HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-05-29 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • • • • • . ..
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E. Doward Dnnt!'s Co1n1nander
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-Proposal to · Kill
Castro Revealed:
8 For111er POWs
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DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTE.RNOON, MAY 29, 1973
V0C.... M, MO. Mii, t S•CT·IONS, :a 'AGliS
ut!Oade;t.1J!'•i11ect
~· ·j colonel Names
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:;8 .. F6rmer POWs
·.·
":WASHINGTON (AP) -An Air Force
colonel who commanded· U.S. war
pHJmers -y f i I e d court•m.artial
cllirges against eight Army and Marine
()ff icer Ilevives .
Woman at Pool >
An oU-duty . San Clemen le police
Iiel}t~nt was credited, with reviving an
~Joos woman who ten into a swim-
mlng pOoi during a Memorial Day pool
PfllY.
""1Jce Lt. Raymond Hartman applied
mouth-t~mouth resuscitation to revive
Wt. Beverly Jean.Walker, 39, Who bad
faUe.n into a pool at 233 Avenida La
euhta -I · A oty ambulance was summoned to
ihi'tiotpe but was not required beca'use thl w<man bad already been revJved.
P9l}ce reports said.
GUests at the party drove Mrs. Walter
lo 'San Clemente General Ho5pluil where
1116'1\'oman was admltled for oboervatlne.
·Tbe incident occU1Ted at 5: 17 p.m.,
poUce said.
l ·or .. ge >
Coast
. :, Weliiher
~ Maf!UY smmy Is the way the
'lt(>ilherlady sees II for Wednesday,
• with cooler day•. lliglls In the 70s
·.,. expected at the beaches and
• !inland areas. Lows In the &Os.
.'t INSIDE TODAY
•:' proclaiming "Hooker! of the
'w6rld, unite," a San Francisco
?t"Otlffiuu and an approoing
,board of businessmen and autho-
on ~ with o '1$,(){)() gnm; /fom
\11 reUgfour group -are OTVOf"'"
id!lg • pro.rtilutel' guild to .,.,,,..
lbat pafict harailm«nt. See Cle·
lllJlll "" Po{/• 5. • .......... . ·-. '~ ft-it ' Qlnfp If
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enlisted men. He accused them of
"miscmduct while· in a North Viet-
namese prisoD. camp," the Pentagon an-
nounced.
The action· by CoL Theodore W. Guy of
TuCsoo, Ariz. was the firat such move
against any of the S66 military POWs
who have returned home.
Pentagon spokesman Jerry \Y •
Friedheim said the names ol the eigbt,
five soldiers and three Marines, will be
made pOblic after they are formally
noiilied. . , ·
Friedheim did not .disclose . the specific
charges or any details, but military
sources said Guy ~ the eight or
aKiing the enemy, disobedience of orders
and di!rtspect to superior officers.
-More than a mon&h ago, the 44-year-old
Guy told a reparter that some POWs he
commanded were cowards "who openly
-tollaboi'ated with the ebemy'' and even
CflUsed pbyalcal harm ,to,.some comrades. · 1te declined tO Daine thCm "theri. ·
Friedbeim said the formal charges
were filed with the secr~l.aries cl the
Army and Navy. 'lb<y wll\ decide
wfietbl'r lo press COl\ftHn!lrtlal after
formal gialid jury-type lnvesttgatlons are
conducted wider the Uniform Code of
Military Justice.
Acconling to ~Friedhelm, <>Iller lonner
war prisoners have sought legal advice
from Pentagon milltaty and civilian
lawyers about pOssible ch3rges agafmt
other freed prisoners but "there have
been no olher cbare:es to date."
He said those Inquiries tnVo1ved both
enlisted men and officers.
Guy, shot down over Laos in 1968, was
commander of U.S. war prisoners in a
Haooi compound·called '"The Pkmtation''
for abiMlt fl; years .
In an Interview, be charged that 1101t1e
POWs accepted fawrs from the North
Vietnamese in the fonn of extra rations
· and greater freedom 1 vilthin the cclu\..
(See POWo, Page Z)
NO CASTRO TIES
TO WATERGATE?
MEXIOO-CJTY (UPt) -CUbo's ~·
unbo.audor to Mmoo aa1d Mopcfay 1lia~
Premier Ji'ldel Caatro bad nothlnc to do
with the WaU!rgale attalr .
"I nJect any Ccmectlon you want lo
make belween the WaU!rpte ..,.. l,l1d
Fldtl CUtro," ambeaador Fernando
Lapa Mulno told nnmnen, In reopome
::; ~ u be arrived to IUa IJ\l blJ
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.... For. Miseonduet
ecor
-_·-ea~--. . ...... ' . '\>.__,1 :.... ,..-._ .. • ' I -t .e.s,~·-,~
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All Ji'rqm Mesa
5 Phone Bandit
Suspects
By JOANh"E REYNOLDS • . , • Of,,. DlllJ~f:S,_ff .• ·.
F'ive Costa Mesa men were taken into
cuStody in a series of arrests over
Mfftiorial Day weekend as police from
five agencies allege they broke the
"telephOne bandit" ring.
lb custody today in Costa Mesa are:
-Mark Stewart Alcala, 18, of 525 Vic-
torja St.
Held
lain y~~~Y~ w~ ~-stl~~ ~ause
the'VICtllnl< n'eVer "biil any· cm tact with
the bandit other than by telephone.
Cordeiro noted ironically that Acala ,
who had gone into hiding, was assertedly
talked into surrendering over the
telephone by Detective George Wilson of
Costa Mesa.
-Paul ChrlsUan LaJole, 18, of the
, salJle address.
During the telephone robberies, which
·netted the robbers $2,700, one of the ftve
wOuld call a franchise business and tell
(See FIV.E HELD, Pace l) •
-Todd Brian Qmppelow, 18, or l8151
. Yellowstone Drive.
Ul"t T....,.,. · -JOhn Patrick Diener, 19, who gave no
'addless. Let's Hear It
CONSIDERED AS TARGET
Cuba's Fid•r C11tr1>
In custody in Huntington Beach is:
-;l1:ffrey Dale Welch, 19, of the Vic· $% &* f Ali torii Street address in Costa Mesa. 0 Or Ce
All the men are . ~i!«l wUh. armed . . . . , ,,
E. H .. . a· y · · "''. r·•11ery .nd··.=.:.· iaiif''Al•a1a '!we~.· · " .,.,.., . " • · .. · .. • fiil . .,..,...... . -U'"l S~·· ' u.,io • ~ • 3 ~m SEATI'LE (AP) -Rocle •n• roll eo-
• ._, 1«1U-• . "£ ·~ ~ held on charges of mtent lo In Jure lertalner Alice Cocper wu cited by
• • , w h a d~truct1ve device. . Police here for disorderly conduct at a
P l to Kill . ect1ve Sgt. Sam Cortle)l'o of Cost& per{onnance -et• ~-!leattle C.Oter col· r-Op0$a •'•'' ·M .... ,.who ·beaded•ui>•the learn ol In· iseum In whlcb'IJO lnvlled the crowd to
. ve'9tigators on the case, said the five men express its "best insults."
C t R led are being held in connection with a total u Wally Long head of 8 Police a.s ro . evea or '· 15 _robberies throughout Southern detaCrunenl at t11a' oenler, said that at
WASHINGTON. fUPI) -Watergate
coospirator and rormer CIA agent E.
Howard ·Hl!Dt, who helped plot the 1961
Bay of. Pigs invasion or Cuba.. says be
recommended to CIA supOriors !bat
Fidel ,Castro be assassinated as part of
the scheme. His proposal was never ap-
pri>ved.
Huot made the disclosure in a
forthcoming book In which be describes
hls role and that of the Kennedy ad~ -
ministration. bl the' ill-fated invasion by ~
1ewal )wndre<1 Cuban v:uies WJ'<! we" ·
·O<gaJTiud "and t:r.iined by t~ U'nlie<!
Stafes to overthrow Castro's regime.
A copy of the printer's galleys for the
boo!<, to be publilhed In November by
Arllngto!t Hoose, waa obtained by UPI.
In I~ Hunt cbarget that Kemedy tried
to f'wbitewash the New Frontier" when
tile invasion' failed by "heaping guilt "" tm CIA.·" K"""'11f ~ _.;billty (or the
Bay ol Pip llUOI> at Ille time but much
ol Ille blame for Ill lnlUative snd Im· Plementatlon wu placed nn the CIA by
0~ said be ~ ..,.,.lnating
the Oiban ltldtt · beclll8t ho believed
tbel "without Cltlro lo lnlplre them the
, (See CASTRO, Pap li
Cahfom1a. • · the end o[ the llhow Friday ntgbt Cooper
Known a.s the tele~e bandit in _West "approacbed the crowd with a rolled-up Orang~ County, the f1v~ men are believed poster In his hand and offered the poster
by police to be responsible for seven rob-as a prize fCJr whoever could smut the
beries and a bombing here in the past best Insult.
month. "For three or four minutea it was just
'l1>e robberies, which took place In a contest of whoever could shout the
Huntington Beach, C..ta Mesa and Foun-worst obscenities."
Gas Tax Bike
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U.S. Eyes 'Economy Matter'
WASHINGTON (~ -Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz
said today the' Nit.on admlntatnlion ls considering a proposal to
raise gasoline taxes as an economy matter1 not one to ease the en·
ergy ciisls. ,
Shultz, speaking al a news conference for economic reporters,
also indicated. that the Administration has under study other tax-
Increase proposals to help c:ool the rapidly expanding econoD\)'.
& for the gasoline tax, Shultz said It is "one of tho many things
we are reviewing all the Ume."
He said there -pluse. and minuses connected with the pro-
posal and slTessed that no decision bu been made.
The federal tax Is four centa a glllon. .
am ··
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Cars Backed
Up 5 Miles
From Shore
By JOHN ZAILER
Of ... DelW pt..., lt•ff
A hot ljllll>y Memorial Day produced some-of .the .1tt111e11:beot!li -.;and
worst traffic jams 'in the history ol tbe
Orange Coast, officials reported today .
Roads leadtng lnto all coastal areu
were snarled -50Rle frcm as far as flye
miles Inland -from late morning Mon·
day until late afternoon, and wbeb
motorists arrived at beach areas, park-
ing spaces were at a premiwn.
Coaatwide beach attendance w a s
reported at nearly 400,000 Monday. alone.
Newport Beach wlth 150,000 people and
Huntington city beaches with 40,000
persons both reported the largest single
day crowds Jn their bblory Monday.
Newport Beacb police said their park-
ing offit!ers were.. writing tickets at the
rate of two per minute all day.
"From tbo ~lice bellM>ler. ypu ~ · !Oie 'that tlii! Whole l>Oacb area waa . '
Uterally covered with cars -and none o( ..
them were moving," said Newport Beacb ·
traffic .officer Q4FY JAe. 11 1 1
''People were parking on par~lij-'J. ~ r
the grass. in tht! atreet," be said. "A lot ·
ol them bad ·been llghl.ing trallle all ·day,
and when they got bere they were not
about to turn back just because there
w&J no place to park. ;
"Jt was the worst I've ever seen it in -
nine yeara on the force ." Lee said. :
ln Huntington ·Beach police r.ported •
sinl.ilar snarls ln ~ beaCb area, with ~
nearly 100 cars towed away for illePI
parting.
"Evttybody that came to H"""-1
Beach Mnnday· parked here Ulegally,"
declared police Lt. Dm Jenkins this ,
momlng.
Beach coodltlons, for those that got ·
that far, were excellent both Sunday and . , ~\oo~y. Wat'!{ -~~l)ll!,l&<S ranged up , fti'!f'llegfeA •allil ·111if'W.s small. Air
: (See 'CROWDS, Pap I)
U.S. Cited Star Kist
WASllINGTON (AP) -Several months !
before • Star Kilt plant JJICl:ed two lots
ol tuna fish that 11cltened more than 200
pereons, gGvernment inspectors cited IS
qu .. tlonable sanitation practices at the
facility. The INpectors reporied, for ei·
ample, that fish were. being thawed In
untreated bay water, cans were not tie1nr ·I
cleaned out, rain leaked through a roOl
on1o cooked fish •:~~ Proceaelnc and cockroaches were ln the raw Dli"'
terlall stora&• room at tho com_., 1
plant In American Samoa.
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DAILY PILOT s !.....,, ..... l9, 1913
Skylab's Telescopes Trained on Sun Fro•P ... J
CROWDS .. .
temperatum were trom 10 lo IO depieea,
with the holtest ltmpuatures recorded
on Sin Cleme!!tt Stale Buch.
SPACE CEN'l'Ell, -(AP) -sQlab ....... t Ill". ,1'*llh P, ~
today polnb!Cl I ba!"rf ol tel-al
the t:I. hop(nc .. ill"" odentllla U>tir beat )'<!t 1! bow tlt1a ~ .......
ol -control& the aolar aystem. Physlc:lats aill! hot>e the e1por1Jneot
will help unlock the -ol allltrolled
thermonuclear fltsloo, Ille ....,.. ol lb6
51.Ul's energy. 1bl.s might aid in the
search !or an unlimited, pollution-ftte
power source oa. earth.
"It's a bceuUfuJ pldure." Kerwin
noted as be viewed on a !pace 1tatioo
Envoy Arrives
Chinese ambassador Huang
Chen waves upon his arrival
at Kennedy Airport in New
York. Huang and bis party ar·
rived in the United States to
establish China's "liaison of-
fice" in Washington.
I~tn1der Rapes
Woman Visiting
In Huntington
A Garden Grove woman who was
staying with friends in 11untington Beach
"'as raped early Monday morning by a
man \Vho broke Into the home.
The woman told orficers that her
fr iends had left to go fishing at about 5
a.m., leaving her sleeping alo ne in the
Geneva Avenue home.
She said she was awakened by an in·
truder who put his hand over her face
and told her to keep quiet. The raplst put
a pillow over her face before sexually
a~ulting her, the vlcUm told police.
·When her assailant left, the woman
said he told her not to call police because
he was hitchhiking to Mexico and would
be out of the counlry.
Won1an Dies in FaH
FORT BRAGG (AP l -A woman lost
her footing on the edge of a cllff and
plunged 200 feet to her death as her 7·
year-old daughter looked on, the sberifrs
office sa id . Gloria Ann Hawley, 34, or San
Anselmo. died Monday ju1t after she
stepped ou1 or a camper parked in the
rugged coastal terrain of the Warren
Creek arcn 20 miles north of here, the
Mendocino County Sheriff's department
said.
Ol.A.HCll COAST ,,.
DAILY PILOT
1111 0 •1'10-Coal! DAILY P'ILOT, wltll wtl•<h
Is ;~lntd ftlt Nnn·P'rn1, It Pllblltl\td ~y
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Hvn!lnvton ••~11/Foun••lil \1111ey, L..-
BHtf!, lrv!Ml$tddl.nlek Mid Stfl (IHMnl.t
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VIC• Jlr•llltrl! tnd Gt111rt 1 Mt11111tr
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"-"'IV1 "' -II U II -""lrl ll'lllltart .,.ttl'ltl .... ., ... -*"·
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~ IDCl'!lkr Ciiia ma ot the sun the
ob: Ill-•ere aamlnJn&, each In a
cWlonol ....... l....U..
Wllllo -limed up the llZt.I ll!lllbi llftl' oJ qbl lelncopea, Charle•
Qmra<I Jr. and Paul J. Welts assembled
..,,,.,.. ad ........ ..yhlcb they'll ...
IClrtloi fi'ecllleldq ~j lllrVef the eat1h 's ...........
. It Wll the filth da cl the planned 23-
day orbital flight.
Mission commande 1 Coorad today re-
quested a private radio conversation with
Spece Center Director Christopher Kraft,
mp eaalrollar Nell n.-ad
dlnetor al !licl1I ...... eperaUom OOltakl
It 6laytm.
MMolon CGoUol lator .. -a ..,,. ....., ol Ille m"'11mrte eonvenatloo. COmnd aid be thou&bl the .. _._
atabll!uid In the llllkm In Ille low 11111 and
that the....,,.,_ -d be Ible to -duct all -1meots flllly mept for ~
bicycle eun:ile Uled hi '""1lcal lats.
He aaJd the temperature still was a bit
wann for the bl.cycle exercise to be run
to full capacity. He also said It caused
some dilficulty because it "rides'' di!·
Guidelines Ordered
High Court Hits
-Editorial 'Ads'
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -The U.S.
Supreme Court ruled today that nelther1
federal law nor the Constitution's
guarantee of frte speech requires broad-
cuten to accept paid advertising on any
public luue, incllJdlni war aod pollUca.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger l@Oke
for the court in test cases inltlated by the
Democratic National Committee and an
antiwar group' known as Business Ex·
ecutives' Move for Vietnam Peace.
The U.S. Court ol Appoa~ bere
directed the Federal COmm1DlicaUona
commllsloo to aet up "regulatory
guidelines" on how to deal with editorial
advertisements on such subjects as war
and poljti~~
Frot11P"flel
FIVE HELD. ••
' the manager that a hl1l>powered rllle
was aimed at bis bead. Sometlmes they
would tell him there wu a bomb lnslde
the busineS!I that would be detonated if
the man did not follow instructions.
Cordeiro said today th.at the group's
suspected robberies in Tustin, Los
Angeles and San Diego did not always
follow the telephone style. "Some were
jUJt straight armed robberies," be a.Jct.
The last telephone robbery hi Hwr
tlngtoo Beach lnvolved the Sizzler steak
house at Beacll Boolevard and Ellia
Avenue.
1bree days alter that robbery, a plpo
bomb was expoded on jhe roof of the
restaurant. No one w~ injured in the ex·
plosion, which police are charging to
Alcala.
It was the explosion that brought
federal investigators into the case
because possession of an explosive device
ia a federal offense. lt was the only time
any violence was used, the detective
believes.
From Pagel
POWs •.•
poond walls and that they "turned their
bllcks on us."
He claimed that he and other POWs
were turned in to the North Vietnamese
by other American priloner9 and that
they were beaten and tortured because of
his efforts to establish communlcatlms
among the POWs and to organize
discipline in the camp.
Frledhelrn avol:ded a dtrect an~1er to a
Question as to whether Pentagon officials
Rltempted to talk Guy out of filing
charges.
The Pentagon spokesman said only .
that "Col. Guy was afforded the aame
legal assistance that would be afforded
any member of the services." Friedheim
said thi.! included guidance on the rights
of the colonel and the accused under the
military justice code, but said the legal
officers "wouJd not presume to suggest a
decision'' on "'helher lo go ahead with
the charges."
From the outset of the POW release in
February, Pentagon officials have hoped
to smooth over the harsh feellngs
between some war prisoners and to pro-
mote a forgive-and-forget attitude.
When the Supreme Court got the case,
it froze the situation so that stations
could continue their traditional practice
of not accepting such advertisements. To-
day, it reversed the lower court.
The vote to reverse waa 7 to 2, with
Justices WU!lam J . Brennan Jr. and
Thurgood Marshall dissenting.
Burger said "balancing the various
First Amendment interests involved in
the broadcast media and determining
what best serves the public'! right to be
Wonned is a task of a great delicacy
and difficulty."
He noted that Congress had con-
sistently refused to make broadcasters "common carrien" to which anyone bas
'""'--· !ll!tead, lt g•ve 'regul•tory
authority to the FCC, which evolved the
Fai.mess Doctrine in 1949.
This principle req~ broadcastm to
provide time for opposing views when a
cmtrovenial subject bas been aired. The
doctrine was upheld by the Supreme
O:>Urt June 9, 1969, in a case involving
Red l..Jon Pa. Broadcasting Co. case.
If everyone had a right of access to ad·
vertising time, Burger said, there would
be substantial risk that the system would
be monopolized by those best able to pay.
Thus, the fairness doctrine itself would
be undennined and the public ac-
countability of the broadcaster diluted.
Further, be 18..id, the commJssion would
inevitably be involved in a case-by.case
detenninaUon ol -should be bear<!
and when, so that government would
have more .. y Jn broodcutlng opera-
tions.
Burger said that the FCC, tn rejecting
the propooa1 ol business group and the
Democratic committee, could properly
take into account the fact that listeners
and viewers are a kind of "captive au·
dience."
In the public interest, he said, a
sy.bstantlal degree of journalistic dlscre--
tion must remain with the stations.
Burger suggest..i that Congress, the
commissioo ar the broadcasters
tbem5elve! mJght now "devise some kind
of limited right of access that is both
practicable and desirable."
Black Paper Bombed
WILMINGTON, N.C. (UPI) -An u·
plosion demolished the editorial offices
of the Wilmington Journal, a black-ori·
ented weekly newspeper, Monday night
and sent debris sailing into nearby homes
and vehicles, No injuries were reported.
Man Dispenses
Free Reefers
Laguna Beach police definitely
would have looked one gift horse
in the mouth if they could have col·
Jared him.
An irate citizen told officers Mon-
day that a long-haired man was
stopping passersby and offering
them free marijuana cigarettes.
When police arrived in the 40
block of North Coast Highway, the
pot huckster was: gooe. He was aaid
to 'have been in a euphoric state.
Daneers Cited
Cultists Charged in Obstruction
Laguna Beach pollcc cited 15 persons
on charges of blocking the~sldewalk as
members of the liare KrtSMa cull and
1.ove Animals. Don't Ent Them gathered
in SOC1g and ch::int~ Saturday.
Police Sgt. David Avers 1aid offic~rs
cited members()( the vegetarian care set
as they danced on the sidewalk in front
(){Love Animals, Don't Eal Them, 782 S.
Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
Those who danced to the jingling
sounds of bells, nutes, and drums forced
passersby to walk Into the highway to
avcld tbem, Avers lakl,
Aven aald the dancen declinod to obey
Corpse Identified
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A decapjtsted
body found last week In a field In
liuburban Dominguez ha s been Jdentlrled
as that of Robert James l.oudoo, ZSI, a
UCLA chemistry department teachlni
assistant. llis body waii foWJd with some
te1tbooks scattered nearby , hut his
watlet was rnlsstng.
I,
officers' i.nstrnctlons to leave a lane open
on the sidewalk, and were cited. A further
"loud music" disturbance was reported
at the vegetarian mecca early today,
however, participants complied \\•ith
"quiet down" orders.
Earlier Saturday, James Douglas
Roberts. operator of the Love Animals,
Don't Eat Them was cited for four
buikling code violations.
Roberts, who gained 90me measu re of
fame last year for allowing a camel, two
chickens and several dogs In lha cafe,
was cited for alleged vtolalloru of the
siiin ordinance, and remodeling without a
pennlt.
Love Animals, Don't Eat Thfm opened
last July 4, and was immediately in hot
water &s Boney Banana1, a eamel, and
Col. Sanders, a rooster, Joined opon!ng·
clay celebrallons lnslde, In violation of the
ftcalth oode.
In a colorlul trial, Robtl'ts wu found
guilty despl" his plea tbat 1n!mal1 and
man are all one. '
Subsequently, Love Anlmsla, Don'I Est
Them, became a temple.
ferenUy in welghU~ than ln earth'•
gravity.
Connld expressed dilplealure Mooday
al a number of e1tra qjoeuing tub
the astronauta were being uked to do.
He asked !hat these be held oft a couple
days until the crew got back en &ehedule.
The fint earth puses will be over tbe
United Sta ... and will bo directed mainly
at agricultural areas. The goal of the ex-
periment in these areas is to survey
crops throughout the current growing
sea80ll, assess arability of land and
evaJuate water runoff potential.
Ull'I Ttlffholt
SAID 'KILL CASTRO'
Consplr•tor Howard Hunt
From Pagel
CASTRO .•.
rebel anny and militia would collapse in
leaderless confusion.''
Hunt said his proposal wa s lo
"assassinate Castro before or coincident
with the Invasion." He added that the
role of carrying out the killing was "a
task for Cuban patriots."
He said he was told by Richard Bissell,
chief of the Cential Intelligence Agency's
claodestine 3enices, that bis plan was
being considered by a "special group''
within the goven::ment.
But liunt said: "So far as J have been
able to determine no coherent plan was
ever developed within CIA to assassinate
Castro, though it was the heart's desire
of many elite groups ."
Hunt's part in the invasion plan in-
cluded organizing C u b a n exiles in
Florida and coordinating their activities
with the invasion forces being trained by
U.S. Alr Force and Army specialists
.mich included the Army's Special
Forces unit.
He ssld plans had called r... a Cuban
Exile EJ:ecutlve Committee with Hunt at
their s.ide to enter Q.iba after the in-
vasion, declare themselves a
"government-in-arms" and call for
military akie.
Under the plan, the United States was
prepared to immediately recognize the
exiles and provide "whatever might be
necessary to ov,n.hrow Castro," Hunt
said. 0 "American Ships would be standing
near CUban waters 80 help wouldn't be
wm..,....,.Uy delayed."
Hunt said he wrote the book in 1967 and
intended it as "a private legacy to my
children."
But due to the Watergate publicity and
disclOl!lure of his CIA background , Hunt
said he decided publication would serve
to correct "distorted accollllts of my in· I' volvement in the Bay of Pigs invasion."
The telllOCIP'I m mocmttd on a large
device that II at.ended away from the
orbltin& ttatiOD GO Ione metal anm.
Tho UlrOhautl Moodoy completed set·
tini up -keeplna In the laboratory,
which II tbo me ol a thr<t.'bedroom
home, and began...lbdr _nm medical ex+
perlmeots.
A mabthlft IUnlbade erected Satur·
day reduced temper1ture1 to near 80
degrees. far below the 12S degrees
recorded in.side the cabin after a heal
shield was ripped away during the launch
of Skylab May 14.
Holdup Man
Gets $13,195
In Santa Ana
A Brink's armed guard was robbed of
$13,19S in a Santa Ana discount store
Monday afternoon in the midst of a holi·
day shopping crowd.
The lone gunman who con[rooted the
guard carrying the store's cash receipts
for the day as he left the office area in·
side the K-Marf store, 1400 W. Edinger
Ave., escaped with the aid of an ac·
complice, police said.
Officers said when the gunman con-
fronted the guard he shouted, "Don't
move. Don't do a damn thing or I'll kill
you," as he grabbed the guard's revolver
from its holster.
After seizing the money bag. the rob-
ber forced the guard to sprawl face down
on the floor In the hardware department.
"Stop him. He's got the money," police
said lhe guard shouted as the bandit ran
lhrough the store.
A store security guard tried to block
the path of the fleeing robber but be was
frightened off when the bandit waved his
.38 callber revolver at hlin and shouted:
"Get out or my way, boy. I don't want
to have to kill you." ·
The robber rped out of the front door
and jumped into a waiting station wagon
driven by the accomplice.
Later police found the vehicle wblch
was idenUfied by witnesses who took the
license number 81 it left the store park-
ing lot.
A wibless near the scene where the
st.atim wagon was found said she saw
two men, ooe of them wearlztg a ski
mask hurriedly leave the station wagon
and drive off in another car.
Witnesses described the bandit who
committed tlie robbery as about six feet
tall, weighing 170 pounds with shoulder
length hair and a busby beard.
Aliens Escape Jail
EL CENTRO (AP) -Officials today
were looking for 14 illegal aliens with
tell-tale unifonns -the T-shirts and
green shorts they were clad in when they
escaped from a rear window in the
Imperial County Jall. ·
Princess Anne
Troth 'Near'
LONDON (AP ) -The London
Evening Standard said today an an·
nooncement of the engagement ol
Princess Anne and Lt. 1r1ark
Phillips ls Imminent.
The newspaper quoted friends of
lhe princess, 22-year~ld daughter
of Queen Elizabeth II, and Phillips,
24, an Olympic gold medalist
horseman,
It sald friends "would not be
surprised if an annolDlcement were
made tonight."
Tbott were"rew rescues ,_ied, aod
only ... -lnci4ent ln"Olvin1 Laguna Beach ur.,u1nla. Ofllclala there
said Homer t.lfll, ~. of i.o. Angelea l"l,
jured hla head and neck body surfing
Saturday. , ....
Putted from !he surf by hi• wile, Lewi&·
w~ not brtathing when lifeguards ar·
rived. Following mouth -lo-mouth
re:;:uscitolion effo~s. however, Lewis wts
reported in sta\Jlt' ~ndition this morning
in the intensive care wiit or South Coast
Co1nmunity l~ospital .
Lifeeuards related the record-brtat·
ing tie.ch crowds to the generally poor . "
beach weather that has plagued coaata.I ·
beaches through most of thJs spring. · .
"People have been going crazy for a :· ·•
chance to go to the beach all IJrlng,"
said HunUngton Beach lifeguard Capt.
Dougla• D'Arnall.
"Then they get their first good weather
to coincide with Memorial Day, and you
know there's going to be trouble " n.e
said. '
"The people were just really ripe for
the beach alter the lousy spring we had ,"
was the way lifeguard dispatcher Bruce
Reed of Newport Beach put it.
There were some reports of jellyfish
at Newport and Huntington Beach, and
several reports of sting rays in San
Clemente. There were no serious in-
cidents, however.
Although some gang fighting was
reported on Los Angeles county beaches
Orange Coast lileguarda said the larg~
crowd! were well·behaved.
Huntington Beach police reported some
problems with about 100 surfers who
refused to leave the water Monday morn·
ing when crowds on the beach began
building up . Two arrests were made, but
officials said there could have been more
if personnel had been available.
Copters Curb
'Nude Relays'
In San, Carlos
SAN CARLOS (AP) -The nude relays
of. 1973 were cut short this year by bell· copter--aided police. fi
Each year for about the past decade
high schoo1 senior boys have celebrated
~nding graduation with a naked jaunt
Utrougb city street.. and around a track
on Memorial Day weekend.
Police dispatcher Sgt. Joe Nagy said
the boys cruised town in cars Saturday
night daring one another to run nude.
Some obliged to the cheers of about J,000
area students.
One gl'O\.lp raced around a high scmo1
track with the victor reportedly gettin&' a
case of beer.
For five hours, the youths played cat-
and-mouse with police squad cars: and a
heli copter.
Nagy sa id five persons were arrested
for minor offenses and later released 10 parents.
Pot in Scliool:
2 Students Held
MESQUITE, Nev. (AP)-Two students
at Virgin Valley High School here llave
been arrested for growing marijuana
plants in the school 's greenhouse, author·
Hies say.
Blaine Allen, school principal, told
Clark County sheriff's deputies he and a
teacher discOvered a half dozen planll
growing In a gallon can behind other
plants.
Deputies said the plants were "grow·
ing healthily" and OOoked the two teen-
agers for Investigation or cultivating a
controlled substance despite their claims
they were conducting an experiment.
WOULD YOU BELIEVE -
THAT THERE ARE STIU COMPANIES
.. . . -.
.. . . . .
. . . . .
. . . . .
IN THI
MAllOI A.II.A
llNCI 1917
WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS
THEY SELL PERFORM 7
WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON
SERVICE 7
WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE
PERFECTLY 7
WHO MMNT AIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY 7
YES, "VIRGINIA," THERE IS AN ALDEN'S!
(TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.)
'
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA M!SA
646-4838
'
Moo.· '111ars. t lo S:JO: Ftf. t lo t; Sat. t1JO le I
I
s DAJLY PILOT
Safety for President
$100,000 Improvements at Coast Home
By GAYLORD SHAW
WASlllNGTON (AP) -The While
House says more than •100.000 in lm·
provements made at President Nixon's
San C:emente estate during the past four
years were requested by the Secret
Service "for the protection or the Presi·
dent."
The projects included a new electric
heating system ror ~ President's
Spanish-style man sion, a $3,360-storage
shed, more than SS0,000 worth of brick or
redwood, fences and a $13,000 bullet-proof
~S<nen alongside the presidential
swimming pool.
Building permits were issued by the ci·
ty of San Clemente for about $70,000
worth o f government-financed im·
provem_ents. The rest apparently was
done without building permits,
The federally financed work was in ad-
dition to the $123,514 that the White
House said last week the Nixons bad
spent themselves for improvements on
their home and 5.9-acrt homesite.
In a statement Friday, disclosipg that
Nixon had sold the bulk of his estate to
one of his wealthy friends , New York in·
dus.trialist Robert M. Abplanalp, the
White House would not provide a
breakdown on the $123,514 figure.
The transaction took place i n
December 1970 -18 months after Nixon
had purchased the ocean.side property
with $6251000 loaned him by Abplanalp.
The loan was canceled in the subse-
quent transactioo that left Nixon with a
net investment of $374,514 for the house
and 5.9 acres,. and Abplanalp with an in·
vestment of $1.2 million for the re·
maining 23 acres.
The White House said the Nixons bor·
rowed $625,000 from Abplanalp to "meet
the objective of the purchases," although
this is $205,000 more than their down pay·
ment. They have added $123,514 ln im·
provements for a .total cost of $1,623,514.
Abplanalp, the statement continued,
paid 11,219,000 for Tl pemot of the
acreage -an amount which al8o was TT
percent of the Nlxons' cost -but
Abplanalp didn't get any butldlngs on his
land.
The net result of the deal with
Abplanalp left the Nisons with a f,340,000
mortgage and an actual cash invettment
at the lime of $34,514. The statement did
not say how much of the remaining
mortgage has since been paid off, but ac--
cording to past statements, payment is to
be completed by July 1974.
Abplanalp also is the owner of ODfl ol
the five houses in the Florida While
House compound at Key Biscaf.De. And
he owns a Bahamas island which Nixon
periodically visits.
The entire tract, including the portion
now owned by Abplanalp, remains under
Secret Service guard. It is Immediately
adjacent to a Coast Guard station, which
serves as the site of the President's or~
lice and other buildings constituting the
Western White House.
After the Associated Press reported
Monday that the federal govenment had
spent more than $100,000 for im·
provements on Nixon's estate, a White
House spokesman issued a statement
saying "All the work done at the Western
White Home as listed in the Associated
Press story was requested by the Secret
Service for protection of the President.
"If tile Asloclated J>r.ss bu recom-
mendations to make to the Secret service
as to how the President and hls famlly
should be protected, the Associated
Press should outline those suggestions at
the same lime it carries a story which
implies the President has improved his
property at the expense of the govern·
ment," said the statement given by
Deputy White HouSe Press Secretary
Gerald L. Warren.
A Secret Service spokesman also
issued a statement saying, "We recom·
Count y Planners Seek
Ali-so Creek Gree nbelt
By JAN WORTH
Of ttl• Dally Plltf lllltf
impact on Aliso Creek, the report stated.
As yet, no way exists to preserve the
The Orange County Planning Depart· rich cultural heritage and tradition of the
ment staff has recommended that a area.
budget be created to save the 19-nille The creek flows soutbweSterly from
Aliso Creek as a greenbelt in the midst of the santa Ana MOlllltains through a steep
burgeoning urbanization. canyon, the Rossmoor Leisure W«ld
'Ibe recommendation ts part of a development, and the Niguel Hills.
recently released report by the planrdng Its watenbed lncludes 22,000 acres, in·
staff on the creekbed that meanders duding major portions of El Toro,
from its source in the Santa Ana Moun--Leisure World, Laguna Niguel, and the
tains to its tenninus at the ocean in Moulton and Whiting ranch properties.
South Laguna. Its watershed varies in width from one to
Four other areas have been designated · fo: .. or rive miles and narrows to 500 feet
as priority greenbelt projects by county at its mouth.
open spa~ teams: the La~ greenbelt, Many general and specific plans for
Chino Hills, Upper San~a&o gr~belt, developing property in and arond the
and open space for urbanized areas m th~· area exist, increasing county plan·
northwest coonty. . ners' concern for preserving the area. Recommendations for each pro1ect1 o be decided on by the Board of Most recent are the proposed plans for
Supervisors, are basically the same : the. ~0,000-acre Moulton Ranch and the
-Recognize officially the critical Whitmg Ran~ ..
nature of saving the area. Already ex1~ting _are the community
-set up a budget for the project. pl~ of Missl~ Viejo, Rossmoor, The
-Appoint a project coordinator to Missions, Lalc.e Forest, . Ran-
organize an open space and recreation cbo Cepiatrano, Thunderbird Capistrano,
project. Laguna NifUel, OXo de ca.za, and Crown
-Delegate to the coordinator the task Valley Highlands.
or meshing plaMing needs for the project County master pla.M exl!ting cover
with overlapping government jurisdic-drainage, shoreline d e v e I op m en t ,
lions in the area'. regional parks, arterial highways, riding
Reports are finished on the Chino Hills and biking, and bicycle trails.
and urban area ~rojecls to date, with the 'f1le population of the area, according
Lagwia area pro1ect almost done and the to soine projections, is expected to triple
Santiago ~port forthcomln~. . by 1980. In that case, 85 percent of the
'lbe Aliso Creek area ts important, area will be residential~ with a shortage
planners aid, because "it bisects the of park space. '
urban setting and could provide valuable Proposed regional park facilities for
contrast and re!lef . f~ the forces and the area include the Laguna Niguel
effec!_s of urbanization. regional park; the Serrano Adobe and Man has already made a tremen<kius eucalyptus grove; Moro canyon, and
Fortola Park.
lpst Girl, 5,
• F.ound in Woods
' PORTERVILLE (AP) - A 'S-yeer-old
Stai.ton girl was found in gQOd condition
aft.fr she apparently wandered away
frolll her family's · camp Saturday and
spell! the night sleeping under a tree,
autliorlUes said. ~ela Dougberfy, the daughter of Mr.
antf Mrs. Fred Dougherty, was found
~Y about 21> miles uphill from the
C$r Slope Campground, in the Sequoia
Naponal Forest, rescuers said.
'
Several arcbeologleal finds have been
discovered in the a r e a, in~uding
Miocene horse unearthed in El Toro a
month ago.
"If development is allowed l9 contlnue
without the opportunity to work theae
aue:1: the loa to lhe coonty ls Jn.
calculable.'' the report atated.
2 Held in Tula re
TUµRE (AP) --'; Two persoos were
ah'esled, two small fires were set and
pollce received numerous reports of gun-
fire as a distu:fbance with racial
overtones erupted here. No serious in·
juries were reported.
·!Monkey See • • •
I
flue Movies Turn On Chimpanzees
CHESSINGTON, England (UPI) -The champamee leet here soon, and all
Chlssi11gton zoo has come up with a new thanks to lhe fllm," said spokesman
wtfi of increasing its chimpanzee popula· Andy Bowen
tiol -show ..,.,. mildly blue chimp 116 "We tried .ii In three caget In the ape 1111!11. And H that doesn 't work, a spoUsulan hOuse," he said. "Tllo orangutans were
sdl. lhe :r.oo may show the chimps aome only inltrelted In the projoclor. The
of liie hard core stuff. gorillas became -Ive but Cmalda
Soo officials · said Monday that ·tMJ ' was just overcome with passion."
s ed chimpanzees at the roo a British .Cre11Jd1particularly1Wooned·ovtr the
1l dcastlng Corp. televlllon doaJmen. chimp male star of the film.
mendtd all of the items for the com-
pound"
Building permits oo file wllh the cily of
San Clemente list these federally financ-
ed. projectl:
-"A 142,500-e(ght-foot brick and con·
crete b&ock walf strttcbing fOC" $bout
1,400 feet around three 1ides of the:
President's pro~y.
-"Three gazebos and a gatel>ouse coot·
ing an estimated $22,000.
-"A $3,360 storage shed with stucco
walls to blend iOto the Spanish-style
architecture of the President's house.
"A $2,000 cabana-on the beach beneath
Niron's house, plus a 60-foot redwood
crossover oa the railroad tracks which
run beneath the beach and the house."
In addition, maps cnntalned In the
city's building permit files Indicated
other projects had been undertaken,
altbough building permits apparently
have not been issued for them. Asked
about specific projects indicated on the
maps, the General Services
Administration -in responses related
through the White Hous.e press office -
listed these other projects:
-A $13,500 electric beating system in
the Nixon home to replace a prevj~
system, which oHiclals deemed a
"security risk" because of the danger Of
fire or explosion.
-A $12,964 glass screen installed
beside the President's swimming pool.
The glass is 1 lf• inches thick and is bullet
proof.
An $11,561 six-foot redwi>od fence ex-
tending for about 800 feet between Nix·
on's property and the beach.·
-$1,500 spent for paving a road linking
the President's house with his office on
the adjacent Coast Guard property.
The White House listed these four proj·
eels tolallng about $39,500 on Saturday
in response to queries from newsmen on
government improvements on t h e
presidential estate.
Most of the government-financed proj·
ects were undertaken as part of "Opera·
ti on Sunrtse," a crash program launched
by the government 'SOOl1 after Nixon
bought the property in m i d • I 9 6 9 .
Although the White House won't say what
sections of the overall tract is owned by
Abplanalp, indications are that some of
the federally.financed improvements are
on his land.
In addition to the government work, ci-
ty records disclose several other projects
apparently paid for by the Nlxons as part
of their $123,514 in improvements.
. These include the swimming pool cost·
mg more than $5,000, a fireplace in the
President's study costing an estimated
$2,0QO and renovation of the kitchen at a
cost estimated at '7,000.
The kitchen projeot is the latest to be
undertaken. Begun 1n November, it in-
cluded the imt:81Jation of two new sinks
two food warmers, dishwasher, a clothe~
washer and. dryer, a garbage disposal
and an appliance described in city rec·
ords as a "trash masher."
O.llr PllOt Sttff .... "1 ,, i
FOR FOLLOWE RS OF TRANSCEN DENTAL ME DITATION, 15 MINUTES A DAY DOES IT
Followers Fred Rash, Bill Cri1t and N orm1n Zierold Endorse TM Benefit1 ~
j
'Improves tlie M ind' ,j
Meditation Rewards Told
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of th• D•Ur Pilot Stall
The claims sounded like something
you'd read in an advertisement on the
inside of a pulp magazi11e cover.
". . . natural process clears and
strengthens the mind ... work more ef·
ficiently . . . you become more sU~·
cessful and happy in your success •.. "
But, the three men talking about
Transcendental Meditation (Thi) were in·
tent and sei-ious.
"It works," said Fred Rash, a Laguna
Beach painter, gallery owner and art in·
structor at orange Coast College.
Norman Zierold is a novelist who bas
written "The Moguls" and recently
"Garbo" as well as "Three Sisters in
Black," winner of the Edgar Allen Poe
award. He explained that TM was a con·
temporary and practical method of men·
ta! exercise, not a religion.
"Some people think it means going into
a cave or sitting in weird positions,"
Zierold said. ,
Bill Crist, chairman of the Maharishi
World Plan Center, said that in Laguna
Beach alone, more 1ban 200 · persons
practiced TM and in the county. about
1,300 persons meditated.
"It is a process of turning the attention
inwards to experience and subtler states
of the thinking process," Crist said.
Crist's group holds lectures on TM in
various localities and a course of in-
struction costs $75.
He said !he Maharishi Mahesh Yogi's
instruction of the Beatles and ac·
companying publicity represented the
"pop" phase of TM.
Crist said scientists have proven that
meditation produces a deeper resting
:;tate than sleep or hypnosis.
"Rest serves as the basis ror activity.
This Cocktail
Will B ug Y ou.
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -An
uptown saloon called the Club is
offering a 25-oolt cocktail called
the Watergate. It consists of. a glass
(){ water with a plastic bug in it.
Larry Bisso, \YOO owns the bar,
3ays he hasn't actually se.rved a
W$terg8le to anyboey yet:
"Some people say, 'Give me a
Watergate,' and I say 'l don't
have any extra bugs,' " Bisso said.
"They get. a big kick <>ut of It."
Deeper rest is the basis for more ac--
tivily," he said.
He said the TM could be as usefUl for a
stockbroker as for an artist or writer.
''It's possible to make the mind
clearer, more efficient and stronger. If
you work better in your job, you'll be
more successful and happy," he said.
Rash said after he had started the TM
proress, he felt his teaching had iJn.
proved. ;
"It was more creative teaching. l had
more unity with my students, at least
that's what students who had been taught
by me before TM and after TM said,"
Rash said.
Crist said TM was an ancient process.
Just as Newton "discovered" gravity, the
Yogi discovered the meditation process,
he said.
Crist said TM was different than other
"mind control" courses in that "TM can
be scientifically effective" and be said
meditation does not involve diets, or
special effort, just 15 or 20 rnlnutu ~
quietude in a comfortable cbalr the tint
thing in the morning.
·~1n fact, you don't,f!!ven have. to belleye
It will wark," he said.
"It's like making brownies. You Just
put the ingredients together and you get
brownies. You don't have to beUeve 1n
the process."
''Our salesmen are
your kind of. people''
PETE "The Greek" PELUSES
Sales Manager
PETE P ELUSE S
We have on our sales staff the type of men you'd like
for neighbor s. Some of them are. You'll probably re
ognize Hugh, Charlie or H.B. These men a 1·e par t of the
difference you'll find at J ohnson & Son. Come in and
let us offer you a fine Lincoln or Mercury to. suit your
needs at always a fair price.
HUGH MYNATT CHAR LIE TH OMAS
SPECIAL
Continental MARK . IV's
H. B. PRICE
• Outstanding Selection Now in Stock
• Best Time of the Year to Buy!
• All "Golden Touched" & Ready to Go
''Or,nfge Count~'' Fomlf'U o} rtn~ Car1'1
Rome Of The New Car ; , •
"Golden '.l'Ollch'' ohnson&son
LI NC<ll N f\1! l~<:1J l lV
Home Of The New Car • • •
''Goldelt T ... ch.''
'
' . . • .
'
ta shoWlng other chimps klsslnc and "He's the equivalent of Rudolph Valep.
cu . tino for her," Bowen said. "'lbere wu a
,,
oil of the Chessingtoo chimps lovtd male chimp In the cage with Crealda,
it and ~pied every move, a ' zoo bul so rar he haa not reacted.
s · esman said. ~ally an S:.year-old "We are plaMing some replays oft.he
re ale namtd CWulda Who the lilm In t1>e om two .... ts," Bowen satd.
1 said ft! ''twited. on." "'nlen we hopt to show more upllcit teS
"We hope to hear the patter of tiJly lllms to them."
.
L
I
' CCJ\J Ci •\f~ c /\f' l{I
'
2121 HARBO R BLVD •• COSTA MESA • !>40·&&30
j I
I
l
I
, ,
Welcome
To S11mmer
REFLF.cnONS. DEPT. -Jl you've
been ooe of -who spent the put kw ... ..a gazing lnlo logy. leaden ·-and wondering where all Ille good w..iber
wu, now )'OU know. We were aavtng It up
for the MflJIO<!af Day weel«nd.
It WU clear. It WU bot. And even the
Pacific's water temperatures rose to
..... Ille comfort nqe. Our lhorellne
looked like a wall-to-wall zoo. At most of
our, beache8, yoo oouldn't just wallt to the
water, )IOU bad lo figlJt ywr way In. The
...,tan lotion buslne,. has made a start~
~comeback.
'Ibere are 10 many sunburns floating
.......t today that the glowing re!Iectione
ought lo be enouiJ> lo power Skylab foc
the next two weeks.
THOSE OF US who hugged p.-.tty
dole to home and shoreline may have
bad It juat a bit cooler than folka just
over the hill. One chap who lives out FJ
T<rO way in1ist.s the t.hermometer at his.
pl.ace hovered between 110 and 115
degrees over the weekend.
He didn't say whether or not ~
were day or night readings.
Even if he was high by 10 or 15
degrees, that's still fairly torrid mercury
readings, even for El taro.
You have to believe It got warm Inland
by coontlng the numbers of folks who
abandoned that region over the weekend
to vUilt our area.
AU TSE TALK prier lo the big lhree-
day weekend wu about how there was
going to be a gasoline shortage and a lot
of motorists were in danger of being
slranded someplace. I haven't as yet met
a stranded motorist.
A nwn~r of statioM along the Orange
Coast did, hl;w.·ever, have signs pro-
claimlng "No Gas" hanging out.
If there was a fuel shortage, it seemed
to have been in the service stations. Not
in the automobiles. They all had gas and
were limning It up at a record pace.
Coast Highway was so a'OWded that Jt
looked worse~than the crashing start at
Indianapolis. _
I'll have to admit, flowever, that I was
one of those wM ran out of gasoline over
the weekend. And three or my favorite
.stations did have the pumps locked and
the Golie Fbbln' 1igns out. So I Md to go
to a fourth place and suffer the final UJ..
dignity in order to fillerup. l had to pay
cash.
SO IT IS THAT the long weekend came
to a conclusion. The remaining question
is whether or not the good weather will
go away with it. Signs at this hour sug-
gest the pr-e-heated atmosphere will be
with us for awhile.
NaturaUy, the weatherman is hedging
his bet a bit. "A little cooler today," he
predicts. He says that inla1'¥1, the
mercury will be "in the lower 80s." That
always souMs fwmy. When you talk
about temperatures in the 90s, lt seems a
bit strange to hang the word "lower" in
· front ol it.
'That's sorta like saying the weather is
going to be In the lower freezing. Which
it Lsn't. Right up there in our good Coun·
ty Seat, for example, they admitted to a
99 at 1 p.m. yesterday afternoon.
THUS THE SIGNS of the times are
clear. Temperatures are rising, the skies
are blue and the Pacific i.s !it for human
habitation. •
Indeed , we may have a summer on our
hands.
• .;~~:~,i:-.
i!ill"iillili "::,,,,, OKU.
.. , .... : .·:·:~-:-;., ~;-;.;.;:(.·
Vietnam Accord Near?
Saigon Agrees to Cease-fire Timetable
SAIGON (AP) -Government aouttU
said today that tha south Vlotnamese
govenunent has agreed ID prtndplo lo a
detalled timetable "for 'a true Vietnam
cea~fire.
The agreellleJll, worked out In Paris by
IJenry A. Kislinger and Hanoi's Le Due
Tho, calls for both Salgoo and the Viet
Cong to order all their units to stop
shooting, the sources said.
TllB SOtlRCE8 said Salgm has ....
que1ted some modifications and made
some counlef"propOoals. They did not
elaborate. ·
These sources p!"edicted the follawtng
developments:
Jan. rr. thil waa auppoaed to have been
accompllsbed by tile end~ April_
-MDJTARY COlllMANDEllS of the
oppoelng parties will meet to estabtub
safety COITldoni through the respective
zortesolcootrol. -Respect for the demilitarized zone
and a wtlbdrawal cl troops and war
equipment from the buffer z o n e .
Demobilization of forces by both sides.
-The establishment of legitimate
ports ol entry for the replacement ol
war materials by each side on a one-for·
ooe ba!ls.
-'lbe release of remaining Vietnamese
military and civillan prisoners o! war.
Meanwhile, the Cambodian High C.Om·
mand said today that aov.-troops
with intense U.S. air support have broken
a two month long rebel stranglehold on
Highway 5 which cut Phlipm Penh oil
from the rice rich provinca in the West.
Qimmand spokesman COi. Am Rong
said that rebel forces appeared to have
withdrawn from the road. Am ~ said
Highway 5 ,would be open to traffic
"when downed bridges have been
repaired, and that could be Jes,, than ooe
week." Thailand based A me r i c a, D
bombers provide continuous heavy bomb-
ing In support ol government ti'oops
who pushed out from Phnom Penh to
reopen the blghway· after it was C\lt
March 21, military sources said .
.,,,_
SOUTH, MIDWEST HIT BY RASH OF TORNADOES, FLOODS
At LeHI 48 hreon• Dled Over Memorial Dey WMkend
-Kissinger and Tho will ollidally an-
nounce their agreement on stren,gtbening
the crigioal ceas&lire accord at the
coocluslon of their nest round ol talb in
Paris scheduled lo belin Jtme 6.
The United States will bait all air re-
Federal Prosecutors· Eye
Grand Jury Quiz of Nixon
connalssance missions OYer North
Twister ·Terror Vietnam.
-Twenty-four hours after the an-
nouncement, the Saigon government and
!he Vlei Cong will order opposing bat·
tlefield commanders to cease their fire.
160 Tornadoes Ravage 11 Srotes -FIVE TO 10 dayg later, Saigon and WASHINGTON (lJPI) -Federal pros·
the Viet Cong will grant guarantees of ecutors have told their superiors that
privileges and immunities for members they believe' there is justification for
ment does it," the source wa§ quoted.
Ronald L. Ziegler, Wbite House press
secretary, Wued a statement saying,
"The PO.st story reflects a shockfng and
irresponsible abuse of authority on the
part of federal prosecutors lf, in fact,
they made the statements attributed to
them.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre91dent Nb:·
on today declared Alabama a n d
Arkansas major d.laaster areas because
· of weekend tornadoes and the White
Houe promised similar action would be
takm toon for other 1talel bit bard by
the rub ol spring 1tonm.
By The Associated Press
A reoord number o! tornadoes dipped
to earth from storm systems across the
Midwe6t and South over the Memorial
Day weekend, claiming at least 48 lives
in multi-million dollar trails of destruc-
Lioo.
Several small towns were all but
Rev. Berrigan . .
Marries Nun
In NY Rites
EAST ORANGE, N.J. (AP) -The
Rev. Philip Be?Tigan and Sister Elizabeth
McAllster, Roman Catholic antiwar ac-
tivists, have married, according to a
former Benedictine monk,
The Re9 . Paul Mayer, a close friend
said Monday night that the wedding took
place Sunday in the New York City
apartment of Berrigan's brother, the
Rev. Daniel J. Berrigan. He said he sign-
ed their marriage certificate and It had
been mailed to the registrar'3 ofrlce in
Montclair, N.J.
FATHER MAYER said Berrigan and
Sister Elizabeth had lived together since
May 1969 and had "formalized" their
unioo in January 1972 at the federal
prison In Danbury, Conn.
The Baltimore Sun reported that
Father Berrigan and his wife recently
left their religious oniers and plan lo
open a peace movement commune in a
rented house In Baltimore.
Ben1gan and Sister Elizabeth were
amon.g seven persons tried l~t year in
Harrisburg, Pa., on charges of ~piring
to k.idnap presidential adviser Henry A.
Kissinger and blow up heating tunnels in
federal buildings in Washington, D.C.
The jury split on the charges and some
eventually were dropped. But Berrigan
and Sister Elizabeth were convicted of
smuggling letters in and out of prison.
BERRIGAN, WHO was a member of
the Society ol SL Jooeph. had been im·
prisoned in April 1970 on a separate con~
viction stemming from a Maryland draft
board raid. He later was paroled.
His brother, a Jesuit, also served a
federal prison tenn for taking part in the
destructkln of draft files at Catonsville Md. I
obliterated as about 160 tornadoes turned of the tw1>-party Joint Military C.Om-grand Jury questioning of President Nix·
the long weekend into a holiday of. horror mission. The two sides will fully deploy oo on how top aides could carry out a
for thousands. observers into the field to keep the cover-up of t.he Watergate scandal, the peace. Washington. P05t said today. ·
DEATHS WERE reported in 11 states -Within five to 10 days, the United
from Oklahoma to Florida, and at least States will resume operations to remove BUT mE NEWSPAPER said the pros-
. mine3 from .North Vietnamese waters tcutors themselves as well as higher of.
six other states reeled under heavy rains, and also will resume economic talks with ficiab In the Juslice Department believe
high winds and flash floods. Hanoi. the Constitution does not permit a sitting
The National Weather Service said the -Within three months, zones of control president to tie summoned by a grand
number of tornadoes reported between will be delineated. jury -that any fofll18.]. questioning of. a
Saturday and Monday eclipsed any . -Within siJ: months, a National Coon-President's actions has to be initiated by · cil of National Reconciliation and Con-the House of Representatives under im·
previous 72-hour period on record. cord must be established and ao election peachment proceedings.
Amoog the victims of the weekend procedure set up to shape die political 'Ibe Post quoted Justice Department
weather were farmers in the lower future of South Vietnam. Under terms of sources saying the "one key question that
Mls.sissippi Valley whose crops had been the original agreement signed in Paris remains to be clarified in the current
"GRAND JlJRY proceedings are by
law secret."
Ziegler said Attorney General Elliot L.
Richardson and the special Watergate
prosecutor, Archibald Cox -both newly
sworn in -had been asked to investigate
·'the circumstances of these anonymous
charges against the President of the
United States -and to do so im·
mediately."
delared for weeks by spring floods. 'Ille grand jury investigation" of Y(atergate is
new rains dealt them another blcnv. and the President's position. 'lbe article said: Plane <::rash Kills
some counties In the region prepared to L • Th• ks "Th.e prosecutors have told their iza ·n superior. that evidence justifies ques-
ask for the second time this year that " tionlng the President about how Six in Famil
they be declared a federal disaster area. members of Mr. Nu:oo's innermost circle Y
He' L l could perpetrate a massive obstruction of THE WEEKEND weather systems S OVe y justice without his knowledge, the COITAGE GROVE, Ore. (UPI) -Six
caused five deaths in Oklahoma, three in sources reported. members of a prominent Southern
Kansas, seven in Missouri, three in NEW YORK (UPI) -Actress California family were killed during the
•·-----Liza Mlnnefli am" ed f Loodoo "TSE PROSECIJTORS' heo he weekend when their twin enaine Cessna ArA.<11~, ten in Tennessee , one in v rom · t ry of t ,.,. Mississippi, seven in Alabama two in Monday and called her Jatest com-case holds that a Watergate cover-up 310 plunged to earth during: a landing atr
Georgia, one in Florida, seven '10· North panion, midd.Je-aged British actor was undertaken by the White House to proach.
Peter Seu·-a "1 el I veI t disc! of Owner-pilot John W. Mieras, 56, an at-Carolina and two in y;....,inia. In addit100· , man.'' .... .,., ov y, o Y pre_ven osure a covert program ~,., fill al cti torney from Pasadena, was killed Satur-
six persons in North Carolina and one in ° eg a vities conducted by the Nix· day along with his wile, Eunice, 56·, their Virginia were listed as mjssini:r and However, the 27-year-old Oscar-on administration," the sources said. presumed drowned. -e wirming actress refused to say if "including the break-in at the office of daughter, Christina Gaglione, 22; her bus· she would .,,.,,,,......, Sellers who ·s 0 · 1 Ellsbe , chi band, Fab_io, 25; Mieras' mother, Jennie,
The storms betan Saturday in eastern is 47. '"lbai;;-b'i 0 0 d y pn' ·va1.e.~• arue rg s psy 'atrist in lfi'l." 84; and his brother, James E. Mieras, 47,
Oklahoma. and continued i...lo Monday pped The Post accouut quoted a Justice of Fullerton . .. , sna Miss Minnelli, who has De night, when a tornado at Athens, Ga., apparenUy ended her romance partment source as saying, "The~ is Witnesses said the plane era.shed and
took the life of one person and left more with singer Desi Arnaz Jr. no bombshell tucke<f away," but that exploded during a landing approach here,
than 60 injured. "there is an evidentiary pattern" raisiog where the victims had planned to spend to~P?~esf1!r:u1~°';1im~r~~~sa~~~i~ l~f= .. ~-== .. :=::._==.=.=.===-='""''=,;;.,=*"*,= .... =.-;;:=_=.=.-=.=_="=_=_,!__~q'.l'u~e~su~·ons"':'·_.:,a~~~~~t ~N~i,~o~n~'s'....'.'ro~le::·_'~'N~o~d~oc:'u':·_~M~e~m~o'.:M~a~t ~D~•~y_'w'.'.ee~ke~n~d~w~1~·th~fr~l~ends~~-:::::
million. The worst damage appeared to "~ ,·~~ i • • ' /• -:-:rol
be in small towns such as Brent, Ala., 1 ,' "' -.,; ::esK~~t~k?k.la., and in 'the city of k n.-r. j ift __ !,.i'..J~::i,~ 1 , ~t """' ~~t'~-~: \ • ., ~ I
FOVR OF BRENT'S 2,500 residents ~; ~0&'='.~'WeabGUtaiuiaP a p"· • . _e,~:.a~imow as much
were killed, and Civil Defense officials •, ., , ' • •' '. iL';.:• ,,.,,..• ·'as''' -theY·. . 'do. said 90 percent of the town was I W.:; '•
destroyed. Gov. George C. Wallace f .,,.
estimated damage in Brent and nearby
1
. ~ · ~~~· where one person died, at .l ~ . · Jo' ... ),':'
"We're Jost," said Brent Mayor
fl.telford Worrell. "We don't know what
we're going to do, but the city will
definitely oome back." The stonn hit ~ • •
Brent just as Sunday ievening church f
services were being held. It ripped the
Baptist church in half, killing one person.
In Arkansas, Gov. Dale Bumpers asked
President Nixon to declare four counties
disaster areas for the second time this
year.
Bumpers said one twister cut a trail
a~t a mile and a half wide through
Cra ighead and Poinsett counties.
Directly in the storm's path was
Jonesboro, a city of 27,000 where three
persons died. at least 300 were injured
a~. damage \\-'3S estimated up to $40
million.
'
' r
•
.. . (", , ... '
Heat Relief • Ill Sight
Fair Weatlier Seen Follo,wi1ig Record High Mo1iday
Temperatures
Mith low ,.,._
63 " ..u ~ ~ :~ 7S ~ .36 .. '' ll 6( .J1
61 4f .OJ
~ ~ ~~ 10 •J
16 ~' ·" ,, 7•
~I 67
., 11 .. " 101 M " ~ . ~
M " I' " ' " ,. 61 . " 71 jj
73 5' l t(I t6
"I " . " 102 71 ~ ~ Q M ,. '' " . u " AA <> " ..
I,
.01
"'
...
·"
"' .. ,
.01
. .. • 1.1'1 WI •1141l fOIOC.UI e
'·
Coastal Weather
MMllY 1vnny tod1y. lllJhl varl1blt
wl11<11 night 1nd moml1111 llour1 be-
com!no $0\lltlwfllsf to Wt$1 1 to 16 ~"°'' In 1f!itrnoon1 tod1y Ind Wfd~y.
Hlo!'I tod1y, mid 10I..
C0111t11 temperaturn r1r.ge lrtwn 57
to 7•. Inland r.mper1tur" r1~ from
SI to N. W1titr ~llu,.. 6-2.
Sun, Moon, Tides
TUHOAY
Slalnd hlgt\ 7:39 p,m. ,,l
S«:ond low 1:10 p.m. l..S
Wt:ONISOAY
Fl"! hlOh t:l1 1.m. ).I
First !OW 2;47 1 ..... ·I.I
Second hlo/I ' .. t :U p.m. 6.1
SKon<I low l:JP p,m. 1 •
Sun ltllt'I J:.U 1.m. Stll 7:l1 pm.
MOOfl It.JM• l :ll 1.m. St .. J.31 p.m.
DAILY PILOT
DElJVERY SERVICE
Dri"l'ltf'J of UI GallJ rllol
ls •Mt.ltd
............ ,....,. 1't -.. 1111 ...... -...,... ., ... ..,_ ... -""' ..... . • .,,..,..,. .,...u .. .,..,..._
11 ... ...
s. ........... .....,., .,,.. .. -......... .,...._ .. , ..................... ...... _,.,u1-• .., ............ .
.... (flll .......... "'·""' T-,.._ ...... (...., ._ ........... ---.................. -~---... ~~ .... """""' "'"""" ...............
Bene.a th the Arctic's frozen ground
huge deposits of natural gas lie
wai1ing to be tapped.
And, since there's growing energy
shortage here, you're going to need
that gas. Even though it will
cost more.
So the Gas Company plans to
tea m up with others :ind build an
Arctic pipeline. But before we do,
we need &0me answers.
Namely, how do we build it with~
out harmJng the land? Or the people
who live off the Jandl
We're !ind..in1t thMe answers.
Arctic roscarch facilities-mock '
pipeline installations-are measuring.
the effects of pipeline on permafrost.
There, thousands of buried sensors
hooked to computers arc giving us
an underground view never seen
belore. So we'll know exactly what
we're getting into.
Above ground, acres of test plots
Arc t.ellJng us what kinds of gra~
grow fa stest in the Arctjc cli~tc.
So we'll know what to plant fter
WC build.
,Field Ji:•m• are bonding fls -and
w.a.lerfOWl. Plana 1-(C tricking """
I
caribou, mapping migratory rouis
that even the natives who live off
the herds don't know about. So we'U
know where (and when) not to build.
The Gas Company is spending
millions on these and
BctaU$C it's our job to
kccjiyou supplied with
other pmiects. ~
natural ga$. ''"
But not at th e expense ~
of the Arctic. ~
Southern Calll'ornia Gas Comjlany
Wen in-11n& 1ntom-
"
, ..
•
s: .Four Apparently
t
Die in Kern River
The Kem River bu ap-
"1' puently claimed four lives .,,. this Momorial Day w..tend,
Kem County sberill's deputies
" ' aeld. ~y ..,. of the bodies
has been recovered.
The body of Danny Clunt, II,
of Bakersfield, was found
about 200 yards from the point
near Highway 99 where he
dove in at.tempting to save a
brother and a cou.sio..
, Blunt, three brothers and a
, ~ were crooslng the river
, 1 y on a sand bar whoo
the twe foll in. BIWlt dove in
,.-
". "
"
(_" .
....
16 He"ld
In Melee
L A K E BERRYESSA
(AP) -Sixteen )'OWlg
people were &ITeSted on
various charges after a
clash with sheriff's depu·
ties in which the officers
were pelted with rocks and
beer cans.
The melee developed af-
ter the Orfficers were called
to control a disturbance at
a lakeside resort Sunday
llight. About 25 Persons.
most:Jy juveniles, started
:OS.ing cans and rocb at
ltie officers.
A rock hit ooe officer tn
the head but he Wa5 not
seriously hurt.
FBI Agents
Reporredl y
Ask Silence ·
LOS ANGELES (AP) -FBI
agents bave Impeded a coonty
probe of the break-In at the of.
fice of Daniel Ellsberg's psy-
chiatrist by telling potential
witnesses to avoid talking
with investigat<rs, the Los An-
geles Times reported today.
alttt them Md managed ilo
aave !:is brother then waa
swept away by the current.
Two other brothers pulled the
cousin to safety.
IN A SECOND a<cident
deputies said Jose Montez, 19,
and Robert Medina both ol.
Whittier, were attempting to
ride the rapids below the main
dam at Lake Isabella Sunday
when the raft capsiied.
Medina managed to swim to
safety but Montez was ap-
psreriUy drowned. His body
has rot been recovered.
Later in tile altemoon. a Loo
Ar€eles man was swimmlng
in the Kem River near
Democrat Hot Springs when
he got into trouble, grabbed a
tree brand! wblch broke and
was swept away. The body of
Emmit Rayborn, 25, ls also
still unrecovered.
Shortly afler that, a Mex·.
lean dtizen, Louis Cast01lada,
34, apparently went to the
river near Miracle Hot Springs
to wash bl• i.et. fell in and
was Ioet. His body has also not
been recovered, deputies said.
21 Arrested
Swimming
In Canal
WJNTERHAVEN (AP)
Marines and friends who wad-
ed into an oversir.ed irrigation
canal on Memorial Day faced
minor charges ·today, officials
.said. .
Orphans to Travel
Unable to attend their mother's funeral because
there wasn't money to go to Ohio, the Baker chil-
dren of San Francisco, (left to right) Mike, 10, Den·
nis, 7; Marie, 14 and Bruce, 11, will attend their
father's burial thanks to doRations by strangers.
Bob Baker, 41, died, according to Marie, after ,drink-
ing himself to death following the cancer death of
his wife a year ago. His last wish was to be buried
near }ler in Ohio and the children will · live with
relatives there.
A group of 13 yoomg Marines------------------
from the Marine Corps Air
StaUcn at Ywna, just across
the border in Ari1.ona, plus
five females and th re e
juveniles were booked for
swimmi~ in the canal.
Swinuning at the site is
forbidden because of potential
danger posed if a spillway
upstream Were to cut loose
tons of. stored water, sheriff's
deputies explained.
Prostitutes' Guild
Gets Broad Backing
..
•
I DAil Y P!lOT 5
Stor111 Brews ID SF
Tempest Brings 'Class' Back to Stripper's Strip
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -the United States and Europe,
''America's No. 1 st r ip Tempest Stonn commands a
teaser. The ooe and only eYer weekly salary of $5,000 in Laa
to appear at Carnt.gle Hall. Vega!! and $2,500 to $3,000
Hore !he Is. Miss Tempest elsewher<.
Storm!" The "40-21-M" burleSque
Drums roll. The music queen was beckoned to North
starts and she's swishing Beach to launcb a facelifting
across tbe stage to applause, for clubs. Her two-month
feather boa and rhinestones booking replaced nude women
around her neck, wearing a wrestling.
glittering coral gown and an UNDER PRESSURE from
enticing smile. the local board of supervisors
She's 22 years older than the and the state A I e oho 11 c night of her first "headliner" Beverage Control agency, 11
"We will continue tDploss-
bottoml~ shows, but with a
completely new approach,"
said Davey R osenberg,
spoke:muin for six of the
clul:l!. "We're going back to
burlesque and vaudevUle, but
not the way it was done in the
1930's."
<lloreoflraphers are -king
oo a bottomless MouliJl Rouge-
type ca~an show in ooe club,
an act called the "Watergate
SCandal" in aootber and a col-
lege coed review in a third,
Rosenberg said.
tiling "" needed a >Dper-ouper
act, so..,.~ ill Tetnpest
Storm,'' he added. '"She brings
class to the street.••
On a gaudy atretl wbote
more than 50 )"OUlg 'tlanen,
some half her ate. daoce
stark naked, T~ Storm
does a sultry act oot so very
dlfferent from her 1951 debut. ,
strip al an Oakland burlesque clubs volunlarily toned down
house across San Francisco marquees, eliminated sex act<t
Bay. Still, the houae is packed and muuled s1ree1 barkers.
for the only performer in San i -'=~~-liiiiiiiliiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmmmmmmmmmmilli;;:--Franclsco's Norl!\-Beach who I
doesn't take it a.LI off.
•1ro LAUNCH the whole
"They sbou!d cbangio their
image here," she said between
shows in a makeshift be!&
ment dre&Sing room. "I'm not
a prude and I'm not old fash-
ioned. But they should leave
something to the imagina tion.
YOUNG PEOPLE'S ART ' DOWN SUPS a zipper past
her flaming red mane, and
she's out of her gown. Off County's Best Now on Exhibit come the elbow length gloves.
Piece by piece the underwear ~outb ~oast ?tua goes with coaling from the cJ
crowd.
North Beach, the self-pro-I __ _::~~~~~~~~~~~~===~~~~~~~~~~ claim ed "world 's ca pital ofl-
topless·bottomless", is toning
d-Own its rawichy style of sex
in response to official
pres.sure. The first step was to
have Miss Storm perform her
strip act here to "bring class
to the street."
For 15 minutes she bumps,
she grinds, she dips to her
knees and squirms with the
drumbeat, then rises for
parting flourishes in nothing
but a G-string. She takes the
applause, arms outstretched,
and blows kisses.
The appreciative howls con·
tinue briefly as the curtain
closes on opening night at the
off-Broadway nightclub .
"mERE'S NO reason to
quite when you'd stlll m fop,"
she said in an interview, dab-
bing sweat from her 45-year-
old cheeks. "When I started I
said I would quit when I was
30. But as long as the gold
keeps rolling in, there's no
reason to quit."
After hundreds of strips in
YOU RECENTLY TOLD SURVIVORS OF WORLD WAR I AND
11 CASUALTIES HOW THEY COULD APPLY FOR A GOLD
STAR LAPEL BUTION. MY SON WAS KILLED IN VIET NAM:
AM I ENTITLED TO A GOLD STAR 1
by EUGENE 0. BERGERON
Y-. yn en ... titted to..., wl .. 1tottor • Gekl Stcw IMltitlo. If ro• will ffllt'llet n w
wfll ...-. o r9C1fftt to tht U•ltff S..,_ GnenMtllt '°' 'fO•·
Ullttl NCetttlJ the ••rvlwon of ,,....,. .. who died I• •tlo• otol ... .....a. of tM U•tt.tl
Stat• ofNr tM Kot9GA Coaftlct "'° •Ot Htlta.d to e Gold S.., award. TMI h• ._..
ch.,.... Now bJ Gii oet of Co .. NH; wWoWI,, p.Mlltl •d •ext of Ir.I• of "'--wtlo hcwo
lost tltolr llns 111 actlo• Ii•• J11t, t, 1 '''· .,. ..titted to routn hid Ster &..pol l11tt. ..
frotll tH.Pef•l••llf of o.t....
W........ ,..U.lo, qMltlol'd will M emwomf I• tlill colomri. •
Balt:·Bergeron Funeral Bmne
COSTA MESA CORONA del MAR 646·%424 2 LOCATIONS 673·9450
•••••••••••••••• • • • •
But a Justice Department of-
ficials, Kevin Maroney, told
the paper that a problem re-
garding FBI agents telling
1be juveniles were turned
over to their parents and the
others f a c e d amtignment
unless they posted $50 baU
each, a spokesman said. The
!-<Iden water hole is located
S(IN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Prostitutes are being organiz-
ed inljl a craft guild here by
Margo St. James. An advisory
board of businessmen and
authon is supporting her
movement.
"Thls is an essential service
Industry of the city and some
radical changes are now due,"
said the Bellingham, Wash.,
fann girl who "discovered a
decade ago" that men in the
city would pay for what sbel't' ___ "
'· . ( ) about· a quarter mile from
"'
1
'.' BfilEE''S the Colorado River, where ,·:: r : swimming is permitted, of.
----------ficials stated.
· Her motto ts, "Hookers of
the world unite. You have
nolhing In lose but cop harass-
ment."
TI1e Point Foundation at
Glide Memorial Church has
given a grant of $5,000 for the
group to begin its work.
aaid she had been giving away
since age 15.
"I've always loved sex," she
said. "I might as well get paid
for jt.
j
witnes,,es not to submit to
questioning has been resolved.
"There was some mlswxler-
standing, but it is straightened
out now. Ally witness who was
under the Impression that the
FBI did not want them talk·
Ing to other Investigators bas
now been told otherwise,''
Maroney said.
2 Bills Die
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two ,
bills to regulate the funeral
1::mlness have gone to an early
grave after encountering ~
tent opposition of the funeral
Industry.
·!l'he two measures, both au-
A few stones were thrown at
an an-esting deJMy but no one
was Injured, the eheri!f's of. r.,, said.
Diver Drowns
Near Catalina
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
1~year-old Las Vegas, Nev.,
girl drowned while scuba div-
ing with her father near
Catalina Island, authorities
said Saturday.
Usa Holmes and her falher,
John, wore diving in about 90
feet of water a half mile from
the Catalina Island isthmus In
an area c.alled Blue Caverns,
authorities said.
Novelist Herbert Gold, a
board ·member, said Sunday
that Miss St. James was work-
ing for a good cause.
"I'VE KNOWN her for 12
yean and she is always doing
good things," he said.
Miss St. James, 35, said she was recruiting for b e r
organization, called coyote,
from the streets and jails
because she wants to change
the way society t re at s ,
punlshee and stigmatizes pros·
titutes.
She said she cl!ose that
name because "coyotes are
the most promis c uous
animal ."
"YOU CAN WORK when
you want and earn $50
anytime you like and the hours
are your own."
Philosopher Alan Walla Is
another member of the in-
formal advisory hoard.
"She (Miss St. James) is a
very gifted young woman,"
said Watts. "She's very wise
and beneficent. She19 the kind
of woman who'll never let you
down if you're in a jam."
"The women in prostitution
take all the heat," said yet
another member, author
George Leonard. "Margo St.
James is talking about a basic
transformaUon in our society:
the way we look at rela-
tionships between men and
women."
thoced by Assemblyman Law-1-----------------------------
rence Kapiloff, (D-San Diego),
died Monday in the Assembly
~ Commerce and Public UW·
' ities Qxnmittee when no one
-would secood a motion to a~
prove them . There was no
vote.
Lobbies Free
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Legiolation to clamp 11ghte<
cootrolJ over local lobby\lrtl
In California clues, coilntl.S
and s~ tllstricts has been
torpedoed · ih the Assembly
Rules Olmmlttee.
COmmittee members dedd·
ed '1J a"'4 'VOl8 .~ to
prepGI'• ,a reooiµUon uldng
!lie Aaoembly'a ~ G9vt<n-
ment Commiitee II> ofudi the situation with ..,, • eye ,Iowan!
possible fUture klglslatrm.
_ st.iions'.4,t. ;. ·
I SACRAMENTO' •!Aili -~l!,apit<>l fe!lort"lt fl:i>ill -jo< Call&inila ; tef'evi&lon
_ Uona are 11'0vbitl to ucure
Ur unUmltod rtchlll to priiceedlnp' oi the ala!e
•-,,b[f' --' . Ill a ao.ninutA> RSSlon with
-ty Rul ... Com-
mittee Monday, reporters Vic
" Biondi ol. KNJlC. TV, Howanl
Glngold of KNXT·TV and Lar· " '°1 Bacf8er of KIJJC-TV said 0 they wanted a change In the
Assembly's "gentleman's
t" Illa! pennllll a
memllet of a legblative
tee to veto television
coverage of a bearing.
l .Sacking the reporten, com-
.Ollttee chairman Jolin L.
·~ said Assembly ruletl -.afi:eady , Io r b I d tawmak<rt '
from blocking t e l evis ion
t·"Cb\ieragc of committee
.tJ ... _SOnl.
I
Make money at
Keystone Savings Ill more tl!an a
place to save money. It's a place tQ
make money. We're here to make
your money grow,
• • , ... hdaiillaces
Ille May Maine.
Nowyou can get $25 cash in 5 seconds
24 hours a day. Juat insert your
special ctlld in Keystone's Mon ey
MachJ.ne and out comes your $25.
This is a free serv1ce to our
customers who maintain ssoo in tholr
regular passbook saVings account -
it's designed. to save you ttme and
reduce your check Wilttng expenses,
Stop by Keystone soon, Ope n
yon:r savings account, choose the
freo services you want, and get your
Money Machlna card. You feel
~orat.((oystono. Wlthgoodreason.
OKEYSTONE SAVINGS
&18 &.0U AUOCllTIOI
ton.Id'!· c.upm, °'''"""'or"" 1otr11 ~ CllDDlr 'MP t I f, l .. ot l IMch llVd.Jo..tlbl to Hl'hnnv Inn. PllOM -..i. hdii!flt fll'l10et m N' t?ldf«-
Wlf•llO Jroldwar•J.Ollluao:e, 11IG.nt 77J.7'40. Al"°"' c.i.. Newport 411.b Gil JlacArtlau llv4.t 1'baiii IJ:Hllf7
"*" ... "° mlWllt.
• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
MAYI/llJ
SAVE MORE ON A MAYTAG PAIR!
e N ... FaMt M_.., WoaMr
e Cholat of W#Nf toft>lps
e Halo of ti~ Dryor
• No hot 1pots e AlltollMltlc ..., loYel coetnl • c;..tlo, Offft heof
• Llltt ,.,,., • P'eneo·P'rou cycle
• P'oworflo ... ,.., • ,, ........ lhtt fll,.
TELEVISION e ST!REO e APPLIANCES e SALES e SERVICE e SINCE 1947
'• 28 Yetir• of Integrity .\ Dependabllllll m
COSTA MESA e HARIOR AREA EL TORO e SADDLEIACK VALLEY
El Toro ll:o1d 1t Fr-.w1y IN1irt to S1v·Onl
j
! • ........
DtUy 9.9, S1tvrd•v 9-6 131·1110 '<lr ... _ .....
RADIO DISPATCHED FACTORY AUTHORIZED TV I. APPLIANCE SERVICE PHONE 541-3437
;
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• ! l r. DAILY PILOT * • • • ~County • . • • • • So Ions . .
Fight Bill
Over the objectiaa ol <¥ans•
Colmly'• -· the ""'" Senate Jut week voted 21 to JI
to reotrlct 8Chool U.. of In·
, dlviduol ..U.. of • aptitude
tests for 1J1.01J0109 other than
psyd>ololloal evaluation or
coll<ee placement. I
( CAPITOL )
St.ate Sem. Dennis E .
C.,,,..ter (ll·Newf)ll1 Beachl
and James E. Whetmore (R-
La Habra) oppoeed l h e
measure wbioh waa aeot to
Gov. Reagan for signature.
THE PAIR Jplit on another
bill defeated last week -SB
4i03. The bill would have allow-
ed school dlstricts to contract
with private finns foe oot-<>f:-
state work experience educa-
lion !l<Oil'lll!l6 for high school
students.
Sen. Whetrnore voted yes,
C&rpent'er voted no, and the
meesur<> failed 8 to 28.
Six btlls cleared t h e
Assembly and Were sent to the
Senate last week. The bills and
votes ti. area legislators are :
VET EMPLOYEl!S
REPAYMENT: AB 276, re-
QUiri..i the state to reimburse
emp'°Yers for hall the costs of
wages paid to Vietnam
veteraM up to a maximum
period of 18 months. Measure
appropriates $5 mlllioo. Pass-
ed 57 to 6, Yes : Assemblymen
John V. Briggs (R-FullertonJ
and Kenneth COry ( 0-Garden
Grove). No: Assemblyman
Robel'i E. Badham (R-New-
port Beach). Ab se nt :
Assemblyman Robert Burke
(l\-H1111tington Beach).
TAX CREDIT ' AB 373,
gives apartment renters a flat
$jO tax credit replacing tile
scale from 125 to f!S . Passed
51 · to 18. Yes, Cory. No,
Burke, and absent were
Badham and Briggs.
EQUAL WORK RULES, AB
478. extends protective labor
Jaws, now applicable only lo
women and minors to male
workers in caurornia. Law
does not affect minimum
wages, however. Passed 49 to
17. Yes, Cory. No, Badham
and Burke, and absent was
Briggs.
GENERIC DRUG
LISTINGS: AB 692, requires
publication or lists of multiple
source prescription drugs and
their generic and brand names
along with wholesale price.
Llsts would go to health pro-
fessionals , ph:yBlcians, con-
sumer groups and others.
Passed 57 to 9. Yes, Cory. No,
Badham and Burke, and
absent was Briggs.
PH YSICAL EDUCATION
llEPEAL' AB 1116 b y
As9emblyman Cory, would
repeal physical education re-
quirement for conununlty col-
lege student>. Passed 44 to 25.
Yes, Badham and Cory. No ,
Burke, and Briggs, absent.
SEX EDUCATION llULES '
AB 1177, makes violation of
education code provisions
governing the teaching of sex
education g r o u n d s for
dismissal or revocation of a
teaching credential, b u t
repeals protections of teacher
credential in cases when
parents are not notified of the
classes or provided materials
for inspectkin. Passed 42-26.
Yes, Cory. No, Badham,
Bi;.iggs and Burke.
Pirates
Hungry
GEORGETOWN, Guiana
(AP) -River pirates
boarded a pontoon bo.at,
knocked the skipper un·
conscious and got away
with the groceries, police
said.
Capt. Victor Richardson
told officials he used an
iron bar in trying to beat
back the attack.
llT'S BE FRIENDLY
U you have ntW nelaltbon
or know of an.yOne movln1t
to our area. please tell us
to that "'e may extend ~a
trt~ welcome and help
~to become aCQualnted
In their new turrou.nclings. '
So. Coast Visitor uwsn 4f4.t3'1
Harbor V"tsitor
'4Ml74 ______ _,1
•
90 DAY ,•
FLEA CllJ:AR
IEG.
1.27 sec
GiYe your dog full 3 month
p1otection tm>annoyin&. !leas.
Sizes for 1lltreeds Df-dotso
secure closure,
HAIRSEI
TAPE
IEG. .. , 3 i 81
Scotch BraJld hair set tape
especially for hair styling.
Takes place of llard to use
pins 01 rollers.
.RORIBUNDA CREPE PRINTS
luxury cotton crepe prml fabrics 9 I c
in ltte season's brightest cotors RIG.
and patterns. Mach111e wash & dry; 1,99 finished to resist creasing.
HOT AT JEffERSOM STORE
" KAPOK FILLBI PILLOWS
good night's sle!p. Non al\ergen1c. REG. F ~"'P'r lilk!d M< pillows IG< a 2 s 5
odof1e5S alld super res11tent Heavy 2. 99 O
cotton t~1ng, corded edge. EA. R
6102
SAVE 81.50 llW •••
MetalraRl8 Heater
tor aquarinns . gg REG.
3.49
Keep aquarium water at just the right
temperature and keep your· tropical fish
alive, healthy and acqve. Fingertip con-
trol and pilot light for-safe use. 20 and
50 watt models.
SAVE 81.98 NOW •• :
SLIP 'N SLIDE
FROM WHAM·O
REG.
7.97
gg
The super summer .toy. Simply attach to garden
hose, take a running dive at it and slide from
one ~nd to the other. Made ol rugged, smoolh
finished vinyl-just what's needed to amuse
youngsters on hot summer days.
.WATER
WIGGLE
111 IEG.
2.27
• Wbam·O's truly amazins water
wiggle. chastt kids, waters
. the lawn; plays tag. Just hook
, cm alf'/ oose.
IB·OZ. BATH
OIL BEADS
RIG. 2 ·~ a· ac S7c R .
Tangee makes a pleasant way
to baby your skin. In floral
or lemon scent. Soothes and
--• softens.
4 oz. 4 ply skeins ot 100% ~he
yarn. Perfect for knitting or cro-
cheting into sweaters, scarves,
!lats, dresses, etc. Washable.
NllT AT JEFFERSON STORE
72190" ACRYLIC Bl.VIEi
Sott, comlortabo lig!miglt blan· 4s 9 · kets lit twin or f~I size be1:1s. Floral IEG
designs in 6 color co-ordiMted 5 99
combllliliiw. MUAe washable. '
':" •·LIYINli ROOM
. •·BEDROOM
• • li~tHROOM
•'FOYER
\ i •
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12'' MIRROR TILES ·CREATE DECOR·· DRAMA ~ \ . " . 'Convert aa ordinary ioom into one of ~acious elegance and dim·
ension with easy to apply mirror tiles. Add dramatic depth to
living rooms, bedrooms, baths or foyers. Each tile comes with
pressure sensative mounting tape.
Gold vein tiles ..... 79c ea. Antiqued smoke .... 89c ea.
FOLDING
CHAIRS
~~ 3~~ ..
Slurdy folding chairs. W11h
rubber tipped legs~ com-
.'firtable sea( and back. ~eal
for extra seating needs. ·
· CLEAR VINYL
.v~:. RUNNERS s2
Heavy duty vinyl carpet
nJllflE!:r with grippers to lie
·flat. Choice of decorative
patterns. Save wear on rug·s:.
.. 'fl!,. C.
~ r I'' .. ' . ,,. ·' , EA.
REG. ,;-·:~
59c
BIG .SHOW
Off JDS
88~ ..
", ~"'" liilted'2-qt jars 'Nitli
tight fi\ling lids. Use f<r
storage of detoratioR pur pos!s. .
•
LONG UFE .
llGHlBUS
·a· ·:a· a-c .... -
• 22cU.
Light bulbs oorn up ID
years. 15; 40. so 'and tOll'
watt oo lbs. Stock· lfl.
White front's low salepri
~
•. Huge 2Q-lb •. capacity le~. clotnllS . turnble free
brllow dry • 81g fan , and · 4~-po~ts 1il gently
all fabrics and help reduce-wriniling • Jleavy ~uty
to111ue ¥2-hp motor· • Bif: ea~y. ta ·ciea:n· lint fi
WHIRLPOOL COMPACT MYER
•Compact electric dryer plugs into s 11 ' normal 11 5 volt outlet •Only 14"
wide, yet hlllds good size loads 110.
·Special permanent press cycle 129.97
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY REFUNDED
CllARGl ,,
10DA1
CHARGE IT ••• USE YOUR CREDIT CARD
WIMOMOI -
• IAlllANllltUI II ~
• NAST(I CMMSE CUI ~ . ...... FOR YOUR SH'P'"G . CONVENIENCE .JUIT .. C-~IJ,·lODAY!.
• • t .,, '. : ,, • 11llS(1111 CIWYINIUIT Cl(ltT ftlliS •
1, I I
•
•
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1
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12-PC. llTCIEI
CURBIYIO ,
-·llG..
. """ zas
10 P·C •. GWBI
COFFEE SH
. 3'~ .
l.Dvely glaze filffsh set ilclucles
coflH ~rver/fid: plastic tray,
• creamer/lid •. sugar & mugs. •
£arthenwate..
, .
JUMBDWITE .tlREMUCI .... I '*I ''.lli:H.' : •. \ ... ~ "' . A faotasti: bargO.! Jlic!.
· ·glass llll.lgs ·are insinated to
kt!'P bM<ages hot er cold.
Altn<tiYef.sblldy. -.
. .
SAWE 820 ••• DElUXE
12'':::::.i COLOR 'PORTUtE . . ' .
/!Ii gg
' . OUR REGULAR LOW P·RICE •21 9.97
C1isp,. clear piCtures and brilliant colllr OOll!istenll'f filllll'tllis
quality portable TV. This nifty set has slide controls for pre·
cisioo color tuning. And buHt·in antemlis ~nd hand~/or por·
!ability. and coovenjellf-f Ideal ~gift ~i!\;for fallier's1Day ur
.. on. ·' ·t. . .• · .. . ·~
· C9~•1iE A..l $4°t9. 97 •
Vivid. true color on the biggeSt stlllen,d! Deluxe feablres
include famous Packad Bell Tele·lla&ic automatic fine tuning
system. So it ~ins you a perfect picture. ·llailfsome walnut
fini!lt clli11Cl ·
.UHdQ, M.,-29, lq73
FABULOUS BUYS FOR CARE OF YIUUi :GARDEN
1111 IECUUI LOW DISCIUllT Pllct ••. l.H STlll WllEELIAl.01
, 3 aiblc ~·ill pulJIMe c;irrier with Wlllded a:.et, rubller ti;e and wide
rngle t.lllle flips. So you can carry heavier leads comfortahly. It's extra
stunjy for ~ded safety.
DUI · IEGIJlM LOW 1.ISCIUNf PllCE 12.IJ ... LAWN SPIWIEI
Spread all the seell:s you C<lllM possibly want as far ·as yru wen!! Tbis •
· ~lity soreadir is made froln heavy,gauge steel construction, 8" rubbtr
tires. Sjlrea:l •s,·fertilinr -anythi"i!
Diil IEl:irLAI Law·aistat'JlfT PllCI ... I.II ADJusraiLE SPllNKUI
foc,01itst.aRling results use this-full or part circle ccverage up to 86 ft.
diameter. To get )'Oii" entire lawn lllorooghly wet. And it's l'IKlunted 1111
wheels !tr easy rmving.
DUI IEC.l.IW LU ,llSctulfT Pll~ ... 1l'4 1 l5i UL Sl'UYEI
Big tapa:ity tart for sinJilli insteticides, llqJid ft!Ji!inr, etc. Hose
witll val\'8 «Wlb'ol ron:le. Go alter pesty irisects witll this big baby!
your
choice
ea
FOWTEl41NCH
LAMI. MOWEii·· ·
. s1vl •ao ... i.1· uMlaeiA TABlf. .
STllRAGE SHED . · .. !~!~ ~·BASE
IEG. 1 ·
17.H. If 9
Get tbe meticulous results that
only a hand mower can give. Ban
beafing wlleels and· tuoolar .steel·
hallllle.
110. 8999 Wi\lte onom•I Hn•~d 12!P ff.tt -4 steel 110~. tullular-ltti. . u.tr ' ..
7' UMllWA . , 14" Over 270 cu. ft. of storage space. Sol!d CC1lor 0111Side aod ne. ·
Double sliding doo s and lantern prlntOnl~fTiqged. ·. .1e.•1
all! eagle trim. Weaiher tight 1t 10. UH ALUM. ~· Holds tmil9ll1 secwtly; · '
weiihs 40 'lbs. filled.. . ~~
ARMAC ·''3·1N~I'' 8 n~
'
POlJABLE .
' OUR RIG; 1.19.97 t 88
'
*"' slatene bed, wool billiard ·cloth and rein-
forced frame to let you play a serious game
of pool. Put the board that's included on top
and YQU have a. table for ping. pang or dining •.
Co~ with set of balls, cues1 and triangle.
Limited' to stock on hand.,. hiJrry; while they
last.
8' DB.DE ,._ TAILE ARMAC 7' POI. TABLE
Cu9tom tab~ with wool I 8 I 88 Steel fralll' constnrctiDO allll : I · I 88 cloth, 1!1 ~velm, ~~nt wood gnln finislled aprons.
ball retorn, fine furniture · Ball return allll leg levelers. finis~ ClineS with balls, 111. Wit~. balls, cues allll 111Ck. HG.
cuesaol raek. . 229.97 · • "''7
UMmo TO SJOCI OlfffAllD .. 102
3088 BRISTOL ST.
c:C::::H:;:A:;o:;R~G"'lf'l'ci'iiH'iiA•iiiGiir 1ii'T.-. .. uiiis1i1riiioliiu1ilc'ii11iiion117iaii1ii'o II
. 11' ::;:, .... =r
San Dleto Froeway ol lrlotol 101A Y ••11•c-11t1unnm
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5 Students
Ge t Honors
At UCS B
Five Costa Mesa students
are among the 1.691 named to
the dean's list for acaden1ic
excellence at UC S a n t a
Barbara for the w i n t er
quarter, 1973.
Those honored are Edward
Anthony Clime, 2408 Narbon-
ne \\'ay; RicMrd Kevin Mac
Mahon, 2n3 Bunting Circle:
Donald Robert Randall, 2911
Clubhouse Road; Carol \Vise.
1780 Panay Circle; and Toni
Marie Oberscheven, 1 5 6 5
Wintergreen Platt!. All are
seniors, 'exet?pt Miss
Overscheven who is a
·sophomore.
Requirements for the honor
list at the Santa Barbara cam-
pu~ are grades of B-plus (3.5)
or higher.
Bloodniobile
Pays . Visit -·
The American Red Cross
Bloodmoblle will visit the
Co111munJty Services BulldinJ
at the Westminster Civic
Center Thtirsday, ~fay 31 in a
drive to stockpile blood for the
-summer months.
The visit. sponsored by the
Westminster School Di$trict,
will last from 1:30 p.11\. to 6
p.m.. according to d r i v e
chairman Di'. John Tully .
APPointmeitta may be made
by calllni the Red Cross •. 8$-S38l
Coast Man
President ·
An Oregon State Unlvenity
student from Newport Beach
has been elected president of
the' -w~tem Regional
Interfratemlty Conference.
Richard G. Jenness, whose
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
E. Jenness live at 1800 Com-
modOl'e· Road, is a student in
tbe school of busine!JS and
technology at the university,
Speed Reading
·To Be Shown
A fre& demonstration of
speed reading will b e
presel'lted June 18th at 7:30
p.m. at the Orange Coast
YMCA In Newport Beach. Dan
Rosenwasser, president Q f
Educational and Industrial
Researeh, Inc., one of the na-
tion's largest reading im-
provement organizations, will
present the program.
Persons Interested In at-
tending shouJd call the ''Y" at
642-9990 for reservations.
•
3 Stude n~
Get Honors
Three Chapman C o 11 e g e
sutdents have been given
departmental honors f o r
academic excellence.
Senior Pat Sparkuhl won the
Purcell Srt Association Award.
He ls the sone or Mr. and Mrs.
Konstantin Sparkubl, 3 3 4
Bluebird Canyon Drive, Hun-
tlngtoo Beach.
Psychology awards wete
given to senior Donald Babitz.
13892 Typee Way, Irvine. aDe
graduate !ludeot ft l e p h e t
Millre, 203in Acacia Ave ..
HW1tington Beach. .
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_J• DAU..Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
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·No Budget Woe Here
, Fountain Valley IJ a nre cily In Orlllgo County -
it pays caah for what It builds and II doesn't aweat th•
annual city budget Illa! other troubled communitJes.
Long ~ge flnancal plannlng, lndudlng a ~year bud&• aeYeJOped by City l!Wulger James Neal and
Finance Dlroct<>r Howard Stephens ii the simple secret
of flJcal success for the city of 50,000 inbabltanta.
In 1969, Neal and Stephena put together a long-
range plan, through 1979, which projects the city's po-
tentlal revenue each year, what services it will offer
and bow much It will cost. Tiie budget projects no
change in the city's tax rate of $1 .15 per $100 asseased
va.IuAtlon.
The city just completed expansion of Ila police de-
partment, corporation yard, city hall, and a brand new
council chamber, for which It paid $1 mUUon cash. This
summer, work starts on a Sl,250,000 recreation corqplex
at Mile Square Park -another cash and carry prdject.
The long-range fiscal thinking bu allowed Fountain
Valley to build a surplUI for the future, al a saving "' all taxpayers. It's a sound example for others to follow.
'Orange Cqunty' Gang?
' Orange County bu been taking some undeserved
Ucb from the Eastern press since Watergate became the
topic of the day. The terms "Orange County gang" and "the Orange
County boys" appear with distressing frequency In ac-
counts of the activities of the President's advisers.
These characters are variously described as "ambi~
tious, cold~yed young men , "men on the make, men of
limited vision." And, we are told, there are plenty more
of them "where the Orange County boy1 came from.''
The "Orange County" ta~ appears IA> have surfaced
in reports of a British journalist, who might be pardone.d
for getting bis geography mixed up.
Actually deposed Presideniial aides H. R. Halder-
man and John D. Ehrllcbman have Los Angeles back'
grounds (UCLA, cla.ls of '4ll~ Tbelr Orani• County con·
nectlons were llmlted"' Western White Ho.uae oojollrllJI, Press secretary Ron Zle&ler, who lm't among th•
accused, did work at DisneyTand for a wlllle. But the
only authentic Orange Countlan on the White HoWl8
Team appears IA> have been Newport Beach a\IA>mey
Herbert Kalmbach.
Perhaps our sunny county Is just getting some back·
wash fl:om Its longtime reputation as a cornerstone
ol ultn-rigbt conservatism. but the gang connotation is,
to say the least, unfortunate.
Rubber Stamp Law
Want to make sometblng illegal? It's euy!
First, find another law that sounds good, copy
its prohibitions in detail, reword the preamble, affix a
code number, pass It IA> the city council for a vole, and
presto, it's banned! Rubber stamp ordinances are common In Orange
County. Recently the county's anti·nudity ordinance,
upheld by the state Supreme Court, created a rush
among local cities to enact similar laws.
So the Santa Ana City Council voted In a nudity
ordinance it picked up from the Costa Mesa City Coun-
cil, which was picked up from the District Attorney's
office, which in turn ~ot its ordinance elsewhere. ·
AB a result of this legal plagiarism, display of the
"natal cleft" now is unlawful m those territories, along
with other unmentiona~es flaunted by dancers.
This is all very well -except that the lawyers,
city councilmen and county medical experts cannot de.
cide legally what a "natal cleft" is. And the fact that it
isn't listed in any medical dictionary doesn't help.
· The "natal cleft" will never be a great issue. But
It does raise the questio~;of how many other, more
serious things, have been similarly rubber~stam~ un·
lawful -or lawful -in our multitudinous city and
county codes, rules, ordinances and regulations.
'Gee, it must be nice w be a hero and have a
friend in the White Ho~e.' ·
Memories of
An Operatic
Bridge Nut ··
Klein Believes Nixon Will Ride Out Crisis
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
J was saddened to read earlier tb1s
spring that my old Aspen acquaintance,
LaurllZ Melchior, died at the age o! 82.
/.$ a great opera singer (he performed
more tlwn 1,000 times 11.t the Met), be
died rlcll In 00oor an1l1ame, but the ooe
dllllnction ho milot
wanled eluded him.
MeJcbior w a 1 a
bridge nuL He also
was the wont ~
ous bridge play«f
I have ever n.m
across. His pusion
for the pme WU
matdled Only by his ,
vast lnepdtude; still ,
he kept teytng. grimly, year alter year,
to ,..ch the master class.
'111ERE w AS something heroic as well
as pathetic about his bridge ambiti«I. He
ezempllfied Otest.ertoa's sympathetic
portrait of the "true amateur" as a man
who believes that "if a tiling iB worth
daln&' it is worth doing badly."
(Cl>es°tertoo reminded us that "amateur"
comes from the same root as "Jover,"
and that the Inept but infatuated k>ver is
the man who really keeps any game or
sport or pursuit aUve.)
We played bridge abnost nightly In
Alpe!I in the early 1950s, when Melchior
was Marty retired and cou1d afford to
take hi! hobby more 11eriously than bis
wcaUon. His ll(ife -as peUte as he was
huge, as serving as be was demanding -
was even worse than be was, so she
mansged., make his game look "good."
Quotes
"The whole art of government consists
ln the art of being honest."
Tbomu Jellerson, 1774
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
II I worked for the Committee to
Re-elect the President, does that
make me part of the Orange Coun·
ty Mafia?
C.N.C.
-
ms endearingly wls11ul amblUon was
to win a tournament, cr,a tiUe, to attain
even tlfe fOWe1t rung of Masten1om lo
b1'1dge. To his credit, be eachow..t the
1boddy de"llce adopted by so many
frustrated celebrities ...:. he never hired
an expert as a partner to win "master
points" for b1m by letting tile expert play
' m:ist of the'·bands.
(It has always puzzled me wby ,.
many otherwise su~f\11 penons
cheapen themselves this way~ for nobody
outside the tight Utile bridge w«ld
knows or cares which rank you pOsBess;
while tho.se within the coterie know ex-
aclly -earned his points and how, and
have nothing but amused contempt f~r
spurious "masters" who bought their
way In.)
AT ANY RATE, I lost track of
Melchlor for a dozen years or so, think-
ing o! him occasionally and hoping that
in retirement he had elevated bis game
to a level he could be proud of. Then,
some years ago, I was sent the first edi·
tion of the "Official Encyclopedia of
Bridge," a vast and autmritative book
listing all c.hampionstrl.ps, titles, and
records In Uie gaine.
Lo and behold leaping oot !rom one of
the pa.gee was the name of Lauritz
Melchior, lesdlng all the resl. He had
finally broken a bridge record : he had
entered a tournament end compiled the
lowest score ever recorded (13 percent)
by the American Contract Bridge
League. Finally, he was immortalized In
the record book. 1 hope his score is never
beaten. Such a lover deserves a niche in
the aMuals of tile game.
The Task of Rebuilding Confidence
WASHING TON -Herbert G. Kleln,the
White HoUBe communications director, is
not the most powerfuJ' offlciaJ in
Washington but he possesses the strength
of knowledge of Richard M. Ni.Ion through
all of the many and varied crises of the
President's career.
'l1i.s is an identity
shared by only cne
or two olhers cJ086
to the President, and
so Klein's analysis of
the Presidefll's reac-
Uon to bis worst cri·
sis ill worth atten-
tion. It goes like
this: Nix<n won't re--
sliJ>. He'll ride up !'8msylvanla Avenue
at the side of the new president on Jan-
uary 20, 1977 ''with a stronger record
than the first four years."
CONFIDENCE must be rebuilt. It
can't be done by cosmetics but by ac-
complishment, and Ibero will be plenty of
that in foreign policy, in decentraUzing of
govennnent, in changing the philosophy
o! goverruneot. "The reconl itself will
rebuild the faith."
This is what Nixon has t.okt Klein and
what Klein is now telling others. 'Illose
who have concluded that Nixon is already
doomed would deride Klein as whistling
by the graveyard, but at )east the. oom~
munications d1rector can be deoended on
to give accurate readings ol Nixon's
state ol. mind. IOeln speaks with a
background of Nlxoo's first campalgn !or
Congress, the Hiss affair, the Venezuelan
episode, the confrontation w I t h
Kbrushcbev, the Nil:on fund crisis, the
mining oi Haiphong and many l.,..r
challenges of the Nixon career.
HE IS pretty well versed oo bow Nlxoo
\Vlll react to any given set of. adverse
circumstances, and we are now about to
see another unfolding of events in reac-
tion to such circumstances.
Two positive factors are involved. It
begins to appear tbat Dr. Henry Kiss-
inger w111 reach a satisfactory agreement
with Hanoi's representative, Le Due 1bo,
on the reestablishment of a reasonably
(rucHARD wn.so~
eftecttve cease-fire in Vietnam. The pros-
pects for this rescue O{M!t'Rtioo. are
regarded as good.
Soviet Chairman Leonid Brezhnev is
coming to Washingtoo In the latwr port
of June with every evident intention o[
reaching new agreements with Nixon on
mattm or gnost importance. Brer.lmev,
who !;las consolidated his own pow..-in
Moscow around an "'l>erlcan dewnte of large, substance, hi!.( as big an Jn..
vestment in Nixon as the other way
around. He has made it clear that he is
not being diverted by Nixon's Watergate
troubles. He also states he expects big
accomplishments in his visit.
TO SUSTAIN his pos!Uon r1 power
Brezhnev needs such accomp(isbments
as much as Nixon, and it is already in-
dicated that general agreement bas been
reached on a series of amouncements
similar, if not as many, to those agreed
in advance before Nixon's Moscow visit a
year ago.
Assmtlng success with H41loi in Paris,
or a reasmable facsimile thereof, follow·
ed by new constructive developments in
the detente with Russia, who then is to
say that Nixon has lost his capacity to
govern the United States and conduct its
most importMt affairs?
This ill the type of thing Klein has in
mind when be speaks of rebuilding faith
oil the !mis r1 actoinpilshments. Klein
apparertly assw;nes that a majority will
·eventually conclud~ on balance; that
Nixon was not so demOllBtrably linked to
the Watergate scandAl that a continuation
of effective action as president in other
areas will not offset lingering doubts. Ac-
cording to Klein, "many" \vho are now
be.in prejudged in the Watergate matter
will be found innocent, and the President
will st.and through this crisis, "moving out
with the support or the American peo-
ple."
TIIlS AT LEAST is the theory which
sustains the President as he tries to ride
out the storm, and it cannot be doubted
that there are elements of plausibility in
his position. 'I1lere are some weaknesses
in the position. Another round of
agreements with Moscow may not be
received with the same faith as the first.
Some congressmen and opinion-makers
will be less disposed to have confidence
)b.;t u.s. lnwresls are adequately
safeguarded in a new stage of nuclear
arms limitation. Others, remembering
the wheat deal, may be less responsive to
a new deal for the exploltaUoo o(
Siberian gas resources.
And still others will judge that the
breach of ethics, morality and legality in
the 1972 election overrides ally other Nix-
on claim to a monopoly on the pubJlc in·
terest. But at least Nixon ha.s found his
formula for responding to his worst
crisis.
Chicarws Feel They Were Let Down
Spanish-Americlns, after a whirlwind
political courtship during the 1972 cam-
paign, are complaining bitterly that
Presidenl Nixon hasn't kept his promises
IO Uiein.
AB lhe election approached, be poured
an estimated $47 million into projects for
Spanish-speaking Americans. The money ;
port of which had been wltbhetd
previously by the Admlnlstratlon, was
f\lnneled through the Health, Education
and Welfare Department, the Housing
. and Urban Development Department and
the Office of Economic Opportunity.
AT LEAST !20 mllUon went ln1'> the
areas of California and Tells with large
Spanish-American popu)ations. Tb e
highest-ranking Spani!h.Amerlcans in the
Administration, antipoverty d I r e c to r
Philip Sanchez and mass transportation
admjnislrator Carlos Villareal, aiao
toured the COWltry at the taxpayers• ex-
pense, telling what the President was
doing t... the Spam.IHpeaking J>OllU)a·
Uoo.
AB the money began !ailing like
autumn leaves, one Latino employment
Service, caller Ser, meaning "to be" in
Spani!h, was promiBed a 50 percent !und
increase by President Nixon himself at a
special White House ceremony. His in-
terest in Spanish-American arfairs, he
told them, was not "a one-shot deal."
TH E PRESIDENT'S campaigners
courted the Latinos and Olicaoos with
bilingual brochur<s, films and gajas. One
such wingding in San AntonJo featlftd
the President's brother, Donald NiJ:on, '
and Latin movie star Ricardo Montalban.
Tickets to the affair were sold through the
United Businessmen of San Antonio, a
federally-funded organization offering
technical assistance to m l n o r 1 t y
merchants.
The campaign was effective. 'Mle
Spanlsh-Amerlcan vote went Republican
in many areas which had long been
DemocraUc strongholds.
BVT NOW, both Sanchez and Villareal,
who campaigned so hard to drum up
Spantsh--American support for the Presi.
dent, have lost their high posts. Ser
received a telegram rescind·
Ing the !uading increases penooally
pnxnised by the PresidenL CM lnfunn-
ants say even the United Businessmen "'°" will be pbaoed out.
-Congress Unikely to Renew Draft Induction Authority
WASHINGTON. -Malodorous
Watergate disclosures are casting a
blighting tihadow on the armed services
of the nation.
They are virtually killing the chances
of obtaining congressional renewal of the
induction authority of the draft law -
which expires June
30 and ha• been •
key faclOr In promol·
ing enlistments for
tbe a11-volunteer Ar·
my.
This bleak sit.ua·
Uon I.I directly at·
trlbutoble 1'> Waler-
gaw.
With the civilian
COllUIUlnd r1 the Penugon riddled by
a succession of shifts and exits, wllll
the Whit<! House somberly preoccupkd
by rocldng and reeking WaWgatc ex-
_., and wlt.b a Demooratlt-<oolrOlied
Cootlrea lncteaaiD&IJI dovioh , recalcl-trlli end truculmt, nothlDg was dooe
about the problem r1 the lndoctlon auth-
ority -111111 too late.
11lAT'S WHAT the adminllttation was
bru11quelr. wld when It !lnally di<I get
arouod IU!nc llOUJldinp on C.pltol mu.
IUustraUve u the !orce!ul opinion r1
Rt!p. F. Edward Hebert (O.La.),
chairman of the powertul House Armed
Services O:mlmittee and long-time sup-
porU!r or the dra!t and Induction
authority, as follows :
"I stlU t.bhlk the admlnl.slraUoo should
ask for renewal of the inductloo. authori-
ty, al~ in all !rankness, it may have
dlily-daliled too long 1'> get favorable con-
slderallon. lt,Just didn't bestir !!Sell soon
enough. The House's vote cutting off
funds fur Combodla la omtnoualy ln-
dlcativ~ of the atmosphere now preva11·
ing. It's decidedly dlscouraginJ."
Jn fact, It's so dlscoangt.na IOll1e
sources f(\ar that a move at Ulil late date
to retain the Induction act might lead to
congressional cl.emor lot repeal ti. tho
permanent draft Jaw -which bas boen
In efl•ct since 1948. · · ·
There have been 'lOme disquieting
signs oi that.
A SENATE Appropriations suboorrunlt·
tee bu held IKtle-notlced bearings on re-
pealing the dral1 and the Selective Serv·
Ice Act -a key port al the draft system.
One o( the wltnes5e5 was John Hancock,
executive 3m'ttary of the National Coun·
cil to Repeal t.bc Dra!L
HI.I strongly dovish views were heartily
t!l1dot!ed by Sen. A I a n Cranston (!).
Calli.) member or the Veterana Allain
Committee. .
In the House, a number of doves and
leftlllll are known to be "altlng !or an
I , •
opportune opening to strike at both the
draft and setecUve Service. Foremott.
amoog them are Reps. Bella Abzug (0.
N.Y.) Robert l>rinan (0.Mm.) Ronald
Deiltlltll (D-Calll.), Michael Harrlngloo,
(0.Mass.).
WhUe militant llberau and le!tbts IJI.
vei,h incessanUy against the Pentagon
and the "mllltary·lndustrial
oomplex," ll!e plain !act is that complete
dismantling ol the permanent dra!t coold
tum ·Olli ., be pr•ctlcally probiblUve
!lnanciaUy.
AlrC8dy personntl cosu of tile armed
scrvlcts conaUlute 56 percent of the
defeose budget -eel at 181.1 biUlon Jn
the Pre<ldent's !local 1971 budget.
TlllS BVGE -1im ,. certain 10 In·
crease as CO'-'tl of an all-votunteer Army
mount. To ge,t quality enlistees (high
school graduates), the ti:rmy hu .,
1teadUy offer more expensive In-
ducements -IUCb as a $2,500 cash bonus
and mllllons !or advertising.
More than 127 million ts being spenl for
!bat purpooe this !lacal year. with f.'11 .9
million eannarkcd for next year.
Chairman Hebert is forcefully stress-
ing tllis cost !actor In citing the urgent
need to retain the draft law and Selective
Service System. It u hl1 finn belief that
the only way to "have an aO-vohmteer
Army is to draft lt."
"11le switch to an all-volunteer Anny
Ls tiphoning off funds vitally needed IO
keep the countiy strong," contends the
veteran legislator. "Sharp 1ncreaaet 1n
military salaries and various other ben-
efits to attract enlistments hav& made it
dU!icult to find the dollars needed for
weaponry and other non-personnel cost!.
We are literally pricing ourselves out of
a strong defense by soarlng personnel ex-
pend!tures."
BACKING Heberi's contention that the
dra!l is needed to produce an all-
volunteer Anny is the !ollowlng:
In li71, .U percent of Anny volunteers
were draft-moUvated. IAst year that
figure dropped to 'El percenL 'lllls year,
wtt.b the c1ra11 llUSpended 11nce wt
December, nearly all reorults are lrUe
volunteers -mlistees who sign up 10loly
because they want to.
R=ultll!i goal of t.be /l:rmy ill t'IO,'leo
men by June 30. Since January,
recruiting bu been on schedule -quan·
Utallvely, but not quaUtaUvely.
On quality, tile tiara had to be lowered
to Obtain the desired numbers.
The proportion of high s c h o o i
' '·
gradustes sagged [11)111 71 to e:i percent.
That was the result o! the Army easing
Its standard of not accepting more than
30 perceot r1 recrutt. without high school
diplomas.
PENTAGON o!ficlals hopefully feel the
quality leveJ will lm,prove in the summer
mont.b.t. General Accounting Office ex-
perts, who !>ave sludled the matter, have
strong doubts.
These audloritles are urging the Army
to hire more civilians for non-military
fwlcUona and to recruit more women.
'l11e Selective Service System, even 11
retmned, may be pered down. It now
I
DAILY PILOT
l!obrrt N. Weld, Publiih<1
Thomal Keevil, Editor .
Borl>aro Krelbfch
Edftoriol Page Edil01'
Tuesday, May 29, 1973
•
costs 8l'OW1d $56 mliiion a year. Si>me
Budget Bureau officlols would 'ltke~t
that in hall. But congressional sup 1
of the system are warning thit a mo to
slash this item may trigger a dove drive
to klii II eotlrely. :
Addendum: Anny Chief o! Staff ten.
Creighton Abrams says there is i one
unmenUOOed gain from the Vletham
conflict: a large class of combal~~
pertenced 9fficers aod non-<Ollll. ~· the one-tinie tank commander in en.
Patton's famed Third Anny, '
reservoir ol. battle service ls unma~htd
In the world, and will be a prl~less
source of strength for years to oome. '
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Bet~er ~eeiety Goal of-Co111111une
By Phil lnt~landi
''All I can say isl wish you were part of my take-home
pay.'' ~ .
L.Itl. Boyd
You Can't Arrive
By _ Plan~ Train
> Mister, what did you pay for car repairs in the Wt 12
months? A company that specializes in automotive ex·
'penses figures repairs on the average middle-priced car
dwills Its fil<lt year on the road run aboot $42. Tbe oec-
ond year, $96. Tbe third J<ar, •t&S.
The fourth year, $226. And the fifth
year, $251.
Exac~ 1.4 percent of the coun-
try's law officers are women.
Han! to believe, this, but a job
counselor of lengthy experience con-
tends the average stenographer's ca-
reer lasts only two years.
That word "arrive" comes from three Latin word.t
meaning "to come close to shore." That's why some nit·
pickers1 some but not many, still ~ you can't arrive
by train, plane or auto, but ooly by boaL
Look, son, ll's not enough to report tbat Benjamln
Frankli{i recelved an air mail letter In 1785. You must
report furtJier he was in France and the epistle came to
him from England by balloon.
BEAIJTY WAS ,-, II was the so£~£ealured, full·Oesb-
ed, round-faced w~ who for centuries was regarded
as the most 'beauuiUJ:·qiOsider·lhe leminine portraifs by
Giorgione and Rubena.aizd da Vmci. Not IDIW the motion.
pictures came alorig 4fd the girls with shadowy eyes and
high cheekbones and fll'lll jawllnes -say Greta Garbo,,
Katharine Hepburn, Marlene Diebich, Joan Crawfml -
get popular. Tbe special lntenfilve lighting for the cameras
did it. Brought on a sudden admiration for that sort, of
girl who looks like a sackful ol deerhorns. In those earlier
days " sunshine and cand1eligbt, the most admired were
the ladtes whO always appeared somewhat pneumatic, the
kind wbo would roll downhill if placed borizootal on a 15
percent' grade.
MARGARINE -Q. "Don't the margarine users out-
number the butter users?"
A. By two to one, they do. Hereabouts.
'Mxlee stargaien: continue td in.!ist that the Aries man
tends to be a home lover wbo greatly enjoys do-it-yourself
prMents. Remember that, young lady. If your bQSband is
an Aries, cite this interesting claim as you band him the
dishrag.
P. T. Barnum remains famous as the cunning drcus
promoter who said, "There's a sucker born every minute."
Few realize he might have been talking about himself.
Not once nor twice but thrice was old P. T. flimflammed
out of fortunes. First, he lost a big bundle in a crooked
real estate deal. Second, a stock salesman took him fot ·
his enlire portfolio. Tbird, be divested bimsell ol the wbol<i
shebang in a funny scheme to manufacture phony snow.
Address "'4il to L. M. Bol/(l, P. 0. Boz 1875, New-
port Bedch, Calif. 92660 .
.............. • Now .... Plastic Cream
Invention For Artificial Teeth
Artillclll Tiid t1mr Felt
S.'llitiinl ......
Now. fortbeftnt time, 1eienceoffm •
plntie Cftll'lft th•t holds dentWft •• MVet befoN-fonnl an tlutk: mtm· bnne that 1'1tp1 /tot' 1111• to lltl rcatwrol ti11w1 of ~r ntltltl.11. It's a
unique dilt'OVeQ' called FIXOOI~
that bas reYOlationbed dentlH•
'llftel'io(. • .. £ ~ r • It tell YoQ bite batder.d)d ~ ter, eat more naturally. FTXt'lOINT
l11t1 for bCM&R. R.i.tl moistutt-Dtntures that flt are ea.1tial to health. Set your denti1t rgularly.
Get e111·~\Jle FtXoo&Ht Venture Adbeeive Cream.
. Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
Warning, The Surgeon Gene1al Has Deterll)ined
That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous 10 Your Heahh .
IWl.Y PILOT 9
HAMS
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I
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CLOCK RADIO
OllGllCAl.21J7. ..• . .. . ·--·-···-·--··->Kf.N
125 ONLY LLOYOS DI GITAL
CLOCK RADIO
.,_lllCMllll ···-----NOW
7 ONLY PANASONIC
STEREO SYSTEM
~Sl2'.'5 --·--·· ---·--···· ... _NOW
JO ONLY SOUN DESIGN
STEREO SYSTliM
"9nllC.... .. ---••-·--·---·-·NOW
'18.88
•19.88
•99.88
•99.98
1800 PAIR
MENS AND CHILDRENS
BOAT SHOES
Hfavy duck uppers, thick rubber
soles lrl Navy, White, Red, Green.
Buy 2 pair for all the famlly
$
.
99
ORIGINAL '4.99 NOW
2 ONLY 19" SHARP CO~OR TV
O•IGltlAl·UI• .. -··-··-··-· _,, ___ ._ ... -.. --.... _NOW
6 ONLY 19" PANASONIC COLOR TV
O•IGIW..·'411"---NOW
MF NS
'266.00
$366.00
JOO ONLY MENS SHIRTS AND BRIEFS 3/2"
.99
OlllOIN.ll JIJ.fl --·-·-···· .. ··------·-·--NOW
600 ONLY MENS T-SHIRTS
Oll01NAL·l1.• .. ----····---··-···--·--NOW
700 ONLY MENS BRIEFS
AND SHORTS
011e11u1LL¥ 1JJ.•--... · .. ----------·NOW
J~i9L~~'.ILll~~-~.:~~-RESS SHI~~
250 ONLY MENS SS AND
LS SPORT SH I RTS
.......... ft........... . ... -•····------HOW
JOO ONLY MENS SS KNIT SHIRTS
ORIGIN4l.·ll.tl .................... ------·-··--N~W
•3.88
'2.88
t.12 .. 9~,L,.Y,~!~~W.~Y~.N_~~~otfl 1 RTS •1.aa
27 ONLY Ml!NS POLYESTER
~~ .. c-~~r,s ________ ~"°w •29.18
SI IOI S
102 PRS. BOYS SHOES
OUGlNAl·liL•·IJ.11.-----NOW
JO PRS. WOMENS MOCCASIN
O~IGIH,l.L·ll."··-····'"···-·····-···-·-""""'""-HOW
115 PRS. WOMENS BONE PUMP
CRIGl'i,1.L·ll.11· •..• ·-----··-·-·--------NOW
93 PRS. WOMENS SLING BACK C(.OGS
o•tGtH>.l •.11 __ ··-·-·-·· .. -·-·-HOW
63 PRS. MENS CHINO SADDLES O~IGIHAl.·11111·11•11 -·-··· .. ---·· .. ···-'··~--NOW
19 PRS. MENS CLOOS
Ol lGl'Ul·•ll Ill II --·--·----HOW
198 PRS. KNIT and SATEEN SCUFFS
O•IG!NAt . I] Oil , ...................... ,_ •• , ... , ......... -•••• _ ••••• NOW
9'l PRS. MENS CANVAS LACE to TOE
Ol lGtH>.l · ll II _ •. _, __ ..... -------------NOW
53 prs. WOMENS POLYESTER
KNIT BOAT SHOE ~·"'·····--·-···--·-· .. ···-.............. _ .. NOW
•4.99
'3.99
•4.99
•S.99
$11.99
•7.99
'2.00
'2.99
$3,99
1000 PAIR
DRESS and CASUAL
MENS PANTS
ORIGINAL $5.99 to $12.99
the reasury
family store and supermarket
TWO BIG GROUPS
OVER 225 WOMENS
DRESSES
Choose Junior, Misses,~ Half Sl!ff in 1 wide assor1mlnt of
style and colors and at t\Vd. to· believe prices.
• • ORIGINAL·
$7.88 to $16.99
ORIGINAL -
Sl1.99to$16.99
$
NOW
72 prs. WOMENS CANVAS
LACE to TOE .........,.. __ .
274 prs. WOMENS SPECTATOR
·2-TONE PUMPS
... SUI ••. _
93 prs. MENS WHITE MONK
STRAP SHOE ............. -·-····
--
HOW
AUTOMOTIVE
88
•2.99
•2.so
•s.oo
18 ONLY 8 TRACK AND
CASSETTE TAPE CADDYS
-........................ ·-·-··--·----'1" to· • 10"
e CLOSEOUT--40 ONLY
LIGHT FIXTURES
and CHANDELIERS
Choose from more than 25 etyl" In
brau, wood, wrought iron, hobftlll,
Wegtn wt.I,~. WI '" cltllnt tut lrl • .,tire llnt 1nd ytu MW.
20 ONLY I TRACK TAPI PLAYERS
OllGOW.·Dt.tl(.\IOOELlS-al) •. ----'OW
4-PLY NYLON TIRES (27 MONTH}
Otl!OINAl·faJif.E.T. ttO'I/
HOME DECOR
84 SETS 50 PC. OR 64 PC.
•34.88
•14.00
Cl'LUS l",!,T.)
~.~,1;.~~~~!:-:'.~~E -•16.88
!~'~'~;.~~-UG/TRE~-SETS How $2,44
64 PIECES CARNIVAL GLAllWARI ASST$1 44 "
OUGIHAl ·D.•···----.. ---· JrlOW e
/;!WfoYJ.f.~.M~IS.~~~~NS TA~lijS •2. 99
OVER 300 MENS
SHORT SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS
Polvttttr ind cotton blend In
COIOl'fUI j)l'/ntl Wrt tlHYn In
sluJ S-M·L·XL, S1vel
00
for
ORIGINAL $3.99
• I
SANTA ANA • STORE
ONLY!
e 1200 PIECES WOMENS
SPORTSWEAR
Just In time-tor 5-lHYltner fun and vacation • a grand
assortment of tops, sweater,"'f>ants. shirts, sets and blouses ·
all drasttcally reduced!!
GROUPl $ 150 PIECES ORIGINALLY
$2.99 lo $4.99 NOW
GROUP 11 400 PIECES
OlllGlll-'i.l'r'Uft ltW.".-·-·-·--•·•·••·---.N~
GROUP 111 JOO PIECES
(lfllGINAUYM.tlklW.ft ..•••... _ ............ --._wow
GROUP IV 150 PIECES
Oll!G!PW.L'r'lt"•ll•.-------
GROUP V 200 PIECES
m 'SPO.R'TSW-EA_R_C_OO"'Rc=D.,-cl N'"'"A· r·es ··-OlllGllW.l'r'i•I• NOW
CAMERAS
00
'3.00
'4.00
•s.oo
'7.00
2.44
12 ONLY POLAROID BIG SHOT CAMERAt7 88 IAYl:AflHISl.OJt,Li)flll'lt'(E!.-Ht/<N e
23 ONLY POLAROID
SQUARE SHOOTER
~17· --··-··-····· .. -··-···-·········--·-·N!'>W
7 ONLY GAF COLT MOVIE CAMERA
Ol"'lll.f.llt'I _____ -·----··-----""'
40NLY GAF MOVIE CAMERA
OlllG!tc.l.l · Qf.fl .............. -•• ··-·-.. -·--'"-·-·-·· NOW
100 ONLY 5-WAY PHOTO CUBE
OllU;lllM.·IM ----NOW
'21.88
'50.88
'24.88
'2/1.00
~'~~~x_<:_A~~!.C:~s.:_w.1 ~_::~£,ANS f3,88
STATIONERY
42 ONLY WOMENS SOFTS I DE LUGGAGE
1l"N•"Sil9I '15 88 ~IGllUL·a7.ftlOIJ2.fS HOW e
100 EACH METAL TRUNKS-
SPECIAL BUY!!
...------·----·-··---.. ·····--NOW
190 EACH MINI DRAW POKER
a.1w.-yO!itr1'9d .f \llly >.lllOmlticQo>gir...r • D."···-··-·-·····-!'OW
800 BOXED STATIONERY-
SPECJAL BUY!!
-.. ·-··--···" _,. ..................... -... --... NOW
LOTS!! 100 COUNT ENVELOPES-
SPECIAL BUY!! Llipi•utllllrSin-._----.HOW
•a.as
'1.88
'2/1.00
'4/1.00
e MORE THAN 600 PIECES!
WOMENS JEWELRY
• Earrings • Necklaces
• Bracelets
SAVE ON GROUP I
• Ropes
OlllGlllALilf-------•OW
SAVE ON GROUP II
SAVE ON GROUP Ill
Ol !GIJll1LJtJl1tU•.·-··--·-···-----.. NOW
TOYS
•2/.99
•.99
'1.99
1n SESAME STREET FINGER PUPPETS $ 66
Ol1'1111il·U -NOW e
~s.~SA~~~TR ~=:i:.:'.'.'~~~!-~C:.Jv.ETTERS •• 44
!~~~~~DY DOO~V._PUPP~-~-~-f1,88
31 TINY BABY TENCER LOVE
LAZY OAZY -TINY TEARS DOLLS
0-IOtNAL·tsff lltl'. ..•.• -·-·-•• . ..••.• _NOW •1.aa
SANTA ANA STORE ONLY 3900 SpUTH BRISTOL, SANTA ANA
JUST NORTH OF SOUTH COAST PLAZA
I .. . . • .,
•
'
•
1965 Ready ReservAccount
-. -~ --· -· -·
.
--"-T"'...,"-=' M11~29, 1':.:.::...._1) _ ____::::DAILc:...:..:::::Y PILO:'.....MT J J J
AutomaticTransfer Service/
Ready Reference Statement 1966 Check ·Guarantee Card
1967 National Check 1973 Automatic Investment Service
Guarantee Card
1968 CheXclusive Checks and Free
Personal Checking Accounts
with Minimum. Balance
'
1969 Premium Passbook/
Automatic Transfer Service
1970 Combined Check and ·
Charge Card, Gift Checks
1971 Ready AutoFinance/Combined
Check and Charge Card
1972 Unique Personal Checking
Account Package, including
Ready ReservAccount/
Check Guarantee Card/Master
Charge Card/CheXclusive
Checks/Ready AutoFinance/
Within weeks,
Security Pacific Bank will be
offering an innovative
thre~-w~ ii?estment/s~ ·~
service, destglled to make
investing easy for the new .
investor. And as you inight
expect, all you need is a , ·"'
personal checking account ·
With Security Pacific Bank
to take advantage of this
exclusive, new service. ·
Special services for special
people. Like you.
I
I
I I I I
•
,
SECURITY PACIFIC BANK
SOMETHING SPECIAL
I
~\
I
'
•
'
JJ PILOT .. OVEJtTISU
Deaths
llANCllO llANTA FE (AP)
---. ... Jllllllldly
-ol Del Mir -Tr1<k • ... -. delil ol •
hart •ltock at...,. SUDday.
KALAMAZOO, Mich (AP)
-Judie 11'. Walbce Kt.I, $7
otdie 8th u.~. Circuit eoun .o1
Appeela In ClnctmaU, died
Sunday ol a heart attack.
NEW YORK (AP)-.lay Cee
H.,.,...••m1 17, jau t.rom-
bonbt ol the 30s aod 40s who
ployed with Lools Armstrong,
Fletdler -and otheT jazz gre&.s, cfied Satuniay. He
ttmpOlled "Give Me Your
Teleplnle Number," "Swing
Out," a n d "Hlggtnbotbam
Blues."
l CINCINNATI, Ohio fAP) -
. Fred Lazarus, 88, a founder of
the Federated Department
Stores chain, died Sunday. t ie
was honored as America's No.
I retailer in a poll of
merchants in 1965.
ORANGE COUNTY
Campaigns
Cost Less,
Won More
By 0. C. HUSTINGS
Of ti. o .i1y l"li.t Sl1tf
The tried politlcal formula
"n1oney equals votes'' was
reversed in the Coast Com-
WHEATON, tl l. <AP) -mUJJity College District elec-
Frederick WOilam Specht, 83, tions. according to campaign
former pres Iden t and contribution statements filed
chainnan of the board o{ by the four candidates.
Armour and Co., died Sunday, ' George H. Rodda and Worth
lie was president a n d · Keene, the two iDCUmbcnts
chairman of tile meat packing returned to their seats in the
company from 1952 to 1961. April election, actually spent
Marriage
Licenses
LAS VEGA-' -Mtrrltg.t lke<1H1 lllWd 11ere Include: 11~~~;r,•~,7 o1-c~f.' M:!, ~""(:'.~
LVM, ''·of Coron• JOHNSON-MAASHALL -Aiw. 20. Lewl1, Sl, ~ Al°"'11 J1111, M , boU1
ot Hunl11~ron 81acn WINTER-H WlANO -Allf'. 20. £rne1! Theodor r •• ZI. of Fouott1ln V1Uey, Ind NlntV LOI'.,,., 20, ol GarCltn Growo SVLLIVAN·lllOSSI -A,pr, '!Ii WUll1m Teny, il'ra!:! Min 1.. ... ...,, bOlh ol A:~~~N~·Oi~EN -Apr. 20 JOlll Eric, jJ.1. 1nd K1r1n. 2•, both ol Hun-tlnofon llHCh POU.EA-AAAEOLA -A~ 20, M.vrict £11119ne, :it, •nd v1vl1n, 25, both Of Coron• O.F Mer
GIESER·OAVIS -Apr. '°• Fr1nlr A., 19. Ind M1rHcl1 Ann, l1, both cf
Foun11Jn V•f!ev TVLL-9ATES -All!" 20, L1rrv Ktl!h, 37, ol L11 V11111, Nev .• ll>d P1!rlcl1, 31 or Fot1n1•I" V11Jev "'IN-MC MILLEN -Apr. 20, Ji;tteon WI Ired, 31, of W1t1mlnsrtr, 1nd 1111-tv I.DU, 22, Ill' St1nhM.
OAVIS-KENNEOY -Allt'. 20, G11v
Cl'lllrloH, 21, of FOU11111n v111ev. 1nd
Letlle Ann, If. of Hunlh!llGn llNCll PUENTE·NOVOA -Apr. :JO. 0-oe, SI, of Gerdefl G!"OW, fnd Alll'll!tl&, 51, of NfWOOrt Be.ch ZJMMEA.Ll·SJEFFGEH -Apr, :io. Robert E,, $, ind HelM, JS. bOlh ol N~rt llM<PI LONAMl!!H-GARCIA -Apr, 1 O, Edw•rd Cl•r•n<•. «! .. ol F11Utrron, ind It-Alln. 33. ol wt1tmln1t.,..
CLAll.K-Nl!UON -Apr, 21. J 1c;k ~~!51·= PIUllM C .• SI, llDIPI ol
JOHi.SOH-kE,,NI• -A11r. 11, Melvin
El.IMM, », If S•nt~rw, 111d M.lnllll MH 24, of Wt ~ WILLIAMS-SULLIVAN -,pr, 21, OoMld L•ftDY, 21. 1nc1 .liUrlorle
M11dM1 lf, both ol' Ht,ll'lll?:!i"°"' OY&llt·HollGEIMN -All(. , It nc"ll LH, 2li. ind k11t1h.W , 20, both ef "untlnoitort •Nth
WELCH-•ANGtiL -All/'. 21, J-.n G., 34, of Huntlnotan l!IHCl'I. •nd Dorl• ll1rt11r, :w, of SfPUlv.dl CONNl!LLY·HOKE -AO<". 11, H1rrv '""' JS• of G1rden Grl1W. and DIO!'• .. lt, ol WHl!fllntt1r
De ath J\'otlces
••uoo1•e \lt'llU•m H. llrUQ111•1. MIJ•CHnl of L'1"' il11cn; d•I• Of Oe••ll .. MIY u. 913. !:.urvlvld b~ wile, ctlhl•r· brother. Edw1rd llr1,ll)Q1r1, ilerk1l1V.i. 1 u1r1, Ml11 ,.nn Brvgg1r1 Ind Mrl. o..11fkH'd HelOI,
l.olh of 0 11churtl, l elllo•nl•. Pdv1111
.. rYlcfl Wltfl fltld It Shetttr Lfgun1 &••'" Morru1rv.
WILLS Anni WlllJ. ltll KILHI, (oJ11 Me•a. Oate o! dt,,lh, MIV tt. 197l. Svrvlvld bY 011111flJ1rJ, Vf ranlc• 1<1v1 I nd M1rv Ann
Leon; !Ive or•nd<lllldrt n; five 11••81· preodefllldren. Gr1'1Sld1 w rvl<tJ wera ~Id lodl y, T1111.day, 11 AM, Good Sfltolwrd C • m f! 11 r v . 81ll:·81rqert;i F111>erfl ttom•. Corona d1I Mir. 01"'<:•
1or1.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
427 E. 17th SI., Costa rt1esa
&l&-4188
BALTZ-B,RGERON
FUNERAL HO~IE
Corona del Mar 673-'450
Costa Mesa 64S.2Ui • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadw•y, Costa !\lea•
LI fl.JUI • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1705 Laguaa Canyon Rd.
•H-'415 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery ~fortuary
Clo•pel
ssel Paclfle View Drive
Newport Beac~. Callfornl1
MUI• • PEEK FAMILY
COWNJAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 Bois• Avt.
Well'.tmln•ter 81J.35!5 • SMITllS' MORTUARY
m Malo SL
Uantlngto1 Belldl
utmt
much less than their con-
tributors.
Statements filed with the
Registrar of Voters show that
Keene and Rodda , who pooled
their campaigns, spent 1333.63
each.
Third place
Donald Strauss.
Beach, spent $1.040 a n d
Frances 0. Mann, fourth place
vote getter. $1,468.48.
Keene of Seal Beach and
Rodda of-Newport'Beach, were
rHlected to four year terms
on the board which governs
Orange Coast College and
Go lden West College.
* CONGRESS!\fAN Andrew J
Hinshaw (R-Newport Beat h)
has signed a letter to, ',Presi-
dent Nixon urging that the
Service Employmenl
Redevelopn1ent (SERJ pro-
gram be federally funded in·
stead or locally funded through
revenue sharing. •
Spqklng. at Ille ~ de SER luncheon In '5anl" Ana
ia.t Thursday., H~ said
the ability, of ·ttte ~
Amerlcall manpower Ji:•!Dfr.18
program ""' adapt to the Admlnlstration's.1 re.Ve-Jlue
sharing· guidelines, w h i I e
malntalnlng or imptOYing Us
present high 'levels of service
and succes!lt ls doubttul."
* SENATOR ALAN Cranston's
£or bett~r ambulance and
hospital lire for emergency
cases has passed the Senate,
with House action expected
soon.
The bill would authorize
$37.5 million in fed er a I
matching funds to help com-
munities d e v e I o p com-
prehensive medical services
system which ""ould train, stalf
and fully equip ambulances
and hospital emergency rooms.
* ORANGE COUNTY'S Coo·
gressman H i n s ha \v has
asked the Department of
Treasury to protect California
grape growers and vinters
from illegal competition from
Spanish \vine exporters by en·
forcing eKisling laws against
illegal Vo'ine traffic. Tl'easury
.-eacted to the request by ask-
ing !he Bureau of Customs lo
discontinue the release from
customs OOnds of 12 different
Spi:lnish-n1ade wines, Hinshav.•
said.
* THE ASSE/l.fBLY has a(>-
proved a bill by Assemblyman
Kenneth Cory whi ch \vou ld
eliminate n1andatory physical
education in junior colleges.
Under the measure , t he
governing body of any state
community college district is
granted the option lo include
PE as a required course of
study in their 0\\'11 district.
The Garden Grove Democrat 's
bill has the suppport of the
California Junior College
Association and the California
Community CoJlege Student
Government Association.
Red Cro ss
Swys Ope1i
SANl'A ANA -The Orange
Coon.I)' Red Cross Blood
Center will remain open unUI
8:00 p.m. the !lrst· Monday ol
each month for appointments
by prospective donors and
groups.
The center. oormal1y open
until 3:00 p.m., is located at
601 North Golden Circle Drive,
SSlnta Ana. Appointments for
June may be made by calling
the Red Cross Chopter head·
quarters at 83S-5381.
·-·········-····· .. ··········-····--··--··-·····~ ·····-··· ...................... . ......
2 3.4 Lb.-Dry Chemical
FIRE
EXTINGUISHER
• Ex tinguishes flammable liquid, gas and
elect riCal fires.
• Rechargea ble-pressure gauge.
1 Certified by U.L., U.S. Coast guard, F.F.A.
• Every boat, bamper, trailer and home should
have.one for safety and security.
REG. $9.59
#PDC 275R
$799
SAVE $1.60!
New State low requires simi -
lar extinguisher in all recre·
otional vehicle5 with cooking
or heating units!
Hardwood Birch
PULLMAN
"Give Your Bathroom Thar
Built-in Look!"'
• Cabinet has hardwood birch front & particle
board sides. '
• 23"xl9'1 top -cabinet can be stained, point-
ed or antiqued.·
• Marble·like one piece lav-top with non-drip
edge & molded-in bowl -assorted colors.
REG. $41 .90 $ 2 995
"
•
•
Once lrt.a'l:ifetJme Buy!
LU(lTE®
INTERl.Olt :ENAMEL
"Ours Alone -We 'Bought All They Had!"
• For woodwork, furni t~re, kitchen ond both·
roo m wall s.
• T?ugh to scuff -easy to wash .
• Dries in a n hour, smooth m~diltm gloss -
soap & waler clean-up.
REG. $9.35
S,A)'E OVER $5.00
5399
Gal.
HURRY .
Adult Size
BEANBAG CHAIR
"Perfect For Anyone-· Any Room!"
• Vinyl beanbag in your choice of colors -just
right for relaxing -use them indoors or
outdoors.
• Pick one up for each member of the family -
they'll love them.
• They'll take a lot of wear & hard use -super
sturdy viny l cover.
SEEN ELSEWHERE FOR $19.99 .
WOW!s9~~
.,.
' <• ~ ..
.. •'
'
•
,.
1
• . •
• •
• •
• •
\
• •
y:
Wi nn in g · Seams ' Na tu:ral •
' '
f
, Br· JO OU!ON
' ' Of Ille Diiiy Pilot Slaff
Misty Lee, regional winner ln tbe1 ninth
sewiJli. con~t •Jll'ISOl"ed by the. Glrlls
Clubs ia ·America, learned to oew at the
local Girls Club, naturally.
But she had an "in" when it came to
taking al\ tile sewing classes sbe wanted:
. s!le lived next door to tbe Girls Club and
was alWJ.YS available to sign up first or
~t ~ little eztra help. ;.The UJ .. year-old Orange Coast College
freshman's latest achievements as a
seamstress have won for her a $300
scholarship..-brand new sewing machine
(the first all be.r own) and three pairs o!
shears.
She receivOd ber prizes d~the 28th
annual ccnference of Girls CI.ubs of
America in Dallas from Ro b e r t
Clohessey ol the Simplicity Pattern Co.,
Misty Lee , winne r
of a re gional
sewing conte st,
models a prized gown
(l eft). Right, she
is showing her.
mother, Nan.cy, so me
new .techniques.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
TUffdar, Mar :tt. 1m , ... 11
CKIJOllsot of, the ·sewing cootest.
"Llke mother, Ute da.ughter" would be
. an adage riihi for Misty and ber mother
!Nlllcy Williams, a •ae<tetary, becallae
tbty both sew. A!--fint Mis. 1Williaills
would "-Ip ber daughter with pcojeds
"but oow my rootber gets help from
me," Misty said.
TRADE JOBS
~ 'Ibey a1so ... c~, tasks, eacb· doiJ!g
•the job the otbef 1irids disagreeable.,
' Misty's youngest sister Laurie, U. ta:
starting to sew but Linda, 15, is the
"horse type," Misty said. Sbe bas ber
own horse and is busy riding and taking
care of it
From her first .gannen,t, a swrunP.r
shift which she made at the ,age of 9,
Misty has progressed to the most dif·
ficult of party dresses and tailored
clothes.
:;Bank on Sportswear
...
Latest in status signatures is. the lady-in-the-hat
logo which is found on most of the sportswear collec-
tion froin·the'Right Banlt"Clotlting Co.
Coordinated by Donald Pliner, owner of the RBCC
'· · boutique in Beverly Hills, the collection features fash· -: · ions with a flair. . : .
... ...
.. -
••
Included are cotton pants with halter tops, cardi·
gan sweaters, pullovers, sweater sets and printed shirts.
Also featured are great looking belts, jewelry, hat.,
bags and"shoes.
One o!...the attractions is the flpral•sprigged seer-
sucker draw'slring halter paired with matching high-rise
wide-legged pants (right).
Tempting in the accessory department is the uatur·
al straw '\butcher bag" with canvas webbing (below).
The import collection can be found at Joseph Mag-
nin, South.. Coast Plaza.
.
Sbe has been mulnr 1h1rta fol: ber
boy!ritnd ·and fa~, just ID get
the eq)el'lence.ol JDel)11 clothes.
Sewlas: dlasos 11 EoollPI J\lnior H;gh
Sdlool, ~ -lllih School and Estancia Hlgh added to ber sklll,
espectally tbe stretdMmd ... w class she
bad al Esl.ancla during ber senior year.
it," she eiplained . "Sewing is pert of
c~ting. I try to make things look dif·
fertnt than the pattern."
Sile has made a~ately SO pu-
cent ol the cl_ ID ber wanlrobe under
ber !)'Siem ol "having 300le)lloce to go
and ihen making ao outfit for 1l"
She likes to sew because she finds It
reJUing, but only lf she allows herself
plenty of time to complete the job. This
is where unsuccessful seamstresses err.
sbe be!ieVes. They try 10 rush and
become frustrated .
BASIC PATI'EllN
Sbe has sewn lot> ol bathing suits lllld
summer shifts as well as dresses, pants
and tops from ber basic Pelloll pattern.
Each is varied from the original pattern
and embellished to give it a custom look
and take It from !be realm ol home made
topcol-.
The brown-haired, 5'5" award-winner
enjoys all sunvner sports, is learning to
snow ski (the hard way since she broke
her leg the first time out) and plans to
attend California SlS;te University, Long
Beach to ~jor in .home economics.
"i picture an outfit I like, tben make
Her part-time job at the Girls C!Ub is a
clue to what her profession wilt be when
sbe graduates from college. She teaches
sewing classes for teens. which ls good
experience for any future junior high
school teacher to have.
Daily Doubled
Cross Word Saved
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm only the
father, so, of course, I don't have
anything to say al'OWld here. r am
permitted to pay the bills and drive
everybody wtiere they want to go. I just
keep my mouth shut and do as I'm told.
My demands are simple. All I want is a
chance to look at the newspaper while
it'a slill readable. Yesterday where your
coiwnn should have been was a big hole.
Our daughter tore it out to take to her
Family Living class.
Yesterday the crossword puule was
mlsstog. M1 mother-in-law waated to do
it "later." 'lbia morning my wife ripped
out a recipe for peanut butter soup. On
the other side were the stock-market
returns which I wanted to reacf. If I com-
plain I'm "a sourpuss." What about this?
-M.C.P.
DEAR M.C.: You need two papen In
your house. One for the rfppen and one
to read. Too expensive? Not when yoa
~•Wei' tbe benefits tn term• of famUy
unity. Be fOOd to yom'telf, Dad. Order
that secood' paper today.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am tmishing
college in the spring and plan to be mar-
ried in June. My fiance is a wonderful
person. We have great communication.
The problem 1 am writing about bas
nothing to do wilh him.
J want to have a thorough physicol ex-
amination before the wedding and 1 need
some guidance in selecting the best
method of birth control. And this Is wbat
I am writing about.
was that a pbyalclu should not be treat-
ing bis family, except in an emergency.
AU doctors have reciprocal ar~
rangements aod your father could surely
have you e:ramlned by a colleague.
You're a big girl !\Ow, and It's time yo11
broke up that Wee-Tot-Papa thing.
The answer to your question la-maybe.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am new in
your country and want to thank you for
helping me learn the English language.
When I first started to read in America l
could understand everything in your col4
umn because you writ.e tor everyOOdy,
not just bank presidents and college pro-
fessors . ,·,
And now I apologize for bothering you
when others need help with serious wor-
ries, but if you could answer me I would
be appreciative.
Very often lately I am receiving in the
mall items 1 did not order, like
keychains, neckties, cosmetics a n d
dtcorations for the house. These are not
free samples. They expect money in
return.
t mostly send everything back and then
sometimes 1 receive bills-anyway. Please
tell me v.·hat to do. I do not want to
1 damage my credit or get into trouble
with the law. Thank you . .....! SYRACUSE
llEADER
DEAR S;R., Wben unordered m1er<lul';-..J
dlH arrives Jn the mlilll, you may
I
My father is a wonderful doctor. He
has taken care of me all my life. I need
to know ll be coold tell, from a pelvic ex·
aminatk:m, whether or not. I have had
Mlll1&I relaUons. I'm afraid my fatber
would be very disappointed in me ll be
learned tbe truth. He pnibably woujdn't
say aoythinf, but I need to !mow whether
O< not be coold tell.
older II a gift. You do ... peed to pay for!'---'
It, aor do you bave to p to the trwble
Please chedt with )'Oil!' medical cm-
sultant.s and give me the word. Thank&.
AM. -INFORMA110N NE!i!DED IN
BffiMINGllAM
DEAi\ t N.: I ...,ulted three pliytf..
<lua. all wltll teeaap daQbters. '!be
lmaiedllte reapo11e h eacli tmtuce,
and .. ,,..... of malllq II back. II
bdoo&• to you.
What's prudish? Whal"ll OK~ II JOQ
aren't surt, you need some betp. It's
available ih the booklet: l(NeCktcg and
PetUng -What Are tne Limit>?" MaU
your request to Ann ~nders In care of
the Daily Pilot, encl .. ii,>g SO cents in coin
and a king, stamped. aell-acldttss41
envelope.
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DAILV PILOT
Wiggling Out of a Bargain?
U Linda Costanza is figuring on a new silhouette, she ought to know belier.
She works for the Better Business Bureau in New York and the consumer
protection agency bas criticized vibrator belts as "completely ineffective in tak·
ing inches or pounds off a person's body." Promotion of suCh devices is no
longer considered hip. ·
Horoscope: Changes Due Aquarius
WEDNESDAY
MAY 30
By SYDNEY ()MARR
Whtn Virgo undertakes an
aulgnment, It usually ts all
the way, not lukewarm, not
ball and 00 shortcuts. nus
being .so, Virgo s e I d o m
receives as much com-
pensaUon for a job as might
be deoerved. Virgo performs a
service and it is useful,
benefldal and there seldom
are questions about hours, rest
periods, coffee breaks. Virgo
is a worker. Virgo is
k.txrMedgeable about health
and clean1iness. Virga can be
antagonlttd by Gemini and
Sagittarius. Virgo is attracted
to Pisces but it is often a case
of opposite! being drawn to
each other. Virgo makes
money with Libra, love to Leo
and Capricorn. harmonizes
with Cancer, Scorpio and
TaW'UI.
ARIES (March :ti-April llJ: .
Long d-are leatured,
whelber CUllltC1<d with !ravel
or correspondence. Improve
communications. Be sure that
what you say and write ii
properly interpreted. L e • ,
Aqaartua and Scorpio ptrJODJ
are ln picture.
TAURUS (April ZO.May 20):
Te!t theories. Applies to
personal a n d professional
endea vors. Probe mysteries.
Ask questioos. Answer3 a re
available. Mate, partner may
be reluctant to disclose all
where money matters are con-
cerned. Be persistent.
GEMINI (May 21.June 2;);
Accent is on cementing rela-
tionshJp with mate, other close
family members. Let others
have their say. Bfilld bridge.of
goodwill. Maintain low profile.
Family Price Freeze
Do more list.ening t b a n
UIUl!ng. Tura, Ubnl ln-
dJvkluall are invoived .
CANCER (JUlle 21.July 22);
Maintaia balanre. Inner calm
now la essential. Don't at·
tempt to force 1Jiue¥. Obtain
valid hint r r o m Cdmlnl
message. Take things slow
and etlSf. You may soon be
changing yoor mind about
situations, persons.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
CreaUve r eso urces are
featured. Member of e>pp05ite
sex finds you attractive and
makes no secret o{ it. Welcome
chance for change, t r a v e I ,
variety. Stick to your own
style. Yoo will be a winner!
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221:
Be frank. Don't placate one
who constantl y sings blues
borrows and breaks promises.
Know when a relationship is
finished . Don't p u n i sh
yourself. Start building or
rebuilding on solid base.
Separat. loct lnllll wlJhlul
lhlntiDf.
UllllA (Sept. ZS-Oct. 22):
Short trip could be leatilred in
c.onnection wtth relative or
visit. You receive new hope.
Where there was despair,
there can now be optlmlRn.
New contactl and new lease
on life -tbeJe are featured.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
By playing hunch, you gain In
monetary mauers. Glve full
play to intuitive intellect. Heed
your own COUl'flel. Refuse to
be bullied. AquarlDI, Leo
persons could play prominent
roles. Pay and collect. tbeck
prices and values.
SAGrITARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21 ): Lunar cycle coin-
cides with time for fresh
starts, meaningful contacts
and relaliomhips. Take in-
itiative. Higbligbt personality.
Permit personal magnetism to
flow. Leo is likely to be in pic-
ture.
" CAPRIOOllN (Doc. :IWu. •
It); -ellort ls due lo
f'Y dividends. Stldc t Of
prescribed course. Steady a~·
.jiroach b\'inP -:-. •
results. Acceot is on the ~ ~
den, sec,rets, ~ -
meeting. Aura of. romanee
surrounds acUvities.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.F
18): Empbasls is oo friends.,
desires, way of fulfiJllng goals. -
Changes due bul they will be
pleasant and could Include. 1 member of oppo!ilte id.
Gemini, Vireo persons could __,
play importanl roles. Analyu 1 '\
motives. •
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): -.1
You are relied on, depended
upon , given more--·;
responsibility. Prestige quo--t
tient rises. But remember ~· t
obligatioos to family as well t
as to profe5$ional associates. :
Seek hannony at h o m e. -:
Otherwise, effcrts in other ...... ~
directions prove meaningless.
' ..
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Spenders Polarized
~
FRANCIS-
'\,,ORR J
l
i
By ERJ\IA BOMBECK
It probably comes as a
surprise to no one, but girls
start early to outspend boys
... a lead which they manage
to majnlain until death, or an
ugly credit manager ...
whichever comes first.
TuiS difference among men
and women has probably ac-
counted for more domestic
scenes than any other phase of
marriage. Actually, spending
is a genetic trait.
In every female is an ex-
ocrine gland called "Spend,
Baby, Spend." It is located irt•
the palm of the hand which is
why girl babies are born with
the left hand cramped in a
credit card position. (Males
are born with closed fists.)
Whenever a woman views
si gns reading : "SALE. END
OF THE MONTH CLEAR-
ANCE. GOING O!IT OF
B USlNESS. LlQUlDATING,
ONE-HALF OFF. NO.
PA YJ\IENTS UNTIL AFTER
CHRISTiw1AS," the o l h er
glands swing into action.
Saliva begins to fonn In her
mouth, the palms of her hands
AT
WIT'S
END
begin to perspire. tears of ex-
citement form in her eyes, and
the pituitary gland says, "Go
Mama."
In the male, it is quite a dif-
ferent story. He has a gland
which follows a muscle from
his right arm down to the base
of his bi!Uold pocket. Jt is call-
ed "cheap." When a decision
of money is to be made, the
muscle stiffens, the right hand
becomes numb and he is
unable to pull the billfold out
of the pocket.
These genetic differences
can best be explained by our
recent experience in buying a
freezer.
We discussed at great length
at home how a freezer would
save us money. We decid£d
between us that the budget
"COUid staod the cost of a
freezer.
W d . •• s . 1· . e saw an a 1n u1e pape-r ·
listing exactly the one "''e pecia· mng
wanted at exactly the price we • Bl d
could pay. We took the ID on es
checkbook 'fron1 the desk and
FINE STATIONERY
GU.DUATION
011"TS -CAllDS ~
5 .. ECIAL Of',.-1!111
.......... 'll!\95 ..... ·7
annoWlced to the children, 644 1 lllJ 1.t1An llitwAr 111-1111
"We are going to buy alr~~~~~·~~~~~~~~·~·~11~11~1~11~'~"~·~11~"~1~'"~'="~'~"~'"~ freezer tonight."
At the store, the salesman
approached my husband and
asked, "May I help you?"
"We're just looking," said
my husband and wandered in-
to air conditioners.
I grabbed his arm, "Whatya
mean we're just looking!
We're going to buy a freezer!"
"Tonight?" he asked in
surprise .
"We decided it was a
ne<:essity."
OVERWEIGHT?
56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS
Under Medical Supervision
at the
o ·mega Clinic·
HOURS: 9:00 • 7:00
• CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT II "You said that when you got
the dog 's teeth capped ." The salesman returned. My COSTA MESA ANAHEIM SANTA AHA Fw11~101"L•H•1tr. 1869 Newport lW.. W. lldwy, 11'21Tutll"Av1 1SO w. L1H1br1 •1V11. reflexes instinclively opened 646 1633 7T8"1Ml 547.6329 (714) 870-9347
my handbag, thrust it at the • (213) 697-1791
salesman and said, "Takei'=Tr~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~\=' what you need."
fi.1y husband shook his head
muttering, "I wonder i f
there's a hormone you can
take [or jlOVerty ."
\ ., : .
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1
!p;m;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--,J~~
WE HAVE ENTHUSIASTIC AND HARDWORKING
Great Suggestions
For Father's Day Gifts
From fliClcd,1 t.-r1nr.01 Ohio
MRS. BURNS MRS. LOPEZ MRS. DELANEY AVAILABLE AT MOST HOURS -FOR AS FEW AS THRE E
HOURS. OUR UNIVERSITY STUDENT EMPLOYEES ARE CARE·
FULLY SCREENED, BONDED, INSURED AND ARE COVERED
" •• ,.
3 Full Service
Locations in
Huntington Beach
PRESCRIPTIONS e Ctlarge Ac<OVrlll e O.ltv1r1Q
L1l 111 m111 your prnl'lll
prei.crlptlol'ls
W d d
. s I . d BY SDI AND WORKMENS COMPENSATION. UNIVERSITY
e Ing S 0 e rn n I Ze HOUSEKEEPING. CALL b36-llOO, MON., WED., FRI, ONLY: ·~:..,:;!":,h~;;·:: :::
HOURS 9 A.M. to I AND 2 to 6. :1 a....-1111n1 & H•mll,... ttMU2
'fon1 Becker and Russel West.1~~~=~~====~=:::;;;;;;;;;;;;:!~··~--~o~-~~·"i..ef':~~.=~-=·~~-~·~ BURNS-MALEK
In a home ceremony Joyce
Claire r..1alck became the bride
of Thomas E. Bums III. Both
are residents of Balboa Island.
Their parents are Mr. and
Mrs . Michael J . r..1alck of Pen-
nington, N.J. and Mr . and
J\1rs. Thomas E. Bums Jr. of
Drexel Hill, Pa. Officiant was
the Rev. Lorren Flickenger of
the Newport Unity Center.
Miss Carol Malek "-'as !he
maid of honor and J. \V;;iync
Sylvester was the best n1an.
The bride was educated in
Pennington and is a former
stewardeS!l. Her husband is a
graduate of Lafayette College
and Purdue University.
After a Hawaiian honey·
moon. the newlyweds v.·ill
reside on Balboa Island.
LOPEZ-GRAY
Married in Our L.1dy of
J\fount Carmel C a t ho 1 i c
Church, Newport Beach \\'ere
Jamie Ann Gray and Ran1on
Vincent Lopez.
Performing the ceren1ony
was the Rev. Vincent Lopez,
brother of the bridegroom.
Parents of the ne,v\yweds are
Mr. and f\frs. James J. (;rav
ol Newport Beach and JI.tr. and
Mrs. Louis Lopez of Vallejo.
J\.1iss Karin llolloway was the
maid of ho n o r . and
bride:.mn1ds 1\'cre Lucinda
I-Jayes. Carol G rod z i ck i,
Patrice Lorick, Linda Wilmer,
Judy Bradshaw and Elaine
Kranlp.
The bride is a graduate orl
Santa Ana l!igh School and
her husband is a graduate of
Newport Harbor lligh School.
They will make their home in
Costa Mesa.
Attending as best ntan was
rvlike Lopez ; ushers were
r..titch Gray, Bert Gutierrez.
Ken Van Train. Bill Delaney,
Bill Halford and r..tarty Nikula; .-----------1
ring bearer v.'as Patrick Gray, RUffELL'S and altar boys v.·cre Jim Gray
and Jeff Bro•~. UPHOLSTERY
1"hc bride, a gr11duatc of w. ... Yo11 Want
Newport Harbor Hi gh School. The Int
is a junior at Loyola Universi· 1t22 Harbor 11.d.
Iv 1vhcre she v.·as head Cost. M"a -54B·0159
Chettrleader and a men1ber or J~~~~~~~~~~~
the Loyola Belles.
Her husbar.d ean1ed a BS
from Loyola '''hC're he 1vas
president of l'hi Sigina Kappa .
He also is a graduate of St .
Vincent's High School. Vallejo.
f'ollo11'ing a H a w a i i a n
hone~·moon. the bridal couple
v>ill reside in Los Angrles.
DELANEY-SMI TH
~lartin Hruce Delaney or
Costa r..1esa and Theresa Ann
Smith were married in the
Unity Wedding Ch a p e 1 ,
Anaheim.
Their p:ircnt s nrc r..1rs.
Bernice Delancy of Costa
Me.sa :ind J\ilr. and ~trs.
\V i!liam David Smith of Santa
Ana.
Attenrl:ints \rrrr r-.lrs. Trddy
Ho bcrts. Piltrir1a F' 1 i pp c n .
Lyle's
is NOW
Earl
Lazear
Is doing
expect
scissor cutting
&
hair dressing
nt
Eastbluf( Colffurt's
E11stbl uff Vlllagt! Center
644·1 ~70
~ ~ Golden Needle's I
t MAD ~ o1\'!t l ~m'!~S...:..µ_re_:l4_t_o/..!!..__tk_1Q,~ed-.1, 'G~u!nH•ToH Silly & Slinky
___ •_u._c" __ Acetate & Polyester
DllSSIS c•••11 Print.,
ILOUllS
PANT SUITI * Large SelecUon * Grea l for blouses· dreMe!I • ties
Reg. !.98 10 4.98
NOW 2.27 • :1.97 ~·d.
Golden '11~~dl c FAeR1cs
•ouTH COAIT 'LA.tA • CAllOUllL L(VIL
ortlt IVIN!NCI I l!Jtell.'n
)
URPRISE
Our p1rkin g lot ~IS been bulldozed
ind we simply 1ren't seeing enough
regular custom ers. This is a catastro·
phy! However, we firmly believe dol·
lars talk -10 we're having I "SUR·
PRISE SALE." You'll hove lo look for
1 place to perk -but you'll be de.
lighted with your new found LIDO
FASHIONS bor91insl This "SURPRISE
SALF' will continue through the eri·
tire construction per~od.
• long pastel skirts
• summer cotton dresses
•pant suits
•sweaters
• shills
•pants
UP
TO
'Yo
off
TH clOMS 1wl1t .,.. ot 9:l0 .... pl
CREDIT CARDS WElCOMf
~F ....
3424 VIG lido, Newport Btoch
I sale In prosrreH at Via Lido 1hop only I
(.
Dad deserves something spacial <Jn bia special day.
Gifls from Hickory Farms of Ohio have a special ap·
peal for men. They like the BEEF STICK, tasty cheese
and other food specialties many paks contain. Aft er
you make your choice, take it with you or we will
mail if Dad lives out-of·lown. Our friendly clerb will
assist you. .;
PLEASURE PAK $10.50
Dad will find : One lb. BEEF STICK, five
cheese!, Horseradish Sauce plus imported
candies.
AP~SER DELUXE $9.98
Butt Kaese Cheese, Mild Mldg't Lonahom,
Gou a, four Cheese Spreads, Sharp Cheddar
Cheese Spread, Belle Fleur Cheese, blte-11%e
creckert, Banana Cb\p1, Smoley end imported
candies:
Other Gift Paks on Display
For Yon To Seer
ffitltd1'1 t•!!J!r.
South Coast
,,.
rO_P_!'_N_D_A_l_L_Y~
aza SVIWl•'l't .Mi.r CIHll"d'I .,II I p.m,
,HON• 14Mftl
LOWll CAltOUS•L MAU.-.ltllTOL AT T"I IAN Ol•OO 'llWY.
•MEBJCl'S 1s:1mm 1:eeme smm
' ,
••
-· .· . • ... • • • \-..,(
• • 4 I . I
J .,
--· ._,,
I ~I .. ' . . , ,.
.
'
TUMBLEWEEDS
. • • • . . :
MUTT & JEFF
FIGMENTS
NANCY
r M SURE
ENJ OYINc;T
IRMA'S
PARTY
TDDAY'S CBDSSIDID PUZZLE
AMOSS • 1 Mirthful
sound
6 Saul's
successor
10 o..,-11oper'1
mop
14 Eqvptian
month
15 lntorc11
16 Crtrv: Slang
17 Fr~hten1
gr11tly
19 Affirm with
confidence
20 s$p abroad
21 Black magic
23 B6rnba1ds
26 Convey a
t•image
'I1 Vf'leedllng
30 ~ttourc111
34 Retentments
35 C.use to
11Clh11re
:J7 Gf'tek letter
38 Pbetlc
q.ntrection
~f· l~of
I ' 42 P Tplus
tHirae hours
43 The hives
44 Signet
ayatem
45 Longing
47 British lslN
ntUva
!iO Weter
barrier
51 G1H bladder.
Prefix
52 Pure end
lovely
56 Loch-
60 Pen!an
gazelle
61 "Howdoyou
like-__ , ..
64 And elle--
where:2
words
65 Consumed
66 ht c•pitel
Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:
w11SuA
S7 SU.tis
68 Be1r 18 USSR cfty -48 Goela
89 Drop• bait 22 Ona leaving "8 Prtnc.
DOWN hl9 bed Edward-
1 Loathe 24 Armlstice -49 F1nWI
2 Acme 25 Of• church 62 High cants
3 I l t council nl rumen r'2 _ ..._ •••
• T ... _ XJ Commended """" ......... 0 u.. Not•wd ·purpoN fOf'bfavery
5 SMot furth 28 COfJ'I Into 64 -ml!ttet
repe•tedtv 9Ctbn 66 Cc.nverse
6 Eastern name 29 Jokes -' 7 Thstil:A.bbr. 31 Englishtown -:JI £arthenware
8 AC'tOf Burl 32 Actreu-58 ';'~
9 'R1v1ged
10 St1ndlng1
11 Fondneu
12 M1ple genus
13 C1nadian
politician:
Informal
Bara
33 Sea nymph 59 Military
:38 .Tusli; material awards:
39 P1t1tor1I Abbr.
4'0 Reciuses 62 Airline
44 Chewed abbreviation
noisily: DWI. 63 Maki humans
•
by Tom K. Ryon
I MA'( IP.SK YMlM 'IOORE j i li¥'ffit.._ ll!:PRt:Sfllfl!IG?
l J 4.1-Wlo
by Al Smith
by Dole Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
OH,
BROTHER
HAVE A
PEANUT BUiTER
SANPWICH
PEANUTS
~ ...
' I ... ,,.
JUDGE PARKER
NO, HE ISN'T
. .. eur HE'LL ee eACK
SHORTLY! 15 TliER.f
A MESSAGE?
MISS PEACH
I
I
'1tl0~Y'5 Tt5!' WL~ Bli ()N ™E WO!O:K Wi'Vlil
ST\AOlfJ:> FmM THI! ll!!hJNNING OF THI!
Tl1'M ~NT!~ NOW ...
ves, ilfA?
DICK TRACY
® -VBE "P£AllUT9UTnR"
IS DISRUPTIMC. TlllNGS.
I
DOOLEY'S WORLD
SALLY BANANAS
CJiiPl.~~m.iro>,,
Su.o<..B/ ~!
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
by Chartes M. Schultz
----~~~~~ .......... H! Al1lll1TE!I 11'. />ID
1 F.OOiAVE HIM-
by Mell
r~. M1y 29, !1173 DArl Y '1LOI J 3
by l09er B+adfleW
~---~ -__ ,.
~--..
by Charles Banotti
1n.ir,,.,~~&cm ~~~-G.i&e of:<P.~~-
by Gus Arriola
:t. 'J'fclf.i/(.
D1ifti4cr;. TRVST.
,\''
by Rottr lollen
THE GIRLS
DENNIS THE MENACE
---~1 __,
'I .Mf ~NS MYCAR~I'
I
·.
,
'
'
"
"
f I· •l
Ir • '• .,
" " ,,
:· " '
f ' • • • • • • • • • • • • ' i • • • ' ~
• • ' • ~ : • ~ • • • ' ~
' f
' • • • •
1 • • • • !
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Jf O"'L! PILOr T.....,, Ila> 29, 197' '
Orange County Drivers Recall Crash
•
By Dl!KJr ROULGATI ,,. ......... ..,
INDIAMAl'OUS -As II be -. ildioc In the eye ol the burrlcane, Jnliii
mklenl Jeny Grant mi r a cu t.o ta,1 Ir
..,.peel loJury In the bizarre starllnr Une
~t &hat Involved lS can Monday at
llldlanapolls Motor Speedway, deopit&
be1J11 me of Ill first 'Yici.Jms.
Grant started the race on the outside of
tbe ii.th row. •ioog side Salt Woltl>et, a
second year driver wbo wu wiously in-
jured In the fiery crasb that hailed the
nllHlelayed race which ruumed today.
The ~ flag came out and 33 can
ocoolent..i· -the atol1htg line, . .
i.-lng 1,000 ilonepnl'tr per car.
-Joler, Grant aem<d ~ .............
''I looted out tht comer of my eye and
aaw Sall suddenly veeriq to the right Jn.
to mo. iu. bit the ltft front wlleel '° hard
It -j.....i the~ wbeel out el
my hand," Grant says.
"I grabbed hold and stood on it to get
out of lhe way and Salt went right over
me. flipping and on fire."
Walther's Daytoo·Waltber SpetLal wa1
launched from the field ol Grant'• Olsoo·
Sports Clipped Short
Newport's Stewart
In Senior Finals
BURLINGAME -Hugh Stewart ol
Newport Beach and George Baskevitch
advanced to todayay's men's U singles
flna1 at the 73rd annual state Senior Ten·
nla Cbamplonshlps at the PenlllJula Ten·
nls Club bett.
stewart beat Butch Klrkorian, £.1, 6-4
In the semi-llnalll Sunday w h 11 e
Bllkevllch -lllree ael.I to down Joe
JpUua, 6-3, <H, 6-3.
Laver Withdraws
PABIS -Rod Laver, Corona del Mar
temis star, has po.lied out of this year's
Wimbledon tournament. Laver bad in-
!ormed be couhl not play because of back ..
tn>uble.
'11le -34-yeat.-<>IQ:,Auslrallan hai won -llie
Whnbledcm rnln s singles title four times
-In 11161, 1962, 1968 and 191111.
Laver is not competing in the current
Frend> Open Champtoo.hips.
Jockey Suspended
INGLEWOOD -Apprentice Steve
Valdez, the No. 2 rider during the current
Hollywood Park meeting, was suspended
Monday !or five days because of in-
terfereoce in a Sunday race.
been on the disabled list since acquired
from the Houston Astros on April 21.
Robinson said the disqualified status
represents a "list of players doing
something that doean't conform to their
contracl.J." Pepitone, he said, is still con-
sidering resuming hi.a career in Japan
and will remain in Chicago for a few
days to take care of per.sooal business.
"If an American player goes over to
Japan," Robiilson said~ "the Japanese
have to negotiate with his major league
club for his coo tract."
"Joe had some business he had to do,"
Robinson added. "I told him to go to
Chicago and I'd be in touch with him."
Fa1uily Aees·
RENO -A Reno tiusband and wife
both scored holes ln one during the same
round of golf at the Washoe County Golf
Course here Sunday.
Club pro Pete Marich sald both A1 and
Pat Kimbrough scored aces while playing
ln the same foursome.
Pal Kimbrough made her hole in one
on the 120-yard third hole. Her husband
got his on the 173-yard 11th hole_
' • Eagle and new 6l !e<t through the air.
lnto lbi fence l!nlJii the straightaway.
His ~r explQded in a IJ.1ll ol flame and
caromed 120 !eet down the track, landing
upside down., aptn.nlng like. a top aOO
sprayjng flaming fuel In all directions. It
slid Bnother 64-0 !eel and bowlCed off al
least .two other-cars, ti:pew!ng parts along
lbe way.
Also involved in the first lap accident
was Mike Hiss d Tustin, whose right leg
was burned as J:Ua car rolled through the
ball ol fire surrounding the Walther car.
HiS!, however, was not seriously hurt
and was Uned up to race this mornlnt-
Jimmy Carutbm ol Anaheim blamed
the acciden\ on 1 •'Tesa&·lltart" jumping
of the starter'• fiag from the third row,
on whi<;h be started, to the rear or the 3J..
car field.
Caruthers claimed that ooe driver
passed him approaching the starting line
and "'lis already challenging front row
starters Johnny Rutherford, Bobby Unser
and Mark Dooohue going into Lhe first
tum.
While not critical of officiating. he
hinted that drivers' expectations o! an·
\
nual lint lllp OQOlmloo may have .......i
the l .. den to raff all the way around
the track, •lmoot bid< to the aeddmt,
even though the , ... -bad bet!lutopped.
"I thought they had JllSI lorgollm to
change the. yellow light to grffO when we
st.Brted just li.ke they did tut year.''
Caruthers saJd. 111 guess we all did. We
raced all the way around the tract tum
I. ··ay that time we knew it was for real.
We could see the smoke and flames, and
there were guys jumping around and
waving red flags, trying to gel us to
stop."
UPIT .........
FLAMING CARS AND FLYING WHEELS FILL THE TRACK AT THE 57TH INDY 500.
Valdez. wbo celebrated bis 17th birth·
day OD Saturday, was suspeq<!e<f from
Juno 1-4 by the Board of Stewards at
HoU:fwOod.:fatk for "failure to maintain
a lliat&bt COWJe during the atreteh run
of the fifth race, May 27." ,-
T!le •tewards said Valdez and h1a
IDOllll~ ll1lh Ara, caused iolerfennce w111Je redng In\<> l11e lead to finlah · !lrtl.
Irbb ·Ara, named for the football coach
st Notre Dame, was disquatlfied and
moved to tut place,
Messersmith's N.ew Style
Paying Off for D·odgers
Going into Monday's racing, Valdez
had won 39 races during the meeting at HollJwood Park, just one fev.·er than the
leader, La!fit ·Plncay Jr.
Disqualified
ST. LOUIS -Baseball's troubled Joe
Pepltme left P.1ooday for Chicago, with
the indication that he may .yet link up
with a Japanese team.
AUanta Bravt\S Vice President Eddie
Robinson, y,•ho saw J>epltone off, said the
player would be placed on the major
leaiuea' disqualified !Ult, meaning he v.·as
suspended.
The Braves also announced thev \\·ould
activate outfielder Norm Miller, "·ho has
LOS ANGELES -Now that an eX·
Angels pitcher has helped boost the
Dodgers to within l 1h games or first
place, Los Angeles fans are hoping
another ex-American Lea_guer, Tomrriy
John, can get them even closer.
The Dodgers, winners of their fourth
straight behind a spa rkling 5·1 victory
over the Philadelphia Phillies Monday at
Dpdgers Stadium, send J6hn against ex·
El Segundo JDgh standout, Ken Brett,
tonight at 8.
Manager Walter Alston can only hope
John, 3-2, pitches as well as Andy
Messersmith did Monday.
"I tried to copy a lot of things the
other Dodgers pitchers y,·ere doing," ad-
mits 1t1essersmilh, 5-4, y,·ho came to the
Los Angeles club in the controversial 5
for 2 trade with the Angels.
Ahead of Last Year
Quick Start Pleasing,
Surprising w Nicklaus
A'l'I..ANTA (AP) -For more than a
decade, Jack Mcklaus has been getting
ahead ol everyone else in professional
golf. Now. it secn1s, he is even getting
ahead of himself.
He's well ahead of the pace he
established last year ,.,.hen he won seven
titles -the most of his career in a single
season -accurnulated a record $3'l0,S42,
and won Player of the Year bonors.
And he's far ahend of his OY.'ll
Umetable of preparations for derense of
hls U.S. Open Olampionshlp at Oakmont,
Pa., Jwie 14·17, his next big goal of the ... .....
"I'm really surprised r played this
well," Nichlaus said after a front rurming
victory in the Atlanta Golf Classic last
weekend a triumph that was so easy the
rest of the field admittedly was playing
for second place, and runner-up Tom
Weiskopf suggested Nicklaus should give
the other pros some handicap strokes.
He once led by as many as nine
atrokes, and finished y,•ith a 272 total. a
record J6-0nder·par on the tough, hilly
Atlanta Country Club course. He called
h1J aecmd round 66 "as good as I can
play."
program built around and aimed toward
the major titles -the Masters, U.S. and
British Opens and the PGA .
After he 'd \\'On the Tournament of
Champions, Nicklaus said:
"Now l 'm going lo let myself down.
You can't stay up all tbc tilne. J'1n golt\g
to let do'Nll and not play (or a while and
then co111e back and start building up to
a peak again."
But he came back at a peak, and now
is faced with retaining that hrgh standard
or play -or even i111proving on it -
through the U.S. Open .
"You know, you want to play each
tournament as well as you can," he said.
"You don't hold anythine back ln order
to reach a peak later on.
"But you try to bring .the whole game
along so that it is at a peak Jn the majOr
championships.
"I still have a lot of Y.'Ork to do. TI1ere
are several phases of my ga me thal need
\\"Ork. I've got to \rork on sand shots and
chipping. I didn 't do much ol that here,
and you can'! expect to hit all the gre<mi
in the Open,''
"ft just didn't work. 1 have to be my
own pitcher."
So Messersmith went out and fanned
12. including the first six batters he fat·
ed, siII]ply overpo,vering the Phillies. His
six strikeouts to start the gan1e scl a Na·
tional League record and tied \Vith Bert
Blyleveo, Ray Culp and John Hiller for
the major league mark.
The Dodgers supported Messersmith
with a nine.hit assault as a threc·run
fourth and t"•o-run sixth assured the ex-
Angels standout the win.
His 4-4 record to !his point
season was somewhat of a
pointment. Even 1'1esserS11Uth
pleased.
in the
disap-
wasn't
"I tried sideanning the ball." says
l\fessersmith, "but I got tired of trying to
be a finesse pitcher. l just decided to go
out and thro'v over the top, \vhich makes
n1y curve more effective."
Phl!.111.tptii.1 ti) Ltt Angeltt UI •br~rbl .lbr~rbf
Tov~r. 211 5 ti 1 0 LOP!S, 2b ~ 0 I 0
U<\scr, ct ' o 1 o Buc~n...-, lb ' O 1 O
Mon!ane1, lb • O O O W.Dftvl1, c! J 1 1 0
Lu1l1>1~!, II ' 1 1 o Ferguson, c J O O O
W.'lol>inson, rf ' o o o W.Crawfora, rl J 1 1 2
Sctlmldt, Jb 2 O 1 1 C•V• JtJ ' 2 2 1 Boone, c 4 e l o Joshu,,. 11 ' o o o
l!ow•. ss ' o l o Ruuell. ss 1 l I O
RulhYen, p I O O O MesM!rsmllh, p ' 0 2 I
Bra(ldon, ·p O O O O
Rgclznskl, pf! 1 o o o
Len.ch, P G 0 II 0
P1911n. pf! I G 0 0
Ttt•I• J' I 1 1
, .
Ru1MY1Pn {l,l·•I J-lf]
Br•ndon .,
L•r.<11 ' Mes1tr1miltl IW,5-•l •
lolals n s 9 4
ooo 100 ooo -r 000 J02 0011 -s
" • .. .. so
' s • • ' • • • • • • • • ' ' ' ' ' ' " PB -Feruu10n J. time -1.ll. Atleodarw;t -
15.&60. THE START OF THE CHAIN·REACTION, MULTIPLE CAR ACCIDENT •
Indy's Super Repair Joh
Special to the Dally Pilot
INDIANAPOLIS -It was like rebuild-
ing a battleship overnight.
11lC !ront straightaway at Indianapolis
Motor Speedway looked llke a junk yard
in mid-afternoon Moo day. This morning,
\Vhen Tony Hulman said, "gentlemen
start your engines," it gleamed like a
lady's jewelry case.
New body panels, fresh chrome rind
boldly painted tires adorned 32 racing
cars.
A total of 3t tires \vert! replaced on 11
cars, and tl]e iWull4ing jobs that were
done after the accident were nothing
short of phenomenal.
Dan Gumey's All-American Racers
crew from Santa Ana had the biggest
job. It rebuilt and magnafluxed the
complete front suspension and steering
on Wally Dallenbach's Olsonite Eagle
and thoroughly checked Jerry Grant's
car.
John Martin of Long Beach. whose
unspoo.wred Special was among the n1osl
severely damaged cars in the pileup,
look one look at his ~1cLaren when he got
it bactc to the garage and declared ~
"With a lot of blood, sweat and tears,
we might be able to get it rebuilt within
a week."
But his crew got the job done in tiour,.
Rook.le Lee Kunzman's crew rebuilt an
enUre right !ront smpeosioo syStem.,
steering and lronl bulkhead and right
rear hub carrier. ,
Dick Simon's Travel ~e Speclat,
which had been blasted by a flying whOOI.
li.ke It was hit by a ho'Aitzer shell , wRiJ
back on the line with repaired water ahd
oil tanks, straightened roll bar, new
brake lines, patthcd cowling and new
body worki.
The principal area o( surpri.se.
Nlcklaws aald. was that he played so well
after a one-month absence !rom the
pme. lle hadn't competed since winning
the 'n>umament ol Champions April 22.
New W ashingion Tea•n Unnamed ~ ~ I
·•r would have to say that I'm playing
ucb better 'now than I WAS at this stage
year," Nicklaus said with an alnmt
mused smile .
couJd be a problem
•1nnlng a record·tylng 13 major
dlamploruhlps and <If American tour
tlUes, Nlcklauo ha1 followed a program
ol rtgld dildpllne In bls IChedullng, •
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Baseball maf
return to Washington, but apparently not
the "Senators."
Joseph Danzansky, a food chain exec-
utive who heads a three-m•n group of
Washin1rto11ians who bought lhe San
Diego Padres for a record $12 million
told a new1 ~ference Monday It wU
"very doubtful '' lhe new club would take
I
on 1lle tradlll<lllal name or W11hl11£1on'1 Ille dHI hal boon signed, 1he Padres'
ba&OOell tOll~•· ; tranriCt' to \Vaslllngtoo i. sllbjocl to Na·
"That's a little outmoded. don't you tiooal '""'""• llPll"O'•l think7r" he said. lie 1111l~ the new club .. \"-".-· · , owners would "probably go to the public Thia ls not quite a celthratlon, Its
for sugeal!Olll" !or a oome. ' more of a prayer meeting." said Danun-
Congratulatlons from President Nixon sky, president of Gtant FOOO., Inc. "It's
notwtthstandlng, Danzansky also had a not all wrapped up yet ... We've stlll
word of caution. Ile said thnl :il!hough got thflt hurdle to cross."
t
. I
But ho.,. .. "eltn!nlCIY ""'111d<!111''1Jilil
Jeaguc ~ntatlves, at a mcetil\g .till
to be •rranged, would ol<ly tile lraJtllir
ln time for lhe capital to My~ 115 <>ll'D
team• at the star! of th< 111'1{ seuon, the
flnt tlme since Doh Short• moved the
Senators to Arlington, Tc.1., as the Te..1as
Rangef'll after the 1970..71 season.
GLENN WHITE
Sports Editor
Pinch-hitters
Give Singer,
Angels Victory ·;
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Pinch-bitten
Tom McCraw and \Vinstoo Lleoas came
off t;he bendi to drive in a pair ~ nins in
the seventh inning, rallying the Califumia
Angels· to a 7-4 American League victory
over the IJlofil\vaukee .Br,t'wers Monday.
Bill Singer notched hia elghlli victory
in 10 decisions but trailed until the st\'·
enth. He gave up a two-run homer to
Angels Slate
All Ge-M KMl'C mt)
.,., •1l!w1'lll It !IOl!Ofl .,., ~ ~1tllornl1 et ""''°"
IMV I lfornll 11 JUM 1 Cl l foml1 11 M~
rookie catcher Darrell Porter in the shth
Inning a• Mllwauk<e took a 1-.l lead.
Rudy A1eoli opened the Angels' sev·
enth with a single and scored on a pinch
double by McCraw. Llenas, a .143 hitter,
sliced a single past the drawn-in Infield
for the deciding run off reliel pitcher
Frank Linzy.
The Angels scored two runs iµ the
eighth on Ken Berry1s sing_le-and· Meoli's
sacrifice fly to wrllp it up.
Frank Robinson hil his eighth h>me
run of ihe year for the Angels in the
fourth.
c.11 .... 11 en Ml.._.. <•1
111,11rt11 •brllfW
Alomer. 2b J 1 I o T.~. 11 $ t 1. •
Ll1nas. P'I I 0 I 1 Col11<clo. rl :t 1 0 •
O.l\11non. 1b I 0 • 0 l.lhoud, pf\ 1 • 0 •
PJ111on. If $ O O O /WllMV, lb 4 O • f F.lloblMon, Gii S ! 2 1 11..-., II ~ 0 t I
El)11•1n, lb 1 I O 0 S«M, lb 4 • I I
R.Ollv.,., rl 3 0 I I O.Mtv, cf 2 t I I
Sl1n1on, Pl' 0 I 0 • ot.lr....,.., Oii 4 t 0 I
G•ll19Mr. JG 4 0 J 1 Portw, c ~ I 2 l
Berry. d ~ o I 1 Gtircl1. 2D 2 o 1 t Mt!Oll, 1s J I 2 1 J.11111, p 0 0 0 t
Tor11or11.c 2 01olln1y.p Of Of
McCr•w, ph I 1 I I 5hof1. p -.,. f O t
Kusnytf. c o o O o Si!lotr. p o o o o
TOl•l1 ll , IJ 7 TOl•'9 !) 4 ' 4
C.11tomll Gal 102 220 - 7
Mltw•ult• Oil oot GOD -4
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-C•llfornil 4. Ml,.,...ukM I. 2• -D, Mly, ll'trttr,
5coTT ,Mc(r1w. Hit ..-I!'. R°'*""' l•l, P'ortef' ($),
s'll -T. Joll"'on. 51" -It. Olfvw, Midi. IP H t. Ill II 10
Sini!M' !W,1-1) t ' 4 4 J S
J .11111 (L,4'6) ' ' • ~ • '
Lfnrv 1·2/S ' 1: J 2 • Shorf 1·11, t 0 O I I
HllP -by $Inger (Monly}, Tlmt -J;& A"
ltndloc• -1J.4U ..
Shaky Smith
Battles Back
In Paris Tennis
PARIS (AP) -Tom Gorman w
Chris Evert, two of America'a hopes ii
the French Open Tennil Champioosbfps,
today advanced to the quarter-finals in
the $135,000 event.
Gonnan. of Seattle, downed' Milan
Holocek of Crechoslovakla 6-3, 1-3, 6-4 in
a th&d round. mat.ch, wbUe ~ EVeR
slugged her way past Czech Reaal.I
Tomanova 6-2, 8-3.
Stan Smith. struggled for five 1ets
before overcoming hls U.S. Davis O:rp
doubles partner Erik Van Dillen Monday
niglrt.
Smlth woo 6-Z, 6-1, 6-7, U , 6-1 an<!
";:t :::!to:;:' :i~· at lbe ~ of a
rainy day at Roland Garroe Sjadium,
•la<led In sunJhlne and ftnlshelJ under
Ooodllght.1, and was played an lWll
court.s .
Smlth'• form varied dramlill~ dur·
Ing h1s long l)talch with Van DUJoo.
AJ. first, lhe Wimbledon champ was
brilliant. He quickly ran up a 44/leld la
the opening set and dropped onlJ three
polnts in hls nrst four aemce gupes.
Tbe ·finlt set Wll played Oll.-aA:)outslde
court where .ll)e boll often akl~ low DI
clay IOlked by hours ol heavy rain.
Van Dillen was lfadillg 3-Z In Ibo ...,.
ond Jet when the ""'t&r court became vacant and 'the nlatdt· wu movedlthere.
F;or a while, it fOllowed the ·~ pat.-
tem. Smith ..mt OD servJnst pi!ili!rfully,
brok .... ....,. '91 44 and lod', """'-to love. ' · l..
But lilen hla I nr.t llll'Vlct kllrdts 10-
curacy, .. d -v1n Dillen, flChU~llke a
Uger. began notrlevlna llhol.I AJtil,y61Jey•
Ing with deadly tUeciI..0.•. . ••
,... .. , ........ ,,.. b., 1
Nikki Pltk. Y11111t11Yla, llMt """ Dlflt. ~
:M. ,4, '"'· ...i. ' ~ A«J-l"-,itt1, 1t11y, bt•1 J1r,,.,, ~11 Olli.. t
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PWlll 'I lll • bt9t l'lft1llO!\o Motrt. AUltrl •• • ~ ':j"" ·-........... " ... . .. . ltm 0..-ITlll\, S.. 116.t Ml NIOC.C. < ..... ......., ..... ., •
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I -lhdy on TV
INOlANM'DUS -The .nct1I B~ Oompony (a.nnel'~l aalll
It •ill broodcalt the pootpoo<d 1 ..
<flanapoU11 500-mlle auto race too.tali
from 8 to 10.
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A.wards Banquet
W om.en Athwros
T_,, M.,. 29, 1973 D.lll Y PILOf
Tritons Assistant-Coach ·-.,
. . Winter
-Olynipics
Forrkids? Lauded by OCC
PUSll DOWN AND fOWAllD WITll YOUR·FllT Takes Colorddo 'Grid Job
PARIS ·W~\\-Coon!)~
de Bea"'l'D"t, .,..;for vtoo-
• J>r.,ident 1111 the lnlen!li~rilll Orange Coast Collep'1
Olympic COn»nittee has a· women alhletes were hooored
plan to ,l;,.. ~ wlh , at an awarda baaquet lburs-''6ll·-"".U~~~li<O:-!er dayntghtlnthestudeotconter.
f . ""!"'I'""!,.'~ uMer A111ards winners included· ZI . ' ' ' · ·.~ ~ ,. , ~ Bultetball
"ft -f womdi.. . ::0 p c:oro-.Most valuable player -
tnerclatism tn J y m p ie Michelle Poirier and Pat
skiing," U,. Coun< 8"14 In an 'Shine; most improY<d -
Intet'Vl.!w' at w ,,,;i.i; tibme. Lourie Anderson.
; Beawnom, • ft who was Sof&ball ~_defeated by Lord Klllanin of Most valuable. -Kalle
~·
Ireland in the election for the Flemmg; m~t unproved -
IOC · •· •· Ramona Bofill. pres1""ncy wst year, Volleyball
hopes In Pl(! his idlf'" ~P fOf ' M team most valuable -~a\ 1he Ollll'llPIC COil-Barbie Sweet· lllQll Jmproved
gress ~becluled for next _ Tin.ka Hes); 1A Wun,'mp$t
autumn 1n Varna, BuJgaria. valua~e "?"'>'JOlllln :tublijaga· ~ whole future · of Jhe most 1mproVCd -Jemile Slat~
. Winter Olympics is in doubt. tery. '
l Many members of the IOC Co-ed VoUe7ball
;' wo~ld like to drop them Most valuable man -Chip
Brown; most valuable woman
-Andrea MacDooald; most
jmproYed man -C r a 1 g
Leeper; mosl lmpr o~ed
woman -Kath,y Fer8lL'QD.
s~
Most valuable -Linda
JobnJon; mQSt improved -
Nancy Stungls; oubtandlng
diver -Pat Shine.
Co-ed Badminton
Mo.!t valuable man -Harry
Shigak:i ; most valuable woman
-!Jeldl Gr...,; _most im-
' proved man -Paul San-
ta.ngel(J; most improved woman. -Karen cooner. \ Co« Temt11
Most· valuable man -Jim
Sutuki; lnost valuable woman
-Terri Fieblng.
Teenfs
I believe thlll piopor faot.
-wort< Is noc:esuiy to Rlll<•th• ao~ swlna succeed. The key element Is pushina downward
and forward with your fHt (to-
ward the 11r~t) at the start of
the downswin&.
Do this smoothly before you
start the club clown with your
hands. But do not slide. your
head forw•l'll· Follow th ...
pqjhters and lCU will pf<!perly
·sfiilt your wellllt lo th• left Ind
derive full -· from your
1eg·muscles. ao twi...._.,.._
117 BAl'llt WQal Of" .. ...., .... tellf
Rudy K.d1lJb Is~ a one-ytar carter U a teacher
and COICb at San Clemente
Blah. And what the ~ Lach in loogevtty, tt makes up
for In unlqueous.
Klldlub Is leaviJJC to acc<pt
an asslslant fOOlhall coaches
job at t he Un!V<nity o f
NoMl!ern Colondo In Gtteley
and leavq behind a spot as
the only male teacher In the .;.
girls physical educ at Ion ql ..
department 1t San Clemente. .,..
"It really was rather unique, '{ t
I guen," KadJub says. "Al •
least I've never beard ol a ~
man reaching girls phys ed ' before.
"It was a little difficult ad-, .,.,'a :G·
jusUng at fir1t. naturally I 'd RUDY KADLUB ligured Oil leachit'I[ boys
phystca1 ed\ICllllDn whtn I -studying for my degree and I
same sub]«ts 1 would in boy,
phys t<I . nnd I think I
establi.!hed a pretty good rai>-
port with !be girts."
"I'd say that generaUy glrl<s
are as eager in pbyslcal
education lli boy11, some are
mere eager to perticipale than
others, but the ratio is about
the same as It would be on the
boys side."
After getting a close-up look
at the girls programJ, Kadlub
is in a good position to rom-
n1ent on the effect or the ClF's
recent ruling allowing coeds to
compete in all varsiry sports.
He feels the only sports which
girls will infiltrate n•ill be tho
non-con1act ones.
v•· •llc€ellll!r beca .... 11 of fue . ~ \ · spread of commerdallsm .
.. ,,t JI Killanin himself has said the Checking ·~hr.e:i ~ture of the Winter Carnes · ,
Most valuable -CI n d y
Walker; most improved -
Peggy Swiers; outstanding
graduate award -Pat Shioe.
Drug Tests Slated was a little nervous the fll'st coach Schafrs better teams,"
few days. Kadlub recalls.
"But since.this was my flrst Kadlub went on to play foot-
teaching assignment it was ban al UC Davis ~ for four
"There are a couple girls
that could have played on my
tennis team this season, but
none that could have played
football or basketball,'' Kadluh
says.
"I think that girl s will be
able to compete mainly in the
indi~idual sports."
Kadlub Is eaicr Jo switch
fron1 seaside San Cll:mente lo
the 1nountalns or Northern
Colorado where he vo'i!I likel.v
serve as offensive line coach
under Bob . Blasi. The 10,000
plus enrollment school com·
petes in the Rocky Mountain
Conference.
ni >.u• . could depend. on how they go natural I'd be a 11 t t l e
aiirtv·' at Innsbruck 1n 1976. . i i_ p
"('.t•Y;,. ' "Gf course they are in lirea rep .,.~. danger," Beawnont said ,
'f)(..11 · "Th~t is why 1 want to put
A '50 athletic scholarship
was also presented to Sue·
Kemper, a Physical Education
major. And the OCC women's
PE Department alsG honored
retiring Danny Musselman
with a plaque.
For Henley Regatta nervous.''
Kadlub came to S a n
Clemente as an assistant with
football coach Allie Schaff at
the beginning of the school
year. He had played on
SchaU's first varsity football
teem during bls senior year at
Mark Keppel Hlih In Alhsm-
years, three of ~'them as a
varsity guard, l~e captained
the team his senior year as a
197-pounder and r ec e i v e d
several conference J1onors.
• .•;1; 1, them on sounder lines." Banqu' t
t,! , .. I ~Je "has di~S&ed his under• ·, _ ·• e s
Zl plan with Marc Hodler, , ·
.president of tfle international Netf LEDdzion and Jim Poet·
ski .federation. . tgen ~ most valuable . ::: i: 1 ''Hodler ·offered T)O ob. 1.---f :::.:: r:. jection," BeaumO!lt said. "In 11Ul.n;, ar baseball and track .Ji~ • ~act ~ have not yet found at Mat.er Dei High's Bnllllal
t any~y whO disapproVes or spring sports awards picnic
· ' iny pf~rt ~ Sunday. ~~,~jlt "The question of an age Special award winners:
, i~· H1 llmi~ in the sum me• games Baseball
b:,11r does not arise. I am simply Varsity -Most Valuable: · Neil Lehdzion; Most 'INi:it , suggesting it for the· Winter lmproved: John McElwain;
Olympics because so much Best D e f e n s e : KevVl
'tell r more money is -involved fn the , ,.,,,.~ wi'nt-g--"" Timpane; Best . Offense;
• V"J. .... • ........ ~. ·~ Mlk~-Alnaranthus; M o·s t "As £oon as a skier reaches
"lt111,t, world class ·he is open to big Inspirational: Matt Smith end
.,,u '" rr .. Mike Ryan. money o ers. Junior Varsity _ Moot·
The roe congress at Varna Valuable: Chuck L l n n er t ; ·lti,, ;' 'Will be the first sin~ 1930. All Most lmproved: Pat Eccles.
oii • 11 ltle world sport s federations, Track
: ~ ~ including FIS, will confer with Varsity _ Most Valuable; : z ! the IOC and thrash out the Jim Poettgen ; Most Valuable
, , .a • whole future of the Olympics. Runner: Mark Fitzpatrick;
; ; ~ Beaumont said Killanin has Most Valuable Field: Greg ~ ~ ~ given him the job of compiling Woetse; Most 1 mp r 0 ve d :
, . ~ a questioanaire which will be Mark Fitzpatrick; M 0 st
; : ; . dislributed to all delegates. Valuable Sophomore: Alan . ; . . :: ' Deep Sea
'1:/J ' ' ... , .. " . ' ' .. ' '
; ~;Fi.sh Repo11
r ' '
Barry; Most Va I u ab I e
Freshman ' Bill SI. John.
Estancia
~~ • · .-Baseball
VarsitY ' -. Captain: Mark
Deven; ·Most Valuable: Joe
Barnett;
Most inspirational: Tim
Hayes
JU;Jlior Varsity -Co.cap-
tains: Buddy Lorton and Steve
Tomlin; Most.Valuable: Kevin
LangW,le.
Freshmen -Captain: Moe
FJemhig;·¥06t Va J.ua b.l e :
GleM· Jtobertmn; Most
Improved: Danny Angel.
•Golf •
Varsity -MMt Valuable:
Larry CoDins; Captain: Mark
Les ; Most Improved: Mark
Pender.
Junior Varsity -Most
Valuable : Howard Ratcliffe;
Captain: Charles Stewart;
Most Improved: Ken Montano.
Ex-GWC
Star Named
LOS ANGELES -Ex·
GoJden West College star Bud
Bulling has been named to the
All-Pacilic Coast A t h 1 e t i c
AssoCiation baseball team, an-
nounced today.
Bulling, a catcher, batted
.301 during tbe conference
season, helping Cal.State {Los -
Angeles) to the championship .
Three of Bulling's team4
mat.es -first baseman
Charlie Bates, oulfielder 'nm
Corcoran and pitcher Bob
Edwards were also selected to
the all-league team.
Edwards shared the most
valuable player honor with
Fresno State third baseman
Mark Hance.
Net Results
HUI fil' H•rtlw ,._., Atwclttltll BDl>AMH5h~ 1. E.,.,.rald B.ay11[!) 2. ~ H1rDOt" C•t) . .). 51 HUis C•11 '·
e11bo.a B•Yf.U/,.s. •!lb> v~·11oii ''I· 6. ~ vero .. ..vi, 7. Tustrn lfb c ; 1. Newport Buch 1361, 9. l<IOll Isle 131). 10. Hun!lngotn H.&rbor (lf), 11. Penln1ut1 Polnl ! 15).
C DlvJ11M l llMlllOS t. T111tln Hiits (89'h), 2. Minion Vlalo
116), 3. Sunnv Hlll1 (12), •· 81lbN Bay n), s. N•wi>ort H1rbor 171l. 6. M'" V1rde fSt V.l, 1. Nl'Wl)Ort Be.ch IS7,,.,), 1. Hunll"ll!on Harbour f56J, 9. Lido hi• (52). 10. emerald Bav l•l!. 11, CMDl'll
dal Mar (.)8), 12. Tl1rr1 T~!s l"Y,I, 13. Oht Ranch {311, U. P11U1~ {30 , 1.S. Penlnwla Point 1201.
D D\YIN< Sl1ttdlrM11 1. Tllltln HI 11(41),1. Hawpo!"t &11ch
1651, l . .,S11nny HlllJ ('°'··'· ~ V1rd1 "I• J. Old Ranch (171, '· Lido Isle lS • 7. Mission VIRIO (JI), e. H""·
llrialOn HarbOur C'lll, 9. Balboa B•v ,,,), 10. Penl111ul• Pol111 (22), 11.
~rtl« Gl'Hl'll (19).
D Dlvklell
Ole ••nd1 111 111 -.. ~
Jane g!Wpphlrd-Slllrlty H111unQ (MV)
deot. R-Aillwlll-Joyce Ginns 6-J, 6--2.
Nancy Smlfh..Mancy Gr.y {ORJ def.
Jullto McEtkl~-Vk:1d VIII'" 6-3. 6-).
Mvrn11 Wl90d·Susan Os1-.HI (ORl clef.
Jr;o Svffl$.Dll-5ue L1r1..-6-3, ~7. 1-IJ.
Belty Holdln-ktly H1twortFI fMV)
dtf. 6.rty J•1n .._y-Mluko Y1m1ukl ... 2~. 6-3.
H EN LEY · ON·TllAMES,
England (AP) -Drug lest!,
electronic timing and oue-
armed bandits are threatening
the 19th century gentility or
the Henley Royal Regatta.
But this out-of-step event is
confident Jt can remain on ir·
resistible magnet to rowing
buffs around the world.
Buffeted by spiraling costs,
laughed at . by_ perfectionists
and . pel'sistenUy $entenced to
death even by jts afficlonados,
the regatta refU9es to die, It is
scheduled for July t-7 this
year'. -Otange °"'81-colleilti
will ,,lirUcipale. '
1be regatta's decision to
carry out drug tests was a
rare concession to the 20th
century.
"Competitors will be stJb.
jectedtospotdrugchecbfor
the fll'st time in our history
this year," a regatta officl.al
said sadly. "It is just one
more cross we have to bear .
"Not that we think anyone
would use dope here, of
course," he added quickly.
So drog checks will join the
wonders of electronic timing
and ooe-SQ:Ded bandit slot
nljlchines as~ do6btful assets
the regatta fel.t obllged to mix
in with tlie traditional recipe
of sti-awberries and cream,
bubbling champagne and the
wide brimmed hats o f
fashionably dressed ladies in
the exclusive Stewards'
Enclosure alongside the River
Thames.
Years ago, the start and
finish of races on the quaint
and colOrful one:mUe, 550-yard
course were signalled by the
firing of a cannon. Tuning
systems improved, but Henley
has only just moved into the
electronic age.
Slot machines were \nstalled
in the marquees fOf' the first
time last year iD a bid to raise
much needed revenue. Despite
immense popularity, the race
always loses money .
Baseball Standings
.. •t fl,1';
M?IM
bin 1
..a r fl~ i1Q171
ll<J1t1'JI ~"!
AMERICAN LEAGUE
GB
~Chicago
·Angels
Western Division
W L
26 14
23 18
26 2l
22 19
Pct.
.650
.56 1
_553
.537
.511
.325
3'\
,, Kansas City
.. Minnesota
31'>
41,1;i;
I,
Oakland
Texas
Detroit
New York
·Baltimore
Milawukee
Boston
Cleveland
23 22
13 27
Eastern Dtv~ion
24 20
22 22
18 20
19 23
18 22
19 25
MOllCl•'f'• R1Wll't.
511
13
.545
.500 2
-474 3
.452 4
.450 4
.422 5
A11t1l1 7, MllWIUkH • M1....e.1>1>t• 101 lltltlmorw 3
Dt!1rolt '· o.kl1nd l
Ktnwis City 5, Bmton ' cri1ca110 6-1, CleYttf•nd H Hirst 11.am11 71 1rw11n,1,
com111e1lon ol Mav 26 iiame su1i>ended 1l~r 16
lnnlrwn tied. 2·21
Tuas .&I Ntw Yort, -!l><Wl.i, r1ln
' Tllll ... l't k°l*IUlto An11lt (Jl:y1n, .._., It Bo1lon (LH, 6-lJ, l(Mf'C,
':30 p ,m . ~kl1nd (Huntpr, ~?) 1! N.w Yorll fPlltrson,
:Ml, nt11ri1
Cl@vtland (Stram, 1-51 11 Tu 11 (Brobl!l"9, 0.41,
nlllflt B11trmor1 tP•lmf'I", •·31 .&I IC1nwi1 Clly (SPllttol"fl, 1-n. nr11111 Min_,, UllYIPfet>, WI II MHwaultH 1&i.ron,
2-Jl, n19rir
o.trvi1 c Lolld!. l ·Sl !I Chl(•oo (FIJher, 4-3). n111n1
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Western DfvfsJon
w L
San Francisco 31 19
Dodgers 28 19
Houston 28 20
Cincinnati 26 19
Atlanta 17 27
San Diego 16 3Z
Eastern Division
27 18 Chicago
New York
Pittsburgh
Montreal
Philadelphia
St. Louis
20 ZI
18 20
18 21
19 25
17 24
MotWI""• ._,,,.
o.dHn 5, PF!llldtlllhlt l
S•n Frlll'ICIKO 6, N .. Yon j
Clnd,,....11 6, CF!le.&!JO I
Pltt'lbut"DI! '• Kot.llf'CWI 2 51. LOUii J. Afllnlll 2
Monlrtll 7, S•ll 01$ 6
TMlflilt'I ICIMfll ..
Pct. GB
.620
.596 I'h
.583 2
.578 21'>
_386 11
.333 13
.600
.488 5
.474 Slh
.454 6
.432 71h
.415 8
Phllldtlfl»ll1 (Brett, J..11 vs. DMI-(Jolln, ).JI,
Oocllff Si.dlutn, l(FI, l(Wl(W, I p.m.
Houston IRlllU. 6-1) .. Chk:HO (Bofthllln, ).0 Of' lit1111Ch11 • .t-J).
At11nt1 (MOrton, 4-ll •I .Plttal:lu1"9'1 (W1lkff, 1·l J,
nl11ht
N-Yorll tse1v1f". Wl 11 kfl "'lll>CllCO t1!11rr.
4-SI nlthl
Only ,_ sdlf<luled.
bca .
"We Were ~9, not one of
The Regatta committee,
generally considered reac·
tionary, always bas dismissed
offers of commercial
sponsorship as not in keeping
with traditiom: of the event
which began in Jtme, 1839.
This year, however, Henley Baseball's
He stayed on as freshnlan
rootball coach for one season
before joining Schaff. ac·
cepting the position in the
girls physical e d u c a t i o n
department at San Clemente.
and serving as the school's
head tennis coach.
"It really worked out well
and I enjoyed myself,'' Kadlub
says. "I taught basically the
"They·re building a new
athletic facility, including a
stadium that'll seat 7,000 and I
think 1·m going to enjoy work·
ing !or coach Blasi," Kadlub
says.
will benefit consideraly -if
Indirectly -from sponsorship_
"I really think 1'1n mak·
ing the right move.".
In fact. about m.ooo of eom· Top Ten
mereial money will give. the s $1 96 re~lam~: ~Ing pumped ..... ~" •• ... ave • on
Into Britain's first cbam-1"'11yw "'':ICA:. L•~OU\ l'ct
plonshlp-standanl')'egatta -o••-=~ ·-...... ,. ,,.. . half. gallons· f new c:ourse at Holme Pier--1C1rtP11trlct. • 0
repoot In the Eng I ls h ~;., •Y !I 'Ii 1l ~ :,,.',,'\
1
•. mJcDands. FJSk ''" ;n 1» '° "
At first, the Holme Pier· ~~:':llv Mt'fii~ 121 ~ ~ •
321 J B R s t h
repont RegaUs, scheduled lor g~:::: ~~Jl !~ ii ;; .]l'':'r,' & are co c e June 30-July 1, was looked ~~ :w 1u ,, .n
upon 1n hor:ror by Henley of· Clr•w Min .¥) 150 27 "'
ficials, Since it will be held the M•vbenv. J::. •,r~h 0uncin, weekend before Henley begins c1.....i~ JO; o.Mtt~ ltw•vk .. , 10:
its fota"-day run, officials ~\~,: ~;:'c11rc1"°. •1 D.AN:.
feared jt mJght lure the top Chic~ '1 .:.9«a. Oekl':' '·
crews away MtVbtl'TY. K1m11• "lflY. ,,, Miiion,
B the H' I p· l Chlctgo, :Pl Mo,wcw. Htw York, 31; ut o me 1errepoo 11.J.cl<WI. OQ1M11obl »1 s P 1 t • • •
evef!t t~ out to be a bless-'f}~·-:.1111 F.: ,::..c1111orn11,
ing IR dJsgwse. To ensure SUC· Colborn, ~-· S-1, •• l 3 I cess, Holme PI err e po n I c""1......,1 • Otltl t-t. .1111 Slnotor. • • 1ltorn1, 1-2. 1 Al•••nd•r organizers said they would •••trmiw:!t ·""'· .1C1111 w. 111111t11. 4.f.
pa all e~n-for C .IOOi G..,_, K.111ta. Cltv. '-'I ... , y -..--s rews Wood, .Cl!Jcevo .. 11.).'"'-'U1 Sp lttor!f, who al~ wi~ to participate K1Mnt cirv, 7·J1,1 ,1Jt.
at Henley. Pl•vtr , NATfNAli L•\oua"
Moottts_ before entry lists Mlldcla SF 31 1~ 16 so
closed for both regattas, of. 'Z.~~1"4 171 35 60
/icials were gleeful at the pro-E:,~ l'oh ~ 1,'J: ~ !!
Pel.
.Joi .3'1
spect of a top flight in-\...°:°~~~~ 20 11 "
ternational entry. Piii ~ 104 1, ~{ .llr a-ews trom 12 nations, m. l:::: ~nl il ~H n '° :m
eluding the United States, =-r... sFn 1°' l2 U ~ R~ia and Cr.ecboslovakia, H.A.tron, ==·~-,,. St•rulll, qwckly announced partfdpa~ "'~• 121 EVtM.1.. •. l11t11••· 111
l, llfldl. Clildnrlt", 11 r '"nn, HOUiton, 100. 111 l"«wlon. lM ~ 111 londt. Henley never ha.I.bad much S•11 Fr~fleo. 11.
le . #--._ .. ...,.,.
R~518.95
.::NOW $}6.99
troub attracting crews UVUI l!ltnCh.. CIM:l~I~/ Flrwuton. LOI
around the globe. But sulJ. ~»~.~ n~f:. ?1~ Ir---;:'."''.":~';;:"•~.;;~
denly, the wcr1old'1 best crews "' ... ~, Dtch..,. II S s3 50 were rushing enter. l!lllll1111htm. Chw:J11n1111, 7-1, .1751 ave • Officials at Henley now are H-.., HOUiton. ._,, .m1 o-t11110, Lot.
A'-111,, ~I • .&XII Wl11, St. Loul1, '5-2. on JrB II coofldenUy predicting a record ·!"; HoH. CIMl-1, •L ·"'' 0 ga ons
I b bl · of Defll*"'t. Hanton, 5-!, .11'1 lry1nt. en ty, pro a Y Jn excess ~ll Frl l>CIKO. 7.:1. .1001 &ulton, LOI Re s3745 250 crews. .1.11911", '-l, .u1. g • • It's a tremendous jump N s33 95
from the inaugural event 134 B M OW • years ago in which just seven oosters eet crews participated. with convenient pouring cradle The Dana HUis athlellcl .. _________ _
.............
Banquets
Scheduled
boosters club will meet L' 't dT' Onl Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the lIDl e • ·nne y hite~S:°1iteros Include the 11S l'loof11tfl0Ntcokl!W111My~ 1973 "IOd~onCorp .. N.Y.
Track, tennis and volle~ll
athletes at Fountain Valley
will be honored at the annual
sports ba>quel tonight at the
school cafeteria.
The program, which will
feature the naming of most
vaJuable players in each sport
begins al 6,30,
Hu11tb1gto11
SJrlog oporb athletes al
Huntington Beach High will be
feted tonight at 6:30 at the
Marina !Ilgh cafeteria.
Awards f o r outstanding
performers in swim m ing,
bas8.lall, track, tennis Bl1d golf
w!ll he presonted at Ille gathering_
1'Iurin11
The Marina !Ilgb ltnnls
team will hold its annual
awards dinner tonight at 6:30
at the Villa Sweden
restaurant. M08t v a I u a b I e
player and captains awards
will highlight the evening.
"lbslon Viejo
League champion track Bl1d
golf ltams from Mlsiion Viejo
High will be honored tonlght at
g,30 In the ochool's mulU·
purpooe room.
NEWPORT LEASES
24H -· c:-1 H-Laa•blg all Vahiclu
645-2202
election of officers,
1972 -WINNERS
. OF 5 DIVISION
CHAMPIO~S~IPS
N1wport4 M11e Jr. Afl·Am1ricen Football Association
FOOTBALL
SICiN-UPS
RESISTRA TION FOR THE 1973 NEWPORT-MESA JR. ALL AMERICAN
TACKLE FOOTBALL SEASON WILL BE HRD WEDNESDAY, MAY 30TH AT
7:00 P. M. IN TWO HARBOR AREA LOCATIONS.
R19l•tr•tlon It open to all boyt age 8 10 14 FM boyt In the Costa Mata and Ettancla High Schoool
Dfstrlctt, r'9l•tro1tlon '#HI be held •t the Maude 8. Devis
MidCllt SdioMI, 1050 Arllngton Ave., CostA MHa.
Boyt re•ldlnt In the Newport-Corona dal Mar High School
Dl•trlct will rogltter at Newport Harbor High School.
Pou.....,. tHm1 In S weight Cllvisk>n1 compriHd of b0y1, 'r •U-• •to 14 !a• of A"IJVll 11 and weighing btlwHn S5 and
140 pounds will compete against other Oro1ng1 County
t11m1.
e (HIEFS e CONDORS e CARDINA~S e CHARGERS e COMMANDOS e COUGARS e COLTS e COYOTES e CORONAS e COWBOYS e CORSAIRS e CABALLOS e COMMANCHES
PLUS ONE TEAM AS YET UNNAMED
\ I
,I -·· '
I
J 8 DAILY PILOT s TuetdlY, M111 29, 197S
2 Banks to Off er
Stock Investing
Special lo-tllo Dally Pilot
LOS ANGELES
Consumers with rq o d e r a t e
financial resqurcea f!an now
participate fully . .in stock in-
vestments lhrOWih a new
service aMouncecf recently by
Security Pacific Bank, Los
Angeles, and Chase ~fauhallan
Bank. New York.
UNDERSCORJNG a com-
m.ilment to expand customer
sefvices, Security Pa c 1 I i c
Bank and Chase Mlinhaltan
ditclosed the introducl:on of
an Auto ma ti c lrivt·~tnient
Service -the first of its type
offered by banks in the U.S. -
that will provide thousands of
customers across the nation
with an entrce to stock
ownership in some of the
Jafgest corporations.
ing ateo1••s.
In 1'41Uon to the stock J>U-plan, customers may also add lo thelr savings ...
C01.4Dtl or p.irchaae U.S. Serles
E saVings bonds by aulboriza·
Uon of , 1imJlar i utomatic
monthly cleductloos.
The minimwn amount re-.
quired lo partlctpo~ In the
regular saving• a c e o u n t
service ls SS per month.
Participation in the U.S.
Series E savings bond service
requires one-third of the cost
of a bond each month.
"WHILE A SMALL service
charge will be applied to the
stock purchase plan, the other
two services are provided at
no cost to the customer," said
I lartnack. "Ou r month I y
service charge amounts to five
prrcent of the amount in-
vested or a maximum of 12 for
each corporation selected."
1' ertieal Exercises
Two CL-84 tilt·wing evaluation aircraft go through
their paces at'the Canadair plant in Montreal. One
ot these aircraft is to undergo testing at the U.S.
Naval Air Test Center in Maryland.
President Carl E. lhirtnack
indicated that Security Pacific
Bank will begin off c r i n g
automatic investment service
in June to the hank's checking
account customers. He also
eq>lained Chase Manhaltan
Bank will simultaneously prcr
vide this unique service in-
dependently in New York.
State.
Furniture Sales in August
SECURITY PACIFI C
Bank's president indicated
that AtS actually combines
three services which allow
customers to plan their in-
vestment and personal ob·
jectivcs through automatic
doductions from their check·
. Earnings Up
At National
Na tional Systems Corp. of
Newport Beach, reported earn-
ings of $86.000, or six cents
per share, on net revenues of
$4.313,000 for the three months
ended March 31.
On a comparable basis, the
cornpany Jost $8,000, or one
cCflt per share, on net
revenues of $4,233.000 111 the
first quarter, of 1972.
By SYLVIA PORTER
The next majo,r round of
furniture sales across the na·
tion will be coming up In
August -and if you find and
buy at one of those gigantic
"warehouse'' sales, you might
save as much as 70 to 75 per-
cent on an item,
This co uld be of the most
c r u c i a I dollars-and-cents
meaning to millions of you, for
·~f . ~ wilhin th~
next 12 mon-
ths, an enor·
mous 25 to
30 percent of
a 11 U.S.
h o u seholds
report they
are planning
to make a
PORTEii: In a j 0 r ex-
penditure for furniture and-
or carpets. Jn addition, there
are millions of you planning
to make only ''minor" outlays.
IN THE FACE of this de-
mand. furniture pl'ices are
heading sha rply higher, may
be up as much as 10 percent
this fall on top of a rise of at
leasl as much la st year. The
so.-,ring price of 1vood, fro1n
which so much furn iture is
made, is one factor; the surg·
ing demand by ~ro\\•ing
numbers of young. relatively
considerably more money than
you really have to in order to
get what you want. (The
average U.S. household spent
close to $100 for furniture
a lone in 1971, but in
households headed by a person
under age 35 the total spent
for furniture and floor cover-
ings was three times the
average.)
Here, therefore, are im-
portant guidelines on bow and
how not to !hop for fllrnlture:
-t nstead or trying to buy an
e-nti-r-e hous_eful (or
apartmentful} of furniture all
at once, draw up a two, three
or five-year buying plan to
reach your realistic goals.
•FOC1JS ON the basics first
-bed, couch. table and
chairs, adequate Ii g ht Ing ,
bureau, dresser, mirror.
•Fill out the basi~ )'00
can't afford to. buy new wilh
good-quality s e c o n d h a n d
furniture from secondhand
stores, thrift shops, junk
shops, auction.!, garage ~es.
tag sales, Salvation Army and
Goodwill Industries, want ads
in local papers, family and
friendS'. Good-quality used
furniture is a better deal both
in durability and at-
tractiveness than low-quality
new furniture. Second.!I or
slightly damaged new
furniture alsQ can be a
bargain, but before you buy,
find out how much nece.!88.ry
repairs would cost. These can
be especially good bargain
places JI you are handy at fix-
ing and refinishing furniture
and if you have time Lo spare
for shopping, carting and the
fixing.
0If you're inclined toward
antiques but can't afford their
prices, try buying "antique
style" furniture through an·
tlque dealers and auctions.
Consider buying copies of an-
tiques, made years after the
original by lesser but still gOOd
craftsmen.
A KEY POINI' here -
favoring old copies: or antiqueis
(and for almost e ver y
category of antiques, there are
whole classes of copies) -is
that such furniture ls likely to
grow in vaule while the
modern furniture you buy at a
sore may depreciate by as
much as twirthirds the instant
it leaves the store.
•it you're young and just
starting out lo buy, select with
an eye to the future. Sturdy
but inexpensive canvas fold-up
chairs, for instance, might do
now for the dining area and be
used later as porch furniture.
And play safe by choosing gir
anywhere furniture which will
move easily and rearrange
easlly at a new location.
affluent fan1ilics' no\v selting:i.=====================ol up households is another : the
continued backwardness of
this splinlcred industry -
reflected in its failure to
d<'velop cost-cutting techni·
quC'S of furniture manufacture
and distribution -is a 'third
that yours moy not !
COMPLETE ORANGE
COUNTY COVERAGE
hd1dl11t: LotultG leacll,
So• CteiMnte, Mlulo11 Yi•lo
0.110 Pol11t, as well n Lo
hocli ond most of L.A. ONO
MONTH TO MONTH
ltlNTAL IASIS
HO DEP<>SIT RECj>UIRED
ON APPIOYED CR!DIT
4 ONLY $17._00 PIR MONTH
TOTAL COSJ
lu111lmlM( pjlqftl
5 NEW COMPACT UNIT
SIZE {1 1/4 11C .. '11 1
6. VOICE MESSAGE PAGERS
•LSO ARE •VAIL.AILE 7 FULL FRIE MAINTINANCE
ORANGE COUN7Y
RADl07ELEPHONE
SERVICE'"
714 • 835-JJOS
401 SO. SA NTA f'£. SANTA ANA
ro"' L•~""' 8e•cll, Mlnlo" Vle!D, O•n• Pol"'· S•" Clemt"lt, S•" J~•n C•pl1lr1no, Et Tore, c11I loll tree
496°3223
factor.
Furniture is likely to be
a rnong lh e 1nost expensive in-
vestments you'll make in your
lifetime, particularly or you
are now in vour 20s or early
:10s. /The re:;son the furniture
industry is sla ted to grow
spC'tlacularly in coming years
is that the number of familie'S
headed by highly mobile
Atnericans under a.e:e 35 is to
expand by about 50 percent
during the 1970s, and this is
the key furniture-buying
bracket.1
FURNITURE SHOPPING
also is likf'ly to be among the
n1ost frus1rating experiences
\•nu'll rv<'r h<ive in the
i1l.'.1rkrlplace. and <in area in
\~·hich you'll probably spend
BUY SILVER NOW
T•ke Actu•I Possession-.999 Purl Slh1er
ln9ot1-Medellion-Coins
WE.t.i.'.TM PROTECTION .t.NO POTENTIAL CAIN-FRl!E l llOCMURE
919-St4J UNIVERSAL TRADE CO. t1t·ll"3
lfOO lliVINE .I.VE. fNEAR Alll:POlll Tl SUIT£ 115 NEWPORT 11!!.l.CM
You :ire cordi all y in\·ited to attend an
1nvestm rnt Srminar Dinner of
Prudential l\fobllc Home Park Fund Hosted by:
~I. I'. KRUSE & l'O~IPAN\', INC.
A TAX SHELTERED LIMITED PARTNERSHll'
TO INVEST IN MOllLE HOME PAIKS
DIVERllolflED GEOGRAPHICALL'I'
THROUGHOUT
THE STATE Of CALIFORNIA
For Collfo...,.,lo R1ttlcle11 tt Only
Two dotet for your con .. enience
DINNER SERVED
NEWPORTIR INN, IOARD ROOM
1107 Jo,,.bo1ee Rood, Newport koch, C•llf.
O!!t•I"! c1rc.,11 r1 w1•r IM '"'"b"'t<I •! 111, um1111rt
Twndoy, May 2f-7 P·'"·
Thwndoy, Moy 31-7 P·'"·
,.,. lltt•lr'llllDlll
C•ll 1'14) 141·1t41
lfUJ Ul·J1fl
M. P. KRUSE & COMPANY. INC
~ l':klic 'ilock ~
ltOO N i\-1a1n Street· ~Jnt;i Ana.CJhlornia 91706 · 1714) S47·S941
Sylvia Porter's readers can boat that headline
• • • she told them how lo save up lo 25 "/. on
meot buys, as much as 20 ,,. on canned goods:
'Follow the
most
fundamental,
simple and
ordinary of an
the rules •••
Shop the
specials.'
Maybe it seems obvious, but when Columnist Sylvia
Porter tell~ her readers something like: watch
newspaper ads for bargains, she always goes the
extra step. She asked questions of some of the
food industry's leaders and found out savings can
amount to many, many times the 4lh% predicted
rise in overall food prices. That's economic advice
you can be lieve.
Test it for yo urself. Check the specials in the bar·
gai n-laden ads of the Wednesday Food Section every
week in the DAILY PILOT. And if you want more
lips on ge tting your money's worth, read Sylvia
Porter's .. Money1s Worth'' column appearing sev·
era! times each week in the financial pages of the
DAILY PILOT.
The One That Means Business
DAILY PILOT
Wall Street • • •
Fifteen o.ut of every 100
We couldn't prove it, of
Americans today own
course, but it see Ms
that the percentage is even greater here . rn
stock.
likely
the Or-
ange Coast area ..• and it's growing every day.
That's why the DAILY . PILOT was proud, years ago,
to be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring
its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high
speed wire services. We're still doing it in every home-
delivered edition and the service gets better a II the ti me.
Wall Street's computers "talk to" computers in
DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate
the
of
12 more than 1,000 words per minute. It takes only
the entire New York and minutes to
Stock Exchange
American move
reports from
Street to the typesetting
the canyons of Wall
DAILY PILOT
And when
record, the
technology finds a way to beat that .speed
DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the
first to use
When it
it to bring readers "today's action today."
to financial news, the one that means comes
business is the
DAILY PILOT ·
:r:~~0~~~"~LDT~s~~T~~~~·~·l97~3 --~~--~---------~-----.-----------------.'
'
•
• • • . '
•
' . ' . 11
The DAILY PILOT ••• Still · only $2.65 a month
delivered to your door . seven d·ays a week
WHY PAY MORE?
ORDER NOW 642-4 21
COr Use Toll Free Number To Call The DAILY PILOT
Office In Your Orange Coast Area Community)
. \
•
' .
•
:~ ••• "\ . . • . $ ~~ ..
.:1
·~
. : •. • . .. '· ' •
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'ZO DAil Y l'ILOT
PUllLIC NOTICE
T ......... M., Z9, 1973
PUllUC~
.... .,...-.. -·1o-.,..._.,
"ltove the front and back the woy lt i1 ond nothing
off the top and 1idts, pltase."
NY Woman, 19
Murder Witness
Jumps to Death
NOTIC• TO ca•DITO•S
'""•a1oa COUllT O" THI
P'ICTITIOUI •UllNISS PUBLIC N-CE ST,t,1'9 OP CALll'OllNl,f, P"O• Not.Ml STAT•MINT VII TN• COUNTY OP' OllANO•
T""' tolltwlno ~''°"' .. , "°""' N ... A·f•111 bu•lrttH 11: P'ICTITlOUI IUlllCllS flltlt of ll!DIA 5 TE I" ff AN 1',t,
SUCCESS MINO CYIEllNETICS IN• N.t.MI: ITAT•MllllT OllANOVSl(IA STllOTHEll, OK .. Md.
STITUTI!:. SM N, Cl1rk, Ortt1ge t'lUI T1'it t.lklwlnt Pfl'ttn• lrt dolflll NOTICE IS HElll!ilY GIVEN lo 11\t
J T .. r•ll Moote. 11on z11nl Pl .. b\11(,,.,. 11: c:rtdlhn of 11>1 tlloft ntmtd cltctdtnl
WH!mln tttr, Ctlll. TUSCO COMPANY, 11$2 l,tllfleY 11111 1n --lllYlnt dtlm1 tO-ln1I lhl lllclllrd It. Vtt'lr,r 13' N, Cl1rlc. ..__, ll'VIM, '210I ••kl 4Ktdel'll ,,, r"'11•td ~ fll• """"'·
Or1no1, c1111. W1rmrrotot1 °""'°""*''· I ~ c . , with !tit llte• ... rv vwc:Mf1, Jn .,.,. 0Hlt1
Tllh !MJt.IMll l• cNuc:ttG by • o-r•I I C•lltornl• (Of'POl'tflon. l1Q LlflfltY of thf Cltnt r.tf tlle lbOW tnlllltd COi/rt, Of' 111rrrttrtlllp, A'IW-. lrvlrie ft101 to ,.....,., "'•m, with l"8 fttCttllfV
ltl<:r.t•d It. VtfltY Grlm1tad Incl HOOM °""'*"'*" vouthlt'I, to !hi ltlMt"lOfttd II th• office
1'1'111 ,1:r'::.::::: Hiid wllh 1i.. cwn. ~rny, 11$1: Ltnolty A~. lrvlrM ~nNA~~o!~E1.;;1:.11•~11.•;~I(~
'¥ C111k If Or1119e County on M.ly f, lf1). Thlt b!Jlllleu II bel"I Ctnd!Klld 'rf 1 Clllfwnll "'60, wnleh I• IM pl1t1 If
l'tUIO 0-.11 p1rtrttrll'llO bln.lneu If !tit under1lgMcl In •II m11i.t-1
l"llbl!Ultd Or.,.g.t Co.ti Dilly P!lol, Ch.lrln R i-foow lltf'f11ftl119 to thl e1t1t1 of 111d O.C•nl
/INiy IS, n , )t, ind J\lfte s, 1•1:1 1G7·n TM• 111ttment ·!!ltd wllll 11'19 ,_,.., wlltlln ,_ month• '""' tlle t1111 ,w11e..:
cim of Or•noe County on Mty 14. 1m 1191'1 of 1tltt notic..
PUBUC NOTICE w1LLIAM e:. sr JOHN, couNTY o.1tct~,.:;1~· J'~cHtl"I
-------------!CLERIC.. •v Tl>tt'ne M. W1td, Dt'1i'L:1u l!uc:lllrl• ~""Win
PICTITIO\IS au11M••s PUbll1htd °''"'" C11o111 01lly 1"110!, of"" lbowt n•JNld dtctdtnt
Thi 191.!i"i: • .!'!!~~:'~ b\lllnns M•Y "Ind JuM s, 12, lt , 1m 1'21·71 :~·:L~
•! -rHS MAAK.'' ffO 1. S011ft1 coeil PUBLIC NOTICE :r~ = c':';::... "*
HWY .. LIO\lfl't lffch, C1l1loml1 '2'51 T .. 1 (n41 ....... 1 I Mint It. ll'ltUoft..41J HIU It., Latlun• l'ICTITIOUI IUllNlll .-,llwM't fw lhdt!U .. -.ch. C1lll'Dml1 HUI NA.Ml ITATIMINT P11bll1l'ltd Or•not Cent 01lt'f !"hot,
Thi• bull11111 t1 mnc1uc"" w .,. IT'I· .... !.~· ro11-1no Pl''°"' ••• dolno M•v n. ,., •nd J11ne s. 1:1, 1t11 ,.,,.,,
•vldutil, ...,..11111 II. NIM It, lllt4don GRIMSTAD .-.HO HOOSE DEVELOP·
Ttilt '"~' ..... nltd with Ille COUii• MENT COMP ... NY. 1752 L. ~,I •Y
.., C:ltfk of Or•not County on Mty 2. ltr.I. Aven11•• Irvine n7t15 '2Jttl John A, Grfm1tlif, 17S2 L11111!ty
llvtill1htd or...,.. coe1t D•llv Piiot, Avt"1.11, ln1ln• nm 1----.,,==c--~=c---·I ""'y •• 15, n, it, ltn 1111 .73 C1!1r1•• It. H~•· 11Sl L1119tty l'ICTIOUJ •VSOllSS ... v.,,,,,., Irvine n1os NA.Ml ITATIMZNT
Thi' bu•tn.,.11 11 being conducltd by 1 Tiit ro11ow l1111 pe<IOl'I I• dol119 bu1!nn1
01ner11 p1rlner1lllp. 11:
-------------Ch1rt&1 ft . Hooi.e NEWPOR.TER 1'JIAVEI. AND TOURS,
PtCTITIOVI IUSINllS Thl1 1r.l•Ment 11114 wltll !ht County 1101 J1mbot'" llO&d, 11 Hlghw1y 1, Ill.AMI ITATIM•HT C,lerk ot Or1noe County Ofl M1y 2A, 1973. Newport lltach, C11llornl1 ''MO
Thi followlncl ptr'°'1 II doll!ll bllll"•i1 WILLIAM E. ST JOH N, COU NTY ll11tv Jo Allin, »t Vhtl Gr•nd1, I I : CLERI(, by TMAil M. Wltd, Ol>PVIV. NIWllOl't lle1cll, C1ll10rnl1 '26'0
CON.N.UNITY M .-, N ,t, G E M E NT 1'·1US! Thl1 bu1!ne11 condvclld by 1n lndl'ildlltl.
IEll\llCES COMl' ... NY, llSt Nonllt Publl"'ed Orino1 C11o11t Diiiy PUor, l1!1y Jo All111
"11c1. Ortnot. C•lllornl1 Mtv 2t tnd J-J, n2. 1t, Tt1l lm.n This 11111ment wa1 flltd with ftlt COU!'I•
Jtotlet'I Jll~roll, 1aS1 Nordic Pll(t, --· tv Cltt'k ol Or111ee c;ounty on Ml'f 11, <>;7:,.<•~'.·~·1"6, ''" Gltn oirv PUBLIC NOTICE l'7l .,u2u
StrMI. Wh!Hltt', C1Ulornl1 comblnH wnti D•flY Piiot, Newport
Tl'lll llutll'lftt 11 CQfld\lcltd bV llobl!rl l'ICTITIOUS aUSINtESS llt1ch, C1llfoml1, MIV 15, 12. 2t 1nd
•1Ytt"Otl .. SI...,. .-.. 1 .. rd, t Gtner1I NA.Mii STAT•M•NT ... , "ubllllled HtwPOft Hlrtool' Ntwt llre1s
1'1rtl'ltl'MI,. TM followlllll petlOl'll •r• "" 1111 Jun• s, 1911 1'91-n
Robert lllvtfoll butlnu1 11: SltPhtn .... •••rd FOSS . llEVTEll .-.sSDCI ATES. IOI
Tilll ll•llmeril Wl1 flll'd wl!h """ Cotm· .-.c1cl• ......... C•on• dt l Mir. Cl l. 91623
ty Cl1rk ol' 0t-1ne1 County on Ml1 '· lt7l. M1rllvnn L. Foa1. 17(4 Htt'moM Avt.,
P•Ulfl' H...,_ !itl(h, C11. '~ Htlet1 c. lltuler. JOI Ac1cl1 Ave., -------------1 W1"'9fl M. 0.,._ Atty, Corona dtl Mir, C11. PICTITIOUI aUSINISS
11'1) C......,,.w lh>llll. Tl'll1 M inni 11 Condll(ltd by t VMMfll HAMS ST ... TIMIMT
lflllllW'ttllll, C•N""""' MMl P6•tn11al'llp Tiie 1ollowlno oer-11 dolnt bllllnth
Publ!.nt<t Orll'lfl C0111t o.n1 .-nor, Htlen c . ltt11ler 11: M•v I, l S. H. 2', 1t73 1(1)7-71 Thi• •lllitmtl'll W91 flllif wlll'I tht' C0\111· VILLA \llSTA MOalLI! EST ... TES,
-------------fty Clerk of Or•nte County on M•y 2', 30il3 8111 Clrcl1, Co.11 Mui, C11ll'oml1
PUBUC NOTIOE ltn "91» tl~!-11d It ... tnlttt'. G_..t P1r1Mt'.
---l'ICTITIOVI IUS .. tlSS Publls~ 0~1no• Co••I Otlty P1to1. JOI.,,?_ 1111 C1rtlt, COlll AV11, C1111otro11
M1y 79 and June J, 12, U, 1'1l 16U·1l •g MAMI ITATf:MIENT Thl1 bu•l11t•t Is tcfld1,1dtd by VIiii
'Tiie tolkrwlno Ptt'IOlll 1re dolno Yl1!1 Molt11• Est.<l, • LI m I t. cl 1 llli1lnns 11: PUBLIC NOTICE VEJIGO &Ull,DtNG SVPPL!E,, 2.Sll Pir!n•rlhlp.
PUBLIC NCYnCE
PUBUC NOTICF;
PUBLIC NOTICE
NEW YORK (UPI) -Anne
~farie Paixao, 19, a ke y
witness against a group ac·
cused or murder, robbery, and
kidnaping, leaped to her dealh
from the roqf or a si x-story
apartment, police said 1'1on·
day.
Police said the girl was
despondent about her irr
(IN SHORT ... )
volvement in the kidnaping of
a coostrucUon company ex·
~Uve last October, ·and
afraid because she later
agreed to testify against other
members of the gang, ln·
eluding her former boyfriend.
She went to the apartment
Sunday to visit her sister. But,
police saJd when Miss Paizao
did not find her sister at
home , she went to the roof and
jumped. She died Monday, 17
houn later, at Flushlng
Hospital.
Miss Paino was indicted
along with her boyfriend,
Anthony Franclotll, In lh•ldd·
naping of coMtructlon ex·
ecutive Gerald Lazar last Oct.
13.
No More Se:.:?
LONDON (AP) -Prime
Minister Edward ff e a t h ' s
government continued to insist
today that no more of its
ministers are Involved In a sex
scandal despite newspaper
reports to the contrary.
Two government minlster!I
resigned last week because
Scotland Yard found out they
had been consorting with can
girls. But the government on
Monday night denied a report
in two Swlday papers that a
third minister -and possibly
a fourth -had been mixed up
with call girls.
Cod Talks Set
BRUSSELS ( U P I )
Iceland and Britain today nc·
cepted an offer by the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization
{NATO) to mediate the
dispute over lhe so-called "cod
war" between the two coun·
tries.
NATO Secretary General
Joseph Luns extended the of·
fer after Iceland told the
alliance that it must help gel
British warships out of lcelan·
ic waters. Britain a n d
Iceland are both NATO
members.
Government officials i n
Reykjavik., lhe I c e I a n d i c
capital, said earlier today
Iceland may reconsider its
role In NATO unless the
organlzatton can solve the
fishing dispute.
CulHI Ties Told
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)
Argentina's new cl vi l I an
government resumes
diplomatic relations Monday
with CUba and said It would
shortly establish relations with
both North Korea and East
Germany.
The decisions we.re among
the first taken by President
Hector J . Campora, who
assumed office Friday as the
lint civilian president in
seven years.
11le move to renew ties with
the Communist government of
Olba came after a meeting
between Campora and vislUng
president Osvaldo Dortleos of
Cuba.
F're Rages
NAPLES, Fla. (AP) -New
crewr were brought ln Monday
to relieve weary firemen who
have spent a week batUlng a
blaze raging across 30,000
acre11 of Big Cypress Swamp.
"We have the fire contained
to the south and we're working
en the east flank, but it's still
spreading north." said Pi.fark
Heil. a Forestry Division
.spokesman.
"It's not burning toward any
inhabited areas, so we don't
have to worry on that score,"
Heil said. Officia1s said most
wildlife in the area has been
able to escape the names. The
fire is burning in the swamp
along the western edge of the
Everglades about SO miles
cast of this Florida Gulf Coast
city.
N.....,_. lllvd., No. I, COii• Me11, C1lll, =~!1 Rp,~~·
t,"17 NOTte• INVITIM• 1101 Tlllt tit!"°*'! w&• lltlld Wlll'I 1M C!Klft·
ll1y G. Ovlf111rl, 'SIS N""'T»"1 11\fd., Hotlc1 11 MrttrY gl"ln tllet lf\1 IOlrd of ty Cltrk o1 Or•fllll COUflty on M.ly A, 1t11.
Cotll MIU, C1lll. '2121 TrUllffl of trtl C11o11r Comml/ftlty Colltff PUUS
vlnc:1nt E. R11g1n, 1SOO Ntwport Ol1trltl of Orl!!Dt County, Ct ll!ornl•, w!ll w .. 111( Wel'llwe!MI Ally
11\'d., No. '' Co1t1 Mew. C1Ut, '1627 1tttive 1elled blfh ir!t In 11 :00 1,m., 1• ,1,,,.;..119 If tM i11n.' Sllllt UJ
Gray at Law
Thh bu1l1M1J 11 conducf'ld Dv 1 111n1rtl W..:lntM11v, J1111• 1,, ttn, 1111'11 l>U!'<h•1· L• AllPlll, c11111n111 ,...,
111rtntt"Jl!lo. 11>11 de1M•!menl Of 11ld 1tllool dlllrltl 1:t1t« ll•~ G Ovtrturt lO(•ltcl .r \Jl'O Ad1m1 .-.vtnu1, Cott• l'ubll1hlll Or•"llt Coast 01111 Pltn!.
ThlJ llt!tn'l«nl Wll llltd wllh ll'lt Coul'I• Mt11, C1lllO'T'll1, •! wMcll !lm1 tl ld bldl M1y 1, u:, 22. 29, lt73 1(09·73 Ex-FBI Head Back in Firm
IV Cltt'k of Or111111 County on MIV 2, 1973. Wiii bt publlely 0Pt11tcl 1rod nild tor: -------------1 P'Jlnf $T ... TIOWERY SUPPLIES.
l"ubllshlld 0••119• Coa11 Di lly POot, Alt bld1 i re to bt In 1ccordtnc:t wl!h PUBLIC N~CE
M1v '· IS, ti ..... 1173 13"·13 ""' ln1truc:Uons Ind Condlt!on1 •nd v I I 19telflc1tlon1 wtilch ,,.. new on 1111 1nc1i-----
ni1y 119 llC\ll'lld In lr•t orflcf of 1111 l"tCTIT10!JJ aUSINISS
Purch1tl"9 "vent ol 1•ld 1cllool dl1!rlcl, N.-.MI ST.-,TEMINT
l"ICTITIOUS auSINISS E1<h blddtr rn111t 1ul>n'lfl with hl1 bid 1 T~ toUOW1111i1 perlOfl 11 dOl119 bu1ln1u
MAM• STATIMINT '••hl•r'I <fleck, Ctrtlnld e~ck, or bid• I I>
Ttie hlllowlnO ll«•Oll Ii onlno bu tlnen -·s bond mld1 P1Vt b!1 to 11'111 ordtr of MODULAR l"JIOOUCTS, 27112 Cimino
11. IM COllll Communl!v Cotlto;1• Olttrltt Ctpl.rrtno, L-oun• Nlollt'I t:!an
PUBLIC NOTICE
From Wire Services
It's back to the old oJfice
grind for former acting FBI
director, L Patrick Gray Ill.
JJe withdrew his nam e for
consideration as director and
resigned in April a f t e r . ECOL O G V MA 1 NT EN AN C £ lloetd nl 1rutl~ 111 en ,,.,_, 1101 lt n Mldul1r Muwtldvfl1111, lr>e., •
SEllVICE 171)1 IC S~Yllltk It In• lh•ll nve 1>1rcent (S•o) of tM sum t>ld tor C1Hlerrtl• Corpot1tlon, 171a1 Ci mino (•Ulor"l l' t1101 ' v ' Olle ve•t'I conlrACI 11 I guHl n!O!'f th1t C1f.lltr1110, Llq\ltll NIOvfl, C1Uf. '2617
JOlln A. Ftndt t. to1 Tlnlll• Pl., CMll tt11 bldd1r will e"!er l"!o Ille jlfnpottcl Th, bu•lrtt•• It CondUCltd by I CO!'· ( ]
Mtl41 C1!Uornl• 97616 (or>"•CI II fhtt ••me h 1w1rded lo MM. llO!'lllOf\, Tl!fi 'builneii 11 conducl«I by in In. 111 the event ol' f1llur110 enltf Into 1uth MOOUl.AJI MANUFACTURING, PEOPLE
d!vldui l. (Otl!r..Ct. t11.t 1>rnctld1 ol tht cl'lec~ ... ut INC. Jot>n A Ftnder l)t rorlttlrtd, OI' I" 11\t CI H ot 1 bond, Int Joh" $. t llcli:. ltr. Preilatt1t
Tnl, 1111,,.,.;,1 wit 111~ '"'"' '"' COl.m· 11111 1um "'t •tof "'Ill b9 lorltlled lo 11ld Tlll1 lltl•,.,."' w11 """' wlth ti>!! Covn· IY Clerk of or1110• county on M•v 1 ltl) school dltlrlct. ly Clerk of Or1nge CdlJnly Oii M1v I•. .,,.....,. ______ ...,. __ _,.
'°1Jt)I fiO l>kfdet" rnly Wlll\dtlW hl1 bid for I lffl disc!OSU l'e I/lat he destroyed
Pullll1htd or1no1 co111 D•HY Pilot. period of forty.nve ((\) d•v• tlltf' thl l'JSJ12 d I · M•v 1, u. 22, ,.,, "1' 1362.1) d~e w,1or tht o.,.,,lno thertd. l"ubtlsl!lld 0 ••"11• (Oll~I Dtlly Pltol, OCUITJC'fltS re a t In S lo ·~ o..rd of Tn11te11 rnerw1 11\f M•V 71, 1'. 1nd Junes, n, ltn 1s13.n \Vatergate. PUBLIC NOTICE P<l~lleo• °' rt>11ell"O •ny •n" •II t>lc11 ~1-------------
-----· ---------l'o welve 1ny ltrto;1ul1rlll11 Of' In· Louis c. Wool said Gray is 10fm11111e1 In •nv blc1 Of' on 1he bldc11110. PUBLIC N~CE t d t 'th' P'ICTITIOUJ •USINISI sroneo: NOR.MAN E. WATSON V ll expec e 0 return 'Vl In a ""M• sT ... TIMl!NT ~ • .:: • .., .. ,...., few w ks I h' rtnershl Th• ronowlflll per1on 11 Oolno bu1lne1J Bo.rd of Trusll!'fl PICTIT!OUI •UllNl~I ee 0 IS pa p
1J: Optn: Jun• n. 1911 . 11 ·00 • m HAM• STATIMtENT in the law firm of Suls mlln,
OIVEASIFIEO COM.MOOITIES. ,,~ Pubtl11\ed Or•no• C0111!
0
01ll\. ,lnot M•i TM 1o11-1no 119t'JOn• ••• dnl"O Shap1·-. Wool and Brennan In Nord If Platt. or-~, c111Uorh!1 t76/i~ :n, 11, 1tn 15,,., bu1lne•t 11: •"
11:1111111 11;1~••011. 115• Nt:>Pale Pl•t•, --c--l't:t.ZA MAN, 1110 Harbor 11vd., Cott• New London, Conn. 0•1ng1, C1lltornr1. , Mttit, .,.,., Thi1 IMlll,..11 11 C111'1ducled by Jtoblrt PUBLIC NOTICE JOM Howard Fry, Ml J11mlne Clrtlt. *
lllve1011, •n 1nc11vldu•I. CC!9~t• M"• <1tt1. ,,.,, A Frenchman v.•ho sold lloblrl Riveroll lrtOTIC• OP .-,,me lfll Ntlllln1 lcm2 SlltrflTI,
tnl1 tlttttnenl Wll ll(ed wl!h I~ (O\ln• NON·ltl!Sl'ONSlllLITY "'.t.f!.•11 ' C1111. ('Verythlng lo come to Stan· ·~ c1.,1r OI O••"Ot County on M1y ~. 1tn. No!•ce 11 lltttby 111.,.,. !hat 1111 un-Th bu1fne11 t1 C(lrld\ICftd b1 • 01ne11r for" University for a hear<
IMS« 1'·111H dt •,l11n11<:1 wltl nor be reOQOni lblt !or •nv 0trlner1hlp, U dtbtt Of 1111111111 .. con''"'"" b'f' •ny-John 11ow11d Fry transph1nt i;evrn months al{o
........ ,., M. OO•OON. ott>et thin mv1111. on• •lt•1 thh d•••· Th!• "'"'"""' w11 111.a with Int C!)!ln· ,·, •e--r1'bed bv doctor s as still Atftt'MY ti LIW, D1ttd lhl1 !h t d1y of M1y, 1f7l. IV C1'etk ti Ol'lllO' Counly °" Wy I.. u ""
Tlt!J C-"lw ..... nrllll, Jt<ome P. ttorvt ll\, lf7l not SiC:k eiiouah for the
l .... WMllll, Clflltntfl M:lltJ 111 Wtlnvl SI~ "2mt ti
l'"wll1htd Dr•nit• c01111 0 11rv P11o1 M•Y c11111 ,,.,..., c.111. l"llbUll'ltd <>r•• c o1u 011ty p11o1, ~licate operation. •· n, ». 1'. 1tn uoe .n Publls/led Or•111• Cont 0111v Piiot, M.., 22• "· 1M1 J-L It. ltn IJll-i'J After examlnlna Lou I 1 PUBLIC NOTTCE M1v n. n. ,,, 1tu 1!49·73 ,., Andre Cbmpou11lo, 4-0, last PUBLIC Nar!CE PUBLIC NOTICE November, Stanford's heart
tr11nsplant team decided that
although he was quite lll, he
was not In Imminent danger of
death or untreatable by other
therapy.
Still. Chl'lmoous~ln. w ho
speaks no English. llre!I easily
and is too sick for strenuous
activity. Ifill wife has taken a
job as a housekeeper.
* TI1e first man to walk in
space, Col. Alexei A. Leonov,
will lead the tw<>.-man Soviet
crew in the 1975 j o i n t
American-Soviet space fight.
The news ' a'gency Tass said
that Leonov and pilot-cog..
monaut Valery N. Kubasov,
both 38, will fonn the prime
Soviet crew for the ex·
pcriment .
* En1peror Haile Selassie,
flanked by kings and princes,
presidents and prime
ministers, presided from a
canopied head table while
liveried waitress servtd an
eight-course meal to 1,500
guests.
Girls tn grass 1kirll danced
to bongo. drums on the dal! In
front of guests, wbo ate off
golden platrs with gold knlve!!I
and forks and seasoned their
food from gold salt and pepper
shRkers.
~occasion 1vas a dinner in
Addis Abab!l lllflrking tht 10th
anniversary of the founding of
th@ Orsanilation of African
Unlly.
* Jebn W. McC1rmacll:,
fonner speaker of the U.S.
llous:e, says he has joined the
M.ard of directors 0 r
Massachl15etls Citizens for
Life, an anli·11:bortlon group.
"I ..-•elCQme the presence of
the ~life movement in
America, and I wl.!ih to
bcc<lmt! •ctlvely ldentlned
with It." he said .
~Bwttertlles Are Free'
Laguna Show High·
In Natural Rapport
"Bullerillel AI1l Fro<" Is
undoobledly the bOll comedy
lo tutor down to Ibo corn·
munlly lhtater clreult this
aeuon. a 1'nder, thoughtful,
yet terribq fum\y story with
tho slrelglh of a play written
aplml tho backdrop of ttall·
ly.
The Laiuna Moulton Com-
munity Playhouse ts closing
out its most artistically IUC•
cessful season in many yea rs
with an ezcelleot production of
Leonard Gershe'• aeriocomedy
ol • blind youth trying to
make 11 on his own In the big
c I t y. Olaracterization is
superlative in oeerly a 11
respects and the productioo
itaelf ls ooe of the most at~
tractive of the sea.son.
OnJy the necessary evil of
unmotivated mo v e m e n t
"aUTT8•'Ll•S Altl ......
A comedy by Lton1rcl Gtr1lle, cllr1eh1d t>y H1p Gr1h1m, 1tchnlc1L dlrt (lor
Rlch1rd Ander1tn, llghtlno b'f' C••I C11t1w1y, sound by 01vld C1ud!1,
pr111nllld Tu.M11y1 1hr0\19h s.1u1day1
11 t :.JO unltl June f 11 tlle L1gun1
MOullon Pl1yhOUH, 606 L111un1 cuwon
Roed. L1gun1 s .. ch. R111rv1t101u '''-01'3.
TH• CAST
Pon ll•ku ............ Wiili"" cunen
JIU T1tn,..,.. MlcMlle llrown Mrs. ll1~tf' . . . . . .-.nn1bell1 Qvlglr,r
Rilll)li .-.u11ln • J1ck lllnoerr
around the huge Lagwi.a stage
restrain.! "Butterflies" from
achleving Its hlghe.st potentlal.
A foul'Character show in
which more than two actors
are rarely on stage together et
on time, the play would fit
more comfortably Into the
condensed set empLoyed with
Laguna's last production, "1be
Effects or Gamma Rays on
Man-iJl..the-Moon Marigold.!."
DESPITE THE drawback of
overacUvity, director H a p
Graham his fashioned a
smooth ·flowing, realilltic&lly
Interpreted show which bub-
bles with nalural and skilUul
interplay among its
characters. Paramount among
the cast members in this
regard is William Cullen, who
Intermission
Tom Titus
dellvers an except io n al
performance a.s the blind
youth experiencing belated
growing palm.
CUilen brings to the role of
Don Baker a quality of
11n3hflshed, freshness f o u n d
all too s e l do m in e<>m·
munity theat.er. His rat>-
porl with lbe girl in the ad-
joining apartment and, later,
wlth his overconcerned mother
glows with a marvelous hones-
.
ty of character. \Vben his well·
adjusted facade f i n a 11 y
cnunbles, it is a shatte.('ing -
and bellevable -blow which
is experienced by the playgoer
as....U. I
Newcomer Michelle Brown,
as the free--splrited girl who
introduces him to both emo--
lional pleasure and pain, im·
proves markedly as the play
progress. Altogether I o o
animated and directionless at
the outset, Miss B r o w n
matures with her character to
deliver a ca p tivatin g
performance. Her verbal cat-
fight with the mother Is
especially well handled.
JN TIIE Pt.mt supporting
role of the mother (which
recently won an Oscar for
Eileen ~leckart), Annabelle
Quigley presents a caustic but
sincere cha ra cte r who
becomes more sympathetic as
we get to know her better.
Miss Quigley handles th is dlf.
ficult transformation v.•ith ski ll
and insight.
Another newcomer, Jack
Bingert, portrays the avant
garde director more for hones-
ty than for the laughs which
could well be elicited by his
part. In keeping with the mood
set by the other three, Bingert
is never a ca ricature but a
most believable alternative.
Richard Anderson's apart·
ment setting is well executed,
but perhaps a bit too im·
maculate to draw gasps of
horror from the mother on her
arrival. Only a suggestion of
tackiness and clutter exists to
provide sketchy motivation.
"Butterflies Are Free" is
the seaso n's sixth and final
jewel in the crowo or a theater
that has regained Its place aa
Orange County's community
lheater kingpin. Performances
resume tonight and continue
Tuesday through Saturdays
for two more \Veeks at the
Moulton Playhouse, 6 0 6
Laguna C:inyon Road, Laguna
~ach.
Movies Prove Gold Mine
For Best Selling Authors
By BOB THOMAS
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
film industry's eagerness fOl'
presold fllm.1 is producing a
rich harvest for bes~>elling
authors.
To the delight of lite.rary
agents and tMir clients, prices
m going up f<X" novds and
nonf>ctlon books which offer a
filming potenlial. Prices In lbe
six figures plus fringe range, a
rarity a year er two ago, are
now frequent.
The reasons for the authors'
harvest:
1. Producers' belief in the
presold property -that is,
novels or plays that have
become so fam iliar that they
are instantly recognizable to
the. ticket buyer. ' 'Love
Story," "Airport" and "The
Godfather" are a few ex·
ample.s.
PARAMOUNT JS n o w
gambllng that millions more
will pay to sre a film starring
a high-flying, best-selling bird,
''Jonathan Livingston
Seagull."
2. The improved fiscal
heaJth of the film companies
has permitted big payments
for literary properties.
Says a literary agent: "The
studios were ~us
a couple of years ago ... but
most of them are wUllng to
pul out f<X" promising books.
Jn searehlng for screen prop-
erties, the studios naturally
want repeats of what has suc-
ceeded before. Thus the sue·
cess of lhe "The French Con·
nection" sparked a number of
purchues of law and order
boob. One ol lhe biggest -
Para.mount's p.Irchase of a
book called simply, "Low and
Order."
THE NOVEL by former
New York p o l Ice woman
Oorothy Uhnak b r o u g ht
13SO.OOO plus 12.000 for e""ry
week it remains on the New
.York Tunes bestseller list.
Anolbor slx·Ogutt .. uor Is
"The Taking of Pelham On<
Two Three," a suspense tale
of a subway hlja<king by Jolm
Godey.
PakJmar Picture! is pay1ng
$175,000 plus $2,000 ror each
week It stay11 on the list.
"The studlOl!l want best
sellers," explained veteran
Hollywood agent II. N .
Swa.MOn, "and they're wiUlng
to pay 8 Jremlum for them ,
"THAT'S WHY f pul the
best seller list claut1e in lhe
'Law and Order' deal. 1 also
sold 'The Race' to Paramount
for 1175,000, plus 12,000 for
every week on the New York
Times llst, and $25,000 for
advertising and publicity for
the book.,,
Another loog4ime literary
agent, Evarts Ziegler, com-
mented: "There is no question
about the upsurge or book
purchases by the sludin-;. But
they are seeking special sub-
jects, one that contain action,
melodrama, sex and violence.
"When the business is bad,
the producers aim for the gut
level, There is no market to-
day for th e gentle. sensitive
story. nor the black romedy.
The prOOuccrs want noisy sub-
ject n1atter."
The film 1nakers are foJJOW.
ing the trend, as always. But
Dally Variety pointed out the
dangers of pulling too much
faitl1 in the salabllity of filmed
best sellers. Among t h e
failu res: "The Arrangement."
"The Love i\l a chine , • '
''Portnoy's Com pta int,''
"Topaz," "The Shoes of the
Fisherman ," "The Secret of
Santa Vittoria,'' "The
Salzburg Connection," "1be
~tan," and "The Ad ventures.''
Night Owl TV
'Tomorrow' Due Tliis Fall
By JAY SllARBt.m'
NEW YORK( AP) -The
NBC Television n e t w o r k ,
which gave us the "Today"
show in 1952 and "Tonight'' in
1954, plans to complete the se.
quence this fall with "Tomor-
row ," a late·hour interview
show.
The host of the one-hour
program will be Tom Snyder.
a Milwaukee, native. lle·s
been the 6 p.rr.. news an·
chorman since 1970 at KNBC-
TV's Los Angeles.
''Tomorrow" is aimed at
earlier risers or night owl!i!,
depending on one 's point of
view. It'll start at 1 a.m . Tues·
day through Friday right after
the Monday-through Thursday
"Tonight'' shows.
IF YOU ARE still with us
after that explanation, leave
us preu on.
"Tomorrow" is described by
NBC as a "sophisticated talk
show" that will tack.le con·
1rovcrsial. edult s u b j e c l s .
Snyder will discuss these sub-
jects with one or more experts
License Okay
WASHINGTON (AP) -'l'hc
F ~ d er a I Cornmun\c3tions
Commission has announced
• approval of the assignment ()f
the license or UHF station
WF[J)..TV, C h an 11 c I 32,
Chicago, from Field Com·
munlcatlons Corp. to Kai ser
Broadcasting Co. Tnvolved in
the approval wns staUon
KBSC-TV In Corona, Calif.
and various personalities.
Some of the shows will cove r
the lighter side of life, ac·
cording lo NBC. which says
"Tomorrow'' will be taped
withoul an audience at the
network's studios in Burbank.
The idea for the show was
developed by i\1ort Werner,
NBC's senior vice president
for program planning and one
of the developers of the suc-
cessful ' ' Tod a 'Y ' ' and
"Tonight" shoY:s.
LAST SEPTEMBER.
\\lemer said he hoped the new
shoy,· would be on the ai r by
this spr ing. It now probably
won't start until October, after
the "premiere week" of the
1973·74 TV season, N n C
sources say.
The delay was p:irtJy at·
lribuled to negotiatons ror
r;:itcs on the telephone lin es
over which the show y,·ould be
fed to NBC affilia tes across
th e country.
When it docs appear. it'll
mark the first time a network
has reg!Rrly scheduled bro1d·
casting past one a.m. on
weekdays. al though NBC bas
been !!tarting Its "Midnight
Special" pop music show at l
a.m. every Saturday since
F'eb. 3 this year.
"Tomorrow" will end only
fi ve hours before the "Tod11y"
.ihow begirus and could lead to
even more n c I w o r k pro-
gramming in the predawn
hours on weekdays.
As Werner put it, "who
knows what's goi ng to happen
from 2 lo 3 a.m. if we're suc-
cessful lrom 1 to 2?"
TV ffiGIIllGHTS
ABC Q 8:30 -"Five Desperate Women." Five ~omen who were college classmates meet on an
island for a reun ion and find them selves at the
mercy o_f an unknown murdep-er. Anajette Comer.
Stepbarue Powers, Juli~ Sommar., Denise Nlchol u Joan Hac:hett. '
NBC Q 10:00 ~-NBC Reports. The role human
beings play in. med.1ca~ experimentation, a subject ot controversy tn Amenca, is examined.
KHJ 0 10:00 -"A Hard Day's Night " The
Beatles in their first movie, from 1964 a seiui-<toc·
umentary which follo ws them on the Concert to ur.
TV DAILY LOG
Tuesday
Evening
MAY29
SPl'ClM. NOTICE
fB Htnuus Conije
fll) Tirnlq Polntl
(G) D [dlftdo di Enfnnte
ml Cintra IMfl ~1111rk:ln1
lf1 Movie: "four's A Crowd" (com•
'38--Errol flyn 11, Ros1llnd Runell.
8:30 f) Cl) HIWlll Flwt.O (ft) The tflef
LID 0 "'~'"'" f, .lo ,\ , .... _ ' . . .
•' •)\" .. ,-......
... WIW
"SUTHER"
Allo INl ... _
......... kli
''FUZZ''
End1 Tonight
"CLOCKWORK
ORANGE" ...
"DEALING''
Startt Wednnday
"CABARET" (PG) ...
"LADY SINGS
THE BLUES" (RI
••Ill Ill Coler All 12tn1 networks will CO'l'lr tlle Ioctl
electiOlll, &0 you can expert so111• pre-
emption and/or dll'J ol lfll 1ntlr1
1.-en/ng's sc hedul•i.
ot • 11nceres:s v101in thre•t•ns u liF==~~=~:~~~~ 11plode into an intem1tlon11 \ncJ,
dent.
D (})@ m ABC Tuesday MIWll:
(C) (90) "Fht Dnpentt Wo111111•
(A) (dr1) '72 -AnJ111ette Comer,
Steflnl• Powers, JLHie Somrnars,
Dtnise Nlchol1s, Join H1c1Lett flvt
women who were coll11e cl1ssmll:e!
mnt on 1n istlnd for 1 reunion
and find themse lves 11 the merCJ
of .tn unknown munl111r.
li:OO
Cit ELECTION NEWS
* KNBC NEWSERVICE
1:00 o a o !II m mi m ,.., rn ®J • ... 0 8tn1n11
(6) Gtt Smart
0 W1nlld DHd or Alln m The Alntstenes ID Star Tnt EE Qulnm1 r Otvldall fI1l Hod1tpodi1 lodp m ThrH Stoo11s
m Merv Griffin show
@D IUI Utrell' Joilrtial
EI;)NMll
t:OOQIDnpd
Ei.)NIM
6:30 ril 1to110'1 ff•ton
fD lehlnd the U11n "Bmadcsst1n1
and !tie flnt Amendment" Exce rpt!
from tile conf1rtnct held this sprint
at Santa Barbara's Cent!f tor tilt
Study of Democratic Institutions. ill Nochts Tapatias
G Mo•it: (t) (90) "'Who's letn
Slt•pln1 In My lledl"' (oom) '63-
Elizabetti MonlJOmery, De1n Mart in.
H1ndl0me dOCIDf hero of 1 1V se·
riu, const1ntly pu11ued by women,
1oes lo 1 psychi1trist for h~Jp.
(j) CIS News Walter Cronkite
Q fflYI C11n WIO Trani ®I Mtrv Grtffln Show m AndJ Grtffltll ED l'T1d H11ullo11 m Jo.tnnt Cil'Mlt C!I!l MH1l1
fiD Th Fra~• hoplt m llttl• 1tuub
!:3011 KNXT Eltdlon eowerat1 Jen'}
bunphy .and Joseph .Senti report. Cil CBS Tueld1r Movie: (C) (90)
''Tour MOMJ or Tour Wile" {com)
'6l-Don1ld Sind1n, Pem Cum·
min$.
BNns m 1111 Cosbr fl!! Biid. Jounfll
@I) M11ellacha ltllla111
CI:) Festini MflklM
''°"o m am• ... 10:00 0 NICI Silllffl (R) Dr. Loeb
and Del Din Palmer st11rch du-
pe ratelr for 1 12-rear'1!d 1irt. omm• ...
e Bowlin1 for Dolt1rs
@ Trutlt or Conuquenca
(jJ Safari to Advtllurl
0 Wlllt'1 MJ Unt! m I Lon Lucy
18 I Drum of Jt111nlt £'E Slmplt1111ntt Maria
fDThtfrt~ CMf al MLUllCI I
c;J ""'"" - -
(!) Uars' Club
Q) Speed Racer
0 CV (I} m M11cus Welbr "Doll
1nd Dtnlse" (R) The future of a
youn1 pianist-composer and his wilt
is in doubt whtn she b stricken
with multiple sc!erosli.
0 Movi1: (2hr) "A Hard Dlf•
Nl1llt" (llW5) '64-The Bell:les.
@t.•-
·7;30 fJ XNXT DKtlon CMnp Jel'f)'
Dunphy, Josaph Senti report
m Eml~ment: TodlJ and T11MJ•
"" How to protect, preserve i nd
enjoy the natural wilderness as prac-
ticed in Color•do.
(!) Kogan's H•ron 10:30 Q KHBC Elttt!On Covtta11 a SPECIAL ELECTION e ,,. '""
-*COVERAGE ID Mdl••'• Nny B KNBC Election Covtt111 @)Intl: Otlt Day at a Till!e (R) g e)Revldl Mmkll s..!;il(~r!:~:~;:;o~!t: 6Ii) N11n/Sports
um, Shirley Matla int.! 11:00.fJ 0 ail m Ef) News
(!)To Tell tfN Tnrtfl \ (]) (() Gj News
(jJ This 11 Your Litt O he Slip leJ'Ollll
0 Miiiion $ Mcwlt: (2flrl "Mt, CIJ MarsMI Dllloll
MOMS'" (ldw) '6&-«obtrt Mitchum, m Truth If Coftstquencts
C1rroll Battr. CD Mme: "'Th ToQ'lll 'uns" (wa)
~ Honprood Squsm '57-RUSl Tamblyn, Gloria l•lbot.
mTNtGlrl m Drean•t 11~0 o ~ m Jobi"' c.no.. Brn to.sbJ
ED Cltyw1td1ers hosts. m stand Up and Chew IJ Tiii Prbofttr ml ComedJ 0 fltcllo~ C:O.tftfl
(D tt Is Wrttten Cl) CIS Late MGWie: (C) "'Wiiie.ii ED Addl111s famllf •IJ to ltit Front? .lerTJ Lewis sl•~ m To T1U tilt TnrU&
1:00 fJ (I) l.lauclt (R) A ft1nd·r1hin1 IZ:OO Q JohnllJ C.l10ll Bill Cos.hf hosts.
party for t black mlll!ant be«1mes D Jld. Paar Tonlte
1 crisis when Maude's bl1ck aues!J 0 Moorie: "flit Hippy Thlnn-
c1nce1 ouf at Ille last mlnu!e. (com) '62-Rex Harrison Rita H• • 0 U3 NBC TllHdtJ Movl1: (C) worth. ' y
(21tr) .. A Time f1tr I.mi" '71-two m Alfl'ld Hltdtacll F'l'hfnb s1p•r1te love itorlu. "No Promlln
No Pledps" 31111 Joh n D1~ldson, IZ:JO fJ CIS Late MIVlt: "Wl'ifdt WIJ
Jaet Cassidy ind Lauren Hutton: ti the Fl'lllt? Jen} Lewis stars.
"tlo Sln1 tfl• Son p. Mnt" stirs D Nm
Cluistopher Mitchum i nd Bonnie m llowlt: (C) "Ray1l Wtddin('
Btdell1. (mus) '51 -Fred Amin. .Mne
0 (I) ClJ t'l) Tetnptratum Rbl111 Pow!ll, Peter Lawford.
"Litht, Action, camera (R) Dr. No-Ii) Pl'ttk:od JunctiM
t1nd becomu 1 N 1l1r when hi
unupecledly 1ppurs In 1 docu· 1:00 (]) 0 CJJ ""'
ment1ry on llOSpitals. ®l ft TU • TMef
®.l Movie: (C) (21Lr) "Stnn11 ltd· z.-oo ID Al~Nlpt Sher. .,., flland, •
felton" (com) '65--aodi: Hudwn, Hf11e 911911•1 Afri~ Wll"
Cini Lollobrl1id1. m Alff'ld Hitthted '1unU
ID""1"""
Wednesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
!:'511 Morie: (C) "PDhl Fro11 H•ll"
(wes) '61-Audie MurphJ.
nett. "Solihry Child" (susci) ·s1-
B1rb1r• She!le1, Phillip ffl•nd.
ti» Q (C) ''TN r1r Out Wed" (1d\I)
· '67-Ann She1ldan, Cary Vinson.
1:00 m (C) "1..ut of tbl Colllenthu"
(wes) '53--lloyd Brid1as.
l:JOG"lndiSUMf' (com) '58-CllJ
Glint, lntnd Berrman.
l :tXI (I) "Sm• o.rt. 111 Mlf Col'ICI.
(dr1) '64-Burt lll'ICasttr._
IO:U> CJ) (C) "A MeJeritJ of OIN" Conci.
(com) '62 -All<: GulnntSI, Rou·
llnd Ru,,ell, O "farp" (wn) '52-Wlmam· El·
Nott, PPl)'Hls eo.tei. u-fJ "lopper libs I '""' (com)
'39--Roland Youn&, Conitance Ben·
®l (C) ....... '" ...... """' (dta) '65--Nlthonr Quinn.
3:30 a (C) .... Khlllad" (dra) '54 -
Tbnr Curtb, Frank LM)or.
4:00 II IC> "Mllttr Coty" (drt) '57-
Tony CUrtlt, M1rth1 ttt-.
4:30 {)) s. .... 10.W liltiu:
KOCE, CllANN~L SO
Orange County's UllF television station. XOCE-TV, has
sche;iuled the following special programs today. Detailed
listings of Channel 50's programs are canied in the Daily
•Pilot's TV Week each Sunday.
1
Ch•rlton
'1omlcld1 detec:tlye In th•
y••r 2022 In Metro-Goldwyn-
M1yer'1 •u•penaeful "Soylent
Green''.
Co-stars tctw. G. RoblMOt1
Lefth Tcr,for Youft!J
Josepll Cotton
People DUSI II .••
lnlhc~r2022.
Plvs:
''THIY ONLY II.ILL
THEii MASTllS"
MAT. WID. -1 P.M.
Naw
SHOWING I
AT
AlL THlff
CINEMAS
Bibi ~et for Broadway
'" NEW Yom( (AP) -Bibi a B«lin apart-.t during
~ ,.,. GI -·· lut day GI Hiiier's l'\lle
leodlttg --·· bu boon !be llrst day GI the Russian •tcn<'d to mak lw Btoldwoy &mil''• occupation. debln lb Etid! )lorill 11e-·--'-----'-----
marque's play "Full ctrde,"
which Peter Stone hn adapt· ,l::;:[ltl!i.:::~~;:=
ed
Mls3 -bu s<•mod in such Ingmar Bergman
films as "The Seventh Seal,"
"Wild Strawberries," "Smll~
of a. Summer Night," "Per-I
soni.'' and "Passion of Anna."
"Full Circle" takes place in
IUlllNG THAT UAYU YOU
PllLING M>ODI
"SEADREAMS"
l'tu c.,,_.
,..,..._ .... 7:10 • t:JO
~_;;,I Jbuth Coast Repertory
' .. z•sn. v11WT Ml!W MIJllCAl.
"IN THE MIDST OF LIFE"
A.udlet1ce Acclaimed! Fri. thnii Sunday
"THE CLOWNS"
A Slapstick SympllOfty of Mime, Music
and Loughtor Wednesday & Thuroday
1827 NEWPORT ILYD., at H-
lntormall9n/l1......,1tlet11 '46-11163 I P.M. curt1111
-
"Soylent Green" ...
"Skyjacked" I PG I
"Clau of '44" <PGI ...
"Last Summer" (PG J
"The Getaway" I PG I ....
"lady Sings The Blues" !RI
Tiie INtt "JIVl•r Pklure
of Our Tlmn
"Billy Jack" CPGI
U.A. CITY AHD SOUTH COAST CIHEM~S-TU&SOAY Sk
ILAOISS AND Sl!NIO~ (ITllaNll-OPEN 'Tll 2:0CI P.M.
• W. M1lltl1u/C. ·~""" "P ETE 'n' TILLIE"
Cllnl E11twood "JOE KIDD"
8Gttl In Catorl (PG!
"IO'l'l.I Nr 01&.t!N'" CPOI • "THIY OMl Y ll!l l. Tttl lfl
MASTl lll" ~l>Ol
1:45 , ....
Call T!tecttw for Salt. Sched1le
DEL
NATIONAi
,-;A'fd '
OW PUYIMG
U51RYIO SEATS
On S~1 Doi1J 11 'iii !
MAR~OH BRANDO .ltL
'J>Bl1s ~ "° ... "'°"". \A ) • "°""11t11 Unur4 .lif1111,
IUES.. THIU TllUIS. I P.M.
FRIDAY 1 I !:45 \IT. I MOI. 2-1 I !:IS
~tl!Dll 2-l I I
ALL SIATS ... 00
..... 11 .-.1 . ..,._,_!2."'l
''THI CWS
Of 44" ,.G.
"YOUNG GUOUATIS"
Wt<Oll'S 6:•5
SAT.· Wtil & MON 12;45
"CHiii LIADllS"
'SlOUCllOlf OF IN GA"
IOlN flAlUll~
IAT10 IX)
WEDNESDAY NIGHT*
M 1~1 W1d111td1y night your night lo 111 0111. At 011 Taco,
Wedn11d1y night 11 T1co Nioht, You 911 1i.: t11ty Del T1co1
for just $ 1.751 Thl1 Wedn11d1y, Grlv1 thn1 for • family 1it1
m1.iJ you wo11't fOl'Jlf, At pric11 yo~'fl fi~ h1r4 .+P. beat.
HUNTINGTON BEACH Worner •I , Sprl~lo
NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA '
Bristol (P1llsades) at
C1mpu1
COSTA MESA
41h St. and
Newport Fwy.
Baker At F1lrvlew
DAILY •IUJT Jl
.W. OISNIT tllOW
WaRLO'J GlllATilT
ATHLmft}
.t.. ~ WHIT( WILDllNISS
........... , ...... , .....
Ct.1-1n Avl .
~51-fOlt
lty•11 O'NMl "THI! THll!~
WHO CAMI! TO OINN.11"
0..rt• C. SHH "ttAo•li
••Ill 111 Color lf>GI
Mini• lmlt~ ''TRAVELS
•
WITH MY AUNT"
J1dl l •mmon ".t.~IUL FOCl.S"
hit! 111 COior! .. PG> ,• TUSTIN
Red Hill Noor Sent.• Ana Fwy.
~~~ ......
J'oa<~ ... ~_,.....,,_
'Si'WE TI-IE n:m
........... .W'l(GlJ'ORD ... -.....~~ ""'\'HIS 'lffl lltA NIOWIHI
NIOOCI CHMUT • lOOSt ""'"
\
-... AHtmJIS · -PWMMER ............ 1.,,......,-lftlAIO n.ume
-~' ra-1w--1.sz:.-,
llOMll.T tMU lllOllT • 7 & II PA "'""'°"' . .....,,, . llOUDA'P. 147·1•
(G) -Nl::\\o'POR1' ,_.,
KO•T
a•AVJTrUJ.
xv•tCAL ,_.
1)
llil~IX&l\t NOO··
91 --·• ENnR ()NCI AGAIN A wttOll! NlW WOMJI Of
MAGHWICOO ltUSIC4l E#Tf"'....,,,
• """"" "
I
1 -
I
. '
·'· .:= • I;
DAil. Y l'ILDT r...,, liq 29, im 1973 DAILY PILDT
' • .. .. ..................... d .,,,. The Bl.,eit Market~ on the· aranp· Coast • .
DAILY ·Pl CLASSlt:;IED ADS
l!ol>'1! ..... "' .. • • • ds • "'
• .. "
., -, •. , ........ ·•~t90
lloil:ft .. MorN .. ;, , •• tOG -9M
...... ¥1 ......... ,,. .. ,,.
.. $I * 0 0 * 0 < * 0 ·.m.,.,
... ...,~ ..••. ,mq.,..
... -0..-•.. ·"°-lot
............. : ,JI)) • .,. ' • • ; l • •
~na11ciall • • • • • • • • • 100,. 1"
..,._tor 5* ••••.• JOO -124'
'Lw & ,...... • • • • • •• S50 -,, ..
·~· ••• ••• •• I00 -149
You Can Sell It, rllld .. lt_,
Trade It With a Want. Ad
'
(&42~5678] One Cal I Service Fa~· .Credit ,Approval
...... ....i ........... "" -"" s.-....i .......... 600• 699.,
~ •.••••• 9'S ·M9 ~ __ ..
OUR 24TH YEAR
Offering S.rvlc.e
Only Exporlonco
Can Provid•
General w.-.... ,., ... ,., .. ,
Gener1I
INCOME
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA. 3 11\ckory Ranch Style Homes
w1lh Hardwocxl Fkaon and
Shake Roof.I! 4 Ga.ragea.
Pride of OINnenhip -New
Pain! irulide and out. Ideal
for O'A'ner-OCCUpant. Build a
Tax Deduc.tible E qu i ty .
Privale l'inanc.lng. $56,500.
CaU anytime, 646--0:555.
HARBOR VIEW HOMES EASTSIDE
Nearg new 4 bdrm. & family rm. home -COST A MESA
2 ba h 3 I t · · t 3 Bedroom Home & 38x10 s -, car garage -x n view -JUS RUMPUS ROOM comple;te right for growing family. $89,500 The Best 3 Bdrm lovely Setting with SIDne BBQ ,.
LAGUNA BEACH -VIEW I $31,950. Boat & camper $30,500. Secluded rear ~:.~'!r":.;,.~ ':%
You'Jl enjoy the "white water" view _ also access. V e r y lovely living room. 3 bed-forest of shiubs ruJd otjl~e
the Catalina sunsets; features incl. 3 bdrm ., landscaping, park-like. rooms , 2 baths. Plast-~·-t:~best~~-1n!°r:
21h baths & a dNam kitchen. The children's 2 b a t b s . Forced·air ered walls. Formal din-Homeover another. garage?
I wing is ideal for tee1.1agers. $89,SOG heating. Dining room. ing room. Modern kitch-$32,950. Owner ""lll help finance. Call anyt Im e, DUPLEX -OCEAN SIDE OF HWY. built-ins & dishwasher. en built-ins. Fireplace. &16--0555.
Newly decorated & carpeted duplex; 2 bdrms. Fireplace. Large stor-Two patios. New car-12 APARTMENTS
each unit; a garage for each unit. Price just age area. 540-1720. petmg. 54()..1720. Many altematives to flnan-
$ clng and ownership. reduced ,3,000 -now 69,500 ---------1 e May Trade· Down for
I
In Mesa Vedre For the Executive
$42,950. For the large $45,750. Near the Santa
. family. 4 bedrooms, 3 Ana Country Club. 3
General Gener1I baths. Huge covered pa-s p a c i o u s bedroom
l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;jjjiiiiiiiimmm;;jjj;;jjj~tjo. Victory garden & suites. 3 baths. Formal
1, fruit trees. Lots of room dining room. Family
for a pool. Boat & cami>-r m fir 1 T"l
A U/llllVUI: tKMI:
er access. Family room, 00 • ep ~ce. l e
fireplace. Formal diri· roof. On a qwet cul de
ing room. Deluxe kitcb-sac street. Shows like a
en. 54().1720. model home. 54().1720.
2955 HARBOR BLVD;
COSTA MESA 540-1720
General General ·
YOUR NEW HOME?
Smaller Units.
• !\lay Trade tor Land
suitable for 3 to 5 uni!S.
e P.1ay Carry 2nd Trust
Doed.
All Unils Furni11hed. Good
Rent Schedule. Heated and
Filtered Pool. $172,800. Call
anytin~. 646-0555.
NEW INVESTORS
Lovely near-new 3 bedroom
2 bath townhowie on
greenbelt, beaut. upgraded
home. in immaculate con·
dilion. Fireplace and built
in kitchen. Re c r ca l i on
• room, pool nnd children
piny area. Try ld';~ dn. will
carry itsf'lf. For more info.
Please call 673-8550 Priced
a l only $27,500.
OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN 70 BE NICE'
__ ..
~U,-$111/d
~ •assoaiits
REALTORS
2828 EAST co.sT HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR.CALIF.
644-7270 . ' ••••••••• e FOREVER VIEW
Watch the boats by tlay and harbor lights
by night from your living room. The ULT!· MA:rn in FEE' ownershlp, luxury on-the-
wat\!~ living. 2 Bedrooms,. 2 ba~ condo in
prestigious CHANNEL REEF. Pool, securi-
ty guard, boat slip available, CALL FOR
appointment ..................... $95,000.
••••••••• e INCOMPARAllLI!'
1n this two story, custom built, \Vith many
deluxe extra features. Open beam ceilings,
fireplace, 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, GOURMET
KITCHEN, built-in sewing center and study.
Two decks plus 2 landscaped terraces. It's
a real value at . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $79,500 .
••••••••• e DELUXE CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX
Beautiful ... tree-lined street in Old Corona
de! Mar. BOTH DELUXE UNITS 'HA VE 3
bedrooms, den, fireplace, 2 baths, builtin
kitchen, PATIOS, 2 blocks fl> shopping and
schools. Choice location ........... $98,500
• ••••••••
•.FOR THE YOUNG •FAMILY
•.. within walking distance to schools and
shopping? 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace.
Has asswnable VA loan -All for only
................................ $29,950.
••••••••• e OCEANFRONT DUPLEX
Swim on your own private beach, a step Crom
your front door. Two large bedrooms and 2
enjoyable fireplaces in each unit. A deluxe
property like this only comes along once-
in-a-lifetime. Call now for appointment.
FRESH AS A DAISY ON THE OUTSIDE-
Mellow as Granddad's pipe on the inside!
This Corona del Mar duplex has open beam
ceilings, a cute fireplace, walls of warm pan-
eling and new carpets, paint and plwnbing.
It's a winner! 2 bedrooms, 2 baths plus a
darling one bedroom studio unit.
UN19UI HOMIS OF COIONA DEL MAI. 6715-4000
A lh"at ef M•fortti MCIM11
UN:lVUI: tiUMl:S
If you are looking in the areas and price
ranges shown below -perhaps one of the
following fine properties will become your
new home. Call us today! 675-7225
Spyglass -6 bedroom
-marvelous view -$135,000
Harbor View Ridge - 5 bedroom
'~ e BUl~·OE~ :;E~N~I·~~~ ~-~." $l
4
0,000.
\ ~iiiiiiiii~~~~~ ROOM TO BUILD = UNIT on this
. REALTORS · .,.
-----------
01nerel Gener el
"OWNER CLIMBING WALLS"
... has bought another house; this is your
chance -owner wants offer on this elegant,
lge. bay view home; 5 BR., 4 ba. Complete
entertainment center around lge. 'hld. &
filt'd. pool; locked wrought iron gates. NOW
$159,000. Land available.
AVAILABLE
Carmel model, Harbor View Homes. $72,000.
CORBIN· MARTIN
-fee land -$110,000
Harbor Vie\v flames -3. bedroom
-superb location -$ 69,900
Harbor View Hills -4 bedroom
-sensational pool and view -$1291000
Harbor View Hills -4 bedroom
-beautiful yard and view -$ 89,500
Irvine 'ferrace -3 bedroom
-tremendous vie\v -$155,000
cameo Shores -4 bedroom
· -white water and canyon -$290,000
vie\\'S
Bay Front -3 bedroom
-divinely decorated - $ 89,000
plus boat slip
Bayshores - 2 bedroom
-cozy cottage -$ 56,500
Bluffs -4 bedroom
-Perfect family home -$ 55,950
Call 675-7225
COTTAGE large i;<Jrner Jot. 2-be · hdWO!,·carptt.s,
AND INCOME drapes; fenc&! yaril in Newport Heights.
Starter, retirement ............. , ................ , . $33,500.
& investment home
On tree shaded street • • • • • • • • •
45X100 Foot Lot
\Vith R-2 zoning
Only $20,950
HARBOR
COMP'ANY
REALTORS
SINCE 1944
673-4400 . ..-.... -.-...
SEPARATE
WORKSHOP?
;t~p, ,....,
'
-"'"' ---"'
VIEW Of HARBOR UGHTS •
"HARiDR VfEW HILLS" • I
J,ocatea high on the bill, olfei:lng lull enjoy-
ment of the view of Newport Bay & Pacific
Ocean. Lusk bit. 3 bdrm., family rm., dining
rm., with a htd. & filt'd. pool & jacuzzi; on a
profess. lndscpd. corner lot. This is a one of
up in the world. "Consider as an investment
DOl;L HOUSE -$32,900
"FOR 'TH.E YOUNG AT HEART"
City .of Irvin~. Air-cond. 3 bdrm., 2 hath
towruiouse. Ideal for th~ srqal! f8lpily comlof
. up m the world. "Consider'~ an inYestmen
shel\er." Co\hpletely rurn,(shed at $32',DOO.'
· DOVER SHORES
"EXECUTIVE ESTATE"
Elegant masterpiece of tustom design for
indoor-outdoor entertaining at poolside, with
blt-in service center or inside in spacious ,
living area. Plenty of room for the family,
too, with 5 bdrms. & 4 baths & a view of the
bay. Reasonably priced at $159,000. Terms
avail.
GOLF COURSE VIEW
NEW LISTING
Lge. exec. home with 5 baths, game room,
family room, sauna bath, dining rm . & lge.
country kitchen w/all modem conveniences.
5800 SQUARE FEET. Offered at $139,000.
ESCONDIDO INVESTMENT
2.1 Acres ol gentle rolling R-1, "approx. 240'
X 380'," to build your own country estate.
Owner will finance, consider subordination.
Only $24,950. Call today for the details!
ANY OF THE FOLLOWING CAN SERVE
YOUR REAL ESTATE REQUIREMENTS:
Velma Jordan Bud 'Corbin
Michelle Davy Paul Martin
Carol Arthor Mary Finch
Jean Mitchell Ramona Host
Edrea Metesh Audrey Richardson
Joe DeKeyser Worth Probst
Edith Bray Georgine V•ught
CORBIN· MARTIN
REALTORS Call Anytime 644-766
General General
oflnda .!J~'6
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Lindi Isle W1terfront
Custom 4 bdrm., 41h bath hol'fle on ,lagoon.
Fully equipped island kitchen, waterfront
family room, bijliard room . . . . . . $245,000
For Complete lnform11tlon
On All Homes & Lots, Pleau C111l:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 6754161
,
I
I
l
'
REALTORS c.rr Anytime H'ERE-lT-lS! 3 Bedroom,
hard11.·ood flOOi'S, \\-'Orkshop
sloragc bu.titling on R-2 lot.
All fu111iturc and 18'
portal.lie pool inc luded. Full
price $30, 750. East side Costa
Mosa
~
... in this 18'x36' heated POOL. Great EAsT-
SIDE location! Close to \Vestcliff shopping.
3 Bedroom, convertible den, 2 baths, fire-
place. plus ROOM TO ADD ON. 10% down -
owner will carry 10% -2nd T.D. $39,500.
Call for appointment.
General General ~===;;;;;;;;;:;~==!: CUSTOMIZED DUPLEX General General
540.1151 Opon EvH.
~ww~1 ~~==;;:;;;;;;==;;:;;;;;;=1 ~~'-"'»> HERITAGE OPEN HOUSES
Very best duplex concept; 2 3-bdrm., 3 baths,
frplC". plus family rm. Each reflects privacy
& advantages of a priv. home:-Heavy shake
roof, custom features. Ready for occupancy
in August. Call to see.
LARGE BAYSHORE HOME
Spacious family l1ome near private beach.
Lars:e mstr. suite upstairs. 2 Bdnns. &
famdy room down. }ligb beam ceilings.
$72,500. Mary Harvey.
NEW LISTING LIDO BAYFRONT
Lovely & immac. 5 BR., 3 ba . home on Nord.
Paneling. Parquet floors. Lots of charm plus
room for large boat. $279,000.
Charlyne Whyte.
EXCLUSIVE DOVER SHORES
One of the most delightful homes. 4 Bed-
rooms -family room -living room with
beamed ceiling. All this & a pool & view.
$139,500. Eileen fludson.
NIGUEL SHORES -PRIVATE
Charming. ilnma culate 3 BR., den, near
beach, tennis. Move-in cond . Completely
furnished. Priced to sell now! $74,900.
Bob Yorke.
IT STEALS THE SHOW
Enjoy bayfront view from this two-story 6
BR.. 4 bath nautically oriented home with
pier & slip. $37~.000 -Comp. remod.
Gary Knox .
DOVER SHORES OPPORTUNITY
Make offer! Owners have purchased smaller
home. 4 BR., 3'2 baths, formal dining room
& family room w/flreplace. Foo land. Kath·
ryn Raulston.
~·
Coldwell, Banker IJJ.0700
644-2430 ~
550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B.
~ '
OUR 24th YEAR
Offering service
only experience
c1n provide
• • REALTORS
•••••••••• SEE IS
BELIEVING
• • 3BR, CONVERTED DEN & POOL -337
Magnolia, Costa Mesa. $39,500. Open Sun.
2-6.
&c this charn\ing 3 bL>droon1 • • • • • • • • 8
ct Orange Coast
REAL ESTATE 64t 1141
2600 E. Coast Hwy., Coron• del Mar
DUPLEX -OCEAN SIDE OF HWY. I hon1c . nil rreslily painted ln· AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES side. Back yard like a REALT General General rorl·st, "'·i:h loll\ of trees -____ O_R_S __ _;_...;·:._·_:.·-.:.· _;_' _;_' _644--'-7-'2'-70:._ 1 _....;. ______ _c:;,:;.:.:c::._ _____ l
Ne\\•ly deco rated & carpeted duplex ... 2
BR. ea. unit -\\'ith garage for each unit.
Convenient to shops & trans. $69,500
4 UNITS SO. OF HWY.!
T\vo 2-bclrm . homes plus two 1-bdrm. writs
over two 2-car ~araJ?es; located on two R·2
lots (to add to the t,,·os-the property over-
looks lrvine Terrace #2). $126,500
Bay .and 13.uwtz, ?adt~,. );u_·,.
1401 l COAS I HWY • CORONA DEL MAR · DlS JOOO
Gener ii General
** ** ** * TAYLOR CO. *
LINDA ISLE-$195,00D
Exclusive island ol boating offers the uW-
mate in prestige living. Private tennis, beach
and security entl'ance. Architect design in
this lovely 4 bdrm home with library, formal
dining rm, play rm & 5'h baths. Beautifully
decorated. Pier/slip. Plus more.
''Our 21th Year''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Road
''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club''
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
supc1· shurp. Top schools, General General
and excellent neighborhood. I ~~~mmiiiiiimmiiiiiliii;ii;i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I Only $.14,500. 5 46-2313 .1 1
You'll buy this if you bother
to S.'!C it.
OPEN TIL IJ • "'S FUN TO 8E NICEI
;IJJ li111ttl
CAM1'ERS-
MESA VERDE
A boat gate .t. room to store
your can1per or trailer off
the street. Mlnh11u111 ynn.J
maintenance .• , & who
needs a yard to kttp up If
you have a recreational
vehicle! 'Just 2 years new.
Three bedroon1s, atrium,
family room with expo6ed
beamed ceilings, mMSlve
fireplace & deluxe bullt-1.n
kltcht'n.A real goodie ...
$38,950.
C. F. Colesworthy
Realtors 640-002b * LOOK! * $42,SOOe
ENGLISH TUDOR. Unique fovr bedroom in
Newport's Baycrest area: compllmentin·g
landscape, excellent carpets, formal dining
and nice size family room. Thts home gives
an impressive welcome and is an excellent
value at $74,900. ' ·
UNl9UI HOMU OF NIWPORT llACH, Mf.1500
A Htthtt •f Joel .. H...._u
UN l()U I: li()Ml:S
REALTORS
------------General Gener•I ~·.;.;;.,~~~-...._~1=c:::;;:;;..:;~--~-~-I
EXCITING VIEW OF HARBOR HIGHLANDS
S BEDROOMS-POOL -FANTASTIC-Walldre d~tance to Marl"""
Large 3 St$'m. 2 bath hOme School and Westcllff "1op-
wtlh famJJy/dfnlng, ~ame plfli. New paint in and out,
room, 3 mwlve fireplaces new floor coverings ln lhll
and A clecorator'11 delight. bulll-in ~lactric kitchen and
Just listed • For appoint· <lining areFl. Three baths ment' CALL 54 5. 8 4 2 4 . plus !!Cparate !lerviCf' porch.
SouthCo Realtors. f>rlCt< redlk..·td 10 $57,500.
BAY
You won't PfU11 thl1 tme by,
over ml 11Q tt. of dclux liv·
lni:. Owner I• mollvated to
eell th!• level(, 3 bdr., S be.th hom(l "'Ith a111a.sllc view.
Priced 11t $tm.ooo. 0i11 Red
Ctu1>Clt, Rcnllc1-s for an a1~
polnlment for Action Call 642-5678 s.11 '"" o1d stu!L Buy u;; c. F. Colesworthy • • • new stun.. Realtors 640-0020
Need a·"P11d"? Place an adl
Call 642-oo'iS.
t
I
MACNAB
IRVINE
~-~-~~-"'--~~~~~
BIG CANYON CONDOMINIUM
New, spacious 3BR, 21'.i bath condo. Choice·
location. Immediate occupancy. $115,0I»,
Billie Mattson fl44.ll200. (514)
SPECTACULAR HARBOR ISLAND
Beautiful 3 yr. old custom home. 6000 sq.
ft. of the ultimate in bayfront living. 5
JlRs., formal DR. Elegantly paneled ·LR.
Extra parking. Pier & fioat. $465,000.
Barbara Alllle 642-8235.
LOCATION MAKES TliE PRICE ,
I
I
twice as niCe -for this quaint "cottage
like" 4 BR w/beamed ceilinged LR. Attnc-
tive large patio. 3 blocks to bay & beach.
·$55,000. Amy Gatson 842-8235. (SH) I
[lrvJ~a 1-.,l.-~O. ·7 J i IOI----I • 1144 ..-."""""' 144·-.J I
....,......_oh,CelttomleH .. S I
I '-::!!!!
for Action •· ••
• • .
O,lll.Y PILOT 1973 DAIL y "LOT 2S I ---~I --l~ L -·-l~I .....,,... ~ I -·-~ -·---~ ---I~ I ---: I~ I --~ I~
r-1 G-al
"'""" ~-S.itl.
~lilusaams
REALTORS ~HIGHWAY ' -.CAUF.
I 644•7270
e BUILDER'$ DELIGHT I
Ready and wall!ng for sero.id unit on ·this
large comer lo!. Z..bedroom hoose, carpets,<
drapea, fenced yard, in Newport Heights. . -. ...500 ........................ ······~· .. ······ ........,, ' . • CORONA DE~ MAR DU p'IJ'X
BeauUful •.. tree-lined street'!n Old Corona
del Mar. BOTH DELUXE uNJTS HAVE 3
bedrooms, den, fireplace, 2 baths, builtln
l\itcben, PATIOS, 2 blocks to shopping and
~ools. Choice location . , .......... $98,500.
START SMART
FQR-A-YOUNG-FAMILY ... wilhin walk-
ing distance to schools and shopping? 4 Bed-
rooms, 2 baths, fireplace. Has assumable
VA loan-AU for only $29,950.
AUSTIN.SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES
REALTORS 644-7270
ral
UR BEDROOMS
·$28,750
General
Have 2 Homes
Must Sell
! !
trr· ·•• :~~ L , 1•1 . , ,
o:·-.... ) I ~ .
4.1.NKllJE t1CMI:
'DO YOU WANT A HAPPENING· ROOM or
six bedrooms? Either way this Harbor View
Hills Burlingame model is worth viewing!
A:nd it's perfect for the executive's family.
Near ·the park, on a cul-de-sac, grbt for en-
tertaining, colorful decor, delighttuJ grounds
and a flexible 2·story floor plan that has
room for children, hobbies,' live'in lielp and
a swllruJiW pool Presented at '104:950.
UNl9UI HOMD Of COIONA DIL MAI, 6114000
An.tt.tsf.._...,-.M-.. .
U~IVUI: ti()MI:§
REALTORS .
0-al General
Wt ·lt l )( i e&.c { n11 1Ja 1 i-'· . .
WRAPPED IN GINGHAM
H•rbor View Home:s
2600 Sq. Ft. Pl>rtofino model, beauUfully
d~ted In "Country EngllSh", cll!tom
woven wood shutters, used brick, landscap-
ed, etc. 8 RR, 111~ BA. lam rm. plus bonus
rm & loft br for guest. New. exclusive list·
ing. 1946 Port Trinity, Newport-Beach. Open
Sun/Mon 1-5:30.
BIG CANYON
Spacious custom home right on the golf
course, overlooking a wide grassy fairway.
Super !amily room plus other outstanding
features. 28 Royal St. George, N.B. Open
Sunday 1-5:30.
CdM -OCEAN VIEW
Brand new, charming 3 BR with formal din·
ing, many unique features, immediate oc-
cupancy. 418 Hazel Dr., CdM. Open Sat, Sun
& Mon 1-5:30.
2~·1" F Coa~1 I I 1 ~hwa\
0.-al
11 ROOM
MANSION
5 + DEN + GUEST
\\'rouabt iron t~e protect· lul bU&e est.alo anq PIU'k·
like crooooa. £\lropM.n 8J'o
chltecture featuring ra.re
c~IJI and 1talr\Cd
git.Ii "Vindowll· Banquet for.
mat dining. Step down den
with ceUlnl blab li"'plaoe.
Garden view mulcr suite
with 6th balh, sundeck .
•'BALI.ROOM" with dance
noor. 2 bedroom gun! hou8"
v.•ith ldrchen & bath. Grea1
for entertalnlne. Ca 11 -·
1k
Of
LOOK WHAT
WE FOUND!
' OLD DOG A beautiful townhouse in a
park St'.!lting for only Corona dd l\1a1 h/) 1i'1()()
On a tree lined street -A
picture perfect 3 bedroom
home with lots of Oov.'ers
and fruit trees that add to
ifs charm. Entertain in the
large family room and
12'x40' enclosed patio. Must
see to believe. $29,750.
s.t&-231'
CffH m. t • ttS FIJN TO BE MCE1
lfililMI
UARNS * $29,soo * General Generel J Bil 11,4 BA, 2 Sto)·y ,, .. ith , NEW TRICK 1-;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j su11 PorCh, near rec centrr 1
TI1is started out a ShOrt tlme I• & pool. Dble ga1· .. freeway
ago as an old 2 bedroom ~ 3 ~ close! To see just call house on a large lot. The / 963-5611.
home h" been oompletely inda ~ e
remodeled. It has new {r!.11 GOOD\\'I N p1umbln&, new wJrmg, new -PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES ~~~eecl~ ::' ~~ SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
rear of the lot a new ""'1d· LINDA ISLE WATERFRONT
iiig has recently been Com-Custom 4 bdrm ., 5 bath home with view of
pleted v.11.ich contains a fine main channel. Soft color::i, rich wood panel-2 bedroom unit wilh marble f
t ( \) •.• . ' \ ... "
~St.
--Ca.92708 714 963-5611
Goner•!
5%0/o LOAN
4 Bedrm, 2 b&,th, \Yilh large
tamUy mt & atra aho9 ror
··the 1-lutcr.ol-the-l'iOOSf'.'0
fl. rn·lght ~ry ltitch. tor
the Mra.: and a ~ 1£' x 3&' H/f Blue DoJ pool
fO(' the kids. \Voul you ~
lleve ·a.11 t.hetse fe<l1" Ju
N~ Cosia Meu. for only
$33,950.
Newport
VACATION
VIE\¥ HOME
In lnilne Ttff'Ua wltb ~I
....,, """'· I I«<· """'!-1 hunily rm.. pme rm., .J»
OOths. 1..4e. hid. A-Ult'd.
iioul . Com pl t lel )I rroccoruted trom top to bot·
OffeM turnlllhtd ..
by app't. only.
BIG POTENTIAL
And It 1lartl \\'llh a !'le\\'
outlook Wide. 2 Bdrm \\'Ith
gournict kUchen . aucny !iv·
ing rm, kw abe trplc. pvt
garden • .,._ t lo, double
garage. Room lor addiUoool
uni!, only $56,900. P\ease,
one cnll at a Lim('. Agent.
. . in ~IE"Xlco aU the year 673-TJll.
without leaving your hon1C' .,.~~~"J'!~t'J"'~"" J
. ,, Bedrn1: huge kitch, \\"ith * DRIVE BY *
double fu~placC',. POOL.1 Lovely fttmlly home in
fl::nd authentic Me."•l'an .can· Corona 11ighlantl~ .. You own
llna dC'COr. \Vrought uun, the \and. 3 Bdr111s., l~
till>. PLUS. Subnlll on haths, brnnd OC\Y carpets;
$42.500. paneled living rn1.; Iota of
G1Nl\'.Y l\IORRISON storage. Vie\Y. All this for
~Open Evenings)
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
• AREA -
Cambridge Homes
162.''°°' MORGAN REAL TY
67~2 67S-6459
CdM DuDlex
517 BEGONIA
Cute ~ BR, 2 Ba front house
\v/l1"1C'd prlv patio & yard.
Immcd. occup .. 2 BR, 1 Ba
rear houlre, x1ra wide u·
lot
Open S\ln/Mon 1-5:30
mpletely ~ecorated in-
lide·and out which makes lt
better than new, because
it's lleUOned. The Queens
'kitchen boasts a Corning
range top you" ca.ii wipe
' clean like wiping the
counter tOp. Blt-ln Bar-B-Q
on patio, sprinklers and
:fuJly grown landscaping for
; easy care. Hurry and call
·,hower "all and a nifty 1 ing & 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate eel-COWGE PARK
bedroom apartment, plus a ing. Waterfront mstr. suite has dbl. bath,
Priced to~selJ at $99,500 - 3 ~ double garage. This is the sitting area, view deck ........... $295,000. PRICE "'""'°"" bedroom.!, 3 '"'" CUSTOM TRIPLEX first time our new !rid< h ...
1'1odern, shake roor. 2 car
gar. 3 Bedrnl, l '!.l bath.
double lirepiace, dining/ .
1
ffl.ll\lly -rm, new carpets.
Corner (can put boat or
trailer storage). $42,950. As· 1 sume approx. $32.000. V.A.
Joan. Assun1e V.A. loan
balance.
·now,
C 'ili1ll1[H & l ll
Real Estah!
7682 Edinger Ave.,
842-4455
Open eves.
SIMPLY
BEAUTIFUL
"SPANISH"
l bedroom Spanish besuly
with imported Italian tile
'floors, goi'gCOU8 kitchen and 1fa.mily' room, formal dining
area, beautitul t r op t ca I 1atriutn, wet bar pins much
mueh more. ~ clcfln tct~·fioot l'h!S .. -a ''rhust-
aee". Priced at only $46,500.
I NOW 80-ZilS.
H Tll .. t • "'S ft.JN,10 8E NICE/
THE REAL
ESTATERS
FOR THE
SWINGING
I SINGLE
$16,900-
$136 PER MONTH
Not a condo, cute A beautiful
r new carpeting & the
furnishings remain with th.ls
home. Perfectly situated on
a large lot & the gardens
81'1! lovely. WALKER &
!LEE Realtors, 546-0022.
' 90 FEET
' LIDO BAYFRONT
ree R-1 lots, 11\de by side,
h pier & slip privileges.
me Udo Nord location.
i\VUl sell or land-lease. Try
"'60,000
HARB«:)J'
COMP' ANY
REALTORS
SINCE 1944
673-4400
uriou• bat,.,, lovely °"""" been advero.ed "' hurry. For Com~l•te Information REDUCTION
view, super construction. lSOO Sq Ft, 3 bedroom. 2 lull Only $59,950. Call 646-nn. On' All Komel & Lotl, Please Cell: Don't lift a hand '"hen you e SACRIFICE e
2 RR; pool, 2 car gar.
R-2 Lot. Only $56,500
Quiet cul de sac-street, fee baths owner unit. 2 OPENTILt •rrsFUN 10 BENa.1 move inlo this sparkling
land and an Eutern-type, Bedroon1'. 2 bath unit. and ~ . BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR etean home beeause there" basement that defies large 1 bedroom unit. All 1111"'!~•1.I ~~¢~P0~~: ~~i:fveto =h ':,,~ h~~~ dr:;~:~iN'ij1!il . ~34""l"B'"•.,Y;,•.,1d.,• .... D.,•., .. .,s.,•.,i.,•e~1 ..... N.,.B.,.'l"'""""6"1w .... 1.,'.,1.. ~~ d~~£~:~~~~
The Real Estaters. 6~ separate laundry room· 1~~~~-~~~~-~ _G_•_n_o_ra_I ______ .;;G.;:a_n.;;.•r:..al.;o.., -.,---:-:-·I flnowe tree llned street, and
Ottoeanvlew Realty 67~
Co1t1 Mesa
OPEN TIL 9 • rrs FUN 10 BE N/CEI Owner unit e I e gan t ly -2 BEDROOM
HOUSE ON
R-2 LOT, I : f1 ! furnished. 6 Detached closed PAINT & SAVE NO M"ONEY . SS ~ l~Alil1 ~!·5"'N"+"'eg=~"'e:_:i_t_2_G_s_~-o-~-=-~~ .. :~·'E .:::.:'~o :~\~~!~~:·Lhi• 6~~ ==.=D::u::Plj::IL;E=:x=z•==:
ASSUME f · · and paj t Jllne s 1\vo l-bdrn1., close to beach, EASTSIDE C.M. $34,500 ,:::,,. '81e on1y.°0PEN 1·~, SCHOOLS bot h unit• 1urn;•h<d. Owner FHA LOAN
First Owner Exclusive rolling green hill· Fri, thru Sun. 1000 Grove This charming 3 bedroom will trade up f~r larger This Cotta Mesa houJe wttb GORGEOUS
'GLEN MAR 10 - 1 BR + 2 -2 BR, furn.
Simply one of the greatest Top rental area near trans.
homes offered in Hwitington & shopplng .. H/F pool. Good
Beach. Super sharp 4 net income. A real bargain!
bedroom 2 bath home e CALL ANYTIME e
located close to schools and 646-3928 or Ev•. 645-4375
stlopping. Shag carpetirig,
upgraded, no wax linoleum 1
in Kitchen, watersoftener,
n\af"ble fireplace, aluminum
covered patio fenced yard
Lachenmyer :
Re.1 l!o t
for the kids~ ~:la a lot of ===-"'"-----
house for $32,TaO.. Better I
hurry -Ne\v listing. READY FOR A
TREAT?
sides of "Back Bay." NeedA Pl., C .. M. (l-Bllc So. of Vic-and den home is walking unit~. Call for app t. to see. beamed Cl!lllngs and miee ,
decorating, but a fantastic toria on Monrovia to Oak . distance from all schools, . J;1l:~73--3663 ~ Eves back yard I.I an k!cal •tarter
value. S bedrooms .. Huge 3 Blks W, to Republic • So. with no major streets toliii ... iiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiii.... · home. Nole thP FHA ·
ranch kitchen with eating 2 blks to Grove PL> CJ10Ss. Sei:luded walled, tree OCEANFRONT DPLXS as.mmable loAn + R2 1'0l1-,
area. Ponderosa party room. $23.950 shaded back yard with ~ 3 Brand new buildings. AU Ing. Prtced at SZ,500. For 1
Enterta.ineri patio overlook· form . flagstone . pat 1 0 · different owners, locations, details qlll 646-Tin. !
ing green lawn, I0\11ering Premium . carpetmg .and &izes & architecture. <N'ENTn. t • rrs RJN 70 • N1C1S
trees, corral and 2 bedroom HORSES ! ! wall covenngs make tha 8 3 Br up/dwn $140 OOJ
gue:Jt facility. ~and new on • • • allowed on this l;i acre great value at $26,500. Why 4 Br' up S br dwn $169'00) !"'!''!!'!!'!!!~~:!!!~~!'
market. Better burcy! Call ranch with large custom wait, call now 546-2313. 4 Br up/dwn sno:ooo ADULY.. DEWIE ~· home, tenced corral PLUS Ol'EHTILI • rT'SFUNTOBENICEI HORVATii REALTY
a 3 bedroom rental al $200./ I ~ Ask fo, Dave • CONDO
. hom 675-1972 494-0615 . 1·"· '-' . '"'~ mo, Custom e is va-In Founta n va1leys flnest *. -· W r cant • quick po&seftion. Will communi!y -near nMv City
exchange lo' bay·side du-HOME & BUSINESS Hall. Model unit, ga• BBQ MESA ViRDE
1 om \i L rn \O\
.'? • ' ' (' .,, '
•
. co: Ts
WALLACE
REALTORS
plex. ====-=----:-14 Bedroom 2 bathll double with huge bonus (hobby) BUYER
This greenbelt I o cat e d $65,000. HARBOR Vl£W garage. $3o,ooo .. '&st o1 room over la~c OO~ble • : • ,for extra 11harp l
Carmel model in Harbor POOL HOME I garage. Only asking $30,500. DR )\(>me close to 1chool1 View llomes spells real • 4 Bedroom & Fanilly -cor-erms. \VALK.ER & LEE Realtors, &. shopping .. New green
oomlort. Come' lot, thr 3 EDROOM VACANT & "'"lot -168.000 LARGE ~AMtLY7 546-0022 •ha,<! carpet, alum. oov'd. """!!~~~~:'!"'~~!"!: J bedrooms, 2 baths, klvely RE,6.0Y 3 bedroo.m & Family -fee 5 Bedroom, 2 baths, Close to STOP L. OOKING NOW'! 11atl0. F'rel.hlY painted . • "EAT YOUR WIFE fl I $32 750 land -hke new -$69,900 shopping $32 500. I b ll I rl famtty room, rep ace r 5 Bedroom & Family -NEED SE,CURITY? Let a proff:ssional Jjnd ti:vour Frtplal~!· but~, P ml~ d al y formal dinirig room. a Swim into summer • where Owner anxious! Redecorated sunken living room _ $79,500 new home for you. Te us area1 ~ U)' 1 · ~ t~\·o~~~':h ,!,.~ey ~~ gorgeous kitchen two Bse can l'Oll buy a lovely, 3 btodrni. &: family rm home 4 Bedroom & family_ great 3 Bedroom home fully car· what you want and we \VIII I! I w11re~. ~ .........
" ~,.. private pa.Uos.. Lovely freshly painted JXlOf home on huge comer lot-room for view _ $89,500 peted, recently painted. !Ind It tor you. Absolutely no IJ ~:msbea~rtii 3 2 ~~ upgraded decorating at thia loW, low °price? Extra boat or trailer, King-size 4 Bedroom & Family -Large enclosed sunporch, high f;reuure techniques.
thruout. Priced to sell at ··~e --e .. ~ mru·n· ~·ered pa"o & pr•·vate mod ·-· and v·,..... -fenced front & . back yard, L.-• • ... _ ... ea-1 ~~·S~d:!ceitis ~1·~ 69,D .. Fee !-and -' Call t~ ...... f;; ~ autt> ;~.Quick ~ssion. Low ~,500e......, ..... room for boat. Quiet street. :Vke~evCa.Jj ~"for 531·5111 ( :;::.} I53J•511D
yours. Let us show it to you 6'J3...8550 for appolrTtment. nl8tic pool sweep, uBed down. OPEN l.S Fri. &: Sat. 4 Bedroom & Family -pool $27,500. yaur penolllll interview. ~~!!'l!'!!!!!!!!'!!'~~~!'J
C wA U<ER & LfE
by appointment. CffH1't:t•n"SRW7DllfMCEJ 'brick fireplace .in living 744 center St;, C.M. .t view -$129,cm Roy McC.erdle Realtor Red Carpet. Re41tors 2629 -:;:BRANO '"'EW HOM£$ ~ ~ =~ ~~~; $27,250. 61!d1&°~~:~~ -f~ 1810 N'514a.~d., C.1'L OH.,.ChoEr ABlvdN .•• CootaVIME•w G"at ~Ulde Loealion
Realtors 545--0465
Open eves. . ~ ""'"""'~""''°"'"""'' CALL642·1m RED CARPET 252,>l2.27f.22ndSt.,CM
. · ~ ~ • 3 + G $25 950 Large 3 BR. 2 BA. fam rm, ' ' Ontu REALTORS uest • lple. Approx tROO sq. n. HOME PLUS ' ' IV OU Private circu~ street of Crpls, drps, lndacpd. tncd. LAST , '''21 I'll DL Y fin• home .. Pam< and '""' All Included. 10% Down , •. INCOME PLUS YEAR'S --=--liDECENTS thousands. Sweeping 7li% Int. Drlv. by! ! I I
V••CANT LAND ___ ....___.._ ~II '"'"' """""''wlthroomf"boal. -or66-61p.
K CES I -Beautiful two story 4 bdr., 3 3 bedrooms inc I ud Ing 0 c o· SE ESTATE Cozy 3 'bMroom home and a PRI • FIRST MANICURED bath home buHl CUilom lor hl...,.-way ma1ter •ulte, T L .
s ma 11 r en ta l or LA CUESTA VERDE HOMES builders pereonal use . separate· childrens whig, 3 BR, extra lge kit .. llv r':J
mother-in-law unit in the In 1 n-•-6 Hills h8.I 2 homes PRESENTATION BEAUTY OWNER-arutiou~. Large Imagine how upgraded this den With slldlng glass door newly redec thruout, pav a...ag........ kitchen with bu 11 t-in 11 · home ,·,., ~tier yet , Call to 25• entertBiners patio. clrlvewar, grass/flowct'"ll & rear. Lot size is lOOxl(IO on back on the market becawic of this 4 bedroom, family On a quiet pretty CUl;le-ssc Heated •-filte-.. pool 4 ~ h I -·11 1 1~ 000 "" ,.,._, · o:A"""A", Red Carpet. Breathtaking view of ca· 8f'ielrees.ru prce ..:i, Main Street to new Civic of credit rejections. Both room and 3 bath home. Has street. This \\'ell dest.....,... bdnn• 2 ba'"-Rear ltvlng ..........,.,.. · n-·nnlA...i f,/! l I I • 5•>= • u"'. o~•tor• lor y 0 u r ftr\. yon and blue' PadfJC, -'Xll· i.IWU5 co11 .1 o sa e • Center. Total price 531,750. have a ...... ,.. kitchen and double gara.""" and boat home has a 1 ......... lot and a rm Dlnm· g nn ....,_,..,,_ ... """"' r Ca 11 ·11 · A -· ~-z .. ~ ~~~ · · ......,,._,""'"' polntment to see for TE R HURRY! ti e nsuranre. PP•""'· Call for more information. family room plus 3 BR's A storage. Beautiful location boat gate. Inside is 4 patio. brk $39,500. 979-~ yourseU. 64!HJ3(l3, $4000 dn. No financing nee.
842-2535. 2 BA. One has a ftrepl.ace.. on the peninsula .. $82,500. bedrooms and lovely shagll O\VNER moving. Rich I y * BRING * 8~ term1 may be JLITa11ged Quick ....---Jon, excellent CAU. 675-4060. Ask for carpeting tllroughout.. You' EASTSIDE · h p In 1~'" OPENTIL SI. IT'S FUH ro BE NICEI ......,ven•r.::;-aj-financi" ... avail-Hollis \Voocl. PETE BAR-enjoy, too, the efficient tiled paneled. Corked errtra~. 4 • PAINT BRUSH wo;: ... .,!'~!~".. r c ..... "' I ....... ......... .... y kl d f 1 d bdrms, 2 baths. Patio. 5 UNrrS ''V ....,,......,..~, l ftt!il:•,,U able .. •-tt,OOO • •",500 :::r*-:1!:A2:C_,_RE__...*_. :0.,~,c ... ~l:O.~.f{' t~m~~i~ ~:~1y1..:.1'~~1a~.~~~ What an lnveatment! Th.ls 4 BR.~~B•th1 Br~.~i:,r1sia1~ ~icli~{i~ _!?!!!!~.!-. .,.,L "'.,,... ·$37,462. 540--172.0 one ia priced to make )IOU v;. Down Pl'OX, 2400 sq. n., bltlns,
OWNER l••vlng. Best Joca-money. Al $72,1'.m you will FORTIN CO. ru.Uo, Prof. land g cpd• Call Jerry Hardin Zoned R·2 1500 OPENnL9 •n-'SFVN70BENICEI """ have lo bring your check r~ f1{A I n o
714: 544-«112 25 to 21 Units 1 • fireplace. Covered patio . ._.l""'t, Re lOrs Back Bay BY Owner, Jbarp JBR. on ·~· ll~~'li'~I bdrrns, 2 baths. Family rm. ""'--al quality. 54()..~
. $50,ooo '! L Forced-air heat. b r k Open House west SLM, 1rg lot, fruH
MACNAB
IRVINE
or Joe Wilhlte Ora-.County ~ ! tion. Walking to schools. 3 bodk to catm this~ btlted RE'AL TORS 642-SOOO aasu.m.. _,.,. oan,
FORTIN CO. . ---·--,. 134.900. 541>-lTlO 16291 Ten· BY OWNER, 3 b,, "1>k. tree•. quiet street, prlne.
RlAL TORS 642·5000 ' TIE A YELLOW eovered patio, new kitchen, only. l'l!,000. 953 Union Ave, Cowt! PA' RK 0ne or t"' .,,.,P.,, • &lG-0166 ·o, 64<).0227. 642-7501 C:HOOSE YOUR ~ RIBBON bedroom, 2 bath hom., In Balboa Panlnsul•co --,-,-.E-GE-~PAR=K~. -,-Bii.= IS ·sELU.NG Huntington Beach. Priced at Anthony Pool, H/F, 1'4 BA, on one of the many huge only $32,500 for quick sale. BAY front home. or dup. needs lovlna care but only . FAST f ! t1'tts in the big back yard Open 12 to 5. Sat, Sun It. Priv. bch, pier pr Iv. $32,000. Exel. Klngurd
complete \\oi th flagstone 842-25.15 $198,500
86
• offer. 0 w n er. Real 1'Atalc ~2222 We have listed one of the
lowest priced horoe11 in the
development for on ly
$30,950. It doee need some
work inslfle,. but a great
value. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths,
hardwood Doon, shake roof,
comer lot. b cau t I tu I
landscaping.. Huny before
tt'.1 gone.
'4
HAVE A PARTY
round the pool, at the bar or in the "
ormal DR. Impressive Courtyard entry-
oveiy street-l!IR'~9,500. J ane Frazee
Uz..sli:IO. ($11)
"CHINA COVE BAYFRONT"
e find-great family beach home on
ayfront. Situated on 3 lots, 4BR's, FR,
anal garden area. Overlooks. jetty. Ken
artiey 642-8235. (Sl3)
DON'T BUYll
Harbor View Homes until you see tbls
hoiee "CARMEL" 8 SR/FR oUered at the
west price available tad.a)>.._ '67,900.
is Mlll~r, 642-8235. OPEN HOUSE MON·
AY 1-5: 2080 Port Provence. ($28) i--'------.... .. --·
[Irvine I -b-lm~-,--1
·111--Ml·m• ·
1144 lila&Artllow 14). itod
patic) and rear entrance.1-~~~~~==~ G7H1
Point a yellow da!By In the GIANT DUPLEX MESA V"'de supe' sh1111> 4 i m m a c u l ate kitcht!n. Tf'tlPLEX 3 & 2 BR. $125,000 Br + t.a.m.Uy nn, freolhl,y
Sunshine abounds ;n lhb 3 , . $44500 . DUPLEX ............ $57,000 palnlod ~ el'J>td. $51,500. BJ I
bedroom. 1% bath beauty In R e 810 "re, MAKE MARSHALL Realty 675--16<Xl ov.ner,i ~
beautiful breeey Huntington TH Q USA.NOS. 1'~anta&tic Coron• def Mlir BY Owner! 3BR. mA. bltlnl,
Bee.ch. It's a true vallie al investment plus great aroa trpk utl ~ ~ It.
$32,900. 847-QllO. to raise children. Agent * SO, OF HWY. * m Dither, $32,500. 837"'11
645--0303 Jmmed. Poseu. on this sharp ~fESA del Mal", 'Z owner. ta '
TW HOUSES duplex; corner lot for 138 au. (2 Colona , 0 privacy. 2 Bdnn•. each: 4 BR. -· 1733 w,.tdlll DI:., N.B. ~ CO&ATS $40 OOO fl'J>l.-.., ..,.. ~ dropes m La., m.!851
WALK To • one. Newly painted. Offered OWNER, 3 bl'., 2 ba .• cpb,
• WALLACE ltow rl1ht can you ao? tor $74.500. drps, patio, clbhset/plOI. WESTCLIFF .::::;:::;:::;::::~o:=:=~~I eu.rom 2bdr., home with MORGAN REAL TY a ... \o -·:-REAL TORS one bdr... cottage in the -. .1:.t.112 675-6459 Th I• botne la near --54Ml..,4141 -rear. Let 10me one elae help 91_,_ .,..,,.,~ lbdr., 2bath, (Open Evanlngs) make )Our paymenu. Good FEE OR LEASE HOLD
newly pe. nted, with huge A r;hndy streel Ea.stllde location. Cll 11 4 BDRM. 2~ BA, fam rm,
patio. Better Hurry on thla 11 such a delight 54&-8640 Red Ca r p e t , modern kitchen w/sell clng
-· Red Catoe<. RhllDn $17,000 CAL CLASSIC When )OU own, two 1tory R<alton <Mn. m I" o '" '•, Ktt-54&-"40 Very clean 3 br/den i' .,..~ Euy livfill c&l'I i,. )'OW'S in Thftt flta yoo Juat riaht. COMMERCIAL LOT chenaklc dahwhr. New Cf1M. EAST$1DE MANSION ""'1> In rear. l.Dts 0k thla prldo ot own-Ip home A cn.ekllna fireplace . ON COAST HWY., $12.000 1,... hold. IRVINE
mo Sq. ft 4 BR, S BA. fol'. privacy with . chaln·lln °" quiet cuHlo-. otreet. 4 And lamily room, too W ORT BEACH TERRACE. Owner 673-3007
ma1 dining lam nn plwi fence arooncl th• charm· bedrooms, 3 batht, custom ?ric:ed $36,560 NE r_Pll or Tra..1-BY ownt.r, ~ ott28•1'!n(~· den. Death 'tri f&mlly force• ~ hoir1e~1 .. ~-It ftnn • carpet.I, dmPt'I-Beat ICbool It 's perfect for you. .,. ~ comer cottage, R. .
ea.le. Nine~ new, $44,700 WA~ •LEE"Reatton ln town for your chUdren. Call 546--2313. $17,500 nu 1100 sq n unit. 2BR, A
full prlce.Call,,_B,kr~~ .. ~! ~ Prtced. to ,ell al $41,500. oP£N17Lt•rT'SRJHl'OBEMCEI Georg• Wllll1m10r1 A' trplc. Top qua ti -"Gov'-='-"tO'Joa"'n"'.-",""'"""~7'""'°-· 1 Call SU..2535. Realtor 541-6510 S109.150. 5 0 0 Poinlet a, OPEN llouae SUnda,y &: Mon-READY 'TO INVEST? Ol1fHTIL • • n RiN 10 M NICrrr Ur73ll Qr 64fr9C179 ·
QUl~K CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT !
WANT AD
642-5671 $~t·t~~i: W~~~;,~~~ i ll~*11at1 ~Adi ... ~n F~~~~W=~ 1~~~~t, 54&-m'I ...... Real..... _______ ...... ,
l
•
•
" .
.. ,z~. • DAU.Y'PllOT
I'•
1! _..,_ 1~1 1 _,.,_ I~ I -... -
"
101!1\I [ OISO\ "'
Fountatn Vall ey PlAtrORS
I' 1llage Real [state
'~4471 ( ::::) 546-8103 5 BR. 2400 sq. ft., 2~'2 ba,
bltna, DW. crpts, drps, fplc, "'"""""""""""""""""' 2 story. $42,900. 968-6216
Huntington Be1ch
VICTORIAN
CASRE
' .
e VACANT e
/,
' .
l~I
Cj)UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
CALL 642-5678
' _ ..... l~I I~
GET A HORSE
531-6800
1711
50 X 140' Near 19th & 2% level acre11 between
Pomona Ave., C.M. priced Capistrano & Lake Elsinore.
low at $2.50 Sq, ft. $3,9'20-acre. $975 down pay·
W11l1y N. Taylor Co. ment, easy ternui. 8.U-3223
2lll San ~~~ills Rd. Real Estate Wanted 114
N•wport ce"'" 644-4910 * Cj)uick Cash *
Condominiums Will buy your property. All
for sale 160 cash within 72. hrs. Call
962-8851 CONDO -Park-like sur-
1uundings-pool, NB, 3 BR. 2 iJb.. T~;~;::;:::· ,:::~::: iilllllil
do. Owner desperate. $1000 ==-=Bc:Rc:O;cK=E~R~S~INC,C"-.'-"c-I
below mkt. Blms, pvt patio, RESffiENCE or units San
pool. 536-2029 Jullfl, or Dana Point. Prine.
Income Property 166 ~~~827 Mom/late e v e • ,
MESA DEL MAR Business
4 LUXURY UNITS Opportunity 200
$63,000-AFIL
$6300 DOWN WELCH 'S
gets you Into a potential an· . . PROE?UCT nual gross.. 14% spendable. Billion dollar _industry needs
We have an !k>% firm loan l"lO\V resporunbl.e m~ and
commHment. H u r r y 1 ! •.von1en to service high vol· "'"TITI ume beverage routes. ~ ' LIMITED OPENINGS
OPENTlllJ • rT'SFUIVTD8ENICE' PART OR FULL TIME
[ ~ NO SELLING
Company establishes COfll·1
me1·cial or factory locations.
. . No franchise fees. Con1-~~-~~~::..::..=-'-I plctely secured inves~ent. 40 GAR DEN CASI! REQUIRED i 2396.
f'or n1ore information write;
UNITS N, C. B. C., Inc. I
7700 Edgewater Dr., Suite 725 !
. Oakland Calif. 94621 ·
\V_e can subst~nliate P &: L Include P0hone Number I
figures on this one, as we[!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f manage it. Beautifully maJn--
tained in every respect.
$495,0CC. Principals Only.
Sparling Investment
Corp., 63&.5662
DELUXE 4-PLEXES
• • * Malcolm Reid
1728 Paloma Dr.
"t.lewport Beech
You are the winner of
TWO FREE TICKETS
Only 3 Left! Best rental area. to the
All units have _trplc's, dsh· Southern Ca lifornia
\vhrs, forc<'d all' heat, air/ MOBILE HOME SHOW cond., closed garages. Pool
avail. \Valk to shop'g schls May 26th lhru June 3rd
& park. ' at the
Sparling Investment ANAHEIM STADIUM Corp 6J8..5662 2000 State Col~ege Blvd., ·; Anaheim
SIX UNIT -apartments with Pleal!e call 642-5678, ext 314
ocean breezes. Spacious 3 10 claim yow-tickets. (North
BR, 1% BA, hltins, crpt'd, County toll free> number is
drp"d. 65' x 300', close to 540-1220.)
gramntar school. $1050. in-* * * come. Asking $125,000. but
make an oUet. KINGAARD e Cockta il-xlnt buy
R.E. 642-2222 e Mfg-2 kinds
5 CHARMING units in xlnt e Coffee Sho p Lo dn
LAGUNA location, close to e R I Bd everything, always rented, Apt enta , 2 rm
f'X\erior just painted. Call HOLLAND Bus. Sales
RED CARPET 497-1761. &15-4170 or 540-0008 eve.
1716 Orange, Coata Mesa
1st TD Loans
UP TO 95%
2nd TD Loans
2ND Trust Deeds
PRIVATE FUNDS AVAll.
Any Amount * Call 675-4494 BKR.
DAll.V PILOT -· ..... 28. 197)
• • • Marlon PllUllps
9591 Landfall Dr.
Huntl ........ Buch
YOU &re the winner of
TWO FREE TICKETS "'... . Southern C111forn1•
MOBILE HOME SHOW
Ma)' 26th U1ru J UM, 3rd
at the
ANAHEIM STADIUM
2000 State Collep Blvd.,
AM.helm
Plea.5e call 642-5678, exl 314
to cla.lm your Uckell. INonh 07ur:lty toll free number ls
540-1220.) * • •
Money Wantod 250
EXPANSION Funds -Prut
Man Guar. 3 for 1 Return
ht yr. Call Pt-fr. Vlclor lTI 4)
5.'ll-0302
Macnab -Irvine
Macnab-Irvine
642-8235 Mortgages, Tru•I Daod1 260 ..,....,...,...,...,...,...,,... I==== PUT YOUR MONEY
TO WORK FOR YOUI
Earn 10% Interest on v.·ell-
secured 2nd Trust Deeds on
Or8.nge C'..ounty real estate.
-sIGNAL PtIORTGAGE CO.
{114) 556--0106
4500 Campus Dr., N.B.
HOVlff Furnished 300
tiou••• Unfurn. 305
4.tl \V. 19th SI., Costa ti.1esa
1854 s. coa.c Hwy ., Laguna
(Piccadilly Circus}
t'OSTA MESA OFFICE
Serving-Coste Mesa, NewJXltl
Beach, Huntington Beach.
$115 -Ea.midC! rum. OOch.
All utll pd., pool.
$.100 • 4 BR, 2 BA home w/
pool, kid1, pet•, 1n1ils. ok.
$155 • 2 BR bome1 gar., encl.
patio, children OK.
$150 • Nice 2 BR, stove, frig,
cpta A drps, a:ar., encl.
po.tlo.
CAlJ.. 64.5-0lll
\Vo SpeclaUze In Newport
Beach • C.orona del Mu e
' I: Laguna. Our Rc1111nJ Ser·
vice IJI FREE to You! Try
Nti•Vlew!
NU.YllW RENTA~S
or 4M-3J43
•
''I I I 11 ' 'II I I' II d.
-.. . I\ 1•1di111·
TueMl.17, May 29, 1'97J DAILY PILOT 25
Apb. Apt\.,
'70 Fum. or LMfurn. '70 Fu"'. or Unfvm. 371
Costa MeN Newport BMch
W1N'f'EJ\, Summer, \'rly.
\111,.... '• Rtnltllt, Bier, 2006
\\-. Balboa Blvd, fi1l.IX!r3. ·----
415
l
f
,
' OMV PU.OT
ICE.SKiATING
WITHOUT
WEAK A:NKLES
• No weak ankl•• fo r
beginner• with the Ice
Schools and
Instructions
•
Thia variety of fine eehoolt
could introduce
you to a new tomorrow.
Capades pro dulgned lco Ui~F::;
skates and unique teaching
NIWl*t Air Assadates
Fligllt-Scht* & Flyq Qib
LEARN TO FLY
method.
• Aentorbuy lceCapadel
skates at our sport shop.
~. • Enjoy the thrill of akatJng
In a few houre.
• Giff certincates, in any
1 amount. for lessons or k:9
skates ••• a glH of llfettme
value.
MESA .VERDE SHOPPING CENTER
Tel: (714) 979-8880
2701 Harbor Blvd. at Adams, Costa Mesa
MEXICO
STUDY TRAVEL PROGRAM
e Stu.dents
e Teachers
• Adults
~ ~
Mexico Study Travel Program is designed
lo involve you in a great veriety of exper·
iences related to Mexican history & culture.
The personal experience of travel is used
for academic & practical application. You
\\•ill learn by "Jiving" & "doing" on a trip
that is flexible to 1neet your personal &
acade1nic needs. \'au may use the GI Bill.
I
Mexic11 Study Travel Program
c/o Bill Gregory
·P. 0 . Box 766, Bolboa, Colll. 92661
Telephone for ,more Information
673·5706
Astrology Classes
NOW FORMING
Beginners ... Advanced
theSrIRSUfil
Offers Complete Astrology
Services * PERSONAL HOROSCOPES * ASTROLOGY BOOKS * UN IQUE GIFTS * CLASS INSTRUCTION
Burton !\forsc Judy Zintl
712 E. BALBOA BLVO.
BALBOA PENINSULA
Hours 11 A.M. -4 P.M.-Closed Sunday
67S-6661 • 675-2140 • 493-3893
Anna's
Pre-School
Kindergarten, lit & 2nd Grade
SPECIAL SUMMER PROGRAM
REGISTER NOW FOR FALL
Ages 2 thru 2nd Grade
• Full Learning Progrem
• Phonic.1 Stressed
• Arts & Crafts e Music
• Reeding Specialty
• Sports Activiti•s
• Special Summer R•adlng
Progrem For Older Chlldr•n
2110 ThurifJ Av e., Corti Mesa Ph: 646-1444
@IJe~G e~~ I
"Learn and Play
our Pre-School way"
·Edueetional program. Music, Artt, Crafts,
Numb•r concepts, reading rNdinass.
Op•n 6:]0 a.m .• 6.00 p.m. Prola11ional
1taff. Individual attantion. Saturday pro·
gram available. Hot Meals. full Tlma pro-
grams & half day 1e11ion1.
Fami~ Affair Pre-School
6401 War11<, H .. tlllffH ._.
C.11er ef WarRft' & Edwards
947.5775
./ are worth training for
• TRAVEL
• ADVANCEMENT
• SECURITY
AIRLINE
SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Learn Ho\v You Can Qualify
can 543-6655 •
610 E. 17th St., Santo Ano
ACCREDITED SCHOOL
' ORANGE COUNTY
VOCATIONAL
TRAINING SCHOOL
LEAR·N
AUTO TUNE-UP
,.--..,. ..... ~ ....... ,.._.,"'"""
* S Wiil 11,
INTENSIVE COUISE ~
* TUITION FINANCING {$
AVAILAILE ,.
* MOlNIN•
AFTERNOON &
IYININfi CLASSIS ~
* MODEIN
DIA•NOSTIC
IQUIPMENT
* PllPAIATION FOR
CU.SS "A" SMOG
LICINSI INCLUDED
* Job Placem•nt A1sistance Available * Cle1ses Forming Now * Spticial Courses for Mech1nic1 who
need Class "A'' License
...----FOR INFORMATION ---.. I CALL 714/646-5065
2120 PLACENTIA AVE.-COSTA MESA
$500.
(" ............. , * F.AA APPROVED *
Covne lackrdft:
35 Hours flight time in Cerrne I SO'r with
20 hour• duel instruction. Club membership.
3 Month's free dues . lndivi duel in1truction,
t•ilor•d to YOUR ability.
15 AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT
LOWEST U .TIS IN OIANGI COUNTY
L .. m to fly now - -end h•v• fun I * Fly Mexico lo Conodo * Specl1I Rites for Commercl1I or
Instrument Stvdenta.
For Comploto Detoll1 Coll NOW
979-1155
Interested In
A Real Estate Career?
IN FOUR WEEKS
PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM
LICENSING PREPARATION FOR
• Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers
• Employment Assistance For"
Graduates With
Leading Brokers. 11
• Day And Evening Classes
• Broker Referral Program
• $110-Full Course '
For Information-Brochure
Free Guest. Lecture
Newport, 325 No. (Old) Nowport Blvd.
548-1192
I
EDMOND F. JACKSON
Real Estate Education Since 1964
ACADEMY REAL ESTATE
CONTRACTING lo INSURANCE SCHOOLS
GI-Master Charge & B of A
SADDLEBACK
LEARNING CENTER
Will Offer A
Special Summer
Reading Program
Ind ividualJzed Program of Instruction
Diagnostic Testing & Evaluation
Licensed Educational Psychologist
All Credentialed Teachers
27601 Forbes Rd, Suite A
Laguna Niguel
830-2800
The Ancient Chinese Art of Sell Defense
.MEN• WOMEN
& CHILDREN
•
COMPLETE
GYM
FACILITIES
•
STEAM ROOMS
ANAHllM
I 111.,995-9693 I
1221 KNOTT AVl.
Cetttfll' Kn•tt & lall
$,.
-ft'
F I IOOlSEY
KUPJGfU STl#WJS
JMJGfUST~
KUPJGfUST~
KUPJG-RI STUDJOS
JMJGfUST~
KUNG-fUST~
JOIJtfU STUDfOS -,
SPECIAL
CHILDREN'S
CLASSES
HUNTINGTON llACH
I 111•1 847-9130 I
6011 WAl:NIR ILVO..
Wamw ~-. lhetttt'tt1 C9fttw
DOWNIY
I 12t>) 869-92291
11026 S. DOWNIY AVI.
Q~ 10 a.m. ... ' ""'· MMMfay thru Sehlnlay
.... ,
• .......... ., 211. 197)
READING -MATH
SPELLING
DIAGNOSTIC TESTING (No Chergo)
Your Child Wiii Rocolve
Guaranteed l·to-1 Instruction
At EBRONIX-Whoro RHding
11 Enjoyabe
2750 H~rbor Sulto 7B C.M. 979-1626
NOW FORMING
Qualified Instructors
Beginners & Intermediate
Classes are being held
Morning-Afternoon-Evening
THE WET
CANVAS AR·T
GALLERY
11512 llo•ch Blvd.,
Huntington Beach
963-2929
DAILY PIU7T
ORANGE CO.
AIRPORT
3 man lll\V firm has space
avail in Its new, attractive
suite for 1tono1ny minded
young attorney. Fum/un-
furn, all services avail.
833-3622. __ EE!_
OFFICE SPACE
Newport Beach. building
overlooks 811.lboa Bay.
Prime arc'a. Various size
suites, rent or lease. 3700
Ne\\'port Blvd., NB. Mgr.
615-1220.
JolJU. SERVICE
Wostcllff Building
Corner Westcllff Drive &.
Irvine Blvd., New po r I
Beach. Mr. Howard
645-6101..
OFFICES AVAlL NOW. Vic
17th SL C.M. 2-3 Rm suites,
cpts, drps, $150 &: f175. l-5
Rm. $300. an1ple park
space. Sultabel Dr. Dent.
Rllr. MNI Lnb. Account,
ete. 642--1272
PRF.STIGE OFFICES
New prof'! bldg, Fountain
Valley. $250 per mo. inclds
recept. rm; recepl;
ans\ver'g service. Se!:relar·
ia1 service avail. Ph:
847-8989 or 962-8955.
DESK space available $50
n10. \Viii provide furniture
at $5 mo. A11s1vering service
avaHable. 17875 &aeh Blvd.
Hunlington Beach. 6~2--1321
Business Rent1I 445
* • * Stovo Cappel
400 Merrimac Way
Apt 14
Costa Mesa
You are the wi nner or
TWO FREE TICKETS
to the
Southern California
MOBILE HOME SHOW
May 26th lhru June 3rd
nl lhe
ANAHEIM STADIUM
2000 S!nll' CollC'b'C Blvd.,
t\n:dK'fn1
Pleruw rall 642-5678. ext 314
10 clriirn your tickels. {North
County toll free number is 540-1220.)
* * * 1·15 E. t81h sr. C.l\f. Suitable
for slores or ofc's. fa) 684
s/f, $190/mo, Cb) 362 s/I,
$100/mo. (c) 1069 sfl,
$265/mo. C.J .S. R e a I
F.stalc, 5-18-1168 1 Come In Or Call
Bu1ines1 Hours 9:30 AM to 6 PM "The f'Rctory " has Shops :
~~~~ A\•ail . Jrlen.I for bookstor<> I ~ ·1eath~1· shoµ, ct<'. Sto1ting
fron1 SllO/n10. 42.) 30th St ..
EXCELLENCE · 1N
SUMMER DAY
PROGRAMS
• Boys & Girls K-6th Gra<le
• Arl, Music, Drama
• Sports Activities
• Field Trips, Cookou ts
• Reading & Malh Tutoring
• Science &. Cullural Activities
• Museuins·Tidt Pools
•Knolls Be[ryFarm
• Train lo S.D. Zoo
• Circu1-'R.Qdeo
• Sea World
• Olvera SI.
\~--:-ENROLLMENT UMITED! ~ \
CALL NOW• //
675-4022
Pre-School Programs
All Year
./
' '
c:JVewport ~viera
S th & Marguerite Corona del Mar, c;"al.
N.B. GT.l-9600 i
STORE. good loc. nr. N'pt l
Posl Ofc. 940 Sq. Ft. $2501 1no. Also avail. adjoin. 1350
Mop. Ab'1. &16-2114
STORE/office nr. N'pt. Post
Office & GN'yhouncl depot.
587 Sq. Ft. $160 ~10. I Agent 646-2414
CUfE ADOBE JIOUSE, 1000
sq H, arljoining busy cornrr,.
Costa l\fesa. 645-2020/~t
Industrial R•ntal 450 j
NOW LEASING
Huntington Beach
NEW M-1
. 940 Sq. Ft. & Up
llan1ilton & Nt"wland
646-0697 or 83.l-OOUI
1'.iOO !>Q ft M·l spe.ce, 'v/front
oUlees, lrg rear door, $180
n10. 1781 \Vhlttlcr St. CM.
646-5033 clays, 64~1 eves
M-1 l~ sq. ft, front office,
lrg rl'ar door. lUO Logan
St., $180 mo. 646-0033 dnys
&'6--0f.SI PVl'S.
Rentals W1nted 460
NEF:o sn1all house. Eastsidc
OJ. l\'/fnced yarci for clOJi:.
\\'orklng adult w/excellt'nt
ttferl'ncci;. 5'15-0048 att. JI
AM
3 OR 4 BR unfurn home in
Newport area. i\1id.June .
Sept. 1st 6·14-4T:J6.
·---· I~
Announcements 500
• * • Kenneth Hamilton
515 Marigold
Corona del Mar
You are the .... 1nner of
TWO FREE TICKETS
to the
Southern Californl1
MOBILE HOME SHOW
May 26 th thru Jun~ 3rd
at Ille ANAHEIM STADIUM
2tm Stale College Blvd.,
AMhein1
PleAse cJill 642-5678, ext 31"
lo claim your tickclS. (North
County toll tree 11umber is
540-1220.)
* * * ALLEVlATE anxletles, lean,
gulJt. Be hea1ed I
suacsUve meditation. Cal
S<:>Z29.
•
,
ff GAILY PILOT M.....,, IA., 28, 1973 OAILY PllOT
~[ ~ ... ~·11w~J~~~~-~·-~l[f!J~1 l ---1~
5c1-lo a. 11 i. Boby>lltl"I Holp w ... w , M & , tlO Help w-, M & ' 711 I .:.:====.:.:;..;...;.==i:...;;=====o 1,,=
l[D] .__I ....... • ,·_: -· I e -.. , .. , .. , $-··~ .
< i '
lnotrvctioftl S7l IMlnKtl-575 YOUNG .i...... •••••• CAMIERS. NEIEPlt;>
ORANGE COUNTY ~~.i!,'t_,..;:.=ATTEN MEN Fdlt DAILY PILdt
VOCATIONAL =.:-~. . ~''!;~"v~
TRAINING ~HOOL WILL bolld or ; •pa! r C~~1:!"'
LEARN ~.rsn~--· ~== 8u1inn1 S.rviu. , AUTO TUNE-UP --'"-•~;;;.;..._-1 Don't' min thli oppo ........... I Typing Spec:l11i1t1 '~-·· J
...... ....... Wt .. rv!(e. 50 TRAINEES Pick up • dellv. 64Ul50 * I Wlllt INTINSIYI COUISI
* TVmON flHAHCIN!i
AVAIL.AILI
* MOIHING AITTlHOON &
mHIH. CWSIS
* 'MODllN
DIA I Nome
19UIPMINT
* ,.., ..... TION POI I
CLASS "A'" SM06
LICIHSI INCLUDID * Job Placement lu1i1t1nce Av•ll•ble •' * Clain• Forming Now * Sp.clal CourM1 for Mach•nlc1 who
need Cl11s "A" l icense
•---FOR INFORMATION"!"'--.. I CALL 714/646-5065 I ·
2120 PLACENTIA AVE .-COSTA ME!A
Bus IN E.Ss Management SerVioe. D. J. Tue:lle w.
Alsocial'e'I. 644--1869.
JOHN'S ~ I: UMoJAtery
Drl·Sbampoo tree Scotch·
guard (Soll Retardants).
Degreasers &: all · color
brigbtenen: & 10 minute
bleaeh for whlte carpets.
Save your money by saving
me extra trips. Will elean
Uving n'L, .dlninl: rm, &
hall IJS.. Aey rfn. 17.50,
couch $10. Qi.air $5. 15 yrs.
exp. is what counts, not
method. 1 do 'NOrk myself. Good rel. 531--0101.
-~· I
C1rpenter
I~ I ..,. ... ,,_. Jfnl NEW, remod'1, framo &
'W I L:1J fin"h, "°"''· offices &
. L. -----;;~·:;; homea ·etc. custom work. I Licensed. !162-1961.
Ptrson1l1 530 Found (free ids) 550 C•m•nt, Concrete
We hope that so gOOd trainees wl.U an-
swer this ad to fit good posiUw .. Jt
doesn't matter what your past work has
been I! you can qnail!y. AU we ask Is
that you will be willing to study and
learn as you will be· taught our work.
You will be selected through a
· SClentJflc
Unblo~
Aptitude Tut
Which will tell you whether you possess
the fundamental ability necessary for
success in our home maintenance elec-
trical industry. ),' ou wijl enjQy taking
the test; it's free, given on interview.
Our work is not hard. We are .not pie
type 9! company to stantl over a ll\IU!
or woman and drive them. We do, how-
ever, expect an' honest day's Work for
an honest day's earnings. ' ' . . .
$150 Per Week·
"
... ...~,.,
MALE OR FEMALE
MUST BE 10 YEARS OF AGE OR CLOER
HAVE A O!iPENl>A&LI llKE
GOOD PROFITS!
• ' COASTAL
'PERSONNEL
I AGENCY Pln1•1I AIHCJ . "*' ....,,_..._.Pant ..... ,.._JM It." Htfl It •
CALL 642-4321 Aak fer Goty Jorrott S.I .. Rop Audio
H°lp Wonfod, ~ & F 110 Help Wini.cl, M & P 710 ACCOUNTING CLERK Vision Aldeo
Blueptint
Operator
*·CARPET c LE AN ER Co. C•r + ,.,.,...
WANTED. min age 21, start Gre11.t chance to ute )"DW' •c· + Comml1alon
$2.50 hr. Call ~n62 COUDt1llc "Pf1'· w/this AAA Ht!tt is an outztandtnir oppcr.
ti.mt. Data proceulna inpul tor Alea oriented C&ft'a'
a +. Salary to $600. Call motivetf!d individual. CaJl CHARGE or "Uel coo1c
needed for retirement home.
Pleasant work. X I n t
benettta. ~7095
i..lnd.a Ray. on schools. Xln't bendl..._
I $10,800.
c.11 Burt LMr ll3H'lOO
Aro lmmodlole oponing CLERICAL ORIVER S.IH Tme lo $tK
t exists. for a tempor· * TEMPO * Growina tinn in Irvine Learn the art ot tellllll cm ary on-dll blu9prlnt/ Complex. Muat h.1u·e good the inside in thla 1enow:nt!d
xerox operator. JndJ.. NEEDS YOU "OWll drivina: tteord &: JOn'le corp.&:-then mow out.Ide A vlduola with previous n .. watthooae -· Start -up .. ,., .......
ex.,.,rfence pr~rred. · Call Sally·"-"· Call Burt Lorw" 13.1-7!00 ~ . FILE CLERKS
Apply In Poroon SEC"Y JR lo. SR .. Accounting to $12K
4333 H•rbor Blvd. ~~~CLERKS ENG~ELECTRONICS 1=:va~:n1ln.n~C:t~
Costa M11A, .Caflf. F/C .,B()OKKEER.ERS !l.S.E.E. v.1/prus 4 BN t.rit'ndly company. A• I -·h Qt.I~ """'RS Appl. engitift:r exPtr. in benefits. D ..... ,...,.H ., .... v~ tran· ... ucers. Xln't uJA .... " Call Burt l.oog m-:nm KEYPUNCH OPRS ,..,. -J ~ firm. Call Don Jackeon. Bookkeeper to $550
IDEAL WAY TD A Little 811ic Moth
'... 'ff INGR·ELECTRONICS Goes• Iona:""" ln -thll poeltion in 11maJI con-........ ,"written nu~r~nt.. EAMI XTRA MONEY B. s . E . E. w I broad genial co. Friendly lndlv. * * * BRICK veneers .. Slumpstone r-• ,,...,,..,,. Kn background &naloa: & E/M PJ&'ht. * * * Lawerence Auletta & concrete, block fehces plus bonus and cash advances. U you are de•isn. AID Conv. Comm'I Call Kim Clarie m-2100 23~S ~~I~~~·~.. 9860 Flemlngq Avo. ~~ .. ;,,,,:,_~ tronl sincere, clean cut and anibltiOlls calJ: Equal Oppor. Empl.,..Ymlf WORK fJT' OR P/T j~n~ C.U Don AcCOU11li"1Clerkte$52S
Costa Mesa Fountain V•lley PATIOS, walks, drives. Sav.., 838·5267 Preatl91 Company
You are tht> winner ot You are tht> wmner of hrellk, remove & replace Boat Manufacturirlg Hett le: your chance to join a
TWO FREE TICKETS TWO FREE TICKETS "'"""l•. 5411-8668 '""I. ~:!';::!, 81;:'de,., Trainees TOP $$$$ ENGR·MECHANICAL llne dept. innamem. Brlaht
lo lhe
10 "" • FOUNDATIONS T Artl"i< , URN & TUES 9AM41'M Only "-willing to·work & lndlv, '°""''· All ..,.. Sout•·rn California Southern California Planters, col\cr'ete & brick n., , 1 --~ pl Good B.S.M.E. exper. In cen· benefits. ~ MOBILE HOME SHOW L d earn ,_,.. ~P y. "-·1ne "" "~ ~·-• pump de 1 l,..,... Call -Mann -· -MOBILE HOME SHOW patios, ete. ic' 644--0687. wages &: benefits. "'" 17802 Sky Parle.,..,....._ Hj;d~~lca. Capable of~ ~ .. •w
May 26th thru Jwte 3rd May 2Gth 8~ June 3rd S I p E \VALK S ! patios, Help V'•nfed, M&F 710 ' ERICSON YACHTS NEVER A f"E~ A~ TF.MPO I~ Innovative Rlf A la for Appln
at the ANAHEIM STADIUM dnvev.·ays & ,brick walls., · I~ ' 540-8001 Tempo Temporary1HC!:JP --rt•r. Call~ Jacbon. Fee PaSd ANAHEIM STAOIUM Call JeSI, !"67-«124 ..,_ _,,_ AIR-AfP. <!erk. At leut 2 . . ...--Entry 1 ... 1 poottlon In_,
2000 State College Blvd.. 2000 Stal~~~:;e Blvd., Contractor . . yrs exper. Newport Beach ~t Repalrman/TrMa Cleri 0>. that often all bmdltl -+
Anaheim Please call 642-5678, ext 314 · ~Salary~. Call EXper. pret'd. Penn !/time .GLn•r Ofc Cltrk OIRL FRI MEDiCAL aym. ~ lndiv. aouahl Please call 642-5678, ext 314 to claim your tickets. <North JACK Taulane -Repair · ' only. Must have short hair Bkk tra· 1 good .._,__ · AJ..o Fee .Jobs.
to claim your ti eke ts, j North County toll free number is re mod., eddlt. 20 yrs exp. Painting a., , &, dean record. Blacki~s Ing pnf lO ~ne~'addlng ~;: ~al hospital needa in-Call Lil Ba1te 833...2700
County toll free number is 540·l.2'l0.) Lic'd. My Way Co. 547-0036 Paperh•r'!Gl"9 ~TRl>lYA· i'NEES...1 : ~tyard, 2414 Newport' • '.cbiz)e req'd. Learn sw:ltch· dlvidual who can handle Admit Clrk Tme to $451
540-1220.) * * * JACK Taulane -Repair .,,..... boan;I. Apply L. M. Cox busy Insurance desk. Start Ind * * * FOUND large altered male remod . ., addlt. ~ yrs exp. No Wasting $700 Manufacturing Co., Ino., 1505 $51Xi. Call &J.ly Hart. K HHrt
VETERANS cat, -y strl .... d, 4 Seasons Llc'd. My Woy Co. 547-0036 * WALL-PAPER * l,mm~!1~ •~-i..n--~, *Bklcpr ~ to E.· Watner, S.A. An Equal Cool HNd · ho •·-~ . When""" cllll "Mlle" .-w ,.,.... .. ,,,... .. , ' f"/C, Coristructlon o N~~ I lhl -Earn $4.58 to $7.00 per ur Moblle Park, Costa Mesa. Electria•I· J--e bl pportunHy EmplO)'er. ~ or 1 e
guaranteed by using your 646-GMl. owner please ' 548-J444 eves. Assetfl y ~xecSec'y to$700 CLERK TYPIST KEYPUNCH OPR meetin1 spot. Ve-ry G.t. Benefits v.•hUt" at· clain1. No pets alloy,-ed HOMEOWNER'S electrician. Patios e Fl'-CL...L Life ins. exper req'd . rev.'IU'Ctln& pol!Uon awaits
tending Santa Ana College. here! Alr cond. dryers, 'ZJ/JV, re· "' 'IWl"llS '" *Secretary $625 Part time. 1 pm to 5 pm. Large corp ofc located at )'OU.
call now -• FOUND Siamese kitten mod, etc. 545--6)27 WOOD Patio Covers, Criss e p-Lers ,' Mftl'keting/SaleS , ~~ Moo-Frl.$1$2.50 hr. Bllllna, (uhion Island. Exper. on Call Norma Sands m..2700
547-956l Ext J?O vicinity Sha.key's Pizza ELECTRICIAN, licensed, Cross Lattl~. Garden ~ *Recept. to ,$550 ~wplntm_ F~f;~¥.!"h~ a2!J .\ 009. Start $f.OO. Call •-...t..AM
FULLY UCENSED Pftl'lor, Newport Beach. bonded. Small jobs, malnt & Structures. For APP t' • Fold~ I : Good typist, hvy phones Me 11 a t I e ct;~ n I cs $ally Hart. Vat Atat ~ "'C * SPffimTALlST * Contact Shakey'e for in· repairs, 543--5:113. 649-2204 The Good Guys. TOP $$$ "";Secretary . $;500 I;llJ.tribptor Could lead to And !:" ~~ u
Spiritual r eadings IO am-10 formation~ Gardening Pla•t1r, Pa~. Repair Bank Joan department tull tilne Jl desired. ~ LlliGAL S·ECRETARY lO'J _ .. w·-id:.ny doctor.
pm. Advice an all m~tt~. FND: 2 cats, both altered Irvine (2 Shifts) 541)-445() ·*6en'I Ofc $450 Mornings plea.e, l\1r. Tuttle Brt&bt lndtv. wttt be ,taulht
312 N. El Camino Re • n males. 1 semi-long haired A Profe!ll)onal, unl1onned * PATCH PLASTERING * 17802 Sky Park Good typist,•hV'Y ck!tail · a..E'Rk 'Pyplst. accurate cfrowtng electronl.ct tlrm all ~
CI em en t e • 4 9 2 -9136, arange-white, Other Short gardening learn, Se'rvlng All types. Free estimates NEV'tR A FEE AT TEJ\fPO *S.cretery $600 t y p Jn g:' iOOd phone lteds lttl'etary 'ff/OO'rfJ 6· Call 8arh&ra Mac m..2100
492--9034. haired grey tiger. 'Vic: only lg estates, apt & Call ~ Tempi) Temporary Help Yroperty management J?U&On,Jit,y, under 25, 5 day, ~r. Good benrtita. Salary
PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con· Mesa Dr & Newport Blvd Indus compl~es. Free est. Plumbing '*S.crat•ry ,-, $600 $00, call 'M9-0410 tor ~ » $4i50. Call Sally Hut. K----'-.. $12IO t id en t, s y m pa the t I e C.M. 828-1283. CUstmn" L&ndaeape Maint tervi .,.....,."""
pregnancy counseling. Abar-Basset £n4) 531-1280 LR. OTIS PLUMBING A'ITRACllVt ~~ S3.00 Accounting firm ew -~ • Punchh• I• Pun Here lion &: adoptions ref. TRl-colored male "A Frank M NelAon Co" 0 ·models k ~e-; .. Water per hr ·plus ,mluh.,. fti.I Ot' ' HELEN SOIAFFER •. · CLERK-TYPIST ••.. T~ Dnn Mt:ltt altrt 1,.. 642-4436 ilound V.'eari.pg heavy black . . no:; ..--~· part time. Perm. Work H.B. I rERSONNEL AGENGY . . ' "*' ""'NAGER TRAINEE dtvidual. Good location .. APCARE leather oollar with broken GARDENER of 7l yean ex· heaters, disposals, furnaceis. area. Pmhe 4 tO 6 PM for , 4:62 Campus i:>rl\"?J. No. B. Sh!PIStn&', 42 "McelVlng, type !16; , 'l • _ &reu;:rret1l4.
H 0 r.1 0 SEXUAL IN-rope, \'i.cinity Bo~ A ptrience..; seeks 4-5 ad· dlhwashrs. pl~ l M/~ &. appt. . 6Mf2180.· Christian l$vport Beach, ,i 5S7r2111 WPM .u:atnlnwm. Sa1ary Join natlondy imown.'ftrm. ln Call · Mann &U4lm
FORMATION Springdale, H.B. 892-384o. ditional maintenance jobs. iA·. Com o::~e P tun mg Studkis :il26-M JI n Oil i a open. Good fringe beneflta. tbe financial field. Gnat op-• •
Gay Switchboard Hotline l t SSS George H_~e~ll rv'ice. Anahetiii. · ' Bo OK KEE p ER, Full Hoon 7;30AM-fPM, 5 days, lpr. for advancement. c;ri~al Ole to MOO
PREGNANT? Th Ink Ing Ldsr i\daffi!I it_ Magnolia EXPER. Japanese Gardener. No job too l11l8ll ~ • • rm:rtsurate WI tiielqitomld 'Slnta Mli'"&f'N'I 546-9842 Otar:· ~· . • ··~~~.!_"-!TI4J 642-4253 Ot" 833--0238 o~* , . * ~ * . . PLUMBING REPAIR AUfl charge. Sa la n-com· plus l!'\'1!?)' other Saturday. Salary to $525. Call Gloria N I rd=-H
abortion? Know all the facts H.B. area, sn11 black male Know how. Tr Imm Ing . -~ ?\'tfi9-!l28 * * SAlEs " N .. '· " & 'abftity. A~·m )lreraol'I,' • c0MMERCIAL \ .,,. . Va.rleb' ,,.'J \.~.;._)'ID
first! Call LIFE LINE -24 d<>g w/white ctnt. chin & Clean-up. Small landseap-LABEL'S ~ deaning ·r 1752 I.angle~,'•'• ., ~~Jl keep~ lndlv. •-w7 In
hrs, 541-5522. trnt feet. Med. len&f.h~ 1JW..968-3Q&. . •. . · '9.sl • 24 hour service Ni!~1en~~ a ~us ~~C1 • F~~1 BOTIQUE 8aQlih'i ' o:21l/ii wi1~~ 'h.Btre a po11tion ffATST QPIRATOR ~_, colJi.on.~~~
REWARD Help me find . US;' reward for EXPER Ahleriean ·I *979-8630* rarl,Ulrg~lnventoryOtu~ :W::a'?-.~1!.,~~ ·~tor1 .~~per.commer-~ol 0ranp Count;y'iCall'IQnnM'anh IS.14100 Bartender job. $25. If hired ~lOl Garderie~. Maintenanct1 Rictflng , ,. can,•Tree demo, cxceller\t l 'ty train h -..uoty~~ tial telel'I'. j It comp&nita. Go od '• A=~LlCS Anonymous. 1'~ ~d ":f~e ~ ~~uii. L&bd~pil;lg: RbbFrNG-rock & shingles, working conditions, See BUd ~xP'd . 673-7'89 ~n :\.ltlt Mt:' }f!/.~ Contact 836-3505 Great benefit&. Start 811nk, Gen'I Ofc te ftOO
Phone 542-7217 or write N'P;.C,~ lie tag & flea tag1 EXPE'R. Japanese GardeQ!?'l'. ~ estimate. Do it now & Rydel!NorEYiPOait 5 · · /\. · -· · ~i(OF' AMERICA , Call Sally Hut. You Can 8enk
P.O. Box 122.1, Costa Me!a. Re'!!rd 64&-2911 "· · c,\ithplete yard U'V. Relia. A sa.~. 846-1098 Eves. ~. BUSBOYS . f'\eWport Center Branch · . Tre On Thlt
SWINGING SINGLES SMAU. white teddy beu. rieat.,.,..., est,m-089. Sewlng/Allor11ion1 IMPORTS HOSTESS.CASHIER ' ~ 01'1""· Employor RECEPTIONIST ~ ::!'~O.U.:
Call ''Leah" 2.spm. 53().1250. Lost 5113s:e~! General S.rVlc:n 11..l~rotlon-,.2 • .,5 3100 w. Coast Hwy., N'.B. Full-Time COMPANION -Prefer banJdna flekt Friendly ln-
Soci1I CluDS 535 ..., •• -...,_ 642-9405 wiclqw ·-......n "I" ~ to promotion of pretent div. ~ 1:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1i::r ~~ fe,~~~ ~ C•ptafn1 Car Care Nut. accurate. :al yean exp. AUTO SALES , rfliply Iir PtnJn ·50-60. C.re for beef ,,... ~~ t~pu~ ~Call Llz &U--2100
LOVE WORN ~7973 CdM Area ~~ !r~ it Tutprfng Experience preferred, ....tfI: H 428 H~~tr°ee~LI tlent-llve In. Roern & 1: 1peak w/eaM on the R ... rvatton1 to $400
Discover DISCOVERY' LOST male Samoyed. Vic. of consider sharp trainee. New; CoBta Mesa board, Nlary op 1 n. phone. Must have &ood typ. le A Travelers Al• PROFESSIONALS in a field o-"-& Bay, r -ta Mesa. H1ulln9 *·Concrete &: Asphalt Saw· car dealship oilers ~ _,_, R-Lr-oa -u1--•. Ina: lkilJa. Call Gloria Gray. W·" ~-co. -~-·-~-~ s;f' • Call Dale After S pm, ,.,.., ....... i ... io1:.and demo f, ·· Equal Oppor. Em.-.zer •~ ... "' ... ., J".u cu. AINWn ~ qt Amateur 1.1atchmakers. 54J!.<949 ,_ 1~-·• 7968 """'"-~•19•1 •-· "' ~~-Ind! ~ ,.,,,~ GEN Haul..... Tree .,.uuy -. Go00. co. netlts. App y ia 7-" .. ._ a•u-...:u~ V. --(Est. 1"""). GOLD harm b 1 t 1r· G • Yd 1 BUSBOYS . PR IPQt. Free lunch .. f714l 835-6885 (213) 387-3393 e race e -im. ar • c eanup. pe"'°11, Mr. Brad Bodoh. COOK'. \\'c have· penn. pott. SEC'Y·RECEPT. -·-~ta: here. l"!!"""'"'""""'""'""'""'"""I keepsake -REWARD! ID -Est. 531-6377, 5.57~904. ' 1969 Harbor Blvd., Costa Apply In Person tlons open lor an exper cook ··-..,
'PARTNER' lNTROD. : IRMA. 5'18-2342 aft. 5 LOCAL moving & hauling It; I= '. llit ! Mesa. Alrport1r Inn Hotel &: dietary aide. Immed Ntw ottlce tn N,B. nHdt Call Barban Mat: l3S-27m
personal Service. L<l\v Fee student. Large truck. Reu. E11•111•1t AUTO O.C. AJrporl Arell employment. Park Udo penon who can handle •--retiry to ._
548-1479 or 836-tm 534-1846 ar 5.14-2164. 1 18100· MacArthur Flaphlp Conv; Center, 466 phones w/eaM & u. die· ...,,.. ~ Paid ••-
I 1 1~1 32' FURNITURE Van for MECHANICS Newport Beach n .. ship, N.B. tAphone. Salacy to lltlO C.U Lind Cf..:....,.,,, awalta ~nstrucHon loca~ furn hauls & gen'I Job W•nted, Male 700 Toyota ar Jaguar. and lubt" COOKS ~a Ray. atttactlve lndlv. In w. top
I§] hauling. 548-1862. , men. Altk for Bo b Career Secretaries Full or pl.ti~, No long hair. echekJn pc.ltlon. Tentnc
1-lftd FOll1d SKIPLOADER & dump truck * * * Thompgon. Laguna Beactli{ Carl'a Jr. Reat. l!'O'IP A super 1tatt. Aho !~------;,:;;; Schools & v.'Ork. Concrete, asphalt Fred Rlce 540-3100 • 1 Average range $500-f750 Top App\Y in penion between 3 SHIP & RECEIV. Fee J'Ol» II lnitruction1 575 sawing, breaking. 846-TllO. 19615 Surf 8r.eek•r AUTOMOTIVE·, . Palnte~·• s. NO . FEES. N.B., C.M.. A 5 weekdaya, Ca.r1'1, 3101 Rapidly srowina: flnn In Call Marion Mann 833-7l'OO
Found (free ads) 550 1---------LOCAL moving, & hatlling W HuntingtOn · B•ech helper wanted Al>ply lri INine, Orange & S.A. ~all Newport Blvd, N~port Ikh. Jrvtne Complex. G reat •--m L
1 1:..;:.:;.;=..;:.;..;;.:..=;:...._;..;.. Ebronix stlideri.t. ~ tl"uek. Reaa. You are the wumer of person. 1510 Ave. De I;..a Immediately. COOK for small nunlng ~ tar advancement. ..,.. •ry, et•
FOUND -Youni.t white Tutorlnn Clinic 5J4!.1846·or 534-2164. TWO FREE TICKETS Estrella, San Clemente. J~ • pp S. home In Lquna, day lhltt, ~uat have exper. & be A Quick Verdict
female kitten lrt1ust go) • YARD'. &'&ra&e cleanuJSs, to the Mac PheDOn Body ShoP~ • •. 40 hr.s/wk. Call tor amt. eleancut. Start $800. Call Fee Paid
Vic. of Albert & Orange, READING Re treq dlrt ,Q;l;. -1 See Glenn. , . 494.«1'75. • ' Sally Hart. Unanimous i:ledskln tavorlnc SPELLING move , ' . Southorn Cellfo.,H• AVON SAYS Peclllc Poroon~ COOK-It~-• . ..--'-r. ab• ', this xln't flrm will be mode Cast a 1'-1 es a B cf . Dnve\vyat gracHng. 847-. MoBl'tE HOME SHOW ~n. "At"" le
9am-645-T.>57 MATH H I 1 ''Be Your Own Bosi'f 1 ~~l'.'Vlc11,, I~.__ ... to take..cbarlc ... Hleman wiU by thalp indlv. who withea
FND -Orange long haired Free Diagnostic Testing OUHC -:.:. "1 . Mey 2Gth a~~ June Jnl Earn an income at your ~1 500 N~ Center Dr. usirt. 2 acllts, nu home. ~ ST~K CLERK ~~ = FO:,. ~ (b.
('at. Vic. l\farqUerite & 979-1626 * •·~AD~ -Need a hand ANAHEIM STADIUM right tn your own nelgbboJ'. &:Ute~. ?ii.~ Refs. 6Ff.::872. ~ _ Call Khn Clark 8.u-2100
Coast Hwy. CdM, Male. l :~~~~~~~~~I w/lifting, rnevtrir, odd ......., eoi-··-,,.:rr 81.:...1 hood.·Be u:"A:VW'f -R--.i · 640-1970' •COOK * • Cf nation&ll.1 knowT1
Eila-4944 aft Ei job1? Call Sam; 673-5900 -~-~ege vu.,· &entAUve." can new.:' -7;'7'~ ~ ~en~~T1.:fl'·;cn.ana:e NJTES.kttdi""'•'. Mndllna J. . Q~~ ~ ~ .. f!, Rec .... IMtlat to~ l~ eves ~""m 546-5341 "54a-1Ml • . •. .,. . .....-~,-. "!tnbfM ~"Small dinne't .u• ...,... ""1"" .,._.. QmCH purs e wlth . Please call 642-5618, ext 314 Ol" Equal Oppor: !mplO)'er ,.,.,,, .. ~·· rn.. .......... 2-5 .... ~... maflc\rt .. 7th HNven Prescription glas.!!es. l!Jth St. s.mc., •nd R'P*I SUPER effielcnt Cal. 5tudent to claim yolll' tickets. <North ijABYSI1TER wanted even-,..,.. • ...-1 •-...... deiltt to advance. call Fee Paid
Costa rtfesa, 548-9387 aft. ~-----.:;~.: seeks N · B · -C · l\f . County toll free nwnber is tngs ln mY home. 1 ~ (;ray, Here'• a drMJn spot b' at· E~=."~t"'~"";-~-r-cT-.1-~-!"-L~',-~-.,i • 0i;!d!'l;.~i:n :f.f~~·~1~::~ ;i~M-LETS 0:~~~ E J:;~~ :: !~~ ACCOCOUSNTTING ,, ·T;LL;; :· a~de=r~~:";E
del Mar 6'73·-0363 · eo-. 537 1 tl\lt CM Beautiful modem Io ea l Call Lli Blake 83.l--7100 [Arge German shepherd, nit. Coron• el M•r Dutch Malnt .,,c•Y· •J.iJVO ANSWERS . .a.. branch hu Immediate optD-
Vlc. rmHS. Black &, tan. You are I.he winner of Oec:lfcated Cle•ning Balboa Bay ~lub Tral.aees lo $3.00 hr. ANA'YST Ina for lndiv. w/torne ex· Office Mir to $650
Friendly. 842-6478. TWO PREE TICKETS • WE DO F..'VERYTHJNG * L.ctl1a Spa Attend•"t =::!~~!n ~~::.:: 1 1 •. ~ . -per. Sallll')' to $:iOO. Call Name Your Hat Sl1e
SPAYED fem ~og, 7TTIO!I., to the Refs. Free t'fllt. ~2839 Joyous -Groin -Dogma,_ Prkir exper In BPI j>rocad-?dalnt & Qnhn $1.80 hr Unda Ray. y~·n wear a variety hen u
fox len'ier mix, wh w/blk Southern Callfornle Xlnt Howtecltan\ng Mea?ow -MUGGERS . ure. Mutt be over 21, J'Bnltbn T $2.25 hr I $800-$'° Per Mo 1ee'y to W. (but ma.naset tee 4 ean, vie Arch Beach MOBILE HOME SHOW By Day. Own Transportat1on Crinie ln New Yorl< Cir_y: lmowltdgeable In uac ot Lwnber Handler Open y.· ... ' , or th" tcrriftc co. Gf'Mt
Hts, Laguna. 494--9815. Ma,y 26th tbrU June 3rd * 836--0648 * H's gcttlng 30 badMUaftGerGmERSid. whirlpool & J11auna. Contact E)cpcr Truck ..Drivrr 2 ears Experleandnce I~ either TYPIST benefit•.
at the I nlght CV(.'n the ' Peraonnel Mana,,r, a ..... ,1~1' t1e $3.00 hr job cost or st a1u coal. Call ~ Manh l33-2'll» FOUND bike v I c In it Y ANAHEIM STADIUM L11nd1cep ng travel in paJ;s, . 12'11 w. Coast Ifwy., N.B. rn•;;; ~ $3 00 Ji rtfust Interlace w/product Large lnlurance m. w/tlne ~~u~:1 t!~ ~1;,s~ t' 20Xl State Colle(l'.e Blvd., LARGE Yucca P1-nts -Xlnt Job W1nted, Ftim•I• 702 a!.. J ·Drf\rer St. s.3.so ~~ a.swell as mana1ement. benefltJ. Mbst be aceunte PBX Trainee
An11heim tor Jandlcaplna:. Alto other BANKING Arc ~eider St $.1.50 hr Call Immtd, lately typist w/dlctaFhone exper. Sorry Wront Number FOUND pregnllilt cat. Vic. t'leasf' call 642-5678. ext 314 plllnll. 961-002S NEED help at home? We UNION BANK Ord Dietl{ • to mo mo Start $472. Cai S.lly Kart. Uni~ )'Ol.I have a ltrOl'C
Santa Esabclle &: Santa ~B to claim your tickets. (North •• _ have a.Ides, n u r !I e II · l-lu an opentqi for A lndde s.ltf to $*>O mo • p p s deal re (0 ltt.m thll sw1tef'I.
Ave, Costa Mesa.. 548-1 County loll tree number ls m.aonry ho u 1 t kprs, eompanklns. CUSTOMER Ins. Asst Mgr St. $800 mo • • • bovd. Beautiful '°"'
OI..DER Grut D a n e !Wfi..1220.) QtJALJTY k Homemake.rs U p j o h n , TnUnff $450 mo It btnefita.
llrlndlo l•m. Fnd Vk. * * * Brick" btoc~..:Jr.. ;,:'J.,; ~7-<681. SERVICE, ~I.ERK · -P1clflc f'oroonnel FrH & FM Pooltloni Call ~ Mac m.
Ii'vtne & Mell!. Dr. 567-7861 B•by•lttlng a ~lty. 640--0887 BAB y s I TT ING. LITE Exper desirable. Pleq.e ·~ Factory Tntet to $2.00 hr S.rvlc.•. Inc. FEMALE Great Dnne -Vic. I;:;:;.;;.=="'-----& HOUS~~ IN_ YOUR .. 1 1 · ... ~ng Madi opr $2.00 hr
Santa Ana &: Del Mar. CHILD ea.re -pre t er Pilntlng flOME AVa.llAble Weekend! .,.y n.per90llo ·· ',.• /!iaM. Mar ~ $2.75 hr 500 Newport Center Dr.
Fawn. 54!Hl2'2.1 chUdren 2--5 yn. aid. My P1,.rhanglng ooly, ~ eall after 6 PM 610 Tt= ~, br ~~~:..Sk'Pr St. $2.75 hr Suite 900 Newport Sch
WfUTE cockapoo p u PP y, homt, hot lunches, tned yrd. 60-{i687. , N Be e~r Recesi°nlst to $475 mo ~1970 :;r-ntan Valloy are a, CM 642-1169 G«rKe J1al~ 4 ~·ng OFF M&r/FC bk• .. alt affig EqualN•owport ~ iw F/C lcpr ' St S550 mo ~ 0~· fll'lpl~ lntarlor 1' Ext.,~· , ' r ppot, ~ Aalt -to $US wt< -32'11 OABY altting In my Colt.a Guaranteed Top Quality, & eec 1 tunctkma:. 6\rl P'rtdA)' $450 mo
SKAlJ,. black kitten with Mean hOme. Special care. Workmanship &:-Malertals 552--'7964 eves" Vfk,t'nds B.EAtmClAN ... anted tor Gen'I Ole St $400 mo
FOR ~CllO~ ...
CAll 540-6055
Or Apply
Oentol Cholroldo
Help A T-Fairy
ll<ll&hlflll defttfat -""'
to ....... "°"'"' omoe. CallLlslllalno -
2082 llcbelson Iii'. ma collar on Avocado S!, 54&-l!lffi ..... esdma!e1 Uc .• Ins. Htlp W1nlod, M & F 710 00.,. ialoo ati'IS.·;~ . APEX ~· Mruia 64~24 CIULO CARE In my home, 1-8'10--8S74 Pliua. Paid .;ae. .,o-a11 \ M~iif:::•i,i:.;:!!'3tC:h:... =lrl-'•"h"--S.~lle-r. dependable A ttl.la.ble. Odld-PAINTING .t: repair, 35 yni A.~ t~J(;ln · fM ~~I~, M&-7186. .
-nm trom 2 tn s. 546-015. •wkman1hlp """· Tllko ~. '=..,~~ly ' .::. BOAT hanfwanl l"lf!!D!blen. r0nl.l'vuruy AGENCY , DAlLY· PILOT 1nine 2790 Harbor Blvd
f91-Shuttftl Cottat Hwyi. BABYSI'M'ING, 24 hrs a 11dven1a1e of n1y exp, paneling . co. nt!eda youni expcr. Snl CattJV.tbl. 19.U tlftf. U'llllin
oc . 49)-(,657 day. Ucen8ed, nelta)Jle, At· W-1006: man to ~ etutlt; inj, J.;. Pomona, Santa Anll
MALE Welmarantr. Vlc. of
Two Guys Dept. Store, H.B.
:i.11-&!<1
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tcnllon. ltunt. Beach area. PROF. painter, blneat work, molding. Good appor. for 541-W • ;;Ji; 1 ltlO.C Newport Blvd,
Phone 968-0!87. reu. Int/ext, tree eat. rtaht man. Apply in penon, 1 ~ O:>lta MMe. 1 66-4320
Nepd a "Pad"1 Pl{lct an ad! J\Hs. $48·2759. 21SO S. Grand Avt .. S.A. ~ant ad results . • • .,.,...,.:,,,;·.,;,· ""'""'"""="~
WANT AD COl,lll M-
CALL '42-5678 ·1 __ , __ !l!!!l!ll_._2.718-•I
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:al ONLY PJUIT T-, 114' 2'1, 1973 ~~~~~~~~ll ~~~~~~~~l ~~~~~!!!!i!~""~-~~·~M~.,~28~, ~l"7~3~~~~~~~~1Wl.~Y~Pl~l.O~T~~·J1 fill(~~" •k;~•_,JIDJ I E eli• • l[l!J ( '"~ ,' ][j}J I -• :,;.•-· -,.,_,[DJ
,_ II
I F Htlp ......... M.& , flt ""' w.....,, MAF 7 Help Wantod, ""'' ;rut Htlp Wanfod, M a , 711 Help WMlod, M & F 710 Help w-. M & , no H•lp W,Mllod.-M & , 711 ~Ip w_~ F 11• ttelp WantocL~ ~
I ;.10 .. ~. _;;;:;_a:1~(l~~;pm;:~~~;;;;,.!!-:;ln EXP'1> r.,;hfl l'ftUI. f'tlrd ,., pq .. pq ....
H I P'rlld ~ '21i;!i"£'. l'nldtooU 0.. A Smott
-O>UI 8WJ' eorina de:I Mar l~. All bnf•/Penlbl
babyUt, .I..IV£..1N HOUSEKEEPER Nunes ,
"'· ""' ... -"'P"d a ,..r. _.. '""""" ""''"' to " MACHINISTS R~·~ ••DE TRAllNE&S • rv:ic.Ho•,..•• ... schlldrm, nw--1n· kl~ n.w for •"""'" NQWHtRING
pri no a.1* 6 TV. s day oldorty woman cool< 2 """' do """ I.Idle a mBI 11•7 a lhlJtL Too ""1 G., B INDUSTRIES '
t ' -• pllJ\. Torn Stamp Font 3.15
COOl'ON SORTERS N, lil ca..1no, Sah
<A1c, iovtl,y w a t e r f r o n 1 meal.$ dt..11)' Priv tV t•• • baY• own IOOIL dbty '*" Im.med. Pl.Y Jor • • ...,, Newpon Bch horM, salary hl>lnr 1n cai>1i.1ntno ":;ach.'. NITE FOREMAN Door fJ¥t:i. c 0 u n 1yw1 de FULL TIME .~ PA~ T Tl.ME
NWJ>t Bt;ti -Jo'flnale, lull or ~ n~U3'1'
P80 ti.mt. lnfnrin.l work.
t.ond. Much '1•nd Ing. EXEC. SECRl!TARY
Sl.6WJ.1" + """1 ·buod TO STORE MANAGER
boDu8. Solne Entil!.h ....,., E<cttil>tl ,d>all-phlon
·-open, m.sa:i6 Call t.1r. La"'·rence da,yUml. Sf'l.'OOtlary opef'1;t\oo l11trvw1. Moo-Fri 9 -5. ~$640 Mo SJ00.$410 Mo.
H 0 u s EKE E p 1 NG C00-4t38S -monthly ulary. ~ expt•r rfQ'd Car notch~ Le1Jeoulle 'NUJ'VIJ ftea:istry, • L.eMfnw..,..Supervisors -
Aidt-Perm Ut1me position. LVN. 11/limc or f/tlme 3-11 Ing, tapping, ~rllllng, de· a51 ll01pital Rd .. NB (1..Qb. $120 & Up Salary •
hnmed opt>nltig. 1 Paid stilrt. NURSES A t o Es = broacllf'rNj'~~" ofh"'r bf ltfrk' Udo 81 d r) Second shift work. No experl.ence necessary. hollcl.a).'1, vaL" & sick leave. 7-3: 30 lh.JJt. 99 Bed con-,..,...... 00-9955, 5«).9!JM. • ed l.f ed
P1trk Uk> F1agship Conv. vale9(..·tnt center. BeauUtuJ DAV NPORT NURS~ A.kl,, 7.3 shirt, ext .'rtaining .P~VJd + accept . c.-. 4'A!F....,hlp, N.B. N.B. 9"1thJ&, T Paid ·Set.Up Men """·, pr<r.,d. Huntington 'Celli ·fr!il'l)I, Saturday,& Mollday to ma~e
IF vou holid.ar.s. vac &: ai<;k leaW!. BROWN & SHARPE Beach Cbnv. 1-lospital, 188ll appointment with personDel director -. Jn
Art> Young -Flexible_ Neal, ~rk L::G ~hip C.Onv. Set·Up Men Florida, H.B. 847-3515. Huotipgtoq Beach area 53&-2591. Jn Anahelfil
Call "''""I' 6'.Y.>IJ)). J . W: ROBINSONS
YJ , • C · 1 Apply in peram 10-5 ro11 c:ountty No. 2 fashion Isl.. N.B.
Drlv•r1 Equal Oppor. Employl'r
rv. • Foremen
•Managers e A1..mbl•r•
• Mokler•
llave pride of workmanship, nter, F lagfililp, N.B • Good wagn, Steady t'mplby-NURSE-LVN or RN, exper. 776-8551 10AM-5PM
EXP'D Truck dnver to Work \11ilhout ~pervlsion LVN, f/tlme 'l-2.. Charge ment. Lit &: 2nd shift open-ln pedlalrlca &: EKG· I"'•'!!!!!!!!!!!!~· ..,..,..,..,,..·"'~~~~~~~'!"'!'~~I
make Nul"S(_•ry dellvtties. G •-• S $800 ... We o1lcr atciady Nurse. See Mn. Taber, lngs. Fltu·ne Call .. "!'~ Na"· • HeloW•nt·• M & ~ 710 Minor tnsck --•-1. Call 8111 , -.d1nn unv to 1'1.ll Convale• ........ t H-p, ,cy . O'tO.r' ~. • .. Htlp Wan~,, M & F 710 -· ~ •twUJ• • ,.. · part/tlrne Cleaning prestige 1881 Florida. H.,._8" "" Excellent h".lnge benefits tn-,.., .
" ......... -...... ·Wioiiedii.ii6'2-il686 ... iiiii;'iiii•IMln 1 YT· supcrv\J;ory l"xp. hometi, 569 \V. 19th, CM Bet 847_35~· ?uding company paid group NURSES AIDES, exp er. REAL ESTATE SALES SEC/Girl 1''rid&y, perm · e Inspectors
e Gel Rep411lrmen • EDP hHnd JlO!lting &. credi1 1 .'~l~-l~pn~>~iiiiii0ii0ii0iiiiii0o I •iiiiiiiii0..iiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiio I msurance pref. Xlnt worklng con-SUCCESS CAREER pJtime, good s kl I I 1, Fi~r9la11 Mokters collectiora. REXNORD INC ditlonls. ShUla, 7-3:)0 & New or ~ .. need. Join the responsible'. w/drafting or
& gel coaters. experi1)nced. IMMEDIATELY NEEDED ~tACJ-llNrsTS S-cielty Fastener Div, 3-11:30. Beverly Manor Worta·sJ!:'"~t and fastest artistic ability. 66-7092 or All 3 Shlfl&
\V1• Will Train ~ MacGregor Yecht Corp.
1631 Plact""nt1a. C.M.
Steady employrnf'nt, Good S t $700 SECRETARIES ,..-c 1-f i .......... llill -.. ~-671-2185 opportunit1es "''ith rapidly ecretary o ' i .J///IAtt 1• 3130 W. Harvard onv. osp .. ..._........ s. growing l'Hale organization ..::;c=~'=-=~=~=~
growing rompan}. Must be SUpeT typist, 2't'I ran r en 100 Santa Ana NURSES Ai$1es. l!:xper. req. wtt;h a network of over 300 SECURITY GUARD
SOL CATAMARANS .be II>. Very fasl p&eed in a.n 1 J.1kc.>. t() i:nt'ct people~ \Vanl n415t&-5100 2131585-21.&4 7-3 1/time & 11-1 f/tlme. offices and become a ExJ>C'r. F time. Contlllit 1'1r. intere!lllag, chall-~-g .... ~,. van1'ty in ""ur .. ·ork'!' Lr!I T F II , al H.B. area. 842-006t member of ~ Millionaire Ford, Sccurlly Su""rvi!>Or,
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CROSSING GUARD 19-p --~·· ~ 1 J-• o owing equ oppor. em•'oyer n1/f Cl b. Multi-Jllo doll •· .J• omona, Santa Ana nt!'Sll w/good polential. ui.; pla('e you w1th (\range OFEJCE MGR u . . n ar Balboa Bay Club
CITY OF IRVINE 541·2285 C(Junry·s tvp t.•u\pl•1>C'l's at Job Opportunities MACHINISTS J."ULL CHARGE OFFICE ~~~~~i= if~!'!'·sc~ 1221 \V. Coast H"'Y·· N.B.
$2.29 Per Hour I GI I F I to $700 top 7atcs. Choose the ioca-Are Available At P-tot-& 'lodcl• 'letal. MGR for New Car .. E-·-U-t ~ ... ~~""'tr•;"lng. , s~~-... ~, "ull or
The ,.,·1y ol lrvin• '' P""."""•ly ,,. I N AN CI ALJSfati~fical, ns. r r tion & '"A"''·· ,,,0~ <:tin· •v JY'-,. ,. Deal -•·op y k th ....... .... """"" "' "'-un.~ • 1. cuu 1
" """'" "" ·~ "' C bl f I 1· uJ e,.,., · ou now e P l••00 call y;...,.; .. ;., J o-• ~·1ttrrle in Coeta Me~" "-a. :i<'cepli~ apf)li£'allons ror N.B. engineering office, "'rite ftrc & hon1eo...,·1w·rs. veni1•nl for yuu. KAYNAR apa e 0 00 ing mRil ac-experlence you must have. o~~'. -..... -.... '""ne (TI41 540-857-1 .'::," 73 th~ po&tlion of Cl'06&ing ~·s ~n exp'd In H.alc pe1·so1111I lines & auto. to;O FEf; luring as well as prototype. Please apply in person, or .,.,.......,RuED CARPET 0,·~Room 223, 3'"' 11:;,:bor,
guard The basic funelion malhemat1cal computation, RC'gister Today-Component n1achining. Must phone 645-7170. If a r b 0 r ........, -
of thhl position L'I ro ht•l11 w/10 Key ca I c u lat o r . \\fork Tomo1TOw have exp. & own tools. Top American Motors. Realtors C.M. •
elenientary school children reporting & typing. 675-3551 COit Acctng Clerk pay & fringe benefits. EOE. 2 OFFICE S SEMI 11 'ed I 1
c·ross saf<'ly ltt ht'ltvity 1'LDRIST, min. 5 yrs. exp to $680 rf-'. eSCREW MACH SET-ACCURATE MOLD co. NEEO;DIRL 'REAL. ESTAl'' SALES buslnessr"'ex
1
per. :ad~e~p
t r av t' I e d lntcrst.'<·llons, w/frellh llowE"n. Full time. Son1e C"Xptt in eo11tlng nec~s. j ·(yiiJ. UP OPERATORS (Z13l 860-S54S R ti 1 1 h d. 1 h Resales in Newport Beach management li c r v l c e ..
Guards ar1~ nN!'<!l'<I from Top pay, dcsl~ners freedom plus flexibility & willingness %Jl2D. ,_.Dr. J\lini1num lhrce years ex-MACHINIST a: 0 e ep one ispa c area. fi.14-1869. !:
00
45 ~ un1il ~wroxlmately 675-6291. lo
11
00 h gi r.1 b Friday duties ~f ........ • UJ.lm IJC'l'lcnce st>Uing up and F'amiliar \Vith Bridgeport Mus~~1~·1~~~!~rlve HARBOR VIEW •
: 1\1. A Til'CMlsary FOOD services supervisor 12 \\'h e t e JO grows 10 ruH l ·fuan opcruting davenport &/or type mills and sn1all lathes. YELLOW CAB CO. HOMES SE.NIOR l equlpn1enl furnished by the mo. Under 1 e n e r 8 I ti1ne COMtlna. l:irown and Sharpe screw . City or JrvinP, ApplicaliOllll supcrvi.Bion 10 be responsi rnaclun t's. Reo Plastics Co. Inc. 186 E. 161b,, Costa Mcsa 1829 Port Sheffield PJacl"
n1ay he pl<'ked up at the ble for the operation of the Exec Sec'y to $700 IMMED. employment avail 1365 LOGAN AVE., CM Outbrd Motor Mechanic Newport Beach Sl3-o7so RECTRON. IC
Trvln(' PoliC"e De1mrln1enl, School caJeteMaJ to select & ' . for gen'I Car wash hel11. eTOOL & DIE .~=-~540._3_3_70 _____ 1summer or permanent. J\fovei'!!!!!!!!!!~w~k~.<J•a~y•'•'•"ly..,!!!!!!!!~
19002 1A>e SL, Irvine, or Jt train penoruiel to assist in L.A. Firm moving to -1rvinc Apply in person, Lido Car MAKERS 1\1AID . MOTEL. Apply Ex· t be tiful L k Ar. I~ •
tu rt her informal ion is planning, remodeling & needs sharp gal. Sh, 110me \Vash, ~1 E. 17th St., Costa l\1inimun1 three years ex-ecutive Suites, 2080 Newport
0
au a e • R.FXEPTIONIST, Mature TECHNICIAN
needed Lvntact Mrs. JOllll cquiping cafeterias. $'13.> stat typlng for VP.. 1\1esa . pcrience or 1naintaining and Blvd .. Costa Mesa. ro\Vhead. Call ( 714 ) lady. Take reservations.
Gumina, Public Infonnafion $898 per month, SenCI V.'l'it-ren .. iring progressive dies 337-2501. Some tjping, no sh. Operate
Cl "· ~• 5238 INTERESTING full fin1e op. ,... MA ID, clays, f/tin1e. Person-X·-· co · r Sun' I" book e ...... o.n· . len resume lo Sarldleback 1 G ·trl Ofe "SO and Ja ..... e presses. ~v... pie · P " • .,.. portuni!y fur someone ... nel Dept. Hoag H°'pital, PART T[f\1E k · --' · ·
CUSTODIAN 11• ~avoy•--' VaUey Uni fied sch 0 0 I . . eepmg uuuer SUpelVlSIOn o-.au Beautiful Construction offices w/variC"d ofrice ski I I s. eSET-UP MEN Newport Beach. of CPA 5 D lOam • ~hift. st:i.rtinu sa Ia r y District, 147313 Sand Canyon · E · a · · NEW ACCOUNTS · ays, .. pm, --••-Iii-lh Ave East Irvine & a very nice boss make' ng1ne istribotors Opt:'n1ng ~linimum or two years ex-J\olAID v.·ork in exchangc for Wed ,thru Sun. $SOO mo. ~·-..,.,.,,.. '-' per mon , , ' · . this the joh if you like work-nu office; rcqs exp'd \\Oman rooin. 4 hrs. pt>r day. 2376 CLERK Send resume Classified ad
dependini;: upon qualifica-1' OOD WorkPr. cook111g exp. ing in<lepcndently. G 0 0 d lo fill girl f1·iday situation. pcrienre setting up s.m.All Newpon Blvd. 548-975'5. • .. no. 873 c/o Daily Pilot.
lions. Plus S25 !lhirt dif· Days. Penionnel rn-pt. Hoag skills. 1 Rec('ptionist, secretary & punC"h presses lor precislOn -7.-..~7"""'""""':;.-. 150 \V.P.M. typing, sh prefer-P.O. Box 1560, Costa l\1esa,
fcrt·ntial. Call Mrs. Radner, 1 .~H~"~P~·~N;:·;B~. ~~~-~-I bookkreping baC"kgrouncl .f work: Must 1?C capable .or MAILING DEPT red. Calif. 92626.
Sarlrllf'back College 8.11-9700 FRY COOK, EX PER. Maint Man PlC'asr send resun1cs to' readi~gbluepr1nts and Ill· Expanding n1ajor dire<:t mail loiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•
CUSTODIAN, days. f/t!me. F'ull Time. Must be clean & • to $650 Classified ad no. 881, Daily spection tools. & printing firm in C.M. -UNITED-RECEPTIONIST
Personnel Dept, lloag neat. Xln't ivorking conds. A J r. J.ack of .~u trades. Pilot. PO Box no. 1560, eSPRING WINDING needs exper. & inexper. CALIFORNIA BANK
Hoi;pital, Ne~·port Bch. & pay. Apply, Surf & Sir· i\.1echan1cal ab1IJty & a Cos!a Mesa, Calif 92ti26 MACHINE SET~UP help. Mechanical aptitude Day or night, no exp. nee,
o i:; L J c ATE SSEN help loin, 5.930 w. Coast Hwy., NB green thun1b. JANITORIAL, pcm>. Jl}lime MEN an asset & gd dexterity 201 Avenida Del Mar easy, fun job. Will train, no
2
rcq'd. No layoff problems. San Oemente typing or shorthand, etc.
$5 Per Hour
Min. 3 yrs d~. \\'/com-
puter related peripheral
equppment pref'tl. Exper. in
line printer & tape drives.
Call Jm1nediatl'ly • P.P.S •
Pacific Personnel
Servic;es, Inc. wanted, morns, l hr, to eve. v.·ork. 4~ hrs nitely. :i E · · ti' d Qppor. Jor adv8Ilcement. 492-5123 A I · J alart. Mu~t be 18 & dcpen-GENERAL LABOR Secretary to $625 Day \Vk in beach & other . xpcr1C"nce in se ing up an PP Y in person any a l OI". ilable. Apply 495 E. 17th St, areas. Must be neat a1> operating Torrington Spring Please ~~~l~or ap P l. Equal Oppor. Employer eve. at 2930 West Cst l lwY.,: 500 Newport Ceilt'er Dr.
CM. Ask for Jitn. . .. National sales mMager needs pc!Ming. Apply Tues thru \~'inding machines Add•--Pr'"' Ceotor Inc. N.B. Suite 900 ble1,o,·por1 Bch n1at11rily & a sense oJ re. · N SA "'""'" "'' 64()..19'/ ~· DELIVERY Me n, pern1ane11l Newport Seach sponsibillty. Manuf. or mar-Fri, 409 · llai·bor, · · .eMACHINISTS MANAGER TRAINEE * PIZZA cooks & drivers RECEPTIONISr tar animal . O
part tin1c !or rarly morning Coste Mesa ket ex per. preferred. JANI'fORIAL work pJtime. I Minimun1 three-five years 0 over . 21. 16532 Beach Blvd. hosp, N.B. Fri & Sat only. Eq'Ual oppor. cmplof cr TK'Y.'lipaper delivcry f o Exper. couple (n1an/wife) experience on all tool room ulslanding opportunity to Huntington Beach Send resume Classifiecl ad I_,. LS±±
ho · N 1 °· h Santa Ana 1 Pl h 1 · N advance to n1anagerial posi· ' 1-.. SG7T mC"s 1n ewpor D'lt'ac . on y. us o cs 1n e\vport. n1aehlnes. · · 3 no. 639 cto Daily Pilo1; '-' ·s· ENIOR ,\1ust have dC"J)('ndablc car & Orenge & Irvine Secretary to $600 Top pay, steady. Call 1213) lion in .D-60 days. Our cur-POSITIONS·OPEN P.O. Box 1560, Costa ]\fcsa,
I)(' 1'1'.'llahlr. ph 642-4800 Good, t'Onl1denl phone abili-927--0115, lOam~pm. These openings arc' available rent ma II agers ('8rn FOR NEW BRANCHES Calif. 92626. ~
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" \ d ff II t $1~1500 1110. l\fus t huve DELIVf:..'"RY Men, pern1anl'nl 0 C('S • ¥ecldy Paycheck ty l.'On1pose own rorrt'l:i· JUNIOR SALESMAN: '1n ° er <·xce en roni~ di.J·t'Ct sale' ""'~ro·encc. RECEPT SEC'Y M · 'h " 'I ~~~si':an;rtor ii:~~('~rnir~ :11~~ ~~~1• ~~e:~~~· Zncl ia;~:n~id~ ~:~~~ryw~vit~ Earn $20-S40 per v.•cek ~~~i111~1~rog~~1 1:i:;~~~l cau Mr. Ne~';;n 97S-52'12 : ~~~1..cccwnts Good typini: ;ills, pleasant TECeCHN·a
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nCJCl4N
homes in Newport Ikach. Top local company. \Vorking afl C"r s<"hool and MANAGER wanted. Small pel'sonality. Must enjoy
JI.lust luive dependable car & • p p s on Saturdays getting ne\v -Group & Medical Life In-recreation club. No ex-e Loan Proc. Sec'y meeting the public. Del
hf' reliable. ph 642-4SOO • • • custom('rS for the Daily surance perienCf' necessary. 536-8091 \Vebb's Newporter Jnn, Asst Bkkpr to ~.c.oo Pilot. Thi• 1, not a n"'pcr -Paid Sick Leave MEDlCAL Savings & Loan Ex........ ., .... 1700, ext •~. . , ., , ,. ~ p · Jlolld & v . assistant, J girl r-.,_ .u.J
Oepartn1C"nl St~
J. W. Robinson
Newport Beach
STAMP & COIN
DEPARTMENT
Pecific PerJOnnel
Services, Inc.
500 Newport CenlC"r Dr.
Suilc 900 Nev,1port Bch
640-1970
' :U Central TO\vf'r. Orange
547.&146
Bookk('('ping knowledge lo
!rial balance preferred. You
will hanc'lle AI R. A!P &
lite payroll. 'tNo ta>iesi. In-
ternational firm oHering
good potential.
route and docs not inC'lude · aid S •Y• 1 acati~ns oflice. 1'1ust have front & Pref'd. Apply I.n Person. RECEPTIONISf I Ty pi s I Min. 5 yrs 'exper. 1rl~ com-
deliveries or collecting. -ProfitPI haring Ret1re-back exp. Phone 64&-4846, 9 Mariner's Savings & Sal,.,..., commensurate w/ r,u1er ~lated fie~ ~t',!pact w, have openo'ng, '"South-ment an t 12 2 Loan •.· ·-1'at1'on _, •ne pnnrer -In t Cost M "d So th -Credit Un1011 ° or to 5 ,_.._ background & ability. Apply • ex J \~·('s . a esa an u -E<cellent work in g con· MEDICAL tront office. ~-15l5 Westclift Dr., t-1 .B. iri person, 1752 Langley, peripheral tiC'liJ. "' • lluntington Beach only. 642-4000 · Apply noi\•! 9fi8·9G4l. ditions perienced only. Call 642-8566 j.:=:::::f::::::f:Zl:::::f::::::f:::::::::::=:I c':o"""~·~·=~~~=~=-Call lmmedial'elY. ~ betv."een 24. 1 -• -ROUTE SALESMAN -1 • l<itt.'.hcn h<'lp, s:~U-1:30 T1'JE Apply t.mployment Oflice M -• p f.S PENGUIN, Laguna Bch. KAYNAR EN & WOMEN 18-27 Public Relations Permane nt Career Oppty ·
49-1-t.133 Earn to $342.30 salary per p·.·e. Nation's 12th largest retail • • •
1no. \\-hile we teach you a organization has oppty,tor Pacific' Pehb..n~I 215 E. ~u·ealth Sharp front offi<'e personality
F /Time Salesman PBX/Reeept to $550 ,•I
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I
I
1\Jan;;igcr potC'nth1I.
-
nl'ce~sary.
1\pply in pt'1'.oL011 11>-5 pin
No. 2 i''n~hion 11!1., NB
1':11unl Oppor. Enwloytt
Dl·:l-'ENDABLF: d rive r i;,
delivery service. must know
(':\1 NB. c<lll aflC'r 4 pm,
642-94.hl
DIAL A JOB!
Liz: Reinders Agency
4500 Campus Or, N.B.
~57-3401
~~ D.ISll\\'1\SllE!~~'ull~
lS yra~ 1)1' olc1t•r. THE
l'(ITTAGE f'OFFEE Sl lOP,
;i62 \\'. !!Ith SI C~I
UESK Cll'rk, illalntcnance
man, n1111ds. 'Thf' New
1\t;1nna Inn Mnll'I, l)nna
Poi nl , Harbor. Call C('nc,
496-2'.15'.I.
DISPA'l'CJIEH .. Undt'l' diN'c!
super ... lslon or transporla·
tion su111·1·visor pl•rrorn1s all
C"leri(•al \\'Ork requ!re<l for
ll1t• 011C"r1111on of 1hl' sl'hool
hu<: S<'rvi1·e IV olhl'r rf'lalPd
dutie.~ as mquil'f'd. $:>79-$702
111·r n1onlh. Send 1vrl!!t'n
J'l''i\1111e to S ad d I e hack
V!l1lf'y Unified Schoo I
Ulslnrr. 1·1736 Snncl Canyon
Av•· .. r:a.11:t frvh11• -
Suite F :Fullerton & aµpearancc. ti·lust have
870.1833 good rorrl hoard expcr. &
Equal Oppor. Employ~r reully like prople. Lite typ.
inp:.
GE'NER'AL 6.ri'ICE '9.'0rk -
1iosling, phone, ~etarlal. SYCOR Operator ta $540 Small. pleasant o tr ice, . Orange co. Airport area. Ir ~u do not know this ma-
1'1ui;t be stable lady with e~ine hut have so~~ exper.
high 11.cc:uracy. Good salary. "'1th bkkpng or. b1\h~ nia·
ImmE'd. opt:"n!ng. Call 9--4, chln;s !he co. will train you.
any day, 714 :552-8503 Typing must be very ac·
GENERAL Help, p/time curate .
eves froin 5pnt on. Dl'ivers
& Kitchen. Over !1. Apply Sales/Mkt Engr
in person, f\Ie n Eris, 410 I::. to $18K+
17th St, Costa r..1esa [)('gl"l'f' .t Min 2 yrs exp. in
GUARDS electronic lnslrum(;nt sal('s
r·uu & P/tin1(' Po.~itions dCSJ.~n helpful.
or11..'n in Lon~ Beach, La·
~unu Niguel in Lagun:i. & Gen'I Office $500 Co1npton areas fol' quahhcd . . . applicants \\'ho des l re T.h1;; 1-:"l'01\•111J: 1.-0. 1s 1n!er~t.cd
srcady employmenl. IS Yrs Jn U('('Ul'Rle !yplng, al.uhty
of Rge or ohi!-'r. Apply in 10 :-.1·t up 11 good b~siness
person, 326 So. U.•rnon St., l!'ll('r. b'flCNI R:room1ng &
Anaheim, betwn 9 am & pleasant attitude.
J pin,
AD'f Stt'rllng &>rurity srrvice F /C Bkpr, Sec to $900
An E<1u1tl Oppor. En1ployer
GUARDS
FULL OR P /TIME
NE"'PORT BEACH &
S1\NTA AN,\ AREA
\Ve!ls 1'"argo Guard Servire
D1v. Bakl'r Prote<:. &rvicc
Knowledge of constnJC'tlon +
i,,'()O(f secretarial skills for
bcau1ifu1 office.
Reeepl/Gen'I Ole $450
St>l\uliful surroun<lings. V1'1'Y
posh private club. \\'ork
\'.'Ni. !hru Sun. ~·lust be
people & 8('f\'i<'C oricntt'<I.
Keypunch Opr Exper MFG CO INC job skill in Electronics Me-person living in looal area. Services, Inc.,..
12 Noon . S:45 pm. Ask for • ., • <·hanit•s or Administration. EXEC. LE~EL Operate estab. l'Ollte bus· ··
r.1rs. Jasper., ;,.10-9772. After training, earn $45-60 We. seek outstanchng s~es lrtt'ss. 5 Day 1\'eC'k, no ean. 500 N('wport Center Dr.
BOOS. State College Blvd per mo. for 2 days work. Ol'i~nted Indy for our Irvine I vass. '$10,000 to $12.000 opply. Suite 000 Newport Bch KEYPUNCH
OPERATORS
Fullerton Call 1'Sgt Young. Calif. Air or~ce. Ideal for r.esults Vehicle / all expenses paid, 64~1970 ·
National Guard 979-1343. onen~cd, career ~inded, xlnt fringe IX'nefits. Call Equal oppor. en1pl0Yer
INTERVIE\VING IJOURS Molders & Assemblers ~realive v.·omari wh~ hk~s ~o Mr. Taylor or ~1r.,Donnelly, . l
F . run her own show · This IS 714· 774-0330 • SERVICE StHtion Sal&Sman
Monday thru Friday or gro1v1ng fiberglass boat a responsible & dignified!~"-=·=~~~·====-& LUbe MB.ii Exp Pref'd.
\Ve are seeking ex PP r. !) A.rtl. to 12 & 2 to 4 P.~t. co. Prefer exper, but are position oUering personal SAL£S MANAGER Top pe.y. ~ll..1:" part 'timC".
keypunch operators f 0 r \vitling to train. Apply Clip-growth w/So. Calif's Iastest APfll. F at Sllfl,.L, lTlh &
daylinie & swingshifl. 4 pm· Alter hour intcrviey,•s may be per i\1arine. 1919 E, Occi-gray.ring Temporary Help . -. . 1 NB
l2: 30 am on the Univac arranged by eallini:: d('ntal SI., S.A. Service. Xlnt starting salary This is an cxc1ung & rvine, ·
1701-1710. \\:e arc "''illing lo J. H:. 1''retlrick 1114~ 871-1550 1\10TEL maid work. Neat, + exp. acct + comm + challenging opportunity for S~VJCE Sta. Attendant,
train on th(' tah punch An Equal Opportunity energetic \\'omen, 6 day wk, auto allow. & loads of !he Mght man or won1an to f/t1me. days. Salary open.
verifier.Locationoflhekey Em1Jloyt'r Laguna Beach Resort benefits. Call Dollie,~ .w/a nation.ally Apply in person, Earl
punch dept. in the n<"ar :~===:::~=:::=:::::::= 494-1196 540-4450 Ior confidential recognized company in !he \Vllliams T('xaco l 6 9 j futur" ii·ill he> Fashion -......... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiii.... appt. Aeromatic gift field. To Superior Ave, C.:M:
1sl11nd, Nev:port Beach. l\IACHINISfS MTST OPERATOR TEi\fPO TE1'1POR.\RY qualify you must be able to SERVICE Station Attondanl HELi> reorganize our cntire sales full or p/tinie. Over IS. Ap-
Pl('HS!' call ~1rs. Ro~ E • t I Dictation Transcriber. "''"''"'""'""""-"'"'"''"'~I effort for vigorous growth, ply Brown's She'll, 990 E.
!or an appoiotmeot xper1men a T . & I . II' PRINTER cootribute '""'lant1,.i1, to Con•• ll•'Y· NB,, • ..,,, (714) 547-7571 yping · x n t SIX' mg. new product application. na-.,..,.,.....,...
GREAT WESTERN
SAVINGS
1418 N. l\.1ain St.. Santa Ana
An Equal Oppty En1ploy<'1'
KEYPUNCH
DAY SHIFT
6 i\fn's ;;l{'IU:d ~·ork exp('I',
on k"Yl>Unch. kt·y ta1x· or key dlsc devit·t"'.
Apply In Thi•
rrrsonnr! 0('par1111('rJ!
i\.lon!lay·Fri. 9 an1·12 Noon
M h • • t Some i\ITSf ex Per· tional sales plans. shows, S~fAJ\olPOO GffiL ac In IS s nt"cess. etc. & effectively n1otivate a Wed thru SaL Must be
comn1ission sales force. Ex.· licensed. 1610 w. Coast
perience in our, or a similar H~·y. NB Apply 9 am. 12 noon
1\1onday thru Friday
PACIFIC MUTUAL
700 Ne\vport Center Dr.
Eight years gener·
al machine shop ex-
perience in manu·
facturlng precision
parts and tooling
required. Will per·
form the la yout and
machining of com-
plicated parts from
d imensional prints
or sketches.
NeY.'port Beach
Equal Oppor. Employer
NEED MORE MONEY?
Disl:ribute Am\vay home care
products & Nutrilite food
11upplements from yo u r
home. Call 545-785.1
to;JGHT clerk for nu1tel in
LAGUNA BEACH . 2
11igh\s/1vC"ek.
494-8521
3 Oay-12 hour shift. Must
have experience on the 2650
P.1ulti·Lith, 2000 Camera &
12.50 Press. P r c v i ou s
printing or related functions
helpful.
commodity fi('ld desirable. SIGN Painter Yeeds tteiper.
but not a niust. Age is no Part Un1c, 1 ave na'1e &
barri!'r. We have an at· phone no. M~ 00<14
lractive compen sation STATEME•iT CLERK p ackage fo r the ....
results-oriented individual. w~ ar(' prf'!;t'n!ly lak:irig ap.
Send resuine & earning pllca lions for our smtemcnt
history to R.W. Easter, 523 window. Must haVe'. somc s. Woodland St., Orange, typing skills, pleasing pcr-
Newport Beach Califo111ia 92669 soru1lity, able to 1vork W/lht· public.
Apply ~12, Mon.-F'ri.
PACIFIC MUTUAL
700 Newport Center Dr.
Pra:ct. Control ~00 wk Sales Engineer degree $lSK Pll'nS(' can
Silk sereen ~per1ence Dt.'fllal Fnit ore to $600 Mr. Ne1vlanrl, 8:~3505 Pttso~~c~gffe Med. 1rnt & back ofc ~ BANK OF AMERICA
1651 E. Edinger ~A. Inven. C:lerk $450 Ne'>l•porl Cenlt'r Branch
Dr's Assistant
Ynu111 lady I 1~·2f0 lo assist
111 ht'nlth 1>pa. \\'ill train, no
l'XJJ. 111 ·£'. Apply In pci'lll(>ll
;1t1y ;oft or e\'e, 29.'W \\!,
("011.st llv.')'., N.B.
~~J~p~:~1t0;o~~~h, S.e'y/Trne $450 PACIFIC MUTUAL
An excellent opportunity if 700 Ne1vporf Cr·ntcr-Ur.
Apply In Person
3333 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, Calif.
NON-DRINKER. age
Assist gentleman.
960-1420
(Mark n1 Center) Secretaries . ss:io Equal Oppor. EmployPr
542-8836 "'°'pt/Typ•" l550 'STROCTURAL
Escrow Ofer $700 DRAFTS N' H 0 ME COJ'SULTANTJ
CUSTOf\fER SERVICE For
Capistrano Villas 1n San
Juan Capist1·11110. Exper
preferred but not ncccs.sary.
Call 6.lS-1000 for ap-
pointment.
you 11rt" nl"W tn the hu. .. ineM NC"wport Beach
world. Business hk(' attitucl!' """"""'"'"'"'"'-""'"""..,.. willing to learn and 11 pl('aS· LAB TECH
CcelesC'O!)
NURSES
Rnt n~xible ~nonalil.,Y. Imn1ed. R & D opening for OPPORTUNITIES
FOR 110M/<~."1'1<" fl.,lp cc~:iri:C"
Allr•n Uyland A.t:>'n1').', IOti·U
E. l[ilh S1 , S.A. ri 17-0.195.
Dressm a ker,. p/time
Hospitality Hostess
Service
Is l1l0k1ng for 1von1('11 to 1vel-
t:t11n1· & in!l'rViC\V n('1v rC"si-
clcn1s. Sales or adver1ising
e~r. helprul. Musi have
t·ar & ty1x>1vriler. :>17·309:1.
llOSTES~ Cashier o\·er 21,
fl11yi;, n1te& & "''kndi;. Appl,v
IJtdly, 10;30 a1n-lpn1. &
4:.l(µ'j :JOpm, Mi Casa 1'1<'x·
lean ~1uauran1, 296 E. 17th
SI, Cf\1.
===* ;,1.l(.n~'2.1 *
DRJVE!!. Parl 1'in1c. Mair
or fen111h• over 21. Clf-n n
~ut. ~(i111Um,Y cor, ~lust
1111ow Or<1nge Co u n 1 y
835-::ll·IO ORfVEl't~.-,,,-.,-,-,-.,..-,-r-.,-,,...-,
Jt'!)Od driving ret."'()J1!, full
1ln1(', apply to part11 "181'.
llov:urrl n iev. R.'t'J--05b5 --. ---~ · HOTEL Nigh! Audilor frx-
Payroll Clerk $498
Some e:<j'>E'r. working \V/pay.
rolL Prepare inror1natio11
for hank y,•hi<'h n1akes up
the checks. Lite typing. ln-
fom1ation must be k1..>pt co11-
rldf'n1i111.
FrH & F ..
Positions Av•lleble
1·.Mr>LOY\lF.NT p<"rien1't"d onlyl Airporter
MUNSEl.01? In n llott'l, lrvu°w. Contact Cell: TRISH HOPKINS
p,,.,. 11,,c1•n1·y o'l(j)('r. ln ~1rr-.~ I l)l('k H11nnan K.'ll-mo
& !"t'h 1IC'!>k. l·.lic1linjt jol1 -. . Or h1Rh 1•:11T1in.:-s _ w -0 ,. k llOUSEKEEPER lo hve-1n,
1\'/111Ri.t£'r group. Call Elly "'1th exf'I; & rer~. $250. nio to JERRI WHITTEMORE J'.:Jli~. ~ stan. J;lOO. n10. aflf'r 90
C.'ONTROL CAREER days. Pv1 room. bath & en· t:r..fPt.OY~IENT AGENCY trlU'loo + col~r TV. No
3400 Irvine Blvd. Suite l09-B rooking, no ironing, ro pelA.
Nl'WllQrt BcRr·h f\tugt speak En It 11 sh, 67fhJG27
TIME FOR
FOR ACTION.' ••
DAILY l'ILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
CALL 642-5678
I IOUSEKEEPER -l'Onval~
c-ent hospital, full time.
Good ~nefjti;, Coll 642-2410,
1·14S Superior 1\ve, Ncwpoi·t
Beech.
Hou,.kMpor, I/time
s«J.31)6]
488 E. 17th Strett
Suitt 124
(At Irvin•)
Costa Mese
642-1470
The fn.1lcst draw In !he Wcsl ,
•.• a Daily Pilot C!aMifled
Ad. 6'2-St!78. ~
(
prototype projects. Pi'f'f.
.'iome L'Ollege in a technical
f1f'ld involving niath & hO.!iiC'
l' I e clrical n1casuren1en!.
Locnl industrial e x p e 1· .
df'sirable.
Dunc11n Ele<'troni('s, 286:i
F'airvil'W Rd. c.rii. Equal
011por. F.:mployer.
l.ADY l't1n111iu1 ion for niother
N(ln-i1n1oke1'/rlrinkl.'1'. Share
11·ork & fun. Roon1 & honrtl
-+ sa!~I'). Ref. exctianged.
Call 519-7623 mornings or
t'venlngs only.
..
Equa l Oppor. Employer nl/f
STAFF NURSES
ORANGE
COUNTY
MEDICAL
CENTER
Stimulating University
Environm<'nl
Full & P/lhne Pol!Hion"
• Critical Care
e Psychiatric Care
• General Care
1\fACHINlST _. gen l" r a I New rmployes start on even-n1nrhlnl~t nr lnthe hand. Ing or nltP sifl s; Transfer to
GoOO company bent!lits. days. Xln'I fringe benefits.
Ills<'. Jnstrument11, 102 E. Staff d('velopment program.·
Leasing Ba.kf'r, Cosla Ml'lll. 979-S300. Call for interviews:
Representatives An Equal Oppty. Employer. Director of Nursing
~~k~ee!~~;~~rn~~:p~~ylo QUICK CASH J!f.4~~~
8how & ]('nfl(' 1tpla tn th(
Trvlnr l\t'l'fl. l'll'nsant THROUGH A lOl City Dr. South
II Orunp;e, Calif 1)('rironn !y. Typing fiO. Must hi• willing to w 0 r k An Afflrmn1lvf' """''""'· DAILY PILOT A"'°" Employer 1-;xct·ll1:111t 'vorking conds . co. 1.-,.-fil.<. NURSE -l'<y<hlotrlc """"
C•ll 644-3389 WANT AD Plllrnl', Pl'rY.Onnl'I de p I
Bt>l\\l'rn 9nm & nnon t I Haog Ho:ip. N.B.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!l't----------\Vant ad rell'.ul!s •.... 642-5678
P . T. Receptionist Clt•rk Typist $450 . MA
Good typing ... Local Keypun ch 10 $600 Rapidly growing consulting
$2.5'1 Per HR Stat typist $~') structural C'ngillC('ring firm
Wt!stcliU Acctng Clerk $500 111 Newport has lmmed.
PC"rsonnel Agency G A Clrk ~c""" openini::: for q ua I ~ f i ed 16!il E. Edinger, S.A. en. cclng to"""" draflsnian. 0 u ls tatld in R
(J\.lark III Center! Legal Secretary $650 cornrmny brncU111: Ca 11
542-8836 Gal Fri ?\led Bckgrnd SSSO 546-8581 for RP. pn!. I"'""""""""""'"'"""""",.. Sec'y /Con.'1lr $650 ""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiii;/;oiiii• I G. Accounting Supv SSOO TEACHERS
STUDENTS
HOUSEWIVES
Purchasing Clerk
The Irvine Company
KllQwledge of A/P function
as related to receiving dept.
helpful. Typing 65 w.p.n1. &
use ol IO key calculator.
Call 644-3389
F/C Bkpr Constr $71)()
Sec'y Re<:('pt. $550
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
133 Dovtr Dr .. N.B.
641-3870
Betwn 9am & noon SALES, Oflice products & ~~~~~!!'![!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!P l marking. Full or p/time.
REAL ESTATE SALES Women or rctin>d n1rn. 270
FREE LICENSE Briggs Ccor Redhi!IJ PM
TRAINING ooly,
F•mou!l Real Ell late LIC(lnS·
log c.,.,., now avall•bl< SANTIAGO BANK thru Tsrbctt Realtors. Ftce
Plactn:"nt Service. FJ"f'(' Experienced
Training Program. Eam TELLERS
whlle )'(lU learn. Call Al Contact Mr Lorenz
Sloan <n4) 832-MolO. •
REAL ESTATE 714: S31·S100
SALES MANAGER e _ ££Y
R..aio OINce ,,.,..,. manager *°5ECRETARY *
w1t}\ 2 years of Real Estate needed k>r• Newport &ach
ex'perienC('. Newport Bcac;b Broker a g c . FI rm .
arcu. Expanding comJ>My. Resp on a I bi IJUa Inc
EXl'('IJC'nl opportunity tor tr a n 1 tcrrh1" _scc\uilles,
professional growth. Appl)' i1ho111· wnrk & filing, etc.
in oonlhtenl't. &'nd resume Must be 11harp & Willlng Ip
10 ClttSR!ffed Ad 00, 638, cit> 1earn inslcll'I>. of exc!Unsr
0Rfly Pilot, J\ o. Box 1560 buidnC811. Ty~ 00 wmp.
Co11t!l Mella Callr .v....... • &.incl resume to P.O. Box ' · "-· 2070, Newport Besch. 92000.
&>LI Idle Items .. 6'2·5678 Attn: P1?r80nnol
' Male & Female ' ' Looking for Su mfn.1 er
omploynwnl? Como nt:lster
w/u~ for ijood p.1yi.n~tem·
rorary a.5'l.:111n1•nts in 8
large van('ty of ind y In
Orange County. Nnl l'OO·
\rut'ls lo 1dgn. \Vl' Need
"{ou? A.Ye; obout our 1\ionus
plan. ~
' Interim ~
Personnel Set ice
17581 ,Irvine Bh ~.
s_,<1rtltb.1 ·k f'L'l:t" D R·
# 115 • slin
838.5460 •
F.t111ril Or1pOr. J.:m p yrr
Turn them lt110 'c tlh
"Weed 11 ~ Rro1
F"r01"' trea11111'('t lo ta!J.k
CAl.J.. Dolly PUo
I
r
..
-
•
\I
DAILY l'tlOT 2
b J7 j
0
LI "l(f}] [ s, e ~;.I _ .. ,,,._. ;;;J&J;;;;;"1 I .... I ... I~~[ iiiiiiiii ..... _ ...... ~~~ [ .... ~-I~ J[ff I._·_·· ... _. llilJI • tun;1t I: e' I ., n t11
Help W1111lool. M & F 710 Helli Wonted, M & F 711 Horp Wonted, M & F 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 710 AnHq-100 Go r'!!" Solo 112 M'-llo-on 111 TV, Radio, HIFI, p ,.,. 11.\4 ===-----'-' Stwoo 136 NE Sa?u. Won:• TYPIST. Mon -t'rl. • * • BR turn. Home Enter-ON.LY AUTHORIZED ---------1
from )Ulr own home. .IJ-»>Jd.. lemporaty, June w 1 Wlll•m R. Phillips ta In men t C f' n l e r . Kirby YJCUum Dlllrlbu1or In • • • Ken Rodflr•
Hllbnt --· Ex· i..,, -July lilh. ,.,.__ OU d You L1"ke To Become 23IOO so1voc1or Boy ""•"''h""' M""' Go' Coclt .._ -wm ...... y oerieoce no l neceuary. _IW2-1'982 Mon. thru Sund. IO ..... -a boine dcnlOI .. fln-slM N L•guna Niguel -·--.. ..
'i3 MODEL cl~ on
RCA 4: Zenltb TV A-1tt>reot1. Lo~lt prkes ol tht" ye11.r at
Orana-e Coun~'s laf'\NSt
dt>al@r . Ze n it h 19''
Cbromacolor S349. 25" con-
D t' remo\e $598. RCA 25"
S-Olkl State ron.'iOle11 from
$52.i. 19" Solid State $389. 3
yr plc1ure tube, l yl' parts &
scrvit'f', Cash 90 or tcrn1!<.
0021 Alhrnla., H.B., 962-5559
or lflO:l6 Brook.hurst, H.B.
96l<-J329
944 L1Mlredo
LAfUNI Beach
olevtl*
Cablevl1lon
lnstah•r Tech
Orf.nae CoWlly ba I ed
cabkMak>n ro. Ir aeeking 11-
cuatomu scrvlce installer.
Dutiff will include in-
stallation It maintenance.
Tl!levlakin or electronics ex-
per. req'd Cablevlsion eio<·
per. desirable. Must be able
to deal w/thl! public.
P\eAH send, br~r Jett€!I' or
ftR1me to~
Qa11ltled ad no. 874
e/o Dally Pilot
P .O. Box 1560
Costa :r.tesa. Ca 92626
THESHOWOFF-n> Receiving Stock Clerk ,
n Ol Mdse Asscrnblers lor
mat1dng &: hanging:. Apply
Wed., May 30, beh.vn 10 &
3 at 350 Clinton Av e., Costa
Mesa. No phone caJlg please.
TOOL ROOM
TRAINEE
U SKILLED A Part Of The Elcl.ll"ng You ... the"''""" or SQUARE ... table. Old '"'"""· TWO FREE TICKETS !Hhioned • ......,,_ PH -Call m-5222 ~ alter 6 or 919-5-169 ASSEMBLY Computer Industry' I souther~ ~llforni • Mochlnory 1161111scon•noou•
' • MOBILE HOME SHOW KWll{D:h \Vay Boring-;;;: Wanted 120
GENERAL VD M I
~1tiy :ltilh lhr.1 June Jt'd Valve t'l'Surfnet•r, t11trd scat OLD ORIENTAL RUGS. I
ut th~ grln~:r. truck drum lathes, \VUI pay ~10', n10re cub
ANAHEIM STADIUM 846-2009 1han top s payei.'S. Eve,,
LABOR 2000 State Colleg~ Blvd., .PAID.I ALL CUb trllctor, ~
, Anaheln1 I tachm XI I cond •==-~-~-~--Vari.an Data Mach1"nes Pleosc CRll 642-56711. ''" 314 w al ents. -n . Offlco Furniture/ to clRin1 your tleket1. INorth 493-1245 Equip 124 PUNCH County toll free nun10Cr i.s Mi1e•llaneous 818 • Has the following immediate openings """"!;1 • • • • • 0~_c;ha,,!';~11~~11 .~!:
RENT TO OWN
TV'S & STEREO
SlO PRESS Su1an H. Hamilton Good cond. 8.15-8944
Ele t M h • I DEALERS/SWAPPERS 110\.'.o Corel EXEC IWVI chrs StS-25 Soc C ro• ec an1ca CALL FOR STOCKI Balboo l•land ch,. $&/24 Desk• $20/90 OU No c,-,,i;, Check •No Deposit TRAINEES A i11 I5:'JO So. Coast 11 .... -y. You are the winntr of Supl 867 W 19 CM 642-3«>11 f'ree Delivery · Fl'tt Repair
$2.25 Per Hour
Day Shi~
Call Immediately • P.P.S.
Pacific .Personnel
Servlcts,. Inc.
500 Newport Centtt Dr.
Suite 9CXI Ne.,..rport Bch
640-1970
equal oppor. emplo~·er
SSemblers l..af1u1n Bcaeh 4~-2442 TWO FREE TICKETS Pianos/Ort•'\• 126 l-1onthly Rentals Available
CUSTOMERS: 1o the -Opon Eves. 543-4444
~1in. 6 mo 's electronic assembly exper. 1st
Shift & some 2nd shift positions immediately
available.
Calibration Technician
Jr. colleJ:?e or technical schooling + 3 yrs
exper in calibration or oscilloscopes, VTVM,
pre-amps, dilferential volt meter, digital
equipment & other electronic test equip-
ment.
Electro-Mechanical
Still ha\'e large fiUpply
of sideboards. also snui ll
items anrl mi.<ir fl1milure.
494-2442
• J:,,j() ~-Coast I-fwy., Laguna
ANTI QUE Earl.v An1erican
Dutch Cherry Pine cabinet
\v/slereo hi-ti b It . i n,
porcc!Rin knobs. ln.<1urable
appraised vnluc $14:i!J, Hi-1<'1
no charge/Cabinet $600.
Private party. 64:>--0183.
Southern Californio ANTIQUE EUROPEAN
MOBILE HOME SHOW PARLOR GRANO,
~ftty :l6th U1ru JUIK' 3rtl Good Condition, Black
at the Ebony Finish
ANAHEIM STADIUM S&OO 2000 State Col!ege Blvd.,
Anaheun
Plcnse call 642-5678, ext 314 497-228•1
to claln1 your tickets. (Northl .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiii ... ,_
Counl.y toll tree nu1nber is
540-1220.l BABY GRANDS
---*--*---*---No\v save up to $1000 on cer-tain floor models. Other
Grand Pianos froni $729.
STEREO: 1973 Quad Syslen1,
r:arrard model, full size
changer, 4 Quad speakers,
A ht /Fl\lfl\IPX reC('i\'Cr,
t11pe deck plu.c:: in jacks.
\\'as left unclahned, still
brand ne\\' in !xix and
~Ul\rantecd. '\las $260, 1..011•
$125, or take over sniall
pyntnls. 89.1-0;"l(ll
*SPRING SPECIAL*
Rebullt .. Plcturt Tube
$85-21'"' or 25'' Color * 2 YEAR \VARRA NTY
You ftre the wiMtt ot
TWO FREE TICKETS
l(J the
Southern C1lifornl•
MOBILE HOME SHOW
?.lu.y 2G•h lhru Junt 3rd
1\11 ~
ANAHEIM STADIUM
200> Stall! Colle~ B1vd ..
An11heln1
Please cnll 542-5678, ext 314
10 cllllm your Uckets. tN-0rth
County loll ltte number 11
M0-12l0.) • • • e PUPPY WORLD e
JOO ML"'<ED PUPS. Optn
Eves. Irish Setter, Dober·
n1an, Fox Tcniers, lluskie,
Bull Terril'r, T-Cup Poodle,
Chi huahua, Lab., Boxer.
Cockapoo. S\V AP Sht'pherd11
tor ?! Stu'1 Scav nwst
hrttds, 531-5027.
Shop exper, In nile school. I ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:1 Must ha\>e mechanical ablli· j • ·'>· $2.25 por hr. Inspector
Appl i•nces 802
SI Of~ by side
Refrigerator-Freezer, sn1all
size. O'Keefe &. Merritt
range. 548-1900
WANTED
TICKETS TO
LEP ZEPPELIN
CONCERT
These and n1any n1ore 111 :
W allichs Music City
Soulh Coast Plaza M0-2830
tnslallat!ou Availabl~
Rice's Television Ser"lre
torn1erly :P..tesa North Center
1 Blck S. or Baker 546--6002
open 9-5 (6 days)
BLACK Pobcllc p II ll p i e ll '
H1rnlng silwr, 8 "'et>k!I old.
CUte & lovenble. Full-blood-
ed and very reaM>nable,
under $50. 111n..le11. 541)....o114S
FREE llh1·k n1 ,I',: f pups.
Dam AKC Lab Ret r-SI~
Ger Shep. <19-1-!l!l22 Lug Bch.
Gd ron1pany .~ protec!lon,
nlso potC'ntial hunting doii::o;,
SAINT Bernard -n1n lf',
AKC. :1 yrs. good 11'llh
r"hlldN'n. i\1nke 0 r f c l'.
5-:iS-9797
Call lmmedlately • P.P.S.
P•clflc P1rsonnel
Services, Inc.
500 Newport Center Dr.
Suite 900 Newport Bch
&40-1970
equal oppor. ,employer
QUICK CASH
TflROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
·. 642-5678
UNSKILLED
ASSEMBLERS
Femalt
No FHo-Top $$
Call Immediately
Weekends Included • P.P.S
Pacific Personntl
S.rvict1, Inc.
500 Newport Center Dr.
Suite 000, N.B.
640-1970
24 Central TO\\·e:oi:, Orange
547""46 ' 215 E. Conunon\\'f'alth
Suite F Fullerton
871>-1833
F.qual Oppor, Employer
Required to inspect computer syst.ems &
lower level assemblies for workmanship,
completeness documentation. Must have re-
lated exper. Second shift.
Inspector
Min. of 3 yrs exper in a receiving inspection
activity testing resistors, capacitors, pulse
transformers, transisk>rs etc. May be re·
quired to assist lower level inspectors.
In Process Inspector
2 Years recent exper. in a rela ted inspec·
tion activity including cables, circuit boards,
chassis etc. .' -
Please Appfy In Person
Monday Thru Friday 8:30 AM· 4 PM
To The Personnel Department
Or Contact: B. Krafka
2722 Michelson Dr., Irvine
833-2400, Extension 336
An Equal Opportunity Employer
For an •d fn Wom.1n~1 World
Coll Mory Beth 642-5678, ext. 330
Help Wanted~~-~~.!!_O I Help Wanted, M & F 710
I
\VAITRESS, Waiter, ·o/21, Urgently Ne•ded rnshwashor. Two Guys rrom
b Ita l y, New I talin n
• A11em ly Rl:'sta.urant, 2267 Fairvie\v, e Packaging Cht
Super Swlfty It's Quick-Point!
Zip (up and travel straigtlt thru summer tn a sw1rrv
lkiqtmer Mtb Ure 11lde dart
shaptnl that'• 11> figure nat-ttrlna. For blends, cotton.
1 PrtntM Pattern 9 3 6 3 :
Women'•'Sbetl 34, 36, 38, 40,
G, 44, 46, 48. Size 36 fbu.11t
40) take• 3 SIB yards ~inch
fabric. •
BllVEl'fTY ·'1VE CENTS
for •ch palll!m -add 25 ~ti fOr each pattern fl::lr
Air Mail end Special Handl-
in&: 0-thltd-cliys dellwry will take t~
Wffks or more. Send to
Marlan Mnrtln, the DAILY
PILOT, 441, J>Atll!m Dept., m · Welt 18th St., Ne#
Ymk. N.Y. 10011. Prlnt
JU.JO:. A.OORr.M with
llP, IJIZ.ll and 8TYLI:
1'llMJIEL -
S1Z MORE Qui ck
Fublons and chooM ont
Eem tree from OUT rw..Summerr Catatoa. AJJ
I 0111)' !Oc.
!NSTAm' SEWING BOOK
MW today, weftr tomorrow. 11. INSTAm' FASlllON
BOOK -fh1rlftred1 o I
futdon flictlll Sl.
tt'1 a bl"ffu ... Mil rour tterm "\l1th l!'R.!le, llll' Dally
PUol OUlllJ<d., "1-al1L
• W•r~use ,vt-·0m~w=AN=TS=~ro~~=·=o~RK~~, e Lab Assistants DRIVE A CAB!
REGISTER 1'0DA Y Cl-fOOSE your hours, v.·ork
'1.'0RK TOMORRO\V for yourself, be your O\Vn
J-lighest J-Irly ra!cfi bnss. h>len or \l'Omen. Can
NO FEE EVER! be sli~h!ly handicapped.
Tops Jn Tempol'aries N ca 1-0ean Appearance. Vts, retired, Age 25 to 70.
Supplemrnt your income.
Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a
riay. Apply in person,
Yell=>1ll' Cab Co., 186 E. 16th
St., Costa Mesa.
NOTE
TELLER
We have an imme-
diate opening in
Cost• Mlsa that of-
ftra a fin• starting
1al1ry, excellent
benefits pack1gt,
pleasant working
environmtnt •nd
opportunity for ad-
vancement.
Wt would prefer to
find .1n Individual
with pr1vious ex-
perience as a not•
OlArmlng gift for baby -ttller; howtver, if this decorative rug! New! Quick-point rug is 111\ you have worked in
fun-tO-do cross-stitch on • bank, savings
four-squares--t1>--lnch canva!!. and loan or finance
Uae rug yam. Pattern 7173: com pa n y , you
actual-size chart and color fy chnrt tor 18 x 24" rug. might quell .••
SEVENTY-tWE CENn So, come In end ne
for each pattern -add 25 us, cents rot each pattern for A.tr Mail and Special Handl· Apply In Person
Ing: othe~se thlrd-elWJ Mond•y through Friday
deUvecy will take """" 10 AM • 3 PM ~e;e: B~~the ~AIL* 196 E. 17th Street
PILOT, 105, Need.tecraft Cost• Mes•
Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea
StatiOn, New York, N.Y. 10011. Prtnt ?Came, A....._
Zip, Pa~ Namlw.
NEE 0 L ECRAFT '12!
Crochet. knit, etc. Free
directions. !Oc-Jaatut MactanMI 8ook. Bute, W,ey knots, pat.
lft'tlS. $1.00.
SECURITY
PACIFIC
BANK
:iby~~'r*Pa~ i'.qual Oppor. Emplo)'~ m/f
~:: W Gift e.ol: \V 4ITR&sS. Coffee $hop, ex.-more tba.n 100 aUts ... ptt over. 21. No phone callt1. iioo . Kono i..n.., 2'99 u.-.
o...;p..,. iJ.... ...... ~Colt:::::•~M~<u~.'-~---
'1100. Welt,..ttet
1' IHfJ Jlllf Booil11 • SOc. Fttll or p/tlme . JR or owr. ~ el 1l Prim Aflfwls. C•rl's Jr. Rest.
Qdt kik 1 • 16 paltcrnt. Apply In pe~n bel",>een 3 A OOr. S .... ~kdaya. Carl ~. :no1
M-;..eum Qttllt Book 1 .. Ncwp>rt Blvd.. Newport
!Oc. _Bc_h·---~~~~-,
Qt&llt. 1nr Teday'• U\lhac • Any cia,y ti the BEST DAY to
1l bu.utlhll pattttna. SOe. nin an ad! Don't delay, ••
.call ..... 60-56'111.
"'JG Stylists -t:xper. $2 -
$'.!.:-.0 hr. Sal + Bonus. 7MO
EdingC'r, Hunt. Bch.
\VOi\1AN \V/son1e
secretarial, bookkeeping &
irl\·oiring exp to \\llrk FULL
TJi\lE at Leather Gypsy,
Inc. Salary 11·ilJ be com-
n1ensurate \\' I e x p &
nbilitirs. Plse call 495-5763
bet8&5.
\VOMEN -Need 4 attrnctive
11,omen for up to 5 week
public relation project to in·
troduce bank service to
Laguna Niguel residents.
Salary. No selling. \Vork 9
to 3:30. Call ~1rs. Carlson,
495-0850 -
BOOK: Signed by
'I P.ussie.11 , <'II 15.JO S. ~hvy, Laguna Bea1·h.
c.~t. eo..1
BLACK INDIAN POTIERY,
signed hy Marie -at 1550 S.
Coru;t Hwy, Laguna Beach.
-------
-Rent Washers/Dryers
$2. Wk. F'ull main\.
• 639-1202 •
FREIGtlT Damage Sftll" Oil
new llotpoint & \\lhirlpoot
r e f r i g I wa shers/dryers
545--0780.
REFRIGERATOR, 5
old, 1"·0 doors. and
clean
893-9060
years
sto\·e,
a DISHWASHERS, v.·ashers,
dryers, reblt, guarn &
dC'lv'j'.I. 839-7620; 540-5218.
RECOND. APPLIANCES
Delivered -guar. ·Dunlap's,
1813 Newport, CM 5-18-7780
i\IA YT AG washer & Ken-
n1ore dryer. Both in good
rondition $35. ea. 548-2129
\VHITE REF'RJGERATOR
Good running condition. $60.
Call 4!M-7210
AUTOrit/\TIC \Vasher, elec·
h·ic dryer. Excellent con-
dilion. $90. 646-5848.
Building Materials 806
e Surplus . Building
!llATERIAL • 1000'8 Of NE\V
ITEl\IS! Doors, lumber, ply.
\l'OOd, alum sheeting, mold-
ing, windows, etc.
BUILPERS SURPLUS
2406 So. Main St., S.A.
A-1on thru Sat 10-5
TI4: :.46-10.'U
BEA UT I FU'L 11 nt I qu e
Austri&n &by G mnd :
I all ebony finish. Xlnl cood.
P ea!le c ~1ust Sae1i lice this treasure 548-7881 * For Cost Only * S'lSO? 968-4~. . ~~=~--~~~ 32 PEDAL '~urlJ!zcr Ori;:1tn GAS BBQ, heavy duty FaJ-Like nu cond. Estate Sale
con Mork V $1(15, RCA home ~1u.st !;ell, $500. 675-.)2.10
entertainment center w/23" e YAMAHA rt'ductd to : colol' TV, $1200 new, sell
$295. BeauHfu\ extension $550 firrn
dining 1able $65, 10' sofa & -=--&'-;10-4-867'"7"6""7 __
chaise $75, Walnut cabinet Piano, Cable-Nel110n,
$10, Gas fireplace logs $20, Spinet, Xlnl cond.
Canopy bed $40, Other items 4!13-12115
!213) 592-1601 , * AUCTION * Sporting Goods 830
1'.lagnavox a11trosonlc phono .
am/fm com.binatk>n. goo ti
cond. Est.ate sale. i\lost sell
$300. 675-52SO
~·-.. _v.u~l[I
3 Lines,. 2 Times, $2.00
ADORABLE kittens, 6 \vks, 2
re, 3 n1a., grey, blk/\vht,
blk, fluffy, Need Jove.
5'10-7604 :Fine Furniture M98 MUASER, V24, 81.11\1, & Appliances nice ~O. Enlleld 1917 U.S. DARLING litlle puppies,
Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. ~-06. nice sso. Springfield beagle/poodle, 6 'vceks old,
Wl'ndy's Auct·1on Barn AJ'--03 ~~te model, ne~w $90. looking for homes, 557-4071 All m1htary. 557-4885. aft 6 pm
2075~ Newpoi;t. CM ~ GOLF Clubs, hfacGrcgor, 10 \VK m & f Labrador I
Beh11xl Tony 1 Bldg !\fat I. new, Nicklaus ~feritagc, Shep. pups. Polenlial hunt-
REFRIG $45., tal l freezer complete. Cost S·150. Sell ers 4~·9822 LagWla Bl'acil.
$.115., 7 dra,ver mahogany $250. 548--4189, 548-2412 F R E E puppies ,
dc~k S75 .. 5' metal clo!f!I SURFBOARD 6'8". Inrinlly C o 11 ie/Shephcrd/Husky,
$7.50, coffee & tv.'O c_nd tbles clear with red mils. Ad-for Information cell 847-~Th
$12., vanity $8., pi neapple jllf!table box fin. Just like FREE to good hon1e, n1ale,
bed $10., crib $8.50, gas con-new $70 642-4006 black It white puppy, 6 v.·ks,
nectors 75c ea. ~lisc. USED TV ' d-I H'FI Gd. for child, 84~
AKC Dachshund pu~. Xlnt
temperarnent, Chnn1p bloori
lines, pr! ply. \Vknds or
.,..·kdys aft ~pn1, 968-93.t.!
OBEDIENCJ:: clnss to lita11
June 20, \Ved 7:30 pm.
Newport Beach/Inline area.
5l6-4ll'l8
~~-~~~~ BEAUTIFUL, EX 0 T I C
Atihan" I yr, AKC, $50 A up. !J62-69j6 art 3.
UlASA ApllO pupa, AKC reR:.
14 wks ""'/all 11hots, lovable,
xlnt (or apt. 5-14-9314
SCOTI'Y female. AKC. 14
wk!, champion background.
$1'5. 545--7361
Keeshound AKC, 8 mo's old,
$51), Beautlh.11 dof(,
Call 642-4205
BEAUTIFUL AKC Beaele
Puppy, 10 v.•k.11, male. $50. * 833-1.526 *
"PULI" Hungarian Shl!epdoa
AKC rca:. top winning doiis
In US. TI4/783-297J
COLLJE Puppies, AKC, 6
wks old. $100. Tri I Sable.
aft 6pm -54/i-1512
HorHs 156 USABLES, 2560 Newport , Ra o, I ,
Blvd, C.J\f. Tues thru Sat. Stereo 836 * FREE KITTENS• HOJtSES for Sale, Re&.~
FOR Sale: '64 Classic 770 1 Calico, 3 black, 1 Colt. l~' yn, good ,
American hi 0 t 0 r 8 , g BEFORE YOU SELL Siamese. Call ~7 Bay iteldlna 3\ii yr; %i
cylinder, 4 new tires, good ./ CUECK ~S (2) BLACK kittens 8 wk.11, 1 Quarter ~' \lf'.elch 13 yn, "
gas mileage, $250. Thomas OUr trade In allov.ancea are ~1. 1 ~--weened ·• hsebrkn. Pot, ~' Welch 7 yn, Tact
electric organ $35 Girl's the talk of the town. Top ?i.1othet Russ Blu 642-7768. avail, 493-1245
20" bike $20. Car 'rack $5 trade dollars on your old FOR SALE: 5 year ol4
54i--7945 Hi-F1 gear now. Bri ng in all Thorobred nlarc and Year. . your used equipment for the ling Thorobred oolt. Court
Cameras & 1 1-JAHAL oriental rug, 9x9, deal you nl:'ver U1ought pos-l htl Md c.--u...., Martial • Nasn.illa Ii n e. Equipmtnt 808 lOO yr old patch v.·ork quilt:_ sible. HARBOR III-FI, 1780 ...._.. 993-2398
---'--'-------cha1nbe_n1 stove;-old: semi Ni?wport C.M. 646-0123. ' '
NEED c a 111 c 1. n lll'/in· i porcelain Engl 1 sh -\Var eLs=r=E=R'-to"'-''--C1c=97"-=o-2,c'1-o-'""wo-'--,-1 ~~ ARAB, 3 Yr beauty,
terchangealllc ll'ns. 4ooinm dishes, set of 10; ll1•in, beds, : · ' a t Pets.. Gener•I 850 genlle but splrlted. Call
tele. lens. ie. Pen!a.x, Nikon, n111ple; Other items. Garrard model, pro( sized after 5 PM, 6-12-4553 changer, Jen s c n air 544.5400 etc, after 5, 673-'1050. suspensiQfl 5 Pe 8 k er 8 , A'Pl'ENTION PETS!
Furniturt 810' BRUNS\.\'ICK Gold Crown AM/FM/MPX receiver, 11 Home awny from home, 1-IORSES Bnf>nled, rldln,ir
---------pool tables, 41~ x 9. Snooker track deck, orig S-110, now bliill Just for you! al"'t'na & ira111. 20271 Acacia
5 x 10, offer. Pinball & $1.80. \Vas le rt unclaimed. BoardingiGroom'ing 5-16-2848 St. S.A. llel'thta. &14-5.WT
Arcade games $75 up. C.Om-Still brand ne1v ln box and TALK I NG PaJTOt-Amazon BEAUT. Gelrilng. Pill1~~~1)' ~ercial ndak>t ~~ 1~Jittxl. guaranteed. Cash or small Yellow Head, w/"''f'Olliht l)'mkhana trained. '400.
FURNITURE, 2 sofas, 3
chairs, dinette, gir l's Fr.
I>rov. BR. set. King·size
gold wrought iron head-
board, hanging la m p s ,
piano. Gorgeous! A Is o
garage Mle. &W·8676.
CUST0~1 upholstet-ed cha.i:-,
continuous armg & back
\\'ffabric ,;k\rt to floor. No
v.'OOCI showing. C.Overed ln
imported B e i ge-\V h l t e
velvel. Like TIC\\'. $Z50.
Priva1e J>al'ly. 6~:l-018.1
COritPLETE furnishings of
drLx apt. Thi1 apl nr
Disneylnnd a lso l\vail at
$1~. mo. 871--0370 or
5'.?6-7657
SMOKED glass & chrome
round elcl"f{f' -l -1heU cock-
tnil table GO" long, crnr tbl.
2.fl" sq. $97. 842·2690.
PA1R matching highback
chain;, $250 .• PaJr n1a tchlng
8' sofas, $400.. many an-
tiques, elc. 493-1812.
n ve r ._,,. · pymts. 893--0501 iron cage $175. 6U-412l or Call 962--5.175
3 1\10. old 8' Deluxe Geryi Top 3 STEREO arn/lm com-548-1292 Have IOmCthlng you want to
Camper shell l~r pickup, binatlon, Packard Bell. Dally Pflot Want Ads have sell! Claulfied adJ do 1t
perfect shape, ongina.I cost 493-12.-15 bar&:ains aaIOre. well • call NOW &4).§18.
$.150. Owner sacrificing for 1 :piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"-$285. 646-0581, 4pm-8 pm. 11
\VANTED • USED
ORIENTAL RUGS
Will pay ca.!h. (213) 874-2842
COll'?[t.
KNEE-high lace-ups $25.
Record albums $1-$2. W 1
l'inow chalfl.!I, spool-tops.
642-3621
MOVING sale -Fantastic
household furnishings +
clothing. 3 2 6 Rochester,
C.M.
KIRBY vacuum with attach-
ments $45. Golf cart bag
combination $7. Brownle
camera SlO. 842-2690.
WANTED small hou!ehold
items, jewelry & misc.
&i2-7009 Sat/ Sun aft 5.
MEMBERSll1P -Dana Point
Yacht Club. $400
21.3-545'5294
\VATER SortetK'r, Refiner,
fain sz. Lifetime frbgls. SeU
cheap. 543-i<lSl 24 hrs.
ESTATE SALE: Natural
Autumn Hatt l\tlnk Stole.
After 6; 552-9Tl!i
HOME MADE FUPGE
SJ. a bag. 64~
Sell id le items .•.•.. 1342-5678
FIND YOUR NAME
WIN FREE SHOW PASSES
Each DAILY PILOT Winner
Gets Two $1.50 Value Tickets
Southern California
moa1lE
HOmEIHOW
Anaheim Stadium
NOW thru June
PRODUCED BY
~~d.~~i::
Ertdot1.-ci by C1liforni1 Mobil1bomt
DtllHs Auoci1tian
ADMISSION:
S 1.50 Adults;
75-Voun1sters
10 to 11 years
3
--.. 5.ttwClly, So.mc&tv. Moo>my, Mtl¥ 2'•:11
12:00 llOOft 10 10:00 '·'"·
lwtdly lhr• ,,..,.., ~ ~ I
2;00 OA fD 10:00 f.ft'I.
S.lwClly, ~ 1
1:1:00-10 10:000.m.
S-.V, Ju ... 3
12·00l'IOOl'Ito1:00 p.ni.
The PAIL Y PILQT m•ku It Olsy. J..t chock throu9hout
the claulfled MCtlon for "ads" ll1tlng winners' MMK. If
you find your n1mo l••t coll 642"5678, Ext. 314, bo-n
9 1.m . ind 1 p .m. to mak• arr•nttmtnts to pick up your
tlc,kett 1t 1ny convenleftt DAILY PILOT office.
I
I • •
I
OAJLV PILOT 3t . .
---I~ I _,,,.. I~ I ---I~!· --
'""°'"';.;;_.;.;... ____ 156_ Boota, Sllpo/Docb tll
PRIVATE bo." ~ls.. lhlil WANT SLIP for 25' Smray,
llUtomatic wat.trer • l1ih~ rent or trade. I own
arena. wash rackl. all Uus J*WNbop. Prerer Newport
!or $3S. We Med young Beach. 66-5695 979-0ll55 ~o start • drlll team. Boats, Speed & Ski 911
MotorH..,,..
Sole/Roni • Trolltrt, Tr...i 945 Truob ---'------SMAIL CAR OWNERS.
lDoJdng for a roomy. CX>M·
PACT TRAU...ER! Head for
a Ml size eampin& vacation
with the Ladybug --!Or nnaJ1 cars. Sl)ec1ally
11rlced thru May onfy. $324.
493--071.l, 32981 t.a.!Je Perfe<:·
to, San Juan Cap.latrano
'72 RANou:RO 500. 351 V8,
)o mileuge. Make oiler.
6G-<IM
IMPORTS WA!n'ED
On11p County'o
TOP I BUYER
8llJ. MAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blv ..:.
970 Ailtos. 1 _...t 970 A-. lmporttd
IMW
171h Ctu1s Cralt SS runabout,
I~ 327 V-8, mahogany hull ""1t w/traller & llkla. Only XIO . 1' hr. since new. A tt:al
1howpicce! $2500 Prlv. Pty.
544-7901 Bolts, Gener1I 900 , . 95 --·--· ---·-SK1 Boat, xlnt cond.16. * • • hp Evrd. Trlr, rover. $1295. Frank Karoleskl 644-2999. 6#-7119.
21121 Rod Jackot Circlo 15'h' StucMbakor VI
Huntf119ton llffc:h l~!!!!!!!!!!!!IFOO!!!!!!!. 53&4346!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~ You are the wt11.ner of
TWO FREE TICKETS
to the
Southem California
MOBILE HOME SHOW liiiii
May 26th thru June 3rd C•mper1, S•le/Rent 92:0
at ttt
ANAHEIM STAOIUM MEMORIAL DAY
2(ro Si•J_-~~\" Blvd., SPECIAL
Please call 642-5678, ext 314 AH camptt sheUs at factory
to claim your tickets. fNort!' cost. Custom shells start Jlt
County toll free number ll fll9. Cu.mm steepen $425.
St0-1220.) Hurry • sale ends Monday * * * May 28th at 5 pm. 100% 13' BRITISH DORY financing avail. Call 893-0573
4) elec, Johnson, complete 3 MO. old. 8' Deluxe Gem
OQt'.'ers. 675-2451 Top Camper shell for
n•~ ,._I I I pickup, perfect sha pe, -••• ..,. n • r1gi I $30 Owne •--·I _., o na C06't • r ...-. ce 7V4 sacrificing for $ 2 8 5 .
tJNbERWATER hull clean-646-6681, 4PM-8PM.
lht. inspect.kn, repair, and 3 mo. old 8' Deluxe Gem Top salVage etc. Camper shell for pickup,
' M&-1255 perfect shape, original cost
MARINE MECHANIC _ good $350. Owner sacrificing for 1'drk -Fair prloes. Call $2S5. 646-6581, 4 pm-8 pm.
Burr's Marine S75-8677 '67 TRADEWINDS t e n t
n·~~1 .. _ I traller. Furnace, s to v e , -.. nMr ne flberglaM top; new tires.
Equip. 904 SIP>'J. 6. Good (.'(Ind. ;500.
531-0468
Trallon, Utiflty 947
SMAU... CAR OWNERS.
I.Ao+ting for a roomy, com·
pact trailer? l fead for a full
siie camping vacation with
the Ladybug • designed for
small cars. Specially pr1ced
thru May only. $324.
493-0711. 32981 Calle Perfec-
to, San Juan Capistrano.
4X:> SI'URDY util box trier,
xlnt tires & spare. Ball
furn. \Vi.red for Ii t cs .
644--0938.
WANTED
TICKETS TO
LEO ZEPPELIN
CONCERT
Please call
548-7881
H. Beach Ph. 847-8555
Autos, lmporteo 970
e THE FINEST IN
USED IMPORTS e e THE FINEST IN
IMPORT SERVICE e
Do yourself a favor and come
sec us first. Open Tues.
and Thurs. ti!. 9, Sat-Sun * For Coat Only * Iii 5.
'72 FORD Van E 240, 123 (a IROi EAN AUTO)
Cargo Van, V-8 p/s, p/b, .s... Ji:.u-.-"'
Xtras! Less than 6,000 mi., \~! ...... S34JO, 536-3828 aft 4 2IOO ~l!IMl.C-........ M.o
HUUY
Yo•••lril1,.n,
... ~110.1210, ..........
At "9 .W flf'fiM
NEW DATSUN PICKUPS
ALL COLOIS TO CHOOSI FIOM
IMMEDIATE DlLIYllY
BUY or LEASE
1971 Dodge B-100, 6 cyl. air, ALFA ROMEO auto, R&H, custonl bit. lmporte4 cabinels, mags, Xlnl. rond.1--.-69-A_LP_HA __ RO_M_E_O __ ---'--B'-M-W ____ ---'--B'-M-W ___ _
$2800. 831-2229 S d V I p .
AN ,. 3 .py er eoce. r1vate pty., __________ ----------'~ '72 OODGE V , .,.. ton. 675-8638 1 · ._____ ... _"_"" ___ ~M spd stand, 318 •n g. -------LEASE A GOOD -. GEORGE II. 64!Hl>l1 o.-AUDI ------I ~,,,~_...,~, -~~,----,1-:-------SELECTION OF
Sports, Race, Rods 959
-~==~~=~= 1921 "T" Rdstr. Jag rear-end, Pontiac eng, &
Turl»-hydro. 646-2305 Apollo, Pacesetter, Baron,
Jamboree, Roblnhood •
We've got 'em at
KEN DON
MOTOR HOMES
Trucks 962
'67 TOYOTA
STOUT PICKUP
707 N. Harbor, S.A. With CAMPER Shell. (835-
_--..,""'554"-,COO~l1=---I CPJll, 21' TP.AVCO $1099
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
25' L'lJCOVt.:RER
2"l'·22' COf'ffINENTALS
20' PHll>E & JOYS v AN CON\. l':nsrJNS
~"Ir~ e Service e Rentals * Danmar Inc. * 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555
l-IUNTINGTON BEACH
'!fo~o~~o~'~-S~1325o:a~J ·~e~~dkiJ:!1r;5'b1~~·~: 1973 BAVARIA USED BMW's
494-64CU. 548-5112. CREVIER BMW 1971 BAVARIA
A. -•.;..l..;..o•_W_•_n_1ec1 ___ 968_, AUSTIN HEALEY Sal". Servi'". Leasing 1972 BAVARIA
-208 W. lst St., Santa Ana 1970 2002
INSTANT CASH!
we ARE IN
DESPERATE NEEO
OF GOOO, CLEAN
FOREIGN CARS
TOP DOLLAR-Paid
For Or Notl
Call or come in to see us.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B.
642-9405
""3171 1971 2002 '69 Austin Healy 7Mw 1912 2002
Sprite Bob Mclaren, Inc. CRE1V96
1
9ER1600BMW 4 cyl, 4 speed, beautiful Sales Service Lease
burnt orange exterior, im· Lease a 1973 Bavaria. A/C Sales -Service • Leasing:
maculate (105BLQ). & AM/FM for $137.86 per 208 W. Jst St., Santa Ana $1377 mo, open end. 850 No. Beach 835-3111 Blvd., La 1-fubra,
714·522--5333 See It -You'll Buy It
~w.Le.wU
W TOYOTA
1966 }{arbor, C.l\1. 640-9303
Like to Trade? OUI' 'Trader's
Paradise column is for you!
today ..• 642--5678
Need a "Pad"'.' Place an ad!
You'll find it in Classified
TIME FOR
FOR ACTION •••
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED AD
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
G ·
SALES-SERVICE-LEASING
OVERSEAS DELlVERY
ROY CARVER, Inc.
Zl4 E. 17th St. -CAPRI
~
NOW OWN THE
FABULOUS 1973
CAPRI
\Vith 2,000 4 cylinder or V-6
engine, with or without
dcror group, so1n e with sun
roof or landau top, P>Wt"r
disc brakes, style steel
wheel, radial tires, bucket
seats. ORDER YOURS
NOW.
$2789
OR IF YOU PREFER
'71 CAPRI
(231CORJ
$1789
GUSTAFSON
Lincoln-Mercury
16800 Beach at Warner
lfuntington Beach
842-8&14 * (213) 592.5544
''Home of the Viking''
'72 2000, AM/FM, decor
g1·oup. Best offer! Call after
6 or anytime weekends,
586-3264 ~I: ~:~se~ ~~i MAJORWAY & Hall Pint
gear box. otter. 536-7lll2 Campe~ & ~('!Is at Jae·
1::.'10' Ilarbor Rlvd., G.G.
531·6800
'68 CHEV. 1h Ton with
camper shelL V-8, stick shift,
radio. Camper shell fully
paneled & insulated. Very
good condition, has only
42.000 miles orig. o\vner.
544-8874.
~W~E'""°P7A~Y~TO=P~DO=L"'"LA""'Rc-1Autos, Imported Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported ~----~~--~~~~~~--
970 970
Next to G.G. Datsun FOR TOP USED CAilS
Boo P 906 tory pn ces. 858 W. 18th..
. ti, ower C.M. e SALES e If your car is extra clean,
see us first.
BAUER BU1CK
2925 Harbor Blvd.
26,.· OlRIS Craft, xlnt cond. * CAMPER Shells for salt:'
ttu'uout, a/s radio, head, or rent. All makes &
galley, sleeps 4, Pert. for models. 2941 .Grace Lane,
your 1st cruiser. Everything Bldg G, C.M.
aboard you need. Owner CAMPER & trailer repaira &
will be aboard Sun. May Z1 supplies also van con·
thru Sun. June 3rd. Marina versions. 858 W. 18th, c;.M.
• SERVICE • e RENTALS e
EXPLORER
'55 FORD 1h ton PU, Olds
engine, hydro, new pa.int.
S550. 548--5122.
Costa Mesa 979-2500
Have something you want to
seU? Classified ads do it
P:U,· .. Newport Ben ch· Cycles, Bikes,
'72 SABRE Cra.tt 18' Conv. Scooters 925
OF
HUNTINGTON BEACH
18801 Beach Blvd. 842-8803
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Sell idle it1• .. 1s , .. &12 :~781 well • call NOW 642-5678.
Cycles, Bikes, • Cycles, Bikes,
Scooters 925 Scooters 925
hidtp, m 1/0, OMC under John'• Racing Cycles
5Q hn. all duh Instrument. * BUL TACO * :~rnco::~s& ~~: i:i:::~ iEADOUARTERS FOR
Pfint Vanson trlr, Ideal fam DESERT, MOTO X Tr "'6t for fresh/Wt. Cruilll', Accessories.
fi.h, ski, aak'g $ 3 9 5 O l-Iarbor at \\'ilson, C.M.
963-5567 or 545--4451 646--4655 or 646-2428
24'fSCHJADA lnbrd. Cuddy '67 Triumph 650
c~bin, head, elect refrig, Extended front end, custom
1lhk,, trim tabs. radio, Chrys exhaust. New paint, tires. 4«t eng, 82 hrs. Tandem Lo Mileage. Excellent (.'On-
tder. slip, $7950. &M-6235 ditlon. $600.00 642--0433 Sat.,
20·· SKIP Jack, leu than 2 Sun., Mon. only.
Yk old. Full equp'd. 165 hp BICYCLE SALE
IIO; incl trlr $6500. NEW 10 SPEED ITAIJAN
&6-A280, 54S-938J BICYCLES $59.95. Beach
30' TROJAN, FB, TS, $9.500 Bicycles, 800 E. Balboa
'I'tlp cond. See to apprecla.te. Blvd., Balboa 675--7282.
644-l836 1972 HARLEY !Javl.dllon, 6:5
2 3 ' BRUMMEf-Mandella cc 15 orig miles, brand nu,
dt.Y cruiser, sleeps 4. 427 $215. Uoder warran. &4G-0172
FORD. $6500. 673-6897. HARRY Qulnn 10 spd, full
18' GLASPAR in/outbrd. campy, Phil Wood hu bs,
JLLNESS in family causes
sale of 1972 Luxury Balboa
Motor Home. Purchased 9
mo ago; Chevy V-8 eng,
PIS, P/B, shower, ~
Monomatic toilet, air >
furnace & extras. Xlnt cond. :a
Still under 'vaITanty. Priced X
to stll no\v at $8200. 1624 0
Antiqua \Vay, Dover Shores, c
Newport Beach 642-9980. UI '" 1973 Dlsco••erer and Sundial
Motor Homes for rent, make ;
r£>Servations for Summer I;
now. Phone Miss Bennet at
Bob Longpre Pontiac,
892-6651 or 636-2500. ~
NEW, Explorer, 24', full •
equip Sips 8, air/gen, '"
lowest rates, no mileage, X
552-8292 0 c .. '"
l\10TOR hontc rental. '73
Overland 24'. Special off
season ra tes. Comp. ti'
self-0:int, a/c. 558-0952 > :;;
Dodge chassi~. slill under
WAREHOUSE SALE WAREHOUSE SALE
JUST ARRIVED
FROM ITALY
SOLD ONLY IN THE CRATE
Easy To Assemble • Super Lightweight
10 SPEED BICYCLE
ALL COLORS • ALL SIZES
Be•utifully p1lnted & 1trlp9d
with chrome forks
ONLY
~
"' "' => 0
% .. .. ~
~ :,;
"' "' => 0
% .. ..
~ :!~rs. $~·8~98~V:s ~. ~4'lz wks old, sell '73 21 ' FIREBALL on l·ton $79 95
35' OWENS Cruiser. TetTific 1971 YAMAHA 3fiCl Enduro. warr. 5500 mi. Priced to .c e sa.vin~s. Loaded, Mu s t Will lake best oiler, sell. 54~3766 Eves. ; w_,
sacrifice! 644--5400 494--4031 Rent A Motor Home "'
WAREHOUSE SALE WAREHOUSE SALE
Bolts, Sail 909 * 1973 HONDA 350 CL * for your Vacation X RtcJulor ~ * * * ,i:iac er::* 1.o Mi~r:1m * 531.6800 * g $140.00 ~
Russell Jens1en * 1973 HONDA 350 CL * e •73 Lifetime M H 23125• ti' Value :::>
114 Lom• Lane #3 Immac Concl. Lo Mileage "plush" free mileage & m 0
San Clemente $650 * * * 496-1909 lnsur. Pri. pty. 838-ffi.U UI e C4mpanola Derailer e Aluminum Chain Protec· i5
You are the winner of 1970 HONDA SL90 Scrambler 8\li FT. Holiday camper, ?:; tors • Aluminum Center Pull Brake • Aluminum m
TWO FREE TICKETS perfect condt., like new. Jacks, shocks, oven, boot, m Gear Protector • Aluminum Kick Stand • Safety ~
\o the S195. 962-7~ nil'e and clean $700. 847-7435 Reflector Side & Rear e Aluminum Handle Bars ~
Southern California '69 Triumph 500 * 1969 BALBOA * ~ e High Grade Gum Tires e Aluminum Wide Flange 111 MOBILE HOME SHOW Good Condition -$600 like new conrl .. dual nir. , 1 b w ped _, May 26th tlu"U June 3rd * 645_3245 * $50()(). &l5-20BS : Hubs • Quick Re ease l-Iu s • Factory rap -C
at the -u=s~E~D~B~l~C~Y7c=L~E~s-· '·12 20· ESCAPADE custom % & Plugged Handle Bars. .,, A~HEIM -STADIUM All Types * 642_1272 Dodge, air, all extras. Sale g ~
2000 State College Blvd ., M~-~H~-----·I or trade. 494-2742. 411: NEWPORT IMPORTS :>~ Anahein1 otor omes 1r LAZY DAZE on '73
Please call 642-567B, ext 314 S•I•/ Rent 940 Dodge. fully sell con!ained.
10 claim your tickets. rNorth TI4-~2-7092 ~ 3100 W . Coast Hwy •• Newport Beach :!
County loll tree number is Deluxe Winnebago """""""'"'=~-c~-=~ ! in ~ 540-1220.) Rent. 2r. 640-0482 NB Trailers, Travel 945 ~ * * * . Don't give up lhE" ship! J9i0 AIRSTRf'.:AM. ~7 lt. 642•9405
LlDO 14 -No. 3726 W/lraJlf'r. "List" it in classified, Ship Good eondi1ion. All extras.
l ,' yr. old. Ullman board, to Shore RC'suHs! 642-fi67~. 642-0574 or 1\92-8'200
rudder, salls. Measured. A 970 A I 970 97 A I Kfpt Inside. Sailed 10 times. utos, lmpor1ea utos, mported Autos, Imported 0 utos, mported 970 ~4-&18-5009 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~-
SCJ-IOCK Endeavor, 2 6 '
fiberglass sailboat, full race
eijuip, with or without
K~wporl mooring. 644-2614
FACI'ORY 2nds, Nap I es
Sahot form $165. Also un·
tiiiished plyv.wd dinghy $45.
612-5195 * SEAQUEST 26' * Sips 5, galley. head, motor
ovshioM, hing:cd mast. Xlnt.
~500. 846--24:19
LIDO 14 Con1pl w/trailcr
~. rte Anz.1 Bayside
Storage or call ( 71 4 ) ¥-""'' LlDO 14, Fully equipped,
ocwer & lraili•t', lnany ('X· thts. $1000. or best oUcr.
'J34-5213.
HOBIE 16: nrly nu, Yi/all
ntclng gear: trailer, trapeze de. call days 557_...>SU or
~ 6«>-0591
HOBIE 14 Catanu1ran. Vcrv ~ rondilion. NC'\Y Irani·
polifl('. $T;:'J(). 4~J'i-1fi6,I ,)('fr
li' t.1EitCURY C lrJ s ~.
Ji'ibergJ a. .. s. dacron sails.
!eel trlr, nu paint. f>'IZ-7880
' LIOO 14 $6SO
OR OFFER
Ot\LL 6~ EVENINGS
i&E 651, blue h u 11
>t/trallcr. $500. Call after 6 pm 67'...-9071
• YANKEE built 11-finute
. Tralle:r. COVf!r.
mplete. 64f..05.">8
lfr: S NI P!; sallboat . '/trailer, $«)Q. ~-·-· ViNTuRE 21' JifU!t tiell. ·~iotJer~3
I. CORONADO 25
'1nt amd, pr!v pty 644-6537 1
Sell Idle I..... • • . 00·5618
' .
'69 FORD
f.251 l"tctU"
omper s~tla1, v .. , AvtQ .
&ti pOWtr s'"""9• O•f
' Tool bo:t. 1261$0.
$2795 ---·--
'71 DATSUN u• 2.DOOtt ..,uto .. l!&H. otr tQll!I. ~tw
<adiol tlre1, nl!'W Delnl. Lie.
~o. 5s.I DFW.
$1895 ----
* u s
E
D
c
A
'70 DATSUN
.. ltO.l.OiTl!lt ~.lvtof w11n I'--'-· J mMd ho~-.. It""'-Al 111 '-®!. SJt Ill',
$995 -----
15 Cl!l H JRUCll
IH llOC! • • •
READY TO ROIL
PRICED TO mu
- -- --
Lease Your 240Z
FROM
DOT DATSUN
AND SAVE$$
Only $114 Month
PLUS T ... X
16 MOS. OPIN IND LU.SI
LOADED WITH Elj)UIPMENT
C SMtlil tr-.. of< condlllOl\lns. mDQ,, /\M/l'M rodlo,
flntld oktu. 011 tflt z·1 ~~lroi.
IMMEDIATI D•LIV&:RY
~~~~~-~~~-----------------~~-~~~
I I I
1"66
1'65
1'67
1'68
1'69
VW 2 door
~ spted, rad~. heater, vinyl in-
ferior. (TBP~22J
YW Bug
4 sPffd, radio, llNler, ~lnyl ln-terklr. CSR.W1!99l
VW Bug
radlao, heai..r, vlnyl lnlerlor,
xln!. condlt!on, (WXAl!Ol
YW Bug $1' 195 R...:!lo, hN!er, ~llow w11h ~!etk
vinyl Inferior. (WVF7?0)
YW Bug
l!edlo, heettt,
(YRU52)
vinyl
~71 VVI Fastback $179$ I ~ ,Pfld, radio, hfe!er, vinyl In·
terlar, law miles, xlnt cond1llon.
(52JFZH >
~11
'69
LARGE SELECTION BUSES, CAMPERS
FASTBACK & SQUAREBACK
AND MANY OTHER FINE CARS.
Autos, New 980Autos, New 980Autos, New
TheMO#T6
CAll'O Is Having A Great Year!
1973 MONTE CARLO
with automatic transmission, air conditioning, VB
engine, power steering and brakes, heater/de ...
froster, whitewalls, vinyl roof cover, niirrors,
?eek-up lights,· wheel .covers, etc.
NOW ONLY
$
Only ~22 per mo. on approved credit
for thirty-six mont~s lease!
12 ELEGANT NEW AND USED '73 MONTE CAflLOS
IN STOCK NOW FOR
IMMEl»IATE DELI.VERY!
HOWARD
CHEVROLET . Mac Artlv nl JamlMne Boulemls
bhr "'"·-OPIM TODAY
• • •
1'
I
T.....,,...,Z9,lm
1§]1 ~! ~-~, ;;"'~-;~;1 ~ 'I ~ 970 Autoo, Imported ml A-. '""'",..,
MERCEDES llNZ
1§1 I ---_ .. _ 1~11 ......... l§J'1 :.-. .....
~~m ~~m~~m~~~~~ ~~m ~~~
1§1 ! -------
TOYOTA DATSUN DATSUN RAT FIAT I RAT JAGUAR MAZDA
"12 DATSUN 6 -Paok '68 Fiat 850 Cpe ~ :;;;-Fl.AT U4 Spld<r. Xlnt. '71 Jaguar XJ.6 MAZDA "n RX-2. Jo mliff, * SPECIAL*
'70 MERCEDES BENZ
280 SL CPE ROSTER
TOYOTA SALE
AT
Pr•O.Y•luat&on
PRIC ES
BRAND NEW
1'72
" . l I ~~'7::~1~~: 1973 DATSUNS Low Mil" A Real Nice 6.r. '69 FIAT SPID cond. ""' top. M"'t .... Sedans •mltm ttenoo. "'"' doan.
$J>OO ~ 54S-6397 ALL MODE tXDAZ.Ul~ . Roi!.dster. Orangr extmo . Asking ~call~~ J colors to chooM from S1500, 615-7414. •••
'68 DATI>UNPlcltup.1300 cc. LS $899 tYDAnll. l9Tl FlAT, Sport ''"""'· 5 ""'· Sil""' and Blaclc, &II MERCEDES IENZ
. , I
Good -···•·· __ .,,. IN STOCK $1 "99 '""· xlnt oond. moo. er 1n •--.. tilul --~"---------• -·-· -·~ oon. BILL MAXEY . "' m•k• ottor. Call '8&-181.l are ~ . ~~· -'
CU.!Dml"" lnlttlor. J ... t BARWICK IMPORTS BILL MAXEY and l'UUy """''" Alr Cond,
$8SO or b"t otter. 546-41<5 33375 Camino Capistrano TOYOTA JAGUAR A"'o ,.,...,, eto. ·n 510 STA. Wgn. -Oran,, San Juan Capistrano t888t BEACH BL. 8'?-&155 TOYOTA NEWPORT
'68 Mercedes
280S Sedan Spark.Una polar wh I l e , Auto. trans., radio, fact. a!r I
automatJc, power ateerlng, cond., W·S..W tu.,, tint. 1 w/wblte Jnterior 4 spd 493-3375 831 ~.,..,., ·ro $2300. S75-256.3 ' ' or ·w1" HUNTING N BEACH 18881 BEAOI BL. 847-85.55 1967~ XKE Roadster. Quiet, IMPORTS
.. .,., MUST 11ell '69 Datsun. Xlnt 19TI FIAT, Sport Spyde.r, 5 llUNTJNGTON BEACH cle-An, f a at. Gentleman's W Coast H
Auto Trans, Air Cond, Power
Steerlni:, PO\ver Windows,
AM/FM, Cange kept COO·
dltlon.
air roMitioning, both hard &lue. CTE'llOO!ll:iOTJ. • ·:
& !Oft lops. All acces.10rle1J. $2563 ... ~:
Need a Pad · Place an ad! runnhia; CQnd. Radio & spd, xlnt cond. $2700. or Fast results 8.N!' )Ust a phone sp:>n ing machine, $3.100. 3100 • v.'Y., N.B.
Call 642-5678. heater. Betrt o!ler. 5.57-2568 make otter. Call 586-2!13 call away • &12-5678. &t0-1608. '4l·9405
Low mileage. Call for an SAVE NO\V
appolntntt'nt to 9ee this ex· AT --™--m-~ m--m--~
••••••••••••••••••
• "AT CUSTOMER REQUEST" •
• REPEAT OFFER •
l
I
••••••••••••••••••
DON 'T MISS YOU CANNOT
PAY MORE THAN ..
THIS WEEK
THE FOLLOWING CARS APPLY ONLY :
•LTDS
•TORINOS
•GALAXIES
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
THAT'S RIGHT FOLKS ••• $99
OVER DEALER INVOICE PLUS
$90 DEALER PREPARATION,
FACTORY RETENTION FEE,
SALES TAX & LICENSE
Harbor American /Jeep
HAS GONE
1~~\\ TO THE PlJa ~v.,O~ HARBOR AMERICAN/JEE~
HAS CUT THE COST OF BUYING
A USED AND NEW AUTOMOBILE
NEW 1973 HORNET EXAMPLE I
A REAL GAS SAVER $AVE $$$
'69 CHEVROLET IMPALA
VS , pow1r 1f1trin9, power bra~tl,
•ir tond., vinyl roof. !ZUY9ll)
'70 DODGE MONACO
VI, •1.110. h•n1., air tond., pow•r
1t••ri119, pow•r br•ke1, vinyl roof, (792EMSJ
WHOLESALE •t 70000
OUR PRICE •t6so•·
$50 UNDER WHOLESALE
'71 MATADOR
F•ctory 1ir. VI , •1.1!01T11tic tr1n1., pow•r 1h1ering, powtr brt~tf,
r1d!o, httter, r•di11 tirt1, tike ntw. {66lDLHl
ONLY $154500 ONLY $1895
AT THESE PRICES CARS SOLD AS IS
FIRST COME FIRST SERVED • COME IN
NOW AND DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED
Harbor American /Jeep
1969 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA 833°2440 645-7770
SALi GOOD TILL 6 P.M. SUNDAY MAY 27, 1973
All CARS SUlllCT TD nlOR SALi, AND A"•OVID CHDIT.
'
JAGUAR
AUTHORIZED SALES
AND SERVICE
WE BUY CARS
~111.u q1w. ll\111111~;
l"lll' ,....._, .t • ~"" . .
JAGUAR XJ-6. ·n, im·
nmculate v.·hite/black in·
terlor. Priced for quick
saJe. $6700. 642-3121
1972 JAGUAR E TYPE
2 + 2
Totnl Factol)' Equipp<.'d,
NE\V CAR (•3703 ).
$876.5.43
\irll1'trq111•; lllithn~.
lvroJA I~ <.l.I\ I \111,"1 .. ' . . .
~~
•
ceptionally m a in ta In e d
DI s I lnctive AutonX1bile,
&"3-lm. (69;).Bls. Dlr.1
See Tl • You'll Buy It
;DmlW!iA
-TOYOTA
•
•
~ '··
'69 TOYOTA 2 DOOR
4s~~'.™:~~V19~ transmis· 1
$919 .
GUSTAFSON
. ' .,. . . -,
• I
: 1
' ..
. .
I
. SPECTACULAR SAVINGS
ON ALL 1973 CHEVROLETS NOW!!! : I
• Monte Carlos •
• Lagunas
• Camaros l:::-::51
e Caprices
: : . '
'
':
'
. ' : ' e Station Wagons e Monte Carlo' Sunroofs e Laguna with
"Coach" Windows e Vega Hatchbacks & Kammback Wagons )
' • .. • " ' .
' -I BLAZERS • 1/z TONS • >/4 TONS i
LUV PICKUPS AND WV '
BAJA • SURFER VAN -
EL CAMINOS-READY FOR DELIVERY
·I
CONNELL CHEVROLET ! . I 2828C~~~o:E:lvD. 5 46-1200 .. l
.................................................................. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ...... 11!1!!!!!!!!!!!!1~1
) \ I
~ llL 11 q11 1" llli1 t111~.
" ' .. . ' .....
VOLKSWAGEN
VW's
NEW&. USED
2 Big Location\
S MINUTES FROM
COSTA MESA
2ll4 E. lST ST., S.A.
835-4531
(4 Miles No. of
So. Cout Plual
15 MINUTES FROM
MISSION VIEJO
AREA
1442 SO. BRJSI'OL, S.A.
5464220
CS.A. Frwy. Ea.st on
ht St . %. ml.)
Commonwealth
Motors Ltd.
Santa An•
-l~I·-
'68 VW SQUAREBACK
4 speed, Jocnl car;-'25,000
original miles. \\lhite \\'i1h
red interlo'". 1\VBJ671 i.
$1299
llbrq111 ,; 11111!111~•
~l•.IO~ .:.t < J~.•I . . . ~ .
, CAD. 69 Cpe. de Ville. Only 72 VW Van. Radial.I, 1tereo, :$3,<XXJ miles -factory war-
fog lites, tach. Xlnt a>nd. ranty tranlflferrable -traded
$2900. 548-7942 In at Mercedes dealer.
'65 VW, good condition. $3,500 (Ser. No 6920) (714)
$500 or best offer. I c:'83J""'.9"300~)'-. ~~~---1--~*:;,_...::645-=3:oZl5:o;,__.o*c,,.--1 '68 CAD 4 dr, Sed. de V!Ue.
'66 Bug -runs WSll, Xlnt cond, all extras, Very
•S575• lo miles. Priv. party
847-7119 84fH>864
''6 Bug * Good Cond. w"'o"'ND=E°"R'°'F"'u"°L--.,.9--pa-,-,~Ca,...,d 1
$400 * * * 492-4548 LIMO 1961, black, pwr & · air. Best off over $400.
VOLVO ~64<--0002~~-""""o--c~-i CAD '70 DeVille, full pwr,
am/fm stereo. Leather,
steel radials. Otter. Eve ~ Wkdys 811--.
'71 ·Volvo 164
4 Dr.
6 cyl, power steering. radio, MAKE otter! Make offer! '69
heater, leather interior, sil· Cpe de Ville, must sell.
ver metallic ext, black $3195. Hurry! 531-5.164
leather interior. <096CHU>. '69 CAD 46,00J mi, 1 owner, $3677 like nu, factory equipment.
See It • You'll Buy It 644-3406,S-5
CAMARO ~Wtlf.IN
-
Yol VO '61 CAMARO, RS, 327 Std.,
"' nir, xlras, reg. gas. Very •h•.-p & • .,,,,_ $1 2 9 5.
1966 Harbor, C.~1 . 646-9303 .~<0'-94-1.1'-"''-'1'°'8=-=~~~
VOLVO SALEI '68 CAM'ARO SS :m6, ok,
• vinyl top. Beautiful Car.
Huge Savings .=ea,.,u~s«-804~'°"1'--7.-,,.....--,--~1 ,72 & ,73 '69 CAMARO, V-8, auto, air,
ONLY
12
LEFT AT
PRE-OOLLAR
DEVALAUTION
PRICES!
We make overseas deliveries
See II • You'll Buy It
pwr, ~I_'!& xlnt cond. 11850 ........... ,
1972 IMPALA cust. Loaded,
p/a, p/b, p/w, etc. $3000.
524-9780 an 6pm.
'71 CAl\1ARO. V-8, 350, pb,
ps, air, nu radials, xlnt. priv
ply. ~-552-8581
CHEVROLET "'••M l•1.:1
-
WA ~-'68 CAMARO, P/s, auto., Yol VO vinyl top, low mileage Ex· ~1 <>'11. nmoing "'""'"°"· New tires. \Vlll sacrifice for
1966 lfarbor, C.M. 646-9303 $1500. Call "'k days between
'68 VOLVO 144S 3-0 •·"'· 997-2412
4 Dr, Air Cond, tan with tan 1969 ~OVA., 45,000 nli, p/s,
vinyl interior, definitely the nu tires, mag whls, $1275.
cleanest Volvo we have ever Xlnt cond. 640-0172
had In stock. '72 NOVA. 350 $AVE turbo-glide trans,
en~,
ralley
whls. $2!\00. 897-2604
NEWPORT ·si CHEVELLE-SS396. , '"' IMPORTS Bucke~ seats, mags, reblt eng $850. 673-TJ64
3100 W. Coast liwy., N.8.
642-9405 ·~ EL CAMINO J.qj), lots of
xtras. $1900.
'73 VOLVO. 1800 ES Six>rts Call 548-309:!
wgm. Back fron1 EUroPf', '65 I!\1PALA s.5 327. Goorl
mo!lt. M!ll, l'X~mely lo mi, tires & bait. Runs good.
!!tick, Ali.I/FM radio. Own-$J50. 962-1887.
er. 213·592-5227. S5950. ~-~~~--~= '66 lMPAI..A Stal 1''8.gOn, Autot, Us.cf 990 V-8, good tires, good paint --'---B-U-IC-K---i Job, 1495· 541H144l
'66 EL CAMINO with un-1----------I finished camper-shell. $795 1961 RIVIERA 963--0025
LANDAU TOP '65 CHEV Bel Air "·gn, best
46,00J mi's. F'ull J>\l'r offer.
faM ulr, amf fn1 r11dlo 842-76.1!8 call aft 5p1n.
Below Blue Book CHRYSLER $1400
540-3194 '67 CHRYSLER Newport. ··=67:-'.SKY=°'LA""R"K7,--o4-c_,,,..,,-h~d,..tp-.1 Fully auto, lo mileage. Must
air, p/s, p/b, p/windows, see to apprec. $1400. or best
tilt whl., TUns goocl, needs offer. 968-9221
=~body wonc l .'ffl COMET
'66 BUICK Skylark, all pwr, ·~ Comet Cyclone. V-8,
air, R & 11 , nu tlrrs. J Auto, fully equipped, lo ml.
owner, Excepllon. S 7 2 5. Xlnl eond. $550. 962-9962
962-m7 CONTINENTAL ·n RIVIERA -S2700. Im-
maculate 1'011dillon. l"ull ---------
power, 68.cm mi. 963-1896
CADILLAC
I
-_..,.
llAND
NIW
al AND
NIW
'!.
lllAND
NIW
'48 JEEP 2 whl drtve, C'twvy
en(, tra.nlm & rear end.
979-2289 before 6 pm.
MAVERICK
·ro MAVEIUCK, auto, radio,
good tittt, xlnt cones. gold.
1968 FIREBIRD 400. Low $1450. 55l-5lll
mileoge. P/•. Radio. El<. MERCURY lmn1ac. cond. See to ap-
preciate! $1400. 831-1314 or 1---A,..V-A-IL_A_B_L_E __
830-5400. FORD 12) 1971 Merc~ry Colony
Park St1tlon. W"f0n1
Lie. No. 2 West, lite blue
$2300 firm. P/b, p/s, pwr 6
way seat, luggage rack, air
cond, tinted glass, am/fm
stereo radio & speed con·
'71 FORD LTD Country
Squire. Fact. air. P/s, pwr
disc brks, Best o f f e r .
548-6l12
trol.
Sa.Jes A: Service OLDSMOBILE
GMC TRUCKS
~lll.1 rq111•. 111111111:-. .-. ~ ~· . . ·'·' .
HONDA CARS PONTIAC
UNIVERSITY OLDS 1--LE-A-SE-OR-BU_Y_
2850 Harbor Blvd. •n thru ·73 Pontlacs
Coota M"" 540-9&40 DAVE ROSS * TORO. '73, B-. Int. PONTIAC Loaded, low ml., steel
belled tires. Private party, 2480 Harbor Blvd.. a t Fair
644-4261, 673-3481. Drive, Qiista Mesa a.16-8017
1968 OI.pS DEL MONT 4 dt', ''69" GRAND PRIX -SJ air, P/S, P/!=\, $995. Ph: Model _ Fully equipped.
839-84$18 Gold w/black Vinyl Top -
'&I OLDS 9 MUST SELL. $2,0C!l or bes! pa.gs, sta wag.,
air cond., top rack, hitch. otter.
644-1577 an 6: :I> 552-75.52
'65 OLDS 4 door. Fair cond,
$350 or make offer.
642-9241
PINTO
'64 PONTIAC Grand Prix, one owner, u.oder 60,CKXI mi.
Air, nu tires, aln1ost like
new. S700. 545-2957 53.)....2'l27 '69 FORD \VAGON, 9 psngr,
lo n1i., Jonded. By owner.
Must sacr. 494-4775,
494-2®.
Lie. No. 4 West, Beige, $2300 I----------
firm. Pis, p/b, pwr 6 way
seats, pwr door locks, air
cond. radio, tinted glass,
wht sidetA'alls & clock.
* 19n Grand Ville *
l.Daded! Good rond. !\fake
offer. 833--3218
'67 FORD Con~'cl'tiblc. XL
500. Power, au10. Top con-
dition. S795. ~-IG-1'.{2:).
* 1941 Ford * Convet't1blc
646-1786 afl 5
West, Inc.
3825 Birch St., N.B.
540-9040
'71 PINTO lo mi. X rood.,
air, Runabout, auto, $1900
962-7859
'72 P INTO, slick. air, vinyl
top. Sharp. $100 cash &
T.0.P. &14--1791
Need a "Pad"? Place an ad!
clean, automatic, p/s, $350
642-4122 or 54~ 1292
'65 PONTIAC ca ta I ina ,
1966 TEMPESf. ·I dr ::26
V-8, p/s, p/b, ~ood cond.
S400. 963-4607
.
•• lo
PONTIAC
LEASE
1973 ·PONTIAC
GRAND ' PRIX
Auto Tnu'll. Poil¥er Steertrw:.
Power Disc fltilkel, Ak
Cood, RAily• ll Wheela,
\VS\ll, AMfFM Stereo,
Vinyl Root, Powe~ Win-
do'A'll, (No. 348282l
$111 • II
ptr mo.
plus ta.x. 36 mo. O.E.L.-0.A.C.
SO. CfAL
1st NA!/BK
LEASING
2001 Michelson Dr.
Irvine
(7141 1133-8620 1213) 9"»-4413
'69 GTO. $1800. 970A W. 17th,
Costa !\'Iesa eves between
5'-10 pm.
T-BIRD
1967 T BIRD; Landeau, air
cond, PS, PB, vinyl l'OOf,
burglar alarm, tilt wheel,
new paint. This car 11 rea.lly
sharp. See it lo believe tt
11iust *!II now. Best offer.
Private party. 492-2667.
'67 T-BIRD. Fut\ power, xlnt
t->f'lnd. J\·Just sell. best oUer.
673-2383
Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990
'73 PINTO RUNABOUT
Stick ~h ift, heater, bucket
seats, vinyl cover, deluxt
bumper group.
#3Rl lWl87161
$1988
ORD COURIER
TOP PICKUP WITH A NEW CAMPER SHILL
ln1orlo•, liQM, <OmOltlt/y P•"tltd, 1lldi~9 1id1
"''ndow1, t!ora91 comp•<lm•nt, Iott.Ing doors.
IMMIDIATI DfUYIRY
1973 GALAXIE V·B, auto. 1rans., pow-
~r sir .. fact. air cond.,
~wr. (d isc) brks., rad.,
!r., w/w tires.
#3J56Hl48621
'65 "' MUSTANG $488 v.a, •~Ill. '""'" pawer llttring, redio, hlllt r. No. NQZ076
'65 MUSTANG $588 v .. , t uto. rr1n1., /W'l"91 "•rillt rffit, b.11.,, ZIA320. '
'69 PONT. $1288 IOHNfV/llf Vf, tVIO., I~ 1ir ·r.:· ,,,, .. b11kt1, l•i:w.s•i~ltd 'g .....
wt!etl '°"""· *-U I
'68 51379 CHEV.
Air tllfldilion;f19, rffio, ~t•lt•. ('144671)
GAS SAVERS
67 TOYOTA CORONA
AUTO., !ldio, h11t ... (393GWllJ $488
'71 MAZDA IX•2
-ol1ry 1n91111, 11dlo, httltr (2210t.Sl
'70 TOYOTA COROLLA
A 111., 11dlo, t"lltr ('34AUMJ
'69 DATSUN WAGON
.. 1p., ,.dio, "-'''' 1wwPJ1n
I
• TRUC _I( SPECIAL •'
•::~0 1973 FORD F-250
3/4 TON PICKUP
IDEAL 1'11\JCK FOR
YOUR CAMPER
lf25HRY31121
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
'73 ELDORADO CAMPER
•• onAWA CAl-OVll
'71 ,.D ··,~,;IT·,S, ... ~.~! .. '',,k_·up $1478 .~;:r~;!r~~'ru~::~~:ti:,'1~1f~ . .. •• n '""... self conl•ined, streps 4, toilet,
sllow1r. renge & oven, etc. ' .
ve '"''"· '""· ""'" ,...., $66
.;:::M :;;' ~~D ;~;~~uvERY 1 6 7 ~;~~~~~::~:~ Cmpr. $1488 ~;~E,;;~~RD VAN CONVERSION
COUNTRY SQUIRE ''· ""'" "' ""'·"~'·•· 1---=-=---------~-~-=--t r.:.~ .. :::::··~ ... ::.·~.,.;~~~! '68 C~D. $1588 •••H, llnl_..j gltH, 11.0 bolter!, {Pt. di Vollr VB. tuto., foe. 1ir, pwr. luqg1 g.o rick. Seri1I ;:lJl6~1 · 111., bflku. w.ndo...-l, ' .. ah, -&H,
5866. SAVE wh1riw1ll tiru, vinyl. J:SE166
$1400 '71 ~.O.!.D, .. ~~~!!.,,_ ... $1297 . :;.~1~;/rci" ""''"• ........ .
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY FROM FACTORY UST
~~·· '73 TORINO 2 DR; HDTP. '69 ~~!!~.'.'""·'~'"·'"' $1876 Sir., br1kt1, & wind., •&H. whit ... w1ll lirtl, ~1nyl •ool. 2'-'IAUI
llA.ND
NIW
•
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
VB, cruiH-O-m1tic, power
steering & br1k1s, hl·back
seals, r1dio, healtr, tinted
glass, 70 imp batttry, Rr.
dinettt, overhtad bed, slove,
ict box, pressurized water.·
E24GHP19S8
:.::."" 1973 BRONCO
I
v.a. £1b:1J belt.cl !ln-s: , ..
CIU(fd IOUr'ld lfvtl hlllull.
A~•dy tor lltt lr1ll1,
UU6lll600n
,;
•
l
I
! I
• •
I
I
\
I I
I j
'
'
. . . • . -. -"~--;· -. . . ' ...
.
1
San l:lemenie .. -
I ~-apistrano EDITION
• •
VOL. 116, NO. 149, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1973 TE~ CENTS I
Memorial Day Memorable-Crowds,
. . ·--.: :f'
Traffic···:
By JOHN ZAll.ER
ot "" °""" ..... ''"' A bot sunny Memorial Day produced
SGIDe of the largest beach crowds and
_,_ traffic jams in the history ol the
Orange Coast, offidals reported today.
'.Roads leading into all coastal areas were snarled -some from as far as five
miles inland -from late morning Mon-q&y Wltil late . artemooa, and when
!POlOrtsts mlved .at beach areas, park-
"\' spaces were at a premium.
San Onofre
Checkpoint
Shut Down
Heavy holiday traffic caused opera.
lions at lhe Border Patrol checksxiint at
San Onofre to shut down over the long
w:eeke.nd, but a surprise roadblock alOQ&
ais isolated highway elsewhere yielded rfcord arrests of illegal aliens.
Spokesmen at Onofre said tbal the ieDcr over the last three days
aiaoovered • maJ9< 1oopbojp .in ,Ille
.,.tem. .
,,,. ourprise ,,,.~ a1.., mghwa7
" In the Aguanp .... "' ...-s;.. Dieco County J!llled--of iJ.
ltpl fmmll)'al>la.
Coutwide beach attendance W I S
npor1ed al nearly 400,000 Mooda,-alooe.
Newport Beach with 150,000 people aod
Huntington city beaches with to,000
persoos both rtpOrted the largest single
day crowds in lhelr bistorj Monday.
Newport Beach police said their park·
ing Wticen were writing tickets at the
rate-di-two per minute all day.
"From the police bellcopt<r you cculd
see that the whole beach area was
literally covered with can -. Ind none of
.
them were JD091ni," sald Ntwport Beach
tnlfic olllcer Gary Le<.
"Peoele wei-e P.8fting on parkways. on
the grass, in ~. ltreet," he said. "A lot
ol them bad been,.,fjghting traffic all day ,
and lPhen they ~ here they were not
about to tum t>ae\: just because there
was no place to part.
"lt was the wont I've ever seen it in
nine years on the force," Lee said.
In Huntington Beach police reported
similar snarls in the beach area, with
nearly 100 cars towed away for illegal
parting.
"Everybody that came to Htm.tlnaton
'Beach Mcioday parked here ille1ally,"
declared poltce LI. Don J <nlins this
~· CW¥litions, for those that got
that far, were ei:ceUent both Sunday and
Monday. Water temperatures ranged up
to 61 degrees and surf was small. Air
temperatures were from 70 to 90 degrees,
with the hottest temperatures recorded
• ac1n
In San Clemente
Official Salary
Impasse Called
Salary and fringe benefit negotiations
between the city of San Clemente and
public safety employes have reached an
official impasse this w~k and soon will
go to_ formal mediation, it was amounced
today.
Public Safety Asaociation President
Will St4ckda1e said that the group bas
hired lawyer Stephen H. Silver of Santa
oHer by the city with no increases in
fringe benefits.
Thus far _,p,§!gotiations with the city
have yielded a 7~<:eot wage increase
offer by the city with no increases in fr~
inge benefits.
City ccuncibnen in J'e!l'!ll budget study
sesajona liave 1"\eftd th,e cost-of·llving
~ 1o11 -. ... jJf*,'fl*allr MoPe4 lhii o11.r. · • ·
Stockdale a1' not elM!ciratt on the' full
range \of-.._ .. ·mad• by the public
~.H:!'.:r.::i. lbe ~will he
the 'aj:>goibtment ot ·mi liDpartial
mediatm;. ·to review the tSsue and make
final iecommendatlons on a COllllllUDise
1arrangeme11.t.
on San Clemente State Beach.
There were few rescues reported, and
only one serious inddent involving
LaQ111a Be•<h llleguards. Officials there
said Hamei ~wis, SS, of Los Angeles in-
jund Ji1> bead and neck body surfing
s.turday.
PUlJed from the surf by bis wife, Lewis
waa not breathing when lilcguard,, at·
rived. Following moutb·to·moutb
resuscitation efforts, however, Lewis was
reported In stable coodlUon thls morning
. •SAID 'Kilt.: CASTRO'
Conaplr•to• Hon n! Hunt
· 'Jbe poUlbllity ol the major loophof<
arooe after detenUoo tota1a dlJll'ed
lmart,edly al Ooolre and then did the
~=cu:at a similar cbectpoint at
• "'!'bey had lo be getting by somewhere,
jo ·,.. looked al the maps aod Ihm
j1gured It might be a1oo& Highway 71," a
1pokesman aaid.
Operatillns at san Onofre resumed tbh;
zrioming aod the first major detention of
illegal allem came soon afterward.
Skyl'ab Crew
Takes Bead
On the Sun
SPACE CENTER, Houaton (AP) -
Skylab astrooaut Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin
today pointed a battery of telescopes at
the Slal, hoping to give scientists their
best loot yet at how this seething sphere
ol gases controls the solar system.
Physicists also hope the e%periment
will help unlock the ....-et of cootrolled
thermoouclear fwlloo, the source of the
sun's energy. This might aid in the
search for an unlimited, pollution.free
Thelat<st develol>ments mark the lil'llt
time tbal the emplOyes have IOIJChl the
assistance of a 'lawyer in wage.beDet{t
bids with the city.
Official bargaining bet..... I h e
employes -police, fitt aod lifeguard
penomel -and the city bas taken place
!or the paal tbree years.
Hunt .Sought CIA Death
For Castro . in 1961 Plot
' '
Offlcen stopped a low-ridinc small vac
, Ind crammed in the rear compartment
were 23 illegal immigrants-from ·Ctntra.1 -
,<merica.
The driver was also an lmmigrant,
patrolmen said.
All two doz.en occupants of the vehicle
we.re held for deportation.
Officer Revives
power sOUfctf on eartfi. -. -· . .
"It's a beaµtiful picture," Kerwin
noted as be viewed on a space statioo
television monitor the area of the sun the
six telescopes were examining, each in a
different wave length.
While Kerwin tuned up the $Ul.2
milliOQ array of. eight telescopes, Charles
COOrad Jr. and Paul J . Weitz assembled
cameras and sensors which they'll use
starting Wednesday to survey the earth's
P I resources. w oman at 00 It wa~ the filth day of the planned 23-
1 I day Orbital filght.
, . Mls.!ion commander Conrad today re-
An off..<futy San Clemente police , quested a private radio conversation with
lieutenant was credited with~viving · ( Space Center Director ChristQpber Kraft,
upcooscious woman who fell into a s · flight cootroller Nell Hutchinson and
TQing pool during a Memori t director of fight crew operations Donald
' K. Slayton. • PFi>'· MWion Control later released a sum-
PoUce U . Raymond Hartman applied mary of the sbl:-minute conversation.
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to revive Coorad said he thought the temperature
. ~s. Beverly Jean Walker, 39, who bad stabilized in the station in the low 808 and
taUen into a pool at 233 Avenlda La that the astronauts should be able to con·
Oiesta. dud: all experiments fully except for a
' A city ambulance was summoned to (See SKYLAB, Pace 2)
home but was not required because
1be woman had already been revived,
police reports safd . Holiday
Letter Bomb Explodes
FLORENCE, Italf (UPI) -The filth
-letter-bomb mailed to an actress in Italy
this year bunt into flames Monday in a
mail .truck. Police said the Jetter was
addressed .to actress Laura Betti in
Rome. Like the other four malled in
January and February, it was sent rrom
the Tuscany region.
Laguna Incident
WASHINGTON (UPI) . Watergate
conspirator and .former-CJA agent E.
Howard Hunt, wl)O helped plot the 1961
Bay of Pigs Invasion ol. Cuba, says he
recommended to CIA· superiors that
Fidel Castro be assassinated as part of
the scheme. His proposal was never ap-
proved.
Hunt made the disclosure in a
15 Dancing, Chanting
Cult~ts Get Citations
Laguna Beach police cited 15 persons
on charges of blocktng the sidewalk as
members of the Hue Kriaboa cult and
Love Animals.·Don't Eat 'Ibem gathered
in song and chants Saturday.
Holdup
Police Sgt. David Avers said officers
cited members of the vegetarian cafe set
as they danced on the sidewalk ln front
of Love Animals, Don't Eat Them, 782 S.
Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
Those who danced to the jingling
sounds or bells, flutes, and drums forced
passersby to walk into the highway to
avoid lbem, Avets said. Guests at the party drove Mrs. Walker
ft) San Clemente General Hospital where 'the woman was admitted for observation.
J1Tbe incident OCCWTed at 5:17 p.m.,
'.»bnce said. ,. Brinks Guard Robbed of $13,195
A vm: said the dancers declined to obey
of ricers' inslnlcUons to .leave a lane open
on the sidewalk, and were cited. A further
"loud mualc" disttirbance was reported '
at the vegetarian mecca early today,
however, participants complied with
Sailboat, Gear _,
~tolen a t Da na
~ An eijbt-root sailboat valued by the
"'"er at PM. was stolen duriq • the
· weekend from its moor!nc place at l>ana ·:~Int Harbor, Ora"i• Coomty Shoril.!'1
' ~Heers said. -
" •Deputies said the loaa was reporied b'Y
. ~J. Blalr, •• Of 1'latln. Blair IAlld •1hlf,cnift .... removed -tJlc i bY lninodera who br.u the mooritlg ' . echanlsm. '
DepuUe1 are al10 im+estlp:tiftJ the
" of lblllllg equipment takm by tn-
who -· Into a ~ boaL :Boat owner James F. Flem1llf. M, ol
)t51J EmWtadero Place, vahied the
t<>dl and r'etll taken bf tltl.-at' 'Ill). . •
A Brlnlt's armed guard wu robbOrl of
$13,ltS In I Santa Aria diSccunt' o\ore
Monday afternooo In the midst of a boll·
day shopping crowd.
'Jbe looe · gunman· wm· ccoilronl<d the
"""" carrying the aton'• caah receipts for the day "" he left the office area iJr
aide tilt K,Marl store, 1400 W. Edln(er
Ave., eocapod with the aid of an ao-
complice, pollco,fild. • ·
Oflicer1 said ~hen lbe .,.,,,.... ..,;;:
~<I~ guard•Jie' ~"'1'DliP't moVe;:Ooft'1~-a'Uibn tbihil.~ t'INrm
you," as be grabbed tbe guonl't revolva'-
!rom Its ba!Jt<r.
After lebdng the money bq the rob-
ber loroed the guard to IJJl'IWI face down
on tile floor In the bardwore department. ••stop him. He'• got the tDODeY/' police
said the guard llhouled as Ille -t ran tbrouCh 1be store.
f
'4qulet down" orden. A store oecwity guard tried to block the path o1 the fleeing robber but be was Earlier Salurday1 James Dooglas
frl&btehed off whtil tbe bandit waved bis Roberts, operator' or the Love Aclmals,•
.38 caliber revol\ler aL him and shouted: Don't Eat Them was cited for four
"Get out ol my way, boy. I don't want building cede vlolallons.
to b:ave to tut you.'' Roberts, wbo gained 80l'De measure <lf
Tiie robber sped out or the front door lame last )'e01' for allowing a camel, two
and jumped lnio a walling staUon wagon ctrickens and several dogs in the cafe.
driven by tbe ~:. wu cited for a!ltced vi9Jatlon:s of the Later J!Olke r ' !llli vehicle which litpl ordlriance, and remodeling without a
WU ldmtlfled (11' ' -jool; the )><rmlL . . • , , . . llcionlO ~Je(l'th& llOre·part. Love Animals, Dilll'I &al '.l'IM\m opened 'lnlllill::.~'.-!;. ~$'.. · tut July 4, and '.was lmll>edlalely tn hot
K•Wtmdl ~ICeDe where the water as Bmay Baoaia•~.~~~el, and
llallon -ilald obe ·aaw COi. Sanders.-a rooet.r.°lOlll!"l· opellln{I·
too --~ a okl 11'1)' "'1ebralloos·blslde;ln,vlo!aUon ol;the mut !klniedly', Ibo station wa1on .beellh'.code.' . ..
and drlvO oll !ni , •car. ~ a-cclorliil trial, RoberU •Wu found
WllnesaH the \>IDllll who : ..,ulj' ,se.¢.tt· hla plea thet ·aa1mo1t· and
committed the ~~~ f.,t · -m aO °""'' ,
tall,len&th weJcblnlbalr ind' . ...,.l-1:/"of*il'-! ~~ .. Lo~;,.;rupws..D...i. Eel • • • bOca1ne a ll!inpte.
lorihccming book in which. he describes
hts rcle and that o( tbO Kt1111edy ad·
ministration in the ill·faled invasion by
several hundred CUbe.n exiles who were
organlzed aod trained by the United
States to overthrow Csltro's regime.
A copy of \he printer's galleys for the
book, to be published in November by
Arlington H.ouse, was obtained by UPJ.
In ii, Hunt charges that Kennedy tried
to ~'wpitewa.sh the New Frontier" when
\ tbe irivasion Called by "heaping guilt on
th.! CIA."
Kennedy accepted responsibility fOf' the
Bay ol Pigs fiasco at the time but much or the blame for its initiative and im·
plementation was placed on the CIA by
other!.
Hunt said he proposed assassinating
the Cuban leader because be believed
that "without castro to inspire !hem the
rebel anny and militia would collapse in
leader leas confusion."
Hunt said his proposal was to
"aMas:Sinate Castro before or coincident
with the invasion." He ·added that the
role of carrying out the killing was "a
task for Cuban patriots."
He sald he was told by Richard Bissell,
chief of the r.entral Intelligence Agency's
c:landesUne services, that his plan was
(Seo CASTRO, Page I)
San Clementean
Dies of Auto
Accident l njtrry
A San Clemente man was one of two
Orange Couotains who died over the
Mt:morlal Day weeiend as a result of
traffic crash injuries.
Davl-1 Barr, 32, of 2705 Via Mootewma,
died Sunday In Orange County Medtc•I
C4Ji~r of injurjes surt.e~ .when the car
in whkh he was fidlng crashed into a
tree on Camino capittrano north of Calle
Fortuna in Caplslr-Beach.
Barr's death was not atlrlbuttd to ~I·
d'I)'' trafflc. The accldenl occarred late
Wedneoday.
'!be olber man who IOll hil• llre •a•
ldenlifled as ·Francil Burbank, M,ool·llO
Granada Orlvo, La Hatw-a. 8urt)lnk was
,killed i.te Friday nlabl • wbtnJ11 WM
111($wn fnin his vehicfe durinl • two-car
ccTilslon on Lambert Road, La Habra .
' ('
.'f:
in lbe intensive care unit of South Cout
Community Hospltal.
!Jleguanls related the ~
In& beach en>wds lo the s-nu:r -beach weather that hal plagued coastal
beaches through moot ol thls spring.
"People have been going crazy for •
chance to go to the beach all spring,"
said Huntington Beach lifeguard capt.
l)ouglas o• Arnall.
"Then Ibey gel thtlr first good weather
(Seo CROWDS, Page I)
Misconduct
OaimedBy
Commander
WASHINGTON (AP) -An Air Forte
colonel \\'ho commanded U.S. war jl<~oners today r 11 e d court-marllla!
charges against eight Army and Marine
enlisted men . He accused them of
"misconduct while in a North Viet·
namese prison camp," the Penta1on an·
nounced.
The action by Col. Theodore W. Guy of
Tucson, Arlz. was the first such moye
agalnst any of the 56S mllltary POW1
who have returned home.
l'edtagon 1pobsman Jerry W ,
Frledhelm oald the -ol the ellbl, flvt soldlera and three Marina, wt1f bo
ma~a public after Ibey are lornWly
nolifled.
Friedbeim did not disclose the spec!Ue
charges or any detalls, but military
souroes said Guy acculled the ellthl of
aiding the enemy, dlsobedlence of mlera
and disrespect to superior offlcera.
More than a month ago, the "°Yt&M>ld
Guy told a reporter that 80018 POW1 be
commanded were cowardl "'who openly
collaborated with the enemy" and even
caused physical harm to aome comrade.!. ,
He declined to name them then.
Friedhclm aald the formal charleo
were filed with the secretaries ol tbe
Anny and Navy. They will decide
whether to press courtHnarUal after
formal srand Jury..type investlg1t1cins are
eonducled under the Uniform Code ·of
Military Justice.
According to Friedheim, other former
war prisoners have aouaht lea:al 1dvice
!rem Pentagon military and civilian
lawyers about J)osalble char1es agalnlt
other freed prisoners but "there have
been no other charges to date."
He said those lnqulrles involved both
enlisted men and oUicers.
Guy, shot down <lver Laos in 1968, was
commander of U.S. war pri!oners in a
Hanoi compound called "The PlantatlOo"
for about 4Y.a yean.
In an interview, he cba:qed that some
POWs accepted favws from the North
Vietnamese in the form of enra rat.bl!
and greater freedom within the com.
pound walls and that Ibey "turned their
b;.cks OJ us."
He claimed that he and other POWs
v.·ere turned Jn to the North Vietnamese •
by Other Ar'nerlcan priaone.ra and that
they v.·ere beaten and tortured became of
(Seo POWs, Pare 11
or .. ge
MMtly sunny ls lbe way the
weatherlady sees it for Wednesday,
with cooler days. Highs in the m.
are expected al the beaches and
inland areas. lAws ln tbe 60s.
INSIDE TODAY
Proclaiming "Hookers of the
world, unitt," a San Fratlci.YCO
prostitute ond on approving
board of burintumcn o1ld aut1'-
or1 -toith a $5,000 grant from
a religfotLI group -are organ..
izt11a a prOJtitut~s' .auUd to e,om. bat,i>ott<~ liDrasm•ni, sa:, '"' . 14iltcm'Pb!le'S: ' .
'
SC '-· Mor29, 197)
Paraplegic Re•cued
Nurse Carol Purviance comforts George Fernandez at Eden Hospital
in San Lorenzo where the 20.year-old panpleglc ls recuperating
from five days alone in the wilds. Fernandez, paralyzed from the
chest down, became lost when his specially equipped camper van
mired on a narrow trail. Subsisting on rain water and grass, he was
discovered by a motorbike rider.
Fox Hunt Fails
In San Oemente
State Park Area
Wary residents of neighborhoods over·
looking San Clemente State Park re--
ported a fox behaving strangely in the
area Monday evening, but police and
animal control offlcers could not locate
the animal .
Foxes In the rugged areas In and ar0W1d
the park have occasionally bitten cam~
ers, and last summer sparked a rabies
scare which 1ater proved to be unsub-
stantiated.
The latest sighting of a fox was re--
ported by Kenneth Bangston of 214 liv~
nida I..obeiro. The animal was sighted at
7:30 p.m.
!Ast year foxes at the state park bit
campers as the visitors slept. Rangers
and anlmal control officers then laWldred
a trapping and hlOltlng program at the
park in an attempt to curb the attacks.
Corpse Identified
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A decapitated
body found last week in a field in
suburban Dominguez: has been identified
as that of Robert James Loudon, 29, a
UCLA chemistry department teaching
assistant. His body was found with some
textbooks scattered nearby, but his
wallet was missing.
Princess Anne's
Betrothal News
Officially Told
LONDON (AP) -Buckingham falace
aMOUnced today the engagement of
Princess AMe to Lt. Mark Philllps,' a
commoner.
The announcement came after months
of denlals from both the 22-year-<>ld
princess and the dashing 24-year-old
cavalry officer. They had been constant
companions since December.
Palace spokesman insisted until a few
hours before the announcement that
reports of an impending engagement
were "pure speculation."
The ofllclal announcement said: "It ls
with llfe&lest pleasure that the queen and
the Dul:e of Edinburgh announce the
belrotflal of their beloved dauglller, the
Princess Anne, to Lieutenant Mark
Phillips, the queen's Dragoon Guards,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Phillips."
Phlllips spent the weekend with Anne
and the British royal family at their
Scottish estate of Balmoral.
He was the only guest visiting the royal
family, and this touched off intense
speculation lhat an engagement might be
announced soon.
Anne and Mark were due to take a
royal train to London tonight with the
queen and Prince Philip from Aberdeen,
Scotland.
Gas Tax Dike
U.S. Eyes 'Economy Matter'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz
sa~d today . the Nixon administration is considering a proposal to
raise gasoline taxes as an economy matter, not one to ease the en·
ergy crisis.
Shultz, speaking at a news conference for economic reporters
also indicated that the Administration has under study other tax:
increase proposals t~ help cool the r~pi~I~ expanding economy.
As for the gasoline tax, Shultz said It 1s "one of the many things
we are reviewing all the time."
He said there are pluses and minuses connected with the pro-
posal and stressed that no decision has been made.
The federal tax is four cents a gallon.
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From Page I
SKYLAB ...
bicycle exercise used in medjcal tests .
He said the temperature still was a bit
wami for the bicycle exercise to be run
to full capacity. lie also said it caused
some difficulty because it "rides" dif·
ferently ln weightlessness than in earth's
gravity.
Conrad expressed displeasure Monday
at a nun1ber of extra engineering tasks
the astronauts were being asked to do.
He asked that these be held off e rouple
days W'llil the crew got back on schedule.
The first earth passes will be over the
United States and will be directed mainly
et agricultural areas. The goal ol the ex·
periment in these areas Is to survey
crops throughout the current growing
season, assess arability ot land and
evaluate water runolf potential.
The telescopes are moun ted on a large
device that is extendeCI away from the
orbiting staUon on long metal arms.
. The astrooauts Monday completed set·
llng up housekeeping in the Jabontory,
which l& the size of a three-bedroom
home, and began their first medical ex-periments.
A malteshlft sunshade ere<ted Satur-
day reduced temperatum to near 80
d•I™'· far below the 125 dtgroe• recorded Inside the cabin after a heat
shield was ripped away during the launch
of Slcylab May 14. '
High Court Hits
Editorial 'Ads'
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Tbe U.S.
SUpreme Court ruled today that neither
feden.l law nor the Constitution's
llJl1'llllle of free IJpeech requires broad·
cutm to accept paid advertising on any
public luue, including war and politics.
Cb.let Jwrtice Warren E. Burger spoke
for the court in test cases initiated by the
Democratic National Committee and an
antiwar group known as Business El:·
ecudva' Move for Vietnam Peace,
'lbe U.S. Coort of Appeals bere
dlrecled tile Federal O>mmullicaUooa
Comml!llon to set up "regulatory
guidelinea" on bow to deal with editorial
advertisementa on such subjects as war
and polltlci.
When the Supreme Court got !be case,
it froze the situation so that 11t.atlons
could conunue their traditional practice
of not accepUng such advertisements. ~
day, it reversed the lower court.
The vote to reverse was 7 to 2, with
Justices William J, Brennan Jr. and
Thurgood '-1arshall dlllenting.
Burger said "balancing the various
Fir1t Amendment interests involved in
the broadcast media and detennintng
what best serveo the public'• right to be
informed is a task of a great delicacy
and difficulty."
He noted that Congress had con-
sistently refused to make broadcasters
"common carriers" to which anyooe has
access. Instead, it gave regulatory
authority to the FCC, which evofved the
Fairness Doclrine in 1949.
This principle requlrea broedcastora to
provide time for opposing views when a
controversial subject has been aired. The
doclrine was upheld by the Supreme
Court June 9, 1969, in a ca.ee involving
Red Lion Pa. Broadcasting Co. case.
If everyone had a right of accees to ad-
vertisiJll time, Burger said, there would
he substaotial risk that the system would
be monopolized by !hose best able to pay.
Thus, lhe fairness doctrine itself would
From Pagel
CASTRO •..
being considered by a "special group"
within the goverrunent.
But Hunt said: "So far as I have been
able to determine no coherent plan was
ever developed within CIA to assassinate
Castro, though it was the heart's desire
of many exile groups."
Hunt's l"rl in tile Invasion plan In-
cluded o~naC u ban exiles in Florida and ~ their activities
with the invasion forces being trained by
U.S. Air Force and Army specialists
which included the Anny's Special
Forces unit.
He said plans had called for a Cuban
Exile Executive c:omm1ttee wit.h Hunt at
. lheir side to enter CUba after the in-
vasion, declare themselves 'a
"govemment·in-anns" and call for
military aide.
Under the plan, the United States was
prepared to immediately recognize the
exiles and provide "whatever might be
necessary to overthrow Castro," Hunt
sa id.
"American ships would be standing
near Cuban waters so help wouldn't be
wmecesaarily delayed."
Hunt said he wrote the book in 1967 and
intended it as "a private legacy to my
children."
But due to the Watergate publicity and
disclosure of his CIA background, Hunt
said he decided publication would serve
to correct "distorted accounts of my in-
volvement in the Bay of Pigs invasion."
In the past, Hunt has written several
fiction spy stories under differing names.
Hunt recalled a luncheon he had in
mid-1960 with Brig. Gen. Robert E.
Cushman, then a military adviser to Vice
President Nixon.
';Cushman told me that the vice pres!·
dent was the Invasion project's action of-
ficer within the White House and that
Nixon wanted noUtiDg to go wrong."
CUshman, now Marine Corps ctun-
mandan t and member of the Joint Chiefs
of Starr, allegedly authorized the CIA to
help Hunt in preparation for burglarizing
the office of Daniel Ellsberg's
psychiatrist.
NO CASTRO TIES
TO WATERGATE?
MEXIOO CITY (UPI) -Cuba's new
ambassador to Mexico said Monday that
Premier Fidel C8slro had nothing to do
with the Watergate affair.
"I reject any connection you want to
make between the Watergate case and
Fidel Castro," ambassador Fernando
Lopet Mulno told riewsmen, in response
to a question, as be arrived to take up hts
new post.
Ford to Give Food
BUENOS AIRES, Arsentlno (AP)
Residents of a Buenos Aires shantytown
line up today to receive S,000 food
packages from the Ford Motor Co. 's
Argentine aubsldlsry. The packages,
delivered Mondt,y to the local church,
were part of the first lnstaUment ol
Ford's million-dollar prot..uon payoff to
the People'• Revolutionary Army, wl»M
IU•rr!llao wounded two employes of the
compony during • kidnap atwnpt wt
week . ·
be imdermlned and the public ac-
countability of the broadcaster diluted.
further, he said, the commlssloo would
inevitably be Involved in a CU&-by-ease
determinaLion of who abould be heard
and when, so that government would
have more say in broadcasting opera·
tions.
Burger said that the FCC, in rejecting
the proposal of business group and the
Democratic committee, could properly
take into accoont the fact that listeners
and viewers are a kind of "captive au-
dience."
In the public interest, he said, a
substanUal degree of joumallstic discre-
tion must remain with the stations.
Burger suggested that Congress, the
commission or the broadcasters
themselves might now "devise some kind
of limited right of access that is both
practicable and desirable."
CUSD Group
Sets Action ·
On 2 Pools
A new steering committee plai,ming
construction of two new public swimming
pools in the Capistrano Unified School
District hopes to interview architects in
early June.
Headed by Bruce Deacon, the com·
mittee wants to hire an architect or
engineer to begin the early design phases
of both projects.
Tentative target date for finished
designs is Oct. 1, with construction to
begin in January, 1974, and completion
set for the following July, said Joe
Wimer, director of administraUve
services.
The schedule is "optimistic," Wimer
admitted, but the committee has ''an
awfully good start."
A meeting will take place at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at school district headquarters.
Tile 12 to 15 members of the committee
include delegates from Parents on Pools,
a group which led the successful cam.
palgn for a special 10-<:ent tax rate to
finance the pools.
Also represented are San Clemente and
Dana HUis High Schools, the city of San
Juan, Dana Hills High Booster Club,
recreation directors from Avco Com·
mlmity Developers and the community at
large. ·
Wimer said the conunittee will draw on
the expertise of as many outside con.
sultants as it can, including area col-
legiate swimming coaches.
Committee members are now supposed
to identify architects and engineers who
have designed good or bad pools in the
county and decide which uses of the pool
deserve top priority.
Despite the special tax, funding is a
sliKht problem.
A preliminary budget estimate to build
both pools is $400,000 to $450,000.
Although the committee wants to build
both pools at once, the tax has to be
levied over a tw<>-year period.
Wimer said the committee is in·
vestigaUng methods of getting enough
money advanced.
Aliens Escape Jail
EL CENTRO CAP) -Officials today
were looking for 14 illegal aliens with
tell-tale uniforms -the T-shirts and
green shorts they were clad in when they
escaped from a rear window in the
Imperial County Jail. ·
Dilly Piiot 51111 Pllolo
IF YOU THINK IT WAS TOUGH TO PARK A CAR ...
You Should H1v1 Seen the Bikes at Newport's 31st Street
Fron1Page I
CROWDS ...
to coincide with Memorial Day, and you
know there's going to be trouble," he
said,
"The people were just really ripe for
the beach after the lousy spring we had,"
was the way lifeguard dispatcher Bruce
Reed of Newport Beach put it.
There were some reports of jellyfish
at Newport and Huntington Beach, and
several reports of sting rays in San
Clemente. There were no serious in -
cidents, however. Although. some gang fighting was
reported on Los Angeles county beaches,
Orange Coast lifeguards said the large
crowds were well·behaved.
Huntington Beach police reported some
problems with about 100 surfers who
refused to leave the water Monday morn·
ing when crowds on the beach began
building up. Two arrests were made . but
officials said there could have been Jnore
if personnel had been available.
Fron• Page I
POWs ...
his efforts to establish communications
among the POWs and to organize
discipline in the camp.
Friedheim avoided a direct answer to a
question as to whether Pentagon officials
attempted to talk Guy out of filing
charges.
The Pentagon spokesman said only
that "Col. Guy was afforded the same
legal assistance that would be afforded
any member of the services." Friedheim
said this inclut!.ed guidance on the rights
of the c<llonel and the accused under the
military justice code, but said the legal
officers "would not presume to suggest a
decision" on whether to go ahead with
the charges."
Planners Slate
Meeti11g Tonight
On New Building _
San Juan Capistrano planning com·
missioners will meet in a special session
tonight to begin study on the site plans
for major construction of the Beckton-
Dickinson headquarters facility near
Avertlda Junipero Serra.
The 7 p.m. meeting will deal with the
cL nstruction details of the headquarters
which will house hundreds of employes in
the operation which develops and builds
sophisticated medical and other scientific
equipment.
The firm plans to move into the new ·
quarters sometime this fall, moving
operations and employes from leased
prope rty in Pasadena.
'I11e formal name of the San Juan
facility will be "Endevco," a subsidiary
of the parent firm.
Local officials have characterized the
plant as the largest industry to locate
thus far in San Juan Capistrano .
No major problems have arisen so far
in the planning and construction of the
plant.
Groundbreaking took place several
weeks ago and rough grading of the site '
overlooking the San Diego Freeway is
well under way.
Woman Bfes in Fall
FORT BRAGG (AP ) -A woman lost
her footin g on the edge of a cliff and
plunged 200 feet to her death as her 7-
year-old daughter looked on, the sheriff's
offiCe said. Gloria Ann Hawley, 34, of San
Anselmo, died Monday just after she
stepped out of a camper parked in the
rugged coastal terrain of the Warren
Creek area 20 miles north of here, the
Mendocino County Sheriff's department
said.
WOULD YOU BELIEVE -
,
THAT THERE ARE STILL COMPANIES
. . . . .
~ . . . .
Ii • • • •
. '
WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS
THEY SELL PERFORM 1
WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON
SERVICE?
WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE
PERFECTLY 1
WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY?
YES, "VIRGINIA," THERE IS AN ALDEN'S!
{TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.)
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA M&SA
646-4838
M ... ·Thous. t hi 1:30: Fri. t to t: Sat. t :JO hi I
•.
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• \
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I¥ DAILY •JLOl SC
t:ustorner Service
2 Banks to Off er
Stock h1vesting
Special to the Dally Pilot
LO S ANGELES -
Consu1ners with m o d e r a t e
financial resources 1:an now
participate fully in stock in·
vestments through a new
service announced recently by
Security PaciOc Bank, Los
AngC!les. and Chase Ma11ha1tan
Bank, New York.
UNDERSCORING a com·
m.itment to expand customer
services, Security Paci r i c
Bank and Chase Manhattan
disclosed the introduc..1ion or
an Au tom a t I c ltlvesuT.cnt
Service -the first of its type
offered by banks in the U.S. -
that will provide thousands or
customers across the nation
with an entrce to stock
o\vnership in some of the
largest corporations.
President Carl E. llartnack
indicated that Security Pacific
Bank will begin offerin g
automatic investment service
in June to the bank's chec~ing
account customers. He also
explained Chase Manhattan
Bank will simultaneously pro-
vide this unique service in-
dependently in New York
State.
SECURITY PACIFIC
Bank's president indicated
that AIS actually combines
three services wh ich allow
customers to plan their in-
vestment and personal ob-
jectives through automatic
deductions from their check-
Earnings Up
At NatiQnal
National Systems Corp. o{
Newport Beach, reported earn-
ings of $86,000, or six cents
per share, on nrt revenues of
$4.313,000 for the three mouths
ended March 31 .
On a comparable basis, the
company lost $8,000, or ooe
cent per share, on net
revenues of $4.233.000 in the
first quarter, of 19'12.
that yours may not !
1 COMPLETI! OltANGE
COUNTY COVERAGE
l11<litdhtt: LCHJ11na lffc•
Sa• CS..-nte, Mlul•" Vlelo
Dn• Polat, ft w•ll OI la
hocll ad m01t of LA.
MONTH TO MONTH
RINTAl IA.SIS
3 NO Dl!H>SIT ltlQUIRED
ON APPROVED CREDIT
4 ONLY $17.00 PER MONT
TOTAL COST
· (11nll11dtH pcHJftl
5 NEW COMPACT UNIT
SIZE 11 1/•'C 4xl/2J
6 VOICE MESSAGE PAGERS
ALSO ARI! AVAii.AiLE 7 FULL FREI MAIHTENANC
ORANGE COUNTY
RADIOTELEPHONE
SERVICE'"
714 • IJS.3JOS
401 So. SANTA l"E.,SAHTA AHA
rem L•111r11 1111ch, Mlr•kn1 Yl•I•
011n1 Pol11l, Sin Ci.tne11N1, s ... JM
1plllr1tnt, El Tiro, uU toll I
49 .. JJl]
ing accounts.
ln addition to the stock
purchase plan, customers may
also add to their savings ac-
counts or purchase U.S. Serles
E savings hoods by authoriza..
tion of similar automatic
monthly 4eductions ..
The minimum amount re-
quired to partldpate In the
regular savings a c c o u n t
service is $S per month.
Participatioo in the U.S.
Series E savings bond service
requires one-third of the cost
of a bond eacb month.
''WHILE A SMALL service
charge .will be applied to the
stock purchase plan, the ether
two services are provided at
no cost to the customer," said
Hartnack. "Our monthly
service charge amounts to five
percent of the amount in-
vested or a maximum of $2 for
each corporation selected.''
By SYLVIA PORTER
The next majQr round of
furniture sales across the na-
tion will ~ C<lming up in
Augu st -and if you !lnd arid
buy at one of those gigantic
"warehouse" sales, you might
save as much as 70 to 75 per-
cent on an item.
This ... could be or the most
c r u c l a I dollars-and-cents
meaning to millions of you, for
within 1 he
next 12 mon-
ths, an enor-
mous 25 to
30 percent of
all U .S.
households
report they
are planning
L to make a
PORTER In a j 0 r ex-
penditure for furniture and-
or carpets. ln additioo, Uierc
are millions of you plaIUJing
to make only "minor" outlays.
IN THE FACE of this 'de-
mand, furniture priCes are
heading sharply higher, may
be up as much as 10 percent
this fall on top of a rise of at
least as much last year. The
soaring price of wood, from
which so much tumlture is
made, is one factor; the surg-
ing demand by growing
numbers of young, relatively
affluent families now setting
up households is another; the
continued backwardness or
this splintered industry -
renected in its failure to
develop cost-cutting techni-
ques of furniture manufacture
and distribution -is a third
factor.
Furniture is likely to be
among the most expensive in-
vestments you'll make in your
lifetime. particularly of you
are now in your 20s or early
30s. (The reason the furniture
industry is slated to. grow
spectacularly in coming years
is that the number of families
headed by highly mobile
Americans under aJile 35 is to
expand by about 50 percent
during the 1970s, and this is
the key furniture--buying
bracket.)
F URNITURE SHOPPING
also is likely to be among the
most frustrating experiences
you'll ever have in the
marketplace. and an area in
which you'll probably spend
.-BUY SILVER OR GOLD1
-
T•k• Actual Pos..ulon--.fft Pure Sliver
I ngots-MedalllOM--C•ln1
WEALTH l"ROTECTIOH AHD POTll!!HTIAl OAIN-1'1l1!£ lltOCHUltE
t1t·5'G UHIVIRSAl r•ADE CO. t1t-6Ml
J•OO lltV!HI! AYE. (NEAR AllUIOltTl SUITE 111 Hl!W~IT IEA'CH
You are Citrdlally lnvtted to attend an
Investment Scmloor Olnner of
Prudential Mobile Home Parl: Fund fl~ted by:
M. P. KRUSE & COMPANY, INC.
A TAI SHfllfllD LIMmD PAITNIUHIP
TO INVhT IN MOllLI HOllll PAllS
DIVfl,lfllD QIOGIAPHICAU Y
THIOUGHOUT
THE ST.I.Tl OP CALIFORNIA
For Coflfo,1110 lMWllltt 011Jy
Two dotft for yo1u co•.,.._•
DINNIR SIRYID
NIW..ORTIR INN, IOARD 100116
1107 JamborM loacl, New,.n S.OC•, Ceftf.
T11"cloy1 Mlrf 2t-7 p.111.
U111rtday, M.y 31-7 p.111.
M. P. KRUSE & COMPAN'f: INC. --"""""'"" llOO l'I Main Street · SantaM3.callfornia 92106 ·17141 547-5?41
. .. -~-
l' ertical E~erclses
Two CL-84 tilt-wing evaluation aircraft go through
their paces at the Canadair plant in Montreal. One
of these aircraft Is to undergo testing at the U.S.
Naval Air Test Center in Maryland.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
coi.mtry's ecmorny showed a
downward trend for the first
Lime in 30 mooths in April, ac-
cording to an important index
of leading business indicators
released by the Commerce De-
partment Tuesday. ·
The Index, based on eight
categories of bu s i n e s s
performance, dropped s i x -
tenths of one percent in April
to 161 .5 percent of the 1967
base oC 100.
While economists will cau-
tion that it is too early to base
trends on !Jgures for one
month, the figure nevertheless
is seen to indicate the slowing
or the economy that the ad-
ministration predicted would
occur about midyear.
The country's economy had
been expanding at Uie rapid
rate of. aboot 8 percent during
the Cirst quarter, \vhich ad-
ministration economi3ts said
was too high. They have been
seeking to slow th& economy
to about a 4 perce11t growth
rate.
satellites, each with a five-
:y<!ar lifethne deslp. One will
be placed In staUooary orbit
over the Atlantic and one will
be placed over the PacWc.
The third is to be an m-ground
spare.
Complete New York Stook List
'
Winter
' Olympies .
For Kids? ~~ !
•• •
PARIS (APJ -Count Jean
de Belum(>ni, senior vice-
preof,i..it ol<\lli International
Olympic .Co!J1mit ... , lw a
plan to mtrict the Winter
Olympics to competitors under
21.
"JI would s I op com-
merdallsn1 in O I y m p i c
skiing," the Count said in an
interview at his Paris home .
Beaumont, 89, who was
defeaU!d by Lord Killanin of
Ireland in the election for the
IOC presidency last year,
hopes to put his ideas up 'for
discussion at the Olympic ain-
gress schedu1ed for next
,. autumn in Varna, Bulgaria.
, ' V .,. The whole future of tht; ~ Wlnter Olympies is in doubf.
Many members of the IOC
~1,1:1 would like to drop them
•rn1 ' altogetller becau'se of the
!!I ,,;,, spread of commercialism.
Killanin himself has said the
future of the Winter Games
could depend on how they go
.,-,o•· at Innsbruck in 1976.
•'/ )t, '· ,,, , .. "Of course they are in
danger," Beaumont s a id .
"That is why J want to put
Lhem on sounder lines."
·""' ~ . H'e has discussed hfs under-:!} .. 21 plan with Marc Hodler,
·"'·''' president of the international
rlJzµ ski federation .
"Hodler offered no 01>-
.,,.. jeotion';" Beaumont sald. "In
&ln'" fact I have not yet found
• 'Tfifi ' anybody who disapproves of ti!~ my plan.
l!C:i:i "The question of an age
4"~ ,. limit in the summer games
.g'JkA: does not arise. 1 am simply
suggesting it for the 'Vinter
,....,..,..-! Olympics because so much
\IH more ·money is involved iri the
winter games. 4
.... "As .60Qn as a skier reaches
~'1/ ~ • world class he is open to big
11 o money offers."
~ : ~ The JOC congress at Varna
~ • will be the'first since 1930. All ' ' 1 1 the world sports federations,
~ ; ~ : lrtclud!ng FIS, will confer with
11 • the JOC and thrash oul the : ! ~ whole future of the Olympics.
::. ~ ~. Beaumont said Killanin has
given 'hin1 the job of compiling • •f 1 .a que stionnaire which will be
distributed to all delegates. . .,, .
.w'•~ . (~ "-"' .. •· ··Deep Sea .
I • • f ' Fish Report ,. ..
l
•
Award1J B•nfJlP!1f .
Women Ath'let.es
Lauded by OCC
PUSll DOWN AND fOWAllD WITH Y04!lt -f&T
Orange COa!t College '1
women athletes were booored
at an awards banquet ~
day night in tbe student center.
Award! winners included :
Basketball
Most vaJuable player -
M i~helle Poirier and Pat
Shine ; most improved
1..-0urie Anderson.
Softball
Most valuable Kalle
Flemlng; moat improved -
Ramona BofUt.
Volleyball
AA team most valuable -
Barbie Sweet; m~t improved
-Tinka Hess ; A team most
valuable -Joann ZUbilla!iJ:a;
most improved -Jennie Slat-
tery.
Co-ed Volleyball
~1ost valuable man -Chlp
Brown; most valuablt woman
-Andrea MacDonald ; "'°''
improved man -c r a i g
Leeper; most Improved
woman -Kathy Ferguson.
Swimming
Most valuable -· Linda
Johnson ; most Improved -
Nancy Stungis; outstanding
diver -Pat Shine .
Co-ed Badmlnton
Most Taluable man -llarry
Shigaki; most valuable woman
-Heidi Gresa ; most inl·
proved man -Paul San·
tangelo; most i m p r o v e d
woman -Karen Conner.
Co-ed Tennis
Most valuable man -Jlm
Suzuki; most valuable woman
-Terri P'iebing.
Tenni.s
I believe lhlt ...., tool·
. wo/11 it nec:nsory ti> llllk• lh•
tP>lf 1wina· 1uccoed. 1'l>e key
element is pu1hlng down~rd
and forward with your Ifft (to-
ward the target) 1t the start of
the downawina.
Do this smoothly before you
start the club down with your
hands. But do not slide. your
head forward. Follow these
pqihters and you will properly
shfft your weight to the leltond
derive full power from your
leg muscles. ®·Ct ""n."""""IJ"o.lil!B
Checking
Area Prep
Banquets
Most valuable -Ci n d y
Walker; most improved -
Peggy Swiers; out.~tanding
graduate award -Pat Shine.
Drug Tests Slated
A $50 athletic scholarship
was also presented to Sue
Kelli.per, a Physical Education
major. And the OCC women's
PE Department also honored
retiring Danny Musselman
with a plaque.
For Henley Regatta
Neil Lehdzion and Jim Poet·
tgen garnered most valuable
honors for baseball and track
at Mater Dei lfigh's annual
spring sports awards picnic
Sunday.
Special award winners:
Baseball
Varsity -Most Valuable:
Neil Lend zion ; Most
Improved: John McElwain ;
Best Defense ; Kevin
Timpane; Best Offense;
Mike Amaranthus; Most
Inspirational: Matt Smith and
Mike Ryan.
Junior Varsity Most
Valuable: Chuck Linnert ;
Most Improved: Pat Eccles.
Track
Varsity -Most Valuable:
Jim Poettgen; Most Valuable
Runner: Mark Fitzpatrick;
Most Valuable Field: Greg
Woetse; Most Im proved:
Mark Fitzpatrick; Most
Valuable Sophomore: Alan
Barry; Most Va I u able
Freshman : Bill St. John .
• Est1111cia
Baseball
Varsity -Captain: Mark
Dcven; Most Valuable: Joe
Barnett;
Most Inspirational: Tim
Hayes
Junior Varsity -Co-cap-
talns: Buddy 1..-0rton and Steve
Tomlin; Most Valuable: Kevin
Langdale.
Freshmen -Captain: Moe
Fleming: Most Valuable:
Glenn Robertson; Most
1mproved : Danny Angel.
Goll
Varsity -Most Valuable:
Larry Collins: Captain: Mark
Les: Most Improved: Mark
Pender.
Junior Varsit y -Most
Valuable: ~loward Ratcliffe ;
Captain: Charles Stewart;
f\.1ost Improved : Ken Montano.
Ex-GWC
Star Named
LOS ANGELES Ex·
Golden West College star Bud
Bulling has been named to the
All-Pacific Coast At h 1 et i c
Association baseball team, an-
nounced today .
Bulling, a catcher, batted
.301 during the conference
season, helping Cal State (1..-0s
Angeles) to the championship.
Three of Bulling's team-
mates -first baseman
Charlie Bates, outfielder Tim
Corcoran and pitcher Bob
Edwards were also selected to
the all·league team.
Edv•ards shared the most
valuable player honor with
Fresno State third baseman
Mark Hance.
Net Results
HUI N' Harbor T•lll'llJ AtsodaMDn • Dlvl1lon 511ft01"4t 1. Enwr•ld B11y f521 2. Nawo«t
HarbOr (lf), J. Sunny Hiii• (l1i <.
Balboa B•Y C«/· s. Minion Vi•/' "I• 6. Mes. v11r1111 «IJ, 7, Tustin HI 1• '°, s. NewPOrt Beach Cllil, 9. LIClo Isle
fJlJ. HI. Hut1!lrwotn H11rbor (ff), 11 .
P11nln1ul• Polt1! (151.
C DIYlllon Sl1nllll"!lt
1. Tust!n Hiit• (89'11), 2. li\IHIOll Vlelo
(~6), 3. Sunnv Hiiis (1l). l . Balboa Bay (11f, 5. NeWPOrt H11rb0r (1)), 6. Mesi Verde IS9'fol. 1. NewPorl Ba11ch (57\11), 8. Ht1nllnqlO<l H•rbatlr {S6). 9. Lido tile (S2J. 10. Emer11ld BIY (llJ. 1!. (!!rona
del Mir (JJI), 12. Tlarr11 T11nnrs (JSl'>l. n. Old Ranch (321, U. Palludes (lO), 15. Pe11lnst1l11 Poln! {20),
I> DlvltlOl'I Sl111dln11• 1. Tudln Hills (611). 2. New"°"I aeach
16~1, J_ SuflnY Hill• {li(I\, '· Milt~ Verde
151), ~. Old R1nch [J)), 6. Lido IJllJ
JS). 7. Ml•slon v1 .. 10 !Jl), a. Hun·
li,,.,IO<l H•rbOur (28), '· 81lb011 e11v !2~). 10. Penln•"!a Point (22), 11.
Harbor Gr•ens (19).
D Dfvlilon
• Old llllnth (2) (2) MIU Vlrda
Jane IShlp~hlrd·Shhiey Har!uno (MV)
def. Renft! A•hwlll·Joyce Ginns 6-3, 6-2.
Nancy Smi!ll-N11ncy Gray (ORI def.
Julie McElklney·Vlckl Vul1n 6.J, 6·2.
Mvrn11 Wlood-Susan Ost~el IDRI del.
Jo Svenll0fl·$llll Larimer O.l, 5-7, 7..fi,
Bellv Ho!dl!n·Betly 1-!lllWOl"lh IMV)
del. BeTty Je11n H1y.Mlwiko V11m11U1kl
6 .... , ,.,, 6.J.
H EN LEY -ON-THAMES,
England (AP) -Drug tests,
electronic timing and one.
armed bandits are threatening
the 19th century gentility of
the Henley Royal Regatta.
But this out-of-step event is
confident it can remain on ir4
resistible magnet to rowing
buffs around the world.
Buffeted by spiraling costs,
laughed at by perfectionists
and persistenUy sentenced to
death even by its afficionados,
the regatta refuses to die. It is
scheduled for July 4-7 Ibis
year. Orange Coast College
will participate.
The regatta's decision to
carry out drug tests was a
rare concession to the 20th
century.
"Competitors will be sut>.
jected to spot drug checks for
the first time in our history
this year," a regatta official
said sadly. "It is just one
more cross we have to bear.
"Not that we think anyone
would use dope here, of
cour'se," he added quickly.
So drug checks will join the
wonders of electronic timing
and one-armed bandit slot
machines as doubtful assets
the regatta felt obliged to mix
in with the traditional recipe
of strawberries and cream,
bubbling champagne and the
wide brimmed hats 0 r
fashionably dressed ladies in
the exclusive Stewards'
Enclosure alongside the River
Thames. "'"
Years ago, the start and
finish of races on the quaint
and colorful one·mile, 500-yard
course were signalled by the
firing of a cannon. Timing
systems improved, but Henley
has only just moved into the
electronic age.
Slot machines were mstalled
in the marquees for the first
time last year in a bid to raise
much needed revenue. Despite
immense popularity, the race
always loses money.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Western Division
W L Pct.
Chicago 26 14 .650
Angels 23 18 .561
Kansas City 26 21 .553
Minnesota 2.2 19 .5J7
Oakland 23 22 .511
Texas 13 27 .325
l)ctroit.
Nrw York
Baltimor{'
Milflwukec
Boston
Cleveland
Eastern Division
24 26
22 22
18 20
19 23
"18 22
19 25
Monll1r•1 RtlVlll
Anatlt 1, Mllw1uket1 •
MlnnHOll 10, BaUll'!IOf't 3 •
O~•rol! •. O&kl&nd ]
l(~nt•1 City 5. Bol!O<l '
.545
. 500
.474
.452
.450
.432
GB
J1~
3~11
4 \.2
51!!
13
2
3 • 4
5
CMCaQO 6A, Cll!Vll!l!'ld u (llrtf game 21 !Mino,.
comp1e11on t1I M11v 26 o•me JullPl!nd!'d elltr 16
lnn•nvs !ll!d, 2·1l
le~"' 111 N~w York, ~lt>OO'l!'d, r.iln
Tonltht'1 Sclledula Antell (l'lya11. 6'•) et B~lon (ltt, •·ll, KMPC,
l :JO p,m.
O,ok!11nd (H11n1er, l 2) 111 New York /Ptlll"SPtl,
l..fi), nl9hl
CllVtl•nd (~T•Om. l·S) Ill Teire$ (8robtr.I, ... ).
nlv~1
Ba!tl!TIO'"e {P111rn.,., '-ll 11! K1n1M Cllv (5PllllOrff,
1·1), .,;RM
M!n1111oCl1 (81VleYMI, S-6) 1! MltwlllJkM ISlaton. 2·JI, nlol'lt
Delroll ( Lcllcl'I, J·I) II Cl'llu1110 (Fl1h1r, A..J), nJtl'lt
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Western Division
w L Pct. GB
San Francisco 31 J9 .620
Dodgers 26 19 .596 I 'h
Houston 28 26 .SID 2
Cincinnati 26 19 .578 2%
Atlanta -" 27 .386 ll s ff r--an 1ego 16 32 .333 13
Eastern Division
Chicago 27 18 .600
New York 20 21 .488 5
Pittsburgh 18 20 .474 5~2
Montrea l 18 21 .454 6
Philadelphia 19 25 .432 7 1,~
St. Louis 17 24 .415 8
MINl•Y'I R .. lllh
ooii..n. !, Phll•<telllhlt 1
San frtn<;l..:O '· New York S
Cincinnati 6, Ch!CllOO 5
Pllllbufllh '· Hou9ton 2 SI. Louil J, Al111nta 2
Montrul 1, S.n Dlevo •
TMllftlt'I lcllthlf
Phl!edtlr>hl11 (8n!ll. 3·1> YI. '*'""' (John, J·2J ,
OOdoar Stlld!um. l(F"I, KWKW, I p,m .
H01Jtlon (Ravs1, 6-1) •t Ciika"° tllonh11m, J.O or
RDV'Kf'lll, 4-JJ.
Atl•nll {Mof'kln. l--3) 1t f'ltttburth !Walker, 1-21,
n1gl'lf
New Yctit (SHver, 5-JJ 1t Stn ft1nc(sco {8•rr.
•·SI nlohl
Only 11.ima1 tchedu1ed.
The Regatta committee,
generally comidered .reac·
tionary, always has dismissed
offers of commercial
sponsorship as not in keeping
With traditions of the event
which began in'J\Dle, 1839.
nus year, however, aeniey
will benefit conslderaly -if
indirecUy -from spollBOfShip.
In fact, about $75,000 of co'm-
merci8l mooey will give the
regatta a big boost.
The money is being pumped
into Britain's ftrsl c::bam·
pionship standard regatta on a
new course at Holme Pier·
repont in the Engli sh
midlands.
At first, the Hqbne Pier·
repont Regatta, scheduled for
JWle 30-July 1, was looked
upon in horror by Henley of-
ficials. Since it will be held the
weekend before Henley begins
its four-day run, officials
feared it might lure the top
crews away.
But the Holme Pierrepont
event turned out to be a bless-
ing in disguise. To en$Ul'e .sue·
cess, Holme Pierrepont
organizers said they would
pay aJI expenses for crews
who also wished to participate
at Henley.
Months before entry lists
closed for both regattas, of-
ficials were gleeful at the pro-
spect of a top flight in·
te.rnational entry.
Crews from 12 nations, in~
'Cluding the United States,
Russia and Czechoslovakia,
quickly announced participa·
tioo.
Henley never has had much
trouble attracting crews from
around the globe. But sud.
denly, the world's best crews
were rushing to enter.
Officials at Henley now are
confi dently predicting a record
entry, probably in excess of
250 crews.
It's a tremendous jump
from the inaugural event 134
years ago in which just seven
crews participated.
Banquets
Scheduled
Track, tennis and volle)ba.11
athletes at Fountain Valley
will be honored at the annual
sports banquet tonight at the
school ~feterla.
The program, which Will
feature the naming of mo.st
va luable players in each sport
begins at 6:30 .
Hu1ttb19ton
Spring sports athletes at
Huntington Beach High will be
feted tonight at 6:30 at the
Marina H;gh cafeteria.
Awards for ootstanding
performers in 1 w l mm Ing,
basd.>all, track, tennis and golf
will be presented at the
gathering.
Marbaa
The Marina High tennis
team will hold Its annual
awards dinner tonight at 6:30
at the Vllla Sweden
restaurant. Most v a I u a b I e
player 8bd captains awarM
will highllght !he evening.
1'1uslon Viejo
League champion tracli and
golf teams !tom Mbslon Viejo
High wtll be honored tonliht at
6:30 in the school's multl-pu,,,_ room.
NEWPORT LEASES
24HW,..c-tlffo'wor
Lu1tno 111 yohtcl11
645-2202
DAILY PILOT
Triton8 Assi.slhnt Coacli
Takes Colnrado Grid Job
•r BANI: wace or•.,....""....,
Rud)' Kadlub b endinc a _.. ..................
and -al San aem..ile High. And what tbe career
laCb In~. tt ma); .. up
foe lo uniqueness.
Kadlub is leaving to accept
an assistant football e<>aches JOO at t he University o I
Nol1hern Colorado in Gneley
and leaving behind a spot as
the only male teacher in the
girls physical e d u c at i o n
deportmenl at San Clemerue.
"It really was rat.her mtlque, -
J guess," Kadlub says. "At
least I've never beard cl a
man teaching girls phys ell
before:
.. ft was a little difficult ad-
justing at llrst, naturally I'd
figured 00 teaclting boys
physiail eduj:8lioo when f -studying for my degree and i
was a lltUe DflVOUS the first
few days.
"But since this was my first
teaching assignment it was
natural I'd be a little
nervous."
Kadlub came to S an
Clemente as an assistant with
football coach Allie Schall at
the beginning of the school
year, He had played on
Schaff's first varsity football
team during his senior year at
Mark Keppel High in Albanr
b<a.
"We !were ~9. not one of
Baseball's
RUDY KADLUB
coach Scha!f's better teams,"
.kadlub recau~:
Kadlub went on to play foot-
ball at UC Davis for four
years, three of them as a
varsity guard. He captained
the team his senior year as a
197-pounder and r e c e i v e d
several conference honors.
He slayed on as freshman
football coach for one season
before joining Schaff, ac-
cepting the position in the
girls physical e d u c a t i o n
department at San Clemente,
and serving as the school's
head tennis coach.
"It really worked out well
and I enjoyed myself.'' Kadlub
says. "I taught basically the
same iubjecta I woold In boy•
phys ed, and I thlpk I
established a pretty good raP.
-porl with !& girls."
"I'd say that gePerally girls
are as eager in physical
education as boys, some are
more eager I<> participate than
others, but the ratio Is about
the same as it would be on the
boys side."
After getting a close-up look
at the girls programs, Kadlub
is in a good position to com·
ment on the effect of the CIF's
recent ruling allowing coeds to
compete in all vamty sports.
He feels the only sports.which
girls will infiltrate will be !he
non-eonlact ones.
''There are a couple girls
that could have played on my
tennis team this season, but
none that could hav~ played
football or basketball," Kadlub
says.
"I think that girls will be
able to compete m&ruy in the
individual sports."
Kadlub is eager to switch
from seaside San Clemente to
the mountains of Northern
Colorado where he will likely
serve as offensive line coach
under Bob Blasi. The 10,000
plus enrollment school com·
petes in the Rocky Mountain
Conference.
"They're building a new
athletic facility, including a
stadium that'll seat 7,000 and I
think I'm going to enjoy work·
ing for coach Blasi," Kadlub
says.
"I really think I'm mak·
ing the right move."
TopTen S $}9 ..... ~ ...... .,_ aiv.e • 6 on· AMERICAN LEAGUll ~ ,,
Pity., e At. .. H. Pct. h. alf. . ~~~~"~ .~ ~ ~ ; -gallons of
... ~M"~ ill "'" '~J BR s h ~sJ~n in ~ 2 ~~:{ & are co"c ..
Chi 3d 1l5 21 ~1 .311 llJ
C1rtw Min .«! 1.SO 21 46 .:J07
H1ma Rltlfl• M•lblrry, 1Can.i..t$ City, 13; Ounc11n,
Cll!YI and .. 10; 0 .MeY. Mllweuket1. 10; S!>lkas, Lltvellnd, f; Murc1r, N1w York, 91 Malton, Chkaoo, 9; D.Allen, cnkallO. f; T..,ece. 01kland, t.
RUM 81tfad I" Mlll'blrrv, K1nu5 City, ''; Mellon, ChiClllC, 33; MurCef", Mew. York, 32;
A..J11ck10n, O<llklend. l2; S 1> I k 1 '. C11v11an11, 211 F.ROl>lnllCfl. C1lllol'nla, "· Plfdll'!ll 5 DldtlDM Colborn. Miiwaukee, !-1. , 13 3; Hclh"*>. O.ii.l9!d.1-9·2 • .1111 $l"111r. C11ffor"11, J.t, _, AlaJtlflllat B11tlmott1. ,.,, .IOO; Lee ao1ton. ,.1, .IOO; G1f"blr. ~llMS City, 1-1, .IOO; Wood, ClllCD001. 11..:J, .786: Spllttorff. K11n11s Cltv. 1·~ .111.
NATIONAi. LEAGUE f'Jayar • Al ll H
Meddo1t SF 37 1:18 16 SO Wel$0n Hind 111 35 t.0 M11ttll.WS
Sf (2 C1'h Pah 30 l.OPDS LA l5 W. RobiM$0n
"' ·~ "' " " " Phi 32 104 17 $~nlo Chi "2 152 2J ~~~"}F~ 1~ l~ Mor• LA 31 lot 12
H-ll:~M
" u
" " " " " ~
••• -~' _,,,
H.A•ron. Attanll, 13; Sllrpl1, PlttsbUr11~, 111 Evan1, All1nt1, 11; Benell, CJnclnn1tl, 11; Wynn. Hovs!O<l.
11; f'.rguson, Lot Angele$, 111 Bonds.
Sin i:-,..ncllCO, 11.
R-a.nM In
BUILT 1MH ~.~~~.~ .. ~.
RegSJ.8.95
·Now
$}6.99
B1nch, Clnelnn•ll, 371 F11r;11son, Los
A11Qt"t1s, J7; Wiison. 1-!ouston. J?; '?----------• """''I S.in franclseo, 32; SPl!l1r, Sin 11 Frenc ICO, n.
Pllthllll 5 Dt<:ltlom
Bflllnohflm, Clnclnn~u. 7.1, .915: Hauu. Hooston. '-1• ,1511 Downin!), Los
Anoe!as, . .S.1, ,133; Wltef St. Louis, 6-2, .TIA; Hell, Clnclnrni I, !·2, .71l;
D1ll:obartt., HOl.lfton, S·2 •• 71A; Bryant,
San Francisco, 1-3. .1001 Su!ton. Lot
An11lll11. 6-J, .6"1.
Boosters Meet
The Dana Hills athletic
boosters club will m e et
Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the
high school.
Agenda items include the
election of officers.
Save s3_50
on J£B gallons
Reg. s37_45
Now s33.95
with convenient pouring cradle
1972 WINNERS
OF 5 DIVISION
CHAMPIO~S ~IPS
•
N1wport~Me1• Jr. All~American Football Association
FOOTBALL
SIGN-UPS
REGISTRATION FOR THE 1973 NEWPORT-MESA JR. ALL AMERICAN
TACKLE FOOTBALL SEASON WILL BE HELD WEDNESDAY, MAY 30TH AT
7:00 P. M. IN TWO HARBOR AREA LOCATIONS.
Rogl1trotlon 11 opon to 111 boys ago 8 to 14
For boys in the Costa Met• and Estancia High Schoool
Dl1trlct1, rogl1trotlon will bo hold at the M.audo B. Davis
MlddJo ·~. 1050 Arllniton Av1., Costa 'M111.
Boyt re1kllno In, the Newport-Corona dot.Mar .Hlgh School
District wilt regl1tor at Newport Horbor· High School.
Fwrteon tMms In· 5 W9ight divisions comprllld of boys,
ageo I to 14 (11 of A119ust l) ind -ighlng b1twffn SS end
140. pounds wlll compote ag1ln1t bthor O.-ang1 County ........
e CHIEFS e CONDORS e CARDINALS e CHARGERS e GOMMANDOS e COUGARS e COL TS e COYOTES e COR'.ONAS e COWBOYS e CORSAIRS e CABALLOS e COMMANCHES
PLUS ONE TEAM AS YET UNNAMED
' '
' .
•
I
I
.
(
Tuesday's Closing P.ri~mplete New .YorlC Stock Exdiange List
After. Big :Week, ·
Market Falters
••
SC DAILY PILOT •• , ..
Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List
St11s N•l P-E 1~1 HkJh LOIM l.111 CllO.
Amerlean Sale•
·----.... ___ ·-
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Pf<TfnouJ ....... IV.I'd ... COUltT CHI' "'8 ..-nc:1 9' '1'W .,... AMI """'8 °' .... STATllM"" STATS Ofll <Atll"Oll.•t& l'CMI ntl tll&Aa,.. Ofl Tiii• LOeM. TJ!e,.....,.... _ _........ nMICOUWf'l"W..,... AM11a HIMA'*' C01Wml0t9 "' .... A... w ..... ~ CM.NIMJliA. D 'I • ...... INl1AU..Af'Off. IDI .....-.Cl °" ........ OI' PIT"10tt ,,,... A ~IO ' ...,.,...1 ...
M. .......... a-AM. CA mtt TO """8~ 111.M. f'ROll'Un Ntfl\.~r HNI TMI Ctn' OI' ~ ._ ...... 11• c.wt !Jll -....,.,. .. .. lirftfrt flf Corr• lllft.t, WfU. SI ,._.l#Tt ~ /l#I. ,, .._..., tA •UUIU L.PO'I' Md.Artil. Owe ... '9a MU.I.. O
0...... ... ~ ""' ......,,,. ~ .. ..,. --...... """""-"' M.. ._.. 0....... CA tM ,,...,..,, ti ICATHIAIHlf 'IL(IM lllOTKI II Hl~l•Y Gl\llM mtt ""
Laguna Show High
alc:WOll '1111 ~ TU f. T""'1f McUtN • ..... lllW1itr1• of ""' E.lllte ~ .~ P'w-llclfl C....nt..io.. lie· M ... Mt, CA ft1n ti •UtSIU.. \.llOY McaAIM, -...... _. .. ........,. tlllo tatt. "J-, lrM. If
"".l.Ul Ill II~.., I ...,.... .. Hr Ill ...., ti ~ t Otr'll h'I cori: tl'llt '*°'" ti t~Ge f'.M, ti' Mid dlY W 1> ~ ffect lw "" ..... rtf cert1111 rMI Mltl• -thtlfffter •• Mio """"" Giii IN .,....., A. ortta# .,,...... Imo ..., ,,_. fl(IGIM 1,. 1111 fleerll 111 .__ m '" ,,... 0r-.,.. c-11
Tfllit ~ _, ftlelll wll'll lflt C_.1111911"'4, end DONAl.O OIEWAYHI ~rtlf9f! luU.111111, ,1, H 1 r I ~ I\' 0.-ti Or ... C-1)'., M.-, t, 1'1S WICKS, I ~ "'9#1.. be Mod el tht •T...,,_1 $11 ... , llftl1 Ml, C111torn11,
""" t011t1 tit-"' o.,.n'"""' , of ""' •• "" "'"' •l'ld ci$1e1 ,,,,. "" eommr..ioro ~ Qlrtntl CMtl Diiiy Pllol, ~ C..... of fl'll Mt11 ti Cetlfornlt to 'e'rilw Md .. l .. IOlllM I JPlll'<• 01 I"' ,,., u. 21. ,., ~ J-s, Im !OW) '" tllff "' ""' C.U..ty ol °''•· City oi "W'l'ICI llf !I'll c11., of CO.II MIN.
In Natural Rapport
-'--c=o:c:=-c:-::::=::::----1h1'111 AM. Ofl n. 19'11 .-, "' MMy Im T"" territory 10 bl ctntldolr.cl wltNn PVBUC N011CB If f :OO .. clod! A.M, • ' .... .,,,.,. ,,, ·~~ ""'" '"VOIVI P'OP' $.u ,...I ~ to N COt'IV9\'M II lrllft ,, ..... n., wllll/11 thl dty I/mill al
•tCTITKM.11 •USINlll 1111111 .. Ill fhe C--ty ti Ore,..., 11111 of c .. 11 ~. 111d 1111lncet""~ltt<1 l1rrllOI'~ MAMI STATIMIMT C11ltoml1. ldlKMt lo 1911 ~11!1111 clty 1111'111• 01 fol ""-ft fMorWy _. 10 h ,..J C•l1 MMI. 11'11 lollDWlflo ,....._, ert I'll HM lfl ftl1 '*"In tor flH"!htt particutll'I' D•tW: /Ny II, ""
-""" ••: O.i.d ,.,,.., 10.. Im • •v OllDlll D" THf" LOCAL /l,G[HCY ~HI WOODSMEN. Ol.D WO.LO W 1 l'T JoitN 'CHtMATIOM C 0 MM 11 I1 0 M O' sift \llMG AHO IMPOll:TS, AHCIENT co....;., cs.r.. .... c1--. CMU.HOI COUNTY, CALll"Otl:HI-'
wot!: D P•OOVCTI, 1'Q60..( Heient """'·• of Mid ...,lor c-t IUCttAaO T. TUAHEfl Wetinllr.IW, Cllllomll fMll ty W J_,.. o.p.n IMKvtlVll Otrlc1r
1'MOll"• 1~11'11 "--Jr., 1•1 ......,., ................. a~ Loc•I .-......Cl' Form11ton Mtwtand I t. /yf. •• HUllH ..... °" •NCll, 1•is& te. Qw11; A-, c.to'rtml.,.JOft
C1H""'1ol• ""1 ......._., callMitlle""' 111 °'"""' County, c.riro..,.•I • •lc:l'llrol Melt Ll'V"t. tl .. l"llllMffil. 1-.0C 'votl~ OrNtOe CM•I 01!1y l"llof Mey •1W111l11 \1111•'1" C1lllor1'111 f'VOI ~llMd o,.._ C.tl Dtlt-, ,1111 B, lffl !jfS..r.I
Thi• ~ rt COO'W!vc;IM O<'I' I tlftll"ll ~ 11, 12, 2S, 2', tm .,..,..,oj ... -------· TMOIOr• Eilwll"cf "--Jr. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE lhl• ftlllft'lltll Wff Hiid wll'll ... C_.
,., Clift. Ill Or•"'• Covnty Otl Mi r ~~r.:1---"~==:::::.:::,cl~A~l~l:::O;,:..._ __ ll-;.~ooT~><~l;"";O~,;-;.; .... ;;;:;~~ ............... ;;":;,,;:y,-
Pulllllhtd 0t•fl9• Coe•! DILty 'llol, UAL P•Of'llTY AT f'alVATI IALI Hltfltt 11 lll<"elry 111,,... 111•1 ~ U"·
I-MY u , n. tt, ll'MI J-s. lm 14',•T.J .._ A mn ffr.JV"M w111 not bl ••t.CM>Mlbl• '"' 1ny
"leave t"• front and back the way ii is and nothing
off the top and sides, plea~."
"BuUtrfUes Au Free'' Is
undoubtedly the best comedy
to filler -. to the com-
munity theater circult this
season, a tender, thoughtlUJ,
yet terribly fUMy story with
the strength of a play written
agalmt the badtdrop of real~
ty.
PUBUC NOTICE
'-lor C.wt of tM 111'9 ti Ci lllor I cftOI• or ll1~ll1l1• COl'llrK !.cl ty •nv-
Hr fht c-tY If Ori,.. n 1 other """ mv1111, 1111 or 10..-1111• "'''· l---------------------------111 ltll Mlftw al !I'll • E1lt l• of OaA 011911 lhh 22ncl d1V of M•Y• ltl'l.
The Laguna Moulton Com-
munity Playhouse is closing
out its most artlstically suc-
cessful season in many years
with an excellent production of
Leonard Gershe's seriocomedy
of a blind youth trying to
make it on hia own in the big
city. Ow-acterization ls
superlative in nearly a I I
respects and the production
itseU is one of the moet at-
tractive of the season.
---,==:::-:-:-:-::::;::::::----llCLUOI! •EMHITT tllO ~n 11 OllA aon1lcf S, Ay1•t 'ICTITIOUI •USIMlll ICLVGE. Olcl1Md. IM'IO H. 'Kiiie A~t. MAMI ITAT•Mllft H14tct It hlrl'bV" glv1n llloll f111 un· iUllHI llffch, Cell!. fWO
Tiii l .. llw\fllil jMrlOl'I 11 dol119 IMlnttt dlrt11nM win Mii ., prlv111 1111, 1111 or :libl~.n;! ~~'::; Clll•! 0•11Y 1:~;;
It llhr ltll 2Slll dty Ill'"""'' 1f'1. 11 1111' of. IY • ' ' . 'EllEtltA AllAllANS. 020 C•""'PU• lie• of KAHN. ITE•H l ILAHt"Y, Jtstl-------------t
Dr!,,.,, H1w'8fl l1ldl, Ctllfoo'flll t1..o W. Ctnturv •IYcf., Loi Anll""' County of PUBUC NOTICE •ILL PlalEllA, 11\C., • Clllflll"nl• Les ...,..,...., ,,,,. of C1lllOl'nl1, lo thl
'°"'"°''!Iott, ~ C1mw1 0 r Iv I , lllll'lllf I nd bltl .icfd«, I nd IU'blt<! to
H•wporl •tach, C1llforl'll1 ""°· eonflr,,..flon bV ••Id SllPtl'lor Courl, •111---,==°"""''"''°'=-:c~--I TMt bu1lne1• It colldll(lld bY 1 cor· '"' rl11llt, fllll Ind lnttrnt of 11lcf NOTICI TO ClllE DtTOllS por1Uon. 4KMMcf 1t ll>t llrnt l!lf 6t1!11 Mid 111 1111 Ml, A·1"4S
llH P1rl..-1, ll'lc., r1tht, tltl1 -ln1tr111 ~I 1111' 11111• ol Sul)trlor Cour! of 1110 S!lll or C1!1lorn!1
w11111m L Ptrl1t1 ll1cf dKuNd flt• ecCJUlrtd bY t•rlllon fol' 1111 counly of Or~.
Prt1l6tnt ot l1w W OlhlrwlH, O'lt!W 111111 or In Ill· E1t1I• ol' GS•TUO£ 'LEWA, DKllt·
Tl!lt t!ll-nl w11 111911 wllll ti. Coun-cflllon It !Mt OI 1t!cf llKtlffcl, II ll•I t<t.
ty Cltlli: of Or1noe COVIT!y Oii Miy a. llmt of d11th, In lt'WI to Ill 11'>1 ctrt1ln ND11c1 11 ~1•9by 11¥1ft 10 cr1dll0t1 ol
• Ul). l'HI "Oflll"1Y llftltll In 1111' Clly of S1nr1 "'' l boYI n•mlcf dlct<len! lh•I 111 '·1M1t At11, C°""ty I/If Or1no-. 51111 ol Ptflltfl• l'l•vln11 cl1!m1 111ln11 1111 t ald
"'11111"'*' Orlllfl '~·· Diiiy Piiot, C1llfornl1, P:'rtlcut1rty dllCllkcf ., d!K'.14111'11 i re r911ylrell to Ill• !him, Wllh M•~ u, n, ,., •!Id JUl'll t, 1m 1.n.JJ fol'-1, lo-wit. 11111 neceu.1ry voucllll'I, In lh• offlc• of
PUBLIC NOTICE
Lot 11 11'1 •Ioctl H or 111"'1 S«onll "" C11rll of Thi 1bov1 enlltlt<I uurl, or Acldlll111 to !I'll row11 of ,11'111 Ant •• In t1 pr•1lfll llllm wit~ lht n.c11i.1ry
1 Ml• rtcorcfld In llool! lO "'*'' 15 I/If vovchtfl to II•• und1•1!ollld •' 1111 offlu Mli.ull1_.. •tcord1 of Or1ng1 CIUfl-of J1nlt Vlnclftt. 1557 l1vtrly llvd., LOI
••CTITIOVJ •us••••• !y.. Al'lftl11. C1ltf, '°°" whlcl'I 11 It.I pt1c:• ol N/l,MI t"TATIMIMT 1111"1M Ill NII Ulh 111 l1w1ul _., of Du1l11111 al 1111 utlOlr1lllflld lh 1H '"'lttr1
Tht lillAlwl"ll ,...._. .,. 111«1'19 l!ivll-"" Ul'll~ Sttm .,, COl'lllrm1tl1111 Ill M lf, "''''"'"II IO 1111 111111 ol ••!cf dlCtdtnt,
11; W ,,_,, Cllll 11'1d M!1nc:e IVldtnct<I ty within fDut mon!M 111111" 1111' llr1t pubUCI• O..t.NG! COVN'TY "UtltMITUltl Mii HCIH"M bV MorfttOI! or Tru1t a.Id tlon o1 11111 l'llO!lcl .
llEITOllATIOH CIHTllt, 71 2S •-kk °" "" P'Oplrly M .olcf. Tlfl per Clfll ol 011td Mey I, 1'7:1 UM. lhlll A W111rN11tllr, C1t1f.,,., 1moun1 bid to lit dtPOlllld wllh Md. ElllC E. HUSS, O-V. A, 11119« Jr. & Miry IC. l lcft or lfflrt '"bl lfl 'l'l"lllfll •nod win E•Kutor et tht W111 11,...,. ,,,., c-1,.., Chllt Ort ..... C•I• N rtotllltd II It.I •lor•••ld 0111c1 I I •""I' ol ••Id dtetdllll ~. Ctlll. f:MU time tftlf' ITll llrtl Pll"llt.•HOl'I l'llAof 1/111 Jllllf 'llKl!lf
TM• lll.lllnMI I• Clfllltl.ICl'ld try In ,,.. blfor• dill It 1111. 1•11 ··""'' •IWI. ~lvk1111I 011911 /My 11, 1'72 Lii """'"' Ctlll, MM
Ml,Y I(, 11,,..,. Wllll1m Tl'IOl'l'll1 Kluve A'""""l' .... l llK.tw 0-.. 4.. Slllfl'" J r, E•KutOI' of 1111 lttll• •1""4\'I
NY Wmnan, 19
Murder Witness
Jumps to Death
NEW YORK (UPI) -Anne
Marie Paixao, 19, a key
witness agalNt a group ac-
cused of murder, robbery, and
kidnaplng, leaped to her death
from the roof of a six-story
apartment, police said Mon·
day.
Poli~ said the
despondent about
girl
her
was
in-
war" between the two coun-
tries.
NATO Secretary General
Joseph Luns extended the of.
fer after Iceland tokl the
alliance that it must help get
British wanhips out of Icelan·
ic waters. Britain a n d
Iceland are both N A T O
members.
Only the necessary evil of
unmotivated m o v e m e n t
"IU'TTl••l.111 Alli ••11"
/lo ComedY bY l'°'11fd Otr1111', dlrtcltd by Hip Gr11!1m, le(hnlc:1I dfrtc1or
A:khl•d Ar>eltrH!'h llgMl1>9 by C1rl
C1l11w1y, 10llnd bV 01vld C111<1l1,
pr-ltd 'Tuad1v. throWh S1tvrd1y1
., 1:30 unnt JUM ' II !lit L111un1
Moulton F>l1yhous1, ~ Llll'Jnl C1ny0fl
ftOICI, Lt0un1 IM<h. R11«v1!1on1 ,,.,. 010.
THI CAST
Don 1l1ktr • . • •. , • . Wllll1m Cullen Jiii T1t1111r .•........ Mfclll'UI llrf"M\
Mr1. ll•ker .•....•.. An1'11blll1 QulollY Jt1lph Austin . . . . . . . . • . . Jt<:k Bingert
tl11 "'...._' Wit t'llM with '"' Ctlln· of Mid dl<«tlftl Publllhtd Or-111119 C111ll D11lr Pilot,
IY Cilc1I "' °''"" '-"" °" ~ ... '· lf'1J KAMM. ITlllf .. •U.lflY MIY. IS tt. n 1m 1..os..n ( ) ,lllff 111 ...... c. 1''"' , ___ ._. ___ ' --------' IN SHORT '""'""' ,..,.., c-• °'"' ""'· ._....,. "'' "K~w PUBLIC NOTICE • • • Mtr 1s, n. "· tl'ICI ,_ s. ''n 10 1·1' 1tt1« Pu~llhtd Or1no1 Cot1t D1l1y Pllot.,l--------------I
Government officials i n
Reykjavil:, the I c e 1 a n d i c
capital, said earlier today
Ice\and may reconsider its
rol6 in NATO unless the
organization can solve the
around the huge Laguna stage
rtstrains "Butterflies'' from
adtleving its highest potential.
A four-character show ln
which more than ty,·o actors
are rarely on stage together at
on time, the play would fit
more comfortably into the
condensed set employed wllh
Laguna's last productioo, "The
Effects of Gamma Rays on
Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds."
PVBUC NOTICE Mey a. 2f •t'WI JUIM '-lffl l.st7•T.1 NO'TICI TO CltlDITOaS __ ....:::::::'.'...'.:.:'.'.'..::'.'.. ___ , ___________ c;.;.:.:1 su•••10• COUllT Of' TH•
PICTtTIOUI IUtllflll PUBUC NOTICE ITATI' °" CALl•O•MI-' •011 NAMI ITATIMIMT THI COUNTY OP O•AMOI
TPll folllwl"I ,.,_. .... "'"' ... "'"'"" bull-t11 •tCTITIOUI I UllNlll 1!1t1lt of LE01A STEPHA HI A IUCCEll MIND CYl l!!llMl!TlCI IH· MAMI ITATIMllNT GaAMOVllCIA $Tllt0THEll, O.C111td.
STITUTE, S)I H, Cltrk, Ortl"llrl.,... "T1'I follCM'll'ICI pttlOlll ,... dollll! HOTICli IS HlllE•Y GIVEH to !lit
J. T•ttlt Moir•. 1n luril ''" 11u11neu 11: em 1..,,. et fN 11iow "''"" dlcldlf\1 w.,imlMltr, C1111. TU5CO COMPANY, 1111 L•111fty '"'' 111 ,,.,...,.,. lll'Vl"ll c;\1lmt •O•I"'' ,,.,. '"~,. •. v.,....., JM H. Cl1r1c, "'"""""'· trv1111. t110S Hid dlud•nl 1r1 r~ulrtd ID flit llllm,
0!'1,..., (I.It!. W1rmlngto11 Otvtl°'""'"'· I "e , , wltll 1111 ntcn11ry vouc:Mr1, In 11111 offl(I Tllll tvll,.... 11 coMuc:IH bl' • ttnerlll 1 C1lllornl1 cw,.or1!10t1o UJt ~ et tt1t c\lrll o1 1'111 lbaw 11'11111111 covrl, ctr ,..'111tnt!~. ,,.,.._, lrvln1 r.t7111 .. "'""'' ,.,.,,., wllh llw 11te11wry
aktllfd II. Vttl,.,. OrlmillCI ind H-~ ""llUdllrt. to !I'll lll'ld..-•llf'llCI 11 It'll oftlct
J-~· C_....,, 11SZ Llnglly .a...._, lrvllll 1111 HALL ll!ELY, Allor...., t t L1w, ,.._ 11111 ,,,,_, Wll filed wllh Ille c-'2105 1191 Mlou.. Ori..... "'"""'°"' ll11Ch,
IY Cl9rll 1111 Ortntt C.unly' °" Mey t , ltl'l. Ti'll• M llllll It 11111'111 tofldlll;tld by 1 (lllfomlt "2iMO, wf!lcl1 11 11\t pltCI l)f nnM ,..,...,, ~11• butl-• l)f !I'll U!ldll'tlgntd Jn 111 m11i.ra
,UllUlfleif Ore• Coed 011ty PHDt, Chlr1oll ll H-l111'11lnl111 lo 1111 111111 of &eld de<Mlt'll,
May II. n. "·IM J-'· 1m 1a1.n Tiii• '''*"*''. flllcf wtlll lll't CountY wlf!'I" 11)\11'" "'°"'h• '"" "" flrtl pUbllC•·
C..,.. ol' °'"'""" County en Mty :u 1m "°" of lh!1 notlc•· ' 011.c1 ""•¥ 11, 1m
volvemenl in the kidnaplng of fishing dispute.
a construc;tlen company ex-
ecutive last October, and CufJa Tie• Told DESPITE THE drawback of
f fraid because she later BUENOS AIRES (UPI) averactivity, director ff a p
agreed to testify against other Argentina's new c iv i 1 i an Graham has fashioned a
members· of the gang, in· go v e r n m e n t resumes smooth • flowing realistically
cluding her former boyfriend. di plomatic relatio~s _Monday , interpreted sm; "Which bub-
She went to the apartment with Cuba and said it would bles with natural and skillful
Sunday to visit her sister. But, shortly establish relations with i n t e r p I a y among its
police said when Miss Paizao both North Korea and East characters. Paramount among
did not find her sister at Germany. the CR!t members in this
home, she went to the roof and The decisions were among regard is William Cullen who
jumped. She died Monday, 17 the first taken by President '
Intermission
Tom Titus
delivers an exceptional
perlormanoe as the blind
youth experiencing belated
growing pains.
Cullen brings to the role of
Don Baker a quality of
unabashed frestr>ess f o u n d
all too seldom in com·
munlty theater. Risi rap-
port with the girl In the ad-
joining apartment and, later,
with his overconcerned mother
glows with a marvelous hone~
CULLIH, MISS •JtOWM
ty of character. \Vhen his well-
adjusted facade fin a 11 y
crumbles, it is a shattering -
and believable -blow which
is ~perienced by the playgoer
as well
Newcomer J\.fichelle Brown,
as the free-spirited girl who
introduces him to both emo-
tional pleasure and pain, im-
proves markedly as the play
progress. Altogether t o o
animated and directionless at
the outset, Miss Brown
matures with her characte r to
deliver a c aptivating
perfonnance. Her verbal cal·
fight with the mother i.s
especially well handled.
IN TflE PLm1 supporting
role of the n1other (which
recently won an Oscar for
Eileen Heckart), Annabelle
Quigley presents a caustic but
sincere charac t e r who
becomes more sympathetic as
we get to know her better.
Miss Quigley hand les this dif-
ficult transformation with skill
and insight.
Another newcomer. Jack
Bingert, portrays the avant
garde director more for hones-
ty than for the lauglu which
could well be elicited by his
part. Jn keeping with the mood
set by the other three, Bingert
is never a caricature but a
most believable alternative.
Richard Anderson's apart-
ment setting is \veil executed.
but perhaps a bit too im-
maculate to draw gasps of
horror from lhe mother on her
arrival. Only a suggestion or
tackiness and clutter exists to
provide sketchy motivation.
"Butterllies Are Free" Is
the season's sixth and final
jewel in the crown of a theater
that has regained Us place as
Orange County 's community
theater kingpin . Performances
resume tonight and continue
Tuesday through Saturdays
for two more weeks at the
Moulton Playhouse, 6 O 6
Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna
~ach .
PUllUC NOTICE WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, C.OUMTT SOPHIA G KHIPI _____________ ,cLl.aK, lly Tlllrnt M. W1rd, ~IU IRtculrlR ~ 1111 Wiii
PICTITIOUS •UtlMIS• P"Ub\hMcf Or•ntl: Coett D•llT 'Ult. Dt Ille 1t>ovt 111!1'1911 d1elcf1nt N/loMI ITAT•MINT M1y 2' 1nct JUnl S, 12, lt, ltn 1621·7' MALL lllL Y TM feltow1fl0 ,,.,.., 11 cloklf M!nttl A""""l' It Uw
'" PUBLIC NOTICE * '"' M..._ °"""'
hours later, at F I u shin g Hector J. Campora, who
Hospital. assumed office Friday as the
Miss Paixao was indicted first civilian ix-est.dent in
along with her boyfriend, seven years.
Anthony Franciotti, in the kid-.. The move to renew ties with
naping of coruitruction ex-the Communist government or
ttUlive Gerald Laz.ar lasl ()ct. OJ.ba came after a meeting
Movies Prove Gold Mine
"THI MAJtk," l90 S, lluth CM1l .......... ._... C: .......... t tMM ....,,. Llfunt tMch, C.ll'*""t '2Ul T•t ln41 .,.., lilN 11 . IMkl9fl. AU HIU ti .. Lii-fllCTmoul •utlMlll Atiwwy lw hll'9trl•
Suell. C•llfontll fiUI MAMI ITAT•MIWT l"vtlll"'-'d Ori""' Cotti 0 1Ul' Pll .. ,
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llllYldl.wl nlM. I I! •-------------·I ffll'll. IMtclon GllMITAO ANO HOOSI OEVl"LOP·1
PUBLIC NOTICE TMI ... IMlll;.i we• lllld wltll ! .... COUii• MEHT COMl'AHY • 17$2 l t II I I I y
ty ~""'If OrMOf COVl'lly °" M•l' t~ Aj::,."" :.vt~=ld. l~S2 L•"llly
,..,_...,,.., .Drll'ICll C111t 01!1y 'lllt, A~lrvl.r 'W'-l tJt ... 1'181 l----,-,-CTl-0-0-1-0-0-1-10-1-,-1---·I
""" .. IL 12• "· tm 1111•12 AvtflUI, 1rv1M t'l10S • .... NAM• ITATIMIMT
PUBUC NOTICE Thi• ~1 ..... II 11111"11 <Ol'ldl.l(fM lrf • Thi' tollowlnt1 l)tr"IO!I ll dolflf bullntst ~r1I Hrlflln.hlp. t i : -------------1 Cl'lolrlft II, Hoo.to HEWPOll TER TaAVEL AND TOUllS,
•ICTITfOUI lllllMISI Tiii• 1111""'"1 tiled wllll IM Caunty 1107 J1mborlt a'*cl, 11 Hlfl'rWly 1, NI.Ml ITAT•M•NT Clerk of Orlnot COUl'lty 1111 M1y 24, lt7l. HIWJMH"I llMch, C1lllonll1 ~
Tiit fdll:IWl"lf ~ It 60!"1 tru1IM1• WILLIAM E. ST JOttN. COUNTY l1tty JD All111, 531 Yln1 Gr•ndl, H : C.LliRIC, tly Tllll'IN M. W1rd, o.outY. H--1 l"ch, C1lltornl1 t'2UO COMMUNITY MA Iii • G I M E MT ,.um Thi• llv1hwn alldVct.d by '" lnd1vldu11.
s1•v1c•s COM,AHY, 115' Hordlc 'ut>l lll'lld Ortrt(ll Coett 0.Uy 'flol •tttv Jo Alllft ,,ICI, °''""' Ctllflwl'llt MllV " •l'ld J-s, n.z. If, ,,,, 1'12-'ri Tiii• '''"fM"' Wiii flllcf with "" COUT>-llololrt 111...roll. '"' ~< •ltc:t . ty Cl .... o1 Or•l'I .. C0Ut1ty on Mal' 11,
0r.., c.!Htorrtl•. PUBUC NOTICE tm ' · • .._ A. hlrd. 7.i'I 0111'1 01r1 'tnu Sl'r..,., Wtilttler, C1llfonll1 comblnld wlltl Dilly 'riot, l"'"""'POrl
11'111 bV1111111 11 --..Clllll lly •11111r1 l'ICTl'TIOUS •utlMlll llech. C1llforllt1, Mil' IS. 22', 2' 1N •r....,.1111 6 St.,,_ A. •urd, 1 Gentr1I MA.Ml STATIMIN1' Pub/IMld H.wpMI Hll"tlor Newt p,....
P1r1111n111,. Thi 1o11ow1t11 penon1 ,,. dDI"' JUl'll 5 1m 1.,1.n lltMrf 111¥ .... 11 builnlll II: '
$t.clhln A, 1-.:1 FOSS·llllUTEllt AS!lOCIATES, SOI -------------1
lhl1 111+-1 w11 ftllcf wtlll tht Coun· Actcl1 """'· COi"-di! Mil", Ctl. t2'21 PUBLIC NOTICE ty Clerk ti Ore,._ CIUll!y' 111 M1y I, 1'71. M1rllYT1l'I L. Fou. 111.4 H...._. A.VI .•
•.Ult1 "'"'"°" 8MCll. C11.
t2U.OC "'""" C. llevt1r, 50f Actc!I Av• .• 1 ---~=~-=~=---w-M. e.nt-Ally. Cor11111 d1I Mir, C•I. 'tCTITIOUS SUllNlll 1141J C""'tMw •lft. Thll tM.1111'1111 11 CD!ldvc:lld bl' 1 llfllrt l lil.\11\1. l'TAT•Ml.WT
1,........., Cell ...... 1 _, ptrl,,.,.tl'llp Thi fOllOWl"'ll l19flltfl 11 dolnt but11'1tH
'11blllfttd Orl"'lll COii! Di lly Pilot, H .. tn C. llevter 11: Ml , •• IS. n. ,,, ,,n 1401·11 Thl l lflllfl'llftl ...... flltd ~"'the c-· VILLA YIS1A MO•IL! ESTATES. -------------lty Clerk of 0rlfltl Covnty on M1y 2t, Dl 11111 Circle, Co1l1 M111, C1lllor11l1
PUBUC NOTICE im PW» n~ld 11. 'tnder. G-••I P•..,""·
•ICTITIOVt IUllMISI Publ\'hed Ol'IPIO• Coe1t O•llY Pllol, m~ l•ll C1rcl1, COlll Ml•I. C1llfoml1
.,. .......... ITATIMINT M•Y,. •nd June J. 12• 1'· 1•n im.T.J Thi• bl/11 .... 11 ,, COfldliCltd w Vl1l1
Tl'll tollowlno ,.,_, •rt 110!rt11 v11r1 Mobil• E111t11, 1 LI m 111 d
tn.11111:11 11: PUBLIC NOTICE • • •1 VERGO •UILOIHG SUPl"L!ES, 2!11 1' nll'ln P.
H-wt alvcf •• NO. •• eo.11 MtlO, C1111. =!. •;.~,:--·
'2'17 MOTICI! IMYITIM• •IDS Tl!ll tllllmlftl w11 llltd With IM CCU"·
ll1y 0. o....rturl, ?Sii H~ !tvd., No'lltl It Mrltly OIVlll !1111 lhil lo.rd I/If ty Cllr1c of Or11191 CDUl'llY on Mey 4, 1'73. C•I• Mnt. C•lll. f2f11 Tt u1t111 o1 1M C:o.11 COmmunlty Colteot •u111 V!nclftl E. 11••0•1'1. HOO HIWPOtl 0!1trlc;I of Orl"llt County, C1ltfWl'lll, wltl w.tlt I( WllllwlM A"'
•• ...., •• Ho.. 4, COlll M111, C11ll. ft.n' rtc.iY. IHI.cl bldt up lo 11 100 t .m .. 1• A...-If tilt f.11n,· s .. 1. »•
Tllll busllllll II ((lndU(t..,t by I glftlrtl w.c1n11e11y, Jvnt ll. 1t1J. II "" llU'"dl• .. L• A .... 11 •• C1Ufilnll1 ,.., ptr!fllnhlp, lno 0tP1t1menr of 11kl 1ellool dl1lrk:I l:tlt.QC ··~ G 0Vfffl.lrf lottlld t! ll70 Adtms Av.nu., Coste Publl1Mll Orll'IOI COlat Dilly Piiot, Thl1 llllllYI•"' ..... llltd Wllll !ht Covn-Miii. C1ll tornl1. ,, wfllcll 11mt Mid llldt M1y .. lJ n " ,,,, l.ot-n
ty Clerk I/If Of1noe CDUnl\' Otl M•Y '· ""· win k publldy OCllf'llCI ll'ld Aid tor; ----·---'-------·! P2,.,, 5T-'T10NERY SUPPLIES.
Publlthld Ortrt01 Co.11 01Uy '!lot. All bid• •r• to H 11'1 tetordlntt 'wllll PUBLIC NOTICE May t , IS, 22, 2', \tr.I lJJJ...T.I lhe ln11ruc:tlon1 •!\cl Condllt11111 l r'ICI
--------------l1J:t1CIJ!t1llOl'll Wl!ich lf"t l\CW 1111 fll• ll'ldl--------------1 PUBLIC NOTICE mtY IN wcurtd 1" 11>1 o1«e1 111 11\t ••CTITIOUI •USIM•ss ---==~-~~~----I 'urcl>t1lrt0 ACllf'll of 11kl 1clloot dllfflct. MA.Ml ITATIMINT
'IC'TITIOUS I US!Ml.IS l1ch blcfoftr ITIYll ll.ltllnll with 1111 bh:I 1 Tiii folkrw111g P«Mll 11 dofrtO bvtlntt•
MAMI ITATIMINT c11hl1r'1 Chlclr. Ct rllnl'CI rl>tc:ir, or bid• I t :
Tiii tollowlng pe<ll!f"I Ii dolno bullntts d .... J bol'lcl m1C11 PIV•e.lt ID !he ordtr ol MOOtlLAlt 'aODUCTS. 2n6J C1m!M
•t• the Cotti Ct11•1t•11un11y Coll~ Dlitrk l C.i>l••••no. L•oun• lfloutl t1'77
13. between Campora and visiting
Na Mare Se:r'!
LONDON (AP ) -Prime
Minister Edward H e a t h ' s
government continued to insist
today that no more of its
ministers are involved in a sex
scandal despite newspaper
reports to the contrary.
Two government ministers
resigned last week beeause
Scotland Yard found out they
had been consorting with call
girls. But the government on
hfonday night denied a report
in two Sunday papers that a
third minister -and possibly
a fourth -had been mi:s:ed up
with call girls.
Cad Talks Set
BRUSSELS ( U P I )
Iceland and Britain today ac-
cepted an offer by the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO ) to mediate the
dispute over the so-called "cod
president Osvaldo Dortioos of
Cub11.
Fire Rqes
NAPL ES, Fla. (AP) -New
crews were brought in Monday
to relieve weary firemen who
have spent a week battling a
blaze raging across 30,000
acres of Big Cypress Swamp.
"We have the fire contained
to the south and we 're working
en the east flank, but It's still
spreading north." said M~
Hell, a Forestry Division
spokesman.
"It's not burning toward any
inhabited areas, so we don't
have to wony on that score,"
Heil said. Officials said most
wildlife In the area has been
able to escape the flames. The
fire is burning in the swamp
along the western edge of the
Everglades about 50 miles
east or this Florida Gulf Coast
city.
Gray at Law
Ex-FBI Head Back iri Firni
From Wire Services
It's back to the old Qffice
grind for former acting FBI
director, L. Pal.rk:k Gray Rt
He wtthdrew his name for
consideration as director and
resigned in April a ft er
space, Col. AJe:s:el A. Lflonov,
will lead the tw0:-man Soviet
crew in the 1975 j o i n t
American-Soviet space flight.
• ECOL O G '( AA A 1H1 E 1\1 AH CE IOlrd of TrvtlMI I" 1n •mount not 1"1 Moduit r M1nul1d1Klnet, 11\C., I
Sl!llYICE HUI " s~ ,.rk Ir IM 11111'1 ,,.,. Oll'"(lftl (l'I ol 11!1 "'"' tlld for c1111«1111 C~•llott, 2naJ Ci mino C.lllornl1' tJNI y • ¥ ' -Yltr't t otttrl(I 11 • gu1r1nl" lfltl C1r,l1tr1no, L1gun1 NIOllll, Ctlll. '1611
w11 C•lllvrnli ni1' C0t!l•1cf lf thl ,.,..... 11 •Wl•dld lo him POtlflon,
Tllh 'butllll1I 11 condut.lt>d bY tll I"· In tl>t event of f1lh1r1 to ll'nl..-'"'° 1uc:h MOOUU.111 MAHUFAClUlllHG, PEOPLE lflvlduel. tt1nlrec:t, !he PfOCttd• of tM ("lll(lr wit! INC.
The news ageocy Tass said
that Leonov and pilot-cos-
n10naut Valery N. Kubasov,
both 38, will ronn the prime
Soviet crew for the ex·
perimcnt.
Jofln A. Flf!Olr, to1 T•ntn.1 Pt., Cott• IM bllkllr wlll '"'-' Into the prO(IOMd Th• bu1l11111 11 tOl'ICllKlt<I bl" • cor· ( J
Jo/11'1 "'· Fll'do• bl '°"9111111. or 11'1 !ht t111 of • llond, 111t John S. ll!lck, 111 . Pr-tildent
Thi• lllHmtnl WI' lll td wltll 1111' (111,1!1• tull 1um "'"'°' will bl lort1ll9d ID 11!d Thi• '"'-' Wll fllfd wllll 1114 COIJ"· * 1., Clll'k of Or1r111e County on Mey 2. ,,Tl uhool dl•lf"lct. tv Ctffk of °'"'"" C~nly Ol'I M1y II, .,,...,. ____ _, ____ _. H U •
PJMM Ho bklctt• m1y wttlldr1w 1111 bid '°" • 1m disclosure tnat he destroyed Emperor I e Selutne,
Put1U1hld Df•no• co.11 011ty Piiot, .,..rod 1111 torty·"Y• ll!l ) d•Y• •l'llr the · P1J.1n documents re] a t j n g to flanked by kings and princes, M•y •. 15, 2'. "· ltll 1:W1·1l a·,'~-Ml. ror ..... ""_}llllftl119 th..-l'OI. ll'ublltllld °''"'' Co.111 01!1~ Pllo!,
'
.. ,, ";• , ... Tru11ee1 '"~ t11t MllT n , w, 111Ct J11111 s. 11. 1t1J 1s2:1.11 \Vatergate. pres Iden ts and prime
PUBLIC NOTICE pr ¥ .-ctt "' re ICllflll •ny 1n11 111 bid• er I 10 w11..,. ,...., 1 ... eou11r11111 or 1n. Louis C. \Vool said Gray is ministers, pres dOO from a ---,-,-,-T-,,-,.-.-,-,-.-.,-,-,-,-,---lt0f"'•11~~;~:'M'o:~ ':". !.:T~rJl'lg. PUBLIC NOTICE expected t() return within a cnnopled head table while
,.""'• ITATIMIMT SK•-'•fY, few weeks to his """-rship liveried waitress served an Thi tollowlng P«•Oll 11 cfofno bu.1...... lla1rd ol Tru111t1 ,lc:TITIOUt •U$1NISI ..-. ..... • h
••: Ool!ti: June 1l, itn . il'oo,'" NAM• tTATIMIMT in the law firm of Suisman, e1g t-course meal to 1,500
.. D'J:'~llS IFIEO COMMODITIES 115f P\lbttlhlcl Or•l'IOI Cotti 'o.uf .Ottot Mey Tiii l'ollow!llO Pl'tolll 1r1 cfDlflO Shap1'ro, Wool --· Bre-·n in gue!llS, ... or....: Pl1e1, Orlf'lll•· C1llforn!1 t16'U 22. 1', \ti'] ••).JI bullflffl ti! &llV ,,. ....
lllbtrt •IV1roll, 115' Nordic F>lte1. jtlZZA M.t.M, 1t?O Heritor •t'fd., Co.11 N ton; Co Girl In k' Is d -• °''""· c1111orn11, ,,....,, mn ew n, nn. s grass 6 11' an ... ~
TN' ..... ,..., •• tonc1uctM bY •Obtrl PUBUC N"011CE Jotin M......., Fry. '" '•111'111'"' c1rc1.. * to bongQ drums on the dais in 111-•11• '" 1nc1tvi(lvt1. C:oi.1• MIN. c i nt. ""~' A Frenchman who sold front of guests, who ate off •lbln ··~•r"Oll lilOTICI. OP Armo o ..... Hf!IOll. '°232 SMrrtU.
lN• "''llYlttlf w•• 111..s ..,..,~ 11w cou"· No11 ••1P0Ns111L1TY Ane1111m. c1n1. everything to come to Stan-• golden plates with gold tntvea
tv c1..--o1 0rt1101 ~.., ori M11 •· 1t11. Not1t1 11 M..ey •lv•n 11111 !tit ""'" T1111 b\llllM•• 11 conducted w • .-11 ford Unlv ..... lty for a heart and forks and seasoned tbelr l2'$-0C l'·UUI d..-11onl<I wilt not IN -.-llbll tor •~Y p1rtnlf'1l'llp. ,,..,, ~'' or 111111111111 (or1tre.c:te11 bY •"Y°"' Jll'lll "'-•"' ,.,.., transplant se ven months ago food rrom gold aalt and pepper w.a.•111M M. eoaDOtt. oi~tr !hll• mYNll, Ofl or 111., 11111 °''' Thie 1111....en1 w11 "'91'1 w11111111 c-. ..,...,...,. "l..lw. 0111d thl• Jh1dlY 1111 Miy,1,,,, • 1y c.1.11 11 0r.,,.. C«tnty on M•Y lt. is described by doctors as still shakers. :::.~~ ~=i f;;o;:,!:i ~r,1111, ,,,, l'JWI not sick enough for the The occasion \vas a dinner in
f'Ulli'INd Or•l'ltfl co.11 01111 Pn1t Mir c.,,, M•••· c 1111, itllblldlld °''""" Coa•• 01t1y PU11. delicate operation. Addis Ababu nlilr klng the loth
•• u . "· n. 1m l«M·n P~btl•hed °''"" C0t$I 01ity Piiot IM-'c'_n_. _ .. _._ .... _,_-_c•_•_•_· _ .. _n __ '"'-"-·n,I After-e:s:amlnina L 0 u Is anniversary or the founding or PUBUC NOTJCE M•Y 12. ,l, tt. itn 151,.ri "' Andre ChamJ>OUulD, 40, la81 lhe Organization or Alrican
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE November. Stanford's heart Unity.
transplant team d~lded that *
although he w1s quite Ill, he John W. M c C or m a c k 1 waS; not In Imminent danger or former speaker of the U.S.
death or untreatable by other House, says he has joined the
therapy. board of directors of
StJll, Cha:mpoos~in, who Musachuaetts Clthtna rcr
speak• no Engli$h, tires easily Life, an anU-abcirtlon group.
and Is too slc:k for strenuous "I welcome the presence of
1cUvlty. flis wife has taken a the pro-life movement in
job 1s a housekeeper. America, and r w!Jh to * become actlvtty lde<ltlfted
The nrst man to walk In with II." he said.
For Best Selling Autlwrs
By BOB THOMAS
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
film industr}'.'s eagernes,, for
pres.old filmS is producing a
rich harvest for best.selling
autrors.
To the delight of literary
agents and their clients, prices
are going up for ooveh and
nonfictioo books which offer a
filming potential. Prices in the
six figures plus fringe range, a
rarity a year or two ago, are
now frequent.
The reaDlS for the authors'
harvest:
1. Producers' belief in the
presold property -that is,
novels or plays that have
become so familiar that they
are instantly recogrUzable to
the ticket buyer. ' 'Love
Story," "Airport" and ''The
Godfather" are a few ex-
amples.
PARAMOUNT JS n o w
gambling that millions more
will pay to see a film starring
a high-flying, best-selling bird,
''Jonathan Livingston
Seagull,"
2. The impr.oved fiscal
health of the film companies
has permitted big paym<nts
IOI' literary properties.
Says a literary agent: ''The
studios were poor-mouthing us
a couple of years ago ... but
m<l6t of them are willing to
put out for promising books:.
In searching for"""""' prop-
erties, the studios naturally
want repeats ol what has suc-
ceeded before. Thus the suc-
cess of the "The French Con--
nectlon" sparked a number of
purchasea: of law and order
books. One of the biggest was
P8l'8IDOU.nt'5 purchase of a
book called •Imply, "Law and
Order."
111E NOVEL by former
New York po l lcewoman
ilonlllly Uhnek b r o u g ht
$350,000 pl11.1 $2,000 for every
week it remains on the New
York Tunes bestoeller list.
Another •lx-ngur< eeller ls
''The Taking of Pelham One
Two 'Ibre6.'' a suspense tale
of a subway hljackq by John
Godey.
Palomar Pictures is paying
Jl75,000 pltl.1 $2,000 fur each
week It •ta)' on the list.
1'1be studlo.1 want best
sellers,'' uplained veteran
Hollywood ogenl II. N '
SWaDIClll, "and they'r" wllllng
to pay a pt<mllum for them.
.. THAT'S WHY I put the
best seller list clause in the
'Law and Order' deal. 1 a.lso
sold 'The Race' to Paramount
for $175,000, plus $2,000 for
every week on the New York
Times list, and $25,000' for
advertising and publicity for
the book."
Another tong-time literary
agent, Ev~ Ziegler, com·
mented : "Thel-e is no question
about the upsurge of OOok
purchases by the studios. But
they are seeking special sub-
jects, one that contain action,
melodrama, sex and violence .
"When the business is bad,
the }X'Oducers aim for the gut
level. There is no market to-
day tor the gentle, sensitive
story, nor the black comedy.
The producers want noisy sub-
ject matter."
The film makers are foUOW-
ing the trend, as ah1rays. But
Daily Var iety pointOO out the
dangers of pulling too much
faith in the salability of filmed
best sellers. Among t h e
failures: "The Arrangement ,"
"The Love Machine,''
"Portnoy's Co mplaint ,''
"Topaz," '"I'he Shoes of the
Fisherman," "The Secret of
Santa Vi t tori a , ' ' "'Ille
Salzburg Corulection," "Tile
Man," and "The Adventures."
Night Owl TV
'Tomorrow' Due Tliis Fall
By JAY SHARBIJTT
NEW YORK( AP) -The
NBC Television n e t w o r k •
which gave us the "Today"
show in 1952 and "Tonight" in
1954, plans to complete the se-
quence this fall with "Tomor·
row," a late-hour interview
show.
The host of the one-hour
program will be Tom Snyder,
a Milwaukee, native. He's
been the 6 p.rr.. news an·
chorman since 1970 at KNBC.
TV's Los Angeles .
"Tomorrow" is aimed at
earlier risers or night owls,
depending on one's point of
view. lt'U start at 1 a.m. Tues--
day through Friday right after
the Monday-through Thursdny
"Tonight" shows.
IF YOU ARE still with us
after that explanation, leave
ws press on.
"Tomorrow" Is described by
NBC as a "sophisticated talk
show" that will tackle con·
trovendal. adults u b j e c ts .
Snyder will discuss these sul>-
Jec:ts with one or more experts
License Okay
WAS!llNGTON (AP) -The
F e d e r a I Communk.aUons
CommlJllon has anoounced
approval of t00· assignment oC
the llcenoe of UHF station
Wf[J).'l'V, Ch an n e I 32,
Chicago, from Field Com-
munications Corp. to Kaiser
Broadcasting Co, Involved in
the approv1l wu statJon
KBSC-1V In Corona, cam.
and various personalities.
Some of the shows will cover
the lighter side of life. ac·
cording to NBC, which says
"Tomorrow" will be taped
without an audience at the
network's stud ios in Burbank.
The idea for the show was
developed by Mort Werner.
NBC's senior vice president
for program planning and one
of the developers of the suc-
cessful ''Today'' and
"Tonight" shows.
LAST SEPTEMBER,
Werner said he hoped the new
show would be on the air by
this spring. It now probabl y
won't start until October, after
the "premiere week" of the
1973-74 TV season, NBC
sources say .
The delay wss partly at·
tributed to negoUatons for
rates on the telephone lines
over whlc.h the show would be
fed lo NBC affiliates across
the country.
When 1t docs appear, it'll
mark the rirst time a network
has rcglarly scheduled broad·
casting pa!rt one a.m. on
weekdays, although NBC hai
been startin.1t Its "Midnight
Special" pep music show at 1
a.m. every Saturday since
F'eb. 3 thls year.
"Tomorrow" will end only
five hours before the "Today"
show begins and could lead to
even more n etwo rk pro-
gramming in the prtdawn
hours on weekdA)'S.
As Werner put It , "whl)
knows what's going to happen
from 2 to 3 a.m. If we're su~
cessful from I to 2?"
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Lag1111a ~·ueaeh
EDITI O N ·
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VOL 66, NO. 149, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES a '
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Man Dis penses
Free Ree fers
Laguna Beach police definitely
would have looked one gift horse
in the mouth if they could have col-
lared him.
An irate citizen told officers Mon-
day that a long-haired man was
stopping passersby and offering
them free marijuana cigarettes.
When police arrived in the 400
block of Nort,h Coast Highway, the
pot huckster was gone. He was said ~ to have been in a euphoric state.
Howard Hunt
,
Tells Castro
Death Scheme
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Watergate
conspirator and fonncr CIA agent E.
Howard Hunt, who helped plot the 1961
Bay of Pigs invasion of CUba, says he
recommended to CIA superiors that
Fidel castro be assassinated as part of
the scheme. His proposal was never ap-
proved.
Htmt made the disclosure In a
fortlicomlhg bO'.lk in which be describes
bis role and that of the , Kennedy ad·
minislration in the ill-fated invasion by
several hundred .CU ban exiles who were
organi7.ed aad trained by the United
states to-overthroW 'CislfO'i..,-ttglme.
A copy of the printer's galieys for Ille l>i>ok, to be publlsbed In November by
Arlington House, was obtained by UPI.
In i~,Hunt cbarges ·lbat KeDDedy tried
to "whitewash the New Frontier" when
tbe invasion failed by "heaping guilt on tli.! CIA."
Kennedy accepted responsibility for the
~lY of Pigs fiasco at the time but much
of, the blame for its initiative and im~
plementation was placed on the CIA by
others.
Hunt said he proposed assassinating
tbe Cuban leader because he believed
that "wilhout Castro to inspire them the
rebel army and militia would collapse in
lett<ferless confusion."
Hunt said his proposal was to
!\assassinate Castro before or coincident
Jritb the tnvasion." He added that the
role of. C&ITYing out the killing was "a
task for CUban patriots."
He said he was told by Richard Bissell,
:dllef of the Central Intelligence Agency's
'Clandestine services, that his plan was
being coosidered by a "special group"
Within the government.
But Hunt said: "So far as I have been
able to detennine no coherent plan was
ever developed within CIA to assassinate
~tro, though it was the heart's deslre
of many exile groups."
Hunt's part in the invasion plan in-
cluded organizing C u b a n exiles in
Florida and coordinating their activities
wlth the invasion forces being trained by
U.S. Air Force and Anny specialists
wt:tl.ch included the Anny's Special
Forces unit.
Be said plans had called for a Cu ban
Exile Executive Committee witit Hunt at
their side to enter Cuba after tbe in-
vasion, declare themselves a
(See CASTRO, Page Z)
Only 2 Injured
·1n 23 Lag una ,.
·Auto Accidents
' '!be Mtmorial Day holiday period In
Lquna Beach was marked by 23 auto-
niobile accidents. Only two involved in·
juries,
,A 32-year-old Huntington Beach motor·
c1[Clist suffered a broken right leg as he
cOllided with a car driven by Mary
Clilrke, 48, of 387 Clift Drive, Laguna
BOacb, '1~d Vnndenbeuvel, or 5831 Pillion
Stnet was talreo to South Coast Com-
lllJnity Hospital .followlnl! the ~dent
nµr 480 Third Street oo Monday DJghL
Aldee reported the cyclist ID sallsfaetory
~Oil today. An ll·manth-Old chlld and molbtt w•re 11\Jllttd in a colllsm at Bniodway ond ~t Highway at about 8 p.n!. ~
l\iroo and Mary Karoub , :ia, o1 'l'Utln '""'8 both releasod 1-. South '1ooll
Hoopltal following emergency lreOtmenl
)'ollco .. Id a car driven by Lellty lllatllalll, fl, of 115 McAuley P1-, La-
guna Beach, colllded with the Karoub
fthlcJe drivtn by Marl< Ka1'1Ub.
'Other M'm>ortal Jla7 accideots while
-Involved OOl7 minor daJDqe, dllice'" said.
15 Charged
'
In Song,
Dance Bit
Laguna Beach police cited 15 persons
on charges of blocking the sidewalk as
members of the Hare Krishna cult and
Love Animals, Don't Eat Them gathered
in song and chants Saturday.
Police Sgt. David Avers said officers
cited members of the vegetarian cafe set
as they danced on the sidewalk in 'front
of Love Animals, Don't Eat Them, 782 S.
Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
Those who danced to the jingling
sounds of bells, flutes, and drums forced
passersby to waJk into the highway to
avoid them, Avers said.
Avers said the dancers declined to obey
officers' irultructions to leave a lane open
on the sidewalk, and were cited. A further
"loud music" disturbance was reported
at the vegetarian mecca early today,
however, participants complied with
"quiet down" orders.
EarUer Saturday, James Douglas
Roberts, operator Of the Love Animals,
Don't Eat Them was cited for four
building code violations.
Roberts, who gained some measure of
fame last year for allowing a camel, two
cbickenS and several dogs in the cafe,
wss cited for 'lil1ege.j' v!OlaUoos of the
sign ord.inaoce, and remodeling without a
perm!~ .
Love Animals, Don't Eat 'lbem opened
tast July 4, and was .immediately in bot
water as Boney Bananas, a camel, and
Col. Sanders, a roqsttt, joined opening·
day celebratiClllS lnllde, in violatioll of the
health code. •
In a colorful trial, Roberts was found
guilty despite his plea that animals and
man are all one.
&lbsequently, Love Animals, Don't Eat
Them, became a temple.
Sky lab Trains
Its Te'lescopes
On Sun's Gases
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
Skylab astrobaut Dr. Joseph P . Kerwin
today pointed a battery of telescopes at
the sun, hoping to give scientists their
best look yet at bow this seething sphere
of gases controls the solar system.
Physicists also hope tbe experiment
will help unlock the secret of controlled
thermonuclear fusion, the source of the
sun's energy. This might aid in the
search for an unlimited, pollution-free
power source oo earth.
"It's a beautiful picture," Kerwin
noted as he viewed on a space station
television monitor the area of the sun the
si:r telescopes were examining, each in a
different wave length.
While Kerwin tuned up the $121.2
millioo amy of eight telescopes, Charles
Conrad Jr. and Paul J. Weitz: assembled
cameras and sensors which they'll use
start.Ing Wednesday to survey the earth's
resoorces.
II was the fifth day ol tbe plsnned 28·
day orbital fiigbt.
Mission. commander Coorad today re-
quested a private radio conversation with
Space center Director Christopher Kraft.
Oigbt controller Neil Hutchinson and
director of night crew oi>era\iOM Donald
K. Slayton.
Mlssloo C.on.trol later released a sum·
mary of the six-minute conversation.
Oxlrad said be thought the temperature
stablllzed in the station in the low 80s and
that the astronauts should be able to con-
duct all experiments fully ex<:i!pt for a
bicycle exercise used in medical tests.
He said the temperature still was a bit
wan'n for the bleycle e:rerclae .to be run
to full capsclty.' He also said lt caused
some diffiCulty because it ".ril:les", di/·
ferently in welghUessness than in earth's
gravity.
O>orad eipressed displeasure Monday
at a DU111ber ol extra engineering tru;ks
the 11irooau1S were being asked to do.
(Siie SKYLAB, Page I)
Council Meeting Off
A Laguiia Be•ch City Cooocll meeting
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday has
been canoeled, 'n>e council wu to meet
with staff and memben of the plarming
coJIUllisalM and board of adjustment on
procec1ura1 mati.n. Schedullnc conllicts
foroed the metllng change.
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Ofti'NGE COUNTY, CALIF9RNIA TUESDAY , MAY 29, 1973
• J"
ac1n
DalfrPJ)tt Sftlff ""ota1
TOM TERRY SETS NEW RECORD AS HE TOPS· THIRQ , STREET HILL IN 8.65 SECONDS
Six-man Wagon Pull , Below, Wa~-Won ~y,t~P-eda~1 a1.30Q Spectators Witched . . . . ' . '" ' .. -.. ' ' -,
Roads , Beaches Jammed
Over Holiday Weekend
Uphill Racers
Grunt, Gro a1i . -
In .Pedal Fete
· · By JOUN ZALLER about to tum back just because there 11 you uiink Laguns Beach'• Thlrd
Of 111e Dflttr '""" 11tH was no place .to park. Street hiD is steep when 150 horsepower
A bot sunny Memorial Day produced "It was the worst I've eVer seen It in it pulling you. up, try it on a bicycle with
some of the largest beach crowds and nine years on the force." Lee said. pure pedalj>ower.
wdrat trafJie. j(\Il\$ in the history of the In Huntington Beach police reported · Monday 55 bike riders groaned,
Orange Coast, officials reported today. similar snarls in the beach .ar:ea, with sweated a,nd strained their way up the
Roads leading into all coastal areas near!Y 100 cars towed away _for. illegal Art Colony's ·-nd steepest st ....... t dur-were snarled -some from as far as five parkmg · ........ v ......
miles infand -from late morning Mon-"Ever).body that came ic> Huntington • ~ the-Jaycees' Memorial ... Day Hill
day uaut. late .afternoon, and when Beach Monday parked. here ..illegally," Cllinb.. • • '
mOtOf'ists arrived at beach areas, par~-declared police Lt. Don Jenkins this Tom Terry ~ Laguna Beach ~t a new
i.ng spaces were <t.t a premium. morning. record by topping the 33 percent 175-:loot
Coo.stwide beach attendance wa s Beach conditions, for thoee that got lq-srade .in S.65 ~n<is, and received
reported at nearly 400,000 Monday. alon,. that far , were eJcellent, bo\b S11n4ay, 'I'd • top,~,'" the '\""' • dl".!'lon,,
Newport Beach with '150,000 peop~ a1f11 , r,Jooday. Water temperatures ranged up A ..... t a half ' secohd bcblild Terry
Himl1Mt9n city beaches with 40,000 to 68 degrees. tmd surf was . small. Air w~ Lagunan Patrick Bums with a tune
periOos..both reported tbe largest single temperatures were· from 'Ill to,llOdtireet;· ,of 8.~J<jXlnds.
day cmwds in their hlsl!>ry Monday. with the hottest temperatures recotdnd Janet Florell mounted, tho hill ,.l?;E·7'
Newport Beach. polJOO said their t>l'lrk· on San Clemente .State Beacb.r , .. ~.;whire. CORll_lelitor ~wn ,.uuruas
Ing oWcers Were . writing ticket$ at tbe t• There were few rescu~ repoi;ted. and pow Creel down before re'.8ch1rw tfte sum--
rate of two per mDNte aU day. only ooe serious IDC1clent , ipvo!Y!nc .mlt. ,
"Fron! the poll<e, belicopter you cwld Laguna Beach lifeguards. ~la 1beQ Other wutnm were: ,
see !bat the wllole beach area ' was iald Homer Lew!s, 55, of Los A>igeles ,11>-Junior Men (14-17) -Chris Farrell,
UteraUy covered 11)11\ cars -1111d ~,of w"l'i his head and neck bqdy surllng, . Newport Beach, 8,96 ,_.c1s. Ont place ;
them lllft mmna~·~Ne•f'!"\-Beoih $alurday. . . Chris Smith, second.
traffic olflcer G~ toe: ' '. ' #·. ' Pulled from the surf by hil w)I/>, 4wis. , .BoY• (11·13 ye,ars) "'.: Nick Ralston,
"l'!ople _. psrk\ng oo psrtcWays, an was not breathing when llfegu•ids II'-IU$ secood!· ffnit; Kevm Lend, second .
tbe grass, In the street." be sald. "A lot rived. Followina: m o u th -t o • m o Q. th Junior BoYs (up to 11 years) .-. John
of them had been fighting traffic all day, resuscitation effort•, however, !Awls wu • Fowler, 11.0l second.!, first; Tom Har-
and when 'they got11ere they were not tSee CROWDS,·Pap Z) rl19R,,eecond .
'l'oday's Final
--
TEN .CENTS
Mi sconduct
Claimed By
Commander
WASHINGTON (AP) -An Air Force
co tone I who commanded U.S. war
prisoners today f i I e d court:martial
charges against eight Army and Marine
enlisted men. He accused them of
"misconduct while in a North Viet-,
nan1ese prison camp.'' the Pentagon an~
nowiced.
The action by Col. Theodore W. Guy of
Tucson, Ariz. was the first such move
against any of the 566 m1Utary POW&
who have returned home.
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W •
Friedhelm said the names of the eight,
five soldiers and· !hree Marines, will be
made public aft.er they are formally
notified.
Frledheim did not disclose the specific
charges or &n1 details, but military
sources said Guy accused the eight of
aiding the enemy, disobedience of orders
and disrespect to superior officers.
More than a month ago, the 44-year-old
Guy told a reporter that some POWs he
commanded were rowards "who openly
collaborated with the enemy '' and even
caused physical harm tO some comrades.
He declined to name them then.
Friedhelm slid the fo rmal charges
were filed with the secretaries of the
Arbmtyhe and l;i})I}'" '.fheY.. ;tY!\i, deQlde w e r to press biburti.maru&l after
formal grand jury-type inv..U,.tloti are
conducted under tho · tlDllitnil cede Of
Military Justice.
Acoording to Frtedhelm, otber former
war prlsooers bsve sougllt legal acfyice
from Pentagon mllltary and eJvfllan
lawyers about possible charg .. against
other freed prisoners but "there have
been no other charges to date."
He said thooe inquiries illvolved ·both' enliSted men and officers. --,
Guy, shot down over Laos 1n 1968, wU
commander of U.S. war prisonen in a
Hanoi compound called "The Plantation''
for about 41h years. , ...
In an interview, he charged that some
POWs accepted favors from the ?forth
Vietnamese in the form of extra ratlona
and greater freedom within the com.
pound walls and that Ibey "turned their·
b.:<cks on us." .
He claimed that he and othet POWo
were turned in to the North. Vietnamese
by other American prisoners and that
Ibey were beaten and tortured beeause ot
his efforts to establlsb communlcl.Uona
among the POWs and to organize
discipline in lbe c_!Ullp.
Frtedheim avoided a direct answer to a
question as tG whether Pentagon officials
attempted to talk Guy out· of filing charges.
The Pentagon spokesman said only
that "Col. Guy was afforded the same
legal assistance that would be afforded
any member of the services." Friedheim
said this incluCed guidance on the rights
of the colonel and the accused under the
miUtary justice code, but saJd the. legal
officers "would nol preswne to suggest a
decisJon" oo whether to go ahead with
the charges."
From the outset of the POW release in
February, Pentagon officials have hoped
to smooth over the harsh feelings
between some war prisoners and to pro-
mote a forgive-and-forget attitude.
Or uge «:out
W~dter
J\'Iostly sunny Is the way the
weatherlady sees it for \Vednesday,
with cooler days. Highs in the 70s
are expected at the beaches and
inland areas. Lows in the 60s.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Proclaiming "Hooke:rt of tile
world, utd~,!' a Sa11 Fn:rncisco
pro.stitute ~d an · approving
board of busintss1~a.en and a11th--
ors -with a '5;000 ,grant~Jrcnn
a r~ligious group ~·arc orgah-.
iring a j:Jrostitutt!' ·guild to com·
bat polict harassment. Su de·
toils 01t Pagt 5.
,.. •• ,.,..1
Gas Shortages
CROWDS ..•
.._..ed Jn llllhle oondltlan this momJnc
Jn the lntensiv. ca.. unit ol South C4ut
Community llo<pilal.
• • r
' .,
.,
,,
on
lly JOllN S<JIADE
Of .. Dtl" ,.,., ., ...
The feared euollne lhortage along the
0nngo CO/l&t llaned oot to be a mlxod
bag over the k>ng Memorial Day
weekend. Some statklnl clo8ed. some ran
out of au and for olhfn, it was buaineu
•• uaual.
Olevron and Standard otatlons had the
bardtst Ume with statJoru like G<Dre•
Pllil!lps' Olevnio In Irvlol. Phlllip9 bad
been pumping gas at one of Orange
O>unty's highest dally rate.!. He had to
limit eadl car to only eight gallons. A
spokesman for the station said he saw
Rain Plagues
Indianapolis
Race 2nd Day
INDfANAPOLIS (API -The 571h fn-
dianapolis 5QG.mi.Je auto race appeared to
be rained out for a second straight day
today after a four hour, 10 minute delay.
It probably would be rescheduled 10< 7
~ a.m. PDT WedneldlJ. OtJe{ Steward Harlan Fengler got on
the public address ayslem to tell the more
than 175,000 persons at the lndianapolls:
Mot.or Speedway for the race that "we
d have a very dangerous situation here.
. 'J'hetracklsnotsafe.''
b Fengler said he and other race offldals
would watch the weather condJtiom for
a short while longer, but added: "1be
l
• weather reports are very bad for the rest
• ol the dly.
"We're trying to work it out the best
way we can. I'm sure none of these com-
petitors waat to run 250 miles and have
the race stopped."
' '
' • • • • • ' • • ( • • • •
•
He brought car-0wner Roger Penske
and driver Gary Bettenhausen to the
tnicrophone to echo hl.s sentiments.
Penske said if the weather didn't
change very soon he felt the race should
be postponed until Wednesday "for the
safety of the drivers and spectators
alike."
Before Fengler's announcement was
e-ven completed, most ol the fans were
heading for the exits.
From Pagel
SKYLAB ..•
Ile asked that these be held off a oouple
days 111Ul the crew got back on acbedule.
'Mle first earth passes will be over the
United States and will be directed mainly
at agricultural areas. The goal of the ex-
periment in these areas is to .sunrey
crops throogbout the cummt growing
season, assess arablUty of land and
evaluate water runoff potential.
The telescopes are mounted oo a large
device that la e1tended away from the
orbiting station on long metal armt.
'lbe astronauts Monday completed set·
ting up housekeeping ln the laboratory,
which is the size of a ttiree.bedroom
home, and began their first medical ex-
periments.
A makeshilt swuhade erected Satur-
day reduced tempe.raturea to near 80
degrees, far below the 125 degrees
recorded imide the cabin after a heat
shield was ripped away during the launch
of Skylab May 11.
Ford to Give Food
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP)
·Residents of a Buenos Alre.s shantytown
Jine up today to receive 3,000 food
packages from the Ford Motor Co.'s
Argentine subsidlary. The packages,
delivered Monday to the local church,
\Vere part Of the first installment o(
Ford's milllon~ollar protection payoff lo
the People's RevoluUonary Anny, whole
guerrillas wounded two employes of the
company during a kidnap attempt last
week. II-
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ltob1rt N. Wied
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I 11
Coast
this limit mnalnlng throughout the aurn-
mer.
Jim Tice Cllevron in Costa Mesa main-
tained a IG-gallon Umit over the weekend,
then c!O>ed early to preaerve daily
gallonag•.
1be American Oil Station In Costa
Mela orden for flmr stations but has not
rettlvod new auppllet yet.
Bob Smith'• Chevron in Mllsion Vie10
was an ei:ceptlon to the rule. Smith had
pleoty of gu for the holiday weekend.
Prior lo the weekend, Arco stations
were reported1y nmnine short. Some sta-
tions countered that possibility by simply
closine for the weekend. But Smith's
Arco In Colt.a Mesa had its monthly
Quota re-allocated and wu able to re-
main open.
Unlm Oll llationl -the demand .
Andenon.'1 Mesa Verde Service had no
limit oo. gallonage but cut operating
houri. Tom Sharp Union Oil Jn Newport
Bead\ reported their gas llUJJPly beld oot
but they clooed early on Memorial Day
becaU>e ol Jack ol buolnea.
Lilqpiardl r~ the .......-••
Ing btach C!O'lldl to the ""'"111 Poor
beach weather that has piqued coastal
beaches through moot ol tb!J apring.
"People have been going crazy for a
chance to go to the beach 811 spring,"
sald Huntington Beach lifeguard Capt.
Douglas D'Arnall.
''Then they get their first good weather
to coincide with Memorial Day, and you
know there's going to be trouble," he
said.
"The people were ju.st really ripe for
the beach after the lousy spring we had,"
was the way lifeguard dispatcher Bruce
Reed of Newport Beach put it.
There were some reports of jellyfish
at Newport and Huntington Beach, and
several reports of sting rays in San
Clemente. There were no 9erious in· ,.
cidents, however. -t
Although some gang fighting was ~1
reported on Los Angeles county beaches,
Orange Coast lifeguards said the large }
crowds were well-behaved.
'!be weekend sltuatJon wu good at
Tony's Mobil In Santa Ana with
normal boun and no gu abortage
reported.
Dilly Piiot Sr.ff l"llot. LAGUNA BEACH RESIDENTS GATHER IN HEISLER PARK TO PAY TRIBUTE TO WAR DEAD .
Huntington Beach police reported some
problems with about 100 surfers who
refused to leave the water Monday morn-
ing when crowds on the beach began
building up. Two arrests were made, but
officials said there could have been more
if personnel had been available.
More Than 50 Wreaths Were Prennted by Civic ~nd Service Organizations on Memorial Day
A spokesman for Tooy'1 Shell in Foun·
tain Valley did report a delay in gas
delivery by the jobbers. Ile Mid the
delay wu caUAd by an increase of
gallool: ordered at Shell 1tations to offset
limited gu supplies by other brand sta-
tion&.
The station met the demand by raising
pri""' and llmlltng the number ol gallons
per car for the weektnd.
SUCh was not the fata ol Art'• Sbell In
Costa Meta were enoup gu and oonnal
hours were reported.
Texaco statlona like Bob's Tezaco and
Airport T .. aco statlonl In Newport
Beach both remained closed over the
weekend to maintain their limited supply
or gas tor reguJar.week day customers.
Country Club Gulf In South Laguna is
nonnally open 24 hours, seven days a
week. It was closed Sunday and Monday
and daily houri bave been cut back. A
spokesman said their gas allotment has
been cut in hall to figures based on la!t
year's levels.
Princess Anne's
Betrothal News
Officially Tokl
LONDON (AP) -Buci:lncJ!arn Palace
announced today the engagement of
Princfll Anne to Lt. Mark Pbllllps, a
commoner.
The announcement came after months
ol denial& !run both the 22·yeal'<!ld
prlnooas and the dlshlna 24-yelNlld
cavalry offlOO'. Tbey bad 6oen oonstant
cooipankm since December.
Palace spokesman Jnallted tmtll a few
hours before the announcement that
reports of an impending engagement
were "pure speculation."
The offldel fllltlOUllCell1t said: "II is
with greatest pleasurt that the queen and
the Duke of Edinburgh aMOW!Ce the
betrotbal ol tbeir beloved dlughter, the
Princess Anne, to Ueutenaot Mark
Philllps, the queen's Dragoon Guards,
son of Mr. and Mn. Peter Phllllps."
Philllps spent the weekend wilh Anne
and the British royal family at their
Scottish estate of Ba1moral.
He was the only guest visiting the royal
family, and thJs touched off intense
specul1Uon that an engagement mlgbt be
announced soon.
Holdup Man
Gets $13,19.S
In Santa Ana
A Brink.! armed guard was robbed ol
$13,195 ·m a Santa Ana discount store
Monday afternoon in the midst of a holi-
day shopping crowd.
The lone gunman who confronted the
guard carrying the store's cash receipts
tor the day as he left the office area in·
.side the K·Mart store, 1400 W. Edinger
·Ave., escaped with the aid of an ac·
complice, police said.
Officers said when the gunman con-
fronted the guard he shouted, ''Don't
move. Don't do a damn thing or I'll kill
you," as he grabbed lbe guard's revolver
from its holster.
After scl.zing the money bag, the rob-
ber forced the guard to sprawl face down
on the floor in the hardware department.
"Stop him. He's got tbe money," police
said the guard shouted as the bandit ran
through the store.
A store security guard tried to block
the path of the fleeing robber but he was
frlg}Jtened off when the bandit waved his
.38 caliber revolver at him and shouted:
"Get out of my1way, boy. I don't want
to have to kill you."
The robber sped out of the front door
and jumped into a waiting station wagon
driven by the accomplice.
Later police found the vehicle which
was identified by witnesses who took the
license number as i\ left the store park-
ing lot.
A witness near the scene where the
station wagon was found said she saw
two men, one of them wearing a ski
mask hurriedly leave the station wagon
and drive off in another car.
Witnesses described the bandit 'vho
committed tl1e robbery as about six feet
tall, weighing 170 pounds with shoulder
length hair and a bushy beard.
FroniPageJ • CASTRO. • •
Dead Honored
Lagu1ia Citizens Join Ceremonies
With the hot dogs sizzling and the smell
of surf and suntan lotion rolling over the
hills, some 150 Laguna Beach ciUzens
paused Monday in Heisler Park to honor
American war dead.
Picnickers in the bluff park stopped
their noontime preparations ·to join in the
flag salute and listen to the Laguna High
School Band.
gangsters . . . most of those who
sacrifice their lives for America realil.e
it's not in vain -and without that we
wouldn't i>e where we are today," he
said.
Laguna's Foes
Of Macho Picchu
Plan Statement
A formal statement opfl'(Mling the pro-
posed Machu Piocllu development at ToP
of the World will be considered by the
Laguna Beach Pia.Ming Commission
when it meets at 7:30 tonight at city hall.
The planners previously voted to
recommend denial of the specific plan
for the $15 million townOOuse develop-
ment astride a ridge near Thurston
School.
' '
Couples ln swim suits stopped 3t the
l\.temorial Shaft on their way to the beach
to join neat scouts and senior citizens
waiting to place memorial wreaths on
the monument.
Sponsors of the program were the
Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 5868,
commanded by David A.1l.odriquez; and
American Legion Post 222, commanded
by Lesley 0 . Chatham.
0. W. Price was emcee of the p~
gram. Laguna Beach Boy and Girl Scouts
directed by Hayden Hinger and Mrs.
Jason Troth led the pledge of allegiance.
Primary reasoos listed in the negaUve ::
commission action were housing density
and traffic.
More than 50 wreaths were presented
by civic and service organizations.
"Many people in our wars are not sure
\Vhy they're there, but for our sake it's
good that they were," Lt. Gen. Frank G .
'Mw.rin. a retired Marine, said in his
keynote speech.
"We're not a bunch of international
Price of Laguna
Homes Increasing
A check of selling prices of Laguna
Beach residences shows that home own·
ership in the Art Colony is fast becoming
the province of the well-UK:lo.
Donald Ward. president of the Laguna
Beach Board of Realtors, addressing the
Chamber of Commerce Board of Direc-
tors recently, told the board the average
selling price of a Laguna home is now
$54 ,000.
He said to qualify for a loan in the cat-
egory where 31 percent of sales are
made, a $3,000 a month income would
normally be required.
Ward said housing prices are still ris-
ing, even while sales appear to be slow·
ing.
A rifle salute by the firing squad from
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station
preceded the traditional taps closing the
service.
NY Times Tells
KaJmbach's Role
Against Wallace
NEW YORK (AP) -The New York
Times reports Herbert W. Kalmbach of
Newport Beach, President N i x o n ' s
former personal attorney, approved lhe
spending or $200,000 to $400,000 in GOP
funds in an effort to engineer the defeat
of Gov. George Wallace oC Alabama in
1970.
The paper said former White Hoose
leg&J counsel John W. Deao Ill has told
\\'atergate investigators or this develop-
ment.
Two Washington attorneys familiar
The resolution to be considered by the
commission also lists confusion iresented
by differing studies of "experts" oo
hydrology (drainage) •
The 250-unit development is bul1t tmder
a specific plan which requires public
hearings at both the planning mn-
miMion and the clty council. 1
The planning commission recommends
a course of action to the council which
then has the final say.
Women's Unit Names
Officers in Laguna
The first pennanent officers for the
Laguna Beach Chapter of the National
Organization far Women were elected
recently.
Llnda Moore as president wiU be backed
up by Susan McGrievy, vice president;
Linda Gustafson, secretary; and Bar-
bara Perkins, lreasurer. Laguna NOW
has a 24-hour phone senrice et 49t-07S7.
Victim's Widow Held
\Vith election law told the Times that, EL CENTRO (AP) - A woman who
while such contribution v•ould not have identified herself as the widow of Donald
violated any federal laws, a careful "Shorty" Shea, a murder victim of the
check of the Alabama campaigns financ-Charles Manson family, has been ar-
ing laws would be needed. rested for investigation of smuggling Black Paper Bombed Wallace, widely regarded as a potential drugs, customs agent.I say. Magdalene
threat to President Nixon in 1972. won a Velma Shea. ii, of Loo Angeles and two
\YILMINGTON, N.C. ?'ttPIJ -An ex-runoff election for the Democratic men, William C. Jackson and Freddie
plosion demolished the editorial offices gubernatorial nomination in June 1970 Connor Jr., were arrested 12 mlles east
ol the Wilmington Journal, a black-ori-after finishing behind Gov. Albert P. of the border town of Calexico, C.lif., of-Anne and Mark were due to take a
royal train to London tonJght with the
queen and Prince Pblllp from Aberdeen,
Scotland. "government-in-arms" and
military aide.
ented weekly newspaper, Monday night. Brewer in the primary a month earlier. ficers said.
call fur J -=;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
The report tbat Pbllllps would be
joining the royal family on the train also
fueled speculation that an engagement
amotmctment from London was f>OS.'lble
Wednesday.
The entire immediate family of Queen
Elizabeth was at the estate for a reunion.
The queen's sister, Princess Margaret,
and her family were due to leave Aber·
deen by plane later today.
Corpse Identified
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A decapitated
body round last week in a field in
suburban Dominguez has been ldentltied
as that of Robert James Loudon, 29, a
UCLA chemistry department teaching
assistant. His body was found with aome
textbooks scattered nearby, but his
1,1,•allet v•as missing.
Under the plan, the United States was
prepared to immediately recognize the
exiles and provide "whatever might be
necessary to overthrow Castro," 1-lunt
said.
"American ships would be standing
near Cuban waters so help wouldn 't be
unnecessarily delayed.''
Hunt said he wrote the book in 1967 and
intended It as "a private legacy lo my
children."
But due to the \\latergate publicity and
disclosure of his CIA background, HW1l
said he decided publication would ser\'e
to correct "distorted accounts of my in·
volvement in the Bay of Pigs invasion."
In the past, Hunt ha s written sevcr;il
fiction spy stories under differing names.
llunt recalled a luncheon he had in
mid·l960 with Brig. Gen. Robert E.
Cushman, then a military adviser to Vice
President Nixon.
Gas Tax Dike
U.S. Eyes 'Ecorwmy Matter'
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz
said today the Nixon adrnlnlstr1Uon is considering a proposal to
raise guoline taxes as an economy matter, not one to ease the en-
ergy eris!!.
Shultz, speaking at a news conference for economic reporters,
also indicated that the Admlnistratlon has under study other tax-
increase proposals to help cool the rapidly expanding economy.
As !or the gasoline tax, Shultz said It is "one of the many tlllngs
we are reviewing all the Ume."
He said there are pluses and minuses connected with the pro-
posal and stressed that no decision has been made.
The federal tax is lour cenls a gallon .
(
WOULD YOU BELIEVE -
THAT THERE ARE STILL COMPANIES
. . . . .
. .. . . .
. . . . .
• • • • •
IN THI
MAllOl AID
SINCI 1tl7
WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS
THEY SELL PERFORM?
WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON
SERVICE?
WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE
PERFECTLY?
WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY?
YES, "VIRGINIA," THERE IS AN ALDEN'S!
(TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.)
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA M~SA
646-4838
Moe.. 1'1lus. t ,. S:J01 Ftt. t ,. t: s.t. t:JO ,. I
I
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I
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--
• Saddl~haek
EDIT ION
.J.
V.OL 116, NO. 149, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CB'f.S
•
Howard Hunt Tells Hi·s Castro 'Death Plot'
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Watergate
~lrator and former ClA agent E.
Howanl Hunt. wbo helped plot the 111111
Bay or Pip invasion of 6iba, says be
recommended to CIA superiors that
Fidel Castro be assas.!lnated as part of
the scheme. His proposal was never ap-
proved.
Hunt made the disclosure in a
forthcoming book in which he describes
bis role and that of the Kennedy ad-
rnini.stration in tb.e ill-fated invasion by
several hundred Qiban exiles who were
organized and trained by tbe United
States to overthrow Castro's regime.
A copy of the printer's galleys for the
book, to be published in November by
Arlington House, was obtained by UPI.
In it, Hunt chargee that Keooedy tried
to "whitewash the New Frootier" when
the invasion failed by ''heaping guilt on
th> CIA."
Kennedy accepted responsibility for the
Bay of Pigs fiasco It the time but much -
of the blame for its initiative and im·
plementation was placed oo the CIA by
others.
Hurlt said be proposed assassinating
the Q.iban leader because he believed
that "without castro to inspire them the
rebel amiy and militia would collapse in
lea~erless confusion."
Hunt said his proposal was to
"assaesfnate •C&stro before or coincident
with the Invasion." He added that the
role ol carrying ool the killing wa.s "'a
task.for Cuban patriots."
lie said be was told by Ricllanl Bissell,
clllef ol the Central Intelligence Agency's
clande>tine oervices, that bis plan was
being considered by a "special group"
within tbe government.
But Hwit said: "So far as I have been
able to determine no coherent plan was
ever developed wltllln CIA to anasslnate
Castro, though It was the Mart's desire
. IS<e CASTiio, Page Z)
Ex-POW Files Charges
Air Force Colonel Accuses Eight of Misconduct
.
WASIIlNGTON (AP) -An Air Force
colonel who commanded U.S. war
prisoners today f i J e d court·martial
charges against eig ht Army and Marine
enlisted men. He accused them of
"misconduct while in a North Viet·
namese prison camp," the Pentagon an·
nounced.
The action by Col. Theodore W. Guy of
Tucson, Ariz. was the first such move
against any or the 566 military POWs
"·ho have returned home.
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W •
Frtedheim said the names of the eight,
five sold.iel;'s and three Marines, will be
made public after they are formally
Eight Youths
Held in Mesa
Drug Rqid
Costa Mesa detectives drove dirtCUy
across the street from lhelr headquarters
today to arrest one-third of the student
bqdy at Bricker-Ward Prep a r a t·o r Y
School. Inc .. charging eight pu¢ls with
multiple sales of dangerous drugs and
marijuana.
The visit to the private school
operating In an old building at 88 Fair
Drive apparently caught the student.s and
facu1ty bf surprise.
One boy tried to slip away and nee on
loot. police allege, alter his Instructor
had told investigators he was not In class
while the suspect stood there in their
midst.
"'This is him," Detective Don casey
remarked ~ he escorted the youth back
to' a squad car to be delivered to Orange
COunty Juvenile Hall.
~Casey engineered a two-month in-
vestigation of I.he school along with ~
partner, Detective Dick OeFranclsco,
after reports of alleged drug-dealing
surfaced.
: Except for the one escape attempt, the
9:'5 a.m. raid at tb.e campus leased on
Orange County Fairgrounds property oc-
~ without incident.
-Investigators found most of the
!Chool'1 25 enrollees standing ammd
outside waiting for class when the eight
amsts were made.
Charges to be processed through
juvenile court include sale and po!sesslon
of dangerous drugs and marijuana.
1bree of the eight youngsters -rang·
ing In age from 1; to 17 -had marijuana
in ·their possession when taken into
cU9!0dy today, according to Lt. John
Regan.
lie· said the sales which allegedly took
plaff! on the small campus directly ad·
jacent to Costa Mesa High School, and
Davis Intennediate School, which are
)wt across Arlington Drive, involved
srn•U amounts of contraband.
The largest individual dealing resulted
Jn purchase of 56 amphetamine tablets.
Lt. Regan claimed today, adding that at
one point hls men were negotiating for a
f utl pound of hashish.
.He said hashish, a marijuana
derivative, was involved In most of the
• (See DRUG RAID, Page Z)
' W. N. MacGo-wan
• ~tes Wednesday
·Private lunoral oervlcel will be h<ld
~edoetday at Padllc View QiapeJ 1t>r . mr.m Nelaon MacGowlll, a i.u.ion •l<i mldent who dled Salllrday •t the
• ol 83. •
MacOowan ti survived by his
• Haul, of tht lamll)'.Jiome, IW/1
c.atalonla Ctrcle i a DI, Wlll1am, Jr.,
Qlld. lwo grandchildren ••
. A4!8tlve ol lowa1 Mr. MacGowan II·
tended Hanan! U111voral1Y and tht U.S.
Naval Academy. Ho ,.rvec1 as 111 ef1Ci-
n-. w£th the Navy. Mr. MacGowMl liild
llvwd in Orange Olunty for the put 2S yean.
~
I. I
notified.
Ftiedheim did not disclose the specific
charges or any details, but military
sources said Guy accused the eight of
aiding.the enemy, disobedience of orders
and disrespect to superfor officers.
More than a month ago, the 44·year-old
Guy told a reporter that some POWs he
co·mmanded were cowards "who open1y
collaborated with the enemy" and even
caused physical harm to some comrades.
He declined to name them then.
Fried.beim said the formal charges
were filed with the secretaries of the
Army and Navy. They will decide
whether to press courts-martial after
formal grand jury-type investigations are
conducted under the Unilorm Code of
1i1ilitary Justice.
According to Friedheim, other former
war prisoners have sought legal advice
from Pentagon military and civilian
lawyers about passible charges against
other freed prisoners but "there have
been no other charges to date."
He said tb.ose inquiries involved both
enlisted me.1 and officers.
Guy, shot down over Laos In 1968, was
commander of U.S. war prisoners in a
Hanoi compound called "The Plantation"
for about 411.z years.
In an interview, he charged that some
POWs accepted favors from the North
Vietnamese ln the form of extra rations
and greater freedom within the com-
pound walls and that they "turned their
b.::.cks on us."
He claimed that he and other POWs
were turned in to the North Vietnamese
by other American prisoners and th8 t
they were beaten and tortured because ot
his efforts to establish communi cations
among the POWs and to organize
discipline in the camp.
Friedhelm avoided a direct answer to a
question as to whether Pentagon officials
attempted to talk Guy out of filing
charges.
NY Times Tells
CONSIDERED AS TARGET
Cu.H's Fld•I C•stro
U"T ........
SAID 'Kl~L CASTRO'
Conspfr1tor How1rd Hunt
. Coast ·Gas Stations Feel
Sh()rtage in Some Places
By JOHN SCHADE Tony's Mobil ln Santa Ana wlth °' "'-O.l)y ,., ... ltttt notmal houn and. no gu shortage Frisbee Festival
First Flinging Finali-sts Frolic
The feared gasoline. shortage along tile reported. . ~ Kalmbacn's· Role Orange coast turned out to be a mixed A spokesman for Tony'• Sbeltln r .....
bait' over-the ·long . Men1ar'tel ,Day tain Valley dld trtport a delay ~·-.S
' In 35 minutes Thursday, linallsts ror
..... t " . ' '
A complex organizatiOn bas been set up
to bahdld<the.-i..f..nipetillob within
tbe short time •vailable for airing tbe
whlrling ·discs.
• 1 dellvery by the 1obben..-aai'd ,the .UT ..Jl'l.i..:.i..,;, •• ,.~~~tai;..,.~"·' dilV !itPI caiilei >bJ.11\i bi:ti'ua ol •:n' ifJI~ aufiilg&'i!iil'!Or o~,.it';l!'~s gallona ordered at Sbell statlOM IO o&et
u tllllal. • · · llmlted'git supplies tiy other'Innd Ila· the June 7 "Pnl Annual Ulliverslly fiigh
Sdlool lbtemaUonal Invitational Frisbee
Cl!iOll" ·Will be aelecled.
.• Preliminary elimination rounds begin
at 9:30 a.m. and end at 10:05 a.m,
woodworking teacher Dick Hamon said.
"That's the regUlarly schedu1ed activities
perlQd,'' he erplained. 'J'he .ftnals will Oe
held in the same time slot et Uni High
June 7.
"Thousands" of entrants are expected
in the oompuJsory and free-throw events,
be maintains, adding, "We haven't bad
much response from neighboring
schools."
Foreign competition may be even
scarcer.
"We figure it's an 'international' event
because I'm of Swedish extraction and
the of.her el. supremo is Nick Mis3ervile,
auto shop teacher. "He's ItaLian,"
Hanson said.
"We have a director ol friz forensics.
two frii 'go:.fers', and two Inspectors ol
friz aerodynamics," Hanson said. Two
more wear badges giving them no title,
status and best ·of aJ~ "no responsibilities
to do anything ," Hanson added. .
The event is open to any high school
student or teacher.
Hanson looks at the event in a jocular
way this year. "Next year, who knows?
We migb.t have to apologize to the
Laguna Beach Pageant of the Masters
for stealing their crowds."
Then, suggesting the Laguna festival
board might recognize the "trutb" of the
frisbee art and athletic form, Hanson
quipped, "Maybe oomeday they'll do a
statue of one of our competitors firing off
a frisbee."
NEW YORK. (~) -1lJO li"* Yori:
Tim .. report& 11erberl· w. nJritlJoch r4
Newport Beach, l'n!skleol N l X O n .' I
former• personal' attorney, approved the
st><fl(iing or $200,000 to ${00,IJl)O Iii GOP
funds in an effort to engineer the defeat
of Gov. George Wallace of Alabama in
lll?ll.
'Ibe paper said former White House
1ega1 c0un.e1 Jmo w. Dean m bas told
Watergate investigator.! of this develop-
mmt.
Two Washington attorneys familiar
with election law· told the Times that,
while such contribution would not have
violated any federal laws, a careful
cb.eck of the Alabama campaigns financ-
ing laws woold be needed.
Record Crowds Jam Coast
By JOHN ZAl.LER
Of tll• Diii' ~11•1 lt•ff
A hot SUMY Memorial Day produced
some of the largest beach crowds and
worst traffic jams in the history of the
Orange c.oast, officials reported today.
Roads leading into all coastal areas
were snarled -some from as far as five
miles inland -from late morning Mon·
day until late afternoon, and when
motorists arrhted at beach areas, park-
ing spaces were at a premium.
Coastwide beach attendance w a s
reported at nearly 400,000 Monday alone.
Newport Beach with 150,000 people and
Huntington city beaches witb. 40,000
persons both reported the largest single
day crowds in their history Monday.
Newport Beach pollce said their park·
ing officers were writing tickets at the
rate of two per minute all day.
"From the police helicopter you couJd
see that the whole beach area was
literaUy covered with cars -and none of
them were moving," said Newport Beach
traffic officer Gary Lee.
"People were parking Oil parkways, on
the grass, in tbe street," he said. "A lot
of them had been fighting traffic all day,
and when they got here they were not
about to turn back just because there
was no place to park.
"It was the worst I've ever seen it in
nine yearsJ)O the force," Lee said.
In Huntington Beach police reported
similar Sll8l'is:. in the beach area, with
nearly 100 cars towed away for illegal
parking.
"Everybody tb.at came to Huntington
Beach Mooday parked here illegally,"
declared police Lt. Don Jenkin"s this
morning.
Beach conditions, for those that got
that far, were excellent both Sunday and
Monday. Water temperatures ranged up
to 64 degrees and surf was small. Air
temperatures were from 70 to 90 degrees,
with the hottest temperatures recorded
on San Clemente State Beach.
There were few rescues reported, and
only one serious incident involving
Laguna Beacll lifeguard!. OlficlaJs there
said Homer Lewis, SS, of Los Angeles in-
jured his head and neck body surfing
Saturday. .
Pulled rrom the surf by bis wile, Lewis
(See CROWDS, Page ZI
Irvine CoiJ.neil Confused
Which Members Should: Attend What Agency Meetings?
Contusion over which city COl.mcilmen
sho<ild alfend -t meetJ"8s or nearly a
doiea cily and county agencies Is causing
some headaches In Irvine.
Questkiis oru wllO ·1s •Ui>iJooed to at·
tend what ineetinirs camo to light when It
was teemed Irvine was not n;p1 eaeoted
at two rocent key meetings In wtl!ch
declslool-aUectmg the new city were
made.
On May 10 the city selection conunlttee
ol tbe League of Citlel tapped a Garden
Grove man far an -1nll on Ille Atrpcrt,•
Land Use Commisllon. .
On Ajl'll 25 tbe Inter~
Coonllnating Council of Orange Oaanty . (~CC) voted a budget lncreooe wblch
triples Irvine'• dues ln the organization
from $351 lo $1,llll.
Durln( the c!Iy'a Ori! li months, Vice
Mayor Henry Quigley and Councilwoman
Gabrielle Pryor held down most of the ci-
ty delegate posts.
Alter fbeD.lllaY... William Fischbach
announced his intention to more evenly
divide , responstbilltle.s tor these largely
honorary posts, Henry Qutcley an-
nounced bii lack of Interest In seeking
reappGintmeol to such post.I. Henry
QuJ&ley voted with Couocllm1n E. Ray
QuJgrey Jr. anti •Burton to wueat Mayor
Flidlboch anti elevate Jobn Burton to tbe
mll)'<ll"a chair, ln March.
Jn two 11~ve meolJnp the more
than a doreo cilY poola wore divided up
._ tbe eouoctl. Bur1on was named to
the rec. an11 u nioyor, •U1011Jatlca11y
..,.,.. on the Lcque'a city ,.lectloit
committee.
"Fnmkly, I'm nol pillg to go to all
tt-things," Burton said. "I jll3t don't
have Ume. I have lo earn a living. U.nry
and Bill (Fischbach) said they dldn't
want to lake on any of tbeae assignments so that leaveo only three or us to plug tbe
holes," Burton added. ·
Councllwoman Pryor today said she
has been attending .,..tings to wlitcb she
has been £omially wlllled as lrvblo'•
deleg&te or altemale anil some to wblch
she Jiu not been assigned, namely tbe ci-
ty selection committee of the Lo&&ue.
"That one i.s for mayon, you. tmw/•
sbo Mld today, "and I can •t vote far
Irvine unless a written proxy is mallad to
the League."
Mn. Pryor added sbo wa.s aware of the
•vole on the airport oouunlslloo ap-
pointment and tndlcated &he did not !eel
·ln1ne'• ablence or presence would have made any dlffmnce.
Mrs. Pryor allo said ahe ta not the
(See CONFVSION, Pase ZI
aie..... llld standanl statlona llad the uons. . ~ llll!O "\th slaU!lu.s lite Q<orge 'llte lllatloo met the·demand by rallille F!illllpa' <JM\l?Oci in Irvhie. Philliilo, had prices and limiting tbe DUID!ler."t 1allom
i.n . pwn~ gas. at one of Orange per car tor the weekend.
Counly's hl8hest dally rates. He had to Such was not the fate rA Art's Shell 'in
limit each car 'to ooJy '1£ht gallOD.!. A Costa Mesa were enough gas and oonnal
spokesman for the st&tion said he saw (See SHORTAGES, Page 2)
ttlls limit remaining throughout the sum-
mer.
Jtm Tice CJiemin in Ooola Mesa main·
talned a 10-gallon limit over the weekend,
then clooed early to preoerve daily
gallonage.
1be American Oil Station in Costa
Mesa ordehs for foUr staUOOs<b,Ut'has not
received new ·supplies yet. ·
Bob Smith's Chevron in Misslon Viejo
was an exception to the rule. Smith had
plenty ol gas for the holiday weekend.
Pr1or to the weekend, Arco stations
were reix>rtedly nmning short. Some sta-
tiona countered that possibility by shnply
closing for tbe weekend. But Smith's
Aroo in Costa Mesa had Its monthly
quota re-allocated and was able to re-
main open.
Union Oil stations met the demand.
Anderson's Mesa Verde Service had no
limit oo gallonage but cut operating
hours. Tom Sharp Union OJI in Newport
Beach reported their gas supply held" out
but they closed early on Memorial Day
because of lack of hminess .
1be weekend situation was good at
Purse Snatchers
Roh 2 Women
In Laguna Hills
Tu--o women were the victims of Purse
snatOOers In the Laguna Hilla area dur ..
ing the weekend and Orange county
Sheriff's officer• believe the same man
may have been responsible for both
thefts.
liis victim Monday was Mrs. Phyllis A.
Bickel, 43, of 26551 Concion Drive,
Misskln Viejo, who9e purse WU grabbed
as she stood outside-a nursing borne at
Via Estrad• and Paseo De Valencia.
Mrs. Bl~kel told deputies a young man
grabbed her purse conialning $20. ran orr
to 1 neortJy lllatiOll wagon anti drove oil
at blgb apHd.
Mta:. Pearl Allen McClure, 70, of 893 P
Ronda Ave.~ World, waa_.rollbe<! of
an undisclooed"t\nn SwOiillFAI the lell a
resturant at Et 'l:oro !19ad. in. Laguna
Hlij1. Deputies' said the deserlptlon ol the
man wbo snatched h<r purse and the ba~
tered "1taUon wogoo he uaed wu atmoot
klenUcal to that given In the earlier rob-
bery.
Black Paper Bombed
WIUllNGTON, N.C. (UPI) -An ex·
plostoo demolished the editoml o111 ...
of the Wllmlngton Journal , 1 black...n.
..,led weekly neW1P1per, Mooday ni&ht.
Heir of Irvine
Council Member
Wastes No Time
Just 48 minutes after Irvine'• Mr. and.
Mrs. Henry Quigley packed a nlgblh!:tn
a 'bag and Iie'aded for ' llollg MH!Wlal
Hospital in Newport Beach, Hem'>' H.
"Dutch" QuJgley was born. .
Oluncllman Henry Quigley sold' today
the Monday dellvery "definitely wu na4
turat childbirth. There wasn't time 'for
anything but."
"Dutch" weighed in at seven pounds,
four ounces and is 21 .lnches tall. He is
nafned after Jds grandfather, another
Henry Qµigley, or KlillSl!S City, ll!J>,.
whose father similarly tagged b.ls son
"Dutch," the Irvine councilman ex-
plained.
Dutch is Henry and Margie Quigley's
first aurviving son. His birth, just montlu
alter Mayor John Burton's wife Janet
delivered lhcir first son, and former
mayor William Fi.schbach's wire Dinah
delivered their first 90n, raises .specula-
Uon that two or more decades hence,
there may again be Irvine councilmen
.named John Burton, Bill Fischbach and
Henry "Dutch" Quigley.
Orange Coast
Mostly sunny ls the way the
weatherlady sees it for Wednesday,
with cooler days. lligbs in tbe ?Os
are expected al the beaches and
inland areas. Low• Irl the eos.
INSlDE TODAY
ProeJalmi11g "Hooker1 of tht
work(, . ttnite," a San Fnmcf&co.
proaUtute and "" opprl>9'11o ,
boord of bu.,;.-otld 01'111-
ora -w>llh o $5.000 grolit fr°"
a religto"' group -are organ-
imto a pro1titut:ts' gMftd to ~
bat police J1nraumt1at. Sec de·
tails ota Paae 5.
.4 '
f
I
Z ""'LY Pd.01 IS
'Astronaut •
·'Zooms In' ... -,. ... . ':. •.
"':-t ··~-
On the Sun
SPACE CENTER, Houston !AP) -
Slcyl1b utronaut Dr. J.,.ph P. Kerwin
today pointed a battory cl telelCO]>e1 at
the ...,, hoping lo llve ldentllts their
best loot yet 11 bow 1hia aeethlng ll]lbere
~ gues caotroll the solar l)'!ltem.
Pbylldsts elso hope the experiment
wUl help unlock the secret of controlled
thermonuclear fusion, the source of tbe
lllll'• energy. Thl5 mlgbt aid In the
aearch for an unllmlted, polltJtioo.free
power toUrCe m earth.
"It's a beauUful picture," Kerwin
noted u be viewed oo a space atalJoo
televlakm mmitor the aru of the llDl tbt
1ix telnoopes were ex•mlnlng, each 1n a
dilfemit wave length.
While Kmrlo tuned up the ,121.2
millloo amoy cl eight teleacope1, Charles
COond Jr. and Paul J. Weltz wembled
cameru and senson which tbey11 UM
starting Wednesday to sunrey the earth'• ............
1t was the fifth day cl the planned za.
day orbital Dlght. M1aakln commander Conrad today ~
qtated a private: radio convenaUm with
Space Cmter Director Cbrlatopber Kraft,
flight cootroller Nell HutdllJllon and
director cl Olgbt cn:w operaUOlll Donald
_,. __ .... J
owns .. .
...
was llOt brtoth!J>C wbm U!eguanll """ r!wd.~ moutb·l•·moutb reucltatloa elfolU, however, Lowis ...,
• ~ lo llalile coad!U.O tbla morDill&
In ~ -.... UDlt ol South C4lil con.imlllty s.pltal.
LUegumdo related the -· Ing beach erowda to tho mierallY -beach weather &hat hall plagued CouLlll
boaches tbroogh moot of tll!J 11>rtnc.
"People have been golng crazy for a
chance to go to the beach all spring,"
uld Huntill(t4n Beach Ufeguanl Capt.
Doualu D'Amall. "'ilieu they 1et their ftnl good wulher
to coincide with Memorial Day, and you
know there's going to be trouble/' he
said.
"The people were ju.at really ripe for
the boach after the lcwy spring we bad,"
WU the WIY Ufeguard dlapatCher Bruce
Reed of Newport Beach put it.
Tbore were """° reporta al jellyflah
at Newport and H1D1tlngtoo Beach. and
....,.al reports of sting rays In San
Clemente. Tbere were no aeriow1 in·
cidtntl, however.
Although -• 1"111 Dg)IUng waa reported on Loo Aac•ln county beaches,
<>range Coast U!eguards Aid tho large
crowds were well-Mb.lved.
Hwitlngton Beach police reported some
probleml with about 100 surfers who
refuled to )eave the water Monday morn·
Ing when crowds on the beach began
building up. Two arreata: were made, but
offldals &aid there could have been more
if penoonel bad been available.
K. Slayton. ~ Mlalton Cmtrol later releued • marr o1 the .1x-m1nu1e coovma . Indy 500 Race
COond Aid be tbouibt tho temper•ture
lt.Bblllud In the st.atlm In the low IOI and R • d 0 t Afte that tho a.rtronauts should be able to -mne u r
du<t afl esperimeslt.a fully .. cept for a
bicycle Uereiae Uled In medical tetts.
He aald the temperature lllll waa 1 bit
wann for the bicycle ei:erc11e to be run
to full capacity. He also Hid It call!ed
some difflcuJty because iL "ridu" dif-
ferently in weigbUel!lsness than in urth's
gravity.
Conrad expressed displeasure Monday
at a number of extra engineering tasks
the astronaut! were being aeked to do.
He asked that tbeae be held elf a couple
days i.mtil the crew ti:ot back on llCbedule.
The first earth passes will be over the
United States and will be directed mainly
at agricultural areas. The goal of lhe ex·
perimeni lo these areas is to survey
crops throughout the current growing
season, assess ara~ty of land and
evaluate water runoft' potential.
The tell!SCOpel.,se mounted on a large
device that ls extended away from the
«biting station on long metal anns.
The astrooauts Monday completed set·
ting up housekeeping in the laboratory,
which is the slze of a three-bedroom
blrne, and began their first medical ex-
perlmenla.
A makeshift sunshade erected Satur·
day reduced temperatures to near 80
degreeJ, far below the 125 degrees
recc:rded 1ns1de the cabin after a heat
llhleld was ripped away during the launch
of Skylab May ll.
Party's Over • • •
N~t For gotten
E y likes to party It up over the
long emorial Day Weekend, but nobody
Jikes to clean it up afterward.
This was the motive offered today by
police Investigating the burglary of an
Irvine woman's home whlle she was
visiting in Hemet for the holidays.
Donna J. lleU, cl 19591 Sierra Canon
Drive, returned home to find intruders
had staged a big beer bust in her
abeence, leavlng the house Uttered with
empty cans and cigarette butts.
They took $3 from a piggy bank when
they left. but nothing else, according to
police reports.
Corpse Identified
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A decapitated
body found last "'eek in a field ln
suburban Dominguez has been identified
as that of Robert James Loudon, 29, a
UCLA chen1istry department teaching
assi11tant. His body was found with some
textbooks scattered nearby, but his
wallet was missing.
DAILY PILOT
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l11eh, lrvlMl~•lldl9bKll. fllld San C"-!•I
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~I
Four-hour Del.ay
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -The 57th ln·
dlanapoUs ~mile auto race appeared to
be rained ollt for a second straight day
today alter a four hour, 10 minute delay.
It probably would be rescheduled for 7
a.m. PDT Wednesday.
Chief Steward Harlan Fengler got on
the publlc address system to tell the more
than 175,000 peraons at the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway for the race that "we
have a very dangerous situation here.
The track is not safe."
Fengler said he and other race officials
would watch the weather condltioos for
a short while longer, but added: "The
weather reports are very bad for the rest
of the day.
"We're trying to work it out the best
way we can. I'm sure none of these conr
petitora want to nm 250 mUes and have
the race stopped."
He brought car-owner Roger Penske
and driver Gary Bettenhausen to the
microphone to echo his sentiments.
Penske said if the weather didn't
change very aoon he felt the race should
be postponed until Wednesday "for the
sa!ety ol the driven and llj)OCt.ators
alike."
Before Fengler's announcement was
even completed, moet ol the fans were
heading for the e.11ts.
Princess Anne's
Betrotli,al News
Officially Told
LONDON (AP) -Buckingham Palace
announced today the engagement of
Princess Anne to Lt. Mark Phillips, a
commoner.
1be announcement came after months
of denials from both the 22-year-old
prtncess and the dashing 24-year-old
cavalry officer. They had been constant
companions since December.
Palace spokesman itl!listed until a few
hours before the announcement that
tePorts of an impending engagement
were "pure speculation."
The official announcement said: "It is
v.1th ireetest pleasure that the queen and
lhe Duke of Edinburgh announce the
betrothal of their beloved daughter, the
Princess Anne, to Lieutenant itark
Phillips, the queen's Dragoon Guards,
son of ft1r. and ft1rs. Peter Phillips."
Phillips spent the weekend with Anne
and the British royal family at their
Scottish estate of Balmoral.
}Ie \\'as lhe only guest visiting the royal
famil y, and this I ouched off intense
speculation that an engagement might be
announced soon.
Anne and Mark were due to take a
royal train to London tonight 'vith the
queen and Prince Phillp from Aberdeen ,
Scotland.
The report that Phllllps would be
joining the royal family on the train also
fueled speculation that an engagement
announcement from London was possible
\Vednesday.
The entire immediate famll y of Queen
Elizabeth was at !he estate for a reunion.
The queen's sister, Pr1nees.1 Margaret.
and her family were due to leave Aber·
dee.n by plane later today.
Prince Charles, 24-year-old heir to the
throne. Oew out of Aberdeen tode.y to re·
join his naval unit in the Caribbean.
From Page l
SHORTAGES ••
houn were reported.
Te.111100 staUons like Bob's Texaco and
Airport Texaco stations In Newport
Beach both remained clo,,ed over the
weekend to maintain their limited supply
of gas for rel!J.lar week day cuatomeri.
Country Club Gulf In South Laguna Is
normally open 24 hours1 acven day1 a
week. It was closed Sunday and Mondey
and tlally houn have been cut back. A
1pokeeman u.ld their ea• allotment has
been cut in half to figures hued on last
year'1 ltvtl.1.
~~.
0.11'1' Piiot lltff n.te
AU From Me.a.
I 5 Phone Bandit J
Sus~ects Held
vestigators on the case, aaid the five men ;
are be:Jng held in connection with a total
of 15 robberies throughout Southern
Ca!Uornl.a.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of "'9 Daltr P'Pll Slaff
Five Collta Mesa men were taken into
custody 1n a series of arrest.I over
Memorial Day weekend u pollce from
five agencies 1llep they broke the
''telephone bandit'' ring.
In custody today in Costa Me• are:
-Mark Stewart Alcala, 18, ol 525 Vic·
toria St.
-Paa! CbriJttu La.Joie, 18, , of the
same address.
-Todd llrt.aD ~ppolow, 18, o! 18151
Yellowstone Drive.
-Job Patrick Dielttt, 19, who gave no
addrw.
In cll8tody in Huntington Beach ii:
-Jeffrey Dale Wflcb, 19, of the Vic·
toria Street addren in Costa Mesa.
AU the men are charged with armed
robbery and police said Alcala ls also
belng held on charges of intent to injure
with a destructive device.
Detective Sgt. Sam C.Ordeiro of Qisla
Mesa, who headed up the team of in·
HoWup Man
Gets $13,195
In Santa Ana
Known u the telephone bandit in Weat
Orqe County, the five men are believed
by pollce to be responsible for seven rob.
berles and a bombing here Jn the pas!
month.
The robberies, which took plaee in
HuntJngton Beach, Costa Mesa and Foun-.
lain VaUey, were dlsllnplshed .because
the victims never bad any cmtact with
lbe bandit other than by telephone.
CM!eiro noted ironically that Acala
who had gone into hiding, was &58ertedlf
talked into surrendering over tbe
telephone by Detective George Wilson of
Costa Mesa .
During the telephone robberies, which
netted the robbers $2,700, one of the five
would call a franchJae b\J8iness and tell
the manager that a high-powered rifle
was aimed at his head. Sometimes they
would telJ him Uiere was a bomb Inside
the buainess that would be detonated if
the man did not follow iruilructions. 11
Cordeiro said today that the group"s ,
suspected robberies in Tustin, Los
Angeles and San Diego did not always ~ollow t~ telephone style. "Some were
Just straight armed robberies," he said.
The last telepbooe robbery in Hun-
tington Beach involved the Sizzler steak
house at Beach Boulevard and Ellis Avenue.
IF YOU THINK IT WAS TOUGH TO PARK A CAR •••
You Should H•ve Seen the Bikes at Newport's 31st StrHt A Brinks armed guard WU robbed o!
$13,195 in a Santa Ana dl!Count store
Monday afternoon in tbe midst of a boll·
day shopping crowd.
Three days alter that robbery. a pipe
bomb wa.s e.lpOded on the roof of the
restaurant. No one was injured in the ex-
plosion, which police are charging to Alcala.
Irvine ·Councilman Sees The lone gunman who conlrooled the
guard carrying the store's cub receipts
for the day as he ll!ft the offiee area in~
side the K·Mart store, 1400 W. Edinger
Ave., escaped with the' aid of an ac-
complice, police said.
It was the explosion that broua:ht
federal investi1ators into the case ~uae possession of an explosive device
IS a federal ~ffense. It was_ the only time
any violence was used, the detective · ..
believes. '
Success for .Redistricting Officers said when the gt/nman con·
fronted the guard he shouted, "Doo't
move. Don't do a damn thing or I'll kill
you," as he grabbed the guard's revolver
from its holster.
OJrdeiro said be doeinot !mow whether
the FBI will charge Alcala under fedl!ral
law. He said be expects the five men wt.JI
be arraigned Thursday in the Hartor•
Judicial District Court. Orange County presumably is not
among a list of 21 counlies whose
Republican Central Commiltee chairmen
have asked Gov. Reagan to veto an
Assembly redistricting bill.
While the bill adds six new seats in
districts heavily populated w i t h
Republicans, some county central com·
mitlees oppose the plan.
Orange County's GOP central com·
miltee met last week but did not vote to
From Pagel
CONFUSION. • •
alternate to the ICC whlch recently tripl·
ed the city's dues.
Mayor Burton said Mrs. Pryor was the
alternate and at Burton's request Mrs.
Pryor did atteod last week's session.
However, city records indicate Coun-
cilman Ray Quigley is the official
alternate.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Pryor who was of.
lict.al alternate to many of the posts ftlled
by Henry Quigley prior to the council
reorganization, claims "I have a ball at.
tending these meetings."
Mrs. Pryor chairs the Orange County
League of Cities action plan en-
vironmental c o m m i t t e e . Recom·
mendations of that body have drawn
statewide altention and will be among
legislative lobby directions the League
Members vote in October during a con·
ven.tlon in San Francisco.
Meanwhile. Mayor Burton vows he will
"look Into'' the dues increase Irvine has
been assessed for its membership in the
ICC, a county liaison body Burton said he
believes ls "nearly worthless."
Mrs. Pryor differs in her views of the
lCC and said the expense may prove
worthwhile "If people give the organiza·
tloo a chance to get off the growxl."
"U cities don't get together on son1e of
these rer:tooal issues Sacramento will
end up do1ng it for us," she observed.
From Pagel
CASTRO ...
of many exile groups."
Hunt's part in the invasion plan in·
eluded organizing C u b a n exiles in
Florida and coordinating their activities
'vlth the invasion forces being trained by
U.S. Air Force and Army specialists
which included the Army's Special
Forces unit.
lie said plans had called for a Cuban
Exile Executive Committee with !!uni al
their side to enter Cuba after the in·
vasion, declare them se Ives a
"govemment~'1·arms'' and call for
military aide.
UDder the plan, the United States was
prepared to Immediately recognize the
exiles and provide ''whatever might be
necessary to overthrow Castro," Hunt
said.
"American ships would be standing
near Cuban waters so help '""11dn't be
uMectaarily delayed."
Hunt sald he wrote the book in J967 and
intended it as "a private tea:acy to my
chlldren."
But due to the Wntergate publicity nnd
disdooure· of hl1 CIA backgrowx!, Hwil
!aid be decided publlcatl011 would serve
to correct "distorted accounts of my in·
volvement ln the Bay of Pigs Invasion."
In Ole past, Hunt has written several
lieUon spy stories under differing names .
Hunt recalled a luncheon be had In
mld-1960 with Brig. Gen. Robert E .
Cushman, then a military adviser to Vice
Pmtd<nt Nlxoo.
oppose the plan, although the proposed
reapportionment provides no really new
representation for the COW1ly.
Redislricting was necessary following
the 1970 census in order to reflect the
''one man, one vote" principles of the
U.S. Constitution. Orange County in the
decade since 1960 has been the fastest
growing county in the state, and in some
years, the fastest growing county in the
nation .
Yet the county gairu: only chances for
two new seats since two new districts
established in the plan contain portions ol
Orange and two neighboring counties.
lrvine Councilman Henry Quigley,
observer of central committee activities
and former alternate to that body sug.
gested "practicality" determined Orange
County's lack of opposition to the
Assembly plan.
He noted It passed on a 63 to 12 vote,
more than enough votes necessary to
override Gov. Reagan's veto.
Further, were the 54 votes needed to
override a veto somehow not available,
the courts would redistrict the Assembly
and Orange County and Republicans in
general might not fare as well, Quigley
offered.
"It appears to me -and I'm sure to
the county central committee -that the
practicalities are the governor probably
will sign the bill into law," Quigley said
today.
J\.fean"'hile. the Association of
Republican Central Committee Chairmen
last week urged a veto, suggesting the
plan "ignores all consideration of co.'ll·
munity interest."
That association, along with legislative
observers, assume the Senate will "rul>
berstamp" the Assembly's plan to
redistrict the lower house.
After seizing the money bag, the rob-
ber forced the guard to sprawl fac:e down
on the floor in the hardware department.
"Slop him. He's got the money," police
said the guard 11bouted u the bandit ran
through the store.
A store security guard tried to block
the path of the fleeing robber but he was
frightened off when the bandit waved his
.33 caliber revolver at him and shouted:
"Get out of my way, boy. I don't want
to have to kill you."
'.!be robber sped out of the front door
and jumped into a waiting lt.Btton wagon
driven by the accomplice.
Later police !ound the vehicle which
was ideotilled by witnesses who took the
license number as It left the store park·
ing lot.
A witness near the SC6le where the
station wagon was found said she saw
two men, one of them wearin1 a atl
mask hurriedly leave the station wagoo.
and drive off in another car.
Witnesses described the bandit who
coounltted tlie robbery as about Iii: feet
tall, weighing 170 pound! with shoulder
length hair and a lllllhy beard.
Victim's Widow Held
EL CENTRO (AP) -A woman who
identified herself as the widow of Dona1d
"Shorty" Shea, a murder victim of tbe
Charles Manson family, has been ar-
rested for invest11atlon of smuggling
drugs, CU!toms agents aay. Magdalene
Velma Shea, 29, of Loe Angeles and two
men, William C. Jackson and Freddie
Connor Jr., were anesttd 12 miles east
of the border town of Cale.1lco, Calif., of·
flcers said.
The cue was broken, c.onleiro asserted
on a tip from !he Los Angeles Police
Department's Foothill Division, dealing
with one of the robberies the men are
alleged to have committed there.
Based on the information Codeiro and
detectives from Fountaht VaUey HWl-
tington Beach and Buena Park Md FBI
agen~ conducted a five.day, 24-00ur
surveillance of the Victoria Street aperl-
ment.
La.Joie, Chappelow, Welch and Diener
aJ1 were picked up at separate ttme.s 83
they were on the way to the apartment.
After the initial arre.ts, Cordeiro said,
Alcala went Into hiding. But Monday
morning, be called WilllOn, who talked
him into surrendering at the police st.a· tion.
From Pagel
DRUG RAID • • •
purchases but accused some IUSpecll of
selling LSD and other hallucinogenic drugs.
Police said no charges are anticipated
against operators of B r I c k e r -W a r d
l'r<poratory School, or tho faculty, which
includes a man and a woman as
teachers.
Investigators declined to 1ay what Jed
them to investigate the private school
which operates a flexlble currlcuJum.
A raid on the school was originally
planned for Friday but the strategy was
abandoned at the last minute.
lnvestiti:alora said most of the ttudents
ditched clah, prl!sumably to go on aenJor
ditch day at Costa Mesa and E1tancia
high schools.
WOULD YOU BELIEVE -
THAT THERE ARE STILL COMPANIES
• • • • •
. . . . .
• • • • •
WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS
THEY SELL PERFORM 1
WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON
SERVICE 1
WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE
PERFECTLY 1
WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY 1
YES, "VIRGINIA ," THERE IS AN ALDEN 'S!
I TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.)
/
(.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Pla~entla Ave.
COUA MISA
64Mt38
M-. • TIMn. t le l:JO: Flt. t le t: s.t. 9:30 le 5
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· . .. -\IE>L 66, NO. 149, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
' .
Memorial
..
Day
• I .• By JOHN ZALLER
Of .. Deity ...... '''"
A hot llWllly MemorW Day produced
IOlne ol. the largest beach crowds and •st traffic jams in the history of the
Olrulge Coast, olficials reported today.
·~ leading into all coastal ar:eas
Were snarled -some from as far as five
rftlles inland -from late morning Mon·
dity until late afternoon, and when
, ~rists arrived at beach areas, park· a spaces were at a premium.
Coastwide beach attendance w a s
reported at nearly 400,000 Monday alone.
Newport Beach with 150,000 people and
Huntington city beaches with 40,000
persons both reported the largest single
day crowds in their history Monday.
Newport Beach poll~ said their park-
ing olCicers were writing tlekets at the
rate of two per minute all day.
"From the police helicopter you could
see that the whole beach area was
literally covered with cars -and none of
UPI T....,_..
~
~-.
LT. MARK PHILLIPS, PRINCESS ANNE ENGAGED
Couple Revul They're More Than Just 'Good FriendJ' > •• '} .,.
f rincess Anne Gets Okay·
To Manj.li. Aiillips
DON (UPI) -Ten weeks after
Isled they were just good friead.s,
P Anne. 22, changed her mind and
M!<ed her mother, Queen Eltzabeth, for
i¥.}missioo to marry Lt. Mark Phillips, a
~Year-old, $100-a-week career soldier. ""~The queen gave the couple her bJesstng
.1Q11 amounced the. engagement tonight,
lfiis bringing Into the royal family a man 'ffbose mother does moot of her own
bnuoekeeplng and whoso father is only
"f' :ij, Sailors H el.d
~·
_{n Beach After
Thefts of Cars • : ..;Four Long Beach sailon are in Hun-~ Beach jail today after they
·a'ftegedly hot wired four Lincoln C....
.tinemals in a Beach Boulevard car lot
:4n<1 took them joy riding on the San "Die&• Froeway.
Three or the four cars reportedly weft
'lrl'OCked befu<e police msnaged to catch 'f!>r alleged thlev .. In separate chases
;~ the streets ol 1-Beadl at :~ upwards ol 110 ml!" an hour. ,
.-:.\ flfth BU.SpeCt abandoned bis " car at
.lhe Long Beach Naval Station, where the
·idler four men are stationed, and eluded
i!eptute on foot.
comfortably off as a director of a pork
s11Usage and ice cream finn.
'The anoouncement in the court circular
said:
"It is with the greatest pleasure that
¢e Queen and the Duke or Edinburgh an-
nounce the betrothal of their beloved
daughter, the Princess AMe, to Lt. Mark
Phillil"o the Queen's Dragoon Guanls,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Phillips."
The Buckingham Palace p r e s s
secretary, RonaJd Allison, said the wed-
ding would be in the early autumn -
probably November -either in
Westminster Abbey or St. George's
Chapel on the grounds of Windsor Castle.
"The queen and Prince Philip, who
have both known Lieutenant Phillips for
some time, are deUghted with the
1 engagement," Allison said, adding that
Mark's parents would lunch with the
royal family at Buckingham Palace
Wednesday.
-'lbe'-news was heralded by an U11U1Ual
gathering of royalty at one of the royal
faqtqy ®es in Scotland, Bahnoral.
Prince Charles, heir to the throne, flew
in · from his ship in the Caribbean and
Qleen Mother Elizabeth, P r i n c e s s
Margaret and the Earl or Snowdon also
were present.
•Phillips "as the only commoner
. preSent: And when it became known be
was there at the express invitation oY
Princess Aruie, it became obvious that
she and the lieutenant were not sticking
to the "jUst gOOd friends" story they
gave journalists in March.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNl.t. TUESDAY, MAY 29, 19n
Memorable-Crowds,
them were moving," said Newport Beach
traffic officer Gary Lee.
"People were parking on parkways, on
the grass, in the street," he said. "A lot
of1them had been fighting traffic all day,
and when they got here they were not
about to turn back just because there
was no place to park.
"It was the worst I've ever seen it in
nine years on the force ." Lee said.
Jn HWltington Beach police reported
similar snarls in the beach area, with
nearly 100 cars towed awa,y for illegal
parklna.
"Everybody that came lo Huntington
Beach Monday parked here illegally/'
declared police Lt. Don Jenkins this
monilng.
Beach conditions. tor those that got
that far, were excellent both Sunday and
Monday. \\'aler temperatures ranged up
to 68 degrees and surf was small. Air
temperatures were from 70 to 90 degrees,
with the hottest temperatures recorded
on San Clemente State Beach.
There were few rescues reported, ~
only ooe serious incident involving
Lquna Beach lifeguards. Officials there
said Homer Lewis, 55, of Lo.! Angeles in-
juttd his bead and neek body surfing
Saturday.
Pulled from the surf by hi.s wile, Lewis
was not breathing when lifeguards ar-
rived. FoJlowing mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation efforts, however, Lewis wns
reported ln stable condition this momlng
N.Y.
TEN CENTS
Traffic
in the lntensi\'e c.re unit of South Coast
Community Hospital.
Uleguards relaled the record-breat·
ing beach crowds to lhe aenenllY poor
beach weather that has plagued CoutaJ
beaches through moo:t of this spring.
"People have been going crazy for a
chance to go to the beach all spring,"
said HWltlngton Beach lifeguard CApt.
Douglas D' Aro.all.
"Then they get their first good weather
(See CROWDS, Pare I)
"
Five Mesans Arrested
Coast Police Nab Suspected Telepl1one Bandits
Dy JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of the D<llllY Pli.t Steff
Five Costa Mesa men were taken into
custody in a series of arrests over
Memorial Day weekend as police from
fi ve agencies allege they broke the
"telephone bandit" ring.
In custody today in Costa Mesa are:
-Mark Stewart Alcala, 18, of 525 Vic·
toria St.
-Paul Cbri1lian LaJoie, 18, of the
same address.
-Todd Brian Chappelow, 18, of 18151
Yello\vstone Drive.
-John Patrick Diener, 19, who gave no
address.
ln custody in Huntington Beach is:
-Jeffrey Dale Welcl:i, 19, of the Vic-
toria Street address in Costa Mesa.
All the men are charged wilh armed
robbery and police said Alcala is also
being held on charges or intent to injure
with a-destructf8.--4lflee.
DetecUve Sgt. l1?m Cordeiro ol Cost>
Mesa, ?t11)>' beadai up the team of in· vest'~ bti-tbe case; aa1d the five men
are beii:Jg held in COMectloo with a total
or 15 robberi.., throughout Southern
California.
Known as the telephone bandit in West
Orange County, the five men are believed
by police to be respo.psible for seven rob-
beries and a bombing here in the past
month.
The robberies, which took place in
Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa and Foun-
tain Valley, were distinguished because
the victims never had any contact with
the bandit other than by telephone .
Cordeiro noted ironically that Acala,
who had gone into hiding, was assertedly
talked into surrendering · over the
telephone by Detective George Wilson of
Costa Mesa.
During the telephone robberiea, which
netted the robbers $2,700, one of the five
would call a franchise business and tell
the manager that a high-powered riOe
was aimed at bis bead. Sometimes they
would tell him there was a bomb inside
Main Street
Closi11g Due
Main Street in Huntington Beach
will be partially closed for two
weeks beginning today between
Huntington and Holly Streets due
to construction.
At the same time, Gothard Street
will be completely closed to traffic
between Slater and ·warner Ave-
nues. city officials said.
Traffic on Main will be routed
on one side of lhe street during the
t~·o-week period.
the business that would be detonated if
the' man did not follow instructions.
Cordeiro said today that the group's
suspeeted robberies in Tustin, Los
Angeles and San Diego did not always
follow the telephone style. "Some were
just straight anned robberies," he said.
The last telephone robbery in Hun·
tington Beach involved the Sizzler steak
house at Beach Boulevard and Ellis
Avenue.
Three days after that robbery, a pipe
bomb was expoded on the roof of the
restaurant. No one Was injured in the ex·
plosion, which police are charging to
Alcala .
It was the explosion that brought
federal Jnvestlgators into the case
Gas Tax Hike
U.S. Eyes 'Economy Matter'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz
said today the Nixon administration is considering a proposal to
raise gasoline taxes as an economy matter, not one to ease the en-
er2v · · ~~-"'~ ,.;, v . "'\"" · .......,. r I: )Dlt!l"ll :~·economic
also indict that Adlninistration )IU. under lludy .o er ·tn-
inerea.se propo1als to help cool the rapldlf.upandlng ecobGllJ.I', As for the gasoline ~ Shults all! It "one of the many things
we are revieWing all the ttMti."
He said there are pluses and minuses connected with the pro-
pOsal and stressed that no decision has been made.
The federal tax is four cents a gallon.
McWhinney See·n ·Victim
Of Plot to Get Battin
By TOM DARLEY
Of flle Deltt ,Jltl Shlff
Westminster City Councilman Derek
McWhinney's attorney today told an
Orange County Superior Court jury that
his client is the innocent victim of a
"determined move by certain political
figures" to discredit coi.mty supervisor
Robert Ballin.
Loog Beach attorney Joseph Ball told
the jury in his opening statement this
morning that McWhinney never at any
time told strawberry grower George
Murai that the $5,000 allegedly demanded
from the Mile Square Park tanner was
destined for Battin's campaign fund.
McWhinney, 40, and Westminster Plan-
ning Commissioner Tad Fujita, 34, were
indicted on grand theft, bribery and con-
spiracy charges after the grand jury
heard allegati<m that Muari was
pressured into perting with a total of
$10,000 in a "pay up or Jose your lease"
plan.
But Ball today told the jury he will
prove that McWhinney's objective in a~
proaching Murai was to obtain the Mile
Square Park lease for a group of
bu!iness associates who expected k>
mate substantial protita from the Foun-
tain Valley acreage.
Ball said it waa non.sense lo suggest
that McWbinney used Battin'• name u a
lever to extract payment from Mural
since the former Weatmlnster mayor was
an active supporter of attorney William
Wenke, Battln's opponent In tlle First
SUpen-isorlal District contest then under
way.
He reminded the jury that Murai had
been reluctant to testify before anyooe in
the weeks immediately r 0 11 0 " i n g
McWblnney's first conversaUoo with him
last June 20.
Ball claimed that Murai "had his
memory refreshed" and became much
more ready to ccioperate with the district
attorney's office after Richard Ruiz,
Supenrisor David Baker's executive
assistant, called the fanner in late June.
"Rul% told Murai that II lie didn't
cooperate in the investigation that in-
cluded Batlin's name be would never get
his lease from the county supervtaon,"
Ball told the jury.
because possession of an es:plosive df:vtce
ii a ·ledoral olfeme. It was the ool1 time
any violence was med, the detective
bellevea.
Cordeiro said !JO doeo not know Wllolber
the FBI will charge Alcala under federal
law. He aald he expects the five men wtll
be arraigned tlnitaday In tile Harl>or •·
Judicial District ColD't.
Misconduct
Charges
Face POWs
WASHINGTON ·(AP) -An Ai< 'iorce
colonol who ........,de<f. u.ir. .....
isi-o. lodv Ille d . -1v;::
~ .aplnsl •11!!1. f.m>1 11(111
enllalod men.' Be · occ-!Mm fll
"-uct Wblle In a Narlb Viet·
namese prllOll camp," the Pent•ison an-
nounce<I.
The action by Col. Theodore W. Guy or
Tucson, Ariz. was the firat iuch ~e
against any of tile 586 military POW•
who have returned home.
Pentagon 1potuman Jerry W •
Friedhelm said lbe names of tbo elcbt,
rive soldiers and three Marines, will be
made publlc after they are formally
notHied.
Frtedbeim did not dlselose the specific
cbarges or any details, but milllary
sources said Guy acoused tile tl&ht ol ,
aiding the enemy, disobedience ol onlerl
and disrespect to auperlor officer1.
More than a month ago, the 44-year-old
Guy told a reporter that-some POW1·be:
comm.anded were cowards uwbo openly
collaborated wllh the enemy" and evm
caused physical harm to aome comrades.
He declined to name them then.
Frledheim saJd the formal charge&
were filed with the secretaries of the
Army aad Navy. They will decide
\Vhetber to press courts-martial after
formal grand jury-type JnvesUgaUona are
conducted under the Unifonn Q>cte of
Military Justice.
Ae<ordlng lo Frledhelm, other fonner
war priaooera have sought legal advice
from Pentagon military and civilian
lawyers about posaJble charges against
other freed prisoners but "there have
been DO other charges to date."
He said those inquiries involved both
enllii:ted me., and olficen.
Guy, shot down over Laos in lHI, was
comma.oder of U.S. war prisoners in a
Henol compound called ''The Plantation"
for.about 41\ years. I
.--~--~~~~~-.j
Oraage Coat
!~'!be incident began at 4: a.m. Monday
Wfter1 a .security guard working near
GllSlafson Llnooln·M~, 16800 Beach lfOWevard, saw five men pull up in a car bi!ilixl Its lilowroom. Studies Solar Secrets
And the veteran lawyer made It clear
that defen11e witnesses' testimony will in-
clude the aHertlon that relations
be(ween Battin and Baker were strained
at the time the Mlle Square Park lease
came up for review. ;~· unldenlilied aecurity guard alemd
that the men had e11tered the lot,
.. ired four Lincolns, and driven off. f, llce "{rived too late to apprehend fi\O suopects, but minutes later the
California l!lghway Patrol spotled a four·
~caravan of Lincolns on the San Diego
Astronaut ·Peers
>Eraway. Tiley reportedly were travellnc SPACE CENTER, Houslon (AP) -~~---' . 1'}ien offioen started after the fonr Skylab astr<oaul Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin
.;.io., U..y apllt up, leading PolkeJ>O lallr loclay Polnled a balt<ry o1 telescopes at
· cbues tbrouih tbe streets or lbe ""'· )loping to give acienlilli their
Beodl. best look ')'tt at bow lllls ,..thing sphere
Ice estimated the four pursuili of gasea controls the eolar system. ~Ired men tllan !11.milel •I "'""'"'of ·I'~ a1ao hope the elJ>Criment !ban 110 mpl!. ' wllJ ~ the Ileen!! of controlled
It WU over, three ol U.CM"S hid tbtllDOllDClelif....lustOD, the IOurce ol tbe
dam aced, ooe abendonocl lnil llllr ...,., «lo'11-'Ibis might aid m,. the
were In custOdJ for auto lbelt and awd> (or an unllmlted, PollUlioi>lree
driving. po10!t oource OD earth. I
ed 1n Huntington Beach Clty Jail ••tt'a 1 beautiful picture," Kerwin
~are <:a.rlous Dee cartor, )J; VOD oot..d.\as be view.od on a space station
'li!lllbtt White, 21, and Joltnnl& Mlltaa', Jr., tclemlori monitor the area of ~lliiii the • J*.·'A 17·yeaM>ld male ls alao Ill,~ ,'1X teles<opes were examining, each In a
"bl tange County Juvtnllt> Hall ,\U are dlflerent wave length. •10 s stationed at the l.<Jl1C" -, While Kerwin tuned up the 1121.2
• N• al St.tlon. t million krray o/. eight telescopes, Charle<
'""1!ce Id Ibey are looklag for a 61th C.Orad Jr. and Paul J . Welil auembled .olw In ooanectlon with tbe case. • camoru and ,. .... ,. which they'll use
•• " .
starting Wednesday to survey the earth's
rcsourteS.
lt was the fifth day of the pla.Med 28-
day orbital flight.
Mission commander Conrad today re-
quested a private radio conversation with
Space C..ter Di-.r Christopher Knit,
night cootroller Nell Hutd\lnaon and
direetatd fliabt ...... _.tlont ll\lnald
K. SlaytCG.
lditaiOD Cmlrol W.r relaased a aam-
maty ol tile alx•mlnillt ""'1Venatlon. Coon<\ aald he ~ tlie temperatu~ ~tablllf<d la U.~ In tile low 80s and
lhal lbeOifiliiailti should tie able to con'\ <tu<t all erperl-= f\Jlly e1cept for a i
bleycl• exuciae .·ID ,modfoaHeats. '
He said the~ iWI wal a bit
wann for the bicyde e'Urdte to be run,
to full capadty, He also said It caUMd
some dilliC\llly because It "ridts'! dU·
at Sun
ferently in weightlessness than in earth's
gravity.
Conrad expressed displealUl'e Monday
at a number of extra engineering tasks
the astronauts were belng asked to do.
He asked that theae be held dl. a couple
days until the ettw got back on scbedule.
The first earth ~ will be over the
un11e<1 suites and win 1>e dincted mainly
at agricultural 1rtaa, The gaal of tile ex•
periment In these areas Is to aurvey
crops throughout the Clln'elll ll'OWllll
season, aMCIS arability of laiid .na
evaluate water nmoU potential.
'M1e telescopes are mounted Gf\ a 1arte.
device that la extended" ·awiy from t6e
orbiting station on long metal anm.
Tho astronauli Monday completed set.-
UM up hou5ekeeplng In lbe labqr11D1y, w'bJdiis tile Si,. <i I . __,..,.,
llilme, and began tb<lr flnll medical ex·
pcrlment>. ,
Proaecutor Michael C.piz.21 told the jury
he will prove that McWhlnney and Fujita
simply intended to make money out of
(Seo MeWIDNNEY. Pare I)
Valley Man Dies
At Pool Party
An autopsy was scheduled todl1 OD tile
body ol 1 F0111taln Valley man wllo died
Monday durinl:: a MomOrlal Day -pool
party at hi• home. '
'l1lonlas Mcintooh. !4, ol JVllO .5*ll SI-
--St., was found dead a)Cll!illdl·hl•· pool about l:ts p.m. Monday, pi>ll .. said.
Ftremen al.tempted to revive the.-man,
bql lie was ~®ad 11!1.F':IVal ~I
l!'olaltaln Valley c..ninunJW Hoopttal.
A ~an for Ibo ~ County
Coroner'• Office lald the cawle of death
~...l'.° blown unlll, the·~ is
~ arrmg<rnenlo ate ')>ODdllll al
Peelt's Family Mor1uary In W-r.
Weather
M .. tly sunny Is the way the
weatherlady Meil'' for Wednelday, with ... 1er claya. llJibs in tile 70s
are e.1pected at the beacbH and
inland areas. Lows iD the 60s.
INSIDE TODAY
Proelalmjn\'; "Hool«n •I lh<
world, unite, a San Fro1ici.lco
prosti,vte and an awrooing
board of buslnt"""11 and auU..
or1 -wlth a '5,000 gnml from
a religioui grokp -"'' orocn--iring a _pro1tlt:Mtt•' aMild-Co com-
bal . poUCt -~:,Se<' iU· tair.·an Page 5) 'Q ' ·, • If
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I J OAILY PILOT
·I 00 Surfers
I
Ignore Plea
•
To Get Out
l!Wllington Beach City lifeguards oom-
plalned this morning that about 100
surfers stayed in the water up to two
hours Monday after they were ordered to
make way ror swim~ra and wadera.
Captain Douglas D' Atllall sal4 llwe
were two arrests of surfers who refused
to obey IUegilard orders to brln& thftr
boards up on the ~·and "there could
have been a lot more but we just didn't
have the Po~ power to handle It."
D'Amall 1tressed that the problem was
caused by only a "small fraction" of the
estimal<d 2,000 youlha wllo aurled on
Huntington city beaches on Memorial
Day.
"Tbere was a record-breaking crowd
on the beach and we had a Jot of things
more imPortant to do than try to get
surfers out of the water," D'Arnall said.
"This small fraction of surfers who
reftue to do what we ask is getting a bad
name for the vast majority who are
cooperative," he l&id.
D' Arnall said problema began ohoot
10,30 a.m. when the beach began !Ullng
up with swimmers and waders. The
surfers were ordered from the water,
and D' Arnall said that most surfers pad·
dled in on the first wave after the re-
quest was made.
"But the others were very llf1..
oooperaUve," he said. "We had to get our
rescue boat out there along with the l:':i, and they alill ignored us !or a loog
D' Arnall said !hat "'" alter the surfers were cleared out, "some of them
kept running back Jn Ille waler whenever
we didn't seem to be watching."
The two persons amsted had r~
tered the water repeatedly, D'Amall
said·. He said both were juveniles who IJv.
ed in the area.
"We're not against surfing at all,"
D'Ama.11 said. "But when the beach gets
crowded, we just can't have surfboards
out ·there whizzing past swlmmers and
waders in the swf."
' From Page 1
CROWDS ...
to coincide with Memorial Day. and you
know there's going to be trouble," he
&aid.
"The people were just really ripe for
the beach alter the IOlll)' spring we bad,"
was the way lifeguard dispatcher Bruce
Reed of Newport Beach put it.
There were some reports ol jellyfish
at Newport and Huntington Beach, and
several reports of sting rays in San
Clemente. There were no serious in·
cidenta, however.
Although some gang fighting was
reported on Los Angeles county beaches,
Orange Coast lifeguards said the large
crowds were well-behaved.
Huntington Beach pollee reported SC1me
problems with about 100 surfers who
refused to leave the water Monday morn-
ing when crowds on the beach began
building up. Two arrests were made, but
officials said there could have been more
i( personnel had been available.
16 Deaf Students
Will Stage Play
Sixteen deaf studen ts at Golden West
College in Huntington Beach will stage
the comedy play "Arsenic and Old Lace"
Wednesday lhrough Friday.
The group, members of the deaf drama
club Silent Rustlers, "'ill perform in sign
language, using interpreters to help the
hearing audlence follow the action.
The play will be staged at 8 o'clock
eac.h evening in the Actor's Playbox.
nckets are on sale for $1.
Cast as the old maid aunts are
Mavourneen Sirling and Kath I e en
Potestig, both or Huntington Beach.
I
OIAN•I COAST NI
DAILY PILOT
Tl'I• Or•11111 Coe1t OAILV PILOT w!1n whl(n
Is ~1.,..,.ine N•-Prtu. 11 l'Ubll~ bY
ltlto Ortl'ql CO.II Publl1h lng C-ny, """'"
rt!t e<ll!lon1 1r1 l'Ubllsn.ct, Mondty ft>rowh
FfidoV, !or Conti Mt•t, Ntwi>Orl lleldl,
Hunll"41!(K! lltot h/F°""Tll" V1lley, lltUM
PoNtl'I, 1r.1,,./SH4l11Nck 1nd Sin c"'"'"1•/
i.e.., J ... n C11>!1!r1no. A 1il>gl• "9iOMI
""'Hon 11 1>Vbll1~tid S.lurcl91' 1nd Sunt11v1.
TM Pl'il'KC<l>ll l>Ub!l~llfl!Q pl1nl I• t i )lO Wfff
ll1y Sir"'• (Ollll Me14, c.1uer"11, '2•2'.
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D•UY Pllet S!tff Jlflof*
Wears Crown
Marion S~mmons, 17, a Marina High School coed, reigns today as
1973's Miss Huntington Beach. She was selected from a J'ield of 12
candidates Saturday during the annual pageant sponsored by the
\Vomen's Division of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce.
High Court Rules Stations
Need Not Accept All Ads
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The U.S.
Supreme Court ruled today that neither
federal law nor the Constitution's
guarantee or ~ee speech requires broad·
casters to accept paid advertising on any
public issue, including wa r and politics.
Chief Justice \Varreri E. Burger spoke
for the court~· test cases initiated by the
Democratic N ional Committee and an
antiwar group known as Business Ex-
ecutives' Move or Vietnam Peace.
The U.S. Court of Appeals here
directed the Federal Communications
Comm:ssion to set up "regulatory
guidelines" on ho\v to deal with editorial
advertisements on such subjects as \var
and politics.
When the Supreme Court got the case,
it froze the situation so that stations
could continue their traditional practice
of not accepting such advertisements. To-
day, it reversed the lower court.
The vote to reverse was 7 to 2, with
Justices WUliam J. Brennan Jr. and
Thurgood Marshall dissenting.
Burger said "balancing the various
First Amendment interests involved in
the broadcast media and determining
what best serves the public's right to be
informed is a task of a great delicacy
and difficulty."
He noted that Congress had con·
sistently refused to make broadcasters
"common carriers" to which anyone has
access. Instead. it gave regulatory
authority to the FCC. \\'hich evolved the
Fairness Doctrine in 1949.
This principle requires broadcnsters to
provide time for opposing viey,•s when a
controversial subject has been aired. The
doctrine \\·as upheld by the Supreme
Court June 9. 1969. in a ca se involving
Red Lion Pa . Broadcasting Co. cas e.
If everyone had a right of access to ad·
vertislng ti1ne, Burger said , there y,·ould
be subslantial risk that the system would
be monopolized by those best able to fla\'.
1'hus. the fairness doctrine itself would
be undermined and the public ae-
lntntder Rapes
Woman Visiting
111 Huntingto11
A Garden Grove woman who was
staying with friends in Huntington Beach
was raped early Monday morning by a
man who broke into the home.
The woman told officers that her
trlends had left to go fishing at about 5
a.m., leaving her sleeping alone In the
Geneva Avenue home.
She said she wa·s awakened by an in•
trudor who put hls hand over her face
and told her to keep quiet . 1be rapist put
a pillow over her face before eexually
assaulting her, tbe victim· told police.
When her assallant left, the woman
said he told her not to call police because
he was hJt.ch.hlklng to Mexico and would
be out or the country.
countabili ty of the broadcaster diluted.
Further, he said, the commission would
inevitably be involved in a case-by-case
detennination of who should be heard
a'nd when, so that government would
have more say in broadcasting opera·
lions.
Burger said that the FCC, in rejecting
the proposal of business group and the
Democratic committee, could properly
take into accoun( the fact that listeners
and viewers are a kind or "captive au-
dience."
In the public interest, he said, a
substantial degree of journalistic discre-
tion must remain with the stations.
Burger suggested that Congress, the
commission or the broadcasters
themselves might now "devise some kind
of limited right of access that is both
practicable and desirable."
Second Hea1ing
On Huntington
Budget Readied
The second half of a public hearing on
Huntington Beach 's proposed $ 3 0 . 5
million city budget was to continue today
in city council chamben.
'T'he hearing began last \Vednesdoy,
lasted three hours. and \Vas adjourned
until 5 p.m. today by r...tayor Jerry
Matney.
Cowtcilmen have asked city depart·
ment heeds to justify each personnel in·
crease indicated in the budget for 1973·74.
The budget sho1vs an increase of 136 peo.
pie. thou8:h 55 o( them arc already work·
ing on cit y jobs \vith their salaries paid
by the federal government under the
Pll!Jlic Ernployinent Progran1 (PEP).
Tod<1y's hearing was to include
cli~cussions on whal to do \\•ith the city's
Jrdcr;i l re venue sharing money.
Another topic or di scussion i s
Roy,•land·s six·ye ar budget projection
1vhlch sho,1·s the city running into a
deficit of $18.8 million.
Last Wednesday's hearing drew less
than a dozen residents, a sharp contrast
to past city budget hearing s.
Architect Display
To Open for I Week
A dl splay of work by Golden West
arthltectural technology students will ht!
shown May 30 through June 4 ln the llun-
llngton Ceoter Mall in liuntlngton Beach.
The exhibit, located at the east end of
the mall, will include working drawings
d apartment and commercial structures,
exterior and interior home renderings,
studies of an nrt gRllery and convention
complex, and construction n1odels.
\
Police Raid School
Mesa Det.ectives .Hold: 8 on Drug Charges .~
Calta Mf!K deCectlVll drove directly '1\b is him," DetectJfe Don Casey arrata were' made. ~
....,.. the -1 ll'am tltelr headquarters remorked '" he escorled the youth back Charges to he pl'OCWed through ':
today to arrest one-third ol the student to a squad ca~ to be delivered to Orange ju\'enile court include sale and possessi n : body at Brlcker-Ward Preparatory County Juvenl)e Hall. . 0
School, Inc., charging eight pupils with Casey engineered a two-month Jn-of danien:w drugs and mariJua111. ••
multiple sales of danceious drugs and vestigatioo of the school aloog with bis 'l1lree of the eight youngsters -rang·
marijuana. partner, Detective Dick Defrancisco, ing 1n age rrom 12 to 17 -had marijuana
The visit to the private school after reJ)Orts of alleged drug-dealing in their jXISsession when taken into ~·
operating in an old building at 88 Fair surfaced. custody today, according to Lt. John
Drive apparently caught the students and Except for the one escape attempt, the Regan. '
faculty by surpriae. B:4S a.m. raid at the campus leased on He said the SBlts which aU~Jedlt took
One boy tried to slip away and flee on Orange County Fairgrounds property oc-place OQ the small campus directly ad-. ,
foot, Police allege, after bis instructor curred without incident. jacent to Costa Meaa High School, and -;
had told investigators he was not in class Investlgators found most ol. the Davis Intermediate School. which are.;:
\Vhile the suspect stood there in their school's 25 enrollees standing around just across Arlingtoo Drive, involved :'
midst. outside waiting for class wben the eight small amounts of contraband.
Assembly Redistricting
County GOP Evidently
Not Reagan Plan Foe
Orange Coufity presumably is not
among a list of 21 counties whose
Republican Central Committee chairmen
have asked Gov. Reagan to veto an
Warrior Scores
Second Straight
Channel Victory
By AIMON LOCKABEY
ot 1111 .,_Ill' l'tllt Slaff
Al Cassel's SO-foot sloop Warrior from
Bahia Corinthian Yapht Club woo its s~
ond consecutive victocy in the Pacific
Ocean Racing Conference in wiMlng the
wind-lashed, 246-mile Channel Islands
Race Sunday.
Warrior was the third boat to fini.!lh
behind Mark Johnson's Windward
Passage, New York Yacht Club, and Bob
Grant's 61-foot sloop Roboo, Newport
~!arbor Yacht Club.
The race was marred when Fred
MacDonald, NllYC skipper of the Colum-
bia-52 Tribute, suffered a heart attack.
His condition today W83 reported u
"stable".
MacDonald was removed from ' the
yacht by the Coast Guard and taken to
Hoag Memorial Hospital.. Tribute re-
mained in the race.
Strong winds with 60-knot gusts and
I umultuous seas buffeted t.he fleet on
Saturday, forcing nearly half of the
yachts to abandon the race and seek
refuge.
The race started Friday at 3 p.m. from
Loo Angeles Harbor and took the fleet
around the Channel Jalands with the
finish near the west end Or Catalina
Island.
The winds started building Friday
n;ght and by micklay Saturday it was
blowing 50 koots of! San Nlcolaa Island
and Ricilardson Rock, the weatbermolt
points of the course.
There were no reports of dismastings
or serious damage to the yachts.
Windward Passage finished the race at
11:14 a.m. Sunday for an elapsed time of
44 hours and lf minutes.
OVERALL -(!) Warrioc: (2) Robon;
13) Blackbird, Allen Puckett, CYC: (4)
Drumbeat, Don Ayres Jr,. NllYC; (5)
Interlude, Forest Olson, NHYC.
CLASS A -(!) Warrior; (2) Robon,
(3) Interlude.
CLASS B -(!) Blackbird: 12)
Drumbeat ; (3) Sirona, Jim Michaels, St.
FYC.
CLASS C -(1) Iliu:sion, Ed McDowell,
KHYC; (2) Nemesis. Tom Tobin, SDYC ;
(3) Kari II, Dick Kelton , LAYC.
Assembly redistricting bill.
While the blll adds six new seats in
districts heavily Populated w i th
Republicans, some county central com-
mittees oppose the plan.
Orange County's GOP central com-
mittee met last week but did not vote to
op!)Ose the plan, although the pro!)OSed
reapportionment· provides no really new
representation for the county.
Redlstricllng was necessary following
the 1fTO census in order to reflect the
"one man, one vote" prlnclplea of the
U.S. Constitution. Orange County Jn the
decade since 1960 has been the fastest
growing county in the state, and in some
years, the fastest growing county Jn the
nation.
Yet the COllllty gains only chances for
two new seats since two new dlstrl.cts
established Jn the plan contain Portloos ol
Orange and two neighboring counties.
Irvine Councilman Henry Quigley,
obeerver of central committee activities
and former alternate to that body aug-
gested "practicality" determined Orange
Cotmly's lack of oppoaldoo to the
Assembly plan,
He noted it passed on a 63 to U vote,
more than enough votes necessary to
override Gov. Reagan's veto.
Further, were the S4 votes needed to
override a veto somehow not available,
the courts would redistrict the Assembly
and Orange County and Republicans in
general might not fare as well, Quigley
offered.
"It appears to me -and I'm sure.;to
the coun{y central committee -~ti.J .
practicaUUes are the governor probaiilf'
will sJgn the bill Into law," Quigley said
today.
Meanwhile. the Association of
Republican Central Committee Oialrmen
last week urged a veto, suggesting tbe
plan "ignores all consideration of com-
munity 1nterest."
That as90Ciatlon, along with legislative
observers, assume the Senate will "rub-
berstamp" the Assembly's plan to
redistrict the lower house.
· Huntington School
Budget Talks Set
A proposed 18.S million 1973-74 fi!cal
btxlget wUI be dlscu3aed tonil!llt by
trustees of the Huntington Beach City
(elementary) School District. Their
meeting will be held at 7,30 o'clocll: at
Dwyer School Library, 1!02 Palm Ave.
The preliminary spe.ndlng plan, up 1:1.2
million over the past year, will be ftnanc-
ed in part by a projected tax rate of $3.03
per $100 assessed valuation.
.-' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~·
NO CASTRO TIES
TO WATERGATE?
MEXICO CITY (UPI) -Cuba's new
ambassador to Mexico said Monday that
Premier Fidel Castro bad nothing to do ~ ~
with the Watergate affair. ~ -
"I reject any connection you want to
make between the Watergate case and"'i
Fidel Castro," ambassador FernandO .f :
Lopez Muloo told newsmen, in respome
to a quest.ion, as he arrived to take up hiJ t
new !)OOI. ('
Posture Queen
Congenial Too i
' 'I Not only does Debbi Giesy of ffun ..
tingtoo Beach have an award-winning
posture, but she's one of tile friendlieat
girls In the state.
Debbi, a 16-year-old Marina High,:
School !uni~. """ the Miss Coogenlal!ty' ·
tiUe tbil weekend during the statewide"'·.·
M'w Perfect Posture contest sponsored. "
by the California Chiropractic Associa-.. ·
tion. ,
Debbi won the Orange County Miss ·
Perfect Posture title recently 1n com-':
peUtioo S!)Onsored by the ._,.qe County
chapter of the chiropractic association.
She ls the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S.
II. Giesy, 17011 Bolero Lane.
Karen Hirshman
Queen of Valley
Seventeen-year-old Karen Hirshman ...r, wa1~ Miss Fountain Valley SUJlA" I
day filibt at Los Amigos Hlgh School,
before an audience of more than 250.
Min Hirshman is a Song leader and
dance manager at Fountain Valley High
School. She also teaches ballet.
She won the city's title in competition
with seven other girls, replacing Alesia
Speir, the um Queen.
Caroline Lammers, 22, was named
"Miss CongeniaHty" by the other con ..
testants.
From Pagel
McWHINNEY ••
Murai when they warned the fanner that
it would take $10,000 to help i:mect bls
lease.
Mural had worked the 215 Mlle Square
Park acres for the past five years at an
annual fee of $150 an acre, Capiztl said.
He told the jury !hat when McWbinney
and Murai first met in the farmer's
strawberry field negotiatioos were under
way to grant Murai a one-year
"holdover" lease on the property.
WOULD YOU BELIEVE -
THAT THERE ARE STIIL COMPANIES
• • • • •
. . . . .
. . . . .
• • • • •
"'™' MAllOI AHA
ll~CI 1H7
WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS
THEY SELL PERFORM 7
WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON
SERVICE?
WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE
PERFECTLY?
WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY 7
YES, "VIRGINIA.'' THERE IS AN ALDEN'S!
(TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.)
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Pkicentla Ave.
COSTA MISA
646-4838
M•· • 'llloin. f te SrJO; M f IO f; Sot. t:JO IO I
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17
T-, M11 29. l97J H D•JLY PILOT
.-~Castro Slayi11g Plot Told
E. Howard Hunt Writes of 1961 Assassination Scheme
~ WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Watergate
conspirator and ronner CIA agent E.
Howard Hunt, who helped plot the 1961
Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, says he
recommended t.o CIA superiors that
Fidel castro be assassinated as part ()(
the scheme. His proposal was never ap-
proved.
of moey flllle -..
..
Intended It As "a private legacy to Ill)'
c:blldren."
CONSIDERED AS TARGET
Cubl's Fidel Castro
llunt made the disclosure in a
forthcoming book in which he describes
his role and that of the Kennedy ad-
ministration in the ill·fated invasion by
several hundred Cuban e1dles y,·ho were
organized and traintd by the United
States to overthrow Castro's regime.
A copy of the printer's galleys for the
book to be published in November by
Arlu;gton House, was obtained by UPI.
In it, Hunt charges that Kennedy tried
to "whitewash the New Frontier" when
the invasion failed by "heaping guilt on
th.: CIA."
KeMedy accepted responsibility for the
Bay of Pigs fiasco at the Ume but much
of the blame for Its inltiaUve and im-
pleroentatioo waa placed oo the CIA by
others.
Hunt said he proposed assassinating
the Cuban leader because he believed
that "without Castro to inspire them the
rebel army and militia would collapse in
leaderless confusion.''
Hunt said his proposal was to
''assassinate Castro be.fore or coincident
\\·ilh the Invasion." He added that the
role of carrying out tbe kill.lng was "a
ta sk for Cuban patrlots."
He said he was told by Richard Bissell,
chieC of the Cenlral Intelligence Agency's
clandestine services, that his plan was
being considered by a ·•special group"
y,•ithin the government.
But Hunt said: "So far as I have been
able to determine no coherent plan wa!I
ever developed within CIA to assa!ISinate
Castro, though it was the heart's desire
Hunt's port ln Ibo lnvulcll plan 11>-
cl\lllell on!lllllzio« CU b I D -In
f1orlda ..a coordlnallllll their -with the Invasion forces being trained by
U.S. Air P'o«< and Anny specialists
which lncluded the Anny's Special
Forces unlt
He said plaM had called !or a OJban
El.lie ExecuUve CommJttee with Hunt al
their side to enter Cuba after the in·
vasioo, declare t be m 1 elves a
"govemmeot·iD-arms" and call for
mililaq aide.
Under the plan, the United States .,. ..
prepar<d to btunedlately reoosnJze the
exiles and provide ''whatever might be
necessary to overthrow eutro," Hunt
said.
"American ships would ~ standing
near CUban waters so help wouldn't be
wmecessarily delayed ."
Hunt said be wrote the boot in 19$7 and
But due to the Waterc•te publicity and
dl!cloouro ol b1s CIA bad:cnJwld. -I
.. id be clodded publtcatlod would IUVt
to correct "distorted ac<oUnts of my 1*
\'Olvement in the Bay of Pigs lnvaakln."
In the past, Hunt has written aeveral
fiction spy stone,, WMler dlffertng names,
Hunt recalled a luncheon he bad Jn
mid-19!0 with Brig. Gen. Robert E.
CUsbman. then a mJUtary adviser to Vice
PrM!dent Nixon.
"cu.hman told me that the vice presi-
dent was the Invasion project'a action of.
ficer within the White H"""l · and that
Nixon wanted nothing to go wrong."
Cushman, now Marine Col"pl!I com-
mandant and member of the Joint Oitels
of Staff, allegedly authorized the CIA to
help Hunt in preparation for burglarWng
the olfice of Danie.I Ellsberg's
psychiatrist.
"'°IT .......
SAID 'Klll CASTRO'
Conspirator Howard Hunt
Indy 500 Race
Rained Out After
Four-hour Dela:y
Sonae Cutbacks Noted Man Dispenses
Free Reefers
l f Brinks Guard r
Gasoline Shortages Felt
Laguna Beach police definitely
woold have looked one gift hone
ln the mouth if they could have col·
lared him.
Relieved of Cash
In Santa Ana t
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -The 57th In-
dianapolis 500-mlle auto race appeared to
be rained out for a second straight day
today arter a four hour, 10 minute delay.
Jt probably would be rescheduled for 7
a.m. PDT Wednesday.
Chief Steward Harlan Fengler got on
the public address system to tell the more
than 175,000 persons at the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway for the race that "we
have a very dangerous situation here.
The track is not sale.''
Fengler said he and other race officials
would watch the weather conditions for
a short while longer, but added: "Th~
weather reports are very bad for the rest
of the day.
"We're trying to work it out the best
way we can. I'm sure none of these com-
petitors want to run 250 miles and have
the race stopped."
He brought car-owner Roger Penske
and driver Gary Bettenhausen to the
microphone to echo his sentiments.
Penske said if the weather didn't
change very soon he felt the race should
be postponed until Wednesday "(or the
sa fety of the drivers and spectators
alike."
By JOKN SCHADE
Of !'flt DllllY .. 1191 SUllf
The feared gasoline shortage along the
Orange Coast turned out to be a mixed
bag over the long Memorial Day
weekend. Some statiom closed, some ran
out ol gas and for others, it was business
as usual.
Chevron and Standard stations had the
hardest time with stations like George
Phillips' tllevron in Irvine. Phillips had
been pumping gas at one of Orange
County's highest daily rates. He had to
limit each car to only eight gallons. A
spokesman for the station said he saw
this limit remaining throughout the sum·
mer.
Jim Tice Chevron in Costa Mesa main·
tamed a IO-gallon limit over the weekend,
then closed early to preserve daily
gallonage.
The American Oil Station in Costa
Mesa orders for four stations but has not
received new supplies yet.
Bob Smith's Chevron in Mission Viejo
was an exception to the rule. Smith had
plenty of gas for the holiday week.end .
Prior to the weekend , Arco stations
'Secret Service Requested'
Nixon Hom"e" Alterations
By GAYLORD SHAW
WASHINGTON (AP) -The White
House says more than $100,000 in Im-
provements made at President Nixon's
San Clemente estate during the past four
years were requested by the Secret
SerVice "for the protection of the Presi-
dent."
The projects included a new electric
heatlru!: system for the President's
Span.I.sh-style mansion , a $3,36o-storage
shed, more than $50,000 worth of brick or
redwood fences and a $13,000 bullet-proor
wiM.screen alongside the presidenUal
swimming pool
Building permits were issued by the Ci·
ty of San Clemente for about $70,000
worth of government-fmanced im-
provements. The rest apparently was
done without building permits.
The federally financed work was in ad-
dition to the $123,514 that the White
House said last week the Nlxona had
spent themselves for improvements on
their home and 5.9-acre homesite.
In a statement Friday,' disclosing that
Nlxon had sold the bulk of his estate to
one of his wealthy friends -. New ,York in-
dustrialist Robert M. Abplanalp, the
White House would not provide a
breakdown on the $123,514 figure .
The transaction took place i n
December 1970 -18 months after Nixon
had purchased the ocean·side property
with $625,000 loaned him by Abplanalp.
The loan was canceled in the subse-
quent tra.mactioo that left Nlxoo with a
net investment of $374,514 for the house
and 5.9 acres, and Abplanalp with an in·
vestment of $1.2 million for the re-
maining 23 acres.
The White House said the Nixoos bor·
rowed .$6Z5,000 from Abplanalp to "meet
the objective of the purchues," alUwugh
this is $205,000 more than their down pay
ment. They have added Sl23,514 in I ·
provements for a total cost of $1,623, .
Abplanalp, the statement cont ued,
paid $1,219,000 for 77 percent o the
acreage -an amount which also was 77
percent of the Nixon.s' cost -but
Abpl81lalp d.ldn't get any buildings on his
land.
The1 net resuft of the deal with
Abplanalp le!t the Ni1ons with a ~.ooo
mortpge and M actual cash investment
at the time of '34,lll. The statement did
not aay how much or the remalnlng
mortgage has since been paid off, but ac·
cordlnJ to past statements1 payment Ls to
be completed hy July 1974.
Al>Dlanalp alto is the owner of one of
tho l\ve hou,., In the ·Florida Whl~
House compound at Key Biscayne. And
he owbl a Bahamas island which Nlxon
periodically visits. 1 The ,eOtlre trnct, including the portion,
now owned by Abplanalp, remaJns under
Secr<t S.rvlce suard. It ls Immediately
:.djacmt to a Coast Guard station, wblCh
se.rvet as the &lie of the Pl'Hldenl's of.
flee and othe r bulldlngs COllltltutlng the
Wutetn White llouse.
Allot the Al!1odated Pren reporll!d
M~ that the federal govenmont had
spent more. lhan $100,000 for lf\1-
•
provements on Nixon's estate, a While
House spokesman issued a statement
saylng "All the work done at the Western
White House as listed in the Associated
Press story was requested by the Secret
Service for protection of the President.
"If the Associated Press bas recom-
mendations to make to the Secret Service
as to hoW the President and his family
should be protected, the Associated
Press should outline those suggestions at
the same time it carries a story which
lmplies the President has improved his
property at the expense or the govern-
ment," said the statement given by
Deputy White House Press Secretary
Gerald L. Warren.
A Secret Service spokesman also
issued a statement saying, "We recom-
mended all or the items for the com·
pound."
BUilding pennits on file with the city of
San Clemente list these federally financ-
ed projecis:
-"A $42 50().eigbt-foot brick and con·
crete block wall stretching for about
1,400 feet around three sides of the
President's property.
-"Three gazebos and a gatehouse cost-
ing an estimated $22,000.
-"A $3,360 storage shed with stucco
walls to blend into the Spanish-style
architecture of the President's house,
"A $2,000 cabana on the beach beneath
Nixon's house, plus a 60-foot redwood
cros50ver on the railroad lracks which
run beneath the beach and the house."
In addition, maps contained in the
city's building permit files indicated
other projects bad been undertaken,
although building permits apparently
have not been issued for them. Asked
about specific projects indicated on the
maps, the Gejle ral Services
dm · tton-'"-in responses related
gh the White House press office -
listed these other projects:
-A $13,500 electric heating system in
the Nlion home to replace a previous
system, which officials deemed a
"security risk" because of the danger of
fire or explosion.
-A $12,964 glass screen Installed
beside the President's swimming pool.
The glass 1s 1 V4 lncbe.s lhlck and is bullet
proo!.
An fll,IM;l six-loot rodwood fence ex-
teudlng for about 800 !eet between Nix-
on's property and the beach.
-$1,500 spent for pavlng a road linking
the President's house with h.is orfice ()n
the adjacent Coest Guard property.
The White House listed these four proj-
ecis totallni about $31.SOO on Saturday
in response to queries from newsmen on
govemmeot lmprovement.s on t h e
presidential utate.
Most of the government-financed proj·
ecta were undertaken as part of "9P:ra·
tion Sunrise," a trash program laUncbed
by the government soon after NI.Ion
bought the property In m i d -11 e 9 .
Although the White House won't say what
sections ol the overall tract is owned by
Abplanalp, lndJcatkms are that AOTne or
the federally financed improvements are
on his land.
I
were reportedly nmning short. Some sta·
tions countered that possibility by simply
closing for the weekend. But Smith's
Arco in Costa Mesa had its monthly
quota re-allocated and was able to re-
main open.
Union Oil stations met the demand.
Anderson's Mesa Verde Service had no
Umit on gallonage but cut operating
hours. Tom Sharp Union Oil in Newport
Beach reported their gas supply held out
but they closed early on Memorial Day
because of Jack of buslne6S.
The weekend situation was good at
Tooy's Mobil ln Santa Ana with
normal hours and no gas shortage
reported.
Texaco stations like Bob's Te1aco and
Airport Texaco stations in Newport
Beach both remained closed over the
weekend to maintain tbelr limited supply
of gas for regular week. day customers.
Weather Should Boost
Voter Turnout in LA
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Clear skies
and warm temperatures were expected
lo boost the turnout of voters today in the
mayoral runoff election between in-
cumbent Sam Yorty, who is seeking an
unprecedented fourth term, and black Ci-
ty Coon(jiman Thomas Bradley.
A heavy voter turnout could favor the
incumbent mayor who predicted last
week th.at he would be victorious if 70
percent of the city's more than one
mj\Jion voters cast ballots.
City Clerk Ru & Layton estimated a
65 to 70 percent turnout.
Today's election was a virtual replay of
four years ago when the two faced each
other ror leadership of the nation's third
largest city. The polls then showed
Bradley ahead of Yorty but the mayor,
who has a history of out foxing pollsters,
won by a near landslide.
Bradley, a former police lieutenant
who campaigned on the platform that
Los Angeles needs a ''wttidng mayor,"
ended his campaign Monday with a hike
into tbe Santa Monica Mountains with a
group or IO girl !5<0Uts and boy scoots.
Yorty, -beld the city's reins for U
years and last year made an umuc-
cessful attempt for the DemocraUc
presldenUal norninatlon, ended his eazn..
pa1gn at a Memorial Day parade in his
white middle-class stronghold ol the San
Fernando Valley.
An Irate citizen told officers Mon-
day that a 1ong·haired man was
stopping passersby and offering
them free marijuana cigarettes.
When police arrived In the 400
block of North Coast Highway, the
pot huckster was gone. lfe wu aaid
to have been ill a euphoric state.
Carnival Truck
Crash Kills 4
GILROY (AP) -Four peroons were
killed when a trailer truck carrying a
carnival rkle veered Into oncoming traf·
fie on a crowded mountain highway,
struck two cars, and plunged over a ~
foot cliff, the Ce.1Uomla Highway Patrol
said.
Officers said the accident occurred
Monday about ZO miles eut of here on
State Rte. 152 u the carnival truck,
driven by Edwin "Sonny" Catwell, ln bis
late 206, of Sin FranCaco, wu west·"
-downblll. Calwell ...i his passmger, Charlea
Grimsley Jr., 23, of Ulah, were killed u
were two occupanta of ane auto -Ernest
ff. Soremen, &I, ot Altadena, the driver,
and Agnes Schdcik, 73, ot Pasadena.
A Brinks armed guard was robbed of
$13,195 in a Santa Ana discount store
Monday afternoon in the midst of a boll·
day shopping ctQwd. 1
The lone gunman who confronted the
guard carrying the store's cash receipta
for the day as he left the office area In·
side the K·Mart store, 1400 W, Edinger
Ave., ucaped with the aid ol an ac-
complice, police said.
Olllcers said when the sunmau con-
fronted the suant he shouted, "Doo'I
move . Don't do a damn thing or I'll till
you," u he grabbed the guard'• revolver
from !ts hoister.
Alter seizing tht mone~ .half• the roJ>.
ber forced the guard to sprawl f1ce down
on the floor In the hardware department.
"St.op him . He'a eol the money," police
said the guard sl\QUted as the bandit ran
through the store.
A store security guard lried to block
the path of the fleeing robber but be was
frightened orr when the bandit waved hil
.38 caliber rev olver at him and shouted:
"Get out of my way, boy. I don't want
to have to kill you."
The robber sped out o! the front d9or
and jumped into a waiting statlon wacon
driven by the accomplice.
Leier poltce !ound the vehicle which
waa ldenUfied by witnesses who took tbe
license number u It left the at.ore perk-.
Ing lot.
A witneas near the acene where tbe
station wagon waa found said I.be aaw
two men, one of them we&rlq: a a.ti
mask hurriedly leave the statJoa wagoo
and drJve off in another car.
''Our salesmen are
your kind of people''
PETE PELUSES
HUGH MYNATT
PETE "The Greek" PELUSES
Sales Manager
We have on our sales staff the type of men you'd like
for neighbors. Some of them are. You'll probably re
ognize Hugh, Charlie or H.B. These men are part of the
difference you'll find at Johnson & Son. Come in and
let us offer you a fine Lincoln or Mercury to suit yo
needs at always a fair price.
CHARLIE THOMAS H. B. PRICE
SPECIAL
Continental MARK IV's
• Outstanding Selection Now in Stock
• Best Time of the Year to Buy!
• All "Golden Touched" & Ready to Go
Home Of The N•w Car ; • •
"Golden J'ONcW'
I
I
"Orange Count11'1 1'amtllt o] nne Cort"
ohnson & son
Lt:1.(,f ll f\J rl.11 f\1 l 11 \ Y
2121 HARBOR BLVD-COSTA MESA • ll40-M30
l t
Nom e Of The Ne~ Car ....
"Golde1t r-cll"
l
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I ' I
t
'·
Welcome
To Summer
I
,._, ..... 29, 1973
1 UPIT~
R.En.EcnONS, DEPT. -11 you've
been ooo of !hose who spent the past few
weeks gazing into foggy, leaden 11kies and
wondering where all the good weather
was, now YoU know. We were saving it up
for the Memorial Day weekend.
It was clear. It was hot. And even the
Pacific's water temperatures rose to
near the comfort range. Our shoreline
looked like a wall-to-wall zoo. At most of
our beaches, you couldn't just walk to the
water, you had to fight your way In. 1be
suntan lot.ion business bas made a startl-
ing comeback.
SOUTH, MIDWEST HIT BY RASH OF TORNADOES, FLOODS
Al LeHI 48 P•'-• Died Over Memorial Doy Wookond
' . Twister Terror
'lbere are so many sunburns floating
around today that the glowblg reflections
ought to be enough to power Skylab for
the next two weeks.
160 Tornadoes Ravage 11 Stat:es
mosE OF us who !tugged pretty
close to home and shoreline may have
had It jimt a bit cooler than folks just
over the hill. One chap who lives out El
T<ro way imists the thennometer at his
place hovered between 110 and 115
degrees over the weekend.
He didn't say whether or not those
were day or nJght readings.
Even if he was high by 10 or 15
degrees, that's still fairly torrid mercury
readings, even for El toro.
You have to believe It got warm lnland
by counting the numbers of folks who
abandoned that region over the weekend
. to visit our area.
ALL mE TALK prior lo the big threo-
day weekend was about how there was
going to be a gasoline shortage and a lot
of motorists were in danger of being
stranded someplace. I haven't as yet met
-a stranded motorist.
A number of statioM along the Orange
~st. did, however, have signs pro-
claunmg "No Gas" hanging out
If there was a fuel shortage, it seemed
to have been in t"be service stations. Not
in the automobiles. They all had gas and
were burning it up at a record pace.
Coast Highway was so a-owded that it
looked worse than the crashing st.art at
Indianapolis.
1 I'll have to admit, however, that I wat
: one of tOO.cie who ran out of gasoline over
1 the weekend. And three of my favorite
stations did have the pumps Jocked. and
~ the Gooe Fis.hln' signs out. So J hlld to go
to 11 fourth place and /JUf(er the final in-
dignity in order to fillcrup. 1 had to pay
cash.
SO rt IS THAT the long weekefld came
to a conclusloo. The remalnire question
is whether or not the good weather will
go away with ii . Signs at this hour sug-
gest the pre-heated atmosphere will be
with us for awhile.
Naturally, the wcathennan Is hedging
his bet a bit. "A little cooler today," he
predicts. Ile saj'3 that inland, the
mercury will be "in the lower 908." That
always sounds funny. When yoo talk
about temperahues.ln the 90s, It seems a
bit strange to hang the word "Iower11 in
front of it.
That's sorta like saying the weather ls
going to be in the lowe!" freezing. Which
it isn't. Right up there in our good Coun-
ty Seat, for example, they admitted to a
99 at l p.m. yesterday afternoon.
THUS TIIE SIGNS of the Lime6 are
clear. Temperatures are rising, the skies
are blue and the Pacific ls fit for human
habitation.
Indeed, we may have a summer on our
hands.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmddeat Nb:·
on today declared Alabama a n d
Arkansas major disaster areas because
of weekend tornadoes and the White
Hoose promised tlmllar action would be
taken llOOD for other states hit hard by
the rub of spring storms.
By 'nle Associated Pttaa
A record number of tornadoes dipped
to earth from storm systems acn:ts.1 the
Midwest and South over the Memorial
Day weekend, claiming at lieast 48 lives
in riiuJti·million dollar trails of destruc-
tion.
SeveraJ small towns were all but
Rev. Berrigan
Marries Nun
In NY Rites
EASI' ORANGE, N.J. (AP) -The
Rev. Philip Berrigan and Sister Ellr.abeth
McAlister, Roman Catholic antiwar ac-
tivists, have married, according to a
former Benedictine monk.
The Rev. Paul Mayer, a close friend
said Monday night that the wedding look
place Sunday in the New Yort City
apartment of Berrigan's brother, the
Rev. Daniel J. Berrigan. He said he sign-
ed their marriage certificate and It had
been malled to the registrar's office in
Montclair, N.J.
F A111ER MA YER sald Berrigan and
Sister Elizabeth bad lived together since
May 1969 and had "formalized" their
union in January 19?2 at the federal
plisoo in Danbury, Conn.
The Baltimore Sun reported that
Father Berrigan and his wife recently
left their religious orders and plan to
open a peace movement commune in a
rented house in Baltimore.
Berrigan and Sister Elhabeth were
among seven persons tried last year in
Harrisburg, Pa., on charges of conspiring
to kidnap presidential adviser Henry A.
Kissinger and blow up healing tunnels in
federal buildings in Washington, D.C.
The jury split on the charges and !Oll'le
eventually were dropped. But Berrigan
and Sister Elizabeth were convicted d.
smuggling letters in and out of prison.
BERRIGAN, WHO was a member of
the Society of SL Joseph, had been im-
prisoned in April 1970 on a separate CQn·
viclion stemming from a Maryland draft
boa.rd raid. He later was paroled.
His brother, a Jesuit, also served a
federal prison term for ta.king part in the
destruction of draft files at Catonsville,
Md.
He at Relief • I ll
obliterated as about 160 tornadoes turned
the long weekeud into a holiday ol horror
f0< lhoosands.
DEATHS WERE reported ln II states
frcm Oklahoma to Florida. and at least
six olber states reeled under heavy rains,
high winds and flash floods.
The National Weather Service said the
number ol tornadoes reportal between
Saturday and Monday eclipsed any
previous 72-bour period m record.
Amocg the victims of the weekend
weather were farmet3 in the lower
MW!ssippi Valley wbooe """"' had been
delayed for weeks b9 spring floods. The
new rains dealt them another blOw, and
some counties in the region prepared to
ask for the sea>nd time this year that
they be declared a federal disaster area.
THE WEEKEND weather systems
caused five deaths in Oklahoma, three in
Kansas, seven in Missouri, Oree in
Arkansas, ten in Tennessee, one in
Mississippi, seven in Alabama, tv;o in
Georgia, one in Florida, seven in North
Carolina and two in Virginia. In addition,
six persons in North Carolina and ooe in
Virginia were listed as missing and
presumed drowned.
The storms began Saturday In eastern
Oklahoma and continued into Monday
night, when a tornado at Athens, Ga.,
took tbe We ol one person and left JDOl'e
than 60 injured.
Reports from local officials indltated
total Josses would climb well above $100
million. The worst damage appeared to
be in small towns such as Brent, Ala.,
and Keefetoo, O.kJa., and in the city of
Jooesboro, Ark.
FOUR OF BRENT'S 2,500 resldeats
weno ki!IOO, and Civil Defense officials
said 90 percent of the town was
destroyed. Gov. George C. Wallace
estimated damage In Breot and nearby
Greensboro, where me person died, at
$20 mi!Uoo.
"We're lost," said Brent Mayor
Melfocd Worrell. "We don't know what
we're going to do, but the city will
definitely come back." '!be storm bit
Brent just as Stmday ,evening church
services were being held. It ripped the
Baptist church in half, killing one peTSO!l.
In Arkansas, Gov. Dale Bumpers asked
President Nbi:on to declare four counties
disaster areas for the second time this year.
Bumpers said one twist.er cut a trail
a~t a mile and a half wide through
Craighead and Poinsett counties.
DirecUy in the storm's path was
Jonesboro, a city of 27,000 where three
persons died, at least 300 """' Injured
and damage was estimated up to $4-0
million.
Sight
Fair Weatlier Seen Following Record High, Monday
Tempernture•
High LllW Albal!Y ~l 61 All•11I• " :.! ·~::i: .. Buf~o " r. (ha HIOI! .. ~harlot!• " .. lilc11go " .. ~lncln1111tl " i: l•vel•nd " 011n~r " " "'"' " " HOl'!Olulu " " -" " JAClfllOl'IVlll• ., " K•nt.111 Cltv u " L111VeotL '"' M Lt'lle "oc:k " ~ ~~~r111. " • " " MHw1kff .. " Ml!ll.· lj P1ul " " Nirw r f'll!I .. " NM ork " .. ~~City " " " " 1"11'" SPl"I-"" ~
Ptr.: iltf:r. '" " $. " " '" " ' l: "' ·~°"· n .. .. .. " J!it ••k• " • n r11riclKO ., " ,$"'It . " " W•MllOtol'I .. ~
... ·" r-.W ·" :~ Sl[ATTLl
Ii :il .n ·" ·" ~ 'All I • ~ ... ,.,,.,,"'.,, .. c ,aco
30.00\ MILO ,, '• lD•AN•(ll•
·" .01
"' " •
.l! " ..
• ·" L/l'tWI Alltfl 1010CAll e
• DAL~ ...
Coastal Wenlher
Mllstty wnny toclay. UOht YtrltbM
winds 11lgtlt •no morning 11o1.o... bll-
CDl'l'llng touftl"""' to _, I to 1• k""'•
lri in.moon. fodty tnO WedllHcley, Hlllh 100.y, mid 70I.
Coa1111 ftm,,....tvrwl ••l'IOll rrom 51
hi 7•. t"l•nd l'*m1111r11tvn1 r•l'IOll from SI ta • w11i... tlmpllt'1tu,.. 61.
SuH, Moen, Tides
TUISOAY s~ l'!lllf't 7:3' p.m. 4.3
Setond low 1:10 fl.11'1, 1.S
W..DN•SDAY
First ll!;tl .. ... . •:11 '·'"· :S.I
First low .......... 2:•7 •.l"l'I. ·1,1 S9C:Ol'ld hlot'I .......... 1:11 p,m. ,_,
&.cotld Jow ...• 1,,. 11,m. 1.•
S1111 ltltn S:"' 1.m. lllh 1:S1 fl·'"·
Moon IU-3;2' t .m. ktl J;)I P•'"·
DAILY l'llOT
DEIMRY SERVICE
-" ... °"" '"" ·-It •• ~""'" " -.......... _., ... ~utt--_., ... M ...... 11 ... Cllfll_..,._ ,, ...... ....,.., ... .,.. ........ '-""' ,_ ...... ..,. ..... ~ .... ..... ...,.,. .................... . .... c.--..-· .... t-. ......... c...., .............. ......
---~ ... .. .. .. : .. _ .... -..... ~ ,_,..,..,.......,. ..... ___
'
Vietnam Accord Near?
•
Saigon Agrees ro Cease-fire Timetabl,e
SAIGON (IJ'l -Government _,,.,
said today that the South Vlelna._
govermnt11t has agreed Jn prlndpie to a
detailed timetable far a true Vietnam
cease-fire.
The agreement, worked out In Paris by
Henry A. Kl!singer and Hanoi '1 Le Due
Tho, calls for both Salgoo and tile Viet
Cong to order all their Wilts to stop
shooting, the sources said.
mE SOURCES said Saigm has re-
quested some modifications and made
some coonl<rjnposals. 1bey dld DOt
elaborate.
1'lie.e sourees predicted the followfng
developments:
-Kissinger and 1bo will officially an-
nounce their agreement on strengtbenjng
tbe original cease-l!re acconl at the
cooclusim ol their non round ol ~ In
Pan. scheduled to begin June 6.
The United States will halt all air re-
connaissance missions over North
Vietnam.
-Twenty.four hours after the an.
nouncement, the Saigon government and
the Viet Coog will order opposing bat·
tlefield commanders to cease their fire.
-FIVE TO 10 days later, Salgoo and
the Vlei Cong wtU grant guarantees of
privileges and immunities for membert
of the two-party Joint Military Com·
mlssioo. The two sides will fully deploy
ometvers into the field to keep the
peace.
-Within five lo 10 days, the United
States will resume operatioos to remove
mines from North Vietnamese waters
and al90 will resume economic talks with Hanoi. .J
-Wlthilt three mooths, zmes of control
will be delineated.
-Within .U mooths, a Naliooal Coun·
cil of National Reconclliatlon and Con-
cord must be established and an election
procedure set up to shape the political
future of South Vietnam. Under terms of
the orlgina1 agreement signed in Paris
Liza Thinks
He's Lovely
NEW YORK (UPI) -Actress
LW. Minnelli arrived from Loodoo
Mooday and 'Called her latest com-
panion, middle-aged British actor
Peter Sellen, a "lovely, kwely
man."
However, Ute 2'1·year-old Oacar-
winning actress refused to say if
she woold many Sellen,--ts
is 47. "'lbat's bloody Jli.vaie,"
snapped Miss Mirmelli, who has
apparently ended her romanee
wlth singer Desi Arnaz Jr.
&neath the An:tic's frozen ground
huge deposits of natural gas lie
waiting to be tapped .
And, since there's growing energy
shortage here, you're going to nttd
tba~ gas. Even though it will
co.st more.
So the Ca.s Company plans to
team up with others and build an
Arctic pipeline. But before we do,
we need some answers.
Namely, how do we build it with·
out harmins the Jandl Or the people
who live off the land 1
Wt!re linding thooe answers.
I
II
Jan. rt, this was ~ to have been
accompilJbed by the eud ol April
-wn'AllY COMMANDEBS of tho
_,.ing potties will meet lo establish
oalety corrldon lllrouih the reopective
..... d. control.
-Re!pect foe the demilitarized zone
and • withdrawal ol troops and wsr
equipmeot from the buffer z o n e .
DemOOillzatJoo of foroes by both aides.
-The establialll!!ent of lelJ!Umate
ports of _,, for lbe replacement d.
war materials by each side on a ooe-for-
ooe buls.
-The releue ol nmahilng Vietnamese
military and dvillao prisoners ol war.
Meanwhile, the Cambodian High Com·
mand said lodsy U.t IJO'l'ernmeot troops
with intense U.S. air support bave broUD
a two month loog rebel stranglehOJd oo
Highway 5 which cut Pllnom \'ellh ol1
from the rice rich provinC.S, tn the West.
Command 1pokesmaa Col. Am &og
said that rebel forces appeared, to have
withdrawn from the road.. Am R<q aid
Hlgbway 5 would ·be open to . tralllc
"when downed bridges have been
.. ~. and that could be less than ...
week." 'Iballand based A m e r i c a n
bombers proyfde -heavy bomll-ing in llJl1IJOrt d. government "-
who pushed oot from Phnom Penf1 lo
reopen lhe highway after it · was cut
March 21, military soon:es aid.
Federal Prosecutors Eye
Grand Jury Quiz of Nixon
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Federal JX'(IO·
ecutlln have told their ~ that
they believe there is justificatkln for
grand jury questlonlng of President Nix·
on oo how top aides could carry out a
cove<-up of the Watergate scandal, the
Washington Post said today.
llUT THE NEWSPAPER said the pros-
ecutors tbemselYeS as well as higher of.
ficials in tbe Justice Department believe
the Constitution does not pennit a sitting
president to be summoned by a grand
jury -that any formal quesliooing ol a
President's actiom has to be initiated by
the House of Representatives under im-
peachmmt proceedings.
ment does it," the source was quOted_
Roo.a.IcJ L. Ziegler, White House press
secretary, issued a stat.anent saying,
"The Post story reflects a shocking and
irresponsible abuse of authority on the
part of federal prosecutors ii, in fact,
they made the statements attributed to
them.
"GRAND JURY proceedings are by
law secret."
Ziegler said Attorney General Elliot L.
The Poot quoted Justice n.partment
sources saying the "ooe key qaestioo that
remains lo be clarified in the currmt -
grand jury investigaUon" ot Watergate is
the Pres.ident'a position. The article said:
Richardson and the special Watergate
prosecutor, Archibald Cox -both newly
sworn in -had bee.n asked to investigate
"the circumstances of these anooymous
charges against the President of. the
United States -and to do so im-
mediately."
Plane Crash Kills
Six in Family
"'lbe prosecutors have .told their
superiors that evidence justifleS ques-
timing the President about b o w'
members of Mr. Nixoo's innermost circle
could perpetrate a massive obstruction of
justice wttboot ru.. knowledge, the
souro!S reported.
"THE PROSECVTORS' theory of the
case bolds that a Watergate cover-up
was undertaken by the White House to
prevent disclosure ol. a covert program
of illegal activities cooduct.ed by the Nix·
oo administration," the sources said,
"includino< tho break·ln at the office ol
Daniel EI1sberg's psychiatrist in l!rll"
The Post account quoted a Justice
Department source as saying, "There is
no bombshell tucked away," but that
"there is an evidentiary pattern" {aisiog
questions about Nixon's role. "No doCU.
An:dc ...,..rch facllitks-modt
pipeline llu:u.Jlations-.ttt measuring
the effects of pipeline cmpcmufrosL
There, thousands of buried sensors
hooked to computers are giving us
lln underground view never Sttn
before. So we'll know exactly what
were getting into.
Above ground, acres of test plots
are tcl~ing us what kinds of g.ras5es
grow fa stest in the Arctic climate.
So we'll know what tO plant after
we build.
Field teams..,,, bandiqg lish arid
waterfowl. Planes ue tr1cldng
CO'ITAGE GROVE, Ore. (UPI) -Six
members of a prominent Southern
California family were killed during the
weekend when their twin engine Cessna
310 plunged to earth during a landing ap-
proach.
Owner-pilot John W. Mieras, 56, an at-
torney from Pasadena, was killed Satur-
day along with his wife, Eunice, 56; their
daughter, Christina Gaglione, 22; her bug..
band, Fabio, 25; Mieras' mother, Jennie,
84; and bis brother, Jamee E. Mieras, 47,
of Fullerton.
Witnesses said the plane cfashed end
exploded during a landing approach here,
wbenf the victims had planned to ipend
Mernol'iaj Day weekend with· friend!:.
caribou, mapping migratory routes
that even the natives who live off
the hetds don't know about. So we'll
know where (and when) not to bu1.ld.
The Gas Company is spending
millions on these and '
other projects.
Because it's our job to
kctp yo\! supplied with
natural gas.
Bµt not at thc·cxpcnse
of the Arctic.
Sout!>"m Callfomla Gas Company
We're im<utlng In tomorf-. '
,,
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Tottay'•~
N.Y. steeks
\IPL 66, NO. 149, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1973 N TEN CENTS
' Newport Beach Crowds Set Records
Dally Pllst Staff l"tlol•
Throng Set
At 150,000
For Holiday
By JOHN ZALLER
Of "" D•ll., ,lltt il•ff
A hot sunny l\femorial Day produced
some of the largest beach crowds and
worst traffic jams in the history of the
Orange Coast, officials reported today.
Roads leading into all coastal areas
were snarled -some from as far as five
miles inland -from late morning Moo·
day until late afternoon, and when
motorists anived at beach areas, park-
ing spaces were at a premiwn.
Coastwide beach attendance w a s
reported at nearly 400,000 Monday alone.
Newport Beach with 150,000 people and
_Huntington city beaches with 40,000
persons both reported the largest single
day crowds in their history Monday.
Newport Beach police sai• their park-
ing officers were writing tickets at the
rate of two per minute all day.
"From the police helicopter you could
see that the whole beach area was
literally covered with cars -and none or
them were moving," said Newport Beach
traffic of£icer Gary Lee.
TRACTOR PULLS WATER·LOGGEO PUMP TO HIGH GROUND AT PROMONTORY BAY
Nature Takes a Hand in Man-made S.y, Fllli"1J It Ahead of Schedule
"People were parking on parkways, on
the grass, in the street," he said. "A lot
or them had been £ighting traffic all day,
and when they got here they were not
about to turn back just because there
was no place to park. Misconduct Alleged
AF· Colonel Cbnrges
8 Other fror me r POWs
WASHINGTON (AP) -An Air Force
colonel \\'ho commanded U.S. war
pcisoners today f I I e d court-martial
charges against eight Army and Marine
enlisted men. He accused them of
.. miscOnduct while in a North Viet·
nameSe prison camp," the Pentagon an-
oounced.
"'1e action by Col. 'Ibeodore W. Guy or
n, Ariz. was the first such move
st any of the 566 military POWs
have returned borne.
·Pentagon spokesman Jerry W •
Friedheim said the names of the eight,
five soldiers and three Marines, will be
made public after they are formally
notified.
Friedheim did not disclose the specific
charges or any details, but military
sQurces said Guy accused the eight of
aiding the enemy, disobedience of «tiers
8Dd disrespect to superior officers.
.More than a month ago1 the 44-year-old
Guy told a reporter that some POWs he
commanded were cowards "who openJy
collaborated with the enemy" and even
caused physical harm to some comrades.
He declined to name them then.
Army and Navy. They will decide
''tiether to press courts-«Dartial after
formal grand jury-type investigations are
conducted under the Uniform Code of
Military Justice .
According to Friedheim, other fonner
war prisoners have sought legal advice
from . Pentagon military and civilian
lawyers about po6Sll>le dlarges against
other freed prisoners but "there have
been no other charges to date.."
He said those inquiries involved both
enlisted me.-i and officers.
Guy, shot down over Laos in 1968, was
connnander of U.S. war pri900ers in a
Hanoi compound called "The Plantation''
for about 411% years.
ln an interview, he charged that some
POWs accepted favors from the North
Vietnamese in the fonn of extra rations
and .greater freedom within the com-
pound walls and that they "turned their
b;;.cks on us."
He claimed that he and other POWs
were turned in to the North Vietnamese
by other American pri.soo.ers and that 'Friedhelm said the fonnal charges
were filed with the secretaries ol the
Newport Unit
Sla tes Session
Over J et Noise
' they were beaten and tortured because of
hi> efftli13 to establish communicatiom
among the POWs and to organize
discipline in the camp.
The continuiog battle over jet oolse at
Orange County Airport will be aired at a
Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce
Tovm Meeting Wednesday at 7:30 a.m.
at the Balboa Bay Club.
'Mle breakfast session, which is open
to all members el the public as a com-
munity service of the Chamber, will con.
sist of arguments from both sides of the
noise issue that has sperked a good deal
of debate 1n the Harbor Area in recent
rri<Nlths.
Air California President Robett_ditront
Is upected to speak in favor ot ~ Ule at
the alJ1lOfl and outliDe the latest -OQ designed to lessen the nol>e and po~
lullon of jet engines.
I.oog-time jet critic and A1J1)0rt Action
ASIOClatlon member Dan ~ey will
mlll<e a p ...... tatlon m the damace be-
ing' done by the Jets as dlty fly ...,.
Ui>Oer N""1'0rt Bay.
lie Is obo expected to outline a num-
ber of legal act!Onl pendln1 aplmt Ille
jeta.
Dr. Nolan FrtZZl!lle, dlalrman of--Olo
Chamber's Airport Commtttee, will ttall
the business commun~y'• -m Iha
ainlort amt moderat<> the meettnr wlilch Wlfi also Include q-and _,,, •
from the audlenoe.
Tbe br.alllf'I wJll ..,.t 13 per -.i
•nd -aUios mqt..mede by conilll
the <Jiamber offtco.
Friedbelm avoided a direct answer to a
questioo. as to.nether P:eotagon officieJJ
attempted to talk Guy cut or filing
charges.
Tbe Pentagon spokesman said only
that "Col. Guy was afforded the same
legal assistance that wou1d be aUorded
any member of the seryices." Frledheim
said this incluc!ed guidance on the rights
or the colonel and the accused under the
military justice code, but said the legal
o(ricers "would not presume to suggest a
decision" on whether to go ahead with
the charges."
From the outset of the POW release in
Febri.i~J P~ntagon .oUicials have~~
to smooth over. the .. ha.rib feellng:i
between some war prisoners and to· pro-
mote a forgivHOO..forget attitude. · ·
SCh ool Trustees Sei
Special Meet Tonight
Newport.M,.. !dlool dl.ttrlct trustees
will meet in tp<dli .... 1o11 tonlgbt at
7::!0 o'dOck at Coata Mesa High Scliool.
C4otinUed dlSOUllllon ol the ptellmlnary
bQdcet lot tbo am 3Chool year ad ao-
lion on pr_.i chaoges ln the dlltrlct'• ndes pemJna corporal punlsbmmt and
empioye ~ aro ·oo tile apnda.
Black Paper Bombed
WILMINGTON, N.C. (UPI) -An e•·
ploslon d<molilhcd the editorial offices
of Ille Wilmioilon Jdlmal, • blacio<>rl·
entod-)J·ne-. Monday nlCJ>t.
Promontory Bay
Lagoo11..llelayed
By Dam Break
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of Hie DallY Pn.r Sllff
Work on the Irvine Company's m,an...
made lagoon at Promontory Bay in
Newport Beach was dealt a three-week
setback alter the second dam break in as
many months filled the basin with IS feet
of water Sunday.
Tbe owner of the cqntraCtlng company
doing lhe job said the only damage done
by the tmeXpected fillup was the
dispJacement of seven large concrete
bulkhead panels near t.he entrance to the
lagoon.
"They can be reset but the loss ol llme
will be costly," said Al Penhall or
Pmhall Marine Inc. He wouldn't quote a
cost figure.
A floating pump was also capsized by
the rush of water but it was fi~ out to-
day and is undamaged.
Two months ago, the same section of
the 100.foot·wide earthen dike gave way
and pre.maturely filled the lagoon . All of
that water had to be pumped out so the
\Vork could continue.
Penhall said this time, the water will
be left in the lagoon and his cre\vs will
"work with the tides" to finish the job.
Penhall engineers and Jrvine Company
officials speculated today the dam gave
way as a result of weekend tidal action .
An Irvine company spokesman also
said there is a pos.!ibillty that increased
wave action from heavy Newport Harbor
boat traffic . could have been a con-
tributing factor.
"There was ,a leak in the dike Friday
but it was ' patched and the whole thing
wa.\,. recompacted," said the company
spakesman. "We don't know al this point
whether it was the patch that broke or
not."
Penhall said severaJ log booms have
been stretched across the mouth of the
basin where it enters the Balboa Island
Channel to collect any construction
debris that may floa t out as work con·
tinues. ·
A spokesman for the Regional Water
Quality C.Ontrol Board said his office is
satisfied that Penha.11 is doing all that's
!See LAGOON, Page ZI ' ' ...
"It was the worst I've ever seen it in
• nine years on. the force." Lee said.
. In. Hun=~ Beach police reported '-·-··~·· nearfy ' 100 cars towed away for illegal parkinJ. "Ev~ that ,came to Hunlilliton
Beach Monday parl<ed here llleially,"
declared police Lt. Dou JenkW this
morning.
Beach conditions, for those that got
that far, were excellent both Sunday and
Monday. Water temperatures ranged up
to 68 degrees and !Urf was small. Air
temperatures were Crom 70 to 90 degrees,
with the hottest temperatures recorded
on San CJemente State Beach.
There were few rescues repcrted, and
only one serious incident involving
Laguna Beach llleguards. Officials there
said Homer Lewis, 55, of Los Angeles in-
jured his head and neck body surfing
Saturday.
Pulled from the surf by his wile, Lewis
was not breathing when lifeguards ar-
(See CROWDS, Page II
NY Times Tells
Kalmhach 's Role
Against Wallace
NEW YORK (AP) -The New York
Times reports Herbert W. Kalmbach of
Newport Beach, President N i x o n ' s
former per90llal attorney, approved the
spending of $200,000 to l@,000 in GOP
funds in an effort to engineer the: defeat
of Gov. George Wallace of Alabama in
1970.
The paper said former White Hoose
legal counsel John W. Dean Ill bas told
Watergate investigators of this develop..
ment.
Two Washington attorneys familiar
with election law told the Times that.
while such contribution would not have
violated any federal laws , a careful
check of the Alabama campaigns financ-
ing laws would be needed.
Wallace, widely regarded as a potential
threat lo President Nixon in 1972, won a
runoff election for the Democratic
gubernatorial nomination in June 1970
after finishing behind Gov. Albert P.
Brewer in the primary a month earlier.
.Gas Tax Hike
U.S. Eyes 'Ewnomy Mauer'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tre .. ury Secretary George P. Shull%
said today the Nixon administration Is considering a proposal to
raise gasoline. taxes as an economy matter, not one to ease the en-
ergy crisis.· Shultz, speaking al a news conferencl."ffl economic reporters,
al!o lndlcatetl'lhat the Administration .~ under study other tax-
Jncre..., proposals ro help cool tbe rap!d!Y expandlQg economy.
As for the gaaoHne tu, Shultz said it is ''.one 6f the many things we are reviewing all the ilrhe.'t ·
He said there are pluses and minuses connec!OJI with the pr<>
posal and stressed that no decision his been made. •
The federa l Lax. is four cents a gallon .
... ---·· -_.,
•
I
-
• Ir''
~ I , Dltfr .............
II' YOU THifJIC 'fr"'):s·rouoH' TO PARK A CAR .. -
You Should H1Ye SMn the BlkH •I Nowport'o 3111 St ... t
•
Land Use, Apartment
.
Proposals Top Agenda
A document intended to shape future
development, and redevelopment, of New·
port Beach and a proposal to extend the
ban oo apartment construction on the
Balboa Peninsula head a lengthy New-
port Beach city council agenda tonigllt:
Councilmen, meeting at 7:30 in city.
hall, aie expected to adopt· the land use
and residential growth elements oC the
city's new general plan.
8'Xh elements have been rni:irkedl)! re-
vised from original planning staff \nd
planning commission recommendations.
The major changes stern from su11::ges-
tions by the Newport Harbor lbamber of
Conunerce that i-:o~ controls on
mulU·family (apartment) uses be killed.
The Balboa bullding ban, enacted Feb.
Canada to Quit
Vietnam Peace
F orce July 31
CYITAWA (UPI) -The government
announced today that Canada will with-
draw its 28Q.man peace observer force
from Vietnam by July 31.
"We are prepared if the parties to the
Paris agreement wish. to stay for a pe-
riod beyond June 30, but not later than
July 31,'' External Affairs Minister
Mitchell Sharp told the House of Com·
moos. (Related story. Pa~e 4l.
"Canada's decisk>fl to withdraw is firm
and definite. but the additkmal flexibility
should give the parties adequate time to
find a replacement for the Canadian del·
egation.' he said.
The minister noted Canada'a previous
position that It would pull out of the in-
tematlooal Commission for Olntrol and
Supervision (ICCS) by June JO U there
were not "subltantlal prog?UR."
He ssld this progrm had l1bt been
achieved ~C. oda thereloro would '111ithdraw.
He said ltkmal »day pr.....,.
in Vietna 1Jd give more 'lme for the
part! .. td find • succeaoor and for· tbe
l'Oflcluslon al negollations belwMn .U.S.
and .North Vletna,,,_ neg-,.In
Paris. • Shari> said can.di enterod ' tile roes
ooly oo a· tBltaU .. baslo 'llld with l!l""Y
doubW, emanatln1 ·from wide ._...
with -keeping elsewhere 11!!1-11
Yetll'I m the old Vtetna111 lnteniational
Clootrol Commlssloo llOC), which ht hu
described as 1 "farce."
12, prohibits the Issuance ol bulldlng per-
mits ro .. all zones euept Ro-I ·(slnil ..
ramlly), 11-1 .5 (limited duplex) and CJ
(commercial .)
A roar-fifths Yl>te of COU11Cilmen-w!U·1>e
necessary to •Pl"OY< the propooed eig)lt·
month extension, which is intended to
hold down construction pending adoption
of the new general plan.
While COWlCilmen arc scheduled to
adopt the land use and residential growth
P.lements tonight, their effect is appar·
ently not permanent because councilmen
have said they intend to approve the
general plan in Its entirety this fall when
all elements of the plan are complete.
In other acti041, COWlcilmen are sched·
uled to :
-COnsider specific zoning criteria for
Newpart Shores.
-Permanently close the northerly in-
tersection of Dover Drive at Irvine
Avenue .
-Appoint a committee to study pro-
posed growth cootrole Jlf'0!>05ed by Or-
ange County that came under fire at A
public hearing Jut week.
Orange Coast
Weather
Mostly swmy is the way the
weatherlady sees it !or Wednesday,
with cooler days. Highs in the 70s
are expected at the beaches and
inland areas. Lows In the 60s.
INSIDE TODAY
Proclaiming "1looktT11 of tM
world, un,it," a San FTmu:hco
prostitute and an approving
beard of bµajnestmtn and ciu&k~
ors -with a $5,000 gratlt f1'om
a religious group -llre orgc'r-
izhtg a prostituU1' guild t.o com-
bat Police harassment. Ste de·
tails on Page 5.
L.M • ...,Ill t CtJlle,_ l
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w.n. ,.... •· •
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' I
I
% DAILY PILOT
Taxpayers Wa • rIOJ.! ores
Slwll Out , S~c9nd Vi.ct~fY
On B eaclws ., AUIOll IDCIABEY l(ort>cr vai ~.
Newport Beach retldtnts pay more
than premium bowling COSti lo Jive clOle
to one of California's most popular w....
Urlront rttrtallonaJ areas.
Taxpayers shell out nearly $1.S milHon
a year to maintain and operate the.lr 1.1
miles of ocoan front beaches, Cl\)' Man-
agor Rohen L. Wynn said IOday.
Wynn said granll to tho city ml .....
enues generated by beadlaoers total un-
der $!00,000. meanlng the City loses aboul
$1 miJUon a year.
Wynn was scheduled t:Jtve a report on beach ooeta to coi mm today.
Qlundlman Carl Kymla had requeoted
It to find out bow l1lllCh local Jupayan
are paying to support wllot he says ii a
reP;nal recreatioo.al area. He implied Orange County government
ought to be paying more of the Jab to
keep up the beaclies.
Only Monday, !Ueguards reported a
record 150,000 pel"800s lammed NeWport's
beadles for Memoria Day. There are
only 55,000 people llvlng Jn Newport
Beach.
Wynn said the biggest single cost to
local residents is police services.
lie estimated that of the police deport-
ment's 12 million budgel, 16t!,OOO goes
toward taw enforcement along the beacb-
frunt recreational area.
"During the summer months all vac.
tiClll are canceled, officers accumulate
overtime and the clv!lWt reoerve -
loroe Is preued Into paJd-ttme -In
order to maintain the level ol manpower
equal to the demand for senlces," Wynn
said.
Lifeguard costs are the 9eCOnd biggest
expenditure, Wynn said. They totalled
$418,000 last year. Of that total, 198,000
was reimbursed by Orange County.
Other costs include beach maintenance,
$212,000 ; landscaping maintenance, '433,·
700 : parking facility maintenance, $(5,·
185: and capital improvements (average),
lll4,045.
Wynn said that placed the estimated
total annual coru tor "regJooal recrea·
tional areas" at fJ,«2,729.
Incomes are derived trom Corona deJ
Mar parting lot, 11111,000; Corona cijl Mar
restrooms, ; Coran& del Mar ~ annual ~T,000; Corona del Mar
ceooion, "' ; Balboo parklna. lot, $32,000; BaJtioa annual puses, $25,000;
Balboa reotrooml, 12,200: Tel-.
$550; pier COllCOSS!ons, 16,ltlO; coonty
l~eguard .. rvtoes, 198,800; and pa-g
meter receipts, 1120,000.
"In addition to these identifiable rev-
en\le9," Wynn said, "the beach u.sen also
contribute to the city's revenues in the
fonn of additional sales tax, uniform
transient occupancy (bed) tax, court fines
and other indirect lees.
"The increased assessed valuation ol
the homes located near the beaches al90
increase property tax receipts. However.
it is impossible to project th e increment
of increa5ed revenues received from these
sources," Wynn concluded.
2 Hurt in Fires
On SD Bay Boats
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Fires broke out
on two boats in San Diego Bay, leaving
two men hospitalized with burns in sep-
arate incidents, police sa.ld.
Harry Lasko, 43, of San Diego suffered
second-degree burns Monday on his legs
when the engine on bis 18-foot inboard
mot.orboat exploded, police said. Three
persons on board weren't hurt. and lhe
boat, tied up at a dock at the time, suf-
fered minor damage,
Allen Parish, 29, of El Cajon received
first-degree bums on his face in a flash
fire on his 30-fool cabin cruiser at a
feuling dock, ponce .said. The boat wasn't
badly damaged.
Aliens Escape Jail
EL CENTRO (AP) -O!rlctals today
were looking for 14 illegal aUens with
tell-tale unifonns -the T-.shlrts and
green shorts they were clad in when they
escaped from a rear window in the
Imperial County Jail.
I
OU.Neil COAff "'
DAILY PILOT
111• Otlnfc (01>1 D"'ILY ,.!LOT, wllfl wll•(fl
h CombinN t~· ,..,Wl-Pt~IJ. " P,,Dll•lltd bV
~ 0r•"9• (O~ll P~Dll1M,,g C:omp1n~ Sep•
r111 Mll!lon1 ••• D\IDll1ll!'<d, Motld•Y flll'Ol>'ln
frld~y. !O• c ..... Mt~. NtWPOrl lltttll.
Hll"llnv1on 11••~~/FOll'llt•~ Vflltv. l"vnt
lie•~"· 1•¥intl~Ocll.0.ck •flCI '"" Clemoni.t
S8n Jv•n C.plslrano A •lngl1 fl'lllnn~I
.cr110M ft. p...11!1•-s11111111y1 end Sund&Y.J.
'"-11rlMlj)ll Pllblllhll\O pl1nl .. I ! ]JU W"I
.. ., Street, Cmt• M..... C1lllllml1, tUl4.
Robert N .. Weed
,.,...ldtnl •nd P'uOtilllcf'
Jtck It. Curley
Vice ,.,..klcnl tnd 6-ft l Mlnlfll'
Tho101c1 ICccvil
ll!OllW
Tl>om11 A. Mw1ph1nc
.IUlllOlftll ll!dli'Qr
L '•l•r Kti t' Nt-1 a.ldl City l:d110<
N.w,_,, ...... Office
JJJJ Ntwport lovlc¥crd
M•ilin9 Add rco: ,,0 . 1011175, •266J
o....o .....
(0111 M"t: 1111 Witt ••v St•HI
Lie-•••tfl t m Forni Avcnvc
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l'Nllll•ltlr W -n U.lJ -'lllY1 fl\lllfllfT
... INT .... •M .-JlllY.
I
ot 111e °'"' '""' ''"' n>e race was marred when t'red AJ Clssel's 50-foot 1k>op WllJTior from MacDonald, NHYC 111dpper ()f the Colum·
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club won ill aec· bia-52 Tribute, wffered a heart attack.
ond cmsecutive vlct~ in the Pacific Ills condition today was repcrted as
Ocean Racing O>nfercnce ln winning ttie •·stable",
wind-lashed, 24&-mlle Channel Islands MacDon.-ild was removed from the
Raei! Sonday. yacht by the Coast Guard and taken to
Warrior was the third boat to flnllh Hoag Memorial Hospital. Tribute r,...
behind Mark Johnson's W l n d ward mained m the race.
Passqe, New York Yacht Club, and Bob and Grant's et-foot sloop Robon, Ntwport Strong wind! with ~knot gusts
Coed Reports
Election Data
Must Be Lost
Only one candidate In last month's
Jacklu.ster Newport.Mesa school district
election has failed to file a required ex-
pense statement and one successful can-
didate reported spending more than
11.000.
Morprel Selterholm, tho 111-yeer .. ld
former Corma del Mar High School stu·
dent who ran to unseat Area Four in·
cumbent Thomas C&sey, is the oo1y ooe
whose statement Is delinquent.
"I mailed the statement a week before
lhe deadline (May 22) 10 I can only gue5S
it's been lost somewhere," Miss Set·
terbolm Kid. "It's not the flnit trouble
I've had wttb the post office."
According to the Orange County
Registrar of voteri, Miss Setterholm
must now get a court order to file her ex·.
pense statement in order to live up lo the
letter of the law.
State law governing the statements re-
quires any candidate who spends more
than $200 to file. Miss Setterbolm says
she spent "about $390" on her campaign.
She said late trlday the registrar has
mailed her forms for a court order and
campaign expense statement to mail
back without penalty.
lbeoretically, a delinquent candidate
can be brought to court by any clllzen and
charged with a misdemeanor.
Cesey, the Corona del Mar banker Miss
5etterbolm tried to defeat, reported
_.ilng 16.87 more than he broogbt in in
donatioos for a total of $1,029.03 -the
most for any candidate running.
Mn. Elizabeth Lilly, whol!e last minute
write-in campaign failed to win the va-
cant seat in Costa Mesa's Are Tvto, spent
$541 and took in the same amount.
1be man who won that seat, Costa
Meaa Commwlicatioo.s Director Orville
Amburgey, reported '335 spent and $335
received.
The third candidate in that race, In-
surance executive Charles L. "Chuck"
Bridges, ~aid today he "didn 't spend a
nickel" in his campaign. Bridges did not
file a statement.
James K. SCbwarz, a third candidate
for Casey's Area Two seat was
unavailabl~ for comment but reportedly
aho spent Jess than $'ZOO on his cam·
paJcn. He aloo did DOI file a staloment.
Two candidatea, Arthur F. 1bompson
and Roderick MacMlllian, incllmbeats in
Areas Five and Seven respectlve1y, ran
unopposed. MacMillian spent nothing on
bis campaign and took in no donations.
Thomp&1n spent only $21 for bis un-
contested seat.
tumultuous seas buffeted the fleet on
Saturday, forcing nearly half of the
yachts to abandon the race and seek
refuge.
The race started Friday at 3 p.m from
Loo Angeles Harbor and took lhe fleet
around the Channel Islands with the
finish near the west end of Catalina.
Island.
The wind!! started building Frjday
n.ghl and by mid-day Saturday it was
blowing 50 knots off SJn Nicolas Island
and Richardson Rock, the y,·cathermost
points of the course.
There were no reports of dismastlngs
or serious damage to the yachts.
Windward Passage finished the race at
11 :14 a.m. Sunday for an elapsed time of
44 hours and 14 minutes.
OVERALL -(l) Warrior; (21 RDbon ;
(3) Blackbird, Allen Puckett, CYC; (4)
Drumbeat, Don Ayres Jr., NHYC ; (5)
Interlude, Fc:rest Olson, NHYC.
CLASS A -(1) Warrior; (2) Robon,
(3) Interlude.
CLASS B -(JI Blackbird; (21
Drumbeat; (3) Sirona, Jim Michaels, St.
FYC.
CLASS C -(1) Illusion, F.d McDowell,
KHYC; (2) Nemesis. Tom Tobin, SDYC;
(3) Kari II, Dick Kelton, LAYC.
FrotnPagel
CROWDS ...
rived. Following mouth· to · mouth
resuscitation efforts, however. Lewis was
reported in stable condition this morn ing
in the intensive care unit of South Coast
Community Hospital.
Lifeguards related the record-break-
ing beach crowds to lhe generally poor
beach weather that has plagued coastal
beaches through most of this spring.
"People have been going crazy for a
chance to go to the beach all spring,"
said Huntington Beach lifeguard Capt.
Douglas D'Arnall.
"Then they get their first good weather
to coincide with Memorial Day, and you
know there's going to be trouble," he
said.
"The people were just really ripe for
the beach after the lousy spring we had,"
was the way lifeguard dispatcher Bruce
Reed of Newport Beach put it.
There were some reports of jellyfi sh
at Newport and Huntington Beach, and
several reports of sting rays in San
Clemente. There were no serious in-
cidents, however.
Although some gang fighting was
reported on Los Angeles county beaches,
Orange Coast lifeguards said the large
crowds were well-behaved.
Huntington Beach police reported some
problems with about 100 surfers wbo
refused to leave the water Monday mom·
ing when crowds on the beach began
building up. Two arrests were made, but
officiaJs said there could have been more
if personnel had been available.
McWhinney Seen Victim
Of Plot to Get Battin
By TOl\f BARLEY
Of ,,.. D1llY l"lllt Slllt
Westminster City Councilman Derek
McWhinney's attorney today told an
Orange County Superior Cour.t j.ury that
his client is the innOCi!nt v1ctun of a
"detennined move by certain political
figures'' to discredit county supervisor
'Robert Battin.
Long Beach attorney Joseph Ball to~d
the jury in his opening statement this
morning that 1\1c\\'hinncy never al any
time lold stra\vbcrry groy,•er George
f\1urai !hat the $5.000 allegedly demanded
from the 1\ll!c Square Park farmer \\'f!S
destined for Batlln's ca nlpaign fund .
1\.1c\Vhinney . 40. and \Vestn1inster Plan-
ning Commissioner Tad Fujita. 34. were
indicted on grand theft , bribery and con-
spiracy charges after the grand jury
heard ailegaticm thll Muari was
pressured Into parting with a total of
$10,000 In a "pay up or loSe)your lease"
plan .
But Ball today told the jury he will
prove that McWhinney's objective in ~p
proaching Murai was to obtain the ~hie
Square Park lea!Je fe>r a group of
business a~iale3 who expet':ted to
make substantial profits from the Foun·
tain Velley acreage .
Ball said It was nonsense to suggest
that McWhiMey used Battin's name as a
lever to eitract payment from Murai
since the former Westminster mayor wos
an acUve supporter of attorney \V illlam
Wenke. Ballln'I opponent in the First
Superv isorlal District contest then under
~·ay .
He reminded the jury !hat ~i1.1r1:1i had
been reluctant to testiCy before. anyone In
the weeks immediately · f o 11 ow Ing
McWhinney's first conversalie>n with him
la!lt June 20.
Ball claimed lhat Mural "had his
memory refruhed" and became much
me>rt ready to cooperate with the dJ11trict.
attorney'• ofOce after Richard Ruiz,
Supervisor David Baker's executive
assistant, called lhe rarmer in late June.
"Rulz told Murai that if he didn't
cooperate in the investigation that in-
cluded Battin's name be would never get
Ns lease from the county supervisors,"
Ball told the jury.
And lhe veterlm lawyer made it clear
that defense witnesses' testimony will in-
clude the assertion that relations
between Battin and Baker were strained
at the time the Mile Square Park lease
came up for review.
Prosecutor Mich11el Capizzi told the jury
he will prove that McWhinney and Fujita
si n1ply intended to make n1oney out of
J\1ura l when they warned the far1ner !hat
it would take $10,000 to help protect his
!ease.
Murai had worked the 215 f\.1ile Square
Park acres for the past five year.!i at an
annual fee of $150 an acre, Capizzi said.
He told the jury that when McWhinney
and Murai fir.st met in the farmer'!!'
strawberry field negotiations were under
way to grant Murai a one-year
"holdover'' lease on the property.
Ball claims that McWhinney was
motivated by the desire to get a better
price from the land worked by Murai and
spill the acreage into three perctls to
give smaller farmers an opj)Ortunity to
bid.
li e told the jury today that f\tcWhlMey
pro1nlsed Murai he would return the
$S,OOO If he could not get !he land under a
ne1i,· tease for the Fountain Valley
farmer.
CBpi:ui said he will prove that
McWhinnry used Battin's name to ex-
tract a $5.000 check from Mural In favor
of Bottln's campaign fund .
Tilt. prosecutor said Fujita was caught
with the cash on the table when he drew
a further ~.000 from the farmer.
Capizzi said the district attorney's of·
nco taped a number of talephone cm-
versatlons and obtaintd evidence that
immediately led to the indictment of both
city olllclals.
\
UPIT~
LT MARK PHILLIPS, PRINCESS ANNE ENGAGED
Co.upl• Reveal They're MoN Than Just 'Good Friends'
Princess Anne Gets Ol{ay
To Marry Lt. Phillips
LONDON (UPI) -Ten weeks after
she insisted they were just good friends.
Princess Anne, 22, changed her mind and
asked her mother, Queen Elizabeth, for
pennission to marry Lt. Mark Phillips, a
24-ye&r-old, $100-a-week career soldier.
5 Mesans Held
In Telephone
Bandit Scheme
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of lfll DlilJ' P'llef Stiff
Five Costa Mesa men were taken lnlo
custody in a series of arrests over
Memorial Day weekend as police from
five agencies allege they J>roke the
''telephone bandit'' ring.
Jn custody today in Costa Mesa are:
-Mark Stewart Alcala, 18, of 525 Vic-
toria St.
-Paul Christian LaJole. 18, of the
same address.
-Todd Brian Cbappelow, 18, of 18151
~ellowstone Drive.
-John Patrick Diener, 19, Y•ho gave no
address.
Jn custody in Huntington Beach is :
-Jeffrey Dale Welch , 19, of the Vic-
toria Street address in Costa Mesa .
All the men are charged with armed
robbery and police said Alcala is alse>
being held on charges of intent lo injure
with a destructive device.
Detective Sgt. Sam Cordeiro of Costa
Mesa, who beaded up the team of in-
vestigators on the case, said the five men
are being held in connection with a total
of 15 robberies throughout Southern
Calilomia.
Known as the telephone bandit in West
Orange County, the five men are believed
by police to be responsible for seven rob-
beries and a bombing here in the past
month.
The robberies, Y•hich took place in
lfuntington Beach, Costa Mesa and Foun-
tain Valley, v.·ere distinguished because
the victims never had any cootact with
the bandit other than by 1elephone.
Cordeiro noted ironica11y that Acala ,
\Vho had gone into hiding, was assertedly
talked inlo surrendering over the
telephone by Detective George ''iilson of
Costa Mesa.
The queen gave U1e couple het blessing
arxt announced the engagement tonight,
thus bringing Into the royal family a man
whose mother does moot of her own
l'oosekeeptng and wbose falher is only
comfortably off as a director of a pork
sausage and ice cream firm .
The announcement in the court circular
said:
"It is with the greatest pleasure that
the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh an-
nounce the betrothal of their beloved
daughter, the Princess Anne, to Lt. Mark
Phillips. the Queen 's Dragoon Guards,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Phillips."
The Buckingham Palace pr ess
secretary, Ronald Allison, said the wed-
ding would be in the early autumn -
probably November -either i n
Westminster Abbey or St. George's
Chapel on the grounds of Windsor Castle.
"The queen and Prince Philip, who
have both known Lieutenant Phillips for
some time, are delighted with the
engagement," Allison said. adding that
Mark's parents would lunch with the
royal family at Buckingham Palace
Wednesday.
The news was heralded by an unusual
gathering or royalty at one of the royal
family homes in Scotland. Babnoral.
Prince Charles, heir to the throne, flew
in from his ship in the Caribbean and
Queen Mot.her Elizabeth, P r i n c es s
t\fargaret and the Earl of Snowdon also
were present. • II
Phillips was the only comm&ner
present. And \\'hen it became known he
1i,·as there at the express invitation of
Princess Anne, it became obvious that
she and the lieutenant wer~ not sticking
jo the "just good friends" story they
gave journalists in March.
The young couple will be on the
overnight royal train from Londoo
loolgbt with lhe queen and lhe other
members of lhe royal family,
NO CASTRO TIES
TO WATERGATE?
MEXICO CITY (UPI\ -Cuba's new
amba ssador to Mexico said Monday that
Premier Fidel Castro had nothing to do
1\•ith the \Vatergate affair.
•· 1 reject any connection you want to
ma ke between the Watergate case and
Fidel Castro," ambassador Fernando
Lopez Mulno told newsmen, in response
to a question, as he arrived to lake up his
new post.
'
Astronaut
'Zooms In'
.. •
• t•
On the Sun
SPACE CENTER . 1-louston lAP J -
Skylab astronau t Or .. Joseph P. Kerwin
today pointed 11 battery of telescopes at
fhc SWl. hoping to give scieAlists their
bcsl look ye t ~t lu1y,· rtu s seething sphere
of A:IM>S controls the solar system.
Phvsiclslll also hOpe lhe. experiment \~ill help unl0«:k the secret of controlled
thennonuclear fusion. the source of tht
sw1's energy. '!'his might aid in the
search for an unlimiLL'CI . pollution-fret
power source on earth.
··tt's a beautiful picture," Krrwin
noted as he viewed on a space station
television monitor the area or the sun thf'
six telescopes were examining, each in a
different wave length.
While Ke rwin tuned up the $121 .2
million array of eight telescopes, Charles
Conrad Jr. and Paul J. Weitz assembled
cameras and sensors which they'll use
starting Wednesday to survey the ea rth '5
resources.
It was the fifth day or the planned 28-
I
•
day orbital flight. :. ~
Mis.sion commander Coorad today re, · !
quested a private radio conversation with
Space Center Director Christopher Kraft. \
flight controller Neil Hutchinson and '
director of flight crew operations Donald
K. Slayton.
Mission Control later released a sum·
mary of the six-minute conversation.·
Coorad said he thought the temperature
stabilized in the station in the low 30s and
that the astronauts should be able to con··
duct all experiments fully except for a ·
bicycle exercise used in medical tests. (
He said the temperature still was a bit ·
.warm for the bicycle exercise to be run '
to full capacity. He also said it caused "
some difficulty because it "rides" dif·
ferently in weightlessness than in earth'!'!
gravity. • ..,
Conrad expressed displeasure Monday
at a number of extra engineering tasks ¥
the astronauts were being asked to do.
He asked that these be held off a couple
days Wltil !he crew got back on schedule. '
The first earth passes will be over the
United States and will be directed mainly
at agricultural areas. The goal of the ex·
periment in these areas is to survey
crops throughout the current growing
season, assess arability of land and
evaluate water runoff potential. I
The telescopes are mounted on a large 1
device that is extended away from the ,
orbiting station on long metal arms. 1
j
From Pagel J
LAGOON ...
possible lo protect the environment. ·.
"His method of handling U:ie problem l"l b',
quHe itJ:.-isfactory \Yith us as long as he
does everything as la id out in his
permit." sa id water quality engineer
John Zasadzinski.
·'The thing is so Ear along that we don·t
think any more dikes will be needed," he
said. "Something'• happening to those
dikes that defies description."
Zasadzimki sald Penhall will have to
complete his cement work -ebout 80
feet of bulkhead reinforcement -and
finirti dredging near lhe mouth of lhe
lagoon without polluting the harbor.
"U be can do that, we have no com·
plaints," he added.
The Irvine Company spokesman said
no penalties will be assessed against
Penhall because the problems aren't get·
ting in the way of what the company is
most interested in -the expensive Jots
that surround the new basin .
Penhall estimated work on the ney,• in-
let should be finished now by mid·June -
six weeks past the original May l
deadline.
The Irvine Company said t h e
premature opening of the bay badly
messed up only one thing -a formal
opening ceremony that had been schedul·
ed this Friday.
WOULD YOU BELIEVE -
'
THAT THERE ARE STILL COMPANIES
. . . . .
. . . . .
.. .. . . .
• • • • •
IN THI
HAllOI AllA
llNCI 1tl7
WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS
THEY SELL PERFORM 7
WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON
SERVICE 7
WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE
PERFECTLY?
WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY?
YES, "VI RGINIA," THERE IS AN ALDEN'S!
(TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.)
\
ALDEN'S
•
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ava.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
....._ • Thn. t to S1JG: l'r1. t to t: Stf, 9:30 to S
•
l
• I •
Coast Toda~
EDITION
YOL li6, NO. 149, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • TUEsDAY, MAY 29, 1973 c TEN CENTS
Member · of . . esa Sign Committee Step·s Aside
Nathan L. Rea~e, one of three men
charl!ed with the nominaUcn cl COSta
Mesa's new sign ordinance study com-
mittee, has resigned because of a ''possi·
bte conruet or interests."
· -Reade's resignation from the panel last
F.A,aay was accepted by Mayor Jack
Hammett who promptly appointed elan-
Din( Cllmmlssion chairman H. J.
·~e" Wood to the vacancy.
Mood j<>lns City Cooocilman Dom
:n.citl and Chamber of Commerce Presi-
"'
dent Eilgeoe Bergeroo on the nominating
comlnillee.
Hammett explained today that Reade's
potential coollict stems from bis dual
roJes as a member of lbe Costa Mesa
Plamling Commission and as paid assis-
tant mana_ger of the Chamber of COm-merce. . .
n.. cbamber cutTeDUy Is studyiDg the
controversial sign reform proposal and is
expected to issue. a recommendation for
or against the tneaBW'e.
A.. a member of the pl~ com·
UPI T ........ Ms
LT. MARK PHILLIPS, PRINCESS ANNE ENGAGED
Couplo Rovool Ti..y'ro Moro Thon Just 'Good Friends'
Princess Anne· Gets ·Okay
-·
\io Marry Lt. Phi11ips
LONDON (UPI) -Ten weeks alter
stfe insisted they were just good friends,
Ptlncess Anne, 22, changed her mhtd and
a.Ired her mother, Queen Elizabeth, fur
P,trJnissioo to marry Lt. Mark Pbllllps, a
24.year..old, $100-a-week career soldier.
: The queen gave the couple her blessing
~ announced the engagement toolght,
tbiis briDging into the royal family a man
Whose mother does most of her own
liousekeeping and whose father is only
oomfortably off as a director of a pork
sausage and ice cream firm .
·The announcement in tbe court circular
siid: ~ f•1t is with the greatest pleasure that uie Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh an-
1'0UD.ce the betrothal of their beloved
daughter, the Princess Anne, to Lt. Mark
Phl1lios the Queen's Dragoon Guards,
Son ol Mr. and Mrs. Peter Phillips."
Ram Back to Be
Mesa Fisli Fry ...
Grand Marshal
l . !l.es Josephson , running back for the
~ Rams, will sit Saturday out In the PJush seat oC a convetUble as grand
~ha! of the Costa Mesa Fish Fry
P.arade.
Tbe Buckingham Palace p r e s s
secretary, Ronald Allison, said the wed-
ding would be in the early autumn -
probably November -either i n
Westminster Abbey or St. George's
Chapel on. the grounds of Windsor Castle.
'"lbe queen and Prince Philip, who
have both known Lieutenant Phillips for
some time, , are delighted with the
engagement," Allison said, adding that
Mark's parents would lunch with lhe
royal family at Buckingham Palace w edne,sday.
The .1tews was heralded by an tmusual
gathering of royalty at one of the royal
family homes in Scotland, Balmoral.
Prince Charles, heir to the throne, flew
in from lils ship in the Caribbean and
Queen Mother Elizabeth, P r i n c e s s
Margaret and the Earl of Snowdon also
~re present.
Phillips was the only commoner
present. And when it became known he
was there at the express invitation of
Princess Anne, it became obvious that
sht!' and the lieutenant were not sticking
to tbe "just good friends" story they
gave journalists in March.
The young coople will be on the
overnight royal train from London
tonight with the queen and the other
members of the royal family.
'lbe palace spokesman maintained
Anne illld her fiance """' being honest
when •they said there was no romance in
March even though she had been seen
kissing him on the lips when he left to
join his unit in Germany - a remarkable
display' ot public affection from the
daughter Of a queen.
mission, Reade will be asked to vote on
the sign question after a public hearing
his been held.
In bis letter of resignation Reade
declared be does not think the two posi-
tions are in conflict, but tha.t others
might disagree.
The sign study committee became
loaded with controversy last week when
Raciti charged the group was being
weighted with businessmen who would
resist refonn.
Councilman Ra citi asserted that the
Five
nominations accepted by the mayor con-
tained 14 ~ess-oriented persoos and
only seven homeowners ..
With Reade off the nominating panel.
Hammett said he would ask the nomina·
tiOll! be reviewed again · and ask the
group to make additional recommenda·
tions, if neces,,ary.
The sign ordinance study committee.
as envisioned by Hammett, originally
was to have included only business
representatives. Hammett said the intent
was to determine what kind ot sign
limitations businessmen could "live
with."
A subsequent decision to expand
membership to non-busin ess citizens trig·
gered Raciti 's complaint of lopsidedness,
the mayor believes,
Raciti's contention is that the sign
Mudy committee should have an equal
nwnber of business representatives and
residential representatives.
The councilman said today he would
attempt to persuade the other member.I
ol. the nominating committee to give
equal re prese!1lation to both interests
and to reduce the membe rship to a total
of six.
"I don't see how a committee of 20 to
25 people will get anywhere," he said.
Raciti said also he saw no reason for
Reade to resign and that his objections
centered on the imbalance ot the com·
mittee and not on Reade's dual
capacities.
Me sans Arrested
Coast Police Nab Sus,pected Telepl1one Bandit,s
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of !fie DallY Pli.t lttff
Five Costa fAesa ·men were taken into
custody in a series of arrests over
Memorial Day weekend as police from
five agencies allege they broke the
"telephone bandit" ring.
In custody today in Costa Mesa are:
-Mark Stewart Alcala, 18, of 525 Vic-
toria St.
-Paul Christian LaJole, 18, of the
same address.
-Todd Brian Cbappelow, 18, of 1815l
Yellowstone DriVe.
-John Patrick Diener, 19, who gave no
address.
In custody in Huntington Beach is:
-Jeffrey Dale Welcb, 19, of the Vic-
toria Street address in Costa Mesa.
All the men are charged with armed
robbery and police said Alcala is alan
being held on charges of intent to injure
l'l'1Y!~· . · DeteCUv8 ~ • o · '
Mesa; who he& -· up the .. team-of -in-
vestigajors oc;ftJle cue,-siid the five men
are being held iii connec.1ion with a total
of 15 robberies throogboot SOuthern
California.
known. as the telephone bandit in West
Orange 'County, the five men are believed
by police to be responsible for seven rob-
beries and a bombing here in the past
month.
The robberies, which took place in
Huntington Beach, €osta Mesa and Foun-
tain Valley, were distinguished because
the victims never bad any contact with
the bandit other than by telephone.
c.ordeiro noted ironically that Acala,
who had gone into hiding, wa s assertedly
talked into surrendering ovei:: the
telephone by Detective George Wilson of
COSta Mesa.
During the telephone robberies, which
netted the robbers $2,700, one of the five
would call a franchise bu siness and tell
the manager that a high-powered riO~
was aimed at his head. Sometimes they
would tell him there was a bomb inside
the business that would be detonated if
the man did not follow instructions.
Cordeiro said today that the group's
suspected robberies in Tustin, Los
Angeles and San Diego did not always
follow the telephone style. "Some were
just straight anned robberies," be said.
School Trustees Set
Special Meet Tonight
Newport·Mesa school distMct trustees
will meet in special session tonight at
7:30 o'clock al Costa Mesa High School.
Continued discussion of the preliminary
budget for the next school year and ac-
tion on proposed changes in the district 's
rules governing corporal punishment and
employe grievance are on the agenda.
The last telephone robbery in Hun-
ti ngton Beach involved the Silzler steak
house at Beach Boulevard and Ellis
Avenue.
Three days after that robbery, a pipe
bomb was expoded on the roof of the
restaurant. No one' was injured in the ex·
.
plosion, which
Alcala.
police are charging to
It was the explosion that brought
federal investigators into (he case
because possession of an explosive device
is a federal offense. lt was the only time
Gas-Tax Hike
U.S. Eyes 'Eco1iomy Matter' -
WASHING TON (AP) -Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz
said today the Nixon administration is considering a proposal to
raise g~line taxes as an economy matter, not one to ease the en-
ergy crisis.
Shultz, akinlit a n~ws conference for economjc ~erS,
<tease p SaJs 00 ! --~ I , •
· · at •r.· · ~ "l't~" · · · ·· ··.
As to:1r. gasoline tax, Shwtz said"it ui~ne of -~ fhina•
'We a.re-~vteW1Dg au.the tJ.me-;~J... .-t·· 11' ...
He said there are pluses and minuses t'OJlllected with the pro-
posal and stressed that no decision has been made.
The federal tax is four cents a gallon.
8 Seized in Drug Raid
At Costa Mesa Sc1wol
Costa Mesa detectives drove directly
across the street from their headquarters
today to arrest one-third of the student
body at Bricker-Ward Preparatory
School, Inc., charging eight pupils with
multiple sales of dangerous drugs and
marijuana.
The visit to the private school
operating in an old building at 88 Fair
Drive apparently caught the students and
facul ty by surprise.
One boy tried to slip away and nee on
foot, police allege, after his instructor
had told investigators he was not in class
while the suspect stood there In their
midst.
"This is him," Detective Don Casey
remarked :.s he escorted the youth back
to a squad car to be delivered to Orange
Coun ty Juvenile Hall.
Casey engineered a two.month in-
vestigation of the school along with his
partner, Detective Dick DeFrancisco,
after rePorts of alleged drug-dealing
surfaced.
Except for the one escape attempt, the
9:45 a.m. raid at the campus leased on
Orange County Fairgrounds property oc·
curred without lncldent.
Investigators found most of the
school's 25 enrollees stancllng around
outside waiting for class when the eight
arrests were made.
Charges to be processed through
ju\·eniJe couft Include sale and possession
of dangerous drugs and marijuana.
Three of the eight yOWll!JllerS -rang·
ing in age from 12 to 17 -had marijuana
in their possession when taken into
custody today, according to Lt. John
Regan.
He said the sales which allegedly took
place on the small campus directly ad·
jacent to Costa Mesa High School, and
Davis Intennediale School, which are
just across Arlington Drive, involved
small amounts of contraband.
The largest individual dealing rtBUlted
in purchase of 56 amphetamine tablets,
Lt. Regan claimed today, adding that at
one point bis men were negotistin& for a
run pound of hashish.
He said hashish. a marijuana
(See DRUG RAID, Pa1e l)
any violence was used, the detective
believes.
Cordeiro said he does not know whether
the FBI will cbara:e Alcala under federal
law. lie said be expects the five men will
be arraigned Thursday in the Harbor
Judicial District Court.
Misconduct
Charges
Face POWs
WASHINGTON (AP) -An Air Force
colonel who commanded U.S. war
prisnoers today f i I • d court-martial
, . ~m ~ainal ~fll' ·"""3 ~ ,Marine enltate~ men. Ho accgaed them of
"mi,Cooclucl .iil1e In 'a Ncrlb Vlet-=-prison comp/Hila Penl!qplil an·
The acUon by Col. Theodore W. Guy ol
Tucson, Ar:lz. wu the first sucb mGYe
against any of the -566 military POW1
who have returned home.
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W •
Friedheim said the names of the eijjlt,
five sbldiers and three Marines, will be
made pub!Jc after they are formally
notified. .
Friedhelm did not disclose the specl/ic
charges or ony detalls, but mllltary
sources said Guy accused-=elgbt ol aiding the enemy, dlso · ordm
and disrespect to superior of •
Mare than a month ago, the 44-year-old
Guy told a reporter that some POWs be
con1111anded were cowards "wbo openly
collaborated with the enemy" and even
caused physical harm to some comrades.
He declined to name them then.
Frledheim said the lonnal cbargeo
were filed with the aecretarles of the
Anny and Nayy. They wW decide
whether to press courts-martial after
formal grand jury-type Investigations are ·
conducted under the Unitorm C«fe of
Military Justlce.
According to Friedheim, other (armer
war pri.sOners have sought legal advice
from Pentagon military and civilian
lawyers about possible charges against
other freed prisoners but "there have
been no other charges to date."
He 11aid those inquiries involved both
enlisted me;1 and officers.
Guy, shot down over Laos In 1968, was
commander of U.S. war prisoners in a
Hanoi compound called "The Plantation"
for about 4 ~ years.
Orange Coat
::The parade, expected to draw a crowd Of 100,000, is the llighlight of the ZS.year-
l>\d fry. Jt begins at 10:30 a.m. at C.OSta
Mesa Parle, just west of Newport
BOulevard and 18th Street. "<.~Clifr Wesdorf. organizer of the three-
lniie Jong parade, says this year's parade
~volves 140 entries and more than a aozen floats.
Sttul.ies Solar Secrets
Open Space Part
Of Mesa's Plan
Set for Review >The theme, "From Jennies to Jets,"
~lebrates the 50th anniversary of avia·
~on in. Orange County.
'Last year's hit , the ''Suicide Squadron" t,f the Tijuana Police motorcycle. detail,
)"ill not 1>3rlicipato In the parade because
Jts M:rvlccs are required south or the lionfer. acconllng lo Wesdorf. _ But the ca.ta Mesa-Newport Harbor
~. aonual hoeta for the Flab Fry, li'omlse several sullotituto tbt1J1a begln-
n!nll with CIMlival rides at the parlt Fri-
day. nigh!. • Fish Fry attractions lnC!lide musical
and stage ..._tatiO!ll lllroughout the
tlltoo-day event; band, beaul1 Ind baby
'contests; drawings for priW which In-
clude a new car, and of oourae, the tradl·
tional fish dinnera.
'.L..91hcten will he seniecl begiMlng at
_...)°:30 p:l!>. Friday, at noon SaturdaY, &lid
11t noon SUnday: Price per dinller ll $2.
• ""-<II" from the dlnllei'a, camlnl 'and mldl!IY booth> will be tunied ... r to 1iiarhor Are& mar1ues. Liem C1nb ~bets ·hope to cma •t00,000 during ~--· ...
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Astronaut Peers at Sun
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -
Slcylab S,,tlj>naut-or. Joseph P. llerwln
today pointed a battery of teleocopes at
the SUI), hlll>ln¥ 19, 111ve sclen~ their
best look yet at !m'·this -thing sphere
of , .... cooltOll the solar system.
PhYstclata also hope the e:xperlment
VllD· help unlock the secret of controlled
lhtrmonudear fusion, the source of the
stm'~ ~-This mjght aid In the
search for an unlimited, polluticm-free
power' aouree on earth.
"1t's a beautJftd picture," Kerwin noted oa he viewed nn a space staUon
televialon monitor the area oi the 1W1 the six teleacopea were eiamining, eaeb in.a
different wate length.
While Kerwin tuned up the $121.2
millim11rray ol eigbt telescopeA. Chari..
Conrad Jr. and Paul J. Weitz a-ru>led
ca-'3 .ind te!llOh wllich they1i use
,•
starting Wednesday to survey the earth's rerently in weightlessness than in earth's
resources. gravity.
It was the ftfth day of the planned 28-COnrad expressed displeasure Monday at a number ofo extra engineering tasks day orbilal flight. the astronauts were being asked to do.
Mission commander Conrad today re-He asked that these he held off a couple
quested a private radio oonversation with days until the crew got back on achedule.
Space Caller Director Cbrl8topher Kraft, The flnt earth passes will be over the
flight conltOller Neil Hutcbinsol\ ~d United Slates and will he dltected mainly
dJrector of flight crew operaUons DonOld rt ogriculturai areas. The goal of the ex-
K. Slayton. periment' In these areas Is to survey
Mlss!Clll Conlnil !liter released a sum-CfOI>.' throUghout the current 'growing
mary of the .U-litinute conversation. sea50ll, AWSS arablllty of land and
Conrad said be thought the teliiperaturer evaluate water nmolf potential
stabllized Jn the ataticit_ in the low 80s a:nd • nit telescopes are mounted on a large
that the astronauts •bould be able to con· device that is extended away from the
duct all experimenta fully except tor--a orbiting 8'tatlon on long metal arms.
hicy<le uercile Uled'tii ~"'\! teltl. The astronauts Monday completed set·
He said the temi>Oi\itumltWJ"lu 1 bit )lni up housekeeping In the' laboratory.
warm for the bicycle ~x'et<:i>t 1*·~ :l!lllch ,is the si"" of a throo-bedroom
to lull capacity. lie aloo said It • -"!iciilie. and began their first ·medical ex·
some dittlculty because it "rides" dif· pcrlmenta.
The new open space element of the .
Costa Mesa General Plan will be l'f:view-
cd tonight by tho city piaMlng com-
mission during a 1:30 public hearing in
the Costa Mesa Civic Center.
A result of nine months w'ort by con-
sultants Marshall F. Linn and Co. ol
Fullerton, the study stresses C:O.ta
Mesa's ne00 to buy up vaeant p._-tjes
and to involve more citizens In mating
decisions about open apace.
The open space elemeol 11 a state-re-
quirement wh!Ch mus\ be enacted by the
Costa Mesa City €ounCU.btfore •July I.
Another public tieartnc listed on
tonight's planning commission calendar
has been canceled.
Thai belting was to have beo!1 on the
citywide sign reform propotal which hali
encountered several delays.
Planning commlasiooer1 will
reocl)edule the public heaftnc °"·the llin
Cll'dlnanco alter a cW-commltlee lllJCI. fine the _.i bu mac1e-1i. ,,_,,_
meridation.
We.._er
Mostly SlWly is the way the
weatherlady sees jt for Wednesday.
with cooler days. Highs in the '10s
are e1pected at the beaches and
inland areas. Lows in 'U>e 60s.
INSWE TODA 'l'
Proclaiming "Hookers of th•
world, untte." a San Frmldsco
prostiluto and an approving
board o/ bu.ttnusm«n and autho
or• -wllh a $5,000 grant fr=
a rcl£gjom group -ore organ·
fzfno a prostitutet' guild to com-
ba.t l)Oiz~e hora11m••~ St'!,·~
tad1 on Paae S. • •
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z DAILY Pll01
Memorial Day
BJ JOHN ZAIJ.ER
Ot .. Dtltr ..... '"'" A M_..w l>Q . •
IOll'.'le ar the largest beach crowds and '
~w•I traffic jams ln the llla!ofy of lhe
Oran&• Coast. officials reported today.
Roads leading inlo all coastal areu
wert snayied -some from as far a.,_ ~ve
miles lnJaod -from late morning M•
day until late 8.ft.emoon, and when
motorisl, arrivM at beach areas, park-
ing apat-e1 were at a premium.
Coutwlde beodl llltendanee w a •
reported 11 nearly 400,om Mondly alone.
Newport Beach with 150,000 poople and
Nixon Rules
Out Appearance
WASlllNGTON (UP!l -'Ille
White Ho""' today ruled out as
"conatltutlonally ina_.tate"
any appearance by President Nixon
before the Watergate federal grand
jury.
White House Press Secretary
Rooald L. Ziegler also said that "no
consideration ... at all" is being
given to a possible appearance by
Nixon before the Senate Watergate
investigaUng committee. (Earlier
story, Page 4)
Ziegler responded aharply to a
report in the Washington Poll that
Watergate proeeeutors told lhe
Justice Department there was
justification for calling Nixon
before the grand jury.
NY Times Tells
Kalmhach's Role
Against Wallace
NEW YORK (AP) .-The New York
Times reports Herbert W. Kalmbach of
Newport Beach, President NI x on' s
former personal attorney, approved the
spending ol $200,000 to '400,000 in GOP
funds in an efrort to engineer the defeat
of Gov. George Wallace of Alabama in
1970.
The paper said former White House
legal counsel John w. Dean m has told
Watergate investigaton of Ulls deve.~
m<O!.
Two Washington attorneys familiar
with election law told the Times that,
while such contribution would ll(>t have .
violated any federal laws, a careful
cbect of the Alabama campaigns flnanc--
ing laws would be needed.
WaUace, widely regarded as a potentla1
threat to President Nixon in 1972, won a
nm.off election for tbe Democratic
gubernalorial nomination in June 1970
after finishing behind Gov. Albert P.
Brewer in the primary a month earlier.
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA PLANNING COM·
MISSION -Regular meeting, City Hall,
6:30 p.m.
NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL BOARD -
Special meeting, Costa Mesa High
Lyceum. 7:30 p.m.
OCC STUDENT ART SHOW ~ OCC
Art Gallery, May 29-July 1~.
UC! LECTURE -"Evening ~'ith and
by Eugene L<lring," Fine Aris VIiiage
Theater, 8 p.m.
UC! LECTURES -"The Road Back,"
part of series on Japanese-American
Internment , 178 Hwnanities Hall. 7·9:30
p.m. Admission $-'I .SO. "Southwe!tem
Archeology ," part of series o n
Archeology and Environment of Orange
Count y, 104 Physical Sciences, 7·9:30
p.m.
OIAN•I COAIT CM
DAILY PILOT
Th• 0• ..... Cotl! OAH.'I' PILOT, w1111 wtlldl
I• comoll'llllll lh• ,......Prn1. It (IUM..,._ '¥ 1119 0<• ... U••• l"llllUJl\lng c.,,,,...y, ...._
rete 9dlllon1 ere ~t,'*I, M-..y lhf'O\IDl'I
Frld•y, ...... COiie MtN, N~ •1M;11.
H""li"fll<WI B1•dlfF-"ln V11tty, L .......
B.ad'I, INIM/S-le*k ..... "" Cllmtt11e/
Sin Jwn c..,11rr11111. A •ililllt '"'floNI
M i1!0fl It Pllbflt~td '4l!Urdily1 l1'CI S-n.
T~t prlr!cl~I ~111~"'9 pl1n1 1 ••• JIO w .. 1
••Y Strnt, Cotti Mn1, C•ll+ttfll•, t»»,
R1b1rt N. W11d
f'r1t!Hnl 111Cl Pu!tll.,_
J•ck R. Cur11y
Uoi:t l"tMl!laool W Ottlff•I Mt,_... n.,,..,, Ktt•il I!-' ...
Th1,..11 A. MV1",hi111
Mtn.ttl"fl E41tot
Q 1 rlt1 H. U11 ltlch1rd P. H1U
"t1llYfl! MtNilii'9 1!11111"'•
JJO W11f l1y Str11t
M•lll111 Mdr1111·r.o . hv 11to, t26?6 ..__
NtwPttl 9MUll Im N.-.perr ltlilleY1~ L....-IMdll 121 t"otftl A-~--IMdl i 11'1'1 •.-cti ...,...,..,., ,..~ c..-•: .. Nerti! II Caffl ..........
, ... ,. •• , 17141 '41 .... 111
Cl•sl,._ ""*'tlill1 '41-1671
C..,.,.,lill!f, 1m. o..,.,.. CNll ~fl'll ~. '" -·-·· llluttrt .... llfttwlel --• ~ ........... ........ _., .. ,...,,,_. """"-' ....... ......
fl'llnltft -..,.,,...., -· '-'Ill ............. c.1 ..... c.11f1Jr1111a. • ...,..,...,. 11'1 ettftlt .....
llllWlllllY1 lw -ir u.11 ....,,.._,, "'"""' ..,.,_ .... ,,.... ITllflf!W.
dty --wUlt jO,lllJ ... ripwled lilt llrpll •incle """* ID tlMlr llillory lliMKll1 • N3;-polloo aid tllolt ~~
Ing ~ llcllela II -rato • ... ~daJ.
"From the pollce b•lloopter you could
see that the whole beach aru was
literally covered with cars -and naoe of
them were moving," aald Newport Beach
traffic officer Gary Lee.
"People were parkln1 on parkways, on
the iJ"a51, In lhe aired," he said. "A lot
ti. them had -fllhtlng trafllc au day,
and when they eot he.re they were not
about lo tum back juat because tbtre
wi.noI>I-lt._, .,, "" °'" .... l'>e -...,. It in aloe )'Un Ill lfio iinit," ~ Nld. IA~·~ lOllm ~ llat4lai ID !lit . ...,.,.. -Wltb
--11 ... -nq for llltlll perking.
"Everybody that came to llunllngton
Beech Monday parked here Ulegally,"
declared police Lt. Don Jenkins lhl•
mo ming.
Beach cooditiorui, for tho8e that got
that far, were excelleot both Sunday and
f,1onday. Water temperatures ranged up
to &a degrees and surf was small . Air
temperatures were from 70 to 90 degrees,
McWhinney 'Just
Innocent
By TOM BARLEY
Of IN D.lllY ,1111 Still
Westminster City Councilman Derek
McWhinney's attorney today told an
Orange County superior Coort jury that
his cllent I.I the innocent victim or a
"detennhled move by certain political
f1£Ur'N" to discredlt county supervisor
Robert Battin.
Long Beach attorney Joseph Ball told
the jwy in hill opening statement this
morning that McWhinney never at any
time told strawberry grower George
Mural that the 15,000 allegedly demanded
from the Mlle Square Park farmer waa
de!tlned for Battin's campaign fund.
McWhlnney , 40, and Westminster Plan-
ning Commisslooer Tad Fujita, 34, were
indicted on grand theft, bribery and con·
spiracy charges after the grand jury
heard allegatiom that Muari was
preuured into parting with a total of
$10,000 in a "pay up or lose your lease"
plan.
Canada to Quit
Vietnam Peace
Force July 31
<YT.TAWA (UPI) -The government
announced today that Canada will with-
draw Us 2~man peace observer force
from Vietnam by July 31.
"We are prepared if the parties to the
Parb agreement wish, to atay for a pe-
riod beyond June 30, but not later than
July 31," External Affairs Minister
Mltcbell Sharp told the House of Com·
moo•. (Relot-ry, Page 4).
"Canada's decision to withdraw is firm
and definite, but the addltlooal fieJ-lblllly
should give the parties adequate time to
find a replacement ror the Canadian del-
egation," he said.
The minister noted Canada's previous
position that it wouJd pull out of the in-
ternational Commission for Control and
Supervision (ICCS) by June 30 1f there
were not "substantial progress."
lte said this progress had not been
achieved and Canada therefore would
\\i thdraw.
He said the additional :JO.day presence
in Vietnam would give more time for tile
parties lo find a successor and for the
conclusion of negotiations between U.S.
and North Vietnamese negotiators in
Paris.
Sharp said Canada entered the ICCS
only on a tentative basis and with many
doubt!:, emanatnrom wide erperience
with peace-k el11ewhere and 19
years on the~ letnam International
COntrol Commlsaion (ICC), which he has
described as a "farce."
Victim'
But Ball today told the jury he will
prove that McWhlnney's objective in ap-
proaching Murai was to obtain the Mil e
Square Park lease for a group of
business associates who expected to
make substantial profits from the Foun·
lain Valley acreage.
Ball said it was nonsense to suggest
that McWbinney used Battin's name as a
lever to extract payment from Murai
since the former Westminster mayor was
an active supporter of attorney William
Wenke, Battin's opponent in the First
Supervisorial District contest then under
way.
He reminded the jury that Mural had
been reluctant to teslify before anyone in
the week.! immediately f o I I o w i n g
McWhinney's first conversation with him
last June 20.
Ball claimed that Murai "had his
memory refreshed" and became much
more ready to cooperate with the district
attorney's office after Richard Ruiz,
Supervisor David Baker's executive
assistant, called the farmer in late June.
"Ruiz told Murai that if he didn't
cooperate in the inve.!ligation that in-
cluded Battin 's name be would never get
his lease from the county supervisors,"
Ball told the jury.
And tbe veteran lawyer made il clear
that defense witnesses' testimooy will in·
elude the assertion that relations
between Battin and Baker were strained
at the time the Mile Square Park lease
came up for review.
Pro6ecutor Michael Capizzi told the jury
he will prove that McWhinney and Fujita
simply intended lo make money out of
Murai when they warned the fanner that
it would take $10,000 to help prote<:t his
lease.
Murai had worked the 215 Mile Square
Park acres for the pa.st five years at an
annual fee of $150 an acre, Capiul sa id.
He told the jury that when McWhinncy
and Murai first met in the farmer's
strawberry field negotiations were under
way to grant Murai a one.year
"holdover" lease on the property.
Ball claims that McWhlnney was
motivated by the desire lo get a better
price from the land worked by Murai and
split the acreage into three parcels to
give smaller farmers an opportunity to
bid.
He told the jury today that McWhinney
promised Murai he woold return the
$5,000 if he could not get the land under a
new lease for the Fountain Valley
farmer.
Capizzi said he will prove that
Mcwhinney used Battin's name to ex-
tract a $5,000 check from J\1urai in favor
of Batti n's campaign fund.
The prosecutor said Fujita was caught
with the cash on the table when he drew
a further $5.000 from the farmer .
Irvine Councilman Sees
Success for Redistricting
Orange County presumably is not
among a list of 21 counties whose
Republican Central Committee chairmen
have asked Gov. Reagan to veto an
Assem bly redistricting bill.
\Vhile the bill adds six new seats in
districts hea vily populated w Ith
Republicans, sonie county central com-
n1iltees oppose th e plan.
Orange County's GOP central com-
1nittee nlcl la st 1veek but .did not vote to
oppose the plan , although lhe proposed
reapJX>rtionment provides no really new
representation for the county.
Fro1n Page 1
DRUG RAID • • •
derivative, was involved in most or the
purchases but accused some suspects of
selling LSD and other hallucinogenic
drugs.
Police said no che.rges are anUclpated
against operators of B r I c k e r • W a r d
Preparatory Scho91, or the faculty, which
includes a man and a woman as
teachers.
Inve sti gators decllntd to say what led
them to inve1tta:ate the private xhool
which operat., a flulble curriculum.
A raid on the tehool was originally
planned for Friday but the strategy was
abandoned •I the i .. t minute.
tnvestigatora said most of the students
ditched cfas1, presumably t.o go on aenJor
ditch day at Costa Mesa and Eatancla
high IChooll,
t
Redistricting was necessary rollowing
the 1970 census in order to reflect the
"one n1an, one vote'' principles of the
U.S. Constitution. Orange County in the
decade since 1960 has been the fastest
growing county In the state, and in some
yenrs. the fastest growing county In the
nati on.
Yet the county gains only chances for
t1,·o new seats since two new districts
established in the plan contain portions of
Orange and two neighboring counties.
Irvin e Councilman Henry Quigley,
obse rver of central committee activities
and former alternate to that body sug-
gested "practicality" determined Orange
County's la ck of opposition to the
Assembly pl an.
He noted it passed on a 63 to 12 vote,
more than enough votes necessary to
override Gov. Reagan's veto .
Further, were the 54 votes needed to
ovftrtidt a veto somehow not available,
the courts would redistrict the Assembly
and Orange County and Republicans In
general might not fare as well, Quigley
offered.
"ft appears to me -and t'm sure to
the county central committee -that the
practicalities are the governor probably
will sign Ute bill Into law," QuJgley aald
today. I
Mean"'hile, the Association o t
Republican Central Committee Chairmen
last week urged a veto, suggesting the
plan "lgnare.s all consideration of com-
munity lnt.e.rest. ''
That association, aloog with legtalatlve
observer!, assume the Senate will "rub-
bentamp" the Assembly's plan lo
redistrict the lower house.
~ ---·· ..
wit.II the bottoat rocanled
on San C1emente Si.ti 8-:b.
~ ""' few -l'lpClrW, ml ~ --la,cl41i!nt lnYO!ving 1Uunl ~ llflculrU. OU!ciala there sakl Homer Llwll, II, ol bl Angeles in-
jured hla head and aeck body surfing
Saturday.
Pulled from the surf by his wife, Lewis
was not breathing when lifeguards ar·
rived . Following mouth -to· mo u t h
resuscilation eftor1s, however, Lewis wa s
reported in stable coodltlon Ulis morning
ln the intensive care unit of South c.oast
Communlty Hospttol.
Lileguard& related tbe reeord-br .. k·
Ing _ crvwdl to tbeslly -bofc!> .. ..u.r tbal llu ... "' ~ throllP -tf apdoj(. It have been golna crazy for a
c to go to the beacfi au spring,,.
sa untington Beach lifeguant Capt.
Douglas O'Amall.
"Then they get their first good weather
to coincide with Memorial Day, and you
know there's going to be trouble ," he
sald,
"~ people wert just really ripe for
the beach alter the lousy spring we had,"
was the way lifeguard dispatcher Bruce
Reed of Newport Beach put It.
'Ibere were some reporta: of }ellyfistl
OtllY '1111 l l•tt ""9tt
Historic Flag Raised
Harold Hohl, Tom Powell, and Bob Kitts (from left) hoist Stars and
Stripes which flew on the battleship Missouri during WWII. The his·
toric banner, now the property of VF\V Post 35~6, Costa Mesa, waved
from the Costa Mesa Civic Center on Memori3I Day. Discovered in
a salvage depot by Mrs. Hector Navarette, the Flag will be included
in an exhibit at the new Costa Mesa Veterans Memorial Hall.
Arguments on Jet Noise
Get Airing on Wednesday
The continuing battle over jet noise at
Orange County Airport will be aired at a
Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce
Town Meeting Wednesday at 7:30 a.m.
at the Balboa Bay Club.
The breakfast session, which is open
to all members of the public as a com-
munity service of the Chamber, will con-
sist of arguments from both sides of the
noise Issue that has sparked a good deal
of debate in the Harbor Area in recent
months.
Air Californ ia President Robert Clifford
is expected to speak in favor of jet use at
the airport and outline the latest technol·
ogy designed to lessen the noise and pol·
lutlon or jet engines.
Loog-lime jet critic and Airport Action
Association member Dan Emory will
make a presentation on the damage be-
ing done by the Jets as they Dy over
Upper Newport Bay.
He is also expected to outline a num·
her of legal actions pending against the
jets.
-•
Traffic 'J.
~ ~ at Newport and tfuntlnaton Beach, 1~
-"!*II al ... "'11 iD Saa ' Clemente. '111ere were no ~ ... .. · cidentl, however.
i\Jlhough some gang nahting was
reported on Los Angeles county beaches. Crance Co81t likguards said the large
crowds were well-behaved .
Huntington Beach police reported some
problems with about 100 surfers who
refused to leave the water Monday mom·
ing when crowds on the btach began
buUdlna up. Two arrests were made, but.
of'ficlali aald lhere could have bee.a more
if personnel bad been available.
Warrior Cops
Second Yacht
Race Victory
By ALMON LOCKABEV
Of tt1t DtllY l'lltf tNlff
. ' .
Al Cassel's SO.foot sloop Warrior from ~ ~
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club won its sec-· • ·
and consecutive victocy in the Pacific ..
Ocean Racing Conlerence In wimlng the· '
wind·laabed, 246-mlle Channel Ialand•
Race Sunday.
Warrior was the third boat to fini!h
behind Mark Johnson's Windward
Passage, New York Yacht Club, and Bob
Grant's 6l·fool sloop Robon, Newport
H8j'bor Yacht Club.
1be race was marred when Fred
MacDxlaJd, NHYC skipper of the Colum·
bia-52 Tribute, .suffered a heart attack.
His condition today was reported: as
"stable".
MacDonald was removed from thi ,' · ~
yacht by the Coaat Guard and taken to ,
Hoag Memorial Hospital. Tribute !'f? -. ~
mained in the race.
Strong winds with 60-knot gusts and
tumultuous seBl'I buffeted the fleet m
Saturday, forcing nearly half of the
yachts to abandon the race and seek
refuge.
'lbe race started Friday 8.t 3 p.m. from
Los Angeles Harbor and took the fleet
around the Channel Jalsnds wlt.b the
finish near the west end of catallna
Island.
The winds started building Friday
n.gbt and by mid-day Saturday it was
blowing 50 knots off San Nicolas Island
and Richardson Rock, the weatbermosl
points of the course.
There were no reports of dism.8'Ungs
or serious damage to the yachts. ..
\\'indward Passage finished the race at :
11 : 14 a.m. Sunday for an elapsed time ot
44 hours and 14 minules.
OVERALL -(I) Warrior ; (2) Robon ;
(3) Blackbird, Allen Puckett, CYC; (4)
Drumbeat, Don Ayres Jr., NHYC ; (~)
Interlude, Forest Olson, NHYC.
CLASS A -(I ) Warrior; (2) Robon,
(3) Interlude.
CLASS B -(!) Blackbird: (2)
Drumbeat; (3 ) Siron.a, Jim Michael" St.
FVC.
CLASS C -(I) Ul"'ion, Ed McDowell,
KHYC; (2 ) Nemesis, Tom Tobin1 SDYC ; 1
(3) Kari II, Dick Kelton, LAYC.
Neighbors Alert,
But Not Accurate
Watchful neighbors called Colla Me1a
police Monday night to report It aweared
someone was trying to burglarize tbe
home of acquaintances across the street.
Police raced out to the 2400 block of
Venier Way, but found the intruder was
only the homeowner 's 22-year-old son
who apparently had misplaced his house
key.
WOULD YOU BELIEVE -
THAT THERE ARE STILL COMPANIES
.. . . . .
. . . . .
IN THI
HAUOI AllA
SINCI U17
WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS
THEY SELL PERFORM 7
WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON
SERVICE 7
•
WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE
PERFECTLY 7
WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY 7
YES, "VIRGINIA," THERE IS AN ALDEN'S!
(TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.)
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Aye,
COSTA MISA
646-4131
Moo •• Tkrs. 9 10 5rl0t ft!. 9 IO 9t Sat. 9:30 lo S
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