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1973-05-16 - Orange Coast Pilot
' •• r ' "(• • •• 'I -t" - --' . .. -.. • --. ;o..;.-.. ---......... ..;_ ~ ='"--"--~~7---- • ... -. -. J --r • • ' ....... - _ ... \ ~ -·WEDNESDAY-.AFTtRNOON, MAY 16, 1973 Sq-~,·~·.~~· ' . ...... ~ - ifl:•g ~J:-.~~•ght __ ~ • i , • ~ • ·-• . ...-r:-i· ~ .. --~ '"'"' .. ~ .. 111!1 .. ~ .. -,..· ... , ....... ~·~--· ........... il ...... 1 .... lji ... ~ ... ~, ...................... !liil .. ll!!llillli __ _ ..... · .J •. '•' 1111' .. YOl.. Mt ND.· 1Mt I S•CTtoNi° 111 ,AOll1 - ' 't' ~..... Ii '"'. ,. ' .. ' ... , ,., ·, _;.. : ----~ • ' . ., . ' ' . C /·_Chief ~ ' . ' . . . . ' --_. ' -... ~..1 . ~ ~ :\ "' 'fyf;' ' .. :;;;;,__~ ~!.l_' ' W (AP) -'.......,,...0-G. Bf~k ol tlie' ~ties 8iid. ®'· ehanp Coolrn)Mlon ~-• h 1 s resignation tod8y. · ')• a lettu to Preolden\'~D:oa, Cook said : ''I deeply r~ ba~ to leader my reilgnalioll u ~d of the Securities and Eicbange Commiah:li, but in light of llllfollul!ale.~ now prevailing, I believe it is best to. do so." Cooll.· J18med SEC chaJni>an by Nixon only a few maolhs ago, has-been c:rltlciz- ed for..bi.s .bandlif!& ol a rel"!!:! of a .,.,h contrlbutiOn. to the Nixm 1972 campaign by llo\>ert L. v~. who )las beeii under ln~atlon'liy· tbO SEC. · COOk. turned 16 Thiirsday and was one of the' yCIU!l,i!est chairmen in history of the SEC.' tr 5 .. .a-_ be ;· 1 • ~ ~I ' ·~filicf-'!ftlt'Weot"tf a ~ ~~·~Mt. ooni;;Jitt"ef '.;. ~:' .. ~ ma~. ·The nature of the tesliillo!!t.Jas not -dlscl!ieed. _ cOoi•~ignalloo b certain to affect Wiii! 'tltreet in\ View ol tho facl he has bem~at ttie, farefniot of moves to reform th&. .. country's leCUl'itles· markets to creale,a single C<Dtrll market·system. A federal l@i!d lW'Y In New Y <rt ollegeil ' l'llat Goo!< Yielded to pteuu\'e flUll Nixon :timi>olBD fund ralser Maurice Stailflii d<!!Oting meollon of a lafi<, oa4li <klnalliii>-ftnm Vesco from· an Sf:C suit against Vesco, a New · York ~cier,' · · · It .has been olleged that a $200,000 con- tribution from v~ was made in secret to the Nlxoo c:ampaip. ' . ,-. , . . '~~,lflait~~ · ... 1 .,.,:7,.:.:.~ ":..:;;.0--'ti"-.. b+,-·,..!..~E---'r\-·~-'--~~-"';-r~·~-;. -· . ~-~~~ll 6K~d~Wlr:etapp~g • 1 iavem-~e;·~1~~· of -Aides-white House ' ' ~. r ' ~..., • , 11· l "\ 1"1 ~ ' ,. . ....... .. ~ -" -·· -...... " -I -~ ,~llO -(AP) L-, Tbe lemale pro-, , _ • .:....;.... ol 11 • tavern near here WASHINGTON (AP)-The Wbtte House "Ille spokesman 'did not identify those • J&Fi·~ •9 • N$' • ..;,;:.,,.;-.-; ''°"-"' •'"' '"" '"" 'V": , .. · .. · .' acknowledged today lllal President Nixon whose phones wereiappe;!._ . "'.' \ ;r.". , . · " • JQI · RES,..,,.,..Y~f!QVE .olt~tlD ': ~~~to • ,,qi. vl~un of.an, persooally approved wiretapping of\moce .. Earijer._the N~~ Yori: Tunes said they • -;-:'..;· ... ~n.. .,. '_A ~~l'!'~.tl'ou~ Ordeal~~ A !t'PP,Y E~d .. !t nll>bery a "nllhler, Mader&" than >I dozen Nalional SeOurily Qxmcll ln~\1<1¢ lhr'le.fonner at~ of preaiden-"='.": · ... . .. : · .\ _, » , · slierlll'• · i · · ~es s a 1 d. anil ~tagoo aide8 11\artilig in 1969. _ tl!'l adviser Henry A. Kissinger -Daniel 'ti' " "-< '; '. -'; , .. .-,. .. · , .,. -. . · · .. • ~ .... . . "lt;t! .. • '"'11o .. 1 security m•tter,":a " Davld44>~ ..... ~·Lai<• and w1nston . . .. ~... :ti>r~· :Snvn ' J·__.V .. t"ne . .-. a~ -.ia .MJ~vid1. was s~t" 11«id. ''The prcedure was 'Po Lord. . . ' ' ; ' .;, ~ il. •· . UJ Q . I ~ . • f"""11ly her busholnd When he returned prov&! by the Presldtnl lllld authorbi!ll The newspaper.said the wirelape,.were •" · , ~ " · .-1 ''' · ,.'v · ' · .. ~: , • ..;w · in individual easel by ·the attorney undet'laken ti> q>md a ,oeriou, """urlly "'. t . -. , n-mileH~~:iwj~-'\~jnl!'l>~•.JV!ll\~~ .lllJ!ll~foii:~~·ldairi&· B' o"·;,«•'l:' .... : .... ft.' : ;m ·s' . . , . 'MOVIE STARS STILL .. .,f,1./fi .. " I Wall Street :~ '. ' • l • .... T . ·m· ·.:" ~ . yc~u .. ·, ,: . '!l i~ Witl-, . . : .. a.~ , t. , • . e· J, • J •. ,~.t,;;· ~}(4 .... • :; I • :--~•J'll'lW ORJt (AP~ ' · • fodoral l!O•t<lll•-.,. ~ .. ~ ~al Cllar(~ aga~· sen!Gr ~ !D'.;• · Wall ·Streil . ftnil.tlridaally m~ ·fill "~·lllttllj ... ..,1..,.. · triooliona to l!Oii. Hubert fti-BDmJiluey'I presldanllal priniary camPO\ln'lall:yaar. .,The crlmtJlal inlormaUP11,lllecl.ln. U.S. 0islrlct Court alleged that John L" Loeb, , 10 · o1 !ho-fir'!' .or ~,1o.c.i .. made 15 contributions in tbi name1 or eight persons, mainly cJericil:emPloYes 1 of 111.! firm . · · · , . I U.S. Alto'l>ey Whitney N<>rt:!lse~, charged thal · at U>eb's ·Urilnr the , ~ployes wrote checks dr8wn on .their perSonal cbeafug accounts· . ~ 12 dif· j· lerent campaign committees alt~ Loeb tr11n>ferred lhe $48,000 from his account · to theirs.· ' A spo~ said the filing• of. tho ! cbarge-at.emmed from an investigation begun neari, a· year agn ·by the General • 'Ac;counl!ng Ofllo' an~ the FBI. Loeb wi• / accused under the federal election ··cam- paign act •of 1971. · · · ·"' • ; ~t week, former Atty. gen. John N. ) Mitchell Ind former Co m m e r c e ' Secretary Maurice H. Stans wi?re i&-' dieted · oa •. charges of • ·o~ion of justice, ·~acy and perjury in con· 1 nection with ·secret caffipaign <;on· trlbutions ao the Committee for the Re--. election of the President. That indictmept charged that financier Robert L. · Vesco, charged with con· 1 spiracy and obitruction of j~. made a secret $200,000 cash g'Jft to, the GOP , cam~ign fund.&o 1nflueoce a gOv~ment piobe 'of his far.flang-Hnanclai dealings. Loeb fi$Jed ~eot·lrom hs olfice saying IM~ ~. -"oo intenl on my part to '...O. lllie'i..r. I did IlQl kOOW its (~.~Y, Paga .I) ' .. · ~. ··~· -_ "· • -·" ·ol.tlle'.$edettl..B~ Ql'1n~'· :. ,~ .. · .,,,. · " · Y,' "~-· " g· · · q:ueeze ,¥.,: • · • ll~CK 'NIXo~·· 19 ' -· . ' -. . ' ·~ U0nJ.~·a1. ·I · T' ~eat · .r.~ ~9~'-~ · rk..1 ;;: that 115% _ A•nian ~y·~a1ijn"h-fro111 • _, i -'•~~~~,.~dehtarry~} .. . " 1 i;7 ~~ &' ~~-~.,. · 8~ laJ1~s iruilde in !kine Tµetday.-'llli lunctl:liiilitUnJ ; MWJ~~,,illl(\i:~ft.\Jl'.•lhe b&Be ·of· a · ,., ' . r ~11eechet now is • O.fense double jeopardy, trapped for 5.1' minUtes masmry,'lilocl.'.wall!wbll<:Walklng ~gh ' ~ •• " • , • , Another I = ;.,.,,.. said the al the bottom of a cramped lttnch' di a new !rad being built at Ktom Street : /!'layboy..IJ..~i.e To Eat: WithNixo~ wt~""~:"J.~!~ lo find amolet boie ljx "'I deep. • • :..:~ ·r:::;::-. ...... ~ejl Ill• den-: . .' 9'QlA!d!INTO ~,.;A 'lloinan 'Who ~picture Of her centerfold feature out, We_ ~ the .people who were the . .. . _ . .. _ , (_linl!" lhelf efforts. to save,-t::" -~ _ iiiW tof'P111l>OY ~ff'• ~ter1o111 in 'Jaa!WY'&: Playboy. • ."Tf-i!:~~:~aiJ were eased ou1 PILO.T :Al) PRO YES •' ~~1-~~d t ... ~"1~,,_ ~·~th: . t!wlll,¥."e 1 at \Qt White .. , . .,_...... • v • . ' ""-·~· r qpwo ' · ~ ~.lllil date 0( a former . But, on llOCOl1d thought, 1 don t·tnow.' of-th~ j!oolllona·as ·• ,.suit, a govern-TH. E ,.... ~T'S MEOW , · ~r.\t~ a ~ , , ch ~~ •. l·. · if Pat would·Jike ~&.!-' _.,.. f~;,-, ment ~ 1tof.d The ':l'fines. . _ '-.di. _ ' ,: ~.; ,~~~~ •1. · . • •• i ~~,M!" ..... «t>"'~~ -'l'Ke.,"'ite ... 811'Jl'1&od.i~~~-T ~· ·r ._'!\"!" ... 11~ .. ·~·at."'~ ._:.;-+;:.· .... ,..,;:,· ''. M· ... ,JOOi&i~.\ , .. ~~)tJIO!llft'blW ~ all;( 1eriuner'lold ihefti ~Wili-a~1" •<I' " _flOtOjlflDI.,,.. -ona .. ..,,.; ,....,. .. "1I0'1I sa ·~'WF;, ~ tie-):ecto~ reieai«( y.North ~lban\ by the cban8ts In Playboy Ill? bla Cf!>. , . pivl~ 1 Ila ·gq•ernmenl In 1969_ Daily Pl1t>•laaal~iei' f!dvertlsing columns ~ , ;boy l"!f~ !ro\it' ~ .~~M'· the Viel Cjrlg.,. • • " . •. ture.'11,e,sald he WIS sutfll'liild by, \1je Ldi::Rillf01trtlte-:<Jllbbodlan tnvasloo, sucoesslWlf ,.laid She nol only found CiOwd.9 o( curious 00~ alll"!ed . lit ~. -.~. a, ~2H' fig· total midity. '" • 11!1. ~d '111 he! looms this -the ~ for aift'lk!tterui in-J« ~ay,.oot around t!lo si;en~.u ., ?tre ~ DR a 5-loot~, I~ lririjil, told "BUI.he llked it " said Miki. ', ._, ~~ill ' .U.. not link them t:i its / "111<1 aomo·~ people, too." llera's the 0.partmeut. . ~lie!\. 2i ~" ~-"" Iii' be _ ~ dirte Kramer's wile divorced him wbll• Ii,-"fidtt 'iii&\ ~fllldats lost their jobs liillng that did the ~' near UC ,Irvine, wjl!' . J~. · ~,Gliland c._~r ol Q~a. was in pri>oa, and hos a1nee r<mam~ ... ~ ol llJo,,tapo., • • Ht was ,JlnAl(Y ~ oolt· ht c sjing Sli1Hll tb?.i11it •~ 'll!!lla wbere ... was • Mi.a Garoia had no ,comment ,qi •, ;, .,. . ~ FREE..ktttena, 'l'li<ed mlors, looped B(ld lmott~d.J><•¥'1h• bJa a~ and ~llJ!.aa:-~ranti(1or ,.,,ayboY. whett!er there wu anytblng romantic be-. " · t ! weeks, cu~. -playlUI. 41round·JUa,~~"'llMll.Y Q\qtclllng. the abii 't;,''thd!Jtd• ae111llled ,nd 1 ..... 11er 1111<1 Kramer. , ·Euthanasia ReJ· ecte<l ,_No:> rope above h~.11eil -. · -: med.'1 Mllo,(!Kda ~."OJI, "H•'s a real nice guy," she~ "11'1 .., ; ' lnvesilplllis 9ald he .... pcd ihe'hour· Jo nt ~ dl_4nlflecl .. ' .. hOnor lie ukecl mo," , ', , . • ~T . . l'l, na. .(.l!'l _ ·Tho II could Ju.i· be lbat ;,a tful<l he con-1001 ordeal wllh.alnal~' and ttllls6s. ~ L. -;:.1:'c w.i'!Jiat colllellllgh A former model, W.. Gar.,. la aloo-an Plorida Houto of 11epr....,taUves ~ <'h!ctd"a Delly f'\lol ad Ii Ille "cat's me-He was taken ·kl OIQ<lren'1'llolpi1l1 of , ..:::__ " ;.;;~ . ; oecallonal lobbyllt at the l:dlilatur• -~ted.Jll' -.IHI vole a blQ lo•Clft ow,"· Give it a lry. The direcl line to re-Orange County In Orl'nt!t ~ • preca ,' A> 'i,i\' ~ polttk1lly; slit "tld workl11f1 for humane-trultiitnt ~ anl· tel:i!llnlllrUl or lnjutod ptrlCllll Iba riahl 111111 II -·· tionary · dlec:kup;·pa~ llP 'anc1·S:. ' 1 ~·the l'lftt, Family an au o-mals. ~,order .docton to lei thorn die. home, to 4ISe Roc\>Ofl• A"-, lrvfl1e , ·~ ~f ' ~ ,. ~ ' " .. i " ' . • DAil V OILOf -s Bandit Holds Up Pl1oto Drive-in A bandit who simulated a weapon by holding his hand in his pocket got $53.18 from a Huntington Beach Fotomat stand Tuesday afternoon. Clerk Susie Neil said the young man approached the stand at 5932 Edinger Ave. on foot and ordered her to empty the cash drawer into a sack, which She handed to him. Miss Neil said she was unable to witness the bandit's getaway becawie he ordered her to crouch down on the floor of the stand . • • OIANM COAST DAILY PILOT fht Or~ CINfl DAILY l'ILOT, 9fftl wfllcfl 11 ~!...., IM Mtlfn.l'rtt1, If 1111blltMcl » W... Or•"'' ,:: .. ,, l'ubOll'llnt ~n1. itlM• rtlt tdll..,_ •rt l)Utll/1,,.., Ml>l'llley ltirovot> l"rtHy, fw (.11111 Mt .. , N"'1*"1 ltKl'I, """11 ... IOfl Bt9Cll/F_,r.ln \11!'4Py, l.el- •Nch, 1rvlne1l.-k!IMl9c' 9nd kn c1t .... ntt/ .,.,..,..., .... n C.•~111.._, A ,.,._,. revloMI ldlli911 It pUbU11...t klll*YI ,,.,.,, SvncS.y1, '"' pr1nCl1M1 ,..,.,11t111i>1 oi.m 1t. ., no wu1 .. , ilrnt, Coti.o M.w, CatHer~I•, n.N. Aob•rt N. w,.-. l"rHlllt~I •l'ld ll'llblllMr J,, .. It Cu•I.., VICI l"fWtlftflf '"' ~ti M~ Thont•• K•1vH fllllol' Tho..,., A. M11rplii~• MIMtlnt Ectl!or ctlt"l'fM H. looJ ltich•r4 'P. Nill AHkll"I Ml .... lnf llfl .... t C..11 M-: JJO W'!..!,~ SITNI Ht'#SllWI 1-11: D» H ._,,._..., .. ~ •llKl'I: m "'"'' "-·MUftfilllM!I tNdl: 17'71 IHdl ._...,,111 ._... C*"'"M1 as ""'111 I.I ~IN llNI I Tllrpb1 CTI 4t 641-4111 Cl Ple4 ........... h I '41·1171 ,,_ ~ ...,,... ......... w.-l lldlo 4tM4H ,.,_..,. °"""' ~ tH11i.1 ....... _,.., c.rrwit, 1.,.&. Ort• c.-. f'l#ltMlll CtrNiflf. ff9 -...... lllwtol111M, llfffllot .. / ,,...,... .,. .... ,........... '*"' _... ... ,. '.-""""" ...... 1 ,.,. ,,.._, .. c.,...19M ........ .__,, cl.-....... .,.... 9t c-. ,_., c."'"'i.. ...... .... ., ~ .... ~I W ftlllft U.11 ~I rit~ ....... ,... tlAli ........ , ( \ w-. 1111 16, 1911 -. . ' From P119e l HUMPHREY. • • el.lstence and the full facts were made public at my instance within three weeks after the Initi al contr:lbtltlon ." He said h6 wrole to the Hwnphrey commlttee June J, about 20 days after the inltlal contribution, and "asked them immediately to file a statement making public the fact that I reimbursed the con- tributions and made posslble their co11- trihullon1." TI1c committee did so six days before the California primary, he said. Loeb said he was being charged with "the technical and unwittini' violation of ·a procedu.ral provision of the new law governing campaign contribut!Oll3 ." Loeb is to be arraigned ~fay 29. Con- viction coold bring one year in prison and $1 ,000 fines on each of the eight co\lllts. J he sto .. ed illoddt IJlo. A~·~ 1hip in wttlcb llllh'-utl a.ttes: "'Pde'' Conrad. Dr. J...,., P .. ~ and Paul J. Wtiu will blaBl-Glf·lor aQ1a!1. R eportin g fG f lltelt ~ develoemeots in a~ _,,,, ·at the Jollnsol> Space <J<i!ter I\ , Uwis said tempenturet inlJde !he orbiting workshop (OWS) were well over 100 degrees Fahrenheit'.·. "Internal ~mpCI m too high to inhabit the ow~,',' be said. '4lt doesn't mean we ...Wein t nnt (an -ut) ID go lnt6 the OWS, but It does mean '!" wOIJ!cln't . • Murderer Gets , ' 2,000-year ':1'erm SAN ANTONIO, '!'ex. (Q:Pil-,: A jury .sentenced John L. l-lar:dlJ, a 26=-y~er-old accused of~murdering •"'City,·p'.lllceman, to 1,000 yeal's ln prisOdTuesd4' and add- ed 200 more years bec!&use' or &':robbery convictlori. • . '.,." .f-. The day before, ~ JUl'y' ilimlenc- ed Eugene Spenei!r Jr.;i!ISO a~ed of killing a poUceman, to J0,000 years in prison. -- Jesse Jane? W 01nan Held in Trai1i Hijackin g SANFORD, F1a. (UPI) -Police said a 25-year·old woman leaped aboard an unmanned 28-car Se.board C~astline freight tnln today and droV<l it 30 miles north before it WH diverted onto a spur at Pierson and derailed . ~I. R, Herring, SCL's chief dispatcher, said railroad crews man· age<! to switch the stolen train onto side tncb twice to avoid two southbound frei ght trains, one pulling 105 cars and the other pulling 68. Sheriff's deputies arreote<I May Lane Pitkin of Sal\foro at Piel' son when the stolen car was switched onto a spur and lt oollided with a parked freight car. "Someone reported seeing a person leap from the train as lt went onto tli.e spur track at Pienon," an official said, '"but we're not certain it this point ·whether it wu a hobo, an accornpllce or what.,. The train was taken from SCL's switching yard at Sanford about 5:25 a.m. The locomotive wu still rurining, bat the train'• crew wu not aboard. ·~ • • To.Election · ... WASHINGTON (AP) -Daniel Ellsberg told a Senate hearing tOday he beUeveS be was prosecuted for leaking the Penta- gon papers not because he violated na- tjonal security but because of J><lS.'ible links to DemO(!ratic; candidiates. Arni, said Ellsberg, the ~t tin would have been to Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (lH lalnel-, chairman of !he beat'· UPI T91""4119 MAY GET POST -As$ociate Colorado .State Supreme Court · -Justice William H. Erickson "boarded an -~ Tueoday for a fllgtt"til Wasl!lnlton. -He .will be interviewed as the pos- sible prosecutor .Jn the Water-. gate s~dal. _ ·· • ~ Seven Soldiers P erish. in Cfash . ' . Of Army (;<;pier ' .. -. : Mutineers Off Shi~ SAN· DISGO (AP1 ..,. ,A G~k oil tanker Tuesday night left Sall .Diego harbor f~0Panama1 leaving bthlnd 14 ,,H9'!!1~~rewmeii indudilll f111e who 'll'.<11 '!li!>l,Jn,!Oei)ea ~y \l>e.sJllP'• ~·!.'!a"'· , lkictteet ruis-$&.95 tJ $10.95 Baseball Mitts-Bats ' ' ' .. ' Speedo~irnsuHs & Trunks Laguna SWini Tnmks-$5.95 & $6.95 · Life Guard Swim. Trunks-$4.95 Wolller Board Kick Boards-$4.95 Warm Up Suits-$21.95 to $34.95 Champion HandbaD Gloves . f!acquetbaD .~uets Ta61e Tennis · Paddles & Sets Wilson-Dunlop-Penn Tennis Balls WUsOn-Bancraft-Dunlop !Jackets Badminton Rackets Sqliash Rac~ets . - OPEH 9 TII ·.~m SUNDAYS " Balls-Shoes-t:of0r8il Sleeves· Shoes--SanifiH} Hos~·-. . Adidas~Tretdln-:'.converse Jack PurceD " Te• ~s : .. :·, Tennis Oresses-· • Tennis Sh_irts & Shqrts .. • '~. . , ~': . . . ' " ••• ' • ( \ A ,Yo ,Dal "" . ~·i.e -added -....... Col a probloml T~m IOrlt• fl!' DUftlL N IDIU cut red ' • I lllllf, •pd Iii< .. • 01UtD1r1 and ' acttoft II o u ·ne1d co ·-.1 to1.. 'luqulo ' ""' "' "°"" tr.mnmi o'2d 11 our quts- tlanJ to Pat Dutt.n I Ai -.. •. 11.a :Y°"' s.nnc,. Orono• . Coa&t Dally PUo~ P.O. B~ JMKJ, Coato, lfeta. Ca., 92626. Jnc:tudt 11our 'if~hon« numb1r. Mt19ter11 Atldlth•e • Doar Pal: On Sunday JUibl, April IS, ~e ,was a teleyiiion program titled, "1,"be :fhne Being," on Cwmel 4. It was aliout .. bypoglyoeq>Ja and wu vecy iJ!. tereatiog. Tbe narrator was MYln& that ''One cau&e ot hypoglycemia ls a com- mon food addltive ·• • • ti and then be was CUI pl! by • oommerclal. No 010re w11 •w w> lbe subject. I would llke to know tbe· naroe: of !lie foOd additive snd why the DUTll<r J'U interrupted. . J;.M., Focuitabl Valley f•PlaJa 1qift•·m a.e-'re8f ot leatenct, -· to'a Cbanel t apat-U, wbo IClded that many o&br.I' vtewti-1 bad e19- ta0..i Ille llalleo to loqulro about Ille ·~ food ..wiu ... A lutty com· pUler 1'u ltllmed lor &be llllllmdy com· mntliI ·~ eat off Ille urratO<. • . . ' .Petet£ NetcspGpen • • - ,, ' Oemente'~s Red Ryder: ' - Posse m Patrol Car By JOHN VALTERli '\ Of Ille 0.ltY ,li.t lh" , BBUCE CREGO'S HEYDAY wu lhst period between World War II and the ttme ,tblt the f~ay toot the traffit away from San Clemente . Jn; tblt era when El Camino Real was the only way north or soutb, the , city lfleRled always ·to be crammed with can. There were periods oo busy summer weekends when there wasn't any way to move through_ town at all. And in the middle of this me.., day in, day out , was that .abort, red-balred man wbo walked benE at the hips. . He was s'ligblly bow-legged, too, and his oict simply bd)owed al ~' • .~~. To my-ilk -teenagers just ~I to ·ve in dad's car -Crego was an awesome qemesis. ~ . YOU SPENT ,ti PERCENT o( yoor driving time look· ca•GO .. 're in the rearvtew mirror to make .sure Crego waso'l iround. . -,:But · lboe:e who barrelit<f into the city from somewhere else rarely knew about the prowess ol "Red Ryder" Crtgo. . · U that motorist made an emir 1n traffic, t'reao'a patro1 car seemed to come from out of nowhere. .... • His CODtempocaries sUll .reCaD the countles,, times that Crego wouldn't , .~·l,IUll-0ver juSt one ~; : He:<!. pull tl~m iiVOf :(n lfOOJll, make them line up alone the curb and ... w~ their. turn fot a s~. • , Ancflhere was Just ·no escaptni)lim. AlmOst once: a wee)!; it seemed; a new chapter wu added to the ltory. CRJ:GO $Eil,u:D TO LOVE lo cha,. some recklO.s drunk from here to santa .IJll Jtt breakneck ~ He did ii 50 often, people loot counL OcculabaUf;'..Jf 'the vtol8tar abnply refused to pull over, he would find Illa car scidaenly pierced with lead. That was the way it was"ln those days. Iiut Crego was far from a beavybande<I, o~ertiearlng cop. To the hundreds ol yoongsters who grew up in San Clemente in Crego's years, "Red Ryder" wu the kind of guy who gave you a fair shake. His work with kids In trouble was legendary. Indeed, it seemed like we were all part of the family. U you got In Dutch you'd 1e1 disciplined. For Algae: T~~Hippo By JAN WORTH Of .. Dellf ... ,, ... ls tiler• a foolproof way to control algae and larvae in lakes, e!J)eclaDy the manmade va1iety found in Lake Forest! ,'Jbere sure iJ. Just ask Ken Wuman, one of Occidental Petroleum Land and Development Company 's project dJree. ton ln Lake Forest. Trroble Is, the solution com $'1000. And during the night it ••Is ~. And It weighs two tOns. And """'" blood. The solution? The 'trlud-JoVitig htp- popatamu,,. Wasman, sweating a littJe blood· himself over a persistent alpe and gnat population explosion in Occidental's 37-aCN lake in Lake Forest, hHt'd Lion Country Sar¢ In . IJlguna HUI• )lad an answer. . ' . '1 was so excite<! thlt I jumped right ,. in my car and went out lhere," Wasman sald. That ·•u when Pat Quinn, ioological dlrtcl'!< at Lion Coon"'l'., made the hippo offer. 'l1'e pondel'OU9-aaima1, a member of the .swine famiJY, lives~~ vegeta- t(M In the """":It il)babl"~ natural sta~ -. •· -.. , lion Coonlry. Safari'•_ ii-h!l1ooO .ere gi£en other rood, put snackixliiiO.algae of Ille wlldlile preserve'~Jab.ODOllfll to keep 11 under.eontrol. ; , · •• Foriunalely for W•smlti .~d the realdents of the t~yo'1«114" 'lake, however, Quinn had ani>lber tata. - 0ne. ftllh, .n Afrlea,n· ~ atll~ Mcmlinblca ''l'llapia, ~ -'Into the mud.~ devours the larv•e wlllch pro- duce gnats. ThoUgb the fish is native to Africa, it Ls ll.5ed ~t oltai in Soothea.st Asia, where it is placed in the watery rice fields. . Not only does it kee p the pest problem down , but furnishes farmers with protein to complement their rice harvest. After m eeting with County Fish and Garn& ofticlals, Occidental has obtained permission lo stock their lake with 200 Mossimbica Tilapia. The Fish and Game Deparpneut has offered to raise Oiem and provide them free oJ charge. "We should have enougi') to stock , all three lakes In Lake ForeR." Wasman said. Two other lakes, .of 18 and 7 acres, .• DAILY PlLOT 3 . t are owned by the Lake Forest Com-· munity Assoc iation and are coping with similar algae and gnat problems. 'l "This is a never ending problem/'· \Vasman .said. ''We've been trying to~°. trol it with chemicals but that kilts ·ott· some of the fish." A certain a.mount of algae ls desirable • and needed to ~eep a heahhy lakg. Wasman stressed. Fish die without tbe ' oxygen that algae produces. .-., 'IiE.y:\ .'f:AT: M'IJiy tlmel in the pa•I l'Ye noUctCt ads for neWSjlapen printed on the day or a person's bfrtb. M luck woUld have it, now. that I'd like to order ooe of these da!ed' oewspspera aa a gift . .¥ .. 'iDJ. arandfatbe<'! ·W!> '1itthdaY. I can't lfiif any adver!l/;ii~IS. '"" you help? LB.,, Newport Beacb THERE WAS ONLY ·-timea year ·wbeJr~ might be ible ta dish a little out in return. That was oo Haloween. The crowds of local Qls: would gather along Avenida Del Mar at sunset, . armed vi.lb a fallci!t handle, pockeWul of balloons and a bar or soap~ Scientist .. CJ.aims Report Y/ou Caii~ Bug:.. DA's · Offree DUed ..,...,.,... C9'Y from Ille "'°I ,.,e ti tM New Vert Berald nibat for •1 da~ from Jaa. 1; ·t• &Voap Dec. c ;.1,l(t •lo. ..-1or ·11.1t.pooj.1!o!d -Jloltday Gilio,; JllilK. tll-P, ll'beal Jlltlae, Colo. -· You could soap all lbe windows aroilnd aild try to soak every patrolman unforhmate enough to be out that nlght. It TIU 8n annual ritual. Crego was the pumber~ne · tarcet. ' On ;Onofre Was Censor'ed A request by the federally 1\111<1- ed ' Orange CoUnty Inte!Ugence Unit • of the District Altorney's office to /. purchase a surveillance · rE!ceiver ' •system at 8 cost of $6,700 WU ap-·i proved by the Boatd of Supervison · • Tuesday. . fl ' ' Tiie Prulef# J'leliets DEAR PAT: I'd 'appreciate -In· fonilolloo reganllng the pri<:es of tic~ lo tbO Elvis ""8Jey OOllC•!rts March i3, 24 ·in Anaheim.-When I calle<I the OJPvention Center box office J was told llie'Jllllbeal'lpriced titt 'it&!<'$11Y.'t liad hO;td few fnlct row seats' 01'.l'tthe arena ·llool'·becau!O I bought lhe II~ early, but 1· tftdoil.up In lhe ·Ioge. 'P!<'iP!\!'l!lttlng lti'duita mo·iII hid ilop4il ~or'llttl& lil!at.. too and hid bought lllelt tlcllell Hrly.' ' Then I W.. told ffiat tickets for lroot row &M\s'ooM 118' U lbll ll'true, I don't'lhlnk It's fair to misinform tbi:>le of. us who woul~ t>a•e been wllltnc to .pay a Wgher price to have a chance at the' good seats. i;a. you find oolt ll the 111 flgUI< I• right, and if ·so, why IO many of us weren't told~ . E.B., Col'&a Mesa 'Ille lap Jll1eod tickets anllabto from tllle A1111eim Coaven~ Cm&er boJ: of- rice were ·tit, aocacdt.a1 to Wtwam hl.W.>pe, 81sb&ut mua,... No lletcitl at aore tbaa $11 race· value we~ printed. He llld alt lleMll were .. tct ID Ille O<der dlef ..... recel•ed by mall · Will tboll • fbe ll'ftl Aoer being 101d flnL Be ~ /lial -,.ltlal Uckels fw QI aphlt mut bave been ticket bnhn -.. .calptn'' -wltt ned 1'-· -bl mattfli1 ln !or ticket He aftd hls!feITow ol!ieen would chase m ·zi1-za1 fashion all over the main · street Untll the ftm wore off. And every ooce ln a while be would catch a guy red handed. "l REMEMBER wilEN he' turned around ooe time just when I bad 'let loose with • balloon. I started to pplil down Del Mar, ligurUl« be waa 81\ch an Qld man he cdJ1d ·nt'lf:r caltb me,'' a close friend. recalled this week. "I ran and ran , but he was sill! r!g)lt behind me, soakiog wet and yellll\I like bell for me to stop. "Ila chased me for I b r e e blocks nn•• J re~""" ti.. .t.nnis coutta and • ~ .... 3'fdOt..bYgfilt:Wee. 'rli>"" .:rn':61 . ~·1"~"ii1:rr: !l. ___ 1 '"" _ ,, "He Ji111 ssl 'dawn to calcti bls lireath and ' IOlll..m! that wben I was ready I coold come down. Flnally 1 did arid be hauled me in. ti l!fY Fii~ '1Jm88'• for Ille ' pJd!.ol ,~~-~ three lt/Juil• wOrth cf P!>llsblng oo Ui! city lire tnglne. , • , SUcb tale! of Bruce C<eao go m and on, but be ~vet waa the 80tl ol. man who wa.< comfortable rem!nl!lclhg about the past. He shunned many offers of feature lntervieWs. But in one encounter several years back be did• remfnisce, recalling the time be pulled over a drunken driver whose cal bore a Mencan UceUe plate , with the number one. on it. · · "This guy was drunt as a skunt and be kePt s1yini that he claimed 'di~ lomatlc immunity.' · , · "I came to find out at the statlon that be waa the Metbn Ambassador to the United States, but hell, he was drunk and under Arrest. "I finany got so tired of liearfng 'dlplomaUc hmmmlty' from this guy that I lticke<I bl• 'diplomatic Immunity' all the way down the hall and Into the cell," .be said, bellowlni with laUBhler. .. - BRUCE CREGO PIED tbia week in bis 7181 year. He retired from the force sevtn yean ago and more than 250 of his friends bade him fatewell al a party lo.bl• honor. lt't.. certain thlt many more than thlt will bid him a fmal fa,,.well on .Thursday. SAN DIEGO (AP) - A scientist says Southern California Edi.son Oo. censored his· report on the danger of two new atunic poWer plant units to marine life before baodlng it to the AWmlc Energy Commlsslm. . ' Dr. James T. Enright of th< Scrip~ Instillllloo of Ooeanograpby said Tueoday b~ waa hired by the company last DecemliU to predjet the effects ol ex· J>1Ul.'loo of the San tlnolre power ptiht on ~:._~tt~. ·llr nia ~I \ii:r~~th! ~ -~tHe repcirt had been cqmmunlcoted to the AEC." But be Jearited later that Im· portant dita had been left ""' of !be draft sent to the AEC stiff, be 1&1d. Enright · mode the disclosure after testifying at ao AEC bearing oo en· vtronmenlal effects of the two JtOposed nuclear units at the seaside . plant in northern San Diego County. Hi• Watch Language In Firm Names =~•'t'°...i!'.'3.::~ N" D A ,J:Ji·S '.', F ' d ~I=-= .. ~,::~ 1:io ·'· , ~.I ;.:. -ope •'uulCt ree . ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -The stale Senate has approved a bill granting the secretary of state authority lo refuse to allow corporaUons to assume names that "transgress against the common stand· anls of dec<Ocy of the poblk:." only ·a bandlul of legislators oppo<ed the measure Tilesday. 1be bill's spontOr, State ·Sen.I Walter Langley, cited such names e Lease-A· Lass, Inc., and can-A-Girl Inc., u ex· ampleo of narneo lbft could be banned. ·IMoojr'llll!'"llfnclC. p~ laid lbal --........ ln "llnl fol Ille '. Ei~O.-~-'-;~~~ · Ort'Child Sale C:hnrges n.tl' ?r;.;rc /~-~£ ~ · · ~ ..... .. · -, · · GEM TALK DEAR PAT: Each i.r I purchase a Call!Qmia State 1'bt ',day uae permit with my ~ cbeck. .Today I w11 told at the Hlllltington Beach State Park thal they will not ~e· a check. as they mull maio good oo ilit retuni<d cbe<:k>. I "'8llt to know if ooe part can make ita: OWD 4 rules u4 ~.1.•· ~er would be held ""'""'l"ble-11> • cbeU Is written to the state. • o' D.E., ,,..,.. .... -b \'oar pe--1 •lleckl1ill\·h_.,ied II y .. m.u Ii .. BunimctoO l!Oa<b Stale P.M, P.O. Box c1 H..U.pa B..,cb 11811. ·State Paijt;>lloijer' IA~ .It! ..... ·llld Iba& lllMlbtc a permll al Ille Ume a --' clltct II a«epled cao P"IV• lo be a ,,_., II lji,• cheek II )&\or .dli-tecl. Slato policy reqllra CW cUC.U.lioa of patlt pr!vUOJ~ ID Ille .... " • ~.......a do!!t~ 11·)'6• prefer to r-iro yoor penall dliecl1y from the Cilllonilo Deporlllleot or Patka aod ~mall ,...1....,lt;lo P.O. Box ~ mi, Sacnmuto tll1 . ' EUs1Jerg Stay!ng lr_iDC' s .W~~rgate .WASIUNGTON (AP) -Now Daniel li:ilabirf 11 sloeplnf In the WP!et~te. U wa1 dl!Ck>sur.. ar1slnt out GI th< Walerpte 11\VeltlPtloa ll>Jl led IO; IUt -·· cllJ!nl.nal of dliqOI' 8811n11 llJlberi, l!bo ,ltWd the P"'l<i&on .,.lolSJ. -~ · t El!tber& lll1d bl. wile llew lo Waa nat<m lb'~ i>oulcf ~ to • ~fcomm!tlee 1bout pven> ·NEW YORK (UPI) -A heroin-ad· Failla !aid be bad mt moved <11 the case ·~ lalher-Wllo allege<lly tried ·to,..ll because no wltttes!es bad rome forward. bl1 tbree,monti>old daug)lter for the Layne, freed pending a boarinif In price of a fix walked out of jail oo parole Manhattan Criminal Court Monday, Y•M Tuesday because no witnesse,s came arrt:sted. at a subway station April 28, forward to testify against him. after 1 woman passenger told police he Manhattan Supreme O>url •Justice Irie<! to ..U Iler Ille bati,' -nsmed Kim. Gerald CUikin Aid it was unforlUnate Transit police officer Gregory Early thll be had lo parole James Layne, 29, Aid be found Layne holding Kim, who but "l have no choice." wu "bedJy battered," by the neck. "Unlornmately, moot unlorlunately, Wlln....,. said Layne bid been beating the law Is clear and there ia notblng !be !be child. TODAY by '<IJljtt can do under !be circumstances," Early and La1ne struQled and during· CONDENSATION IN I WATERPROOF WATCHES A truly walA!rproof watch such the judge said. . _ _t!iat aculfle, an of the wltnesu• vanish- Layne'a .Lqal . Ate! attorney, D<vid ' ed. !Caplan, argued lbsl II was against !)fe Layne was charged with kldnaplng, al· law for a defendant to be held more than tempted abandonment harassment and 72 bourt. wltboot a bell1og or any m-public into1lca1JoD from nan:otld. dellCI!! beine pretented agalnat hbn, Kim'• motner, Lorraine Cruz, 35, is in Ass!Btant Dlslrlct Attorney Richan! a methadone maintenance program. • as those wor'n by ~~in 4ivers, SCUBA divers and many ~ailors and aviators, should never show logging on the inside crystal sur· face. Because fine watches are rrianu- ,. factured under carefully controlled . eondiUons of IA!mperature and bu· D • al Ar , B Ok d inldit~. original mouture conlA!nt ISpos ea uy aye within ·the case 1. 1oo 1ow 1o per· • mlt presence of fog producing moi ... lure. Such fogging ls therefore a Purchase o( 11JO • .,... o1 the Pi-1 dollar amo1111t ,... ,,_ sure aJgn u.t mo!Sture 1J entering 1,500-aett: Prima Deahecha re fUtt ·Cormack added that the Mission Vlejo the case. . disposal area tast of San Jpan interutt wanted the County to file a Watch parts will rust when ex- Capistrano waa approved Tuesday by1be "trttndly" con&!mnation suit 00 the posed to water. Water also ~reaks Boan! of SUpervllon. tranasctioa which -would give the com· down the lubricating qualilles of Coonly Road CommlM!oner T e d pany a tu tldnntage the oUs. Even though such watches McConvllle, who aloo head• the reluH Long term plans f& &he huge dispo,.1 are ruggedly built and esperlally dllpooal department, aald negotiations aro•, larvely, 'VY lteep ridges and deep proteeted agalnst moisture entry, for purclwe of !be IOO acres were "very conyma, call ror recreoUonel use aftor they are often subjeclA!d to rough near agreement" between lhe county and the landllll operation-II oomplded. use , cau&Jng such. damage as frac- the l\llJllm Viejo Company. SUpervlsor Ronald W. Caspers of tured crys!als, damaged or bent 'mlorfle Connack of !Ital. Property Newpori Beach wanted .to know U '°'"" case f'""" or crown damage. testimony was allow¢ by hearing ex- aminers despite objecti0ll8 by SDG&E, a co-owner of the plant, and the AEC staff. Enright &aid he believes the mortality rate among plankton in the area of the plant's cooling system may be much higher than the AEC stiff esl!mat,ed iJJ an environmental report. ' • The staff said 40 to 100 million plankton per minute would ~ sucked into the cool· ing system. or tht expanded plant, and aboot 30 porcml of lbe plankton ,~ Um In the> linmediale atea would . edl §'lankl!Jn .ar;e CONldered a vi llrik in the food chain of larger sea cniatures. Enright a8ld SDG&E did not give him enoogh d~la for. an accurate. report..!.'A 1pecios·by·species ~tudy 'of the mortality rate ls -nee,dedi," he said. Anotber scientist said warm water discharged by coastal nuclear power plfmts apparently causes no damage to animals or plants "!hi.ch dwell on the ocean bottom, a scientist says. Robert Given , director of research a\ the University ol Southern California's Marine Biology l'8b on CalallJ/a Island, testified at an atmUc energy commission hearing. He sal~ a long study dele<ted little dlfCerence 4between organlsnls tn:- side and outside the outfall of heated water. Casino · Blaze Out ' . STATELINE; Nev. (AP)·-About 50 persons dashed to safety ·after a fire erupted iil a motel.:c891no here,' gutting a coruitructlon project. The blaze at Harvey's Inn started Tuesday afternoon in a nearly completed casino area where . workers had been welding. - I But before votlna approv'al·. Supervl!OT Ralph . llledrlcll of•i Fullerton, 9'1Democftl,~ JI /l was amusing that the · ll'idelri1 .. , government would-.. provldt fundl , · 1 fo~ , .. equlP.IJltl),I. . \ .' 'I et ~llJo•.!, -"II . Iii! ... ftt 'Cl . .._od -' · ject.. In 11\0 ltw enltJl'Oomeht lltld-{ · and thaf. the lurvelllance · r6Celwr \, system iii uMd to detitct cmy 'btd!ler! " microphones. oc other bugg!ni ! : devices. ' Lawmen Destroy · .. Marijuana Field,. LAS VEGAS (AP) -Clark Coc!niy sheriff's deputies ha.ve destroyed a m8rt:" juana fleld of an estimated J,000 plaots in !be denae Vegas wasb ,area of""'' LJ( Vegfis. • A ••am of six d~li~ droye Into lbe regiixj Tuesday tb two fOUJ'o~ vehicles and then p~ OD foot until they located the fleJd, spokesmen said. . One deputy said the foliage was .so thlck they had to crawl in places. . The depu ties said they frightened two: suspecta wbo escaped in the ~brush. OJ[,J[) §JCJL\VJEJ!.l If you have old gold, silver end coins, they m ay be w orth a tot more than you think. We will pay you excellent prices, so ' sell w here you have complete assurance . I J.C. .JlumphrieJ Je1vtJferJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENl fNT TEA.MS 17 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION l•n~All'l•ri<11d -M•t+•' C~•tt• PHONE Ml·)•OI • / ~~·tlio Dlil!l)l ~ Watttgate Services, the depottni<ot wblcb Is hiindl• of'tbe .,.a ""'1d be Uled for recrealioll Bu the moment~ waterproof ~ ""C"::· ==~or~: even :i• "'.'t and nn operaU0111 were watch dlows cryital foqing, ll the "-I' lor purcbaae or IOO acres wa• aol~bvule 11ld lbls wa• • definite lbould '8 checked by ·}'OUr Jewel· budgeted for the current fiscal year. No port of the plan. :er':_a~w~a~tclt~re~palrnrtlL".'.'..:~::_----~============="'-=--=--=-==-=--~=====:! ' I • • • - J • ~ ' .. • • Jumbo_: Je ,,,,. ' • 'J •• '1 -· ., "" t. l ·-· .. Chance, : Sidely '! .i 1 .,, I ; Lands1 · in B:enYer I o Mouthing , _ •• 1 ~., .. ,, ( } • • . . ' • ff .This Month · Skgla'1"Solution7 ' .,,.....--,'. DENVER (UPI) -An e1tortionist who threatened to dlsentegrate a 747 jumba Jet' el.lT)'lng 115 penons to Tokyo unleu he received $.10,000, forced airline or- ficlalw to divert the plane to Deltvet t1> da7 with the hope the e1torliooist Wat bluffing. MOl!l'B OF 11lE MON'J11: I wu c..,.. on In tltla lj)&Ct ooly yesterday t our good Orange County Board ol pervllor• and bow they ..... •bout to e county policy-on firing people abruptly, l tripped aver my pewriter. ·i a.ll<rinc alon(, I WU attempting to aln that U ~ Dlltr1ct Supervtaor ~tlltl rot ltla way, county deport. t bead! would virtually be workinc on month-to-month buli. somehow, when s got in type, it came out "mouth-to- "outh " bails. Jncredlble. • :Normally, when eolumnills gtt done in • • this kind ol thing, they (ly into a pur- r1ge, start demanding original proors nau about looking for some printer typesetter who can be blamed !or the •1•M AFJtiUI) TO DOJt. (haven't even. ed back at my orlahlal typing. The .ion is, maybe it wU one of those ~..,.u·, an •UPI a n d I l'Ollly did type E;lh-t~mouth. !¢'.F~r today, you see, it develops lhat -by Battin did get his way. His fellow nty sUPervisors even v o t e d anlmously for a return to a J to 2 lot being enough kl give the boot to partrncnt heads. allln didn't get hiJ way, however, on ·ng of depa.rtmeotat chJE!fs at a ent's notice. The balance of the d figured those fellowa 1hould !Hill · t a notice of being dismis.sed for cause or reuon -relating to performance office. Then the poor chap 'I.! enUtled 1 fair hearing. :AU. OF' TffJS .accomplished, the fact I suggested the department chief! be workl.ng mou~to-mouth ratheJ; lnonih-to-mootlr-iCtW.1ly . soundJ a little better. C1n't you just ~ar some supervisor now wamjng a department 1'iead? He yells iat him' "61~-me·any more-« )'Wr mouth and you'll gef •'mOOth. ; _;, Or, you can asume if the department chle!taln should draw the wrath of three votes on the !lupervi90rlal board, lte 's gutng to be living hand-t.o-mouth in the near future. CL.EARLY, P.tOUTHING off is going to become an unpopular pa stime for department heads up there around the County Seat. So. rTK>ulh or month, whatever kind of basis. I guess it all works out okay. There will, howe\'er. -be so1ne controls on juat how the good supervisors give a department leader the boot. Battin, in trotting out -the three \'otcs-and-yau'rc- out system, objected -to the dictum that e firing bad to be "for cause." He sug- gested ~a800S would be enough. And one of those m!MS coold be thot the board "lacked con!ideDCe" ln the fellow. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper warned. however, that such lack of confidence had to "be in the way the department head Wll performing. "But lack of COO· fidence because yOu don't like his haircut, no," lhe suptrvisors' altomey declared. THUS IF 'nlE RIJ>fln110rs don't like a department head'1 haircut, you SW!pect they're going to have to prove his Jong hair is lalling down Into hll unsatisfac- tory work, or something like that. There is no telling where 111 this will lead. We may have to come up wilh a slogan for department beads who fa]) by the way1ide. I'll probably hive the but luck If l call them "The Mooth of the Mooth ." • len"wlth <nw livtn~:,nd·lhll> and wotldni Ollly ·1n "tel~ _ · , (3) Wrapping huge lhtnnal llianltet arqtlAjl tb!p. • • Blast Kills 14 at· ·Movie • 40 More W ouruled ,at Outside. Film in S. Vietna1n From Wire Services SAIGON -An e1plosion has torn through a crowd walching an outdoor movie, killing 14 persons and woundirfg -i-0 others, in an attack Saigon blamed on Communist terrorists. A government spokesman put the toll at 12 clrtlians and two militiamen dead with 35 cJvllfans and five mllitlamen wounded. The explosion, he said, came about 8 p.m. Tuesday when the crowd had gathered to watch a movie on a screen set up outdoors at a village 335 miles north of S&igon. The village is abool II> nille1; west of the provincial capital of Tani Ky. 'nil! Eltl'Ul!llON WU dolcrfbod H the !IlA1t strloos o( at Coinmunlat · ... ,... fire violations reported by the pvtm· ment for the U-bour period eraunc at s a.m. todly. • • In another incident, 19 ComnumL>~ l<Oldlors w.,. reported killed 'J\Jesday when they attacked a government m;. fanby pooltioo In rmbem Dinh Dinh , prov~ 270 miles north of SalJOll. One aovtmment soldier was reported killed Jn the auack. IN SAIGON TODAY, the Viet Cong dtleption to the twoiparty Joint Military Comtnl.ssion boycotted a s c h ~ d u 1 e d rheeting of the subcomml5son on war Pris<!ners. lf/1iid the .SOOth Vietnamese government d1d not provide it "With enough gasoliDe lo get to the meeting. ·,.It Goes -Beyond' In Phnom Ptnh, Cambodia's new l"'"""""'t ol "Independence, neutrality · and peace" took office today with a pledge to strengthen the fight against tM Co~uni!ts. N~'!_ fbmmunist successes were reporfed ana-thtre was unUsually beavy U.S. air activity along the Mekong Rivet. ttiilltary sources said American planes destroyed 1 large Communist motor veuel 1nd a big sampan in Mekong River air strikes while other U.S. Clghter- bornbers struck Communist gtOWld units thrut<ning the i;outhern town of J<am. pot. 'Deep Throat' Ruled· Too Explicit BOSTON (AP) -The movie "Deep Throat" has betn ruled obscene in a sis:·paee decl1ion by U.S. District Court Judge Frank J. ~urray. "Jn lta expllctness," Murray wrote, "the film goes beyond any tilm which has been examined by the courts and probably beyOlld anything thu s far e1- hlblted in pubJic theaters in this country." In otJ)er deveklpments: -Am~rican officials have contacte?I Communist Pathet Lao :over past few weeks in efforts to obtain information on mls.!ing AmeriC1Ul . .servloemen in Laos. Murray said the movie was obscene becaUle "taken as a whole, it appeals ·-:lo ~ ~ ,i.Q,~t in se11 1is patently oUef.181ve tn that It affronts conlemp> .. rary· cornmttnlty 18tandard1 ·With respect to 'descrlptlon and representaUoo of sexua l matters and is utterly without redeeming social value.~· -South Vietnamese troops attacked" a) Communist force before dawn tod~y ney- lhe ctn1ral coast; killing 49 men and ·cap- lurtn1 more thap 100 weapons. \ I . , Nixfili 'Wiirlts Commission Three T ouristS . Shot Visiting Victoria ,.FQJ4i~\-· To Look Into Elections WASHINGTON (APl -Spurred by \\'atergate revelations, President Nixon asked -congress today to create a special nonpartisan commission t-0 conduct "a complete re-examination of our system -bf elccUons and. campaign practlcea." ln a special message, Nixon said "re- cent disclosures of ' wide!p~ad lbuses during the presidential campaign of 1972" make refonn an urgent and essen- DAILY ~!LOT DELIVERY SERVICE O!llvtry of tht Daily Piiot 1s 9uara11tetd Mt..,t1•1'ri4•1" If Jt• .. lltl 11•1 YIUr ''"' •r l :>O •·"'-• ctll '"' reur "'' wlH H lrt"'M It , .... Ctll1 l'lt littft ¥Mil l:H •·"'· SU11ntJ tl!<ll JllMtfl II Ytll .. Ml rfftl~t VIII• <tPY Df ' '·"'· $ttu'111y, tr I 1,m, li~•••r. c111 1t.d 1 <•Pr ,.111 bt 1,.~tttl r. y111. Ctll• t •I ltllft ll~IU 11 '·'"· T elfp/lonts NlrlttWUI H1111!111tltll llH~ '"' Wltl,,.lrltltr ., ,., • "f.llH SIR Ctt ... t •lt, C••l1lrl"I ltlc~. SIR 1111~ CtpjllrlM, Olftl h lrll, SMllll Ltt• ..... "''""' N1t11111 • . •11-on tial priority item to help "restore the faith of !he American people in the in· tegrity ol their political processes." While not ooce mentioning the word Watergate in bis message or in '-com- panloo address prepared for radio 1Sroad· cast, Ni100 said many more clliclosures of 1973 .....npalgn m1adeetla "will doubtleS. soon be maJe." · The 1Presi00lt tulmltt.ed a propo!ed joint resolulion that would crettt. a 17- member Nonpartisan COmmiukln on Election llelorm that ...Wd be called on to subm.ila final rep«t. by Dec. 1. ,. , SAIJSBURt•lllio<leii&c~vPI) z. .Ir.km· bian troopo ~~-·-~:Ult VlC)O!I • Falls goqe .lnfO .~~ ~· killed two Canadlan' -11l'!J~ ~* r1ously -.xied:al>.All)erl-. ·•. ;:;, . 1be American w.U'dcl.eotllled ai ifOlni Crothers; 31, of 1'roy; Ohio, 'and 'tbi Canadians as Chrt$tlbe .J.o.dse. S!nclaJr'· . !O, of ~elj>h, Ont.,: all<l;Ma>l<ll! ldiiibl; Drljber, 19, of RDckW'Oocl; nit. , •· 11le Cruiadian External:~ Dep.vt; ment said in Ottlwa it btd~Ved' in.: formation that both girla.~ ktlled In the lhootlJ1i. II saldJlloi:~ WIS . killed instantly and MIS& lll'!Jblii''il'ai hit by IUJ!Shot and fell Into 'tlie -z.mbosi THE COMMISSION'S mandate would River which fonni the .ZambQib. be as broad as the federal election proc-Rh<xlesl.an bordtt. I ~ ess it.seU," Ni1on said. "Nothto.g would It said dragging operations have begtin, be excluded." but her body has oot been recovered yet. Nixon 1peci{icl.lly urged that the com· • . . mission coostdu the wisdom fll 1 coo-RE~TIVES IN Otuo ~ Ctotber1 stltutional amendment that...ww!d 1buit.a-.. and his wife wer.e ~ a year·Lone ""President to a single sb:-yeirTEfiil and -round-the-world tnp with a party d. eight double the-tenure of Hollie members to orftine. They left the United Sifites on four years """ April I. · · . --"--' . Rhode>lo bNnediately protested the in-While ~1press1ng no ~~ opiru_on cidenl A fonnal mq l&ld ·.It "protests in ~ pre11dcntial tenure,· .Nbort said, the strbngtjt . terms at t hi.a in- Perwn.lly, I have 1111( favored the discriminate lil1lng and maiming of ln- fou_r-year· term for memben ol thd' nocent le ". · Hvouse, wlll hiU .~I tbe memlltrJ elected n.. =-said the incident oc- c er}' two years. curred Tueeday afternoon netr the roar- 1be aoonymou.s caller, who tele~ b1I: threat to airline oencen in Portland, Ore., said a pres.rurized bomb was hid- den in the middle of the -iuxurious •Northwest Airlines jet and it would ex· plodt U the plane descended below 7,000 ,_ "Mexico City had the clOlfft airport above 7 ,000 feet ," an airline spokesman sa.14-"But the plane didn't havtv\he fuel to Oy that far. We had to\t.ake a chance 1od. put her down in Denv~r." THE PLANE UNDED at Stapleton International Airport at lJ :15 p.m. PIYf. The 100 paMengen and 2 2 ~ben deplaned through lhe regular exits and were hustled to securi- ty stations where they were questioned by the FBI. Their luggage was rushed to a makeshift-bomb d.ispo681 unlt and searched. Federal and city bomb experU oombed the plane and at the end of a twc>how' search pronmmced It ·clean. The passengers were taken in three buses . to various city hotela. The plane, Northwest's Flight 7, was to leave again for Tokyo. • The flight originated in New York. Ill; final-United States sto-p was in Seattle and It Jeft the Washington city on schedule. It was flying . over Anchorage, Ale.aka, when the pilot, Capt. John Den- man or Seattle, learned of the bomb threat. • ..~ smiiED tDdi: wtwett'~ .,.. four hours Into the lllilf>t lrhon· Ult cap. tail toJ.d us about tli& diete," ltid·«tit woman from. NeW York Whole lui.ibrand and four children wefe on Uwiir Wit tO 1 Japanese vacation. ''1l>el;I', WU no lo· dicaUnn before fliat we wOli In any kl4cl oC trouble.:•. . .,.;/' The passengen were .titedi....and.llr· ritated by the dlvm!Oo, ·the queallolilni by the FBI 'ml the ilrdtal o! J;avl'!( to· 10 ' tlroug)l cuatmna &illfn .. l.'b't -· .""'Y reluctant to talk about the ~~.; "I just trusted In tbe gOOcl Lord to bring me home and be did," ooe elderl)' woman sald. . , All but two of the pusenger1 ~~,the night in hotels as guests of the ~Ii. Two Japanese aliens who were ~ deported spent the ntght 1n the city J4\\- Shot J to 7 Tin&es Escaped Convicts HlJlltOO In Fanrt Family SiaYingS. REYNOLDSVILLE, Go. t!APJ Authorities today pressed a aearch for three escaped coavtcts wanted for ques.- lionlng "in the sllylngs ol six members ol. ·• rural family;::. • -·'t-- Sherill Dan White. Qf ·Seminole County saJd the five men killed were shot .in the back of the head from one.to seven times each, and lhe lone woman victim was raped and tcrlured before she was killed . ''You just couldn't imagine a woman goi11& through as much torture as she had ," the sheriff said. HE_ SAID DEPUTIES were con· centrating their efforts on finding a car • ltAACt DUMOlf: belleved stolen by tb6 murderera: . The Georgia Depa-rtm,6nt of Investigation ~losed today , balllst;cs tests re vealed the murderers were arm- ed with at least f9ur different guns -.12· caliber, .31-caU~. ,1&-ca'libet, '!lld .380-cllibtr WelpGn.s. ., Department d ire c t o r Willl~m Beardsley, c'ommenUng oti the search for the three escaped cOn\ricu, ·1 a Id , "There's no point in ~ f~ ~Y l!lse. The circumstanfial -eVideoce Js overpow,riog." • Ha· oaid thret penons hive btea fotlnd who ,can five 90mt deacriptioa tblt· will help in the investigation.. .. , Police idenUOed the ~,.,as Carl Isaacs Jr., 11>; George Dungee, 35; and Wayne C. Coleman, 26, all ol Bal•;-, Md. --I TIIE ESCAPElll . hod threatened · earlier they' would ''kill any policeman who trie~ to stop us for any reason.'' Police theorize that five male members of lhe Alday family were ~ dowft in a nightmarish sequ~ aa tbey lltuluetl one by one from a corn fteld. Later, the nude body of ·the wif!ot one of the victims was found in i f~d ·six miles aw~ .. Autlx>riUe(I. 11&id. lbe ~ been raped and shot tJ ~th. · The victims w,re ld&Wied·u 8S-year- old Ned Alday ;. hia. i1oo1 cJerry •. 35, Chester, 32, aod Jimmy, ~t,.bil brother A~~rey, 57; and J&rry'a wlfel 'Mary, 2.1. They we.re u . good a fojb as they come, and they didn 't drink bett wine or whisky," said Sheriff White. "They were churoh-JO!ng and hard·~g " The five .Alday men Were-f~ ·early Tuesday lying race. down. in·•· beet can· littered house trailer, ~h .a1q in Ple back of the h .. d. Mµy Aldar'• tiOdli~ found several hours latet.. She hAQ' shot In the bock of the hoad ~ in a shoulder. AmerU;an Team Scales. •. • • • Ohio Valley Has Frost' S.ti>rms ~ arnings Go Vp for Lake ,Superior ing watertal.I. dl.!covered by missionary exploter David Uvingstme and named for Britlln't Queen Victoria -a spec· tacu11r waterfall wider and twice a5 hlgb as Nlagra Falls. Nepal's flf·_.D~~ KATMANDU, Nepal (AP~-Dr.'U.W. ''1l>l1Ja·a c: Reichardt, the American fllmber whO ~eat - THE SPOKESMAN said shots wh11zing sa...i himself from an •~aljlnebe 0. 11\t.. find _,' · ~. · lllB•"tN ~•wow ~ ..._ .... ~·NO'#llli ""II: ftOW la'OSS the falls Coflt kllled ooe Cane· Dblulaglrf four years egor.J:bt d.Jfing Jnto , .r: ' ,, ~ dlan girl toutlot Instantly. ' ~-'I v • • Donal» C:rltiu fhi.Jt~~ A second girl was hit and tumbled into ( JN SHOR '. ~-· J t~AtrS~i!t .... ·-(UPih · '. • " the Zambtsi River's fourth gorge, he ,lQ,11 lt"N. nor1hetn ~-s1reno wlndi IMlf-aa id. · • · policies t 'U · • to ~~'~ 0\l'z!f!!• M~~in; •. •ndwlf:= "We have imfut1ble proof that Zam-1 · t~e born ' "of •• "bn-f::',,,...'v 'Nfiid."Or so 11' i"l. mn" nt~ blan troops &nd not Z&mblln·Nsed guer-. a mowbank, bu led a ~man team ~led Pl"OPOrti • . f: ~~u;; :'!1~ ·::r~,ttt~: rill&« Wert MJ)OMible fw the lttack," to the aummlt of the~,~& Azneti~RD Senate Republjtan 'j~ S ~*' ~tht wt,t,~.rr:JS''·::: the Rhodesian· spokesman aatd. The of. upeditloo. reported toda?:J...__ · restraln~followtr\a Tu !!"J!r,n:._:•M'f~"t''fr. flc:ial protest note repeeted UU.s state-John Roskelly, 24, of .;>pUl\am:, W3!h.. in the APPfOll'lafkl:if ~;;i;.""· Wl•<911•1n 1/ld , ,., ipent. and a Nepalese S~ ~e nan1ed off fWlds {Pr the ..._t.1.... , '{llllftiltf"•lltY<tl°• ov•~ w!Hh• •r..•I-"Tbe pvel'l)IIWlt Of Rhod""•illl in(orrn• Shamd~ accomparued Rel~nrdt to the renewed ............. ne;;:;,-t1.• 'l"'ln. ~=i!fi:'~~ J~;:~:"Mtaln l"elioft' tM ;o+t?mnefrt.~1-ernbla 9llbtd4i~·;t• 26,JDO.foOt l~mlt S,~ , ,........,.~ euul . ON , ~-;r'.1"0'N:C:~ .~'.:"..'II"~ concem a\ tltli deliberate t,nd na,;lnt ' -A radio mesuge said illil'm<n hoisted • 811ge Pratlu To~" ~ •-.. '""· vlol>tton ol human ttghta and protesta In th• American and Nepa~'flAgs during WASillNGTON (AP) Coatnl -wear.er · the stroogeat 1unu at 1 a-1, in. ~ m!"ut" on top o1 J>ljautagiti, the Promilnn:l•l\W! m<ri ti\in M°'""' _"' ffllt•Y. Lltllt ••rl••'• 'discriminate ~ and ·Jm:lmlng d. Jn. ~Id 1 sixth· tallest m~taln. It was conti;act9J'S hive made -'Its Off ~ wl1M11 "lollt •"II "°'°'"'"' '*"" !Mc-. noct11l people, tb.t Rbodealln Stltement UJll third time the mountain bad been Pentago6= r. 1~·-50i-;o. lftll W'lli.rlV io to u 11:""" Jft aftwo said ac1led. 1 (Related p ) :::;: :•" 1nc11 Thurtd•,. Hlth fflltt' • e Nb:oa Cltet1 ~ One~~k..,ag~ 'ut CMJlll ..,.,,.,,.,,,,,... rffllt fnN'll .. s I p . Hik d i -profi ..... '"'''"' ttn!Pttthlt" ~ ...... ,_ tee rices e WASHJNGTON (AP) -President Nix-....... l ' '. I -J,) ft 71. W1• flft\Nl'ltvl't •1. ,..,,,. I on'• portne< al a State Dliufet'!S" him · ~ · , Sun, /ff-. Tl .. • PirI'SBUMll (UPI) -National Stffl u aa)'lnf 1t1a!OrJ. would !!it" forolglf • C:tadi ' '. 1 w•••oio.v Ccrp. and Inll!ld Steel 0ompony 'llteoday lf!atn ~II "" RO!IANi1 PAft!lNT."~ ~. tlcONf P'tfll't .......... 11111 f'.1'11; '·' announced Pl'k:t ~ m ... lo n• Watergate. Maj Gen Jamet L. Prie4i..&r: I - ltcDllll tow .......... 31°' p,m. i.t pe:r t'-' en llicet and efrtp 1teel prodlk"tl, ,_Nlxoo -described aa e relaxed host er ti the · 2tst Alr t>t~:r-'I"..::~'!~~ TMO .... Y jotnlllC seven· -major-productt'I wbld! al I White R-dJnJler 'l\Jeeday nl(ht North • ~er1can Air ~ a~~ "1"' "ltll .......... ltrM -.M. J.S boosted prices stnce last,... US. 8tttl f Em ffalt.. 0 ... 1 11.1u ....,..t9a1e-~1111UU "''' ,_ .......... •1~ '·"' .. , Corp ... lloll' No prot1' • • ,.. fl'IW ' ~ -...ie of f:thloplo -region ot llMcoct Afr Ftlfte ,..... _..__ 'K""' ••• · ......... ••• ...,. •·• ·• •~ DI 1 • I ucet, waa --•ed to Mn. R-<n _C.B. Morton, s-~ ... 1·1·-, ........... ~ .=_ ::_, •'=-1·,41· I.ii\. = f;;-,_~ 1flrsteelt. tO incrdle prtoea on ~.and atrlp ;,r,;7 the Secret;Jf or the lntert1r. d~). n;'h; ti;"' Ft0.-:::,~h?e=~ .. ~~ ... r-1-ai. 110 ._.... -1111 """ Mn. Motton qUOled NI.Ion 11 S11yin1 was nJ'lnc crasMd ~"'"~rt~ a ., • • "•" ' DAILY PltDT S .P tither Seale .Lases Bid ) - iContest , 1 Bill Near ,. .. SACIWIENTO (AP) -The fil'I, ·AlltDlbly ~1.t'-J) Ill ~ of both portles Is". heiid<d I« a -' . . ~ •. '!!Jle. ~ to ,!'1d twp, ytln ol bitter portlsan CALIFORNIA sb:\\181• ln<the lowt< "°""'" M th Lod • O!>e' GOP 1ea11or callod 111e o er e· !dfll,~pey!iapo the worst ~r- ~~ ~ Gold Fever l'l Tue!day to support the • COIJ¥Ollllae plan -ii -m· A . . .,..,,.. !1P t 1or a n00.. vo18 ts . gam '!it.m.,,. .• . SACRAMENTO (~I) - The bill · ~d wipe eul 1'flning equipment stores in seats ot three tncwment · Califomii's famous· Mother Democrats, but It would still • ~-..,..,. ~ "gold f .. leave Democtati with a 4.7-ir l.AIUa •"'}"'• ~ loUI' ever A~bly . lRl'J!>rlly, 'tiact<ers demands . for pans, dredgts· said. · .... and metal detectots is soaring • Le>, ue '."'-•'"le· nearly es !ti.gh as the price of · flfl '!""'.'!"-.,., Ille pttdoUS yellow metal on · ·8'.CRAMENTO {AP) -The world.-markets.. v~ ,luncheon to t new . Leaaue of Calli~ Qties ~ A UPI survey of equipment ~the1ile.al ,today'1coo-d..len Tuesday sho~d '(> , , ~ · · · . business mcreases r g ' ··· " .. · ) from Z5 to 75 percent the BRIEFS "'"'·day gold closed oo the Paris fret market al 112U6 .. location·aftei two mayors and 11It's gold fever,11 said Frank Assembly Speaker.Bob Moret-Sullivan,· manag. er .al the U l>Qyootted the.Tuesday lunch Her Chafins ,All Heni, S.~Y Doctors ....ion. Mother Lode Skin Diving shop Gov: Ronald Reagan was 1n Sacramento. "It's juSt like SAN DIEGO (AP) -Ann Home Brewed Gasoline .. ~tudied by Long Beach ICl!eduled to ht the featured addlctloo. It's llke olcobol to Tallent's charms are her owh, LONG BEAC!{'(llPll -The sJ)eaker, today.' an alcoholic." not a contribution of medical city" goVemment, squeezed by Mayors Nonnan Mineta at science, doctors have told of-._ the.gasoline shortage, has an San Jose and Warren Wklener SULLIVAN SAID his diving ficlals of the Miss Greater.San · option not avililabl&.to many the leading soorce of petro- leum In California for more than so·years," said City Man-· ager John Ptfansell. Of ~rkeley refuSed to attend equipment used for gold Diego Pageant. . others: do-it-yourself gasoline. 'l'Uesday's luncheon at the Other contestants claimed Io this oil rich city 1.he mu· . '1a&-'• E!!I> ciW>. saylng recovery was doing • bnsk on Tuesday ,that the 2t-year· • J)itjp,fgqyen11ll!'!'1 4a.i".own S•." amer Set . tliil'tfilb'4tscrlminales>agamst ,business, and Ju. pans and old wmner. a_fashioll niodel, crude oil,reserve1t.~ • _ . ~ . racial minorities 'in its dredges were ' "up -$12,00fr a had enhanced her ~1.gure !1f ·• •''!'fie' city has been'buY,in)'·its • . '. f : .. · c .... • · ,, membership policies. ~~ J>!ISt. two months •• be r.::.:s'."'gery or "licooe tn· ga'?line from major oil com· Fbr "Sailing' ~- • De•th Bill OK said; his $re bas sold more Officials had Miss Tallent pames but so far has been "'." ••~ "~NTO (~) -· than 5,000 pans, 300 dredges checked by three plastic able to get any CO!?IJllll1Y to bid $AJ<1 PEDRO (AP) -The ;),l!,Vnt"UnL .......,tinn p to $400 nd bout surgeons Tuesday night, then on the contract for 1,.5 million · ~ • Seo.at.,:~ mmi """""'-""& u •13 a announced: "Whatever she · galloosit~forthecoming ~·c8tal~. known '\O ·hun· Has.f!Mi 8-2~~vil f:O a bm .~ :rpl=.-00 gol~ ~' won With is hers." year. . .. dreds of thousands as The requiring ~ e:iecuhon of "We're swamped,'' 5 aid Miss Tallent measures 35-22-The oil companies say that ~t · '\Thite ·Ste a -mer , anyone convicted of murder-Herman-Fiedler, who runs 35. with tbe shortage corhlng; they resumes its famed run to ing a po~_ officer. " -Fiedler Equipment Co in don't want· to be tied-to such Av~1on on Catalina Island june tlie11"' ,,Ii°!"~!~~ ::fl.Valrey ln the ~a flJUl Endorsed biL 'ii!,~~-~! ~ay 16 alter hting idle more than a Rldlanhoo (ll,~). to . LOS ANGELES (AP\ -unanimbusly approved a teso-y"""' btca11S<1 of a labor the Senate Door. U it passes "IT'S (BUSINESS) improved Gov. Ronald Reagao'.s , tax .l~ion to .~·a. com~ny to , dispute. '_. '~~.·In.it tt~ ~~. 'i""'8.Y.· •. .to the point where we've had to 1im.it4tion initiative has gained . tjeflne' ~ :city'•:·~ bf:J .re-· Jack Stanaland, owner of r • .tum away -. wort.:'· said the eodor&el!l!!'ll of the United ,.serl(~!o ~o:! l!it~ fieed· the steam-wwed vessel, said -e·sl'!lltFqe.I Fiedler, whose tw<>man firm OrganlzaUoos of Taxpayers ;.;r'llfk"!>lls'pl>lli!il eari'and ~.t!te ship was able to · 't . · · ... ' manufactures aod re tat ls loc. Howard Jarvis, the other municipal vehicles run-go back into service because SAN FRANCISCO (AP-)i·-''•custom dredges. "We're nm-group'c 11.cbairman, tolrJ ~.~ ,,. "" of an agreement reached with ·ant TG' . . .. ,, MAKE RO,OM FOR NEW SUMMER GOODS MON. THRU FRI • 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. SATURDAY .ID. A.M. to 1 P.M. SUNDAYS 1! A.M. to 5 P.M. •Pants _ •Sweaters •Tops •Skirts •Swimsuits •Blazers •Vests •Skirt Sets •Dresses •Pant Sets LONG & SHORT •Blouses •Hot Pant Sets JPJ CALIFOllNIA FASHION ·FACTORY . . s II OUTLETS r . . . . . ~. -... ;, .• . -..:. .. · -HUN11NG'tON BEACH . . ~ROEN ~~DYE · 9586 . HAMILTON lA HABRA 1 Sl tt llOOIHUlST '-.., I lloek South of Gardan Srova llvd. ARCADIA 2' W. L.1 Tvn11 Or. MONTCU.11 2' Blocks West of Brookhurat llLLFLO.Wll 9204 Alondr• REDONDO IUCH 1164 90, IUCUD ALl'HA IETA IMl'EllAL ClNTER1 I Ilk. S...·ef lmperJ•I Hwy,·• LOS ANeJl,P lll5 San ferntrido Rd. MAllNA DIL Ill 572 Waiah1"9too "" " ,; ,, .Paul Malis Co. rnoood·ln •San ·nlrig 25 percent •hove normal newmieb. -<tll8t the prop$.l :'.,'1'!Q 9etpecti\11'!-wli<.\lllat ~-t hi.-...., whicb allows a ' l'(lllClsto ,Soptrlor Court <lndllweoouldhandle'all tl>it "will tlo more than anything no oil compony would aupply •Jft~ ~'fl1"f'f1 -} Tµesday to sue the 'flnn's' came ln we'd be ·so percent we've seen to return control to tl)e-city of Long Bfach \JW}. , • O ~5. · · ' ,t;. .. -·~Paul Marls, above." the people.''• :~•-~llt4d>~'6eenl ---------------------------------...;.... ·and'•o&hti' former e1tecutive51---------·--_.;....;. ______ _,~==crr.~::..::'.=::c:.= ' ; ... for llarttages 'in e..,... ol 110 mill.ion, a 11 e g i n g acts dfltrlmenlal to tha"'!"pan;'. }!iris, ":ho was re~ced ~s piesid'.~( 1'Prjl, lj,,prevlj>usly <utd :tl'lj. dpmlges a1.uis1 board· ;aialrinan .Milton D. "tlewart, who ts president of Creative Cspllal Corp., the inaio< strekbolder in Paul l4r!s 'fl· • TetR:htt Jailed SANTA CRUZ (AP) -·A San Jooe City College teacher w!ll ht arraigned We&iesday gM of embezzling frpm a cripp~ed scamp. Lesfie R. Schtidt, 35, of San· ta Cruz. a health' education In- structor'' at the colle1e. was charp! • with' tM> counts of grind.the!!, deputies .Said.,,,; Santa' CLVa tAUhty district at- t&ney's . offlC~ said Scheidt pocktted p0y~k; meant !or .students working at the Easter Seal Society Camp. ., . S ..... ,, ' ;.. .. ' ' ~ . ears 11trtese .. _ when . _, .. w.-ythin(• getting claiit> ' · •.!111, COllll'.l!cated, ! we',. still .~I enouM., to kMw who yuu .,.~,j . j } ' . ' . . l .. Coron• d1I Mir: 27\4 E. Co11t Hwy. / Phon•: 1714} ~4-7255 .· Assets just tt.reJy over $300 mlllon • Huah Evans, Jr., ,Ptesld~nt , · Make ·Time Stand S.till · ••• -·PQ~traits are forever!· ' . , \ . 49*· fa ch Portrait Wfth One Subject ~· ' ' ' is all you p~y for a ,., big 8x10 color._portrait adults • children • •No age limit •limited to Oo&Ftlrt•ait . per Subject, Two Portraits per Family · ,. · \ ' .. • b'ables • Adct;tional Prints Available ~t' · - Reasonable· Prices ( no•extra ctiarge for<flandling and delivery 99c" extra for each addiliona\ P!!rsor•i! portr,ait "Plus Sales Tax • L , · . ' • ' HDUR,s~ Drily;t2.·n~n to 8:00 p.m. Saturday 9,30 a.m,to 6:0.Q p.m. ~un.day :l2 ·n~on t~4:BO p.m. • Now illrough $u~day, May 20 at t~e ·foU9win9 Sears Stores • · £'e' <ftl-(i -TORRAHCE.i:CHRITOS-. 1Nlll£WOOD COSTA MESA' ORANGE l::J • a.i Ll PASADENA BUENA PARK ' ILENDALE LAGUNA HILLS . Saci.sfaction Guaran111ed or Your Money Back , I• .• t -.•I· ! • . . ~ ' \ • \ I J • \ • FASHION :JI .ISLAND •: ' NEWiC>R~CEN'i'ER . . Pacific Coast Highway -Between Jamboree-. and MacArthur . . . l I ......,, , • . . " .. ., " •' .. • '· •• . • I • • \ • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Battle of the Budg~ The annual wrlthlngs O'llll' tile Laguna Beacl! city budget got of! to an oorly lllart-Cllbt-year, and in per- haps • more reoponsive manner than baa been the case In many past years. • After a good look 11,.l week at .ome preliminary ftg. ures showing an incoml _of about $3.2 mil!lon and p~ posed ex,,enditures of about $4.4 million, the council ordered the dty manager to sbarjien his pendla and start cutting to produce a balanced budget. l'revioualy, the oounci1 has been handfJd in late J1D1e a opending program whidl If not eolldly cast in concro4AI was at lealJt hardening fut by the time tbe cound1 got It. Then, tbe council could but whack off whole programs rather than provide tor the more care- ful trimming back of specific projects. . Part ol. the problem seems to be tbe opproach used In mithu! up the budget. City departmenl& Include all the m.,...£o.have items, rather tban being given firm llmlts frcm the start. Obviously such an approadl pro- duces "willh lists" ntther than budgeta. The council should remembe<, too, that the nifty ~· batched all year long oome borne to rooot at lune. And, they don't coot ch1Ck8nfeed either. P ark Funding Eased ' The plight of Pines Park in the Capistrano Beach P•llaadee seems to have eased somewhat now that the cub for a master plan of development seems to be avail- able. ' tab fo~ a JJW!er plan ol parb for the 5ovtll ~I area.So far, the mo~ey n""8c1 to develop PtneaJ>arlr'-. ,· ,' • remained frozen in !be county account ot ac<UmUlalecl parlos f-from developer!. Current policy .iai... that tbe cash can .be U8ed Qnly for new park purchases, not old park redevelopment. But lt ....,., evident !bat in the Palisad .. -r of !be district, new parka are not as import.aqt u th& Im· provement of exi&flnJ parkland& The parka dlslrict cannot ral>e enough cub on it9 OWll to finance such a development project, but county superrilon could easily autborue the cash from the...,. clal fund. The t>lanners working on tbe document llhould in- clude thaf point m their recommen<lationa. H~lpers With a Heart Three leadenr of the Soutb Coast area have been honortd hY 'South Coast Community Hospital for their many yean of continuing 6er\'lce to the hosplJ.al and.jbe community-recognition that is well deserved. · Adolph "PllJ>"" Kroell, 20-year hospil:al ou~ and former lloop1ta1 board chairman; Vioto< c. Andrews; chairman ot the board 'and Dr. Vincent Clll'l'Oll, a long- time practicing physician at the bospilal, were reci>g. nlzed for their hospital activities. 1-·The Daily Pilot is pleased to join in congratulations to'them. , 'In ICC!'J'ting his award, l{roch noted with pride; 'The one !bing that gave me ploosure in all these years is to t:all It the 'hospital witb a heart.' " - • • • Although the park ts administered by !be board of a special district, the County of Orange will pick up !be . SUch a designafun is made more valid by the serv· ices of community leaders like Kroch, Andrews and Carroll. s 'KE,EP YE~ MONE.¥. I WANT THAT ROAST gtE f SAN~Wl<H! Theater Buff? Try Thes e For Openers· fnm J.HARRI~ A theater buff 1n Boston suggests a quti about plays and the theater. To nar- row it down, I have selected only 20th century plays; you are to ldentlly them by the lolJowtng descrlplkins of the set· ting or opening scene. Hall right is an admlrabte score: I. M the cuckoo clock s!r!kes 1t., a dog is turning down bedoovers and run· ning bath-water. 2. On a oountry road, with one tree in aight, a man sits on a mound, trying lo take off his boot, when he is joined by a friend, whom he tells he spent the pttvlous night in a ditch and was beaten up. 3. A lady representing the Humanity League visits an island factory which manufactures mechanical people design· ed to perform menial tasks. 4. A man appean at the window or the mayor's bowie in a medieval British town and infOl'1Jll the mayer'• clerk be baa come to request hi.I own hang\ng. S. Foor men ~ three In white lie and tails and one lo .Weater and bare feet - are dancing a Mozart minuet with fuur women in gaudy evening gowm around the llower·laden coffin ol a women they have killed. 8. In the Uv1ng-rocm of a farmhouse converted into a school, a lady is coaching an apathetlc student In the reading ti Shakespeare, while other girts sew and study Latin. Dear Gloomy Gus Tbe people Interested In aavlng La· guna'• birds should apend """"' time snooping around Wycoff and Dyer Street.! where boys shoot our feathered friends with bee-bee guns -which ii more of a threat than cats. CAT & BIRD LOVER 0....., 0•• '*""''"" -........ """ .. ., ,....... ........ ,._.,,.,, ....... .... ,.... ef tM •••ru 1r . ._. ,..., Hf .......... ,...,,. .... °"" Htt. 7. A clergyman ii praying and weeping at tbe bedside o/. ha. daughter, when a message arrives from the doctor, reporting that he can find no natural cause for the chlld's illness. 8. A barker at an amusement park on the outskirts of Budapest ls standing at the entrance of a carousel, coaxing customers to buy tickets. 9. A theatrical manager and cast are preparing the rehearsal of a play wh~n they are interrupted by a strange famlly -a father, a mother in mourning, an elder son, a step-daughter, and two children. to. A v8Iet ushers a man into a draw.: ing-roorn furnished ln Second Empire style, and leaves, locking him in; the room coot.ams Do windows or mirrors, the ligbl cam>ot be turned olf, and the call beU cloesn'I work. ANSWERS: I. "Peter Pan" by Barrie. 2. "Waiting for Godol" by Beckett. 3. "R.U.R." by Capek. I. "The Lady's Not for Burning" by Fry. 5. "The Blacks" by Genet. 8. "The Children's Hour" b:J Hellman. 7. "The Crucible" by MU!er. 8. "Uliom" by Molnar. 9. "Six Characters in Search of. an Author" by Pirandello. 10. "No Ex.It" by Sartre. 'Model' Letters Vs ed To Boost Nixon Image The Committee to Re-Elect the Presi- dent established a natlooal "letter writing network" which continued even after the election to nood newspapers with letters praising the President and lambasting his critics. His conservative Critics weren't spared in the letters-to-editors c a m p a i g n • Conservative columnist William Buckley, for example, annoyed the President by critlctzing the detente with Communist Chi na. Out went a draft, which the "let· ter ~·riling network" was invited to use as a model for bombarding newspape~ "ldeotoSfcally oboesaed, willl rigid and inflexible atUtudes, William Buck! y sounds like a political Elmer Gantry wi his rjghteous outbursts against I 'Otinese (communist) devUs,'" the let· ter writers ~·ere ln$1ructed to say. "Buckley ha s no trouble supporting rigbUsl dictators, from Spain to Greece to Brazil. but he appears merilally in- caDable of recognizing that Wlder Mao thC lives of the Chinese ma."JSes have been greatly Improved. "BUCKLEY doesn't IMt11 to care that before 1149 the average peasant had no house, almost no clothing and never enough food, th.at he was exploited rtllhl.,.ly and died young. !'Bucklt.Y l$ not offering t he 'COn3er'Y'IUve' vltw of China ... What Buckley gives Is a radJcal, evangellt al hy1ter1a centered in tr.:e old Manichacan lhe«y ti ab.9olute good and evil." Tbe same letter writers, who were ask· , ed lo 1ttock Bucl<ley for his anti-Mao (JACK ANDERSON) Tse-tung views, were also Instructed to write letters protesting the ouster of the Chiang Kai-shek government from the United NaUons. LETTERS TO editors were stimulated on a variety of bsues from the Vietnam War to wage-price controls. The President'.s campalgn e om m 1 t tee prepared a blast, for example, at Rep. John -Ashbrook, the Ohio conservative, for criticizing the President's fiscal policies. The letter writers were urged to pro- test: ''How would Mr. Ashbrooll: malnllln his desired fiscol black Ink! By ratalng taxes. or cutting beck im>fic employment programs, or r<duclng bencl!ts to tho unem~oyed?'' AS LATE AS January 25, tm, loog after the President wu sately re-elected, the campaian convnittee urpd the ''letter writing network" to stimulate mail congratulating the Pruldent on the Vietnam cease-fire. "l£t's give him thpnks, PUBUCLV, In a Letter to the Editor -tJI two or three papers!'' the letter WTllera were urged. "And get two or three othtr people to wrltt, too, There are •lways Jot.a or voices telling the President what he'• doing wrong -let's congratulate hlm for doin& a very big lhJni -RIGlrl'I 11" Med School Enrollments Saa.ring Doctor . Shortage-··-May End by 1980 WASHINGTON -The prospects are bright that the shortage of physicians, which bu afflicted the country for more than a quarter of a century, will be overcome by 1980. .. Two key factors are behind the prom · ismg hope of attaining this Jong-sought objective: (I) Reeord • high enrollment in medi· cal scboo1s: as a re- sult of a grov,'ing treod ~ youth of inlerest in medl· clne. This marked tnterest Includes women, blacb and other ethnic eJe-' - menu. (2) Steady increase in federal un· derwri.Ung of medical schools and students under t he Comprehensive Health Manpower Training Act. In 1966 (ROBERT 8.AI.I .EN) the federal ouUay for this purpose was $6.8 million ; the amOWlt this fiscal year is 188 millioo -and is virtually certain to go up further ne1.t year. Strikingly revealing of the growing in· terest in medicine among youth is the 5,000 increase in medical 1tudeots :since 11166. . LAST FALL, the 109 medical schools In the U.S. enrolled a record 13,500 students -in contrast to a little more than 8,000 In 11166. By 1975, the Iola! ti enroll.., Is ,eipected to 908t to 15,000. On the buis of these estimates, the Association of American Medic a I Colleges (AAMC) anUdpotd lbal ·the cumnl shortage of around 50,000 pbysi· clans will be eliminated by 19t'K>. Dr. John A. D. eoopOr, AAMC presi- dent, attributes the growth of interest in medicine among youth mainly to two fac- tors: the feeling that practicing medicine is a "relevant" way to serve fellow men and society; a career as a doctor 1Mures an affluent income end a well regarded professiooo.1 and social status. 'Ibis combination of idealistic and pr8J!m.8UC factors, Dr. Cooper noted, is 1trikhigJy evidenced bJ1 the . following statlsllal: ln 1970, there were two applicants for every m~cal ilchOOi opening. Laat fail, 'the ratio Was '3 to 1. Alao, 7.1 percent of this year'!! freshman clus is blaCI: - three Umes the number in 1968. The AAMC expects the proportion to rise to 12 percent by 19'15. TODAY, medical schools get ap- proximately 48 'pert'ent of their ~ from federal sources. • 'Ibis is in maUtd contrast to a dec:ade or sO ago. Then ~cal schools were financed by foon4atloo grants, private endowmeois, state ind local COO· lributions and tuiUon paymeois. ~ Aa tl!eoe traditional ,.....,. """""" dwindled and costs soared, . they were replaced by steadlll' ~ federal subsidies. 1n additlon to direct grants to medical :!Chools and ~tud"1ts .under the Comprehen.s1ve Health Man pow e r Training Act, the federal gov..,,,nenl has also J>OUre<! around $'178 mllllm Into medical !CllOols in the form Of researdl programs and other projects' The government also directly helps medical schooil to expand by giving them an incenUve boou.s for each 5 per- cent increase in the freshman class - plus $1,000 for each gnutuated phy;tclan. . I ~ ~ ·~· Spoilers H·~pn~~, the Nature Trail To the F.<titor: Why must a few slobs ruin things for the rest of us1 'Ibis season the hllls above Laguna are at their loveliest with white, flame, blue, yellow, apricot, mauv~. and magenta wildllowers bejeweling the green, gray chaparrall. Yesterday morning the dew still gilstened along Ille trail, partially fog shrouded beyond. A cottontail bound· ed into the brush, tiny birds trilled mer· rily, hawks and ravem wheeled lazily overhead and quail and mourning doves called. from the lb.ickets. THEN just off the !rail ahead, I noted aomethlng had been added •Ince I last passed there two days ago - a pile or freshly cut ivy trimmings. Ah, well, being biodegradable, they will disappear in a few~- A few hundred yards further on, I came upon exhibit number two, roughly four square feet of charred, yellowish plastic foam. Scattered along the next few hun· dred feet were: a blue ptasUe inside car door panel cover, a green enamelled tray, two more pieces of foam -one larger and one smaller than the first - an empty beer can and a chocolate milk carton. Yuk! · MAY TBo.5£ assorted items return to haunt the perpetrators(.s) o! this outrage and may be waken from his Wms each night .sweaUng in fear of choking to death on them. To the Editor: NAME WITHHELD AghGst Tbe egregious letter or May ti by Elizabeth H. Powell leaves me aghast. l have never seen a more crass, cynical, and faithless view of our country and its polit.ical bases. To say that politics is a airty bu.sines.!, that politics will destroy personal lotegrity •. thal prote.stations of integrtty wiU be adver11ely used is quite 11ma1ing (if possibly momentarily true) but this ls only a moment in history. Ms. Powell wants the revelations of corrupt~ be burled! Then, of all things. she tugeats an assal!in's bullet a.s an alternate soluUon. Good Lord I CANN<YI' a person like this try to give the benefit of the doubt to many honest (although human ) people In the political world until they prove themselves ,..dlahonest? l feel that Ms. Powell lJ parroting a 0 oonsplratorial thesl•" or our history since WW II. Sure, crooks or wrorwdoers I n . . •" ( __ MMLB_. o_'.'. X __ )· Letters frrmi reackr1 'tit'-~tcome. Normally writers shouJd. :eonvev their messages in 300 wordr or ltss. The right to condense ltttttl to fit IJXZCt or elimi'l'late: libel ts rese:rwd. All letters must include signature and mailing address, but names may be withheld on request if sufficient reason is appaTent. Poetfj/ will not bt published. \Vashlngton etc., must be nailed to the wall, but by due legal process. No argu- ment. Howevu, in the long run, have we not faith that, our !mn of 1ovmuneut will and can try to do the belt !0< the major· ity? -R.C. i!ADDEN P ·res-c-11- To Ille Editor' Citieg have tradltiooally grown aJong travel routes or next to good' harbors. 'Laguna can dlredly link its origin with Laguna Canyon, our "corridor to tile sea." For years private and public in- terests have colncidod, leaving the Qm- yon In a natural state. Today we are faced wtlll perpetuatlng this symblotk: relationship between private and public interest!. We 'musl f1nd a way to preserve the Canyon to ~e Laguna. PR€VIOUS city ooundls have boldly approached thll dilemma, specifically the development of Sycamon: Hills, willl Ille auresstv...,.. of the proverbl1l ostrich witll hls Mad In the sand. Bather than standing and fighting or '"'" rendl!r1ni. they relied on the lnsidiOUI ploy of the nioriiOMUm. Tte time has come to reckoo with our problem. Sycarnort Hills ii the keystooe Quot~ ADM T. H. MOORER, USN, Cbmn., Joint ailol1 of Slaff, ta S.F. tallc - "Military fottA!I and weapoo1are11\)1 the cau .. of -talion; coolrontatlon Is caused by coolllct of naUooal lnte...is. The real k.ey lo worid peace ii not disarmament per It, bit! the peaceful resolution tlnulb\MaOtil_!l!lpa ol (U-1 conflicting lnten:IU." to Laguna . and El TC>r<I Canyons. Ted McCmville, county road commlssioo.er, recenUy 'suggested ~ discussing the controverslaJ 09o Parkway extent.ion that Ille coostruct!on of the Partway depend· ed a great deal on development plans for Sycamore Hills. Who else is waiting to see what happem with Sycamore Hills? RosslnCl'e, Irvine and Moulton? NEWPORT Investments has presented a development plan which exnibits en- vironmental consideration and architec- tural imaginatioo. Newport has sug- gqsted that several d e v e l op m e n t alternatives were 'studied and the current plan is the otlly one which would provide reasonable re(um 'tn~ private capital invested in the property and ensure that added tax liability would not fall on the r~ldenls of Laguna Beach. believe the Planning Convnission s d analyr.e the development ,.alternatives and ask searching questions related to what Newport actual considers a "reasonable return on investment" to be. HOW MUCH did they pay f0< the prop- l!rty? What are the curreot to:es on the property that go to the City ti Lquna? What Is the actual appraised value of the Jil'OIJertY today! If devefopnent Lt In- evitable, wby not a golf coune ... anolher Hope Ranch? <Jan the Planning CommlDlon tell the cltl2elu of Lquna who wan\ SycalllOft Hills to remain open space bOw this.can be aroirnpilsbed? Are ocjlllde funds available for public p~t Is a,bond Issue ·~ to buy the'~? Is r..oning ol the property to 1<strlcl development tegiil? Jn oummary, let's take pollUve action, will we ha~ open s:plc&1 or homes? Another moratorium ls not' th.; answer. WAYNEJ. BAGUN B e Is B ullish To the Editor: I would like to write in protest or your headline Tuesday. May 8, 1973 entitled ''Councilman not Bullish on Celebratkln." On the contrary, I am extrtmely buWsh on the Cinco de Mayo Celehrallon. 'l1IE TEXT of the article ai.o misconstrued what 1 stall!d at the Mon-- day night council meeting. A letter was written to the Chamber or Commerce slatilljJ the blood!.,. l/ullflght was illegal. Tbe Clmmb<r responded Ulot It had been checked f« legality and WlrS legal, and I thought tho' Chamber handled it very well. ON THE otil« band, the "Citizens fa< Action" c.ommittee, represented by Mr. William Hicks, came up wilh a letter with such absurd charges of there being some possible connectioo between the Chamber of Commerce and the Mana that at iOMI 1 persooaily will questlon Ille credibility of anything they ever have to off~r in the future. I look forward to the celebration next year and hope that the technlcality may be ironed out far enough ln advance to have a true bloodless bullfight included. My best wishes and a hearty well-done to those who put on the event. JAMES K. WEATHERS Councilman, City of San Juan Capistrano To the Editor; The termJnatlod of the Ellsberg trial is a perversion of our system of govern·· ment and freedom. In what other: country would a man who deliberatetr stoJe. go v e r n m e n t secrets ·be· tur,ntd kKtle to make in- credible cbarget' ~ . wreak further damage In a oatloit O~eoed 'llllll Ille peony anJ• an~"Qr .Orne super r.ealoua su~nate:iJ · · ~ · Perso0aJIJl1 i am-fahf;.W'ith the Uoniz. ing of Ell!berg. lt ·1'l1 •t•me that a person with ~ lnteDecililllaienta has not been agie to pit 't6iffi to more balanced use. •' LYMAN1,l!..~R .. 0u .... ~~\:1 . ' -t.~ ' .. ' ( ]!.,.,.., N. Wetd, Pub llcf", T-K...U,·Edlkir Barbara ltt~~ c j,.~' Editorial Pao• Edffot ·" The editorial ,JJIP of fM.-DalJ1 Pflot Sttk1 to infonn and ltfmulai. readen by prftenting on this pma diverw 1·commentaty'on klpics Ot tn- lfT'M by sYndkated colwnni&tl and cartoonista, b)' Pl'OVktlnc a rorum b' radtra' vWwa and by prnentilwtt\ts ~· opirtlonl and tdeu (II """""' topics. The tdffilclil -..... Dally Piiot _ ... ooly In ... tdltorW C.'Olunm at ~ top ot tbe P&&e>. OptnlonJI; expreaied by thl! CCJJ.. umnilb and cartoonilta .and, letter wrltt'rl are their own and m ~- im:nl ot their vlew1 by 'the ~ Pilot ftJUld be blfttrtd. Wednesday, May 18, 1973 ' ~ ,. I. I ' , • ~""""· Mu lb, 1973· • . e . .rdinated loo1< · ,e colors are · 1ght - les are bold. j .. 4' ' . e price tags are light~·-.. • ~·s short 8'eeve polyester IMf'- sucker shirt with long pofnt collar and +button· placket. Machine washable in sizes S,M,L,XL $13 Men's polyester knit slacks atyted with flare leg, wide belt loops an(\ hemmed bottoms. In great looking spring colors, sizes 30-42. Also in handsome patterns, 15.00 159s Men's polyester double knit can:ll• rr gan with zip front ind packet. Perfect for spring and sumnier In assorted colors, sizes S,M,L.XL. \ · =. JCPennev We know what you're loo,ing for. 498 Boys' Penn Prest• polyester/ Collon twill baggy jeans in patterns or solids. Styled with wide flare leg and cuffed bot· toms. Machine washable in assorted colors. In reg., slim or husky sizes &-20. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the ~ollowing stores: ' ' ·FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach '(714} 892-7771. HARBOR CENTER, Coste Mo,• (. ·.:: " ' . - ( } D~LY PILOT 7 ' - • . - ----- -.._ ' • ' ' ' .. . " I ., ' ' ' ' I I ' ., • ' ., ! .,. ' .. • • " • ' l ' r ' f 0An. y_ l'ILOT - reatgifts forgraet · on the go. ave on-our pe , iters. \ • - ' • • ' ' • ' . •• 'v ,y , . , -Ii.' -119:, '.:~ Sale.$ ' ' I .11eg. $139.Peflncr .. ieeoncoro•12et~ri~~ typewiiter with full 12"' carriage•. lo;lu 3 •~1 ; repeat action keys, personas touoh lelector,.cow ' set dial, add-a-type keys; and other quality teatu* only an electric typewriter can have. Pfca or EUf9 type. . SaleS165 ·Reg. $185. Penncreste Coni:ord9 PCA 12 eleGtrtc portable typewriter•. Our finest full-feature e4ectric portable has all the quality features of the Concord• 12, pf us power carriage return. Just a touch and the carriage ,rtiurns. ready 1or the next line'bf type. Pica, Elite or Script type. ~~.-----_ •AU Pi?nncrest!Jypewriters are.made in the U.S A. expressly for JCPenney i)y Smtttt"CoroTia.-·--- ' I ) • Sal• prtc~tcttwe thru Satul'dly • • rea travel companions. c . . . ~ ~..... -. ' .... . • ., 9~t. JCPenney atf,er/d<ryer with speed dryl.ng a11achme~t forcon<:entrated airllbw. Has comb and bruit! a'ftachmanll for controlled drying. . ' 13aa ' Penntrest• mist ltvling comb combines mist for 11yling with hor.lr for drying. lnctupes 2 combs and bruah attachrnenta. I f. -• -· ~ 1aaa . <." ' JCPenney.3-way f)ttraetter. Gives you a choff» of conditioner, dry or ateam set. Includes 2Q tlngle-free roller.. cllpa. conditioner. ' j ' ' .. Special9 99 A handsome selection of zippered soltside luggage. Choice of large tole bags, 21" weekenders, and 24" or 26" pultman cases. ,. ; " • ' I I i I I I ' . ~: ...... ( k~· . "' Special. -. t I } ~, , " , ,. . .'.' ~ .. ~. 'Out 16" all-purpose ~P,io(llg~M t>Og ~;··: " :~ Quality features Include nylon zipper, a11- wood durable frame. "tuck-tile" lock ck>sure•, he tapes and more. In burnt orange, avocado and blue. · fot1 echool, sporta, work":oc lny ew • · · u~. Fealures bullt·ln "~· frame, • ' ;:_ ' ' comfort grip handle, windoW l.D.neniepl•_ l .T' :--._ and easy slide zipper. ln=blut, biack, g,;.,t~" <· • • 'l' . ' ( ' .... ' \, JCPenriev know what you're looking for. We Shop Sunday noon .tG-5 PM at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND " Newport Beach (714) 6"'4-2313 . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hun!ing!on Beach (714) 892-7771. b. I . -· plaid or Americana. ,, 'sOotM JCPonneyColltofl lor _,. Grid-gift- • --. .. I t I I t r \ l DAILY PMT f • M;...tery DP':!P"DY Bailouts . i Taxpayer l f · TORONTO (.&Pl "" 111 d lll!l•a -· ....., membl!n ot there .... '"'1 blq-ln llld. "WllE!I n: llgDOd the...,. lhoy..u..e tbe01X111'1QJpull-counslnc buJolm. A good In r.ct. tlle Nau tried to Pl'ol. .1.. "*" -· , For Real (Tltltd n. 4 ffries,J Conpeos were 1ur1ous, poinll to tbo 1aot that 1be trad. for tbo ru, nobody aw ed a)uJ In on !ts fl4 bid._ IDlllY «>11trador> have told hold ,Grumman to Its n4 COi> .. ya lb e "Scrll>l>llll _._ JK!Ulgn Eroml~ _.,'DI aalJ Illa -Iha\ u.. -·~ "l.'\tilok II II DOI GOly paul-roe 1t ..,.11meor ano4het'lhll tr..:t up to tbo PolnLwbon lho ~.· -""" E'lllPAGI!:, , , -·, WIL), a lioqoeat ;crillc · t( ~ -on Ibo nt -be CUI-~ Dllldl u II WU Ille, It Is very likely that at the time they made a bid viability of the oompo111 WU ~ ,..:!::. = ~ uaed to rel« to, ~ _....... ' ·~ jeet. lld>oantll Da11glu """!" and ~· k!Je1I ~ tho Grumman delibenllJ ..,, theJ knew they sbouldn1 bhl In doubt. =-In d t ti ·~ &lllpa, Thete day.;·'u-. ',aid be .~,leell In flOG millioD ·io,er. def'°"' boidpl. -.Id be, cut deltld." .. Id David Pi.chrd. that law, bat It.., Ille ollly'-,"We &al caught I? a"pc>lley -! ~".,,,,,~~ tbe,y oRilf to ~ In-le~Uoo to ... -t b. Qa --D. lo. I. bodi In -.,..., And .,.,,,.,. debulY -.tary Of ed." ~.po~-~ ...... ~ ~ -· And lliO ~t)lllolll~ la. g~ ..,,....,. 'llblcll Uie fen-IJotM-ollk!lo1 -.e11: nobody dreamed 1 n !I a ti o D Def..,.., •1liey mlChl pttler ...,, to .set• conlr w1i ~, :Wt 'el ' I '.1')1bili; :.:rJ" baa·~ 141klng tl1e Ame-tu-• · ~ ball out "'!bat ... ,,_ .._ -would llU.plf the wv ~hair t,::.they were overly Ill>' IN AN mlfortuuale:CUlrlt of ~~ --".Ui&aUI ·It ,,~!Udzedl -., JllQ'el'.-,.,._,_,,._ • "'aii -' .-"':::-"°' -~ -".._.L'iilict0tir-"i(• ~ M ~ wtlll·a lanf' -, which Is one of Ille tbiilni t..-Gnsnimln; ~ .---in:« -" -,.,;, 8-DUy, 11-. ~ i " ls'V<!rY much Ill>' '"~• not ~ at an• term., toral ' 'pacbp JI"" tbJna loll of tbeoe !eUows after the compony illlle'~-= -::::-=~~,~-, !laca1 year goes by Iha! Posed to:.ll1!1"30rt of llllnl anct Joaepll G. GavlDJr.,~t Clll'Olllelll, wlilcb nlew ·•,11'~ t•ncffo becnocealllon. FH cootrac:t, the ~, Packarcl wu ,..ylJ>I total -·-a -tw _ _ _ ~ _ _ _ the ~tration Is very o1 Grumman, llld ID an JD. edi>rlte cmtract, and we .,.. ' "Bu\• the De!eme Depart· Department lhre1r oat total paehp wu a bed concept .,_ --fw --~~ mllCh aware that we are." to1;viewath11Betlqlogeofllce. tolrytooperatewllbltwheo -llaaabisloryovermany packaceprocum!M!lll .. Bulal Ind tfieN •woUldn1 be a~ °"1J·P11 •'1t'IM!t toe • r e Pro.mire said In a l<Celll In· "We'Ve,,.ifered from oveNll all ooodiUOO. ,.... ldacbd yean ol !lndlng ways to c!over the l8IDO ~offidals dt!Cld-more coo~ Jlke that ...... C. laffitefJ die ta'Vlew. "Whal we're doing Is natloaal lnfllllllll and a agalmt our ...,.,..._.. llloie feDows when they COl1le ed lo try to'hold contracton I? bectiiit,lh01 Mi1 -':." 548,.9977 .._._.e ""'ll"'iJ .... rt-lelllng the Del...,. Depart· ~· In °""' ),nshws Grumman crilica eoaood• becli: wilb loaaos, so actually Ille ~ms of Tl'P ccntracts """'' -...-menl u~ public funds to• ~ba~R~._:_~~~~~~~lhe~•~faclon~,~·~bu~t~lllill~~aa~y~tbe~·departmen~~~t~bu~~been~~..,~-alre~~ad~y~m~gned~,~·~~~~_i:N~EX~i:~'hlllblo~~~.......,~~~~-:..._: lllftlt ... e p1d>lfe undenmte a segment of• fu...U to uouler• private Industry. I'm hopeful terite c s~t of lbal there won't be any more ~ f:l~~::~~au;;:~~ '' Rnumbttol-and doesn't find De!ense IJOpart-•--ffi~·•· ~·--•~ menl o!fidals~dgtng to de_.. 0 ~ ~·-CapitOI Hill lo , ·" lhat one said llley believed ,, I b I I or anothet-de!ense <Oittraetor ~ tbe DeleMe 'Depart· has nm into finantiaf trouble me.nt bad always found IOl1le for one or anolh<j~ and P"BY to 1et whal ii wanted and that ooly a last tranallWon of '~ .. C8l1! of .!ta CODtrad<ln, federal dollars will save the t,b.at contractor psychology ls company and . its priority to expect bailouts u n d e r defense project. almost any cirC11JD1tances, u'IBIS OOUNTRY used to / TIDS INEVITABLY ts operate under the ·theory of followed by congressional ac-periods of maximum danger," CU!8tions o f wroJli'floing, 'lbomas V. Jones, chainnan mbconduct, mismanagement, and president of the Northrop then, laxity, stupklity and Corp., said in an interview. greed. In the end, the \>alloul ~"'!bat's what World War II is consummated and evel')"OOfJ nse buying was like. We 1.s aatisfled except for the-:.tQ. up one morning -and a payer who's probably going lo ma11'in Wubinglon waa !8ylng be asked to finanCe arlotber we have to have all these bailout again next yur., weapooo becalllO we mig!!l1bfi AMONG,_,, • .;; ... ilons 0n fighting Germany any day, ,_,.. "So the deleme coolractorl the_ Iheme: jumped In and went all out lo ·, -Tile Grumman ,'Aerospace, help meet this period of mu- C.orp. has a firm contract to lmum danger and we ~lld-Navy F14 Tomcat thatUweweni·tJrote-trytng·to fighters at what th~ : Na~ aave the mmt:ey~~&O.V ~· 1o be a wilrprtre or-ment ...wa iilake_..-w11o1e , $16.8 million. Mter accepting again. four ·Navy orden: for a total of "We're still thJnklDi -that 86 F-145, Grumman refused a way_ the contractors and the flf\h order for 48 p~an~ Pentagon _ even · though I ~UJJ~, the company ~d, 1t cannot think of a single cur· was losing money btuldmg the rent program whose failure planes so cheaply. The Navy would cause thb country to told ~ that if ii !all into the band• of the would take. the fifth order Russians. we don't stand nak- Jll the ?!d price, ne~ contracts ed any more. we have reuon providing higher prices would !or expect.Ing the government be negotfated for f u t u r e to procure on a more-sensible orders, basis and for Industry to pro- -When the Lockheed Corp. vide on a more sensible basis. introduced its LlOll com· •"But ure-psychology 1.s SS merclal ~ jet, orders years behind the fact." were so slow comlng that the ONE OF 'HIE most common ~ reasons contractors need bail-,...,_; ff d ,Ing out Is lhal Ibey have 'nt>'tlff ... ere bougblin: deliberately bidding front •-r•H na-for a project below what the thmal , itlflctlon project will OO!I just lo gel the and a slalnltage in contract, and then depending Oll1" IJ u • i n e • • oo a bailout to repair any resulting financial mess. ~ .:..:~ely~= of!lclals and other cantracton !inanclai etablllly of Ibo com· that a buy-In Is what IJOI pany was threalened. Since Grumman In trouble With the Lockheed __!lso was building FI4 Tomcat .. : . Ille Air Force CSA super cargo Under the °*"'a<! 'It ~ ' ' jet, the Defense Department ID 1*;" Gi1iffilUlt slJoUW, be ~ , wu coocerned '!!!'. fillillotf ~ ,il'lti al""a uni! ' public !unds, " . '!>rice of fll,8 .~ Bat the guarantor of a >: ·~Y cia1niJ that al that loan .....cl by '.~-lt'ls losiig fl.5 mUlion I itseU out Of , ' . ' ' ,~ 'Ibo Na 'bas -Tile Gap , ·, ·~ tbat4!"G~ will of Hauppauge, N,Y':•, . . , ilolll6 l!!e!lrsl nve·1o11 -or $3,l millioo contract iO( ·• : U4 air<:rafl ,~ at Jbe f16,I . !lre<ontrol units for ~·~'-mUlion-pr\oerlbe Navy ,Wili destroyers. Last year, wbFD ~otiate the price of l:l)Y the company elhausted Its ~ ~uent :romcaL orden of credit, Gap created , a. bl)tobd. Jbe 134. ~~W:d0!.:1~ ~:-,r.:'[~ TeE NA\'.Y could just ·stop the Navy for fL7 million, Both ·buying the ~!ant after 1! ge!J sides aald lhe action had the the. ftrSt flY~ ~' ·but if the effect of a loan. The Navy can entire Fl• _.program. cost had ndeem the stock beginning in to be ~veraged ou~ ov~r only 1976, but only if Gap iS show-134: aircraft, the unit p~~ per ing an after-tax proDt. plane would be.$25.8 nullton. So the classic buy-in, ball· WHEN mE N a v y ' s out scene is set. transaction with Gap W88 Grumman vigorously denies Be . -..es'81T A lot of pie need JIO'lo And. they need you right now! 'lbere'e a 1lllal need for quallfled people of all ages In the ' • t=~~a"tfntal'~ ... :. .. " . Southe111 Caiireiilla ~e!fe of Medlca~~ Den.at ea""'~· ·r, ~1.n1 ~ ror MEDICAL ASSIS ~· .:..~i;NTAL TECHNICIANS -ME l:;N,}IE PTIONISTS -and -DENT""'~Sl .. . • You get superb pro-!essloMl.(~011 . fqr an exciting lulln,lll health care! , . Lejim it fast! • • · These are 'no-nonsense'~~ with critical Information. You're taught qulddy. Eftldently. And, you go to WOik -fast! CAIL 635-3450 l>oitrightnowl You'll get"'°" Wormadon -end -p"I di-,.... how ...... -nally do ..... you! PIACE>IEN1' ASSISTANCE FOR GRADUATES l(f NO EXl'RA COSTI ACtREDIT!'D MEMBER, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF TRADE & 1ECHl'l1CAL SCHOOLS. AU.PROGRAMSAl'l'RO\IED FOR VEJERANS. . • ~ ' . • A11 ···91rl's. ·short ' sets . . o.n:,'·saJe .! Save 1 ~s%! • " Who goes through mo"' 1hort sell come summer than little glrfs? . Why not stock up now and eave. You'll flnd popular safarl'looks, tank1ops, • I • ~k tops, tllld more. /\II with pants to match. In all her favorite colors and all your favorite fabrics. Like easy~are cottons, polyester/cotton blends, oven polyealer knits-to name a few. Sizes for 3 to Bx and 7 to 14. Salo prlcff ol!oollv• lllN ~ JCPenney We know what you're looking for.' • Shop Suni:lay ·rioon to 5 P.M. at the followlng stores: • 1 • • ; . ' ----·---' • I! ' ,,• ' SOUTHERN CAUFORNIA OOUEGE OF MfDICAL& DENTAL CAREERS 1717501.JntBROOKl:lUBST,ANAHEIM 635-3450 • F1'SHION ISLAND, Newport Beech (714j 644-2313. HUNTING'tON CENTER, .... untington BHch (714) .892-7771. HARBOR CENTER. Coste ~ (714) ~5021 ,, • '• \• ' t I' ,/ ,, L • ' • , \ WedM1d17, ~ lb, 197J Ba Newport Praetitt La:wyei's Record Cleared_ 1 ' -~~ II ... SANTA ANA -A perjury Jqnes .......S 1 ,.... o1 the Jury ID llecenll<r, 1115 -Vllla ~ a W'"''" di\ m a Boord Changes Vote Rules __ .....,,._ • ·"In Firings. of Tqp Aides ByJACKBROBACK The foor other bo•rd Ku.YPttAldll•~-t~ c:oovtciloothatbrou&hthlma ,..tenoe _he recolvtd lit =tattllem<llt•od laod --ln•Ol•ed °' 111t o.NY .,.... '"" members 8tuck to thelr con-1'htther the re11>l1.1tion read 1U1Le prllon ternt of one to 14 December 1967 atttt being fa1Je ~~ Falll::l'ook acr-ie OWDfld. bJ i SANTA ANA _ Oranie tention that ~ would not be "catllO" ., .. ......,. ... He aid yean lw been 1Cn1blied fmn found guilty ol provldhit falJe ll . KodllnC and U.. -et i (:otml~SUpervlsotl decided pt01><r lo dlsml,. a depar~ the q...,lon ts "do you want the ...,..,i of Newport Btach testlinooy IQ a Civil trial. That Franklln and Siaoo ,,... LaWJeoce -1>o. -0.-. ""' lo reduct Ille number ,..... head wt-ooU!ico• the right lo RI lllandanll as atl<lmey Artbiu' v. J..,... testlmca1I it ""' aDeced. law acquitted. J-wu Way, Oonina del IW. of v requlM!d to fire a tJon of the intent and a hearing ouUiruld in the merit system." Orange Coonty Su p e r I or played a majo< role in an convict<d on two counts of Bootl>t Jo-. ~ In COW>IY partmom beod from before the board in' doled Battin finally agreed 10 drop Coor! Judge James Turner' $11,000 settlement in Jones' perjury and aent' to ataje the actlon and' -allepd -·to Urie. se8Slon. Ilia demand for the elimination ORANGE COUNTY ha> granted lhe pardon IOl!ght favor. Jirison. fur lhe!n tllat KacfiC 1"'4 -• The movt ,... urged by A> Supervisor R a I P h of nollflcatlon and· a hearing by the &S.year-<>ld lawyer who Jones and two Corona del The civil litigation .t that aented to the dnl and Glat hi ,5u...,...... Rober! Battin, wbo Diedrich ol Fullerton put it. before !hi board. is oow practicing in Newport Mar real ...... men -lloN!ld sparked Grand Jury actlOll ID· bod a letl<r wrltlm lo ~gured p"""1nently in an Ill· "We should give a department Battin told newsmen his ---------Beach and U~)and. Calli .. with V. Franklln, M, arid hi> vo)ved two breach of contract Franklin by Boothe wlllob RI lated 1 .mQYe to rire County head a proper bill 0 f move waa p aimed at the new license approved by salesman, Robert Sisoo, 40 -lawsuits in which Franklin out -.the propl:l9ed IWl'P Ind ~ Oftloer Robert particulars and explain .com-anyone in particular. the State Bar. were indicted by the Grand sued William H. Kaebioi ol pve Boothe'• eon1mt to It. 'D>mnas in 1971 . Alter Batttn'1 plet.iy why we lll' \billking ol, ~::;:_:_.:::_::_ ________________________ ~----~-------------"---'---------_._.,ailed . the board .,.. fring bim." creased the number of votes Ballin also objected to the needed to dismiss a depart· word "cause" as used iil the ment head from tllree to four. county's personnel and salary SuperviJOrS also provided for resolution which governs the proper notification cf the in· hiring and firing of depart· tended action and a..,.hearing ment beads and other person· before the board. nel. Battin wanted to strike out ''The use of the word •cause' the notification and hearing gives the department head's provision of the resolution. lawyer 8 lot of room for legal too, but was defeated in that arguments to just what is a move Tuesday. al ont ded B As aJ>JroYed WJanlmously by leg ~cause," c en at· the supervisors Tuesday, an tin, 8 lawyer. appointive department head Supervisor David L. Baker can be removed by a three-of Garden Grove took a differ- fifths vote of ' tbe board, but ent tack: "We should give the only after proper notification person affected the right to and a bearing. resign or improve hJ;i past Battin in making bis pro-performance m relal1on to ...:~V~ lhal the resolution whal we have found to be defi· ~---a four-fifths vote cient. The merit 1 Y s t e m was adopted 4-0 tn his absencehd be continued 81 far aa two years ago. He called the y county emr'}'Ye is con- actiap. ''emotional and ned." . lUlw~." · County CounSel Ad r i a n County Panel Funded -For Youth Employment SANTA ANA -Orange County has been offered $179,600 by the U.S. Depart· ment of Labor for a summer youth work program. The Board of Supervisors decided Tu6lday to tum the money over ·tO· lhe county's Community AcUon CoWlcil (CAC) .for administration. Robert Thomas, county ad- ministrative officer h a d recommended that the pro- gram be administered by the PEP staff in bis office l'ith assistance fTom the county personnel departmenL Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim thought the CAC was better set op to do the lob because that agency has done it for the past several years. Daniel O'Callaghan, CAC director, agreed completely S. Pacific Scliool Set AboardS1iip ORANGE -Students who want to get places at Chap- n1an College this summer will step on campus in California, attend seminars afloat on the Pacific Ocean and go to classes on Tahiti and the Fiji , Islands. The students will pey Crom $1,000 to about $1.500 to enroll in a five-week sunvner session on the college's Wo.rld Campus Afloal. The campus is an 18,000-ton passenger vessel converted for classroom and laboratory study as well as college livin g. The floating calnpu! sails from lm Angeles JWle 16, staffed by profeS30rs expert on the culture, r e I I g i o n , eCDnomics and go,vemment of the peoples of the South Pacific. There will be study stops at Tahiti. the Fiji Islands, New '" Guinea and the Philippines. The session ends July 21 at Hong Kong. The students can either fly back to Los Angeles or pay additional fees to sa il on a second five-week session tha t will take them to Taiwan. Korea. .Japan and l h c 1-lawaiian Islands. with ' Ciark pointlng · 9'1! that_ his agency had handled t¥ program with "unusual suCr cess" for fi ve years. · The vote to turn the federal money for the youth work pro- gram over to the CAC was S.2 with Supervisors Ra l p h Diedrich and Robert Battin supporting Clark's view and Supervisors David Baker and Ronald Caspers in opposition. Door Closed At Registry For .Nurses SANTA ANA -State action against the operator of a South Laguna nurses' registry has been successful with the sign- ing of an Orange Coonty Superior Court writ that closes the doors at the Crossroad.! Nurses Registry, 31732 S. Coast Highway. Judge Robert P. Kneeland took the action that closes a file opened when registry operator Christopher D . O"Keefe sought to run the business he said he inherited when his mother died. Mrs. Jean O'Keele died last year after operating t h e registry for 12 years. Her son explained in opposing the state action that his application for a license in his name had been delayed because of a dispute with his brother that has now been resolved. South Laguna attorney John Roberts Boyd said t h e business has been sold since the decision in la vw of the state. It formerly sent sorl).e 150 registen€""and practical nurses to five hospitals, con- vale!ICent and nursing homes and private homes in the Laguna area. -. For Sports The DAILY PILOT Is the newspaper for sports along the Orange Coast .•. complete statistics on local home and away games. sta!f coverage, more exclusive stories on Orange Coast sports than any other I o c a I I y distributed nc\\·spaper. CHAIN FENCE SAVE ON CHAIN LINK FABRIC <I-' ) PROTECT FAMILY, HOME AND PETS 50°/o OFF* 1~s1l~~LE~H.f:,N wARDs c-.. •t•I-fttltPtl1 •11111: ..,1111i.. al t1111rdw, lt•·l'llllfll..,•nc• 1•lv111lftd tr , • ..,. ~111y1., .. ,.. 1111r'k. Wit• l•Wk It. ""'I• '''"'"""' for •~Jr• llrlllflkllM. • •G11te1, P•"'· t.piroll, ffft .... -4 IMton.tSo .. ~ e•tr• .r o•r totulOI' ft ,,Sc... C•ll ,., frM _._.. ttdcryf • WOOD AND WIOU•KT l•ON ALSO AVAIL.AIU. ) -Freezer sale! Take ·the 2195 savings and stock upon fOo~ barg~ins . .____..____ _ ____J I \ Sale$2Q8 Reg. 229.95. 20 Cu. ft. chest freezer has a big 710 lb. capacity. Defrost drain eliminates spills. "Power on" warn ing light alerts owner to power failure. Choose white, avocado or gold. Color costs no more. Sale$2Q8 Reg. 229.95. 16 Cu. tt. upright freezer features a convenient defrost drain, "power on" warning light. full width slide out basket and 5 deep ctoor shelves. Choose white, avocado, or harvest gokl- Color costs no more. Sate prices eflectlYe through Saturday. Time saving appliances at budget saving prices. $158 Our fully automatic.clothes washer features a dependable pressure !ill system, non·kink drain hose, heavy duty transmission and porcelain lop and lid. In while. $108 -Matching dryer has a porcelain finished drum, easy access lint screen and security start switch. 24aa Ganislt;ir vacuum with convenient c11rrying handle and disposable dusl bag. Features an attachment set with crevice tool. up- holstery brush, rug/floor nozzle, chrome· plated steel wands, and long-life flexible hose. U.L listed. $148 Gas range has recessed lop that lifts up and off for -easy cleaning. Also fea lures an all porcelain cabinet, lightwelght alumin ized steel burners and remova~e broiler drawer. -JCPenney We know what you're looking for. J Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 1>4+2313. HUf:ITINGTON CENTER, Huntington B11ch (714) 892-7771 . .. • ' -- I • • DAILY "1.0l , .. • PEP Cash ' lfaltql Cue DoulJtful Judge Holds Porno Ruling on Sta~ .: ~ }· Geis Thin ~ ~~ -'-~9fd : • • , ... ,. , ' l n'Coun t'\t " ""'" B•OLEY He ,.1 May :Ill let the-\ext ,• J Of .. Dlllr ,..... IWI court action on rraud charges SANTA ANA -"'-'"'"e SM •n &,Ii -A move to fued when the Star allegedly u .. 9"& ,,ake one court action eut of ·Colu\.I)' _.,...,.,1 la t,aklng separa;e, obo.,..tty and fraud publishod ao article con- •• -stepa to phue oul· its Public 1 c.:are-es filed agalnsl the Los demned by District Attorney 'IC'. ~-\ .1 "1'"'.e~es Sta..· se4'-med do .. k•ful Cecil lilcks a§ "an open in. ' ':==i ..... en~ P.rojed (PEP) w.LK vltatlon to defraud lhe Pacific Santa Ana munlclpal court TeJephone company." , .... _ ' I of succeas Tuesday when • The U.S. Department of :J~ge reserved a ruling 00 the Deputy Dlst.Flct. Attorney · '""~ ;.' ";.;,. \. , 1~.• Labor gave DO!ice recently ORANGE MUNTY obscenity Issue. Gary Ryan said alter the brief :Mu•CMJ.O,..,,.,.,satlw r ~tMr... that federal tundl .Jru cover UU Judge Paul Mut said he will court action that it is ex· ··1:(·~·~:i!£":it t;;.~'°" only the period up to June~, '---------..-' ·ule at a late:-dat~ on the tremely doubUul that Judge ~11tti11ifi JWll"9'.._. ,. .., ner'.t<; of 0 b s c en i l y IC· Mast will rule on the obscenity "'"'"J'""'SON ,-w. "· 1974. -• the ch••ges before May 311. 110! w.,_ ..,,... H.;,,,tlft9tOl'I &Mctl. cusa.Uom fileu agalnst ... •1'1111 L-11• v .. ii LOllll euct1. The PEP program hu been newspai>f:r in Orange County. "He will be more or less LUND-llEIDEN8ACH -0.VI E .. 22, funded ahnost entirely with1 --------------'c...:.c_ __ _cc._ ____ _ _.. Ir-A •• n, bpth of 314 :Drd SI., 111~e~.J· _ John E., ». 112 federal money for the past two c1a., s1., HVt1tlniJJ°" ••AC11. •nd G•r years. County Administrative J .. a , us LI,..., Monrovl•. - teWna us if we bave a cue against the newspaper," he said. "He wUI be ruling "'1ay 30 on a number of pretrial arguments filed In conned.ion wltb the fr•U\1 charges." Ryan said If was possible? depending on the Mast ruling; that the two cases could be combined for trial at a later date. Llsted among the defendants In both actions are the High Class Publishing Company of Los Angeles and "40 vending • m1chlnes In Onuic• Cqunty ." Most of those machines were confiscated in police raids car· rled out in a number of ciUes. Los f.ngelea Ster editor Paul Eberle · it named among Star employes, who allegedly con- •plred to defraud the PacUlc Telephone C o m p a n y by' publishing the article, "Call Me Anytime, Telephone Credit Code for J973" an analysis of the system used by the com· pany to log and record credit card calls. OONE""-l.YNCW -0..lltl o., lO. l:J.a-Officer->-Robef1...1'homu-satd Florid• St., Hunll110lon INCh, •nd . LY•• M., 24, L-aucn. " most sectiQDI ot the project FAii.MER.JOHNSON -Roblrl W , «1, uJd 'JI be ··• A1111n.1m, .nc1 Jue11tl'I ..... JJ, ttss51 co sti . . carr)i:u out to the W1r11«, Hun11..,.1on &Hell. final June 1974 date EllMIN-OEDING -GIOl'WI H., 2nd.. u ' i.. 101 ""' s1 .. N1wi:iort -c11, ~ There are one or two Set· Cynlfll• L .• :W. An.1/wlm ••• t•·•-~~ will .hav ' lo be aYllD-UDAA. -Ht!H'on 'F. Jr., 2', ~ 'l'l'Uf\;N. , e Oll1l•ncl, •nd Not'lko, 'U, 6762 W1r1M1r phased dbt. IOODef' but most Av1 .. Hwillng!Ol'I 8"cti tin til h 1Hii:ETS-8EDllOSIAS -• Tllomls P.. can con ue . un t E: - 2', w1 W•rn« Av•.. Huntt~ tll>adline " he ... 1r1 , 8a1ch, •ncl AtU'lt, J3, AllM!ln• T-ln ' .....,.,, SAULMlEll·ATEINaERGER - . Slut1rl .. . 8J\S'Wj!f to a qQestion U' to F .. 26, 1113 Ltt1u11• crn .. L~un• which programs can continue Sell,, •ncl A119llH, 21 llll'r• Mtdr1 ' GIETZEN-GOLDSMITH' -John B., u. 'Thomas cited the county's 1,• e. e,., s1 .. C(l&t• M ... •nd Consumer Affaln Office and .. •nlc• L .. ». Long •••ch. SEAUDRY·PLANTE -GHbtrt ..... $t, fnnds allocated. to the Plan- LOllV 81..:11, •nd Sylvl• D , 60 7$91 • Ile rt t f D•nut1t or .. Hunnng1on eHc11. ' n1ng pa men or support For 3 days only. Wfire out to beat ~ anybody's prices on these famous brand --- ........... ... of the General Plan Program. M.-rr1•a• llctnH1 wer• 11W111 to The Consumer Affairs ·Office tilt tollowl1111 •• of Mly_ 10· SM1TH<ll:IPP11:N -crt1,· ' ,, ... an ex•-ple of a pro1'ect •,11u1owtrt •lid ChrlllfM M.L2~:·211M1l ..... H rookhur" st.l?.:Huntlnu1on D•.cll wholly funded by federal PEP ~~?JOI"... -WIU41m c.1 t2. ftmds he S8l'd GofT..~ ..,..,_ A., 10, 72161 • • BLAlll·MIC~llll~~ 11a.c"n. uo Supervisors have indicated golf sets and ten_nis rackets. ;r·:r~~m. ,,_., •nd o.w. T.. by past actions that they in-·~ if.~~ .... o.=:'\~io.".;.,.,"1';1 tend to keep !be ~MU!Jl!f M: L'~'!~lt.ic'~oell _ SllCJl'ltn c., fain agency lD operatiOI'i aft.er t;e. ~~ lnd l""'-A .. 21, I.he P~ funds run out. o;~u11-M1Lau11N .._ O:!!, ~ 56, •nd PEP funds have not only 11.-rlolt• M.. 0. ~-·of 4251 .been .aBocatod lo the -·ty "' lll'rntlull Or .• HwtllWIKllJJaKll ... u ..... GOADFREY.,6,111.\S -MkNM L, 21, 'bUt a1ao to some o( the Jar&er l~1...,C.~11~vr.• ~·~11n1111:1n 1Hc11. cities. 'l'boise communltieS are NASH-WESYAiST -Sr.nn..11 11., 71, -1--f·-• ·WI'th the need lo ~'°'8 GrowHurifMO SIWon A., 31, aloW ~~ · • ' LESOVS~~ ~-Btecft V phase ~finaooe --'--· &·-~=2i\;' -t.11:> -Uiio..W ·......thezD. ..tbiauiti~~ lax ~..:::--;---, n,•~n'l1~ Limes. M., 1' • mnney after June 1974. , P~~!4,Q~~~~s~~;;---;~{I -me-:~ Jftovlde·cf ..... 0"1'-\~f&'~.£~·~.!l~ v. 21 tra~:.;.and _ Jobs1. f;o r t~Ofn.rl::~r ~o.. aa.c11.' •ii.I unemp~~ and m nor I t y co,NNERS· I k -Jthl "Onl . ._211 persons ln government work. «Ill LI •• M!Won \Ji.to, -Cor111o1, 21, ~ GILLETTE·Wl~Y -Lan11 W. :n, Mlorln• Del , 11M Jarile A' tt; 1'51 ..... ~,.. ti ,,.. .. • . Balrer LeadS KEATl'NG·-. ALO -lMTY ~ ' . • 2•, Ind l.VMI lo! bottl of ·11f l6rli . ~ic~~t~~ -LMrt F 2S '~ . ' Ind Suwri I., lloftl of, 1210 -~Ml[ N'""""°rt. N a..at State U •t PENNINGTotMl:UNYAN -OMI,.,. E. , m "'a .. 2'_. • Colton St., N.wpon , • • ~ tldl, ~ ..... )Ii! c.rr1q .• ' ,. C~N·Al8Afl -MMll S., "6. Md • w..~ · r -" • F .. .ft, lloftl of._ W•mw A".. SANTA;i-MfA -SUpeJ'vbor Hunlll'l!llOfl hKfl · ,. H"LVORSl!:ft1H£11~ .. -T=• Devkl L. Baker of uarden ii.J!.'.,;;"'h~i .. J:'\s.~:;:1;::: Groye bas been ele9'J:~"d · CA2RLSON<O.L.All -O.vtd a .. u, ..1.-1--"--AZ •--w' ~·le 101 W•rrllf', Hl(".!1.~~ Md ™"""'! ]1!1._Mlll;O _. -f"'' .. c~m':'v~·ct'1~111 ,._, ,., SoUd Wuij.~Jl..e:-'?Q.U't c e • m~~at;'~ ~ .... ,,. j Mam&~ .. ~ 'It m -li\llltt!IW L.,.J!.r I ''!be}:.~/~ W &I t::",,..~,,. _. °':1!£'-.estah&liiSif;"1li March to G~~'e.G-fjlC M"ld -::V.,~:. fotmullte -·a ~_...-~~ w~zfti~, ft'; ~oblrt L , a : ;ete p>llcy ~.managment'Clf ;s:t"' ' 7701 W•mtll'• Huntl""'°" INCi! • .iid ~ IOlid W~. Mloro•m 11" u. L.A.. • Baker recently completed a Death., Notices three-year stint as chairman ol the state Environmental Quailty Study Councll. IAHAnll • Kon11911n-NICPIOI-••rotll11. Aat 6', ' of '1lll ~tflhldcet Dl"lve, HllllH"!Wr ' 1::r-=09 "'1:..1.1'Tc':'JJ5 di-:.,,, .... ; ·\-Sex . ' Suspect . ~I-P , ..al •1111 Chris-. t11n 'h.r"!:i Nlchol•in 8Mt>ehls1 four lll'Mlktl . ll:1e1ulwn MrVlc•, WeOl\olldrt, 7~SO PM, Pttk F•mllv Cdal'I .. 1'--' Home. Fu,.,.,., .-..vie., TJ.~ SI. John tM 8•pttlt O<'M Cllu~l'I. An•ll•lm . Olr W M F•mllv Cotonl1I Funtr•I ._,, ' FaCe$ Trial ., JOHNSON 'SANTA ANA -A Santa E Jor;,,_, 5ot 2tt11 51" N-rt Ana Helghta resld nt -·-·• "<"· 0.11 "' dt1t11, M.-v 14, 1tn. e a ... ~u:M:U .wv!Yed bV 11"1oUuQt1tw, Gr•lt Z..mm.1. ( -·-" I st' Swvk:M. n.w.uv, M'\l 1', 1 PM, a.111-O seauauy mo e mg a e~ <'osl• ~ n..111'1'. 1ni.nn.nt. neighbor's 13 Id PM:iflc view Mm1or111 Pane. 1.111• • Y e a r • o gr:=, F1111er11 HotM. eo.r. Mtu, ~ter who told p:>lice she MYSllS a18o was given marijuana VWl'I L Myera. .-.g. ,,J t"ftldent of :1!1 from a supply be kept under lllMcll. De.. of °""" M.ty 13, l • the bed . hi partment h Survhw w two '"'!'Ji.''"' a\..:kan'I"' m s a al ~ Nc~~,,r.;f .r!..~ "~ been ordered to faee trial July ~:: 1~. ~""~~flMI~: 25 in Orange County Suprrior 1m11t1t Mortvlry, Dtl'9Ctora. Court. Jotin It. w.1en~",lfi."~, .... T"1'..:..A Kavind Cldarkb CocJ00hraneJ , 2AI, c-c1t1 Mir. 0111 01 0..111 • ...,.., ''· as or ere y ge ames ltn. Survived 1w "11-. Flor9flcl1 ""·-to t t h' d1Ulll'ltw, Mrs. Robert l'•utltJ . ,._. .. wuer re urn o 1s f.~· ~~~··1:1111.,.. ";·~~= ~ courtroom July 20 for pretrial ~~ ... v't.z1c~ti.~X:t5· action on charges of rape, sex ::,,~11c view ~~~·~"fti perversion and possession of C011•~~s. = confl'lt.IM to w.. rN.rijuana . He is free on his C1~""lr"' .... rcll DIDI. ol Hoao Ml!l'IDrW • Holllll•I. l"Hlflc ·vrtw MOl'tu•rr. Dir«:· promise to appear. tor•. Cochrane wa,, arrested last YOUN• J I 29 EOIVlam Vtln!Q, 1'30 l 1k1r 51., Cit.II U f · MeH. 0.'9 of ,,..,,,, Mio¥ 12. lt73. Survtwd ft Wiit, Hll1n1 '°"' Bruce1 di"°"""-Norrn1 Jtlnne Btclll1I Md N•ncv c-t•1 bnlllltl'" Clllr1ts Y~; •1111 lllrtol or•ndd.-UGh~•· Gr~ J P " li · Ik" h wrvlct, Frld1y, M•Y 11, S•W'I · ·o .... ' at Vlll!'IM c . m. I. r v . ••1tz·81~rori ~ F...,,.r•I HorM, Coste Mft1, D rtetors. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTIJARY 4%1 E. 17tai St., Colla Me18 ....... BALTZ-B,RGERON FUNERAL HOME Corou del Mor m.ttlf Costa Mesa Ml-UM I • BELL BROADWAY MORTIJARY . 111 llroodwoy, Colla Men LIWGI • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTIJARY 1711$ Lopu Cuyoo RAI. flf.ffll • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARX CemeWj< MorllltY '-Olpe! Sift h<Hlc View Drtn Newport Bea<•, cawo• MU'I• • PEEi( FAMILY 001.0NIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 Botu An. 't\'11tmlnster mms SMmlS' :,R111AllY In*"' 81. Hntlqtoo -. , UI- Trial Slated SANTA ANA-Herman Let Cloo_J..,.. .-June 25 ·trial in Orange· County SUper(or Coort for the Sept. 11, 1972 .!daylng of Buena Park detec- tive, Jll\d .Cate, ff,).,. , . 1udge Jilmea K, Ttiiner aet the date Monday after pro- llOllncilll Clouston, 37, sane and fit to stand trial on charges of murder, kidnap and burglary. Clouston was arrested five days after the shootlng, follow· Ing a manhunt ,lhlvlltiJr. Lill Angeles and Orange &iilnues. He h .. be<n held wllhout ball. - Poet Schedules Reading at UCI UCLA Engilsh instructor and poet Stephen Y emer, Thtll'!day at noon, will give the final reading in a UC Irvine series ol!erod by the Department ol Englllh and Comparative Literature. Yenaer will read hia own works In the writing center, room 126 llun\lmlU. Olljce Building. The publlc ts Invited at no charge. , Now4799 " Rtt. 59.H . Chi Chi Rodriguez golf set. lmprOYe your stroke with these 3 woods and 8 Irons. ~I dubs have at eel ahafts. They're available in men's right hand, left hand, ·and youths' right hand. -· ·-. Now$32 Reg. $40. Set of 3Jack Nicklaus Golden Bear or Lee Trevino Professional woods. AU oome with steel shafls. In men·s right or left hand. . ,~ . . . ·i Now~li99 · ·- ffeg. 69.99. Jo;";Ja<:k Nield~ Bear or Lee Trevino Professional irons. All come with Sleet &halts. In men'sright handorlefthand. · ' • }:"' ., , .... ~ Now1591 Reg. 19.89. JCPeriney golf bag. All new bag In wet-look vinyl9. Comes.in as9orted colors. Now1839 Reg. 22.t9. JCPenney tube type viny:I golf bag. In assorted colors. Features shoe and shag bag C<.Nef. Now1983 Rq. 24.79. JCPenney prof811ional style golf bag • .Detachable hood, zippered ball pocket. Wet~look "Espana" vinyl. .. • Now2399 Reg. 29.11. JCPenney tube type golf bag. Features full length tubes for club proteclion, shoe and shag bag cover. NOW 29B8 Reg. 37.95. Wilson T2000 metal tennis racket. Various grip sizes. NOW 34118 Reg. 43.99. Wiison T3000 metal tennis racket for the stronger player. Varlou9 grip sizes. NOW 7118 Reg. 9.H. Spalding Erik Van Dillen Tournament tennis racket. NOW 11 118 Reg. 14.19. Spalding Matchplay wooden tennis racket • NOW 18118 "' Reg. 24.99. Wllaon Jack Kramer autograph tennis l'ICket. N'ow1Pi';;· Reg. 2.49 per can. Wilson championship tennis ~ Ir\ re:gular iind heavy d~ty conStruction. Wh~te or yellow • NOW 1n Reg. 2.49 per can~ Spalding championship tennis balll. In r&gular and heavy duly conslruction. White or yellow. Heavy duty In fush ia also . NOW 1n Reg. 2.2' per can. Slazenger championship tennis blllL NOW 155 .. Reg. 1.99. Wilson vlnytracket cover. In blue, red, ra~ or green. NOW 166 Reg. 2.19. Spald1ng vinyl racket covers. Atsortld colors. JCPenney We know what you're looking for. Sliop Sunday· noon to 5 P .M. at the foUowing stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newp-;;rt Boac h 1714) IM-2313 . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntingfon Beach (714j 892-7nl. • ' • I I ' I 1 I . Free Man ' Michael C_ Christie, 21, leaves the state re-- f ormat<>ry at . Se.attle with h 1 s girlfriend, Aleiah Narvaez after spending three years -impi'IS<>ned for a T1>1> bery two other men say they committed. Smuggllag Ploy CourtBacksBan on Brothel Sewer Okay. I ' ,.AtfuE CITY (AP) Volen \" lllO ~'fJllll!" Himamyan Bear C'RSON cm, Nev, (AP) -The Ntvoda Suprtrne Com1 has ppbeld Llower courl rul- 1.Dg that bb:ted"r-a woman from opening a legal brothel in nearby Storey County. "maoopoly" 00 1he bmlnest-ficiab d<tmnlned .,.... "" ID-Clly -blllt .......... t4 suPiwii£ vesilplloa "not to ilale IUCb mJllio111..,...-boad -· 'ltlo lha~"lbe-"C-O•t-.m~~: ~£tothe~n: >-oi< la 1he tlectloa lnvohloc Discovered Dead bosi.-wu al best, wt 1lllnk, 1lad fallh , or oll>enrlie lm-nvtTOftll 'hllae wild Tl-. of a prlvllq:ed nature." pennl&ll ~ ol dllcre-public utility cllstrtctl ~ .. r llon .... ··-ly boarll" 1J4* to• 2$7, __ 'l)le~~court~:__isa~1~d~co~un~~:_".o~-~~~.,,:.._:~::._:::::::__:::.::__ _ _:_:;_: ___ -;--___ ~ THE SUPREME Court 1- REDDING ( APl -A 250- pound liimalayan be a r employed in an exotic hashish smuggling scheme has died In the mountains of Northern California. The bear weighed a "withered and emaciated" 65 pour>ds, authorities report. They said porcupine quills im- bedded around its mouth prob- ably impaired his ability to ~ eat. The be<!f _wa~ found dead on the side of a Siskiyou County road about IS miles from where it was released early in December. AllTBORITIES SAID they believe Smugglers who used hollow walls of the two-bear cage to import $50(),000 worth of hashish from the Far East turoed the bears loose as soon as they gqt into the woods. A 'hunter shot the other bear a few days after the bizarre smuggling story started to un-~ fold. The bears' story began Nov. 28 when custom.f agents in New York .drilled holes in g1_g« _carrying the t w o Himalyan bears fr om Kat· mandu, Nepal, and said they found about half a mHlion dollars in hashish lining the cages. Monday ruled agail'llt t h e remote, for~sted area ne'Br appeal ol lreoe York, wbo had where they lost s.l.ght of the gone to COlff. after tbe Storey truck. County Commilllon refused to They also arrested three issue her a business license. persons Dec. l, and four more Th~ woman, who rune a later for invutigation of con-brothel in Pershing c.ounty; spiracy and smuggling. Their argued that Joe Cooforte, the trial is tenlatively set !or June 'Sine• you a/t,~h•r•'s only person authorized to run 11 in U.S. DistMct Court in 1l=~w:ha:r~/':tl~do:, D:lc~k~. ·_jj•~l~eg~a~I ~hwse~~of~p~r=osl~ilU~l~i•:n~in~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--SacramenlO. Storey County, h a d a STATE FISH and Came of- ficial s were dispatched to tilt Si&kiyou C:Ounly roadside aft er two men reported spotting an ailing bear there Saturday. But when they arrived, the bear was aJready dead. Stale game official Paul Wertz said r ' it was "an apparent victim of starvation . He may have been unable to fend for himself in these foreign aur- roondings." ~ Awaiting trial on various felony charges in connection with lhe case are Charles Earl Woodson, 33, Kenneth MoTTOw, 25 and Donald Hotaling, 28, all of San Francisco, and Peter 1banez, 26, Warren Pierce, 27, Charles 1'1urray, 20, and Ruth Doorbar, 40, all o( New York .,_ City. the swimdress 'from Penneys. This is the kind of ttery ·· that will get you any here . San Diego's Alessio Ends -=-~ail -l-:erm ON DEC. 1, customs agents SIBERIA N CUBS BORN followed a truck carrying. the SAN DIEGO IAP) -Three caged bears -which had been Siberian tigers were iborn on shipped .by air express to San Mother 's Day in the San Diego Francist0 -200 miles__north 1.oo, a spokesman has disclos· toward the n;iountain town of ed. Big . Bend , about 50 mites The cubs have been ignored noi'rftea!t.-d-Red!'.Ung. -by their motlrar sin~ctlll'leir Aglnts IO!t"" slghr--ot-the birth 'but arc being car for STElLACOOM, Wash. (AP) truck in a dense fog, ofr1cers 1n an anima l nursery. _ San !Diego multimillionaire said, but found the. empty They brought W the John AlesJlo has been released • cages and the hashish a few number of Si~rian tigers in from McNeil Island Federal days later -hidden 1n a the zoo. Penilentiary after s e r v I n g three yea rs for income tax evasion. "I guess il's nice to be out," the former operator of the Caliente Race Track in Ti- juana, ~lexico, said Tuesday . "mEV'VE TREATED me very fairly here. Now, I'm on my way home to see my children and 12 grandchlldren.'1 1 A\essio wa11.. greeted by his wife, Edna , w'hen he debarked after a short ferry boat ride from the hea<Jlly guarded federal compound on the Puget Sound island . "I've waited a long time - a long time." said Mrs . Alessio , patting her blonde hair. ALE~IO, ONCE a Southern Caltfomlan busines11man and civic leader, completed his term after being transferred from Lompoc F e d e r a I Penitentiary i n California. After Investigation of alleged irregularity at Lompoc. he and others were Indicted f o r bribery-conspiracy. AJe:gsio's son, Dominic, was kldicttd on charges ol of· fering btibes and a former prison official was charged with acceptipg them. 0 TH E R INDICTMENTS charge Alessio, his .son and two brothers with conspiracy to defraud the U.S. govern· ment by bribing prison of· flciab. The trial on these charges Is set tentatively Oct. 23. Alessio, who also w a s greeCed by three daughters, indicated he would Oy to california and attend the bcibery trial of Dominic today. "I will be with my son.'" the blue-suited Californian said. ALESSIO SA ID he hasn 'l though t much about future plans. e .H;a& .. ~Y~ ----SPECIAL FER! • FREE Pl Ee OF Pl NEWPORT BEACH 31 I 0 Newport Blvd . HUNTINGTON BEACH 9791 Adams FOUNTAIN VALLEY I b 155 Ha rbor Blvd. ..... !hl.-11> ... _ •llll,.ouMl'loo !CtH100 ""''no"•· C-••~ .. _ ............ _. Oller ,_•"",....., ""'"""Oll<omi L'-Oot -tl l ..... ,,.... ..... 0 .... -..... ,,., °''"' oood .. ..... . ... _.,,,,, ...... 041 ... o.ci i·lt 11.m. Tllrv w., llrd, 1'71 New Clinics Now Open COSTA MESA-HUNTINGTON BEACH l indoro's unique program is a safe and practical melhod for the entire family to lose weight and le arn how to maintain proper we ight ... under th e strict supervision of Medico I Doctors. medical weight reduction Coll lor 1nlormol•OO Monday tn1u Friday 8 AM fo 6 P.M. UNDORA:r . MEDICAL CLINIC ~::~~ .. :~~~.IACH 557-1893 llEWP!llT BEACH GARDEN GROVE LONG BEACH 645-3740 534.205 I 426-6549 ll "'4•1t•MI ... PASADENA 796-2614 , .•. ~ .. ORANGE· 538-.2395 1votift-C...,_,. ,.,. .... ._..-ewe, WOODLAllD HILLS SHERMAN OAKS WEST COVINA FULLERTON LA HAllA 347-5647 789-7103 962-3438 870-9501 694-1029 ~ .. -.v1c1..., c;.ilt;,,.v ... o,1 Me..... Slt!tC..... M~ \f'"lt .. ttll1, l"l.tM ..... llq, 1141 MNilelllldt. MMli .. IWf. ' \ \ I II · JCPenney We know what you're looking for. ' ' The pleat skirted swimdrMS of nylon tricot. Navy, brown, or green/white dots. 1().18, s14 . The long printed swimdreea of brushed nylon. Putple o~ yellow, 10·18, '14 • The scalloped tunic of nylon double knit in pui'ple, 1 green, pink· or royal, 1().18, '18 The empire swtmdrea. Of Arne!9 trlacetate. Lota of prinla for sizea 5-13, '17 ' Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport ' Beech (714) b#-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington HARBOR CENTER, Costa Mesa (714) ~5021. • Beech (714} 892-777 I, -· • - ; I \ lOO oce suit 1 Su Atl by D be \ r tityF ~Suit -- r • DAILYl'ILOT J3 i FBI Chie f Admi ts Hyperbofk '.~ HO<lle dom..UC adviser John D. Ehrllcbman . • On Se age Dump No Guilt On Rap. ·-~Fann.in Not Sa Prl- This sign'!• a 1looded field neu Denver ad- vertises 20 acre.! of prime land for sale . The trouble ls, nobody could see the merchan- dise last week wbeQ it was covered with flood waters from the South Platte River. WASllJNGTON (UPll - Acting FBI Dir<ctor William D. Ruckelshaus has apolaslzed to Treaslty Sectttaey G.eoric• P. Shtltz for a faceCious and ·~M'i ALLU8ION to iana wrutllng' -an effort It hyperbole at a tilna wl1en DURING UIS news um-reallty--eennot abearit u -'"I ltrence. lluel;tlshaus-lllld that -.ggeratl!>n;" he -- . ~ .. .. " . . . ' . SANT>. .BRBARA ( -r Calllomla's oldest national Thls ..;,Ide dty II ~ ...-rn.: ~ belnJ wom..down HOENIX, Aris: (AP) Pant FanDln (8'.Arlz.) declared 1%tai11 legaUy --o f misleading reference to "arm wruUing" with Secret Service agents over mis.sing 1'""81 files at the White House. "when we took the papers out "The gloves were never don- Lhat resulted. in this, it was the ned. the fighter• never in-- mast diffJcult lhl.ng I've ~ver troduced, and the bell nwer l had to do. We almost had i&o rang. in short, the bout Dl\lfl' r arm wrestle wltb the Secftt occurred," said RuckelshaUJ. ..~ Servi 1 be< .... who promJstd to "rffiraln my ,> m1M'fl -· ~ •*8use'OC too many •bttors too ··~raw sewaae '· ifJd too: tittle fimuicing, Of. nken drivtng 1" t alns th t he is be~. •1crilti(l¢" over it. Ruckelshaus told reporters Monday that records of wiretaps sought in the Pen- tagon Papers trial in Los Angeles, missin g from the F'BI since the sun1n1er of 1971 , w;e found Saturday in an of- fi safe of former White ce ater on ause t.r-penchant for tevlty." (·) records were gone." • A Secret Service spokesman ·":i:.• ocean, 'the state con in a ficials say. suit aitinst the city. , • Mllltona of visitors come to The civil suit, I' : n.rt .. the 80-year.old forest every Soper10r Q>urt here by ~ty ytaz', orficials report. Most Fannin telel)honed; a television station here Mon- day, ju.st be(ore the statiQn carried interviews with police officer Joe Muno,z, who ar- Ruckelshaus Tuesday wrote said MOfld~y that RUckelahaus ~ Shultz. who has jurisdiclon and an FBI agent were In the over the Secret Service. that Executive OCOce Building for Atty. Gen. Eflwi!> J 1 el, leave the facilities a,s they asks the court to a "rowld them, but varlditts ac- count for thousands or dollars rested the senator Nov. 17, =======.,.. and former Assl. City Alty. 7 his agents ·'could not have on ly four minutes, and that been more polite or efficient" ··v.·e gave them the files they in releasin~,!j? FBI r_ero_r_ds_. __ ,_cqc.ue_s_t_ed_'_' w_ithou __ 1 _in_c_id_en_1 __ ECOLO Y in damages. Poachers are picking off the forest's big horn sheep; fire, Robert Updike, who said he resigned because a drunk driving charge against the senator was dismissed. smog and disease are slowly permanent injunc halting destroying -trees; -camping cwnnt methods f sewage -spaces have decreased and treatment and assess the some trails and roads are "IN 'mE ruling of the court - city civil penalti d up to poorly maintained. and my own conscience I 'am $6.000 a day f arch t . not guilty,'' safd Fannin. The suit con ds ttoat the eReport H it "There are those who !eel city violated ne state laws SAN FRANCISCO (AP) they can profit by crucifying regulating how uch sewage An environmentalist group me and my family on this can be pumped ~.the ocean. says power companies are matter. It-~eems hlghly urifair threatening energy shortages to have this i.ssue,,drag on for e An tino e Bill to draw support IQ< 'the such a lo•g time. SACRAME (AP) - A development of.nuclear power ~ ·When the arrest W¥ {llade. $.1 millkln me re to insulate plants. Munoz siii:I Fannin appeared schools fMn reeway noise Friends of the Earth to make~threat. has advanced the Senate. criticized a report Wued by "After all I've done for you Stereo component sale. Wfire up to our ears in sound savings.:~=-;:_~--The Assem voted 69-0 to the Stanfocd Research ... you do this, an<\ I will _pass the rueasure, b Y lnstitute urging rapid develop-reciprocate," Mll;110Z quoted Assemblym Frank 0 . ment of all energy sources and the senator as saying. Lanterman ( La Canada). · endorsing the need for nuclear "I TAKE that to mean the Lanterman said the money pow 1 er to meet the state's, U.S. senator, invested with the would be sPEf\t at 147 schools fu,:ire ~nergy ~· .. power of the people, would use wherE'._ freew-f noiJte seriously Env1ronmentahsts ha v'!' it against us I guess " said interferes with c. l&MeS. been chastised for a so-called Munoz. ' , s I 1 'doomsday' a~roach," Jim a e • l..ot~ Sea.on Harding: special P r 0 j e c t s Munoz said he arrested Fan-_ SACRAMENTO (AP) director for Friends of the nin after motorists reported Acting Gov-. Ed Reinecke hf.S E!l'th commented. "Now it that the senat&"'1 weaving car 19' 9 signed leglslaUon tmt extents seems the shoe is on the other had run them off a city' street. ·$ ;·~ . . _· . the crab ~ oft fue _Joot_,_ with the .utili.W--~--~ ..JYA!,! v.ery . an- Northem C8.Ulonua coast: t l>mnes. threatening us with tagonistic," sa1it Munoz----:-0He .._ The ...bULReinecke J..i is brownouts aDd ratiobitlg." referred to me and the other .-. Reg. 259 .. 95 JC Penney Quadropr.Onic ' by_~~aa Pa e •n.-i-n .n .-• ~cers as bUlird9."-·----sys-tel'ff1Efatu7es.,.M1FM/FM-stereo= D•V!> (!)._~Ola)~.=---.......;,,;,~~·-_ _:t~'f~~cli8tg ·~~-.;~;-_'-....._: _..;;. __._1a~l<);<!'t.a1:1<"iai:adeci<lhot-plays4 .. _ ... -. n exte ... tllf" ,_ LOSANQEl.ES(Alll-'nle was dropped Dec .•. 23-anei' ., • cliamel·~Witlmlawal - between Dec. 1 and Aug. l ln-Los AngeleS City CowlciJ. bas~ Fannin's attomey, Wan-en .• «automatic ~or Dutton. Four 61 /2" stead of the CUfl"llt · 1· approved 17, new positions in Ridge, presented testimony .'~ ~ lull range speakers. Walnut finish July 15 season. 1 ' • the planning. department in an from three medical doctors \?, speak8' cabinets. 9.SO a month• e Site I D er errort to process a growing that medication taken by the ,.. , • -n • load of envi"""'1tntal replirts senator eootd have affected ''· : · • ·• LOS ANGE!.Es ( ) -triggered by the Environ-" the results of a Breathalyttt . Sale~-... Angeles National F ~ 1 t , mental Quality Act _ · test for intoxication. ., • . ~· ' 1et tile .. ;,,i;., ·.' ' ' ' !1~. ··-~·· G_ -".ec :t.,· . ,-.i; ..::· .,_·i,. o.:.r.'.i~="''51iB~ .. :rr ;~ .:'-7" ~ ·----: ~~o~~F~:~~r:a~~~ftr!c~ , ,....... !'-¥--11 ·1 UI' · · player/recorder In walnut !1nished , for ney. "~me:!;;• <MS! CO'"' ;nc!udep Sale58¢ea. Do a 9x12' floor for 62.64. a.,. ••; ••c.h. ~ow you save 19114. Cover your noors with comfort in our ~on tufted shag plle carpet Illes. Ex- citing tri-tone colors hide ./seams and foot~ints. High den1Uy foam ba~k with ad· hesive. Easy lo lean. 8 contemporary · s. More sound savings.· . Yourchoice,Sale $199 ·. fte-1. 299.95. JCPenney Earty American or Med1terrHne<1n style console ste11~0 ter1tures AM/FM-FM stereo with 1nd1- ca1or lights rind 1llur111ni'lted slide rule dial. c·onlrots lor tuning. volumP., b<1lance and lreble Rnd b<Hss. 8 trac k tape player hfls pushbutton channel ~leclOf" Record chRnger equipped with 10 .. 1urnl<1ble Two 8" woofers '°'"d two 3"•/' 1wee ters. Hardwood . cabijnet. Is completely solid state. fl 1 a · month. SaM prices etfec::tr.e through Saturd8y. - /\ Sale ¢ea. , , - [)c) a 9 12: floor for 54.00. 1 .. It¢ ••c}i .. Now YoU save 18'111.. Tweed's erriflc for tra- ditional and em decor. Ours 11 cont! uous lilament nykln level I pile. High · dentlty foa rubber back with aelt-tUck ad ·ve.. 5 fashlon ---..,. ...... .,. JCPenn~-. · W. know what you're -for. ' nday 'noon to 5 p.m. ot th followlnt stores: Shop I _ FA ION ISLAND, Newport Beach 17141 644-2113. HUNT! TON CENTER, Hu~;,gto• Beach :17141 892-7771 . "\;. -\. ) Special buy on headph~nes 14.88. Slereo es with '<'Qlume oontro4 have sturd spring band. rubber e<1r cus hions Use rth any stereo system wit h headphOne i.lCk 'This amount represenls the required monlhl payment under Penoeys Time Payment Plan lor the purchase of the related 1t8~. No Finance Charge will be «urred 11 lhe balanceol th account in the tirsl billing is paid 1n 11111 by the closing date ol lhe next b1l11ng per1oct ~ incurred Finance Charges will be deter .by applying penodt<: r~tes ot 1 2% (Annual Percen~age Rate 14.4%) on the first $500 and 1'111 (Annual Percenlage Aa1e t2'1t) on the portton over $500 ot the pteVtOus balance w1th0t1I deducting payments or credits. JCPenney We know what you're looking for. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newpoct Beach (714) i>M-2313. HUNTIN/:.TON CENTER, Huntington Beach (71'4} 892-7771 . ,\ I ' • I • • • • • T • • l 1· ( PEDPLE Rep. Shirley Cblsholm, (D- N.Y.) is among the winners of the first Ladies Home Joumal "Women of lhe Year" awards. Other winners: Poete,s., NI~ k I GkNannl, yauth Jeadersjitp; Kalllarlne Graham, ~ chairman of T)je WashllJilon Poat Co., ~y atlci' ~; Dr ... ' Vlilglnla A-, -a'iHI • J. re!earch; actress U el e,D 118yes, aria 'Bod $' J Ellen Strun, wilulUI •f· , tion; ILa Dina Hmt1, UmU \, )1' rlghts, and Mary Laster, quality of Ute. * Vice Pre9ldent Spiro T. Agnew is scheduled to receive an honorary doctorate at Dre x e I University's com- mencement exercises June 2. 11le newly invested doctor will be the maln spea,ker. * lt was just like in the . . ' ... ICE SKATING WITHOUT WEAKANKtES • No w eak an kl ea for beginners wit h the Ice Capades pro designed Ice akates and unique teething method. • Rent or buy Ice Capadle akatea at OtiJr sport shop. • Enjaythethrlli ol•icatlnG In a few hours. • Gift certificates, in any amount. for lesson• or k:e skates ••• a gift of llfetlnw value. ICE ~I \!'\!ii I~ '01 .... ~ ? (. . .. movies, except they didn 't gel MISA ·'Y£aDE SHOPPING CENTER the bad guy. ' 2701 ·Harbor Blvd. et Ad ems, Cost• M•sa .. ~ San Francisco Policemen Tel: (714) 979-8880 Tony Pbua iand~iiFrank~~ijiijiijii,iijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiiill Hurrj· To The FINAL CLEARANCE. SALE ., TENNIS DRESSES VESTS HALTER TOPS LONG SLEEVE SWEATERS HOT PANTS . ~.,. • ' ' .. -,,~ .. &ankAmerlc1rd e Mister Charge • Diner.a . ' ,. . . ' / ' ' • ' • • • ' ' ::, 'I 599 " Polyester/(:otton hostess gown~ in vibrant floral prints. Three styleS to choose from: pinafore· look, tailored, ruffled side-wrap. Sizes 10 lo 16. Why stop at one? / I . ' . ' I .., . ' j • ' '. ·J ., . ~' .. .. ~lus Penn~y-priced basic$. .. I .. i. ' .. • ';.. ·i ·,. .,;-if"·'' : ' ' .. I. . ~· ' i ·, '· "' FASHION ISLANO,'Newporl Beech (714) IJ+l.2n3. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington HARBOR CENTER, Costa Mes• (714) 646-5021. lj Beach (71 " -~. :; " ' .. . :~t·i,,~;~~ ·, ' ·i· . . . ' . • t' ~. ,., 1:· ! .. • ") 1 ~ '-1..•i • . ~' 892-7771. ( • J \ ' • I ~ ., ' '·, ;' ., I AUtoLoans How better to greet spring than with a bright new ear? Bank of America offers you three ways to go. - The 'regular New-Car Loan. Mpst people finance their new wheels this way. Through dealers or directly with us. It's quick and very -simple. ; Auto-MagiQ, The new way to finance your new ear. Rock-bottom monthly payments. H0w to get that special car you thought you couldn't afford. ASk your auto dealer. Leasing. Many find· it advantageous to lease their new car. We can help here, too. Plans are now available at mar;\y Bank of Arn6riccl awto dealers. -~ -' Home Improvement Loans There's no better investment than your own home. Why wait to improve it? A new room. A new Pool. New carpeting or drapes. From the smallest fixing up to a major renovation, a Banko! Arrierica home improvement Joan can make it happen. We're an equal:.housing lender and make all our Joans without regard to race, color, rel igion or national origin. Talk to a Bank of AmerX::a loan officer ntractor soon. Spend spring· lorful new, old home. @ IQUAI. HOUElllG LENDER • l' ., " ' ... ---·-l : .• -: - \ .... ~. ,,,... ,•··I" '· ' ' . ( ..... •., ' - ·. ; Mobile home living has a·lot·to offer. Low down payment. No big mortgage or upkeep oosts. An exciting choice of locations. It's an easy, inexpen5ive way to, live. Ana Bank.of.America .can' make it your way. · .:lust ask a mobile-home dealer or Bank of Anierica loan officer about our finaneing. It can be tailor~to flt your· needs quickly; simply. t If mobile home living in\rigues you, look into it. Then, look into ' Bankp!America financing.They're bot~ .nice and easy .. ' ' • ' ' BANK _ OF AMERICA " for-the.bu!inessof liYitg . . .. ..,....·~ -. ' . Leisure loans .· · Boats or planes. Campers, trailers or motor homes. Bank of Ametica~n help.yQU .out with just.about anything that IT\Clkes your leisure-time tun:· · Bank of America•leisure loan -rates are attrootive. Terms flexible .. And paperwork l'l')itlitmal. There are so fllilny things tciclay / which can ffia/le. your life a little more colotfutDon'twait. Enjoy them naw, ·. wheo you'll enjoy them most. Check · · with your dealer or BaiJk of America . about financing. And let us help 'make this spring, your best spring ever. . ' I ' ' • • • ' • " ·• .. .. • \... UP'IT .......... THEIR GAY EXPERIMENT WAS BIG SHOCK Muriel Sivyer, loif. ond Mori Gunn Stroll Gay Experimenl SlwcksTwoCoeds PALO'"ALTO (AP) -Two lji'gb schQol coeds who held Hands and lfisplayecl other signs of affection during a three-week experiment say they were branded as sexual deviates )Ind rejected, mocked and even threatened by fellow students. "The whole thing made me wonder," said Muriel Sivyer, 17, one participant. ·"The younger generation is su~ posed to be so open and tolerant." High School, said be "doubted the validity" of the ex- periment as truly scientific -because-thereJflU. no control group whose attitudes were ~nown beforehand. Neither girl had a steady boy friend, but they said the boys they had been dating dropped them as soon as they began displaying their new behavior. "We played the roles well, we didn't 1et ourselves laugh all the time," Miss Gunn said. "It was bard to hold haods " MISS SIVYER and Mari and keep a slra,ight face." Gunn, also 17, both students at ' .. Gunn Hlgb School, said they "ONE GUY ALMOST chok· decided to study social at-ed on Ibis milk when he saw titudel toward homosexuals us," Miss Sivyer reported. after.dbcQislJtthe topic iyith "We could hear them talking their fm:nHJ' life teacher, Tom about us, we saw some of ~ · . . . ;' llJeQI pointlng at us." '( ....---+w-A"14i...,. · Sbe said the boys carried __ ,...._-~ ~ 'theft bosUUty no further than • f'Otle ,.,, 1111...0•t narni><:alllng, but many girls <!liolc4!11Gtl ltbMUk "walked on the other side of wMJa fie' ••IO 111.'' .the corridor," when they pass-ed, and '"some girls. threaten-~ ed to beat us up.', · . } At fi rst they considered a "I can really syinpe.tblze campus questionnaire QT in-with gay people and tbe depth.ln~erv~ew~.~b_yt "we felt pressure they're under ·1n neither of them ·would help every day living," MLss Slvyer find out what J¥4S needed ," said.· L ·-2 _·' Frankum said. ,. F inally, the girb said Q>ey THE GllWI rah! that o""' decided to test th e 1 r the trut)l . abbut ·tflielr ex- classmates' tolerance 1S y periment came out, many holding hands, hugglns and stud,ts .. ho harrasaed them excbanslng occasional kisses tried to treat the whole thing on ~he cheek. as a joke and act u if nathlng JACK ALEXANDER, an edu cator and p u b 11 c iir formation office r for the school diltrict including Gann r changed. · . , · . "In . essence tbey~re saying, •ean't we be\ f.rie~s again ?': Miss , Sivyer said. "That really ~es me mad." ' . ; ·.•· Pay Package OK ' ' ' School Head (jut; Facing Sex Raps ·, - ' 1 ------ • ...... : ' ' Sale 2841 , D. Reg. 35.Sr.JcPe-nlley-22" cast alumtnum --· - kettle grill has hinged top destgn. Large 1 1 • cooking surtace, top and bottom draft co~ i 1~ other qual ity features. 1, 1 , • - Sale1039 E. Aeg. 12.99. Floor model Hibach1 la 28W' high. Has 4-position grid, 2 side vents, mar..· ~-black._avocado_Or~~rjfle. _ '· l ' .> : ' ··. ' ·' .:.o··, ' ' r .~ ·,,,._..,1 I ......,...,_ --11'"" . ---. . J' . f • 'I '( ' -. " " r ,11 -.. '. ' Sal~ 369f; . .. . :· ... :·~·, ~; f. Reg.-~.99. Cqt aluminum smoker ngori. Has chrqme--pll~ cciOki ng:grld, .. ~~-_ feeder door, droll' conttpls, 6ttiel COIMlltenl 'features. On folding stand. · \' . . ' ,,. ' ... ~A..·~ ··1 -' ' ' " . . ' . ' -' Sale ~~ ' . ~ "~ . ~ ~ .. ' 0.'Reg. :Ut. casftron slng~'Hl~cti11~; ~ c. .> '·~ 1 • _.,.poattlon, adjustable 10" grkf, bO~ \~. ;~.,~ ... · ~ control.· ~ ~ . :.l .... , . r, "i . ,__,,__Double f'fibachi with 10" x 1r arid, ,,~ e.• r.~ · ·~,_,,,;: ... ,,. Sale 539 · · '"'~.' :·.· ;f '"' .I <. Light up and save." Clean Up and save. " .... ~ ',. . .. :.• ., .. ... ' " ... " ' .. Sale199 Reg. 2.•9. Single spot light holder. Sale239 Rtg. 2.99. Lawn stake fight holder • Sale359 Reg. •.•t. Double spot light holder. Weatherproof: Socket, 43C: Donation box, 2.98 4" box:, 1.69 Receptacle, 2.98 Pole switch, 1.98 Sale2499 Reg. 29.99, 10 Gallon shop vac features a large all steel drum. Fof dry pickup. Includes 6' x 2'h" extension hose and 2'h" utili ty nozzle • • • • ' .. ,-· ' t -• • , • •t . . ~ ' ,. •i • • " . ·r .• , .,., f • '. , ' 1 •• JCRe~v~~ · W, know wtiaf .Jou're·1oM.t ~·, .I A ~~l:j,xr;:_ -4--:....:.:........ ~~""'·~·~ ' ~h~p Sund~y noon to 5 P~M. at the'followl~g stores: .. , FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach {714) 6+4-2313. HUNTINGTON-CENTER, Huntington Beach (71+) 8?2-7', 7 • -· - \ ) ! -~,~ -,,,,. ..... ·'IN ;RACE TO STAY' ( ,_,. ,i?j•:i-Woldlo . ·1.,,,.. .. WBldie's . , ; A·Hopeftd Underdog )WI FRANCISOO ~ CID- djdlls wtlb DlllTOW political .1 -4oa't win the big deo-Ums.. -~ (Nws .tN.aisrs) · . . . Tlie det.ermtned cOn- INlllDNl aee1 AliOto aS hls · chief · competition, ' and Lt. Go\". . Ed Reinecke .. the • _..ieot Republican' In beat In ibe ;1"1erai election. ! He d.1.smbses Moretti as a tllEul ~·1 tbij)t Bob Moretti has to : dlO!>:Cl!it •oMlle"l'i«:'· Waldie . ~ ;'lliCauae !l>e'D 1.,. bli · P911Ua!tbas. if he doei run. . . . ' .,.';~Y, AssembiY.l""n ",..... . Brown and ·t; • o ~ ""' j<lckeyini In llocqme speaker if Moretti · ~ in the race, and this ojbUld be tough oo the --.U In p6we.-. Moretti ~to get out," Waldie sat~. ~ ~· Mqretll doesn't ·.~ In Santa <(ruz. the A41embly speaker said. "I'm IJ!l:llle race 1n stay, and 1n ' I iliil>'' · ri~e is c1mpaigning Jor a minority and youth In catllornl•. . • • • -· w-. Mor 16, 2m c arr 11 ~ w1..... 11111-16, 2913 . DAJLV PILI!'(. ,, I ' • .. .., • ,. I Al Stores ,·Celebrate Grand ·Opening -of Our New Store, 3325-Bristol at· MGcArthur Blvd. Santa-.41a ~ •:. "°'*"ANf 'f'ALLllY-11114 ........ tt ... T.-.t W•STMRUTt ...... J .... , Hl •t ...... W•t HVMTHt•T• ·~llM ._. ...... •....... • ! COITA Ml~ .. 1M It. ~ ............................ _s,_ ~· All&A-1• •• ....., ......... ... ....... ....... ·~ fQ . IPllAI. Your 99c Choice f'OU..TA .. WAU.DUltl ..__. .,... _, -.. MuttTllrll•TON •IAC"--1 ,,...... at '"""'"'"' Muih1••TOM 11ac.......-. ... ..,. s I ..., I !1 •t. TOao--al 'hf9 • a-... ... • • ' ~ ~ '• ' • . ~ ' ' : . aac Al3-ou··ui'ifi .. 8li~a·· Es·~ Pii . 38c • t••S.,.llllnttAI• -. ..._ ______ _. Pri<lo•&>od · thrv TueRlay . WasbFCl~s . 81 23 SCOPE MOUTHWASH ••• 83c 2 ·~ 23c 44 1oxot40-R•t•l••or;";~ITARY 99c l•y 2 & San lSc 'I MODESS . NAPKINS • • • • • • • • • 1 @lg~ ol 1tt ~\IQl!v, cotton t9fTY ~ doth& !ft colors to coon:l!nc1'e·...+. tn. tow.kyvu~t-.12xl2" "ii.1.. --- . 81 1 ~ iliffilN ~~~ .......... 98c 97c iiiiON'S BABY . 82C SHAMPOO••••• 1- . I ---- > ·N!>lron, mochint --I wo1hl Non.11/p bcxklflO. In M.i.. :&.~-· ~ ~ GtMn, • 1ti1N" SOf~ SID $5.'9 7..Mtwt to ae;-·· c:ommodat• TV, record player•. Rock 1torn owr -100 Glburrt.I Wol- "vt ftnlWd 1tML. 60"' .:id•, 16" d .. p, ...... Palll llQ lllll ·. Your Giitc~ S]DO ... ll(lbl. ' pc. Mt of r Mlltr, ~ 011C. pan far IOI' quiclo:. ecny pointing. "Peorwt... c.hor· acf9r prini.d cot- ton ™"-• wilh fringed 1nd1-ln ........ •11c 1111111 TIWll1. l1c •11cWuUlltar,41c Mochlne -Mob le Antlq~ 41xl4"" I• Pr. ...... ,.,....~ ... ·~ •a•• White. leig•. Gold, "- COd°'i 5 pinch, ple<111 to a pOML Ready tro hong • Never before at this law Price I ill Fllllll8r lclllll • . • "'!'"1 .......... !:!i::~.~ 3-0Fs5 E:Tth~~= ~:29c cotton 11~. bright rillt KM!s. Comport R -co-com-R ... bl-~--f · too ul ..____, ...,__,,, or11t11 ----II S I u , 1-11. °'-' •t)'le• for octtYe boya. • C: II' II I lpt ...................... ni• ' . ' . , 'I~ Daiarnr Cll'lllC .... Decoratlwe ·a Practical 97c . . s.. 0\#' hintatt;c -llc:tlon cf brfgllt I. b.ovt*ul hond dKOo ~ """ c«Ol'Tlic -. tlqu•'-hrfed ~ ~ d.n. !Mn; room or Mdroom -· OUTDOOR SALE VALUES . . ~ . ' . -~ ~ . ---.. --. ' .... ' -~ . \ .. .... : .. ";,.-·.· .... "'.~ .... $.- Yoor Cloolco Sll'IOl't ttylft fat flotol vnon...- m•nt1, pott•d ,,._ hofdon. lfffd Of frulr .. ,_........_ f lrit quolflY, tor· tor.. •hell fln!1h. ~37 CDPPEiiilii Q.T •••••• $1_·14 9ac . ~· . . '1• PiiiiiAtlON ·H~~:;0!0!~159 .. . . ' •t39 · i"'·~0'ili'U.-1noN TONIC ••• $2 88 ·. ~ ' . . . 5J·ac ·Bll.O-••<•-•ot1''s"-"'M1HlhS~AVE ·3&c ·-CREAM I I I •• I I I " • Slll•Mr • Shtr . '""' . '" Top quollty, no. tlo n a 11¥ adv.r- ti1ed noll poh1h ot on un"-ord of low prkel Gr~t •electloi\. FrlctlH s,11sll • S,..JJ,.,.., • 1111111111 ... , ... ~ S1v1 SOc . · i!1fil'? MULTIPLE llllIVlllllll Your Cllolct IIL;l..,. •••• ,., 1.91 Bottle of 250 BBC t.aow.1 you fff~ Ing 1•1\l110ltv 1ofr ond r•f1•1hln51ly vital. Save big One tobl•t dolly •t.tllJ)Ht1 otl ftl• vltotniM on adult OI' child normally n.edol ~SHOP & SAVE ~T THR Bic Selection! Ori1inally Sold for &De 11. P•mtackl09ks 4:99c Reprints from publitller of clo~ 1ic1I Rornonce, Wnt.m, ~ '-"f, tclenc• fiction, Catffr roo l ' • ' • • • • ' • • llalfGlllal l t SS&& I A Tf.rlhy ••ckrtive ,. bed--...ir.rt SPM:lolly Pfk•cl. IOI o 1"""9d .;19141 onlyl ) I ' . • \ Ja lwLY Pll,OT :P~i .Noi· A--t;s;tMe To Fire (THE LAW J November, 1970 after he pleaded guilty to poose<sing marijuana. He wu placed on probation for twe years. _ • D•tfS Exellfmge S.\CRAMEN'l'O (AP) - L&w enforcement ageocies in Callfomla, Oregon and Nevada can exchange Information via a ~ c om,puter -p. ··~om1a Deparl- menl ol Justice spokesman reports. The. new· electronic mutual 9.change makes 30 million driver records in · the -~"1lct1!~i!i. r; stanUy lo law enforcement of. flclals In tho n<lghboring . states, said ~erry Littman of the state· Department o1 Justice. · . lnlormaUon previoualy had to be e1ch&nged via mall or teletype, Littman aald. • Suspendon SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The c.Illornla"Supreme·Court hu llUlpendod Laii A,ngeleo •t- tomey Olarles L. P'lekting Crom pracUdng law for al• months and placedi him on probatJon fOI' three y~. The court held that'evkleru:e supporled the Slale' B a r disclpl!Mry board's llndloi that Fieldlng tn 1967 convt!Uia $1,100 out of funds received ln settlemmt for hll clients and wl\lcll be retained to poy their medlcal biill. Fielding llnally paid lhe medical bllls ~ the couple some One years later after a complaint waa made to the State Bar, the court said . • Not ll-nlmous SACl\AME~ (AP) - Mlstrial.!1 caused by one or two holdoul jurors would b e eliminated under a nroposed amendment to the California Constitution. The mee11url' by Assemblyman Ray John!OO (ft.Chioo) would permit verdicts where at least five- sixths of the jurors agree - meaning there could be a verdict reached on a 10-2 vote. Johnson Introduced a con. stltutional amendment and bill to achieve that end. Unanimous verdicts would still be required in the penalty phase of cases where capital punishment was Involved. • Center Opens SACRAMENTO (AP) -An advanced training center for California's law enforcement officers has been opened in suburban Broderick by the Stale Dep&rtment of Justice. Atty. Gen. Eve lie J . Younger 8l100unced that with a budget of about $450,000 a year, the centt>r is expected to give about 1,200 officers ad. vanced training in narcotics, intelligence and other police topics in the nerl fiscal year. The state has been offering advanced training since 1944, but on a limited basl!, Younger said. The new center will house the first "ex- ten.sive" advanctd training program. Have Red Your Tag? C.pltol News ~rvice SACRAMENT O - OwJ1ers or motor vehicleR without the red l 9 7 J sti~er oo their rear l!oef\se plates are subject to law enforcement action. "WJth the exception of a small number of ag- gravated situatlonst . all vehicle owners 1hol.ua be In poSlfMion or J973 validation stkk•n, a receipt for 1073 feet, or & ' !<tier Crom the depart· ment," said Robert Corens, director of the lloporlm<l\l of Mo<or ,Vthlclel. ' WtdMsdlJ, Ma116, 1973 Big Store Beat LUFKIN 2SFOOT TAPE ·~"wid• • Ea•y tor.ad r11troctabte ta,.. ' I • j turdy <a .. _. '' "BEliNZ·O~MA TIC" PROPANE TANKS . - • lnt~rchonti.a~• on oil propane oppllan~ia . ., • h r.ady fort~• oUt-o(. - doora lif•I MELA RD TOILET TANK REPAIR KIT EA. 21/•" POT FUCHSIA • '20 varielies lo choose fr om. • &loom1 all Summer and Fall. R;;·t •• ~. ALUMINUM SCREENING •Now is the time to fix tho1e old screttns!. .. •Firs! quality aluminum. • 24" lo 48" widths. ~--....,~ COMP. AT 12' e 8 FOOT TWIN RIB ALUMINUM • 26" wide, eictra st1on9 • ld90/ for roofing or 1iding ' v so. FT. . BOXNAli.S • 8d or 16d. • YQU.~ qlOICE! .. --·\. . REG .I!" 23 •.. y · LB . ~~"it,;::==jl SINGLE TOGGLE OR DUl'l!X RICEPT ACLE 1, • I. ' SWITCH · ~ ·PLATES CAMPING CLEARANCE '· % !~tAL ~ LOW, LOW PRICESI We a re c:lo1ing out our •ntire Camping Deportment • Sov• 1/3 and more on lanterns, stoves, sleeping bags, back packs, raft1, thermo1, ice chests, etc. 18 INCH BLACK LIGHT •Full •i:r•d unit includ•• fixtur• and black light blu• bulb. REG.\ ll.99 10'; )( 10'' HIBACHI • Sing I• trill 1O"x1 O~x7". .., • Wrought ir~n with wal111ut .... ba;.. ~. • lutgedly c:onatrvct•d with c:hrom• fitting• on pittol hondl•. sr.'4£ ,.oo I REG. 3.99 !I NO.OH57 EA . 1 GALLON -DRIVEWAY ~RESllNG REG. 99• CRAFT AFGHAN KITS • Kit contain• sufficient Co· ' lonlal Virgin Acrylic Yarn to co.mplete one Afghan. •A compl•tely unlqwe gift. ..~~ b~ ~ REG. 4FOOT ~\ DECORATIVE 1~t.oo R~~~1~;~!1d;ne :-..: • Adjust• to any angle • 4 FOOT SECTIONS REI'. 4.49 4!1 EA . CEDAR GRAPE STAKES • Flr1I quality cedar. • 1"x2"x4ft. •Great for garden ne~d• fo r tomatoe1, flowera, etc. 1226'0 l . OAIVlY , 11.occ·s 1,;s Of I POlloltt. JN 0t.1•1 SHOW n. ~ll[ ............ •SANTA ANA llff SO. lll1$TOL 2FT.x4FT. PEG BOARD • Full si•• sheets ..• 'A" thickne11. • Organi•• your kitchen, gorag• or play1oom ... 4FT.x8FT. SMOOTH BOARD • Versatil• ~ '' thick •mooth board fo'r building, remodelin., craft wor~ o;td dtCoupoglng. REG., •• 2.99 . ::t::t EA. tS5N0. MIUS .... FllUTOHlllVO. .. ''UOl:I r'11 --' Ml Ull • 111"9 .. I~ • RIVIR51DI • GARDINA 103J1 MAOHOIJA l:tttt to. WlSfltl 5.99 6 FT . HIGH 15 FT. LONG BAMBOO FENCING ' . 6FT. TALL 'PICKY CEDAR FENCE •GARDIN GROVI 12 .. 2 CHAM!.A .. AVI. MfUllOJ .. WMITlllR llSSS 'llfGt).rH ID. ' ' j · ' I I l l ,M,1 ... ,.,, ...... 'A Fl". PRliSIDENT' . . Ja-Stf#M't Advertised I Brands Costlier TRI! CONa.v&ION was dlspated by a spotwnan for a major tooci products OCJPlll"'iY. Tlm lAlberskl, a UC San DleiO lludent who oocfdlDated the April 21&-27 surf!Y, said studeriY visited aJI D i•n 0 1Uptrmarket cha"'-' In the ' °"1nty and found t h a t namebrand shoppa:s paid, on lhe • ...,..,., A llPOKE5MAN ·for a local ' _.,..-chain aald store. br~ hljve been Improving in uJes for the wt few years .. because 'of t&8 aavtngs and boe..0. they have found the nsmlbl-andJ to be good.'' He Aid his own chain fJUl5 Out -lwo otore brands, a cbMPer one of lesser quality and i l!OCOnd that"does ·~ well • • • in blindfold tests ' qalnlt name brandJ bot still colll !el& T8E FOOD inchicts com• pony spokesman con•......, that store braJlds lack ·~ slsteo1 11andard of quality that brlnP (customers) back to our product." Bo al90 said ad~ costs · hll company's cdft· sumers ·~ess than half a ctnt for~ average can." ' BJ JIOll mrw•a Location SAN FIWICisco (AP) - Coovtd Rucbell Magee's new trial on aggravated lddnaplng charges In the slaying ol a judge will Ile held in Sallla Clara County. • San Francisco S u p e r i o r Court Judge John A. Ertola announced the new trial lOca- UIJ!) Tueaday. MAGEE'S FIRST tr I a I , which ended ina hung jµry, was held in San iFranclaco on a change of venue from· Marin County where Superior COllrl Judge Harold Haley was .bOt to death in the bloody lrl'O ci>urtbouse ""8pe attempt. Santa Clara SuperiOI" Court waa the """"' ol a componlon trial for black militant Aogela Davia who was accused ol pro- viding guns used in the lllootoot in whlcbfourpenons were killed. She was acquitted last June of munkr, l<ldnap and conoplracy charges. A1TY. GEN. Evelle Ynonger di.closed April " Z3 that the state would retry Ma1ee m the kidnaplng cflarge but not press m\Jrder charges. I See by TodaY's Want Ads e MAKE BEAUTIFUL MUSIC on this B&ldwtn upriaht pianG. It's an Ae- roeonic 1n beautifUl ~ di-• . • FURNl'l'IJRE: bar """ 'bar ....... ottlce d..t and , exflC'UUve chair. ~" round , bn:aldut table and • chain • all Uke. new. . " • l ,, • • • ' The ~ ~ • • ' , Wfl!llHllQ", Ml )' 16, 197l DAILY I'll.OT Brev;ty Ban Ai1i't Jt\he Bertie1'! .i-Jt --= . • • .. , ,, < ·" ' :.i ' . .\ . ' it's OUT of th.. , · . 18WQR\..0•. ' • • • ... • Kilogram '. " .· . . , " •'. . .. .,. -::- •.,1 ... I - . ~ S Hamburger " Actually, .1133975 kllogram Is the new metric name for the quarter pound Carrs Hamburger, c:liarbrolled to perfection when you order! By any measure, It's the most delicious hamburger you've ever tasted. COSTA MESA 1550 W. Adams (at Royal Palm) 279 E. 17th St. (at Santa Ana) :lj)92 Bristol St. (at Birch) FOUNTAIN VALLEY 9945 Warner Ave (at Brookhurst) 18951 Brookhurst (at Gail!leldl HUNTINGTON BEACH 6882 Warner (at Goldenwest) '21532 S. Brookhurst (at Hamilton) '19512 Beach Blvd. (at Yorktown) NEY(!'ORT BEACH 3101 Newport Ave. (at 31st St.) •NOW UND•R COHSTIUXTIOH Bell' • Plplf """ bop lllfa 8tsn ond Slrlpoo party Otasa, both for only 35¢. Start your Mt. now, In U.. lof Illa 4th ol Jury, '-, I ,• ~ it's garnished with ••• 2 slices of tomato . Lettuce "1ayonnaise . 'earl's own Special Sauce (onions al your request) •I '• .· '· , .• , ;then served on a fresh, toasted, sesame seed bun. Try one. Matter of fact, try two-and enjoy th~second one on us by using the coupon below. It's good at any of the 85 Carl's Jr. Family Restaurants in Southern California. '•' .. .· •. ·: ' .... • r • ' I ' r--------------------,;1 I : @ 4ree! @ i'i : I 70¢ Carl's Hamburger 11 ' I 1 . •• When you buy one at any ca ... ~Jr. I ~ -n"!ll coupon can be redeemed tor one Carra Hamburger at fllJ c.rr. Jt. 1., I Family Reataufant ~ Southern C1Utomla when , on• car1'a Hamburger ls purchased •{the regular prtce of 7°"" I '· I Thlt offer ls g~ up to al'ld Including ~day July 1, 1973. • L •Car1 Karcher Enterprise .. Inc. 1973 J ·,' ----------·----------• I ' , I I -. j I • • ' I . I I r . I 1W1. Y "1LOT Home Ee Positions Available By JOYCE L KENNEDY Dear Joy~"'I am a high ' odiool junior and was thinkihg al:o.Jt becoming a h o m e ~ economics teacher but_ I hear U,at jobs are hariTo get. I really like home ecooomJC!: What would you ad~? -r llW., Greensburg, Pa. ' This advice come! from Rachel E. Owen. coodinator o/ borne economics for t h e 'Columbia, Mo., public schools: Despite discouraging joQ sJatistics concerning educli.tkl;n in general, many JO u n g women are still interested in -~ ecooom"='..J.! a_,.c hi n g I because they_ know tMf eduC:a--Jion is an eJ'cellent ) (Career Coi·1~1r J •bad<ground for entering other home ecooomiCI PoSIUons. The woman wlib bu, had two or three years of teaching .background Is wanted by business, extension services, and many other emp)oymenl I areas which need a good home · ecoomnist, becau.se the ' teacher hM· had some ei- , cellent e~periences. J. TEACHING IS!l'I' j~ a ' .caae·-g and coming ~ home at 3 o'clock. The home e:conmnics teacher may have m ore extracurricul~ IFi ' tivilies than any pUjer t..cher ' 1n the school, and the &esn'I . get paid extra for them. For example, in many h i g ~ ,1chools, she haa the ~ pleuurable but t i me • c o n: suntlng work ol sponsoring the school's Future Homemaken of-America chapter. CoDoeming the scarcity of home economics t e a c h i n g • positions, the rumor is only 1 partly true. If you're tied to a ljpecific locality, you may , bave trouble finding the posi· 1 lion you want. In my coUege 1 town, we have a university ~ and two colleges, but no fac- , tories or massive business enterprises. A girl who comes here and intends to find a teac.blng job is going to find It pretty rough, We have dozens or girls trying to get jobs here. Want to know why? They 're trying to put their husbands through school. If you want to be sure of finding a teaching t job, you have to be movable. You have to take the chance and go where the jobs are. FOR 11IE inexperienced teacher, the positions are not ~ in the larger towns and cities; ~ employers in these places re- : quire women with experience. : So lvhere do you get your ex- perience? You teach a year GI' two in gna1\ communities where the competition for jobs is not as stiff. • Many of our schools require ~ a vocational degree. (BricnYi "vocational'' home eronomics relates to homemaking, while ''occupat Iona I'' home economics relates to paid jobs outside the home.) If you don't have a vocational degree. you'll need to obtain a teaching certificate from your state department of education. Although , for teaching, you • will need a vocational degrre t r or teaching certificate, as a college student you should : take all the occupational hofne 'e<:Onomics courses you can fit tn yoor schedule. This is , because your chances for get- ting a nontcaching job later - • in food services, fashion " ·P.1erchandising or child care , ~for instance -arc improved ii ~ , you have teaching experience 1 in occupational home ' economics. l. TO FURTHER hedge your , bets for branching out into oc- cupe.Uonal OOqie economics J • careers later, get yourself t' aome work experience. Walt f on t.oblC3. C.t to be a sl-OCk girl ~ Wbue they're handling : nlerchandl,.. You may get ~ blisters on your feet but you'll also get practical, worthwhHe aperlence. • • W.....,, M., 16, 1973 • • Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You ..... -... ti)()% D~RO"® 'pOLYESTER PILE! BEAUTIFUL NEW, DEEP SljAG ' AND EASY TO MAINTAIN. NEW DECORATOR ot. • ..COLORS. N'OW SALE PRICED COMPARABLE !IETAfL .... $8.99 ' . -·-.. w....,,, 11or 16, 1973 "1LOT·l>,~~£A J . . .. Scouting Edison Seeks '. t · 6 -~ · ·It·~-J Dinn& 'l ~ PASADENA-~ do 11111 lab ,nr.. audear ~ ..,_llQI unlll '!llh -· r/wlir lllim jf,.. all 1!'!11 ~--.J.::'l .::J ? -from die loo, -Ill""' _.... ol ·lJOJ·-~ -. jo -aal lillll_,...,._ ... _....1e_,po1111 __ ~_ ,:,CD.eUW~ with I~ then pit \be,,,q,, wu.r bod< lhe existing lSO iptP~ _ ....;;; ~·...W. wt, ..... = K~li T' ~ " ,()IJofn, ' ·-·~ W"D ....... . • ~ • , • ' • .,,,. ~ r'equlrementl ---lbat<...,...... 1tl1loc ..... • Leadm lo Cub and Boy 'l'llal'11he '4]1C IOI"" the .. te(lo 1'11l," Dr. llroois --1'1lli!!l1T .irttll. tlli -Sooutlng will be bonoted Moy the ~~i&.mia:i. . esplolned '"llloY p.y Ull!_ aurfaoe -.....,. .-"Dlii' itduces llii' ._. 2% when the Pacifica District as it faces 1 ~ J'. to tllennll may DOI be wanned rilOii !Mn 4"~ ~ Ed<cr<a ·-11111 ii holds ill ncognitioo tfu1!1er at poUution nearai \~ ll"0!-4' belt power ~above the aallf'"l --mott !/:re':' • .....,.-"'". 1o 1" ., 'I the Meadowlarl< Country Club plant unlta ""CloaW., f 1,llllll'leel -tbe outfall." . · °"""" ' i in Hun!Jngtoo Beach. The answer -end tl>el'O 11 me' '-ls .., · ' ' In -' tho jeta n -coming from the ""'1<'111 e 1e1m ot.,•,:tJ BMPBAS1ZED THAT bis Caltech towanl dec\let water, clindilf( The 9,30 p.m. dbmer Is ... engineers at Cal Tedi. ~-find thtt I ~ ~-·t woding "' tbe final desip, wanner wai.r. "'8Y -tbe l>eo<t>. ~ to draw 300 men and special dllfuler ayitem, · witb 'a(i'delalfl ol lhe llJllf sysl"'1 (to.m<e{ "'ftle bailO }iiobiems IO be ..,,;,.r.ID women from Hunt Ln gt on noz<iea, can probably do the very dilO llllDdanl). We'ro just wocldot! witb the laboram .,. bow far-.-- l)eaeh and Foontain Valley. nicely. . ~· wttb I-about the ,......1 outl&!l• neeii"lo Qlend, bow 11mc-ui..a. il«ognilon will be given to · . '' , ·',. . 'llratoilY ltr mWng Ibis warm water 1nto fi«r (J>OZ#e) iOClions should W.· 1111 individual packs and lroo]ll "IT'S· VERY~~ Ibo! it Is -llW-" -how lJlW ~ ol' -'illo,i ... that have excelled i_n areaa of technically pooatble' to meer these ·1'11Jin& Indeed seems to bold tho needed to~ canplllliiie ..uijllit camping, yeer-round program, (temperature) ieqtrlnments ' with no answer.~f.ns team' test.eel a System using new requJfts:DenLs,." Dr.1BrooP I 'L,..) Scout· 0 ·~a participation trou_ble wbataoeve~,". Caliedl's Dr. ~e buried pipe with Lebaped-~--. :-· · and ""'tairung membership Norman Brooks wd lD an Interview. ll!'ll!rudini up tbroogh the sea-Boor sand. SO FAR, 'l'Efn'S,indlcal6 ~t ~ enrollment, a spokesman said. "We can de,,ign !or that, and we can sUU "bur main JllJPl'08ch." Dr. Brooks ad-!all system will ....i al leOI\ lit• Exceptional leaders will be have an &Pequate margin "-safety." ded, His to ftt tbe end of the OQU.ll Pipe each up to 20 iodles . .in di~, ~· given cert!flcatea o I ap. Dr, Bl:poks, prolesaor ol envtronmeot,i wllb a dllfusive slructure ... 'lbls .,..,,;sts alO!llf a ~oo of pipe 2,000 ·\O ~.«10 , precialiM afier t be < iJ\. engioo¢ng and civil mgineerlng, noted of Jilany 90p3rate noufes. And with ihese Joac. ,,_ dllf_.;JOcllom ~ stallation ol district olftctrs that -and the San Diego Gas & wo gi!t a ereet amount ol ·mW!lf! o/ the .ably be placed alioot a ~,:di'>. ~ !or 1!173-74. EieetriC. Cooipany plan to add two warm water with the SWTOllnding sea dqilbs av.raging 'O to IO felit, Q' 1_, -. I . ~· • 111 QUALITY .NAMI alAND CAIPITS AT LOW DISCOUNT PllCISI• SILICT fROM THI LAIGIST CAIPIT INVINTOIY '· IN TNI WIST • • ' ( (• Clll LONGBIACH -. ~ .·._, 3008 Bel·lflower Blvd 421-8934 • Al'.f Alflf -... 649 'North Euc~'f_~ 635~7674 \ I ,, .. , __ • .-:o .c:u -- • \ Wttlllldaf, M'7 16, jq7) DAILY PILOT U 1 She's 32, Totally ·Fatiguea ' , o•r-..,._-.,t?s.•.w•_.... _.!ll_llr.-COMMBNT: l'lnt I'll uk 'Ii question. "Ras your doctor ever considered the possibility that you m~ IUffer from myasthenla gnv!s! Although ~bal been • ro<'ClgJIJzed Dear Or. Stelncrohn: I'm ... -to feel .. tired ell . tho 11111e: Al the .,. "'*· and wt\h onl)' t\.o cbllltren and ell tbo belprwan~..lt¥ scarcely ,,..--------.. &et~lbt.,, • At -tim.. ir• •YJll an effort for me to keep lllY eys open. DOCTOR IN THI!: HOUSE My ey~ droop. WlllJe eallng , t feel 16 ezbaUJted U'1 even an medical condition tor many effort tor me to chew or years, it is not convnoo and is swallow. often Overlooked. But u it b When l talk with a friend, so often overlooked, It is likely my voke ls sooo down to a that it ls not really as rare as '!'ili•per for lack of stre!lilh-we think. IO!y doctor thlnk.s I haye a What has given me th • ' b o rd e r l i n e ' ' case of strong hunch yw may have Jt -~· He-afS I'm_ i3 ~of 'l'"!J!loms' · a "lltUe" anemic. And of e1&reme t.Ugue, drOoping or course, there . ls .!M old eyeU,is, difflculty in chewing standby e:iplanation: You are and ·1wallowlng -and even nervous." trouble in talking. l'm practically an invalid I have seen a few patients mlUcles m,.y be a!rutf!, tt.ey don't wwt well !Ac••,_.. messages don't come through lood and clear. I SUGGEST tllat yaii ..it YoUr doctor to consider this condjUon. Jf fie won't, ihen ask for a coru:ultation with an in- ternist or neurologist. A a.imple teat will rmi.ke the diagnosis. We have special 1nedlclnes that will, 1n moat patients, qutckly "5tore ruqtb" and vigor. We don't know what causes the condition, but it is encouraging to know that we don't have to stand by helplessly while patients slow- ly fade away In exhaustion. Treatment is. o! course, in1· portent. But correct diagnosis comes fir.it. MEDICALETrES walking around like a zomb~ with 'Similar symptorm who For Mr. T: Not too many in a dream. I'U have to stop were at last diagnosed as hav~ years ago the treatment for wrjting this letter. It's getUng ing myaslhenia gravis. In this gout was merely prescribing ••J·bopethoae-weren'lalilovewllhell&oneto·weedil." t. to be loo much of an «<ort .. condition, tl>ete are loose or Oil• special medicine for the Please help me with some faulty chemical coonectioos attacks as they occurred. The suggestion if you can. -Mr&. between muscle fibers and patients would lie ln bed or sit ~----. Easy lighnng, Jong burning, odorless briquets.. ,,.s11s-• ( . . ,, ••.. ~-~ •-nc~ B. nerve impulses. Altboueh the--in a ,chair wilh foot elevated ·BIDDlllGAND YEGl,TAB ... ~PlANfr~ Pony !rays of .all yovr ' summer favorit~s. Petunias, ton,otoes, pepl"'rs and more: ' i :: WATERl9'G CAW S.QUAR1' '' "· . (If the lllodi wu_ In tbe big toe) QDlll "'" 1!113 ua:ltd theJr dfect: diarrhea. ThiJ WU & stgoai to stop laldnil them . Within 1 few hours, or d.,s, the acu\e .pail>. 1 n 4 In· nammation bad •~Ind the att8cJc was ove_t, .. As a rule we did not prew,m, -*lca- llon between attacka. .. Just don't overeat, don't. 4rink too much, and uerclM moderate- ly,'' we .sakL f'> JIUT NOW WE have medlcallom. Mr. T .. that need to be taken for months and months. 'Mleir purpose is to prevent attacks -to keep the uric acid dawn to normal. Therefore, I think you will understand \\'by your doctor insists that you bep on with the medicine altbough you have beeq feeling well lai,ly. If you would like a copy of "llow To Live With Arthri· tis," write me at this paper enclosing %> cents and a STAMPED, SELF-ADDRESS- ED ENVELOPE. .. ~· ~;...i-:·"~-· --=_..,n ANTl•FREIZI-., n ~ .-Once a year, all.year cooli(ig r3i&WI '""· . " system protecilon. For ,... "corrosion protection all year ~z:,~--' . ~;. .. Eldi' • •• tvrdy ~ C:onstruCtlon/lias d rugged finish that· fertilize('· and chemical$ won't harm. itlllFINISHID . - PANELl'NG .SAi.El WJNIIH SUMMER .'or1ouhd, get Prestone fl ' ' · -~odoy! I ·~ ..... ,., SWINGLINE STAPLER· . ' Case-l!c!tden•cf steel ond bonderi~ed far ru4t resistance.. Complete with built in atapl• extractor. ' Uses both J/4"' and· '5/16" 119ple1. -.MILAMINI INlllRWARI ' . SIT " . ., Complete· service for 8 in exciting accent colors-of the 70's ••• New olive hues. 61 PllCISI ' •••• SET .. ' ' 79~ 4' INDUSTRIAL Fi,UORESCENT FIXTURE Heavy steel construction.' Complete with 3 conductor cord. lamp5 r:iot included. ' • 849 SHERWIN-Will/AMS ANT•GUIKIT:· The fir1e1t antique kit ,-------;;.;.., made by Sherwin-Williama. Seola and fini1he1 in 2 ea1y steps. Ydu don't need to remove the aid finish I IOMI COlOll I• UMITID tUA•TlfllS ·"· ' ' ' , 4'X8' PANELING . . Introducing our new prefini}hed·paneling. Two tonea: WA,NUT and PICAN. Both are prelinished with a hardboard bock and ore easily applied over a solid surface using panel adhesive. Simulated wood grain. • YOURCHOICI 3 49 IA. AME~LCA'S GREATEsr HARDWARE STORES AND HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTERS ---' . 'WSTlll nn•'flMllYD. ·~ ' 11UTMlllSftR •711 WUTMlllTU AYL , -llAl<lL If ... POIT A If tOf.Dlll WIST IT, BUINA•AaK -YAlirtYlnJ IT. ILT4"ao. JQH IOCIPm.I ' ATUll<OUUVL ATllTOffU,, , 1MILIATIUA-AY .. U-HABRA UJ1 W. L.t. llAlll llYD. ....... •\ ATnStlMAVL ~ AT llACll llVO. FULLIRTOll MOSLOAPUllAYL COSiA .. R tit l 1 n'fl IT. ATtTATIC«Utlt&YD. IT SAITA • ··1 AV&. .. ' ' -e LONG IEAClf eVAH NUYS e RIVElt51DE • COVlfllA •LA CRESCENT A• THOUSAND OAKS• SIMI• LANCASTER• CHATSWORTH• TARZANA •UPLAND •SAUGUS •CHULA VISTA ' e llDWOOD CllY •GOLETA •VISALIA• VICTOllVILl.E • GRANAD~ HILLS• SAN BERNARDINO• CAMARILLO e BAKERSFIELD• HACllNDA HEIOHTSeSANTA MARIA • DEL AMO . • , e SANTA CLARA e CORONA •ESCONDIDO• SPRING VALlEY • LADERA HEIGHTS• RESEOA •EAST LOS ANGELES . . . -~·~iiiiiiiill • ; I • \ I . ' • .. I ' • • • • , - ff IWl.Y PILOT _ _.. -· • TONIGHT'S L..._ TV mGIIlJGIITS KCET rD 7:30 -Storefront. A jau dance writ· !Am narrated and chore<>.zraphed by William Cower foil0ws movement ot the bbck people ol Am,rlca and up througl! slavery to today's reform mqv .. ment.s. CBS II 8:00 -Sonny ind Cher. Joe Namath. 1.5 a gueat tonight and he's ln good company -with the U PLl.yboy Playmates of 1972. ABC fJ 8:00 -"South Pacific." The 1.958 movie version ol the Rodgers and H.ammente.m ~U:91.cal .clustc with Mitzi GfYOOI', Rossano Brllll, John Kerr and Ray Walston. TV DAILY LOG W ednt1sdoy Evening Ill-.............. ) MAY 11 pt 8 Ill D II GI Giil li1l -, wa-! ........ i CIJltl .. .. I .......... ". ' ··-r ... Tot • I ··--·--·""'-i '''°Cll-.-' D .._.: CC> (tO) -war tt t11t I 1!111 I 11" (ldV) '16-kofiro Hon10, --. (j) C1S """1f 1lt1r Clbll~ ... • • I "NM 11111 Wiii TIMI ii'...,. ltffflll ... r m...,,_ ·' 111-...c..a.W' t Iii)-( ... , ......... ' Ill .... _ 1:0011 !D •c-t ~.....,,. .... ,, (I) TMI: • ~M41 l])--D'lllll'•Mrl.W ..... '"" ..... .., .... e•r11 ~,...,. m t111 • .. , .. (•1 1::: ... k\IC..1111W aJUon'Oo• m_...., ,,.._ -rl """'" Ill• "" ....... c...,. .. n. -Cll-·-• Walt 1"11 fW ,,.. Itta ..... .. ~ VICltloft"' Thi f1mlly •tc:•· lion It dilt'l.lp!N wtltn Hl"J' l!llku • cltlltns •mil of IOl!I• 1111411 t.111· 10:00 8 ci.'l Ch11t11 (I) Clu CL1111tr pm tt uatrfty. chW. Emmett lvrdld. who shtws Jmmtdl1!1 Ill· --.. ~-!lo. ,.wltl .,. ant. :L llip atllt •foa to ttiJi, I for fft 1Mldl\lll'ltr. aae--... ...... {fl)'M.·llltlco llMt "'4:td. 1 U.S. ·~ f111111 tM _,.. t•rioul "*nln. whoSf "'"" .,. in,., ror-, i'riOf. Uw1111 Mulh111 W .llmtt Cl'llDIJ'pat. ···-a..., lei dlii-;.. 1o1t 11-, .....-<••> u w:. rn·W... lfll'ICf llwan, M1l Z1ttWHn1 GJ la Molllm mr- 111 btttln;-tlllf'I~ ·brlnO.-on 10-.IO 8T•lt Itel' · thl wr•lll OI ~l110n 1NI 41ufhtw. at• llaleM •Ill Atille B -IC> (llol} .,,._ rl "' 1111" <•> '17 -J1m11 G1m1r, ~ llm C-CoMIQ 11'*1 .i.son_ "*'°' Robert 11111. D ""'1/Spll'b 00 '' ,,. • '""' 11,00 DD D Ill l!llll""' (}) T•,.,, r.r 1t D -i _, <C> "'~ Cll CIJ llil --" ......... , ... , '57-......... _ Jotin W•Jlll, Seolll• Lo11t1, Kou1no Cl> Mtnltll llMIM !rmt. m Tr.ti! er Cllltlflll.._ : • • • • 1 • • • .. Three Shows ·Make-0 ';buts' By TOM TITUS ..... ..., ...... ..,, Ttfte new stage productions · a~ 1 on the Oruge COUt boards this week u the llvlng theater eeu<XJ moves into its homestl'eUlb -one the aeallld world premiere in less than a week at South Co a s t Repertory. nus one, opening tonight and playing Wednesday• and Thurldays throogh June 21, ii "The Clowns,'' a tribute to the .silent movie comedian! by Ron Boussom'a Actor'a Mime Ttieater. The other newcomers are ---------~ This is the Jwt Theater Note1 column to be pulr Lished on lVedne.sdays. Due to a de-emphasis of local entertainment. live theater newa will be fourul, begilf'> ing next week, on TUes· day! and Thursdays. Local theater pictures also wilt be discunt111ued . --~· -.. S !l.1/U.11 I ': ' •. l .. '"-l-l.:11.1'~ -,. . _ .... ,,,, StAO/UM •J :;:; "TkG~-CPG) .... -'L!.>UUXit!.l>CJJ?::,11 "Lady 51091 Tio• ..... Ill -... " ·-...... SIAD/UM ! :;~ .. •'.111'•\.'.11.hL".I'. • '"' .... b,...., ... , Pktw. ' .. "" Tirrltl' . "lllly· Jadi" 'IPGl ..... For Advertising In OUT 'N ABOUT Phone Norm Stanley 642·4321 19tll a!MI NIWPOIT 541·1552 "O.. of tlie Yoor'1 10 ._, .. -LA. ll-. "THE EMIGRANTS" ll'GI U•,.itc.e OUrior "SLEUTH", L ln time ii 8 o'clock al the Hall In UC I • ~ ArU Village on campus. RMervaUoll5 au. 8617. "EXIT THE Body" finishes out the loth · anniversary season at the Huntington Beach Playhouae w h e r e perfonnancet will be gtven 1 Fridays and Saturdays· through June 16 under the dfrectlon of Howard Solomon. - Ann Coffman takeJ the· leading role in the F'ted C.3rmichael comedy, With Ray Scott, Laura Black, Helen Susman, Bill Moreland, Greta Smitb, &lsan O'Connell, Colin Guiver, Dennis Creedon and Gordon Sandy in . supporting roles. Sandy also has designed the set for the production, which begins at 8:30 in the playhouse, 2110 Main St., Hun· tington Beach. ReservatJQn.S -· I Magic Ti~ . . . . : .· '":( Sandy Banks and Mike Fulle« enpge Iii. some hOfse; 1.: play from Soutll Coast Repe(\ory s,iipeclal cbil~'.• · program "ll!a:gic Theater II." Final perf<>rm~nces ~ will be given May 20 and 27 at 2 p.m. at the c;osta ' ~esa !beater. . , . "'. ' ·f . Network's ~Growing Up'. . ·:r . Experiment Successful ;i,1 LOS ANGELES (AP) -were encooraged "lo lace up Robert D. Wood, president or to problems wbicb are OQD-• the CBS Television N_~work, temporary :to real-Jlfe s.it!m' said Tuesday the dec~lOl'I to tlcns,•• he said. " create new programmmg ~t But it hM oot aJI· ~ woul~ reflect the ~udl~ s change. Wopd sald.''-We kpoir grot!Wlg ~ducat lop and -vie~ef'6·woo1d;~ up-in a~f sophbticatlon bas been a sue-anyone ti'ied to tamper . c~sF.our Y""'"'"-·aan we faced the basic ·format of aeries,. .,.... "' . ev such as 'Lucy' and 'Grm up to the fact tbat televisioo smoke• " . • genera.lly, and CBS particular-· ,, ly, was slipping out of the ~**·*·*··*·*·· " rh$streamofAmerican ~,..,. ~ life," he told the annual ""'"'"'•.P,ftPi meeting of the CBS Television fl.l..i.:L.\ RESUMING ON Thursday iA Ne.Work Affilialos. the San Clemente Community He ,said that although CBS q'h~ater's comedy "A Barrel had a large sbar~ of the rural 1'ull. of P~.s" by John .. and old~ au~~/'lhose un- Patrict'. '\l1th .·J~e A:t>-'dtr 30 . anti 1 1 ttie mo~e ple{!:ett m tbe dn·~r 1 :dl~1r. sophlstlcafea, lD'tJatt'. audiences Mark Razor's una1mattve were ~ off · and tuning perlormanco ts a hlgbllgh> of ciuf al'~!ar •i t.ll!tliiOn w the . .s~w, which also features concerned. Tbey'Simply ~·ould Pa~ ~· Doris Donb, not sit .still and watch many Ardis Faith, Mark Ma-g the ofd.time!avorltes Who __ .., <I' and Sharon Todd. made this network a leader. The curtain R'Pes up at 3:30 And they Jaughed4 at, fu!~ 'l)ursday through Saturday , of with, many of OW'. ~kmt~ and 7:-30 ori SUnday at the ning hits." · Cabrillo J?layhouse, 2<0 2 Wood said that oiilY seven _of Avenid'a Cab r i 11 o, San the program&: on CBS in 1969 Clemente. Reservations 492-att atlll on the air. · 0465. The ~akthrough •. progroyn . · ;.. WAU/~UNO-fUI WAI '!All iA the:Fanuly ," and ' It was folloiretf foY 1'Maude'I -' Ml DftMy S... "'CHAlltlll AMO TMI ANQiLH In.ii "CINOlll•l.LA" ~es,":!~!;·.,~,,~~~ .. TyJer Moore Show," "Medica'I Center" and ~'Hawaii Five-0," LID 0 NI WP0'1 111 ltl T1n1 II'. 11W"' • lill!M: ..,..,,... T••• 1 tri,• °'m ""-llft (Cliltlll) '31 -Censt1nce 81nn1tt, N ... : ,.. ... ttin Fri. ltol111d 'l'ounr. 1:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~·1; .... ;-;;"~7~,1~0;, ~"'~'"~,.;-~·~,J~O~I llE ACH l j>tlll,AH'". 1() Llt'O ,~,1 ' • <I> ,I' fn ..... 11'1111 '1ht Mowmtflt of 1 Peoplf' A l•a d1nc1 WJitten, n•r· IIil QIJCt: llflllM 1111 IHI rlt:1d 111d dlortof11ph1d by W"~· ll:ISllJh•t M 1l1m r.oit11r, follows mowm111t ol bl1ct PIOPI• to Am1rk1 ind ut1 ll:l0 II (I) Cll l.llt Mftit: (C) -W. lt1rou1h ll1vtry lo tod1y's ralorm .. !Iden• (Wes) '58 -Alan l.ldd. mov11Mnts. C!ntst Boranlnt. a> TIIJ1 II Y•r llr. fJ Cil (j) ED INd: c.wtt Pe1rf '!) MM•1 f•lly !1il1Y Is lb1 xl!ldulld 111111. 1:00 IJ Cl)'°""' 1114 c.i:., (R) Jm: H1· CJ 0 m Jo ... 117 C.1111 m.01 ind tlM 12 P!l)'boy l'!lym111a O 111111Ill1 SliftclM tf 1972111Ast. m Te Ttll t1r1e Tnitfl CJ a m Adi• 12 "Air Drop" (K) A JOUl\I &lrf lltds Officlfl M11loy lZ:OO fJ M.M: (t) "llfrlfltf 111 tfl1 Statfl I/Id ltHd to 1 1111plclou1 pl11tt ind ltn" (•dv) '66 -Jobit Htl'IMll, /MP tn tllt mount1ins end the poa. Hom rra11t. sibllity of I Nin:ol:lcs drop. m i\lfrM lfftllletcl "'-ta Q (J)(l)l!}A IC W•- ...... : (C) (l~r) "Stutfl ,., ... lZ:lO" ,.,.. {mus) '51--Mlttl G111101, Raauno m lllffft: IOJl'ritltill" (dr1) '5Z- Brw1, .lohn Kerr, Ray W1 lston. Vin Jotinton, Damthy lleGlllr" B1sed 011 limes A. Mithener't nwtl, Ql Ptttif.elt hlndilll • "files 111 tbe South Ptt:ihc," 1bout younr Arn1ric1n N•tT nuu1, Nellit 1:00 (I) 0 0 (I) ff,.. fll!\ush, ind her tom111et with 1 f11nc:hm1n Jn H1w1li durln1, Wo1ld 1:45 IJ lilftlt: (C) '1.lt!MNI" (my!) '51 W1r 11. -Ray Mif11nd, MtUrMn O'H111. CD Trwtll tr ~11t11m ID PwTy MIN" fB Mtn11110l Corajt ft) Altlria 71 A loo• ti lht nt· lion·s medletl 11s11rch pro1nm1.. fI) Ch111piltlslll11 Wrtstll"f Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES l:JO 0 (C) "Maril Crt1'" (mu1) 'SS.- Pit Boon•. Cltriatint C1re11. It.OD (])"""" a.,, Sin(' (m1r1) ·s~ lMn my Slnds. llli G1nll1. CJ °'LNll ..,,... (mys) '52 - Geor,. R11t. 12:00 a "Mlatiw•~ i.r lmJ'I> '4i-Roti· ert lowtry. "M1W •I Stl1111" {d11) '37 -fred MtcMu1111, Cl1uae1te Cor~rt. 2:00 m AH·Nlfhl Stw: "'Cflc11tM C!J," "'OKI UP" I TIMt" J:lD 1J Mtlk: "Stt' DIW'll " TlfNf" (ctr•) ~9 -Rod T•Jlor, Jocely• 8r1n6D. l:«t m (C) ""tpl!l1t1'1 DtqtiW' (mul) '49-Red S~eUon, £slhtr WiUi1m1. 1:30 f> Nbll Silt•t. 111111 DHp" (dtl) '5&-Clut G1bl1, 911rt L1na,st1r. l:IO (I) (C) "nit ea.rt Jtthir" Cone:!. (COl!I) ·~1nny KIJf. 9 (C) °'Ttlt 11111 An lintl11(' Conti, (Cl "Jiltr.11" P111 I (drt) ·6"4 -$t1n Canntry, Tippl Hedren. J:JI Q (C) .... ., ... (1dY) '66 -Clint W1i..tr, Je1 North. 4:00 D lilewi1: (C) (lM) "'Alriu f1111 ~ .. (1ctii) ·57 -Hu(h O'Sriln, 1ohn Mills, Ni111 Gretn. KOCE, CllANNEL SO Orange County's Ulrl'~ television station. KOC£..TV. has scheduled.. the lollowina: special programs today. Detailed listing.s or ctwloeJ 50's programs are carried in the Daily J>ilot 's TV Week each Sunda)'. 4:00 TM• OlllAT CIJlfSUMlll COlf. TCST (Cl OCA,() 'f1~1m~ T•ll T1l11" U.~ 4 -S'O""I 1 "~ aLaCT K (OMl"Afl!Y' I CTW') OUC.lklnl ""''-'illN'nt"f. mut t •l'ICI lllnO• 1111 '~" Drfm1ry 111:1'10d f.l'lllctr•n. S~ llJAM• STlltlaT !Cl lt"TWI d\lc llfiN/ ;;J:it1m fw • r I · •: HIN. 11 C MIUMI• C ... ... ~Cl C?., •• ., _, f!u 1 -. -.::..:.;: " -........... 'i NOW OPEN 1155 BAKER ST. at FAIRVIEW • COSTA MESA • 011not Cowltr'• ntwfft Dtf T1co It: opon •nd reldJtO urv• you I • For TASTY TACOS, Burrito• and To1l1Kfot, or DELICIOUS HAMBURGERS, Fri•• ind Sh1k" • FAST SERVICE It tlthtr our Drlv1 Thru or lrl11d1 P1tto Dining Room , •• and, Your Order i. M•d• to Order. ' NOW OPEN' 1155 BAICtR ST. al FAIRVIEW, eoot.-U- 7 AM-12 PM "CLOCKWORK ORANGE" ... "DEALING" l•riMr• H•r1h•y loth Color f It I KUls Like To Ask Andy ~ -,,., W_,, I.My """"'" "SUTHER" Abo fl'Gl lwrt lt..,..ldl Ja41"'91 Welc• ''FUZZ'' NATtONAI GINHAL THIATllS W PLAYING R!SIRVID SIATS On S•le D•ilJ 12 'Iii ! MARLOJI .BRANDO f!\titL r . -. ' . . ' • Oil. 1i/RU111URS. I P.M. I fRIDll 1 ' 1,cs Sl!UROIY 2·1 I Hl SUllDll l·f 11 AIL11ATS,S<~.!!-1.J lillllllftMJ· ,Mltl ... ,, .... "l~O'TOOlJ ~IOIUI J ~Of'·tl~"'° ~ ........ .. r:.::=~ ... §.~.~.~.~~§ •• ~.~~l~I Mt.1 •1'.M. -~"' .. lJlJlllS." ~ "SIOUCllGll Of ~" '°'" ft.ti'hltll ••rro tJCt ·n"''"-Dlll'.T HAllY 11'1 .... ~ ..... KIUlt •1 llOfl ·"" Ol9I • t Ml I .. !1 .. \ • • • In do •, ' awa Sta i_gg the ,T in• anl p row . . • • ,; .. : r \ '• • • •• .. • •• •• ' " • ~· • ;, .. or~ • ' t .. I ' I , hllion Isl~d , . " . ewport Beach .. • , ... ... . ( ·' People rim ii •.. in lhli yeai 2022. ~·PANAVJSIONO ' . ;1~-rl>P ~~~10 e -"'"""''"'-'"' \ •• ' • ' ' ¥ ' -I'"' ANDJlEWS · "~"""" PWMMF.R WIDNISDAT THJIU JJllDAY • 7 1 10 ,,M. SAT •• SUN. & .;ouurs 1 ..... 7.10 . . ' "HERE YOU have a whole o,.; .-:;0~"1- ll t• ··"'· CNtlM •nMllOll '''TM• ,.AMIL Y .. L .. M1rvl11·Q .... H1ckrNil "'ltlM• C;UT,"c.ler 111! -llyln-O'M .. 1 ''T°H•- THlat' Yhto CAME TO 1 Dl"M•R" ' ~. (, ldtt "lt.t.01" ~......--•• ,.. '"-ettt.rl 1..01- , ONf-vUY WANTS TO . Xlll HER • DAILY PILOT Jlt NOW! IN THltfATRE FOUi .. .STEREO SOUNDS OF mHE HA 'RBOA • • ~ f \ I .. •'. • r ' " I - • ' , . . I . ; . .... I ' ' " , ~- , • \ ' · J4 , DAJ,l \' PILOT • W.tntldoy, 11111 16; '113 NEW '73 DODGE CORONET W~GDN ~tris is 'M be$1 "'""OM i$ °" tht (YYrket tod•Y· , Loaded with fe1t1.1res ' you would pay extr11 for on otMr makes. OIDI• J'()Ull "°'*· With comfort, styling 11rid «onomr. . .comt.s flJllY f.Jefory ~uipped with lil'lfed g/dss, windshield .tnd other convenience feiltures. OO>rl NOW '70 CHEV C,_,.ICl i door h¥dTO!l, V·I, 1u!om1tk tr1r.s- mh1ian, pawtr ''Hrlng, ~inyl top, IKrory 1ir conditioning, till 1tHring wheel, radio I. l'ita!tr. !IJ9.BEK J •1788 ' '68 MUSTANG , ........... VI.•-•-< ,,,_,1>1111. _, ~ .. ""O ••nyl •oo'. IM;~y l >'(CJ'lf .• ''°"'~ 1VV.l."11 .... '69 CHEVY • C.k• i 111111r l\l•dl(lll 111 • ...,10 t•~,,, lcir>O•hOlllll(f, lll"1'• ''tt'lll(j, l)Clwt• .,.<\doY.1, t &O 0, llef~r ,.nyl '1CI, T>ll wl\ttl, ,C\li.k •t88 . . ~""· .... .... -,Beach ·q~ty • ' I '°""' Linl, 6 !oj)Md ~. R.:lio. H81tf, IM-(JF, '68 DODGE 0·200 :, Tori Long l!ed Pitkuo. cv1tom cab. \/·,, ' IOttG, ""'VV duly spjil ritm. (ll~lBI '68 PLYMOUTH SATfum wMsoN 6 ~1~1enger. V4, IUIOr!lllic frtl!Y f'T111Kll\, ~wer Slffring. fact«~ 1ir c~nai11 onifl9, 1~99J9~ r"1ck.· i\ll'.D.:60 .!688 ..,....,.,... "~befll" V·I. 4 ll)(«I !r1nsmi!- 1iotl. rlO!ll & hrtlrr, r1iWd wtl•lt ltlltr !if'ti. Herdf(ICI. (bt'KKX I ...... '66 FORD ICOHOl ... SU"t WAM H.r; ,..,.,~, ,~1ruor. r-& flNlf", C.•r.tl ku ""1ltfl I,: tUJ~ . , ... , '69 CADILlAC ' HAIOTO, DfVl(ll L~~-~·Na~ POWtl' st1t'S: pgwrr brfk~. ~er wi~ Ii~ wtwl. !IS..DIL I I.. y • • • • . I HURRY.! ... BU.Y~-NOW ::AMO.-. . ~ SAV·E BIG! VAN :CON.VERSION !i.f)l)lt jop, p.lntliiig, Ciq:l!!S. l'nr dibelff, rat ~, lutly ' tiC10ll .eQli•PP8d. ~Ser. ;g111s21 ~ . ~.-·~-m-. ~' NEW '1'3 . MEL-MAR MOTORHOME Mini-hom,, lu!Jr sell-<Onll!ned, lltlUtiflll tone on 'llllHI,, ' cv. It. rtlr)Oer1tor. 4 bomer i~, 3611 engine, diK brakes, aulomli!Jc trll'IS- miHiOh, power s!eering. tser. Oll-6~). ' . IMMllNAn DILIVllY $. NEW 4 STAR ; MOTORHOME 'FH!uring llr!ll piclUl't 1i1ed slidir9 . willdoWI. w/remov.tble scmni. 84" lntrriLrJ1Nd:rwn, 10 Ofllon bultM t•nk with 11';11 lllVllt· 2 t11ige wtetv vents. 11Pfrt · 11rt lo rim w/rilClt· intMIJng •1 bur'nPef, full S" Wrl flrrllJ;!.!Stlicrl • m1ttresw1. 52 91llon gu Nnt. 1ir ll'lodis. 10 g1llon hot "'Iller Ml!«. NOW ON SALi AT llG DISCOUNTS NEW '73 PACE ARROW MOTOR HOME Stltct !rom many moOtls with !tie eq.,iip. mtn! 11\il w1t1 'fOU .. BIG II' Model with ~omattc trilllS111111ian, pewer. ~teJing, pOWtr brak~. SPICiou! wardroot. !ffu!ilul 'WOinffd U!Cr>tn with l burntr SIO\rf, forctd imlt hH1, 0th.1~e bathroom. 90 ampbal!uy, scrl!tfl door and Diiier hllcurits (5.J91l) ·1 ·Tone~ Chassi\ wit~ 3liO v.a englnt, autom1tic lr•n5missicn, llOWff b'r.k~. sfll<011tained. cruise contr11, 9C amp bf!!ery, {co. tt, ' rririger~Jor, UOO BTU f\l!alH. !Ser. • ~?mil IMMEDIATE OEL!VEllY . . i • Y•s, the brand new 1973 Pa<• A"ow forotd)' $6911. PAY ONLY Only $691,ID down plusta. & lice.,., eit"'r•qulty ' ~r yoor trade, C!llh or a combincrtion di ~Ii, ¥.:' . ~'...11 ·3G.t"Monthly paym•nls of $113.94 ond ·appn>yol of Y911r ,., ~.,pod credit. Deferred payment price laclvdiq -HIJI,· ,.. , "; Hcenw and all carrying char;8e1 Is -$10-.(269,96. ·.'Mo , ;· ANNUAL PERCENTAGE llATE lD.64,,_, • · ' • > · " 'S9 TOYOTA ,_ ... " WP111r..11I !Of t \, but ktl 1t1U • VVAi'!I~ ' . ....................... ,....,,_.,l_~ I ' ~-•,. • '69 ' FORD lCONO 1-190 .:, Ton Va~. rnler for 11tntl!d.. (lSO'i:TX) "70 ~lym, Wgn . · '<111•._....,... V·I. IUl<I. ·lflll!, 1ir (ondi\ilw!i1'9, l'OWfl' S1tt1"11!g. trm:~F ···-·· .. ~ I j •f ' \ ... . . . . CIA~ Sl•lionwf'ilan, 6 ~· rltlio lo hnlfr. (lHvrntJ ,, . ' • CUITOM SOO 11-I, IUltlmllk lritf'IWTl!r.si .. , poWfl" 1terr1ng, t1erory11lr concrltioniri;. !•iKJLI . . ., •• '88 COUGAR -: '·. . ~ . " '.'.f, a~ttmlllc lr•nsmis!ion, ?O'\'.~· 11ttring/viN/{ IQP, radi~' hi!a:er NIJ.hll . • . , \ • r ), \ • ' ' • Wtdfttf4q, M11 16, 197) Perez' Comeback . . . I ' .. . . 1, _, ... , i '"' ' ~ ·. I' ·~1~~dRop:UVER U.l'l'TJ IS OPDT ~ ~ C!~ALY IN LAS VEGAS T'O'llllNAMINT. \ . '· \ ,, • DAIL V PILOT w 16, 1973 Wilt's Big Dippers in ' Area I I I, Ora11.ge Coast, UC I Host Volleyball Matches .. l \ Will ~ ol the Loo Anitlt• I · Laktt1 and his Big DIPIJ<fli '°™'yball ' ..... will hold matcl>el at Oran&• Cout Coll'lle Saturday night and UC 1rvUte "'llleoday. Qiamberla.in's team Yiill tangle ~ith the Balboa Bay Club in an 8 o'clock , mat.ch at Orange Coast in a best two«· , three series. Tuesday the Dippers will be at UC Irvine's Crawford Hall Cor a beat· · -of'-five series against the ~e County AU-stars. Game time will again be a. 'l1le Big Dippers are generally con· sidered one of the be.st four-man volleyball teams In the '~1orld and have ·Drafted Twiee ....,., tai<nted ploytrs to C001plemml Iii< 7·1 Cbamhtrlaln. G<!1e Selznlck, consldored M r • Volleyball In tile U.S. and fOf'll\OI' Olym- pian Larry Rundle will be port of the squad. and ex-Orange Coal! and UCl.o\ basketball star Jom Vallely will lend his talents. Members o/ lhe Balboa Bay Club team tnctude Tom Read, John Meek, Spencer Not.ebaum, Larry Voelke, Bill Imwale and Glen Stone. The Big Dippers were f«med after Chamberlain took up the sport two years ago, and have lost only ooee in 50 matches over a span of two years. And Anteaters' Humphries Plnces Education First By HOW ARD L. HANDY t Of .. Deity ~M9t Si.It •· Ray Rwnpbriel is a young man whose ' 1!.ougtn. ol an educallon have surpassed U-ol slgnlng a professional boaeball contract despite beio£ a first-round cboice twice in ~ @st two years. · BumJiries is the winningest pitcher on the UC Irvine staff this spring and has '.pasted 10 straight victor~ after suf- fering an early-seaJOO loss to USC -his • iJ,Jy defeat. -' Ilia first win ol the campaign was over 1be vatmled Arizona Slate Sun Devils and found him gotng all the way in a lG--in- .nfDC H triumph. He is now IH le< the ·year. they haYO -lhtlr lall.44 In a -· 'l1le Dlppen will play only lour mtn on a tam agfinst a l'fgulation 1U-man team in both contests. 11ckell for both eventa wUI go oo sale at Ille door. Prices at tbe ONllie OJeat malch will bO 13 for adull&, · 11.75 I<>< students and $1 for children under 12, At the UC! match, tickets are j)rictd at 13 for the general public and $2 for students. 1'te Orange Coast contest will be preeeded by a match between two girls teams, Will'I Uttle Dippers a n d Selznick's Shamrocks, scheduled '\o irtart at 6:30, Golden ,W est ' Gets Top Grid Candidates· By CRAIG SHEFF 01 Ille O.JI, Piiot Sl•lf A record crop or 76 f1'eshmen have in- dicated a desire to •play football at Golden West Coilege next season. ac· cording to Rustlers coach R a y Shackleford. Heading the list of frosh candidates are five All-CIF stars -linebacker -tarry· Grady and 9uarterback Dan Accomando from Westminster, quarterback Marty Mikkelsen and center Bob McNuJty from Pacifica and linebacker~d L o u Chumich from Bolsa Grande.' , "We feel tb1s Is the" OOt year of recruiting we've ever had and I mean it seriously," says Shackleford. This should be a banner year for the jaycees in Orange County. We're really excited." Shackleford lists three other top pro- spects -running backs Dan Princeotto (Estancia) and Fred Hernandez (Edison) and wide receiver Bob Granath (Edison) - but adds that none of the three -has __ Je·Records are something _lhis Junior , !!slifbander h8I ncv4:.r given much ht, however. 'f\t---<,....~~decioioo,-u yet. "Princeotto has told us he has not made up his mind one way or the other. We're still trying to recruit him and we're in hop'.es he will attend Golden West." "Last s~r he spent his time playing UCI coach Gary Adams in Rapid y_, South Dakota, bul .not as a pitcher. ~t wu In the Black frills area that he ~~·third tme tnsteed of pitching and Al a rMJJt, Ued Frank Howard's single season home nm mark for that franchise at 13. Humphries aiso hit a .298 clip but ~ two short of Merv Rettenmund's -lfasin League homer mark of IS. jh1s would indicate he ~d a future as -an tnnelder and a potential slugger. Not so. "l like to pitch, now," he says with 'medesty. · "When I came here, I was more or a ·thrower than '& pitcher." he explains. : '.'Coadl (Adams) has made me learn hOW to pitch and J really enjoy it now. "I don't really think I have a future as an infielder," he adcb. At San Bernardino Valley College he played third base his first year and pitched in his second season, compiling a lo-4 record including a win over Cerritos In the state playof(s. San Berdoo Jost to Long Beach and wound up third in the atate, largely on the strength of H.um- . phrles' arm. He was first taken in the draft by the Atlanta Braves-in January; a year ago and in June went on the first round again, thh time to St. Louis. He turned down both offers aJthough he says he was close to signing when he left for Rapid City last surruner. "St. Louis had a scourt cmtact me the ) RA,.Y HUMPHRIES day before I left but he didn't call back and I went to South Dakota. I really don't know if he was going to offer me enough to sign or not." Humphries will join UCI first baseman Jeff Malinoff this summer in Anchorage, Alaska playing semipro ball. The team will spend 11 week or two in Hawaii with the second week hinging on a proposed trip to Japan. A mutually strong feeling for dogs may have brought the two closer together. MalinOff has picked up stray dogs for many years and found homes for them. Humphries enjoys bunting and owns his own Labrador Retriever and Vlzala (a Hungarian pointer,). When he i•'t pla)olng baseball, he spends tlnie on a private ranch in the Hemet area,.hun_ting birds with the dog•. But right now; it',s concentration on the NCAA college divis!On baseball Cham; pionships with the UC Irvine team. In ad- dition to his 11-J record and 10 complete game performances, be sports a 2.66 e.r.a. His batUng average has dipped a bit, largely through fhactlvity, but he has two bome runs and a double in 58 plate BP: . pearances this season. Don't bet against the strong right- hander signing a pro contract when he completes his educatk>n at UCI next June. He's a virtual cinch to be drafted high if he can even come close to rivaling his record for '73 as a senior. Gol*I\ WeJI Fl'Mllm•I\ l'rM1N<tl Boli.-Grar>ae -BoD Bonnat (lr>G); Rod Brink ~Cltfen5lve 1lneman)I· Joftn C1rroH (d~lva lndf; Cl<I Cr11.omfch (I 1>1backtr.enCI); 0.MI• H11rle !/lu•rCI ); Jotln L•'1llvtkl (Clefl'lllllV• ll111m•nli Steve tensor IC1e11n1lve l»ck); Jatl Talby tdefen1lve "!"· otl• Mau -KtllV Slrolch Of,.bl<k•r). Cll1on -Joe ~lr•k°" ffvl l).lckJ; Mike Oom11 lotfltf'lllvt Unaman); Bob Gr•rwll\ lullCIKldeCl)J Jack H•voes !ninnln11 beckl; J!Jt! Johflson (offtonsrve llnemtn/; M•rk Wtlherbff lwlell rec:tlv1rJ · Oen WlnclWI CHne.<ktt-Clelens!ve .00)1 Fr.c:t Her;,•odez funClec:ICllCI). E"tnclt -Sfoll G•Vntt lrllrllllrli! beck!; M•rk Pandlr (cleitnl vi ti.ck); O•n PrlnclKlho tun- declCllCI). FounT•ln V•ll~ -M!k• ~lcO!m trunnlng l»ckJi Bob OU!lrv lclefemlve ti.ck[· G!rditn Gr-• -Bob C cero tquarl•rt>Kklf l(lrlr. DM.., !ot~lva linema n); Warran H•nMn ~doll-Ive tiac11.l 1 _ s11v1 HllrnDan lclef1n1lv1 """41nl; ll:•n,_ Ytt11IH (deftnllv• ti.ck)! Tom l\llllMll (u"4ec:IOtMI). • •~11on Beach -e1n 'Harbin tqw•rlerbeck); kyle V Arner1t£1C11fimalv1-be~ck. L• I• -O,,rry !ru ~Ck). Miki GellM (deffn• w 8af;kl1 Cl•rll., an tol!en1lv• 111•Mm• \ Rid!: (Off"'!lllv• becl\'.U Lou Utu Unolll'lln • ' ' >' ' Let. A.m!QOS -Rfcti.rCI M1rlll'I 1tnd); John MOl'lon IOll&ntJv1 UnflTl•n). M•rlna -Mika l(rcltllc \Cllfen1lv1 unem111); Jo~n Petrie 'ldai.,.Mvt Hnem•n > ScoU WllCl!'rm•n (Ot- fenllv• 'fMdl). ' M•lt_f °"' -TOl'IY C•...,.ff:t (OltlnllVt llnaman); Mtrll stenrw111 Ctl11et1acker·tnC1J. NIWPIJl"I H•rbOI' -M•rk OalbV (offen1lv• vn1m1n); Dana Ktmper lrKO!'lver/; Kavin ReHar ·~~~\~.~k~obln Luken !oft.n1lv• Une!Nn); Biii McNully offensive cenler; Alex M•1c1ren1s ~.tensive beck); M!k1 Merer• !rec:elvH/-< M1r1v lkktlwn (Cl'l•narDlckl; Don Phoenix 01t1nslv1 I rwman); Louis Soto (de1tn1!v• beck); Gltn 'r1l1ll1 (1;1f11n1lv1 lln•"""n); Bob Karar (d1f1n1lv1 !lntman). lt.•nchO Alaml!qa -Luther O..n !!lne!»ckH)1 l•rrv Co;ionr-.lt !oll1n1!vt lln1m.n); Mart PJ1rc1 ~r.celve<J. '°;1' --Rick Curry ldtfemlva 11narn1n)I Don .Dial: Odmalv! bi\Ckl; Jim. Oilrr jCl~lv1 enCI ); rM FltilCI !f.,.1>K1<e<-Mntrriilt1ll. AMl•n MOniov• (Cle1ans1ve """); Garv North (runnlnq bKkl; L1rrv O'Ntll C0tfafl1lve ll1>11TW1n); Steve Ric• /l'KtlverJ. W111trnln1te<" -D•n Accqm•noo ~...-rterbKk· delan•lv• bKkJ:_,..RIY AJbl1 (_dti-1¥• enOJ ; S11v1 Frltlch (IM'fenslve llt1enwin); Lerrv Gr •Cl Y' !llnebec'*°JI· Cti.rltt H•rrls (olt1<11lv1 Hnarn1nl; M1rk Hout (ottens!v' llnarnln); Rov Ne•I C<ltlenilw ...O-!lriablckerJ; Cr•~ RIPP (eoel·HneblCkHf; Rlcti.rCI Sfl1blrry CUn•m•n); Wall Slnt1tr (d1l1<11 ve blck). Tuslln -ere11t Perlr!dQe Crut1nl1111 t.aock). Foo!Mll -Devld Wllll•m1 (IMltmlva tnd· Hnet>acke<I. ~I. Anll'MlnY -Ken Kr>afler Coll"1slv1 back). Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Dlvfslon W L Pct. GB Milwaukee 15 15 .500 Boston 14 15 . 483 1!l Detroit 15 17 .469 1 Baltimore 14 17 .452 11,'i New York 14 17 .452 1\7 Cleveland 15 19 ,441 2 Chicago Kansas City Angels Oakland Jl,flnnesota Texas West Division 19 g 20 14 17 13 18 16 14 15 11 19 Tunf•Y"t OllMI Oatroll •! New Yotk. r1!n B1lllmor1 •I Bolton. r•ln Mln1>11G1• f, Ttx•s 5 Al\"" l, 1<111••• en, o Mltw111kM 2, Clev•lanll I 111 fnn111GI) Chlcaoo '' Oekl•nCI 5 1121nnlng1) ,, . .671! .588 .567 .529 .483 .367 2 3 • Sii 9 TM•,'1 G_, Ml!wlll.lllM !Slalon 1-2) •I NIW York IMadlch l ·ll Bolton tCurtlt l·ll •I Datroll !LolL(h J.•I klMl.-f CllY (Sp1Uro'11 .. I) •I Tax11 (8robltt .. I Chlcaoo IFllMI' •·1l 11 Ml-I• (Wood'°" 2·11 Oaltt•nCI COCIGrn 1·!1) •I Allf'flf tWrlOllt 0.!) OnlY --'ft ad'tedU1'CI. TllarlOllWI OUftH B11tlmor1 II Clevelltld Mllwlull.M 1t New Yorlt '~'°" ., Otlroll 1{1nlft CllV et T•11 ChkllltO ti MlfllltllOlla o.lllMMI II """"" • . • NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L Chicago 2l 13 New York 17 15 Montreal a 16 Pittsburgh 13 15 Philadelphia 12 2() St, Louis 9 23 West Division San F'rancisco 26 13 Houston 22 14 Cincinnati 20 13 Dodgers 19 16 Atlanta 14 19 San Diego 13 23 Tlln!lan ...._ SI. Le\111 f, Pt.11~1 4 Chl(lllO 4.-~ Yorll J PL!l.Wrtl\ ,, MOnlrtel I, II llWllntt Cfncl"Mll ,, .,,....,.. 1 Atlant• ,, Hou•to!I I ,_.I\ Fr111CIKo 4 SI!! l)JeflO t Pct. GB ,618 .531 3 .467 5 .464 ' .375 8 .281 II ·""' . 61 I 21f:i .606 3 .543 5 .424 • .!61 11 11 T•Y'1GMfttl St. LOU!• (f0$lll' 1·31 at OI~ <(R,llllKlltl .,, New Yor" (P"ll' :Mil al MonttMI CMoOn 1·1l Ph!!aclall'tll• (TW!lchttl 0-11 lit Pllttbllrvl'I (Etlll •WI 00falf1; {OoftTllllO 4-11 11 ClrtelnnlO {f'6tl10n 1·21 AU91111 (Qtofltl'Y 4-11 •I HoUttln (RIYU S.l) S•" Fnll!ClllCO (Mtridlttl ~) .. Sll'I OltllO lC.tdMll , ... , '1HlnlW 1 ..... ~If C~hw1•U $1, L.Oull ., ,,,iu.o Htw "'°"' •I MorllrMI l'l'lllGt..ni• •I l"lllWlurvll All•nla ti Hout""1 DnlY ~ Kfttolll.lfed, '\ • It Slwul.d Get Better Fans Forced to. Endure ,Marathon Spike Meets If you want to see a marathon, you go to places like Sao Paulo, Boston, or Tokyo. Somehow, you don't expect to get marathon treatment when you attend the CIF track and field semifinals. Yet that's what fa,ns at Lakewood and Valencia Hlghs were forced to endure as the new AAAA, AAA, and AA systems went into ,effect last weekend. Kids who left for the AAAA semifinals at Lakewood High and told their folks ~~----- STEVE BRAN D it was more than 45 minutes aftet the track events had been completed that the final field event, the fro.sh-soph Jong jump, was finally over. For those who stayed it had one ad- vantage. There were no traffic jams leaving the stadium. Most fans were already home. The solutions arc obvious and the way F'agans l't!acted to the lies. you can ex- pect implementation next year. -TM 100, 22Q, 120 high hurdles,. 70 high hurdles, 180 lows and 120 lows will 00 redi,iced to three heats of nine each with t~tt top three going into tbe finals. Now l!]e top two in four heats plus the fastest ~ird advance. -Either the field events will start at least a half hour earlier or the site of the AA meet will be moved where OOth the varsity and frosh-soph competition can be held simultaneously. It 's just too bad full houses at both Lakewood and Valencia had to be the guinea pigs. UCI Sends· Full Crew To Sprin-is- L\)S GATOS-UClrvlne will mall< its strongest showing In the Western"Sptinl• Championships on the waters behind Lexingt(l~ Reservoir 1n thl1 Northern Califomla hamlet this wetkend If plana of roach Bob Ernst materialize. l The Anteaters will enter five ciews in ~1f~~ti:~c1~:~g c~:t~~lt~~~ ·, · poweo on the west coast including the Univer-sity of Washington and UC Berkeley. "I think we have a chance," Ernst said before leaving for this area Tuesday morning. "We were the elgh'h best on the west coast a year ago and we have lost to only one school this year--Berkeley. "We made a big step up just before the Cal State (Long Beach) race and another just after we lost to Berkeley. We are due for aitother one .sometime thls week and It .should come before the com-I petition Friday." The Anteaters will also tiave a junior varsity and FreShman eight crew in the water along wllh varsity and freshman fours boats. "ThP-big thing we are .shooting for is to get all five crews Into ~e finals. "The limiting factor will. f)e: in· o:perience but we have improved' steadi- ly as t.he year has progre~ and our main emphasis i' on the varsity eight shell." Rowing on the varsity are bowman Phil Pearson, Qne of four. sophomores in the shell; Dave Graham is at number two and Bill Butler at three, Y>otb as juniorB. Another .sophomore, John Sutton, is the number four man with junior Mike Sulllvari fifth and Rick Peterson, a sophomore, sixth. John Davis, a junior, is seventh and the lone senior, Ted Weyand,• is number eight. Coxswain Rick Martin is also a .sophomore, giving ·ErnSt a boatload of experiehcc-d ·oorsmerr1or next season.. · The average height of the varsity Cight is 6-2 with the_ weight average at 190. "They are all strong with no fat," Ernst says. The Lexington Reservoir course ·will be over 2,000 meters, the Olympic rowing ·distance. 'The meet was scheduled for the same site a year ago but Jack of suf· ficient water forced a year's delay. Plen· ty o[ water is available this time around. El Toro Names 5 More Coaches Five more coaches will be .added to the El Toro High coaching staff following formal approval at Monday night's Tustin Unified School board meeting. Slated to tutor the El Toro aquatics forces Is Steve Farris of Los Alamitos High. In addition the Chargers will have Bob Johnson, Bill Dickey, Larry Nitta and Art Lopez to assist varsity football roach 1.1ack Moore, according to principal Robert Bosanko. Farris, an El Toro resldent, coached lootDall al Highland and Arvin high schools in the Bakersfield area for five years prior to a one-year stint as an assistant at Los Alamitos High. The is.year-old former Glendale High and Whitworth (Wash.) gridder says El Toro will field a var.illy v.·ater polo team in the £all and is hopeful a good influx of Jreslunen will augment his program. they'd be home by midnight Friday. were probably in a lot of trooble if they stop- ped for ice cream on the way home. The meel, which started at 6:30, didn't end until 11 : 15. Oil City Aquatics Club That's almost five hours, a mark matched the following day in the AA Semis at-Veleneia. Friday night the fan s had a lot of good marks to keep them In- terested and, probably veterans of many meets, they stood at the start of each race. Some say it was to see the finish but another reason could be they wanted to stretch their legs. At Valencia there were just a handful of good marks. No wonder the stands were empty when the final event ended . As expected ,there were some prob- lems in the changeover from varsity, Bee and Cee. While most seem to enjoy the new ftQ.sh-soph and varsity <f\visions, it would be bard to find anyone who likes it enough to· sit aOO watdl far 10 hours. At La~wood, the major woe wa~ one CIF colilmissloner J. Kenneth· Fagans warned us about. - "The rnQre heats you have, the longer the meet and the more chance of disputed finishes, not to mention ties," he had argued in rebuttal to Miss.ion Vlejo's track coach, Bill Crow, who felt more heats were needed to allow ·everyone t.o compete. And sure enough, when it came to pick- ing the fastest third place in several events, runoffs were required, throwing lhe meet schedule way behind. Fagans groaned when ties were reported but at least made instant decisions that kept the meet from drag- ging even worse. At Valencia the problem wa,, lack of facilities. With one long jump pit, one hlgb jump area and one shot put ring , It was obvjoos one division would have lo be completed before another began. 'Ibus anque t Set Orange CoMl Cotlege's· swimming team will be honored toolght with e ban- quet In tht school's student center. lt begins al 1:30. Nabs Short Course Title With several Olympic and CIF cham· pion swimmers showlng the way, the liuntington Beach Aquatics Club cap- tured tbe Southern Pacific short course Junior Olympic swim m i n g cham- pionships recently. The event was held at the santa Monica Municipal pool and Cypress Col· legE'., Huntington Beach, coached by Flip I Darr, amassed 850 points, to far out· distance runnerup El Monte's 650. Ja~k Babashoff set a 15-17 SPA age- group record with a 21.6, in the SO-yard freestyle end also won the JOO and 200- yard freestyle events.. New records were also set in the 15-17 200-yafd freestyle relay, and the 200 medley relay. ~he( SPf record was set in the 15-- Playoff Scores 17 girls 800-yard freestyle relay, where Shirley BabashoU and Valerie Lee com- bined with Gretchen Ross and Sue Whitaker to swim an 8: 16.4. A total of 54 swimmers from the Hun. tington Beach club participated in the championships. 81y1 IJ..14 !lyron Slm1 -lit ln 100 br1•1t 0 :07.,)1 lnd In NO free, 200 IM. Mlkf Kl11y -hi In 200 II, 12:07.71, •nd 100 fly (S6.~) 811! Blbl11\oll -2?d In 200 •ncl 100 tly. 200 medl•v rel•¥ -ls! llltc• IK't!IY. Simi, SltVI Wonn~r, P11a Muhth•ut•r). 400 medley r1l•1 -l•I P!KI ISllT'll, Merri!! Rll•Y Muhlhlunr, KfllY . ' M'!!', free rally -hi Pl•ca ISlrm, Rll•V• Un f'l•u11r, KtilV). , • .,, 1 .. 1, J•ck Brbl1lloff -: 111 11\~Jll lree (SPA record 'l.4J, ~ 1rae 1:'5.•/· 111!1 100 "!47.tJ, A:omu'° /Ir•" .s -lit !Oil l>Kk t~.01, 200 back 12,;,0l.f}. 1.Huca Furnlll -Ill In 2001M U:00.7). 2nd !11 -'00 frt>t anCI 2001MJ. ICennv Wlltl -lal lrt 100 llv fU.OJ. Sam Fr•nklln -21\d In 100 beck. Peler Si>uritm -lrd In 100 l lv. Wiii O.vl1 -lrd In 100 Dr!•"· lOO iree rtll l -111 n 5PA rtC.Ol'd 1:2'.7 CSPurrll'n, Fr•nlc In, Rlcl!tord W•11111r, B•t.111hotf). 200 !Miiie! r1l•Y B t••m -1~1n &PA r.cord 1:.0.I l"'r•n n, SIM1IOl'I, Fr1nlr.lll\, "1:1m1. • @ 1 '""° t11W -111 OllKI SIHKI91'n, Wlll1, rurn ».,;. B•l»stlofl), F~~tll. i.~~li::to:-"" 111 Ill.Ca (SPllf1tm, W!lll, Oltll 11·14 !O~~~ H~mmll! -2f">CI In 100 ""' lr\l In IOQ n1 Ind fl~.· ... ~ 1n1C:.'~r!:. JOO frM (5:1U), ;a;....__./ , H1mm111, Hall). * Im relav -l•I (L!fl.hovt. C..vtt.r. Hammni. mtdltY ~l•Y -2nd (Litt"'°"'. O.ultw. Htm· "°*6' . m IJ, HoUJ. • Gtrll lJ.IJ •V~ lM -'I' In 200 !IV 12:0..1). S(X) ''" ( · • 2ncf In 100 rff ~ 11.itll' -lat '" 200 IM '(1:11 • .t), itd In '° '1f;,,, .... B•llttl'IOl'I -lat In 100 .,,.. (5'.1), :k'd ln 400 M ln<I 20I ll<'M1I. SllC'I' iDi.h -)rd II\ IDO iw.tt. 900 l!'M rtlt'f -111 Jn SP~ 1:16.4 (OAtcl'llll Rott, Wl'll'lk1r. LM, 8Rbll I 100 MtdltlY ttl•Y -111 h!tet.ar, Pl91t, LH, 8•bu.l'lo1tl,~ "°*l M''" ~•I•{ -111 {Whlr.tttf, Pletr, l ... t•l>I• . H M R•llY -111 CltOM; Wiii .. ~.,, Ln, .. '} . .;/;~ 1tei-Y -ht llt011, WNllUt, L•t. •v::m_ ·.,.._. -Hllf'lllftllto!I &HCtl (Qll), I MOftfi9 ltUJ, "" t 111'1 .. (,...), ' \ ( \ ' I ' • Canada Tounwy -... . _.. ""' ..... ~ Lur'es 18 Girls .· • DAILY PILOT 27 Tennis Results Lagunam~ Top. CIE ~Playoff Foe Eighteen girls !rom the , Oranie COunJy Volleyball Club wUJ travel to Canada oeit week to compele in the V1'!>- tOuver, British Columbia Spring Featlval o! Sports. ing team won .the w .. i.rn lntercolleglate UUe Slmday, deleatlng lour top unlver1tty squads at Mallbu~cb. • The ~rs or ~ Raul Duarte .taru.ci m.S ,.team points ta nose Oii! IOCid! place San Diego ~·UC Santa Bari>ara, .IJCLA.AAll UC lrv)ne trailed in'lbat~. Laguna Beach lligb's Or· ange League champions breez· ed Into the second TOllDd of the CIF A,/. tennis playoffs Tueaday al)emoon following the Artists• methodical 11.!-S root of vlsltil1r blrtheran. The gJrls, aged 13·17, com- prise two teams which will compete in the volleYball tournament as part ot the an· nual event. Eighteen teams are entered in the tournament, five from tbe United States. The Orange CoonJy group is the only representative from California in the competition. Orange c.oast area girls on the team Include A n n Goldenson, Rocky Elias, Paula Dittmer, Debbie Green, Ellen Clark, Marie Dvorak, Carol Stoneman, Kerry Deaver, Liz Ogden, Colleen Rice, Be<:lty Cames, Machelle JohnSon, Mary Platfoot, Rose Greyshock, .Laurie C .o o k , Leimomi Pol and Nancy Reid. Rustler• Win Golden ~Weit'• -Klayne Brown ~t big Upi!et in the . when be de!eated Diego State'• <l1eer ~. a repnlOll- tative ol the U.S. In the wcirld surfing meet last year. Goldi!!) West surfers and placement by lleats: Heat one "'I"; ·Steve Weaver, fLrSt; beat tWo -John Heine, fourth; beat three -B,own , fi beat lour -· Willy an, first : 'heat five -Lee ry. secood (tie); beat six hn Mitchell, second; heat ~ven -Mike Makrldichian, second; heat eight -Skip Spangler, first; beat nine - Jolm Silver, first; heat 10 -Angelus League Champions The victory, paced by sin· gles player Tim Taylor and the doubles team of Norm Bedell and Howle Pearsol, earned Laguna Beach a shot at Pasa- dena Poly Friday. '· ..... ~ LffVM auch (D) (J) LulMrN .. _ T•Vlor I LBI Mt. &olH 6-4; def. Met-6-.11 *'· 5mlrh ...O: di!. L!Jebbt ... Spek11"8 llBl -1 .. , 6·l~ loll S.7 > _ ... McCl\Jng Cl.9 ) IOSI I .. ; won '°'• "3, ... Ooddl C\.9! lost 1-4. 0-4, 3-4 ; won 6-I, . --8•<1•11·"•4"* (lBl ct.I. Gr.,.. .. s1111n .. l, .. )I 0.1'. POll.,·&kiOOod 6-4, 6-0. J~obMll-i•Y ILi ) won .. ,, "'' won .. 2,. "°· " lrvlM \.1qu. -.1nnlt Tlllt'M'I' 11 CdMf ·-· ..... ...... uott (Elll def. Dlwl• (Edl .. 2. &. L•rr• (U.) dtl. G1r~tn (CdMl 1·111, ,_.,, ~. ~ln1lt M.lloll {E 'll de!. \.;srre (LA) 6·1, &·•· Alex Ohlsen, second (tie); Mater Dei's Monarehs eaptured the Angelus League heat 11 -Gar'll<fan, lil"lt · baseball tiUerand are l;lare<I for CIF AAAA playoff Golden West College's surf· Gardea, David Najera,-MattSmith, Brian Donkersk!y. Thi!:d row -coach Bob Ickes, Mike Yost, KeVlll Timpane. Dennis Murphy, Chuck Adamo, Greg Groen, ,Mark SJ:anbra, Pat Eccles and coach Bob Donkersley. HB's Slagle All-Sunset Bl·g Canyon . ;~,el~/ ... tu' -,Mike.Evans, 'llj)tiQ!l a8ainst .Ramona Friday. Front row from . Left-Neil Lendzion, Mike · Amaranthus; Jim Dean, . . . B~lt ,f;ame Tom GJobrzeckMacEI, Bob. MaDoc-aulce~;~Mindk roRw-Ch1ris Gyinnastics • -coMkEaCE--Golden ---------'-~---'--"--''-'------------------------Mulli , ;?; _ Scott. n :wa10, n --. .e yan, 1m gan west College's sum m er • Huntington Beach H i g h pitcher Brian Slagle was the lone Orange Coast area player to crack the first unit of the All-Sunset League baseball selections as picked by the l09p's coaches. . basebal1 team will play a E H Id benefit practi~ game against Vent e a Norwalk COnnie Mack team Sunday night at 7 o'clock at Members of the Big C'anyon Country Club men's golf club staged a mulligan tournament recenUy with a team com- posed or Bob Cunard, Frank Legrand, Louis Hoyle and Ed Law copping first place with a score of 59. -in a tinulligan toofnamertt,- all four players hit drives and then pick up the three _ worst balls and place them at the spot of the longest drive. This is done after each shot until a putt Is completed to give the team a net score.. In second place was a team or Bill Hanen, Don Starling, U.T. Thompson and Bob Lucas with a score of 60. Two teams tied for third al 61 with Dick Berbon, Jack Duboise, Lee ~pencer and Buzz Wendel winning by matching soorecarda. . , ! -. The other spot weoj; to' H~ ry Boucher, Jack Boyle, J.C. '!umphries and Ken Ri=ttc. Quigley Field, here. The game wtll help defray the cost of sending an un- derprivileged team f r o m Norwalk to Las Vegas for a baseball game. SCC-in Spikefest 1lED'l:ANDS ~ The ' Southern California COilege Vanguards track and field team will be represented by six. performers in the District III .championships to \>e staged at the University of Redlands Friday and Saturday. Jack Causey, a two-time NCAA college division high jump champion ('68 and '69) has leaped 7·1\4 this season and last weekend hit S.10 at both__ the Fr~ Relays and tbe UC Riverside Invitational, on successive days. Hitt will nm in the 11ix·mlle Friday and ~ three mile Saturday along with teammate Ted Goss. Surfing Title Won By Edison Edison 'tligh Schoo) won the Orange "County s~fing cham- pionship Tuesday morning in waters off ·Newport Beach to qualify for Saturday's Southern California finals at the same site. . Edison surfers won four of the eight heat races with sec- ond place Huntington Beach nabbing two and San Clemente and Pacifica one each. David Van Druff won the fi rst heat and Dan Rice the second to give Edison an early lead. Greg Clemmons and Lance Erickson of Huntington Beach_, won ·the third and fourth heats to make it close but Gary Wurster put the Chargers back in front by nabbing the Pitc~ing, Defense Key for MD Foe Badminton Summaries Olrh INn!IRIOI' M•11M (11) (11 MIPilll Vlllt- Slagle compiled a 1.50 e.r.a in fashioning a 5" mark. 111111'11 A.11-ltlltMI' lNlue LlndMV l. .. ( ...... r) dlf, M•rv c 1.. ~Int THm monCI CMV) 11·1, 11.s. l"-&oou, Wntern Sr. . Delli Mllcllll (Mllr) Del. LIM P'-Slatl•• HIHllfngfOn Sr. Ma:ter Del Hlgh's Angelus years and he cites the steady ~~' '01~~1-11,._rl ""'· , 1,.-e--w1g1n111on, ..,MM!m sr. baseball ha · " .. 19--Wllc.x, .... n&llllm Sr. League c~· mpwns . pitching of Show anQ Petroff, s-~~r~1~1.~· (Ma'tJ d•t. ~rlin11 2a-SOObtJ1, Loer• sr. @t -a t}ti• $te. Frio! "dCIF abpl~y~lf ~aloog_wit~ Jhe nlf!Y_ Pl~.Y ol ar~~·o1._11.1, ~·1Mv> d ' " u T i ~tt~:;i:~o!.'"!~~~:rm t~: compe 1 on ay u hort t S wh·teh d 1 • · u • urev OF-Hot110. L1>1r1 sr. Ramona's record is an In-s ~op !eve. 1. ea · 1·~1~l~-...i~jev1n (Mir> def. Hon, OF-Caii..,.;ii, ..,n•hetm 5'· Wh t head h I th OF-Oovls, S1nt1 ..,"II Sr. dication it's fairly certain the I e 1 S wt power Weber 11•1• 11 "· UT-ou11v. w11i.rn sr. Monarchs will have their col· and iplays good defense. The wenav Young~i:r' 111nn1r (M•rl P-Munor, ... ~:C:i'! Tffm Jr. lective bands full. latter item -de~ense :"""' ~s def. 11ec11 He11er<111e1v s~ere11 1w. P-Kuruow1. L""r• Sr. 'The game is scheduled for 3 also 'been, a .key ingredient in 1S:-1.1511 Str•ttn<lndv c11rk !M1rl del. ~B'~:":;"'~~:r~ ~;: at Mater Dei and invading the the Rams game. •'.•'IT Helm1·N1ncv chlJr"t"!"•n 1s-2, 1s-2a-vn11r, N1wpor1 Jr. ANTHONY KHOOU . t Ra I t fi l .. 311-Swonson, M1i'ln• Sr. HAllOI ca--Monarchs' confines 1s a earn mona OS ll'S 'Uasemen L•ure Thompson-JI.Ill• w1noc:k !M1rl ss-Mllls, Hun11r111ron sr. ..,,.,. • that has rolled to a Z0-5 overall Mike Dohr due to a broken leg clef. El•!M Hlllll'l-Ancty Dor•" 1w, 1~ OF-wnc1erm1n. Mlrln• Sr. tM M•l'MI' c111iw rl ed • half 2. OF-SMndr1, L""re Sr. C.1!1 M-. C.lltlnJt mark, owns the Riverside su er in the C, ey tussle Glnnv Revet·M•rion lteotil !Merl e1e1. OF--K..,nectv. Hunti~'°" sr. Pll. (71AI '7t..JJll tournament -wn and shares last week and his glove was c,.hrl• ar111&1-1C•r.,. ar101i.t.1H 1w, 1s-uT-H-. N1wP01"1 Jr. o.16 "'" Pllye<" of the Ve1r -Oennl1 llOCl.lt, 1717 l':""lrlolll-.nf It, the Cttnls Belt League cham-considered a hefty factor in M•rcl• T1rlll1·Elleii Gllcil !Mir) e111. wnr1rn. An•Mlm, C•I, .,... ,. al Ra , Merlene O'C>onn.il-ClnCI~ Gr1ml~ 10·1~. C"-'Cl'I of tilt Ye1r -8111 Mclnllre, Pll. (7141 776•lllO. pionshipwithperenni powq ~"".'m~o~n~a~:•~s~ucc~e:ss~.-----~'"'~·~'"~·....:....:....:....:....:....:....:....:_~w~·~"~"~"~·....:....:._:::_:_.:::_::_:::_::::i..~~~!!~~i!!!!!'!~i!'!llll Chaffey. 1- Making the Ramona Rams the ~ss they are is a pair or pitcllers -rigblcbander' Erle Show and Brad Petrol!. • Mlle Squ«re President's cup actlon'ls un· der way at Fountain ·Valley . • Mile Square Goll Course with first round action to be com- pleted by Sunday. Other SoCat' entries include Jim. Jeffers in the shot put and discus; Steve McCredie in the mlle; and ayde Harvey in the hammer throw, Golf Results filth heal Larry Spradley posted a win in the first knee-board ra~ and .Jaek iypght flnistted see· ood for the; <llargers m the other to wrap up ~ team ti- tle. Each ownt fr.2 and 9"2 league and overall won-losS' records and they bolh fussed three shutouts during the campaign .. Coach S8m Pechia has a Ramona team in the playoffs for the flfth time in seven * * RAMONA I._.) •1 ~ ~ •• 0 0 FORD COURIER: THE IMPORT THAT GIVES YOU ALL THIS . .. long 104" w.hooltdase Santa ·Atta It wlll be member.guest day at Santa Ana c.ountry Club Friday and again on Saturday when the annual invitational competition is staged fo1 the men's club. Lee LeFrance scored a hole- in-one on the 15th hole at Sa~ ta Ana CC thi.£ week using a five iron to cover the 168-yard distance. LeFrance w a s playing with Art Nlsson when he 900red his first-ever ace. Edison ·scoffi! 40110lnts to 31 for Honlingtoo Beach in sec- """"~ aMCtt Dl•t11ct ond place and 30 !or San V•r'lllT Abe~ •t sud1H Clemente ln third. .... l . C•mrir.o~~~-\ 70· 2. lrown-881-U? a a·y '! Southern ~~1Wt1~8::. gtr!-~1~! . Califpmia champioMhip meet· tl!~~1 L=:'i. <ftt~I l~k:·cwm\ 011. will involve Edleon and Hunt· fonl IHS) ..» Hn11;lr.: 1ee111D11J • • ington Beach as the Orange 1. tMrtM 1•11~":."M""tlrqllln ·~ County representatives along (,I,), 1. fOl,ll'll•ln '11ll•V (OS), 4. ·"" ~--#-Sa p· w.s1m1nsm ('351, J. EdllDll 10&1. , Wh.11 1.et1llt!I uum n 1 1ego cre.Mtw L....-County Los Angeles North ,...,..... P1u11 and sOuth areas and Santa At •IT-l. Ttm Mlf11n {MV) l.tt1 2. Gr•Mm Barbara. Cow•n (SCl 150: l . T.cl Cummlno• • '"""' •-:ts (MVl 1S2l '· ~rk O'IM•r• CMV) U31 ~nt Mal -\. O.Ykl V'°" Oruff tEl S. Stott Hallori (FH) 1Sf. 2. Sob Sllllotl' IDH) l . J-1'f Sml!h (H9l. ~ l!MI -1, Dan Ric. CEJ 2. MllCk McOOMICI ISC) ':I. John Fl•nn!11•n • 10 Norr. Vlstlo • 1 VltW V•ll•Y • 1 •Garey • s ..,pp1e v.11.., 13 PllClfk n 1t.ot.no. 6 Fonl•M ,,.,, -12 Elffl'lllOwer' 1 CMfflrr ~ Rl'l'llnld9 Pair 4 P•dflc 10 A11bldol.nr • ~ Motl!ICI V.ilty • 1 lhtbh:tou• • f L• Sltrr• • • Aldl1ndl, : • • R-.:li.nd• o R..tl•nd• 3 Fonl•M I 5•1\ Gotl'Ofllo 11 Elwnhclwer 1 Ql.lffey 13 Rlvenlde Polv • • ' • • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 0 • • ' • ' ' ' • • <:---Mi8sion Viejo Bowler Fifth in Elims Tourney ( l"I/), Thlf"! hHI -l. Gr~ Clemmon• (HI> 2. Phi\ JahnlDll (OHJ l. Garv Pl•tl {El. Four111 hMI -1. L•nce Erlc~'on (H!!I) 2, Vlnu Cole (E) l. Tom EUls {l"V). • non Lea1111e Baseball Fltth Mal -1. G•ry Wur1lolr CEl 2. Mlk• WMd !OHi 3. IUcil B•uer CH8). CRR'ITVlh LIA.GUI Sixth !IHI -I. Tim Pouglldn1 (SCJ PIM Z. Mlk• CnilclttMnk (DH) il. J1tt Hor5I W l IFV). Or111111 11 3 T GO 0 ! k-llHnh VIU• P•rll 10 3 Game bowling Eliminations IE~lh .::' c~ Lrm ~~~~ T111!1" I s got under way at Costa Mesa's Gon1111n IFV). M!sMon Vl•lo : ~ K Lan Elfhtll hffl -I. Joel J-.;kson (Pl 1. El Modena ona es. J.ctl Wr1ght (I!) ], Mlk• F ... ,, ... !SC). Foottllll ' I Hicks, a veteran or the TNm _, 1. Edi.on .o, 2. Hl,HI· sin c1-i. 4 10 • ' ) 0 0 0 ) • ,. •• ' s ' "' Missior Viejo's C "° a)' n e Hicks fired an 886 four.game block to claim the No. 5 posi tion Monday night as the · 13th annual West Coast Match El. 'J 1 d tlnvton 9Mefl )1, l. SM Cl-11! 30, '· IC•Nll• 3 10 1ms tourney. traJ s ea er o.n. Hu11 :u. s. Fount•111 V•ll•v 2-l, '· T_..,., $Ofe Matt Bowcutt of Buena Park ii••"";;;;;;";;;;;;'"•"•· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-..-"'.-•"-"".-,..1:__•'•·"""•·••'-'•',;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.J by 31 pins. 11 Deep Sea Fish Report In second place is Gardena's Benny Becker who was not even present for the opening night of action. BecW, enroute home from the .. ABC tourney In Syracuse, SAN D1•00 \M11111<1 .. 1 ~1w1 -ut N. Y., received approval to use 1~1' "51 t•I OWl•ll. bonll:;'~1~~\p .;. •• fS,,.n=~~r~ r~~ a substitute -Tustin's Benny coo. SOper. Soper responded with a 1M~•R1.t.L •1•cH -21 •1111l•r1; •1 916 series, thus B-ker trails vallowteU,11 •1Jn !Ith. ... ... . • J,tlr., P~o~~io!l::r.11'#1":.:nnO. !1 Bowcutt by just one pin going c1uco 1w111. m r«k coc1, 1 s11mon. " into next Monday's second bllle bau. (UM!' It. Ulndl!ttl -45 11111ter1: so c1llco o.u. 2 MIJlut, 101 round. bonito, )0 tnKll..-.1. • The MAL1•u l"llR _ lA •noiei-1: 410 only other area bowlers ~\~U•A -lt•nqler1: 12 ti.n1:1u1. In the top 16 are • c•11c• NM. 10 Mnd Nu. Its rock Westminster's Ray Bryson c~o11Ro uv c•"*"'• uMhllll -, (10th ) and Irvine's Farrell •fllllM11: 1s rotll cod, 111nu coc1. lYlrT• H'nkle (16th ) U...._I -27 1ne••r1. !II Uno cod, ltJ .I • ''i' '"' The lZO.man field will be cul AN llM•ON -lJ •nalef•· '6 11"11 t th J din '6() ft 28 c°to0:..71 'i:S\~il11• -.n .riglw•: 12',... .... oft e ea g a er c•llco boa••· I haJLblJt,. 216 rock cod-• L!Clmes. MARINA DI~ lllT -lt M'IOll'f'I: 1 ""'" N•IN CITY P'IM .. ~~2N-~<t·-67 ...,......, .foQ l. Melt 9owtlltl, &lllM P•rk t17 rock lOd 2 (OW coCf , 2 tfMI cod 2. 9efit'ly Bec.kll", O.~ ti• LOM• 'llACM CP'(~nt U ..... l -3 .... rt Jae.II-. \.omit• ~ 16 •llQl.,.1: 1 blrrleuef.9, 7'CI DOnlio, 4 '-ltktllrcl Whir.. LA "" "1 c•llco M••· llel.,,_, P'lwl -t2 J. OW•,... Mkb. MIPltill v1ei. .. 1nqler1: 200 bClnllo, 125 rock tod. ,.,... 6.. Dafl Oletl, u H•tw• ''' -21 •l'IDi...t: 162 bClnlto, I• b9rr-s:ucf.I, 1 ..... ChoCltt, Woodl•nCI Hlll1 161 1'R';='cJl ~721:19•~•'1· 65 aolleo 1. Lee T•vlor, S•n OMoo Nl INIP. §ft blue 1:19..., 103 Dari•to. 661 oii<:k '· ·~ Lowen. S.nll ... M 153 ''8'-.. ,... -:n •1'1111.,.•: 127 rock cod. ,., R.., a,,,_ WttllftlMt.r Mi AMARO -•1 .,..,...,: " c•lko 11. Dan TscMrlnenl ... ~l'lelm _.. ~··· 111 .,..,. blH, 2""htillbVI, n Hnv IL 9otl Coufburn, °"' 8MCtl •Ml cod<.102 l'IKk cocl. De'l'll Fr-. ANM 141 S•AL llACH -"'.,,, ..... : 91)() rock 1• Hirm Wtblr Fun...ion .. cod. 2 cow coc1. 1 111111 ~ t 11on11t1. 1 · w.it etodr. C•rtGn ,., ~~: "'°'=!ti~~:· M1f::. tJ/. 1•. ,M'Y'llt HIMJe., lrv!M DI r•cudt. I ••!Id ~·· Ottwr1-2'. JoM C•rll'-' Founl1ln NIWl"N:T c 1 Lack"') -J? V•ll•v 1201 21. G""9f M•rbr llt\!loeJ ~ij· J. t'lik:t="c ,2l!11~lrfArfli--'l•1--l2...£r:M.Dou9bl:dJ'_<L~ 1:11111) bfrtK 1 bonito. Is rock coCI. eetthl 10t1 •· DOii er-IC01t• SEE THE 19731/:1 NOW! PANTERA ,. by deTomaso ... imported for Llncoln·J\olercury. Italian coachwork crtat.ed by the brilliant Ghia Stud.lbs of Tw1n. Ford dc51gned the 351 CID 4V V-8 engine. Four wheel in· dependent suspension and mid-ship engine placement. Five speed gear box, fully synchronized , . . "Pantera ... Italian for Panther ... ... big 74 .5"x 62 ."2" loadspace · ... roomy cab with 53.5" hiproom ... zesty 1800 cc. engine • ... storage space behind seat ... whitewall tires ... bright front bumper ... bright grille ...bright hub caps ... mud flaps at rear ... dual sun visors ... dual armrests .. .ful,I, insulated floor mat j • • JMa'I ~ IMI ... •· J~'i:,'fP'b41K. J 1141 • T•N $~ (t41Jfttl~ m ANA Alt' -It M!OIWS' '1 Mna) 11111 5', ,rink ltwlMorl Cl CO NIM. blffKUO., )Of llonlt., I (W-slmlMI ... ) 1'11 iiO. Soll ShanllOl'I hit blJI, 10 rock COit. O"llHlllrtOIOfl IHCll) 7". ,., _______________________ ,.-~~----------'\------------=--------------~·-------+ .. ' j . 'r • /, , J I I I \ + , ' , [ ' I . ' ' l [ II DAll.Y mor w-. ..., u. im ~ -pla~h f o-r Skipper l ".' Linville Winds Vp a Soggy Second -Cillta Umin. f4ll) .... -1 -Ida fenlpeira-yaail ' "" LOlll Beach Tlleaday y<t I ,... rooovered and the bolt n.llbed ......i and maiz>. ·· tiloed a ....00 place ovt:r-oll 1 t&itian 1n the N o r t h .6inerlcln Champ!Olllhlpo. Umtlle of the - BOATING -,Lumaran , Rose Take Dana Races BID Rob r s ' Colwnbia-3& Lmnaran, Voyagen Yacht \:llJll, and -BurneU'• 25-f<iit aJoop Hampshltt """, South Shore Salling Club. shared hooors last weekend in mises Dm:ia Point races, the -and thlnl ol 1he High fi>inl S...la for Pacific Han- dicap Racing Fleet yadlt.. ., Saturday'• race was from Dona P1>1n1 to Newport and ~y•s race was from Ji'owport to Dana Point. There Win 2Z entries In the dooble eveeL , llom Pelot IO Newport (I) Lumaran. Bill Rolin, VVC; (Z) Bebo Ill (1-30), Bob Pamall. VYC; (3) Jeremiah (1..11), Rich Ritcheson, CHIYC; (4) Sola Mia IBalboa- 211), Karl Lassey, DPYC ; (5) Gwnptloo (1-38) Bob Groff, LIJU_ Newport to Dana Point (I) Hampshire Rose; (2) SUnday (35 tool sloop) Graham Gibbons, BYC; (31 Miki II (Cal-21) Jolm Kklkel, VYC; l•) Lul!er ccer-%5) Carl Loot, Vl'C: (5) Espenoza (Cal.zl) Bob Boot, VYC . .. ' .. Yldlt Club In Rowayton, Conn., bl hi& grip Of' lhe ne•t to last in the eight-leg series. flls brother Jack took the Ulltt, ctreled and plclled him up. 'Ille LtnvtDes had lost all chance of catching Bill Van <lark Jr., of .Marlon, Maas., yet !tnllhed second In the field "' 17. Out fmisbed in two hours 23 minutes and 37 aecoodl, but juat 37 -ahead oJ the Llnvllles. That wu enough to maintain first place after rour racts. There will be races Wednesday and Thursday with the top five of the six counting in the standings. The UmtU.. !lnWMd 1n 1:14.14 to be cbifged wllh ilx polnta over .. u agalDlt three for tht leaders. tn thll yacht race, the winner ol each rece gets no poilllJ and the - place flnllher three with more for thoae on down the line. Third overall wu Argyle Campbell of the Balboa YC ol Newport Beach, Calif., who had 13 points aft.er fmlshing fifth• in lhe fourth rm. David Falconer of Noroton YC, finished third in the fourth race and ranks fourth. Tom Gates ol South Coast Corin- thU.. YC ol Marina ,del Rey, CaUf.. finished fourth Tuelday and rank! fifth overall. New Boat Bared By Mesa Builder Cal Boats or Costa Mesa has started production of a new Cal-JS cru1sing auxiliary from the deoign board o( Bill Lapwofth. -J 'Ille boat baa been lermed a cheaper version or the Cal Cruising 2-4& which captured tht fancy .of cruising yacbtamen at this year's boat 1hoW1. From conception, the new boat was designed ll! a fast , Rose Slates Racing Talk "Trend$ In Offshore Rac- ing'' will be the Sllbject of Andy Rose's· talk before the members and guests of Bahia Corinthlan Yacht c I u b • s Yachtsman's Round Table lundleon Friday. The social hour is scheduJed for 11:30 a.m. in the Ciolwnbia Room, lunch at 12 :30 and then the progrim according to Robert M. Parker. chairman of the monthly luncheons. Rose, of Corona de! Mar, is a member of Balboa Yacht Club and taught sailing for seven years, three at BCVC and four al BYC wbece he was director of 'their rummer sail- ing program. Reservatlona are requested at BCYC offic't, S73-4382. ' • comfortable cruising sloop with diesel auxiliary power. The full run keel and shoal draft was designed to make her a good cruising boat for a couple -whether the cruising ground! by Baja California or the Caribbean. Lapworth said the Cal-35 promises to be a stiff boat capable of carrying about 546 square feet of sailln the stan- dard sloop rig. The h u 11 configuration portends eomfortable>-passages with a good tum of speed. The deckhouse features win- dows on all sides allowing full viaibi.lity from the saloon. A starboard alley, traditional dinette and chart table are located in the saloon. A separate cabin 1orward with V-berth and locker has its own entrance to the "head", assuring privacy between the two cabins. A quarter-berth is located aft on Ute starboard side. Standard equipment includes a Perkins dJesel with tankage adequate ror an IX)().mile cruis- ing range on power alone. Wheel steering, pressure hot and cold water and shower are also standard. Comparing the 3.5 with the 2- 46. Lapworth said the 35 should be slightly stiffer and almost as fast. It is estimated that the smaller boat will be approximately hair the prlc of ttie 2-M. " ... , ¥ ' "' ' I ' . ' ' , ' ' ... , ' i ! • ' ' New One Tonner In First Outing JMndelion, Erics~n Yachts' new 37·foot One Ton takes to the water for a test sali with a blue-nbbon crew aboard. Her designer, Bruce Kiili. I! •I the helm while Dick Dea~er checks the set of her new oult ol sails from North Salls. 'fhe new ooat is being prepped for the North American One• Ton Cllamplonshi,,. at Ban Diego slnrttng next Monday. Her crew will be King DeaV<!r Jack Holiday 'Ron Doughlerly, Chris Bloom and Davy Crockott. ' ' ' J ' ' t' ' , • U.S. 'l 1eam Swamps. -Mexicans .. U.S. .Lldo-U U:lppen llun 1 Newport Beach v l r l u a 1 Ly swamped their ,,,_ex 1 ea n · counterpofnta lut weeUnd In the bleonlal ...-11 of the U.S.·Mexfoo!am,_, '!be Amerl""'1S tAijaled 71V.· points oo the reverae acortng system to 155 for the Medc:ans ' from Lake Valle de Bravo. The • team raco 8"' beld alternately at Newport and at Lake Valle de Bravo. Tbe Mexican team woo two years ago. U.S. sijppen were Gared Smith, captain; Scott Schock. Dori& Kirst , Dean Hope.. Don stoughton and Al 01"5\)I\, wtth alternates Herb RJ.ley and Dovell Smith. FLAGS OF TWO NATIONS HOISTED AT LI00.14 TEAM RACES IN NEWPORrtlEACH Cop!. Gored Smith (loft) of U.S. and C1pl. Jorve Ferrl1ro of Mexico Perfonn Honors The MexJcan lineup included Jorge Ferriero, capt.aJn; Mrs. Bijo~ Collianlr, R o tJ e r to Colliards, Valentin Prat, Ala- jandro de Ia Barra, and Tom Ehrenberg. '\ ... It's Auto Month.~' Were rolling out ~savingson wide polyesters.· ' Sal 1610 Reg.·18.95. pt"' 1,B3 ""'·tax. : e A7&-13 ($)0-13) blackW&U tubeless. JilUeagemak•r GP. Has 4 pfles of polyester cord. 78 series wide profile. Avallab&e In blackwall or white! wall. No trade-in required. • IM.ckw1ff tubete11 Ph• Tire size Reg. price Siie prk:e Fed. tax 078-13 19.90 16.91 1.81 E78-14 24.00 20.40 2.22 F7&-14 26.00 22.10 · 2.37 G78-14 28.00 23.80 2.53 560-15 21.50 18.27 1.74 G78-15 29.40 24.99 2.60 OtMr ........ .t Om' low ..... prices.. Whtte•U• llt com.,.,.._ low p'1ces. Sale pr1cH eltedl• ltwoMgil s.turday. Big buys on our wide tires. 2410 ,UU6-.~A7~1 3 Scet-Trac 70 series competition profile tire. 4-ply nyton. Raised white letters. No trade-in required. TubeMM Ptus Tire 11&1:• Price ted. tax E70-14 28.45 2.49 F70-14 30.55 2.57 G70-14 32.80 2.79 H70-1S 3'..10 3.06 31 95 ptus 2.12 -tax. 060-13 tubeless. Seal-Trac 60 series competition profile tire. 4-ply nylon. Raised white letters. No trade-in required· Tubelets Plus Tire aize Price fed. tax E00-14 36.95 2.52 G00-14 40.95 2.90 JS0-15 45.95 3.39 Other sizes available at: our tow ewryday prices. 2049 ·smoothie Chrome Wheels complete w ith baby moon. Fits all disc brakes. Uses AF/X lug nuts. Size 14x6. Other sizeS avallable. ·---------__ , '!! Pre-Memor~al Day I stop and go services. I I 4918 Premtum cfnlm ........ cmmoul. I I Complete 6rake overhaul by our expert 1erv1oemen. Prlce Includes parts and labor. I 69.88 Premium disc brake overhaul, I Now 1844 Tune-up 11ervlce. I most 4 cyl. American cars. I Aeg. 18.22. We Install points, plugs, condenser, rotol" and I cap; adjust distributor timing, carburetor. L Most 6 cYI U. S. cars, Most 8 cyl. U. S. cars. J 22.44 26.44 ------------ 2974 plus 2.40 fed. tax. 670.1516 tube type b!ackwan. SuPer Cargomastere XTO. Our finest nylon cord.highway truck tire. Features a 5 rib wrap-around tread. No trade-in required. Plua Tire llze Price fed. lax Tube type 700-15/6 650-16/6 700-16/6 Tubeleu 700-1418 670-15/6 700-1516 36.49 30.83 36.04 30.62 32.40 31.21 2.80 2.58 2.95 2.68 2.65 3.()9 79¢Pint STP Gas • Treatment. Jq~~n~~Y We know what you're looking for. -Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the followln9 stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport BHeh (714) 644-2313. HUNTINGTON .CENTER, Huntington Be•ch (714) 892-7771. I I , • ' \ PUBLIC NOllCB PUlllJC Nona: PllllLIC N!mCE ) • DAILY PILOT Big Money BettorS' ~ • On Vegas Free Rid~~ ---'----1 Fatnilll Clr.-11s ., bll Biil Keane "· .~·i"'"'1,•' ' ,{ 'We're ready for you, Daddy." Coyotes, Bobcats Find a Protect-Or SACRAMENTO (AP) The coyote and bobcat no longer would have a price on their heads -or tails -under a bill introduced in t h e Legislature to outlaw paying a bounty on any animal or bird. The measure was proposed by freshman Assemb!Yman Daniel E. Boatw~gbtf (0-Con.- cord) on behalf ol the Sierra Club. "The whole ilfia o f Oalifomla counties paying someone who turns in , a coyote's tail Is inconceivable," Boatwright said. .;. bounty ranging up to $10 is paid by some counties on ( ANLlfALS ) coyotes, bobcats and other animals considered to be predators or livestock. Another bill sponsored by Boatwright woold prohibit the hunting of foxes for profit. • Su»nu /lio10 SAN DIEGO (AP) -Salty, a hartor seal pup, is finally learning to swim. A young couple found him apparently newly born beside his mDther's body on a beach l ast month. Mari n e veterinarians put him on a high-calorie formula or rich cream, ground clams, herring, OCC Song Groups To Tom· Orange Coast College's Chorale and Chamber Singers have scheduled May 16-20 for their annual five-<iay spring concert tour , The two groups will travel up the coast or California. Last Y°'\ll' the group visited Washington and D r i t l sh Columbia. This year the students will perform in Ven· tura. Carmel, t.ionterey, San Jose, Sacramento and San Francisco. The tour is financed each year by the members of the two groups. This year the Chorale and Chamber Singers sold peanuts at OCC football gan1es, conducted c a m p u s sandwich ~les and sold goods al rwap meets. Seventy-three .studenl s will make the trip. All are memben of the Chorale. "'ttile 25 compri3e the Chamber Singers. Both groups are under the dlre(tiOn of Richard M. (laub. Betty Babbitt ls ac- companist. The Choralt's literature ranges fn)m the deeply rellgiou!, to spirituals and contemporary numbers. Com- posers wh<>!te Works-will be performed include Handel, Wolf, Distler and Vaughnn Williams. cod liver oil and protein sup- plements. From 14 pounds Salty has grown to 40. He sank when they first put him into a pool. Then he tried dog paddling before realizing he had flip- pers and a tail. • Bandier Curbs SACRAMENTO (AP) -A 'bill to regulate ·p;>lice .dog handlers has won committee approval in the Legislature after a lawmaker said dogs had been used to intimidate labor union members on picket lines. "We want to make sure the people who handle them are trained properly," s 8. I d Assemblyman Kenneth A . Meade CD-Oakland}, sponsor of the bill. The measure was opposed before the Assembly Com· merce and Public Utilities Committee by a spokesman for the state Conswner Af£airs Department who sald the department had had ooly one complaint of that sort. · •BHIPmhed SACRAMENTO (AP) - Students in California public elementary and high schools would be barred from cutting up. electrically shocking or otherwise Injuring animals in classrooms under a bill sent to the Assembly floor. The Assembly Education Committee voted 12-1-to ap- prove the 90:<:alled ''antivivi. section" bill despite opposition testimony from Fran Rosen, SPokeswoman for the Science Teachers' A.!lsociatlon. Mrs. Rosen told the com· mittee the bill would bar students from ''gaining val1,1able experience" through medical experimentation on animals in school laboratories. • Rap Dropped EL CAJON (AP) -Deputy Dist. Atty. Thomas Whelan has dropped a charge of allow- lng a public nuisance against the owner or a mountain lion that escaped April 19 and was shot. The 80-pcund cougar was shot by sheriff's deputies arter· it ldlled a dog and attacked them. It was one of several pet cougars owned by Richard White and kept on leashes and in cates on his property in w .. 1dc. • .fat a Snack SAN DIEGO (AP) - A 150- paund orangutan pus_hed open a dool'>' 1eft unlocked ac- cldentally at '\he San Diego Zoo and had a picnic. By ttie tlrn~ Roberta wa~ found , the apes' food irupply room was covered by bananas and bread. After 45 minutes. a veterinarian bagged the shag- gy redhead on the roof of a nearby building with a tran· qulllu.r flrea from·a rifle. "family" image for the strtp~ offering all soru of padago plans for the family. A typlcaJ 134-95 tw<>nlght, tbreMat package for two perSOns ·11.- clude! lodging. meals. a din.- ner slDw. two cocktails '9""' inexpen!lve gifts. .. But the hotelmen haven't I torgotten that much of thrir success has been bu ilt on big-j stakes gambllng. The hotelJJ figure it cm~ f them an average of $600J.1 give a gambler a free tr· here. The hotels also fig e lhe house claims 20 percent of I every dollar gambled. That means. on the average, that a " gambler must put up at least f $3.<XXJ for a hotel lo break J even. I • ONE HOTEL rC'quires a l minimum of $2 ,500 in "action>-' lrom junket players. "Then we allo\v for hu1n nature,'' said a man who s run junkets for the hot~!. " " losers \4'ili lose much more lhan the y,·inners win." In the hotel's eyes. the be\t player is not one who makes huge bets ror short periods &it one who makes -$10 be.ts al\d plays for eight hours at a time for lhe three days. 11Ae'll wind· up droppin; everything." said one official What about big winnerst llotel men love them about~ much as they do big losers. "IF A GUY'S willing to put up ~.000. they don't care,l! he's a big winner and w~ away with a lot/' says Willlan;i Friedman. ' He Is an lnstrucor at the- University of Nevada and teacbes the nation's oa~ Course ii\ casino manageinenL "The-fdea Is they hive to give them so much actk>n." The hotels maintain a network of Junket repre9en· tatives In major Cltles, either full -time salaried employes lft branch offices or in&iJ)elld<!ifA who are paid 125 to ISO 1 heioa• dependlrig on tho play;;;.;'I "quality." '· · "The best junket m3n is-tf bookmaktr,'' said a formf.i' hotel Junket manager. "He ex· tends credit to his players a.nd knowa bcjw much they'fe worth." ' ' . SOME HOTELS re q u 11'• junkot.era to put up $5,IOO before the trip and )ll'Dllll3l•IO play or forfeit the cost of tl!e - stay, Friedman said. On every trip, be said, some players turn out to be "rlden" or nongambJers. If t h e y hav"en't p.it up a depo51t, the.y receive a free trip. Many hotels have a grad!nr s)'!item to determJne-bow much Jimketeers _are warer- ing. One hotel rates players from AAA for excellent to C for average", P for poor and F for fraud. The system's worth depend's 00 how clooeiy bottl .,,,. ployes keep tabo an playon and some do a poor Job, Frlod· man said. TIIE BIGGER the playt{, the more lhe hottl provide.I. One lorm<r, jWlket II»!ll"I.,. said he provtdlld i>rollituteo for some Players and .Ofice fill- ed a :r,equest for ln.8IWn n~dles. · - "There are always ?"M- tltutes avajlab l e in tho hotels," Friedman said. "~ casino just makes sure they're around. It's not an o!ficlal policy. It's usually the decision of an individual executive who says, 'Th.is Is a good man. I think l'll provide this servlco to him.' " The Nevada Gaming Control Board, which pallces t h. e gambling industry, adopted rules Jut year making hotels resPOMlble for the actions of. juiiket representatives. "We are most interested ih seeing that unsavory pmcim are not sponsoring Junkets.•· said Shannon Bybee, a board member. D E S P I T E PERSISTENT rumors that junket organiiers used strong-arm tactics oa players who failed to pay olC their hotel "marker!'' or IOUs, Bybee said he has h e a r d no complaints by players in t\\'O years on the board. Friedman said in- vestigation has turned up only one documented case. The gaming board requlrn that all junket representative5 register, provide p e r s o n a L historlts and undergo in-- vestl(latlon at the board's dl~etion. The junket business ls com- ing out of a ~lump eiused by too many lnvltatlons to the ~stabflshed players, frledma1\ ~aid. lie said the hotels a.re tumlng (o new. untrjed players for new business. "!low ITUln)' cuys can afford! to drop 17,500to110,000 • Y"'I' and not fetl It!" he asked. "A guy runs out or trump." ) • j' r -I ' , J • DAll.V ~11.0T ~By PhU lnterfandl ~ 'i'Would you .Jike tO come into 1ny garden?' said the gardeoer to the butterfly." L. M. Boyd • Don't l\.ihhitz lnEmpori~Kan. AD elderly ordinance in Emporia, Kan., prohibits kib- bitilng at card games. Euctly ..bow many kinds of animals, besides man, ac- tually cry tears in sorrow remains uncertain, but Darwin insisted Indian elephants do so t?O. This b the order in which your senses stop registering their Jmpressions as you drift off to sleep: 1. Sight. 2. Taste, 3. Smell. 4. Hearing. 5. Touch. Do you khOw of any bank that assumes responsibility • J· for the safety of what's in its deposit ~-· boxes? ... Come on, "strengths" can't be the only nine-letter word containing but one vowel, can it? ... I.Jfe ex- pectancy of a U.S. Anny general is somewhat longer than that of other men. Why? ' • • I . DANCING BEARS -Pretty imag- inative bunch, those gypsies. History records that years ago in Central Europe they devised a physical therapy for sore back mus- cles and sold same to many a working man . It consisted oC inducing a small trained bear to massage the ~tient's back by dancing on it. Pitch was-smile, please-those animals never get aching backs because lhey so.treat them- selves, lnstinctlvely.knowing exactly where to· jump up and down. In medical hi.!ltory, dancing bear! should outrank leeches, I think. ··=·1 ~· ~I I -- ,. QUERIES -Q. "Who was the first American presi- dent to grow a beard?" A. None other than Abe Lincoln. PENNY /&. GALLON -Q. "Whatever happened to the old boy who lnvented some sort of green fluid whlch sub-- stituted for gasoline to ruel a car for about a penny per gallon?" A. Louis Enricht? He wound up in Sing Sing. But not before be ~k the senior Henry Ford for quite a ride with his remarkable trick. At age 70, Enricht in 1916 demon- strat,ed his concoctJon to reporters, publishers, mJlitary experta and industrial giants in the auto business. He poured a few spoonfuls of the. stuff mixed with water into a gu tank, and the car took .off, pUrriflg PeRecfly7 They tried it in other cars, too. Still worked. To Ibis day nobody knows how he pulled it off. His 'green gasoline hoax Isn't what landed him in jail, though. It was a grand larceny indictment that grew out of a stock swindle ln 1923. AddreSJ mail to L. ltf. Boy{i, P. 0. Boz 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. $1 Million Urged As Arts Subsidy Capitol News Suvlce SACRAMENTO -A freshman senator from San Mateo County has in- troduced a bill wh ich would in· crease California's state sup- port of the arts from $250,000 to $1 million. and the bill is receiving surprising support from sources which previously scorned art subsidies Arlen Gregorio ( D · S a n Mateo) introduced SB 121, which is co-authored by Sens. John Nejedly (R -Walnut Creek), Mervyn Dyma!ly (D- Los Angeles), Albert S. Rodda (D-Sacramcntol, Milton Marks (R-San Francisco) and Anthony Beilenson (0-Beverly HJlla). year and $200 million -$1 per American per year -ex- pected to be allocated by 1976. States which show a greater interest in their own art prir grams are likely to receive a higher proportion of I h e federal money which is one argument for passage of SB 121. Many boards of directors of sympbonies, museums, art centers and the like previous- ly shunned public funds, pre- ferring to raise the necessary dollars among the well-hee led in their home communities. THE I NFL ATIONARV pinch. however, has hll the arts as strongly aS" other elements or society, and ONE FEA":tJRE of the . bill skyrocketing cos ts have caus- would. :equ1re o ut ~ 1 de ed a change of heart. orgaruzallons or rompanies to The Cali fornia Partnership ma~ch state funds on m~~J.;:'f~the Arts is among the proJecl'.5 on a tw~ to one b.as1~. ~ · estl§bbying groups sup- Operating on its rel~live!y rting SB121 for this reason. small ~: the ?8hfom1a So is the powerful American Arts Commission, which would Federation of M u s i c i a n s adminJster the . funds , ~as representi~g 5 O, O O O ~ proven e!flclenl Jn generating fessionals tn Cali fornia. corporate, union and public The arts bill was passed by matching funds for a variely the S e n a t e Governmental of arts project!. Organization Committee by a Callfomla Is f5Lh among the unanimous 7-0 vote. No voice ~ ltates in per-capita slfpport of was raised against it at the '° the art~. New Yark all<><;.atet comrnittee 's hearings and hun-~ ! '20 mUhon per year, 80 times dreds of Californians traveled l-·' Ca!11Clf'Dia 's rate o f con-to Sacramento to cheer it. " 1"1huuon. •• NATIONALLY, mE Ni:con "ii' odnlliilltfiit1on h • • voiced .. ~ ltroriger JUppart for Increased ~ • aJJoeatlons · eo the National .Eodowmeot for Ui' Arts, with a propoeed • mOllon this } TIIE NEXT hurdle will be the tough Senate Finance Committee probably in June. The most frequently heard que11tion in art circles is this: "Wiil the Governor sign the hill if it passes both houses?" ) ... 100 T AlllT IOTTJI OF 11ufferin -Twice u Fut u as,1r111 99c GET60%MORE :Lavoris MOUTHWASH FREE ••• Wit' Tllis Speciallr Mark- e•. 32 IZ. BDllS Bittle. ggc 14* OZ. SIZE GILLETTE b Foamy mosoL SHAVE CREAM sac 3 OZ. SIZE INSTANT Neste·a····- 1003 TEA! s--MIYOAI 1. 3l LOW PIKE 99c 11 OZ. or 11 Y2 OZ, BAG Chuckles All Your Favorite Flawars! 15¥2 OZ. CAN, Fris·k~es DOG FOOD Meat, Chicken, Kidner & Bacon. Lamb & Linr. '7~1.0 ' ea & Ski SUlfJAll LDTIOll -Bott1e 11 Tlbe 4tL 1.39 ... It 1-Pc. Swim Suit ·· 100% ~met~ "hor' colors. Belted .tunic lop with tie & p~nties or 100% nylon polka dot with elasticized shirred waist-g· 66 line, panties and bra top. Sizes 8-18. Reg.11.99 0 .. Bikini :swim Suit .. GREAT MEll's · Trunks Elastici~ed P~U-on styles in cottop or , ·nylon. Dashing prints or solids ftf ttie . man with a flair for fas}I· 2 66 ion. Sizes S-"M-L · . . Rec. 2.99 • M.E11:t J run ks . -. t-=ret.IYllO •ilh elas-ticized or drawstring lfaislline. Prints or solid colors in pop- ular styles. Sizes / S-M·L R11. !.99 3~66 . .• " ·; LADIES' - Ac~lic oi"i!jlOll ·ib b<ighl colo~. You'll be extrel)lely' iltraclive as you gel lhe 5. 66 ulloost·out of.the svn.' SI"' 6-16. ' · Re1. 6.99 • . Halter Tops · "'-Polyester or nylon • .c w/lie bad<. ~b or 'X anchor print .l'op· /· · ular colors in sizes ' 'Soaks ""'Y foot misery as ~ relieves fired, ill:Jl. inf, burning feet. llrtt Slzt Rlf.91t I I I • ~""'· Oddjer Girls' SETS 6JollOJ'r >11~,wilh sille·tie lop or lailo...i ·llitm wil' ~ lanl lop. Cute oullits fdr tile ~111e '2" 21· . tykes. Sizes ·ZT-4!. ' Re1. 2.49 ea. ; GIRls· Shorts. Wates; color print bikini or Pastel bf1shed denim shorts w/elastlcized backs far com- fort & gOOil til Sizes 4-6X. Rer.l.Hea. 1.1·1 • I • .. · . S·M·L·Re1 .. 1.99 ' '~ 3~5 .. 90· ·. . • 1• . ., •• r"'•,-, ., • ' ; i iv. " ' • i : • ' ! -: _, l . i" SANDAL$ . ·' j:olorful velvet thong style for cawal wear around the hooset patio, bmh, elc. Sizes 9'n· 1 I. l~ZMl .88 g;_ ...• !J";· ., -.:;!HONGS <' '"' • ··Popularcolors f0< Ille "tire lamily. . ' . '. .. " · "Liiiis' .c•il4re1's-tr Me"'s 111, 21c R11. 39c ..ed-... .,. 16, .... . . , HVLON I I'" ttaturar -Herb MONEY· :SAVING -. .BUYS ON ..:':. '·,_ ' Y •• • . ' NATURAL Springtime. is "Villlmin time ••• when yuu need that added ener2y for all your activi~!S during this wonderful time of tile year! , . Wheat Germ Oil CAPSULES 119 A dietary supplement. 6 Minims. 111. 1.31 tOD'J • Cod Liver Di I GEUTIN CAPSULES ~ich sourc. ol A& 0 Vit>mi" • •• ,. 1.19 lOI~ 99~ ,, Vitamin A. 1 •• CAPSULES Conla ies 25;000 U.~P. Units al Vitam in A io,its natural form lrom 99"' fi sh liver olls. A nutritional SUP.-' Ii plemenl Iii. 1.lt l"l ; . . . Presidenl's '. Gkotce $UP!I B COMPLEX . 3 29. t & ~ll lq.Utl•'s • "I ··~~~ ......... ~~~~~ ... NatJtral Vegetable. ... ~r~ri~oftemporarycon-119 stipotio~ Iii-1.4911'1 •. ·Rose Hips e:· · , 25t 111: with fmit llavor·f0< 1 99 children and adults. A dietary ,.pp1_L 111. 2.41111'1 • ~ -' .. JOKNSOll· & JOHNSON .· DftlL! TIPPED .. Sitabs . , •• Unbreakable, firm IHJt flexible. Safe for baby. 66 C I •er.Uc lUTOfnt ' Bn'.t1f1I ~1~yi~~;\~' NAi°LS I Easy as 1-2-3 ! Instant elegance ••• so natural you will think they 'ar! y<1urowo. COMPLnE 3 50 NAIL KIT • "RAID" HOUSE & GARDEN SPIAT-Effectiveaerosol ri· insecticide for indoors & 119 ~ outOOors. - Reg. 1.3913\i II. • 1 " CAl'TAIN h I· Tutted washable corduroy, foa"\ 111.1· 11 ed, with ties. Decorator ccilors fur a great &ccOl\t ett.<L 1 · ·59 'I Chair Cushion RI(. 1.19 • ~ KENNll Garden Gal , · Help lif< plant & irow ie~ flOylm! Petite doll dfessld i' 2 99 Oenim overalls. •• ,. 4.11 • .. Sooper Jubble launcher 810,..rf.auncl SooP,, Bubbles! COm· 1 49 plete w/playing !11Uipmell(J•instrllc· tions. -. let. 1.61 • . . ' All PRICES PREVAIL' TllUISDAT, llAT 171~ QllSIQAT;'.11AY21n •·1 , 1 ·• ...-' I · 4 ~•Wft0fl1' ••&eii -lo:lf"SMN. WHtcllff 1'!1111 KUHTIN•TON llACM-A4h'"' a. Brealcf!11 .. 1 MUNtiMOTOM laA<:H -SOt'll!Ode" & ldl~ ' · l:l TOR0-2A372 Rockfltfd ltoed OPEN 9AM1._ 10 Plft 7 DAYS A WEI~ . . • • ' ' PAI Of 161 GET 45% MORE Dove LIQUID )OR'. DISHES W~b !Ms Specially Marled 3f '" ''"' 1111110!· ScQT. Sil£ . -PUftX-sciP11-- atEACH· SHEll N~ Pest .S~rip ,:. KILLS FLYING INSECTS INDOORS 1.49 ' 125 Sll£ET-TWO PLY ' • KlfENEX I TOWtf$ • 3l99c I ( I -.,, M>t I&, 1973 . • DAILY '1LO • l}J I THE PICK OF Panc.h I PWQ( ---· • C°"""'lgtlt lt11. T.,.., .. 11111 S~ ..,:;;,~ Phiosphyon lho bamttNt k wllhMP""' II ....,,. not being •blo to got •job wlNln l'vo ~rod.~ Plans Approved For Water Basin I Special to the Dally Pilot POMONA - A Southern California water conservation area will be created tn Pomona with the approval by the Pomona Valley Municipal Water District for t h e purchase of 26,993 acres of a 48.S..acre site known as. the San Jose spreading basin from the state Division of Highways. The site wUI be used as a wa- ter consefvation research and storage project joinlly witll the Los Angeles County Flood Control District, the Sanitation Dlstricf of Loe Angeles Goun.- ty, the clty of Pomona and Cal Poly, with auxiliary public recreation benefits. TllE WATER district board authorized an installment con- tract "tYlth ~ state 4t a purchase price of '475,425, with a down paymenl of 10 percent and the -balance in IO installments at 7 percent in~ te~-L Angeles r ... l. Flood Control Distrk't:~ negotJaUng with the state for the remainder of the 4&.5 acres, ac;:cordlng to Arthur *· Cbx, former Pomona may., and president of the Watfr Dlstrlcl. I Whon completed lnltl!lly !lie project will pump 15 mllllon gallons of water a day with tum<>l:tbe-<:entury projectioils at 50 mlllloo gallons ,daily. • . . . T,HE SITl!i ·~ localed in tl!e Ylclnlty ol Ridgeway,. SouJb CamP"I Drive ond the OranJ< freew"f, withjn !he _Pomo city limits. It bod been qul[ed by,the •!ile~ f the f,_.,ay cOlllli\'i'l_ldil p · gram. . Cox sail.the f'>l!rehU!\. ,, the way to a11xn1ani-Ule people of tile P . Gabriel VaU.Y ond Southe~ Callfomla.~for. recreatltn 1 . 1 "tllat sucb ~ ts· poft .ol district's plans. , ~liiillii' ~.i,.-,..a• I . , , v 4, Fort~.~ -~~,cq;rd-.l Births IT. JOSl!l"H HOSl"ITAI. ~"' Mr. •!Id Mrs. ~ Donnell, lllllltM11 W1y, l'\lln1, boy MIY 1 Mr. llld Mr1. J1m11 A. McM111"1, 13662 On••v ...... lrvlM. g(r1 Mr. •IHI Mr1. Mkhloll NitOntl. 2'222 J611ffr SI., l!!I Tnro, bo'( Mor.' Mr, 1nd Mn. Ronn• G. P11mff, 2"6n L• Sien'• Orl~1 Ml"lon Vl1lo. Cllrl. IWllY 6 Mr. incl Mn. J11U1n CllMnll. 5~A "S" Str ... t. Wl<S. El Toro, Dlri. Mr. 1nd Mrs. Wllll1m H1rv1y, 26315 NICCOITll Or1vti, Ml11lon V1411o. boy . Dl•solations Of Marriage IKTlltl.OCUTOl.Y HCAl•S •tt-.,, ' M,.n. l1ttlfin11 El._ 'Ind R•'t Gomu. U1mnt MarlQI 1na 0.Yld Allfll, lflty Elll119 •ncl Rlc,...,rd Cl.,.0. 1[9Wtl, IUhth Kb-eQwln D. Wilton, H1rol4 Incl GlldVt I. H.rtlo~ MICl\all \· Ind '-''°' A: • 1"1rtt11'", l111N1r1 . ind w1111r JI""" Cln..i, t.enruot G. M'ld .1wry L. Arwy, '!'-E. 1nd JnM L .. J1111r1, Lina• J. •no R1rmonci ·r. ltowl9\f, Ktncllll E. •nd DorotlTy $n~v., W1Ul1m JOMPll •M Dol'lnt AlhllllW\:C~I ll;11th Ind Rlc ..... rd Louil Fl.cl,! .. DI fl 0 , Ind JoM A. A11Nc!W lmlll P. Ind Anlll L. H1rr.n, ihlrl" F .. 1"41 Ellott Cl1xfon Ml\fl, M1rlorl• D. •l'ld Robert c. HOllM1n, H•l«i •nci Plul A1rn1r$, Vicki l " 1nd G.org1 Al'ldr1w Girvin, AndrM Al•nne ind T1rr111Ct Gr9llOIY . I C1pllr>01r. M1rD•l'll o. ind wm 1m Runell Cro.... ••rt11r1 M. encl Plul J , (..1111.n, lhrl1l1 A. 1"4 01nl1I L. Smltl!, kentln Anll1-M1rr111 •nil Jef· 11:"::. ~fuol "'' JOMPh 1nd J11n C1mt>bll/,K"QUtOn1 G. 1nil R1nclv C. KIM*'. £1tt1W MllQred 1nil W1ll1!1 J. Elliott, lllOOll' E1rl Ind Mtry Tllll'IH !lktr, Rlndall Ind C1rOI f-lclt.. Mlrlfnl Ind llWfl llCI Ho¥~~. ~. ~ wml1m Htnrv Gonion Gun-!rlrt M. 1nil•Aablrl T. 1'1bll, Y1kl1 L.orr11ne 1nd 6-11'1 Attvrll, 1'1us.tt. Ill. •net .c;.offf.., s. F1tc:ti.r, JlldY E~ Ind Alber! G. d lrll.. K_,llttfl 1. I/Ml' Mtrlon loulM H1111f0011. TllWl'lll J. Ind R-1 C. ,UIAL D•Clll"IS I f. ' ' - ' J' \ \ ' • ' ( AMll;ll -I J ' TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT & JEFF "Ol~EETIMES1lUS WEEK MY ALARM CLOCKFAIL.i.O ME! NOW IT'S EmOKE AGNN! 1 WILL APPRECIATE IT,UMK, IF YOU WILL SEND ME ONE OF'YblJ~Al.ARMS RGMENTS NANCY ~'~VERY SMARI 00Y WANTED GOOD PAY TODAY'S CBDSSIDID PUZZLB ACROSS 1 The "S" of "G.B.S." 5 Ci1y in tndll 8 Di1mond l1111tur111 14 Commotion 15 Tibor 16 Musi~ pas.sage: Informal 17 Wreck 18 OecoflllOI''• item 11 European siskio 20 Science 21 Time 1 intervals 23 lick of t harmony , 25 Swif.5 cit'( 26 Head covering '27 Trout 29 Joke 32 Plot conspira cy 35 Which thing? 36 Son in Gcne:iis 37 Mlleston&s 38 Wan 51.reet unit 39 E.~tt• 40 Give medicine 41 Limitt1d period ol tim11 42 Dallas residerit r 43 Female 'animal 'r'.esterday's Puzzle Solved: 44 R~u111ted to go '45 European '46 SpOU5P. 48 Weapon 52 Gamblers 56 ComP9U po!n1 57 Funny tenow &8 Pack1ging it11m 59 ''The Venerable 60 Str•dlv•ri's teacher 61 l11sh·G1elic 62 Utill1od 63 Made 1 larg& pack.1ge 64 One who doe,: Sufli1t 65 lnclian w11igh1s DOWN 1 V.iluable lidclle 2 Voluptuous woman 3 Mine 9 Hiush 10 "Hehas---- about him" 11 Salo 12 Emerald Isle 13 M ale oltsprings 21 Ice hockey \s1at1st1c 721'~n :24 Pursue 27 Map enlrances 78 Injure c Was 30 A11a :Var. victoi\o\Js 31 Vnlley 5 Pubhc ~lice: 32 Grant lnlormat 33 Lined up 6 Imposing 34 Zinc or lead: 7 Trick. 2 worcls 8 Ot thfl USA: 35 At what Abbi. 11mol 36 Modify 38 Building matflri11I 42 la1ge casks 44 Dumb 45 More difficult 47 Sharp 48 Nor1herll or Na1ive Dancel 49 Birds 50 Oown- 51 Reqvife- m1lnls 52 Low pe1~: lnfo1mat 5J Mountain cat 54 Cards 55 Cause of 1 1.,~il ~uil 59 Vehicle -, -. by l>OIMJ Wiidey DOOLEY'S WOILD '!1ul ~z . ,, ''" '--------"' L-__;; ___ ---J 1-----~-..1 ~---------··'" by Al Smith ---- by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller ••. PEANUTS VERY SMARr 60Y WANTEI:> GOOD PAY 00 \tlU U1<E I OOH'r 191<*1-llO c,tiu l.Jl(f ""-MOl1E 1HAN I . ME MOK!' lHAN I LIKE 'IOU? LIKf IW, QllCI(? JUDGE PARKER , · SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charlie M. Schulz l.ET"5 NOT f't/W L~' 6AME5, Olt.t:K ! -- by Harold Le Doux " SHE HAD TO KATHER!NE FORGOT TO RETURN TO HEW weLL, DO YOU AHO I OEClDfD TMAT 6AM HAVE SOME~ I'VE eEEN MONOe; lf' I WERE SAM THAT WOULD DRIVER, I'M NOT MEAN ONLY ONE SURE I 'D WANT TiilNG, JUDGE ••• YOU OUT OF MY THAT YOU DIDN'T SUG6E5T THAT YOU ~RING YORK THIS MISS SANDS HOME TO EVENING, J'UOGE! DINNER, BE TSY! MISS PEACH YOU/I' 1'11/feNTS Alf!! MAYING-COMPANY ~16MT, 1-INDA? DICK TRACY ) II Yl!!S, M ISS PliACH, ,..,,y l.OVli COMPANY! • . 1. THIH6 PL.ANNED 0LIZIN6 HJS TIME, l"-OR TONIGHT 1 TH AT I SHOULD GIVE HIM AH EVE NING TO HIMSELF! SIGHT FOR A TRU&T ME! DON'T MINUTE ! YOLr"fRUST ME'? 1 • MV l"ATMelt 1-0V!S Ca,4PANV: .• I RUN TME FORENSIC MODELING LAS. r \ . [ ' , ; ' • by Mell -,;r i-l!AS'T t 'TMINK so..-wa Al-WA'>'6 SAVS THA'T IF HI' Wfll!I!! 'TMlii OMl..Y MAll!ll!lllD MAN IN r ... e w~1-o, "''" EJe MISl!!ll!Al!li-1!! ••• $,,, Mn-..-C....lNWS. by Chester Gould SMl'S NH WI~, Rl'NlmMBl!R. ,, . ·, .. , by Charles Barsatt;;.,, C · ~~,..._ .,,, I ~»6°'4 ,,_ -~ . .:tM . ki.•o~.u.~•-· 'PL .... .....,,,..,....-...... by Gus Arrio!_a i : i : l f ! :i by Roger Bollen .. r~~~.-:--:=:-:-~"'M...~:l "611E C(X) . . ' THE GIRLS ~TR!Et> u---,l ~~?J i 'I !. ,, •• '• 1. , . .. i: .. •• .. ' l · ' -. l r .~: .~ c I ~J'l;-16 "I just hale tbls time of y~r -1bere aren't any more holidays ~ming up tbat you can put off dieting unUI after." DENNIS THE MENACE -p -< . .. .., ..... 'JN CASE~l'JIL~A$1(!)Me,,b1 ... C>J.I l STAY Mf1. HERE FOR ~? • - \ ' j, • \ f ostponin.g Smog jl irrogram Blasted • Sfoclil ...... ·~y Pllol LQ6~gr;d_ A dolly ~onfilil ~OI~: f•I ~bin the Sou CiWI lur Basin and Im· poMJ~ eipense on m.,fy · California s m a 11 busiltmmen. 1'1US PRIIDJcnON was ...lie by Fred ·J. Macfee vied-pre!ident of the Echlin ' ·mobile [:;phone ,....!'··-·,-- ~lace fl '!:ecelve l!elephoae calls j in )'0111' car ; ·---' I \, ufl~NGl COUN7Y n~DIOTH EPHONE srnVICE"' ' 401 S. Sama F1, ,.. ·~ s-taMo j 3 ·5.3305 1• ,.) "Mllllulaetur1nfl O>., Ill fight ot- ~ week's Callfomla Air ~ lloa1'I -one to coosJder a l!Jr-lh .delay of a procram ~·~,,.. smog CO!j\rill'de.lc:a to,be In- •~ .. virtually au 111'1&-70 vehicles h<tween July 1973 and April 1174. Echlin Manufacturing Co., Branford, Conn., is one of the manufacturers w.pproved for installation" ..by the A i r Resources Boord. ALTIIOUGH THE program to control oxides of nitrogen (NOX) has been law for two years and in pilot operation in Southern California for four months, some mem bers of the st.ate,Senale have suggested a three-month postponement of lhe July l mandatory phase. "Southern California motorists ha.Ve already t>ee.q installing these devices on title change ~nd thousands of service dealers throughout the state have bought hundreds of thousan<b of dollars worth a.s inventory," Macfee pointed out. 'Ibese stations, already feel. ing the economic pinch or gasoline rationing, can ill af- ford to have lrtoney iitveated and bringing no t e 1 urn , Macfee Jl?inted ·out. ; EXCRLENT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY ., Wrh Ad #•94 P.O. lox 15'0, Cestll M .... ~ '2•2• .,,c o11 '112> t t1.J1J1 LEASE • • • a Continental LEASE ••• Mercury ' ' Full Mlfntenance Lealing .•• "(our Choice. Nowt 540 ~5630 \ Conv eyer Concept •• DAll.Y PILOT 3:J Financial OVER TllE COUNTER: . ' Fitm Tells 1--·NASD-L·"·"""-""-r•.·· ... ~· ... 1._,..,_1s..1m __ ~~ '~• ~ ij~ Iii'::: E: Jl\11 \{ l~,. ' a •·enues lloMI .WYCft'f I°""' 1 ...... T Eit. ""'-...: • cg Ii:: :r.x."".,r. 'ii.. f!!;. w 'l~ i!- 11ie Fl'rlt Amerbn-Pinln-~ ,.,:_~:J ~~ \l flt' In~ :""!" } g: § J~ ..i .. t I:'-..-. of Sulla Ma t»d =.) Thi o\IOI.. r'i;;;'i ''I ~ ... lit.. Pl., ..., Trlfl C1I (I) l" ~ .......... = .. ""' it>c:llolOt "= m ."'" ."' . Wi •l!'t "'~! WA> 6ft total revelllle5 ol $9,758,MB rm 1 ~~:::! • k ' ~ 1~. :l:l :: W! rn ~ tt;i ~ dUring Jts Ont quarter tnded ::' anc1 llOf A4V 1 \ ,,, •""' 1>1 r.,. u':t""c.,,t Ni 'f\; Mll'Cb Sl, an Increase fl. 32 ~=:we-. KNil U~ l~ ~ ,,~ ;e ii~ lm 'If~ u= '5 'm 1r" ptlt!ePt over nvenut'I of _,,:.,""l'f't,,, ~"'* ":It :S le;:,. ,."r: 1~ l ~Er,_ L "" 1r" .. *7,384.6.S'l in the flrst quarter __ 1~ •; .s1a .s" 111:1111 s .... n , 111" frd:t. u:.. 1.v. last Pr •d D p IMDUITlll:IAL.I _..,.. J! fn' nt l:J: Mo 714 1 "' MeM ,_. * year, est Mt • · AMD UTIL. Tiii ,.t J\l t~ s.:::..lt(ll 1= lh._ ~= t m nt-Kennedy report e d to aid A1k n:f1':9Mt ·~ 1~ k"'""' 211 .. tf.\' v.,. 00.111 1~ 1~ stockholders. ~"'•u~~"~'. l2!: r,: ~~= c N.~ lhV: ~u ,:::, fi,,. m, ~fl!U .1ftt ~I~ Consolidated net income f 1<0 ::i , , ~ 1&' ,.,,,., scott1L G 1,.. ,,..... \l\dlO sn ._., .sv~ , \r. ,_ -. t• U \ kr1po1 H XI X* VhWI k N o the recent quarter w 1 a All .. " i. , 1 uni Miu 1l"" u Sc:r1ii10. 1 214 -r v• ,,.. l<I"' 1.-. AUYll •• ""' 3\Q v•tt c I "" 12~ S.a Wrld ,,.... 13Vio w.,,. HO '" I~ A~~rM 11.._ ll , .,,,_,. C 2114 21'1; =Merell U\ot U W .. '9 Mt tl\41 2211. A rt! .i \\ 11'141 Wat lr: ~ vm.lllr '1J n W••""" t WIW. l~ ( ) Alrl I I.ti fl fii1 l'ldl NUCI 2 \II 1.io... Ull :V'4 11 W41bt! R• 5"' , ... EARNINGS Am E!l'IW" Vt "foru l 1\• S""tr Co ~ 21111 W..S... I\.\ e l\m Flm:I """ ~o :i." 31~ ShOr.... 6 -~ W... wt llYJ 1"4 •m '"'" O '" "'~' " "' "' "m-"" W.Ofi:i.£ U'4 '"' AM OrN ~ •H-. 1111m1 • I ill'. U\'J s ..... I) Tolt WPc:a pt .... ~ AMlrc lo" II ~'> Jnl Alum 11/i llU\'I ~I 1'\.\ 11"~ ..,..,, 1u, an ncrease six AMWU" 141 v. raland A ~ , •• ttn 1'" WIW.. H J 11 11 Mn T~" 'N~ Ioli n 8tW A t• '""' 11114 Pll) '""' I W'"r Fii ..... JCN. ·~ 4-j of Am Wtld ll"" I W /lltr&I Cp I 16\' 2"' 114 I WlllWftf t ..... ti""' I , ' f "'*"" '" ~ J~ Jameoo ft. 11>\to •MOY I I) 11'1. WW l>lct t!Vi :12\C. UIOI TllffN•• pcrcen O\er earnings 0 AW"' E 'I\' 11 1•' AlrFr J ... ' Std """I' '' !L .. WIK 111..t """:IO $771 ,:r.wJ in the simil~r quarter tr.tn 1::, I .. l~l .. ~:ii~~ r, :r~ lf~; ~~: e"~ R~ 'a\;=· Lfv ;= l~ l!I year ago. Earnings were ... ~ AH~ '•'••"•"' ,• .,.,. c i-. 1111 s1.a1r N s 10•• 1M11 wrtuM w ~ ,~ An ultramodern $80 million mass tranit concept that would use conveyers to move people in air conditioned oomfort is under consideration by Wasbtena\v County officials to oonnect Ypoilanti with Ann Arbor, Mich., ten miles away. The continuous !oop would be composed of a main conveyor carrying paired seals at a 6teady fixed speed. • "'"IW r /J.:~ .. ,,, Tt ~ 1 s1rv1 Tee 1Ei.. 16 X-c., I "It equivalent to 68 cents per ~~. ,:2, ~ !Sii._ 111 .. 11 1u-Et i ~ lOllll v• """ .a~ «1~• share in both periods, based "" c1,.L1 ':t \~~ iC~ &.~ !1! 1 ~ si.': ~: 1 ~~ 1~ it:,.~ ~ ~!! on the average number of :~i':'e1 A~~ 1•~ •Vi ~::"ct.~ 1~~ 'm,,1 __________ _ shares outstanding, t ,203.362 ln ·g:~1~ ~~o:. ~~1~ ~lt 1'~ 1~~ 1i"" J O !float Adlee the first quarter of Hm and R:u., Mh ~J .. ~,., ~= ~: ~v. ~~ .... 1-----------1 129 542 in the first quarter a •'•"' ,",~· l!!:; Kr~ 110 ,._ NIW YOlltK lU1"11-TM" ~ "11•• ' ' •n l~ • ,. Krwow ..... • ... lloc: I l~ldeid Oii .. OTC ,.... T .... year ago. rnn ,, ~11 J:"' k u.tm El 714 • e1•v •• 1us»11w rw H.UD. .~l~ n 12Vi Ledd Pet 7~'& .... Vol-... .--.n.. . I~ F •<~ SV. t::~I kS\6 t \1 l"t!ln ~'" !I > it .. Co 7\':I I L•wtw c »"11 lS Mner -• ;'f Hi 1111 Y LI 'l ?3 i..iv Bo »>.!. ll'10 lt;1::t: " 1 ,,_, eo1ony Kitchens 1 ·n c .• 1:t! ~:: u .. i'~ l,ro· ~ . .,,. "" ~.~'" 't~~. ":::; 1. 'If~ N t Be h ~.., I lf)b Co 91~ t U o.r1v H 3\~ l~ Bankam...-11 71 <I v. ewpor ac , rel"''...,... sa es 11 ~!!!"' 11« llU Lii Ct>mo •h , Analo As.Afr ~ +-o;, ~ for 1he nine months ended Be!lrd ev;;: nu i~ ti: c~:I .i: ~''I ~:~ D~h~vll ti:B 1r,: 1 "1\1 March 31 in excess of_ $13 Np 17~ 11\.lo UctltL • .S1 51~ Klollf 8tdM Jl,ll)O IW. I .... ,,,... ,_.. I :tl' n'!!a -· Co ~v. ~2 Fishing Threatene«l. mUlion compared to $10 4 Br1,,u '" 11 141\ IMd G•i 14~ 1s•• • • . 6-Ar """ )"• Mlll lltt1y • '°"' l'IA$0 Voll.Wfl• TOCl&v: 7.111,1~ million for the cotresponding 8....:li:M-11~ u• .. Mlll1c111 "" ~ A<l•i"'" ~ periQd last year. 9~ s1 J~ J\lo ~!'"~ ~1 i~~ = ~=.Jl~ ... ~·-···· for the -~od utler· M ..... ""' Nu:. Cmct; Cl\'t •SI Total .111.i L.><1.1.1..,'&' i"rl' a~ r!! 23 ~ M=y 17'tl 18\4. Foreign Fleets 'Ru.ping U.S. Wa ters' Gt.OUCESl'ER. Mass. (AP -American fishermen wbo live off the waters of the North ··Atlantic say t he i r liveliMod may be dead within a few years, the~ victim of foreign competition. Haddock, the lifeblood of Boston fishermen, have been all but wiped out by foreign fleets which fish outside the 12.-mile international · Jimit. And many other commercial species, including flounder, pereh and herring, have been dangerously depleted in. the once.rich waters stretching from Cape Hatteras, N.C. to Maine. . ~THE federal government p e r su ade s foreigners to take less fish or seizes control of the fishing off its shores, industry people say commercial fishing will cea~ in the North Atlantic, possibly within three years. '"I'he· foreign fleets are rap- ing our waters," says Jack Donegaq. president or a local of the Seafood Workers Union. "If we doo't move by next Yea/. ~ years fl\lrn -we're gomg to be kisling the lndnslry good-l>ye," Dooegan said. "Everyone i.s saying the United Sets M,ore '!2rips On SF Route Special to the l)aJJy PllOf SAN FRANCISCO -To "" commodate taeavy ·traffic de- mand O!\ Fridays ~d SUndays. Upited Ait Lines Will introduce Boeing 747 ' service on its: Calllornia., commuter route between San Francisco and Los Angeles beginning June 1. Tbe 3l9-seat 747 "Friend Ship" will leave San Francisco at 4 p.m. and will arrive st 5: 11 p.m. Return service will depart Los Angeles at 6 p.m. and will touch down at 7:05 p.m. ''111e primary reason for putting the 747 on these days is to handle added weekend traffic," said John Courtright, vice president·marketing for the western division in San Francisco. Price is $16.50 for a coach seat. ' ~, same_ thing -management, labor, scientists and goVe~ ment. We're all 1.n the same boat." .. lt's Inevitable," said Com- tn!ssioner Frank Grice ol. the Massaebusetts Division o f Marine Fisheries. He Jftdicted that other species will follow the way baddoctc •re headed and become a.n. mercially extinct. "IT ONLY TAKES a couple of y.ears of really cmeetltrated effort to do the job," Grice said. SolutiJ:>m advanced by state officials ·and industry spokesmen center on Jlaving the federal govemmeot,,ez:tend the international bouriaary to 200 milfs from the toast. If the .government won't do that. lhe local officials want to see at least an American tattover of the supervision and control of North Atlantic fishing. Neither prop)saI is likely to win much i support j n Washington -re ollicials point lo the ~diplomatic problems such ..Uoos would create. ' 'We anticipate problems with any fishing stock out there -anything that's abun- d ant enough to be economically feasible," Grice said. "They will eventually be exploited." AMERICAN FISHERMEN are bifter and blunt about seeing foreigners take over coastal waters that 15 yean ago were tbelrs alone. Congress shoUld b a v e declai..i-oontrol of the .East Coast fishing banks 10 years ago, 68.ld. Tom Powers, mate of the Mary .and Joseph. a fishing boat out of Bolton. "Fishing is just about don~ here," said Powers, a 4.1-year veteran of the seas. "Uocle Sam lw tried to he ' Santa , Claus for the world." Last month, 312 foreign vessels, 190 of them Soviet, plied the !I-Orth Atlantic CQasl, the National Marble FW!eries Service reports. 1llE FOREIGN ships fly the flags of about 17 natiom. Wblle. Americans fish with small trawlers which are no more than 130 feet Joog , the government-supported Euro- peans work with Deets of large trawlers that feed t 'be i r catches to 600-!oot factory ships. . I ' were $316,622 or 32 cents a :, N"'Gil l~ 12\/o :ec1/'"' ~l't ~ · "Jt isn't going to be a very share vs ""9 746 or 29 cents a •"' vtP '"' 1'"' Mer d 1rr i v. 6'14 Gainera & Los-• -" • hmll ~I 1•~ I~ ,,.,,.,.,, Ff' I~ -. . ~· • nice situation fol' Americans share~t y:ear. ro"-'c;: XI.:~ ~ll~por "3i' .U\6 NI• yon, (IJl"ll _Thi 111""""8 ll•t as long as ~ are fishing like President Bruce E. De Mers 1 )P fl .. ~YI Mfnn in. 2I~ 22S: =r" .,!.i,..~Q(u fllll\· l'!!'.!. .. 1!*11 .. 1ria_ that," said Russell T. Norris, sald the favorable results r11 r~ = ~~ ~ ~ :°" ,,.."" ::' 'IC ~-~ j • I di ecto f I h obta• ed d It the f l 162 In Moor• S& 24 2~ m•r-" •• QUO!ltd bY ltl9 NASD • reg1ona r r o e were m esp e ac l"t v A ~ ~,,,, Morr1111 1v. 1,,~ N•t 1nc1 percwnli!ff ~ ,,.. .,,.. fisheries service. "It's not a tht the traditionally busy ::."'l.,.. 11(1' ll'-Motw c 1 9~ 1ov, 11111.,.nc• tit'-'" 1111 Pf'nfou~ ""' b6d •~ght future." E I k whi b 1 ll . the ocae L• '"' ''"° M5I o.i• "'" ~price •11<1 "" cllf"l"lflf "" 11111 Moe. i i.n • as er wee , c e 111 om1 shr 27 :it NII c ... vst N TCA6 I --JIUs . ··-' ff third . te last mwTI p 23~ 141,1, Nat Llbtv 1411 t\.\ ........ J1ie-s1ans arr1v~ o quar r year, oc-ontllH ,. UVi ISl'I Nt McHCr l°"" 1~ 1 i11 ~•Miii wt. i "' u 111 ~ American shores in 1960 when curred after the close of the ="·c "~I&~ ~W"~ .... , ,f ,~v. J fd~klll.. rr: = I their vastly expanded fishing , ~uartt;r this year. ~':tt(~o1i . 1f,! 1u_ ~C:~' ~l l~ ~ ':i=Rf.~ !: • : · and' G ... ..:.tJt'on!t~ 06--·.S. f 1ny M 1411 .,... H "I" 10 tc Lm ._ p -' fleets moved down fzvm New·· -~ '"I '"" 21\ll"tnfl N •t G 1 17\o\ ~ '' il • 1 1 foundJ ,8 r,,.,uu ~· ~--me,. ftC. art ~Ill lS'llo 111" Nla!Hn A jl 31~ = > P 1 ·' --· Ill ed b ·' •I• 3 l{o Nlels'"e 1 31 I U ~ ~u111 ... 1ucy . ~ , 0 OW Y Swedlo-Inc of G, -~-n "! at~ 3'1" N«ctilr 21~ tt 1 u .,. d I v. U• ..) ~ .aQd.. Canadians .. · C1Jw::: 1 • 1sv. 13"-H-HtO m ""'11 l<•fl\Pll 't j II! • most of them in Search of hei: ·-Grove ~~f recordtb ~es! b .... ~ ~ JU =:ie:r ~: 4;\, 't'-'! 1,'I, t:.¢:1 · •jevi: tm\41 ! ~ I r and earrung·9, ot e ·~• ""'" "" "' "' II!-" "' • ~" • ll ~ l ring, rantastlcally .J>len1UI1 ui in year 'eiide<1.MA?Cf11'31. g~::·c:i 11~ ffv. Ck:::: ~ fl~ ~Yr 1: )t~~"'b~lnr:.O l~r: t . I . the area a,nd virtua y un· N 1 . 1 11m tt<1 1i'U nv. ocnar Mt v. $.\llo 11 ~v•MY l!'C. 0 . hed b Am . . e eanungs rose o kk A e • .,.. •'6 !' Lv• ,.... 11 ~-~·nor LIJl!l•t 1 . touc y ericans. $1,647,000 compared w j t b 1..,.. Sci u ~ nv ... :: ''"' 1: ~ M·1~'Nt~ ~~R I II' I :f IN THE PAST 10 years, the $886,000 in fiscal lf12. Earn· ,. ~ !!ii ' ~:"' 1~ 1~ b t~=:~'i.1ii ~ ro 11 herring' have been reduced 90 1Dcs per share, on a 26 percent ,,J~: 1r ~l~ ~Z:mv;,A ~ .... ~~ u ,:~~S ~ ltt Ht :11 perceiit ..incfease in shares outstan· unto;I~ .o J\lo ..., E C•D ~ ,,..:, is *"' \II "' Ult • I The Europeans, with ~ dlna; ... rose to $1.SO from 88 F .. "f: ~l't lt .. P~ Br ~ fi~ Lot1111:s · superior ecjuipment and 1*ge -(\UllS 1n tbe prior fiscal YtV"· ....,.i'°c .m ;~ ~ae L=m isvrA ~'"" J 1 .. -~o:vrtr... 1~ ,~ Ill processing ships, use a method Pre.tax operating margins ~" '~ ~~ lll'I ~:!o ~ 11~ ,;: I iW,·~~ ~~ · ' = ,. l~:f : called,pulse rist\i~. increased to rune per cent l.c~,r~! t~ 1~~ :11 A.... Ii.., 11•,, W1l~}0!cf,5 !~= '°' 11 When an exploratory vessel from six pereent. Sales in-~:~on ~ei 2~ 2,m P:r.:v c!'s 'l\" 1!~ ! 0•1~c:; Ott ~ 1oi:= 1! l . hool f ,. h a ed to ._ 509 000 F••m Br 1]\, u Ply N Sv 1 1IJr u 'Slnd Mtcn11 I ' ' ' discovers a sc o 1s , ere s "'""• • , com· F•v• or11 6~\ ,~, PllG•& w ,..., '''' 11 w11ttelll"ld IT:: ....:= 14 1 • dozens of trawlers descend on pared with $20,730,000. ~~~~c!stn :1·• .:Jy, :::roHt~ 1:::: ~~ l iA~~rn PJ'ip~ it ~ I' JI ~ r.-h until it IS gone 111 T•F'ln 2m U '/tN Stow t lo 1 111 WWII. ·,rn '"'-llt i1. , ~ • • W,'lll••d B bt W1tF' AP nkrtn -J3 25" u ,....,,, cemo ""--v. lJ dum m~ their ~tches in ~he 11'~ O~ts ~ISCPT~~ l l~ ;~ ~ 2\! ~~ \~ ';.~'ft-c ·~fs S = 1..., 11: A procesamg eblp:i for quick Willaril< Boot Works Inc. ~'il\' °' \j\\i ;,.,' •,rg ,,. ,t~ Ill ~1.:it.:f ·~ ~ ll l~f handling. says its net sales rose 48 per· F'::rt11 °fri' Hi 1~ ;"" ..:'' 11\111 1 , r.!dll!N111 .17b 1 _ ,,,..,, • cent to $1,666,906 fro m ~~11111,, 2• ~Pm' C•r ,f .. ,"' ==~ i I , $1 ,129,71Z in WI. ·~ ... ~ !lll ll; ~""c.. := .!" E~ ~'r.; I ' ~ Sl• n File s For $be yMf ended Dec. 31 ~Ww' H ~ tt'd t'r:.: ~ ~· ~~ ~'°"'~'t; ._ .,c; tbe C6l.a Mesa 1irm reported : net income of '$101,t.78 or. 26 ' Fat Suit PORTLAND, Ore. (AP -A Portland woman whcl says she spent · $17.50 to have two packages Of·· ground beef analyzed ha~ sued a supennarket chain fOI' lt00,719. She contends the ground heel contained too much fat. Suzan Winder Is asklnl! 1100,000 fOI' exeinplary and punitive de.ma~. S'lOO for legal fees; f lT-'I for the analysis and $3 for the cost of Ute.meat,,, Sbe says Fred M'eytµ" Inc. acted maliciously and In wanton disregard for her rights and feelings by selling her ground heel with a fat content higher than the 15 percent specified. by slote policy. SACRAMENTO (API Stale and local government agencie_, would have to buy compact cars weighing less than 3,000 pounds -like \legas, Pintos and Gremlins - under legislation p r o p o s e d Tuesday. Assemblyman4Alan Sieroty. ([)..Beverly Hills). t o Id reporters the regulation for Ca,llfomia's 80,00lkar public ageocy fleet "may reduce the Deed or extcnl of gas ra- tiontng.'' I cepts a share oompared t.o $108,193 or 34 cents a share the previous year, f MUTUAL . FUNDS I J I ' I' I ·. I • , .. ff .,....._/ Pl.LU1 • w .. .....,, ..., 10, 1913 M••ert Tttt'lllOil-. -Complete New York Stock: List Payment Balance Plunges Sharply --=~us:i~-..:rr::=.:;; .... 1111:1-.......... ....=-....... .!:: ... ~-, .. , ........ le: ij ' J! '!ff l'.J,i ·~ F:lf)J J I ! ~ ~t:t"nj B=' t , ~ :: tt; IS ii!-1=,....!1 ~ ~ ' ,., -II" 1.:~ :; + a : ii im· ~1~:~~ r. ill,_ · ! ! l -' I '* . ' Im i= i-•-" 1---fill"ll -o WASllIM'.lTON (AP) -The U.S. balaoce ol pay-a detttlor.t.d sharply "' the fin1 qum-ttt ol Im, due largely to interns t lo a a I monetary turmoil during the period, the Commer« Depart- ment reported Tuesday. Two meuures of t h e belanc2 ol peymenll both declined. 'lbe offldal reoen'< transacUon balance wa1 in dellcll by $10.2 bfllloo and the net liquidity balance waa In defu:tt by $6.S billion. 'l1IE DEl'IC!T Jn the of- fidal r e 1 e r v e transactions ba•ance, a rntuure of all of· flcial and private financial transactions, was $8.6 billion larger than in the fourth quarter of im when it was ;u billion. The deficit in net liquidity balance was $2.7 billion worse Utan the fourth quarter deficit ot •u bHlion. The two deficits reported by 'the commerce Department mean the outnow of U.S. dollars into world fnoney markets ina'e&sed sharply d1.1r!Y the first quarter at a -ume when world gcwemments were expressing cot'ICi!rn that the flow of dollm led to ln- tern at ion a I monetary disturbances. THE BALANCE of payments deficits also oc- curred d~pite a substantial improvement in the country's trade dflicit, which ws:r $900 Sliuttle's Contract Reveakd Special to the Dally Pilot DOWNEY -Lockh ee d Missiles '1: Space Co.. Sun- nyvale, has been named as the subcontractor to fabricate part ol the space shuttle orbiter's external insulation system. Award ot the subcontract was announced Monday by Rockwell International COrp.'s space division, which i s developing the orbiter and in- tegrating the overall shuttle 1ystem under contract to the National Aeronau tics & Spece Administration. THE SUBCONTRACT will have peak-year funding of about $18 million and will be in effect several years. Details of I.he agreement are being negotiated. The insulatJon Lockheed will develop is called high tem- perature reusable, surface in- sulation. It will be pu,t on those portions of the shutt l e 's payload-carrying orbiter craft that will be subjected to heat ranging from about 6 so degrees to 2,300 degrees F'. during launch , orbital opera- tions and entry. Made or a sllica fiber fabricated into Illes, the in- sulation will be attached to the orbiter's external surface. The material will cover about two- thirds of the craft. THE SP ACE shuttle is the first reusable space transportation system. The · orbiter will function both as a spacecraft -in lifting o[f froom earth and operating in space, and as an airplane -in returning to earth lo land on a runway similar to a con- ventional jetliner. The orbiter b; designed to transport as much as 65.000 pounds of payload to earth orbit. Car~o will range from satellite to passengers and 5Cientific laboratories. -~ -- mlllloo In the first quart.<, compared with $1.7 billloo In the fourth quarter. ' All figu>., In the Commerce Department b a I a n c e of payments rePort are adjusted fer seasooal variations. The differtnt"t between the two balances ii that the net Ii-. quldity balance does not In-- elude private flows of Uquld capital, which are ~ts easl· ly convertible 10 cash. TH£ bf:FICIT in the of- ficial res e rv e trar1$8Ction balance was lhe worst Since !he third quarter of 1971 when it \fas $11.9 billion. The deficit in the net liquidity balance also was the worst since the 1911 third quarter. UPI T....-.. Some Balanee The sharp increase in the price of gold ~aused lhe U.S. dollar to drop sharply around the world again Tuesday. In New York's jewelry center, Jack liertz balan•es a bundle .or $100 bills against a precious bauble. W..t I -F I!> ~ ,,.I Ill: ti -~ W•• I '!I Ii'" .. "'" " ~ • " • • m 11 ~ ~ ! ~a: i. J:£" if.I ·• Jl ~ If~" ~ •t • ~~ ·-.t J! 1n: •N ~, 1~ Ji mi 11~ ft+ n J"1ltftl.lfl :.. n lf7' 1 'C 1,ttM+lh Jl ~J~ ... ~ ·.:.·., ~l·li! ·~n :ot:..1 nti..Jl!11-=ttl5.T.~1i 1d=rlh.:;; J '. :P -d ~ , =. !~-ml·· ,,. • :m 1~ ~ ~ ~~~ , ''2Y u~ ~~I~ n• .., . 1t 1, .s~ if' i'" \ • 10~ 1iC 1~+ "' i:Mlii i."'6 11 Ji 2'til 2'\.'t ;1r+ 1:o -Ca , JI "'Ii ~lio F I 2' 11\to lifi 11'.4+ 14 . I( K-•' 'r,' ~ ~~ a.Ali _:.!ti "' ,,, .' , }!.~ ' 111o ~I. ~. ·, 11' #v. " n _ "'~:\~':J ~~ 1i1'; ~~ ~ 1:.m+ v..: I... 0ti4 ~ '"' tlr"nlr 1 ' 1;a + l\ Fl• • .'5 1 I* 1"'9 l•\lo l.A6>-W KA !J1Jf tv. 1 S1 S1 iJ"" -''" ' .. ' !I-wt , 11~ 11 \4 Fl.IP~ 1..0 ft n ~ {.N • + llo ..,,c to I 12 ~ 1"o M + i.. 111= n \lo I ~~ -~ : 1 1;z ~ ~ ~::'1t1 111 ,, 'J 12 .. ll~ lfC. = :n.....11 '.lo I II ri· 6 m-.. r; • ml Ii! \4 Eci~ l.64 II 1§ ; ~Jilt: \lo Fluor Cp _,t {I lM lt\.'J i1"' lll1'tl ~ ~PLf 2.20 I n It I ~ ii~ ii· :a m~ ii ii ·~' ~ 'h L;·: r:IDJ J '.'. ·~ iii llE li·: ~iE1Si~l 1 .i 'Jl ~~ Ii . t - 4 U tt" 1 -\lo ltlM$Y t:io 11 17$ '°" ~ !,Ii ~· .611 lO 16 ,,_ • fioll ""'-... I P~I • I' y 5"' ~ ,. ,. ,... \+" ~1iso 1 a 11 ,a ~ 3"11'1 :15 + "' Foo1, Ml"" . . 1 "" ll.,., 5'1.-i.. " I " 1•• '°> "3 "' ~~I~ 1~ ... • '1111'11 11 It,._ \4 ~tr.W" #f • I.)~ 1 IJ\oli · ""' •. l.~,, -"1 1a 241 21YI '""' ::l 1 "'9 f + ~ /ty "" wt\ .. 2 2 1 Ford M 2.aG .s \!:II ~ YI 5' .. tJ K ~· .12 J 22 ~ .s1MU\'lo ll"" ~+:.'.% I~ 1"1,., 17 Jt 'r' ," ,V.-" ~~"1:11 1 ~ l~l'I ~ .... ~""+ ~ ~=r '-~ r. :Ii t\4 + 14 12 u .... ui.-. \II la!'lt'ilf~ 11 lfi "' ""' ........ "' FortHP• ·" 31 2' SN .WVt S.~11'1 ~:t.-r:f ·jg ,~ t.111 mt is _,;: 40.I 19 ,.. +w. larto: o/' '.i ll 22 20 Zl +n" For~ wl 16 ~ ftll. ~ .. ~.....CO ·10 , 41 6\/o ' + 'I\ l ~""' 20~ 4-U ~ott t.; 1 2 ~ ,1v, a\L v. ~=ipl'.., 1• 1~ ~ ,,, "' 25 t ft: ,11~" ,Ag 1\ 21 \~ ' l ~ "' l!~ li.. lli -i.... El 1.:1:1 10 1 :m. Jm 3Wo+ \ilo Fooc A> 2t .u 25\oli 2-111o 25~+ --....... ~ lltt ~~ ~ :l'?1 r;!, 3~ II ~ r, l'r'+ ltvit& Pflt :i:l«I 1•14 13 13V..:-11/, "''" M .20 " .. lll'I lJ 13~"' ~~I '1: I 1 23'.lo 'llV. I """' r • '"° ' -.. torox ·; " '1 ~ 20 22"111 Fr•n ~I ,411 II •2' 32'4 29 JO -3IJI Ktnoeott 1'«1 ' 320 2.Sl'I Ullo 1't :m11~rllnt• · "'! I~ lt'h 1~+1 l\lett P • 10 In.. ,,,. l:M•+ " P:r"PIM11 .80 ~1 201 ""' n Z»I>-4li ~:"f,111 1'14 1a 11 ~ im v. m • .» ~ ~ ~ .. \lt'HP Ill 1~'4 13 1nr.+ Ill ~n.otflllt 1,10 ' .., 21¥. 21\11 :at\li-'* ••· 060 21 .SJ6 f"" ,,,. f -o -----------------·------l:B•,~1-1: f m ~ !m r+t .. 11\I lm1 ~ lf -._ U\'I =+114 F11«1•ltld 41 '__!.f Jl'A l!Ht 11 -IJI "'tft"' 1 t 7 5"" 1si,., m S&L Deposits ... : BJIHI '.21 Ii 16 Im m;: -'* ~ :.1n1.10 ' 1.= u~ ll~ llV. + l'l C.bl• lllCllt 7 18iw: 171.1. 17'4 K~~ :~ ts 1~ '~~ I~ ~l *-·~ R . . :]~~I~: ~: Ill~ tm ~ ~~: :rlb!: 1~~ .~ ~ ~ ~ ~ '\'o g~ -~~ ; 1i? 1~~ 1~V. 1~¥.+ ~ ~I~~ ~ 1: 9: ,,~ 2~ .!~ ...... ~· ... •• ~ 2S ~ .. «•Bott :ll " "' I' " I' . •rnSllf 1.60 ' :II" 21\.'I :ll\ot-1\.', ~... ..,\.,.. 11 1• \)Vo • "" Ising :.s.!!',1!'_ \?9 1f 1-s-~'4 22i.-1w. '"~= l.~ '' ~li:""1Jr~1~.t1~ &EGA,,.Sk ::: '7 ~ ~"" ~~~ ~ lk S.Jo...'tN,.;fg 20 ~ ~: .. 31"' . ! AOl11Tel ..Q ,. 21 •!Ji .,,.. •!Ji . Bk . ·1 21 )¥. ll J" " nn.tt ,2,S " 111 )l\'ll 31\111 31y.._.1Y1 K r!I in ~ n 34'141 ).jU, ~ ~m0 .... .,1,..v11 ·· n, •• i'"' ,.,._, "" 1" ·°' If st 13'11 12tli 1ni.+ ,_,. irdOton ,70 IJ u 11\'i 1114 1&1A K:::;o1' • tlo ~ s. ' !ih· ~ .• ll\.11 1 · OIQ•lt 1..51 :11 JI '4'11 f'3\(o t<o1 + -tioc' .U I 6 1~ 16 ... j6~ K I 1 51'11 N ~'•· :::: 'titJ.:i ~ it .. 1~ 2t + ~ o~I• .... 1 • Jl'Mo ll" ~"'""'",,... ••lvc 1.11 ' 40 lS\.li 1~ 4'h-" ic.~1fc~P1 w 1l 1$11 •v. ''™ '·i.t ,.,,,, E Df •• 10 j~ j" ...+ ~ o ,. ,~ . St -1 '-•v '" s Jt J'h 5 .sv.+ ,.. Krtwe '..2b J7 rn 11"' sa\4 .•,,. A Fr~-;'1.10 it 1 2 I I 17 + ,_ ~~ 11 IO lr' l1':t 1~ ~ -'1"1 ~ 14 ;g 1,t' 1'"' l~ ~ K.-.ltt Ill 6 1 7VI \1 1 .T~loli R f H T d E d : ~:t 2 ·· ft ~~~ ffi: mt: :tl!Ll!...Ui& J: IM 11\lo l~11i+ Vt G.n Am Inv : · 20 l•'h 1,:t I•._.."" ~=r1" '·~ I} 1~ ~~~ J~y, -;"'" ea.sons or appy ur)laroun ye :~31· 1~ ., ~ M~ ~r-i~ =\lo :n~1-:~ 'i j ~ :m tt~ ~ ~eni!t;c·i'~ l~ ff ffl ft~ r :: ~ )--.:1.0.s 11'1 .-Ll,u ~!l ~· \;:~ ~~~~I 18 3, .,rs !il: u,,., ,f:Z,+ ,_.. :J;~A I~ . J J1~ 21'1• }lli-'h nC•bLe .llO 10 99 11~ jo>.t llV.+ V• t::::c, "•~ I~ 4 ~ \It ~;tjj AmHotP ,21 39 212 ~ ll'llo otP'lo+ 4' B ~pf 1~16 12 :dj Jhr. r rF!+l~ ~C~iJ! : 1U l:V. r" 1f"~ ~ L•tMI 1.ll' 19 ·~ ~ 22~ ij..~ FRANCISCO (AP) •'fl t" d "( I I A 'l d I It--'~ Amtnvst .$0 7 19 10 "'• ~"' 8 ! llf"e'f I , 12 ts 24 2'I -t l'i OV'Mm 1 ~ 21 1Mli ,.,..__ L•trobe !I! I .. ,oi•· SAN - a epos1 p cture or pr1 a vance oan comm ulClR-3 "AW111ct .n tJ '' 11.., 11"' 1~ 1.11 or G•• 1 '° ii ?1 31.,. 11~ 31,,.,_ ~ e 1., H ,53 ~ ~ .w11o+ h L••rsi~ 11 • ~ 2'"' 2"-4 ~'~ For the moment, it's easier to because of real estate and in· made in better times, the :AWMt~c~ 1f '!: ..m ~t? :J:U 015~~~ 1~ 11! ~ ~fi ~ ~ l\P ro ~:g J ~ff"" f~ ii""+."' t::~c ~~ '4 •Jl ,",v. 29"" l.-lli~ et kl t bu ho " me (ovoo b t i "t "'""""" ~~"" ' d r)< A.MIC pl 5'f.o 2 ;~n 94 94 -4li o=E I 51 II lSJ t.a\lo ~ t.111,1, n t Cp I ll 12~ lm 12~ "-LH.\Cpf 2 :Z0 1 t"" g ~ ans o y mea tn co _ .........,., u ·no qui e as ~ia~.i.w1.1 _were m . .a <I Amer Mot°" ' m z\4 .?· 1v. , " .«1 17 fl 1~ 1,.,. 1411.-·"' :..Jk ts 133 1rn, l , iatii:,. L••~wv .50cl 11 6 ~ ti.,. l . ,• California bechuse of action by bad as it turned out. Came picture AmNG• '"'° 9 11 37"" fa"' 37~ 14 omS "' '° 1 l•'h 1•~ ''"" t l ' 31 lm:: ¥o LNC!s&N .50 it s JIOI ::!t ~1111r• the Federal Home Loan Bank May;-and ~an-that unexpected The ioan bank:, in what ane ~~ i:I :g ,~ ~~ lr"!~ E!tt t :fi; J~ ~! :,..fi, iJ!~ r-iJ:i~ ·~ ·1~ ;,J !\2-l~-==~~ tS~c 1'5 11 .ff \)~ \~ I!_ and an as yet unexplained green balm descended. executive called "an im· "'" s1nc1 50 • n 11~ 1v. fh+ "' wEd¢ 1..42 . ~ 21v. 22 ._ ~ ' 11~ 11 -._ Le!lm i .ati , 40 ls~ 1~ ,~ ""'lldof ~ 17 ~ 62 ~ ..,..Pf 190 •• ~ zv, ~ 'I XJ7 14 -v. l.~ar Cp S U ~ tV. , l.t turnaround in savings and loan ''The key question," said portant and timely lhing" an· Am ttr11 . .n 1s 201 u :1214 Ol'nwEd wt :: ! 1iw. l!R't lcw.-,... Publ i' , 200 l 20 -,,.. Lenax .JOa 11 ll »v. 31v. , w. ' Am terll wl 4 1\:W. 11'11 l* l'I omEQ' 8wt 1 10 '9 ID;'o CW.-\lo '"-ltdrtc -f\i 5 ~ y. Lev Fd C•ii 2• 9.ft '~ \II agency deposits. Sandler, is, "what was the nounced last week that the AmTs.T 2 . .0 12 1619 53~ 5219 S3 ~ omwou 21c ;ii IO 1av. tft 0 1 .., 1• .. .. "1 ~lit Levi s;rs au 2' 34"' 34\lo 3" "·1 AmT&Tpf 4 119 40 S914 591,\i Yi "'°"lpf 1 n ll 22 21'-22 'v. S I llld 2' 3V. 3 :Ni LtYltt Fur" II '61 I~ No.,.,~ .. A si. ....... rise in savings and surprise, April or May?" S&Ls would be permitted to ATTl'l'A '"" .. 11 52i;, s1"' m. .. -..t ~ lt '9 ~ .. mi.+~ ~ 1•60 11 s15 F,ii :11 ttv.+ "'LFE COIPn u ,.,,, ~1• ~" ·-" FHLB · · . . Am T&T wt 1411 ~ i\/J ...,.,_ 1'1 om1>Ulr kl 127 31'& n. 2:i.:. v. T ,P.!, 2~ , I 21 191111 liJi 1-'1 LltibyO 2 20 7 120 ~ 3J\lo , , • greeted joyfully by e:icecutives California S&LJ capital on hand more money avaHable for ~wilt.~ nz :: ~l~ i:~ llt~, 14V..-v. ~:'~~ . .:t. I~ " ~i? ~~ ID:=1~ t1I .:Mi ' ~ "i1~ 1i~ 1' + u tf~~~ ' 1lf 1h. ,n; r: Joao deposil.S this month WaS Statistics SboW that reduce their IJQUtd1ly to make A~•lr M 1 19 ll'I• 11~ lit+ lj: ONgr t~b '7 t ISV. 11\.1 1~ 'Iii Tl rm l-~ : l!OO IJ 17'4. .. LOF Pf 4~ . t, 191'1 19 1. • · h t . lo find tot led °'" b'll' ( °'-d ho rt AW!r pf l..O l-50 :!Mio ~ ~ • Cll!ll't«: 60 10 32 ln!i 11\9 17""+ \Ii l•t .70 t 4 l ~ 161111 l6'h .. LlbrfyLfl .50 I 16 1 ..... 10\lo \.ji, who say I ey are ry1ng a_ .,..,.,.'I 1 10n a u~ en rqe mo gages. ArMton '5 • ' i•v. 1'"" '''"' con Ed l.IO 11 m nr. 23v. 23.,_ lnP . .,..-:w jl,i v. l7Vi •~+1 Lige Mv lJl 11 "' )!llli S1V1 .,_" out~ w11.:1 1 means. • 1 o ..xi. ACTING .BOARD chalnnan A""'rn ,.o. 10 21 I•"" 1~ Ja3t: }'> c-Fa 1.» 13 110 37 35 36"+1~ l"WPf 1.12 1 10J'h 1 1t1Jv. . Lmv e11 . 6 n 29, &4 11~ ltl'1:n ~1 ·1 of February cl'mbedt ..... 9 "'"'"'51 .100 ' 1 1 ~ 7 -v.c-edll!'.s su""u UYo+'"-P1oe .10g1s »l'lim~~+~L"11JMJW ,. 2n'llm-. ..-. billion a t the end of March, Carl 0 v.mp Jr said the ;~Mf.:, ,n 1! ~! 3,,~,r?~ ,r~ ,!f,1£i~ 2:l:~~t ~~ 1 \J fir. n\'I n~1t; v 11 1:.ii't : 1t'f 1l!~ 1h 1l!~+s~ 1:1:~:1 J1'1 ' 'g l/:Z = jl;.~v. "VERY HONESTLY, we are tben dropped some $33 million · n.a · ... nc .6'1 -...,,.. 21"" ,.._ ··~-NG 2.03 1 1s 2n-. 2ni. 27"'-V. .20 s ~ -.....,_ .. ..,,,., c""o 11 .n ~ 3'6i ,... ••• trying to , analyze how to by the end of April. reduction in hquldity re-~::C~;r: -~ · 7 1~ ·~~ '}Yl 4~~ _ tt, ~ $*4.~ 10 ~ m: lo~ u:-"" lttlt~ -~ '1 1; 1E"' ir7 1~ " t11~:::"cv ~v.~ 11 %3f 1f~ ~ l~ v. .nderstand what happened," qurrements from 7 ,..,.,......nt to Am~x Ci> · ''° ~ '"" •,i.-~ onP pf 1.12 : 11Q 1cwv. '°'\~ 1cw""i v. F1,.1 Sk ' u I lP!t-v. L nn ,.~ Pl 2 ·· 1s 11"" 111-9 ·~ ; ·: · ,.-..--Amt"el> '°'11 3 JO 7'4 ~ + ,.. CDfltl Air lfl ll )7f '!i ,.,. Ai \ti L""ls · SI 1' '"'°i \'o L4tt0!11" llfA I lO'il. ·I -llt ~ said Herb Sandler, president FACED BY A reduction in 6 5 percent could produce as Armt•r 1.10 1 « 26 mo 2s;. ... cn c.,, 1.'<l 10 •'!1 2"/o :it~ 2l'lli v. tm•~ .ub • 2 1 v. 1614 l•v. 14 Loc:lr.11t19d ',~ " 6ti. ~ 64 ._,Io- of Golden West Savings, and cash supply for home loans much as $1 billion more in ~::l~pf2:!3 1 1~ 4fJ.: ,ft.': ,fj:+ ~§~''C'.~ · '1~ 'm .'it:: 65~ ,,.. 1= 1~ tt W: lt"" ff~ ft! ~t='fF11·~ 1, 1!1 it"' i~ 12~ l<>a and the need 10 meet posSjb]e ffiOrtgage funds, ~:" _i]g 1i 1~ li 1l .... 1~ -i,;j 'C~kK,.P pfi~ T 1;t ~~ ~:z ~'-= ~ ,':'._ r~ 11 ~ .. ~.,::',, ~~ ~t= l..J9: 11 4~ ~ .tCl\'Ril • ><~I'll n. • AN:hHC 1.0I • 41 nv. 22~ 22"'-""'~!IUllU m 11 31 ltV. lw, 1111i+ "" mo'DI\ • '4 17 '""" Hr+ \ti L-s Ind""! I .. 16"1o ~ 1 ' Industry spokesmen said the• And Cl•Ylon 1 s :zov. l9'11o 19q.+"" on"""'i 21 10 67 1 ..._ ,--f 'Iii ~I Mar 11 60 11\'o 12~ ll + t~ Lon stG IA 12 120 ~ 30v. ~·-·,J.o earlier cas~ shortage made it . APtche-.17a 1 JO 1JV. lv. 1~ 'f.o con11 011 1y, ? m 37 ~ 311,-11 "~ klW~• Fe o ,,.,. r,.: . L•L prlC •XI :i:i(IO lOI 107~ ~ \II .. Anoellc• ·'" II a 12\o! j214 12~-v. gnMt_g_ .$.II) 10 10. I~ 1014 1~ "' lobtUn ·'°,-1' ', ',!-;· '1'""-\lo lOl'IOILI .... 10 " 2211, 211111 t; ' increasingly difficult to obtain In Swit%erland ~=~~ .1~ 11 :~ 1!• ... I~~ I~ 'Ml ~:I ~~lpf .J ,, ~ ~ ~v. ~-1"" ~·~r ·rl 1t ~~ n: 1~ Hv. = n t:':11Doc~11~ ~ ~l! ·~ ~~1'° loans at the going rates -7% -=------'-------'----:~ri:J c,jl 1: ~1~f:1~fil 1~}~i1~~:;~ 01~ff 1~ ~ ~ ~ #C,~ r&c&lll ~nc;v! 1f 1:?1 B: ll~ ll11ci: ~[:L•"P~1nc 1~ ~ ~~ ~ tml;'.~ percent interest with 3 percent M al F d p• A~A sv 1.22 15 112 1m. ne11o ll'Y>-2 =: 1~ Jo 1~ .J J:Z ~~ J'A_! ~ ~:n vu ·:& : J ~~ ~;: ,i'f!+ ~ ~:.6~:1 1'.~ IJ 1f ~ ff:! ff""~t: down' 8 percent interest with t Arc1t1N .14 • 21 '"" 6Y:i 61h OOPtr L•b 19 ~s ll:ito 1n. 1a~ '" ,,n v 1-20 , ll 21411 21~ Wl:: ·~LTV COl'P 6 l6• , I~ !"""'-u U un loneel'9 Arc~l'rO 50 IJ Xl20 21 27 211 + ~ CCOl>Tr .27b 1 10 1'"' 16 16 W " LTV C p A 2 10 o o ' 20 percent down, 8 percent "in· ~~f:1~s E1~l: : t: 2~ :Jt 2f1_ "I\ S=~ ~ 13 ~2l ~"'° i:::: ~V.±':±' flli.r 1~1f4 ii 13i ~: ~ ~lv.= ~ t!~tifi s :1 n J ~ ~~ ~~~ terest with 20 percent down, , Ark ees1 .40 1 34 ll"" 13 llV. . • 'COPO R•noe 74 15$11 ''"' ul'll ~ t A&P ~ u 1~ '§ 1,,._ ~ luckvS .soa 11 '° 11v. 1~ ,1"+"'-Ari.n AtlOY t :t?S 6\fo ~ ·~ " C-ld IJI 6 '2 2:!11-'1 2• .... 25 --\it tlkO 1.20li 11 J 2$V. ~ $~ \\ ll<llow l,Oli I 61 1311 13'Ai IJl!l+•\14 and 814 pert:ent for those who (J f Id 45 s • d Armt<I• CP " 12 6V. '"' 6l.-. Con111r• Ci> s ~ 19 71'1 1 l$! v.. tN Ir 1.lOd 11 d i~ l(l<lo\ ukenSll "° 10 111 li'lli uv. ~..,_1,,.. •orn e e1ze ArmcOS l.:ZO 9 217 :t.1'111 221M 2Vio-V. !ornGIJ 112 ll 13110. " 103 +1'\lo INNell I 60 IJ •S'v.. (S'A-+ >,:, L VO COl'P Ii l9 '"' «II ._ , could qualify for a ~ percent ' ' Arm o• 2.10 25 JO'fl 30 ~¥Ji+ ~ ovs1" 112b 2 ~ 25¥ :zs14 2 -v. 1wsi=1t1 ,40 1 13 11•1o lm 11 .._ ,,. Lvk• vostn 15 ~ '" ~' ArmurDf '"" J100 60"'° 60""' ..,..,.+ .,. -1es COfl'I 16 22 •Vt 6V. 6'h-"" t ~r Un I S 5 +\.I LVll pf l 12c .., 2,,.., ·~ loan . A."ns CM .80 14 SlB ll1M 2'4' Nll.-\ii oxBrd .:u '' 10 1s 24V. 24>4-YI 1w11u" pf ':lli"" 16 16,,.__V.Lvnchsv ',40 21 .w 01'& m -.i... Armslll l 60 6 I' 30 'l9 29 -1"-CPClntl 1.n 10 61 JOYI ~ lO , rt"Wa5h '" 27 3 l '.;... ·~ ~ ,,,._ ~~" Theinfluxofnewmoneyhas GENEVA, Swilzerland (AP) day in a private bearing Aro Ci>-~. I I'"' 16~ 16\'6 Cr•~~ 1 1S 1,\\ 16>4 11\la+lli rnGl1n1 l 11 11 \.') 2J'lt ~·"' M•cAF .07b 1 ''m ... Jf ... made loans more available, B d Co f Id h . bel . Arv1"1..:r .~ i1 •s iw. 11Y1 11,~-:t crec111 Fl ' 103 •'Ii .,..._"" \·'' . J.s ~ 'fs =1 MK0on1c1 1• 21 ~ ...., -ernar rn e ' w 0 Jn-ore a magistrate. ~~ L~:t .• .11 .. ff: :~ !l~ ~~'~~~:·I( 1:U : 1'6 rrit 1:: 1t\'I= ~ ~:l\nQ' -!1 ' t:;.' "114 ~ ~ ~~~11 .o~ ' ??1! !tto ::? but the industry people ~y troduced mutual funds to A11\t OU 1.20 t IU ~ 25\lo llV.-"° CroustH-.54 13 SO l91i'll 19 19 -\o\ roUt~ .. 90 J 1 l V. I 11V. +~Macy R H 1 ' ff5 !j. l' .. they're uncerta•"n how oog Europe, has ~-n ordered to HE PROBABLY will be ar-A.r.•OPt uo . 2 SL s1 11,,_-J'h Crow" cork 14 121 ~ ~ fi"t"' rum'"'" o n.. tllt+' ,,,,.., Fa .«>ti ll2' " 1>'4 v.; ~ . AsDrYG 1.30 11 •1 31:W. ll\lt !--'"' ~n ti I.~ ll 141 2'411 2SYI 14 ~ ~ll•n In 20 ~ " P.tt It M-.1 S-re ld 4l ' , •h•\ will las!. appear before a magi·strate on ra1gned Wednesday before the .r..&or 1.2'1a • • :uv. 21 ,.. r, rwnllf 4. • 1100 66 " ·~ [ '·"" ! ~ ¥-M-o.lcCh _,, 6 1 w. t'!oll • '-' ..,.. Cha . Anoe: T••n1 . 12 7'h 7\11 ...-T S COl'O I 3' l"' " ""7-'4 L ... to -\lo 51l~Y ~ .40 13 11 11'\li Charges Of fraud •• bettl·og mber of Prosecution, Atl\l1111e 40 s 19 12v. 1,v. i2 ... + • 1.1t11""n .JO IJ 11 ,,.,.. 'l" 1 v. utOI 1v; 1 n .,., 4 ~+"'Mt orv '6 10 '"" 19\~ ~ S'NDLER SAID th y · · · · . AllCMI 1.03b I JS llV. 11,... 11v.-Vt um!n• II• 14 4 ~ 311111 -~ f Rt&C1' I '° '* I •~ MtoneH .Jt lt 19 '"• 23'~ ..;.:,,., ,.. e mone I t' d ' which Wiii decide If he IS to re-AIJCI~ 1.•7 , 1-1 ZZ\.11 21 "22 -\Ii llM Or~ 9 15 ""' ~ 6411 ,. !ADI• .lOc • l 111/.i 1 14 1~\lt-\.'I Mlnhlnd ·jt • I \~ 11'4 '• men anticipated a rather =a ion._ an mismanage-main iii custody. ~k~J a:~ ~ 1J ~ 'llo il r +3 c~ffl:tw;ovA ~ 'lf ~ Wi• "~+ V> J.'M'S f.f2 12 ~lu11~11r,.,./ i;,,. \\ ~Wn 1.511 l\ ~ ~ 121'&, 1~ A police spokesman said the !lr~~hpforf,_, . . 21~ I~ 1~1'11o l~~i~ c~~ 1·'l ig ~' s.... ~ + ~ :t:z: .:: .~ m ~ :::: ~ 1.: ~fl 0 ~ ~ )C\n ,"" Yo .. ~ The flnancial Napoleon was charges "are ronnected w;tb All•• COio 102 59 21-. 1 1 .. ~vPrvs;;f1 1 ' ~ 11v. J ~• 1rw1111 1"" . i 11 ft 11 -2 M1rBir'1.60 1f ~ I'" -.J•t, T lls ~ d M od h · I ATO I""-,lit • 61 71~ 71'9 1v.+ ·~ -" o--IW1111 J•,, . j l(I0\.111 ..., 100"'-""'M1.-cor .ao 10 2 !\\ .,._;, 1,. F • arre~ie o ay w 1 e th t" l t' " Autom 0111 • 394 t.111o> 67 61V.-i.. 1rw1 pl 3~• 1 ssv. v. 54V.-'f.o M•rcDI' 1 2 uv. .,., -. ..!.. ~ ~ •....... e · I h e en Ire comp eJ QUeS !On A~lomt Lndl I 128 ,ji;. 41/11 ~·to Dimon Cp 26 ~ JJ'h 31~ ll'h-Vo fWs ot s::r.r,, , 11v. JIM 7siv.-V. Mtrem • Ob 11 1 ~ 321~ UUI"-'~ .LI. .I.LI. vis it ng i.s 85--year-old mother of Investors 0 v er 8 ea s Avco CDl'P , 121 11>\11 11111. 1a..+ 1-9 00."~!fJv,• ,.., "• .mi 3'1 :J _ ·~ vltM 1nchl 11 1s v. "" 14 +"" ~~~~d f, d , 1 1 y, 27\/o 2~_ ~~ t hi l . I k "d ·u Avco Cl> wh 04 214 2\i 2'.l. • '""'" ,¥i ...... .. ~ N-.... riw1L \lo r r,~" a s uxurl<lUS a es1 e Vi a. Services the empire Cornfeld AYCO pt J,20 l .m;, ltVi lth-14 &:~1~ 14 $1~ ~ r ~:: Het;kW 2.36 ' l J7\/.o » '"'I ._~.!!!!'-I.II ,1 '~ :~ Co I Id 45 d . '. . Av•rvPr .lS l9 IS _.., 3'"-~ '¥t · , IN I 'A+ \'ll H•!IPrl .to1 1 16 lll'!Ai l "~ V. n..,..,.,,. .. 40 15 ~.,.. Mor·tg" a~ae rn e • I Crosse into founded in a two-room Pans Avis tnc .«I 18 42• 34 32 32 .. -1 .... &:~i·111 14lt ' J3 i'"' 61 ,1 -1 Htlllbln \.n 3$ 104137 I 1n" IV. ~:~:io':t ~~ 40 ~ 1~ 2~~ ~~~ Switzerland from France for a pa rtment · 1956 "~"•tine ,JO • 112 aVt '"' 8~ oavllnl" .2• s '8 tv.. '"" t + v. ~·::::&:"° J 11 ;g 1~ ~ +:! M1rs11F ~'31 11 Jt '1611.i 15'4 26,....::i ._ h ' Da ' a m . ~=~~, ,~ S1 ~ iffiZ lg;z 1flv.+ O•YtonH .St 10 37 lil! y .... Im! :+ .. :ni1 •• :. "" • " .•. ,., l '.lo+ "' Mtrll"AI "'° ,1 ' 'I• .,,.. ~ ,,. Mot ers Y visit. He spent The company, which had a Ait1c:ou 6k ~• 12 ~ 201-'1 mi+ B:~~ }tg ~1 i&,or 100'ill 102 -i1'~•IMlkH .n 11 ~6 1~11 1~~=:'~ ':U 1T ~ t:,,.. !~ 11.~lt Falsl,f)'l'Ilg the night in medieval St. An· million ~hents at its peak with 86b&wlt .111 15-1:1 9a; v 21 + ~ g::i:v11 1:40 1' a.I; :,v. ~~ .:i:;:+ ~ ~:=. 01 ·~ 2~ a ",t ~~ "~ v. ~imli: ·~ f? 1~ ~~ ~ I" toine Prison and appeared to--assets listed at $2 s billion s.c11e ,1sb 6 74 5..., s"li s~ ,,.. OllP&L 1.'ft i 11 "''' 16 16 -v. H:~~'!"~B, 1~ ~ ~ .,., JW:; U ~-1 .1sb 18 VJ lj• II , . ' '81kerlr. .162S IT 26\lt 25"" 25Yl-\.1it>t1N111t l,IO 'I 31 11+1111.\:i191\+V.H•r~ilo 1·!.t 1 !! 2'2V. l"" ~~=14Ml1$C .6?b t.11 2'--.... began collapsing m 1970, and B•k•rO 1 37 l• s1 26~ 25'"' ™"+I oetl•Alr .so 11 506 60~ 5W. " + 14 H•rrr,"' :12 lit 11 Jl"'1 lt.'r-t \.\~·Mt F.: i2 ~ ~"' n ~ ..., LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Cornfeld. was forced out of t:'.ic":f 11! l~ ~ fl~ ~v. ~1.t.= it B:ll:i, 1"l'! t 1l? 1SiZ 1~ ,~"'t' ~ ~:~J"1111J 1} t} ~ I~ i~ ~ Me"'i:":.\'J.,01£ :,111~ 1,0 1?~ s¥: 29ll!:~ .. ~ · Lo An 1 home 1 1 h d h" B•nd~ rnc • 11 v..., 2""' in.+ "" oeo'l"t'" .to • l5 25"" 2•'11. 25v.+ .,,, M1r1SMM .. 11 1 11 J:ili • t " ' i ... ~ ·· ~" major s gees rontro . n 1971 , e sol is Bu\Qllr Pn 4 3J 9 l'h '"" oennl1t1Pt 1 2 :zov. 20\11 20V.---\lo M1rfeH ,!Ob 10 :ia 12"' 11v, 12•-1 s.,~~--·w · 'I • ~ ·~ fi ~ b "Id" f" h s dlsclo~ S f t k t A f' · B•nurP 111 2 ·. J "\'J 25 25 + ""DMnv1 o• 11 m 11•1J 11 nv.+ :v. H•weEI 1.u 11 s ?N 2111o 21'/.o-v. ......... 7 ,.,. •• UI Jng lfffi a x:u a eway S 0C 0 mencan mancter Bnk of NY 2 6 32 lll'll 3J'h 3J'l't-v, o.ri1,11ly .68 15 IJ llh 111'1 11!~ H~vin A!ll J 1 1! 1'"9. l•lf.i u,.+~ Mlrtt<I 1. I 16'5 ';-~ ... th I rat former emplo-• Robe ( V ed 11 ti 81nk V• .A 14 35 J1~ JO:W. Jl'-V. OesDlo1" .o a 11 10 9'1'o •9 Ma1tlll11t1 15 20 """ 1H11 ~-\'Ii MCA Inc -"' \ti' a seve ;-r esco, sever a es BtnkTrv1r 3 10 s1 53 s2:i. 53 +,.. 0e1Edl1 1.-45 10 " ~ 201"1 ~ HCA Mirtl" lJ s 1.,.. 19\11 '~"'-111 mlnCC«f ·• 7 ' 7 ~ Of its mortgage bank j D g Wlth the company and moved 81rbtrOI 2k 1t 31 V. 30\11 31\lo · OetE l'f t 32 . 1190111 117 lit -~Hitt! Tn .24 J 3I05 ay, '9 "'"'-V, r l ii !!!" ~ ~ J;~l? M S • l!l•rdCA .13ll 216.lll!"2N.lll\Oo Oe!EpfSV, 27'~~""' HKltlnc 121f 3516:w.16'4'j·'•-·' ••·I~ I 7 • subsidiary "altered or in-eat u•t to Beverly Hills B1rnel 1.29b ' 16 26\11 26'4 26''<-II:-Oexlr (.p .2S 16 ' IP.'i 161111 16l\+ '" HKl•M11 211 • 317 l" ~14 I v. -v. ~ !!! --..; i ' ~ ~ Bllfl Ml 20 20 5 11 10., .,--,.-v• 01• Intl 1.80 t "1 2'\.1 ... 1111 2il'f+ \lo H•len•R ,16 16 6' 1Sllo ~ 2.1! .i.1 •.li M rEd IVt 11 x29 n Ill 'I\ rorrectly stated" cred•"t m· • &-• 811/c In _ _.., 14 5 a•,i, 6~ ,f~ l:-Diet Fl" 54 11 12 1"4 l.N 11 _....,Heinz H 1.ot I• lll 4114 , .,.. 41Vt+ ~•Mc '6 'wl 4 13 ~· •1,., form.ti.on on S-Ome mortgage VESCO WAS indicted in the e1mM P' 1 . 6 16~ 1w, 1.s:11o-"" 011m Sl\m 1 10 74 10 19.,., 20 + v. He1e11e C1.1r1 16 31'11 >Vi ."'Ji Mc , HI ..., , 'I' ,.. !"' ,~ "' 8111\ Ind .JO a 3n 2JV. 11' I 13Vi--'Ill g1.s11m pf 2 . l 30 30 30 Htlltrl"I ,u 15 191 l\V. JO\J;i JJ'lo.i. 411 ""'' c 11 3 4 Y. • "" applications to help "margin OAKLAND (AP) -A United States last week with 8•11sctoL .42 11 316 n\.'J 21'111 nv.+114 i.Shol 120 Tr 16\4o 1~ 16Vt+ ·~HetmePr Ml r 6 1llli ,.,.,.. 1~ Mclntvr• ,. lflO 62 51 ¥, ~, r A Bixler L .15 60 lOS '9 ... •1-111 "I'>-'" k:lllOll" .JO J' JCI ' It\ lh -\ti Helm P•V"" 11 24 22'1\ 2111.i ~ -Mel("' :Ub 13 IJ 22 ~ +11-a homebuyers" qualify for $174 million class action onner tty. Gen. John N. 111vukc11 .so 10 s 12'h 12'1'> !?~ •. DiMK>td A)g 1 129 •5v. ""' ...... _.,., Ktmllo C•P 17 '" 214 ,.,.,+ 14 McL"r, · 60 11 3 .cJv. 4314 .3~ ~ . M" h II d t 8urlnQ5 60 15 29 " •S\lo .,.,.._, OIG1oroo .60 7 .. 1014 10 10141+ .,., H•m 1" .Xlb 25 1 1 7 Mcloii I\ Sll • Al !St. l)Y, u~.;; l:. mortgages suit contends Safewa y 1lc e an 1orrner Com-Be•I Fd1 .•1 11 466 n:r,i, n•n ~ ,., or11n.1 E11Pt •1 113 ''"' 7911. a. +l'JI Herc1.11e1 .68 l' 5<6 J4 n ,\.I -.., McN&11 1s 1 t u /2'ill 3 A Slate~ent released Mon-Stores Inc. sells foreign merce Secretary Maurice H. g~r;::g :~ ~J ,:l ~ ffi: 36v,t ~81111~_pf1 ·13 13t 2'~ ~~ ~..:l-.~?~!1n 1·~ 2f 2i: k't ~~ ~~+~~:.eg,i0 2~ 11 H l1:t 31~ •lll~~ •-·f nd t b Sta · t "th BHCl\Ar .1'1 • 5' 1~ uv. '~ ~ 0111on c.IOcl 16 • JO 29'oi 2"'o-M-iil P .29 .so ss2 n 1». 11 +n' ME 1 C01'11 10 s J 1 l . da y by Kaufman & Broad Inc. u=c a am a s ns in connec l<ln WI a e11c0Pet lk • 51 11~ 11 11-lli+ 14 oiine~w .12 6l aJl '' 91 t4 + 4. Hlohvou en fl 11 sv. 5'"' 5'.\ Mil sm. . .:i 22 17• 26..., "\• ~ >4 said that an investigation of "U.S.D.A. Choice" in secret $200.000 contribution to B:ffir -~ 1: 1~ ~J-2J,111 ?:~: 8!~. ~ 18 1; M: ~.,. ~'t ~ ~111::~11 ~ 1~ 1~ ~~ ~ ~ ~ =:• 41 1/ 2rJ :* :~ ~ ~ lending institutions which California. Presid~nt Nixon~ re.election g:,:,1.~:' 'aa lg 11~ n:z ~ ?~i.-.=1~ gi=~t''? .• JC • I~ J:i 25~ 2ltt:::: ~~rtAlld.'il ll 'f .J~ J: J,-:_ '"' ~::ik51 l'ff n ,o:I '::t .. 1:i.... 11"4't 1•1o After the suit was filed campaign e1n01x 1 ea 10 ,,, 3N 36v. 31~+ """orPflloPf" .22 ~ )96 231¥ 21"" 2314+ ...... ~ ,,, n 3 m' ~ m.+ 14 Ml'r«lllh 111 1 1 U'lil u1111 11 ... ~ purchased most of the loans · a,nd1,. pf l 6 s.¥. sr•n s1v.-'" eomeMn 11 30 :I05 1mv. 97\lt " -1 Hof! ElKtn 1 " n. "M '"-v. 1Mrr1 t., .s. ' J52 1~v. 1~ 1f:':t \It turned Up "a belo•• average A-fonday in Alameda Coon-'fwo weeks ago a London Ben c1> 1.1s 1 m 21t11 21"' 21"9+ "'DornFil-Mb _ 16 1v. 1 !~ ti"' inns .JO 16 +w ntt. 21v. :n•.i.+ "'M...,.•,." ,Jo ,11 122, •....":' ~, ' , ·~ " Su " C · ' !lenCopf 2\lo r2d 32 :17 31 OonLulJ 12 I 2 1 IA + V. ..,oUn A .l5b 2 32~ 22V. 311.1>--2Yo ... ....b I 16 7.,.. 'II ~+ \It number Of del·,nquenci"es ." ty per1or our t , court £1ned Comfeld $1 125 for 8•"' or •.XI 2 10 '9V. 10., t.,., donne1rv _.. 16 " Zl'" ,2.,. 23 Houysu .2Sb ·, ., 11\.lt 13 ''"" MQt•MMK, • ,1 ,! 1•14 ,'•'lo uw .... "i TIIE STATEMENT iden- tified the mortgage banking subsi diary i n v o I v e d as International Mortgage Co, which arranges financing for buyers of Kaufman & Broad homes. There was no trading on the New York Stock Exchange ~1onday in the stock of Kauf-. man & Broad, which made its disclosures In the wake of an article in Barron's, a financial magazine that questiooed the rirm 's accounting methods. Sar k B "IJ ., de ' btflQuel Inc 10 M 314 3 lv• '"' ()or1c C_p 32 (, 11 147,'ll 1'""' l•"" --V.14on'on!k .60 21 106S SN 4"1i ~'(j-)Ii MG nc ~ \I" 6;'ll 171'1._., ,,. eway spo esman t an 1n cenl assaull" on a 19-f•rkev Pho 1 JJ• 11"-nv. """ v. Oorr onVtr , 11 t¥oo 9.,., 9V. -'Ai Honvwl I «1 '1l 2•1109l\ 1~ lCll11o+ .v. t::f:o ·~ • fc: ,, ~ ·:F u ...... 11 Gross denied the ac· year-old California girl, Vallie xro~s:,,J~ ~ 1: mt r,~ ~:;;+,,., ~~·1¥ J ~ Ji,;, ... ~ s: -=-~ ~~ c': I l~ 2n; ll'a 2tft-"I \ti MG1t11n7'.10 '1 ~b41! ~ ,s;¢. ~ ~ cusation Da . ~ t tif"ed he h" ed ll&ck&Ok I '4 SB 103Y, '9'111111V.+2~ 0 p F lncp 1J 6 s.... • KMl>ll•I Aff '° "' 914 ;«....I.ii MkhGI 1 M 12 m;' 714 ~~+ '• • VIS . !Xie es I Ir l•lr Jn ·" 6 l:U l lfo I 114 Ort~ \YI t 14 77\'I Jl"" 26\IJ.-v, Ho$i>Co .oeb 11 405 14 121,'J 1• +1Ttto = TubJ ] )' 1• ·~· • • "tn that particular suit, her to tend his horses in ,~~111 ,~, 1~ ~ 1:~ 1:1/.i '::+ :~: g~~ k~ lf 1r, = ~ ~ :;t H:~!ri~ .a. 1 u l~s-14'1'1 :6 "::J3't'l1 •96 1~ ~~ l~t\ \1~ 1 l 1 lt. their allegations charging Switzerland but brought her to r11es1ff,.~ ~ :g 11: 1, .... 1m;-:_: o..-.n..-pr 2 •• 1:10 u 3' l6 +1•;. ~"-MF ~ ,t1 ~ 1"-r,i /~ 1?t:!l!;;-~ M!~~g '.lt 'i ~~ ~~ lil~ • • purpo f I d "I obblt '"" 1 1 191,_+1 Or••el 1.0lb 14 jl\li 211'& 21\'t OUM '"' j ft 6"' .,. M dROll ·to , 39 1 1 . ...; sc u ece1 a re his London townhouse where o.ino,.c ·"° 1: lH 1im :;-,: 10i,-: orevtusC1> 1 i ~1 av. 9'111 ~ s., liou .. ~ . 2112 26 2s~' u. + \'i MktRIPI •v. , , , .v, nonseose," he said. -, °'" .. ned s s , Q1.1k1,. i.«1 iz 1 Bl' 21111 21'"+ * MOUM pf ~ 7 se1; ~ "" M11e1tb 121 16 .a •1 .. ,,., , he enteredherbedroomnaked B::~"f~ ·, t 21 2f 21 -v.'6u~l'f ,.: lo; IST \tt.,,,=1""~'r~1~ A 3~ ~~ :t~ ~~M111on81 :,.~ '° 1,,.. lU\ !!l1! and made advances. i~'Mw :·~ ig !Jl rm ~l~ ii:!! u g:!ii8:: IM 2i 1 4 1~ 14~ Ji -1~ H:fJtGI .:w ~ 6IJ 30',., 29411 :iav.-: ... M~I~~~ ,\ I ~~ ~ ~ ,, 2~ Dl'G WI 4 l,lf>len C:p ll Ml 7""' 1\.lo '""f \.'o "!OHO pf 2\\ IT 6114 61V. 611/o-Ill M unEQ '\i4 1 11• 1714 17 ~ i°"~r2~~ l? ~~~~mi; ?1'4-""~Ponl l\lob lt llMl74tl l7'1\lo17• +IV.HOW•rll.J .1419 '"11V. 161'& 11\.li+IV. MlstAly '90 II 19 1~ IS'lol jt¢"" :1Epf 1·11 ~ Ill 11! 113 -.,., llP" l'f f'~ f ~ S!EI" ~~ tt ::=: fl: ii nt = ~V. w--\.'• Mo PK A J 6 I 71 ... 71"° I\ A e e 011rm nc I l 12'!1. I ~ J2iMl1 V. ~~r 1.¥110 50 ~ ~ I'>-~ "flldB•V 't.2Q 14 lf Utli 2J'/o m.+ ~~~~IM 1: 1l ~ ~ w ;\-\'o Ir.Ilg ~ 1~rc.osl n~:~ ~ u ~ iiu h~ ~ "°~ 8::t~ °l 1l .. ~ -1\lo ~~~f::"TC: J Jl ~ Jv. 4~1?+1 ""' :=c~r f.! '' '1' ~~ fm" t f: 131 ," M of 2 10 1m 43 o -ovmo" .2' 10 l 1'9 11'1ti I~ 1-. unt Cl! .16 2• !6 11 17 !} Mohllwll 61 IT ,.,. .,... vo r l :r ll, 14 1l'h-• ·-UllOll E .40 6 11 9~ f 9V. Mol\wk f" l lt 11 1~ llo ::::: H•t'J~~ 32 11 303 92 4 lJjj, i? lJ•<\ 1··· Pl ,f7 ti-" ft U• " i * ~~cil(O ·'' 29 24 til\'lo )I 26'4 + ...., MolYb (WI) 1 94 lnlo J16\."\ 9'1\.11 8d HI pf j • SJ SS -'-IKOC: .20b !J 4\oli \l\li 1•14o ~ •urol'm' .1• I $0 t l'i! 9 M<)lypf .17c ' r.~ > -1 e..:I GI 1 11 UV. 11 11\1,.t \\ ·~ Air llfi ll* mt ll\4 14 _,,_ M-rdo .tO 6' ~ a 16 · ..• Equity Capital NCJ!.I Service ern Sl\rp 20 11 s 1 ~ •lonCP 1 t 21 '4-Jdl• 81>f .ru 1 n n n -1116 Mons DI ~ n arF1rr11 °' 2• 1•1 20ltt 'I,.. 1•.,.,_1 Eci•HnM 2• 11 "" 14-*' rov 41 • 2s 91/o s rn. Mon!Ok I·'' 11 1• """ ;is . :s -:i.r. , • Brvtl\ W ..1rO 9 22 2l 24'h 2•'h-1-'1 Eckd NC . 25 "*"-'A I '"' pfA • f VJ t3 '3 -2'.I. MGn•M ,1'b 12 l• l\11 \Ii FIRST 1NVEST01lS CORPORATION SACRAMENTO T h • Equity Funding s c a n d a I , which bankrupt an insurance company, put policy holders in a shaky PoSition and staggered • the financial communi ty, will be the subJecl of three days of heaMngs in the 5tate Capitol. f •Ollll llh ' 14 l"' 16"" ... llKO 11 37 ,., lu' ti + " 'I Ill • '11 ll\.'I J\4 J\4-'l,l Mon.nt . -.... Deddeh (!).Chula Vista) COm er1.1<llwll '24 ' no:i 19 1 Vt 11'1!.-""'Etkd Jk 39 14j ~ ,,,._ J'~'"''" 1.n • S2 19111 1914 1'1~+ v. Mon1Pr .IO 12 :II :w,l:• ,,., E •• mitlee chairman, announced I~ l~ 1·]8 11 1~: ?f= r,: m:+ ~ ~gs'l"G 1 H ~ lJ fj~ 'll~l~ llr ~f 2~ 12 ~1 ~ r ~ {: ~~n ~ 1\ 1~ ~~ ~~ JI i ~ the hearings which will be B~0 11f,J 1 J~ ~ ~:; ~ i~ ~~ ft ll 3m ~ i~t111. \l11~~ ~t' n zltt ~1~ 29\\ ~M .,. ~::'e17; t :f Ii 1;,. Ii"· .~: he~ :ednesday and May 29 B~~!_~1J,2g li ,j «~ ~"' ~'Iii - 14 ~L~ t>t~ l' G t\\. ''" 141 tS'X'l~ f~ I ':J ~~ ~1'-~+ ~ m~1.o.H f ! lt ,{'~ '1~ ~ an ' B~T:w R': J 111: M"" 1?~;.! ~ ~;r.r, Ni:t ., n k ;y, ~'!lit 14 /~ t:'!: . . ~r ~ ~~ ~-;,., =-::. JO 2l 26' ~ ~ ~t,~ ) - Jto Will Street. New York.i N. Y. 10005 We are pleased to announce the opening of our ·new Branch Office at 3700 Newport Boulevard Newport Beach, California 92660 714-675-4890 and the appointment or MR. GERlIARD RANDEL Branch ~tanager . ( Lawma1<ers are c:onsidering formation of a Llfe Insurance Guaranty AssoclaUon which would pay claims against in- solvcnl life insurers. AT mE suggemJcm of Assembly Speak•r ll9b Moret- ti (0-Van Nuys)i t he Assembly FI nan c-e ond Insurance Committee w 11 1 study : -Eventa leading to the seizure or Equity Funding Life l~surance Co. and two flnns now In conservatonhlp. -'I'be 4lele Insurance de p a,rtment'1 examination system. llU!IR !If 1Vr I ~ Woi+ \4 llPllONG 1 I 113 I JI !t!oi + 19 lllCClnc ,5fb 1 1~ I~ tOi""" 111\Gtoroll wl 1 11$ ~·--~-:::: "-0EQUlTY FUNDING Lire Burl In 1., 14 lf9 l2 11'1 l2 -"" ltt.C~ l... • e 29 " ~ ~Ind.+.~ JO ' 30 :zo ''"' ltYI--... MT F~tl J·a) n 294 ' 1S'il 7f\.'J+2''o I ' . lu~! NO lV. • 10'1 »'Iii J.S~ lJ'lli-11/o ,.,., I 'u .. ' 1s IN tA'lll-... ,ndHdp( 41/t 1 72 ~ 72 --6\1. MISIT.t ·" 10 40 21 1'\ ;n n8'urance Co, was an Ilhno1s u•IN Pf .s.s • ,.. Ni 1!11,1, ,.,,.," r , fB 1 "' $1 ~~;_: IMI a.. 1.... • 11 ~ ,.,._"'~SL 11111ujJ i 14 1 I'll! "~ ,~ insurer, headquartered in Cali-~~~ :: ~ sJ21:J::2~1~~=l"1 : I 11 ; 21: ~ 2 16-l~Pw~111 1:U 1? li ~ ~ B~::== .... l r ~ ~~\: fornia . which wrote a subslalr 8"'h u111'" -<5 c-!:. 11.1o lM--~~~, 1~ 1; ' 21 2Ji; · .. l;f ~ JJj 1' ff :TU ~t: ~!. U =~l: i 1~ ttv. T7?1 ~ ~~ tlal portion of its insurance in E·~tcJ·~l~ 11 fO ~111 .I:: ~:::_ 19 ~p.irn 1k '!'10! tv. ~ 1m+,.. ln1~'Jr~ 1~ l8 "~ ~ ~~+ \t =~~rgi ~6 3t 4\ ~;; + ~ th. t " Dedd h . "Th • 11W • l6t ~.. m • ....._ "' molr• Gf>t 5 fi j014o 1~ ov.+ \lo I""'*"' ,12b , •2 ,~ "" • ..._" utom . •3' 7lti ·~ ~It 1$ s ate, e said. e ~rt Wd d 126 31i1o ""+1' ~~ ·~ l' m ,... 11 lf\t I 11111~0 c 10 1 t 1~ 1 1ov.+ "'Mutrs L ..o 11 11 1t11o 11-. «i+"' company, being an Illinois :n~ 10 oo•\to lOl>li 1#\lr, + ~i:..1ro.:,, 'Jo 1!: ~ ~ ~"1"'1 c~1~ 10 ,0 !!Ii\ Wt !tit-u •bl~> 11~1""""; •I\.\~·· co'rporation WRS SUbJ'ect to ex-1m 8 lA f ff a 2"~ :i Ql.llrnrk .to It fi"' 1~ ,,.._ ~ 1:f'1nv .«lb I J 1m i1l:i 1m:t It ?J•lco II ~ •1 ,ti 211.. i.1--1i., ' •mRl .SOI !"' .._ \6 ~I" ciuGM 2 . .0 l 'l ~ U" jj'._ .. tni.ton ,24 11 U 1>'111 •~ '"-Ill N.rco .60 l/ I M"'-M *' amlnatlon bv •l.at state •!)IS! 5 1.1• 1• u 14 ~-ru!;L11w 11'!i 11 1 ·~ •!1 lfil,._t )! l"twco 1.11 11 :n 41 •~ ·~ i" -\Oi ~......... .n 2 11 ""' 4'1i 'I-lt. ' I.!' ' •n ar:i; • i •l'> '"' ~ $8lnc • 1 ... .. ntrlalit 1.90 1 IS 2i'llo 2'\'I . 11 Air 10b ' lj "~ Although the Jlll.oois Insurance •n"'K j "" 1• 1rk "" 1 27•)! ,.. 1! I e "" •·"I » "' ~ :ww. !»ii t1Av 1.~ 1 "" 'f~ ~"' ...... 1..... ' IP~ I t"~ IUIUl11t.l1. 1 ...... -.,.11111\C•wl "1"~ "-•~trffCtn -~6 ~!'\' l:ij-t "lt ~partmont ·~ not exanuned , -~ ! • •• !!. l;f+" I"'/" :II • " " 11~ ~~t " "'"w ·"' ,. ·~ '" ""''"' _. ., " 1 » "' v. ltformo~lhanfouryears." ::11~, 01:, .R -+: tli~~,.·~ l1~~i~ .. +=-:~~tr1.'Jtl .1 jj •• 1~j ~:t&': ~fl\'il!~~ A main committee goal will :r r?".M ·"' ~ii.t -411 9 't ' 'J -f ~ l~'f"" 1'? ·· 1 m f~ !f: N.'?Atlu2l 1f ~.,. ·ffit ~::t be to compare the state JD. :~~~, I• 12 , ~ =r~ 11 \ 1 ":~1n.~~ 11 ~ fr-,.. r,:;._ ~:~ 1.~ I ,H ~ if" ~t-{;: !It 11 ran ce department's ex· •rt ..a 1s 20 ..,,~ llxOll 1b 12 1a Wit •1 1 I~' " • ii! W .,.. M -t1GV9 1. s I u 11\o\ ia~.t v. • ' • -~ ,. \j, -1!' ,_ 1 17 ?!" ., '9·-~ !Home ' 1 14 \I) '"" , __ amlnatlon system with Jts :~lltt:k ' II l l v.= .. F•De'!"OI _., 7 1.U. ... m J,,._ ~I ID '~ lj l7 "l' .1\~ 3llt+ "' If Ind ·OJZ 12 '7 -:"J l"'-Vt relationship to the NatlonaJ ~=;J.r ; ~II • ~ +1" ~:l:f~ ci; n '6a ~ 1 m+'" ·1 'l/'f•1ru I~ lA$,j ff"" ~lit >1111.:J~ il'~rl' 1111 ,, jf .;~ 11r::1~1 Association oi Jnsuran~ Com-c ~ ,.,.°'".!l ""' 1 l'1 1 ~ ~:!~i~ol,, ' j 1J! 1 1J:-._, T\h'1 .. ri %1 "v. ~+ ?l ,{~': J ~ fi ~ ~~ :Z ccdures IMUrance company ·~ ·~ t\lo f'•nsm ·' l ~ Ht; I~ m:: 'I\ I tf.,-;i N -13$ .u OJ-): + n fS ltcl'I ~ .. ,.. : ~ ~ 1-.. As.l<!mblyman missioners' examining' p~ I~··~ l A I ~ ~:::.1r: .. ·11 1. 11'4 ll~ 1m= ~ L !fitl1~ • Sl ~ ~ u~"+11u rtBlf'lf JI y 7~ l1~ ~!14 ~!ti survcUJii.nce tccbnJquc!I' • ~nd 51:. II ~11~ ~VI ~ = a ~=I:~ -1 l: 1·! ,m+ : 1~=,~ I 1 lll m; tr~ 6S .! i1 ~r~ ~ ~ ';j JS ~ ~ the organluitlon and staffing =-~ttt 1 1j ~· ,,... ~+It ffi~ fl~G I • ~ I" "= JO 7 n· rm~ 17 +... • ' 1-t ~ 45~ ..,... ';t( of the Insurance department, =1,1 ~ l: 1 U ,,.. ,;;: :: e1Nit:, ~ifi 1: ,-s# A~ + tt ~~ "(1 -rT '11 ~ , :.% "'" 1: ll ~ ~~ J$-l ~ W~,·e F th bl Id nM~W j 1 ·~ "I 11 -V. tCll"•O.rl I 11 tv. t~-.."1rs1111S1t 'IN i.+"'H.,l'fl. ' 'I~~ !I av • e c a nnan S3 · ..-ISw . ' 14 1oi .. .,. •'14 " -1 lldl"Df& 110 ' 1 .,.. 1,... ~"''"""•ts un 1 1 N ...-~ N•1111if 1. ' 1~ "' ~ ... • \ ... ' • ,. • • . •• • " : al ra1 •• ' "' •• ;.~o " "' .~ •• "• N . ·~: :,N1 ' ~· ·'~ '. '• .... . ' ,• ••• N •' "" N " • • '" '" -'• ' • . .. • M11 -• 1973 ·-•• .. . ~ r • Tuesday's Closing Priers-Complete New York Stock Exchange List 1, -' Market Recovers, J * -··Dow Jones !Uses '· s, DAILY PILOT SEA'M1.E, Wash. (AP) "' American Aviation Services, Inc. bas purchll3ed five used Boeing 720 jets to mnodel here ror re-&ale or ltue. The firm, whl~h sef"ICU airplanes based at Sealtle 't Boeing Field, bought tht PWnt-1 rrom Branur Inttrna.o ii~al for an undlstlo..ed a~ according to A. Joel Else!> berg, con1pany spokesman. J l l • ·auNIOtUOR . . ... ~ ~ - . BRAND NEW .. 1973 PINTO 2 DOOR SEDAN • WITH THIS AD ONU YOU MUST PRESENT THIS AD AT TIME OF PURCHASf • YOU CANNOT PAY MORE THAN • ·' BRA.ND NEW 1973.t:-·· . MAVERICK 2 DOOR SEDAN ~ 320 CID, 2 .¥4 q i .. -.IM, c.llf, --lm41Hoft-ContNI 1y.,_, AM hdle. ' •h.I•• bu,.,,... 9,.up, tlnt.4 ,,..,_ .• ' ' . 1600 " 4 cyl ..., •• 4 ..... ~ ......... C.llf. lml11i.. Ip~""° .ec. (UIOWl7SaG3)1S31 '99 TOTAL DOWN' PER MONTH $ J3K91F11tl96)95S9 . . •99 TOTAL DOWN ~ER .. PAYMINT, O.A.C. ·aRA-ND NEW 1973 .FORD LTD · $ THAT'S RIGHT FOLKS • , .$99 OVER FACTORY INVOICE PLUS $90 DEALER PREPARATION; . FACTORY RETENTION FEE, SALES TAX AND LICENSE. cTtl,E 'FOLLOWING CARS APPLY ONLY: 351 CID 2 V v.1, •Ir corwl., rodl1, con.-oni•nu 9n1vp, WSW tlre1, th1tod 91011, who•I co.-1r1. (3J62H1S406S) •99 TOTAL DOWN PER MONTH ePINTOS e M•YERICKS· PATMlNT O.A.C. '" h Mi!el •·PY""· S114.17 k i.t.1-pylllll. iML 111, 73 Jic-1111 fi-ct-,.1•_,,,,1N4i119< 4t """ Orttr...i ,y ..... ,.a SIJ7t.lt l..i. •ll fi-1 .-.....-. 7 J I.._• W 1'W ,,..,_ M ,., c.11, hlll caJh ,,k. ill 14310.1• i.c1 ... i.. -... ·1J li<-AHHtJ.t.l nKOOAGI un 12.7""' V-8, aulo. trans .• fac"tory air condit ioni ng, power steering, power (disc) brakes, power · , powe r seats, am· stereo radio, heater, whitewall 1Jres-. vlnyt rool, tinted glass, wheel covers. Lik£ new thru out, . 205CRL 1971 . CAPRI Cpe. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • V-8; at.rto. trans., power steering, powtr !disc). brakes, radio, neater, whitewall tires, tinted glass,' wheel covers, good mile-s, one owner, bought new at · Dunton FOf'd. 639DBA 1969 MUSTANG Mach I • w/tape de<Jt, heater, tinted olass, wheel covers.' ' PAYMINT 0,l.C. MONTH PAYMENT 0 .A.C. Stt ;, ...,_ •· ,,.... s1i2.21 n t...i -,,_, iMl tu. 7l ...:. 1 .n fi~ ct.rps.,;.,,,. u..111·"'"-. Dmmtl jlplflt. ,,;. i11d. ell fU-. ......... ,..... .,, --., if ~,...... .. ,., .... ,.._ .. ,.... $49:7J.'2 ... ~IH tQ;,7J r-.AHMl&l.HlaNJAOll'R l17"'-' .. 2 dr. H.T. spt. cpe, V-8, auto. t rans., power .. ~ring~ radio, heater, ·t infi~· Silla Ss: 'Good ;~'Ifs, llght cream·fin· is'lt··!i~e new. 14SCDM . '. :1· -70 MAY ·c·PE . . I ' - $ JSl 4V V-8, avlo. !rans., power 5teerfflg, .rad io s i ;7· . ,. . , .. · wide oval raised while letter ti{es. Reoal red · . . $ " speed, radio, h!ater, tinted glass, dlx. in-- terior, sharp silver fin· ish. JWBRU • 1967 .THUNDERBIRD 2 dr. H.T., auto. !rans., factory air conditioning, power stetring, power . {disc) brakes, power windows, power seats, radio, heater, whilewall ~ tires, tinted glass, wheel covers. Truly a melody in metal. TAH907 • 1973 MUSTANG -MACH I Sptsroof, V-8, auto. trans., fa ctory a ir cond itioning, power sleering, ·power (discl brakes, radio, heater .. .vinyl roof, tinted glass. : wheel covers, low miles. ,amost new. sharp! :save! Stk N889.A 1 w/black trim, tape deck, '8594 miles, one owner, · 1 : • • Uke new. ZKH666 . '. ~ . v.a, auto. trans., POwer steering, .r.adio, heater, chrome yelloYi wifh brown trim, 90Qc1 miles, marp. 80494H · . 1968 FORD Fastbac .. ,Cpe ~'.. ,, Gal.m v.a, auto. trans .. factory air condllJoning, s I O~I" power steering, power (disc) brak;es, radio, Pleater, • wtiltewalt tires, tinted glass, wheel covers, nfN11 .. • tires, metallic green, 58,09A miles, excellent coodi-· · lion. ZNC:JaO . ' . . . . \ • 6 cyl., stic~ sf'litt, ralf10, ~ater, whifewal.l fires, vinyl roof, ti nted glass, ~-.,~1 covers, law mi~, • dtx model. E:xtra clean . ZVA196 1 ·955 FORD F250 3t4 r~ ' Camper Special 390, V· 8, auto. trans., power stetring, radic, heater, ' tin ted glass, hvy dty tires, eKtra-gas tank , excellent cond., extra clean. V.tll ll $ 1970 T-Bird 'Landau V..S, auto. trans., fa ctory air conditioning, povv"er ·.st~.r,iog, PQW'I' *dHt I 'brak~powerW!~, · power:stats, radio, hea- ter, wh itewall ~tires, vinyl roof, tinted glass, wheel covers, tilt wheel, good miles . 217ADR FORD • ' '· ...... l ' I I • . ' r· I .. , , ... • ' • • • /. Treats Recycle Energy .. . . . . ( • I s Jogge ...... ~!or W1$ aIOOc en IC1\vl~·· 'I. .'i(l AND lllllNG · • MOL\8151!l1 •B.US "' <Up l!lilt.r ....... margarine is. cup ~ peanut butter .,, cup'lllbl or dart mo1._ ' . I OIP .-• I ttf"lllCClll 'vanilla atrld • <le f ~ lortill<d hlgl>prot<!ln cereal, -2 cupa silted aD·purpooe flour 1 teas_. baking powder 1>~11lt v. teaspoon belrilli soda 1 cup -bed ripe banana 1 Y.a cups semi-sweet chocolate pieces 1 cup chopped Silted peanuts. In large boM, cream together butter and pesnut butter. stir In molasses, sugar and yanllla. Add eggs, one at a tttne, beating well after each addition. Add cereal. . Oo wa1ed paper, sift nour, baking powder, salt and baking soda together. Add fioor mixture iltemately with mashed banana, sti¢Di alter each ad- dlll!ll until just ~&Ir In chocolate ' • , I pieces and P<on"'5- .Poor batter Int<> • ~ 11" by w· by 1" ,baking -Bake lo a preheated (llO ..,_,'I':) oven !or 30 mlnUla, or until firm to-1he tlJucb, Cool in pan on wire rack. Ort into Z5 ban. On abolbe< out!ng, boost energy with the oatunl sweetness of these Cooktes, made slinp!y by adding fruit to cake mu:. CHEWY DATE NUT BARS 1 padmge (ti or 19 ounceo) yellow cakemiI 2 tablespoolis frozen orange juice ~ cenlrate, thawed, undiluted Water 1 egg, *' cup butter or margarine, 80ftened I package (8 ounces) pitted dates, cut up I> cup chopped nuts Empty about ball of cake mix into large bowl Put uruliluted concentrate in- to a measuring cup; add enough Water to make I> cup. Add to cake miI wf1ll egg .!'!1 !>.U~· Beet QD 1ow speed of electric mixer or with a · -spoon tmtil . blended. GraduaDJ beat in Nmaining c:Bke mix. {Mlrlure will be quite thick.) stir in dates and nuts. ~ .$pread miiture in a greased 15 x 10 x l·lncb pan. Bake in 375-degree oven for 18 . to 20 minutes. Cooi. Spread with Orange &Jgar Glaze.. Qit Into M ban. Oraage·Biilar Glaze ·11> cups unsifted powdered ougar ¥, cup fio7.ea orange juice cmcentrate, thawed. undiluted 2 tabltopoons butler 0< margarine, melted. Mix all ingredlmts until smooth. Makes 'II< cup.-. • .. 2 cans (15 ouncea each) chill coo csrve (meat cnly) 1 can (lJ ounces) Mexican style com. Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Blend tom bread mix, cottage cbeese and water. Set aside. Blend chill and CO<D In 11 x 7 x :I-inch baking dilh. u chili Is thin, dram the ,com. : . Drop ccii'n bread miI b)I spoon!uls onto chllf. Bate 30 minutes .,. until browned 'land bubbling. Serves • to '· CAMPEii CREESE FONDUE , _, INlh or ttwe> (cooked( crab meat I Jan (5 ...... escb) sharp cheddar proc....S.~·. s ....-n onlon1, chopped 1/S cup chopped bell pepper 1 tablespOOn Worcestershire sauce ' Hi.king ilnd Biking Bars, milk and fresh fruit accentuate - goodnen of the great outdoon. ., .. ,., ...... -..... ~••IS!Ji ·- Home News and Views .. I ' li2 teaspoon salt 10 drops Tabasco sauce I loa! crusty French bread c.omblne first seven inQedients in casserole. Bake in 325 de~ oven for 30 mloola. Serve !rom cassenile. Qit bread intor bite-sized chunks and dip into fon- due. CX>BBLER CAl\E t can (21 oun<e1) peach pie iinlng 1 single layer yellow cake mlx 6 tablespoons butter or mprgarlne Pour the pie ,fllling into 1 Jightly greu. ed 1t r 7 • 2 lnch baking dish. Sprjokle the dry cake mt• ev~y over filling. Dot with butter. Bake in 35lk!egree oven !or 15 mlnutas or; until brown and.bubbly. Ser:ve warm with Ice cream or whipped trefm In ~ to. 8 portions.. . For variaUons, substitu~ apPle fllllna: and spice cake or cherry filling ana t hocolate cake mix. • ,.,., . , -1:uxtfrtes ·Taxing · By DOROTHY WENCK OrMM CtufttT H-Ad\lllW In the first three montl\s of 1973, food prices rose 5 percent. nus is double the average annual rate of 2.5 percent bf whicti food prices ~se over the last 20 years. -No wonder consumers are com· plaining! This recent dramatic rise in food prices has been all out of proportion with the rise 1n the prices of other lte~s. But when you look at the rise in food prices and compare it with the rise in the pri ces of othei' items -and with incolnes -over the past 20 years, you see that recently food prices have been playing catch-up .- Incomes and ttie prices of many other comumer Items have gone up ap. prcciab\y more than food prices in the past 20 years. For example, between 1952 and 1972 the all items Consumer Price Index rose 58 percent, while all food prices rose 47 percent. However, "all food" includes two categories: food at home, which went up only 38 percent, and food away from home which went up a whopping 90 per· cenl During these same 20 ye a r I , transportation costs (autos, gas, and oil, other transportation) went up 5S pereent ; housing (including shelter. (umi.shings, and household operation costs) went up 64 percent ; and medical care went up 123 percent.. The salaries of hourly wage earners durtng this time .period .,..ent up 140 per- cent. "'But, you say, laxes have also gone up during these years so that we don't get to keep all of our wage increases. This is true. So let's compare the cost of food in tenns of !'.=hanges in our after~ tu or: "dlsp>sabl.e" income. In lf!J2, our per caPlla after-tax income was $1,518 and in 1972 It was $3,807 -an increase of 151 percent. The· per capita annual coet of food was '348 in 1952 and f596 In 1972-a 71 percent increase. 'Rius ln 1971 our per ea pt ta "d~ien.ary" Income (after sub- b"actlng taJ<es and food coota) was $1.21t -a 174 percent increase over tbe1952 figure of $1,170. In 1972 food coots took t5.7 percent o! our after•tax income compared·to 23 per- cent In 1952. What has happened during these 20 yeara Lt that we have adjusted our living stand•tds upwsrds with oor Increasing incomes and our relatively low food prices. So now we C'0n4Wer u .neceesttiel many things such as !JtCOC)(I • ears, dlllf\wuhers, recrealJon vehickte* boats, . 1iourant JDealJ, •'!'· that were former-. ly thooghi of as lurirles. We also have added many 1~lll1Ury" ' (. foods to our every day menus. • And when food prlcea go up and taki a : larger bite out ol our incomel, it 1, ~ to make ends meet withou t glvtng up some of these luxuries. With the expanding world demand 'Cot food and the rising standards or UVlng 1D other nations, it seew to me .that, Americans will have lo adjust to spend- ing more for food. " For now, the rest ol the world 11-• vious of our food prices. While our mtd-Maich price of airloln steak was $1.89 a pound, the priCe ol a equivalent piece of meat ln Bm:in. Germany was $2.06 a pound (U.S. dollar equivalent ); in Paris, $2.57 a pound;' iii ' Rome, $2.19 a pound; and in Toiyo, $11.90 a pound. QUE&TIONS WE ARE ASKED •· Q. I am feeding a family of eight which Includes two adults, two teenage boys, and four schoolage children. Every week it seems Uke my grocery bill ~ up.. It's now averaging about $75 a week. My husband can't understand how: t ' can spend so much, yet I have tried to shop economically. Does this amoum: sound high to you for our sfze fantily? It includes not only food, OOt alJo paper 1 goods, detergents, and other aimiba' , "noned.ibleS." A. According to food C06t studies by I the U.S. Department of Agriculture, at present prices the weekly 'COSt of food for J a family of eight is '&bout $7{) at the low. ! cost level. ' I These are ~ts for food at home only -all meal!! eaten at home and · nO 1 allowance fur non.foods. So if you, are l spending only f15 a week for your family, , you are actually spending below thil1-- cost level since your total also includes nonfoods. (Some families apend'up tO z 1 percent at the supermarket tor non· foods. I I With six children, two Of them I teenagers, yoo are actually feediag the equivalent of two families ol four. I bard-I ly think you could be expected In spend I any Jess than this. • . Q. I have had some ground turkey ln my freezer for about a year. Would~ still be good? A. It depends on what you mean by ! "good." II the ground lutkey wu solidly frozen all this time, 11 would be-safe - ~eaning It would not cause food poi!Joll"J mg. But you will probably !ind tbat tlit1 navor Is not so good. After about three Pr I so months In the rreezer, most ground meats and poultry develop an ·~d''' navor because the (at turns rancid. ' 1bls mlgtit nol be ob)ectloruible II YQU1 .voe the grQU!ld. t"lkey 1n a hlshl1i navo..00 dish l>ilere other heasontnp, might misk .the rancid fat Onvor. ...... I / j' • .• J • ! ' ' . \ \ • • • --· • llEAB :1111!1,r'll'.'\'<h Aid. -mlJ l ~"l!i -wwt!IT \ '11 f.m a D>olllir wllo -&et '° aJ1"Y wllll Ill)' dilldrm I'd but them bild< and blue. MJ f.YNM>ld WU Oil MIO fllr a nemJUI coadltlan. We were botli pnder Pl)'dlla~ -t beeged my doctor to belp me be a ~,mother. Hi• advice w.,, "Ccmtrol wauNMt1 Don't toee )'OW' temper." "-;r- TblJ wmt on for .,.. a yeor. 'lbell • fri<nd told me.pout Roooveiy, Inc. Two months all« I ltjended my flm m<e11ng I wan able to oontloot! my lmpdaea That WU -Jiaq ago and I'm lltill going to me<llnp. I ~t tell yoo "1lat this orgaol.iatloa bu -to me and to my family. I woold DOI ha'" believed It poulble had I DOI ezperteooed it myself. Pl .... leD _,. lbat R<cov<ry, Inc., nometlmes 11icceedl when poycblatzy fallJ. -A TRUE BELIEVER . DEA& 'l'lt.ll!: I .. ve recommfadcd tw. «pnhodoe ..,,... ud am pleued to dD 10 apla. Reetvery, IDC., bu t50 cbapten bl IM U.S . ud Cuada. Tha meeilngl are .,.. ud lne. Tha membtn are people wH bave, er are ' , I , cover Se~~contro·I Peering Aro·Jncl ~-A ~'/---' tryln.1 Co ...Mm fNm, emetloul i&w1. 'ftelr' r~ fl" 1ueceu la P'tarmtul. Look lo Ille ..... heel<. II yoo do ... aee a U.Unr, wrfte to Recovery, Inc., Na- dooal Headqaarten, 111 Soutlli Michigan, pieago IGI03, for WormaUon and . galclu«. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband is kind and cmslderateand everyone tbtoks we are happily married. The truth is I am miJerable. For 14 years I've tried to tell myself lhat friends, movies, plays, concerts, cl ubo, all the thiogs I tbonJughly enjoy, are not important, that it's better to have a faithful husband and good children. WeU, it won't wort. I feel like the four walls are closing in on me. My husband never wants to go anyplace. He C()Uld stay home 365 nights a year. If he yelled and argued I'd prob- ably feel better. He just smiles aod ' -says, "You go, dear. l"m. happy It home." PAYEMARIE IABtlla, a ()Jc 1e1 life IJ wmderful. We have no Colla Meta Hl&b Sc boo l money problems. We IJOCh-mjoy good gn*"lo 111111 di.Pitt. d. C. health. When I tell him I'm· g'1iDg stil' LaVeDe cl v-. """"4ted crazy,he ~L"It'l juilamood,deer, u a Unltecl Air Llae• you'll feolt.lti« tomorrow." -sltwm-~ llUed eut Toolgbt L said, "I'm going to write to of San Frlllldlco. Ann Landers ," Hl.s reply was. "Go KIMBERLY Jobnltoo. a ahead. She bas all the answ=." So graduate ol llunllnglon Beach what's mine? -UNFULFILLED j!jgh Scboo1 and Oraap Oout DEAR UN: Tbe problem la lbat yoa College, bu abo-graduated ar~ home all day and when evenln& from TraDl"W«kl Alrllaes comes )'OCl want to 1et ouL Voar husband Stewardess School. I• oat all day ud wllen evening comel She Is the daughttt ol Mr. be wuta 1o a1ay llome. and Mrs. J-Ohq J. Johnnoo of My advlco la do Y""l' tblng during the Huntsville, Ala. and lormtrly ~ ol HIDltlngloo Beach. Mm day -the movies, plays, eoottrtl, c•C· Johnston 1s based l.D N York Accept tbt fact that you are not ColAC to ew change him, so you'd better cbaqe City. younell. He aoand• too pd to dump. A TT E N DI NG the ii> Even if drinking is the "in" thing in your crowd, it needn't crowd you out. Learn the facts from Ann Landers' booklet, "Booze lnd You - For Teenagers Only.'' Send 3? cen ts in coin and a long, self-addres6ed. stamped envelope to the Daily Pilot with your re- quest. stallatlon ol the Oommlttoe ol Prolessiooal Womeo for the Sou t be r n CalUornla Sym- phony, Hollywood Bow I AssociatiM were Ve 1 m a O'Brien, Corona del Mar, and Carol !.<land, Wlollrod Bacoo and Agnes Blomqul1t. Newport Beach. · ~asaical.music" will be-1ra!led_f9!' Cotiiil:l}':)"es!e!1' tunes at the \Saturday, May ·111. Wild West Party planned by \lie Haroor View Hllli;l'bilharmonlc Committee ~the Coron.& det Mar borne 0(1:he ·Wjf1Wn Baningtom. PoljBbing up a saddle ~ (lelt to right) tile Mmes. Dcnald Yahn aod M. W. Patterson. -.. . " • SHERYLE BRENT Rites Set In August PJ,iring a cockta.iJ dianer y given by Mr. and Mrs. ID" Stanley Brent oi Hun- gton Harbour, they an- nounced the engagement or their daughter, Shery le Jeanne Brent to ThOmas Joseph Fipp of Marina de! Rey. Miss Brent is a graduate or Jmn1aculate llearl H I g h School, Los Angeles and is a member of Ga mma Phl Beta sorority. She graduated cum lau de from California State University, Long Be a ch . Presently she is a candidate .Patrons Honored Party Plans Bubble ' l'atront and petrone,... of s .. k, Benjamin C. Brown, J. tile Empire Debutante Ball · Thomas Callaway and Merrill will be honored at a traditional V. Duncan. champagne buffet at 7 p.m. Still others are the Messen. Saturday, May 19, in the and Mmes. Lester P. Elmore, Newport Beach home of Dr. h-t. D. Flaherty, G. Robert and f\.1rs. Theodore Maravich. Grant, Robert Guggenheim, The annual event i s Roy Howell, Joseph C. sponsored by Harbor Ke y, a Jiwnphries, Glen M. Keller, support group of the Oiild Walter S. King, Kermit Kvien, Guidance Center which offers Prke McCuistion, J o hn low cost psycblatfic treatment McKerren, Stanley E. Nash. Carl Nelsser and .t"a c k for children and adole9Cents, Nemeth. ages 2 to 18. Patrons support Concluding the list are the J.s a major source....of revenue Messers. and Mmes. John for the center. Newbrough. Frank Pendleton, Receiving guests will be Evan Prichard, Francis H. Mrs. John F. Vlttrup, ball Pullen. Harry S. Rinker, ~~t!s5·c=: ~ WilMam A. Rothwell, Robert S attler , Edward \V . her husband. Schumacher, John Sheridan . Among those to be hooOred Marlo Silva, Robert L. Swof. are Dr. Charles W. Hostler, ford , Homer C. Valentine, Dr. Vincent c, Kenl and the John Wright and J ohn R. Drs. and Mmes. Thomas w. Young. l/OiJ.1; .J.ouia· A. Gotllchalk, .Freiliick_1'r: :Giazer, · Dal'l<F Kagnoff, Frank E. Kendrlck1---:--:::-::---:::;:;;;o Jr., Hugo Ris and John J. Thornquist. Others are the M m e s . J oseph Beek , Charles G. Bo1se, Arthur G. Coon s , ,~"1 Nonnan Cirkle, C a t h r i n e Carli, Patti Hostler, Virginia '-"-'" Lee, Dana Latham and > Q zlc => Samuel J . Tuffree, t h e > :Ii CD Messers. and ~lmes. T. L. Q ~ Q ~ :E Ary, Robert Baird, Harry ?-.1. z. Z < ;;; Baker. Roberts S. Bardin. <; Thomas A. Barnard, Barton 644 • l 70 ror a mas ters degree in art i;=========="---=-=-=-=-=--==-=-==-=-_;:-'"-'"-=-:::,-1 and is an artist and teacher at Valley High School, Santa Aoa. lier nanc.e. S-On or the Bernard S. Fipps of San Diego, is a graduate of St. Augustine High School, San Diego and earnod a hachelor of science deg ree in marketing at California State University, San Diegp. 1-le held the rank of lieutenant in the Navy and served two tours of duty m Vietnam. They ore plannin~ lo marry Aug . 25 in St. Bonaventure Church. Huntington Beach . Betrothal Told h-1r. and Mrr-. Frank Thompson of Irvine have an · nounced the engagen1ent of their d a u g 'ht er·, Terry. ThompsOn to Steven Rusie. son of the Robert ll.usies of Mission Viejo. ~Uss Thom p son \Y i!\ graduate in June from Mission Viejo High School \\'here her fiance graduated. Jlc also will graduate in June from Sad· dlcback College . crnon'S SPORTSWEAR. Welfclitr Plan.. 171h and lrrioe. Newport Beach,Callfomia92660 I I- Stanley Holden Dance Center Workshop .Ah•: Pas de Deux -Lois Ellyn & Gonion Daniel I Sunday, May 20-4:00 • .,..., Hltti k""I -s..... .AH sJ.IO M.tfl $2.oo an.,._ ' s""'"" Tlcketl .......... ,.....,Mace fet eddltklllol l~o11 cotl 157·4171., C21JI 471-20JI • ,.,11°" " tltt IN'M...,. wlH " 11vtn tor tllt ._v.te11mtllf 9f "'-H!'#l"ORT CULTURAL ARTS CIHTIR \ •• ,Jli. •. l ··. r i-. I . FIVE-FOR-BEAUTY GIFT. THE CLlNIQUE DISCOVERIES. ' " YOUR GIFT WITH ANY CL.IHIQUC PURCHASE: OF $5. OR MORC. T RAN SPARENCY 2 FACE POWDER ANO BRUSH, NEW CONCENTRATE LUBRICATING CRC'.AM, .;Ql(TINUOUS COVERAGE MAKEUP BASE, Pl.US NATU_RAL GLOW BA~CED MAKpnii! BASE: TO SHO W YOU TWO BASES ARE BE'rrER ·'TliAN ONE. CLINIQi.JC -100·1. ALLERGY TEST ED. ·~oo·;. FRAGo\NCE PREE. HJ:RB SHAMPOO 8 oz. $5. 0 UNSCENTED HAIR SPRAY. IZ oz.., $5,.J~ EXTREMELY GENTLE EYE MAKEi.Jr ~EMOVE~. I oz. $3.50 D R0EMARICA.9l..Y EFFECTIVE ANTIPERSPJRArtf DEODORANT• 6 oz . $5. [_j ~REMEL.Y GENT L E CLEANSING CRl::AM. 3 . 25 oz.$ 5. [I I BEAUTY l::MERGENCY ~U E . 2 oz. $7:50 o· CONCEALING STICK. $6. [J wR1Nl(L E STI CK . $6. D MAJL/;>HONC. COSMETIC'S • ' ~, I • ;~ '·· CA.LL 714-644-2800. PHONe ORDCR BOARO OP ENS AT 9 ,,,,M . OR MAIL T<? ROSINSON1s , METrID SOX 6080, LOS ANGEL ES , CALIFORNIA 90055. PLEASE SEND ITE'MS CHECKED: • NAME---------------------.....:.------------ ADDRCSS----------------------~HONC ________ _ CITY------------------~TATE-------'1P'C. ------"' PAYME.NT DICLOSt:o0 ACCTe NUMBC~---------------- AOO IJ"l.SALES TAX lF DELIVERED IN CAL.IF?ANIA. 7 5 4 SERVICE CHARG E oN c .o.o. 's OR PICKUPS, OR PURCHASES UHDER $5. SHIPPING CHARGES ADDED OUTSIDE OUR DELIVERY AR~. N-!j-16-12 NEWPORT FASHION ISL.AND SHOP JO:OO-S:30 714--044-2800 \ ' • ,. ' .. • • I A R·ep9rter Views • • • BJ IAUlm: llASPER tl:M ...... t'l'M wt..""""': Watch out world! l, a "fllll.0<1lgecLl'ianlrl." am here, living, brea~. eaUng, W1)1'king ud, ye., even playing In lhls Orange Collll territory. Now all l have to do is follow the fonnulas offered in Playgirl magazine and 'I will catch my man ... or better ... yet, my men! Thls magazine which just hit the local drugstore a n d mpennarket newsstands, calls -itself "The Magazine for Women" but that common and honored (I th.ink) word , ""woman," seldom is printed on its pages. Rather, its reader' are "playgirls.·• I tried to count the number of times this refer ence, always in capital letters, appeared but I was distracted somewhere around 75 and not yet to the centerfold. MARrN SC01T M i I a m , editor, expects her magazine to sell to all women. "A playgirl can be a teenager or a 5.S year old won1an," she ex· plained. "l th ink you can be young at 70 and I think you can be very mature at 14." But one of the advertising executives said the magazine ;, npedod-to 1111 beol - si~P •gea of 15 and 30. He didn!t say w_hLlllis group woold find the magazlne mosrattractive. No matter. 1 flt rJgbt smack in the midd~ of his classiflca· lion. So, 1 read the magazine with added personal interest. Bllt first, I must admit, I glanced at 118 !our-page foldout "Our Man for J•ne: Nude Lyle Waggoner" and its · nude centerfold TV 's Ryan Mac- donald. THE CENTERFOLD, said Mrs. Milam, sets the pace for the magazine which "editorially and v I s u a 11 y reflects the changing attitudes of women today." Now, she claimed, w e women possess a new freedom and are "not inhibited." She was a little critical of her competition b e c a u s e ·'~1any or the magazines of to- day are holding back a bit and I don 't think they should ." But rett.l_J'ning to the subject of the male nude. she said, "I think women today are rea dy for a feature of this sort." This is what the magci:zine a 11 about, according to its publisher, Doug Lamb er t , owner ol the Playgirl Clab in Gard<:!! GrQYe. He Ula :be was surprised bot nooo-tbe-ltss happy lh•t Coomopalltan .,,..., repealed the liliel ol Burt Reynolds. Only becaUse he believes worn· en are more than ready, want· lng, to tee the nude male did be bring the magazine off the presses. But this only takes up a few of its U8 pages and 'vhen ask· ed about other sectioM of the magazine, he said, "I'm not a publisher. I 'm a businessman." But the centerfold on which he is bani.Ing lacks interest . 'I1lOSe ef us living on the coast can see as much by going to any of our beaches where the male flesh is alive. moving and resp:insive and covered very little more than those in the beautiful color photographs. MAYBE WOMEN living on an Iowa farm where the only waves are waves or grain would find thls presentation of the male novel -if she's ready for this new step in equality, if that's what it's supposed to be. A male nude olympian type also is featured with several lash.ions by l\1r. Blackwell but he (the model\ is only in dull black and white so it 's no big - th ing. Men arc the focal point of Utis nlagazine for women. "The na1ne of the game is him. Get him. Entertain hin1. Enjoy him." One of ils regular columns promi51!:S 10 give "guidelines for today 's en t er I a i n in g woman. recipt hints, tricks of !he trade ... Let's get off to an obvious start w i l h aphrodisiacs.'' Apparently, playgltls and their men need s u ch stinuilants. AH. 81..M' THERE'S more ... astrological forecasts and explanations: recipes: hair styles: beauty, Ii t er a r y. health. fitness, movies, music, art and travel guides ; fict ion; llollY\\·ood gossip ; personality profiles. and even an article on virginity {which suggests we've all lost it but should ho ld on to it"?) and another on ··compulsions of the pro- 1viscuous woman .. ( w h i ch preal'hes that each of the in· tervil'1,·ees needs · • good therapy") .• Its editor promises more in· depth stuff and "a little bit o[ everything.'' It already has everything th at T~n Scene and Seventeen had way back when I would read them. It even has a quiz. "Are You a Potent\al Playgirl"?" I took it and I am. But. really. I'd much prefer to be a woman. it's mal~e ~ for the LQQK of NATURE! The l•te1t in EIYJO CaplH• Wlq• AU with ,~i n-tops for natural lookin9 p•rts. I. Lady Elu.ro: Petite ~ead sit•, short, simple or ele- gant look. Copless Dano: fluff back, smooth iap, curls &. soft waves. Show9lr1: Extra lon9, softly waved'. . Ju.llet: Smooth top, hits shoulder 1n soft, turnbl1n9 curls. S. Fonda Shoe): Face-framin9 sha9 , not too straight, not too curly . b. Elura Toppatte: Wear as chi9non, fluffy wi91et or swept up. 7. Jcftnlfer: Gypsy in soft curls & waves. 8. Reversible Fall: Shoulder len9th, we•r •s 9ypsy or 5mooth pa9e-boy. 9. Raquel: Lon(ll page-boy, off.face or with b•n9s. I 0. Polly: Short ba,ic look. Elura wigs & hoi.,Ieces !Tom .......................... $17.95 WIG AND BEAUTY SALON '2500 Ea•t 17th Street 548-3446 Hilgren Sq~are, Costa Mesa • • • And ' Atadftier' s Viewpoint By JO OLSON Of 1111 Diiiy Piiot Siii! Roxbury Dri~e, ~e~ly Hills, California 5:30to 8:30 p.m." chock out this new magazine. , When we arrived a lot of ears already were parked oi.Itside so we decided lhe par- ty must be in full force. We entered , gave our name, rank and serial number, and were issued name tags. to "finish her sentence'' but never did. The bars were crowded and the buffet was extravag~ but was taken away before 'th,e pany was over. Lyle's iS Zowie! Sounds interesting. ··vou arc cordially invited to attend a private cocktail party to preview our ne\V 1nagazinc for women. Pl aygirl. at the Beverly Hills Club, 120 South Let's go! -r So go:'we did. Two potenlial Playgirls zippfng down t'he freeway to peopl~watch and THE CARPETED, plush Beverly Hills Club was filled with people eating, drinking and making merry. The only trouble wa s that it was so dark we couldn't read many name tags. So we wondered who alt these people were. Suddenl y bright lights were turned on a small group of people and a cameraman started his film rolling. We edged through the crowd to see who the celebrities were but by the time we gol there the lights were off and the people had moved on. We started looking for Ryan Macdonald, the centerfold in the first is.sue, and Lyle Wag· goner, the featured man in a four..page color fold-out. No one was making. a big fuss over anyone who was there and there were so many peer ple milling around it was next to· impossible io-see who all was there. We finally spotted them but didn't get close enough to talk to them. THE EDITOR or t h e magazine, a tall, lithesome frosted blonde who was wear- ing a long and low~ut black dress. talked tO us fOr a fe~ minutes until she was called away. She promised to re tum -J Days To Save On Singfil* sewing machines SALE ENDS SATURDAY LOOK AT ALL THE GREAT FEATURES OFFERED BY EVERY PASH ION MATE* ZIG-ZAG SEWING MACHINE: e Exclusive ~g!!• front drop-in bobbin e Straigtlt and zig.zag stltctle• Model 257 /708 WITH CABINET Reg.119.95 YOUR CHOICE! $109 Great sewing with this machine, otfer1ng additional features like a bobbin winder shut-of!. and one-way needle insertion. Deco· rat1ve Kingston cabinet included. • Three needle poslllons e Snap-on presseJ feet Model 252/242/575 WITH CARRYING CASE Reg.129.95 ="'"') i 252/242 575 Remember! Sfug!ll' sewing machines start as low as $67t Model 177 SINGER Sewing Centers end partlclpatlng,approved dea..,,. A Credit P!nn to Iii you r budget is available a! Singer Sewing Cente1s. Monv approved dealers al so offer a11rac11vc cred1t 1erms. Singer hAS a liberal 11ade ·in policy WC will ll"OPl)•an allowance on your U9ed sewing machine 1owa1d any new se wing machine you buy at Singer Fo1 eddre$S ol s1ore ot deale r nearesl you, see 1he yellow p11ges underSEWlNG MACHINES 'A trademark ot THE SINGER COMPANY • ' ' - Pl!ople watching was. fan· tastic: there Was a man in a leather ruit, one in a pair of handsome boots (with his trousers tucked i n s i d e ) , carefully coiffed men whu looked as if they bouglit the newest .style suit every wee k to be sure they were in fashion, and buxom, be}eweled ladies. A woman told us that these were "~tly advertising peo- ple.11 Bein& a , former. J•ad· : vei-Umiig :-pe~aonn ·myeclf, I wondei::id abbtil t1)at. Where were ·au the!e wierdos when I was in the business? J With these thou ghts in mind, we went home to look over our Playgirl magazine. Suddenly, I had the same thou ght about the magaziqe -would it be there on Sbturday morning after the Fr1iaY night surge of interest? JOAN WYVONNE BRAD MARGE we wisla to exte1ad I 'IVANKA JOHN IRENE ANN an opetaing invitatiota to the Public to joi•• us at the CJ1a11apagtae 01tening of Lyle's oi Newport Sunday, May 20th, from 2 to 5 1660 0'range Ave., Costa Mesa, 645-7337 I had a feeling that there were quite a few people like ourselves from the "real world" who were people watching just like we were. (I wonder who they thought we were?) WITH PRESS ktts in han• I·-----------'== (including one copy of the first issue of Playgirl) we decided to make our exit and discuss the situation on the long drive home. As luck would have it, Steve Allen and J a 'J-n e Meadows were also leaving, though pausing mom~tarily to have their picture ti"lcen. so we realited there indeed had been some celebrities in the crowd. It's just that when i+ley're off camera and without makeup. they're hard to recognize. They're real people too. a fact we sometimes tend to forget. On the way home we specuJated abour all t h e unusual looking people we had seen. Were they, too, real peo- ple who have to get up on Saturday mornings and mow lawns and go lo the grocery store? THE "~t AGIC" of Beverly Hills and llollywood 5'Ct'OlS to be an evening phenomenon . What would happen if a preview party took place on Saturday morning? Would the real people in the real world manage to beet;>me the in· teresling. mysterious people of the night before? Wl"ll •• CLOS£ •• YOUR PHON£ ONLY THI FINEST FRESH MEATS a. PRODUCE "" o.tfftfy to yo11r Ito-. COAST SUP.ER MARKET WI 0etlw1r ,...,, ·.,urcll•HI w .. r ••• CleM ., ""'" pllO!OI 673·3510 3347 £.COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR H adlme fo elpyou buy extra convenience. Kelloggs Jumbo cereal assQrtment. 18 Happy Servings. Now you can have Kellogg favorites in lhe cupboard and save ~ little money, too. Kellogg's Jumbo As sorlment gives you 18 very convenient servings. ~ ,, i; .;,.·"" ~· ' . ,. I I I -~ . \) _, l!--...:.:··~--~·~l~·='""~r~~~~~~~~w~"::;::"'"':::.:'~·~...,==-~··~·~·""~'> "-. Lea'derShip ,SelecteQ ew by School ' Unit· ' _$dj!c>0 ~; A <0111m• 5 p .... Th!'ldoy for publi-Hunllni1<>o s-IL Rq:lllra· Mulical _... will be will be cunt opeoker at the u.i ro ,....,.... Vall.y,' -ll'tdnHd•V-tlOD 'lrill llo IU:JO.a.ni. --~ lllflntr!. lalller_l"4.l!OO dlm>tr Thurs-:.~~~--otadl Oet<IL. H t• -to cilfioen will he IMallecl, a vocal .,_ --O.Y.lli1li. aft'10 p.m.-in ...._.. • un mg n -boi«•r· n _,. ~-·~---"M.11•rtu=..Wlli boot. Tickets kw O>ld Stal Beach School Council PTA service awards will be are priced at 11.lO or cl ,,.,.,,~uachtr "" preseo1"", and a perpetual Crest View PFO latl\enl and so. ceota for nhatim11 will apptOr In Mrs. 1Min Lammer• memberahip trophy will be Mn. RmMIJ DuDcaa sons. Dcilt1 Pflot each week. President awarded for the first time to Presiden1 , , nformatfon must be rt· COMING UP: Annual council the member Wlit with the COMING UP~ Oh Natural Is ived btl .tfra. Ctlbert awards luncbe<u ii schedu.I· largest percentage or In--tbe UUe of ... the mothei: and 'rnbull, 507J Mangrum ed Wednesday, Ma.y 23, in creaae tn membership dur· daughter falhion show and ·ve, Jluntington Beach by 'The Gold Anchor restaurant, ing the tm.-73 school year. tea scheduled from 2 to 4 p.m. Wednesday, May 23, jn the Peek Family Colonial Terrace Room. Fashions will be modeled by·~nr, teachers and students. F1ag ceremony will be cooducted by Girl Scout Troop 1267, and Brownie Troop 865 will present a special program. Refreshments will be serv· ed. Tickets are priced at $1 for mothers and 50 cents for daughters. ResenatioM or further information can be obtained by contacting "Mrs. Sy Buder at 847·2875. Dwyer PTA J\trs. J·ames Eastman President REPORTS: Newly insialled officers are the Mmes. James Eastman, president; Dale Bush and Joe Pooley, vice presidents; Dy r us Casey, secretary; Donn Bravender. treasurer, and Paul Dugmore. parliamcn· tarian. Harry Turner \Vil\ serve as historian ... Representatives of the Hun· tington Beach P o I i c e Department inspected and licensed bicycles and con· ducted a skills test during a PT A-sponsored bi c y c I e rodeo. Eader PTA Meadow Vw. PTA Mn. Mary Zaqger President COMING UP: Installation din4 ner will take place tonight at 7 in ttM: Fireside Inn. Mesa View PT A Jim ROOerts President COMING UP: Unit w i 11 present a box social Sunday, May 20, /rom 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Box lunches wiU be raffled at .noon. and sack races, relay races, an egg toss and softball game will follow tn the afternoon. Park View PTA J\trs. Robert Oslan President COM ING UP: Surfing will be the subject of guest speaker Russell \\lilHams at meeting tonight. Williams a faculty member. will discuss mak~ ing, repairing and safe use of surfboards and will ii· lustrate his talk with slides. Also scheduled is a report and slide presentalion'of the recent eighth grade class trip to the state Capitol. New unit officers will be elected, and a musical pro- gram will be presented~by Miss Sharyl Parker's music class. • Mn. GOl)l<m mP,gh . Pr.esident REPORTS: Cinco de Mayo carnival netted more than $100 for the unit and more than $300 for the student council. Robinwood PFO J\1r. and Mn. Sam Kaplan President · Moiola Fair Crafty ,, I ~COMING UP: Unit meeting f will take place at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 22, in Gisler Intermediat~ School. Fifth· ' graders will present a First Aid Station Dennis Grogan, paramedic and recipient of the Medal of Valor, will be the guest speaker at the Father-eon night at Fountain Valley Hi. g h School at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 23, e?acticing a little first aid :is Ron Richter for John West- erhold Jr. whileWesteifiold observes. Music Programmed Carnivals Calendared Editor's Note: A column devoted to Newport Beach. Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach ancC A1Uti01i Viejo parent· teacller orocrnizatiom will appear i1i the Daily Pilot eacli wee k. Information niust be received bf/ tht: women'I deportment or Mrs. Cared Smith. 1746 Ce-ntella Place, Ne w port Beach bV 5 p.m. Thursday for publication Wednesday. Aliso PTA Mrs.•R. T. Boswtll President C0t-.11NG UP: Spring Round Up carnival from 10 a.m. to I p.m. Saturday, May 19, on lhe playground. Ranch style refreshments will be served. Also fealured will be races. relays, a r t involvement booth, boutique comer and many prizes. Mrs. Norman Drew. chairman announces that volunteers may contact Wedding Plans Told An Aug. ) 1 \v-edding is being planned In Sl. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Nc,vport Beach by Catherine Kristene Champlin and l\1ich.'.lel Lee Gilmore. NeWS of 1 he betrothal and forthc\Kning event has been annoo.bced by h<!r parents. r.1r . and Mrs. James Lu n d Champlin of Irvine. ' Mrs. Champlin Is a graduate of DeStrt l:ligh School. Edwards and currently at· tends the University o r California. Santa B a r b a r a where she is majoring in home economics. Iler ,liance, ~n of Mr. encl fl lrs. Edwttrd Lee Gilmore of sa.n Rafael , is :i graduate of Terra Linda lllgil Scilool and l'l'UI vaduate In June from U~ with a DA in political science. her at 499-4381 for further information. Bear PFO !\lrs. Robert Ballinger President COMING UP: Officers will be elect~at the genera I meeting tomorrow night. Student awards will be presented and an Instrumental Music Concert will be be fourth and fifth graders. REPORTS: Spring carnival proceeds will be used on educational items for the school. Eastbluff PFO J\lrs. Eugene Kovach President REPORTS: Annual mother· ·daughter fashion show has been postponed until June 2. Newport Ele. PT A r.trs. Roger E/rly President REPORTS : Officers installed at the annual luncheon are the Mmes. JO!!cph Goubcrt, president; David Tingler. E. l\'1. McCook. Steven Task and Terrv l\1cl\elvcv. vice pr c s i d 'e n l s ; \Vi1HAn1 Ca1npbcll and R ob c rt Stewart, secretaries: John Franco, treasurer: J. A. Shepardson. historian , along with Gary Schnicpp as auditor. Newport Hts. PT A ~t-s. Jame11 G. Blain President COM I NG U P : Association meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tu~· day. May 22, will include the insta llation of oUiccrs aild the Introductions or ctuiir· n1&1. Mrs. Paul J. Manola will direct the Instrumenta l orchest ra . J\.1idshipmcn band from Horace Ensign School will be conducted b y· Jlichard England. • t Paularino PTA • ~1rs. Paul Dumaia President COMING UP: Retire ment tea to honor Gordon Imler. prin· cipal will be neld at 3 p.m. Tuesday. f\1ay 22. REPORTS : Ceramjcs kiln was purchased by the PTA from profits made in this year's activities . . . F' our th District awards were presented to l\1rs. Eugene Meister. f\!rs. Jack Sikes and Mrs, Jerry Lelir and their con1mittee for outstan- ding \\'ork. Commlttec con- sisting of Mrs. David Lang, Mrs. 1'"red Palmer and Mrs. Malcolm Niles have been formed to revise the bylaws. Pomona PTA J\tanuel Robles Presidcn~ COMING UP: Annual carnival \Yill be fron1 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, May 19. Games. prizes. food, fun and rides on a double decker bus will be featured. Presa\e on Uckcts will be held this week at school. · Turtle . Rock PT A Mr1. Warren Paige President COMING lJP : School picnic will be"frorn 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.1n. Saturday. May 19. in Bommer Canyon. Games and contests for1all ages will be featured. along with entertainment and food. Victoria PTA 1 ~1ni . Torn Lukavl~h President C0!\11 NG UP: Father-son spaghetti dinner: will be servt>d by board members from 5:30 to 7 tonight. Barry ri.1ncPherson , psychologist at Victoria School will serve as masterof ce re mon i ea . Representatives from UCI karate club will give a demonstration during din· ner, followed by o baseball gan1e directed by Gary Adam.! . musical program. Fulton PTO , ~frs. Herbert Yomogida Presicjeft -COMING UP: New officers \Yill be elected and installed at meeting Thursday, May · 24, al 7:30 'p.m. Annual spring concert will b e presented by the students. Marine Vw. PTO • Mn. Earl Morrison. President COMlNG UP; Keith Erickson of the Los Angeles Lakers I ~ COMING UP: New officers will be installed 'at the final unit meeting of the school year Tuesday, May 22, a.t 7 p.m. Taking office are Mr. and Mrs. Bill Martin, co- presidents; and the Mm.es. Jerry Bellsmith, vice presi· dent: Jack Radzai , secretary. and G e o r g e Braun, treasurer. Volunteer teacher· aides and block moth.ers will be honored at the meeting.Executive board and faculty members will entertain with vaudeville acts.~ Charlie Trizinsky and Michele--Kaufman ·work on a creative wood project, one of 20 <raft 'Projects to be offered at the Arts and Crafts Fair, sponsored by Moiola PTA from 10 a.m. to 4.p.m. Saturday, May 19, at the school • I I REPORTS: Proceeds from the spring carnival will be used lo purchase a laminating · machine and a projector !or the school. Schroeder PT A Mrs. Richard Arrll! Pi'Uident REPORTS' Mrs. E. \Yillmore installed D. t n e Mmes. Richard A r r a s , president; James Reed. Howard Shifflett and Edward Brennan, v i c e presidents; F.dward Wol'Ci!ster and D a v i d Robison, secretari'es: Van Aken, treasurer; Peter Melodious Farewell !l's tile Real Thing will theme the talent show at College Park School honoring graduaUng fifth and sixth graders at 7,30 p.m. Tuesday, May 22, in th~ multipurpose room . Sin~ lng a farewell song to the school 1s Dale Tracy whUe Tracy Mays is en- tranced. I 'j Cutler, historian, and Richard Keyes, parliamen- tarian. James Reed was in- ~-talled as auditor. Performances were by the sdlool band, s t r i n g in- strumental group" a n d choirs. F I a g ceremonies were conducted by the stu~ dent council, and mothers of second and fourth graders hosted the meeting. REPORTS: New off leer s 1 Spring Vw. PTO John AltmaA President imtalled are John Altman. president; and the Mmes. Paul ·Meister, Larry Landesman, David Kurth and William Guffey, vice presidents; Michael Burke, treasurer; James Hawkes, secrelaiy, and Jerry Sacks. historian. Recipients o r special awards were Mrs. Bill Frend!, leacller-ol-the· I year, and Mn. DiclRowlty, parent-of-the-year. · · ~ Coastal Clubs \ Closing Year League Orange County Women's Architectural League w i 11 meet at 10:3:0 a.rn. 'nlllrsday, May 17, <in the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana to hear • talk by Gerrie Pinckney of t h e Fash.ion Academy. 4 Al'umnae· A musical program and potluck dinner are scheduled for the final meel'lng of the year for Orange County Alum· nae, Sigma Alpha Iota, an in· ternationaJ music ftaternity. The ~P "will m~ at 7 p.m. Friday, May 18, ini the Placenlia home of A n n Patrick. Saddleback GOP Dr. Dao.lei J. ·Fischer. superintendent of the Warner School District, W a r n e r Springs will addre!S ·\he Sad· dleback Valley Reyublican Womail's plqb at -9:~· a.m. Tuesday, May 22, in the h1issioo 'Viejo Inn. • His topic will be Wbal Socie- ty Are We Preparing Our Children to Live In? Dr. Fi!tther, who has taught and served as a school ad- ministrator in. Orange COOnty for several years, received the Orange County P.res• Club Ed· ucator Headliner of Ute Year in 1967 and the VaUey F~ge Freedoms F ou n da t Ion's American :Educator medal in 1971. Toastmistresses Ann Gick will be installed president · of the Newport Harbor Toastniistress Club during a dinner meeting, scheduled to begin ai ·g p.m. Monday, May 21, In the , Alrporter Inn. Town and Gown A scientific approar,h to weight control will be the topic or Dr. Grant Gwlnup when he Is a gaest ol UC! Town and Gown at II a.rn. Wednesday, M11y 23, in the Bahia Corin· thlan Yacht Cub. Dr. Gwlnup, profenor or en· docrinology Md metabolism at I l of Medicine, will discuss Bi getics of the Human Machine Key tO Weight Control. He 1 a past president of the Califcirnia Diabetes Association, w a 1 editor of the Metabolism journal and is the author of the book, "Energetics." Classes Internationally f a m o u s recipes from New Orleans will be the subject of demonstra· tions by Southern California Edison Co. home ecooomists: Programs will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Monday, May 21, and 10 :30 a.m. Tuesday, May 22. Fountain Valley Com· munity Center, 7:30 p.m. Wed· nesday, May 23, and 10:30 a.m. Thursday, May 2 4., Westminster council cham· bers; 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 30, and 10 :30 a.m. Thurs• day, May 31, Fashion Island'! Island House. Other presentations are 7:30 p.m. Monday. JW"Je 4, and JO :JO a.m. Tuesday, June 5, Edison Co., El Toro: 10:30 a.m. Wednesday June 6. ~1urdy Park Communi t y Center, Huntington Beach, and 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 11, and 10:30 a.m. Wednesday , June 20, C.OSta Mesa council charbers. Youth Concerts The final two free youth concerts of the season will take place Wednesday mom· Ing, May 23, at U C J. Sponsored by the Orange County Philharmon.ic Society, the concert 'vill be played by the Los Angeles Phithannonic Orchestra, under tile direction or Gerbord Sarnl!el. Attending will bc 'flfth and sixth graders from Newport· Me~. Westminster, Magnolll, FullerWn, Santa Ana and SavaNla school districts. Busin ess Women llaymood M. Kelly, manager of automation data 1 processing at McDonnell · Dooglas was named .Boss.of· the-year by the Newport Beach Chapter,..A mer I can BU$lnMs Women's Association. -·• • · ·OPENING CEREMONIES -Orange Coast yacht clubs will host opening day · t-eremonies next weekend. Ready to raise the flag for Bahia Corinthian Club are Dave Stoneman (left) and Stephen Kfoury of the Flying Toads Sea Scouts from Ship 306. Ships Dressed for Inspection Openinfday ~·will be maiked by ~acht clubs · along the Orange Coast ne.ll weekend. A full day of activities are scheduled at Bahia Corinthian, Balboa and Lido Isle Satur- &y, May 19, and Dana Poi_ot Yacht Club will stretch events into a second day, At BCYC, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy P. Studer h a v e coordinated boat inspection, Newport Harbor High Scbool . S a i 1 o r band, jam session by members, boating films, a parade, cocktail party, dinner and dancing. Events will get under way at 8 a.m. with the boat in- spection. The band will play until formal ceremonies begin at 11 a.m. at the flagpole where the F1ying Toads Sea Scouts from Ship 306 will present the colors_ and raise the nags. Following lunch, a dressed ship parade around the bay is • • planned. Afterward, members Point Clubhouse on Saturday. will be Etertained at a jam Beginning at l p.m. Sunday session til the cocktail flag will be a parade of. decorated is hoist at 6:30 p.m. Jack yachts which will pass in Candelori's trio will provide review before Commodore music for dancing. Charles Cromwell aboard his UDO ISLE _ 1 yacht, Mary Liz. Ceremonies at LIYC will Champagne will be servl'd by , begin. at ll a;nt--with ~t.in-the Buoys Bells, the women's spection, and t~e flag-raisi'ng group and an early dinner will ceremony by Girl Scout Troop • 965 is scheduled at 12:30 p.m. _, ~l~~e the weekend An all-American luncheon of feshv1t1es. hol dogs, potato salad and potato clilps will be oerved "'·1----------I the clubhouse, BALBOA At the Balboa Yaehl Club. boat lnspectlon will begin at 10 _,.._\.: a.m. following by a buffet luncheon a n d nag-raising ceremonies will commence at 2 p.m. Afterward trophies will be awarded. DANA POINI' Cocktail hour at 5 p.m., followed by a buffet dinner and dancing to I.he Rhythm Aces is planned in the Dana HOURS1 TU•S.-sAT. 11 M 4 IMllNI Tiie IM,._Mtl C..t ... HUHTINGTON l&ACH 1"41 ALGONQUIN 11 WAltNElt "'""' • HOW lD COME BY A .BEAUllfUllY SMOOTH SKIN. " AND HOW TO GET ONE fREE: ANITA OF DENMARK" has~ lormu~. new.INSTANT GLOW FORTHEBOOY. it's four~ of natural min e ~ emu!OOied combination with luiUnous oi~ and enliched with other litarnins. ~ rich,~~ pa111111f1 to massage into tlie skin after tanning or batfJKig ~ 6.00. but jm ~ Ile yoo to have' Distant glow as a gift Vliien you· hlr1 6.00 WIKlli or roore from ~ anita of l8lnalk colEtm : bOOy massage &'moisture ~lion, 5.00;-lhrrit cieam, 7.50 ; eye crm, 5.00; all! facial oil, 7.50ciust some of tlie choices. a special represenlati¥B from anita of tmnark will ·II mabig ~e introdoction.5 aoo off~ ~ gifts in jm cosmetics- south coast jiala, tliinlay llluugh saturday IOO wrelt ·JOSf PH MAGNIN • • I Wtdnffdit. MQ lb, 1973 DAILY PILOT Your Horoscope Tomorr'?w • t Libra: Travel · Ahead THURSDAY MAY 17 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March ll·Aprll 191: Acceot is on pb i lo so phy , religious concepts, your will- ingness to face issues -and yourself. See situations, in- dividuals as they actually are -not as you wish they could be. Travel plans are on agen- da. You are going to learn! TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20 ): June Date Selected Mr. and Mrs. Richard 11. Stewart of Newport Beach have announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Olyvia Ann Stewart to Fabjan Sebas- tian Kajtazi. Miss Stewart attended Lin~ coin Junicr College, Lincoln, Ill. 1Her fiance: is the son or the Josef Kajtazis of J a c k s o n Heights, N.Y. Whal you sUlrted in recenl past may command attention. lnve.slmtnt.s, "°·ork which af· feels future security -these are featured. GEMINI (Mlly 21.June 20): Spotlight a· s on agreements, legal lies marriage efforts which req Ire mutual aid 8nd cooperati . You finish rather than begin project. CANCER (June 21.July 221 : Creative activity is featured. "°1ea,ns the giving of yourself, the presenting of your style - these elements can be marked success. LEO (July 2.l-Aug. 22): Your intuitive intellect is featured . You teach and learn. You gain by sharing knowledge, especially with one born under Aquarius. Creativity, Io v e relationships are featured. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221: What was a restrictive situa- tion is due to "loosen." Means you will have more freedom. You also will have apportunity to make ex:citing contacts. LIBRA (Sept. 2J.Oct. 22): Emphasis is on short trip. special message, u nus u a I discussion with neighbor or relative. Oleck fine print. Take nothing for granted. money, -, special payments • n o colled!ons. Gtm.lal, Vireo per$0M are apt to play prorn.lnent roles. Be , analyliCal and ready Car meaningful changes a n d decisions. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Lunar cycle Is such that you can refine techniques and attract altentlon of persons important to you. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Be aware of the subtle, of nuances rather than direct probe!. Look beyond the im- mediate and behind t h e scenes. Secret a g r e e m e n t coo.Id directly affect you. Know it and prepare ac- cordingly. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis is on getting what you want without losing friends. This might take some doing. Capricorn could be in- volved . Greater recognition i3 due. Accept accolades but don't forget U-who helped along lhe way. PISCES (Feb. 18-Mardt 20)' You finish, complete, realize where you stand and why - and where you are going. Cy· , OF COSTA MESA a delightfttl bttdget salon where bea11tif ttl hair styles begin. (' PRICE LIST fEatr1 DI•• ,.tf' l.9111 H.irl MONDAY THRU THURSDAY FRIDAY, SATURDAY. SUNDAY !'RICES SLIGHTLY HIGHEl Sh•mpoo •nd Set ...................................... $2.50 • Mp Perm•n•nt Wave .................... ··········--·--7.SO • •P Ti"t ................. ,_ .................................... 5.50 • ., Bl•a ch Touch-up ....................................... 10.SO &: •P Frostin9 ................................................... 14.00 • •P S•mi Permanent lashes _ ........................... 10.00 haircuts •1.so 1695 Irvine Ave. -Costa Mesa cle is significant and prestige l~llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~ . . The wedding will take place June 3, in the Church of Corpus Chrisli, W o o d s i d c , N.Y. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Lunar position emphasizes is on the line. Applies both to!''.'. professional and person a 1 endeavors. Aries is in picture. Try Saturday's News Quiz Casino Brand Announces 2 New Sizes, 4 New Flavors, Casino Brand is a fine line of natural cheese and the line is getting longer. Now, in addition to the 12 oz. chunks and the one lb. NAT-UR-ROLL"', you can get the same fine casino quality.in two new sizes; 8 oz. chunks and 5 oz. wedges. And there's more news~ Casino Brand has four new flavors; Fontina, Parmesan, Romano and Sharp Provolon.e. All are made to fit your natural feelin~s. II: ; . •• •\ . ' • and ... I r.------------------------------------------------------~ I l I I I i ) ·up ~~ERJ!ack! 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I am encloo~lat>el(s) of the new elteo and navors aa indicated below. P--send me 25¢ for each label for a total of $.$ __ Enclosed are 0 8 oz. Brick 0 5 oz. Fontl"a 0 8 oz. Muenster 0 5 oz. Pann esan D 8 oz. Mozzareha 0 5 oz. Romano 0 8 oz. Caraway 0 5 oz. Sharp PrO\lolone Mall lo:.Caslno Brand New Deal Offer, Box n99, Chicago, llllnols 606n City • . State ZIP·-,--- Uft!ll: 0,,. r11lund 119• llll'llly or Mkhtn. 01'!'1' 11plrM bec. ':°11, 0 1173 Md It good ollly In 11•011•10Plllc .,,, (U.S.A.) fn Wfllcfi""thle ""-' lonn 11 c111ii11YK ~ 9dnr11Md. Vo•d •II••• ptol'llblt•d, IUed Of '"lrlct.d. Ll&elt tllblllltl•d "'"'°"" thi1 on..1 lo1m or try club• o• orv•Mt•ll-•HI /IOI bt hon- o•ltd. Ouptlc•I• '94""" •Ill con11ilul• trlolld. Tl'ttfl 111...,. 1lon, 1•1><oducllon, 111• Of pu•ch ... of ll'll1 lor111 It p-oh.1111 -............. ""'° .... labelo) i!ii!~"""""''"ii KRAFT f0008 J)lvl .. orl of Kt.IS. COf1'0l'•llDll Tllllo m .. 1-ln o11er ror... """" ~ ,...,..._ . ' T I' '. ' ' ' ' ,. CHAFING DISHES SIMl'llFY ENTERTAIN ING Summ_ertimi:'s Casual -" Dishes Move Outdoors (',ome summertime, it's !he patio that sets the scene for a swirl of activities. Enter- taining takes on a lighter, more informal tone and the patio offers just the sett1111 - outdoorsy and comfortable. Patio foods. too, are light, fun and served buffet-style for ease and convenience. Chafing dishes are perfect for thi_s type of entertaining since they'll keep food warm, as well as make a lovely addllion to the buffet _table. For your main dish you can Choose from two delightful Italian entrees -Neapolitan Scalk>pg and Shrimp, or Fet- tuccinl FlorenUne. ~you love seafood, you'll find" the Neapolitan d i s h especially delidous. Scallops and shrimp take on romantic Mediterranean flavors when prepared in a tomato sauce seasoned with garlic, an- chovies. olives, capers, basil. Tobasco pepper sauce and sugar. When served over hot rice, Neapolitan Scallops and Shrimp make a sensational meal that's light enough for summe r eating. ye t marvelously satisfying. Fettuccini Florentine, a northern Italian di sh. consists of flat. narrow fettuccini noodles prepared with crumbl- ed bacon, butter. chopped spinach and a creamy Parme6an cheese sauc·e. It differs from southern Italian dishes since it uses nO tomato. garlic or oil. rather. the northern food s tend to be but - tery in flavor. · Fettuceini Florentine is a quick dish to make and one or the most delicious things you Potatoes Flavored • SWEET POTATO CASSEROLE . '4 cup mapJe.navored syrup 1 c cup peanut oil I teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind Y. teaspooo ci1U1an1on 2 cans (each 17 ounces) 1 sweet potatoes. sliced 2 large apples !cored and p~el~d and s l iced crosswise) Mli: together the sytup, oil, salt, lemon rind and cin- na)non. Alternate layers or s'vcet potatoes: and apples in a 2· quart oblong baking di'sh. beJ!lqnlng with potatoes and er¥1lng w:tlh apples to make 4 Liters. t:;venJy drizzle &bout l/4 cup or syrup mixture over each layer. Bake in a prfheated ;lSO- dcgree oven, basting oC- casionally, until apples arc cooked through -about I hour. J\1akes 8 servings. ) . \ can do with noodles. Mixed with the noodles in a chafing dish, the bacon, spinach and Parmesan navors complement each other perfectly and yet remain distinct to create a rich flavor combination. NEAPOLITAN SOAU.OPS AND SHRIMP 3 tablespoons olive or salad oil 2 cloves garlic, minced I poµnd sea scallops 1 pound cleaned shrimp (if frw.en. thawed) 8 anchovies, cut into pieces J cam (1 povnd each) tomatoe.s, pushed through a food mill a pimiento-stuffed olives, sliced 8 pitted ripe olives, sliced 2 teaspoons capers 1 teaspoon dried leaf basil ~'a teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce 1;, teaspoon sugar Jn large sau~pan or skillet, heat oil Add garlic and cook over low heat until tender but not brown. Add scallops and shrimp, and cook until Desh has become firm and shrimp tum pink, about 5 minutes. Remove .scallops and shrirnp from pan and set aside. Add 'anchovig_ to liquid in pan and simmer until soft. A d d tomatoe8 and simmer o\'er low heat for IO minutes. Add olives, capers, basil, Tabasco and sugar. Cook uncovered for IS minutes. To serve, heat scallops and shfimp in sauce for 10 minutes and keep warm ~ver Sterno canned heat in · tl,lafing dish over hot water bath. Serve over hot rice. Yield: 6 to 8 servings. FETI'UCC!NI FWRENTINE I pound bacon I pound fettuccini noodles 3 teaspooM salt, divided 1h cup butter or margarine I package (IO ouocesl frozen cliol?P"!1 spf¥ch, thawed, drained · • ' t 1,':t cups heavy Cream I egg~ slightly beaten 2 cups grated Pannesan cheese 11, teaspoon pepper Cook bacon until lightly browned, drain and crwnble. Cook noodles according· to package directions, using ·1 teaspoon salt in water. In a large crepe pan or cha- fing dish, melt butler. Add drained spinach and bacon; cook until heated through. Add cooked noodles to chafing dish and toss lightly. Combine cream and egg; add to noodles \'lith grated cheese. remaining 2 teaspoons salt and pepper. Toss to mix well. Cover and cook for 5 m\nutes. lo heat through. Yield: 8 servings. Cereals Sp iced QUICK CEREAL llERB ROU.S 1 • cup butter, melted 1·1 teaspoon marjoram 1 1 teaspoon thyme • One package (eight ounces ) rl'frlgcra!t.'d biscuits One slightly roundt'<f cup bran flakes Combine buttl'r Lind herbs; 1nix. Hull biscuit~ in rounds aboul three-and-a·half inches in diameter. Dip into herb-but- ter mixture, drain sJightly and coat both sides with bran flake.s. Roll up and arrange folded side down in a small, shallow baking pan. Drizzle any remaining but- ter mirture over the rolls nnd sprinkle \Vilh any re- n1aining bran flakes. Bake in 400 degree oven until biscuits are done. about t went y n1inutes. Makes IO rolls. -f ·-:-:-r-ii\:1-,---.---,~ • . •,.._f, __ -..J!L.,' PENNSYLVANIA STYLE CHOPPED CHIPPED 129 ... HAM ·~· SI.Sf Lb. NOW OUl OWN FIESH IAXID 6/29 Hamburger Buns '°'No'-'"' ¢ FlESH DELICIOUS Brown ies 6/49' ITAllAN Otll llllTAUllANT IAICEll:Y-Ollot•llY 11111-WINI' - 8911 Adams at Magnolia, Huntington B•ach, o ... et •ri. a.r-9nf 0.11 O"r• ....... 111 C1lif•ma.. In O•l'OtM 1'1111' 21 Yff•I. Ntw ll'"'i'nf ttln!1119h:1t1 ltlth, Flllf!lllft V1l1ty, (ltlt M.111, Ntw"rt I. •II OI Or1n9t Ctunly . DAILY \0.6:l0-Fll. 10-9 SUNDAY 10-' CLOSED MONDAY I I' ' rBi'l.OlllBl!l OOOK kruw ru11oa 1r.,. 2 to 33 -Cfllle. ...., dorJID..i...lo r~ot -up In ~I can !(!)Im .._ JuJoo. -, ..... _ ---pereenl. !'Ork cho!* 1tayed ll!Odlh ended April ll, tho -~ -pam111~ ........ --, A careful :':f:r can fiod 8 the same in two cities, were Agriculture D e Pa r t me u t white eW eost man ln MVm pacbCe of paper ~' a_1 I b ·~ '""'· v~irulleandwentup ~ on Monday, and clllel.Col/eelocnMaranged pouod ol ~ ---ew arga ns at -m one. 1 rtlall bot dog prices lltayad lromSIOTper<C1faiiilet111lJ>. -eaa,meJarol ........ -.1 supermarket these days. an · AU-bee! rrantrun.,.,-were the-rame from April 1 lo May -1'1111• lrom 5 lo 19 a bm: ol delergc~ .a Ilic ol Associated Preas sampling up in eight cities. Most of the 1 in alx of the eJeht cities. percent. t -fabric dteDer, a lmlll an of 1 show•, but the prices of most i:ncttuel, how1ver, came in ... Coffee and eggs also Wet"e 'lbe lta:ns checked were: tomato auc:e. cJ:wonlt:S• dttp 1 food and nonfood ii.ms In a Mardi when cattle prices amc>lli the !rems that were one ~ cbot>Ped chuck, one cookies, milk, ~ selected marketbasket have were at a record high. more expensive. A pound of "pound pod: choPI, me Jmall and suear. I cisen or rtayecd.lbe same over, -.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ___________________ ;;;;;_;;;;;_,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; _____ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;Oi ' the past two months. JI The AP checked Ille prices ot 15 food and nonfood items The survey found 32.1 per- \ cent ol the total number of \ items increased In price, 4%.4 percent stayed the same, 19.4 percent decreased and 6.1 per- cept were unavailable on one of the two check dates. Bargains in some ilems - particularly pork chops and butter -offset increases in hamburger, coffee, eggs and frankfurters. The total rost of the market- besket was up in six citie·s - Miami, Chicago, New York. Philadelphia, Providence, and Albuquerque -and down in five -Seattle, llls Angeles, Dallas, Atlanta and Detroit. The Agriculture Department reported on Monday that the price paid the fanner for milk declined in the month ended April 15. Butter, nM14.e from milk, was down in eight cities, but milk itself was up in five cities. The price of a quart of milk averaged about 38 cents and increases generally were only a penny. Hog prices were down in April and the price of a pound of center-cut pork chops declined in !!leven citie!I, with ) ..aop ·WHITE ROSE OTATOES !l! CllSPY FIESI CELERY .ft! IA. -.,.--. . -. ,,_. 608 EAST 111-LIOA BL VD., BALIOA .REFRIGERATED DE L!liERY SERVICE: PHllNE 673-1310 • • .( ' '· . IPIQAU fOI TMUUDAY, NIDAY, UTUIDAY, MAY 11, 11. 19. UARTEI POIK LOlll SLICED llTO PORKtHOPS . ~-~---· ''lllW'' llAllllT UllllT BURGER-PRO ... .._.. ~ J 7$ .......... -· -2J'llo i.,.i... ... _ ...... .... _, !l! ' ... .auw..-snen• IAMGUU DINNERS !l! IA. IDCIPT -& UlllCll IA. It.OZ. CAii •;,JlijJ::P.:~· • ..• . ... ~-~ WllSOlr;Tmll .,;;.. .. - • IOllELESS. ~ CANNED HAM . ---.. -. 99 .... PARKAY i, MARGARINE ·11 ' ' ~ THiii IS A MA•«fl IASKIT M.1. DISCOUNT ,000 sro•r NU• YOU \ • \ I • I WlfCI ttm ua-... ~ ........... &:;-·- -...... 1o. --· --·----.... ------------· • I I ............ -.. Sprinkling of Imagination -J ' ~New teaf 'Turned 'for Besldm the ravortte Iceberg escarole. This has a broad leaf and llwnld and uae within a lettuce, lhBe are other klnds that ts grac<fully frilled aHbe few ~. 1o enjoy. Ups. aIEF'S SA!AD wrm ,,,.,. ta tender lloolon lei-Glvm such delightful mak-HOllSl!RADllll llllESSING tuce with a -~ clellcate lop for salad, tt Isn't bani lo ,_,, dream ue some new ones. v. pciund al.Iced salami Ila.or; <riBp romaine that ta A very band3ome-looklng y, paund sliced bologna abap;,d UM long plumea "' y, pound sliced SWls:s cheese -; loose leaf lettoce; and new cnation is Cbers Salad 1 head ~e the dellghtful members ol the with Ho....,.dish Dressing. 1 bead i;hlc:ory endive family. It's made with both romaine 1 red onion, sliced • ,,,_ locludo the curly lea! and chicory. Instead of all the . CUI hail ol salami slic.s In endive, sometimes ca 11 e d meat being cut into m~ • half; roll to make cornucopias chicory, so deooraUve and st:ict-«ile pieces as ts usual and ~· Qlt remaining crisp In • toaed R!'«ll salad, for this type of salad, slices of salanu, bologna and Swiss the "elegant ivory co1ored sRZami are rolled . into cor-cheese into 'h;-inch strips. spears o( BeJglan endive; aDCt mx:opi.as, &nd centered in the Reserve a few romaine stn!&ht.leaved endive, or · middle like a bouquet. leaves to line bowl ; tear re- A salad with imaginative 1J>. malnlng romaine and chicory Acom-i>!aol ''"'""" 11 .......,....i1n this crisp chef aalad. gredlents ts Fresh Vegetable into blte-slie pieces. Line bowl Salad with Blue Cheese Dress-with reserved romaine leaves_ ing. Irs made with Iceberg tet- tuce one! Boston l<ttucc, crisp, raw mullflowerets, a 11 c e d fresh mul!lhrooms 8nd cuCumber. W ha I dellcloUs eating! Avocado-Orange Salad has Boston lettuce and escarole to.ssed With orange sectiobs and chunks of avocado in a marvelou! sour cream dress-- ing _Jaced with fresh lime juice and ~Uier good things. ~ tlnd to the greens you ~ )0 enjoy them at tli<ir jish •peak. Keep them cold Place torn greens in -I and add onion. Arrange salami cornucopias in center and sur- round with stripe of meat and cM;eso7 -serve tn s PQrtlons with lloneradlsll Dressing. Honeradbh Dre111n1 3 tablespoon! fresh lemon ju!c. ~ cup olive oq ll teaspoon salt v, teMpodn pepper 1 tablespoon. prep ·are d horseradish 1 clove garlic, crushed In a' small bowl mix lemon juice and-oUve oil-; Add l!l<, pepper, hoiSeradish a n d 1arllc. Mis well. FRESH Vl!lGET.(]ILE SA1AD wrrR BUJ8 1:a1:gsg DIU!SSING ll bead l<eberf leUU<;e II bead Boston 1'1tu<:!' ~ cauliflow~ ¥• pound fresb mushrooms, . sliced j cul:umber, ~ Tear lettuce lnlo ·bl!Kize pieces and place lo a ~ bowl. Seperate caullllowor m, lo callliflowereli. Add lo bowl with mushrooms and cucumber. Add Blue Cbetse Dressing and mix llgbUy. Makes 6 servings. Blue Clle<R DnuilC '. 2/S cup~veoll 3 tablespoons vinegar 1 ll tableepoons frosh lemon jlllce 1 clove garlic, minced \\ teaspoon-.ugar 'it: teaspoon celery seed "9 teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce 1 cup (4 ounces) crumhled blue cheese Beat together all ingredients in small bowl until well blend- ed. AVOCADO-ORANGE ~D WITH LIME-CUCUMBER DIU!:&9NG 4 oranges, sectioned DAILY Pllllf Q l medium bead Bollall tuce ' 11-leacarole I avocado, peeled mt lo dumb ' : Toooetlon........,~ trom top, then cut oil !tripe from top lo ting deep enou&h lo wtdte membrane, 1beD ,: allce trom bottem. ""' .. Or cul of! peel round round, spiral !asblon. Go . fruit spin, removing malnlngwhlteme ......... Cut along · side o( · dividing membrane r r.:,:: oo1slde to middle ol Remove secUon by sect Tea< salad gree11S into Sile pieces. Place in a bowl. Add avoead<i oJU1 oectlmsand toss ,Wltb Cucumber llrt!ubW, M ..... . IJm~ Dres!lj t cup. IUUi" cream 3 tablespoons freah · jllke V.. cup mayonnaise I teaapoon sail ..,.;~ I cup shopped pored, ~ cucumber (l medtu .. CUC\lrnber) ~ teaspoon chopp.._ scalllorui r Mlx.all-lncredlenta In 1111111 bowl. ... Ther~ are .drinks that ·are just empty calories. And drirlks that jusi fizz. And drinks you have w mix from a powder. An<tdrinks that come in sizes that are too big for kids ana are too much trouble to store. • ! ' ! • • ·~ • In pop-top 6-ounce cans that are just the right size for · kids. With lots of healthy, whole- some pure fruit -/ • - :.; ;. " .. 1 '· ' ··'' ' ., 10 Jc ·;.·~ •,,Iii • , ril I •b " v, •:'Jf ' ul .. , "' .;/, .~ "· 'P ,r -•J , ,1J "' . "' .. .. • ..... MEATLESS PIE"" CULINARY DELIGHT . . .. ' juices in them. ~ . . Pie baking !>as long been a c:Wjnary 0 art "!ltif!good''.<""kl filllng lbem with eiehthing fr.qm ~-oc .mild\~e io. colorlul ~ lrulis. ' · Hlstorical~, · savor_y onion p!S ha~;)leeb i-IJ>'!.Clalty In Geqnadl-0 isiDe. ~~vp-to f.lle-i\lmJtel 1 ver!lljlJ., w a s ckvelopOj!, bf• ~. h,o m e e ~Ono t&Mis ~ the cAUlornla milk ptd""l"'S in' . dtllliry. • 'l'be;special COlfll• 1!hort - mldn!r ilultel'; tinil Oolir with ·n' ~ Ill l10ld m· crumblr m~· ~:!olet""• ~ I fOMlll a D '-' " • idr~ yorlul onion a 'iplnach' ~g ac· cented in I.he tradUlonat man- ner with caraway seeds. SmoOUi, versatile dairy sour cream and eggs give body to lht vegetable filling, , ·~ I •. / ., .. '· ' .. ' .. . '" ·Fla~or ... •' Pie ' For a simple luncheon or l cup d~ sour c:remn. supper this protein rich entree 2 tabl,.Pl>oiis ~ can steal the sh-Ow. Tq fill out I teaopoon cirliwaY oeed! the meoo a Uttlt ;furlhei;, . Bacon cims ! ·: , coonlinate the SOur en.am · l;ul 'butter ln1i> fklur until Spinach Onion Pie i>it1t·thln!y oonsi8teney o1 coarse niul. l,dd 11 teaspoon salt and l egg boiled or ba~ ham wrapped and· ml>' 1o a dou&I>-Pat Jnto around , husky· • t i;c k s ol • lloUoiil IRCI I lncbes up llJle1 Monterey Jack cbee!O. wru. •-'·cf •loch IJlringb'm pu. --· ~ ~ ~~ ~""" aide<··--ind chop -'Sallie YOl!'Ye.-ial a moot sallsfylog • jn ~)ablapoon liutter, lllrrlng ...; mend.. . · ' .. bf"n, °"9' medhan beat until sollit CllE.9t ,s p I Ii Ac R tepder and Ugbt golden .. Cool. ONioN PIE •'lbw anti dnln spinach . Squeae dry and chop. Beat ll cup ~tier · · ' IOW' <rWn with . .l Io •·r. t-\2 COPI! flour · 'J'. caraway Jeed.91 remaining 4 . Sall ' eu• and 1 teaspoon ialt. Mis 5 aggs In onion& and s]llnach. . 2 pound• oniono (about 6 Tum Into pastry sbdt.llake cups chopped) In 3!0 degree oven I hour 15 1 tablespoon butter for sau· minutes or until golden brown \ ' Without carbonation. . Three delicious kinds. Grape Drink. • l Tropical Pllnch. Lemonade. In convenient • • -'I " . I ' 6-packs. And when you buy three of tb.e};ll, we'll pay ' _ t ' ~ ··~1 ·. , for one of them.~ Cut out·the 'c0iupon. r---------------------------, Buy3,getl~ I Send us th&.w[o~~toat-otzips Jrom the_carU>ns of three S. I packs of 'IreeSWeet fni1t dtirtkS, along with this coupon, and we11 I send you a check for ~ (average 6-pack purcha1e price: ~.). I ' Mail to: TreeSweet, P.O. Box 11625, Santa An:O, Calil. 92711. I Name I ,. I • Address --------------I -~-- City State Zip •. ; · 1:--Jt 'nlilellerlfO'lllonly on~!Plllldt,Gnpl Orinlt:IOld~C...--IC_,_, ..... l ~ ~~-·-·r•'ii'r.:'.:.f;.':irf.~.::!"~°";."""'"""...,..,_,· 6tK·j-·' .. I t R.Q••l.t fninl cM-. INtthulloM. .-.inni.., -~ w!U 1111i 1101 honofMt, l.qilmi , o-n11«31,1m ... 11nw ~_..li:lf ref\aid. LA·7 \. L--------------------------- t teing nnd set J,n center. Garniab top _ L~""-,,ackage m.e -.....11. v,w •to 111--~------- • oplnach servtnp . ·-------------------------------..:..---'---------~·~· " I ; r I. ' --. . ' . • .1 ., I ---- ff DAILY PILOT Kids Gtmg--Ho Over Gung k-Gai Ding ' 111 JWIUiA GIJll!ONS. O>mbln• lngredienll. In I "l1iln Ibo UlJJ<t """ kif small bowl and . fork-wh1p drop tho ~ on a Pl--~--waiter c1!1'd lliile -·-~ ~' ·--~-Ugblly. Preheat s · t. tbll di.sh "'Gun« Bo Gil Dina;· Pour on onc·lourth of the towel or pl .... Pri!>u'e 1'"'' tut our teeH&e tablemalel batter. When bubblea appear crepe!. Mimed It *'Chicken GlD1g on surface, gently lift the These cookies have Sood Bo!" You'll call it fabuk>lll ! crepe and flip it over. Brown chocolate flavor but they are olher side. not rich. All you need 11 a skillet and ------------------- .. , .... tome euily a v a i l a b I e qJOOOC&1T --2 cups sifted n~r \, teupoon.aall I}, cup butter I cup sugar 1 •gg 1 teaspoon vainilla ' z tobl-11 milt 2 aquares (2 ounce•) u n neetcntd choc:ola.~. melted and cooled On waz paper sift. tosether the nour and salt . ln a large miJiag bowl cream butter and sugar: thoroughly beat in the 5\?Ptrmarkel ingredients to tum out a spectacular ooe--Oish dinner in 10 minutes or Jes&. What could be easier! NS c.lnf.10 ... _ .. ___ c.11 ............ . Despite its glamor. this dish ls a dieter'• dellght and virtually free of fat (cbaltlterol-watcherl, t a k e note!). With its emphasis o n c runchy-cooked vegetables. OrienLal-style cookery is lan· usUcallY healthy and eye-ap- peallng as well. 'lbe main ingredient ls 'White-meal chicken. That'a euy, now .that most supermar~ t ell eel! boneless, 1klnleP chicken bftast& (IOUldlmet called "'~ fiDetr."') GVJ4G BO GAi DING IQolckle Cblckt'> Sktntl) 3 chicken brea&ll, &klnned and -5 tablespoom t!IOY sauce 1 Vf!r'f large Bennuda onion (or 4 yellow oolono) 1 small gr .. n peppers l con (4 OUJIC<I) sllc«I mushrooms 10 cat\Md water chestnuts. ~ quartered 1 teupoon arrowroot (or cornstarch) 11i teu)>oon sugar (or sugar wbltitute) %i teupoon hot red cayenne -4 tablespoons whole almonds Spread tbe chicken fillet~ on & cutting 'board nnd slice Lhcm into Jlh-lnch cUbes. Combine dllcken and soy sauce in a covered skillet over moderate beat. Peel the onion and cut into !,,,_Inch chunks. Add to the stiJlet. ())ver and continue to cool<. Remove tops and seeda from peppers. cut peppers into JJh.. inch slices. Add to skillet; cover and cook. Drain mushrooms (reserve liquid) and add mushrooms to .stlllet. Add water chestnuts. Cover, cook. Combine mushroom liquid. arrowroot, sugar and red pep- per. Sttr into skillet. Continue to cook -tme0vered -until moisture evaporates a n d sauce Is thickened . Stir [requently. Do not overcook. Onions should be crunchy and pcpi;crs bright green! Sprinkle with almonds and serve Immediately. Makes four servings, only 2.14 calories each. Fancy French crepes, stuf· !<d with chicken and topped with a delicate ~tornay Sauce! Who'd ever guess that such extravagant rare is based on a pauper's portion of lefto\'er chiclr.eo, a few scraps of S"·iss Cheese and your last two eggs!· Wha t·s more. this candlelight dinner is equally glamorous in the calorie category -only 292 per sc.rv-• iog! In adclilio11 10 cutting calories. \\'C've strcamlln~ the preparation for the girl-on· th~go. lf you're out of leftover chicken, try this recipe with canned chicken, or water· pacl<<d tuna . EGG CREPES 1 large egg 2 tablespoons nour Pinch of salt 3 tablespoons skim milk Use a small nonstick skillet. Spray it with a leciUn prod· uct for fat • free cooking, or wipe It lightly with oll. Martini s Miss An Old Friend WASl!I NGTON IAP1 - Olives will be in shQrt~r sup· ply this year . for salad!', martinis and other t;iblc u.~cs . ;:iccording to the Agricul1t1r1' Departn1ent. Table oli\'e production Hl Greece and Spain •totale<l 171.900 tons lasl year, do\\·n 23 percent from 1971. Tbc U.S. crop RI SO Vt'EIS dowr last year, some 27.000 ttlns compared with 57,IQO in 1971 ..- a<:mrding to a report by the Foreign Agricultural Service. USD CHOICE RIB STEAKS CUl'TOM 11INMID La. • • Cll 1:1111 Slllb .:.'i:::: ~ 1.81 UllA Qllcl y ...... .::=-~ l71 PllldRMSlllb . ..::o.::.~1.11 1:1111' Cit alllCt... :-.:.. ~ .91 ...... fllllf llllb '=' ~ 1.41 BONl!LE88 ROUND ROASTS OflNIM' L& e 08CAR'MAY121!R_..- 8PARERl88 Ml!O,flMTOUALITY l'llt 1.111111 Plltlll ":iml;:" ~ .69 Cllll'c.t•Pertl:lllfl "':ii'" ~1.2& Clllli' Cll I.Ill l'llt Cllp '=' "'1.85 1ARMOUR OR LUE SLICED BACON TREAT Y'OlMTAm BUOi IRlll Lii D' M '.1:1.llil'Jlm ~ .79 Fnlli llnall 1111 -~ .81 ll1hl' llll l'llt Qlfl ~ ~ 1.19 11111111111• Dlllilm = ~ 1.1111 .~sEAR>oo) 1111111111 ........ ~,.... ~1.111 Fwy l1l•c.lf ... f.tll'~U8 C*ta .... Fiiia -"':.. ~1.69 Clrll-fnlli Flall IMI == .17 ~~) Gourmet queHry, outaranding nrlety p1e111no pr1eee. l.11°1 Sllclil MW--~"":lli=.-.39 • . ~V'ONssucioAi.t -glljl. ~MEAT BOLOGNA • SANDWICH F-'VOJllT! La.. ... .. -.... -~.-_ ..... 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H-1'11111 ~. .AB Frllli Cll PoaP11111 _ .. .....,,_ -.19 Vloll .. , ___ ,., an )'Ollt'IMM9QlnMdl.. r···--M-~taa..,~·M MILLBROOK VODKA "':."' IO"'°°"" UL Crylllla. Gallo Pllk c.8111 Alm Ce1• 1111Ct --- .97 Z.19 1.99 NIB LETS CORN CAMPBELL'S SOUP THE UN-COLA 7-UP YOVLIKEIT.-ITUKESYOU F111s"HEN Tll!~!j 10-14 US. AVr:J. WT. ..,,~ ..... milk: blmd In --.. !be!'~ cbocolate and hall the !lour cookie 11 about S lndM!o long. mizlUre. Bike In I 1"i><Oled !so. Stir in the r<malnlng flour degm .... I lo t mlnul<I. mixture, mWng w~U. Press Wllh a wkle•1p1tula remove to through a cookie gun. u!1ng wire racta to cool. Store In a ribbon shape and medium lightly covered Un box. Makes thlclme.u, onto u n g r e a s e d about 7 dolln. , ·~~--~~~~-'-- OVl'-11.ltand ........ ~~""-I\ 8t'R19'1111Ct """''= .39 1111111T•111 '::...~ .19 Fnl*lllll ... ~ .37 1w111vi..1ii1• = .Z5 .lllly Plfllll "lll!:=-.29 fnslltlrnlllrnflll = .Ii MRS. FILBI! ~C!ARINEl~ llllldSuluUrllOnqa ·~ .z5 lllllllm Wlllll Cliu "~ .37 V.. lnlll llltll Clllll ';If .79 11111111 CIMlll ~ ':.::: .17 I'll A ftt Ulllr .. '1:'AI. ':::' , .111 • UNCLEBl!NS 8TUFl"-N-8UCH ll:li. ADDI TONMftM. e ,., ............ 1-==-• wllllihlllll.lllM ~=' .21 FacfFn er. ... "'..::"" Z4 Jn111N 11111r -:o~~ .n lllllC IUlll 0111111-='~-.a, HIJifT'a HOLE · 1 ~S,~S 21:l". El11illfl P.M: THllll ~ 1.12 11111111 AlllCN ,.... ..:=. . Al SlllAlllTllMll -==--:.=:i .69 CRl!MI! RINSI! T:fi. MO. wmt IOD't AHD'&ONDI ' llllK11111Alllrllllnllllill~lfl.4C .II.I Clllll 8""1 ~ .18 11111111 Ollllll• -=.::.-:.,. = .79 1 L EM ii~ ;TOOTHPASTE 5~ (EXTMLAAOE~.120Ff _ • Pacljlla Dry Skll Cm "!l"" .48 ,,...., Lltlll • -::==::-.58 ... 1111111 Dnp .::= .62 ..... -·· • To moot llloppOrl, --loW ,.-ror qualllflllO'IU* --.11 .. -111 v_...., _ .. adwtrtlle 1111NI .OW priole oa ..... If' oAfour--_... 111111 allllt; · clllrJ prodUGta; trutll Md nptd I 1 Ii ond ..... ~ 11111 ..... --··""""' --...... -,... ......... ~.._ llrtgltl .,_,., v ___ ,....._11111•.• pt-. to got blllor nluoo tor ,..., .._..,._,v ... 111111-.- --1ntown. rr~~~---~ , 18 DOUBLE Bi · BLUE CHIP STAMPS CJI I Wf1H ANr GIOCRf PUICHASI I ' I ,....u.-,, ...... ...,....... I I I I 0 1 _.__ .. ~.... VONS ·------~~---· I': a• g; +1gwg ..... 1 SAVE with tliis I I coupon on I I J.lf · 11:. 49 I I~~• I : D -=::o.:r~ VONS I .,.. ___________ ,.... __ 2.J r:~--g11+111p1+---.. 1 SAVE with this . I 1 . coupon on I !COMET 1~ 1 Qi · 1 CLl!ANSER • J I D -~..:::'~ VONS IJii-----------------HOUSEHOLD NEEDS Orclilll lllJkln '=rT .II 8fM 30-811. TM hp == .II VIII Alilll • Fiii :t.:.'11:.. .4' PWflnl A1r11118"1 I.Ill o:r..o:= .• ASH ~19\1 _;~~r:~~:t. .. •Yi!I Tht Foltowlno lltmt 119 •valltbM et mottVONS M~ '""' ,.,.. o:::.:r..::.=: .ea P11tJ PICt 1111-=tol!!I .II 111111 Z-QI. Plialfc Pllclilr = . 71 fiO-Oi:"FoAM- 11cE CHEST ~wmtHAHDll •-DM11on11 ::=rn:: 1.114 RIPl8Wlllllldorllt ~ 1.17 VIII Frla-Ylll1ll "E" O::.'=n"llt 1.71 :ANACIN m ~~~~.:o.~ +•.'YWM~ ·MONS CLASSIC TRACK E VONc:; SPl:l,1/!I. nr:Krr orr Fr;· - For Weekender Advcrtisi 11 g a... ouAl.Mil'crDUcm ;HCau.-0.. L __... ............ ----·-··· ~ .__It """'°""' Hm_ ... _... ... _,I Jlllmllll ~· LYllll 1 -=~---·----·'"tir~' "'I:'"--1 r-••1!! .. ..... 1 ..... _ t.M .... -----... -Ill ··1..i .... -.a-··--74 • 69 ICrtft -~·....,,_ ________ • .tt ...... ------... . ·--.. ozs. • ..... ~·-·· ---··-~ ·"' .......... ,.. . • -,.,.OIWUION ·- • Phone 6424321 10111 Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach ..__ ___ ........,,34051 D.oheny Park Drive, Ca~rano Beach 5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beacb Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro • 21082 Beach .Blvd., Huntington Beach · 17950 Magnolia, Fountain Yaney . I \ j • • • ' ' • -,MIJ 16,197) WfdllHdly, M~ 16, 1~7l DAI LY PILOT 41S • Lilce Molher, Ulce Daughter I ' ~ ....... ....,,,""",_...~,,,,,-=="",,,....,,,,,,,,.~-=-.-.,.,._ Performer Als_o at Ease in _Kitch n NEW YORK -~w. were famom for our coot houaat .. In fact, if the pey ... ., the 11me and lt eame to u act'• malldnc a declJloll between our dreuaoranot.ber-.we aftm Id the act ofter they'd -out .... coot-:· uld ,,,,. Qlst1anl of the fam- ed dmD family. '-ibe 'cook bouae' is where food Is prepared and served for ~ who wort and perform under.the bl( top. "Our family, beln( Italian, set a roalJy great table! My grandmother coobcl every cloy and alnya bad ropedal ollves and bO<a d'oeuvres oo the table. 0 My mother was born in America, but she fell right In- to the family palf<m -she's a fantastically good cook." us 'and there was often mt underataod our waY of llfe. ~ cup diced carrot~ ' larp saucepan (or skillet ). dllCl1mlnaUon. Al I rtlUlt, we 'nlemore, we have to be able 1 Iarse clove garlic, finely C.ook onion, carrot and garlic learood to llllek loplhor. to ooq>penSate and go more l1linc<d in butter-oil mixture until ••14y father always taught ua than half w111y when we meet 1 can (ll ounces ) Italian vegetables are limp . to try to gel along with people others.' plum tomatoes Add r<maJnlng ingredients. becaUJO wbeo r"' go to a new '"l'bat'1 belpod me a lot In Salt, !reshly ground pepper coot •bout IV• hours, stirring -. ""1 wont the people to being able to cope wUh tblnga, · to wte occasionally. Taste to correct lib )'OU and want you to come especlally ln lbow bush>ML i teaspoon dried oregano . seuonhlg. bee* because that's your 1 teaspoon dried bull (or 1 Greaf to serve over baked Uvellbood. 'nNA'S MARINARA MVCE tablespocm freob chopped (0< broiled) chicken, veal. 1'0:mequenily, circus people 't4 cup olive oil 1 basil) fish, or lightly s t e a rn e d would bend over.JJackwards to 2 tablespoons sweet butter Handf\1..1 chopped f r e 1 h vegetable.!! ( tu cc h in i or be agreeable. My father 2 large yellow onions, peeJ. t pareley spinach). Makes about 3'11 al!fa)'I saJd, 'Many people do ed, chopped 1 Heat olive oil and butte in _cup&. ~~~~+-~~~~~~----~~~~~~~~-"--'-~--~~~~ ' T ina Cri1tl1nl knows how to make• tmall kitchen Into a workable masterpiece~ Orlglnally, the RI n g 11 n c Brothen Clrcllll brouslt the Crlstlanla totbo U.S. Later, the .,. family owned and openJed Its own circua and toured the ooantry. • : 1111 su.1r · At that time, dinner under the big top WU surprisingly formal , the tables covered wUh spo.rkling linens and tho men r.qutr.d to wear jacketa at dinner. Tina, who ls now an ~as, will be aeen thla summer star- ring in . Paramount's· "Badce 373." Her lilchen Is small but worbble. and reneCts · her cln:us background. , "I've learned haw to work in a restricted area so I like evecythlng within a hand's reach. l've...teslgned the work •PllC<, putting in . • hrtcber block and fliJ>:up shelves with special blJlges." She lites to entertain in the small dllletto that Olijoim bu kitchen. . "I 1ove ~avies·and sauces. One pf my favorije disheo Is a thing I call Cze<:boslovaldan chips, that Mom always made. "It cooldn't be easier -you just brown cubea of floured, ...aoned round mak, then add a couple of cans of mnwmme and cook it to death! Mom alwa)'I serves it over rice. SomeUmes, she adds tomatoea, cnions and fresh berbl. . "When I make sauces, I just throw in aD.ytblng I have, and never measure. I mate a very slmpJe saI.:I, but everyone always flips over it. "Tue a bead of n>main• and cut It In ball. Fry up aome . bacon until It's nice and crisp, add the bacon bits and ...., vlnepr to a good botiled Jlo. quefonl dressing, then just spoon Jt over the greens." lleeently, nna prepared a spedal meal of French pepper si..t, atartlng off with a "nifty appetizer of wblte bread spread With mayonnaise flavored with lreshly grated Parmesan cheese, and ligbUy oven-touted. Sile talked about the cln:us way of life. "You can get addicted to It. Every lime I fmd myself got· ting near a ring, I got very nostalgic. CrCUJ people are lovely people and Ve r-y trusli:rW: once they have ac- cepted you. "lt'1 a much more stable life than one imagines. For ex- ample, each fall I always returned to school in the same place, after being on tour dur- ~ ing the summer months. (: "And in the summers, if there were any children in the act.1:, we always bad a tutor. It was alrnos_& like going to awn- mer school." Tina bec>me a battback rider when she wu three, and has walked the low wire, performed on the trapeze aod • ridden ., -ge; But the greatest les..m she learned, she aaya, wa,., boW to get along with other people. "When we moved from t • ·to town, people would stare at Spots Erased ~ formulat' for remov· Ing Spots from CO!lll!b are: I: I le-mild liquid ~ delerJioil (IJpe used lo< -htlbd;dlabwashlng), . 1 cup lukewarm Mte"r 2: 1/3 ~P white vinegar .. 213 6ip lukewann wafer 3: I tablespocm bomehold ammonia . 3/1 cup water (do not use llils ... -carpeta.) Squeeze mixture on spot. Blot It with ct.mp cloth. Rinse well with clear water, being careful not to wet carpet backlnJ. Blot dry. 'Fo~ .fieekender Adv~rtising . Phone 6424321 .. t , ·Ralpha Meat Master Beef is aged by the same process that fine restaurants - This process brings our meat to its greatest potential for ftavor and tendemesa. Switch to Ralphs1md discover that economy doesn't have to taste like a bqaln. '• . FRESHNESS DATED MEAT MASTER MEATS DtlJCATESSEN DEPARTMENT PRODUCE DEPARTMENr fJrtJ of lh• ••aeon p ., .. _ .... Ive Super lwget'" ... 89 A INC&AL COIHlltATK>N OP~ O"OUND 11!11 AliD 1UT\HlilD'IOY PROTlrM. u.a.D.A. Qalce-F,.th Lamb Shoulder Roast a. ,89 U.&O>-Cholce-FNllt ' L,amb Shoulder Chops ... 1.18 II ID A CIMlioe-ff'Hlt Lamb Slr1oln Chops ... 1.78 .... _llMtuSMr Ctrt . Boneless Clod Roast ... 1.39 Fi~'"·-... 2.96 rn;:i;ee:; Brisket ... 1.11 ..... Qll .. ,....., Fresh Port< Chops Dnl;l1u1tmobd Piner C9okedHam --81otd.-11b.Packq• Rmph&Bacon ---Boneless Harri . Mon91-WetMAdd9d . Boneless Ham Slii:es RMll.9tand-C..... C.U-lb. ... SlabBacon ........... -M--1'1t.- Sllced Bacon ..... -lfowft'• ..... Pork Unk Sausage ... 86 .. .85 .... 99 .. J.91 _ ... 1.89 .... 7f .... 88 ..... 79 ,... . . fl'llll 2-21<n. f pYll'S . ... _ ...... 45 ' ' .... . ... .... 61 .... 89 .... ~86 . S.EAFOOD DEPARTM~NT ; .... 1.89" ~ .. . '" .. 1.08 ., UQUOR DEPARTMENT uae..-.. s.W•• . VOJlka = 8.99 1 JoiioiOioW---UI Red !Jibe! Scok:h • = 18.75 Bou .. -....... AnclenlAge = 11.39 - 1111.CIH ,_.....,..1-'foWQollt Ge1111an Wines -1.69 -·--12 ........ Aspen Gold Beer ,;:_ .• 96 ... -~ lll 1188f Franks ~, ·UOL .89 ... 1.13 120L 1,07 lo:r. .78 •IOL .94 loa. .81 ...... 86 , .... 33 1 lb. .43 1111. ~47 ..... 26 1'plnt .38 ' HOUSEHOLD VALUES ... --....... co.,, 3 a Alumlrtlim Chairs .... • a __ ..__,........ 1 69 PlcnlC Jugs . .... • 'nlt..W..,-Coi1'1potct, l'DrtalM-t!" -. Bart:Je.que Grills · .... 1.99 Nenr Nftds latlefln-One ,..., au1rentM 89 Endura Hand Ught ..... THIS IS RALPHS SUPER CENTURY 1873-1973 11111(11 , B1m•l4' Tld8 , Yellow , Paaehes CalHorN• Avocados ,.. ... 49 -.28 l•rt•• Cotch911a Whtie G;rarapet""""'ruit Pre•h, Ctt1p Celery -Fr1ah, Topt Rtm0ffd Carrots ,.. .. ,niah RMI Radlah .. Of Green Onions - FLORAL DEPARTMENT .18 .11 .12 .10 2W' Pot-1nclool aa House Pl8nts -• rPot - H&rVml Y.fllvet PWtts-. 2.87 I BAKERY DEPARTMENT -------Ralphl Bread ~.41 ,...,._Qkl , ..... 'Tallano Breed r.ets Whale 1•1111 ....... aa ------11111 FasNalad Sb111nad Glmd Size lea Cream !:!.59 Biby Food ·~r:.~07 Detergent Corn •.:.19 ~:.79 11 •• ,.,, ....... Price. •-••"""'\ s,.dol Alln•ce. HEALTH &•BEAUTY AIDS .... 59· -· ..... 89 -· ...... 78 -· uoc. 88 ...... ..... 48 .... . .... 66 ..... Bi;'~:i"Tllilets ';.; 1.21 --·"!t'I ---. 88 OfdSplce ~~ • FROZEN FOOD ......... Spl/llcl1 Soullle --· Butlermllk wame. "-Co11c1nlnte I lfmlallan Punch .......,._,.._. CoolWhlp ONIM..._. ComOnCob .......... Noocln Romlnoll .... .. -IMlllttil Pepperoni Pizza 11 ~ ... 47 ."t"" 43 .... .... .... 21 ...... ..... 55 ..... ... 76 .... . ·~ .47 ':; .96 °' ..•. ,...,. ,.,.._ ....... ,.... , 8 69 1llllC8y A0lll9 MOL.... o • -Prices elloc;tlve ~ 17 lhrough M1y 23 4i&& EVERYDAY Lqty PRICES • PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS n:, .69 '... 84 Plfte4cM-U..Uld o•n • Pina a ••• '"' 89 -· "'.::: .19 ,. .. --•'' ..... 66 -· ..: .68 ,, ... 26 ..... ... 81 ...... .... 48 -· -·· .... ~2.87 HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS FROZEN FOOD PANTRY FILLERS P,WTRY FILLERS PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS --111 ... AntocldTobteta --l'oldantTo---Prt1tHn Powder ,,, __ Acllva -Pallll ..._ ... ..... -........... .. --PolktentPo .... .~-.: .29 -:.:: .71 ~t.02 . .::t.t7 •.:AO --=.ea ---OrangeJ'*9 ---.......... •.:.11 ~.n --Mb:ed Vegetablea •,: .U --,....,,... r.; ..... ,..., . r Bo,..nborry PIM ' · -.. a ....,,,__.._._ 1\nk., Routa -~ 1..- --V1nltta W.,.,. '~.42 ...,_,.,.,.._Dllilt ' eon .. •;1.oe ---•.: .11 CatfoM --·-.43 ---. ... -·-lla1plla Flour ~.A ·--_.,... •.:AT ' ....... -...a·-·•.:.ff ----!:.40 ,__ ........ ~ CanrMCf Pop 81lad Df•tllng TolletTlUH ---•.:.n ...,... __ _,, •;.a1 --· Selllne Oacbra CoftffCre•m• D1t1rg1nt ·-·.: .28 ---"'.: .31 .._ ....................... Fruit Coaldll Cinnamon Paper Towell --· •;: ...... ...... _°"' ~"".: ..21 -----....... -Or11n Ilana Qr1nutetecl 8oep ·-•.:.32 1114-1.lpl•-i:.20 __ ..__.o.i.. TolnotoJuloe Brown"8"91r , Tolllt TlllUI ... -----Powdwtd lupr ~.20 lntt1ntCoffH ·:1.n W1ter lorteMr The IHP•••bt wl1l1 Suerkff prices RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 380 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA; 9901 ADAMS BLvD., HUNTINGTON. BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER· ' ' I LAGUNA HILLS, 24167 PASEO DE VALENCIA 1726117th ST., TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM STORE HOURS: 9-10 DAILY, 9-9 ' 1- ----= .11 ":.; At ~.37 -,;; .7t 4.:At ~ .... "" ., , ·~ ' .;")'~ ., , ~' ~ "" ' -"" .,.:: ... , 'I. ;,.' . ' JV. Ji ) ...~"' ' ' "' ,{(f: •J,IM! ..~ '"""" 1';J)") '1& { ' "1'1. ;:W.J1 . ..., ' •"'l ~ ... I J .. ;; ' . .... j .... -' "J "'" "-'' . -= .. ... :, " ,, . " • ,, ( ' I .,. I _ _I ' i ' I I I ! , - - -·~ . -• • DAILV Pu.or w-. MaJ \6, 197> • -namas 1\nswer !land , -'·-· ---.-,~. ...· ·.:.,-_-,..._-. drilii<il tlpl lrid Oilm Sid c e • aiiilC!iaai tiriilh.--1il toponloable • ~-" creamy -,.... ....,.._, •-ether ..... cream, mllll. fl>al lhe cloctor order• for the 2 ~~ly chopped cooked GarnlJb wllb tUcod banana. Rd...,. to. heal; coot. allr· ;;:'gar and ·.;;ui Cover and <bot ......., Yield: I-... rlq COllltantly, unlil minute Jl:lcer ·~uent. ~cup mashed bananas COlDtil t.o ,a boil Md thlci.tm. over bollirig water 111.i to 2 ''It ofl<n upsets a balJllehold (3 medium! a---Add ,.it and cheese; stir until bt>uQ, stirring """""""'°Y· completely t.o have a member In large bowl mis alt ln· 2 tablelpoonl buttU or ~ ~lta. until ,rice ii tender. 'Of the family suddenly put on gredients. Spoon Into i greu-margarine Remove from lleat and stir , . BANANA RICE PUDDING a Utile rice m11t1re into. egg · 111 ulcer .4iet· ed custard cups or an ~ 2 tablespooqs flour • , , , . yolb. Stir yolk nimture back " Famlllar· foods can come to inch loaf, pan. Bake in aso I 'h cups ~ cream i,i, cup uncooked regular rice into pOOding. .. ftbe ret00e in such a diet. degrees F. oven 25 minutes for ~ ~:.= aal~ i ~: ~~cream· Coo~ 2 or 3 millltes, stirring Bananas have just the cups or 55 minutes for loaf. 1h cup (2 ounces) shredded "5 cup slipt constantly. Rem<we fro m qualities most needed. The Remove from oven aod let Swiu cheese v4 teaspoon ·nu heat : 'stir ln vanilla end cool. tesblre is sort Md naturally atand 10 minutes. Tum_out on· · In medium sauce~n melt 3 egg yolks P;eel bananas and slice. Fold I I ! ,lll100lh. The naval\ 18 "¥'1'°"· lo serving platter. butter; blend tn flow'. Rtm<>'• 2 teaspoons vanilla it\lo pudding. <llill until ready .ne~~b:~e:tiecyr,_~Serv~e~w~ilb~~~f~t~as~par~a~gus~~fro~m~bea~t~and~s~tlr"._J:ln~cre~am~~4~ba~nan~as~~-~-~~W~oerv~-~~~r~1e~~~:~·l~aet'l'inp:'.:'.'.".'!~·~~~'......::..::,.~_:_~~--=:::::::::::i:.;::::.:;.:.:.::::.:_::.:;::.:....~~:.:....~ .• ~·~~--;,:---~ tah.e, t b a t "stay-with-you feelioC", bananaa cau.se no gaseow: distress. ·- Bananaa can be mashed to a creamy consistency, easy to blend Into lbe pureed foods that the bland diet requlrea. Bananu are Very low In cost. Unlike IOllle f o o d 1 necessary 1n this diet pr&- gram, bananas have held lhe . I~ 'In price foi; lbe put twen- ty years. Using bananas, dellghtful dlshea can be prepared for lbe ulcer sufrerer. These will not make him feel tel apart to eat bland, uninterettlng foods. The whole ramlly will enjoy gom-met Banana Chicken Tim· bales. Por dessert, there i s IU>dou• Banana Rice Pudding. BANANA C8ICKEN 11MBALES 2eggs II cup chicken broth 11r.r cups eoti tlread crumbs 1112 teupoons salt 2 teaspoOIUI grated onion 2 tablelj)OO!ll bnely chopped . p1m1;o1o 1 can (2 or 3 ounces) chop- Egg Rate ·Reaches New low Leftovers Curried ·Good way to use Jeftover fQU:t lamb., LAMB CIJRRY '"... 3 tabfespoons butter l man onion, diced (~~ cup) 'iii mectium apple, pared and diced (II cup) J tablespoons flour. , 1 table!poon curry pc:nirder 1 can (JOlh ounces) con- densed chicken broth, un- diluted 1A cup heavy cream 2 cups cubed cooked lamb In. a JJ;ledium saucepan over low hell inelt the butter; add onlon.JIJld •Pill• and cook uotU ..n....d: lltlr Jn floor and cur- ry powder. Gradually 1tlr In bnilh, then crt!am. Q)ot, atiJTing con- stantly, until thickened and bubbly. Add lamb; 11!heat. Serve with rice and pus chutney incl peanllll. Makes 4 Rnings. FRESH FRYERS USDA &RADE A ""'"'~" 45 t K•CKl!PH UNCOOIOIT!ONll..l..Y c . ~.~~~~~ • LI CCUT·UI' •1tYlltl JI< LI) Low Ewer day Priced Deli Items ! · DEOOORAIT 97 C Pu1llbunon con 1-0t.. AlllOIOL HolrCar• 9 byC~~ 7 ~ C , ,..,,.,,,_ ... Kl(lk(I !l \J -m11w•s . -I-DRY CITIDI &LASS CDOllE JAR c,,..... s21• lre1hne11, "MELITIA"~-, ., COFFEE -~ llllER ' For good•ta11ing C2' i · '"drip" !ICl'VDr. ....~ _ $297 ·cl . , ,. · -. itlt:ifl'A" - COFFEE FltTERS Poc.kog• ol •O. 7 6 C STllAW WOIEI TRIVETS Colorfvl 1tyl ... 44 C CDOLERTAl!PER Plattlc "9frtgerotor $ 117 MYero,. liHtM'· f ~ . $127 Smoothing! ' 14.QL ULTRA BRITE TOOTH PASTE ,..,.,.,,°" " DISI 111111111 MOii T"ANASUPHMAlll!lt. A OISCOUHl CINTll Off'IH AV A· • r =v.i:.~~~';:;,- GAIOIN NUOS. A 1 MONfT- SAVIHO IVllYDAT IOW f'lltCIS. . t'-~t'I I. ltlr ;f~I 1 IMIMUM • 111 Se. SMI• t.iltfl "'4. AMllllM • l:tO W, l1 ,.... a • ._ - AllllA • 113 I . ...,.,._ i••ll IAl.DWI• Pllll • 1)14t ..... ,.. 11•1. CANOGA Piii • 71M ..... A•t. W. C0¥11U · I•~·'"'""' Chi. DOW#lf · IUt fhtt1• .... IO.l.aflfll GIDYI ; ll'7M"ic:N St •. c;.&1(1111 GIOVI • I !011 ........ lo St. .GU.llO'll . nu w. ~Mtkf lh,. GUllDAll · 10CIO W. Co-9•-' •••· "'Gtll,.tJID Piii • Ut'W. l•1. ~S • 11UMn11ifttl'.WA<M ""51 .. ,.._ ),._ :r.111U1t1G)ot1~flCll • IUClf 1t1 .. ni11 St. llG\llfA 111\lt · S• ~hf. ol lt ,_ ' II MltAOA . l9 MiooH. """"" (,,., IADIWOOO • ltlt .... Slit,... C,.. t••••u . ,, .. , i., """'""• w.4. llllllOI · !0101 "-'-A•I. lllfWOOO • 11111 l"-1'k I ••· IOMO 0lllC11 • af1J I.,,.., St. - I. ICK AllOO.U • J'°5 l . -..... ,.. l•t. llllOlllOVIA • 411 W. """' .. 101 o.i .. •011n11uo . en ... """'' llOIWllll , u.,. ........ . ,Ofl.\ltl . ;. .... , .............. . • PAJAOllA • M ( • .fie s...-1 , • WI MIUID~1 HI•),....,.. sio,. I. ta." GllllU ,,A 1 •. ~•t-'• WI "'*' • nii tt. .. wnA ,,., . 1n• s.. "1ttll W111 MOlfl(& • '611' ~ .... sou111 oan • 1111 11."''"' ""''· llOOllOO lllCll -II n ... ,. ... 11¥4, TO .. .OICI , 1150 P.f1nt c-.. 11 llwy, TOHllKI • ... '-"'"'' th4. tvNMO• • aut ,...... "'" TI.ISi• ' IJ11t .. ., ........ ht 11, wn:~" . 1111 ~ ••. ·~n • -1•1! ltf'ot ... St wtS .. •JTll ..... Wtti..IM,., .. Tftfl • IM$5 S-111 f1 A••· •1111m1 . 111M I. WMttltr "'4. 1r10•o1oro• . 1m ••· A•""" WOOOl.tMO lllUJ • 1 ... Vlnwt ... 4. •·•~'ti). .. ·Klflkfl SUPPOSITORIES::O:'.{;r:'.''"'' I TllAY SET $21a 59 c • . s139~ ,.,_, ;_ .•. ,. .... ,., .... :1m 11'• '"Iii p ,,. •• , .. , ~--------' STORES OPEi 10-lll' \ ) • ' T-BONE STEAi 8EEF LOii U'"Co+IDlTIOlt.lLLN '$ 1 ·69-. •O"DllDF01t OU,.ltTYAND ,. ~p.1101. La (l'OllTll.KOUlll ~TIAK I." Li i ,. • OLYMPIA BEER .. : .... : .... ~ • .:l.62 DINNER WINES ........... '.'::::.';2.0S I • °""'"· ~. ~ -· S.... • "• ' ' ' SC01CH ........ ; ...... :.;:;_.\"'..';l9.77 I ~~AVllillA • .U~lGUlRCilllllWll"llGUIM:Dll"I.> ""' ... ,... ••• ..... w ~Van de Kamps 111 *t~=:t:::~.1.• AN OUTSTANDING VARtnY , ,..,.,......,. -• of '11611 IAlllRT GOdDs r pntm0tlonol au~ ... lWJ'.<t•.;lololo•tl w.,f ,,.,. ..... i.v..,·~·· ' . . ' ~ ... 211l'A . · liACI ' . ? RACll8 .Tllll. '. ·: '! auy a t1¥1r,, ·~ lwo~ -. s 89': ·~ ... ~, ... ' ' ' -. ' '1•%· .,... . · ClllED AllE. RUGS 11 . 2•"i'!•O!"'wC.~•pile . ' Jn bright color•. s2•• . . . ..... f . ; .. ~ t. 211 11!. . SUPER 111.LJ!ED _ 11111 TIU•; ,tOJM,ii.g ..,C.. , P't ,• ,,3, ,. . .. • '-4 ...:·. .. ~ - ' . i'C'iqj11 5 1 ~'7 ;-~~I ww•re wi!h foam . ~ Ii'!.'" ............... , ' JACQl~I ;t 1µc1 llW~L , - Blg :w• 62" """\oiUCIM s.Ja1 '~.', • ' 1 ·Ji\ con•• r1111T • , ' 1 llTCIEI TIWEL 47c ·~.'." P're1ty ond proctlcoll ~ • '11MA~EIT PllEll ', I : ~ •• NGRT 'SUEIE ...!' " 0 DRESS S)lllf -~ ,t., I -,._ .. .. lO•'l'<are OQl~"l't/. c•nan b"renJ.. COion 1111 10.t/2 to 11 •• \ -~ .... ) • w-. ""' l&. 1973 DAILY PILOT L -. '-6".~. .. . FrB.nkly, a lot of speciaJty breads today aren't all that special., They're more lik~ , evecyday bread in a thin c&guis~ 'Butthere is one truly unique ·. speci~ty bread we'd · ·like · - . you to try. ·New · · . , · . . I .. o Millbroo~ Up;_Side- .. . D.<>wnB~ea ,,.s~~fill.outthe ·. · · coupon below : 1mml.it.to us along with-a wrapper frem-' read"you're now --· , -q_si.pg . .lnretUrij;we'U_sendyoy.:a. , rt~"._a~goodfor ' what :tnaY.: b~ the finest loaf you~.~ver .tast ~or toas!e0.1 ~t's made \Vl_t}], go.ad, , aturatfbings like farm-fresh·cr erybutterand _pure hone~ 1~ it's actually '· ' " I baked ups1 1 ·down. For good ... ,. ,. '" .. ·;:'\'''' · teason. ,Yo see,afterthedoughha5risenirtthe usualfashi n,aspeciallidallowsusto ·tum-eachbread -, , pan upsid down. So during baking, the.flavor-filled · ye~t bub !es rise throughthe do~gh a s,econd time. 'The res .js a cake-like texture, a honey-combed ,. cru$t and list a touch of sweet-. . ' . . . . . .. . ,,.}~"""~ " •, . . nes~., Se for your Creoledisbescompinethesubtle . . freeloafo wheat . flavoring of French cooking,. the zest • ofSpanishreciPe81m<fato~c!i·¥tbe . • ·Or white Up ' ~~~M~,!!tpµr~er:. • .. ·. · · ·SU.ie-Down today. =ncation Program, EdiSo11 Home ' ' F.conomists present recl.pes'for Jam~~. Cbic11en Gumbo File, Shrimp Arllaud iiil(t .. other tempti~ dishes. Plan now to visit us ana see·bow ~118)' it all is to prepare. \Ybileyou'rewith us, we'll present you . W:i free copy of Edison's recij>0 · _ You just iliightgain anew bread. · . . ..... 'We just migbrgain ane\vcustomei: ' .. '. . e Art o~ Crwle, Cooking!' l'OUNTAIN . • \ ,_ !P,t'£.\!.' :j-~ •, = Cr .:.:., .j ft -~~ .......... C.. 111M ·-~!·1::·· ....... , ~.11 .. 21 ,'1'71 ~ •!Ii:;:'"'" -'Ii "Jilt ..... ~-~. ..... • 91 jllt'. •. "\' • T ........ MllJ ~ 1'7~ _, ~ ~ •• ·,v : lfJJ ·• ......... . 10:1(~ ·~~ -ir::::~·c,, .. ,j, HUllTIM~ -CH IJ9' W• li11t• ........ ....... .... Cs *f CW.. 1'# Q 0 i• Mer·llo 1t1J. 7'9! ~ t• 911•1 i4M) ,. .. , ..... 'i::-.r .,/,~ .... ......,_,m. .....,,...,M;1m. 1 :Joe.a. - 11&JI .... .. "1 ..... '. . l " / •• --'· Mil.I.BROOK ~-· · .w~w:B·~~E~~ .• itfl<StmaybetM:jinest,.,.,,youw or ........... . . ~ . ~ -:-i -• • • • -· .. I' t ' •. ' ' " . ; • •• • 1 . r G lllEhiihil!! Bl'ffllll COl'IUWi . •• : -'. . .. -~"" --T""-...,.. • I ' , I ·I ! J .! J j • • -"" , -. ... • ,_ --~ , ,,, IJAILY PllOT Wtdnlwii1, MAJ lb, 1~73 The only thing we cut when we went di scount was prices. We've kept our quality. we 've kept our services --and we will keep our prices as low as we can and still open the doors. And our 24-hour supermarkets are still Open 2-l hours a day to serve you. , How can we afford discount price s and around-the-clock service? }.,or one thing, we 've been24-hour markets for years -- our entire system is set up for it. For another, one of our biggest costs of doing business lies in the stores themselves. The stores are tb,ere 24-hours a day, open or not. W.ilh our experience, it. doeS~t15i tB·that much more"to staff them and keep them ope n for your convenience. !-'or proof o( how )OVi' ~fayfair 'prices· are, look at the accompa- nying price compa rison of items that the U.S. Government uses to measure the cost of food. RETAIL MEAT PRICE COMPARISON BASED ON U.S. DEPT. OF LABOR, BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS ITEM LI ST, AS OF MAY 5, 1973 ' TOT4l ' SAVINGS ::::. Of" UNIT AT .ITEMS COST MAY'AJ" M1yf1lr " J2.3'5 .... 1 Panl•y 22 36.96 M•rl•lr 25 33 24 i .39 M11ket S•iktt " 3'5.63 ... ,.,.,, " 26.88 ... S1 tw•Y " 21.10 Mt~fit " 30.4'5 2.%4 Alp 1 811• " 32.69 'Being able to shop anytime you choose, and your savings from our lowest food prices, are two im- portant reasons why, at l\fayfair, discount prices are more fair. PeacJies FIRST OF SEASON Mayfair c:Best ~uys in Produce MusJtr001Il5 FRESH SAVORY • 86LB. ~ariarias CENTRAL AMERICAN .11 LB . 70triatoesSALADSIZE .2SLB. c5\v2~.~~~ -LARGE SIZE 3FOR 1.00 ~roccoli GREEN'ONIONS Tender •...•.•.... BU .• 10 . BROCCOLI Fr•sh, Tender . , . , ... lb .• 28 SPANISH ONIONS U.S. No. 1 ......... lb .• 25 CELERY Tender Re-d Band ...• e• •• 14 CAULIFLOWER .Fresh, Tender .• , .•• ee .• 39 BLOOD ORANGES Gourmet Delight , ••• pkg .• 49 CARROTS Crisp Tender 1 lb. C8110 e.~ ... _ . e• .. 14 RADISHE S S.l•d De light ..•• , .. BU .• 10 FRESH TENDER BULK CANOY .Assorted Ver1eties Cello Wrapped ...•• , lb .• 39 WHITE GRAPEFRUIT Oeserl Grown 8 1b. Cello Bag . , ..•• ea .• 89 VALENCIA ORANGES Sweet Juicy 8 lb . Ce llo Bag .• _, • ,ea .• 98 FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT Indian River Ruby & While •••• , S for 1. 00 MUMS Flor1I Ou11lity 6" Pots .. , ... , , .. ea. 2.49 HOUSE PLANTS ' Assorted Varieties 21/4" Pots •••••• 3for 1.00 8trawberries LOCAL RED RIPE - 12 OZ . BASKETS • • yrorind ;:Bet;f FANIL Y PAK• 3 LBS. OR t.fPRE UE$ THAN 3 LBS .. 8~ LB . 3 H OOUARTERS WITH BACIC 3 F EOUARTERS WITH BACK 3 NGS -GIBLETS & NECKS INCLl}OED - .I , Chu~ ·Steak BLAOE CUT - MARINATE OR B~A-8-0UE • • ~Sliced Pork Loin 11TO1~ CHOPS-. CENTER LOIN & END CHOPS MIXED :.l Round 8teak BONE-IN FULL CUT - GREAT TO PAN FRY OR SWISS • ' .. . ~ • •• . • . · .. • • ~ ' • " ~ ~ • ) .. ' ~ > l -, ·: ' ' -< 1 ' •. •. . -. l '-~~~~~~~~~--": , • • .. Mayfair ~st_ ~ufein Meat \11-...jim----------------------...i . Smo!.@d ,,.. Ham HOF FMAN BRiNo . DRY CURE op 8irloi"rf. 8teal{§. 18. 9. SHANK _PORTION -6 TO 7 LB. SIZE ; BONELESS -BROIL OR BARBECUE • LB. ·'·~·;i.-----------------------.., q'-Bone 'Steak$ ' · ·. · -" This week'S.~st"Buys inGroa,nj.es, TAILS REMOVED '-'BROIL OR BARBECUE 1.6 9 LB. u.---ilijo, --~ .. "!.!". •. ---.-------.... ·---ittt;I nrLamb NEWZEALAND nn Scope MoutJi~~~~ .99 ; e/FAozEN U.S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED .77LB. • resJiFryers ~~~~~ ~ooy 4 '7 <;_Del Mo11.te GatsuP,. oz. BOTT LE .1·9 l FOSTER FARMS, WHOLE BODY ... s•~ lb. • 1 LB . Sunshine : ~?,~~fill~~~ FRvo• BAKE J.48u.. Hydrox Cpokies 20oz,-.!f.9 J 'lbp RolJI/.d 8teak§ 1.49 LB. LEAN , BONELESS rte~!Js?.'!!~ ~!~~A~B-OUE 1. 79 LB. BONE'!.'!T1eN:Ye~~~!H & FLAVORF UL! 1.19LB. §!!.<r~<!a. !!cf!~<!rlJcK OR REG. SLICED .97LB.' A den/M£1J.~!f!1 MONTEREY JACK 1. 07LB. OL" IR diNIA BOLOGNA All eat or All Beef 1 lb Pkg .••..••• ,. ea •• 99 CO 0 SALAMI Or rgini•-1 lb. Pkg. ea .• 99 C ED HAM Far rJohn Sect ed and Formed 8 oz Pkg .••••••• _ • ea •• 99 KR T SWISS CHEESE Sl ic • 10 oz. Pkg .•• ea. 1.39 OW CHEDDAR BARS r B•rrel-10 oz. ea .. 89 OSC i MAYER FRANKS All ••t -16 oz. Pkg .• ea. • 99 A STE4 B •SI •••••••• 1.29 HAM SLICES Center Cut Pan Fry .••.••••• 1.38 BEEF STEW MEAT ~ Bone less .:_Good So Many Ways ,.-•.. ,_ .lb. 1.19 CUT UP FRYERS Grade A Fresh 53 Tray Ptk •.......•• lb . • Foster Farms Cut Up . ·Ji-..59 RIB END PORK CHOPS Eastern Qua lity Juicy and Flavorful ••. lb .• 89 JIMMY DEAN SAUSAGE Hot Or ~ild 1 lb, Rolls ... , •..• ea. 1.09 OSCAR MAYER BACON 1 12 Sliced 1 lb. Pkg. , • , • ea. • 12 oz. Wafer Thin .•• e•. 1.12 • iltl• • • • •• • • • . Zarofsky CVodl@ 2.89 ~ 100% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. 80-PROOF FIFTH ' FROZEN FOOD JENO'S Snack Tr1y 7 1/2 Oz .•••• 93 JENO'S Pepperoni Piz1• Roll 60z •• 67 JENO'S S.Usage Pizza Roll 6 Oz ••• 67 MORTON D1nish Pec•n Twist 12 Oz .••..•••••...••.•••• se MORTON Melt Aw•y Coffee CHt 13 Oz . . .•.••.•...•.••••••• 58 HILLS BROS. INST. COFFEE , 10·0Z ........•..••• 1'.19 HILLS BROS. COFFEE 3-LB .....•••.••••••••••• 2.79 7 UP CANS 6-P_k. 12-0Z ....•.•••.••••••. 1$ ~atftt0Mt q'Jssue AURORA 2-PACK . • PETER PAN Paanut Butter· ! Smooth or Crunch 18 Oz .••••••• St • GREEN GIANT Fr9zen Nibltta ! Coni -Pt•a 10 Oz •••••••••••• 33 : FILBERT'S Soft Coni Oil . .. M•rg•rine 1 Lb .••••••••• , ••• 43 ~ LIQUOR • . • . l SAM SYKES Kentucky straight I Bour'bon Whiskey -F11ll 16-Pr'oof F;fth ....••. -•• : ........ 3.19 HAMM"S Beer "Be•r P•ck." I ~~~•.I .P.·~~·-rr: ~o~ ~~~1~ _o_z: •. • 2_ 19 1 Hill§~ro§. Goffee . REGULAR , DRIP, ELEC ~ERK ' • ' J i ~~~~~~~--.'--~.~--==-~-==:_i ~ <:J'ide Va.q de Kamp'§ l _ ~eterge.qt Encq,ilada§ · KING SIZE - 25< OF-H.ABEL 84 oz _ BEEF, CHEESE. CHICKEN 11n oz . . .. Prices Effective Thursday, May 17 thru Wednesday, May 23 • USDA Food Stamps Welcome ----------------------------------~ ................ ~~~~~~~=-~ ~ I I !r • .~~::::l11 :~coSTA MESA •OP.EN 24 HOURS) I • \ . . • • II PILOT-ADVERTISER AQ.UA NR PIP-Afl.DIT HUD 6 ~lllllPRAY ''°' 3 au5 SH ~:"-•Utt'!f9· ..--43• .;.... I • IJ.OWD · _....,. __:.~,IWl9 '°' I I .. BAL CLOll-UP ~qDll ~llllq.. TOOTWAltt· I ~ ·....;_ .,, sa· ·11~· ,.,, -."ft:J.. .._, ~,.. • ,.OYJQ. ,., • ,,., I ... > ASSOmD CAKE MIXES DUllCA• llt•S 181/1.0Z. 35c PANCAKE SYRUP GOLDEN 7 ·3c GRIDDLE ';. 4-0UNCE · I DAILY PILOT 49 • ' A I 2090 FOOTHILL BLVD. IN LA VERNI CHUCK GROUND . ROAST BEEF STATER BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF • BLADE CUT FRESH• DELICIOUS ANY·SIZE PACKAGE U.S .D.A. GRADE-A WHOLE BODY c c u . COUIER CHAR. COAL lllQUETS • 10.LIS. 97c c llGROLL CHUCK · STEAK STATER IROS. CERTIFIED BEEF• GUARANTEED PORK LINKS FARMER JOHN SKINLESS• I -OZ. PKG. c L-L-~"lu4~-. SCOTT .TOWELS lm)S.IYI DE$Sllf TOWING SS' ' COOL WHIP ............ .. . ........... •-01. ~. nHIWllT•.Ol.CANI ... JS• 4ftll o ORANGE JUICE . . ..... '&'l.'; :,·· ' oml•IAUSAOl•Ol••••ON 7 .JINO'S PIZZA .............................. ~~-5c ASSORTID COLOIS ~Y,GIJJll;ICOT ~ t JOHNSTON PIES ...................... ~.,~ SAIALR1J.'l •autel · ' 75 CHOCOLATE CAKE 1.. '. .. ' • c " ; lowi.IHOVSI . 63' llllO$-IYI 10.0Ul<fCI ).j.. 'Ii!~ j BUTTEi BRICKLE "" BABY I UTTER BEANS\ , ~ ! • JOWNHOUSI ,C:')c OM IOY 1).QVNa 'fa_ J SPARKLE BAllS · •·•" w. SUPER IUI SANDWICH IV.-f TO.....,l«>l,ll( &')a 011 toY ION\,15 , ... ~ s1• ' ~ ICE MILK SUNDAES '"' oJ. PEPP£RONI PIZZA ,..,. i , '"'"''' 31 CAllHAflOH lM REA~HIP TOPl'INO . ' BREADED SCALLOPS , .,, w-""'"°" A'>c """-" , • . 21 . MUFFINROUND$-• °' "'1~ ·HAWAllAll-PUNCH , --.'.. C&H SUGAR G""""'" s '" 70' KRAFT NEUFCHATE L • Ol 35' C&H SUGAR b'l':~6l\i~ " 20' MUSTARD ~~~~r,0,"~lm ,,oz 19' DISP~SER ~~~i•oo• ·,.oz colJ., 29' I GREEN CHILI SALSA ~t~.; di 25' CLO~OX LIOU!D BLEACH G" 55' DIXIE REF.ILLS l.i°f, 44' 1..:;z" SO' PU~EX. BLEACH . """' 20' fWHEAT WAFERS '""'"'"' '°oz 43' LIME SOAP g';"Ji\b~~').~' '""'"' 12' LYSOL BOWL CLEANER ,. oz 64' BIGWA~LY .;,""""" ,.o, 11.31 CHEESE PIZZA MIX :::~~,. o. 51 ' I DISHWASHER DETERGENT !~P~.75C ' . I I .. j I I l· T I - . ~ppmg be11gh Sauced • ()le cl the belt Wayl lo ,.... cooked artlchok<o II WWII • dipping "'"""'· Aid H'1 'fun to invent one to try cin family and ~· Implred by the popular fill- Ing for --hard oootod -· plmlellto otulfed gree'o ollves and ma)'Omllll< -UliJ ia a tasty version. ARTICHOKES YllTll EGG-OLIVE DIP s bani cooked eggs ~ cup mayonnaise \I cup finely chopped pi· ml en to ..stuffed green olives I II <easpoons lern<lll jul<o f cooked artichokes, see beloW Press eggs through a sieve or mash. Add mayonnaise. ollves and lemon julc<; mix well. Makes 11/c 10 1 in: cupa. <:over and chill . Al oerving time spooo this clip Into the cenltt of the cook- ed artlcbol:es or poss the dip _.wly. Mak .. toervinp. OOQUD A1tTtal.ODS a'., tlf the item• ot 4 &11M.ta m remcwe small ---aaharp boll'!)' tnlfe. ail off about l ___ .,_ ... Oh • ~ ICisaon trbn tlpo --Stand lhe ..-.. updillt in a deep sa•'Cfl'Ol jlllt '1ar1< enough to bold lbefn Jlllll8ilY · Add I teaspoon .. It, I tlblespoon ollVe oil a n d enough boiling water to come up blgli·on artichokes. <:over and boll gently until buo can be plen:ed easily with • fork -35 to 4S -· Tom-.. upoldo clown and ello!r .to drain, tllen lllaod top aide up. Gtatly pill Olli smaller_, leave& attached to chokes (thlll!e portions) and dlacard; witll a IW<l1 -.acoop out -and discard. -Q>ver and chlll until serving tlrne. • Morning Sandwich W.01JD_ed __ What better way to 11y ....... mornJng" to your faml- lyg.,... than wltll these most unusual breakfast sandwfches? Yes, aandwlches. Hert'• a del:lcloU. way to add a new and mrtrtttou.s note to the !lr1I meal of the day· ~ sandwiches are made with pocbged !>rown and serve cr\J!ty club rolls. Pop them In the OV<ll willle you rudy lhe ingrodieol• that . make up the fillinf. Qanned apple pie filling, stripe of crl.sp<:ooked bacoo, and a golden crown of shred· ded. Oteddar cheese form the inner layers. Encased in the warm !rqrant roll!, this ii a breakfast treat that's both tas- ty and dlff"""1t. • Or try sprel'lllni the hot, split rolls wlttlcream cheese, •liced dried beef and aprl<ot v preaerves. Or, cook bacon in the oven while the rolls are browning. • 'lben tuck the bacon and some 1crambled eggs into the split rolls. ) APPLE CHEESE LOGS 1 package brown and serve Club or French roll.s Butter or margarine 1 No. 2 can (2 cups) apple plo filling \~ pomd Oleddar cheese, ahredded (l cup I 12 alices bacon. crisp.cooked Bllke rolls accardlng to package directions. Spilt in half lengthwise and spread with butter. F« elCb.. cover bottom half with apple pie filling, Cheddar cheese and 2 strlf.s of bacon; replace top of rol . · bake at 350 degrees until cheese melts and filling is heated. Serves 6. Mild Formula A mild cleanser f or potetlaln sinks, tu1"! and ap. pllances can be made by oom- bll:ag nine perU rme grade whiting to one part Jaundrx. detereent powder or to a half per! ltUndry delerJent and a half part water toftener. Kida Like to A1k . Amly - , • - w-.,, .... 16. 1973 QAU.Y PILOT I • ,,__ MOll.-flll. 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SAT.' SUN. 10 A.II. TO 7 P .M. The 84 DOUBLE DISCOUNTS in this AD. @copyright 197:1byAlphe8f't9ACl'M Mktt., lnc.,~n rfuhb '-*· f/Hd~''I(. ~l';lOU lil 'S lV(lll OAT ~""°""' ...... ~USTEllNE @$'UAv(iiA1R'sPw ~ 7.0....... A.tolol ~ ~ Dl~L DEODORANT AIJ'MA .,. '"'Ml 2" 69c 49c 93c ~ @o'iAC'im:PERSPIRAllT 139 PONDSCOLDCIEAM 119 PONDS LEMON CLUICSER 111 l.7.0...-Pock-<8 SHELL )iliil NO-PEST STRIPS 101 139 52• 1ss FIRST OF THE SEASON SPRINGTIME SWEET & JUICY PEACHES c ~ANTASTIC UISCJ1,JrfTS rvERr DAT '"''""' """"' ""' fANI ASTIC Dl~C(}l.J ,.r':. £VER1 OAT ....... fri.i.;.s • 15.$.0L C... , ''f 32-1<3-0z. ~ Dot FOOD MEA• . 'Nos ~ ...,,.,,..., •• ,,.ro;;r 52c ...._, IOAHOAN "POTATGES ia.o .. 6oQ Uf D.,.i,i; R......._, ' 2'0:I. &atft. · ..__ LEMON JUICE ~Mln.~·10·0LS.... 37c ' .. ~OOG TREATS . ~.,.,,..,,..,,o,.•:ii:-""-46•@MAefumSPRAY SIZING 49c ~DILL PICKLE HALVES ~'"':11:~•.o.. !'.'>_ 41 c ©""'"";~·.o·c~ 15c ~SUPt1 SUGAI CHEX TOMATO PASTE - 12..0...C.C... -~.._""' ...... -_, ciilrKitiliK''sllic!s 31 c , ~ tOtST'EiirPOP'UP 36• . . 63• • LL BAG WHITE ROSE I "9" SIZE POTATOES c SHANK PORTION RED RIPE WHOLE WATERMELON RED• RIPE HlWllllll PAPAYAS JUMBO SIZE STRAWBERRIES 00 l~~·~\l r. J1'.COU N'5 !~E~r DAT . -~1Cillil•"•J.0L-.J~ -CHOW MEIN · 0..... ICing • 5-0i. CHOW MEIN NOODLES .... c rt.l:'PACl(A 111 37c •• IASKm """ea•~ ll!Clll'l 11111 BED' . c"uat!lAll(a·~9c . ROASJ CUT LJ. GOLDEltCRISP BACON YOUNG & TENDER CARROTS STEAK MUSHRO MS ~···· ) ·RED RADISHES . !-LB. PACKAGE T-iONE 1aa STEAK u. 1~- ,.~ 169 ' .... ' -sac .~ • . ' r • \~ '··.-11~11,, 015CCIJ N T~ EVl ~n ~fi l ~ 7.0..-,.;.._.Cart- ~ ROD!S IEOOI WIP· ·~Naf ....... •12.0r. MI08ET SAUMI 61c 137 1oc . 45c 39c c lB. -~ -. II!!>•-~.• lllESH rROIIll • WlllUJ nm • .llllWllHG • -)09 ·:y-n1111Y •un' 1.1. \~ '78! • • I • . .. " • • -. • r ; t : • I I l • " : l ' • l f ~ 1 I " ! ! .. ~ l ~ l ' ' ' ' . , • • ' • • • • • . , . " , . . • .. . loo,1'iil mon .St~ I - ~~s -Tasty i •· / · "AppdtiAi,toioes · with, tbe . 'i eaUDc," say the French and so it has proved with our national appetite for mubroorna. PowKi for pound, m~m for mushroom. you get the ~ value you pay for because • with these litue .. R " 1' there is no was~,~ . :~ of fresh mushroom& to the two pounds of cubed beef I shouldet in today's oven.baked LemOOf. lol\l'lhroom Beef Siew r recipe makes the dish seem I all tbe meatier. LEMONY" MUSHROOM BEEP STEW : 1. poupd µiedium-siied fresh l mushrooms , .. 3 tablespoons salad on • •• 2 pounds • ~ .bee! : \ lboulc1er ~ <ut into ~ 2 in~Cubes ~ 114 ~uPs sliced carrots •, I cup chopped ooions • l I cup qhopped green pepper_ ~ 1 teaspgon gr~ lemoo /·peel _·1. I v. cup ltmon ju!~" j 2 beef booljllon cubeJ ,, I Ito ""'° finlllng wale!' ~ 2 tablespoons-all-purpose :: flour ~ 1 ~ t•••-ns salt ., ~ I ¥• teupoon ground b ack ~ pepper '• 114 teaspoon thyme leaves ~ 4 cups seasooed mashed ~ potatoes ,, 2 egg ~olks i Rinse, pat dry and cut off ~ stems of mushrooms flush ' with C!J\'· Cut Caps in half and : chop steinl (make.si about 111 .. : cups); set caps and stems : a!lcle separate\y. 1 In a 2V1i1UJl"t•e&serole with : lid, place Qu.·iieat casserole in : a prebQated Y.ery hot oven (450 ! F.) fOll 3 nlinutes. Add beel; : return tisserote to oven to : brown beef.."Obollt U minutes, ;stirring~-Remove •casserole froln P!m· Redllce ; oven heat to slow (325 F). , ; Into casserole stir reserved !chopped mushroom stems : along with,tJ:ie catTOts, onions, :; green pepper, JemOn peel and ~ juice. ~ve .boUillon cubes •in boD.ing water; gradually stir : into fi9UJ'. Add salt, black. pep- 'per and thyme te> bouillon : mixture~ Pour over meat ; stir : well. • .. Cover,,..aad return casserole : to oven! 1-t stew simmer in •oven for '.1 hour. Remove : casserOJe from-oven. Stir in , ! mlLShrOQm caps. Cover and : return·clll!role to oven; bake : 30 ml.nuJ.ei, longer or until :.._meat la Under. _ • Increase oven heat to ex-~ tremely: hot (500 F.). CombLne ?Potatoes and egg yolks. Spoon _ : or pipe through a large tube ~around inside edge o f j casserole. Return to oven; d bake until potatoes are nicely • browned, about 5 minutes. (Yield: 6 por!ions . • ~ .. ~·, ' ·, t D~~{ca ~e ! Sau ce ~for Sole • • • : Some,, filb are best suited to : si mj>le->'bnllllng or sauteeing. '! F'.f.llet .of IOl•rhOwever, being a . mud' f1Sb. is often-served with I a7flavorfu1 sauce. ~A ~ ;n you are concerned with r ~lories and cholesterol, a rich ;· <teMn sauce Is definitely not I tile: answer. Instead, try cook- ~g in the style of Provence! Pi\UPIETl'iiS OF S 0 L E ' PROVEN CALE i cup chopped onion I ilo'cup chopped celery , t spl'ifO paptey · · 'l,iai>I~ . 1 1 can (-~ltaliln plum · tomatoes ; . 1 , ;. teaspoon UJ\-.. 11,a teaspoon sugar ,,. )•spoon pepper ~ teaspooa farragon leaves , : crushed , '-pound! fillet of !Ole ~ Melted margarine : Salt . , ' Pepper ' : Parsley ·springs · .11n a~ 1!1Je;"saucepan saute (. c!ilion. eel~ and parsley iii I ,• t&l!I-margarine untll i· tfpter. Add totrratoes, :i tea- ' spoon salt, "'i•r, \io teaspoon ~ peyper tmd.. tarrag~. Slntrnet t, I !l!>W'. 'Mlrriai ~y. ;:YeiiiilillO.Jarm!ellOlfDat '!1$ce, 4at¥r side up. Bhllh >!!Ith mclted margarine : ~ ilorlnkle with salt and pepper. i Clit In bJll ~ftlnrlse,.,A!Jll up • 1 and slrulf oo'"°" ~ Ill Madi : square baking 4IJb. . Y 1 ;;Brush with add1U~ ·11 • ~marg-lllb m ·'-..-.~ mlnulet, or . "1!8b-flal<e• ·tallily wllh l . 1. ' , .. • DAILY PILOT $J ' • Delly Treats! _?'--\.-· • • 1-. In the field of supermarket shopping, the woman who "mUst do a really good job is the lady who shops for a fam ily of fou r or more. She sometimes Joys down forty or fifly bucks ot a time for her groceries. She doesn't just want Jaw prices; she must hove low prices. · She needs o store ru n by people who understand her need s- She gets thal a l Thriftimort. She needs discounts, not on iust a few selected item s, but lhroughout the store She needs o large selection. She gets th at at Thriftimort . Prove it to yourself. You'll find: Thriftimarf i~ the store for families with more reasons to save. --------- I -~ ' ,,, ... -" -:' 2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN ~OVE • Man&• !Ith: 00 llmllng tter. Spooo on tom.to u«. Gamt!ll With parsley. Ma.k.es I servings. l 308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA e 5858 WARN ER, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 ;EL TORO, EL TOIO . . I " • ' •• I • SZ DAU.( i"1UJr Greeks -- leach A Cook GaodDeed make the scene Sundays MANNINGS . REVEAL ROASTING WRAP AJAX CLEANSER 17 OZ. DICOIATOI PLUl'IC CAH llG. H ; CHERRIES 59'1b. FIRST OF THE SEASON! SQUASH EXTRA FANCY ITALIAN 19'1b. LARGE SIZE GRAPEFRUIT SPRINGFIELD HAIR SPRAY 11 OZ. CAN . -UL TRA·BAN ANTl-PERSPIRANT a OZ. AEROSOL CAN REG. UNSC!NTl!D OW: GINTLI POWDER HEAD & SHOULDERS SHAMPOO 39' 59' MEDALLION BRAND LARGE 24 oz. SIZE MAYONNAISE FULL QUART FAB DETERGENT . GIANT SIZE ReG. B9c !' ~~ "'~~ ROY.AL FA CELLE PAPER TOWELS BIG ROLLS . . PEPSI COLA or 7-UP 12 OZ. CANS 69c-·29~ 6i89c FOREMOST PREMIUM l'CE CREAM L;OG CABIN SYRUP 24 Fl. OZ. 69' JU GREAT WITH FIODN WAFFLES KEN·L·RA TION DOG FOOi>' TALL CANS NIB LETS CO!lN MANNINGS BONELESS 12 OZ CAN 12 OZ. CAN TOP SIRLOIN STEAK MANNINGS RIB STEAKS MANNINGS CHUCK STEAKS FRESH LEAN GROUND BEEF GROUNO PROTEIN BLEND 6/~ 23' fQI. ........ 9 rATTll5, MEAT LOA.f, TACOS 1/1 GALLON ROUND CARTON • • • MIS. SMITH'S NATURAL JUICI APPLE PIE IEGG WAFFLES BAGGIES REG. It; REG. 49~ I INCH 13 oz. FOOD STORAGE BAGS IOX OF 75 IAGS BAGGIES FOOD STORAGE BA'GS IOXOF . 50 IA.GS AJAX LIQUID CLEANER GIANT SIZE 21 FLUID OUNCE IOTTLE WOODBURY BA'R SOAP BATH SIZE BARS SUNSHINE WHEAT WAFERS 10 OZ. rtcG. MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT rCOFFEE IOOZ.JA.R YUIAN COf fEE ' LI. CAN 49' 69' 79' 59' 49' 10~~ 43c $)49 LlllYS PINEAPPLE JUICE i OZ. CA.NS 6/J9c c lb Prices Effedlve: Thursday thru Sunday ' May 17, 18, 19, 20 Prices subiect to stock Oft hattd. WE GLAl;ILY ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS -FRE.E DRAWING MANNING'S FORMULA FED HINDQUARTER A.GI D. cuf . WRA.rt'ID. 9 UICI ••OZEN L_.:.in'.'....'.1::.00...!!Ni!i.!l1~·i~'M~l1 BONELESS LEAN STEWING BEEF COSTA MESA PLACENTIA 19th and Placentia 71 D W. Cha1111aa • \ i ' / l - > I ' > ~ ·! , ! • ! ! ' ~ ~· • ·~ • • • • • • • ' • ' . • . • • • .' • " .. • • ~-• • • • • . • • • • • : . • • • • . • • • . • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . " ) I ~ ; ! • . . . -, I ; j ! ' ~ ~ • ,. ' ' • lffal to ,.. "" .. a..11 USOAChoke Grade left k:leol to aoilMcvo -(.ts ,. Manor Hou•• USDA Grade 'A' Plump, Tend et and Meaty II-oz.let Weight SELF.BAITING TURKEYS . . --·~ WRIGJIT'S I ··9RIAD - S.,O. Soft-Ideal For Sanclwiches • Youn9,Hon~ucki;-69C Hen..Under 12;U.,. Grade 'A' fh. OSCM Mayer Bologna ~ :.'";: 65' Oscar Mayer Cotto Salami :;;: 79' .. .... . • • , Fruit Drinks R~~.~:1::~. ~ . · fl Dl•pers : . ,Blscultl · · • Truly fine Disposable Farfaytime Use Mn.·Wrtght't Boke and Serve • .. ..... c.. 22-cu:. l tl. ;. .. ·a loy Liquid_~~:: j '. ~oilet I-Issue ~ · 4 .... 11 P1ic• 1 ··. · ,llewerages ' ' ' • I • .. .. .. • Ctagmont "'II Top Cans 12 .... c .. IN OUR DAIRY CASE. .. COTTAGE :- CHEESE .·~ '"•m•·43 • ,.-•.!', • ' ""'.:..':::;"'' "' ~ Pini (In. Large 'AA' Eggs ';;""o!' 'O:'. 63• Grade 'AA' Butter 't:' ~.~~77' Lucerne Com Tortillas 'O::'. 18' Lucerne Yogurt ':.~ i;: 22• Gelatin Salads· .... _ ;;., 39• HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS ; ' .. .. . . . . • .. • • FR~SH BAKERY BUYS Hot Dog Buns ,. 35c -.-. ARR. ·ID or liliirltecue-lkytark of~ . ~. ' . ; . • .. • .. . ' • . : Cinnamon Rolls I Fresh Donuts -· Extra Dry . 8 8" ~NTl-PERSPIRANT 6-oeo'n· 'lo Mr1. Wright's Piig. 79c Mrs. Wright's Pkg. 4·4c Family Pack of 12 , Bakers Dozen of 13 .. .. . . • •• • •• . ' .. .. , SAF EWAY LIQUOR BUYS SAF EWAY WINE BUYSI • •• • • • • • • .. ~evODKA BURG_UNDY orCh .. lla . . .. • • .. • • !~ KAYLAllA s711 Cry.1111 a--tt.lf '°""' Goll.it ........ s1 s2 Half Gollon " . ;,.• • la Mesa Vermouth "''' 79' J ~ ~ · • Senorita Tequila ".:'.~· 13" Winner's Cup ~ourbon::' ... 14" Pink Chalills ..... ~:~... .i:n:" 12" •• ~ ~'. -.. -"'!'.' ' ,. ~-~ .. ~ "1 ·cc;rn~dt1 .• 11.. Cob ':i:· Meat p1·e.1 ~:.'7:::~ ·-. . '\ . ., lo<OURSJ_ ~ _ ~ 9Bel-alr Asparagus _::.• \ . '· ·IJ.DE'5 " , : Btl-alr flaffles ""·"~ , ... .... . ::;,t; B9~ B,el-ctlr OJOf!ge Juice c!::.~::. .. · ·. 1l•a1r Sausage Pb1a 1t~nles Patio Dinners ... :=.;.,.. "~·15• .... ·~·. 14' ""•· ~22• ,~-:·11, .... 56' ·~25• 8 ::=. '5c Bel-air French Fries - .. ,r. ·-------------------....1 •l.-1,-•' - it Dial Anti-Perspirant ::. 111• @Breck Creme Rinse ';;: 73• Ii Close-Up Toothpaste ~ 62 ' 8 Conditi11ner :'..:':~ ~: 113' 8 Hair Spray ""•"M' ~~ 64' fi Children's Aspirin • ~ 29' Ii Creme Rinse 'F:: ·:;· 58' ICE CREAM & NOVEL TIES · 1c1 MILK · LucerM - ~;.~ 59c Half Gallon Snow Star Fudge Bars :t, 7 S• Ice Cream Sandwich ~:~ 65 ' Snow Star Twin Pops :r. 59• Wtdntsday, May 16, 1 q13 DAILY PILOT 5:J. U.S. Gov'r. Inspected flavor Holding Package , (I• 2-lb. Pocli•ge) PORK CHOPS . f<osh-la.._. t.lo Ind 9 8 ldMl toPan ~ I n.ii ~ .. lamb Chops ~11• S-11 i..on Cut-USDA O..W. Beef Brisket ,.$111 Ft"h-USDA 0i-. 'elnt Cui Boneless Roast ,.$131 Sh.11ld•1 OH 0.11<1k-USDA o..tc• Beef Rib Steak !1 .. lar,. (nd-USOA Ot.k• ~.~!~,~~.~'~!~!~'""• ,.$141 ~~!~.!!e..5.!.~k .$111 Rlet Mignon Steak .,,::-... L '2" V~al Patties·"::::.:::'"' 'Ii: 84' Cooked Fish Sticks «c:::·· :.';: 84' Skinless Turbot Fiiiets L 89' Cooked Haddock Fiiiets-L 98' Corned Beef -:::.;;· .., •. '111 Comed Beef Brisket ii' •. '1" Fancy Ouall ty ""a•• the Solt & 811tter, H•re's Corn to Feott On." large Avocados .::::. , •• 29' .. Crisp Carrots ~" 3 ~ 391 Green Cabbage • 12' Grapefruit ·~::.::· 8 ::, 69' Fresh Broccoli "-.::.:::-• 29' · Ear Valencia Oranges 8 ~98• Roasted Peanuts ""M • 49' Brown Mushrooms L 88 • Crisp Celery ,':~~. .... 28 ' Dritd Apricots .:: . .-~ 59' • 1000 Bayside Dr., Newport Beach • • 211 E. 11th St, Costa Mesa • 24 Monarch Bay Plaza, So. Laguna • 636 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach -• 801 E. D:J:amino~L _san CleRlente • Santa Ana Freeway at La Paz, Mission Y'iejo • • Wilson & Fairview, Costa Mesa ' [ I ' ) •. • l ' i • I . ' . t !. • I ' j Mere VolHsl I ~~~E 35c l Your choice of Duncan Hines layer 1 varietie8! f'L-~~~~~~~~~-' i Soft Spread 1MPER11L • 49c ! ~;i~;a·~~t~h~~1 :~ .c~n25C ' The slow one-rich, thick! 14 oz • • f Wheat Wafers ..... 35~ f Y~b~r~ckC~ff~u~s~i0n:! 0 lggc i One 'pound c~n .(3 lb. can .•. 2.95) t APPLE 4 SJ ~ SAUCE for S &. W ... simplY"wonderful t.aste! No, 30\J,ri• .. .. Instant ~Yuban .... s1s9 Enjoy the' great flavor! 8 oz . [ Ivory Soap ..... 2,., 25c · f So pure ... so gentle! Bath size bars i: Liquid Wisk ....... 79c ~·For rings around the collars! Quart ~-Zee Tissue ........ 39c ~ Save on the fou r roll pack! • • ~--~~~~~~~~~--. 1; HAMM'S ~BEER s2ig ' Ctn of twelve 12 oz. cans saves 311! Souffles ~®'~ -. . : .. 49~· .. Choose §p_inactf1>r-C{>m! 12 oz pkg: , : Side Dishes ~TOUF~ER •• 49c . .. Mac & Cheese. Scalloped Potatoes, ..._ Noodles Romanoff . , • 12 oz. ' : Pizza Rolls ........ 59c k .Jeno 's frozen-three kinds! 6 oz ~ Sundries : Extra Dry 1 ARRID • ~ Big iavings on t his 6 oz. aerosol ·: spray! ·~ Clairol Rinse ...... 39c Hair Conditioner you'll love! 4 oz. ; Vitalis Hair Tonic . 69c For healthy hair, good grooming! 4 oz Adult Toothbrush . 59c Oral B ... the one you know! Save! Polident Tablets .. 39e Removes most stains! pkg. of 40 ~ • ICE CREAM 75~ Royal Hoot catering quality-half gal. Premium pack ... all flavors! . . SOUR 59c CREAM . Knudsen's famous Hampshire ·crealn ... pint So good on berries!. .. ,· . ~. • ( • ., " I ' I JI ' . ' ' ~ " . . . .. 'wlilP •1·591' ·TOP,PJllG , · .~ ~ddi-~p. the P~ff!tt"d one! 6 V2 oz. aeroeol can P*»UNb CAKE ) -. . . Even Sara Lee tastes Petter with El Rancho's plump berries! Frozen • • ~"·-,·e11llfi1ar~-8l-liaMM-' · ~1 fle"ies ... big, plump';-fimt, ripe, w~th that. dttp ~ ise1 flgvor divine!. &re, y ay find berrid'al other milkets ..• but com{'Oll qua 1 , El Rancho! ' ' P.lr ·· , "lQS:r .. 2 3c Betfy 'CJ:)>Cker'• Stieb make it so eaBy~ you! 11 ounce ., •. : ... SHELLS Mary Holmstrom ... two 9" shells (Tart shells ..• pkg. of six 3" .. 49') I ' • •. p·,1 ~~ . ,; ' :~: GLAD ~." Carriage House ... 18 oz ... make a-i'_i~ "With the prof•ional touch! LUNCHEON$ . · 89 MEA-T J ..... 2·. and. • . for your main· course pleasure .... OiD .. Loin er.id, from lean tasty mid-western grain-fed pork! Average weight 4 lbs. 4 Whole or Rib Half Pork Loin ............. 89,f Center Cut Pork Loin . Roast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SJ1,? Enough here to feed a hungry h ofde! They'll love the lean meaty goodness! Pork Chops STUFFED •••••••• 51°!. Po'. k Chops ... · · ·· · J1 2• CENTER CUT e e e e e e e L Lean . loin cut, stuffed wi th Dressing! GAME HENS Checkerboard Farms Grade "A" ... 24 oz. big i Beef Liver ...... :-. 89~. Young beef for flavor and tenderness! Ground Beef ...... s11? Exti-"a lean! Choose bulk or pattie~! Sliced .Veal ....... s24,? Ri b eye cut, (or scellopine! ·-· \ ,:~ . t· - From t he heart of t he Ioin"for ·more good eating! Spa_r~ Ribs FARME~~T.YLE ....... 79:: So much meaty goo<:lness on these you 'II want to barbecue them! Corned Beef LEAN BRISKET 98~. _ Lean<tender brisket, cured in a very special brine~ Whole or point half. Eye of Sirloin Tip Roa~t 511! Boneless and rolled, for 'fhe oven or rotisserie1 U.S.o .A: Choice beefl .. sucea B'actiO.:-. . : ·:"89f El Rancho's (Ho:mel. Wpi,r Bacon) · 12oz ...• Bir) -.,,_, .. Steaks. EXIRA _LEIN $}29 GRO~~BE£F lb ~_,r~sh! Average 3 P!'r ....... ~d/-'':!1 1·~· I ' •Ct.,1'1 -.~ " h· " • Potatq, ~\aw; ~' .. c~ni,i"9\f"°t! Pint Knocks or Franks-;sl 19 Wilna, Chicago Style Koshe11! 12 01 KOSHER DILLS Buddig'': .. crisp, crunchy, taniiY! 32 oz .... ::· . .- . ·~ ... . . • ... ' .. _' I ·..,.' . l!ri,o<f in effect ~. Thur. through Wed. ""' . ~ May-17 through ~ , ' MaJ'.2.J. ~·{ ' Operl daily·9,to 9 'Sunday .•• JOtoT No !ales to dealera I [l RANCHO SPECIAL OFFER ! · , ,.,,~{ ... • ... ·.~ ,:ir:ll~• '' . , .. ,.<.tr-,,,...·~ . i· ··-:'r-• ' .. ~·}-: ~· ~' ~ ,~., ., , .. • .. )~ \\; .. , ~ • HILF -GILLON ·' ., ~ ,l>·.f,.~,,b ( ~·· ;,. i• ...I":' . _Gin or Vodka "'. 4 :Ir• • ·~ ... ' ,.:'t ·~·;.:· ,_ .... '"" 't\ .,,, , . ... ,.~ ....... ~~. Roe k .. c· 0· ~d FRESH"" " Fl L~ET~. · • lb; Get acquainted with El Rancho labels with yo ur choice of these half-gallons! ' . • El Rancho Scotch s579 Bottled in Scollond! fifth (Q~orl 6.89) ~ Blended Whiskey . s399 ' J st;;;;At°Wt;i;~;;: ~;5:) ' El Rancho'• 3 '• oi<l,aour_i,,ash! Qk. Crackling Rose ... ~29; Great at any meal! Paul Masson 5th Chenin Blanc •..•. s225 Deliciouo dry white wine! Weibel 5th • Champagne Ffnif-•• s199 Jacques Bonet White, Pink, Cold Duck! ., Firm flesh because they're really frMb ... and you11 love the flavor! '' t • I ' l . . ' .,Chenystone_ ~ 1a tockfait-shrim,r-t' Fresh! From New England waters! Fully cooked for convenience. "fillet . of "TurbQt B~ loijster T ~ils ... sz9! J>rom the Jey banks 'II( Gruriland! Fl& Australia ••. net wt. 8 oz. uch Fillet of· Sol• . 7 B!* Gre~n' Shrimp •. s 19i · F8~orite wiih so niaJ\)!.R!'.OP!e t ·~ ~~~u~~!. . . fine fqr frying! ~ . ~ . ' •. I ._ ', • Ji • "' • .. .., ,.. ' . "" -. ' "' ",. .. ~ ..... ,,.~."" ' ~ ) ' x \ I t i I • I / ·'· • -~W1 .. 1.,, M• _16', 191J ' , Wedlladv, Mu 16>, 1'73 • •DALY PILOT SS - t • Tl-1'~ R~A T .. :i::~TftT1::iEJ~ I -----... ~... ~ ... ""' ~..(I". • .~ • < ' 't· • ... f • . \"' ~ OPENT I L~ ' the .rioht ·nome ·1r· 1moor1ant to · kids:1001 ' The home you buy will be impol'tent to your femily for yeers to come ••. end if you hev e e growing femily ; you will nat urelly went to consider the ed- vente ges for t he childre n ... fulfilling t he ir needs now end · fo r th e future, too. Let us teke you on en inspection tour now. Remember we a re th e lar- gest locally owned Reel Estate firm with ov er I 00 profess ionals to help you eve ry step of the way. Please drop by, we will be happy to answer any of your qu e stions. ~ . ·' • .. "lt••~fem' U' Be !Wlee to People" . • '· . ..JIGS <)$ • .: THIS, E , • '· ' · · ,;: 'Tl .. tiotE-1TO ACT .T ...... "!'""~t .... .,.,.y~•, • YOUR LAS.lMEK·OD .. ;, 'Foriu.turea~u~ .• lder2~mva.cant ~ .... .;.V,,toO~" ft. °'~,:aQU51 fiUNTIN(;~ .. t~· 7.t "b··, , 1 ... .-~-,.r , 1, • • Price ttduCtiOri on the'per'tect fanilly t\ome ln .c t ;, , · , home.south of ·tb.e blghway_,:::orona del 1tar-It's a..,.bee..utlful,..''instaot.~'.',J:~a; 4 bed-Q>ran&5~ ·Mar. ·Nqw1 ~t:.$107.SOO. 4 bedrooms, Orf':· ~ ,I •ti;eet-+ pk;ture perlfet 3 , rooms.•family..roorh arid ~' dlhJ.r!g·-all on 2\i ~tiB. play room, "1lll'K room, study, sewing "· ~th lo\S 0( flo\\'tts and·'ttu!t.-&-2 zoned can ~d apartm~nt over garage. one 1eve.L ,opgta~. ~ ~-.Le coridition room, .Work shop, J.arie"iarllke-Wltb stnrage for t · aCld-t· its · Cl:i~':'E'"n1.eitaio iie'the 35xl18 lot. vacant , Only S65. 750. EX tenns. inside -and out a~ tastefully ' deeorated Please 'bOat ot tnile.r. :access t.o private beaches, sunny tar -~. '.&nd iiZX~O'. ytel~ ~lo. '6?J-856().' • _... :.· . ; ,,, .. ;:~,i~T313,' .... ~o.r. addl_tl:"'1."-.~~-,.~-nfo~tlq~ and ... t~~~T·~k~c~;~v~-~~n-~es· 'and ?ttus 1~"' ". :$29,~ ~$4313; , · • .'¥ . . . . • ~ . • \ l " . . . ~ . ~ . . . .. . . ·. . #-\';~.¥ .. ·-::~ '!'.:~ "·. ·~ . ..:· . . .. i ·· \~ . ., . ~.-.,·, IMMACU~TE ·~-', •~ . • 5 llEDROQM 0 ;:, . : '/-·IF! vc>u .ARE -"' •: .1 ; . $6~.~00 ~.r · · (1.', · : · UNDA ISl.l ' PARTICIJtAR A t t h I .\.,Jr '4 ~ '1 ' Dramatic dlUet.ei)l st\lnnl'nk custo1n bay. thep you will love ttrls 3 bedroom home PERFE~TION . . ' Here it Js. 4 &p: beautifully dreorated an.d land- scaped. .Front and rear patios ,,·Ith lots of,U$E!d brick. Plush carpet. Even the garage is perfect with cabinet£ and work bench. In the lovely Meadowktr"k area, it is ready to move in, relax • and enjov. $Q,<llll> call now 842-2535.: '>-' ._'. .' . • ·v:. •. . . . l . ' ii SKY BLUE HAVEN vJn wan1· t 00 '~ thifi one it's ~tter t1!8D ~· The lnterior of this nl!W hon~ lS so cleenl~It g heavenly With S bedrooms; 2 batb.s down, large ran!Ji,,.._. u-1rs with tiar """*"~·All carptted Jo1.th nylon shag. o.mer lot·.with sep-. llJ'abe:·~ boot or traUc-r art?a. Price only $41;bi' caU Now 842-2535. '. { FIRST HOUSE? :· ~SW-o ·• e nea~, c ~"':·· , -. · trout honte..:-.deijpce beyond deaci·lpllon-c.• that 1s 1J1 a totally: better ~on th&fl. a , t balbei\.YOU ,wtll Jte. D~;·~l, ~~3, 9twlity ,. appQ1tatinent.6 throughout;J ,New brand new·o1*-~lJiight kh\piU' bedrlooms, ~ .. For further, 41f~o11 :of ,~'..~ '. JJlcu:r::z:l--fte~~torinal dining ~ ~utiful l andieaplng, ~nt and rear w/ , call (WS.7171. . · '·~. , 31& baths.!..pri\rate 1muter bedroom "With, sPHnrtler~~~Well keg~.,.nfighborhood. walk IJ ' ' ' • '~ , ,tltini room plul alfn deck. can.for detai.lt to g~.tidxlol an4 '·major shopping. At '~ i~.... ' • ... •.• ~·2530 , , • , . SERElll;!~-' ~· .,: 'and ,howl.,,,. ·s7J.&50. '4' '$!!2.95& . I& WW worth, J~ Call now ,AND TUN ·trt·· c; _\'(~TPtG/~TE ~PECI~ , "aEtrER t1PMEs & GARDENS · Char~1~ thlS spe l me. P,. f I~,.. . 1 ~ be a ·scandal.t..but ypu 11 be should see~e Compte\.ely modernh:ed and 'stmt In ·a \\CU landstji!ped neig~ ' ed • you call..us.abput this love~ upgraded kitchen in thJs lovely 4 bedroom The . home itself suggeS'\S . peace ~fi. r.;, ~e i~t~~~o;fr~~u qt~ia:~ home. The beautiful landscaping in ,bolh \\ith a good floor plnn o!-91' one ...._!:f'PO~ to --~· I ' ltbo t ing the front and rear yards adds to thls . . ., · . "'!Udd!n can KQ ~ ,.. • w, u cross ..,, truly delighUul home. Located on one of side, living area (and pie on the any st L Thi! a~ , 'J)rtil~e and ·\the best streets in Mesa Verde. Do your. other. Above the garage and away from all la.rge double gara11:tt.ci:i thb ~:Jo~~Offer ""Self a favor and call on this one. 546-2313 . the rest is a shag carpeted Jarge sunny many, many posslblnues. ~ \l~ ~. · · $31,500 This .. the lfnt ad on'Ull-.ly . THE RIGHT INVESTMENT bonus room with wet bar a.nd bath. See so don't delay your Investigation. Act now it now ... only $31!.900. Call 847-6010. -caU 646-7171. 7°/o LOAN ASSUMABLE MRS. CLEAN OWNS" NOW but she v.•ants to sell her Immaculate 3 bf.<:JrOOIT! home. Large kitchen and dining area is,dellghUul to behold. This home is ~located on a lnrge co~r 1ot Md haS ex- oellent landscaping. IU all read.Y ror your ~-\\•bJte gloYe inspection n.o w . $32,900. 847-0010. • . 'BUILD YOUR· OWN NEWPORT HEIGHTS this 'veH located lot in Newport Heights. Perteet for family hon1c. Walking distance to all schools. Owner will carry financing. only s20.ooo. cau 646-7111. INVE$T YOUR EXTRA CASH. in income units. You don't have to bf! rich to mnke property investments. \Ve have one you can attord. It's 2 units with • 4 garqes on R-3 zoning. Garages are ... stressed tor building up. The price is only " $32,000. Cal~ for more details. 847-6010. "PRETTY CHIPPER" You'll be feeling pretty chipper when you find the home of your desires. And we ~ve it! It has that bright and cheery \veil decorated kitchen with big eating u:ea )!'OU've been looklng for. Also pretty carpeting, 3 bedrooms, and a well located A RARE FIND . •But we did it. This wonderful new 3 bed· ·room in Corona dcl Mar has clear ocean v,iew. Swiss chalet designed \vith vaulted ceiling Jn living room with fireplace and \Valls of gh\SS to enjoy the water view. Expensive w/w carpetg....-3 baths. It's ~va ean~move ill rlgJ:lt now. Price $110,000. C&Il 673-8550. SUPER POOL SUPER PRICE Are unbelievable $32, 750 for this freshly P!linted 3 bedroom 2 bath home is almost impossible to Imagine. The o\vner will also pay $500 of your cost to purchase. Hurry, ls equal to a lifetime of toil. Your chance to own this cute duplex in Corona del !I.far. F"ront has 2 ~R + Den. Newly painted . 1v/1v carpets throughouL Spotless ·condi- tion throughout. Large 1· bedroom over 2 car garage. Only $73,500. No charge to 8.i"' sume-loan. Hurry. call 673-8550. • ..,__ HILLTOP .H,4VE~ -. This vtew will Jal~ forever-' • To. the Ya!Jey-to the 1ea' l:llgh atctp a bill · Where )fou'll always want to be. A tri-leYel Mediterranean With Spanish style feeling Priced at $125,000 See this home, It's most appealing. Call 546-2313. •. thls new listing won't '"'' lhe week. Call BACK BAY MINI VIEW 842'2535· $52,500 $26, 950 (:secluded cul-de-.58.c property In prestige • Total plice of this 4 bedroom 2 bat estate ·~. ot ~lne~ homet. Dramatic ca-. ,' tbedral ceilings 1n living room with crack· homt'! 'vi th all the .built-ins. lt 1 an ex-ling 1vood-burnlng fireplace, •pen plan tremely decorated 3 year old home within family room, spack>us garden view, formal \Valking distance to the beach. It could dining room, 4 large bedrooms, and gour· be perfect fOl" you. Call now 842-2535. rr:iet kit.Chen with break.faAt bar. Peck-a-boo · FIVE BEDROOMS...,.3 BATHS $38,950 vie\\' of Newport Bay. Ask us about the interesting pc:M1slbillties for future Increases in value. Please call today tor an appolnt- n1ent to inspect this highly desirable prop- erty. Call 546-2313. SEEING IS BELIEVING See this charming 3 bedroom home, all freshly palnted inside. Back ynrd like a forest, with lots ot b•ees-f!upcr sh&r1i. Top schools and excellent neighborhood. Thii one Is p!l'(ect tor a youn1 family. 3 bed-L:~'dcvelopment. $33,950. 847-6010. <· room + !amlJy room.· pool size lot located on quiet street., ~ block away (1l)lll a new park. Priced at' only $00,450. Call today 842·2535. Sharp, bright two story home 'Vlth t"·o master bedrooms, super spacious dream kitchen. Ne\v carpcU and paint through- out. Beautiful landscaping front and rear "'Ith sprinklers. \Veil-kept neighborhood. If you need a big home this Is !or you. cau now 842-2535. Only $34,500. 546-2313. You'll buy this If )'OU bother to see it. '.• • SALt:IMAN ••• 11 Teur LIFE STJILE PfffMnt & ~&Kftrit l'ou c1n complete moff tra&ctlon1 wJth 1 ... frU1tntlon. · Htlphtt othon If rewarding; rNI .,t•to Ii 1acl~ln1. ' lf.lrn mer• -'INrn mor• 1n4 1erv1 b1tt1r •• , /()IN A LEADER. R1qulr1ment1: lntttrlty & Enthu1l11m. P.S. L.t'.1 t1lk 1bout It ••. Call M1 ot 146-1600. - GOLF COURSE VIEW ' . • Relax .. ln the lap ot luxury! From thlt elepnt .settlng, watch the golfer11 stroll by. Just a five Iron away, you'll see the sun and breeze playiJ'lg a bea.utllul lake nestled In acret oC green grua and mature trees. The 3 bedroom, 2 ba.~me Is of wperb quality, enhanced by the tlnett car- pets, drapes and wallpapers. Only $68,000. Call 546-2313. "It'• f'lln to Be Nice to People" . - MESA DEL MAR 4 LUXURY UN"S $63,000 -$6300 DOWN gels you into a potential annUal gross. 14'i4 s1>endable. \Ye have an SO•;f, firn1 loan commJt· ment. ~tter hurt>:!! 646-7171. A TRULY DRAMATIC HOME Aet 1: !Outside) Spenish e-xteriOr \\•ith atrium and :1 car garage in a lo .. ·ely n~lghborhCiod. Jar~ privatl" yard. Act 2: tD(>l\'nslairs l Forn1Rl ·dining and living room, huge family mom with tlf.eplace, bright fU"etty kitchen. Aci-1:(Upstt1irs1 4 huge bedrooms, 1% baths. Act 4: tClltnaXl Only $41,500. Call 841-6010. COME AND Bl: ENTRANCED POOL SJZE ·YARD A he~ w,armj.!lg eye thrilling, 3 ~m jewel that'• a standout in Jooks anti ~Jl>Uity, Choice Corona del J\.1'ar location. SecJUded .patio. Park- like yard--chHl'nlini.:: rustic shake roof-used brick. 2 baths. You'll see harmony and exquisite taste at only $62,900. Call 673-sMO. • DO YOU THINK YOU MIGHT? like to set" a ,·ery special 3 bedroom home in a pretty area if the price is right! Could your family use a beautifully designed noor plan! \Yould your \\'ife enjoy a re111ly pretty kitchen ,1vtth lots or cupboards! Could you call nowf Because \\·e have that home priced at only $31.950. 847-6010. NEW· BALBOA DUPLEX Prime Newport ·Penin,,ula location. Spacious 4 and 3. De-luxe features include noor to ceWn1 brick flrepl8.ce. Lavish use or tile In. kltcben1 &nd baths. Walk In closets-open beam ceUinp. Laundry area for each unlL Stepe to the beach. $109,000. Call 646-7171 . Ew.POA'f mm , 1100 NoW;.t 'M. · • 646-7171 coaoN~· DEJ, MAR . JNVESTM,E~TS , , · ' n . Matt•..it• • 1no--~10--= •• .u .. sso eo. .. .,._ 546-1600 t• I • f -' 1 • • . -I 1 . I • 'I .. - I ) • I , • ' o4 o,.,., PILOT PILOt -ADVERTISER ll ~ •••••• JOO -Slf ----.---...,, ... , .... ';',. ..... ..., 1oob & Mwir'9 11,.:, ••• 900_·-"'-1H l-1 r;;..., .... -:-....... 100 ·7" finonUal • • • • • • • • • 200 • "' ttoui.es tar ~ • • • • • • to0 • ru "'°" & ~ ••••••• '50 • ,,. Maida die. , •.•...• IOO • M Or• Ca' I Ser.vice Fast Credit Approval OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Provide SWIMMERS ARE YOU READY .•. to enjoy your own POOL and this LARGE FAMILY HOME? 5 Bedrooms 2% baths, FAMILY ROOM, fireplace. Lots of decking and firepit for your swimming and entertain· Ing pleasure ................. _. .. $60,500. OPLEX-OCEAN SIDE OF HWY. Newly decorated ct< carpeted duplex . . .. 2 BR. ea unit -with garage for each urut. Convenient ~ shopo. & trans. $72,500. INCOMPARABl:E RAMATIC DUPLIX ON THE 11£ACH CUSTOM BUILT "2 STORY HOME" . If you like the beach, yoo'll love thla loca-... with many deluxe extra features. Open lion! 2-BR. lo l ·BR. units -both furnished. beam ceilings, fireplace, 4 ~ooms 2 baths, Fee iand ncit Jeaaehold. Price only $125,000. GOURMET KITCHEN, buil~m sewing center ' ;nd study. Two decks plus 2 -landscaped ter- THE BLUFFS-FOR LEASE races: It's a real value at ........ $79,500. 3 BR., 1 VJ bath condo. Lively patio. Furn· . DELUXE DUPLEX !shed. Yearly, $395 Month. · CORONA DEL MAR I ===== ... on beautlful tree-lined street in Old Corona de! Mar. BOTH DELUXE UNITS have S bed· r ooms, den, fireplace, 2 baths, built-in ltit- chen, PATIOS, 2 blocks to shopping and schools. Cholce Joc'atlon . '. . . . . . . . . $98,500. * * * * * * TAYLOR CO.* DOVER SHQRES-$225,000 Magnlficent S bedroom home onplcturesque qa1axy. Drive .,. includes the landl Reali)>• custom built. On a street·l<rstreet Siie. Large family rm, lge formal dining rm, 4'h l)aths & ikar garage. Fully air-conditioned, !IL'< cptng, bl~in vacuum system, miniature pool w/jacuzzi & sun room off ms t.r bath. ''Our 21th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 S•n Joaquin Hills Road ''Overlooking Big C•nyon Country Club'' !WPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 r•l G.neral "OWNER CUMBING WALi.s" ..• h8I bought another howe; this ia your ' chance--owner wants .ofier. on~tbia.elegant, ·lge. bay view borne; 5 BR., 4 ba. Complete · entertainment center around !ge. htd. & filt'd. pool ; locked wrought iron gates. Ask· ing $166,000. Land a v:W. THE BLUFFS -FOR LEASE Back Bay view. 3 BR. 2 Ba. $475 MO/lease CORBf.N -MARTIN CHnerel General ,. . ATTENTION EYE DOCTORS : This is your Ji~! With a golf coUl'se view as far as your eye can see. Five bedrooms or 4 and a deo-lype office, a family room that is a •igbt to behold and financing that could read as low 1111 5~'Kt. You should sight in on this 4 bedroom, spill level and now why should an eye doctor own It? Because the address is 2.G-20 Ko mat· Drive. Ooh, I see! UMl9UI HOMU 'OP MISA mDI, 541.sttt A llltllt .t J9k leipo• UNIVUI'. ti()Ml'.S Rl!ALTORS Ganerel PAINT & SAVE WESl'~IDE 3 Jl<droom Free- dom Home on large tree studded lot • needs little ftxin' and paint" l~n fdrces 18,le only. OPf;N 1-5, Thurs. 1hN SUn. l.CXKl Grove PL, C.M. $23,950 HORSES!! • • • allowed on this i,t acre ranch with large .custcm home, tenced cottal PLUS a., '3 bedf'XIDl rental at $200./ mo. CU!tom home is va- cant • quick p()sseaion. Will exchange for bay-side du· plex. $65,00(}. VACANT & READY General .'18 ROOM· MAN$10N- s + DEN + GUESY' Wrought iron fence protect· ing huge estate. and parlc- like grounds. European ar. chitecture featuring nu"e cra ftsmanship and stained glass windawg. Banquet tar- mal dining. Step down den with ceiling high fireplace:. Garden view master suite with. 6th bath, sundcck. "BAU.ROOM" with dance floor. 2 bedroom guest house with kitchen & bath. Great for entertaining. C a 11 66-0303. IOHl\I L Ol\11\ I, le A Uh Owner anxious! Redecorated ,..._ ................... ,... 3 bedrm & family rm home on huge comer lot -room tor boat or trailer;· King·&l.ze cov~red patio & prlyate yard. Quick possession. Low down. OPEN 1-5 Fri. thru Sun. 744 Center St, C.M. $27,950. BEACH BEAUTY . . . within one mile of the ocean you Y.'ill find this super sharp 4 bedroom home that shows better than a model. Two large rovered patios, corner lot .fith 3 boat gates, fruit trees and your own vegetable garden. Too many extras to mention here, BO come see for your- self. 6%% FHA loan can be assumed. New listing. $.16,000. co: Ts WALLACE REAtTORS Open Evenings • 962-4454 • SUPPLY UMlTED. DEMAND GREAT I -C'mt.CoifiiirJ:M" Homa, dUSlftd about _..,,.,.~oa:uw Ol'lt of ttil ,,. IMlllnlftl ""' ,.. ...... ~-""""" ...... -""'"' ....... 111nt reUd1ncy or holldtJ home. SWtdecb, flr1pl8ca,, Wit blrs, SuitUtc9 kitchens, tucl-lll'ldtr double praps. Heated •im- mlnl pool, IJ&htld tenDb" courts, saunas, fhv•PJ pool All al•· rlor 111lnttn1nce provldeit' A' tqti111, experitoce ii 1'ofba IM111! Twe, "'"' • ·-........... •sas.4es FIUN hclflc Coast Hichw'7, ., Sl.lperlor AwnUt to·llconderop, 11111 dirtctlJ 'o #12 Robon Court. r••••· enc, MMt.a .... .__..., 10 ....... ~ --··-"-11.C.,bd-ll.c-t-----•1tn ... 1.c..• oflnJa ]hf, PRESTIGE WATERFR9NT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT · . Linda Isl• Wotorf'ront Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home 1'ith 'view-of • main channel. Soft colors, pcb l';ood I"'}.~· ing & 3 frplcs., give a warm Intimate .. eel· In g. Waterfront mstr. swi, ¥•· .d,bL l>atl!. sitting area, view deck .. 4 .. .: . ·r• t'2t5JOOO: For Comploto lnlorm,tlon On All l!olho•·A Leto,. l!l•se ,a,u·;_ BILL GRUl\IQY, R~LrQR ., " 34! Baysldo Dr., Sulto 1, N.S. ns.6161 General Oentr~i L @, ·' ~ Si · -'"" HERITAGE . . REALTORS General· -SOMETHING ' SPECIAL * IN COLLEGE PARK A sparkling clean w-ell main- tained 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with formal ·dining, family room, pool med yard and inside laundrJ on a lovely tree lined low trat-· fie atreei. · ~. • . ONLY $33,950 Nigel Balley & AssoC. REALTOR Gener•! _ IPl;AL. P9R, GUEST HOME , On thl11 . g o v I" r n m e n t 5 Bedroom 2 baths. Ooae reposses1>ion. 3 h u g e sbopPng '~ $500 DOWN bedrooms, big yard. and ac-R_, MCt.ntti'. ''R.e•ltor cess for boat or trailer. On--1 ly $23.500. Betier call today 1810 Newpart Blvd., C.M. -payments of $214 per 541-7729 month, include everything. Newport Rlvl- • Realtors 646-ml _..,. 204.1 \Vest cliff Drive eountry club Uv1ng. . ation center, PavUUon Ball room, lounge, Olymplc pool' putting green. 3 &. .f _.... Open 'til 9 PM Owner leaving. H""" 4 bdrm. rooms from $3l.OOO. Age:n "DO YOUR OWN THING" TRIPLEX Ganicn &. fruit'-tree!!. 3 ~64&«l03i,·~-;·;;;~i;'.;;;;~ii'f iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,._ baths. Covered paUo. Fami-''Suw Clr-'e'' Q\1·ncr rransfcrrod. leaving FIVE UNITS ly rm., fireplace. Formal r-· """1'1 i\1ay 31st, 111ust &'JI! 3 BR, ' dWn~ rm., built i ns . 2 BR Ftxer. Five unit site: lilrli•'-'i~~ ... ~ITh!s home' necdg carpetB and inter ior paint, but Is located in College Park tract. 1S • 30 • LOVEii Tennis bOffs -to the Bluffs! Everything you could want in this great condo to free you for THE sport! Incl. a view of the Npt. Bch. Tennis Club. To ni Escobar LONESOME HILLTOP HOME Ready for love & attentioh! Move in & en- joy the quiet Harbor View neighborhood , view of hills & peek of Pacific. 3 BR's. & fam. rm. Triana Bergin OCEANFRONT ESTATE nchanting view. Exclu!ive area w/p rivate beach. Luxurious home w/4 bdrms., 4lf.z baths. P ool & therapy pool w/jacuzzi. $350,000. Carol Tatum ENGi.ISH VILLAGE CHARM Old Corona de! Mar delightful area, So. of Hwy. Walk to beach, park & shops. 3 BR's. & gst. qtra. Remodeled 1971. $89,950. DANA POINT VIEW LOT Spectacular harbor & ocean vista. Large level lot. Priced at $159,000. Gene Vreeland HARBOR VIEW PORTOFINO 3 BR., 3\l ba's., fam. rm., din. rm., game rm.; brick patio & sha ke root."'()w:ner trans- ferred, short escrow O.K. • $81,900 Fee. Howard Wells MONARCH BAY CHARMER Security + country club living. 4 Bdrms.- family rm. N!ce vlews. Few •teps to club- house & beach. Decorate to suit $79 500 Call Geo111e Grupe. · ' · ~ Coldwell. ........ ~ $50 Nl!WPOR'l'·CINTl!R DR;;-N.B . .. Hardwood floor.;, s h R k e roof, corner lot, 3 bedrooms. PriCT'd to sell al $30.950. A COATS & \VALLA CE EX- CLUSIVE!! • co:Ts · WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pen Evonh191) 1¥1 BA. To11·nhousc in beau-COSTA MESA Pre~ligious. brk. S42,950. $17,950. Trades OK! Agen li!ul Fountain \7aHc>y. frwn. Each 2 Bednn. Gd. cond. ~540-=l,:,120;·~-----......00. BARGAIN REALTORS .. SINCE 1944 673-4400 f'r ha." reduced price for ·Properly overlooks proposed ,.G::;•::ne;:::.:••::'------'--"G-"ene=r-"•;,.l _____ 1 Inst sail'. marina. ,\ppro)(. 1Ai acre1 · f,{ II G-OOD\\'IN ' (Q .... Pj!.NV North Costa l\1esa, 3 iarge ~'!"!!'~~~~~ units of approx. 1200 sq. fl. • • • • • • • • .-1 "ch. Con•i'1ant ;orome ol Cj)UAUTY BUILT $490. per mo -on lease land. East.side, clean, sharp 3 Bed· ~ lll1 $.18,500 room, hardwood floors, tire-1n11 Brooldvst St, CALL 642.lm place, enclo&ed patio, new Fountain Valev C'.a. 92708 Ontu carpets and fresh paint. 114 963-5611 Ill \Vidl', corner lot • walk to ~-==::::::==::==:==:==:== '''21 shopping:. J ust lisled at ~ ~li°s1 · Open Eves. I • , a HERITAGE BARGAIN! . . REALTORS ' ' .. ..., f .. . - zoned for 8 units. FOR1m • MACNAB IRVl.NE . THE BEST FROM TURTLEROCK TERRACE! Magnificent location -view of Catalina! Professionally done interior! 4BR, FR, DR! $97,500! Laszlo Sharbny 642-8235. (Q19) GOING! GOINGI Better hurry on the •moat·dr~bonie in Blg Canyon Magnlflcent view. 4BRfFR/ Study/Poo!/Jacuul. Imported fixtures - all the extras. Lois Miller 642-82ff-(Q25) SHARP 3BR ·' I . Baycrest home. Elegllllly ~ped. Handyman's gmge. · Cellltal' V.CUuin. $'16,900. C. Allison 64U235. (Ql5) BAYFRONT-CUS1'0M.BU(l'I' 4BR, 4V:i ball>-$' fr'ln~e·on mlcfuln.. nel in Dover Shores. Boat d :Huge master suite w /flr~p!ace & 1!t room. Spacious ldtcllen-ltr•akfast roo Ideal family bomJ, kar M•· T~ .~r ~i.m. (Q20) ;. " -'!'ME PLEASANT WAY OF fl.E Charming .1 BR. home. Lg. mas • sufle. Gourmet Island cook center~ ' ed on quiet cu!-de-sac. View, Of the pa !Ila. night llgbt&-<eclusion .& Privacy. '49,90. Lois E1an 844-tiWO. ( Q3fj . · , i I • \ I \ J ' I I I \_ t: 10 NJLY PILOT .. 1'173 • • • • • ' 'FREE REAL EST AT£· 'LICENSING . COURSE· FamoUs Licensing Course now ayailable thru Tarbell. Applicants fully reimbursed upon qualification. For de- tails call Mr-Sloan (714) 832-5440 in Orange County, on weekends 832-7000 . '• Fne Placement Service • .Advan~e Training Pro~ram Fountain Valley Quality 4 Beinioms! $41,951>. Very !ipaciou.s home. 3 baths. Formal dining room. Boat r &: camper access. Patio. Rear living room. Flrepl&ce. All d e l u x e builHns &-d I• h wa 11 her . custom features l.hruQill. ( O'M&J) 84.2-2561 I • Ideal Fami~ Home $34,500. La~ home ,.,.;1h 4 ~nts, 2 baths. Forced- 11.lr heating. Extra-la.rge pa· lio for outdoor tun. Dining roorn, built-Ins. Cozy tire-- place. Secluded rear living room. (()'.ili36) 842-6691 ' Huntington Beach' Quality Inside & Out! S32,450. Located on a quiet cul de sac street. 3 bedrooms, Z' baths. Gas kitchen built-Ins&: dishwasher. Shake roof . Dining room. Alley access !OI' boat or camper. Rear liv- ing room. Family room & fireplace. (00181) 846--06l')4 BonU$ Home Lots of ,vahted extra~! Paneled ll viog r o o m . Pool-sized yard, Fu 11 y landscaped. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Patio. All modem family kitchen. Bonus room is great! Family room, fireplace. Picture windows. Cwltom featuns lhruout. $46,500. (O'Zi3)) 846-13&3 Silnp~ · tove~ $37,ZiO. -Plcture-->mro,"'1r...-+~-------- wlih Oshpond, 1""'' .... ,. Near the Beach trees. l-ush greenery & now· ers. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. $29.900. Well-priced home. Rear living room. Bonus Immaculate coodition. 4 room . Fireplace. Dining be d r Q o m s , 2 baths. room. Modern dream Jcitch-Forced-air heating. Patio. en, (02642} 962-5566 Secluded rear living room. Family room &. llre~ace. . H Yoil;re Serious About buying that hoflne, then see thll beautiful 3 !JedroOm .• (:teat -00·· hood. ~!$ landlcaped. 3• baJ.h,I. ~.,.patios. La~ -~tfy . 'l"Obm.1 ~Jarg'I! 0 '1'Cfo8tts. .Fl!irWtid diftlng room. Garden ki~ .with all built- ins. Fireplace. Jte.ar living room. $40.500. (0'J400) !ltJ..1313 Mor.II t11 Offer! $35,jOO, Sharp 2-Btory home. Huge yatd 1a ereat for kkls. Dining room .• c $. r pe ts . drapes. As11Umable F H A k>An. Ga.s .butlt-W &: dish\\"'8sher. Family room, ft-replace. Palk>. Forced-air heating. (02499) 962-1313 Relax & Enjoy! $39,900. Uniquely landscaped. Ideally locatffi. Gorgeous home. 3 bedrooms, 21 i baths. I..arge rear living room. Bcaut!tull:v-linl!hed b on u s room. Room fnr your camper. Fireplace, family 1"!''11-l'D• !"Jilt-In'!, . Rich paneimg ~ k?fag carpet•. Even a \Vtt bar. Laundry room . AMumable VA loan. \Valklng di~ to schoola. (O'm8J ~M · . ' Dramatic Features $34.500. Most wtlque 3 bed- roon1 home with Spanish covered patio with built-i ns ll,ghts. Built-ins cupboards in ttlt' den. Flrel.ace. Rear Jiv- ing room. DiJlnl room. Room for your l&t or camp. I er. ~1oc:le:rJl lcltchen. 102548) 962-1313 Dining room. Lovely kitchen with an ·the-~ modern •con- venience.~. Carpets:, drapes. (014(6) 96M5ll6 Lots of· Trees! s.~.500: Beautiful tl'l!f!1I add beauty&. prive.cy! Very tlose to the beach. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Kltehl!n p s n t r y , built-ins & d lshwa s hec . Largt" ut111ty ' Toom. Dining room. Patio. ,Family room & fireplace. (025M) 962-81165 Fussy Buyer! You 'll like this home . Custornlled tamilY kitchen '\\1th electric: built-in."I & dishwasher. Boat & trailer ae c ess. Be au Ii fully landscaped. Rear I i. v i n g room. Patio. Dining rooin . Cozy ftreSJlaef!-Extra cabinet space. $36,900 (0248a) 9GU885 $25,950 • wow ! Priced to sell quick! Nice home with many eXtru. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Formal dining room. Kitchen buUt - ins. Easy access for camper. Family room, 'fi teplace. And a sec,luded ~ar living room. Patid', totted-air heat. !DZ'l60) 846-1383 Loaded With Extras $42,600. Lo v e I y home overflowing with 1 p e c l a. I goodies too numerolb! to name. 3 bedrooms. Pool & patio. FonnaJ di ning room. f'ireplace. Carpet!:. drapu. Top k>caUon. Enclo1ed all-v.·eather Patios-Come see lo appreciate. ( 0 2 2 3 6) ~= Since 1926 HAS 6 BEDROOMS! D•"• Point. Be•utiful exterior & i11terior. ] b.droom1 , 2 b•th1, Stot•9• room for your boo1f & fr•il•t. H•11dym•11'1 wor~1hop. Rto1r li ... lng room. f•mily room, f ir•plo1c•, Otlux• built.i1u I dl1h- w•1h•r. Po1tio, loY•ly f•t1c-.:f y•td with plo1nf•"· l•1t r.1id•ntl•I ••••· N•w rtductd pric•d J37,900. 493-6251 Huntington lt•ch, WOW! H•I ·•II th• room you'U n••d, flO m•lt•r how ltr9• your f•"'ily i1. Dining room. S•cl11dtd r••r 1;..,1119 room. F-o1mily rootn, flr.plo1c•. Po1tio. Roo'" for your boo1t. Fo•c•d-air·h•afing. Kitch•n b1.1ilt-in1 with di1hwa1h•r-N11 down f•rm1 aYailabJ,, $J5,500. 962-5566 Huntington Beach 4 Bdnn. With Pool $36,900. Very sharp hon1e. Shows like a model home. lmmacu1ate condition. Dining room, gas built-ins. Patio. Fireplace. Forced-air heat. Just In tlme for sum- mer. l02250} 846--0001 Like A Model Home Very plush executive home- in HuntlngtQn Crest. l.arg:e comer 001ne with lots ol decking in t~rear . ·waterfall, pond 8"'frees are lovely. 4 bedroqins, 3 baths. Formal dining room. Fainlly room .l fireplace. SUper deluxe family k i t c h e n _ $54,950. {Oz.196) 842-2561 Tuo Cote To Miss $31,950. Precious 3 bedrOOnl ho!Jle wllh colocfuJ. lan4st;ap-ina:. 2 baths. Formal AlmnK room, Electric bu1lt-ln'.'s' With di!hwuhcr. Booutiful PV atone Jlre?ace. F~ heating. Large J)4tio. Better ~~! (02592) 842-6891 Favorite Tri-level $41,500. Very . i.nnuential home wilii 3 bMrooms. 3 balhs. Fannal dinlng room. 21,J car garage. Gorgeous patio with lattice cover. Family room v•fth fireplace. All .¢luxe kitchen. Ideally landscaped. (02565) 962-8865 On~ 10 Months Did! Very prHtigious home with great extras. Thick shag mfl)ets. Cuslom d r a p e 11 . Air -condition i ng . 4 bedrooms. FormaJ dining room. All de~e~ kitehen v.·ith all the conw-nienoes. Family room, fireplace. Rear living room . Patio. $53,TJO. (017521 842--Qi.91 $29,SO~reat! Costa Mesa Owner Transferred Very &harp home with 3 !Jed. rooms. Forced air heating. Patio. 2 ba.ths. Dining room. Ch~rful kitchen with built- ins. Fireplace, 1amily room. F'enced yan:I. Extra-largt! living roorn with wall shelves. $34,9S0, (03358) Ml"1120 You'll Like This Very popular home \vlth an ideal DoOJ: plan. 3 bedrooni.s, 2 baths. ·Many n e w redecorating f e a t u l' e s _ Drapes & thick shag carpets. Boat access. Lots or storage·· room. Large ya.rd ._ two lovely pe.tios. Fanillf room, fireplace. Built .. ris. &' dishwasher. Dining room. Move in right away. $35,900. (02.w2) 540-lraJ Executive 3 Bedroom! $45,r"aO. l mniacu l ate &. bcaµtitul:-1fllear !he Santa Ana oountry Club. 3 spaci9U11 bedrooms,. 3 baths. Formal dining. room. Family room, fi. 1plaoe. Deluxe f a m I I y kitchen with bullt-in& & dishwasher. Shows like a model home. a40-1720 ProfeS'sional Decor $39,995. Exquisltel.y done in- side & out. 3 spac.ioua bedrooms. Dining room, gas built-ins with dishwasher. Family, room, fireplace. Two patios & an aUium off the master bedroom a u l t e , Open-beam ceiling throuout the home. Elegant Uvtne. <O'l2441> 54()..tm 4 Bdnns + 3 Baths! Irvine Peaches & Cream WeU describes this charming home. Avocado shag carpets thruout. Harvest gold ap- pliances include built-ins & dish1v11Shcr . S I i n1 s I o n e fireplace. Brick p at lo • Beautiful rose g a rd e n . Choice 2 bedroom home. $31,000. t!m41) 979-2390 Superbij Decorated $31,500. Deluxe thruoul Din- ing rootn. Built·ina. Lovely fireplace. Lots of decorator mirrors.· ~ated on an over- sized cul-de-sac lot. M0&t unusual 2 bedroom home. {02136) 540-1720 California Lovely .. $31,500. Lovt!ly cor~1ot hOme. 3 bedroom•, 2 baths. Cenlral a i r conditioning. Shag carpets. Dining , room. Mom-pleasing bWJt-ins \\•ith dishwasher. Family room. ,., Fenced rear •yard. No down tenns available. ( O 2 2 0 4) 97'-2390 El Toro Beautiful Surroundings Ill g'Of"geous Lake Forest. SMrp 3 bedroom home. Mir. ror garden entry with sky. Ught. Lovely patio with fur- niture. FOl'm8l ,dinirll ~ Electric IJU.!lt-ms. Fa.mffy room, fireplace. Pool •fa.c:ill. ties avllliable. The best In relaxed living. $49,500. (IMli!) - In .Lake Forest Tremendous home w i t h bea utiful custom features. 5 bedroom•, 3 bathll. Formal dining room. Deluxe family kitchen. Flreplaoe. Elegant decor. Family room. Pool facilities available. N'e5tled among the mountain(. 2 )'@&r!I old. $61,000. (02481! Mission Viejo Custom Decor $38,000. A de co rator 's delight! Prorcs .si o n a l landscaping, C>legant interior. Gas BBQ on covered Pfltio. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Chlld·1 .play area. Dining roo1n. Dishwasher & buUt-lns. A real gem! (02500) 8»-6060 Best Neighborhood $40,900. Rolling hills view!. ClOse to shopping. ·custom wallpapering & rich v.'OOd. pa.nellng. 3 bedrooms. Two patios. Rear living roo1n. Faniily roo1n. Time-saving bullt-in$. Fireplace. 1'~eooe<l trQot yard foe children's aalety. T1st.etully decorated. C0241!3J•l<Jl).0030 Spanislf llaeienda · Calilomla beauty with 3 bedrooms. Lovely hillside view. 2 btt.ths. Dhm18 1'00n1 Rear living room. Fandly-k>ving built-ill.!i v.·ith dishwasher. 1''ireplace . fami- ly roon1. Inun.e.culate con- dition. m,950 . ( 0 2 4 8 2 l 83ll-ro30 Influential H• Very prestl,riouf pool home 2-s!ory 5 bedroom with pie· ~e tarmcaplng. 3 baths. Pool fenced ott 1or your safety. Boat & traJJer area. Formal d.inifl& room. ,..., liVlJ1& ""'°'• Family room, fireplace, CUstom kl!- chen.. Just 3 y.-,rs old. ISZOOO. C03Ci:li - Beauty Unlimited $4&.950. Very spadous home with ample-sized yard. 4 bedrooms . See-thru fireplace. Walk-ln cl.oflets. Patio. Family room • fireplace. Rear Uvina room. Dreuine room. Great lam.ill ' kitchen with eveeythlna:I 101993) 83IHi030 $43,950. Excellent M e 1 a. Verde home. Very Iarve lot. l:ovely garden: &. tru.it trees. Plenty of room for a pool. • Boat & trailer ace es•. Covered patio. Shake fool. Formal dining r o om , built-ins & dish w a 1 her . ramlly room, fittpla.ce. ( o:r:xl5) ~ 1 ?m 830-6030 • LCICJuna Beach Ideal Famiij Home Very Very Sharp B'v1:'· ~ly ~;,~~".=: Top of the World $31,950. Very de11irable hofue. ll and yman's workbench. 1 ~-Very exciting home high ........ ge storage a.re'I\. Boat & Beautiful bonus room, W'ty above the blue pa.cl r i c camper acceu. 3 bedrooms, ' • ·spacious & lovely deror. 2 baths. Patio. Fenced yard. Kitchen convenlneces include ·Ocean. Large attractive D~ room. Mom-pleuing bullt-lns &. d I s h washer. llU)(fscaplng. 5 bedrooms, 3 bullt-m1 with dishwasher. Patl:o. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. baths. Lots ot privacy. Patkl Lovely home \Vith many security features. Fire alarm system. Brick enc losed patio. Even a ttont courtyard. 3 bedroon1s, 2 baths. Rear liv- ing room. Dining room. Large den. Fl r epla'ce ._ Kitchen built-Ins. (02442) 962-/;566 10125,9) 540-172) (02394} 830-.fi060 Dining rooin. Deluxe family .... __________ _. __________ _, kitchen. Family room, ---------.-fireplace. $56,000. 494-8003 Executive Pool Home TAllELL'S OPEN HOUSE DIRECTORY (Open Sun4•y, 1..S) Deluxe Contemporary ;58.00'.l. Just like a model home. 4 bedrooms. 3 baths. Beautiful pool Y>'ilh patio & dee~. Formal rl I n I n g room-Electric built-ins k fliah\\'fll,her In the family kitchen. Fireplaee. family room. Elegantly decorated. Lovely landscaping. {02252) JW&.0004 J bdrm1, famlly rm, 41nln9 rm. $15,tOI J7D2 lamoM, S•nta Au ,, .. ,,'° Corgtous aJI \\'OOd & glas! home. Beautiful ocean & mountain view. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. Cathedral beam ccll-.lna. Bright cheerful kitchen Y.'ith e v ery convenience. Family room , fircplaoe. Spacious thruout $ 6 4 , 0 0 0 (01440) 49HI003 4 bdrms, den. ~ .. ,. buch. $41,fSO :a bcl rma. den,. po91. SJl.t4G. SOUTH COAST .OFFICES COSTA MESA 2t51 Herber tt.4., 541)..1720 NEWPORT BEACH 60D·fl N..,.n C..W Dr. U0-17JO HUNTINGTON BEACH 16111 .... 11¥4. M2 ... t1 .. ,, .......... 962-15'6 1124 ,,,...., ........ HJ1 N.._attw t6t .. UI • FOUNTAIN VALLEY LAGUNA BEACH I 1114 lfMlllttnt 1 '20 S. CMlt Hwy. , 4f4·1DOJ tl2·1JJJ 17941 .....-U• SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 141~1161 J1n1 o.1 ow.,. 4tJ.1J41 MISSION Vl~O SAN CLEMEHTE 1101 I . 11 C..S.. 4tZ.7110 .._. .. wua.,._ IJMDJI SANTA ANA sms: •ht;i EL TORO '''·2Jt0 DANA POINT JJlll II T.,. 14. J4161·A c ... HWJ. 4tl-611\ • .. ' YOUR PASS TD mE FUTURE ADMIT ONE THIS PASS GOOD TO ATIEND ONE TARBELL LICENSE TRAINING COUllSE WITHOUT OILIGATION-WITHOUT COST! Opeon to the publlc for a llmlted time .nly (Off« explrM May lO, Jt7i> If 1"'11 n•v• tvtr tl)ownt ot enl"''""' tne rut •Mt. 11t•olt·u,..._.,....., •t Ollr 1111e•l-wlltlOMI CQ1t or obll~UOft--<11 to1ct11al 11c..,,1nv d•u. Tl•I• ,...r ~ 'f'llll• llr•t si111 In o111 •-c!llA9 .. rt ,,,.•rdlnQ c••-· Ma ravott worrle.---oo •!If ll•nll-nu 1ortK1 retlrt<Tlfnl-fanto11Uc if1Ytl!'"8fll oooe>r- Hlnilln ......,nUm!teu incom~rll!tulon<ol 11111,111 TO Pll:OVE lHE f'OJNT : Our T•rMll So1l11 $1•11 11 1llllne . l'IOIM IYtf'Y 2l mlnuttlt C•LL tOO•Y to COHl'lltM 'l'OV• ••ss•v•tlOH AHD CLASS D•T• AL SLOAN 832·5440 11062 lrvlne llvd., Tu1tln Laguna Beac:h --- Very Spectacular The epi101nP In lu."uriou~ ltv- ing. Cusloni--built hoo1e 1v1th priva lc beach~ & teru1is courts. .4 bedroom sulteog, 4 baths. Fonnal ~ room . 1'-..amlly room , lireplaCf'. Ex· tensive use of \\'QOd & glass. Ready for immediate oc-- cupancy, i17),000. (01442l -Back to Nature . Thnt's tfre re-cling you gr,! in this bcnutiful 4 6edroon1 ho1nc . Ovrrlooks an ncrr o! 11&ture'£..wllderncss. 3 baths. ::!\~~-J~~~i11~~~ f f:'~1l; t~~ . room. Dream k ! t c: lien, S90.000. I~) 494-8003 San Juan Capistrano Very Influential Dana Point Live & Enjoy You t'an do tx'lth ln thla t•hruming 3 bedroom ttorne. Bt>autifully landscaped. At- tractive front patK>. Fire- place. All modem kitchen \\'i!h a ll the conwnienei!S In- cluding di&hwuhet.-P:leture \\1nctow... CU.torn featurH tht'uoulp $C),CO),. tlrMIZ1 Beautifully Decorated Lots of much-desired privacy In this gorgoou11 home. 4 bed· roon1s. Cozy Uvln&; room with _ \\'OOd--burnJng 1 1 l"e p I a c ~. Tv.'inkllng city-llght \'le\v! Formal dining room. Pat.lo. Family room. Divine muter svite. $43,900, ~. Large Fami~ Home F.xceptlooal ho~ for en- tertaining. ·ldel.l floor plan. 4 hf'<lrooin~. 3 batl\ll. Large fenced rear yard. Wet bar. r~onnal dlnl"" room. All delu.'te kitchen. Fa. m 11 y room, llreplsce. Beautiful eruiy-("nre yard. $ 5 9 , 5 0 0 • <9H'!51 I .i • S47,500. l\f o s I Jn1pre1:~l\'e ··to v.·nhousc." · Tastefully decorated . NC\\' non-polish vinyl floors. \Vrought-lron cndosed & covered J)(llio. 2 nice bedrooms, 3 btiths. Dlnlnp; room, b u il l -ln11. Fireplace. The best in city tilling. (02407) 493l-1341 The Very Tops Ultimate home tor a.'8Ured living plea.sure. 4 bedrooms, 3 bath& Beautiful pool & jllL'!'Uni. 3 patio~. SplITlillh tile entry. AJ\.f/FM intercom. Family room 1vlth \Vet bar. Dining , r o o m . Fireplace. Rear /Mng room. Tile roof. Lote 01 privacy. m.ooo. 49l-134t . San Clemente ., 1 Ocean & Harbor View Complete ·Privacy $47,500. Spacious home, very near the Pacific ocean. 4 bedrooms. Dtnlng room . Bufit-lM & dlsh\\'JlSher, Lovely fireplace. Patio. Pie-- tune v.indow5. Perfection in detail. (02353') 493-13lf Owner Transferred $37.500. Ideal home. Lai:;te enclo5ecl patio with outside carpetlng. l.argc walk-in kitchen pantry. Built-Ins, dishwasher. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Walk-in e 1 o s e t s . Family room, f\reolace. Nice yard. (023,jG} 493-1341 Dana Point Are You Particular? Then You mu~ see thli; home! Lvvely 3 bedroom ""'!'! 2 bathP, LPrge pool-1;lz- ed lot Family room, flrep\1ce. Secluded rear liv- ing room. Patio. Dining room. We t bar Is y,reat lc.r parties. Atrium off mastt>r suite. Walking distance to rommunity cenler. A 11 nlOdern ldtehen. $ 3 6 , 5 (} O . {019642 493-6251 Spectacular vlf!"l'f' 1br lhl• outstanding 3 bedroom home. Excellent location. Formal dining room,-Patlo.-l°amUy... roon1 .l ~laf!'t tor mo9e chilly nilbts. Cltstom de«r. ldoally ~. 163.0CO. C()')S.Jl1 m.mo - Lots of Luxury s;i2,900. l'w1'J1Y hDon ol relax- ed llvinc. ~ bedn:lonui. Fami- ly room &. tin!olace. Formal dining roonY'. Secluded tta.r livlng room. Extra dinlng al'eR. Patio. All modem - kitchen with buUt-lnl le dis:hwasher. <01798l 492-7210 Has Everything! lncludi)lg a spectacula.r panaran1ic city & ocean 9\rle\\'! 2--story home with • b e drooms. Very well J11ndscaped. T\vo pa t I u 1 , shake root Fireplace. Gu hullt-ina with dlahWMher. Large covet"!'d patkl 11 Ideal for parties. $49,500. (00434) 49'2-7210 Emancipated Living J\f!nd-atagrerlng panoramle view. 3 bedroorna. Covered patio. Beautitul m a • t e r bedroom suite. Rear llvine roo1n. 0 I n I n g room. Fireplace. Lovely kitchen \\1th all the modern con. venlf'nCH. Attractive yard. $52,000. 49l-7210 L ' I • - r .. • • • ... ._ ... c .· -w-., a. im DAllV PILOT ' , . e [· "="::" I ---. ' • 2ND Trult l>eeds PRIVATE flJNDS ·AVAIL. Ally Amount * Cell 67MC94 llkR. 1 .. • .. _ • ..., u.. 1973 • I • DAllY PILOT Slt The Sea Terrace Apartments-. luxurious, new adult living in California's newest coast town " An jdeaJ locale, beach nearby, ocean ell mate, and' rieat-recfta. tion bring you Laguna NigueJ'a cl&c«e rs.idntidJ 4~ Ut1i7tg. Available with ocean or park views. Compleielr C&l"" peted with beam ceilinlJ'il in upatain unib or paneled livinr rooms in downstairs unil.!I. EnclOBed path>e or balconies. New General Electric kitchen with self-deaninr oven and dish~ washer. AM'a Recreation Building with ftreslde lounge. pool, Jaeuf.&i & rame room.a. Choice of l & 2 bedrooma with 1, l~, 2 batha. Come make ~°"r choice . Fn. $205 10 PSS I*' .... th. Dl~OUf"J'rnm l.<11 An8"1es. go nllh on the Su Diego Fwy. to C'nnm Valln'Pkwy.u.:it..l 'l\in, right (approx. 8mi.) to Pacifi«= CoMt' Bwy. Lett t mile to Nf_kuel Rd. Left OD ,Niguel Rd. t.o 'l'he Sea Turn.ce Apal't.lnent& ' , • ' PU! a inlf'U lie ... ~ come to ' ' ,. I . ' • I ' \ , • I t I • I ' ' I .. I I " ' ~ ' ... "' .... • ' -• • • • Looking For omeone To Take An rder? We're We'll even pay the postage to get ¥OU t~ give us an order. Get ready for some ·quick profits by mailing in your oftler today. Put .. . . . --a hard~work1ng DAILY PILOT classified want ad to work for you.· I - • USE THIS ORDER FORM USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES z TIMIS - $4.50 $5.80 $6.80 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 OR USE YOUR • CHARGE CARD Publith for ••••• ••,, •,. d1y1, be9innin9 , • •••• , ,, ,, •• • • •• •• •• •••• • • • C111dfic1tio11 • , •• , , , •• ••,, ,, • , ••• , ••• , •••••••••••••••••••••••• • N1mo , , ••• , , , ••••• , , , , , , •• , • , , ••• , ••••••••••••.••.•••• • •, ••• • •• Addr1n , , •• , . , . , .•••.•••••• • ••••••• • •• • • · •. • · • • • • • • • • • • ••• •• • • • Cily • , •••• , , , , , , .•• , •••.. , ••• , •• , , Phono •• , , , • , , • , ,·;, ~· •••••••• • M11t1r Ch1r9• Nurnbor • , ••• , , •• , ••••. , , , Expir1tion D•f• , ••••••• lon~Amtrlc1rd Numbtr •• , ••• , •• , , •••••• , Edprttiori Dtft , ••••••• • ' 1J TIMES TIMIS TIMIS -- - $7.40 $11.70 $17.70 St.01 $14.SO $22.SO 510.76 517;30 $27.30 TO FIGU911 cost Put o"ly c1111 word in •1ih :peca 1bowl!. lntlud• yo ur eddrt1t or p~o111 ""'"ber. The coil a l /four 1J i1 11 the ind of lho lin1 o" which th• l11t word of your 1d ;, writ• l1n. Add Sl.00 plu1 l /i1111 .,,,,., if you d11 ir1 "'' of DAILY PILOT 101 11rl"ic o with m1i!1d r1pli11. -·------CUT HEll -PAITI ON YOUl ENVILOPI'------ Cl•ssified Dept : BUSINESS REPLY MAIL Fi•O Cl11• i'e,mil No. 11, Coil• Mou•, C•lifor~i• v Orange Coo•I DAILY PILOT P. 0. Box 1560 Co•I• Me••· Colif. 92626 , ·' .. . ' ' 1 --·- L ' • • • ' \ . ,j • ' • • • ·r -, Or Give Us an Order by Phone ot 642-5678, the Direct \Line .to DAILY PILOT • . ·~ ,.. • I • -' • 1 \ 1 ) • • -' • • ' ' ' ·1 ., , ,, .. \ • " • q ' r 1 I • • I l I I • ! j ! ! • l l • i . l I I ' I I I I W~, May 16, lt73 DAl~Y PllOT ,.. I -·' -I ..... l~ I •· *1' lfl!I --I~ I ---1~ 1---: I~ I "·· ·-lflll I ...... ·· lllll I ....... ,,, ... "!?lah ~"!'led 460 -b. 500 C..,-i.t' -· Pa.•l•r.l'•ldi;"'lt..p&I A'ITl!ACTMJ-""'· 11•,1l;lol;,~W$ .. ; •• ; ... ;,~-M~-a~.JL~7;1t ~Wa-,M.AJ"l 575 per hr PIUI comm .• t.d1 .:t ~ ~ . ' COOK.IC, I 1'illl ...._ Jc. -lid--WRl1'Ell5 '•iiiiiiiiiiiiii-iliiiiiiiiiii"'iiii•iiii-~NEW, ...-1. ...... A * PATCH P!.<STERJNG part """ Ptnn. Wert lj.11. BUYER Au ....... .. va'lu<ont-~l,.t. ca"fi =-~~==:Small .,.__"'-.., -It = :.ra..:.:--t. AU ~I ';;]mat•• ;: ~~to ~ r :.,'. 1137~ tor oWl ~ M. W. or 'lb eta.es. Be-k Ucensed. 96l-19fil. P lumbing StudU, me: Ma rn o 11' a, OJ,int)' pt.per COOK, part a nan time. Ap- Wanted to JWnt atnnms or ~Otl"lmced. Wo Id y L. e C.MMnt, Concrete ---~-----l _ ..... __ l_m_. ______ J -. Xlli· be.neflta. ply at 9791 Ada.ms Ave , ! Bodroom, untumhhed Cridques, fi•ld '""'-tlkle U OU I 1----------L.R. OTIS PLUMBING 1, • · U, 1509 E. McFad-Hunlin•ton Beach houle '#ttb tmced ya.rd for lhaw's. 962-Z'll.3 afttt 5 PM. l>"OUNDATIONS • Artistic Remodels Is Jtepa!rs. W1ter Apt ~n1mt d -bi .. ~ Cost Accnt to $19K • 54&-()283. RICHARD HamUton Paint-T w k I A Planters, concrete & brick beaters, dlspovila. turnaee1, M 1 I"" Ex rl ifO now befnir shown at ~ 0 ' or n patios, el<', Uc'd 644--0681. d~washra. 6tH263 MIC & Al1l1t•nt , career Secretaries MU ac W~~llff pe cnce , I 1 ST the MISSION GALLERY in PATIOS, walks. drivei. Saw, B/A. Ollnplete Pl\ltnblng Resident M•naoer ~ Pertonnrl Agency San Juan Capistrano. ............. ___ •. ---.1--Service. 1 •• 1 E o•i-s A T I A , .,...,au. '"'"""'vc • • ..._ Major Newport Beach ~ Avera,ae tanae $50G-$150. Top .,.., · lJ\I .... ~., • • Auto Tra••-rt1tlon 525 rave gency concrete 54H66fl !Dl'esL ' PLUMBING Rf'PAIR ,_ ---• Id NO FEES. ~ B. CM !Mark 11! Center\ • ..,.._ N job too>llm&ll • see ... _...slant rea •nt S. 1~. • •. •• M2-8836 ·,llYS! . ,.. . .. ,, •-PJl,TIOS-PLANTERS,., *°*642-3~•* m1ana~u'i':!:1->1ode:f'_, ~~..:..~•&S.A.Call Ht ,. • ..J w. All Ccncrete Wolk. ~ I! 1 I P ex. """ ~ w~bt ..,llU.1.......,.-v· COUNTER e p p ume, ' ~ i I emodel & R.,. r ~bile, relate well to · • ·p e S rem. over 1s daya & nltea. • ' I ie Oul' Shot-! Courto S A T Mall>nry -hild •-k 1 , .. I \ c L • T I ~11o .._ ~---c ren "" eep aCC).lf'I. e . ,~ ~,·, • 1r1ale over 18 nitts. App.., l"'ht By Orange County r•w .-. • ....... WJ1L build or re P • 1 r records. The lndlvidual • . Burger King:, ~15 Harbor Agents • • • • 963-~ ~Enneg your54hom11838e needs. wk muat live at comp!~ IOI) Newport ~\er Dr. ~B~lviidii"iiCMiii.io' iiiiii•iii.,.[ Child C•re ~ne 1• -• be wUllng to ..wk wttek 1 •• Suitt 900,N.B. lliiii Class Convenes May 22nd Sewing/ Attor•li•n• occasionally .• Salary ... ' 6IO,l!l10 • Cron country HAVE openina;s for N.'O ~uc:tion in rellL £lcotlleelt 24 CmtnJ ~. dra.we. Drivers l Nights A Week For 14 Weeks dUldren. ages s moolha -Altoratlono 642-5845 co. bencllts. 547-· . 5 yrs. Hot 1 u n c: hes, Neat, accurate.. 20 years exp. C<1ll 6tt )319 Equal Onnnr. =er e Foremen Person1ls 1 .MO " Call For Qualiflc1t1on snacka. fenced yard, DIJlll. Betwn t .A noon ·On ly > rry ~ e M.tn•gers -OC:.: 1 --,(. NOW I Refttenres. CM are·a. TJle = e •· bl VETERANS'~ , nter;v1r;w, ·• CARETAKER ror,. Pfivate .-sem ers • I =-6'&-0l~"'°c.,,------CER.A)flC TIL.'E NEW le scOOol. Full or . ,p/tlme. e Molder• Earn $4.58 to $7.00 perltour , -Ul"ited To ·15 Stiidents ContrK!ot remodel. Free .. t. Small ASS Y'· Mu" dri ... ..i-!313, H.B. e ln•poctors ~teed by using )'Our ·1 .. ~ . ' ' " joba wetcome. S!S-2426. ,. CAR WASH e Gel Rep.tlrmt n ~ii~~~~~~: , . Airlines Schools . Pacific J~~;;~T ~.';:~~ Tutoring TRAINEES rr.,~n~m~~m.::i, ·:e~: w~'~uSh~n 547..Jl561 Ext 370 610 E. 17.a. St. -PRNATE tutoringo German, .~.. . !0035 Elli MacGr-or Yacht Corp m Drafting Spanish. Latin, Greek. $2 Per Hour ..._.,,. U1 pel'90n, s -• • NEED crew for 6-8 mo's 659 Telephone 551-4346. Temp. & Penn. Asalen-Ave .• F.V. & 481E.11th St., • ..;1;!63!;1!!!Pl!!!acen!i!j,!!!'!!'a.~C'!.M~.!""'•I crui.e to Caribbean ahoacd Santa Ana 543. 6 Rosld, Comm'I Indus. ""!liiijjiiiii Al,. Experienced C.M. 26' sailboat. Pref. fem. Room Additions. Remodels ~ CASHIE~ CUSTOMER SERVICE 18-30. No exp. Send name 0.slnn Drafting Assoc Dl l\1AlL ORDER DIVISION address & phone to M.W. • ATTENDANT \Ve are looking for an ef· Gibbon,,, P.O. Box 2600 2960 Randolph Ave., CM \Ve will train mature, \\'ell flclent i;i:lrl w/good typing Fullerton, Ca 92633. r· .. Ital I =t, I ' l!Sl . 557--0626 or 5{!7-9695 groomed individual to "'Ork !lkilla & pleasant phom FUU..Y LICENSED 't IMl Ind,_., Loit.Mtt~~ ' E. lectrlcel Job Want9' Male 700 &11 cashier ln our new high voice to run our customer * SPIRJTUAUgi> * ( · · . . (? volume O:ilp-Op Service Sta· 11crvlC"C! dept. Sal com- Spiritual readings 10 am-10 ·' · E't. ECTRICIAN, liL'ensed, SCRAM ''LETS Jigmafic~ tion in Costa ?>.lesa. After· 1nensurate w/exper. C.M. pm. Advice on all matteni. Found (frff 1d1) 550 bonded. Small jobs, ma.Int I: ;. noon ahlft open. Good ca""'"a::·.c•.::7t:,:4l'--"9~c:,,:1560::c;;·~= 312 N. El Camino Real, San ----'---'---lost 555 repairs, 548-5al3. starting salary & benefits. CUSTOMER SERV. DEPT. SJ.~~e. nte. 492-9136, WlllTE cat w/bllc & yellow REWARD!tLost 2 very lrg Floors ANSWERS 500TN~rarycenH,e;~Dr. z~1r ~pmpe~~~t";,~7~~ MEN WANTED 'l:l-.>':I on back. Poeaible Calleo. 1t ssian--W 1ftiOund T ~~,-~· ""' 1 sk f Div. of lar. manufacturlni PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con· Found in our garage on Sat. u o !I, aras TILE le LINOLEUM Watery -Steed -Daily -SUlte S20 St., Costa l\ esa, a or firm. has 18 openings, Id th I 515 along w/4 1 wk old kit· wht wired, Booryah, wht LAYER. CALL 5-7. N rt Beach 833--3861 Rus.s. · TIME f en t, sympa etc tens. Hlll'bor View Homes. w/beige head. Plse call 'EVENINGS968-4930 Impugn-SINGLE ewpo , ~:.::;;CH=•n=•~=-;;CHIUrn;-;--FULL & PART ~~.!ting, Abor-64()....(J7'J). 846--0210 or lW7-2516 i1 you A man can be 100% stupid AUTO We need ..... ~q:iQks. Apply $4. PER _HR. ........... na · kl10\¥ of iheir whereabouts. Gardening and not kOOW" it, if he is In person •S.s-"prn or pho~ 956-9341 APCARE 642-4436 FOUND large alter.d male COCKAT!EL b'~ ~ • SINGLE. SAL£SU AU McF dd Pl -~-:--'~="---:=•I • t..i......:1 4 Se ""'~ --~ • ,-~=""'~----"' .........,. for app't, 102 a en . -::: Sa I $500 PREGNANT? Thinking ab-ca .. &ref ..... _ .. , a.sons white body, yelloW lace, vie. A Professional, unifo~ed MOTEL Manager -Vl"Ould New car Deal.endlip needs miiiii*i;;i*.i67'-iiii~199~1~*~*~~ Cust. rv ce ortion7 Koow all the facts Mobile Plll'k, CQ6ta Mesa. Irvine. Answers to tune garden~ team. Servmg like to manage motel. Good Ft..-e Reimb. Also Fee Jol:>s fir9t! Call LIFE LINE-24 646--6841. Owner please "Yankee Doodle." $20, only lg estates, apt & ref's. Call 64.>1791 aft 6 ~~°:~~~pro.per-CHECK HERE WITH Wettclill hrs, Ml..s.522. ~-~.t No pets allowed reward. 552-0127 Indus complexes. Free ~t. pm. or call 6f6.:3632. Peraonnel ~ncy LEARN: Auto sul:gestlon .. It _...,~,. Custom Landscape Mamt ' ience helpa but ~ will 1651 £:. Edinger, S.A • ••• c .......... , _, .. l.·i(..e~. FND: Satl blJt·& wht n,al& LOSI' 1 tan/white (7f4) 531-'l'JSO .,. L . dftoughl,y train men wUh THE j09" ~,,,.... ... (Marte III Center) ~· ·-~-,__ dog 'bl k Cbfhuahua. 2 yrs. old. A!?l "A--•-M N~-n Co" MALE, ~ 'w/BA, 'desires --' pot~al. U ""'' haw .,..., oo"W? Instruction, counseling, lee· -JIOSSI Y COC -a-poo. V I n-"-r~"""' · t:DO.J • guuu J¥-.,....._ tureB 545--2S29 Vic. Bwhard & In· to Peppi. ic. o ..,.~<>..llf>" & any type of work. Beach any .sales expemnce or· 11 diana U.1 R B Flower., CM. Rewa rd. EXPER. Japanese Gardener. area. Hrs/pay flex i b I e . you ao!d dtrect or Door-To. W ._ ___ A,,. -to $2 75 hr DAY waitrrsaes run or pert YOUNG COUP~ 18-3~,+ ,fllJ, ~ W=-O'Jl.9 . Kno!V bow. Trimtrtin r . ~evei. 1 Doorandattambitiouaand ale•"'1WlCI•-· •• · time, over 21, w/food, A Parties or meettpl to ~l . ~ •,•, · · ·' FROS'r J>OlM s~. very CleB!H.1~. Small labdscap. VETJleeds job! Photog, t to top doH :tra1riees ·········'to.$21:Kl hr cocktail P:pet'. Jolb' Ropr, call "Leah" 2-8pm .. 539-3344 FOUND wblte puppy with It . I "Jooe" Owner ing 968-3486. . prln ~-wlhae I eornU It Dur n~ Malht MaA 496---0855 See Don black markings, female, CO or, · · typilrt manag, ter . ..__ ere. s no m · ocue-Multi Skilled •••• , •. , $4.50 hr · · MAN 5.5, wbeele~, W!Jll11 vicinity .Lake St. Fire Dept, heartbroken. Reward -Jb E X PE RT J a P a n e s e wife &: home. Help! 557-8008 lits include: Free Demo, Ori~ , •• , . . . . to $3.00 hr DA y Kitchen Man. Day Bus to meet kMng gal; any ap. H, .... +h•i1o1' u.. .... b. fi36..M6l q11CStiops ~ed. 494-8086, Gardener: Complete Yard J) RUM M Et> .......... :--.-1 Va.cation,,. ~nus plan, Jlos. n-f1 .. Men tb ~ 50 hr Boy. Apply 901 No. Tultln ~ • ' . , i or"'"'~:J68s ~ 499-2.143 ~re~ ' Free estimates work """ ex~...,,H,;cu pltaJiza~ and ~ ~·~· •• .._. · iN• A Santa Ana. ALCOHOUCS Anonymous. FOUND Sian\ese kitten SMAIL white t~dy bear. 543-2001 wants 842.9519 ~am wtiiif. you Jeani. AppO: ~~= ji~jp;;.;· i~' :.: ~ ~ELIVIRY HELP . Phone 542-7:l17 or write vicinl.lY Shakey's pizza Lost 5/13. Reward! EXPERIENCED Japanese J b W ocl F I 702 •n,penooM at Gusll~!AL\chn· Office Boy • ..... , • $1.65 hr Full or P/time P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. p-~-r. N-·-N 0 .ach. 842-5061 Gardl!'ner. O>mplete yard 0 <Int , emll e con erclll"t' oaoN ....,-a b •2 00 hr I Com ~ '"~' = iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Int nan e •-·b~ry Blvd H t1ngt' B Aaaem ly ..••••••.• •. For O\&mber o merce SWINGING SINGLES ·~-tact ~-•-ey•s •-r In-ma e c ~ su .. u uc ' ho un on ea.eh Ti •· M ·~mo C Boole Good ·~ .....,., ->•...,. :w •-~ t ,, .. ., ,,,., .. 7 NEED help at me? We 9 AM., to 5 PM ' re ""'rv. an •• •• ....,.. . oopon • ,.,..,.... .. Call "~ah" U pm. 539-3122 bmation 673-9301 ~ u""""· 1: ... """ es· ~ have aides, nurses, ----.,.,,:-="---Tech Writer .•••• ·•··, Open qe of Westminlter a:. A TRI-colored male 9· ii IMtructiOn I I'm' EXP. Japanese' main-ho us ekprs, companions. AUTO own lrallapOl'tation. Abovt Soci•I Club$ 535 Hound wearing heavy ~ ,.........-~,.'.!!},~ • ~Ji:• n -u P • Horntmalrera Up john, ·SALESMAN Recept/I'ypisl ..•••• $450 mo avenge earnbWL P a t d leather collar wlth b~e i,• mmmiiiiiimm~iiiiiii~I 4°27'81r--9C8. e ext' SCT-6681. _.. ~ F/C Bookkeeper ..•• ~mo dally. Pidc: YoUl' own houn LOVE WORN rope, vtcinlty Bolsa & I C:0842-M42c:o.;'°";:;1 c:c-=:;----I LOOKING for Apt. managing Need 1 a a J e 1 m a n , ex-Steno Sec'y · · • • • • $525 mo from 10 am-8 pm. Apply !15 DilCOver DISCOVERY Springdale, H.B. &'S'l-3840. Schools & FlRSI' Vis.it Free. Aero job. Pret beach area. l perienced, Sell BMC, Fer-Order Dept Clrk • •.• $400 mo 3rd Street, Suite E, Huntine· PROFESSIONALS in a field FOUND _ Yoong white lnstructlon1 575 Gardening Se r v • ~ 1-)T"Old. Exper. 53&-aS.39 rari, large inventory of uaed Asst to Bookkeeper • . ton Beach. of Amateur Matchmakers. female kitten {Must go) ~~~1""'930 _"-_ ~~P.P~lt-H ,1 W ted' M & F 710 cars, Free demo, excellent to fl.25 wk 0 c=E:.N=T=A::;L--A-,-,~1-,~tan-,I, (Eat. 1966). Vic:. of Albert &:. Orange, LEARN ;:~~~f,~:.;;;;;;;c;~;;;;;: I ;;";;;2;P;;;;;";;n;;;;;;;;:' ;;;;;;· ;;;;:;• ;;; I v;oridng conditlonA, See Bud Factory Trnes, C.M. · · energetk enthut\.utlc tn- (114) 835-6885 (:tl.3) 387-3393 c 0 st a Me 5 a Bet. SPE£DWRITING EXPER. Japanese Gardener. Ryder or Tom Aikin at St Sl.70 hr divldual ;.,anted for i..aauna ""'"-'45-7551 Complete,.,....,., Rella. • A ,..,., T•'"P. ¥tloo NEWPORT Sewing Mam Opr .• 12.00 h• Bch practlce. Exp 0 r . .... ,. • A 5 5 I F I lJN n lfy hi ~ SHORTHAND neat. Free irt. 60-4389. EARN MO.Rf IMPORTS P/tlme Girl Frt •• $2.20 hr neceu. Fututt Jlmlled only B D u w te .• --bl as tittie as Counter Girl Clnrs I L 15 hr 1n1 d llSJ O>ut Hwy., Corona Del ££KS Gen1ref S.rv1cu s, by tla ve to ...., . . ! E D • 5 6 7 .... ... -M ... Ho'• al °"'""' Co, 6 w ' 3100 w,o.ut Hwy .. N.B. APEX respon. lalary ..... l:mmmm;;~·;;;; Pooed. Pleue hurry . 1n THE hool In Orange * HANDYMAN * WITH US! 642.9405 :!-~~ .. ~~_,..,,--, ,.,., ohly ac Minor home repoirs • paint. --A.-M-hanlc: EMPLOYMENT AGENCY DbeENTp IALe •Rece• a npltloldlt, • ....:..!!:!!!, BLACK Cocker S p an 1 e I :n~ ~~each ing • no job too small. *"IIV -\U" ..... ,,. .... Found (frff ads) 550 female, tqund v t cl n tty •EXECU~IVE SEC. ~te11, refs, aft 6 pm, e T • 1:~an1o°: WOl1'~~ ~~. ~.tront otace FOUND·. Part G • r man Monte Vista School, Costa es c ARIAL yp1sts IU'l" lvd M ...... ··n E RET REP"RS • •• -·-ts'"• • RJ • • ts ............ _ Good WOl1c:ing COO· 1810-C Newport B ' DENTAL ... -·-. no Shephenl t.male N •ppy, ' ~ .,. ~ a~"'u•=• Uu • -ept1on1s _ .... , <g -~ U~- ¥" 1 .. _,_.. 'RECEPT gu1~-•-aU ~ • .-... 1n---dltiona._ c...... H11bu: at <hit.a Mesa ~ exp nee. Good o=--t'dnfty Vk. Hoag Hospital. FND -Orange ong uw1'-'\I.· ' ....... "" .... ..,,.~ e ,.__ I _., •~ ..,_2228 cat. Vic. Marquerite " eCOMPLETE STENO •ll'\Ul"nts. 64,;.noo. D8ys -retares CREVleR BMW CHILD care-my home. 5 .,... ~ ~":" ~ i::. = TlNY blk female puppy, v;c. Cout HTiy, CdM, Male: -•BQ.OKKEEf:'(NG · · Hauling -. Booldcee-rs -Sais.· Secvlce -Lessina wk. Summer only. Call att. I .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiiiJ Calle Rica ......... San sr>.<~ aft • FREE Placement Assistancel·Y-ARD_ ..... ___ l __ l . NCR 0 ,.:....rs 208 w. ,., .~;-.,..,,7 ta Ana ,:5 .... 56 .. ...-,... ......... · ........... I orllVni MIN-co. Of!mente. Dtl)'s -tn.1677, FND. Shutten OJa.At HY/Y. In a HURRY? Prepare For • garage c: eanup11. pe,.,.,., ~ 7f _ tnftll 1na ev--4314, 492--6657 TI-lAT GOOD JOB NOW Remove trees, dirt Ivy. e K h 0 CLER!~·· <• ~~ Tuition Budget Plan Drlv.wy•. grading. 847-2666. eypunc prs AVON SAYS ~ CLUTCH p u rs• Mlh Lost SSS Avail-<>le GEN Hauling. TrM/Shrub e -UnslrfUecf -~ Own Bosa" T-•ppllcall<N !Dr: ~~-J;: REWARD! BUSINESS ~-s:;~ ~;:_cl".""'p. Assemblers ~-:.r:;~~'i:.: 1:00 p.m. White Pentan, loet Dover INSTITUTE 32' FURNITUltE Van for hood. ae an AVON Repre- EXPERIENCED BILLING BOOKKEEPER 2 SETS of keys on a key ring 9lOl'N vlclnlfy. 0 w n er local turn hauls & ge:n'l Interim sentattve. C&l1 now: ·-vie. 21th k Santa Ana su. -· 64l-96ll6. OF ORANGE COUNTY hauling. 548-1862. 546-5341 or 540-100 119 W. 19th St., C.M. Between ID AM-Jo PM C.M. 642-<1526 WHITE German Shepherd, 4 1580 E. F>linger. &rite Q LOCAJ,. movln• & hauling by Personnel Service BABYSlTrER !Dr , girls, 8 mo., answers to .. Keno." SANTA A.NA can~ student. Large truck. Rell!!. 17511 Irvine Blvd. & 11 in Mesa Verde area, CLERK DIAL A. JOB! BL.ACX La~or puppy. White on chest. F n d downtown. Huntingtm. Beach area. Male 5J6.-M45 FOUfID: Male Beagle w/brown collar vie:. Warner &: Newhope F.V. -9480 F'ND: Blk fml med-ti dog w/sllver choker v t c:. Hanlin& & Yorktown. HB. 962·'002 FND: small apricot cock-a-poo. Vic. Adams Ave. nr BrookhUl'!'lt, HB, !'i/14 -54&-3563 aft 3 pm SMAIL black kitten with flea collar on A wc:ado St, C.osta Mesa 645--4124 FEMALE Beagle. Blkltan. whtte. Vic. of Hanover Dr. Col1ege Pk. 557-6686 FOUND fe~ Irlsh Setter, """""' vie. Magnolia k warner 968-3514. Me!18. Verde. Rew a rd (S1nc:e 19'J3) 534-1846 or ~2164. #115 Tuttln 2:3().6 · Mon-Fr1. 557-7548 546-1740 eves .. Ebron ix, SKIPLOADER & dump truck IJS..5460 · LOST, 2-2% mo puppies, on Tutoring Cllnlc work. Concrete, asphalt Equal Oppor. Employer BABYSI'M'ER needed, my Eut 18th St, Costa Mesa. READING sawing, breaking. 846-nlO. home, F.ast Side Coeta Blk •-tan b'-·-.. ·•. Solid Me,. uo ~~ -•1 5 "" IUUUl-..ul"' HouseclMnlng: ' J"IO"'IWN .... • Over 30 5 Doy WHk APPLY IN PERroN Liz Reinders Atiency 4500 C•mpus Dr, N.B. 557-3401 blk Labl•hep mix. 64>-6>61 SPELLING BABYSMTER for t child Bf<w=.· ~a:~ ~~1Ja: Free~~ Testing ~~r1r1,~~~ Annou"fA'CTORY *** J~s:»11:30. Bal. 11. MARTEC ~--:;: Jost_ 96>-3196 (!amUy &ri•v-979-1626 """" c.,,.. Me... Hun-~B"A"RMAID~· =-_--,NI=G"HTS;;;;;--REPRODUCTIONS Wed lhru sun. Bah I a Ing) tington Beach area. 4 hr. 1577 Placentia Ave. Corinthian Yacht Club, 1601 GIRLS 7·15~ Sw~~. surf, minlmum $ 2 . 5 0 hr. Apply ln penon days, Bayside Drlw, Corona del FEM Irish Setter puppy, 12 volley ball, arts 'i c:mtts, & "' .. " AA1S • Vikki's Lounge, 17911Ai Newport Beach Mar. See Chef Debus. wks. Vic: Santa Ana & "be M · ' 'C~~77'''=-=~~=~ N rt Bl d CM good ·.Vl s. 5 onJmgs a1-ewpo v" · · Equal Oppd'r. Employer DISHWASHER tor ooUee ~O St, CM. Call week ·4wks.Completeinfo HOUSE OF CLEAN ~~~ q; ~ BEAUTICIANS -H.B. &i '!~~~""'""'""'""'~•f shop.Neatappear.Applyln ~~~------1 Ca!! ~1712. FIOOI'!I, windows, walls, car-• S.A. Busy salon. Take over 1 Cu:ANING ........,.,0 aftice penon betwn 2 le 4pm, X3:J RL"WARD very friendly Tab-1 1~~~~~~~~~1 pets .\ drapes. 7 \'rs.' area. Q U tr 6 1J t Je Xlnt earning& !"'·-w Coat H NB by Manx c!a.t w/short bushy 64Ui824 or 646-2527. MIC. <I c en~ . "'"' ,,,_.. H B . N.B. 2 hn. in eve. Send . wy., .. . r I~ can tor appt ~ ' .. relW™!, Claultied ad no. DISHWASHERS, full time. :.tcH~~~~lrch s..toJ..,~ · Cerpet Cleaning S.A. 979-3580 639 c/o Dally Pilot, P.O. Day or night. Ins. bnfb, '~~, Floor Care & Windows "BEAtn'ltlAN for busy Box 1S60, Coeta Mesa, Ca. Jolly Ro&er, 496-0855, 11ee LOST lrlsh Setter, 4 mos .• 1 ••••••••-Dutch Maint Serv. s.i7.~ prestige l.llUon In South ~. Don. Orangewood &: Gilbert GG.11 New Ute Industrial Cout Plaza. Grea1 working COMPANION _ Prefer -==~=~~-~"' REWARD! 645--083' or B b lttf -1 Xlnt Houaec:leaning Division For Women conditions. Call Bob~ DISHWASHER. day ahlft. ~. a Y~ "· By Day. Own Tranaportalion N eded N widow betwHn •get Nunes Aides, ll-3 ahitL r * 83&-0048 * . e 0W BEAtrrICIAN needed part 50-60. Care for bed pa• Call 642-3505 . LOSf male eat, gray/white. BABYSl'ITJNQ -Anytlm~, LM COMPLETE H 0 USE ~'!'e.; ... ~'°or .,~!hlBOfor ttnt. !lent-live In. Room & ~!!..!~D:;ISHW~::,ASH="E"Rc--Vlc. of Main St., Hnlg Bch. any hours, m,y ~me. Hour· a.EANING SERVJCE" .-.-~ .-rJ aft 6, SJ&..2889 ly. dally, ivee)dY •. 642-16XI * 646-5943 * s.DiS * 2nd & 3rd Shilt.II BUUTY OPERATOR -board, 1<1l•ry open, ~9 ~yti:· days. MALE Iriah Setter. Vic. 23rd LQgi> -black cat. Wearing CHll..D CARS in my * Asembly x 1 n t opp 0 r 1 u n It y , References required. A: Santa Ana. 646-1094 colllll', ta& says Elizabeth. dependable •reliable. Chil eaning Homes le Offices Guarantee + Commlaak>n. 9.,1931 DISPATCl;IBJL Under direct MAY 13th. Irish Setter. H.a are+ 5JS.2«i6. rcn~2··s ...... ~...... all ROBBIES RAG le MOP (Tr•lning & Exper) MERRELL HA I R aupervWoo of transporta- 645-8997 -u\.IUI. ,.... ..,_.,..,._-w * 673--0819 * * PC Assembly DESIGNS, CdM. COMEAHION for semi-In. Uon superv\lor performs all CHILD'S pet, :F. 4 JnOll, Blk ~s.~!~. Service HOiJSEYIORk . Gener a I * Industrial S.wlnn Phone Evenings 4~8209 va11ir,-must have car. Mon cle"rlcal work required fol' Dally t Want Ada have Lab. Vic. Mq. I: Adams, __ -·-· ··• • •'--· Fri ·~ a week he lion ol 1he -~ r~!~~-'·~~~~~.;~;;;~~~~~~~I I In D rk Own * I j Ion ~-'di wu w • """' · t o~ llU.JIJ'Ul ....... n. .REWARD! 968-8577 BOOKICEEPING & Account· c ean g. llfWO · n ect mot "9 BEU.MAN, Sheraton Beach 9~ or 557-4458. but service &: other ttlated. ing SerVice, systems de-tran!lp, Have n!fl. 83&-4672 nl Inn, H.B. Must be over 21. dulles u ,_..ulred. t llii19-fll2 ,_ __ ,... HOUSE le A Cl I Come to our office o Y once A 1 .. I ...... ..-signed for your l.ll..IUIUleeplng pt. ean ng. to fill out an application & pp.., n penon. CONS.TRUCTION per month. Send written needs. Free E 1 ti in ate 1. Costa MeAa, Npt Bch le San-Aign up for work. All your *800KKEEPER* * Adm Sec'y to $800 reswne to Sad d I e back 998-4264. taAna8l1!8.S.642-21.90 assignments will bemade *A S , 1 $625 Valley Unlfttd Sc hoo l TYPING Janitorial when our staff calls you. M\131:' De' fUll charge book· cctng ec Y 0 District, 14736 Sand Can:)'on SERVICES 1---------Weekly pa.Ychec:kA. No keeper, for part time or full * Receptionist to $550 Ave., Eut frvtne LIB*RA ~'fell5o * OFFICE oteanlng, l lc'd , FEE. time .. r..!ll~w1lhwhole"lle *A/Payable $500 DISPATCHER ., . bonded. 1 Yrs ~ In area.. ~ A..,,1.. !P&n~tu n& Unn in ~Ur · , Ml,C ... · Nationally known firm netidl &rpo1 Serilco 'I ~ or 64-2021. · .,v l ~ Ana. SeWy opot1' * Adm Setj</manuf cute bubbly type Individual JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery P1lntfng & lJetwn,,9 am noon' Call Mr. Moore, 546-(156. $100 to«al w/servtce delJt. Som• Drt-Sluunpoo ire. --Paporh1~1"" Ke y Gelr 5 BOOKKEEPER * sa1os Sec'y $625 typing • nt• bid< .... help- ..... (Soil RelaN&nto). N ~~ , p"'l'9-:AllT-~ -'-Pen /Salos Soc $498 fut. Start $450. Cali Linda ~--"' all ~ t ... '111tm~ ""' -..... Ray, -· Coulal -=.r-• ' 'lO °' * WA L A R * BOOKKllEPEw. E •~er. ·* A~ctng\C:;::' to ..,_ '°'""" Ag•ncy , mo H.-hi:t ~i!° c::!i:: When yOO call 1'Mac:" 2061 Business tr. Dr. w/mail merchindizlhfr • 1t 'Steno~ to $500 Blvd., CM . Save your money by' savtna 54&-1444 evn. lrvlne tlJ.9107 bk>Qm&: des.lred. 646-74l3. * G1n'I Office $450 00 ~~M;E~ST~l;C:_H""'el_p_,C....,..=1c,1 me e~ trips. WW clean PAINTING le repair, 35 Yt'l ACl'OS!I from O.C. A\rpOrt . BREAKFAST COOK HEl.EN SOIAFFER Allen Byland Agency, lOS-B ~ Anteq.' V::fey livq-rm., dinina rm, Ir. workm.anahip guar. Take Santa~ So. Main ~T-953.'i Exper1~. A-ppjy tn PERSJNNEL ~GENCY E . 16th St., S.A. 541-mz. altport, overlook ng hall $15. Any rtn, $7.SO, advantage of my exp. ";====:::::=:=== J)cnon to mgr. or chef. 4262 campus Drive, No. B DR..\J'ERY Shop trainee. No Country Qub &JOI! course, couc:b.SlO. Olair $5. 15 yrs. 5$-7006. 11 HOTEL LAGUNA Newport Beach 567·ml exp nee:. Havel's Drapery llt'il1 trade-h ~'-3<r boat. ex:p. ls what counta, notl-~TOT=A~L~srn=vi=CES=~oo~. -APPLIANCE ·-s ~--1 H ' ·-·-Se I l~' Obm W -962-:ie&'I. ·7 method. 1 do -k myaeli. Pdlntlng lite carpentry ~ -~ wy., ---' COOK-RELIEF cM ce. •M ' ay, OLDER ilooae' Trallerei ;!WN R d"'1.,,. exq,anp Good ,.1, S.'!1..0101. 64tl-09ir or 646-1809 . Experl~~H~I~ & lj)UICK CASH Exper. Apply In ....,. only, EASY TO LEARN U,.hl "•·'\~~ II~ ~ii :~ ·t Mr~t!!'lnlnHBeU for CLayARPETer n~~etwbymC&rpea" ~ PROF. p&lnter, honest WM'k. Maytag. Good Company. THROUGH A A!rontl'! WNmB. 2100 W. Qcean. 'vork full or pi.rt-time. llM ·...-In • • .,.-~· N : ""-unllnf-· ,_,._, ' ' reu. lnl/exl tree .,l Fringe benefits Including __;. _ · · _ ~ A"''""• •-'• IS per boor irau.. + Good Honda 90, Jon Bdt, C..t& M... ..... me.. Call Joh• 5*-2!§. Rel& 518-ml. ''""" ll"!J'"" A hoopltaJt. DAILY PILOT COOK , EXPER _ .. ""'''" .,.,., w 11 b ~i~~· t.'1, 't2~ aJ>b, PtJm C•rpen,.r * . I c.~~ ~~G =n~T>PI~ only ' WANT AD ~--a~U""~-. oO~·pH~~" • :.:;~~ . d~ou u a ( ~ ~ ~ 1 ~ . '$.\!a . . ' 6p'1ip, <Ir -A""'"· ~;oR·Expertcnced Carpentry, • 5411-19'.l; • DAVI S.BROWN 33.!I Vl• Lido N 9 444-llTl or wrlle Rawlclah ti~-'" l:Y . " TRMl8 ~ty tor "'""' -or !ln~h . .,~1 oa,. -TV & APPLIANCES CALL 642 5678 . . . eo ... 306 Ad•llne st " ~ Bfich 'atta eorn:· hooAe, C.ltf. G 46 • 3 9 2 SI G.{g.;:s792 I 4M-1µ1 ews. lnterlor-!xterior tor intonna.t1on: Mr. Wtbst~r •· Any day 1' tht 8E!rr DAY 1()(1Jda.nd, Ca. Mm. mm:lal .,. n 71UM-1519. 54!>311! Ladlen..,.... RE. All Typoa Corpontry Wall COV•rlnp ... " 116-5925 54J.3'30 QR ACTION ntn an adl Don't dela>-• • HOUSE Uun~f Watch Ibo • ~ ... Small ;16.1648 Yoo'll find ll In Cla""'led .!!!!-!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!! .. f ', • • .... toclaY-eoa'IL •• ,... QpD UQI_ ooll-~ Trader's Patadise " • I ' • • r • ·- ' • I • . .. .• lf7J -I z I,.,, d" a e' :.:... m I '6 ,., ' 0 I'' •• , ..... , I ••:; ,,,.. .. ...,_r· -•w.Ma' • 11e~wJ...MaFnL Holto'llllMW.M&F710 HolpWIMoft &F ...._w ....... Ma· · 14 ~-......... ' M w~.~•!.1'10H°"',w.....,...M111"' F REE SHOES J:._Ra_,.ilon~ ~ 11~*. ~ad~J;, 0~·i€~! T Uf--01 llN ' ·-~ IS$ElllRS r.. v ... Loeld!MI ,., Perm ....... , eng T°"" PHl!lon? ~'l: >:; ='"~: dept. tor el~C'lro11lc iNemblen. OU "'111 be 1Wlrltine on Etl!Jlt -drc'att b 0 • id I , I ~ .. 1ub-auembllea &: components. e can ofter you a &:ood lt&rlint !IB.lar')' and eK- cellent company benefits. AIL YOU NEED TO QUAUFY IS: . 1 Yr ElectronlCJJ u.embly , eXJ>erlence -Duties may 'al.90 · Include mechanical ~mbly. Kmwleda:e of cOtor CXlde. ~=~·= ==~~ ~~~.~l! ~~-=-.. ··-~.. . ·-:-.. -N':"'.,,.::,.=r~= J':!,OR~l.ew'~ ••. ~INE MATURE..,, Sa!uhill! Exp'd «7tntb: • IESJ~UIANT merit! iiM Tratnirw f'rt>. workin1 &11n-tdJOCI and £ g kll' reN.1 to .-U· F/Ume • 65-1'». . . •1 ....,, ID-: Write on .. .....,.. -.... only. AJll>ly In -OVEJl.3L-·-'I""' ...... ·-Jon P,..r•m R. P. Kell ... ll<Pt. 0.1. -for •tbe Doll> LATIHE (lmo'o llfta Shop, 11 HID> ___ ....,,.._ One Knapp """'« Brodt· Pilot nu, i, no< a ..... -Cl<, H.8. aJao dltdtwub<r. WW. Now ~....,,,lewfnt for Ma-men! """""""· <n40l. ·:\'~ "::-:= MACHINIST ~: .. ·~ "'::. ·~~ ,.,.... i-s P .M. FULL « P/time We btve °'~In lo&tJl.. tioMcy --. Retail 'ftPI'!'· · -......, ft,N Friday ~~=-He~.1 u!,! wmtfAta ~Md South Set up A.QDel'lte tnaine lathe a mut. 841 &II&: -Exptr. tmmt4 ,unts only !1:!,;S· ~Ivel., L•H•br• .h'''· J--•·-.. •-··---. R--, !!.~ .. onb'· of do9e ilOlft'UllCe ltlOl't •run MATIJRE Man for .nlaht F/thne. ~·~...a· \. al ty Emplo•er ~·-• ~w~ """ -· ~-~ •-·~ zntn. walchman lo loduslrial ·-. -' ;(.-,-, -; ' ' ' • HE"' · Mesa Verde O>nv. Hmpital, ,..........__ ·----plex &lfM day work. --Ub ~ "'" c. ..... SI. c.M. -·Ke' lly .. G·1rl l::l:' .!~~ ~ ~y. ;.,,. m.«;u , ''-~~"'"" .,-~.1,..a , HelpW•ntM. It\ '"' 719 H•lp w."'""· Mif'° ~ p,q ~ • .• ~ =.. tools. MATURE expeJ>. auistant PARKING \'attendant, 'U ar REA!.. ESTATE S&LES ft.Na l1·7 ·relld:-~ d&y1 per' Wfftt ff, r Jn.~f.OI Shalde< ,,..<tuel~ 546-J511 * =."NB: ~U~'<••blon """'· •pftlm<. siart $l hr. N , l;U~~!i~oln'I' 1 wli. ll~~~ I t..... ~Oabie. ~. ew or txPt·~ the • ~ LL PRES&c GENERAL I IDllll' .... Mli_rloe ~1 .. 1. ~anlc PART TIME. f'ULL T1¥E ~~Wiest~~~ SALES· -•. t.' :. ~'.ii~ KO Pl.lliCH'' UIUUft lnd.....:al F/time. Young man who t9 Sales on Commluioa + ........ ~ rmale -_...._ e us ines:s-ollnded creauw LAYOtrr TOO' ~c . •·\.~'. . GRINDER •graduate of U.S. Anny Bonus. f114)96l-66M. ,. wtaa. a network of over 300 J)enoll wh>'.s owned !Mir -Uf•• Nowport ~ch Cost• Mis' S•nta Ana O rang• & I rvlne tnmport&Uon 9Chool pre{'d. offioel am become a own tttail shop interested • WELDERS I· Solderers OPERATOR' Apply s am-~. Chll!ftt"E. PART TIM£ ~1aiid't1--o:!:!~':: 1n 1~ & =":;.~•.GRIND ~ · ··-' .. N~'°:'~e C:~~~~·5·:~ ~~ Co., Inc.,~ n.t•SL, NEW ACCOUNTS _ a -~~~1 ~ 8-0r .;; time. Saw.; ~Jft :_t,, · fltt companbl•.-· · t~J!llK ·· · -· · opm"PI.:·~ -~. ~'~ J Setup&: operate ID, OD~~-Mechenlc-experienced ent NJes traln1n&. c.£~~-. M . _.:.a. .... 1""81 ~ - No Fees • Weekly P&)'Cbedc Elec. Assam short nm production. Re-213. 438-4836 50 W.P.M. lyptne', llh prefer-. 836-G11.. , -wom-e n au pp t em en t • • blen taee " special grlnden on Long Beach area. · · Pleue call Vlrilnla Jones ~ -afiltt 1ni= • -pt .1 ·•. 1 Day shifts, 2nd ahltta and Able to · wori: u n de T quires 2 y~ ~ral · . mt RED ~PET , retirmnt. income. 3 hr. day (714) 557 graveyard. microaoope. Needed Jmmcd. -~----._,... own MWICAL ¥S~ wante<t . •-•NITED-R' pleuant work gd. money ~.if""lllll""'&"'' The> des~ for pl!!'J'manent ~~yj~~";/iE\v BY -npnientoe ·tn: lab;· K"'fty ··· · -., , I Mrs. foster 894-231;2 ~E., 1• • ... •• omp!Oymenl •• p p s 2061 Bus!nenCtr. Dr. APPr. ONLY. & EKG._ Approx. "'2 Hrs.~' CALIFO~NIA ·B!<N!< , •REA!; ',ES?ATE • ...,. only. , , ,. .. ,, lhe """""'" )'>U've • • • Irvine 833-9107 MACHINE TOOL DIY :1:;.,~~t.25-~.j t~ 201 Awnlda Del Mar •SM.IS M.\NAGER 1 wn G2llrl ...... •'No~:~ . as· • . ,. I I , been lookln&'. tor, come in AcrosA from O.C. Airport " • perlel>ce. Call 548-3'142 San Oemt11le ~ Qttice Dttd(ni.anqer wJCnds. or over. une . 1 fpr a pe.nonaJ interview · 500 Newport Center Dr. 4b-5123 9JttJt 2 yean oi ~ .Estate .....oq.. : Plee,ae send ttsume :' 'MOOdp.y throuah Friday Suite 900 .Newport Bch KENNEL man or YiOmAtl for CALL m.:;aJl MEDICAL front office. Ex. 1 experience N~ Beach P .O. Box 1623, Newport -9 •JU~ 1 pm. 640-IJ!O animal hosp .. N.B. 1o S450 CON RAC CORP. penenced only. Call 64HSQI Equal Oppor. Employer ...._ Ex.,;..m,. ~-S.&dt, ca "'660. mo. Send reAUme, Oassltied m Bow. Ave., Wntrninlter between 2-4. Excellent opportuatty tor SALESMAN, DIRECT 'OlDrllrtlt' 24 Contral sJ:-· Or.,,.. ad oo. 639 c/o Dally Pilot An Equal Opportunity MEN & WOMEN lt-27 · PBX Rocept. T-·ptol .... onai ...,,..,__ """"' Needed. u yoo.,.. -tioos . , . :iJ UIUl.l For addlUotllll Wonnation • Pleae CaJI P.O. Box 1"560, ~ta ,Men., E~ Earn 1 to l342.30 salary per Exclus.Ive. clU'b' ~ a~ in CCl!lfidence, ~ .re.un_ie "' willing to work 4 hrs. per ' \ -. E :ns E. C<mtnonwee.lth Ca 9'))l6. JU!). ~t~we-l~ ~· a ttve jndiv. to. grace ~eu to <l.i.asi11.ed ad no. 638, c7o day, ~·.::all earn up. to $150 Call :'~':~ • .. ABBOT. SCIENTIFIC Suite F Fullerton KEYPUNCH MACffiNJSI'S job !Jkill Jn Elec~CB, Me-front ofc, ~eet fal>Woor 1Dally Pilot, P: O_..BoK"iMo, a w~. cogltri.ission, ·aver-~ieekt .. _ _ ii 1171).1'3:1 SECOHIMRY chamco or Admi'!'otratlon. -· ........ caw -... .Com M ..... Cafil. 9lti26. '"'· Simpoon Advenlsing. ~ . :<71Cl 51i7-19il0 klentlflc-Producto Div Equal ~-Employ.,. OPrn•roes Alt"--· """ $4$<0 = :---.. ·= ! REAL ESTATE ·SALES can for int•"""" 6464137. ·!yl:;',1\:,"' •. r -i ' . 3975 Birch SI. GEL COAT Ulft OPERATORS ~ ~ ·~,.!.~~ !Mne, ,.:.,')lfi:ti<,_ ;;';.: FREE. LICENSE SALESWOMAN •. c1•d ....... • .N.ewpoit lkacb, Ca. 92600 TOUCH UP National Guard m..1343. ~ -.__._,, ,.as. aerv TRAINING Exper, in q'l.Ulllty women!! & . ~ 11 \1 1 An Equal OpportunJ.t We are tttkh'f e" Per· .. ...,...,.. • • Famous Real Estate Llc:.ena· chll~ne Moes. HeinPb.ilh, · · ·· · ~ · • • EmploY,«'. Y & VARNISH MEN keypurich operatoni for Required tor tapping, Mtch-MEN needed iri lLB., F~V. Rehet Ahift. H.B .. , , ·trig Course !'!OW ~v,aµa,ble 54 . Fa.ab:lon lsland, NJ!. , • . '.t-t ·'~J;;:lr-.. t h!!!ll ............... ...,.;,,, [needed ~hiimediately. Top pay daytime & awtngahitt. 4 pm-tng drillin&: deburring ~ for mornl..ng-ne.Wspaper Call 5J6..8881 · thrU·T8rbell Rt81ft>rs. ·Free 644-4Zl3 Ask tor Mr . e Wire~&. H~ ~1· • .{ ELE.CTRONIC TECH for top m~. Contact Coe.st-12:30 am on the . Univac b~chipg assembly&. oth~ auto routes. Approx 2% hrs PHOTQGRAPHER needed, PlademPnt Service. Fret. Shoemaker. e Some SctiemaUca 4 ~ ~ tabra~ry. Background al Recreation, 940 W. 17th ~2~1TI~~ Wthe~b1"~~ operat~. Exper. req'd. per momlng 847-8979 oce. Sa~ nltes., ~ts. Training Program. Earn, SALESWOMEN over 35, ex-blu~t1. . ! digital I analogue circultry. St., Costa. Mesa. ¥ varitier. l:.ocaUo•·or the key REXNORD INC Mo L DER S •. Gelcoaten, will train ·&. equ1p. ·se~ While you Jesrn. ·Call Al. per dresses 4 spdttswear. • ttt Ne F nfverllfied M>ric load In GENERAL OFFICE punch dept. in the near , • Toolers, Exper. Ph.one ~sume:OnSi~~o.·Box Sktan ln4) m.5440, -on CM & HB '1h Site 1'hop TO,-~+v Ml i !rii..i.;.;ti<;;; 1 -ttsttng Of in-Larse financial corp. often future will be Fashion 54l-22S5. l9l2 r;. Pomona, 1349· Costa Mesa Wmends <714> 832-7000. Part· time 01ncld. ~n. Cari · ... '1~,. ,1 s ! ~ l51and N Beach. Specialty Fa.o:tener Div, S.A.. 636'-$7 eves. I: wkends. •. , t. ·J"': • ; lttumetltallion. anced oot.a.tandillg opportunity to • ev.'(>Of'l 3130 W. Harv11rd MOTEL ManagerJ, . ass:!&-PRINTlNG REAL UTA.TE SALES SALES·,.., ton.,. • • •·· • I .KineUct, QC., 1231 Victoria start an ottice career. Start Pl•a'oe call ..... rs. Rose S n--•-· N~~ n--h ~ St.1 C.M. Gf>.TI.65. E q ua I $365. Call J.Jnda Ray, "' •nt11 An• tant& or exper. manager8'. BINDERY ~ m "~t""· ~ DRUG STORE "t>Ppc>r. Employer. MCMill"J5, Coastal Penonne! tor an appointment 714/54&-5100 ~2184 2376 Newport Blvd., CM. area. , 615--0640 50f/.Jllewplrt Center Dr. ~ •1ectran1c AsMmblen Agency, mo HOl'boc Blv<l.. 171<> 547-7571 ~I oppo<. employee m/f . 645-3967 .HELP HARBOR VIEW SALES Lady. Expec. 'Marutt Sult>·"° 641).t~twJ>Ort ~ 1 • .,.,...~ • ,_,_ wanted CM. ~"'EAT WESTERN M 0 T >; L e < ec u t Iv' .' HOMES -""b<lter Jpo<UwN . '. . · '.d in'f"·I ·. ~ IR 11:1"11 ICll<"""a \ftl ~keeper. _5_ da,Y wk..fncl. 1829 Po1-t Sh~ld Pl8.ce ........... wkndA. .....,,, 'Ml"7l\ 24 Cenma!ia:'~ .• :.n--e', ®r da1· shift. Femat., oo G~ OFFICE, ex» SAVINGS MACH'IN!STS Sat.~ Sun. 4""11521. N<WJ>Ort S.ach 833-0"l1I! S-·W•YERS• .··~w·• d ,.r.-· -~~I exper. l'M!CtSl&J'y. 1583 ~ pe necessary, book-wk-days oiily A ome nee A . c .SI. Gtt!Nde Place. San6 k .. Plni:. n11ng, payroll tor 1.,8 N. Main .St., Santa Ana DAVENPORT MTS. C OP£.DITOR TRAINEES OR mature woman for 3-U & 215 E. Commonweallh 1. Ana. TIUl6-8940. UM!! mfg. co. Z115 Set-Up Men Oii EXP.ERIENCED REAL ESTATe· . 11-7 •hllto., J'n<. , ·N SUll<\T. .lln'l: Fullerto• 1 "ELD:l'RONIC Asaemblen., Hathaway, SA 557-2440. An Equal Oppty En1ployer . , . , SALESMEN • Why not work Housekeeping duties. Abo ' ~lft! ~ J"IO!&n. avail nil• "' day GE:NERAL Help. p/llm• l(EYPUN, CH . BROWN D~Y. O~ N_IT!' Sl;tlFT m Iii• hotleot area Huo-.-. J>/"'l>". 64&<'11£. Eouo! ·~. l;\opl.,..r \ •hlft. Micro SemJ Conductor eves from 5pm on. Drivers lnt•rim. ' . 1 .. J r ~ ·-• · 1.l:, • 1 t 1.n g ton ~Beflleh1FJJUl'ltain SEAMSTRESS. n\1.18t b e · ·O:lrt>· '20) So. Fairview St. & J<itchen. OVer 11. Apply & SHARPE APPLY' IN PERSON Valley and let us train yoU! exp'd. ?a.Ju.st be able to do SMALL AutQ PlliJ,me.nutaoi: '&nta Ana in person, Me n Eda, ,410 E. D•y & Swing Shift Set-Up Men Personnel Service o'4 ....... ....,;pjil.... """' CaJl Phil Mi; l'f a...ntJ!.e. own rep&irs & maint. 4 Day turer want. -.• k i 11 e IJ ELEC'mONtC _.ri1ecba.nlcal 17th St, Costa J\1esa Good Wag@!. Xln't oo. bme-17511 Irvin. Blvd. . .·"; ... WLRK.1 .. '-" VILLA.CE REAL tsl'of\'tE. work v.·ee~ ·Apply ~c,, ,machi~t 1«?,W:lathe mm usembly, Will tram. Pal GIRL FRIDAY 6 Mo's actual work: exper. fltA. Petro. steady employ. #115 Tustin UPl,Qi'-••C!nOM' ,S!l61-447l. .,., ' PmduetS. 837 W . .J!th· Si. ec:t. \~e:.bl~bolid~ Eleotron l "· 6391 Local CPA will train ma,.. :::;/~l:'::~~,:-peor (n<nt .'ind sqUt openmgs. 131-5460 i;n·~~tiaAve.'~· •REAL E~!a/8 Sajeman. C.M · · '·. · ;:::;:~nsp!lit\ltU'~ -We 1 t m In At er Ave., lnd.lvklual w/llOO'le accoUnt. REXNORD ·INl't • Equal' Opwr': Emplcyer . v ... ~ ... ~. "'' .. ~t,, drop-tn ~tablia6ed SEAM~RE.55 Open!;~ .• OOJ, tw. apP'\, ~.r , ·· W~lnster. Ing knowledg<> 10 become Apply In The .., ' . ,. :"':""'~ .., . .. 1 ~~on In ~· A"Ex· 29th St, Newport Beach apply at 851\, . ttfrTRQNICS technician f/chlll'ge bkkpr. Start v.ioo. Pel'80nne\ Ck'partrnent S~ialt\'.yk~a.slcner Div. M' T ST . ~ • Em~e'r ; :Bei:t n~4.s-z.~lm·· 1'eue Call 675-1823 N.B. Mon-Fri, S.S. ~t.O QC communica!IOM Ca.II Sally 1-lart. 540-6005. J\1ondny-fri. 9'°'at1)-:'J,2 Noon 3130 • H•rv•rd Certified . l\lagDetic 'Pape ay . SECRY. R.E. 81\IALL aut~manuj. ampl!llen. Pat El-Coamal Pe"°""'' Agency .• PACIFIC MUTVAL n<i~iit.• ~58;.2JM Com-; Opera"''· """ Prod CoriffoP/;i Mil"' $1UK l!iE(:EPT. . to $550 Secret""1'1 "°'"'"'"'"poll. . 'Jlri raJ °' ._ ··wntrntnster A ve ., 7790 Harbor Btvd. ,CM. 700 Newport Center Dr. be exp'd in~ & output · ~deii'ee 100{ . Fee;. Pili~ . Realtor'l':--Mft~.! Bea · . , ~ tn'!: I \Velttnln&ter. -GUARDS Newport Beach • 1 Equa.Ji oppor. employer m /f machlnes, . typesetting for ?'~Line Mgr $1400 Fa"bOJou.s opPorftJ!lity to jom new ; office .1~ N~ !WJ\.'fr. &ik,, .... EXECUTIVE, DIRECTOR· Full & P/Hm6 Positions books,-magazines. X1nt .a..-1r S BcQrndJ est1b. CO:· .movt~ to .new Centi:r. Omaenia1 .,Jal!ii~,C411 *···~. ~ !Girl'• Club Hubc'Jr A~a. open f Lo Be h &: ... NCH ''"CHI benetitA & '\\'Orking con· w.....,!'.::'~~ )'8t.efH: • .-..... quarters 1n <>range C6.1Tcr-maf'Cli'e ·pei'idnnel. A frtl'nt tot· ~nterytrij;. ~'fD. M ~arting salary $10,000/)'T. C'or n · n\i ac · KE YPU . M#4 NISTS dltions Salary op en . .... ... ........,.man .-u rific tieticU.ts. C&1l Barbara' otflCe position requirlni' 'Co:, 1158' Pf'a:1uet:kin "'Pt.1; N E.4 " e r. I enc e in ad· 8~;ifc:,11are!~ r J~f~ · . OPE_RATORS · . . Bond i Parl<hUTSt Publlca. 1"/C Bookk~per $650 Mac, '833-troo.~·· ~ Fee good telephone voi_ce, SH & SNACK Bar Cook. Me ·miniatratlon a, 1upervt1lon. iteady employment. 13 Yrs FWl CJ[' p/l1me. Prefer 1 yr i\fust do· own lathe It mill tiona. 714 1. ~-Den~qit 9fc:-to:: Jab8." DenniS. &7Denn;i11 Per-IBM Exec.. abilities. Real .'ti! J..a~r. n.y. Multwork with oommwiity. of age or older Apply in recent expcr. on (129, 129 .or !lt!'tupll 11:.-haV!: own tools. NE.EDED IMMED Med. ofc " 9WUlel Agerx:;,y .o{ ilvine estate exenenct;,~., ~..Yacht Oub Mall re1Wne to P.O. Box per.1::1n, ~ So. Lemon St, key to disk. Will consider Good ~ U1r ~-.. -J lnven. Cl,eck· ' ~ 208:2· Mlchelsoli·.nr~' ' tlal, but. helpful.· . ~ e Baytide Dr, CdM. See' ,8%tj"tte~port Beach. ca. Attahelm. bctv.'" 9am & trainees woo have ~<;t\?ss. vancenfetit Xln t working TOOLING ·MEN ~':1 .. ~st' $500 RECIPTIONll'f ~~al 1~1~ _:or ~ ,.Betip. , l!XPERIEN!:ED !pm. folly completed• KP.·..,.,.. '°""": "'""-pogitltxl. Good '~.-. • Loe cu!ioo~"· •Telo...._ =' Sk NOTE CL.RK ADT Sterling Security &: can pe.13 KP test. Please benefits. . SHIPPERS Escrow 01Cr $700 al finn ne-edl . ,.......,. W•.sl.ey .N. T&$'lm""Cb. m«JlO . ..,,__ : ·-" Call ''' ·--' '° 'REXNORD INC Cl•"'··~ . $400 .,. .. D>dMduaJ. .,. ~tmdl• . . . : ' P/'l"I ' ml ~ ... c.. yn -. ex ~. . GELCOAT REP .,,,,.. . ·~ ·-· d sk ' ---· ~·· (b!tettkm1, ~me money An Equal Oppor. Emplo~r. Ews & wknds 9T9-8fi07. • I\~. . .· to.,.,.,.,, uw• e n new OuK.~. • S.Cmeri11·· .. '· P.9 pm, our ~~1. Pe , -tranmterw, fonngn exchange, HAIRDRESSE" I S1fana1•rd/ln..:..lrafMI Contact Coastal Rec~atlon Asst.Bookkeeper to $600 .$alary to· $400. CaU"Glorla e Typists .Ba'I.ned~ requirlr14' 110me customer contact. ~.. w Ione ... .,... C ••• Specialty Fasteper Div, 940 l?th St <mta M ~·y, R.E. : $525 'Cray·, 54CM;055, c.o&.$tal ·!>er-e T A bl perllonatny It · hi~ Col'QWlU orlentl!d. Average foll'?W1ng .. Shampoo girl. Data orp. 3130 W . H•rv11rd · ·• · ~sa -Stat 'fypist 1565 sonnet ~· 11'90 llarbOr r~ IHm •rs 833-3656 or 675--uiJs Ceves).1i 'tyJjnc llklll. Neatness & ac· Xln t working conds &: loc. LAB ASST TRAINEE S11nt• Ana &lZ-0542 · Acctng a~ $500 Blvd., CM. \""" • e Gen I L11borar1 TE LEPHQNE ~ ·curacy and mmt like detail . Call for appt. 548--4l79. An analytical m n Id &. 7141546-5100 213/fi6>2184 NEW Car set ~ man. Gf:n. Acctrl~ Ork .. : to~ RECF.PTIO!'tlST fop anifual VOLT · ·,SeNl.Cf!. "· 1 l>LEASE CALL Hospitalfty Ho1tu1 desit'e to work in 1~icntific egUa[ oppor. emiiOY'er m/f ~St~A~~N El Legal secretary...._ _ __.:,$650 hosp, N.B.·Frf•&:·~t ~Y· Instant P•rlOr!ntl . ,,. ... ~a.:pe~ahJ~ -MR. NEWLAND Service fjeid needed for this xtn't · • • ·Pe,..,.a.1,,.,..Jlf1 Send ~sµme, ctamtitQ ad Te'l)lporai'y Service ~ • .,. .. . , .. _;:auK OF"6-350SAMERICA Is loolling for IA'omen to position Jn well ~ oo. ~CHINISTS ~:.i~Jn ~~.' ::ar~~~nte. , N~WP:QRT. . ~ "°6 639· c/o Daily i'il~. 38'.'8 Car_n~ Dr., Suite t06 TELEP.HbN~.st(f 'SJ.S01hl. -.. welcon\e & interview n£iw To $600. Call Ki.m Clark, ExperbnentaJ .l , Production, • · 813 . ..;0ovlli °1)r ., N.B.. P, · Box-1560, O>Sta ·Mesa, Newport Beach 5:'16-474'1 g'uarantee. 9113-S970, 10 ~1: '•.O&:q,ii:i;aliiiiOi:lfi;P'Yii.iEiinii>oiiloiiy.O".... ~kldents. SaleA or ad-83.3-2700, Dennls & Dennis 5 Yn min. exper. Divers!-NEWSPAPER auto route. . .,.oe .. m Calif. 92626. Equal Oppor. Emplczyer· 3 pm · ·· ·! -11 1 vertlsing exper. helpful, Personnel Agency of Irvine, tied v.-or1c load. ?.fanut. or Early A.M. Approx hrs ~. ... ~· · ~LIEF Clef needed from TELEPHONERS • J!.l!'porlonced ICD CLERK : .UNITED CALIFORNIA ; · BANK i , . 3029 Har bor Blvd Cost• M•s• 546-2033 ~1~~e car & typewriter. 2082 Michel.son Dr. Instrumentation. Advanced .dally f!'in CM., Xi.,~· Pref. I May nh thru June 12tti. Female. For Quunber Jt HOSTESS. mU>t be ov .. 21. Legal R.Ctipt. Trne Kinetic" Inc., 1231 Viotocia ~11:,,. ,u:n. 540-~ PRODU~TtON Sh!lt 8 .,.,.. pm. Mosa Secretaries Comm=e -.... No exp. nee., will train. For Here is your chance lo worlt OSt., c.EmM. ...., TI6S. Equal HITE AUDITOR ..e,..'..uN· MAN ~ f~~ Evc;J: b. ·-ntotJon...Pick )'ql.U'.own ~ for a terrific attorney. Will ppor. P oyer. I . I~':'-, . \iijl -~ -~ · -lO am-J ~¥t~1lntti-I feAlautant. Call 645-8444. train sharp indiv. Call .Lynn MACHlliIST GENERAL Hote ~ club . ex.per. req d. r. '· . •. ~ 11\e Irvine Compaay. l\a!I $2 per howv+ bfiiits. . HOUSEKEEPER Take Marsh, 833--2700. Dennis & Growing C.M . co. needs good Knowiedgt> _of NCR aJOO Perform electronk: checkout Restaµrant •' openings for secretaries not DeCns. tWe''·lri:U, · ' charge of Hunt. Harbour Dennili: l>ersonnel Agency of all arodlkJ machinist. 1'qols', needed. F/time. See Per· of mlC'l"O'll(8~ llfOducts. & H£ED£0 HOWi w/min of 2 yrs exper. in trom'our offi~. Apply, 3 ' horn<> w/2 nice !!Choo! age Irvine, 2082 MicheL'IOO Dr. dies & precision part_.. Ex-sonBnell~-gr. B C'··b RS eonipOntnts. T~c~ • either of the following 3rd St., &.lite E, Hun , children. Exp'd only. s:m LITE M a 1 n t e-nan c e & per. Mill, lathe, surface a uull wy "' or servi~e,!l<fhool. training 1n '!-backgroWlds. ~~ ?Y+·9'-2lOO. ~ ~~·Call 84&-3024 or housekeeping. F/time (Crinder-.etc. 40 hr wk -l2'll. W. Coast Hwy., N.B. electronics• Mm 1 yr re-.. Purcha1lng Clerk • ~ perm. Apply In peraon, St•ady. C&.11 642-8080 for NOW taking applications for lated experience. WAITRES$; "EXPE.R . K.nO~· of A/P · .hmCtion yr.r.tEI " Equal Oppor. Employer HOUSEWORK, Tues &: Fri, Hunt Bch Conv. Hosp, 18811 appt. , counter girl,&: assemblers. c.a.Jl For Appt Full &: p(tim~ l\fust be owr as' 'relAte'd tO receMng dept. · "1a" 5Ref. owncautransPort1 .. oatlon, an Florida. H.B. 847-3515. ·MACHINISTS Acpply, 1 Hr. Va.Jerone ~ Industrial Retations 21PR. YXln 'oo~~·X . E i helRtuL .Typlng 65 w.p.ra. Ii At--.!:....\ \~· :I . ' EXPER mobile home pm . 6"4-al"8. Protot)'pt & Models Metal. leanen;, 8868 Warner. C "Vc~ P. fl. U&e of 10 key calculator., !.i"t'uve,. .. ·S..~ or . ~ j 'Service Man. Qualifications: HOUSEWIVES Wanted, 1;~~~n:ro~l;~kN~a~~~ Capable ot 1oollng manu· Fount. Vly. ; .trl4} 494-9401 ~ 'l'ime. MUi"be_·cJ.tan &: Fln1nc9 Secret•ry ' 00... :ltt. ·Sl:feiftd~ .. 1 , must tnow everything about r,1t1me delivery for dental peacing & bondable. Apply faetu.riq: as well aa proto-Nurses • ·' ' neat.' Jqn't worlcil,J& condi· 1-leavy statistical m>tn&: & exlllf[pe oncRMl.e ""'SAYIH. • . Mobile Home. 4 9 3 -1 1 2 8 . ab. Call 646-5068. ' in pe-n 8 10 4 89;) w 19th type. Component macbining. RN-L VN~AIDE TElONIC &n. '~.·. . use of 10 key. Organized • GS ~ • · 33413 San Juan Creek Rd., INSURANCE g l r I for St .• chrta Mesa'. ' r-.tust have exp.&: own tools. 11·7 &: other ahtftL Top pvt 11~1(w 1~~, . DISHWASHER peraon required w/n~r. fn • ~ : -"San=o:'"::':::n_,Co:•!'.'.Pi::'1,_,rano"-".--. I ca.suatty ~ncy In Corona LUNOt WaJtr't!!IS. p/time. Top pay &: frinp beneflta. duty pay, rmmed. pty for 1 .~¥' _ . .... Must ~t ·1:.. dean. 0.er ~/R &: ~ _!"eef1jD·~ ' ··, 1 d \UIAH ,1 I ; ~~!~C~~~e:;:; ;\~~~~:·hours. ~n!tw~:ur::; Over 21. Apply in penon, Ef~TE MOLD CO. ~~~· CM°c!f~Y. w91.~ ~ L•~u~ 21: ~l~.· t~!f :!;:t:~ .. ,. :i r •A & + accounting off I c e in to Cla11ifled AD, No. 870, ~l~=~~NBe~h~ Center (213) 860-5548 LescouUe Nums_ Registry. Equal Oppor. •Employer ' ~ ~ Pl!non Tnb\E: ·85 w:p.m:.·,Ut-.lh .. Te:leptionc ~ ot164\.1 ' I - ' Cap!strano Beach. D. J. Dally Pilot, P .O. Box 'l$0, 7 MAIO _ I'uU thne. 351 H68pltal Rd .. NB (Lob-Surf &"Sirloin use ."Of ·~O key, ~ ,f~ "PP.l>~; "., ', ~Atkinson & Co. 496-1224. Costa Mesa. Callf.·9?S26. LVN Charge nurse, to 3, Motel & ;\pts. by Park Lldo , Bldg) . . ·~""W ~-11 ~ i ndlv1autfEqual ~ r Salary open. INSERTER & Gen'! Malling days; weekends off. Also, ea.n 536-001· 642-9955 5'0-9954. P ~ion ~Mfr ;R.JV • ~t wy, v.•/ability to compQM: cor-• EXP' 1oocJ he! $l 85 n Al Pttne 3-11 Otarge Nurse. Needed ' r , , o.-1. Newpon Beach retpondence : D 8 1ra .... ·er, for p. · r. 30 Y immediately! 646--7764 MAID \\Uk in exc~ for NUf'SES l..ar&~ .. XOCI: ~ ~~ ~~ ' ' THE SHOW 0 i btJAy <':Hnleal ab. Salary ~mailing machlne opr. apt, 4· hn. day. 2376 LVN 7·3, p/time.· .Nunes purch&l'ing. ~.:;O>ntrcil, REPAlRifAN to work in Sui Xln't beneftta A: WGrkina ._ • .-... ....... r__. 35& Ext..t.J l :..::~~i&s~/exp . ~ MACHINISTS Nt'WJIOl'f.B1vd.CN54lH7$ Aide, 11·7, ex~. pref'd. ma~rials~~~·~ Juan Capistrano Mobile eonds. ' ·. i-~,~~.-22 F EXPER. tire & casuallty in· . MALE le Female Help Mesa Verde Coiw. Hosp, 4500 '¢aibN-'oDr· "· Home Jot. '493-ll2S. Call Mrs. ~: I lofl:I.sland, -N.B. ~ irurance set"l't'lary. HITT FORnllN wanted. Kentucky Fried ii61. ~er.St.. C.M. 548-5585. 546-2118 -;· H~ Beach RN f/tlme. Emergency dt'jlt. i " ' -•• '".1 " • • l'OU~ Uf :!MEH""1 , 6734199 ~~~ ~11111 Chtck'"• 61'! S. Coast l"'Y. ~URSES Aides. 3 mo'• exp. ,__,~ ~ ,11.7 shill. Xln't employeo "6'14"3389 ·· 1 '. ~;.., ·welifO< · • I .JU\JO..i;;) Laguna Beaoh. 9am-Jpm I< 7 a.m .Jp.m. Z: iii&12--beneflls. Contact Emeroen· 64A .'IJ17 M B •~-j FAST accurate typist nee<l<>rl MAN to "'Ork tull tinfe .In Park Lldo COliv. Ctr, Call Publ~Reiaf:t cy Dept, C08t8, M.t sa "'!1!'.' 11t u._...-with some' medical ex-FEE PAID Secondary Operation rental )'lid. Neat i1' appfitt. ~. , , • 1·. Memorial Rospita't, 301 'vic-Betwn 9ram I: l2 noon only. Met•f F•IH'klltor e;rient-e, Ior c I I n i c 8 I Chif'f Elec. Eng S25K Setup exprr req'd for not-w/nea.t hand\\•rltlfti. \\IUI riURSES Aide needed for loria C.Pi-1. 642--213f . .Equal CT c-.bln1t1Mbr.1 . I bon.tory. Eileen, fHO-Ol40 Chier 1¥1ech. Engr .S25K chlng, tapplhg, d r I 11 i n&', train. Apply monll/ · 1930 ronvi hocp. Apply in penon. ' .,'!"· IA .... . Oppor. Employer. , S•~•'l'ARV. : r:,11...... • .. • , ~ i Flbergl••• Rep•irm•n l\tanul. fo.fanagtt S25K deburring, broaching, "-Nev.iport 'Blvd, CM ·. · . ' 1 3«l Vlctori&, C.M. 1 _ ~VEC~' •'-· RN 11-7 Ahtft LYN ·3-U~itt.. .rr~:rr.. .21~' · • · .-...... ':;-,,. 1 .. ,. · " ........ and Snle.J/l\1kta; ElllP' Sl8K other mach~ l)l)en.tions. MA r.t.rn , . '"r-:t • , . , '"itl a uw , er . \ ftf•1 ln~ .. QMl&fl Stockr M Xln't co. benefits. Penn * . NA-.,..,.. NURSES 4ide1, Exptt. nq.· We .,elf ' ndfnl ',~ ,99 bed 00"'18.I~ et. YOUric t . ttmi tid t~ly: ~,Mon oom an g::~~~~ $850 poAltlon w/pxl ch~ !qr Women'sRetall.SYnoper. 'f.3 f/f!nM &: 11·7 ftttme.: ,~l!i4:J:ll-Jor;~~': ~fentN~~ tietkj lntellipnt, attn.ctiV!: 'lhur!S1 .1 •1 •4;:,-. I , For fast growing boa I co. 1''/C Bookkeeper S800 advancement. In womep's ready ~ wear. » e .. area. ~· otfii:llt.: .. ~ . ~ rii~ .,: ~ . , .l..~~ ~· t 1ht office. exp. re· Columblll Yedttt ~ ~;19ciwo;".~~;~~ =~ct•phone '°!: . REXNORD INC. t5<7~f'£~. 2 :o~di~:JRLS • ~~.,#.~~, T.IME .,· I ~~~a 7,1Mo<"mmkk,C.M~ FOOD --·i""• .. ,, ...... ·~··~ 12 A/Payable Clerk lo $S75 S 1 F. DI Fri. WllSon'A -i.toUse ~of lt.ad\o telepho, ne dispatch ~ a ~._-l dlp'dfied v f w/q; .. Btneflta. Fot" annt, 'rn.AIN~ 11" ~ u ....... ¥ ..... • "'""' • ""'' Rl'C('?tionlAt" to S500 ~cla tv asll'ncr v , &lcde 118-44 Wilshire Blvd .. 1 M11•t ht 25, able to drtve .. = Ottez:tng pCr,onal • -4' ,1 • 673-ll6L 1 • ~ 1•. "'f""'.. -..i \NI~ T tip at mo. Under ge n e r a l K h ()pr 1 ""~ 3130 W. H1rv1td ' ., __ j., Hill 2Jl/''""!tnnno AR.Pl.Y.In Person w/!b. putr1.fulffl... • . man, l'NI: Z.'JO vtt IUl>f'rviiion lo be f'eliJXlnsi· eyr.::ec & Ytt Posil\o.: _..., S1nt1 Ana . . ~"'"·~ s. ~. :.Y,liLLOW CAB co. ~ .TemllofY>' Help Qlllic~r A.A ... SECRETARY. excltlnc = wltmut 11lws. Medwrl l . ~t!f c'.!T C>Pfratlon f' lhl• CALI~ TRJSll llOPKCNS 714/546-5100 213/585-2184 MAN ACER .fa" t • food, .!BG E i.Gth Costa Meu. , Servlct •. XJ.rit ~ ... 18.1')' ,.,,II ~ ~~ '1'0 tion in OOsy Al~ ije~ ~ lkll~ le tpptftude .. ·'tr 1 .. ' eterfatrtllf'~& JERRI WlllTIEr-.fOttt equaJoppor cmptoyefm/f .matu~&"d<>pendabtv . 0 ,....,:. . ' •fl + exP. 11.Cct .'j.+: cemm ii · "' ~ Project.·· e.tuy "0 P•' •· ~· ltadable. =ir• ; a.,. penorme to 11111u11t In .. Needld .~work Iona' hours FTt\..J'•:K1l'l,,part tllne, S.u-, f.Ulo . .u.w .. 4 lcildl Q TfflAUAU' A Weatminlter = ~nd 1c",. · I =::· (':=~J.ng srt ~1~~]~~$t (all70.),~ QUl"K CASH l!~""~~fyl~ = !~"~"'·r~v~ '= ~:~.t.i vuau.: . m~~. POMi! ~ ... r :r .:t:~h. ~= ti tt y Pt ., n ., JI irowth· ~ St6-'33$ 7-9 llldultrlaJ hrk 979-23.'U ~\tt@o , . • l!ISO, O.C.. Meta, Ca. 926Z. a f"~ • =· ~n.ds.J~~ 'QutdK c~sH THROUGJ·H ,,A: $ .. ~ER . • · °'.""'°'~PAID ~ · · lliJ.J><~·R'AAr DAllY' PflGT ~ ~"'!:: .'·-. · ~,......., .. u , Aw,l:U!llW!e. THROUGH A · . "'r'E"fil'N-a:-,~ ~Mr~ r..='7=1n!:.,.: . : ' ". ~ ' ==:~~'t'nt. • 1 1"" ·~~ 1! FOR ACTION • '"'"""' 1pe<!alty -Pb !hi> J,Wvtce d<pt. "'" ·.-DAILY: f!ILOf .,. WAll:P,, Al I S.nelltl. -F.qu" " ~. Em....,. · • • ' DAILY PILOT DAILY PILOT 541-7133. • Uz Blalte 833-2700. Al'°~ • ~ , hCntory P./llmo Mo!., i\ Fom1le · DAILY PILQT . " . . va..-...;:i """"'' = =-.:~= ~ 'CLASSIFIED·'ADS .-." . .' ., .1 Cilllloli'I pm .• '• e6cil ~~~- CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSIFIED ·AD WANT AD s,~ .. ~S.~11~ '1'1chs"'l!'l)r. . ,. 642.5678 642if678· ~ ~'::;;'.·,,.~1 !low~-. 642·5678· 642-5678 , "'!!'! eao.-N°*! CluAll!<d"A<l1 ...... ~ ,.. • ..-. i •; • • l,iR!!~llffi!. ~!i!t~.H~OO!!~!!J!i!l,!ii,M<;~(..l!~!!iiael!!!!$!!W '· I ' .. I J ... ' l • ' l • I .. ' I I I ' I I I I . l • ! i " ' ~-,;.. . , . \ • '.. •· . ... ' " . •·. ( ' . . ., . Clerk · Typl~t Typ!nl"~··"'·P.m.) orders & !Uing iD ·our ~depl 2 Yrs ·recen~offi<e exper. . . ... · I '• . "·' ,~~. "!, MC.clillle Ofji< , M~ lill.e': . 01> ~p.licaling ,maChine, ~ngln~ & eligineering documenta• tion P . _ · ,.., "C!mputer Opercitor · A ~!"" of.;~ Yn computer operations ~· ;w ~l yr ~s. 2nd-5hlft. • ''• .! ~ .... . . , . -,. Draftsman · U Yn ..,erience. Must i.; •• some PC tape-up~..: . P.~ ·Modlin. O.perator , A min. of :II mo's offset press• exper. 2~ desirable. • • • • .• . " ' l i . ShifttllHJ & ~iilvln9 Clerk \ 2 Poei!JOllC. ppen. Pref.er same shi~ing &/or 1 rl!Ctlvhlg exper. Musi ·be willin ·to work Offl'time. .•. l " . > . ( . ~,:.9~"Auuriiia Spectolist I ~ -~l"ftlent wllHJO recelvln_g lbopet>-tton. l1Utilli$ wlU include vendar piircb~ I ina~~lli~. . · .. I I I I I I I ' . ' ' I .I ,. • • • ' ' ·i . " " ' ' •I • • '• ,, !j ,, ,, If· . ~tro. ... 11ical ' .. · '. ·~ MQlllrld-lo• .!nspeet . computer systemS le lower.: ltvtl < assembllell.,fer •woPknitnehlJll • c::s•tt.eneu dOClllllentation. Must !rave re-•• I e¥· Secoild shift. . · · -f j~ .. :.;. :Mm. ot'a Jl'I Hper hi a receiving Inspection fctivilJ: ~g reoislors, , capacltori;, pulse 1ranlfitoiers, lrinsistors etc. May be re- quired . to assl!t lower level inspectors . .. ; I\. I , ' ' . ~ ... fnuu hnpechlll : ' . i Years retent exper. In a related lnspec. tioil ~vtty Including <:ables, circuit boards, tb111l"8tc- ' ' ' I 'i .I I ' . ' I I ! , ...J ' ) ·r:..L.~!.:t p • Tf, ~ ,...,..._ •Doporilftlnl • , h of Cifttjitll .L. Kr-'9<• ' · ' l .f • .. • • ..... Z7U ...... ;.Dr.; imfte ·' 1 'I •''· ''·' •t•' ·: m.z400 &t••• 3H · , .. • 1 ,.., ., . ' ..... . ' ~ .... Opp111anity ' '· I f ' ' --~-~~--- ·-' I . .-' -~ . i ,. ""' \. -·""· "'" 16,, 197) • ,:.... . - ' . • ' . • ' . . ' • ... .. ; ' . -· • w •ff ~VPILOT I~ [fjJ I --.... RECREATION TIME a1 CONNELL CHEVROLET NEWPORT DATSUN HURRY 707 N-..,~~· S.A. e Yi TONS e :ii TONS e LUY PICKUPS e E~ CAMINOS e SURFER VAN e LUY "BAJA" YOU CAN STILL GIT =--~-~~=~-A NEW DATSUN 510 '72~ -20' ESCAPADE • __ _;A~T-T~HI OLD PllCI Custom, air, all extriu. By -owner, sale or tr a de . NEW 1973 DATSUN LITTLE HUSTLER PICKUP READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Connell Chevrolet YOUR TRUCK HEADQUARTERS 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1200 $.50. DOWN $'69.62~~ enewest • ere.~ We want to show you the bigger, stronger, spunkier Honda Civic. Absolutely all new. The new Civic"' is sporti ng engi· neering pi zzazz like 4-wheel independ ent susp~nsion, anti-sway li___arand rack-an d-pinion steering. ~IVJ ____ _ And althoug h it can get from Oto 60 in 13.0 seconds, it still runs on pocket change. Gets up to 30 mi les per gallon. Come in and test drixe it yourself. We th ink you'll be pleasa ntly surprised. 30 MILES PER GALLON!. BIG SELECTION-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! 494-1742. 761 Temple Hills Dr., Lag B. RENT -2S' '70 LANDAU or '73 DISCOVERER. Loaded. Air/.Gen. Bike racks, trailer hitch. Sips 6 to 7. 968-5237. Trailers, Travel 94S SMALL CAR OWNERS . Looking for a roomy, COM- PACT TRAILER? Head for a ful l size camping vacatjon with the Ladybug -designed for small cars. Specially priced thru May only. $324. 493--0nl, 32981 Calle Perfec- to, San Juan Capistrano 18' SHASTA fully s/c, sips, 6, opt 8, $1200. 962-7893 wknd anytime, wk days alt 6 Trailers, Utility 947 ~ .. '" :i: 0 c "' '" "' > :;; ~ .. '" :i: 0 c .. '" "' ' ~ WAREHOUSE SALE WAREHOUSE SAU JUST. ARRIVED FROM ITALY SOLD ONLY IN THE CRATE E .. y To Auemblo • Super Ll9htwol9ht 10 Sl!EED BICYCLE 1 ALL COLORS • ALL SIZES aeautlfully p1lnted a •trlpM with chronM fork• ONLY $98.88 = :i: • R09ulor 0 $140.00 :;; Value < '" ~ BARWICK IMPORTS > 33375 Camino Capi.traoo • San Juan Caplatrano ... 493-3375 CJt 831-1375 a •n DATSUN PU, alr, map, c larite tires, m\,m>n, radk>, IQ 1tep bumpen, one owner, $1195. -1993 ' ·,~ e Canlpll.nola Der11ilcr e Aluminum Cha.ln Protre-r: '72 DATSUN 6-Pack ,. ton • Aluminum CcnlC'r Pull Brake • Al\lmlnum ~ Cab--Over Camper Deluxe. "'Grar Protector e Aluminum Kick Stand e Safety Many extras! 16,001 mi., IJ(XXl ~ ~ Heflectnr Side & near e Alluminum Handle Bars ~ t< e High Grade Gum Tires e Alumlnwn Wide Flange > '71 DATSUN 1200. xlnt cond., W ped • new tires 24,00), $1250. Hubs • Quick Re lease Hubl • Factory rap .,, 968-0669 ~ l Plugged Handle Ban. S .::::::_::::::::___R_A_T __ _ c c ~~~~~~~-~ J~o~~~~L~~_!!R~ ~;~~~ .. ~a:·~ 1tll1.111 pll,; 111111 111~. IU>Ull\•~·"" >I.' l J~.,, . ' . . * Mozde •73 Rotary * $66 MONTH 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE Will accept trade-ins CALL MR. FRY 842-6666 Hunt. Beach MAZDA TOYOTA TOYOTA sALE 'AT Pr•O.V•lu•tfon FIRICES BRAND-NEW 1972 Auto. trans., radio, .i.ct. air cond., W·S.W fuei., tint. gl~-~). IA~ AT • 1966 Har6or, C.M. 646-9383 '72 ·TOYOTA CE UC A 4 Spd, Air Cond, Beautiflll 17331 Beflch BJ. 842-6666 turquoiae ttni.sh ('l53EKR1 MERCEDES BENZ $269~ 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY BILL MAXEY I TOYOTA ' HUNTINGTON BEACH , 18&fl BEACH BL. 847-8555 TtYOTA AUrHO,RIZED SALES AND SERVICE l11ll,1rq11E; l1!1tllll''• l:llUT I, 1:i._..~ UI ' " I -. BUY NOW DURING OUR HUGE MAY .J'-'NE SAYING SPECTACULAR! .. Connell Chev~q~t I;; '" JAGUAR 642-~5 • -.69-JA-G-UAR--XKE--,.2,-_-i;:x-.11 Your VEGA HEADQUAR1E,~. 2828 Harbor -Blvd., .CostQ • ~ 546-1200 . ' I ' ' I ' ' ,, ; l ' ' 1-i ' 'I ~ i . ' " i p .. • . " . ' i • ' I ' ' ' • ' . • I '' ' " ' " I' ' ' ' " ' '. ' ' > ' l ii ': ~ . , ' -1 ; .. , I ' ' l ' ' ' ' ' : l ~ '. ! . ' • • . ' ' • . ; ": . ' ' ' I ' ' ' ' ' ., . ' ' . ' .. I ·~· . " I I ~ .. ' '. WAREHOUSE SAU WAllHOUSI SAL! cet>_tlon8lly clean nu tlretl, $3<00830-309I! lbl!!l!!! ........ ""'9 .............................. p 1 I ' , \ ' ' ' . .. -·' • • 1 • w-.,. 11'1 lb, 1973 Wedl\tSdaJ. M'oY lb, 1973 DAILY PILOT C$ 1 I 1r~1 ~1 ~-""'-.. ~'§] r _.., .. 1§1~1 ~-.. ,,.-.. ~'§1~1 990 ~-. "- [ · ~--~1 .. I --l§J ! -"'• ~--"'_ ... ~!§] I :/;~c~HM;io:~~j ~A~.-;;.~~;-~~~·~;i;;;!:::'.-"°~ A-. 111oc1 J90 Avtos, u .... ""' 1r1M i-YO-LICSW--AGl_N_ CONTINENTAi,; MERCURY PONTIAC '7J Mom_ -(· it •n Grand Prix YW'• NIW & USID 2111tt ~ • MINUTES l'ROM COSTA MISA Jll4 E. (lST S't., &.A. 13S6531 (C ~No. ot. So. Q>M PW..>: I -11 Mll\IUTES fROM MISSION VIEJO AREA JAG !l), inusror. $.A. 5*0220 ($.A. n.... Eo.11 "" ' 1st St. ~~ mi) ; VI, AT, PS, Air, Landa• top, 1968 <Xll.ONY Park 9 PM'-~ St~ Po• er etc., low miles, facrory war. • 1971 FORD wqw. full powt;r, lact. alr, Brakes, Wt whttl, Ah'Cond, ta.1:1ty, (182FSQ). P/S, PIB. R.lll, rack . Bucket ~al.5, AM/FM, ONLY $3ff5 ,70 LINCOLN MARK In ~~OUGHAM ~ -J881 'l'ahlU. 17,000 mlln, Rail>< wheels O'nlERS w CHOOSE FROM V-3, ....... 11c -· -St-OLDSMOBILE l13SFWD)$. 4695 H.OWf-RD Ch.v..itot radlo f< beal«, oower _. -.r Dbc am., Newport leach. ing, -er ........ power Alf Oil<lltionin& Salos & Selva DAVID J. PHILLIPS """""""'Blvd 6-•an'lboree """"""'pawer..a.,, >1>! Tilt Steering Wh"'I OlOSMO&ILE BUJCK PONTIAC OPEL, inc. 13'415$5 -. -tittt, air condi-Bl .. .,,,.,.. GMC TRUCKS ~1975 ''8 CHEV. CaPrice coupe log. !ZSN""l. Dorlt Btu> Vin)< Root HONDA c•RS w1v1ny1 rool, aJr cond., $4819 Matd>ing Brougham !ntrrior ~ '69 Grand Prix ~/!'uev~'f; ~..,.;.~~! ~USTAFSON =.:." Contliuon UNIVERSITY OLDS S-J MODEL 11456. -Uncolll·Mercury $2595 c-~.!arbor Bl'(d.-FUlJy .... ppec1, blaok vony1 1965 O£EVY $Qer ,Spt l&alO Beach at Warner See at , top. J._ia 327 fldl 0... aJr . Hun-Beac:ll DAILY PILOT EMPLOYEE 12 OLDS O>nv. Cut!ua 552°7552 bucket 1eati. m ~~ s~ 1424144 * (213).S9'J .. 554C ••" ,:A~!'!~WT M =me.Ex~ Pow~1:,-; Private Party Santa Aha., SG-1003 ''Home of the Viking'' -est ~~ ta es.t otter. ~ 'I!!!!!~~~!"!!~!!!!!!"""' Comm-on..;_;,hti. .,.. Impala 2 Dr hn!top S.S. *MINT CONDITION* Call M.,..,.t Greenman '66 DELTA 88, 2 dr, vm,t 8UY OR LEASE ........ ~· 567-0:!26 Eves. 1971 Mark m. loaded w/ • 6(Z.4.l'2]. • roof.,oclnt cond. ps. pb, air, ~~~NTR~~s5 Moton Ltcl. , · extras, !uJly equ! ...... Whlto best otter, 56Z-'1234 Santa Anec Air n CAPRICE wi red ~·· white vinyl top; '11 FORD Country Squire '72 Toron.ado. F.xecutive own-PONTIAC 1--::::-=-'7.""''""=::--J • pwr, am/Im, ~· Low mileage. $5150 flnn. wag. lo mi'I, dual facing ed. Xlnt cond. $4500 ot 2480 llarbor Blvd., at Fair '71 ~ IUG * ~ * 1 645-8407 call betwn 4 A-8 rear seats, A/C, radio, best offer. 64().0169. Drive, Costa Mesa 546..S017 with pn .t-rintna 4 '670tE\TELLE:'-SS3.~4 ~-pm only. ~ P/S, P/~ root rack a.wo PLYMOUTff:--'69 Pontiac Bonneville ~(m'Q}, -._....,• =~-~~mags, re t CORYm'i dr Jocks. 496-ZDJ • ~ convtbl, mecha!1ic special, $15ft 1969 FORD XL Convertible. •73 Plymouth'ih.i'tfer needsvalves,oth e r\\·ise · 1959 CHEVY Biscayne, new MUST SELL TO MOVE Black beauty, P/S, PJB, Black vt'ith black vinyl rool' great! Po\ver xtra.s, radials. · llLL MAXEY motor. $150. Pvt party. EAST 1966 Corvette, new P/W, many exlra!:, xlnt and black lnterlor; 6 cyl, ra.llY '¥\'heels, 400 eng., 59,<m YOT A 536-7056 tJn-s & exhaust system. cond, will sacrifice. 96$-2943 Auto Trans, PDWtt at~, mi. $1000. 494-9642. TO CONTINENTAL Call 536--0296 6T GALAXY, 4 dt., p/1, p/b, radio 'eater air coouditlon-'69 GTO, full P'\T, air. i-. BEACH BL. "70 CORVE.TTE CONVERT. R I& h, good rubber, $600 ing ~ ~r factory war· AM/fl.I, vinyl top, Orig HUNTINGTON Original, auto, ·454 eng, 5t5-344l ran'ty only 1500 mUe&. owner. $lT:i0Jbcst offer . lb en&·• both reblt. trt. tape. Xlnt. $3500. 837-0813 air. roof rack, stereo. $2250. PRICEb nrSEu. ='"~'"'· 7326"'·==,--.,--.,~- 9'0Autoo.- GET OUR DURING OUR A MAY-JUNE *SPECTACULAR* HUGE SAVINGS ON 1973 CHEVY'S e MONTE CARLOS e NOVAS · e LAGUNAS q e CAMAROS e CAPRICES e IMPALAS ' e STATION WAGONS 914 • 115 vw Bua. '67 ' '63 '6it p/s, p/b, atiereo radio & "7U FORD Country Squire, ' ~ Priv • pty 842-5916/835-3:100 u.pe, neW'1*n 6 byd. · • COUGAR 641>-1029. ·ro PLYMOUTH slnl io n HD ausp. carry 1 'J'i '73 '66 FORD LTD 4 dr, 1 own wagon, 9 pas!:. good Stab!. CH Patrol tgs. · 112 MARK IV .68 OOUGAR, p/a, low f/a, all. JW.T good rubber, transportation. Priv ply e MONTE CARLO SUNROOFS e "COACH WINDOW LAGUNA" 2311 Orcbard.t_ __ 'f"·b· SAo r V-8, automatic trammission, mileage. S161Xl. 9 6 2-7 8 9 3 67,800 m1. Xlnt L'Ond. $1,100. $400. 531-0338 orchard & '-"}"Pl"'U I wknd. anytime, wk: da);S aft. 673--0594. ~fUST sell have three cars, lfcts. radio A bee.ter, pmier steer--6. 'TI FORD LTD. Coon+ ..... '67 ~y III, good co~...:· 1970 PonLiac Ca I a 11 n 8., ·n SUPER BEETLE.S1' ing, power brakes, vinyl top, ~ .. ~ good tires, nu shocr.&, beautilul car $1,695 or best II CHEVROLET u air oondilkming "1Ule Ede-'67 COUGAR XR-7, Juli pwr Squitt. Fa<!. air. P/.. $500/best ,ollor, a!! 5, orfer 897--0887 Conne m-tl~~~ .;.1f1 y,•aJI tires. (!165DlS). w/air, xln't rond. Pvt pty. P/b. Best olfer. 5'f8..-0472 58&-3436. • ---;;:===-:=,---- eve. 49<-9!73 d.<y. • $7489 =· 963--2884. '10 Country Sedan, 8 ..,.. 70 DUSl'ER, 340 hp, loadod SHELBY ' •19 vw CAMPER. Xlnj oond. GUSTAFSON DODGE ~~=· .r.f:· J;':;m\"."'· raok, Cragar mass,., ,e1e.ba1Golng b I d M w/pop top ., tent '12250. 0$veT1400.~~·736"1 or ance. '67 SHELBY 500. New paint, 2828 Har or ·e v Costa esa Do>' su-SSH:" ...,, Uncoln·Mercary '64 DODGE Dart, needs ~7 FORD Convenible. XL -~ 1>ra1"" 427 '""· hl·back •t ~-16800 Beach at Warnar 80me work. $100. 962-5937 ~. Power, auto. Top con· 1966 PLYMOUTll wagon 9 bucirets, tune-up, stereo. All - ".U.'«ij ... ;lrSJ 'ml 1 $1'~. '1Ham• of the Vlking'1 A/C, $1600/otfer 675-8162 carrl:er, 838-4428. or trade. 830-2616. '6' VW SUndial j ~per. Huntington Beach . aft. 5PM rllUon. $795.. ~1323. pas.g, Top cond. R&H, ~IC, power. Must sell immed! 546 1200 ~-~~PY A-l cond. 142-1844 * (213)592-5544 FIREBIRD 'b9 Ford Tor;no s. w., PIS,'"""'""'"'+ hg box Worth ove. 120001 .. U.$!600. -. - -5PM · ' · 66 Llnro!n Omt!nenlal, air, '67 FIREBIRD 326, Juli MAVERICK PONTIAC VAUANT ~ bk ~,mi on full ~r. Looks gttat,. power, air, nu ttres. good 1 "1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!11'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ___ .. en&'-fll'J!I_ ~ needs engine-work. $500 « ~age, $9ti. 64 4 - 4 8 9 6, '.70 MA\TERJCK, auto, radio, * '.69 P01 NTIA.C G.!?: 7~1XX> '62 'VALIANI', Good body, D •1 p•i Cl . •t• d' :slDt 1..voa1. 6'l4-SA5 Be1t otftt. 962-4122 6'5-0435 Polyglass tires, new brks, mi., c ean, .au-, ...._.,,, ouer. tires, nu reg., rad\c., nothing -· ,. ~ -·$896 it '68 4-Dr. Hardtop, air, new '68 FIREBIRD 400, P/S. major. tuneup, xlnt cond. 548-2554 ' . to write· home .about, but GI y I 0 ass1 18 '72 VW. l(lnt :~· tires, mdial, x!nl rond. P/B, R&H, aulo tram. Gold, pvt -Y. U650. F,.t_,.sul1' arc iU•I a phone good !nnsportallon. 1200. . 'WO). &681.M ~ $19W. 6'J5....4f00. 49?--196J 551-5111 call away 6«2-567S. 675-2692 -o.....,.--~-:----ii'=,,.....~~-,,----==-:--..,,,..-7'"~~...,.,~1 VOLYO Autos, UHcl 990 Autos, UHcl 990 Autos, UHcl 990 A"ut"'o;..;s"-, ..;;U..;;Md=·---990-"'-'' A'-'uto='°s,_U.;.Md=---"-990'-'"'-A-uto_s_, _u_ .... ____ 990_ Auto•, UHd · 9904'uto1, Used 990 1 ~'v-O_L_vo-s'""l._LE __ I _ Hate ScN11gs ·12 & ·n ONLY ' 12 ' LErl" A1 PJtE.00~ DEVALAU'llON , PRICES/ . We make owneal. deliveriet See It • y:·1~ Johnson & Son Announces their - RANJEE · ON · EACH & EVERY llSED CAR WE SELL. BUY WITH CONFIDENCE FROM US! ·. r-.u.__ . I ' . 19111! Harbor, cf 646-9ll3 ' 72 VOIVO 4 dr IM!dan. s,piffce $200. t.o.p. Pvt,Pty ~1072 aft 6. ... -. UMd . 990 . AYANTI •e AVANTI ~to r/h. p/s, p/b. electric windows, make otta. ~tl. 1970 BUICK ltlectra.225, full vn. ale, s1nt cord. Mmt ~ to app;reclate. su...mz CAQILLAC ' I ' DICK JOHNSON says: We want you ~ompletery satisfied when you plirc:hase your ~: used car from us. If for any reason you're not, wltllin a 48 ,I): hour period, -wfl' will simple - GL-ADLY vcticl-the -+ra~sac:tion. It's IF YOU'RE NOT HAPPY. WE DON'T WANT THE SALE. '72 Mark IV tew mn ... Ilk• n....,, An:tlc whit• !ln!.n. wllll• ltalller lnrttlor, ""111t t111d•u top, tvlly luitury .ciuJPPld, ll>cl. tutl POWet, tvro-ttmp air OOnd., lndlvidu•I PG'"' 1e1t1, AM/FM 1f1rt0. 1111 whttl. c:rul11.control. pwr, Ollar locks. elc. $old trid 11«Vkta at Jolln10111. See a. drl_.. It tOda~. {115EYZJ $ALE PRICED! '69 Lincoln 2 Door 1 Sold new by us, 1erviced by us. Light gold exterior with d•rker 90/d vinyl top. Factory air conditioning, power windows and seat. Neer new Radie! tires. Low mile•ge. (b41FYYI '70 Mark Ill Bur9u"dy fi.{lish with matching leather interior, black vinyl top-. Full rwer, f•ctory air conditioning, AM-FM ste~ r•llio, IOcking group, tilt whi9I, lo~ miles. I S-46· • 1'GHI . $5275 ' '7i ; t.1ercury Cougar 1 Olive green tri•rior with matching vinyl top end simu· I lated leether interior. Fectory •ir conditionin9, pow•r steering, 19,000 miles. l3l9DZF) $3275 SOME-MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE SPECIALS '71 ~I~~~~~.!."!~~~' A;, Coodilioo · s3775 in9, 1mm•,ul1+1 Condition. l5J2C)(W) t ---~- '71 ~~~-~"~·!'.;.,bl" w;!l. 1;9ht bl" ,;,,I lop ood bin $5875 l11ther int•rior. Crui1• c:on!Tol, AM /FM 1t•r•o r1dio, full pow. et with locking group. I 109EXAJ '70 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX VI, Aufom1tic: Tr1n1mi11ion, Redio, H11!1r, Pow1r Ste1ri11g, Pow1r 8r1k1,1, F1c:t. ;.;, Cond .. L111d1u Roof. l513EA'f~ '69 CADILLAC Cpe. De Ville Full Pow••, F1c:tory Air Conditioning, 6 W1y Power Seal, l.1rtcl111 Roof. fKSSl l2l '70 IMPERIAL LE BARON '70 '67 l Dr. H.T. 0111 Owner. lmmec11l1t1. Full Power, Fec:t-ory Air, AM/FM Aedio, Tilt Wh•el, 6 Wey Pow1r S•at, l1nd1u Roof. 16141EV) ~.~~.~Joh~~! •.. "' .... , ... b," •1·•· .•• ,,.,., .m. s5475 ev1ry •lltr•. Mecliu111 bf.own fini1h with vinyl top I 1111111• int1rlor. 11191711 Power it•eri1t9, power luak11, 1uto1T11tic. tr1n1mi11io11, eir condltlonin9, ¥inyl roof. 1544CIU ) !~~ !~tl•~~m~•;o•, ,;, <oodltiooi•9 "'" '1"'"· $1275 f6269SXI · Roma Of The New C81' , , , "Golden rwcW' • NOW. 1973 • LANDAU CONTINENTAL MU1l.Ul\Y '70 Mercury Marquis 4 Door 1eden. Ivory finish with bleck vinyl top •nd simu· lated leather interior. Power windows & 6 w•y power seat, factory air, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, local one owner car serviced by us. { 49-4AFY I $2675 . '71 Cougar XR7 28,000 miles . Sold new by Johnson & Son. Serviced here also. Factory eir, power steering & br•kes, Mefellic blue f inish with . blue Calico interier & .white vinyl top. New +;,.,, J5b4l>XYI '69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Door Hardtop. F•ctory air conditioning, full power equiRment. AM-FM radio, vinyl top. 1"417AGHI $1475 '68 Cadillac S1d1n OeVille. 65,000 miles. F1ctory 1ir, full power, Gr9cl1n gold with black leather Interior end vinT.I top. · A vtry nice one owner ctt driven only 12,00Q. mi es per year, IXTA3541 . ' - Home Of Th<'-Ne• Car ••• "Golden To,.clo" NOW. 1973 LANO AU CoNTINENT AL ' MOTOR HOMES ... MOtOR HOMES "'' ',\ . 7626 HARBOR Bl VD. ilil>AltS, COSfA MESA • ll40-5630 ~ -... . ' ' • \ I .. • • I· SEE us FOR: '66 GALAXIE . 500 . . <4cfoor,11:.T., r•d io, heeler, e11h1mo1fic, '679 power 1tterin9; VI, 9ood mile1. ( RRY - 1121 '67 MUSTANG v.1, .. d;, • '"'"· ..... ,,,.,;09. s107 7 Good mil11. IVCJl621 '69 GALAXIE 500 T DR. H.T. VI , rtdio, heet-r. auto., pwr. 1leeri119, s1 683 vinyl roof, good mite1. IXSR92 ]) '10 COUNTRY SEDAN WAGON Rod;o. '"'"· p••· ,1.,.;09, "'°" $ 2 2 7 6 1ir c;ond., good miles , IOOlAVRl '69 MUSTANG GRANDE VI, FM/,.d;o, '"'"· "''·· po•,.$1669 1l••ring, •ir c.ond., viMvl roof, good mil•1 . I 255851) '68 MUSTANG H.T. Radio, h1at1r, auto., powar 1t11rin9.$ .. •62 air, VI, good mil11, tWIA194l a6 '71 Gi'LAXIE 500 2. door h1rdtop" r1di~, h1at1,, auto .• $1995 air, powe r 1t11rin9, vinyl roof. Good mil•1 . 1996'CQL f ' I ' . . ·-. .... . . . TIRED Of ''SHOPPING AROUND?'' FOR THE BEST DEAL? THEN SHOfJ NO MotlEI OUR TRADE. IN SPECIALS '66 PLYMOUTH 2 DR. H.T. R•dio, h.,1te r, auto., power sl11rin9, '89 7 V-8, .!i ir cond ., qood mile1. !FCJSO Sl '67 PLYM. BARRACUDA ·2 d<., VS, r.id io, h1o1!tr, eufo ., new '875 pain+, low miles. IVVW8291 '68 CHRYSLER New Yorker ' Ooo• H"dtop. foll po••" ,;, ,,,. s1099 ditionin9, good milt1. IYCNSI I! ' '68 OLDS Cutlass Supreme 2 dom tt .. dtop, nd;,, ....... "''" s13 76 power 1l••rin9, vinyl roof, 9ood mil•1, •i1. IYX N8591 '65 CHEVELLE WAGON VB , radio, h•1i1r, •ulo .. pow•r 1!11r-s.766 in9. INFZ526 l . '71 CHRYSLER 4 DR. H.T. R.d ;o, h,.1 • ., "''·· p••· ,;..,;09, $ 26 71 1ir c.ol'ld., low mile1. I 120DFB J , '72 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX •·dio ........ "''" ·,, ....... ,. s3:9· ·99 ing, pow1r wi11dow1, vinvl ,oof, air, , lo"t 1"11il11. !42SEAEI ,.. - • -~ -. - MISC /IMP'TS ' .. '72 YAMAHA Motorcycle 250cc. Only 2600 mil11, 1addl• b•g1, wind1hield. IUOV075) 5499 '66 VW FASTBACK T-BIRD TRADE-INS! 5 TO CHOOSE FROM! '67 TO '72 MODELS Fine low mile•9• -some local ow.,er cars, buy today aod ..• $AVE Ex'""ple '69 T·BIRD LANDAU . f,11 pow.,, ''' <0odiH00;09, pow" '1788 window1 & 11afl. (969CPA ) ' ' • '\);t \ V-8, r1dio, h•1t•r, 1f1Mdard 1hift, ·2· •pproximataly 15,000 mil•L ( 214- 171-1) '72 .Ford 1/2 Ton P.U. V-1 , tidio ind haatar, automatic. '2 Good 111il11. I 19l02ll .1 • " ' ·@;1 --~·_,...,.w --· . . . •' ·,• .,, :; :t •• " > I • • • ' .. ' 1 \ r ' ' ' IWl.Y PILOT f'1 ., IMPERIAL-CHRYSLER PLYM T Wt NEED 'YQUR 8USINESS . ~·1~:~~~·-1 ~~~~ '1~.riilouTH FURY St•teo, sp•-4 control, etc. This is the owners per-loaded with equipment .. FACTORY . . 5on•I car •nd has only 2,782 mites. AIR, V-8, auto. trans., tinted ;kiss, • . ' ''I EXEC. DEMO · SAVE FROM WINDOW STICKER PRICE :-:S . IMMEDIATE -DELIVERY ,,. • r • ' • , '\. THE ~ECOllOIY CHAMP ~ . . . Fully factory equipped. Economy & Style . tor~ ;48 "'°'· wolh $JOO & l &l down, iul1 uM P'ice $218'1 + T&l, delened poymeoi pnc;a S2m.40. N'9.. 10.12 0 .A.C. ORDER YOURS TODAY! YOUR CHOICE OF COlORSI power disc brks., steering; radio, ·vinyl roof plus much more! STK . 400. Ser. 257587. ·$ :DO MO. for Ollly 4 "'°'· wirh $300 ond l &L down. full colh pnce $3550 + T&l, deferred poy1T1en• pti<e $4718.j() APR; 12.8 E, 0 AC. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • '73 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON This large wogon hos power steering, po"#Cll" ditc brokn, fvll vinyl interiOt", 400 CID V.8, • . Calif. Emission Sy1tem, J.78i:1S tir•s & much, much mar•. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! STK. 4029) SIR. 249425) s·aa T~TAL sea Total Down MONIHL Y Payment PYMT. + T & l $88 is total mo. pymt. $88 is down pymt. plus to.I & licenM & all carrying chorgn on opproYed credit for 60 months. Deferred pymt. price is $4543.40 indu. tox & UcenM1. Annu- al percentage·rate is 11 .07%. PilStiNALIZEO LEASE . ~lAN". ' NO DOWN • cistt BACK FOR YOUR PRESENT CAR l!)( SEE 1IDE '13 CllRYS. '13 .fUIY '13 SITEWll 36 MO. WARRANTY -Parts and labor ElMlf HDTP. AIR, LOADED HDTP. AlR, lOAOEO. AIR CONO, ETC.· 3:-:i:-::. '89 10~ '89 10. •l9 MO. -r•<J.~ ,. ~ ... ~' ......... l-DAY TRIAL IXCHANGE: WE LEASE ALL MAKES.CALL LORNE FEALY • IDPL.SICOND CAii V-1 .,,.glnt, eulomllllc: tren1m1ulon, ,... dlo, l\H lr, vinyl roof, lVOZ491). '67 ME1tCURY COMIT CALllNT! tPOW.r 1tHrlno, .au1orn.t!lc tr1n1mlsslon, r.tto: ~t.-. No. VCY"'-etrvaln prlc• .... -.1 1111ly ••• '$488 .. !68 PLYMOUTH ·•• "10.ADIUNNt:ll" ';' ~· tneln•, r•dlo. llHler, wll!t1 w.t!ls, cllii. Wllttll cover .. tYUA:ml. Drive It • • . you'll buy Ill $688 ' ... ' ' t I f..,~;:68 PLYMOUTH _, FACTOIY All r,U1tv. v.., W-w ti,..., ·wn1. eov••· u· 11'9 cl•nl IAC"" . • ' '68 CHEVROLET CAPRICI HAIDTOP · 2-door, \l-l,<au10mllllc, r.,dio, llMter, .,-at~ing, I t ii d t \i .top. FACT. Al CONO. tXTA011l. $788 '69 CH~YSLEJt. TOWN & CChiliriY STA.-WAG. Fact Air, 1utomtllc, redlo & hNltr, pwr: sl-1ng, full _,.... ccw•rs. •i.two ltpe. tZCA7ftl • $1288 '72 CHEVROLET "fACTOIY All'" '$1588 '72 FORD "P-ACTOIY All'' \I-a tnilnt, i;iow..-1tterlfl(I, r1dlo, ~lw, lull vln\11 setts. 15'3HFIP). "l•t ltte model buy •round." $1788 I• '71 Cl:jEVRQl:ET Fllfl'i ~· Lib. f2tCc,,Y. $888· • . • .. AKE YOUR CHOICE ORD '71 CHEV. '70 PLYM. Lie. 4338EW. Lie . .521CCY No. 21337 ssa LFUELLTH i3IPMEN5T MO. DOWN Pm. $35 mo. k>r Ofllr 30 --..;!lo Sl8 +-T&l ........... COW, pm. S888 +-TC.l. o.fwr.cl ,.,,-pril:t SI 131.00, A:ll'.lt. 17.31 0 .4.C. LAKEWOOD SH_.otPING .CENTER 'HERE'S· A SAMPLING OF OTHER FINE VALUES . '73 Caprice Chev. Classic, Loaded, Fact. Air, (816-HGT} '68 Buick Rlvl•ro, l•eded, (248 BlUJ 72 lmp1l1 4-Dr. Sedan, (371 EHii '71 Buick C•nturlon, SHf.RP ,(316 COG! '71 C1m•ro, 4-spffd, 12,000 mil•s. (730PFZJ '71 Must•ng, NICE CARI f~2.CBIJ '72 Mollbu, Good looks, Good Prlc•, (622EEQJ '72 V•ll••I Sump, Good Economy, (061FFVJ '10 Cougar, No Puny Cat, (105AEZ) '72 Dust•r, • Real Sherp Auto, (555010) '73 Pinto Wagon, Economy + Practicabllity ; '72 Courier Pickup, Pickup on This Fine Truck (242FTDI '72 LUV Pickup, You'll "Love" This One, (1 JlGHE) '71 Chevrolet Wegon, loedod & Shltp, (4<11DMDI '71 Fury Wegon, • Rool Boouty, (030DKRI ' '71 Old1 Cutl111, loaded, You'll Went This One, (626BEWJ '72 Furry Ill Coupe, lmm1cul1te thru-out, (016ELK) '71 Ford LTD, Luxury 1t a Low Cost to You, (319CBK) '72 S•lellite Custom, Out of Thl1 World, (504DVWJ '72 Dodge D•rt~S . up, (368VJT) '72 Chry1ler, y' 'II like It, (526EYN I '70 Novi, Very Ice Cir, (420VHF) '69'Toyote Coron•, Whit•, (819AEOI '70 Ford Tor!•~· A Boouty, (311Glii.J '71 Mu1t•ng'FHtbock, Excellent C~nd., (207BUXI '70 l TD Coupe, For YdUJ, (247 AVNJ '66 Chryoler H.T., (BMY201) '69 Dodge Monac~ Wagon, Just Wh•t Yov W•nt (BBM022J '71 lmpol• Coupe.Rod, (985EXll '70 C.rnaro, Air; (3798E~) . '68 Mu1iln9, CIHn & NlcW,,(XFY746J " . r - ,; I , ~ • ,, I ,. . ' ~ .. 1, • ~ ·,,, ' ,, J. • ~ ~ •l . .. ,. "1 .. - \. ... .. I , .• 1), ' • • " • .. ~ ' l J • ' " ·1 l ' l • I i ······· T I - • i r J ~1..1 ,ILOr 1973 PLYMOUTH Gran-Sedan Plenty of •~lra1 lnch1dln1 1lr con- dlliollh1CJ. Ser. NI. PP4JMlDl6nu Off Suggested Retail Price Sl'f'. No. CH4J-T>C-14JIJO SPRING CLEARANCE '70 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR SEDAN VB, eutometic, redio. he.iter, power 1t•erin9 & br.ike1, W/S/W, •it condi- tioning. f90BANGl s1595 '71 MAZDA RX2 ROTARY 1 DR. CPE. Rol1ry •1>9 ine. 4 1paad, ••dio. h11ter. power br1li11 , .. ;, conditioning, bucket 1e1t1. Low mil11. l 21 OEOH ! '69 TOYOTA STATION WAGON Rad io, healer, power br~ke1. w1H1, .i ir conditionin9. roof !ZWA9001 -• . '66 CHEVROLET CAl"ll:ICE 2 DR. H.T. VS, •ulom•lic, tedio, he•ler, power .t11rin9 & br1ke1, W /S/W, 1ir condi- lionin9. I 529HGC) s795 '70 CHEVROLET IMPALA l DR . H.T. VB , 1ulom•lic. radio, he1ter. pow111r steering. W/S/W, <1ir conditioning, vinvl lop. low miles. (811GJU) $]995 '70 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON B el~edere. VB . .iulom.itic, r1 dio, heel· er. pow111r 1teerin9, W /S/W, roof t.ick. !<t4bASJ I I' SPRING HAS SPRUNG, THE GRASS HAS RIZ, ATLAS IS WHERE THE SAVINGS IS! '69 CHEVROLET MALllU 2 DR. H.T. VB , automatic, radio, h1eler, power 1te.rin9, W /S/W, eit conditioning, vinyl fop. llJIOLMl s1595 '71 FORD LTD 1 DOOR HARDTOP VB, aulom1lic, r.idio, h111.it1r, power 1!1e1 in9 & br.ik11, W/S/W, eir Condi. tioning, ¥inyl top. l555CMK! 52195 '67 MERCURY COUGAR XR7 1 Dr . H.T. \It, .i11tom1tic, r1dio, 111111· er, pow1r tftering & br•k11, air con· dilionin9, • leetll•r inl•t., vinyl top. !WXH141J s1295 ' .. • ' ..... --· .· • Wot-, ft11 16, 197) • ,. • And Get Out For More Fun! NEW ·y2 TON PICK-UP SER. NO. lHICO.CH861114 NEW ·· 1973 T~AVELALL · BEAUTIFULLY· EQUIPPED SER . NO. JHOHOCH8323ll ,NEW 1973 l/4 TON PICK-UP "CAMPER SPECIAL" ' . !'GET 'EM UP ' SCOUT" ' I HEAD FOR THE HILLS ••• THE DESERT ••• OR BEACH IN A RUGGED GO-ANYWHERE . SCOUT - , •• • I ' I, A ~uly great way!~gef · away . from . it all. Out. standi11g • • • spr1ng·h~e" sav. •ngs n ' • ow on tit~ . elit" l1neofft ~ ,•re n ernat1onal's S • perb Recrfational Veit~-. cles. 1 -~-.. -.. ······-··· ·-. ' • ' t ' PLUS TAX AND LICENSE '. --:;::::::'.; OFF SUGGESTED R~AIL PR!C~ ,_ , OFF SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE ·rr1ce Does Not lachHM Camper l SER. NO. lH2COCHB3759l • -1 > Off .suggested , ' ~~-1 . ~Ce\ :l. " i" • I ' ... ; i . ' . . ·' . ~: . ' ( ! . . . ' r,, .. • .I , •. . • ' ' [ ~ . , . • :...v (:-' '• ' . c' . . - • ' . ~ ... l;· ~ ~ , ' ~ . . . L :. ~ .. f • . ' ' . ·: • • 2DOOI ·- ' ' . I. • ', ~' 6. 7. 0. owN· _ FULLY FACTORY EQUIPPl>D . · Low mites /used (596HDE) • t • IMMEDIAlt DIUYEIT . , j $ 567 iStotol ciiiNjj;167ls tot• '.. 67 ···.MONlJf :~y~~\1 .~L,i ·~~ou•.ciio1c£,Of """•• charges on '99(, credit1for ~ 42 months. '.lleler:red' py mt. .' CUSTOMIZED • pf ice S2881; intluding tall & INTIRIOIS.. license. Annual ,Dtrcentage $ J.'$0 AHDu• rale 10.Jla , ~t. ,. '.Vfdntsday, May 16, 1973 • DAILY PILOT D 8100 YAN FULL FACTORY EQUIPPED OllDIItYOUIS NOW . '· . ~C~l~COlOIS . . . . "$1 '988 ····-~11·66 ·$58DbWN $58AMONTH- , • r ~ ' t . · . FU.LL' ·P.RICE •• . tSI 11 tot.I .. 11. pywtt, $SI l1 tef9I-. JrMtfl. litcl. frml, lket!M & .ti canylllf ci..r... ... .,,,. ~ t.r 42 lllCM!tln. hf.emd 11rmt. price ti4M IMI. tu & 11 ..... ANNUAL •DCIHTliol IATI t .M.. -. .. 172-'l'~G A ;·•.> .. ___..ladiO, 1heatei, deluxe interior and exterior_(79aFBA). . .. . :'\y I; . ":'-~: :~ '. ... . HCll<hbcick, radio, heater, fully f_ry_equlpped (IOIJ\UTI , ·1(!. e· ()-· L'f~ '\. I ' ' ' ' ,...,, . I ~ .. I., .. ..., t~---·.~ ·cF.ULL PRICE ' , t3~l t~Q~~D~9WN _ w ·I C50 .. A MONTH l·. ''I l . jS31 . ' lit I ~,..yMt $SI.SO Is total fwa. pymt. litc:I. ta• & li<eflM and all carry! '· es~· o~crtdltfw 3'M01. ~rred payment price $1176.66 in<I. 1 tax&• < • , A Al f"Cl'lfMI ~Tl 17.!,i~· · il:' . ~-. . '" . ~ 1 lkMEDIA "tE 'DELl;Y-E'RY . '70 CHA·RGER . · •.. ' ' . -• ri ". ···. ~72' C()LT · ... Wag0n, automatic transml11lon, "'41!0, heater. (197FFH) '72 Pl.NTO -- Radio. htai.r, dtluxo exterior, automatlc"transllil11lan (aS711Qltl-, ~ . . -' . ' ,1~ • ~(~ ... • • .,.,.. .. _ '~~~·ICl -1 ... .. -''"· 3q uuWN -~ .: · $3.9 MONTH . ' . . ' . ,f1>9 is tot.I dn. pymt. $39 Is total mo. pymt. incl. to•, lk•nM I •II carrylnt chciirves on appr. <milt fOf' J6 mot. O.ferrff paymtnt price $14'4 IMlo tct.11,. IJ•n1to ANNUAL PIRCINTAOl 11.12%. ~68 FIREBIRD ~69 TORINO . ~ 170 DUSTER V·8, ~"\o· trans, .. radio, hea· $,,,. FASTe);cK, V./J, auto. trans.. $ 766' Jlidio, healer, otr vlnvt In· .,,, itr povrec ~eer1~W v1nv1 top, wtr disc.t brales, wJ:de qvat . ~iors plus full fa~tory equip. , laoliirl. ak,f""d• <1 U~ljll71 · IJre.canor11el/ow. IOjSCUWJ W.L19COB3173671 · ~ "·, ~r;..,· l ~ ;PULL PllCE • ' ·,Ull ,~·· i, ~ . fUll ••rel ~~L993) · ~ater, factory air (181FZWJ '·68 COUGAR . XR7 ~70 FO·RD Wa ~~~r1n~~,,~.c~;;~f;:·~1~~~~~ $86t 1 !:~~~ ;!~~~i~~i~9. :a~~;$ I 0 . ' "' .: FULL Pll t • FULL ~II I . ~ .... I I ' • J , I I ' ' \, 6 1 1 1 ' 1 , '· ' < ' ,, • \ I \ I I I " • t " I _,. t ' I ' ' I I • ' I t ' ' • • • I I I I ) • • . i ...ulA, 1uto. trans.. power :=1tHring, radio, heater, No. ~ZQ)6 , -.· 4 Door V-1, auto trans.. power steering, factory a1r, ( UZk- JMJ. ·llAND NIW • ~ ... ' .. • .t •. IMME~TE ·DELIVERY ; . . .. .. Spefd, rw bumper guards., ·vinyl interior, 1bucket" siets, forc ed air: htilfr, ett. JRJOW1791~t ' . ' -· • .. .... .. • • • , " -. •• I ( " ' r . "<( ' Clemeil -) :t •• --Teday's Fbud •Ira • VOL 66, NO. 1~6, 8 SECTIONS, 110 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA WEONESOAY, MAY 1$, 1973 ' TEN CENTS ' ' . ,E~·gy Crisis , to Me~n Cha~ge • Ill Life-style? ' J • ' I l ' • I • • kn111Jngl9 cuf<lo"1! m lhe bel!tmc !llil. Thll iii llirlon<iif"thril<lgb'1lllO hem! by the .....,,.... dlvlalC)ll • ol the Amerjcan ~u.. of , Petroleum Geololli!a and the Socletr of EooDamlc PaleontokJcl.rla and Ml n er al o J.I •ts meetl!Ji at lhe ptsneyland llolel. : . Kettl> Doig, ..ice ~ ol olilnninl all1I -lea fir Shell 00, lol4 u.e gatlleHng lba.l lllr! United si.teo probably wlJl Mt get all lhe energy It ,.quireJI dur· Ing the ~ period but lhat the "ltion '• . • . , ·ar1ne ' .r ' CamJHliflh .Fuqd will be "nuinlng liiiCiiillll1'opill" In 19'0 =er ~doing away wllh po pilot U the proper at.pt are IW!!. ::-• producllao-<I llMMU. He llld a pro)ec:led dilllbllnl Qt energy tranaml3slons, lncn!aaing lhe alrllne load coosumptlon fnn lt?O to _l)ll meana . factol', and Improving lhe el!lclenCy of that lhe ~criala ."wlfl be I lnduatrlal plants." phenomenon it I-15 )Uni. · And to aave on domestic heatlnc 'Ind To aoften the I' ht l'flCM'lnwwled. c:oolbJg-bl1ll Doig predicted, 0 we ~ lhat lhe coontry "underiite ,-.y ...,. have to nm the poos. two to tbrte servatloll ~ .the developnent ol degrees hotttt in lhe summer and two o< dolneotlc ruources." three degroes cooler in lhe winter -and On the conservation side; Doig' said. perbapo l;nil sweaten instead." 'are such altemaUves u )nducblg Since four-passenger automobiles are • Ill. seldom used to capacity he forecast that J!OrllaJl.' "'L many ~ lut,11 o! the luture vehicles on the rOllil ~ anty two _.,.. but feature 45 mph lhrm. He said if q&o~ were to continue to .insist on air "OObdlUonlng and automatic lranamlsalom, tbe United Slates would ''have to pull off a RWlsian wheat deal every year" to pay for Imported oil to run them. Another speaker, Ralph L. Lewis Jr., vice iweaident of public rellUoo.a for Gull HHH ~upporter • . - Faces U.S. Rap SEC Cbi:ef' Quits . Overuiticisiri' pt _F~d ;Report ' '\VA$llINQTON '(AP) -Cbalnnan G., ~on1 Cook oL ~ Securttiel ll!ld· E<· Change Ctpmlssion announced h i I mloi.~on today. NEW YORK (AP) -The federal government today filed a criininal charge ~t the senior partner in a Wall Street brokerage firm for alleged!)' making $48,000 in illegal, ind1rect con- tributions to Sen. .Hubert H. Humphrey's presidential prJmary eampa.ign la.st year. The criminal izl(ormaUon flied in U.S. !>illlricl Coort alljged lhal Joim L. Loeb, 70, of the flmnlf·l..oeb Rhoades l<-CO., ll)llde is conlr'.fi°r5 in the ~ of eight persoos, · y clerlcAI emplo,Ye! of blo. fkl!JI; . " -. ' ·v.s: ~. . tney wi>rill 'seymoor ch lllal '*· ~'.• urcbil the ~~·~""'!rlhelr Niallrtls to " dU· fmpf ,~RI!, OO!Jlll'!llieea alter Loeb :~~ \!'":f48.IOO lrom _llli.1CCOU11t . A ipoke"1tan. eaid the f\ling of tbe cbarae at~e4 frqm an tnvesUgaUon b<gun nearly a year ago by tbe ~era! Accounting O!liC. and tbe FBI. Loeb was aceused. under the federal election cam- paign act of 19'/L Last week, lo.,_ Atty. gen. Jo!m N. Mitchell and 'former commerce secretary Maurice H. Stans were in-!ii_'a lel!U lo Pmident Nixon, CoOk aajd: "I deeply repel having to lender mt· ... igrialion' "II ~-o1 t~ County Planners Secw'iues Md Ezchange Commluion, but in light ot.imtortunate -· ~ prevalling,,i 11eu ... It 1s -1o 11o Join Developer ~ namect SEC cha\rnw,. by lllxoo ClllJ1'(a few lnon_llur ago; bu !Mien cr!liciz-1n' s· uhdi . . eel for•bls'hamjling ol a r<port ol 1 cash . · VlSIOll canlributioo to tbe Nlxnn •1972 cam20lgn , by -L. ·Vesco, ·""'9 bu been under A land develo!ier ol a Dana PolDt sub- in..,~ by Ibo SEC. " div-·aaid todlly ho saved at leut Cook turilod SS Thursday and wn one $50,000 by meting lhe deroancls of tbe ol tbe youngest chairmen in ~ry of coonty planning commiaalon. lhe Sf.C. . Bob Hezmalhalch, director ol opora- . He'.testified thi1 1week at a cloaed-door tioos and land de~t for American healing before a Siloate committee on Housing Guild of Newport Beach, which the' Vesco: matter.' The !lalure of the is • developing an •aere aubdivislon tesUmony wu~~ disclosed. across ~ the new1 ~a Hills Hi.eh Coo•• · t ' Is • rtaln 1 · 811 •• _ School, p<aised the COOUJUBSlon for its a s res1gna 100 oe o '"'-'• persistence Wall Sl!e<t in view <ii lb< fact he has His firm iost 13 lots In lhe process, but been at the f?ret'ront ~ IJ!OVea _to reform saved .flllin8 end gratling a eanyon and the country s -securities marR:ts to two addiUooal acres ol open space were ~e a single eentral-inarttl system. gained. Coast ' Weatller 1 l'1!e •8111\ W)ll peek, OUI of the cloUd&a little earller'Ga 'lbureda11 .. with mosUy ,1unny skies after the momin( burn off .. ffigbs of 68 de- -at lhe beOi:hea rfsing to 75 inland. Over:nlflhl lo~ 50s. I . . INSQ)E TODAY Two Palo Alto coed< wanted to 1ee for\hemielw1,h010 homo- Jezuals art trerited. 80 tlit'IJ con-- dllCle~ an <iffectionau perional e.tperi"""'! With sft<>cki"ll n. sulll. Storr P~ !Ill • '. "We feel very aood about this," Hezmalbalcfl said. 115ometimes yotl can't see the forest for tht trees -but the ooplmisslon forced us to take a aharper look. at our gradJog plans, and We'·v& got a better map as a J'QlJ)t." He said ID layouta, nsulllng Jn nine different revl&ed plarul, were · produced. Normally, tbe firm prep&res three or four layouts before getting a satl!factory map. · The origin.ii tract for the Thunderbird Caplstnmo Homes called for 312 •Incle family lots. The fh!alt version, approved unanlmoosly by lhe' OOlllllliulon, Is scal- ed down to 299. A street originally drawn to cross a canyott with ~ on both sides, now boroers on an open ~. 1be cuts and fills ellmlnated In this rerouting saved ~ the developeni from moving moro tbali fOOc.,~~~rindla llid the ootcome of tbe Thunderbird pn>eell "was a tumtna point for us. These people worked round lhe clodt to come up with a better plan, and they've gone out of their way to work wllb us. "We'"" shown lhat 'environmental and building oonc<ma can work lotlethor to benefit eYeryone ... 1be0 fml>hed Thunderbird plan bas r e.&-acn part, of wblch 4.5 will be dedicated IO lhe OOWlly. Abo Included al an open spaeo """' Is 'boot IO acre In a P.!_cturesque stee~anyon. • dieted on charges of obstruction of justice, conspiracy and perjury in eoa- nectlon with secret c:am~., con. tributiOM to the Committee -fof P'e Re- eleetion of the President. Thal indictmeot charged lhat financier Robert L. Vesco, charged wltb con- spiracy and obctructioo of jOJSljce, made (See RUMPi!lftE\'., Pqe4) •. ",(_ ..t:: 1\J. --~i.. ~-.-1. z~-~~<J;~~ Tap on-Dozen Secu1ity ·Men WASlllNGTON (AP)-'111e White Hoose acknowledged today 11111 President .Nixon Jienoully approvS::.,'!Jlretapplnf-ol mor.e tban a 00..0 Na Security Council and Pentagon aides starunc in oo. "lj: was a national &eeurity matter.'' a '°' spokesman saJd.. "The prcedure was ap- proved by tbe President and autbom.d in Individual cues by the . attorney general -in coordidation with the direcCor of the Federal Bureau of InvesUgatlon. '' The ljlOke.mJan did nol ldenllfy those whose phones ...... tapped. . Earlier, the New Yorlc Times said they included three lonner aides of presideir Ual advlaer Henry A, Kissinger -Daniel I. Davidson, -f"thony Lii<• . lljd :ll'lnlli>I! Lord. • " 11\e newspaper saf4 we wiretape: were undertaken to correct a serious RCUrity breecb !ollowing tile nempaper'• May 9, 1969 dispatch by William Beecher which MOVIE STARS STILL BACK NIXON-Page 19 re-ported for the first time that B52 bombers were atriking targets inalde Cambodia. Beecher now Ls a Defense Department offlctal. Another Tunes source said the wiretaps were very productlve. "We found out what we wanted to find out. We found the people who were the weak links," be s;aid. At leasiJbr:ee, officials were eaaed out of their }l1111Lloni u a result, a gove~ (See WlllBTAPS, Pap I) -. ..;,.. ~ ...... Delir Pll" Steff ...... JEFF ARMSTRONG, 9, JOINS RESCUERS ABOVE OROUNd In lrvlno, A Lunch Hour OrdHI Comes to A Hoppy Errd Stive J.niilte . •' . ' Re,cuer.:s • ,-.. " . . Boy in Tigh :t Squeeze A small boy walking home from school in !Jflne Tuesday spent his l1111Ch hour in double jeopardy, traPPed for SS mlnules . at· the bottom of a cramped,.14-lnch di· ameter hole aix feet deep. , Jeff Armstroqg, 9, accidentally dropped down the small shaft at the base of a masonry block wall while walking tbrough a new tract being built at Krom Street and.~~ A•enue. , . ' Re!cueni at Ibo scene faced two dan- gers ln their efforts to ~ve the ~Y. · 'Ibey spttad a tarpaulin around tbe tiny -"111, folding II . down inlO Ila WallJ initially tO prevent a cave-in wbich coul!I bave Sllffocat¢ lhe JIOlllliller. Irvine Police Officer . Herry. Ehr!lch said ·~ al>O were concerned be- cause· tbe boy.·auf!era fNm an Jllneas, • Crow& ol c;llrioUo ·nelahbon" gathered atoimd lhe~, aa:Oanle.O>unty Fire Bare Visit'Ors • Departmeil$ ~ from Slation 211 • near· UC lrifllO"worked to free Jeff. ·Ile wa.s finally holated out In 'a sling looped and.knqlled beneatb blo arms and aroundJ11i chea~ vallanlly clutching tbe rope .~, blli bead. Red Crabs Ruining Coast Fishing Their ocienllflc name la Pleuroncoldea planlpes. . Some -le call, them pelagic red crabs. And Ibey ~arely """"up alr,ohore. ,_ three 11111· of ·-lbta el]Jlain lhe ii::"""• ol mllll<m ~ creatur.. GO Qemeolo11 lle'lldlll lhls week - • ahlmala which lnltWi,. belfled local oboerVera lo< several dayJ, Sao Clenieate High Sc'bool Science in- structor Bamtt llffve aald thla morning lhat ll)e data be bu shows tbatJlie lllllll eta.bl have washed Mbcre on'· fe.w-oc-- caslons In the laat cl!llUrY along Southern Ca!Uornla'a coallllne. "Usually Ibey llvll'far OltHo ,., and primarily off Baja calllomla," Reeve aald. . '\But In this cue .. .,. rettlnf aomo changes ln currents and lt11 obvious the .... • J I ehanges have moved the crabs close to shore," he added . ' The animals -most oC them alive when they ltrst wt1sh up -look like a tiny version of· a Maine-lobster , although their piocerl are not u bulky I! the Eastern version. Reeve 1aid that .their presence in in- shore waten bas also affe«ed tbe sportflsbery. Deep-,.. fishing had been extremely spotty ...,.lier tbls spring, but &Jtlppers wer~ baJOed becaUle tbl flSb were present. but Ibey wooldn't bite. Tbe few lhal were eailibt were found atu!fed with tJle. <rabt. 'rho answer Was 1imple: lbe IJQr Wettn'l llungy. F.lil!lblng, however; has I m p r o v e d markedljl ajnce lhe cnbo began W'!hlng fl Shore. , .. ~- lllveailp"1ft' aald be eacaped tbe bour- lq ~:wllh.abrulona and bruises. He w• talen to Qilldren's HOC!Pital of Orange dianty'ln Orange ·f0< a precau· Uonary checkup, palcbed up, and sent home, to 41$6 Rocht!Ue Ave., Irvine. ~omeone Else Roi.ding Boat's tloldiqg Tank ~ge CowJ;y Sherift's4nctn1, made wary by a wave of boat thefts at DllM Point llar!Jor, rtlpollded promptly M..,. rived at Oona Point. But tbeJ1 have be!s seen near a display boat mounted In tbe harbor't parking Jot. , Tbe boOt wu· alill tbere wben Ibey ar- rived at 1lina Point. Bui Ibey havt de6I unable to locate the portable tollel placed bp Places Marine i11.>1c1e the vess<I. /, L . Oil, stressed the need for development of domestic energy source.! to · avoJd depeiKlency on fOffign naUons. He said tbe energy crisis is now on the front pages of the newspapers and that the oll lndUltry, having captured public attentJon should tell its story In aimple terms and nm America "it's Ume to stop fooling around." "Let us get to the busincsa of finding available domestic sources." he 11id. (See SCARE, Pop.II • Pair Held In Eatery Altercation • ~ shoot.ing In a San Clemente restaurant parking lot early tQday left a , young Camp Pondlelon Marine in serious oondllion and two !ellow aervicemen In jail. The altercation began al oboul I ; 30 a.m. inside the Rumplestilt1kln Restaurant cocktail lounge 88 a group or Marines began mJldng fool hand 1esturea lo one another, police aa.ld. W!Jen. lbe _lllll~~'"'1ed, Jan P11rlck Moltilt.,U, lay'an tba·pav .... 1 outside wttb.e-bulIOI ID1lfl atomaclt A f•l'! moa>enla,lltot ~ Joel! -.,r.ilng ' .... !la1llM llldJ Jlll!il no;...,, II Bl'~"'--lllllllOll'IW.'uil'·A~ cadlz and pa~·meit .. ttbe'two men lnlide. Tbq 'lrer& ldllltlliecl u Terry Lee Wlcklllm, JS, b...i~ -Frank Dlrvant MCOure, . p: ""!" ..... booltecl ' or. dli,,. ol 1tlemi! ~. Deteetive l,l. ~, lald tbe . argumonl.lmldo 'bar ~ycd o!!l lo tbe parkinJ lot and Involved a group of Marinff wbo bad been paid a i.w hours before. . IJurlng lhe 1<;rap a group 'OI Marines assertec:Jly coofrooted the two men in the jeep aDif ·the driver pl lbe vehicle allege<Uy fired 1 aho! which missed. Poftnez .. Bild the drlvilr then ac- celerated and another shot rang.out, hit· Ung Mother,ln the abdomen. Po~aald the . .,..poa was a .18- eallber plltOl. Jt was found in the jeep when patrolmen slopped It, police said. Moaber was taken to San Clemente General Hospital where lie underwenl surgery. But surgeons were unable to remove the slug from bis abdomen. The Marine was reported in serious condft1on.- in the bospttal's intensive-care ward this . morning . Kissinger's Off For Paris Talks WASHlljGTON (UPI)-Henry A. 1118'- inger beaded for Paris today for negotia- tions with his North Vietnamese eounter~ part, Le Due Tho, aimed at keeping the shaky Vletnain cease-fire agreement from coUapetna. The talb between the two men who worked out the agr..menl which """11· ed in return ol more lhan IOO American war p~en and withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam are acheduled tq, start 'lbnl3day, but already are cloudedc in Ulla!i'iahiiy. · ' ' ·• 'Ibo Indicated on his arrival in Paris: that he woold delay Ille talks witll KJSs. inger -or break thiem off if they were in progress -U U.S. boml>Us we.re in action in Carobodla. · PILOT AD PROVES :. THE CAT'S MEOW One blpi~' aau.i¥ customer who used Dally Pilot ~lfiod advertising columns· ...,_,,flllly 1lld alle oot <lily found homei for five klfleos In ..,. day, but "met tome nl<te ~e. too.'1 Re.re's the listing lhat did tlie JOb; ._ FREE kittens, mired colon, •t weeks. cute, play!ul. (Phone No.) r r 11 could just be that yi>u could be ...,.· vlnce<I a Dilly Pilot ad Is lhe "eat'•• ow." Give It a try. The direct 11ne lo ,_ oults1i 11Wi78. t ' .;I: DAILY '11.Df '!!Jnhabita~, aod aald • spacewalk by '~. f1rlt AIU'ODIUl.a lo vi.Bit the ttaLlon ilbbalil;. !"'\" be O.C.ssary lo oorr«I il!o problem. :'1Jlh1. dlreC:lor .Qiucl< Lewll ,.Id lfalneer• al Manhall Space Flight ~ Jn l:l un llville, Ala., and backup Siyllb I commander · Russell L . -~ -- • • • Jesse Jane? Woman HeM in Train Hijacking ~ SANFORD, Fla. (UPI) -Police said a 25-,Year-old woman leaped' : aboard an uumanned 23-car Seabo ard Coastline freight train today ~ : and drove. it. 30 miles north before it wu diverted onto a spur at · Pierson and derailed. ~ M. R. Hei'ring, SCL'1 chief dispatcher, said railroad crews man· aged to switch the stolen train onto side tracks tWice to avoid two • southbound freight trains, one pulling 105 cm and the other pulling 68. Sheriff's deputies arrested May Lane Pitkin of Sanford at Pier· son when the stolen car was switched onto a spur and it collided with a parked freight car. "Someone reported seeing a person leap from the train as it ~'en t onto the spur , track at Pierson," an official said, "but we're not certain at this point whether it was a hobo, an accomplice or what." The train was taken from SCL's switching yard at Sanford about 5:25 a.m . The locomotive was still runnlng, but the train's crew was . not aboard. 2 Coast Developers Lose Bid for CQastal Law Okay Two Orange O>ast developers have been told by lhe South Coast Regional Zooe Conservalion Commisslon they must apply for a coastal permit before the go-ahead w.ere: \ continuing on-site work. • The projects in San Clemente and Hun- ftngton Beach don't quallly for exemption trom controls or Prop. 20 passed by voters last November, the commisalon -Add!Uon of 15,000 square feet to ex- isting Shopping Center at B e a c h Boulevard and AUanta Avenue In Hun· thlj:ton Beach by All-Metal Fabrlcatof3 Inc. -Orte four·unJt apartment bulldlng at 34101 Ruby Lantern In Dana Point by James P. Rapattool. • .. decided. Denied exemptions were: -Fairway Seavlewa C om p a n y , developer of a three-story, 60-unit apart- ment oomplex at 2501 S. El Camino Real in San Clemente. Fairway obtamed a local . building permit for the proiect Jan. 5, 1973, paat the Nov. 8 effective da te of Prop. 20. -Huntington Harbour Corporatlon, on . a request for exemption for a lt-lot . .!l~gle-fam.Uy tract at Warner Avenue adn Davenport Drive. !I'he commlulon has pennlt power wlthln 1,000 ya.rd.a. of meah high Ude line of.;Orana:e and Loa Angeles counUes. Coostructlon of two rour-unlt ap•rt· ment buildings at 321 and 322 21st St. in H~ttncton Beach by J1cqueline M. Foxx wb approved by the oommis.sion Mon· day. Other Orange Co61ta project! reoelvlng Rites Thursday For S~t. Crego Funeral services for retired Police Sergeant R. Bruce Crego will be held Thursday at 10 a.m. in San Clemente. The rites wlll be conducted In the San Clemente Masonic Temple at 3011 S. El Camino Real, followed by graveside services at Eternal i-lills Cemetery in 'Oceanside. Mr. Crego, a veteran of 20 years on the San Clemente police department, died Monday inoming at Westminster Hospital. Sheffer Mortuary is in charge of ar· nmsem@nts. OUNll COAST K DAILY PILOT ,.,.., Qr"'Oe <Ml! OAtLY P'ILOT, wtflrl wllletl .. ~lltd Mii N1W1·Prt11, 11 "'*w..I fW ,..,...Tiii Or~ Ctf1! Publlslllflt ~. s.p.. , • ._ llllllo<l.I 1•1 pUbU,,,., MMhy lltf'ougll l"riCl•Y· '°!' C1ttt Mn.t, lrol"'flOl'I 8ffd'I, "..,,,tlrtll10fi ••"'"'"-11111 v.11.., ....,_ ~. ln>IM/SM:l!-cfl -.... Ci...-111 lf11 Jl/fft CtPl>ltllfll. A •l"ll!t . ""'-1 9clltlan 11 1111bllt~fll $"unl•1'• ...., "'"di", TM prlnc;l"I llUbllf~"'e Pllllll It 11 DI w .. 1 by Sir"'• COJlt Mt ... , C.tl.,.,.lt, tw,., ll.1l,1rt N. W11d Plt1~ttH .... PUDUi.1111' J 1ck It Cvrlty VI(• Prt11c1..,, •Nt a-... Mfl'lolQlf' Tho11111 K11vil Elll<>I Tho111•1 A. M11rphi"' \ MINtl"I! Efllw Ch1rl11 H. loot lt idl1rd p, Nell ANltlffll Mt ........ lotl•1 ... a.-... Offlq JOS North El C•111i110 11111, fl672 °""°'""' '°'''Miu: Di Wftl ll•y "'"" H..,.,, ltldl1 Ull NfWllWI 80\lltVfnl HIN ........ ktdl: 1'11J ilffd'I ~tnl ut-'-di: m ""°""' "- , .. 1,b 111 (714t 642:-4J2:1 ~ A4o•r"kit 641·1671 S. Cir natw Al D.,11rh401t1: T4'1,bs11 491-442:0 '-rrllM, ,,,,, °"'"" C.11 'i.'Dl••~lnf ~ ... -.. y, lff ...... lllr.... INllll•tll-, -· _...... " MIOWt~11 htrt!" =-.-.. ~-WllllM •IMl:lt l --· =::i:.-~==-..ri:r ~ ~~ M~':f -"'"'' ..,. !NII u .11 """"""'' l'lllUttrr • ............... ~ . ....... ~~~~~.,.-~~~---' , •·~I Voting was delayed until J une 11 on a 99-<oodomlnlum unlt project proposed on 7 .25 acres between Camino Caplstrano and Calle Grande Vista and on 1 pro- poeed eight-unit apartment C<lll'plex at Buena Vista and Avenlda Aragon In San Clemente. '· Jury ·Selection· In Woman'sTheft ' Trial Beginning By TOM BARLEY Of 9M Dtlly PltM Iliff Judge Raymond V!ncefll put !he moun· lain ol doculnents complied In eight • months cl. pretrial work on bis bench to- day and ordered jury selectloo lo begin in the first "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug trafficking trial. Eleven of mon: than 40 per90na in- dicted by the Grand Jury have been _cleared or found guHty or les.ser charges since the Orange County Supertor Court jurist was given the Brotherhood case as a full time assignment. Five lndlctees and their five lawyer! were ordered to appear before Judge Vincent today to watch lhe jury picking process in what is expected to be a 14· Wft'!k trial. They are: Edward Jeffrey Lang, 25, Laguna Beach ; Edward Clay, 26, South Laguna; James Leroy Crittenden, 29. Loog Beach ; John Charles Gale. 30, Leu- cadia, and Calvin. Delaney, 30, Riverside, who was arrested in Hawaii. Trial dates rematn to be set for the re· maining defendants in rourt procedures that have been complicated by the failure of authorities to arrest many of the persons named in two indictments. Among them is Robert L. "Fat Bobby " Andrist, 29, the forpler Laguna Beach resident who was last seen six months ago in Hawaii and has continued to evade a nationwide net. Andrist is regarded as a principa1 in an alleged worldwide dru11. smuggling opera· lion that often, lawmen claim, put as much as $1 million a week. into the organiulion's coffers. Investigators claim that the money was raised from the Import of many ex- otic drug! and substances, among them hashish, hashish oil and other foreign drugs Jn various stages of refinemenf Investigators said the mulll-mlllion dollar busineu used heallh food stores. surfing lhope, and in one Instance, an ice cream parlor as centers for the sale and di3tribuUon of drugs that were lmpOrted from as far away as India, Pakistan and Alghani!lan . -Much of the investigation centered in the Laguna Beach area. And in- vesUgatora: said today that many of the indictees who have evaded arrest hailed Crom the Art C.Olony area. A1Jo named ln the lndlctment was Dr. Timothy Leary, the LSD cultist who is .- now aerving a long term in Folsom prJSCl'I for his escape from Los Padres Men's Colony near San Lula Oblspo In September 1970 while he wa.s serving a sentence urlier impofted ln Orange County. Local authorities, satisfied with the prison tenn ,Leary a:ot last month, have dropped Brotherhood chai'g., against hlt.1. -- Unin)iahitaht ....... .,.1 ~ ~~ " want to use thal u wr 1mDg quarters." -.nil wu one of fl. ldeu, Qll~ ~'--wbkb ,..wd cool lhe rlflilnl !ram the llmplo to !lie exotic, worklhop en<>Ul!b lo ii ~-lll*l' .waa ·a. IUllthadt ~ m..i; ot-~-~ ""-~ 1!~ plaatlf. One ol lhe aslroli.auts w~, sessions wlucll I x 1 e n d e d wiiuJd Oil.end It aloq tbe side ol Skylab throughoot the night • where a vital bullt·ln heat shield ripped Nnong the other far-out aolutioos pr~ away durtng the alaPon's Jauncb Mon· pOsed to save the $2.6 billion apace Ila· day. • lion projeq. were inOating a big ballOon "Jt would be just Jike taking a curtaJn bet~een the wun and Sk)'l_1b to cast a and attaching it to one end o( the vehicle cooli ng shadow, and wrapping a thermal w1d pushing It down to the other," Lewis blanket around the 110-ton •ubular said. spac~hip like a loose-fitting blanket ... O•TIY ,,..., S!ltt ,l!olo • .Fro .. P .. eJ WIRETAPS. • • medt source told The Times. The newspaper quoted aome officlals as saying the wiretap program was end· ed in February 1971. , Davidson left the govenunent in 1969. Lake quit oyer the Cambodian lnvu&on, and Lord will be leaving thll week, the Times said. It did nol link lhe111 to Us report that \hrte officials lol!lt the.Ir joba because Of the •tap.s. S8n Oemente's Top Dog Gogi Dies at Age 11 - . I Gogi, the little silver poodle whose cos- tumes enthralled hundreds of .scbool-qe • chlld(en and whose . pictures often ·~ .peared In lhe Dally P ilot, II dead . To Arms, To Arms Thell·Y•Ar-old miniature poodle owned by Mrs. ·Charlotte Peterson , of . San Clemente was ;put to a!eep at, • local veterinarian's office Tuesday aftemoOn. Minstrels, str'eet mimes, craftsmen ·and n1edievaf lnusicians will practice their crafts Thursday at San Clemente High School's first Renaissance Faire_ A parade on campus will kick off activities at 12:30 p.m. Stu.dents will perform Vignetles from Shake· spearean plays. Activities-,vill continue until dusk. Kip Connor (left) ~nd Paul Harvey practice with rapiers f.or their parts. "His heart wu the problem. 'J'here ,pas . no way to cure the poor little thlng.,ao we had to have him JNf, _to sleep," Mrs. Peterson said. From Page 1 SCARE ... "And in ibe meantime let's import that Middle East crude with tankers, let's gel out the shale oil, and let's get over to Vie nuclear." With all the domestic "easy oil" already extracted, Lewis predicted that ...., of pulling all bf lhe rem~ bar- nll out of the earth w\ll increase slgnlOcanUy. This means that Americans will have to pay considerably more for their fuels, including gasoline, a conunodity which is already so short in supply the oil com- panie1 are no longer advertising it. * * * Oil Industry's Incentive Plan 'Looks Bleak' President Nixon's oil industry incentive program will face trouble in Congress, Sen. Clifford P. Hansen of Wyoming predicted in Anaheim Tuesday. Hansen, a Republican, told the American Association of Petroleunt Geologists that prospects of its passage are "rather bleak" mainly because the upper hand in Congress is held by states that consume, rather than produce energy. And representatives of energy-con· suming states ha ve recently shown little favor for Nixon's proposals to en· courage accelerated oil exploration. The President recomme nded t a x benefits for oil exploration, remova l of price controls on new natural gas, sup- po~ of increased offshofe drilling, and other Incentives to increase domesti'C poduction. ' Hansen agreed with the recom· 'rnendations but abo said, "en· , vironmental restrictions, state and local, must be relaxed or stretched out to re,vea6': crunCh.'' d that prices for petroleum products should be allowe;d to rise, to en- courage • research, development and technology in other energy fields. Assistant Interior Secretary Stephen A. Wakefield also addressed the oil geologist and sa id tha t the department does not in· lend to wait until the 1979 deadl ine sug· gested by President Nixon to begin tripl· ing the amount of oil leasing in the outer continental shelf. He said federRl leasing of up to three milUon seres a year for offshore oil drill- ing is expected to begin in 1974. Area~ of specific exploration Interest, said Wakefield, will be Lower Cook Inlet and Bristol Bay In Ala ska, Southern California beyond the restricted area of the Sanla Barbara Channel and In deep water off the Gulf ot. Mexi C1l. Ferry Fire Quell ed SAN FRANCISCO CAP I -The Golden Gate Fen-y was due back in commuter se rvice after damage was repaired from an engine room fire that injured a crewman. EK..tra buses were cal!ed iito service oo the San Franclsro&usa11to route alter the boat was disabled Tues- day morning In .. the waler of( Angel Island. Colorado Educator Given Top Laguna Schools Post " Dr . Donald Woodington , COITUTlissioner of ed\ICa.Uoo for Colorado and. 25-year educator Tuesday night was .made Laguna Beach superintendent Qf schools. Unanimous boat:d action employlng the 54-year-<>ld educator ended the nYe monlh search for a new superintendent. Under terms of a contract hammered olil t>eiween Dr. Woodington and the board last week, he will join the district Sept. l with a starting annual salary of $32,950. Prior to his (ull·Ume s t a t u s , \foodington 1,1,•ill visit the district periodically to begin planning ror future projects. His first visit will begin this weekend and continue through the middle of next week. The first major task facing the new supertntendent will be a recommendation to the school board for a new business manager to replace Charles A. Hess who departs for a Palm Sprlngs school posi- tion May 25. Applications currently are being received for the job. / Woodington, who now earns $35,000 i:n- nually as the top man in education in Colorado, said his desire to return to California led him to apply for the Lag1U1a Beach pasitlon. "My wife and I desire to come to a community where we want to Jive and sink our roots," said Yloodington. "We have always considered Callfomla our home." Prior to being appointed commissioner of education in the Rocky Mountains state in 1971, Woodington served as an executive with a recreational and playground 'equipment firm in Bur· linl!!'am. '- The San Clemente housewife over the ye.an had created an entire ·wardrobe for her smaU pet. Among the coatumea 'were Santa Claus outfits, an Easter Bunny suit, a cowboy getup, a Pllgrlm tableau and several others. Mrs. Peterson often would take her pet and lhe costumes to local schools where she presented infonnal programs. "In the last few months, though, he couldn't even sit or lie down to sleep. He had to stand up bt<:auae his little heart hurt him so," Mrs. Peterson said.' Would she look for a-new pet? "I doubt it," she said. "There'll never be another Gogl." • Mnrderer ·Gets 2,000-year Ter~ SAN ANTOmo, Tex. (UPI) -A jury sentenced Jotm L. Harris, a 26-yeaMl!d accused of murdering a city policeman, to 2,000 years In prison Tuesday and add- ed 200 more years because of a robbery conviction. The day before, another jury sentenc- ed Eugene Spencer Jr., alao accused of killing a policeman, lo 10,000 years In prison. · •• CLOSID SUN DAT Duck Feet Fins-$6.95" to $10.95 Speedo Swimsuits & Trunks Laguna Swim Trunks-$5.95 & $6.95 Life Guard Swim Trunks-$4.95 Wonder Board Kick Boards-$4.95 Warm Up Suits-$21.95 to $34.95 BasebaO Mitts-Bats · Balls-Shoes-Colored Sleeves I I i2LAARg:CI Champion HandbaD Gloves Racquetball Racquets Table Tennis Paddles & Sets • Wilso~DunloHenn T ~nnis Balls .Wilso~Bancrott....:Uunlop Rackets Badminton Rackets Squash Rackets 1 OPEN g. TO 6--i:lOSED SUNDAYS I ,• ; • J I I ' Shoes-Sanitary Hose Adidas-Tretom--Conme Jack Purcell Tennis· Shoes T enllls Dresses • Tennis Shirts & Shorts Raleigll Bikes- Parts-Tires-Tubes . Repairing Racket Strl inJ 538 CENTER-646·1919 • • t . ' ' I f • . ' ' . I • -.. :1 All-round Gal Sharon Schultz, 22, of Milwaukee has made it in a man's world. Besides past experiences as a secre- tacy, telephone operator and tax clerk. she has .been a car jockey a dude ranch hand and is now trying .--heTlfallO. ar au o nfecDafilcs:-She's shown lier'eUn-L • dercoating a car. • I -Late Models Fl·unk EPA Test Sh~ws Majority of Cars Pollu"! -. • ,. ~: WASHlNGWN (AP) -The E n v i ronmental F:rotection Agency said Wednesday that tests have shown the vast ma- jority of cars built since 1968 don't meet antipollution stand- ards. - Reporting for each model- year tested, EPA said: Detroit and .Washington, 81 percent were violating stand- ards . -The 1971· models did a blt better; out of 225 cars tested, 62 percent were ove'r the pollu- tion limits. -Cars tested in Denver showed moch higher pollution levels tJ;ian comparable models tested in other cities, apparently because of_ the ef- fect or the city's altitude on air-fuel ratios in the engines. Among 1'71 cars, 94 percent flWlked in Denver, ' -Tl percent of the 1963- models · tested produced more carbon monoxide or hydrocarbons than allowed by the standards in effect for 1968~ the test covered 967 vehicles in Kansas City and Houston. ' · -Among 1969 model cars iD ·" •the same two cities, 70 percent of the 982 cars tested flunked . -Out of 1,829 cars of the 1970-models tested in Kansas City, Houston, Los Angeles, Industry Booms Again in April " ·1 .· , ,. ' • • ;-.. '. " r ,, . , CQ.1.if ornia Airline-Pare Boost OK'd SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Five airlines have b e e n aulhorized to boost fares in California by 34 cents to help pay for increased security protection. THE STATE Public Utilities Commission ruled Tuesday that PSA, Air California, United, Western and Hughes Airwest can put _the surcharge into effect five days after giv- ing noticll, to the public and the PUC. However, the PUC said the IUI'Charge would be made ef- f!'ciive pending a public he.~ Ing in view or a Civil Aeronautics Board inquiry into security costs. HUGHES AIR.WEST, United and Western already had CAB authority to impose a 3k'ent charge on interstate flights. The PUC ordered t h e airlines to keep a record of the number of }>assengers in· volved and related expenses for each airport served in California and make the data available to the PUC. WASHINGTON (AP) -The country's industrial production took another big jump in April, but government economists don't see the rise as a setback ln efforts to slow the booming U.S. e<Onomy. The index of industrial pro- duction soared a full percen- tage point in April as output rose fur nearly all segments or industry. The March increase was .6 percent, the govern- ment saKI Toesday. ADMINIST R ATION economists warned recently; that tjle country's eoonomy, increasing at a rate of about 8 percent this year, should be Meat Battle Leader Quits LOS ANGELES (AP) -· The woman who helped organize the nationwide meat boycott has an· "nounced her resignation to take a business t r i p tbroad. June Donavan, the na-- tional chairwoman and co- rountter of the Fight Inna- tlon Together (FIT) move- ment, named Mrs. Joan Sheets of Los Angeles to succeed her. Mrs. Donavan, an ac- tress, plans to remain on the FIT executive .board . -FIRST INVESTORS CORP~RATION llO Wall ~lrett. New York, N. Y. 10005 We are pleased to announce the opening of our new Branch O!Cice at 3700 Newport Bo~lovard Newport Beach, California 92660 71 4-675-4890 and the appointment of .- MR. GERHARD RANDEL Brodi Manager • ·'-~~...;.,..~~-------- , r -· slowed to about 4 percent to .guard against a "Tecessloo. "April came in strong, but that -doesn't make a whole quarter," a spokesman for the President's Co u n c i. l of Ecooomic Advisers said about the production jump. "I bate to erpress p]e&\lre or displeasure. We think U will slow down and expect it to in coming months,'' the spokesman said. BE SAW figures for the re- maining eigtj. months of the year, especially after JuJy, should show the results of government efforts to slow the economy through restrictions on federal spending and a more moderate increase in money supply. 111.e industrial production in- dex for April stood at 123 per- cent of the 1967 average, and was 9 percent above a year earlier, Federal R e s e r v e Bbard statistics showed Tues- .day. , The board said gains in out-- put were evenly distributed among consumer go o d s , business equipment a n d materials. The only major in- dustry to show a decline was auto assemblies, which drop- ped to an annual rate of 9.9 mlllton units frcim the March rate of 10.1 million units. Tax oh. Wines Contested WASHINGTON (AP) -Capitol Hill's bo!Ue battle could be a cork·popping lulu for wine lovers . It pits little new winemakers against big old ones in a free-for-all over state taxes. CALIFORNIANS AND NEW Yorkers carried the opening r o u n d by 16 to I1 Tuesday as the H o u s e Commerce Committee apt>roved a bill to block states from imposing discrlm.mato;y taxes or other "burdens" on ou t-Of-state wine. But powerful fol.kJ from pla<eS lil<e Arkansas, especially the chief U.S. tu-writer himself, ana thou from the 18 ~ed "rontrol states" with merchandising through .Ute llores, are awaiting lhelr turn for a fight on lhe Hou .. noor. CALIFORNIA AND NEW '\'or~ delegation> in Congress overflow with those who argue s o m e states are unjustly putting bigher taxes on out-of· sate wine and thus protect the home-state product from competition. They cite Arkansas as an ex· ample ol a state ta.J<lng ii& own wine at a rate well below the amount Imposed on California stuff . I~· -- wm lete New Yor l;c Stock ·List -.•. ~ .. ) .. ,. • • Postponing Smog \. '1-ogram Blasted- • ' W•••••· _, u.. 1m DAll.Y PILGT u,. F.irni. • ......,. a. .,,., 'Plot Uls N!llEIES -" delly In dllJ-~ -cor pollu· lion :,..0.ln>I' PHIP an will uz>o peiiUia inolortsts to Ille Coail Alr Bailo and im- nneceatry eipen-" on marW eauromia s m a 11 busifiessmen. M-lnf Cb., In ~at lut ....... c.Jifonlla Air Reazrces Board meeUQg to consider a three-month dtlay of a program to rtqu'ire new -smog cOD{rol deVlcer to be in· stalled on virtually all 1988-70 vehicles betVl"tttl July im·and April fg)t n-~Arnenca .. ~ ~ ~~~?, T-:i:•f cial COrp. of Santa Ano bad ;;;, -e iii: !-c:i• ;ii • Iola! ,..,. .... ol '8.758.14! s~ .!!!I ••• !era. ::: = I during !ta flnt quaritf ended K ~ *'* k , .;;:;a r.: !filllt-Fn 1 1m Mardi 31. an In~ ot 3% tr __.. 1£ u noa :=:.. 'I ~ 1 U:l!on c\i 1 1~ perceot ~ver avenues of ,.:,~rm 1 F11~ •:_r ~ ::! ~~ !m , 'l'I Hif\ ~ , ,f-· fl,3M,537 IP, the , first qullft_er _ M •; ·~ ~ lwl •1ov ~ ll.. 8111"' J:i ~ 11!ft last ~ar •r Pqsident D: p. IN~tl Yll Jt ~ "' t:f~ "t~ .~ ~ v~ ... :..., ~' Kennt!dy reported to AM 1 aid!.... ~. c ~ ~ S.n"11 n11 "" 15~ Vence Sn ~ "" • TJYS PREO!CTION was ...W. by Fred J. Macfee vice-presldenl of the Eclilin .mobile ' l phone '· •• 1-~-·--• place fl receive telephotle calla ; tayoal-car ~.---·--; } .. UcellN I ·---~ C•pit•I l10••1tm•"' Mo11~ to Month R•nf•I l11h tlRANG! COUNTY R>\0!07HEPHONE SERVICE ,..,c 401 s. Saota Fe, '· Santa Aoa ;835·3305 Echlin Manufacturing CO., Branford, Conn., is one of the manufacturers approved for installation by the Ai r Resour~s Board. ALTIIOUGH THE program lo control oxides of nitrogen (NOX) has been law for two years and in piktt operation in Southern ca.Iifornia tor four moiiths, some members of the state Senate have suggested a three-month postponement of the July 1 mandatory phase. "Southern California motorists have already been instaJling these devices Oil title change and thou,,ands of service dealers throughout the state have bought hundreds of thousands of dollars worth as inventory," Macfee pointed out. These stations, already reel· ing the economic pinch or gasolint rationing, can ill af- ford .to have money invested ·aod bringing no re t u r n , Macfee. poioted out. flRf ·BURGLARY ALARM SYSTEMS RESIDENTIAL I', COMMERCIAl • ·~····'''" .. ~< .. •<•" JO ~<'" f •a•"""<• 1: f~J'' '" '''" Ho•t•r Ate.• [ ~011 F~ ~~ .. Es1im~1~J SEA COAST ALARM SYSTEMS O•"''"" Ot leiO (u•" lltO" Sup~I, 16Sl Plo~c ntio-Couo Mtsa 64l·J490 : EXCELLENT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY J'"•INI cwtom ,,...nlll•dur1r Ill 1xclu1lv1 sports dol!llng In 111/tll'f' tM l•IH'k "'°""" to Of"•~ Counly from T••°'· Hoed f!lkldlt II•• llgur11 tot u.,.,.11c111 •NI P9f"1ll..,1I .... r11:1119 copU•L Exc1pttOMI 1row111 po· "''"''· ,uU dOl•U1 lvmlMIW "' tublllftllOI lf!Mlllllld Plr1,. .. Wrfte Ad #694 P.O. lo1: 1560, c.te M .... CA '2626 or C.11 (512) tt7-l7ll LEASE ••• a Continental LEASE ••• Mercury Full M1intenance Leising ... Your Choice, Nowl 540-5630 o,.,.,, C•1111J/1 •r:•11il1 tl/F ;,., C•n• ohnson&son 1~=·1 2629 HAABOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540·5'30 • SlOCkho!derS. ~· ~ ,._ ~ M& 11,; f?? t::::-1'' In JtVt n ~:: •~ l ·111~ Consolidated net income for ~\f't. ~ ,\6~ r' ":!. c ff,. f~ f=c:jl1L1nG 1~ ~h't ~=1~~ 1•\l si; the recent quarter W 8 S 1111T:.. ~~ l"t ~ fa lfV. f:Vt w~l= ~ ~1/t ~ ~~~ 1~~ I~ Al .,_ aa *·IV. tt ( T \Ii lN Wrld t2l'll t) WMll Jo!(l 14 1-:rnAl~ll 1:-1 .... f 21 \lo 21"11 ¥ .Mlr(.h Ul'll u WMlo ."!It !Iott~ ( ) ::£ c: E ::'.l.1 .. Ill mi :=:;,. Ill: ll :!E.: ·m •• ,. EARNINGS Am e:; "' -~~ lJa J:::!:. Co f ~ : Wt-1!:: ,:.., Am Ul'l'I ft cE" Jloto S... lm~l!'l'I l~l W M lnlolnl ~rt.Gf't: l 41 ~'"'l. .. ~· 14~ 141'11 Snop Toh W11U '9 'IA M'e ""' Tof'.Y " w ... •W"A Ml :t Sllld Pop ~.: ::w~ !im = <:onveyer <:oncept $82,0,478, an increase or siJ: ~d J=. ~ !!!f'!!.~~ 1itl' 1,,_ J~•Y m 1 Wlll1rwt I r· i' .. percent over earnings of ~. 1~ ,{M 1"' ~·~1 ft" 1~ fu~ 1 ~1 l1 :!:::' ~ '1Vi ::~ ..,.. ' . m~ fi ... 1 •• A rFr $\? 4 Jl"d llltlll If 17 W1iC l'Lt 1Mio JO -.111,398 Jn f.he Simi.Jar Quarter ~nin 1;n, k lilt. 1 Yll f' Int llVi S!k N Ale l2'A 1'\11 W#d Lffl 11'6 lW. a year ago. EBrnings were Arni ... "" lh-, \r.i .. ~ 7~11~ 1l~ ~:.'\ ~"1 lt ir ~~' ~ 'ft 1~ equiva~ent fo 88 , cents per ~c;: 1= = t!..hirod 1~ ,~ ~::&r Tri lo\io l"' ~~ f~ GOA J: share m ~ peruxls, based All G1 Lt l.fftli II KoY '3.~ 1u 1S"'1 sv,_ co 10~ 11 Zl"V!r c11 1 N An ultramodern $80 million mass tranit ·concept that would use conveyers to move people in Vz: conditioned comfort is under consideration by Washtenaw Cowity offu:i.als to' connect Ypsilanti with Ann Arbor, Mich., ten miles away. The continuous 1oop would be composed of a main conveyor carrying paired seats at a stoody fixed speed. 0 the · be of AUtD Tm I°"' _, !( ...... Fb 16'11 17" S10bo Fd iV. 7"'1 ZJ-VIII 21 2'V. D average num r e11rd Alo 4\lo ·~ K9" cwt n: Slit,., _____ . _______ _ shares outst:anding, t,200,362 in ::~':-~~ ~~ ll ~· :~ 1!~ 1i"' JO Most A~i-• the first Quarter of 1973 and 8•1dWll L 12 11 1Cn1oe Vf is 11 c .. ov~ . 91Uy Mn 37'4 3114 l<oCM<" p 20l'.I 2l"'11-,===~=-oo--c---~ 1,129,542 In the first quarter a 8nk I!~ )6lfo 16~ Kruevw r '"" ... N'EW YORK (U Pll-Tllt 10 ll"IOll ocilv• 1~k R.r u~ "* K""""... ·~ ""1lock1 ITOdOd on tho OTC IT\Orklt filllll· year ago. ll"llH H "~ 24\o'J Ktnlf!I El 7V. • di• •I WPOllld bW' NASO. 811$0!1 F 21 '9 Lldef Pirt 7 Fishing Threatened ~Vitti It ltVi i...ntut ~-I Vlllu-I~ ......... Qif. · • Colony .Kitei.-1 \~· c: 1~ w. Lll'IC• 1!lr' ;: ,..,,n Ltiw ru.;JOO ~ >fit !'' •~'f I• L ..., I llWflt' ,. '"" ..... Ame<" E~p 1 r,~ ' l > ' y ' •• 2:l UIY ao'y -·~ 31.U ••nk Onift lot ., , Cokmy JGtche.ns 'l n' c·., !f:: :::g 35 36"" ~ Pl 1w. 137Z A11,,1co e1911 tt, 11"1.).14-'·'' · Be I lli,: 3~ ltoerty H 31/o ,.... Monori:h c111J1 94,100 r~ ~~+ "I Newport a"" -~ sales B b,• ••'m0 ' II ,, ••L 11onklf!ll'f' 11,200 -0 v. ""'·""'t"'·....... e 1]\lo ll'ji '-. mp .. ,. Alll!IO ASAlr 6,).~ 1~ . + SJ f<Jr. the nine --ii.A ended 11 rd $on1 7lV. 24\• l1n<: Bast I 1111 Weit Of> L~ll '2 Im , M in UIUUl.IQ BQb Evn1 26Vo ire Lton CISo ~,,,, ~ p se' . atdl 31 . ezcess ol. $13 18~NP0 11•~ 1 • t.oc:111, s1 s1"' 1er:f 81~ 31:. 1 ,m:: .. mllli .,,_.~ 7:1'• LMWS Co 51>\'i' 52 " on compared ·to $10 4 BrlnU In 1:t¥r. 14'/J Mod Go1 l•'h 15\'--- Foreign Fleets 'RapingU.S. Waters' milli~ for lbe f'l).......,._,,i ..... 8=1"l)Wn Ar 6'4 7V. Mal FUty •• '"" NASO \l'!'ume TOOly: 7,111,IOll vu -r''"~~ Biie 13'4 l•V. M"1kkf ~ .. Adv•nus «19 period last year a n. t14 M•rJt Frl 17¥1 1114 o.:unn 1121 • flUrJICI SI """ 'l'J Miry Ky 2Rt 2R Unchonoed '"' E ....... 1....... for the period e1111 ... M 31V. 3'\4 Mc. Crnck 43\lt '5 Tol•l -317, -..._. !:J Too 2j t.J'll McQwy 17\.'il 1111. GLOUCESTER. M...,. (AP -American fishennen who live off the waters o( the North Atlantic say t h e i r' livelihood may be dead within a few years, the victim ot foreign competition. Haddock, the lifeblood of Boston iishennen, have been all but wlped out by foreign fleets which fish outside the 12-mile international limit. • And many other commercial species, . including . flounder, perch and herring, have been dangerously depleted in the once-rich waters stretching from Cape Hatteras, N.C. to M8ine. UNLESS 11lE federal government per s uades foreigners to take less fish or seizes cootrol or the fishing off its shores, industry people say commercial fi shing will cease in the North Atlantic, possibly within three years. "The foreign fleels are rap- ing our waters." says Jack Donegan, president of a local or the Seafood Workers Union. "lf wo doo 't move by next year, thlee years frotn now we're going to be kissing the industry good-bye," Donegan said. "Ever'}lo~ is say.ing the United Sets More Trips On SF Route Special to the Daily Pilot SAN FRANCISCO -To ac- commodale heavy traffic de-- mand on Fridays and Sundays, United Air Lines will introduce BOeing 147 service on its Ca lifornia commuter route between San Francisco and Los Angeles beginning June l. same thing -management, labor, scientists and govern- ment. We're all 1n the same boat." "It's inevitable," said Com·~ missioner Frank Grice or the Mas.sach.1~ts Division o r Marine Fisheries. He predicted that other species will follow the way haddock are beaded am become <ml~ mercially extinct. "IT ONLY TAKES a couple of years of really concentrated . effort to dO the job," Grice said. Solutions advanced by state officials and industry spokesmen center on having the federal government extend the international boundary to 200 miles from the coast. If the government won't do that, the local officials want to see at least an American takeover of the supervision and control of North Atlantic f1Shing. Neither proposaljs likely to ""in much • supPort in Washington where officials point to the obvious diplomatic problems such actions would create. 'We antiei.pate problems with any fishing stock out there -anything that's abun· dant enough to be ccooomically fea sible," Grice said. "They wlll eventuaUy be exploited." AMERICAN FISHERMEN are bitter and blunt about seeing foreigners take over coastal waters that 15 years ago were theirs alone. Congress should h a v e declared control ol the East. Coast fishing banks JO years ago, said Tom Powers, mate of the Mary 'and Joseph, a fishing boat out of Boston. "Fishing is just about done here," said Powers, a 43-year veteran of the seas. "Uncle Sam has tried to 1l>e Santa Claus for the world." "II isn't going to be a very nice situaUOJl for Americans as long as Ibey are fishillg like that," said Russell T. Norris, regional director of t h e fisheries service. "It's not a bright future. v The Russians arrived off American shores in 1960 when their vasUy expanded fishing Deets moved down from New· found.land's Grand.Banks. They were· foUowed by Ew-opeans and Canadians, most of ·them in search of her- ring, fantastically plentiful in the area ·.and virtually ·Uil· touched by Americans. IN THE PAST 10 years, the herring have been reduced 90 percent. The Europeans, with their su pcrio.r equipment and large processing ships, use a method called pulse fi shing. \Vhen an exploratory vessel discovers a school of fish. dozens of trawlers descend on it and fish until it is gone. dwnping their catches in the processing ships for quick harxlling. She Files Fat Suit · PORTLAll'D, Ore. (AP -A Portland woman whc says she spent $17.50 tc have two packages ol ground· beef analyzed ha5 sued a supermarket chain for $10Ci,l19. She C<lntends !he groun"d beef coiltained too much fat. Suzan Winder is asking $100,000 for exemplary ana punitive damages, $700 for legal fees. $17.50 .for the analysis and $2 tor; th!' cost of the meat. 1 . were $316,822 or· 3'l cenis-.a ,, N~' 1~ 1fl: =:n ~"" 1~·1------------c' share vs. $269,746.or 29 cents a rn,1tv1;1 l:~ :~ Mwld""1n •1• ':,. Gainers 4 Lo•er• share lut year. hol'ICo,. 10t._ :!Mi ~m1~Fr .m: =:l-:c--::--,-=:::--:=--,-:-c-~' Pr 'dent B E De M Chlnl Ca 4'111 m Mpls Gas . 211il 22i. Nlw York (VPI) -Tlll ~ llst esi ruce • ers Chim .Cp JJ :M Mln11 Fae 514 5.,. ""°""' 1i-.e ttoc~1 ni.1 111 ... 911....,. '"'· said the favorable results ~~~Br3 1' 74 1.w. M~ul co 20v2 n mcn.1 '"" 1os1 1111 """' blMd °" [!ll"t'Wlt, • ~ Molex In 31:\.o 3J.¥o ol chen<M Ofl tne 0-·lfll<ounM I were obtained despite the fact i1111 u A 16~1TI,4 Moor!' s.. 2• 2,~ m•rke1 •s 0110te<1 b~ 1111 NASO. , tht tbe t ditionall busy I·-· ll'"' ll'lil MorrlSll IV. IP\7 NII Ind Oll"(lnl•i:t1 cNnon .,.. IM ra y ow Crr> V. 16 Motor Cl flt 10"" dffle~ btlwHn Thi l)rlW'fou1 lat bid Eas•Ar wL-i. which Jell ;. the ococ L• ln. 1114 MSl Diie s>1o .i. Pl"k• ind "" curnnt 1,11 bid P11co. ~ u;: ~. ... oml Shr 27 21 1'111 Cnv"St Ml 1~ I third quarter last year oc-c~ P lJ"" uu, Nit u-.ir. •~ OAUUIU curred after the close of the t::;1~~ I" ~~ ~m Nt·"-~1~1 .·~v. 1m l L1Ui:~(l'T:3. l19 t H: !f.J .' quarter s year. Crut(tt R N s N,~, u c., i2v. lJ"' , Publlsh co inc 14 uo 11 . thi c:to.1 co ''"" 20\lo m i 12 3 sneu.,. C.P Am ~ Uo ·r.:1 . Cur1 Noll 1514 16V. ng Ge l~ 17'-' s Alle<I 61Vl'f' JI m '"" Up ,,. ganl lfttt 27'!. 27"' NJ N•I G 1~ 17V. ' Scan 01t1 Cp 11'0 14 Up li ( • s-•dl~-,,..._ Inly M I~ f'll Nk:al<lf In 9 10 7 EIKfnt Llmlld 4~ ... Uo 1s:.. ~ .,....,, •""'• D•rl Dtg 15"' 1614 Nl~Sll"I A 31 Jl\it I !i,~ptr Mech ~ l Uo lJ.I Swedlow ,.,,. .;of ":-'en B:f: ~ :J.,. 31<.~=1~ 1 ~l~~tt1:8uli= .~'!':. l ·-~ 8: lJ.tlo ...... -..-,,.... u.eis-oa-13"' N'Wr""nt"G""--•'11 ~m tt-tr:•mPOniund·-1! · 1-uo 1' Gr.ove reported record sales ~!Car · In 5* '"' No:ictu Cp "' lO 1l Huohls s uoiv 1 ~ .,. vri 2. • • • .,...klb AR ,2,,. '3'14 Nuclr R• 2'1' ]V. l 1n11r1olt lncorp .1211. 1* Up 12.6 and earntng'S fot the ftScaJ ~lhl Intl M4i '"' 0.Skwd H 7'4 I 14 P•VMov• C1llO ,,2v. 14 . 011' !'·' year en<!ed March 3¥ 1~~·c~ ~~ ffv. ~::~ ~~ ff" ff,,., l: §fjw~~~~~lnr~a . 2• itt tl: !:! ., t · I · l•m Hd 11~ 12\il ocngr Mt 5\to 5"" 17 1sov ll>C 1 ~ Uo 1 .\ ,,e earrungs .rose o R!~.11 A B 78'4 21"" Oflsh L<is m ·•'II 11 111or L~111 ,,. up {•·' $1,647,000 comparOO with ~~'i.f'C1 Mv. !J 8Jl117"':! 1:,4 1J ~ ...,-,vrW~ F~~ 1~ 1~ "H: ,g:f ~one 000 in fiscal 1972 Earn· OotJr Gen 1'111 t 0pt1 coot 1104 1814 21 Flbtr111tk cri Jo 2¥. 14 v,~ \'·' ~. • Dori1lds ~ 26'~ Ormont 614 '"" t2 lnform111c1 In V. pg t.o 1ngs per share, Qh a 26 percent ~. J~l 15 \'I fl~ Ovrmrr • . •~ fl ft!t1~~';6 ~ ~,4 JlZ Up ;:: increase in $flares outstan-Ounkln o J'~ \~ 8:1~ ~~ ~ ~ 2s Toosv• 1n11r1 1111+ ~ UD 9.1 ding, rose to' $1.30 from · 88 ~~ 't: ~v; ::& P•bst Br 69 69•• LOS••s . I , El Paso tl\1' 13V. PK<:llf' JO&,<, 31"'1 1 cents in the prior fiscal year Enerol c 6.1' ~ PK ~m l'.'Jl .19>.{. I Am Bloe1"t1;1~ i....... l'll OH 20.1 · Equ I L 131, lJ'llo Pac Lum JSV. :U 2 Canwed Corp 1 -1.,... I II; Pre-tax operating margins Em.an ,.. 25ih 261~ P1So Brd 1'4 '" 3' <•,,,•~,,", A!'}!. " -111< 11:l , . . e k 1 •· "Pan 0c01 12v.12"' Iv ._.. s -1 14. u1creased lo nine per cent Ei: ~11"~ 1,; 1~i~ P•u1 Rev u , 15;1 ! ,.,.~ll~o 8~ :t:= Iii !"' r · t SaJ · Felr L1Nt nto m P•ully P ~ 4\'o ilC .... 4 . .1 rom SlX percen . es tn· Forlon El nv, l•\· PyJss C11 15V, 16\~ 7 M.1r(11S Corg 1014-1-. l.C-' creased to $25.509.000. com-~~~ o~' 13•~ 1• •~:~.'ls~ l~!Z l:. ; ~,~·x._~~.;: ,"'= ,v. ~~~ · ~ced ""'ilh $20 730 000 Ftnl!f'hr 11 1'~ 1~"" Pet H&H 19,.,, lD'IJ 10 wa111eon<1 1nc 1.91i-'4 11 : r-• ' · Fs1 Sos1n 1ou ,,, .. P•tro Lw ~\'o '"" 11 A~llon P l"dls ~ ~ I !'- ' T · • Q .,. •• S 12 Al>dr511 JilCob l'-V,, . I ,I II )\fin 2J\.t 2• .-,c... IV • 10 1J v ... WV<:lr ln!I 4'"-'"' I ... ~ • W·11 dB t hi Ws!F ,,.. mP"krln :n 25 l4P I ' •1 • I ~ l ar OU" FlscoJnc l2'l.11Po6'PictnlrW 9•llOl'o15Are:n 1ncO:~ ··=1,,, '11" F!f Telep J1Vt ITii Pl1111111 Nit 21~ 2:Jvt 1& A~M Corri 15 ' -..._, 1f1'~ W'fl d n-•t W ks J Flklmr 12'\4 l)'lli l"DJ>!I Bro 5'tlo 4'1' 17 C•Plf'to I lPc 6'9-"'11. 10·1" 1 ar ll\.00 or nc. FOn!it 01 I& 15~ kt cri .11 11"' 11 c11,11on• Mi: 21 "" iti " says its net sales rose 43 per-~:'!~~G'ir.' l:~:~ '°' ~, -JI,{, 1J !!: ~ci:4V:t!~p .17b 10~ 1.,. l&:J. cent to Sl.666 906 fr 0 m F,•,1n1I• ,, 16\lt ~Car ll\1 1 ~ rr W1llr•rit0 wt f,,,._ v.110.0' . ~· rend re 231< 2"' Publihr l!lto 1'!\ n Pondlcil. Pr1111 ...._ "'1 9.a $1,129,712 m J'1 ~rl1ch,,•, .!!~· l.S~ Pvln c~ ·~ 5 ti Cllftk:ll S(len 11 ...... 114 ... I F lbe '.I roi .,,... 10•.lo Qonar Cp 1Hlo 12 'U C•-Cr•l!s •"-\'I •j or ye .. r ended Dec . 31 F1111er H •. 13'4 1•1.:. Qtl•kr Ch 21 22 ts HvdrGnP1c-L1 1~ \lo 11 i 1 the c.osta Mesa firm reported · net incOme of $101 ,478 or 28 1 , _,.~..,.,.,,,,.. -~.,,,..~ cents a share compared to :Jt.l'J!, ~ -~""" ~\ .. ~+:ru )! $108,193 or 34 cenls a share the previous year. MUTUAL FUNDS · ~ ., • Stellar Ind. !!VliiiltiM"'··~""J.J"<i,. • .,..,.. ~ '"""""·•~I Stellar Industries rnc. or 1~1'r: 1~or: 1l;F~ 0B~v~~s 1~.'::r1 1.•11l~' F~~ g:~ l:."# 11v1=: "' ~:J: 1:~ Newpoct Beach, · ann ........ ·-..i bid •lld ••ked ,..1~ rvf Lv u.ao 16.n vv Fund 1.n 1.22 R "'"' 12.u .. .....,,.._"t:U en on MIJfl.Nll i~ lncm 7.n 1.H JP Gwt~ 9.01 'ig ~i1t11r 2.:rt 2-!: that the company's board of f~'1.1.J~ ~'.td by e1.i c~~ 'i:B 'l;: Jfi".': ~ 19:~ 1:~ ~ .. ~ lf:l' tn directors has reached agree-TlllM!oli eM r .3l' 1.113 JH•" s1o 1.ss t .2.5 ~ornv• 111 : · ment with Stellar's creditors M41~ vn ~~w.':.:.f: ~~\'t0Nr:2;'·°"1'·05 hn.r.rwr" 1\1 1~Zj, • Boin Fd 9.50 10.l& Cusl Bl lf.2120.17 ~ 10 n 10 71 committee on a pr~J to 8111 AA Gwlh .F 0 .111 11.t• cin1 &1 20..n 2::1.33 11 29M2tM f · "Y:""" ADMlllALTY: lncm~ 6.21 6.11 ~usl Bl 8.'3 t.V S CUlllTY l'DS· r c 1 nan c e approximately G""'" 1,ci. •.~ SDKll F 11 • .Ai 1.1~ u~ Kl 7.l3 1.o:i eou11-, l.U ·1u $7,000.000 in unsecured and J:=~ ~:tt :~ is~d i:~I l~:I; ~i ~ :J·j\ 2~~ ~~rn' ,, 'i,l:ll partl'ally secured debt Advl.... 1.26 '·" OIE Sp 20.fl 20.tl ~'" ll 10.'7 12. S•L•CT•D Ii i • Ae1n1 Fd 1.1, 1.9• Fe MGMT O•P: 11st 1.49 I. Am Shr t D5 The announcement was Aturure tA tAI ECltY Gr 1.s1 ~·· 1111 u •.11 ' 0oo Fd 1 . 10·1 AGE Fd 4.9'11 j·O& Eqty Pr 2.9' • . . APOilo •.M 5. Sliof Shr• 12.!l \l. made by Wl·11·am G K' 1. .. 11 An1••t• 12.131 .114 Fnd Am 7..41 Pol•rl l.49 •.Ct3 s....r1ne1 t I! l • 1mUICIU, AIOfWI Fd U.19 T•.42 Eqret G 112.1113.J.S l(nk lo.r •.lo 6.411 Sei{try " li • president Of Stellar Industries Amc:ap F •J• S.'l!i ltun Trt 16.311 • Knkr Gl'1 7..11 1.01 SMAll!HLD NJI : • • Am o ... ,.. t.f'l JP.15 em~f"lll J.96 •.ll Left• Fa s.2• 5.2• comi1 .JJf l .O Am Eq1y 4.a '-"' Enef"QY n .• n .... L~o•ou .. , e ... 1ror J ,, i1• • Sa. t "' Bt AM El'.PRESS Equ!lv F 1.45 p Ledr 15.6,) 11.H Fiii Fd ,:co 4:.0 1'he 31!}.seet 747 "Friend Ship" will lea\'C San Ftancisco at 4 p.m. and will arrive at 5:1 1 p.m. Return service will depart. Los Angeles at 6 p.m. and will !ouch down at 7:05 p.m. , Last month, 312 foreign vessels. 190 of them Soviet, plied the North Atlantic co.ast, the National Marine Fisheries Service reports. She says Fred Meyer , Inc. acted maliciously and in wanton disregard for her rights and feelings by selling her ground bee! with a fat content higher th.an the 15 percent specified by store policy. n ... e '" PUNDf' F•lrlld 1.36 t .14 .... , 1.02 H1111r f.l!." C•r>I• 7.50 1.20 Fm f111re t.J) t .n Hrd'I lJ.if 14~ L11111I L . t'" Santa Fe International C:Orp. I= ;J} ·::f1 ~tft~l\'v-,.., ··· tlf,tv in~~ J:!j l s~~C:.{J,'\ ;~1 :"'I and Fluor <?cean Services Inc. ~~~ 1.1JJ ::it 0en~ ~ '·" lO.Dtl CJ:: 9.~ ~:11 I: t: 1~1' 1l1T have reached an agreement fn· Am Gr1h 5.h It caotot 11.012.51 L~nd 3.5 .. 1nw11 t .os ':ll. . • . Am lnstn ll i Co111ra 1.90 • L 11 •r. °"" lOM 10 principle under which Santa Am 1n..-1 '· 4. ~Sk 1.11.2 1.HSA LI!: jd• Fd 111:,s 1 Fe will purchase Fluorts ~~N't~r t~ 1:1{ ~~~~;-13:.U ~i'ua~"' l!] 1~l ~~~hr~-'!-" marine equipment valued at t:5~~~ F~~1' l!:ii lJ:fl L.Z11C, ... 1'',·n 1.1l {~~' 'i: '!:~ approximately $15.5 million. ~~''lnv 1:~ l:~} f~~~~ F to1 1~::1 ~:;;, ~~: 1~:.,J 11JI ~~irrt"r 8 l~~r lo:it "The primnry reason for pulling the 747 on these days is to handle added wee kend traffic ." said John Courtright, vice president·marketing for the western division in San Franci.-;co. Price is $16.50 for a coach seat. TUE FOREIGN ships fly the flags or about 17 nations. \Vhile Americans fish with small trawlers which are no more than 130 feet long, the . government.supported Euro- peans work with fleets of large trawlers that feed th e i r catches to 600-foot factory ships. I . Grwlh 7.ff l·'j Trend lJ.2l 25.l9 Lulh•rn 01.Sj 11 .~ fl II.Gr I'll n'.31 / lncom 7.42 .1 ,I NA NCI Al. Luthn In 9.1 10.n GenF l~ IJ-" P bl ' :v~tvr 1.21 t.06 l"ROGlllAMS: MAGNA ,UNCS: .....,, Inv t •·ft 0 A u W1 Nt!I 12.20 lJ.l7 Fin Ovn •.20 •.10 Cutel 3.1: 4.'Jj w lnW' G f; U le gency Se ~:: , n: ::~ fl: ::::: rn n1 ~'If:;::, : .. :tt ~.:: 1i:. •.:,, lXE V1nt 3.t2 3.92 M1nhm J.t2 •.a P lnO 7.M 1.36 HOUGHTON: ~ hlF" V• 11.15 12.!t Miit Gwt 2.t2 U2 I AT• IND 0111 .. · Fund A •.Ill s.22 ,,.ST MAS5 CO: om Fd •.66 sOt Fund B 1.n 7.M tNVl!STO•S: F•~ ,.Ol I.IQ 'lvetlt 5.llj !:" Of L l C Sloe~ 5.\11 '·'1 01!< Fd 5.Sl' 6.10 lndo F .(5 6.16 roo•s •:S :.n O E d A~• Sci •.21 •.ii Gr"' F" 1.12 1.8G M•u F 11.4112.Sll s1 Fr Gr ,,75 •.JS ltt e ars Ye ILC Gth 11.29 12.34 Sloclr F 7.83 l.S9 MASS FMCL: Sl Fr Inc t 1' t 1! : eb!or! 10.&.3 l0.t3 hi Munl t . .O l . .IO MIT 11.Xl 12.ll Stet. Str 4'.JO .cJ'oo ' ' '"~ l.n 1'9 >» '"" ,.., '-" M>G IJ.H U.I nUDM'" . ·r·1, lavrk or 5.52 $.11 FO•UM CROUP: MJO 13.90 IJ.! Am Ind j -OS . s fi!Cn HI t .•6 9.46 100 Fnd lf.1!1 11.21 MFO lJ.06 u . Auo Fd .2' ' •ICOll 11.lt 11.1t 101 Fnd 1.6,l t.&J MCD 1411 'l ln'll!st l.lt !~ SACRAME~TO (APl SIEROTY ' ADDED his bill ~e=r IC 1!j~ 'i:!! fs°'ur.Joa t~ ~:: ~;/r,:, iv 1f.$t n. '11:1~~ •o'°-~1,,'.t1 SI l d I I h'cb I . ond11k .C.tt 5.311 Fdn Gr •.S3 •.9J Mid ""' (I) \t OPl!l 10.o:J 1003 a e an oca governmenl -w 1 wou d go into effect si Fdn t .9110.u l'OUHDe:tts MOfl¥ Fg ioM 1 . 1oct 14.711,:11 agencies \\'Ould have to buy in 1974 -might pressW"e the ~'rtoc1< 3·51 3·" 0l~' s.21 s.16 :11~ 11F11 )~~' ~1l. 'b1~~00"'t·~ ,1, Conip"Cl ca s · h' I US I · d · 'UNDS: tll(om 11 .Hl310MI= Gro 4.'3 •:1i lncom '1 u r . "'e1g 1ng ess .. auo m ustry into Bull Fd u .00 1•.2• F Mtuel 1.t• t:n Mu<>mot 4.11 s.11 smmit 1. ,:~:.. lh"n 3000 pouods l'ke • b 'Id ' ]' h Cdn Fd 21.3323.36 F Soec:ll ll.13J2.16Mu0m In ,_,Jll.OJ lochnl ... n-..a " • -J Ul in~ more 1g t cars -01v Shr l.IAI •.03 Fa..irtc1 F 111 tzl Mut stt .. lf.42 1 .42 "''o F 1.~ 1:t~ Vegas. Pintos and Gremlins -sometiung he said auto ex-~~~.ri l8:}l ll:Jl ~IMi~~IN M~u/1 rJJ: 'ffi:'" 10::; ~"'~P f:lff' i':rJ. under legislation proposed ecutives wouldn't do volun jmhm 10.os 10.0e oNTC 1.2' '·°' AT s•c " ' •mlll G . 1 .•1, • G Fund t.H 10.ao Gwth Sr 1..a !.13 1l1nc . 4 9.tt rtw.r c ~-'.l't Tuesday. tarily 01N1mr 7.61 !f, Fr ll'ICrn 1.99 .u BOod Sr .01 S.41 Tr•n Cari 'f '·f ·-op l"~ l·j! , l/S GV S l~.Ol 10.•7 ~lvldn l .1S 4.11 Trovl Eq 9. 'i < Assemblyman Alan Sieroly, Quesfloned if his bill didn't •P 11r1 • '·' 01111111 s.•1 s.tt 9f s111 •·• •.ntu11or Ii \' i 11).B I H'll ) l Id •o rln 11. 9 11.23 Rn Cori •.IJ 5.00 no:orn '·!' l~ :!0th CG • . every 1 s • o have little chance of p•••age ..,, Sh• 12.ls 1J.so Rr Eatv •.u 4.s.t stoc!\_ sr •· s »., c 1 ,11 "·''I ,...,., UANNING F~ lfEa 11,il li.&4 Grw1,. tr. Unjr,Od g.n !"' reporters the regulation for beedcodusde Americans are so 91~,e~= ,11 Cl ~t:6:td~Nc';; .ll 111}0~11v No11,,{ 11.51 ~~1g~nc1 s••VU:~·"1 California's 80.000-car public w e to a "car psychology•· J"" F.d c1 11 o•ovP: 'Gfwt11 1 ·~ 1 .n o o , ~gency fleet "may reduce the Sieroty agreed and said· ~1n•11o: , 11 ~ cl~"i: ;:n !9:61 J~' Mt 18'.nl~·j ~t 1~~ 1j1t 1t.n: d t I f "M · , · ncorn 1'11' nd111 Ir 11.ll I .21 N1t11 C•nl •.70 '· N~ C•pl .2li I' II nee or ex en o gas ta· 1 aybe 1t wont pass1 this ~P«• , , Pllo1 1. 1·00 Nevwth t·•7 1. Wh!h•r 12.t4 ..:14 tionlng." . . . Ventur l I Gal"Y 1.6 .27 N•wtv:; 'f '7 ••.n UNITlllD , ••• ,. year, but 1t s going lo haJl'" ~~JgN : !i!'r, S·~ 3:i! '·'' ~~ $J 1 11::; 11t~ ~"~"~d l:li" i'·.t1 HE SAii) Ills b·11 Id be pen. Fn<1 Bos a.n t.Ot O:•ouP SEC : Nk:lll<t! .2, '·'' °"' 11w 1 ·4111 l WOU ' "Jf peopl II FrOll ijP ~.52 6.~ .41>e11 F-S.13 6.~ Nnl lvlr 15.1, U.1f on! Inc 10: 11Jtl Rmended lo cover slate·pro--d bo e are rea Y ~On· t~1 1 6;~ 't)o ~~ ~~ 1T:~ 1,. • ~':r7 ~~' t::. ~= 1l~ 11·~ vidcd cars driven by ccrne a ut the energy cnsls, ~1;m Fd 10.n 1 .sJ lfuFAm •.l-4 '· ' Nou Id "·! 11.s.c \181!QC1 ,_91 7·J this is one way" of meeting •v•,0 N!."L ': trtd ~:.J: l;:cl: ... WVJM 1t· : 16.i:. 8!"",'••' 11'·.", lo'· l<gislators the m s e I v ts . ios I'd' , ~ H G o 21 I the problem because "the ~"" 'j""f:H -I! TOH o• 1· Alm ' . • 11 . \IAJ.U• LINI: PCJ ror big cars, inc 1 u ding automobile is the most =11 s:t116:s l11Cor:: 'i:ft 6:61 o c ~ 1g:H 1f. ~:! ~ f:&t j· Lawmakers show a preference ilty ·~ ~ •.u ·H # .f,rtd . 1. v11 ~'" J-?t J. wasteful commodity in our '·" 'f·'l H1rl"W9r 1 .62111.11 P•rrm' 1.,. (· v11 oc li2 3_.... Cadillacs and Buicks. ' '"'"" 3.46 .11 H1r1 L,,. 1.u 1. ~' •w 111 1) V&NC: society" _ consuming gu, ~G ~·.,' .., Hfdbe\1 'j 1. • M111 .a ·• 'tNci•s= Only a smaU portion of steel glass nibbet1".4lnd othtr u •" TH "=~ f: f:If 11111 ~ 11! 9f. yr_c~ ~~ ~j public agencies' vehicles now mate'rial.I' f~r Its ~tructJon a.• l'i" t 15'0cp 1f:. l!'JI ~I::'\!~ 'iJO 10~~' J'fi ; (alJ un der Sieroty's weight , omo f 6 r mo r 7 .90 P!eiJrt. ;u: Vo!:'f'rd , ~ limit. The bill would forbid and·ma!z!tepance. ""1: c: t l' ': "!:.' 1j3:!2 1 :11~ P °" ~:1" 11~' &j· ~::¥.J°'? ~ 4~ local governments to buy big· SJ'ERO'A'1S Bl'U \\'OUldn 't omo ~ J:ff I..., ~~"' 1:7f ,:,j rfi, ' 1 :· If: ~!'1?1 ~~ f:&f ger cars, Sieroty said. apply to tiucks. lrallen or ~""' ,f-~1j:: :., 1~:-'Q' ~::; F.~ ~!ik\"ia~ ~ ''-~~·r.~":: 1 ·73 Jii B S, h 'd h chi I ed b t11111 ow 4~ . .-o "v cu 7.rt 7.(2 G'rw1~ •1·p w L INO Ut 1eroty, W 0 S8l e emergency V C tS US Y O!'IMI In 7~ .3t nv Ind !·" NW fO • 1 • 0 0 !01 currently drives a 197 l law enforceQ1ent aa:encies and f~11c ,~: 1!:tl,~Vrlr'c~o&'P1i3·'1 P~':Fd°'" ~ .. ~ .. ._=, 2':~ Oh1smobile that wouldn't meet other public ~tities. n ~~ ~:'3 t:U :gs:! 'tJ~ f::f •'.11 ~~~1 • ·1':!f #.~'J ~c~~ 1!i 1, the requirement oC bis· bill, The JJUbHc won'l move vi~A•a''" t.U ~ •;1 ::2f ':'1 f""' P 1 .)0 11·' i~l.,. \ : I · lold a Capitol news cwiference toward smell cars voluntarily l~e .. 1 °' ~:r,'¥: 1•:U ff.tt '~~Z 1 1 v.;r,!t,,_, 1 he dtdn 't know eractly 1Ji>w Sleroty stresscCI repea tedly, s0 §:f~' ~ 1!;ijl&;t~ r·~~·~ J::J 1:~ ::iyr; :1:t1 11~: w.'#;r~ 1': · rnany cars fit the tcnns of his i:pJe ne(l(f to be prodded by~',, a:~ Jl:r:ti I o*n!1t. '·" ~.u 1:.Cwtf't 11;'! 1'' ~~~· :ii I : weight llmlt '"•laUon cl( 1 .Jf 1 . 1 111Com ~.13 '·" 11,,. .o11 I •••'41'1'ffe<1d. • _ ':" • • r111ll I! 1 .111 , 1 frst U! J.}( Vl•l• f' .'1 . t"llNVolloblii • .. ' ' I l ' ' f.''..:GooCI ews, a Confuses Market < I I SC Dll\. y Pll.DT IS Sptclal lo ... D111J Pilot LOS ANGELES stocttiolden of SI err a c In Corp. IWfOved -y tmn1 und,.. Wbicb Si<mldn will 11<- qulre Atlal Cori>-Burbont. ~can. for ... change of .22 shalt! ol S.r· racin for each share of Axial • \ ' , .·81lAN'D N'EW 1 ~973 '•INTO . . 2_'._DooR SEDAN 1600 •« 4 cyl .,.1,.., .C ~ ....s.n1 ttu .. , C.llf. IMl1Non .,.......t:ko·(HIOW17J30:S)fSll '' ' PER ' Wiit :JHJS Ml"ONLY · Y.Qt,J. ~UST PRESENT THIS . Al> A.T .TIMl OF PURCl:IASE X.OU .. ~N~NOJJ'A ~~ORE THAN . , --- -....,, .... 16.1973 • , •9.9 TOTAL DOWN" \ . MONTH .. f99 TOTAL DOWN PER . · f.<ONTH) IAYMINJ, O.A.t. PAYMIKT O.A.C. ......... ... ,,., .......... ~~.i.e. .... 7iib.~ ...... -... .. ...,.U'lllltt.r41-. ' ...... ,,_.'""'.,,.,l.Jli.t..iil...C. ..... ~?1.-..M,_,.. .. ,_,_.,fllll_..prict;lt SlJIJ.:IJ.lld. ... -.'7J ....... iU11W11.,._•&m-IUW.. ~ . . : . . .. . ------- ~ ' . . -. .... . . Mt II_. ._.,,...Jll.U 11 ...a-,.,.. i.i. tu.'1a ._,.._ ~......-• ..., .... ..,.., ... .,,.,,..,,,...., ,,-suit l..t. .i fl-.·--....._, 'n N-11, ii-H.,.,,... .. "'1 ............. II . U744.2D i.L ... -. 'n .._, AMfJAL PlllCINl•Utl 1ai2:a. ~ · · .. . . ~A.AND ·NEw 1973 :FORD LID-J h • • • ... THAt'S RIGHT .FOLKS ••• $99 O.VEI FACTORY INVOICE PLUS $90 DEALER PREPARATION, BRAND .NEW 1973 LTD wAGoN · ' ., . ' i:Ol'o::: ·-·-= . '" ~$· ' .. lfARDTOP · . FACTORY RETENTION FEE, -SAL.ES W !l!IP..L!_ClNSJ,.~_ .. ._ THE .fQiiowtNG CARS APPL y ONL 'I': :ssi cro 2 v v-1, .,, c-r .. N41e, cOflYefti..c. t,.up, WSW tiNI, th1ted 91011, whee l ''"''''· fJJ62HIJ406J) '99.TOTAL DOWN PER MONTH •. PINTOS e · M*YERl.CKS COO CID 2Y y.1, Movy llVfy. w .. pension. oir concf., llgM i .roup. conveni•~ grttup, nidlal WSW tirtf, 1.,_.,. tock, ti~ 9loss, th:. (3J765169122) 1019 $99 TOTAL DOWN· ,AYMl.NT O.A.C. fft i1 tM1 ... n•· 111,,17 ii ,.._t -,,_.. iacL to, 7J 5-M I .II "-1 ,....,.. • .,,,. 1Mt1 N.. 41- lltlerM '1""· price 1111'.l• llod, .ii Ii-dow.-. !aft, 7J I"--: II r-,... 19 ,_, -11. full ceU! ,.ice it w 10.st 11d. Mi 1a. ·1J lk-. AfH.IAL PlKIHtMif un Tl.7,,._ V-8,auto. trans., factory air conditioning, poWer steering, power (disc) brakes, PoWer windows, power seats, am- .fm. stereo radio, heater, whitewall tires, vinyl roof, tinted glass, wheel c.:ivers. LfkE new thru out , . 20SCRL IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OFFER VOl'D AFTER SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1973 ' . 1971 MUSTANG 2 Dr. H.T. V·!, auto: trans., power steering, power (disc) I "$2299 brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tiresf~tinted glass,. , ' · , wheel covers, good miles, one owner, bought new at · ·· . Dunton Ford. 6390BA · . ' . , .. TMENT O.A.C. 2 dr, H.T. spt. cpe, V-8, auto. trans., power steering, radio, heater, tinted glass. Good miles, light cream fin- i;sh. like new. 1'5CDM ' r · . 1971 _CAPRI Cpe. 1969M .'.I.SJ AV v-a, auto. trans., power 1leerlng. l'adio $ w/tape deck, heater! tinted glass, whetl awers, . · wide oval raised while Jetter tires. Reoal red · · w/b!ack frim, Jape deck, 4859' miles, one owner, 1970 MAY c·PE A speed, radio, htater, tinted glass, dlx. in- terior, sharp silver fin- ish. 379.BRU $ 1967· THUNDERBIRD· 2 dr. H,T., auto. trans,, factory air conditioning, power steering, power . {disc) brakes, power windows, power seats, radio, he·ater, whitewall tires , tinted glass, wheel covers. Truly-a melody In ])'letaL TAti907 1973 MUSTANG MACH I Sptsroof, V-8, auto. tra'ns., factory air conditioning, power . steering, ))!Mer (disc) brakes, radio, heater, . vinyl roof, tinted glass, ,wheel covers, low miles, ,cimost new, sharp! :save! Stk 1889A like new. ZKH666 . . 6 cyl., stick shift; radio, heater, whi~watt tires, 71 LTD D H. v;nylJoof, tlntedalass. ' -r. • wheel covers, low miles, ""'" v~. auto. t""'" factory airconctiliOnJng, .$~ ·2. ·:3 99. · ldz'v'·Agmod1966, •_'_·&Extra deon. power sleering, power (disc) brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires, vinyf roof, tinted glass, wheel overs. Good mil es, beautiful one owner lvoryWhite w/gold vinyl roof. Vinyl interior, sharp! J.SJDSN •. 1972 CHEV Nova Cpe 1971 ECONOllNE Super Van v.s, ~uto.· trans~. PQWer steering, radio, helter, $ chrome yeUCNr' witti brown trim, good milts, sharp. 1Kl49~H 1968· FORD Fastba~k Cpe . 0.1 500, V-8, auto, trans .. fociory air conditioning, s·i· ''l , . power steering, power (disc) brakes, radio, heater,· , , . wh itewall tires, tinted glass, wl'letl covers. rtf!NJ ~ ~. • . tires, metallic green, .SS,09~ miles, excell"1t condi.. , • · · lion. ZNCJM : • . ' ' J' . ' \ ) ' . . .. . \ Camper Spec ial 390, V- 8, auto. trans., power steering, radio, heater, tinted glass, hvy dty tires, extra gas tank, excellent cond., ell:tra clea·n. V~1111 V-8, auto. trans., factory . air Conditioning, pow!!r steering, power (disc ) · br.a~s. RO'!"er wirdows, , pow~r:s,ets.~ r~jo •. hea-- 1 ter, wHit!well tires, vinyl roc:if, tinted glass. w}ieel covers, tilt wheel,' !100d rrilles . 217ADR -·~ - $ ' ,? .. . ' • • '. I . I .. ' vae 66, ',NO. '16. 'a· SECTIPNS, 110' PAGES .-~-...._-._ ORAN_(?f· CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA •• • • • • '"".W£0NESDAY, MAY 16, 19n •• • • •• oday's Baal ..;.· TEN CENTS na ~s Ed-uca tion • ,-N·@W School Chief Lauds L . ' : iiJ. FllEl>ERICK l!CllOEMEHL -. '1 ) Of tllci q.ttw.""" Sf9ff ' '!be new 8U{lerilitendeot of the Laguna .\!nlfied Scbool Dl!trict, pr. WCIOC!lJlilon, ~ bigl!Jy of On In tlle Art eoiony. "'~~ Beach 'has a good reputa- tion,'~ Woodhflt{>n 'said today. "I wal]t to ~ .. ~~· ~!' !'jlltl~ ~·Dd illll>',O~ \ Woodingtoo's e m p I o y m en t a.s superintendent of the school dl>trlct was confirmed by the l!oonl of Edu<ation ,._.y nigh~ ' ••Laguna ba.t ' ~ JiO!e!!U•! .of .a lightbouie ~. 1be ~lty IS d .. lrous of a· good' SOllnd publlC school system. ' "We ha ye the, m~jor ingredients of a district that can become &· guide. The diS:biet has that potential, in tact, it may already be there," commented Wondlngton. • "I want to wor~ in a good oebool ll)'Slem and wori< with & good boon!. I was impressed 'Wltb !be J;aiunll l>!ianl," the educator ~. • : , ~ Woodington said bis finl ,deJlire -.lier assuming full.time duties Sept. I will be to meet the staff and members of the community. ' "I want to elicjt attitudes aod ~ ioDJi'' be said. "Abl>, l'd like to alt down with the board lnd tilt •bout their impress.ions and expectations. n • . The second project, WQ!ldtnpo said, will )>e declllons on what v~es wllJ\ln the dlsltlct sbould be fllWI and by .. -. . "I beiieve th! role of the public 'school ls to provide effective cltizena for . our society," said W~on, In delcribing · bla pliJ)osophy on education. OJ A peraon must be able t~ function in the ~world -tbe'world ol work, and !IS a family person, IM to do this and to function in a Chanalng trorld, he has to be on independenl lwner. 11He .must have the~ !kllls of com· ml\llltlltloot, I n c I u a l n g · reeding. mathei:natiCs, science. and social skills." the new superintendent said. Woodington saJa be will ]ltriodlcatly visit Laguna during ·the summer ''depen.- ding on i'he ....is of the cllitrict and the desire of the bqard. "t know 1 will be ln the district at least once a month,'' he added. Woodington said he has enjoyed bis po.sltion as ttie commissioner or educ&· lion in Colorado. "J think my jQb ha! been suc~ssful. Tbey are unhappy to see 111e g,o -something l can feel ~PPY about." . . *; " * " *· . * * * * *· * f @p :Colorado Educator -... .. ,. -' -- T akes Reins • ID. Laguna 'f.' Man Held In Sniping Of Schools ' ........... ~ ~ Beac_h, man Who j>o\ice say , smtWf ~ ~ 19'11 willj ·t ii)!lj~ carbine was ~ tu'eloday Oii ~n Dr. Dollald \Voodinifm; cominiuiiloer of educaUan .for Colorado and . 25-year eduCator Tuelday ~&ht WU nwle l~E~r~.:-, f.:; 54-mr-ofd.. cator .~· ~~ fjve ' '.. ~ . . .}.~ ,;. '~, ,_ .: ....;,_,, ""'" -10'' .... " r "."' DlllJr.-t -r _,.... •.. .iigj's .f.ew1vA~ ·~·RD ~. ·~~~~·~~""~: .. ~ta • '$.·· .. ~ .:..{·~·r Ilgu~?' J!iultler • ~~ ... • f Jtfuis Festival . . Of Ails Board · . . -' ~' . ; . of also firing .the bullet 1'bldl embed O,,,,alb 11"! catatbla ~ ~ of • re\IN:d ii' .... ~, .,,_'!f Mila Kqban Y·· ,, . ~ .. , • llaale J LOllOr, U, of At Gleon-ene Stree~ .wu'~ Into.._ jail ward of or.ftge c.otnty Me4icaJ Center on. a charg~ of dlile)larg!ng a flretlnn Into an ..mtlablted-dWl!lllng or .*'1Pied bulldlng,"Detectlve Carroll Bush aald to- day. Buoh alleged that Lotter had been drinking hea,vily prior to and following the lncldeot at the Kuban homi, •boot a half blocl: away !?Om the Loller residence, Bush clalmed that Lotter first fired the military """'"' -in the directloll of Kuban home · for some unknown reaaon;-aDd later picked up the weapon again and.sbot'hlmseU·occidentaDy. ·Bush said ~ter apparently picked up the gun the wrong way, and a dlscharged bullet ripp<d through bis trouser leg and smashed into the top of bis loot, passing throolh the foot-into<the cement floor and llia!Mig bad ~Into the loot: He .aid l;oiter's fllim floor apertment (!loo' GVNSBOT, Page %) La~ '~JI· 'bu\lder., ;r4n!~, J. ~i:t-haa betlp''..ppo!Ji&ed .114 lill[tbe ~ tenn <#·the lai°e Willil¢1D. Mfi.!lli as a iJlWnlber ~-,tile• ta~ · · ... :. . ~"6StiV~ ~'Arts ~t--u<t:».onors Top s.!tiniitt:,--=11an<r,ri'ner ar~ · •'1: · , qh11~.,.~,t!:'·!r ·~~~-~ Stn~fB .Drofs planning, ' ' ' llJ'•~·.P' .,. -.;~ ~ :i-'-' ' ~lrltecf.by the fhj!n Mayor~ ·. T ~·~~ 1 Ci '• Jt:'Marlli\ ~M<!rd! l.a~ag .. of .LjUtAU. . tizens 79. !liiptiOil as a lestliral d&ectoT baa • -• !leen"'1icant alnce. '!'he• tenn of olflce will UC Irvine and its alumni association presented their highest awards of the run. to November 1914. .· · year Tuesday night to 17 members of th! !kmiitz' appointmetlt was anoow)ced fat"Olty, stall, student body and com- 'tUesdaY following an ei:ecutive session munity. ¥onday night after the regular m<eting Professor H o w a r d Schneiderman' of~ festival cUrectora. -received the alumni's hiahem honor - ·llcbmitz said be hai i,.. lntereoted in the extr~(!!'dillNiu• •!~T iqi! hl1.ro!e 0,. F~Uval of Arla, f9r )L 1°'* Ume and as doan '.Or lhe UC! """°"' of lllolftlcat "1oQjDng forWant.lO •• area'Wr Jt1'i!v.. Setencesi". • , . r ' m..f wi1b the art and culiiiral orgaolza· • Bodi Mr. 81\d Mrs. Rol>ert N. Weed of ll(ltL •. . " N'!l'JIOrt Beai:h were ""'lpients of" the fie said 'he &u Doi preViously heeb in-hfibest award given annually by the YOl~ed·Jn the art world. University, the Citation of Merit. -'':fl¥,l festival bas alwaya $Ile' a, good ~ yn;vmlty citations followed .the jOb. I just wanl t6 l:l!>i!1. the lllgh ib:ade lo • -talion ol several scholarshlPt from what It I• pow. and' ri and J>ettet It pie· Mumnl to ttudenls Including the first · whene.ver ifi can be ·bettered/' ~tz 'bm11l. Patrick McNu1ty M e mo r i a I said. · ~ · ~ ; Stholmbip ·Award of $306. The grant, P.IW'l' AD:PR.fJYES " . . THE .CAT'$ ~EOW . . . "'i .""': • . - -one biglllji aatisfie(custllrner who wled !Md,r ,Pl!J>I daesilled advtr!lsini eo'lumill .,-.iu11y aid ahe not onty 1oudd ha for ,.five kittens Iii' one day._ bUt "met some' nk:e 'people, too.'' Here's the n.un8 tllai c11a the Job , •• • hooortng the' late UC! E•tension writing ioStructor and former foreign cor-- r~llllt .foc. the ASJOClated Press, was glveh to Jbnetle L. Eberhardy, a topbomare in comparative culture, from Anaheim. . nr. Sclmeidennan's ,award ·capped the P.™;enta!lon of award& to the campus community ..........,. Ml'Vlce 1o tbe uiilVe(1!J1, to tbe community, outstaocl-bli ~ acoomj>llllunent and dlltinlluJsh!d tMdllng and ..-by lacllllj<. ' l •' • Couri:iy .. Declines· ' ' ' r 'f:o ·support . ' . uc1 -liospitnl ' .. ~~!Or·· . ~ • ""\"'between !lit tbe • ~laatweel<;.~ · illt~ ' . , 'l'~J Sll'l!llf~~. ,tlO. 1~ . . i' , , l'lior. to hi! · .. /1,tll'llllL I" I I I ~-I , Woodlngtbn ;will: ytjlf !he 4lallltt perlddically to be@! J>lllJlilif for · ftitilre ptQjects. . ~--,-,/ • ~~ His firs\ Visit "'.iU begin rt.bis 1ytetkend ~ .. ~. ..l ~· ·~' ~·· •• , , : o.iw Pllef s1.11t.,11et. . :'Ok.eootln~e lhroui!! "':' ~ .o1 'PeJ:t i: ,//s!(111:l\~J")ldN'i;• t, ·.~0.INS: RESCUIRS ABOVE GROUND 'Ille flrsi major tu~ lactng die' 'ntlf ·, •. ;· n l,rvlno,,( Lunch ""ur-Otdoaf C-to A Happy End supetintendent wlfi be 1 reconm.inditlon ; ' r ,, · · · · . · · · · to the scboo1 board for a.t.DeW li1sintu I)~ · ' · · · · · e:~!.~=~;:. ~stlJets~§~ve l ~vine • ~pplicat'9ns ClJ\'.IO!ltly ~ -Jo.eJ n I · · ::?~rr=~~~ i . nv~Yi:n.;~g' ··11 i Saq .. Tne"Z'tT-Colorado. aald bis desire .to r<turn to ·~ . ./ · uc;' c;. Clllfomia led ,bi.Jn , to apply for the • ' ' 1 ' · • , • Orange County supenjsor& today dedinedto.-rtliC~,Jia~ retain slate·bO.itt> IC!-·~'~ for .-comilnl<:Uon of an ·-~ Laguna Beach poslfiOf\... , ~: .. ~ ~ 1-· ~ "'· •i~i~,: -, .1 _ ~.t,·r'4J ~ . 1 • :"""wife and r .d .. ~ tN .... •'to ·a 1-"'1J8Q'.~· .. 1.~'hr.:.litheol · ""'eY •pr•ad· a tarP4Uljn 'ar"'•itd i-'• .,.;,;;;'Wlity where we ~;."ant" i;;ii';e ~nd in.Irvine ' ay~~1U.: tiity' ai>Oitlni.'toJdiill: ir'dOwi(il\to <b teaclill>g boapll'!l. . , >· ;· • lnlW¥l• supen<ison voted to ,..,t,bli8h a oommittee to meet with UCI-C4)lfornla . Qlllege 'fJI Medicine Olficlals and report ba<:k to'the board bY June Son. which ot ''many alternative proposais•:·is nloat ac- ceptable •tu both the county and the , lll!ive.;.lty. • •• 'lbe actlon named Supervioors ·Rall!h Dl<dricb of t>tillerton and Jla!pb l!. Clai1I: of Anllbelm to the study CDDl!lillee. .~rs .ti>ld· UC! Vice CllOncoUor L: E. t:or they coald not 81'"'1' the 111u ... tlon adequately enough to 111ake-up·thelr m)n<!s today,, ,CQDS!derl\Jg the large number of Olternate plalui ·to ,speod the univt!rslty bOnd ·m0oey: · InJact, observera,mte, the lack ol ac- tion by 'the county lea ... the decision making up to state officiah:. • Alsemb~ 1 ~ Bmm•a: Join\ . gialatlve . Co!hm\ltee on 1'fchtn1 (s,ti JIO!PIUL, Page %) • • Zlffurat Be~tt sink oor roots," said Woodfuiton. "We dou~IO ·~.: ttapP,l!d·for.~·mtnute wal11fl)iif!all?,,~jPf#ent'a"ltl\'°"D'ifhle have always coosidered Catlfom!a our ·~lho .botkimf ~ a:iimped,<liolncb dl· • ooilld lla'v'e:~tod'ule yol!Qi'sl,t!r::· home." a~eter '!'>le'. l!iS ·1.;1 cfuep; · ' · ' ·. . lrvJne ' P,~tiC,' Qlflcu ·in.r;y. Ehl'~ Prior to being appointed 'cooimiasiooer ~ell ArinStrm&/9, acct dentally dropped said ~ers . abO. w•re conce~ he- of education in the Rocky MoUotaiiis down the. 1111)811. llhalt at the bsae ·of a cause tile bojr ll)llfer1 trom an Ulne&s. state in 1971. Woodington served as an mii'°!it'Y·block w.1"1 )ihile,w~lklng thrOOgh Crow<b ol curious neill!lhors g•lberid executive with a recreational and a"bow tract tielnl( bulll 'at Jtrom Street arouoil·~,acene, as Orang; County Fl~e · playground equipment firm Jn lltU' llid'Glaat ,4.v..,~: ' · ' . Department per;uu,,,1 from Station :a& lingham. · ~at the ac.ne .f.oced .IWo d"'1-... r .UC lroi•»Wl!<lted to Cree Jeff. : Woodington served as superintendmt gmdii.~.~·to aav• tM )loy. • fie wu finally hollted ou< in ·• atmc of the · Monterey Pennjnsula UnUJed 1 _, • • • • • looped and kllotted beneath his arms Add school District from 196S ·to 111'10; the . . .. . . 1 • around.hi•-~ v'aUanUy dutcbing tl>O l~~':r 1~~~:1:;·~ J.~:, ~tin~ .Death . P~oh~ '0f:v~'::1~~ !:.\~dhe escaped.the hour· San Jose, from 1957 to 1962. SA GR.AMENTO (AP) ~ _ kn. iutop«y long ordeal with abrasions and bruises. A native ol Eau Claire, Wi.s., bas been .otdeted for tQda)t do ·lbe death He was taken, to Children's Hospital of 1 Woodlngtoo received his b ache Io r • of a 48-year-old lann woTker believed to Orange Coynty in Orange for a pre<:au· I dogreefrom WiSCOJlBln State C.OUege and have-dJetl frotn 1a bee' st~. Yolo COunty tionary ch~~up, patched. up, and ·sent I IN!tlt ~ and d\)Ct<>l'ate ~from eon.in'• qfflt» llld,Elllallo Cl'. Gooz.ttes home, 16 1356 ~belle Ave., Irvin&. iJQ\ll<iteley. .. .• ., . ., ' loil ·.COllllCioult)eo llbortly aftl!I' being , Ill• lea~(' caf.!'r·,~a'ih ill jliel>' sl\Dlfl, by• bee ,MMdllY'!llibt and was . ·. (S'ee WOODINqTOl(. I'•~)"· dead<ll arrl'fal.,1~1;,WoOdllliLhOspitaL .. , • • • 0raa1e Coast , Ease Into It-Resid!~nts Weatlter The sun will peek oul 'ot the cloqds.a UtUe earlier on Thursday, wilh mostly SUM)' Dies llter the morning bum off. High,, of .. 68 de- grees at the bea~ rising to 75 Inland. Overnlght 'lows In tbe· 509. • The Laauna Niguel Homeowners' The homeowners group wu the. only Associ&.tlon bas ~ed that for non-governmental body asked to com. the community 1 i8ke, the federal General Services .AdmtD:tifralion (G~) ment oo envirorunental impact report oo should ' occupy the' Cigilnli Niguel 21ii· 'the etfects of GSA occupmicy lasued late garat lacilil)! gradua!)y_ 1n April. • le•a letler aet>t tO °'"'GSA office Ill San According tq the n!pol'I, the buildlna Franc:lsco, !be Homeownen • .\BOOC!aUao coold hoose 7,500 employes and haa pork· , ~of ~ra Jill4d llIDOi bJzards, Ing for 6,llO oars. . . · •lilide<juata ICbOol capacity and a laclt of a.n-its ...,.. requttted hy Mlly 20. lool-<OS! ·=:,· . u oll .... IODll to Dlllng The "°""°wnetraPllQ!nted • -man I<'' -•u.e to study 'the nport, ·but ' tbe faelJI... • .. • •-··--b~· ""'-~-.... '' pialrmin ~ W.uuama'aald !O _,1 WU call.,.S.. the .s.i(gurat becaute It not OUOllgh time to tn>aL!t thonuahly. --~ Babylonian temple, "We do latow that this will bave ' . ' i r~ .. Coplea . were reproduced by the homeowfte? and given lo other local ciu.zw> ,mips. 'l'he . Jetter, passeid as a unanimous reoolutlon by the hoard, voiced . a ~ partlctljal';dlncem about the llCboOI altu .. lim,,T\IO-aoly jtmlor bigb,.Marco F<tft!ltter, ·already. is on extra aeulons and !'Ill .. Oil double ..Uloai riol year. "TIM 7;1.00 emtliOYe capadly means on- ly ·;the heada ol liouehoilds," said one boil'd QIOIDber. ~ number ol: Clbildren added 1i0uld be bll'd for tbe dillrlct fo •• INSIDE. TOD.4.Y Two Palo Alto coe(ta wapted. ~ see for tlttmralvca-how hoow- U~ are ireatt-d . SO the71 COfl.· duct~d on aflectlonali ,,_."'"al experiment with. th.oc:.lt:jng ,,. ault.: S'°"'J Page HP. , • I ~ 'FREE . kttleOI, mixed colqn, • t wedl, cute, · p1ay!ul ' .. (Phiioe NoJ ~ tould Just be that you could bo con· 1lo<ed a Dally Pllol.id i. Ille "cal't mo- 11(." 'GI~ tt ll'try. 'l!le'llln!ct fl .. to ,... ,\lnmnl Asloctalloo President Adreana SOU!elel, herself a winner of the 1973 alumni university . service a w a r d , preaented the Tony DtLap original lithograph • • M a r i n ' ' and "ex· traordlnariUJ'' plaque to De a n Scllletdennan. &ple1 of the IloLap or1&lnal weat to other alumni il<algnces, 1il pr.,..ttna the Citations of Medi to Mr. tnd Mrs ,_ w~. U.CL<;banceUor Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr .. cited Mn. Weed'• the $1.1 mJJlton ae~r.,ant waa bull! (r.,.neod..,a tm~ on our '"'"•" be by Nortb American ell and , ha• aald. betll ~ a!nce Its completion. 1'1n Fuell tea, encuUve oulstant to '!be g°""'ldllen!,plam to' trade uoe of Flflll Diltrld SUpervtlot Ronald Ca-1. the l!!,lge bulldlng for IMrplus property Jn aald ho-dl4 nck .io-why the Niguel ~;,.....,·uid they feal'lld the ~ lot; tow....i boualng caused by the In' malOd delllal>ds cl .the GSA employes WOUid rwult' In blgb.deoall)!, blah. the. deveJopcnent. " :_. .., · .. • ..?boy added ........ thf..anly..tm>sporta. \ r nJ "T'·- ~-----·---(S.. UC! AWARDS, Pase II WAiileJei "'1lllt1'18ed by"llockw<ll-hclmeownert-wer• lht Gld.y -· ••• fn<ernallonal . governmental grouJl """t 1he n!pol'I, ' (8eo llQGUllAT, Pap I) I' . " • ' ,. I I ' • I I I ·l • .. ; -... w ...... ,, .r., 16, 1973 Fr•• r,,,,.i lt \JO """' ... Gan .. • •• ... ,,, Ila...., ..... .:~ -.. p' I I and -"'Ille ... '.1i~-.......... ... ..... ·--· .... bu..- ...,...::: ~Jury and tile =-... ~~ .. ~ .. ~·s~'~1c~~ ,.!~::.=:....~~ k,; Citation al Merli to don! al jlla'~1 tot lier "llllb 1'vtl al -... w... Is pubii..bor ol the Orange ............. ,...,.., 1 .ii 11111 onlvenlty ·-~Pilot. ~'lofrt. 'ffumphre)'I, a'gn.tuate 1.'9 prukltnt of the Friend1 or student In pb)'ll~ mother of t.wo and con- Aklridl said, adding _this y .. r1s sistqptly graded •"""!Ir the top flve per· · 111• 8 "unique-poeltion to bo-ol Ctr1t ' al ·· btr ~.... has presented ~ ter service to the campus and has numerou1 theoretlcaJ papers in th1& coun- ~-·'"'i nA edllor!ally pr.. try and abJ'Oa<L.Sbe II Wotldni toward a """' --Y 1 "" · doct~te In .pl\ylics having ealned a v · supp>n, for our campus. ~Jy In Ibo past six months," mater's de&ree at lJCI till> year. Al .111d, "this man's newspaper bas By categoiy, Ille follo!Jlni are the "" doM mote to assist tlS in brlnglng to this ciptentJ o( uftlversity sirvict IWlnfs: ·,;,,,· ---"':-'-""tal than any Staff: Doris M. Nelson, graduate ~~ ·~~IU,g -r division admini!:trative analyst, and .-__ , __ Besch author !Aland J. Cooley Helen I. Greening, Mesa Court residence en::d"" the evening and read the cit.a· haU manager. · tce0mpanying awlri!a to. other Facility: Fine Arta Dean Clayton L. 1~t~ stall aod rtadentl m the Garrisoo, profes.sor or drama and resi-i4!orter IJln fele. dent of Laguna Beach. \ilnllerl In other csteplet ar.: Sludenl: Laureen Kay Edwards of 1 Fteall)' Teaehble: Dr. Huntington Beach, humaniUes senior in f South Laguna, profegor classical ctvillzation.-- of the department of Alumni : AluninJ Aaaociation President ~Y. He was cited f o r Adreana Sou1eles of Newport Beach. •1coRa:l.Rently being singled out by By Category tbe following are wtnnera: ftudenta and faculty alike as an excellent of communJty service awards: instructor." Staff: Clifton L. Miller, dJrector of UCJ DllUDplllled Faculty R e I e a r c h : h l pl .. ._,..... and devel t ;..,. Alexei Maradudln or Newport Beach, P yslca --.. npmen · v• . eSIOr of physics and chairman of the Miller Ls a longtime TusUn councllman CI faculty senate. A charter member of and former mayor. O.llY P/IOt llaff PIMle UCI DEAN SCHNEIDERMAN IS "EXTRAORDINARIUS' Alumni p,...1dent Mrs. Soul•I•• Pr ... nt1 DeL1p Artwork !wt be has published more than Fecalty: Dr. Robert I. New01XDb, lee> ,....id, pert 70 of these since lurer In IOdal actences and rosldent o! F~ Pqe I Com!<._to...:ucl and'was rec<>ill!!l<!l (or __ C«ma de! M•teJ.e.wcomb -Ille WOODINGT-o· N 4 -year Contract For New School Chief Outlined -· to UCl's noputaUnn In UCf vO!leyti'all anil -~ ~ llOlld state pbyalcl !or bis CllWllellng services to pr1>on ln- student.s w..;t to· matea seeiJn& educational opportunities. ~ .. ·~~ of Irvine who was Student: Kurr Snipe.a of Corona del mond followed by posi~ons in J_. t.stancbn athlete ~ the year Mar1 a ~r majoring Jn blologlc&J. philos'.opby, school law, school finance ~;!!' .. hlt g rtldpaUon in UCI'& sciences cited for his off-campu1 projecta: and public scboola administration at UC '....,..-.. ~ · onshJ t e a m 8 • including development of an educatloo Berkeley. ~~lo 11 a J:oor ':najorlng-in motivation program at 8anta Ana High Woodington also has held teachiog The following are the major terms of psh:boloCY School. assignments with San Francisco State the contract between the Laguna Beach ~ Deiapp ()( Jrvine named outatan-Alamnm: Dr. Steven Feinberg of El College and S~nfoni University. Board ol .Education and Dr. Donald ·-' f · hb Torn recognized lnr hb part In the crea-r he School ding senior studePt of the year.em!,.. ll tim d. the verano· Place well baby cllnlc He i.s a past president 0 t Woodington, appointed Tuesday night as "einellent achievement acad ca Y ....... 1.h 1.............. Facilitles Council and l)olds memberships d his partJ.c1petlon in univenlty and development of 8 S.-.---a-a.., with the California Teachers Association. superintendent of ~: -_ !!1mce..mi activltles.!'. De.Lipp ii.pm!-~"!~ _atu~&ni1·~ . Natimal Edueatien Association , -It ls a four-year contract, the max- ____ din! al ~~ Sludtl'll ol UCl,·WH ~ g 801° Y .. _ _ eai~omia As~iallon of Schoo I _.illl~!Jl_!~!!fl)Lall"!'!blo ._by_Ja'!, -com., ___ -. ~-.· ...,.....__ •-... 1------·-··'-'--·---·Adm1ntflt1'Btol'fJf--:Nation;~Cogqoil on--enl Set I -- _Townhouse Pl.an ~~ou~cil Despite Denial . From Pagel HOSPITAL .•. Hospital Siting is eipected to recommend. to the leglslature before June exactly how and where UCI's $38 mllllon share of a $155.9 million state bOild lallue for =. spaj<elllllll !or Cfeative Com· ....Ucal education la to be 1pent. uu ' proponent for Ille $15 million The reanlutlon 111pervlaora were uked Plodm towabaule project at the to aupport would have ·urged spendln& of 'l\o al Iii World llt taiuna Buch, uld the lilMey for medical achoo! ·l>ulldJnsa t.i!ay tie llint '\ilana to ad-lta"l>ro-and• letldlllil bnipllll on the llCI ~am-pOaa! fo the city c:..mou c1e1p1te • pns. ne1at1ve recommendaUnn by the plan-Staff 1..-the San F'rlnctsoo Democrat rung commtnloo. who beada tile atwty' -and the -nie Huntington Boach company wtll • budget poweWu\ Asoemblj' lV•)'I and ;: , IP'OllP" thll week .with • sorte1 nf Iii~ Colnmltjoe har,. ' ii Ii·-~ I• d u.p and will study the ~,Jor ' seYerli altemativea. Olla blhla the t comiplaglon'1 derii1I, IAnY l\edlllan, · mJaht be 1penl In Watti 1o:g. , e Uve Comm111>11lea rtpretenlalln, another medical school ·a , , to · ' Marti.II Luther Ki.Ilg Hospital the ~' commlasloo voled Monday to Another divides the money JlelWff!I r_,_nd denial of the project follow· UC! and Orange Coun ty providing 1 new tng a tumultuous rneetlrii: at city hall at· 200-bed teaching hospital on the campus tended by an esumatea 150 persons. and fl million of UC bond money for FDilowlng a throe-boor pbllc bearing on upgrad!n1 Orange County M e 41 c a I the 250-unll h1114ide project, tile com· Center. • mission ruled that the density oI develop-Supervisor Ronald W. Gaspers of ment planned in the lownhou'Se propoul Newport Beacti wondered why the was too great. univeralty needed the suppport of the A company spokesman said the aupervilors "when the wrtera last negative rec(llllmendaUon by the com-November decisively approved the bond mia:sioo was a great disappointment, but issue which had rather speclf1c in- that present plans were lo continue to the structions concerning the UCJ teaching city Council with the proposal. hospital." · Machu Picclru, named for an Incan Cox said he agreed but the bond lslue hilltop community. was presented Wlder measure lert t.he decision of where the city codes allowing a deYe\oper to money was to be spent to the legislature prepare 8 specliic plan for a planned and that the joint legislative committee community or project. headed by Assemblyman Brown had di!· 1be specific plan then requires public ferent Jdeas.J hcarina:• at both the plania'ig com-Cox said the university is willing to IC· missJon and City c.ouncll levels with the cept Brown's proposal that $7 mllllon of council having the official decision. UCl's share or the bond ls!lue be spent ln 'Ibe architectural firm of Councilman upgrading the Orange County Medical Peter Ostrander prepared the plans for Center. the townhoUse project to be located along The vice chancellor said timing was Pl!.rk Avenue between Thurst on critical because the state senate ways fQtermediate School. And Top of the and means committee which will make W.orld. . the final decision on how much money is ·Residents of Canyoo Acres and Top or allocated to UCt is waiting on the Brown ttie World comnnll!itltles in opposition lo committee rn>Ort which he said should the pl8na cited flood haurds, traffic coo-be out this week . g1stlon and impact ~ city,services dur-The UCJ vice chancellor answered the irig commWion hearmg!I. l'Onctm of some supervisors that beds ln Sch001 Construction, American Associa· m c ng P ·. · . tlon of school Administration and Phi -Dr. Woochngton will receive an an· Delta Kappa. nual salary of $32,950. 11le school board Woodington served as a Hne officer • will hold the option of adjusting the with the Marine Corµs and as salary at any time. Ath~etics Officer at Camp Elliot. He -Prior to Sept. l , Woodington will atta1nOO the rank of major before discharge Jn 1M5. s~n~ al leas~ 10 days In the school Woodington and his wife have four soos d1str1ct. He will receive ,1,000 plus the whose .age! are 25, 2-4, 22, and 19. cost of travel e:1penses for the ~ices. * * * Laguna .Trustees OK Resignation Of O.orles Hess The realgnatlon or Charles A. Hess, asal..stant . 1uperintendent ror bulsness services, was accepted Tuesday night by the Laguna Beach Board or Education. Dr. Hess, who has a<.'Cepttd a slmllaf Polition wKh the Palm Springs Unified School District. will depart thO Laguna position May %5. Hess was one of Laguna's three top school admlnlstrators fired by the school board in December. when trustees voted not to e:1tend his contract beyond the Ju- ly 1 e:1piration date. "As a member of the board that hired Dr. Hess, I'd like to thank him for hi• contribution to the dlatrict and his famUy's contrtbotion to the community," said Trustee Jane Boyd. "! tbtnlc that goes !or Ibo total board," added William Thomaa Ill, board pres!· dent. Hess, reflecting on the new position in the desert community, quipped: "Well, ittll be warm there, too.11 Akins Oarifies Exhibit Remarks -The district will pay Woodington $2,000 annually for use o! his perannal Cir while superintendent. -'lite school board and Woodington wiJI meet at least once a year to. dlscua wortl.ng relationship and con.sidering ~newal of his coil.tract. }-WOodtngton may undertake outalde ctinsultlng 8 C t i V l t i i I , speaking enga1ementa:, wrlUng and .lecturing ac- e-Ording to board policy and advance ap- proval of the board. -The superintendent will l!ave direct responslbillty over organization and ad- ministrative personnel and other staff member~. -Woodington will receive 22 working days of vacation each year. Under the terms of the agreement Woodington will not receive the full $32,950 during his first year since he will not join the district until September. He will receiYe the pro-rated share of the amount based on the remaining nine monUu ot the school year. Dr. W i 11 I am Uloom, former super- intendent of the district, rec e J v e d $27,750 annually. He received a monthly mileage allowance of $75. OPIN ' ... HHH -upp 9, -Faces u·.s_. Rap-~ • \' NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe federal government today flied a crlmlnal charge against the senior partner tn a Wall Street brokerage firm for allegedly making $43,000 In illegal, indirect con- tribuUons to Sen. Hube.rt H. Humphrey's piuldential primary campaign laat y~. The criminal information filed in U.S. District Collrt alleged that John L. Loeb, 70 of lhe firm of Loeb Rhoades & Co., m~e 15 conlributlon! in the names of eight persons, mainly clerical employes ol his finn. U.S. Attorney Whitney North Seymour <:barged ttiat at Loeb's urgJns the employes wrote checks drawn on ~ personal checking accounts to 12 dif. ferent campaign committees after Loeb transferred the '48,000 from his account to theirs. A spokesman said the filing or the charge stemmed from an inYestlgaUon begun nearly a year ago by the General Accounting Office and the FBJ. Loeb was accused Wlder the federal election cam- paign act of 1971. Last week; former Atty. gen. John N. Mitchell and foimer C o m m e r c e Secretary Maurice H. stans· were ~ dlcted on charges-of obstruction of justice, conspiracy and perju11' in con- nection with secret campaign con- tribµtion.s lo the Coinmittee for the Re- eleclion or the President. That indictment charged that financier Robert L. Vesco, charged witb con· ~piracy and obstructloo. of justice, made a secret $200,000 cash gift to the GOP campaign fund to influence a government probe of his far-flung flnancial dealings. Loel:> issued a statement from hs office saying that there was "no intent oo my part to evade the law. t did not know its existence and the full facts were made - Signal'Contract . For Niguel O~'d A low bid or $6,583 was accepted by the Board of Supervisors Tuesday ror the in~ stallaUon of new signal standards and conduit at Crown Valley Parkway and Sea Island Drive in Laguna NlgeuL 1.Dw bidder for the project was ·Baxter- Griffm Co. of Stanton. There were five bids rangillg up to 19,533. 1be job inch.Ides the removal of er~ istlng tralllc stgnal standanll and flashing beacons to make way for tlie new standards. '!'.:0111 l» .. e 1 · ZIGGURAT .•• tion lnto the area lB by automobile, use o( the plant will rqltire more roads and higher taxes. Government ownership ol the building would remove it from the tax roles, caus- ing an estimated. loss of $400,00'.l each year to -\be School, commwtlty college and water districts. Mutineers Off Ship SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Greek oil tanker Tuesday night left San Diego harbor for Panama, leaving behind 14. Honduran crewmen including one who wu shot in the leg by the ship's captain. public al my tllll'ance wltbilt lhr<c wotka 1 after the lnitia( coiltrlbUtlQQ.V He aald ~ wJOle to ~.ll!J11lphrey committee JW>e I, abnul al days afl<!r the inllial cootrtllotq,, Jnd ."~them immediately to rile ~-'i~tllll"t making J>llbllc the fact !hft i ~ tile con- tributions -and maiM,..6ie tbetr cnn- lrlbutlon.s ... 1be committee dJd so slx day!! before the California primary, be aald. Loeb said be waa beJns charged with "the technical and unwlllJns violalioo of a procedural provislm of the new law govemlng campaign contribut.loos." Loeb is to be arraigned May 29. Coo- vict.ion could bring ooe year in prison and ,1,000 fines on each of the eight counts. Laguna Unit ' Nixes Delay On B-q,ilding The Laguna_ Beadl Planning Oom-. mission this . week rejeeted ooe com- missioner's request that a four-month moratorium be slapped on oo~ <ln unsubdivlded lands within the dty linlit.s. . Commiuloner Sally Bellerue raisectthe matter in the wee hours Tue.sday mom-lni loliowtng more li1an five hours of public hearings on the Machu Piccbu and Sycari\ore Hills developments. 1, She argued the moratoriwn woold give the city planning staff a chance to spend more time wcrklng on the General Plan and related zonJng ~ad of process!ll& deveio-t appllcattooa. · But ller'motion-t<>C-lllllltuti.the I-- failed with DO Votea f""'1 CommltaJone" John McDowell, Llirry C&mpbell alld Michael May. Commissioner llol« Lanphear Jillned Mr~ Bellerue In •up. porting tbe1 propoaal. She said she wan ted the moratorium to apply to llll!1lbdivlded lands and any'°"!' changes that would create fi1lbe'r densities. 1 "A moratorhun would be beip(ul," · agreed McDOwell, "But not wtthou lllud-' Ylns It and bowing wbat tile Impact would be." , 1 He a~tbe mo,~ lie d!acusaed . at an u study 1ts1lon "The only about delaYIDk 11 that we get farther and farther belilnd. I think we should 111.'!l(i! a general stl~t I about tile prol>Jeli\ and let tl\e ~l\l' ~ ; cil •ct," llld ?.{h'. Betide. --~ .. ~·!; The city llall! obe said "hH • .,_...,.jO : go on" llocl.Wiil -;,f lap In the ~era! : Plan fotmulati!n. "lt'a uofalr 14 tbe stall, tile~· and1'cljlzeog." . She 1*1te<!~•· illoratorlinn, ~~~ aJ1oW i the staff iliort ·pane lo sin.mt "'1l)n General Plah ~iimenll to , the state ljy the upcomlnfl June :Ill deadlines. · Campbell_ said a tour-month moratoriumi would not be necessary if the pressure 1' on only thrnuih June :Ill. "It would be an undue and unnecesury harassment io the Wilding trade ... we're ' doing enoogh alrudy," said Campbell. ?tlrs. Bellerue respmded that tflr.ltaff also needed time lo work out· proper ordinances ' for grading and plarined residential developments \Vlthin the city. FollOwing the vote, McDowell said be would be willlng to reeonsider the matter "at any Iuture mee-Ung." 646-1919 CLOSD SUNDAY OIANel COAJT the medical center would be reduced in number by statm.g that any upgrading of the center would Inevitably lead lo a 1091 in beda. Laguna Beach Festival of Arts Dlrec- tor Hal Akins today clarlfled hls nmarks relatiYe to a S'Uggestlon to restrict the children 's art exhibit at the annual Festival of Arts to Laguna !tudel'ltM Duck Feat futs-$6.95 to $10.95 Baseban Mitts-Bats Balls-Shoes-:Colored Sleeves Shoes--Sanitaly Hose Ad'ldas-Tret1m-Converse lack Purcen Tennis Sh~ Tennis Dresses •• DAILY PILOT Ti. QI".,_. <Mt! DAILY lllLOT, Mitt ""'left II ~ln9d the N'"*l-PrH1, IJ -llltell D)' ~ 111e 0r.,.. c...t ,.~..,,..., com;.""· ~· · rtlt Mllllof>t •rt 1t11t>ll1"9cl, Mllnd•r ''"Ollllll llrWay. .... Cat~ M .... , H...,.~ ·~. Hllrltl,..,.., • ~IF-111n Vtllty, L1111,1n1 ... di. l• .. IM!SNdlfllKlli W!llll ~" ci. ..... m,1 ~n Juen r1p!1t•1N , A 11nOI• •llClkHitl lldlt"°" I\. P110ll1hed k~y1 t nd ~ty1, r ... P'lr>cl ... I Mllll\fnt 11i.m It 11 ut Wu! ••v St'"': c .... MHI, C•lllwnl1, mH • l Rot.1rt N. W11d lll"ft!Mont .......... u,,,., J ee• II. Curley !tlct l"rflld111t 11'111 O.-r1i M-... Tii111111 Ktt•ll . ., .. .. - 1'lia Joss \lo'OUld be balanced by the pro- pooed 200 beds at UCI, Cox said. FromPageJ GUNSHOT ... i.c; in line With the Kuban resid(nce where a bullet flew through the home ripping through a four Inch by four inch post, an aluminum window frame, a woodtn win- dow siding, past Mrs. Kurnin !'Ind through a wall before hill ing a brick firep lace and fa 11 in g bel\vcen a 11.·all in the residence. Bush said he had attempted unsuc- cessfully to recoYer the spent bullet wh.ich missed Mrs. Kuban by about a foot as she sat reading a newspaper In 1 chair. The Kuban shot was reported .,t about 8:13 p.m. Monday and another ahot w11 reported to police at 10:39 p.m. by a call&r who tbougbt It came from the area or Lqlon and <lienneyre Streets. Officers were unable to locate a weapon or suspect 1t that time, but believe that ls when Lotter wa1 injured. Oet. Bush Mid that although Lotter, whom he ldentllted as tba operator of the Ship Ahoy restaurant in Laguna Beech, waa bookeQ on a fr10ny ch1rge, 1T ft pllllsible the district attorney's office wlll 1 file on a Jes.5er misdemeanor charp ot firing 1 flnarm within the city . ' Akins lndlcaled be didn't dlar~rtze the present mtem of chll~en'a exhlb.lt& as amateurish, as reported, He did say that If the exhibit was restricted. to Laguna school children, the artwork cou1d be displayed in framed fonn and that the art shown could be rotated and changed during the Festivill run . At present., all school children in Orange County are invited to compete for childttn11 exhibit. Art is shown unframed and the exhibit remains the 1ame throughout the Festival of Arts run. Wallace Accepts Wheelchair Fate MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -A yaar after he was shot down while campatcn- ing for the Democratic preatd...ual nom- ination, Gov. Cleora• C. Wallace MYI be baa "•ccopted ~ ... !act tliet I'll probably never W11lk aaain." Bui Wallace, wounded by Arthur Brem- tt In a Laurel, Md. lboppln1 center, add- ed, "l alw8)'1 pray for a miracle." nwt Alabama governor met newsmen Tuesday, exactly one year after the shoot· Inf. --- AJ a mull al a bullet In the spine, !he govemcr loot the 11to ol bolll 1•1• and has been confined to a wheelchair. Speedo Swimsuits & Trunks Laguna Swim Trunks-$5.95 & $6.95 . LHe Goard Swim Tru~s-$4.95 Woooer Board Kick Boallls-$4.95 Wann Up Suits-$21.95 t~ $34.95 • Champion HandbaO Gloves Racquetbaft Racquets Table Tennis Pdes & Sets W'llsoHnlo~1111 Tennis Bans W'dson-Qancraft--Dunlop Rackets 9a!1mlnton Rackets Squash .Rackets OPEN g TD s:-tLosm SUNDAYS Tennis Shirts & Shorts Ralelgll Bikes- Parts-fires-Tubes R&pairifli Racket Stringing 538 COOER~1919 ' ... I I \ I I \ I J ' •• -i. , ' • • • •• -• • • ' . . j Yf!>F-66,, No:-136, I S~TIONS._ 110 ~AGES ' . - I ' . • ' -... ---• • l I • 1 O~ cp\INTY, CALIFORNIA • .. • • .. . -... WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1973 I T~'s Fl••I TEN CENTS 17 Jleceive Highest Awards From UC lrVine : UC lrvlno and•llt 1lwnill uaoclatlon ......,tod the!r l>Jgbeit awn. of the Y..r Tueodly night to 17·menben of .the f""'111¥, staff, student body and com· ~~~ -H o w a r d Sclmeklerman ..C.Mil the alumni'• .highest bonor - the eltraorillnali11S award -fOr his role ·u dean of ihe Ucl Sohool of Bioloiical $dpiolss1 _ . __ '· llo!Jl'·Mr. l!lCI Mrs. Robert N: -Weed of _ Ne11jprt ~.were recipleots of the ' J . !L .. ·' •• ·. ;,,. ""'.""~ .. . ' . ns NixonOK'd Wiretaps l .,------- 17 .Jn i969 . , , ' . W ASlllNGTQN (UPI) President f'ixoo persooally aut.borized F B I wiretaps oo telephooes of more than a ~·members 'of his Natioool Security !X/iilcll mil In~ In ap effort to track ......, news leaks, -the White House ~ledged'fi>d&y. . , A_;!~'t!!~sfpe~1 &f~ed MO A~S ·STILL'.' .• ~el( NIXON:-.1'~ 19 • i .f rJJine Nursery ' . Hearing Given One Week Delay _E one weet· delay wu_ ordered today in all Pralii• Countfliuperio< Couti-!1eartng on the merits of State Department of Social Welf~'s liid to close an Irvine nurSery. · . Ju<!ll•·Robert P. ltn<eJallil."1e~ May 23 iS t1j ..iaie lio 'Will Si ... lbe state de-inaal or .,a i>rilimio iojih;tioii that .. duld ll.ij ~,i)oos ' . the Colon!' Club C'.omniunity -A!ioolaUon's 1 ' Pl 1: i e Playtirite Qlopei'atlve Progtam"·pendin& ttl~I ot;~ rlilsed lil.the•lawsuil State lnyeno· argue.' that ... .,It to 12 $hildr<n of tltee to live ~ of° age wbo'aitondtlie'lliiy care center ai·31111 S. Miil~ Jrvilie, are not, sufficiently JJI"> teeted ·fronl ftre ·hazords and·IWO nearby sWidiminii )>ooli. • " , 1liey ilsO cllim that the center ls oj>eratlnJ wltbiiut a license and bas lg-. nored demands that ooe be obtained. Nained as defendanti In the action are 1Sll0dallon preoident Robert Purl% and mother's group. pre~klent ~ Harkins, 1672 S. Mall . ; • ·Parents whO plaCe their children in lbe f.CUU'y picketed state of/lee In Sanlt Ana l8st week to,pr0tesrtlle proposed closing d the rfuraei)' schQoI. · Mlrcbing with tbem were three.of Ir- .vine's five cltt OOlill<;llnitn wbo ¥'that c!Osing of the nur,.ry Woufd aloo mean the end of Cub Scout and Brownle ac- Uvlties and recrealloo pttgtlllllS at the center. • : 'Unbrefl.fw.ble' ' • r' " ,. ) • • !' :Lock Foihd ' . A bOkRJar .broke . into a com. merclll YID equl)>ped • with what was suJ>P.Offd to bi an Wlbreak'able loclt at '" IrYlne conllrpction site, ~ fl,000 ln toob and ·equtp. aient. · · Jen llyland, of AGR .Electric Corp., Anabelm, ~the job to tdlce Tuesday, liter dil<ovorl~ Ifie E!' van wJ)lch W81 pvked averrll it CUIVlr Drive and Scot ale Streel. Officer jlarry Ehrlldl aald the,I van wu·aecwed with a 111:ieclal lock lhat c1nnot be cut or broken, IO the Intruders broke a latching device ~ t!Jlt Dold It .Iii place. . ' • highest award ·given annually by the UnlVeJJl\Y, the Citation of Merit. The' university citations followed the presentatiol(Of ~veral sdiolarslii!lo' from the alumni lo aludOPts-tilcluding the llrst annual Pafri'ck McNulty M e. mo r i a I Scholarship 'Awar4 of $!00. The grant, bonoring.ll\¢jate .UV! J!ztonsiOO writing instwcWr ·and former toi;elp. cor- re$W<lde!') I"CJ \he~~'3'"· was given.,~ ~e tl. ,i8ij'b'ardy, a sophomore -in comPollrati.~e culture, from --~ . , Anaheim. Dr. Sctmeidennp's _award c11pped the preafnta\)on of. tward.1 to the campus community re<iognlzina &efVice lo the univenity, to ~ -oommunit~ QY~ ing .• accomplishment and distioauilbed teacl)ing and <esearcb. by facully. Alumni As§Qciation ~eat · Adre.na Souleles, beisel! a wllmef , el. the 1m alunmf wUvefsity service a w a r d , presentod, the Tony DeLip original lithograph ' • M a r i n ' ' and 11e1:· ----~ ,, ' JEFF, ARMsTROtlG, 9, JOI.NS . RESCUERS ABOVE GROUND ' In 1~1~11'. L"'1Ch-Ho!ir .. ~p.,4o ,:4'tl•PPY·~\ .~ , traordinarlus" plaque to De an Schneidennan. Copi,. of the lleLlp original went to other alumni ,deslpees. In presenting the Citations of Merit to Mr. and Mrs. Weed, UCL 0w>00Jor Daniel G. Aldrich , Jr., cited Mrs. Weed's service to UCI Town aod .. (\own as a member or its board' and as a past presi· dent. Aldrich also noted· her ·service on. the Orange County Gcanil: Jury and '!be UCI Foundation as well. In what Dr. Aklricb aaid wa a "unique" situatkln, tbe UCJ chaDcellor presented 1 secood Citation of Medt to Weed, who is publisher of the Orange Coast Daily Pilot. Weed Is president of the Friends of UCI, Aldrich said. iddlng this year's reclpent is in a "unique position to be of greater service to the c~pUS and has both reportorially and · editorially pro- vided support for ollr canipus. "Particularly in the~put six months," Aldrich said, "this man's newspaper has ea- • ' I \,, " OFFICER HARRY EH!ILICH i,CO,MORTs MOM.. MJis.•p'r,! ~mt'r'A'e'Y For Jiff, on.Stret'cher., Worst l• ~•r Excepf Patching Up . .. ·~· . . •i ·~ \ f ' . . ' •. . ~. . . ' "' I ·:" . .. """ . . ~ -~·· ( ~ ~ • r···:·11•·, ''.• .1'"'•·\1~ • .f.)~ . N.~w ur~~l~ :: ; : ·.1t~~~ttet~~'S:ave 1 rviiW . .. ··' .. , Seen _in Growing Epergy _ Ctj~ : ,, Boy in Tigh .t Squeeze -. By RUDI, NIEDZIELSKI Of ... o.llY ,.1.., ,,_.. A small boy walking home from .I Americans will need to make ~ifl-iri lrvlne TUesday 11penihll,iunch hour ln cant readjustments to their lifei;tyles double jeopardf,'trapt)ed "foi-55 minutes over tbe'nell:t few years as a dired resul~ at ~ botimf d. ·a ~ped; 144nch di· Of 'the growing energy crisis, oil experts ameter hole ii.I: feet deep. predicted In Anaheim Tqes4ay.' ' • . •-"'"--" .-~ctl<lonhlll --1o Sund drl ~«be ~· J~ '>""~r-· · ~· -ydropped • · ._uc . ng . ay ve .ww-·a uung Qown the smaJL ah&tt at·& base of a Dto\be past, automatic trammlaslrill an · •. bltlc\k ·,..u ~'w'1kfilii tbro h 'Unaffordable luxury, the average car , ~ ! . ... .. ~ p;Oj>ol>ly ,.111 be a tW<H<ater th8t gets 45 a new' b'act beinj Krom Street ril\les.Ji:r gallon, and women 1rill..t.Oe up Ma Glasl Avmue. · ' '.. . lmitthlg to cut down on the heat!iii' bin. ti.Scum at the scene f~ two dall-;nllt ...., the forecast throuih 1990 • , ~ .• ell · · · liel.fd by the women's division. of tbe gecs_in their: ,,Oltl1~ ~ve'th8 boy. American Association o( Petroleum )bey spread a tarpaulin around the Geologists and the Society of Economic tiny , -">g, foldln& JI. doWn .lnJo lta Paleontologists and M I n e r a l o g I s t s walls initially to ~event a caY.Hn which meettng at the D~yland Hotel. ., .. » · _'., • "the. -Keltb Doig vice president of planning cowu ·h&ve "'l'°""teil youngster. · ene,· economics -for Shell Oil, told the ~rv~ l>Olice OOl~r Harry Ehrli'1 ' Pth,erlng that the United Stales probably said """"°"the . ;•~were concerned lJe. will "61 ~ all.the energy ii requires dur, """* boy .5!!ffen frotil an illne~ ~.!l'" arltlcal j>eriod but that the nation " ' iflbebe "nmnln& smooUtly again'' in 1990 , lie ~"!' i!i~:' do~b~~g of energy . Real Hot, Stuff I conSurDption fi<orn 970 to 1990. means t!Jlt the ener&Y crlsls will be a pjlenomellon laJlinfat !NII lb years. At Fire Hou'Se · To ooflen the blow, be recommended that the country "undertake energy con-· · N"o rmdie · dincen were arlrwed at servatJon and the development of • Costa Me'Sl't ~ P'\re Ho\IR toda domestic ._.....,,.. l"'P sbop.'l\~s.4i1r)Mll 1!0~ sti)\ llioit'ed On the cmoervatlon lide, Doig ~id, up !'&QY>ht lhO,ia;. , < are sud! allmulUves as producing Patrolm1n .l'*ul .Alexinder· ~ Crowds of curious neighbon gathered around the scene. as Oraug~ty Fire Depjll'tment personnel from Station :2& near UC Irvine worked ' to fr~ Je(f~ He was finally hoisted out in a sling looped and knolled beneath' bis arms and around his chest, valiantly clutching Ute rope above his head.· · IJtvestigators sald be OIC&ped the bour- loog ordeal with abrasions_ and lruiJes~ He was taken to ChUdren's Hospital of Orarige CoWlty in Orange for a precau- tionary checkup, patched up., and aent home , to 4856 Rochelle. Ave., Irvine. PILOT AD PROVES • THE CAT'S "MEOW . One highly satisfied custorrlt.r ~ho uaed Daily Pilot classified .advertising columns successfully said she "hot only found homes for five kHteri1 in one day "but "met some nice peffle, too.',. Bere11 the l~Uog lhll did the jtll>: • FREE' kittens, .filix«( com, • 9 . weeb. ~. pliY!uJ. (-No.) . amallor cm, do!ns·a'lay with gas pilot to a halt al tllW -ttled fllrmer"hetr llihta, •""'1>lnl ~ of ' aulomallc bor at !Tl i;L 11.111..SI., •bout 9:111 a.m., 1l could Jui! be thJI '°" cotM be con· transmtsaion1, Increasing the airline loid for tba llrlt oollii'o·'1JU 11 tiie day. vi11<e<f J Dally Pilot ad la the "cal'• m .. factor, and lmprovlng the elflclcncy of Something· Mlc!eriil.ny.'°trill80'ed the ow." Give tt a try. 'll10 direct Doe ID r .. indust[lal plants. w • • COl1\blnaUon llre .~ bw'ata< at.rm at suits 11 84J.l6"1!. Aiid lo &live.on dol'iii;tle llealhijf and--the lpJI ~tbe-hllitell ... -111:~, • -· --· !See SCARE, !) town. . I .. . ... . ' ' .. ,. • • Battill PtdpQse~: Llst ·of-Studies For Upp.er B'ay By JACK BROBACk Of Ille o.llY ...... ,,,... ' First District Supel'\!'lao~ .Robert. Battin of ·San la Ana succeeded ·in muddying the waters of the Upper' N'ewPbt:t Bay a bit more TUesday by pi;,po.1ni a list of studies relating .to fiood . it'8t.ers; salt water intrusiori a~· high tide eltect on tlie three lslaDda )tj th< eitu..Y. The Upper .NoWper\ BOY devell>pment into a comblnatl'oO wUdl~e preserve and recrealion area. hu been lboro\lghly ltudled by a '°"'"!fed jleid commktee of federal, 1tate and local officials. Al U."S. ,lii.terior Department executive We~ . Oils told the Board of Sµpervbon last week, all facets of the future development are being covered. But Battin thought the county F1ood Cootrol l>!llrict's chief engineer should be b~~l Into the picture. Battbl: 1 request for studies covers much ~nd already subjected to con- siderable stu~y by various agencies. , cf:le Wlnts flood control to "determine public ~semeni. over flood plain land between MacArthur Boulevard and the tidelands Qf the Upper Bay." . Wben such a determination ii made, tlr supervilor aaM, board members could. then decide whether flood waters inl! be cba,nil~led In the area or allowed IQ:tJQW In, their )fatural state ..u In oilier ~of the C01111ty. • llaiUn abo wanll flood 1'0!1tnll Io determine U dr<dglng of the Uppel Bay cbAme1 lo i depth ....,..ry to ..,. ~mll)odate !!!<proposed UC'lrvlne row· Ing <Our!e wwld j>Cllllll sal! water 111- tnlllon of tho underground water basin. lie dldn'.l llite'WhllL~~iil'iboWa lSee UPPER BAY, 1'1c• ll .. . . ' • • • done more to assist us in brinlinJ to this campus a teacbJng hospital than any other media." Laguna Beach author Leland J . Cooley en\Cffd the evening and read the clta· tions accompanying awards to • other faculty. staff and students iri tbt Alrporter Inn fete. • Winners ln other catc1ories are: Dlstlapllil<d Faculty Telcldng: Dr •. Nelson Pike o( South Laguna, profesaor - ISee UC! AWARDS, P11e l) ' ',, " Supervisors" Will _Study Alternatives_~ Oran1e COunty tupervl3on today declined to 1upporl UC Irvine In 11.s bid to re_tain _!tat~ l!eelth sci•'"-"' bond hinds for cons~ of an on-campw: teaching hospital. Instead, supervisors voted to establish a committee to meet with UCJ-Ci!Uornla College of M~clire ofllcials and ropi\rt back to the lii>anl by June & on' whlcb ol "many lltem~Uve -"" la DIOll ac: ceptable to' bolh-1he-...mty-llld -the unlvlrilty ·. , ,-· ' 'mre"°Ct\an. named SuJ!Orv.llora Ralph Dledrl"'1 of fullerlon Ill~ Ralph B. Clark of Anl1lolm to !l>O study committee . SUppvlaon told UCI Vlco 0i1ncoDcr 1. 1:C..~iliftl cquld not .sraap 1111111ua- ttoo I~ OJ19U8h, to Dill• pp their mind• , l!ldll't . conMtrfilfl the llrge number 91 altornate plans lo spend the univenltrbo~ money. In fact, oblerven note, the Jack of ac- tion by the cowity leaves the decWon making up lo •tale Qlficlals. , Auem:llilyman Willie ·Brown's JOlrit Legislative Committee on Teaching Hospital Sitin1 ls expected to recommend to the ltgtslatur. before Jime eUctiy bow and where UCI's 138 million share bl a '155.9 mllllon state bohd isaue for rr.~dlcal ~jlon Ji to be JRellt. . '1be relOfUfJOo. supervisors were asked to support wouJA have,,,,,.,i opending'ol the money lorme<Jlcal'lelloj)l')QllcttnP and a teacblnl llospltal oo tlie UC! curi- pus. , StaU for the San Francisco Democrat who beads the study cOmmlttee Ind the budget powerM Aaaell)hly -Waye Ind Means Co!Jttnlttee have 1 u g g e 1 t e d several alternatives. One hint& the money might be aptnl in Watts to upgrade another medidal schbol. at~ to Martin Urthef King Hospital there. · Another dJvides the money between UC! and Orange County pr0vldlng a new 200-bed te8cblng hospital on the campus and fl inlllion or UC bond money for upgrading · Orange County M e d l c a I Center. Supervllor Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Be.ach wondered why the university needed lhe .suppport of the supervl90~. "when the voters lut !iovember declllvely approved the bond issue whJch had ratber specific in- ISe• H08PITAL, Pa1e Z) O,range c ... t Weatller The sun will peek oot of the clouds a little earlier on TtwA!day, wllh mostly s~ skies after the morning bum oil Blglr.s of ea de- grees at the beoChes ~ lo 75 Inland. Ov.rnlght lowt Iii the 50s. INSmE 'l:ODA Y Two Polo Alto coeds .,.,.led to see .Jor t,..,,.,clves how homtr sexualt are ff'eated. So the11 co. rlucted an affee&tcmate penonal e%p<,.;,,..,.I tDltl> shocking re· "'ltr. SforV POQe 16. , . . . ' ' . :') • • ' I l • IS ... a: ---1 .. a.vi • <I , ~tui-eSet •1----, 'I' . ... . . J!alky's I ~ -. [ ~rcheQ.logy •If• ~ .... ' .; ~ ~ s1le! diBOovered jg .lr~ba<t·Va!ley hav• and haven't ~ about Ill past. will be tbe topic ~a 1!6 lrvlnt Exten~ston series lecture ~ Jo Mission Viejo. 1 ::rte lecture i5 entitled "Unique Natural • lfi!tures llnd Archeological Values." ?i~ lJ the third in a series of aix free !';bile lectum <JO "The Saddlebeck Mea : Its History and Ecology." :%Roger Desautels. president o ( Mcbaeo.logical Research Inc. (ARI) ol C.OSta Mesa. will discuss the area's past cultures according to artifact and fossil ~-da and °?" problems· ol trying to \14jl.abliab.a history. . · ' ·lbesautels founded ARI In 1968 lo pr<> • 1!ife Independent .....,.h, exploration JMci J')Ollble protectloo of an:he,eologlcal 'fs1es . 1 ~a'ppearlng atlhe Tpju., Jneeling in tilt mu!Upurpooe · roCntl ar La Paz , IOllJ10e!liate School wUl be Chapman O:illege geologist Carol Stadum, Her speech will concentrate on a re- cent discovery of fossilized remains of a Mycenaean horse in the El Toro area and 1 identification of whale bone beds which may indicate the area n'tight ha've been a • breeding ground. for what es 17 million years ago. · Mrs. Stadum has done geologic research for 12. years and been affiliated with Scripps -Institute of Oceanography, Columbia University, Los Ange.les County Museum and University of Washington. · Ron Yeo, Newport Beach architect and Orange C.OUnty Planning Conunissioner, is coordinator for the UCI-sponsored ,.00. .. La Paz lntermediale School is at 25151 Pradera DriVe. __ .. __ _ From Pagel :w-JRETAPS ... ' ' l . coverup of ·the Watergate scandal. • The "'ir~laps apparently ytere installed ;following a published report about B52 ·bombers ·attacking targets inside Cam-.;oo:ua in 1969 and other reports relating i'@ U.S.-Soviel talks on limiting slrategic .arms. : The WhJte House had been described at :the time as concerned about leaks to ;newsmen ot coofidential material on both ,ubjects. ~.~.'~t wata national security matter," a :~rule House spokesman said today of :eresfd~tiaJ a~provaJ of the wiretaps, ~irst reWfted by the New Yprk T~es. • "'Mle procedure was approved by the :President and authori1..ed in individual :cases by the attorney ·general ln :coordlna.Hon with the director d the :Federal Bureau of Investigation," the ~pok0Slll1JI said. . Actmg FBI Director WiUlam D. lWckelshaus said Monday th.at recordS '.found in a . safe in the office of . former 'W.hlte House aide John D. Ehrlichman in· dlC)ated taps had been · placed oo tbe telephones of 17 individuals, including foor repor!An. 'He said the taps were authorized after presidential adviser Henry" A. Kissinger had talked with J. Edgar Hoover, then FBI director. The wiretaps came to light last week at· the Pentagon Papers trial in Los ..\Pgeles. It was disclosed that FBI agents monitored a conversation by Daniel EU.berg when he used • telephone al the Bethesda, Md . home·of Morton Halperin, a member of the National Security Coun· ell staff at the time. Halperin said today he was sure Kiss· iager, as head of the council, was aware Of the wiretapping. "I don't think there's any question that he knew that my phone was being tap- ped, indeed that he was reading sum- maries of the reports of the phone ~ve~tians/' Halperin sald on the NBC.. TV Tuday Show. •·tte had told me that people in the Admini.stratioo suspected me of leaking things. I assured him that I had not leak· ed any information and he indicated that I was still under Investigation , but never gave me any h.int that that included telephone tapping.'' OUN•I COAST 11 DAILY PILOT T.,. Or•-CN•I OAllY PILOT, •lift ... Id! Is cemb!...., Int N•..,.•Prn1, Ii '°*..,.,.,. .., ~ Or ..... CO.ll P11bll1J1lnv Co"""'""'· 5-· ••It tidlllo!I• •r• wo11111tc1, 1111-.1 "'""""" FrJNy, IOI" tooi. Mft<I, N_, "-di, HUt1tl119lon tltecll/FOl,lnltln V•li.y, l-69VM S.-ch. lrvlnel,Stddlftilc'-•rid ~n ,..._,.,, St n J...,. C.p!Jlr-. A i""1•• r~I tclHbrt j1 111111111~ S.tvrd&ys -~.,, T .... Pf'IMIP91 publblo!ng Pl•nl 11 fl llO ,,..nl t1• $1r .. f, Co:lll MtN. C91!10rn,., t1'1'. Rob••' N, w,,d Prt1kl ... I '"° PUOl11llor J•ck R. Curl•v VIC:t Prttkl.,., •>'II G•PlttJI Mttt1Q•• Thome1 Kte•il Ed!IOI" ll!om11 /I,, M~rpll:~, MeMi!llljl ECll!or Ch•rf•• H, lo•H Ric ~ud P. N1il ,,_Wat1I M-itliiil &<flt(H'I o ..... c:;..11 M .. t: )31) Wtst St'f 3!tt0! N.-porl ahdl: ml 1-itwPOr! llou~>'•rCI i.ao-11.-dlt m Foreit """'ue H""l!l'lll'°" llMCll; 1}17S llud! 80~ltv•rCI S.n a.m-.••= JOf HOr111 Et Ct"'ino lle.i , .. .,., •• C7141 '42-4121 c_,,... ,.._.hi"' M2.s,11 S.. C.._.. All hpAr-... : ,., ,, •• 4tJ-4420 Co!J"f.t.IM, ttn. °'9• Co.\! P\ltllif111"9 C~flY. Ht -...,,.., ll!wtrtti..,1 llllll'°'ltl --~ _.,,.,,..,."""" htrttft ""'" bt ••~ wllMvt -clal Ptr· -.11e1or1 .. ~ ....... ~ U.t ._,._ NW llt Qltp MtM, C.I!~. ~IOtl Irr CINlw" tf .. 1 ~lr1 1w -" IJ,lf, "*'""'°' m1111arv _,.,.., *'' · AM "*""Ir. • I UPI T.._..tt MAY GET POST -Associate Colorado Slate Supreme Court Justice William H. Erickson lioarded an airplane Tuesday • for a flight to Wasblngton. He will be interviewed as the po .. sible pro5ecutor in the Water- gate scan dal. Dee~, Autos Pose 'Mutual Coast Threat Deer native to Southern California which for generations have drunk from waters of the San Joaquin fre shwater marsh are endangered by 'l'ilotori sls on streets &tween the marsh and the San Joaquln Hills. Dr. Gordon Marsh, co-chainnan of the UC JrVine marsh studY are8,-ende<t a leC.. ture llbout marsh Tuesday with a warn- ing io motorists traveling University Drive at dawn or du sk. "Because the deer ha ve long traveled th e draws of the Irvine Ranch to come to the marsh for w~ter, they are a danger. I recently eaw a~ Volkswagen and deer total each other. It's a wonder the stu- dent driver wasn't killed,'' Marsh observ- ed. . With increaSing urbanization of the Irvine area, the deer are one wildlife species particularly affected . Hiltslae-aevetoi>men:t, the unlverstty campus and resultlng highways each re- quires cutoff the marsh from roaming wWilife which once u~ it freely. ~nli apecu\ated -deer pr· o b ab\ y wou!dn't use tunnels "\m.der highways even were they to be proltlded in the ei:- m<ltiig University Reglon~l !'VI<-' The developing park links the looihi!Js wlth the San Diego .Creek channel ·at ii pojnt not far from the ~acre unlveraity-own- ed marsh reserve. "Deer follow the paths in the draws they have travelled for years:," Dr. Marsh said . If motorists are aware of the danger, Marsh speculated, ll\e hill Populations of deer would continue to share the marsh with the wide va riety of birds, native and European weeds, insects and other water-oriented wildlife which make,...the "unnatural" natural reserve home. Marih uses the l.i!:rm "unnatural'' to describe the marsh because the area would not continue to be wetlands were it not for groundwater pumped gratis by the Ir vine RanCh Water District. f.~urther, the marsh was created decades ago by members of the San Joa· quin Gun Club who·se scions . in dwindling numbers continue to 'hunt the marsh , in season. The arrangc1ncnt provides the university $5,000 a year to maintain the study area, Ma rsh said. FronaPagel HOSPITAL ... ::;tructions concerning the UCI teaching hospital.'' Cox said he ngrced but the bond issue measure left the decision of where the money was to be spe nt to the legislature and that !he.: joint legislative committee headed by ASsemblyman Brown had dlf· ferent ideas. Cox sald the university is willing to ,ac- «'fll Bro\\·n·s proposal that $7 mHJfort of ucrs share of the bond issue be spe,nt in upgrading the Orange County Medical Cent.er. The vice chaRcellor said timing \V8S critical because the. state senate ways and n1eans con1mittee whi ch will make the ftnal decision on how much money Is allocaled lo UCI is ""ailing on the Brown committee report which he. said should be out !his wttk. The UCI vice chancellor answered the concern of some super visors thal beds In the medical center Y.'OUld be reduced in number by slating lhnl any upgrading of the center would inevitably lead to a 106S in beds. This lo.'8 would be balanced by the pro- posed 200 bed s at UCJ, Cox said. Reagan Hits Speniling SACRMIENTO ·(AP) -Un I e" something is done to slow it down. government spending will gobble up more than half the average CABfom lan's pay check in JS years, Gov. Rona ld Reagan said today. Reagan ~de the statement 1n a· speech prepared for delivery to a IA?:ague of C.alltomla Cities convention lunchoon where ht defended his tax limitation proposal. .,. • • • NEW YORK (AP) -The federal , govmnnonl !<>day l1led a ertmlnal charge aplnat the senior partner ln a Wall street brokerage firm for allegedly making '48,000 In illegal, lndlrect .,..,. tribultons to Sen. Huba'! H. Humphrey's prtsldenlial primary campalgn last yur . Tbe criminal Information filed In U.S. Dlalrlcl Court alleae<l that Jolm t . Loeb, 70, of the firm of Loeb Rhoades & Co .. made 15 contributions in the names of eight persons, mainly eierlcal employes of his firm. , U.S. Attorney Whitney North Seymour charlled that at Loeb's urging the empfoye• wrote cbecka drawn on their cooling blll6 Iiolg predicted, "we may have to run the hoU5e two to three degrees hotf.e.t-in the summer and two or three degrees cooler in the winter -and perbapJ· kn.it sweaters lnatead." Slnce four-passenger automobiles are seldom Wied to capacity he fofecast that perhaps as many as half of the future vehicles on the road would carry onJy two passengers but feature 45 mph thrift. He said If motorista were to amtinue to Insist on air conditioning and automatic transmissions, the United States wouJd "have to pull off a Russian wheat deal every year"> to pay for imported oil to run them. Another speaker, Ralph L. Lewis Jr,, vice president of public relations for GuU Oil, stressed the need foc development of domestic energy sources to avoid dependency on foreign nations. He said tbe energy crisis ls now on the front pages ·of the newspapers and that the oil_J!iclustry,-having c_apU!rJ_d Jl!lbllc attention should tell its story m simple tenns -and warn America "tt'a time to stop fooling around." · "Let U! get to the bUsiness of finding available domestic sources," he said. "And in the meantime let's import that Middle East crude with tankers, let's get out the shale oil. and let's get over to the nuclear." With all the dornesUc "easy oil" already extracted, Lewis predicted that coat.. of pulling all al tbe remalnlng bar· rels out of the earth will increase slgnlficantly. This means that ,Americans will have Jo pay conside~ablf more: for their f~ls, lncludlng .gasoline, a conunodlty which is already ao llh«t ln '"PPly the oil com· panies are no longer advertising it. * * * Oil lµdustry's Incentive Plan 'Looks Bleak' • ' . peraonal checking a«GQntl to 11 di!· ferent campaign ~teea aft.er Loeb 1 transferred tbe '48,l!IO from his aCCOWlt to theirs. A spokesman said the filing of the charge stemmed from an inve&tigaUon begun nearly a year ago by the Geoeral Acoountlng Office and the FBI. Loeb was accuaed under the federal election cam· palgn act of l971. Last week, fonner Atty. gen. John N. Mitchell and former C o mm e r c e Secretary Maurice H. Stans were in- dicted on charges of obstruction of justice, conspiracy and perjury in con- nection with secret campaign con- tributions to the Conunittee for the Re-- electk>n qf the President. Thal indictmellt dlarged that financier Robert L. Vesco, charged with C<JO· splracy .and obstnictlon of justice', made a ~.ooo cuh glll to the GOP campaign ~ to infiueDce a government probe of his far-nung financial dea1inga. l.A>eb issued a statement-from hs office saying that there was "no intent on my part to evade the law. I did not know its existence and the full facts were made public at my instance within three weeks after the initial contribution." He said be wrote to the Humphrey committee June 1, about 20 days after the initial contribution, and "asked them immediately to file a statement making public the fact that I relmbursed. the con- tributions and made possible their con- tributions." The conunittee did so six days before the California primary, he said. Loeb said he was ,being charged with "the technical and unwilling Violation of a procedural proVision of the new law governing campaign contributions." Loeb is to be analgned May 29. Con- viction could bring one year in prison and $1,000 fines on each of the eight cowtts. Froin Pflfle l UPPER BAY • • • do if such was found to be true. The supervisor then posed a third study. "The chlef engineer of tbe Oood C<JOtrol district should further determine the ex- istence of public easements for the free flow of water over the tops of the three islands In the Upper Bay and if no such easements for the free flow of water ex- ist_, to what extent could the islands be filleino lilock Ute now of water wltbout creating such a rste of flOw in the re- mainlng channel that marine and pianl !lie oo al!Ul~ tidel"!'da would be damag- ed and the base·of cliffs eroded away," he requested. • Battin'• overlapJ>hi& ~ wm approved by other ~ members without commt!nt. ' The flood cootrol chlef engj,_ is to make tbe ·studles anilrepoo!back to tbe board "as soon as Possil>l!." UPI Ttl.,,..._ QUITS sec HELM G. Bradford CfOk SEC Chief Quits Over Criticism Of Fund Report WASHINGTON (AP)"°"' Chairman G. Bradford Cook of the Securfties and Ex· change Commission announced h i s resignation today. In a Jetter to President Nixon, Cook said: "I deeply regret having to tender my resignation as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, but in light of i.m(ortutlate circumstances now prevailing, I believe it·is best to do so." . Cook, named SEC chairman by Nixon only a few months ago, has been criliciz· ed for his handling of a report of a cas h contribution to the Nixon 1972 campaign by Robert L. Vesco , who ha s been under Investigation by tbe SEC. Cook turned 36 Thursd?.y an4 was one of the youngest Chaj.nnen in history of the SEC. lie testified this week at a clOsed-dcxf. · hearing before a Senate committee on _the .Yego_matter. 'Jbe nature of the testimoil.y was ilot <lisclOse<f . .,_.. ---... -- Cook's resignation is certain tq affect Wall street in view of the fact he has been at the forefront of moves to reform the country's securities markets to cfeate a single central market system . A federal grand jury in New York aileged that Cook yielded . to pressure from Nixon campaign fund raiser Maurice Stans by deleting menlioo of _a large cash donation from Vesco from an SEC suit against Vesco, a New York financier. R. -Quigley Gets Water Unit ·Post 1l) 1, IrviJle Cily Coimcllmtin E. Ray Quiiltey Jr. has been appointed to the santa Ana Regions! Water Quality Control Board by Gov. Ronald Reagan. Quigley, 39, of Turtle Rock, is a pilot for United Air Lines and fonnerly served Pt·-P ... J J f AWAR.US .•• ;- -o1 lhe~" 1 of - Bo fl ·f OT . "'1 by ilDd aaiilY ellte a! an exctllent Instructor." O'AfqqkW ..... 1 &e,aea.(Ck·i Dr. Alml-rl.-porl 8dd. pro!-r of pbyslcs and cltl.lrtnM of the UC! f.:culty senate. A<~ -of the fac:ulty, he has J>Ul>I-more than 1.0 research papers, '10 of these smoe coming to UC!, and WU!fecogni>.ed for his oonrlbutioo to UCl!ll reputation In theoretJcal soHd state pby>lcs, Top awarda. to stud~ts ~eu ·to; Jock Dlekm--~Jrylne,<TlllO WIS name<j outstandln& ~ele of· the yelll' recognizing hi• 1lllitl 'pltlon io UCl's wster.. polo cbamplOnshfp t ea ms . Dickmann is a senior majoring in psychology. Tom DeLapp of Irvine, named.. outstan· ding aenlor student of the year, lot' his "excellent achievement academicalJy and his participation Jn university services and activ~ties.'.' DeLapp is Pll5i· dent of Alsoci.ated Students of UCJ; wu vice president and chairman of the stu· dent ~te. ls married, and bas worked his way tprougb cal.le~ w<>rkl!tg in an area supennarket, the citation noted. t Lyan Humphreys Of Corona del Mar was designated outstanding graduate stu- dent ol the year, for her "high level of academic achievement and university service." Mrs. Humphreys, a graduate student in physics, mother of two and con- sistently graded amoog lhe top five per- cent of her class, ha5 -presented numerous theoretical papers.in this coun· try and abroad. She ts woridrig toward a doctorate in physics· having earned· a master's degree at UCI this year. ~ •. By eategor)\ the fQllowing are ~ fe-' clpients of university service awards: , Staff: Doris M. Nelson, graduate division administrative analyst, and Helen I. Greening, Mesa Court residence hall manager. Faculty: Fine Arts Dean Clayton L. Garrison , professor of drama and resi· dent of Laguna Beach. Stndeat: Laureen Kay Edwards of Huntington Beach, humanities senior in ~lassical civilization. . Alam.a.l:..._Alwnni Associatioo President Adreana Souleles ef Newpqrt Beach. ·By-·Cafegory the fOlfoWffig are winl'rers of community service awards: · ·Staff: Clifton L. Miller, director of UCI physical plaMing and development. ·Miller is, a longtime Tustin cooncilman and form er mayor. Faculty : Dr. Robert L. NewComb, lec- turer in social sciences and -resident of Corona del Mar. Newoomb coaches the UCI volleyball team and was recognized for his counseling services to prison in- mates seeking educational opportunities. Student: Kurt Snlpes of Corona del Mar, a senior majoring in biological sciences cited for his off-campus projects including: development of an education ·motivation program at Santa Ana High School. . . \ Alumnus: . Dr_. Steveu Feinberg of El ~ for his part in the crea- iioo O/• the Verano Place weU baby clinic and1 development of a , Spanish lan1Uage class for medical students and personnel working al Orange County Medical Center. · as a director of the Irvine Ranch Water R District - a joint water supply and ogers Trip Blasted Ligh . F' On ~wage treatment public agency. President Nlxon'i oll lndu.stry incentive _ tning ll'e& l . The appointment was one of three MEXICO CITY (AP) -The daily program will face troUble in Congresa, made by Reagan including the replace-newspaper Excelsior suggested in an Sen. CliJford P. Hansen ol Wyoming FRESNO (AP) -Six-Ugbtnlog-men! of Andrew L. Holtz of Hunting1on editorial Tuesday that U.S. Secretary of predicted in Anaheim Tuesday. caused forest fires have been report¢ in Beach, who declined reappointmen t. State William Rogers' Latin Arnf!rican Hansen, a Republican, told the the Sierra NaUooal Forest in two days, a Holtz will be replaced by Edward H. tour \vas made premature1y in an at. American Association of Petroleum spokesman said TUesday. Steve Beck, in· Willits, 52, of CorOna. tempt \0 distract attention from the Geologists that J:('OSpects of its passage formation officer for the Fe.rm service, Quigley is the Ohly Orange County Watergate scandal . ExcelsJar said that are "rather bleat" mainly because the sald Uie fires are all under cimtrol and member -of the board which regulates Presid~t Nixoo has long used "distrac- upper harid ln-(l)og?ess is hefd by states. are lll()6t]y eoocentrated in an area above water quality in Orange, Riverside and ting maneuvers," especially lntemaUooal that consume, rather than produCe the San Joaquin River northeast of San Bernardino County areas drainlhg politics, to divert attentloo f r 0 m energy. 1 _F1renso;;;;· ;;~~i~;;;;~~~!!~t~o~w~ard~tbe!!~P~a~clljc~~Oce~an~.;;;;~~~~~-~e~s~ti~c problems. And representatives <>f energy-cob-·-;i;;;;;;;;;;a;;;;;;~ suming states have recenUy shown little ~ favor for Nixon's proposals to en- courage ascelerated otl exploration. The President recommended t a x benefits for oil exploration , removal of price controls on new natural gas, sup- port of increased offshore drilling, and other incentives to increase-domestic poduction. Hansen .agreed with the reoom- ~endations • but also said, "en- vironmenlal restrictions, slllte and local, must be relaxed or stretched out to .. relieve the crunch ." He added that prices for petroleum products should be allowed to rise, to en- courage research, development and technology in other energy fields. Assist,ant_Jn_terior Secretary Stephen A. Wakefield abo addressed tbe oil geoloSist and said that the department does not in- tend to waJt untiJ the 1979 deadline sug- gested by President Nixon to begin tripl- ing the amotD'lt ol oil lea.IJng in the outer continental shelf. He said federal leMing of up to three million acres a year for offshore oil drill· ing is expected to begin in 1974. Areas of specific exploration Interest, said Wakefield, will be Lower Cook Inlet and Bristol Bay in Alaska, southern California beyond the restricted area of the Santa Barbara Channel and in deep water off the Gulf of. Mexico. Anaheim Boy, 3, Killed by Truck . A little Anaheim boy wn.s fataIJy in- ]Ured Tueeday afternoon when he ap- parently r11n into 1he side of a 11an drlvtn by North Orange County Judicial District Judge Logan Moore Jr. The accident · occutred at the ln- tors«11on of Otron and Hall streets, •c- cordlng to pollc.t. Victim of the tragedy w•s Roberto G. Alvarez, 3, of 7tt Hall &,,,., near the in· teneetion. · N<r citation was lamed at the acene. Traffic lnvo1t111tor1 are sµll probing the cause of the accident. • 01'111 ' .. ' Duck Feet Fins-$6.95 to $10.95 Speedo Swimsuits & Trunks taguna SW~runks-$5.95 & $6.95 Ute Glianl SWim Trunks-$4.95 Wonder Board Kick Boarifs-$4.95 Warm Up Suits-$21.95 to $34.95 , Champion Hand_baD Gloves · RacquetbaD Racqu~ts Table Temis Paddles & Sets Wilson-DunloH'enn Tennis Bans- W'dson--Bancroft-Dunlop Rackets Bainlntllll Rackets Sqaasll Rackets OPEN ·9 m 6-CLOSfD SUN~YS- - • Baseball Mitts-Bats BaDs-ShoeH:olored Sleeves Shoes-Sanitary Hose Alfulas-Tretom-Converse Jack Purcei Tennis Shoes Tennis Dresses Tennis Shirts & Shorts *"'WWW'l'k' Raleigh Bikes- Parts-Tires-Tubes Repairing Racket Stringing .,,. a ,.,.. •. 538 CE!lTER~&.:1919 . r ' • CLOS ID SUNDAY ' = l t • • DAn;y PILOT EDITORIAL P-AGE ·ce --for Citi-zens- A new !omi of pyenunent called a llullidpal Ad· vlaory Council (MAC} ...,.._to be well on its way (or the rapidly growing saddleliocl: Valley. The MAC when ii is foniled, probably thls summer, will be tbe tool by wbicb the Saddleback Valley IJf the luture !Hbaped. It will be an Important voice !or res!· dents of the sprawling communities comprising tile Sad· dleback area. - The proposal calls for election of between five ¥1d nine representatives from the JO.square-mile aret. Th_tse elected offidall would meet rel[Ularly and advise th• county Board of SUperviaors, Which would retain the final decision-making power for the unincorporated territory. So far, citizen reaction to the MAC plan made six weeks ago bas been subdued, considering the. 70,000 population of the area and the potential impact on the Valle~. Representatives of the Saddleback Coordinating council have had to go oearchln~ for citizen opinion wll!1 whkh to shape the plan. Citizens have a real op- J)()rtunlty now to speak their minds In the shaping of l.be futu~ or this area. Address your comments to the ~ddleback Coordinating Council, P.O. Box 357, El Toro, 92620. • . Oil and Esthetics After some bitter words about an· ''unsightly" Gil rig NCently added to the city's skyline, Irvine council- men have expanded use permit regulation of oil drill· ing werations. The rig in question is one approved by the former planning commission. More than one councilman indicated the test well apparatus is Jess j,han estbetic and quite possibly rather ugly to most who pass it on the San Diego Freeway near MacArthur Boulevard and the ajJl)Ort. IJlannine COl!lmislionen retalaed authority lo regulate lbe e.theUca ol fUture searchea for blac\ gold. Perhaps it Is timely to mention that the ~( drilling operation may continue for only 90 d~, under terms of the permit 1ppr~ed by the planning commis- sion . Maybe that's just long enough for city officla!J to get some ideas about how to regulate the appearance of future oil wells, just In case oil is found beDeatb Irvine. Day Care Center? The state's right to regulate a parent-operated pre- school program for members of a private community association is at issue today In Orange County Superior Court. , The state J>et>artment of Social Welfare w asked Pixie Playtime of Irvine to explain why it does not fall under regulations requiring state licensing of day care centers for child.fen. The mother-run program which uses the community owned Colony Clubhouse may or may n<>t. fit the state's definition of a day care center, Pixie Playtime's attorney Tom Woodruff contends. Similar community-iiSSOCiation..Jtoused educational programs are run by other associations in Irvine. One has been in existence fer six: years and accommodates 150 children, operating lvitbrut a state license. For more than a year since complaints from other Colony Club members prompted tbe state welfare of· flee investigation, mothers have chosen not to· seek a license. They cite burdensome costs involved, including the expenditure of several thousand dollars a year for a professional director, as required under licensing. The program at preserlt is free to parents. • 14 "·'w! •...•... Those who find it ugly wanted city councilmen to have final say over future drill rigs. As it turned out, Further, since mothers entering their three-to-five- year-<>ld children in the program are required to partici· pate in activities, organizers maintain Pixie Playtime lS not really a day care center, but more a pre-school recreation program: SB ''KEEP YEIZ. MONEY. I WANT THAT ROAST ~EEF SAN~WKH.' Theater Buff? Try These -For Openers (srnNEY J.HARIU~ A theater bufi in Boston suggests a quiz about plays and the theater. To nar- row it down, I have selected only 20th century plays; you are to Identify them by the foUoWing descriptions of the set- ting or opening scene. Hall right is an admirable score: 1. As the ciickoo clock strikes .six, a dog is turning down bedcovers and ~ ning bath-water. 2. On a country road, with one tree in sjgbl, a man sits on a mound, trying lo take off his boot, when he is joined by a !riend, whom ho tells he spent the previous night in a ditch and was beaten up. 3. A lady representing the Humanity League visits an island factory which manufactures mechanical people design· ed to perform m~al tasks. 4. A man appears at the window of the mayor's house in a medieval British town and informs the mayur's clerk be bas come to rOque.t his own banglog. s. Four mea. -threl!Jn-"hlte ue .and tails and one in sweater and bare feet - are dancing a Mo:zarl minuet with lour women in gaudy evening gowns around the flower-laden coffin of a women they have kllled. · 6. In the llving·room of a farmhouse ' converted into a school, a lady Is coaching · an apathetic student in the reading of Sbak~, while other girls sew and study Latin. Dear Gloomy Gus ' If Supervisor Caspers bad bieen representing the people of the Fifth District by attending the Upper Newport Bay Field Com- mittee m~tings maybe be wouldn't have been dumped from the com- mittee by fellow board members. N. Cl-E. 01-.rny o.u1 Qm-b -•"""llttcl »- ,_." Mii ... Ml ...c-rllY rtlttd Tiie ...ww.· ... "" -·-· s.-"""' "' -N GloMrt' Gn. 0."1 Pn.t. 7, A cfergyma1fb praying and weepinc at the bedside ol. his daughter. when a message arr;ives I.rpm-the doctor. reporting tbal he caa find no natural cause for the child'.s JUnes.s. II. A barker at an aniusement park on the outskirts or Budapest~ is standing at the entran<:i! of a carousel, coaling customers lo buy tickets. 9. A theatrical manager and cast are preparing the rehearsal af a play when they are interrupted by a strange family -a father, a mother in .mourning, an elder son, a step-daughter, and two children. 10. A valet ushers a man into a draw· ing·room furnished in Seoood Empire style, and leaves, locking him in; the room contains no windows or mirrors, lhe llgbl C8llllO\ be \Ul1led olI. and the call bell dQesn'I -k. ANSWERS: 1. "Peter Pan" by BarrJe. %. "Waiting for Godot" by Beckett. 3. "R.U.R." by Capek. 4. "The Lady's Not for Burning" by Fry. 5. "The Blacks" by Genet. 6. "The Children's Hour" by Hellman. 7. "The Crucible" by Miller. 8. "Uliom" by Molnar. 9. "Six Characters in Search ol an Author" by" Pirandello. 10. "No Exit'' by Sartre. 'Model' Letwrs Used To Boost Nixon Image -The COD\mlttee to Re-Elect the Presi- dent establbhed a naUonal "letter lvritlng -network" which continued even after the electlorl to flood newspapers with letters praising the Presldtnt and lambasting his cities. . His conservaUve critics weren't spared Tse-tung views, were also tnstrucfed to in the letters-to-editors c a mp a i g n . wri~ leUers protestl'.IFthe ouster of the ConservaUve columnist William Buckley --€hiahg Kal-sbek government from the for example, annoyed the Pres'ident by United Nations . cri~iciilng tHe detente with Comm~t. LETl'ERS TO editors were stimulated China . Out wen\ a ~aft, which the let-on a variety of Issues from the Vietnam ter wrltlng network wa1 invited to use war to wage-price controls. Tb e as a modll for bombarding newtPapen. Pstsldent's campajgn c 0 m m t t t e e "ldeologica111 oblessed, with rigid mind propared a blast, for eumple, al Rep. and lnfiexible JtUtudes, WJ!llam Buckley John Ashbrook, the Ohio conservative, sounds like a political Elmer Gantry with for criticiling lhe President's fiscal his righteous outbursts against the Policies. 'Chinese (corr.munlat) devils,'" the let· The letter writers were urged to JJfO'" tcr writers were instructed , to aay. test : "How would Mr Ashbrook maintaln '',Buckley has no troob!e supporting his desired llsoal bl~ck ink? By raialng rightist ~ctators. from Spain to Greece taxes, or cutting back pubtlc employment to Bruil, but he appears mentally In-programs, or' rtduclng benefits to the capable of recogniztng that under Mao unemployt!d?" the Uves of the Chinese masses have. ,, been greaUy improved. AS LATE AS January 25, 1973, long •jBUCKLEY doesn't seem to caN: that before l!M9 the average peasant had no house, almost no clothing and never enough food, th.at he· was exploited ruthl.,.Jy and died young. 118uckley 1 ~ not offering t he •eonseryative' view of Olin& ... What Buckley givu is a radical. e•angcllcal hysteria centered In the old Manlchaean theory of aboc>lute good and evil." The same letter writers, who were ask- ed to attack Buckley for his anU-Mao alter the President was safely re-elected. the campaljJn committee urged the ''letter writing netwQrk" to.. stimulate mail congratulating the President on the Vletnam tease-fire. "Let's give him !hanks, PUBLICLY, In a l..etter to the Editor -o( two or three papers!" the letter writers were urged. "And get two or One other people to write, too. There are always lots of voices telling the President what he'1 -doing wrOl!i= leCs CODifl\Ulale him for doiog a very big thin& -IUGl!tf!l" ltled School EnroUments Soaring Doctor Shor-tage .May. End by 1980 W kSIIlNGTON--· The prospeotirare· bright t'hat the shortage of physicians, which has afflicted lhe cowitry for more than a quarter ·of a century, will be overcome by 1900. Two key factors are behind the prom · ising hope of attaining this loog-sougbt objective: (I) Record • high enrollment in medi- cal ~ls as a re- sult of a growing trend among youth of interest in medi- cine. This marked interest tncJUdes women, blacks and other et b n 1 c ele- ments. · · (2) Steady i6Crease in federal un· derwriting of medical schools and students under t h e Comprehensive Health Manpower Training Act. In 1966 · -curreot.-chortage .of _around..50:,~ phy!i· ~ ~ cians will be eliminated by 1980. ROBERT S.AJ.J,EN . Dr •• John-A. D. Cooper .. AAMC presi· dent, attributes the growth of ln~rest in medlclne among youth mainly to two fac- the federal outlay for this purpose was $6.6 million ; the amount this fiscal year is $86 million -and is virt1,1.ally certain to go up further next year. Strikingly revealing of the growing in· terest in medlciue among youth is the 5,000 increase in medical students since 1966. LA8'I' FAU, the tlltl medical schools in the U.S. enrolled a record 13,500 students -in contram to a little ~ thaq 1,000 In 1916. By t975, the total al enrollees is expected to soar to 15,000. On the bash! of these estimates, the Association of American M e d i c a I Colleges (AAMC) anticipate.s that the tors: the feeling that practicing medicine Is a "relevant" way to serve fellow men and society; a career as a· doctor insures an affluent income and a well regarded professional and social status. This ~combination of idealistic and pragmatic factors, Dr. COoper noted, is strikingly evidenced by the following staUstlei: In 1'10, there were two applicants !or every medical school oP<Nng. Lui !all, the ratio was 3 to 1. ~. 7.1 percent of thls year's fre&broan class is blaq: - three times the n\Bllber In 1968. 'lbe AAMc· expects the proporUcx\ to rlse to 12 percent by l!llS. TODAY, medical schools get ap- pro!)mate!y .411 pen:enl of their fund> from federal sOOrces. ,.. • This is in matked cootrast to a decade or so ago. Then medical schools were financed by foundation iranl!, private endowments, Sat.e ana local COO• tributions and tWtk>n parments. As these traditional revenue sourees dwindled and cost& soared, they were replaced by steadily e<panding federal subsidies. In addition to direct grants to medical schools and students Wlder the Con)prebenslve Health Manpower Training Act, Ille fedVll aonln-' 11u also poured around fl'l8 nlllllon fnto medlcat schoob fn the lorm-of ~ p-~ and other projedll 'Mle government alao directly bel~ medical schoois to expalld by glvlnl them an incentive bonus for each 5 per- cent increase in the freshman c1asa - plus $1,000 for each graduated pbylidan. Spoilers Haunt the Natu.re Trail To the Editor: Why must a few slobs ruin things tor the rest or us? This season lhe hilll above Laguna are at their l~est w1th w~e. flame, blue., yellow, apricot._ iruw~ •. .and ~mta wildflowers bejeweling lhe green, gr8y cbaparrall. Yesterday monting lhe dew still glistened along the trail, partially fog shrouded beyond. A ~ttontall bound· ed into the brush, tiny b!iils lrilled mer- rily, hawks tjod ravens wheeled lazily overhead and quail and mourning doves called trom the thickets. THEN just off .the trail ahead, I noted something had been added alnce 1 last passed there two days ag!) - a pile of freshly cut ivy trimming.a:. Ah, well , being biodegradable, they will disappear in a few years. A few hundred )'Mis further m, l came upon exhibit namber two, roughly four ~uare feet"of charred, yellowlSh plastic foam. Scattered along the nm few hun· dred feet \\-ere:. a blue plastic lmide car door panel cover, a. green enamelled tray, two more pieces of foam -one larger and one smaller thaD-the first - an empty beer can amt a chocolate milk carton. Yuk! MAY THOSE assorted itema return to haunt Ille perpetratoni(s) o! this outrage aod rnay he wa.Un from his drullll each night sweating In fear of choldng f4 death on tlem. NAME Wl'n!HELD To lhe Editor : The egreglow; letter of May 11 by Eliiabeth H. Powell leaves me aghast. l have never seen 11 more cra.ss, cynical, and faJthleu vlew of bur country and its pollUcal bases. To say that polltica is a dirty business;, that politic.a will destroy personal Integrity, that protestaUons of Integrity will be adversely used IJ quite Quotes ADM T. H. MOORER, USN, Chmn., Joint Cblel1 o! Stall, la S.F. talk - "MIULary forces and ~llpona m not the cause of confrontaUon; confrontation i!i caused by conruct of n11Uopal lnterests. ...... The real key to world peace ls not dlsannament per ae. but lhe peaceful ...,..JU\lon through negotiations o! (lhooe) ctlllllctlng lnleresto." MAILBOX Letters from read.err are wlcome. Normally toriteTs should convey their messages in 300 tOCn'dl or lls1. The right to condense Letters to fit rpace or elimi'1uite libel t& reseTVed. All letters must include rignature and mailing address, but names may be withheld on request if sufficient reason ts apparent. Poetry Will not be published. amazing {if possibly momentarily true) but this is only a moment in history. )Is. Powell wants. the revelations or cdfruption be buried! Then, of. all things, she suggests an asaass\n's bullet as an alternate solulion. Good Lord! CANNOT a person like this try to give the benefit of the doubt to many honest (although human) people in the poUUcat world until they prove themselves dishonest? I !eel that Ms. Powell is parroting a "coospiralorial thesis" of our hlltory since ,WW II. Sure, crooks or wrongdoers . I n Washington etc..pmust be nailed to the Wkk• ,...s . 7Tley'f8 from Agnew ... but thBy'f8 ticking/' wall, but by due legal process. No argu- ment. However, in the long run,.have we not faith that our Jorrn of government will and can try to do the best for the tnlrjor- ity? R.C. HADDEN Memorial Concert To the Editor ; A special thanks to all your readers for their fine support of the Leenerts Memorial Benefit Coocert held at Qrange Coast College oo Sunday, May 6. II any or )'(KU' readers still desire to contribute to the support of Nancy !Mnerb and her family, they may do so by sending dooa· lions to Paul Cox, Fine Arts Invbion, Orsnge Coast .(lollege. PAUL COX, Fine Art.a Division Chairman (li1T!. Lttnertt if the: widow of El.- mer Leene:rts~ who lo!t hil life in a Costa Mesa industrial explosion lost month. -Ed.) End the A,_tlag To the Editor: Following World War II many zealous Americans warn<!l that lhe Canmunl.sll would attack and defeat ua. We anned ourselves lo tbe teeth. The Commwlists said In essence, "Dcn't bother, we will take you over from within." but we did not believe them. CONSIDE R the ronowlng event!: There has been a breakdown ol the sanctity of the home . There has been a breakdown of the very fwndatlom !aid by our founding fathers. There bu been a breakdown or the religious establishments, p r i v a t e enterprise, prtvate ownership, porno- graphy abounds, etc .• etc. Major steps have been t&ker\,to cause the defamation of our honored FBl, ann- ed force s, police establishment!, labor· unions and other establishm·ents that 1'U\Ve helped to make our country great. HONORING the d~honored, draft dodgers, murderers, rioters, syndicated crime, etc .. etc. The Infiltration into r e I i g I o u a organizations. schools, and other basic !oundalioos and organliations thllt have mi.de us a greit peace loving nation with compassk>n ror our fellow man. And now comes the final coup de grace\ The di1tniat of the vuy baals ol our government, challenging the credlblllty • pf the Supreme Court and the Congress ot lhe United Slates. And now alas, the office of lhe Presi- dent of. the United States. Their boast appears · to have been fulfilled. It is now-up to U8 fellow cltJzenl-to tnd the apathy and to judge and upbold all that we hold dear to us without hysteria or undue emotion and to stand up to our problems as we always have in the past and to make our judiments with great thought!ufness· and beiog completely just and keep our country the best place to live for ouraeJves, our ch 11 d re n, grandchildren and others to follow, 1 GEORGE D. BUCCOLA Fed lip To the Editor: 'l'he termination or the Ellsbierg trial is 11 perversion of'"'OUf system of govern- ment lllld freedom. Jn what other eountry would a man who deliberately stole g o v e r n m e n t secrets be l.urned. loole to make in- credible charces '~ wreak further damage in a datlmt o~rbufdened wiih the penny ante a~tics~some super zealous subordinates? Persoqally, I am led !with the lloniz· Ing of !'ll1Jberg. Ir IJ me lhit a person with bls inteUJf .talents has nqt b€en able to put t'fem \0 more balanced use. ' LY¥AN FAULKNER ~ . Jlobert N. w .. d, ~ Th"'"°' K<.mJ. B itor Barbaf"G ICf'efbldi: Editorial Peg~ Ecttior The editorial .page ot 'CM' DlUy Pilot ~ to lnlonn and stimulate JTeden by Pl"'Sftltll!c m this l*C' diverae•commentary'on topics Of.~ ltTtat by i)tndlcated rolwnnlst9 Md cartoonists. by providtn, a fonun b' ~dus' v'""-and by ~ 1llill ncwsp.per'1 opSrdorw and 1dMa on C'lllT'tnt topica. The: edtforlal ophllolw of the DUiy Piiot a.ppeu onl)r tn Ole edltott.J colun:ui at the 1of ~ 1he pqe. Opinkins exp1cwd by the <'QI.. umntsta a.nd. cartoonbt• ml i.tttr wr\ten are thclr ow11 and no endol• mt:nt of thtlr vie!W9 by 'the, »-i1J Pilot-.idbe- Wednesday, May 16, lll73 - ' -- • ' -Showdown CALIFORNIA --l - 'Panther _Seale.Loses Bid --lnO.akliindMayor Cont,est OAXLAND (AP) -llbcl< PanUier colounc(er 8 o b b y Seolo loot hlr bid to become '""r<>' o/ c.ur .... ia'• rdth 'Jarielt ctty. But be pledges. 11We haven 't stopped yet." - a "lignlflC0111 lpunda!lm for the people in the fuhjre to oolve the wues and problem1 or the c!omnlllQlty." I TO I MAKE · 'SAa!AMENTO (AP) -'Ibo ·llr:SI' A••• m b I y reop. ~ bill .. wfll Illa· jorlty 1upport from IU8tlllblymen o/ both parties it headed for a ahowdoWn • floor vole, promising to end '-------~ twu years o/ bitter partlaan Bulin<Ssman John Reading capt'ured hl.t third I e r m a! ' mayor by an almost M mar- gin Tuesday and lauded the Panlhen' movement into the politlcal arena. He h&d urged program! ol ai'd IPfthe poor lllld "a be and more decent Jife -Ute be-- ginning oC which can come v.ith the idea that people have a right to a job, with or with-ROOM FOR NEW SUMMER GOODS •• strugg1e in the lower house. One GOP lesder calleil'the plaa "perhaps the wont ger· rymander in the hl!tory ol thl> state," but Republlcanl voted 1'1 Tue!day . ID 111ppclrt the compromlae plan -it comes up for a floor vote niWi.iay. The bill -.Id wipe oot &eats ol ~ Incumbent Democrats, but It would still leave I>em;q"its wUb a 47-33 Aaaembly mejorlty, j>ackera said. • Lea.gin '.l'ro11f)le SACRAMENTO (AP) -The League of Californla Cities has 8hllted Ille site ol today's '°"' venUon luncheon to a. new ( BRIEFS ) location after two mayors and Assembly Speaker Bob ,_1oret- U bOyootted the Tuesday lunch ........ Gov. Ronald Reagan was ...,.ded to be the featured apeaker today. Mayors Nonnan Mineta ol Mother Lode Gold Feye1· Hits · Again SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Mlnlng equipment sto<ea In Ca1Uornia's famous Mother Lode report the "gold lever" demandl for pans, dredges and metal detectors is soaring nearly as high as the price of the precious yellow metal on world .markets. A UPI survey of equipment dealers Tuesday s h o w e d business increases ranging from 2S to 75 perCi!nl on the same day gold cl~ on the Paris free market at $124.06. "It's gold fever," said Frank Sullivan, manager of the Afotbcr Lode Skin Diving shop in Sacramento. "It's just like addiction. It's like alcohol to an alcoholic." San J08e and Warren Widener SULLIVAN SAJD his diving fl. Berkeley refused to attend equipment used for gold Tuesday'• luncheon at the SaCrameoto Ellca Club~ ·saytng recovery was doing a brisk the chib di9criminates against business, and his pans and raCial minorities in i t s dredges were "up $12,000 a member""' Ii · n1onth." l!l~P po_ Cl~. Jn·tbe past two-months. he • Death Bill OK said, his store bas sold more SACRAMENTO.(AP) _ The than 5,000 pans, 300 dredges costing up to $400, a nd about Senate I Judiciary C.Ommittee · 20tQOO books on gold mining has given 3-2 approval to a bill and panning. requiring the execution or "We're swamped," said a.nyone convicted ol murder-Herman Fiedl~r, who runs ing a police officer. Fiedler Equipment Co. in 'lbe f'ote Tuesday advanced Grass Valley fn the Sierra the bill. by Sen. H. L. foothills. • "I would hope they will con-... tinue to work in the democra- tic proceg," Reading said af-~ ter his victory was asstred. g:~.,.. '.'I'm much more pleased with ~ """ this than with the militant and ti · confrontational type of ap- proach the Panthers were 00. ing four to five years ago." With all 436 precincts report-.. ing, Reading had 77,476 v~tes to 43,7 19 for Seale. There wa• a 71 per cent turnout of the 174,900 registered voter-3 in this city of 361,500. Jn a nine-candidate primary April 17 \\'hich saw a 63 per- cent turnout, Reading collect- U'I T....,_. OAKLAND VICTOR Mayor Reading ed ,55.434 votes to 21,329 for Seale. Seale called his campalgn- aimed primarily at the 34 per- cent black a n d 20 percent Spanish-surnamed population out a aldll." , • Re9dlrut said he and-seaie. "are talking about the same 1-ues. We want to reduce crime and incfease emplO\'· ment, but we're poles apart in ho• to achieve these things." 'Ibe mayor said that hla.ap- proach ls to create a comm°'" nJty climate that attracts bUsi· ness and new jobs. . Despite the defeat: Seale and -a crowd of. yowtR" supoorte's held what they ~ed a 'rvb- torv celebration" tn the-.<'IC· companym!nt M a live band at a waterfr~t restaurant. ;1We h~ven't ·stooo~ v~." Se~le-s.11.id to aµplause. "I will not mak" a ....,..,cession sn-e<>ch b'!<'ause t will.not cencE'l"I~ the rights of human beings." Her Charms ·· All Hers, Say Doctors Home Brewed Gasoline . --,.. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Ann Tallent's charms are her own, not a contribution or medical science, doctors have told or- ficials of the Miss Greater San Diego Pageant. Studied by Long Beach Other contestants claimed on Tuesday that the 21-year- old winner, a fashion model, had enhanced her-figure by breast surgery or silicone in- jricttonr. · "" -~ · Officials had Miss Tallent checked by three plastic surgeons Tuesday night, then announced! "Whatever she "'on with is tiers." Miss Tallent measures 35-22· 35. LONG BEACH (UPI! -The city government, squeezed by the gasoline shortage, has an option not available to many others : dcrit-yourself gasoline. Jn this oil rich city the mu- nicjpal government has its own crude oil reserves. The city ha.!1 been buying its gasolio~ from m11:jor oil com- panies but so far has been un- able to get any company to bid on the contract for 1.5 million gallons it needs for the coming year. . The oil companies say that \Vith the shortage coming, the.v don 't want to be tied to such Pl E I d big contracts. an DC orse So the City Council Tuesday the leading source of-petro- leum in California for more than 50 years," said Cit} Man- ager John ~1a~ll. Steamer Set~ . . - For -Sailing LOS ANGELES (AP) -unanimously approved a reso- "IT'S (BUSlNESS) Improved Gov._ Ronald Reagan '.!! tax lution to seek a company to SAN PEDRO (AP) -The SS Catalina, k.no1vn to bun· dreds of thousands as The Great \Vhite Ste am er , resumes its famed run to Avalon oo Catalina Island june 16 after being id.le more than a year because of a labor dispute. MON. THRU FRI. 10 A.M. te 9 P.M. SA.TURDAY 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. SUNDAYS 11 A.M. to -5 P .M. •Pants •Sweaters •Tops · •Skirts •Swimsuits •Blazers •Vests •Skirt Sets •Dresses •Pant Sets LONG &, SHORT •Blouses •Hot Pant Sets JPJ CALIFORNIA FASHION FACTORY OUTLETS · . HUNllNGT-ON r BEACH .. GARDEN GROVE 9586 ttAMILTON LA HABRA 1l1ff llOOlt:HUlST 2 Blocks West 13•4 SO. IUCLID I Bloelr So11il! of of Brookhurst ALPHA BETA G•rd•l'I Grov• Blvd. IMPER.IAL CENTER I Bllr. So. of lmperi•I Hwy, AICADIA IELLfLOWEI 29 W. l•1 Tun11 Dr. 920'4 Alondr• LOS ANGELO l I ]5 Sin f•tn1ndo Rd. MONTCU.11 REDONDO IEACH Richardson (R·Arcadia). to the Senate floor. Jf it passes that house, it still faces strong o~''!oo in the Assembly. to the point where we've had to limitation initiative has gained refine the city's O\Vn oil re-Jack Stanaland, owner or , ____ _ •S11itFUed turn away some work ," said the endorsement of the United serves to get the ft'asoline need- Fiedler, whose tWQ-man firm Organit.ations Or Taxpaye'8 eel to keep its police cars and ' manufactures and re ta i Is Inc. 1-Joward Jarvis, t he other mUDicipal vehicles run- SAN FRANCISC(:) (AP) -custom dredges. "We're run-·group's chairrnan, to Id ning. Paul Maris Co. moved in San ning 25 percent above normal 'newsmen that the proposal "It is especially ironic that Franciaco Superior Co u rt and if we could handle all that "will do more ·than anything no oil comp.any would supply the steam-pow~ vessel. said Tuesday th~ ship was able to go back into service because of an agreement reached with eigbt wljons '4hich tllows a work force reduction from 64 KUh iik~ Xo Ask-Andy ·· 'l\lelday to sue the firm's came in we'd be 50 percent we've seen to return control to the ci\}\tf Loag Beach~with ... former president, Paul Maris, _•bo_v_e_." __________ 1h_c_peo:..:.;;_Pl;_•·-"-------'g::•:.•:.•in;_c:.e::Lo:::::nge.::Be:.a::c::h.::ba:.s::bee=n'-----------------~---------------------~_;;"_ and other form er executives 1-'•'.: to 45. . for damages ln excess of $10 million, a 11 e g t n g acts detrimental to the company. Maris, who was replaced as president April 19, previously sued for da.m.Qgel!l against board c:Mlrmen Milton D. Stewart, who is president of Creative Capital Corp., the major stockholder in Paul Maris Co. • '.l'e.u!laer Jailed SANTA CRUZ CAP) - A San Jose City College teacher will be arraigned Wednesday on charges of embezzling $15,000 from a crippled children's camp. Leslie R. Scheidt. 35. of San- ta Cruz, a health education in- structor at the college, was charged with l\VO counts of grand theft, deputies said. The Santa Clara County district at - torney's office said Sc heid! pocketed paychecks meant for students working at ~he Easter Seal Society Can1p. Sears • 11these days, when everythini:'s getting giant and complicated, we're still small enou1h .to know who you are" Coron• d•I M•r: 274'4 E. Co•1t Hwy, Pl!orie: !7t'4l 64'4-7255 Assets just barely over $300 mllllon • Hugh Evans, Ji:, President -------------- Make Time Stand Still ... portraits are forever! 49* Each Portrait With One Subject is all you pay for a big 8x10 color portrait adults • No age limit • children . . • Limited to One Portrait per Subject. Two Portraits per'fam!ly • babies • Addilional Prints Available at Reasonable Prices no extra charge for handling and delivery 99c* extra for each additional person in portra it *Plus Sales Tax .. HOURS: Daily 12 noon to 8:00 p.m. Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 6,00 p.m. Sunday 12 noon to 4:00 p.m. J Now through Sunday, May 20 al the following Sears Stores I C' .a.d rs TORRANCE CERRITOS INGLEWOOO COSTA MESA ORANGE . ::QR«.µ.i = PASADENA BUENA PARK GLENDALE LAGUNA HILLS \u.u.•Of'llV(;.,;,\l\.o(o. .'iatisf<1ction G1i?rt1r1t.eed or Yo11r ~lo11Py Back ,. . J • • .. FASHIONj ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER Pacific Coast Highway-Between J•mborH •nd MacArthur • ' .. , \ t I 7 I i • ' . • . . , . . • I • • - N.Y. Steeks i . - JO.L 66, NO. 136, .• SECTIONS, 110 ·p,t$~ . ,.. -. • • WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 19n TEN CENTS . . ' .. • ' ' ' . . ' . will be ''nlmlini mnoothly qaln" In lll!IO u the proper stepo are takeo. He aald a pro~ dou!Jlln1 of energy coosumpllon from . 19'19 I<> lll!IO means that the • .ei1l1a will be a .....,_ e:'!'~. , , l""'"'""menon ~-. at Inst ~years. To aolten the, blow' he. recommended that the count11 "undertake energy con· servation and the development of domestic teSOl.l1"0e5.'' On the conservation side,. Doig said, are such -alternatives u producing smaller cars, dolng away with gu pilot lights, stopping production of automaUc transmissions, increasing the alrline k>ad factor, and improving the efficiency of i ndustrial plants." And to save .on domestic heatlng and cooling bills Doig predicted, "we ~ have to run the house two to three degrees hotter in the summer and two or three degrees coolu in the Winter -and perhaps knit sweaters instead.,, • Since four-passengee automobiles are • • Ill Lifestyle? seldom used I<> capacity he forecast that perhaps .s many u half <11 the future vehicles on the road "would carry only two passengen but feature 45 mph thrift. He said if motorists were to continue to insist on air condlUonlng and automatic trarmnlsslOM, the United States would "have to pull off a Rlls,,lan wheat deal every year" to pay for imj>orted oil to run them. Another speaker, Ralph L. Lewis Jr., vice president of public relations for Gulf Oil , stressed the netd ·tor development or domestic energy sources to avoid dependency on forelgrr nations. He said the energy crl.sll is now on the front pages of the newspapers and that the oil industry, having capt\p'ed public attention should tell its story in simple terms and wam America "It's time to stop fooling around ." '"Let us get lto the business of flndinJ available domes tic sources." he sald. (Stt: SCARE, Past: ti on I ; Tests Set · To Salvage -·--- Sk lab I . y . ljlOUSTON (UPI) -Soarln& tom· W-.tures today rendered Skylab I u~bi~e and englneers began t<sts of a sumhade I<> be erected by the first crew in an effort to save America 's I . r statioQ. , # • J'!l.C<-dft«i't. '""-£ LeJi!a -'d ·o.. ~uls -'"'iJl'.ti';°' ~'~·~ SKYLAB TROUll!-IS SffOWN- 111.,.tntlon P.#9'1 ti • • MW prqf>ablY would·bel!J!fllell to plnfonn an Ull~ ~ a Ir· 1paci!wal~ I<> lie! up · the lgged 1uiisbJde .• .J:t :~ ~p= =~~~~ dale for seoding thi:ee ...,.....II to Stcylab. .• -But he said it was 0 marginal" whether • tlie reptlt equipment coold be readied and checked out by that time. - "We'll . fa.nch them m _&mcfay cir iu\otber live days laler," bt llld, ex- ~•lpioi . that the ar.cood, ;launch OJ>' pirtDnify .eolild not cune ...,,.., because d · lbe -orbitll!g atafic>n's path thrulgh ,piico. th> !Diles fn>m earth., The space 11ency reported at Cope K.nnedy, ~while, tba~·llle Depart. meat of 'D!Une bu JW>'I~. ....iutlon pbolograpbs :<fl 1111>,crlpjlled ' ce station I<> ald englnftrs In lllldlni ~ "' .... the craft. A t(>Okeaman ..atd ne1il>er ll)e·h!ghly c!assll1icl pl~ nor a .~escrlpUOn of their cootenta Wauld be 1111de public. • ·xrtMManball Space"'1lghl Oenter In Uunllvllle. Ala., ~ ~ In IJllCOSUill i.,,pn tolfs ln i ~ water tinlt ,.. ~ !imlllate '!!'n>Cfaolly of apace -of ways I<> rig the aunoblde. '''Ibis la a very rough. first approach to the ptoblerir.'' a . ~keaman at the Alablma center sauf. AnOtller team at the Uouston IP"ce ienter, headed )y Lewis, worked (lirougb the night I<> det<rmlne wli6re t~ emergency Tep.air equipment might be -ed In the Apollo CQ111l11and ship wtllch will carry a1tronauts Charles ''.Nit" Corired; Or. Josepll P. Kerwin ~·Pan! J. Weitz up lo Skylab. Ji,~portiog m latelt· Skylab d.Veloptnenll In a news cool~ at the Jolmaoo Space Center In lloostoo, Lewts said temperatlires insido 'the llrll!tlng wor!<shop (OWS) were well'over 100 de8'ees Fahrenheit . "Internal ttm~ are too'bigh to tnlJjbit ttte. ows;,, be iafd.. 11lt doesli't mban we .,,.Wdn't want'(an amonaut) to go Into 11\e OWS, but II' does mean. we '•••uldn'I want to use that u our living quarters." PILOT AD PROVES . ' rllE CA.T'S MEOW one highly saU1fied custoa)er wbo U8f'I ll81TyPllcil claaolOed advet11ilnc <olOftllll tu~lly aald she not only found 11111*"" tor liv~ kittens )o.,Ol>O '*Y, but ~·sonfe nice people, tot>.11 K•e's lbe I tblt did the ·Job: • , FREE llilt<ns, mtzed ·mlon, 9 -ka. cule, p11yl\ll. (Phone No.) It could jUll be that you could he coo- •illced a Daill Pilot ad 1a tha "cat'•·-uL.:. Glv. It a try. The direct 'line I<> ro-iulll Ii~.. ---------·------• . .. -. I Ante IJp~ ,B.,1s 'Slim' Defends .Poker Crown • L,\S VEGAS (UPI) -kmarillo Slim begins delense1'f his world poker title today ,agaih:it fellow Texarui "Tree Tops," "Hook" ~d "Speedy." · . They-were-among six survivors of a-$36,GOO,-U..man..-Kansaa .City-ace-~ five lowba!J game that start<d Mmday and .continued tllroul!h Tuesday. The fmalists are Amarillo Slim Preston, Jack .. Tree 'fop1" Strauss of HOOSIM, Gorge Barnes of Oklahoma City, Bob "Hook" Haberis of Wlnlt, Jam.es "Speedy" Myers of Killeen and Aubrey "All Day" Day of Birmingham, Ala . The winner will net at least'f70,000. · W. C. "Puggy Wuggy" Pearsoo, formerly of Nashville; Tenn. but now a Las Vegas· resident, has already won $45,000 in contests ·completed ·thi! week. He collected $32,000 In wlnnlng the seven-card stud Ulle and. another $17,000 In a ''mini-bolcH:m"-ccmpetition. Last year's five card su!d champion, Bill Boyd of Smackover, Okla., was uncha!leDged In bii specialfy this year. · J-Qemaleln .ct Lu Vegas ,... $21,000 in .a<:e I<> fiv...,.,U Iowball. ' • 'life fvimt "liiifiiStti@il lil'lhe--lioe CMf. .. . . ; . . • . ~ ., .• ,, -. ·. .. ~··.w,., • -· \ .... • ... _ .4;J •, _h ~ Fdf· zv~ •re-:-· . f • ~ ... p • .-r,-1 ' .{ ~· ~ ' f ' . WU. . • . "iS, , ' Foo1p:roof , ay~ti ~fymie Algae, Gnats: the Hippo By JAN WORTH Of #19 Difif ,.llif Shift Jr there a foolproof way to control algae and. larvae in Jakes, especially the mirunade vartetyioond bl Lake Forest? .. SEC Chief ·G.B.Cook Quits· Post WASHINGTON (AP) -Chafrman G. Bradford Cook of the Securities and Ex· change Commission announced b i s resignation today. • In · a letter I<> Prealljent ,NiJoa, Cook said> 'ti deeply regret ·llaving·to tender mv resignation as chairman of the ~115. . 1--~, =·~·. ·;-. liS·bi4fii( Uniir a · ~; now jirevailing, I believe Ilia belt to de> so." ' 0 • ~ • I cOol:o-~ (IO]y a few monlilS·llO,'hu lieen critlciz.. ed lot b1a bandllng of a rel1P(t G( a cash :~i.~~~~1: lnvesflgation by the SEC. . Cook l1lmed 36 '!'bursdat and was one of the youngest chalnnen in history .of !be SEC. He testified this week at a closed-door hearing before a Senate committee on the Vesco matter. The nature of the - testimony was not disclosed . Cook 's resignaUon is certain to affect Wall street io view of the fact ;he bas been at the foreCrooi of movea to reform J •• u,,.,.......,. ""'-~· . -, ~,..... ' .. ....,,$': C HILl!I " , • o·. a COojlc . . • the·,. oounlrY'• ....,.u;es markets to ci:ei1tt •'al!!ll• ~tral market system. A led~ grind ' )\Icy In New York alleged thal Cook yielded to pre•Sllre from Nlaon camii8Jin lililit · raiser Maurice Stans by deleting menUon of a large cash donatlon from Vesco from an SEC suit aga"inlt Vffco, a New York financier. It has been alleged thal a '200,000 coii- tribuUOO from Veeco.l'as made in secret to the Nl1on campaign. Homeowners Sue . . Firm for Saline ,. ,. Soll · cOndition~ There eure is. Just aek Ken Wasman, one of Occidental Peu.leum Land and Devel""""'1t COmpany's project di@:- ton In Lake Fcrest. Trouble ls, llie solution coets $7000, And dUdllf Ille nifbt it .. ta bushes. And it. weighs two tuis. And sweats {)tood. Tiie llO!ution! 1be mud-loYlng hit> popatamus • ..Wuman, sweating a little • blOOd himself over a persistent. a1gae and gnat population expl06foii In Occidental's ~·!'1-acre lake in Lake Foreat>, ·beard Lion €OOntty .Jlolari in Laguna Rills had an Ellsberg -Claims Link Of Trial, Camzxiiining A homeowners llSIOCiallon and the ...-... owne:ts ot~tfu.ee bPrnes Jn' .e: ijuntington "I was so excitedithat I jumped right Beach tract .want1nearly_ $1.S milllori in in my car and went out ~e." Wasman daJpages Id an or-Countf &Jperior ,.said. . O>i1rt -that')zlames the ~elopm · .-'lblt -'fben Pat Qulnii,.-logicsl for "groaly !fllne" soll oondlt1ons In the , ~.at Lion Country, ... de the hippo area.. , , . Kaufman and ·Blood, Inc., of .Placentia 1be ponderous animal, a member of are accUled in the lawsuit tnea.. by the the swine ~ly, lives solely on. vegeta- Tideland HomeoWrlera AaloctatlOn' .and tion In the rivers It inhabits in ltS na'tural property ownen1 Tetry A.' Gray, Victoria state. S. Clouse and Wlllian>Peter Milla of fail· Lion Country,.ftafari's ,It hippos are iDg I<> correct soil conditions affecting Hl given other foOc(. llut snack oo the algae homes despite their 'alowledge of U-of .the wildl~e pre!erve•s lake eoough I<> condltlonl. , keep !!•under control. 'lbe·Plaintiffs' class action on behaH of· Fortunately for Waman and the all those residents points out that,it,is. residents. of the. t'°"year-old lake, impoalble I<> ~taln laWl\I, ptdtns ' bowevu: Ql\lil\1 bad .onllt\!Ot ~·· and flowers .in the area. Qlncrete 14v1ng 'One fish; an 'Atilcari ·es calleil and ildewallts have also cracked blljicJse M-bica Tilapla, burrvws Int<> the o !the same coodillons, the action says. ' (See lliPPVllj Pqe I) " .. WASHINGTON (AP) -Daniel Ellsberg told a Senate hearing today he belieYes he was prosecuted !or leaking the Penta· gon papers not l;!ecause he violated na· tional security but because of po&sible links to Democratic candldlat<s. And, said Ellsberg, the strOngest ties would have been to Sen. Edmund S. Muskie ([).Maine), chainnan cf the hear- ing. ' EUsberg said he never met Muskie but that several· individuals involved in tbe massive Pentagon study of U.S. Involve- ment in Vietnam advised the Muskie pres- idential campaign. He pointed out that et. the-time Muskie was the leading oonteoder for the Demo- cratic prdidential nomination and was leading President Nixon in some popular- ity polls. 'un~i.ngton ·ff~otel Quashed · , ~l \ ' . City Plan1ierj.· WOn't 'Give Okay Witliout EIR '. . / Plans for a $2:.S million, four·story hQte1 Jfith a >roof-top restaurant were te~lly oquuhed · ~sy nlg!tt by . the 1mtlngton Beach Plannlni C.m- 1!' ~ re!Uaed to gunt an ad· minlitntlvo review for the bolel ~ beci~~,Lenny Llndborg refu>. ed ·"' lately wtll• pn .,,. vi-lmpoct report on It. Pact report writteii later?" Llndborg said or conditional exception on 'the property, todaJ'. "l wouldn1t mlnd, lf)J;>ey hid ask-because his plans meet the city buUdlng ed IOt1he report"when l llrit' Nrled, but code for the zone . !liq w-1ted 9>ree moot~ .b41ore !tiling "1 don't disagree wllh sucb a project mot , . being reviewed -by the planning co .... Lltitlbor1 nid wben he ftnt ap-mluion, but the clly code "-''t require ~'!be plaM\Dt lde'pet\meot he It," Llndborg said. . aaked t( t~ Jl"OPSty, °""""' l!I Olcar "l\'e need a, mas~ plan in th1a city, Tayb\ WU.ll'Opetly,amed for a. motel. with rulee and regulatkm.s. Even it It's ''Tllo lllemlian ol the planning staff bad 11'1 better than what we h.ve. You toJd me tt ·Wu/' ht l&JI'· can't dtelgn on opinions." Ellsberg also noted that E. Howard Hunt Jr., the convicted Watergate con- spiratOl'. who was alacrllnked to the burg· Jary of. Ellaberg's R9ycbiatrlst'1 office, wits· hired by the White House a week after Ellsberg was Indicted. "The que1Uoo was could I be made into a m~baU that would sUck to·a pres· identlal cahdldate," Ells berg said. The fonner Pentagon researcher al- leged, that the operation was directed by a iask force ln the Jwitice Department headed -by Robert C. MardJan, assistant attorneY.,s~l In charge Of the Internal SO!'uril)'. dl'Vla!On. Ellsberg descrilied for the subcommit· tee the mustve government security system under wbicb more than one billion pa&es are clwWed and in which the very names of ~ classJflcatlons ate kept aecret. He noted that during 12 years as a defense researcher he held about a dozen t:i, tbeae super1eCret security clearances. •!'ir-1 cmly unW you. haTe a dozen or more that you reallte there musl be s t i I I others," he aid. -.a. "cOuld 'there be clearances the Presi· dent doeln'.t know about ~ "Of course," Elli.berg said. He added, however, be doubted there were any, EUsbelj' festllled before a joint sesaion or th& Senate government operations and judlc~:,.0.'btomntltiees examining the government'• ~ty system . Sting ·Death Probed Tht'prC>paltd hotel ~Id cover the i& laod ._ ,of Pl>Clllc OOut Highway. betwllell 9Ch .•lit 10tlf9\reela. Llndlii!r& ·aald this lllOnllng he would appeal tlwl commiuloo action I<> the city cowl!!f~ He aald he dldJIOt want to •pead '"°""" m an Impact report for pure ~_lallon." !lien,ln ~ wttll llaff memben, Undborg said he bellevn the biggest a'IW ids piano -• 1lready drawn. problem ls the lack of a bllh rise SACRAMENTO (AP) -An auto)>SY Undborl wu tDld JhO ptopelly Is not ordinance, which lhe planning depart-has been ordered for today In the death toned for a moiel, but U he .ellmlnated ment 1!1 11Ull writing. Plannen are on of a *'Yeal"'()ld fann worker beUeved t1:> Ille kitchenettes It ~ta 10111.~ hotel. their aeventh revision of ijr ' have cited from s bee sting. Volo County "So I did. The :oitiln1 wu pr0per, It,... Planner. asked Llndborg If lie couldn't Coroner's olllce "id Eulallo G. Gonzales quires 0011 a revlew, DOI a ,_llna. wttb bulldJ>ls bot<! higher, lcavllli·tboto open loot ~ •hortly afttt being the Jllannlnll ~n.._.....,.-..~_..,._..,...U.1-,ground...C>v> 'of lbelc --1 ·bJ o bee-Monday n!ght ·and Wit ' Steps .Taken To Plug Up News -Leaks "'N·1~·.on=+"'..,.~' Ion.:-.: ..,;;,~~~ ~~al security" one daT'-&ftcr .-:top··~--· fictal "'' iald I<> hav~ tU!l'nelI that three lop Wlltt.~ aides itled I\> In· vol•• the ~ttaf''fliteltlgence Agency in a coverup ct the Wafergatt ,ljean\llL i The wtre~'lPP'rthUy were lnllalled following a published rej>ort about 852 bombers attaclting targets inside Cam· bodla 1n lHe and other reports relating to U.S.-SOvltt talks on limltlni strategic arms. The Whit .. House had been described at the time at concerned about leab to n<:wsmen of coofldential matetial oo both subj'ects. " t was a ·natiorial security matter." 1 White House SP.Ok~sm·an -illld--ioc1ay-or pre11dentlal approval of the wtretaps, first rei>orted by tbe New York Tiziiea. "The procedure was approved by the President and autboriied 1n individual cases by the attorney general in coordination with the director of the Federal. Bureau of Investigation," ibe spokesman ta.Id. Acting FBI Director William D. Ruckelshaus· said Monday that records found in a safe in the office ol\ former White House aide John D. Ehriichlmin in- dicated taps had been placed on tbe tt:l ephones of 17 individuals, including four reporters . He said the taps were at1thori2ed after presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger had talked with J . Edgar Hoover. then FB [ director. · T;he wiretaps came lo light la st week at the Pentagon Papers trial in Lus Angel eJ, It was disclosed that FBI agen lci monitored a conversation by Dani el E11sberg when he u.sed a telephone at the BeU:lesda. Md . home of Morton Ha1perin . I a member of the National Security Coun- . tS.e WIRETAPS, Poge i) I Oradwe Cout Weathel." The sun will peek out of the clouds a little earlier m Thursday, with mostly sunny skies after the morning bum off. Highs of 68 de- grees at the beaches rising to 75 inland. Overnight lows in the 50s. INSIDE TODA\' Two Palo Alto cotda wm1ted to 1ee for thtmuiveJ" hotD homo- tt2*all· ore trected. So they eoti. ducted on alf1cUot1at1 persot1al exptrim.-nt with 1hockino re· 1ul11: Ster~ Pao< 16. -·,'ft!' ciil'l"tliiy a""""° IMCOiiCiill of the botel, subject \o 11pprov11 of en Im-Uodborg was DOI uklng for ' variance (See HOTEL, Pqe 11 doacf on 1niv1l st a Woodland hospital. ~----------......, • I • • ' • • " .. • . ~IUT-AR:f....KEN --'="= en . 'a91Jlll-----..-:._;,,,...~~---___.._-&:;. · Incentives WASHINGTON <l'PIJ -Prealdenl Nixon had not talked to his legal COWlsel, Jobl W. Dean. be(ore he claimed last summer that an in\'esligalion by Dean inclce.tedno Adminirtration olficials were -.'>.;., * * l'romPGffel WIRETAPS. • • cil staff at the time. Halperin said today he was sure Kiss- inger, as head of the council, was aware of the wiretapping. '1 doo't think there's any que.etion that he .knew that mr phone was being tap- ped. indeed tba he was reading sum- maries oC the r~rta of the phone conversations," Halperin sa1a on the NB(}TV Today Show. "He had told me that people in the Administration suspected me of leaking ,bings. I assured him that 1 bad not leak- ed any information and he indicated that j was still under investigation, but never ~ave me any hint that that included /elephone tapping." FrotnP .. eJ HIPPOS ... fOUd and devours the larvae which pro- du~ ~ti-~ 'lbouih the f\ah U native to Africa, it is u5ei1 most often in Southeast Asia , where it i!J placed in the watery rice fields. Not only does it keep the pest problem down, but fumishes farmen with protein to complement their rice harvest. involved In tbe Watergate buggfDJ. lbe White House aald today . · Nixon) pms secretary. Ron.aid !.. Ziegler, aatd the President was relying on informaUon from other staff members when be told an Aug. 29 news conference thal .. a thorough inveatigati<1111 by Dean exonetaled all pe,....,. tben In 1he AdmlnlllraUon. Ziegler declined to identify the other staff members who reported to Nixon or to .say whether fonner White House aides John D.1i:brlldunan and H. R. Haldeman ever taUted with the President about any tole they might have had in a Watergate COVef'"'!JP· The New York Times reported today that ttle only report given Nixon on poa.- sible Administrattoo involvement was by Ehrlicbinan, and that it was iofonnal and .oral. Ziegler insisted today that ''the Preli· denl <a1lecl r.. an lnvesllgalioo'.' and tbat "the responsibility ror conducting that in- vestigation clearly fell ln the coun.wJ'3 office" occupied by Dean until he wrui fired April 30. Ziegler said Dean's report was never put in writing, but its contents were con- veyed to the President by "senior staff members." Ziegler made the comments at a While House briefing in "response to repeated questions about the scope of ~an's in- quiry , which Nixon cited for n\onths as the basis for his claim that the Administration was not implicated in the Watergate case._ WABHING'll'.)N (AP) -Pl-t Nix· Oii will fly lo Norfolk, VL' fjllun!q to dtllvu an AnDed r-Doy -•• I llllJltary lnlianat1oe, lbt White Howe uJd today. While Norfqll< ls ~.bowii U I naval lnltallltlao. the Whlle 'U.U.. Aid Nl1on's audience abo will Include uniformed members of the Marine corps, Anny and Air Foree from nearby hues. nie President is expected to return to Washington immediately after the event and, quite likely, proceed io Camp David, Md ., for the balance of the weekend. Irvine Boy . . Spends Lunch Underground A sml}ll boy walking home from school in Irvine Tuesday spent his lunch hour in double jeopardy, trapped for SS minutes at the bottom of a cramped, 14-inch di· ameter hole six feet deep. Jeff Armstrong, 9, accidentally dropped down the small sh.aft at the base of a masonry block Wall while walking through a new tract being buill at Klom Street and Glass Avenue. Rescuers at the scene faced two dan- gers in their efforts to save the boy. They spread a tarpaulin around the tiny opening, folding it down into its walls initially to prevent a cave-in which could have suffocated the youngster. Irvine Police Officer Harry Ehrlich said rescuers abo were concerned be- cause the boy suffers from an illness. After meeting with County Fish " and Game officials, Occidental has obtained pennission to stock-their lake -·wilh-200 - ti.tOssimblca Tilapia. The FJsh and Game Department has offered to raise them and provide tbem free of charge. Seven Soldiers Perish in Crash Of Army Copter Crowds of· curious neighbors gathered around the scene, as Orange County Fire Department personnel . from Station 26 near UC Irvine worked to free Jeff. He was finally hoisted out in a sling looped and knotted.beneath his arms and around his chest , valiantly clutching1'be .. rope above his head. . FT. KNOX, Ky. (AP) -Seven sOldiers lnvestlgators said he.escaped the hour- "\Ve should have enough to stock all three lakes in Lake Forest," Wasman sai d. Two other lakes. of 18 and 7 acres, art owned by the Lake Forest Com- manity Associatioo and arell.-coping with similar algae and gnat problem!. "This is a never ending problem," Wasman saJd. "We've been trylng to con- trol lt with chemicals but tfiat kills off same ot the fish." A cei'laln amowit of algae ii de.sirable and needed to keep a· healthy lake, Wasman stressed. Fish die without the oxygen that algae produces. . 'Bonfa to J{~d Citywide Group City Attorney Don &nfa has been elected chairman of the Huntington Beach Coordinating Council for 1973. He replaces Betty Kennedy, a member of the city's recreation and parks com· 1nission. Other officers nan1ed recently were Bruce Williams, vice chairman ; Verela 1\:lae Erdmann, treasurer ; and Marlene Downey, secretary. The coordinating council is composed or 80 community or.ganizatlon.s. It an· nually sponsors the citywide festival and publlshes a directory of about 100 civic organizations and services in Huntington Beach. Fro111 Page l HOTEL ... jections was tbat it covers Z30 fee t of the 2i50-feet rrontage. . "I'm not going to build 16 stories to get 80 units,'' Lindborg says. "The proposed tilgh rise ordi nance doet1n't allow you to build econonllcally.'' OIAN•I COAIT Kl DAILY PILOT "l"t O••f>Ot CMjl DAIL'!' '"'LOT w!tll Mllcl'I ,, Cl>••>Ointd "'' NtWt·PreH, I' 111,1bl!-.. ., "'' O•IJltf CN•I l"ublltlllng Ca"'"ny. s~ rite ll<lllll f1' t rt PUbll1~. Mottdty lllrouglt F•lll•'I', for cos11 Mt••, N-part 111dl, H""llflflan lttclt/Faunt•ln \1111ry, lltunt 8tadl, l••lnt/Sltllo:ll1bt0; t NI !t•n CS.,...n!t l 1.111 J11111 Ct oi1t•1110. A t!~.. re9~I tclotlon 11 pubil•Mll S1t11•Y1 tf!d SllllCllY'- fl>ll prlnc:IJMI put>ll11tln9 PlaM It ti )J:I Wttt 81'1' Srrtt1, COl<ll Mn.i, Ct llMrn!t, t14H.. Robert N. W11J Prn'Jdtn! l l'ld Puo11.~11 J1ck II. C11rl1y lflc:t l"rnl01t11 ""' Gr,.,.•1! M•~•v., Tho"'11 IC11~il l!lltO• Thom11 A. M11rphont /1111n1t1113 Eo.,o• Ch1rl1t H. L111 llic~1 r4 I'. Ntll Attla!tnl Mtn19i""1 (0,10,, T 11ry Coville W•I Ortngt Cwn1y l'!!loO• H•httt,,. -..11 OMte I 7171 l11th lowl1,.1r4 M1fli11f Ad9'1111 1',0. 101 7t0, t2•41 ,,_ °""• ~ •~: 222 '"''"' ......... w cetll M-: )ID Wt1I 11'1' l!r... , "'"""'°" okt<fl: J#S N._i IOUlt'lltr!I Jiii Cllr'lw'ltt: JOI H1r111 !.I CtmlM lttl T.t.,.._ C7141 l42-4l21 / c._..............,,.2.1•11 ,_ H9'1fl or.,.. C....., Ctmm!H'lllll ..... IUI ~11111, 1111, or.... c..11 'llb!llll"'9 c:.rr.,...~~. Ho ~ 1f'lrlot, 1~"'1•1tlot1•, ""totltl mtlMT' ., .. ~l ........ 11 ..... "' ""' .,. ·~ WljflOul 1111(191 Pt<· ll'lluJtofl " ...... i.tit --. --stt9N ttm """"' ..... " c.. .-... '-l!liwrtl&. ~-"" Ut'l'ltl ., .. -1111'1'1 11'1' ""tr ~.u tl!OllffllY• mui.""' -...r!Mltlftt tt.U ~. were kllled early today when an Army Jong ordeal with at;aslons and bruises. helicopter crashed during a flight to He was taken to Children's Hospital of evaluate a new nighl vision device, a Orange County in Orange for a precau· base .spokesman said. tionary checkup, patched up, and sent home, to 4856 Rochelle Ave.,.Irvine. The wreck.age of the helicopter was miles north of Muldraugh, Ky., nearly hour• .rter the crart w•• due to return to--Guadalune Fleet tbe base. ~ ~\ A search for the chopper was launched when the ·uHl·H belll'Ppler falled tq return to tht? post's Godman Army Air Field at 12 :35 a.Ill! as scheduled. The base has started an invesllgalion lo determine the cause of the acci<tent, the spokesman said. ' The wreckage was found about two miles north of Muldraugh, Ky., ne'.alry four miles .north of the base airfield'° the base spokesman said. Names of the dead were withheld pend· ing notification of next of kin. Jury Selectio1i Begi11,s in Trial Of Brotherhood Jury sel ection began today in the Orange County Superior Court trial or a """oman accused of pocketing $8,000 in permit fees while she \\'Orked in the Hun- tington Beach city treasurer's ofrice . Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner assign- ed Judge fl.1ark Soden to take the bench in the trial or Pauline Frances Tolson, 55, of 15391 F'lorence Ci rcle, Huntington Beaeh. Mrs. Tolson was indicted by the Grand Jury last February on charges of grand theft and destruction of public records. She has pleaded innocent to all charges. It is alleged lhal she accepted fees paid by applicants for building permits but did 1101 deposit the funds with the city treasurer. Charges ol destroying public records were added when it "'as further alleged that she took home a number t1f files while on sick leave and ''later returned thern with many or the documents removed. Picks, Up Wind, Heads for Home The Guad.alupe Island yacht race fleet pU:kad up • brisk 15 to !ti-knot northwest breeze TuesdB.y night and were speeding toward the finish at Newport Beach to- day. Bob O'Brien•s 56-foot yawl Spirit out of the California Yacht Club reported a p05ltlon 150 miles from Newport with the prospect of fin ishing by late afternoon Thursday. Close behind with 17& and 180 miles to go were Jack Malllnclcrodt's Newport. 41 Swift and Jack Blbb's Columbia 50 yawl Intermezzo. 1be rest of the fleet was strung out as far back as Guadalupe Island with Whitney Collins' Newporter k e I c h Leprechaun bringing up the rear. Corrected time standings as of 8 a.m. today were: Ocean Racln1 O\iuall: I. Spirit 2. Swift 3. Loco Viente. Class A: I. Spirit 2. Loco Viente 3. Intermezzo. -· Cius B: 1. Swift Z. Decision 3. Tomahawk. PHRF: I. Kismet 2. Matangi :l. Leprechaun. W 01uen to Hold Sale In Fountain Valley 'M\e Fountain Valley Woman's Club \vill hold a rummage and bake sale from 10 a.m. to dusk, Friday, at the Alpha Beta shopping center, Warner Avenue and l\.fagnolia Street. - The club is trying to raise money for its various chari~ble acliyities. Anyone \vho wou1d like to donate Items for the nunmagefllle can phone 96U596, or 847- 7088. Rare Visitors 'Red Crabs Rui11i11g Coast Fislii1ig . .. Their scientific nailie is J>leurOOCQides planipes. Some people call them pelagic red crabs. And they rarely show up on shore. Those three bits of hard data eiplain the presence of millions of red creatures • on San Clemente's beaches this week - anlmalt "'hlch. lnltlally baffled local observers for several da)'S. San Clemente High School Scien ce in- st ru ctor Barrett Reeve said this morning that the data be bas shows that the sinall crabs hnvc washed ashore on frw oc- casions in !he last century along Southern California 's coastline. "Usually they live far out to sea sod primarilf of( S.Ja . Calilomia." Reeve said. ·•aut in this cue we're getting some changes in currents and It's obvious the ( 1 • changes have moved the crabs close lo shore," he added. The animals -JllOlt of them alive when they ftrst wash up -look like a tinr.Jerslon of a Maine lobeter, although their pincers are not as bolky as the Eastern verelon. Reeve said that their presence In In- shore Water1 ha:J Also altected the sporlllshery. 0..p-<e• O.hlng had been extremely spotty earlier Olla 1prlng, but skippers were baffled becau1e the fish were preoent, bat they wwldn't bite. 'llte few that were caught were round stuffed with the crabs. The an8wer was simple: the fish weren't huna:ry. Fl!hlng, OOwever 1 has l rn p r o v e d markedly since the crabe be&an wash ini ashore. ....... ~ .. ? ...... le' • .. ~ft .. ,;;;:_ .q . • ·:: .... P...,idenl Nl>on'• 9.'1ilndultr7 lnceotiw program wlll la-. ~ In' CongJ<D, Sen. Cllflord P. He,.. cl Wyoming predicted In Analieim Tueaday. Hansen, a Ref)llblkao, told the tc\. ~ American A.asocl.-uC:n bf Petroleum ~-. ~• Geologllll.lh>l proopeclf ·01 its p~· · ·,~&t e.re "tatber btea)" malDl)' becallle the 1 , ~ upper band 1n °"'ll'l"'·!s held by a~' rr'ii!i°l that consume, rattier than produce ~~ energy. And representatives of energy-<:00- sumlng states have rteently a.hown little favor for Nixon's proposals to en· courage accelerated oil exploration. The President recommended t a x benefits for oil uptoratlon, removal of price controls on oew natural gas, sup- port of increased offsh-Ote drilling, and other Incentives to increase domestic poduction. • Hansen agreed wlth the recom- mendations but also said, "en· vironmental restrictions, state and local, must be relaxed or stretched out to relieve th e crunch." • Dlll'l'"l>I_, Slttf ..W.. He added that prices for petraiemn products should be allowed to rise, to en- courage research, development and technology in other energy fields. Assistant interior Seaetacy Stephen A. GILBERT SEAL ALR&ADY FEELING EFFECTS OF ENERGY CRISIS · ~bul•'nc9 Oper•tor Gets 'Dear John~ Letter From Oii Firm Wakefield also addressed the oil geologist and said that the department does not i~ tend to wait until the 1979 deadline sug- gested by President Nixon to begin tripl- ing the amount of oil leasing in the outer continental shell. Coast Ambulance Firm He said federal leasing of up to three million acres a Year for offahore oil drill- ing is expected to begin in 1974. Areas of ·specific exploration interest, said Wakefield, will be Lower Cook Inlet and Bristol Bay in Alaska, Southern California beyond the restricted area of the Santa Barbara Channel and in deep water off the Gulf of Mexico. ·Facing Gasoline .Shortage 1 . ~ Seal's Ambulance. which serves Costa local gas stations," Seal said. "lt will · Mesa, Newport BeaCh, Huntington Beach cost more, but that isn't what worries us .. and Fountain Valley, faces a shortage of Ii's the availability that scares us." \ gasoline over the next few months. Seal .said the California Ambulance . AtlanUC-Richfield · (ARCOl • .which .sup--Service AssociatiQO bas been asked to _ Co1rn Rejects plies Seal's "'Ith bulk gasoline, has an-study the problerrl:- nounced. it will cut the ambulance service _ ''\Ve're app8feiitly one or the first am-; amount to 84. perc.ent of the bulk used for bulance companies hit with Utis. We don't Sewer Project Rerouting Plea the corresponding months in 1972. think emergency services ought to be ra-. "We're already past last year's use," Honed ." Seal added. j Gilbert Seal, owner of the ambulance ARCO is one of the first oil etimpanies service, said TUesday. "Last July we add· lo launch voluntary gas rationing. In a ed service to the Long Beach Veterans letter to Seal's, ARCO said it would soon : Hospital which nearly doubled our limit all branded and u n b r anded • A' plea by the Westmiruiter City Council Cor court approva l of a rerouting that would take a controversial 96-inch SJ:wer line away Crom five area schools was re- jected Tuesday by an Orange County Superior Court judge . gasoline consumption."· distributors to 70 percent or their normal In May, 1m, Seal's bought 1,357 gasoline orders. , gallons from ARCO. Last month, Seal's 'I'Qe gas ration affects the six western 1 bought 2,$10 gallons. states. Ar<:o said it was qioving to volun- The company bas its own 1,000 gallon tarily m~ the request ,of ,U.S. Deputy ' " tank at Its headquarters, 533 Center SL, Secretary of the Treasury William Co9ta Mesa. ARCO keeps the tank full at Simon. · · ) ' a reduced cost of 29.1 cents per gallon tot On May 10, 1973, Simon askld the half premium, 1'11 regular. petroleum lndUstry to Launch ~ "I guess w&'ll flave to start filling up at to carefully anocate petroleum product! whe~ necfsa8ry. Judge Robert P. Kneeland granted lhe writ demanded by Orange County Sanita- tion District ~o. 3 in_ actioo which ap- proves the district's sele<:tioo of Route B -Bo Isa A venue to Rondeau Street via Newland, Hoover, GoJd~ West S\reet, Matn. Street and Westfnlri,stes; Avenue. ARCQ 'Indicated lt• sUpply demands - chaD1t! n1onth-t1>-montb, so lhe iiles , percentige to Seals and otHer companjes . may alsO change month-to-month. Frot11 Page 1 The dty's lawyers l!hSuc<etolully uk· ed that Route C be chosen. 1t was a plan basically the same as the district's choice with the exception that would take SCARE ... the line away from five Main ~t • "And in-the meantime let's import that · schoob. MiddJe East crude with tankers, let's get "' Seal said he has notlfied j:iti~ covered, by his ambulance service to be careful · aOOut sending the seven ambulances oul on needlesa calls. It was pointed out by the city that con-out the shale oil, and let's get over to the struction of the line will involve the crea-nuclear." lion of a 40-foot ditch near the schools Witb all lhe domestic "easy oil'' "Sometimes we waste a lot of gas on a call which Lsn't needed, but the cities forget to tell us," be said. and will also involve other heavy con-already extracted Lewis predicted -that structiOh work which could be dangerous costs of pulling atf of the remaining bar-M Off "'h" to children in the area. rels out or the earth will Increase utineers '!J t-p Judge Kneeland also rejected a request slgnirJcanUy. by city lawyers that they be allowed to This means that Americans will have SAN DIEGO (AP) -A. Greek oil file a writ in opposition to the sanitation to pay CODJideraQly more for their fuels, tanker 'l'uesday night left San Diego 1 district's action. The decisloo is seen as including gasoline, a commodity which ls harbor for Panama, leaving behind 14 clearing lbe way for cooatruction to already so short in supply the oil com-Hondwan crewmen including one who begin. panies are no longer advertising it. was sllot in the leg by the ship's captain. ~~~~:==~======~~' • •• " ~ ,0!':~ 538 CENTER STREET-COST A MESA 646-1919 ~uL;m~ I ~:..;.;;-.Dll..,ck .. Fee•tNiFi..;,ns-u.$-.6.•95111to_,S ... 10""'.95 ... ..,.....,......, .. Biiiase•ba•D-Mi;.;1tts-Ba~;.;,ts,;_.;;;;;.;..i i "· • Speedo Swimsuits & Trunks Balls-ShoeH:olored Sleeves Laguna Swihl Tnmks-$5.95. & $6.95 Life Guard Swim Trunks-$4.95 Wonder Board Kick Boards-$4.95 Warm , U~ Sults-$21.95 to $34.95 . . KIS~W'""A .. _,A,,_,_~,C .... E-....... ~,, ...... .,. ... bd!&IS!! . ,. Champion HandbaD Gloves Racquetball Racquets Table Tennis Paddles & Sets W"~son-llunlop-Pem Tennis Bans WilsolHancroft-Dunlop Rackets Badminton Rackets SquaSll Rackets OPEH 9 TO 6--CLOSED SUHllAYS. • • Shoes-Sanitary Ho$e Adidas-Tretam-Converse • lfk Purcen Tennis Shoes Tennis Dresses Tennis Shirts & Shorts ______ ....., __________ _ lfalelgb Bikes- Parts-Tires-Tubes Repairing • Racket Stringilg 538 CEHTER-6~191 ~- • • I I I. I I I • ·• I I I ' I " . ' H DAILY PllOT nor VCI Loses Wall Street Tycoon Hit For Funding Jt111ster11 Additive · Dear Pat: On Sunday ~::·~'P•:llt\~ there was a television p~ titled, "The Time Being," on Channel 4. It was about hypoglycemia and wlli-v~Ff-in- teresting. The narrator wastSayU\g tbat "One cau.se of hypoglycemli ii a com- mon food additive ... " and tlien ~ .. :Was: cut <Xf by a commercial. No 1D9fe-'!WBS said on the subject. I would ~to know the name of the roOd ad(!iU~e zm4 why the narrator was interrupted. B.M., FOWJtaln VaDey 4'Plafn sugar" WU: tile n:st of sentence, attordiJJg to a t1lannel 4 apQkesman, who added tbat many other vlewers _bfid con-. tacted the •station to ,lnqulre about the mysterious food lllldltive., A fault)' qn;n· puter was blamed foi the untimely com· merclal that cut off t.he oanator. Dated Newspapers Olll'Y Pii.t staff l"IMN UCI DEAN SCHNEIDERMAN rs "EXTRAORDINARIUS' Alumni President Mrs. Souleles Presents Delap Artwork DEAR PAT :1 Many times fn the past I'.ve noticed a~s for newspapers printed on the day of a person's birth. As luck would have It, now that I'd like to order one of these dated newspa~rs as a g.ift for my grandfather's 7otb birthday, I can't find any advertisements. Can you help? - L.B., Newport lkach 1>1ifed-af.w11paper ~PY from tbe·1ront page of the New York Herald Tlibune for ••Y date from Jan. 1, ltoo through Dec. 31, 19'4 ii available for $1.50 post-paid from Holiday GU ta, Dept. 46'-P, Wheat RJdge, Colo. 80033. ~C Irvine Gives Highest _Honors t°-I 7 Rec!J>!el!ts The Presle11 Tickets DEAR PAT: I'd appreciate some in- formation regarding the prices of tickets to the Elvis Presley concerts March 23, 24 in Anaheim. When I called the Convention Center box office I was told the ~ighest Jlljced ticl<All was 110, I had hoped for front row seats on the arena floor because I bought the tickets early, but I ended up in the loge. people sitting around me all bad hoped for. better seats too and had bought their 09kets early. Then ,I was told that tickets for fr'r.t.row seats co6t $16. If this is true, I .dpn t think it's fair' to QlisinConn those of us who wou1d have been willing to pay a higher price to have a chance at the good seats. Can you flnd out if the $16 figure is right. and if so, why so many of us weren't told-? E.B., Costa .Me1a ne top priced tickets available from tbe Anabelm. Convenllon Center bor: of· rtce were $19, accordlog to Wllllam Palethorpe. as1h:tant manager. No ticketa at more tllan Sit face value were prhlUd. He said all dcket1 wen sold in the order they were recetved bY mail wltll those on tbe arena Ooor being sold lint He ti.Id that those selling tickets for Sii aplect must haYe been ticket broken -"scalpers" -who used ptvate names ln malling ln for ticket orders. Those $11 tic'5eh rre1•mabty wett for $10 seats, some~ wbl~ were ii the arena Ott som• 'In ibe ~ PaletbOrpe 1ahl no tkt.ets ,Were lol4 throogb tbe .... des. PaletliOrpe 18~ that thole Who wrote la first ~got l front seats and that be 11 wtlllng ·to cbec the Oles u to when your letter was ,...,1,ed. I i !Hall Check 111 .DEAR PAT: Each year I purchase a California State Park day use permlt with my personal check. Today •. ! was told at the Huntington Beach State Park that they will not accept a check, as they must make good on any returned checks. I want to know if one park can make its own rules and why a ranger would be held responsible if a check is written to the state. D.E., Hwatlngton Beach Your persooal cheek will be ~pted if you ' mall It to Hun~ Beach S&ate Park, P .0. Bo1 C, dil'iilington Beach nut. State Park Ranger Lawrence Mo«e aald ·tbat l!9uJng a permit at tH lime a personal check Is accepted caa pnve to be a problem If &be check ls la&er dl1bonored. stale pollcj requlret tbe canceUatton of park prlvtlege1 In the CJSf! of a dishonored check. U you prefer to receive your permit directly from the C11lfornla Dtpattment of Parks and Recreation, mall your check to P.O. Box 231t, Sacramento MIU. Ellsberg Staying lnDC's Watergate WASHINGTON (AP) -Now Daniel "i3isberg is sleeping In the! Watergate; ' It was disclosures 8rlsing out of the Watergate investigation that led to last week's dl!mlssal of charges against Ellsberg, who leaked the Pentagon papers to the press. Tuesdiy night, Ellsbcrg and his \f1fe new to Washington so he could testlfY to a congr~sslonal committee about govern- ment secrecy. 'lllly IJ!lMt the nlcJ>l. ill U..Wet.ergat.e 1lotel. , UC Irvine 3nd its alumni association presented their highest awards of tPe year Tuesday night to 17 members of the faculty, staff, student body and com· munity. Professor H o w a r d Schneidennan received the alumnl's highest honor - the extraordinarius award -for his role as dean of the UCI School of Biological Sciences. Both Mr. and Mrs. Robei"t N. Weed of Newport Beach were recipients or the highest award glven armuany by the University, the Citation of -Merit. The university citatioas followed the presentation of several scholarships from the alumni to students including the first annual Patrick McNulty M e .m o r i a 1 Scholarship Award of $300. The grant. honoring the late UCJ Extension writing instructor and form er foreign cor- respondent for the Associated Press. was given to JeaheUe L. EberhArdy, a sophomore in comparative culture, from Anaheim. Dr, Schneiderman's award capped the presentation of awards to the campus community recognizing service to the univenlty, t!) the community, outstand- ing accomplidl.ment and distinguished tUcbing and research by faculty. Alumni Association President Adreana 9:iuleles, herself a winner of the 1973 alumni university service award . presented the T.ony DeLap original lithograph ·' ' hot a r i n ' ' and "ex- traordinarlus" plaque to D e a n Schneiderman. Copies or the Det.ap original went to other alumni designees. Jn presenting the Citations of ~terit ~.· Mr. and Mrs. Weed, UCI Chancellor Daniel G, Aldrich, Jr., cited Mrs. Weed's service to UC! ~'fown and Gown as a member of its botrd and ns a past presi- dent. Aldrich also noted her service on the Orani;e County Grand Jury anct the U.CI FoundaUon as well. . In what Dr. AJcfrich said wa a "un\que" situatioo, the UCI chancellor presented a second Citation of hileril to Weed, who is publisher of lhe Orange Coast Dally Pilot. Weed is president of the Friends or UCI, Aldrich said , adding this year's recipent is in a "unique position to be of greater service to the campus and bas both reportorially and e<Utorially pro- vided support for our campus. "Particularly in the past six months,"' Aldrich said, "this man's newspaper has done more to assist us in bringini to this campus a teaching hospital than any other media." 9""> Laguna Beach author Leland J. Cooley , You Can,'t Brig DA's Office ~ request by the federally fund· ed Orange County Intelligence Unit of the District Attorney 's office to purchase a surveillance receiver system at a cost ol $6,700 was ap- proved by the Board o( Supervisor.!! Tuesday. But before voting a p p r o v a 1 Supervhor R:alpb Diedrich or Fullerton, a Democrat, lboUgbt It was amustng that the Federal govenunent . would provide funds for "anU·bugaioc" equipment. The request ~1plained that the in- tellla:ence unit found It nectssary to holfl, closed meetings on vital sub· feet's In the law enforcement field and that the survelll11nce receiver ryslem is U3ed to detec:t any hidden microphones or other' bugging de ' -- ) , emceed the evening and read the cita· tions accompanying awards to other faculty, staff and students in the Airporter Jon fete. \Vinners in other categories are: DistJnguished Faculty Teaching: Dr. Nelson Pike of 5outh Laguna, professor and chainnan or the department of philosophy. He was cited r o r · "consistently being singled out by students and faculty alike as an excellent instructor." Dl!tlnguiabed Faculty R e s e a r c b : Dr. Alexei Maradudin of Newport Beach, professor of physics and chalnnan of the UCl faculty senate. A charter member o[ the fi:,aulty, ,l)e h:i!\tJ>Ublisbed ,mort than 140 ~e~1arcll jial>",1•· 70' of fll'I'~' stnce coming. to 11C1, antf was recogruied for his conribution to UCI's reputation in theoretical solid state physics. Top awards to students went to : Jack DICtmann of Irvine, who was named outstanding athlete of the year recognizing his participation in UCI 's water polo championship t e a m s . Dic~nn is a senior majoring in psychollgy. Tom DeLapp of Irvine. named outstan· ding senior student of the year, for his "excellent achievement academically and his participation in university services and activities." DeLapp is pre&i· dent of Associated Students of UCI, was vice president and chairman of the 11tu· dent senate, is married, and has worked his way Lhtougb college working in an ai:ea supermarket, the citation noted. Lynn Ha111phreys of Corona del Mar was dest'StlJ'ted outstandingo.graduate stu- dent of the year, for her "high level oC academic achlevemenl and university service." Mrs. Humphreys, a graduate student in physics, mother of two and con· s.istenlly _graded among the top five per- cent of her class, has presented numerous theoretical papers in this cow.. try and abroad . She is working toward a doctorate in physics having earned a master's degree at ue1 this year. By category, the following are the re- cipients of university service awards : Staff: Doris M. Nelson, graduate division administrative analyst. and Helen I. Greening, ti1esa Court residence hall manager. Faculty: Fine Arts Dean Clayton L. Garrison. professor of drama and resi· dent oC Laguna Beach. ' Student: Laureen Kay Edwards or lluntington Beach, humanities senior in classical civilir.ation. Alumni: Alwnni Association President Adreana Souleles of Newport Beach. By Category the following are winners ol community service awaGC!.s : Staff: Clifton L. Miller, director of UCI physical planning ·and di::velopmcnt. Miller is a longtime Tustin COW?cilman and former tnayor. Faculty: Dr. Robert L. Newcomb , lee· turer in social sciences and resident of Corona de! Mar~ Newcomb coaches the UCI vGlleyball team and was recognized for his counseling serv1cea to prl!on in· mates seeking educational opportunllits. Student: Kurt SniPt\'I of Corona de\ l\1ar . a senior majoring in biological sciences cited for hi! off-campus project.I including developmcrit of an education motivaUon program at Santa Ana fligh School. . Alumnus: Dr. Steve'n Feinbera; o! El Toro re<..'Ogfl1t.ed for his part In the crea- tJon of the Vetano ,Phtce well baby clinic and development of a Sj)nnlsb language class for medi~1 -students and penonncl workillfl-•1-~0rllJlie C4w\IJI Medt..11 Cccter. 'l . Hospital Support Orange County supervisors today declined to support UC Irvine in its bid to retain state health sciences bond funds for construction of an on-campus teaching hospital. Instead, supervisors voted to establish a committee to meet with UCI-Callfomia College of f.1edicine o!ficials and report back to the board by June 5 on whith of "n1any alten1ative proposals" is most ac· ceptable to both the county and the university . The action named Supervisors Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton and Ralph B. Clark of Anaheim to the. study committee. Supervisors told UCI Vice Chancellor L. E. Cox they could not grasp the situa· lion adequately enough to make up their minds today, considering the large nwnber or alternate plans to spend the university bond money. In fact. observers note . the lack or ac. tion by the county leaves the decision n1aking up to state officials. Assemblyman \Villie Brown 's Joint Legislative Committee on Teaching Hospital Siting is expected to recommend to the legislature before June exactly bow and where UCI's $38 million share or a $155.9 millkm state bond i~ue for inedical education is to be spent. The resolution supervisors were asked to support, would have urged.spending of . the money for medical school bltlldings and a teaching hosp\tal on the UCI cam· pus. · Staff fOflhe SaDTfincisco Derrioc.rat who heads t)le study committee and the budget powerful Assembly Ways and Meam Committee have s u g g es t e d several alternatives. One hints the money might be spent in Watts to upgrade another medical school attached to Martin Luther King Hospital there. Another divides the money between UCI and Orange County providing a new 20()..bed teaching hospital on the campus and $7 million of UC bond money for upgrading Orange County M e d i c a l Cente~. · Supervbbr llooald VI. cali]l.r1 ol Newport Beach wondered why the university needed Jhe suppportJf the supervisors "whet\ the vote last November decisively approved the bond issue W'hlch had ratberi t0eclftc ln· structlons concerning thlz 'ut:l IMChlng hospital." Cox said he agreed but the bond issue measure left the decision of where the money was to be spent to the legislature and that the joint legislative committee headed by Assediblyman Brown bad dlf· ferent ideas. Cox said the university is willipg to ac- cept Brown's proposal that $7 million of UCI's share of the bond is.sue be spent In upgrading the Orange County Medical Center. '111e vice chancellor said timing wa11 critical because the state senate ways and means comD'littee which will make the final decision on how much money is allocated to UCI is waiting on the Brown conunittee report which he said should l::? out this week . The uc1~ vice chancellor answered the concern of some supervisors that beds in the medical center would be reduced in number by stating that any upgrading or the center would inevitably lead to a los.s in beds. Tbii.los.s would be balanced by the pro- posed 200 beds at UCt, C.01 aaid. GEM~TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRIES ~"'tW::A..A! CONDENSATION IN WATERPROOF WATCHES A truly waterproof watch, such as those worn by skin divers, SCUBA divers and mariy sailors and aviators, should never show fog ging on the inside crystal sur· face. Because fine watches are manu- factured under carefully controlled conditions of temperature and hu· midity, original moisture content within the case is too low to per· mil presence of fog producing mois· ture. Such fogging is therefore a sure sign that nJoisture is entering the case. Watch parts y,•iJI rust when ex- posed to water. Water also breaks . down the lubricating qualities o! the oils. Even though such watches are ruggedly built and especially protected against moisture entry, they are often subjected to rough us.e, causing such damage as frac- tured crystals. damaged or bent case pipes or crown damage. But the moment your waterproof watch shows crystal fogging, It should be checked by your jewel- er's wattb repairman. LAGUNA SUPERINTENDENT Dr. Don1ld Woodington Laguria Sel.ects Coloradoa11 Top School Official Dr. DonaJd \Vood ington . commissioner of education for Colorado and 25--year educator, Tuesday night was made Laguna Beach superintendent of schools. Unanimous board action employing the 54-yeaf~ld .educator ended the five month search for a new superintendent. Under tenns of a contract hammered out between Dr. Woodington and the board last v•eek, he 'will join the district Sept 1 with a starting annual salary of 132.950. Prior to his full·time stat u s , Woodington will visit the district periodically to begin plann ing for future project!!. His fint visit will begin this weekend and continue lhrough the middle of next week. Tbe first major task facing the new superintendent will be a recommendatloo to the school board for a new business manager to replace Charles A. Hess who departs for a Palm Springs school posi- tion May 25. ~ Applications ¢urrently are " be i n g iecifv,P for the job. W~ton. who now earns $35,000 an· nuaUy aa tbe top man In education in Colorado, said his desire to return to C8llforn1a led him to apply for the Laguna Beach position. "My wife and I desire to come to a communtty where we want to live and sink our roots," said Woodington. "We have always conaidered California'. our home." Prior to being appalnted commis.!ioner of education in the Rocky Mountains state ln 1971, Woodington served a11 an exeeutlve with a recreaUooal and playground equipment firm Jn Bur- lingham. Woodington served as s!,!perlntendent or the Monterey PeMinsula Unified School District from 1965 to 1970: the Inglewood School district from 1962 to 1965, and the Moreland School District, San Jose, from 1957 to 1962. A native or Eau Claire, Wis .. Woodington received his b a c h e I o r s degree from Wisconsio State College and both ma11ters and doctorate degrees from UC Berkeley. NEW YORK (AP) -The fedeV1I government today filed a criminal \ charge against the senior partner tn 'r! \Vall S1reet brokerage firm for allegedly making $48,CKXI in illegal. indirect con-· tributions to Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey'! president ial primary campaign last year .. : The criminal Information filed in U.S. Distriot Court alleged that John L. Loeb,·: ro. of the firm of Loeb Rhoades & Co.;· nlade 15 contributions in the names or · eight persons, mainl y clerical employes · of his firm . 1 U.S. Atton1ey Whitney North Seymour'; charged that at Loeb's urging ttj;:'. employes Wrote checks drawn on tbe1f,1 personal checking accounts to ll dif- ferent campaign committees after Loeb, transferred the $48.000 from hls accoont , to theirs. A spokesman said the filing of the charge stemmed from an investigation begun nearly a year ago by the General Accounting Office and the FBI. Loeb w•s: I accused under the feder'bl election carh.,.. . paign act of 1971. • Last ,.,:eek, fonner Atty. gen. John N. t Mitchell and fonner Co mmerce· · Secretary Maurice H. Stans were .. irr dicted on cha-ees or obstruction or l justice, conspiracy and perjury in cor(· 1 nection with secret campaign con:. tribuUons to the Committee for tbe Re--· ·j election of the President. That indictment charged that Unancle~ . Robert L. Vesco, charged with ""t' · spitacy and obstrucUon of justice, made: I a secret $200,000 cash gift to the. GOP, campaign fund to influence a governm~t .. · probe of his far-flung financial dealings: ' Loeb issued a stat~nent from hs office, saying that there was "no intent on my . part to evade the law. I did not know ill, existence and the full facts were ma~ public at my instance within three weeks after the initial contribuUoo." He said he wrote to the Humphrey committee June I, about 20 daya aftet,. the initial cootrtbution, and "uked them, immediately to rue a statement maklnl, pub® tho !apt that l,1Wubune4 !\If con- tributions and made poutble their COl>- tributlons." .:i The conlmlttee did so aix days before the Callfomto primary , he said. Loeb said h! W8' bel~charged with "the technical , Jllll~t-·~ten. of ~!l proc<dural 11' 1' tll tile bii 1""'1 governing c&mpal' corrtrlbuUons." + Loeb 11 lo ·llO i 'algmi;! May 29. Con-,, viction could bring one year ln prison aodf $1,000 fines on each of the eight counts. Lawmen Destroy :· Marijuana Field . ' -' LAS VEGAS (AP) -Clark County. l!lheriff's depulles have destroyed a marh: juana field of an estimated 1,000 plantl!I jrl , the dense Vegal!I wash area of east Lai Vegas. 1 A team of six dep,.uties drove Into the · region~ Tuesday in two {our-wheel ' vehicles and then proceeded on foot wtl\ .. l . " they located the field, spokesmen said. , One deputy fSld the foliage was so thick they had to crawl ln places. The deputies said they fr ightened two suspects who escaped in the underbrush. - OJC,J[)l §J[J[,\VJEJlt If you have old gold, silve'r and coins, they may be worth a lot more than you think. We will pay you excellent prlces. so sell where you have complete assurance . J.C. .J.,/umphrie3 Je1v<'ler.1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS 27 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION l•11•A"'•''e•rd -Madtr Chtr9• PHONE 54t·l40t • ----~- I • • ----·----·- .. twl.Y f'llOT o Mouthing ff This Month ~OUTH OF THE MONTH' l was ca~~g on in this space only yesterday :Jjiout OU' good Ounge County llol!"d ol • • ..flspervisors and how they were -about to ~nge county policy on firing people ~n, . abruptly. I tripped over my ~writer. ~pattering' along, J was attempting to :iJ,plain that if First Qi.strict Supervisor ;iobby Battin got hi! way, county depart-'. . nt heads would virtually be working on month-t~mooth basis. Somehow, when s got 1.n type, it came out "mouth-to- ici>uth" basis. lncn•dlble. ~.;,..onnally, when columru..15 get done In ~ Ibis kind ol thing, they fly into a pu<- ~rage, start demanding original proors :lid flail about looking for some printer SC typesette) who can be blamed for the ;(Oo-boo. ·~· ,.., . t::r'T\f AFRAID TO DO It. I haven't even •• ;,lcJoked back at my original typing. The E~ is, maybe it was one of those lan &lips and I really did type th-to-mouth. §",.~~ today, .you see. it develops that ~Y Battin did get his way. His fellow nty mipervisors even v o t e d · . nimously for a return to a 3 lo 2 • • ot being eoough-to-iive the boot to fl!partment heads. :;•Battin didn't get his way, however, on f of departmental chiefs at a : erit's notice. The balance of the ! d figured those fellows should still ~ t a notice of being dismissed for cause i.:..r or reason -relating to performance :IQ office. Then the poor chap is entitled ~fl a fair bearing. ··: ·;.;ALL OF THIS accomplished. the fact ;Jtla.t 1 suggested the department chiefs :trPuld be working mouth-to-mouth rather ;fbAn month-to-month actually sounds a little better. Can't you just hear some supervisor now warning a department head? He yells at him, "Give me any more of your mouth and you'll gel a month ... " Or, you can asume If the department chieftain should draw the wrath oI three votes .on the-superviaorial board . .he's going to be living hand-to-mouth in the near future. CLEARLY. MOUfHlNG off is going to be com e an wtpopular pastime for department heads up there around the County Seat. So, mouth or month, whatever kind of basis, I guess it all works out okay. There will, however. be some controls on just how the good supervisors give a department leader the boot. Biittln. in trotting out ·the three votes-and-yau're- oul system, obJected to the dictum that a firing had to be ''for cause." He sug· geit.ed reasons would be enough. And one of those reasons could be 1hat the board "lacked confidence" in the rellow. Cou nly Counsel Adri an Kuyper v.'arned. however, that such lack of confidence had to be in the \\'ay the department head was performing. "But lack of con- fidence because you don't like his haircut. no," the supervisors' attorney declared. THUS IF THE supervisors don't like a department head's haircut. you suspect they're going to have to prove his long hair is falling down into his unsatisfac- tory \\o'ork, or something like that. There is no telling where all this will lead. We may have to come up with a slogan for department heads who fall by the wayside. I'll probably have the best luck if I call !hem "The Mouth of lhe Month." • ' w"""""' ..., 16. I 97l ' . Shylafl Solutimi? ' Engineers sifted hundreds of ideas to solve oveTheat- ing prc>blems in Skylab I. Propooals include (1) Fab- rleatlon of Special balloon which would be inflated to <ut shadow on craft; (2) S...llng off living quar· ters with crew livinJ!:.:,ud ship o.ud working only in telescope , (3) Wrapping huge thermal blanket around 6'11p. . ·Blast Kills 14 at Movie -40\More lJr'Ou~ed at Outside Film • Ul S. Vietnam FrOIJ! wt. s.m ... SA IGON -An exp!Olion has torn through a crowd watching an outdoor movie, killing 14 persons and wounding 10 others. ln an "attack Sai80f1 .. blamed oo Co~unist terrorists. A government spokesman put the toll al 12 civilians and two militiamen dea1 \vith 35 civilians and five militiamen wou nded . TI1e explosion, he sajd, came about 8 p.m. Tuesday when the crowd had gathered to ·watch a movie on a screen set up outdoors at a village 335 miles •tt Goes north of Saigon. The village is about Slh miles west of lhe provincial capital of Tam Ky. 111E E=.o5!0N JVIS de>cribed as the most seriOUJ of 89 Commtinlst cease. fire violations reported by the govern· ment (or the 24-hour period ending at ti a.m. today. In -another incident. 19 Communis! 60ldiers were re!XX'ted killed Tuesday when they attacked a government in- fantry, position in northern Blnh Dinh provinc~ 270 miles north of Saigon. One Beyond_~- 'Deep Tliroat' Ruled Too Explicit BOSTON (AP) -The movie "Deep Throat" has been ruled obscene in a six-page decision by U.S. District Court Judge Frank J . Murray. "In its explictness," [\1urray wrote. "the film goes beyond any film which has been examined by the cour1s and probably beyond anything thus far ex· hibited in public theaters in this country.·· Murray said the movie \vas obscene because "taken as a whole, it appeals to a prurient interest in sex, is patently offensive in that it affronts contempo- rary community standards with respect to description arid representation oI sexual mallers and is utterly without redeeming social va1ue." Nixo11 Wants Commission To Looi{ Into Elections WASHING'J'ON (API -Spurred by '\1atergRle revelatlons, President Nixon asked C-Ongrl"SS today to create a special nonpartisan commission to conduct "a complete re-examination of our system of elections and campaign practices.'' In a special ffiessage, Nixon said "re- cent disclosures of widespread abuses during the presidential campaign of 1972" make refortn an urgent and essen- D41LT P)LOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlivtry of tilt Daily Pilot •S guarilntttd M•nd•v·""aov: 11 ·'"" d• no! II••• •tu• ••INt •Y S:Jt ,,,.,., <•II •nll your •••1 wilt Ito ltrtwthl It ''"· Ctll• •r• "~•n 11nm /:JO~"'· i•lu•ffY •nll S11""fY : If yt11 H flOI •tctl•o 1•11• <tll1 ~, f '·'"· S1turd1y. or I '·"' S11ndoy, <•II ar,d • <•11'11 wUI De 1trew9M Jo '""· CJll• ••t to~en 11ntll it '·"'· Ttltphont~ Mtll Or••tt Co"MJ il•••• . Hff'tll'•UI H••llntltn ltlCft •nf Wt1l'"lnalor S•n Clt'"tnlt, Ctpl1t<tno l1fcll, S•ft Jw•n (JpiolroM, Oon1 '•Int, Sour~ L1111no, Lfl""' Hltlltl • S4t.UH tial priority ite1n to help "restore the f:Jith of the American people in the in- tegrity of their political processes." While not on~ ment.ioning the word Watergate in hi~message or in a com· panion address prepart!d for radio broad· cast, Nixon said many more disclosu~s of 1972 campaign misdeeds "will ·doubtless soon be made." The President submitted a proposed joint resolution that \\.'OU.Id create a 17- member Nonpartisan c:ommi&a;ion on Election Reform that would be called on to submit a final report by Dec. 1. ·THE cor.u.n~ION'S mandate would be as broad as the federal election proc- ess itself." ·Nixon said. "Nothing would be excluded." Nixon specifically urged that lhe com· missioo consider the wisdom of a COO· stltulional amendment that would limit a presi~ent to a single six-year term and double !he tenure of House members to toor years. While ex.pressing no personal opinion on presidential tenure, Nlxon said, '·Personally, I have long favored the four-year term for members of the HouS<!, with half of the members elected every two years ... govemmonl soldier was reporte4 killed in the attack. IN SAIGON TODAY, the Viet Cong dtlentlro W..t!>e twc>party Joint Military Commlssion boycotted a s c h e d u I e d meeting of ~ subcommisson on war prtsoners. It said the Sooth Vietnamese government. did not provide it with enough gasoline to get to the meeting. In Phnom Penh, cambodia's new government of "independence, neutrality and peace" took olf.ice today with a pledge to strengthen the fight against the C.Ommunists. New Communist successes were "if and there was unusually heavy U.S. activity aloqg the Mekong River. 4 • --M~itary,_._ said Amerioan;>I._ destroyed a large Communist motor vessel and a big sampan in Mekong River air strikes while other U.S. fighter. bombers struck Communist ground units threatening the southern town of Kam- pol. In other developments: ~American officials ·have contacted Communist Pathet Lao over put few weeks in efforts to obtain infonnatlon on mis.5ing American servicemen in Laos. -South Vietnamese troops attacked a Communist force before dawn today near the central roast, killing 49 men and cap- turing more than 100 weapons. Three Tourists Shot Visiting Victoria Falls SAWSBURV, Rhodesia (UPI) -Zam- bian troops iiii:ng across the Vlctoriai F&.lls gorge into wbite-ruJed Rmd.esia killed two Canadian girls today and se- riously wounded an American. The American was Identified as John Crothers, 31, of Troy, Ohio, and the Canad.Jans as Christine Louise Sinclair, 20. of Guelph, Ont., arid Marion ldwna llo'ijbe,, 19, o( Rockwood, Ont. The Canadian External Affairs !;>epart· ment said in Ottawa it had received in- formation that both girb bad been killed in the shooting. It said Miss SincWr was killed instantly and MjSJ Drijber was hit by gunshot and lell Into the Zambesi River which forms the Zambian- Rhodesian border. It said dragging operations have begun, but her body tw not been recovered yet RELATIVES IN Ohio said O-Others and his wife were making a year·long round-the-world trip with a party of elght or nine. They left the United .states on April 1. • Rhodesia immediately prOtested the in- cident. A fonnal note said it "protests in the strongest terms. at this in-. discriminate k~lli.ng and maiming of in- nocent people." Ohio Valley Has Frost The spokesman said the incident oc- curred Tuesday afternoon near the roar· ing waterfall discovered by missionary explorer Davjd Llvlngstone and named ror Britain'a Qu een Victoria -a !ipec· tacul8r waterfall wider and twice u high as Njagra Falls. Storms War1ii1igs Go Te1nperoturea HllJ'I ttw "'· All:llnY )] 3' ''i All1nr1 ,, ;JI llollon ~ •e 11111110 .'il j} ,. . 6~ •$ • ~5 I• ~' •l ~S •I l'i •'i 't. ~~ :~ " . '' SJ .~ " .. "' ,, <I OJ •I '" n 01 JI Ptu! /, •l " ·~ \1 '' IS I! Ii •I '°' i1 jl w " .. " ~ " H ~ I I !~ tl ?: 11 " .. ·" " " •• -U'I WI All4ft 10 10( iUI. M1•r1• In 5outhorn C•lllor n11, -..It~ 01 ~:~".;:,~d~~l!no;r I" IP\f' (liq ll1•r Lt fl.• Tllll N•!lo•11! Wtt1111r $ t r v I t ' O•M IC11 Wf'nv •fl•rnOOfl In tke Lo• Ano•••• .,., t11rvug91 fl>v•'6fv. wl!h ~~:"11'" 111.f ml(l·10\ ,.,.AO•Y'I Moli Up for Lake Superior TllE SPOKF.SMAN said shots whizzing across the falls gorge killed one Cana- dfan girl tourist instanUy. A second girl was hit and twnbled into the Zambesi River's fourth gorge, be said. ....... Mostrv wnny fod1y. l lghl ¥••!11\11 w tl'l(l1 nlg~t 1nd mornlno 11ou .. bee""' lroO "'"ltrlr ID to IJ kl\0!1 In t"'r· nooi'll ltlclt'f Ind lhurlldty. Hlflh IOCllW "PP9' '°'· Co.11•1 ""'~'"',.' rtno• 1rom u ro U . '"''nd ""'"''•'"''' .. "Qt lr-Jl le n. Walt!' fM1per11vrt 61, "We have irrerutable proof that Zam· bian troops and not 1.ambian•based guer· rillas were responsible for the attack," the Rhodesian spokesman said. The of· ficial protest,. note repeated this state- ment. ''The government or Rhodesia informs the government of Zambia of lts deepest concern at this deliberate and flagrant \'iolation bf human rights Mj1 protests in the strongest terms at t bis in- dlse<lmlnate killing and maiming ol in· nocent people," the Rhodesian statement said. Steel Prices Hiked Sun, /tfoon. Tide• Pl'rI'SBURGK IUPI) -National Steel WIONISOAY torp, and Inland Steel Company Tuesday sf(,,.,,, 1.i"' 11 11! o.m. s.a announced price increases of S8 to $1.2 St(ond '°"' ·· ·· a:oo p,m. 1·' per ton on 8hect and str1p steel products, T1ur1:so.t.v Jolnlni seven major producers whJch "1ru Pt1g91 • • ioiu • "'· a.J bOOSted ..Mees slnce last week. U.S. Slee! l"lrtt low , •rt• 1 "'· .f,1 --.,.(' ~ n , N SM.Otld 111111 .. . .... '1" "·"" 4' Core.·1.. u1e nauon s 0.-f producer was >e.cond ·-,.,, om •• n t t in . -~ • s~n 1ttM11 5,0 •. m. sti. 1:$3'°""· rs o Cf'tll.Se pnces on .,.oq;t and .strip MOOfl IUMI 1:,, I) m. hf• J·I) .. m. steel. t t'1 • • Chanee~ ' ' Lands •• in ' DENVER.(UPI) -. An extcnlooiJl.wbo thrul<ned to dlamtqrate • 747 fWTlbo Jet WTYlni:m petsoow to Totyo llllltas he tted.•ed ·1311.000. forced airline o(,_ ficial.o to divert the plane to Qenv.r-i.- dsy with the '-the -rtimlst WU blul!q. '!be lllOllyl1IOllO caller, wbo tele.........,• hiJ thttllt lo alrllne omcer. lo ,.._ Portland, Ore., said a preuurizod .bomb WU hid- den in the middle ol tiie lll%Urious Nol'lhwest..Airlinto Jet IJl4.Jl wouJd..m; plode il the plane delcoocled below 7.1¥/t feet. "Mexioo City bad the cloeest ail'llOrt above 7,000 feet," an aJrll.ne sp0kWnan said. "But the plane didn't have the fuel to fly that far. We had tO take a chance and JM.It her down in Denver." J ·' DI env.er 11IE PLANE I.ANDED at staple!M International Airport at u, 15 p.m. PDT. The 103 p&ssengerB and 2 2 crewmemben deplaned thro!lill the regular exits and were-bustled lo seculi· ly slatlons where they were questlooed by the FBI. 'lbeir luggsge "'81 rushed to a makeshlll bomb dispoW' un1l and searched. "'IT SEEMED LIKE we ·,,..ere three' or [our hours intq, the Oight when the cap- tain told ua about the change," said one . woman from New York 1IPhoae hUlband and four children were on their way to 1 . ' Japanese vacation. ·~re waa no In· dlcaUon before that ·we. were in' any klrid Federal-and city bomb esperta.oombed the plape and at the end of a two-OOur search pronounced It clean_ of trwble, ·.:_ _ · . ' The possen~-,.«e--.tire<L~. .--and~~lr~-- ritated by thei rsion, the questioning by the FBI t ordeal ol having to eo The pa.s&engers were taken in three buses to various city hotels. The plane, Northwest's Flight 'l, was to leave again for Tokyo. l"'- The flight originated in New York ... Jts final United States stop was in Seattle and it left the Washington . city oo schedule. It was flying over Anchorage, Alaska. when the pilot, capt. John Den- man of Seattle, learned of the bbmb threat. through cus s again. They were very reluctant to taJ about the experlc,nce .. "I just trus ed in the ,good Lord to bring me home 'and he did," one elderly woman said. ~ . All but tWo the pa.Ssengers spent. the night in hotels as gueSts of Uie airliries. Two Japanese aliens who Were being depornd spent be night in the city jail. ' Escaped Co11v1ct~ilunted In Farm Family layings- REYNOLDSVILLE, Ga. (AP) Authorities today pressed a search for three escaped convicts wan~ for ques- tioning in the slayings of six members oI a rural family. • Sheriff Dan white ot Seminole· County said the five men killed were shot in tbe back of the head from ooe to aeven limes each, and the lone woman victim was raped and tortured before she was killed. "You just couldn't imagine a woman going through as much torture as she had," the sheriff said. HE SAID DEPU11ES were con· centrating their efforts on finding a car IS.I.ACS DUHO•IE believed stolen by the murderers. The Georgia Department or Investigation disclosed today ballistics tests revealed the murderers were arm- ed with at least four different guns -.22· caliber, .32-caliber, .38-caliber and .380- caliber weapons. Department d i r e c l o r William • Beardsley, co en ting on the search for the three e aped ConVlcts, s a fd , "There's no po in looking for auY~Y else. The circumstantial evfdeocl is overpow~ring." 1 He said • persons have beea ~d \\'ho can~ give, some description 1b4t will help In the investigation. . , , Police identified the SU&J>eCls aS 'Carl Isaacs Jr., 19; George Duhgee, 35; :and Wayne C. Coleman, 26, all of B.iltunore, Md. THE ESCAPEES had ·1bttatened earlier they would "kill any policeman who triea to stop us for any re¥Qn." · Police theorize that five male' members of the Alday family were gunned-down in a nightmarish sequence aa theyTetUmed one by one from a corn field. Later, the·nude body of the wife of one or the victims was found in a field six miles away. Authorities ~d she had beert raped and shot to deat'h. • The victims were identified as ~year old Ned Alday; his sons Jerrj 35 Chester, 32, aod Jimmy,. 25; his brOthe; Aubrey, 57; and Jerry's wife, Mary;25. "They were as good a fol.ks as tbey come, and they didn't drijik beer wine or whisky," said Sheriff White ... They were church·going and hard.worJdng." , The five Alday 'rn&n were folllld early Tuesday lying face dowp in • beer can- liltered house trailer,. each shot in Uie back or the head. M'~ AJdl:Y's body was found several hour! later. She had been shot in the back of the head and in a shoulder. • American Team Scales Nepal's f!lt. J)ha_u~g\ri ;, I ~ •, KATMANDU, Nepal_ IAP) -Dr. Louili. "'This is a..tfnle cl i'OllJ~~and Reichardt, the American cllrnber whjS gtl:at s:adDess'.rtr' al~ ~il''wbe'U·~ou saved hi~self from an avplanche on Mt,. llnd ·perlaniJ ffiend1 la tri>uble.'' -;; Dhaulagiri four years tigo by diving Jnd> ·'· -. · 'Y ' • •, -----------;-• 801111> CritfcsGnila " ( 9: WASffiNGTON (UPI)-'l'lleiiiimfni1tra· IN SHORT... tion fried to b!JY time for ll•'fodochina "----------• pollct"" today-u bipartloan ~ to the bombinf ol Cambodia' · -/q 'un- a snowbank, has led a tliree-man leim precedented proportions. • · , .. · · to the summit ol the peak, the American Senate RepublJcan leadel'I Pi~~ed)or exPedition reported today. restraint lollowlng Tueoday's .:lf>lo o_>1ote John iloskelly, ~. of Spokane. W h., in the ApProprlatlons Cclhmltt~ to cut and a Nepalese Sherpa guide n&n)ed off funds for the bm1bing on the' eto or Shamden accompanied Reichardt to the renewed pegce negotiations In Parli. 26,750-foot summit Saturda,. · • A <adio message said the men hoisted • lf119e Profits Told, ,J, the Americ8n and Nepal~ flap during WASllJNGTON (AP) -Sen. WAJ!am 40 minutes on top of Dhflu~ri, the Proxmire claimS mo-e than 100 tk!fehse workJ's sixth 1ellest mounlaln.' tt was contrM:tors have made profits o{f the the third time the mountain had been l'"enlagoonani!JlJI from 50 lo 560 P."""'I. scnk-d. !Related 111...Y. Page 9.) ,, •Nixon Cites Deeds One .contractor. bo said. reiUziol a profit ol l ,902 portent, based on.lfie tir1n" WASHINGTON (AP) -Presldenl Nix· net worth. • 1 '" 's partner at a state ~IJ\!O~ him · ' u saY1n1 blltory would llhow'lilS ljrefsn • Crash KUb ~I . allnlrs accompllshmenti •""rtlladoW RO!l.AND PATEN'!', N.T. !AP) Watergate. Maj. Gtn. James L. Prloe, ~l, command- Nixon + described as a relaxed host er ol !be 21st Air Dlvl•k>n aod the 21st at a White Il4Ule dinner Tuetday night North American Air Defense Command - for Em~r Halle Selmie ol EthloPia -region at Hancock Air Force Bue near commenfea n. mfel'l"C.8. M&-lon;--~~-i-- wlfe of tl)il; smtaly-.1 th" Interior. day· whl!o-the Ftfl6.llgblel'lntercq>1or.~ Mn. ~Morton quoted Ntx:on as Aying was flying crashed near here . \ ' • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' Sur ers ' Surfera in HuntlngteD :ould like the city to eaS6 its sulll!Mr SUJftng r "'°"'· They alto W>Dt a reduction in the price of Padflc Coest Highway parking meten-25 cents per bour. The current surf law uys no surfing from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., June 15 to Sept. 10. This covers the atta from the Bolsa Chica bluff• to Beach Boulevard. All-day surl· Ing Is allowed at the bluH•. Surfers would like lifeguards to use a !lai system, leaving it up to lifeguards when surfers cotild tM1JI:/ enter the water. -Under a fla& l)')ltem, surfers could ride I.be waves when, for whatever reason, the summer swhii \crowd is Slllne. They told ti!• city how such a system does work al'Hehnoa.Beach. • · ;· Their proposal se<1ms worth serious consideration, wbieli. councilmen indica~d lh<!y will give It. It sbould not_ be that difficult -for lifepiards to uoo jud1111tnt and open up surfing opportunities at reasonable times. . ..-.. for reducing the parking price ·to 10 cents an .-. this would bring th<l80 meters in-line wttJi other met.n around tbe ci!y. Meters i'l"e ge""'"'1Jy used to k~ .people from oarlrlng a long time In one area, 6ut !®\tj;"' parking Is the only real uoo along this part of the · way. · -Unilieation· -the Answer • • • lt riow looks as if !Ome ·type of unification within tlle lluntington Bea~h Union High School District may be possible by 1975 -a s!A!p long needed for improving education in weot Orange County. · e •• 1nts along the boundaries or Its own elementary district. That plan, however~ now take a back aut to a new proposal ottered e Hwitln on Beach City (elementary) School . Leaders or the city district suggest that five separate unified districts be established along the boundaries ol. the five elementary districts contained Inside the hl&h ociiool area. Such an idea M5 been offered before, but In the past it met with strong resistance. Why? Because three districts, FoW!Wn Valfey, Ocean View and Wes!min~er. have little assessed va1,u~t19n. '!'hey are poor. · The other two districta, Huntington Beach and Seal Beach, are \VOallhy because Ibey have lucrative oil wells and poMr plants in their nelg!lborbood. No one could find an equitable method of financing education on an equal basis in all five districts. Now, how~ver, the state is moving toward more state financial aid and controlled property tax rates. The apparent change in state attitude has made all districts more receptive to the five-way proposal. It hasn't officially been considered yet, but last week Fountain Valley trustees Indicated they could sup- port a five-way plan. Dr. Ralph Bauer, who serves as a trustee in both the high school and Ocean View districts, said he liked the idea. No one has explored ail the legal questions yet - such as the problem of unifying a district ax smal l as Seal Beach (l,150 students and two schools) or how to equalize ail of the.fmancial exckanges -but the five- . way .)>fan.bas gained 11)0!"<! erelimin2r)> support tlfap any previous.pt(>JloS'alt "' •• • • -- · -Fountain Valley i.lre.dy has proceeded" witli 'efforts to withdraw from !he high school district and unify ' Nearly everyone 1S aware of the· problems lit the over·size.~ school district such as overcrowding, in· ability to pa$ bonds, poor communication. At least it seems everyone is begihning to accept the one possible solution-unification. H 11KEEP YEP, !'>\ONEY. I WANT THAt ROAST SEEF 5A~W1CH~ · 'fheater Buff?· TryT~e . For ·()p~l)ers . (SYDNEY J.HARRI~ A theater buft in Boston suggests. a quiZ about plays and the theater. To nar- row it down, I have selected only 20th century pl"fl: you are to identify them by !he lollowlng de!crlpti<Jm of the set· tlng or ~g scene. Hall rJght is an admirable score:' · l. As the cuckoo ·clock striW a1%, a dot! is tum1n1 clown bedcovers and run- ning bath-water. .!. Oil a coantry road, with one tree In sight, a man sits on a mound, trying to .take off his boot, when he l.s joined by a friend, whom he tells he spent the previous night in a ditch and was beaten up, 3. A· lady representing the Humanity League visits an island factory which maufactures mechanical people desjgn- ed to perlmn menial tasks. 4. A man appears at tile window of the mayor's home in a medjevaJ Brttisb town and inlonm the mayor's tlerk he bu come Jo request his own banging. 5. Four mm -three ln white Ue and tails and ·one tn sweater and bare feet - are danclna: a Moiart minuet with four women in gaudy evening gowns around the Cower-laden coltln of a women they have tilled. 6. In the living-room of a tarmhouse converted into a scbool, a lady is coaclling an apathetic: student In the reading of SbaliespOare, wbile other girls sew and ltui:ly Latm.. • Dear ._Gloomy Gus Yes, teachers are fighting for a "cost of living"· salary increase. They also fight for school bonds Jo build schools. · H. R. S. oie-r °'" a.111111ab -~ w , ........ do "' 11-..t!V ,..... .,.. ....... ., ... _...... S4llll ,_ .., ""' " ............ c.ur '°"· 7. A clergyman is praying and weeping at !he bedside of his daugbter, when a message .arrive,, irom tbe doctor, ·reporting f:l¥l,t be can 'nhd no natural cause for tM cMd's illne.ss:. a. A bar'ker at an amusemenf park on the outsklrts of Budapest is standing at the entrance of a carousel, coaxing customers .to bJy tickets. 9. A .theatrica1 manager and cast are preparing the rebeanal of a play when they are interrupted by a strange family -a father, a mother in mourning, an elder sOn, a st'ep-daugkter, and two children. 10. A valet ushers a man into a draw· ing-room furnished in Second Empire style, and leaves, locking him Jn; the room cootains DO windows or mirrors, the Ugbt cannot be -tiirned oll, and the call bell doesnl wort. ANSWERS: 1. "Peter Pan" by Barrie. 2. "WaJtlng for Godot" by Beckett. 3. "R.U.R." by Capek. c ... The Lady'• Not far Bumlng" by Fry. 5. "The Blacks" by Genet. S. "The Children'• Heur" by Hellman. 7. "1he Crucible" by Miller. 8. "Ullom" by Molnar. 9. "Six Characters in search ol. an Author" by Pirandello. 10. "No Exit" by Sartre. 'Model' Letwrs Used " To Boost Nixon Image ' The C«nmlttae ,to Re-Elect the Prest, dent establlabed a national "letter writing networ~" which coo.t.ltltled even after the elecrtlm to n~ newspapers with letters praising the Pre!ldent and .Jambastlng his crlilca. His conservaUve critics weren't !p8l'ed in the letters-t<>edJtoa c a m pa I g n . ConservaUve columnist William ~kley, for example, annoyed the President by criticizing lbe detente with Communlll China. OUt went a draft, whlcb"fhe 0 let- 1 ter writina network'' was lnvlted to use as a mod~ for bomb&rdtng newspapen. "IdeolCJllcall1 oboeaed, with ri8ld mind and inlllllble allltudes, WUUam Buckley sounds like a polltlcal Elmer Gantry with hi• liiJl!e<m outburm qaiNt the 'Chinese (oorrdlWAl3l) devils,'" tbe let· 1 ter writers were· Instructed to say. "Buckley has no """ble aupportlng I righllst dlctaton, Imm S[Jlll\ lo Greece to Brm!I, but he appears mentally In· '1 capable of recognl%lng that under Mao the llvu of the Cblnese masses have I been greoUy Improved. I "BUCKLEY doesn't aeem, to care that before 1149 the averqe peasant had no house, •lmon no cloth.Ing and nevtr enough food, that he was exploited 1 ruthlesaly And died young. I "Buckley ;.. not offering the , 'conservaUve' view or China , • . What Buckley gives l.11 a rad.ie&J, evangelical I hysteria C<Dt..-ed In the old Manlchaean , theory of aboolute good And evil." -'l'ht wne letter~wntara, who were w- ed to attack ale~ fer his antJ.Mao (JACK ANDERSON) Tu-tung viewr, were al!o lnatmcted to write letters protestlllll the ouster of !he Chiang IW-shek government trom !he United Nations. LEiTKRS TO editors were stimulated on a variety of Issues from the Vietnam War to wage-price control&. T be President's campaign comm l t t et prepared a blast, for eumple, ot Rep. John Ashbrook, the Ohlo conservative, for criticizing the President's fiscal pollcies. The letter writers were urged to pro- test: "How WOllld Mr. Ashbrook malnt.a.ln hlJ desired lboal black Ink? By raising ta1es, or cutting back public employment pl"Ofll"am.s, or ttduclng ,beneats Jo !he unemployed?" AS UTE AS January 25, 1973, long alter the President wu aafaly re-elected, the campaign commlttee Wl!ed the "lette.r wrlUng network". to stimulate mall congratulating the President on the Vletnorn cease-fire. "Let's give him thanlts, PUBlJCLY, in a Letter to the Editor -o( two or three papers!" the letter writers were urged . "And get two or lhrte other people to write, too, There are always lots or voi""9 telling the Prealdent what ·he's dolna 'l!T<llli -let'sc:Onifatutate him for dolng a verybl1 thina-RIGIIT!!!" Med School EnroQ~ts Soaring l)octor Sho~t~e May End by 19.80 WASHINGTON -The prospects are bright that the shortage of physicians, which bas afflicted the country for more than a quarter of a century, will be overcome by 1980. Two key factors are behind the prom Jsing hope of attaining this long-sought objectlve: (1) Record -high enrollment in medi- cal schools as a re- sult of a growing trend among youth of interest in medi- cine. 1bis marked interest includes women, blacks and other ethnic ele- ments. (2) Steady increase in federal un- derwriting of '"'medical schools "and students under the Comprehensive · Health ManPower Training Act. tn 1966 (ROBERT S.AIJ.E~ the federal outlay fot this purpose was $6.6 million; the amowit this fiscal year is $86 million -and is virtually certain to go up further next year. Strikingly revealing of the growing in- terest in medicine among youlh is the 5,000 incl-eese in medical students since 1966. LAST FALL. the 109 medical schools in lhe U.S. enrolled a record 13,500 students -in c.ontrut tO a little more than 8,000 In 1966. By 11175, the toCa1 of enroll ... is expected to soar Jo 15,000. On the basis of these estimates, . the Association of American M e d i c a I Colleges (AAMCJ anticipates that the ----- current shortage of around 50,000 physl· cians will•be eliminated by 1980. Dr. Jolla A. D. Cooper, AAMC presi· dent, attributes the growth of interest in medicine stnong youth mainly to two fac- tors: the feeling that practicing medlclne is a "relevant" way to serve !eDow men and society; a career as a doctor Insures an affiuent lnCome and a well regarded proleaa:ional and social status. This comblnatkln · of Idealistic and prqmaUc factors, Dr. Cooper noted, is strikingly evidenced by the ro11ow1ng staUstic:s: IJl lfl1l, there were two appUCIJ1ts for every medical school opening. Last fall, ibe ra.Uo Was 3·to 1, Alao, 7.1 percent of • this 1'8!:'• f....mnan ciu. 1.s blee\' - three 'times tl)O number Ill 11168. Tho AAMC expects the proportlilo to rise to 12 percent by mi. TODAY, medical ICbools get ap- proximatel:t 48 ptrcent 'of their funds from federal !Ourct!. " This is .m mark!<' contrast to a decade 'or so ago. Then medical schools were financed by foundation ,...ts, private endowments, state and 1 k>cal cm- tribuUons and tuitioo poymolit>. >,,, these traditional revmue ...,,... dwindled and coots _,..j, they """ replaced by steadily _..nng federal subsldl01. In addlUon to dtroct """" to medical -. and 1tudentl -the Comprehenstve Health ¥an power Training Act , the federaJ . ..,._.t bu aiso poured around mt mlDlan Jnto medical school.t In the lonn ¢ reooardl programa and other projectl; Tho govenunent also dlr.ctly helpo medical l!choois lo erpond by gMng them an incentive booua for each 5 per-- cent lncrea!e In the ~ clla - pl"' 11,000 for each graduated plzy1ldan. Spoilers Haunt tlie Natur,e Trail To the Editor: • Why must a rew slobs ruin things for the rest of us? Tbil seuon the bills above Laguna are at their loveliest with white, name, blue, yellow, apricot, maUve, and magenta wildflowers bejeweling tbe green, gray chaparrall Y-y morning the dew st!~ glistened along the trail, partially fog shrouded beyond. A cottontail bound· ed Into the brush, tiny birds billed mer· rily, hawks and n~ens wheeled lilily overhead and quail and mourning doves called from the thlc:kets. THEN just off the tra!I ahead, I noted something had been add~ alnce I last passed there two days. ago ·-a pile of freshly cut Ivy trimmlop. Ah, well, being biodegradable, they "Will, diiappear in a few years. A few hundred yards further oo, I came upon exhibit numbet two, roughly four square feet of charred, yellowish plastic foam. Scattered along the next few hun- dred feet were: a blue plastic inside car door panel cover, a green enameUed tray, twq more pieces of foam -one larger and Me smaller than the tlnt - an empty beer can and a chocolate milk carton. Yuk! . MAY tuOSE asaorted llel111 nlurn to haunt the perpetraton(a) of tllil outrage and may he waken from b1s dreamt each n!lht sweating In fear of choking to death Oii them. NAME wmDIElJ) AgU.t · To the Editor: The egregious Jetter of May 11 by Ellubeth H. Powell leaves me aghast. r have never seen a more cra53, cynical, and faithless vlew of our country and Its poliUcal baaes. To say that politics Is a dirty bustness, that politics will destroy personal integrity, that protestations of integrity will be adversely used is quite Quotes ADM T. H. MOORER, USN, Cbmo., Jttnt Cldef1 of Staff, in S.F. talk - "Military forces and weapons are not the cause of confrontation; confrontation Is ci&used by conflJct of naliona! interests. 1be real key to world peace Is not disarmament per ae, but the peaceful reoo1ut1ro tbrou< ne..itations of <U-l confikillng int.ere1ts.'f"--= • MAILBOX Letters from reader1 are toe&come. NQrmally writer1 ahould convey tMir measages in 300 word! or ltss. The right to condeme lttter1 to fit ipace or elimi'nate libel ts reserved. All letters must incl'tldl signature and mailing address, but names may be withheld on request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry toill not be published. amazing (if possibly momentarily true) but this is only a moment in history. Ms. Powell wants the revelations ot corruption be buried! Then,. of all l.hJn~. she suggests an assassin's bullet as an alternate solution. Good Lord ! CANNOT a person like Ibis try to give the beneDt,of the doubt to many 'honest (although human) people in tbe political world until they prove themselves dishonest? I feel that Ms. Powell ls parroUng a "conspiratorial thesis" of our history since WW II. Sure, crook,, or wrongdoers I n Washington etc., must be nailed to tbe Wicks 'ftitlCS. 71rr('m from Agnew,,. but they're dcklng/' • wall, but by due legal proc:e .... No &rJU· ment. However, in the Jong run, have we not faith that our form of government will and can try Jo do the best for the major- ity? R.C. HADDEN Memorial Conttrt To the Editor: A special thanks to all your readen for their fine support ol. the Leenerts Memorial Benefit Concert held at Orange Coast College on Sunday, May 6. U any of your reader. still dellre-lo contribute to the aupPo,rt of Nancy Leenerts and her family, they may do oo by sending dona- tions to Paul Cox. Fine Arta Division, Orani• Cooat COiiege. PAUL COX, Fine Arta Division Chairman (Mrs. Leenerti ii the widow of El- 11Wr Leeneru, who lo3t hi.I life in a Costa Mesa induatriat explosion las' month. -Ed.J End the Aptltlllf To !he Editor: Followtng World War R many zealo\ls Americans warned that the Oammunllfl woold attack And defeat '!'· r We a~vea to ,tbe teeth. ' The Communists &lid In wenoe, •1Don1t bother, wewUl takeyo,,i over~ within," bot we did not believe them. CONSIW!R the following evenls: The.re Ms been a breakdown ol the Slncilty of the home. There ha1 been a breakdown of tho very loundati-Oos laid bf our founding fathers. There b3ll been a breakdown of the religious establiahmtnts, p r I v a t e enterprise, private ownership, ~ grapfly abounds, etc., etc. Ma)ot steps have been la.ken to cause the <lefamatlon of our honored FBI, ann· ed forces, police establlshmeots, labor unions and other eatablishme.Dta that have helped to make our country great. HONORING the dishonored, draft dodgers, murderers, rioters, syndicated crime, etc .. etc . The infiltration into r e 11 g I o u s orgen!Uitions, schools, and other b8slc foundations and organizations that have mode us • greit pe~e loving nation with compa.t1k>n fer our fellow rnan. And now come• the final coup de 1race! Tho distrust of the vtry balls of our eovernment, challenging the <ndibiUty I of the supreme Court and the ~ I of ~ UnJted States. • And now alas, the office of the Prell· dent of die Unlted Statea. . The.Ir boast appears to have been fulfilled. It is now up to UJ feUOw citizem: to end the apotl\Y and to judg• aod uphold all that we bold dear to m without hysteria or undue ell\Otioo alld to stand up to our problems as we always have in the peat and Jo IDl!ke our judgments with great thoughllulnesl and being completely just and keep oor country !he best pi-to . live ·for ounelv~. our c h 11 d re n , grandd!lldren and other. to follow. EORGE D. BUCX:OLA Fe~ Vp To the Editor: The tlrmlnatlon of the EllsberrtrJal is a pervertlon of our system of sovem- ment and freedom. In what other country would a man who deliberately stole I o v e r n me n t secrets be turned loose to make In- credible charge& and wreak further damage ' Jn a natkib o~dtned wllh the peqy ante lntlcl Of tome auper 1 ualoua tlilbordinatea! r , Persoo"1Y, i ani led up "1111 the lloniz·I Ing of EllaL>erg, It ls a illame that a peraoo with bl& lntelladual talents hai I not been able Jo put u..til to more • balanced uae. • I LYMAN Si F.,\ULKNER ~~~~~~~~~ .... ~~~' ........ -?.. DAILY PI LOT Jlobm N. WCfd, Plib!lalWI' T,,.,,... Kt..U, Edltol' • ,', Barbero Krtf~ "! EdJtorlal Pag• Edflor """ <dltorlal ...... ol ""' Dal!> Pilot ·&ttkl to Inform and stlmul.IJ:• JUdtn by prnentitw Oii thla Ne diVttM •~entary'°"-klPics Of:~ lft'Ht by s)'ndkattd colum.nllts and cartoanllta, by ~ a forum for ttadas' vlewa 8w:I by praentl1¥ thla; newape,ptt's opl:nkm-and 'kltu an current topics. nw edttoriil oplnJom ol the-Dally Piiot.,,..... ooJy ..... editorial column at tt\t' 10p ol the JJqt. Opinklm expr"tt9td b)' the \'d. umntsti arid Cllt"tOOnbta and letter wrlttra •re ~lr own and no~ ment o( 'tMir views by U.. DaiJ11 Pilot 1hould be W'fl'Nd. Wednesday, May 16, 1973 • • I . I· . i • . j • r ·- SACRAMEN'l'OCAP.l -'Ille fint. A11embl y ~ p6t llollll>eql blD lO win '""" JOrlty luPport fr~m ~ ol both parties Is beaded for a -wn floor vote, promising to end two years of bitter portJsan struggle in the lower boule. One GOP leader called Ille plan "perhaJ>I the worst ger- rymander Ill the b!stor}' ol this . Qate," but RepubUcanl voted H Tuesday lo support the COIDjll'Olllbt plan when it comes up for a floor vote 'llnnlay. 'Jbe bill would ·wipe out seats of !hr.e incumbent Democnill, but It would still leave Democrat& with a •7-33 Assembly majority, bad<era said. • League rrouhle SACRAMENTO (AP) -'!"he 'Senate Judiciary Committee hits sJ~oo S.2 approval to a bill requiring the execution of anyone convicted or murder· tog a po)ice officer. The vote U'uesday advanced the b!ll, l>y Seo. H. L. Ridlardson (II-Arcadia ),_ to the Senate Ooor. If it passes that br:>lwe, it sWI faces strong oppclOlilon ln the Assembly . CALIFORNIA Mother Lode Gold Fever Hits Again Plan Endorsed • LO('IG BEACH (IJPIT-The city government, squeezed by the gasoline· shortage, has an option not available to many others: do-it·yourself gasoline. In this oil rich city the mu- nicipal government has its own ~-oil reserv..es. ·- / the leading source of petro- leum in California for more than 50 years ," said City tl1an- ager John ?i.1ansell. Steamer Set -"· For Saili11g SS Catalina. known ·to hun- The city has been buy.ing its ~soline Crom major oil com- panies but so far haS' been UTI-, able to get any company to bid on the contract for 1.5 million gallons i"tneeds for the comirig year. The oil companies say that Great White ' Ste a mer, \vith the shortage coming, th ey resumes its £amed run to don't want to be tied to such Avalon on Catalina Island june big contracts. So the City Council Tuesda y 16 after being idle more than a LOS ANGELES (AP) _ unanimously approved a reso-year because of a labor "IT'S (BUSINESS) improved Gov. Ronald Reagan's tax lution to seek a company to dispute. to the point where we've had to limitation initiative has gained refine the city's own oil re-Jack Stanaland, owner of1,,,,= ' MON. THRU FRI. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 7 P:M. SUNDAYS 11 A.M. to 5 P .M. , - ,JtdnHdaJ', Me 10. 1'713 . ~ TO MAKE· ROOM ·FOR NEW SUMMER GOODS. • •Pants •Sweaters •tops •Skirts •Swimsuits •Blazers ~Vests •Skirt Sets •Dresses •Pant Sets •.. LONG .& SHORT ·.•Blouses •Hof Pant Sets . JPJ CALlFORNIA', .. '1C ... II FASHION FAC.TORY OUTLETS -·----~-. __ HUNTIN.GTQN I EAC"' •' .. .,~ .... ~. GARDEN GROVE 13199 •RoOltHURST t Block South of G•rd•n GroY• Bl vd. ARCADIA 29 W. Lai T1.1n•1 Or. MONTCLAIR 9586 HAMILTON . ·LA HABRA 2 Blocks West ' of Brookhurst IEWLOWll 920-4 Alondr• l.IDONDO llACH 1364 SO. IUCLID ALPHA BETA IMPERIAL CENTEk I Bllt. So. of lmperl•I Hwv. LOS ANGlLIS 3135 s.n hrn•!ldo R.d. tum away some work," said the endorsement of the United serves to get the gasoline need-the stearn-powed vessel,· said Fiedler, whooe two-man firm Organizations of Taxpayers ed to keep its poiice cars and Tuesday the ship was able to manufactures and re t 8 i 1 5 Inc. Howard Jarvis, the other mtmicipal vehicles rurr go back into service because K •m i •k T A k And SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -custom dredges. ''We're run-group's chairman, to Id ning. of an agreement reached with l l e 0 S . y Paul Marls Co. movOO \n San ning 25 percent above 11orr1~:1l newsmtn that the propoSaL "It Is especially ironic that eight uhions which allows a 1 '· • " .' , , . • Sult 'Flied ' Fi-ancisco Superior Court and if we could'handle all that "Witt do more than anything no oil company would supply ~work force rtdactlon 'trOm 64. ~ . l . Tuesday to sue the firm's came in *e•d be 5() ipetCent we 've seen to return control to ~ t;:i\Y,of l..ong ~ch wttQ.. .. ,_t_o_4_s. _____ · ------------------------~,.·~~------.;;.,._ former pra\dent., Paul Marts, _abov_-_e_." _________ th_e_peo:_;_Pl_e_. " _______ -C'.gc:as::..:::•i::nrell:mg Beach·haS beent • ,, and other fonner executives ,- for damages in excess of $10 m:illkm , a ll e ging acts detrimental to the company. Marif, who was replaced as president April 19, previously sued for damages against board chainnan Milton D. Stewart, who is president of Creative Capital Corp., the major stockholder in Paul Maris Co. • Te.uher Jalleil SANTA CRUZ (AP ) -A San Jose City C:Ollege teacher will be arraigned Wednesday on charges of embezzling $15,000 from a crippled children's camp. Leslie R. Scheidt, 35, of San- ta Crui, a health education in- structor at the college, v.•as charged with two counts of grand theft, deputies said. The Santa aara County district at· torney's office said Scheidt pocketed paychecks meant for students working at rthe Easter Seal Society Camp. Sears 0 these days, when everythinc's getting giant and complicated, we're 1till 1mall enough to know who you are•• Coron" d.J M11: 2744 E. Co•1t Hwv. Plioo•: (7t-4) 644.7255 Assets just barely over $300 mUl/on • Hugh Evins, Jr., President --~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-! Make Time Stand Still ... portraits are forever! • 49* Each Portrait With One Subject is all you pay for a . big 8x10 color portrait adults • No age l1m1t • children • l ifll ited to One Portra'it per Subject, Two Portraits per Family • babies • Additional Prints Available at Reasonable Pr ices no extra charge for handling and delivery 99c• extra for each addi tional person in portrait •Plus Sales Tax . .. .. ~.OURS: Daily 12 noon to 8:00 p,m. Saturday 9:3 0 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Sunday 12 noon to 4:00 p.m. · . 1 . Now throogh Sunday, May 20 at the following Sears Stores ~s·ea rs TORRANCE cua11os INGlEWOOD cosrA MESA-DRANQ,._, __ _ _ _ _ PASADENA BUENA PARK GLENDALE LAGUNA HILLS " -•r.A11 .. aos..:CKAfftlto. Sf1.t 'iJCfc1r.tio1i G11ara11teetl tir Yo11,. Mo11.ey Back • ·' , f \ ' I . " ... '· , .... , ,, .. .. • • • • ... '· .. FASHIONJ ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER • Pacific Coast Highway-Between J•mboree and MacArthur • l ' , • 7 , ' -• • • ' • • • ' I • I • ' • ' I . ·• • VOL ~·-1'10. 136, 8 S~TIPNS, 110 PAGES - ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' - WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1973 N . • -~ . • . -• : -• ' •• -.-• . TEN CENTS !~attin . Requests New Studies for Upper Bay . , I , , B1.J,!.CK BROBACK Of .. Dll~ f'llef ttftf Finl District .SU · r 0-•~ Battin '-~ '":"!"'' . oJ SanO\ Ana IUC<ON<O in milddying the water.s of the,Upper Newport Bay a bit mol'ff"' Tu!sd~ ,by proposing a list of stodle(~lll!R' •to flood waters, salt irater ltitrtlsl9)> ·and high Ude effect on Ille three islailds in the estuary. r--The·tJpper;;-tf'ewpori .Bay devetopment into a ~in8tion wildlife preserve and . . .•. ' recreation area bu been thoroughly studied by a so-called field committee o( federal, state and loc;aJ officials. As U.S. lnterkir Department e1ecutive Webster Otis told the Board of Supervisors last week, 11ll facets of !be future developnient are being covered, But Battin thought the county ·l'lood Control District•• chief en~ sbbuld be brought intn-the-plcture. " " Battln's request for Studies covers .- much ground ~Y subjected to con- siderable study by v~1 ag~es. He Wllltl Oood coQP'ol to ildetermtne public easements over flood plain land between MacArtln~ Boulevard an4 the lidelands of the Upper Bay.'' When sucb a detei'mlnation is made, the supervisor said, board members could then decide -!her ·-~era will be channeled in the area ot 8llowed t - . , to no\v in their natural state as in other parts ol !he county. Battin also wants flood control t o detennine if dredging of the Up~r Bay channel to a depth neces.sary lo ac- commodate the proposed UC Irvine row- ing course would pennit salt water in- trusion of the underground water basin. He didn't state what the board should • do if such was fouod to be true. The supervlsor U>eo / posed a third sludy. • "The c~engineer ol lhe llOod control district should further' determ.lne the ex- istence of public eaaemeou for the free flow of water over the topl at the three islands i.o the Upper' Bly ·and if no such euements)or ~ free now of water ex· ist, to -what e1tent could . the i!!lands be . filled to block the now of water without . . creating such a rate of flow in the re-· malning. channel that marine and plant life on county tktelands wou1d be damag· ed and the base of cliffs eroded away," he requested . . Battin's overlapping proposals were approved by other board members \\'ithout rom~nt . The nood control chi~r eng inee,r.i! to make the studies and report back to the bo~rd "as soon as ,possible."' . , . . . Nixon Okay-ed · WirefapS WASlllNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon persona1ly .authorized F .B I wiretaps on telephones cJf more than a ~ mem~rs of hil National Security Council stafi in 1969 in an e~o.:t to traclc. down news leaks, the White House acknowledged today. A preoidential spckesman d,elended Nixon's .action orr gnim¢1· ol "national se<:urity'" one dai affer 8. iop CIA of· ficial was said to have testified that three top White House, aides tried to in-: volve the Central Intelligence Agency in a coyeru2 of the Watergale ~dal . The wiretaps apparently were"" installed following a published report aOO:ut ~ !>IOVIE STARS STILL BACK NIXO~age 19 bombers attacking targets inside Carn· bOdia in 1969 and" other reports relating to U.S.-SOviet talks on limiting strfl;tegic arnu. -The White House had been described at the time As concerned about leaks tb n\..wsmen or corifidentlal -matetia1 on OOth subjects. . • "It was, a nCltional secyrity ma~_." a White House spokesman said today of pres.identlal Jipproval of the wiretaps, first reported by the New York Times.· . "Tile procedure ·was approved by the President and a1,1thorlzed. ln Individual cases by the attorney general in coordination wfth the director or the -. " Federal Bureau or Investigation," the spokesman suid. A'cting· · FBI · Director · \Vllliam D. Ruckelshaus aaid l!·londay that records found in a safe. lit lhe office of former · Whltf' Housliide'John D. Elirltchman ih- . dicated taps had been placed on tbe telopbones of · 17 individuals, includlni four reporters. . He ~d the taps were authorized after presidential adviser 41enry A. Kissinger (See WIRETAP.S, Page ZJ =-.Citizens Vow - City Battle On Downzone SEC Chairman ·Resigns---· Positwn Vnder C,wud Brisk Bre~~ Speeds Boats To Newport : Marguerite Marsaudon (left) was Miss Mermaid at last year's Costa Mes;>-Newjiort Harbor Lions Club Fisb Fry in Coota Mesa. Jeannette Frills (center) and Cindy l>ellusha, both.of Costa Mesa, are candlllates for Ute 1973 ·trown. Unmarried girl\.ovet' 16 ~ho are interested in /\7Ying· for the beauty title should contact Dr. Bernard Simon, 540- 1171. Deadline for entries-is May 30. Fish Fry will be in June. ~~~e~-~.~ -~!~~i:-,~~~a~~~ (Jn '3rip.pled .!Space .Home ' : •' ..:. ' _, ij@US'.ro~·'1(1J1'1) -Soaring. lei!'··, Q~le for sending three aslf<!nl1Jls · to ~111;,,;·~r rendered Sky~' l Skylab, ' ·- uitlnhab!t8 · d engineel's began !!:sis __ ~-.aid it was "marginal'' whether ol1a iunSha · M"be e~ ·by~lif¥ tlie~pµ equl-nt could be readied crew in •lll\\~f!ort to save ·Amerioa's ~cheCked out by that tlrnO. 1~e ·HaliOO'. .. -1~We'll liunch them on.~ Swiday or .,¥Ugbt ~or Chuok Lewis sai8 the -~· ------------astronaul! ,,-now at the Houston space SKYLAB TROUBLES SHOWN- center -probably would be called on lo lll ustr•t ion Page 4 ~ an unprecedented re P'3'i r ~walk .to set up the jury-rigged sUDsbade. · ' ~.lS said the space agency Still is · b:jiihg to ~eel tilproposed Sunday·taunth another five daYs taler," he said, e:t- plaining-that the second launch , op- ·pqQ_ttnlty 'COUld not come sooner because Of, t»• -btbiting station's path through spa~ 270 milt!$ from earth.· Coast ··~" \ .. ''"e ' ~' ·~. The ~::·will ' peek out of ·the · tlouds· a IJttle earlier M Thuniday., \Willi mos~y sunn~ skies after the morning 6um off, Hjgh$ ol a, de-, -1Pt itJlhe beac~ .rising to 75 •il\111hd. ~ght low! in the 50s. • ·"'J'fe space agency reporiect' at Cape Kenne<ly, meanwhile, that the ; Depart- 11\0Dl of De!ense ha. provided hlgh- rdolillion photographs o! the cr}ppled sfi&ce station to aid engineers in flndi.ng ways to sa>Qe the craft. A spokesman JJaid neJther the high1y classified pictures nor a description of their contents WoUld·.'be ~ inade pUblic. At the Marshall Space Flight Center in (See SKYLAB, PKge %) ·-PILOT AD PRO VES T HE CAT'S MEOW One highly satisfied customer. who used Daily Pilot ~classified advertising COIWMI .._..rully said slle not only Jound homes !or five 'klltel!s in on0 .4,ay, l>/l "met some nice people, too.'' Here's ttie !isling that did the job : FREE ltltlenJ, mixed colora, 9 weeks, cute, playful. (Phone No.> Jt could just be that you could be oon-- vioced a Daily Pilot ad ls the "cat's me-~-ow.u Give ff a try .. 11ie direct line to r.- .W!s ls 14W6'18. ByJOHNµuE!l ot ...... ~ .... Newport~-; led,~a -cl~ -·~ . ~ .. •. ;'fl)b the city -""'' l At ...._ ... .:UooW i!iee'"'"' - . . an uo.r.~. ~. nig!\t, tl!!.-Cl!'!l!~ ~-lot continUing to ~· ·for strlUltD£ ..... tii'1'D" zoning Jl!<8IUlOI ·111 the _Balboa·NOW119rt . Penlnsullf: '~· • . to ;Elaine ·Linball, hlterim ~ ,ibe-QD!t. · , •. "II lookt ~ ell and planDi.,g commitsion are / willing to let all the downzoolng p~s go by .the . way· side," she 'saii:I. · · "That's bad news. Density on the pen· insula I! alread h!g!quld -tl!ore mu!t-1>0 measures taken to coofrol it," she said. Mrs. !Jnhof! said r0presealallvt1 of her group wool!! appear 'lllursday night at a meeting of the city Planning Como mission to, preient tbe..NRU polltion on dO\lllfOllinl~a-cu would be made It city counat QiHitii>p in an elfort to revive official interest in dOW!"JOOinl. Tfie so-called doWhf40ing • measurtt were inU!ndeil lo IjJDlt density bo the penin81.lla. .. After more than a _year of studY, bow· ever, ~eii indicated last week that down~ing property .Oil the penin- sula might burl the area more . than it woold help. ' _ · The council's decision was made after landowners from the area said the pro- posals wootd unfairly interfere with their property rights because tliif would be f~ to build smaller unit.s on their lot!: "The people .opposing down1.oning ·~ (See CITIZENS, Pq e l l .so.'' Coot, named SEC chairman by Nixon only a fe~ months-ago, has ~n criticiz· ed for his handling of a report of a cash e<inltibutiOn to tile" lllxon IW12 campaign by Robert L. Vesco, who his been under lnv&1tigat1m' by the SEc. · CoOk tuined 38 TbursdaY a{1il W•• one of the ~est chairmen in history of tbi>«SEC. He testifted UU. week at a cloled-door heiirlng-Wore a Sli!ate <Olnriiittie on tbe Vesco matter. 1be--118ture of the testimony was Dot disclosed. Cook's resignation is certain to affect Wall Stnei In view of the.Iact be has been at the forefront of inoves to reform the country's securities markets to create a single central market system. A federal grand jury in New York alleged that Cook yielded t.o pressure from Nixon cam~ign fund raiser J\.laurice Stans by deleting mention of a large cash donation from Vesco from an SEC suit against Vesco, a New York financier. II has been alleged tbat a $200,000 con- tribution from Veaco was made in secret to the Nlxoo campaign. Job for Hippo ' Lake Eorest Has A lgae Problern By JAN WORTH Of ffli o.lty ""~,,. Is there a foolproof way to control algae ll!td larvae in lak .. , eJpeeially !he rnanrnade variety found In Late Fomt! 1'11ere !Ure Is. Just· ask Ken WR1man, one of Occidental Petroleum Land and Development Company's project direc- tors in Lake Forest. Trouble is, the solution costs $7000. And during the ·n11bt ·it ea!! bushes. And It weighs two tons. And aweels blood. The soluUon7 The mud-lov1ng hlI> popalamul .. w....,..;, sweating a Utt!• blood hlmtelf over a persistent algae and gnat population uploolOO in Occldental'1 37-acre lake'in Late ~oreat1 •. ~ Lion Country Safari in Lacuna HW• had an answer~ . "I was so excited that I jumped rtglit In my c.r and went out tberer Wuman said. · J That WU when Pat Quinn, ZOOloelcal !rector at Lion Country, made lbe hippo ofter. · The j>otfderoai ·animal, • member of the swlite' famlfy,'Uves IO!ely on vqeta· lion 1n the river11t Inhabits in Its na tural atate. Lloo Counuy Safarl'a. II hippos are glyeo other IOocl, bUI macf,.., tbo-alg,. of the-wildlife )it-il'rllb lllOltafl'to toep_IUU11l<t-S!JlllDI.'="-.....:'---:"- .. Fortunately for • Wuman and thf: " • ~ residents of the two-year-old lake. however, Quinn bad'IMther idea . One fish, an ~ African. species called Moalmbica Tilapia, burrows Jnto tlJe mud and devours the larvae which prO.. duce gnats.-, Thou1h the Hsh. is native to Africa·, It is used most often in Southeast Asia, where it Is placed in the watery rice fields . N~ only does it keep the pest problem down, but furnishes farmers with' protein to complement their rice harvest. Alter meeting with County Fi!h and Game offkials, Occidental has obtained pennis1lon to stock their lake with 200 Mossimb&ca Tllapia. The Fish and Game Department ho offered to raise them and provide them free of charge. "W' should have enough to lloet all three lakes In Like Forest," Wuman aald. ho other lakes. of 13 and 7 acres, are oWned by the Lake Forest Com. niunltJ A..oelatkln and are coping with almUar algae and inat problems. "1bl1 11 a never ending problem," Waaman safd. "We've been trying to con· trot It with chemicals but that kills of! some of the llah." A aert,alo amount ol alpe. ls deairable and netdtd i. keep a healthy lake, \'(WM !~ '.Fls!LiiLY!ilb!!lll_ the Ol)&el' thll algae p1'0(fuces . • • ) The Guadalu~ itsland. yacht race neet picked up a brisk 15 to 18-koot northwest breeze Tuelday. nigtit and were speeding toward lhe finish· 11 Newport Beach to- day. · .Bq!> OJ!rloll'illf-£oot ya)! SP!l\l 9Ut 01 the" Calllomla 'Yadtl Club reported • -.pooitinq lii!l,.1Diles !roll) Newport witb tl!e proal"!d of flllisl)illjf by la!e al!enjl16n Thursday. , -! ',. U"T•-M QUITS C HEl.M ·o. Brid rd Cook . , Stmg Death Probed SACRAMENTO (AP) -An autopsy has ~ ordered for today in the death of a 48-year-old fann workl!r believed to have died from a bee sting. Yolo County Coroner's office said Eulalio G, Gonzales lost consclollsness !lhortly after being stwig by a bee MonQay night-and-was dead on An;val at a Wood.land hospital. Close behind with 175 ·and 180 miles to go were Jack M:at,llnckrodt's Newport 41 SWlft and Ja~k'Blbb's Columbia 50 yawl Intermezzo. The rest of the fleet was strung out as far back aa Guadalupe Island witla Whitney Collins' Newporter ketch Leprechaun bringing up the rear. Gorrected· time standings as of II a.m. todt1.y were: Ocean Racing Overall: l. Spirit 2. Swift 3. Loco Vlente. · ' Class A: I. Spirit 2. Loco Vlente 3. Intermezzo. Cla1s 8 : I. Swift 2. Decision 3. Toma~awk . PHltF~ !. Kismet 2. Matangl 3. Leprechaun. Ferry Fire Quelled SAN FRANCISCO (AP l -The Gol~en Gate Fe1Ty was due back in commuter service after damage was repaired from an engine room fire that i.11jured a crewman. Extra buses were called into service on the -San Francisco-Sausalito route after the boat was disablfd Tues· . day morning in the water off Angel Island. i .J • .; r • • > • • • llAll.Y l'ILOT_ # w"'"""''· ,.., 16. im I En er y Crisis~ Mean Cha .. ' ' 81-IWDl~ Of "'9 O.ll'r ,IW St•d ~ will need to riiUe """1ll· cant mid)dments to their 1Hestyles over the next· few year! as a dirtet rnult of the growing energy crisis, oil experts prOOicted in Anahein1 Tuesday . The long Sunday drivf' will be a thing ()( the PQt, autcmatic transmissions an unaffordable luxury. the avei;age car probably will be a t~·o-seater 1hat gets 45 miles per gallon. and "·omen will take up knilling to cat down on the heating bill. 'llllS was the forecast through 1990 • hear<lJ>r Ille WGllM!D'I dfvls1'>a ol the Amerkag AllSOdaUon ol Petrolewn Geologjlq' and the Socl•ty of Economic Pal~ andl(loor1lo1I 111 m .. Unc 11 l!Je P~ u<>!el 1• . • Kellb Dole ''r\<t ~ llf*81!btf and ;.;;omlca for Shell • Oil, lolil lhO gathertng that the United States probably. will nol get an the energy It tequlres ·dur· ing the critical period but that the nation will be "running smoothly again" ln'1.990 if the proper steps are taken. He said a projected doubling of energy COfl!umptloo from 1970 to 1990 means ~ • lltlt !he _-., .atsls wlD i.'' a ~ llttla.,ot lean II 1ear1. • To IOll<n lhe -· ... -- lltlt lhe-. ----. Rmlllalt 11111 i!ie ~ -.r domat!c rf:908l'Clll:" ._ On the conwvaUoo aldo, Doi& lllld, are auch alternatives as producing smaller cars, <kling away wtth gu pUot lighll, slopping ~U<lion al aulomaUc transmissions, increasing the ~ load factor, and improvblg tbe efficiency of industrial plants." And to oave OD domutJc healing and Dem0crat Link Sparked Trial, CGollic bills Doig (ftllldod, "•• moy _, :iur" lo PIJ' !Qr !mllOfled tllJo 1'1111 have to nm the '-bro to three them. "'ci-hotter in tho • ...._. two or _, apeaar, llolpb _L. Lnll Jr. -...... cooler ID lb8 "'4ler -and ·· 'vice preoldonl ol publ1c l"i-lot Cal! por.,. mt -~ ln1lad.'' Oil, -the need for"'""""""""' of SIQoo.t....._..er -.. "" domelllc •'*IY -lo 11Q4· .. ldom uoed to capedty be foroc151 Illa.I depeodenc:y OD (orel«JI D&tloot. f' ", perhaps N many ti hall of the future· fie aald the energy crisb~il now cift ~ vehicles on the road would C811o/ only ftonl ·pages of the newtpfllpera and tbat two -gers but leoture 45 mph thrKt. tho oil lndusby, having ca)llun!I OoliliiC He said if motorists were to continue to attention chould tell its story. in s1D1Plt insist on air conditiontng and automatic tenm and warn America "k'1 time to transmissions, the United 81-tes would stQp fooling arow!d ." "hive to pull oU a Russian wheat deal "~ us get to the business of find1D& Ante Up~ Boys 'Slim' Defends Poker Crown avollablt dacne.llc IOUl'Oel," he ..id. "And lo the memUme lei'• IJnpcrt that Middle Eut crude rib lltDt,u1; )el'.• .. t i oat fllo -oil. IDd lot'• ..-1o Ille • nucleAr.,. ' Willi 111 the cion\eSl1C .. ..,y oU" l1mld1 ulrllcl«I, 1-15 pr..ik:ted that costs of _pulling all of the remaining bar- rell ouf of Ille ell'lh will lncreue alllltlllcantly. 7rh11 means that Amei:lc1111 will have to pay coosJderably more !or their fuel!. Including gasoline, a ~which is already so abort in au the ol\ com- panlea are DO loa&er · . · il. * * .* Oil Industry . ..... ~ays Ellsberg Incentives 'Face Trouble' • ., -.--~ W ~SHINGTON !AP) -Daniel Ells berg ' told a Senate hearing today he believes ha was prosecuted for leaking the Fenta· gon papers not because he violated na- -tional secui-ity but because of possible links to Democratic candidlates. : •·And, said Ells ......... , the strongest ties . ., . . ~. fl!"',·--.\Vould have. been to Sen. Edmund S. • -"Muskie (D-Maine), chainnan of the hear- O•ll, Piiot s 1111 ~llclto -. !ilk Ellsberg said he never met Muskie but that several individuals involved in the massive Pentagon study or U.S. involve- ment in Vietnam advised the Muskie pres- idential campaign. He pointed out that at the time Muskie was the leading contender for the Demo- cratic presidential nomination and was leading President Nixon in some popular- ity polls. Ellsberg iilso noted that E. Howru:d Hunt Jr .• the convicted Watergate con- spirator who was also linked to 'the burg· lary of Ellsberg's {lSYChiatrist's office, \\'as hirl>d b,Y ·the White "ttOuse a week aft.er Ellsberg was indicted. GILBERT. SEAL ALREADY FEELING EFFECTS OF ENERGY CRISIS Ambulance Operator Gets 'Dear John' letter From Oil Firm "The question "'as could J be made into a mudball that \\.'Ould stick to a pres- idential candidate," Ellsberg said. The tooner Pent,gon researcher al- 1egec1 that the operStion was directed by !. ··-a-task force in the Justice Department headed by Robert C. Mardian, assistant attorney general in charge of the internal security division. Coast Ambulance Firm F~cing Gas?line Shortage 1 Ellsberg d~ri_bed for the 11ubcommit- tee the mass.Ive government security system under which more than one billion pages are classified and in which the very na'mes or some classificatioo.1 are See.l 's Ambulance, which serves Costa l\1esa, Newport Beach, Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, faces a sbortage or gasoline over the nex t few months. Atlantic-Richfield (ARCO), which sup- plies Seal's with bulk gasoline. has an · nounced it will cut the ambulanc-e service amount to 84 percenl of the bulk used [or the corresponding months io 1972. "Wc·re alreacly past last yea r's use.'' Gilbert Seal. owner of the nmbulance .service, said Tucsd1iy. "Last July we add- ed service to the Long Beach Veterans llospital "'hich nea rly doubled our gasoline consumption .'' In l\1ay. 1972. Sears bought l.357 gallons from ARCO. Last month, Seal's bought 2,510 gallons. The company has its own 1.000 gallon lank at its headquarters, 533 Center St., Co!ta Mesa. ARCO keeps the tank full at a Teduced cost of 29.1 cents per gallon for half premium, half regular. "I guess we'll have to start filling up at local gas stations," Seal said. "It will cost more, but that isn't what worries us. 1rs the availability that scares us." Seal said the California Ambulance Service Association ·has been asked to study the problem . "\\'e're apparently one of the first am· bulance companies hit \Yith thls. \Ve don't tl)ink emergency services·ought to be ra- tioned ," Seal added . ARCO is one of the first oil CQmpanies 10 launch voluntary gas rationing. In a OU.N&I COAST • DAILY PILOT Tli• 0••1'91 COii! OA1LY P.ILOf, wllfl Wlli(ll It UO'n&"'9d the H•wt.·Ptftl, 11 Pllbllll'lecl l>V "'9 011"119 CO.II P\ll>IW.lng Comp,JllY. S-· r111 .Oii-1 r1 '11bll1!\9d, MO<"Cl•V lfii1W,11 • Frld1y, ,.r CDlll MHI. H-rl B••ch, H11<111"910l'I llHCll/F'Oll!IUlft Vlllly, L•ouoa 6•Ch, lryfnl/51ddl•« Mid S111 ci..,,.n111 &111 JIJll'I C111l1tr1nc1 A 1lnol• t'flllonAI Miiion 11 P\lbl!lhK $1!11rdlY1 eod Swna1y1. Thi prll'l(llMll PllblltMn-g Pllnl It 11 llll W11I l•V 5trMt, CDlll Mtu. C1IUOt'nll, '241•. Robert N. Weed ..... klent INI P11oll1Mor J1c~ R. C11rl1v Ylcl Pr"ld""I Ind Grn1r1I Mtntger Thot1111 K11wll Ea1tor Thom11 "· M11rphin1 Mtntolng EclilOt l . Pitt• Kri19 HtwpOl"I 8tKll en.,. tdllOI H",.,t IMcll OMu ]))) Newport lo1111Y1rd M1!ll119 Adcl.111 ~ P.O. l oJ 1175, 9l66J OtltM Offk• CO.II Mtll: llll Wtll lltY SlfMl l"U11<1I llHch: 1%' Far11I A- lo!Wltll'IQIOll lluc1'; 17$11 BHdl llo\lltvtrd JM Cl-tt; JOJ Hor1h l!I C..mlllO 11 .. 1 Tllap•1M (7141 '4J-4JJI c• • .,.. .. ,_..,....., '4J-s611 CtatTIOM, 1f71. °'Miii' eo.tr f>UC1ll.ri111111 ~. l'ff MW• 1torlft, IU1111rttl0111, tfllorlal -tftor tr ..,vtrl ... l'tlflllll h1r1ln 1n1y .. ~ w!l!'IOll! IPfC!tl 1111 '"'-'..., 'et CIOO'!'.....,I o-, t.fiCOl'llf ca.. .. 11111'!1 Plld ti (OJll MIU, e1u....,_r.. ~-bl' ~rrltr ii.u ....,,11\11<1 ., rNU $1.IJ nwnth1Y1 m11111,.., att.111\0fllnt "·" -"!1¥. t . \ letter to Sea l's, ARCO .said it would SO<l" kept secreL · limit all branded and u n b r a n d eid He noted. that during 12 yeats as a distributors to 70 percent of their norm~l defense researcher he held about a dozen of these super-secret security clearances. gasoli ne orde~s. . "It's only until you have a dozen or more The gas ration affects the six western that you realize there must be st i 11 states. Arco said it ~as moving to vol~ _ ot~er!," fle ~d. . .. tarily meet the request or U.S. Deptny--__..:.:Could 'lt.ere be. clearances the PreSJ.- Secretary of the Treasury William dent doesn't know about? · .. "Of course," Ellsberg said. Simon. He added, however, he doubted there On May 10, 1973, Simon asked the were any. petroleum industry to launch programs Ellsberg testified before a joint sesston lo carefully allocate petroleum ·products of the Senate government operations and "'here necessary. judiciary subcommittees examining . the ARCO indicated its supply demands government's security system. change month-to-month, so the sales percentage to Sea ls and other companies may also change month-to-month. Seal said he has notified cities covered by his ambulance service to be careful about S<'nding the seven ambulances out on needless calls. ··Sometimes i.i.·e waste a lot of gas on a call which isn't needed. but the cities forget to tell us1" he said. Fron• Page 1 CITIZENS ... mainly just the people who own prop- erty.'' i\1rs. t.inhoff charged. ''The ma- jority of the people in this city don't \l'ant to increase the housing density on the peninsula.·• She said that her group included some persons who Jive in the area that would be affected by downzoning. "These arc people interested in the quality of life on the peninsula," she said,."not people interested in making a fast buck by building apartments." · Mrs. Linhoff. who lives on PeninStJla Point , said there \\'ere at least 20 to 25 persons at the meeting Tuesday. She said they were unhappy with the action of the council in failing to take strong actions on the proposed downzoo- ing measures ''becaus, the central pen- insula area is a part of Newport Beach ~hat concerns everyone in the city. not JUSl 1he people Who own property there." ' Anal1eim Boy, 3, Killed by Truck A little Anaheim boy was fatally in- jured Tuesday afternoon when he ap- parently ran into the side or a van driven ~ North Orange County Judicial Distri ct JJJdge Logan Moore Jr. The accident occurred at the In- tersection of Citron and lfall streets, ac· cording to police . Victim or the tragedy was Roberto G. Alvorez , 3, o( 714 llall St., nrar the in· terseeti0rt. No C1lalLon was lS.Sued al the scene. Traffic investigators are still probing the cause of the accldcn! I • Fr'"'° Page 1 SKYLAB ... Huntsvijle, Ala., engineers clad in spacesuits began tests in a large water tank -used to simulate zero-gravity of space -of ways to rig the sunshade. ."This is a very rough, first approach to the problem," a spokesman at the Alabama center said. Another team at the Houston space center, heade<fby Lewis, Vt'Orkedrthrough the night to determine where the emergency repair equipment might be stowed in the Apollo command ship which will carry astronauts Charles "Pete" Conrad, Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz up to Skylab. Reporting on latest Skylab developments in a news con ference at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Lewis said temperatures inside the orbiting workshop (OWS)-wcre well over 100 degrees Fahrenheit, "Internal temps are too high to inhabit the 0\.\'S," he saj,d. "It doesn't mean we wouldn°t want (b"n astr:onaut) to go into the OWS, but it does mean we wouldn't want to use that as our living quarters." Real Hot Stuff At Fire House No nudie ~ancers were arrested at Costa Mesa's notorious Fire House soda pop shop Tuesday but police stiU showed up early in the day. Patrolman Paul Ale1ander screeched to a halt at the embattled former beer bar at IT/ E. 17th St., about 8:30 a.m., for the first police visit of tHe day. Something accidentally triggered the combination fire and barglar alarm at the spot featuring the hottest sbows in town . J\lutiueers Off Ship SAN DIEGO (AP) -A G""k oil tanker ,Tucsd11y night left San Diego harbor for Panama ~a~lng behind 14 Honduran crewmen "iich"ing one who wai; i;hot in the leg by the ship's captaln. LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Amarillo Slim begins d~fense of his ~orld poktr title today against fellow Texans "Tree Tops," "Hook" and "Speedy." They were: among six survivors of a $36,000,. 12-man Kansas ~i!fa ace-to- five lowD.all g'ame that started Monday and continued through Tu y. The finalists are Amarillo Slim Prestoo, Jack "Tree Tops" Straw of Houston, Gorge Barnes of Oklahoma City, Bob VHook" Robe~ of Wlnk, James "Speedy'' Myers of Killeen and Aubrey 0 All Day'.' Bay of Binningbam, Ala . The wiMer will net at least $70,000. · w. c. '"Puggy Wuggy" Pearson, formerly of Nashville, Tenn. but now a Las Vegas resident, has already won $45,000 in contests completed tb1a week. He collected $32,000 in winning the aeven-card stud title and another '17,000 in a "mini-holckm" competilioo. · . Last year's five card stud champion, Bill Boyd of Smackover, Okla., waa unchallenged in his specialty this year. Joe Bernstein of Las Vegas won $21 ,000 in ace to flve:card lowball. The event is being staged at the Horseshoe Club. PresUlent Didn't See Counsel Before Talk ' President Nixon's 'ou industry incentive program will fa.,. troubi. in Congre!s, Sen. Clifford P. Hansen of Wyoming predicted in Anaheim Tuesday. Hansen, a Republican, told the Americln .woa-1100 of Pelrolewn GeolOBIJla that l!fOlll<CIS of 115 passage are "rather bleak" mainly because the upper band in O>ncresa 15 held by states that consume, rather than produce eoerCY. And reprellelltalives of enera~ sumJng states have recently shown Utile favor for Nixon's proposals to en- courage accelerated .oil aploratiOl}- The President recommended t a :i benefits for oU exploration, removal of price controls on new natural gu, sup- port of lnch!ased offshore drilling, and other incentives to increase domestic ' poductlon. WASHINGTON !UPI) -President ·· fole lhey mfght have bad In a Watergate l!olllen •creed ~th the recom- Nixon had not talked to his legal counsel, coverup. mendatlom buL aho ·Mid, "en- John \V. Dean, before he claimed last The 'New York Times ·reported today vtrOnmental restrictions, state and local, summer that an investlgatjon ~Y Dean that the only report given Nli:on on pal--must be relaxed or stretched Out \0. indicated.no Adminis tratioo officials were sible Administration involvement was by relieve the crunch ." involved in the Watergate bugging, the Ehrlichman, and that it was informal and He added that prices for petroleum \Vhitc House said today. oral. products should be allowed to rise, to en-courage re.search, development and Nixon's press secretary,· Ronald L. Ziegler insi&ted today that "the Presi· technology in other enerq fields. Ziegler, said the Pres ident was relying dent calied for an lnvestlgatioo" and that on information from other staff members "the responslbiUty for conducting that in- when be told an Aug. 29 news conf~rence vestigation clearly fell in the coumel's FronaPageJ that "a thorough investigation" by Dean office" occupied by Dean unW he was exonerated all persons then in the rm April 30. WIRETAPS. Administration. he the Ziegler said Dean's report wu never Ziegler declined to identify t o r put in wri•'-• .. , but its contenta were~ • • staff members who reported to Nlx<n or loUJti , to say whether former White HOU8e aides veyed to tbe"President by 0 11!1lior ataff member9." had ,la!kecl wllh J. E<ICar ,JIOO~. )hen FBI director. John D. Ehrlichman and H. R. Haldeman ever talked with the President about any Claire's Cupid Takes a Powder Wealth.f real esta~ Investor MiHon Bren' and hlstwife, acttess·ClatreJl'rev&r, are keeping an eye out lot Cµpid, the t.ilerub of ~. -· · · . • Bren complained to Newport Beach Police Tue:sday that statues of the winged infant holding aloft du.sters of grapes were stolen from the front lawn Of his home at 1000 Westwind Way, overlooking upper Newport Bay. Officer Phil Hahn explained in his $250 grand theft report that Cupids both are purple and depict two of the foor seasons. OPEN ' .. ' Burglar Iii~ PrintingDffice The wirelapa came lo light Jut. -X at the Poo~on Papen trill ID I.Go Arlples. It w ·disclosed that FBI 11eill5 monllbntl' ·-Uoo bJ .~'1 EllsberiYirfiJi ,:1~ ~ atl~ e.theldii, Md. home of Mor!On Halperin, ·a member ol the N~Uonal Security Cl>un- cil staff at the time. . Halperin aald today he war rure 'Kll&-Corona del Mar printer ~ack E .. Styers inger, 88 head of the council, waa aware fowld a woman ~~r .waiting ~ .of .the l"J.retapping. - he arriYed to open up for busineSs Tues-· • "I doo'tJhink there's aey.questioo. that day. he kney,i that my phone was being t~p- . Thei)perafi>r i>f:ilie:.1!11i\W.f.!~234S ~--poctifi,, 7·~:_)lo :f»: ~ E. Coasr-Hig~way •. toid Ne~·Beach =.versations" ·fr~pe~h.?sald:otr·th: police later· that he. waited.. on her, then NBC TV 'I'Odiy Sbow. · found that someone hadn't ·waited on "HE had told me that people in the him. Administration suspe<ted me of leaking A burglar using a shim bad opened tho things. ! assured him that I. had not leak-. ed. any informat100 and he ind1cated. th.at f~ont door during the night and esca~d I waa still under investlgaUon, but never with $700 worth of office equipment m-1ave me any hint that that included eluding the electric typewriter. telephone tapplng." 646-1919 CLOSID SUNDAY buck Feet Fins-$6.95 to $10.95 BasebaD lfitts-Bats Speedo Swimsutts & Trunks BaOs-Shoer-Colored Sleeves Laguna Swim TrunkS:-$5.95 & $6.95 Shoes-SanitarY Hose Life Guard Swim Trunks-$4.95 -Wonder Board Kick Boards-$4.95 Ad'ldas-Tretom-CollY8fSe Warm Up Sutts-$21.95 to $34.95 Jack Purcell Tennis Sh~es """" a I -Tennis Dresses \.)i"Pion HandbaO Gloves · Racquetball Racquets Tennis Shirts & Shorts Table Tennis Paddles & Sets -WilsorHJunlop-Pem Tennis Balls Raleigll Bikes..- Wilsoli-4ancroft-Dunlop Rackets hrts-Tlres-Tubes Badminton Rackets Repairing Squash Rackets Racket Stringing OPEN 9 TO ~LOSED SUNDAYS 538 CENTER-f46-1919 " • • ' ~\ I ... • I \ • ! DAD.Y PILOT -DITOBIAI. 'PAGE I IJownzane ~-Heat Off • • Newpori Jlel<h c:itJ fatlMn Ilnllily have decided arllHnr)' doWnzoniDJ ii "° way ~ conform denmty and population to the city's g..-.1 plan limlts. . City councilmen iast"week llioMd their strong dis- like for d<>wnzoulng In cn>Wded.-. of the city and to_P pllrul!Jlg officials followed Ull by saying downaoning ,.. proba!Jiy a clooed door DOl\' 1hat the council bu taken • otand. What it all meaM is that the general _plan and zoning In the dty won't conform In time to JDMt the June 30 legislative cSeodline toward which all dtles are moving. It also means planllllrs will have to use a Utile more IOPl>lstlcatlon and tnventlvene&!I to niUe th<! NeW)'Ort -of the future what everyone says Ibey want it to be, d dlln The city bas been rushing to meet the ea e. No\\t, apparently, planners are just going to work al 1llftr own speed to do the job ngbt -deadline or no deadline. • •"'l'bo 1a.V:tlurt· a little more thought -and more pratttcil polilicti temporizing -will bav.e to go Into achievement of general plan goals should make the whole °"ration ·more palatable to the peqple who must live with ;i today, though 90me of the goals willthave lo be modified. Newport Needs Voice Plans are In the works for a major ocenle highway at least six lanes wide that would crooocut south Oraq~e · y from Newport Beach to Mission Viejo. Optimistic rters think work will start within a year. 'The scenic route, which would generally run. from the end' ol. San Joaquin Hills Road tbrougb the hills .ot Irvine and connect with Oso Parkway at )!iss;on V1e10, is the product of some imaginative thinking by an Irvin-e architect and several major county landholders. ; out&ide the Newport Beach city limits, the pl1ADero uy Newport Beach can lake it or leaw IL '!'he problem Is, 1'l>O la d<>inJ! the plannlng !or · whom ind who is to ev~ wbetner Newport Beach will bO affected by any aaenion.al \ta!fic the road ....Wd generate! • The route appean deoigned to make access to the relaUvely undeveloped aoutheasWrn area of the county much euier, thus preMDably spurrin~ development In that area for both ~tiOnal and residenuaJ 1<tlvit1 ... But it also would speed tra!flc from the rapldl)"develop. Ing Mission Viejo area to attractions In Newport, In· eluding the Newport Dunes area, Newport Center and the beaches. In sbort, this pl'Ol)OSed county project bas mired benefits, and Newport beach should be brought into the planning considerations from the start and given a fair opportunity to evaluate the effect of such a road on the community. Up to the Commission Despite all advice to the contrarY' from their pro- fessionaf planning staff, Newport Beach city council· men have decided 4 to 3 to do away with Balboa's Fun Zone and replace it with a 33-unit condominium. The landmark ammement park's run~wn condition swayed a number of residents away from it and toward · the JAK Construction Company's condominiums. The emolion.al atmosphere was perfect for the approval after a year of l>attllng. · Most city l'lanners are still convinced the land had viable alternative uses of a commercial nature. They say alJowfiig residential uses in the midst of a commercial zone lis opening the door to unwise spot zoning. The Daily Pilot shares that concern. .. Realistically, the whole project could be put to· gotber with little more than a nod to Newport Beach. ·Since the highway actually woold run from iust · For the time being, the Fun Zone is out of the city's hands. The next step is the South Coast Regional Coastal Conservation Commission established by Prop- osition 20. They must grant a permit before any such development can occur. N •I :i' ·::il, MONt Y. I WANT THAT ROAST SEEF 5ANbWl<H.• 'Theater Buff? Me d School EnroUments Soaring Try T hese For Open2rs Dear Gloomy Gus Doctor Sho~tage May End by 1980 ~YDNEY J.HARBI~ , WASHiNGTON -The prospects are Jf Supervisor Caspers had been bright that the shortage of physicians. representing the people of the which bas afflicted ..the country for more Fifth District by attending the' than a quarter of a century, will be upper Newport Bay Field Com-overcome by 1980. mittee meetings maybe be wouldn't Two key factors are behind the prom · have been dumped from the com· ising hope of attaining this long-sought mittee by fellow board members. objective: A theaterplabulf ind ~tbealon tsuggTests a N. c. E. (I) Record • high quiz about ys an 11i.::-. er. o nar-enrollment In medi-row it down, I have selected ooly 20th 0 1oom' 0v1 C6111MMh .,.. ..-.ilttM .,. cal ··•··Js as a _ id~ .... them ,....,.. ..... Mt -.rilY refttct tM lli'UIUU ,.._-century plays; you are to 1c:nw.J .,.... "' .. ....,.,,. 1en<1 ,._. ""' suit of a growm· g by the fullo~g descriptions· or the set-~ "' •'-"" .., o.or ....... trend amoog youth ting or QPelting scene. Half right is an of interest in medi- admlrable aoore: cine. This marked 1. As the Cuckoo 7. A clergyman ls praying and weeping interest in c I u de s clock strikel six, a . at the bedside ol bis daughter, when a women, blacks and dog is turning down 'measaje arrives from. the doctor. other ethnic ele- bedcovers and ruq-reportln& that he can find no natural ments. ning bath-water. cause ~ me child's l!lnes1. (2) Steady Increase in federal un· 2. On a country a. A barker at an airwsentent park on derwriting of medical schools and ~~· with one tree the outskirts of Budapest is Standing at students under t h e Comprehensive in, sigbmoundt, a rnan.t ~Its the entrance , of .a carousel, coa,xing ....-Health Man'power Training Act. In 1966 on a '· rymg customers to 00.y ticketa. · lo take off his boot. · I and t (ROBERT S.AI,J ,E~ the rederal outlay for this purpose was $6.6 million; the amount this fiscal year is $86 million -and is virtually certain to go up further next year. Strikingly revealing of the growing in- teres-t in medicine among youlh is the S,IXM> increase in medical students since 1968. LAST FALL, the 109 medical schools in the U.S. eoroUed a record 13,500 students -in contra& to a Utile more than a,ooo in 11186. By 1975, the total d. enrollees is expected to 808I' to 15,000. On the basis or -estimates, the Association oi American M e d I c a I Colleges (AAMCJ_ anticipates that the current sliortage or around· 50,000 phy51- cians will be eliminated by 191M>. Or. John A. D. Cooper, AAMC presi- dent, attributes the growth of interest in medicine among youth mainly to two fac- tors : the feeling that practicing medlcine is a "relevant" way to serve fellow men and socl.ety; a career as a doctor insures an affluent income and a well regarded proless!onal and social status. 'Ibis ccmbinaUoo of ldealiotic and pragmaUc facton, Dr. QJoper noted, 1' strllingly evidenced by the following 1to1151ks: l.o 1'70, there were two appUcents for •"'Y medical llChool opening. Last !all. the ratio was 3 to I. ~ 7.1 pemol of this Yf!V'• freolm>on '&a. 1' blaojt -1 tbree tl?l\es the n"'1ber ID 1968. The AAMO eipecl.o the proportion to rise to 12 perceol by 1'75. TODAY, .medtcal IChools get a~ ~. "'="' -- proxlmately ta Percent of lhe!r fllDm from federal sources. nus is in marked contrast to a decade or so ago. Then medical 8chooLs were financed by foundaUon grants, private endowments, state and local coo- trlbuUON and tuition paymmts. As these tradlllonal rtvedlle aoorces dwindled and COOJts soarod, they wen> replaced by stoadlly expanding federal subsidies. In addition to dl.rect grantl to medical schools and students under the ComprelleM!ve Hwth ~ a;.n pow• r TralDlng Aj:I, lhe ledelol ~.has also poured aroWld ma. lUllllon Into medical schools In the I011111 « .-arch pn>(ltamo and other projects. Th& governinent alao directly helps .. medical schools to ·expflld by llvln& them on lnctnilve bonul ,lor ..m 5 per- cenl lncrea.se in ·the lttsbman cllll - pllL' 11,000 for each grsiluated pbyslcian. • .. • when he ls joined by a friend whom he 9. A theatr1ca manager cas are Us b ~ ...., · Qi ht · preparing the rehearsal of a play when t~ e "Y"L'• • ._.... ~VlOUS g m_ a they· are Interrupted by a str.ange family ditcll and was .beaten, up. .• . . .• _ a lather, 'a JllOlher in mourning, an !. A lady ref1ttsenhng the Humatnty -..elder son, r--~v,ghter and two ...: ~ '00.._ts an island ·ftlctory which children. · ' "I: maiiill'&ctrins mecbanll:al people d~· · · dr S~ilers. .. H·au,.t · ~t~~ Nature 'frail .. "" "J-., • ,. ;• . "" .. -":.""-•• •o f .... _ •. 0 • ed to perform men1a1·tasks · 2&.·-A"l'ifle·~hen-a-1M1>Mtto a .a.w-.. , Ing-room furnished· in· Second Empire 4. A ,man appeai;s 11t tbe wmdow of Ufe style, and Je'"aves, !~kink him in; the mayor s house -m a medieval British town room coo ta.ins no windows "or mirrors· , and informs the .mayor'1 clerk be baa the ligbt cannot be turned off, and ~ come to request his own banging. call beU doesn't -t. S. Four rden -three in white tie and tails and me in sweater a'nd b8re feet - · are dancµi, a Mou.rt minuet with rour women 1n gaudy evening gowns around the flo~laden coffin rl. a women ,tbey have killed. 6. In the liring-rooni or a fannbouse converted into a school, a lady is coaching an apathetic student in the reading ol Shakespeare, whlle other girls sew and study Latin. ANSWERS< 1. "Peter Pan" by Barrie. 2. "Waiting far Godol" by Beckett. 3. "R.U.R." by Cape). 4. "The Lady's Not for Bumlng" by rry. S. "The Blacks" by Genet. S. "The Children's Hour" by Hellman. 7. "'Ibe Crucible" by Miller. 8. "l.Jllom" by Molnar. 9. 0 SlI Characters in Search ol an Author" by Pirandello. 10. "No E1lt" by Sartre. 'Mo del' Le tte rsU sed To Boos t Nixon Image The Committee to Re-Elect the Presi· dent estabUlhed a · national "letter writing network" "1Udl continued even after the el«.'tim to flood newspapers with letten prai.slog the President and lambasting bis critics. His conservative critics weren't spared In the letters-to.editors c a m p a l g n . Conservative oolumnlat William Buckley, !or exanttle, annoyed tile Presldeot by criticizing the detonto with Communist China. Out we1W a draft, which )he "let· ter writing network", was invited to use as a mode1 fot bombarding newspapers. .. ~.-..ii, with rllld mlnd · and inflexible attitudes, William Buckley sounds like a political Elmer Gantry with 1 his righteous outbursts against the 'Chinese (communilt) devils,'" the let· ter writers were• Instructed to aay. j "Buckley has no trouble aupportlng rightist dictators. from Spain to Greece to Brazil, but he appears menially · Jn. ca.pa61e ·of ~ that under Meo the lives of the Chinese masses have been greally improved. "BUCKLEY docan't seem to care that btJore 1949 the aveJ"8ie peasant had no house. alll'lOM no clothing and never enou.;h food, that he was exploited ruthlessly and died young. "Buckley i.J not offering the 1 'conservative' view of Oilna ... What Buckley gtves Is a radical, evangelical 1 hysteria centered in tbe -old Manlchaean theory of abooluto good and evil." . 'l1'Je; iame letter writers, who were Mt- ed to alla<t Bucltlay for his anti-Mao • \ Tse-tung views, were also instructed to write letters prot...tlng the ouster or the Chiang Kal--shek governmenl from the United Natioo.s. LE'ITERS ro editors were stimulated on a variety or issues from the Vletnaro War · to · wage-price controls. T h e President's campaign committee propar<d a blast, !or ewnple, al Rep. John Ashbrook, the Ohio cooservative, for criticizing the President's !iscal policies. The letter writers were urged to pro- test: "How would Mr. Ash1:trootl: maintain his desired fUcal black Ink? By ra!Slng taxes, or cuttln~fbeck public employment programs, or reduclng benefits to the Wltlllployed!" AS LATE AS January 25, 1973, long alter the Pmldent wu safely re-elect<CI, the campolgn con.nlttee urged the "letter wrlUng network" to stimulate mall congrntuJating the President on the Vietnam cease-fire. "Let's give him !hanks, P\JllLlCLY, In a Letttr to lhe Editor -ol two or three papers!" the Jetter writers were urged. "And get two or three other people to write, too. There are alw,.ys klls of volcu tell!Dg the President . what he's doing wrong -let's coogratulato him for doing a very big thing -RIGIITll I" \ I • •• ·-:-·'?[1111·1-......... To~; !':~r~ few. slobs ruin things ;o~ ... "( ·. •... ... )-~e~l: ItolUi~~e~~~ep~'to: · de~ ~~~itea~:~· t,o havr bffl} the rest of us? MAILBOX ~ " the market. !ulfiUed. Tb.ls season the hill! above Laguna are The lack of foresight in city planning is It is now up to us fellow cillUIDI to end lo 1 amazing as Is Illustrated by the the apathy and to judge and uphold all at their ve iest ~ith whl,te, flame, blue, mOMtrosity called the Versailles that i5 thaJ. .. we J\qld dear to us wltlp..it h)'lterla yellow, apricot, mauve, and magenta not only ugly but whldt also adds un-or undue emotion and to stand up to our wlldflowen bejeweilng the green, gray Letters from readeri art' welcome. necessaO' congestion to Superior, a problem.a u we always have in the pest chaparnll. Yesterday morning the. dew Normally writt"r1 should convey their primarily industrial accesses road. and to make oor judgments with. -.. t messqges in 300 wordl or lt'11. The 1h-... htlulne ~-still g&tened along the trail, partially right to condense l.etteri to fit apace It is also a well known and accepted ... "'"& u and being completely just fog shrouded be}'ODd. A cottontail bound-or t'limi'nate libel is reserved. All fact that violence and crime Increase aa ahd keep our !country the best place to ed into the brush, tiny bJrcb trilled mer-letters must include signature and populaUon dens tty lncreales. The human live for OW'Mlves, our ch l l d r en , rily, bawb and ravem wheeled laz.ily mailing address, but namt"s mnt• be belng seems to have a natural need for a granddlildren. and others to follow. overhead and quail and mourrung· doves ··~• certain amount of "space." It Is · my GEORGE D. BU~LA withheld on requt"rt if BU/fidnit \A.Al called from the thickets. reason is apparent. Poetry will not be strong reeling that it would be in the best m~ just off the trail ahead', I noted Mmethtng-tiad been adcled-sinee-1-last passed there two days ago -a pile of freshly 1 eut Ivy trimmings. Ah, well, being biodegradable, tlley w1U disappear in a few years. A few hundred yards further on, I came upon exhibit number two, roughly four square feet of charred, yellowish plastic foam. Scattered along the next few hun- dred feet were: a blue plastic inside car door panel cover, a green enamel~ tray, two more pieces of foam -one larger and one smaller than the first - an emptx, beer can and a chocolate milk carton. Yuk! MAY THOSE assorted Items return to-<:> haunt lbe perpetrators(s) of this outrage and may he waken from hl1 dreama each night aweallnt! in !ear o! choking to death on them. NAME WITHHELD A gluut To the Editor : The egregious letter of May 11 by Elilabetb H. Powell leaves me aghast. I have never teen a more crass, cynical, and faJlhJ• view of our country and its political bases. To say that politics Is a dirty bualness, thal pollilcs will destroy peraonal integrity, that protestations of integrity will be adversely used Is quite amazing (If posllbly momentarily true) bul thl& It only a moment In history. Ms. Powel} wants the revelations' ol corruption be borledt Then, of all things, she suggests an assassin's bullet as an alternate aoluUon. Good L«dl CANNOT a person like thi.s try to aive the be.,.ru of the doubt to many honest (although humal\).people in the political world pl\, until they prove themaelve1 d!AMnm? l le<J that Ms. Powell ls parrvtina a • I • • Published. interest of the city to take care ol these problems and dowmone now rather than ·Fed Vp ''conspiratorial since WW II. atl .unU1 the more su!Mtantlal reaidents thesis" or our history or the community find it necessary o To the EdllOr:- relocate and we are left with an The t~tlon of the Ellsberg trial ls Sure, crooks or wrongdoers i n Washington etc., mwt be nailed to the. wall, but by due legal process. No argu- ment. · However, in the loog run, have we not ratlh that our form ot government will and can 1ry to do the best for the major· lty? R.C. Hf.ODEN Down.zone Nf?W J'o the Editoro A recent article in the Dally Ptlot. con- cerning the city council's negative at· titude toward down-ioning on Balboa Island as well as West Newport indicates to me, as a resident and homeowner. just how little understanding the council and planning cornmlssion have of prob- lems in Newport. Indeed, it downzoning were to take place I am sure that prop- erty owners would even further upgrade their property as they would have a great deal invested Jn a aingle family dwelling. M It is, there are many absentee landlords that simply collect rent from their R·2 duplexes (which have lllegally been converted to R~ and which do not provide required perking.) They intend no upgrading and often do not even provide for necessary maintenance.- THE COUNCIL has approved a 33-unit condominium at the end of the penlmu]a. This Is absurd. There are only two ac- cesses, bot1t already over crowded. lf you have ever attempted lo drive to the wedge on any weekend or any summer day, you are aware of the cona:eaUon as well as lhe ridicl.llousness In 11ddlne even more to the p0~ulatloo density. On the wetkend my buslne'ls ror restaurant.a, etc., goea to Huntington Beach and Olota Mesa olmpl.y because It overcrowded slum. a perversion of our system or govern- SHARON SPEIGHTS menl and freedom. E nd the Apat h y To the Editor' Following World War ll many zealous Americana warned that the O:JmmunlAI would attack and defeat us. We armed ourselves to the teeth. The Commwtlsts said ID wence, ''Dm't bother, we will tateyou ovtr flUn within," but we did not believe them. CONSmER the followtna events: There haa been a breakdown of the sanctity of the home. There has been a breakdown of the very foundations laid by our foundi'ng fathers. Thero haa been a breakdown of the rellgtous es~ents, r, r I v a t e enterprise, private ownmh p, porno- graphy •bounds, ew., etc. Major steps h!ve been taken lo cause the defamation o( our honored FBI, ann· ed forces, police establishments, labor unions and other establishments that have helped to make our country great. HONORING the dishonored, draft dodgers, murderers, rioters, syndicated crime, etc., etc. 1be infiltration into r e 11 g i o u s organizations, schools. and other basic foundations and organizations that have nu.de us a gre'lt peace loving Mtion with compassion for our fellow man. And now comf!s the final coup de gr act! 1be dlltnJst of the •ery basts of our government. challenging the ettdlblllly of tile SUpreme Court and the Congress of the United Stales. And now alas. the office of the l'rttl· • In what -other country would a man who dtliberat.ely ltole go v e r n m e n t secrets be t~ loose to make in- credible cliargei· aM° wreak further damage .tn a nation ~ with the peMy ante. antJ¢1... of aome 1Uper zealous 11ubordlnatea?.-, PerSC1nal11, I an1:1Mlu)wlth the Uoniz. ing of Elllberg. It If ' tbme that a person with hl.o Intellectual talents has not been able to 1111t, tMm to more balanced use. · LYMAN S. llAULKNER OIANH C.,;Jj DAILY Plll)l ' Robert N. W<td, PMblalltr Tn..... K1e1'11, Editor Barbaro Krclbi<1' • ., Edllorial Page Edilor , ' The edHort.1.l :'P&Et' ot 1tie" DlU:y Pilot .ietks to lnlonn and .tlmu.late Tf:aders . by ])r'l'lentinc on tt\la s-p dtVtt"te icornmentary"on topkw iof ib- lf'rfft by sYnctleated columni.ta and cartoonilts. by provkflna" a fonun tar ~aden' views and by pruemq thla ncwtP1.ptt'• opinions and ideas m "'"""' -""" editorial, -ot the .D&Uy PUot •wear Orlly tn Che editorial column at the top ~ h pqe. Oplnlom: expr&Med by the C!'Ol- umrdst:s aOO c~ ucl lettw 'wit en att their own and no «4*._ m~nt of their views by tt» DUl1 Pllol _,Id l>e ·- Wed~y. M&y 16, 1973 • • " • -I • I ~Ji, v. • Bill Near ---· Showdown ' . SACRAMENTO (AP) -'!be first A 11 e Pl b I y reap- porllOtmitnl bOI lo w11J '""" jorJfy 1uppbrt from. assemblymen ol botb partiff ii headed for a sbowclown floor vote, proml$1ng to end two years of bitter partlsan struggle in. the lower house. One GOP leader called the plan "perhaps the wont ger- rymander IJ\ tbe history ol thil state, ... but Republlcana vQlecl H Tuesday to support tbe mDpromile plan when II canes up for a fklor vote ThulBday. The bill woold wipe out seats ol tbnie Incumbent Democrata, but II would lltill leave Deinocrats wilb a· 47-33 Assembly majority, ·bac;i:ers said. I • Le...,e Tr,ilif>le SACRAMENTO .(AP) -'!be League of Col~omla Oltiel has lihi,fted tbe Ille ol loday'a ...,. venUon. luncheon to a new ( BRIEFS ) location after two mayOl's.and Aaaembly Speaker Bob Moret- ti boycotted the Tuesday lunch -Gov. Ronald Reagan was 1<beduled to be the featured speaker today. Mayon Norman Mineta ol San JOle and Warren Widener <Jl Berlteley relu!ed to attend Tueoclay's luncheoo at the &.nmen!o Ell<I Club, saying the club discriminates against . racial minorities In I t s membership policies. . e De.th Bill OK SACRAM:i;:NTO (AP) ,... The Senate Judiciary Commlttee has given &-2 approval to a biU requiring the execution of anyone convicted of murder- , ing a police offl cer. The ...ie Tuead,i!Y advanced the li!ll, by sen. H. L. RJcllan1soo (R-Arcadia), to CALIFORNIA Mother Lode Gold Fever Hits Again SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Mlnlng equipment stores in California's famous Mother Lode report the "gold fever" derilanda for .pans, dredges and metal detectors is soaring nearly as high as the price of the precious yellow metal on world markets. A UPI survey of equipment dealers Tuesday showed business increaaes ranging from 25 to 75 percent on tbe same day gold cl-.! on the Paria free market at $124.06. "lt!s-gold f~ver," said Frank Sullivan, manager of the MOther Lode SkiJl, Diving shop in Sacramento. "It's just lik e addiction. It's like alcohol to an alcoholic." SULLIVAN SAID his dlVj.ng equit>ment used . for gokl: recovery was doing a brisk business, and hi! pans and dredges were "up $12,000 .a month." fn the past two months, he said, his store has sold more than 5,000 pans, 300 dredges costing up to $400, and about 20,000 books on gold mjning and panning. "We're swamped," sai d Herman Fiedler, who runs Fiedler Equipment Co. in Grass Valley in the Sierra foothills. Panther Seale Loses Bid I • -OAKIAN!> rAP) -B,llck Pantbtt eolouoder Bo b b y &eolo loot bllbl4 to become ' ' ~or "' caurCll'llla'e filth ! 18ll"' ~y. Bui be pledges, u,.. ha .... 't stOl1Ped yet." B<lllneaamao john Reading captured hl1 third t er m as mayor by an almolt 2-1 ma,.. g!J\ Tueadoy and lauded the Pantben' movement into the polltlcol ....... "I would bope they will con- tinue to work in the democra· tic 1"ceu," Read!J\g said al· ter'b!tvlcWrY .... .....-ed. "l'qi muclt more pleased with ~ thil than wltb tbe militant and It,,,: confnintatlooal type of •i> ~~ proadt tbe Panthen were do-• ing four to five years ago." ayo Ul'I Ttl"'llnt W:!th all QI precincts report-• - int~ had 77,476 votes to 43,719 'for Seale. There was a 71 per cen~turn t ol the 171_,900 registered v i~ this OAKLAND VICTOR Mayor Re1ding city of 361,500. Jn a nine-c date primary April 17 which saw a 63 per· cent turnout, Reading collect.· ed 55,434 votes to 21,329 for Seale. Seale called his campaign- aimed primarily at the 34 per- cent black a n d 20 percent Spanish-surnamed population -a "at&nUJcanl lounclatian for the !""f'1• Jn the luture ·to solve the ~ ind problems of the •••m~inlly." He had ifked 'l"'>Sflms ol ald to the poor and 1•a better and more decent life -thi'b&- glnning of whlch f?lD come wit h the idea that people haye a right to a job, \vith or with- out a skill." Read.Jn~ said he and Seale "are talking about the same issues. We want to reduce crime and increase emploY· ment. but we're poles apart in how to achieve these things." The mayor said that his ai> • proach is to create a com mu· nity climate that attracts busi· ness and new jobs. Despite the de!eat, Seale and, a cro\\·d of yf!un!l supQOrters held what thP.y c<illed a "vic- torv celebration" tn ttte PC- companyment of a Jive band at a \\'aterfront restaunnt. "We h::iven't stonoed VP1." Sellle s11id to app!a11se. "I \\'ill not makr a rflftcessi(ln ~IX.'~h b""ause f will nr' C".,C't><l<:! the rights of human beings." Her Charms All Hers., Say Doctors SAN DIEGO (1\PJ -Ann Tallent's charms are her own, no t a contribution or . medical science, doctors have told of- ficials of. the Mlss Greater San Diego Pageant. - Home Brewed Gasoline Studied by Long Beach Other contest.ants claimed on Tuesday that the 21-year- old winner, a fashion modeJ, had enhanced her figure by breast su;gery or Silicone in· jectlons. Officials had Mi ss Tallent checked by three plastic surgeons Ttfesday night, then announced: "Whatever she won with is hers." Miss Tallent measures 35--22· 35. LONG BEACH (UPI ) -The city government, squeezed by the gasoline shortage, has an option not available to many others: do-it-yourself gasoline. In this oil rich city the mu- nicipal government has its own crtide oil reserves. the leading source of petn> Jeum in California for more than 50 years," said City ltfan· ager John l\.1ansell. ~· Steamer Set ' . For . Sailirig . · . -. ·The city has been buying.its gasoline from major oil com- panies but so ·far ·has been un- able to get any company to bid on the contract fo r 1.5 mill io n SAN PEDRO (AP) ga llons it needs for the coming SS Catalina, known to hun· year'. dreds of thousands as The The oil companies say that Great White S I ea mer , \vilh the shortage coming, they resumes its famed run to don't want to be tied to such big contracts. Avalon on Catalina Island june So the City Council Tuesday 16 alter being idle more than a LOS ANGELES (AP) _ unanimously approved a reso-year because of a labor Plan Endorsed MON. THRU FRI. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. SUNDAYS II A.M. to 5 P.M. IE7 llJ ·---- •• ,JO · · MAKE .. ·ROOM .FOR . NEW · SUMMER, GOODS •Pants •Sweaters •Tops •Skirts • •Swimsuits •Blazers •V.ests •Skirt Sets •Dresses · •Pant Sets ·LONG & SHORT •Blou~s •Hot Pant Sets JPJ CALIFORNIA FASHION FACTORY OUTLETS HUNTINGTON BEACH - LA HABRA GARDEN GROVE 958~ HAMIL TON llltt llOOKHUlST 2 Blocks ·West IJ'4 s0. IUCUD I Block South of of Brookhurst ALPHA BETA G•rden Gro~• at~d. IMPElllAL CENTElt I Ilk. So. of hnptri•I Hwy. ARCADIA llLLFLOWll 29 W. l•1 Tun11 Or. 9204 Alonclr• LOS ANGnD l I l5 S•n F.rn•ndo ltd. MONTCLAlll llDOHDO llACH 1 the Senate floor. If it passes that house, it still faces strong oppoollioo IJ\ the Assembly. "IT'S (BUSINESS) improved Gov. Ronald Reagan's tax lution to seek a company to dispute. to 1he point where we've ·had to limitalion initiative has gained refine the city's O\.•:n oil re-Jack Stanaland, owner of1 _______ ~ turn away some work." said the en<l9rsement of the United serves to get the gasoline need-the steam-powed vessel , said Fiedler, whose two.man firm Oi:ganizatJons of Taxpayers ed to keep its police can and Tuesday the ship was able to • Stdt l'Ued · manufactures and re t 8 i 1 s Inc. Howard Jarvis, the other municipal vehicles run-go ba'ck into service bec~use Kids ~ •k TI A k And SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -custom dredges. ''We're run-group's chairman, to Id ning. of an agreement reached with l e 0 s .: y· Paul Marls Co. moved tn San ning 25 percent above nonnal newsme!l that the proposal "It i$ especially ironic thal eight unions which allows a · Franciaco Superior CO u rt and U we Could bandle all that "will do ·more' than anything no oil company would supply work force reduetionffror:n 61, , , ; t , "' I ~ , . · . • Tuesday to sue the firm's came in we'd be 50 percent we've !tt!1 to return control to ~-the city of Long Beach wltb. . . to 45. # • 1 ' . ~ 1 , fonner preyldent, Paul Maris, above." the people." gas.since Long Beach bas beeni--------------------------------...,--------,--and other former executivesr--------------------------.,_____ ' for -damages in excess of $10 million; ~..e. J 1 e g i n g acts · detrimental to the com pan}'. MW, who was replaced as pr.sidenl Aprll 19, previously .. • • . . ,-• • .,;; . , . 11uetl:. ft>(,., d&mages'" agai!\st • ' 'board chairtj!'an Mitton D. • .-' • Stewaij;, who is president of. Creative Capital Corp., the majQr "stocltOOlder in . Paul -"MariS c.\: . .. • Tea<!her .Jailed SANTA CRUZ (AP ) -A San Jose City CoUege teacher "Ill be arraigned Wednesday on charges of embezzling ,15,000 from a c rippled children's camp. Leslie R. Scheidt, 35, of San· ta Cruz, a health education ln- 5'lructor at the college, was charged with two counts of grand theft, deputies said. The Santa Clara County district at- torney's office said Scheidt pocketed paychecks meant for students working at If.he Easter Seal Society Cantp. Sears " ~everything's getting·giant . . -and complicated, we're still small enough to know who you are"· ""' Western Federal Savi~ Coro11• del M•1 : 2744 E. Coe1t Hwy. Phone: (7141 644-7255" Assets just barely ovtir $300 mflllon • Hugh Evans, Jr., President • Make Time Stand Still ... portraits are forever! 49* Each Portra it With One Subject is all you pay for a big 8x10 color portrait • .. adults • children • babies •No age l1m1t • l1m iled to One Portrait per Subject, Two Portraits per family • Additional Prints lwailable at Reasonable Prices no extra charge for handling and delivery 99c• extra for each additional person in portrait •Pius Sales Tax HOUllS: Dajly 12 noon to s,oo p.m. Sa turday 9JO a.m. to 5,00 'p.m. Sunday 12 noon to 4,00 p.m. N?w through Sunday; May 20 ol the following Seors Stores Se TORRANCE CERRITOS INGLEWOOD COSTA MESA ORANGE PASADENA BUENA PARK Gl.f/lllAlLUllU1141U..,._ ___ . --~- ' ,,,. ' St1tisfc1rtio11 C11nrn11tertl or Yor1r ~ltJriry Ba.rk • I• ••• ' • ' . . FASHION J ISLAND . ' NEWPOitT' CENTER · Pacific Coast Highway-Between J•mboree an!I MacArthur • --~ --- • • I ~ I .... • • • •• • • • t • r \ -~ Ora~ge:--C'!o1r10~ • _, I \IOL .66,' NO. 136, 9 *1°IONS, 114 PArc;ES , ' • ' ... ·-' -' ' ' ' -~EDNESDAY, MAY 16, (913 ' Today's l'lnal N.T. Steeb c TEN .CENTS ' ' Sorsahal Denies Allegatiom ~of Mesa Firemen lly RUDI NIEDZIEL'lKI "' .. .,..., .......... City. Mmlager Fred Sonabal 10day broka 1111 .Ueoce m allegatloos by Co6ta M<:Oa l!nmen ·lhat poor employment oon-• di-l!>ve caused morale to sink 1" an ,lll.-llrde.-low. In ~-ge press releue the city 's dUef> ad,mlnistrative officer offered a )loli{H1i'1>0int r<buu.J of the charges mide ln'anothel'pl'ell l'el .... Friday by 1 '(l\IDWe_rfllhlm olficial Cam:ihle Rivera '· .. ·• ' in beball ol the disgnmiled employes. the manoer they ara _....,i,ing the City officials, iodtlding Fire Chief John problem, but I have lnltrucled Penoonel Marshall. initially reluaed comment Director Bill Todd to ,eol•blbh clell1!r Marshall cmtinlles to defer all comment Un... ol communlcatklo with the associa- to the city manager's office. Uon," be 3aid. ~ Sonabal said be wu "chagrined" al "I sinoerely hope tliat Ibis has been a lirem<n for nol llling Pl'O[>Cl' channels in . total misundentandlni and llOt a threat alling their' problems and that the to have tile' management fl.· this city Firemen's Benevolent Associatioo is coerced and threatened .• " trying tQ clttumvent policies established ·ruvera's cl~ that .low morale for negotiations. resulted in an exodus m 3CMO firemen in "I tborougbJy_ ~ w.ilb them in the last few years is nOt-a-fect, according ' .. \' 1xon ' SEC Chi£f G.B.Cook Quits Post ~ ... WASIDNGTON' (AP) -Chairman G. I, BrOO!onl Cook of the Securities and Ex- c:bihge Commission announced b i s '"9ignation '10day. ' ! In a letter to President 'Nixon, COok I said: "I ~ply regret havirig tO len!ler ; my · rem-liolr --• cbalrmalr of, 111e I ,-' • r S«:unties and Excbana:e Commlssim, but in)ight,of llllfortunate ..,.__ : l: ~· I 'believe !I ti 171 to do coot, l)iiped SEC chalmli!> by Nixon / anJir •• le~ ll!O"tba ago, bu beSi crlliciz. QUITS SEq<,JIELM · G. BrMffo<il c.ok Test§ Set To Salvage Skylab I HOUSTON (UPI) -Soaring tem- peratures today rendered Skylab I uninhabital;lle and enginee.rs began tests of a su!Nlade to be erected by the first crew in an effort tO save America's space station. f~. dlr~, °""'k 1:Wl' lli4 ~ ~~.J:be~~~ perform an"~ rt'pa r~ sjlecewalk to set · up the larY'l'IUed "1lllbade. · Li•if said .tile -''""" 11!!1-• tryiiig to ~ i ~ swiao1 lailiicl> date for ""1ding llioe uti'onauta to · Skylab. . • to the city manager. . "I have found lhat In ttsf, a total of nine people left the fire department, three in 1970, four in lt'71 IDd nine in 1972. This amounts to-a total of 25 people amt-an avera&e turnover nte' of 7.5 per· cent wbich is below the tumoVer. n.te for the entire city, .. Son:abal userted. Moot ol "-who left said they were leaving the area, according to tbe city manager. He added that the contention many others are~tooltlng for -newjobs • ·-I ·e ' elsewhere was unverifiable. ''Many of our employes strive for bet· ter positions in otber local government agencies," he. commented. With respect to safety, Sorsabal declared tba~not me,aingte reported in- 1\D'Y bas OCCUlT'8d because of firemen riding the tailboard slnce he took over as · city manager in 1970. Approximately five months ago a new study was initiated to determine the types oJ injuries occu¢ng to rlremen and other city cmploycs. "! feel that the management ol tbe city has continually strived to improve the safet.y of all its employes," be said. "The claim about the Inadequate Joo1- term disability program is absurd," ht continued. The city's preseqt J>rOlf&Dl pays 65 'percen t of an employe'1 regular salary for life for an injury disability, OC· curring either on the job or off, and UP to age 65 for a sickness disability.'' "![ a fireman sbould be killed iD 1111 !See FIRE FLAP,.Page l) Steps Take}\ -. To Plug Up ---- ·News Leaks . WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon personally authorized F BJ wiretaps on telephones of more than a dor.en members of his National Security Council staff Iii 1969 in an effu1. to track down news leaks, the White House acknowledged fuday. A presldentla[ spotegman defended Nixon 's acUon on grounds of. '4natlonal security" Q111! '<lay Ifie< i top !:[A of- ficial was Did to• uv. t.olllltcl that three _top Wlilta House aides trlOd to In- volve tbe Central lntelilltnce ~:iy in a OOVet'.llp of, tho Waterpta · The wtret4po apjlo:renUy were inltalled following 1 pW>llshed report -t ~ ~MOWW 1nAu tTILI. -DACK N XOM-,1> ... tf ;. • Of1 lllf l!!J, band!Jng of a report. of a cash COl>lriblitloo to the Nixon 1m campaign ' ' by Robert L. Vesco, who h8B been under New J,ife$lyles Seen in . Growing Ene~gy. Crisis · But he said it was umargirlil" wbetber. tlia repair equlpmen1· OOJld be readied and checked out by !hat time. oomhen1 lttitkinl largets ll1ildO Cam· - bodia Iii IJlj: liKI other reports rolatlng to U.S.-Soviet talks on lim\tlog 1trateglc ~mbythe~. , Cook '·turned 36-Jbt&rsday and. was oae of ;!he Y<JllJ!l~t chaiim<i). "! ljistory of the -SEC.'"': . • . . ~ •' He teslilied this week. jl a closed-door By ./IVDI IUEDZIELSKI hearing ¥fore 8 Senite commi~i.ee' on "' .. . otlfh -, Ptllt sw • the v .. .,, .. m8tter. 1be nature of the Americans will need -~ .mate slgnlfi· -cant reidjustmeljtl to _their llfeslyles teotimoni was. not dbclosec1, over the out few-years as a direct result Coot'; resign&tklo ls ce!Uln to affect of the grol!'ing energy crisis, oil 6perts W,a)LStreet in >lew o1 the lai:t be has • predlded in Anaheim Tuesday. bein ·at lhi ioretroni' ol moves to reldrm The loog SUnaay drive will be a thing • · ttes .Uls to ot lbe past, aulomatic lrlllSllllss-an ~ COWl\il' seam · ma unaffordable ~--·, the 8ve·""'e car male a alngle central mai'ltet ll)'llem. .,..,.,, ·- A lederal -·" J•-"' New Yoril: ~-Wtu "-~ter lhat gets 'I · · .. -~, "' inUes "'-• g~·-'""-W<>men will take up alleged ti\lit <;ook yielded to pressure "'' .. -!nm Nixon •<•mpai!!'\. 1gr111 ra1aer knlll1'it·-lo lll!J.down on tbe heating bill. ' I li!aui16e Stan• by defeljljjf menlioll'ol a 'lbis~l!'U ;tlle •fo~st t"':<>ugh 1990 Iar e-M donation fnxb Ve.co from .an ~ ·bf f ~ womens ,dlvl!100 of the SE~ l'Uit against Vesco, a NeW' Yor'k: ~iidah ~ia~io~. of Petroleum I financier. . ~?liste-,~ the SoC~ety of ~mlc I •• 'been, ·"-eel lhal .;,,.. 000 coo-PaleOntOIOiisls and lo) I !).er aJ o g 1 s I a t ••• . --. . ~ ,.....,..,. · m.;eu., at the ~laild -~I lribOtiotl froJri Vesco was made Iii tecret -JCeltb 'Qoig, -9ic<> pNlildont of-j,lapnlnc to tlie Nisoo ~pal~. "'4,0<p0mk:\i.!orollbell Oil, toicl, the'- Soda Pop Drop Smashes · Beeth Thing> would bave gone better with ,\Jberto Montano Tuesday nlal11 il be bado't ttacbeil down !Or a droppell botile ol.aoda pop rolling aroond 00 tlie floor or his car. Cost& M ... police said tbe,J>ending r0ovement appaf'enUy caused tl"ontano's GeOnaJl car to V""1° off northi>ow>! W... of Falrviaw Road into a power pole just north of Bal<er Streel. . .Montano, 23,. of , 1115. Bismarck Way, c..ta MOS\1, elcaped 1V1th -scrapes and &< Up laceratloo. : PJLOT AD -PROY~$ THE CAT'S MEOW gatllerllig that !hie Unlted Slates probably will no! get all tlie energy It requires dur- Iog ~-ciltlcal period but lhat the nation will;~ :•rwm1ng smootlily again" in 1990 If the -sl<ps are taken. H¢'Said a projected doubling of energy conatanptioo from 1970 to 1990 means thalt the e!fl'gy crisis will 'be a Pbeaollll!noo lUting at least Ii years. Td' ~ tbe blow, he reconuiiended that lbe country "undertake energy con- servation and the development of doJbestlc resources." ~ the conservation s.ide, Doig said, are such altematives as producing IDliller cars, doing away with 1a.. pilot ligttli,' stQpping production o1· aul!>matlc transmlsaions, increasing the airline load factor, and impn>vlog tbe efflcteocy of lndtistriaJ; plants." And to~save on domestic beating and (See SCARE, Pa1e l) Great "We'll Jauncl:\, tb«mt on SUnday or,. ~. SKYLl,B TROUBl:.es-jHOWN- IHuslrt.lion P1ge 4 · • -. ' another five • days ~laier," ·be said, et· plaining tbal the second launch op- portunity could not come ooooer because ol tbe orbttjng slatloo's patb throufill space Z10 mi\eo lrun ~- The •pace 11,<!"'Y reported al Cape Kennedy, meammue, that the Depart.. ment ol llefeme h8B provided blgb- resoiution photographs of !!>e crippled space Rattan to aid ~lneers in finding ·~ aave the craft. A spokesman said neither' the blghly ctiissifuid pictures nor a descrl[l!lon of lbeir contents WOuld be .made j>ul>!ic. At tlie Makhall Space·.Yllght Center in Hunts'(ille, Ala., engli1eera clad in spacesuits began tests in a large water tank -DJed to simulate ,en>-gravity or (See SKYLAB, Pait I) New Principal, Meets Public • Robert' Patter, aewJy appoi.Dted principal ol Costa M... lllgh School, will meet the ~unity 'lbunday night. , ' His 7:00 p.m. appearance in tbe I.y<:eum bas ·• oq:anged by the Costa Mesa Jligh Scbocil, Boooters Ctub. Parenti anti :Students are m. Vtted. ~ Packer, principalof Nogales Hish School in 1.4 fl!ei\le, will take charge of the 1,too.ludenl Costa Mesa campu11 July I. . arms. . .. ~1t .... ,.. '. rT. CAN• CL&AH.-Y0\,111: l!AKE BUT •BIJS1'fliS i,ob( TOO•· · ·Hl-•. l.1;.,Tllitlr,1t;U001fCOui;try, Cost f!.000 I ·, > ;r• ., ••, -.....-• .. ' \ .ltist_A· S~k to: f.e,,. .. ·Hip~$·~_aj .Be ·S~e -CU,!~ . . ~ ~ . ' .. , F,or· L~e: Fdr~st~s . Alga~ By JAN WORTH ' 61 .,,. O.lt-1 p ... itatt· Is there a foolproof way to control algae and larvae in iates, espeCially, the manmade variety found in ~e Forest! There sµre is. Just ask Ken Waarnan, one of Occidental Petroleum Land and Development ·Company's· project ~ tors In Ulk.e Forest. Trouble. m, the aolution costs S7000. And du(lng t~ night It eats bushes. And it weighs two tons. ~ !Wefll blood. . ·That wa! when Pat ·Qubm , zoological jlirectol' •L Lion Country, made the bl ppo oU~-' ·The ponderous •animal, a member of the D'ioe family, lives solely on 'llegeta· tioo ln lhe'Tivers it lnbablts in lts natural state. - Lion Coqntry safari'~ 11' hlP!lO• ... given other food (tJt4 «JI.ck on the algae of the wildlife 'J)resert"e's lake enough to kee"-tt ,,.,,._ · -• • · -' K ~· conuw. , ,. The WliltallOOae bad been.described at · the t!Jne as cooctmed about leak! to • JK.ii;smen of tonftdentlal majerial on OOth · · sabjects. · • . *'·"It ha~ niiional seainty.matter,'" a white House apokesrian said todly ot presidential· ·apProval o( tbe wlritape, first reported by the NeW Yort Times. "The procedure was approved by Ule President and authorized in individual cases by the attorney eeoeral ln coordination wltli tbe director of the Federal Bureau of InvesUgatlon," the spokesman said. . . Acting FBI Director William D. Ruckelshall! said Monday that records found In a &a!e' .tn, the ,office of forlner · White "ouse aide Jotm D. Ehrlichman in· dlcated taps h!id been placed on lbe telephones of 17 individual•, includin1 four reporters. i , He said the taps were authorized after presidential adviser Henry A. Kisaiqger had talked wilh J. Edgar Hoover, tbeu FBI director. The wlretaps came to light last week at the Pentagon Papers trial in Los Angeles. It was disclosed that FBl aa:ents monitored a cooversaUon by Dante! Ellsberg when be used a telephone at !hi Bethesda, Md, home of Morloli Halperin, a member of the NaUonal Security Coun- cil staff at the Ume. Halperin said lodaY' ho waa sure Kiss- ISee WltlETAf'S, Pap 11 The solution? The mud-loving hi~ popatamus. Wasman, sweating a little blood himself over a persistent algae and gnat population ei:plosion in Occldental's 37~11cre Jake in Lake Forest, heard Lion Country Safari in Laguna HUis bad an answer. Fortunately • Jor Wa1rium and tile resident! of the ·two-year-old lake, howe¥er, Qulrm had another Idea. \ one ·fish, an Afr~ !pectes call~ Mossimblca Tllapla, burrows Into the mud and"Pevours the larvae whlch pro-· duce· gnats. or .. ge Cout "I was so excited that I~'umped right ia my car and went out th e," Wasman said. RipOff '!bough Ule fl!h.la native to Africa, it is used most o'ften in Southeast Asia, where. It is placed in the> watery rice Oelds. Not only does it keep the pest problem down ,.but turnishes tanners with'·protein to complemen~ their rice harvest. After meeting with County Fish and Game officials; Occidental has obtained iiennlSBion to Stock their lake with 200 Moaimblca TUapla. The Fish and Game Department has orfered to raise them Weatller · The sun wfll peek out of the clouds a little earller oo. Thu~. with mostly sunny skies after the • 1 morning bum off. Hlgbs of 68 de- grees at tbe beaches rising to 75 inland. Overnight lows In the IOs. One hlgllly saUsfied customer who used Dall)' ~ Clalslfled adverUsiotJ1.«ilumns ~ aaid she not -1-1 fiome; for five kittens in one day, but "'"* ~ nice people, too." Hen'• the Uslllic that did the job: _. . ' Costa Mesa Recycling Center Tells Loss of Cans lflee BIPPOS, Pa1e II Road Projects Set INSIDE TODAY Two Palo A.lro1 eoctdi wa11ttd '° ate jar thtmHlw1 how ltomO:. ••~ or1 Jreo.te<t. So they C011· ducted an a/fectioflnte ptrsmwl t:tpe:rlmen.i ·with 1hockhigi re· 1ul11. Stol'l/ Page 16. • ·FREE kittens, 1111xed <olorl, t -· cute, !"i11•1. (Phone No.) ' , It cOuld··'"'t be that you. could be ..... •Jnced a Dilly Pilot ad 11 the "cat'• me- . n:-'' OJvt lt,a tit. "1't ~Jlllt to"~-su ts 11~ ,. ; -- • JI· 1 I Tbe International Order of Odd Fellows (l<JoF) and cttizerul Recycling ,U•bte DObrla (CRUD) are looking for leads on ideoUty of the odd fellow who pulled The Grell Alwnlnum-RlpoU. The Great Tra1n Robbery it wasn't. ' There has -repeated pilfering or salvag~able aluminum cans at tbe eo.ta M... llecycllng Center. The grou_ps operatlni It at Harbor Boulevard and Wllaon-5trttl.demanded action . So-ti•• TOOF'a 'Ed Wllkutl siient last weekend lnstaDing a shed-like container with a ~ted door to testen the b1rceny. Slaff people )>!Iii by CRUJ)_ and IOOF per ton for rt.usable a111Dlinum, the ' sl!<Jwed Op)o!cjii\ay, ·IM .... they got oorglar rtlld• orr with i!lloul $1 to -· 1n_ C:Osta: }fesa A.rea tliere, the alumlmnn can capboard wae for parllape one hour's toll. - here., Of 1lmolt1 The ~ar, eave up when he ha.d Bidl • .riv:h·eelled for soon for the '1m. e:~..,_ ~ ::..:tr-' ': ~, A b/a'ilar bra'red the fonnldable abcNI one IZ'iallon trash 11!11U11 of cans, provement of Santa Ann Avenue and Red r.l!'.ll; n _,_ "'" I~ In which \be castoff .cans wue leaving the rtSl behind. Hill A.,_ between Mesa Drive and ~:!!..,. ~--J =. ~ ': ~Jocked, tlul tduldD't pry the, locked door She ' aald the loss Is . un!Ortunate 1,s11 feet qorth or Briltol Strtet, lbe ~ n.11 o-c-IY 1•n llll the way open, Recycled aluminum 11 because ~-tncome from U*. elm '1elps 1!'~ty Board of Suj>ervlsors ~~ : :::.. .:; worth 10 cent• a notind, • ~ Jt\iUlo rft\tects as fin a n•e: i a a 111..~ .... ..,v. °""'"' ,..",.. 11 or. 1ltfflcn4Wt " ~ r< ftit.....ar 1.r."'."'· r;·""<t .ll.:-...r · •f4i.n.t ""' ' l!Odl Mlrtl ... M-ll "The Gfeat Alllll'llbum .J\lilVI' • f • " artinc.,.... Uiney n;iachines. call for wldeniqg and rtpavlAg •1tt1t1~ n.tJ T11rr1t1111 11 giggles Judi::rriCY:,.~-..m>n. .Er ~led lt'a, a bll funny'<:ij!i';:::~the\4'~11,\1 which Is ln.J>olhswolY arc,a_ ::;;: ,..,.. ..,. _:.':",:.' ,..~ , . ''They reacbld1n a ;liOJfO.ctns onei -~1ili ~ ue ,a~~i.: · .-.-,~e-Mese~'S:-1>..,;.. __ ". n.: -=:"':;!"" ~, by one." r Riictcllnr m.r pn<i set more for less est ·~ --of 111 share of tlie project· M -" She 'eatimalet at the llOing rote of $200 "or~ than the w' .. k.nd skulker made. lo 119,'68. J • • J • .. " • ' • c ~Additional Bay. Study By JACK BROBACK ot "'9 ~IY '11-' 11111 First District Supervi3C>r Robert Battin of Santa Ana succeeded in muddying the waters of the Upper Newport Bay a bit more Tuesday by proposing a list of sttidiet ttlating to flood waters, salt water Intrusion and high tide effect oo tbe1thrtt islands in the estuary. 'I1w! Upper Newport Bay development intO a combination wlld1Ue preserve and recreation area has betn thoroughly studied by a so-called field commlltee of federaJ mte and local offic;lals. As U~S. Interlor Department executive Webster Otis told the Board of SUpervtoon· Wt week, 111 facets of the Mure development are being covered. But Battin thought the county Flood Control District's chief engineer should be brought into the picture. Battin'• request for studies covers much ground already subjected to con- siderable study by various agencies. Jte wants flood control to i•detennine public easements over flood plain land '.between MacArthur Boulevard and the 0 tidelands of the Upper Bay." · When such a detennlnaUon is made, : the s1,1pervll0r said, board ,members could. then decide whether 6oed waten ·will ~ chanoel!id in the area or allowed . to flow in their natural state as tn other . parts of the county. Battin al90 wants flood control t o determine if dredging of the Upper Ba y 'channel to a depth necessary to ac- . c~mmodate the proposed UC Irvine row-r mg a>Ul'Se would pemiit salt water in· trusion of the underground water ba:i1in. He didn't state what the board should do il such was fOund to be true. .... 'I'he -IU{M!:rvisof'"' lhen--posed -a •-third study. "The chief engineer of the flood control district should further determine the ex· is~ce of public easements for the free flow of water over the tops of the three islands in the Upper Bay and if no such casements for the free flow of water ex- i:i1t, to what extent could the islands be filled to block the flow of water without creating such a rate of flow Jn tJll'! re- maining channel that marine and plant life on county tidelands would be damag- ed and the base of cllffs eroded away,•· he requested. . B~Uip's overlapping proposals were approved by other board members Without comment. The Oood control chief engineer is to make the studJe:i1 and report back to the b(>ard "aJ soon as possible." • , ~~·, tae•• r ~ ca\e1\d• . -TONIGHT _. ORANGE COUNTY ?AIR BOAITTf -. Regular meeting, 88'Faic Drive 8 p.m UCI LECTURES -"Intellectual vs. Society," Clark Kerr , speaker. Science Lecture ~!all, 8 p.m. Admission $2. "Understandi ng Movies,·• Social Science Hall , 7 4 10 p .m. Admission IS.SO. "TWELFTH NlGHT" -Fine Arts Village Concert Hall , through May 19, 8 p.m. Admi ssion $3. Phone 6.13-6617. "THE CLO\Y NS" -South Co:i1ta Repertory, tooight and Thursday, 8 p.m. THURSDAY, MAY 17 CHART -Regular meeting of Citizens Harbor Area Research Team. Mesa Verde Country Club, 7:30 a.m. Speaker : Rod Gunn, Ad vance Planner for Newport Beach. LIBRARY STORY HOUR -Stories for children. 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. COSTA MESA SENIOR CITIZENS - Thursday Fun Croup. Co m m u n ; t y Center. Fairgrounds, 12-3 p.m. POPS CONCE RT -Costa rifesa High music dept. Lyceum , ~1ay 17·18, 7 p.m. DIA.Mal COAIT CM DAILY PILOT T,.. Or11199 (M•! DAILY "ILDT, wlll'I """!di •• comblftld "'9 JlleW$·Pr1u, I• pUl:!Utlled ..,. 11'!1 Dr..,. C.0.tl "1>11ll1Mr111 C0>mpany, S.111- r•tt tdllllon1 •rt pyotl1hld, M-•f tfl,.,,...h Fda1y, !Cir Colt1 M.,1, Nt""'°rt II~ HunllnG!Oft lltKll!FOUl\1111\ V~ll1y, L_,,l>M l..cll, Jrv!,,.ISeOdlMic-•nd S.011 C,.,.._ttl S•n J\Nln C•phlr1no. A 1lnvi.. r119lonll llCIUlon h PllbtlJllld $&1"'1il'l't •nd klnd1~1. TM l'f'llWJPlll itUblltllll'IQ plln1 I• 11 JXI Wttl l t f StrHt, CMlt Mtw, C..llfotn!I, t)Ot. llobtrt N. W1•d Pr .. -'"" Pllb!l•h" J•c• II. C11d1y Vk l "'ftlOtnt Ind Genolr1I MIMtlM' ~ Tho"''' K•••il Elllllr Thom•• A. Mur phin1 M1...,lnt fdllOr ai1rl11 H. lao1 llich1r' P. Nill l41llllnl AU riAQ"" f(llllor1 c.-. ,. ... Offk:• JJO W111 I•.,. S+r11t M•lll111 Allllllr1i1i·,.o . lo~ 1110, 91121 ...... °""" N--1 ~: UH ltt""P0'1 loult~I .. ~ 9-:h: m '"''" ,,.._ Hvnt_. 11..ch' l711J llN<PI hultv•rt .1.-i Ci.ntnN: 10J Hori!! l!I Ctml"" 11:111 r.,.,, ,., 111•1 1•1-4121 drnnMW ~W.. 641·1171 c.irtf.;..., ltn. Of'•... Co11t "u111•1ll"'9 ~-... ,,.... t!Wln, lllut!t•llCIN, .. ""' .. ' """" fl' ~~·rt~ ""''"' ..,. ... ~ ....... , .... t ..,. mtnlM ., ~ ..,....._ .. .._.. tllH ....... ...... •1 CNll #oftl, Cdfilim ... · .......... W (l .rl!ior QM MMll'llYI W 9Mll U.lt "lltflll'llVI ,,..IH..,., ~IMtllM ..... ~· ·-•'~ .. I • • 0.1,., 'lie! lllff '"-"' Behi~d the Scenes This is What a puppet s,how looks like from behind the curtain. Teen members or Harbor Area Girls Club staged j'Hansel and Gretel" in puppet format for junior members o! the club" Tuesday. Show was -p.,t of National--Girj5'.Club week currently being oboervecj in the Harbor'Area. • - Coast Aillhulance Firin Facing Gasoline Sho~age Seal's Ambulance, which serves Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Huntington Beach . . and Fountain Valley, faces a shortage or gaso'line aver the next few months. AUantic·Richfield (ARCO ), which sup- plies Seal's with bulk gasoline, has an- nounced it will cut the ambulance service amount to 84. percent of lhe bul~ used for the corresponding months in 1972. ._,e!fe.alreedy past last year' a• ·u~" Gilbert Seal, owner Of the a1nb'utance service. said Tuesday. "Last July we add- ed·servioe-to the Long: Be1ch Vf terans .. ' . .. . . , .... • · "'· ·~mPagB{''' I '• ' -·SKYLAB .. ~-• space -or ways to rig the sunshade. "This is a very rough, first approach to the problem." 11 spoke6n1an at the Alabama center said. Another team at lhe llouston space center. headed by Lewis. "·orked through the night to determine where the en1ergency repair equipment might be stoy,·ed in the Apoll o command ship which will carry astronauts Charl es "Pete" Conrad, Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz up to Skylab. Reporting on latest Skylab developments in a news conference at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Lewis said temperatures inside the orbiting workshop (0\1.'SJ \\'ere well ove r JOO degrees Fahrenheit "Internal temps are too high lo inhabit the OWS." he said. "It doesn't mean we \Vouldn't want (an astronaut) to go into the OWS. but it does mean we wouldn 't want to use that as our living quarters." Guadalupe Fleet 'Picks U JJ W incl, Heads for H 01ne The Guad.!llupe Island yacht race fleet picked up a br isk JS lo 18-knot northwest breeze Tuesday nighl and were speeding toward the finish at Newport Beach to- day. Bob O'Brien's 56·foot yawl Spiri1 out of lhe California Yacht Club reported a position 150 n1i1es from Newport "'ilh the pros pecl of finishing by lalc afternoon Thursday. Close behind with 175 and 180 mile:. to go were Jack Mallinckrodt's Newport 41 Swift and Jack Bibb's Colum bia 50 yawl ln tennezzo. The rest of lhe fleet wa s s:rung 0111 as far back as Guadalupe Island with Whitney Collins' Newporter k e t c h Leprechaun bringing up !he rear. 'corrected time standings ns of 8 a.n1. today were : -Ocean Racing Overall: I. Spi rit 2. Swift 3. Loco Vicnte. Cf81s A: 1. Spirit 2. Loco Vle ntc 3 . lntermezio. Class B: I. Swift 2. Decision 3, Tomahawk PHRF : I. Kismet 2. "-1stangi 3. Leprechaun Hospilal which nearly doubled our gasoline consumption." In' May, 19'72, Seal's bought 1,357 gallons from ARCO. Last montb, Seal's bought 2,510 gallons. 'The company bas its own 1,000 gallon tank at its headquarters, 533 Center St ., Co9ta Mesa. ARCO keeps the tank full at a reduced C(l8t of 29.1 cents per gallon for half premium1 half regular. ·•1.guns wl!Jl have to start filling up at ·local ga.s statlons,1'· Seal sald.'· :•tt w\I~ cost more, but that isn't what wprries \Is. It's the 11:vailability that scares \!S." Seal said the California Ambulance Service Msotjat19n has been asked to ~ludy lhe problem. -· . uwe·re apparently tile of the: first am - bulance companies hlt·rttb this. We den't think emergency services ought to be-ra- tioned," Seal added. _.., • · ARCO is ane or the fll'st oil -campanies to launch voluntary gas rationing. In a letter to Seal's, ARCO said it ~'Ould soon limit all branded and u n bra n d' d distributors to 70 percent of their normal gasoline orders. The ga.s ration affects the six western states. Arco said it was moving to \'O lun- tarily meet the request of U.S. Deputy Secretary or the Treasury William Simon. On May 10, 1973. Simon asked the petroleum industry to launch program s to care£ully allocate petroleum products where necessary. ARCO indicated its supply dem ands change month-to-month, so the sales percentage to Seals and other companies 1nay also change month-to-month. Seal said he has notified cities covered by his ambulance service fo be careful about sending the seven ambulances out on needless calls. "Sometimes we waste a lot of gas on a call which isn't need~ but the cities forget to tell us," he :i1aid. * SCXRE • • • cooling bills Doig predicted, "we may have to run the house two to three degrees hotter in the summer and two or three degrees cooler in the winter -and perhaps knit sweaters instead." Since four4 pas.senger automabiles are seldom used to capacity he forecast that perhaps as many as half of the future vehicles on lhe road would carry only passe ngers but feature 45 mph thrift. e. said if motorists were to continue to st on air conditionlng and automatic lransmis.sions, the United Stales would "have to pull off a Russian wheat deal t.very yea r" to pay for imported oil to run lht'm. Another speaker, Ralph L. Lewis Jr., vice president of public relations for Gulf Oil, stressed !he need for development of domestic energy sources to avoid dependency on foreign nations. _lie said the energy crlsl.I is now on the front pages of the newspapers and that the oil industry, having captured public attentio n should tell Its story In sim ple terJns and warn America "It's time to stop fooling around." "Lcl us get to the bllSine!! of finding svaM~ble domestle aources," .he saJd . "And in the meantlme let'1 import that Middle Ee!tt Q'M_Jde with tanken.~Jet'a get out the shale oil, and Jet's get over to the nuclear." .. . . • , ., • .Dlda't See Detm ,..,._ r.,e I r , •d . -D ·1· ~ ..L!IRE~FIQ .. :; r _es1en1 .it.e ·1eu -!:.:::• .. ~ 1: O~. ~taff RepQ~t . ' lif< ............ -om aod Wllfk.m<n'• ' ~uon p1... ro11r ..... t p1an ' 1-ellto If la a melvber <I Ibo iitJie. t mail plan." 1bt city JJllUl>ier agreed lhal lhe c.ota' i.t,.. Flre Department does not maint.-in a civil Mf'Vice 1y1tem but that ti. merits pn>gra111 du..U. II-laat lwo years ""'111«1 in 10 prorOOl!Ono, "many mere than have ocWrred tu otbtt pues. '' WASHINGTON • (llP.l~st':"! Prl!ll""'I Nixon had nol lalUcl' to rut r.inl .....i, Join W. Dean, btl<>re i.. &!med 1Mt summer lhal an lnvertJcatlon by Dean \ndicatedno Admln1'1ntioo Glllclah wore involved In the Watergate bu&ging, the White House said \IJdal'. . ·' Nixon's presa tecretary ~ Ronald L.' Zltglar, said the Pmldenl was relylnC on into~tion from other staff members when be told an Aug. 29 newa conference that "a tborougb invesUgatioo" by Dean eUllqated all persons then in the Administration. C:OVtn;'.' T\IO Ntw Yorlr. l'!mel 1<ported today lha!'1bl> only ftp.rt aJvtn Nblon on poo- llble' Admlobtntlon lnvolvemmt wu.by Ehrllclun4D, and that it WU lnfonn&l llld oral All lh<men are judg~' on U!el!' Ill· , dividuaJ· merit eac~~~--'to determine whether their per1.._ is ,.tlllac· tory. "I ,.. notbln1f ~ with lbls 1 • policy,'!. ald-Soraabel. Ziegler declined to identity the other staff members who reported to NiJ.on or to say whether fonner White House aides * * * Democrat Link Sparked Trial, Says Ellsberg WASHINGTON (AP) -Daniel Ellsberg told a Senate hearing today he believes he was pr1;>5ecuted for leaking the Penta- gon papers not because he violated na- tional security but because of possible links to Democratic candidiates. • And, said Ellsberg, the strongest ties \vould have been to Sen. Edmund S. ~1uskie (D-Maine), chainnan of the hear· ing. Ellsberg said be never met Muskie but that several individuals' involved in the massive Penµgon study of ·u.s. involve- ment in Vietnam advised the Muski&-pra- idential campaign. He pointed out that.at tbe time Muskie \vas the Jeadiflg contender for Ql_P_ Oem<r cratiC' presidential nomination and was · leading President Nixon in some pr>pular-• ily polls. Ziegler Wisted today lbal "the Presf. delll callod for an lnvestiaallon" and that "the ruponalblllly for conducting that ln- VMU1atlon clearly fell In the COUDMl'1 office" occupied by Dean until be w.a.s lh<d April :!O. Zlegler said Dean's report wu never put in wrJting, but Its contents were con- veyed to the President by uaenlor staff members." From Pagel WIRETAPS. • • inger, as head of the council, was aware ol the wiretapping. •1 don't think there's any queation that he knew that my phone was being tap-. ped, indeed lhat he was reading wm- marles of the rePorts of the 'phone conversations," Halperin said on the NBC.TV Today Show. "He had told me that people in the Administration suspected me of leaking things. I assured him that I bad not leak- ed any information and he Indicated that I was still 1.Dlder investigation, but never gave me RjlY hinl that lhal Included telephone tapping." .. ~Judge 'Orders. Mesa Firemen7s Reinstatement Ellsberg also noted that E. Howard Hunt Jr .. the convicted Watergate con· spi rator who was also linked to the burg· lary of Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office. Fonner Costa Mesa Fire Capt. was hired by the White House 8 week Norman nllner got a job back Tuesday after Ellsberg was indicted. in an Orange County Superior ())urt ruling "The question was .could I be made that leaves his future rank in the hands into a mudball that wou1d stick to a pres-of City Manager Fred Sorsabal idential candidate," Ell.sberg said. Judge Robert P. Kneeland granted the The former Pentagon researcher al· writ that reinstates TUlner on the force leged that the ope.ration was directed by With full pay from the date of hi! AllegAUons· about the lo6s of vacation time were abo cballenged by the ad- ministralor. "The city's vacation policy i.s based on a wort weet. M the work week for r~ was rt(luced (now at 65 hours per weet on a 24-hour shill basis) vacaUon Ume ea.med iJ reduced. and is proportionate for all city employ ... " ''[ must add that the claim about poor retirement, salaries, etc. is ridiculou.t," he eoottnued. 1''nlls city provides the firemen a fringe benefit pac)tlage worth 35 percent of his salary and is, m.. ctdentally, above the national average and locally compeUllve. "During the last year's salary review, • firemen salaries were brougi. within the • average of the four ciUes we survey (Orange, FuUerton, Buena Parle .and Westminster) and at that tlme exceeded the average salary paid throughout the coonty. This city also ·reduced the work weet wblch dkt cost the taxpayers mQ!'e ; money," . '"l'be city's retirement plan Is com- petitive and actuarally sound. 'Ibe clty's 1 contribution (which comes from the general fund supporled by lhe properly tax) bas generaU-y exceeded t he empl.oye's contrlbui.lon rate," the city manager charged. Recent allegation.!! by the firemen that they were being subjeeted to "iµrpriH" in.spectioos after niaking their com- plaints public, were denied by Sol'sabal. He said an in!pettiOQ was made Ill the dire<tim of Battllllon Chio! Robert Beaucbal!lp laat Wednesday, two ~.,.. ~ before· newspapers ca1Tied stories about ~he fire department controversy.· · • T!li! IMpectlo.7, deoa-lhed as monthly and routine, resulted in discQveries o[ some deflclencles by Beaqcbamp. Jn. eluding department groom l D g re- quirements. Sorsabal said the men were simply "directed to comply with the regula- tiarut" FrotnPagBl HIPPOS ... a task furce in the Justice Department dismissal March 5, 1m. headed by Robert c. Mardian, usLt\allt Bul he agreed with the clly's lawyers and provide them free of charge. ~ttorney general in charge of the internal that other aspects of the controversy that "We should have enough to stoct all security division. sparked the wittt rued by THJner's three lakes Jn Late Forest." Wuman Ellsberg described for the suboommit· lawyera called 'for Sorsabal to review a said. 1'lro other lakes, of 18 and 7 atta, tee the massive-govenunent security list of city complaints againsl the officer. are owned by the Lake Forest ~ system under which more than one billion Tlltner clalmed Jn hls aetiotl that he munlty ADOclation and are 'COplng wtth pages are classified and 'in which the , \Yas denied a fair hearing followinl hla simllar'algae and gnat problerils. ' very names of some classifications are dismi.!lsal from the force 14' months ago. "This is a never ending pfoblein," kept secret. And he further alleged that Sot-sabal was Wasman said. "We've been trying to cml- He noted that during 12 years as a ~~a:ed.ln hf:i~~n~'.m and played a major trol-~itb chemicals .but that kills off delense resear-"-r he held about a '-en --~ f th f. h " ~~ ~· , .. Tillner's dismissal ~ollowe<lthe filing o1 some e ts . . .. . of these suPf!r-secret security clearances. 21 allegations by .the city. They included A certain amount of. algae is desU'~e "Itis only until yOu have"a dozen or more the charge that he Used profd languq&: ~4. peeded to . keep a healthy la.ke, that you realize there must be s t 111 10 8 battallon chlef in tbepreseftce ot a , Wuman stresaei1.. Fl.sh die ~tbout Die .others." he said. . '' Daily filot reporter; that he "refused to on1en that algae produ~. "Could there be cleara~s the Presi-participate in communltyiless" and tbat ~ dent doesn't know about? he "criticized Capt. Gailagber'S coffee "Of ~oursc,'' Ellsberg said. table." Off Ship Mutineers He added , however, .he doubted there "Our city attorneJ has told me that the were any. .. court direction a1lows ~to reytew Mr. SAN DIEGO (AP) - A Greek oil f.llsberg tesWied before a joint session Tillner'.s file ahd determine his rank," lanker 'I'Uesday nltbt · left -San Diego of~he Senate government operatlans and Sorsabal said after the heartng. "I can harbor for Panama, Jeavlng behind 14' judiciary subcommittees examining the or.ly confirm, with>ut having read the Hondµran crewmen inclucling ooe who ~g~o;;viieriiiniiimiie~nl~'s~s~eculi~~t~yiisyilsiite~m;.;;;;;;'";li~ng=,;':h·a~l=l~w~i~U;do;:tha::t~. "~:;:;::;;w;as;;ahot in-the leg by the ahip'I captain. t ! Speedo Swimsutts & Trunks Laguna Swim Trunks-$5.95 & $6.9~ LHe Guard Swim Trunks-$4.95 Wonder Board Kick Boards-$4.95 Wann Up Suits-$21 .95 to $34.95 Champion Handball Gloves c(l- RacquetbaH Racquets Table Tennis Paddles & Sets Wilson-Dunlop-Penn Tennis Balls Wilson-Bancroft-Dunlop Rackets Badminton Rackets Squash Rackets OPEN 9 TD 6-tlOSED SUNDAYS • BasebaO Mitts-Bats ··....-:+' ,,,., CLOSID SUNDAT • •• Balls-Sh~ored Sleeves Shoes-Sanitary Hose Adldas--.Tre~onverse Jack Purcell Tennis Shoes • Tennis Dresses TeMiS Shirts & Shorts Raleilfl Bikes- Parts-Tns-Tubes Repairing Racket Stringing 538 CENTER~46-1919 ................................... a.. ........... ~-, ......... _,_ ___. • , i I , • Sign ~ and -bntln• lfOUPS are mobil· lzlng ihelr en•'1101 to ~ defe.t to tile proposed Costa lfeoa lign o!dlnonce. that conliclentl<ln with the dlamber's oft-voiced ln!O!'- est in Jlllking the city a ~ attnctive place In wblcll to Jive. At tivo recent dty CCIUlld,l eWd.Y ""'3la!ls on the controversial proposal, all the comments wv. from 1,11-two aoor<es and all were oegatlve -~'! unforlunatel7 oome hardly necessary verilol elluoe o the Planning Department and Its younger stall.members wllo wori:ed on the ordinance. 1':"'1M<>po-nen-ts of 8lgn reform, meonwblle, lbould llrlve for npreR11tatloo on a ooon-to-be-appolnted sign ordiaance study commlllee, Councllmen already have indicated this rommittee obou1d b.ave the ''faith" ol the businea community. It also obould have the ''faith" of the "81 of die community. Further oPPOSltlon appears likely from tbe6e groupo. Zoning Problem Solyed • Chamber of commerce Otfidal• ~OD the on!lnanet: The sign lncluAtrjr has la Sacn- mento lolibylst and otiler · at!eded groupe are getUng Into the ..,i. • Jn short, Cooia Mesa elty COUDdlmen, who seldmn have been Wlsympathetic to the busin~1 are x..- cel~ a lot of Input from the pro-s!P, racuons and he~g a1moot nothing from the. other lide. One of the more vezing problems !n Costa Id,.. - bow to zone the land north ff the San Diego Freeway - appears to have been settled with the adoption of oev· era! key amendments to the General Plan. Although a compreheMive Plannlng DopiU tment SW'Ye)'~Y discl08ed tmt BO percent iii all residents all4'80 · .I of Ill basln.....,.n ;ndloled they are In favor ll1<>nl sbingent sign controls, no O\!~ from. the PUbll.c or t4e business community bas eleppec! forWard iouttcu1ate·tbls side of the 1-. ~ had been on the city council to settle the future of the 390-acre area eince !Mt summer when Mesa Woods tract n!Sldents organized a homeowners associa- . tlon and demanded a general redlJction of density in their part of the city. Romeowners contend that they were threatened by encirclement of aportment developments. City offi· clals, on the oth..-band, were reluotant to dktate to the f~Y owners wllat they should build on their own tt the """'ey is indicative of the feeling In the c:omm,unity -and there is no reason to .believe other- wloe -thoae citizens believing that sign "11fi>rm is f:lme. ly and nece6Sacy will have to make 'thelll8elve1 beard to give lllOr1' balance to the oouncil's coMlderations. Uni ... they make their feelings known to the COUD· en pretty ooon, the council -bearing nothing but neg- ative reaction to the proposed ordinance -could either be persuaded to discard the ardimnce entirely or water It down to the point that ;t is of little impro""1tent on the present situation. In the center of the controversy W'l<'" two large plot. of Segerstrom family-.ed land which the home- <>Wners wanted dlanged"from commercial to low-density residential use. But compromises worked out between the Sege~· stroma and the homeowners have led to a quick solu- tion of the other zoning difficulties tn the area. The chamber, while it is primarily a voice of the business community, should weigh carefully, balancing With. these, the last c!iapJer in a long controver.;y over which direction development in nortli Costa Mesa should take, finally appears ended. Theater Buff? T_ry Th:est: For Openers Dear . Gloomy Gus c Med School Enrollments Soaring D()ct<:>r Shortage May . End by 1980 I WASHING TON -1,'he prospects are current shortage of around 50,000 pbysl-proximately 48 percent of their fun& FNEY J.HARRI~ If Supervisor Caspers tiaa bee? representing the pe0ple ol the Fifth District by attending the Upper Newport Bay Fteld Com- mittee meefinls maybe he wouldn't have been dumped from the com- mittee by fellow board members. bright ·that the shortage of physicians, ~ ~ ciana will be eliminated by 1980. from federal sources. which bas afflicted1 the country for inore ROBERT S,AJ.J1EN Dr. Jolm A. D. Cooper, AAMC presi· This is In marked c:ootrast to a decide ' , · than a quarter o a century, will be dent, attributes the growth of Interest in or 80 ago. Then medical sdloola were overcome by 1980. medlclne among youth mainly lo two fac- ~ theeter bull In Boston suggests a uiz about plays and the theater. To 1\8.J'o w it ·down, I have selected only 20th playa; YOO ore to ldaltify them the lollowlng de!Cript!oos of the set· or opening scene. Hall right is an ble score: !. A> the. cucbo -·a1z,· •. Is tumlDg down coven and run- batb-water. 2. On • bOUntiT road, with ~ tree in s1ght, a man sits on· h moond, trying lo take off his boot, when he Is joined by a friend, whom he !ells he "l""'t tile previous night In a ditch -and was beaten up. 3. A lady representing the Hmnanity 'Leque vil!ts an island iacfary which :maiufactures mechanical people ... design- ed to ptrlorm menial tasks. • 4. A man appears at the window of the niayor'a home.in a medle.val Bri\iah town and inloniii the7Jba;.r'I elm ·brbas come to request bla awn banging. · · • N. C. E. OIMlllY 0•• _,,......,. •N ~ W ,.....,. ........ 11:1111.ttt ........... wttwl " "" ........ ... ,..., ,., ---... ......,. ... IMfty Pfllt. . 7. A ~ergyman b praymg and weeping at the bedJtda .ol Ills dauBbler, w1>en a message arrives fnxn the doctor. reporting that he can find no natural , causerfor ,the cbUd'1:.~. . t, 1 I. A bark~ at au Uuwement park on the outsk!rta of Budapest i• otandlng at the entrance of a oarouael, coaxing custonlers tO buy tickets. ' · 9. A theatrical manager and cast are preparing the rehearsal of a play when they are interrupted by a strange family -a father,· a 'mother. m. mourning, an elder son, a~ step-daughter, an~ two child'!n. . 10. A valet. ushers a man into a draw· lng-room .furnisbed In Second Empire sly!e, and leaves, locking him In; the · room cmiatna no wtDdows or mlrron, · the l!gliC cannof be lliiled oil, and the call bell doesn't w..-t. ANSWERS: 5. Four men-tbr<e lo while tie and tails and one In sweater Ind ba1e feet - are dandni a Mowt minuet with four ·women In gaudy even!nl 'IOWllS aJOUlld the no,.....laden collin ol a women they have killed. · · · 1. "Peter Pan" by Barrie. 1 "Waiting for ,Goclot" by Beckett. 3. 0 R.U.R.." by Capek. 4. "The Lady's Not for Bum!Dg" by Fry. s: '"Ille. Blacks" by Genet 6. "'The Children's Hour" by Hellman.· 7. '"lbe Crucible" by Miller. 8. "Ullom" by Molnar. 9. "Sb: aiaracters In Searcll ol an Author" by Pirandello. 10. "No Exit'' by Sartre. 6. In the Uving·roam ol a farmlJooJse converted into a scbdol, a lad)' is coachq an apathetic llOdent In the reading ol Sllol:espeato, Wbile other girl> sew and study 'Latin. 'Model' Letters Used To Boost Nixon Image The committee to Re-Elect the Prest. dent establisbed a national "letter writing networt" which continued even after the election to flood newspapers with lelters praising the President and lambasting his criUca. (JACK. ,ANDERSON) Hts conservative critk:I weren't ~spared Tse--tung views, were also instructed to tbe letters-t<>fdltor1 ca m pa I g n . write lette,. proteltlnji the ouster of the ConservaUve colwnui8t William Buckley, Chiang Kal.ghek govermpent from the for example, annoyed tbe Pl'tsldent by United NaUoos. tici%lng the detente with COnunun1st IEM'ERll ro Oditors were stimulated China. OUt went I ~all, -.htch the ''.let-on .. variety of issues from the. Vietnam ter wri~ network wd11nVlted to UJe War to. wage-price controls. Tb e a~iamod .~~~·De'WIPll~··, Prealdent,1 Wripa1gn committee Icleolotrbll1-. wltb rigid mind prepareel • blast, I« enmple, at Rep. d lnfiexlblo ,atu~es. William Buckley John Ashbrook, the Ohio conservative, unds Ute a political Elmer Gantry wlth1<,; for crltlclzing the President's !lscal righteous outbunta .,~t the pollcles. ite (commuqllt) devils, the let· The letter writers were urged to pro- writcrs wert Ina~ to •ay. test : "How would Mr. Ashbrook maintain ckley has no trouble oupporllng hb desired llsoal black Int! By raising tlal dictators, from Spain to Greece tues, or cutting back public tmployment Brazil, but be appears mentally In-programs ., reduclng benefita to the ble of recognizing that under Mao uoemp1o~t" llvea of the Chlnese masses have grutly improved. AS LATE AS January 25, 19'13, Jong after the President ,... safely l'Hlected, BUOILKY -~ _,, to care that !he campalJm committee urgod tbe 1919 the avenge peasanl bad no "letter wrttfug net...,.k" to stimulate , aimoot no clotbing and never mat! congratula!tng the Pr<l!dent on the b rood, that be was exploited Vietnam cease-fire. !essly and died )>OUDg. "Let's give hlm thanks, PUBLICLY, In uckley 1, not offez:ing the a Letter to the' F.d.ltor -"-two or three rvatlve' view of auna ... What papen!" the letter writers were urged. ey gives la: a radical, evanaetical ''And get two or three other people to Tia centered Jn the old Manlchaean write, too. ,.There are always Jots of o1 allaoluta ll<!<>d and evil" voices telli!!i the President what he's .. me letler wiiters, Wbo wore ul:· doing wrong -let'• congratulat• blm for to stlaO\ Buckley for bis sntl-Mao <%>,lni 1 ftry big tbing -RIGHT!! I" Two tey factors Ire bebJnd the prom · tors: the feeling that practicing medicine financed by loundaUon pants, privite ising hope of attaining this long-sought the federal outlay for this purpose was is a "relevant" way to serve fellow men ~::~d t~J~ ~1:;:"81 coo- objective : $6.6 million; the amount this fiscal year and society; a career as a doctor insures .....,~ (1) Record • high Is $86 million -and is virtually certain an afflUent income and a well regarded A3 tbese tradltlonal revtniae aowces enrollment in medi-to go up furtl)er next year. professional and social status. dwindled and co8Y soa1'e4t they were cal schools as a re-Strikingly revealing of the growing in· ThJs combination of . idealistic and replaced by steadily ezpandina federal Sult of a growing te~ in medicine among youth is the pragmatic factors, Dr. cooper noted, la subsidies. In addlticn to direct grantl to !rend among youth · In edical tud·-•· since ........ , Id ced b the f llow'"" medical schoolJ and· studalll ,under the of interest in ~ 5•000 lDCl'ee.se m s QAW> !;u.;w: ev en Y 0 ... 16 ComprehensJve Health M ••power cine. This matted 1966. fa 111'/0, there. were two applicants for Training Act, the federal ,.,odimeat ha• interest l n c I ad es LAST FAIL, the 109 medical acbools in every medtcal tlchool opening. Last fall, al'° ~ around ma. iblllJon Into women, blacks and the U.S. enrolled a reconl 13,500 ,tuc!ents medical acbOo!s In tbe lomi ill research other e t h n i c el~ -lo oxitrast to a UtUe more than a:,ooo the ntio wu s to 1• Also. 7·1 percent of proiraml and other projef:tl..!.. In 1~ B ·-th Iota! ol ll •· this )'Olr'I ~ ~ II blad: -The ~ ~• ments. -· 1 u .. , e enro ... ~ three ·-. tbil mber In 1966. "11ie ..,.emment .... : -po (2) Steady Increase In federal un· expected to soar to 15,000. AAMC. ta ~ rt!cn to ris'e to medical schoola to by 111'"1& derwriting · of medical scbools and On the basis of these esttniates, ·the •II* propo them an incent!V.. boQu& !or. each 6 -· 12 percent by 1 ' _. students under t he Comprehensive Association of American Me d i c a I cenl increase in the tre.hmap. daa -, Heelth Manpower Training Act. In 1966 Colleges tAAMC) anUctpates that the TODAY, medleal ICboo!s get ap-plus lf,000 for each J"'dllated pbalclln., • • , " • .. ' Sp~ilers Harµit the Nature Trail • ' 4 ' • ,.. • " • --• • • .. • .4 ... • . . . . ' . •' ' -To the Editor: • · ,,..----------~ wal~ but by due legal proc..,s. No argu. of the Supreme Oiurt and the ecm.,... Why must -a few slobs ruin things aor .. mtllt. . . . ~ the United S~tea .. the rest or usl MAILBO:v However, 1n the Jong run, hive we nof And no~ alas, the olflce ot· tbrPresS. · '-· ' '4 · I al th that oor fonn °" gavenunent will dent o1 tile United states. I This season the hills awve Laguna are and can try to do the beet for the major-Tbelr boast appean to have been at their loveliest with white, Dame, blue, lty? • fulfilled.. yellow, apricoC,• lllfiuve, and magenta B.C. IIADDEN It is now up to ua fellow .citizenl to end wildfiawers bejeweling the green Kr•Y Lett.rs from T<aderr ore Wflcomt: the a path)" and .;o judge ill1d uphold -.u cbaparra!L. Yesterda __ ,,,_ the d Nornl<Jlly writer• shoiild convey lluir Memorial Coneert that we hold desr to us without hysleria ~ Y ~-°"""'t . ew messages in 300 tqprdi or leas. TM or undue emotion and to stand up to our • sUll gliatened aloog the trail, partially Tight to condense Zette:r1 to fit .tpae« To the F.ditor: ph>blem.9 as we always have 1b the past" · fog shrouded beyond. A cottontail bound-or eliminate libel is re1nved. All ban all --.i-f and to make our-jUdgmbnts with ,reat ~ ed into the bra.lb, tiny birds trilled tner· letters must include signature and A special t ts to your ,~rs or thoughttulnesa and ~completely just I •· and _..,_, their fine~ ol the Leenerta rily, haw..., ravens .,..-..ed lazily mailing addres&, but names may be !al . r-~ held or and keep our country best place-to overhead and quail BDd moumlng doves withheld on request if suf·'"-"-t Memor it~· at ange, live for ounetveS, oUr ch l 1 d re n, called ,_ the...... , __ ,. Coast College on Sunday, May 8. U any 1 uVm 1.u~ts. reason -is apparent. Poetru will not be of your readers still deaiN: lo contribute grandchildren and others to follow. · off ~. published. to the support of Maney Leenerts and her GEORGE D. BUCXXlLA THEN just ~ trail ahead, I noted ~ something bad been added since 1 last family, tbey may do 90 by sending dona-I passed there two days ago - a pile af amazing (If possibly momentarily true) tlons to Paul COx, Fine Arta Dlvillon, f'N (Jp freshly cut ivy trimmings. Ahr well, but this Is only a moment in history. Orange Coast Collece. being biodegradable, they will disappear Ms. Powell wants the revelations of in a few years. corruption be burled! 1ben, of all things, A few hundred yards further oa, I came she suggests an assassin's bullet as an upon exhibit nwnber two, roughly four alternate solution. Good Lord! square feet of. charred, ye~ plastic foam. Scattered along the .QUI few bun· .dred feet were: a blue plastic inside car door panel cover, a green enamelled tray, two more piecea of foam -one larger and one smaller than tbe first - an empty beer can and a chocolate milk carton. Yuk! MAY THOSE assorted items return to haunt the perpetralors(1) of tbb outrage and may he waken from hla dreams each nigbt sweating In fear of chottng to death od them. NAME wmDlEM> Aghat To the Editor : The egregious letter or May tJ by Elizabeth H. Powell leaves me aghast. I have never aee.o a more crass, cynical, and faithless view of our country and Its political bues. To say that politics Is a dirty business, that politics will destroy personal integrity, that protestations of Integrity will be adversely used Is quite Quotes ADM T. H. MOORER, USN, ClunJ1., Jolot Chief• of Staff, 111 s.r. talk - "Mllilary force• and weapons are not the cause of confrontaUon; confrontation is caused by connict or national lnteresta. The real ltey to world peace is not disarmament per se, but the peafeful """'1utlon througb-negotlatlone ol (tbooe) conflicting int<...U." ' . , CANN<YI' a person like this try to give the benefit of the doubt to many honest (although human) people in the political world until they prove themselves di!honest? 1 I feel that Ms. Powell is parroting a "conspiratorial thesis" of our biltory since WW II. Sure, crooks or wrongdoers I n Washington etc., must be nailed to the Wicks ' lw:;:i\ ~ ~ ~ r: ,Pl 'Thr(tt1 from A11n-... but thBY're ticking/' PAUL COX, Fine ArUI Division Oiatnnan (Mn. Leeurti ii the widow of E£.. mer Leeneru, who lost hi! life in a Co1ta Mesa indUltrlal ezplosion last month. -Ed.J -- To the Editor: I The termlnitl<ih of the Ellsberg trial is a perveraion of our tystem of govern. ment and freedom . • In what other Cwn\rY would a man who deliberately stole. & o v e r n m e n t secrets be tumed loose lo mau Jn. credible ~lll'(lii· iild , wreak further End the Apothu damage ltt a nlilloo ovtr-burdened with To the Editor: !he peney anle antlcs of aome 111per zealous sobordJnatei!. Following World War II many zealous Pert0nally,I am fed up~ the lloniz. Americans warned that the Olmmunl¥t would attack and defeat us. ing of Ellsbtti. Jt_~ia 11 · me that a w ed ..i the th perto11 with Ills lot~ talenta bas e ann our ve.s to tee · 1 not been able 1o pu• tbPJ. to more The Communists said In ea.sence, -balanced use "Don't bother, we will tate,..ovortrom • LYMAN s. rAl!LKNER within," but we did not believe them. CONSIDER the following evenla: There has been a breakdown ol. the sanctity 6f the home. The,. has been a brolkclown ol the very foundatloos laid by our foondtng rathers. There tw been a bretkdown of the religious establishments, p r I v a t e enterprise, private ownenhlp, porno- graphy abounds, etc., etc. Major steps have been taken to cauae the defamation ol our honored FBI, arm· ed forces . police establishments. labor unions and other establishments that have helped to make our-country greaL HONORING the dilhonored, dralt dodgety;• murderers, rioters, ayndlcated crlme, etc., etc. The infiltration into r e 11 g 1 0 u. organizations, schools, and o~r ba1lc foundatlons and organizations that have m&de us a greit peace loving nation with compisskln ror our fellow man. And now comes the final coup' de grsce! • The distrust of lhe very basis of our government, challenging the credl'bllity • • OUMMCOAlf " DAILY PI LOT • ' ' l!obm N. WHd, hl>Uolllr, Thom4t Ke<tllf, Editor Barbara. Kreibkll· . ,, EcUcofial Page Editor \ 111!' edftorlal .p&p of 1tr O.ily Pilot leelu to Inform. and stimu.lal• rnden by prnetrtlfW on tbis pqe dlvene iCommentvy ·on lopJcs Ol m.. tft'Kt by lfyndicated rohunnists ud c.amonlsb, by providtrw & forum ftr re.den' vtew1 and b)' ~ eu. new.,pe:r'• oplnlont and XW.. ca currwnt topks. TN e4ttol'1&1 ~ ot the o.1Jy PUat &pptar only in (be editorial column at h top ct tM pqe. Opinlont t!<pl'ttllllfd by the coJ.. umrdstl Md Cflrtconflrt• and leUtt writ en are t.twir own md no f'Odorff. rntnt or thtlr view& by the DtJl7 Ptlot ~ki be inftmd. Wednesday, May 16, 1973 ( \ I • I -' . :Near Sho down CALIFORNIA 'SACllAM&NTO (AP) -1be llnt A t a. e m b I y rel1>' ~ bill to win ..... I• 'if,y 1upporl from ....mblymen ol bolh parties ts 1*l<lod for • -'town -VOie, promillDg lo end '-------' IWO ~ ol bitter partl&an atrµale In the lower bowe. qne GOP !elder called Ille piab. •'perbapo the wont ger- 1')'11i18nder fn the hJatory ol thll llate." bot Republicanl - ,., Tuelday to ... ~ tb6 -omlae plan -11 -q, for • llocir Tiiie 'Jlwr>dl1. 1be bill -1d wipe OUI seats ol three Incumbent Democnll, but It would atlll leave Democrats wilb a 47-33 Aleembly majority, backers said. • League Troalde SACRAMENTO (AP) -1be Leacue ol Calllornla ottt .. has shifted the site ol. today's coo- venuon l~ to a new Le::·. ::::B::::RI::::EF~'S _) Mother Lode Gold Fever Hits Again SACl\AMENTO (UPll - Mining equipment stores In Cililornla's famous Mother Lode report tbe "gold fever" demands for pans, dredges and metal detectors is soaring nearly as high as the price of the precious yellow metal on world markets. A UPI survey of equipment dealers Tuesday s how e d business increases ranging from 25 to 75 percent on the same day gold closed on the Parlrlreemartet-at-fl24.06. Pqnthet Seale' Loses Bid < InOp,kland~a_yor Contest ' ' OAKLAND (AP) -Black Panther col<IUlldel' B ob b y -loot his bid to be<ome mayor of California's filth Jai:geot dty. But he pledges, "We haven't stopped yet.'' nus1neaman Jom Reading captured bis thlrd t e r m as mayor by p.n almost 2-1 rnar- gin Tuelday and lauded the Panthers' movement into the political arena. "I would hope they wlU con- tinue to work in the democra· tie process,'' Reading said af- ter his vlcloly was usi.red. ''l'm much more pleased with this than with the militant and conlronlat1onal type ol ap- proach the Panthers were do-1 ing four to five years ago." Wtth all t36 precinctl .._-!· • • ing, Radtng bad 77.'tl& votes to 43,719 for Seale. There was Ul'IT91efMNI OAKLAND VICTOR Mayor R•ac:ling a 71 per cent turnout of the 174,900 registered voters in lhis city of 361,500. In a nine-candidate primary April 17 which saw a 63 per- cent turnout, Reading collect· ed 55,434 votes to 21,329 for Seale. • - Seale called his campaign- aimed primarily at the 34 per- cent blacL;wl d 2Q percent Spanish-su~ population - a "signlifcant foundation for the people in the future to oolve the ilsues and p<Oblems of the communilY·" He had urged programs o1 aid to the poor and "a bet!W and i;nore decent life -the bb- glnning of which eaff come wilh the idea that people ha a right to a job, with or with- out a skill." Readin.IJ said he and Seale "are talking about the sam~ issue!. We want to reduce. crime and increase employ- ment, but we're poles apart in how to achieve these things." The mayor said that his ap- proach is to create a commu- nity climate that attracts busi- ness and new jobs. Despite the di::feat, Seale and a crowd or ycuni supPOrte'"S held what thev cql\ed a "vi~ torv celebratioti" ln the ~c companyment of a live band at a waterfro.,t restaurnnt. "We hqvc11't stooc :!d vr.t." Sei:ile s~id to applause. "1 wilt not make a r',.,ncession soePCh because l v"ill not C"'lCecl e the ri ghts of human beings." • ' , DAILY Pll-OT TO • •, . MAKE ROOM ,FOR NEW SUMMER ' GOODS •Pants •Sweaters •fops •Skirts •Swimsuits •Blazers I • •Vests •Skirt Sets ·••Dresses •Pant Sets LONG & SHORT •Blouses •Hot Pant Sets locaUon after two mayors and -ly Speaker Bob Moret- ti boycotted the Tuesday lunch "It's gold fever," said Frank Sullivan. manager of the Mother Lode Skin Diving shop in Sacramento. "It's just like addiction. It's like alcohol to an alcoholic." Her Charms All ~ers, Say Doctors Home Brewed Gasoline Studied by Long Beach MON. THRU FRI. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. JPJ CALIFORNIA FASMION ·FACTORY OUTLETS -Gov. Ronald Reagan was ICbeduled lo he the featured speaker today. Mayon Norman Mineta or San Jose and Warren Widener of Berkeley refused to attend Tue.day's luncheon at the 'SacramenlO Eilts Club, saying Uae-dub dl:scrimt.nates against raclaJ minorities in i t s membership policies. • De•tJa Bill OK SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Senaleo Judlclary Committee baJ given 8-2 approval to a bill requiring the execution of anyone convicted of murder- ing a police officer. The vote Tuesday advanced Ille blJI, by Sen. H. L. Rlcban.OOo (R-Arcadia), to the Senate floor. If it passes that l>luae, it still faceo strong ~ 1n the Assembly. •S1dtFUed SUlLJVAN SAID his diving equipment used for gold recovery was doing a brisk business, and his . pans and dredges were "up $12,000 a mOJllh." In the past two months, he sBid, his store has sold more than §,000 pans, 300 dredges costing up ·~ $400, and· about 20,0CK> books on gold mining and panning. "We're swamped," s a i d Herman Fiedler, who runs Fiedler Equipment Co. in Grass Valley in the Sierra foothill s. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Mn Tallent1s charms are her own, not a contribution of medical science, doctors have told or- Jicials of the Miss Greater San Diego Pageant. Other contestants claimed on Tuesday that the 21-year- old wil}ner, a fashion model, had enhanced her ngure by breast surgery or silicone .in· jections. Officials had Miss Tallent checked by three plastic surgeons Tuesday night, then announeecl: "Whatever she v.·on with is hers." Miss Tallent measures 35-22· 35. LONG BEACH (UPI) -The city government, squeezed by the gasoline shortage, has an option not available to many others: do.it-yourself gasoline .. In this oil rich city the mu- nicipal government has its own crude oil reserves. 'lbe dty has been buying its gasoline from major oH com- panies but so far has been un- <ible to ·get any company to bid on the contract for 1.5 million gallons it needs for the coming · year. The oil companies say that with the shortage coming, they don't want to be tied to such Pl E d I big conb'acts. an n orsec So the City Council Tuesday LOS ANGELES (AP} _ unanimously approved a reso- "IT'S (BUSINESS) improved Gov. Rona1d Reagan's tax lution to seek a company to to the point where we've had to limitation initiative has gained refine the city's own oil re- turQ away sol!}e work," said the endorsement of the United servestogetthegasol:ineneed- FiedJer, whose t~man firm Organizations of Taxpayers ed to keep its police cars and manufactures and re ta i Is Jnc. Howard Jarvis, the other municipal vehicles run- s.AN F"R1tHt!SCO (AP) custom dredges. "We're run-group's chairman, to Id ning. the leading. source of "petro- leum in California for more than 50 years." said City ~tan ager John Mansell. Steamer Set For -Sailirig SAN PEDRO (AP) -The SS Catalina, known to hun- dreds of thousands as The Great Ylhite S team er , resumes its famed run to Avalon on Catalina Island june 16 alter being idle more than a year because of a labor dispute. Jack Stanaland, owner o£1=== the steam-powed vessel, said Tuesday the ship was able to go back into service because of an agreement reached with eight wUons which allows a SATUROAY 10 A.M. to 7 P .M. SUNOAYS II A.M. to 5 P .M. HUNTINGTON ·-IEA-CH GARDEN GROVE-9586 HAMILTON LA HABRA 1364 SO .. IUCLID ALPHA !ETA IMPERIAL CENTElt 13199 llOOIHUl$T I Bloek South of Garden Grove Blvd. AICADIA 19 W. Lai Tunei Or. MONTCL.Allt 2 Blocks WHt of Brookhurst llLLFLOWll 9104 Alo~ra IEDONDO llACH I lllk, So. of hnp.rlal Hwy •. LOS AMGILIS l I 35 Sen FwTi1"'10 ltd. MAllNA DU llY 572 w •• hift9Mn J(ids ~ike To Ask -Andy · Paul Maris Co. moved in San ning 25 percent above 11ori.1Ul newsmen tbat the propqsal "It is especiaUy ironic that Fnmciaoo Superior C o u rt and if we could handle all Ulat '.'will do more than anything no oil company would Supply Tue9day to Sue the firm's came in we'd be 50 :percent we've seen to return control to the city of Long Beach with ... former president, Paul Maris, _a_bo_v_e_-'..,' -'-----,---•-he_:_peo_:_p_l•_-'_' ------~gase.:...='.:.iil:..:q.:.•.:.l.o:.n_,gc:B:..:•c:•:.ch.:.,has=.:.bee.:.:.n'I----------------------------------_:_ ______ _ and other former executives ,~ far damages iii excess of $10 million, a 11 e g i n g acts detrimental to the company. • 1 work force reduction from 54 ' to 45. , ' , - . ' Marl&, who was replaced as -p<elldent April 19, previous!~ sued for damages 1&ainst .._ .board cbairmlin Milfo(r D. stewart, who is president of · cre:a.uve •Capital Corp., the . ma)oc. stockholder in Paul Maris Co. " • Teacher Jailed SANTA CRUZ (AP) - A San Jose CitY College teacher will .be 'arraigned Wednesday on charges of embezzling '15.000 from a --c·r Ip p 1 e d children's camp. Leslle R. ScheKl.t, 35, of San- t.a Cruz, a health education in- structor at the college, was charged with two counts of grand. lheft1 deputies said. The Santa Clara County district at- torney's office sajd Scheidt pocketed paychecks meant for students working al the Easter Seal Society Camp. Sears .. .· "these days, when everything's cetting giant anaComplicate'd, we're still small enough to knoll who you are" ' . Corona clel Mar: 2744 E. Coe1t Hwy. Phone: 1714! 644-7255 Assets just barely over $3~ mlllfOn • Hugh Evans, Jr., President ' Make Time Stand Still ... portraits are forever! 49* Each Portrait With One Subject ,. is all you pay for a big 8x10 color portrait adults •No age l1m1t • children •limited to One Portrait per Subject, Two Portraits per Family • babies • Additional Prinls Available at Reasonable Prices no extra charge for handling and delivery 99c* extra for each additional person in portrait *Plus Sales Tax HOURS: D~i ly 12 noon to 8:00 p.m. Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Sunday 12 noon to 4:001J.m. PS ' aj . Now through Sunday, May 20 af the foll owing Sears Stores arl -·-43~N~ -~~:?:lG:·~~~~SW.001-'0&lA=MUA-ORANGif.----e S PASADENA BUENA PARK GLENDALE LAGUNA HILLS ~u•t.11o&IUC"'""'1>co. S11ti.sf11ctin1r (;11.aro11.t.eed or Yn11r ~lt1 11 Py u,,,.,, } ., • ' •' ..... • • • FASHION J ISLANO • NEWPOBT1 l:ENTlllt Pacific Coast Highway~ Between Jamboree and MacArthur • • f \ • l •• I