be · league's managers, in an lltb-hour-- private meeting, decided to drop' her from the league. "We decided to drop Carolyn ' !l'OOI !be rooter but to continue to flgbl In court to bav. her reinatated," said Bob Taylor, vice president of !be group. • 'Ille UWe League. with naUcnal headquarters in Williamsport, Pa., has a rule banning girls. "If she's lo the ~. on the field or in the dugout In a IDlilorm as a member of the team, they will i..1n ·violation ol Rqulatlon-4;' Parasrapb I," said s . B. Stantan. district' ad m inis tr at or troni ' Jacloooo. The regulation Stanlm refemcl to aay1: "Glrts are not e11g1ble." "She's .very good, that's the. crime ol !be whole thing." Tay](lr said. "U she WU I mediocre player- you could IRY kqet I~ but she pu1a, ,_ II and 12-)'Hf-olds lo lhame." 1 Ono' oboemr said sbo may be lho bes! player bi tho city'• leogue. A Cnmmon "'°'plaint aboul ti-, ~ !Jllla League prqJram Is thal !be adWtt who run It wm't get GU1 ol tho" way and simply let tho ' yoompten play their aame. But In ~·s case, she was betqytd by ber .....id-be cootemporarles. Of the 40 boys In the league, 13 ' ~ to kick carolyn out ol )the 1 ) ....... Nine voted to let her play0 bn ab8talned' ml three were nol anDable when the VIiie Wis tabn. "'lbere .... • po11lbllity the I ..... .....id looe l!J cbartar on4 equipment and financial '"JlllOli-" Tt.ylor said. 0 We'd ba•e ~. al ldtla involved who couldn ~ play baleball. "When It cameo down to one kid vem11 IOI , we have to conaltler tho 204." John Mahler ol Betlelldorl, Iowa, slid backward for 700 feet in hla Eagle-Olly coming out ol the third tum but didn't hit anythl.n1 and wasn't hurt . However, he has thrown himself into Gumey's organization, moving his wife and two chlldrtn from Seattle, Wash., to lrvlne, so he can remitn near Ourney 's plant in Santa Ana. ERNIE DIGREGORIO DIVES FOR A LOOSE llALL . In two GlupioW ,.,.... ml I U3 ln- nlnp al _. coolest Wright gave up lllo. dll'le and four earned nw. lie lost e•ch tbne. Ht boo been hit bani In his otber two oullnp and bas a UI ERA. • '1 • U( hi M LL " LA JI ding ch a Unil = fug ioo five-strc the Sot !e~I ~di< !:~ Coolrse, and an tcibr-ov1 cOUrse still • tolunan sl:Ore a 'l'lis u .v.n, 1: tlie tear the ch! ~· score 01 1-UC I stroke Northrh The An 1 ....... Ctllfoml11 ~~~ Milt• W111 Jim Port! 8 I Pf1rr . Cl· I 7Ji-141fi 81'1!iendln 7 ..... 111 / l 1 . flit) i~~: BtrtNri• !In.'· ur lwtDnl " Cfl'l'P~ 13. USIU .,,,.....,,,., PQlv CS. "' Ai . La Fo ... ·Jeff I All -II baskett averag1 for Piel .,i.~ Inine ! "He sbootinr seen Ut Ol"'junl llOl "' the sig 1Butle W!terRlj will ha memhe aka in starten Baker, Peet az -tlutle ~ Qlego i All-Me also a' glme. .He l lj!gh Where per ga Ille le! ~His Oaks' cdrnl"" ' \ UCI 8th . hi SoCal ~HPlay 'fA JOLLA (AP) -Defen- ding champion Craig Stadler, a University of Southern Gallfornia sophomore, shot a q_lne-under-par 63 in the morn- ing round and coasted to a five-ctroke Victory Monday in tJ\e Southern CalifQ.rnla Jptercollegiate Golf Tourna- ij)ent. ~dler set a tournament ~rd with his l)pelling round ~~the Torrey Pines north c.'tMlrse, Ahootlng seven birdies and an eagle . He slumped to a ftiu'-.over 76 on the south cOurse in the afternoon, but stD1 woilnd up with the tWrnarnent 's only s ub · par sCore at 139. 11ils use team didn't fare as ~ WelI, tying Fresno State for tfte team }ead at 585 but losing the championship on a com- pllison of the fifth man's score on each squad. 1 UC Irvine missed by one stroke of edging Cal State Northridge for seventh place. The Anteatel'3 shot 603. .'L..cnng ICarWS In the Southern Cliilf!wnla lnl•n:ollt11l•I• Goll Tourn•-"*11 CD11r nJ: c ;•l11 ltectler, USC 1o.i.7L-1~t Mlk• Wehll'y, F-SI. n -72--1.U ..., 'If, I ii:J >:af4·~f14 yo..· ~.~., . -t JL. • •• - T-. M11 8, 1973 DAILY PILOT J7 Past Olympic Star Still Close to Discus The lwll:lte fl&ure ..., Iii bu&lneu as be wall:ed up lo !lie ""°""" table al lhe l)l>11nd Relays., "Would yoo, p1...., allnOWICe the dilcus campeUllon will' start tmmedlately," lie said In a voice you wouldn'l quesUoo. The yOWJpter co lhe public address system fl!mbled 'lrilb lhe mike and gave the an- DOlll.D(W!W'lt. LlllB, Fortune Gordlen was br1nglni In the mulls. ll showed Marcus Gordlen of Clare- mant llllh !lie winner. Fortune ls a household name to track fans. He competed in three Olympic Games, finbhing third In 1943, fourth In 1952 and se- cond tn ttsa when Al Oerter started his remarkable fOUl'>gold medal streak. He was named Track and Field News ' Athlete of the Year 1n 1949 and four times was listed as the world leader (1947, 49, !IS and 541. His best, l!H sel In Pasadena tn 1953, is the only ooe from lhal'docade among the lop 100 all-time marks. The Minnesota Unlveralty gradua' still bolds the Blg-10 r<cord. But that's history. The future ls Marcus, wbo rates No. 2 In the CIF 'lrilb a discus Ion ol la-3. Fortune says that mark is ridk:ulous. Ar. ""°" as the Bruins had scorecl--'1 points to bOo.t use. however, lhe recon1 wu announced . A world record II not IOI every dq, especially one as good u !lie shot put. Polley or not, it sOOuld have been armounced im- mediately. * * * The aew CIF ln<I: clloml*mNPo will re- qllire a marathon pace for &be tu wt. waDtt &o see everythl.ng. Here's a capsule rouadap of ibe llta ud area ttpresentadves: AAAA Prdlms -Friday llJPl, May II, at Lakewood High (Marina, H ........ Beadr, Ed1soa, West.mlnst.tt, Foantda Va I I e y, ' ~ STEVE BRAND Newport Harbor, Col"Ollll del Mar, Estucl1, Costa Mesa, J\.tlukla Viejo, and San Oemente. Jim P«ler, UCLA 73-71-1'4 ''IJ Pf•rr, Cl•"1Tlllnt n ·n-1•• •. Ct h'lclh1d'Ull M:Ont: Sltvt ~ n-n-uo. ~rv s1-r 16-7)o....1•i Si.w Aytn ~Ut1 John Brtund!n<! 19-7~15.:h :i .. c;..•;ud 7S- 76,-IS1i Oenn!1 Fo.I., 11-,,._1'9. ESTANCIA HIGH STUDENT KYLE GAYNER PRACTICES PRIOR TO TONIGHT'S COMPETITION, "He's thrown 190 in practice," s a ys Fortune. "I think I'll have to qWt officiating when he's throwing. He's never .sald anything but I think he knows I'm there and tries a lit- tle too hard. "The only trouble Is, there aren't that many people willing to officiate that event.'' AAA Prdtms -Satunlay all<nloon, May U, at Cliafley High. (No ..... leOIDI) l . (tit) USC •nd F.-.no Sl•I• $15, ......, '"' llttt. ""n's score; l . C"I s (~ Bncll) 590. "· UCLA m . s. s Olepo'I s1a,. 594. 6. 11r !l.~nl• &artlera 599, 7. Cal Slala jNortllrld<tt) 40?, •. ur trv'n. 1{13, •. ca Slatoo (F'-'I· ltrlllftl ~. 10. UC Rlwr11de 60$, 11. ••af•,...,..,, ~t•. 11 ur 5•n O''"'IO •10. Tl. USIU 622, 14, C&I Si.le (LOI •-1 ... 1 ~1" 1~. lt""41&n<ts ~'6. 14. Cal PQIY (San LUil OblHIO} 631, 17. '· . Anteaters ' ' Land 6-6 Forward ... -Jeff Butler, a &-' first team AU -Metropolitan. Conference basketbaU forward w h o averaged 20.0 points a game !01 Pierce College, has signed a-letter of intent to attend UC Jnine in the fall. "He is one of the finest shooting forwards we have seen this year in high sc:h®l or' }lllior college," a pleased llCI macb Tim Tilt said of !lie signing. 'Butler will bolster the veteran Antea ters lineup that will have all but one of its members eligible for play akain next season including starters Scott Magnuson, Dave Baker, Jerry Maras, Harland Peet and Gary Eubanks. ·Butler was named to all- t~ urn amen t teams at Moorpark, Mer<:<d and San Qlego in addltiori' to gaining an All-Metro first team berth. He 'l)so averaged 10 rebounds per game. , He graduated from Grant 1 -4 ~ Jjlgh School in the Valley >ii where he averaged 19 points ~· per game and was captain of J tJie team in his senior season. " i.His home is in Sherman r ~\+' oaks and he will be studying ,.,N!i£ cdmparative cultures at UCL KYLE'S TEAM FACES JAPANESE GYMNASTS AT FOUNTAIN VALLEY HIGH. 1 Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore Detroit Milwaukee Boston Cleveland New York Chicago Kansas City Angels Minnesola Oakland Texas East Division W L 12 13 12 13 II l! 10 13 II 15 to 14 West Division 15 6 16 to 13 9 II to 13 14 8 13 81ll!more I, 0.k11nd 2 Boston 4, Ollc"OO l OnlY 01mes 5dledl.tled. TlldlY'I 0.-. Pct. GB .4!0 .4!0 .178 .435 I .423 111 .417 Ill .714 .615 I II .591 211 .524 I .481 5 .381 7 Allftfl CWrlollt 0-.J 11 Clrtel1nd IP..,.,. ""4) Oakl•nd (Hunter 2-IJ 11 &altlmore {McH1lly .... ~lrolt {Fryman 2-11 1t KfllSN City ($1111f· torfl •·1 J TtxM !Brobtf'V o-31 at Mllw.W:ee flltton 1-21 Ntw Y«t (StottltmYr9 M) 11 Mltw.-:ita {KNt •ll Bolton (Pattin 1-51 M Olicfto lflthtr i-n .... _...,.. o .... ........ .,(~ ~taM at hllk'nort Tnu 11 MlhWMMI Otff'Olf II 1( ...... City frttw Yortt at Mlnnaotl t ' NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh Chicago New York Montreal Philadelphia St. Louis East Division W L I! 9 14 l3 13 13 11 13 11 13 5 19 West Dtvlsion San Francisco 22 9 Haust<>n 20 10 Cincinnati 16 11 Dodgen 15 14 San Diego 11 18 Atlanta 9 17 Melld•Y'• o ..... Moulton 6, Monl!'ffl 0 Pct. GB .571 .519 I .500 I II .458 21~ .458 211 .208 8\1. .710 .661 .59.'! .517 .379 .346 Ill 4 6 to 1011 PlllltdelPhle 3, Clnclnn11t1 2, 14 lnnl""* Ntw Yor11. 7, AK"1111 2 Sin Olt90 4, Chlcato 1 Pltbburvh 5, ~ 4 Only '''"" ICMOl.lled. TllllY'I 0.- HoUlton {For.di )-11 tt Montt'MI (Renk• 1-21 Clncll!Mtl (81111~ 4-ll at Plllltdtlphle !Rufi!'°'" 14) Atltnla (Re.cl IM) It New Yorti: (Mltltdl. 2·•1 Clllc:ffo (JrilM 1·3) If Sin Olfto INotmen .. , Pllt~rgll (8rlles 1·2) at °""""' (MIMs'lmllll 1-l) SI. Lault (Glbton l~J 11 Stl'I Frtr'ICileo (Mlr- k:tltl .. 2) ................... Clneh-11 ti PhlieOel~ Hllltafolt 11 Montr.tl AKfnll 11 Htw Y,,,_ Plttlbllr"' Ill .,...... Ollc:Ho .. "" 01191 St. Louk If s.n Frtl'ldllCO I • Japanese At FVHS Wednesday • Nor many as qualllled. * * * Policy at UCLA is not to annoonce any results from otfler track meets, according to athlelic director J . D. Morgan. The press knew of Al Feuerboch's W<ltld record 71-7 pul in the shot. the TV audience knew of Feuer- hacb's toss hut the fans tn attendance did not . "We don't announce Lakers results during AA Prollms -Satunlay aflenlooa, May It al Valencia llJlh (Unlvenllf, Dua Hills, Lapna 8-b and Mater Del). Ftnlls the following week al Ille oame - follow !lie ldentl<al ocbedule, ucep& r. die AA where lhe compelltloa 11 r. Ille .....inc. Tbetl Iii lhe cbamploao -for lodlvldul ........ llld •tale qulllylnc Frlda.Y a!pl, Ml)' !S, at Citrus Colltce. • UCLA basketball gamoa unUI tlley are Kyle Gayner, 15, of Costa over," es:plainl Morgan. "and we feel Me~. will be one of aix no obligation to announce other resulll, even Southern California A c r o u they are recofds." .. As with anythln1 Dew, anticipate some.,... ble1111 wttb the revolatloaary 1ya&em. Bat om very 1ood tllla.c bU ceme tMlt et &be ellmlp. lloa of Bee Md c.e compelllloo: Team (SCATS) members fac-- ing an all-star contingent from Japan In !lie Fountain Valley llJlh School gym Wednesday in a special gymnast ics meet· beginning at 8 o'clock. Miss Gayner, a student at Estancia H i g b Scbool, Log Race Scheduled will join Olympian Dagmar The top predicted Jog raceni Hintnaus, Karren B r a k k e , Doana Ketnp and two other In lhe Southern Calllornll members of SCATS In the Cnliser -lion wiD com- competltion. • The Japaneae Nippon Gym-pete Saturday In lhe MDual nasties Club includes Olym-Sharl: !stand Yacht Club pian Takalro Hasegawa along lnvttallonal. with several All.Japan gym-Marina del Rey, which cap. nasties stars. tured moct of the aw'1dJ, in Chizu Mortsaki and Junko last year's competition at· · Huodo are the All.Japan performers and the trio will be tractlng entries from aiz ma- joined by youthful stars Yuki · jOr Souhtem cautomta yacht Tbanl: goodness thin are no -. CIF cbaJl!plomlllpo OD die 11ftrulow Oerrllol College track. BOB PALEY AND ASSOCIATES INSURANCE e AUTO e HOME e YACHT e INDUSTRIAL e COMMERCIAL e BONDS ~ •Al'ECO INBURANCE BOB PALl!Y 474 E. 17111 STREET COSTA Ml!SA 642-6500 -546-3205 Kawai, Sakiko Nozawa and ~c'l\Iu~bs~,:_:is~a!ga~l:"_n_:fa~v~o~red~. --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!'!'!!' Satiko and Noriko Olwal:l. •- The Japanese contingent is on a month-Jong tour of the United States with coach Keiko Ikeda and will perfoi 10 at several other Orange Coun- ty high schools during lbeir stav. Miss Gayner bu been participating In the sport since she was 10 years old. Last year she placed 17th in the U.S. Gymnastics Federa· lion qualifying meet for the 1972 Olympic Games team. At the Olympic tryout!, she placed highest on the optional balance beam while team- mates Cathy Rigby and Miss Hintnaus won · spot& on the U.S. tea m. On June 9, Kyle will join ,, other members of !lie SCATS team at the Felt Forum of Madison Square Garden in New York for an exhibition. Current plans also call for the team to travel to Stut· tgart, Germany late !n June to compete In the 1973 World Gymfest and continue on a world tour. Money derived from the u:- hlhttion Wednesday and olhera in this area will be used for lbat trip. Tickets for Wednesday's ex- hibition with the Japanese Nippon Gymnastc Club wtll be avallable ~l lbe doer and sell ror $3 per person. Riggs Looks For Rematch SAN DIEGO (AP) -"If Margarel Court beats me SUn· day on Mother's Day l hope she gives me a return match OD Father's Day." 'ntUI Bobby Rlap the ~ year-old former ul men'• tennis chunploo, rofused lo predict that he would dol~t Au.stralla1a Mn. Margaret Court. qed JO and \ltlS year'• top woman player. Riggs and Mrs. Court were interviewed on the Columbia Broadcasting System about ' their match which wilt be tel.Vlsld nallonally and In· tematlonally by satellite. Riggs told how he 11 prepar- ing with dally Jonlttg and stuffing himself with vitamin pills, hut he added cauUOUl11 : "I don •t pttdicl victory. Tltls ls a compl<te lll)'llery match and I don'l lhink anybody can - I $2 iswlae Wl1ere'I the bet!! place to get ycur pe!90Mf loan? Wl•i I bullr-..n goee for a big loan ··1or hla oompeny. W. lnll<ll ro.. to aome of Amlilrlca'a llfll'lll oompanles. Millions of do&n II a time. For things like .cargo ships. New factories. Power stations. But fOr 611 1he millions we lend to business, we lend Just as much to people 11!8 you. Beceuse we feel the reasons you need money are • ~ aa lhe l8MOll9 a big company needs money. Nead cash to pay ott bills? To take a vacallon? To meet aome emer- f11/l'tC'11 Come see ua. The people who understand all kinds of money · ptOblems. Commercial Credit. ~Con•nerclal Credit no_,..,._•_ta'"""11>opeop1aw11o-- l'IO EMt 17th Sll'eet o Phone: 646-8700 OliaUlilb 11A...W.toSl1dWloBooiowa1UOtol.D ... •o c ·~n..111141 .... predlol who wlf1 wlD." ]----------------------------- ' I • t '. ... •• •• .. . . .. . .. • • • . . • ' .. .... "' • ' • • < ' • i '· •. •, :· :· ,. }f DAILY PILOT Alamiios HaPness Entries O.W • •Ht. ,.,.., hit I ,M •"~••ltlncit..N-'9•A ... "",... 11'11.IT •Ac• -Ollt mlle. Pece. C'lelmll'lll •II ..-. Cl•lml"'I prlct USOO for' ,_... ttW1t MW Miii ,,.d fl( llttttl' kl '"' 4 111rtt. Pt.I•• u• KllJClllt SC•mp CJ. Wllll•ms) ,,_ Mlaleh (0. Lanol'I) Ooldrl-_._..., {G • ....._) ~·· Boy CL •. Greoorwl Action 6oy fR. Rkhmendl AllOY'I 0.1111• (F. Htydtll) Shl)lgun tG. Holl) Hitt! TltmPO (J. SMrrtnl QCC>fifD •ACll -OM mllt , ,_,., tondltloMd :s -Yur okls ' ulllW. ~"'--Purw t1600. a1rm11ry J~ (ft.V. Kql Gvll'Y, Wtw CJ. l.IOllttlllll Andy & Aslrld (J, loc:ld) Ptrfl1 Htr>OYtt (J, 0'8rltn) Mlllhh' Orff,., CE. Cobbl "*IT Voro CO. Ktr.e'""'l ,,,..,, T-(J, Wllllam&I Rough H00JM Pet9 (H. M!lrltll THllD A.I.Cl -One mllt. Pac:1 . Cl1lml1'111 111 '9"· C\elm1"9 pt'lee SUOO for horMt that Mvt o..tl Jrd Of' beltet In lftl I stM11. Jlurw S161D. , &.n1tor Miit (R. BIKlr.men) KWG (A. Wlllllf!') Cllltl R.,... tC. &oyd) Jonlan Adlot IG. Slyu,1lk) Soltv'I Agtln (R. Gllllltfl) l.oul Tf'\1111 CJ. Todd) Slttdl' Nol• te . Cobb) R-8111 T•11 (0. a.ltllcll) '°UltTH RAC• -Trot clelmlt'ID handicap 111 t!lff. Beile cl•lmlng price ~-Tot> cltlmlno price U«IO. Purse S2ol00. Vklor'1 A•lrd (P. COl'lroyl K1lly'1 Mtoll (L. 011.rllonl ••nit Lord IH. Elvlnsl Fr011Y Led (C. Boyd) 5o 5o Ult. Mt;CllmlM) lndl•• V•I (P. Roccnlo) Demonic• Ut. Wlllh1m1l T•rport Pet• CJ. 5hlr1'911) ,lnH IACE -Cini mlll pac1. Clelmlng •II ag11, Top d1lmlng ptlct SC7S. Purse SllQI. Good Gr1nen (M. Aubin) Tommy's Flr11 (R. Wlltl1m11 Polly Jlnkt •CM. Hlrptr) M1r VII (0 . M..,.ock1) Only Son ($. Dt-•l Scolf'('I Ludlr' (J. Tadd) Certl ... RoclrltY (G. l.orlgo) Roxy N (J. Mltllr") SIXTN RAC• -Orie ml11. PHI. Clelmlng 111 eoe1. Top cltlmlllCI prkl s~. Purse 12200. Wlcklow 9111 IJ. 0'8rl.,l Frlt HN!her tM. Holl) FrDllY Avaloon (J. Lonpo) Sllvlf A:. IA. Wln{llfl Sein! E1Ttpht (A:, WllU1m1) LlrlColn Lltld lrook CA. Crelgl TT Piiot (J. LIOhlhllll , Bil Wnce (0. Mtyoctl) . SliVINTH IACI -Ont mH1. PHe. Sl'li'kt for l yur oldl. Cel·bted blftder1 1t1kt. Purse S15111Hckttd. Grou Purw IJ7SOIHdOlcl. And't"I Win.go IR. Bl1tkm1nl A·Ol'ct Dick (C . C1m,Wll) Ptrltd Ttmp (L. 01ullon) l otvl Tiil fll:. Gordon! Honttt Effort (J. 8111..,.) A.e.tlUr Jim (C. ClmpDfll Jr.I B Gripe: Time IG. Holll 8·Dl1mont1 PrlrlCI CJ. WlllJ1m1) Ollt Pllllllp (R . Wlt111m1J B·Frost FrDll (M. Hol l) A·John Olck OWMd ..,try 8..C.111'1 Holl • Htydttl Hl1!1 OWl\ed e!!· '" llOMTM IACI -Ont mllt. P1tr. C11lming •It 9Vft. Top c:ltlmlng price 110,200. Plll'M '2600. hnnv D•wn IA:.V. K..,.) llneoln (0. 811tllchl Sllainey (G. Holt} Loe.I Nott (A. Wlng1r) 8tmbooz tJ.T. RUHtlll C1o1o Hll'CIV9r IR. Glllllln) Hyf Lucky CR. Rldlmondl Bred'• Att.r,_, Cl . Otull~I NINTH RAC• -~ mlle. Pece. Clelmlng •II 1(111. Cleimlng H"ldlcep. 81Jlc clelmlng prlC'll •1000-WOOO·SfOOO. Top clllmlng prlai S9000. PV<'M. SlllOO. OW.,.,. {Hen.over (J.T. ll:ussetl) Encounltr (0. Cronk) Worthy Mlclll (A. Crelg) Miu Melrose (P. Conrayl Como He!'IO'l9f' (J. MIU1r) SOOrchlr WeYI (J. BIMtlnl GrNI lrli.h (S. OKO!T'i'1rl I.end Freight (G. L.ongol Alamitos Harness Results Melldly, "''' 1, 1m Cller a ,ad '••sT aacr -°"" m111. '"'"· CJ1lmlng 111 llft, PurM 11600. St 11dy N1po ltOfl !SlyEulk) 7.60 S.00 4.00 81thllor l=efr (Stamm.r) 5.IO ~.60 G!orvs King IGrrgcry) 9.IO Tlma -2.07 '15. A1IO r1cr.:I -Ledy Setter. Lldy Abadlos. H•I• Tommy, Edgewood Jtt, No Justice. 12 E•ect1 -1·111edy N1pol1Cn • 1· ••chlkw P:elr, l'•kl Ml.00. Sl!COHO RACE -O.-milt. Pict. Clelmlng ell ao". Purse 11600. C iii o• Be rm In !Wlllltmll 79.«1 10.60 7.00 Henry Kid (lrl.ll'lll 32.IO U.20 Sliver A:&cord IWlnotr) 10.olO Tlmt -1.Dt 2/S. 4150 raced -81nnock M1s1!Dn, Admlrll Timi!, Mu1k1t H•nover, Fln11 Count. HifL Srorm. THIA:O RACE -Ont milt. PHt . Clllmlng ell 1ge1. Punt 11100. M1for Dundee !G.llUl1n) f.20 5.80 5.00 Oel1no Kid (Hott) 4.llO 4.20 l lltl1 RI• Oun (Cronk) 4.00 Time -2.0S ~IS. Also r1trd -Volo Honor, ECll~ Athlone. 8011nle1 Ml111l1, Andy• Ctflu<k, Miu Met<IOw 0. Scr1!chrd -Pride Of Eg'(fll, SCO!fy• leader. l'"OUltTH ll:ACI! -One mile. Peel. Conc!Ulon ! YO I. imdtr, PurH SIMIO. l flvlncl ble ShlCIOw (Ml lilf) S.20 J.IO 2.60 Ml Gotta Go (W111!1msJ 5.60 l.00 Berry 0 (WU!l1ms) 2.to Time -2.CU 1/S. Also recrd -Slloft Trip, Ced1r Crnl Royet, E11v Stir, Jolle Mldem. ,lnM ll:AC& -0 fl I mlll. Trot. ~l"IJ h11'1d!C1p 111 l gfl. Pur11 M6glc Air (M1vn1rd) U.00 7.00 5.AO Nlnc'f' Darnley (Jlus~ll) (.00 3.00 Fir• Tiii COrp (8..,~n) 7.20 Tlmt -2.06. Aho riced -C•lfl•ry lid, L•lln Em Pre1, Picture PrlrKtll, Oukt P1181UI. Pee~ Pact. SIXTK llACE -One mlle. PKI. cono. 6 YO •nd ullder. Pur.1 uoo Andys Double · f8l1tkm1n) 5.60 3.00 2.IO 8nla 8rf! (0'8re<1l 2.60 2.t.O 81rmary Or0opy (Vall" K1yJ 2.40 Time -l.06. Aho riced -Dire(! Mftrle, Cutlom Otsl9~. Lvmbtr Prt11, Tr1btl Eit , Pfler J1y Adlo1. SS a0d1 -J•Alldyt OW1111 I I· l•t• al'llf, jllllif SMA S~Vl!HTH RACE -One milt. Pict . Cl1lmlng •II ""' PutM '"°°· G•mt Jae~ (Shtplrol 16 . .0 6,00 3.60 Winter £11pr1SJ !GUHl1n) ) 20 2 60 And~t S1Uor (AUblft) ' J02C1 T!in. -2JIJ l lS. . Ati.o r.c:ed -f>GPN A:t11, Go Olen, Andr11 Boy. Crul11r •~•llOVtr. l lOKTH ltACl -OM mllt P1<1 Cl1lmlng •tl 11111. Pu•u 12<00. · · MlllW H~ Shot (Otnnit) U0 2.«1 t.2' John De. (81llryl 2~ 2.?0 Goods"-H (Wltlllmll J.00 Tlr'l'lt -1.03 (/S, Alto rectid -l•lld, Harlin l et, Hur· rvlfl9 Henry, Aclll'I o.n., N1vte11 Jlck. u · llledl -~ti.r Mot SMI I !+ JllMIO. ....... lfl .... •"tTM ttACI-=-OM l'l'lllt, P.w. Cl•lt!llno •II ""' Pu-• n.oo. M/11 Am, A•l•t !Wlllll mt) 1•.IO r.to S~ N""'INIS (O'll'tln) 4.IO 4A JOI IUeh•td (Wflllams) '00 TIMI -10.. ' AllO rl«ld -s.coM It•'-• lrllh Clm, Armllr6 MA!rwf, MMtw Brown, .. _, U l111ei. -l<Mlw Mtf AlllM I i· N._lffrf, 11'1lf SJtf... . • T«tsdly, MIY 8, !973 'AltlfJJI& Pa.iM.rA, r.~~n~ s,.. u ••· .. w . , _ .::;.;:!. ~~~ . 'R . 'R . ' _ ..... ,~ .. -· _ ............ "AtMl.&TIO<ntlDD:...... »---"-da . 'fn l'f'f'f'I n'fn "'""-·"~KN! NOTKE1'.!::".!~·----Dlll"fllCU . If ..... .,.-~ t;ft'lf ..... M~t!(•t/1S .• 5JP:T.'l. Pt.EWA. ow-t',.::J!:!!i*.....,_., .. _,.:.. .. .:::: ""'°' llf ..,_ ..,.,._ te c:Ndtfrtn 41 s.ntt.v Olfrrlcf, 9' ,,.. otlke 1111 "9 City .... ...... -* ~ IMf all H .. I, 11 h"' Dt\'4o c."i Mewi, .............. ~I ... _. ti. MIO Cttltll'flll, _,,. ttlt9 Mw t1' 111• &.m. OJI ' ...... -.............. ....,. "1fll "" --.. ~ • .,,,, ., ..... ,.,,.. S A h -........, ............ 1111 atlk..,""' .... Mo --tMllldy ..... ,_, eason :'Was "'9 atn1: Clf ._ ..... , ...... COW1. or ak1uC1 I~ 11'11 CWKll ~ fGr "SQUAii£" SHOULDEllS ON ALL SHOTS Run Seen . ' -• ,_ ..,,.,._. ..... ... -.........,. 'U"-NISHIMG Au. U.IOI AH D Most &ood golfers "open" their stance somewhat on short shots. 'They position tl1tlr Ifft So thet the right one Is closest to the tareet line. A line across their toes points to the left of target (see illustra- . . -'° ...... ,_ o1 .. -MATDIAU -T1« ~UCTI°" _Barracuda ~ continues :,.: ~~~-~~ .... ~ :~N~:~ef~~·:L "i:= to ~ --.tt.. ... •I-• ' ~offhelill........,... lfl"lll:I-"'" USA Ollll'l.!#0 aASSTOL{I. ~ _.,.......... ....... WY'.f.UIVYl"l'll' l'\Lt.... --A---'---C!Olll'lo. ___ ,_ -'""'"' .. -...... " .... ~. A. Mt"' pialft, ~lleatloN Md llhtr ••-Ille ()nn-Cou\ and t -nl'WV•.4""• va1ao' -UX: n.u.;r-...m Ol.---• .uu.a.~ ....... flM' ~ lfW tflt rlnf l'llWlea-cantfld ~ "'9V lie elllai'*!I 11 -..... ,._., -l.-1. _ .. I~· ·---1 In O i.1-Ult •I:.• ... -.-. al tlM .t tf'ltt itollct, ltlrt offk.I' f/A In. City Olf'k -I -..it wanner watft' tem~hll'el It l~ .. ......_.. -UW. lor' wa: UICA' • leVer 0.... Mey 4 lf1' of SIS.Gt. A ~ f/A f1.ot wl• le nltdl Ille --•~-• lbe -~ty -'"-" o•-~-__...___ _.,... .. II was .. _,..,,.,.... EIUC·e . HtJts. 1t ~ iw !NH. Pl.EME M4tL tion #1). This open stance causes the backswing to become a bit more ·upright and allow& the hips to "Clear fully during the doWI)· swing. -~"' q_.u -· loliW -~ ,,.._..-..----~ •UHllWft;QI ~et In. Win SE,AAATS CMICKl. . are -=rib to ..... ••· ed •-··-o1 -111 but 11 ....... _ ............ "' Mid .....,.. Eadl bid tt1t11 ...... "" !ht llf'OlllMll ,_.,, ••• "'-=' ~ .. -. • .. • • ~i::-.. _,.. J..,. v..... form arid'" !ht~ PfO\INM fft !ht tm •Port outlook a·blg t::' ~"'r~abed tbatlan-McRle, wbo-uJW buildl bl! := ~~. ~. ,... ~ ... ~~-ft'" ~c!:..;; boost ,ttiis week. 1 tea800 llll• W OU oWll Leda McRae racers WU A...-Y ... ....,.. chldl or • 1"d bond tor ftot I• th.In l1t11 All three.' area1 = The Wyandotte 8' 1 b 11 • ,.... ,., cent nMll> ot lM 1moi.m "' 11'11 "1d, re,"""'. ....... •--. of borrac 1 e • _. _ _. a-STP Monday after l'\dllhed 0nntt c... °'"' ""°'' mac11 ,..,'* to """c.ta ,,.... 1a11111,., r--~ .--"-:1~ Alloclatlon u1d 'it ls can-e ......... v7 May .. 11. ta."· 'lm 141ff.7J Olstrfd • fishing .. i.... .. the coast _and a_ .... llM.17 ........ entire 1---b1a '"rootle" tests for the In-NOTICE .. ,UATH!A GIVEN tlltt Ille ......... ......_.. w,fl;I' · · "'"'~ P'UBUC NOTICE loltd 111 Olttctorl ., ti. c.ta Mn1 ~ for D&11& WJ:iarf because the bellpart 11 Wldet Clianapolis 51)1) clasalc. u1111....,·0t1111ct • ... ,.,..,., .... 111M .. YI WI•·· •·-pera•·-t and •·• •~ ~ 2u •-· ousiNftl ad • cnv•nl(ll r.r. MCI K"' "' _...,,, Kl tc1u •w~ are waer u.u lllllllLL '""" lS FOr STP be will drive Lola ii.\Ma'STATSM•NT 1n1CCOrNnc.,w1t11t1w.to1teMklTn 1n. in the"80s al the~--~ t'une -·••· --. • -~-· con1tructklll oi' "" ...,,,.. WltltlM lin. r• .. Kll• ' u-.i.uiJ. tp0rta canl. ,,,. p«'tlOft 0• .....,MQ pro11tmtnfl, Thlt Mid raft Mid -II WI• b:z =~-w'!s :' : .. c ~ Even if it quit raining ~ McRae la currently the only Ill VILLA V 0 ISTA MOllLE ESTATES, ~by.,.:-~-oi'ftwo1a::;, ': ;g .. o" 81 •••··~-.Our Catalina Urely, It would take another ,_,.....;_.. • .... ed 1 lb _,a.ti Clrclt. tos'-MeN. c.11rorn11 Jinuery, 1m ,1111 1, .. t11t In fill offi ce • ~ w•~ Ii to • eeks I the DOD-n,u..ig ....... eflMa or e fUU oi' ltll Aulttltnl s.cntery, 11 '"r Orlv• and San Cl boats ve SI.I w or 1....1. .. 500 DoMld R. fl'Ner. GeNrtl .. ....,..,, COii• Miii TMt Mid rate """ Kalt ,; emente over grounds to dry out and be put '"NJ • :,. 8111 c1ra.. '°'" MIN. c.11'°"'1' hlrlln ntemd to ,,... ...., In 1111, the weekend also caught some into semi~reasonable playing f)Jalle C.p 1f'• Tiii• bull""' 1, condudad by vni. 11ot1c1 •• "'°""' tuoy """ ~r.iw u1 white sea bass," Dana Wharf shape BUENOS AIRES Chi! , Vl•t• Mobli. Est•ta. a 1..1mlt•d =tec1~~1c1'~"°'~~ ':, m::1:.11 ·~ However, care must be taken not to •·open" your shoulder position in the process of open· 1ng your stance. To hit straight shots your shoulder line should ·@ rema in on target (see arrow in Illustration #2). 8yopeningyour shoulder position, your short shots will tend to fly to the left dds · -e 8 l'trtntnl\lp. ot rhls notb by ~; • a "&rracuda fishing w a 8 ~ "About the only way we can Jaime Fillol defeated Argen-=:,Id 1 •p,~r, Thi coflfraetw .neit tn th, good _over the weekend," a use our ballpark this year, is tina's Julian Ganzabal 7.S, 5-7, T111s·•t•t..,,.,1•!.111ec1 w1tl'I tt11 coun-~ ~!'9 ... .;:-... : c!: for a fi•"'•"• derby," sakl "" g.,1 to give his country a 3-tr~ of ~ CO!ill'lt'I °" Mf't '.,.· •m,u. of tt1t s11te of C.llforllf,J •nd ot111r 11..., spokesman for Davey's Locker ~ ..., of Iii e11t1: app11atH ~ w1th i111 t f Balboa P vili. Marvin Morris, president of. 2 victory in the Davis CUp .., it • ..,...,.., ""'· "~ onl., o1 Mt! .,.,..,uon. •• rney ou o a on says. the WBA South American 1A>rle tennis i• •-" tM sten. , .... .,, Ill rtQUlred undlr tt.f IPKl•I itatuttt "We had two or three sue· · . IAI """'"' ca1...,... ""' pul'IU&nt to w111ch Pf'O(Mdl1111t "-under · Pro SJci-• finals. · ...,, •--= 0 1 ,,. t•kln •!Id .iiic11 Mve not betn cesstve good days and our ~e Al plitt' F 1 d , , Nied ar.,. '°''' 11y ,.,.ot, ~.,., n. proYl1Tont"'"" LtbOr of target. e.o ""n._.,..._ half-day boats are getting a lot ter s ing r a Y s Mav " 1'· n. 29• tm 1.ot-n COdl P~• to labor Win tie •"~ -KUFSTEIN,. Austria -singles matches, Argentina onty ·1n ""m1nntr provided llV i.w. of rock cod with the bass bite Austrian s k 1 manufacturer too• Satu~ay's doubles while , PUBIJC N<rnCE Thi contr•ctor ltllft -cin1y -. PUT POWER BACK INTO YOUR SWING I-With th• help of Arnold Palmer's illustrtled bookl.t, "let Shots and F•irway Woods." Send 20e •ncl a self·•ddr•ssed, 111mped •nv•lope to Arnold Palm•r, in c•r• of this newspaper . picking up. The water tern-. F Kne' 1 id oda • "' rnenuttctu...o m1t.r1111 produced In ~ peratures here are about the ranz ISS 88 t Y no Chile's Patricio C o r n e j o PtcTmOUS •US1Na1s un1i.c1 Stiff• anct only m1!Wl'ld\lrff same with warm and cold !decision bakdi yet""~! ... ~~ebed ouUasted Guillermo Vilas 11· 1llll toi.!."l:•.,!l.!!~~~ buslMU ~:::.'':C,:,=.~ :°"'t11ern11~= d . or ace s er ™" .x.-w-anz, 13 •1 •7 • • •1 Sunday to e•: produe«I 1n ..,.. united st11a, '" !ht ays intermingled." Werner Bleiner and two other ....... r • ""'• v ''THE MARK, .. "° s. Soutl'I C*• IWrformtrio:e of 1111 CC111trKI . The Davey 's spokesman Austrians' to participate in sed t 'dingthe stalcgeh for Monday's H';;f;;, L~~il?~\~~. ?.5~. m=:..~ !1111~1'"~ ~-;:1,r:es:,1ti: Oilers Set Tempo In Surfing Contest says a dock fisherman hooked f · nal k' · ec1 ma . 8eKh. c1111or1111 nu1 co.te rMM s..,11....,. 011tr1ct and 11 mMt a large halibut, too big for lbe pro essto s 1 races m n11 ttullnes1 11 conducted b'f •n 1n-In 1ccoro.nct. w1111 the provt•I-of 1n. America nel1 season PUBLIC ~CE dlv1Cluel. · ' Pl'OPOMI requlr-11. net, and lost it. · '~1• Nine R. Slwklon -EKll bkldlr Mutt bl lklnMd Wiii 11'° A French report f r 0 m Thi• •lai.mtnt w•• fllM wll!I 1111 c-· pr~lflM • r.qulr..t bY law. DANA WMAltir -33 11111ler1: n ba11, 1 wtolle see bess. SAN 01100 -60 englers: 11 v1llowllll, 10 berrlCUCI•, '' c1Uco bass, ™~;r;,t,~1111_c~ 9;~~~,;4· ber· recude, '9 bonito. 91 cetko bel1, 2 wllllr SIN beu, l ll1Ubul. H . Be h H . h I . . SAN l'l!DRO (lportfllllllltl) -35 unlington ac I g miss c assroom activity to •r111trs: ts c~llco bau. 152 rock cOd. School~ won the Ii r s t participate in the prei1'ms. iund st. l•~Cll"'J -l4 1no1~1: 1 v-'lowleH, 73 clllco blu. J And 11111, welimi~ary race in the Jeff Smith, Tony Denuccio, ci:~~c:'ElACM C8tlmNt 11'1.,.I -l9 Orange County surlilig cham-Rick Bauer, Greg ·c1emmons 1no1er1; 1 und bass, 10 bOnJto, 390 and Brian Gillilan were the ~~~ .. ~~:io 1~"rio.6 :::>,11~:~rs: ID b•r· pionships staged Sunday off Huntm' gton Beach w 1· n n er 5 H&WP01tT 1Art'1 L•ndll'llJ -21 11111er1: 23 MAO beu. • roc:ll cod. Newport Beach with second with the Oilers. picking up a SEAL tl!ACH -11 ~noiert• 3 u"o:1 beu. 16S rock cocl, 170 11onuo1 l nalfbut. place Fountain Valley also pair of sef\Onds as well. ::,r:,• 25-~i:U"11er1 : 1eo t1on to, ' 11ne1 qualifying for S a t u rd a y ' s c ;..oiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I ' - finals . u tor l1t11t l111ino tip• NEWPORT LEASES The Oilers won five or the : Mr Ch·ips !locally._. & .,.._., eight heat races stap;ed Sun· Mnc. Ht>u_,o,.d, Leasing all Vehicles .. day morning ln the first surf suitable for the oft-postponed 645•2202 competition. The sec o ·n d preliminary competition was staged this morning with the final prelim set Wednesday with two teams qualifying for the finals from each of these competitions. Action in the surfing meet is in two parts. Si1 heat races in s urfing and two in kneeboardlng with points for first place at six and last place one. . ~().\'(' tcttlltJiiJg -olNewpoftllffth-. Cust.om Tailor and Shirtmaker t W15tdlff Plua • ~vtnlre11th'•nd Irvine• MS-1072 Mission Viejo was forced to withdraw from the com·lr ___ ;.,; _________________ ,.I petition becau se of a sahool ruling that surfers could not Surfllig A:•IUIH First he&! -l. J,u Sml1h (HBl. 2. John Ften'h ICdMJ, 3. O&n Frarler (F''). WS«ond heal -1. Tony DeNJCclo (HBJ, 2. Steve Ltwrl1 (CdMl, J. Jol'ln Flan101n (F ). Third h••' -l. Sklc:i ol"'" \Fiil, 2 llllC't Erlck90ft (H l l, . Jel Fowler "IM.1 ourtll htet -1. K•!lh Tobi~ \CdMJ 2. Tnm Ellis {l=V) 3. Stev• Anttl Ul , Flffll hell -I , ll:lck 81\lfl' (H8/ 2. Sc<m Rfcllard1 (CdM) J. J1rrv Mrv 11\0 (FVl. s1~1h he~t -1. Greg Clemmons nuu 2, Rick otto ICdMl 3. Jeff Hont {FY). Kn•1110.iiro1 S.Ylnlh heal -1. Jllch Gonults IF' ) 1. Miki d<lwnev (HB) 3. Bob Linn fWm.). E!"hlh ~~•! -1. B·•~n r.111111-~ li.>R) 2. l?rld Peterson (FVl J. Dav• W;isl!er crrlM.I. Te1m score1: 1. Hun!lnct!on Beach 41, 2. Foun!~ln V1llev 311, 3 CorMI de! Alar 36, A. Ul'lversllv 21, 5. Wntmlnsler 16, 6. G1rdl!I Grove 12. Nickname Given El Toro High athletes will compete under the Chargers banner and don academy light blue and gold unifonns in the fall when they begin their in- itial venture in-interscholastic activity. The school is still without an athletic cfirector and no in- formation is available on the matter from principal Robert STILL ONLY $2.65 A MONTH Even On Pric:e Alone The • DAILY PILOT Delivers The Most For The Orange Coast SUBSCRIBE NOW 642-4321 (Or P'1011e tM DAILY PILOT otRc. 111 yo•r co-•ltftJ) Bosanko's ofrice . ~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! from to {andback)7 a..buonPSA. .......... 5' I Callhrnla's WllDflk'" stMe bird. Or tiy the PSA Grin11ingbirds to S&n '. Diego and San Francisco. 0Vef 160 flights a day connecting all of northern and southern California. Give your travel agent or PSA a bird whistle anq take off. PSA &I* J'DU a llt. Grenoble said Monday Schranz ,tcTrTIOUI austNUt t'I Cid of Or.._ c-t'I on Mn 2, ltn. Thi 9otn:I of Olreetort of tM Cor.111 NAMI STATIMINT flt9a Miii Stnll•l'Y Obtrlct l'fttl'Vft !I'll rl~t and Bleiner bad already tum-Thi folkWfnt ~ •re doing Publl"'9d o...no-com Dilly l'llot. 1o r1J1C1 env or •II bids. ed pro ~1-... ~ •· 15, :n. 2f, 1m 1m·n Mey " 1m Sehr . A tria' I SCOOT'; INDUs'ilttAI.. SU,PLY. &30 ~r W:ff~g:sT~~ ~Rc°OSTA anz, • us s op ~1ttn s1r111. COit• M .... cent PUBUC NOTICE MESA SANITARY 01STR1er. amateur skier who was dis--RUHtll H•m oi11on 630 T.,.11n ,ICTITI""" .. au1.,tns Myrn• ElltboYdt lilied f the •-W' t ' ..,... Aulsttnl $1cretery qua rom ""''" lD er Awnue, NIWl)Ort 9lldl, Cellf. -JfAMI STARMWNT P\1111111\td 01'111'1(11 Cont Dally """ Olympi•• ID' Sapporo Jatu1n J1mes M. Grell'Mtlr. 1152 Cl,._ Thi tollowfng flll"$Clll Is doing bllllrwll M9Y I IS 1971 1419.,J .,_ , r-., Stl'tlt. Cotta Miu, Cellf. ••: 1--'--'-'----~~----on a charge 0 f com-Thl• bl.Isl-is t111"' aw1111Kted by DELANEY'S INSTANT PASTURE, PUBLIC NOTICE · lism Is • G-•I P¥tntrshlP. ,..o. aox M Cott• """'M~lfornl1 mere1a 1 currently in Rusllll H-V" Dixon '26%7, 2515 Tustin. COttt C111 J--------~=---~ad1a_~~~~dylH~ situation Thi• :::::::i· ~~ th. couirtv tot;:::..C':'° M-DtlMMV. 2515 Twtrn, 'W'.1~0::A::::::s ID pro~ s~. Cltrll ot Orlllllt Coun1Y ori Aclrfl 17, COS!• ,Mep, Cllltwnl• t1627. Thi lotlowlng plnOfl ll doing IMJM» 1m. ey Thlr-M. w1rd. Dlpl.rt'f Tllf• 111111 ..... I• bllng COftductwd tiy .,. e•: , Vodi--•· ~rade COUl'ltf t:llfll. -• lfldh1klulf, ' . IRVINE VtrERINAAY ltOSl'ITAL. •-ir ~SS Frafld• M. OtlantY #02 Moulfwi P:edl;~,_J_rYIJ!!L C1llf. LOS ANGELES -Defensive Publlshliel ·Or•nue C-' 0.11., p11o1. Thi• 11e1-1 fllld with tM c°""tv '266A - nd Al ~-Ung lo AprTI 1A Mid """ 1 ••• 15. 1m 1m.n Ci.rt. oi' 0..-. County Oii April ''· 1m l•wrene• WV1"111 Zl1"1111. XII e \NW s, a rmer 01 Thlf'IM M. W..-d, °'9ll1Y countv Junfptr, s1ntw AN. c.. t21M. University of Southern PUBLIC NOTICE cim. Thi• Mlrwu •• c_ondUttld by"" In. cal" . All ,\_,..,........ ,,.,.. dlvld\lal. u0rm8 nurg.._.., W3S Publbhld DrlllOI Coht Oetly Piiot, lawfel'IClt W. l.arftlll, D.V.M, traded by the Buffalo Bills to • 111• "Prll 2A, •1'111Mey1, •· 1s, lfn 1145-n Thi• 111111m.nt fli.ct w11t1 1111 c:ouri1y be H Oil M NOTICa TO C1t•Dm>•• Clerk of Dr•noe COIMty on Merd'I :IO, lf7J • t ouston en onday for su~1:1t1oa coun OP TH• PUBIJC NO'l1CE l'·tOM hi h draft ho. STATIE 0, CALIPOll:NIA POfl Pubntfled Oraftlll Cotlt Dal!Y l'Jlol, a g c tee. THIE COUNTY 0" OllANGI Mey 1, •• 1$, n, 1'73 1:J20·11 Cowl;.... 6 feet 5 and llltO Ne. A-1-1 NqTJCa TO c1t•DITOflS .. "G "'"'° • •<>EN SU .. IRIOR COUA'f Oii TMI els lb Bill ' f'rst Ell•I• of MABEi. E. IN;..,.,. ' STATe 0, CA.Ll~NIA l'OI PUBLIC NOTICE poun , was e s 1 OKe•~· round draft choice in 1970 NOTICE 1S HEREaY GIVEN to "" THI COU .. tff'! C?!.!U.•O• ' creditor• of thl 11bOve named decedent E DO _._.,~ ,ICTITIOUS aUSINISI ao ft Sf thll 111 ptrlOl'IS ll1vll'CI clll!N 1111h1tl 1111 st1t1 of RI$ l . KILLIAN, •k• NAMI STATl!Ml!MT Jr•C Ge fJtlS s1kl d~edenl 1re rteflllred ti. 111• ftlllTI, ~~~C~llf:~.T~.·.~U.~~~j:~Md... Thi following ll"'10l"I I• CiolllCI buslnnt LONDON G h with ltM ~-ry lll.IChtn. ln 11'11 offlCI 1 o n : - r a a m ot !hi cltrtl. of !hi •bol'I '"'1tt9d court. or cftd ton oi' """ •bol'I "'med ...,, RAMOS • AUOC., 1'531 Airport Wit McRae a 26-year-old New to pr...m !him. With ""' lllC'IJs&rY lhlt 111 PltWlllf ht~lng cl•lm• eo•lnd 111e so., Senta Mt, ctnt, 92707 ' vouchlrt. to thl undlnlgMd ,, ... ~ Nici dlctdlnt ,,, reoulreei to 11111 thlm, RllDlll Ad•m R1mo.. 1601 81lbol Zealand racing driver Who of 1111 1ttorntY•• Negtl, RtNn • wttl'I thl MCUMry ~. kl lhl Offlct 81Yd,, Ntwport 81.i:I\, C1tlf. 92'60 I. -B 'ta' h bee DI~ fllC 1010 Nortt! JMI" St su1i. of !I'll el«k oi' ftll etlow entll1!1d court, or Thi• buslfltU •• conducted by '" I~ now 1ves 1n n m, as n 510 Sent• An~ c.n1on1ii f2:1Dl ...Mcti 1, to ~""' thlm, w1111 '"' nteeU•rv dlVklu.I. signed by Andy Granatelli of tN' p11 o1 ~1-oi' 1111 ~ 1n wudltn. to "" Wllltnltntd at """ off1e1 Rubin A. R•rno. Peterson. / Dodd Gain All-circuit •H ma~ .. Pll't•ll'll"9..,"" llfl•ll of .. 1c1 of hlr e~. DOMA.LO 'W. Kii.LiAN_, This"''"""''-we! fli,ci: 111111'1 tl'll c~ cttc_..t ·.ittilA lilur• ""°""" ,,,... tM nt .. 4'0I c.,,... Drlw, Newport 9"di. tv ci.n of 0r81'1111 COWLfV on AP\11 ta. nr11 pubnatlon of thlt l'IOllc• C.1lloml• ~. whldl Is 1111 pleu of 1973. • o.tm Allrll u. 1m · bullMP of ltll Ul!dlnlGMd In •U matter• 1''4711 John w Mcu..... Plrl•lrillli'toillll ... II of Mid ...,..,,, l'WUltlld °"'"" C09lt Deny Pllol ellt\llOr oi' "" """ of Wltlllft ...... monttla afllr ... flnt pub(Je. April 2' ...it ,,,.., I, lL lS. 1m Us.t-n ,,,.. dlCldlllt "°" of !hi• riotlct.' '1111 lboft ,.. ' Oltwd Apro 16. 1m PUBLIC NOTICE •A09&.. aaOAN a DAVIDSON, INC. DORY. /Jffrt KIU.IAN SWETT ay1 ....... p, """' Jr. E .d.tfbi'" ' 1 ----~--------ltll INrtli Mall! SI., htM S11 K 11 ti !hi Wiit of !I'll l'ICTITIOUt aUSIN•ll Sfft• AM, C•ltf. '2111 DOtlAL.D~M~~· •AMI STAT•MINT I~=~ 'i'NOMAs K. CAi.UITIR 11;M tollowlflf Pt:rlOn .i, doing bullntn· PubUstltd ar.no. Cout 01lly l'lklt. Ati.Myt .. Lew SMITH 9ROS .• IUD $Upfflor AV111ue, Mey l, .. 15, 22. 1m 1326on =-~,·~ °1:...r.e ,,... COili' M ... , C•ltf. '2621 PUBLIC NOTICE Toh C11t) MWnl PRES.KEE, INC,. 16«1 SIJPll'IOI' Av11111t, COii• Miii, C11lf. 92U7 -------------!""""""" fW hMltrtX Thll IMll'llll 11 btlng conduclld bY 1 FICT"IOUS austN•ll PUblllflld °''"" Cot1I Dally Piiot, corpor1tlon (Celllornl•l. NAM• ITA'TaMINT AprH \J, 34 .... #My 1, I, 1'73 1137·73 PRES.KEE, INC. TM followlng Jllf'IOft 11 doing busllltll PUB L1rry l . KH!ln GoJ•-· w ~ eon • Mlk .. : LIC NonCE This '''"m.n' flkd w1111 ..,. county uen e:n ege s e OIVl!ltSIFIEO COMMODITIES. '"' Clerk oi' Or•l'lll County'Oft: Aptll lt, 1m. Dodd and Curt Peterson have Morelle Pllc:I. Or•Flll· C•lllomll '2665 ,ICTITIOUS •UllNlll er. TlltrKI M. W•rd, o.puty Countv been med to the che ltoblrt ltlveroll, lut Nordic Pi.ct, NAMI STATEMl!NT C rt. na coa s 0r111111, c.11torn11. Thi 1o11ow111111 ,., ... 11 c1o1no lMll'lfl• "'7111 All-Southern c a I i f 0 r D I a Thi• bullr.u It eonduCtwd by lto!Mrt M! Publllllld 0.-111111 COlll D•llY Pllor. Confereace baseball team. Rl\fll'Otl, •n lncllvlOU.I. DESIGN SIGN co .• 1Ull2.C Gothlrtl Aprll 24 end ""-YI, .. U. lt7J 1176·73 Roblrt Rl\fll'Oll Al/9., Hlll'lttnglon Blkll, C.lft. 9UO Dodd, a sophomore from Tlllf st•temrnt w1• n1ec1 with 1111 c_.. Bry1n Rtlpti McUOd. 2S401 c.n. PUBLIC NO'l1CE Westminster, was selected as 1y c"'11. of ore"°' county on MIY ~.~'::; ~~·~ N:::,C~11'w •n 1n-• 111,. the first team catcher while w'"""'.. •• " ........... d1v1c1u110. :r=:.·~ M<' ....... su,11t1oa cou11:T· o" ™" P fr·~-· J A '"' _.., ..,,,., .._ STATI OF CAl.l,OltNIA '°' eterson, a ~uu.an from E AthnllY at i.. This 111 I Wll med wtll'I !I'll CClllll· THE COUNTY OP OIA .... Modena made it as a utility 11tts cNMllaw ••••••_., tv ciert of Dr•ne• eountv on ADftl :zs, Na. .......,.., ' tfllle•sod. (aflforl6a taa l•n. NOTICli O'' HIAltlNO 0, Pln'rTIOH player. Rubll$hed Or1ngt.CONI P•llv Piiot MltV .. .,.,, •• ~ -c· ' 0 , ... ,MIU "Olt l'ltOaATI! 0, Wit.I. ANO f'Ol Dodd ba-·· 341 'd . g th L 15 Z2 79 Im 141)1.73 ,. .,_, "''llllf Oii • •T Piiot, LETTlltS TESTAMINTARY ~i.eu • ur1n e ' ' ' Mly .I, •• 15, 22, 11n 1:iu-n Elllle ol PHILIP $HOflE. Oec.llSld. past season and stole 21 bases PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 1s HEREeY GIVEN '"" A:vtto Gold W t d And PUBLIC NOTICE Sllore 11111 ffl" llerwl11 • oetlllOft tor a en es recor . Prot>ete of w111 •nd tor 1tsuellC'• o1 1.rt· Peterson hit at a .429 clip and FICTITIOUS •USINl!SS PICTITIOUS aUSINISS ltn Test1meot1ry to the Plfltl-r, d 4 3 't bin ....1 NAMI STATIMINT NA.Ml ITATIEMltrlT rtfertnce to wlllch 11 medt tor f\lrttier ha 3 • pl C g rte01u. tl;ht tollowlng penon II doing MIMI• TM fotlowfflt ptrson It dolllCI builneu p1rllcular., end 11'111 tl'le time ...it piece Three Rustlers were COMMUNITY M,, NAG EM I! NT u ; of IM&rlng"" .. ,,,. Ila• btln Mt'°' Ml1 Selected to the ·-nd team . SERVICES. COM,ANY, lUJ Nordic LYLE'~ OF NEWPORT,'"° Or111111 ~''E.'.. •I t :OO '·"'··Ill !I'll courtroom of """"" AYI., Cott• Mes.I, C1lll. ....,..1, ,..,en! No. 3 of ':'Id eaurt, 11 100 They include third baseman p~-· Or~~1~11~1• Nordk Pllce, LYI• E........tt V•n di Welk., 233 Civic c1111r Orlvt WMt, I" .,,. City of Sente A"' Ave NIWPOrt &Nell (:1111 Slnte ~ Cllltomla Tony Cresci, 'outfiekler Phil o;~c·~~·rd 7621 01 Gary f7IWO ·• • • p11111;.p,1111.1m Macartney and pitcher Craig sir.i, WNn'1et, ct11'1om11 en Tiil• bullrwu Is eonclucllcl bY en 111111. ~!'.;,~~.:it st ~N. Lu d Tiits bull-II COl'IOllcttd by lloblrt 'llcru.I. MINDI.IN, LIVY n gren. Jt1vtro11 " s1ep11en A. BHrd. , Gtntr•I L. I!. v,., d• Wiik" SIU.UT• a uaNnai• Cresci batted .364 white f'•J'1Mr1,hlp. Thi• lllflfl'l«ll Wll flied with !ht C-· 1• ~ Partr .... Macartney hit at a .271 clip. ~= RM!ent ~•trt of Or•r111 COU11tv °" Aprll 2s, T IM ,,...... Clllf, ,.. Lund had ~ k . Thll •llllmtrit we1 fll4'11 with 11'11 COIM· l'M* llt 111S) ln«Q gren 8 mar lJI ty Clerk of Ore• Cour.tv on M•Y '· 1'13. Publllhld °''"" Cot1I D•llY Piiot, A~ .... tt"'*"" co.st 0.1... ,Jlot, conference action. All three ,-n111l _M~"'"-'~·~'·;,';';;"~·~';"~';;;;;;;;;:;;:-'=..,.=n:l~M~•~•~··~·~·~·"~;"'~=--~"-'-'"~''.:':·» are ....i..mo...... W•""" M, ...-Atty; ~...... • ..... llAll Cf'IMl'llW 11¥1. . PUBtlC NOTICE Golden West's B J a i n e 1..,....... ca11ftnlle ""* PUiUC NOTICE Calder·, Rod Biown and Pat Publlshld Orat111• Cot•t 0111.,. Piiot, ,ICTJTIOUI IUSINns Mey, .. 11. 22. ,,, ltn 1407.n NAMI STATIMl!NT SU,UIOA .. couAT 0, TM• Espinoza were accordedl--'------'------1 Thi to11ow1ng ,.,_ .,, doing 1TAT•°""'M.1l'OllN1AP01 honorable mention. PUBLIC NOTICE bu•'""' 11: TM• cou~v.o' ot:A••• CYCLE WOflKS LTD., 1122 HIWJIOl'f lk A-1GM Los .Angeles City College's ,ICTITIOVS •USINIESS Blvd., Co.ta MIU, Clllf. n627 NOTIC• 01' M•All:IH (II' PmTIOM Pat Estes was named the COD· NAM• STATllM•NT S!tpheft ~. Klmb11, m s." l"Olt ''"•" OI' ...... AllD ,011 Thi followlng ptr90fl 11 doing bulll'lffl 8..,,.n:llllO Ave,, NIWPOrt 8..c:h, C1llt. Lil'n't:ltS Tl!STAM•llTAltY ference!s most--Va J.u.a-b I e at;----""° ' Etl•I• ot MILOIU!:D J, WIESE. I ' A I -~--fi Id Eco Lo G Y MA 1 N T e: N A H c E -JDM· ..-. tclml!W;--n 11 """'°" a1vc1.. ~-· p ayer· tc:.iu1-.i1 OUt le er, SERVICE, 17131 I( Sk\'Plrk, +rvlM.o H9Wp(lrt'lffctl, C1llf. r*O NOTJCE .II ME"l!a~ OIVl!N 11'111 Alvifl Estes baited 380 c.11torn1i t'IJf1l Tl! .. bu1lneu I• eoncluctwd ll¥ a OtMrAt o. WI•, ,,., l'IU fl)eid'""'91ft • """°" · • • Jol'WI A_.Fendrtr, 901 T1nene ''·•Colli MrtntnlllP. tor Problft of WOI anil far IMUMU ol All-SICtf c~ ,....,,. Ctlltorflll 9'2152' • SllPftln o. Kim~ L•tttni T•lllflWl'ltary, rtter.net to WfllCll ,l,.t T'-Thl1 't1usrntu II conductwd tty 1Jr! J,.. Tl!l1 tt1twnent WH flied wllfl !tie COUfto II mMt for fllt1tltl" ~ .,.. tl'Mll Pl$. "''"' C""'9 .... Yr. dlvktual. " c1-. of °''"" COUl!t'/ on AprU 2S. !I'll ttme .... ~ "' l\Mrlng ttll Mint C-Mikt Dodd Gold'" Wttl .JAi $o Joll!I A. Fll'ld.r l'71 IMls ~~ ll;l't fW. Mtv .21, 1m. •I t :OO 18-8r•d Hll1rri.n. c.,.,,.... .31)( Ff This fllltmtnt w11 filed will! !hi Coun-' PMllJ •.m., In tf'lli courtroom of o-,.1rt"*'I No. 28-aob Plcc!olo. s. Monlcl .32! So: 1y c1-. of °''""' County on Mey t. 1m Plllllllllld °"""" Col•t O.lly tl'llOt, J "' 11141 -'• _,. CWlc c.em. 0rr~• 38-Cll'tO Miii•, LACC ' .2" Fr. """ Mey J, •• '" 22, 1'71 1~n W..1, '" ... City f41''9M1-.AMI, CMllornl•. S~s-AtldV ~· Hal'tlor .351 SI. ,Ul)llthed Ori~ COiet Oii" Piiot Deltill ~1 »..1'3 ,ct~~~ O:~':d.lf=~ '.ift ~: MeY ,•· 11. :n. "· rn 1sa.n ,P:UBIJC NOTICE 1, ~~AM<~ 1t JOttN, F-JlffFrmk,S.MO!'olCI ~ !o. ' 1 ~ .,W'11 _..,~ P-Oennl• i!mltlOflt HMtlor ~ so. PUBlJC NOTICE ,ICTITIOOI IUSIN••• • ~T~._., ::.~NMlltl, P-J~Mor,r'li!-~ ... So. NAManATllMINT ...... N~=·,,-.,,., I ~IC'tTJ'I, LA.CC ... 2 SO. ,ICTJTIOUI 8i.ISldSS Thi fol-.111111 Pl'IO!I l't dOlfw IMI-Tlh fmJ· . • }i' -urt ,........_ GWC .C2t Fr. NA.Ml: STATIMINT 11· A'*-P -.r ~ ~)Tlflflt TM follow1111 ........ are CIO!nt • T'MI OtUGINAl vn•o•N IHOtt co., ' .. '""'' 1i:f~~"f4.~ :m SO. bu•lw:~I aUll.OINO SU,PLllS, Hll :... == Orde, '~iwtM Mtf~~~ ,~ ~ D"" .:.o;; m-.rlldf """""· Harttor .so t: Hewriort Bew.. NO. s. c..til Mw. Cal<t. John H. '""'· tan Mtweteill• ar.,,J---""·--------..C.- 39-TGllV CNICI. owe ,,.. So. fffl1 """"no'°"' lkKll. c.trt . .,... S-Rl.ld'f U re, c '°"''' .3A4 Fr, ..., G. OWrtllrf. ISll Ntw!lott ll\ld.. Tiii• ............ It Olftllluctwd ,,, • fflo PUBUC NOTICI Piii! MacertfM'I GWC .271 ~ Cott• "'*-'• Clllt. "611 di""'*· . • ~ • F-111:1511: Gonlllls, ff•rtior .~7· ' VHM:lflt I . RffOll'I, 2500 H.....n JOllft K. 1urr I .... W::l" ~ Yf'= EHb~ ·'!1 atYlf., Ne. " co111 w...., c.nt. nw 1lllt •ttf91Mnt ••• flied wo11 tti. ClllUfto 1u;n1oa coun °" TM• f'-f~k A'.1t111; ~ IJ • Tllll IMI'*' "' tondUtltd tly a ........ tv Clll'fl of Or ... C~ tft ""'19 U. STATI OP CAU ....... ~ P-Ell ('°"""n, 1.ACC 4'1 r. ~. 1m TM• COUNTY°' 1*MMHi Horitll'abl1 111111tlon -•lalne C•t• fl:IY Q, o.mtrf "'-1 k ~ f('<!>klfll W-.11. ltlllol'I A~ (l;est TN• •t•tlmlftl ... fl .. With fht COWi< PvlllllMd Ore• CoMt ~ Pflof, NOTtc• o~· MIMI•• °' ""'"''°" l LAll lton .""""' fOOtdllt W..tl, ,,. "Cltrlt of 0r-. C-ly Ol'I ~y '· 1m ,,., 1, .. 1$, n. 1m ,....,, !NII. •!toUTI CM' ....... MID POI 71.,.'"""""" f~~I._ ht l tOll'IOl.I • ··l'lmf LnTl'AI T~AMlllrf...," =.1~IMJil: C~i!~!t e r .u~ °"** co.t 0.lty '"°'· --nnu. ~,,_. Eltlitl Of IDAMAY D9~1. ~ • ' ..... T .. 15. n. "· 'lm IW-1J rVDllfti """'"lilt td • ~ • • ·--MoTICI IS HlltlaV OIYD ltllt • ' · PUBUC NOTICE PKTfTIOUI austt1m AWtM ~ tt"""'9 • m.. ...,. , Jc Golf ..... ITATOMllOT ...... "" -" -_. "" _ The ~ ~ ft ....., I""'"°' 91 Lenn f•"1 ... t to tM l'rc'nttOUS 9U1:f111DJ, .,.._ H : ~· ,..,..... • ...... " ...... tor T .. - -l10 ,:::,.,n.Ml"'WT" .__.__ COASTAi. ,.l!tlONNIL AOINCY, '~-:.::' "'9 """and --'"' ................... c.... .. .,, ~--... --Ill ....... ~ Fl -... ,.., Ml ,.,._, C.ilf. ,_ , fOt ~ IS.. 1!11>· at f ! .. ~., Ill lt'lt ··:;;,:, """'«J THI VILVIT ,.00.. 1o1-.....,.. °""* '; CWl""'1t. ~11.es c...-.i ~ .. ~·""*" .-;' * flf uld Fin dllY -n -Aidt """' •klD.. »1• cam111o c.llfrll!Oo '9ft Orl'l'I. COit• -... c.iit; ,.. CllW1'. -' "' C'.11\W' OrM ww. '" M ( 1 1t -JUM c.,lstr'"°' Q;, f'JU'I. C*"lt V. C,... .... J11tt C~ IM C1ty Of •A~~ ~II'• ........ I """" •• o.a.. n1 lkMI• """" .... IMdl. Clltf.... 0.-~ v. Im I YI 11-ftJL -,°!l~ 0.-1, C.ltfwnlt. Thi• eA ...... e.ducW tw • · WIU.IAM I. It JOHN M°"I' 1 "'1 ....._ II COl"l .. 'tld "' Ml "" ..... CO." Clllr1\c -" ifW t llfYfdUIJ. • J, Qlllwl'I -' I ""':.:"Ji & ....... ; Ille.. • ), """"' .. o.rda ' Tiii• ............ """' "-.CtvfttY ,,, .... ~ (C TIU .... fll'lllnt WM 'u.d WI ... 1t11 C~ CIWt. If Onllllt C"""' •• Allrtl,., 1"1. ~........., C..-Dr .. ~.AU flt -( < • IT 1 _a.t ... Of ... c.ltY 'M Mt11 a. WIU,IAM I . IT ......,, COUNTY ....,., .... c•. . ••• ';." l QARK. ly,,,.,,,, L K,....,, ~. nh.-(nt)....... • MTft ".air' -f ~ .... ......,,, ·c~ ...,...,. ..., ,....._ I =~no lot~,.,.,. .,, l'vbll*""' ~ O.t 0.1" Pllef, ~1Wl9d OfWltt Cont O•llY ,.llot, "'*"...., or... CoMI Df/lf'f "'°'' CJW. 'P' -~~7CttetltY w. M41Y '· •• 1J, tt.11m ,~~II 17: ~•.Md ,,.,., l' .. 1m· ,....,,; ,,., 1, t. .. ~m ms.n . ;11111~ .... I• 'f ., Vfl.' ... ..... -" ',, .. .,. ~ -. . . ... !.•·'ll ,_ .... 'f .. .:.~~ .--:. r:, •"<U'l. • •-(of 'I ...... ~ •• I""" • l""l" ·•'~'·' .. .. -.. , ... ~. .t ' ~.~ '•" I ..... 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",,. ~" "'- ···~ -.. ! 1~ ,., .. , \'" .. ~,}.\ . . . . .. , . . # ". :•i .... , ... , .. ,. . ,-.., ,, 11!>1 • • , 'l ;· '. '. . .... : ' ,ll .,. ! I •'I . ' .. ····~ •.• • r.·: • ~ .. ... . ~·· Ul,~\ ..,,, .. i i.111 • TONIGIIT'S TV IDGIIlJGHTS • ABC D 8:30 -"The FBI Story." James Stewart J>laYJ a "typical" FBI agent in this documentary· <iraina with Vera ldllt!s an<! Nick Adams. • ~ NBC D 10:00-Ameriea. Contemporary problems whlch threaten to alter some ot the lasting l"ralts ot the American way ol liJe are .,,_,,,ined by A11· sf.air Cooke . KCOP m 11:00 -"The Bachelor Party." Don Murray, E. G. Marshall and Patricia Smith bead the cast of this 1957 comedy. CBS II 11 :80 -"How to Murder Your Wile.'' 1 Jack Lemmon u a do-it-yourself cartoonist and Virna Lisi as the luscious blonde be weds by mis- take in this 1965 comedY. with Terry-Thomas steal· ing the show as Lemmons valet. KTTV m 12:30 -"The Girl. in While." JUJ1e Allyson as a lady doctor in a 1952 drama with Gary 1.lerrill. · TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening MAYB D lu Hocl11 Sbnlfr Cep Pl1JOn1 Continued trom 5PM. T1nt1tl'teiy schtdu1td. a IOll•w Ci) Ctt Sin1r1 CJ Wllltld Dud w Mnt ID "'",_ Il k,,.. m Ml Dw1ct ll•-* m KCtT Adotl 7l 11.ms sdlfd. ultd tonlrht. lllDl9J •rt •nd 1ntk1m. lrtcluchn1 an oriain•l Rodin scu!p-1 t11r1 plus 1 Clrlbbeln cruise, Ell""'"""' Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES O l])CiJlillAIC ·--' (C) (9D) .. H1nlwt'" (R) (ftl) '72 -Clint Wilker, Sttl1nie Powers, Alex Klrns. A JOldler ol fortune 11 !ht turn of lht tentury ls dtttrmln" to rtttln wMI is his 1fter he rthlms to Tex1s to find his rtncll aold 1nd his •lie 1on1. m Mtn Crtffl• SllN m Stlnd Up '" CMtf m ""'" ,,.m.,., -"'"'..,.. t<n) '49 -Glt111\ Fon!, Janet Llllll. ~· fiJ (C) -....... (dll) ·11-_, £nol Flynn, Freil: MKMt1rrtJ. ,,.())(CJ -illtll .., Wiit '" ; l:JI 8 .,_ "'9Wellt's ~ (dn) 1 • '53--0i111ton Huton, SUM1I HIJ· Dell't" Cone!, (C) ....... "" .. 1m1• P•rt I (cir•) '6S -Fm- S11111r1. '".)'' •I"' wtnl. • '' Um (C) •a h•-....-Corid. , .. ,..,. Ci-> 'SMiCNrd £.cM, ~ •• I' '... Mce11ltt. "'"t'""' \ ....... (com) '36-W.O. n.id1 :..~ :. ·.~ """ ........... (dfl) '59 .... ,w-. -Nwlll• 8r1nd. ''Olllw FMf( .,, t. ... -·' '50-JlmlllJ' Ell~L •u ....,., ,.._ llJ(CJ "II ... """ -~ 1itttr" Patt I (11.1111) '6S -8lttt Dnlo, OIMo .. Hfl1111'4. 1,11 D ICl ""' ·~ ,_.. <-> '52 -Kirt Ooullts. Eve Miiier. I,. f) "A ClllW h ....... (drl) 'II -lurt lJnwttr, Jutt 8'rlllll l:IO (J) S-u 111!11 tfdlC ~ " ~-'--------~----~~~-~----~11 ll'f I ' ~· ,..-,.1 • .. ~.·t.11• • !'.J": ·' 'I' I Nearly Everyone Listens to -Landers ·I I • UP'IT ......... Robot Receptionist 'Carbo' the wallting, talking robot developed by General Electric's Carboloy Systems Department, conducted a sidewalk news con!erence Monday be- fore wallting into Cobo Hall to participate in the Society of Manufacturing Engineers Show in De- troit. Change Food H'!-bits To Keep Costs Dow1i DALLAS, Ter. (AP) -The long-term trend in food prices will be upw.ard and the on1y way to lower' the bill ls to C'hange the family's eating habits, delegates to the Super Market InsUtute's 36th annual convention were told Monday. I ' American consumer "what ap- pears to be _an inevitable trend ·ht f()(J;f prices and the basic reasons for it." "It is misleading to en- courage an expectation of a return to the lower food prices, relative to income, that prevailed during most of the postwar years," Cooke said . • Profits 'Look S'ltlwp' Gillette Took Ad Gamble --Won By l)J!AN C. M.II.LEI\ u ................. NEW YORK -The Gillette Co· ..... pany says It has cut down shaving competition by liming its promotion at mare related sports events. 0€ the 70 million U.S. adults who shave, 74 percent use wet rather than electric shaves. according to William G . 5alatlch, president of Gillette North America, Boston. Gillet· ·te handles only blade shaving equipmtnt ln North Arnerica . FIFTEEN YE~RS ago it looked as if the blade shavlng companies were as dead as last year's Christmas tree. ODe out of three Americans had switched from blades to electric shavers. "But our emphasis on sports, which attracted male viewing and listening, and Im· proved wet shaving systems such as stainless blades has cut the margin back to 26 per· cent," Salatlch said. "And "'e're improving ever)' year." The story of how Gillette turned to spor1a to sell its ll<Od- ucts reveals the astounding rate of infiation over the last 35 years as well aa ~ secrets of selling a product . FIGURING rr had lo appeal to men, Gillette decided to sponJOr the New York Yantee. Cincinnati Reds world series of 1939. It wu a gutsy gamble . Gillette had: to put up about one • fifth ol Its total annual 11.3 million advortislng budget for that series. Onnpattd to today's cost of l tO mUllon to $12 million foc a series the 1939 outlay wa.s an advertising steal. It came to $1000000 for 50 peroent radio rights and another llll0,000 for talent and other co s t 11 • Television was\~ a factor in those days. The pmblt paid olf. "Our 1939 sales In that MSI Data Tells Saks • ...e..d....J, 1 .... 1 '"• ~ , OAll.Y PILOT J• OVER. TIIE COUNTER NASO Llotl.,.. for Monlloy, M.y 7, 1973 J • l"letini, Oppr~10..-- Consumer Gets ~ --- .. .. -_..- ' -• !!!gli Cost Blame. When- . NEW YORK -Braoe yourself. About those rt&lng prloes: You're a lot to blAme. You might be the victim but .)'<ltl're.tbe oppressor too, l'llll< ·own oppreaor. Yes, you the · consumer are ln charge of the ~economy and doing a bad job. Thia may be a debatable tconomlC view, but it isn't a fa'ntasy. It can be shQwn in many waya that what the coo- p • swner does with h i e money \lllclates future events and that .govenunent and business .react to it. ' VP TO WORLD War II 11 ~was just .the-opposite . Busin~ a n d government "spending were the big factors ,lo directing the economy and anaJysts ignored the consumer who, It was felt, couldn 't do anything but spend i! he was goJng to live. But now consumers have discretionary spend ing. They have money left over after the essentials. They can buy or •')1ot buy, save or not save, and • do so on an enormous scale. ~ --~~ ~o~ ~a~fy":~:~:n:~ : ithe GroSSNationaJ Proou-ct. :· No less a man than George ; :. Katona, the dean. of consumer • behaviorists. is authority for (:.the statement about consumer . power. ~ •· "Yes." he said in answer to- ·;.a suggestive question, 0 the : • consumer is in control but"he ;.is not conscious or aware or ~::it." ';· "JS HE DOING a poor job? ' .. Yes very poor" said • • • : .Katona, but he ha$tened to , mention that the consumer · : doesn't-act alone. He makes · • his decisioos. in accordance . : :with or in o-poosition to . : :government decisions -~nd 1~·gCfvernment share s • SEVEN ADVANTAGES . OUR PAGER OFFERS that yours may not C 1 coMrLm OIAN•I COUNTY COYllAGol l11Cllltll .. : &..iMH IHc Sa• C.._lde, Ma.Ion Yltl• Dano Pohlt, • well Cd lhocll lllMI Mott of L.A. o MONTH TO MONTH llHTAL IA.SIS NO DffOIJT 119UlllD ON A,,IOVID c116JT ONLY $17.00 rll MONT TOTAL COST tnflMltff ,...., NIW COMrACT UNIT SIZI t1'1••4x'la1 YOICI MQSAGI PAGIRS ALSO Alll AVAIL.A.ILi 7'~ULL FREI MAINTl~~NCI ORANGfCOUNTY RADl01 tl ll'f!ONF srnv1n ,, .. 714 • IJJ.3301 · .. 1 SO. SANTA ""' SANTA ANA rem l••Unl a11cll, Ml••IOll Vlet1. nl Pelnl, Sin Cl11N1nl1, 1111 Ju1n ••llh'1110, El TO,_, ctll loll f 4t6·Jl23 responalbllity. "Why is the oonswner 90, eP- rattc?,, Katona was asked . "Erratic? We had lots ol er· ratJc economic b e h a v I o r before discttlionary spend- ing," he said, and be listed among thefu the d e e-P depressions and r r e q u e n t ~siona that have marked tbe country'.J_gro!rth. "On the whole," he said, "the consumer ls less erratic than buslne.ss and speculation. There are so many consumers compared to businessmen." Because there are so many variations or co n s u m e r behavior, the extremes tend to be averaged out, he explained. When busihess spendlng was the more powerful, he pointed out , it was concentrated amo.ng a relative few. IT WAS DURING World War 11 that Katona became concerned about consumer power. What in the world were people going to do with all those war bonds they had ac- cumulated ? They had developed enormous power. Studying t h e i r attitudes, Katona developed the themes that are basic to consumer studies tod_ay·, that consumers spend or save not just Decause they have money to do SQ but because of their moods and fears and other conditioos of mind . Many students believe, for example, that the consumer has had, his fill of high prices today and will~ ,despite a windfall in tax money ·now · beihg returned tQ hhn, bank his mon~y rather than chase prices to ·the heaven~_. WHILE 111E consumer may be calling the shots, it is genera.Uy agreed that what government does has a pro- found erfect upon consumer moods and thus diminishes the consumer's" power and shares in the poor management. Nevertheless, another stu- dent of consumer attitudes! Albert Sindlinger, head o Sindlinger & Co.-, demonstrates that interviews with consumers can be used to forecast various elements of the economy. He claims that his studies have enabled him to con· slst.ently forecast the Standard ' & Foo.r's 425-stock index eight weeks ahead of time, and that at the moment his eight-week forecast is within one-tenth or one point !rom being a bulls· eye. SOON, HE said, he will demonstrate that consumer attitudes can be related to many other economic events, including interest r a t e s . "Bankers only foJlow what has PllVlfE TRUST FUNDS AVAILABLE FOA flEAL ESTATE LOANS lat l 2nd TRUST DEEDS t l ,500 To $250,000 UP TO '°"• LOAMS OH TRUST DEED COlLATERAL Nl'WPOllT !GUITY FUNN H"'p0" Center 920 Hewpo'1 Centtr Ort.. Mtwpor1 8111eh, Ctlll, (7t4J &44-1124 (Peopl;;'.Quotes) makes nday FllllBAY Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Ordtr For Yourself or 1 Friend· May be used on onvelopes •s return address l'•hels. Also very hendy 11 identific:etion libels for m•rking person•I items such •s books, records, photos, etc:. L•bels stick on 9l•s1 tnd may be used for m•rking home c1nntd fo c:d items. All labels ,ere printed with stylish Vo9ue type on fine quellty whit .. gummed peper. r----:..::~;,:::;::.~:~~:~---1 I ,.,..,. P'rW ... Le .. I DI•., P'.O, • .,. 1"9 • I c..s1• ,.. .... c111f. n•u I I I I I . I I I : L----~~L~!-~~J!~~----J \ a Family Needs a Friend ... Sylvia Porter Do high food costs cause you to cut down . o.n the quantity and quality of company dinners? Do you find yourself slighting your family 's nutritional needs in order to meet financial needs7 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 fam ily. Her nationally syndicated column , "Money's Worth," features im- portant ideas which can relieve your concern over monetary matters. For ex- ample, she will tell you how to save a considerable percentage of your gro- cery dollar despite spiraling food costs. Let a friend drop in on you tonight. Sylvia Porter can visit you from the pages of the DAILY PILOT delivered right to your home . You will get your money's worth from Sylvia Porter's col- umn and all the othe r special features in the financial pages of the \ \ DAILY PILOT THE ONE THAT MEANS BUSINESS -· r 1 ,, ,, • ... • J . .. 4 ~· . ,• ~ • • b t t t .. r t t - •• ... ... 't :~ .i • . ..., .. 1m ,_ · Monda.y's Closing Pri~1nple1e New York Stook Exchange list I \ • " • ' 1 p ""!If PILOT T uesdl.r, Mii 8, 1 ~73 t AMILIR TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT & JEFF FIGMENTS •• NANCY HEY, DON'T FORGET OUR AGREEMENT TO SHARE E'VE'RYTH I NG··· I RATE' HALF OF THAT LOLLIPOP "TODAY'S CRDSSWDRD PUZZLE ACROSS 42 ''B11t who will ----•.• ---?" 1 Le gisla1u1e's 44 Pewter coin pioduce 45 Click beetle S Vegetable 46 Hibernia dish 47 Kind of gull g Hardwi re 49 Huit items SJ Mentioned 14 New Zealand earlier tree 57 Golf cours e 15"Af1ic1n piece republic SB "The sky'a 16 Till the----" 17 Down-Under 59 Soothing bird: Var. substance 18 "I agree" 61 House part 19 Boa 62 Feminine 20 Canvas name structures 63 Cart 22 Put the heat 64 Occupation; on Sull1x 24 Feminine 65 Occurring namer within 26 Structural 66 Equ ivalent steal item 67 Far: Prefix 27 Show sorrow 29 ScuUer"s necessity JO Transporta- tion media: Abbr. 33 Hydroplanes; 2 words J7 Stain 38 Dupe: Informal 39 Mr. Carson 40 Steps for fence scaling 41 Negative phrase: Dial. DOWN 1 'ret& ---·- 2 Ar1ives J Ontario 1iver 4 Arizona, Texas. etc. 5 W11t1: Scot. 6 Light generating device 7 Werning of at111ek 8 Glass contiliner: 2 words Yesterday's ~uzzle So1~ed: P L 0 T 5 L T I i: I T I It 0 R I 9 l ight cavalry horseman 10 Per --··- 11 Headliner 12 Ft.sh 13 Ice vehicle 21 Squalid 23 Water bodies 25 Confederate soldier: Informal 28 Straighrs: 2 words JO Narrative poem 31 "Whatever -·--Wants" 32 Proolre1d11r's word 33 Oua11el 34 Couple 35 Hea11ng v&ssal 36 Be sick in b&d J7 Hardest 40 Small piece 42 Marshes 43 Dickens character 45 Calo1le counter 47 Salty stuff 48 Kind ot crown 50 Egg-shaped 51 Kind of book 52 Solid: Prefix 53 Hawaiian royalty 54 Grendular snow 55 Pr&uge 56 Weight unit 60 Colo1 by Tom K. Ryan l'RAr:rlCA).L'( by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER DO YOU KNOW eETSY'S EXTREMELY ·THE MAN IH 50 ••• TALfNTED, JUDGE! ONE WHOM SHE'S OF THE NETWORKS WAmS CURRENTLY HER. FOR AN INTER.VIEW INTERESTED? $HOW! e uT IN MANY OTHER. 'WAYS, SHE'S VERY IMMATURE! ! i ! ! • ' MISS PEACH aur :r~, WHY ~e 'IOI.I ·~~ WLA" AFFliCflON FOi' '1'11i "IS1' OF V0\411: CliAfSMATIS T l~l .. DICK TRACY -. • DOO!.EY'S WORLD -• SALLY BANANAS ,. GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charlie t.t. Schulz M8ITION llWE 'il A M151CIAN, ANP 'llXJ 6f1' ~ 001' ! by Harold Le Dolix MEAHWHH.E ••• SAM, I LIED TO YOU AeOtJT WHY I CAME HERE! THE REAL REASON WAS .~.TO SEE YOU! YOU'VE 6EEH ON MY Mlt-10 CONSTANTl.'I' SINCE I · LfFI SIX YEARS AGO! OM, NCAUSS THlr'~ A JaAJ.Olotf, fNVIOUS IJIANCH. ,..._ MINUTI T~ _, "!'HAT YOtl'U VSlfY. 600r:>'AT SCMl~Tl·UN4', 'T'HJY ltiSaNT' ~ . "°" '1'1' •• ... by Mell ' by C"'5ter Gould . ' ' -, .. - by Charles BarsOtti by Gus Arriola by R09er. Boll;n , . '· ·==z::!!.•"''·---- ... -. THE GIRLS "Well, suppose we tldnk tt over a day or two ind then decide wbether or not we 1boald go in for &hill 1aani 1edactive &oot of the tweatla. n DENNIS THE M.ENACE • 1 T ' . \ \ • Why Criti~s? • Emmy Policies Assafled • • lly JAY SllARBUTI' vQtlng IOI Emmy news awarda NEW YORK (AP) -The because of po&lble conlllct-of. . - r•w..t..ff Pre11••i11 • Lagnn~ Ballet Magnif.iee nt ,. ~ lly TOM BAIU.EY 1111ple with a rnacnlfleooUy the I!Ollriao""'"' withoul °"'r dancers IJt the company. They ~iltlo.na.l -rA c-ac.d trrrry of -interest, a cc o "r-i;li n i to °' ., - -,.. uocutecl llllclt s...n pos cle allowing the U-or the jnoy be few ~ number bu!, u Jf 1ey bollet loYtr needed deta Iron>' "Swtn LIM" -music to becoine ~ the old...,,_ "they're the fJNlO/ ol how the • Laguna -ol the ft\1181 ,. llorioua Tho boll llhlelra~ tut finest In •ltJO 1ind• la this Beach Civic Balle~;Company -la ~ lhlt cal!J observa~llD the . .,. wteflllly ~ted and bu so !ple""1dl1 upahdejl Its -, u Mias · ~ ~wl!l nodlly ~t ·dlinc~t11~L~nd beautl(ully'illled bailet. horizons It was there !Oj' the leJtlfy ....for lhO • o t m g.a,i-• magnuscn, , .. ...., ,,,.,.. a '·-;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;;;;; •g lll!l'weekend 1n.,. .,._ inCiJloa 1a llmhif...md' ex· Adele QuJettl and·la 'lllo.~u Television Arts and Sciences academy officlals. Okay. But _this year l:! &ivlng lb Emmy why TV critic•? aw8;d, lo two aeparate .shows Why not prirlt journalists ~ -one for entertainment and who've covered the sto~fes ' the other for news cited in t~ Emmy news acbieve.nieQts. nominations and know fifst~ --The -entertainment awards hand the time, _work, c.ontacts bltlooJ' and ethuslutlCally ecullon. ~-' rorm offered.by Mary •Sa)ienl I l ' -voted on by members of the and deadline presmires ln- TV. entertainment industry -volved in getting t tre s e . will be given oat May 2tl in stories?· · Los Angeles in ceremonies Academy officials saY print broadcast by ,. th~ A B c jO:UmaJists might exhibit bi11s teleyislon network. against their e 1 e ct r·o n i c · brethren. Two days later, CBS will And, says the academy televise Emmy news awards spokeswoman, the idea of TV ceremQnies here. ..\rid who critics as judges was endorsed were the judges for these by the networks and recom-awards?~ men.ded bv the journalism . #1 were TV critics from scbool professors who've jud- newspapers, around the coun-ged TV news for the academy trY. They-convened in Chieago in the past. two weekend ago to view the f. pardon the personal entries and cast ballots. reference, think this 1s nuts. Their · expenses for the For mv dou~. people whose • ~ O.ltr Pllet Sl1ff• ...... Law's~ .. A~ · received fOW'work _...... II abo denion!lratecl very MISS HANF and Maure clearly bow ballet ~ showed us euclly bow " Ula Zall has developed lbe should be -In their fluent strongth and stamina ol ber and Oawless way. And ll1&Jl3' a eoger company to the point yo<1111 dancer IO •llerly that they coul4 tackle two watching them sllhed and demanding ballet:o, snatd> a looged for the day wl>en be or rest while two gifted guest she Could execute thls dance artists entertained us and then form made so much more come back with a carefree or~ magnificent by lhlt flowing !ering that completely cap" Tschalkowaky melocb'. ti vat~ this ~riti~. 1bis critic has ton,· betn an Let s begm nght there, at admirer of Rodrtao's music the end -Victor Moreno's without ever seeln1 It adapted gay and glittering "Moldavian for the ballet staga as Jiii Dances," a potpourri ol Sweet has done tn her "Para pease~t da~ that were Un Gentilhombrt." One splendidly interpreted a n d won d er e d before the delivered by a company that performance if it could· beef· obviously enjoyed every mo-rectlVely adapted for the ment of the Moreno work. dance and one wondered after IN ANY event, this lllltry. beautifully paced •1Para" WIS In sharp contrast-10-Mlss '"" i'ta.:"::'°lT 5-t's last ol!erlng, a 11----------1 modern da!lCe rorm which ..,. mains In this critic's memorys u a cleverly danced and at- tractive ballet while lts name escapes him. Jill, b a 11 e t lovers, ls going to be worth watching. On to the strictly classical "Three Plus Two" that pro- vided the ideal opening ror a splendid evenJng's program 'and the observation that Miss 1.all's dance form to Bach's. score is the l d e a I in- terpretaUon -.of. _ the great master's music . Plaudits here for the male c ........ .. "PLAY MISTY FOR ME" STAITS WIDNI SDAY "OM ef ... .,._., t i Mtf' -LA. Tirnt1 Chicago trip were paid by the duties call for an analvsis of. academy, according to an · s::iv, "Kung Fu" as well as "liO academy spokeswoman who Minutes" aren't quite in the said between 60 and 70 TV same jurlgin~ le11~e as the critics took part In the voting. peers of the TV newsmP1'1 . ' . . . Greg Feuerborn attempts to preSsure some info~ matlon out of Dewey l\:nlgbten in· this scene from the Irvine Conunanlty Theater drania "The Des· perate Hours," returning for two Special perfor· mances Friday and Siturday ..;.1 the UC Irvine ITS HIGHLIGHTS, from this writer's . seat, were the cleverly choreographed and executed ·ribbon dance, a beautifully performed pas de trois that called on the abilities of Usa Robertson, Belinda Smith ·and Roge r Faubel and a swirling finale that brought back: the entire company for a r_ichly deserved ovatton. the performance how onel:-=========--=11 MaxvdnSydow Liv Ullmann 'Jb9B•>•t•awnm Broadcast newsmen weren-'t whose efforts now are up for invited to participate ~n the Emmy awards. HUmanities Hall Playhouse.' · NIWil'OIT llACM •• •I •lie •"!••~•• t. lelt-1••1 Ii.I'• hi• ·• 01. l·ll'D ENDS TONIGHT "JEREMIAH JOHNSON" "JOE KIDD" STAUS" JftD}tlSDA·Y Er.di T_,.,..WI SO. COAST l"U.ZA l S•n Dlt!IO ,.,_ ti ar1s101 Cttl1 Mttl -~2111 SEAL llEACH IAY M111! St. ti PIClfk: Co11t Hwy. -411""51 • Adm. U.Sll -7tJO & t:lO p.11'1. STAlrTS WED. II, CNll TllMlrt• ~n· lllCfll I I Hunt~gton R.eadies · ~Body' The Huntington 8 e a c h Playhouse is in rehearsal for its final produciton of the season,· Fred Cannichael's mystery'-'Omedy "Exit the Body." Ann Coffman bas been cast Perfortnazices of "Exit the It , would have b e e n something IQJVonder at indeed if we had not had a magnifi· cant "MOidavian Dances" in the light of the example of- fered this yoWlg company in the work that immedi8tely prece~ed Moreno's· very pretty Howilrd Solomon is directing the play, which will open May 18 for a five-weekend run at the playhouse, 2110 Main St., Huntington Beach. in the leading roJt, with Ray Body" will be given Friday Scott, Laura Black ~ Susan and Saturday e v e n i n g s O'Connell In f.e a.t u r e· d through ·June · 18 at the .assignments. i::omi>.t<;tll\'i th!' ~layhQu!e; 21to Main st., Hun. Huntington Beach Cast will ])e _ tJngton • ~ach. A d v a ~ c e Helen Susman, Bill Moreland, r:eserva!lons may. be acquired Greta Smith, Coli n Giiiver. l)y Cilll.mg the playhouse .at Dennis Creedon and Gordon ~- ballet. ,. · Guest artists Mary Hanf and . Paul Maure offered that ex- Sandy. . ,... "C...0. 0.. Eye" '· '· PLUS" "Sterile Codloo" IPGI -..... ----~ .. ,,,,, "TJi. Gotoway" IPG I ... SrAOIUM ·J ".z ~ ~·.i..;.c.1=-'"' . ···''Lady Sl"91 Tho •"" !RI -... -... ,.,,, SrA01u1t1 -t .. " ~.\tll•1~1.'.l>f".l' .. "Fist Of Ftary" Ill .... "Reclr s.•• Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers ~~-A/lM8T •••kO-Z&f8euJ Hl§fltSl:Ft.MSl<f'-llCJMfO •Mirr . "Bl'O'Ttler sun SISTer MOOR• ' U.A. CITY 6 SOUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUl!SDAY '°" ·~ALL LADIES a OOLDa ll AGERS OPllllNO 'Tll !< .. ) ) . , llrvc:t LM" IUftll .. 1C1r1t. "'ISTS Of' llURY" .,.._ e.u .... ·-"RE D SUN" ••• 111·c.1w1 ,., could ever have doubted the considerable abilities of thi s splendid choreographer. He dance forms invariably captured the soft Spanish Idiom and subtle nuau?ces of Sln'9 Al'll Frwy. nw c"4,,,,.n Or111tt • s,..rm sH~<fv!,~G EDWARDS THEATRES ' ,. lllOC. - '· (, ~····~ EDWARDS I I\ I '.Ii I I \ 11 K '•' • • ''I'·' ,·· '" ' ' ,•. •1~ ~7 s.1=tt. _ ... lfr. ........ t_ .. _,,,.,, '"P*:wTillie'" -....... iw. ... _..,-.. -......... , ...... .._..... !!21 Pllt· IYAH O'HEM. Jl(QUELtME 81SSET "THI THlfF WHO 6111 TO DINNll" . I' INI ~····· EOWARU t.:; I I\ I II \ I I \ I I K ._,A •~ ~ : ' :. •' rQ~'A ~(,A· ,·,~1~; HEU>OVIR . - ... J.U: &..MM -AND- HOT LOVERS" l•tlil C•I•. ll J ' --. -1 . ' . ;( .. . MOfll. J'NIU. , ... ,,., . IAT. ~ Mt 1 ,,M. , , 2nd FIA'f!l.RI '!GRIMM'S FAIRY TALES" ••••• •••• t11 ;;:c~· •lvo··::1\· .. ~; . . -~co••••,-............ _ .... ,. ·-· ... , .... ,, ... ," ........ ,. .. llUS1 Gary Grtmes Jerry Houser Oliver Conant I I Toddcac•""'"'-e... •l!!il -ALIO- l w N1111 OfMw "SLEUTH" BARGAIN MATINEE W.:fnesday, 1 p.m. Piii IRtiHMI NTS ....,. Sl .00 OW PLAYING RISHVID SIATS Do Sill 111111 12 'Ill I MARLON BRANDO Wll;DATS t 14S UTJ A IUN. 12145 "CHUI UADIRS" "SEDllCllH OF INGf' Mmt llATUllJ ·IAllll IXI --~ . . -.... p • I • - If IMll.Y PILOT censors To Kill TV Show? --.. lftlW YORK (AJ>) -"eui Moyers' Journal," one ol lOID' public 1ff1ln series that have lost the llnancl.ol supporlo of lhe Corpot•tloo for Public Broadea.st"'IJ, uplm 11 lhe end of this month -maybe. Wllellw It relurns rt<JCI fall on national public televltlon depends on fwo key iuues, says Afoyers, the fonner presidenUal press secretary for lhe late Lyndon B. Johnson. Ooe iJ whether the CPD in the future wants lta officials to "prescreen" all public aUairs shows for signs of unfairness and imbalance prior to allow~ Ing lbt:m on the air, Moyers said. "They'll call It prescreening. But that's a euphemism for prhr ceDSOnhip, and I couldn't live with that,' he said. 'Bands Off' The olbu luue, be ,s;iid, if_ how a drawrK1ut dispute between the CPll and public television station officials iJ resolved. The dispute is over who •Ul have final say on which programa -partict.}lar~ ly ones on controversial sub- ject& -will appear on the Public Broadc8!ting Service "Interconnection" linking the nation's 2S4 public television statioll!. Pati Tambellini repulses the advances of Nick Adams in this scene from the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse production of "The Gingerbread Lady," giving final performances Friday and Saturday evenings. No Business Like Showbiz, But for Baseball Broadcast? ·--By JAY. Sl!ARBUTf NEW YORK (AP) -On May 21, the NBC television network begins its Monday night baseball season. Joe Garagiola 11 dolng the pre- game lhow. The theme of his first 1bow will be "What is Baseball?" Good question. For me, the answer is that big league baseball today is duller than watching paint dry. It only promotes slumber. Carl Lindemann Jr., NBC's vice president for sports, hopes to arouse UJ Monday night nappers by Installing ln the broadc...t booth prominent show biz celebrities who also are avld baseball fans. For thb:, he's been booed by baseball purists and accused by one magazine writer of brlnaing • "Designated HucUter" to baseball. These folks should tiave their heads candled. I hope NBC's idea works. AT LEAST, I hope II brings back the sense of fun televised baseball had in the wonderful days when Dizzy Dean was broadcasting for CBS and murdering '' W ab a sh Can- nonball" between Innings. The problem iB the major leaguea. They've gotten rich, rat, genteel and boring: Pretty soon they'll outlaw cheering. The remedy, of course, is for network television to Ig- nore tb.e majors for a few years and cover only t6e mliK>r-league11. That's where the fun is. And'fhat kiad of fWl Ls vanishing fast. Los Angeles, where I more or leas grew up, is a prime ex- ample of how fa st it can vanish once the majors and money show up. It used to be the Pacific Coast League's most exciting outposts. IT HAD the Hollywood Stars and the Los Angeles Angels and the town wasn't big enough ror both of them. Stars-_A ngels series always featured at least one riot, either on the field or ln the stands. Their televised g a m e s usually were sponsored by a Jocal brew that ~ }'<)lD' head off after two cans and by used-car merchants whose wares were guaranteed for 10 miles or 10 minutes. The Stars were my team. They were managed by Bobby Bragan, who shouted at um- pires a lot and was thrown out of games a lot. When that hap- pened, he'd orten repair to the dugout and commence hurling out a blizzard of towels, shirts and other apparel. You never knew if you were at a Sta rs game or a white sale. I had two heroes, one was Star outfiel d er Frank Kelleher. He was pot-bellied, red·faced and violated the theory of good batting by put- ting his foot in the bucket - the third base bucket. HE SURE belled a lot of home runs, though. I copied his batting stance and got a repulaUon on my block as a power bunter. The other hero was a pitcher for the Oakland Acorns, a guy by the name of Chesty Chet Johnson. He was known to hurl the resin bag at hitters when they were expecting a fast ball. '(> 'Illese and other she- nanlgitns -and a lot of good baseball -occurred at the Home of the Stars, Gilmore -Field, an ancient wood stadium that coUld seat 30,000 only if they were well ac- quainted. Gilmore Field is gone now, its place on earth occupied by a television studio. There is Dodger Stadium, but it is made of concrete, s e a t s maybe 100,000 souls and lacks both soul and style. I ONCE went therere two years ago and sat in the left field stands. It was awfully high up. The players looked like midgets. You couldn 't ~e their faces, watch their bat- ting styles or hear them talk. ~fost of the people around me were listening on tnmsis- tor radios to the major league game they were watching. I sportscaster would h a v e helped. them then or now. But don't think a show biz J sure hope it does. DJ Howling su~~ess Wolfman Jack Snarls Way to TV Slot NEW YORK (AP) -Most television announcers got where they are today with perfect diction and deep voices. \Vollman Jack, on the other hand, did it with the taped howls of wolves. The familiar howls don't usually accompany him in his chores as the reguJar an- nouncer oo the "AUdnlght" Special" pop music show that commences each Salurday at one a.m. on NBC-TV. But they're always heard on his daily rock radio show, which he tapes at his home in Beverly Hilla and syndicates to aliabUy more than 1,400 sta- tions In the U.S. Wolfman probably is IA>tally' unknown to older fOlks . But he's a legend lo milions of teenage listeners and to, say, anyone who still can recite the compll!te lyrics of "Blue Suede Sbo&t." Rn MDJ> in per10n and wild on the air. His delivery 11 a rapid-lire g r ow I , putlctU.lled now and then by the loud , mournful "OW()()()()" th.It has been hla trademark llnce 1959. in Ciudad Acuna, pumped out 250,000 watts. You could hear Wolfman's howls late at night as far north as Las Vegas and then some. WoUman, a stocky man in his late 30s, has been going strong ever since. He was in town this week to discuss a record albwn, but took time to recount how he got in the bowling buslne~. . n ·an stemmed, he S"aid, from disc jockeys here and in Buffalo who howled or barked Cln occasion. "I MORE or less got tho whole thing from them, and that's where the Wolfman Jack name came from," said Wolfman. who has a graying goatee, hates wearing coats and goes about in cowboy boots. "At midnight, I'd come on with the wolves howling and the down home blues souni:t,'' he said, grinning 8lld giving a quick sample : ·~Thi! ls Wolfman Jact down here with tho donkeys gone get you some SouJ, Man." his real name is Bob Smith, moved lo Los Angeles in 1966. He~ taped his shows there, although they were booked north by a 50,000-watt station, still with his wolf howls , and began syndicating his show, picking up a swarm of new rans in addition to those he'd had right from the XERF days. lie went [rom underground fame to that of the network ·variety when tapped to an- nounce on NBC's "M.idnlght Special" shows. "THEY WANTED somebody on the show who wasn't a straight announcer, someone who could do dlllerent lltlllJI to give the show the kind of rock image lhcy wanted ," he said. "So they came to me and asked me to do what I do on the radio show. 89 far, It's WO!'ked pretty good." Wolbnan, who ts married and has two ~ds. lives quieUy and conventionally, despite hlS howling 1uccesa in rad.lo. Wh4t music does he l~ when relaxing from work! "I really don't U.ten to music when I'm not on the alr,11 he said. 0 1 Jlaten to It, lil:e, 10 houn1 a dajl and It's my lrade. My profeulon. You know -a butchtr doesn't go home and cut meat. l ' Surgeon Sentenced To Work She Reti.re1 A Q:ueen · Attoniey. Protests Parole • Freeing F ewn Calkd I rrespo11sib1.e Prom Wire Servlctl l'lmed bearl 1111-Dr. c. ll'lltoa LflMot has -fined '50,0llO and ordered IA> perfonn 111 moothl of wort for charity -be<iause of an Income tu evilstoo conviction. The sentence was pnr nounced by U.S. Dlotrlct Court Judge .Philip Navllle in. MJn. neapolls. Llllebel has 10 days IA> appeal Llllebel said that he could H ARR.OWOATE , f)npnd (UPI) KoUHen SbuJb, M, •• allo-l'IJI In ll>Olil 1GO be'iUty "'!"tats, ...., the Brllllh pet q_, ,,_,. 11 the Uth pel tnde lair. She Immediately ID- oounoed ber wlthdra,.al !run further coalllsls. "I'm gettllut manioc! aeon and I'm fed up witll watching my fllW'• and sllmmlng," Miu Shanks uid. I'd rather be hippy and cuddly.'' · SACIWIE!m> CAP) -'l'be Sa<:ramealo County llil)rtct Attoniey'1 oh llol prolftlad lo tho Clllloml1 A d u II Authority for pllOllDfl one of "the n>Oll IOpllbllqted llld d"ll&el'OUI crlmbiafl, Jn tliO atate'• history." 1he letter t.U ~· Adult Authority called tlie ]lOlOle o1 Roger Allen Loc:Ufdge, It, "unbelievable" 1 n d .!.• re1ponalble," 11IE PAROLE 11 to be el- !ectlve May 21. The adult authority II the ~· board for Caillornla prlaona . work In J0111elltlng like "Pro-'----------•----------ject Hope" ror the •ix months Loctrfdlo has aerved four )'W'S of an ll-10ar-to-llfe ........ aft•~ • Cf!me - with hit brother thal '"1ded tn • liacrameolo ohootout in 1916. He was convicted of attempted murdtr, two counts of lint. degree but&lary, armed rob- bery, conspiracy lo oontmll forgery, two counts offor1ety, plus one other felony. to contlnue hil aurglc1l career. He was accused of evadlng about $130,0llO In federal in- come taxes during the mid· I960's. Sen. /.mes t. Mlif. -who gained u n w a n t e d attention ftom women around the state ( PEOPLE J . , last year when his vote tern-f i(,. '-x porarlly blocked ratification of w,':~'Jl.. , If.••_;!! the Equal Rights Amendment , ·~ 'f has Introduced legislation to ~~"' require public schools to ' emphasize the contribution of ~­ women to modem society. · The bill would require social science courses to provide "a foundation rot-understanding the role and contribution of the American Negro, the S pani!h-speaking American, and members or other ethnic groups and the role and con- tribution of women I n California and. United States history." Miiis (D-SM Diego ), Is a .former ..Engllsh teacher .. *'* * Odlle Rublrosa, widow of Dominican Republic playboy Porfirio Roblrosa, has mar- ried a 24-year~ld Rio de Janeiro stock market worker, Paulo Roberto F ranco Mlll'lnho. The bride iJ 36. 'l11e simple -ceremony took place at a private home, with members of the Brazilian jet- set among the wedding guests. * * * Sen. Barry Goldwater ap- parently lilted the 1971 Pari! air show so much he's going back this year, again as the President's personal represen· tatlve. The Arizona Republican was a World War II pilot and is a retired Air Foflte major general. * * * Elvis Presley has sold a 162- acre ranch in DeSoto County, Miss. that he once ~ regularly r o r entertaining Big Baby .. ,_ 'lb• wtllOr of tha pn>teat lel- ter waa Jooepb E. Taylor Jr .. assistant chief cleputy district attorney who proeecuted th• ..... HE SAID alter lhe sen- tencing of Lockridge and his 42-year-old brother, Lawrence, he expected they 'iwould never ,.. the light of clay qain." The letter was sent lo Honry W. Kerr, chalnnan of the Adult Authority, with cople• IA> Gov. Ronald Reagan, Sacramenlo Police C h I e I William Kinney, the Im Angeles Police Department, and Sacramento police olftcer Walter McA.daml, who wu wounded In the gun battle with the Lockridge brothers. Taylor said Met.dams never fully ncovered from the -· THE BROTHER, Lawrence, was given a life term with a mlnimwn of seven years before becoming ollgible for parole. He wa1 oonvlcted of. kidnaping a Sacramento aboi; • per, Trudy Priddy, for lhe purpose of robbery ~urtng the shootout. Tayler said thal at th• time of the crime spne, the Lockridge trotbtnl were on bail, reduced from $1 mllllon, In connection with a .. r1 .. of multl-mllllon dollar jewelry and safe burlllrle1 In Los Angeles In 1916. THE Uil'J'EK aald the two, In an apparent eUort to raise attomefs fees, robbed a aav- lnp and loan association in Santa Clara of about 132,llOO Striking .Of Pi:e:vious -• •• ' -.. ~J rn~rges ~ ca,illl • lie"' lleni<e ' ,1 • ' . . • guests. Presley, who also maintains mansions in Memphis and Beverly Hills, l!Oughl the property in 1966 for a reported $535,000. He frequenUy used Caveman statue, symbol of Grants Pass, Ore., was draped with an appropriately large diaper recently. Scott Hendrix, on pedestal, and Del Hartung re- lieve the tqwn's mascot of the unwelcome clothing. SACRAM_EN'.J'O · -If·• :iO'l . ' . have been convicted of a 11602" . . " -that'• dnmk drlvfnC' - chances.are you don't want to face the JiidP .X. tho ume charge. Current.iaw ..U. lor a minimum llelllence of n .. days In county JaII, a ftne of at least $2lO and auaponaloo ol your driver's license for one year. the ranch on -..weekends for horseback riding and at one time had a number of mobile homes there for guests. The Boyle firm said It plan- ned to build a shopping center, townhouses and private dwell- ings. * * * Former Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe casino entrepreneur Nathan S. Jacobson aays be is le3ving the Reno area as soon as possible. "I have definiU! emo tions about it, but none of regret," Jacobson said. No specific plans were In- dicated. Jacobson helped operate Caesars Palace and the Bonanu Hotel-casinos in Las Vegas before building Kings Castle at Lake Tahoe's North Shore. He went bankrupt in the venture. * * * Capt. Robin L. Quigley says she's ready to become the first woman given a major command In the Navy. In a ceremony May 16, she takes charge o! the Service School command in San Diego, which trains Navy men and women for specialties auch as cooking and running com- p II ca t e d electronlca equip- ment. Nixon Anti-press Feeling Unveiled That's If you've had a con· viction In the last seven years. BUT SINCE April 1919, the courts have, for Me reason or another, invalidated about 25.0iiil pnor cooVICllliiiiO drunk driving In cases where the defendant waa before lhe court as a repeater. NEW YORK (UPI) - Walter Cronkite believes the Nixon Administration "has tried to bring, and may have succeeded in bringing, the press to heel" in America . In an extended and candid interview in the June issue of Playboy magazine, the CBS newsman accuses the Nixon administration of "an o r c h estrated, coordinated campaign" against the press. CRONKITE SAID he fell Spiro Agnew's 1969 speeOb In Des Moines, Iowa, in which the vice pre1ident attacked TV news commentators as "a tiny, enclosed fraternity of privileged men elected by no one and enjoying a monopoly sanctioned and licensed by govenunent," was a turnlng point in the Admlnlstration's Mtitude toward the news media. shouJd be put under much closer-scrutiny-by &oclety~as a whole. "And th.is, I think, is a dangeroos phllosopby. This campaign against p re s s credibility, to dlvlde the nation from the preu, is continuing -and iJ being stepped up, as a matter of fact." Ctonkite said that although he regretted using lbe term "conspiracy" in ·a speech a couple of years ago, 0 1 ztW feel that lltl1 iJ basically what has taken place:· a well- directed campalp IJll]mt lhe press, agreed upon ln -.1 by members of the Administration. To take up the sloclt, Sen. George Deutmejlan CR-Long Beach bas Introduced leglala- tion to require the oourt to specUy reaDls why a prior oonvlctk>n should be stricken. AB AN INCENTIVlll lo the olfende~. the bill woold alfer a 1100 dilCOU!lt on tbe mtnlmum lin< In ~turn for partlclpaUoo In a driver lmprovenlelll ~ gram. And lhe lle<lOlld offender would have lo oount hi• oon- vk:tions tn a Ov~year period "I CAN'T SEE bow tt•a rather than ttven, and lace a possible lo have 1111Ch an mandatory 41 hours In jaU. o r c he !"•led, coordinated The·11111pen1lon ol the driver'• campaign without IOllle prior llcerute could remain u 11. plan alid agreement -which The 8 o u t b • r n call!omll really com .. out lo be 1 con-lawmaker 11ya slepl DMJst be splracy," be aald. taken "lo emphulzo the Cronkite t e rm • d the aeri0Ullle8S ol the 11<1 of drlv- p re a l dent's temperament Ing while lntozlcated." "rel)'etsble, partloularly for 1 HI• bill has the bacldng of man In hla pollt!on.'; · the Callfomla HlibWlY Patrol. The NlllOll ' administration aftl!I' loctint ""' ..men In " the safe. They were cuhlnr · $14,000 worth <t at o Jen ; traveten eblcks julf,. befOn 1 1 the Sacramenlo guablttle. 1 '"Ille Loctrldao ~ we~ oonalderld by 1"1\' en-\ rorcement offlcl.111 u two of ~ lhe mool sopi>latlcated and l dangUOUI crtmlnalJ in the . 1tate's history," Taylor ..set. i "I 1 .. 1 compelled lo voice whit I believe WOUid i. col- 16cllve outrage at t b I s premature and lml-lble nleaae," he aaid. Vio'lence Thoory Dis pured LOS ANGELES (AP) -To many adentiats, Dr. Frink!!. Ervin I• a 1 .. dlng auth<rlly on lhe problem of lhe violent personality. Others see hbn as a proponent of t.havlor con- trol lhrou1h lhe fearful ira<- Ucea of psychosurgary and lobotomy. Coolroveray II a way of Ille lot ErViu, a faculty member of the UCLA School of NAME Jn the NEWS MedlclM, becsule of his belief that many people who commit repealed acts ol viol...,. suf- fer llOIDll brain clellclaicy or damage. TROUGH RE hU al.lied ropeatodly In lectur.o 11111 In hia boot, 0 Violence and the Brain," that he does not iJe, Ueve all violence iJ cauoed by brain damage, his more oot- spokeo critics hive cendomned his belle! .. heresy llld the lint. 1tep toward lotalltarlan- lsm tbrouab beliavkr control. To defeod bfa belle!, l!!rvtn, L bl@elajly or le n le d psychlalrla~ has OOtiil\iCted ~Ive .-an:lL Somi of . his !indlnga are: -Bei\teen z peroent anil '5 pment of the lZ,llOO -who gu voluntarily IA> tho p1 ychl atrlc cllnic al M a i s a c h u 1ett1 Otnera1 'HOlpltal c:omplaln ol auger, a-Ive behavior or loa of CQOlrol. -In ... group of 134 Ervin llludled, 28 percent had ..... tromceplialofinpblc evidence ol IUblle damap II> the tem- poral lolfe of lbe brain. IN SUPPORT of Ervin'• theory,. Brlllah ~­that unmollvaled , IO- called senseless m u r er a , """ five lo 10 tlmea more lrtqU"1l In Individuals with abnormal tempOral I o b e .ncordlnp than peopl• wbo had tilled with a motive. Whether modlcfne-hU·the· right to alter be ha• i Qr surgically is not only a moral question: it ts a legal ·one. A Michigan court I! dellberaUng a cue Involving planned psychowrgory, with COllllelll on a 3'-year-old man who was In a state menial hu!pltal for 11 yean because of un- conlrollablo violence. 11IE CENTllAL lalUes In the case are whether 1 person lnV<\hmlarlly detained can give tnl6 Informed .,.._, IOI' IUch iurpry, and .metber It fs othlcal lo deprive the patlenl of a lreltment which eould ttmper hla lmpul,.. lllll al>ow bll return "' aocltey. Ervin 1ctnowlodges ~ .,. difficult moral,Jt;f'1,..i elltlcal lalues ln\'OMd, '!Mt 111'11 "FOi' me lodaJ ~ • tral I~ Is that .tlien editii lndl.idu&l1 who havo loa of lmpulle control llld this J,lfo- blem ha• beeo neaJeclod' bJ medidM.'' "I think that was the open declaration lh the battle," Cr<>nklte said. "Delore th.It, It was limply felt tbal this Administration'• antaaonlm> had been about like the an- tagonism shown by previous admlnisttaUons. • • " attitude Joward the prua "au .-------------... -;.,,...------. ~ell bact ·a little .bit, I think, :.:z~...,i: Nude at Large ''TllE ADMINISTRATION has lrled to bring, and may have ~ In bringing. lhe press lo beel. It has tried lo IU88elll In every possible way lhat th• press bu no prtvll-In U!e ooclety, that,_ 1-. If anything, lbe press Plans Funded with ntlfllll<ll, put hla' feet up1 gefOUt the bourllon botUe ana say, 'Come on, Pna, let'i have a drink: you (IUYS .aure laid It lnlo mo todl1," Qoonklte11ld. "'111AM TllE IOl'I of tltinl that goes on ail ovtr C.pilo1 Hiii ovory afternoon. G~rl, 13, Poses in Raw That wa1 the year the Brooklyn.born disc jockey hit It b;, with his aho" from sta- tion XERF In Del Rio, Tex., near the Mexican bord'r, lt IOUll<ls like an unlil:ely place "' become • ll&r. BUI the 1tatlon'1 tranamlt- ler, located across the bordtt H• stayed with his tried- and tcsted howla throughout the late 19608, when many radlo stations were doln~ what he calls "sterillud rod10" - de ·empba siil ng on-air penonalltles and emphasizing cmfuUy progranuncd music aeloctlona plaed out by a con- ouhanl ' W~fman, whole aides Insist "I usually like lo go home and hear silence. l like to meditate I little bil bee1""' l .... heur IOUl1dl all day long." \Wlll!NOTON (AP) The Fe"aeral Aviation Adm i nistration '8ld It ailocated $22j1,0llO lo e I d preparalloa of -plans for nine alrports. 'Ibey Include $20,0llO for Tracy, Caill. "And I Utfnt that boctlll6 President Nlloo ..,,, do the~ hit aloofnela .,.... lnlo coolness, IDtq misun- derstanding of the preea, and then lnlo anta...,...,. toward the press and eveotlllllJ lnlA> a campaign eialnsl ii." ( I 1 ' For the Record " . , . . LAI VEGAS -Merrt ... ·1'-·1 1uecl ""'' Include; -F ISHEL·flSHEL-Ap_r .•• C 111 r1" • Mic Mel Flshel1 n, r 'm 1 r r • d ' ~I• Ut l"nlltl, 32, bDtt1 ol' Hun-.f. ljngfon,8ffCll. , !il,liFFALO-fi:ENZI -Apr. I RtlPh L rt .ltllffafo. Jr ..• JCt, ol' weumlruifft', ind ~'t.-~~109~un Rtnll, 2t of Los i$Pf?NSONE4TRONG -Atw. I, Mlll.i . c.";J"'"'°'"• U, ol' S1nt11 Ant, Ind .. · M-J"" SlfonCI, 22. of Cosl1 !$11.EIUl"F·TIER~AN -Apr. 1, Uwl1 HtT'ltltlf SNrftf, Jr,, :II, Ind ~ltll• D. . Tlffntn, a ~Ill of COlll NI ..... COVERT <HAse -Apr ••• L•"""nc• Fr11>klfn c~. 37, ~ Ju.n111 ll1rt»r1 CMH, Ji, bOftl of UQunl HlllJ. 't RQS.SMAN.ALTON -Apr. ,, ,111rrv ..,,... ltanrtllf'I, 21. ot. W"tmlmter ).. u.:·~. A°" Altan, 'U. Of •1·VOTE·HOOGS -Arw. 10. Otnnls G. \Im, 26. I nd lllldl Mar11 Hoooi, 17, ... btotrl 111 H1111!11a!011 It-ell. • HARMER-8RANT -Apr. 10. on...,. .:• 0.-H1rmer, .Q, tnd ,,,.., Rvtl'I .._ lrM'lt.; Q boltl of Irvine. MO,ll,QW:'SMITH -Apr. J), LHUt C. -...!'" . ...,......., Sl. •lld Anne W. Smtih, '6, . """' "' .,_,_, h9Ctl. ._Sl!!HORN-MOf!AISSY -APf, 11. l(en-'ll<lff> O•le Sf'l!orn, If, of CvtH't•s, •l'ltf Chrl111,,. . M 0, r I I Iv. ,,, of Wtstm1t1SW. .,.,, ~ssolutions ftt Marriage • - DAILV PllOI' S 6 4 2 ;,. \. "-•• FO•EVER VIEW-DOVER HORES EleRant. IJ!e. bay view home; 5 4 ba. Comp. entertainment center around lge. htd. & fill'd. pool; l~ed wrought iron gates. $166,000. Land avail. .SUPPLY LIMITED. DEMAND • D,fllT CHEAP for $19,500. but CU1e nil bu.I• FA hL ._ tirep.lacie, .,.. .... caJ1>tt. ·~ iiaGme Fl'5-..-~ ,J~I _..,. .. I~ * * * * ·* * * .TAYLOR ·co. * - ,DOVER SHORES-$"1,0IO Fab~obs 5 bedrm home on (lalaxy Drive&: includes the land! Lge lam tin. formal DR, 4<,\ baths & kar gar. Fully a!N:ondlUoned, miniature POOi w/jacuzzl & sun room oU master batlt. On a street-te>-street •lie. 5 6 7· a c L A s s I F I E D .... -~ • 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T _l'HE...BLUF..ES -FOR LEASE Back Bay view. S BR. 2 Ba. 1475 MO/lease CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS C.11 Anytime . 644-7662 Gener•I Gener•I FORMER MODll HOME Now, even more beautiful than when it was a model-luxurious 3 bedroom Bluffs Do- lores plan-:.ena unit. All new decorating with (talon~ touCh by a very talented couple who unfortunately caruiot use this lovely home. ~7 .Novia-Open house U p.m. tcr day and.•Mooday. $79,950. Call 67:>-7225. :;:;::::;:;:::;::;::;;::::::::::::~ 1 ·-------12 APARTMENTS Two For The 'Mon- Mao)' AJter!Yltives to Financ- ing and Ownenblp. e May Trade Down !at Smaller Units. • 1'fay Trade ,,,, Land Sui(. able for 3 to 5 Units. • Mey Carry 2nd fulst Deed. All Units Furnished. G o o d Rent Schedule, Heated and Ntered Pool. $172,800. cau anytime, 646.-0555. CLOSE TO ALL SCHOOLS \ including Orange eo&st Col· lege. Priple Condition, Prime LOcatiOfl.-4 Bedroom, Family Room, 2 Baths. Fire- plaee New Paint inside and out. $38,950. Call anytime, ~- ROOMTOGROW If your family is having _JUQWil>g_-_~).ool< no ~r, w;e have your house. •iSuper sharp FOUR SEASONS bonfe with 5 bedrboms & 3 baths, large roqm with fi !!-e place .. co u n t r y kitchen/family room with fireplace &: wet bar, plus very formal dining room. Upgraded carpets thruout. Ideally located near schools, park and only a mile to the ocean. Over ZJ()() sq. ft of living space. $45,900. • COATS WAL~ACE REALTORS Open Evenings • 962-4454 • NO MONEY DOWN WALK TO SCHOOLS This charming 3 bedroom .. _.and den home is walk1ng Wstance from all schools, with no major streets to cross. Secluded walled, tree shaded back yard with free form flagstone p a t i o . Premium carpeting and wall oowri.rw• make this a great value at $25,500. Why wait, call DOW ~2313. ~ GffN nu• ffS '"' 10 BE N<:EI i •.• • • • • • • • I 'MESA VERDE'S l~st prke et $32,500 . ~t value, with format din-fi'W, large eat-in kitchen, fireplace, covered I patio, finished garage wotk11hop. Won't last long at this price! 5*-) 151 Open Eves. I .,, ~:.· Htn111u1t . . REALTORS ey -Four For The Show -Income Property All Ready ToGo- 3 BR, 1 BA: 1 BR, 1 BA plus 4 g~s on alley -stress- ed for 2 units above and set up for plumbing and elec- trical , hookup. Blueprints available. RA wning with Jots of potential to see your investment doll ars i,,'T'OW. $31.<XX>. 847-6010. DPE.N TIL i • ff'S FUN 10 BE NICE/ ~ Bright, cheery, DEANE BUILT home less than 1 mile to beaeh, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, e1ectric bulltins, family room, patio off mas- ter bedrm. Beautifully land· scaped wJth a variety of fruit trees. Flexible terms. $33,000. jCJa.. W::~:E ~REALTORS Open Evenings • 962-4454 • BEAUTY AND THE BEACH FRESH, CRISP, PENIN- SULA POINT HOME • 2 Bedrooms and bath, fea- tures huge brick fireplace, builtin B-B-Q in patio, wi.e. Clllly decorated. Priced at $65,000. PETE BARRETI -REALTOR- 642-s:IGO OWNER WILL FINANCE AT 7°/o That's right! With, just lOo/c down, owner wiH carcy the remaining balance at only 7% interest per annum for 30 years. Tills 4 bedroom, 2 bath cutie sits on a large corner lot with room for boat or camper. MaJc:e this a must see at $27,600, Call 546-2313. OPEN TIL P • ff'S FUN 70 8E NICE/ THE REAL ESTJITERS WHO'S THE WCKY ONE? Cozy cute 2 bedroom den home on Balboa Peninsula Point. first time offered. Tastrfully decorated I n· bright quiet colors with w/w carpets throughout. OUtstanding new kitchen with form.tea tops. Loads of curiboards. Bright living room with f.lreplace. 2 baths -2 patios -~ll landscaped. Double garage . Near Bay & Ocean. Only $55,000. Ca.U 6~. GREAT I Ntwport Cmt Condorllllkl111 Homes, clustered 1b0ut l'llndSOITll COUrtylfcb:. GCalPJ one of the fn ram1lnlnr llrp propertlu In desJr1bl1 Newport B11ch. Ekact_ly riJbt for JllNl'I· nent residency or holid'l)IOint, Sundecks, fireplaces. wtt'ban, Sun·Llteo kitchens. tuck.·11ndtr double 11r11es. Heated awlm· mina pool, tllhttd tennis courts., saunas. ther1py pool All txte· rlor m1lnten1nc1 provided. A lastinf cperi1nu • aloriocA fl'fln&! ''"' ... , ... '"' ......... """$65,,495 hcitfl.t ~ "-"'rr: From Pacific Co1$t HlrbwlJ, up 1 Superior Avenue to Ticondero11; 1n·d directly !o #12 Robon Court. r...,-. (714J MMl41 S.la Officl .,.. dallJ 10 ............ --~·-a1-N.C.,l1e.Rtbltl ff.Crall~. --• 197! FKlfk w.c.. .... Gt • ... _ --·--- HORSES!! .•. alowed on this % acre ranch with large custom home, fenced corral PLUS a 3 bedroom renW at $200./ mo. Custom home is va· cant • quick possession. Will exchange for bay·aidc du- pleit." $65,000. VACANT & READY • TAKE ONE minute o( )'QUI' time to kmw '9boe,rt OU. ~l' sharp 2 atory - 3 bedroom. l1nlahed bo.nUI l'Ot'm with "'-'el bar. Many, many ex· tru. 211 baths. So clean &: sharp It wtll be worth )'Our tin1e. • could make y o u money on thl• home -just a phone call to get the features on this 3 b e droom , bonus. 6%.% loan with LOW, LOW 00.,,, Wity pay 7" % to 8%! Nice area, nice home, ereat price. $32,~ • UTILE LADY do you Uve In a shoe? When )'QI.I hear about this you'U know what lo do. Exciting 5 bedroom, 1800 sq f! \v/carpets A drapes thruout; FA ~heat. 9 Years old, for only 131.SOO. • COOL that's what you'll be lhls Summer wllh your own 3 bedroom p:>ol home. Pool ii heated & filtered, home Just painted and ready !or you to move in. • WHY RENT payment on thla 3 bedroom home l8 less than rent. Take over VA loan at $2a.1. a mo. Close to Mlle Square Park & shop. pi111. Large i-ea I yard. AnS'one can buy. Wm. McC•llo, Inc. Roal Eot•I• 8740 WARNER AVE FOUNTAIN VALLEY * * 842-4405 * -~--SOMOHING SPECIAL IN COLLEGE PARK * ''Ou r 21th Y ••r'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 S•n J .. quln Hiiis Ro.d "0..rlookl"t Big c..,yon Country Club" ~EWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 Gener•I 0.Mr•I PERFECT FORMALITY! A very talented lady who claims she is re. tired from interior decorating (one look at this home and you'll never believe she is !) has done her own lovely three bedroom "condo" to perfection. Quiet formality, pure elegance, but not too formal. Located on the bay-you own the land and a boat slip capa- ble of handling up to 38'. All this and low $34.00 monthly dues! Call 67:>-7225. . ' o.n., •• Gener•I GALAXY VIEW 4 Bedroom, 4 bath home. Beautiful decora- tor furnishings included. Large, covered pool with roll-back-roof ................. $245,000. Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 8-ysl~ pr,, Suito 1, Nowpott B .. c:I! _ 675-6161 · GOLF COURSE ESTATE Newport $39,250 I RAMBLING RANCH style home on exclusive private 1treet. Overlooking the site of the new golf COW'91!. Great family home featur· lng hlde-a--wa.y muter 11.dte. Separate chltdreN wlqi. Maid! quarters-end-Pon derosa party room. Owner anxious. TAKE ADVAN· AGE. Call 645-0303. OOVl!,R -SHORES VIEW Live on the SUnset Strip tn Newport Beach! A really ~cular view from the beautifully furnished home, the bay by day & by night, all the tlghtl of the city. A dramatic pool with automatic slkling root. 4 bedroomr, 3% batM, formal dining room, paneled den. 1245,000. Furnished. o • ._,., IF YOU ARE PARTICULAR then you wtr. ~ thla 3 bed- room home thlt fl: in a tCJW. ly better concHUon the a brand new ooe. Brfah! ldna· size bcdr'Ooms, beautilul landscapiJw, front and rear w/sprtnklers. Well kept nelghbomood, walk to arade 8Chool and major lhoppl:nc. At 132,950 jt \I weu worth It. Call now SC.2535. OPEN TIL I • n'S F,l.M ro st Ntc£t ~--- THE REAL I ESTJ\TERS i ------~ Ten Units $145,• All Individual i!'Ound Door homes on one acre EASf. SIDE property. $101,000. io6.n ava.ilablc. Conalrtent monthly Income of $1665. 0-·ner may trade for 20 to 30 unltl. CALL lo aee. Nowport II l'1lrvltw 64Ut11 l•nrtlmo) FIX UP Redecorated 3 bedrm &: fam. ily rm home on huge corner A aparkllna-clean Mil main· AND SAVE SS lot -room for boat or trailer _ ta.lned 3 bedroom, :Z bath King-site covered patio &. home wlfh formal dfnJne, private yard. Quick posses-family r6om, • P,001 '•I.zed WESTSJDE 3 Bedroom Free- ,;,,,,, Low oo.,,, Only • Yard and IMlde !sundry on I i!!i'!'!!!!"!!l!!l~!!!!!~'!'!!,,. j dom' ,lloo1e on laitre ,,... $27 950 a lovely tr.e Bned low trat-OWN!:R -· Central -ed lo< • -.!! Ultte J 1 • fie street ~. alr-conditlonllig. 3 hdnns, 2 fix ln' and paint. Illness CALL oo.1m ONLY $33, 950 baths. Sllag ,,_.._ Dining '°"""' $..i.23 ... ,Ho ":JI.. Fan1Uy nn, l.:Orner k>t. trk Ontu°' Nla..J lafley nn, bull<-!~ d~hwuher. 21 & As 131.SOO. m-2390, ~ IOC. OWNER anxious. Near Santa -i::::t:=-J I REALTOR Ana country club. 3 bdrm.a, Six Bedrooms BEAT YOUR WIFE 3 baths. Family rm, formal • dining rm. BuJlt-ln& .. to tru1 lanta:attc deaJ ·vou f1replace. Rear living rm . won't need much money for n1e roof. Llke a model bdrmlhis beauty. 3 queen ·•lze home. brl< $45,75(1. 540-ln>. I with 2 IUXUrious baths. Full price ii: $31,950 OWNER traM. Stupendous 4 ~ 5% down It can be bdrm, Custom kitchen. n. Let ut ~ .. It ID Huge family nn. Larae by appotntme.U~ YoU pool, lots of decking. 3 -·I ' ~ • ; 11 I I ,1 '• I f t baths. PaUo. Formal dining rm. Fireplace. Oiolce E . Costa MtM 'lltl'ea: Beauutul. Realton 545-9491 llrk 136.600. 540-17'0. t i • :; ;:· • • • !l~~tas~f~N CALL ~21 BACK BAY OPEN nu • '''"''""IE NICE<., WHY smLE i . llVl'lll, B~l~~E;:;fi*E! I I •.••••••• I NEAR SOUTH To ... valley • 10 the ... 'COAST PLAZA ~·~~':::~ ... want to Count The Extr•• Courtyard en1ry, aarden kitchen, forma l dlnlnc room, eating 111-ea In the kk· chen, vaUltcd beam ceilings, family roon1 \l•itlt fireplace, dP.COrntor "'·rill covertqas, 2~' 1>311'1. lfofle'lt, th!& is more thR.tl ju11t a 4 bedroom hpme. We \\--ould Jove 10 llflow ft to )'IXI! $52,fOJ. * CUSJOM * HOME MUST HAVE QUfcic SALE be. 3BR,2Ba,hup~ C. F. Coleswortliy RHltora '40-0020 EASl'SIDE COSTA MEsA large Jot • room for 2 ad· dlHonal income uniU. 3 BR 2 BA. fittpl, Hdwd noon w/deop ahag carpetina; •ii blttns, formal dodqi, and only $34,500. Owner retiring to travtl • cau now. 568424, South Co flet.ltora .. ' brand-new 2200 sq ft 4 • BONUS ROOM e I bedroom 2 balb home wl1h PLUS 4. bednnt, 2% bat.ha. I Wall·krwall c a r p e t t n I dose to achc:loi1 and lhop-thruout, draperies, oorn- kltd>en lqUeUy clean and A tri-1evet Meditern.nean neat, 1U.e covered patio, With a -style feeling . OUPLEX pool-size lot. Priced ri&bt at Priced at U25.00> 2 OlarmJ121{ COlta.aff near $31 ,950. •• See this Mme, it's most ap. park A beac:h, 1-Bdrm .. l 5*-1151 Open Evto: P,e&llng. ~ eoch. Alwny11 ,..nUd, Pin&'. Onb' $32,950. pletely builtlri k l t ch e n , GINNY MORRJ9:>N fireplace, aprinklen, lawn, f~ncina. etc. Full Pl1ee •***• ..Jl.EALTOftS· $40,995. HURRY! Ca 11 • -{ :-HERITAGE REiil TORS *Clf!l* l!J05 MtA 5.11-7671 for details A&ent. IDEAL FOR * •Verde Dr. Eal!, _,.......,,.,.,,.,.,,.,.,9,..., I I • • • • • • • • • ~ * Coo1a M--NEW IEACHl'RoNT- GUESl HOME **•** K1-4Jl0 QUICK CASH La Jolla. apectacular t~~ lf1lirrC!roOm :ooi.-=->·--,.,___ ,.,.,__ ~-I ' 1tory, muterrut blend of • • uaUU1 . ......_ lo --,''"-v:J'C'l~4;.~· np) , ,. wood, 1la.q, rtle and •tone. ::v""'~c~· Realtor * TRIPLEX * THROUGH A 4r tll• beachroom wttplc a 18io Eamldo Coata Mea. 3 2-_ Mex~an ~t ba.r 1tept from NT.J:· C.M. :':""c0nJ ~~..:1!0 ':tt DAILY PILOT ~r~· :.=~.:/~~00i°""..,,_ 1-~~~~ j· A good ~ ;;164,!;i'. ' Willis M. Allen Oo. 1424 * DUPLEX * MESA DEL MAR Camino dtl Mar, .Del Mar, 2 BO Lovdy 4 bdnn., Ill balhs: WANT AD Ca. TI<: 1lll-<1St (Coilectl RMS. EACH tip-too oonct. l.olJ ot txtraa. Lib to '!Tide! O\Jr Tra•-r·1 Bltln...F.-Y•r4 ~ Good Pooim.t lo<. ottOl'td klr j!•2 5678 Parodlle <nlwnn 11 lor )OU! FJ:i~j;~ion '=GAN RIAi.TY Q;'t ;. Sllnes,ldayst.rlbuckt RMlton 60-5000 , 67U642 675-64.St s.l1 the old slut!. 1111!' the new ltul!. l call 546-2313. winter & iq1m1n'°.r.IS52,.500 Call: 673-'16113 ~ -' "' ' ' .'jJ/I ''"1'' . "' I .~,,•iii, ~.._1u~ • . ' THE REAtl F.STATERS ! THRl!E BEDROOM SPECIAL Rench stYle honie lnclude1 fd'rmal dlntna: roorn, beaut n-..... park Ii> back Yllt'd. Near llNJV/CAL .• lmne. Only. • .~t7.IOO. CALL 645-'1221 1'133 Weotclltt Dr., N.B. 9:f21 associated ~R('l("QS-Pl'! f')~'. l"l~ W flolll C' /I! !~r • NEW .TRIPLEXES IN COSTA ~1£SA 3 Bdrm., 1'1 Rath 2 Bdr1n., 1 ':i Bat!) I Bdrm .. II Balli 101;(, 00\VN Orange c-ty Apartment Rultw1 547-47'1 J'at Prvrit ii 11talned w~o ..... u lhroo)lh "'"1<..,.el· ting Dally Pilot a.uuJtd Ads. &U-ti678 I I • .I ~ ••• I •• SOO·Sl4 Ai tl A 'hJ11 • , , •• , , • 950 • 9'0 The Bluest Marketplace on the' Oranp Coast -...._,..,..'' .11S·M'I 8 . -...... " .......... 700. 799 DAILY Pl' 01 CLASSIFIED ADS -· ........ ·.n1·¥ ..... ... -· ' •• ' .850· 1199 .... b-°""""· . . . . ISO • ~ tr( .... ;ftt .. filiancial • • • • • • • • • 200 . l99 ~for We ...• , .IOO ·t2A · ...., .. fo..nd ••••••• s.so • 574 Mii <hol Kha. • . . .. ' • • IOO -949 You Can Sell It, Find It , fade It ·wrth-a--Want-Ad ( 642-5678_)_ One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval a....i ... ,,, •... ,300 ,M ..-....i -• • • 571 • m Som" ond -•••• "'°. 699 ~-••• , ••• 91S • '49 ' ••• i1t'T .~ in1' ... ---l_ ____ ... _ .. _ __,I ~I I _,., ... _,,, .. ••• .~ l~Gtno~~r~•~1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii0iiiii .... iii'~•~I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii [ Geniral Oener•I ii.. ~~';/"4/Ul-SM/tl. ~ AlllASS8CllrtS -· .kr 'I" -' '· ' .~' ~ -J,n ii.1h I , •• ~ -' '" '" ,,., I.ff ~ -· " ' ... ' ... , 4.UNIOOI:~ GOLF COURSE MANSION. A five bedroom Cannell and Chaffin original that could be your perfect home in a perfect setting along the Mesa Verde Golf and Country Club. Tra- ditional two sU>ry with delighUul patios, spacious grounds and a three car garage. An exclusive oUerlng of Unique Homes at $125,000. UN19UI HOMIS Of MUA YRDI. """''"° ,,,_.t_C-..... 1 U~IClUI: tl()Ml:S REALTORS ---~----Oenorol A LITTLE BIT OF HEAVEN . . . in the middle of Costa Mesa. Tropical palms suITOund secluded pool area, enclosed patio opens to your own paradise with splash- ing waterfall and pond. The perfect place · for entertaining. Separate -area for boat, ca mper or trailer. S· Delightful ·bedrooms, 2 elegant baths, separate laundry room, ftnish· ed garage plus many more extras. Nothing U> do but move in and live. Offered at only $48 9!50 Won't last call now. l' • '" I 546-5110 li''1;;::=:::;:;:::::=:=:==...,....~-°""".-~E-v_n_.~~ • ~-V HERITAGE . . REALTORS , !r-Gentr•1 ,....,, Gene,.r_1_1 _____ _ ' -· YA TERMS I ••••••••• I ~ Here Is a BIG 5 bedioom or BACHELOR PAD 1 1 -.._ 4 bedruon1 plUS' den home FOR THE PARTICULAR -that will &ell under govern. I• ment terms,, m:i 111. ft. of SJNGLE ~ A Gorgeoua, no-1,. luxurious living hardwood work townhoul!C. One AUper- VCJ ftoon 2 maaiv' btrdl. fire. big ~~m overlooking a pl • . e t..-u.. apaCIOU& hving room. Shag l'I aces, spaclOUI uu•uv kit· carpets, wood p a n e I e d REALTORS 2821 EAST COABT HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAii. CALIF. 644·7270 e DELUXE DUPLEX e Beautiful tree-lined street in OLD CORONA de! MAR. BOTH UNITS HA VE 3 bedrooms, den, fireplace, 2 baths, builtin kitchens, PATIOS, 2 blocks to shopping and schools. Choice location .... ·.;,. . .. . . .. . . . .. . $98,500. e FOREVER VIEW e Watch the boats by day and harbor lights by night from your livlng room. The ULT!· 1f1ATE in FEE ownership, luxury on-Ute- water living . 2 Bedrooms, 2 bath condo on prestigious CHANNEL REEF area. Pool, security guard, boat slip available. CALL for appoinlment, . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . .. .. $95,000. e SOMERSET MODEL e HARBOR VIEW HOME . Welcome children in this family TWO STORY 5 bedroom fam- ily room home which features 3 bath;, for- mal dining room, WET BAR, large conven- ient kitchen with all the extras. Tremendous fenced yard on deadend type street. FEE LAND . . .. . . .. . .. .. .. .. . .. . .. $79,900. AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS . . . . . • • • • 644-7270 r.. cbcn area. witti huse pantry. \\'alll', builtln kitchen, dou· ~!" A hard to find 3 OU:,P1'flie. ble garage, used brick front, General 11 ., , ~ MY• leH. I want 1 ~1: bath! and lots of extraa. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;; General ,, out. Price $52. • Call At '22,000. You must see • now, 842-2535. this! ,_ 1,. '" I*· .. · I •' ' 1- 1 ' I " ., " " '" 1_ .l•I •·· ,V ·~ ' ' ,, ,. 1 544).1151 Open Ev11. · -. '. ~· HERITAGE SALESMEN- . . . ANXIOUS TO EARN r-.IONEY • larger split. bon. us. oth~r fl'inge benefits. CALL GINNY, 5574130. General REALTORS WATERFRONT CONDO Beautiful panoramic view! Boat slip avail. To be sold furnished . $150,000. Call for app't. Lavera Burns · IRVINE COVE 'S BEST BUYS 3 Bdrms., 2 baths, pool, view ..... $130,000 2 Bdrms., conv. den; rm . for expan $119,500 Guarded area & private beaches. Edie Olson CHARM OALOREI Cape Cod -3 Bdrm., Ill ba. + lge. guest suile. Bright & sparkling. Lovely decked patio. Short walk U> private beach . $50,500. Mary Harvey FRESH AS SPRING Out.landing 4 BR., 3 ba ., two-story. Drenched in sunshine. Has formal DR FR. & large finished bonus room . $78,500. Gary lf.nox EMERALD BAY-WHITE WATER VIEW Tree studded vlsla. Steps to beach. 6 BR., 6 Ba., pwdr. rm., lge . form . din. rm ., brkfst. rm., 3 frplei ., pen. lib" lge. play rm. w/ wet bar. Rec. romp. reoec. Kathryn Raul· 1ton NEW LISTING LIDO BAYFRONT Lovely & immac. 5 BR ., 5 ba. home on Nord. Paneling. Parquet noors, lots of cbf!l'm plus room for large boat. $279,000. Charlene Whyte OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Providt * * JUST LISTED * * 2 OUTSTANDING VALUES! ONE OF THE sharpest 2 bdrm . & dining room coo.dos., complete with spectacular "Back Bay11 view . It's the popular "J-Plan", bastefully upgraded, incl. new carpets, paint & decorator wallpaper. $65,000 2 NEARLY NEW !·bdrm . units -Eastside Costa Mesa -hand v to trans. & shops, on Newport Blvd . Com ple!ely furnished -good income record. ~95,000 I 0111 11! L Ol \O\ .. "''fAl'U#\ WHO'S THE LUCKY ONE? Cozy cute 2 bedroom den home on &lboa. Penln&ula f\:mit. 1'·1rat· time offered. Tutd'uUy decorated 1n brtpt qu.ltt cOOln wilh w/w carpets throughout. Out- 1ta.ndint new kitchen with tormlca tops. Load1 of cu~ board1, Bright living rwm AtOSI' OUTSTANDING DE· SIGN . ln this 2 & 3 bed· room duplex. Each unit t\lio story with living and dining upstairs with balconies and hl&11 pitched beam celllnga. l:xccll(lnt klcatlon near 10th St. bay/bea.ch. Brand-new, with lirst-uscr advantages, L&ndscaplng tn. and car- peted & draped. ~500. 544).1151 Open .. VH. ·. HERITAGE flE/\l TORS with fireplace, 2 baths • 2 I • • • • U--'-•~ -~~. · :Z:. ~:;-c~ ~EAN VIEW ...........--~ OceRn. t"nb' SS5,(Q). c a 11 rrom-ili1a almost new tna· Coldwlll,..... 673-8000. Jttt1c VIP f•mlly home. 644-WO ....._., •• To··· OPfN1H.l•lrSfiJN1D8ENICIJ SpRclou& bedrooms,? batha " ~.. " I . s.nd txcellmt ma. You sso NEWPORT CINTIR DR., N.~. ._ . 11~Nil ~:t;.:,:~~::~ --------------11 646-Till Open-. UU700 (· ~: ' ' ---_ ..... ---l~I _,,, .. I~ Gener1I Bick B•y. COit• -Huntl1!91on-&lch BY o~ 3 br, trplc, iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ~~ !"~ kitchen. * JUST USTE., * 2 BR. -· on EuWde COUNTRY Zoned pro1 ... 1ona1 ESTATE WATERFRONT lol 50x80 $27,500 POOL w/?JJ' Boat Slip. Ma0ke olfer G.orge Williamson lo Owner. sn-mo RHltor 54U.170 OVER 14 ACRE. ii;ii;;;;~;;;;i;;;;;d.---1~~~~!!!!!..,..,;~~,; Customized 4 bedroom 3 Balboa PeniMula DESIRED Location. Aleu. baths, electric kitchen wlth .~ ::r Coming Wear coolc center DUPLEX-$79,>UQ \•mte No. 2 yr. Inutu1.c. 2 & Trash Master. Hardwood 2 & 3 BR., 3 ha. 2 trpl. ;::nry, 2300 ~ft. ~R, ~ tlooni, four car garage, Modern & re.Iurbi&hed Int~~· saJ.· Ava!i'JuJ.y. boe.t l'lorage. View of eoU 2~ ca.r gar. Act last!! course and Jots of trees. Gener el B1lbol l1l1nd ---GEM By Owner $44,950. 557.SSOO. Reel =-uv;,,g clooe lo $23,950-VERY NICEI SPANISR BEAUTY ·-.• , 4 BR, can convert back lo 5 shopping. CALL 893-&533. Nice family home, just $40,800. Beautiful home 1610 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. bdrm, 2 BA. Intercomm, recently redecorated. 2 on a quiet cul de sac REALTORS 642-4623 heat sensors. Extras ! $25,500. baths. Air-conditioned. street. 3 bedrooms 2 * TRIPLEXES * Clubhouse privll. ~ e 1 0 w How diff1cult it is to find a Rear living room. Din· baths. Screened atrtUm $89.SOO AND $125,000 market. $34,'150. Principal!. nice home at this price. 3 ing room. Lath & plas-wi'th wet -bar. Patio. MARSHALL Realty 61:>-48X> only, ll) 828-5671 or Bedroom, clean-as11.-pln. 828-5200 \\'alk to schools. shopping, ter construction. Shade Dining room. Deluxe _C;;•;,::p;:i•;:':;'";"°;-;;B":H:'.:ch:::':-::;:-l!E:!1~st~B~l!!uft~-----I and 5 minutes to froeway. trees & greenery. Pan-built-ins with dishwash-SPECTACULAR ocean view, SUbrn1t temts. CALL 893-8533 eled living room. Car-er. Faniily room . fire-unu9Ual 1 BR turn, gar, PRIME Bluff• Condo pets. Built-ins. Move in place. 2Yz yearS old. parking camper I OO&t 4 BR + den, 2~ Ba, trpl condition. brk 540-1720 brk 540-1720 496.5423. ' crpt/drp. Chvner 675-3535. Coron1 del Mlir Fount1Tn V1lley 3 BDRMS- IDEAL HOME I L o v e 1 y landscaping highlights t h i s nice home. Formal dining room. Two patios. Fire- place. Rear 1 i vi n g room. N e w carpets. Picture windows. Forced a i r heating. Kitchen built-ins . Rea- dy for immediate occu- pancy. $30,500. b r k 540-1720 ELEGANT 4 l!EDROOM Exceptional 2 • s tor y home in Mesa Verde. Large lot. Garden & fruit trees. Lots of room for a pool, boat & trailer. 3 baths. Family room, fireplace. Block fencing. Formal dining room. All modem kilch· en. C o v ere d patio. $42,950. brk 540-1720 2955 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-1720 18 ROOM MANSION Gene ra!. $23$0 WESTSIDE 3 bedroom home with large enclosed yard, new carpeting, newly painted inside & out, and hi a Like-New-Home. SUbmit your terms. N1wport ., Fainiew 64~811 (1nytim1) Wrought iron fence protect.s magnillcent 18 room estate on picturesque park-like grounds. Veranda entry. All spacious rooms. 5 bedrooms. Secluded masttt' quarters \vlth private garden view and 6th bath. Gourmet kit- chen with built-ins. Formal dining room. Llbrary & music chamhETs with fire· place. "BAlLROOM" with danc.-e floor. C,ompletel,y Sl'parate 2 bedroom GUEST HOUSE with kitctlen and bath. Great for week·enct [~~~~~~~~~ (;~~=· FANTASTIC! WESTCLIFF-OOVER 101!1 \I J_ 01 \0\ REAl!UN~ HURRY!! OPEN TODAY OWNER leaving. Model coo. diUon. 4bdrms, 3 bathl. T\l.rO lovely Lusk honl<."S, both Formal dining rm. 3-car \Vith great views and fan-garage. Shag carpets -1~~~~~~~~~1 d . Air-conditioned. Cathedral I~ tashc erorating. Popular ceiling. Built-ins. Fireplace, ''READ THIS" four bedroom one story n1odels lll the heart of the family rm. brk $52,000. fastest appreciating homes 962-1373. • in our area. Cali 675-TllS. OWNER arudom. Spenl•h • Fnrer • 4 Bdrm + bdnn. CloM to """°°~ & 30' Fam Rm + shops. 2 baths. Dining rm. • • · built-In., d,, h w a. h .. ' 40' Pool • leach • Family rm, firelace. Rear llviog rm. Nice yanl. brl< $27 ,500. " $32.990. 84H691. UNBELJEV ABLE BUY OF OWNER relocated. Lots of TifE CENTURY!! trees. Good area. 4 bdrms, .:I Just listed, you can't miss! bath..'!. Parnify rm, tir@pla.ee. Modern convenlence1. 4 TRACT FEVER Endooed pat to. , Gas queen txlrm's. Huge paneled buil>-Jn.. 4 ,.,... o·l d . lam. nn. with nio.nlmoth A disease that attacks whet\ Euy-.care yard. brk $37,;m. fireplace, overlook! tan· you discover that every 962-8865. tulle 40' pool. Deluxe third house on your block MAMMOTH builtin k~tchen. Bar . ..Full looks alike! Is this 2100 sq ft single story sire dining rm., n 1 ~ e REMEDY: home. carpeta never lived carpelri, boat access with The un-tract, Corona High· on, decorator d r a Pe 1 , separate storage, nee.; the llll'ldst and an extra sharp formal dining rm, fam rm, beach, E-Z, term11. NO GI1M· 3 bedroom home with pool gan1e roon1, plus solid brick MICKS. IT S FOR ~~· sized yard, walking distance playhouse. So much for the Call early 962-5583 to private beach. $62,000 price. $39,900 fee. Call 6'J'S..6679. for PERFORMANCE NicJel Bailey SEE-BU~::!. Today & Assoc. ww Down APwn 7% loen. I Olli\ I I. Ill \II\ ~ { >f l ' /.J ;;;' REALTOR $269 total Mo. Payment.lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ---'0=u=-P;=:.LEX Move In Toda.YI Nice 3 BR. ., 2 BA. Corner lot. Nr acllls. , Open Houae .,.5 NEWPOl\T MESA REALTY WALK TO· IEACH · c:~n~ar • 1 "~·!'f2:9411 · '' 3 BR & 2 Ba and 2 BR 1 Ba. Huntington 8Ht1h 3 BR 3 BA ViHa Pacifica's Extra \vide 42• lot. most popular model s:U.soo. ALSO h · 2 Oversized dbl gar, ~ ~lk to c annmg BR houoe . COUNTRY yr.round H&F pool, sauoa, on R-2 lot, room to add on.' .... _ · • jacuzzi ,tennis courts. Looks Call 6""'900. --iCLUB·-like model. Features all ATMOSPHERE -Gorgeou1 eltc kit w/upgraded , bltln two atQl')' tri·level Green:: -apP.'s, all upgraded l w/w brook. 4 lJedrooms, 3 ha.I.ha, crpts le drps, tirepl, a!sume ""e~C~d~M~D~U~P=~LE7X~e-1 toimal ~. Jaia:e tamlly existing 6}i% rnA, loan. Assume 77o V.A. loan room with wet bar, sunken Xlnt prestige address. Sec living room, top iJ:"ade C&.r· ?lay. 2 BR & den & 1 BR unlt pets, drapes, cathedfal cell· ·' · \Valk to beach. $73,500 Ing In master bedroom, 3 OPEN DAILY 1·5 car garage. Lots of trees. 513 ORCHID Eojoy the c!ubhouee & poo1 H:Z.4471 ( ::::.1546-1103 1llage Rea l Esta te Oceanview :Really 673-8500 activities. Just lilted -Yt'On'tl I"'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'"'"'" I BY owner-Lusk 1-1arb0 r last. OWNER leaving area. One of View, 4 BR, ram. rm., 2% CALL 842-4451 the best. 4 bdnns, 2 QatM. LA CUESTA VERDE HOMES ~~~!!!!~~ BA, 2 frples, wet bar, self· Large covered patio. Brick in 1...aguna Hills has 2 homes cleaning OV('n, air oond, BB Q . D 1 n I n g r m , back on the market because UJ>&radcd thruout, pr o f . d\sh"'·asher. Family rm, o! credit rejections. Botti Japanese ldscpg, Catalina rear living rm. brk $28,0CA}. havC' a cozy kitchen and I vie\\·• $88,500. 64-1-8569 for :""'5566;:o,='"-' ~~---- • frunily room plus 3 BR's & EASTSIDE appt. O\\'NER bought f}(!\V home. 2 BA. One has a fireplace. COSTA M~A -IRVINE TERRACE Gorgeous 4 bdnns, 3 baths. Quick possession. excellent Great family home. 4 Br, 2~~ Rich paneling. Formal din. conventional finaflcing avail· 12 XLNT UN TS Ba. fam, din, util nns. new ing rm. Deluxe kitchen. with able. 10-lBR + 2-2BR furnished. crpt, remodeled kitchen. GRANDMA built -ins & dishwasher. Top renta1 area nr transp. & Large corner lot w/2 fenced HIDES AWAY Fireplace. Patio. Larg e SJl,000 & SJl.500 Call Jerry Harden 714: 544-SOU 'hoppl•• H/F oool ~-Pri !pal fsmlly rm with C'OJTVe'l'&'l.tlon . ...,, . · ya...... nc s on 1 Y. Si:iail deve~ment of cxclu· pit. brk $49,~. 84~1383. e CALL ANYTIME e 673·3007. Owner. 1>1ve homeS short walk to =--~~-~---\ ~ or Eve. 64s.4375 Cosio MOH ........ Al,,,.;.t 3000 "" n ol $28,500 2 BR 1 IA Lachenmyer: Realtor MACNAB IRVINE INCREDIBLE I 4 BR + FR. Night view of Newport Bay Area , ocean & surrounding communities. Enjoy the niceties of life in this love!Y new borne high on Spyglass Hill. $124,500. Wal· ter King (714) 644-6200. OPEN DAILY 1·5 p.m. •46 MISSION BAY. (P23) THE IMPORTANCE OF LIVING! Big Canyon splendor! A truly different 4BR cusU>m pool home ... the ULTIMATE in privacy-glamorous design & spectacu- lar view. Lois Miller 642-8235. (P29) LAROE FAMILY HOME 5 BR, S bath Somerset in HV!tomes. Foi' mal DR, lg. Fr w/wet ber & FP adjoining country kitchen. Pool sized lot. •'79,750. FEE LAND. Bob Owens 642-8235. (P20) [l~nel tOl00..rDr1¥9 '41•1211 lloU MeoArthur ~-uoo N-•t -.ea11-tHA expensive decorator extras. Doll holl!e near the Heights ''VA TERMS'' Plush .c.arpecs, open weave sec of town. Sharp & clean, Ho Ey drapent;s. ( Co m P I e t e nice neighborhood. Will go N MOON COT· A1ocher-1n-law quarters wtth VA or FlIA says the &eller T AGE on desirable R-3 lot. 'full bath, huge private bal· or submit the new Yhi down Huge family room, "'Ith cony and den.J Walnut gar-pr 0 gram . Are you beamed ceilings, llreplace, den kitchen with ceramic qualified?? Call new carpets, flagstone patk>, tile. Family room, fonnaJ waterfall, fruit trees, only dlnt~. 4 ""BR Pl.Us ·3 full $25,900. baths, Huge 3 car &arage. ...,;WAll<[H & lfl FANTASI'IC 4 Bedroom, What a rantasrtc setup tor Realtors 545-9491 1'6 bath, cul-de-sac street. only $48,750. Adult occupied. Open Eves has CRV, $31,000 . .Better rA11 now ~ =u BKR 1 ~~===~--- hurry on this one. ""'°""' ~ · ASSUME 6°/. VA TllE REAL ESTATE FAIR * BIG SUR * 3 BR, fam rm, on comer nr 536-2551 FRAN~ FOUNTAINS beach, park, schools, iho~ * R I . b th p I * ... formal dining rm, ••P. ping. • I ax Y 1 oo oral<! lamily nn plus""""' RED CARPET Quiet 2 story. 2 B~, l ~ BA. bed:mu and sundeck above Rtaltors 962...5515 Adult rondo. E side, CM. garage, This. one 'NM't last, ' Sten! lhla from owner. hurry! Only $52,200. CALL _ * TRADE YOUR HO?(E * 963-2187 alt 4PM 847-8531 or 846-1351 -for Jnoome -Five 1wlita COU.EGE PARK 3 BR. with 3 BR 2% BA mmer11 ElZ~~i[~r~~ ~I:!• ~~g:r.:;;· POOL Ueocedl, EasUlde ~-'~VACANT $1f,950 CM, 3 BR, 2 BA, bltns, 12'! New carpet ,f:. pall\t, 3 BR 1 ~~ brick fplc, lot! ot pe.tfo, 5390• BA . $500. down to Vets, or $35,900. By Owner, 543-6848. $900, down to aeyone. Must BY owner, 430 Ellthcr St, .... ~ you in, seller be 110ld, Call anY,t.Jme. 3BR, 28A, bltlns, quiet PftYl if:ll other costJ. paymta SCO'M' REALTY, sas.,;7533 street nr tchools It e00p-$735 per mo. Inc tue~. No pl,,.. ~14.500. 837-*111. , 2nd TD. Adu!,. only coodo. $390 1 3 BR, .:I BA. all elec bltlns . • l * BY OWNER. 4 BR, 2 BA.. R/0 w/w c;:rptl &: drp.1 , .. moves you tn · sellt'l"J>ll.Y!i Redecorated inside I: oUtl .~lator's cleU&ht. 8 Yri aU Other coats • J>l(Ymtri Principab Only. $27,000. 959 new. won't lut, can-$21.5. per mo. inc tu & ~St .. CM. 893-6370 ~ mitlnt, no 2nd TD. ~Is BY OWNfi • 3 Bdrm + Igo ll!rffwllll!flf,Jfil ,only condo, 2 BR. 2 BA, all Film Rm Lanai_ cul de AC -·•-·--·-elec bltlna RIO. w/w trpll Vlc Backllly-Prtnc.OnJl' 44 ll:l:I IOJ & -.. Sp•culalh'• $29 51)) Tel 548-7353 dellRhl! ·Drive by modeJ . 631 • . --, --~ S. F1Jrvlew. {2 blks N of BY o1WNER, 3 BR, 2 BA, It YoU cao t<llord $260 per McFadden.) Open dolb, io-5 crp t , drp1, p11.llo , *11 p.m. I clubhouu/pool, clole to mo., C.u UI about our new 1.' schools MS-803s Stardust llrtlna:. You'll be • , COU.WE P A R K Cam glad :IOU dldi • bridge model 3 Br, 2 a.'. coll ~ BKR 531·5111 ( :::.) $JI 2 !rpiCI. By . °"""'· Job * SEABURY * I=·~!""'""'~--~..,;;;,; lra°'l•md. 979-l61ll 'BR. 1!( BA, !mmac., C<KnPI BY Owner, l>Kul 3 BR don. II'• a m.... . . eclJ YoUr o:pld, drpd, auto pr door llv rm, din rm, 2 ba, ~HOP lt@na wtt.b eue, UM O.U, open@r, many ~trul 8021 tole, boat •tonct, neu Pilot Clualfl<d. w-sti78. Ellowwlh, -· $37,SOO Wlltt, $30,llGO, 5)S.'ll29, r 1 • :111'fi:1 ' 1 ·~ ' ' 1,.., T f- f" ' ' : ,;,1. ' I • , : :-. ' . ' ' " I T " ,, •, '. '' . • ' :~ I ! • I • ' ! . ! .. . " ' . I f I I ! • • • . . Tllndor • .., 8, 197' DAIL y I'll.OT ~I-...... ~[~ .... , iJI ~-~ J~I ~ Ifill .. -l~I --.-I~ H-IMcll :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj~iii.; L""" Ille • Nsx""'I .... b p I j ~jii;;iijiiiiiiii!iiii~iiii~l~iiiim·~-;;~~----;::-~ "iiiiiiii""iiii•iiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii J:H~untl~•~ltll~°"::~•~s~och'.'.'._. ;__j .,.. .. n1112w , ''"'' 200 HouNs """'"'-• ,...,_ ,Unlum. • Condomin- I' LITTLE~ OUll pcLUSIVES N£W IALIO_A INVES1MINT _ 0,tnerol Hun~I"""' lesch Unfu.....----_ ARE YOU A TIUPl.Ell • $1'11.000. Studio D'1PLEX TAX SHEi.TEii-iNCOME BEAUTll'VL ExecuUvt II>· Coots Moos SJ.A YE7 -::.U..."\_*':,.11>1,.=t,: ,' Jl!ket.:"=--Prime N~-,.. 1o-• ·1 PRESCHOOL ~~'lio,..u;:!\.:~~ !! clenda • -...,.. 2 Baths.1-------- ro HOUSEWOllKT Heie'i 2 BR...-. ---.-..4-. f bath& · ~!ion. SilOdila~ Liiiil::l; Olle::oUlie -'• -ud ----5 to lj) 1 !"~11t1,room;-<1bi!ng room. 3· •EOROOM, 1. l>oth, a -p1u that wU1 CIUlll!l1-~-c1reom1 • izm.ooo llelwc• .,.,.._ tnelude --Preocboola. tlmes. Locol _,., wnte -~ "'"' tchooli, shOP' 2 c pool ~ -'• .,,_ &11(1 ll1"1e ~~· #!.*>· .• ' · UDO REALTY !Pr to .cdl!!>c br1c1t tire-Llce1ltd !or '13 Chlldnn. ctaq<Oi\d Ad No. 685. P.O. ., Ai*bi-p1"" lr<owaya. Yard i:!' II~ .J~. ............. --- '''fiW"'»~---:,;;::;;...,;::; .,.P~v S!lf""""'Lldo.'1irPf.Baacll ..-Li-•,ottlem ~!>Cr 'lo Box'"'°'_Dt.11.YPDol O><\a ~I inaln«_ .. ~ter llO.!d. w,.,,,r • _. ·I II~~;"~ °Tj 147•35M · ' , ..-mhet kitdleos and ba1hs. -Wilk """"Newport Beocb'aDd 11 ... 3 .-.' · -o Ill ONLY 2. 'YEARS OU>! All cr;fll m ; l1Hllard1/ : ·'\> Jor a )IOUO& tDICl4bel-ot twe. lrvlM 1 in cJoeets . open beam cell· Colla M~. mo.cm. can ===-=--Hcaw ot tbeainitx'":. to e~ c.rda rm, putth't : L.Bed;rpomJI 2.ba~ Rancbo' ~··'~~· . . =: ~rm-ytoar:e w;:e for Appointmtot, &IM8. • L~-I LlcQffs.le 14 mW.19lb St., Ccst&Meia :~. ~ptr ::.C,~sf1-'l981 '91'Mft, MW crpts, MW !"'' -=~~-J;:: ,·GOLDEN GLORY lmELY"llJ!.·J'ilA.famlly $100.llQO. Call 641-nn. e Coln IH-8usy 18$1(~"°:Jlu"'&e..,J..a&una Houw U~furn. ·JCi5 point& .._ .. $US/I* .;.-_...._ .. .,. -iar,,.. Attranl!ve, --~ rm, Pl\tlo •. -·ctPt· .._ """'""'""""'°"..,., e Bu r ~/Mkt cc_!_ > "'°' BKR 531..!M, . r; ~· ~ --· . courfyard lake!J.OU -the ~"Gf'--• • Blclrs $uppl'f Inv ljft COSTA MES.\ OFFICE lrvl 557.21n. ''I" •• • · · · ' spedoos en1ry wifhlii Cold 11\111iOlf'VMJ\ "'<' HOLLAND-B.:.1 S.1<11 Setvtno-O>sta Mesa Newjiort Hunlllop1"<9Hclo , ,$28,5.00. vm =.~~Beautt-BY.(lwoer 3 br Ait.oVilla ,645-4170 or 540-iieo&,ew. Beocb.HUnttncton'Beach. 2BR.1Ba ............. $285 l SR l\i 8A Crp . ' -NO DOWN Ing oil r:" carpet. Condo. .Pian . .:a Appal. ins Orange, Costa Meaa $100 • ~ • Fiim. All 2 BR. 2 Balhl ...... , . 1325 bit .; n --' ... drpo, ~ _ aets_ _ UJt::Jlnusual . 83f-9017 • _ util·~ ---Ava.I! 519. 2 BR, den, 2 ha, atr eand S275 -8· ~ room & pool. 3 BEDROOMS 2 OATHS, ""1lrway ..,,,.,,....... In . 1 ·EtEGANf G!FI', SouYenlr .. Toy ..... 1170 .• Nice 2 Br. Dupleoc, 3 BR. 2 baths ...... 1>;5/775 ~MO. 547~791 Bkr. hardwood floors, carpet. this 3 lxlrm., 2% bL town-BY owner, great V>ew, 2 br, on beeuiitul Balboa Ialand Encl~ Gar. Kids A: pets 3 BR. 2'11 ba .•••••• S39:" /450 JSR. 2BA. btt'IM, crpb, dl'p8 c1rapec;,..bu!It1no. Oovered =.'''•tmm-.wtll ~~~..,...._.,,.,MANSION . C·2 +INCOME 110,oooandttisyoon1Gooci $ll0 , 2 ·er. 11o1iae. Stovo:•BR.2bath ........... 1295 pa11o. ~ & blue prtvt: patio. ' bard ~,!ind 1Ioor pod and locaUd M • · • VACANT 4 ' tiOOnn, 3 bath P!i<e<\ at only ~.OOO. aeuon j,,.. aartincl 21711 rdria'. 11'.plc, ""'' yard for 4 BR. 21> ba, .......... $37$ leese $185. ~=-~ boulewi&!1 dream. greenbel~ ~-adult pod:. Ntwfl'ID'11Swt\• . conOO 1850 eq ft w/master Property is clear/make of· Marine Ave., 673-8668,, kids• pets. Gar. 5 BR. 21.h ba ....... $365/396 Lagun11 Niguel 'to acbools. freeway Ir $59,500 Incl~• land. suite ;22~ blc. bml din, fer on. doY(D paymt Owner 5'i.'i-5675. $)It .,. 2 Br, Horse propeey. We Have Sunun~ Rentals 1-==~="'----~-CAIL 96844$, ~red hill o!~=RT =-~~J<xrmidi~r.: ~ c;g: ::::-:.;,~~Money lo LOan 240 w/gart.&~u l Ired h·111 =·o~~~:::iho'e".,,2~ ~~·0!°· PRICE. • · HEIGHTS 0\'.=0 =: ~ym;o'. ~·~·"'o~~3a~ear~ 1st TD loans LAGUNA BEACii ornCE ~va~;f~·~ •• Go~u~ What a bu;y! ·3 Bedroom, 2 /10% dn tage with units staying ln Serving Lquna, Dana Point, -$275/mo. Agt 495-4877 baths, beautiful terram en. REALTY th1s ~ll locate<J _lot,in New-w ,,...~~ rear, 1or over $1.5,000. yr in-· UP TO 95% ·Sal;' CJ~te, Capistrano REALTY · · Ml t VI ~vesUlv~i:~a:~ u~~l ~~~~ ~H: = ::: If llhliillillll ~~r = ~ Jroz: ~ 2nd TD Loans i::: ~· fvi"1 yes:: u~;o~c:n\~~.v:~~!!e m::: eo:!:, enclsed at. drapes, large family room, Ottice "°""' 8 AM to 8 PM tance to all 8'lloola. °"""" 531·511f;'( :;:) 531•5111 US National Bank A Ko')" M ok. Call Anytime, 5,;2.7500 tac ..,., crpt•, drps, dlw, fireplace, water softener, I 1 , ,, ...... _ R nch'' will <S!1'Y ftna:ncbv, Ol)ly · Hawaii Restaurant. Thats Lowest rites Cring• Co. $190 • ~ 2 Br, patio, gar, Office houn 8 AM to 8 PM self cleaning oven, patio,_ patio, 3 car ga.raee, garage rv n1 s • ,,. 1 $2),000. Call 646-nn. ;lust SQutb of Bo~ s.A.. Sittler Mtf Co bltns, dilld/pet. swim pool privl ~ _. openers UnbeUevable Plush 4 BR, orientol garden OPfNTILt • ""FlllTOBENICEI ' . CHARMING I' 642-2171 'SU:O.. 11 I'!!!: ~-to~~"'·!.~· 4 BR. 2% ba., .......... un 830--0871 . . for the price. CALL 968-4456. home in Irvine's Ranch. 'l;",...i:.. erican ,t VI"''' .,...,.,._. ....... "' ~"_..,. ......... • .t.... One-like it &Old in one day at ~-OJ Am home on Serving HaitJQr area n >)TS. ~ ok • . ! BR. 2 ba. ••••.••.•••• $365 I OWIJtou•• Unfum. m 142.900. Call Jack Peck. = ~ l:'1"i/k'~.,:. 531·5111 I::::.) 531·5110 NEED CASH! n:ooo. or up $295 ·Now 3 Br, 2 Ba H~e. 39B~R. 2~.~'." .~~~ .. 1415 N-rt &..ch Broker, m-6381. " BR ·2 Ba. f--..oy nn le to $3,00), $10.Q)O and-more. Fn>lc., dbl gar. Family/ f BR ba TR Hilla 1<-1...;.;.;.;.:=;..;=;;;;.---J L " '• • cuuu ' Remember AVOO Thrift for Snglsl'Pet · • ' ' ·' •.J•-aguna Bs&Cll *VANISH * hobby rm .. oov'd patio, 21< Walk To Beach a Real Estate Loon u CAi.). f94·9.19l 3 BR. 2 ba., tum ....... l400 ADULTS-LEASE • · • ..,., plua area lor camper 12 Unlls unfurnished """ ap--' uae th · pon * LANDt ORDS * 5 BR. 21>-ba. ........... $385 2 Jlr...l_ba_c._t.-$l!!O Swiss~ wl SpaniJh motil. or boat. $52,500. • • ..,. ........ , . e money 3 Br. 2 ba. gar, pool $300 • 3 BR.. 2 -ba, :remodeled to CALL 4\, ,4,.1,1, carpets le drapei, 6.9 x however )'OU like. ~ ult l'REE· RENT,AL 1 '$ERYI~ REALTOR 642'-S333 ~~ : , I ,1 , ' ~·~::;Card, <.1 • ._ ~ ~u:.~~~ = t~ '.;:'~~ _!llG_ 4_ ltE_!lR~M, 2 l)UolexH Unfvm. a PRESt!GE - -* LEASE OR BUY * r. fll4 -· St•te Park. Don't ml" ts! 620 Newport Center Dr B • t fi lioifts· obout 2 2100 MODEL RETAIL STORE 3 BR. 4e-!amiiy rm. 2 FUU Non ,.,:,~:,Lli,, 0111,. i~,000639-~t SZE/DI. Suite 101 . , jile~1to tho beoch.. B!ilboo lsland ____ 1 281» ft Of luxueyliving. 4 Bed· COMMERCIAL ba.'1., 2 frplcs. Lge. yard. N rt Hei ht ne Newport Beach 833-34«) . mm 1te OCCU1Nncy. LEASE _ Waterfront. ·Pier. nns, 4 bath home w/super-OFFICE· Best N'pt. H'ts. location. ewpo 9 1 DON'T BORROW · $298.. P • r month. +ISJNCE 1946" New 3 Br, 2 Ba, all elec. Mg tte room upm;rs with COAST HWY. Alao, .will leaaeloptlon. 'TIL YOU CALL USI AGENT, 546-4141 lit.Weatel"t Bank Bide. 1425. 67ll-3838. 214 GJ'&lld full bath, plus family room 25, Front pl"• l·BR. apt. BALBOA BAY PROP. OWNER, i3 BR, 2 BA, tam Bo ho _ _.MI C Univers1tv Parle Irvine Canal A formal dining room down-"" * 642-7491 * rm w-FP, cul-d~sac, nu now on your me "'twv oron• chi Mer · ' ·.1:="-·~·-~~---1 stairs Asking $52900 CALL Beaut. decor. furn .; ,.view. 2 cpts, drps, assume VA 7%. for any good purpose. Serv· Dey1 552-7000 Nlght1 Corona del IMr 841.sslt. ' · Gar. + studio in rear. Ex-Lide Isle Beauties $45 000 ing Lls Angeles County for * OCEAN Vu Home. FU1i·y • p ,anda~le •. $100 ,~00 ON WIDE street; 4 bdrms., 548.os2o 646-l5l.f over~ years and NOW in maint'd pool, deck furn. Lagun11· Buell NICE 2 Br upper near bCb. Ill!~., Wan/goodwillue ... :. 8f~~'-m1oc•·.· !._.~tb!;.,"fOOOea.tures. .. --~~oareble! Orange County! ·lBR, 2BA. 2 frplc. Washer -Avail Jime 1st. $220 MO. --·· -tique 00. .3~-Ul.le rrM..-,:: . .,..,.., =w•• , SJ .'.;NAL MORTGAGE CO. dryer, retrtg. Lge gar. Cpts: '180 -Redec 1 Br. apt. Good Call lfter 6pm: 646-M69. ' · • $125,tm. Bob Yorke . G%·T.D: '.,- 1 1~ DELUXEMLEXES _ fTI4) 556-0106 drps. Lee $500 mo. 673-6635 loc. Nr. beach &.town. Huntington a.ch ' • 644-2430 60 Fl' . ....GARD.EN charmer. llablelton.. lillil (1) 3 BR\Zf2 BR (1) 1 BR 4500 Campus Drive, N.B. OCEAN side Hwy -front & $225 -2 B~, bltns, 11,S blks;1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 -4 Bc1tilU 'family room 4 • rear"-M u dbl ,........ beach. Pat'O, View. Sml pet.11 !~=~=:::~===~ .. • . . ALL unlla ha"' frptc'i, cen· Loons $20,0llO & Up " Call ~1~ --·· $275 " 4 BR, 2 BA, trplc. gar. NEW 2 BIDllOOM . POOL LAGUNA NIGUEL ba"Ltb~''fi:ALTY. tral boat, air/rond., cloaed Available to new or C , 673..-or <M-32481 Bath, encloeed pvt - Spacious 4 bdrm. home with 3377 v · Lido N'pt Beach Mobile t1omt1 garages. Walk to shop'g le established businesses. J.R. Olt• Mffl Hillil. •· ln duplex building. $185. Pl!' ••• 'nestled back on a quiet, "!' abtolutelf breathtaking ; 67,_7300 '* For Uls · 125 't1'PEJ'fl'~baii!!'Dail; 1~ Austin or M.L. Ro,., MESA VERDE NU·Vr.W RENTAL.$ mo. Man.,er at 3BOsw1111. ::. ~,..;.,(: :~ :;::..~' ~'::'d1y":\'.r,~ * 2 u .. 1rs * Motor Home Rentals = s. Haster. G.G. 12n> 316-5093 : Fi>r 'Leaae Lovety 3 sR 2 yard. Ntoe cond! LaC\Ul& ·Hunt1ow'°k8:i'i&h ... horn Lux hood Wood burn.I fire-,.,. Sp•rllng lnv•1tment BA. 2 trplc fa.m rm e°ncl l BR cottage, charmipa1 • e. urtous private Ilv· · . . . ng Large R-2 Lot C 2ND Trust D·-"'· -tlo o • 1 t ut l quie t area. 11,;o mo. + dt1hl11t11!111!m.!!l!!!!I! ___ ..! ing room. Huge_ master plaee m lovely livmg room. ClO.e To S.i1ch -r---orp. -...u. ,_ · D qu e c -ue-sac. Adlta n1 494-4365 NEW d(iple-x: near tchool a quarters. Two varuty balm. 152,500. A.kl $52 500 SALES & LEASING 618.5662 PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. ~';;.. ~ ~· 2 children, L 0 YHlll ' beach, dble 'rar. bled yard, :'~ ~:;: =~~: YO I.,,, -(Needed _n!ntal li.ongs) Oa full aerviMace tacillty EXCHANGE Any Amount pd. $m: Jo~ t18•= oguna • 3 BR, 2 SA. iii!. 5.16-:191' Ing, heated ,..,,;,ming pool. vroe..,,,Q BALBOA BAY PROP. nmar tor Homes ~2 l.otiwm take 6 Units *CALL 615-4494 BKR. Avail lmmed. 545-QU. NEW 'Wortd.· 2 Br" den, 2 11•1 :•:, ... AB .,,beatable bqain and REAL ESTATE * 67:1-7420 * Hun-on Beach. ' Money Wantod 2$0 4 BR. best Me .. Verde area, Ba. pt\tlo, dbl garage. low [ ~--' " .-tnv.stment. Hurry, calf us 531·6800 FOR: 10 ID 15 Uruts In 4 ~· tam. rm .. 2 Ba. Frplc, malnt. Pool. 12!0. 830-4047. , .962-SSll BKR. · 1190 G1enneyre St. Orange County. ii ,500 1st or --"" mortgage. bJtns, full erpt A drpg, Lge NEW World -2 BR a, Den, 21 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim:i:.:~1 ! 'I." OwNER moving •. Lots or 494-9473 • 549-03)6 STEPS J_O 9CEAN HEMET Sporllng lnvHlment Want tong tenn u -Ible. ,.-Atrium, trg patio • BA, patio, dbl garage. Lowll ~/· . · 4 bdrms. 3 baths. Would You Bellev• 2~7.~.Jc· 3 t!3R. i!~: 10 x «> 1 BR~ w/coven!d Corp. W:e ~ ad No. 989• P&rt cov'd. Wtr I: rardener ma.int. m . ~· Apts.. """'· - , • Family nn, ireplace. For· ... 2 Bdrm. own your own patio on xtra lrg lot. Adlt 638--5662 &sty M ~it~ 1560' pd. $350. 545-3604. L•a~ Niguel 1----------' 1 · mal dinin&' • np. Ilull,t·ins. apt., close to shopping & ~~080 S:~·L TY park, No pets. $3,500 . Will . Mo a esa, · LUXl1RIOUS Vu, oo Santa T ' S~thG~'S .. -~ I 'Prime· ~«reaJ 11 mile to bea.¢l.' 4;e7'btd.~pool & rec· <iOnsider trade tor equity in E-StJ:?E C.M. -Sue 2 ·BR rtgaget, Ana golf courae, 1rg .ma, NEW Se a t e ·r ra c e mon • one """"''"""'" Ill beaeh. Elegant. bric. $42,150. reat:ion a re a . Beautifully * 548-1290 * mil home or condo. Cart wrlti w/enc~. ~-=· , Trust Dffcft 260 3BA, gardener, $525mo, or Townhouse. 3 br, 2% ba, ::"'tr on J,.tK ::i .. ~ 842-2561.. _ tpdilcpd.::..JtWTY···on-tbts one Nemn. ~~-er . $625mo turn. 1 atnl pet, yr balcony, 2 frplc, dbl. gar., tubl 111 for $15.00 OWNER arodooo. Pool-•· 11•$28.oooc'·'• i """'. LIDO ISLE BEAUTY . 846-1.1(1;, • ' PUT YOUR MONEY !eaae, 557-9409. =:J':c :::!'at~ew& mon~Blcr. ~7225 • 4 bdrm!, 2 baths. I>llUni. -. '.. 60 Ft. garden chRrlll« D,!!-t;"'drpe, ~ epanct,:ci = Lots for Salo 170 TO WORK FOR YOUI 3}!~ROO!f:.,2 bath, double private beach. $390. 49!>-4728 Balboo l1l1nd ~ ~-ins~U:P1jc;:::: 1 4 B<!rms .. family room ~l, pri beach, ja~. & reg DANA POINT residential 60' Eam 10% interest on well· ~· Call .. ~~ J: eves & wkend1. ma.culate condltion. brk (r~Rf:l.c;'y pools. Putting green, pool x 100' lot on Chula Vista St. Sf.Cured 2nd Trust Deeds on tngs and weekendt or 'Mltslor Vl•IO • WAT~RF'RONT, J· BR. :x; $36,000. ~. ~··-S671 '4:•.•~l .... ~" 3311 .. v. ia Udo,'N'pt Beach table & so forth!3 • Adib only, $15,500. 493-0441. • OrangSIGNALr ~ORTGty_ reAalGE .. COtate. ~ . . ' . ~:r: Ba~lnngt, yrly, REPOSSESSIONS • • . * 6 :I-no ~ts. I ,500. De Amo Mountain, Dlsert , m · BUSINESS ...,. llve In this I:IEW 2 """'I' f BR. 2 8A, · Y•v • 1SPECTACULAR.. t ; 7. ~ * ' Bays•de V•llage, NB• RaorL 114 ~ 4500 i:! 556-MOG otil<T 3 BR; 11> Ba home. large patio, view-lot. •vail lalboo Peninsula For Information anil location REDWOOD & FIR Bayfrdftt Comer ccm.-. 686--0112 pus Dr .. N.B. $300/mo wtr pd s 1tablel~J,,..1!!!::·~1S:-!;:.:!l350~·:...· 837~-<l21~S!.__l·-:;;;\;;;;;;;i'~;H;:-'I or these mA &'VA homes, 3 B~. 2 BA.i .. wl~,view, Near Newport Pier 24x57' 3 BR, Mod~'1a.r LAND INVFSI'MENT forstudioorsrM.1loo'!1neu. Newport 8Mch ~WEEK & UP contact · atrium, lg formal din rm, 3 lo13 & 7 small apts redwood w/vlew & bcb. Beaut:Uul. Level Riverside I • 1154().§1.48 or. 548-7745. \. • Sleeping Rooms ~ . l<AS.ABIA"' . lplc, 3 decks,. prof decor & -c. oruy. Agt 673-3012 (n4) 494-9609. ' . County De"'rt Land with I --,..'io;., II fl! I 3 BR, l 8A. Gar. ~. Some THE 81.UFFs . Lovely 4 Br, • Houaikcep!ni llooma furn. Lo.tu>1,&1Ej.SS. ~ BEACON Bay Frnt -2 + ' Trees & Shruba 1700 feet . . crpt'tt &: drps. 2113 3 Ba. ~. prlvil. & yard e~Ocean View Aptl Rul Esf•J• .96~"'644 chrome, wood. Askl.ng guest rm+ apt, dock fur 2 ~ elevatlon1175040~cresBal$135per Monrovia . 646-1145, .maintenance $450 per rm. BALBOA INN ''SPANISH VILL:A'', $67,500 furnished. Open Dai· -s.5' boat., dbJe gar, tennis, I ""'•-I acre wn. a.nee 64&-6Z6. !ft Ir last mo'• in edvance. 150 M~ Strftt A~ 3'XXI '4 ft of home ly. 494-7881 , $165,000, 10% dwn conskJer Gtnttal $36.50 landmonth. 00160 Acres HOUMI Furnflhecl 300 LARGE I I 8 tm. minimum or 12 mo 6'f5.8740 ..., .... ~. · · • ·· !rad JMD 838-225' 7 . same $1 per acre · • ove y, many tx· max Leaae N •· Avail w/central air cond., PLU~ "THE BIG · ONE" es. • -~ Balance $100 BalbN Isl-. ' tru. f BR. 2 BA. Family · · ope-Corona del Mor huge pool. 4 Bednns., large 4 BR. den; bltn kitchen HARBOR Vi ew Hms ·I· month 997...irr.l; Agent · · rm. '335 mo. 548--6T97 anl,5~1~26;;·!:'--~~·-,..--,,..,-l:"':::"".::':":~::;::--1 ba9e~ent rumpus rin, for. opens to din. area. 2 •,-PL Montego. 4 Br, 2 Ba. FIR, Ac.-.ege for sale 150 · · 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, 1 p.m. -4 BR on water, dining 1 BR, gorgeous view, M ma1 liv. & din . rm1. Many Mstr. BR, .eutte w/pi:tv. DIR. ()wne.r. $e 4 , 5 o o. BUILDER'S ATTENTION Real Estate Wanted 114 utilities paid. Avail May lBR drp ..... 1.. room/den, 2i,i BA, tennit summer rentals, . $250 per customized features. Own-; , ba., on leyel al~ glUs 83J..389f. : . !5th to June 15th. $260 mo -m'Bnew Cl'PI, a, ~t. court, awtm pools, beach, month. 2530 SeaVlew. Call ers tran~erred north. Call] opens to· oeean v ~ e w OONOO • Park·llke s u r. :~n!vceed !~:~~~tin. A~ RErIRED man wishes to Realtor, 644-TllO. • pets. s=Wl.Y· Adlta, no hlm1lY pref: AvaJI 6/15, yr-:;r4582 or ~ ·ews. THE REAL ESfATE FAIR. ~ny. ~.000. roundlnp..peol, NB, 3 BR, 2 DANIA REALTY CO purchase IOund income real-round. 673-S334 .-'Y;-·-..------1 • • • 536-25:J!. l ~ Realty • 4M-0731 BA. $43,000 .... Bkr. f73·5221, , ·*· 642-6560 * ' estate. ApPro,c. p)) to Ligunt1 Baell ._, 28~=e, trp~ ~·Aho 3 WA~NT -Prlv. patio Cost1 Mela SPANISH HACIENDA lleguna Nlgusl .,_ 14~5. " C ~M .,.. •. Also may be . 1175 utu raPd coun,!'7, & dock fbr up to 28' powerl---------1 D.esperate owner must sell ·ocEANFRONT --•m•tery interested in financing good $150 -Util Pd. Small cottage, 979-8430 · Agt. fie, boat.-3 Br. den, 2 Ba, frplc. Casa cle Oro immed. 3BR, 2BA, like -new· CONDO. 2 BR, 2 BA on Golf Du 1 , j Lots/Crypts 156 new project. Prefer Orange woodsey setting. Ideal cou· Vtil ~l. $550. Yr ly • ALL Ul'IUTIES PAID carpets, drapes, bltins. 5 ~· bltna, beaulw. ten· pe,x, owne r agent County. Principals g l,.ve pie. Laguna,, ' · 1 .f.~ i $A, ltovt, dbl gar', ~. Com min to beach. Large well ms club. ID% dD. $36,900. 673-9266 ~Y . Lots. Pacif:i.c dea.tils. Write Classified Ad $3XI -· UHi Pd. Decorator blOck , wall Jencit. Newly IMMEi> occup, 2 BR, den, 2 Cu pare before you-rent ·kept lot, fenced yard. 831~ Oc•anfront Dupl•x ~e~~ ~k. :~ No. 489, Dally· Pilot, P.O. furn. 1 Br. apt BeauWW· deccl!l'. $2SQ. 67'5-.3M9. BA, upgraded, lawn maint, • ~:fI:ke!aee.~ $36.950. EZ Tenns. Lido ltle + beedl lot $135,000 · er Box1560, Costa Mesa. Calli ocean vrewl Laguna. 3Bll,2BA,$295mo. '"'°' 1-. lhopptnr direct llahtlnr t.or PERFORMANCE Prine.· only. Agt. 673-3012 Comm1rcl•I 91326 $32$ -2 Br, 2 Bat trplc, gar, 2782 Mendoza.. Near echoolt. oonvenieJlCe•, no pets, -. Separate dln's·area 847-a584 ·* EXCLUsrvE * HOUSE for sale by owner in Pl'0P9rty 151 yard, very prlv. & nice. 7 546-5291. 644-5966 Owner 644-S569 • Home-like ltotqe: LESS THAN RENT 4 Bdrms., plus den; 5 baths. "The Bluffs", $59,000. 3 Bij, . . mos. MESA Verde beaut. 4 Br,• 2 mE Bluffs, brand.new .f BR.·• Private patios $6SO M,,..s·yoo Into 3BR. l% l.'l~i ~on! ~rboe r · 2% JV.. 1 m·mac u ta re\ COroncid.f Mar NU.VIEW. RE.NTALS ,Sa, ~y rm. patio. 3 BA. pool & yard maint. e C!oaed ear.,e .,;;-.,0 BA Condo. Walk to shopping· $170 OCIJ,cen cu · me. decorated, 644-2146 by ap. Build to suit to q'ualltl€d 673=4p30 · or 49f..3248 •· · Cuat crpt & drp.s, $000 mo. • Marble pWJman . center. : _polntment only. tenant-on vacant lot at 24%1 Newport Beach NU ~~R. crpted, drped, bl1in 1.st A last plus f.llO dep, '41:, Kfl)g·.P Bdrma . RED CARPET RENTALS: Summer winier DuP.lexes near the oce"" E. ¢ol!ot Hw. Plans . tor . . rMP· amt ..,..t, pr, .,..ter 83H635. .. ~I·· Barbecues • our- • ;j RHllors 962-5515 " leales. ' llliles Larso•, Realtor 3500' building wlllt parklnr lleoutlful Bluffs pd, $200. 548-9524 ' THE Bluffs, New, 3 BR, 3 rounded with pl..,, land- • ' LIDO REALTY *~*... tor 14 cars available, Bkr. Smaller 3 Br. 2 ba., 1 .. 1:y. wcircun-3BR. 2IIA. BA, sunken den $475. ·IC8plng .. • i OWNER,.~ 2BA, de~, 3377 Via.~hfdo~Npt. Beacb BAYSHORES~-0\VNER 615-1225. , ; $315PerMo.,yrty.$500.mo/ ·~1 -'·'bltns dbl Lease. Eve s /wknda,. Adults. No PetL ! , , : ·~ ... nii:e y8rd, nr shoj>s 67:1-f3llO 4 BDM, 3 8ATH FlmU 2. ADJOINI>IG lricolti prOp. 9itmmer. . ~'l300 s.issc P.J', 640-<l200. . LARGE l .BR ~ l -oe·nten ' &-Schls, $36,500. Home; $61,900. ~.y erties, cent. C.M. i1s.ooo. 3 BR., 2 ba. '-somta," deluxe 3 BR ' ' . BLUFFS, 2 br, den, ~ ba 365 W. WU.son •1911 l 847.oos.2 T El B 5 Y OBdnnWNER 3 __ th HARBOR VIEW _, owner. 645-•/Sf2-«i60. APT Units for hwe9bnent. $500 mo/yearly. May ;,. ~~· Secavailclep&bl~ llv. rm, tonnal din. $475~ LOW WEEKLY RATSS BY Owner: 11.900 down . . egant .• .,. • . . . . . . C-rnlnlums • Loc>tloa: Newport Beach & BLUFFS REALTY 644-1133 'dw. -mo. • · 644-56731673-3152. Executive Sullsa OVr 1t% GI. Pm.ts $3ti6. 3 family rm, ltg. So. patio &: 5 Bdrm, 3 Ba Sornerset ())eta Mesa area. Unlfa:: , re<J .• 60-0822. 20IO · Br, lam rm, 2 bll, bonu.s rm. garden. Prime -45' atreet to Model. By owner , 644--6.'ll9 for .... . 160 preferably. 4-30. Must HARBOR VIEW HOMES -MESA VERDE Trl•leyet. 4 SHARP 2 BR., 2 Ba, Blutta, . Newport BIVd. 833-1103 ot 5.52-9503. street location. "W-~ It • Reap"• , . generate net ·-nda.ble in-Monaco model. Completely BD 3 8A bt•!... _ _. all blt·inl, carp., drps, pool. Cotti Met•. 1 S120 ooo 21 7 ~ "" HUNTINGToN u 'B ~ · ~-· furn Nr clubhouse A pool. • .., ' ...,.,, 6 ...... ener. 1330..Mo 642-411f ... -Have .something )'OU want to , • 673--4 . From treasures to tratb . AR OR! come or have potenwu for fto .7 m09 Adultl'Only N~ Leue, $450. mo. 51).'8:29. . . ""'2611 aellf Claaallled ads 4o it I "List" It In clusltied, Sblp Tum·them into cub PAG!FJC CO)IDO. 11 bllc 10 opendable lnCome. S32-al33 Peta. 644-2560. · fountain Villiov 4 SR, 2 BA, FIR, DIR, STUDIOS & 1 Blt'S • , well .. call NOW 642-:5678. to Shore Results! ,642-5678. CALL Dally Pilot . ~-I:.oW down. 213: 1 BR. <Jolt•-. ••• .a ;,:;,f.. :1415,rrHarbor .,.yu Homes. e FREE Llnens .. , _.., :iuus/pell. 6 BDRM 'on cUL~ j··-' or (.tw) 792--4824. e FREE Ut:Ultic:t n..-..-/U It I I~ A1!o 2 BR Mobile $87. • ' -· 14!!0. l l , ... ' I . ... ,....,.,... .. ,_ H ." 1 1 . 62 ' ~. • Bachelor uruts In all bch N-o1 Mlle Square Pvk,J,;;~,,._------1• Full Kitchen .. . . cities Agi Fee· 9'19<-8430 , Downlta.irs baa 4 br •ft'pl SHARP waterfront lg 4 'Br. • Hea:tea Pool 'iiiiiiiiii..:~-~ii '. . ' ' utll nn: OYen!Zed ...... A lhq cpt, bltns, frplc, dock e Laundry Facillt!ea 8Y OWNER. :!r2 8R. 1 BA, • HOUHI Unfurl!. 305 fenced yard. 14< an elect avall 1425 yrty. l,., 673-0192. e TV & maid serv aval. neor Beach, new cpts, lull...U kltch A din rm. U-5 BR. 4 BA, FIR, DIR. Lrg e Pl.,ne_ Service $.18,500. After 5, 496-5606, Opportunity 0...ral baa tee -b<Gu. nn, yrd. Pool prtvl. Harbor Vu $30 WEE'K & UP . Cap1-no Beach. ""'.:11 'R"'UND 74' aq It 1nc1.-2 br, Hms. $515. 833.3894, • Studio A 1 BR Al'll- lnci>me Proporty 166 'I....... ... -· -· """""""" LGE 3 8R. 2 BA. b!IM, &hag •• TV " Maid Service Avail 5 2 U N I T M 0 T E L * PARTNER * 2 bedroom + <lat. quiet ....,..._ ano.,X!nt tor Ige wetbar, pool, beach 1 blk. e Phone s.rvt ...... Hld. Pool eul ·de ........... $295.00 family. $350 mo,. lli6-8597 $.175. Yr!y ~2124. e Odldre~ & Pot Sec11aa '73 Inco~e up 47%. Choice Active with $25,00I' cash, 3. 8ednlom • 1nnd """' Huntlnglof! lleoch -port Hsi-ts • 1120 Monthlf Ha-Blvd 3.8 """''· (~) tor ..._.....ti m CdM .. ' ......... $tl().OO · . •" :i.m Newport' Blvd., CM Room lot expansion. owner IUperv!tory pi)lltlon. c-ted 4 -• ~ • · 2 BR. lrg yard. patio, gar.. 548--or 64i>!9fl Flexible. Wil as I j It ~~e~ ~-grMt View •••••••• sm.oo 2 BEDRCJ:OM, electric util paid, rert:. Avlb. 5/6 & Ad Good For $5 on Rent qualltied buyer. Long term llAtary e -· Starling 5 8ednlom • 1Iarbor builtlnl, FA heot, wsll· 611. $250. 645-6625 28R Avail June 15. l;e,.15. ~./~~ m,1tl;i ...W :!.,000ol hi "': p(u View · .............. •·1111 1-oll cai:l>lfl, doubts 2 BR. Clean. Adita. No pels. Fully furn., a.i... TV, ro· quallfY:· wir.:o.!1....'-:= to ~~nis Ltdo 1* n~.oo ,., .... $210. p.r mo. $250, Also.I& 2 Br a.pt. $135. stereo wa t b er/dryer. team, be ,,.,..e;;f.'f,"';.dy ' · · · CALL DALE, 9'2.+171 646-180~ 64>-1048 979-1152, PIS to start at Ollce 4 eojoy a .i:~ ~ ~lldbltnll · .,i. HouMa Furn. or N·~1"'CE=1°"•'"2""'BR""'Tro,....,Uen.:--,$85=1 diverat!led pu:t!cf,,.tton In ~ pet. Unfurn _ 310 & up. Mature adulla. 133 E. • hi-profit ~tnn-1395 . 5ard+ Denkl.:lfli>l<t .. ~.~· 3 BEDRM 2 both _.,. - ' 16th St .. CM. GG-1265. • We're raising a who~ gen. ' proof tl:naocla1 11ti1t1Dt9 pr. 'I • -Sits :u v1u•:1. ' • c t Meu 8 SfGlion to bellew lhOt when that Invites the mCIOtllltd $S25 • ' + Deo. )'en!nsut• h<iuM. $215. per mo. OI • EAUT. FURN 2 Bil $115 __, grow old, thsy 111111 lnvestlptlott. Ro!-Pt., ~;8chBeautlful house, Bltln1, flNplaco,' In SMALL two bedroom houae 3 810:~.!'~7,;r.':.~ Ji'~ I -. .;.. excllanr~ ~ ~ Wu· ~• · Xlnt Cond. & loc. mlka from beach In Costa . I K 0 y II E D 40 UNITS IN A PARK rontideotfal 1-. write U.VIE\111 RENTALS AGENT 962-4471 or Meta. Comptetl!!y -ta'*<f. l p 8tR. Frpldcut. Beamt!L c.u!nd • • °""P .... tM divcWt ..... C1Ma1ned .ad no. 156, % f73..4030 or ~ ~ ..... •1-' ._~ fo D I $165 month, will share half a tO. l a t. U , 1 j 1• I . ! I lty fllilno In "'° -_.i 0u-..unr .-n apta M Dal'1 Pilot, PO Im m. LANDLORDS! ~ ... ,._ r s e. on gu and eltctrlc. 64H58I 1152. -. . . . :J . . '°" _,.., m "!''No. 3 ~ L& •-bl lmmaeulalely. c..ta Mu a , ~ SINGLES or Fam!..._ ZJIR. bel-n $:00 pm •nd 3:00 e TROPICAL POOL e , 1 • kept fll'1Ul'df, P\)ot, l/c. !IE6 and Include phone We Spodallze •In Newport wl~. Alao 3 BR pm. I Br. lut'n. Jl«I CU • W1r . a PRIT~~$~~·AER~Sl£fltRS IN I'' 1: I' 1•' 1· r 1·. T% f:in&ncirc, S.7 x groa. m:uffbtt. Belch • Coron& del MLt • 1 hone rioch l n country, 1175 lrvkte . pd. E/1ide on 18th. ~1168 ~ ,., , = , . . . . _ _ . 1495.000. Prlftdl><la ooly. 6 luunL Our Rtotal Ser-UUI pd. Aft. Fee. 91Hl30 AVAIL Now Elaide 2 Br . Sf)tU'ilnJf _ ..... Olrp. MUSI' S.ICRIFICE Laundry vice Ii FREE to You! Try 2 Br Condo, Clt>ta. d.,,..1% FOR r.nt 4 BR. Townhou.. 1\0 Ba. pooi nr IC\IOOI• i. •"'1l?~/~flf!lH$ I I I I I I I 6M51'2 ·~~~~by";:' t;Nu-UV!twVl!.WRENTALS aa:poolt clubhOuae.$115, lnUnlvenltyParl<.~IOper ,i.op·g.No.,;ts.&16-oo4. _ . • • -• ~ WAl'tl'ED by prtvm_ i-._rty.~ er. •. w mu. · " ~ $43..1405. mo. S;;W314. t BR turn uttl 11IC'I MW 'f I _ _:SC~"~&!'! u~LET~~S~A~N!'.SWD~~~S_;l~N~C::!l.i~A~S:!:Sl~R~C~A~TI~O~N~IO~O~·I 6 unit>. Fbt up OK, ~ ~-collect aft f :30 Jiii !p-«)30 or -Fut rew!la ~•phone For thot Item under $50, try ...iec .. ovtr ear. Ila m ~ • ....._ fM?Jllnp. Want ad -1ts ..... ~ Neet a "Pad"! Pla..'e an adl ca11· 1way • ~ the l'<MY P!tt<her. ; E. 19th. -t:::; -.. - I ' Schools and nstructions This variety of fine schools ' could introduce you to a new tomorrow. further information r99ardi119 plKement of I· •dvertising in the Daily Pilot Scltools and lnstrudion Directory CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 li·-"'-lt1 1-... -1~ l·A-<g,___F._(""_· ___ 360-'-, Apt. Unlurn. 1,c:;;cis;;.t;.;;1-'M"'"'"""'---_a. __ 1_boo __ 1,_1,_nc1 ___ ~ '. * SUS CASITAS NEW iow.,, duplu. 3 BR, -;..~Bachelor• 1 BR'S. Yearly. Wuher, dryer, 1 -u~·-•· ~ ~.,.. rr!rig, 1>!Hns .• 6'JS.-l38'1 . .c~-~-· lUJJ N...,,... Blvd., CM YEARLY, 1UN1Y 2 BR, gu., 2 ':BR lrg $110. Ideal for new shag cpts, drps. & bf.chelon, swim pool. ter-paint. $215 mo. 675-0158 nee. Adlta only. 19 9 3 Bolboo Penlnoul1 Cllurch. '48-9633 "learn and Play our Pre-School way" Educational pr09,1m. Music, Arts, Crefh, Number concepts, re1din9 reediness. Open 6:30 e.m. -6.00 p.m. Profe11lon1I steff. Individual attention. S1furd1y .pro- gr•m 1v1i11ble. Hot Me1l1. Full Time pro- 9r1m1 & half day 1111lon1. Family Affair Pre-School 6401 w ... or, Hwtlottow ._ c-"'w-•ldwood• 141.sns ire worth training for • TRAVEL • ADVANCEMENT •SECURITY AIRUNE SCHOOLS PACIRC Learn How ·You can QuallfJ Cal 543-6655 610 E_:..Yth St., Santo Ano ACCRallTED SCHOOL Sumtnl!r BOYS & GIRLS I 12 to 16) ... ,.rt Ai' AssKJalli . FIPt Sclllll '1Rril • ~·~ TO ·RY " $500. tR 11t1As R'tt 7* FAA'"' APPROVID -* ,c..ie ..... , IS Hours flight time lo C..1M 150'1 wllll 20 hours duel ln1lructl0ft. Club lftom!Nrshlp. l Month's fr•• dues. lncllv1dutl ln1tructfon, tollor.O to YOUR •billty. 15 AIRl=RAFT AVAILABLE AT LOWEST IA.TIS IN OIANH COUNTT I.Mm to Ry -- --...._fun I * Ply Mexico & c.,,.. * Specl•I R1te1 hw Con!lftlfClal or Instrument Studonts. For Completo Det1ll1 Coll NOW 979-1155 Interested In A Real Estate Career? IN FOUR WEEKS PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM LICENSING PREPARATION POR • Real Estate Salesmen l Bl'lbrs e Employment Assistance Far " Grallllates Yfrth Ltadilg llrakers. • , • Day: Alll Eftllinr Classes • llnlker Refertal Pragram • $11Dfal Comsa ' For lnformoti-a-hun Free Guest Locture Newport, 325 No. (Oki) Newport Blvd. 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON Real Estate Education Since 19M ACADEMY REAL ISTATI CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS GI-Master Charge I< B of A SADlll.EBACK LEARNING CENTER WiD Offer A Special Sanner ReadilPl Program llTOllNI · Ct.Ille . READING-MATH SPELLING DIAGNOSTIC TESTING 1"4> Ch1rg1) Your Chlld Will R1colve Guoronteed 1-to-1 Intl ruction At EBRONIX-When Reodlne Ii Enjoy1be 2750 H•rbor Sul'9 7B c.M. ' Qf Painting C~e6 NOW FORMING Qualified Instructors Beglnnen & lntumedlate Classes are being held Morning-Afternoon-;Evenlng .......... , .. -1~ • Apt. Unlum. -MS l -·------1 Newport llwlt OCEAN and HARBOR VIEW Elepnl • ..-.... designed with a Muter'a touch, IU· perb iixlle aecurUy, exclu· live Versailles Club and pool with unique Aquabar, tounta.ina and .formal pr· dens. All part ~ the South Coast'• finest apartment community. 1 Bedtoom/•tudios from $195 3 Bedroom from $300 Models open 9 A.M. til dusk ~ ON THE BLUFFS AT NEWPORT From Newport Blvd., turn at HOlpital Road Cl block above Paci.tic Coast Hwy) to entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, Newport Beach, Ca. 9&0. Telephone: Cn4) 645-0060 UDO Ille. 2 BR. 1 ba. Avail. now. $325 Mo., yeuly PENIN. Pt. 2 BR. 1 be.. Fum. or unfum. $290 Mo, yrly. associated BROK [ R 5-Rf AL TO~ S 2C~~ W Bcilbo" ~ 7 l l l.1 J EXCLUSIVE BIG CANYON Luxury Golf Course Apartments NEWPORT BEACH 1415. $T.IO Phono 714/644 0509<J COR Channeltront duplex -3 THE WET BR, 3 Ba, den, bltns, fl1>lc, 2 patios,. gar, sm boat dock, . $415;,J.'ly. 6 7 5-0120. CANVAS ART ,"";; .. ,·be. 1 -.. ..,.... • • Frplc., new carp. I: drap@I, GALLERY J::~~=::;:: 11512 s.ach Blvd., Huntington Beach 963-m9 Come In Or Coll 3 BR, 2 BA upper. ~ Cl-pm. -· bltino, dean. Kids ok. 962-JS!M, lD2l Mission Dr. Eastblutt * Townhouse 2 BR, Pool, frplc, adults. $235. 848 Amigos Way. Bu1lno11 Hours 9:30 AM to 6'i>M 497-1977 or 644-(8)6. PENIN. 2 Br., 1 ba. $250 * BR., 2 ba. Nr. beach $350 MARSHALL Realty ~ -·------~-------~------2BR. 2BA, 'f<lwnhouoe, $2115. Adlts, no pets, Call 649--03e ( -"••11•11t1ftrRlfll )(9J( -.at11•its...._ )[tl .1:a~VEN. 2 BR. ,•u • ,,.v, ·)·"'' ... · ' • adults only, $160 mo. .. ~. • 548-4078 ... .AMI., • " · · 1 NEW Bayfront-priv Bch & 370 l jl'um.'\ir .IJnfUm. 370 ·Pie. 3BR, 2BA, $550 mo )T· Cost• MIN Gtlt•· M.ii ' • ty. 9'79-<mt m-644-451o. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, 'TAKE over Lease: 3 Br, • Ba. 1 blk to 'bch. Couples or FOR BETTER, c;ii *'lulta. $325. 613-5167 2 BR • F!RPLC, adults only. $200. mo. Call f!33.M47. 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. 2 BR, 1 & 2 BA. Bltn ap. pllanct1. Pool. 642-Q74. Apt1., Furn. or Unlurn. 370 Cost1 Meu • • ' ' ,..,., -.. 1tl) I -l~I -~I .... t a r ' 5 2 a '' s a I It sAft: 1111 I Offlc. Rom•I 440 ........ A ) ' 11 DAllY PllOT 0 a a 4 0 .............. 2 1 0 c s • • • ,• •l ~ :.-1 ·-· iiiiiiii, ~~~I 110 ~dtlllory .. GIRL l'IUDAY -· G MAN'HR 'f1lNI -RULUTATI SALIS _.,-~ft:~~--o1t"" ~ -v _, ~~~-u .. SIN 1 s~--.. "•-· • ~.~-~ •1.1•. an tripanc!ldtme -· • ~·-PR si« tor ..,... miiSiln .t i:"~·~ oC ,.,_ a8-l,,,..,..Dll llw 6 .-io. N<wporr • -a.•-. -' • With lhdr :tumilllre to ..U. lalhe, 67H'IOO. • l wtto llm a Jot <Ii~-. ,.TJVE "-" oo.-"' ""G'I u ,f _. --Top'pw1 ·11-=-.&l'~IW . WAITRESSES Ooly 2 trema lefts Pair ol MlocellaMOUI 1if i !Jt~a~n.:r.stft • "• ' on the Jab 1"'llthtc bemt!IL ....,. """· lmlllOd. ,.,. "" ~-• n.-~,[.,.. ...., matd>lnr °""" oc:caJlc>nol --------r1 :J.• 'c.i1 Llodaef.ZJ · f!lo•,..1 ilMch ~-•~p.,.Gnf..,_.. =·· ~· ~twfl,d5•. ·-·...!':-.. # -,--·" . ..,. '1"" chain. Tall back, no anm, BARGAINS G .... , """ ~ Cele.Ital ~ '" ..._..,......_ ~-----~--' ____. r_,,. DtJllC l~J . R I ve&'Y.,~orte.ble~~tteal at tables Sl e:ch. . ~'* ' 2790 Rlrllor Blvd n.. Irv!iie O>mpony ,..ks 2lllO -.alvd. al 1 * •il!e N._ 2-. N--l3UllO ... ,0 r. °' ' .$.15. ~:rm alJ. _,.. ~ Map!• oollee tab1e I r · • new~ment le_aaln&~tnfct• ma-.35.lffolPlal ... NB-O.Qb. • ..,__,, t-; MIQ!Japeno lllet1reen2ELEGAN't.B&Aett bedrm. $2S.ChaiTt$3n.cht_ElectriC ,..~ tor ~ t\lJ'e C-""1.. ..,ty blrf..-1.lc!t>;-BJdaJ. H.11 ...,...._.. •Jiii, 'lcl$C.~ at 1;1111 '1, 2192 let. wilt &'floral. drosser, broiler $9. ~ 4 ~checktr, ...... porvi' p/Ume ~~ ._; . . •-1"-·-· ~ .5*ilk. . ' MT£, ...,....... llrlato ~ -·-· l "·"· = bed . ll '~"' ma tor rnedlu,. ........ Pltuant penootlallty ~ ........ \I". M --· " "1 • Wll>.'f"\ wqrt< • '> •=·~· •wm ~· """°"'ii.Ye ems --.. 'ofm market -& ability to,_ 4 rdate llliJOWdlLIJll'llll,Analie!m, OmCB -!,.~,j th<~st.!U... Hun-·~·-1'or'~,t'/nr'iii. Wi~,Oll.,°'!."!f. wtrh canc>JJY, •P . rule Pictures, frame 25t ·f~ be ~wk weekends. well to the /;;..llllc. Xlnl Apr. !!.!. ' . ' ...,_ ~ •1\.r I 0 ,. ~taln 2)'rl:, ~-·~ Fui i..... 1t' Doll Jose stand, deak 4 chair, chest D~hes 2SNJ. Jewe n~ APPlY3MTE.Coutllwy, wortinlcondl · MATORE pertoJS W ~=r~er" Vaueyad'Jet~-Jt*tri)ooul 'Alla~.. ~-=~. E.Adams. :!~:ui:ttre~ifke:. ~-Flc>~~o"1 Oi!M. C II Ill -pleuant part tiJno r.le....... _... ...,.,... · _ ,. Can Phil Mc Nam ee. -·~"· · $450 MS-2479 P "-,,,,_ ~-CAOCERY Oerlt. Age :n. Ore 6',4.fij{ ""'1< from ,...... home. macb!ne, .,;ru;;'-N> VIILACE R,EAI. ESTATE. . l 1. ' WAl'i'RESS · • 25<-14. •·~ ~-· -~ jl AJPb' s.n pm at T-11 Mm· Houl1)' wqe. Beach uea. curacy 6 ~, -with -..m. ·, . . ~ . ~ Mu.t''be over 21 Ap. MUST move May ~1best ~ch~~~ Drit i et,~ Bushard, llB. lotw-,_ 112 -CIB 61Hl!!.!. 9'»12:30. -~· Good RIAL 9ffATI' SALES Heavy stalill!cal IYl'lrw A ply..; _,.llrni A Strloln, ~f!e~ <'!!:,":; ~ :;:...unt :::.,, ~ 'I , , , 9 UARDS )IA~ l<i<IY tc> .,.....,.. 2 .....,. ~ lo lotiq, • PAii• ~ICINSI ablllry to uoe JO key by 5000 W O>ut '!'R• N.& w/curved mahog. Ible to H.B. 1 i ""' " P/llme -"""' LVN, "" llpt . = . Y<>U... -· -· 11" -.-.--' ·, TltAl]tlNG ....... ~.eq,. • w.RO't. I W.ltrellH !It:. Coektall lbb8.4lam6 "'10' 01'1' u.;,~:::·rr"AR=-112~.-,..-big=-$49.SO="'. I' ....., In .Lona Beach I< ~ """'-cnmc;-u::; houoewodt. XI'" ll•lnr COl1ll. /at K<ft. '~ ~ liiai -u..n. , ,._,,;.,t, . • 1 J -· z>-t> fQI' dhilna nn l painting. (tt4) -. set drums $1SO. dinette I ~ °"""'"" areu O>r qualllled. Qi~ c..tr i.r-='" salary.-ca 11 .OPl'ICI· iiiiNAValt tae: i<:oune -aYtlllable "acrvWC banquet. See Peroonnel Huntington _, chn 155. collee rbl SU. • Qllllcanta who des Ir 646-1634. ' • Ideal pooldon lot the In-dml-Tal1>eU R<ol-Free Sec-Manarer. EARLY AM. couch & chair vamty $8.50, chest> • .-, steady employmenL 18 Yrs I E ·* MECHAN1C WANTED-1' dhridual ··who likes abort ~ • s.ntoe. Free •••-_r , .. lboa &.y Club $150. hin bed set $00. tbls, bks. bunk &: other cl ll'l' or older. Apply in MACH N 1'eet ~ nlte boun A-IOQd lllao': Good ~ Procram-Earn With f:XP:U· w/a Wnk. title 1221 W Oout Hwy NB ~a\.ll&b)'de couch ft beds, bikes, tvs I: mi8C. All • ~ -. 32; So. Lemon St. OP ERATORS-..rt, alt 10,:Mf am, t-" lh.oould pul '°"to white >"" """"· Call Al co. ,,. lnckpendent eacrow • ·• · · loYeseat $1SO Naugahyde kind> USED USABLES. ~ Anlbelnt. betv.'n 9am " PLASTICS ~7284. the dr:i.ve-a ·1eat: Start $3.50 SloaD' • m•l 83U440. OD co. TypIM 60 w,p.pt . w~ aicper. over 21, chair & ottoman s 1 s • Tues-Sat. 25fiO Ne w p 0 rt 1Pm. Openlnp on all lhtrts for ex· MECHANIC exp'd, own hr. Call , Linda Ray . W~ (1U) 1132-nioo. cp/I~ I:_ ¥al&.:~ 1 or 56-3695 aft 3 ~B::.lvd~ .. ='CM"'."°"==-=,.......,=- MYr Sttrlinr Sec u r 1 ty J:· oprs a:-tramee.. Oean toots, paid lnl. ·Apply 1n ~ Oatal Pl'l'SINlel REAL ESTATE SALES-• • , ,ftft[ll_nce.i 1 ~. ~Zlnfmtt. e' OOucu. custom made, 9 ft., e THRIFT·O..LUX '• An F.qual =c:e·Emplo)'tt. ~d,.Tttt ~=min:: =M!~ Anaheim Ave. ~ency,,~ .. ~ Blvd, ~C¥~u~7 sec,,.., W'ELDER w/ornamental ~:rnr=m.a~::.!~ Is beck in Cotta Mff•! i· liMPftollty H .. te11 for lljle ."!"'I< ~ .... -~MEDICAL uslsrant; rood 2 (jjii.l'fCE-OIRLS COMMISSION. , PART With backgrou111f.lh llnaDce. tron ex pee . Mike's 3 yrs 0~ all !or '$300. Dry cleaning "°"' too ~ Service advancement a: xln t uu15c t)'Pilt ,...Ul train. Write NEEDED TIME CAIL 'JilRS. HAft. ~ on: accounting Ornamental Iron w~. 54&-2-4l9 • high??? O:nne !n and '.' J ... 1-1.1 .... for women to ~ts _inclU<lb'.c PfOflt ausitsed Ad 'No.·5tf.,~ n ftoM.-....:1--...-· .11,,_..._h DIN. fM.9fm. OR .645-0111. ~ .. 1c b ed ule 1 &: 72S'iii I..qutiit Co Rd., Lag ~-·~-I save!!! CoupoQS w~ll \le out • ~.. ~ 1500 Cos ..........., '"'""'l'IN'"' \Um.,..n: reports. Eicper. in budaet Bc:h. 494-Ul6 ""'' ... ~ • 812 in May. 1876 Harbo;t'. I. weleome & lntenlew new A1>1>1}i tii Pe-Pllol. P.O. Box , la )full•"' 25, able.to dri~e [t!CEPTIONIST pr-ioa\I< f<l n ••~•I ltJ: 1'i;li:l>, . Sha 1~ <'• 645-7408 : ~ntl. Sales or ad· t.-1.f'un'A 2..-4 pm Meaa, Calli.~· · ApP4r In~ 2J.3Q., $400 hr MD. Hail stafeirieD.tS .helpful. ,'J)'P~ ~Qil~ No ap. ~·GAR.A.GE SALE : Kit: ONLY AUTl;IORJZED ! v~ exir~· Calif Inject.km M.oldin;: MEN & WOMEN la..27 YILLOW1CAB CO. daYs. · Attractlve. .Must 'eit W.p.Pd'.( tfJ'·Jlet-by toucti. jllst' airlJlltJon, No lay()lfl:. chenware, furniture, ap· Kirby vacuum DWrlbutor In !' M ve CU: er.. XMJ Brtgp Ave. Earn to $342.30 aala:ry per 186 E! Uth. Cotta 'M"na drfve. -5'8-5253, NOW! pUances, used b r I c k , Costa Mesa -Will be happy I ~~-5f 7 -30!l5. be Irvine Indus. Complex mo. wtdle we teach >W a OF.'FICE Gj.rl; part time, RMlty !.xplor1tion ptt benetttl ~~ working WHO WANTS TO WORK? glassware, also flagstone, to arrange a home 1! ffOTEL~~~·=be Costa Mesa job..al(l.Uin!;J.ectmalcs..,Me-~lure~ ~pine MOOlrvineAve,"N.B.· conU. DRIVEACABJ motors, etc.~ Newport demonstration • . : :C, on • chanic• or Adminlltr&Uon. ~ fil7-'411-~1SU • Suite ,109--A ~ 008» :rour; bpun, work Blvd; C.M.. C'all ~ .; weet..to :,:11= = MAClllNlSI'S Atter training, earn $45-60 PART ttrpeo ·~ Day or RELll!F COOK & y0unel!, ~be )'OU?' Qwn FURNITURE &: Misc. Starts or 9'l9-5llt I' Api11y · Ja~!.~ Im, DAVENPORT ~ ~ ~...2 ... ~11~ ntibt !S'lO bn, w.ekly. Expet .. APPf to..,... Cbly, boa. Men or women. Can Fri. 12 Noon lhn1 SUnday. FREE LUMBER I fn3.4120, , ... -.up Men National Guard· 9"J9.13ll. Extra.-Cart Maintenance, All~Weirt, 2108 W. OcMn-be alJabtJ.y handicapped. 31l Mesa Dr., 01. Located at the reer oi 1374 ·~ llOUSElCEEPING " lite -114Ts2258, fron!.; l'!·B· Ne a I-Clean Appear.uice. HoUMhold Goods 814 Warehouae Rd., C.M. Brintr ...........,., F'llme perm. • ..... w...._ MOLDERS . PART-'J'1cME g;H, 16 --1·9. ~ lle1"" Dim ,l#U -..... vr., reru.d. Age :n to 111. yoor '"""''" 2xh, plYwood I "H n...a. -wftV IT' Tele-Solldtlnit o-'--· ~ ... ~ SUpplement your income. --1; .. ,. cablnets _,__._ · Am Ill .,.....; unt ~· -· All 3 Shift• · -,.,,. _, llataurant Drive a cab 6 bn or more a 12 PLACE Settings haM --~· • -·· I eoav. Rosi>, 11811 Florida, & SHARPE MecG Y..tit Ci>rp. & O>min. 833slSll2, 51>~, SECREl'ARY RECEPT day. Apply In pel'90n, palnled china. 0 r i e n ta l Ing, elc. ! H.B. 847-3Sl5: Set-Up Men 1'31 pr.;; tlo C.M. POSlTIOll avall.,Jor, exp d tfEDJElt NOW! Foe Oftbodi'>rittc·Ofc ...... ,.. Yellow Cab O>., 186 E. 16th motll. All serW>g pcs incld. 00=2u°'GHBO==y"'sw1m="""poo1,,.,-com-,,.-'I v USEK£EPER for &m· Good W&i"N. Xla't co bene-Ken ' · tow tru~ driver. 'Mlllt be 45. Newport area. (714) St., Costa Mesa. $90. 4~7109 plete $30. PenMytvanta i·.' bQlacory home (all la1Ue9) fl.ts. ~nn. steady imploy. NEED re1pon1ible manager familiar with ·Holmes ~440 .. ~ 5fl-$ll9. \VORKING Manager for cof. I 1 815 lawn mwr. · $)). Rocking UW:·ln, Room A: bolrd + ment. 2nd shift openlnga. (Jingle) retired fireman or boom.. Startin& sa..l.aty $500. WAIT.RISS, ,E~PER. SERVICE Station ~ fee shop, exper. Please send •we ry chair almost nu $1~ · ' $<lary REXNORD INC poli~eman pret'd. 17 units. per mo + comm. Apply Full & P/time. MUii: be over & lube man. ~per. pre~ d. resume, P.O. Bax 1623, ROCKHOUNDS, have 10,000 _83.1-""'~1B4~0--,-,,..,.--;c;:-;-; 1 L ' 6c'"'381 • BlgCorona,2 bUrs 'tobeach. SheU,'"~~1 Ir: ~th. 2L Xln't hoU:rs." Top pay&. fringe benefits. N...,,...rtBea.ch,Catif.93i60. ctl. Genwne· Pigeon blood LAWN mower , 36'' ' s~alty .F tener Di CaU ~1624. N.Bo ; ~£ ~ • ~ t • Full & /"--va11 A '-• ~-,,,_ .. ~~-=Cc-::::::--=:I H~~~~~ 1'tf a~ef . 3iio W. aHarvardv. N ~· d -~~-~=#!)(~~& StleN! St!tk:n."'i1~h ~·~ Y~~,:u1tb:or~5part~= ~a.~~~~~ ~~~aster 7~hp, riding I C#nvales«nt Hosplt.a.I, S•nt•AM ee e ~ neat.~ffrs·9am.·1·~.-XIn:t ~· . Timea in our C.oata Mesa ct. -558-7275 or~. 6~. j' Laawla Hills. ~..stm. TI4/346-5100 2131585-2184 tutna· · wcntna Caodmar,. a pay. SERVICE Station, Cd M Office .. Guaranteed hourly eves. . "s"'LUEC:"'co-uc7h-;-&-c"hair-.,-,$65.:::;o •' H2i{SllKEEP.~. ERtel. "'. r tmallit 'F4ttal,\OPW'" emplqyer mll lmmed1•aJely Ur'IUlJORS ;. DISHWASHER • area. Age 2l or aver. 5 ware & comm. For details DIAMOND irtud pierced ear. LamP< $18 pc. w.i..,r •. 1 1;-:i.-' '°' 8521 ** . -Must be "titat &: dean. bver Niles "!t..4·~-$at/Sun ott. t::all 540--03Q1..!. . rings, tlawlesa. A~ end-cotfee· tables ,$50~ set --, " RI 21. ~Dependlib1e. ' Pbone' m--t1B15 for appt. $975, sen $350. t.az.eer pen· 837-ms aft s. , HouMlc-r. f/tlm• M~C NISTS ~' · For ·libeiilboo & Nin com· . · SERVICE Station Attendant 1 ll~J dant to marcb $350. 558-1:175 WATER S.ttenec. HeOn<r, f . , Call .:::w......... -Mu.st dot owh .klhe • mm .- -... preaioli·~ special APPiy In·.Penqn full or p/time. Over 18. Ap.. • ,'•d• n 1 · or 64.S-6301 e:Ves. fam az. utetttne trbgtg. Sell ..,._ -ex~' ioQiJ!ie\l. p"• Brown's Sholl 990 E ""' -~ 24 hrs 1j HOUSEIVORX-4 hours eacb -" ,_. -·· · · I ., , , • · Surf I Slrllln ~ · • ' ROLEX 0ystm pe,,..waI cheap.~·~· · l"fek.,Own car ~13M vancemen • ALf1 --.!no Newport Beach 010:<1·v.._...,, "' e htion, ••q • evv 673-7332 ditivee. All or part. ·1--.Konll•n"J'rl,l40a Good ~1 ~·t !Dr-ad·• Clertr Typist ~ .. ~b)erl ·& aaieraJ 5930W.O>utH..,. .~"'?ta.NBA644-4131.tt ndant Ang_. .. I w date. just. warch. $175. oo CASES .or mi!<:. oilWlllads H OU~S 'EKEEPER Con-oondL~jtlrl.tion.Good e Sr.·Typlst , n.. .... _!~pl!Nft _ __,_ln ~ !Jtime· <;tievronM ' . ' . * 1 DIAMOND engagement take beat offer! 548-8921. valeacent Hospllal, full time -~11111111 INC e T.Ch Typist ';"'~~~ RN U•T -LVN 3-11 shift. ""'Fairview, C. · SCRAMLETS oet. Appraisal $2750. Sell The "YefiOW .Pares" ot I employment~ Call 60-2410 ftl.AnUftU , e Rep' -Typist ' ' 99 bed convaleBCent C'l!!nter. SlTI'Ut.bo HreliableB • 0 days,l ~ llr' $1500. Call ~ classified .... 642-5678. It lMUl!llhCe AieDC>' Glrl IV Pleueapplyat ~·tN~~·~ cti;·S47~~. ·. aau AN"SW-'rrRs :1' KMwctre ol ·-line< Specialty Futener Oiv. • Secretaries c•··-o· . M...... ·-~· ~ . , hel~u!)"" ,will train. Must 3130 W. Herverd --rv .,..., ~· , • I be ............ Alrportarea. S...l•An• .. VOLT . CO SALESMAN(3) 'SKIPPE•R Behold-~-Eagle-j -~~er~~ea~ n4.f54&.5100 2i3155-2184 ';:~·=' 7601.,C~Y·_AVE. ' P~RT !IME , t ~~ nist1* :n~·gen- ' 833-9i80 equal oppoo. employer ml! 311411 ca~M Dr., Suite 106 HUN'l't'NGTON lilEACH EARN '"'· PER HR. · •-bell 'that when I .... -4l , ~ .-· LA'• larifft' · «impatibllity erat'iml "' eve ·, • 41'•• V..... -.,... Newport Be&ch 548--47 (W~"Cr ~·llJW., jult eervlee·nee<Js -3 dependable Salling experience, licmled women grow okl, they tum MACHINISTS Equal Oppor. ' ~ South ((. Garfield) reps to ~ eervice Orange for at least 100 tma. 130~.1,B_LON~_DE-·===~--i 1i ~~ LATHE OPR NEWS!''~. .-.''"route. An ~,Oppl)>.Employer Coonty.· Te1T. ·.C U AR . Gall Rlgged ·Kot<h.oWiJ!ing ANTIQUES : ·'ll"Jil'.,;.....~ Early Ji.'r.1"."A.wrox hn H llL'F APPTS. NO CANVASSING. to relocate to SOutb Sea 10% ,40% OF.Ii ~ ' . • ·1 Fr.-i. F0:. Pooltjons Miut do own set-up & have dally in CM .. area. Prof. PRESS OPERATOR Only -.,.. need apply. =-'·..J1.: ~.:. tieiYMlna Mai~I~j •YiV ·~ an ~1/.1 ·'1:f:61a '::::~ ~ ..... ,,.At°OD "25K awn tools. Good oppor . tor rnp·fam man. Xlnt, penn Call Jay 2J.3..'58...6'. quarters aboard. Stock Reduction Stle 1\".1' ... ~ "-' , ry ~4 '1~ ' ;; A .. ~M.lllro/"-~" f¥P to .. advancement Xln't working p/time 1ltuatlon. 54()...3X)6. SWllgln .. · machine set -up SAIES National outdoor at-9a I? c ll"a l"r s. t a b t e• I ir. •• :Ji.ll:L...:.'.U~ r~ Instant c--L-1 · Sal.et Midn& En8r 10 $l8K + conds. Penn. poiiit1on. Good • F traction, · nttda sa I e a Abo licensed marine engtn-8 e eretaries, Wett.minlt ~·~ ~ma ~ , Watthle MtDaltt $lOK benefits. y NURSING ot>erator. Exper. en n re ,_le"llta.tive, w/.--'---ol ~ > ~ ltfana&emtnt~ to• REXNonn ·1NC I Rotar:vSwaaen:.,Mhl.2~ mai;:-ke t ing ~tel'+ 3 crew mmuuc,··· ~. ~ , .. _ •• 1•,•r ·- . Exec. Secretarlet 1D $TOO All ·-CRITICAL exper. Seot-up, operate 4 ad-Mwlt: have strong penonal sailing exper. ~tchc,n~b~~~· ' : Dictaph Sec'YI to $650 . , ~ , just for close tolerance dt1ve &: wt.llina to work odd e c. "'"A" E ~,-H .. ; , IC -"""' -Sa "Cru· iW'W ............ n wy . : F Bookkeeper to ..,_ Specialty Fa~ener Div. · & lona:thoun. Good starting 11R31' ISeS, Corona del Mar 675-251.$ : 1 __.G. OUJce to 1450 3130 W. Hervenl CARE AJ>Pli.-In Person aalary, ro _.,-. car •-II -I CAILc TRISH HOPKINS Sente Ane furn. · E ~ ua 1 opportuntty ...,,.. --• 4118 ~""~~CM n41546-SIOO 213~2184 NURSING 5!'!'1ts..,L~~-~.o~.P. :.':'~i call, 71j-837-W>. :!427'J1unt1ng!on Drlv•, 1-RF.CO-~ND-. -APP-LIAN--CES-.'.". -1 : •.• 1,,. -.-1470 equal oppor. employer m/I -...,. " ~ San Marillo, Ca!1I. 9U08 JIU • ., ~ "'"" S•nt• An• Bu ai neu-mlnded creative · Delivered -guar. Dunlap's, : n •• ¥>• ~ MACHINISTS ORANGE COUNTY 11 B1k w. ol Gmd .l So. ol ~~"'l,.~..!f~ (213) 684s2JJJ ==·:;: '!:"'!!. JANTroR. Ptt1me. Mesa Pftdslon mlefibilst .. w/mln. MEDICAL CENTER SGta F-e Railroed Trackll In fashion & creative selling electric dryer&: dishVfasber : Verde Conv. Hoep, 661. of 3 yn ftper. Must have ~ Oppor. Employer tor a tine speclallty abctP. $45 ea. M)..$48. •; Center St, C.M. 548-5.585, own toola &-heavy etper. on POSITIONS AVAILABLE IN: Full or part time. gaiary e lliSHWASHERS, washers, · betwn S a: 3 Bridgeport. Verticle MW A -Cardiac care Unit open. Ph: 547-7733. TELEPHONE Jnterviewen dryers reblt, guarp 4 : JANITORIAL ,.,-or1c Part Engine Lathe. -Pedlatrica Intensive Care Preductlon Pl•nner SALESMEN wanted for wanted, no selling, work delv'd~· 8J'9..7620; 546-521S. 1! Tl.me Help needed. Exp'd p Unit W•nNcl Cable TV nrk. Good pay, from yaur home. HOW'S R W-,• /D ,: men 4 women. 979-3652 Apply In enon -Neooatal Intensive Care . . •flezlhle .n , ·Appl:r. ···<t n flexible. Write C1aaified Ad •nt ' lmt"1•r1 _ryer1 ; JAl'ilroRIAL. Eve•. local. SHUR,LOK CORP. Untl Dutiel include pmct,utnr, penon. Telepn>mprer, 2624 No. 684, Dally Pllo4 P.O. $2. Wk. Full mam1. , adult $2.40 hr. Full &: 640 So. 5Mt•'Fe -Ne~nata l Jntennediate production Ol"dfting, lnven· w ... Coast ,.Jlwy. }iewpott Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif * 639-1.m * . /time 979-392:3 $ An.I Intensive Ca.re Unit tory control, some tool plan· Bch. 92626 FREIGHT Damage Sale on : P · · Int• -Bum Unit nlng & production coat es· ~ must ha Tele""""--Sollcltors new Hotpolnt A Whltlpool ' JANITOR & Maintenance Cl Blk W. ot Grand I: So. of -ReaPiratory Unit t.ima'ttng · ' . 1' · • J.n :c-Part·tbn'"e-w~ 0 r k . Hourly r . el rt g / wa shers/ctrYen '~Man, with fix-It abll1Ue_s1 SantaFeRAlliOad.Tracl\I) -Intensive Care Unit • P~! e n c1e. 's00 ~ 545--0'180 :; Oub work, P~I Bhilt, $2.::u Equal Oppor. Employer -Emergency Room , REXNORD INC. re....,k~:~o--wenda~., ___ P6._2990 waa:e. Good working envir· --~·---~~- :' per hr. Apply Wed, ttl West wor .. '6 co luuuis. ,,,... ~ent. Excellent summer KENMORE washer/dryer ' Bay Ave, Balboa MAOIINIST Teaching hospital, Univ. of Specialty Fastener Div. CdM joti. 536-2591, lD-5. $79 ea. Over 200 washe-n, ! JANITORS _ Part time. Secondary t.fachlne 0pr <;•Ii!. llVine attlllated. Con· 3130 Vf. H•rv•rd SALESMAN -collector for TELLER ~n, reb1g from $39.95. : E\'enln.,.s. ltfan & wtte Mechanically incllMd. MU ~Uln& of ed~tlon }Yith S•nta AM f\an s1Dre. Good oppty .for .. ,_ •• "--utilttl mod banl<J,:C::,..;,'*'="·--..,..,..,...,.-,-.,, , team~ ..... Irvine area. M 6. M train on days tor swing \ .... r1tical Care tutoring. W~ll 71~5100 , .213 ...... 2184 the riCtrt m&11. 547-24µ, '~ ~ ~-$80 1 YR. guarn, del &: install Maintenance. 213: 333-6425. shitt. Xln't beneftta. Contact ~pervi~ Jn tervlce tram-F.qua1 •opp:.-. ~ hl/f &ttr-'1512 , · ttyi fir 1ndWidua1 w/rnme Late~· Kenmore washer. •: Employment otc betwn S A. Ing program. Ailvanced step . • !!!!! SALES Clerk '"in l..a& Bch exper. Sa1ari to $550. Call ~2840. 839-1778. JR. PROGRAMMER 12, L.~J. Cox "Manut. ();), appointments available wi~ area. Full ttnie. OWn .trans. He!en Hay es, StCMmii, MATI:A.9 Washer $lSO. Aqua ... Inc. tsm E. Warner, S.A. appropri~e exper. Calif. Public Relations Mature. .fM-0060. · Coutal . Pertormel Agency, Frtgid&ire w/top freezer Our .home office ls litua. Equal Oppor. Employer. RN R!qUired. R 2790 Harbor tuvd., C.M. $12.5. Bqth xlnt 546-• aft 3 ted on a. bluff OYeTiooll:· ~fAID tor club work on Contact Donna Zschoche · P 1 Bul!di-M.teri•l1 M6 · Ing the Padll< Ocean A holldaya & .... kendA. PM !n4) 633-9393 • • " SECRETARY TEMPO ... Newport Hlrbor. II you shin, 6..tn.. 12.50 hr. Apply Ext. 697, 641),,. 336 . ·r, · -•SUR.PLUS aUILQING l----;:::-;~ Quallly, we otter """ Wed. "" Well Bay Ave ., , E)CE.C, t EVEL E ED HOWi MATERIAL • IOOO's ol NEW thb uniqlle work @nviron-Balboa. 101 Cltf Drlve South An wentnr'~ ex-·NE D ITEMS! Doon, lumber, ply. ment & a chaltenrtng .. MAill _ PmME Onuige, <;al~-W• ,..k outstanding aales ;..,, In the lrvli\e·'liid... Gell•ral Laboritn wood, alum sheeting. inold· pro1..-a1 _,nunlty. Call in H t'ngton orientecl'laey tor our Irvine irW """°""' ~ · Ing, wiodowB elc Shorcl :'ot'!f.":noo2' Oc.an. ~=-~ oUlce. Ideal !or ruults ~"""' ~~i Sl>ofti hard~~ men BUfLOERSl SU)tPllUS In a flash, be ready to dash ~~~teaC:.: HB ~~~·...,~~wbo=O .Salts ~UJ. ·~ ~lid ', = 2G1So.MainS'l,S.A. in~a;~b~k -use ~rdal CORAL exper, MAIO WORK fn exchartp 1 "nm Mt own show'. 'l"tds't1 hfyolve •~er ,,com. NEVER A FEE i\T TEMPO ,MOn tbru Sat 11).5 8 big hook, coey won~. Go :Must have B.S. or B.A. fol' apt:' 4 hrS ·a-a):· .2316 NURSING I a ftsponslblt • dlgnlned muntc;atlon. imtna; and .TemP,O T'~~ 'IJ"elp n4: stt;;.1032 places" together in matcblng. degree. Math major re-Newport BIYd. CM. 543-915!) ST'. AFF po$tion ofterinc ~nal ~ tor ,Qare ,~ c ........ a -·-' ripple design capes. Pattern .-ce w/expe" & MECHANIC . grOwina le"'lX'l"ll'Y help .. ...._ Hequjropt~ 0>r • • ·°MAIN PATTERN PART (no mlsaes' sli<!s I0.1! included. , .quired. Salary will be In MAINTENANCE ~ wJS.. Calil's lutes! and two area*'• Dial> = EqulpnMnl IOI Sunbeam.quick ONE 7363: child 's sl1.cs :1-1,2; <!l'all6""tlons. For ,,,,,. ELECTRICIAN NU' u·. ES. ·. .aervtc.. Xlnt .-... oalary comldention are; 'I' WO -· E' ,.. u:tCA 1Iq ,~..... 50mni seams!) tor this sprlghtlyin 8EVENTY·FIVE sld..-.tlon, pleaae send + exp. •cct + comm + ytU'I IAlel lll!Cl"etarlal \m: f'. ~· 9nht Canon wrap skimmer! Whip It up for each pattern _ add ~ 4 lllld')' history 3rd shift. Mwt read 9Che-autb~ 'alkrw:--6'""-lo&c!s 'bf ·~~ and COMPANY , l35rnm Munchen $240. Ex:· tulip-bi-18ht cotto~ or ~lend• cents for each pattern tor ID: ~·~"';, ~ "' " &PP.IY ORANOi CbuNTY ;,. =. ~ =~ ~.': ' lion ·SEEKS I cel'r.i · 54~ ~ va<at!on. partie~ pocnks, ~: M~the~J':IJ'~ C!aallled ad no. 63T CALIFOAM CORP.·; MEDICA~ CENTlft Opp!., ··, 1 ".'<' ~ "' 1 alt • $ri..1ec1 Pattml 9135 ° delivery will take ._ c/• llailY Piiot 16661 VonKarman Santa Ana . 1 T.EMJ'O \lHIP.0.1!.A R Y ~IRURT , F 110 t'.lilldren'• Sbeo l . ~ 6, S. -"" or 0,...., Send Co1t:\,C...,~eak~sit;1S F.qual OPPly. Emi*>)'er -=~..:1·1~~.,Nllne · '' IDµ', -DA1'A SYSTEMS Wllh R=-~:~:1111 ldiit~. ~ o~~ ~.:.:: = ~~~ the DAn; ~ • .:., o~. =~--·~~~H~~~E -Employ~l'M1ANlab11 Pwdt~ .... ,,,._ . ' bave llont oll ~ V-. alJ Fantaal --~·oattem. -add a; Depl., Bo>t 163, Old t ....,._ n--r .o;.u•l-'z""" -compreh!natYe, p 1·y e b 'su~· the , ~ ot U'iO No.' .. KrMpier BIYd. -P • a r a _ c C'f,\'J _ ~· bey _41 Must aee. ;u __.lot •• _, •. -•em--~ Statton. .New YIX'k. N. ·' General plant maintenance pnlll'atn • aiJ;11e1 t • 9cl!liP'!'<nt h """"""' ~;;. ktbllltt'IO 1141--Air )fall ~s..:a;i H~· 100lL Prlnl N._ .u;...,• JU.NIOR: IAj; I N: 3rd. 8hl(t. Come In I! .apply -Un IT. Cl 1 Calli. ll>ilne the 'Ochool a1iirie1 , and IOU .Rlvcriklo n..>y.) ~·-· desk. PLUSH velvet '°la A Jove ~o·~l9e lhlnk:lua Zlp,N El'atl«oE D L ..J!..~~· 'T21 Eun $ll).$40 per -" ]1).12 A "'4. afllllatlon . -'•lef .."rvice conttacta. ' PllONE0412'1000 _, -• -· three ~~' W!Sid"tl alter """"'1 and CALIFOAM CORP. -FuU&PartTlm•Ptialllnnl ll8JI01833permo XII>' -.,. ·COlldijlons-A oetir. Al'°·HEHCULON wW -crodl04 lm14 ere. n.. on• Stt~ getting new 16661 VonKarm"'1t Santa Ana Available • Send llesume to S.ddltbaclt Eo-..I •. ~ m/I ' co. benelll& ~"-lat ~ ~qualn ~~· ~ .. ~,~ihe ~n.W dtrectlolta, 50c. ........,_ 10< !he Daily Equal. Oppt,.. =tployer In surgical lmlts A Pellla. Volley Unified S ch o o I ~" -nd. A · "'~ •-• ••u w•, i..tut ......... -. Pllol. 1bll le not a P<per /MNAGER Irie general,....,..,.. Calli. Di"'1d; 246'!8 · CltriaMta _. • I ~ C•A '44 3319 MAPLE dbl bed, <!roper ~ ... 4l2.J:"': ~~ l!oolc, si!Mq _,, roure and -not include EXPElUENCE NOT NF.c RN l'e<1Uiro4. Dl1w, MlMlon .Viejo, CallL Cletl< ~ $400 Btwn t.m I 12 ._, w/mlrmr, 2 end tables, Yori< Ny IOOll ' Print •:.,. ·~ -· -.. or collecting. I 't : 921'15: . . ,. . Girl ht< ,.,.,.lllc.,e!: $1QGO mattreu Ill« nu. 13». NW. · .. oous& with ····-w:.-p1·---1 h. I' We have oP<nlll(!a In Soulh-Jon """'1ng chain ol sue-Contact O~or o Nu"""" REAL E81'ATE SALES JOO~ ftlEE 641).U60 llP, llZll and • STl'Ul ,,.__ . .GO. •~- • ""' O>ota Mt&a and South w°:':~ ~ Mc;:rty ha~ !nil ~· ext 336 ,SUCCESS CAHEEH Liz RelnMt' A(eney :rJIAINEES'.' HEADBOARD, red velvel, -1~~ i1.iaUt Gift Honli1l(!Wn Beach only. mechanical aptltud«, ability IOI City Dl1v. South New« ~ • .Join 1lle , ei» c:.m Dr. · Will train de]iendable .....,.n llOld b1m, dbl, W.. new, $60. SEE MORE Q u I ck • more than lllO lllts - A """'' 968-S64!. to ~ hel~ ol hand!< ~. Calli. World'• 1._.-.aod-luteot ~g • rt lle<ch to become plaatlc Injection ~-• Fublono and ""°""" one IJ,OQ, Kitchen I cuorom>,.. Wllllng to WOii< An alllrmatlve :;::c ..=:':1':'= Sa-..y $651 mode!lnc .operato<s. llltlll * * COl!l'TEMPORARY JO' ~~.su.!':r &:'1oc. ~ <hnplole· MPu -" M ..... Attns Or Ewa to llart dopendlnr on -ol oor':iiJiiio"iiatn • .m otand ellllnt mlli 11 bllllel. Xlnl c:Ond. 1147-INSfANT SEWING BOOK _ ... ~ U ....,_ , (Salsry? Meoll) backtln>und. Ro.p'ld ad-NURSES tHnlDion . ·~ . .-.y. Openlnp on 2nd **'<59FA A im....,~ .. C-•· H.tp '°'"hours. $185. -$250. wk actlon omp1o,.,. -an.I ••'--• . Good~• ha .. .wn car A be •bl• to Sofa, dlnlnc !able. ,chain, ;r;;l'onlY !IOc. ~11>2;_ ... lllob • .t McDONALD'S vanc<monc !tinge benelir., ' Club; Mui dollar . ~ 5.A. .. lit $2.08 ~ br It> start! ...,.., UHd, both for Ill&. -today, woar to-. 50c. I 635W.191h,C.M. ~~)~~i-lorappt. L~.1l~.:~d.~ ~ir::::·..c: ~~ .. ) ::!!..~1 alitn~i;,11.i:;:.lir to Usu.U,hc>me,961-'ISIO $1msr.w-r FASHION ~t-,Jallpal'-<. Y It> livesln • help MANAGER - ' ""1y 3-11, ~ 1rJ11b. M.,. ~i' uleo ttaln.... IGllll AoolY ...,._u.m or 1.,i pm You don'! noed a '"'° lo BOOK -Hundredo "'I ---~ , w/.,,., baby, .... llll u,-~-~ _, EX· Vcr<le Conv. I~! ~ Plow c:8ll ~la ""'-· SEXJIE'l'~; Part time. *or.-eoqr Plaslic> * "Draw Fut" when )'Oil _llshloo lactl. St !lOc. - I -I<. ~-· ._.. ~ ttr St ""' Sl'Mllli. ' ' ~u •-• n.v ~ 4 .i.•·w~ 18th -. place an ad In !he Dally -~. ~~ Want Ad< ha.. -I• ~· u.tllt • ~-~.. PER • • J •• 1 "''"' ' ' RID """RPIT • ~ ..,.~ "-, , = ":::... -~ ~ "'~ Won! Adi l Call -......., '""" 15 bteuttllll ~ ...,, ' M , I'll HOUSE 11;;;,aor? Wald! the ..,. 1 ~ _, • -.-~ Costa Me!". CallL • ,,.,. Idle lkml ••. -54'1-!!!l, 1 • PPEN HOUSE'oolmrm.' ......... f!'!!" ..,....,,. .:·.!-:=::::::: _____ ,, l I I I I I I r I •• • • ' I ~1 ~1 -··-· ._.. ~I -"""'t=',, I~ ... 1 -· _, .. _ ... iii::t~;;--;;"'-.... __.~1§1~1 --.. -...... ;;;;J§J~.. ~1~1 ~--~--~1§1~ .. ~1 ;1 .. -~---..:;~ .1. ~~~ lliFI, ~...... ,_ ~-· I I ___ ;_ __ '"'_,:..:1-=!..IC="'.-:-:---'-*'-'1 A-. ~ ~ 13' loltl,, Power 906 km at•• 925 Trvcb '"""'"vfol-t mp1,,.. i-.. '1------RAT BUICK FOa.D Im n"' • •··'th •-•-"~--FTSUING -L Ill It. G!aoo-'12 HONDA 3'0 lmmaeulat•! 'M ll TON 0..V, Pick-Up, ·--------l--::-::-:::::::::::--WANTED ""'-A • -WKV...-i tron Jn~ lJO 3000 milH. lt.:Y bar; must 32'1 q , pmilnC&n, newl---------!v:h.,..~~.l ~ hp. o..v, & ey1. 8oOt a ..U!$ll0m..8114 :'iJ:'s:"'" llm ·n FIAT, 121 ronvtrtlbte, 7 0TOYOTA '61 BUICK dllpl&y. Priced lea than the motor onb' uieCl 300 hl"I. * 'E6 BSA 650 Twin, * burpndy w/tan tn t, MARK JI WAGON. 2 dr, V4. Auto. Rut clean • TICK I n TO d-.nten with 3 yr pie-Bolt WW. de.... -· 0ean l\IUST SELL! , '58 CHEV. II TON am/Im $lereo. mag whla. Delux•, auro. tnN, Bo<ty ol h>L Runs ...,.s. $250, LID ZIP'PSLIN ...,.. tube, 1 yr puts A SIS ndlo. S3.«IO. Clll l3!0 . 1' • 615.81115 P,U. Good_..-. $350. )l,"1!! mt. Call -a< ndlo. -· en:. · e .M1-31191 e CONCIRT ~ ~ -=~ "1).17!:. ~TR&M , ~~~ ~ Van1 -963 F~. U4apyd<r,lll'i1llY, :t,_~:o...:i:: lMI iu\d< R~ra -..U ao1e purcboao (-...,.i ,..... "' $.15. -'73 · ._ b&hama ,.11ow, hluled See ., -Full Powet, FactOry air, 548-tBsl tin S1 l\lay) ABC Oiler Qulak Doll .. ryl '12 SVZUK? «JO -call eves $46-6140 t6111BliQ) . Am/Fm nullo. Londau lop. * AUCTION * TV, 190l6 Brookh•r•t :15-21-Sl~ .i. SM8 ftuob-lioo a< beat aller C.U WANTED '69 FIAT U4 ted&n-Alr lino $il95 Low mll~k• otter. Fine i\lmltore 9118-3!29 " · 91121 Atlanta di--KolteAbUrs. 6j6-4814 all 8Pn\. • cond. Sac. $51'5. 2840 Harix>r Blvd. " ' • 'ff FORD FAMILY STATION , WAGON, Fullci!ect.1 ._VI. tacby air conclltiOolJw, A II{ I · ·nr stereo,""'·· .rr .. bnkto. -·RAH. Wl'W'. 1\11'. nclr. (6(1..' AFY), . $1"5 2840 -BIY<I. ' Co.ta Mtsa le~ 982-551!9 Hunttneton Beach Dana Point Harbor, ......... 71, Honda '150, · good ~ 613-D.51 Costa Msa 1911 BUICK I pau Eltate uctlonl 23" TABLE lnrMStl IS' 1'10 ~tt tntmrd Jo -u........ At Fair Drive \Vagon. 19,000 n1lle1, new A dy . 7'30 ~.m. Oilor TV $&!. --~~ 90 h ~--o!IC dltlon, -IO ........... TICKETS TO GW ... ~11 ti res. FM stereo, All power. r V(in '1 Auction B1m S<S-M -~· p~,-Beoton.t.,-f'lM51T LED ZEPPELIN ~ T•aner PKG $3995. 548-3123 NNJ)llrl, CM 64&-86111 :".ni. ci;:, :.= ~ "103'0Y.amolll-b""', CONCERT •1;1-GLAS. 1100 GT. "11l SKYLARK p,/o, p/b, At Fair Ortve -7 ~ Beblnd Toa,y'a B1dc Mat'L mbc. Cit. Guard equlpt. S3Z 961).J383 Pleue call mllet.ge, xlnt cond. Make I • fact. air, radio, under warr. USED ~ tackle, rods • [ 111 $1.~ 675-5887. '1? SUZUKI TS 250 Savage, 5t8-7881 offer. aft 6, 552-8T7l Recently OY@rhauled trans. roeio, lines, taci<t. boxe•. . ,,_lo ,_ . lO' TRIMARAN -35% like new 16()() FIRM . SACRlFlcE! '12 0..vy JAGUAR 1911 TOYOTA Cbro!la, a .. , S2m 962-U12. 1911l FORD-i.tl\~rlck, 6 eyt; toola. houaewares, cabinet completea incldll plans. 3 6C-427t Lot.I of extras, $2650 radial tires. J:OO<i cond. 1968 BUlCK Spttiltl Sta Wag. all deluxe ff'a lures, alltoo\., hardware, and many other 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.IO hulls, Cftl8llamll, beat Motor Homes 776--0148 ·n JAGUAR XJ •, Mble 42.000 np. $1350 f l r n1 · Private prty. Orig. O\\'!'lef', fRct. air, radio, healer, etc., ' items too numerow; ttl men· materials, rrmt aell $1250 SaJe/R..+ MO 1<m1 FORD V N ~-~d .......... 58&-2168. Ex.Ct!ptionaHy c.le&11. N C + ('le. A-1 mecha.nicaJb' A bon. All very reasonable. cash. 539-1156 ~·v an -ew un:a. brown, sten!o n · ...... .,.. TRIUMPH nw.ny extra!i. 979-3iS6. .. thruout. lo 1ni., Ile\\' lint, 3625 W. 5th St. Santa Ana. DARLING little puppies, · ll Foot FiberatMI Sl>e«f 2T TR.AVCX> r:.-:afu:1~ ~best~· QWner. $6130. 673-5637. • · 1970 RIVIERA s~ one xtra whla. $1550. !Blue Bk ' ~ :i:r· I blocl< oil l::,".!~-;:n~~,:", ~-l:W; ~htp. lledMe~.~~.t~: ~·.'r.22'· DCO~ALS DODGE Van 1912, cust Int, KARMANN GHIA 1190CPG) bri< 645-439 $1850.l I owner. 495-4566 ...... '6 &Ai ..... • "'ILllQ" wiw 11 ,~ ... u~~... .. ......... _ .. __ BEAl..M'IFUL '12 TR6 con· I9n BUIO< Untiled, 4--door, '71 COUNTRY Sedan, 1 SECRETARIAL desk like aft 6 pm tires. $350 Call after 3>" PRil>E A JOYS nu map & tires, f,.100), ;---KARMANN GHIA. new v e r t I b 1 c, xlnt cond. loaded! Xlnt condition $3500. OY•llCr, ?\-tlchelln tires, hvy1 1 new Metal w I white FREE F1uff;y Kittens. 8 wka: ?'; pm 51J.300:t.. 1VAN ~;-~;~s ... ,_ ~un paint, engine, brakes. tltts. AMIFM radio, cusette 8.U-8010 or 644-2609 dty trier hteh, f'IC\'t'r' U9ed.f Fonn1ca top. C.OSt $375-Sell old. Black & white, also 'n. ~VEL M ~r Cl • ,:iociv ........ • ""'"n-Autos W1nted 961 See to appree. Beat offr. pl~, Mlehel.en tires. $2950 •n RIVIERA $2700 lilt whl. rack, wht \\0/btu S100 962.-6004 Calico colon. 645-6921 art 5 ~ 110 big wJ trdr c * DanlllClr lac. * 49J..-7346 Firm. Call alter 6 pm for 1 mac cond l.naded 68 OOJ in t, perr t.'Ond. SIU?rif, $3)95. USED BICYCLES :_ml N. RE G cabi':.r head, radt, like =~'. ll30! Harbor Blvd., G.G. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR LOTUS app't. ~75m. ~I. 968.-1896. ' ' fl.'i l-3374 j All1'ype8 * 64Z-1Zr.l !ATU erman $5950. 645-1407 646-n n 21.-· FORTOPUSEDCIJ\S "70 GT 6, new tires. >l.llOO CADILLAC 'Tl Couotty Sqnire Sia w ... 1 OOMPRESSOR tor Ale. Shp Shepherd pup, 10 1weeb. (Don F) Next to G.G. Dabun U your ca.r ii extra clean, •70 U>TUS Europa, new miles. Mech&nk:a.11,y perfect. 10 psngr, lmmac. 30,000 nti., · ..,... volt, '3 moe. old. Call male Smart A-oyal . aee UI nnt 19 1 Beaut cond. in/out. Below -pwr slTg &: brakes, air. -5.1&-ms 26' SJ:Al\IAS F b r b 11 ' MOTOR HOMES BAUER BUICK pamt & tires. .l!IO m 's. blue book UtlSS. C.11 allor 6. '69 CADILLAC epo DcV. Full S2995 . ..,_.731, 492-4203. ' 642--1413 crvtser. " yrs. old. Fine $2900. Cash only. m-ooso. ...o -I Mlacellineous GENTLE playful tittle kit· cond. Xln't fishing boat. 250 Apollo, Pacesetter, Baron, 2925 Harbor Blvd. MAZDA .,..,..tv.>J j)\vr. fact air, am/fin ~d, •71 Ford, Blu LTD, cpe, air . • 20 tens, 5 pure white, long hp 1/0 eng. Asking $7200. Jamboree, Roblnhood ~ Costa Mesa 979-2500 '11UUMPH TR4A '67, Good tilt & telesopic \\'hi, c1i.11se di11e bric&, pis, very clean, Wanted hair, 2 orange 54&Cl (~) 592-1065. We've got 'em at IMPORTS WA?l.'TED , cond, Extras, mag wheels rontrol, door locks, 6 \Yay l\fusr sell this ".ken d .. FUN loving kittens need Jove '73 YAMAHA 100 MX. never KENDON Orange Co1mty's * M•zd• 73 Rotary * Ask for Phil, 67fr7718 seat. Sable metallic "'~n1at· 557-9349 N:;p,:.~t.orM~b: & good home." 6 wks, all beeo raced, 1395 cuh/mke MOTOR HOMES TOP S BUYER -$66 MONTH VOLKSWAGEN S':l:x\:ihr~m~.""'tchvmtp.1 ~m°'"':::FOc::,..RD--G-11-.xt~e-soo--21 reuonable. 549-1691 eve. ~ playful, 645-M16. over payment.. $27 mo. ......, N H-~ SA BIIfsm~ WiYffA 36 MWOillNTHS pt.OPtraENd 1:EASE '72 ELDORADO Cabrolet !tr; ~r/-~IP;., 295!ul1Callp wt• .. ORIENTAL RUGS. Private 2~ ~ pup (mixed) 6 mo LAP runabout I bin, reservations for Summer H. Beach Pb. 847-8555 CALL MR. FRY 84U666 VW's s un r o o l & leather top, Peavey, 642-40XI. BEAUT cockapoos-mother 548-7588. 1111 • ....-U'U'l-, • • v . acce e-ms .. , air u.11"11.1. ..,, • Root ~will pay cuh for all need~ homes.~, 16' -.i ,. __ '" aw_,;::__ ca now, Phone Miss Bennet at CAR 7.0flked just need a tow H I B h NEW I. USED a.m/fm, stereo, tpc deck, 'n C-'~ry ._,_n ', Sl%lell 6"-533> <I .... ,. ...... ...,. .<na.&u.e eng. 564-<IOl3 d Junk un eac air, etc. Mint green & \\'hil<", -11 _.. · GERMAN ~herd puppies CaB after 5 nm. Make of. or ~be It's too oJ • • Pr" "'M; ... A., Sta. w ...• .,M>t>. or belt oiler. · Muolc1l lnmuments m N-··~ -3~. 1·--·--_ _J ·-·-----.-can tDwed • ...,, tree. 2 Big Loc1tlon1 •. pty, ~-. Call -' ~--••~. ·-•=· ~·~· 1970 PACE-ARROW, 22' "'ll 631HJ910 MAZDA 5 Mll!lJTES FROM '68 Cad Eldo. all extra... · 83T·29SI. · ' ELECI'RIC Bass. Brand new hometl l'l)W. ~aft 5. * 23' FORMULA f resh contained, generator, roof&: COSTA MESA Very nice. Best otter. Call • 197U LID Braughm, 23,cm·1 condlli<m. New Strings, Pro WHITE Sbepbml -needa water ooo!ed, targoot out· eng. air cood, root declt JUNK CARS. WANTED . '92-l!696 miles, 4 noo•· ocdan. xJnt ' M~l. will trade for good good home, U nm old, drfw; heed. :dnt condition. w/ladder, new crpts, drps I P81" top $$ for junk or 2114 E. tsr sr., S.A. ,68 CAD. EL DORADO cond. Call 531;..2648 .after O ' quallty amtlllic totJt&r caH 1'm!. 548-UXI, 646-99Cli Jl46.J524 .4 uphollt<ry. 8 track """"' wr<dced cars. n4/547-4365. 11331 Beach Bl. 84U6!l6 135-6531 . 1 .:.P.::M'--'------ 541-<1651. FREE -Male SIAIDeOAit. e 18' TROJAN, 11lS hp, lnbd 4 many extras. Priced In ,\utoo, lmportld 970 MERCEDES BENZ 14 Miles No. of ~ii;~co.>'.'1. '68 FORD Fahiane. 29.111) Offlco Furnlturo/ teo. 6 w.eks old.' 6'6-4325 old boat ..n, 646-8402 ' So: Coast Plaza) CAMARO •et. m11 ... 1 owner. $l80. E UI .24 aft 5PM 548--0223, 645-43:15 AUDI --,-536-3832 a1t 5 pm • q P· 6• couai, """""•·""""'· CLASSIC s., Beat, Ntee 18° "11\1 -in'. ESCAPADE 5!1 USED 15 MINUTJS FROM • .62 FORD Ga1...,. _ MARCHANT calctt!ator with foidlng bed (a In c I • ) • So.Coast Lapotralte._ $19115. =r".'' ~ "!~de~ '11) AUDI U 100, am/Im Ml!R<!EDES Ml5Sl!>N VIEJO '68 1 CAMARO~ack, J5.:i 427. )\'Ill sell or. trade ... tape, Does everything. Paid 6'73-6'l90. Penin&ula area.. 6t6-0910 eves. 494--2'7.t"' 161 Temple Hilla radio; air, sunroof, 4 dr, . "'UA . m •. new · ~ • pickup. &B-8205 ~. SaC'ifice for $350. 2 LABRADOR ---)I' .INBOAllD/outbrd. 8&lt Dr., i.;/',i 11. · &'13M71; 646-1213 ON DIS!!LAY · 1442 00. BRISl'OL,.S.A. """™ _.._ -' Amer '64 4 DR; V.,<J. air cond. · 5.16-GBl ..... 9 -. very -· Need -radio, --.. 'Tl EXPLORER 26'. Rental -. BMW Sharp New car 5'464220, ~ track l\<nlO. $1100. 57,<IOO ml"s. Uke new. -' EJCFX: swvl chra $1S-Z Sec a ...,.i homo. 49H!9'l trlr. 639-8382. ~v ~-. n <IOO mt. st-Trad~•--CS.A. Frwy: Eu! on • 646-MlJ day>. tl46'tl881 evu ~·~w°l:1"ol°S::i:1 TO Good Home, 2 -T EXP; Yacht la1eoman wntd. [Ai,~;,,,.;.15% olfhi SALES BMW LEASE Coming In e:'~ Doy 1st St. 1' ml.) CHEVROLET ~ FORD Convertible. lCt. ' --.... weeks. playmates ot "Pal" Eltb. Npt. broker. Phone 3 rental& 50--2886 Servic."e ' .la1.. Abo t Our nl c Ith 500. Powel', auto. Top'00rn; Planoo/Orv>n• 126 the talking dog. 60-9846. ...._ -2671 FOR ,..1 22' Winnebago. Tra..unc <>verreas thla IMl1-"""' U cocloo que ommonwea •n CHEVROLET dltton. $195. 84S-13Z1. COCK·M'OO PIJl'PID;. Boots, Soll 909 Sleepo 6 air, aelf-contalned mert We can OlTU!ie lo< Uood Map'•-LNM llloMn Ltd !llO!fl"E CA RL O MERCURY . t ORGAN HOBBY 9 wka, black 111: wMte. $25 day 10c mile. Pbooe delivery« the BMW of l"O'ir .. ns .,.. • • CX>UPE. CUst. 350, • -INTERNATIONAL 12 MJl.3633 :"~ ~ l!'1P~ House of Imports S,.,t• Ana ::-·.:;:,'::.~'Tl COUGAR XR7. Xlnt Don't buy any c~ran nntil FREE KITTENS Saftboat w/traner. M,ust Rent A Motor Home able in . most ~ · ~ 6862 Manchester, Buen& P~ s~ ~-~u~w M . top, buck4'. . .eats, cond. Jo mileqe, new tirel you can play! Non-players • 675-72(16 * ,aeH! Ask $349: Make any ol-for your Vacation countries. on the Santa Ana FrwY ndia.i.' ·n..:..,.. mats xlni COnlOle, dk inter. ful.ly loaded. AM I nil welcome to attend free work ff4'! 673--6750 * 531-6800 * Bob Mc L aren authorized 52.l-7250 cond. • · ~ • lhN mlleaae (677-stereo, tilt "'heel, p/stffllo ahopo. For Information . l!H UDO Ii O>mpl w/lraller RENT my new 19 7 3 BMW DeaJ.. '70 Mercedes Beta 71 VW BUS r.\'X). Ing " brake•, air cone!. Qlntact: Tom. Dieterich i] NsandSappies $tfi0, ·tV Ama Ba,ygkte ElDorado Mini Mobile 850 North Beach Blvd., La , ------.. . Low m.Uff, ·radlaiS, AM/FM $369' delux Interior A: COl'llOllf. 6C-2l5I . · . Storaat O< call ( T 14 l Home Sleeps 4 All power Habra JIM SLIMONS sL Call 66-7830 day> ooly 2840 Harbor Blvd lime .,.., w/bladt viit>4 ' • CoHI Music Sarvlce 32&-3"469 tape .iOck. -ZIM . ' 879-5624 er 522-6.133 IMPORTS '61 VW 7 P>1i Buo c..ta 111... • -· super buy at - Newport Blvd. at Harbor . SABOT, ..., ..w, """ rte-·-~~-and SUodlal Yiiiii .., ... -I ·-·CED. ES BENZ White with -• In-. At Fair Drlw c.u or I JI n a I .....r c..ta M-Cots 152 ged. Ullman ..n, a1um. ~,;;;.;;:H;;;;;,,"" ... -. ...,,, & "'""' AM/l"M ~~low mllea, 546-801? n~T-15n ~ M.; .BABY GRANDS PERSIAli kittens, CFA ,.., P'":; dolly. 66-&37fut,. lralla !!::>-~~ntl ac, ~01.';(i'~cE HJde.•Bed$~Tabl•, ·~~~E. :i,~ ~ XlnL quallty. S"IS-$100. Abo • ..,.... -or --· • S _ .. ,, • ...,._ ~ -' mu .... , flW. -Prh> 1 !"'!"'""""up to $1000 ~" cer· stud .aervice. !19,2-2970.. ' ·~-= ~~ *·RENT' 21'· ---. Jim .. _ ' l.Cit•Ni Im-ts prty. • -' ,... _..'l>OCfetc-'Otber "-··154 Olleltan.steepo &.A1rconc1. ROYCARVIR I liaap.,.... ·· •·'· ,.... r-· '8TCllEVELLE-SS396.i•pd. MUSTAN.r.:.-I G..and PlanOa from S12!'· ....,.1 13" SAILBOAT, like oew l!IOO Deluxe, 640--0370. 1 ftC. 4li;a,,.-' · ., • ..-1075 BucJ<et seats. map, reblt 'I" • Theoew .~h ~ J?Ol"tc':~ m.;JfE w~ "MX> Mix~ ·: or best offer! Tr1lltn,. Trani 945 2SC E. l'ltb 8t. 130'.l:Quaa! ·n SUPER Beetle, 14,500 ml. trig $850. 6'1).'1564 . '' ~ I ONIC! $ mUSIC h T -~ a1 .. ~'S'etter S50t ,,, * 51111-1397 * 0>ota 111-51M4t1 Newport Beocb Xlnt cooo., orig wamuity. ,63 CHEVY Nova, air, P/S, 1lltl6 H.T. 8, P/S, RAH, -. Sooth Coast Plaza 540-2830 • ,88$Set $40..:,.i. A1&Mn· .. 501. cl.6' HOBlttAT 1972 Model 15' ARISl'OCRAT Lo-l.Jner. I ra~r AL ~~ FR0833-111~-l.ft<'r'UT1"n Tape 1feclr, bst 0 t t er. radio, low mlleqe, . $899. ~ ~t otter. ~ K\!eShound l=JU.·BUJI~ w/traller, $1450. Sleeps ab:. Gu refrlg. Like LU& .,..,,.c..n. ~1.n~n. 6"--00«> Pvt party, 548-3009' ~... or ~ MAGNIFICENT Ebony 5'2" T-Cup Poodle, Chihuah;;J -64¥.1619 eves new. Electrle brakes. Ex-e 73 .Mercedes i9fti ·~ex., lo mllea, '-66 411r Station Wqon nu '67 MUSTANG aut,o ~ , , Antique A.-an Ba by Lob., BoM; .Shephe~ c A UFORNlA C.tamaran tras. 690 Capital st, CM all 1973 BAVARIA ALL MODELS fin, """'· . Very point, eoa rum ...,.i, .:...0. P/S, P/B. air. vb\Yl . ...,, . Grand, !Hee nu. cond. Must Cockapoo. ; 5• St w/traller, xlnt cond. $450. Pomona. J, PURCHASE re ti' """4839, or ~ .. or belt o&r. . very clean, $1~. ~l Sacrlf this prize pooseuion Serv. 21 <-Call 968-110'1. LF;l"U1sellyonrdeentravel LEASE 6T3-6507 ," HIY•LIR ' OLDSMOBILI 1 ai S"lll5. 96&-4!00 SAVE~ H PET LIDO 14 -!650 Ready tn ..u. lraller or camper 1or you. CREVIER BMW · '69 VW Xlnt co>'.'1. C "'. ' 1 WANTED Plano, used O:>c~. . 11r.6'tter, New center board & cover. Demand is good now. Mesa Sales • Service • lasing OverlHI Delivery w/pop ' Ii: tent. $2250. • , ;i:. , Sldet 6 SeMce. 1 , walnut ....... i., oot too old Dactia!iW'd. , Bj>ogle~: Call evenings m-6939 ~~~· ~ w.1!!,st.;,7Santa1 Ana • Coll .Anr.lme lla>ll LI 1~11 17 I eves '12 Oll7*r _Newporff!\;•lliow, · DLDSMOllLE • ; and In good cood;tion. ~ ~~ · · ' Boots, Spied I. Ski 911 ~• * SIU M * 64MICll ' ' ' . ~ ;::4-" ~ dr;,,,p, ~ GMC TRUCKS 641>-':8'19 · RARE Wblte G er m a " · 13.,;,..,~ :. j6oo "1:;: CAPRI ct ... 970 .,......,. VW c::::;: ~ COND -. Must ..U. Belt olfor HONDA CARS · LWinp MKhme• 128 Shepherd. Needi , .... _. & 14' RUNABOUT Glass ,__. o"--. ~ "°""' aft 4 1970 280 SL Coupe, Red/tan ·--1"""" OVft' wtde11le boot takes UN..,_,...., o~·-1 ,........ ~· """"'-....a-tO.W int .• 2 tops & 1oac1ed ilx:ldlng .... .,.... 'Uil tti cau l3:W648 ••~•-t LUI . MOTHER'S DAY ~~ !:'~ 60 lbs, shots, ~J~·=c =· e~ ~WOOD Tent Trailer ~ am/~cO:e~tttl s~ ~ '69 VW, new tifts, new CONTINENTAL 2850 Harbor Bl~d ' * SPECIAL * ' AFGHAN ..... AKC. ""°" ol 673-9322. Can be ,..n 223 Sf.e5. Slpo 6. Xlnt cond. Prlv'. • ~or aft 6!n 6M.2342 ~·· good cone!. $1100. O>ota 111... l'='I Zig . Zag aewtng · machine), wonned. ~ion line. Marine, BJ.. party. 837-3019. for: appt. to see. , 1 545--0630 '68 IJNCX>LN Continental " '72 OLDS ~ .. dilir ~ nice cabinet (new Ve reasonable. Tenns. 70 VW Station Wagon, auto, d sedan xi t nd all ' • ceptlonal execuuft11 Clrl I ••••••••••••••••••••• $139.95. oo;".2235 '12 COMFORT IT, fully .. 11 BRAND NEW 280 SL CPE R&H. Good cooo. ~1441 r. ·-··~ r cot ., ~ Beal offer over $ISOll. 11.h.... ...vw1 used -bleS., , If •I contained. Like newt Ex-~ ....... .-xhrt oond 1968 or 548--'1'801 tras u~ a ereo ape, pnv .,... "T15 • .........,., 5 """'• ...,...... MALE Sa. Bernard. 7 'I tlllM 173 CAPRI ...... .., . ., .. , .... , " ' prty sacrif tor $21!15. Call c~::.:.:=-----.._"I ~~·\$9.95. 'AKC i:istered $2~· I • tras! $2295. S46-57l.O. red wlblk Int., ~. AMI '67 VW Bug,, .FM stereo, 6"0-81n '72 GOib Toronado. tuDJ ' Overll)T&tna:.tJ.Mesa 645--8393aft.4PM · ~ · AutohrvlH,P•rts949 lmmedlateDellv1ry :'o=~/t= ~sU,0~ $700 •• 61 LINC Cont. Very good 1~·~.JS~/w=, Sli>cere Sewing MacOlne ' AFGHAN Pups rnre blue · PARTS (INLY GUSTAFSON ' , running cooo, I will make -~· ' and v"r~i:i8 *Harnar =.,6'5-~able -~amparo, S.lo/Ront '20 FDR SALE CHEAP Lincoln·Mercury OPEL n vw ~:;'ls.'W mile•, ~4~al you can"t "'"""' .:-~ 88, Good ~ i · . · n SIX pac cabover for .hn· From 1959 SEDAN de Ville 16800 Beach at Warner ioos Oi>el Stat "\Vflitln, Xtra 675-ll82 aft. 4 ,62 C'ONT Full gd nd Dependable tranapartation. , TV, Rlidlo, H1FI, * sr. Bernard, AKC, pups. port truck. Stove, sink, CAD~C Huntington Beach clean, Low book. am/fin '67 vw Squ~back, reblt. Gd tires: new Pi:ki ~ 0j. 67>0700 1 SMreo 836 Shots. S wk.! old. Champ. icebox. Boot roof rack, TransmwJOn 842-1144 * (21J) 592.$544 $650 56--1624 engine new brakeL Must bat ofr 548--1801 1968 OLDS DEL MONT 4 <tr:,' sired. $125 up. 546-6584. sleeps 4. Like new, $575. or Ra.cUo • Sell• s9oo 64l-6835 aft 5 • • / - OU> Eogllah Sbeep 0op T otter. 49&-4123. Mr~ uo;t "Home of tho Viking" FOR sale '69 Opel GT. "" ' · CORVETIE atr, PS, p,o, $10'15. Pb! RENT TO OWN wks. v..., reuonable. Show '12 vw ,\i!Yentur. camper. 1212 South 11= St., DATSUN palot. brakes, clutch. Wbp '64 vw Bug Chen-yl SWU"OOI, 83H4P88LYMOUTH TV'S & STEREO quallty. AKC. 839-a939. Xlnt oond. 22,<IOO m' Prlced Sant. Ana eng. moo. 6#-"'97 d:'k~ "9::i':;. ~:-$HARP )Jellow '69 Vet Stlni: $10 OLDEngllsbSheepDogpup-right. 6,..2348 542-3120 DATSUN PoRscHE * .,;. vw SQUARE BK.* Ray. m. 4 spd, __ , __ w.;.H.::;.;.o .;.A:..:..;THE_:..;._RE...:.;1 p~. AKC, xnlt b1ood line, CyclH, Blkn, '55 ())evy 2 dr, 6 cyl, 3 speed. AJr stick, radk> orange 557·787'8 pri. pty. NoCredit01eck•No0epo,;tc:'i.:,~';!t:-~4:b1e Scooters 925 =e~;,.~·-=.~~ N~K~P973 ~~r~r.~.::ir,.~, , m-1.933 . COUGAR BIG FELLA! Free Delivery Free Repair male shots ~ ~ity SPORTSTER / ~ blt Pontiac. Good motor (389) -Only $1400. Call wkdaya on. 70 VW -xn!t cond, yellow Compei!Bon/Juxury l 9 7 l Montbl,y RenW. Available $75 ~ • for show w/Jols of chrOme. & auto tram. + rear eni, NO DOWN ly, ~. ask for Steve. w/blk int., ndial Urea, etc. '70 GOLD Ellmlnator, new GTX. LOADED • ~r. power Open Eves. 543 4444 ~ Schnauzers 12 wks old Less than 1,00> total miles, ~ety good ..... ~ c::f :n-$68.23 per mo. for-48 mo. '69-9ll E. TARGA. silver, 5 '61S!ZlSOIERR/best offer.G6~cl ::!~~~7~es, steerlng A: bnk~ ~. · al ' since nu ·in 1971. Over $5000 t'' e or ..,..... .... er Def. payment price $3273.60. IPd. mags, pirellis, FM Y BU , new ut· , ' trans, 4tl) CID, <I BBL. AM{ STEREO: 1973, 200 Watt AKC, 3~ ~-457'8 in bike, F\rm eellm&' price ! 7:30 p.m. 543-3691.. A.P.R.. i•.34%. stereo, xlnt 6f4-45G5 ch, 13,IXX) ml. on fact 69 XR7, loaded, good ttres, FM/FM mtidpln, vhQ'I Quadraaonlc, Garrard . $.1.500. Fot those who want ROYER enone. $395. 60-637l private party, .Days. 642· top. Out ot pfoduetioa • model, ayatemlzed au t 0 ENGLISH pomter puppies the ultimate bt a street A: r,:::;i '61 vw· BUS l8XJ cc, cooler, 5735. eves &U-7Sli6. limtted edlt1on. MllSI: 1~ =:~: ~~cfM~~ ~~ ~ :;,e .:1123G ~.er ( --...... }t!.!J •s ROVER am TC, amtfm, ~·.M~'· wood panel· DODGE __ :;;" ~te~;,•;;;_1~~t ~ tape deck. Waa lef t IRISH Setter, fem•l1 MAY 7JQ:,SALE . , ~ r~~s~t~u:e;;, 'fl6VW. •70 DART Swinger, pvt par-'69 ROADRUNNER, 383 4 Wlclalmed, 8lilJ brand nc:iv $75. 962--0184 FREE $150 RACE SETUP . 953 '10 PICKUP. xlnt cood, below Blue. Asking $1000. Not ntnnlng. Beat offer. ty, au~o. air, PIS,' 21,ID) 1pd, with map. Xlnt 4i0nd. In box aoo guaranteed, Ong H 856 wllh any 'l3CZ MXtdle!"rt Antl~-/Cl1Mlc1 18.<IOO ortg. mt, cust Int., Pvt.Pty. 675 .. 8214. 968-1189 ml, Vinyl top. Uke now. llSOO or beol otter, !mJ.7'511 price $400. Now $185. Cash or111 COAST MO'ro CYa.E F/M stereo cauettc deck '69 CAMPER·· AM/FM new $2000. 551~1278 AC or small paymems. 8"3,.-050! 5 YR. Old Appy POA gendlng IS31 FORD l\lodel A Qmpe w/spkrs. Blk vinyl -& TOYOTA tires. $1300: Aller Spm, '11) DUSl"ER RIH,' lactoey PONTI STEREO: Unclaimed 1973 _ ribbon winner - a real w/'Sfl Mere engine, now tonneau cover. duel exhaust 675-0726 air <.'Olumn stick $l l7S. =z:ie, m~~·~uIISte~ ~u1fit. ~~Mrie~der. :,~~orMu~i1~~~ ~;~~ $1600/best TOYOTA SALE ·n vw Bus, 10 mileage, cuat ::47385. ' ' receiver, tun range 8ll' 2.134 Npt Blvd, CM 645-8008 best otter, 847~ after 6 & ·n DATSUN P:f.cku w/air AT ~·6!!n~j!»Lnd. Sacrifice, FIDEBIRD speakers. tape deck Md HORSES Boarded, riding John'• Rael-Cycln wlmds.. 1 t p,..Dov•luatlon ~ •r•~ "\ headphone piUI In jacks. .,..,,. & lralls, 3J271 A,,,..ta ·~ R-lonll cooo.. -' 1 ep PRICES 0 Brud new lo box. st.S.A.Hetghts.644-5311'1• iEA~;,r:.~s~OR Vohlclao f'56 ~-=-~~~ BRAND NEW VOLY ·~,~~~=-t·.;~~. , ,auannteed. Orig prtce ~l o~-111~ x Tr Icebox, st,ove, boot, root 19 OO> ml $3500. 646-3411 now $95. Cash or auacua ~ ~"''' v1.v •n InternatioDll. TravelaD ~ rack. l2350. or otter. WW VOLVO SALE' ' · payment•. 893-(!501 [ _..,.=. .. I 'le{ Harbor~ C.M TM. 4 wb. drive. 4 epd. V-.. ..,..&.. '116-1123. 1972 • I Al LY , •SPRING SPECIAL* ~or ~ • :: ~/B. AC 28.111) 1971 240 z, 1 owner, nu "Rebiilt-Pictvre Tube . 1971 SL 350 HONDA. Top . ndlal&, mags, &m/fm Alllo. tt"aM .• radio, fact. air Hage Savings $15-21'' or 25'' Color INh, Gener1I 900 condition.. OnlY 2,(0) miles. 61 VW Bus Rock Buggy 40hp stereo tape, auto., air. low cond., \V.S.W tires, tint. • lortallatlon Available WANTED' Airline Captain Never been In the dirt. Thia 5411'6954 m.3008. $2563 Rici!!'• Televisk>n Service reapons!Ne & experienctd bike ta better than new. Trucks 962 TOYOTA Corona 4 Dr led.an. •n Grand Prix . ~'tr Stttrlng, Powe t Brakes, Ult wheel. Air~ Bucket aca.ta. ~ 17,00J miles, Rall)'e whel!ii (1311FWD), $4695 ' DAVID J, PHILLIPS : BUICK PONTIAC OPEi. inc! $46.1'75 BUY OR LEASE '73 PONTIACS DAVE ROSS * I YEAR WARRANTY No denta. Perfect !hope. 4'pd, a-own body, $500, mllea ... $3950, 642-3392 or •laso. (TE210061507). '720~LY'73 p I LOT lonnerly Mesa North Ctnter wouJd lllce to make ~ Save youraelt S%iO or $3tJO 1969, auto, orta owner. 1 Bick S. of Baker -range""'nta to perlodlcll1y o1J new prico. Ooljl $100. · •n DATSUN pickup w/alr 42,<IOO ml, xlol cood. $91)5. $AVE NOW 2480 llatbm-Blvd., 11 opeo H 16 dayt) ""' good aport llaltef. ·-• cood., '--Is. step Call aft S, -· 496-4374. AT ORANGE Drive, Coat• M.,. 546-801 PONTIAC :II" RCA Victor color Ti. ~1616 1971 SL 350 HONDA. Top bumw • Six p ... -'11) DATSUN 1000 Roadster. 12 '69 POITT!AC LeM&n.. v...,. $75. French Provtncla"l 9' WGH speed tnn1t.able eondttkJn. Onb' 2,(Q) mUet Cun.pet. S!eeP!' blr adults. 30M, Xlnt cood. Pri. Prty. ft_. .. -L•••• clean! TOP or bc!t oeitr • ... blnel, works good . boat~!mr--1<, ..,.._ No -P<Tfeet -; lco~l).""!• ~· ~ Beot olM .$J,AIOO. -LUCAIA UlllO LE-"T --M .. wi...i.. New Ii'"{ , -~726 or 61:1-1884 aft 6 Only """ S tlmeo, Pl). NewT be9. fn Ille dlft. 'lbia '"-· -..-. er. 61:l-8llllO , TOYOTA ~' " AST'S fQ-1286. ·~m. S0'.17'16alter 5 pm. ..~ ~ ~ ~---· "'J!U!IO· 49MU:!. ·~DATSUN ~ z ....... ~ PRE-DOLLAR co T·BIRD ROBERTS 333.X tape WANTED' Y"'1TOUM deck ;; ;;_,;;;u S350-;,, iGi '69 TOYOTA Hll"" II Ton, :;;00. Below bi.'.. ~'."pi;;: DEVALUATION l nooid<r.Sanaull!XMlamp,2 opoce for •ha!i> 33' 0-.. oil ncW prlee Only l650 P.U. Tnick. I owner, 640-08l!eve•. 1966 Harbor, C,M. 646-9303 PRlc;E SI 1971 T-BffiD, I dr IAnClau tt.ncer '4 spet.kers. Gira.rd rtybrklge cruiler. 213 : • 556-im • ' SO,OOOml, See at 5901~ •70 DATSUN lfiOO Roe:dster * '71 TOYOTA Corolla, low Wr makt oveneas dtlJv<!:rles I d• 16 500 miles. full pwr ale ,..,,. table, $560. 613-m:I m-0219 BICYCLE SAL E ~~ Dr., NB. alt 4Pm. :=•roll bar, d;,c brakes. mile~. See It · You"ll BU> II ea 1ng am/Im otci..,, Xlnt ·~ ZENITH color TV, 21", Boots, Malnt,/ NEW 10 SPEED ITALIAN •72 FORD Courier all ..,_ mac. $1100, 644-5832 7 all 6 PM. 1\ l • ph. Dr, A"'""~ °'1i = control. XI" I Sarvlc. 901 BICYCLES $59.95. Beech tru lake .,.r t>Ymms or RAT '61 TOYOTA eo .... d<luxo. aYf41l fAN 962-3319. ews MH709 , 6'1S-10.ll. co>'.'1. 115 0 . OOATS llepair\'d. parts .t ::~~~= sk1282.Balboa -~:~:k::i:.. • "68 SPYDER SlO, 1 owner. !n~ ~ ~'ll~r.'~l~Ult -YOLYO Marketplace ·1; ... ~ ~~.~pd~:.i. "r XllOD. R«oldl ~-~l ~;.~ 1Jr": i\\:' SCliWinn Super $porl Pick-up w/auto. tra n 1 31.llotlml., xlnt m«h&n;cal '6' St1. W•t $1000 ~S..,_\"1 ~~ pert. 0 ::..! ~ ~'t iid:.,j'..iiu.,__, ' · · bl<:)>clo. $"Iii. m.rm llt95. 6*-:klll oon.i., 1795 54Hl2l. , i42-M96 1900 Harbor. c.M. 646-9303 ...,... ~ -&11-3411 • • ,, ) ' l ' ' l \ I f· . • • • ... DAILY .PILOT s I . • • , TotSdiy, May 8, ·l,73 .. • • • . • 11 • The ·DAILY PILOT •• ..$.till· odly ' $2.65 a month delivered to your door seven d·ays ~ week , • D • .. . . . • : ' ' .. . . . <Or Use Toll Free· Number To CG,11 The .. J)AILY PILOT . • • ' . . Office In Your Oran_ge Coast Area Community} --' • L I ' .. ' ' I ' ,. \ I I • ' . . \ I r I I I I I \ ' " ) ' \ San (;Jemen1e (;apistrano EDITION .. YOL. 66, NO. 128, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ~ Today's Fin a l • .N.Y. Stoeks TUESDAY, MAY· 8, 1973 TEN CENTS CouQcil1nan Not Bullish on Celebration By -JOHN V ALTEl\ZA: 01 tlM Delly Plllf II.ti San Juan C.pistrano City Councilman James M. Weathers Monday dealt some slinging criticism to both the sponsors and the critics of the Cinco de Mayo bloodless bullfight that never really hap- pened Saturday. Wealhers' comments, coming at the end of a meeting, were the only €oastal Wanaing . Ions occurring amoog the me!Dher~ of Ibo council ahout wt week"!l!l's cbtunhtr-~ celebra· lion. Weathers flayed sponaon of the eoent !or assuming the role of defender of the city and legal e>pert In •·letter sent In reply to oomplalnts lodged by the SPCA in Sacramento. · In a seoood attack, Weathers lubed Legal Pressures " Threaten Panel. By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of tb9 Diiis' Plllt 511ff An Orange C.Ounty Conservation group Monday threatened South Coast llA!gional C o as t a l C.onservation Commissioners with legal pressure lon:lng them to re- quire environmental impact reports before any more permits are Issued. Dale Secord, chairman of the Project Evaluation aod Planning Committee of Youth, 16, Hurt ~ ~ .. .. When AutO FliP,s On SD Freeway the Environmental Coalition of Orange County, told commissioners at their meeting In Long Beach that the findings of the commission stair are inadequate. Secord said the staff recommeDdations on permit applications are, "either based on a subjective usessm.ent or on an in- adequate and non-Independent analym oi enviromnental impacts." Secord's warning and evaluitlon oC curreot permit procedlll'eS was bis ..0. oner In a 1n!Ok. Alter the lint p,... Jal)on. Commioslon ptairmall -RiQney of Hunllnglon )leach ask~ for a iu.t. .\llomtl' ""neral opinion on Em ~ .... - -contend& that the primary duty of the conun1¥ion established by Propoaillon Ill Is to preserve the .,,. .l ==~ i;:: ':f: virmmen1 ol the 1,000.yanl-wide coastal car on the San Diego Freeway Monday strip. night, a mishap which may have been "Regional • , • commlasloners are re- cauaed wben be wu·nm off the rood. quired by taw to deny a pemi'tt for a pro} , Micbael H. Burney suffered aevere eel wl!icb w o u I d cause a significant fractures and Internal Injuries In the 9:10 adverse Impact," Seoord sale!. p.m. crash near Avenida Pico. 'lbe only way to determine such an im- Highway patrolmen said the youth, of 33217 Blue Fin Drive, wu: beaded north pact is to require a final EIR m every on the freeway when be suddenly swen· project approve by an independent local ed onto the shoulder. • ag'ency, he sale!. That motion caused him to Jose control Secord was critical of the commission of his car then swerved back onto the for granting perm.its to some projects Pavement and rolled over several times. with either. draft EIR.s or with no EIR at Tile youth underwent surgery Monday night and was set to undergo more today all depending upon requirements of the at San Clemente General Hospital. local ag~cy granting building permits. His condition in t b e intensive .. care In a written communication to the weld earller today w.. described as commission, Secord wu also highly ........ -tel!." •-· critical of builders aod developen who he said are applying for permita under W. S. Donovan Rites Wednesday • Requiem Mass will be celebrated Wednesday morning in San Clemente fOr William Sebastian Donovan, 69, a retiree who died at home Swtday after a sudden illness. Mr. Donovan, of 114 Avenida San Dimas, was a former Marine, havtng oerved with distinction with the Corpo durlni World War Il. He leaves bis widow, Martha, of the home, and a cousin, Edward Donovan of Dunne, N.Y. Rooary followed by Requiem Mass will be conducted at 10 a.m. at OUr Lady of Fatima catholic Church with the !IA!•. Magr. Harry J. Trower officiating. Burial will follow at Ascension Cemetery In El Toro. · Lesneski Mortuary is in charge of &r· rangemenls. Social S~curity Calh NDw Free r Residents of south Orange County now may call the Social Security Mminlstntion's Santa Ana oll1ct toll llOe, Walloce S. Ford, dts\rlct manager, has announced. PersoM wishing to call the ad· ministration b9uld dial t h e telephone operator · and ask for Zenith uooo. The new service applies to residents of capistrano Beach, Dana Point, Lag\Ul.8 N I g u e I , Ml!slon Viejo, San Clemente. San Juan C.pistrano, Laguna Bead> and South Laguna. ' 1 false pretenses. He said that local agencies now ac- cepting a final Em only Judge ita ade- quacy and not whether or not there is any adverse impact. "The actions of most developers presenting their applications for a pennit before this commission has been a sham. These people have the audacity to deliberately mislead this commi.Won," be said. .. Though commissioners tabled .several permits and killed a few others for reasons other than missing EIRs, they dld approve a number of permits that were not n!Qulred by local ageocies to prepiµ-e an Em. 'lbe9e included two resta\D"ants on Del Prado Stl'eet jn DMa Point, a two.atory medical office building In San Clemente, two multHmlt apartment buildings In San Pedro and a 30 mill1on gallon sewage treatmeot plant on Terminal Island. Orange County Supervisor Ronald Caspers said the two Dana Point Restaurants, part of an overall master plan for tbe barbor, were not n!Quired by . the county to have an Em. •. Caspers, on.e of the Orange County me!itbers of thO eoutal commission, ar· .rived late for the meeting and did not mum alter the meeting's dinneJ: break at a p.m. Cement MixerTaken At Capistrano Site A cement ?nixer valued by the owner at_fl,111111 ,.,. stolen Monday night from a construclioti JJ.te In the San Juan C.plstrano area, Orange County SherW'1 officers said. Deputies said the heavy mixer wu removed ty Intruders who entered a building site at ma cam1no C.pistrano. It Is l>elieved that the thltves uMd a truck with a trailer hitdl to haul the eqipment away. • • Weathers said. "And I also see that any time. we need anybody in need of legal advice, we can send lhem to the chamber of com- merce," Weathers said. Then, in a parting shot be added, "I would suggest that if anyone ever has any questions about lhe Mafia, or bull in general, they go to the Citlzens for Ar:- 'tion." Weathers' blast was the only discussion ol the evening about the controversial event w'1ich took place at Rocky's Anna, and was marred by a no-show of entries jn the Mexican charreada and the lack: of livestock for the corrida. The celebration in general , billed as the first-annua1 observance of the Mex· ican holiday , was financed through fw>ds advanced by the council several . ....U ago. Councilmen at that time stressed Illa! the 13.000 seed .-y-l<>r the-project might be calculated against the tot.Ill an-- nual subvention to the chamber which could ht oonstdered this budget -· Chamber officials have yet to announce the final tally for the weekend celelJn. ti on. • ess1ons Beet f;ets Soaked ·mg11 water stands in the Monfort reed lots at Gree- ley in northeast Colorado followintheavy fiin which caused flooding of the South Platte River. Flood crest ~eaded ir!to neighboring Nebraska today after. washing over thousands of acres of farm and pas- turelaird In Colorado where officials estimated dam· age at $50 million. And that's not counting future effects of flood on food supplies and prices. 2 Collflty Youths Remai .n In Custody in En senada Sptdal to the Dally Pilot ENSENADA, M... -'I'\YO Orange County youths remain In custody here to- day after a Ciooo de Mayo brawl erputed on downtown streets In which 190 persons wereamsted. Orange Countians a w a It I n g ap- pearances before a magistrate were identified by Mexican authorities as Undsty L. ,:lreene, II, of Seal Beach and cate D. Darnall;21, ol' Garden Grove. Greene Is . accuaed « destroying a policeman's unllotnt Darnall, along witb 'lbomu·F. Pllillips, 23, of,Amarillo, Tei:., are cborged with hitlinl an olO~ln the lace with a beer bottle. One M .. lam attomoy ·de9crlbed the mtltie·u ·a • ._«11". witb1brawlera Kindergartener Registration . B~gins Monday , J>rire51 ratio!\ of children who Will at· tend ' this fall In the ca~ ntfied School Dtstrict wm 1iegin Mar it _.a continue for foor days, dlstrict aides oald today. l'anall .can regilltr their youngsters b<i-n I a.m. and noon or I to 4 p.m. any of· the lour days at the elementiry acl1ool where lhoir chlldrtn will attend ciu-. Dlstrlcl &ldll -that California law mUel It -tory that all yOUft(llfen baw Immunisation for poUo, meuleo and dtpldber1a before lheY Bl· tend cl·•a - Chlldrea who have become Ove years old on or before Dec. I of this year are elllllblt to ennill in ca-this fall, aides added. DurinC ·rtglstratioo partnll will be briefed on kiodergarten procedures ml wlll recelw an lnlonnal handbook. ' " throwing cherry bombs and firecrackers . Fighting broke out while an estimated 4,000 persona were visiting Ensenada for Cinco de Mayo celebrations and the end of the annual Newport Beach to Enaenada yacht race. Hussong's Bar and Hotel Bahia were he~vily damaged by lhrown bottles and other items. Fifty persons were reported injured. The attorney, Enrique Villarreal, said about 50 young Americans were still in jail Monday and unable to post ball rang· Ing from 112 to $21. He was told they cou1d ht freed,. alter serving an unspecil1ed time In jail Juab. Zamora, manager of the Bahia Hotel, told a story of what bappened. "'11'e bippiM, just a few, started com- ing Iii the-hotel· about nooo. The yateros (yadltsmen) bqan leaving as soon as the ti:ophy ceremony was over. 4' At first , the hippies just sat around the pool, drln.k.lng. Then more came until we _, bad about 200 persons around the pool. Wben that many young people are together, IOllleone has IO do oometbing to attract attention. "!lo one bci1 let out a .ye11, and someone apswered him. Then the peoplt were all yelllnc. 'Ibey got excited, and someone · threw a , bottle Into . the pool. Other• --.•things, too. "Oile boy started to take hill paots off, but . we bad the police take him I awor. Then a bic .IUY. maybe S feel S lnt!hes tall, thmr a girl Into the pool. !'So I went up to him and aoked him please not to do' that. He just pushed me •""!'· HJ1 lriehd came up and also asie<j him to stop1.but the' big guy, just l'JI bis hand ovtr'h11Jace and shoved him away, also. "Before long, hlppl" In groups ol six and seven were running through the hallwa!'I, kicking In doors and doing whatever violence they could." Zamora said, "All lbis tn>ublt 1tarted five or six years ago when the hippies started corning down. The yateros caused no trouble. They are good people." " ' Wounded Knee l 1ulians Put Up Their W-eapons WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (AP) -IJ>. dian militants in Wounded Knee laid down their anns today, government of· ficials reported, signaling an end to the 7G-day occupation of the historic hamlet. Federal law enforcemmt officials who were to enter the village following the turnover of anns were delayed, however, by an argument with an insurgent over the tenns of his surrender. Kent Frizzell, Interior Department solicitor general, said a white man lderr lified as Al Cooper drove tOi. a federal roadblock and began protesting terrna of his arrest and bond. Frizzell oald Cooper and another white man, alao under in- dictment oo cbaraes In connection ·with the occupation, locked thenuelveo In the vehicle. Frizzell said the Justice Deparqnent would not take pbyslcal control of the village until the problem was resolved. According to an agreement under which the village was to change ·.hands. U.S. marshals were to comb the hamlet {o make sure it was sare before ousted residents returned. Frlu.ell oald Cooper boasted after the wounding of a federal marshal early In the occupation that he "got hlmseU a pig" and later "paraded around and menaced" federal negotiators with a '(Ste INDIANS, Pap.II ' Nuclear Power· Eyed By Capo Beach CofC Dan Canady, a publicist !Or San Diego G., and Eleciric Company, will epeak before members of the C&pistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce Wednuday, discussing the merits of nuclear power, Canady's talk will focus on the current crbls In energy and the potential solution In nucitar power. The luncheon Is open to any resident of the oommunlty and will •tart al noon at the El Adobe In San Juan C.plstrano. Junior High 2lan·to End 'Crowding' By JAN WOllTll Of ... Dlltf Pltlt Steff The Capistrano Unified School Board unanimously approved double -ions IM the district'• only junior hJ8b as the "most economical' •a1tematlve to . overcrowding on all grade levels. Maroo Forster Junior Hieb In San Juan C.plstrano now has 1,535 pupils, more than 500 over capacity. II will run at peak capacity even wllll double ••lool at the start of nat acbool year, wllll IOO )'OUllgJteJ'I In .... group and '°' la Ille other. -A ..oond Junior b1ih la LllUna Nlluel • Is· about to ht htrun but dialrlct ad- ministrators 1ald ti will nqt be ~ until Novembir 197' at tho' earliest. lfoe Wimer, dlrtctor of admlntsttaUvc services, told the board he was -kin& on a possible division of attendtnce areas. He said the most logical divlal<a seem- ed to ht th.. San aemente High Scbool attendance area plus the area for the new Del Obispo Elementary Scbool lo< one group, aod the rem•lning area for the other group, . wilicb camprllm the largest growth araa. Which group will attend In the lllDl'lllns and which In the afternoon has not yet been decided. Prior to the recommendations for a double IWlon corning from Fonter prlJ>. cipal Ed Kincaid and Wimer, the board had hoped to Implement an extended day schedule. But Kincaid and Wimer concurred that the cost for eight to ten portable urits, about 13(),000, was more than the dtatrtct could hear to Implement the extoaded day. U the money Is poent on tile units, lbty should be uHd In Ille elementary IChooll which are also overcrowded, Wimer aold. District SUperintendent T r ii m a n Benedict said he felt tho junior hJ8b was !lie key to whatever la doDe In ·the district. "It's Im-Ible to -1111 other •ltemaUvee to Ille double -.. witbout spending a lot more,,_,., .. be aald. Trustee Wllllam Enqulat ~ that tbt two attendance areu llwilch ' morning andatim-. timel ~· Benedict sald ttanaportallon 1i.. may dictate which area goea to ICbool early. Seoslon one would run from 7:30 Lm. to 12,25 p.m. Seuloa two would be liom 12,30 p.m. to s;:.c.m., ao:on1inf1 to tho ~I plan. -. ww1d ban •ix· ~minute periods. The weathtrlady cal1I for baxy sunshine in lhe altemoon boun on Wedoesday, with sllgbtlJ> wanner temperatures. ll1gbs of 81 at the beaches rising to 78 Inland. INSIDE TODAY Frttd U.S. Conni GcncNI Tel'Tenc• G. Lt..........._ mpllo- rlud th• .... d f<>r oU g ... ,,.. m<11ll to cooptralt m •IOlllping out fnternolioftal len'orir!n, TM rnvou """ nlt.,ed in Guadafo. ;ara late Monclau. S•• story on Page 4. -.. --. ".,.... ....... ~c:..tr .• ""'*' "''' s .......... ,_ .. _.... . -. _.. ....... " --. Mwkie ro Try A . . '76? gcun m !J ; WASHINGTON (UPO -Sen. li:d- lllWld S. Mllllde (.,..,....J, llld ... dl1 lie would DOI rule aut I try for the.presidency In 1176 1ltl1ougb "I don't expect it to bapptn." Muskie said he received con· slderable encooragement from Jet· ten: lolJowJ111 disclosures or ·~ pln!nt acto of pollUcal sabotage dlr«ted at him by Pr<sidenl Nix· on'a re-election organization while he was regarded a.s lhe leading Democrailc presidential contender In 1'71 and 1112. lie wu Jntorvlowed on !he NBc. TV Today Sbow. New Threat To Lawyer Spurs Probe Orange Counly Sheriff's officers step- ped up their investigation toda y when the lawyer for a Mission Viejo bualnesaman who bu received a series of threats in recent weeks was warned to keep out of the legal bsue that may have prompted the warnings. Newport Beach attorney Richard Sten- ton received the threat from an unknown caller and Immediately passed !he hr formation on to sheriff's investigators. The details of that call tiave gone into a growing file which also contains pic- luw of !he most eloquent lhreat yet delivered to George Goslenbofer, 49, of 2-4832 San Duval Lane - a recently severed ram's head that was Jert on the front seal of his car with the knife used m the decapitation stuck in the skull .. Gostel!ho!er ts part owner or the Sesame Street Mobile Home Park Jn EI Toro. It is believed by him .and Stenton that a business deaJ stemming from that property is responsible for the wave of lbreats. C...tonbofer said today !hat Doug Rymal, his manager at the 20-acre park, bas also been threatened and warned by the person who contacted him: "don't get in the middle of thls or you'll get hurt." Gostenhofer insists that the series or lhreats which have prompted him to move his wife and six children out of their home stem "from an organization w:lth definite Mafia overtones." He now lives alone at the home and keeps a shotgun by his side for prcr tection. He told· !herlfrs officers he was warned by an unknown caller that two of his daughters would be mutilated if he did not Immediately comply with the telephoned instructions. "I have no Intention of meeting these demands," he repeated today. "This issue could be resolved quickly and easily by civil action but those who are threatening me don 't want me to do thing! that way." County Boy,3, Runs Into Side Of Truck, Dies A J.year~d Anaheim boy was killed Monday afternoon when he darted from a traffic island, ran into the side of a truck and fell under the rear wheels, police reported. Craig E. Rupe rt of 315 Carol Drive, Anaheim, was reported dead at the scene, Linct1ln Avenue near Carol, by a coroner's deputy. Driver of the truck, Ronald L. Hooper, 22, of Whittier, was not cited. Officers said the accident is stiU under in- vestigation . According to witnesses, a young girl believed to be the victim's sister had left the traffic island and crossed the street safely. When the boy darted after his sister the truck driver tried desperately to stop but was unable to do so in time to avoid the accident, investigators said. DAILY PILOT ' .----- r All-y~ar School Squelching-~ By ·Nixon \ t--1'-'"'R,_eported • Gets Trustee OK , By TOM GORMAN Of .. 0Mf1 .... ~ AlJ.year Classes at Weatmoot and Crest Vlew schools in Huntington Beoch will continue for aoother year, Ocean View Scbool Dislrlct truteea decided Monday night. ''We have lhe potential ror designing a system that will save money and im- prove education met.hods," said n-tlstee Ralph Bauer in leading the unanimous vote. The decision to continue the pilot pro- gram, which began last July, was mark- ed v;ith very little discussion. Board President R. James Shaffer noted at the out3et of the meeting that the all-year issue has been discussed at board meetings since last December, and prohibited persons from the audience from speaking. Later he backed down from his stand after being reminded that it was board policy to allow ct1mmenta from the floor. Traffic, Parking Study Ordered For Capistrano Fears ol growing traffic and perking congestion in San Juan Capistrano's pic- turesque downtown business area prompt- ed city -councilmen Monday to or d e r an informal study of the situation. In an action stemming from recently approved plans for conveniiOri of the railway station into a major restaurant, - councilmen agreed to. seek "all the in. fonnatlon possible" on traffic and park· ing factors from p I a n n i n g com- missioners:. · The discussions Monday first centered on a situation predicted when the station restaurant opens. Parking being provided for patrons will be "inconvenient." One OOWJCilrnan suggested that despite available parking for the business, cars would use up curbside spots, instead. Altbough no formal planning survey has been conducted of the downtown situation, several informal study projects have taken place. "I would suggest !hat !he planning commissioo tr yto gather together all the information obtained in the studies," said Councilman James Weathers. ,. Only a lwldlul ol the abcM 100 ponnts preaent spoke In oppmlllm to the alJ.year Pf'OIP'Am· When the vole WU lllten !Diily of 1booe preJeOI i,iii.11ded. 'Ille board ......... to lllOdlf)' Ibo achedule at w~ Wlloc 'to bold clasaea there on 1 llD8I< cycle In which all students will attend cluaes at the same Ume Instead <l In staggered sessions. Children at crest View will cmtlnue' to meet in staggered seaslons, ln whk:h a quarter of the students will be on vaca- tion at all times. The schedule change at Westmont was ordered a f t e r a "vast majority'' of teachers and 57 percent of the parents in the Westmont area requested the sing~ cycle. . Trustees admitted that the single cycle program will not save classroom space, one of the ultimate goals of the all-year concept. "I hope Westmoot will look careluUy at staggered sesSiOD$ next year," said Superintendent James Carvell. ''That will be the ultimate space-saver. I see the single cycle as a transition.'.' At both schools classes will be 'held In 45-day sessions broken up with 15-day vacations. The all-year schedule received 62 per· cent support among parents in lhe Crest View area and 49 percent support from parents in the Westmont area, according to results of a poll released last week. Surveyed In !bat poll were parents who bi:d opposed all·year scbool and opted to tr&ru1fer their children to nearby 1ebool1 Iba! followed !he traditional calendar. In a poll of parents whose children re- mained in !he all·yelir ~. 811.3 per· cent. of the ·Crest View plteDtS and Ill.& percent of the Westmont parents sup- ported !he concept. In addition to parent support, trustees • were told that the increase in coetl of operating all-year s ~ h o o I s waa "minimal." Test results also indicated an educa- tional advantage to the all-year program, tn.stees were told in a 37-page report. "Crest View and Westmont primary level students showed dramatiC growth over their peers the previous year," the report stated. "Reading growth p1tterns held true in the upper grades as ...U, although not to the same degree as in primary." Teachers at both schools "overwbehning1y11 supported lbe all-year plan, the report stated. Ul"I TllWl!Oll INDIAN LEADERS ENTER COURTHOUSE FOR ARRAIGNMENT Carter Camp, L.eonard Crow Dog Face Staggering Bail Wounded Girl Can't Explain Mother's Death Fro1nPa9el INDIANS ... fireann as they discussed peace terms with leaders of the occupation. Frizzell said some 40 Indians gathered in the early morning by a church in the A 17-year~ld Garden Grove ~a girl village. H~ said they were either who was shot in the' head and hand im-permanent residents of Wounded Knee or mediately after her mother was shot and nonresidents who would be escorted from killed by the same assailant today told the reservalion or taken into custody. Orange Coonty Sheriff's officers she was According to a list prQvide4 Monday by at a loss to explain the attack. the Indians, the village contained 2.3 Investigators said Donna Marie Powers residents, 15 nonresidents and two insur- told them from her hospital bed that gents facing charges stemming from the Jackson Franklin Hickey was the man takover. At one time, some 300 pro- who entered their Dale Street home early testers were reported in the hamlet. 1.-tooday and opeoed fire on her and her Frizzell reported that the Indians' mother. arms were turned over to officials of the Officers said the girl, now listed as Community Relations Service of the doing well by Westminster Community Justice Department, as provided for in ·NEW YORK· (AP) -The New York 'llmel, quoting Watergate sources, said today that President Nixon twice Invoke<! nali>nal !lecUrity recently in lnitlaTI~ seeking to proven! rele.,. to the Peqi tap p1pen trial de\alls ol the burg!~ ol !he olllce of Daniel Ellsberg s psycblalriJl 1be 11mes aaid the first or the two allege<( 1!t{mpts jnyj>Jved a Justice Di- parlment memorandum linking two coll'- victed Watergate coosplrators to the break-in. 1be seaind involved a fo~r White House aide, Egil Krogh Jr. ~ The newspaper said the in!ormatlon in the first case was belatedly disclosed to the Los Angeles court after Asst. U.5. Atty. Henry E. Petersen, who headed tbt Watergate investigation, convinced Nixon to reverse himself. In the second case. the information was reportedly provided to the court at the insistence of Elliot L. Richardson, nominated to be attorney general. High White House officials called the reports that the President first opposea releasing the inf ormation "lr· responsible,.. the Times said. ne newspaper said the reports were pro- vided t y some of the principals, lawyer,:; and Justice Department officals. · In the first alleged case, Peterseri· reortedly was told at first by Presklenf Nixon not to release the memo, con- taining information said to have been disclosed by former White House counsel John W. Dean Ill on April LI, the ~ said. Petersen recognized ·the bearing of the information on Ellsberg's trial and liter took up the matter with the President1 who then agreed to forward it, according to the Times accolDlt. · On April 26, David Nissen, tht govern· ment prosecutor in the Ellsberg case; submitted the memo to U.S. Dlstric\ Court Judge Matty B~me, who lllade i~ • public the next day. , Bradley, Yorty Exchange Bitter Verbal TV Blows Hospital officials, told !hem that she bad !he agreement signed Sunday. The ci/i:, 'i!!~!YAP~d-M~~r~ quarreled with Hickey, 20, the previous government also pulled back armored .1v .-u1 evening but did not believe that the persomel carriers used to patrol the Yorty have opened their series of televis- minor spet could have sparked the ed clashes in the mayoral campaign by ahooti..... perimeter of the village. exchanging charges that each has con: .. 16• The occupation of Wounded Knee, nections with the underworld. Hickey ia being held In Orange County wbid> began Feb. Z1, served to call na· In an hour-long tek!caat over station Jall OD murder charges med in con-nection with his alleged slaying of ~ tlonal aUention to Indian complaints of KNXT Monday, the two strayed from Margaret Waterman, 40, and assault poor treatment by the government. Two larger issues to make personal attack!, charges filed in ~ection with the Indians were killed during the.sittge.i ·and which were often bitter. Food Dealers Chafing wounding of Miss Powers. two federal officials Were ·1r0unded, one The meeting, billed as a debate. tieated Investigators said Mrs. Waterman was seriously. up when Bradley criticized the mayor fci' .struck in the body and head by a number Frizzell said .abQut 4D Indians were driving With fonner sblger Phil Regan {o of shot.a fired from a small caliber hand believed to have esCaped the village visit San Diego financier John Alessio in weapon. The same gun was then used to Saturday night during a heavy rainstorm. a federal prison. : From Dent's Re-marks ~y L. PETER KRIEG 01 lh• IMIO,, l"llot Sllll Orange Coast food merchants seem to be growling more than glowing today in wake of -a recent rosy report on food prices from U.S. Secretary of Coinmerce Frederick B. Dent. Dent, during a press conference in Newp:irt Beach last week, declared that food prices have risen little more than four percent in the past year. A spot check wilh several · food rr.erchants, however, indicated that the businessmen figure Dent hasn't been down to his comer market reecently. "He's trying to make me look like a bandit.'' said Robert McNerny, owner of Robert's Olde Time Butcher Shoppe on 17th Street In Costa 1¥tesa. McNerny charged that the price ceiling on red meat established March 29 is a farce. "Prices were at a peak then,'' he sa id . "They were headed down. They've got enough of a cushion so they won't have to go up a cent for the next year. · "Everybody'll make out but the government will be able to turn around a year from now and say. 'See, meat prices haven't gone up the last 12 months.' " Ernie Camp, owner of Newport Produce in Newport Beach and Fran Delaney, owner of seafood restauranl;5 at Laguna Hills and Newport Beach , .Joined in criticism of Secretary Deni's claims. "Produce is up well over 10 percent," Camp said, "some things like onions and lettuce have more than doubled. "I ~aid $3.75 for a 50-pou nd bag or onions lasi year. I went up to the wholesale market this morning and paid $24 a bag," Camp said. "Some things, lik e carrots, have stayed the same, or even gone down, but the About 15 others slipped lhrough federal R g · rece· ntly -nvicted f br'"' wound Miss Powers. e an was ....... o 11>-others more than outweigh those," be Officers hope to arraign Hickey on the lines Sunday, he said. ing a public official in a Santa Barbara said. charges later today in Santa Ana zoning case and Alessio, a millionaire A couple of merchants, like Bob Municipal Court. He is held in county jail and former racetrack and gambling Bersch, manager of Albertson's ~1arket with bail denied. figure, is serving a tenn for tax evasion. in IA~ Beach, took a dUferent tact TOPLESS OKAY-Bradley said Alessio ia "one of !he when asked for comment. kingpins of organir.ed crime." "Food takes only 15.7 percent of !he Dedication Slated AT A DISTANCE Yorty admitted making !he trip to income today, compared with 23 percent Lompoc, and .said: 2 Oyears ago," Bersch said. "If you know people and they get ln But a check of food store ad· For Capo Bike Trail SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Topless and trouble, you just don't kick !hem. I bav~ vertisemenls in the Dally Pilot last sum-bottomless waitresses would be banned no association in politics with people mer, compared With those last week, A bicycle trail ~ntly completed by in San Francisco night clubs and bars un-identified in crime." tells a high-priced tale. the city of San Juan Capistrano along Del der a law proposed by supervisor John Yorty then charged that Bradley would Albertson's, Safeway Stores, Lucky Obi spo Road will be dedicated in Barbagelata. be influenced by Merv AdelSUI and Irwin h l llln I(). He asked Monday for a public hearing M I ky Ith N d ·-'""" Markets and t e res were se g a ceremonies May 18 at 10 a.m. o as 1 men w eva I £a.uwi.uig d b f ta f .. ts 1 on the proposed Jaw, which he said is eel' bo lo ned ••• lllO to !he poun ag o po toes or o111 cen n The new trail, installed along the 1 conn ions w a .-; be similar to measures ,approved recent Y B di · The ·~• .. ti b August and Septem r. shoulder of the highway, bgins at the city ra ey campaign. conLCHJU on as They were on sale for twice that last limits on the westerly portion of Del by the courts. been returned, Bradley said. " k It would permit topless or bottomless y ·d th t ~lbut •-wee · Obi.spo north of Marco Forster Junior · orly sa1 e wo conu ors are ur G d AA I t f 39 1A exposure only by entertamers on stages 1 ed · h Las y bl · -ra c arge eggs wen or ceni..:. High c.o_.AAI. Ceremonies will be held at vo v wit egas gam ers m - d · Alph Beta d ertl t ""'"'rw at least six feet from patrons. a ozen m one a a v semen that location, city aides announced. corporations. eight months back. La9t week's ads had ....::.===::::.:.::.:_:::::_::_:::.::.:.::::._ _______________________________ ~ them running between 65 and 75 cents a dozen. Bact1n was 72 cent.a a pound last August. It's a bargain at 98 cents today. McNemy charges $1.39 for top-grade bacon now. One store advertised a pound loaf of bread for 19 cents in August. The lowest price in any Wednesday ad was 39 cents a loat Chicken has only jumped from 35 to 45 cents a pound for a whole fryer. Dent, in his press conference, had laid the blame for all this to a rise in the d~ mand by the consumer, saying he wanted to improve'his diet. That's so much horseradish, according to Delaney, Camp and McNerny. Butcher McNermy blames the administration. McNemy said he's been writing to the federal price commission for more than a year now. WHO'S BEHIND YOU? ' How much do guarantees mean? It depends on the item involved ind the manufacturer. A $I 00,000 house is guaranteed for ONE year. Most automobiles are guaranteed from 30 days to one year. Most electrical products are guaranteed from 90 days to one year. Guarantees on carpeting are complicated. The rule in t'1e industr'f. Is TWO YEARS for manufacturing d e f e ct s. The feeling is that manufacturing defects will surface within that two year period. Beyond this, these manufacturers feel there are too. many variables in the usage to give coverage beyond that period. Seareh Ends Don't be misled by "Phoney" guarantees. They art pro roted, based on miH·invoice costs, plus podding and labor to chenge. By the time you figure them up, it usually costs more to change than the original purchase price: , Carpel manufacturers teH us that,.; preponderance of complaints 'is not because .of defects but because of improper instonotion. We minimixe !lie number of complaints by having tile b~st insta"ers around. Also, we deal only with more substantial mills, further reducing problems. Buying from Alden's will give you tho grutest security. Dad Abarulo1is Quest for Coed ST. CLAIR SHORES, Mich. (AP) -Aller two weeks of haunting student hangouts, talking with youths and tracking down tips in California, John C. Jonas returned ho1™1 and abandoned bis <earch for his oldest daughter. . Jonas went to San Diego April 28 eight days after 22·year-<>ld Mary Diane Jonas disappeared while hitchhiking lrom bu apartment to UC Sin Diego. He said San Diego authorities reached a dead-end in their in· vestlgaUon of his daughter's disappearance. Jonas ~ a $500 re· ward for information about ht. daughter last week: But only two calls resulted and neither provided worthwhile Jnlormation. · Dorothy Jonas said she has knoWll since the 9eal'Cb began that the oldest of their lour children probably Is dead . "The walling i. the worst part. I Just hope the end came quickly for her," she said. - • .. r, .. '· ;11 . 11 , !111 1 . s rn r.::;:; t:'.,· I~~~~, ~''Jlll i.- ' ·' _<il ·,l. -·--' ' '-·......;.-,..,. -~ ~ -·~ --:---........ T" • .. COSUllBA llNCI 1117 ... . ·~-...-......-::::; ,'t" ~ .. o.;r·"""I-. ALDEN'S CARPETS $ DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 M ... • 'l1llrs. t to S:JO: M. t to t ; hf, t:JD to I . ' ' I I I ~ ' ' " • .: " • • i • . . • • , . ·.1 . .. ...... .. ... • • • t ' .. , ·I "' I of' .. , .. .· '~ ... - ' .. .. ~: . ' . ... .. ,, r,' • ' , .. ,. ... · . " ,. .. •' . . . . ' . . .•11 •\··~ ... ' ·• ' . ., .,._ . . . ••• ' . .'' . 'j • . I . .. ' . ' l -. ' ,. !;. .... r.t• , ' . '. ., • TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS ABC D 6:30 -"The FBI Story." James Stewart plays a "typical" FBI agent in this documentary- clrama with Vera Miles and Nick Adams. 0 • ~ NBC D 10:00-America. Contemporary problems .; '. If wilith threaten to alter some of the !~sting tratu • ~ of the Amencan way of life are exannned by Ali· · • stair Cooke. ... KCOP m 11 :00 -"The Bachelor Party." Don Murray, E. G. Marshall and Patricia Smith head the csst of this 1957 comedy. CBS D 11:30 -"How to Murder Your Wife." Jack Lemmon os a do-it-yoursel! cartoonist and -· Vlrna 'Lisi as the luscious blonde he wed& by mis- take in this 1965 comedy with Terry-Thomaa steal· ing the show as Lemmon's valet. ~ . . " .. ,. . •... ... " .-.. .. ' .. ·~·"" .. , "' ... ,. .,, .~! + ... " . . .. , . .. , . . , . . . " ' ... .. ., . " .... .. . · . " ' " •o ., ••. I• • • ' . ' ' .t· ' -" ' .. ... KTTV m 12:30 -"The Girl in White." June Allyson as a lady doctor in a I 952 drama with Gary Merrill. TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening MAYB l:GOBO!ml!D!!lNns rn~-a lee Hochy Stlnley C., rt.,ofh Conlinutd ffGITI SPM. Tent1llYtl)' schedultd. e &oa•Rll @ &ti Smtrt a .,.w u..1 °' A11w m Thi FllntdoMs ID Sbr Trtk QJ Ml Oulel EnalllOradt fm XCET Alldloa '7l Items schtd· ultd tonlfht, more trt ind 1ntiqu11, lndudina 1n ori1inal Rod in 1eulp·1 !are plus 1 C.rfbtaan cruls•. mn,... Sttoiu o rnrn m ... r.--<C> (9~ .. H•,..._" (R) (Wtt) '12 -CUnt Wi lker, Stelanlt Powtrs, Alu Klrr11. A soldler of fortune at tti1 tum of th• century Is determllltd to ltftfn Whal 11 his 11t11 Ill retum1 to Ttxas to !ind< his rancll IOld 1nd his wife 111ne, m Mm lr1tffl Slit'# ll:)Stllllll Up 1N CllM m- 1,1,IT ...... ' 'Carbo' the walking, talking robot developed bf. General Eleetric's Carboloy Syste!lll Departmen , conducted a sidewalk news conference Mond•y be- fore walking into Cobo Hall to participate in the Society of Manufacturing Engineers !Show in De- troit. Chftnge Food Habits To Keep Costs Down DALLAS, Tex. (AP) -The long-term trend in food prices will be upward and the only way to lower the bill Is to change the famlly's eating habits, delegates to the Super Market lnstltute's 36th annual convention were told Monday. American consumer "what ap- pears to be an Inevitable trend In 100<1 prices and the basic reasons tor it." "It I! misleading to .,.. courage an expectation ol a return to the lower food prices, relative to lncome, that prevailed during molt of the postwar years," Coote said. Gillf(tte Took Ad Gamble-Won By D~AN C. MIU.ER U'lllf ...... Mtw NEW YORK -The Gillette C:0'"DMY say5 it has cut down shaving competition by aiming IL! promoUon at mal' related sports events . Of the 1Q millloo U.S. adults who shn ve, 74 percent use wet rather than f'lectric shaves. according to Willlam G . Salallch, president ol Gillette North America, Boston. Gillet· te handles only blade shaving equipment in North America. FIFTEEN YEARS ago ii looked as if lhe blade sha ving companies were as dead as last year's Christmas tree. One out of three Americans had switched from blades to electric shavers. "But our emphasis on sports, which attracted male viewing and listening, and im· proved wet shaving sy5tems such as stainless blades hu cut the margin back to 26 per· cent," Salatich said . "And we 're lmproving every year." The story of how Gillette turned to sports to sell Its prod· utl! reveals the astounding rate of inflation over the last 35 years as well as the secrets of selling a product. FIGURING IT had to appeal to men. Gillette decided to sponsor the New York Yankee- Cincinnatl Reds world series of 1939. It was a gutsy gamble. Gillette had to put up about one • fifth ol Us total annual 11.3 million advertising budget for that series. · Compared to today's cost of $10 mllllon to $12 million fer a &ertea the 1939 outlay wu an advertising steal. It came to tI00,000 for ~ percent radio rtghis and another •100,000 for talent ·and other c o s t s . Television was not a factor In thooe days . The gamble paid oil. "Our 1939 sales in that MSI Data Tells Saws • TutJ<l'f, Mq B, 197J DAILY PILOT JI OVER THE COUNTER NASO Ll1tl"91 for Monct.y, Moy 7, 1973 • ,,r \ M DAILY 1'11,0T SC Standard to Ration. ' ' ~Gasoline in SnID.mer • SAN~FRANCISCO (A:P) - Standard Oii CO. of Callloml• has 11.nnounced plans to ration r ·guollne to ll• 2t,OOO service ~ 11tations across the nation in '. . an effort fO meet anticipated · heavy fuel demands this sum- . mer. ' Althouih 10n>e neighborhood ;... service stations may bave to ~· Umit the number of gallons .... sold to a customer 1 gu , ~Uverles would not drop : below last year's sales volume • of some 15.S million gallons 'per day, a company • spokesman said Monday. "· "THIS IS A preventive •• measure more than anything," • the spokesman said. "Our in- ·: ventories are lower than last year at this Ume and there 's • always e. marked increase in g8!0llne consumption during the summer.'' Limited dpmestlc refining capaclUeir, s h o r t a g e s in natural gas supplies last winter, reduced g a so 11 n e mileage of new cars, and Ha general speed-up in t h e economy" have "severely" . drained inventories, t h e ;" spokesman said. • TEXACO, MOBIL and Shell Oil <!ompanies also have an- ' nouneed s.imiliar ratkming . plans, he said. Standard has : · 5,600 stations in California • with most of the rest in .~ WeStern and Southern states. ~ Standard also said that to increase available gas supplies. " it will slightly lower octane .; r atings - a measurement of ~ antiknock qualities -in iti supreme and regular grades. ~ But the change should have : onJy a minor effect on engine : performance, it adcfed. ' ! Gasoline will be distributed .-to customers on an equitable basis, the spokesman said. Z Finns relying on petroleum :-. products for business purposes :: will have a higher priority thot yours moy not ! 1 COMPLm OIANQ.I COUNTY COYIU•I lllcl-""t: Lot... IMctl s. c.....,_, MllM .. YMI• o-P•i.t, • well • L IHd eM .. It of L.A. MONTH TO MONTH llNTAL IASIS NO DIPOSIT ll9UlllD ON APPlOYID CllDIT 4 ONLY $17.00 Pll MONT TOTAL COST I •flllfllttetl '°'") 5 NIW COMPACT UNIT SIZI lf l/4 1 4s 1/2J YOICI MBSA•I PAGollS ALSO All AVAIL.AILI 7 FULL Fi ii MAINTI NANC than ~·the casual reCreational driver," be said. ST~NPARI) VRGEP motorists to conserve gatoHne by reducing speed>, avoiding la&t atarts Al)d elimillatlng un· neceaaary short trips. Meanwhile, Shell Oil Co. blame.s tight gasoline supplies ror the 50.ptrctnt prlce hike ln Its contract with Los Angelea County. ' ' . In a t.lesram . to COWJty supervl:!on Mond.-y, Frank Staub, Shell vl<6 pr<sldeiit Jor markeUni,~ saSd: '1Glven our tight supply · lliluatlon, we would lllve pmemd not to bid on this cmitract. Had we chosen 1D mlXln>JU profits, we would . have 10!d tltls pn>duct !or more -1 elsewbett." Shopping center Threats Revealed A, ,IMte 'SQUEAKfNG THROU,GH' Exo1dvlttr Heller Economist's Outlook Optimi stic A foriner economlc adviser to two presidents says there will be economic turbulence ahead but that America "will .~ueak through ils ~current boom without a bust." · The prediction came Mon- day from Walter W. Heller, former chief economic adviser to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, and now regents' professor of economics at the University of 'Minnesota . Heller, speaking at the an· nual convention of the lntema· tional Council of Shopping Centers, in Anaheim, said "Phase Ill is beginning to shape up" lo a point where the nation won't see runaway in. nation. "LABOR l\fAY NOT have as much blood in its eye as we had thought," he said. "Money will tighten, but if wage set- tlement! come in at 61h: to 7 percent, t h e n the Federal Reserve Bank can hold back a capital goods boom.1' Environmental regulations 1n4 proposed changes tn federal income tax laws are the most serious problems facing the shopping center in- dustry in the near future, say officials of the International Council of Shopping Centers. ''lf it took you two to three years to develop your last center, you can expect' it to lake four lo six years for your next center," Executive Vice President Albert Sussman told the council 's annual con- ference Monday in Anaheim. ABOUT S,000 shop ping center developers, architects, financers, retailers and otherS" are attending the four-day conference wh ich began Sun- day. New federa l and 1 o ca I regulations on zoning and en· vironmenta l protection, he ad· ded, will add "anywhere from 15 to 25 perceAt in con· struction costs to your next center -that is, if you can get permission to build it at all." Sussman and President Ken· neth Tucker said the ICSC has begun to act as a lobbying organization and is monitoring federal land use legislation. "SHOPPING C E NT E R S have an impact on our way or life and environment," said Tucker. "But I seriously ques· lion whether this impact· is as harmful as many zealots would have :the · public and government believe ." ln fact;' he contended, sho~ ping cenler developers have brought "orderly and planned g r o w t h to retailing in thousands of communities that would otherwise have been traffic · choked, blighted and slum·ridden ." Four Major Banks Hike Prime Rate SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - Prime interest rates were raised from 6o/4 percent to 7 percent Monday by the Bank PRIVATE TRUST of Amenca, the w or 1 d • s FUNDS AVAILABLE largest commercial bank, and FOR REAL ESTATE LOANS three other major California ' FINANCE • OR~NClE COUN'TY RADIOTELl PHONE SERVICE 11t1· lilt I. 2~ TRUST DEEDS banks . . , s1,500 To 12so.ooo The others were Wells 714 • IJ5•J301 UP TO IO'lro LOANS ON r. WI lO. SANTA ,E, SANTA AHA TRUST OEEO COl.t.ATERAl r argo. Crocker and the rem 1..-sun• •Heh, Ml••lfn Viti•· NI WP>OltT EQUITY FUNDS Security Pacific Na ti 0 n a I 0.111 ,..,1, S•• Clemt111e, S111 Jiit N1wpon C.nler Bank. 1pfttr•n0, El Ttr9, till toll l 120 Ntwport C.nltr Orlw f~~~~~·~·~··~l~U~l~~~~~~~·~·;-~~"~K~'·~·~·~HI~. <~"~'~"~'~' :'12:•~1 Alajor bank! have increased prime interest rates charged large corporate borrowers by :.~ 1 0 0 0 § ~:~r. percent in less than a ,. . . l ·' • . ' r , The upward mo ve ment ORDER .usually in on ·. quarter perceni B t•f I increments, began in June, ' eau ( u <972. when the prime rat. Stick-on stood at 5 percent. The latest increase follows YOURS \ LABELS similar move last wee!\ by two New York banks 3nd the Bank of California. TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Youraelf or a Friend Mey b• us•d on envelopes es refurn address 11.bels . "Also very hendy •s identification labels for merkil)9 person•! items such *' ~ooks, records, photos, •tc. labels stick on glass and may be used for marking hom• ~nntd focd items. All Jab•ls are printed with stylish Vogue type on f int quality whit .. gummed p•p•r. • Female Priorities Eyed NEW YORK (UPI)·-The formation of a bank , speciahzing in helping women financially wu tl>6 • nounced Monday by a group that includes fe~ Betty Friedan. "We promise special services to women In banking, lncludin¥ opportunities Jn employment and management/ rueen Preiss, vice chairwoman 0£ the state Democratic committee and coordln1tor of th e banking group, said . • . . . . . ' . .... . ; . . ....... •' "' OAllY PILOT T_,, Mil 8, 1973 AMBLER TUMBLEWEEDS WHY, l1'S 1llf Llm.E INPIAN WHO CAITT 1)\U(! AND HE'S Slfn~ ON II( ~·~i · MUTT & JEFF THE eoss DION.,. LOOK 11'0HAPPY WHEN HE CAME IN! FIGMENTS 1"1:1.1\o-... r.; ..... NANCY -SOTHE FIRSTPARTNER SAIDTOTHE SECOND PARTNER, •ARe """1 MAKING LOVE TO. THE SECRETARY'?" j; ..•. SCRIBBLE SC~'&&.E by Jom K. Ryan •• liy Al Smith by Dole Hale by Ernie Bushmiller ~----~------------.,.--, r-::::==:::;:--, .---..:....------~--,-----.• HEY, DON'T FORGET •vsN"'f1UA1C.. I OUR AGREEMENT TO " SHARE EVERYTHING-'\'' I RATE HALF OF THAT. LOLLIPOP TODAY'S CBDSSIDBD PUZZLE ACROSS 42 "But who wiU 1 LeQislature's produce 5 Vegetable dish 9 Herdw11e iu1m1 14 New Z11iand tree 15 African republic" 18 Till 17 Down-Under bird:V1r. -----·----7" 44 Pewter coin 45 Click beetll!I 46 Hibe1ni1 47 Klrld of gulf 49 Fruit 53 Mentioned earlier 57 G-olf course piece 58 "The sky's the··---" S9 Soothing substance 18 "I agree" 61 Hou19 part 19 Boa 62 Fe minine 20 Canvas name structures 63 C11t 22 Put the heal &4 Occupation:' on Sullix 24 Famlnlne 65 Occurring n1m.. within 26 Sti-Uctur•I 66 Equivalent 1teel item · 67 Fir: Preftx 27 Show sorrow ' DOWN 29 Scul1et's ·~ ..... neceuity 1 Tetti _ ----- 30 Transport•-' 2 Arrives tion medi1: 3 Ont1tlo river Abbr. 4 Ariz.on•. 33 Hydroplann: Tew•s. etc. 2 wqr~1 .5 W1e: Scot. 37 Stain . 6 Light 38 Dupe: _ generating Inform•! device 39 M.r._C1r10n 7 W~rnlng of 40 Steps for 1nack · f9nca .callng 8 Gl11s 41 Neg•tlv• corit•ln•r: 2 phr1M: Dist words Yesterday's Puzzle Solved; 9 light c1v1lry 35 Healing horsem1n veHel 10 Per--36 Be alck in bed 37 Hardest 11 Headliner 40 Small piece 12 Fish . 42 Marlhe1 13 tee vehicle 43 Dicileni 21 Squil~ -char•cter 23 Water bodies · 45 c-,lorie -~ Con!ederate· countlf •oldier: 47 Salty stuff Info~•! -~ 48 Kind of 28 Stre1ghts: crown. 2 words 50 Egg-shaped JO Narfative 51 Kind of book poem 52 Solid: Prefix 31 "Wh1tever ·53 H,waHan .---w,nts" rofthy 32 Proofre1der·1 54 ~:dvlat word , 65 Pr11111ge 33 Ou•rrel 5& Waight unit 34 Couple ' 60 Coior . . . ..• PEANUTS = •-• --'--LO•VE·- JUDGE PARKER DO "YOU KNOW eET&Y'S ExtRfMELY · THE MAH IN TALENTED, JUDGE! ONE WHOM SHE'S OF THE NETWORKS WANTS CURREl(fLY HER FOR AN ll'ITER.V1EW INTERESTED? SHQW ! eur IH M~Y OTHER WAYS, 5H~5 VERY IMMAlURf! I i I I • MISS ·PEACH ' . l~l DICK TRA'CY . ) .. • • DOOLE~'S WO,IUJ> • "t>tJ M1iN4 ll41S OUY JAQC. ll>&Sl>D A 8CAM OUT 1'M' 'W1NDOW' ~D 1lflrNEYT MOQHIHU ™'iR5: WAS A 8'.ANSTAL.K 6RDWIN' WAY UP 1b TM~ SKY ? SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS "fUll. •• tr SAVS SQ RoOHf "'"'" by Charlie M. Schub i:;=::;:;i!!l'.:;'.=:;::;:;::i MENTION LO\'E 10 A /llJSICWI, ANO 'iW £fT ~ OUTl by Harold Le Doux MEANWHILE ... 5AM, 1 LIED TO YOU AeOl.IT WHY I CAME HERE! THE REAl. REASON W/16 .~.TO SEE VOU! YOU'VE eeEN ON MY MIND CONSTANTLY SINCE I LEFT 51~ YEARS Af>OI by Mell by Roger ltadfi,W ri"';YA;;-;GU;;;";;;A:-;B&;;-"n IODDIN' 1 µ(NI OJULO Mli DO tw«? ·I by Gus Arriola ·=-=' ·· ............ . ' ' . . - 'HE LOOKS LIKC CJ:ME~ IN A ~ TAAT NE.COS TO TAJ(E sowmlfNG •• I J J ' • j • l ~ l I ; • : "Blue Chip Rally Aids Stock Rise , • { . _..,. . ·, • DAILY PJLoT JJ > > • • 17 [ I • Lag1111a Beaeh EDITrON VOL. 66, NO. 128, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL!fORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1973 TEN CENTS • I Sycamore Hills Wins Top Open Spac~ Acclaim ~ Sc<nic, _geploQic a n_d natural vegeta· lion factor~ maXe Sycamore Hills one of the most desirable open space areas within Laguna lleacb, planning com- missioners learned Monday night . Other areas pinpointed as having desirable open space qualities included portions Or Laguna Canyon, the rldg"e line between Top of the World and Arch· Beach Heigllts and BluebiJU Cll!\YOD- Tbe findings were made by Tom Howard, a city planner now forinulating . Lquna'a formal open spcH;e element-of within the city. • - the General Plan. ,1be element, along proposed 2,000-unit residenuakomlnol' with an acllon Jlt08l'llll to implement i~ cial development for the m acre mllllobe adopled "Y'June 30o -~yc:amore Hlllo-•--ll.boJac.proo-Howar1! showod the c0mmisslon two essed by the p11nn!ng deparlmnet, with dozen maps wliicb analyted open space a hearing on the developnieDI roquest f:rmn the standpoint of s c en i c value, scheduled for Monday nigbt. geologic stability, natural vegetation, There was no immediate tndictUon wildlife and recreation. how the open space survey would affect The various criteria taken together the development JRpou.l which calll for show Sycamore Hills at the forefront of leaving 72 ~t of tbi site as open the list of desirable open space areas space. Howard ~tiller, vice preS!de.nt of Newport lmvestments, backers of the project, did not comment on the open space findings , though he wa. present at the meeting. More vocal was James W. Dilley, president of the Laguna Greenbelt, Inc. "I would oote that Sycamore Hills has so many overlays," said Dilley. "It is ax· iomaUc that it beoome part of our open spoce. "I wish Newport lnve!ltments would donate the land to the Lagllna Greenbelt, whk:h could convey the lands to the ci- ty," added Dilley_ He said he would be happy to talk the matter over with Newport Investments officials "at any time." · Planners bad little comment on the status report, but did schedule a meeting for 1. p.m. May 18 to work out a priority listing for standards used to evaluate open space. Responding to a question from Com· eace oun f:oastal Warning . -' Legal Pressures · Threaten Panel· By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of .... O.llY "'"" ls.ti An Orange County conservation group Monday threatened South Coast Regional C o as t a I Conservation Commissioners with legal· pressure forcing them to re- quire environmental impa;:t reports before any more penni~ are issued. Dale Secord, chairman of the Project Evaluation' and Plannlng Committee of the Environmental Coa1ition ·of Oranie County, told commllaioners at u.ilr meeting In Long BeoCb that the llndlllla Bike-· Rider • Badly Hurt In Laguna A Laguna Beach bicyclist suffered a broken back and possible paralysis Mon· day evening when he was struck by a car 'that a witness said ran through a stop 1ign. Scott Seeman, 19, of 1796 Glenneyre St .. ls in the intensive care unit at Mission Community Hospllal today. Police said the car was driven by Lucille Joselfini, 21, of Arcadia. A witneas estimated It was only traveling about 15 miles per hour. Police are still Investigating. She was not held- The accident occurred about 6:15 p.m. al the juncture of Broadway and Forest Avenue. Police said Seeman, wbo worked for a concrete contractor, was headed toward the ocean on Broadway and was rriaking a left turn onto Forest when be was struck. He was taken frrst to South Coast Com- munity Hospital, a relative said, but transferred wbeo no neurosurgeon could he located. 2 County Y auths ' Still in Jail Af te r Big Braiv l Special to tbe Dally Pilot ENSENAOA, Mex_ -Two Orange County youths remain in custody here to- day alter a Cinco de Mayo brawl erputed on downtown streets in which 190 persons were arreeted. Orange CounUans a w a i t I n g a~ pearances before a magistrate \ft:re Identified by Mexlcon au1hor!Ueo u -Lindsey L. Greene, IS. of -Seal Beacll and Cate 0. Darnall, 21, of Garden Gtove- Greene Js accuaed of deolraylng a policeman's uniform. Daniall, aloDg with 'l'homas F. Pblllips, Z3, of Amarillo, Tex,, ire charged with hitting an officer ID the lace with a beer bottle. One Mexican attorney described the meJee as a uRoman orgy" with brawlers throwing cl>eny bombs and nrecracl:en. Fighting broke out while an estimated 4,000 persons were vlaltlng Enaenada for Cinco de Mayo celebrations ind the end of the annual Newport Beach to Enaenada yacht race. H._., Bar and Hotel Bahia were heavily dlmaged by thrown bottles and ,,other 11 ... 1. Fifty penona were report<d lnlured. I 'l'lle ottomey, Enrique Villa!TUI, Aid 18W llBAWL, Pip I) of the commission staff are inadequate. Secord said the staft-recommendailons on permit applications are, "either based on a subjective assessment or on an in- adequate and non-independent analysis of environmental impacts." Secord's warning and evaluation of current permit procedures was his sec- ond in a week. After the first presen· talion, . Conunlaaion Cbalrman Robert Rooney of Huntington Beach asked fOr a Slate Attorney General nnlnlnn on EIR requiremmla. jl ··- Secord contends that the primary duty ol the commission established by Proposition 20 is to preserve the en- vironment of the 1,000..yard-wide coastal strip_ "Regional ••• commissioners are re. quired by law to deny a permit for a proj- ect which w o u I d cause a significant adverse impact," Secord said. The only way to determine such an im- pact is to require a final Em on every project approve by an ~dent local agen~. he said. Secord was critical of the commission for granting pemUts io SOme-prOjectS- with either draft EIRs or with no EIR at an depending upon replirements of the local agency granting building permits_ In. a written communlcaUoo to the commission, Secord was atso hi&hty critical of builders and developers who he said are applying for permits under false pretenses. He said that local agencies now ac- cepting a final EIR only Judge its ade- quacy and not whether or not there is any adverse impact. "The actions of most developers presenting their applications for a permit befOre this commission has been a sham. These people have the audacity to deliberately mislead this cormni!slon," be said. Though conunlssloners tabled several permits anil killed a few others for reasons other than missing EIRs, they did approve a number of permits that were not roquired by local agencies to prepare an EIR. _ These included two restaurantl on Del Prado Stree\ Jn Oona Poln~ a ·two-story medical office building ln San Clemente, two multi-unit apartment buildings in San Pedro and a 30 mJJlion gallon sewage treabnent plant on Terminal Island. Orange County .Supervisor Ronald Caspers said the two Dana Point Restaurants, pan of an overall master pl!").for the harbor, were not required by the county to have an Em. C&spers, ooe of the Orange Cotmty members of the coastal commission, ar· rived late for the meeting and did not return after the meeting's dinner break ate P:.m. Soci.al Security Calls Now .Free Residents of south Orange County now may call the Social Security Administration's SMta Ana office toll free , Wallace S. Ford, district manager. has announced. Persons wishing to call the ad- mlnJslration should dial t he telephone operator and ask for Zenith uooo. Tbe new service applies to residents ol Cipistrano Beacfi, Dana Point, Laguna N 11 u e I , Mluion Vlejo, San Clemente, San Juan Clplllrano, Laguna Beach and Scutb LaJuna. 1st Revrew Of Budget Schedu'led 1be first review session for the 197J.74 budget for the city of La8una Beach will be at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the city hall chambers. "We hope that the city council will give us a dollar amount or guideline to go by," Tom Meade, acting city finance director, said. "We hope to ask questions of people who can give us answers and begin de~ ._, .. l'riol'itie!,'' ~)'OP Charlton Boyd safd_ ,,,. c111 ·-wl!l -'!\ioet -~ plnbtha l(lli11n' 'aa..:md 11Hlllhlli Of the dlJae!ls' ~ei planning committee. Last year's i.idgel tolalled ap- proximately $5,600,000. This ye a r • s budget Is expected to be IJiiber, but which department will get ln=ases and which projects will lake priority is a question mark. Meade said city departmental sub- missfOD! are oot yet complete. 1be first preliminary budget presentation will be the first or second week in June. • • UPI T ....... One decision which will flave to be made for the next year is what to do with the revenue sharing funds coming to the oity m ttiefli!f year ol ilieleaer&r pro. graril. INDIAN 'LEADERS ENTER COURTHoUSE FOR ARRAIGNMENT C•rt•r Camp, Leonard Cro"! DdJ Fi ce St~in_(Ball . -Approximately $1211,000 has come to the city so far for next year, with a total of $500,000 dllt!_ "What do we need most and where will we get the money?" Boyd said. ''These are the decisions we hope the public will help us mate." Newpo.rt, .Mesa,.10ffiei~ . . . . . Above all, Boyd said, the budget study sessions need one outcome: a ceiling on expenditnres for the coming year_ Back Teaching· Hospital From there, It can be decided who gets what Eight to ten priority Items will be determined, Boyd predicted. Some of those may be more space for the police department, addiUonal fire department equipment, and additional funding for Main lleacb Park and olbOr oj>en space areas. By GEORGE LIEDAL Of 11'11 OallY Piiot 11.rf Councilmen in both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa endorsed the proposed UC lrvlne-Ollifornla College of Medicine orr campus teaching hospital Monday night. Bolstered by official ·support from Hoag Memorial Hospital d i r e c t o rs , Newport Beach councilmen adopted the resolution of support on a 6 to 1 vote. Thieves Pillage 4 Laguna Beach Doctors' Offices • ..Councilman Paul Ryckofl opposed the resolution, citing his fears that the hospital would encourage continued growth of the Harbor Area_ A series ol burglaries In Laguna Beach, early Monday Jell lour docton' offices in disarray but few items were reported mlaalng. FoDoW!ng a presentatinn by UCI-CCM acting dean Stanley van den Noori, Costa Mesa:clty councilmen unanimously.voted . to aupPort .the university's vlew that the $38 million of statewide health sciences bond money allocated to the UCI medical ischool should be spent here. Resolutions adopted by both cities, and virtually every other city in Orange County, note that voters who last fall overwbelmingly supported the $155.9 million UC bond issue, believed the money . would Improve medical ....... lion at UC! and would-be ipenl to buJJd and OIH:ampus teachjng•hoopltal and the school's first pe~aneat. ·dl.s.lfoom and laboratory buildings~ - Recently, the Al!embly Waya and Means committee has been CCIOlldming the UC Budget which lncludel a partial allocation -17 million of the lolal '1J million -to begin ~Clfol\ nn ~ _ pus or_ tKe bas)c -~1 ~ building. Another lll00.000 budrel'ltem to plan a teaching hospital la ii..-before that commiUee. Finally, the flacally-powerful Wlfl and Means subcommittee aJa:.. 11 ·m~ a bill by Asaemblyman_&iiert Badham (R- Newporl lleach) to aJlocala I~ mJDJon lor teaching hospital COllllruct1\'D In Orange County, this year. 'J'he bill matches one by State sen. Dennts E. Carpenter Introduced In the ·senate. Each measure, however, along with the UC budlet provisions depend on the (See HOSPITAL, Page ti Police said the burglar pried open a door oo a balcony ! .. ding to three offices at DJ Part Ave. Or. 1bomas Judy, a denlilt; Dr. Eugene Levin ; and Dr. Ronald May discovered open drawers and acattered papen when they an'ived at their offices_ Open to Who111? Down the street al 265 Lquna Ave., Dr. Ronald'llopei found -similar ..idence ol a break-In. · Laguna Space Plan Probed AD the -s said no narqollcs wero tepl .., the -"-and rep!J'lad amall chan&e lea than $10 WU miJllng. "<>I all the aaloable items In our office, Including gold for dental work, nothing was liken,. not even a syringe." a IOCl'tltry for Dr. Judy aald. Juot bow open II open space! 'l'blt'a the question Marl: Gumblner, chalrman or tt>e political actk>n com· mlttee of the Laguna Beach Board ol Realton, prtsented to the planning com- mhllon Monday night. Two uample!:, Tie said, are the pr• Libya li'~l o Yank JIOled development of Sycamore 111111 in .....,.F'"' Laguna C'anyon and the Machu Pi<:cbu W~ (Ai>.) _ 1be Ubyan ~ Ift~~s~\~d above goveim-aPeiled American di= Newport investment olliclal•, backing Clladeo 'E. M'artbinten, State Iha S,....... llilla project, bave stated inenl otllciaJa Aid today. They 72 percent ol the 522 acrea wlll be re- to dltcl,.. Immediately the -wlly lalned, u open spaoe. Creative Com· Martbinlen -declared -DOii Jllllllilla, , Jnc_, lfJOI'* of Madw Pic- grlla by Ibo UllJan Preskllnl llulmmlJ' ....... ~ 10 pe«enl'open -· kbadall. '1I tbele deYelopers-keep tbelr unused land In open space will It be opon, _to whom?'' Gumblner asked in a lengthy letter to the commission. Anawerlng the qu .. uon, he alates: "It wlll reJnaln Inaccessible to the public and If left In 1CTUb, with no traila, even ta the residenll of the proJed. "It will be privately owned In un- -divided interest by the ownera ln, the project, and he 1n ...... 1ble to other • residentl of the comm\mity.'' be •CCJnr ilnued. • Gurnblner urged the elty .lo qtabilah a 111111 J)Oiicy regarding the acceplance of land. John Mcoow.11. plw: ...,. rnlaaJcm chairman, said aldt a Icy u· lots ID . the land 111t-elemeat Ille Gen- (Ilea SP ACE. Pip II ., miuioner Larry Ccnpbell, 'II 11 n e Moody, direclo< ol pl1nnJng and develop- ment sakl I...quna's open space plan "will be a fa1tly good maid>" with a similar plan being hammerec;l out by the Orange County Planning Department Moody said Laguna's plan -based on open space and C011SerV1tlon goa Is prepared by a cttltens' committee -will include a shopping list ol lands to be purchased and a list of lands to bl preserved lhrou&h IOlling. nee 70-day-Stay At .Hanllet WOUNDED KNEE, s_o, (AP) -)l> dian militants In Wounded Knee la1d down their lnlll today, pemmenl of. ficiaJs reported, ' or..allD« ID end lo the 7-y occupatloo ti the 6Jatorta bamlel Federal law ..,,.,..,,,..,! ollldaJa wllt were to entor the vJIJap following the tufllOver of anna were delayed. Mever, by an argument with an lmlllgml mr the terma of 1111 ..-. Kent FriDell, Interior ~ IOlicltor g-.af, said I white -ldm-·~,. ~-f'l'I*' ...... ··-.i --11e1m ...-.. """'"' IP anw1 lll4 -. f'l'IDoll aild Ooapor and .... wltlle -....... "" dlall 'lbl ... =.i--...... -:i.~u.q lllemillnl ID tbe -said Ille Jllllke ~ would not talra plvalcal CGlllrol ol the viDage UDlll Ille problem WU leaoiftd. A""""'lna to ID -I .-r wblcb the village ril lo cbanae bandt, U.S. marabaJs were to comb the hlmlel lo make lllll't II WU lllfe before Olllled residents relumed. • Friuell aald ~r boated ~ IM woondlng ol a federal manh"J, 1 :ll' 1 Jn -the,cccupat1oo4bane ·ror -~ ·a Pl&'.' lllld later "paraded around and ~" federal llelOIJalon with I firtafm .. tbeJ dilt:iltll!d peace terms wltli leaden ol lbt OOCUpatlon. Frizzell said aome 40 \m~ In the 9'fly morqJng by a ID lbt village. He 111d they wwe ellber permanent realdenla of Wounded Knee er nonreafdenta wbo would be -from the reeervallon or taken into Cllliody. Atcording to I list provided MC!ftllay by the lndlans, the village COOlaJned is residents, 1J llOGl'elicfenla and two -g-facing chargeo stemming from Ibo lakover. Al one time, aome iltlll pro- teoten were reported ID the blmlel FrllZe!I reported that the Indiana• 8fllll were turned over to olllcjaJa et the Community Relatkm Serviee of the Jlllllce lleportmeot, aa provldid fer ID the agreement licned &mday.-The government atso pulled back 111not«1 penomel -ll!ed lo patn>I the perimeter ol the village. • The occupation ol Wounded ~ willch began Feb. 11, oerved to _..n n. llonaJ auenUon to lndJan eompialalt et poor 1re11rner1111y·lbt . ...-_ he Indians were killed durtng Ille 111&e. 111¢ (Ilea INDWli!, Pip I ) ·~ ' -The -tlieflady ca1Ja for '->' 111nlblne ID the allenlooii bauft oa w-.,, with allpll1 ...... tempera-lllpo el A at the I beacbea r\8lllc lo II IDllild. • • INSIDE 'l'ODA"l' 1retd U.S. COIUWI Gne1a1 r,,.,.r11& c. 1-r mp11o. rlud Ille 11ted for all !JO .. I,.. .... i. lo COOJ'tl'd«"' ~ out inteM10tlotiGI -· Tiie ••llOll "'°' "''"'"" Ila G-J<>. jara late 1Co""°1f, SH llory OR -l'agc 4. j , • .... -: -. --. £:'\, • : =--?? ., ,..... ., ezr...::-.., -. ---\, , -' 11 ~.S'Jti .P,roJ"' Soeniei , Highway S<juelcliliig · ' By Nixon _ ' ' - ~ro.posal on-=-Tap --Reported NEW YORK (AP) -The New York Times quoting Watergate sources, sal~ today ihat President Nixon t~ce inyoked national security recently in initially seeking to prevent release to the Pel!_~ tagoo papers trial details of the burglary of the Office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist. ' By JAN WORTH. °'"' ~fttllt ltaft 1 Ten property owners representing , some 20,000 unincorporated attts in the Saddleback ValJey·lrvino'l:ilguna Hills ' area were lebeduled•to present ·• pro-. ' From Pagel .HOSPITAL ..• recouuneodatton of yet -er legbla· tlve committee. LlkO tho Ways aDd Means committee, Allt!Dblyman Wlllle Brown Jr. (0-San Fnnclaco )· chairs this comriilttee -the JoiDI Legislative Committee on Teaching llospllal Siting: To date the body has coasldered spend- ing Ille UC! bond funds In a variety of ways, none of which would provide a teaching hospital on the campus. One suggestion would see the money spent entirely outside Orange county at some other existing hospital. . Mos! ~oily, however, staff of the Brown committee have au"ested a com· promise .may be c»Qatdered and ' recommended to the Legislature. C1umcellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. agrees with the compromise proposal which would divide the teaching hospital money providing a 200-bed teaching hospital on campus for $18 rniWon. Another ' fl' rnllllon ol UC bond funds would be spent Improving Orange COunty Medical 'Center-(OCMC) the county-run, hospital in Orange which Is medically staffed by UCL Tbe .. 515 beds there are the training ground for UC! medlca' students. The· compromise calls for removing 200 beds · from the "inade- quate" OCMC facility leaving only 315 beds there and · building 200 new beds at the campua;-nett-"· the baalc aciences building the remainder of the university. The no net-increase in hospital beds feature of the compromise broke the two- week Newport Beach council deadJock over the hospital support resolution. Hoag H08pllal dlngstars urged •upport, stipulating there be no increase in hospl4 tal beds in Orange County resulUng from the teadling hospital construction. Newport councilmen echoed that view in their support action. Hoag directors meJiDwhile say they're 1 not concerned about competition from new beds. They are worried about the overhead of rqruting a hospital and the. 1 fact that the fewer the number of oc- cupied beds, the more each patient pays to oover costs. Costa Mesa councilmen also heard from Dr. John Farrer, president of the Orange County Medical Association whose members last February were poll· 1 ·ed for their views on the campus teachng hospital. ReaulLs of that survey given to the ·legislative committee suggested the county's 600 member doctors opposed Ute idea by a margin of 2 to 1. Dr. Farrer said since the university scaled down its plans no new poll of ~ MA members has been taken. COsta Mesa Councilman Alvin Pinkley asked how doctors would !eel i£ the medical school closed due to loss of the funds to another county. "Doctors would be most upset to lose the school," Farrer said. "There is no -doubt about it." Other councilmen supported Pinkley's motion which declared "jt is ii.lmost im- perative this council go on record in sup- , port because we can't afford to lose a medical school on what may be the , greatest campus of the University of California ." Mayor Jack Hammett echoed the view , 1 revealing his concern that the "teaching hospital (might) slip away to somewhere in downtown Los Angeles." That somewhere, suggested by the joint legislative panel, may be Martin l.Alther King Hospital which bas had dif- ficUlty attracting medical staff. An ex- panded medical education program there is under study by the Brown committee at the same time the UCI hospital is being examined. OU.N•I COAST DAILY PILOT T1MI Ori"" C.O.SI 041LY "ti.OT. with •icll Is combined fM N--.flr•u. Q OUbllltwd llY the OI'• ... c.,,, •• Pvbll$1111'11 ~y. s.p.: ,.. •ttlorll •rt publlslltd, Mordty fhr9u1Pi Frldly, ~ CO.ti Mftl, N~ 8e1dl, Huntlnpton ' lkadllll'OWlllfn V1!11y, lag- a..dl, lrwlM/S.odltti.U Mid 5-n Cll<Mnt1/ S.n Ju-n <"•Plttr..... A tllllilll rtolonal •lltlOn .. ,.....,. .......,.. ... Svnd•J'*. 1"1'11 prl.,,;"'91 pubtllll'"' plenl 11 11 ~ Wnt· ••v '""'· '°'" MtM, c.11tom11, """· ll:olt.rt N. w.M '"-IHnt end M li.tllr J1ck .. Curl1y Viet~ •1111 0.-1 M1M1W Th•111•t kff~ Ed,..-', ThOflltt A. Murphin• MIMflN Edllw c1i111 .. H. i..os t1:kft1rcl r. N•ll Aultt.nf ~ fdl*1 ---222 · F•r••f AY11111• lll•ili .. A4'dr••11 r.o .••• '''· 92612 --.c.tt -..: DI Wftt .. y"ltr~ l4iMJI: SW "f'lll'flllll'l 8ouHl~N a.ell: 11171 awdl lovliv•f'lf lOJ NO!;"' •1 Cimino R•I 'M J' 11 (714, 642 ... JJI d ,,,. MNttftl I "41 .... 71 ......... Al • ., •• 1•1 T 'ct I 4t .. t4" ~ ... 1n ar-. c.o..t .....i...., .,.._,.., ,.. _,. ,..,....., nt1111rr•1-.. -----.,., .... ''"' ,........ ~ ,... ...... '"'*"'''"" ..... ~ ........ ..,,yew .. c.i ....... ~ ............. ttr.,... .... .,,.....,, W -IJ U.11 MW11Mr1 Mnlfliry -l llk I •M .....,., ' poaa1 for a 1ow-tpeed oconic highway from lhe Starr Ranch to Newport Dun.., P11tk tn Newport Beach to Orange Coun- \y. road planners today. John Cba~man of Chapman, PhliliJl", Brandt, and Reddick, Inc., an Irvine planning ftrm representing five of the owners, said the proposal "could be a solutlon--io-the-scenlc highway corridor.'' Scheduled to meet with Ted McCon-- ville, county road department head , were representatives of Coto de Caza, the Misalon Viejo Company, the Moulton Ranch, Rockw~JI International, Chap- man College, the O'Neill R a n c h, . the Irvine Company, Ross moor Corporation, Laguna Niguel, and the Presley Ranch. Ohapman uld he had received verbal support for the scenic corridor plan from el~t of the owners. UPI T.itPholo The Times said the first of the t~ alleged attempts involved a Justice ~ partment memorandum linking two con· victed Watergate conspirators to the break-in. The seeond involved a fonner White House aide, Egil Krogh Jr. The newspaper said thi 'information in the first case was belatedly disclosed to the Los Angeles court after Ai.st. U.S. Atty. Henry E. Pelersen, who headed the Watergate investigation, convinced Nixon to reverse himself. Jn the second case, the lnforrnatioo was reportedly provldell to the court at the insistence of Elliot ~~ Richardson, noolinated to be attomef general. . "The secret of the whole back area is solving the circulation problems," Chap- man sa id. Most or the landowners are working on general plans to be brought before county planners in late June. The road aspect is a crucial first step. He said a proposed extension of Oso Parkway linking up with San Joaquin Hills Road behind Newport's Fashion Island would comprise the hlghway. Beef Gets Soaked High White House officials called the reports that the President first Oppotied releasing the information 11ir1 responsible," the Times said. The newspaper said the reports were pro- vided by some of the principals, lawyem and Justice Department officals. · High water stands in the Monfort feed lots at Gree-washing over thousands of acres of farm and pas- ley in~ northeast Color3d0 following heavy rain which tureland in Colorado where officials estimated dam4 1 Rights-of-way as ~ide as 2.50 feet .are being considered, with grade se~ralions at all crossings to avoid stop signs and lights. caused flooding of the South Platte River. F1ood age at $50 million. And that's not counting future crest headed into neighboring Nebraska today after effects of flood on food supplies and prices. In the first alleged case, Petersen reortedly was told at first by President Nixon not to release the memo, con: tairling infonnation said to have beeit disclosed by former White House counsel John W. Dean lll on April 15, the Time; said. ~~~~~~--='--~-"--~~~~-'-~~~~~~~- "This will Mt be like a freeway, however," Chapman said. "We're pro- posing a low speed .of a~t.50 mph and a meandering feeling s1m1lar to the Colonial Parkway in Vitglnla." CUSD OKs Double Session Petersen recognized the bearing of thq Information on Ellsberg's trial and later took up the matter with the President~ who then agreed to forward it, ,according to the Times account. He said the proposed parkway between lanes could vary from 40 feet to 100 feet and would be left in as much its natural Plan to Alleviate Crowding at Junior High School state as poulble. . By JAN WORTH Chapman declined to describe In detail o. ""' .,..., ,..., 1e.H the jiroposals for the five property The CaplltnM Unified School Board owners be represents. Some 10,000 acre.a unanirD01J&ly aooroved double sessions are Included In a general plan now In the for lhO district'• • ooly Jtmlor high as making which will be disclosed along the "most ecooomlcal' 'altemaUve to with a 10,llOO-acre general plan of tho overcrowding on .U grade level" Irvine Compatly In.six to eight weeks. Marco Forster Junior High In San Juan Many parkways along the lines of what C&plstrano-now bas t,5S$ pupils, more the 10 property owners will propose were than 500 over capacity. lt will run at built in the eastern U.S. In the 1930.s, peak capacity even with double sessions Chapman pointed out. at the slart of next school year, with 900 "In our craze to build freeways, we've youngsters in one group and axt in the kind of forgotten about thooe parkways," olber. he said. A second Jtmlor bigh In Laguna Niguel In some areas, the directional lanes is about to be begun but district ad4 would be separated In grade according to ministrators said it will not be flntshed the slope of the hill or other natural until November 1974 at the earliest. landforms. Joe Wimer, director of administrative "Jt's ·not the--number of lanes that services, told the board he was working counts in traffic circulation," Chapman on 8. possible division of attendence said, "but rather the number of stops areas. and starts." • , -, ' , ,)!O said11lte most loeical division seem· · j ') ; ' \ • 1 i 'it ' t<l. ill be ~)Jen Clameote•,lllgh School Wounded Girl ' Can't Explain ' c ·Mother's Death A 174 year-old Garden Grove area girl who was shot in the head and hand im- mediately after her mother was shot and killed by the same assailant today told Orange eotinty Sheriff's officers she was at a loss· lo e.1plaln the atlack. Investigators said Donna Marie Powers told them from her hospita! bed that Jack son Franklin Hickey was the man who entered their Dale Street home early J\1onday and opened fire on her and her mother . Officers said the girl , now listed as doing well by Westminster Community Hospital of£lcials, told them that she had quarreled with Hickey, 20, the previous eveniag but dJd not believe that the minor spat could have sparked the shOoting. Hickey U being field in Orange County Jail on murder charges filed in con- nection with his alleged slaying of Irene ?\1argaret Waterman , 40, and assault ctiarges filed in connection with the wounding of Miss Powers. Investigators said Mrs. Waterman was struck in the body and head by a number of shots fired from a small caliber hand weatxin. The same gun was then used to wound Miss Powers. Officers hope to arraign Hickey on the charges later today in Santa Ana Municipal Court . He is held in county jail with bail denied . From Page J SPACE. • • cral Plan. but that it v;ould be \VOrth· while to review il. Jn oral remarks to the commission, Gumbiner sa id "fee ownership" of open space land by the city would be the ''ultimate protection." "When they (developers) give It, we've got something. . .the rest is just con4 versation," said Gumbiner. Gumbiner said that th?ff years ago he was told by city officisls that the city could not accept land for four reasons. They were policing, maintenance, Uability and·tai Joss problems, he aald. "The fint thi'te we have with any piece Of P!Ol'trty," said Gmnblntr. 'l1M> tax 1ou matter had never been fully es· plored, ht added. · An tJ!tfltotlVI> to the city accoplillC the open space lands would be the crutlon..ol a ....... auoo district charged with ..,. quiring and maintaining publlc property, be said. attendance area plus the area for the new DeJ Ob~ Elementary School for one group,· iiid the, remaining ~ for the other group, whlcll compnsea the largest growth area. Which group wW attend in the morning and which In tbe afternoon has oot yet been decided. Prior to the tecommendatlons for a double session coming from Forster prin4 cipal Ed Kincaid and Wimer, the board had hoped to implement an eitended day schedule. Surfing Hours May Be Exrended ' 111 Huntington By TERRY COVILLE Of tllt O•llY PUol St•ff Huntington Beach will consider a "black ball" flag system to allow more summer surfing and the city may reduce the ~ent parking meter charge along Pacific Olast Highway. City councilmen agreed Monday night to look into both proposals after nearly 100 young surfers filled the council cham· ber to protest tight surfing restrictions. Mayor Jerry Matney dld not promise that either request would be approved. but he and other councUmen indicated they favor ·tile proposals. The current surfing regulations says no surfing is allowed from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., from June 15 to Sept. 10. The city does allow all-day surfing at the BoLs.a Chica bluffs. "Weire concerned with the c:ity pier area because that's where the best waves are and the most enthusiasts," said Rus Calisch, an editor on Laguna Niguel's International Surfing Magazine, and spokesman for the surfing crowd Mon- day. Calisch said su rfers realize there is a conflict between surfing and swlmming, but suggested there are times in the summer when weather conditions keep swimmers away from the beach, but surfers aren't allowed in the water because of the strict hours. "A privilege is now extended to swim, mers in-which suriers can be kicked out of the water when there is a large crowd before 11 a.m.,'' Cslisch said. "We'd like it nexlble so we can use the ocean when there is no crowd." The calisch proposal woold leave the decision up lo lifeguards, who would simply rslse a two-fool by three-foot Dag with a black ball on It wbeifthey wanted !tlrfera out of the water. Wben·Malney suggested (here might be a legal problem to thet, Call9ch read a letter from the Los Ail(eles COunty :Wegusrd Service e11>lalnlng bow the flag system had been 11A$1 at Hermosa · Beach for 15 years. Max BowDlsn, asslstant.dtr.ctor .of the city's harl>ors and beadles dOportmen~ admitted to the council he did ndi know what ll)'!tem was used in Los Angeles County. ) But Kincaid and Wimer concurred that the cost for eight to ten portable units, about $30,000, was more than the district could bear to implement the extended day. I I If the money is psent on the units, they From Pagel BRAWL •.. about 50 young Americans were still in jail Monday and unable to post bail rarig- ing from $12 to $24. He was told they could be freed after servmg an unspecified time in jail. . Juan Zamora, manager of the Bahia Hotel, told a story of what happened. "The hippies, just a few, started corri· ing In the hotel about noon. The yate~ (yachtsmen) began leaving as soon as the trophy ceremony was over. "At fir.st, the hippies · just sat around the pool, drinking. Then more came until we soon bad about 200 persons around the pool. When that many young people are together, someone has to do something to attract attention. 11So one boy let out a yell, and someone answered him. Then the people were all yelling. 11ley got excited, and someone threw a bottle into the pool. Others started tossing things, too. "One boy started to take his pants off, but we had the police take him away. Then a, big guy, maybe 6 feet 6 inches tall, threw a girl into the pool. "So I went up to him and asked him pl~se not to do that. He just pushed me away. His friend came up and also asked him to stop, but the big guy just put his hand over his face and shoved him away, also. "Before long, hippies in groups of six and seven were running through the hallways , kicking in doors and doing whatever violence they could." Zamora' said, "All this trouble started five or six years ago when the hippies started coming down. The yateros caused no trouble. They are good people." should be used In the elementary schools which are also overcrowded, Wimer said. District Superintenden t TT um an · Benedict said he felt the junior high was the key to whatever is done in the district. "It's impossible to seek any other alternativee to the double sessions without spending a lot more money," he said. Trustee William Enquist suggested that the t'1.'0 attendance areas switch morning and afternoon times mtd4 year. Benedict said tramportation schedules may dictate which area goes to school early. . Session one would run from 7 :30 a.m. to 12:25 p.m. Session two, would be from 12 :30 p.m. to 5:25 p.m., according to the present plan. Each session would have six 45-minute periods. Kindergarten Registration Begins Monday Preregistration of children who will at- tend kindergarten this fall in the Capistrano Unified School District will begin May 14 and continue for !our days, district aides said today. Parents can regisU!r their youngsters between 9 a.m. and noon or 1 to 4 p.m. any of the four daYs at the elementary school whe're their children will attend classes. District aides stressed that California Jaw makes it mandatory that all youngsters have immunization for polio, measles and diphtheria before they at4 tend classes. Children w~o have become five years old on or before Dec. 1 of this year are eligible to enroll in classes this fall, aides added. During registration parents will be briefed on kindergarten procedures and will receive an informal handbook. On April 26, David Nbsen , the govern, ment prosecutor in · the Ellsberg ca~ submitted the memo to U.S. District CoW't Judge Malty Byrne, who made It public the -next day . Science Students To See Hospital New Equipment An operating suite, pulmonary cara unit and stress monitoring equipment at South coast Community Hospital will be toured Friday by Laguna Be~ch High School science students. ., The tour ' by rneinbers of the hillli &etiool's physiology" class" and Medic-il Explorers Club coincides with open house activities at the community owned hospital. Science students from Thu r s t o'P. Jntermedif!te School visited the hospital today. -- Marion Brotzman, dJrector of voluntelr programs for the school district, safd students are able to view a surgery room -normally kept closed to visitors to maintain sterile condJtions. On Tuesday, Mrs. Lillian Emhoff, dietician at South Coast community Hospital, will talk lo students at Top ol Dan Canady, a publicity for San Diego the World Elementary School. From Pagel INDIANS ... two federal officials were wounded, one seriously. 1 Frizzell said about 40 Indians were believed to have escaped the villagi; Saturday night during a heavy rainstorm. About 15 others slipped through federal lines Sunday, he said. • WHO'S BEHIND YOU? How much do guarantees mean? It depends on the item involved •nd the manufacturer. _ A $I 00,000 house is gu1r1nteed for ONE year. Most automobiles ere guaranteed from 30 deys to one yoer. Most electrical products ere guaranteed from 90 days to one year, Gu1r1ntees on carpeting are complicated. The rule in the industry, r.s TWO YEARS for manufacturing def e c I s. The feeling is that manufacturing defects will surface within that two year period. Beyond this, these manufacturers feel there are too many variables in the usage to give coverage beyond that period. Don't be misled by ''Phoney" guarantees. They are pro rated, based on mill-invoice costs, plus padding and labor to change. By tho time you figure them up, it usually costs more to change than the original purchase price. - Carpet manufacturen tell us that a preponderance of complaints is not because of defects but because of improper installation. We minimize the 'l!'mber of complaints by having the bist inslalers oround. Also, we deal only with more substantial mills, further reducing problems. Buying from Alden;; will give you the greitest security. ALDEN'S -rMISA llMQ ltl1 1 CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placltltla Aff; COITA MISA 646-4838_ • M~. 'l1lln. t le 1110; l'tl. t le t; s.t. t1l0 le I • I . ' ~· I 7 ' - Saddlehaek TedJly's F l••I I N.Y. Steeks - -VOL 66, NO. 128, 2 S~CTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOA Y, MAY-8, 1973 TEN CENTS • Saddlehack Teachers Request 150/o Pay Hike By JOHN ZALLER Of *' ~ Plitt IUIH Teachers In the Saddleback Unified School District have asked for a ·15 per- cen~ across·lhe.-board pay raise when the new district comes into legal existence on J.uly 1. Teacher representatives Monday night also asked trustees to ,adopt a 100-page document that would require everything from a second gym at Mission Vi~:jo High School to more library cler~s. Teachers said their aim in these requests ~-10 upgrade quality of educatioo In the district. District Superintendent William Zog called the list of teacher requests "ooe of the longest I have ever seen." However teacher representatives ln· dicated they were willing to compromise their requests if the· district was also wilting to rriake· compromises. ''Teachers realize that the--ilistrict has onJy so much money to work with," said James Weban, president ol. fho Sad- dlebact Educatcn Asaodltion.· . "'U it turns out thal it """1d toko cull In the program to give teedlers a 15 .,.,.. cent raise. tben obviously "" don't Wint a IS perteDt raise. We -t to do what is best for the district and at the aame time fair to us," he sald. '6.. .. Trustees accepted the negotla .... -" package from teachers Mooday with ooly minor questions after teachers completed a one-hour, P81'"by-page analysis· ol. the • request. Following a 90-minute e i: e c u t i v e -.n, the boon! also appointed depJty Qiperintendeot Rtd!anl Welte to be ill negotiating ageot with teachers. "We're starting from a fresh position of good faith in working with teachers," observed Trustee Vincent D. McCullough. "We hope to maintain that position." Wehan said about tw~thirds of the policies proposed In the lOIJ.page docu- ment came from existing policy in the San Joaquin or Tustin Unlcn lli«h &ellool dlatricts. "This b a new district olartlng from scratch but then> Is a lot that hopefully can use pncedenll from the oldu districts," be said . However be also said new item,, bad been added lo combining the old policies. One of the more delicate problems will involve how the salary schedules from the two old districts will be meshed together Into a single schedule. "We tried to incorponte the -port. ol both to that no -lost anythinc," eiplained Norm Neville, representtna tbe salary subcommittee ol. the -organization. I "In fact, we hoped thlt each teacher could make 90me sort of gain," be added. 1 fncluded anxmg the teacher-roquested policies were One! that would require: -Construction of a new gym to give space to girls sports at Mission Viejo (See llEQlllmS, Page I) Hospital Wins Support Mesa, Newport Councils E'ndorse UCI Facility By GEORGE UEDAL Of t1t9 Dtltr Pli.t Staff Councilmen in both NeWport Beach and Costa Mesa endorsed the proposed UC lrvlne-Oilifornia College of Medicine on- carnpua teaching hospital' Monday night. Bolstl!i'ed""by official' ,support from Hoa(· Memorial Hospital d i rec t o rs , Newpoi:t Beach. counCilmen adopted the reso(UtiOO of support on -a 6 to 1 vote. Councilman Paul RyclroH opposed the . resolution, citing his "fears that the hospital would encourage continued growth of the Harbor Area. Following a preaebtaUoo by UCl-OCM acting dean Stanley van den Noort. Costa Mesa city councilmen unanimously voted to support the tmiversity's view that the $38 million of statewide health sciences bond money allocated to the UC! medical school should be spent here. Resolutions adoPied by both cities, and c . . ,. ·tNDIAN LEADERS ENTER COURTHOUSE' FOR ARRAIGNMENT ~ Ca rt" <:imp, Leonard Crow Dog Face S~Aggerlng Bail On Parlors 'Indians Lay DownArms ; t . So far as laws regulating massage parlors or nude entertainment are cm- cemed, Irvine stands naked before the f 70-dn y Occupg,tion Ends cye·s of justice. . City Attorney James Erickson learned the dty has no \vay to regulate its: now sole massage parlor in tbe Irvine Industrial Complex. Jlut there haft been DO probJema reported,either. WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (AP) -In- dian militants in Wounded Knee laid down their arms today, government of· ficlals reported, signaling an end to the 70-day occupation or the historic ba~E!t. Federal law enforcement officials who were to enter the village following the turnover of anns were delayed, however. by an argument ·with an insurgent over the terms of his Surrender. · Kent Frizzell, Interior Department solicitor general, said a white num iden· tifled as Al Cooper drove to a federal roadblock and ·began protesting terms of •his arrest and bond. Frizzell said Cooper 'and another white man, also under in- 1dictment on charges in connection with the occupation, locked themselves in the vehicle. 1 Frizzell said the Justice Department 'would not take physical control of the village until the problem was resolv~ .. According to an agreement under whi~ 1the village was to change hands, U.S. marshals were to comb the hamlet ·to 'make sure it was safe before ousted residents returned. Frizzell said Cooper boasted after· the wounding or a federal marshal early in the occupa tion that be '1got himself a pig '' and later "'Rflraded arol)Dd. and 1menaced"' federal negotiators with a firearm as they discussed peace terms "'ilh leaders of the occupation. Frizzell said some 40 Indians gathered in the early morning ~Y a church in the village. He .. ~'Said they were either permanent residents of Wounded Knee or nonresidents who would be escorted from the reserVation or taken intO ~ustody. Park Financing l\'leasures Slated For Irvine Studv • 1.oning won't do, be notes In a message to Irvine clty councilmen who will study a draft ordinance tonight at 7:30 o'clock in city ball. . • Further; most cities e.xercl.se control over questionable massage operations by means of a city business license, Erickson wrote councilmen. Irvine col- lects no business licMse tu.es as yet and hence has not begun issuing licenses. For nearly two years now, a massage parlor bas been operating In the "In- dustrial su~port" commercial area bebind the Airporter Inn. Owner Ray Barr!QDe of El Toro aaid he gets along "just flqe" 'With the Irvine Police Department who stop by reg\114rly during the wee houn of the moriitni to see that bis seven licensed massemes Two quite different means of paying make it safely from the HWrlghl Place" for public parks will be considered to their can: in the darkened offJCe Wedne$11ay night by the city·ol Irvine's buJldlng parking loll. community ~rvices conunissioners. ,flatts fQr massages m the establish- 'Chaihnan sally Mttler of · URtverslty m<nt at 2192 Depont Circle range from Park will introduce a · 8uggestion by $1% for a 30-minute rubdown to '30 for the 90-minute " ... ,__. becuttve" • m-Councilwoman . G~brielle Pryor that the ~,,.... .. cO~iss:ion study a possible ,city parks eluding ••sauna, Swedish oil and French bond issue. Commis8ioners are expected finger tip treatment," Barrlone ei:- to determine how many p:irks are needed plained. alid where they might be In order to sug-Attorney• Malcolm, carpenter and gest a total Park bond measure amount Daley, Barr1one said, fuUy investigated which might be put· before voters as ear· the city laws regulating the operation ly as December. and found nothing to keep the bu!lness •-,.;_di R ' Cl b ' 'd De ftom operating in Irvine. A ' M be, ' ~'"1 y, ticquet u presi ent n Qty officials agreed. However, after ' em r . Lorti's prppoaal for a citizen.built public gnew a voiieyball, football and othU play field toalglit thing• may be dlllerent. h Qluncilmen may decide sudt bu1m..ae. . park nort ol •Trabuco.Road along CUiver bencelortb will requ~ a permit to do I 'Of Burw1 t Club ~~~fon':111 be coosidered by the com-buslneis. The permit fee !Uggelted is ' •, Lorti slbce las! October has been work-l2IO payable after police lnv..U,ate the o bacqround of the applicant. Irvine Mayor John H. Burtdn'sald to-illg on· the park propOsal which calls for While Irvine''does have tts mamge day Vice President Spiro T. Agnew has large amounU. of citizen participation to parkJr, to date p,o bar bas offered nude joined the Irvine-based South Co.fst develop agrlc,ultural preserve acreage entertainment ~thin the city llm.Jts. Republican Forum, ,a political organiza· (S.. FINANCE, Page I) u another Jaw proposed by the city at- • tion which Burton leads. torney is adopted tonight, I r v I n e ... Burton, who was active in the Orange residents will continue to have to travel : eounty eommiuea.to 11e..iect the Preai-Cowic.ilmaii' s to eo.ta -°' Santa Ana to w11ne .. ·dent. said the "'Scruffy'" group had also toplelt iJt ~ dandng. tenilsted Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke, Sllte A~ . Stlcll -1 cavorting b not likely to tomey Oeneral Evelle Younger, Rep. Off"' R'fled bellk:wad.iter,JnlDiadopllapropooed 1Craig Hoamer (R·Lons Beacb), Rep. ice t , , . ponnk .,..... 1 ..,Waling ~ n y ,Andrew J. Hioaltaw (R-MiMlon Viejo ), ., _!..._, ·1a 1111 city· offering any Rep. Clair Burgener (R-Ln Meaa ). State Irvine police today are lnv!51!ptina ''loot er· ................ lntendad lo 'Sen. Dennis E. carpenter a·nd the ;burglary ol an ltvillo hldtlililal \ ..... ,41ver1W.~theattent!onol. _M;eml!IYJ!ll!!. Robert BadhamL both~o~f~Co=m~ office of Councilman tJt )IOI~ Including, but not Newport Beacb. · Quigley. --· ~ -lo, iliiiajii,':ifna!iil, playltl( a · • Scrulfies worked for Nixon and Agnew At 8 n.m. today, Quigley dilcoven:d the musical instnnnent, dlalollle, pantomime in the president.Jal race and Burton was theft of two typewriters valut'd et $450. and moctellbc." -• . directly involved In the Hinshaw cam-Burglars forced their way through a The law, 1<C111lrti! ls!UMce ol a PlftlUt paiilJJ while another Irvine cwncilman. rear door Into H.B. Quigley Company, by the city couiioll, lpplleo -ll)o to E. Ray Qulllty Jr., -u Burgeoet'I Inc. ·•t 178tlr>A Skypatk North, taklna 'pllbllc lltablllh-• • ~ d1D In Orange County d!alrman. ooly the typtwriten, Quigley said. Irvine, U ·~ u ..._.i. I ' virtually every other city .in Orange County, oote that voters who last fall overwhelmingly supported the $1SS.9 million UC bond issue. believed the money would improve medical educa- tion at UC! aod would be spent to. build and .on-campus teaching hospital and the achOol's fin! permanent classroom and 'laboratory )>ulldlngs. RecenUy; the ASsembJy· Ways and MOOM committee bas been considering the' UC Budget which Includes a partial allocation -11 mllllon of the total $12 mlllJoo -to begin construction 00 cam- pus of the basic medical sciences bulldlng. Another $800,000 budget Item to plan a teaching hospital ill also before that committee. Finally, the fiscally-powerful Ways aod Means subcommittee also is mulling a bill by ASsembiyman Robert Badbarn (R·. Newport Beach) to allocate $24 million Employ 16,485 for teaching hospital construction In Orange County. this year. The btll matches one by State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter introduced in the senate. Each mea.sure, however, alorig with the UC budget provisions depend on the recommendation of yet another leglsJa. live committee. Like the Ways and Means committee, Asaemblyman Willie Brown Jr. (J>.Son Francisco) chairs thla committee -the Joint IA!gislative Committee Oil Teaching Hospital Siting. To date the body bas coosidered spend- ing the UC! bond funds In a variety ol ways , none of whJch would provide a teaching hospitaJ on the campus. One 11.1ggestion would see the money spent entirely outside Orange county at some other existing hospital. Most recently, however, staff of the Brown committee have auggeated a com- Over Half of Complex Firms Found in Irvine I More than hair of the 1,059 commercial and industrial finns in the Irvine Industrial Complex -543 of them -are JocateCI in the new city of Irvine and employ 16,465 peraons. A census ol tbe firms which employ a total of. 29,209 persons was released recently by IIC president T h om a s C. Wolff Jr. Five cities share the acreage within the Irvine lndultriaJ Complex. Of 'the !,000 acr .. begin developed by the Irvine Company subsidiary, however, nearly 2,900 are in the city of Irvine. Numbers of firms and employes for other cities sharing the UC employment relOUl'Ce and ptoperty tax baae ""': -Newport Bellcb with 371 firm! employing 7,1118 persons. --O>sta Meaa with 109 finm aod 2,622 peraons. -Santa Ana 'with 33 flnns and 2,43! cmployes and TusUn with three firms and 629 employes, WolH's report shows. Nearly hall the land oel ulde by the Irvine Company for 'the indultrlal-corn- mercial development IUl'1'0UndJna: Oranae County Airport bas been told (Jt leued. An additional Z,000 a.,... Is to be developed in the Jand!nl p • t t e r n southeast of El Toro Marine' Corpl Air Station. The acrtage wu port ol. an 8,400-acre mmeullon annoilllced by the city of Irvine when it wu only five mootbs oid. Final county agenciel' ap. proval came in October, jult 10 months after cttybood. . Wolfl oald IIC fitllllOI -that en the average "one new industrial flnn moves here every week and em p I o ye 1 100 persons.'' Irvine Interim Land Use Policy to Be Presented Neerly a }ear after tt wu begun, the ne)f city of Irvine's ihterim land use polley plan Is ready for final adoplion by the City Councll. City Pl.a~ Director Bruce Wamn will present the final drall ol the docu- ment whlch began as recommendatiool ·New die8s Champ • • • CHICAGO AP) -Larry ~rlatiam9n· of Rtvenld(, call/. "'' won the ln-divlOlal tlllo and E"'1J,., ru. High llclloOl ~the team c'liaiilplnlilpl ln1fle U.S.' ~ a-dimnplc•""IPI , berw. 01rlltllnlorr, a i."""'*"junlor at Pl>Jy Tocll ..::e Scbqol In Rhenide, -1 II.Oii ablp toe lila -,....,. I.Ill -l!I~• lh-iar louma-1111111. • ' ol the city'• first set of JO citizens ad- visory committee• and evolved through steps Involving planning CO!llultanta Haworth aod Anderaon. the city Piannlna: commls:skm and ro.mcllmen. Councilmen who meet at 7:30 tonJaJi' In city hall, 4201 Campus Drive, wU! con- llidet a molullon adopting the pol]Cla. Tt>ef would serve to IU1de land mt 'p!iDnlna doct.sions of the cfti unUl the tltllefal plan la comple~ aud adop4ed. Tt.e •eneral plan is beln& davelojled now and mult be final~ 1!r. DPmber, undoi;darma ol a 1 pod l ~I ~on gruted lo lrvlno by the lllle ltfllalure. 1'be lnllrim polley-P.IOD .-opeclal alp!fbnc;e for land -lo i. allowed In north Irvine. A Z.!IJO. .... -Irvine preclae plan Is beln& ~ by the el\J ..a that plan COlllorO• to the pol!oteo oet forth In 'the doClan<m lo be ccoildered ......... promile may be conalclered and -to the IA!lialature. Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. agr ... with the compromlae propooal which would divide the teaching hospital money providing a ZOO.bed teaching hospital on campus for Ill million. Another 11 aUllon of UC bond funds would be spent Improving Orange County ·Medical Cent«,(OCMCl the..county.nm; hospital In Orange which t• medically stalled by UC!. Tho 515 beda thtro are the training ground for UC! medical students. The compromlae calll for removing 200 beds from the "Jnade. quate" OCMC facility leaving only 3t5 beda there and building 200 new beds at the campus, near the basic sciences building the remainder of the unlvenity. The no net-lncreue In hospital beda feature of the com-1llao broR tile !ft. (See B08PltAL, Pap I) New Threat To Lawyer Spurs Prooo Orange County SberUr1 olflcera step. ped up their lnvestlpUon today wben the lawyer Jor a Minion Viejo bualneslll\Ul who bu received a llerie1 of threatJ in recent weeks wu warned to keep out fl. the legal issue that may have prompted tht warnings. Newport Beach attorney Richard Sten- ton received the threat from an unknown Caller aiid' lmmOdlaiely paiaed the In- formation on to lherl1r1 1nv~•·1tors. . ..... . The detalll of that call bavo ...,. Into a growing Ille willch atao COlltalna plo- tures of the IllOlt eloquent threat yet delivered to George Gostenholer. 49, ol 24832 San Deval Lane - a .....,Uy severed ram's bead that was left on the front aeat of hla car with the knUe Uled In the decapltallon stuck In the akulf. Goatenhofer is part owner of tho Selame Street Mobile Home Park In El Toro. It 11 believed by him and Slenton that a bualne!I deal stemming from 1llat property la re•ponstble for the wa .. or threats. Goatenhoffr oaJd tod.iy that llDUI Rymal, hla manager at the 20-acz:o port, bas also been threatened and wanied llJ the peraoo who contacted him: "don't pt in tile middle of thla or you'll get llurt." Goatenhofer lnaista that the -of threats which have prompted him lo (Seo TllJIE.t.T, Pip I) "...._. The weatherlady calll for lllq sunahlne In lhe aftemoan boun .. Wednetday, with llllbtty .......... temperatures. lfi8bo ol. 18 st 1111 beiches risinc to 'II Inland. • • INSIDE TODAY Frred U.S. Consul Gc....,.i Terrence G. Wonh<trdy ntpl'lll Md the -meet for oU Otlll•• mcnti to cooptratc m ,,....... 01<t lni.rnalional ~ fti mvo~ WOJ released In G..:111 ;ara late Mondou. S•• llory ., Pag• 4. •• •• ' ' a..'= :..ii a.. --· .,...,_ . = =--!!lot• ·~ l , l • \ • C'•!'tf ~rojec!~ . Scenic Hig'1way TOPLESS OKA.1- AT A DISTANCE . ' • • • \. F,.._PfffJel HOSPITAL ••• • week Newport Betch couneil de'Cllock, over the hospital 1Upport mohrtlon. ByrneEyes 1 . Wlhergate . ' • ~roposal on Tap SAN !1WiCISCO !AP) -'ftl>ldl 11111 boltomless,,_....,ldkballned b! San FrucUco nlgbl clllbl 11111 bon,... der I~~ bf..!ft!liiw .IGlll Ba= llollda1•···• llur!M •• w-·.;."!;;l.ored on the' ini>ppoed Jew, wbtdt lie lltld 1i ~b _ Hoa& Holpltal dlnistars Ul1ed IRljlllOrt. ltipulltJnc ~be DO lDcrE!ll lq llolpl- tal bods Iii ~ Count7'niodl8c llom ~ tead>lng bospi~-C!lllltroction. Newport councilmen echoed that view in their support action. ' Link Probe simllor to mealUl'OS approved ~y By JAN WORTH ot .. .,..., ...... ,..., Teo property ownera representing some 20,00ll unlncorporated acres in the Park in Newport Beach Lo Orange Coun· ty road planners today. John Chapman of Chapman, Phillips, Brandt, and Reddick, Jnc .• an Irvine plarmln& firm repre1enUng five of the owners, said the proposal "could be a solutfon to the scenic highway C1:1rrldor." b~/~.,:'~t ioplw .or boi'tOciii .. • ·-· ';. By TID!'llY m viJili expo8Ure only by entertalntrl .. ..... ' 11\ditlngt: ~~~""...macr a at least six feet from patrons. · • 0 tilact, ball" fla& '1y1tem to .allow more , . •wnmtt surflnc and the clty-Joay reduce Hoag directors meanwhile say they're not concerned about co1npe,t1Uon from new beds. They are worried about the overhead of rUnning a hospital and th~ tact that the fewer the number or oc- cupied beds, the more each patient pays to cover cost•. LOS ANGELES (AP) -U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne excused tht Pentagon papers trial jury today for the remainder ol lbe week and Indicated be· may oroer a full·scal• h,.rlni lDto Watei- gate llnb ln the case. rSaddleback Valley.lrvllle-Laguna Hill• 1IJOa wei'e ldlodulod to preaent a pn;. poaa! for ~ .low"l'ffd scenic highway fl'Qlll the Slarr Ranch to Newport Dunes Board Okays 'Doubw-time' For Jr. High The capistrano Unliled School Board unanimously approved double sessions for the district's only junior blgh as the "most economical' 'alternative to overcrowding on all grade levels. Marco Forster Junior High in San Juan Capistnno nOw bas 1,535 pupU1, more than 500 over capacity'. It will run at peak capacity even with double sesskm at the start or next school year, with 900 youngsters in one group and 800 in lhe other. A second junior high in Lagun• Niguel is about to be begun but district ad· ministrators said it will not be finished unUI November 1974 at the earliest. Joe Wimer, director of administrative services. told the board be was working on a possible division or ~ttendence areas. He said the most logical division seem- ed to be the San Clemente High School attendance area plus the area fo.r the new Del Obispo Elementary School for one group, and the remainJng area for the other group, wtttch comprises the largest growth area. Which group will attend in the morning and which in the afternoon bas not yet been decided . . Prior to the recommendations for a double session corning from Forster prin- cipal Ed Kincaid and Wimer, the board had hoped to implement an extended day ~ule. OU.N•I COAST " DAILY PILOT TM~_,,.. CN1t DAILY PILOT, Wllll lflftlcfl 11 -...CIMd n.. NtW1·P,n.1, 11 pu111i...... 111¥ the Orlll{lt Cattl l"ubllt.lllftl CDtnptny, a.,.. r1!1 •ltlcw!I trt pvblllllld, Mtndty thrwol\ Frld1y, tor (0$11 Mti.t, Htwparl lffdl, Hunllllflllon 8Ndl/FC1U11!1ln V11!1y, l .. Ulll l lKlo, '"'IM/$.Mdlt!Ndl 1nd Sin ci.n-11( Sin Ju.n Ctpl1trtno. A 1111919 ""'°"'' Miiion 11 publllhld S.!urd1y1 tnd lllnllly1. f1'll prlM.llMI pvblltlllnf JtNnl II ,11 DI Wiii •• , a1r..i, (0$11 MIM, C1Hlonlle, ,,. .. ltobett N. W11d Pr111dfftl tnd l"~lllltr J1clr: It. Cutltv Viet PrDldlftl Mid o. ... rtl 1NM91r Tholftt1 Kt1vil Ed/tot Tliom11 A. Murphint MtMcih,g Editor C htrl1t H. Looi lticlitrd r. Ni ll AMhltnl M1~l119 Edllon COllt Mnt: DO WHI Ill, S1fNI NI-I llffdl; llJ3 N..-part llOV!evlrd L-g ..... llNcll : m Fo•HI ,.......,. H11n11r'91'on 811c.t1: 1117' llttell 8oule~1rd S.n Cl1......,1e; JOS Nvrlll El Cimino 111:1•1 , ......... (7141 142-4J21 c1..,1w A'"9rtld .. 642·S67t 1 .. Cle.....,. All O.,srt-m1 Tel.,.•• 4fZ-4421 · C09yrl;hl, 1f7l. Or11111 C.O.tt Po.111111hlno (g.mp1ny, No n1wt 110rl11, U111tlrlllcw!1, fOllOrlal m.n,r or t<IYerll•-1• lllrtln m.y be reproc:h.cld w1111ot.1t apecl11 per. mlHlon of (Ojlyri!lht o-r. kcond Cll tl aGtllll' Ollld ti (Ottl MIM, C1lllornl1. 5ubKl"IP!io<I by c1 .. 1tr Sl.•t monthly; t.. m•lt U.U mont111J1 mltll1rr 011lln.1llon1·" 6i l'nOftllllt. Scheduled to meet with Ted litcCon- vllle, county road department head , were representatives of Coto de Caza, the Mission Viejo Compe~y. the ~foulton Ranch, Rockwell International, Chap. man College, the O'Neill Ranch, the Irvine Company, Rossmoor Corporation, Laguna Niguel , and the Presley Ranch. Chapman said he had received verbal support for the scenic corridor plan from eight of the owners. . "The secfe t of the whole back area 1s solving the circulation problems," Chai> man said. Most or the landowners are working on general plans to be brought before county planners in late June. The :-oad aspect is a cr ucial fir st step. He said a proposed extension of Oso Parkway Unking up with San Joaq~in Hills Road behind Newport 's Fashion Island would compri se the highway. Rlghts-<if-way as wide as 250 feet .are being considered, with grade separations at all crossings to avoid stop signs and lights. "This will not be like a f r eeway, however," Chapman said. "We're pro- posing a low speed of about 50 mph and a meandering feeling similar lo the Colonial Parkway in Virginia." He said the proposed parkway between lanes could vary from 40 feet to 100 feet and would be le ft in as much its natural state as possible . Chapman declined. to describe ir. .Cetsil the proposals for the five property owners he represents. Some 10,000 acres are included in a general plan now in the making which will be disclosed along with a 10,000-acre general plan of the Irvine Company in six to eight weeks. ?i.fany parkways along the lines of what the 10 property" owners will propose were built in the eastern U.S. in the 1930s, Chapman pointed out. "J n our craze to build freeway s, "'e've kind of forgotten about those parkways," he said. From Page I FINANCE ... being let to the ciLy by the Irvine C.om- pany. ! . To meet requirements of the cocn- mWlity services commission befoce they ,voold grant their stamp of approval, however, Lor ti was asked to estimate ci- ty costs if the park were to be built to ci- ty standards. -While viewed rui a temp(lr8.ry patk, it ;has been noted by the commissiqn; that the-250 by 320-foot parcel is located within an area designated in a prop<>sed north Irvine precise land use plan for permanent park use. With that in mind and considering the potential for "permanence" inherent in any park use, Chairman ~filler and other cornmis&ioners urged Lorti to "be specific on ~ts" pie city might share ln constructing the perk. Lorti's estimates range from $20,545 for a park bounded by a chain link fence to $26,080 for one with. a block wall . perimeter. Huntington Continuin.g All-year Plan By TOM GORMAN Of t111 o.ltr ,li.t ltlff All-year classes at Westmont and Cttst View schools in Huntington Beach will continue for another year, Ocean View School District trustees decided Monday night. "We have lhe potential for designing a system that will save money and im- prove education methods/' aaid Trustee Ralph Bauer in leading the unanimous ' vote. The decision to continue the pilot pro- gram, which began last July, was mark· ed with very little dl.scus,,ion. Board Pre1ident R. James Shaffer noted at the outset of the meetmg that the all·year issue has been discussed at board meetings since last December, and prohibited persons from the audience from speaking. Later be backed down from his stand after being reminded that it was board policy to allow comments from the floor , Only a hand(ul of the about 100 parent! present spoke in opposition to the all-year program. When the vote was taken many of those present applauded. · The board decided to modily the sched ule at Westmont, voting to hold classes there on a single cycle in which all students will attend classes at the sam.e ·time imtead of in staggered sessions. Children at Crest View will continue to meet in staggered sessions, in wbich a quarter of the students will be on vaca· tion at all times. The schedule change at Westmont was ordered afte r a "vast majority" of teachers and 57 percent or the parents in the Westmont area requested the single cycle. Trustees admitted that the single cycle program will not save cluaroom space, one of the ultimate goals of the all-year cQJlcept. ~ "1 hope Westmont Wiil loolt c•relully at staggered sessions next year," said Superintendent James Carvell. "That will be the ultimate space-saver. I see the single cycle as a transition." At both schools classes will be held in 45-day sessions broken up with 15-day vacations. The all-year schedule received 62 per- cent support among parents in the Crest View area and 49 percent support from parents in the Wesbnont area, according to results of a poll released last week. Surveyed in that poll were parents who h&d opposed all-year school and opted to transfer their children to nearby schools that followed the tradiUonal calendar. In a poll of parents whose children re- mained in the all-year schools, 66.3 per· cent of tbe Crest View parents ~ 59.6 percent of the Westmont parents sup- ported t~e'<:oocept. Church Staff Cut Architect Paul Saito of Rec reation Land Planners Inc., Yorba Linda, al- r eady has donated a landscaper plan and Lorti estimates volunteer labor may re- duce the total park cost 8s much as ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Some 300 staff $4,500. workers have been asked to resign dur- Other Items before the commu nity ing a sweeping reorganization of the services commissioners Wednesday night Presbyterian Church of the U. S . include consideration or park and bike (Southern), a spokesman said Monday. trail use of Southern California Edison The move was described by one official Company right s-or-way in the city. as similar to a corporate restructuring. ~~~~~~~~~..:.:C:::C:....:--"---~~-'--~~- CERTIFICATE VALUE 54 .50 Have One On Us -Good For Free Want A.d The ltMt 1111 11 •ny .......,... ..... rMdlutn 11 'f'O'" twn 1.,1, S. ltlf 111r ,__ 1t ti.Ip you lwy, "" ., rtnl 1 ho11t1, 1 cir. • bolot or - '"""1111•• ...... P9fh~p1. v.o11'r• INllln1 It• -.,,.,Jc1 er Nwt ~ ltt m• cl"'l••lfttl yout html~ ....... Th!1 It • ¥1!111blt c1r1if!c•ll - <IM't to.. 11, lt't 11ch•"fl•lll1 f., 1n t4 In the tl1ullltd c9'11mn1 tf thoi o....,. Cuti OAIL Y PILOT - thlt t rH 'I moil t ctiwt m1••1tpl•c1, c .... Mt.. New,.,-t ""'"' Hwotl.....,, ltMh J.JO w. 11., StrMI J3JJ Newport 11"4. 1n1s ltech 11....il, All you hi ... to clo It -' 111 ,,.ur td tor llrl"I 11 to -ef 1ur COft. YllliMI tffic.t 11ft911 lllMow) i.. pthtr with ttil1 urtlflcti. .M Ji1V1 1 frtt M .,. 111. Wt11 nm llor .. 11 ... t fer JM1 twt tlfMt If M coll. (Of CO,,,..M, -VII.Ill ....... ef tttll '"'' inti ,...,... v..,. wUI 1pplr.I 0. 11 l'Mlw. USE THIS FORM TO WRITE YOUR FREE AD NAME'--------------- ADOAESS------------~ Cl TV FIVE IHO"T~Dt MAK!ONILIHI! DAILY PILOT ' the 2kfllt rf:~~.!""ter dlarge along Paclllc Codi y. • Oty councilmen qreed ~y n!Pt to look Into liotb proposals altOr nearly I QO )'llUlll surfm filltd the couocl1 dJam. bet to pn>tett tight surfing restrlctlOll!. Mayor Jerry Mainey did not promise that elthec request .woul.d be opproved. but be and other counc11men Indicated they favor the proposals. .., The current surfing regulations says DO JUtfin(! lo allowed from II a.m. to 5 J>.m., from June 15 to Bept. 10. The city does allow all-day surfing at the Bol41 Chica blulls. /'We're concerned with the city pier area because that's where the best waves are and the most enthusiasts," said Rus Callsch, an editor on Laguna Niguel's International Surrtng Magazine, and spoke sman for the surfing crowd Mon· day. Callsch said surfers realize there is a conflict between surfing and swimming, but suaested there are times in the swnmer when weather conditioos keep swimmers a..,.ay from the beach, but surfers aren'l aUowed in the water because of the strict hours. "A privilege is now extended to swim· mers in which surfers can be kicked out of the water when there is a large crowd before 11 a.m.," Calisch said. "We'd like it flexible so we can use the ocean when there is no crowd." The Calisch proposal would leave the decision up to lifeguards, who would simply raise a two-foot by three-foot flag with a black haµ OQ i~ when they wanted stirfei;s out of the · water. When Matney suggested there might be a legal problem to that, Callsch read a Jetter from the Los Angeles County Lileguard Bervlce expl•lnlng how the flag system had been used at Hermosa Beach for 15 years. Wounded Girl Can't Explain Mother's Death A 17-year-old Garden Grove area girl who was shot in the head and hand im- mediately alter her mother was shot and killed by the same assailant today told Orange County Sheriff's officers she was at a Joss to ex.plain the attack. Investigators said Donna Marie Powers told them from Iler hospita! bed that Jackson Franldin Hickey was the man who entered their Dale Street home early Monday and opened fire on her and her mother. Officers said the girl, now listed as doing well ' by w,stmlnster Community Hospital officials, told them that she had quarreled wilh Hickey, 20, the previous evening but did not believe that the minor spet could have sparked the shooting. Hickey is being held in Orange County Jail on murder charges flied in COD· nection with his alleged slaying of Irene Margaret Waterman, 40, and assault charges filed . in coMection with the wounding of Miss Powers. Investigators said Mrs. Waterman was struck in the body and head by a number of shots fired from a small caliber hand weapon. The same gun was then used to wound Miss Powers. Ofricers hope to arraign Hickey on the charges later today in Santa Ana Municipal Court. He is held in county jail with ball denied. com Mesa councilmen al.o beard from Dr. John Farrer, prellldenL of the Orange County Medical .wociatlon • whose members last February were poll· ed ror their views on the campus teachng hotpital. Results of that survey given to the legislative committee suggested lhe county 's 600 member doctors opposed Ute Idea by a margin of 2 to 1 . Dr. Farrer said since the university scaled down its plans no new poll of QC. MA members has been taken. Costa Mesa Councilman Alvin Pinkley asked how doctors would feel if the medical schoo~ closed due to loss of the funds to another county. "Doc tors would be most upset to lose the school," Farrer said. "There is no doubt about It." ... Other councilmen supported PinkJey's motion which declared "it b almost im- perative this council go on record in sup- port because we can't afiorti to lose a medical school on what may be the greatest campus of the University of California." Mayor Jack Hammett echoed the view, revealing his concern that the "teaching hospital (might) slip away to somewhere in downtown Los Angeles." That somewhere, sugg..ted by the joint JeglslaUve panel, may be Martin Luther King Hospital which bas had dll· fiCulty attracting medical staff. An ex· panded medical education program there is under study by the Bro~ committee at the same time the UCI hospital is . being examined. The Costa Mesa City Council · acUon matches an earlier resolution by the city's Chamber of ~rnmerce directors. Fro111 PG9e I REQUESTS. • • High School. Teachers also asked !or more coaches, a weight trainer, and team trainer and first aid expert for Mission Viejo High School. -More books to brb:Jg district libraries up to standards of the American Library Association, and also additional library clerks to ln.wre circulation of the books. -A free period a day for all elemen- tary school teachers to allow them to plan their I~. lllgh school teacher' already bav~ this prfyllege. . · "Almost everythlnj we're asking for is going to oost money,'' conceded June Sikes, chairman of tbe teachers' negotia- tion team. "It's a matter of how much they can spend, and then how you set your priorities." From Pagel THREAT ... move his wife and six children out of their home stem "from an organization with definite Mafia overtones." He now Jive.s alone at the home and keeps a shotgun by his side for pro- tection. He told sheriff's officers he was warned by ari unknown caller lhat two or his daughters would be mutilated il he did not immediately comply with the telephoned instructions. "I have no Intention of meeting these demands ," he repeated today. "This issue could be resolved quickly and easily by civil action but those who are threatening me don't want me to do things that way." The jury was brought in at 10 a.m. and told the government rebuttal wt11s conH. pleted and the defense wo!Jld oot offer more witnesses. "That brings to an end the evidence in this case," Byrne sakt He told the unaeQuestered jury to rtporl back to the courtroom Monday morning, Instructing them again to avol~ exposing the~selves to any news of the case. Jurors have not &een told about the' alleged involvement of W a t e r g a t e conspirators and White House aides in the burglary of the oU!ce of Daniel Ellsberg's psycbialrist. After the jury left, Byrne asked at·, tomeys for both sides what they think should he the "scope" of • hearing into the Wagergate links. The defense asked previously that a number of past and present White House staffers be called to . testify here about the burglary of Ellsberg's psychiatric files and other matters. The judge also said the government turned over a box of new materials this rooming, but said the materials did not include those items he speclllcally asked for. Bryne Instructed prosecutors Mpnday to find wt how long the Department of Justice bad known about the burglary, about CIA involvement and about any. electroo.ic surveillance. In the latest development Monday, th"e1 judge released additional grand jury testimony of Watergate ~pira~r E;. Howard HUDt. ... ~ Hunt had said that President NIJ:on's' special counsel, Chafles W . .COison, as!' signed him to a "hot" mission -to forge cablegrams linking President John F. Kennedy to the assassination of south Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem. The Sl!te Department cu>linned in Washington today that HlDlt was given- acceM to cables dealing with Vietnam in . Beptember 1971. Charles W. Bray, the department press ol'ficer, said Hunt was allowed to read tlie cable traffic to and from Saigon at· the request of David Young, another. Watergate figure who served oo the staffs of both foreign policy adviJer Henry A. Ki>singer and White House domestic adviser John D. Ehrllchman. ' The cables covered the period April· through November of 1913. County Boy,3, Runs Into Side Of Truck, Dies A 3-year;-0ld Anaheim boy was kille4 Monday afternoon when he darted from a traffic island, ran into the si de of a truck and fell under the rear wheels, police reported. Craig E. Rupert of 31S Carol Drive, Anaheim, was reported dead at the. scene, Lincoln Avenue near Carol, by a coroner's deputy. Driver of the truck, Ronald L. Hooper, 22, of Whittier, was not cited. Officers' said the accident is still under"' in- vestigation. Accordlni to witnesses, a yoong girl believed to be the victim's sister bad left the traffic island and crossed the street safely. When the boy darted after his: sister the truck driver tried desperately to stop but was Wlable to do so in Ume 1<t avoid the accident, investigators said. WHO'S BEHIND YOU? How much do guerontees mean? It depends on the item involved ond tho manufacturer. A $100,000 hou'" is guaranteed for ONE year. Most automobiles are guarantHd from 30 days to one year. Most electrical products are guaranteed from 90 days to one yoar, Guarantees on carpeting are complicated. The rule in the industry, ;, TWO YEARS for manufacturing d e f • c t s. The feeling is that manufacturing defects will surface within that two yee r period. Beyond this, these manufoclurors fool there are too many variables in the usage to givo coverage beyond that period. ' Don't be misled by "Phoney" guarantees. They aro pro rated, based on mill·invoice costs, plus padding and labor lo change. By tho time you figure them up, it usuaDy costs more to change than the original _ purchase price. C.rpot manufactvren tell us that a preponderance of compliints . is not becau'" of defects but because of improper installation. W o minimite the number of complaints by hav.ing t!te best inslaRen around. Also, we daal only with more substantial miffs, further reducing problems. Buying from Alden's will give you the great..+ security. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac1ntla Ave. IN ccm• ..... COSTA MESA llNCI ltl1 646-4838 • MM.· 1'1ln. t to l:JO; l'rl. t lo t; s.t. tiJO lo I • , ' ) I • I I • • • . . . 32 DAILY PILOT • S • ; . -· • T\ltSday, May 8, 1973 11 • • Jhe-··DAll Y PILOT •.•.• :_:Stil!~anl.r $2.65 . a: .month ' ·• . : . . . . . . ... : ' . . . . ·.·· .., ··-.-~·-·· .. · .. -.... ~-·.. -...... " -~ --· delivered to your door seven d·ays ·a -week ' ' . " "' • • ,. ! • '-I ' ' . , ' ' • . . ~·· . ' ' .. ·. . . ·-· -' .. ,,, . . .. • ., " j •• ' •• ' .. • • ' . ' . r ·" . . . ' ~ . ~-r ~ ' i , I , j.. <, , l Or1 u":~To~l -Pree:."Number To Call T~~ D.AILY PILOT '.•' • , • .. -<( ,. ·, ' • ' Office ·1~"-Y-our ·orang·e -Coast A·r-ea c ·ommunity> I ' • ' ... . " ' I I.., ' I ' . . ' . l i I .. ' I l I ' • t • I I • • . , I I l -' \ -.. •• 8,1973 JI •11 • ~j ~"""'"~::t;;=~·~j l~'I M 1 ~-~, .l~c::::= _ .......... j .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim~.~11 TV, Radio, Hlf f. ·-~ Power ----"--"----lj~~E:::~"·~·~J:A~u~oF~""'~""~"~'~' ,~ ... ~-~~i~~~~~~~97o~-~.J~a~ .. ~~ .. ~.~0::~~~~~~~~990~ ;Auiii,iii.,iii, iiiu...,iiiiiiii~~"°~I : MllCllll_,,. Si.reo 836 ~,s,. r ; . 1------------·--FISKJNG ,.,., ll> tt. rn .... ·12 HONDA 350 1n.....r.1e' '64 " TON ·°""" Picli-Up. -RAT TOYOTA ·. BUl<fl FORD WANTED 1973 RCA & Zenith television tron lnboard.i0utboa.rd 150 :n:io mill!s, tJ.,.y bu, mUlt 327 enc, l'Olltn.cdon. o..~l---------i---------1---,.------1-------::'.=::--I & 8!'""' cl••"!-™" sale. All hp. Chevy 6 <;YL aoat & "11' !"'° m.&264 rubbtr,, .....,, xuu. l*lO. '11 ;1AT. 124 t'O•M>rtible, · '70 T OYOTA '6' 1 BU~CK '69 FOR O a~'all. models 111 stock & on ' nlOtar only us;td 300 hrs. * '65 BSA 650 Twin. * 892-01?2 afttt 6 pm burgandy w/tan Int, t 11 FAMIL'{ STATJON' d1gplay. Priced less than the Bait twlk depth tinder aean MUST SELL' '58 al:EV. ~TON , am/fin iterco. m8.g whls, ~ 11 WAGON, 2 dr ·V-3, Auto. n.eal clean . WAGON. t'ull silt de. TICKETS TO r~u:::~~ ~11!!, 3 ~pl~ SIS radi.;. $.1.600. earl $350 * ~ P.U. 'Good worlc tnMS· $350. 24,000 ml. Clll ~ or ~¢1 . auto. trans., BOci, ~Int. Rwui iood· $250. • luxe Vt. factory air • LED ZEPPELI N "rvlce. Free UllF/VIU' 630-l!ID ..-633-9264. SCHWINN bot• s spee<! Ap-566--0868 "li4IRl6IO · • • . ll!ib<.'...~ ~ e -• condlt!onlnr. AM'/ , CONCERT ro1..-antenna w/aey co(> BERTRAM pie Knie, good Caodltlon V1n1 . 963 FL\'I' \70, UI ·~.prl i\IYI ,....,,,. r.!"' ~ ~--1N1"1Ulc)! R IY!ilr• FM st.m:pwr .. sb'11., • Pl-call 801e purchJue (olltt lOOd ~ -'73 tags balwnll yellOw balll<!d. Boe to lj)j>rec i'ull . Powtr., Jl'aciory air, brol<es, •ulD., R& • 1 548-7881 1bl'u :n MllJIJ MIC Cot<r Quick DollvoryL . ,72_SUZUKI-400_ ~ .call,ow~ 61Ml.40.. · • ' 1 (68!1BBQJ , • Am/Fm radlb. I.and'• top. ...,,, tua. r11Ck. !641· *AUCTION* TV, UOl6 Brookhurot 25-28-3L·38A38-40!fiulhcledt l800 o< btot clftt, Call WANTED' •ll9F!ATU!'O!dan-Airllne $il9S Lowmll'fl:)(akeolfcr. AFY J . 963-3329 & 9021 Atlanta di~ crullen. Kettenbura, -aft gpm. • cond. Sac. 1\175. · · 2840 ' ' IAIM $1195 FIM Furniture !J62.6!ill HuntJnstoD Beach Dam< Point Harbor, 49MlllO. 7l' lloJ!da 7lO good coo-S&m1 ' . c:~:vd. 1'171 ButcK 8 Pai. Estate 2840 Harbor Blvd. A :=""" 23" TABLE model ill' mo :=tt .1nilOli<\. dlUcioi.. _.,'lo mlkage, TICKETS TO G~ . ., At' FIW' Drlvt Wagon.. 19,000 miler. new A~~~.~, ¢l'f:i"'y•s A,.,;ti~~B:,;, ~.~$116. ~drl hp~~</_M_!: ee.totter.m.«;t? LED ZEPPELll't 546-801\, .¥::".1i~K~~ 51&-8017 -""' W, cau-u ~. ''I03\IOY.ntaha-.ibike -.. N-CM ••• -w'1k tllru wlndlhield ud _ -·-' CONCERT 'l{I GLAS:' l'IOO ·""'· lO 170 ™ p,/1, ~lb. , Behloo ~;Bldg~ mile. Cit. Guard equjpt. ---Please call mllee,gt, xtrit conce•Make ' fact;-.,~, undft'WitT. USED n hlno ta kl rod • I J[\ $1,'ll0.fl5.5887. '72 SUZUKI TS 2iO Savage, 548-7681 offer. aft 6, -' l!-'1dy overnatilod traru<. ' reels. I~. t:Ckl~ oo!es. ~--'_,._ .. _"""--~ 30' TRl?rfARAN -35% like new $600 FIRM. SACRIFICE! '72 Che,vy JAGUAR 1m TOYOTA Corolla, air, $nXt.'962-1172. 1970 FORD Maverick. 6 cyl,,: tools, housewares. cabinet -completed inclds plans, 3 &e4274 Lots of extras, $2650 ~lat ~s, good . cond. ~ BUIC¥; Special Sta \Vag. all dt;>luxe fealures, autom., hardware, and many other 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 hulls, crossanns, best Motor Homes 776--0148 , 42.cm m1. $1350 11 rm· Private prty. Orig. owner. tact. air. radio, heater, etc., items too numerous to men· materials, must sell. $1Zj) S•le/Rent MO n JAGUAR XJ-6, sa,ble 586-2168. -Excttptionally clean. A/C + etc. A-1 n1echanically A tlon. All very reasonable. \ cMh. ~~ l970 FORD Van -New tirel. bro"'ll, stereo rad. Orlg. TRIUMPH n-.ny extras 979-3686 thruout. Jo 1ni., new tires, ' 3625 w. 5th St. Santa Ana. DARUNG 1ut06e pt~Pie1ds, 11 1''oot Fi~ Speed 'IC•ZTD'I'!f'A:ovV~VtD ~~r.oo~J;-of· owner.$6150.m-MSTN .G.HIA' 1970 RIVIERA sha~ one xtra whls. $1550.,..S~~'!~ Bk 9:30 to 6 PM. 1 block oU be~e/pood e, woo.a o , rn-... R~ • WhJ•·. 2 ... ·-. ~ ~ ~ KARMAN ('l!IOCPG) brk 645-4392 $1850.) 1 ov.'ner. 4~ H-.~ Blvd. I ki '--homea 557-4071 outu. """m: ..., ~ M•.22• ........ NTJNEN'f"-T • DODGE Van 1972, CUit tnt, -· , w uu• :;: 6ngpmll}J. • 20 hp Mere. & trailer wltb 113>, p}i}JlE A: JOYS ml map '='tires, ·PXX), -"·•-MM .............. ._.-BEAt.M'IFUL T2 TR6 con-BUJO:: Llmlted, -k\oor, 'TI COUNTRY sedan, 11• SECRETARIAL desk like new tires. $.150. Call after VAN CON\i:n.sl::>NS ~.UO. . _ '69 .KARM~N GHIA, new ver.t1bl e, xlnt cond. ·loadedrXlntcondltion$3000. O\\'ner, J\lichelin tires, hvy l new Metal w J while FREE Fluffy Kittens. 8 wka 7:30 p.m. 543-3691. :-•tel • Service • Rental• ·-W ~ 961 pa.mt, engine, brake&. tires. AMIFM radio, C'&b!tte m-8010 or 644-2609 dly tl'ler htch, never wed, FonnJca top. Cost $375-Sell old .. Black & white, also 22. CARAVEL w / Mer c * D I * ,.., in,_ . See to apprec. Beat ottr. player, Michel.en UM. $2950 '7l llIVIER.A $2700 tUt \Vhl, rack, \Vht w/b\u f $100 9fi3..Q'.llM Calico colors. 645-6927 aft 5 ise I/O b" h1 trail anmar . ftC . 493-7346 F!rm. can after 6 pm 1or Inlm.ac. cond I..oo.ded SS lKXI int, perl rond. Sacrlf, $m5,I USED BICYCLES pm. ~~in,r bead, ;!d~, like :~: 1330:' Harbor Blvd., G.G. WE FAY 'l'OP oou..\R LOTUS app't. ~7565. tnt 968--1.896. ' ' 531-3374 I AU Types * 642-lm f\,l I N 1 AT URE Ger man $5950. 645-1407 648-7171 bSl-6800 FOR TOP USED CAits '70 GT 6,-new tires, 24,<XX> ' '71 Country Squite sta wag,; ro=MP=RESro="'°'R"""l"'or,....i=e,.., "'so""p Shepherd pup, 10 weeks, <Don Fl Nut to G.G. Datlwl U )'QUI' car 11 extra· Clean, ,10 WTUS Europa, .bew mil", Mechanically perfect. CADILLAC 1 10 psngr, immac, 30,001 m_i., 2'J) lt 3 mos. old Call male. Smart I: loyal, 26: STAMAS F b r b & I s MOTOR HOMES tee u.I 'tint. paint & tires 19 000 mi's Beaut coDd. in/out. Below -pwr strg & brakes, alt, ,. 642-l~' • 536-2788 Cruiser, 4 YI'5· old. F1ne _ BAUER BUICK $2900. Cash o~ly. ~. ' . blue book $1895. Call after 6, '69 CADILLAC Cpe DeV. F\tll $2995. 495-4731, 492-4203. GENTLE playfUl Uttie kit· cone.I. Xln't fii;hlng boat. 200 Apollo. Pacesetter, Baron. 2925 Harbor Blvd. 548--76.15 P\\'r, fact air, am/(m rad, '71 Ford, Blu LTD, cpe, air, Miscetl1neous tens, 5 pure ~'hite, long hp 1/0 eng. Asking ,7200. Jamlx>ree, Roblnhood • Costa Mesa 979-2500 MAZDA TRIUMPH TR4A '67, Good tilt & telesopic \Vhl, cruise disc brks, pis, very clean. W1nted 820 hair, 2 orange 54S-6627 (2131 592-1065. We've got 'em at IMPORTS WAl\'TED cond, Extras, mag wheels control, door locks, 6 \Vay Must sell this w k end. 1------~--FUN loving kittens need Jove '73 YAMAHA 100 MX. never KEN DON Orange County's * Maula 173 ROtMy * Ask for Phil, 675-7TI8 .seat. ~ble metallic w~n1at-"55:::1c:-9:::34,::9=~~~~~oi ' NEED 150 sq yd< nr 1"'8 of & good borne. 6 w.,, all been raced. ~'95 eashJlake MOTOR HOMES TOP $ BUYER $66 MONTH VOLKSWAGEN eh lthr mter & match vm Ip. 1971 FORD Galaxie 500 2 &'OOd used carpet. Must be types, playtul, 645-8016. over payments $27 mo. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE '3000. 968-99'37. Dr hrdtp, full p w r ~I . reuona.ble. 549-l69l eve. BEAUT. cockapoos--mother 54S-7588. 707 N. Harbor, S.A. 18ft8l'Beach Blvl. Will accept trade-ins '72 ELDORADO Cabrolet ,l',i air/cond. $2,295. Call Ron , ORIENTAL RUGS. Private 21,s yrs, pup {mixed) 6 mo, 16. LAP runabout w/cabin, resenrattons tor Summer H. BC'ach Pb. 847-8555 CAIL MR. FRY S4U666 VW's su nroof & leather top, Peavey, 642-4000. party will pay cash fur all need good homes. !IGS-8293. 4 cyl. Gray Marine eng. now. Phone ?i-1iss Bennet at CAR zonked just need a tow Hunt. Beach am/fm, stereo, tpe deck, c Sed ·'-=;..· .:.644-5326;.:,.;=---,-=, I ~-0033 or ....... "be it's too old. Junk NEW.1 & USED air, etc. lo.lint green & white. '72 oun try an !"'! GERMAN Shepherd puppies, Call after 5 p.m. Make Of· ~ Pr! ly "A"., •• ,, Sta. \Vag. $3400 or best offer . Music•l ln1tru~W1822 1 ---• t .,.o ,,_., cars tewed away !ree. 2 Big · Loc1tion1 · P · ......,..>'t'<V. .. pureblood, 3 fema es, ·~ er. ;no-.i,,,..i, 1970 P ACE-ARROW, 22' sett """-"""'0 MAZDA 5 M 5 F OM Cad Eld all Call. 837-2951. bomee now. 66--Z>~ aft 5. * 23• FORMULA fr e sh <>J<T"'\1'7.1. INUTE R '68 · o, extras. 1 11 ~~::ss::;:p; WHITE Shepherd -needa water cooled, taraeat out4 ~;~·~~~roo~ JUNK'C"'.S W~TED m COSTA MESA r~ce. Best offer. Call *m~l~~1i~!~a~~~n.23~:' Model, will trade for good Kood home, ~.,,na old. drive, bead, xlnt condttion. w/ladder, new CfllU, drpt I PlU' top $$ fo r junk or 4 E8. l ST Br., 8.A. ,68 CAD EL DO"'•"'"' cond. Call 536-2648 after 5 quall1Y acoustic guJtar "'11 lem1. 54MtJO(J, -846-3524 & upholllery. 8 track ....... -can. n41547-4365. 11331 Beach BJ. . il4U666 35-6531 . . ~ I PM 541-9651. FREE -Male Siame&e KJJ. • lB' TROJAN, 185 hp, lnbtl ~'~ .~ Priced to Airtos, Imported 970 MERCEDES BENZ So(4. ~°! Np~;::1 12:5~~ ';'1· ''°68""'Fo°"R"'D~F"'a1""r1-an-e,-:::29"'.ooo"' Office Furniture/ ten. 6 weeka old. 686-4,325 ski boat. """ • VOQ-CnVQ """'""'I• RO act. miles. 1 owner. $99Q. ' E ' 124 alt 5PM 548--0223, 64&-4325 AUDI 50 USED 15 MINUTES FROM CAMA 536-3832 aft 5 pm quip: 6' COUCH, mattre19, chair, CLASSIC Bay .Boat, Nlce 18' ''m) -~·all ESCAPADE e '62 FORD Galaxy, De\V MAROIANT calculator with foldlno bed (a lo r I e). So.Cout Lapstrake. S1996. ~r':'' :.:fe .or ~~d~ '70 AUDI LS 100, am/fm MERCEDES "11~~1,9RNE. AVIEJO '68 CAMARO, black, 3'5,000 427. Will "II or b'ade for tape. Does ~verythlng. Pakt 67':H>790. Peninsula area. 6t8--091D eves. . 494-2T4J. 'ISl .Temple mu. radio, ~. sunroof, ~ dr, , _. ml, new brakes, clutch, pickllp. 645--82()5 ·$950~ 'lor.. $350 2'--LABRAOOR-"1!bied pup. IN'-INBOARl>/outM<l.-lloll· .;taJ=!!. · · m.414'11:·6&3213. -ON ·DJSPLA Y 1~ oos:r.. s.A. ~ ==· tf"~ •t;1 4 DR,. v,a; a~ eo.nd~ , $<l.'l90 pies, 9 ,.n, Y<f'll cute. Need tank. radio, depth tinder & •n EXPLORER 26'. Rental -BMW . Sharp New Car 642-8860. 57."'!J nu s. Like new. 1.\95. EXEC awvl chrs $15-25 Sec a good home. 495-{;592 · trlr. 639-8382. priv. party. -n,oo:i mL SI.pi -Trade-:Y)s_ (S.A. Fl'wy. Eut on a m!'lltl &46-5033 days, 646-0681 eves. _ ebn 18132 Desks lll>i~,2/1 TOGoodHome.2 kltlena, 7 EXP. Yi<ht a18man wnld. 6.Alr, oelf -.JS%.Ulot SALES BMW LEASE toml"'" lh,-Evei Dly :lat St. ll. ml.) CHEVRO ... a '67 FORD Convertihie. XL SUpl 867 W 19 CM 642-.¥tVO weeDi pll.vmatet o1 "Pal" ~ ~· broker.· Phone .:3·ttnt&la. 5«&-2886". Service ''W ' _ 500. Po\\'er, auto. Top con· Pl•nos/Org•n•· • 826 the lalldna' dor· -· ...... 494-2871 FOR ... 1 22'· Winnebago. Travetlnr Oveneu !hla aunt· Ask Abou~ Our njque Commonwealth ·n CHEVROLET dilion. $795. 84&-13Zi'. ORGAN HOBBY coa<·A·POO Pl1PPll!;1;. ao.11, Sall 909 sr..., 6 afr, odl-oontalned mer? we can amnae 1<1r Used Mopr1c..t~s L"',.. · Mot9n Ltd. MONTE CA RLO MERCURY I 9 wlm, ~.1:ck .,,.! whit.. J25 day lOc mile. PhOne delivery ol the BMW ol your lftl • _ rout'E. Ctist. 350, -846-8633 cholca lne!udlng lh!ppb>g Hou•• of lmpo' rts """'• An• pwr. str., brak .. , tae. --------'I -=~~====-I NT E RN AT I ONAL . 12 by ~-Dell '!ti •-van .., afr aulD 1W1 '"""l '71 CX>UGAR XR7. X!nl FREE Kl-ENS I R I A Moto H -·-v 0 a . · '70 VW ~uAREBACK • " • ••y Don't buy any r:gan until •.!! Sailboat w trailer, Must en r ome ' able m· ,motrt 1ore1p 6862 Mancheat~. Buena, Park sunroOr, ,';t AM / FM', top, bucket seats, cone.I. lo n\ileage, new tire.t you CM play! Non-players ~~~*~6~75-~-~·~*~~~ sell! Aak $349. Make any Of.· for yoUr V1c•tlon oountries. on the Santa Ana FIW)' radialJ Coco mats xlnt cont0le, dlx. inter. fully loaded. AM I FM welcome to attend tree work ;: fer! 67J.-5750 * 531-6800 * Bob Mc ~ are n authorized 52.1-7250 cond. -' ' Low mlleaa:e (677· stereo, tilt wheel , p/steer· ~ta~~r:~~~:ch ··I ll'L.I ~ 1:. °:! w~d~ RENT lliy new 1973 ~~eal~ach Blvd. La '70 Merctdts .llem Low,,,;;" ':i.!l~s ... ,,;.. FWJC). $3''9 ~:~ux& i~t~~~::· &flirco=~'. 642·2151 Ptt1andSuppfin ~ S call (71 4) E1Dorado Mint M ob11e Hab , JIM SUM' _ O.NS ea, • l:W11£"... lime green \V/black vinyl CN1t Music Servic1 3:8"~ or Home. Sleep! 4. All power, . g;.5624 S22-5333 . st1 Call 645--7830 days only 2840 Harbor Blvd. roor. Super buy at $3495. · tape deck. 956-2764 or IMPORTS.... '68 VW 1 P•1s Bus Cotta Mesa Call original owner Newport Blvd. at Harbor SABOT, near Mew, race rig-1973 Oisooverer and SUndial Villt our new bolnJJ MERC. EDES BENZ Wblte with red interior, At ~ff1ve 714-557-1571 \veekdays 9--6. BABY GRANDS P.ERSIAN kittens, CFA reg. mast, dolly. 8fS.6137. Bob LoriaPre Po n t l a c , At.rl'HORIZED Hide-a-Bed and Table, '6;ir~~:· :Je~~. P~~ ; Costa Mesa Cits .852 ged. lnlman aail, alum. Motor Homes for rent, make G AM/FM Radlo, low milel, Now save up to $1000 oncer-~· =~~·::~·Also ppl~ix:~. trailer .se::.or :~~ · Tm·;: ;. i ... 2691~wwwll 1!!!!!!!!!!!!~1~!!~~~!j ;if~· '700· 968--5a'l6 Priv tai\1 l!Qo<. giodels. Other · · "5?-5810 & alt. 5 675-IOilO airettao: Sleepo 6. A1r oond. • ~.,.. r~·• '67 CffEVELLE..SS39, 4 apd. Giind-Pianos lrom S729. Oogs 854 ~ SAILBOAT, like new 1!100 Deluxe. ~70. ROY CARYIR, Inc. Imports ' -1 494-1075 · Buclret aealS, map, ,.bit MUSTANG Thc&e and many more at: PUPPY WORLD, 100 Mixed or best offer! Trallen, Tr"1vel 945 2Mi E. 17th st. 1301 Quail -•n-§ljfER. Beetle, 14,500 tnl. 'eilg $850 •. 673-75&t Wallichs Music City Pups, also Irish Setter $50. * 558-1397 * Colt& Meu 54M'44 Newport Beach xtn~ .cond .•. orig wananty. '68 CHEVY .Nova, atr, PIS, 1900 H.T. s, P/S, R&H, $600. South Coast Plaza 540-2830 Basset $40. Afghan $50. 16' HOBIECAT 1972 Model 15' ARISTOCRAT J.o.-Ltner. WSE A FROfl33.M~ftA"~m '"Tape' deck, bst o 1 fer. radio, low mlleage, $899. or best offer. Keeshound $50. Bull Terrier, w/trailer. $1450. Sleepa six. Gu refrig. Like ~ ¥~ .... ~·u•• 644-0045 PVt part.f, 548--3<5 623-4301· or 548--0122 MAGNIFICENT Ebony 5'2" T-Cup Poodle, Chihuahua, 644-5619 eves lle\V. Electric brake.. Ex· e,173 Mercedes 8er1.1 '70 SQBACK, lo miles, ,56 4dr Station ·Waaoo. nu '1>7 MUSTANG aut,o trans, Antique Austrian Baby Lab., Boxer. Shepherd, c A LIFORNIA Catamaran tras. 690 Capital St, CM ott 1973 BAVARIA ALL MODELS ra~, tm, xtrag •. , Very palnt:, eng-runa good, map, PIS, PJB, air, vinyl roo{, Grand, like nu cond. Must Cockapoo. Open Eves. Stud w/lrailer, xlnt cond. $45(), Pomona. PURCHASE r6~~a7blel 644-4839, or 962--6363, $575 or belt otter. very clean, $1000, 552-8305. Sacrll th~ prire """""'ion Scrv. 531-5027 Call 968-1107. LET us sell your clean travel ASE ·~ H OLDSMOBILE at $7115. 96il-4300 SAVE A HOMELESS PET LIDO 14-$650 Ready to,.;;. traiiec or camper IDr you. CREVIER BMW LE '69 VW CAMPER. Xlnt cond C RYSLER \VANTED Plano, u 8 e d Cockapoos, Irish Setter, New center board & cover. Demand is good oow. Mesa Sales • Service -Leasing Ov•rseel D1liv1ry w/pop top & tent. $2250: Sales & Service walnut console, not too old Dachshund, Beagle, Ter-Call evenings 673--6939 j Camper Sales, 2036 Harbor{ 208 W. tst St., Santa Ana C•ll Anytl,me Days ·6 46-887 7 ; em '72 Olrysler Newport, 9lOW OLDSMOBILE and in good condition. riers & poodles 534-3228; • Costa Mesa 646-4002 835-3171 · * 548--5104 * ~. ~ COD!l. 2 dr. bt, p/1, ... 1889 4g.i.,ig53 Bo•ts, Speed & '5k1 911 13, TERRY Trailer, -'-t VW CAMP p/b air v1n>i top mad GMC TRUCK.$_ ~ ~· CAPRI Clami 9"10 !\lel'<'edes ' ER XNLT COND whla,' Mtist tell. Best otter HONDA CAR$ Sewing Machines 828 RARE White German , cond. Many extras. $600 or 1970 280 SL Coupe. Red/tan $950. or belt offer over wbolela!e book takes Shepherd. Needs yard & 14' RUNABOUT Glass best offer. 968-4815 aft 4 '&· int., 2 tops & loaded inclding 675--1428 -tt! Call 833-3S46. UNIVERsnY OLDS MOTHER'S DAY love, 4 nJOS, 60 lbs, shots, o/wood, Mere 55hp eng & pm. am/fm steI"eO, show room •69 vw new tires new 2850 Harbor Blvd. ' * SPECIAL * 645-1923 eves. trier. Runs good. $250. SHERWOOD Tent Trailer. nu. $2,000 total miles. Call brakes,· good cond. '$1100. CONTINENTAL Costa Mesa 540-9640 Z;. Zag -"ng machi'n•, Afo~GHAN pups, AKC, shots & 673-~22. c1an be seen 2'l3 1S9;>. Sips 6. Xhtt cond. Priv. 644-6500 or aft 6 call 644-2342 Call 545--0630 du . -e. ""' .. ' " __ _, Ch · 1· Manne B '72 OLDS Torona ex~ hair • · bi r l \\-0111u:u. an}p10n 1ne. ~ ·· party. 837-3019. for appt. to see. .70 vw Slat•'on Wagon, auto, '68 LINCOLN Continental, -4 .~ ••... ~.~:~ .. ~~ .. ~et$~. ~e~zmreasonable. Terms. '72 COMFORT 17', fully sell BRAND NEW 280 SL CPE R&H. Good eond. ~1441 dr. s~n. xlnt cond., all e~· ~tion~Ue~xec~~~~e·s "500~ M811y, good, used portables, lr:aJ contained. Like newl Ex· . Orig vner xlnt cond 1968 or 548-7601 tras mcldg stereo tape, pr1v 494-3775 starting price • •.••••• $9.95. ~~E Sa~i:~ard, $7250: 'A I a1Udoe ·• tras! $2295. 84&-5710. '73 CAPRI red. :Ai1k' int., aUto:' AMi '67 VW Bug, FM stereo, ~i~crtt tor Ul.95. CaJI '72 GOLD Toronado, full/ AB Guaranteed &45--8393 aft 4pM Auto Service, P1rts 949 Immediate Dellv•ry FM, remvl hdtp w/tonneau, radials. Many xtras. f190, loaded, under 16,000 mil~s: Over 11 yn. In Qlot1l Meaa GUSTAFSON auto trans, $5900 •. 83:Mie0t 54IJ.OO?;; or 548-3622 '61 LINC Cont. Ve.ry good Days 642-5225; eves/wknds; Sincere 8ewlbg Madrlne AFGHAN Pups, rare blue PARTS ONL y running cone!. I will make and Vacuum, 1878 Harbor bl'indles. Rearonable C1mper1, Sile/ Rent 920 OPEL '72 VW Panel, 5000 miles, YoU a deal you can't refuse! 644-24.15 1 * 646-9'142 * Term.. 64:;.Zffi FOR SALE CHEAP Linc:oln·Merc:ury Must Sell! 536-4744 ·55 or.os 88. Good cond, '71 SIX pac cabover for ·im· From 1'159 SEDAN de Ville l6&JO Beach at \Varner ~ Opel sfut Wagon, 'xtra 675-1182 aft. 4 ,62 CONT. Full pwr, gd cond. IJt;.pen4able transportation., TV, R1dio, HiF i, * ST. Bernard, AKC, pups. port truck. Stove, sink, CADILLAC Huntington Beach clean, l.JJw book. arn/fm '67 vw Squareback, reblt. Gd tires, nelv brks $400 or/ 675-0700 , Stereo 836 Sliols. 5 \\'ks old. Champ. ,ice1,...00•·4,, ~! neroow,f~r:..J:-cork, _ Transmission 842.a&44 * (213) 592.5544 $650, 545-1624 engine, new brakes. Must bst otr. 548-1801. 1968 OLDS DEL MONT 4 dri 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;[ •ired. $125 up. 546-6594. ..._.,. .......... Radio Sell' $900 642--6835 aft s /B Ph I• OLD English Sheep nop 7 offer. 496-4123. Air Conditioning Unit ''Home of the Viking'' FOR sale '69 Opel GT, nu · • CORVETIE ~~~S, P • $1075. ~ RENT TO OWN TV'S & STEREO wk!. Very reucmabl.e. Show "12 VW Adventure camper. 1212 South Ross St., DATSUN paint, brakes, clutch. 102hp '64 vwu:ug~IJ~'·1---------1 ""''-"~====.,--i l quality. AKC. 839-8939. Xlnt cond. 22,000 mi, Priced Santa Ana eng, $l5.50. 644--7597 :~k! ~ 979-4cis ~s~pe SHARP yellow '69 Vet Sting PL YM_OUTH $10 OLD English Sheep Dog pup-right. 675-2348 542·3UO DATSUN PORSCHE . * ·n vw SQUARE BK * Ray, 427, . 4 spd, lnaded. · Pies, AKC, xnlt blood line, Cyclis, Bikes, '55 Chevy 2 dr, 6 cyl, 3 speed. · Ai ti k d. 5.57-7878 pn. pty. WHOA THERE Good bod R ·u Ji NEW 1973 r, s c , ra 10, orange. shown by appt. 962-7444 Scooters 925 Y· uns, Wl se-1961 PORSCHE Super 90 673-1933 COUGAR No Credi! Owck•No De~sit COLl..lE puppy, AKC, sable whole car 01· sell parts. '61 PICKUP Roadster. Silver. Must sell. BIG FELLA! Free Delivery. Free Repair male shots show quality SPORTSTER /Chopper, bit Pontiac. Good motor (3$) Only $1400. Call .wkdays on-'70 VW ->.-nit cond, yellow Competition/luxury, 1971 Monthly Rentals Available $7o·. 4' "'9964'. • for show w/lots of chrome. & aulD trans. + rear encl, NO DOWN ly, 833-3362. ask for Steve. w/blk int., radial tires, etc. '70 GOLD Eliminator, new GTX. LOADED -air, powe• Ope E «• "" ~ body ~ \'"ll 11 '1275/best offer. 67343266 302 Boss eng., disc brakes, ' n ves. ~ U>ss than 1,000 total miles, i'i"""'· -.-J se com-$68 23 f 48 •~911 E TARGA silver 5 nd steering & brakes. aut" ~1IN. Schnauzers 12 wks old, since nu in 19n. Over $5000 plete or parts. Call alter · per mo. or mo. u~ · . • . • •61 CHERRY BUG, new clut· 4-spd, xlnt co . 847-&331 ,. !:"'!~~!!!!!~~~~~!I AKC, 3 males. in bike, Firm selling price ! 7:~ p.m. 543-"369l. Def. payment price $.1273.60. spd, mags, ptrell1s, FM ch 13 000 . f t ,69 XR7 1 ded good tires trans, 440 CID, 4 BBL, AM/ STEREO: 1973, 200 Watt Call 637_4578 A.P.R. 14.34%. stereo, xlnt ~4 45S:) .. :..i .. ~ •..,,.., !1}!.· _ _,,., on ac ' 00 ' 64?· FM/FM multiplex, vinyt Quadrasonic, Garr a rd 1--,,..c:::::_;:cc-="--,-$3,500. For those who want VER. e.,. ...... , .,...,.J, vu--vv73 private party_ Days, --top. Out of production t model, syslemiz<'d auto ENGUSl-f pointer puppies the ultimate in a street & ~ RO '61 VW BUS 1600 cc, cooler, 5735, eves &12-7556. limited edition. Must s('9 turntable, AM /'FM / 1\IPX for sale show bike call &U-6500 or I _for.. I = ,69 ROVER _TC, am/Im,' ~' ~~l:'falltire, a, wood panel-DODGE now • ton1orrow might ht? Receiver. 4 Quad Speakers. 646-1792 aft 6 call 644-2342 to see. Pfl MJ\A1 'l;\l .. ~,.,., too late. Ph. 675-1527 aft 6j ta"" deck Was l eft IRISH S tt f I MAY 73CZ SALE · sport rims, spare lire car·' -, ... ,.,..__ ,.~ . e er, 1ma e rler. N•~s clut~. -'56 VW. '70 DART Swmg· er, pvt ..,..,_ '69 ROADRUNNER, 383 ~ unclaimed, stiU brand ne\v 962-0184 SETUP ......... ""' ......,., N -·--' Bes ff •-In OOx and guaranteed. Orig $75. FREE $150 RACE 953 '70 PICKUP , xtnt cond, below Blue. Asking $1000. ot i-wuung. t o er. ty, au!o• air, Pl~. 21,00l spd, with mags. X'lnt oond; price $400. Now Sl&5. Cash °'H~0-,.-.-5-----•a"S6 with any 73CZ MX&Oesert Antiques/Cl11slcs 18,000 orig. mi., cust int., Pvt.Pty. G75-82l4. 96S--U89 mi. Vinyl top. Like new. $1500 or best oUer. 979-7650 all 1 '9""50l IX>AST MOTO CYCLE F/M stereo c"sette deck '69 CAMPER. AM/FM ,,.,w $ll>95. ~'>l-1Z78 PONTIAC 1 1 or sm paymen s. '· 5 YR. Old Appy POA gending 1931 FORD Model A Coupe w/spkrS. Blk vinyl root & TOYOTA tires, $1300. After 5pm. '70 DUSTER R/H, factory STEREO. Un•lalm-• 1973 Vb\W-.;;r *'CJ~W w/'55 Mere engine. nev.• 1 d l h 1 -M ---------ii Gana.rd. mod~l. 1'J1 size -riblx>n winner -a real W&Cd>:P}&' radiator, needs some body onl'l('aU cover, u~600ex,~~~ 61;ni12S· air, column stick, $1,175. ~ 'n Grand Prix turntable, Al\l/fllT Sterro beauty! Experienced rider. -----•~--.-work. Must sell. $950. or ~ff~~~~gs •• '-"""' TOYOTAAT. SALE '72 VW Bus, lo mllea'ge, cust 548-7385. receiver, full range air CaJJ a:lt. 6 PM 846-f.012• 2334 Npt Blvd, CM 645-8008 best otter, 847-6593 after 6 & ~!.fPC95,t·.6!Jn,t48Lcorl<I. sacrifice, -'-'-""F"'l"R"E"'B"'l"R"'D=---p~:es, ~~e~~;I, iE; Co:d1 speakers, tape deck and HORSES Boarded, riding John's Ri cing Cycles wknds. · '71 ndDATlaSUN pich~f w~~Pr Pr•Devaluation .,,... ,.,. Bucket seats, AMIFMI headphone plug in jacks. arena & trails. 20271 Acacia * BU L TACO * Recrutlon1I ~mf,er &rgSbt~a'C" ~bover PRICES VOLVO .71 FJREBIRD Esprit, air, 17.000 miles, Rallye wheel• Brand new •in box . SI. S.A. Heights. 644-5307 V hi I 956 SI adul BRANO NEW ~ ll38Fll'Di. · guaranteed. 01ig price $190. iEAOQUARTERS FOR • c" · f!~· 1:, ~. • ~ _ _ .-.· PIS, P/B, Cordova ,op, ;:::;;,,.'!. ~f' •mall DESEf.,~;,:',:,x TT ·n International Travelall % rack. $2350. or offer. Will · .. VOLVO SALE' l9,000 ml. $35(1(1. 646-l4ll DAVID ~~~~~LLIPS . I MlriMBom~ I~ Harbor at WJ!son, C.M. Ton. 4 wh. drive. 4 6pd. v . separate. 496-4123. 1972 . • I Al LY +SPRING SPECIAL*~ 646-4655 or 646-2428 345, PIS,. P/B. AC. 28,000 1971 2lO z, 1 owner. nu • BUICK POS:~~RPEL. inc! 'ltobuflt.P ictur• Tube 1971 SL 350 HONDA. Top ml. 8.13-25.11). radials, mags, am/!m Auto trans radio !act air Huge Savings BUY OR LEASE I $85-21'' or 25'' Color Boats, Gen•ri l 900 condition. Only 2,000 miles. '61 VW Bus Rock Buggy 40hp stereo tape, _auto, elr, low cond.. \v.S.w tifes, 'tint. * 2 YEAR WARRANTY ;o.;._:....;______ No dents. Perfect shape. 4spd, Crown body, $500. ntilcagt'. $3950, 642-3392 or glruis. (TE2l0061507). "'72 & 173 p I LOT '13 PONTlACS l Installation Available \VANTED: Airline Captain Nrver bet>n in the dirt. This 54~ 962 67'h'IOOS. $2563 . DAVE ROSS ! Rice's Television Servlre responsible & ell"perienc<'rl bike is bcf'tcr than ne\\'. Trucks TOYOTA Corona 4 Dr sedan'. , PONTIAC fonnerly Mesa North Center would like to make ar-Save y()Ul'9Clf $250 or $35(1 1969, auto. orig owner. ONLY : 1 Blek S. of Baker 546--6002 rangcmcnts to porlodlcaU y off new price. Only $700. '71 DATSUN pickup w/ak 42,000 ml1 xlnt oond, •· $AV E NOW 2480 Harbor Blvd., at Fal-' open 9-5 (6 day$l rent good 1port fisher. e 556-8597 e cond., large \Vhctls, step Call aft 6, 496-2)97,'"496-4374: AT-ORANGE Drlvt", COsta ?o.1'C'!ja 546--8011 n" RCA Victor oolor TV. 644--1616 9n SL •~ HONDA To bumper It Six Pac cabowtr •70 DATSUN 1600 Roftdsttt. 12 '69 PONTL\C LcMans. Ver./. h P · · 1 1 .;.,v • P Campar. Sleeps four adult!!. "' Prl l cle··•. TOP or 1..~ offer.' $'15.Fnnc r ov 1n i:1n 9' HIGH gpeed inrlalable condition. Only 2,000 mile5. l 00 I boot l 30M, X1nt cone!. • Prty. n ewu' -· ~~· ~'126 or ~-1884 art 6 a, oor . No dcnt11. Perfect shape. rack. $2350. or oUcr. WW " WA . LEFT AT ·-....,,.,_.,.,.,.,.. I cabinet. 'WOTks good . bo 1 11 boards & oars ce x. 11 ove, · roo fiesl "'ffer over n,ooo. -'•"• _ Mag \\11\001~. New tlres.. ••~ •·~ Only Uled 3 times, $21)(). Never been in the dirt. Thi. t 496-4123 67Hti00 TOYOTA COAST'S ·~·-pm. 642-3776 after 5 pm. b!lre i, betl« than ,_. separa e. . '72 DATSUN 240 z. Perfect PRE·DOLLAR T·BIRD ROBERTS 333X Jape WANTED' Yearround deek Save youn<el! $350 to $400 '69 TOYOTA Hilux It Ton, eond. Below blue book. 1'11: · DEVALUATION f'K'Ol'der, Sana.al 1000 amp, 2 space for sharp 33' Owens oft new price. Only '650, P.U. Truck, 1 0 w n e r • 640--0879 eves. 1966' 1-lttrflor, C.M. 646-9303 PRICES f ' ··A~ 44 1-aken, Girard " bn'dg,. ,,,..,;.,,,, 2 1 3 · • '~8597 • ~.<XX>mi. See at 5901~i •n TOY~ C 11 1o IV k d JI · d • .-.-.u••• ~ 11>-' " "'"'""' • • ~ Seashore Dr., NB, aft 4pm, '70 DATSUN liiOO Roodstcr * v 1A oro a, w e ma e overseas f" vene11 I • tum table, $550. 673-733'2 . 793--0279 BICYCLE SALE sm. n1ags, roll bar, disc brakero, mileage, air. Sec rt -You'll Buy tt ea 1ng ~:e ~tro1.'IV·xr~·i Boats, M1int./ NEW 10 SPEED ITALIAN ·12 1'"'0RD Courier an ex· tmmnc. $1100. 644-SS.12 54!>-%17 aft 6 Pf\,t. . """" L~•.:• --1.jng -nd. llSO. Service 902 BICYCLES $59.95. Beach tras tnk~ over pfmnts or FIAT '68 TOYOTA Corona deluxe. -WI\ !WllO i;.i052. _. --Bicycle11. 806 E. Balboa s2500. Call flick, 968--2687 R & II. 81110 trRn!j. Musi M k tpl BOATS ~palrtd, part~ ~"-Blvd., Bnlboo 675-7282. '68 CAB "Vt'r h ..... Doi:!-• '68 SPYDER 8.10. 11)\1.'nCl', sell. Best Off<'l', 493--0107. VOLVO ar e ace AKAi X2XJD. Rt<I ID reol acce8S. Banuelos !loo: Shop, S h S S • .,~ •· '69 St W $1000 ea,. df!ock. 1 )T old. All<,lng ~76 Hamlllon St, l-!unt. c wlnn uper port Pick-up w/auto. Ir n n s 31,(kX}mi., xl nt mechan!cnl a. ag pa. or -...... 60a" Deb. lllJIH21l. bicycle. $15. 613-7332 $1495. IJ.lt>.l002 oo•ld., !Thl ;t~q21. 642-J496 1966 Harbor, C.M. &JG.9303'----~---- I ' /' ,, • 1971 T-BIRD, 2 dr landau.' 18,500 miles. full pwr, ale< am/fm !itereo. Xlnt eon<t1 ph. Dr. Adam& ~ 962-3319, rves MH709 '57 -Nu Chev Z-28 drl\.'C' line, 38()hp, 4 SJ>d, PoSi, cl~ 1 bl'ftkes, mechnn J)('rf. s.mi. ~· $19q0. 1142-3476 I , . I 7 I I -• -... • H:uu·ti•gton Beaeh Fountain ·Valle N.V. St.eeks • VOL 66, NO. 128, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES OR'!~~ co~~· CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY I, 1973 TEN CENTS . . . • Beach May Ease Surfing Cu:fhs, Parking Fees By TERRY. COVILLE or ""' EN!t¥' "'I!' •• Huntington Beach will COllllder a "black ball" flag system to anow more summer surfing and the city may l'1!du<2 the 2k>ent parking meter charge along Pacific Coast Highway. City councilmen agreed Monday night to look Into both proposals after nearly JOO young surfers filled the ccudcJl clwn- ber to protest tight surfing restrli:tloM. Mayor Jerry Matney did not. promise Huntington Will Share DCLo~hyist With some hesltatioa, the Huntington Beach City Council agned MGDday night to hire a Washington lobbyist to be shared wilb the cities of. Anaheim, Santa Ana and Garden Grove~ - Santa Ana's Councilmen also BPP'!'O\led the joint powers agreement at their meeting Mooday. Anaheim and Garoen Grove will consider it today. . Huntington Beach councilmen agreed to the proposal on a one year trial basis. No figures were menliooed ID Mon- day's reso.lution, but the loJ!l>Ylst budget is ezpected to be near $60.000 for bis salar)r, a Secretary'! salary and an omce in Washington. David Rowlands, city administrate.. of Huntington Beach, said laat week he believes the lobbyist (referred to as a legislative representative.) will be paid about $25,000 , year. Rowjm)cll alao Fd Huntington Beach would not pay more than $151000 as ils. sl\Jre. "I can't really,.. the IOUr ~ a man to work for $hem.'' . · Henry Duke objected. "I think the mlioey could be spent other ways." Councilman Jack .Gnen alao .....ier- ed what would happen il Anaheim -"a traditionally conservative city" - diaagreed with Huntington Beach oo oomethlng. Rowlands explained ·that the lobbyist's primary fuoction would be to acquire ' funds from the federal g9~enunent and "watch out for local inte~." "We feel the four largest cities are in unanimous support of most programs from which we could benefit," Rowlands said. The objections of Duke and Green were met by the provision that the city is doing it on a one-year trial basis. • Mrs. Norma Gibbs said large cities on the East Coast we're am&zed to learn tliat cities the sl2e of Huntington Beach don't have "a man in Wasbingtan." Mayor Jerry Mainey also sin>nilY sup- ported the hiring of a lobbyist who klxlws bis way around Washington. The county's lour largest dUea decJded to band together !or the project iflor the county supervisors decided against hiring a Washington lobbyist for the whole county. .. Nudie Dancing Ruled IDeg~l . InCostaM~. Nude or semi-nude danailg.ls lllepl·in Costa Mesa today. · . 1 An urgency ordinance making lt so was passed by unalmous ,5 too vote.of the~- ty Council Monday •night. 1, ' , The statut~, drafted by -City' Attorney Roy June, l<>ok eUect' linlnediJt.ly but police officers did not make any arrests at either or the clty:s .two nudie places, Papa Joe'• or the Fire Home; after the actloo was taken. • · . · · ; · City Manager Ft9d Sonabal Indicated to councJI membell Moildij nlgbt 1111! the two club& WOllld be ·11..,, 11!!11' to comply with the .... r... but ~ unspecllic over how.mucb. • Sorubal met th1' momlDI wtth:Ca!>I. F.dward GlaSIO'I!; ~ ddel .rtbe Costa Mess Police Depar(inmt, to ' determine when on!or<eJDel!I b to bogln. ' The reaction or the club managen to the news was not lmmedlatelJ -. •Memben of the council who liave been 1 balUing nudity 1n bars •lnctl 1161 -the city's !ltit topleaa ctuh; Bibi' Dall's opened, passed the ordtpance wttllout oommenL The la• was written to he In direct c:oofonnance with a Catlfomla Supieme Court ~ a ,,eet •ao ""1cb U1'he1d the r!gbl" dU.. to boo mJillly In ...... , / that either request would be approved, but he and other councilmon indlcated they favor the proposals. 'l,1le cumnt suiling regulations says no sw'flD( Is allowed from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., from June 15 to Sept. 10. The city does allow a!Htay surfing at the Bolsa Chica bllili& .. '"W(!'re conc~med with the city pier area because that's where the best waves ate !nd the most enthusiasts," said Rus · ~SC,b, an editor on Laguna Niguel's Intematlooal Surfuig Ma&az!ne. and spokesman for the surfing crowd )(on- <Iay. CaliBch said surfers realize tliO.r< ls a con!1lct between surfing and s"1mmlng, but suggeeted there ~ timel ta the opnnmer when weather coodltklns ~ swinuners away frvm the beach, bUt surfers aren't allowed in ,the water because of the strict 'hours. 11 .\ privilege is '10W extei>ded to swim- mers in which surfeis can be ~$ked out;;! the wat<r when there b a larle crwd before 11 1.rn.1" caliach Aid. 0 We'd like it Oexible so we can use the ocean when there ls no crowd." 'lbe Calisch proposal would leave the declaloD up to llieguanls, wbo would sllnply ralae a two-loot by three-foot flag Wltb a black ball on it when they wanted surfers out of the water. Wilen· Matney suggested there might be a• legal problem to that, Callsch read a letter from .)he Los Angeles County Llfe&\llld Service Uiil•Wlng bow the flac 11Slem had been used at Her!ll058 Beach 10< 15 years. Mu Bowman, ualstant director of the city's harbors and beoches department, admltt.d to the council he dld not know what system was used in Los Angeles County. Jerry Smith, a local aurfer, presented the secood request -a reduction in the Z5 cents per hour charge on Pacl!ic Coast Highway parking meters. Smith said the oniy place along-the Orange Coast with a s1mUar charge is the pier area In Newpon Beach, and tha t city sells a yearly pass to reduce the cost to regular visitors. Smith's suggestion sparked a short, heated exchange between councilmen over City Attorney Don Bonfa 's opinion • that Huntington Beach could not Issue a yearl y pass for parking me'ters. Councilman Al Coen said he disagrees !Sec SUl\FING, Page!> ; ' ·school Plan Ol('d ~' ~\, . 'qce(!,n View Keeps All-year Program ' l!AMt Ber Son . Mn.-Anna Mair of Denver cfutches ·a small 'phQtogl'aph of her son , l>ayid, ,lQ,.after s.he. ordered doctors to . tum off a respirator which ·was keeping the boy alive . David wiu; struck by an automobile last month aJ)d was in a coma, kept alive medically by means of a resp;ra. tor. Mr.!-Mair·told aoctors to turn off the machine after learning. the boy1s brain was dead. . regarding higll-level administration in- volvement in the Watergate scandal., The committee's immunity grant does not prevent Dean from being tried and convicted on other evidence but only from having his own testimony used against him. $B0i5 Million ·Preliminary 0 Budget Goes ti)-Council Dean is reported to have told govern- ment inyestigators that President Nixon per"ifttklly congratulated him 1 a s t September for covering up the role of top White House aides in Watergate. · The White · House Monday denied that the President had any role in any such coverup. Ervih said the long~walted public bearing to probe Watergate and olber presidential campaign acUviUes will be he ld beginning at 10 a.m. May 17 and will be scheduled three days a week thereafter on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays. A $.10.5 million preliminary budget ·for tm74 wa.:; handed to Hunlington Beach cify councilmen Monday night: J48Yor Jerry Matney and other ·COUJr • cilmen briefly skimmed 1he highlights of the 2ll;>age budget proposal then set 5 p.m., May 23,. as the tim~ and date for a Pul>ltc hearing on·it. The place will •be city COWlcil chambers. ;n.e .. epct . propo~e<l. budget .· is $!0,529,857, up $4,225,883 on' percen{J ovtr:the Iil72-73 budget. . · . . • ' • City Administrator David R~wlan~s said' tlie -rty tax rate of 11.62 per $100 isSe'ssed valuatkm. would· not change,.snd he vowed \to keep it thJ1.t way Ovei: ~e next ' s~vetill years. ' NO other tax inCreases were suggested either. , pne or the key issue~ in the bildget diScu:saion will be 'Whal lo do with $li.t;S72 in , federal ,revenue sharing funds.from this ~ear and next. PEP, however, is being p~ out en<f will only pay about 50 percent to 60 peii cent of their salaries in 1973-74, but'the city plans to ieep.them: , · . In a quick eStimate this morning, Rowlands said new salaries will cost the city niore than $1 miJlion above this year's salar:x budget. 1be 1973-74 estimated budget exceeds the-'eipecled rev<ilue ' by $2.5 million - (See BVDGET, Page Z) < No witness list for lhti: opening session \Yas immediately available. Ervin said he has no evidence that Nix· on was involved in. either the Watergate affair 'or the alleged cover-up which followed. But he left open the question of whether the Senate investigating corn- (See WATERGATE, Page·!) Capsule· Council Action Here in capsule form are the major actions taken Monday night by the Huotington Beach City Council: , BIJDGE;T: Took the first look at a preliminary 1973-74 budget of $30.5 mil- lion al'id set a public hearing on it for May 23. 1 ·RWiSiMi has a li'.st of Items fOr which ht~ wOuld l,i.Jte the money spent. The re....,. sharing objectives will be a separate part of the May Z3 hearing. Some of) the· major l~ms for which Rowlands '!""1d like .the federal funds wied'lnctude: "50,000 to build a fire sti-lioft: and ' harbor' deplriment office 0n Wl!'fll'r Ayeu,ue in l!uotingtor. Harboqr; ll°fj,'.nl .to lahdscape the "!edlans a]on~ . BrootbtrnF l!lre<t' Md( Adams AveT¥Je; . , 153,'54 on the police computer syste)p, arid $35-lltMJ to buy a police plane. · SURFERS: Agreed to consider a requeat to relax the tight surifng rules around the: city and reduce the cmt or parking meters in the Bolsa Chica Bluffs area. ·• LOBBY; Agreed to join Anaheim, Santa Ana and Garden Grove to hire a W8ihington lobbyist to re~t all four cities-at leaat for one year, . . GYPSY VENDORS: ·Dropped an admlDlslraUan -1 ""'1ch would have allowod gypsy ·flult and vegetable-. to o»ertle Iii town Clll a temporary be.sti. ' ' Another 137&,ooo ID revenue sharing . money would ao to hooks !or the cerrtrol library, and' $232,166 !or fuithcr park ao-. qutsltlon. One ot the reasons !or the higher ~t Is lllo-addltlon ol city -· 'l1lett will be 13' more salaries on the payroll nm year. Rowlands said SS ol tbooe workers almdy work for the city under the Public Employment Program (PEP) with their salaries paid by the federol gOfemment. HUNTINGTON BARBOUR: Approved a project featuring me-bedroom candaminiuma•DllI' Warner Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway .• · ' NE111AND PROJECT: Accepted a 10.acl't! parcel • ol land at the base of the AdalN A-bluff !or• ,flooc! cotllrol pt'9ject •Ill<~ .will alao ·seive ,. a rt11turtl PGntl. Tiie old-Ne~ ~· wttlclJ .may,.~ a d1y m~, 'Sits ontopoltbeDli.iff. .' . ,., • ,·,~ , ... SMOKING: Approved a no 111nolrin& In council chambers ordinance. PAUL JONl!S: Alf'ed to •me the opea plasa ID the ,,.., civic center alter the late city ctert, Paa! .i-. The decision to continue the pilot pro- .gram, which began last July, was mark· ed with very little discussion . Board President R. James Shaffer noted at the outset of the meeting that the all-year lssu_e has befn d~ssed at - board meetings since last December, and prohibited persons from the audience from speaking. Later he backed down from his stand alter being r<minded that It wa• board policy to allow comments from the fl~r. Only a handful of the about 100 ,parents present spoke in opposition to the all-year procram. When the vote was taken many of those present applauded. The board decided to modify the _s.ob!!dute •t Wes~nt, voling ,to .l!i>lll· classes there on i Single cycle 1n whlCh all . students wUl attend classes at _the sarne time instead of in staggered sessions. Children at Cresf View will cootlnue to (See AU,YEAJI, P1ce I> , No S111oke Here Huntingwn Coun_cil BaM Puffing The air bas finally cleared ID the Hun- tington Beach City Council chamber - there 11 a ban on smoking during councJ1 .ll100!Theit!&.,,,,1 >Ii'!' ~-'-:or. ,, smo. ng baii has ...... approved, di5'pproved, and btiulJ!:ed around the ccuncil tncn1 Umes,tllan a -elball. but lll<ilday nta~t councllmen llDa1l1 agreed 6-1 to Impose It. Mayor Jerry Mainey, with a slleepish grin on his lace, fltppad on the red light for the only dlsaentlng vote. "We 're going to have a smoking break every 15 minutes," be wamed. Another matter was ..uJed when Mat- ney aJ"'ed to make llW'e aU councilmen and city staff members 11pay attentioo" during council meetings. The issue had previously been sug- gested In the form of a "no knitllng" ""°"lllon cletliiy dli'lcted at Coun- cllwoman Norma Gibbs, who nnetlmn does knit djlrlng council meetings. The "no-knl\tln&" ')Ile died W two weeta ago. Thiit Vole was followed by a s.3 deadlock on the smoking ban ID re- taliation. Matney agreed Monday to control the meetings so councilmen won't knit, or write carJs during the meeting, and city staff members won't read magazines or w«k crooaword Eles. "Good, now let a get on to some serious business," said Councilman Henry Du)l:e • Nixon Report,edly Used 'Security' in.~quelch NEW YORK (AP) -The New York Times, quoting Watergate sources, said today that President Nb<m twice ln .. ted national security recently hi initially seeking to prevent release to the Pen- tagon papers trial detalla of the burglary of the olllce ol Daniel Elbherg's psychiatrist. The Times said the first of the two alleged attempts Involved a Jurtlce De- partment memorandum Unt1Qg two con-- vlcted Watergate conspirators to the break-in. The second involved a fonner White House aide, Egli Krogh Jr. The newspaper said the informaUoo in the first case was belatedly disclosed to the Los Ancel., oourt after Aat. U.S. Atty. Henry E. Peteraen, who headed the Watergate IDvestlgaUoo, OOllYlncetl Nbon to rever .. hlmselt In the -..... · the lnfdrilllUon was reportedly provtded to the court at the lnalstence of Elliot L. Rlchardaoo, ncmlDated to be ·attorney general. High White House olfJclals called the r<ports that the President first opposed releasing the i n f o rm a t i o n "if.. responsible," the Times said. The newspaper said the reports were pr<>- vided by some of the principals, lawyers and Justice Department officals. In the first alleged case, Petersen reortedly was told at lint by President Nixon oot to release the memo, con· talnlng Information ssla to bave been dllcJooed by former White House coume1 .Breakup of District Will be Discussed A propoul to broak the Hwitington Beach U,nton High School District Into ll•e separate unified dlstrlcta will be alrid' lonlibt by trustees of tbe H'"" tlr!Cton Beacli Clly (elementary) ·School Dfirtct. . "Uope!Ully w,'11 have a Uttle action on It," said Charles Palmer, depuly "superln-t of the elementary dlolrlct. Tho meeting wU he held at 7:30 p.m. at Dwyer School Library, lltD Palm Ave. John W.-Dean l1J on April 15, the Times said. Petersen rEicognized the bearing of the information on Ellsbe.rg's trial and later took up the matter with the President, wbo then agreed to forward It, according to the Tlmea account. On April 26, David Nissen, the govern- ment prosecutor in the Ellsberg case, submitted the memq to U.S. District Court Judge Matty Byrne, who made It public the next day. The second alleged case Involved Krogh, said to have supervised the burglary, who was reportedly told by presidential adviser John D. Ehrllchman last Mooday that "the President doesn'i want any more of this to surface for na- tional security riallOllll,11 The Tlmea said Krogh received (See SECRETS, Pqe ZJ Oraage Weather Tire weatherlady calls for hazy sunshine in the afternoon hours on Wedoeaday, with sllgbUy warmer temperatures: Highs of 68 at the beaches rising to 78 Inland. INSIDE TODA 'Y Freed U.S. Con.tUl General T<rTenu G .. L<onlaorov emphQ. sized the need Jor au gowrn- Jmnti to cooperate in 1tamping out international terrorima. The enoot1 ~ releaaed in Guodalo-;aro late Monda11-See 1torv on Page 4. • Judge Ends Mamie;s ' Mar1·iage By TOM BARLEY Of t11e o.!IY ~Utt II•" Millionaire oil man Ross McClintock's marriage to Mantle Van Doren was an· nulled Monday by an Orange County Superior Court judge who reject<d repeated pleas fur a delay that would have enabled the shapely blonde actress to testify in her defenk. Judge Charles A. Bauer also threw out plea! for financial support for the. 40- year-old enter~iner after he a r 1 n g McCUntock, Sl, testify that his wife of 37 • days refused to sleep "'1th him at night and spent their wedding night on a couch. But McClinlock, a $50,000 a year ex· ecutive with the Fluor industrial chain who 1 .. tilled that bis net worth was betwten 13 million and IS milllon , ad- mitted under cross examinaUon that be had llWl8I relations with Mbs Van Doren on other occasions. McClintock told Judge Bauer that he fll'8t met Miss Van Doren at the Balboa Bay Club and she agreed before their wedding last Dec. I lo give up her career in show business and concentrate on being bis wife. The burly oil man said her first demands on him were for a $35,000 Rolls Royce, a $10,000 chinchilla coat and a monthly clothing allowance of $2,000. The offshore drilling expert said P.fiss Van Doren told him that the full length mink coat be had ln mind for her was "too cheap" at $31500. McClintock, who testified that he was also uked to pay the actress' outstand· ing bills and back taxes, said he was at a lo8s to explain her reluctance to sleep with him apart from her conunents that she was "too tired" and that he snored . And McClintock testified tll'at he would not haVe married~u\ran Doren at all if· be bad been aware of the sexual con- duct outlined in a magazine article that appeared shortly after they look up residence at his Orange home. McClintock said the article frankly discussed Mia Van Doren's past sex life in a manner tha t war "highly em- barrassing" to him and Jed to a dlscll.5'- sion betwen the couple on its implica· tions. Afiss Van Doren's alleged assoclaUons with celebrities who included pro-- fessional footballer Joe Namath, baseball star BO Belinsky and what was described as her unmarried relationship with a Navy commander In L-Ondon also were introduced into testimony. Hearing Slated On Elimination Of Fun Complex The deletion of a proposed recreational complex from the Fountain Valley master plan will be the subject of a public hearing Wednesday before .the city's planning commission. According to planning director Clinton Sherrod, the site on Bushard Street just sou th of the San Diego Freeway was one of two Identified for recreational use on the city's master plan . The other site, at Mile Square 'Park, is the one that has been selected for development as the recreational com- plex. City councilmen voted in March to spend $1.2.5 million on the recreaUonal center. "Since we now know which of the two sites is to be developed, we would like to delete the one on Bushard," Sherrod ex- plained. "After all, we can't afford to build two ol them ." The city planning commission meets at 7:30 p.m. in city council chambers. Church Staff Cut ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Some 300 staff workers have been asked to resign dur- ing a sweeping reorganization of the Presbyterian Church of the U . S . (Southern), a spokesman said Monday. The move was described by one official as similar t-0 a corporate restructuring. OIAN•I COAST Ml DAILY PILOT Tiit Or•n0t CN1t DAIL 'f l"JLOT w!lh 'll'~ltrl 11 cornbiNd the Ht'll'l•Prts1, II put!I~ 111 1M Ol'lflQle CO.II PllDILll'llnO ComeNlllY, .... r.it t11111on1 •rt P11b!l1,,..,. MOllll•I' ~~ frlclty, kw Cotte Mt1t, Hl'NJl(ltl ~tch. Hl,lnll119ton llHCfl/l'ounttlt'I V1llt'1'. LllOUM 8"cll, lrv!MlltddltbKll ltld S.n Clitmcnlt/ Stl'I Jwn c...1ur1no. A 11111111 '"'iontl fllllfleft Is publlllltd hlll!'da\" end SunOtp. Tht prl11clpel publtllllnl tllnl II ti )Jll Wnl •• ,. s1 .... 1, Cotll Mtl>I, Calflol'ni.. fMH. Rob1rf N. W1.d l"rHWtrll 11111 PIJbllll!tr ' J1$k I . C11rl1v Vlc9 ,.,_.,_., end ~ti Mtl\lffl' Tlion111 K11.-il ... w TI!olft11 A. M11rphi~t Mt11111na £d11or 'C.1rl" H. Loot R.icfltr4 r. N1tl ""llllflt Mlntt"" Edl!Oli T•rry C•\'lllt Wnl Or .... C-tr l!C11119r H-..... .... •OM~ 17171 l•1ch le11l1v1NI M1illltj A44r111: P.O. lo• 7t0, tZ641 --LMVM t.aclti m ,.,..,.,....,..,. °"''' Mall ,. ""'' kJ' '""' ,.....,.,, ,...,. : zm ,....,_, b1tY1n1 Sift~ al Nw1'I II Clniin. ltttl T .. e,t1a1 (1J41 M.l ... 121 ct ..... , ............. , MJ.1671 ,,.. .......... ~ Q:a1a:wn1w . _, .. ~. 1"1. ~ c..t "*hfl ..... ~.,.. -.................. .. tllllrll'W IMrtw «' "''wttlQAI-·~ _,. .,. ._ ................... .... ...... ".,.,..... ..... " ...... rlelll ............. CIMff ..... ~it, Mlcl"lfot• w .,,..,. ..... ~' "' -'* U.11 ...,..., l!lllJllan' .............. .,M ....... • Eyes .. Watergate CoaUllW•1·11itlfl Legal l!ressures ' •I • -" • ,\i; . . ' Threaten Panel· r.L., k 'P b -in ,,: .rQ e ! .... • ... • ' U~I Tti.Mlo Slowed Down Georgia Lt. Gov. Lester Maddox works at his desk in tbe Atlanta capital hobbled by a ca-11.Jrom injuries received while bicycle riding. Maddox wired PresidenrNixon and offered his services as -chief in· vesugator in the Watergate affalr. ' 2 County Youths Remain · In Custody in Ensenada Special to the Dally Pilot The attorney, Enrique Villarreal, said ENSENADA, Mex. -Two Orange about 50 yoliog Americans were still in County youths r'emain in custody here to-jail Mooday and unable to post bail rang· day after a Cinco de Mayo brawl erputed OfJ .do_\:Vllto,wn streets in which 190 persons ing from $12 to $24. He was told they were arrested. could be freed after serving an 0 Co . . 1 . unspecified time in jail. range unt1ans a \V a 1 1 n g ap-. pearances before a magistrate were Juan Zamora, manager of the Bahla identifl#t ·by lwjex\can authoritiJs as Hotel, toldp. story or whai happened. Linds<'J L.lcreede, DI, of S<al'&ealh and • ' l"The ty!llll~. just Rj (~,-started com- Cate D. Darnall , 21, of Garden Grove. ing in the-hotel about noon. The yateros Greene is accused of destroying a (yachtsm~n) began leaving as soon as policeman's uniform. Daman, along with the trophy ceremo.ny was over. Thomas F. Phillips, 23, of Amarillo, Tex., "At first,_ the hippies just sat aroun~ arc charged with hitting an officer in the the pool, drinking. Then more came unhl face with a beer bottle. we soon had about 200 persons around -One Mexican attor:ney described the the pool. When that many young peopl e . mele'.e as I "Roman orgy" withibrawlers are ~ether, someone . has to do throwing cherry bombs and firecra ckers. something to attract attent10n. Fighting broke out while an estimated "So one ~y let out a yell. and someone 4,000 persons were visiting Enscnada for ans~ered him. Then t~e people were all Cinco de Mayo celebrations and the end yelling. They got excited, and someone of the annual Newport Beach to threw a bottle into the pool. Others Ensenada yacht race. 'tarted tossing things, too. Hussong's Bar and ltotel Bahia were "One boy started to take his pants off, heavily damaged by thrown bottles and but we had ~he police take him other i~s. Fi!ty persons were reported ~way. Then a big gu.y. maybe fl feet 6 injured. mches tall, threw a gul into ijle pooJ. Art Linkletter Sues Ex-aides Over Bad Debt Entertainer Art Linkletter sued his former partners in a real estate en· terprise for more than $1 million Monday in an Orange County Superior Court ac· tion that claims failure to repay a $500,000 loan. Named as defendants by the show business personality on multiple causes of action arc the Stanley G. Swartz Com· pany, the Stvartz-Linklettcr Company, Lin kletter Enterprises, Swartz as an in- dividual and Mrs. Betty Swartz, his wife. Swartz·Linklettcr was the f i r m responsible for much of the townhome and single family construction in University Park between Culver Drive ·and Yale Avenues. Later units "'ere sold by the Stanley G. Swartz Compa ny and that firm's ope ratior. in Irvine has since been sold to National Community Builders, a San Diego based firm. The organization's la st units to be built in Irvine are now under construction in University Park. Assembly Passes Nonsmokers' B'ill SACRAMENTO (AP) -With one n1cmber puffing on a cigar, an Assembly committee Monday sent a ''Nonsmokers Bill of Rights" to the lower house Ooor on a 9-4 vote. The bill by As>emblyman Jonn v. Bdga . (R·Fuliertoo), would r<quire nonsmoking areas to be set aside In places frequented by the public, such as govlhllnOIJI 'buUdloge, restaurantl and !beaten. . • Brigg!' ·metsure won ·approvnl rrom the AAell\bly Revenue and Tauti(lll ComnlfUee without debete. Alleinblymaa FJllll< Murphy Jr. (R· Santa Cnl%), puffed a cigoi fhrnu~bout the brief hearing and voted "no ' on Briggs' mes.Sure. . . "So I went up to him and asked him please not to do that. He jusl pushed me away. His friend came up and also aSked him lo atop, but the 61g guy just put his hand over hi.!! face and sOOved him away, also. "Before long, hippies in groups of six and Seven were running through the hallways, kicking in doors and doing whatever violence they could ." Zamora said, "All this trouble started five or six years ago when the hippies started coming down. The yateros caused no trouble. They are good people." SURFING ... Fro111 Page ~ with Bonla's opinion and wondered why Ne\vport can and Huntington can't. He was joined by Councilwoman Norma Gibbs, at which point Matney in- terrupted. "Let's have a little respect for the city attorney's office." ''I don't ," snapped Mrs. Glbb91 .. cl~ly followed by l\.fatney slamming the gavel en the desk. Bowman then told lhe council that Pacific Coast Highway is the only area \11ith a 2.5-cent charge (aod a $10 parking ticket fine). He said meters in the residential area are 10 cents an hour and in the business arc a penny for 12 minutes, or flve-<:enls an hour. "I wasn't aware we had that much discrimination ,'' said Mrs Gibbs . "It's unfair ." Matney then asked city ~s to come back in two weeks with recom· 1nendations on both proposals. Jack Green added the last word, saying "Ir we consiC:er reducing the meter charge, let's ask the HOME cooncll to represent the taxpayers on Jt.'1 f 'romPAf1el SECRETS •.. guidelines a few days later telling him he was not authorized to ·discuss details of specific leaks or any tnfonnaUon about nationa,I security. . Alter a meellng. with lllC!lardson, Krogn reportedly decided to dttlll an al· fidavlt that was rele..ed J.kioday by th• Ellsbtrg court in Los Angeles . LOS ANGE~S (AP) -U.S. Dl!trict Court Judge Matt Byrne excused the Pentagoo papers trial jury today for tbe remainder of the week and indicated he may order a fulkcale bearing Into Wale!' gate links In the cue. 11le jury was brought in at 10 a.m. and told the government rebuttal was com- pleted and the de(ense would not offer more witnesses. "11iat brings to an end the evidence in this case," Byrne said . He told tbe imsequestered jury to ,.,,.rt back lo the coortroom Monday morning, instructing them again to avoid exposing themselves to any news of the case. Jurors have not betn told about the alleged involvement of W a t e r g a t e .conspirators and White House aides in the burglary of the office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist. Alter tbe jury left, Byrne 'asked at· tomeys for both aideo what 11\ey think should be the ,;scope" of a hearing into the Wagergate links. The defense asked priviously that a number of past and Present White House staffers be called to testify here about the ' burglary of Ellsberg's psychiatric files and other matters. The judge also said the goverqment turned over a box of new materials this ~ming. but said the material! did not lilclude those item. he speclllcally asked for. Bryne lnstrl1cted prosecutors Mcnday to. find oo,rt how long tbe Department of J11BU(ie .hid knoWn al>out tbe burglary, about CIA involvement and about any electronlc survelllarice. . In the iatest development Monday, the judge-released additional grand jury testimooy -of Watergate conspirator E. Howard HWlt. Hunt had said that Pre<fdent Nixon'• special ooUMel, Olarles W. Colson: as-- signed him to a "hot" mission -to forge cablegquns linking President John F. Kennedy 'to the assas.!linatlon of South Vietnamese Pre<ident Ngo Dinh Diem. The State Department coollrmed in WaablngtOn today that Hunt was given access to cables dealing with Vietnam in September 19'11. Citywitk Art Festival Slared For Huntington The Huntington Beach citywide art festival will be held Saturday at Murdy Park, featuring the works of 10 local artists . A special art show for junior artists between the ages of 8 and 15 also will be st.aged at the festival, with awards for the best works in oil, watercolors and charcoal. No reservations are needed for the junior art show. Youngsters are asked to bring their own easels on which to display their works. The show is sponsored by the Hun- tington Beach Coordinating Council, and will be held from 9 a.m. to S p.m. Displaying their works will be Lillian Caln, miniatures; Helene Ne Ison , portraits; Fay Troxel , floral and landscape scenes; Carl Va I en t e , seascapes; Maurice Gregoire, oil and sketches: Michael Aloni.o, dock scenes and landscapes; Linda Young , velvets ; Douglas Dean, Western watemilors; Rheta Gillet, fractured oils, and Lari Cusollto, still life. By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of .... Dfilr ..... , '''" An Orange C4wlty conservation group Monday threatened Soulh Coast Regional C o a• t a I C.On.servation C.Ommlssioners wlth legal pre.!ISW'e forcing them to re- quire environmental !mp&d reports before any more pennits are issued. Dale Secord, chairman of the Project Evaluation and Planning Committee of the Envtronmental Coalition of Orange County, told commissioners at their meeting in U>ng Beach that the findings of the commission staff are inadequate. Secord said the staff recommendations on pennit applications are, "either based on a subjective a.!ISeSSment or on an in- adequate and non-independent analySis of environmental impacts." Secord's warning and evaluation or current permit prQCedures was his sec- ond in a week. ,After the first p~ talion, Commission Chairman Robert Rooney of Huntington Beach asked for a State Attorney General opinion on EIR requirements .. Secord contends that the primary duty of the commission establlsbed by Proposition 20 is to preserve the en- vironment of the ~.000.yard-wide coastal strip. "Regional ... commissioners are re-- quired by law to deny a permit for .a proj· ect which w o u I d cause a significant adverse impact," Secord said. The only way to determine ftcb an im· pact is to require a final EIR on every project approve by an independent local agency, he said. Secord was critical of the commission , false pretenaes. i He said that ~l agenciea now ac- cepting a final EIR ooly j~ ill ade- quacy and not whether or not there is any adveise impact. "The actions of most developers presenting their applications for a permit before this commi.sslon has been a sham. These people have the audacity to 1 deliberately mislead this commission," ' hesaid. -"I Though commissioners tabled several1' penn.Jts and killed a few others for .. reasoll! other than missing EIRs, tbef" did approve a number of permits that were not required by local agencies to ·. prepare an Em. ., These included two restaurants on Del t Prado Street in Dana Point, a two.story medical office building in San Clemente, two multi-unit apartment buildings in• San Pedro.and a 30 million gallon sewage- treatment plant on Terminal Island. Orange County Supervisor Ronald• Caspers said the .two DaRa Point· Restaurants, part of an overall master plan for the harbor, were not required by the county to have an EJR. l Caspers, one of the Orange County: members of the coastal commission, ar· rived late for the meeting and did not return after the meeting's dinner break at 6 p.m. FromPAf1el ALL-YEAR ... fo~ granting permlts to S'?me projects meet in staggered sessions, in which a with either draft EIRs or With DO EIR at . quarter· of the students .will be on vaca· all ttepending upon requtrementl ol the tion at all times. local agency granting bulldlng permits. The schedule change at Westmont was In a written <:0mmunication to the ordered after a "vast majority" of cohlDllsslon, Secord was also highly teachers and 57 percent of the parents in criUcal of builder• and developers who the Westmont area requested the single · he said are applying for permits Wlder . cycle. • FromPAflel BUDGET ... oo paper. Rowlands said the additional money will come from the federal revenue sbar· ing funds not spent this year and other money not spent. Rowlands told councilmen Monday that the six·year budget should also be ready in about two weeks. lt is scheduled as part of the May 23 public hearing. The $30.5 mUUon budget is about $5 millioo less than r<quested by ckparl· ment heads, and Rowlands said there i.sD't much room for cutting back withou t losing vital services. Some of tbe major r.queots ~hidl rhe denied were : $2.& mlllloo f»r ~on ef the city pier and !>Uildln& of.a rostaurant oo it; $1.2 million for the third phase of the central park ; $1 million in l!dditional personnel; and nearly $400,000 in ad· ditiooal equ.ipment. I Blaze Blamed On Auto Short Huntington Beach fire investigators said today they have changed t h e i r opinion of the cause of a fire which caused about $10,000 in damage to a Golden West Street fourplex apartment. The May 1 fire was started by an elec. trical short in the wiring of an auto own-- ed by Philip EU, an occupant of one of the apartments at 1661.2 Golden West St., firemen now say. Fire investigators originally surmised that a smoldering cigarette left in Ell's car had started the fire. Trustees admitted that the single cycle program wiU not save cl!IS.!lroom·space, one of the ultimate goals of the all·year concept. "I hope Westmont .will look carefully at staggered sessions next year." said Superintendent James C8rvell. "That will be the ultimate space-saver. I see the single cycle as a transition." At both schools class.. will be held in 45-day sessions broken up with 15-day vacations. The all-year schedule received 62 per· cent support among parents in the Crest View area and 49 percent .!lllpport from parents in the Westmont area, according to results of a Poll released last week. Surveyed ih'tbit poll were pareht. who h;.:d opposed all·year school and opted to transfer their c,hil<lren to nearby schoals that fQilQ"ed tll<! traditiorull caieollar. In a poll or parents whose children re· majoed in the all·year schools, 66.3 per· cen~ of the Crest View parents and • .. 6 percent of the Westmont parents sup- ported the concept. From Pagel WATERGATE. •• mittee has the authOrity ito subpoena the President if it wishes. "l won't pass on that question until some reason to call the President is known to exist," Ervin said. Dean is known to have actively sought immunity from prosecution from both lhe Watergate grand Jury and the Senate committee in exchange for testimony, some of which reportedly involves Nixon. Sen. HoWBrd Baker (R-Teml.), the committee's senior Republican, em· phasized repeatedly that the committee's action is first of all an order to Dean to tell what he may or may not know to committee investigators in prlvate. ' WHO'S BEHIND YOU? • . ' How much do guorantees mean? It depends on the item involved ind the monufocturer. A $I 00 ,000 house is guoranteed for ONE year. Most automobiles are guaranteed from 30 days to one y11r. Most electricel products are guaranteed from 90 days to one year. Guarantees on carpeting are complicated. The rule in the industry, ;s TWO YEARS for manufacturing def e ct s. The feeling is tho! manufacturing dofects will surface within that two yeor period. Beyond this, these manufacturers feel there are too many variables in the usage to give coverage beyond that period. . Don't be misled by "Phoney': guarantees. They are pro roted, bosed on miN-invoico costs, plus padding end labor 19 change. By the time you figure them up, It usuolly costs more to chonge than the originol purchase price. C..rpot manufacture" teA us that a preponderance of complaints is not because of defects but because of improper inst1l.l~tion. We minimize the number ~ complaints by hiving the best instalor1 1round. Also, we deal only with mote substantial mills, further reducing problems. Buying from Aldon's will giv• you the greatest MCurity. ALDEN'S 111 COtTA MDA llllCI 1tl1 CARPETS e DRAPE~ 1663 Placfftia Aff • COSTA MESA 646-4838 I .. r ' / M• I non. ' 19 S:JO; M. ' 19 t; w . f1JO .. • ""• • • \ ' I I l I I Tueldq,•Mll 8, 1973 H DAILY PILOT J lndi:ins Surrender at W ouiid~d Knee • I G-roeers-·Growlbtg Militant~ -• - End S~ege Of 70 Days Price ._Ceiling on Meat Called a Farce B1-L. PETER KRIEG OI' the DllllY "Mt Stiff Orange Coast food men:hants seem to , be growlinl_ more lhan glowing_ today in walte of a recenf rosy report-On -food prices from U.S. Secretary of Commerce Frederick B. Dent. Dent, during a press confereDCe in Newport Beach last week, declared that food prices have risen lltUe more than four percent in the past year. A spat check with several food merchants, however, indicated that the businessmen figure Dent hasn't been down to his comer market reecently. "He's trying to make me look like a bandit," said Robert McNerny, owner of Robert's Olde Time Butcher Shoppe on 17th Street In Costa Mesa. .. onMr~e~!at:ra~i~~ t~!~~e ~e~! faree. "Prices were at a peak then," he said. "They were headed down. They 've got enough ef a cushion so lhey won't have to go up a cent for the next year. "Everybody'll make out b u t the government will be able to turn around a year from now and say, 'See, meat prices haven't gone up the last 12 months.' " Ernie camp, owner of Newport Pttiiloc.-ln Newport Beach and Fran- Delaney, owner of seafood restaurants at Laguna Hiiis and Newport Beach, joined in criticism of Secretary Dent's claims. "Produce is up well over 10 percent," Camp said, "some things like onions and lettuce have more than doubled. .. I paid $.1.75 for a 50-pound bag of onions las~ year. I went . up to the wholesale market Utis morning and paid $24 a bag," Camp said. "Some things, like carrots, have stayed the same, or even gone down, but the others more than outweigh those," be said. A couple of merchants, like Bob Bersch, manager of Albertson's Market in Laguna Beach, took a different tack when asked for comment: "Food takes only 15.7 pereent of the income today, compared with z.1 percent 20 years ago," Bersch said. But a check of food store ad- New Bus Route Successful Along Harbor Boulevard By JACK BROBACK OI fM OlllY ruot Sl•ft BusinesS is boom.int . oil the Orange County Transit District's new bus service •. on Harbor Boulevard from La Habra to Newport Beach, district directors were told Monday. . More than 15,000 people used the new bus services during the last two weeks of April, Michael Valen, route contract manager, reported. "Last Saturday we had to add buses to handle the customers on * * * Disabl.ed Youth two this busy route /' ·Va.ten said. "During Easter Week we were forced to add six buses to ~ accomfi\odate the traffic." He warned that additional buses would be. nl!_edea this summer to av old disap- pomtmg potential customers. He urged a l~minute interval service for the sum· mer (now hourly) with nine buses available. Va1en estimated that 2,000 riders a day would be attracted during the coming months. He said the new West Central lines of the district were also very well patroniz- ed. They were inaugurated on April Z3 and connect Anaheim, Buena Park, Cypress, Fullerton and Orange. The West .Central buses get added im- petus from the fact that they serve Tells D:rec•~.rs Disneyland, Knoll's Berry Farm 11 M.J Anaheim Stadium and Cypress College. ' District General Manager Gordon 'Dev: "'es Needed ·~Pete" Fielding ' said figures available "-' . for March showed the district's buses · : •" ,, 11 :'Carrying an 1211-time high of 92,000 Disabled students and older .. p~ple ·passengers. T h i B compares with the have a ser1ous need of bus service "1.lich previous high of 78,000 for February. tan only be satisfied through · the ' "We show an 18 percent increase in purchase of special equipment, a disabl-patronage and an 11 percent jump in ed student told Orange County Transit mileage;" Fielding pointed out. "The Di.strict directors Monday . revenue per mile has improved from 18 Victor Rivera of the Disabled and cents in January to 22 cents today." Incapacitated Students of Santa Apa Fielding commented on the "very fine college (DISAC) said there ls no ~ade-patronage" being experienced in the 'quate transportation for persons like • Newport Beach; Costa Mesa and south hunself. Santa Ana areas. • "You have a significant perceJllage of He said the Dial-A-Ride service in La ' the public which cannot use your buses ~abra was carrying an average of 300 nders a day and that an equipment becall!e of their 'design,'' 1'e said. Such shortage was being experienced. Fielding ··buses are avallable, he mentioned. "The called Dial-A-Ride "the real solution to Rohr Corporation in San Diego is now air pollution in Southern California." ~manufacturing a bus for wheel chair Dial·A-Ride offers pick up r 0 r • ru1ssengers." <¥"" passengers to specific designations at 50 Rivera said that Santa Ana College cents a ride. It is a modified taxi service was s~udying the possibility of buying a with the average wait from tlme or _van for such students .and tha t figures in-telephone call to pickup about 20 dicated that it would be overused at minutes. once. District Board Chairman Ralph Clark .1uggested that smaller buses might be used for the handicapped. The board members promised Rivera they would ~tqdy a program to aid_lhe d_isabled. ~ Rivera offered to provide the district ~th all infonnation needed on potential ~. • ~ r.ounty Boy,3, tRuns Into Side ) f Of Truck, Dies · l, A 3-year-old Anaheim boy ~as killed 1,·Monday afternoon \vhen he darted from a ,traffi c Island, ran into .the _side of a truck i and fell under the rear wheels, police ·s reported . .1 Craig E. Rupert of 315 Carol Drive, 1 Anaheim , was reported dead at the l scene, Lincoln Avenue near Carbll by a .. coroner's deputy . ~ ·: Driver of the truck, Ronald L. Hooper. 322. of Whittier, was not cited. Officers ... said the accident is still under in- .. vesUgation. ! According to witnesses, a young girl ,,..believed to be the victlm's sister had left the traffie island and crossed tbe slreet {safely. When the boy darted after his ·1 sister the truck driver tried desperately • to stop but was unable to do so In time to ?, avoid the accident, Investigators ~id: J Too Mu~h Delegate,, <t ' ' ? Not Enough Chair ' ' LONDON (UPli -Del•gales altending ~an annual conference of clvU eervantl ;i had o complaint about overlapping. 'J Chairs provided for them, one delegate • said Monday, caustd o painful condilion ;.tnown aa Ille "overlapping bottom." He '(Mid the chain .,,.,. "absoluiely agony" lor heavier penlOllll. I I Lawyer Receives Tlireat; Lawmen Intensify Prob e • Orange County Sheriff's officers step- ped up their investigation today when the lawyer for a Mission Viejo businessman who has received a series of threats in recent weeks was warned to keep out of the legal . is~ue that may have prompted the warrungs. Newport Beach attorney Richard Sten· ton received the threat from an unknown ·caller and immediately passed the irr formation on to She!'iff's investigators. The details of .that call have gone Into a growing file which also contains pic-- tures of the most eloquent threat yet delivered to George Gostenhofer, 49, of 24832 San Duval 'Lane - a recenUy .severed ram's head that was left on the front .seat of his car with the knife used in the decapitation stuck in the skull. Gostenhofer is part owner of the Sesame Street Mobile Home Park in El Toro. It is believed by him and Stenton that a business detil stemming from that property ii responsible for the wave of threats. Gootenhof<r said today that Doug RYl11:3l, h~ manager at the 20-acre park, has .also been threatened and warned by 1he penen who contacted him : "don'I get ln the middle of this or you'll get hlD't." Go1tenhofer insists that the ser1es of tlu:eats which have prompted him to move his wife and six children Otll of their home $tem "from an organltation With definite Mafia overtones." He now Jives alone at the home and keept a shotgUn by his side ror P"" tectlon. He told aherlrr's olOC.rs he was warned by an unknown caller that two of his daughters 'llOOld be mulllated ~ he dld not lmmedlalely comply with the telephoned inltNclloos. • vertisements in the Dally Pilot lasl sum- mer, compared "with those last week, tells a high-priced tale. · Albertson .. , SaleWI)'' Slol'H, LiJcl<y Markets ind UH! rest Were sellln& a ti). pound bag ol potatoes for 50 cent& In August and September. .They were on sale for twice that Wt week. ' Grade AA large eggs went for 39 cents a dozen in one Alpha Beta advertiseinent eight months back. Last week's ads bad them nJMing between 65 and 75 cents a dozen. Bacon was 72 cents a pound last August. It's a bargain at 98 cents today. McNemy charges $1 .39 for top-grade bacon now. One store advertised a pound loaf or bread for J9 cents in August. 111e lowest price in any Wednesday ad was 39 cents a loar. Chicken has ?l)ly jumped from 35 to 45 cents a pound for a whole fryer. Dent, in his press conference, had laid the blame for all this to a rise In the de- mand by the coMUmer, saying he wanted to improve his diet. That 's so much horseradish, according to Delaney, Camp and McNemy. Butcher McNermy blames the administration. McNemy said he's been writing to the federal price commission for more than a year now. "Burt Lewis (commission executive) wrote me a year ago vowing this would all be straightened out in short order," McNemy said, producing the letter. "You · know what's happened." Delaney and Camp were I e s s philosophicill, although just as pointed. Camp conceded that a lot of the In- creases must be blamed on bad weather but he' scoffed at Dent's position. ' Delaney, like McNemy blamed Presi- dent Nixon. "Two-thirds ot the seafood in this coun- try is impcrted," Delaney said. "We get shrimp from Mexico, lobster from Australia, frog legs from Japan and the rest from Iceland, New Zealand and Africa. "You know what happened when we devalued the dollar. Every one of those things went up an automatic 10 percent," he pointed out. • ,·•~ _ ~ , • , ... vl'I ~ · INDIAN LEADERS ENTER COURTHOUSE FOR ARRAIGNMENT ' Corter Comp, Loo'1ord Crow Dog Fon Stoggerlng 11111 ·Wounded County Girl Baffled Over Slaying .. A 17-year-old Garden Grove area gir l· who was shof in the head and hand im- mediately after her inotber was shot and killed by the same ·assailant today told Orange-c.ounty Sh~riff's.officers she was at a loss to eiplain the attack. Investigators said Donna Marie Powers told them from her hospila! bed that Jackson Ftlmklin Hickey was the man who entered their Dale Street home early Monday and opened fire on her and her TMtber. Officers said the girl, now listed as doing well by We!tminster Community Hospita1 officials, told them that she had quarreled with Hickey, 20, the previous evening but did not pelieve that the ~miOOr-sPat Co11Id have sparked the shooting. Hickey is being held in Orange County 1Jail on murder charges filed in con- nection with his alleged slaying of Irene · Margaret Waterm·an, 40, and assault charges filed in connection with the wounding of Miss Powers. ' Investigators said Mrs. Watennan was struck In the body and head by a number of shots firell"1rom a small caliber hand weapon. The same gun Was then used to wound MisS Powers. Officers hope to arraign Hickey on the charges later today in Santa Ana Municipal Court. He is held in county jail wilh bail denied. ' . SEE· ,THE DJF,FERENCE IN ' JOHNSON & SON . I WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. tAPI -The 7o-day siege or Wounded Knee ended today as militant Indians sw1endered arms and U.S. l].W'Shals and FBI agents secured the historic hamlet. The federal offacen t r a n s p o r t e d e\'eryone from the village and .sa1d pennanent residents who remained dur- ing the occupation would be allowed to return Wednesday after a thorough search f o r weapons, explosives a n d "evidence of criminal ac'tions." Interior Department Solicitor General Kent Frizzell said fire bombs w~re discovered in Indian bunkers and that one man was arrested with a weapon after the federal officers entered the village. Deputy Asst. U.S. Atty. Gen. Richard Hellstern said t~ JusUce Department's Community Relations Service had taken stock of the weapons. "They just turned in a lot of old cn.p," Hellsiern sakl, "old shotguns and rifles." Evacuation of the village wa.s delayed more lhan an hour when two wblte men idenUlied u members ol iiie OC<Upllion loroe refused to sumnder alter driving to I federal roadblock. Frizzell sald the .two. one identified as Al Cooper, sat· In their locked vehicle and argued with federal officers over terms of their arrest and bond. He said the issue was resolved after counsel arrived at·the,scene W represent them. Frinell ... id·e.t>per boosted after the wounding of a federal marshal early in the occupation that he "got himself a pig" and later "paraded around and menaetd" federal negotiators with a firearm as they discussed peace terms with leaders ol the occupatioo. According to a lilt provided Momb; ~ the Indians, the villaf! contained 2l reslderlts, 15 nonresidents and two Insur- gents facing chlrgea stemming from the tatover. At one time, eome 30G pn>- testers were reported in the hamlet. t • '• , . " I J t • • ' , I STATION WAGONS 1 e Montego MX Villager "Gol.den Touch" only at Johnson and Sons presents These Beautiful Srotion Wag ons At Their FiMst e Marquis Colony Park e Monter ey Station Wagon SEE ONE ... TRY ONE ..• ,~BUY ONE ... TODAY! ' ' ' Home 01 The New Car • , • "Gord-rot1eN' "Orang't' Cout'lty'I romfl\I of Tint Cor111 2121 HARBOR i LVD .• COSTA MESA • 540·&130 r • Home Of The New Car , • • "Golde" l'••dt'° ' 'I I ' . ----- • -T""611, ""1 8, 1973 4 DAIL V PILOT Lebanese -Jets Attack Guerrilla -P-0sts: Casting Sin Out of Mesa 'l1IE BIG COVERUP:, They bann<d nudlty In c:.osta Mesa last n!ghl 'lllis does not mean that Costa Mesans may no longer take baths or showers. It just means the can't do it out in public. Actually, all this anti-nakedness came about because of two night spots on the Mesa named Papa Joe's apd the Fire House. Jn order to attract patrons, Papa Joe's hired dancing girb to perform semi.nude and the Fire House hired same to dance nude: period. Costa Mesa's city brass tried several ways to suggest that the girls put some of their clothes back on. The effort was !rustral<d in the courts. F I n a 11 y , however, an Orange O>Unty no-nakedness statute got approved by the Calilornla Supreme Court and the Mesa City Coun- cil toot Immediate notice. N111' ONLY DID the good councilmen notice, they copied the WOl'ds !rum the Jaw that the justices liked and drew it all up into an antl-DUdlty ordinance of their own. Rushed before the council last night, it waa adopted u an emergency measure by unanlmoUs vote. This meanJ the Jaw takes e!fect Immediately. Mesa City Manager Fred Sonabal. quest!ooed on when enlwtenent -1d begin, nwmbled sometblng about giving the night spots "time to comply." IT IS UNCLEAR what this means. Probably that Police Chief Roger Ne.th will make a phone call to the places, !n- dlcating he's on bis way down and those girls better have something more on than just a nice smile. The new emergency Jaw is fairly ex- plicit about all this. It identifies the human parts which waiters, waitresses or male or female entertainer!I may not expose while going about their appointed business. Scannlns the hwnan parts thus Iden- tified in the Jaw, oor bashful reporter on the City Hall beat .. claimed, "Good IA>rd, we can't print all these parts in the newspaper." Clearly, the Costa Mesa ordinance Is rated X. I agreed with him. SWWLY, HOWEVER. we both realiz- ed that a1l those words will be printed anyway. The ordinance faces legal publication. It will thus be trotted out on the pages of the Daily Pilot some time later this week. Legal advertisements, however, are always published in very frne print smnewhere in the back of the paper. TOOs our good readers will have lo look hard and read tiny to find all the X-rated pieces of the anatomy in Costa Mesa's official legal ad . IF YOU ARE ONE ol tl"5e Wrong Thinkers wOO always figured the human body was a thing of beauty and joy fCft'ler, just read that ordinance. Then you'll learn just bow dirty your frame really is. All this aside, you should know Costa .. Mesa's new anti-nudity dictum isn't ac- tually air tight. There is an exception. It says while all this exposure can't go on in a place that serves food or drink, it's okay 1n a theater or concert haU . Tbe dirtiness of public nakedness, you see, isn't so mud:! ln exposure but where the exposure is exposed -il you follow thal I I I I ~!II THUS ALL COSl'A Mesa's naked nightsp:>ts may soon turn into concert balls, with ticket boxes, curtains, orchestra pits and all that. I predict such efforts lo circumvent the enti-nakedness law will eveoutally fail . While they can still give nude perlormances this way, the law says they can't do it and sell popcorn at the same time. And everybody knows a theater can't make it wittnJt a popcorn stand. BEIRIJ'I' (UPI) -Lebanese alr forct waq>lane1 llllng roct.u struck Palestin- ian guei:dJJa ·~ oo the western outskirts of Belnlt todey, the army aald. The announcement came aeveral hoarl afw the mllillt7 had UllWTIOd control o1 the country. also warned against nnnors being cir<ulated "lo creeta dllorder In the COlmtry." p,.. ..... rshlp abO i. In el!ect Aated-llloul r<porto-11111 eome form of ce-~ bad heen oer...t upon by the anny anc!"gumillas, • Defense Ministry spokesman aatd : "We have oo knoWledg• cl thJa at the ministry." NATIONWIDE BANS on prlnling, writing, publishing, pamphlet and leaflet distribution and meetlnp, aa well u a TIJE PALE81'1NE LI be rat Io D temporary clooure ol ell clnemu, Organ!UlUon (PLO) in Cairo said today theaters, night dubs and meeting halll, Lebaneoe planes, tanks and artillery had were ordered by army cemmander·ln-mounted "ferocious attacks" on Palestln· chie! Gen 1skander Ghanem. _ · Jan camps on t b e outskirts o1 Beirut, The bans followed a lllata'<>I emergen-kllllng and wounding large numbers o! cy proclaimed Mol)day n!gbl by Pftmler--lhe!r-reold@nls. Amin Hafez altar the army and PolestJn-In a communique -the third !Jsued by ian guerTillu resumed llghling, ""8k-the guerrillas sina! figbling resumed in ing an uneuy !our<lay truoo. Beirut the Beirut area Monday evening -the Radio aatd today Hal .. had aubmlUed bis PLO aatd the bombardment destroyed resignatlm. , and burned scores of tin and mud-brick Beirut Radio, In 1111DOUJ1Clng the bans, houses Inside the camps o! Jisr el-Basha said anyone violating these orders woold and Tel Zaatar. be referred to trial by military courts. It The PLO command in addltlon said, UPIT .......... U.S. CONSUL GENERAL LEONHAROY EMBRACES WIFE, EILEEN Four Days of Terror at Hands of Kidn1per1 Ended Mond1y Connally Not Appointed To Nixon Cabinet-Yet WASHINGTON (AP) -Amee t Ing between President N ix on and Republican-convert John B. Connally has not returned Connally lo the Nixon Cabinet. At least at this time. Nixon apparently sounded out the ( I N SHORT ..• l former secretary of the TreaSW7 about taking a new assignment during a session Monday at the Florida White House in Key Biscayne. But COOnally was tmderstood to have DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otllvtry of lilt Dally Piiot is guarantted MttM111·~rlll1y1 II nu •• ...i 111•1 ,._ "'"" 9't' l:M •• rn,, r.111 111'11 )'ffr c.n •Ill k _.,.., M )'Ml. C1ll1 1r1 11•111 •Ill ,,. '·""" S.IVl"llllY Mid lllllHYI II '" .. Ml nc1lw1 ,..,r CIPY lty f l .m, lfl1,.1y, If' I l ,m, SWHl•Y, c•H 1t'MI • C9PY ... rn .... ,..,,,, " ~Ill, (1lh lrl IN.Ill 1111111 II l .m, MMI o.r.,.,. C:-ly ArMI ...... , tf2'4nl H1tllnM1I M11t1tl••'1"4I ft)C~ IM WHlm•11tr .......... .,...,111 ""' c._..,, c1,i11r1 ... INC:"' 1111 J••• c..n1r1111, 0-hlilt, ... Ill U.-· L.1,_ Hl,.,.i .... fFMOI no interest in the only cabinet-level past, now open, that of Secretary of Defense. e que en Returns ASHDOD, Israel (AP) -T he Queen Elizabeth 2 steamed OOmeward through lhe Mediterranean today, half her Israeli cruise completed without any Arab ter- rorist attacks against her load of Jewish passengers. Stringent security precautions have been in effect since the flagship of Bri- tain's merchant fleet sailed Crom Brit.a.in two weeks ago with 620 Jews on a crise to attend Israel's 25th anniversary celebration. e Kissl119er Talks MOSCOW (UPI) -Presidential ad- viser Henry A. Kissinger met for eight hours Monday with Communist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev and ls con- tinuing ta.lb today t h a t the two men started on Friday at Brezhnev's hunting lodge, the U.S. Embassy said. The embassy gave no details ot the talks, taking place at Brezhnev's dacha at Zavidovo, 75 miles north of Moscow . But U.S. sources said earlier the talks are covering the agenda for Brezhnev's talk5 with President Nixm ln Washington next month an'd such issues as Indochina, U.S.-&>viet trade, East-West troop reduc- tions in Europe, strategic arms talb and a proposed European security con- ference. Tornado Whips N. Alabama "As of 1:'5 p.111-today (S:'5 a.m. PDT), the Lebanole army !oms were still shellJng the camp ol Burj el-Barajna on the -of BelnlL Tbe ~of the . -Palostlnlan revolulloli ..,, rmllllng the sourees of fire ln 111 alUm"pt to· sllonce them." IN ANOTHER developmeut, Damascus Radlo reported the Syrian Interior Mlnls".t)I bad 8bDOllllCed that Syria closed Its borders with Lebanon "unlll further notice," but gave no detaila. The Syrian border remained open laal -when the LebeMM-ll'l!ll'-and-guerrtllas began their llgbl. llalez 8bDOllllCed the state of emergen- cy in Lebanon during a cabinet meeting under President Suleiman Fnnjieb. '!be cabintt was considering a draft agree. ment for peace, drawn up In talks wiUJ guerrilla lead6. earlier ln the day. U.S. Consul General Free After Terror ~ GUADALAJARA. Melioo (UPI) - U.S. Consul General Terrence G. Leonhardy walked into his home late Monday in ~e9 clothing and a three-day heard. !reed bv leltwin• guer- rillas who held him nearly 100 hours as a political hostage. ' Diplomatic colleagues said he was weak and tired, but "okay." 'l1IE RELEASE o! LeonbardY. the fll"St U.S. dlplomat abduc!A!d In Melico in modem times. was expected late Sunday afW' 30 se>cal!ed ''political prisoners" - most of them accused terrorists and bank robben -were freed and ·nown to Havana in exchange for Leonhardy. Leor'1ardy aald in a statement that his ordeal again emphasized the need for all governments to cooperate in stamping out international terrorism. He did not mention details of his kld- naping -carried out last Friday by four armed men who later described themselves as members of the Ieftwing People's Revolutionary Anned Forces. BIJ'I' HE DID express lhan!ts to Mex- ican authorities who complied with demands by the guerrillas to !ree the 30 prisoners, among them four women. The kidnapera threatened to kill Leonhardy if the 30 were not freed and flown to CUba. Authorities bowed to the demands Sun- day, then started a long wait to see if the kidnapers would free Leonhardy. He appeared at 10: 45 p.m., walking In- to his suOOrban home through a back door past two newsmen who recognized him. HE WAS WEARING a yellow shirt and pants and shoes -different clothing than be wore Friday when four leftwi.ng guer- rillas stopped his car and forced him away at gunpoint. Leonhardy also was unshaven, but otherwise appeared in good shape. Leonhardy later lssued a statement saying: "I want lo express my feeling about how happy I am free, free again, reunited with my family , friends and col- leagues, both Americans and Mexicans. • 1l lPOll:- LEBANON D -~11-.. -, .. -, ..... ....., IM11tMA1IOMAI. AltPOl1 ---------- UP'I TeltPhole LEBANESE JETS HIT PALESTINIAN GUERRILLA POSTS NEAR BEIRUT Attack Nearly Coincided With Military Takeov.r of the Country High Army Brass Linked to Theft • WASHINGTON (AP) -Four Army enlisted men convicted of · .bilking military service clubs of hundreds of thousands o! dollars today implicated · high-ranking o!!icers in a coverllp o! the activity. The sworn statements, given lo in- vestigators in adv~ cf a hearihg today by the Senate Government Operations subcommittee, outline a pattern of com- mand influence that the 'men say was designed to make service clubs in Germany, Vietnam and at Ft. Benning, Ga., tum an illegal profit. THE FOUR, including former Sgt. Maj. William 0. Wooldridge, had not te:Stified publicly until no w about how they stole from slot machine operations and took kickbacks from military sup- pliers for more than 10 yean. When called to testify before the sul>- committee in October 1969 they took the Fifth Amen<.hnent against s e I f -i n- criminalion. All have pleaded guilty In a IA>s ' A~geles Federal court to. ~~s ,of ~n;. sp1racy to defraud the serVice cIUt>s. _, They have yet lo be sentenced, pending their agreement to appear today before the subcommittee. Wooldridge, the fll'St man to ever hold the job of Anny Sergeant Major said he used his position to control the transfer of his friends, wbo in tum were raking of! the profits ol the service clubs. WOOU>RIDGE SAID that in Vietnam be c a m e to the aid of two non- commissioned officers arrested for black market currency vlplations. He said M8j. Gen. John H. Hay, then rommander of the U.S. First Division, was persuaded that the t w o men should not be pros- ecutecl. The two were atlowed to return to the U.S. and retire rat.her than face· co~ martial. Senate invesUgators quoted Wooldridge as saying there was.clear evidence the men were guilty of illicit behavior. One o! them, former Sgl Seymour LaVW'1 was convicted with Wooldridge ana scheduled to appear with him. Jn Germany in t966, Wooldridge told the investigators, the commander ot the 24th Infanlry Division, Maj. Gen. William Cunningahrn, was aware lhat a percen- tage of slot machine profits was being stolen . by the sergeants who ran the service clubs. 3 Congressional Units to Probe ·. E&berg Heist WASHINGTON (AP) -Thtee con- gressional committees plan lnquiries into the CIA's involvement in•the Wrglary oft the office of a psychiatrist who treated Pentagon Papers defendant D a n 1 e 1 Ells berg. All three committees oversee CIA operations. SEN. JOHN L McClellan (0.Ark.), an- nounced Monday that ranking present and fonner officials of the agency have been invited to testilt on Wedneslay before his Senate Appropria'tioos ~ committee on intelligence operations. Cambodians Recapture 2 Towns Near Capital He said James Schlesinger, CIA difec.. tor, and Dr. Bernard Melloy, chief of the CIA's psychiatric division, would be among the first to testify. The senator said his panel will bear later from Marine Commandant Robert E. Cushman ·Jr., who, while depllty CIA director, reportedly authorized the use of CIA equipment in the Elllberg burglary case. From W1re Services PHNOM PENH -Cambodian forces recaptured two towns near Phnom Penh today and linked up with other govern- ment units to consolidate the positions, field reports said. In the alr war, U.S. fighter-bombers stayed away from the Phnom Penh area again today, but U.S. spotter pilots directed heavy raids elsewhere in Cam- bodia. The U.S. Pacific Forces Command In Honolulu said American 1!52 and tao- lical warplanes were throughout Cambodia. active Monday THE TWO TOWNS reoccupied by government ground units were Selbo, on Highway 21 about 15 miles south of Phnom Penh, and Chhuk Sar, 28 miles to the northwest on Highway 5. Field reports said reinforcements relieved 150 troops who had been sur- rounded at Chbuk Sar while other ground units reestablished the garrison at Setbo. They met no rebel opposition, the reports said. AMT111El\ WITNE'lS scbednled to testify later Is Richard Helms, the fonner CIA director who now b U.S. en- voy to IraIL "Serious allegations have appeared tn the press regarding ~ reported in- volvement of the Central Intelligence Agency in the Pentagon Papers case," said McClellan in a statement. "It l.s the purpose of the subcommittee to hear testimony as to the fal concernlng those charges." Rep. Lucien N. Nedzi ( Mich.), said his Anned Sen'ices subcommittee on the • CIA would begin heartns witness~ Thursday. The third Inquiry WU dJscJooed by Sen. Two Persons Kilhd in Storm , Buil.dings Destroyed Meanwhile the Viet Cong charged to- day that Saigon troop! fighting in a Com- munist-held area sprayed toxic chemical! that "ruined" more than 1.500 acres of land and caused serious illness to "large numbers of persom." Stuart Symington (0.Mo.), cbainnan of the Senate's joint CIA oversight com- mittee. ' I ' Sun, M-. Tides TUQDA'f' kand lllgtl • .. .. t:» ,..,,,, 3.t &Kand ICM ':Jli P.M. 2.4 Wll>lflSDAY ''"'' PllOl'I • • ..... .. 3:11 a.m. '-' Finl low ..... ,.,: •• Mil7 a.m. ~.I 5tecw>d flltf'I .... '.... l:tt p.m. •.3 Mcotld ICM . . . 11:13 J.M. t t Sv11 •I• f :P a.M. .... 1r4f p,.m. M4IOfl ltbe1 11!•7 •. ,,,, J•opular Sta mp Hundreds of stamp collectors gathered in Independence, Mo. for the rim issuing o! an 8- cent stamp l.'Olllmemorating the 89th anniversary of Harry S Tnlman's birthday. The town's post office received 60,000 mall orders for the stamp. 'l1IE AREA INVOLVED Is within five miles of the site where an International Commission of Control and Supervision (ICCS) helicopter was fired on Sunday. Capt. Phuong Nam , a Viet Cong !ftSS officer, said the tox ic chemicaJt were sprayed oo an area in the Mellnng Delta at Hoa Hung in Oruong Tbl<n pro•» Ince, about 100 miles southwest of Saigon. The !CX:S "'-< was flttd on in the same area but it was not hit and there were no injurleJ. In Washington, Secretary of Defense Elllot L. Rlchardson says U.S. bombing Jn Cambodia could C<lllUnure tven II Congress rejects a proposed shilling of military !unds to pay !or it. TllE TRANSFER of '500 miiUon from long-term progranu to meet CUI1'ent oeeds i.· covered Jn a eeneral •t>- propriatlons measure before Congroos. Rlcbarclson said Monday alter a closed meetinJ with the Senata ApproprlaUona Committee that the Cambodian bombing actually accocmi. for a small portioo ol the money the Pentagon wants tranaler- red. ''We plan to look Into tt," oald Sy- mington. "If true. I don't like ft." NEDZI SAID on Monday that CIA: Director Schlestnger confinned fOl' him the involvement of Cushman. Nedzi aaid that Schlesinger conllnned that CUshman l!ad ordered the lasuance o! CIA equipment !or the burglary to Watergata conspirators E. Howard Hunt and G. Qordon Uddy. ' • Need a Job? Call Riclia rd " WASIIlNGTON (AP) -The ad said: 11Adminlstratlve 11tafi post-· 1 tlom ova ii. Call Dick," and listed 1 the White House telephone number .. Tb e swttchboard at 1600" Pcnnsy!vanla Avenue lit up Monday ' with hundreds ol calls re&ponding '· to the claodfied ad in Thci • Wubingtoe Post, appareolly placed' by a practical ~-· Tho l'resld<llt waa in Florida. I 1 ~ t I • • VOL 66, NO. 128, 1 SECTIONS'. 32 PAGES ~ TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1973 • -' Downzoning May Be a Dead • Jly t.; PE'l'ERltRIEG- .o~ t11t DlllY '119' Sllff There may be an end in aig_ht to the turbulence · that seems 'to have shaken public confidence in' plannlng and zoriing in Newport Beach for more than one year. ,. : City councilmen. said Mooday night they don't like the widespread doWmon- ing proposals lleveloped by clty planneni io studies over the past ,Ylfll'. 1'bey· mov. <$to pul a •W>,to them. • ' NeiVp0if R everses Field on R esidential Density In an abrupt reversal of previous of. ficial city po&ture, councilmen almost unanimQ\!Sly asserted tbey think the downzonlng ~ for the older areas of the city that have been perplexing pJaJllllJ'S and property OWners Will hurt the _clty more than they'll ~p. Mayor Doaall A. Mclnnla in!Uated the offensive, declaring he's kept silent on the issue long enough. He lashed out at everything from !lie R-1.5 mne already in effect in Balboa and on Balboa Island, to ,concepts lor cutting residential density in West Newport and old O>rooa del Mar. "It woU1tl stifle, if not shut off, the uWadlnl that ls going on in many areas at this time," Mcinnis said. Adrnitlinl be had no statistics to back him up, Mcinnis, a West Newport res!· dcnt,.charged ahead and pointed out that Condominiums Approved "10 .. years a.to I'd look up and down my block and there were only three full-time families in rWdence. uNow be reverse Is true," he said. "We're getting rid of tbe crackerboxes and sui..tandard uni ts." Mclnnl.s' flurry came as councilmen Teday's Fl••I N.Y. Stoeks N TEN CENTS Issue welt!hed tbe crucial land use elemt11I of the·eity's proposed new general plan at a public hearing ln city hall. No action was taken but the oo.mcil sent nearly two dozen proposed changes back to the planning commission "for comment.'' Most ~gnUlcant are three changes pro- posed by tbe Newport Harbor Cllamber of Commerce -they call for the city to leave the zoning alone ln West Ne.wport, (See DOWNZONING,-Page Z) Balboa Fun Zone Voted Out Lost Her son · ' . " '.Mrs. Anna Mair of Denv,er·,clutcbes a small-photograph.of her son, :navid, 10, after she ordef9d,,d0ctors..:to .turn off a respirator which , was keeping the boy alive. David was ·•truck by an automobile last • month and was in a coma, kept '!live medically by means of a respira- >.tor. Mrs. Mair told ·doctors to turn off•the maebine aftet' learning the . ~ boy's brain was dead. · 1 Nixon Invoked 'Secur,ity' ' To Quiet -Burglary Facts -NEW YORK (AP) -The New York ~ . ' 'd ~es, quoting Watergate sources, sat taqay that President Nixon twice invoked national security re<enUy In lniUally 8$l'king to prevent release to the Pen-tf4on papers trial details of the burglary. o#, the office of Daniel Ellsberg 's poychiatrist. l The Times said the first o£ the two ' . '!lleged attempts involved a Justlc&'De- 1 lfrlm:ent memorandum linking two c.on- 1 Victed Watergate conspirators to the \ break-in. The second involved a termer White House aide, Egil Krogh Jr. public the iiext day. The second alleged case involved Krogh, said to bave supervised tbe burJ!ary, who WU reportedly told by presidential adviser John D. Ehrlicbman last Monday that "the ,President doesn't want any more 'Of. this to surface for na.- tional seCurity reasons." The .. 'l:lmes said Krogh . received guldellnes·a few days !ale< i.Jllng him he wu not1 authorized to discu~ details of .speclfiC leaks or any information al>ou.t national security. AltU a meeting with Richardsoo, Krogh reportedly decided to draft an af- fidavit 1hal was r!leased Monday 'by the Ellaberg court In Los Angeles. , A split Newport Beach city COW1cil Monday night approved plana to build a 3S-un.lt condomlnium that w°"ld rep]~ Balboa's Fun Zone. With Vice Mayor H~ Rogers of Balboa casting the crucial ballot, coun- cilmen voted U for John Koowiser's . plan to tear down the ferriJ wheel and bumper car rides that ,have made the FW1 Zone an attraction for young and 'old since 1936. . The amUS.merit-pari will probably be Nixon Eyed As Ellsberg _ Case Witness ' llOO ANGELES (AP).-, The. deleme • ~,,_'tieoiilt~ lrflll'IW" dho:llidP..todlY'"-lle!Wrei -Prtoldmt NiJ111>ii•~,~~ved, in "~ ing the dellW'Y of eVldeoce to this court" and will cite cases showing that NIIDD ts liable lot subpoena by the court to testify. Attorney Leonard Boudin later told reporters that · the defen5e wanted to notify the Judge that Nixon "is a po- tential witness," but said It bad no plans to try to subpoena him as of now. "[don't think we need him," he said. Defense attorney Olarles Nesaoo, representillg Daniel Eu.tierg, !Old 'the judge !hat based on •""1 reports, It ap- pears the President c118courg1de the Juo- tice Department lnlm telling the court here that Watergate """'l'iralors E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon !Jddy were involved In a burglary of Eu.berg's psy- chiairtst's office. "Is Mr. Nixon difterent from some other man who woold impede the turn- over of evidence to this court?" asked Nesson. ". . .U this were !IODle other person ... this pmon would be called to !be stand and-questioned." He said that the President obviously has "given notice" that be will invoke executive privilege if questioned about any Watergate involvement. "rve never beard ol executive privilele protecting the President from inquiry 1n crimlDal acUoo&, 11 l8icl: Neelon. He ,cited the judl!e's meeting "1111 Preskfeutlal 'advber John Ehrllctunan, In which U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne Was approached about taking the job of FBI ~lrector. B~e has said he met Nixon briefly. · "wtferi you were called to San CJe- . mente and offered a job and given the hand of the President," said Nessen, "I think he told l'<lU at that point In some symbollc way where his presldentcy was at. • .I tblnl: the present question is whether Mr. Nllon will be told where the judiciary Is aL" around for at least one more summer, however. Konwiser must still take his proposal to the South Coast Regional Conservation Commissioo. Testimony at the 90-minute public hearing on tbe project Mooday,night was c!lvided, .but Allan Beek, a leac!lng op- .ponent who last fall took the project to court, dtd not speak. Beek sat sllenUy in the audience listen· Ing to Balboa merchants endorse the housing complex and mo5t residents, In- eluding the Central Newport Beach and Peninsula Point homeowners associa- lk>ns, come out In oWositJon. .. Beek, wboee family owns the Balboa Ferry that operates nearby, declined comment on any future challenges to ~ project. Joining Rogers in support of the residential development on the l.f.acre site wefe Mayor Donald A. Mc.Innis and Councilmen John· Store and Richard Crout. Councilmen Paul Ryckof!, Carl I Against All Newport Beach Fights 'Col.d War' Around Newport Beach City Hall It's known as the Battle of the Back Door. ~ It's a chilling conlroolation. ..... .J!:J~·llii&e a~ ...,,two --i llt city ciloli:ll tt• ~ ilimiiiiil'J!l!>(J~~·-~ Oii the-blustery days of -and'..rty 1Pflnl. , ·_r • o -f I Like Mondiy. There Is on one side ,Councllman.Paul Ryekoll. He Is opposed by 111 fel- fow councthnen, the press, a smattering of lpectators and a covey of blue- fingered secretaries worJdng just outside the council chambers In the clly hall lobby. Despite the odds, Ryciroll usually wins. HE SM'S on the far rt1ht of the council dais and controla the Back Door. He likes to keep It open. Wide open. It creates a draft from the bank of windows be !mists be kept open m the other side of the room. "I tried closinK them once, 11 said one aide to City Manager Robert L. Wynn who normalfy sits right below the windows . "Bui be came over and opened them up again." FEU:.OW COUNCILMEN have yet to formally make an issue out of l~ but Councilman Carl Kymla, who sill right ne1t to Ryekoll, bu pointed oat on a number of occasions that be often goes home during a break and pull Oii hla tbennal underwear and ski socks. --- "And mr. feet still freeze/' he says. Ryckofl s only explanation to date Is tbe fact be doest~ like a warm, stuffy roOm. But back to Monday's Battle. THE SECRETARIES won for once. They jimmied th:? lock on the them» stat.and turned the heat.In the building up to 93. Newport Council Okays Industrial Area Zoning Ignoring a plea to delay action, Newport Beach city councilmen Monday approved commercial zutlng for the in· dustrial complex ofJ Jamboree Road north ol Philco-Ford Amioutrootc. 1betr action means that scme stores, office buildings and restaurants can be built in what WBll to have been 10lely an industrial tract across Jamboree from the Eastbluff resldenUal area. Two persons opposed the change. Allan Beek, president of Newport Residents United (NRUI, likened the proposal to tbe controversial Emliay and Collin& Radio Company zone changes ·(J( two yeara ago. .r The newSpaper said the infOf'\tlBUOD in the first case was belatedly diac~-to the Los Angeles court aft~r Assl. U.S; Atty. Henry E. PeterSen, wm·nta~ect the Watergate investigation, cmvinced Nixon lo reverse himself. In the. sec:oad .,..._ the information was reportedly-provided It the court al the inaistence•of EHio\.1., Richardson, nominated · to be attorney I lerteral. • 'High While House officials called the reports that the President 1int,o~ ftleaslng the information , "ir; renionsibte," the Times .. said.'· nie~ ne\Yspaper said the ,'Nports WE<e .P.nl- \oided by some of tbe principals, lawyers and · Justice Department olllcals. UCI Hospital Supp~rted So did Alan Tracy, a represenlallve of the Easibluff Homeowners· Asioclatioll, who told councilmen the lrvlne·Company had told his group the project wouldn't come up for a bearing unW later in May. "We need the addlllonal time to prepare our oppositlon," Tracy sald. Councilmen paid no attention to Tracy (an Irvine Company spokesman later sa id privately be'd made no such state- ment to the homeownen assoclatl<XI), and approved the project. r..z, alter a eerie• of attempts to roopen the hoarlng failed . In the firs t alleged case, Pelerlep reortedly 'Was told at first by President Nlion not to releaoe the memo, con- tilbing information ..id to" have bemt diaclosed by former White HOllOO ""'"*1 John W. Dean Ill on Aprll 11, the Times .. Id. Petersen recognlud the bearing of the lpformation on Ellsberg's trial and later Jook up the matter with tbe Prt1ident, -who then agreed to forward It, 1coording to the nmes account. ... Qn April 26.t David Niue.n, the govero. ment prosecutor in the Ellaberg case. submitted tbe memo to U.S. District Court Judge Matty Byrne, wbo llllde it ; I • . By GEORGE LIEOAL ' 1 . 'f 'Of llt,Dtltr,J'llitt Sfl,I eouOcllmen In bcitti Newport Beach and Costa' Mesa Ondol'Bed tile pi:oposed UC lrvtne-Callfornla Cojl~e of Medicine 01>- ~chblc hospllal' Monday night. by official support from Hoa1 Memorial Hospital d l r e c t o rs , Newport Beach councilmen adopted the raofaUon of-.upport on a 6 to 1 vote. Councllman Paul RY<kofl opposed the relOlullon, clUng hls rears that the · boopltal would encourage continued growth of the Harbor Arca. Following I pmenlatlon by UC-cCM acting dean Stanley van den Noori, Costa M,.. clty counclbnen unanimously voted 10 support the university's view that the 138 ritl!Don of statewide heallh aclenc:es bond "-allocated to the U.CI medical school •hould'be;spenl bere. ~lutions adopted by both cities, and virtually every other clty in Or- County, nbte that voters who last • fall overwhelmingly supported the 1156.9 million· UC boi1ct i..ue, believed the money """1d Improve medical educa- tion al UC! and, 'limlld be IP"llt to build and --· boopllal and the acboal'• nre.c::--1 clwroom and labora~ , . RecenlJJ, Illa Ammbly Ways and Means· COllllDllleo lid been considering the UC Buclpt_Wl*b Includes a partial allocation -fl nillllnn of the total 112 mlllion -to hlsfn construction oo cam- pus of the • bale medical sciences building. Anottier fllll,000 budget item to plan a teaching holpilal ls alao btlm that commltlee. Finally, the li&c1lly powerful Way1.1nd Meaos subcornmtttee also is mulling a bill by Aosemblyulan Robert Badham (R- Newport Beach) to allocate 124 mllllon for teaching hospllal construction In Orange County, thla year. The bill ma~ one by ~te , Sen. Dennil E. ~ter lntrod)ICed )n the senate. Eich measure, however, alon1 with the UC . bude!i pnwlstons depend on tlle rOcocnm<indation o1 ·yet another IOglala- ,tlve committee. Like the 'Ways and Means committee, AssemblY!"an WUlie Brown Jr. (D-San Frllfclsoo) chairs this cOinmlttee -the Joint Legislative Commlltee'oo Teaching ·Hospital SIUng. To 'date the bod7 has conaJdered spend- ing the UCl \lond funds In a .. rlety of (See llOt!PITAL, 1'9ie Z) ' Councilmen Paul Ryckoff and Carl Kymla opposed tbe change. . Kyrnla argued Iha! not · ,eriough WU knolm about the demands It -14 place on Orange County Airport. O>uncllme!1 Jolm Store countered by saying be thought the pr_.i changes would likely foster less demand than wholly-inClllstrlal usee. An lrvlne Compeny representaUve told councilmen that amon1 the use1 plaMed In the arta are the new headquarters for tbe Newport Beach Poll OOlce, a Paclllc Ttltphone Company office, a n d IUCh thJnll U lamp manufacturing planls with ' rtlaD stores in the same bulldlng. Kymla and Milan Dostal voted no. · Rogen defended the location of tho ·housing units, in t.be middle of a com- mercial diltrict. "We've always bad mixed resldf.Dtial and commercial uses," he 18ld. "It's part of the· unique character and chann of our city." Tbe charge -of spot zoning had been leveled by aeveral speakers. ~ ' Otben argued against it because of Its (ste FUN ZONE, Pqe I) Costa Mesa Says No More Nude Dancing Nude or 1tml-aude dAACllli ls Dlepl ID Colla ~today. An Ui1tDCY ordinlnce making ti .. - plUN hy unalmoul $ to O vote of the Ci- ty Council Moncbf night. The stalule, drafted by City Attorney Roy June, took effect Immediately but police offtcen did not make any arrests at either of the city's two nudJe plam, Papa Joe's or the Fire House, after tbe action waa ~taken. City Manager Fred Sorsabal indicated to council members Monday night that the two clubs would be Jliven time to comply with the new faw but was unspecific over bow much. Sorsabel met this morning with Capt. Edward Glugow, uslstanl chief of the Costa Mesa Police Department, to detennlne when enfo{Celllent Is to beiln· The reaction of the elub lllllllagtn to the news was not hnmediately known. Members of the council who have been batUing nudity in bars since 111111 when the city's first topless club, Baby Doll'• Opened, passed the ordinance wJthout comment. The law was written to be in direct conformance with a cauiomia Supreme Court decision a week ago which upheld the right of clties to ban nudity in bars. Quintuplets Gain PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -For the Ont Ume since their birth 12 days ago, the Andenon quintuplets have all lbown a wel1ht gain during a 24-houf period. The five infants are 11all approaching their birth weight&" and doing "quite well," Dr. FYed Nomura of Bess Kaiser Hospital, said Monday. Ceut Weaill<er The weatherlady calls for buy sunshine In the afternoon hours on Wednesday, with sllgbUy warmer temperatures. Highs of 68 al the beaches rising to 78 inland . INSIDE TODAY Freed U.S. Comul Gt11tral Terrence G. Leonhordy empho- lized ~ need for aU gowrn- mtntl to cooperate in stampfn.g oui internaUonaJ terrorirm. TM WVOJI was released in Guodal.ao ;aro late M'ondaj/. See •""11 on Page 4. I I -- J D,lll Y PILOT H -· .. ., " 1973 ·Coastal Panel Under F j I --' ~~wport C?un~il Action By WJUUM SCllJtl!IBER Of h Dt11Y ..... , .,." AB ~ OOUnty conaerva= Monday thmteMd South Colst Co a s t a I Conservation Commlss oners with legal prusure forcing them to re- quire environmental !."llp.&Ct rtports 2 Countians Still Jailed lnEnsenada Special to lbe Dally Pllol ENSENADA, Mex. -Two Orange County youths remain in custody here to- day alter a Cinco de Mayo brawl eruplod on downtown streets in which 190 persons were arrested. orange Countians a w a i t i n g a~ pearances before a magistrate were identified by Mexican authorities as Lindsey L. Greene, 18, of Seal Beach and cate 0 . Darnall, 21 , o! Garden Grove. Greene is accused of destroying a policeman's unifonn. Darnall, along with Thomas F. Phillipo, 23, of Amarillo, Tex., are charged with hitting an officer ln the face with a beer bottle. One Mexican attorney described the melee as a 0 Roman orgy" with brawlm lhrowlng cherry bombs and firecracken . Fighting broke out while an estimated 4,000 persons were visiting Ensenada for Cinco de Mayo celebrations and the end of the annual Newport Beach to Ensenada yacht race. Hussong's Bar · and Hotel Bahia were beavily damaged by thrown botlles and other items. Fifty persons were reported injured.· Tbe atlomey, Enrique Villa""21, said about $0 young Americans were still in jaiLMonday and unable to post ball rang- ing from '12 to $24. He was told they <.'OUld be freed alter serving an unspecified time in Jail. Juan Zamora, manager of the Bahia Hotel, told a story of what happened. "The hippies, just a few , started com- ing in the hotel about noon. The yateros (yachtsmen) began leaving as soon as tbe trophy ceremony was over. "At first, the hippies just sat around the pool, drinking. Then more came until we SOOD bad about 200 persons around lhe pool. When lbal many yOW1g people are together, someone has to do something to attract attention. "So one boy let out a yell, and someone answered him. Then the people were all yelling. They got excited, and someone lhrew a bolUe Into lhe pool. Olbers started tossing things, too. "One boy started to lake bis pants of£, but we bad the police take blm away. Then a big guy, maybe 6 feet 6 inches tall, threw a girl into the pool. "So I went up to him and asked him please not to do that. He just pushed me away. His friend came up and also asked him to stop, but the big guy just put his hand over his face and shoved him away, also. "Before long, hippies in groupa of six and seven were ruMing through the hallways, kicking in doors and doing whatever vti>lence they could." Zamora said , "All this trouble started five or six years ago when the hippies started coming down. The yateros caused no trouble. They are good people." Tenement Fire Takes Six Lives NEW YORK (UPI l -Six persons, members of two families . dled of bums and smoke inhalation early today when they were trapped on the third floor of a Brooklyn tenement by a two-alarm fire . The victims were Ginny Lamont, 4-0, and her two sons. Horace 14, and Bernard 13, and Shel.ta Davis, 25, and her two sons, John , S, and Sean, 3. Fire officials sa id the fire started at 1:30 a.m. in a vacant aparbnent on the first floor, quickly spread throughout the three-story building and left I t ''completely gutted.'' • OU.N•I COAST • DAILY PILOT Tfl• Or•"IM c ... 11 DAIL'!' PILOT, wl1'11 wtikll IA cOITl&lned tllt Nrwt-Prtu. II P\11111""911 •~ "" Or111g1 C11t1I P1tbllslllng (ompuy, • .,.. NII t~l/!1011• lrt ""°llslltd, Mardtr tll>OUgli Frld•r. tO< CO.II Mttl, NllWPO•I 8ffdl, Hilntlngton lltKll/Fou~111n Vtllt y, l.111...,• BMcft, ln>IM/Sldclltbtdl Incl ~n ci.,,_,., $In J11111 C.!)11lr'llno A 1lngl1 rwolontl ltdllion .. Plfbllllttll S.l11rclt'fl '"" SvrOtv.. 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Alllr U. llnt pmen- Dll!> s-.t, chalnnoa or the Project on permil aPIJllclllonl .,., "ellher based talion, Commllaloll ~ Robert Evt!uallon and Pllnning Commlllee or on a 1ubJecilve -or on an In--,. ol ~ .l!elocb ulce\t for 1 H.... In capsule form are the major aciions taken by N'",,ort Beach ci ty -lmen, wlio met ln>m 1:311 p.m. Monday 10 Z:30 W. .-ntng wllh a lw<>- --bruit ... dinner. ' - DOWN7.0NINO: ~have pul an end lo ii. Follo wing tbe lead of Mayor the Environmental Coallllon of Or=• odeq .. 1e and ~t aaalnlf ot ' '_,_, __ "' ·''--'--'·' , __ _.." . Stato AltMDey G-'1, , • ..,~ on EIR County, told comml•loner1 et TinJ1J1DmU11 Wlt--meellnC In Looi Belch that the liodlngl Seeont'• wamJcc and avalilMlcm ol• ftqU!nmmtL Donald Mc~, tbt:y planning commisslooers to review proposals to allow cumnt IODUlg lo'"°"linue In older areas of lhe city. of the COmmiulao llalf aro Inadequate. curmt permit ~ wu 1111 Mo. Seconl ... -that lbiprimary duty ~-------------· -----.,.--· --of the commhllon establlshed by r Propollllon :iO II' to:: jirooerve tbe en-Seareh Ends ::·nt ol lhe •• ooo.yaril·wid• coastal ll'UN 7.0NE:-Tokl JiulldOr Jollll KOl)w!ser he can build 33 condominiums along lhe Ballloa ~t WberO the Fun ZOOe now stands. Konwlser still needs approval from the South Coast Regional Conservation Commission. • Dad Abandons Quest for Coed ' ST. CLAIR SHORES, Mich. (AP) -After two weeks of haunting student hangouts, talking with youths and tracking down tips in California, John C. JonQ.J.OlurnedJlo!"e and abandoned his search for Ilia oldest daughter. - Jonas went w San Diego April 26 eight days after 22.-yeal'Old Mary Diane Jonas disappeared while hitchhiking from her apartment w UC San Diego. He said San Diego authorities reached a dead·end in their in· v..tlgatlon of his daughter's disappearance. Jonas posted a $500 re- ward for Information about his daughter last week. But only two calls resulted and neither provided worthwhile Information. Dorothy Jonas said sbe has known since the search began that the oldest of their lour children probably is dead. "The waiting is the worst part. I just hope the epd came quickly for her," she sai<f. From Page I DOWNZONING REVERSAL. • • llolboa and old Corona del Mar. Mc!nnla' views were echoed by Coun- cilman Carl Kymla, who pointed oot lhal with all the fussing and rezoning in those three areas, planners feel the population · of the city could be trimmed by only 1.800 penons. "There's 1esa than a JG percent dif· ference between the existing zoning and tbe pn>posed limitations," Kymla said. "We oould make that up by effectively pursuing bootlegging (lllegal apartment units) in those areas.'' Additional zoning Inspector• are pro- pooed In tbe 1973-7! budget. Only Oluncilman Paul Ryckofl, who in- itiated the f1llb to dOWl17.0ne a year ago with bis R-1.5 zooing proposal for Balboa bland, argued strongly against the mayw's laissez faire attitude. "U we take that approach throughout the city, it should be realized that we are creating a general plan not in accord with our general plan policy," Ryckoff said. He apparently was referring to a paragraph In thal policy, adopted 15 months ago, that says: "'The clty shall set aboolute limits on future population antf dwelling unit densities ... " 11We're doing nothing about density. We're &~ witb growth projections," Ryckolf contended. "ll's a~ away from the intent oft~ general Wan," be iaid. 4 1 Vice Mayor Howard Rogers was the only other voice in opposition, and then only when councilmen talked aboul Jilting proposed controls over Balboa, the area he represents. "The plaMing commission has devoted mooths of study to proposed controls in Balboa," Rogers said, "and the Chamber wants to tear them oot after a two-week look at It." He won a slight concesson in that coun- cilmen told planners to review the Balboa propose.I "without prejudice." But he also caught some beat from Coundlman Richard Croul, who pointed out planners made t h e i r recom- men~ for Balboa "be.fore they sent the cards out and the property owners came down here screaming." He was also chided by Ryckoff, who asked Rogers why be was critical of the Chamber's Balboa proposal but voted in favor of the same proposal for West Newp:>rt minutes eirlier. Should lhe propooed controls be markedly loosened, or d r opp e d altogether, it would bring the zooing cris is that has swept the city full circle. Ryckoff made his R-t.S proposal for Balboa Island shortly after his election laat April. Rogers, eyeing construction of growing numbers of 11>-bedroom box·type duplexes on the Peninsula, called for similar controls. Both, of course, came after a year-tong siege that led to development of a strict height ordinance. When Rogers . picked up the denslty- llmit ' proposal, however, the city's ·plan- ning staff and pfanning commission ap. parently sensed a direction on the part of councilmen and began full·scale studies of similar controls for all R·l (duplex ) zones in the city. It wasn't until, as Croul pointed out. p r o p e r t y owners began getting notices in the mail their lots were to be rezoned that any real inkling of resistance began to surface. As property owners began to organize, so did the city's real estate salesmen. They ali banded logelher lo pul up formidable opposition. It apparenUy has paid of{. City planners, who've spent cxmUess man hours working on lightening )he screws on multiple-family development, .declined l\PY formal !')llllllent. ~·It's thiir. city," ~,top city p18Nler said following the meeting. Cowjcihnen admitted they're still con- lrooled wllh one vexing problem lbat isn't getting any better and would only get worse no matter what kind or develop- ment is allowed on the Balboa Peninsula. "We still have a. traffic _problem on the Peninsula," said Councilman John Store. "That's the one area of town that our traffic consultant has found DO 110lu- tions in any of his alternatives." A consultant preparing the transporta- tion element of the general plan has drafted three alternates, one of which he . Is now suppo!ed to recommend as the singular setlutioo to all traffic problem! citywide. · Community Development D i re c t o r Richard V. Hogan did not say Monday night when the planning oommisaion will begin Its review of the proposed chang~ in both the land use and reBidential growih elements of the general plan. Judge Annuls Marriage Of Mamie, Oil Tycoon By TOM BARLEY Of I~ D11tr l"HOI Sllfl ~fllllonaire oil man Ross McClintock's marriage to l\1amie Van Doren v.·as an- nulled 1\-tonday by an Orange Count y From Pagel FUN ZONE ... bulk and the fact it will take away between 2.S and five feet of ex isting sidewalk. Cowlcilman Richard Crout pointed out that the five feet of the sidewalk there is actually part of the private property. But one speaker, Kay Ewing, 1576 E. Oceanfront. contended the public should have obtained title to the walk because or prescriptive righ ts. Ryctoff said he fears the approval wlll lead to S rush of similar requests by owners of marginal commercial buildings in the area. Kymla based his oppoellloo on a strong plann!ng oommission recorrunendalion for retention of. the commercial 'zoning. Store called ii lhe "besl compromise" for lhe property. "We can't start building the city from sand du.nes ," Store said. Croul and otheNJ commended Konwiscr £or cutting the deMlty Of the project. Crom 17 when proposed last summer, and Croul called It "a good plan lhen. It's a betltr plan oow, bul we should have ap- proved It lbat." Konwlaer, when ouUlnlng lhe plan, said the heorintJ Monday nlibl was the 13th public hearing conducted by city boerd s since "he first sought bis use permll lasl year. Superior Court judge \\'ho rejected repealed picas for a delay that would have enabl ed the shapely blonde actress to testify in her defense. Judge Charles A. Bauer also threw out pleas for financial support for the 40- yea r-old entertaine~ after hear l n g McClintock, 51 , testify that llls wtte of 37 days refused to sleep with him at night and spenl lheir wedding n!gbt on a coucl). But Mcclintock, a $00,000 a year ex· ecutive v.·ith the Fluor industrial chain "'ho 1estitied that his net worth was betv.·ecn $3 million and $5 million, ad· milted under cross examination that he had sexual relations with 11-t.iss Van Doren on other occasions. McC!inlock told Judge Bauer that be first met Miss Van Doren at the Balboa Bay Club and she agreed before their "·edding last Dec. 1 to giv e up her career in show business and concentrate on being his wife. - The burly oil man said her first demands on him were1or a $35,000 Rolls Royce, a $10,000 chlnchllla coat and a monthly clothing allowance ol 12,000. The oflshore drllllng expert said Miss Van Dortn told him lllal the lull length mink coat be bad ID mind for her was "too cheap" at $3,500. McC!lnlock, who lestllled lbal he wa s also Mked to pay the actress' outsland- ing bills and back taxes, said he was at a loss to explain her reluctance to sleep with him apart from ber comments 1ha1 she was "too tired" and ilia1 ho-snored. And McCllnlock te3tllled lbal he would not have married Miss Van Doren at all II he had been aware ol tha.le%Ual ...,. duel ouUined In a tnqa%1ne article th11 appeared shortly aner they 'took up residence at his Orange home. "Regional , .. commlssionen are re· quired by law to deny a pettllit for a proj- ect which w o u 1 d cause a significant adverse bnpa91" Secord aakL The oaly way to detennine such an im- pact is to require a fmal EIR on every project approve by an independent local agency , be said. Secord was critical of the commission for granting permits IO some projects with either draft ElRs or with no EIR at al! depending upon requirements of the local agency granting building permits. In a written communication to the commlsslon, Seoord was also highly critlc:a.l of builders and developers who he said are applying for permtt.s under raise preteDSeS. He said that local agencies now ac- cepting a final EIR only judge its ade- quacy and not whether or not there is any adverse impact. "The actions of most developers presenting their applications for a permit before this comrniBSlon has been a sham. These people have the audacity to deliberately mislead this commission," he said. Though commissioners tabled several pennits and killed a few others for reasons o~r than misslng EIRs, they did ·approve a number of permits th.at were not required by local agencies to prepare an Em. . These included two restaurants on Del Prado Street in Dana Point, a two-story medical office buildlng in San Clemente, two multi-unit apartment buildings in San Pedro and a 30 million gallon sewage lrealmenl plant on Terminal bland. Orange Counly Supervisor Ronald Caspers said lhe lwo Dana · Point Restaurants, part of an ovenll master plan for the harbor, were not required by the county to have an Em. . eopen, one of the Orange County members of the coastal commission, ar- rived late for the meeting and did not return atter the meeting's dinner break at 6 p.m. UCI HOSPITAL: Approved a resolutJon supporting an ~ampus tea ching hospital for UC lrvlne. NORTH·PORD: Approved zone cha~ allowing commercial uses despit~ plea from. Ealtbluff Homeownert As:sociatioo representative to delay so res1· dents could protest en masse. NEWPORT SHORES: Sent proposed development criteria for the oommer· cial strip on West Coast Highway bek>w Newport Shores back to planning commissioners. • MARINAPARK: Gave tenants in city-owned trailer park three more years before they have to move out to make way for a public park. Also approved rent hike. COMMinEES: Told Bicycle Trails Committee to stop appointing its own members; reminded all city commiMees that appointments must come from the council. TOURISTS: Told City Manager Robert L. Wynn to find out what it costs Newport Beach to provide services for the millions of "visitors" who come to town each year. · Dean to Testify Ervin Says Watergate Quiz to Begi!! May 16 WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Sam J . Ervin (!).N.C.), announced today lbal his special Watergate investigating com- mlllee will open hearings May 17 and agreed to subpoena ousted· White House counoel Jolm w. Dean ru . Ervin . said lbat U • the .committee determines it is DecesAl"Y Dean will be granlod limited immw1ily Crom proo- ecution to obtain his t e St i m 0 Dy regarding high-level administration in· volvement in the Watergate scandal. The committee's iinmunlty grant does not prevent Dean from being tried and convicted on other evidence but only CONGRESS TO PROBE CIA··INVO~VEMENT--Pogo 4- lrom havtng his own ,lesllmony uoed agllinst him . ' Frot11P09el . Dean is reported to have told govern- ment invesllgatora that President NllOli personally congratulated him 1 as I September for covering up the role of top White House aidea in Watergate. HOSPITAL ENDORSEMENTS ••• 'lbe White House Monday c!onied u.at lhe President had any role in any such covorup. ways, none of which would provide a teaching hospital oo the campus. One suggestion would see the money spent enti.r.ely outside Orange county at some other existing hospital. Most recently, bowever, staff of the Brown committee have suggested a com- promise may be considered. a n d r<eommended to lhe Leglslalure. Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. agrees with the compromise proposal which would divide lhe teaching hospital money providing a 200-bed teaching hospital on campus for $18 million. Another 17 million of UC bond funds would be spent improving Orange County Medical Center (OCMC) lhe county-run, )lospltal In Orange which Is medicaliy staffed by UCI. The 515 beds there are the training ground for UC! medical students . The compromise calls for removing 200 beds from the "Inade- quate" OCMC facility leaving only 315 beds there and building 200 new beds al the campus, near th.e basic sciences building ind the remainder of lhe uni· versity. . The no net·lncreue iJi bospital beds feature of the compromise broke the two- week Newport Beach council deadlock over the hmpltal support resolution. Hoag Hospital dlrectors urged support, stipulating there ,be no Increase in hospi- tal beds in Orange Countf resulting from the teaching hospita construction. Newport councilmen echoed that view in their support action. Hoag directors meanwhile say they're not coocemed about competition from new beds. They are worried about the overhead ol running a ~ta! and the fact that t,be fewer lhe number of oc- cupied beds, the more each patient pays to cover com. ec.t.a Mesa Co11nci1tneo abo heard Crom Dr. John Farrer, prestdenl of the Orange County Medical Asaociation whose membell last February wve poll- ed for their views.on ;the ¢amPMt~g hospital. , •; ·1·.~:· • • '~ Reaults of that llW'Vey g!vetl. to tbe legislative committee suggested lhe county's 600 member doctor• o~ the idea by a margin of 2 to I. Dr. Farrer said since the university scaled down its plans m new poll of OC- MA members has been taken. Costa Mesa Councilman Alvin Pinkley asked how doctors would feel if the medical school closed due to loss of th.e funds to another county. "Doctors would be most upset to lose the school," Farrer said . "There is no doubt about it." Other councilmen supported Pinkley's motion which declared "it is almost im- perative this COWlcil go on record in sup- port becauw: we can't afford to lose a medical school on what may be the greatest campus of the University of California." " Mayor Jack Hammett echoed the view, revealing his concern that the "teaching hospital (might) slip away to somewhere in downtown Los Angeles." Ervin said the long-awaited public bearing to probe Watergate and ol~ presidential campaign activities will be beld beginning at 10 a.m. May 17 and will he scheduled lhree days a .Mek lherealte? oo Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thundays. No witness list !or lhe opening ..,Ion wal ln)ll~telr avaUa~e-· · · • , Ervm Said be has no evidence lbat Nix- on was l.D.volved In either the Watergate U(aJr Of lhe alieged COVeNlp which followed. But he Jell open lhe quealion or whether the Senate Investigating com- mittee has the authority to subpoena ihe President If it wishes. TOPLESS OKAY- AT A DISTANCE SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Topless and bottomless waitresses would be banned in San Francisco night clubs and bars un- der a law proposed by supervisor John Barbagelata. He asked Monday for a public hearing on the proposed law , which he said is similar to measures approved recently by the courts. It would permit topless or bottomless exposure only by entertainers on stages at least six feet from patrons. WHO'S BEHIND YOU? • How much do guaranlHs mean? It depends on the item involv;.d ind the manufacturer. A $100,000 house is guaranteed for ONE year. Most automobiles are 9uaranlood from 30 days lo one year • Most electrical products are 9uarantood from 90 days to ono ytar. Guarantees on carpeting are complicated. The rule in th11:industry is TWO YEARS for manufacturing do f o c I s. Tho fooling is that manufacturing defects will surface wilhin that two year period, Beyond this, these manufacturers feel there ero loo many variables in tho usage lo give coverage beyond that period. Don't bo misled by "Phoney" guarantees. They are pro rated, based on mill-invoice costs, plus p•dding and labor lo change. By tho limo you ligu ... them up, it usually costs more to change than tho original purchase price. Carpel manufacturers tell us that • preponderance of complaints . is not because of defects but because of improper installation. We minimize tho number of complainn by having the best installers oround. Also, we dul only with more substantial mills, further reducing prob'llms. Buying from Aldon's will give you tho graolost security, ,. COITI MISI llKt:I ltl1 • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plactlltla Ave. COSTA MESA 64M838 • I I ' I .. , 01tl M••'lllwL f to S:JO; "'· f to f; Sit!. f:lO IO .l •o.a ,, , ' I ' • 17 ' ' .. • • • • • orange ~'!!!' • • •, Tedwy'• Flul .N.Y. Steeb . , .. '-t' .! ... "" ----. ..._. ..... -'---~L 66. NO. )2!, l SECTIONS, 5t ·~AGE~ ·t ORANGE COUNTY, CAl,IFORNIA r . TUESDAY, "'1AY 8, 19,73 c TEN CENTS •J .~sa .A.p.proyes Bond Election for Open Space • BJ BUOi NWCICIJIKI Of ......... ...,._ ... -fire! -electlol! --... Colla lleia .. ., --y Dllbl In • 4-1 -ol the city oounctl Vol<n will be aWd wbelller they 1fllll to pay out mon llwl " mlllioa to ~ ·-IOll ...... "' lmd in various ports ol the dty u open .... .§J.ty COQllC!lJMn will call Oil the ...... .. 1..,..ty to decide the q-......ume t~ fall, poaeib!y"Sepl. IL . . . I component Of the bond pack•I• P"'lented by Sonabal. Neaotialioos "" under way wtth tire fair board for ·a joint-powers agnoement whereby tire property coold be developied u a community center oc a CGllvenpon oeoter. Meanwhile, councilmen are faced with the posalbility of having five school sites In the pacbge sold ·as surplus. They 8"' also operating under a May 14 deadline fri>m· the 32nd Agricultural District to declare their intenUoos with Mpecl to the fair property. CouocUman Robert M. tlibon, who cast the mI.x "no'' vote on th& bond measutt, said he believes the joint· _.. approach is the correct ooe and that lie voters might be more enticed to approve a bond measure if the "patch of weeds out there had something on It." _ In that caae, be added, he would be favorably inclined toward the bond issue, perhaps one "even up to $8 million or $10 million." 'lbe other council memben were of the opinion that the negotiaUoos could go lorwanl and that the' size of the package could be ...duced U the talks came to a successful conclusion. Meanwhile, they said, they would be "covered" by having the lnstnunent to raise• money for properties th.at could be sold to private interests. Ma)'.or Jack Hammett said he believes ' the bond is.we could be broken down iD several components, letting the voters decide whether they want t h e fairgrounds, the unused school sites, or several other smaller pieces of property in the package. As It stands now, tbe bond propooai reconun.nded by City Manager F...d Sonabal includes the following: -22 acres on the northea.!t comer of (See OPEN SPACE, Pa1e I) ~ewport,, • • ·Mesa Back Nude Dancing Out • Hospital Mesa Council Passes Ban 5 to 0 By GEORGE LIEDAL Of .. Dlilr ptllf ·~ Co1D1cllmen in both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa endorsed the ~ UC Irvine-Calllornla College of Medlclne on- campus teaching hospital Monday night. . Bolstered ey-Olllclat" liqipart from l(oag Memorial Hospital d i r e c t o r s , Newport Beach c;o1D\cllmen adopted the reJOIUt!Qn of 8UIJllOr\ Oil a I to I wte. Councilman Paw "11,uott ~ !he reiolutlon, dUng biJI fears that the .hospital would encourage coalinued arowth of the liarl>or Area. . Following a praentallm by UCl-CCM acUng dean Staa1eJ ~ dm .Noort, Costa Mesa city COU!dhnen tmanh1vvJllly voted JO.support the univenllty'• -that the • million of statewide health --IPid money allocated to the UC! medical achoo! should be spetll be .... Nude or semi-nude dancing is illegal in Co!rta Mejlll today. An urgency ordinance making it so was passed by unsimous 5 to 0 vote of the Ci· ty. Colll\cll Monday nigbl . The statute, drafted by Cjty Attorney Roy June, took effect immediately . but police officers did not make any arre>i.- 8.t either of l}le city's two nudi,e places, Papa Joe's or the Fire Hoose, alter the Watergate Hearings Open On May 17 ~w HIN . ro~&:,~\k · Beaobrtlolls adopted by both cities, and virlUallY every other dty in ~ Qjmty, -that wt... who 1ut fall ~Y supported the 1155.9-da!Dlm UC . boo4 . Issue, believed the mOlley """1d -liljjl'°""' inedldl Ollilet' 1!011 at UC! and WGUkUle-.,.._9 -- . OD-C8Jllll!ll~-~lil'and tbe ~ •• first eJusrtiom Ind. l rllol'f, KS. • I . · ' special 'wiiteriate :IDVestiPlinl• ...,.. mlttee will oP<n hOa$gs MaJ 17 ana agreed lo JJUbpciena ousted Wbite Bouse counsel Jobn w. Dean m. :Jtecently, the Assembly Ways ''JDC! Means commltt;e has been COlllidl!rin& . . -1 ' t ~ ' • ' ,, ... , .lieSt Her-s . .,.. the UC Budget which Includes a partial · , allocaUoo -fl million of the total 112 mlllioa -to begin -Oil cim-pus of the buic lllOdlcal "'.......,, ljullding. Another 11911,009 bud&ol item, to .plan a teaclllng bospitaJ, ii allO before that cammitfft. · " . ... airs. -Anna Mair-of ·Denvt!r··clutches a small ·photograph of her son, David., lQ, after she' ordered doctors -lo 4urn. off a respirator which Ervin said · that if the committee determines it is necessary Dean will be \. granted limited immunity from pros- ecution to obtain bis testimony CONGRESS TO PROBE CIA INVOLVEMENT-Page 4 .• finally,-tbe filcally p</werful,W19> and Means 1A1bcommlttee allo 11 millUDg a "bill by Allemblyman -Jlaclbim (R-·lWtrport .Beach> tn a11oca1e IM m1lljoo ~ teacbin& bolpltal cociatNCtioo In Qi'ange Colll\IJ, t!lls year. The bill $tchea. ooe by State Sen. Dennis E. Clrpenter Introduced in the -senate. . t8ch measure, however,. along with the 1/.G budjet provi11oru1 11_.i . oa the ~tloo Of yet another legisla· tile commlttee. : , · ;*°'e the Ways and Mea~ comm1ttee, ~bll'.Jl!!l.l WUlle B(l!!l')lo.Jx. (!)$llL F,ianc:ISCO) cliilii-tji!S committee ,.-. the .folnt ~gtslati~ Committee on Te_acbing HOopital ·SIUng. . •-To date the body'bas comiderecr'speod-1111 tire UC! bond funds in a variely ol way1, none of whicb-would pnrvlde a taiichllig hoapitaJ on the <amJJUS. One -estlon would aee the money lpeJll eittrely outside Orange county at IO!lle qllrer exisUng hospital. Most recently, ll0wever1 stall of the Brown cmtunJttee have suaested a-com- pitiml.se may bo COOlidered a n d """"1mended to the Legialalln. - • Chancellor Dariiel G. Aldricb-JrL~ wilh the comproml!e -~ lfilicb woi\ld divide the teacbl!!I hosplw money . " (See B08Pi1'..U:., PaP t) · ·' :;1udge to : R~e~ ·l'ollutioil Cmhs . " . . JJy Mei!a }'ipn , ---.. ' -"'A Costa Mesa finn'i,.ttempll to cor- r.ct an emission situation that led to its llelng cbarffd Wlth vlirlaliirg ol Orange Clounty·~ ell"" air standal'dl will be "'viewed May 17 In Santa Alla munlclpal . . . ~~e John Smith has ·aei thei date for Ciaminatlon of the r'elll)(a obllined by lhe use of a wet JJCrUbber it lbe Lopn. ,\veoue plant of. Metr\Jpolltan WOii, Inc. a firm earlier ple:e.d nolo canl_. e · ther 3::1ty ..... Im~) to dllflD 'eoo~f Dist~e County Alt~ ~ty Dlslrict Attomoy Bob Van Hoy "'id the fiin's laW)'en will """'1 on the IOicceas of the wet ocrubber tedrnlque in ~-iling ammooil VlpQrll em11le4 t\ l)ie ' plant. MeltOpOlltan West make& · '1rc1Jlt board• for com(ruten a\ U- 'samisea. • Convlclion on cl!araes ol uolawful :mlallons carrlel a poalble -1ty of tlGO ol eocll violation. • • ,, . ' ., ' •• · was .. keepjgg• the .. l>oy illye. David was stniCk-by, an automobile last .month ilnil_ was in·aooma,-kept.alive_medically by means of a respira- tor .. Mrs., Mair told dpctors lo turn off thounachine-:atter·Iearning .the 'boy's·brain waslil.ea<I> . - . regarding high-level admlnistraUon in· volv.....,t in the Watergate acandal. The committee's imrmmity grant does no! P"'Venl Dean from being tried and convicted _on other evidence but ooJy from having bis own testimony used against him. . . Dean is reported to )lave told govern- ment investigators that Pre!ident Nixon personally congratulated him l a s t Se ptember for covering up the role of top \Vhite House aides in Watergate. In ~ C11stody in. EJtsenada ' . ~ ' . ' ., . ' The White House Monday denied that the President had any role in any such coverup. ---~~ Ervin said the long-awaited public hearing to probe Watergate and other presidential campaign acUvitlea will be held beginning at 10 a.m. May 17 and will be scheduled ~ daya 1 week the"'8fter on Tnesdaya, Wednesdaya, and Thursdays. Speciud to the Dally Pilot ENSENADA, Mex. -Two Orange County youths remain in custody here to-· day alter a Cina/ de Mayo brawl eni~ on downtown streets in which 190 persons were arrested. Orange C.OUntians a w a i t i n g ap- pe8l)lllCeS before f msgistrate ...,,, ideotuied by Mexican ·authorities · as Lindaey·L.-G~, 18, of.~ Bea<;b an~ CateD.<Darnali; It, of Gardeo-Glove.t • Greene is accused of 'destroying a ~an's uniform, Darnall, along wilh 'l1ioln6I F. Piiiilips, 23, of Amarillo, Tex .. are•Cbllrged with bitting an officer in the face with" a beer bottle. · O!ie 'Mexican· attorney described !be mea•as'a "Rortran orgy" with bn!,wlers . · ~cherry bombs and.firecrackers. ... , ',1 ,j ' • • FiglitiiJg' broi(e out while an esµmated 4,llOO·persons were Vialtlng Ensenada for Cinco.de Mayo celebratioos and the end ol )be annual Newport Beach to Enaenada·yacbt race. HUA90Dg's Bar and Hotel Bahia were heavily damaged by thiown bottles and other items. Fifty persons wm reported In ....... ,. . , ... ..,...' . . 11», attorney, Enrique Villan:eal, said abolit•IO' J1111111 Amettcans wete still In iail Mond!rr and unable to post ball rang- ing mm 112 w IZ•· 11e ·was wld they coold be freed after serving an llllllJOC(lied 'time in Jill .. Juan Zamora, manager ol tbe Bahia llo!el, told a llory of whit ba_...i. '"lire hlppiea, just a few, started com· Ing Ill the hotel about noon. The yateroo (yad)lsmen) began leaving as llOOll u 1 tire tMpby cel"IJlOllY WU ovtr. . tlirew a bottle into the pool. Others started tossing things, too. "One boy started to take his pants off, bUt vie bad the police take biin away. Tben a big guy, maybe 6 feet 6 incb<s tall, threw a girl •into the pool. "So I went up to him and asked him please not to do that. He just pushed me away. His friend~came up and also asked hi!\> iq-,iOp, bUt tl!O big guy just put his -baDd over. his face and shoved him away, ..also."-' No witness list for the opening aesaion was immediately available. Ervin said Ire has no evidence tbat Nil· on was involved ln either the Watergate affair or the alleged cover-up which followed . But he tell open the question of (See WATERGATE, Pqe t) Mesa Council Action -Here, in' capsule form, are the major actions takeQ by the Costa Mesa City Council MO!r'13Y night: BOND ISSUE; Orde...d city officials to pcepare the "'Quired documents for "!' open space bond election in the amount of approilmately 111· million. • NUDE BARS: Enacted an emergency ordinance prohibiting topless-botlom- . less entertainment ln Costa Mesa as of today. . -UC! &OS!'ll:AL : Went on record In support of a teaching bolpital on the "'"Irvine campui by unanimoUs vote. . . P~R U: Deiayd for two weeks a "public nuisance" bearing oo the...,. inm!rSiaJ Newport Boulenni beer bar becauae !ho dty neglected to )JOii the properly. PLANNER: Appointed Nathan L. Reade to another four-,,...-tenn oo the Corrta.lfesa Planning Commission. ' . . "At llrlt, the hippies just aat around . the pool, drinl<lng. Then mo"' came imUI we 10011°bad about ll!O·-.......t !be pool. Wben tbat many young poopie ' are together, someone baa to do aometblng to attract attention. DENlllTY: Approved a general plan amendment calling for medlani iJ>. stea\I ot ~ty zoning on two north Costa Mesa parcels oo the weal aide Of South Cout Plala • MEETING BALL: Allowed diqnrntled hornoowneB to ..state their cue aplml a .lehovah's Witness meeting bali planned for Denver Drive and Pau~ artno A...ue. The zone exception a_ppllcatlon will be re-beard June ._ CITY PARTY: Clipped In '2.000 towll'd tire celebration Of c0tta Mesa's :aoth annivklary. The party LI acbeduled for ~-za. 01So one boy let. out a yell, and 10mec>oe -biin. Then Ure people """' all yeillnc. They got e1dted, and IOllleOl1e • - r i\, I action was taken.I City Manager Fred Sorsabal indicated to council members Monday night that the two clubs would be given time to comply with the new Jaw but was unspecific over how much . &orsabal met thi s morning with Cs~t. Edward Glasgow, assistant chief of the Coata Mesa Police Department, to detennine when enforcem~t Js to begin. The reaction of the club managers to Ke~sSeat Nat.hail L. "Nate" Reade, .50, wu· ~pped· Mo~c!Ay ·by €oota Mesa city councilmen to oerve another four·year term on the city Planning Commission/ 'I'll• chamber of commerce execu- tive. of 2285 Cornell Drive, was piCked from a field of six can- aldates, councilmen aaid. Conservative Wi1tg Wants Schmitz Ba.ck LOS ANGELES (AP) -A CalUomia conservative volunteer Republican club has issued an invitation to former Americsn independent P1irly presidential candidate John Schmitz to "come home." The state convention of United Republicans of Caltlornia passed a resolution last weekend staling their members "do solemnly urge Jolm Schmitz to return to the Republican par- ty and aasume again biJI rlcbtful po- sition of. leadership in the cooservatlve movement. Scbmltz, who as a GOP congresaman had rep.,,sented an Orange Colll\ty district which included President Nixon's voting residence, fell out with Nixon O\'.er Red China and other subjects and left the Republican party. SUbeequently Schmitz changed his af· filiaUoo to the AIP and became its presidential standard bearer, blasting both Nixon and Democratic presidential nominee Sen. George McGovern (0. S.D.). Then, after the 1m election, Sclunitz switched his registraUon to .. decline to state/' in a move some observers aaid might be P"'paratory to running as ,an indepmdent or Rtpublican • in his Southern California home area. urux:, wblcb describes llseil as the iarsett GOP volw:teer group, also ~ reaolullons opposing recogniUon of Red China as the sole representaUtes of China and "pledged themselves to W.rk for tbe defeat in the 1974 electloo. of any congressman who supports any payment or aid to North Vietnam" for repairing war damages. Several llunctred delegolea attended tho group'• annual convention over the -kead in Loi An(eles, a spokesman laid. the news was DOt lmmediately known. Members of the council who have been battling nudity In bars since 1961 when the city's ftnl topleaa club, Baby Doll'• . opened, ~ the ordinance without comment. The Jaw wu written to be in direct conformance with a'Qllifom!a.-&rpnme · Court decision a week ago whlcb upheld the right of cl~ea to ban-nudity in bars. Nixon Eyed As Ellsberg Case Witnes8 Lal AliGE!p l~l -'lllt .,_ -in~lbe Pen~ -ti1aJ told the !Ilda-today ii -that Prtaldent Nian ii pe'"*11y brwohed in "bnpod- ing _the delivery ol nldence w thll court" and will cite cue1 showing that Nlmr is ll•ble for 111bpoen1 by the court to testify. Altomey leaaard lloudin later told reporters that the delenae wanted to notlly the judge that NLlon "ii a po- tenUal wiinoll," but laid it bad no plans to tey to subpoena him u ot -· "I doo~ think we need bim," be laid. Delenae attorney <l>arlea Ne91l, _.ting Dirnlei Ei!Jrberg, told the Judge that bued on news n!por\I, H ap. pean the Prolldent diJlcourgade the JtJlo tice Department from telling the c<iurt bere ·that Watergate conspiratora E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy we111 involved In a burglary of Ellsberg's pay· chiatrilt'1 office. "la Mr. Nlion different from !Ol1le Otliei'-man WfiO . wotild-impiile the um;:- over of ev.kleDce to this court?" asked Neaon. " .•. U thls were some other -· •. thil person would be called to the stand and queitioned." Ht Aid that the ·President obviously his "alven notice" that he will invoke eucuttve privilege if questioned about ariy Watergate involvement. "r~ never heard ol es:ecutive privilege protecting the President from Inquiry In criminal· actions," aakl NeSSOll. He dted the judge's meeting with Presldenjia) advlaer Jobn Ebrllchman. In which U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne WU approiClied about taking the job ol FBI director. · Byrne has 11id he met Nilon briefly. Or .... . ,, Weidltert The weatherlad)r calla for hasy llUllShlne In the afternoon how-I on Wednesday, with slighily warmer temperotu,,,.. Hight of 68 at the beaches rising to 78 Inland. INSIDE TODAY Frud U.S. Comul Gentrol r ... .,... G. Lconlumlv tmpha- llu<I the need f<Yr au g ... ,,.. lll<Jlll lo CoopmJle in 1tampmg out jntemotional Ctrrorilm. The •nVO!I W01 r<lta,.d in Guadalo- -Jara late .llondav. See •lortl on Page 4. 'L. M. .... c ....... ·-~ , -ii 'I --.... It., • •••11111111111 IN' ,...... 1N1 ,., .......... ..,,,111 l4 .............. lJ • _., n ,.,..., ,..... " --. . o.-.. c"""' • ......... 1 .. 1. ._ _. ... ..,, ,...,..... ,, -. -. ........... ,.,, ........... ' . • • DAILY PllOT Sfplr.Iching -. By Nixon Rep0rted NEW YORK (AP) -The New· York ' 11.met, QUOtful Watergate so1,n·cei, wd today that President Nixon twice Invoked natiaoal security recenUy In ln!Ually seold!il to prevent ni. ... to tllO Pen- ta,... Jll(ltrl trial detalls ol the burilary of the office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychlabist. ' 1be Time! said the jlnt of the two alleged attempt.s Involved a Justl.,. Do- Jlll1ment memorandum ltnklng mi con- victed Watergate consplr1tors to the break~ln. The second involved a former White House aide, EgU Klogh Jr. 1be newspaper aald the infonnallon in the Ont case w&J belatedly dlscloled to the Los Angeles court alter Aast. u .s. Atty. Henry E. Petersen, who booded lhe Watergate tnveatlgallon, convinced Nixon to revene himself. In the second cue, the information was reportedly provided to tbe court at tbe lnslltence of Elliot L. Rld!anlooo. nominated to be attorney g-..J. lllch White House officials called tbe reports that the President first ~ releasing the info rm at ion "I\-. respoosible," tbe Times said. The newspaper said the reports were pn>- vided by some of the prtnclpals, lawyers and Justice Department officals. T""4ay, Ml7 8, 1973 : M111kie ro Try • 'Again in '76? WA811JNG'l'Oft (UPI ) -Sen. E<l- mmd S. MllAle (D-Matne), aald to- dlJ be -DOI rUle out a try·for tllt ~ In tm althouch "I -~ dpect ti to happen." Mualde aald he recdved con· slderabte ..,_1 from let- ters lollowtng dlsclolures of •P- parent acta of polltleal sabotage directed at him by President Nix- on's re-electJon orglni:.atioo while he w&J reprded u the leading Demottatlc pruldentlal CQJ!ender 1n 1rn and 1m. --- He wu In-<II the NBC- TV Today Show. F""'PageJ HOSPITAL .•• providing a :ZOO.bed teschlng 00.pltal on campus for $11 mt!Uon . Another f1 million of UC bond lunds would be spent Improving Orange Counly Medici! Center (OCMC) the county-run, hospllal tn Orange which Is medically stalled by UC!. The 515 beds there are the tratntng ground for UC! medical students: The compromise calls for mnovfng 200 beds from the "tnade- q\iate" OCMC faclllty leaving only 315 beds there and building 200 new beds at the campus, near the basic sciences bulldtng and the remainder of the uni· ven:ily. In the first alleged case, Petersen reortedly was told at first by Pmldent Nixon not to releaae the memo, con- Wntng lnronnatloo said to have been disclosed by former White House coun1el Jahn W. 'Dean Ill on AprU 15, the Times:. said. 1be no net-increase in hospital beds feature of the compromise broke the two- week Newport Beach council deadlock over the hosplta1 support resolution. lloq Hoopltal directors urged support, stipulating there be oo Increase In hospi- lal beds tn Orange County reaultlng from the teaching hospital construction. Newport councilmen echoed .that view in their . .Uppori ·action. Petersen recognized tbe beartni of the • b)lollll8Uon on EU.berg'·• trial and later toOk up the matter with the President, who then agreed to forward It, acoonllng to the 1lmet account. Hoag d1recton meanwhile say they're not concerned about competition from new beds. They are worried about the overhead of running a hmpital and the fact that the fewer-the number of oc-- cupled beds, the mOre each patient pays to cover costs. On April 26, David Nissen, the govern- ment prosecutor in the Ellsberg case, submitted the memo to U.S. District Court Judge Matty Byrne, who made it public the next day. The second alleged case Involved Krogh, said to have supervised the burglary, who was reportedly told by presidential adviser Jobn D. Ehrllclunan Jast Monday that "the President doesn't want any more of this to surface fqr n• tional security reaaoos." The Times said Krogh received guidelines a few days later te!!i!ig him he was not authoriu!d to discus! detalla of specific leaks or any informaUoo about national security. After a meeting wlth Richardson, Krogh reportedly decided to draft an al· fidavit that was released Monday by the Ellsberg court in UJs Angeles. TONIGHT UC I LECTURES - ''Historical Acheology in Southern Calilornla," part of series on Archeology of Orange C'.ouJJ. ty, 104 Physical Sciences, 7-9:30 p.m. Adm ission $5. "Kibeis and Niseis," part of series on Japanese-American Intern- ment of World War II. 178 Humanities Hall, 7·9:30 p.m. Adm. $4.50. "Process of Abstraction," part of series on Encounter with Art, Little Theater, Corona del Mar High School, 7-9:30 p.m. Adm. $2.75. WEDNESDAY, MAY t COAST COMMUNITY C 0 LL E G E DISTRICT -Regular Board meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. COLLEGE PARK HOMEOWNERS As.50CIATION -Organiz ati onal meeting, College Park S c h o o I multipurpose room , 7:15 p.m. OU.N•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT The Or.,.. C..11 OAILY l'llOT, .......... 11 ~ "'' ,....Prftl. 11 .,........ .,. ltw Or1nge CG!llt Plfltlltlllnf (.orncMn'(, ..... ,.. .. .:lltlonl ,,.. MIQ;Nd, MMMr ~ Frld1~. IOI' Cnl1 Mne, N"90rl IMdl, HunllnglOft 81Kll/~-lllll \tll19J, l.lfWll -..ctl, lrvlne/Slddloetlldl 11141 Siii c--..1 SI" Jr,1111 Clpl11r-. 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"'*""'¥'. • Costa Mesa councilmen also. beard from Dr. John Farrer, president of the Orange County Medlcal Association whose members last February were poll- ed for their views on the campus teacbng hoapllal. JWult.s of that survey given to !be legislative committee suggested the counly's 600 member doctors oppoaed the Idea by a margin of 2 to I. Dr. Farrer &aid since the university scaled down ila plans oo new poll of QC. MA me-1 baa -taken. Coola Mia Coilnc!lman Alvin Pinkley asked how . docton would feel ii the medical school clooed due to loss of the funds to another county. •:Doctors would be most upset to lose the acboo1," Farrer said. '"lbere is no doubt about it." pther COUDC!lmen supported ;Pinkley'• motion which declared "it is almOst im- pe.rative this council go on record in sup- port because we can't afford to lose a medical school on what may be the greatest campw: of the Univmity or Cal~omla ." Mayor Jack Hammett echoed the view, revealing his concern that the 0 teactiing hospilal (might) allp away to somewhere in downtown Los Angele.s." That aomewhue, suggested by the joint legJslatlve panel, may be Martin Luther King Hospital whlch has hid dif- fi culty attracting medical staff. An ex- panded medical education program the.re is under study by the Brown committee at the same time the UCI hospital is being examined. The Costa Mesa City Council action matches an earlier resolution by the city's Chamber of Commerce directors. Circus Coming To Costa Mesa Ponderous pachyderms and highY.ire heroics u'ill be pa rt of the fun Wednesda y when the Royal International Circus comes to Costa Mesa. Two perfonnances, one at 4:30 p.m. and the other at 7:30 p.m., have been scheduled by the Costa Mesa Jaycees for the arena al the Orange County l'a1rgroonds. Tickets, priced at $1.50 for children and $2.50 for adults, will be on sale from 3:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the fairgrounds gate, From the proceeds of the open-air circus the Jaycees hope to raise enough money for next year's community pro}- ects which include work with children at Fairview State Hospital . ' From Page J WATERGATE. •• whether the Senate tnvest!gattng com- mittee has the aulhority .to subpoena the President II It wishes. "I won 't pa91 on that question until some reason to call the President is known to elist," Ervin said. Dean ls known to hive actively sought Immunity from ptosecution from both the Watergate grand jury and tbe Senate committee in exchange for tesUmony some of which reportedly involve$ Nixon~ Sen. Howard. Jlaker (ll-Tenn.), the committee'• sdlor Republican, em- phasbed repeatedly that the commlttee's actlon ls first of all an order to Dean to tell what he may or may not koow to committee Investigators Jn private. ' ' . • Adde·d Surfing Hours ·studied . -· ... ,, "'. By TERKv COVILLE Of t11t oallr Plltt tl9ff -o but suggested there are times in the summer wben weather cooditlons keep swimmers away from the beach, lllt surf en ann't allowed In 1 the water because of tbe strict boun. Huntington Beach will comider a "black ball" flag system to allow mre -IUllllllOr surllng and the city may reduce the !kent parktn' meter charge aJoni Pacinc Coast Highway. City councilmen agreed Monday night to look tnto botb proposals alter nearly JOO young surfers filled tbe cooncll cham- ber to protest tight surfing restrtctlooa. Mayor Jerry Matney did not promise that either request would be approved, but he and otber councilrntll indicated they favor the proposala:. The current surfing regulations says no surfmg is allowed from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., from June 15 to Sept. 10. 1be city does allow all-day surfing at the Bolla Chica bluffs. "We're concerned with the city pier area because that's where the best waves are and the most enthusiasts," said ft.us Caliscb, an editor on Laguna Nlguel's International Surfmg Magazine, and spokesman for ~ surfing crowd Mon- day. · Cal!Sch aaid surfers realize there is a conflict between surfing and swimming, Huntington Continui~g All-year Pinn By TOM GORMAN Of ~ Dlitr Pltet Stttf All-year clas.ses at Westmont.and crest View schools tn Huntlngloll Beach will continue for another year, Ocean View &hool District trustees decided Monday night. "We have the potential ror designing a system that will save money and im· prove education methods ,'' said Trustee Ralph Bauer in leading the unanimous vote. The decision to continue the pilot pro- gram, which began last July, was mark- ed with very litUe disrussion. Board Prealdent R. James · Shiller noted at the outset of Uje meeting that the all-year issue has been d.iscus8ed at board meetings since last December, and prohibiWif persons from the audience from s~king. Later he backed down from bis stand after being reminded that it was board 'PQlicy to allow comroenta from the floor . Only a handlul d the about 100 parents present spoke in opposition to the all-year program. When the vote was taken many of those present applauded. The board decided to rnodily the schedule at Weatmont, voting to hold classes the.re on a single cycle in which all students will attend classes at the same time instead of in staggered sessions. Children at Crest View will continue to meet in ·staggered .sessions, in which a quarter or the students !'Ill be on vaca- tion at all times. The schedule change at Westmont was ordered a ft e r a "vast majority" of teachers and 57 percent of the parents in the Westmont area requested the single cycle. , Trus~. admitted that the single eye.le program wQI not save clasSJoom space, one of the ultlrilate goal& of the all-yesr concept.· "I hope Weatmoot will look carefully at staggered sessions next year," said Superintendent James Carvell. "That will be the ultimate space-saver. I see the single cyCle as a transttion." At both schools classes will be held in 45-day sessions broken up with 15-day vacations. The all-year schedule received 61 per· cent support amor:ig parents in the Crest View area and 49 percent support from parents in the Westmont area, according to results of a poll released last week. S\lrveyed in that wu were parents who hnd opposed all-year school and opted to transfer their children to nearby schools that followed the traditional calendar. Jn a poll of parents whose children re- ma ined In the all-year schools, 66.3 per- cent of the Crest View parents and 59.6 percent of the \Vestmont parents sup- ported the concept. Art Jjnkletter Sues Ex-aides Over Bad Debt Entertainer Art Link.letter sued his former partners in a real est.ate en- terprise for more than $1 mllllon Monday in an Orange County Superior Court ac- tion that claims failure to repay a $500,000 loan. Named es detendants by the show business personality on multipl e causes or action are the Stanley G. Swartz Com-pany, the Swartz.Unkletter Company, Linkletter Enterprises, Swartz as an in- dividual and Mrs. Betty Swartz, his wife. Swartz.IJnkletter was the f I r m responsible for much of the townhome and single family construction In Univer5lty Park between Culver Dr ive and Yale· Avenues. Later units were told by the Stanley G. Swartz Company and that (iiin's operatlor. in Irvine has since been sold to National. Community Builders, a San Diego baled flrai. 1be organization's last unit.s to be bUllt In Irvine are now under cens&ructlon in University Park. ) "A privilege fa oow esteoded to swtm- men tn which surfers can be kicked out of the water when there ii a large crowd before 11 a.m.," Cali.scb said. "We'd like lt flen'bl.e so we ·can use the ocean when there is no crowd." The Callacb proposal woold Jesve the decislnn up to lifeguards. who would slrnpl~ ralle a two-foot by three-foot flag wtth ablack ball on It when they wanted surfers out of the water. Wben Mainey suggested there might be a legal problem to that, Callsch read a letter from the Los Angeles County Lifeguard Service explaining how tbe Dag system had been used al Hermosa Beach f0< 15 yean. Max Bowman, assistant director of tbe city's harbora and beaches department, admitted to the council he did not know what system W&J used in Los Angeles County. Jerry Smith, a local surfer, presented the second request -a r,eduction in the 25 cents per hour charge on Pacific Coast Highway parting meters. Smith said the only plae< along the Orange c.oast with a similar charge is the pier area in Newport Beach, and that city sells a yearly pass to reduce the cost to regular visitors. Smith's suggestion sparked a short, heated exchange bet'«r'1 councilmen over City Attorney Don Bonla's opinion that Hunlingtoo Beach could not issue a yearly pw for parklilg meters. Councilman ,AI Coen said he disagrees with Donia's optnfoo and wondered why Newport can and Huntingtoo can~. He was joined by CouncJiwQJD&ll Norma Gibbs, at ·wblch potnt Matney In· terrupted, "Let's hive a lltUe.mJIOFt fnr the city attorney's office." "I don 't," mapped Mrs. Gibbs, closely followed by Mainey slamming the gavel on the desk. Bowman then told the council that Pacific Coast Highway is the only area \Yit.b a 25-oent charge (and a $10 parking. ticket fine ). He s a 1 d meters in the residential area are 10 cents an hour and in the ~ are a penny for 12 minutes, or five-centa an hour. Frona Pqe J OPEN SP ACE •. ~ Fair Drive and Fairview Road, $1.65 mllllon. -IO acres adjacent to the future Fairview Park behind Estancia HI g h School, $185,000. -A second 20 acres next to Fairview Park, $'180,000. -10 acres north or the San Diego Freeway, $320,000. -10 acres adjacent to Tanager Park off Adams Avenue near Vista del Lago, $500,000. -25 acres of non-surplus, privately owned land in three areas of the city, for a total of $984,000. . The addition of the lands to the city, while praised by Councilman Dom Raciti as a wise investment for the future , received only lukewann support Crom Councilman Alvin Pinkley. Pinkley questioned whether Coota MeSa needs more parks and said be is not optimistic about the outcome of the election. "But I also think we should put it up for the vole of. tbe people and let them say 'nay' or 'yea' to it," he said. Cost to the average homeowner. based on a $.30,000 house, wouHt be a~ pnnimately $11 per year for the next 30 years, city officials said. Slowed Down ' Georgia Lt. Gov. Lester Maddox works at his desk in the Atlanta capital hobbled by a cast from injuries received while bicycle riding. Maddox Wlred President Nixon and ofrered his services as chief in- vestigator in the Watergate affair. Pentagon ' Case Judge Or~rs Links Hearing • LOS ANGELES (AP) -U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne e1cused the Pentagon papers trial jury today lor the remainder of the week and indicated be may order a full-scale hearing into Water.. gate links in the case. 'Ibe jury was brought in at 10 a.m. aiid told the government rebuttal was com- pleted and' the defense would no! of!er more wfinesses. "' 1"11'at brings to an end the evidence in thb case," Byrne said. '! He told the unsequestered jury 'to report back to the courtroom: Monday morning, instructing thetn agaln to avoid exposing themselves to any news of the case. Jurors have not been told about the TOPLESS OKAY- AT A DISTANCE SAN FRANCfSCO (AP) -Topless and bottomless waitresses would be baMed in San Francisco night clubs and bars un- der a law proposed by supervisor John Barbagelata. He asked Monday for a public hearing on the proposed law, which be said is similar to measures approved recenUy by the cow1s. It would pennit topless or bottomless exposure only by entertainers on stages at least six feet from patrons. alleged involvement of w·a t e r g a t e conspirators and White House aides in the burglary of the office o! pantel Ellsberg's psychlairlst. After the jury left, Byrne asked at· tomeys for both sides· what they 1bink shoold be the "scope" of a hearing tnto the Wagergate links. The defense asked prevjously that\ 4' number of past and present White Hotise staffers be called to testify here about the burglary of Ellsberg's psychiatric ·rues and other matters. The judge· also said the government turned over a bent of new material! this morning, but said the materials did nOt Include those items he specifically asked for. ' Bryne instructed prosecutors Mnnday to find out how loog the Departmeni pf Justice had known about the burglary, about CIA involvement and about any electronic surveillance. In the latest devel9P11lent Monday, tl>e judge released additional grand jury testimony of Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt. Hunt had said that President Ni.Ion's special oounsel, Charles W. Collon, u- signed him to a "hot" mission -to forge cablegrams linking President Jolm F. Kennedy to the assassination of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh DJem.1 The State Department confirmed in Washington today that Hunt wu given access to cables dealing with Vletnam in September t97t. WHO'S BEHIND YOU? ' . How much do guarantees me~n 7 It depends on the item involved encl the manufacturer. A $I 00,000 house is guaranteed for ONE yeor. Most automobiles are guaranteed from 30 days to one year. Most electrical products are guaranteed from 90 days to one year. Guaranteas on carpeting are complicated. The rule in the industry Is TWO YEARS for manufacturing defect s. The feeling is that manufacturing defects will 1urface within that two year period, Beyond this, these manufacturers feel there are too many variables In the usage to give coverage beyond that period. Don't be misled by "Phoney" guarantees. They are pro rated, ba1ed on miN-invoice costs, plus padding and labor to change. By the time you figure them up, it usually costs more to change than the original purchaso price. · Carpet manufacturers tell us that a preponderance of compleints is not beceuse of defects but beceuse of improper installetion. We minimize the number of compleinh by having the best instelers eround. Al.o, we de.I only with more substantial miffs, furthot reducing problems. Buying from Alden's will give you the 9Netest security. IM COSTA MDA llllCl1tl7 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 ~Ave. COSTA MIS.A 646 4131 ............ t .. ltJO: l'rL t 19 t: s.t. tiJO 19 I I L , " • ( t , •• r • I 1 . ' 1 .. , •. ~ ~I • .· ) ~ ' I •, . I