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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-03-27 - Orange Coast Pilot• . • Top Calif·or~ia Young Corrigan Bot anist Beaten Bunt Continues" .. . .To Death With Ax But Dope Ebbing DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1972 \'OL. 'Ji. HO. '1• I SIC:TION5. 16 l"AGIES . Su111111er' s Gone ' 1nt~iwi1ona1 beauty Carol Wood, 18, appears to.shiver at the though~ of ~iichig :another winter now th.at su.~mer m Sydney, Australia draWS to ~n end. She could .al.w.ays don a'sweater"but what a shame that woul~ be. . '. Hop e Ebbs.in .Search For Y D_!lng~ ~or:rjgan " By ARTHUR R.IVINSEL Of t1M Dlllf 1"11•1 Stiff Fam~. fliel" Douglas 0 Wrong Way." Corrigan has given· up hope for . his sPortswriler son and a boyhood friend missing six days on a night. rrom Santa Ana , but the hunt today continue~. Ground searchers and Civil Air Pa~rol pilots flying six planes were slill seeking any trace or Roy Corrigan, 22, and his .. passenger Roger Powell, 21, or Laguna Beach. Coordinators or the CAP search head· quartertd at U>ng Beach Airport are con· centratlng along the Southland coastline, also crisscrossing Inland hills and valleys. Corrigan, or 2828 N. Flower St., Sanla I Ana, and .Powell, or 32 Crystal .Cove, Laguna Be.a.ch, took off last Tue~ay from Orange County Airport on what was to be a two.h"'r sightseeing flight. . They planned to buzz the Powells' new home and photograph lt., then swing down to San Diego an~ back for a 4 p.m. return but fa iled to show up. · "We're making an all~t effort, but we have no new leads," CAP Capt. Thomas Valenwela said today when contacted at tile Long· !leach command post. He said six CAP pilots would continue the search today, supplemented by Orange and San Diego County 1heriH'1 aero squadron members 1c1Mll1I the !See CORRIGAN, Page 11 Hair Boling OK . ACLU Appeal Nixed by High Court WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court let stand today a lower court ruling whi ch permits a state to expel or punish public school students whose hair length exceeded limits prescribed by school of· ficials. The vote was l'rl. The American Civil Liberties Union asked the court to act because the Jower courts are divide. The appeal was turned down without elaboration and over the dissent of Justice William 0. Douglas. The Supreme Court has never agreed to hear a case concerning school dress codes and punishment of students who ·" viol~te them. The ACLU appeal involved seven students from Utah, New Mexico, Colorado and Oklahoma. Last September, the U.S. Circuit Court in Denver upheld school authorities. The appeals court said complaints based on nothing more than school regulations or hair length do not "directly and sharply implicate basic constitutional values." The Circuit Courts in San Francisco, Philadelphia and Cincinnati also have backed school officials, but four other Circuit c.ourts -in Boston, Chicago, St. \(See HAIR,-Page Z) Chaplain Witne ss Hints Trips to Motel Innocent JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI) - A courWnartial board was told today that Navy Chaplain Andrew F. Jensen may have gone to motels with his wile for a rest and not for adultery with the wife of a fellow officer. Mrs. Lucille Turner, a neighbor of the Jensen family, testified as Jensen 's court.martial opened Its second week. She said she had joked frequently with Mrs. Jensen about his using motels to get away from the pressures of his work as Protestant chaplain of the Civil Field Navil Air Station.· Jensen, 43, was accused by two of- ficers' wives of havlng affairs with them Botanist Slain In Ax Attack; Husband Held MORRO BAY (AP ) -Botanist Vera K. Barnes was killed in her home today with an ax, a few houn before she was to have been installed as state director or the State Board' of California Garden Club, police said. Her husband, Dana, 75, turned himself In to police and was booked for in· vestlgation or murder, police said. Mrs. Barnes, 57, relired three years ago as a botany proressor at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. She wu to have heen Installed as head or the st•ttwlcle garden club at • lunch· eon tod1y, I Police said ahe had betn bludgeoned to death with an ax and that her body was, round In her home alter her hll$band sur· rtndere<I. and b on trial on charges of conduct unbecoming an officer. He has denied the charges. Mrs . Turner said she would tease Kathleen Jensen, the chaplfMl!'s wife, about the motels. "Yes, I would say, have a good time but don't spend too much money,•• s~c testified. She said Mrs. Jensen told her of meeting Jensen on Tuesdays at a hospital where he wor ed to go from tfiere to a motel. .. She also tes ified that she was with Jensen and a vy doc'.o r, Dave Murphy, one day when Murphy told the chaplain, "You should get away and get some rest because you are just going too strong." Mrs. Turner described Jensen at the time as being "haggard looking ," and also as a "very Qod-fearlng family man." .She was the t~ird Jensen neighbor to testify that the Jensen fanily car was in the driveway e~h night during a week· long period in August, Ir70 wh en ?o.1rs. Jensen was away and durin~ whic h one of Jensen'5 accusers tc .. !i1ied she h'!ld !l'X~ ual relations with him six times in motel; and at her apartmtnt. California Girl Dies in Colorado GOLDEN, Colo. (UPI) -Two persons were killed and th~e thers injured when their car went out o ontrol in a winding mountain canyon overturned 10 miles west of here. Tile Colorado Stal• Patrol ldentllied the dead as Vickie La verne Williams, 22.o( Palm Desert, Calli .• and the driver of the car, No va! Victor 'Eatherton Jr., 25, of Thornton, Colo. UP'I TtllPhtr. HAS HE ART SEIZURE Mrs. Dita Bt•rd Dita Bea rd's Collapse Hazes ITT Inquest DENVER (UPI ) -A Senate hearing at the bedside of hospitalized lobbyist Dita D. Beard. abo rted by the sudden collapse of the \vllness, has left the Senate Judiciary Comm ittee with few answers and new questions about White House in· volvement in a giant conglomerate's financial aid for th e Republican National Convention. Sen. Phili p D. Hart ([).Mich.), who led a~ panel of six senators into a stuffy hospital lounge Sunday to ta ke sworn testimon y from Mrs. Beard . called off the hearing after the 5.1-ycar-old lobbyist su ffered a hea rt seizure. Her collapse came in the first day of her bi1.arre encounter at the Rocky Mo untain Osteopathic Hospital with the trave ling delegation from Co ngress. The senators 'vere planning to return to Washington today, and Uie committee is scheduled to ttsume the hearings Wednesday wllh Harold Gcnecn, presi· dent of the Jntemallonal Telephone and Telegraph CoJ11;1., as the witness. Mrs. Beard 's doctor sa id she "survived her attack of acute angina pectora" bu t would be monitored carefull y for the next several days. Before the seizl,IJ'c, Mrs. Beard 11ga in denied repcalfdly that she had written a memorandum to her superior !Inking the ITT pledge to help Sa n Diego underwr ite the costs of hosting the COP convention IS.. LOBBYIST, Page II Dmg ,Baitti Uea~e 33 Behind Bars By BARBARA KREIBJCH Of Ille Deily l'lltl Stiff A 15-year-old Huntington Beach boy who leaped from a 35-foot cliff in an at· tempt to escape arrest wa1 among U narcotics offenders rounded up by Laguna Beach police over the first weekend of the Easter holiday. Except lor a couple or bookings M suspicion of possession of marijuana or other drugs for sale, the arrests all in· volved small amounts of narcotics, said Sgt. Neil Purcell . The youth. who escaped his spectacular leap with only minor injuries, was one of a trio of teenagers spctted by officers abo ut S: 15 p.m. Sunday, sitting on a ledge about 35 feet above sand-covered rocks at Victoria Beach, apparently smoking marijuana, Purcell said. As the officers approached and an- nounced, "You 're under arre5t," lhe boy shouted, "Not me !" and leaped off tht cliff, landing on the rocks below and limping off through the water. He was apprehended about three-- quarters ol a mHe away, at Diamond Street, by now doubled over and com- plaining of back pain, Officers summoned an ambulance and the youth was taken to Sooth Coast Com· munity Hospital where he was examined and held for observation for several hours before being released to his (See LEAP, Page I) Orange Coallt Weathe r Sunshine a n d temperatures ranging up to 70 degrees are lore- cas t for U1e Orange Coast area Tuesday. Temperatures tonight will drop into the 30s and 40s. INSIDE TODAY Aerospace monufacturers are about to plu nge into competi· tion for the bigoest space con· tract likely to come their way fo r the 11ext decad e -the $5.5 billion space shuttle progirom. Set! stor11. Page 10. L. M. &erd 1 l t•llU It C•llftn111 I (l111lllt• 21·'' ('111!~1 II CNll .. rf II DPlll Mtlf(tl t l.dlltri•I I' ••t 6 E11t.,i.lllll'lllll n ll'IMllC.t 1 .. 11 '" tllt •tcl!'d .. , ..,,."'... 11 A11t1 LtMtrt 1J MOvln 2t JilllloMI Nt-I Or•11tt Ct.1111'1' t s ,1,11 hr1er 1• , ... ,.. , .. ,. Slttll MIA.lb 1 .. 11 T11tY11•11 • TIMl•l•I It Wt11Mr t W1m111't Ntwt 11-lt WffN Ntwt • I I ,, ' ! DAil Y PILOT s Crops Hit . By Freeze In State FRESNO CAP) -FreezinJ lem· peratures that may have dam11.ged bud- ding crops struck California's Cenlral Valley loday. Fresno recorded 31 -a record low for the date. The U.S. Weather Service reported 27 degrees at Lemoore, 27~ at Clovis and 28 on tp.e Sanger River OOttom. Readings were :warmer both north and IOUth with Merced and Stockton re porting r7 and. Bakersfield 39. Fresno's low was four degrees under the previous low for the date, set In 1956. However, the area had anther late Ma.rch reading of 31 degrees on March 30, 1897. 'Mle Clovis low lasted 2~ hours, and Jim Steiner of •the weather bureau said many. valley fi-uits can stand only 50 degrees for ~air an hour at this stage or development before being damaged. Apricots and grapes can take anly 31 degreee~-for one hJdf hour, he &aid .. The nlley is one of the major U.S. agricultural crop producers. Elttmates of the extent of damage are not npected for several days as tanners study their orchards and vineyards and report any damage to COW'lty agriculture offices. · UPI Ttl.,no~ Many·fanners went without sleep moi;t of the night as they used smudge pots and burned other materials to raise field temperat,res. Some irrigated extensively SUnday .t.4 protect crops. , Otie Madera County rancher who vineyard was among several who hired reported a low of 27 degrees in . his vineyar-0 was among several who hired helicopters to hover over f 1 e I d t • circulating air. Nearly Bad Trip Freezing temperatures are predicted again for tonight but may be one or two degrees warmer as moisture from the north changes the dry air over the Cen· tral Valley, the weather bureau said. However, a northerly wind pattern is expected to keep temperatures below normal the rest of the week despite sunny aid ... From Pqe l Lucky thing for this Rio de Janeiro bus driver that there wasn't more room between lanes. People gathered to marvel at the position of this bus after it careened off a safety railing and landed between two supports on this highway overpass. No one was injured. Wedding Fest Explodes Into Riot; 23 Seized VISTA (AP) -The wedding reception of Hilario and Lisa Marlinez erupted into LEAP a riot involving al least 150 persons ~---1 • • • · before the bridegroom .and 23 other men Among· the law e.nforcement officers called were California h I g h way patrolmen from nearby cities ln northern San Diego County. · " were arrested. r,ar 1 W~ today ~~d. Purce~ he~Js The charges ranged from investigation, ve~re. • ··r.. -• • . .»t;drlll>ke!U1e$ to=assault.>0tb ;rdcadJy . _.From Pnae I: A call amo~~ oj ;!VlA"ana ~egdflJt" .. ~JlpttnX.police officer~-=:::-. ;:-'... '" __ ., -, ' -!' _ ~:.' was 1CJttnd 1n his paste~ ~nd 'he ~ '"Shfr"iff's -dCpllty oabny Sfrafft, .. dne ·or 2tl ....... H.:..c ~..: l ~ .I' ., , ... booked Jn ftsentia, pendmg his recovery, Jaw enforcement officers who were 1\.lft • • • 'i poUCIUilllil' . ~· <~J·~al\111, ""'°~ tn tb'l.'~tlil·!!'hilt, .. '-• Ji;, •. _. In~ Victoria Beach are~ • "'Yllil-t iftlp .JlU>ther depu ,uihor· 1.~~,.µd Richmond, Va . helq :J1il9"1ts cideqt,.,.offlcers arrested a 16-ye ~ ... flle! Saia."' ·. '--f t, • tlaVt! a"'COnstltuUonal right to w~ng coup1!2a.t 10 p.m. Saturday after spo g Strain a reserve officer from V!sta hair. - them, totally nude, embracing in a.park· was Jn 'talr condition today 1n Tri·Ci\.Y The ACLU said : "The Lssue wtti con· ed ~r and (also allegedly, amokln_J i:_narl-HoaPfial. · llnue to bC raised so long as school juana. 'l'hey are charged with posteaslon IrJ;VesUgators said there wai .a report of boards persist in regulating th·e ha ir of the drug a~d indecent exposure. , so persons fighting early Sunday in the length of their male students end those The r~aln1ng arrests for possession of American Legion hall, scene of the wed· students insist that the Constitution af· pills . and1 , marljuana Tanged from din& r~eption which began the previous for~s. them the right to make such: WoodllnCI Dtlve to~ .eoeat HJghway, afternoon . An hour later. officers $lid at dec1s1ons for themselves. The court with-a~ deal .of 1Ct1v1ty in the beach ltaSt 250 persons were battling or ·should resolve th ese competing claims.'' ar~, Purcell said. watChlng. '.r.he .seven students directly Involved a Beach lifeguards repor~ed an The 19-year-old bridegroom was balled were Terry Freeman and Vyr9n Randall unu ally q{iJet weekend, with. a chilly _58-out or jail tater. OsUer of Davis County, Utah; Charles degree ocean temperatu re d1scourag1ng Simmons of Utah county Utah· Al White water ·e~thUsiast. A Ught crowd took to of Hobbs, N.M., Gregory 1Randai1 Cranso n the ll!lda Saturday, guards reported. but JirOJll Page l of .La Junia, Colo., and Gary Christmas Sunday's oyercast weathe r wa! what they of El Reno, Ok!a. termed · "•t~!cUy. a brisk-walk . on the CORRIGAN , , ' Prior to the Denver court's ruling, U.S. be1oh day. Lifeguard ac.tlv1ty was • Dist. J udges A. Sherman Chr!Jtensen or limited to a few minor first aid calls and Salt Lake City, Wllliam E. Doyle of checktng ·out an unfounded report that a country1ide from aloft. 'Denver and Luther L. Boflanon of low-flying plane .ha.d crashed. . &y Scouts giving up their Easter vaca· Oklahoma Clty deferred fo school Weekend tr.af_flc 1n the Art Colo11y Y"as lion from school are also combing coastal authorities \vhile Judge Howard c. Brat· hea~, as ant1c1pat~d: A num?er of minor canyons and foothill areas for wreckage to of Albuquerque ruled in disapproving accidents and four 1n1ury ac~1dents, none of Cortlgan's Cessna 150 aircraft. the suspension of the lVhite boy that "the serious, wer~ handled by police. Young Corrigan's father, who captured right lo wear one's hair at any length ls A Placentia ~an was t~ken to South. the fancy of the world ln 1938 when he an aspect of personal liberty.'' Coast .Community Hospital Sa turday took off from Brooklyn, N.Y. for Long The ACLU argued in appealing to the even.ins fo.r emergency treatment afte~ a Beach and turned up instead in Dublin, Supreme Court Jan. 26 that "the un· h h h passenger was 1n Ireland. is pessimistic. car U1 w IC e was. a . • He said he gave up hope th;it his derlyinz issues posed by hair regulations vol.ved in a collision on Temple Hills are profound, for they touch upon the D t 5 youngest son and passenger would be nve a p.m. found after the first futile day's search. very relationship between the individual Police said the man, Arthur William and the state " A I by -1· hll h • h The fateful flight \vas the first in a · PP e , ,•II', was s 1g Y ur~ w en 11 1 1 p 11 1 s 1 The ACLU said school officials were Rb 11 Sh 30 f960P k sma pane or owe, son o a an a driver o ert A en . ort, , o a~ Ana neon lighting company owner. imposing short-hair rules because long· Ave., loat control of his ca~ on a downhtll ~orrigan believes his son. a formC'r hair is a symbol of dissent, "a badge of curve, cross~d the center hne. and struck Santa Ana Register sports reporter. went defiance of authority.'' a vehlcle driven by .Leigh Hill Harbold, down at sea. The appeal added: "It is sought to be 49, O( 2008 Donna Drive. He said last week that \.\'hi\e coastal prohibited not because there is anyth ing OIANCil COAST .. DAILY PILOT --. lll• Or&ff0. Cotti DAILY PILOT, wllll wMel! It ((IMblntd Tiit Ntws•Pr" .. 1' l)Utllltl!td b'f llllt 0.-.1199 Cot•! Publ1$1!1nt COl'!'lfllnY. $ti)•· ' ,..,. •1111111 ,,.. Wbl111!ed, MO/ld1y thro-.h l'"rkUY, fDf Co1t1 Mll4, NIWl:!Ort 611cil, Hut11!t19fon &etch/l'"ounttln V1lltY, l19un1 BHch, lrv!nel$1ddltbttk i ncl Sin Cleme11!1/ Stn Ju1n Ctl)lllr1no. A. 1ingl1 reglllnll edllkln 11 p.1blilh«I $1!urd1y1 aftCI Sunda~1. Tl'lt prlf!tlptl publl1hl111 pltM !1 11 lJO W'11 81y Street, CO.It Me11, C1htor11la, 91626. Jt;bert N. W1td Pr11llltnl.111C1 P'-'bll1111r Jack-R. C11r!t v V!Ct Pr•~ &!'IO Gtntr11 Mtn1ger Thom•• Ktt'l'il •·liOllor Thom•• A:~MWrpltin1 Mtn•l'!n.11 Jctlfor Ch1rl 11 H. loot ', JUch1r4 ~. N1l1 Aur111111 M1n1t1nt tcttto,.. 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Li11dhergh Expedition Fi11ds Tribe of 'Cavemen' ~1ANlLA rU PI J - A scienUHe ex- pedition that included famed aviptor Charles A. Lind btrgh he s discovered that a long-lost tribe in !ht wilds of the Philip- pines may be the first known living •·ca\"emr.n .. , The tribe Is the Tasadays who. until discovered last June in a dense forest In south Coto Beto Province about 500 miles soulh of Manila. had be~n living a Stone Age existence.~They had no knowledge of rice , co rn , tobacco. sugar. salt and other f00d1 known by other tribes in the area. Amt:rlcan anthropologist Robert B. "Fox, a longtime Phllipplne resident and chief anthropologist of the Phlltpplne Na· tlonal Museum. said after the June ex· pedltlon the Tasadays appear to have betn cut off from civilization for 1.500 to 2,000 years. A second expedition earlier !his month has shown another important fact -the 24 members of the tribe live In three limestone caves about 600 feet µp a mountaina ide deep In the forest. Thi Rev. Frank Lynch, a Roman CathoUc priest from New York City who ~ w11s chief anthropologist for this month's expedition. said so far as he has been able to find out no other existing culture lives in caves. "This Is of mnjor 1cientlfic Importance, l.ynch said . •·some people have used caves for storAge purpose.a:, but this ls tht first time we know .that a natural cave ls used tor basic dwelling purposes." Another member of t.he expedition, \vhich \l.'orked its way into the Tasaday by hellcopter and on foot , was Lindberg. a director of the Tanamln Company that financed the trek. Manuel Elizalde Jr.. a millionaire phllanthropoist "'ho is director of Tanamin and who led the expedition. said the previous m&etlni• with the Taudays had not revealed t~ey lived, in cavts, He said they slept and ate In the caves and foraged for food. 1 , Some of the e1pedillon members returned t(I Menlla over the wtekend, but 5everal members ';'ere etaylna with the Tasadays for anolhlr 10 days lo obserye their dally aclivities and to try to determine their language. . - ' to Get Sculpture Mrs. Nixon Will Visit Coast for Honor By JOHN VAL TERZA 01 tlll Diiiy 11'1111 Sllff • Mrs. Pat Nixon will visit San Clemente April 7 to formally accept the $8,000 portrait In bronze purchased by residents of the city, and dozens of celebrities are 1che<luled to join her . Public ceremonies will start al 9:30 a.m. in Old Plaza Park, with film ptrsonalitles. local dignitaries and local and state legislators attending. Paul Presley, chairman of t h e President's Project Committee, said the nation's first lady will leave for another appearance. in Arizona later that day. Television and radio personality Johnn y Grant will be master of ceremonies at the event. San Clemente high school musicians also will participate as well as fourth, fifth and sixth graders from San Clemente schools. The bronze bust of President Nixon was crafted bv Corona de! ~Iar sculptress Edith Braiid and v.•as purchased from her after a months-Jong fund drive held in San Clemente. Court Won't Review Order Public ceremonies were first planned for the \Vestern White House comple1, but later were changed. The President, \vho is rumored lo be planning a trip west in coming weeks. will not accept the gift because o( custom, Presley said today. To Desegregate San Diego The local innkeeper said that according to tradition a public gift to the President Is never personally received by the Chief Executive "'hile he ls in office. WASHINGTON (AP ! -The Supreme Court today declined to rev iew an order that San Diego officials take "reasonably feasible steps" to balance the races in all public schools. The court gave no elaboration in unanimously turning down a plea for a bearing filed by the officials N9v. 11. Frona Pqe 1 LOBBYIST ... with the Justice Department's out-of· court settlement last year bf a huge an· titrust action against the conglomerate. But, under questioning, the woman acknowledged that she had written por· tions or the memorandum that columnist Jack Anderson published this month in· eluding a ,passage in which she referred to "that call from the White House." "That call," Mrs. Beard explained Sun· day, ,~·as an inquiry by 8omeone in the Executive Mansion -1he was not sure who - to W. R. Merriam, her supervisor in the Washington office. "wanting to kno\v all about this commitment, this un· derwriting" of San Diego's convention costs. Mrs. Beard said Merriam "asked me to explain'' and she did -in a memoran· dum that contained about half the language used in th e document Anderson published, but made no reference to a link between the antitrust settlement and the convention underwriting. She acknowled,ged writing: "I just had a long talk with EJG (E, J. Gerrity, vice president ·of IITJ. I'm so sorry that we got that call from the White Ji ofse. I thought you and I had agreed \'ery thoroughly that under no circumstances would anyone in this office discuss with anyone our participation in the con· vention, including me. other than permit· ting John Mitchell, Ed Reinecke, Bob Haldeman and Nixon besides Wilson .. or course no one has known from whom that $400,000 commitment had come." Mitchell is the former U.S. attorney general, Reln~ke is lieutenant g'Overnor of California, Haldeman is President Nix· on's top aide and Rep. Bob Wilson (R· Calif.), is a congressman from the San Diego area. Fourth · Victim Of Crmh Dies CONGERS, N.Y. (UPll -A fourth high 8Choot student, Thomas Erosse. 14, died today of in juries suffered Friday when a school bus. '>'-'hich authorities said failed to stop at an unguarded railroad crossing, was struck by a frelght train. Seven of the 42 teen-agers end the driver injured in the tragedy remained in cr itica l condition at Nyack Hospital today as a result of the collision between the Penn Cen· tral freight train and the schoolbus driven by a moonlighting New York City fireman. E1t1bli1h Sift Blcyclt Tr1il1 The case could have led to a ruling on whether racial imbalance in schools is, of itself, unconstitational. The challenged order was Issued by a state appeals court in California. The San Diego school distriCt1 one of the largest .in the nation, has about 128.000 public school children. About 95,200 are while, 1s:ooo black, 13,600 with Spanish surnames and another 4.000 of other minorities. , In 1969 the state attorney general began the suit, claiming racial tmbalance in several schools violated the con- Jtitutional rights of minority children and should be corrected. Judge Ge0rge }).. Lizar or San Diego ruled that without "intended segregation" school officials do not necessarily have a legal duty to eliminate racial imbalance. Last August, he was reversed by a court of appeal , which held "school authorities in California have a con· stitutional duty to take steps. insofar as reasonably fea sible. to alleviate racial imbalance in schools regardle ss of its cause where the imbalance denies the minority group equal educational op. portunities.'' School officials appealed in November to the Supreme Court. San Diego officials, ln seeking a hear- ing, said: "It is now time to e1amine the question of pupil racial Imbalance arising in areas _where... there was no state im· pased segregation." Due to the Supreme Court's not hearing the case, the next step evidently will be a trial in a California court. Dr. Thomas Goodman, superintendent of San Diego school!, said the high court's ruling was ezpected because of a recent request by Clllfornia Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger that the hearing be called off. • "We agreed three or four weeks· ago to go along with the attorney general ," Goodman aaid . "I think we'll go ahead now with plans we've been developing. We've already presented some alternate plans." There will · be some additional busing, he said , in the plan calling for shifts of Caucasian children from school-Jess hous- ing developments and others now In 463 classrooms which are old and muat be replaced for earthquake protecU on. H·homh Victims To Be Trea ted LOS ANGELES (AP) -Three Japanese doctors will come here In July to help treat survivors or the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nag asaki for lingering ailments. Victims of the bombing have com· plained or physical and paycbologtcal problems they say they believe stem from exposure to radiation. An estimated 500 to 700 survivors of the blasts live in thls country, most of them ln the Los Angeles area. The survivors complained recently of· toss of body heir, breast dl1orders1 blood complications, tumors, fatigue and general malaise. Elect Ultimately. the larger-than-life bust will form the local citizens' donation to the Nixon Library. ~nd members of the committee have said the y believe the gesture will help bolster chances for selection of a South Coast locale for the major building and grounds. The bust, measuring 18 and a half in· ches hlgh and 16 llnd a quarter wide stands -0n a marble base and has a plaque reading: "Richard fl.iilhous Nixon, 37th President or the United Stales, bronze (lriginal, Judith Bland, sculptor.'' , Members of the San Clemente com· munity raised $9,000 to purchase the bust w1th donations ranging from pennies fiom school children to $500 from a leading business man. "Motivating the effort was the desire of the citizens of San Clemen!e lo express their pride and affection for the president and first family, who chose San Clemente for the Western \Vhite House as well as their permanent residence", the White House said. The sculptor is a third generation Californian af\d haL "Y:on all the top awards in the Southern California art shows" for her bust of the president, the White House said. From San Clemente. ?.frs. Nixon "111 fly to Tucson for .participation in a l p.m. ribbon cutting ceremony dedicating the Fremont House. built in 1858 and restored by the Tucson Heritage Foundation. The House is the hl!t territorial governor's house in Tucson and Will be called "Fremont House, Casa del Gobernador, '' John Charles Fremont wa! Arizona's fifth governor of the territory and had a distinguished public service career In California as it.! first civil governor and Jts first United States senator, Park CrackdoW'll On Drugs, Booze Nets 18 Arrests Oll!NDA IUPI) -Rangers arrested 18 pe~o~s during the weekend on drug and dr1nk1r1g charges at Briones Regional Parle It was the !econd straight weekend crackdown on drug and liquor user11 who have invaded Briones end other parks re. centJy, rangers said. · "Maybe it's going to lake a few more weekends before the word gets around that we_ mean business," said Llrry Ol· sen. chief of public safety for the East Bay Regional Parks District. . Rangers arrested 15 persons the pre- vious weekend. ~o serious violence was reported at Briones Saturday or Sunday. How~ver. O!sen said drug pusher• were operating openly. Thirteen men were booked at the eon. tra C~ta C_ounty Jail in Martinez. Five male Juveniles were b 0 0 k e d at the county's juvenile hal l. The charges ranged from possession of dan~~roos drugs for sale to possession of mar1Juana and vio:ation of r!guJaUons agaJ"st dri~king in the park. Olsen said rangers confiscated three 10 lour pounds of marijuana plus small amounts Of cocaine and other drugs. DOM RACITI as your Co sta Mesa Cit y Counc ilman Dom Racfttl supports conc1pt1 of ••• • l1cCH•flil c",. M .. tn1....,.... e • H•••r•ry hnlM A•lf4 a .. 1,t.t kr 01Krn4fl .. ClrflH •f the YHr -Cell9ft ,_. '1A • • C•hi .... IMtitlfttetlel C..M• • .,,... -""",., ..... '"" Ca1n,.lg• lleaflquarter1 at 1840 Neaoport Blvtl. LAST ON THE ·BALLOT-1 st IN CIVIC CONCERN Phone 645·1360 or 541·1313 YOTI TUISDAY, APRIL 11 ,.Ml ,., .., tlllltfll " Slid °""" lllH/ff, Mt, MMllW!N, Clllll'!Nlt, 11• N,..,..-1 ........ -.u.1J • • I I r N lu fa ce m la wi u w Se 'he m de tr w IO a lul pr de A:t bu the ce ly dul tho big vet tha ov rig ce gi v rec to ex i;ai of s p Sm for wit pla da r T hy the Boa T the ope ren H hav lhe said sme be . , pla T to plia p earl thei upg poll L B Bi San Ca pi soug High Th half· plan a Ion the !n stall to \'ari Ian Th ;,111 )>ati area I I iL ff • L> the pub Ii 1.Th Will i f'acl tn~nt l Th bl L "poll ,list '!leer Mo Postpon ed Interment Stirs Rift. MIAMI BEACfl (UP IJ -Jack Kaul· Iman wrestled today with the conflicts of religion and filial devotion -and weigh· ed offers of some who offered to have ·their own loved ones exhumed to make room for Kauffman's father in Arlington Natonal Cemetery. So far, Kauffman has been unable to fulfill the promise he made his dying fa ther to obtain burial at the national cemetery. He also faces censure from fellow members of the Jewish community for failing to abide by the custom of burial within three days of death. A. Henry j(auffman. who served the United States honorably in two world wars and earned the Distinguis hed Service Cross in 1918 died M<irch 16 of 8 heart attack at the age of 73. l The younger Kauffman said his mother, Rae, 72, is in "a state of delirium " because he Is violating the tradition of prompt burial while passover -the holiest or Jewish ho\ldays -starts Wednesda y. "I'd rather be a bad Jew and a good son," Kauffman said. ''I'm never going to bury him anywhere except Arlington." He said his fat her's lx>dy will remain in a Miam i Beach funeral home until he can fullill his pledge. The elder Kauffman's wish was ex- pressed to his son shortly before his death: "AJJ I want is six feet of dirt in Arlington cemetery. That's where my buddies are." After promising an Arlington burial, the younger Kauffman I o u n d the cemetery is so crowded it can accept on· ly the lx>dies of soldiers V'ho die on active duty, those retired from the military, those who win the Medal of Honor and high government officials who are veterans. Kauffman said he has received more than 400 telegrams from veterans all over the country offering to gi ve up their rights to an Arlington plot. But a cemetery spokesman said no one can gi ve away such a right. The 49-year-otd Kauffman said he aiso received six offers from persons willing to exhume their loved ones at their own expense to make room for his fa ther. He aaid be verified the names and addresses of all sil and will consider the offers. Smelting Fi_rm Rejects Order On Pollution Plan PHOENI X (AP) -The American Smelting & Refin ing company has in- formed state officials it cannot comply with an order requ iring ' it to draw up a plan for meeting state air pollution stan· dards. The plan was to have been submitted by the firm at an April 7 yearing before the State Pollution Control Hearing Board. The hearing will be held to determine if the firm's conditional permit f o r operating its Ha yden smelter should be renewed. Hearing board officials say they will have three alternatives to choose from if the firm does not submit a plan. They . said today they could order the Ha yden smelter closed, a temporary permit could be issued, or a heari ng board compliance , plan could be im'posed on the smelter. The firm is the second copper company to announce it will not submit a com· pliance plan. Phelps Dodge Cor p. official!! said earlier they would not submit a plan for their Douglas smeller, and would ~t upgrade the smelter under present air pollution standards. Landscaping Bids Sought Bids for the major landsca ping of the San Diego Freeway through the San Juan Capistrano and El Toro areas h.a~e. been sought this week by the State 01v1s1on of Highways. The major job is calculated to cost a half.million dollars and will Involve the planting of thousands of trees and shrubs along the stretch from San Juan Road to the El Toro Road junction. Included in the project will be in· stallation of automatic Irrigation syste~s to water 2,370 oleander and acacia varieties along with 770,000 separate planting!! of ground covers. . The planting, state spokesmen said, Will make the freeway "much more com- )atible with surrounding residential ,, ...... ; ;La Paz Wins Jiorizon A ward La Paz Intermediate School has won the Johnny Horizon Award for keeping publlc ta.Ads litter free. . The a\vard was presented Friday by WllJl~m ~1. ~1onroe. field representative, Pacifi c Southwest RegJon, U.S. Depart· mcnt of the Interior. 1 The 1ward Is the result bf the Interest tif La Pai studenls ln ecology and a ••pollution our problem" program held lut ytar which rtalurtd a •l1lt by '~ttary or Ih< Interior Jloctr1 C. B. · Morton. .. VOLUNTEERS SAVE MOUNTAIN OF STAFF CLER ICAL TIME Mr s. Marilyn Ridge, Mrs. Eleanor Caye r Pitch In Mo111s Volunteer PTO Lighwns Viejo School Load By PAMELA HALLAN Of Ill• 01ur P'llol I liff The conference room at t-.tission Viejo High School was full of papers piled high on th e oblong table. Seven, neatly-groom ed women peered at the handwritten rorms and efficiently transferred the information to stacks of papers ready for the computer. The job is a tedious one, but no one complains about headache, eye.strain or lack of variety. All the workers are volunteers, part of a continuing program organized by the Pa rent-Teache r Organization. The volunteer mothers provide extra handS' to do many jobs around the school, jobs that would ordinarily be done by the pa id staff at extra cost to the taxpayers. "The volunteers save hundreds of hours of clerical time ." sai d school principal Robert Bosanko. "They are responsible and dedicated people and we're grateful for their service." Mission Viejo's volW1teer moms are currently assisting counselors by transferring student program preferences for next sem ester onto the co mputer forms which will ultimately assign them to their classes. The job takes eight women working five or six hours a day approximately three weeks to complete. "This is an important job,'' said Mrs . Liz Noriega , who organized the program . "If the volunteers didn't de> it, the counselors would have to. This gives them extra time to do their pr imary job which is counseli ng students." But all the benefits aren't just for the school. The parents are get ti n g something out of the experience, too. As one mother put it, "it's a good \\lay to find out \\!hat's going on at the school, to under stand and become invol ved Jn things that concern your child." Many of the \'olunteers have busy schedules, but Mrs. Noriege said she rarely gets a "no" answer when she asks for a volunteer. "I ha ve about SO or 60 on the list right now ," she said. "Most have worked at least once, and some like Joan Sproul , Mary Boehmer, Losi Jenkins, Joan Donovan, Jane Clark, Marilyn Masterson and Sue Reeves have worked many , many hours." Dr. Robert Wallace, head counselor at the high school, said the volunteer mothers have· helped in the career development center, with tuberculosis testing, 3nd with the annual candy sale in addition to the registration work . "They cheerfully assis t us when the paid staff doesn 't have enough time to do a qua~jly job," he said. ''The communit y information part has bee n a side benefit.•• Wallace praised the parents for their dedication and efficiency. "They're pro- viding a real service to the taxpayers of the district. "It's hard for us to properly thank these people," said the co u n s e Io r. '·Perhaps letting the community know what they're doing is one way." Psychiatrist Cites 'Right' To Use Any Type of Drugs NEW YORK (UPI) -Citing con stitutional rights to individu al liberty, a psychiatrist has urged that Americans be given the right to take whatever drugs the want, including heroin. Dr. Thomas Szasz. professor of psychiatry at the State University of New York Upstate Medical Center, said pro- hibition of narcotics is a moral and social question, and not a medical one. Writing in the April issue of Harper's magazine, Dr. Siasz compared current attitudes toward "drug abuse" with older attitudes toward sex, consumption of alcohol or use of tobacco. Despite the potential danger of using narcotics, Szasz wrote . individuals should be allowed to take the ri sks of using so- called<dangerous drugs if they so desire. Moreover, he said, legalizing heroin, LSD, marij uana and oth er prohibition drugs would actually reduce the danger Ne~ Post Office No'v .Operating In Lft guna Hills A new, 13,000-square-foot post office to aerve Lauguna llills is now open and ready for customers, Laguna Stach Postmaster Don Rose announced. The building, located at the intersection of Callt de Magdalena and Pasco de Valencia, replaces a branch in the Calle de Luisa shopping center. The post office wti.s among the first to receive stamps commemorating the lOOth ann iversary of the creation of Yellowstone National Monum ent . Customer lock boxes, ample parking And curlislde dcpo~it boxes are 11mong the advantages to the ne'if post orfice, Rose commtnted . The post ofOce will bt lblt to IC• commodate up to 55 carrier routes. There are now 27 cmitt routes IUYlnC the Laguna Hill.! art11, said Rost. in using them. "\Ve systema tically blur and confuse the two quite different ways in which narcotics may cause death : by a deliberate act of suicide or by accidental overdosage." he wrote . " ... Self destructive behavior may be regarded as sinful and penalized by means of infor.mal sanctions. But it should not be regarded as a crime or mental disease, justifying or warranting the use or police powers of the state for its control," he wrote. Legalization of narcotics -and the right of individuals to administer drugs to themselyes -would help to eliminate ac· cidental overdoses, Dr. Szasz wrote, and would help eliminate crimes which attend illegal use of drug s. Board Accepts Public Stree t Orange Cou nty supervisors have accep. fed the righ t-of.wa y for continuation of Marguerite Parkway as a public street as Offered by the Mission Vitjo Co., with· out cost to the coun ty. ~ The parkway is a primary highway on the county's master plan and is needed to service,a now-building subdivision on the east 'side of the parkway, one-half mile north of Trabueo Road , according to the Fifth District Supervisor Ronald C.spm. What Species Will Ca po Buttonl1ole? Will It bt wild red geranium , bo~galn· vlJ\ea, da ffodll , or cllvla~ These are the suggestions for official city flower o( San Juan Capist rano. The council will consider these sug- gestions and any others made ora lly to Individual councllrnen al ton l1ht'1 7 o'clock meeltng In the oily lllll. . . . . , ' Mondu. Mwtll l7, 1972 s DAILY Pil af :J Career Courses Ol('d S. ·Coast Advisory Group Boosts Program A vasUy beefed-up occupational pro- gram 'tor two South Coast untried school districts' offering 20 different courses leading to a career has won the unofficif.]. approval of an advisory board and soon will be presented to trustees. In an optimlstic study atmosphere late last 'week members of the Capistrano- L1guna Regional OCcupational Progr am (ROP ) discussed prospects for the $215,000 package which would carry a S.S. cent tax rate increase. cemtd about the ezlstlne ~fobrems In selling the program and polntlng out that it can U!volve studnta as well as adult.s in a program that should not bt confused with a "continuation school'' for students with problem1 in .regular clme3 at schools. One way which will prob ab I y fam iliarize students better will be the use- of the career gWdance centers in classroom assignments. Inducing students 1tudents to survey materials as resources for class work. Navarrette sa id l1tst week t hat heretofore, mos:t of the students using the career guid1nce services Wtre ''ttnly a few of the brighter 1tudents. '' If trustees approve the concepts In the proposed budget, clanes orterln.I· prac- lical-on-th .. job experlenct will Include In· alruct.Jonal and preschool aid, nurses assistant, hospital ward clerk. supply technician and physician's 11s.lstant. Othr:r jobs would Jnclude aervice sta~ tlon skWs, motorcycle m e c h a n I c 1 , televis ion antenna installation, heavy equ ipment maintenance. f o o d a oc- cupations. department store and hotel· motel occupations •nd construction· related work . One area which will be touched on heavily in coming weeks, agreed board members, will be selling the concept to high school counselors, particularly at San Clemente High School where overcrowded conditions have caused new problems in briefing students on the ad4 vantages of the occupational program. April 16 Launching_ As the sales job continues at the classroom level, ROP Directo r Hector Na\larrette will prepare presentations for trustees of the Capistrano Unified an~ Laguna Beach Unified School Districts to win official endorsement of the package this spring. Apollo 16 Astronauts Go • The program covers practical training ln a score of vocational fields ran ging from health services lo service-oriented occupations. Navarette stressed at last Thursday's study that training will be limited to fields with active employment prospects. Into Preflight Isolation Included in the expanded program would be the hiring of a coordinator and three aides for an annual outlay of about $41 ,000, plus the establishment of career counseling centers geared at T"eaching students long before the junior or senior level in high school, he told the board. Deleta!es on the panel both from Laguna and Capistrano unified predicted success when the proposal reaches trustees for fi nal approval. Capistrano Unified delegate, Board Chairman Bob Hurst, said he foresaw a positive reaction from his panel. "I'm sure there will be no problem, especially because we have a package that proves something is being done." Hurst added that he, too, was con· CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -The Apollo 16 astronauts today began three weeks of preflight medical isolation to minimize exposure to dis ease or illness that could dela y the ir April 16 launching to the moon. John \V. Young, Charles ~t. Duke Jr. and Thoma s K. Matt ingl y 11 and their backup crew will be restr icted to three areas at the Kennedy Space Center . They are the crew living quarters, the training building and the launch pad. They also will make one or two trips to nearby Patrick Air Force Base for pro- ficiency flying in jet planes or to practice moon landing techniques in a helicopter. The ir movements are arranged so they do not contact unauthorized persons. Most of the 109 persons authorized to work closely with the astronauts are training or launch team personnel . The astronauts and the authorized con- tacts submitted to extensive physical ti:· am inations and have been immunJzed against nine common diseases. Others who must visit the· astronauts, such as lunar scienti.sts, wlll speak to them through a communications hookup from behind a gla ss partition. Wives can visit the crew quarters, but childre n must talk through . the glass partition. The prellight isola tion w•s inillated with the Apollo 14 crew last year after Mattingly had to be replaced by a backup on the Apollo 13 flight when he became exposed to Germa n measles. He became exposed through Duke, another Apollo 13 backup, whe>se son had the disease. During the Apollo 16 misSi~. Young and Duke are to land in the moon's mountainous highlands to leJ~b for evidence of volcanoes. United States National Bank still pays you a big , on regular savings ~ccounts. We still pay you 4 Y2 °/o Interest on regu- lar savings accounts. Which Is not only the highest allowed by law, it's Y2 o/o more than most banks pay. So if your bank Is paying you less th an 4Y2%, It pays you to bank at Unilad States Nallonal Bank. We pay the highest lnlerest rates allowed by law. Regular Savings COSTA MESA OFFICE 1845 Newport Blvd. (714) 646-3291 F. Frank Zrebiec, Manager I • 90Days• On e Year ' 61 convenient locations UNITED STATES · NATIONAL BANK ~ M...-,,DIO SOUTH COAST PLAZA OFFICE 3333 Bristol St. (714) 540-5211 H. M. Stolte, Mana1rr Twovears• •$500 minimum depoelt HUNTINGTON BEACH OF!'ICI!! 302 Fi!th St. (714) 536-9361 Victo r J. Rutdy, Manaf<r I 4 OAJL Y PILOT Quiet Reigns On Vacation RITES OF SPRING DEPT. Somehow the whole Orange Coast seemed asleep in the early hours of this Monday. Traffic jams had forgotten to accumulate on Pacific Coast Highway, Except for a few birds twittering, it was AO quiet around my place you could hear the grass grow. The air was filled with·litt1e more than id1e hums. For some time, this 1b&ence of tumult was disquiet.Ing t~ me . Pondering the tranquiUty, jt finally came to me as to why all this quiet seemed so disruj)tive. Thi8 is spring vacation. I wasn't eup- pose to have gotten any sleep over the weekend because of visiting students who were celebrating one week's freedom from books, classes and teacher's dirty look1.· THERE SHOULD have been loud ex- haust pipes roaring through town . acreeching tires, loud music, profane yelling Into Ille night and the !Ounds of distant crashing and falling giass. All of this became part Of the Easter Week vacation scene a1ong the Orange Coast each yesteryear. No sooner had the tones of the final P'rlday•s schoolbell died away, than here they came over the hill ; driving flivvers, truck!, van s, motorcydes, old limousines. hot rods or whatever else would roll to the coastline. They flooded down to the fl atlands or Huntinp:ton Beach. They rilled every available rental and chickencoop in Laguna. They took over the Newport- Balboa Peninsula and places like Balboa Island by the sheer weight of numbers. TREY CAME looking for sun, fun and freedom. The boys came because this wOWd be where the girls are. The girls came for vice-versa. Tbe whole spring vacation movement to the eo1stline was enjoyed by all in earlier years. For the youngsters, of courae, Jt was pure fun. For coastal peo- ple who had grubbed it through Ille winter, it was the sprin~ thaw bringing the first Qow of cash to the region. The kidl particularly seemed to like the Orang~ C.Oast in those days because we must have had the loosest law west or the Pecos. WE DIDN'T HAVE an over-abundance of peace officers in thole days. And those we bad were prett}/ well occupied with keeping track of the hard c o r e tro@~~s. For the rest, it wis pret- ty *xD free and 1easy. When permanen t residents began to disc:ovtt that the Orange Coast is a great place to live year-around, things began to change for the rites of spring. AU-iil&ht parties in the rental place next door became a real irritation instead of juat being considered a boon to business. The hot rod parking across a driveway now meant somebody would be late t.o work. And so it was that Jaw and order came to the Orange Coast . AND THE STUDENTS began to take their hljinks elsewhere. The week that was juat wasn 't anymore . Well, you can hardly mourn the absence of furniture in the swimming pJols, smaabed flowerpots, cars parked on lawns or whooping and hollering into the night. Those of us who grew up with all this, however. will just have to readjust to the new way of coastal life. Indeed, thi s week has been so quiet. So far. Monday, Marth 27, 1972 A Guy Could Lose Shirt Ul"I Tt!tthOlf Otto. a 240·pound talking robot. owned by the Celanese Corp., \vhirred an d clanked his way into the Desert Jnn in Las Vegas and faced ·off with another mechanical monster, a mechanical slot machine. Otto, with an assist from Shelia Kelly, in· vested a dollar -and promptly lost. North Ireland Paralyzed In .Strike by Protestants ' BELFAST. Northern Ireland UPI) - A st rike called by Protestant extremists to sabotage British direct rule paralyzed Northern Ireland today. It crippled com- munications and transport, blacked out electricity and threatened shortages of lood and water. ~ A regiona I command of the oullawed Irisb Republican Army (lRA J announced a four·week truce in attacks on civilian targets -only to have it angrily coun- termanded by IRA headquart ers. \Villiam Craig, the forme r Home Af- fairs minister who se right·wing vanguard movement called the tw<rday strike, told more than 20;000 cheering Protestants in downtown Belfast it -was time to light to regain rig hts he said Britain seized in assuming direct rule of Ulster. "We have been betra yed by our friends," Craig shouted above cheering and chanting in front of Belfasrs domed city hall. "We have been robbed of our rights. We intend to fight, and we will win them back." The strike. apparent firs t step in that fight, brought the six-county, British pro. vince of 1.5 million residents to a near· standstill. Buses stood empty and unused , the drivers at the rally. City traffic snarled at intersection after intersection. Traffic Wicks 'Lox and bagel for six!' lights were not working and police were occupied elsewhere. Power cuts blacked out 70 percent of the province. Trains did not run. Airline flights in and out or Belfast were can- celled . International telephone service dropped to a minimum. with only a handful of operators and maintenance personnel on duty. At least nine sma ll bombs exploded in and around Belfast today but no one was injured and they caused little damage. There were no major bombing incidents during the weekend although the dea th toll since August, 1969, rose to 288 Sunday when the body of a man kJlled by gunfire was found in Bellast. Soviet Approval On Nuclear Pact Seen, for Sunnnit LONDON (UPI) -Russia will be ready to sign a limited agreement on nuclear weapons curbs with President Nixon at the May 22 Moscow summit, Soviet bloc sources said today. The agreement will center largely on antimissile defenses (AMB) with a pos- sible interim ceiling on land-based Inter· Continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs ). It will steer clear of immediate curbs on submarine launched rockets, the sources said. While the board oullines of the pro- jected accord are already drawn, many details, some of considerable importance, have yet to be settled and some con- siderable differences need to be ironed out. according to the sources. An attempt v.'ill be made al the current sess ion of the Soviet-American Strateg ic Arms Limitation Talks (SALTl to clear the v.'ay as far as possible for the top leaders to sign an accord. The meetings resume Tuesday at the Soviet embassy in Helsinki. A limited agreement on nuclear v.·eapons curbs appeared a virtual cer- tainty, barring failure of the summit meeting on the board policies of the two superpowers in the wake of the Sino- American reconciliation, the sources 5aid. Kidnap Vi ctim's Ki1i Take s Slap At Kleindienst SEATTLE (UPI )-Richard Kleindienst "lacks the qualities" needed to be an at· tomey general. fhe son-in-law of a U.S. Official kidnaped by terrorists in Uruguay says. Dennis F. Kane said Sunday that Klein· dienst had "frustrated" an opportunity for the early release of Dr. Claude L. Fly and had recommended he b e "sacrificed." Fly, a U.S. soils expert, was kidnaped in 1970 when Kleindienst was depu ty at- torney general. Kane told the Senate Judiciary Com· mittee in a letter that he protested Klein· dienst's appointm ent as attorney general because he Jacked "true concern for human rights and wisdom ." Fly was kidnaped Aug. 7. 1970 and rele ased in poor health March 2, 1971. Kane said efforts for his father- 'in·law 's release \Vere in "delicate balance in December of 1970. "At that time Mr. Kleindienst suddenly announced to the world that any ransom demands or negotiations with kidnapers would ne\·er be considered. ln fact, he recommended that any kidnap victim less than the president or vice president and their families be sacrificed." 'Violence Index' Eyed for Crime Prog rams on T\' WASHINGTON (AP) -Almost all the top bra ss of television who appeared before a Senate he'aring acknowledged there is too much TV violence for children. Sen. John 0. Pastore (0.R.I.), v..·ho headed the four days of hearings last week before his communications sub- committee, said something needs to be done. But what~ One possible action is the creation of a "Violence index" to measure the amount of televised crime entering the American home. Winter Still • Ill Midlands Pastore asked the secretary of health, education and welfare, the U.S. surgeon general and the Federal Communications Commission to set up the study and report their findings each year. Pastore called TV industry and federal witnesses to discuss the U.S. surgeon ,general's Scientific Ad v i so r y Com- mittee's report on the impact of televised violence on young persons. Monrona , North Da kota Also R eport Some Snow Temperat ures TtmNfl!t:J l~d ortclD1T•'i~~ !or 1111 '' llOllr -tn<ll~• ti ' ~ .,, Hllll LO\IO l"c' Allll~'f " " ·" All•MI " " ,, 80llOl'I " " 8ull1lo " " ~lltrlottt " " ~ l\fe.,t o u ,, c1nch•n1tl .. ~ ~veltflcl " " '" ll· " nvM Jl 01Ml " •• r,~JJu "' !'I .. lld!1111~r1 ll •• g CklOllV Ill ll •• v~" ii oulsvl It " :U fimPi'lls " • M~mr ., " Mlh•1uktt " tt M1n~~POlft " • "' uew 1r"1 ·" " Sf " &!r-~ (lfy " "Z i: ., P!'lllt tHlll .. ·-· .. " PlttSl)U1'9h " " PN~r1nG. Ort .. ff ... •1c l!W'ld, ..... ij StV~fllO :ii !" 1!:' ~ 1r1 -t J Cltr '" -j g1,, r111clsco e,,1~!' " I I Jnt lOll It Wl""J'" Ctllltorni. Tllf!l'9'•ivr.. wt,. .-ipeclld lo lit ~ ~eolfr •~ :;;T." ·~~s 'II 11 ~uoriel: lOI'. •h' ..., lo"· '4.11'1 W1 II mfllln!tlns ,;f . f;td c)oud1 llo....,td 0111r ~111! l 'Mi l'ICI IOVlhetll mourtll lftl. ~ • = l'T-'71 ~tAIM l!::.L.!J$W0\V f7?";'J ~ ,,, lll.!:J'~OWl•S . ..,. lt(IW U.S. Summar11 Spri~g t howt ftd flit Wtll (a&sl with d•v, werm wetl~er ltXl.tY bVI !ti! !111 ~ft!ion•s midstt!lo~ !' lilt POI!, I J • wldtSDr~~d ~e~ig1 o sto•"'< llU,..."~" rain, J"ow i nd tllundtr1hcwtr1 from I~~ ~Or!httn Rocklll 10 lht IOUlhtrn Aee1l&chi1ns, Ht.,vv 1now-w1rnlntt tonltnued ll'l•outl'lovl tt~ltfn Montane. wilt•• n~w snow l~t~!lt<:I lovr IO t!• lnfht•. Olc~lnson. N. 01k., ftl!Orltd 1 1lx·l~tll sn~w 11111 In ~ sh1·1!our ~11an l"rettln• lemPtrtlvrts l<'lnnt<:I cul over 11v1ra1 1+11es. lro!'I !tie RDC~V "~711 1n rtt1Dfl, soutl'I !o t n 1 Ml,, JSJ~ol Vllttv t nd M •lft 1111 !ht A!!a11tlc Co111 to Htw Enol1n,, . ~e!n t fld orrrrie. wilh occa•lon~I lfl~lldtr5IOrm1, Cl~ldfd lh'Outll '"' OhJo l"' jt~nesut 11111e111. Cot •.1 rt ny conc1111on1 wtrt txDtCttd lo llfl Cl JWIV OV~f MOS! of '"'' nation•, l'llttlOI' Ind fuftll•r 1nowfatlJ wtrt 0111 In fl'Orn 11'11 ~C•lht•n 1'!1!~• to 1rwi AP. p1ltclll1n1 •~d upper New Englalld. TM .... lion'1 hh1h ....... , 91 "''"''' In MJnrrtl Wtlt1. Ttlf., •11111 lh1 low 1~1 w11 tnr" tltlOvt It fO 111 Ev1n1!on, Wvo. Sun , /tfoo11 , T ides Sunny tocr~v. LIOh' 11tr1t&!t wlnd1 11111n1 1.-.0 mornlnti llourt btcomlno wtil!tlly ! kl 1J ~nols In tlltr'tOOl'lt lodly •fld T11tt.<J1v. H!Oll IOlllY ifl to$. C01Sl41 111noer1tur•1 r•flOI ''°"" 11 lo '4. ln!111f1 111'1\Hrtturtl r1n;1 ltOn'I •2 to "· Wttlf ttMD1r1111rt st. Co11•tal Weather MOl'iEIAY Second "'11" e1n -."'. '• SteOllCI 10·"" • 1;00 o.l'l'I. 0.0 ,-1,,1 ~.1011 'I'll low St(e~d h19h .Secono low TUltOAY Su~ lt!n• 1~111.'". Moon J Riffs l .M p,m, 1:16 l.M, ~.• f ·ltt "'· O.• t ·S'O""' }I 1;JI o.m. 0.3 S•I• •~ot 11.rn. Jtls l :lO 1.m. The voluminous report got mixed news coverage when it came out several weeks ago. Some said it largely absolved TV or any major role in encouraging violence. Others said close reading revealed there was a definite link between TV violence and aggressive behavior of some ldren. DAILY PILOT • DELIVERY SERVICE O~livery of tht Dally Piiot is 9uara11tred , M011dtY•Frlc11v: II you Oo nol lllve your paptr &'f •:» o.m .. ct!! encl your <ODY •Ill ,bl &roinht It you. Ctll1 l rt t11<tn unt!I 7:» p.m. l•turd•Y tnd llllldtY! II vou do not ttctl111 yo.ur coiiv lit • 1.m. Jtlur111v, or I 1.m. Sund•y, (tll Ind • COD'f w'l(I bl tlr0\1!1111 lo you. C•/11 1,• •~tn 11111!1 10 1.m. Telephones Most Ortl'I,. COU!'lfV A, •• , ........ «1-021 Ho,lllWCJI Mu"tlntl'Oll 8e1<11 ,,..,., w"t"'l"t•tr •.•• ,,, ........ J14"-1llt "'" Clt,,,tnll, C.p/1 tr1fl0 t11d1, SI" Jiit" C•llbtl'tl'IO, O.~t l"ol"l, Soutll Lt1un.. U111111 H111111 , ........ • Radio, T V Court Backs Ads On Smoking Ban WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court today upheld the ban on cigarette advertising on radio and television. The Nationa l Association of Broad· casters (NAB) and six broadcasting com· panies had argued in appeals that the ban restrains freedom of speech a n d discriminates agains radio and television. The · court brushed aside without elaboration their pleas for a hearing and, as proposed by the Justice Departrnent, affi rmed a ruling by a three-judge Panel in favor of the black-out. The NAB appeal was turned aside 7 to 2. with Justices William O. Douglas and William J. Brennan calling for a hearing. The appeal by the broadcasting com· p.anies was turned down 6 to 21 with Douglas and Brennan dissenting again and Justice te\vis F. Po\vell Jr. dis· qualifying himself from consideration of the case. Congress imposed the ban in the Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act of 1969. It was signed into law by President Nixon, April f, 1970, and all cigarette advertising was swept from radio and TV beginning With Jan. 2, 1971. · The NAB said Congress acted without any evidence that cigarette ad vertising induced smoking. Stressing t h a t newspapers. magazines and the re- mainder of the print media remained free to publish such ads, the NAB asked the court : "If Congress sincerely considered that cigarette advertising was a harm to the public, how could it leave open the op- portunity for the public to be injured through the vastly increased quantities of such advertising available in all other media, save broadcasting?" .. The Justice Department replied that Congress could ha ve applied the ban to all media . "But. as this court has fre- quently held, legislative reform is not in· vali d merely because it does not go far enough," the government said. The NAB, whose membershlp includes 2,118 AM radio stations, 1,259 FM radio stations and 530 TV stations. reminded the court that it had amended its industry codes in 1969 to provide for a tot.ii elimination of cigarette advertising by Sept. 1, 1973. The six broadcasting companies that appealed were Capit al, Dover, Turner, Northwest, La Grange and North American , owners of WNAV in AMa polis,. Md.: WDOV in Dover, Del.; WTMA in. Charleston, S.C.; KVFD in Ft. Dodge~: Teamster Chief's Conviction Case Voided by Judge ATLANTA, Ga. (AP\ -A federal judge has set aside the conviction of Louisiana Teamsters' boss Edward Gardy Partin on three counts of con- spiracy to violate antitrust laws and ordered a new trial on an exto rt ion con- spiracy chai"ge. Partin, 47, of Baton Rouge, was con- victed March 2 of all four charges and hi! lawyers moved for a mi strial or for the judge to set aside the verdicts. The ruling, disclosed today. was made by U.S. District Court Judge James Bat- tin of Billings, f\.font. Battin \vas the judge for the five.week trial, held in Georgia on a change of venue. Batti.n said a ne'v trial date would be set. for the extortion con spiracy Charge, wti1ch all.eges that Partin used strong· arm tactics to force a contractor into doing business with Baton Rouge cement producer Ted F. Dunham Jr. Dun.h~m v:as conyicted last year of consp1r1ng with Partin to gain a monopo- ly over the concrete business in the Louisiana capital through labor stop- pages, sabotage and various other illegal means. Partin is business agent of the Teamsters local in Baton Rouge. His testimony helped the government convict national Teamsters boss James R. Hoffa of jury tampering in 1964. Hoffa has since been paroled. Iowa; WLAG in La ,Grange, Fa .; and WMNI. in Columbus;rOhio. Thev said they were "aware of no other case "ihat has reached the Supreme Court in which a legislature, federa l or otherwise. had attempted to impose an absolute or outright prohibition on the ex· ercise of commercial speech." 'MALICIOUS LAWSU IT' Mayor Jo11ph Ali oto Alioto, ·2 Others Win Court Fight On Fee Sharing VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP I -Mayor Joseph Alioto of San Francisco and two former \Vashington state officials have challenged continuation of fed er a 1 criminal action against them after win- ning verdicts in a $2.3 million fee-sharing suit. A Clark County Superior Cou rt jury of six men and six \vomen deliberated IO'h hours before finding unanimously Sunday in favor of Alioto, former Atty. Gen. John J . O'Connell and George K. Faler, a former O'Connell aide. The state of \Vashington and 12 publicly owned utilities had filed the suit, seeking recovery of S2.3 million in legal fees paid t? ~!ioto during. the 1960s when as a prac· tJcing attorney be recovered $16.2 million from major electrical e q u i p m en t manufacturers. The plaintiffs contended that Alioto im· porperly and secretly shared $800,000 or his fees with O'Connell and Faler, who were state officials. The de fendants denied any wrongdoing. They maintained that the fees were shared for work performed and that o·~nne!I and Faler were acting as private attorneys. Alioto, who was in \Vashington, D.C., when the verdict was returned. said ''This was a malicious political lawsuit from the be~inning ... I now call upon Nixon's campaign manager, John Mitche!l, the architect of this perfidy, to do the decent thing and dismiss the malicious Seattle ind ictment .'' Mitchell recently resigned as U.S. at· torney general. The same three defendants face federal c.h~rges of conspiring to bribe a state of- hc1a1. A pretrial hearing is scheduled Friday in Seattle and a tentative trial date of April 17 has been set. Alioto and O'Connell. who are both ~e~oc~~ts .. have charged throug hout the civil. ht1gahon that it was politically motivated by the Republican ad· ministration in the state of Washington and the nation's capital. Food Chains Target U.S. Will Lodge 'Beef' Over Meat Price Gains IV ASHJNGTOrl ( U P f ) An Agriculture Department report due for publication soon will show food chains wid!ned their margins on beef in February, it was learned today. The disclosure came on the heels of a demand by Tony T. Dechant, President of the National Farmers Union. for adml· nistration and Congressional Investigation of the profit margins of chain stores and processors Involved in setting retail food prices. Treasury Sc<rdary John B. Connally said the· administration would be watch - ing margins. And co ngr essional sources disclosed late last week that a House agriculture subcommittee Is ex· peeled to launch Its own study into what has been happen!l'lg to meat prices . The forthcoming Agriculture Depart· ment report ls a re:p;ular monthly sum- mary or changes in farm , wholesale and rttail prlct:s and fann·to-retall margins . Jnfonned sources bere !aid last week's Labor ' Department . report on February meat,prlce hikes means the Agriculture " I a Department's February report will •t. show retail beef pr ice averages up ag , to another all time record. But since I e fatU.e and wholesale beef prices begfn urning down after. mid·February fie average farm price for the month i's .,.. lpecJled to be reported down from JanUl\fY eves. As a re sult, iources said tibe department's February margins da'ta wlll sh?w an Increase in the farm·to-rettiil price spread for beer, wlth the gain clfl· centratcd at the retail store level a Dechant asserts that while ao~e ch! st~re ads have blamed farmers for hi ~ re all b~ef prlces, cu.rrtnt GOVernm t· P~lt:e Co"!!1llsslon rules give 8 "specJtL ~~;~nr~~ge to fOOd chains and ~ Under current rule s. Dechant po~ out, a meat packer whose cost fo~e cattle JOes up can ralse Its pric malntam th• ••me Jl09fi1 .mar1m ii' d during Ille ~ ~., l'Jic:o Ir \began lut A"iUSt IS. .... ' I p r f l c 0 d d c b II p Ii a c c G. as of d' ha an a frn 2 of ot le Be \\'ii A in ni I Bo p co Ro m' fa pol sai tes be ed in ar SIU 196 tio obj cu no per ' s A Sa rev oth tell' f•'ra \\'C I.a llig s the eel, !he and eas " fre he , . ' I r • 'To P1•ev ei1t Chaos' ''ond"y· March '27, l~72 DA.IL Y PILOT [) Officials ,Support Airport , Deci sio11 . LOS ANGELES I AP I -brought by a Lockheed A i r Alrpart offlcials say a federal Terminal lnc .. OYlner or the appellate court de c Is ion airport, p a c i f i c South\\'CSt overturning il curfew a t suburban flollyil'ood-Burbank Airlines ar\d the Air.Transport Airport \v iii prevent chaos In AssociaUon of America. lht national air travel system . 1\1 o ore s a i d e n- Clifton A. f\loore, general vlronmentallsts worried about manager or the cit y Depart· aircraft noise and sonic boom ment or Ail·ports. said Sunda\• the decision upheld federiil have basically sound coril- preemplion of la"'S governing pla int s. air travel. "It's just that y,·e disagree "Such sing!~ authority is \l'ith the manner in which necessary if the nation is to lhese goals should be ich.ie\'- prevent 11 scramble or loc<J.I ed." he said. E'A/tllL\' CIRCIJS .... ~­.... -.. ,._ b y Bil firtutt> U.S. Plci11 Of }iist ice 011 T riu,l SAN JOSE i Ul)I ~ -Nol on- ly Angela Dn\'is Is on trial in Snn Jose. So is the An1erl can syste1n of justice. An official or thr t.:n ltl'<i States Jnformatlon A g n c y USIA says his organization Is determined to see that lhe lea\'es lit tle doubt y,·here his legal system is gi ven ils day sympathies are. in the court of world public Baskak0\1 says the govern· opinion. ment is ·'striking out against "\Ve have done more ex-all those who ha\'e the courage tensl\'e coverage on this trial lo speak out against the in- bccause !JO many people say justices and racisin occurring 1\tlss Davis was arrested in this United States at this because she w11s a Coinmunist lime." restrictions that would er-Airpor t officials w o r r i e d fectlvely turn the county's air that Jf the law stood. a curfeY.' transportation systen\ into v.·ou.ld eventually be forced on ''H P t C tt · 1 H . ' d Los Ange I es International ere comes e er o onto1 ••• opp1n own chaos,·· he said. th 'I and black." said Bob Leeper. "Angela Davi s is a \•icUm of deputy assistant director or this persecu tion .. , he said in a USIA . ''The actual <'harges recnt intel'\'ie\\'. The U.S. 9th District Court Airpcrt and olher n1ajor e money tro 1 ••• " of Appeals last \Veek upheld a airpcr!s. --------------------are O\'erlooked or not even "\Vhile you Arnericans may ntentioned in the Co1nn1unust not realize this. it is absolutely 1nedia." clear lo the res t or the 1\'0J'ld ," districl court decision str iking Bert Lock\Vood, assistant dO\\'n as unconstilutionol a general manager ror opera· curfe,,· halting jet flights lions. warned that a new bet,veeu 11 p,m. and 7 a.nt. at curfew at Los A n g e I es Hollyv.·ood-Burbank. lnternallonal would me an The decision was made delay of mail , disruption of air public Saturday. cargo and persoMel layofrs . It was not hnmed.iately "Ir Los Angeles should be knbwn if the Burbnnk City hit with a curfew, it's virtually Council, which passed the an· certain New York wouJd be ti-noise ordinance, would no\v closed at night within a n1onth appeal to the U.S. Supreme or so -and vice versa. if New Court. The ordinance \\'as \'ork should be hit first," chaUenged by a I a w s u i t _Loc_k_w_·ood __ ,_•i_d_. ___ _ LA Courity W ilderness At Stake in New Bill the Russian ncws1nan said. The Communists arc using I o · · Leeper has a dispatch done I le av1s trial for all its prop-in early March by OaskakO\' in aganda va lue. Leeper SAid. \Vhich ltiss Dn\'iS \1•as quoted "A USIA man i·ust retur11ed at length. No\vhcre was 1ne1l-f1·om riioscow says her picture tioned the charncs of murder is all over the cit v. There's no " . -and conspiracy s tem ming caption under it. just the pie-from the 1\1arin Civic Center SACRAMENTO (AP) -The I I t · . b'll lure ." . I I I I d d n as year s session a 1 \'JO ence that e t our ea , Senate Rules Commil\ee \Viii establishing a st a t e 1Y i d c There are 33 foreign news including a judge. super-environ n1ental protec-agencies r~gistered \\'ilh the If Baskakov seems more make a bill assignn1cnt next tion a~en<'y was killed in the Santa Clara Count y Sheriff's like an editorin l \\'riter than a \\'eek that could \\'ell decide cornmittee. Department . said sheriff's reporter. he's absolutelv dead- the rate of the last large oasis Then la st \\'eek the com· Deputy tilike Sim1non. in-pan next to the East German of u•ilderness in Los Angele~ mittee approved a new set of eluding Soviet and E a s t Communist COl'ering the trial. interim logging ren ulalions Gern1an media. Dr. Klaus Steiniger 1vorks County. ,.. EARN with daily interest Passbool( Thrift Accounts of any amount earn Sl-'l% per year, pa id from day invested lo day withdrawn. Yo ur funds a lways immediatelf available. Interest credded and compounded quarterly. Fundi pl«ed by April 10 earn from April 1. we 11/fke Il/f'l/.eylzelp ,pcopl0r- Morris Pl an Newport Beach 3700 Newport Boulevard 673 ·3700 Berkele)· Calni Si1ice Bowker Rule Senate J)rcsident Pro Tcnl o\'er vehement opposition bv Thr correspondent tor Tass. for i\'eues Deul schland. the or-_~th~o~po~'§''~r~ru:l__:co:n:s•:r:v•:t~io:n:is~l ~tl~ie~R~is~si~on~n~e~w~s~a~g~en~c{v~.~is~·_Jr;~c~ia~l~C~o~m~1n~u~n~is~t -n:e:w:·s:pa:pc~r;:::~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ James 1'1 ills ID·San Diego1 Sien·a Club. Ed1\·ard Baskako1· and he in E<tst (:er1na11y. refused to speculate in an in-1 tcrviC\1' 1\·hether a Sant;1 I ri·tonica ri.1ou11tains bill \\'ill go r--------------------------------.,.-----::--:;;-~~~--.,.-----11 lo the Governmental BERKELEY (AP) -Albert G. Bowker's first eight months as chancellor or the University I of California's Berkeley carn- pus. \\'here American student dLssenl first ex ploded in 19G4. have been marked by peace and order. No one is mnre pleas!'d about this than BO\\'l\er. 52. formrr chancellor or the 200.000-sludent Cit y Uni\'Crsity of New York. 110\\·e\·er. he is raced v:ith other tough managerial prob- len1s on the 28 .000·student Berkeley ca1npus. "·here he \\'ill be formally inst:illed in an April 6 ceremony also mark· ing the school's 104th an- ni versary. fn a recent I n I. e r v i e 11· Bou•ker discussed son1e of the problems. including a quirt coiifrontation bel11•een Go\'. Ronald Reagan':; budget-trim- ming Administration and a faculty angered by Reagan polic ies. The grey-haired rhan~llor said he believes student pro- te st has virtually disappeared because the protesters achiev· ed many of thei r object i\·es. "They were a strong raclor in turning our war policy around," he said. "Out or the student protests starting in 1964 came a general reali1.a- tion of how ful ile some of our objtclives had become." Bowker sai d the un iversity curriculum is much less rigid now and that students are permiUed political and social Free,va ys '111 Liniho' SAN FhANCISCO (UPI) - A highway official has said San Francisco's "free\vay revolt" of 1959 has spread to other areas of the state. •1Freell·ay opponents are telling each other, 'If San Jo"ranclsro stopped freC\\'llYS, \\'e can too,' " said Thomas H. l.a1nmers. ne"' Di s trict High\\•ay Engineer on Sunday. South Pasadena is fighting the Long Beach f<~ree\\'ay proj- ect , Newport Beach opposes the Route 1 Coast Freeway and Hawthorne is battling the east-west Century Freeway. "San Francil1co's future free\Yay plans are in limbo," he said. '-U~I Tti.,11010 DR. ALBERT BOWKER Ber keley Presi dent action lhal would have been taboo eight years ago. "The violence and con- frontations in 1964 \\'ere the lirsl \Ye had ever seen on American campuses." he said. "No one kne\v quite how to deal \\'ilh the proble1n. .. Now \re have learned. No\v i( studenls do some thing unac- ceptable. \\'e mo\·e promptly and fir 1nly. wilh discipline.'' B O\\'ke r said that dissatisfaction "'ilh Reagan Administrai ton policies has caused some faculty move- ment lo\vard col le c t ive b11rgaining. The state Administration. after denying facu lly cost-or- living raises for two straight years, is budgeting a 7.5 per- cent raise this year. "It doesn't make up for t\,,o standstill years. but i t ' s something ,'' Bowker said. El'en more irking to Berkeley's faculty than the salary freeze has been a state Department or Finance audit of classroom hours is not an effective measure of teaching effort. "The best measure for budget and control purposes is lhe ratio of students to teachers. At Berkeley it is 16.5 or 17-tlr<>ne. And lhis is high ." he said. The salary freeze and audit of teaching tinte ha ve moved an Academic Senate co1n- 1nittee to explore collective barga ining organization. Organization Comm ittee or the Natural Resources and \Vildlife Co1nmitlee. Mills. chairman of t h powerful Rules Commi ttee, 1vould not comment on the measure, wh ich is intended to set up a comrnisslon with veto ))()\\'er O\'er developments in the 200.000-acre ranJ:C. But the bill 's s ponsor. RepubHcan Sen. R o be rt Ste,·ens of Los Angeles. said in an intc rvlC\1' the make-up of the Go vernmental Organiza- tion Committee -or v•hich he is a 1nember -\\'ould make the fighl for the measure 's passage ·'rough.·• A 1971 study by ~ Sierra Club official ra1ed the ma- jOtity of the curN.>nl commit- tre in the botto1n third or rhe Sen.11te on 1970 cnvironn1cntal votes. The N a t i o n a I Resources Comn1ittee. on the other hand. is under the ch<iirmanship of Sen. John Ncjedl.v 1 R-\Valnut Creek ). who has built a reputati on as a tough crusader on environmenta l Issues. "By "'ha! canon of logic could a bill on the Sanla P.lonica ~1ountains go I o go1·ernme11tal organization ?'' asked John Zierold. lobbyist for the Sierra Club I n Sacramento. "Th:it commitlee ha s never played a n y historical role in questions in- volving local governmenl and environmenta l control." The range in question con- sists of a wedge forming lhe nort hern edge of the Los Angeles Bnsln and running fron1 th e Pacific 'Ocean 20 miles east to Griffith Park nea r downtown Los Angeles. Conserva tionists want to save as much of lhe range as possible for a park -slate or Cederal -\l'hile devel opers n'ant government to settle the issue somehow so they can proceed v.•ilh develop1nents. Talking about the difficulty of getting the bill passed U it is sent to g over nm en ta I organization. Stevens said, ''It \vould be reall y lou ~h to get the bill through that coin- mittee, but I 'II give it the old Cilllege try if that's where it's sent .'' The committee succeeded the formr Go vernmental Ef- t'iciency Committee in 1970 alter the old committee had buill up a reputation as a "graveyard of u n wanted legislation." ,I ~ i Mt) u PH ARMACY I WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -CHICK THISI SUPll: SALi SPICIALS-$.,..., 1t1i. ,011r ...... l"rk• 1 S•i. l"rlt• Thtrttr•n Vlt1rnin1, 100 + 10 f111 ••• ·····•••••••, $1.lt SI.II $4,lf l 11H1rin 100'1 •.••••.••..•..••....•..••••••••••••. Sl.67 $1.2t 99c Effo rcl111t T1hloh, 40'1 ···········-········•·--···· $1.lt ttc 77c M11111111 Slri11 l r1 ctt, 4 01 .••••••••••••••••• , •••• , , •• t8C! llt 63c Drist1n Cold T11blth, 100·, •.••••..•••••••••....••• $4.25 SZ.95 52.59 2700 E. Coast HiJ?hwav. at Fernleaf. Corona def Mar m AMPLI PAl:llN• IN ttlAlt H••n -t1JO • •:ot Deilr Cl..-~ _. H•lldrp 644-7575 ,. A cleaner • e11Y1 ron 1n • t' ,./. .-.. ·,(i·~ • -1 • There are days in Southern Califor nia when some kids aren't allowed to play. The air is t oo polluted . What will it take to clean the air? New inventions, for one thing. More electricity, fo t· another. In a recent12-month period, for instance, more than 500 patents granted by the U.S.Patent Officerlealtin someway wi th environ· mental problem s. And more than half of these-275 of them-need electricity to make them \vork. n Electricity for new air It's one reason we nee'd additional power plants. r :pollution controls. Electricity for more sewage treatment plants. Electricity to recycle waste products. Edison must be permitted to build additional power plants no\v. And transmission lines to deliver that powe1: N uclea1· power plants are one way to provide additional electricity. They're clean, proven and smog-free . Other ways to generate electricity. are under in tensive research or being • • .. • . 1:Y~;- ' •;./>liiJ,v 'I ~'. :•" ... ~i ,On ~ ... .~. ,.111 ' •t ··~ ... or.~ ... ,.. developed now. Meanwhile,· the technology of conventional generating plants which burn fuels is steadily being improved. These fossil fuel plants still have some adverse environmental impact, bu t not enough to outweigh the contribution they will make for a cleaner tomorrow. Electricity and a cleaner environment. The two go together. E , •' l . ' t. • ., " ( f • DAD.Y PROT EDITOWAL PAGE Now Public Can l(now In some regions Americans call It hornswo~gling the voters. ln all areas Jt has been plain deception as elected representatives of the people have hidden votes in committees while leading their constituents to be- lieve they voted a way they didn't. That exercise in hypocrisy will henceforth be more difficult in the California A'5embly -but not yet In the Senate. The Assembly now calls the roll in its stand· Ing committee!. Votes of members temporarily absent are also recorded. And the votes are to be published in the weekly appendix to the Daily Journal. The Senate rejected the Assembly's strong roll call measure, using the excuse that a majority objected to allowing temporarily absent members to cast their votes in writing. Assemblyman Robert H. Burke, R·Huntington Beach, a member of the rqles committee which wrote the measure, believes the Senate will soon follow the Assembly's lead. Certainly the Senate should do so, and promptly if it is not to do further damage to the public's con1idence in the Legislature. Exposing their actions to public scrutiny is one way the Legislature can help to restore the respect lost in their partisan haggling in 1971. Labor Leaders vs. Nation When four of the five labor leaders on the Pay Board walked off the job last week, their action was a reminder of the corrupting influence of too much un · checked power. Bringing inflation under control is vital to every American. but especially to the 80 million men and women in the work force . That includes the 17 percent who are members o/ the AFL-CIO. It was not enough for the labor leaders to win five of eight major wag/package situations and 36 out of 54 votes. Like spoiled children, the four labor leaders insisted on picking up all the marbles or they wouldn't play. AFL-CIO President George Meany made charges against the public and business representatives which were straight demagoguery. Jmperfect as is Phase 2 of President Nixon's program to apply wage and price re- straints, it is at least a valiant try. It will be no help in avoiding an economic ca· lamity if irresponsible labor leaders are permitted to go on feeding inflation with exorbitant wage and fringe benefit demands. And to paralyze the economy with massive strikes when their power is resisted. It seems likely that rank and file union members will be no more approving of their leaders' actions in present circumstances than non·members. All have seen their paychecks, including all raises in recent years, eaten away by spiraling inflation and taxes. The labor Jeaders represent a special interest which Is no more deserving of special treatment than/ any other special interest. The whole American public is the "special interest" now and Meany and associates should recognize that fair play to all the nation should come first. Dumping Useless Records Government and many businesses share the bad habit of keeping mountains of records which can have no possible· future value . A bill is now in the Legisla· lure to eliminate the storing of nonessential documents filed in civil suits. If it passes, substantial savings in both storage and microfilming costs will follow. It's a sensible idea. I I l " ' •'< • I Pri•O?let"• of War and Missing in Action National Week of Concern New Way to Cut Rear End Test Yourself on ln a recent ceremony at the White Houae, President Nixon signed a con- gressional re.solution designating tbe seven days begiMing March 26 as Na· rional Week of Concern for Prisoners of War/1t1issing in Action. That date also will mark the eighth anniversary of the capture or Army Capt. Floyd Thompson. ]isled as the first American prisoner or war in \'ietnam. There has been no news from or about Thompson !ince 1964. Defense Department figures show that 1,009 U.S. servicemen are now missing in action in Southeast Asia and lhat at least 489 more are held captive by the enemy. Of these, 383 are listed as prisoners in North Vietnam. Hanoi has identified 343 AmerJCan POWs and claims that this ls• t'Omplete Jist. There have been no figures disclosed about U.S. prisoners in South Vietnam, Laos or Cambodia. In addition to American POWs, North Vietnam and its allies have captured around 2,500 South Vietnamese. South Vietnam holds about 8,000 North Viet· namese and 28,000 Viet Cong. In an Oct. 7, 1970, peace initiative, President Nixon proposed the release of all POWa on both aides. This oiler was rejected. Tm: PR~IDENT bas promised the release of American prlsonen '1elther u EDITORIAL RESEARCH part of an over-all settlement, or through other means.'' The latter part of this plt!dge was seen by some as a veiled threat to the North Vietnamese. lf they remained adamant on the prisoner issue, the President might have been saying, they would run the r.isk of U.S. rescue operatigna. Such a raid occurred at the Sontay prison camp 20 miles west of Hanoi on Nov. 21, 1970. lt wu unsuc- cessful; the camp had been empty for several weeks. In hi! proclamation, Nixon said : "At the end of this month, the first men to be taken prisoner will begin their ninth year in captivity. 'Ibis is tbe longest intern· r,,ent ever endured bY American fighting tnen; it is also one of the most brutal" !\'either a.ide bas been noted for its tender- ne.ss toward prisoners. Reports of execu· tions, torture, indoctrination, starvation and lack of medical care have been com· mon. ACCORDING TO official figures, 100 time! more Americana have been killed In Southeast Asia since 1964 than have been taken prisoner. Yet the emo- tionalism surrounding the relatively small group of POWs is so slrong that every politician, regardless or his views on the war, bases his Vietnam program on the speedy repatriation of prisoners. Nixon has justified his policy of re· taining a residual force in South Vietnam by citing the enemy's unwillingness to return U.S. prisoners. His critics argue that the United Stales must agree lo a complete withdrawal before It can expect a release of POWs. Princeton professor Richard A. Falk has written: "Ironically, the POW issue flas been brought to the fore precisely because the President's Vietnam strategy fail s to make any ef· fective provi!ion for the return of the prisoners." American participation in the war is not the only issue standing in the way or prisoner repatriation. In addition to total U. S. withdrawal, the North Vietnamese also demand that this country stop sup- porting the Saigon government. And so the talking and the fighting go on while the prisoners remain in captivity. UntiJ the two sides can reach a compromise on their now irreconcil~ble demands, the American POWs will continue to serve as Hanoi's strongest bargaining point. Collisions By MIKE ABRAMSON Anyone who has ever driven an automobile knows the terror of another vehicle suddenly looming in the rear view mirror close to collision and countless thousands or drivers know from painful personal experience the destruction from being struck from behind. In fact, National Safety Council figures show that there were 3.8 million rearend automobile collisions in 1970. Safely ex· perts hold that rear epders are lhe largest sing!~ reason more than M,800 persons died and two million were in· jured that year. NOW A NORTHERN California scien- tist-inventor haS' come up with a potential solution to the problem and San Fran· cisco Bay Area drivers are experiencing a new element in their driving. The scientist i! John Voevodsky of Portola Valley who holds a doctorate in behavioral cybernetics from Stanford. Voevodsky sa)1s that u n expected deceleration sltuations on the road are the cause or mo re automobile accidents than any other single factor. Word Derivations Today's little word-quiz Involves the derivations of some ordinai:y words, and the curious ways in which they have changed their meanings over the cen· turies. A score of SO percent is excellent. I. Why was Ethel- red, the 10th Century King • of England, known as "the Un- ready?" 2. What was .1 ''jest.book" in tht early days of print- ing? 3. Why are foot-soldiers known as "in- fantry"? 4. \Vhere did our "rummage" sale Come from? 5. WHAT DOES Shakespeare·s Lear mean when he describes himself as "a fond old man." 6. Were the first "miniatures" so-called because they were small? 1. What did the original "scavenger" do for a living? 8. Why is a green, grassy turf called a ''greensward "? ( SYD:'\'EY J. HARRIS) 2. "Gest," or "jest" was simply a story, and the early jest·books were story-books; since those were merry, rollicking tales of adventure in the main, the modern word "jest" evolv ed from them. 3. Older, more experienced veterans rode horses, in the cavalry; the "in· fants," or juniors, in war, were perrn.Hted only to go by foot. 4. In Elizabethan times, sailors who stowed goods in a hold were called "rum· magers." S. '·FOND" 1tfEANT "foolish,'' and Lear was bemoaning his folly. 6. The first "miniatures" were thin gs painted In minimum or red lead like the ornamental initial cap It a Is in manuscripts; such work was usually small, and came to be known as a "miniature." Lincoln Memorial Is Aging His personal concern for the problem developed one rainy night when, after witnessing a rreeway accident and stop. ping to help, he noted that even with con- ventional warning lights ftastting on stalled automobiles, oncoming driver, came frighteningly close to colliding with the halted vehicles. 9. Jesus tells us that no man can grow a "cubit" by taking thought; how long is a cubit, and where does it come from? 10. Are the Jacks, Queens and Kings in a deck known as the "court cards" because they all lived at a royal court? 7. The medieval scavenger was an im· portant public official. something on the order of our inspector of customs, who riffled through travelers' bags and ex· amined their belongings. WASHINGTON -The world·famed Lincoln Memorial ls showing disturbing 1ign1 or age. While still !tructurally sound, an ex- amination has uncovered considerable deterioration: a lot ol crumbling mortar, llWe ls left between the wide front steps; edges of the marble blocks around the per imeter are chipped and some severely cracked; the roof Jeaks and ..eeds extensive re- pairing and a com- plete new layer of tar and gravel : and the entire structure ur.genUy requires thorough cleaning. Richard Volpe, in charge of main· tenance ol the National Capital Parks, says these and other defects are primari· Jy surface impairments and much more visually defacing than damaging to the building. •1BASJCALL V, THERE i!n'I 11 thing wrong with the Lincoln Memorial," he asserts. "Like any structure that is open to the weather over many years, it needs repairing and maintenan ce. But there isn·t the slightest danger of its collapsing or anything remotely like that." OllANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vttd, Publishtr Thomas Kttvil, Editor Albtrt \V. Ba.tt1 Edito rial Pagt Editor The f:'dlt orlal Pitt of the Dally Pilot tteks tG intonn ind 1llmu· late re&d~r1 by presenun, this newtpe.J>tr'& opinions and mm· mcntal')I on topic. of lnternt and 1la:ntticantt. b)' pr0\-1dlnc a forum for the exprcuifJn ot our readen' f)t)lnlon,,. and by JRlf'ntlnc the df,·t'rlt \'i""l'X>ints of lnformtd ob-servers •n6 1pokcsmtn m toplca of tht d1.1. Monday, March 27, 1972 (ROBERT S. ALLEN) The Memorial will be 50 yean old in May. It was dedicated May 30, 1922, by President Harding, at a ceremony at· tended by more than 200,000. It Is far and away the most popular at- traction in the Capital, visited by millions annuall y. Last year, the . total was 2,330,693 -the lowest since the early 1960s and 40 percent less than the 3.9 million recorded in 1969. HOWEVER, LAST month, attendance showed a marked improvement -79,920, some 20,000 more than January of last year. capital Parks officials attribute the in· crease to mild winter weather and other factors; notably the Jack of mass demonstrations and better economic con- ditions. Both of these matters are deemed largely responsible for the big tourists' drop in 1971. Around $200,000 will be !penl this year by National Capital Parb refurbishing the imposing fl.femorial. IT WILL BE cleaned bolb oulslde and inside. chiefly by steami missinf mortar will be replaced and cracks will be patched up and otherwise repaired. Also due for renovat ion are the two greatly overused restrooms (one for men and one for women.) During Ibis work . lbe Memorial wlll be 1vallable at .all timtJ to visitors. It ls never closed , and lena: of thousands of Quotes Velda M. Mar:tn, S.F. -"The black man will never develop a sense ot dignity or moral responsibility for his own ex· I tence crying about the past. I'm a Negro -Ured of this block biL" Leonard Gross, formtr Calif. aew1mu -''I liUed my boo~ 'i!IM' lo show my confidence that man would survive the lhrtat of the totalllarlan state of Geor11 Orwell's 11984'." people come to see it at night. Parking is one of the most serious problems. Other than taxis and tourmobiles, there Is no public lransit to the Memorial. As a consequence, parking in the area is a constant snag. Similarly, lhere is only one public phone and that creates com· plications. AUTO FUMES ON the ground and smoke exhausts overhead from scores or commercial planes going to and from nearby National Airport are definitely adversely affecting both the interior and exterior marble. Capital Parks is ex· perimenting with colorless preservatives to protect it. The Lincoln Memorial is the only one in the Capital with indoor floodlights jn. stalled at the request of the sculptor. Daniel Chester French, who sculpted lhe giant figure of the seated Pre sident. decided on the floodlights to counteract distracting reflections off the marble in· terior floor which he held cast un- desirable shadows on the statue. THE ME~fORIAL is also the first In the Capital to have a loud-Speaker 1ystem, The West Potomac Park site was a compromise. The construction com- mittee, headed by then-House Speaker Joseph Cannon, R·lll .. was widely split on the location of the Memorial and the sile was finally agreed on as a compromise. Dear Gloom y Gus Can you remember back when both the air and su were clean? -R.R. Tlll1 ... lw• rtfltct1 rffiftf'I" 'f'lf¥1.. 11tt -••wrllY l'lltl• ., Jiit MWta••tr¥ ltnlf ffllf "' l'ft¥t fl OltM!y •va. Dell't l'Utl. ) I l EIGHT YEARS OF research and development followed when Voevodsky reasoned that a scientist trained in psycho I ogy, mathematics. neurophysiology and other disciplines ought to be able to come up with a better system. .The results of those years or effort are winking at San Francisco drivers today. The winking comes from a dramatic new deceleration warning device called Cyberlite which has been installed on more than 500 Yellow Cab Company taxis in San Francisco. There the new safely device will be tested for a year under a permit from the California Highway Pa- trol. CYBERUTE IS composed of a control module, which senses the auto'! rate of deceleration, and a !pecially designed pulsing amber light, centermounted on the rear of the cabs. The light begiN pulsing when the driver steps on tbe brake. The quicker the stop, the quicker and . brighter the light. The on·time, in· tensity and tempo of the pulsing light provides a continuous warning system to following drivers at all phases or deceleration from safe, slow :stops to {he f~st. dangerou~ and u n ex p e c t e d circumstance where a driver ahead sud· denly jams on or Jocks his brakes to avoid trouble. '1THE STRENGTH of Cyberlite," Voevodsky !ays, "is that a person's mind separates the dangerous stop from the safe stop automatically -the way everyone reacts automatlcaUy and dif· fcrenUy to touching a warm at·ove or a hot one." · Re.suits of the San Francisco test will be submitted to the Highway Patrol for evaluation -since all auto safety devices mU31 be approved by tho C.llfornla Legislature and CHP before use. Legisla- tion to authorize installation of approved deceleration warning systems such as CyberUte will be introduced in Sacra- mento this )'!8r. At a time when motor veliicle safety seems to be lhe watchword with federal and state orflcials alike ts well as lhe driving public everywhere. ca11Jorni1 may , once more well be on lta WlY to show1nR the rest of the nation bow it should be done. Clllfonda Featare Su.tc. ANSWERS: . l. "Unready'' meant "lacking in sound judgment," and had to do with "readiness" only insofar as we still speak of having a "ready wit.'' 8. "Sward'' meant orig-inally !he skin or crust of anything. 9. "Cubit" is Lalin for "elbow," and is the length of the forearm. 10. ··court cards" is a corruption of "coat cards," slgnifyi_ng the figures who are clothed in a deck of cards. 'The Arnheiter Affair' Herman Wouk's captain Queeg in "The Caine Mutiny" was a fictional character. Commander Marcus Aurelius Arnlteiter Jn Neil Sheehan 's "The Arnheiter Affair'' is a very real person who, in March 1966, was relieved of his command of a small U.S. warship in Vietnam waters . Yet Queeg and Arnbeiter exhibited many of the same quirks, it is revealed in the atrange tale lhat is the best, if most em· barrassing, naval story to come out of t~ Vietnam experience. ;U.S.S. v.,nce was a.small, slugjsh, ag- ing vessel, a "destroyer escort radar." Only 307 feet long, 37 feet at beam, she carried 150 men, a potential hell ship under favorable conditions and certainly onr: under sagging morale conditions in tM tropics. Amheiter was her skipper for 99 days , enough time, ii Is shown, to drive his men to near mutiny and, in one case, a threatened assassination. • SHEEHAN, TIIE chief 4 New York ti!l,e1 correspoodent on the Pentagon Papers story, covered the Arnbelter !tory during Congressional heariligs po the af· fai( ·in 1968. Later he reooMtructed this naqatlve through interviews with former crew members, through official Navy DePartment documents, and tntervlell'S witp. Amheiter at hla home in Malin county. . '!be former skipper charged be had hem toppled by a copsptracy among a "Vittnlk" crew that amounted to near mUllny. The Vince, he 1&id, had dttfnerated Into "a roach-infested ya~" under a prtv1ous captain and that he tiied merely to tralllfer her into a marM>f·war. The evidence, under 811eehan's digging, provod olherwlse. Arnheitcr was an eccentric who saw himself as sorll• potenllal Admiral Nelson·Horatio Jfombfowr. He took his 1hlp0 lnlo are11 he waa told not to go; ' (THE BOOKMAN) used his men in a small boat as bait for enemy shore fire, saw phantom Com· munists in the shore bushes, endangered his ship in some private war of hls own. He was "a figure of fiction ," Sheehan writes. "that whimsical tyrant in the captain's cabin who emerges al some point in every navy." THIS IS A VERY fair investigative document. Because, like Quecg, one can- not help feeling sorry for Marc Amheiter who wanted to focus official attention on hiJ little ship and simply charted the wrong course tn doing so. The Navy never did convene a court of Inquiry or a court-martial. It would be too embarrassing a public event, the author tells us In an interesting analysis of the naval mind at work. The Vietnam affair has turned up some curious military tales. "The Arnheiter Affair'' iJ one of the oddest and moat in· ter .. ting (Random House; illus.: 17.15). William Hosu B11 George --- o.ar George: All the years I have lived In Miami I have noticed buzzards circling around the old courthouse spire. Could you tell me what al· tracts scavencers to the courthouse?· s. w. Dear S. IV.; No .. Every time I lry I end up in a llbel acllon. I I ,, ' • I • ' • ,. ' '. • • • ',. ' • T t ' c d I ,. QUEENIE . ' )..;,, :: :; . ·.i .. ' " • By 'hil lnterlandi 3-2.2. . , ~cn.rr---... 11ic..•1tn.w."...___,_ ''Of course I'm depressed. tfy doctor tells me I'Jn fit as a fizzle." L.Itl. Boyd I Only I Hqshand I In I 0 Faithful? ' "A man without an address Is a vagabond ; a mu wllb '"'o addresses ls a libel-tine." G. B. Shaw '10nly one husband in 10 never trifles," writes a mat- rimonlaJ counselor of lengthy experience. This profession- al fellow practices in San Francisco. Husbands there must ba more adventurous. He says fur- ther, "SOU them men tend to be slight. Jy more faithful than Pacific Coast hus ban ds. although not as faithful as those husbands along the Atlantic sea- board. The most> dfscreet triflers are the New EnglarJI husbands." IF YOU buy a house, say the boys at the bank, odds run 40 to one WAS THAT cynic ~farlon Brando who said most wr musically, "Emphasizing a woman's hips is like putting falsies on a cow." CAN YOU think of any 'Slates -besides 'A(izona, Florida and Alaska -wherein rivers run !north . 1 Certain· ly wouJd like the names of same. • -. .... -.. QUERY -Q. "'Man will survive!' 8i:t pr9C1., d t e , . 'l:., h' philosophers optimisticall y when the fir~l atoqtic mb, ex- ploded. Louie, how many of the species that ever lived are now extinct?" A. Just about 98 percent, contend the men of science. A MEDICAL researcher is Oakland. Calif.,. says he's convinced the marijuana cigarette so~eday will be pre:Y crjbed by doctors to treat asthma, epilepsy and the pain of childbirth. mGHEST priced fur is nol the pink mink -fix that! -it's the natural Russian sable, I'm told. CARNIVORES, please note: You're not keeping up with the national average, if you don 't eat your own weight in meal this year. CHASE - A psychologist .~amed J?r. A1bert Ellis. of New York reported this: In Nigeria lives a small tr~be which observes an annual ~omen's Le~p Day. Something like the comic Sadie Hawkins celeb!atlon,. After t.he fea st comes the chase. With the women 1n swift purswt of the men. No, said men, when caught. aren't required to marry th eir captors. But they're expected to make a romantic evening of it, certainly. ON A TOMBSTONE in a cemetery near Cincinnati, Ohio. is this inscription; "Here lies .JoM .Nathan ":'!'1° ca!'le into this city and died for the benefit or ·his health. Quaint. But not spectacular. In a churchyard outside Boston, Mass., is a stranger epitaph, macabre almost: "Of pneu· monia supervening consumption, corqplicated by other disea~s. the main symptom or which Was insanity." Address moil to L. J\f. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New- port Beach 92660. Help From the .Skies I I . . ·' 1 I I .. • • Monday, f¥1arth 27, l9n DAU. Y PILOT ,. Lawyer Tells Mexica n N ightm ~re Driver ~lams Teleplione Pole, Bou1ices fr om, Jail to Jail Se• th• be1t in rnen'• w •a r for '72! Th• best ••· lection in town for double kni t 1lack1 and sport coats. Romernber, th• be~t is always at By WU.UAM B. MEAD WASffiNGTON (UPI) -A traffic accident turned a Mex· lean vacation into a nightmare' for a government lawyer who says she was shunted from jail to Jail for four days while U.S. embassy officials ignored her pleas Jor help . Michele Crown. 281 a trial lawyer for the Federal Trade Commission, said she finally jumped ball in desperation, 17 days after the accident. J\.11.s.s Crown, whose crime was knocking down a telephone pole with hES"~ r.ental car, estimated the ordeal cost her $.1,fXXt •in 'legal fees alOJ!e. The slim brunette said she and a friend, Jerry, Dainow, flew to Mexlcn. City Feb. 6 for a one·wrk · vacation. After , four d'ays i'Of sightseeing, she drOpped Da.iqow at an airline ticket office and . decided to t3ke a leisul'ely drive through Pedregal, an e~cl u sfve residential area f>!. Mexico City. r.:._ '1 was .Jooltjpg at the houses-really F:Utiful,.....and I a~ciden1'lly· h · • telephone pole and it w t. down. "[ asked someone jp fall the po- lice, and J call~ t.M car rental agency aOO ir insurance company. . "They kept t~lirig me at the precinct police station it was very, very bad,11 ~she said. ''They called an ' ri.oterpreter and asked me to make a statement. -Then they asked me to sign the statement. "I said, 'I don't know what the legal implications are, so let me call the American con- 1ul." Hi was at another precinct 10 I had to wait. "The police started rushing me to ~.sign this ·statement- Finally ~elvin Collins from the U. S} embassy called. and said, in short, '\\'e can't do UPI Ttl1plloto MICHELE CROWN DESCRIBES 'DI SASTER' Gove rnment L1wy1r Relives Tr1ffic Acci dent Ordeal "The cell was as big as I bathroom, had a hole in the floor for a toilet, and there were ants and flies. There was no bed, just a metal slab." ·An official or the car rental agency brought her a blanket. books and her first food since noon the day before. That night, Miss Crown said, she was trucked to the federal women:s penitentiary. The next day, Saturday Feb. 12, Miss Crown said she was driven to a court clerk's office where she met two 11exican lawyers, hired by her fathe r. She said she posted $400 bail so she cou ld go free pending trial two days later. Before freeing her, she said, Mexican police said they must drive her back to the peniten· tiary. "supposedly to get my Traffic Woes anything. We can only sup ply Free R ;des you with the names of three 11 lawyers.' One o( them had on Bus been dead a year. personal eJfects." Danbow and her case that day, then the one of her lawyers followed . next day, then a week later. At the penltentia1y, she said , . j'They finally, tojd me to she was-told she would hive to show up in court at S a.m, the await ~Mexican immigration 26th,'' she said. "But the court authorities, who would dri\re didn't open until 8 ancl they her to the main immigration didn'l let me in until 9. 1 htld office and release her. Her to wait outside in the cold . lawyer and Dainow wert told ''Then they told me n1y to meet her at the, im-papers would ha ve to be prcr migration of!ice. cessed aga in, and to co1ne ''They came at S:3Q p.m. back the· next Thursday. . ' 1467 Vii l ido N•wporl 811(h and 1hey played a very bad ••So I ran away that night. 1 trick on me," Miss Crown realized the process wasn't said. 11Rather than taking me going 10 end. I was alread y where · they said t h e Y a~'ay from my job three would-to the downtown im· v.•eek! and on the verge of col· migration office-they took lapse. I left rny luggage at the'===========; me to a remote migration out· hotel ·and took only a stra~·'; post. . bag." . . "The men there. searched After ridi.ng buses · 15 hour s. STARS SydnC'y Om11.1T Is one ot thr 11 n\·ld's g1·cat astrolo· J'.:l'lS. I!\~ co lumn Is one of the DAILY PILOT'S great features. everything, took my ca mera, Miss Crown , said , she croas-too~ every piece of yaPer th at ed into the Unite<! States Feb. had mY name on il. They 27, and fle\V to her pa.rent s' handed me a blanket and said. home in New York. 'You 're sleeping here 'toliight'' l;;~~~~~~~i;;;;;iiiiiiii._;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; and 'led me away to a room . About ll p.m. that night, Miss Crown said, she was driven to the downtown im- migration office wher~ her lawyer was st ill waiting. The lawyer spoke no English, 1'They as ked me. for more identification," she said. "I handed the m my Fi'C card. The.n I realized they were going to keep it and I became really hysterical. I was really hollering, asking ii they'd take my driver's license inste~d." Because or her hy!terics, she said, "They said I insulted the laws or l\1exico .. insulted my la~·ye-r!i, and caned the people of J\.1exico stupid. I said no such thing." ST. MARY'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 428 Partf Avenue, Laguna Beac:h HOLY WEEK SERVICE WEDNES DAY, MARCH 29 -7:30 P.M. T•n1br1• ind M1di1v•I Pl1v MAUNDY THURSDAY. MARCH JO-7:JO P.M. Holy Euc:h1riJt, Stripping of Alt1r i ncl All-Night Vigil GOOD FRIDAY, MARCN 31-NOON TO l P.M. Tho Good Frid.•v Lilur9v GOOD FRIDAY EVENING-l :DO P.M. Sptcitl multi-mtdi1 Community E~1 nt - "An El1etric: P11i1ion" HOLY SATURDAY, APRIL T -10:30 P.M. Holy S1turd1y l iturgy ind Fir1I E11tor Euc:ha,i1t EASTER DAY -APRIL 2 8:00 A.M,-Holv Euc:h1 ri1t On Monday Feb. 14. she said, she was driven to the downt own immigration office and finally released. S~e was told the court would rule oin~~~~~~ii~~;;;;;iii;~;~==~~ TAKE A PiCT~R E \¥1TH 9:15 A.M.-Fe1tiv1I Holy Euch1ri1t 11 :00 A.M.-Fo1tiv1I Holy Euc:h1ri1t THE EASTER G~Nl\!V Now -Carousel Court "Colnn• also said h• didn't E d f Travelers ~-utb (ioast 'Pla·a knaw how to advise me of my ye or CJU -~ should do with the statement. rights and didn 't know what I Ii--:=::::::::::::~~========~: ... Tge interpreter was very LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -A million a year from the state ailgcy because she w a s propaSa.1 to provide comple tely when a sales tax on gasoline . Pihl Po11f1c11 Ad.,., a\vak~ 1 to take.' my fret fl(lblic bus service for all goes igto ,effect in July. ~tis " .. ,, '"'' -": ...... J)oliCe I w~ refu sing1 to sign. I . -:to get people here out or their government will match those · · .latement. and she ... told the -Los Angeles, is the'latest idea . anticipated that , .the fed eraJ ED. HIRTH · .HA' ·s· -·f o ·u· GHT , finaU.x J.lig\led It." •'J • !'aUtomObile!I, off the freewa ys fu7nd0 5 ~~a 2·1 basis,fprovitoditngl , ';:~ir ,.,111\' ·~. 1 '', : .~ ; ~ ~t.. ~ 'Ir.a~~d·ero~as:id ~~:.,l•\:_ • ,~~~~{~ a mass -·transit !r $l~~~i~i~n~ar or a a DIL.fG'£N. TLY' . ~o·• 1,.,. R' OVE t e r pre t e f tr a.slating the Los Angeles, with ~.?ll,OOO ll'he RTD has proposed \Jsihg . . ' 11 . , . fJI : · , s~tement into S~an~sh, 1n-private cars registered in the the mo~7y for the conslt;!cl~on . , eluded a false adnilss1on that county is the most automobile of th e subway·sky~ay line THE ENVIRONMENTAL sh~ was driving. 10. ltilometers oriente'd city in the world. ,. and subsequent rap1~ tran~l~ · . ove~ the speect lim.~l. · Distances are great and peo-net"'.ork to. other a eas 1n Miss Crown said she• was pie speak not in terms of eluding special bus lanes and a . . charged with an "attack . on miles but minutes -or hours. new freeway from the end of co· NDITIONS FOR THE the government's com-the sub~ay to t~e Los Angeles munication svstem'', 'reckless There are no rail systems, International AtrPorl. ~ no subways, no commuter drivi ng and damagihg prop-trains to the suburbs and tax-Jack Gilstrap, ge ne-r a I · · · erty. Under Mexican iaw, she icab& seem not to exist except manager of the RTD believes . BENE-FIT OF said, · she was 4onsidereCI at the airports and the larger . that Los .. Angeles ~eople ar.e guilty until proven ihnocent. .hotels. ready f~r ~ rapid transit . . , A SplJkesman for the Mexico The existina bus service is system . YOUR AM ILY City police departinent said .. "' "nltee or four years ago I · F l ho alow and inadequa te in most knocking down a te ep ne areas. With 3 population or 7 wouldn't have said s o . ' ' • pole is considere4 a serio1;1s million in the metropolitan Gilstrap said in an interview. crime in Mexico and a defen-••But I see all sorts of in· dan t is treated the same as area. only 400,000 persons dications that it would re gomeone who ">. larlted a bomb ·regularly use the buses or the welcomed now. The simple Southern California R a p i d on a railroad track fact is that people are begin-After spending t~e night at Transit District (RTDJ. ning to realize that for many the precinct sta tiqn, she was By contrast an estimated reasons -pollutipn. traffic d d I j ·1 3.5 inillion private automobiles t' d k' move to a own own a1 . are on the surface streets and conges ion an par 1ng among ·Nixon Earth l the foremost -that we must freeway! on a weekday. One stop relying on the car." 12-mile stretch of the Santa Names Week MoniCa Freeway alone is However, the only concrete traveied·by 229,000carsaday. thing .done so Car is starting work on a new land on the San Th~ . RTD last December Bernardino Freeway running WASHINGTON (AP ) came up With a plan for a 14• JI miles east from Central Los President Ni1on has pro-mile subway-aerial rail Angeles to the town of El claimed April 17-23 as Earth . systell) from central Los Monte. Week. He urged federal, state Angeles south to the Watts OnJy .bus~s will be permitted and local officiaLs "to give District to be completed by to use that lane, cutting the special attention to educating l9?8. It would be the "starter" trip from El Monte to the our citizens in the prf:Serva-_of an over-all rapid transit Civic Center to 18 minutes as It takes responsible legislation to ·eliminate all kinds of' ele· ments that produce pollution. Legislation • w h.i ch produces effective controls for. a clean h a r b o r , more and better beaches 4nd create more areas t~at can be enjoyed by the residents of Newport Beach. Ho is dedicated t o protect the char4cter of each community and · preserve 'our natural re· sources. "~ '~~ ~/~µ.."': ...... ~ • ~.""":lf" ... l , '• -- tion and enrichment or our na-system. opposed to the 35 to 40 minutes t.ional environment." The idea ran into opposition peak time auto trips. · "U man is lo preserve the from the outset and among the Gilstrap believes that when NEWPORT BEACH , NEED.S THIS MAN! .. SAN FRANCISCO !AP) - The police department plans to help its new helicopters zero in on buildings with high crime records by painting ad· dresses on their roofs . natural heritage upon which opponents was Councihnan motorists, standing bumper to VOTE APR 11 RE ELECT his survival all<i the qua lity of Ernani Bernardi who came up bumpet, see lhe buses whizz· -·MA YOR HIRTH' .Murphy, 'who heads the his life deperxt, he must. make with the .free bus plan as an ing by in their lane at 65 miles · • • • · • helicopter unit, says. resolute choiqes and fix un· alternative. per hour they may be inclined TO CITY COUNC IL, FIFTH DISTRICT, N,EWPORT BEACH And when the two choppers begin operatil'!g within the next two months, all poUce vehicles will have big iden- tifying numbers painted on their tops, Lt. Cornelius These Vfsual aids should compromisinKi prloritje.s,," the The Rapid Transit District lo take the bu s and leave their BILL RING CAMPAIGN MGR. 215 ·RIVERSIDE d~.; N.B. 645-6363 enable helicopter patrolmen tor_:·P!'.r:oc~la~m~a~ti~o;n·~,aa~id~.;;;;;;;;;;;;~l~s·;d~u~e~fo~r~a~w~in~d~la~ll~o~f~$.1~~5 ~c~a~rs~h~om~e.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J~;;;;~;;;;;;~~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ find quicltly_ a bank or other building w~re a crime has b e e n cornmi.tted-Murphy said. And "'if tlley spot a getaway car, they would be abl e to locate a police car in the vicinity ind radio it to follow. ' DELUXE AIR·CONDITIONED COACHES AIRPORT BOUND?.· JJIRECT SERVICE To Loe Anc11111 lnfl All'port fl'om Ol'llllge Coun1J Airport DpiMvl• ... Dfttol'-·· 00 at 7:1:!0 A.M. •nd 10:00 A.M.-• ptue 12 otlMr COftYtl'lt.nt Chl!Mn 1-1t 1' Jn ~~~-rn4)77~2lo ((~' ~~~!~!! s!1~~~!,;:.1!!~M 12801 lwbtN11ry Of Chro!M!IO'J Mth-.a,, COrp. DIRECT• RELIABLE 1 ECONOMICAL , Only ·coast & Southern off ers savers all three:~ • 6% two to five y49ar guaranteed. c ertificates. •·Saturday Service. •The Insiders C lub. Effective 5.00%·5.13% Passboo<. No minimum. Annual 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1.000 Minimum. Ea rnings 6.00%-6.18% Two to five Year Certificates.$5,000 Minimum. · Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn ~ before maturity on all certificate accounts, \ • The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its member6~lpcard permits you to buy nearly everything you need from the finest closed· door showrooms at substantial savings-appliances, furniture stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much mtire.' You can even buy c~s at the "fleet'' price and mobile homes and · motorcycles at subs antial savings. The Insiders Club also provides big discounts.on tic ets to sparling and e11t.erta,tnment eve nts ... plus a whole list of f ••serv ices: safe deposit bOXes, money orders travelers checks, notary services and the use ol document ' duplicating equipment. Membership requirement for savers -$2 ,500 minimum balance. Coast bocrowers now receive associate membershi ps enltlhn g the m to all outside referral services. Ask about Join ing at any C~st offic e. • ) MAIN OFFIC[: illl'I .. Hiii, Los An1•l•t • 623·1351 Othflr olllt•t WIL!HIRI: 1t GAAMNERCT PLACE: 393S WH1hlr• et11d .......... Jtl·l265 •LA. CNIC CENTI.A: 2nd" Bn:>1dw•y • li2 .. l l02 HUNTINGTON Bt:ACH: 91 Huntlqton C.n\•r • (11•) 191·1041 •SANTA ANA LOAN SERVICE AGENCY: 1905 N. M1in St •• (1l•l s•1·9251 So\NT'A MONICA! 111 Wllttllre Blvd.• 393·0746 D1Uy Hours -9 AM to 4 PM SAN PEDRO: \.Ol h & P1c:l(1C • U?·2J41 WEST COVINA: E11tl1nd Shopoi"S Ctr.• 331·2201 PANORAMA CITY: 86.16 V1n N11y1 8lvd. • 192:·1I71 TARZANA: I 87SI Venture Blvd. • 345·8614 LONG GEACH: 3rd & Loc:u't • 431·?411 CAST LOS ANGELES:• !th & SOto • 266-4510 DIAMOND IAR: 328 or.mond Bir Bl'ld, • (7141 StS 1S2S, Open Seturd1ya-9 AM to 1 PM •Not OOll'I S.turll11" • • ' • I I ' • I ' ' f I I • • I • I ' • l • . I I • I I ' I I ! I ' ' • DAILY PILOT Monday, March 27, 1972 I SOFl'·SELL SA~I LEG AL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEG AL NonCE LEGAL ~on~~ - IXGAL 1'0TICE ~tfl' 1•1• It tl<11;. l '• 01 1tt NOTICI• o,. TIUITll'I IAll .. tl'l'l~t·~-., . ,.,.,... ..... ,.,. 11\.111 rttflvt lltt •• , ll'ltll ~ Mr V1c1111,, w;,1t111 ... 1 •• ••••••• •• .... • • •••• •11'1"•~·11 IUJI N ,.,.. 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Ht lttr fer ''"' J'erm J1:1l111 ,,,.. Strttr , • ... • 1 21 1.11 l,~ S;tft fl:o<.lc .,1,,, ,. , 'tt 7 i Vkt "'"!tllt nl lfrrlolt HllPtl Mr SIMI fl111fl lt1,.1r 'r.tl St tttr fl'll'I' '' ~~ .. ! fl:tck tUilnt lltl~ktt ) J it l t l LEGAL NOTICE 11MI vsM ff! t 111•Jtrtn1 ll1sl1 wlfl'I 1111 St•I Form ihlfl R6~~ (U1!nt S~im •&~\ :j: :!: ' .............................. llubllahlcll 0111111 c.ottf IDtlll>' l'llt't, ltlltf tt St11t r I 0 M I ,. Sl•plt jt ck Y;crktf • 1 14 7 \I 1--------~------I Mtrd! 12. 20. J7, lt12 '4t-72 J•(kl" Mlfltf ••• •• • • • • • •• '.. .., Jc!J•l'llYn'lln Spr1y • 7 0 t.lfl: JUI JUll'lllit Miii •• • .,. • ,. • • ·• • 6,4 •.fl 7 I) J-fll'l'.,.,.11 Sp11y, S"""I S11,t 6 tt 7 jJ P1CTITIOUI aUSIHll) LEGAL N-CE ltlfPIW •1111 tllltr '"""ll'lt!lc CtMlllt l'l•ctr 0.,.,11W .. • • f.11 ttl 1 d llltt••• c n111111111 Stt•I '" 1 41 MAMI ITATIM.INT VII LMdlrlf tMI U11111dlrlt .t.t1!1t1r Ctrs ......... """" 1 3J II) 711 Jturllt yll'lfll lrll'l h Cllmll••I .. IH /JI TPll to1i-11t1 Mttoll 11 •Int ""11lne•• Ml--T1,111llll {lllM ., ll'lldlltlt ) • • .. • .. .. • .. '.. 7 d JiklrntYl'lllf! SP••r: Cllln bln; 7 %~ ., 11' LleAL NOTltl N'-tt "' "' "'I' .... "' " " " ' ' " .... " .,, Ill 721 Miii!!! .. Welllft .. ., • " .. """" ,, TH! SMA,E SHO,PEI OM Cltv NIWllOIT-MIU. U .. IPllD NMllilNll '""""" • " •" • ... • ,. •.tt 71J •11ti1611 • , .. , Jt a lv4, Wtit, Ott llMo Ct lll ' IC""'-IDllT•ICT Of>lrelll'lt II Trl-11111 tt1C/tr Gtllllllll Mtt lllnts • ••• ..ti 1 oQ Lift 1111;,,t l\C.t • .. , l~ MldlMI AmN, t3IW Stt1r11 Cln:lf . El M.ttca , ........ 1... "" T .... , -Wini 1n11tlt ., ""'~ IMlttltJ, ''" U•ll'l•11 v1e111111 •• ~ For the Record . FOR TODAY.''' T-C•"' ' NOTICI! IS HllltY OIVEN tlltl 1111 '""' "'' .., lWY " llmlttlllll), 1Mlttll1, tic •• • • "" 'u 121 .t.ll'lllrllftf1f1v• tS Tlllt • bullflltl 11 lit!"' cend!JdM lrt 1n , .. ,, er 1!111>c:111111 ti tl'lt H1wiiror1-M111 l'ewcltrtntn -''1,,.,.' "'".. • • • • • • • • • • .. •• 1 • 1 fl 1 u Apprt11lk.ttft't l"Vll• CJ "'' " lt I 71 ,.. ll!dtvlclvtl. tJ11lllM ld'lfot Olllrld " DrlnN C111111tv, "'1""' ""'" ..................... ' ... " • 1 • .,. 1·0 lltN •AINTlltl !COMMl•C:tit.l) U l It ~~!: 1:s',~1 S511 5101 Marriage Dtiin. Ml~, .. " 1 111 '"' lllPll !rn .. t Mldlltl Alfll f t 1Uf0t"l1. Wiii 11(..IY• •••llf '!cit .... tt l t rtdblttlll' •• • .. • ••• ••••••• •• ••••• ••• 1·" ... '": LttGl'lltll (Cll'lllfU~l•nl s5,?~ ••• , ~d 5U ,,, 1f. Tllll lltltll'lfnt !UN "'11'1'1 ltlt Cwntv 11,00 A..M, on 1111 11111 •1v If April, lt1f lhtfl •~d l t llt Wt rlt '' ' " ..... '" ' " ' :·!: 1 n ; :, Journt v,,,.ft I Co·,• I 'l2 122 71J W'~~·.,11 l rll'ldl k lV '1111 Wernar Clt rk tA Ort nit COi.iniy 011• t"tll H, 1172 ti Ille lfr1tt ff Ml' Stll•I IDlttrJct, l';:.!f';1:,:-:,1,;, t rd StHtr ' ' ' ' ' " ' ' I .. ::: 1-4! J&u1111y1N11 ll •Dll 1'1l111trl ! :~ ~ ~ i ,) Su S 6) Gtortl"ltl , ,_...,tlt Mll I'. 1/ld l'tllOI ay ltWflY J, MtCldOX, ClttUtv Cou11ly IOC.1ttd II 1U/ l'llCl /\111 Avt n!JI, C~ll $.vlo"'Jll~ llt~•·"'~n er.cl Swilt l'llllt<> ·.,., Tunnel \'.'Irk) • ,, I •1 7 \I 1-itil"'r 1'11l11t & (0-.1 AL OICOllATOIU w:;t~1 Cl~lt!;. • Mflll, C111111111lt , ti ...t.!dl llll'lt 111d II ds Tlmbtrl'flt ll, ltUmbtrmtft -_, er ilttf • , ... ,,. ... •tt 7 U SION 1'.t.tNTll (COMMl•tl I U It I lf.TI LI it nr.1 11111 Jc.1\11 A '' • d MC OWIM, O•llfrrl • IYL\J IA will lit P11tilldY OPtnfd •f!d 11..i for: roe! Mon , •• •• ••• 1 ~J f 1J 7 It I l 's u <<i Ali' IOll, S!Jl4n J11i nl!t tml Cult ATTOllNIYS AT LAW MUSJC.t.L INIT,ll:UMEN TS TUMI! C$n(r11i f !ll,:htf I 41 t It 7 4J Jturr eyn1n l•O"•ll:T l~IN~I' 1 I 1i '111 ,,,, 11, ltn 111.'1~..:.; F11nk •11d '{.~Ill /~11iu•1 ". t . Clttlllllll Avl ftlll AU llllls t rl 1e bf Ill t tto1dtntt wlllt T1,1t111•l /All~rl~ll Ht rJUmt /,\tn •• , , •• , f ,, '1J 711 SIGN ,~l 'ITl!fl: • H ., '1 !J Dt'lLLtl-IS "A~ftt 'fl'I -11 l ch • r O 1-f!Jl'fm111. C1r11 A tfHI obt fl °''"''' Ctlll , tt6U Co"dlllcw"' ln1t,ucllon1 •nd 9Ptf.fllc1tlaru VlDt1t1rm1n. J1 ~11 ~•mrntf, i-11111rn 111c t oo 1 1111t11t o,lllt r\ I ll 6 ll 7 21 1A•l1st •~? , ri ~~.!';!•·.~' ~~J»~,r.:i-111;;,e1·01Y°!Ji; ~)~1~~·, G~~fr'.1:· 'k:11 fllllo:;: CIO!OfM Tt11 '2).SIN wlllch 111 1\t.W' ... n11 I",,.. effit!' ol' '"'~Th• (ll U1flc111on "Sh•ll i n• 11111,, w.,,. .. 111111 bl ·~1111cell:t •• •U Wlfk 11111"1 S1t n ,.1111er 5 ~1 Sd !loflllf/11, Ao! o , Hu11lntton IH<ll v !1 J'1'211 'urdl11lr.1Attl'llo1'111d Scl>ool Cll1trott, lht 1111,111(• 11 !111 \Mlt t r rt !•• t nd 111tiud1~1 ~ ... 1111 clt1tnb<lr1 Tn ls c!11ti·1Mtl1Nt !S .o llH!:NF JOHNSON -""''~" ll'>bo'rt. De ii't.1, Cltlft fl:llln 111d Johll Pulll!1htd 011n•1 Co11I Ot ll Y Piie!, 1151 •l1t1ntl1 .lvenu1, (1111 Mtat , f•ctt111'1 111111 111111 rt 111 wen: rnvolv."t au,g• cl'ltlllber1 u11 11 trtund ltv11 1He8t1n a. Wtltt rt 15 25 '' ot 1'!11 Wt~·t•• St V/11•.,,Jr ... IJ••terf, l'•lt.cl_t L t M W•vnt A hlttcn 6, JJ, 20, 21, 1'12 ~5·12 C1!lffl•nl1 On work ptrtorme• In tht Ct Mt•<ll r't w1,l'heu~11, 1110,s t r y11ll1, wflllcll h1v1 P1n1len ''• 1 1 .. n -~ +I ll $1 !I I 11 "' t nd Justin• l.tullt, 2<!, of 5tl2 "''r."'' W11t11 T. t r.JI Pt ul• M E1t11 1:dd1f mutt 1ubmlt 1 •·• ll""°'•t IMtf\ trevlclld 1r 111 "'' to /ltf.111 worll. In clftntr:llltl'I w1m. 1 le' t r prlittt V1~1•lt11 ) ; , DorJ vn Drlvf, H1J<1lln•IC>11 I Utti Gll tn. Afllfrl A Jr i nd Vlr1tnl1 Mt v lrt tht fcrm '' 1 tt•tlhtcl or Ct !lll1r•1 cav11td rty lht tt rft'IS ef !Ills T!Jl\lll l AttH tnl<'ll, t /\d 111 If 1111 'r~ucll1n t r ,,,d Htl'd• ys 1 1 11 , 1 11 llOYKEN DAVIS -All111 ,1t4y, 70, tr Swt l", .,,11•11 A 1"d Htimtll LEGAL NOTJCE dltc:k tr 1 ~ld llond Mul l le fovt ptru 11t l1bllc111111 •I mtt.rl111 ~y 1111 C111lr1ctt1r fer Yt• 1n !111 h11111tr Prtfttl 1,.111 •e Pll•I TIAOfl , / mt rt r•I• 1111°2111 St , Apt, Ill Wt11ml11"et J11~':fr:.:•c1~'11 5Ut t l'HI Gto111 U tl"I' t-'°:•) ol "11 t mll/111 If 1111 l <cf m id• 11/bltr:I ti 11\t tt'l'flt: 111d clf!lllllt nt I P !Ills TU<lntl AllMll'ltnl, 111C 1hl ll H ,.14 'llJll'lh r &. S1H mh!ttr Gtn I Fertmi n ~i;; :~~~ ;~5~'Io~ft1fYllllll rite t nd JftV<'" f llen 1!, o 711l·31tl SI , Lit J'ICTITIOUI •UllN•IS oiyt blt 10 lllt 1tdtt et 1111 N1wp0rt-Ml\lt el t/11,1tt ti Ill• l~U Gt nt Mu<kt /, f,•~ktntn l'lull\btr • $1t1n1Hllt r Ft l lT'l•n ST 45 SI jO .t.pt. 11, Y/tJtml"d1r Nortt. l1rbtr1 $Ut t t1!1 fl:obfrt lrtcf· HAM• ITAT•MIHT Unifl td School Dl1!1ld A ,mtrMt Mt Tlf.\M TIJl:I ,!!Jl'llbtr • " ' ' SJ tS SI ld H£Gll"Tf·LOPE7. -L11ls Q1rc;1, t i. ftrd Tiit fallowlnt 11t1t1~1 l t l l oln• 10/HI tnt'I' bf tl'IUll ... at the lllKrlfll ll 11 Httl1h .. W1'l1rt -4J c 11tr hll/r St•ll'lflllt, • ~:1Jsi::~se,,•, A31/,' it's firl"#!c1~ Mell111, WIOtt ll'l'llllt lf\d Fr111k Lvll J r b\llllllSI I I: tM Ol .. rld. In ll'lf IYeftl If ftlllltt M l'llllllll -& ,... 1W11,1r L... l llf!Ot r • ., ...... ,. • '11:f 0 0M1 o~ou N "•l 1l Avt , Co111 MtM 11°':'."J: Molry Cit/t i" 111111 l/lr'Kll'll • l .. a "!CIUOATIO" STOJl:AOE tflltlf fnfe IUth -lr1ct, tt1t N II 11111'1 VtUllM & WlllCtY F\lflcf -J$t ,.,. ltlUt MMllll Ir Wtlf1,1 • i6\. el' l nlS' ,.frtll IA(,!CSTllOAA, Jr ·1£111,ll:ATO -Ali!!f,etfll!VJ 11lllW1lh•1110 VAll:CI, 17.il (rtblt L.t!, Hllflfl11tlon rntrlOf Wiii M "1ff11'M '9 ttl• $.t,,..I ftt-n; Wfllln I Cll\treehr ""'ID)'I: In 1111 H Yrt!I, t t r _,, 1'11111'1*" 1'111119111 Pft n , l~ tftrftS Pl~flll l lCMtd ~wood, 21. el JJH N-..ort W1'lkl;.on, Ktlllrv11 A. t ncl Otv(d L. lttai. '2141 Cllitrlel If Oftlltt c-ty. tpll'lflllf ""1lll'lla1t undtr fl'lt jvrl .. lclltn ff "'1 T11m111n, t:in:lud!llf Vtttt!tfl I. Melld1v1 t•~ IYd , A. , j 1, C"/' MIM lf'ld °'('.~l1 ' ltlllrr Gl1n11 tlld Jl:ootrlt lr\ICI 11: lu11111, "ll lllttt!!t Dr , Nt blddir mav wlllldrtw f!!t •If Nlr a •llY 9'111plllfl'll ltU lhll'I ti• 19M tf\d 1Nlt1tell1nt1 MU!Pm91'11, ffll .t.pJN'tr1llc1 Ir. Jtur111yrn•~ Tr1l11lnt ll-l·ll l•l·ll '11"1 !'' ' 11. 01 ,,,. NtwHll c IU r. Jt L J 11111 •• .. ""'"" .... Of\ lt6<11 lo.I " follV"111• 1'51 ... .,. 1ftlr 11'1• Ct11•,.u1, .,..1, Clllflt1•I• -T•11111ltf .. C1eft ''"'"''n 11\11 Ill 1 °' c M I flMtf Tittle~ il~.....l'NC~I ~r~k: KIMfl!I, ~II', "'" IOll r. r ti Ct rt Jtc.k L•, fsn Hl•llllllf&lt Ave., ':,',, ttl IOI' IM ffelll"" fPll rftli' 11'>111 l'f'ttlvt UC per flllur mllf !Ml! It'll hltllftl Tt11N,_ CIMlltlt l · UtMlty ,lflrlllll• ,111m111 S l\111 " ''· 1 '• Cl ""'"" Al:ll ,t,, Ml"'" ._.,,.. 11111 Hf!-,111111!11" y ,11c1v T~t ktrd f1I £duc1tl.., t i fl'le N~rt-llOl'I ..,.,. """Id! Ill II f0t1,,...11. Ullilty ,IPltlnt J1111rnt\lfl'llll , '1t l ~I lrlntt IMrlelltl Fer •:i;:;.9Mctl •nc 0 Kl M1111 ,, ~-J ... 1."" JOn ,., ,.~ " l llrt ,,. J 11111• ,Itel u , .. " 'DI It "' '''"' Jlll,lf!OIY"'•ft Trt lnet •OO r , • d-. J011Ptl NOl'mtn "" "''11 • ,,, ... ' Mi.-"1 hOo I I tt '"'"'" I A·fl'ttMI '' Swtdlth Ctllll It ll'rlllt r .., .. ""'''""'' •rt,., S:l 13! lfllnN ) of Ct1Mr011. "'-' A.., HU11!111tlon lh'I' Jt'11 fulltrton rlt hl 11 rt ltet '"" tr tll bld1, tlllll fief •oot 1 J JJ I to•~ 11~·..,. ''f ""r. ••-•::t"• Sl'l11on All" Tllll ktlneu 11 belt1t e011d11Cltll llY 1 11tc11s1rnr t t<ellf tt.1 1~11 b.d, 111d to '"'" • • .. • " .... • • •• • •""" • • l 2 litel!ll • \'/fl 1'1 16,~ MOllllSON-TUllHlll -Mltttttl Johft, p1 ~.,, Al ltt v. *l'f\d Ulll r PlrtntttlllP. wi lvt •l'IY lrt•mt!Hv tr 1,,"\llt rlty In Ctm1111 Olslrlbuter Truell: , "... ...... .... ......... ...... • .... .. ' Jtt,•1to1 I'"• JI , of .011 ''!:?.II LIM, W•1!171ln1t~1 M \r t n, Htl OMJ 111i1 DllrethY l tvet I l 1,1l1on v t-ld ltctl¥1d Drlvt r of Dlltnp Truell " liu lll1n V1tell0/I .. H11;G.1y II IS 11 11!"'! ll~ ll. If '°'2 l'•ll'lllt Luc:~ < J :. L "o M , ·,, 1,_ 1 y1rd1 w1l•r twtt • • .. ... .. ... ..... .. •es , LI/\•, W~ll'll Mftf, ~11rr1t lr1tY jll!tnt ....,. Gn11trt Llf ''' '""' " •ltd 11' • '~ 4 y1r11 11111 11'11 r11t11 I yl ,d$ wtltr 11.,.11 ! OI lr.illuct111r ll1Plf<!ttr r e .. rN11 !~~. tlirG~• JwrT:IY"'l tl fl e OLIVE!t-T"Yl.Ofl: -ll:l<Mr• J:IWll, ru1. 111111 r tlld l'lltl!lt Anne Joflrt I". l lbltt Nl!Wl'ClllT-MISA UH1il't•D I y8rdt lie/I lf'll tfltf! U y~toh wt 'fl !f~tl 5 IJ lr.duilfltl 1'1~tUl!tr JG11r11nm1n SI J.I •1. Ill*' Ptrk!J~ L.111'1" .t. t~, 1t nJu, i1'11ron '1!:1 Joto11 d Tlllt st1t•tn•rtl 11•1111 wllll 1!11 C:llllfllY SCHOOi.. 0 15TlllCT 12 y~tcli '"'' lf'!l lllin It yird1 w~ter riw! ~11 MNllll ., y,111111 10 .. ~';"/~i~M~,~~~~~~P:'·1~v~!~'''' ' ~!:i'YAd:~~1 • ·~d g~~. t~~111111 Cl11k of Ortr>O• Cou11fy en1 M~r. 10, el Or1n•1 Co•'"'V· C:t lllorn11 u y11c.'1 bul 1ffs 111•11 25 ~irds ..,.lltr ltvt l , .s •l i'l".:icn • u·. Sl!<ES HOONAH -Ctllrltl Oont1d, 26, 6°ow!1,, HtPIV .f'tltl'I Wl111frltcl IO'ld 1t'1. I t lltvt rlr J, MlddO){, Clt1111!y llV Dtret!IV '°'''""Y fl~et :H y1rd~ t 111 ltn 11\111 .ii y11d~ w~hlr le;.el , , , ,, ~ tt Vl t"l ei & Hot d~yt •• • 11'o e' 1911 ........,,, Pl1c•, Co1t1 ~·'-' Ind ''•vtn L1t1v .. 11 County Cltrk "urch.,.!rt AMiil «I yt rd1 11 "''"' wtltf 11~el (•111111 ,,.1111 tr ctf!lb1nt 1,on '' v911,lts) 4 OIS J•urrtl'l'fr'l6" T111n'.1f 1'• L1nd1, 21, of 1HI Mt'l'lf ,lttt, Cot1t f llAM W ·llot Drl\/lf tt Truck L-e11 l'tyloto Ct Pl'lry. l·I 1t 1111 '"'" L!GAL NOTIC£ llubll shed Or1n1t CC411 Cl1llv l'!lo!, ,ubllrllM 0111111 C11rt D1llv ,.1lof, L•s 111en 6 lt n1• • s ~5 .,, ;11,in , LtWll Spr:nkltt~ • s• '5 U !3 COLEMA"l•'THOM.f.S, t.irry Tllel'l\tl , Utrtll 13, 20, 11, t nd Ap,11 3, IS72 t!S 12 M1rcll 27, I nd A_,H 3, 1'71 I~ 72 ' 16~1 10 10 torts 5 ti 51,,,..,, & S111rm Clr•f,1 l'lpel1v1r I 1S J C.0 ,r, ot 11'21 Tiki, CrrPln Ind Mt rv .. 10,, Fr1no:•1, l)! of •?Sl Cht1ollet D,lve. PIC:TITIOUt IUllNllS 10 lens It 15 tins 5 1l ~ltalfl'I a. V/1 11r1 virtrtz:!'?b~ LY''!_ w,1110~ ,1cr11 HAM• 1TaT1M1NT LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE J: l:! ~~ 2,:..;:ns .· . . . . ;-~ ~!~,·:~ .... ,1,••v• ~~:: >11rd, ,.., et IC Allvit"' l't1~•, 'rllt i.11twln1 '''"" Is GOlllCI llu1lnt•t Drw1r ti DutnP'11f tr Clull'IM11r Tr..a, 5 0 Tfl•lling a. •re1T1ctoC'I l\o ~ .. ICll 11111 NlllC:\' Elltff'I, 22, •1 ,.lc;TITIOUS IUl!Nlt!SS l.ll Je11 Clr!..,_1 el fl:iid 0.1 5prtldt r Tr~~k • • 5 2l t l 11 t 111 of20S,Sll!Alf0t. S1n!1An1. , l "E.NOCO ,lOOUC1'S 1COM1'.t.NY, NAMf"STA'rlMINT PICTITIOUI IUSINISS Cll IT ltM T k d l 5 :, (IVE ll llY Jr 1tOM0f:llO -Clllton l-"S /1. Sky 1'111!. .. ult v1rc!, lrvi"'' .,, loflowiOO .-•An ,1 f olno but!r>t~I H.t.MI tTAT•MINT r Ytr I ri nt llt rue -U!\ '' Yt •Oi S't111k11r Flllt r Ft1tl'ri1n PlllfK o.:tilf, 2t ct 1J)J2 SICU){ ll11d, c",;iuoi nlt fl"' ,,: ,....... Thi ltlitWlna Mf'iOfl 11 Mint •u,•ntn Drlvtr If Tr1rt1lll.lht Truck -3 ~11•1 t r mere Sil lne udt Sllll 1.,. '" Vtc•l1t n! ~I ~tmln•tu •Ml Jlotllt llt ll~b<lrl• • • ~1111 T,\ICk It'll 111111 6\1 ~·"' Wl ltf ltvl l • • .. • • • 5 ~' 1s.,, ... ~111 1"11111 JC!JlflVtn•~ (l'•llH 171 !If 1:\_h'l 511111~ lll'l<I \'ltitmln• •r' ,AUt. l , TltAYLOll, 2fOI Lllf'lthOUM l'I lllTli QUALITY ,HAllMACIES, 1$. Oull'll'C.rtt. Tnx:k, 4i,, y111b """"" llYIJ 111• t vtr ... 5 '3 int.lullt u 40 ~11 llr, Vt~tl.6lll • aoHEN,11:1ETH, Jr M'1Nlt -JIM L1...., Cer1111 dtl Mar, CtlU1r11lt 11J1 ·-,t,w, l'l1ct nll1, Cttll F T il'LVNH •LUMI JNG (0, 3'13 'O'N lt eM rift 20' i!ucll4-~ '-'"""""' ltTtur1111u l'ulls. f 11rt C~br•1 Httllh .. \Vlltlll Wi111t m. 21. of 1UJI Lt lrel111cf. fl ., Tlli. ~IMSS •• c.tnM,. 'v •n. 111-l r.,;:Jlll Corrr IA Ctllf. C111p,), 1251 W1r111r, 1111!1 A111, (1l1flf11l1. ll'IC ilmllt r l"fl!IS ti lllllU......,I '"' '' •nC ,,,,.,111, IYl't trucks wtl•~ 11 1 toro 11111 lltl~rl:lfi ""'"°' ol lf.l 11V1ao.1:i • • '"' llool A\111, l'ltc1Mlt ,<C1Hf Frlll11lrk T F!'I'/\/\, ~731 Mcrt ll,t ,.,11rnrl11t w11k wlt"111 fflCt f91'1'1!ttr f!lrllllctl111 111•1dlt11i ti tvMS 1r A:~.:,ICl .. Tttl~lnl ...,,l•rtd St ·e:1unl Mton lttc~ "'"'' L. l'11ylor 1~11 b111lntst 11 tOflitucteo !Iv a 1111·J1n 0r1v1, M1s1ie11 Vltlt, C1lll0tn!1 1tt1chllltl'll tlld w11111 lltllllfle "41111-hll 1nll w1!1r ll'lk 1r11ter , • 'tu :.o~:.~~~~~ 0jf1if.so L.,..ii. A~:i,; Tl'lllrfl.,ltmtfll wt1.flltd wl!~ tlll Cw"' Corp. Lawr1~ce 1 G C <1,111/\,1 'U»I A111us!l11, ,.,,le Llrt D1lv1r • •• ................ •• • • • • • • • • • •• • s IJ$ A/C a. ,ll:ilr•ttlt l!ln G-•I Ft••m•~ t lld Gwt/\dlllVn Alilftl 4J, et ut.t IY Cltrlr: If 01'1nt1 t111,rnty t n M•rCll 1,, $elldtr Gt lfllltl Ml&llOft Vit t, • Nlrl!I Ill.Ill ,.,,,.,R . .. •···••· ,.,,, ... , . . S2l AJC a, ,ll:tfrfl•fllit n 1"1!!11 F1r1m1n Ctlle "'"°"• L••1.11>1 Mm. ltn . tlllt Jltltll'ltnl Wt J flltd W'llll 1111 Cllllll• Tl'lll "'11illfts f~ btlf'll ctflCUclM .., A l'lptl!/\t 11'1111 Ut!l1!y WortoJ/lf TrUtll D,tv., inehA l<ll 'N•llCll Truell, i111 AJC .. ,11:.r1;o01t llt11 1'1.ttr e.u~ efl:OWN -Urt~ Jl:utttl, ,,, ~ •o•MAM AMO WOHNI tv Cttrli el 011nM County *" Ml'"' 2.4, fll\trll ••rtntrl/!11 llmltM lo l!!Jcks •J111ft1b11 ft 1•"41111 •fHI 111111~, Wt rlc, WllOtt I (Cln-Ht1h1! .. Wt!fllt if171 C/11r ,ll:lvtr wrt, '::)'"'~ 1~1 ll1l'llr• M, Wffliltr • 1111 J'1Nttkk T. 'IYnn '"It. crtw 11 uced •• , • , .. .. • • .. • .. $ •;3 JIMtlOll c~~~.~':°A~°'~?.ns,1•~t.;,..?J• 1 n1 H. Au11t11 •Ive. tn.oc Thit st1l•rr11111 fllfd w1rri "',• Co1111ty ll-011 Cerri•• Orlvtr -Mllhw1y • • • , • • s lS V•c•tlt:1 , • I RQWF.ll·BOWEN -l~W•I 011• 24, Wllml,,....., Clll'9nll• 11114-f ., Ft,71J C:llrk ti Otlllfl Cou"IY On Ft 2', lt12. Tr11tlc.C111trol ,!lot Ctr, u tllldlnt '""vltll l'll1Vy 111\l>Plfltnl, pertl''hl 111dt $CS •rtlllJtltn lll 10J04 LI H1cl1nit1, Aol JS, Foutl-T......,._ (iUJ ...._ l'ullll1lltll OrlnN c1111 O.Hv Piiot. t r 11\lfrlY J, MICdu, IDll'UIY Coul!N Truell GrH1tr tnC f lrtfNll l2Sc Plf' ll11.1r 1e1111;on1t wtltn werltlnt t n t ri tr.int .. ' .. " ·" " t 11t "" "' 16 " 1 :~ ... " " 1 1·11 10.11 ,.,.n C1119ftl ill FrMi1 Ill" VII~ t flO Fr1,cr 111111~· 15. rn II U#I M1r<ll 27, end Aprll 1. \0, 17, ltn 804-72 Cltrlt ffrl l il ts tMvt 2t.ll'lll'I .... Ml d!11Mttd I :II l'USTIJl:•,11: i~ Lt K lel>dt . • J..J, 111./nlt 11 l'ulltldlfof 01..,... CN JI CltUr !'lil t, COHIM, ITMICI I OWIM Trtldt l.IOlllllM ,.,...,.,. lf'Mm • • • • • • 511 F1r1men , T.'"•"' -\ETO EE ''''" Al-'' ••• ,"' ,., t7 r" .,,,, • 10, "'' -1.-LEGAL NOTICE ATTOll:NIYI AT LAW T1 uet1 11:._.1Nn111 .... .... • • • .... 4 OU 'l•slt1tr • r: ;~n, II A ..... ;;, r.· M1111t"i";m' '"" ..... , .. " ... .. .. 1111 N •• ,.......,, ••II• 111 Trvc.k fl:tMlrl'lltn H1!f11 .... 5.21J Hffllh .. Vlt1ft r1 , , ... S 50 tM;t Jt~'ntvm•n , ., 'lttl 1na Oeor• ICIHll It, et t LEGAL' NOl1CE · 11rtta .t.111, Clllf. Ml Tr11ek ,11:.,.11n11"·Wtlll1r • • • 4.!U '911•'11'1 It• •••i.~ol. o. H11£l"'I°" ••• , ,tCTITIOUS aul!Nlll Tiii Uf.1"9 W•1tf11t,t!Olt'tlf! l r:d T•rt11l •r • •• ••••••••• •• • ..,, V~cu .. n llOOONj-CU<.OZlA -elv nFRtv,~ NAMI ITATIMINT "'011 W1/'tflWMl'IUl11 -C!t tk • • • .. , • .. ..... , 511 Tri•t l'romol,on , • !4rMt"G~1!°"t~:ru,t'."';1r, ~··,,., P IC'{l'tlOUI IUllHlll Tiit tollowtn1 Ml'SOll It fflnt but1M11 PubUlllM 01111t• C11f1 O•llv Piiot, W•ltf ., Tllllr Ty~ ''"""~ Drivtr -11r.d1t 2'°° 11t1ons • • • .. .. 5 II A:>P, .... e11~·~ .. E!T!lrv Courl Clrcft. DIJl'llllll v1n1Y H.t.MI IT A TIMI NT 11: M0tcn " n .•• v . ltn 516-12 W11fr' If T111k-T.,,. True:• Ortvtr -25Ci0 ft!llf'.s It ~ t•llCN s 'l l'\.ASTlll 'TfNDl,11: IL•t•11ttJ Tiii to1!ow1111 11111011 IJ CICtll bu1,11t11 ,..,;,~t: Vl~!!Cl.E, Ull2 Vlt llll, ::,::r ~ .. l'•.nk·TY~ ~'.~~~. D~'~".' ":"' .~ ~~·~.t ''."' .'1'~ . :. :i:$ =~1t1~~ .._T~=l~~rt' ••: H. "'""'111 GrM111, 2'Jl2 v 11 r..1r1, LEGAL NOTICE Wlfltll TtUCk Dl'Jvtr -12n t "'' 110..,, 1u11r1"'t1 w111~ '"11!,flf I'll'*'*' •ffl••" . . . . H.t.WLEY S 0 fl: IVE VI A V l f.t.L MIUlal Vltll wlnetl, er 1lmllt 11P1t.lt l atltt:hmtnb V COATING. lOU Vl ll l'ICl• Nol ,., Cftll Tftl• M lfltlll It 111111 eot'M111tltd •v •n '1"(.!\,'lfl"O ,,, '"Mt l" llSJ thtf'I •I• fio/\f. l(tliln ...... . /.\t :t fllU 1ndlvld1111, ~OTICI! TO Cll:IDITOll 11011 WOlllCllS :OOPll 1(1rt \llcior Htwley, lOC.S V1l111cla, H, Htrmtll G1"M IUJlllOI COU•T ep TMI Htll'" I. W1tf111 -3lt1 "k -1flfn l s=:mi'n ' ' ·•·· '' .lllf, A, te1t• Mt11, t)IH Thi• 111,.,,..,nt fl lld wlllt tile cou nrv ITATI o, CALlPOlltllA 'Oil '11111or1-s1\'Jc:1 ~!IW; -111•111 \ I J01Jrfllym,, This llcl1lfll•I Is btl11t Cll'IClllCltd IV "" CM!rll of 0t•1111 Cou~1V ttll M1rcll 21, TH• COUWTY 01' OIU.Htl V1c1llot1 -JCc 'rTCN IOOP & Cl.t.MI' V.:Afllll'llOOI" 1!11111'14 ft•rv•ry u lllcllvld~•t 1t /J, I v ltllllrlY J MtddOll. 0t11Uty Wt. •·n741 f o11rn111i lltctlws ~•I l•s IJ\till )k Mr ll•ur mtrf IM11 11'1• hturl r r111 " tll• j!er.m111 ' JjmlMr. Glor11 A t nd N.l n\ltl S Ki ri V litwlfY Ctulltv C1ttk f flllt If l!AlliL ,ll:IG()NI, IDtcttstd. l'lf1Plfsl tltulllttlflll -r Wll•dl l\ol 1\11 ,,,.,..l'llltkln Whtn l'WI 1r m111 Sl,;•Ftrt111an ' ' " V ood1. Mltllttl LIOVd •nd D!!b<I An.I Tfllit .rt rart'ltl'll nltd w1lfl 1111 (11,tlltv ,llJ42 NOTICE IS HEllllY GI VEN It 11\t lrtf'I Wlrt tn l rt flllPlly .. , tr!t •11•11 i ttltct .. lly ltlt l 111,i1yer to Jolll'lllY"lt /\ " ' ' " ~:~~k~~t1:r:.r:":J~~~r: T Cltrk ff Or111111 Cellt'tlY on Mt•t ft 10, ,ull ll!htcl Or1ntt CUM 01Hv ,Ull, Crlcl!1111 ff lllf tbevl MIT+lil fKflMlll •cf II l'Orll'lltll. , 'CltJi -re Mtn ' • ": .. : Lo111, /11,t,Yjln E. tml E1lht• 1.\te. lt72, t y 9tVl tly J, M1ffoJ1, OtPVl'f Mt ldl 21, tnd .t.Jlrll 3, It, 11, lt12 l'tlol l ll'ltl t ll M,.on1 h1vl111 cl1l,,,1 tltln1t ftl.t I l/Uf71 l/Uln HMlfl'I' lo Wtlltll C"orov1, Tllomlt Alvl" •~d Vl>ht11 (ou"ty Cl11 k. 1114 dKllltlll ltt r•ulr ..... flMi tl!fm, fl:1lnf1,t i11t 11'111 Wt rk tt .................... ,.-.............. SP 3111 11 N ,11:.tlrt~I '' ' Lois , 1'411 LEGAL N011CE wllft 1111 lllCtHl'V veuclltrt, 111 Ill• 111tlc1 S!rll(lurtl Ir oft Wor11tl' ....... ...... , ... .. ... •• • .. • .. • 1 31 I 03 Victllo~ .. •• " "' " •• !!•ow". G1trj• I l rtll Mlllo11 L Af"••I ,,,.lltlJlllf Or111tt Cet!f Ot llv t'!Jll, , tr tilt cltrk If lllt tllcv1 1Mlt!M Cal.ft!, ., Onit rntnltl 11'11! Wlr1r:tr ........ -;, • • ............ " ••• " ... " 7.U I Cl Outs Cn~k .. it' 8tt1:~t C'fl:t El tint Ind _.. Mt rcll 11. 20, 21, 1fl0 Aprol a. U12 .,, 11 It 1r1J1111 lfllfPI , with lflt 111e1111rv ""''' l!rK IOr • • • • • • •• • • • • ••• • • •••• ••• •· •• •• • •• • 7 JI 1 It A!lflfl lllktthlp &r T,•1111;... • F~nd WOGC11, $1dnev l1UtV 1nd ,1!,lcl1 p 1,01 v1111Ult1J, lt "11 llrtdtrtllnf'll 11 ill 32110 lt71 SUl•TlllAOIS A•r11lnitlrtlot, Dis1olutimi1 Of Marriage " '" , " " , .. , ,. H OJ " '" '1 • l~lt u u • '!f ' .. .... $1 u 10• ';, "' .:J " " ,iO ·" ·" • 1·11 SI ~1 " ... " • 1·11 11 llj " ,. .. Ceught Ill Fft UI Loul1t LEGAL ~OTICE PICTITIOVS au1111111t $1111!, i-.o l ex l:IH. Ntwit0tl t11c11, M1111., W•I' a11" l'I lwHf lfll 11111 C1nllrt1Ctltn Tnc .. U11kln1 SMllT MlfAL Htnn!11n, Joyce Ann 1nd Johll Vllllt•m HAMI! ST.t.TIMINT C1llfo111l1 ~ • ...,,le/I It ttlt 111Kt ff AIRUt,.. W1tll 1111 .l(ortfPlin 1111 1171 llM 11·11 ~=lr.· ~:n-:11~~.~~~··~~ ... 1d Allft 1---------------1 Tiit follewlnt H rton It d&ll'll b111IMU lllltlP!ltl ... 1111 ulldfrllflltC 111 •II l'llltlt r1 IUILllH• ANO COMST•UtTIOH TllAOIS CIUNCIL ... ••A1t•a. COUNTY Gt>l'trl1 Flflmt~ , II.., t lirGv1 Jourt11Ymt11 1111 o1 T IT OV NI IS' "1'111nll'lf to 11\f lllltl l'I Miii tlltetodtlll, • ,._ AllL.C:IO SJlttt /.\t lt l Y,'orto.tr Lor~~-.·t •• :' LIM.lilt homtJ '"' ,.Cf I I :u:...1 ,. l'.t.lllk LtC>O UNICIN, ::117 Superltr, wlll\111 four fllOflllll fl'ttr lllt f!rrt ~Dlk•· ltst 1111 c-11w1 '"'""· S•llll All•, Ci•~·""' 1141-51411 Mttlfl'I .. Wt'fore • , 11'• •llovt Jll.ITllfVf!ll~ rift Pttll P1n1I-LOii•'' t fld llllclY Ttlt NAMI ITA I INT NtwfOlf llleh !lift ff 1h!I 11otlc1 A .. ltltl\11 Cill 11111111 ,,, )1,1tshlt1ntt Allowe~c't, ,,1111pa1ttlh111 l t d T1tV11 Plllt!cn • 11 7J S1ll H n• tt Jt 111m!tu 11 followln1 111r1on l1 cloln1 '!"'•l11tit J•rrv A. Smltll, Jn t Hl!l'f Line, ClttM t"HrutlY l, l t7f T/lftf AH1w1n(t, Apprfllllet ~"'''":' Co"trlbuTIOnt, •le , clnltel 1111 L1<1J l/\ltt/\tllt11ll ,inilo" ··• ::: ·. ~· •f !I '' •0 1J 15 t i IS 1S ,U ll:e!lt•tl,., E1rl lll~mOllll I nd M1rv ·THE INC:lll!Olll.E &Tll:INO MAN, HtwPll't &tic/I llttft Ill l!mll!fkl/\ U11ltn t r Ill D11t1ld CtYncll lltV•ftl lu1.lldltl!011 lflCllkln n1~~~~~r.',., J 1nc1 011n1 s 411 south Cotti MW)',. L•to.1t1• lttcll. T1111 111is1f!l11 !1 IN lnt collducttd by a11 ••Ku1t nr " !tit Wiii :.\'U'T::" ..... ,.1 S.11'11 w•t• •c•t• '' u•~.l: :.1:'.~ 1111y •r• 111c0•1n1r.L • • Goodin\ M.1,1111n t• Ii. Incl 11111'11 I . C1UI, f26SI lndlvldu1t. ti 1111 tllrovt """'" Heiden! O-tl I'll-~ It, ....... JM , TlllA.UO WOllCIAS 11·11 ll'o ef t res1 IM!Yft ll 'l~t1llCl9$ $1Vlllfl $ilv;•· lllUll~l~d J1c•e-11 ll:u••l'll A Wt lld,otl 112, I C1111 Jt tl'\' A Smltll HUlWITI, HUlllWITI' llMll ""'""II "' ........ Jtl/rrtt 'flllt ll' Ttl'rl UO Wtrltlt .. ......... .. .. u ot Mi1 lflf!llf( ., -rtblth •1111 Hwy L11U111 leleh '2w1 • This Slllttnt/\I lllH -'(Ill "" County ... ,.. '""' "''*'" 'w.rkl • 11 • '° "'"'"' .. Wt llttl .... " lS Hl11t~t~ ~)IMrn El1ln1 •~Cl 1.t rtv Tl'll• '1w1t11t11 t1 botlnt t'ontlutltd bY in Cltrk ol 0'111fl Cou11ly '"' Mir. lt, ,0 le• 1UI M ltfll • W 111 11 ' " ' ....... ' .......... • O VattllOll • , • , • s,, VI Hit •v l1vtrlr J, MHllcx, OtP\rll>' .....,.,, l..at, C1fli.n11 hid .. • '' .. .... . ...... . .. . .. . TlltlAllO WOllClllll Hll, •• , , ... " H,~1•',.,'~.:L~~f••'i'"'•"'OiJ':oTiodFI:;. llldlvlCl'ui l. 11 Cou11ly Cl•,k.. Tth 1n4) •7Wlll r''111111 ''""''" ............... "' ·• .ll .SJ AU ltM MttlllfMI Wlr-, ........ t5 70 ,., "" l11111 A. W.,,llrtff p 1 .. 1 A""11tf'• fw lllltewltht IYifltl '' ' ' ··• • ••••• • ·•• •••• ' ' ' ··• ,fJ ,f? Hth•r I. f loor M1clll111 Opr, • J ~) Hintie1, l'tlrlt 1 A 1 Mk et J, l lll• tlllttnl nl ffltd wllll 1111 I O Oretlfllllltl'tll H .. ltll • .. ........... • • •1 •1 M II!'! a, W II , r.t11!1110wlll, D!t nt Incl Jll'lfPh. (ou11ly Cltrk " °''"" Ctuntv on· ''"· ,lllll l1lltd Or•nt• '"" 01!1v l'llo . 1'11bllllltd r11111 Ct1SI IDttlY l'l)f!, AHnnllcMlll6 Trtlrtlftt • • • ........... OH .tu M • ,,, .. .. .. .. .. '0 WlllOll t"· Enoc:ll A. '.i"l 'l"l'lff y, tt, ltTJ ft v ltvtrl~ J. Mlddo~, DtPu!y M1rtll 13. 20. 31, 11\d AptJI J. 1'12 •51·1} M1rrh ,, 1), 20, 27, 1911 l f2·7J IOILllllMAICllll & ll.t.CKl#llTM tf.1·71 Vtt lllon • l.Q e ' I ··' • d r C Cl '" -10 '" >f I F ,t1111fon • • .. '.lil \.. '"'', ''"' .. ~" ·~· ov Dt•J. ountv trk. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE •man • • ................. •· .... ut " r•i• TILi u.v1111 111 t.1.11 ., • \'/~ t:;trlhl Anll ltt!Hlll t lltll CIO!ll ld PUM4 A11tt11nt "1r1mtn • • •• .. ..... ........ 1 '5 il'ortm I UI I lO '"" " (o~:r,~r lt,b<lri JOY(I ind o-1• l'ulllllllld Or1nt1 Co1st ID1lly !'!lot, ... llll'l'Nktr & l lltk1111t!ll •••••••••••••••• 7ffj ,. i n 1" 11 1•••:,) men "~"''''Y ~trt tM~JOll!'lltYPl'lt~ l.\lcllt'I Mt rd'I I, 11. 20, 27, ltJJ 511·12 •ESOlUTIOH MO, 12·Mt H"!lft I. W1ll1r1 ....... • • • .. , , , • "'.. • • 31 T ~''l'11 /1 ' i rot 11 er IS 00 ptr d1y mort lht n Jou1111vm1n ,.,..,. p t f!Jlt L .... Ml(ll111 E --------------·IA ll:l'SOLUTION OP: THI •OAllO 01' Otfl:ICTOllS 01' TMI (OITA MllA ,._1111 • • • .. .... • • • • .. ...... ,ii ) • •Y:r .I ' 7' $6 11 Chet=~~· mic• M1'11 •nd N1e11o111 LEGAL NOTICE SANtTAllY 01sT1t1CT ADO,TIHO A l'llllEY.t.ILINO w.t.•I lllATI ,UlllUANT V~c•tJ•ft • .. • • • .. .. ....... • ·• r1111 .Ul ~::!~n Witl••• ~s fl!tt°loytt ,.y, 011 Mtl• GforJt z. l !ld Crltsllno O TO llCTION 117) OP TNI! LAIOll COOi 0, Tiii ST.lT• 0' CALl,O•NIA, "V'"''•<tsh II ....... • "" ' " • ,OJ Victlio~ •••• 1 .. " , 60 lO T~l~n. J01111 Mkllt tl tlld D11>0r111 ------1,1 lot':!"'~ of Cll"-1:10r1 ot tnt Cflli Mtst $1"1111'}1 Olttrlct .... 1'10ttby r-1\'t i.,'~!~11A'!,_•:m1Jll'f 11 mtn, ntl l•S 111111 se .,., llr IDIVI Jo1.1r"t'ft't'ltn T!:t l'r1mo1oon • ••••• • • • ·'' 1•S ~no, llOl'ltl~ A, ~rid kttllltefl E '~Z::.~0~:A:~~~H::· THAT WHEJl:EA.S PIJrf1tlnf t1 Ill• ,,,ltliltll " $tctltti 1n, " 1111 Lt bllf Fl•ffNll -Em.rev' 11 rntll,11111 I••"''" 15 ,,, hr 1Mlv• J1ur"•ym1n ~\!~"'~~~;~. -.,,, .. '' . .. . .. ..,~;. 1·1·~~ ~;~~:~U~~~ ~ •;.•d ~~: J Tl'le touow ,.., ••rMn It Col111 "'" n11J c11111 •I "'' St1!1 of 'c1r.to,n/1 II ft n1<tt1ery tll1t Ill• t11re " o.r.:11rs .t 1111 F11tm1" -fll'lp1t~ tvtr tt men, '"' lt1s lftlll Sl M ••' llr •Ill"• J1ur"1ym111 T•lf Helptr , ••• , , • • •• , "to S$ 10 I I n 11r111n. F•v $ t nd Chir1,1 e 11. ' ' C01l1 Mnt $1ftfle1y Dl1lrld t fct rltlll I nd dlllfll'llnt tllt 191'11111 l'lfVIUlnt '''" t l kl & l•l •1' J·t·JT 11~ n h f Ct rlil!.. , , , .,, ,, ••••• , , , J 1S !l l! SS ol4 LllJl!r, Norma£ I ncl H•rvtv £, Ml!•V'S Tll UCl<ING, 201~ S, Cl/\ler cf W4Dtt lor pullllc wo1k11 t lld tnt provlt10l'IS Of 141cl Codt l'llllkt II ,,...Mlt10IY w'.:ltr'l•Y~ Wtll~~rtt Ml"n "' """ $4.~ *'!: t ut t Jn f'tltl ,ll:9ll•f11>111I , • .. , .. ..... • .. ... ~' 1, 5 ~ Sml!I!, Wlllt rd L1wt1n 111d Theim• I t. St lll• Ant , Ctlllornlt t2JO.I llOlll 11111w.1t111t11bOCl'f If111y pullllc <111lr1cr, ""'"'' .. rd lltidy t~tlv c•ll1 l'tflflt!I 1 • ::·.·:: ......... • .. :::.:;:: •2J 40 Chri1!111t1 St Yir.es ,.. .......... • , • , .lS IS 2t FJ;t Kinn!il11! W, tnd Mthlldt J, Mli:lll VIH ,l!,ll:llY I OWES, m 1 S for trlde for tny Pllllflr lmpro .... rntnt1, Pt t ttl111lrl l lld •tttml"' lflt .-11 Vatt lllf'I ' "' " '39 Jt \l•Ul,on l1vlr.t1 .. • ........ •• .. •• .. .. .JO O '» W1i9M. Mt• ll't'd •1111 Jtlrn c ... rtl1, Ctnlll sr .. ''"'' Atlt, (11111111111 9'704 ' ,, ..... Hint ,,,., ti "°'1•1Y w19n •fl ~ loe11Jty 11'1 Wiii'" trlt WOfk I• .. bf ... ,. 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' ' -· .. ,..,_ -11on ••rtt/1\111 If k twnlln ' ............................................. ,.,, ILICT•1U.L lfOllKlll'lt '°'TA M•SA SAN 1 ~~~"'{'* :}~..... ~i,%, j![:!!~ !:~1~~~11 ';::1v'• ;s;·';,!, c:!;· .::'~ !;~1111•~=': :,r.:,,,:,:,:; ~ ";!:, ·: ... ·:::::::: .. ··:·:::;:;::··::::;·:;; J·.i: ~= ~~!:,:io111T111 1 AllY 01&J1111c:r ''"~ 4~M.ihMI 7•~ r•lt, W '(flt . ,,, .... , ................. , ..... t.12 kl!,ll:M W. fl:IMA l S Thlf'lk .. ,1(.. 755u«tfd Ol'IJl:ATING INOIHl lJl:S fth ., •• , & l!lt rtf'fltr ...................... ,1 '·" • hcttt•rv ,,~ "'"""-'•To MNllll & Well••• -I(;(, 1sc-111m AP,llMTt(I Wl•IMAW nATI 0, tA.Lll'OltNIA I 11S.-!t 41.. 71[1«111 '""*'-SIOO. •1.20 -7/1/12 ltl I l'Plll, .................... 4!11 •• ,. • )-. tl Drodt ... ~ 71•1111We l/Ktllof!.1iolid1y f llllll -lOt bl4I I "* ...................... , ........... 1.tt •.tJ ,ltl 'f'Nt t OUNTY' 0' 0,ttA.Nlll' I It~ ~lCt 7'k l"Orttn•11• JO< 11tr llOUr evt r ''" r•tt ti IPlt hltl!f'll H lf l lltllt,ter UACltr hit hi I fMI, ..... , ........................... 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I,, ••crfltl'Y'tflllt ... i'f !!'!?'~ • OOool ta\A,_ ~'"''''1 ~··'"'' Wtll•rt -10.:1 lolc-S/1/111 tot -trtm ~ ':'~ (l/\ltt ............................... s.n ti th• Cetlt M•• )lfll::~~-· .. _,,,_ I~ \81 Ill •.1•-,ntttt •~•I•~ -7k1 lk -•111111 t sc -511/lt ••I .. lr{t llt•• ......... .................... ,,, .. ·'" "" •""1•V-.. ,,, ''"'· M•··· ., ... , 1"" ... c:twi1r. C1/lfetn0t I lft tl !llWI -:IOc l '°' -J/111'1 Jtc-S/lt n I tr h II i'MI~~ .. ... ............ .................... .ltt .. ·"'.., • ....,.... ,utlltfll .. ore,... Ctut ..n " '"'""": Wllt!I ""'"., ,.,.,. c.-1 ~ m ""'•'ftlll 111 • •'.,,. • • v1t11itf! ........................................ :r:i,,,,., 'f!IJ f11i I wn • ., tMttd:.:;;.:;;.:;;.;c.;;.;;_.;... ____ -:-___ ;....;.;..c;:_ ________ ~n~>~n -· 1" • L ' ... Cost ''" ·~· " <~-' Ml!I I'" " l" ·~ "' l1c!a ,,, /.leJ " •m o .. llo "' '''" ~irga "" Wiit ,.,, Petr ... er.ci C~rl ecac fiurv .. ' Co Co I For The Record Dissolutions Of Marriage Flied '•bru1rv tt Wtlntr, Unnl R.rt. and Simuel A. J..:obs, Cyntlll1 A. 1nd Gtrt ld A. ClllDOtll, M1rl1n• M. •lld ROY E11t1n• Tonoe, June L. 11'1d Wllll1m R. Beech, Robert Craddoc:k tnd Llllltn E. Burnett. Rulh trid Wllt!tm Rtvtl Prulcl\, Jnal1 ~ro1r1!·Mtrr 1nd Antnonv JOllt~h BY•n1. Ellltbtlll Jttn tnd Donn Contn$ Sandy, Gtrlrudt tlld Wt•rrn 5. ICrotlt. Ktlll'I' Wloellt ind D1rr11 Dttn FrtdY, ~·I• N. tnd Wl!lltm w. Huflord, Dtnltl Ctl 11'111 sn1ro,. KtL\ty Dt Groat, S1ndr1 M.. tnd ce1e111r R, Darter, J1cquf'1yn M1rl1 111d Htrold Letll1 Jr. Buoo1r. 8trbtrt Jttn t l'ICI Dorrell LH Dleln , Slltrrv M1rl1 tnd Crtlt Ltrrv Lawson, Brtnd• Gwin 11111:1 Huon Lt '" Dore, Ltont M•e 11'1(1 John PttltrMlll Romt n, Mtri LOI.I t nd C:htrttt Mtrk Pt•tYrt. Frt ndne tnd lut1 McK1y, Jttn t lld Joh" Jll1H Mtrcfl 1 Tr•"JI· E1tll1r Muri Ind $11•• D. P1plllo11, llastllt A11n •rd R1ymarwl G. 8ru11!0ll. Tl'lomll llutk 11'111 0 1 ..... ROMI Ph1ri1, ll1rblr1 O. t l!d John R. Fllltttlld, S1ndr1 J, 1nd J 1m11 E. Gr1vu1n. Shtnnon Lt•h 1nd Mlth1el James On\t , GordGn G. tnd M1rt1rel "· Weav•r, Ocrcthy L. Incl J !m L. l<ent, S1ndr1 G. 1nd John R. P1do'1<0rski, Nanc:v 5111 and Mlth1el J, M1rtel11, Alfred J. 1nd Deanna L. Rcbtr11, 01rl1n1 Ja1nn1 Ind Don11d '" ll1YnGld1, Ptl)itll lllYI 1nd John L. II Ori, Miidred Nt!+lt Ind John(, Huel11, Ann v. and L1rrv A. B1ru1w1k1, Merv 1nd C1rl Jcwph OilrttY. M1rl)y Lucky I ncl Ronlld W1yne Mo,tes. G1rv Let t nd Sharen Lte M11ldax, Dell•• Lynn 11111 J1mt1 Bcvd J•. G Young, CMrvl Lind• 1f!d eortt Oo~tllH Ill Sh~11pard, 01vid C. 1'1<1 L1w1n1 J, Bolte. J1c<1Ut lyn Ann ana J1ck Blaine Kint, Jtr1kl M. Incl 1(1!1'1\Mn M. Sommers. Flcrentt F. 11111 Victor L. Mver 1. Jtlcl'laro E11w1rd 1no Oelcrn L111rl1 'TM1l11. L1111a 1"11 Mlr1m Wotlrtl, Rtbe<CI !tuwn 1rid Grn Stuart ' LIYton. Mlc,.ellt Louise 11'111 Chrl11l1n Edw1rd Mlthtntr. eon. L. incl R1vmor.d L. Ptrti. J111n ,.lphoni.o 11141 Clndltt Jean Death l\'otices Land Swap Gets Okay, W3rning SANTA ANA -A regional park land sv.·ap advantageous .. Mond1y, M1rch 27, 1972: DAIL V '!LOT 9 County Pelities 1- UCI Prof Keeps Close Tab s FAL,!~1I;!i,:r:~ • A d1nture 1dh11!Ye ca• h1Jp1 FA~Et..l'Klo Powder dou 1\1 01 P Y h V lhl1. 1) 11,tp1 hold uppera and low. 0 ul f t t en lancer, l\rmer11t11dltr. 2) Holdl n Se 0 Ou 0 e tlwom more com ort1bly. l l HtlSMI t: V.~~l'i:¥A";;:~i!br,;,:;~! Po.,der, Denture1 that flt ar• tllltntial to he1lth. See your dent.lat rea:ularJy, __ .._ _ _ -' to Orang_e County has brought a warning from c o u n t y supervisors to county depart· ment heads to cease pirating private property in the upper Santa Ana River area for flood ..,, control or other purposes. By o. C. HUSTlNGS THOSE municipal cou rt headquarters . Sunday. H Is Dr. Melvin H. Bernstein, judges appointed by Governor drive to unseat Incumbent !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;; specia l assistant to the vice Reagan last week -Selim S. Robert Ba ttin will t manate l chancellor for student affairs Franklin of Costa Mesa, from the second floor of the at UC Irvine, is keeping his Patrick McCray or Santa Ana Arcade Building, 515 \V. Main fingers on the collective pulse and Alan N. f.fcKone of St., Santa Ana. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN ln a long delayed trade wilh the state, Orange County Supervisors h a v e approved the exchange of 172 acres of the Bryant Ranch, a citrus operation, in· return for 70 acres of Featherly Regional Park property taken for the Ri verside Freeway. 'Appraisals made in 1969 val ued the freev.•ay land at $353,868 and the 172-acrc ranch land at $367 .230. The trade was made on the basis of those figure s\ but the county Real Proper y Services Department said the land is worth at least 70 percent more today. The 172 acres to be purchas. ed from the Bryant Ranch by the state after condemnation and then turned over to the county include p r o d u c i n g orange groves and five water '"'ells. Ranch manager Ernest Bryant said the loss \\'OU!d jeop<itdite the future of his 4,000.acre operation. Long range plans include a 400-foot wide flood control channel through the area '''hich Bryant said could wipe out prime growing areas on the ranch. Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden Grove pushed throug h an amendment to the trade agreement w h i c h restrh;:ts county departments to use of park lands if at all possible for future flood con- trol projects. "This is the la st major orange grove in the Santa Ana River Canyon area," protested Supervisor William Phillips of Fullerton, "and it should be protected as should all othe r citrus operations and agricultural lands in the coun· ly. "Orange County derived its name from such groves and it hurts to see so many of them torn up for subdivisions and park additions ," P b i 11 i p s argued in vain. t TO FAR EAST Ma j. Gen. Brown TAKING OVER Brig. Gen . Ling of the 25 million young persons Orange -will draw annual * between the ages of 18 and 21 salaries of $32,273 in their new SENA.TOR John Tunney (D· who will be able to \'ote for posts. Calif.) haii donated a volume * entitled "'Biographical Direc· the first time this year. FlRST District Supervisorial tory of the American Congr,ess SA TUR DAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT Marines Will Hold Dr. Bernstein, a lawyer and Candidate John W. "Bill" Hill tn4-1971" to the UC Irvine i a political scientist, has been :~c~h~r~is~le~n~e~d~h~is~n~e~w~ca~m~p~a~ig~n~~L~ib~r~a~ry~.:::::::~:::::::=.:=~~~~~~~~~~~~ studying census figures, opi- nion polls and election returns "1"'""------------•"•'•"•'•'•"'•"•"•'•'•'•'";;";;•;;;m;o~;;;';.' -------------... from the four states that ll Change of Command EL TORO -Formations or jets, propeller planes and helicopters will swoop over th e field here this Friday· as part of Third Marine Air Wing c han ge -of·co mm an d ceremonies. A traditional parade and Mother Set Free By Judge SANTA ANA -An Anaheim woman ruled to be insane by an Orange Count y Super ior C o u t't jUl1' which heard evidCIJCe tha t ~he fed h~r retired son what could l\.ilve been a fatal dose of barbitura tes has now passage of troop units in review will salute outgoing commander J\otaj. Gen. L. E. Brown who is deParting for the Far East. The 4 p.m. ceremony also welcomes Brig. Gen. Frank C. Lang, Gen . Br own 's replacemen t. Gen. Brown has played a key role in Marine Corps avia- tion during a 32·year career and was the first Marine to fly a jet combat mission in the Korean War. He will take over the Firsl Marine Aircra ft Wing in Japan from Gen. Robert G. Owens, whom he replaced last year at El Toro. Class Set On Indians allowed those under 21 to vote in 1968. He ventures these con- clusions:· -Youth will not vote as a bloc. ~ -The newly eligible voters in 1972 consider themselves predominantly Independent (42 percent), Democra tic (38 perce nt) to a slightly lesser degree, with few identifying themselves as Republican (18 percent ). -or the 25 mill ion voters enfranchised to vote since 1968, about 65 percent are ex- pected to register for the tm He suggested that the lack elections, but only about 42 perctnt are likely to turn ou t at the pols. Stress ing that there is no reliable method to predi ct how youth will vote this year, Dr. Bernstein said : "On balance, the yout h vote probably will be large r tha n expected, and m o r e in- dependent in character than ,the rest of the el~ctorate." of. a track record for the newly enfrancfiised voters makes prognosti cation for the presidential election this year recovered her sanity, the trial more uncertain than usual. judge has ruled. ORANGE -American In· "But perhaps it makes it Judge Samuel Dreizman dian dance le ssons are being even more interesting than R b J r offered to Orange County usual," he added. placed l\Irs. u Y Mae e · grade and high school youths * ferson, 39, on three years' Pro--every Friday from 7-9 p.m. at A RALLY is planned tonight bat ion and freed her from the Hart Memorial Park in by Mexican.American backers custody after examining post· Orange. The lessons are open of Wallace R. "Wall y" Davis, trial reports compiled by to the p1Jblic without charge. who is seeking Orange Coun- psychiatrists. The introductory lessons will ty's First Supervisorial seat ED HIRTH SEEKS TO SAFEGUARD YOUR FAMILY BY ELIMINATING HARMFUL TRAFFIC CONDITIONS. It takes responsible study and action to work with the Council to obtain realistic, acceptable solutions to our Traffic prob· lems. Hirth initiated a commit· t~e of citjzens and outside pro· fessionals to protect your rights for a safe and congestion·free traffic system. He hos led tho negotiating team to nullify tho freeway agreement in accord- ance with the peoples wishes. include old and contemporary currently held ·by Robert Bat· Mrs. Jefferson was charged dance styles. Other activities tin. The rally is scheduled for with attempted murder Wt \l/iU inclµde .field trips to tn· 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Santa June 4 shortl y after' She dian historical s i ,.es , ex: Ana's El Salvador Park. Andy's Fun " allegedly add ed a heavy do!le. · cbrsions 'to Indian darice. fairs,· AmOng th e organizers + are ~ NEWPORT BEACH NEEDS THIS MANI VOTE APR·. 11-RE-ELECT MAY.OR HIRTH! of barbi turates to her 12-year·: . camping ventures and home Ray •Villa. Jess Perez, Gil ,.MauRGEY Ask any kid. "Ask Andy" Is ho "Arviso, Fred Garcia and Reset!• Amb11roev. 1'91 NewJ>O•t Blvd., s . s d . th old son's bedtime milk. The . s ws. Co1!a MtJI. Dllf cl del!ll, M1rch ?S. fun . ee It atur ays m e II I "-d h 1·1 F furth inf 1· 111--R~a~lp~hc_:E:ch~a~v~·::· _____ _l!!!!o~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ TO CITY COUNCIL; FIFTH DISTRICT, NEWPORT BEACH BILL RING, CAMPAIGN MGR. 215 RIVERSIDE DR., N.B. 645-6363 1tn. survived bv /!usband. c111rlt$: ''"'" DAILY PILOT. menta y re ar~ c ilds' I e or er orma ion, ca ions, Henry, Ernell. Noell. Ott1r, d b d t 6J8.5499 ,t.!bt!rt. s1m ind Orville ,.m111Jrl1v, 111 o•,'============''--W~•=•~•=a~v=•:...:~~..:::OC:.::.Of:.::.•·~· ____ _.:._.:._.:.· --------I r-~··11 M~'"' lhree d"u'"'"'" ~ ... Lol•1· Mlt!er, 1(1ntyckv1 Mr1. Minni• 8t!mcntr , ln~IG; Mr1. Lcr111,.. CrOlwllllt, New Mrx-lco· '! orndch!ldrtn• 11, 11 re • I· orc'"~cll ld•e"; Ol"O ,,,,(..,re11-or1ndclllld S•"Vl:t .. 2 ~rn. lcd•v, Mond~Y. MltrO'll ,lt,llb~y Ch1pel, wl!h RIV. Gt0r111 Minn OI· lit11tln1. lnterrntn!, M1lr111e ,lt,bbly, e~t.:·8tr11ron Funer1I Harnt. Cotll ,,lc11. Olredc~fHDEllSON Tllcrnl ' Wllll rd Henderi.cn. Alt "· Of 1•'1 0a1p111" Tt•r1C<!. Coron• d•I M1_r~ oe•e cl "''"h, N.1rth 25, lf11. Surv!....., bv 'wife, El1ln1. ct C~•-HI ~·!3_,-," t 11cm11 W. Jr., COlll Mft11 ......... 1 . Hen11er1on. TtJIS: and foltr 1r1nddilldrM. Prlv11e strvl(!s Wtrl hdd 1od1v Moncllv. e11tz-81rflron Funrrll Momt, Caron• dt~b'°'..:'~:s f:dnt $. J-.. Ruldtnl of Sunni Beach. Wife GI ci,1rle1 We~t Jcne1; rnclh¥ al Pa!rlcl1 M1nnin1, Ch1rlt1 W. JOnft Jr., P1trlcl~ 8rVdon 11\d CP!f1$lllll S~1v1111!. C r1vttld• Mrvlc11. T1111.d1v1 2 Jl:M. acll!c Vi ew M~mar111 P1r~. P1c1nc ltw Mcrtuerv, ~~tf~aH'- C~rl Lte L•'IU91'1 27 LlqUn~ Rcv1I, L111un" Beech. 011t at Mith, M1rch ''· 1t12. Survived tty wlft, Allee. Services pending 11 SlleHer L11un111e~!bh M~r~rv. f yclvn 8 re"ntmln RffCI. m Or1ntt SI., Nt'WPOtl Bee<;h. 0111 ~death, Mtrcri ''I 1~;2. ~urv!vtd by '°"' ernar "· Reed. c Nf'l'li:tCrl Beach!' dlUI ler. Elee"cr .... fto(l't N1wparl tach1 slsl!rl, Mr1. """'' wacidtll. $Pallant, W11M1111 on; Mrs. Rase r··cult~al'I. P ~ t r a 11 • , Pt~n~v1v1nl" Prlv111 11rav11ldl Mrvfces, Tue1d1y, 2 Pftl Evcr11retn Cemet@rv. R1v1r1111e. Famnv u1g111l1 lllasa wlsllln1 to make memcrl1I ccntrillUllGl\s. 11l••M, <oo,1r1w,,\! to 1111 Am~rlca" C1ncer Sec: riv. 1c ... View Mor1u1rv. l'llrt.ctars. $TRAMEii Aline w. Str1mtr. 21•2-N VI" Putrl~, L1oun1 Mllb. Dalt cf dtar~. M1rch 25, 19n Survived bv l'IUllwncl, Anlcnlo1 dau9httr, Mrs. Vtrl 8 rcnlt. of W1rrtn/ Mlcl11f>1nr m111.,1r. V11v Ad1m,_ n lngltWood. Stnolttl• Tuesday, I ,M, P'ICllk View Cl'llPll. lnurnll'ltnl. P1cUIC View Memorlal P1rk. Pftlllc View Morlu1rv, Ol•wel~'ifiNGTON Btrnlct 8l1nc:lltll W11hlng1011. ll11ld1"t 11! L1puna Hiiis. 0111 ol dt.111'1. M'lrcll 11. 1972. Survlvtd bY bnllht"' Frederic J. ~ranchell, S1atll11 Harold E. Blanchet. crcnt 681 Mar; LIO M. llt1nche\'· crtltl\d. OrlVOll. MlfftOl'lt l 1trvlcn ,. It be hfld Wldnt•..,1v, M~rd1 7t. 11 ,.M, P1clt!c View Cll1PtL F1m11v 1119ge111 tllo~t wlshl""P to "1kt 1Mmar1111 con· trltu!lon1. Dlt11e contrlbull 10 1111 Amerlc1" Cancer Scc:lt h . P1clflc Vltw Mortu1rv. Directors. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCL!FF MORTUARY m E. !lib SI .. Cost.> Mesa '"'488S • BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 17:i.9'IO Co1ta Mesa MIJ.%414 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Ptfes1 U 8-3133 • McCOR~flCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd. l!M·Hll • PAcmc VIEW MEMORIAL PARJ\ Cemetery Mortall'J Cbaptl ' llOI Padflc View Drl•e Newport Beach, Calllornl1 114°2700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL DOME 7801 Bols1 Ave. Westmlnlltcr 193-3521 • SMITHS' MORTUARY 127 Main St. Rnallngton Boacll l3M53t ' Ol1p!ay, and police norcolfcl experts ttom the COl:tO Mesa Po!Joe Department Wiii be at our Cotta Mesa otrlce trorn Morch 27111 toMarch31sl ou~ng ttl6 following hOUB; C0STAM£SA ' 3310 BnllOl Sl!Mt Tel: (714) !40-7691 Monday ttlN Thursday • 9 o.m. unt111 p.m. (Good Friday) 9 o.m. until noon Avco Savings wlWt to exprv• rtt opprectotlon to the Costa Meta Pollce O.portrnent for Its outstanding cooperation In tht& worltly program. I To: Avco Savings ond Loon Altoclaflon Coupon en11t101 beoror lo FREE lnformo· five Avco booklols on drug obUao. Nom•----------- Addre,.._ ________ _ Clly IP·---- ocr .I ---------- ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT GLASS.BELT TIRE • I • ' JUMB0780 • Gl11s--Belted For Long Miieage • Polye1ler Cord Body For Strength • Original Equip-ment on '72 Cl1'9 • Du'r1gen• Tread Rubber for Traction Fits MUSTANG, COUGAR CAM.ARO, FIREBIRD, CHEVY II.,, ind MOREi 2tor•47 95 C lib d• Size E7S.14 lubttress b!aekwall, • a rat$! -tor plus $2.34 Fed. Ex. Tax,.,. u,... a smooth ride ~======~==============~ FU1 IUICk SPECIAL. CHARGER. TEMPEST, F--15, TORINO, IMPALA, IEL•AIR ••• and llORE I Fill VEGA, PINTO, GREMLIN, CORVAIR, VAUANT, DART, FALCON.,. end MOREi Sin F78-14 tubeless blackwan, PIUI S2.52 Fed. Ex. Tax per lite. 95 A71-1S fYbll•N bl•t k plu• ..... f.LT, HIGH VISlllll~TY~Yfil~L~LO;W;;---;:=====~=====:;­ TENNIS BALLS. VACUUM PACK OP J ···~ JATO SUPER·1DO GOLF BALLS • Curalon cover for long, cul·lre1 Ille • Energli1d "PB" ctnltr give• great distance •Ultra-It~ Windlrig ,,__...,. ""'" 1 Doi. FJ• MONTE CARLO, BISCAYNE. CAPAIC!, CATALINA, FURY, MONT!R!Y,,. and MOREi 2,:.55 95 Sin GTa-15 tube! .. blackwal1, plus $2,71 Fad. Ex. Tu per Urt. Whfftwallo only .U moro ~ ftre. lil:AIH CHECK: Should out IUOfll1"' -1tz11 or ,..-------------.. llMt run a/'lort c1Ur11•11lh!1 1wn1, "'' wltl l>ol'IOr any Flt. LE·IAIRE, WILDCAT Ofdl1'1 plltlcl llOW IOI' IUIUfl dell ... ry 1\ tl\1 ld ... t1l11d NEWPORT, POL.ARA, MONA~O prie-. BROUGHAM T -81AD1 OLDS, ' IOHNEVILlE,,. ana MO .. !I DON SWEDLUND COAST GENERAL TIRE 515 W11t 19th, Costa M111 Phont 540.5710 or 646-5033 2to:61 95 Sitt H78·15 Hlbel .. bl«:kwl!I, plus $3.01 fed, IX. Tu: s»r tire. AVERY GENERAL TIRE SERVICE 16941 BHch Blvd ., Hunti ngton Beach Phone 847·5850 PrlQed • at.own At Gtneral Tlr• Stott,, Competlllve11 prietd 11 tndtPtndent c!••I· era dlapl aylng th• G1neral •Jon, Charo• It fiill m 'l1le safe-driver tire company. ot General Tira ' • ' I Je DAILY PILOT s Monday, M•rth 27, 1972 ... Space Shuttle a Hig Plum Frisco Busi n ess Spared Companies Like Gold Prospectors at New Bonanza By PRll.IP W. McKJNSEY C:ilwtlft9ll ''IMt• MM•or ••1'¥kt WASlllNGTON -Like prO!· pectors rushing after reports of a gold strike, the nation'• , aerospace manufac1urer1 are 1bolll to plunge Into the com- ptlJUon for the biggest space contract Ukely to come their way for the ne11 decade -the SS.5 bllllon space-shuttle pr~ gram. At stake for each after a long dry spell will be enough busines1 to assure prosper ity -barring cost overruns -In- to the 1980'1. The National Aeronautics and s p a c e Administration (NASA l set the stage recently when It nailed down the final · Wort h Buye r s: Beware ·-• ' Of 'Hot Stocl{s' By SYLVIA PORTER The "hot" new ls s ue 1 market in stocks Is begiMing to get too hot -as forecast and feared in Wall Street - and the danger of another blow-off hurting us all is again building up. During a recent five-da y period, 25 separate new of- ferings cf stocks came to market, of wh ich 19 im- mediately rose In price and only two declined . ·-On a single recent day, 10 new stock issues came out and, says a Wall Streeter wor- riectly study· ing the situa- tion, "They almost seem to be dum~ lng their stocks en the pub1ic." A recent issue of a mobile home manufactur- er -among 197l's "darlinlf" industries -opened at $15, then spurted to 132.75. Another recent issue of a leaser of medical eoulpm ent jumped SO percent· from the opening quote. Slill another Issue of a New York motJon picture, TV and stage producer opened at $5, then more than doubled. All this in a matter of hours, mind you. The volume of neY( stock offerings ls the heaviest since 1968. Just before the stock market went into a disastrous tailspin. In far too manv wa ys, today's new issues Jl'larket has characteristic~ of t>ie boom· · bust cycles of 1968-69 and of !!161~. Also, thil time the Insti- tutions are much more im· portant in the search fer hnt new stocks -and if they Ji. ouidate as aegressively as they ,bid, they 'IJ just intensify and accelerate the boom-bust. Informed speculation in hot new stocks can be e1ceedinglv w o r lhwhile. Get-rich-quick Jambling can be catastrophic. The threat, J confe ss. REAL ESTATE INVE STORS GUIDELINES Mont~IV publ!¢8llM with TAX SAii· ING k!N1, IN'IESTMENT ldee1, Info on RttllV Tru1t1, TAX SHELTER, lltm1 1v1rvon• 1t1t1r1:1ted lft Jt.E. thoukl know. l!'>Cludlno t!ftct Jt.E. hr,a on STOCK M1r~1l. FREE con· 1ujllnt-rtltrrt l 11rvk1 w/1u,tcrlp. !Ion. ,,, THJlll 11111111t lltllft ltid d• 11111, -• n.• .. , Realty Enterprises U1 le1•74 ltllt. 2''2 H•t.Hfd Mtt4het1, 0 1111• 44057 frightens me -for t bitterly resent the possibility that my list of carefully !i e I e c t e d seasoned stocks will be taken for another "round trip" by the irresponsible maneuvers of the gamb:ers. To protect yourself from blind gambling , and by so doin~ to protect the entire market, heed these basic "don'li :" -DON'T buy any new of- fering or stoc ks unless you are fully infonned about what the company does and wh'at It pro- spects are and until you have carefully s t u d i e d the statements and figures in its prospectus. . -DON'T buy any new issue on the basis of information not contained in the prospectus - for if the information Is true and ii It's valuable. you may be sure it will be in the pro- spectut covering the stock sale. -DON'T Cail to check into the reputation of the"" un- derwriter -one cf the best safeguards you could have. A firm with a long-established and excellent reputation and with an enormous stake in protecting that reputation is not going to risk it by handling one suspect deal. -DON'T buy a s t c c k because it represents a com-- pany In one of this year 's J;tlamor industries or a current favorite \ndustry cf t h e speculators. There are llun-- dreds of baqkrupt COIT!Panles with allUring names ending in "tronics" or including the world "nuclear." -DON'T buy a new Issue after it has been placed on the market on rumors thRt it is slated for a great price ri se. Why should you be privileged lo have this valuable in- formation? -DON'T try to add to your original small allotment of a hot issue (assuming y(IU get some shares) by buying more stock at much higher prices in the so-called after-market. -DON'T agree with the broker allotting you stock to a deal to hold your allotment for a soec!fied time -say. 30, 60 er 90 days. The broker may be trying to limit the amount of stock on the market in order to push up the issue's price while insiders unJoad -and you are sharing in the decep-. lion at your own risk. Admit it to yourself: these are no more than the ru les of common sense and integrity. They are designed lo do no more than prevent your greed from wiping out your own nestegg and undermining the investments of other people, too. Play by the rules -or don't play at all. ~~-woo§ ORDER -~' ,eaut11u1 , Stlc:k-on YOURS ' LABELS TODAY! Personaliz ed • Stylish • Efficient Ordor For Yourself or a Friend· M1y b1 used on envelopes •s r1turn tddress lebel1. Also very h1ndy •s identific1tion l1bel1 for m1rkin9 person1I ifemt •Uth •s books, ttcord1 1 photos, ek. Lebels •tick .Sn gl1ss end may be u1ed Jo r m1rking home cenned foc;d ifems. Alt labels ere printed with •t)'li1h Vogu• type on fine quelity white gummed ptper. ,------------------· ---1 'ii ,Ill )II ftrl1• Cfll!lfft, (II' t ftl 11'1111 Wi!ft ll.U I~; l'lltl 1'1'11111119 L•HI Dlw., P.O. l ei 1UO I I '"'' M .. , (111P. Ji'26 I I t I I I I I I I L----~~L_C?.!_PR!~J!~~--J dee.Won on the shape of the in an Industry staggered .by apac~shuttle project. The defense -and apace-~pend1ng space agency decided that the cutbacks, ~~SA ts layrng down ahullle will be boosted into some cond1hons: no company orbit by twin solid.fuel rockets -. or team of ~mpanles - rather than by the liquid-fueled will be able to bid on both the booater1 that bave been used orbiter and the booster ; pr1me on au previous maMed-space contractors will be requ.ired to projects. Economics forCffl subcontract as much . of the that dechlon. work as they can as qwckJy as Development cot1l1 for a they can. solid.fuel boo 1 t tr are In addition, NASA is ex- estlmated at $300 million to peeled, to look with fa vor on '400 million, as against that Sl team contracting. And cf- billicn fer a liquid-fueled vehl-ficially or no t, the work will be cle that wculd have dropped distributed geograpically u back intc the ocean after subconlracts are let. launch and been reccvered for Even so, the prime contra ct reu se. is a lure. Vying for it will be Unt il the booster decision virtually all the industry was made, NASA could not giants. such companies as issue requests fqr proposals B c e i n g, General Electric, for the :shuttle-deveJcpment General Dynamics, Martin proje ct. Marietta, McDonnell Douglas, Now, however, the space Rockwell. agency is moving quickly, with The booster contract will not hopes of being able lo pick its be awarded until next year. prime contractor and award NASA is trying to keep the the contract for developing the year-to-year costs of the shut- orbiter -the delta-wi nged tie program down as well as to vehicle that will orbit and rein in the total cost. and the return lo earth - by early pacesetter in the shuttle proj- August. · ect now is development of the To spread the work around .. passen ger-carrying orbiter. In High Gear Howard Agenc y Aims for 1973 By CARL C.\RSTENSEN Of tlll 01lly ,Utt 11111 · Ground-breaking ceremon ies have been held and con· struction wlll s t a r t im· medlatelY on the harbor area's newest car dealer ship, Howard Chevrolet, in Newport Beach. Located near J a mob re e Road and Palisades in Emk ay Development C o m p a n y ' s Newport Plact. the dealership should be completed and open for bUsiness in time for the 1973 model y e a r an- nouncement. the Newport Beach office of Morrison-Knudson Company, Boise, Idaho, parent company cf Emkay, is general con- tractor. • • • Ford Division':s new Pinto wagon sales totaled 1,597 by the end of introduction day on A-larch 17. In the Los Angeles sales district, Ford dealers reported 261 Pinto wagons sold on intro- duction day , accounting for 16 percent of the national total. The new wagon sales ac- counted ror 19 percent of total Pinto sales nationwide on its first day. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The famed City of Pa ris department store. a San Fran- ciSCQ fixture since the Gold Rustt days, has been saved fr om extinction by an Hawaii· based firm. The City of Paris, which set up business 122 years ago on the deck of a ship loaded with exclusive goods from Paris, wa:s scheduled to bid au revoir Saturday. Instead, It \\'ill close down for two months for remodeling and reopen for business . The department store was taken over by Amfa c. a $450 mi 11 ion Hawaii -based cor· porallon which will dub the store City of Paris by Liberty House. The new name will mark the store's role as a member of the firm·s Liberty House department store group. The store, built shortly after the 1906 earthquake, will keep Jts high fash ion w o m e n ' s department, an t i q u e col· lection, Nonnandy Lane French food department and its huge traditional rotating Christmas tree. "There was some talk of bringing in a pineapple inste;;!J but we deci ded against it." Henry A. Walker Jr., Amfac president, said with a smile. Walker would not discuss the terms of the lease with Broadway-Hale Stores, Inc., cwners or the present building. No members of the Verdier family of France, who founded the store and operated it for almost its entire history, will be connected with the new management. However. the name of the Verdier Cellars. consist ing of thousands of bottles er fine wines, will be unchanged. President Optimistic At Boeing The two-floor, $385,000 struc- ture'" op three acres purchased from Emkay has been in the planning s~age for two )"tars. Total floor area under roof wUI be 31,700 square feet and include a four-car showroom, service department with 42 service stalls, 7,0()().square foot parts department, general offi ces, and customer waiting lounge. -.' • • . SEATTLE (AP) -The While m ·t.os Angeles th11 .,. president of the Boeing Co. ~ast week, _General Motors _of· says· the giant aerospace firm f1cers said that tot a 1 has worked its way "out of the. automotive emissions are fri ghtening stage'' and is on declining th ere and that GM th e way to recovery. There will be outdoor display space for ISO new cars, trucks and recreational vehiclesrplus 90 used cars. 'Initially, about 40 persons will staff the dealership. .. Howard Richardso n, owner, said "our goal is to establish the best." Richardson ha s been part owner and general manager cf another Southern California Che vrolet dealership for 13 years and prior lo that served with a Los Angeles Chevrolet dealer fo r over eight years. He and his wife Margaret have been Eastblufr residents in Newport Beach for J,wo years. David Hyun Associales, Los Angeles, is the architect, and will spend $300 million in 1972 T. A. Wilson has told the fer the control of automotive Seattle Chamber of Commerce and industrial pollution na-that diversification, economy tionwide. moves and the success of the GM Executive Vice. Pre!!-747 jumbo jet have given rise dent Oscar A. Lundm 8:nd to optimism at Boeing again. Ernest S. Starkman, vice "We have worked our way president in char~e. ~{ GM's out of the frightening stage," environmental act1v1t1es staff Wilson said. and former chairman cf the And the same day the firm's Technical Advisory Committee stock posted a 2~ gain on the to the Californ ia A l_r New York Stock Exchange. Resources Bo.ard, made their Wilson said Boeing would remarks during a progress never again enter massive ex~ report en what G e n e r • I pansion in one place as it did Mo~rs is doing in the areas of here beginning in 1968, .antic; public concern. !pating 747 !!!ales and con- They headed ~ team of ex-gressional approval of the perts who described progress supersonic transport plane in !ie!ds such as automot!ve project. em1ss1ons control, automotive The firm hit an employment safety, and alternate power high of 101,000 in the Seattle sources. and addressed more area in summer 1968. than 400 community Jeaders, Then the recession hit. educators. environmentalists Congress killed the SST. and local GM management Airline travel suffered and the people and dealers. airlines limited their buying. Employment plummeted to 37,200 in October 1971, and Seattle became known as the home of the unemployed ex- ecutive with a fancy house and two cars. Now, the Boeing payroll in this area is above 38,000, although the unemployment rate remains at 11.9 percent for the city, whose economic fortunes have long been close- ly tied to Boeing. Motivation Firm Can't Se ll Here SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A San Francisco judge has issued an order -barring a Florida-based m o t i v a t i o n training firm from making any sales in California. The order was issued by Superior Court Judge Ira A. Brown Jr. and was dlreeted again st Dare to Be Great, lnc., headed by Glenn W. Turner. DeputY Atty. Gen. Michael J . Kelly said the firm claimed it sold only motivation courses but charged that its promoters actually were invol ved in an illega l endless chain scheme where the y sold distributorships for as much as $9,000. Under the plan, Kelly said. the buyer thereby acquired the right to sell similar distributorshlps lo other California residents at the same price and collect a $2,500 commission .. Comparable motivation COUrsfs !iOld by other firms cost about $500, Kelly said. B r o w n ' s preliminary ln· junction bar:s the sale of any contracts or agreements in Dare to Be Great or Koscot Interplanetary, Inc., a Turner- operated cosmetics f i r m , without prior reg istration with the state commissioner ol cor- porations. Kelly said the att orney general's office obtained an order last July requiring Ko.sco t Interpfanetary lo l>aY back more than· $600,000 1 to Californians w~ Invested 1 in the cosmetics fran chise. . Kelly, in an interview, said the motivation course ap- peared to be effective. "But when it starts motivating ever y one to become a salesman of the course, the end result is that everyone's a salesman and there are no customers left ," he said. 1be suit was brought by At- ty. Gen. EvereUe J. Younger. Attorney F. Lee Bailey a~ pW-ed Oil behalf of Turner. Airwest Proposal, Opposed PHOENIX (AP) -The Arizona Aeronautics Board has rea ffirmed lls apposition to propos~ Hughes Airwest flights from Lake Havasu Ci- ty, Ariz. to Las Vegas, Nev., in competition with intrastate Cochise Airlines. Airwest ha<t"requested withdrawal of the oppos ition in I a board meeting here . Board r membel'l!I were told by Air West that it cannot justify starting Los Angeles-Lake Havasu flight,, at the request of McCulloch Properties, Inc., developers of Lake Havasu, unless the flight,, continue to Las Vegas and return via the same route. McCulloch added that tt 5% Rate Charged By Some · would pay ~t up to $1,400 per daily roWld. trip lo offset "' ,.; NEW YORK (AP ) -A number of maj or banks across the country have boosted their prime lending rate to 5 per- cent, but Bank of America , the nation's biggest, has decided to keep lil!I rate at 4¥• percent. until Joan demands increase. First National City Bank, the nation's second largest commercial bank, led the in· creases when Jt adjwsted its ''fioatlng" prime r•lt uit '\.t er a point to 4%, effective ti> day. Chemlcal Bank, s I x t h large:st; First National Bank or Chicago, the 10th largest: Irving Trust, 16th In size: and First Penn sylvania, Philadelphia's lar~est bank, then •nnounced ·thei r rates will go from 4~ pe.rcent to 5 percent, most ol them e:f· fectlve today. any losses on Ui,: proposed Les Ange Jes-Lake Havasu-Las Vegas service. But Cochise, Arizona's only intrastate commuter airline, contended that 1111 ability to continue serving the state's smaller communities could be jeopardized by subsidized Airwest competition between Lake Havasu and Las Vegas. Cochise started· two daily Phoenix-Lake Havasu fli&hls last October and mended lh<!m to X..1 Vegas two ,...b ago. Service by Cochbe, baaed in Tucson was endorsed by state Rep. Jam.. Oaborn ( D • Yuma), who added that he could not say as much· for Airwest. "You can't even depend on them being late," s 1 l d KinRman. Arlz., Mayor Harry Hughes, leading • delegation from Lhe northwest Arizona town which condemned Alrwest service. Ainmt blamed dlssa!W1c- tion with Ill! Klngman and Prescott, Ariz., Hrvice on reduced federal aublk!le1 and • l Jl,j,,I I There's 1 new comic strip named "Sa Uy Ba· nanas" that will tempi you lo indulga in un· seemly conduct. It's about this singlo youn g lady who , while wailing for her prince to como, has oll sorts of unUJual advenluros in the park. Jn addition · to • topid s.woin nomad Arthur ••• ond on imposs ible clod namod No rbo rt • · •• Solly meals kings ond inchontod frogs and ind11 crib· ablo things tha t oxist only in t ho head of Chorl11 Barsotti, Th• hood o! Char les wh oro th o bullafo 81rsolti -that's roam and tho unox- pretty wild country, pocted bacomos hil. on tho banks of the orious, Ba rs otti i1 m .. i n s t r 1 • m of t ho right.h anded Amoricon humor, cartoon ist wh o h11 created , nusually funny <omic itrip t~at •ppears doily in tho , DAILY PILOT BREAK GROUND -Turning first dirt for Howard Chevrolet dealership are (I. to r.) M. J. Schumach· ·~· Chevrolet Los Angeles rone manager; Howard Richardson , owner; Mayor Ed Hrrth and Mrs. Richardson. Facility Is to he loca ted 'at Newport Plare near Jamboree and Pa lisade' roads. Several olher smaller .Mnks around the country folJOwed the big banks' lead or said they were ~iderlJ\11 hll< ... I •strike by mlJChJ"/P· 11.-------1--------J ' . I t I Buy lhe DAILY PILOT For Peanuts! Here'• here'•. here'• CHARLIE BROWN .,. and LUCY .•• and LINUS •• , and htrt1• VIOLET, .. and here'• SCHROECER.,. and last but not lea11, here'• SNOOPY Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the whole Peanuts gang eome·and visit you dally. ' •I I I '' ; , CAMPUS MURDER SUSPECT MARLOWE BUCHANAN Nancy Wyckoff (R) Murdered in Dormitory Room Champagne ANIMAu;c Sales Up In France REIMS, France (AP) -The stridly controlled area of eastern France that is the botne of champagne sold a record llS millk>n bottles last year. 13.9 percent more than in 1970, the Champagne Wine Committee has announced. Bubbly racked u p im· pressive sales increases a! home -the French are by far ' the largest consumers -and ---------- in all export markets except C G • d the United States. Lo It ampus r1ppe The committee noted with ya y alarm that American sales dropped by about 750,000 bot· D S l ties in t971 compared with the a y e B D · 11.:.1 F ars previous year. and said it had Y ea It e commissioned. major market WASHfNGTON (AP) research study from 'a New P r e s i d e n t Nixon has , ,York firm. designated May 1 as Loyalty .rCORVALLIB •. ore -<UPI) _ .;the evening of F~b. 3 when a Britain remains the leading Day 1972 and asked Americans d t k export client for champagne 1 to "pause as a nation to ask An ·ominous Teminder of the ~ fresbman coe was s rue on sales Of 7.S million bottles last ourselves hoW we can live our fear that descended on Oregon fhe head with a plece of con-year, 'marking a rise o,f a loyalty better." State University campus · dur-. crete while walking to her million bottles in one· year. The proclamation, required ing ·a one-week period last residence hall. The second The United States dropped by a congressional resolution tnorith can ·be -seen on eve ry coed was .attacked three to fourth with 3.7 million passed in 1958, urged ,ap- dormi tory rootn door -a nights later while in the base-behind Italy, 6.6 mlilion, and propriate ceremonies in newly-installed double loc k. ment snack room of her dorm. Belgium, 4.S million. schools and other locations . The fear -~as not .Plspelled Two other. "attacks" were There were 84 bottles ex-· and canett upo,n officials to ~ven last weeK wit!) tl:le arrest repartcd. durm~ the next two ported to Sudan, and 960 got display the flag on all govern- .of a l7-year~ld male student weeks, including one · 0!1 a through the blockade to ment buildings. charged with the lml.(e slaying male student, but they proved Rhodesia. Nixon's proclamation said of Nancy Diane Wyckoff, 18, in to be false. 1 And 756 bottles cheered up Loyalty Day .. js in a sense With Buchanan apparently · t " ~ ruled out as a sus.....-in the scientists in French antarctic equall y 1 m p o r t a n as Angry Mayor Tackles Trains ~{oretti A'kks Noise Bill FORT VALLEY, Ga. (UPI) -Mayor Paul Reehling says trains of the Soulhern Railf'I)' have blocked grade crosslQgs in this town for as long u 2? minutes. He hu threatened to use a bulldozer to stop the trains if the pro~lem isn't cleared up soob:-- J . E, Sims, div.talon superintendent for Southern Railway, called the mayor's statement the "first complaint of unusual trouble." 0 We are trying to get In touch with the mayor aod see what, if anything, can be done," Sima said. 1be' mayor said he did not "Int lo obstruct tra1na in any way but he warned tbe railroad that h< might put a discarded bulldozer ac...., the ·tracU and station an armed ~ceman on lt II U.. city and the railroad can't work out a solution. ~h1ing said blocked cross- 1 lngs have made local reslden~ ate for work and school for years and at times have held · SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - b I and other b • up am u ances Assembly speaker Bo Morel." emergency vehicles., A few ed years 410 the city built a sec· ti, (O·Van Nuys) has urg a ond fire station so there U.S. Senate subcommittee. to would be one on each side of "do nothing to stall" the the tracks. California Legislature's elfortl Tbe tracks run through the to curb noise pollution. center of Fort Valley, a town ?tloretti, testilyirlg ~fore a of about 10,000 persons. subcommittee on 1 air and Reehling said trains ~a~e water pollution,. said le,glsla• repeaiedly violated the city s t·ion pending in CongresS" ordinance which se~ three would handcuff state en-minuttl' as the lin11t any crosslpg can be blocked. forcement progr_am_•·~-- VOTE FOR .( I x .. I P. D. "DEE" COOK ' ' THE ONLY * lnclependelil *;Experienced * Qualified · Candidate PRIOR NEWPORT BEACH From Dr"st •. "#7 COUNCIL EXPERIENCE *"I wlll be a full_ time Councllman" * "I wHI be lmmecllately ·productive" NEWPORT BEACH CITYWIDE ELECTIO·•N -APRIL 11 T w o attacks remain unsolved .and increased leeurlt11 ha•. be- ~me a perman- ent part of cam- pus life. ........ ~ stations. Independence Day, first two attacks, the cases re-•-------------'---------===== main open and the Increased security has become a permanent par't of campus life. If and when the other at- ' tacks are cleared up, school offic ials say the adClitional vigilance will not be relaxed. ~ Doors to dorm rooms all had normal key locks prior to the her third-floor dorm ·room Wyckoff slaying, but th e s e Feb. 8. Two earlier attacks · have been supplemented with have not been solved. chain locks. District Attorney J a me s And the Jocks are being 8rown says he will ask that taken seriously by t h e die youth, Marlowe James students who, for the most Buchanan, of Lake Oswego, part, did not bother to lock Ore ., be tried in adult court. their doors at night. The cleancut , slightly-built A_nother change has been the Buc®[ijln \YB~ a _freshma n .. ~~1g_~ent .. of personnel to be majoring in electronics and "•Orf :Cflity 24-hours a day· at electrical engineering a n d residence hall desks and the earned a straight A record requirem.ent that v i s it ors during his first term at OSU. check in at the desk and be He also was a second-floor escorted py a dorm reside nt resident of Poling 'Hall, the while in.~e building. . coed dorm where M i s s In addition. campus security W~koff Jived. . "'° , C?flicer~ tife making periodic ·o1· • . r"'. '+-w '· rfJi ,d!!<ks. ol,.U.. exterior -.loors ,.. , a~tng 0 IVl:}SS yca.O ffading to the dorrris' to make waa preceded by 8 few. t aYI ..... Strfe they remain ~1oCked at by nonfatal attacks on twD . ht other ~· but Broy.'n says ru~h~ attacks on the three Buchana.n JS not .cor:is1dered __., coeds have brought renewed· IUS~t ~n those ll'1c1~ents. ! complaints about the ceed The ftrst attack ,occurred dorm policy, a plan whereby men and women students live Therapy Program Endorsed Orange Coast College has received offic ial accreditation by the American Medical Association for its two-year in· halatlon therapy study course. The endorsement makes OCC graduates in that field eligible fill' the N a t i o n a I Registry Examination after completing an additional year of clinical e_xperience. "AMA approval should give our program a real boost," said Mrs. Nell \Voodward, chairman of the OCC division of consumer and h e a I t h se rvices. "The prestige of this paramedical specialty i s enhanced because it meets na· tional standards set by the AMA." The college's inhalation therapy program has been in existence for three years and . is one of Jess than a dozen such programs offered by California community col· leges. occ·~ program includes classes in rei pi ratory physiology, chemistry, m i crobiology, maintenance and oper:ation . of equipm~nt, patient care and advanced respiratory therapy. •, in the same residence hall on alternate floors. SchoOI ' officials: say -they have no· intention of doing awaY with the coed dorm plan despite the charges from off. campus · sources that the policy encourages Immorality. HERBERT l. MILLER TIRE CO. INC. SANTA ANA 209 Bosh-St. 547-5685 . COSTA MESA • • 1739. 5UPE.~IQR ' -!••11t~&Mo..,...n , . :--· P,h. 64z.;µs1 PLACENTIA .-.- ·. 144 So. Bradford 1 Rlo(~S Ol(hn~m~" 524-9280 I See by Today's Want Ads e THE SHAPE oJ things to come'! '68 \l\V bug. This one's an au1omatlc, has A~l1 Ff.1 and has J1ad a recent engine overhaul. ll's in excellent condition. • ·s MAGNIFTQUE! That's this French Provincial din- ing room table, lt's onl,y $60. • O\VN A BIG l' ARD? Tht>n you should own this Kerry Blul!' Terrier, too, tJe'JI 11 months old and needs a large place to play, I . - I save .'• , SOUTHERNt.cauFORNIA . . ~ : FIRST.'NATIONAl BMX .. • ' ' I • I \ .. ---·---·-·-··-: •• :_.; • ; ' ... ' ' ,, . ··' , .. ·• . ' .. _.,_. ? " • .<;. . ·; . ..... ':. i; ·. • I • ._' ,._/ ~ .: ,,._ ...... ______ _ "-.. : ~-' ~ • 11 ... " .,_ • ' . ' , ... ; . ' . ,• . ' . . "' , .. ·' .• ... ·, ' J ' l ' ' A bank is the best place to get home improvement rnoney. The terms ·are liberal' t~,e interest is low. So if you r;family needs more ·: room (or rooms) maype our money coul~ help. Just stop .'bY the SCFNB office nrarest you and 1alk to one of our lo~o 'officers . In the Newport area: . BAYSIDE OFFICE -COSTA MESA OFFICE 1090 Bayside Drive 230 East 17th Street Phone 642-1141 Phone 642-1660 HARBOR VIEW OFFl~E 1666 MacArthur Blvd. Phone 6#8511 SUPERIOR OFFICE 396 Superior Avenue Phone 642-9511 . ,WESTCUFF OFFICE 1501 We'stcllff Drive Phone 642·3111 ORA~GE COUNTY AIRPORT OFFICE 2001 Michelson Drive . '-. . ' "( Other Orllnge County olllcoJo., ~.~ Poln~ Fullorlon (9), HunUl)O~ Beaeb (2), Laguna HRlt, San Clemenlll,.Sen .i.i Caplotreno, Slllt!I ~ Sell Bdch, Tua tin end W•tmlnater. , Phone 833-3111 .. , , M-:mber FDIC . ' • • t •! • I ' 'o \ l b • l . • f I. .. ; I ,, ' ' ' . . by, In: ' It. ' ,. . , pie I I I ors. I F j ~ J e!Je· =~ s ~ .!1 or ~ ~ ' d~ The The p11· dUJ the up I -s·· a . . ' w~J ~~ ,,..Ji ... ,~ Wli ... ~ 11111~ 11111 ·1 ..w! ...... -1 ~ , ' ~ •I ~men. , .......... _____ _, I .IA ANDERSON, ldlfwt: .,.. .. .. • . • • " ' . A'nn landers Worship Goes ·up " ' In Smoke DEAR ANN LANDERS: Today I read. the reviJed 23rd Psalm, -"K1n1 Heroin," ~ . ..,.iittn by 'lhat girl who committad 011Jclde.'l1'1·a provocaUw piece but ·why don't you •tut at the beginning! I ran ' . ~ another venJoa which was written, b1. a ""1 namad·Mlte Klnb. It appeored ln,a map•!fte at my ocbool. Pieue put II· In . ,... . eol1111111. t . . , i . Gnoa · b My·Pow• • ·Gnu la my power; ! <0111lanlly wanl n maketh me to ny high In sweet pleasures; It · increueth my 1tnaaUon1. It restore~ deep awareness ; It guidetb me throu&h IOU!lda and co~ ors. with complete eensitivity. Yea, though !·live ln ·lhe• twilight of ~ ..... I do ·lear nothing, For srau·la with me; '1be poll-of a· joint, ii comlorll me. 'lbouib · problems abound In the insence el the living, · Mm pul!a Oil a joint, Ibey keep me; mymlnd..-away. &nl;y joy and delillJI can I follow -marijuana; And I aball dwell In the hell el my --~ ~ . ' I .... l!Jlled need& -.... No.maUer 'lll>at uCUM 1111 mera of craU·etve for their reason to smoke tt, I tblJit that lul line 1111111 il all up. AJ ao alterlbou&hL I would like to r .. mind Ille older 1eneratloo (aod anyone elst, for that matter) that there are llilJ aome people in thls young generation who have M . desire whatsoever · to smoke arus -no matter how many unsatWied neodl they have. I'm ooe of them. Jual lign me -17 AND mGH ON UFE DEAR IDGH ON LIFE: W-to Iba dab. So am I -aod I'm U. n.au t.r _,. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Since readers -· write to upn!ll a pblloaoplly, « allare 10 idea, I decided to poll an unaettling queaUon for wbi~ I can 'llnd no answers. tbousands of letters have crossed your desk dealing with unlalthful husbands, These men fall into no 1peci1l category. 1 'J'bfy are rlcb and broke, handsome and plain, brilliant aod stupid, capllins of in- dustry and ribboo elerts. The ... lhlnc lflty have In <CllllllOD la ibat they cbeal en their wivo. . WbY donl -men reolize they could enrich illeir lives one-hundred fold U Ibey 1pent that time, energy and money on their wives ln!teld o( some young di1b who is only out for what she can get? How Wlfair that a busband will dre111 up for a girl friend, save his polished manners for her and \Ike her to the llbelt places. In abort, be 1ivea her bia best while bJt wUe, who baa sacrificed, made a homa for him and 1iven him children, 1et1 the , leftovers. WbY, Ann Landero! -A "WIF&OF COURSE DEAR WIFE : I coald write a book ,. lbla·RllJtcl, .... -... y I ml(bt. llat lo P'!l .It llrlelly, f'9 atmply •-t feed 111o 4ata lllto I ~'pater ad &et U 1n1wer. Ead. mu ii .Werut. He 1111 his 1w1 fun, IMiltlllda, ·· mwcmldn, fotltlet, ...-.1t1 nd ,.eallartdel. AND, let's ... ,,..... tloo . .,.... •• -.. dtll .......... __ _ ... , .... .,. ...,... W llt'1 Ml lllJrt . Mn.' 1-A-llaad~, l'w alll•lt -·-'l'B say" ...... "4 .__ -nap may M .,... lo ........... --.. _riPI __ .. . Wbat'a Ille story Oil pot, LSD, cocaine. Upper• and downers, speed! Cao you ban- die it 11 10U'rt c!ar.tul! Send I« Ann Linden' new bdOl.let, "Stra.IPt Dope en Drugi." F« eacll -let «derad, aand a dollar bUI, plus • lea(, 1 a If• a 4- droaaed, atamped .,..,. (II emtl ........ , .. Ann 1Ander1, Bo• 1341, Ollcqo, Ill. 1118&1. ' ' - • Rtp. B1rry M .. Goldw1ttr Jr., Miss Susan LH Ghtrm1n with hosts, Mr. ind Mrs. Richord Robinson (lalt to right), Silhouette Shaped by the Sea Silhoueltes and Seashells will set the mood for a fa shion show luncheon Thursday, April 6, beginning at noon In the Three Arch Bay Clubhouse. Sponsored by the Three Arch Bay Women's As· sociation, the afternoon will include spring attire from Rene Boutique In Laguna, commentary by Mrs. Marion Parle tte and music by Mn. Howard Wilson. Portraying the theme are Oeft to right) Mrs. William Hubley and Mrs. Ralph Tanian. I \ Future Bride Honored • Miss Susa n Lee Gherman, wbo ... 111 marry Rep. Barry M. Goldwater Jr., was~ the guest or honor at a cocktail party )'esterday. Hosts were Mr. and Mrs. 1'-lchard Robinson of Newport Beach aod the set- ting was the Dover Shores home of Mrt. Robinson's parents, Judge and Mrs. Jessie W. Curtis. Among ihe 50 guests attending were Miss Gherman's fiance and her parents, Dr. and ~trs. E. Mortimer Gherman of the Balboa Bay Club. Miss Gbennan and Goldwater will ex· change vows at noon 'Iburlday, March 30. In St. James Episcopel Olurcb. Newport Beach. Empire Presentees Poised for Debut Sixteen young women who will make their formal bow to society in June were introduced and honored dur- ing a mother-daughte r luncheon in the Newport Beach home of Mrs. John F. Vittrup. The presentees have been selected on the basis ot service hours contributed to community and charitable work. Of the 16, 13 are Keynotes, members of the junior auxiliary lo Harbor Key of the Child Guidance Center of Orange County. Their presentation will be made during the eighth annual Empire Ball, sponsored by Harbor Key, and pro- ceeds will support the e<nter. DEBUTANTES, PARENTS Debutantes and their parents are Miss Sandra Lee Barker,-Mr. and Mrs. William Lee Barker; Miss Debra Diane Bibb, Mr. and Mrs. John McAlpine Bibb; Mis! Norma Lynne Cirk.le, Mrs. Norman Cirkle and the late Mr. Cirkle; Miss Cheryl Rita Garner, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lawrence Garner. Others are Miss Kathy Ann Gilford, Mr. and Mrs. William Frederic k Gifford; Miss Stephanie Jean Jones, Mr. and Mrs. James Ela Jones; Miss Lynda Marie i.e. grand, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Edward Legrand; Miss Cynthia Elizabeth Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Ca rl llaurence Martin. More are Miss Melinda Lou Myers, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Lincoln Myers; Miss Laura Jean McNamee, Mr • and Mrs. Davis Patterson McNamee; Miss Merle Ann Parrish, Mr. and Mrs. RU:hard Arthur Parrish; Miss Lynne Eve R-0<enberg, Dr. and Mrs. Robert S. Rosen- berg, Miss Ruth Roxane Salyer, Mr. and Mrs. John Wes· ley Salyer. MORE DEBUTANTES Concluding the list are Miss Laura Anne Thorn· burgh , Mrs. Francis Irving Thornburgh and the late Mr. Thornburgh; Miss Lori Beth Thornquist, Dr. and Mrs. John Jerome Thornquist; Miss Janelle Lizabeth Walton, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford C. Walton, and Miss Mlcbello Weaver, Mr. and Mfs. William Henry Weaver. Modeling \heir presentation gowns were the Misses Leslie Jane Allen , Michaela Beth Kelley and Mary Lou Myers, post debutantes, and showing_ appropri1te gowns for debutante mothers were Mrs. Roy Jefferson Allen and Mrs. Charles Elmer Kelley. Assisting as hostesses were other ball committee member s, the Mmes. Benjamin C. Brown, Glen M. Keller, Theodore l\.faravi ch, Jean B. Miller, Van R. Parker ind Robert Wood . Tho debutantes and their lathers will be honored Sunday, April 9, duri ng the annual Father·daugh\er Brunch in tbe Irvine Coast Country Club. THRIFT SHOP TOUR Before the brunch, the girls and their fathers will tour the Harbor Key Thrift Shop, where \he Keynotes contribute volunteer hours on Saturdays and during awn· mer vacations. Funds are raised for th e Child Guidance Cen\er through th e thrift shop, ., \he chairman, Mrs. Arthur Graves Jr., will explain to the group . After se eing the thrift shoP., tho debutantu and their fathers will travel to the Child Guidance Center for a tour conducted by Dr. Leonard I. Lesser, director, then adjourn for brunch. Special guests at the brunch wtu be Dr. and Mrs. Lesser and the Mmes. Weaver, Harbor Key president; James C. Eva~s, ball chairman: Ivan W. Sturgl!, presen· talion chairman, and Clrkle. brunch chairman . • ' / · CAUGHT IN ACT -The Easter bunny himself is discovered by Rachel Gewel· her, 3'h, as she participates in the 10th annual Easter E~g Hu!lt sponsored by Huntington Beach .Jaycees. Portraying the Easter bunny is Kevin Garfalo, 3 months. The hunt will take place Thursday; March 30. Bunny Booked for Hunt The Easler bunny will visit six schools in lluntington Beach on Thursday, March 30, bringing with him candy and special golden eggs. Sponsoring his visit are the Huntinglon Beach M r s, Jaycees, in cooperation with the Huntington Beach Recrea- tion Department. The 10th annual hunt will Your Horoscope begin at 10:30 a.m. at West- mont, Wardlow, Circle View, Spring VJev•, Meadow View and Peterson schools. ac- cording to Mrs. Dave Garfalo, chairman. AU children in the city between the ages of 1 and 7 are invited to participate, and the chil dren findi ng the golden eggS1 will• •receive special Aquarius: Get Help In Managing Money TUESDAY MARCH 28 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Health area is accented. Get checkup. Adhere to diet in- structions. Realize 'value of proper ·nutrition. Those who are interested wanl best for you. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Personal magnetism soars. Opposite sex ls drawn to you. A,ccolade is tossed in your direction. GE!\.11NT (J\1ay 21-June 20): Practical matters dominate. Don"t play games with securi- ty. State position; be knowledgeable about values, property and other'o''ise. CANCER (Ju ne 21-July 22 ): Welcome chance to vlsit , ca ll, re-establish contact w it h neighbors, relatives. Ideas can be developed. LEO (July 2J·Aug. 22): New approach cou ld mean money in the ban k. Strive for in· dependence, originalit y. Know vour ~·onh -and don 't defer io one 'M'ho does much talking. VIRGO !Aug. 2~Sept. 22 ): Lunar n ·cJe coincides no\V wilh time to be a self-starter. SCORPIO (Oct. 2~Nov. 21 ): Spotlight on getting wha t you want. Friends play significant roles. Desires can b e transformed in lo realities. Tear down in order to rebuild. SAGITI"AR!US (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Prestige gets boost if you initiate community proj. ect. Be in touch 11'ith key peo- ple. Write and communicate. Study Cancer message. Self· expression now is a requisite. Make room for yourself at top. CAPH ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19 ): Good lunar aspect now coincides 1vith j our n c y , publishing, learning. 'Status quo is not likely to survive. Family affairs are in volved. Domestic adjustnient, possible change of residence are also in picture. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Feb. 18 J: Matters of estate are featured. Financial planning is a necessity. Get help. it re- quired. on money manage- ment. Joint effort is li kely to succeed. Mate. partner figures prominently. Guard assets. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Settle matters connected l\'ith l;i1v, public relatio ns. Take nothing for granted. Some would like to see you make miscue. prizes. A hat parade the next day at Huntington Center Mall will cl imax the l\1rs. Jaycees' Easter activities. Beginning at 7:30 p.m., judging will take place for the funn iest, prettiest, best boys' and best of the show hats. Mrs. Harold Thomas is in charge or the hat parade. LINDA SCHDETTLER Wedding Plans Told The betrothal of Linda Schoett!er to John Sanchez has been announced by her parents. Mrs. Helen Schoettler of Ne1vport Beach and Harold Schoetller of Los Angeles. The bride-elect a t te n de d Newport ~!arbor High School and her fiance. son of Mr. and Mrs. Tony Sanchez or Santa Ana, attended Santa Ana Valley High School. They will exchange pledges in St. Anne's Church, Santa Ana. No date has been set for the ceremony. l • r Pledges Solemnized for Couples SASSONE-NELSON Diane Wood Nelson and Marco Massimo Sas.sbne ex- changed marriage vows in Chiesa de S. Leonardo in Flore.nee, Italy. The couple met w h e n Sassone exhibited his paintings at the 1971 Laguna Festival o! Arts. The bride ls the daughter or Mr. and M.rs. W. Wood Nelson or Huntington Harbour. Sassone is the son of Signor and Signora Nicola Sassone or Florence. The new Mrs. Sassone was graduated from the UnJversity of Southern California. Her bridegroom attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Florence. The couple honeymooned in France and England and are now making their home in Laguna Beach. SECKLER.JOHNSON Teena Lee Johnson became the bride of Wesley B. Seckler during ceremonies In the San Diego Courthouse. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. John C. McNamara of South Laguna and Col. Danny W. Johnson of Chicago. Her hu sband is the son of ?\1r. and Mrs. Herbert Seckler of Sierra Vista, Ariz. The new Mrs. Seckler is a graduate of Laguna Beach High School, Orange. Coast College and University of California, Riverside, The bridegroom is a graduate of San Clemente High School and UCR. The couple plan to live in San Clemen te. HEIMS-TERRY Corona del Mar and Mrs. J. Paul Evan.s of Fayetteville. N.Y. and the late Mr. Ru.sse.11 !\orthup. Mrs . Robert Whelan was the matron of honor ; ti.11ss Rita Wallace and Miss Mary Lou Abbinant i were bridesmaids ; Ronald Englhard served as best man. and ushers were Frank ~farshall and.. Gary Hendriks. c._ The bride attended the University of Oregon and graduated from the University of Denver. She did gradua1e work at California St ate College at Long Beach and pledged Alpha Xi Delta. Her husband is a graduat e of Bucknell University. recrh'- ed his MBA from Syracuse ·University and affiliated "''Ith Kappa Sigma. They will reside i n Cleveland. Easter Plans Blossom RANDEL -MYERS In 1 home ('('remony in New p 0 rt. Beach /.Irs. Josephine A1yers of Pasadena and Gerhard Richard Randel. Newport Beach exchanged vows. Their parenls arr l\1r. an_d l\1rs. Carl /.'lood.v of Detroit and J\Ir. and J\1rs. Gerha rd Randel of Dresden. Germany. Attendants were ~1rs. John Young, mat ron of honor ; the ,\Imes. Fr a n c I! Anderson. l)(luglas Morgan and Charles Eldridge Ill. bridesmaids; Dr. Irving Woods. best man. and Ben Cutler and Young. ushers. The ntw Mrs. Randel a~· tended Stephens College and IS a graduate of Northw~~tern {;niveristy where she affiliated \l'i!h Kappa Alpha Theta . Her husband is a graduate of the LTnirrrsity of ~1unich. They \l'ill reside in Nev•port Brach. GOOS-SCHWEIGERT Carmen Marie Sthweigert of Pomona beca me lhe bride of Jerry Dale Goos of Westminster in rites In l lillcrest Christian Church, Granada l~llls. The Rev. Dr. Richard \\ling conducted the vow exchange for the daughter of ti.tr: and J\1rs. Fredrich A. Sch~'e1gert, Northridge and the son of ?\trs. and J\1rs. r-.t. D. Goos. Weslminster. lfonor attendants were Miss Ginger Saunders and Byron Schweigert. Others were Mrs. &h"·eigert. Miss Anita qoos, Mike Mahoney, Clark Kibler and Tim Pine. The bride is a graduate of Claremont High School and a dance major at California State Polytechnic C o 11 e g e , Pomona where she is student dance direc tor. She w I 11 graduate in June. Goos was graduated from Westminster High Sch o o I . Orange Coast College and ·cal Poly. Pomona with degrees in mechanical engineering and business administration. The couple will make their home in Upland, DTERY Oolaras Angela T e r r y became the bride of Donald 'Dale Heims during cermonies conducted by the Rev. Howard Davis in the First Southern Baptist Church of Fountain Valley. ' Li ve orchids will decorate the Balboa Yacht Club Saturday, April 1. for a Say It With Orchids dinner and dance. The following day, the club \Vi ii feature its annual Easter Brunch at 10 a.m. and Easter E2,g Hunt at 11:15 a.m. Selecting the most beautiful plants for the bal l decor are ~1rs. John R. Ba iley Oeft) and AIA: STEf' -BEA:NAA:DO -IC IMEL EOWAROS The bride is the daughter o! Mrs. Jack Baillie. · Mr. and Mrs. Denny P. Terry of Huntington Beach. Her hus- band is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Allan T. Heims of Costa 11esa. Maid of honor was Miss Caroline Duncan. Bridesmaids were the Misses Cathy, Baugh and Wendy Johnson. Douglas ~.~ims served as ; best man. Ushers w e r e Thomas Ba)wgh and Gary Absher. The couple was also at- tended by flower girls Wendy Balough and Samantha Terry and ring bearer Tommy Balough. The newlyw eds a t t e n d GOiden West College. LYON-ABSHEAR Newport Beach will be the home of Scott 'Richards Lyon and his bride, the former Gail Lorraine Abshear who were married in Calvary Chapel, Santa Ana with the Rev. Charles Smith off iciating. Mr. and Mrs. William S. Abshear of Newport Beach are the parents of the brid e, and the bridegroom is the son of \Villiam Parker Lyon IIL and Mrs. Bessie Lyon of Santa Ana . SANDRA FULLER June Date Selected Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Fuller of Newpcrt Beach have announced the engagement of Rites Set In April An April 29 wedding in the First United Methodi st Church, Huntington Beach is being planned by Betty Jane Slate and Richard Clark Far- rell. The bride-to-be is t h e daughter of Mrs. Joy Slate or Ontario and the late Mr. Claude Slate. A teacher at University Hig h School, Irvine, she is a graduate of UCI. Her fi ance is the son of tfr. and Mrs. Richa rd E. Farrell of Huntington Be a ch. He earned a degree in physics from UCI and is studying for his PhD in physiology while engaged in medical research at UCI. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT Attendants were Mi ss Diane Mcin tosh, maid of honor: the Misses Debbi Kruse, Judy Veres and Linda Shropshire, bridesmaids ; Donald Abshear, best ma n. and Mark Lauman , Steven Flamm and Russell Eastman. ushers. their daughter, Sandra Fuller l~iiiiiiiiiii to John S. Siamas, son of Mr. h The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School. They both are students at Orange Coast College, and will live in Newport Beach. NORTHUP-LINKLATER Ka thrine E\i;r,abeth Linklater and Thomas Russell Northup exchanged vows before the Rev, John P. Ashey in St. James Episcopal C h u r c h , Newport Beach. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. S. Edward Linklater of and Mrs. John Siamas of Hid- den Hills. Miss Fuller is a graduate of the University of California , Berkeley where she majored in history and affiliated with Kappa Alpha Theta. Her fiance is a graduate0f UC, Santa Barbara, earned his masters at UCLA a n d graduated from the University of California. School of Law. He is a member of Sigma Chi. A June 24 wedding ii being planned in the Grandview Presbyterian Church, Glen- dale. -GER8EA:ICH - PF FLYERS-U.S. ICEOS Dance Wttr by O.ns~l11 ":1pe1lo Otn<t Shoes Corrtcllv1 Sho" for Cllildru 225 I. 17th St. Cotta Mtia • 541°2771 LOSE INCHES IN MINUTES •NO DIETS •NO EXERCISING •NO SAUNAS •NO CONTRACTS R1duc1 quickly, lttily, 1Hartl111ly, lncht, Aw1y'1 111elu1iv1 Europt•n ,11nderi iin9 meth od t1k1, off tho11 1~c111 inch11 •~telly n11d1d. FIVE INCH LOSS GUARANTIED ON YOUR FIRST VISIT INCHES-A-WAY TRIAL $5 VISIT OFF ONE COUl"ON PER CUSTOME~ C\l•llcl lhru July, 1•nl wht r• INCHES-A-WAY a Costa Mesa -1799 Newport Blvd .•••. 642·3550 Anaheim -911 S. Brookhurst •••• 778~4141 ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY FABRICS BUTCHER WEAVE SOLIDS just the right weight for pants, shorts, sports- wear and dresses. crease resistant -machine wash REG. $1.59 YARD SAVE $62c YD, , Take 1n1t1a1ive: lead the \\'ay. -----------------------------==,,.--==================== Vi1e!come new contacts. 1 LIBRA I Sept. 23·0ct. 22 J: r•yon I cotton ''sahara" 44''/451'' wide Empha!is on secrets, "·hat oc- i:urs out of sight. Participate in organtintiona! p ro J e c t s. -----,--1 ~~-~c_-<,hL~.1 ~" ;t41~u...__~ ... I \f: SPECIAL! J)~ I VOTE FOR P. D. "DEE'' COOK I x I BUTCHER WEAVE PRINTS DOTS AND NOVEL TIES a beautifull y textured fabric in spring's bright new colors. crease resistant machine wash , -·--.. .. ONI WE'E IC OH LY! PRIOR NEWPORT BEACH COUNCIL EXPERIENCE THE ONLY * Independent * Quallfled * Experienced Candidate From Dist. #7 "I * * will be a full time Councilman" will be Immediately produdlve" NEWPORT BEACH CITYWIDE ILECTION APRIL "I • ,, ' 11 r•yon & silk ''brMnway" •S'' wide So11tJt Coo1t Ploro -8ridol t f Sil'! Dit90 f-wy. Hoittir Pierre -17th 1t lritlol Cotto M"• -545·1516 So11to .t.110 -J4J.s111 Oro119ofol, Mall -Ort119•lhorpt •"d Htrbor ''"•Peril Cn~ -l1 Ptlmt 1t Sti nton fllllerto11 -l:Z6·2ll4 lltffll Port -*214111 Gardo11 Gro•• -I 2 I 11 lroo~h1.1rtl I 11txt to Von'•) -llO· I $42 H1111tl119to11 CMlttr -Edi~91r t i Bt,c~ Blvd., H1111tl11tto11 .... lri -197·101J • I I I f I ( I ' • IQ b ~A ,, 9M m 14 d; l S 0 16 H 17 v •t b 19 p n 20 T u 21 u " n; 22 u tr 23 St 1; 24 D s Jn 26 8 29 G 31 A d• :12 M m; 33 c ' Bl 36 E wJ ' 38Y 39A " 17 20 2l " ,, .. t • I I , ' DICK TRACY +T INOULO ktt.V! WORKED, EXCEPT.TMEV FORGOT TO RE.MOVE Tl-IE TOE TAG OF Tl-IE MIT-ANO-RUN VICTIM, WMEN ~EIR MAN RETURNED FOR ,.~E TAG. ME 'STARTED SMOOTING A'T U'S. By Chester Gould ~AIH AT LEAST Wt; CAME TO TllE Ri PLACE TO'COM/>! Mondiy, Marth 27, 19n ---GASOLINE ALLEY DAILY PILOT J 5 By Dick Moofft WHY DRESS ~REWiCl.OllfS? • SUICIDE!' By Tom K. Ryan W~'LL Elf ArTACKJl>k; AFTER SIX By Al Smith SALLY BANANAS Been doin' it more an· more latel4 ! ilEY. MUTT! tlOWA&>UT"THIS IOEA I. WROTE FOR. IOOAY'S 'PAPER.' YOU SAY io ME-·'"' .JEFF. IF A BUTTERCUP IS YEW.ow 'MlAT COL.OR 15 A f-4\CCUP?•-- AIN'T YoU HEARD ABOUT RECYCL.ING? GORDO By Gus Arrio.la "Tl\EN l 'SAY - -•IT 'S 8UR?LE!" FIGMENTS ., ,, li 1¥ '------------"~""" ijAcC NANCY DID YOU GET AN AUTOGRAPH FROM YOUR FAVORITE TV STAR '? .-.-.~ • Ir ~-. §~- ACROSS 41 Established law l Quic~ light 43 Ce ltic blCM' Neptune AJ Absta ins . 44 Cessatioo from food 4b Brings ! Mechanic al loqether so i1$ man to form a whole 14 Goddess of 47 Messeng~ discord of the gods 15 Of tht eye 4q Open: Pottic l& Harden: Var. 50 Outer li mit 17 Valuab le 51 Notch attribute to 1 52 ls a tenait boxer: 2 words 54 -dlxit: 19 Perfumer's Arbittaty necessity statement 20 Totally 58 Gaze lle unteactive bD Chou En-: 21 US Chinese VIP pres idtntial 61 Stores nickname 62 Meshwork for 22 Unrxpecltd ricing trouble 64 Brings Into 2J Stiff btistle· existence like process fib·-tube 24 Defeats 67 Stiling sound ly: 68 Rivtr of lrtlil'd' Informal 69 Actress - 20 Boundary line Kelly 29 German article 70 Sulllng 31 After all material dtduttions 71 Stn;r.te: Abbr. J2 Makes a mistake DOWN NO-BUT I .,; D ID BETTER THAN THAT-- ITVl ~ Saturday's Puzzle Solved: ' B 0 I .l I ft • ! 4 Place 30 Gcddess c( stationed with discord troops 33 Continuous 5 Anthropoid 3-4 Rivtr to the 6 Ont of a flight Rhone of steps 35 Constricttd 7 Time bomb 37 Thomas-: 5ound Gt1111an-bom B Those out· author lining an 40 De-spairing underhanded •2 Made orderly plan 45 Act of self· 9 Cul grain fer mortificat ion harvest wit)I ~B Kitchen a sick le appli ances JD Punctual: 53 Felis tigris 2 words 55 Cuts away 11 Tret of eastern the rind North Anl!rlc1 S6 Rash outburst 12 Domesday 57 German city Book mooey 59 Eagle's nest: 33 Canaanite anny commander: 13 Terrace: Abbr. Var. Bib lical 36 Ending used with lele and radio )8 Youoo Insect 39 African bird I ' l " 17 18 20 2l '.!• 29 Jl " " " " .. .. " ' . ' ' " 62 ·- " " . . J Paintings by a 18 Raad-making 'l Animal Joint famed Spanish machine 62 Small drink artist 24 Farm ve-hlcle 63 - -moment: 2 Ma~e amends 25 Forms modeled Shortly: J Stephen In bronze Z wotds Vincent--: 27 Lacking lm«tst 65 A language : Ame-rican poet 28 Colonido park , Abbr. ' ' ' ' I ' 10 " " " " " " 21 ' 22 H' ,., " " ,. '11 ,. ,. '., JI , .. J2 ,. l7 ,. . •• .. " "'·' .. .. I .. " SQ l ~~'m ' " " " ... -SI " .. " ·-.. -... "' 11 • . OJC.i, r FEJ.J.. FOR A GJllL 1t11:esr1.fill. ,AJJp TOOK. J.JE 55Cl..tS AS IV/ EXCIJ._,;;c 1.;i N .N /IE.IC A1~.A'1:J,f L:>ON MULLINS I RECORDED H IS VOICE ....... ,., .. ..._ __ _ WHAT D ID HE SAY TO YOU? ....... --~- ON MY TAPE MACHINE PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER IF Mr. DRIVE~ IS: HE'S OUT ALLS IN, WHERE WITH CA.llOLVN J'OVCE. I DOU BT ™A.T YOU'LL HEAR FROM. HIM ! MISS PEACH l'M Nor GOING 1'o see PEG<GY AN'IMQRE ! . • 1' ' /,, J ' • ,, l ~ ·~-. ~ I . • PERKINS ANIMAL CRACKERS THIS SOOK 15 PURE TRASH /,Wrr>t AU.OF THE WOIJDEl?RJL. ~flAlVl(E AVAILABLE. THIS AUrw~ ()JltELLli'> TllEM ALL !!ti C~P~e> THIS ilWJK our/ I !UT; ON THE. OUTSIDE CHANCE TWAT VOU PO, TELL HIM THAT I'M LOOKING FOR A. ,,_,-c:c-=-:~ MO~E RELIABLE IT WILL BE MALE COMPANION! P1JLY NOTED! :J: TOL.O I-If~ :J: LIKE YOIA BETTEli?, AND :t. CAN NO L.ON .. ER ee HEF<. !IOY F'RIEND. I I I , ' . .. . . ,,. .. -. --. -' c. -~ t;Jm By Charles M. Schulz ·' By Harold Le Don: AS YOtl CAN SEE, YOUR S:ATMER POESN'T. LIVE IN THE BEST SECTION 01= TO WN, C...l.ROLYN! Tl-IERE WAS A TIME ~EN IT WASN'T TME WORST EITHER, \ I ~ / ... .... ,. -• . JJ ' --· 'IlA.M ! By Mel Ti.IE '-EASTS-HE COULD HAVE~ WAS TO HAVE SENT ME A THANK·YOU NOTE, By John Miles I !\I IV.J..i!A/f.Vf' ~1)1 .Alil1,E,\ tls.t! ""i1C).Ji.1IT PIJS/.4 Alf' A IC.i.}lJNOI' AWAIORE. By Ferd Johnson ¥.IHI,\ EVER</ Bro:: llE15 EVER P!JBUSHED IS lilE ·::.AME €1>.RSM;E/ I H~Ve: THEM ~lL . _HOW Do . f,100 KNOW? , -.. ,_ THE GIRLS '"This one Is Ideal -our diets allow us an occasional sandwich !" DENNIS THE MENACE .~.~"9:f.T '"•• ... • . -.:: ... . I I '~ ~T l 'THINK./1IQ'tl? I 'THINK 5'm l\:XJll1UNLUCKY PERSQll HA1>A ACrl/16/ff.'' ! .! ' . • 1 JI DAILY PlLDf ~onday, Mirth 27, 1971 I'd Trade Records for NBA Title--Sharman LOS ANGELES (AP) -"I'm a little disappointed." says Jerry \Vest "I think •·e 9fllY should have klsl rour i aines!' The statement stamps West as even more of a pre!ecUonist than hls coach, Bill Sharmao. Shatman wasn1l axpresslng any regrets Sunday' nlPI -the Los Angeles Laken Sd theJr latest National Baskel· ball Aiaoclatlon rocord by beatlng lh• Seattlo SUperSonlcs, 124-98, in the Jinal regullr season game for their &9th vlc-- tory. Baseball ' Cessation Threate11ed ~1lAh11 (AP ) -lf a threa tened playe r strike materializes over unresolved pension-benefit differences. Baltimore Orioles owner Jerold C. Hoffbcrger said Sunday that he would recommend a cessation of baseball operations by all major league clubs "unit! \\'e get a signed contract." Hoffberger, a member of th e owners eight-man player-relations committee, hastened to add that he does not an· ticipate a walkout after next Friday's deadline. He said he hoped negoliations \VOuld continue beyond the expiration date of the current three-year player·owner basic agreement. "Sensible people have got to un- derstand that a $400,000 increase for one year is a lot of money. It raises the owners' annual contribution in excess or $5,800,000 to the players pension plan and their insurance and medical benefits," Hoffberger said . But Sharman Is aware that the Lakers have a tradition of blowing the big €lnes. "I'd trade all the records that we set during the season for the NBA cham· plonship," be said. Jt "'ould be quite .. 11.,trade, because the Lakers, a team the eipert.s thought was too old at tbe start ol the season, enjoyed the most rcm:irk.a ble .season in NBA h~tory. They set rteords for the 1oogesl win- ning streak. 33 : the mo~t wins at hotne , 36; the m~t \\•lns on the road, 31 ; the most games over 100 points. 81 : the largest margin of victory. 63 points; and the most consecuth•e unbea ten months, tv.·o. No one had ever gooe unbeaten for even one month before. Jn addition, \Vest v.·on his first NH1\ assist champto nshi p v.·lth 9.69 per game. and Wilt Chamberlain, besides becoming the first player to score 30.000 points in a (•areer, Jed the league in rebounds with J,572. The 69-13 record also set a percentage ma rk iof .841. b1eaklng Philadelphia's 1966-67 mark of 68·13, .840. \Vest had an even better percentage, since the Lakers won only two of the five ~aml!S he missed. giving hin1 a mark of 67-10 or .870. · "It's difficult to believe we could have 11·on 69 games with a· nc\v coach and a new system," the All·Pro ~uard C-On· ceded. He attributed his assist tillc to a change in the team style under Sharman. "~fy passes \Vere getting lo the right m3n and he \\'&S shooting,'' West said, "where in the past he \\'OU!d either drlb- ble or pass. I wasn·t scoring as much but It doesn't bother me. 1 believe it "'as reflected in our record." But the Lakers now start with a blank record and must wjn 12 more game s to claim their first NBA championship in Los Angeles. Their first obstacle is the Chicago Bulls. who play here Tuesday night in the first game of the best--0f· seven \Vestern Conference semifinals. SH II It " • ' f.lnro • .. Kcj11 • "' M<On~ • • •• W lnfltl~ ' .. , lltcwn ' .., Clfmi!nS • ,., (•0'1 • ,., Fo•lf • ... To11l1 "~u Sttlllt LOI Allltle.t Fovled 0111 -l'IOl1~· Lt1 •"t•IN 114 0 ' T ' , .. 1• • 04 10 l ).f , 11 2·4 l 4 T n Hi l""'"" f MtMllln 16 Cf'>omber.,ln 10 ooocirlch 11 ~Wttt 11 C11rnon• 10 Elll1 10 Rtl1y Roi>fni.on Trapp fl TolllJ ' ... , 1.1 0 0.0 0 4 ,., • • 3·l It • 1.1 ' J 0.0 J.j '1 21-U 11' hl0te1J-ta n21 21 .u -12• 10,.1 10111~ -Settrlt 1.S~ LOf •P111tl9' 11, A-11.505. If Told to Retire Rupp Eyes Shot At Public Office LOU lSVILLE, Ky. (AP! -Kenluc~y basketball coach Adolph Rupp may st<lp coaching at the age of 70, but he isn't about to retire. Rupp, \vho has compiled an un· precedented 879 victories in 42 seasons as Kentucky coach. said Sunday he \\'ill run for Congress if he is not allowed to con· tinue coaching past the university's man· datory retirement age. ,;I would Jove to continue as coach, but that is not my decis ion to ma"\' Rupp said. Rupp said he 11•ould run as a De1nocrat for Kentucky's 6th District seat if the uni versity enforces its retirement rule. "I think J can represent the district more adequ ately than anyone else that is or n1ight be a candidate," he 8aid. Hep. \Villiam P. Curlin (D-Ky.), has announ ced he will not run for re-election to the seat. · llupp said he doesn't kno1\.' if he will be allowed to continue as coach. "1 hope to find out just exactly \vhat the situat ion is by \Vednesday." he said. Wednesday is the deadline for fil ing for the ~lay 23 primary. 1'primarly an agricultural district." · ,;I kno\V as much about Vietnam and fhese other things as those other feJI0\\'5 kno\v. I 'was brought up on a farm . I \vorked on a farm unli l I \1•as 23. I have owned a fann since !Ml." Rupp said. He described himself as "the only can· didate in that di strict that is acquainted with the problen1s." "They said they need a more youthful coach,'' Rupp said . ''But l have served youth and I know they will support me. II J am asked to step aside. then l v.•ill represent the older people," too." Ra111say Quits Philadelphia Coaching Job PHILADELPHIA !AP) -Philadelphia 76ers Coach Jack Ramsay, expressing disappointmen t and discouragement over a tea1n \Vhich slipped from perenQial contender to also-ran in three years, has quil. The Major League Players Association already has rejected the $400,000 bid. Ex- ecutives of the 24 American and National Leagl!e clubs last \Vednesday voted unanimously in St. Petersburg, Fla., to stand linn behind that offer as final. JERRY WEST FLIPS THE BALL AWAY FROM LEE WINFIELD AS WILT CHAMBERLAIN WATCHES. llupp, \l'ho has never held public office said that runn ing for offic e is "an am: bit ion I've had for years." Ramsay's announcement came Sunday after the 76ers dropped their season fi nale to the Golden State Warri ors 116· 115 ending the first season in the club '~ eight-year history that it did not make the playoffs. The Players Association has been hbtdiiig Out for a 17 ~~er:it cosl of !iying boost 9.ver the owners aonllal contribution _ t.o the liberal pension fund. l'or which each player with a n1inim un1 four years service becomes eligible at age 45. Wins Stoek_Car.~a.o.o _ .. "It would cost the O\Vners over four years an addition<1J $1,200,000 for lhis alone." Hoffberger reported. "I don't lhink there is any historic ba sis for cost of living provisions in pension plans anywhere. Allison Tells Strategy: "I am certain -as certain as one can be in this life -that there is no more money available," Hoffbergcr declared. I R ,an It Wide Open HAMPTON, Ga . (AP) -Bobby Allison or Hueytown, Ala., finally e n d e d Chevrolet's long victory drought SUnda y, winni ng the Atlanta 500 NASCAR G'rand National Stock car race and declaring, "1 just fee l like it proves the car can do it." estimated 70,000 fans when he went into se~ond place ahead of Bobby Jsaac of Cata\vba, N.C., with five taps to go and again when he sailed by Foyt on the backstretch of the 324th lap. He noted that under tbe present pro- posal, the majors' 744 players, managers, coaches and frainers will receive ap. proximately $7,780 each year to\vards their individual-pension benefit equities. Hoffberger conceded that Marvin ~1iller, executive director of the Players association, "is an intelligent, capable representative of the players. Naturally he is trying to get as much for thc1n as he can." Httwever. should a str ike develop on a team basis nr on selecti\1e regular· season dates, Hoffbrrgcr predicted that "a Jot of guys arc not going to be working -possibly for an exlC'ndcd per iod . Allison, pitting for fuel on the last lap of the day 's sixth caution !lag, fell into third place eighl secnnds off the lead \Vith only 61 laps to go, but pushed thf' 197 1 .Junior Johnson Chevrolcl past defending champiOf! A. J. Foyf s r..Iercury three and one-half laps from the fini sh. It appeared that Foyt, \Vho had handl· ing problems throughout the rla y, slowed rlo\vn \\'hen Allison \Vhizzed by, but the three-time Indianapolis 500 \1·inncr from Texas said, "J didn't let off at all . Allison just flew by 1ne.'' F<lyl. \vho had won his last l\vo 500- n1ilc events on rhc NASCAR circui!, said, "\Vith all the changes \\'C made in tl1e race. it's a wonder we finished. l 'd think il "'as going to go through the fence on every turn.·• Hoffberger revea led !hat he had ad· vi sed Oriole pl ayers earlier Sunday dur- ing a clubhouse nleeting: that, ln the event of a strike, "It \VoOld be my r1:1con1· mend ation to m.v peers fcll o\v O\l'ners that we stop playing baseball until 111e get a signed contract -1vhcther lhat n1cans lor one month, t"'Q months or six n1onths. "I hav.en't won tno ny fights in baseball;'' he said, "but I mlght get more \'Oles -on ·this one than in some of the <lthers." ' Allison look the checkered flag .16 seconds ahead of Foyt, giving Chevy its ri rst major l\1ASCA R lriumph since Johnson \l'On the Dixie 400 here and the National 500 01 Char lotte in 1963. "It's a real capab le car and I think to· day rea lly shn1vetl it," said, Allison. wh o Ave raged 128.214 mi les per hour for the $110,000, SOO-n1ile test over .the 1.5-mile asphal t oval ot Atlanta Internati onal Raceway. Allison's cha rge in the final 60 laps brought roars Qf approval from the Angels Have Proble11a Murphy Blows St'ack, Prefers to Be T1·ad·ed TE~ff1E. Ari z. fAP 1 -i'\olan T1yan ap. ::iarently hAli pi1chcd hunsclr out or lhe California Angels' bullpen. But another starter. Ton1 r-.turphy. has hccome an Un\villing relie~·cr. Ryan. after ~,·eral shaky spring <lUtings, fina lly got the ball over the plll lC' <ln the majority of hi!! pitches Sunday, and allowed fou r hits and one run over '1ix innings as the Angels ended an eight- game losing streak by beating the . Cleveland Indians 7·1. After the game, Murphy was told he would be used in short relief, indicating the starting pitchers will be Rya n, Andy Messersmith, Clyde Wrigl11, Rudy f\iay and Rick Clark. This upset the 26-year-old right-hand er. who regards 1972 as pivotal in the establishment of his career. "They can lradc me if All I'm going to do ls mop up," he said . "II I feel r'ny career has reached a standstill, then J'1n going to ask to lea ve. ·•1 fee l that gencrAI manager llarry Dalton ls the type of r:1trson I can go 10 And say. 'Look. I'm not the man for th1!1 $.itualion,.~l want lo be traded.• "Th£'rc J1as to be a lo! or clubs in· lerestod ii) a starting pitcher. I don 't likf' the though! of leaving because I love the a1·ea. But lhen I look al a club like J\oli n· nc.~ota, a contender that needs pitching, and I know I cou ld be of tremendous value as a starter. Murphy \\!On 16 ga1ncs h\'o rears ago. then su flered through a disn1al 1971 season in \Vhich during 8 of his 17 losses th e Angels failed to se-0re. Ryan, who came to the Angels in a trade for Jim Fregosi. had a 29-38 career mark with the h-1cts. His fast ball is acknowledged as one of baseball 's best but he is plagued by wildnes.~. ' He kept in rein Sunday. though. Rynn, "''ho had w11lked 19 batters In 12 !ipring innings, ga ve up only four ba~es on balls. The Anjlcl!I exploded for flv«? runs in lhe sixth inning off startt'r Vince Colbert lo cltnch the lriumph . CollX"rt \valkcd the bllses loaded and veteran rf!Jicver J in1 Grbnt v.·alkcd I.co Cnrdenns 10 force ln 11 run. .Jin1 Spencer doubled in !l\'O rnorc. A 1ingle by Ken Mci\fullcn and " sacrifice rty by Bill Parker con1plcted th«? 3ltac~. _ Allison and Isaac. piloting a Dodge. each led the race fi ve times during the sunny artemoon, the winner for 137 laps and Isaac. \Vinner of the Caro.ina 500 t\vo weeks ago. for J36. Foyt pu shed his Mercury into the lead on the 317th lap and held it until Allison completed his brilliant comeback. It appeared that Allison had cost himself the race when he fell eight seconds behind while pitting ror fuel on the last lap under the yellow nag. "There was no strategy,'' he .said. "I just had to run it wide open to ma ke up that time.'' Th victory \1·as \VOrth $18,3j{) for Alliso n. while Foyt nailed do1vn $10,300 for second pla ce. Isaac fini shed third and David Pearson of Spartanburg, S.C .. \vas fourth in a Ford. Agee Home Ru11 Sin.ks Dodgers ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP ) -A t\\'O·run homer by Tommle Agee in the first inning and a six-run outburst in the seventh keyed the New York Mets to a g.. I rout of the Los Angeles Dodgers in ex· hibition baseball Sunday. Agee hit his home run after a single by Ted Martinez o(f Dodger hurler Tommy J ohn. In the seventh, the Met s jumped on knuckleballer Hoy t \Vilhe!Jn with a walk, three slngles, a double and a tripl e. JiJn Beauchamp and Ken Singleton each drove in two runs in th e inning. The Dodgers got their lone run when \Vill ie Davis hon1cred to lead off the ni nth. Jon r..fatlock hurled thrce·hil ball (or the i\1rts fo r five Innings and \Va!! crediled wilh the victory. J ohn took the 1()8!1. Groups Off er Blue Subsidy NE \V YORK (A P) -Vida Blue re- mains a holdout today despite the effo rt s ol l\.•10 commercial organ izations to get the Oakland left -hander to agree on con· tract terms \vith A's o\vner Charles O. Finley. Robel Gerst. Bl ue's attorney , con· firmed the report Sunday by Guy LeBo\v of the National Broadcas ting Company \Vhich involved an offer of $25,000 to Blue to accept Finley's stand-fast contract proposal of $50,000. ''Vida is un,villing to accept it,'' said Gerst. "He thinks all of the money should be paid by the o\vner of the team. r..Ir. Fin ley is the one \\'ho is goi ng to make all !he money from him." Acco rcling to LeBow , the two Qrgani za4 tlons made the offer because they believe baseball can ill afford to lose Blue as an att raction. The coach said he has had "extreme pre ssure from Frankfort and Lexington to toss my hat into the ring ." 1 '. • Rupp \\'as in Louisville to coacl\l;tt;a,n Of Kentu cky concge all-stars .~-a group of Tennessee stars. In ,,erhap1f his final appearance as coach, Rupp coached the Kentucky team to a 130.92 "'in Sun- day night . Dr. Otis Singletary, university presi· dent has decli!JCd to co1nment in the past about 1vhether the retirement rule will be enforced in Rupp's case. Singletary said any an nouncement about whether he "'ill continue \viii be made by Rupp. Rupp said he received "call after cau.·1 from persons asking him to run while he \Vas in Los Angeles for the NCAA basket- ball tournament, which concluded Satur- day. Three Democrats· have announced for the race : former Kentucky Atty. Gen. John B. Breckinridge of Lexington; Thomas Ward, a farmer and businesman in \Voodford County, and State Rep. Phillips King, D-Kenton County. On the Republican side Willtam l'\.'leredi th, an at torney in ~1erccr Count y. h::is announced he plans to run for the scat. The coach stressed his experience in farn1ing, noting the Sixth District is I Ramsay. said he mnde the·. dec)si9,n: to quit Jasf 1veek. and added there v:a s no single reason for his quitting. ffc also said the re \Vas JlO frict ion "'ith the fr<lnt office. ~ - "r..ty Premise on playing Is that my tea1n plays hard as poss ible for as long as possi ble. This team did not reflect my philosophy." Ramsay said in a statement. The 46-ye ar-old , ·"'ho had one year re· maining on a five.year cont ract, said he wanted to continue coaching and ''as prepa red to move to another city to do so. The 76ers fin ished the season in third place in the NBA Atlantic Division with a 30-52 .record. In the three previous years. Rainsay coached teams u·ere second twice and fourth once. Allhough considered one of the ablest coaches in the game. Ramsa y. some ob. servers feel, let the 76ers slide. He traded both Witt Chamberlain and Chet \\lalker. hvo key figures in the 1966· 67 championsh ip drive. :ind then failed.to repl~ce them 1vith top.notc h draft picks. Th~s year. the 76ers traded star gu ard Ar chi e Clark to the Baltimore Bullets for Kevln Loughe ry and Fred Carter. The mo\'e turned out to br a disappointment for lhe 76ers. SAN DIEGO PADRE THIRD BASEMAN GARRY JESTADT TAGS A'S RUNNER. "'' ftlt."fltl•• "· ,, Larry Haney 11 Out StHling. Tho Athlotlc1 Won, 1·3. r , N v to sai " • 7 well bet! "I putt eds Iha! can cu st over !all par in t T Ni once out on t last Ni tied Eich Eich feet mad "I who over little the r $100, up a or II l=lnl l rM!a Gery .Jeck "" J"'" &Illy Miki "'" &illy Mlkt .. , ·~' Jtrr J"'" Terr lvnk bu '" &ob "' Rik .. , T-"°"' &M MUI "" .., La rr ... ·~ F In ' z was Jy inj ped a cer g The Stadi .Zuric local Abo at the B Som have rhy aroun App to l&-y a Jong coach High. Kru re nt . UCLA, (old · ieason ti So, ~ How ... al mil 9aggi n touJlg '""The \loope a!I mu it; he' Jtaves, "He 1nd th ID figu Rate otherw would 'Cjjslan cjilions. cas1on lppse. "Thi m. e )Id Uk to do Hoot:r j " .. terns, throug In s thrust Player's Vow Pays Di vidend s NEW ORLEANS (AP) -"I'd made a vow after the first round that I was going ~ win thls tournament,'' Cary Player aai.d . "I was seven strokes back then -I had 1 73 -but l'd been playing very, very well all year. I didn't play all that much better this week. But I putted nicely. "I didn't have what you'd call a hot putter -just lukewann . But I only miss· ed seven greens in 72 holes. I don 't know that I've ever done that before. So you can see how well I was playing." The little South African, clad in his customary black ajlainst the cool, overcast weather, had just 1urged past faltering Jack Nicklaus with three-under par 69 that give him the $25,0CX> first prize in the Greater New Orleans Open Golf Tournament. Nicklaus , who had led by two strokes once in the early going, knocked himself out of contention with a double bogey five on the eighth hole and had to birdie the last hole to close to within one stroke. Nicklaus finished with a 73-280 and was lied at that figure with Da v • Eichelberger, his playing p a r t n e r • Eichelberger ripped an iron to within 3 \.ii feet of the flag on the final hole and made the birdie putt for a 71-180. "I just played terribly," said Nic klaus, who had nine bogeys and a double bogey over his last three rounds. He had some little consolation, however, by becoming the first man ever to amass more than $100,000 prior to the Masters. He picked up a total of $11,753 this week for a total of 1109,651. l"lne1 scor" Ind fNlnlY winning• Sund1y In fh• GrNllr Nlw OrtNnl 0Pfrl; G1ry l"lly1r, S2S,IXIO Jeck Nlckl11111. 111,575 Otw1 Ekhtlbt'rgtr, 111.575 John Lill.,, U ."111 8111r,llcbro, 1$,411 Mll<.t RHMlr, "4.150 ROtl Ctrrl,lda, l4,2j~ &Illy C11per, Sl,265 Mike Hiii, JJ,2U R•lllll Jall1111an, ll .2U Geo.rge l(rU.cllOll, l l ,2iS J1rry McGtf, 12,70I JOiin khrotcler, 12.209 Tf'l'ry Wikax, U..l!lll l l,ll'lk'f Henry, 11,71)1 llt0$$ R1nd1U, 12,:it:I Ed SnNd, 12,lOI lob Rasbur;. 11,5'3 l•IH'on H1rrb, 11.»J Rill MIHll'l'Jlll, 11,J.U Dew Hiii, II,~ Tom Ulor11, 11-021 Dow S.lllW&. 11'°21 l ru<• Cr1m11tart. I I.Gil MUI ... l •rblr, 11,021 l(f'l'mll l1rl1y, 11'°21 Doll I i•, 11-021 L1rry Zllgter, 11,021 lob &mllll, 11.021 Georo• tov11U, 11,021 ,,..,.ff.,t-27• u.10-11.1)-:110 •1·10-12-11-2'0 11-71-611-11-211 .7.1).71-7DL-211 ... , .... 11 .. -212 I0-1•70-6S--212 '6-61-7J-1'-2fl 71.ff·J 1·71-213 •1·10-1•1~2'3 11· 11 ·71 .. 9-21l 6f.1•71-11-21• 61-n -13-72-H• •l-7'-12-71-:it• U..72-71-7S-ll4 7$.70-71~21• ••·n -13-10-11t 11-11-11-12-:IU 6f-U.11·7._21j 71·10.1l-7l-2lS 11·72-72-70-ttl n -n-4i1-1.5-2M lt-... 11.JJ-lM 10-1Ul-1S--2" 11.n.10.,,_. 1>-12·'2>4,__ 11·12-4if·7A-216 f),J).74 72-2" 1'N7-7S.12-2W ,,.,,.,,.n-216 Flagpole Falls Into Spectators ZURICH. Switzerland (AP) -One man was killed and three others were serious- ly injured Sunday when a flagpole snap- ped and crashed into spectators at a SOC· cer game. The accident ocrurred at Hardturm Stadium during a game between F. C. .Zurich and Grassho ppers, the two leading local teams. About 20,000 fans were in the Stadium at the time of the accident. • Morris' JOO Oldest Spike Marks Impressive In Orange Coast Area With 14 area high schools and a 15th (Dana Hills in Dana Point) due next fall , it's time to sca n the archives on something which we'IJ officially dub as Orange Coast Area Track and Field Records. The area standards include any marks posted by prep athletes in these parts in any form of organized interscholastic competition -which takes in dual meets, PHIL ROSS triangular affairs, relay meets. in- vitationals and all-comers get-togethers. The olest standing record on the list is Eddie Morris' 9.S 100-yard dash clocking, run way back in 1940 by the Huntington Beach ace. At the other end of the stick are a pair ol records established in 1972 by current area phenoms. Costa Mesa senior Doug MacLean toured two miles in an all-high school all- comers meet in January at Cal State (Fullerton) in 9:08.6. So, that stands as a Mesa school record and it's under the old area record of 9:12.9, which was ac- complished in '67 by Westmin ster's Neil Sybert . MacLean, by the way, has already turned the mile in 4: 12.6 and has a dis- tant crack at Carl Tr en tad u e ' s (\Vestm inster, '65) area four-lap standard or 4:08.6. All-time best discus thrower in area an· na ls is Corona de\ Mar's H::iward Royster. who flung the three-pound. nine- ounce platter 172-2 in the recent Tustin Relays. Royster's feat, which is sure to be stretched out even further if he stays healthy, has bettered a 170-4 V, mark by Newport Harbor's Mark Stevens last year. The other area records are impressiVe in their own rights. Huntingt on's Paul \Villiam s ( '6 8') claims two -the 440 (48.4 ) and seo (l:Sl .2) while Stevens whipped the 12- pound shot put 67-2\A last season to cap- ture the state title. The latter mark has a chance or being surpassed by the current Newport putter -Terry Albritton, while both of \\'illiams' marks seem reasonably safe at this writing. Others which figure to stick around for an other year are the mile relay (3 ;17.7) (Founlain Valley's combo of E d Andersen, Gary Valbuena, Phil ,.faas and • Steve Christiano in '70), 220 (21.6 by Eslancia's Dave Johnson two years ago ), and pole vault (14-7 ¥• by Newport's Steve Simmons in '66). Bruce Kt'Ut1apholz A pair of field event records -the high jump and Jong jump -may, or may not be eclipsed ; it just depends. The vertical jump record for the area Is 6--6 in '62 by Costa Mesa's Mike Lange and CdM's George Kent (6-4 ), Mater Dei's Doui:( Martin (6-4) and Huntington's Jim Worthy (6-2) seem to be the best bets to crack that barrier. Respiratory Problem No Drawback to CdM Ace By PHIL ROSS Of th1 D1Ur l"llel Stiff Some people with respiratory ailments have trouble just trying to maintain a rhythmic now of breathing while walking around. ApparenUy, this has been no drawback to 16-year-old Bruce Krumpbolz. latest in 1 long line of outstanding swimmers for coach Cliff Hooper at Corona del Mar High .. Krumpholz's older brother, Kurt, a cur- rent freshman water polo-swim ace at UCLA, earned him self a ClF individual lold ·medal In the JO-yard freestyle last ieason for CdM. I So Hooper feels it's defi nitely not a ~a~men to still have another Krum· p'lfolz competing for Corona's Sea Kings. However, while Hooper classifies Bruce 1s a better swimmer than Kurt at a similar stage of their prep careers, one nagging problem has .curtailed the Jounger brother to a certain degree. •"The problem Is a physical one,'' Hooper elaborates. "Bruce can't work out as much as we'd like him to because ~( it ; he's aller1ic to things like certain lea ves, olive trees and some foods. "He has had to take shots once a week and the doctors haven 't really been able to figure out what causea the aUeraies." Rated by the CdM coach u an oth erwise hard worker and one who would automatically be a Bood long .qistance swimmer under normal con- 41t1ons, Krumpholz' aJlerKY dilemma OC· ~aslonally causes hls windpipe to col· Ippse. .t "This ts the reason you can't exert ~ even though he's a very coach11bl1 kirl ilke his brolher and perfectly willing tJI do whatever Is asked or him,,, 1ay1 Hooper. •''Past the 220 freestyle, he has prot> terns. But he can breathe h.is way weU through the JOO and the shorter races." tn splle ol any phy•lcal roadblocks thrull inlo the past of the entwhU• iun1or, he's still managed to · establis h himself as· one of the better swimmers in the aquatics-rich Orange Coast area. Krum,pholz is the leader in the butterfly (56.7) and backstroke (1:00.4) on the most recent area prep swim honor roll and he holds down a leg on the Sea Kings' frei relay quartet which paces the area at 3:28.2. · Also, be qualifi ed as a prep all- American last season as a sophomore member of CdM 's record-settin g free relay unit. Hooper surmises, "the brothers are pretty, similar except that Bruce is the better swimmer. He 's a faster butterfiyer tha n Kurt ever was and he gives us a lot or flexibilty since he's a good swimmer at almost every stroke." Still the possessor or Bee exponents, the yollt)ger Krumpholi has already shat- tered school records in that division In the '00 !r~ and breaststroke. wJth a large portion of the present sea.son stiU aheod or lllm. "I haven't yet figur(!d out what we'll do when CIF comes around ," Hooper says. "It depends on how many kids qualify for us in varsity. Then, I'll decide whether to swim Bruce ln varsity or Bees. "He's getUn1 better as far as hi s prol>- lem is concerned. He's the best swim- mer we 've had here but he 'd be even bet- ter If he was as healthy as his brother was." Along wlth the Corona junior's 11wim- ming talent, he was a membtlr of CdM's Irvine League cbampshionship water polo team last fall as wen. Since polo does not require the constant kicking and pc:iundlng attributed to swim· ming, 'Krumpholt had a chance: in the autumn to pace himself and to also cet In eitra v.·ork on the kickboard. "It's hard 1o say, aince his brot~er wAs so outatandlng In everything which he c!ld. But It looks like Bruce Is th< best ••llnnler I've coached in 15 yun al this level," Hooper concludes. The bespectacled Kent -a Fosbury Flop (backwards ) stylist -has hit 6-4 twice, so, on a good day, he could better the Lange mark. Martin uses the more conventional western roll technique and has climbed 6- 4 once while Worthy hit 6-2 in ,his first meet after coming out late from th e Oilers' ClF AAAA basket ba 11 quarterfinalists. Edison senior Ron Collings leaped 22-6 in '71 and he's expected to improve on his 21-101~ '72 topper. And perhaps he'll reach the area record of 23--0lh by Mater Dei's Mike Morgan in '66. CdM, with a 43.2 already this season, should get close to Marina 's 42.4 440 relay standard tr star sprinter Carlo Tosti shakes the lingering pain of battered knees. The hurdle records are held by Hun- tington's Garth Wise last year and Estan- cia's Rich Wood in 1970. Wise fl ew a windy 14 .3 over the 121) highs last spring while \Vood hit 19.0 in the 180 lows. Newport's Matt Hogsett (14.4 and 19.l already) appears a cinch to erase either re<:Ord , although ~1arlna's Gene Taylor (also at 19.1) may have even a better shot than Hogsett In the lows. So, there's how they stand -the Orange O:>ast Area Track and Field Rr:cords. King Eases Past Rival in Finale RICHMO~D. Va. IAP l -11 Billie Jean King of P3lm·Aire, Fla., has regained her winning form, as she thinks she may have, the rest of the players on the women's tennis tour had better watch out. Mrs. King, who hadn't won on the tour since the opening tournamen t. snapped her victory drought at five with 1 &-3, 6-4 victory over Nancy Rlchey Guntr:r of S11n Angelo , Tex., in the finals ot the Virginia Slims International Sunday. --• • ft1 ondJY, M,ar(h 27, 1~72 OAJLV PI LOT J7. . Dodger Pair Not Worried About Threats to Lives By HOWAJID L. HANDY 01 1111 Diii)' l"llet 1111! Their lives have been threatened on rour separate occasions. Fellow athletes have been slow in responding to the crusade that bas gained nationwide attention. Their employer, the Los Angeles Dodgers, his never doubted their sin- cerity and feels as strongly about tbe 'lituation as the two young ath1ete.s. All of thi:i: has come about because 1 young fan club of Dodger, infielder Jim Lefebvre asked him to have dinner with its members more than a year ago. "They came to me and asked me to ha ve dinner with them and 1 accepted/' Jim recalls. ''We got to discussi ng variouS things after our baseball talks had been ex- hausted and one of these things was the use of drugs. "I told them what I felt about the situation and informed them tha t most athletes do not have anything to do with drugs when one young student asked: " 'How could you say all these things about drugs when we read about drugs and athletes almost every day in the newspapers?' " This started Jim to thinking. "Just because one or two jerks in this great profe ssion of baseball write stories about supposedly inside infonnation on what goes on in the clubhouse and ha ve them printed, doesn't mean it's like that at all. A gr eat majority of baseball pla yers do not use drugs. "Yes, 1 have seen drug abuse and know what it's all about. But what about the other 90 percent who never touch them? "I got together with Wes Parker and Dave Hull at KFI and we decided to go out and tell our side of the story. "We didn 't stop there, either. We had to be prepared and we attended classes at the use pharmaceutical school and the UCLA medical school to learn more about the use of drugs . "But don't forget one thing. We are working for drug prevention, n o t rehabilitation. "We try to relate baseball to other pro- fessions and tell the youth that the world is a showcase, too. "We also tell them they have the right to lake drugs or to leave them alone. But we also sire' that they must accept the responsibilities that go with drugs. ''\Ve make sure they kno'v about these responsibilities -that drugs can destroy life, families and all the other good things around. We try to make sure they know these re sponsibilities." Lefebvre and Parker work hard at JIM LEFEBVRE their chosen avocation and feel that If they can help even a few youngsters re- main away from drugs , their mJssion has been accomplished. They do not worry about the threats on their lives. Quite the contrary. They feel that such threats stem from those pushing the drug traffic who know they are making in- roads 1\'ilh the youth the pus hers hope to envelope. Lefebvre and Parker have gained na- tional prominence through the medium of COACHES CHOSEN FOR CA.GE CLASSIC Wendell Witt, coa ch of the Los Alarrutos High Griffins who fini11hed in a tie for the Irvine League championship with Corona del Mar, has been na med head coach of the South All-Star basket- ball team for the North-SOuth Game in June. Los Alamitos advanced to the CIF AAAA playof! semifinals before losing out in a bid for the championship. William Ervin of El Modena Hig h whose squad went lo the CiF AAA playoff finals before losing in overtime after fin ishi ng second in the Crestview League, will direct the North Stars.' The North..SOuth game, sponsored by the Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club, will be played in the Orange Coast College gym. nasium on Saturday, June 17 with tipoff at 8. WES PARKER television concerning the program. They are also working out a format for establishing Athletes for Youth clubs in which members will aid in discouraging the use of drugs. Two other baseball players, former Dodger Joe Moeller and Rene L.acheman or the O;ikland Athletics. have joined Lefebvre and Pa rker in the cause and others are bjr!'ng sought for the future. The Southern California Hot Stove League, a group of former players, coaches, managers, scouts and others in- terested in the game, has given them financial backing for literature to be dislributed to youngsters. But the athletes themselves take on I ! ma ny personal speaking engagements during the off season as Is humanly possible. School groups and others in· terested can contact them th rough the Dodger publicity office. Unlike the weather prognosticator one~ said. "Everybody is interested In the weather but nobody does anything about ii." Jim and \\'es are doing something about the drug abuse situation and have made it a personal crusade. Bucks Lose Star MILWAUKEE IAPl -The Milwaukee Bucks , who open their N a t i o n a I Basketball Association playoffs Tuesday against Golden State , will be without guard Jon McGlocklin for at leaat three of the playoff games. Why·a $2,000 Volkswagen costs a lot less than a-nyoth·er $2,000 ca~ Lisle n'lo:_the:l~ic: G iv e or roke1a rew doll ars, mo-st new eco no my cols ore priced just obourthe some these days. Around $2,000. But come trade-in time, a wei rd thing happens. Some are worth more to-you than others. And base d on whats hap- pened in the past, after 3 or 4 yeo rs~not one is worth more cas h than you-know-who: The Volkswagen Bee tle: So the real price you pay for a car is the diHerence between what you pay now and what you get bock la ter, when you sell it; Aiiyhow;toke a good look at the ch.art on the right. And please be careful. It's one thing to saytodoY,"I just bo l.[gh! the lowe st-pri ced car in . ,, town .. lfS:'a nother:thi n gJom orr.o_~f01 sa-y,-''rjusttsold .the lowest=priced co Yin.town·.~'· Who lost the teost?' -$918 -$631 ~$571 -$432 ... ,, YOl.ll"'•~I,, 11~·~ I' I IU6111TrD .""~ ... Cf, ~.o.r:-•tit•• fn ti'i"'o Of"l• e1.••t• t• .. ~ "· I' ·~· •• 0~'"0•••. 0.0\l , .... ,~ o• ••r••t •. llfC. h·M••~ ... , •••UUU~•ltt' 11\fffUltl •ll't\ '""" ••• "" ..... ~·•t •Q ..... ,;t•••••Clllt •• •hl.l'l l•wt JO<l• ''""''~•UV• •w·• .. •Hit•• lMl4•, ,.. '"' lt•J. See tho Y otlow Pag"' for tho Auth ori10d Volksw19on Dealer n11rasl You. ' I • / {8 DAILY PILOT Monday, March 27, 1972 • ' '.AJamitos Harness I Entries Keoughs' Tradition Isn't Finished Ye t Pro Cage, Hockey Sta ndings ... ........ "',..... tnttltl ,., M .... ,, c ... r • 111u1. l'I,.. ..... l 1M PM • 1Qtt1 .-i I" l 1n . U 1J11ont 911 Ml f, ftll ltM ... ,lltST ltACt ::(),_ mil•. "tt•. S "'"' olb .. \ll'ldf!', trllldlont. l°l,ll'M SI.at. .....,.,_, lllllY (T, ltl!dllarll) Alldy't Ooilllt (M. Gr•11ltr) Uify Uwl11 CC. J1cobtl OIO!'Yt IC!"' IJ, l1llevl s.t'll'lt ,., ...... 01:. Mt¥111rfllll ""''' Tll'l'lt ID. lt!tlltlll lltctl:: W1'1' !J, WllU1mt) Httm1 l1rry (J, Wlt111rtl ., .. 111111111 Aetrtu Abtlt IP. CO!lrOYI ISCONO I AC I -OM tnllt. Trol. I ~, olf1 &. .,. ftl11 111..,. 11tvtr WOii s«IGO, AIM t lll lllle l '\Ill• 01111 Illa! l'llW flt'ltf" WOii UOO l!rll montv f'W~ !C0·2f ,,.,, .. 51'00 S111t1'tmt Mir (0, AUtrl'ltl'll l""'lt Atlo. (G. lOfttol M\irff HtMYtr CD. ltflflc~l luxer IE. Wh"l•rl lrtYtl1 O<. Ct r1n1Tl Moll¥ 0 Sl'IM (C. Jtcobal S. L. Sc»tt (!<, Hlv<lt1') CMMrt Sltr CJ. Ot11nll) • ... ... •111111i. l)er11i."r Ctlctl (A. Whiter) THUll:D ltACI -Ot\I ""Ht Pict. Cltlmlnt. Jr.ti 11e1, TOP clt lmlnt prlct "600 ... 11'1 12100. C-1 Stt !V01t1r1) Souts. Sorit l~orlclll lllOCket ••rt (Jol\tll(lf!) Slloflun t Molll 1'11111\J' SkJ' (TOdd) JIT O•nctr (Wflll1mll MtMY l(Jd (O'lrl.ii) Ul'ICM Smll4Qt (S!lflt11vlllt > Alte·llltJIJtt M1[11tlc LM G. (M!Utrl llOUlltTH lltACI -Ont milt. "•<•, Ct1lml111. C1llf.·brec1. All 1011. Pvr" 12100. T• cl1lml!11 pr1ct S3600. Ml11 Llllrtm 1w11u.,,,,l erotfltr 111 LIW ILOtlflilO) COu1lt1 Ann (Holl) Luctv :klo! !Lt Co.II) OJ1mOl'lll PhU (Cr•IO) An<:IJ''I W11Ut"" IGrtnltrl Tl'W Jullt (ThOl"fll!lfll Mttll SuUy (V1ll11 Kt'f) ""' ""' "" ""' "" - llJl'TN llACI -Ont fl"lllt. Pict .• \tttr Cldt j, un<ltr, non-wln111r ~ r1ce1 /NW.:J/, Pur" S2200. Hl,H"t'fll\I H.iirv (J. ltlltYI l'Mt Pl» IA. WJ.rl In f:rtor IG. Holl) WM R!dl1rd D. CL. Dtul!Oll) A•M l'rlmroM CJ. Wltl11m1J Jll .. _rrldt CJ. Wilhtn:IJ Ntlllc.s Mt l' CJ. 0.1'nl1J AMYi lrtnt IJ. Mllltr) Al" lllt lMt ANIJ'I Dud (M. Jon11) SIXTM U Clf -°"' milt. P1c1. c11rm111,. All tiff. f'urM uooo Toit cl1!ml119 11rlc1 NOOO. I ll Vll'ICt IMl .... r) 50!» Choice il'1ln11r IM111rrl SOCO Mlu Mltelow 0 (LI COJle ) 6000 DAILY PILOT S11ff Pllolt K. W. G. IVoll1rol 50!:0 i::W~0r!fi~~~,=~ll = SON MATT, MARTY' KEOUGH CHECK OUT THE BASICS. 011111 Oa11l1 (W'!IMl1rl 6000 ___________ _:_ _____ _:__:_::._;:_:__::_:.:_:_:_:.:_::_:_:__:_.:_:::__::::::::_ ____ _ Nltk1w1mou1 Star (W!lllall'IS} 60(0 SIVIHTN lllAClf -One ma~. Pat~. Cltimlnt. AH 1111. l'ur1e SJeOa. Tep clalml1111 prltt 110,IOO. Worllw·OICll'll·llmt {Jof'lfll(lll) GrMttbtrg 0'8r!t n IMlllfr) ~M ·~· ... l,V .... IWlllMtl Jlllln OM (81Uey} 1111 l ltlf'lt tVoll1rol Mr. M1tt I . (J-1) llltflll'f (L-O) Glorwl!'lf lltnnell) ""' ..., ... ... 10,llOO l lOHTH llACI -0119 !PIHi Peet. C1t llfllfll. All '"'· I'-&000. TOP d11ml111 trlu Sl1.JOO. TIM Gtr4tnt •ct1rv. Sc.Clrc.titr Wtvt I l~n1tl) l'r .. Mttltltr fllrkl\9r) Good Kint (Cr1lg) Ayr Slud1nl IWl!U1m1) ao lo 1t1n11r llthou!h) Cha!KI 8 ulltr fO.nnl1J INU SOlt ll 18t11t'fl OltmOll,. KIM (Moll) \0,000 """ 11,500 """ 11.000 12,000 11.000 11,000 HIHTH UCI -ON m11t NCI. All I HI, llOll•Wll'lnt!'" SJ000 lf11·7'. Alto en1!bl1 t10t1·wlt111er 17JOO I" 1t11·1fn t10t1-Wlnrier of 11200. Flrt! mon1y ln 1111 3 1t1rl1. ICO·ll P11r1t S2500. OUtflnt P1I IJ. MQllarlth) M'f Otlll1~ fJ, l11feyJ Tl!ll!ff•H Colt CG. 9erk114!'l Mll1 Oukk1!111 (0. 8eltllchl NtVtdl 8111 10. Meyoc:kt) LtdY A""'l°' CE. StrN1r!l J!Jdy !todllt'f CA. Win .. ,) Jtwlorl MCll'ltwk {I, Whffttrl Coast Area Net Results \ltnllv M1"1tn \llt le Cll l•I Tut1!11 Sllll!n )oltMll {Ml IC$1 lo ~Irv {l ) 7-6; lotl to Trcttter l"'i .Cl•f. CMmtk. '-11 IMI TO Sd'ltefer • .H. Wtlktr {Ml Iott .4-<1, '"'' won 7-!1 ~.a. Btrrv 1"1 \otl ~. :H; wen 6·4, o.J. TuttM M ail 04. 1 ... l..t. 7-6. Ooull!K Forton t nd lrown (Ml loit to Fe""'tr tn.:1 Htl t r j'.Tl ~7. 3-6: .Sef. Sml!h tlld HatellOrl ( / 6-1, ..... M111rer 111(1 Wtll•n M) IDtl 1-6, 11-6, 1'6, u . . Junior \11nllv Ml111H VJtlj (tllol (4'i1)T111ll11 1111111 arown (Ml elef. F1r,.,,er (Tl ,.,; elef, Mtl~n lo-2 Knl!t fM ) 1011 .W, U . Mllltr (M) Clef. Ttm~le fTl 6-lJ Otl. Stt1rlt 6-1. MCCtrlhy f'-"l won 7·.!; 101! 34. 0011lll11 R11ktl1ll1 tnO Fr9derkk !Ml l~t lo ~etrl end G1Jltm1n IT} :M; Cit/. Otvlf or ... 111 •-2. Krottl1d 1nd Whllttker (Ml won 7.J, .,_ \11r1llY S..1' (ltmtrlte IOl f11) ,OO!hlll S!nt!tt %1rn (F) lftl. Mtdd«k1 !Sl 6-1: del, l(lnt ISi "'°: Clef. lttllt (51 lo-2J Cltl. Kroelus (SJ «I. Golden West Ho sts Southern Cal Relays Approximately 800 junior college track and neld athletes are expected to parti"clpate in Thursday's annual Southern California relays at Golden West College. Field events 'for the four divisions will be hosted by Fullerton JC (Division Il, Cer- ritos (Division II J. Cypress (Division III) and Orange Coast {Division IV). All begin at110 a.m. There will be one running event in the morning -the four·mile relay. That's set for 10 at Golden West. The rest of the day's pro- gr_am is sched uled to begin at 2 o'clock with the 480·yard shuttle hurdles. The open two- mile run winds up the day's activities at 5:30. Los Angeles City College, El Camino, .Long Beach, ML San Antonio and Fullerton loom as the favor ites in Division 1 with Golden West, Grossmont and San Diego Mesa expected to battle for team honors in Division II. In Division Ill, Santa Ana. Compton and Chaffey appear as the sfr()ngest teams with LA Southwest expected to take honors in the fourth 'division. Saddleback will compete in Division lV with Orange Coa st spikers seeing action in Division 11. Team Entries Division I -Los Angeles CC, Pierce, LA Valley, El Camino, Long Beach CC, Full erton. Pasadena, J\.1t. San Antonio, Bakersfield. the Canyons, Taft, Palo Verde, Miramar: Imperial Valley, Victor Valley, Barstow. TIME SCHEDULE Field Events (all at 10 a.m.) Division I -FuJlerton JC; Division II -Ce r r it o s : Division III -Cypres s; Division IV -Orange Coast. Running Events 10 a.m. -Four-mile relay: 2 p.m. -480 low·high shuttle hurdles; 2:45 -440·yard relay; 3 -Sprint medley relay; 3:20 -Distance medley relay; 4 -880 relay; 4:20 - Two·mile relay; 5 - Mile relay; 5:30 -Open two-mile run. Area Sports Calendar Tu11G•Y IM1r. 111 •r•eb111 -Bo!!e Granai tou•lll!r,, Sin It An.a Elki tourney, Mir• Cot a Mur.-.ey, Octidemel .~! s oy t h e r n C.tl!lcrnlt Colle11e O :Xll. Ttnnt1 -UC lrvlnt 11 UCLA 12). Swlmmln(I -Musting Jnvlra110111t t ! Co1t1 Mesa. Wtdn11d;i11 fMtr. >ti Baseball -Solt• Grande tourney S.tnll Ant Elk' tourn,v. Mirt Cost; tournev, Plu1 X 1t Mater Del (l:B), UC Irvin~ at Unlv,nl!y of Sen 01~0 11:30). Cltru1 It! (.old'n Wtil (first roYnd 01 Ct••v Stt1111t1 toYrney, (l.J.OJ, Tll11rsC11v fM1r, l G) T•tek -Ma!~r Oe! 11 SI. Antf\onv (l.l~l-.Sou!M1r11 Calllorn11 Junior Coll191 ltt1avt ti Goldtn Weit (1:J.O). 811eb.all -8ols1 Granat iournev, SA E l~• 1011r11ey, Casev St1noel tourney, .Swlmml!; -El Camino 11 Golde11 Wesr (7:3 J, Two Swim Changes Recorded Better times were recorded up and do\vn the line in Orange Coast area prep swim circles in the last week but on· Jy two changes occur in top spots in the Orange Coast area swim honor rol l. Corona del hfars' Bruce Krumphotz takes over the premier spot in the 50 freestyle following his winning mark of 22.5 at Saturday's se~ cond annual Orange County varsity swim games a t Foot hill. Jn the same meet it was Huntington Beach's CI a y Evans who stormed to a 53.1 100 Oy in the prelims. Krumphotz moved out Jack ~abashoff (Fountain Valle y) 1n the 50 free \vhile Evans replaced Krumpholz in the butterfly event. Evans' 1:59.0 in the 200 in- dividual medley betters the top mark in the latest CIF release of best times by over a second. \11n1t11 Orar!Clf! t911st Art• 1wlm hcncr roit bi$fd on w1nnlna tlmn 111 dul l meeri tnCI rtcorde<1 limes In 1nvit1!1onel1. 100 Medl•v R:elt~ -1, Cl'AI• M'tl 1:~;,•,2. M1rln1 1:46.l J, CdM 1 ;4~.T. ""' ''e -I Jack ea11a5llolf !Foun· llln Vtllt'f) 1'•5.•. 1, Kevin Asht tNew· PO•IJ 1,49,3 3. STtVt Marron CCostt Mesa ) 1:~.a. 100 I ~\'!. M!l!lev -1. C/ftY Elltns fl11Jn!l1111tDl'I Se•thl 1(S90 2. Hft•rv ' •,•lme,r ICdMl 2(0'/.1 l. Jack e111 a1hofl oun aln Valley) 2:09.4. 50 Frtt--1. e ruct 1Crumol'lc11 ~Cd1Ml 22.S ?. Jack S•lltsholf !FoYnltln c~~;~,~Pi\ 1 J. Tim Sorlnoer rsa,.. ' 100kF1 Iv -1. Cl1v Evans (H yn!inloon '' "<'•" $3.1 2. ICt"llfl Athe !N,w11crfl . ll•uct Krumohoti ICdMl $6 6. 100 Free -1. 8ruce l(rumohclr By ROGER CARLSON Ot th1 01J1Y f'Hot Sl•ff The !iaying goes that time changes aU , but in the case of Ri chard Martin Keough, you'd hardly know it by looking at him. Today, 20 years since the glory days at Pomona High. Marty Keough has ex- perienced a physical change netting fi ve pounds. And hi! youthful appearance belies his 37 years. and bad days. "The m~t fun I b.ad in pro ball was when I was with Cin- cinnati, because we were a good ball club fighting for a pennant. "You can be a litUe happier U you're not playing as much as you like when your team is winning all the time," says Pomona's finest product. His major league career spanned nine years after 51 campaigns in the minors his name appeared on the rosters of the Boston Red Sox, Cleveland lndian.!i, \Vashington Senators. Cincy. A t 1 a n t a Braves and the Chicago Cub.!i. One of the things that pro- v!d a drawing power to the Orange Coast area for Marty and his fa mily was the ocean area and he packed the fam i- ly up and came south last year. With son Matt destined to even better things at Corona del Mar as a 5enior it appears the Keough tradition of athletic endeavors isn't finish· ed yet. ... 1'11111 SllfHlll'ltll E.UTtltN CON,IRfNCI Alltnllc CH11l1l111 llOJl(lll Wfll Liii l'ct, 01 u u .HJ Ntw Vo•~ Phlltdelph/1 l ullt lo 41 J.f .JIJ 30 J2 ·* 12 '° .f6' c1ntr11 OfYl1le11 1111!mor1 31 41 .MS At!1111t 3' 16 .Qt Cl11elnn1t1 31 fl .371 tl•~•ltflll 21 '' no WISTIRN CONl'IRINCI MllWlll Olllltlon MUwt ukM 63 lt Ch lCIDQ !7 U Pf\cl!'l!I If 33 Ottroll 26 ~ 'Miiie D!Yltlo~ LM Anoeltl •• ll Gollftfl Stttt JI ll 511"1• 47 1S Mou1ron ll 41 Porlltl'ld It 6'I $1111!11~'• rt11u1~ 81lllmor1 119, 8uff1to 101 .~I .... .m .4lJ ·"' I " ,. t ' " ' " " " " " " Once the cha ri smatlc tailback that led the Red Devils to the CIF football champ ionship, and the CIF's player of the year first in foot· ball, then baseball, he's now the scouting supervisor in Charge or West Coast opera· tions for the San Diego Padres. Says Keough Cl11Cln11111 135, t11v1l1nd 1n Lot A.nl41e• 124, S11"I• M Mout1ori 131, 'ortl•lld '" He remains the only athlete in CIF Southern S e c t i o n history (major schools) to be named player of the year in football and then gain a similar honor in another sport. Keough and wife Sharon brought their family south from Lafayette (near San Francisco) and they're cur- rently residing in Balboa Island. The near fu ture prom- ises a permanent residence in Corona del Mar, His son, Matt, is a junior at Corona de! Mar High and is the Sea King's No. 1 shortstop. He was also a factor in the school's brilliant 23-3 basket- ball season just concluded. The appearance of Matt in varsity competition en the prep level presents another chapter in the amazing athletic endeavors of the Keough family. Marty's older brother, Tom- my, was a star punter for California's Rose Bowl team of 1951 and later earned All· American status. A teammate of Tommy's on that Golden Bear Rose Bowl squad was Jackie Jensen . A younger brother. Artie, starred on the high school level and is now the golf coach at Alta Loma High. And the youngest of the Keoughs is still active in the major leagues. That's Joe, who is toiling with Kansas City. Marty's daughters are also athletically inclined. Stacy (13 ), Dale (11 ) and Raeni (8) compete in track and field with the Orange Coast Track Club. And if that's not enough, Marty says his father was probably a better athlete than any of them. "My dad. Zeke, did It All. One of his most prized memories was when he pitch· ed and beat USC twice in one year during the 20s. "He still lives in Pomona and tries to miss as few sporting event! as possible," says Marty. The latter's most treasured moment in prep circles was that 1951 December night at Mt. San Antonio College when he nearly single handedly kill· ed Monrovia in the CIF foot- ball finals . 26-13. Coach Harold Hopkins and his Red Devils employed a spread formation with Keough the lone running and passing threat behind the great block- ing of Bill Hardy. IOOllon 133, OtlrOll 1!0 Today's Athlet,es All1n!1 UO. N1w Vert lilt GolClf!< St1!1 114, l'hlltdllll~lt IU ... C·ICtnhK~'f Vrrg1n11 Ntw Yark l'lorllfllnt C1roll111 PJ"sburtPI 1 111 OJ11lt.ltf'I WOii LNI f'cl. t i u ,, .tos u 31 .SU More Specialized 43 40 .!11 lS ,, .•27 ,.. ,, .410 u J1 .lO.S WUI DIYlllM C·U!th Se 1) " "~ " n~ " Does every possible prospect for a future in professional baseball get a fair look by the pro scouts? That question mu.st linger in the back of many a prep and junior college player 'vith a hankering for the big time. Marty Keough, West Coast scouting supervisor for the San Diego Padres organiza· tion, provides some answers U> those who might feel the scout doesn't see enough when at- tending prep tussles. "You hope you're seeing the individual for three years. And frankly it's not a case of watching to see whether he gets the key hit or strikes a batter out. "We're looking for whether or not a kid can hit, run and th row. "And a lot of our work is done while the teams are tak- ing their infield practice. We can usually tell by watching someone in action very briefly whether or not he has the tools." says the one-time ma- jor leaguer. Keough, a CIF AAA (there was no AAAA classUicationJ player of the year in football and baseball, says the athletes of today are bigger, faster, GWC Nine In Tourney This Week Powerful Cerritos College is favored lo capture the fourth annual Casey Stengel baseball tournament set to b e g i n Wednesday at Golden West and Cerritos. Golden West's Rustlers bat. tie Mission Conference leader Citrus at 2:30 \Vednesday in the opening round. And defending champion East LA clashes with Cerritos in another key first round tilt. Games will be played at Golden West and Cerritos Wednesda y and Thursday with the championship finals (at best of three series) slated to start at Golden West Friday at 2o30, · • Here are the pairings for t.be first round : , (At Golden Weit) 10:30 -U>s Angeles CC vs. and smart~ than in his prep days two decades ago. "And, what's more, they're more specialized. It seems to be a year·round deal in any particular sport now. "In my time a real good athlete was able to spread himself around. I th i n k baseball gets hurt a bit that way," opines the ex-Pomona High flash. Too. Keough says t h e average tiigh school baseball player now is more cognizant of the fact scouts are in at- tendance. "When I played I can only remember a couple of scouts and that was because they came up and talked to me. "Now kids are much more aware of your presence," says Keough. Keough signed with the Boston Reel Sox for a fat bonus as a 17-year..old and he says he's not regretted the move. Most of his ·work with the Padres in his four-year stint has been with players from Northern California. The most notable prospect touted by Keough is John Scott, currently working with the Padreis' San Diego con- tingent. lll(ll1n1 u 36 01!111 '' 42 Denver Sol '' Mtmphi• 26 W c<llnehtd CllVIJIOll 11111. luf'Hlty't R1t11tl'I 01nv1r lilt, N1w York ti lfldllnt ti, 01U1t •t P1"1bu•Oh lll, Vlrolnlt lli!I "'"'"'cky 101, ltlcrlCl/1111 1114 On!y Olmts tt lltdultd, Monlff Y'I Ol!MI No 11mt1 Khtdul1d. .., c-11011011 New Vo'k Montrttl Toronia Oetrol! lluflalo Vtncouvtr 1111 O!vr11011 W L T .. 11.,0A " 10 11 117 311 , .. 41 1! lJ Tot 30f IH IA '' lJ IOl 29G 1'3 31 )!I 14 ,, '" 20I J1lolti'JU2UI B '2 1t 49 ltt ~ 19 .. , 4S ltl 2N W11t Ol11ltton t-CMttO'O .W 11 U 10? 143 lMI MlnlltU>tt .U 21 ll ll 2(11 1M SI. Louit 21 31 11 "9 204 ?JI ll'hlladtl~hle JJ l7 11 62 lit 22• lll!!sb11•0M 24 ll 11 61 l'OJ 241 C.tlilornlt 21 36 lt Ml l'O' 211 Los Angtle1 ll 4t I u llf 21$ C-tlinchtd Cllvltltf'I ll!lt. Sun41y•1 rt1111lh e os!on $, Monlrt1I 4 M!11neso!1 J, "ltw York 9 PMllldel~Ma '· V1ncou.-1r t Pt!!S(lurgh J, 8Ulltln 2, llf Chicago •, St. Louis G O~I~ gam11 •ChtdUltd. Mond1y'1 Gtmtt No Otrr>Os scht elultd. Tu11d1y•1 OIMQ llosto11 at 01!roll V•ncou~tr ti SI. l.wi1 Phll1detphl1 11 Ml11ntMtlt Only game1 sehldul~. William s Assists UCLA To Outrun Tennessee LOS ANGELES -Paul The difference was in the field W i 11 i ams. ex·Huntington events, where the Bruins Beach High whiz, finish ed outscored the Volunteers fl·17. third in the 380 (1:5J.2) and Summ1rle1 of Sut1d1'('1 dutl l•tct t'CdLll~ICI mter bflwee11 Tinnel.JN t<ld led off UCLA 's victorious mile 4•o r1t1~ -i. ucLt E' "'' 0 G1C1d l1 -Edrnon1011 olO 0 ', Tt. lbton. relay team with a 49.2 leg as •1.•. · · · tn"'""· th B . Shor -l , Mock, T, J7·ll~ 2 Ptgel e rums polished off visiting UCLA. st.-1•,,. ~. 1C 11111n T ll.~ • Miit -1 l otlttr ·T · 01 · Tennessee Sunday, -s1, Ill' a •~~~·son. i •·11 1· ,· 'c' ·'· 1• ~ UCU, 4: U.?." . ' ' ' hlCOll'll, dual track meet. Po!• vay11 -1. Tricir,1111 IM N UCLA freshman quarter s~cond or , lhTrd: co,,.,oo Tors· 1111td ,o «l~' ooen<na hrlohl of 1S·O o miler Benny Brown, the T. ilr~ Jii~n.~~~htic,f.~4.1i,2j M1"1n1. muscuJ ar l8-year-0ld, won the i~~~~1~cLA. 1;3G-":.'7. ~ic~~;.,·J~s.J!·Ll: 440 in 46.4, equalling his aU- team best, and then ran the d1~;:u~Ll;. ~eiwJ~-H~~kea,:,0"'t:4r~·0~.~.s. third leg on the Bruins' mile Echc11, uC L~?"',~s.s03 · ~c1L~, ?. • 1. I 9 $Wind 49 ,et ,uCLA, re ay team in a swift 44.7 r@i~'d ouriios~.o.n .. ove' 111ow1b11 tor Seconds makl, g Ol1tu1 -1. Fri"" UCL• . n up some 35 Gc'd~n. UCLA 1 ,_. J • in.1 /· yards. He handed the baton to J40.11. • .• OtG1ora11. • J h S h M:!okln;-{· T_~omtt. T. 1:Jl.!. 7, o n mit , who cruised to the ucLA. 1·:51.; i.s2.1, J. P, w1111tm1. front and held off Willie 1,!·.0nw1~~an:i.1dtd i,. ,0:0•1n~. UCLA. 2•· Thomas. c11 • m.11.h.. 1. ee.,. 2'3!~n. UCLA. 14..S"I, "-· Geitr. l , 24. Smith, who sat out the tail 2."'l ~u.111•1 -1. corv11. UCLA $l.t end of the 1971 season with s.i.01 ow•,.. r. s.t.6. 1. Wt r1h. Uct.A; "There's no doubt that win· ning the CIF championship in football was the highlight of my prep career, but in pro baseball I had some good days Chaffey. hepatitis, ran only that relay t. l-'W17.~~'."i. 6..s'.· ~~c~i'i.i;.0UCLA. 1.o•i'i, leg and was timed in 46.1 to Trlp!1 lump -1. l!lutri.' ucu, 5,. J V Tennis Th ' 46 6 UCLA h $'~. w111a .• 1e1eo ! ' .,, o ~ 2 F omas . . won t e u~• . .e., $0.1. i: R8dc11if.° r. •s ... lr"''"· race in 3: 12.9 to 3: 13.1 for the oi':On7" u1cJ."11':1'.1";. U8CLA. i 0.1. 1, (At Cerritos) visi•ors. Thrte-mllt -i. l!lrcw11• o;ci·1 . • 21.4• 2:30 -Golden West vs. Citrus W1l11btro /F l WOl'I ·-4, l--1 , •-l. l--0. on IFJ won l ..t. '"3. 6-1, 6.(l. C. rrlson (F) WOii I·•, 6-4, 6-0, 6.0 DOUDlff Division If -G~Jden \Vest. Orange Coast, Cerritos, Santa Mon ica, LA Trade Tech, San Diego Mesa, Grossmon t, San Bernardino, East LA, LA l"rldly fMlr. )1) ~C?Ml 49.~ 2. Jack 8~ba,hoff IFOU"l~lll s1ub1ll -&olta Grall<le 1ournev, SA a lt'f) 49.1 l. Tim S11r!ngtr CStM Elks !ourney, ca1e:i;, S!fnotl tournt•, Ciemen!el SO.t. Jj"'°' \ltt1llr Or•''"'''' ' /. , b • 12 "I uc ~c~ Frtt -I. Jack B•bt"1>c!f (Foun. L""" "! 01 StCldl••··• 10:30 -Allan Hancock vs. U~A do mt n ate d the Et1~lc.c.u,Vf[A· 14 :oc.i. 3: ~·:~!oi: Pl'erce b t T M11. r~18v -1 UCLA ,. w''!' sprints u ennessee cair ::·1· J -~~tn•>tt 51.t '. Grown .4.1, A'!;~ 2:30-Cerritos vs. East LA. tured the three longer races. 11;-,,;,, ·!co?'t T~nn~·~· i+'.3;l;n""1..., J, rr1sal'·Lln<l (Fl dt l. RYU,11· Ht mbr ($) 6·2, 6.0; 1111. L111,·Browt1 {Sl t<O • ..0. IY 1tt1·Sll'll!h IFl w~ll 6.0, 6.0, .. HarOOr. ' 1 a e IC '"' • 11<11 V•<<••I >.••.• ). C''' <••"> '"•" ,.,,_ -lrvlnt or Ctl Sia ' fOomlnvuer 11 ll1l ... " " ·~ •• Goll -UC trv!M ,5, ChtPma11 al ''nota11 Bel ch) 3:51.0 3. Kevin AtMt McC luno Ill def. Fouthe• !SJ 6-1; Gr~en ltiver (I), INfwocrl) :59.6, dtf, Ntl10t1 6-01 def. Vtn 6-1; d1F. Tt11n l' -uc ll'\llnt 11 S!tMord Ill 100 Sac~ -I, Larrv e1~1te•m1f'I C1rt1r 6-2. s.,...immlno t 1 M r GI do CE'sta~cl•) 59;D; 1. Cl1'f Evans (Mun· Wllll1m1 (L) wen 6-1; (051 ~7; won• lnvrt·81lon.i. -01 1 111 1 '" rl li~olon \ $9.J; l. e ruc• Krumaho!t 2. 4-l. , ... S1t11rd1y (Aprll 1J. (CdM\ S9 6 Vtorr>tns !Ll won 6-2: 6-l. 4.0. 6-1. Jultlor Vtnfl'f o· . ' Ill R' H d e.ueb1ll -Ca1ov Stengel lcurntv. 100 8r1atl -1. Mlk! YtrwDOCI ICO\lf Arm11rono (L) ~" .!-!; '°'' ~s. H ; IVIS!On -10 on O, Crew -UC S•n 0 if1!C. uc 1rvlne al Meu l l;Of.2 2. Scott l'>elt0<1 (Fou111aln won •·2. a.11 CllP'llllla en 1111 l'oatllltl Ri"•ers>'de. Ventura, Chalfey, NtwDCrt !9 '·"'·/' Or1nvt Co.tu, use va11evl 1:060 l. ITlel F•anlc 11rcwn1 ~111 I I t i N~WDCrl 11:30 , IF1111n•a111 Vt lltv\ and Colin Htrdv d (IJ!ro.Lec" Ill 8Md Sotvldln, C\I lllll•s Cypress C'1tru S t A Trnnr1 -uc Irvine 1t Ctlllornlt 4 Me••~al 1:06,J. el Me1e1owi 1ne1 111111 /Sl t·J, .. 1 Muttr 'J dt!. IC•llY f~\ 6-!, 6.0 ' S, an a na , (Sn kel,v) l p.m. •IXI il'rft '1:11111 -1. Fov"Ttl~ V~lle'f loll! wit" C!tm a~d Mof/m1n 2.,S, 6-0 Grte Cl') wan 6-1. f.O. Southwestern, Santa Barbara Trect -us1u 11 UC lrv!~e (1). ~:~.i'. 1. CdM 3:24.1; l . Coit• Mesi Oenton •nCI Johnson CLJ won .. 1, H1 lodv IF) del. L:llkt /Sl 6-' C mpto Moo k GI d I ;===~~~~~~::====;,;oiii:iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'i;0:i"i;'i;"'i;·;;•;;o:;. _______ ;;;; Z•t1 F l 1011 10 oodtr isl !-1. o n, rpar , en a e, Double• Palomar. THE BEST Tri T"orp IF> def OllOll·Ntl1c11 !$1 ~·/ . G•M ...... MtdllOtkl CS) 6·4. Divis ion IV -Saddleback, ncadcr~hip pol I! provt 011 11.1m11~ (Fl wo11 •·•· 6·2. San Diego, West LA , Antelope "Pean uts" is one of tJ1e v1r1u, Valley, College of the Desert, \vorld"s most popular comic flllll lU~~1 ,!,~~1 s1odteb1ek ]\1ira Costa. LA Southwest, strips. Rcftd It dally in the M C••••r ! 1ltd 11·1~01111• 1s1 -·IT San Jaci·nto C II g f DAILY Pll.01'. "~ dtl, 81nl1 1 di!. R:o~m 6..0' llt!; ,;;;;i;";;;'.;iiiii;;;;;;ii;i~' .ii;i'ii;ie;;;ieiio~iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;ii;; a lftnko .. ,. IVIOr (L) !ltd 1-1; won .. !: la.I )..,s; _.. . i" jll !Oii °"'6l Wl)fl •·1 .4. (,.,I, Ptll dlllO' <Ll won 6·1. U . •·1, ,.,., DOUb1ft lttlft11 t nd Levin IL) llt !. Ott t llel ISi .. 1 ... ,; dtf. 0 Yrr I O'ICI Vt " rllOVtn 6-41, 6-0, I ll Ind Ten5!tf111 IL l won 6-l, 6· 41 .. , .... ,_ .. !, SIGMA THREE fREEs AN UTIMATl ON A I U-OLA-ALA-M ,O_ YOU-I USINHI Lt1• er '"re.hue CALL ID·S3" .., lnfwm•tltft Meet the Man Behind t he Safeco Smile. Sefeco ln1ut1nc• on yo1Jr ctr, ho"lt, boil. bu1i111t1, h11lth, lift ind 1v1rythin9 1111 you 1111..,,, Smile, Yo u're With 5afeco. ~ BOB PALEY ~ •A F E CO INSURANCll 474 E. 17TH STREET COStA MESA 642°65 00 -546·320~ DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Lease or .Buy All Models ... DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2490 HARBOit ILVD. #t FAllt DltlYI COSTA MESA Ph. 546·80 17 CPIN I OATS A Wl!IK l r)O A,M, TO lfiM 11',M, I UNDAY1 II AM. TO, f'~ I , .... 101· • l'll!llt ,.._ ... -~ --Ml·Mll di from Lona. Beach to San frenclsco 4tlmea a day. ~~~--=-~~~:.::::..:::..:::: Or take I.II to Sacra mento or San Diego. Over 160 fllghts • dty bttween Nortliern and Southern Califom la enable you t lake PSA often. With pl!1surt. Alao with lowest 1/r fares. You~ travel 1g1nt knoWI Whit. good tor you. PIA QIVff JOU •Ifft. ~1 s f ' ( ' I w 38 Ta \Vi six Li ' sl Yac land Whit Ra skip Lon first hand Cla skip LAY Fi diff, Club Cl 11igar \\'hit Tri (I ) ian, 13) DRY A To dicap tries. 1 radii drev,i Satur Tro RH The I' Fict.io µvc , BYC, , LU Carl bet\\' NHY Fund TE namt (2) ~ ml re. Sill Carl There (3) t Andy Uill ~ , . • • ""1ns Lipton ~ DAILY PILOT J9 Monday, Marth 27, 1~72 Balboa Yacht Cl ~ Trophy· the Hard Way - FINAL GUN -Balboa Yacht Club's Tomahawk gets shouts of approval from the spectator boa t as she crosses the finish line to wi11 the Sir Thomas Lipton Challenge Trophy al San Diego. ' ' l WELL DONE -J ohn Arens, ow net of th<;,.{ihl son· 38 Tomaha\\·k. congratulates BYC skipper Bill Taylor for bringi ng the yacht home first Sunday to \vin the Lipton Challenge Cup for th e first ti1ne in six years. Liglit Wi11ds Harriper Tri-Island Runni11g· Light sout herly \\'1nds: made a slow race of Los Ange:es Vac:ht Club's 153-n1ile Tri-ls.- land Race. !he third of the \Vhitney Series. Raglin1e A Cla ss A hoal skippered by ~1ort Kaske~l. Long Beach Yacht C!ub y,·as first to fini sh Sunday. but the handicap honors went to the Class D entry Counterpoint skippered by Dick Deaver, LAYC. Finale. sailed by Ray Cun- dilf, Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club was the overall and Class A \\'inner of the Dun- 11igan Rock race in the Lit.fir \Vhitney Series. Tri-Island Race over<.ill - (t) Counterpoint; !2) Cenlur- ian, Larry Folsoin. SI BYC: 13) Dakar, \Villiam Goodley. DRYC. CLASS A-1 l ) Tribute, tlank La1\·hom, B\'C: t2J Sumutra, A! i\1arHn . LA YC; 131 Concer- tc. Irving Loube. llYC'. CLASS R--{ I) Robin \\1est. .John Fie:d. CYC ; (2) Red Rooster, John Callev. CVC : j3) Blue Norther, Slillivan & Allen. LA VC. CLASS C-i I) Ccnturian ; (2J Dakak, (3) Tabasco, George Grififth, LAYC. CLASS 0-(l) 'Counterpoint; (2) Wa r Paint. Jim Hokanson, LAYC; (3) ln\'ictus, lf ugh Lamson, LBVC. Overall Dunnigan Rock Race -\I) Finale: 12) Tmpossib~e. Fred Patricio. CBYC : (3 1 Tan· queray. Dave Searing. KHYC. CLASS A-(1) Finale; 121 Foxr Lady, Bruce Crove r, PMYC : (3) Orange B!ossoni. ~1ike Kinney, P~f\'C. CLASS B-(IJ lm po e ible: (2) Tanqueray; (3 ) Ardy J!, llarry Carr, LSYC. Antaunl BYC Eveiat • By ALMON LOCKABE\: Of Ille Dtil~ Pl191 Sl•ll The Balboa Yacht Cl v"on the Sir Thomas p t o n Challenge Trophy unday - the hard 1vay. And in losing t hallowed perpetual for the tirsl time in six years, San Diego Yacht Club went nearly all oul- next to last. In y,•inning the ornate trophy for the first time since 1967, the BVC en try led !ro1n start to finish. despite giving up more' than a minute on the final downwind run by ty,•o spinnaker foul-ups that almost cost then1 an ot he r,vi s e brilliant race. lfere is ho\v it went. BYC skipper Bill Taylor look the Ohlson-38 Tomahan•k across the starting line near lhe leeward rn ark \Vith clear air and a good jump on th e olher nine boats in the race. San Diego Yacht Club's Cer- r.1• Driscoll. at the helm of his sleek, black-hulled 3 9 -fo o l Nova. got himself in troub le at the start \Vhen he was caught barging and \\'as fo rced over the line early. In returning to restart he lost nearly three minutes. Also having to restart was ?11ission Bay Yacht Club's Prime Time. 1\1eanwhile, Taylor and his cre1v kept Tomahawk moving through the Jumpy seas kicked up by a 12-1a.knot sou therly that had been blo1ving all nigh!. Close to his 1veather quarter was Don Edler in Newport Harbor Yacht Club's entry, the Ranger-33 America Jane. It looked like a race between these two until one looked down the middle of the course and saw Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club'll Cal·36 Pleiades which had tacked early and had a good slan t on the port tack. Edler and Taylor apparently took the look and soon flopped over onto the port tack. But \Yhen the bQats \\•hich 1 had taken the right-hand side I of the course after the start crossed tacks ,,·ith the boats on lhe left hand side. it Y.·as l apparent 1hat To1na hawk was holding a ele<1r lead. I At the first \veather mark she had a 1ninule and :JO seconds lo spare o v er Southwestern Yacht Club's Vinma r \v hich failed to lay the mark and was forced to an ex· tra short tack. Taylor's gang made ·a perfect spinnaker se t and was· stretching their le.ed to the reaching mark. The order of rounding the weather mark was Tomahawk . Vinmar, •America Jane. Donlee (Santa Barbara Ya cht Club), Pleia· des. Kahili (Huntington Har- bou r YC). Decision tDel Rey YC), Prime Time, Mission 8<1}' YCJ Jenner (\Vindjam- n1er YC) and Nova. Toma hawk increased her time split to one minute. 38 seconds at the reaching mark, and Plciades 3.nd moved into th ird place behind Vinmar. A perfect. jibe at the reaching mark helped increase Tomaha "•k"s lead to one Ahmanson Delay Told Ne"'port Harbor Yacht Club has announced a change in dates for its Ahmanson Series. The Catal ina \Vest End Race. scheduled for April 1-2 has been postponed to June 1().. 11. The change was made to appease skippers and crev.·s 1vho objected to a l\v<Klay race O\'er the Easter weekend. In its place, the opening race or the series \viii be the 11unlinglon Tidelands race Saturday. April 1. This race \Vas ori ginally scheduled for June JO. 161 Race in Easter Regatta Topped by the Pacific 11an- dlcap Racing Fleet \\•ith 20 en- tries. Balboa Yacht Club's traditional Easter Regatta dre\v 161 boa!s in 20 classes Saturday and Sunday. Troph.v v.·inners were : RHODES.33 (7) Ill Therapy, Gale Post. B\'C: l~l Fiction. Bla ire B a r n e t t e , BYC; (3) Impulse. Paul J\1arx, BVC. . LUDERS.16 (10) -Ariel. Carl Davis, L YC: (2) tie between Haiku. Rick Gantner, NHYC. and Wlndsong, Bill Funclenberg. NHYC. TEMPEST (6l -(I) No name, Tom Gates. SCCVC: (2 ) ~lucho Gusto, ~1 ike Dun· mire. SFVSC. SH IELDS \Ii) -Ill Jean , Carl Reinh;irt, NltYC: ~21 Theresa, Bob Searle!!, BYC; ~31 lie between Kather~nc, Andy fl.1arcus. CYC; Torn1na , Bill M•rtln, NHYC. P-CAT 18) -111 Whisker . Ned 1\1erritt, Kl·IYC: 121 Chaos. ,Joe Blenkinsop, CBYC: (31 Hell F'h·e. Ron Ross, ~l\'C. MERCURY 161 -(11 Oul3 Site,, Austin Lysight . CBYC: 12) Till, George Palterson . CBYC: (3l Duet. t . Greene. CBYC. SOLING 19) -Ill Domino. Lanny Coon, NHYC: (11 Seaweed Vt, Fred Miller. SSOC; Cl) No name. carter Ford, NHYC. PHRF (20\ -(I) Niki 11. John Kinkel . VYC: ( 2 1 Twinkle, Dave White, BYC, (3) Sequoya, Jim Moore . SSC. TORNADO (13) t" Pacific Fox. Seamnn & SlrRuss, MYC; (2) Arp;o. Ron Rie1ne rs. CYC: tll Copy Cat, Newman & Llnskey, CYC. SABOT A (9) -(I J Mork Gaudio, NHYC: (2) K . Sch midt. LJYC: 13\ N. Smith, VYC; (4) Mike Arribo, NHVC. SABOT B 151 -11) Mikel Flamso n. BYC : t2t .Jay Lurid.• B\'C. SA BOT C (11-111 E. Shep-I purdson, BYC ; (21 D. Gales.1 B''C. i\·IO!\"'TGOi\1ERY-IO (6 1 (It R. Armslrong. VYC. KITE A 151 -Bruce T\\'ichell, VVC. OK DINGHY t5) -(ll B. Newlinger, LAYC. LllJ0.14 A (8) -(1) Fang. Don Stoughton, BYC: (2) Phnsl, Alan Olson. BYC: (3) S110'o\•flake, Kelly Snow, HHYC. LJDQ..148 -(1) B. Orsborn , CBYC: (2) B. Uccifcrri. SHYC : 131 G. Wright. SBYRC. INTERNATIONAt,.14 (9) - fl 1 B. ,Curry. ABYC: (2) Pelor Gale<. DYC: 131 G. Sta rk, PVS.\ THISTLE tSI -(11 Will Templeton. BCYC. · 470 (5) -(ll Dave Ullman. B\'C. ' minute and 55 seconds at the leeward mark as most o( the rest of the fleet "'ere having trouble \vilh th eir cranky chutes after jibing the rhark . 11aving rolled the reef out of !he mains'! on the do1\•n\vind legs. Taylor an d crew elected not to ree f again on the final wind\\•ard leg. \Vilh the \\'ind gusting up lo 18-knots, il may have cost them a little tl1ne. 11er lead \\'as cut to one minute 2Q seconds at the mark \\'ilh Vinmar and Pleiades fighting it out for second. A nd h ere's where Tomahawk's troubles began. In hoisting the chute it \vent up in a hopelessly tight \\Tap. Down it came, but a new one \\'as not ready to set. Precious seconds \vere lost 11·hile the ere\\' got a new chute on deck . When it was finally dra v.•ing. Tomahawk appeared to be far of f course. down,vind from her competitors. Th is put her in a reachi ng SALE ENDS MARCH 31, 1972 All Prices Plus Federal Excise & State Sales Tax SIZE situation v.•lth more speed than Vismar and Pleiades who were running dead downw ind to the fini sh. The Balboa contingent or the a a 2" speclntor breathed e a s i e r • when it was apparent Tomaha11·k had regained her lead. Then it "'ils timt' for <11\ hand s to jibe for th e n1nrk, ~lore trouble for 1·0111ahawk. In the jibing 1naneu\'er the big r chute once again s11·irled into a tight wrap. And on came Pleiades -•· which had overhauled Vinmar -threatening lo dou s e Balboa 's hopes . But this time, the spare chute was ready. Do\1·n "'ent the hopelessly \vrapped one l and up went the spare. Ton1ahawk crossed t he finish line just 30 seconds ahead of Pleiades. fl Nova. meanY.•hile h a d "'-... -, .. overhauled ileeision lo sa\'e ~'!iii' lil!i;~io herself the hutniliation of ·~ .... ,..., finishing in last pla ce, It "'as only the thir~ li me in 10 years that San Diego Yacht Club had lost the trophy which \\'as dedicated to· her by the famed yacht s m a n ·tea merchant Is 1903. In the 59 years it has been raced for it has been \VOn by a club from every area in Sout hern WINNING CREW -Cre\\' of Balboa \·achl Cl ub's 1'0111aha\rk proclaim the.m· selves "Nun1ber One" as lhey are tied up alongside the San Diego Yacht Club dock after \Vinning the Lipton Challenge Cup from left are Skipper Bill Taylor, Jay Linderman, Phil Galsgo\v, h1ike Dri skel, John Thorne and Morrie Kirk. California. \Vhen B\'C won it in 1967 she did so onl y because she finish~ ed second \vhile the 1vi nning SD\'C boa l "·as thrown out on a protes t by a Long Beach YC boat. The Lipton Challenge is a sidden--0.eath ace by boats handicap ratings within 2Lh feet or the mean of the defender and o f f i c i a I challenger. II is raced on a boat·for-boat basis. Ta)1lor himself is a cham- pion in the local Rhodes-33 Class . Bis ere\\' for the Lipton Chall enge consis ted of John Thorne. Phil Glasgoy,·, ~1orrie Kirk, Jifik e Driskcl and Jay Linderman. Tomaha\\'k is a new Ohl son- 38 sloop, designed and built by Ohlson Bros. of Goltenberg. Sweden and ov.·ned by John Arens ot BYC. The order of finish \Vas : ( 1 Tomaha,vk 1 Ohlson-39 Bill Taylor. BYC: '2 Pleiaclcs tCal-36 Richard K. Smylh , CBYr. (3 Vinmar (Rasgcr- 33 Rob Batcher, S\VYC ; (4 Donlee (Ericson-35 Don r-.IcFarland , SBYC: 15) Prime Titnf' 1Cal-33l Le o n a rd \\'atkins, !\1BYC: (61 Anlerica .lane 1 llangcr-331 Don Edler. N ~l\'C : 17) K.:ihili tCal-33 ! \Vil!iam V. \Vright. •llIYC; 18t .Jenner ( Ranger-33) Jame~ Foyrr, \VVC; (9) No\'3 {S & S- :!9l lierry Driscoll, SDYC; t lO \V i\Jiam Berger, DRYC. THIS IS A f ,ULL SIZE "78" SERIES TIRE AND NOT A SKINNY, UNDERSIZED TIRE. WINSTON ® WHEN BOUGHT WITH DUR BONDED WARRANTY YOU ARE PROTECTED- AGAINST NAILHDUS, ROAD HAZARDS, WRECK, COLLISION AND EVEN ' RUNNING FLAT: FULL 4 PLY NO THUMP NO BUMP NO VIBRATION •• TUBELESS WHITEWALLS PRICE';:,':· SIZE PRICE';~" D78·13 or 700·13 ' ......... $19.82 1,,7 J78·14 or 885-14 $26.80 J,,, . ... ' ..... E78·14 or 735·14 ..... ' . ' .. 21.52 J.24 ~ G78-15 or 825-15 .......... 24.07 J.61 F78-14 or 775-14 .... ' . ' ... 22.90 J.Jt H78-15 or 855-15 .......... 25.55 2.11 G78-14 or 825-14 .......... 23.99 2.56 J78-15 or 885-15 .......... 26.02 J.11 H78-14 or 855-14 .......... 25.59 2.75 L78-15 or 915-15 .......... 28.64 .J, 1, STORE HOURS: MON ., TUES., WED., THURS .. FRI. 8:00 A.M .-6 P.M. SATURDAY 8:00 A.M. TO 12 NOON. CLOSED SUNDAY OLIVER AND WINSTON, INC. d.b.a. DELTA TIRE COMPANY 141 E. 17th ST. 645°2010 • COSTA MESA I l ,_ I• I • • • • 20 DAILY PILO T Mondl)', M•rth 27, 197 .. TONJGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS =~~11~kl~at~1 ~!ID~.'~1.Zt 20TH BIG WEEK ABC (/) 8:00 -"A Small Town In Iowa." News- man Harry .Reasoner pays a personal visit to his home town of 1-lumboldt, Iowa . Following is an ABC News Inquiry -''Children in Peril/' an ex· { amination of child abuse in America. CBS 12) 8:00 -"The Last Vik ings." This Na· tional Geographic Society special visit s the direct descendants of the original Viking warriors at their home in North Atlantic islands. NBC (4) 9:00 -"Tell Them Willie Boy is Here." 1 Robert Redford and Katherine 'Ross are reunited in this 1969 movie about an American Indian's ~ search !or identity. KCET (28) 8:00 -''Hansel and Gretel." A spe· cial version of the musical fairy tale features Maureen Forester as the witch with members of the Canadian Children's Opera. KTLA (5) 7:30 -"They Got Me Covered." Bob Hope and Dorothy Lamour star in this 1943 movie about a bungling newsman . ·--·-- The stirring saga of • Grfzzly Monarch'• confllcl with man "Get Hot" A FAMILY TREAT! HELD OVER ,1u1 211d Gr•ot fMt11r• "CATLOW" lf'GI wlrh Yul try.., SOUTH COAST PLAZA #J ALSO R "DIARY OF A MAD HOUSEWIFE" Co11thtvo111 S1111doy fro111 2 P.M. Ends Tonight "LAWRENCE OF ARABIA" f. Sur1l119 Aro11nd tit• World ''FOLLOW ME" ••Ill c1i.r -R•lecl CG) Sttrts W ... n11d•y "BILLY JACK" • "HOUSE OF DARK SHAQOWS" Color -<P91 Monday .. Evening m Qll Spci1111 th w .. 11 "H•nsd ll~~c~·~"~· ~M~-~·~·~·~··~17~1~2~~ 1nd Grtl•I" Contralto M•inffn FOi'· rester is the witcll in Engelbert Humperdirw:k's 1893 musJ~I l1lry· tile, which •Isa re•tures Judllll FOl'sl, Chrislint Anton, Comr!ls Op- thol, •nd At1tnt • Me•dows, •nd 111tm.bers of tht Canadi1n Cllild11n's Oom. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN MARCH 27 1:0011 ma o a Nt .. 0 Ci) WiW WHf Wtlt m llll n111btotia 8) I DrMit If J11111111t di) l([T ~ llt111ph1 ID HM11PldJt Lei11• 111m111• ... 9•"""1 ... cmo-.. l:JOU""""..., 8 Mlwlt: (90) "Tiie 1too11" Perl I (t.11111) '53 -Dean M1rtln, JtrtJ Ltwls. C1J CBS Ntws Writer Cron•1t1 (Jj 'Rt MoOll f1ct111J m Att4y Grillith Sttaw m Nl"llJ 111d l~I Profel!or fD JO)'tl Chit Coob lt}Tr•111r1 a '"'" Acres mo '"'· s.'"'"' ED Yldwll J..n ai... l:OOIJ CIJ Dl!l••" . """ @Trutti II' C....•llctf CJ)-• G Wlllt'1 MJ Unef OAP111-12 m1...,. luq O'J I D111• If Jllnllll fD Hist..., If Art II) T1 le All11111nt11 OJ rum: "MJ Sit Conwld1" a!) Moifttnlls Mllllule• 7:15 mi • .,"""' 7:JO IJ St.Ind Up Mid Chfft Guest b mu •tct&W• (I!)Ninl 1:30 m Mm lriffl1 Aow t:OO 1J Cl) M .. '• LlltJ (R) Once 111lrt fed up with Lucy's fr.eHiclency, H•r· rbon C1rter fires he r 1nd 1epl1ce1 h1r with Exmo Ill, • l111t1slic com· puter, 0fD1'1C Mand11 Movi1! (C) (2/lr) "ltll Tlltm Wllllt loJ Is Hert" (\\·ts) '69 -Robert Redford, Kalh· 1rine Rc~s, Rilbert Blake. An Amer• ican lnl!ian'1 st11ch tor identit~ ln euly 2(1th century C1lllorni1. 0 @@ a> ABC Monday Movie: Two pl1ot pr,i11ms 11r in loni1hrs movie s!~I. "Whetlfl ind Munl0th" Is 1 dtiKlil't d11m1 starrlna: Jack Warde n ind Ch1i!lcpher Slone 1s 1 Jllfr of 11;iv1t1 eytS blsed In Sett· U1, Wash., "ho I~ to solve 1 srn· dical1 murdtf. -r111 r.tw H111tn" start L1it EricUN, Robtrl folWOrth, Kitt JacbM-AiW Jcfathtn Lippe 1s ,aralMlllca fto. lf1 1o ust their ~ 1kllts· .tf • w1 ·1 anun runil toillmu111tr. - @) .... , !C) (tb~ "A .Corid• lol tM ~il4 Min" (com) '67 - Wall1r~M•lfh1u. Robert MorH. fmDo-Rt-MI Clfi The Vlrriftl1n EEN•bW Q) Tbe' PtfMldtrt Comtt1l1n Buddy Hickel!. 1:30 fJ ([) llorh Dir (R) Doris M1rtln D Dr. SJmon Loe•• "1'11kltn lost" exposes 1 drtrlty ratke!eer, pl1yed (R) A youn1 •~P•tt111! ir.o:her needs fly,~ Fo1m1n, 1ftei Mil. f1lrburn. mtd~r her,. When Dr. lockt lfits w laJltt wift or IM publisht1 ol lo lrNt htr, lht youn1 wom•n'1 Todty'I lftlfUint , ftttuils her to husb1nd, who h1d t nvisloned 1 help suPtrvist !ht N1tn1of 1 btn1- Thofe1u !nit lil1 in 1111 wildtrntll, Iii 11111. protests.. 8 letllld I.Mk Hosted by Sim O Movie: (2hr) "1\tJ' Cot Me C.w· Dunnt. ertcl" (com) '43-Bob Hop1, Dor(lfhy (iJ II ..... Lamour, Otto J>r1mln11r. A not too CD LI lltl smut ntW$tl\1n 11ts flrtd l1om his )ob btCA USI ht mutfed I bit story lO:OD. (I) S.111 •Id °''' (R) H•MJ Ci) T1 Till ttit Trllttl · Korm1n ind Robtrt Merrill 1uest. Cl) I Drt1111 el J11nnlt IJ "ns Ceorr• Putnam O Million S Movlt! (C) 2hr) "Tiit 0 !"' ,.., Ct .. Dou1 McClure, lumlnr Hllla" ( ) •56 _ T b Jessica W1lttt •nd Burt Reynolds WU I 1u1st Hunter, N1t1lit Wood. A younr man m Nm Ptll Mitter ISClplna: from a ruthlus t1ttlr ID Drtlll t ~1rcn who had his. brother kJlled, [j) M~KI 1'hNtrl "I.Ji! of !hi lmds aid 1nd lcw1 w1!h 1 h1tf·b1eed Mohlcins" (R) ®) Lers M1k1 1 Dt1I EID Fl• Ddymy m Hc11n's Huots (El J1 •5'7 Portlnl al @ Dr11net (Jj) Jn tht Spottrrht all Cityw1WJ1r1 m u.uil 10:30 O Y111r Tum to Tilt lick D c.1111111 C.11m 1111111-- a!) Mltu.tito Y1ld1.1 Show tllT• It AlllMlllCtd a .-..: "'Clkirtt1" m '11111 ftl!Urt 11:00anCIJOl111 m Nt .. 1;00 0 ~ I SJ1l1lL I N1tion1I . C10-0 1tart 1. Dor!IH Show 1r1p~1C 5:«'ctf "Th• List Vikinp'' 00 ,._., '*'" A visit with the diflci: dexe nd1nl! al 1h1 ori1in1I V1kin1 w1nion who D til ED Ntws u ided lhe co1sls of [uropt in th• 0 Mnit: "'llKt :SC.rpian" (dr1) non!h. tenth 1nd eleventh r.enturies '57-Rieh•nl Dennlnt. M111 ~d1y. 11 lhe11 homt In Nonh Al11nlic is m TntJI 1r C.~11111ce1 l1nds lfltltd by lhtir warrior I ll· II) r1slllolll fll Sl'lliln1 ceslo!l. 0 ®) €D Llufh·ln Guest Jot NI· 11;10 OJ Movit: (C) "Cadl ol [wil" (SCJ. math appears 1s lh• husbind ol fi) ·~cott lr16J, Yir1ini1 M1yo. Gl1d~'s Ormphby, 1 duck huntt1 Ind ll:30 II (J) CIS l.111 Movie: "'Han.ill ":·-· M11fon i11Mij ·~ M ~!~in~ Jim~r;n "~i&~mt ~~l~ll1n1: iij~~1t ~~viii m~rli~~ ~ii~~n Juln Mir!~! ~1&~11~ ~ijnl~ min~ ~il~n ' •' •• •• • • • CO.UI H..,Y. AT 111/oCIJITHUI tlYD. • llllWrolT MACH • "'4-011Q PHONE 644·0760 an 1nd11C1tt 1t !ht dr1!1 ~rd. .. • · Ptlula Cl•rt, f1nni1 fl111. th1ro, Suf ''", H(~us) M!S-Aflvis PMmblley, ALSO G Burt Muslin ind Queenie Smit~ •r• ran e nts, ary nn o er. "THE ANDERSON TAPES'' 1roo1 Sein Co11n1ry f , , Cl1aplin Won't Accept 'Star' WI!, Dl'/'I 6:UI 1•1, S""'-l :U "So,.,1tim11 • Gr••t Notion" ''Pity Mhty for Me " HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Charlie Chaplin, tile baggy pants silent screen con1ic, plans to be on hand April 10 to accept a special movie Oscar but he gave the back of his hand Friday to the Hollywood Chamber of commerce. Th'a. Hollywood Chamber voted this year to plant a "star'' for Chaplin ln its con· crete "Walk of Fame" after 14 years or Snubbing the 82-ycar· ol d actor because of his political views. Chaplin was NOW JHRU SAT. 4/1 LOEWS 2 fGUHTAl1f0YAlLrY Brookta#st ct Edinger 3•·1 U.A. SoutlI Coast Cinema #l On W.Sol!Jtowtr,.. lr~td ()pp. SOttlll Ctcntl'kuo ' .. invited Io attend l h. Chaplin"s time for h Is ceremony. forthcoming visit to the United A Chamber of Commerce States have been legion and il "spokesman said Friday that is impossible for"h im 1to accept Chaplin's personal represen·:.,;~on~e~an~d~no~I~l~he~oglh~e~rs~. ·~· :~~~~~~~~~~~~ tative had written th 'Ii chamber : •·Mr. Chaplin ap- preciates the Insert ion of his star in the Hollywood \Valk of i'~a me but regrets to advise the Holly"•ood Chamber of Commerce that he vt'lll not be able to accept their kind in· vi tat Ion. ··The requests upon ri'lr. SHOW Al 12 & 2 P.M. EDWARDS HARBOR TWIN2 Harbor l 'ld.olWJwr1 '46-0J7J EDWARDS CINEMA WEST# I W !Mlmft& Gll.DOfWm ·lt2-U9J KTWIDIG.G. & !.llfDlliOl~i N•mlri•led ,.,, let! l.c"r G-11 (. lcelt .. HOS,ltAL .. IG,I '4lt1 e "'THt: ,ARTY,. IEIClullVt Orlllfl (llllftly RqervMI 5111 Eftl .. llMlll Ho"'I"''" fer I Acld•mw Aw•,.tl "flOOLEll OH THE ROO"" CUnt E•il ..... "DHllTY HAllRY" till Hll1rlou1 Comlllw Hll "SKIM o•Mt:" '"SOMETIMES '4 GREAT MOTION" CG!') pl111 Cllftl flllll-d "PLAY MISTY FOR ME" "'Thi FrlMh ConnKtlln'" IRJ ... "V111li.hl111 Ptlllt"' CRI _j,1111 Conn•rv "OIAMOliD1 ARI: "ORE\llR" D•~lt R1ynold1 "Whll't the M1lrtr Wllh Htlt~t" SHOWING NOW! 1tom111 Pol~Mlll't "MACBETH" EXCLUS1¥E (i@f•l,i ) SHORT 5UIJECTS '" • "TALES FROM THE CRYPT" CONTINUOUS DAILY MATINIESAT 12,30, 3,30, 7,00, 10 P.M. l(OINIDOR• · lffrlW-Boe&.. Av ... ..,,~~illo NOW EXCLUSIVELY ' IT'S FOR EVERYBODY!! llATIMEIS DAILY RITEDG MOWll BOTH lHEllRES MATINEES DAILY 2ndlopH11 Sh.ilrr "''""'e"• 0.bbi• ~~~oldo "WMlT'S THI MATitt WITM MRIN1" ttmto auisb. D ®lmJollnny C.110n Burt Walt Di sney's 0 Small Town· Wh t 1·1 '"""' "'"'""~' '"t. ••••1 • "PINNOCHIO" CIHl!M.t. I -"WILLI E WOHIC.t. CHOCOL.t.tl! FACTORY" -t P.M, •HD 4 P.M. ONLY . . . • a I I Mason. Teresa Grava ind Billy Dt * is hke 1n Humboldt , Woll• 111 stheduled iuesb. CONTINUOUS Iowa, seen by native 0 CIJ@ al ~'' Co"'1 Schld· i;~D~A~l~L~Y~F~R~O~M~t ~P~.M~. ~ son Harry Reasoner uled ruest is John St~sliln. 0 @(l)a>llJIC1lLIM1, H11· mro Tell tllt Trultl ry Reason11-A 1111111 Town In low11 Ne..,sm1n Reasontr p1~s 1 persona! 12:00 O Movie: "C.u1ht lfl th• Drift" villlt to his homelo..,n ot Humboldt (tom) ·~t-Bob Hopt, 10..,1. ABC Hews Inquiry "'Children m MoYle: ''l11t In A Hani111" (m1.15) In Ptt1I' An e11mln1tion cl th"d '44-Bod Abbott, Lou Cos11!10. tbui.t in Amera with 1m11hnls on ntw methods bfinc d'veloptd to 1:00 Cl) 0 0 ([}0 Nm pioltd tilt victims. GI Andr CritfiUI S11tw C!) TM V'lf,llall1 1:30.f)Mltle: IC) "Amw hi t111 ~st" (w11) 'S4-Sttrlin1 Hayden, C:OIMn '111. T uesdoy 111rry, Robert Lowery. "'Tilt lullfitM· •rt" (com) '4>-liurtl ind Hird)', 1:00 O "lht fftltn Mort•n Story" (dr1) DAYTIME MOVIES '57~nn ll!yth, P111I H!..,m1n. m "Sittint Prttty" (com) '33 - t:OO m "Mm lros. It 1~1 Circus'' Jltk lll~it, Ginrer Roge11. (com) 'l9--Mart Brotht11, l:OO ()) "1071 in tht Attic" (dfl) '63- 1:30 O (C) "lirdt Do 11" (com) '66-De1n Mert1n, Gt11ldin1 P111. Soupy S.lu , T1b Hun11r. OJ (CJ "K1lfty O"' (com) '$8 - 10:00 {J) "Thi ltWhldt Ttirt" (•dY) '$6 P1tty Mttorm.ic:k, Dtn Duryea. Tciny Cur111, Clltttn MMltr. 4:00 ~ lC) "10111•'."'f •llll lulltt" {com) 61-Petu Ustinov Sandri Dlt 12:30 D"Outitw ltflr" {Wtl) '•t--Oon •:l0 ())$.1•1••10 ~M liitin1 · RlYN~lfa • Whit's fillY The MJtter ~NTfRS With Helen?' {Qe@ COlOI ._._ SHOWTlll\E-Jt .. P.M. Clllllflllllltl' ltflfl"IRt Shew Stfldey JIM ,M. They challenged the best of the sporting wor/ ... with a no'count hound! ~ ORANGI COUNTY SHOWINGS CINIMA VlfJO Mlll'DllHPWYATLAPAI ............ WALT DISNEY PROllllCTDIS' PAULO DllVf·IN lllWPOITrwYATIAm J4f..U1J Ji!riJgp OIANGI 2 Vf·IN SAITAAlll.t.P•f.1111.t.I CllAPMAlll S47·6t11 MATINEES DAILY 2nd Populor Hit Thor Hoyerdohl's "'"' RI EXPEDmONS" p p r T J. M Al c " Ai Vi co fo a ae ha m Te wi Co ·wh m co no Se Pa A c Ro We ing Pvt gua a assi Ca For Mr. Pro Cos mol Air Ai ' of Rusi Mi his . Trai Tex the Squ Na Davi Luc Erne Bea trai Cent A Nick fl.frs . I Wes ~ week ull<le Arm Na Tho and 1!;301 ting! pu, a boa trans horn now Seve Paclf Navy Seaman Apprentice Chris W. Kopaq:, son o( tt1r. and Mrs. Jess c. KopClng of 26000 Ave. AeropUerto. San Juan Capistrano, was awardM tho Lion> Club Citizenship Award upon graduation from rtcruit trainlng at the Na\•al Training Center in San Diego. Navy Lieutenant Robert J. Miles, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill A. Miles of 1915 Altura Ori\•e, Corona de! Mar, has reported to Training Squadron 31 at the Naval Air Station in Corpu.s ChristJ, Tex. He will serve as a Flight Instructor. Navy Petty Officer Second Class Gregory L. Jeaser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lauren R. Jesser of Corona, Calif., was named "Sailor of the Quarter" for the Pacific Missile Range at Point Mugu, where he is a Personnelman with t h e Administration Dept. Army Private Ri chard A. Rot le, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Collinge, 17696 Beech St., Fountain Valley, recent I y completed with honors a nine- week unit and organization supply specialist course at the U.S. Army Quartermaster School, Ft. Lee, Va. Navy Fireman Ar nold Y. ~1eodoza, son of ~1rs. Jesus B. Mendo:ia of 14141 Olive SL, Westminster, arrived in Bep- pu, Japan aboard the am· phibious transport USS Duluth, homeported at San Diego and now operating as a unit of our Seventh Fleel in the Western Pacific. Navy Airman Apprentice Ronald R. Aubuchon , son of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin R. Willner of 14201 Denise Dri ve, Westminster, graduated from recruit training at the Naval Training Center at San Diego. U.S. Air Force Major Victor J. Nartz Jr .. son of Mr. and f\1rs. Victor J. Nartz of 32302 Alipaz St., San Ju a n Capistrano. has received his second and third awards of the Air Medal for air action in Vietnam. Major Nartz, an air traffic control officer, was decorated for bis outstanding airmanship and courage on sustained aerial flights completed under hazardous conditions. He was presented t h e medals at Sheppard AFB, Tex., where he now serves with a unit of the Air Force Communications Se r v l c e which provides global com· munications and air traffic control for the USAF. Navy Petty Officer First Class Calvin R. Zug, husband of the former Miss Kathleen S. Mcweeney of 5092 Cum· berland Ave.. West minster, arrived in Beppu, Japan aboard the a mph i bi o u s transport USS D u I u t h , homeported at San Diego and now operating as a unit of our Seventh Fleet in the Western Pacific. Army Pvt. Bruce Edward Carlson, son of Mrs. Arlene Robarge. 5082 Cumberland, Westminster, is currently tak· ing basic training at Fort Ord. Pvt. Carlson enlisted for guaranteed school and also for a special unit. He will be assigned to the 3rd Armored Cavalry Reg iment Station at Fort Lewis, Washington. Donald D. Prokop. ron of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Prokop of 1859 Park Vista Cr., Costa Mesa. has been pro- moted to sergeant in the U.S. Air Force. Sergeant Prokop is a com· munications operations specialist at Elmendorf AFB , Alaska, with a unit of the U.S. Air Force Security Service. Airman Steven A. Rusle, son 1 of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Rusie, of 25245 Pcricia Dr ., Mission Viejo. has completed his .U.S. Air Force Air Medic Training at Sheppard AFB. Texas. He will be assigned to the Armored Eva cu at ion Squadron at March AFB. Navy Fireman Apprentice David J. James. son of Mrs. Lucy V. James of 17042 Emerald Lane. Huntington Beach. graduated from recrulL training at the Naval Training Center at San Diego. Army Private Robert D. Nlcker!ion, .!!On of Mr. and Mrs. Frank 0. Nickerson. 13562 La Pat Place, Westm inster. completed eight weeks of basic training today under the modern volunteer Army at f'I. Ord. Navy Fireman Apprentice Thomas D. Hugbe1, son of h-1r. and Mrs. Dale 0 . Hughes of , JMOI SereMde Lane. 1-lun· tlngton Beach, arrived in Bep- pu, Japan, on Sat. (~ar. 11) aboard the a m p h 1 b Io u ' transport USS Du I u th. homeporled al San Diego and now optratlng aS 1 unit of our Seventh Fleet In the Western Pacific. Staff Sergeant Rocu A. TUI, son of Mt . and Mrs. Johnie L. Till or 16102 Stringdale Ave .. Huntington Beach. has been recognized ~or helping his Aero.space D e f e n • e Com- mand squadron earn the U.S. Air Force Outstandin~ Unit Award. • Sergeant Till Is a radio technician with the 7761h Radar Squadron at Point Arena Air Force Station. Squadron personnel were cited for overall performance and professionalism and were specifically recognized I o r performing maintenance tasks beyond the unit's normal capability, which resulted in cost savings to the govern· ment. Alan R. Hale, son of Mr, and Mrs. Russell R. Hale of 13841 Ida Way, Westminster, has been promoted to airman first class in the U.S. Air Force at Norton AFB . Airman Hale, a com· munications specialist, serves with a unit of the Air Force Cemmunications S e r v i c e which provides global com· munlcations and air traffic control for the USAF. Airman Melvin L. Buell , son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy D. Buell of 14931 Ridgeview Circle, Huntington Beach, has ~com· pleted his U.S. Air Force basic training at the Air Training Command's Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to ~ha~ute A:FB, Ill., for training in aircraft maintenance. Army specialist four John R. Mackey U, whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. John R. Mackey I, and wife, Mira Ingrid, live at 14651 Mor an St., Westminster, recently com- pleted the special forces aid· man course phase II at Brooke General •lospital , Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam Houston Tex. Army Sergeant Dan T. Roseberry, whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sheril D. Paulsen, live at 2198 Rural Place, Costa 1i1esa, recently was assigned to the 5th Special Forces group, lsl Special F<lrces at 1'~l. Bragg, N.C. Sgt. Roseberry is a medical aidman in the group's Com· pany B., the 7th Signal Brigade recently conducted the largest signal field exercise ever held in Europe, Anny Specialist F o u r Patrick M. Stellhorn. son of Mrs. Caroline W. Stellhorn, Fountain Valley, was one of the participants of Exercise Large Signal 72, which was conducted over a 2 O , O O O square-mile area in Gern1any . Spec. Stellhorn is a clerk in the 26th Signal Battalion's Company C near Heilbronn. Navy Fireman Apprentice Dtan A. Socall, son of Mrs. Janine Y': Wheeler of 112 W. Coast Highway, New port Beach, has reported for duty aboard the nuclear powered at. tack aircraft carrier USS Enterprise, now at Alameda. Army Private Greg A. Crossley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne G. Crossley, 10431 Slater Ave ., Fountain Valle y is assigned to Ft. Ord, Calif.'. where he is training under the modern volunteer army field experiment. Army Private Glenn G. Dutra, son of Mrs. Jean Dutra, 2293 Pacific Ave,, Costa Mesa, is assigned to Ft. Ord, where he is training under the modern volunteer army field experiment. Army Private David E. Lewis, whose mother, Mrs. Ruth J. Anderson, lives on Holbrook St.. Anaheim, is assigned to Ft. Ord. where he is training unde r the modern volunteer army field ex· periment. The soldier, whose father, Jack D. Lewis, lives at 14571 Bowling Green, Westminster. Navy Seaman Kent B. Dudrear, son of f\.1r. and Mrs. J . D. Lee of 9813 La AmapoJa Ave., Fountain Va 11 e y, graduated from rec r u It training at the Nat•al Training Center at San Diego. Airman J\11 c b a cl E. La nkford , soo of Mr. and Mrs. 0 . Lank ford of 233 Rose Lane, Costa Mesa, has completed his U.S. Air Force basic training at the Air Training Com- mand's Lackland AFB, Tex. Ffe has been assigned to Chanute AFB, DI ., for training In 11 i r c r a ft maintenance. Airman Lankford attended Co!ila Mesa High School. Hjs wife, Diane, Is the daughter of Mr. and ~frs, L. M. Heaster of 3025 Hardins Way, Costa 1i1esa. Private Flrsl Class Norman A. Van Wye, brother or Kermit G. Van Wye, 26507 Calle Lorenzo, San Juan Capistrano, r e !!-e n l I y com· pleted an elght·wtek cooking cour1e at Ft. Ord. • D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 ' . , . " • • . •. Mondil!, Much 27, llt72 DA.ILV PILOT JJ DARY PILOT WANT ADS Tile Bfflflf!•.t Slagle M•rlcetplaee -Tile Or•n11e Coaat • Plt.-842-5678 General FIRST HOME? BEACH • $19 ,000 SMALL DOWN A LOT FOR A UTILE! Per· feet starter home with big living room. Formal dine. 20x20 FAMILY ROOM ALL JN KNO'ITY PINE! Cabin kitchen. Cul de sac lot, Jog to beach. \Valk to shops. can now -645--0303. • I ORl.\I I. Ol \O\ .4'£A, ~OR ) NEW OFFERING EASTBLUFF S BR .. 3 baths: ideal for large family, Nearly ~S acre with paved boat storage area. $54.750. CORBIN- M·ARTIN REAL TORS 644-7662 EASTSIDE •CHARMER Spotless 2 BR home, plenty of room for camper & boat. Gucs1 area. Workshop. Low low doWn. 212 Santa Isabel, c.~t Lachenmyer Realtor 1860 Newport Blvd., C.hl. 646-J9IJ8 Eves 548-8651 TRI LEVEL Newport Beach townhouse. Try carefree living in beau- tiful surroundings. Close to beach and only steps to Gtnei-a l DUPLEX IN COSTA MESA Each 2 BORM., 1 BATH HOME are comfort Plus and very well maintained. \Vasher, Dryer are included Jn one home. Assume an existing f>ifA Joan or PUR· CHASE FHA $32,950. $22,750! Owner Transferred Like Jiving on the Riviera "'"·ith carefree low main- tenance. Enjoy the pool. Private patio. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, built·in d re a nl kitchen, dishwasher. Plush carpeting, flrapes, Prime Costa Mesa l ocation. (BRK}. $40-1720. TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa ASSUME LOAN! REDUCED! LOW DOWN! JUST REDUCED! Less 1han $2.250 down. Pa ym en Is around $200 suit you! Don't miss this lovely livircg rootn. Paul Bunyan family room with open beam celling and vaulted! Crackling fireplace. King size bedri>oms. Don't wait, call now! 645-0303. I ORl\1 . L OI ~O\ /;'£A . TOR:, private pool. 3 Bedrooms, 3 oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOi baths and formal dining roorn. Priced below market and only S31,500. Call 546-5880 <Open eves.)' SEE ST AR GA:ZER PAGE 8 CLASSIFIED HOURS 8:00 a.m. to 5 fl.m. Monday thru Friday 9 to noon Saturday Advertisers mar, p1actt their ads by te epbone COSTA MESA OFFICE 330 W. Bay 642·567& NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newport Blvd. 642-5678 HUNTINGTON BEACll l 7875 Beach lUvd. 541).1.220 LAGUNA l!EACH 222 Forest .Ave. 494-9466 SAN CLEMENTE 30S N. EI Camino Real 492-4420 . NORTH COUNT'l di&.J free 540·1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadline for copy le: kTils is 5:30 p.m. the day be· fore publication, 4?xcept for Monday !;dition when deadline 1s Satur• day, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS: Advertisers should check their ads daily It report errors immediately. THE DAILY PILOT assumes liability for the 1irst in· correct insertion only. CANCEILAnONS: When killing an ad be sure to make a tccord of the Kn..L l'iOMBER given you by your ad taker as receipt o! your caneellaUon. 'Itlls kill number must be pre· i;ented by the advertiser in case o! a dispute. CANCELLATION 0 R CORRECT10N OF' NE\V AD BEFORE RUNNING: Every effort Is made to kill or correct a new ad that has been ordered, but we cannot guaran- tee to do 10 until tht1 ad has a.ppcarctl in the pa .. per. Dll\IE,.\01.INE ADS: The?Se ads are strfcUY cash tn advance by mail or at any one ot our ot .. fices. NO phone orders. THE DAILY PILOT rc- scrvfs the rl2ht tn clas· slfy, edit, censor or rt• fuse any 11.dvertisement, and to chanae lts rates It reR"tll&tlons without prior notice .. CLASSIFIED MAILING ADDRESS P. O. Box 1S&01 Costa 111 .... 92626 RESIDENTIAL -INCOME- New de\u.'Ce fourple.'< with older duplex -on one prop- f'rty. Closed garages with access from alley $132,000. -OTHER CHOICE. IN VESTh-1ENT PROPERTIES. PETE BARRETI -REALTY- 642-5200 • 5 BEDROOMS! $24,900!! BEACH ESTATE \VQ\.\I~ \VlfAT A VALUE? Bfrch panel in giant living room, Real used brick fire- place. Knotty pine family room and big, too? Formal dine. S huge bedrooms, Jog to beach. Don't wait -call now -645-0303, I OKI. \I I. Ol '0\ ' l?/A LTVk Need "Hollering Room?" Tired of togetherness? - This 5 Bedroom, 2¥.i bath home in Harbor View Hills is your answer, Extra large lot. Park·like yard. Bright sparkling kitchen, separate family room with fireplace. Asking $74,900 -Come see and buy. 673-8550. BUILDE'ltS There is a crying need for new homes close In. Have large view lot on Irvine, also pie-shaped lol on Cher· ry Tree Lane. Make ofler while money is plentilul. CLOSE TO BEACH Large 3 BR. 2 ba. duplex with 3 fireplaces. $55,00J, Canal front Jot ...... $20,00J G.eorge Williamson Realtor ~70 '45-1564 North Costa Mesa Bayc:rest • Pool A beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on a 111.rgf' corner lot. It shows and looks like a model hom«-on !l tn:1?-lln- ed street. Only S30.900, CaU now for more details. 546-2313. \-O\THE REAL '~ E~TATER,S Tri Plex Newport Heights S·2 BWroom unit!!" In the best rental At'f'(I. of Newport llel~hts. \Valk to We!Jlcllff 11h0pping center. $485.00 per month Income. \Von't lasi Jona at .$47,875.00. CALL 546-2313. Close Up See ALL The Bay To enjoy the finest in Ne\vport Beftch living Rt this gorgeous 3 BR •• with separate master !IUile; itll'ie f11.mily room leadln&: out to a sparkJ lng heA ted Ir: filtered pool &. the most brtath taking view o f Newport Ba.,y 6: Catalina thal could be found. Truly a Gem by the PaCllic. $82,500. ean ~n11, ' THE REAL R.ESTATERS Large Families Only Here's the kind of space you need. 5 bedrooms, rumpus room, large kitchen, formal or informal dining • plenty of room to spread oul! \Valk to schools and shopping. Anyone can assume the ex· isting GI loan \vith only 107,, down. Owner transl red offf'rs q u I c k possession. Water Front Doll House Balboa Island A home dcslgnf'd with the ultimate in personality and charm. The entire home bas thick shag carpeting through every square inch. This property distinctively features 4 bedrooms and a den, a small patio, a used brk·k fireplace, and your O"'-'n private little dock. One of the · Jew· -waterfronts available on the ii;land, and priced at only $98,800. Call 546-2313. Canal Front Duplex 85 ft . of waterfrwit Y.'ith your own 3 bedroom, 2 bath a p a r I m en t overlooking Ney.•port Canal, and enjoy earnings from the other 3 bedroom unit below. Ex· cellent investment at $62.500. Owner will consider trade. HARBOR HIGHLANDS NEWPORT BEACH Spark.Jing 3 bedroom 2 bath And Immaculate! Modem builtin kitchen, formal din· ing, xlnt carpeting. coverf'd brick patio and fantastically landscaped, Walk te> Mariner School and Wei;tcl.iU &hop- ping. $35,000. Call 545-8424 (open eve!.); \outh ~(-oast --- $30,500-No Down 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. den finest built· in ff' 8 t Ure I, dishwasher. Patio. Double garage. One level. Excellent location, volleyball, park, pool, and recreation. Cen- tral air conditioning 846-0604. TARBELL THE REYNOLDS ARE AT SEA Thi:o; makes their 3 bedroom, 2 bath 3 car garage home rtady· for you. Immaculate "'-'ith huge yard, roon\ for boot or trailer !lltorage. Priced to M!ll for $45, 750. For information ea.LI 646-7171. OVER ONE-HALF ACRE Ask ua of lhe possibilities for th is vtt')' good NEWPORT BEAOI vacant tot -$31.SOO. Houae Huntl~? Wa tch the OPEN llOUSE column. 26Jfltorborllvd. House and Unit $25,500 J cute housl" • small rear unit -great Costa Mesa locatlon·Country mood. 546-8640 Back Bay Bargain $25,500 Upprr Back Bay tion, 3 bedroom home, fast possession. 546-8610 $15.00 Moves You In Outstanding 4 bedroom, 2 bath home -3 years old. 546-8640. Take Over 6 % Loan Beautiful 3 bedronm and family room. 2 full baths, Palos Verdes fire· place, 2 car gara~e. hardwood floors. 7 years old. $29.500. 546-8640 Irvine's Best -·.. l~I _,.sm I~ C. F. Coleswort·hy & Co. Realtors RUSTIC HIDE·A·WAY In Corona Del Mar tucked away in • wood· ed dell and just a few blocks to the ocean- 2 bedroom and den. Living room with stone fireplace and wooden deck \vith canyon view. Large patio with B.B.Q. $53,700 . BA YFRONT BARGAIN A trulv beautiful family home that needs some redecorating but is priced accordin~ly. 5 big bedrooms. 3" baths, forma l dining room and family room plus a 2 bedroon1' apartrhent. A great investment! Shown by appointment. Eastbluff Office • 640-0020 Bayside Office • 6 75-4930 Gener1I BAY & BEACJ.I REALTY .- ABSOLUTE LUXURY \Vant something dif!erenl? This one-of-a·kind Corona <lei Mar hon1e is beautiful beyond description. lt must be seen to be appreciated. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. a large formal dining rm. & a separate family rm. The kitche n alone is a masterpiece, With automatic coffee brewer as a bonus. $76,500. 675-3000 2407 E. Coast Hwy. BAY & BEACJ.I REALTY .. General Every Woman's ' Dream! Luxuriou11 5 bedroom. 4 b11th honu• "'ilh cus1.on1 36 foot heated pool · loods of deck · lng, Ideal for entertaining • This home has every l'Xtra one \\'OUld \Vant, Beautifully appointed thruout -\Vith e:-.- pensive carpets + drapes·· Plush Jixlures : All electric bit-in kitchen .. Pr I n1 e Newport Be~ch Ioc. Price $92,500. 61H500. '·-0 THE REAL ,~ ESTATERS . ·, . . . BY OWNER One year old 2 story 2400 sq. ft. home with 11-N-E_W_P_O_R_T_H_E_I_G_H_T_S 4 bedrooms plus over· sized bonus room and CHARMER Large (1850 sq. It.) 4 Br. 21 ~ bath home in Sandpolnte, 2 minutes from S. Coast Plaza. Living roon1 'vlth separatt dining art'a, fittpla«', coun- try kilchen with family room. shag carpetlng throughout. Patio. fully land· scaped, fenced yard. 1 hlock to elementary r;chool and 3 short blocks to nMv park- playgrouod. $34,900. Call 557.3111 or no answer, 832-9666 ). island built·i n kitchen. 2·Sly, 3 BR. & lge. family rm.; 2 frpl,·s. formal dining $4.3,500. 546-8640. rm. Owner leaving area, priced to se ll -$46,000. Cathedral Ceilings With open beams, big three bedroom, 2 bath CaJl: 673·3663 673-8086 Eves. associated BROKER S-REALTORS 101<; W Bclboo 671°166} home. 111' years old. INTERVIEWING R.E. 11ale11· Put a little "lool.'' ln your Lev.is -sell tho&& habits for "bucks". Call ClassWed 64:hl61ll. Everything in this home men w/or without exp. CdM is new. Anxious owner. 1oc. Hm 1i7S-'i225. $33,500. 546-8640 l bG"o".'n-:o-ra-'<1o'-'----- $17,500?? Zoned for proff'ssional use. 50x150 ft. lot, 1 bedroom house now ful- ly equipped beauty 11- lon. 546-8640. New Triplex Beautiful deluxe units u n d e r construction. Each is 2 bedroom and den or 3 bedroom. Wet bar and fireplace, 1Shag carpet, built-in kitchens. 546-8640 3 Bedroom and Pool Heavy •hake root, big family room, patio and heated and filtered l8x 36 ft. pool. ~.500. Sharp! 546-8640. Newport Heights Hillside location. Separ· ate master 1uite lower level, dil!· tinctive and dirferent. Form dining, areat llv· 546-8640 1 Bedroom Condo· $45,000 Prestige, class, elegance. Th«-most outstanding living on the beach. any· where. 546-8640 On The Beach 3 btdroorn, 2 bath. beach hou~e. completely fur· nlshed. TcrrUlc valu!! In Ntwport !or S43,000. 546-8040 General l OLIVE & CrTRUS TREES Grace this qtr. acre on Somerset Lane, WestcliU. Cust. bit. 4 BR., 2¥.i ba., family rm.; dining rm. Owner transferred. Only $65,000. M. C. Buie CHARMING BAYCREST You'll have a sunny cutlook if you select this 4 bdrm .. famil y & dining room home. Large yard. Only $72,500. Mary Lou Marion LUSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS Lovely decor! 5 BR., 3 ba. view home. Large fam. rm. & formal dining . Covered patio. Every luxury for a family, Fee land. $93,500. H, Davies SHORECLIFFS • APPROX. 'h ACRE Bldg., site overlooking Jetty, with direct ac- cess to swimming beacft. Plans & rendering available. Will consider trade for units. $150,000. Edie Olson 52' BAYFRONT lf you are looking for that ·unusual custom blt. 2-story home, in prime loc., this is a must see! 3 Bdrms .. 31h ba's .. den & din. rm. Pier & float. $169,500. Kathryn Raulston BEAUTIFUL HARBOR VIEW HILLS A lovely 4 BR. home w /sep. lam. rm .. 2 fireplaces & wet bar. Like new condition. Profess. landscaped. $69,500. Cathfyn Tennille BALBOA PENINSULA POINT 2 Bdrm. & family room, 2 baths. dbl. gar- age & slide yard 'boat & trailer storage. Knotty pine galore. EXCELLENT LOCA· TION. $64,800. Al Fink CAMEO SHORES -VIEW Large family rm. w/fircplace & wet bar AND rec. room large enough for pool table. Dining rm .. 4 bdrms .. 3" baths. H&F pool. 3 Car gar. Beaut. decor. $140,000. Carol Tatum SUMMER FUN FOR SURE Pool1 recreation are11. -parks galore! See this 4 BR. family home; formal dining rm .• sunny brk(st. rm., kit., !am. rm ., cozy frpl. $57,000. La Vera Bu!'"s YOU'LL LOVE BAYSHORES Boating, swimming, beaching. walking In privacy, are all yours In this unique area. We have the greatest new listings from $46,950. Mary Harvey 133°0700 __.... Coldwell, Banker ~ 644-2430 ' 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR.. N.a . I f I I I %% DAJLV PILOT I I I • Everyone He s Something lhat Someori'e Else Wonts DAILY p111:>1 CLASSIFIED ADS You Cen Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad ·rhe Biggest Mark~tplace oo the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results . . I Macnab-Irvine General POSSESSION TODAY! General G1n1r•I :_;;_;;:-;;;;_;;:_;:;;;_;;:_;:;;;_;;:_;:;;;_;;:_;:;;;_;;:_;:;;;_:;_;:;;;_:;_;:;;;_:;_;:;;;_;;;_;:;;;_;;_;;;_;;:_;;_;;; I Tahitian Pool $255 ·Move In! Cost• Mes• B'l' 0\VNER (,\Icsa \'f'l'dl'I Open H¥c. \'try n<'at 3 l~H. l* BA . home on cul·de·.'1111'. \Valk lo school, churc:ht'~. Shady fenced y rcl \\·/play· hS!;'. l.rg. Ii\'. rn1, boAst." a tall atone lrpl., cheery fain. rn1., f1·eshly painted !ntrr- ior. And priced right a! $31.900. Visit .1653 OAllUA PLACE. C.II, Ph. 551-Gfl~~- 8-Alit/8-Pl\.1. 0\1·ner movu1g. l-lurry?!! I~ I -'~"'' I~ ~~~j ;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;; Huntington Beach Huntington Beach Newport Stadt __ $_9_U-IC_K_$ __ 1CUSTOM DOWNTOWN 1.;::::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:;;1 IRVINE TERRACE JUST LISTED [)rlightful 4 nn.. 3 bath hOmt". Brautitu ll y dt"'COJ'aled . Lavish "'all, win· do\.\:&. Door decor. Corg<-<011s <.'Orner location. $ 6 7 , 5 0 0 , Tom Queen. 644-6200, ONLY $28,500! .. TRY IT, YOU'LL LIKE IT "BUY IT" $25,500! \\'0 \\'! BARGAIN I IUNTERS COME QUICK! Giant panrl· ed living room. Coun1ry kitchen. DEN opens lo Ta- hitian pool lined with lava stone! Big oversized lo!! Take O\'f'r G.I. LOAN \\"ith aru1uar J>l'rcentagr rat(' of l)NLY !:i·},I~;. -OR -$255 ANO "°lOVE TN! Hun-:.·, J! 11·011't last! Call 645-0.'JOJ. . ' B(•autlful hur"lll', r ."(tl'u 11harp $28,600 WE BUY HOMES •.vlth srparatt' g11r!':lhn1ts<' . ~tf<. KASA Bl,\N *17·9604 ?.Ian!curtd Jdsrpg wilh Job; KASABIAN of fruit and \·t i::<'tablc _g1u·· clen. Onr-ol-a-kind. ()nJy , , •. and \1·lwt ~OU S!'" I~ Seeing is Believing $:ll ,800. Call s-12-4466. N<'\1'port Bea<'h Rn.ck B:i;. ~ Just ocr Tu~11n !II bellUl. AREA CON SCI OUS? I r+"Ti .. ,P!~. iJJ;i Ne11·port Ri\1era. 4 + BONUS ROOM _ ~;..~tl_-No11· i;~ro1vi ng 4 b£'droo1n, :'i RJ-:AL F.ST ATE $35 200 bath~. lr ii·~za clltl)'\\'11). ' Irvine I llu.r;,<' 20 ').(2()' hunu.'I room , hcauf. v.·/11 l'l'P!j:" · charming 2 sLor,v 1·esidenrr dc11.:'0ril tO!' tlra]){'S, ' Inn r 111 r .-.:celll'n! nl•rhooU t·lose 10 JUST LISTED! lin:pl ,. A:\l/F',\'! ir11r1·c·c1111. LIDO ISLE Ti""adltional Country Engll.sh, beautiful warm wooda -red brk. patio. 4 Bf{. sunroont - large ram/gamt 1'00n1 - formal on. r.o.· Jot. $1.22,500. ELEGANT FRENCH BAYFRONT Majestic crystal chAlldelier, "MX>d & brick c:oun t r y kitchen, leaded 00.y vlc\Y window, all beamed ceil· EXCEPTIONAi .. V A l. U E ! B!g J!vlnc room. hui:tf' tami· ly room v.•ith TlAISED 11Ei\RTJI f I REPLACE ALL JX DEL PISO TILE! f3re11k(tiAI h,1r. <;nzy kitchtn '1·1th t•nh· tl u fl rs. COVERr:o PATIOS. CE- '.\1E;'\T DRIVE\\'AY. Brick .sruttcrs. P.m.t :uid traile1· 11!ant~·r11 r\'C'fY'\'hrre. Rain gul!t:NJ. · Rotit and trailer •ga.!,., l~t~1EO J ATE POSSESSION to qualif ied buyer! Hurry! Coll &l.)...0003. iOl!l\I L 01\li\ 1?£A L 1"(Jh', All wrapped up in this nice TWO STOR Y 4 bedroom , 3 bath, HUGE RUMPUS ROO M that will take a pool table, builtin kitch·en, Jarge yard will accommodate your 30 foot boat, and a spacious feeling prevail s thru· HlRISI E 01.\0\ " 1?£A L T O R S Newport Heights Hillside location. Separate n1aster bedrooin suite lO\\'f'r level, di!ltinctive a1jd dif· ferent. Form <lining, great Jil·ing. Red Carpet Realtors. f>.16-8640. CONVENTIO!\AL -Vll 1\-VA. 3 Br-, & !onnal (tin rn1 ., 1~. hrtlhs -paneling-. crpti;, drps, <-"C\·ered patio, l\(•11·ly 1·emodeled kitchen "·/bll- lns·tilcd, dishmaster. Breakfast nook. Loads of cupboards. \V!thin 3 blks ol n1l schls. Big <'Orner lot \v/lrg trees & oversizC!d 2 car garage. PLUS gigantic sep. yard tor boats, !rlrs, dog~. kids, etc. Buy froni O"•ner & save commissions. S24,250. 2103. \Va I ! a c f' , 6-16-8{)12 for appL lll''1Ch~ :.:! hu1h.~. [il'Cplacc, Sh;,irp ··nutgcrs" ~lurh•l. '.':! 1ilsll11.-hr & h!tn~. ALL plan· 11/11• c1·p1s, 1n111~lun(' ln'1..:ht Bdrn1s., :.:!':: ba "s .. fa1111Jy nrrl 1·on11nU1JJty 11 1tl1 ntrl'~ k1l!'l1., profr.~. J 11 cl s c fJ d, rn1, H!'•'l"nlly (';ll'J>l'!t•1! & tJf t'Olling green. S11inu11ini;: grounds! 011'nt'1' !ransfr•1·-painlcd th1·uour. I; u o d pool, putting grrl'n. loadl'l of red, n1ust sell -alt trrn1s. greenbelt to<" at ion in ani1n iti es. 'fol al pitJJllent of Call 841-1221. SJ::.:\'~IOUft popular Village Purk. Adult $26'.l per n10. inrludes all. REALT\", J/141 Be a c Ii o(x·upicd & olfrrcd Jor :l Bedroom, tW<l·slory-froni Blvd., fiunt. Bch. $.19,500. $26.2~. Follo11· lr..-ine Nor!h -EASTER-PEACE TO-to Santa Isabel Avf!., follo11 YOU and YOUR signs to model or call "Doh 1~1vllil, inp, formal dining, 4 BR's., 4~~ baths, dramatic tile deck, private parking. Don Todd, 675-1935. PANORAMA BAY & OCEAN VIEW The perfect selling for enter- taining. Large LR • 3 spacious BR'a. formal DR - l car garage • secluded, quiet stttct. $71 ,500. Han·irt Perry, 642-8235. BALBOA ISLAND COMMERCIAL Quaint, charming "Carmel Type" commercial bldg. on Marine Ave. Now leased. Room for 2nd unit. $62,500. Shangri-La In Newport Shores 2300 gq. ft. of comfort, con. venienre, walk to lhe IX'ach. freedom fron1 yard main- lenance. Amble over lo lhr community pooJ, clubhousr and tennis <.'OOrts. This -4 bedroom home is aclu!t oc- cupied and in absolu1ely im· 1naculale "move in" 1·on. dition, Boat landing, too~ $49.950. Call 546-2313. Harriet Peny, 642-8235. I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Macnab-Irvine Realty Company 642-1235 644-6200 SELECT HOMES 2 BR cute Cottage nr. N'pt. Heights. $21,900. 3 BR &: ram rm. 2 bath~. First class sharp. Eastside C.l\f. $31,000. 3 BR, 2 bath. i tstr BR is huge. Remodeled new. Alley 8CCC!t!. R·2 lot. East.side 132.500. l BR, 2 bath. Like new, 7 )TS. Triple gar. POOL Park Lido 'npt Bch. $33,500. -4 BR & family rm. 2~;, batl1s. Warm &: rich, like nev.'. POOL. Highland Dr. N'pt Bch. $43,000. CALL '·(i).' 146•.1•14 ·l},J• :: REALTY • N11ir,N1wpor1 Pot t orrltt HACIENDA OLE $27,000!! Golf Course View Beautiful Eastside homr with panoramic vie1v of goH course, fcntul'ing plaster u·alls, hardwood CJoors, beam ceilings, forn1ar din- ing, bui!lin kitchen and de· tached double garage. Only $26,500. HURRY Call 546-5880 !Open rves.) [-..:.~/ ENGLISH TUDOR $53 000 FOR"4Al' DINE PRICED AT APPRA ISAL 4- J~l11ACULATE! Dran1atit giant tudor living roonl \\ith floor lo ceiling firep!ar.e! Separa1e large formal tlin· ing room, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths. Gourmet ga r d e n kitchen. One of Nc\\'POrl.s finest values! Must see to believe. Call now for ap- pointment 645--0303. . out. It's only ....................... $39,900. CORONA Del MAR TRIPLEX Built in range and oven, dishwasher a nd dis- posal. carpets and drapes. 2 Units have 2 bed rooms. 1 bath: 1 Unil has 2 bedrooms. 11li ba th \\'/fireplace. Each unit has 2 car- po rts, maintenance free ya rd a nd pool privi· lcges. and from UPSTAIRS BALCONIES .. A VIE\V . . . . . . . . $75 ,000. NO DOUBT ABOUT IT WE"VE GOT IT IN HUNTI NGTON BEACH. 4 Bedrooms. FAMILY ROOM, used brick fireplace, 2 baths, builtic kitchen. close to shopp ing. schoo(.s , Jr College & freeway. Only $31,500. * APARTMENT * UNDER CONSTRUCTION Mak e lhe changes you want NOW. 3 Bed· rooms. 2 baths, builtin kitchen \Vith VIE\V OF J ETTY. FRONT HO US E -also has 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, builtin kitch en. dining area. Now is the time to buy ..... , . $77,500. SWELLELEGANT IN IRVINE TERRACE in posh lrvine-ATRIUM type entry, charm· ing-open spacious living room wi th fi r e- place a nd VIE\V. 3 large bedrooms, lovely famil y r oom, 2 baths, 2 year old home, Room to store your boat or trailer. $62,500. ?1"4tue-Sffdti. ~ ~Kil ASSCclAT!S REALTORS 644-7270 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. Near Beaches JUST LIST ED! RED TILE ROOF to vaulled & beamrd ceilings -SHARP & SPAN· lSH! Step dol\'11 to giant Jiv- nig room. Massive brick fireplace! F amily room. JIACIENDA GOURMET - GARDEN KITCHEN! Suprr king T\VO LEVEL MASTER SUITE! \Valk-in closets. Pri· vate dressing room. JOG TO BEACHES! Act no1v - Call 64s.rooi I Ol!l.\I I. 01\0\ General iORl.\I I 01 \fl\ ' RE ALTO R S FIVE BIG ONES! BEDROOJ\1~. that is! This 1n1prcssivC' 2 slory beauty is the ()flly big Mrsa tie! Mar hom<' in ~fttltiple Lis!· Ing a1 prPsent. Plrnly of room to srrclch out on thc plush shag '·1u11cr,.. Full price is: S.19.900. 11·irh \1A term,; o[fcrcd. Don '! \\'ail to call~ R £ALl"l)RS 'MESA VERDE O ulstan d lng value tn beautifully a pp o i·n t ed. spacious 3 bedroom homr featuring OVC;Tsized st'paratr Jamily room, full buillin kit· chcn, shag carpets, enclOfied front yRrd. All for $30.950. Available all ternis inc!. NO 00\VN to Vets. Call ~1151 !Open Eves.) ~ HEJllTAG£ , ·-: REALTORS MUST SEE! Modern 3 BR. 2 Bo. Midst Jovrly !recs ~Taster Sizrd Roon1s ~linimum care property J\lulti-Amcnl tics l\'larvelous: Cos,ta l\~csa l\'lini-Price $33,500 Call: 673-3G63 548--0n:-> Evrs. associated 4 UIOtll()Uf tiUMf A 4 BEDROOM -Golf Course Castle: It has a secl uded pool. massive game room and an enormous living room th at literally "hangs out" ove r the famed 18th green of the Mesa Verde Country Club. Rhere's maids quarters (or teenage rs retreat!): a 3 car garage and a uniq ue location on a bluff overlooking a lake. It's th e ultimate and priced at a mere $165,IJOQ. PHONE UNIQ UE MESA VERDE 54f>5990 . General Genera l * * * * * * Balboa Peninsula • • • Peter Roof 387 W. Bay, Apt. 4 Costa Mesa, Calif. You are the 1vinner ()f 2 tickets lo lhr We1tern National Boat & Marine Show at lhe ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER April 1st thru April 9th Please <'all 642·5678, ext 314 bet11·cen 9 & 5 pm to elai1n your tickets. (North County toll-free nun1ber is 540..C.~0) * • • $23,500. '.! Be<lrn1, 1 1 ~ BA, erpts. Urps, pa1io, S!oragr bldg , sprink- lers. FHA/VA trrn1s. FHA·VA TERMS 3 Berlrn1 + family nn, large double-car gar. $25,000. Roy Mccardle-Realtor IRIO Ne1\•port Blvd .. C.~t. 548-7729 EASTBLUFF 3 BR., 'I. ha., family kltthf'n. J-Story. \Valk to park, bike ro school. "!l.-1int condition.'' $44.750. 644-11 33 Anyt im~ Agt. STEPS TO BEACH (NC\Vport-S29,500) 3 BR., tan1ily n n .• 2 baths, b!tns. Pools, tenni~, rec. arcH. CALL NO\V! ! CAYWOOD REALTY $29,500 llURR''~ tl1oving April 15th ~ BR, 2 BA. Spaciou.'> living roon1 11·/shag cpl!l & frp!t·. Nrw clist11vash('r. llard11·ood firs. F<1tllaslic N('ighbors! Assun1 51A G.I. Loan. 01\·Tie1· \1'ill carry 2nd. North C/1.1 area. Principals only 549-0674 MESA Verde. By O\.\'l"lt"T'. 3 Bdrm., 2 ba. ram nn., 2 frplc., easy c::ire cor lot. Assllme 5~ F11A S29.900. ~0-6194. BY OWNER. Mesa Verde 3 Br., Z Ba home, complt redecorated, lrg. Io t. 546--6321. FOR sale by O\Vller. 3 BR. J BA, harcl1\·cJ floors. 62.5.-.:125" 101. Asking S2ii,000. 17-17 Orange Ave .. :J48...4607. El Toro .·.EI . T ;;~:Bf Own;;:--" Cle::•n 4 Bl~. 1 a4 BA. Dl'aJ>('s and complerely carpe!ed. Nicl'ly landscaped, Covered patio. Closr !o schools. shopping and frce .... ·ay. Sell on VA , r-.i do11·n S::0,000. 586-0996. Fountain Valley CLEAN j BR, 2 S!Ol)' home. 536,500. By 01\·ner. 63,4-;; ftssumable Io an. Nr. Gar!ielcl & 81"00 k h u r s t 962-2265. Huntington Beach Conv•rsotion Pit & Fireplace FAMILY 540-5147, VILLAGE REAL 1-:sratl' exclusi\•c sal~ agenL 4 bedroon1~ prie!'d at ONLY $21 ,000. The yard is large rnou_gh for thr kiddies AND lhc BUNNIES. BUT }/UR- HY lllis ll'On'I ln s1. Walker & Lee ReaJ1or<> S42-4LJj NO COSTS- NO DOWN 4 8£'dt'001n, :l bath. Like ne11· sh:ig carpets. Large t.'Ovcrecl fJiltio \\'ilh brick BBQ, 4Joughboy pool. Hon1 r <"lose 10 Douglas & r.larina Jligh S<'hool. O\rner is desperate, asking $21:!,i:>I). Call 847--{,(}10. ---1~eultor "SINCE 19-16" lst \\'rstern Bnnk Bldg. L'ni\'rrsity Pnrk. lrvinr Days 522·7000 Nights METICULOUS! SO. OF BALBOA BLVD. 2 Story 4 BR + glasl': f'll- rlosl'.'d slcrping porch. 2 BA. N1t·e cornci· kitch iv/4th BH situated to he <·onvertiblo d1n1ng rin. \\':tshrr & cll)'<'l' hookup. COVCl'f'(I patio. l.Ll!.-. or eemc>11!, P.oon1 for nrw 1\l'O·s!or.\', :: hdrn1 .. ('1111 he . (lt1plex in rron1 . Only onf' •·lrverly an·angrd .1nro. 4 short hlock lo hParh. $42,990. This I0\\'1.1ho_ust' is 1tn· RED CARPET Realtors n1atul11t r 1ns1rlr anrl out. • 84&-28St * Great \'1r11· of lht> hills. ====~c-.,..--=-1 $36.500. EXCLUSIVE Bayshores. By ' ·.ii ... · .. · .. · .. red h1~11 ~~:-:~r ,~'.~;,, .. ;i:~n1:~;~;: d('n, 2 Ba, ~·slm wall paPf'r. shutters, crptg, frpl. her, etc, S49,COO? 646-1231, or REALT\' U11i v. Park Ceurer. lrvlrlf' 61:1-237\). Ca!! Anytin1c, SlrlJ.S20 l's°"o'". --;;B'"a:--=,1ro-o'"1.-,B'"n"1.-,p'"•°'oi-o. I """'.~"'"'"·"""""'"'·.,.,.,.,""'[ Piet/slip. :1BR . $210.000 __ B\ 011·rlCI' .~ BR, 2~ BA hom~. \\'a1rr duplex 11·/float $65.000 $34,500! Cal h('(lral ch_i..~-F ot~n l c!111 :~Bit. rlen, Ral00..1 $59,500 5 B r111 .. frplr. Sl1,!100. S.{~·291:1 :\'larshalf Rraltv 6/;>--<16()() edrooms L"n1vrrsit v Park. · i"l'll'ly p;un!rd c:>1lcrior. ~i FOH. ;i;-'b-R, -I BR Tl lP. BLUFF.°' 4 BR t'OnclQ ,., I ., 1. 1 . i;,l r } onr. iaui full\ air 1'Cn1!, n1anv t.:ustom Ul"l roon1~. ,, i,1[ u;, hugr hon1e f<in1 rn1 ~ forn1:.d din 1 · • I .1 • . . . • • ra1u1·c~. r. rd u c <' d to anll} roon 1 \ll!h 111agn1f1· r111 on green belt . ii:::l-I0-13 si-500 0 , 1·rnt firepl:ic1'. ~·ornia l 11111_ -.i, •• \iner, 644-2499. ing 1w111• All " tr 1, 1 r 1 r Laguna Beach EAST BLUF~' Lu sk ;, BR. ~ '"All'ctl'I!'' h111lt-111 kitt'llt'!l, UN19UE 1 RA. fan1 rm, 2 frplrs. m> 1 1 sh 11· a sh r r, Patio , , llandson1t' brr~~kfast bal". So Spc·1·lal'ular ocran & 1·oai;tnl sri. rL 6-14-1102. 1nany extras. Lovrly Ja1·~e fan1ity hon1r ll'ith hugr prlv:tfl' rear yard. 8'1:.:!-2561. TARBELL ~lagoolia & Talber1 , l-funtington Bt•h. -=c"'L"'o=sE to BEACH vie11·s fro111 rvery roo1n. ol • • li<lnns. plus taniily roonl. BEAC!·I cahin tn traH_er park Unusun.l stutl(' firrpta('f' ,t:_ f.urn, ~]reps _G. Avail. after built·in kitchen. l!nnicdia!r G/20 < ,1 ,11 6-l;>-1421. 01'tt1p:u1ey, $85,000. R!IORES. -1 Er., 3 Ba. fam ..AO tan REAL ESTATE 3200 sq. ft. S11·iin &c fennis, Agent 6T.r-72Z5 fllR JIF:l.J>! Anxious owner ? Br., :i ba, S\l'i m pool, iood loc. Agent. 675-iZ2.:i. l·llR. anti cute·as-a·hu11on1 Heavy 1190 Clenncyre St. xv·LNc;;,;;-';=.7""--0'-"='-1 shake roof. gl'cat bltins. incl 494_9473 ~l)..-0316 • T buy 4 BR, ran1 rn1., d1st11vshr., J BR, 2 BA and a • 1£ yd. S30.000 firm. 2900 1 o ,. c I y pt'Ofessionnlly Exceptional Buy Silver Ln. Ba('k Bay, 640-0489 lndscpd yard. l\.1o,·c-in eond. 2 Bclrni 0\\'11-your--011·11 apL BLUF'F'S: On lge i:reenbelt. 3 thruout. Sound expensive? Hid._ poo.1. all blt-in_s incl. BP. Condo. many extras. \\'ou!d you believe S23,5Q()? reh'tg, \\·aJk lo i;~pping & S·1·1,9;1(} 01r1icr, S.14-8239 . * 548-1290 * Newport H'ghts. $23,250 Lovely Cottage on lgf'. tree shaded lot. Best heights loca lion. Call for appl. BALBOA BAY PROP. A hoine for entel'taining & fam ily Jiving. 4 bedroom, 2 hath, fan1ily l'OOn1, a decorators drean1. Closr to !he beach, sli11 your boat a nd can1per on lhe side of your home ani1 begin t>n- joyini::-lifr. P'ric1.' only S.J0,450. FHA/VA Tenns. Phone 8-17-00JO. Call 540-855.''i. hcac.h. ll!u·1-y on this one at S J . SHERWOeD REAL TY S\9,500. an uan Cap1str•no 18964 Bl'QOkhursl. F.V. • 499·2800 * BUILDERS * 642-7491 * College Park PRll\fE Conler. 4 BR. 2 BA. 11'ith elegant dining & covered patio. See to ap- pre-ciatl.'! 54i·2·142 by appt. please. BY Q\\'ner. Best in College Pk. 4 BR. 3 BA. Tup eond. Sell at appraisnl. 540-8376. Corona del Mar 5 BDRM !!ARBOR VIE't\' l.f0l\.1E, Family rm., dining rm., 3 BA. loaded 11·/ex- tras. $68.500. fer. 011·npr, 833-389-J. Storybook Duplex Und£'r construction. Front unit 2 bdnns., 2 baths: real' unil 2 bdrn1s. 11·ith lgr. fa111 ily nh.. 3 baths. Som!' Vi('U'. $72,500. MORGAN REAL TY S-EE THIS Big <I bedroom, 2 story hon1e \v/sunkcn !iv i'n1., beaut. slump stone firepl., formal din area plus fan1, nn. Great nb rhood and clost to schls. All this for only $29,500. Call 54~855S. SHERWeeo REALTY 18964 Brookhurst, F. V. $27,900 Custom Designed $25,000 Assume 5 1/4 •/o Loan ~;n CLOSE-OUT SALE ~&Ll•s-;r 329 ~so. <~v . .,, ;,, 61 Calle-San Marcos ~o~'l·• ,,..~. Mo. co..#. Br:u1r1 nc111 2 story 4. Br or Alpho 11<1• -Pl""~ c...... . .. '•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•[ :\ Bt· & ~ugc pla}Too1n, 3 ' Lo11· payn1('nt includes taxrs, I' ~ . balhs, carpet r. hr u. 0 u t interest, principlr & in-. • ~ BDR~1~ & DE~ bltns, !gr frnced yd. OnJ; surnllC'e! King sized L1~j·lm. 1~/flpl. of)t'n!< lo $36.990. FHA, VA t. Con- lit.Ylroonu;, built-in <lrean1 pa 10• p~nelcd den olr niCKI. l'rnlional term~. kilchcn. Chct'r!ul hospilable ~1~·1 ki~ch. carp, dr:t~('~., Call Roy Ro1n11n, Bkr. l ivingrooni.Dclig h tfu l ,ac Y 1 1 11 need 1°f ~anJ 714/63~412 Eve~ 493-3900 d . Q -I' eanup iut a rea b111· ror -·· ' ' covere patio. tuet t·ul-de-S.'l6 950 · I • llATE TO CO snc str('('t. 842-U69l. wusSioN REAL TY ~9·1--0i.~l Poor IJ(>alth has mad: this TARBELL 'fOP Of The \Vorld, oce;in eouple dff"irle to give up vie"'· Profess. N'decor. in-lhcir lovely t1\-o bedroom side & out. 4 Bdrms .. 1 ~. l\\"O bath to\\·nhouse, The~ 16111 Beach Blvd., • los 1 ba, Ne1v sha!! c 1, 1,. s c>an >e your gain. Hunt ington Bch. ~ Ch · s cJe(.'Orator \\'llllpapers. Lh·-arn1111g rrnnish fireplace TROPICAL PARADISE ing .rni. w/cnthedral r·eil.. spaciou_s pat io ar" only ~ Rr lax and enjoy lirt• on the ran1• rnL 11 /frplc. ,t;, l\"t'\ fr.iv of lhr nirr thingi'i about Tahitian lnnHi by the b111-. pllJ'</Ut1 floor. Hl1-in tla.~ nn1• story Cni;ila . \l'aterfall. This d a r I i n g k1!ch1,'11 \v/Ltrk!SL arr <t . ('all f()r an llppoinln1er11! hon1e is beaut. lndscpd and Lge. mas1er BR. 1~/\\alk·in JUST $2S,5()(l 1asterully 1lcc'Oratcd in th<' closet. \Valk to all Sl'hOol~. FITZPATRICK'S island fashio1i. Shurp, sharp. S•l2,JOO. 01\'ttrr 111 o 1· 1 11 g Cil p1slrano Vall('y RE'al!y shal'p. Call 548-8:155. 11(1rth. Call 49·1-3ri9J. :11501 Camino Capi.~tr;ino SHERWeeD REALTY Mission Hills ~~" Juan f:arii~!rano 1S964 Brookhu1 sl 1-~. V. 493-1124 Tca.._ co:rs ·~WALLACE BROKERS-REALTORS 2025 W 8olboo 67J~J66J TAYLOR CO. .673-6642 675-6459 G.I. tern1s • JO\\' do1vn all other!l, ;"; o ver si zed bedroon1s. "l. baths. faniily room \Vith ri<"h 1\·ood panel· ing and elegant fireplncr, fo1mal dining roon1. Ne\1·Jy paintf'd. di ~h was h f'r decorator wallpaper ac· cents. Plumbed for sort \Valer. PnUo. D o ub I c garage. llugc J r. estate ground!l • landscaJ>('d to pic- ture-book p e r fec t ion 962-1373. No Down 25MJ Erickson. Laguna !·!ills. Rea ltor Since 1965 01vncr anxious. 3 BR home, Sa t A REAL TORS $200 Per Acre!! -546-4141-Tn Calif.? Only 4 hrs. driving (Op~n Evenings) tin1e liom Ornngr. Hun1 I~~::':'-!'"'-~--· I jack rabbit and quail on 3 Blocks• Ocean )"Qur o\\'n lnnd, \\':ilkini.: Beach + Pool dlstnnce 10 ail' stl'ip & 1\·ater 1vell, Jl('Ul' bont 11\unehin,i:. Only $39,500!! Will •.<e hangc or """" SHC)C'f\J~(; BU1' '11tl"E' puprr only S12.000. Call C U!l 1 OTn h ll il I \Ii I h fii.'\...85.~I(). PR.lVA'ff. Tll·:ACll. '11-:;.;-. ~lt~tfxll !\IS + POOL! G1:in1 lh·ing room. l'uU firepl;1('•·. f'OR..\iAL DINING . 4 r-xll·;~ lara:e bedroom~. \Valk tti ~ach! C:ill no1\, 64:>--030.1. ' I om \I I OI \II\ .... ,,.,~.;-,,, SUPER PLAYPEN BA Y~l!ORES, 2 BR & tl<'n, Oerora.tor's pad. ri.tust IM':ll. Submit' 8.U oU~ --GEM- 1s10 \\'. Coasl IJ,;:v .. N.B. REALTORS 642-<G%1 OJ>fN UNTH. 9 J>M TREES, TREES 5% DOWN Bfnutiful trtc Shadrd resl- rlen11al area. Popular 4 brd· room 2 bnth hQmc \\'ilh double tirl'plntt & indoor S.B-Q, and 1111 buil!ins, 111· n6.<i: forces in1mediatc sale -$~1.?"!00. CnJJ :l4&-84Z4 (open 1>ves.) NEWPORT BEACH SPECIA $45,000 Ne'v listing! Large picture-\vind w view of lhe lovely Back Bay. Streel-to-s eel lot. Se· eluded 3 BR., 1101 e wilh 2'h b ths. 2 Fire· places. Assume g d VA loan. 1 dn. WESLEY General General L USK Harbor Vi('IA'. Unusual Joe. Good decor. Molivntl!d scllE'r. Agent, 675-7225 J-frR. SUPER 2 Br .. 2 Ba., pool. great Har bor Vie1v. Agent. 675-1125 1-ITR. ANXIOUS. Several 4 br homes. lmmed. occup. lo 00 days. Agent 67:>-7225 1-llR. ~1Al.NIF1CENT Viel\' fron1 highest Joc In Cdtn, 4 Br, ran1 rm, 011·ner 6"'J...41 j7. TARBELL 1$$84 Brookhurst. i•ountain Valley SOLDIERS .:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO I Costa Me1a NO 00\VN pymt • Sellf'r pays all cogls! 4 BR.', 2 BA., $26.950. f'ir~I pymt. not 'lil Aug. ]$1. Oversl~d 2 car gar., 60'x110' fell('t(! lot. l'O\"'d patio, upgraded crpts. drps, pymt~ le!l;t than rent. BA YSHORES VIEW & POOL Walerfron t custom home. 4 bedroom & den or 5 bedrooms. 5V:i baths. Top Quality car·· peting, draperies, wallpaper & fL"'itures. Vie\v from most rooms. 87' Jot, spacious yard with beautiful gardens. $240,00 0. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR l1l11nd1r1 Bld91 et Linde Isle 341 81y1ldo Dr., Suitt I, N.B. 675·6161 Daily Pilot Classified Ads EASTSIDE $1250 DOWN Bright, shiny new paint, nc\\' sbaiz: crptg, big back ynrd mnke this a tl'C'at to Olvn. Bu» w/rKJ points. no new Jo:in fees, no 2nd ro·s, calJ It If/age Rra l Est,i te ,.2-4471 ( ::::1 54~101 to inspt.'ct a.nytlmc -Vacant. [ '"""!"::~!'l!'l'!!~~~"" $22,950 GOVERNMENT- Newport •I F•irvi1w 646-lll ll OWNED FHA & VA repossessed Tov.•l'lhouses A-home5. Lo1v clo\1•n. No points or Escrow lt-e.,. Gov'I t>a,y~ closing <'OSts. AU price ranges. Call !16M441 $29 1 900-Pool Jn1maculate, sprinkler unit.I;;:·:;"-;;::":::"~";-::,;:-:,,,_ __ Spacious 4 bedrooms, 2 Immediately :ivail. 642·2155. iiY Owner' 4 BR, 3 BA, fa;; baths, all electric "A\\·ard" Laguna Niguel rnl, forrn~\ 1lining · m1, b ·11 · ,. I d. h h rovcrecl palm Grecian """I u1 ·tn ttc 1en, is was er , OWNER A · t .:.·~1t $45 900 5~7 '· · t"""' • entry hall, fu ll dining room. nxiou~ 0 ~· · 3 · · · J -421.'.I, \\'alk to beach. 9G2-5!"i6G. Br.. "~ts. drpii, frplc., Wt1stminster bltni1. btg yrrl., n e 1v l y •·;:·;--:;--;::·:-'.----painted. 29512 Vitt Valvrrda. LGF: ' BP. ho '"'" TARBELL 642-2155 .. .. " tne. r,rptd. · thru-out, beaut. rugs/dtps ~=~~~---~ --Lido fi le ('?ninr. mirrt'lrPtl hn llna;:: WALK TO OCEAN ..._ 1l1~h\.\·asher fully Ind~. 2000 SQ. FT. BAYFRONT VIEW lg. 11·allt><!·!n hl1ck yetd, 4 + DIN + FAM RM Spacious 2 BR .. dt'.'n, din. rm. C'O\"l'~Cc'tl pa110. 11prlnklcr~ $26,SOO. k wrt bnr. En1ry t'Our1ynrd c~l-.l~·sac ~t One blck h'Oi~ 0\1'nc1· leaving al'<'ll, n1u~t v.·/foun tuin. J.gP. p111i11 on 1~1• '.! blcks f'lrrn. lltho:tls ~ll! \V/\V c;u·pcts, builtin liO fl. lot. 3 rar i:;u. r.i!l,500. ~~· .... Mile Sc1. Park, $30.SOO. ll/O, used brick f!replll.L'f', lo · ~ ' loan. Ry OW'"'' boa>aR& W.ODJfl.. ~1172.-'"'' 2-baths. cscel!enl landscap-ocalCOA ;~~~~~~~~~I ing! SubniiL Call 847~12'.lt. J4lG v · L.do 6., ·~ SEYMOUH. REALTY, lflfl ia 1 1•r-o.><M Beach Blvd .. Hunt. Sch. Spanish style 4 BR. plu~ fflm· lie.at [date. rAJ VERY ANXIOUS I ily 1m .. 3 ba ..•.... rro.soo Ctn1ra1 ~ Brnut. pool hmc. Ht>aV')' Ba.kront lriplf'X, 3 BR .. 2 ha.1~~~~~-;;;.;;1 I k t , Bit 3 u 3 ea. Leas<' land .•••. Sl20.000 s ia c roo. " , ua, LIDO REAL TY INC. Mobilt Hames ('ar gar. 2200 + ~ct. (I. 3377 Vil'I Udo. N.D. For Sele llousa1vife's pride & joy. 673 .. 7300 Xlnt nbrhd. Sac. Sale. 125 * Century 21 * Mou dol Mar lOx<.'i 1 BR. Crptd. Awnin~ & skirting. \\1Mhcr 4 dryel" REAL ESTATE 842-8821 !HES,\ Pel ~tar. 5 Bdnn .. 3 ,_Clo.11:! to 11hop·a;. Jin!~ AITRAC, ~ B!l Fran: Ftn. bQTh. la~(' ynrd. Pril'atc !"D.<'h: Adulls onl). tk t1.1tt'St draw 1n the \Vest •• • Oa01 Pilot Clusllled Ad.tCMm Don't ClVt Up 1he shlp! "Ltst .. ft In cluslI!l'd, Shfp to si,... Rmill>I $4U,678 CREST REALTY for Action .•• Call 642-5678 1 ~""""""""""""1'"..,.r"m...,.•> ror best'"'"'"'~~ llon1e. Overlooks rie" f.1 .S. pai·•y. Qo,.qo to schooli;,fJj· ;;;8:-1;;;1:-81~8;.l,;;;n;;:-;;;::-:;-,. p.irk, nr ~ho~. schls. octan t:hurcJics, r.ollcgr, 540-Slfl!J, IL1ke lo tradt:T <>Jt Trad'""7 & f\''Y· Rcril !::st. Stor<', Agt. p disc 1 er• (213) 4.1!)..3711 . Open lifon-HouSf" 1111nting? \Vat('h the .. 4 11 ra co umn b for )'OQ! Tues-\Vcd 12 to 4, OPEN flOUSE col umn. " ~s. 5 days for 5 bucb:. l . ' : LI c 5830 (2t3 Fl Coast 3 19~. E Im 11.5% Realo CO~I land Ag Dupl .. 1 N\\IPR BA < No tax 548-96 UNITS for du Agent 6 2 BR .. old. F Cover Uon. S -6 L Large- Sano· ling ton Spa<'io owne ft plus w I 2i90 ! 7 HD FL'<er u $S7J. doll'n. 10.1 Furnish tou•n. 112.000. finance REAL SHOP s S3S. s SlO • Col I *PERC WA T E SHELT lease 3 for deta" 673-8249. JUST C triplexe11 · Dr., C. 543--6148 10 INDIV Jot. Al\\' Sell ()r e For tin, P Rll\1E 4 lnc. $7 '$62,500. W7-615J. 8 UNIT I &: 2 BR. 709 Pa.ln1 28 Un 2 & 3 B Ave HB. C-Orona de Joe. 2 Br '67>722'5 ~Oii t.r ORAN o .... 1op C<l 1 Ac. 0.4 M Ac. C·l 1.9 A C l 2.5 Ac l'lttny mo le;ases & Call: Ill PERCY I CHOICE l j><vod /loeh .. 101· \VAik to 1 $21.750. 67 \ l''ll help I I " ' ' /' " ' ' ' I " I I f ' ' I t~ond;y, i.'c.reh 27, 1972 DAILY PILOT 23 J[j] I ~~~·~ Jfil ! n-w Hil I -·-I~ L_I -;;;";;;'"'-;;;I;;;~ f --... ~ .. lltl I ........ , ..... , ... Mollllo Homos ;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~:1 8 r w nt~ 210 -_o_up:..../._._ .. _O_IJZ_m_. _958_ Apts. Furn. ]~1 -... Rft]~[ '--~-"''"_"'"'~"' lltl ( For Solo 111 Mobllo Homo/ I;;;";;';";;";';;':;;;,;,';;:;;;;;-;;;;;;:=;;. Hou1u Unfu. •'-".;.' __ 30J_ -Unfuro. 305 S60 c..osta M.eu • Apr. Unfuro. m •--:....------1._T_r_ai_l•.;.•...;.P.;;a.;.r;;,k•:....._.;.17;;2 I• Gonorol -· lrvln'• ~."."_1_1_ Cost• Mes• 1L I I -NATIONAL AAA·l COi\1· -.... • IM TED TIME ONL y DESERT CREST PANY SEEKS TO Af. 2 BR, 1 Bi~. Lo1,·cr units, AV1\ll.. 1"01'' 1 & 2 Br furn, .Stl.990. 0\\'n YoUr O\\ll lot QUIRE 0 UTE R \VE A R VERY CLEAN -' BR home $300 Balboa, Blt~ns, drps, dl')•tr. poo1. 1•ec rm, gd llX'. No Viking 2.l\:61. u shown Gold. CLUBHOUSE, Natura GAR l\1 ENT J.IAi'>JU},,\C. \\1th l>ltina: &: 1rr rencd yd ; :~ ~ :~. ~~'ri~~·:: $335 6Gl~r;.._,961. \\/frplc. yr I>·. rhlldrn, no pet~. 646~58"1-I Capistrano r-.1.H. Pageant Jlot Pools. $3990 to $?290 TURING COfliCERN. IN· tor S2GS ptr mo. FAl'\tIUES 3 BR. ha. t $325 .rvo ~ Oardi"'n Grove Bl., ~Vm. f.'1~ 8l'och0tt1 Tl!:RESTED IN lt"I R :1\I ONLY. Ca.II agent M6--04L 8Jt ;~' ba • am. nn. S350 Cost• Mes• Din• Point (2ll) 596--09il (lI4> 891-2326 ELDRIGE REALTY co. \VITJ-1 GOOD I\1 ANAGE-Corona dol Mtir • • '>ii •• (am. rm. ~'lM HARBOR GREENS FOR Sa.le or Rent: l Br.. P.O. Box 666-0 ~1ENT. CAU. COLLECT, furn'd on Lido! 100' to Say, Destrt Hot Springs. Cali!. MON.}~RI. (213) 728-6230, JUST remodeled 2 Br., 2 Ba., cov'd p;itio. Adults. Rent -,,°""'""'11:1;:41c,=329-<44::...:::.::•_~ 8:?.0 1'0 5 P?l'I. f~plc., close to o ce an . $190 mo •·• •~ ooo ~ [!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Ad\Jlts. $290. 317 Larkspur or .-.e ,.....,, . 30' SP ACE fo1· age ove' 3' 673-~•<lr 673-J.315. .xi"'. yrs \\'/OO children <lr pc!$. Investment .,.c~--~~----n.A.i\'IINGO • Double \\•ide, lif!'l·up in nice park, childn:!n &: pet \\.'elcon1e. G<JG-8.164. Opportunity 220 l BR duplex, trplc. gsr., new 531·1'94 Mountain, Desert, _;,,R.;.•~•o~rt.;..~~~_.;.17~ 1'.10BILE lfonic: Flan1ingo· **BIG BEAR LAKE 8'x50', [um'd, to be m<lved. ONL\' $9,995 -Picture your· 518-1906, 548-1857 self enjoying Su1nmcr in the FOR SALE • A \VNL:\'G mountains "'."' '''alking _in lhe 48, g• CAB NA • \\'OOds, feeding lhe sqwrrels. x*, Ai "· 8 xn·, Try !hi!! beautiful A·fran1e Call 64&-UIH * t•nb!n neslled in !he 1voods. Acrt•gt for sale 150 )'ou'll like ii. \\lon't last long 40 .ACRES, take for only $29 monlh. $1250 per acre. 968-oo.tl Commercial al lhis 10\v price. <Call Ross 1714! 536-1738 01' 1vrite: Spencer Real Eslate, P.O. Box 282S, Big Bear Lake. California. FRESH AlR-NO TRAFFIC 1 __ P_•_0_P_•_r..;1.Y _____ 1_5_a Good usable vrE\V pi'Operty. 3 ac. only $3900 !otul. Nr. f\shin.c, boating, catnping. etc. 75 min. from Orange County, Bkr. 644-Ml70. First Tim• Oflorod Coast }h\")', Co1'0na de! l\lar 3 Commercial &. tlup\ex $'95,000 O\VC TD@i~i,~a E•st 17th Street Cost• Mt•• Improvr<) Commucial ll.S% Spendable $115,000 On. Realonomics, Bkr. 615-6700 CD?i-1 High1vay frontage, C·l land &-bldgs. Agent. 6T.r722j H.I.R. Real Estate Exch1nge 182 Investors On The Move Up! E:<change 10 unit, prime F.astside money maker. 5 • 2 Bclrms. \l'ilh fireplaces, also 5 . bach. quartm. Income O\'er $12.!iOO per )' e a r . Duplex11/Unit1 •• 1. 162 1"·500• crpts, drps, $240 per mo. 620 EXCHANGr~s. investments Goldenrod. 644-739:?. & tax x~rs. Home &: ..::,_---=_;_ ____ _ lnve!lbnen1 Realty. 6'i>722:;. Costa Mesa , Monty to L011n 240 • Needs Love -2 Br. atove, \ * * * Don Thom•• 32751 Medlterr•ne1n South L•guna You are the \vinner <lf 2 lickeis lo the Western National Boat & Marine Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER April 1st thru April 9th Please call 642.fi678, ext 314 behvf'en 9 & 5 pn1 lo claim your lick els. I North County toll-free numbe.r is 540-1220; * * * BORRO\V to $25,000 <ln the thP. money for any purpose. 0.•er $5.000 <ln real estate & personal property. Call AVCO }"JNANCIAL SERVICES 500 N. Analieim Bl, Anh. 535-2816 240 S. Euclid St, Anh. 776-5250 1879 iiarbor BJ, C.1\-J. 642.3484 617 \V .. 171h St., S.A. 547·4431 2017 S. i\1ain St, S.A. 548-3361 12091 Brookhurst Bl, G.G, l'!'!rlg, child/cat. $120 util illt'. ALA Ronlal1 e 645-3900 e Budget Booster -1 Br, \1•a1k 10 Kbop'g. Util incl. mo. ALA Ronlal1 e 645-3900 • PRIVACY -Lrg furn bach, NICE; All util incl $85. ALA Rant1l1 e 645-3900 e l\IlN! Ranch -2 Br \VI rrplc, rncd yrd, kids/pets. $175. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 Three bedroom, 2 bath <"harmer with large fenced yard and garage. $210 per month. 4 BR. 2% ba., faro. rm . ._,, "f l 1il1 ''l 11•/ld ---"I li·11li11 r "SINCE 1946" lst \Vea:tem Bank Bldg Univenily Park, Jrvlnc D1y1 552-7000 Nights L1gun1 Be•ch --NEW 2 BDRM Private & Nice • 2 BR Triplex. ChUd \Velcon1e. C.onsider pet. Avail OO\V mi. NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4000 01' 494-3248 e \Valk to Beach -Spac Bach. Sm! pet. All util pd $125. ALA Rontol1 e 645-3900 2 BR. l ~I BA, pr. Sharp, LAJ'tCE 2 BR duplex. artat nlcesha.g, $190.IJ)f'rnio. ''i!'\V, :1undeck, laundr )', PJIONE 642-29Jl dS\l'Shr. $195. 49&-1408. Apts. Furn. 360 Huntington Be1ch Gt~ral x La Quinta Hermosa Bold New C ncept S.pani"1 Coun."')' Estato Uv- 0 1ng &. Spac101Js Apls. Tel" raced pool; sunken gas BBQ. fURNIJURE RENTAL UnbeUevable Living -Onlr 1 Br uni $150.lur n $175 * ?.tontb to l\Jonth 2 Br unf $175-fur n $210 * lOO~ Purchase Oplion 3 BR Studio .. furn $275 1r \Vlde Selection-(4 blks S. ot San Diego Fn\y StyJe-Colcm> en Bc!11..ch, 1 blk \V. on Jlol! * 2-1 Hour Delivery to 16211 Parkside Lane.) 2 Bedroom or 2 Bedroem & Den Ph Bo or 1 Full Both1 l\last~ size bedrooms \\'/hii.::h bean1 ceillrigs, large Hvl11g roon1 \\•/gas 01· \l'OOd burning fireplace. Con\'f'nirnt laun· dry area oU kitchen. £n. C'losed patlott 2 s11·lm1ning pool!'\, sauna, recreation faciluies. ~JODELS OPE~ 546-0370 - (7141 847-5441 IM ; ·~,g L1gun1 8uch J,_;...,..,..,....,,..."'!!,.,..,.,. ~ Ideal For Student ON MONDA y 517 W. 19th, Otl ~tS-3481 Private room & bath in large uou'll appreciate lio1v near 2756 N. l\laln SA 547-0314 ho 11 · ·1 l t d' ' -!!i!!i!!!!!ii!iii!!!!ii!!!!!!ii!!!iiiti/ . me. a privi · nc u ing your Ve:ndon1e apartment is e Fresh &: Clean! 1 Br, nr '!! k~tchcn, 1.aundry &: . p~ne. to Newport Blvd. Yet so "·h S I t -" $150 Balboa lsl•nd Xlnt location $SO. Util palCI. quiet and secluded. llavt ""· m pc ""· · NU VIEW RENTALS ALA Rentals e 645-3900 WATERFRON'T 1 Bl· -·' • your n1orning: coffee <ln your . grou .... 613--4030 or 494-32.iS Choo 1500 T f h World floor priv patio parking. 011•n patio. u &J. op o t e 1nq, '•oo s. s.,.~"'· apt. '· OCEAN VIEW n. ot .. ~,,.,, "" living in· 3 + Family room, Htove, re· Balboti Penfnsula Large J BR compl furnished. cludin~ 2 bedroon\s, 2 baths, frig, carpets. drapes, deck Ext.'t'pt ional .. nice area & den 01 guest room. \V/beautiful "Edge <lf ~1'oun-·B-,.-M·0-,,,•0•. -,.·.,.-.-.,-,-.e·ar-.-1 apt. $195/nw. Util pRld. THE VENOOME lain view"! Lrg llv rm '"/ BR, \\'ill sleep $i.-::. Nr. NU-VIEW RENTALS I8-GAnaheim Avenue' 1:{~c~Ji2iW RENTALS Bea c h /Ocean. iohoppg. 673-4000 or 494-3248 Call 00-2824, l\lrs. Phillips !73-4030 0' 494-3248 si;.;;ino. Lido Isle BAY MEADOW APTS. I BR HOUSE e $25 \VK &: UP.On Ocean e -. 2 Br, beam ceilings, priv pa. • Lo"'.'IY Ba_ch-1 Br·R~ms LlDO_ N<lrd ~~yfront·Studio tlo, rec. tacil.. clooed gar· South Lagwia. stove, refrii, l\1a1d serv1ce:~l·Ulll pd apa11ment. N1Cf' be.a ch 1 . age. Gas heat, cooking &: carpets. drapes, )'ard, en· e Call 615-8140 e Suble:i $200 month. 615-492~-\\"ater all pd. All adults, no closed patio, child/pet. Ac-* * 2 en: Duplex .. Furnish· Newport Bt•ch pets. Fron1 $165. N\\IPRT Bch triplex. 2 BR, 1 BA each. Xlnt rental al'f>a: i'\o \'&Caney factor, C'.oocl tax she l ler. 011·ncr, 548-969j. Exchange Corona del J\.lar duplex, 2 • 1 Bdrm. adjacent to complete shopping ce11tcr. Income $330 month, $·12,j()(), Also have Sll.000 equity in estnte sized R-1 lot in Kailua-Kona, Hn\vaii. INVESTJIF:NT D£VISJON 530.4300 6411 \Veshninster Bl. \VshnnsU· 893·5008 crss to prlvale beach. $200. ed. Near beach! \Vasher 381 \V. Bay St., C.?tt. 3 BR., l'I BA. Bll·lns., Cp" NU-VIEW RENTALS avail. $200. 671.-37"1. RIGHT ON Call 646.0073 & drps. Fenced yard. Oean 613 '"'" 4"' 3248 & c.'Ozy. 3135 Sumatra, i\1esa ·-.u.:.v or "". Corona dtl Mar OCEAN New Villi Riviera UNITS \vanted. Ha\·e buyrrs tor duplexrs up to lge units. Agent 675-722:) HIR. Income Property 166 6 Units E11tbluff ·1st TD Loans ~1000 6'14 % INTEREST 2nd TD Loans Verde-. Refs. ·S 2 4 O /mo .1M_•_•_•_V_•_•d_•_____ Large Bachelor apt., t'On\pl 2 ~r .. 2 .F~ll Ba fl{). .. 7359, SHARP 4 BR, 2 BA home. FURN. 2 BR. apt. furn. Beautiful vlc11·. J.Iuge Families ''clc:on1e HORSES O.K. Great loc, els to schls. A w/sundeck. i,; Blk ot'Cat\. d~ck. $120. Util paid. Sha~ ctp~dl'ps. patio, beam House & 1 acre ac1,·acent to bargain at l Z7:i mo. \\'a!er $nl mo. 615-40'!3. NU·VIEW RENTALS ceil., gal'ages. Fron1 $180 S.A. River proper!y. View inc~ Avail aft Apr. l:i. Cost• Mt&• 673-4030 or '194-3248 6-1, 'It C :1\T 540-3058. .:.• .am1 on. .1 • 2 SR. It den, 2 baths Some pallos. All for S1-1.; & $150. 546-7331 LRG. 1 BR. lli Ba., •ha& cpl. bltlN:, trple, prtv. pallo, f!:Jltl •nr. t blk 1chl1. 634 }lamilton. fi.G...6345, BJ0..82~ or 548-1941. * TOWNHOUSE * 2 Bl', 1 1.~ B11, cpt/drps. pa!lo . Adlti'I. $165. 126 .;. Mtlocb' Ln. ~-5986 er 548-1761. }"A:\111.-Y SL 3 br, l~t ha. nr. OCC. Carport + idor. lndr~·. oo ptls $ 190. ;J<;.3.l•t •2 81~. l BA, :\Its& Vmle. ga1"!lie. crpts/drps/bltns. Lrg cl()tets. $1~. Adults. 1\0 PETS. a57-8-IOO. LRG 2 RR \Vt palio. Quiel. Ctpts, dl'pS, SIO\'e, rrfrlg, gar. adults, no p~ta . &1r .... 11ss. 1 &. 2 Bedroo1n apt. Cpt:<1, clrp~. dsh\\'Shr.. \vtr pd. Sl»3lj{), No chi!dren/pels. Si8 A\'OCaclo Ko. 1. 6"2-.5191 . QUIET 2 BR uppe'I', Mesa 'Verde, beaut shag crpt, d L'ps. bltn.s, a;ar. $150. 54~Hli60. * .-BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. Contemporary Garden Aplll. Patio s , fr)llc, pool . Sl55·Sl10. Call 546·5163. SPAC. 2 & S BR. apt. $140 up. Pool, cpt/dt'p!, bltns, kid.!i ok. 2206 College l'\o. 5 6'2-703.) 199U llfaple No. 1 642-381 3 l BR-3 BA $3U On Bluffs. Great Vlew. f'rplc. Pool. 2 P11;tios. Avall April 15. 645-12fi0. 2 BR unfw-n. cpts, drps, new paint, 2 kids ok. $13.\ mo. 770 Shalimar, 538-4741. * \Vil.SON GARDENS * 2 BR, 1~~ BA, erpt/drps, tncl patio. $140. 642-6811. LOVELY, $paclou.s l BR, API. Nr. Shop'g. Frwyg. OCC & UCI $13:i 557-7768. 2 BR .. 2 bath units. 2 yrs. <lid. Fully c1n-p. & draped. Covered park:iJli:. Best loca- tion. $150,000. Real Est•t• Wanted 184 NEED Lo\\·est rates. Orange Co. "WE BUY TD'S" Sattler Mtg. Co. ~~:a Ii n a· $275./Mo. Casa del Oro Sin Clement• See 1lgr, ~~~!rs. Hoban Newport 8t1ch ALL UI'ILl TIES PAID $130. MO. Fum Otean Vu --------- RENT or leaw, 3091 MUITay -3 BR 2 BATH Compare before you rent • Apt, '.\ rms, l Bel, Car park· i\IODERN l B<lnn. apt. ~pts, * NE\\1 Tri-pltx (2) 2 BR, 2 D1n1 Point 642-1171 ~0611 Ln., C.l\f. 3 BR, 2 Ba. &: ' Custom designed (eaturin": ing. Adults, no pets. 492·1209. drps, dshws~r. bl l -1 n s,. BA, \V/blln11, crpts, drp~. c '7S.,OSO C' -'····natca..-. ' Sharp Duplex, Cd~I &/<lr Clean 4 Br llm-Nice area Cash Buyrr SAND CASTLE REAL ESTATE 1786 So. Coast lh\'Y Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. I v.111 buy your 2nd TD. jmmediate cash. pt'ivate party. 644-7691 art 6. Fam. rm. $250. 833-1103, B•and Ne•" Dupl-Slov• e Sp · kl ' . ~ g"ag~. 1 child <lk. All uul ,,_,_, ~1. VI~". U". t'ves, 546-9754. • •. ....... ' ac10Us tchen \\-1th 111· Apt. Unturn.. 365 pd •1=1 .~n7 A d .. " .... c.n• , rfilig., crpts. drps, huge direct lighting . ,. .1.1 mo .. ,,., \.'OCa o. 493-8330 01· :)93-5851. 2 BR. crpl/drpi;, garageJ frplc .. <lpen beams, deck, • Separatl! din'g atta Gtner1I Apt 9, C.i\I. 615--0984 __ ._ East Bluff fenced )'rd. Couple. m pell!. gar. Xlnt loc. Avail yearly. e llome·li~ storage DELUXE SltiO. 548-8251, s.,ig_.140:;. S3i5. e Private patios Duple:-.. Lrg 1 BR'. patio, APARTMENTS 6 LUXURY UNITS largt' lu."l:urious unHi; near San Diego }'rr.e\vay & Jlun· tington Shopping Cenler. Spacio~ t hrec Bedroon1 owneni Suite. has 1.950 sq ft plus fireplace. $112.500. Mortgages, Trust Deeds 260 SEAS. 2nd lru&I deed disc. to yield over 20 90 pa. lo maturily. PrL pty. 67J-J34j. Laguna Beach. '194·8025 YOUNG auomey & family n<'l'd 4 BR, 111 N.B. $2~ ~3'.J.000 . 20~ dO\Vtl. Payments ro S125. Reliable. 673·5284.. ! CAltPENTER 1va111s distressed & fixer uppl'r propt11y t11> to $25.000. 61.>-4.33.1. 2 BR. lg fncd yd, gar, drps, NU~VIEW RENTALS •Closed garage w/storage U·plc., Bea1ned ceiling. l Air Cond. l't'Plc's. 3 S\\im. hnhvd firs, children OK 673-4030 or 494-3248 • Full length marble pull-adult, No peliS. Yrly. $150. ming Pools • Health Spa • $2'1j. mo. 548--0970 67~1410 2 BR, 11/2 BATH man 645-1317. Tennil'I Crts. Ga.me l: Bil· i\IESA dcl Mar tempor~ru • King.sz Bdrms B•ck Bay liard Room. -J Studio fourplex, a1J electric e Pool • Barbeques • sur-l BEDROOl\l rental 4 BR hsc. Avail lhru built·ins, tarpcls, drapes, round~ with plus.h land· XLNT location, '.! BR, 2 BA, FROr..t $165 June 30. $280 m<l. 546-4268. garage, patio Ir: balcony. scaping Frplc, Lrg sundeck, Great MEDITERRANEAN 2 Br h<luse. bltn oven &: Small pct ok. $190. Adult Jiving at 11s bes! vit'lv. Htd pool, Gas & \Vlr NEWPORT BEACH Villa Gr•nad• Apt1. Four bf!droom.!I with balcor>- lea above & bf!l<lw. Gracious llvln~ & quiet aum>undlna for famll)' wilh chlldrm. Near Corona del Mar Hjih , SchooI. Fireplacl!, "''et bar & built.in kitchen appliance. 83.l A?lfiCOS WAY 644·l99J Walker & Lee Inc. Jnves'tnlrnl Oh·. 2i90 J-larbor Blvd., C,M. 545-7131 7 HOUSES ••• 2 LOTS Fi"<er upper l and 2 Bdrn1. S87S. mo, incon1e. $10,<XXl do\\'fl, $79,500. 10.1 BEDRM UNITS rnl~hetl apts. clo~ lo tov.11. NO LOAN FEE. $12,000. d<l\\·n, 0\l·ncr \\'ill finance. $115,000 * CENTURY 21 * EAL ESTATE 642·1771 HOPPING CENTERS S312,500 dO\\'fl $38.000 :;pendablcs * * * * $100,IXXJ dO\\•n Sl0,000 spenclablr .. * ... $65,000 dOl\"11 S6600 spendable Call: Lee 1\Tohlcr (114) 541-5\5.j PERCY H. GOOO\Vl l\' CO. ATERFRONT TAX HELTER. Dock your boat, eas~ 3 ne\\' units, NB. Cnll or druils. Pvt. 01vncr. il4; 3-8249. sr Completed! 2·Deluxe iplexes. 2289 Fordhen1 r.. C.i\·I. Bldr. O\\•ner. ~48 E\·es. lNOIVIDUAL-houses on a ot. Al\\'ays rented. Adults. I or exchange. rtin, Rt>altor 642-5000 11\IE 'l·Plex 3 Br., 2 Bo .. nc. $700/mo. No dn VA. ~.aoo. N. Cos la ?11csn. ·1~131. UNIT -Wafk lo Bch f & 2 BR. $110 l\'f, $16 !\1 dn. 09 Paln1, J-IB 847-3051 21 Unif·Nr. Shop'g. & 3 BR, 2 Ba. 8231 Ellis "'e 1-ra. S420 1\I s41.3951 rona del JI.far lripltx. Good • 2 Br., l Ba., ca. Agent ;)'.:ms H1R ti fer s.r. 170 '"nge. ct"pt/ili'ps. $185 mo. NU-VIEW RENTALS Large 1 BR $17; paid. $200 mo. 548-4845. VILLAGE C.::•:::lt~96H=-.::'::16:.:·_,,-=,..· --1673-40.30 or 494·3248 trrILm Es FREE ':"' l6j w. Wilson 642.1971 Corona dtl Mar 2400 lfarbor Blvd .. C.l\J. Large, vacant 2 BR., gar. 4 BR, fam rm. lg yrd. iiiiiiiiiii/ (714) S57·8D20 $145. Fenced. kids/pets. $300/mo. Ref's req'd. 2900 Low Wukly Ratel RENTAL OFFICE R•nt-A-Hoult 979-8430 Silver Ln. 640---0489. 2080 Newport Blvd. OPEN 10 Al\J TO 6 Pi\f I ho .B F S I B h Cosio MHa ~~._""¥, HACIENDA G•ntr•l Love y me. r, am. rm, ti eac .. 2 Ba. Bit-ins. fi'plc, patio, 642·2611!! llW' HARBOR $751 BR mobile home enclosed yd. On Cul-de-sac. NE\\' Luxuri<lus 4 Br, 3 Ba, STUDIOS & 1 BR'S.~· 211 AVOCAOO STREET 2650 sq ft. t r i · I e v e I , AVAILABLE $100 l BR, fencd, not OK No. school. $275 mo. 54S-5i04. ...__ al .1. b ON TEN .._,__ Adults only e No Pets .--cauiedr ce1 1ng, ~·et ar, e F II kit·• - ....... , ..... , ]~ Housts Furnished 300 f inant'-1 I~ ColdV.·eJJ. Banker & Co. 1'1-Janaglng Arent l & 2 BDRMS. Jrully Carpeted I: draped Covered parking stall~ Cas & 1vater paid 816 Amigos \Vay, ~'B $125 sngls util pd. N.B. I y ff u uien 2 Banns Avail Fount• n 1 •V cpts, drps. $315. (Prestige • Heated pool 1 le 2 BR. Funt 4 Unfurn. · · · Business nso utl pd wlk/bch J...ag Bch -=---....:-"°"'-C.Ollege Park) 21314»-5667 Fir . I I Prf U.. Deluxe l & 2 BR. Pool Oppo~unr'ty 200 $135 2 BR sngls OK • NR. bch. 3 Br., 2 Ba., ft 6 • Laundry facilities ep aces v., Pl Garage. Dlshy,·shr. Paid util. " bit " d 1 a p.m. e Frtt utilities Pool.a Tennia Contnt I Bkfal FRO.'! 11~. "'-'" ~~·u '< &71-1fto 0 -·•2 ...... Bach pads start $80. ns, cp , rps, cov pa ., 900 Se 1 ___ Cd 6" 26ll " ;JOI O'IV-ull"t COCA COLA Rtnf·A·Hou&e 979-1430 lov yard i 200. 962--jl21, University Park • Free linens a ........ M • Coldwell, Banker & Co. C 1.1 · C · 1 962-2194. e T.V, &: maid setv, avail. (AfacAttbur nr CoAll Hwy) l.fanaging Aaent a 1 ornia orporation wans Balboa Peninsula 3 BR, Vlllaa:e III, crpl5, •~:_::n::•·":•::·~·"'":;"'~":!•~=;,_ /,!!'!~!.'!''!"!J!!!!!!!!~~!/•iii~iii:~~~~&iii Huntington a..c11 men <lf' \\'omen to service -----------Huntington lleach drps, 2 patios, bllns. $330. .. ast moving a u om a I e PLEASA!~T Home-Privacy. avail April 15; 213/350-7949. •• .. .. t · t d _. •· • WK. & UP * Charming 2 Br., crpl/drps, * NEW * ON BEACH! equipment. Products pro-Closed garage. Rangf:' & NO FEE e Studio & l BR Apts range & refri&. Localed on duccd by multi-billion dollar relrig. Carpets &: drapes. "RENT \\'HJLE YOU BUY" HOUMI Furn. or • Room $15 WK & Up. ocean side of h\'•'3" Lrg VILLA NINOS FURN. & UNFO'FtN. 2 BR. From $X3 ADULTS ONLY Furniture Available company. Yearly, $200. 613-1412. This lovely 3 BR 2 Ba home. Unfurn. 310 • TV & lllaid Service Avail patio, Heated s\\i mming l.•-ed u••d dbl g·-and ----------1 e Phone Serv1ce. Util Pd PoOI . &: carpot. All util in· Can start part or full time (5-10 hr11. per \vk.J Company l'stablishes business Io r distributors .. NO SELLING Go fishing or l'ipcnd n1ore rimP. \Vith your favorite hob- by and let the machirie; age earn you money. CASI-I RE- QUIRED S2498. Secured. Limited Opportunity \VrUe l'IO\v for more infor- mation. include phone nwnber. (REDl·BRE\V CORPORATION) 1001 Howard Ave .. San l\1ateo, Ca. 94401 CANDY SUPPLY ROUTE (NO SELLING INVOLVED) PART OR FUL-1.-TIME No\v available in ORANGE COUNTY and surrounding arcn!>. You may k<"ep your p1•e5ent position. All loca- lion!'I are (.'Ommcrcial or f3C'tory furnl~ed by us. Qualified ~l'!'IDn \\'ill become distributor f()r our candy fNr~tlcs. Planters. Tootsit' Rolls. l\tilk Duds. 1\lilk ShnkC', Pay Dtl)'. •1cnhey Rall)' -advertised nation· ally on T.V .• f'IC). \Ve arr n nallonal company. V!'ry high income potenU1.l. You must havt' 2 lo 8 hrs. per "'tek l!P8n! time (dll.,)'S or ~vtsl . 11115 REQUIRED 2 BR. t BA, dbl gar. No pets, ..... J""" ' ""' B Ibo P ' I AprU 1 'til Julu I. $2'25/mo. many, many xtl'as. Vacant! • • eninsu I e AlJ major credit cards: eluded at $250 per mo. 2 BR, 2 BA APTS J $225. ptr n1ontb. BAYFRONT .. Choice 5 BR, 4 2376 Ne,vport Blvd. 548·975S 642-8400. Super·Comfortable·Qulr.t 61 $.-8. 113 or 59 s.4 255 · Robert& & Co. 962-5511 BA. pier le float. summer This Ad \Vorth $5 <ln Rent CHANNEL REEF Ntar Newport Back Bay. Corona dtl Mir Singles or families OK. J BR, or yearly, Furn. or Unfurn. Children & Pct Section Unrurn apt f<ll' lease \\'ater. Gas & \Yater Paid. ?\-'Io. to Cl-JARMJNG 2 Br, .2 Ba, everything, oc breeze. 01vner. 613-2039. Unbelitv•bly Beautiful front, 2 Br, 2 Ba. boat .li!ip l\fo. From S1S5. Cape Coe! Cottage. Ju&t Rtnf·A·House 979-1430 VAL D' ISERE Garden Apts. avail. No pel5 or children. Childrtn Welcome. N."'t·w-'po'--r_t_H_o.,ig;..h-'f'-1---Adults -no ..,.ts. Flou·ers $500 n10. 613{)J70, eves 2324 Elden Ave e 645-4012 remodeled. Ne\v kitchen & *'VE ha\."\! a large selection "' .,... s~ t l"d' d 1 2 BR, crpl/drps. gar., blk evefY\\'here. Stream & •.J·8500 . a.pp ns, s 1 uig oor opens. o ot 3 and 4 bedroom bon1es le-• u••d, blln b~.. \VaterfaU, 45· pool Rec. Rm, cL°'R°"G,... ~3~B"R,...,-,,2-B~A-. -,0,.._-a-n * LARGE * i>celuded patio, &re~n hou s« that can be moved into •n...:u ,,..... ""1 """' l\T' & garden. Steps to Uttle almost immediately 00 our beaut. kit. Adult cpl. No Sauna,Sglsl-2Bdrm,Fun1-Blvd. V i e1v . :rrplc . NEWLY.DECORA ED C c. 1 • ho 1 children •200 mo. """ """'1. Unfum. from $138. SEE IT: Air/cond. Bllns. Beam cE.'il. Beautiful Grounds orona .ocac 1 °' s ppng. Rent .O p tion pl a n. ~ ... ~iuv 2000P 642-8670 S.JOO mo. Days 675-1424, SHERWOOD R E A LT y, Condominiums arsons, • $350/mo. Uc. 6'13-40t8 or 10 Minutes to Otean C a r p eta-<.lrapes-dlshwalhtr he ated pool-saunas.tenrds rec room-ocean vlew. pallrni-ample parktnr Security Guards. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC Til OCEAN AVE .. fl.B. (7141 536-1487 Otc open 10 am-6 pm Daily \VlLLIAi\t \VALTERS CO. eves 644-2333. 540-8555 Unfurn. * 1 \VEEK FREE! * 6iS.52f.O. Close to bus line I.: store~ L •· h 320 Bach., nu dee., no kit. $15. LRG. 2 BR. duplex. Frpl. Gns Heat &: Stove. \\later. L:tk,. ;ha~r~,ph~ d':r,~: b~: •gun1 ~•t IM~L\CULATE ex. lrg. 3 Lagun• Buch 2 Br., $165. Adlls. 642·2181. priv. deck. NC\\' c•-t. Garag~. Rec. Rm. Laundry LAGUNA HI LS BR. 2 BA duplex, crpt.s, LR 1 1 -1~ Room included quiet dead-end SI. Children· L .,_, bltns ll'g love!• LEASE-Condom,· n i um G l BR, comp etely furn paiul &: drape~. $250 11e.r mo. 1 BR. $1t0 pet considered. $1~. Also 2 ... ., • • • J "'/bltns. Dsh\\·sr. D sposal, Agt. 6 7 3 -6 S 1 O. eves, 2 BR $l60 $lG5 $l75 Br. turn'd $173, 768I Ellla Nc\v 2 BR, l~l Bath duplex. prlvale yard (gardener &: beach apt 1600 sq. fl. 2 lrg. $l!i0. 642-7973 aft 6 or 6~7i8. Haclo.ndo ,do ;.,,_ 11 a No. A 847-7547. \Veil turn. Alr/~nd. Double \l.•ater pd). Gar + encl huge BR's, lrg liv, rm. I: din. knd rrtW I--.-=~=,.,..~=:- garage, Lrg. patio. Beaut!-prk'g. $200. Re!lp. married area. 2 lrg bathrm's, full)' w s. 3 BR., be:low Jfighwa)', 160 \\'. \\'Uson. Apt 1, Cl'.t * FRESH Allt ful vie\\'! Short term lease couple. Adults). 842-3276. c r pt ( new 1 ha g ) * \VINTER RATES * beamed ceilings, fr p I c. 3 BR. 2 BA beaut ~ apl avail. sr;JQ. 2 BR, elec bltln r/o, C[llts, "'8sher/drytt & re frig . A~c fu~ Studios Sl.L'i, 1 NE\V paint, crpts, drps. Sun 3 <lr ~ adll~ OK. iSi E. 2ut NU-VIEW RENTALS dbl gar. 60'xlOO' fened lot. 35x25 patio, On the ocean. BRs $12a .. Adults, no pets. porch, gar. adults. $275. St C~I 646-8666 673-4030 or 49~-3248 \Vrlte Francis Caramagno, 2135 Elden, i\!gr. Apt. 6. 642-5:331. ·• · · Vacant. 1\'Iove in loclaj'. Sl.95 we liBllU I LAGUNA HILLS mo. Village Real Estate Ph: 9580 Garden Grove Blvd., Furn. Bachelor & J Br'1 WATC!I the 1un11et in this 8 2 WAik 3 Blks 10 Btach! L1e 2 It 3 BR, apts, newly decor. 'Vl w crpts, drps., hltns. except refrlr. $1SO to $225. No sna:l1, no peta. 9624471• C&r~n Grovt, Ca or call especl1lly nice. 2110 executive S bdnn. Ocean 5 kli 1 & 2 BR ant Ne\v 2 BR. 11·i Bllth duplex.1 -~--~~--~-534-t13l. Newport Blvd., CM. Blvd. duplex. Adult3 only. part p"1 1 j . g 1 • 1 ° \Vcll furn. Air/cond. Double 3 Bdrin., 1% bath. cpts, drps, ·.;.~~""'~C.::"".;:,:-sA~" "'! A 1 67-'"JO 11.p a. oo -ac11211-u11 LIVE near the ocean, etcape garag('. Lrg pnlio, Beautitul ney,•ly paint, bllns, fenced Townhouse Unfurn. 335 SHADY EL.L,1S LA\VN POOL &:'oo20 °· gen a·..., ' Jdscpg -garages -dee. to peace Ir quiet. Ntlihbors 1>36-llll. vir1v! ShOrt term lease av11;1l yd., dbl aar. $245. 01111cr. C t M Unfurn. & Furn. 1 & 2 Br. · app!s -adlt$ -from $155. friendly. beaut. big 3 BR $2'j()_ 892-8916. OI • •s• $I40 Up. ChUdren':i Sect. LRC. 2 BR Duplex. Frplc. 151 E. 21st, C.:1\t 646-86fi6 apts., closed fll'agea. $145 Nu.VIEW RENTALS 2 BDR?l'I alt •l•c. d.!1111\'hr .. 177 E. 22nd St. e 642-364ii Pi·iv dC'ck. Ne\v car~t. 3 BR t I • 1 ... mo. CllU for detaO.!l, Torn. NO FEE! 4 8dm1 • $250: 4 paint&.. <h~t1prs . SliiO pt'r rm:i. , ront un l. !!Inge 11.J, 673·40.'.0 ()!' 194 .... 1248 Bdnn • $WO: 3 Bdrm • $235: refrlg, pri. ,, .. ,~her & dcyer, J .BR furn apl, pool &: re~a· Agt 613-6.ilO; rv-ts 613-ti 7iS. sha~ cpl., drps, frple., lge ~163 or Lelis 536-120S. KATELI..A 847--6061 cpt!!, drps, pri patio. Adult&, hon hall. ~fusl be CM"r 3.i.)'l"S _ ,mt10, nr. 1hpg. 673-1910. 2GOS England St., H.B. Lido Ii i• Irvine no pets. Bves. ~91. <lid. Rent $1li J)f'r mo. $35. CLOSE lo Beach, lrg. 2 Br .• ,.. 1·2 A: 3 Br. l~lc. Blt·ins. S EA AIR APTS .. $i30 4 RR, 3 BA. AU bi t.I n~. ap-•;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; * * * iitcurlty. 64&--3164 2 Ba., op@n beams, 1fl?lc, Closed garage. Near South L11: 2 BR. o,,ts, <h1>1. bltns. plianct's. Frp!C'. 2 c&r go.r. • A rnie McCl•thchey HOL IOAY PLAZA :~~31 3:":1• ~~~r;ueritc. Co.1st Plaza. ~2321. 1 blk N. of Adama cu Beach Ulil. inc. Avail July 15-Aua:. 3 BR. 2 ba. flm. rm ••• S340 235 East T•ft DELUXE Spacious l an. ;)-JI ' BRAND NEW I & 2 BR Blvd. 729·•6 Utica. l:l $1200 673-8667 lor app't, :i BR, 2 bf.. N'pl ••• $3151400 Orange tum apt. $13S. J1l'&l<'d pool. UNIQUE chateau on B~i;!de FROM $ . SJ&.2796 <Ir 5.16-7070 4 BR. 2 ba. N'pt .••• , •• $425 You'a.l'e the \\'Inner <If Ample parkin& Adults -no Dr. 2 bdrm. li den • dining 130 WALK TO BEACH Ho11111 Unfurn. 305 2 BR. 2 ba. • •• ••••• J213/300 2 ticketl to the pets. 1965 P<lm~na Ave. C.'f room. Adult.I only, $375 l\to. Near shops,. enc Io s e d Brand ne\v 1·2.J BR Cpt 4 BR. 2~i batha •• • • $325/315 Agent 675-4930 640--0020 sars.gea. bu1lt·lns, e n c I • ·• Gtntril 3 BR. 2 ba. home ••• , ,, S300 Western N1t lon•f Large Bach. 1''um. Utll pd. ' · palk>s, attractive lndscpg. drps, bltns. frJ>lc. W 16th A RANGE COUNTY velopment loc1tions 1 Ac, $126,000 Oranae 0.5 Ar.. lil0.000 H.B. For m~ lnfonn11Uon write: ...;--------1 3 BR. 'Ul AU&".·turn. ••• i400 Bo•t & Mtrlne Show $160 yrly. 2 blks to Big Co-*GREAT VJE\V 2 BR. * Adults only, no pe!a, 1970 308 16th, 847--3957. $100 pvt cott, tot OK at the rona. 1 adult • no pets. Frplc., bltni, l Undecks, pool. Walla<'e St., ~ • 8. o so 4 3 BR., 2'1\ Bt., bltns • r(ta • 1.9 Ac. $168.000 Anh, 2.5 Ac. $325,000 Anh. ny more tor !Ille. ground ascs &: bulll to $Ull. Call: tAe Mohler (11'1) 54-1·5155 ERCV II. C.OODWIN CO. OtCE 101, 100'xl3.''. n.2 vl!d a.Ile)·, 343 E . rtstrr St.. C.111. Sho1 t k to 17th SI. 1hpn;. cnlr. L i30. 67~9. 'II help you ~11· &12 .. rms "ROUTE DEPARTMENT •23," P.O. Box 1739, Covina, Calif. 91722. Include phone no. QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD $115 pvt hme, klds/J)f!l!I OK ired he1ll ANAHEIM 642-8520. $200 up. 644-6344, 67N21).1. 646-2209. • \\'Slir • d1')T -pool & rec $77.50 2 BR hme w/r:ar CONVENTION FURNISHED 2 BR. Apt. 2 BR, patio, gar, '?f!'v pain1, SP,\CIOUS HO~tE 1.-JKE r~c!l· $190. 96l-4167. Sl8- S109 country set 2 BR hme CENTER UtU. pa.Id. $170/mo. 2217·8 erpts, drps. $23.3/mo. 422 twnhse., 2 Br., 2 Ba. tnt1tr l;,7J. $12'S 2 BR Alone on lcrt REALTY April 1st thru April 9th Maple Ave. 548-5913. Lark 5 Pu r. \Vknda/eve1. bdrnl hu~. bltns, \'lulled --,,M"O"V"'E'°'t"N~T~OD~A"'Y,,--1145 % BR kld1/pet1, C.M. Pl 11 642-51178 "'1 311 613-3681 $150 2 BR everything, C.l\t. Univ. Park Center, Jt\'fne case ca & • BEAUT. FURN. 2 BR ' celling~ patio, encl aa.r., From $139. Kids we.Jcome S160 students OJ< 2 BR hie !!!!!!Cal!!!!ll!!A'!nyt!!!!!l'!m'!e'!, '!833!!!!!.ICJ!!!!!...., Jxthvecn 9 5 pm to claim J-IJd Pool. Adull11 (\\'/teen ok) 2 BR. Ptnlhou~ 11.pt., oc~an f'lub h~ & J)OO!s. $100.. 2 ~r. 11.JI xlra!!, pool. your tlckct1. INorth County No ~ts • ., •• up. s·•".""11n. \•lew. Pool. ~.i. Ornngt 540-4179 a116 pm. 8-11-3',69 or ~7~10 2 BR. 2 BA hmt, klrl,/pels t 11 ~ •· I u• •-) ..... •"1oJ ,. """"' Da Pt. DAILY PILOT 0 ·u«*num';r .. ~-2 BR, 1'1 BA,•"· Sh8'p. Conll ll•al E•la1'. 6'~. * LOWER * ** 121 New 2 Br •Pl" 2 BR, h'pl, aar Cd~I Nice 1ha.rc $190. ptr mo. * 2 BR ... Vlt\\', .Pool . Frplc, COLO fl.Jtdalllon, fron' 2 Br, Crpls, drp11, bltn1. Ntar 1175 3 BR 2 BA Hunt Reh CLASSIFIED ADS QUICK CASH PHONE ' 6'2-2951 l " &U. dbl ""''"'· $%3.1. patio, encl rar. laundromat. B<ach! 841-Ul! 1ll•moona. We have JO "°"" ranche• THROUGH A "Make Room For D•J. 61:>.13!6 or 67"'8131. Adull•, no pets. SI M/mo. 2 B,. Apt. CloS<d fat. Qopt., !l&rt SJSO 't\/acrca.ge w/2·7 FOR ACTION 645-~"'la 6t2 rAM ,,,..... h'I" ll -t 0 K BR'~ • • • DAILY PILOT dy", .clean out t11t C01t1 Mo11 ~,, ·~" 11 -.,r- 1 • < ~~·7·.!.".',.1 ~ · • Ronl·A·Home 9794430 CALL 642 5678 •a ~-~·r lra•h Is CASH • l BR 113.l. Ro!ri•. blln!, w mo. ~ "~· . • WANT AD "' ._ ... ,,_,. . * 2 en. lpilciou~ a pt, Crpls C'rplll', aarb. dl•pl . T 1 l N'C\\' lr\pl@Xl·2-3 BR. p r, SclI lhc <lid new ~lulf stull Buy the TIME FOR 1\\th a DAIL)' PJLOT k dntJ)('s. $13;;/tTH>. Sha!Jmar Dr. Ap1 C. C).I f')M(' to Hun1 Ctnt. SW, 642-5678 Cl ouillcd od. • 613-l!U .-~• • "<nrt •. 612-2'1!1 , SI~ .\To.,)Jtl II " ,..~ DAJlY PILOT rt . Molt\111, March 27, 1(}72 )~1[~ -~"'~~ J~~~l~ ..... ~ ...... ~,., .... ~I~~., /~, ~ ... ~Ills ~I~~~[ iiiiiiii!ip,.,,iiiiiiiinll•iiiiF~~1-~-1~ I ~andRe9M l~ 1-ka1ndRep1I" I~ L--[ _£n»loymen_•~l [IlJ !••••••••• HFt•., Personal• Sll Ma sonry He!p Wanted, M & F 710 Apt. Unfvm. 365 Apt1., Furn. or Unfum. 370 Office Rental 440 ** FRENO.J or SWEDISB Ca rpet ~rv•Q Gardening , Fum. or Unfurn. 370 1t1a11.<saae. \\'hut's )'our -.... ----='-----REPAIRS, plan!l'n;, brlt:k. . , r'rril rvine Newport Beach DESK IJ)ace av;ulable $50 pleasul'f''! 833-2100 JOI-IN'S Carp«t k Upholstery COSTA MESA 534-4821 block. lllone. Quall !y \\'Ork, t\~1lw1l1n~.1,~l~~~d ' Coton.a dtl Mar mo. Will provide furniture ALCOHOLICS ~mou.s. g:l~S~~~' tree ES<.~lt~I~ Nel''P<>{!_"~~~~ng~ &Nlgucl Ken Ph. lte!iid , 6·12-1770. X r , $SSO PARK WEST VISTA DEL MESA at SS mo. Arulwering service Phone 542-Tll7 or wnte P.O. guard (Soll Retardants). ' Bkkpr Sec Y APARTME~S 2 BR, turn or unturn, rompl! Apartments available. 17875 Beach Blvd. Box 12ZJ, Costa Mesa. DegreaStrs & all color 1 ___ c;:,o_m,.:P:,.·-Se-=rvk-•=....,... 1Palntlng A 111ip\Jrant P11ys Fee I Bcfrm. FM $ll0 ~patio, aolt wtr. 2 blks 14 2 SR. Furn. & Unt. Dish-llunt!ngton Beach. 642-4321 I~~~~~~~~ . brighteners A: JO rrUnutt * LANDSCAPING * Paperhanging Gen'I Ofc $433 2 Bdrm 2 a. to 'yrlyllt'. 67 3-8lS4. wuhcr ~ SIO\o'e & Retrtg • DELUXE 200 sq. ft. office I, blc.>nch tor white carpelS, New la"'"~· Sprnklrs. decks, A/P ayable $450 From'' S1tS • C.ost1 Mesa Shag crpt'g.t.ge Rec ettnler. suite, $85/Mo. Corona dtl I Lost Md Foinl J[g) Save YoUr money by saving cleanup. State lic'd. 5J6..1225. PAINTING: Inter I Lxt<'r. Acctng Clerk $550 -P·"-·le·" '--· RENT 15tartJ $155 l\ia.r, nr. Post Or!lce, Snack c extr 1r·ps Will I EXPER Japanese Gardener Walls WMhed & minor Escrow Officer $700 """-'I ........ "' -'1!111 lrvlne & Mesa Drlv• Sho ~ k i.... · m a 1 • c ean -.. •-''prices )'OU can ar. R t 'ono'st to .. ~ Irvine. (JUBt ott p. ri·ivate-par ~· Uv!og rm., c:lining nn. & Complete yd service. Neat 'Lt"' .. " R f ecep 1 ~ SUI Dttgo hJ·at CUl\'et Rd) _-,,,*"-..;54cc:,S-4..:8::5:.:5-=0*~-=· I ~Re:;,a:;;loC;no-=m:::;°'::..::B:;.kr::·-.-.::67:.:5-6700,::;.;; ' 550 hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, &: Relia. Free est. 642-4389. 6'°'1•"1'1r<!'ree est. e s, Tele type Opr $400 ** NEW ** l Bn, Upstairs. 1240 \V. DESK space ava1labJe $50 . Found (frM adt) · couch SlO. Chair lJ, 15 yrs., LEE"S L.A\VN SERVICE "" w. Exec Sec'y to $600 Balboa Blvd. $175 yrly. mo. WW provide furniture ---------exp is "'hat counts, ·1xit Dependable & Reasonable. No \Va.snn(! Keypunch/2nd shft $520 lA COSTA APTS 642-2440 or~ f'Ves. at ;s mo. Answering servloo * * * method. 1 do work myselL Free est. 979-1088 (local) + WALLPAPER * fr<'r & frP Position!( • iiiiiiiii ~~~'i.a~. :~~Ave, 1a1::y;l1~se~~~e~rt. =G=ood=o-"-'·~53_1_--0_t_OJ_. ~--r J[~f"S Gardening, complete ·when y0u call "!ifac" RUTH RYAN AGENCY Laguna Beach * NE\V, 2 & 3 BR, oe<!an vu .. l blck lo hMl'h. !225 & up. '1~2339 & 4!H-3383. Laguna Niguel I & 2 Bedroom I If &j l;i;""':;,;=;"i,:::=:;_,;:7.==~-F t · V II STEAM Carpet Cleaning, JA\\'O & yard care, cleanups, 54$-l#l &46-l~ll 1793 Nt'11·por!, Ci\-1 646-4854 • nulJt.'--e Sh•• c•-t• •---R•_•_••_I•--~ ,,-CORONA DEL i\lAR. Furn. oun ain a ey prof. Satisfaction guarn. at S.1>3662. INTERIOR & Exterior Pu1n· rm:H Beach, JIB 847-9617 • Dl'&t><• e \l'alk In closels · '"""" Y Sf' ice. ~·" mo. owes pnces. Free est. ting sninor repn rs. non· '"' 1.1Q ...., ·~.-. AIC ·-· rv· "~ You are the \\•inner of J 1 · I 1•~"'\"~~~~~~~1 Agent 675-.,.,.,., I!.I.R. 2 t1C'kets let the 9G' ~12 EXP. Jla"'aiian Gardene1· 1 e 5,,,ithming Pool ·--------· ·~ ~ . -'"' . . drinker, . Free f-"$\'Hna es. ADVERTISING '"" Sq F Western National Con1plete ga.u.1en1ng .service Call ev('ning•. 646.0477. . LAGUNA NIGUEL • Dar-b-Ques Rooms 400 .iJoJ • t. Office !or lt'ase, Boat &. M a rine Show Carpenter Kamalanl, 640-4676. _.:::::::_:.:..:::::;:::,:,,;_:.,;,,;,~-cr~at opporlunlty for highly Apartments •Enclosed Garage doil'ntown Cos!a :\Jesa, ut the 1----------*QUALITY * PAINTING .Honest,. clean, niotivalt'tl, highly skilled can About Our Ne""· 6 1'1o. All Utilities Paid Ro6:\r tor Tt'nl, working $90/nlQ, 642-IZlO, 673-4626. ANAHEIM LARGE OR SMALL La\\·n & Gardening Service gu~ranteed \~Ork. Licensed 5('('1'etary 10 \l'Ofk into bl'03d· Lease Program 1\vailab' man, kitchen prJ\!lle'-'t'S $GO 1200 sq. ft, plu11. Air concl., CONVENTION All Typrs \Voi'k: Cut doors, Reliable. Free Est. 979-2639 & insured. 67:r57<10. el' responsibilities at fallt· Now, 1 BR $1.'>l. 2 BR, l £ Adults, no pets n1o. 5'18--0516. draped. 17th SI .. C.~1. CENTER pane I, ren1odE'I, !lnlsh, * SALE * paced Ncw110rl Beach ad· $1S7. ~ BR, 2 Ba, $l96 JM.'I \\"atking di!truice to ROO,,I /or -ng•n•'al Indy, * * 6~96.11 * * frame, repairs, etc. 962-1961. GARDEN'ING seNice, ex· Fuller Paint & \VallpaJ}('1' vertislng agc.nry. Brains, h '-" .. April lsr !.hru April 9th perienced and reliable, tree . ,, mont · shopping center. Pri, ba., aJ1 prlvl. S.A. Jlgts Offices .. 600 Sq. F t, Please call &12·5673, cxt,314 PARTITIONS, sm. remodel, c'Stimates. 963-1072, We are painting & dl'Y \Villi initiativE', & sh t'N[ul.l'eu. 20041 AJom:a Ave. 495-4Z12 3S4 Avocado St., C.M. area. $.).ilrno. 557-7678 Costa Mesa e 646-2130 betwCf'n 9 & 5 pm to claim move \Valls. Qual11y \\'ork.1--E---Lo----&-contractors. Let us advise Call 833-1 670 Mesa Verde 642-9708 your tlcke!:;, (North County Ken Ph, Resid.G4Z..1ii0. • ~i::i·ing. ;~~~~~-you, Deoorat~1· available aft AGGRESSIVE $\('reo tape & 2 BR upper, locked garage, ,::;=::;:::;=::;=:z:;=::;=::::;::m j Room & Board 405 Business Rental 445 IOU-free nwnber is 540-12'10) EXP. Remodeling, cabinet!, * 836-0048 * 12:00 Pf)1. Ponit of Color. 516 ~uipn1en1 sah•sn1l'n & Qu ... !, ''r, llarbor & Bak"" ~ PAR/\LYZED Vets or Elderly lSOO SQ FT 14c ""I' loot or * * * repairs, maint. Furniture ----'-""-'C..::~--B\\7. tl9Ath St.I,! CIM. C64GI -0571. \1·on1cn, lull or part tiinc, " " 1 · · ,.. ,---------~I COi\IP LETE La\\.·n & o or ~ aser u1rge. ~ .. ,,,,,,·, •. ·s ionplu~.!'vlusthave Sbop'g. Adltll, no pets. $140 BRAND NEW people. iving iogt•thcr "'ho $250 ~ mon1h. \\lifldoiv Lost 555 refinishing, Reas. &16-<1224. H ul ' '" ., ___ , hcl p I garrlening service, a 1ng PAINTING & PAPERING, p-,,1·ous t'X""'"icnce sf'lling mo. S-15-3QJ5 Arlulls only a00~monl< ,,,...._,, some p, ~rsona front, air. heal. crpts. "'"'rll· Cement Concrete & I ,. ""'" "'"-'" ,~, · _..' caN<, (·leaning-, cook in ", ,.,.. 1 c ean-up. im, ,,..,,_,,.,._,J, 19 yrs in llat•bor area. Lie & !;!ltlle. i\1ust also be ah!c 10 DELUXE 2 & 3 Br, 2 Ba, \villi pool, enclosed garages ,,. rioned to suit. PJen1y ot Sf\fAU. black poodle found hond d 1 z_i ~ b ·1· · biJnking, shopping etc. I'm '""'king in Shern~• Sho-San Joaquo·,, Gott Cou-·. JAP.A.~ESE GARDENER e . Rcr's urn. 6-1 l ..... do til<' c!l'a nup. Apply bchl'll encl gar, $150 up. nental u1 1-1ns, carpets & clrapes ,....... vvu ,,. ...... • * * Ex F E 1 11 Otc ~,· Ma·-Ave, Conveniently located ('xp'd., good car, good cook, ping Center. 8:!1 So. S:U-39"" pie"""" ·a ni ·i ·per. ree s PROFESSION AL Paintlng 1() A.\1 & 2 Pi\1 only or ra 546--1034.~ ~ l Or 2 Bedroon1s ambitious & reasonable. Or Brookhurst, Anaheim. Call i.,, ·~I e I y. Brent Russell * ~7373 * Inter & Exler. Reasonable for nppt. U.S.A. Ster('tl From $155 Per month if you need a hon1c 1'11 S"Up. ~Ir. McNamee 962-44il or FOUND: f.1.1Ie dog pt beagle, 16451 Redlands Lana, GARDENING SERVICE Rates. 557-7453. Equip. \Varchou . .;c, 179 E * 2 BR, lO\.l.'flr, Adults on1~. Drive by 23U Elden Ave ply one. for you. 893-55-1.l 54;)....6·1:1.G. n1ostly blk '''/tan & \1·ht. Huntington Beach CLEAN-UP. TRD1 *PATCH PLASTERING 17th SI., Costa f\1 es a , Crpts/drps/bltns. Av a 1 I Or call 645-5780 Guest Home 415 I ~c-=~==-o,,.--..,, Vic ~fesa \'erde, 551-6610. You are the 1vinner ot e 646-7624 e All lVN>s. r~rcc estiniatcs tH~2.J.\2. 4/15. $140/mo. * 646-2G27. lX PER FOOT. 900 sq ft, 1 ..... 2 tickets lo the ,,,.. ----------I $135. per month. 821 So ...... ~. dog • c."Ollic mix • yng General Services Call 5'1()...6825 A?itBITIOUS gal • Learn I.: Newport Beach MAR80Jt *PRIVATE ROOM* Brookhur~t. Anaheim, Suiie male, s:mrt hair. vie: \Vil· Western National PAINTING, pro!. All "·ork teach. professional .ma_k~·UP tor ambulatory person. Good 13. \Vioclow front, air, heat, son school area. 642-1966. Boat & Marine Show TOTAL SERVICES CO. guarn. Color spec i a 11 st t~c~1ques. t'l'CC tr.unt.ng. PARK NEWPORT food, nice cheerful surround· crpls, plenty of parking ln h."EYS (3) -I should say at the Plumbg -Pa.intg -Carpentry S42-438G 547_1441 V1 v1ao(' \Vooclard Co.smelics, APARTMENTS COMPANY bigs.* Call S4S4i;:i3 * Sherwood Shopping ...:eOter. Ford, on gold chain af. ANAHEIM Elec. Repair -Inst. 646-1800. ' ' 842...£419. Drive by, Ct11l Mr. tached to large red fluUy CONVENTION THINGS by l\.1oose, Lt. electu PAPER HUNG $30. Oft the bay ~~~TO~ A~~RTMENTS Jor senior l\IcNamee. 962-44n or po'vder-pulf type ball. Lost CENTER phunh, fence. tile, instlns., Any r n1. + paper. 646-2449 ASST. BOOKKEEPER Luxur1 apartment Jlving OV• ,673 4400 c111zens, ml'als, ni aid 5'15-&f.!6. in Costa l\.1esa. Please r.all April 1st thru April 9th carpentry, paint. 545--0,520. Plumbing Construction exper, helpful. erlooking the water. Enjoy • service & ch au ff cur, THE FACTORY 6-15-2142 alter'6 p.m. ~:Se ca 9 11.642-5678, ext 314 Hauling Progressiv~ profit sharing $750,(0) heal th spa, 7 swim· G42-9'17S. in Cannery Village. 32 retail L 0 ST l\.T a I e Brin d I e ~ "' 5 pm to claim w_....;______ ECONO Rooter service, management. ming pools, 1 lighted ten-e SPACIOUS e BOARD / Care / Laundry. shol?s under 1 roof. G left 425 \VirehaiN'd l\fix. Medium ~~~r hckets. ~~o:ui ~~ LOCAL l\.10VES, iJauling, Drains opened $5. l\.fain NEWPORT nis C()url.s, plus miles ot Well· Designed Apr.s Goocl meals. Semi $200. Pri 30th St N.B. 645-2167. size, ans\1•ers to "Zac." Vic ec *num * 1• 15 * Clean-up, expd e o 11 e ge lines min. $l2.50. Service Personnel Agen~y bicycle trails, putting, shuf. l & 2 BR. 'vi Terraces. $250. 1t1en-\Vomen, 531-54.14. UNUSUi\L Live in mod. apt. 20!h/Orange. C.M. Reward sturlent. Lrg truck, Res. chrg, s3.50. ?!taster Clu·g. JS.IS Capmus Dr .. ~.B. Deboard, croquet. Junlor l 's i.~rom $140. $275/mo Summer Rentals 420 ebove your business. 675-7225 ~1992. \\1JNTER Rates! Concrete ,5_:3_•-c.JS.:.10::..______ BIA. Blu!! Chip Stamps. r.Branch Oflice_ - /rom S17!i monthly; 111.so 1 Shag cpts, drps, saunas, HIR Agent LOST on Tradewinds Ln,. fl_oors. palios, d r i~v es, YARD. garage clean u P s , 539-3161, Nona \\', llof!n1an 54()..{XlJj and 2-bedroom plans and pool, jacuzzi, encl 'gar. N.B. 3123rd, yr old Seal· sidewalks, Don. 642-Salt Remove trees. dirt, ivy. 2-story town hcr•ses, Elcc· Quiet Adult living l\fAKE your Summer vara· Industrial Rent el 450 ·point Siamese cat. Responds CF.MENT \VURI{, no job to ·ski P • l o ad er ' backhoe SAVE on home rep:tirs. Free ATTENDANT tric kltchenk, privale patios MERRIMAC WOODS tion rese1vation now. 2 Ctr 3 ""'~"'"'-""'"°""="""'-.:. to "China" R e \Var d . small, reasonable. Fr e c 847_2666• est. Rooring, p!un1b .. paint. Residential Care facility or balconle11, carpeting, dra· 425 Merrimac Way, CM bedrooms c 0 mp I etc J y 2500 Sq. Ft, $250 Mo. .,._1. H 8 ulli k ,,. ., .::..:.:._:='------lnstallations, hauling. Work 11-7 Shilt 548-0.)33. £.ol:i im. · t t.-, .... 0--0015. HAULING, clean-ups, mov· 83' "'1' J)el'les. Subtenanean park· * * $170 * * furnished. one block to 1'1odern bldg., Edinger St, 1 ..:gu,;::.ar_:'-".:.~=.;_"____ Older person prc.ferred Ing wfth elevators. Optional """an ,·n Newport orco-na N F So Sa 1 A STi\NDARD ~,..,... Pood l e PATIOS, 'valks, drive, instaU ing. Free ellt, eves, and SS 'IR. Ploomb•'ng & *•ti-~~"'* 3 BR, l~~ Ba., ne\vly painted. "'" '" r. r.vy., · n .a na p<U~ I b "' Sal & Su 847-8""' '" " ......,.., maid .,, .... nee. J ust north o! de] Mar. Ask 'or Pat or \VaJ,,,~rth Real E•. tate female. Bla•k , .. ,·11i ''h•'le ne\v awns, sa"" rean., · n. """'· El · al R · .... ,., Bltns, crpt/clrps, encl patio. 1· " " " • mov uo "'" f 1 ecrr1c epair AITRACTIVE girl \1'/good Fashk>n Island at J ambor-Jlrn. 5-"' "~~~ Agen• CALL: 639-4210 mark on 1ail. Vic. Tustin & re e. ""o-ouuo or es· Yard & Garage Clean Up. 64' ~~, or "2·140.', Nr schls & shopg. Children ... ~<NJJ .. ::-.:.;:v,::•c::""::_:;_.:.~::..;;:::_,1 1igure -n1odel bikinis etc. 3 ~~nd San J oaquin Hills ok. no pets. 880 Center St., 1'1-1ETAL Industrial Building, 18th St., C.l\-1. ~716. CEMENT\vork, quality work. Tree Removal, Free Est, Plumbing • or 4 hrs \1·k. Great pay. T 1 • 1 ffi4) 644-l!IOO C.M. 642-8340 or 548-2682. CHARMING 2 Br. house, 1200 .sq rt, high cei!'ing, of· LOSf: 2 Little puppys-8 wks, ~ash rates, . free est. 1'.1. =~R~ea_s_._Ra_le_:•.:.· .:.64_:6-.,;3.;_488"----::"."0"......,;.....--...._--1 Strit'tly pvt. fl1ust be over ;~p ~:.i information I •OiiOiiOii;i;;ii.;..;i;;iii.oiiiii., I frplc., N. L.i.guna $550. mo. fiee space, Costa Mesa, $840 blk, wht & brn, l \V/yell am y, Anytime, SS0-6t3L TREE JV or k, rototilling, PLUJ\1BING REPAIB. 18. \Vrl!e to P.O. Box 10516, 494-6594, ask for H.E. per mo. 548-5551 8 Al\il to 4 <'Ollar w/bells 6 upset FLOOR Work & patios, yard ·~sh, garage clean-up. No job too small Santa Ana, 92711. BREATHTAKING BRAND NEW Bailey. PM, Sat 9 AM lo 1 PM. children. Bic. H.B. 968-7119. drive\\1ays & side \Va I ks, 1'.fove & haul. 5'18-5$3. * 642-3128 * Auto VIEW From $145. Dishwasher, shag Rentals to Share 430 NE\V deluxe J\1-1 units. 3 ph, LOST: Sh1ihalr Gray kitten Lic'd & bonded. &l5-082G. Housecleaning COLE PLUMBING DETAIL MAN $275. Huge 2 BR Apt. HI on carpeting, walk-in closets. power. 1711 l\.lonrovia. blk stripes. Vic Balboa Is. Contractor 24 hr. service. 645-1161 Detail V\V's, n1us1 be exper· Back Bay Bluff \\.'/ 2 Forced air heat, extra la.rge S ROOM duplex f u T n ., 543-3145; 836-9798 eves. Childs pcL 6 7 5 -O 8 3 2, ---------EXPERIENCED, depend-R d I R • icnced, must have kncw..i. • private halconie~. Frplc. rooms. Beautiful game room, hard\\'d. floo1'S, I rp l c.' Rent els Wanted 460 6Th-3977, 675-1440. JACK Tau J ane-Repair, able lady will clean your emo e & epa1r edge or detailing, Apply in Healed! pool,. Loadll of healed poo) BBQ'R encl~ n1alure Y.'Oman, walk 10 w---------1 "~~.:.:....:o,:..:.::=-. -"°""-remod., adclit, 20 yrs exp. home. \Vork by the day. person only closets. 7.15 Domingu Dr. ed g•~-,,·•ut'et 80•,ITOUnd· •lwp$ & church, •ar., $JOO EXECUTIVE & f .1 1-IUGE, all \\.'h1te Great Lic'd, My Way Co. 5-1741J6. 636--0974. e e e e e e 0 ' (Cd~1 HS) Call &15-1260. ~-.. \I Sa s " . 4 • ami y \Vnnl Pyrenees (looks like S!. . . . ~~~~~~~--1''ATl·IER & SONS range Auto Sales ings & close lo 3hopping. mo. I., • un. & Mon. S..12 lo rent 4 or 5 BR hon1f' Bernard) namn-' "~-· .. ,·kor.'' ROOi\1 Additions, E. sllmates, Dedicated Cleaning BRAND NEW! Adul JI i a T IV d 7 Th / J I "'' ,.... Decorating, design, carpcn. l0621 Garden Crovl"! DI., G.G. • I v ng. l1G pers. in, ue.. e · p.n1. ur. \V poo i11 I K' E11stbluff Call 5'!6-9251 (2~ hr). plans & layout, single or 2 * \VE DO EVERYTHING * ADULTS ONLY-Pf:T OK EL CORDOVA APTS. }~ri. au clay, 548-4151, 203 E. area. C<1!1 JI.Ir. 1'.Iootc, ~~~~~~~~~~I story. L.T, Construction. Refll, Free est. 646-2839 t.ry, plum?ing, \vit·ing._etc. • ATTRACTIVE GIRL DELUXE 2 BR-$185 2077 Ctmrle St. 6424.J70 19th Sr. 893-6346 days, 83S-0568 aft 6 ; 847-1511. EXPERIENCED housekeen. ~ g~nerat~n~ ('Xp. -2Jth yr Oi:calllonal 1vork, Hi pay, Dshwhr, frplc., 2 Ba .. S\vim Near Harbor & ff1UTiilton SLN ,;;E;;E"DC.:.:.--...,---.,-pn1. I 1~11-'+,~:c...._,....,,.-..,..~-,... m us,· Lie d & bonded. Shoi1. houl's J\1ust dr'v pool S5?·2l25. 20342 Santa roommate to sharc i -~~-------1 Senlices andRepajrs Additioi:15 * Remod~ling er, 3 days per ·wk. Refer· 838.3545 Cri>n'l cll'ani~g. No he~~ Ana Ave. beach. houlle, shag erpts, .FUH.NISllED house or apt , . . Genvick & Son, Lie. ences, $22. per day. 542-1530. e e e e e e v.·ol'k. Apply Ren!Al Rl'adier, frpl., yr!y lse. 673-6976. on any beach, must race 673-604.1 * 's.is-2110 MESA Cleaning. Carpets, ";:;m:;m=::;:;=:z: I t <>2-1 Roofing 569 \V. 19th St., bel\vn 11 & 1. ~ Iii Garages for Rent 435 ocean, 0 ~-J mo. year Y· Electrical \Vindo1vs, Floor etc. Rf!sid. NEW 2 BR· 2 BA. * * * * ~Ian 36 lv/local rels. Call Applisnce Rept1ir & Comm'!, 557_6742. 5484111. e T. Guy Roofing. Deal AV~ S:i hr -. Sho\v 1S~h El Puerto Mesa Apts * * * Mr. \Vciss * S4ll-&'i51 & Parts ELECTRICAL WORK. All Direct. 1 do my 0,vn \\'Ork. Co\entry Je1\clry •. No in- 20432 Santa Ana Ave. (across * * * * Wayne Cooper \\'ANTED: Storage garage, kinds. Big or small Lic'd & Spring Cleaning Ahead G45-2"l80. s.18-9SOO. vest, collect., or del"" Min. from Santa Ana Golf T n.droom Apia, 320 lslend N 8 C o · A Ins F-e I '" •211 Call Dutcb Maint. Service for' ,;_.:..;:,;;:::,.;:;:..:::=.----I ag' 20, 897-"0"", 846·"". Course). Heated pool. 1.tgr. goo Costa J\lesa, ' . 01' di\f. 1scount ppliance Repair . IL"' s. "'rrJ"1J • I -& . d 'Sewlng/Alterar'1"ons 897 o=· .>0;.111 ~ Balboa Plea·.• call e:o;o no:::: or W h D o· h h -rd f carpc s, uOOl'S • \\'lD ows. . -.:>J\J't. 979-1268 ·""' .,_..~Q.Jil as er, ryer, JS \\'as er, .:.-a en ng 537 1508 1iiiOiiOii0ii0iiOiiOii0ii0ii•I ' 2 BA $130 & up incl. utilities. AIM> )'ou al't' the '"inner oi !H8-481S. Disposal Etc, Free Est 1--""."'.,....'------· · A1t;r~"fions _ 642.00 I' WATER Vieiv-2 Br. • !urn, Pool & 0 ---eato'on 2 tickets to the GUARANTEED * "" '°94 AL'S GARDENING Income Tax Salary To 800 t' D/11' n.<Xl. • EXECUTIVE & fHmily ~ Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. B approx. sq. .. ' area. Quiet Environment. Western National desire 3 or 4 bdrm. rental for gardt'l'ling & sma l l -,----.-----kkpr/Asst $550 SIC oven, (.'l"pt'd, drp'd, OU street parking. No Chil· Boat & Marine Show \V/pool immed. 5'16-3866. Babysitting landscaping sel_'Vices, call Smiley Tax Service Television Rep1ir Recept $500 gar. deck Side tic a.val!. dren, no pets. at the 540-5198 eves. Serving Order Desk Opr $450 Yearly Jease, 714:673-8249 Also Garages For Rent ANAHEIM BABYSIITING, my home. Newport, CdM, Costa Mesa, e 14 Years LOCAU.Y e :i!~c::~ B~nd~ FHA/loan proc $ 75 0 appt 1 """1961 'lapJe A·•e 1 ~ Exp, & resp. molher will Dover Sho-s, IVest•l'off. S , • i;J~ •• • • CONVENTION I ''f '" "· Fee Schedule Authorized J\-fagnavos ec y $650 Co la 'I p I care for 1 or 2 children. . RJOIARD'S/Lido Are a· i ~~~..,,'~"~esa""'!!!!= CENTER ersona s Xlnt refs. llot meals. Fncd. PR~F. tr~ w·ork, prun.1ng, Mailed On Request Known for honesty 540-4313 Sec'y/Bkkpr $650 New3BR,2BA.Lge,xtra Apri!Jst ihruAprll91h yd. Loving h om e en. 1r1mm 1ng,spray1n g \V.A.SMILEY,C.P.A. Tile See'y/Engrng $550 nice, frplc, d sh \Vs hr , PALM MESA APTS. Please call 642-5678, ext 314 vironment Full-part time sp r n k I t's ., I n <ls c p n g 642-22Zl Anytime 646-96661----------iTypists $425 garage. $325. no. incl util. 111~0~;.s 0~ U~~~· bchveen 9 & 5 pnt to claim Personals 530 $20 wkly, Glen l\far lract Cleanup. Gt'Orge, 646-5893. CLARK & Toner Tax Service. CERA.1\llC tile ne\v & MTST Opr $5 25 673-0844. Unbcllevably large ;:ipt~.. y~w· ticket<; ... ~No1th County FULLY LICENSED ·HB. 968--0833 ward 1 0 w Expert Japanese Gardener 24 YEARS exp. 111 area. :C~od~. F ree P.st. Small Sec'yTravel $650 LIDO ISLE, 103 Via Antibes. hage pool, Jacuzzi elect blt· 10 l·iree numue:-r is 540·1220) Renowocd Hindu Spiritualist school area. Complete Yard Service ?€rsonal Sl'r'Vice in your Jo s w come. 536-.U26. Elec. Tech $700 OPEN Sal/Sun 11-4. 2 BR ins, shag crpfs, drps, sauna * * * Spiritual Reading given dai-CfIILD care experienced & Re-mmCru.Jend~~G--08724 ~ k 1 home. Call for Ca P P t · SERVICE CENTER study, 2 BA, nr heh & shop. etc. Adults, 110 pets. \VANT garag-c ror slurage. Jy, 10 Al'1·10 PM, Advice on dependable \Veekdays. In-"'u •:u Y 18 a a ~~i-ie~o\\ud lark & L l[JJ• AGENCY Lg liv rm. DR, frpl, adults, SINGLES ••..• From $135 Vic. \\7. 17th & Monrovia, all 1natters. I can help you. fant to 5 yrs, Lunches & Nursery · •· ·•···• •. Free Est. l"1>1oyment I J 4262 Campus Dr., N.B. o c EA NF Ro NT y r J y 2 BEDRM. • · •• F'rom $1f,O Lai!una Beach, Conipletely Cle1ncnte. 492-9136 or San Diego Fwy. nr So. Also Clean-up. Free EsL service in the privacy of Jlelen Schaffer lease. 714:753-0719 l BEDRJ\f. ••••. From $140 _c,.._,_1._&10-~,..21_372.~--,-~ 312 N. El Camino Real, San snacks. F enced yard. OfJ J apanese Gardl'ning Service PR 0 r~E SS I 0 N A L Tax ~;~;;E;~~;1;S~u~itc~B·<l 557-2711 spacious 1 br apt, best part You're ril!hl, 1hey're under-private. Near Coast ""'Y· 492-9034. Coast Plaza. 546-7487. • 548-6029 aft 3 PM e Your home-Most $1 5. Job Wanted; Male 700 _ of beach. Adult~ only, avail priCt'd! 1561 Mesa Dr, $30. 496-19S1 5·17-0993 SINGLES group OO\V forn1· BABYSIITER. 24 Hours. AL'S Landscaping, Tree 847-2829· 4/1 $250 645--0668 <5 blks from Newport Blvd.) DOU ing 'frips to Paln1 Sprgs., Licensed. Fenced back removal. Yard remoclc!ini. TAX Service, federul & POS IT I 0 N as Rl'hah Bakery • , • 546·9860 BLE garage S.10 mo. 177 Vegas & abroad. Call /In. Y•ll'<I. 642-1592. Trash haulillg, lol cleanup. state, personal a t your Counselor ln alcoholism . Cl 2 BR. 2 BA, crp1s, drps, E. 22nr! SL , Cos!a ?ifesa. ,. I 1' " \Vri!e 30· p 0 · t t eQnUp hltin!i, dsh1vshr. ?\r. Hoag UleSliBJIU 20 1 -:M,,2~--"'-'~;·~----~ pcgccs Club, l\fary Ann. ClllLD Care, 1 to 4 yrs. Full Repair sprinklers: 673-1166. Mhome, ca l for appt 54.,...,,125. Coron~ def Mar. t n s c a , Personnel J~osp. t172.50 mo. A<llts. Offo'ce Rental .... ,,, 673-71 5• ro:J-2532 or 1-lank, lime, Also '"eekend~ Mesa GREEN MANSION asonry &l2-1387. Sparkling nc1v adll apt. _,,, 6-16-3566. Verde area. 557-fil.90 , Gardening & Yard l\.Iain-S l\l ALL BUS I N Es s C • Lush garden SCI. a1nid lo1ver· ARCI-llTECT, Engineer, etc. PROBLEi\1 Pregnancy. Con· B b . 0. . h tenanec, Joe EI mer, BRICK, BLOCK & O}VNERS: Will do your bk. San Juan apistrano ing pines Offices. 41-1 Old Ne\\'JX)rl !ident, s y mp at he t l c a Y sit ng in my ome &12-1137 STONE \VORK. 540-0929 keeping jn niy horn('. Coll· FOR LEASE OR RENT 1 Bedroom •••• from $155. Blvd. 8e(! to appreciate. Ex. pregnancy counseling. Abor-weekly or hourly rates dayj'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; j ege trained. 979.4189 afl. 4. Apply Jn Person To 2 Bedroom. 1 bath Apts, 2 Bcdroorn ···• frorn $185. 1{'1'. cntranef', $85 n10. tio n & Adoption re!. AP-or night S45-2035. Sr. Accountant. Tetnp; or Carpets, drapes, garagts line!, gru·ages), gas f: witter 548-5300, OPEN. CARE, 642-4436. Cabinetmaking * * * * * * penn. $6.75 hr. lj yrs. F/C 3444 E . Coast Hwy. pd, Atm avail. furnished. -9 • C d I PAUL TAGUE $185 Per Month Bay View Offices RESUMES by former Per-' ----------1 ... ------------------... exper, 7:i-2769, 540-5426. orona e Mor • 2 bath I r $""" 114 E. 20th .. C.J\1. 548-0137 1 · .,} Bdnn. 0 ~<JV DelltXe, air-conditioned sonnet Dircetor. We come to CUSTOM Cabill€t Maldng & Job Wanted, Female 702 E 1 0 E FITZPATRICK'S Y" DRIVE BY RrdPCorated, Lido area you. Eves. & \Veekends too. Boat \Vork, Patios. Room qua ppor, ~mployer Capistrano Valh:y R('aily 147 Flower St .. C.1\1. 1 BR. n('alono1nics, Bkr. 675-6700 545-6505. Addlt. Free Est. 646-5219. Trader's nar:ad1"se· NEED help at home! \Ve ~-tz 31501 Cami.no C'lplstl'ano Furn. Best lclCAtion in C.J\f. -;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;.;....;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:=;;;:;;;;;;;:;::;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:II r1 I have Aidell • Nurses • iii San Juan Capilrtrano 646·0!!20 or 646·3815. l1ousekeepers e Con1-BAKERY 493-1124 BEAUT ne1v 20 unit eduH l1"nes ):!anions • lfomemakers -SALES Realtors Since 1965 "'" m K 2011o s1.. c .M. $@\\~}A-/'1"E~Se· up;ohn, MH681• PERSO•'NEL S•nt~ Ana Bkr pr1rl it'i pa1ion invHed. • CERTIFIED Med. Asst. New n 612-1903 \\£BB. Bkr. ti mes fo bch. H!ghly qualified in HIDDEN Dana Point The Punfe wilh ilre Built-In CfrucJ.fe Med. Ok. Managemeut .<. Apply ln l\.'l'son To Paul T1gu• all trt. & back otc. pro-v ILLA GE * EXCEPT!O~AL * Of.':'r°':mb\::l'';,,:S::: ...... ..,.-... ~ dollars cedUl'eS, 673-2182 all 6:30. Sin~ll', 1. 2, 3. Br. Cnrd0\'1\ at •,..,. • ) Htlp Wanted, M & F 710 H~::~~i~~ ~~~\?G ::~:~:1:::~ ui;. , i 'rlo1 ;;~ ,,:~ ;~, '.Q'. < }~ROM $159 l Sr turn or Unlurn. CA~>\ Carpets & Dra""' PLAYA, 14th & \Valnul, 'I T A y E L I ~ Air ondltioncd H.B. Call f>3t"H!367. _ j . Enck>M'd patiO!i Newport S.ach 1 I j. I l I ~ f ' ~ I ;.~';~f~r~~i OA"iw"O'o"iiGARiiEN" 1 11 . . -. ~ I' Carport & Slorn-.c Apartments _ P U R E N I ~ "--' FAMILIES WELCOME I !Resort Living too f-.., 1 ... ., .... ,-,;;, -" . .;. 1 --1 u TcurlsYs comment: "Down '!500 South Salta Ad111ti1 Only) _ _ • in Mh1mi Beach there's so (f!nt~r 2 b!ki \V. of Bristol, NE\VPORT BEACH ,__,__,_...__.,_._ much money the girls 111re com- otr \\'arner on Linda \Vay, 16th at Irvine I I b ·" 'th b • i:;outh 10 \V, Cl"'ntml) 645.()j.-I(') or 642-8170 N E C A M E Ing 8""" Wi -sun .~rns; Santa Ana e 546-1515 OCEANFRONT: 4 Br. 3 Ba. I I ' I I 15 O Comp1cll the diuckl1 q3b1cd New. Custom d-r. Foni. by fllll~g In th• mlssln.g word. South Laguna · '''-" . " . • -. yau develop from .tep No. 3 below. pre.forred. No peLS. Yrly. *BEACH LMNG AT rrs l600mo 613-8561. f,}Pl\~~~~J~~~~;lETT!IS.tN j' I' I' j4 'l BEST •••• Lease 2 BR., 2 Jrs nJwa)'~ the right lim4' .& SA, t-Jtv. 10 beach. Adult$, al,.•ays tht r ig-hi place-11 '9 UNSC•AMete ABOVE Lf.TTW I I I l_J_ I no ptla. From $.150. 31755 )'OU \\'Ant RESULTS! Qill . TO GtT ANSWER • . . . _ Coal-I Jfw.iy., • SOuth Lo.euna 6-12.:1611 '1: }>lace that tu1 ** $2835.. today! ,--'-=:..=:::._ ___ t...;::::::.:__~~~ SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 I t SlLVERAOO. Orange Co. Ranch & ac. Net Ioreat, Met 1vtr, sprg & wells, val $2100 to ~. Eq tor F&C low tax desert. 8384651 alt 6 pm LRG \Vtr!ront Jot on Buena Vista Lagoon. btwn Carls- bad A Oceansidt>, clear, val $52,<XXI. Trade ror NB prop or 1 548-5525 or 548-9710 UAVE: 1.'lt TD, bal. $27,000, pays $270 per mo. TR.ADE: tor NB property or ? 5-18·5525 or 548-9710 ~ Acre Joi, Lake Lot A"· gf'l~s (\\Vpaved ,;ts A v.•tr) rot R.E. or 1 Atake t1n)' offer Gm ~Icz4'1 S57..fi263, Ed Ricklle Reali)' &Ml-8811. * * * N'PT, Beach duplex. 3 BR. 2 ba. ea, unit. $65.000 \'al. Tnke 25 to 30 It, travel trlr. ns parl down. Owner/Bier. * 675-16-12 * 3 Homes-5, 4, & 2 BR on % acre, gross S7000. Seti $55,000. Equity $25,000. Easy rentals. WlU trade property or t 968..0177 833-9122 ~ Ac comm'! Jot on Ka- tella, G.G, Golf C. lot Paln1 Des. 55 Ac dtv. rec. la,nd. UIAh. Trade for R.E. In area or ? 644·1400. YES. \Ve have banana:ii. And nel 5!X'ndablel $lr.J,<m fruit plantalion & $mall catl.lc ranch in Au!ltralla f'OR cal. prop. Agt, 671> 7225 lllR * * * Accountant Sr. ·S14f\ 3444 E. Coast Hwy Corona del Mir • Chem. Engineer $11K r:ciunJ Oppor. Em"l"yrr Acrount<inl/Bkkpr S&Xl 1.,.,..,..,..;,,.,..,,;;;"~·';;;,;,..j Exec. Scc'y.COnstr to $6501' Legal Secretary $700 (Corporate or Probate) Sec'y Spanish helpful $600 TIME FOR Sec'y Pet'!llOnnel S5GO ~gr~~i;:~::~ :: QUICK CASH P. T. F /C IJl<kpr·LAg $3.50 hr ~:~ :::: ~~·> ~ l: YlfliiOUGH A Penonncl/Payroli $450 Sr. EDP-D.O.S. to $545 ~~~. t• ~ DAi L Y PILOT Acctng cl~k $350 Clerk 'l"yplst/Pem S375 W"'NJ AD file Clerk/PBX to $4.90 flJ NEWPORT P ersonnel Agency 642 133 Dover Dr., N.B. •5678 642-3170 I ' Help BEAU Appl B Gel Coa Costa Bookk anoe ofoUi lo • subst tlon. "'ell-g keepe. "'ith Pita res um quire New appt. B FIC fo !orwa clence 10880, Agt 10 In !be mente D c Ce! in o com pa benefi assign Irvin NEVER Te CA Ho!IY" ne1v fa ln!eresl rated filmed lnttrvl CASU Urg • Must & telep Per 77 642-7523 CAR Several Full & rompan Car \ Blvd., CHILD c 2 boys I TMR st hrs. fie \1·knds. 54~3681 CLEAN I Ironing. Mon or transp. CLEANI1 day ""e CLERK· bkkplng 494-1087 COLLE telephon volume. mis.<;ion. 640.-7300. c P/limc. neat. A Surf & S H,vy., N COOK, Convale CP.nfer Call he! ; co l\f p Analyst Hunling mediate systems C'Xpcr, i yr. a'.ssc language ~al tlm Federall St'nd Re 100. Hu caU 714 /. COUNTE Camera mu.i;t! \\' nhrry d ad No, , Box 1560, COUPLE l8 \Jnif ,J.fust be l •·/middl Apt. 64~ CUSTOM t;;ng cs tr~ln gal gubllc gr ~ui.U lfele °' 27AC Har "Make d y 0 Io o rara.ae .. v.•lth • CIAa:fled ' • • Mondiy, M1tth 27, l'f72 DAILY PILOT 25 .... , ....•...•...••..........•••.....•.... FREE PASSES •• • . ' . : WESTERN NATIONAL : • Find Your Name • • You Could Be One of Today'5 Winners 10 Pairs of $1.95 Tickets Given Daily • • • • • • • • • • • • If your n•m• Is Usttd In a spe-clal ed h•r• In the c&oulfled se-ctlM. Phone '42-5678. htenslon 314, between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. to make.er- ran91menh to pick up your 2 free Mow tickets at any c.oftVe1IHt DAILY PILOT offlu . • • Viall booths 79 & 10 I« detalh on DAILY PILOT 9luaway -a $455 Snoplr boat -YOU COULD WIN. • • • • • • Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT • • : (DINGHIES TO SAILBOATS) : ·~~~~~~~~~,-,.-~--j~.....!.:..::~.:.c:.:c.~~~~~~~~ • • • • • • • • • • • Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 • • • • • • BEAUTY Operator \\'anted. Apply ln pt'rson. COUPLE, live-in, Lido lslt'. "I lls! ~ t'XPf'rienccd, Phone ""1iss \\lllburn. 1714) 540--0500 or eves & \\'knd s (714) 613-23.19. llOUSEKEEPER, live in, 1 child, 18 mo, Laguna Beach. ?.1 rs. Levlnson, 494--0737. • • • • • • • • • • • WOMAN FOR APT. CLEANING LARGE COMPLEX Must be thoroughly exper1· t.nced in commercial clean. Ina. 14 CONVENIENT SHOPPING AND S(WING CUIOl ,Ort TH[ * * J{J 9-0757 * * CAL ON l Hl CO. • BOAT TOUCH-UP Gelcoat Expt'r. Required Coastal Reerration. In<:, 940 W, 17th SL Costa Me:i;a 642-0542 • • • Marc Mucilll 302 Iris Corona dol Mar ''Ou are the l\'1n11cr of 2 tickcls lo The Western National Boat & Marine Show ar th<" }ISKPRS Emplyr pays fee, George Allen Byland Agen- cy, 106-B E, 16111 S.A. 547~J9j, • • • :;-- : (INFLATABLES TO CRUISERS) .•.................. , •••••••••••••••••••• Coll 546-5025 \VOll1AN 'S LJB CANDIDATE Do you Y.•ant the oppor. at 11 management JOb'.' l\'o salrs, !\1o typing, Large national ron1pany \\'il l u·ain. Start $473. For 1n ad in Woman's World Call Mory Both 642-5678, ut 330 BOOKKEEPER Bookk«"ping thru trial bal- ance &: thorough knov.'lertgr of office proc:<'durl!~ rcquirrd lo associate v•ith t h \ s substantial sales organiza- tion. \Ve are looking !\Jr a well-groom<'d, ma1ure book· kreper assistant IT.i-40 yl"I) wilh a min. of ~ yrs t'Xp. Please send typewritten resume; Include salary re- quirements to P.O. Box 232S Newport Beach, Ca for !!pp\. ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER April Jst lhru April 9th Please call 642-5678, ext :114 between 9 &. 5 pm to claim your tickets. (North County toll-free number is 540-1220) • * • 1Mll1EDIATE PLACEMENT SEC'Y -STENO Good Sh & Typing Skills EDP CONTROL CLERK DOS tape librarian C'XQC'rience required, PACIFIC 11.'IUTUAL Free daily bus transponation for y,•ork in Los Angeles un- til move to Ne\vport. SEPTEMBER 1972 Interviewing Hrs In NEWPORT FINANCIAL CTR l\1onday & Tuesday BOOKKEEPER DELIVERY boy, Canyon F /C f<lr medical co. Please Auto Supply, 843 Broadway, fon\•atd resume in L'onfi-Lagun& Beach. 9 <l'clock Al\1 • 2:00 PM On dence lo manager, P. 0 . Box 1 0-E~N-'_T_A_L_A-,-,-,-,-t -n_n_t, 10880, 51111111. Ana, Ca . 92TI1. h . id L"d ff " d c ;urs e, 1 o () 1c1t. &-n Site Of Our New Bldg PACIFIC MUTUAL CornC'r Santa Cruz le. NeY.'JXll1 Center Drive BOYS Age lCl-14 to dehvt'?' papers ln the Dana P<lint; San Oe- menfe areas. DAILY PILOT 492-4420 Carpenters Get in ()n ground Door of new rompany. T<lp SU & benefit.II. Xtra long term assignment. Irvine •. , •• ,540-4450 NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO TEMPO Temporary Help CASTING NOW HoU~·ood prodUCt'r seeks nl"\v faces who arc ~incerrly interested in being !n 3 GP ratl!d m<lli<ln picturts to be filmed early Summrr. For lntervir"'· 121Jl' 464-3121. CASUAL l:ABORERS Urgontly Noodod resun1c, et~·., 1<l P .O. Box """"'""""""'""~"'!"'!!!!!! m, eo"a """· 92627· INVEST IN DENTAL rcccpHonl,t. exp. YOUR FUTURE Senf! resume to Box 1a1, South LaguPU, CA. 926n. Full or p /lime. DISHWASHER \\'anted, nite BE YOUR OWN BOSSI shift. See Chet 16o 1 Mtn or Women Bayside Dr, Cclrona de! M.,.. least A Yellow Tul Cob Call for Appt 546·1311 DRAPERY-CARPET Sales. ExpC"r derorator t y pr pcnt0n for aclive ~tore. Xlnt dra1v + ron1m. 492-22'"a4. DRUG Clerk. l yr min. drug expC'r. Prof. pharmacy. 40 1...,iiiiiAiiskiiifoiirii}iileiormiiianiiiiiim Hr \Vk. No Sun ()r l'ves. W. Anaheim area, 54G-4580. Earn $100.$500 Wk. Spare or f/!lmc. Space age roating for floors . .l\1cn/\\'o- men. 832-4442. Et.fPl.DYMENT COUNSELOR !RY!NE PERSCNNEL SERYICES•AGENCY APRIL 1 THRU . 9 DOORS OPEN WEEKDAYS 6 PM - WEEKENDS 12 NOON f'.mPol11•1t Help W1nt1d, M & F 710 Help W1nttd, M & F 710 ......... -...---. r..1ATURE babysitter "'anted, Palisades area, wkclays only, my hou11t'. 49:1·0082. r..1ATURE Babysitter, 11 , hskp., live in/out, !\1on-Jo'ri. $25. 557-7719/962-4097 aft 5. * MOTEL MAID * BALBOA INN. 675-8740 MEDICAL Transcriber, full lime, &-5 daily/5 clay. i\1ust be e.xp'd in med ic al 1erminology, lest required, salary <lpcn contact r.tn. TillotS<>n, 557-6300. NCR PROOF OPERATOR TELLER Commercial Bank Experience Min 6 months required (714) 646-7121 R.E. SALES -The best training program in Hs1ing & seeing. Up l<l 80% comm ·~. Ca.II Bill Haa~ or Phil McNama-, V 111a11; e Real E~tate, :rou n ! a I n Valley for appointment. 531-5800. REAL Estate Sales. Like ~·or king in Laguna Beach? lmmediate <lpe_ning for tY.'O qualified licensed per!on~. SANDCASTLE Real Estate (New Owner) *** 494-8025 *** RETIRED or planning retirement &. need ad- ditl<lnal income? T remen- dous potential for people 11•ith leadership capabil iries. No solicitation, no linancial r isks. Phone 837--4468. RECEPTIONIST Savings & loan In Co1t1J Mesa Has Opening F<lr- Employment Call ll('ll'n Hayr s, ~ C<lastal Agency 2790 f.larbor Bl at Adams WOMEN Earn, ll'!U'n & l'nj<ly on your timf'. Any age 18 up. Also possible 10 have small busJ. ness of your O\lo1l, 645-0990 ( 10-5 l. YACHT SALES:\1AN 2912 \V. Coast 11\\)'., N.B. •• 645-5321 •• Holp Wonlod, M & F 710 I .-f-' ALWAYS TOP i ~----­j-(-id_ TEMPOIAIY Antiquos 800 '::I ASSIGNMENTS 1-------1 CorMln&r•tistertoday \VANTED t<l buy, 196 8 You11 ff glacf you did. S \V ! d Is h R <l rs tr ands Nohe ever. 2112DllP011t Chnstmas Plate. 644-4687. Drivit, lnine. llJ..12'5 Appllanc11 ....:..;.....-~~~-~1 TELLER BOOKKEEPER SECRETARY - Savings &: Loan Experience Necessary NEW Kelvinalor freezl"r, model VJ-14. 490 lb! ('flpac. Bct'n in !lt<lrage. $149 <lr offer. 495-0074. ELECT dryer $50. Norge auto washer $50. Kenmore gas comh. washer-dryer Sljij. Frig. refrig copper $60. Pb. 546-8672. KELVINATOR. model no. 766NR. Runs perfect. good To Size 48! Contact Mrs. Bray cond . 17 c1,1. rt. 673-7395. $85. 90J9 a KENMORE -Repairman SIZ!$ 34-48 Mariner'1 Savings has washtt/dryer/d!l!lhwash· ;\ • • .._. ....... t,. ...... ,.64!!2!!-4000...,..., ... ~I er" guarn. 546-52 18, L.•. 1(f,..i..,.1Tfc..'1' .... I' • 839-7620. ~ Tired af Housework I~-'--'-'--~-----! \\'ould you like to rarn $300 Cameras & t<l $400 or mme per month Equipment 808 e Must ha,•e transportation & telephnne. If y<lU like lo \\'ark y,•ilh JOO- p1e & ha"e had sales or public contact experience. \\·e will train )'OU in an in- le~sling c i. r e e r , Com- missi<ln + Salary provide, high earnings. S600).$!0Xl. Call l\1r. Harper, 540-6055 &cy/Purchasing to $525 Dlctaph Secy/Anaheim S600 Secy, lite sh to SXA'.l AIR Cr & Collect $.lOO Ask for ~Ir. Mendonca Equal Oppor. Employer \vorking only 3 t<l 4 hrs per SUPER 8 Bell k Ho"·ell, week on y<lur own time. \\le auto zoom. $85 Girl w/pleasanl nhont! man-are a 2 yr <lid national com -832-9422 ' 644-6178 r pany just opening in Calif.1--~------= TODAY'S LOOK ill lean, unfussy, crisp ancl makes you feel marv,lously "with it"! Sew it, wear It ln tex- tured raYon, llnen, polyester knit. Interim Personnel Service ns \\I. 20th. c.:-.t Coastal Agency C!C'rk Typist l<l $4l'l OVERSEAS ner &: good typing skills. Attractive, intelligent wo-Furniture 110 DOWNEY SAVINGS Prlnted Patte:m 9009: NE\\' \Von1en'A Sizes 34, 36. 38, 40. 42, 44, 46, 48. Size 36 (bu~! 401 takes 3 118 31ards 39- lnch. 2790 llarbor Bl at Adams EMPLOY11ENT Op. p o rtuni t lcs tG ll'arn Gril Friday $450 lolORE JOBS TifAN PEOPLE P/Time Gen't ofc to S3 hr All 1'.ikills &: professions & LOAN men over zt wilh sales back· 1 PC. NAUGAHYDE ~und ":refeJTed. For more DEN GROUP 2-i523 54fr.2592 .Free & Fee P<lsitions e IDaher wages e L<lwer 488 E, 17th lat lrpineJ CM expenses a Tax benefits Call Mr. Davenporl 1nf<lnnat1on call Mrs. Mor- 642-i422 -fiberxlass work & lxla I CAR-WASHHELP build in~. Day & niitht shin vr.ral posllion!I. 4 LoC"ations. avail. Apply in pen;on at Full & part time. Groivlh 33012 Perfecto, SJC. rompany. Top pay, Mrtro l..iiii;i;;i.iii.iii""iii""iii• Car \Va.sh. 2950 Harbor Exec. Sec'y to $700 642-1470 a Free Transportali<ln CALL 541-4345 Service Guaranteed Until employment accepted OVERSEAS SERVICES 1617 E. 17th St S.A. Suite 3 .. ~E;q~"!"'~-~O~p:po:'~· ~E~m:pl~oy~e~r~ 11 •,iii,.iin;i'oi8Jiilii-!228iiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiii j consisting <lf lay-back sofa (sleeps 2), chair, In heaV)' duty nauaahyde, end tables, SEVENTY·flVE CENTS l<lr each patlern -add 25 ct'rlts f<lr each pattern tor Air Mail and Special Handl- ing: otherwise thirtk:Jass dt-livery will take three weeks or m<lre . Send to Marian Martin, rbe DAILY PILOT, 442. Pattern Dept., 112 \Vest 181h St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Blvd., C<lsta Mpsa. Typing 75. SR 100 ILD care & lite house\\·<lrk. Sec'y to Pre!=irlcnt 2 boy! 6 & 9 yrs. 19 yr old EXECUTIVE TMR 5tudentl 3 days 1vk -PERSONNEL AGENCY hrs. flex ible. Occa~. t1·c, tr 410 \V, Coast Hwy., NB \l'kndS. CM area. aft 2 pm. Suite H 64.5-2716 MS-3fi81. I "'""'""'""'""'""'""'""" LEANING-New home, no EXECUTIVE SE.'cy for \\'Ork lronlng. MU$! be thorough. in private medical office in Mon or Tues & Fri. 0"'" Huntington Beach. Sen cl transp. Re[s. &14-8148. resume to M i~s Breyrr, 246 LEANING LADY y,•anted 1 Ancona, L<lng Beach. ~3· day y,·ee-k. EXPER'D gardener, must be Call 675--053j able to repair spinklers & legal Secret•ry 3 Positions Available. ~1inimum I yr experience ln litigation, probate, corporate or general business. Large Ne'''port Beach law firm. Phone Jo Ann, 557-9900. LIVE-in, a 1 sis tan t com- panion/housekeeper for 2 adults. 5 clay ,,.k, 54~8014. LUHRS BOAT CO. No\v !·!iring ENGINE INSTALLERS P·GEE INDUSTRIES Needs Tr1lne•s $50l-$650 Por Mo. Young men mechanical ex· per. helpful, not reqd. Must be 18 <lr ()Ver. Able t<l s.tart work immediately, ii ac· cepted. F<lr info on job pl11.cements, ca.11 Tuesday 9 am • I pm <lnly. 776·8551 R00;\1 CLERK • Male. Ex- perienced. Call Mr. P'rez, Newporter Inn, 644-1700. ••••• 10¢' ••••• !or a ph<lne call could save you miles of driving. We need sales agents to repre- sent a quality cliente.le. y.re have noor time. full t1me receptionist, Arnall salt.Ii staff and <lpportunity for good people. Call Nick Rogers, 842-4466, T eaclership I_] REAL ESTATE use lav;n m<l"'cr equip, gd Experienced Only PRACTICAL nurse to <"are ERK-Typist, including li!e wagPs. 968-75114. for elderly couple, llve ln, SALESMEN bkkping Peacock Ins. c B h EXPERIENCED m () 1 d 1 n ~ Apply Bcl'>''n 8 & 10 A~t apo eac , car nece!sary, Nel!d men who a.re ready f<l 494-l087 ~frs. Bradley. machine operators. 1st 1.:_ Mon thru Fri. Only Give references & salary. learn the car business and OLLECfOR -Inside 2nd !!hilts. Apply Bald\l.•ln Write, Classified Ad N<l. are willing t<l train. Must lelephone, "XP'd. &Large Plastics C<l .. 2650 So. Grand 849 w. 18th St. 360, Daily Pllct, P .O. Box have good pl!rsonality, be_ volume. Salary com· Costa Mrsa 1560, C<lsta !\tesa, Calif. lntere11ted in a future. dress ission. ~1r. Hen k a, Al'e., S.A. I'"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I =9~26:C26'=. =,.,.--.,,==,..-.,-., well, ulesm!nded. Benefits: S.-7300-Fh~~:Lt~ ~~vel-::m~ii;s~ MACHINE Opr expe_r. Apply PRACTICAL NURSE, lull Demo., group ins., guaran- COOK, EXPER. h••"' & wo"gs, hot ~nts •-Mon-Fri J0am-2pm. 858 timl", live·in, ca.re for elder-teed salary plus commls- Ac:cur1cy A Must! 50 W.P.M. roffee table & lamps. ALL FOR $169. TRADERS FURNITURE 202 N. Bro1dw1y, S .A. e Many Locations In The 835-1305 Open 7 011ys Irvine-Ne~t Beach Area. PVT Pty-Alm<lsl new cut ShOrt & long term velvet peacock blue sofa & assignments. Xlnt earnini!, Joveseat S345. Dk <lak (&q & Coll Suo, 833-1441 hex) end lbl set $95. Wrought iron frplc tools & basket, cust. made $50. Xlnt Kenmore washer S 6 0 . Playpen $10 ., misc i!ems-!\1arion 530-0920. Pring NMIE, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE arxl STYLE NUMBER. SEE !\10RE Spr i ng Fashi<lns and cho<lse one pattern !ree from new Spring-Summer Catal<l&. All sizes! Only 50 cents. JNS'J'Ai'iT SE\V ING BOOK BLONDE bedroom 1 e I , sew today, wear tom<lITOY.'. 2061 Business Center Or. compl, bed, OOx 1prings & $1. Irvine 833--1441 mattresi;, bookcase head-INSTANT FASHION board, 2 bed side tables, lrg. BOOK Hundreds <l t UP H 0 LS TE RE R exper dresse.r & mirror, like new! fashion facts. ST. necessary. Apply 898 W. S100 642-2081 · 16th St Newport Beach · · 10 of Grandma's old-fashioned ·• 2 quality book shelf hd. board recipes, Send $1 to Bonnie, VIETNAM w/frames. duplex bed 1et , P.O. Box 244, Joshua Tree, VETERAN 9x12 wool braldl!d rug. Misc. ca. 92252. Once in a lifetime opp<ir. lo Mui;! 5ell. Make offer . .:::.c....:.:c:.:.:::... ____ _ Sprinq Crochet it<lm. daughter -swing in- to spring in ripple-de&ign ca pe~. \\'hen b~('zes hlO\.\', be toal'ty togethrr in matching, 3-L'Ol<lr capes of knitting 'vorsted. Ea~y crochet. Pat. 7073: S {child's 2-61: M (g.. 12J ; L {teens', misaes'.S-16) incl. 8EVENTY·f1n CENTS tor each pattern -a.dd 2.5 cents for each pattern for Air Ma.ii and Special Han<il- ing: <llherwise thln:l-cla.s& dl"livr.ry 1v!!I take llu'et? 1vceks <lr more. Sencl to Allee' Brooks, The DA1LY PILOT. 105. Needlecralt Dept., Box 163, Old Chrl1a Stali<ln, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Name, Add.res•. Zip, Pattern Number. NEEOLECRAFT'721 Crochet, knit, etc. Fere dire<:tions. 50 cents. NE\V! ln1tanl Maerame. Buie, fancy knots, pat- terns. $1. Easy Art of Ha irpin Crochet -over 26 de5i(ns to make. $1. ln•t.ul C.'rochfll Book ... learn by plcturts! Patterna. 11. C<lmplete lnstant Giit Boot -mol'e than 100 &ifts_ -$1. II Jiiiy Ru& Books • 50 cent.11. Book ol l2 Prize Altha.n•. 50 cents. QuUt Book 1 -16 patterna. 50 cents. Mu11eum Quilt Book t • !O cents. Quilts tor Today'• Uvtnr - 15 beautilul patterns. 50 centi;. ,,.. "" n-...1 1 · Pl N B J J d M d · N B gions. Unlimited income. Ap. /time. Must be clean At hOl!i\ery, etc. f<lr nlagazlnes, ,-,.., .. uc ion , . . Y a y. ust nve, . . ply In Person. UNIVERST- eat. Apply in pers<ln <lnly, billboards, etc. Ne exp. nee. lltAGICIANS .... Amateur or ="'=8·~11836,;..-_' ~~---~ TY OLDSMOBILE. 2850 urf & Sirloin, 5930 \II'. Coast No fl'l". Limltal lime <lnly. professional. Put your sk\lls PRVT room & bath w/outside Harbor Blvd., Costa M!:!sa. otart a management ca""'r •30-8913. • ••••••••••••••••••• ln a loc;aJ br~nch <lf one <lf VELVET living wy .. N.B. 213/461--8344. lo \\'Or k in your own modern enlr. in exchange l<lr lite · t 77 SALES PART Tii\1:E OOK, matur('. ~1esa Verde rEMALE nul'M's' aide, ex-busin<'5S , <lr asst~! me n hs-.vrk. Elderly lady <lnly. 4 Neat young man needed 2 onvalescent 11ospi1sl. 661 per. pref., small nursing m if\C'. Fu!1 or part time. Mr. Flower ~I.. C.M. 646-7365. & Sa A M Call enter St., C.i\f. 548-5585 home. Call f<lr appt, 494 -SO'i5. Megs, S48-233:j anytime. PROFESSIONAL p h () n e <'Ves. t. · • 5 5:W-3081. Rll before pm. FIBF.RGLASS F 0 rem an : MALE <lrderly, t>.:o<per. pref., llJOlicitcr • Dana Point, San ..::::.cc;::;__ ___ ~y-- 0 11-f p UTE R Syslen1s Tool exper. nttded. Apply !!mall nursing home. Call Oemente, Capistrano a.rea. SECRET AR aly.!il . $898·$1081. City of at Trabfca Produets, 837 \\I. for appt. 494-8075. \Vork iri your own home. Newport Beach finn rttks untington Beach has im-18 h 5 Co 1 M Personnol So• $650 Best deal in area. PhOne secrelary w/knowledge of t t.. s a · <"sa. .. 835'1.Y::: between 9,00 ..l.m. ediate opening. 3 yrs. --=~~~~~,.--Be the boss' right ann! ~ Real Estate documentation ystems and programming Ji~ l B ERG LASS Molders Beach area. ;Oantl~,:noo~:;;"·"°"==-=-::-: & transactions. 5 yrs. 'xper. xper. including at Ira.st l Trainef'S &. e.xpe:r, All 3 PRIORITY PERSONNEL PUBLICATIONS Feature in field f<l R.E .. law, or . a's.!iembly and }"orlran shills. 1631 Placentia. C.l\f. AGENCY Writer. Da,ya, FIT, Person-E!!crow a necessity. Typing nguqe college degree, FRY COOK. EXPER, 9107 Bolsa ne:l Dept., Hoag Hospital 70 w.p.m. Sll helpful, hut al time expp.r. des\rablr. e BLUE DOLPHIN e Weslrnlnste.r ;N:;wp:;:t..;Bc::::h:... ------not neceMary Xlnt "'Orking ederally funded position. 3.'l55 Via Lido, N.B. 894-lJGl R. E. Sales concls. & e<>. bene.flt11. Call end Rrj,ume 10 P.O. Box t _F_U_l_J-,.-p/_t_lm_c_,_m_g_m_t_tr_nc, MGR OF R•af' Estate Career &44-3~. 00. Hunt. Sch. 92648. <lr no oxp n-•-••~I-mm SS:CRETARY all 714 /53f..5491. Fuller aru"s·h ~96', ~·f lG'". . PROCUREMENT NEjolW OR EXthPERt' IENC 1 Eo-T ,.1,, •irl 1--V' TO $20K FEE PAID n "co. a "gt'Ow ng Personnel k rnsurance cxprr. UNTER GRAPHJC ARTIST: Expcr. Live In booming Phoenix. FREE prererred, TyplnJ. sh, filing. mera sales experienet a I t & rt" t · Perm. position . Gd oppor. & ayou sl:!tup a is ts Thoroughly e.xpcriencctl in R. F., Ucen1lng counic, 11ouar-usl! \Vr11 e qualilirations & _ _._.. l th" b · ht & ~ fringe bc~fils. Csill r<lr appt • . 11 d neL ... 1a....i <lr IS rig r ll'Clronic .: o m po n fl n I anleed IG pai;s 11ta.te exam. 01......, dP.~!red IG Clw1 e · I T S800 s~ctra Strt"p Corp 7100 w•.z a iry new P 11.nt. o · p4.1rchuing (ceys!al, l<lrolds, Sales training pr'Olfam at ,,.. · · d NQ. 300, Daily P ilot, P.O. Call"-" 1v·1 eAn "~" Lamp'°n Ave., Carden 26 pU1J 1 aon, .,.l\l""<.J\MI filter•). Travel expenses. NO COST. Call for &""l. Ask 151il, C()Sla Mm. 926 · c--stal A . 'I I "' Gro"e ~ 3361 .... gency For intl'rview, C&1 or wr le f()r Mrs. Bell, • • """. • UPLE to mamigt. deluxe 2790 Harbor Bl, at Adan}" NPS, 2929 E. Thomas, Roberti & Co. 962 .. 5511 S1cret1ry 8 Unit N.B. apt complex. GENER.AL Shop, Inventory, Phoenix, Ariwna. ( 6 0 2 ) R I E C 3 Polllllons Avail1bJ,., Mini· usl be c <l mp 1 tab I e malnl. k dl':llvn-y. hlail 956-73.11. ti state lrffr mwn 1 yr f?xpe_r\enc:1' In lltl- /mltldle aRt tenanll. Jo'rte rcplll'S tG Classltled ad No. T .,75 New or ex:l>('rienced, join the A:otUon, probale, corporate Pt . ""l631. Man1ner rein•• ~ Comp .. nv th&l'I '""'W\"'" tf 6 -t b 1 1 'O'IQ-307 Daily Piiot, f".O. Box • -... ~·-.... or a:e'""'&I us neu . ..11..rae ~1-fER RELATIONS 1560, Costa Mes•. 92626. \Ve guarantee a j()b or 00 you do not have • llctnse, Newport Beach Ja1v firm. bl. h d c Ill Fee. check on our Ph J A "'7 9900 ng esta 15 e 0· "'' HAIRDRESSER PRIORITY PERSONNEL $49 one 0 nn."" .. . 11ln 1al for career. Mc.ct WANTED AGENCY SERV1CE STATION bllc graciously. S475. Salon establlshfd 20 )mil. 9107 Bolsa ATTENDANT. LXP. ·'I lfelen Hayes. 50-605S Rail E1t1t1 ~·2 fl bo r-·t M .. Bt.11.t h art:e.. 0• .. 1 673-S2j(], \Vestmlnslcr •"J ar r. '-Nl> a 1 f'Sll Crnistal A-ncy ...., 1 LI I C tlarbor Blvd~ a1 Adams nhes ti46-8Qa5. 894-136 cent ng our1e TELEPHONE Sales. Top -H-AND-.Y~-M-A_N_ ~1ANICURIST-MerreU Hl'lir Full N.les trainlng program cc,;mmissions and bonus. Ap. Ut Room F<lr Dad--no cost. ManAttment np· CaU ~tra. Schmidt DcHIJl'.n, C<lronA del l\lar. PH ply in pcnon betv.·een 9.00 y •, •. c It an <lUI th• WE~IFf' 494-820~ eves & Sundays. portunltlcs. A.sic for A.trs. 11nd 12:00 noon at 8381 Bolsa CASH u •"-Lo Jonts for lntormaUOo at tu'l.J'f' .. )'Our truh is LOT-Pmionnel A.aeney "Howard'" \l.'htre are }'OU~ hl-5581. Ave.nut, Mldwt.,Y City. 'ith a DAILY Pl 20'3 WestclJU Or., NB lMt ~mc 1 hl~T f ind lt, F()r thAI Item under u1fled ad. 66-2770 pl•c• '" ldi !<i-567!, Tarbell Realtors try th• Penny Plnclwr 100. I ' country ii b1ggei;t t.'Omp. l H 1 1 .. aso ercuon soa anles. Plannf'd tra1n1ng pro-1 t All Ilk• I 1 ·hll ovesea • new. r-------R"ram ets y<iu earn \1 c 64;~1701 you earn. To $5700. 1---------- Coastal Agency Tables &: chair'!!. Wholesale :~C;ru~l~Bo~h;W~-~ilS<>~n~. ~>0-60SS~~~IJSA~L~E~'~C~u~st~o;m~S:poo~l~F:u:rn~-.1 ~~~~~~;;;::~~ 2790 Harbor BL at Adam~ prices. 548-0953. Guo•o Solo 112 Ml1coll1noau1 \YANTED: Woman to care 8' SOFA & l<lve seat, never • 111 for 3 children. Prefer older, used both $130, sewln1 mach. * * * malure person. Salary, Sl40 S25. 968-7910. Roger W•ls1 per mo. plus room & board. Garage S..le 112 329 Emtr•ld Bey Call 1147-4359 afl 7:30 pm. Laguna Beach ~tr. C<lleman. LRG. formlca topped d in Y<lu art' the wlnnrr o[ \VA.i'lTED Expcr. Salesman. table w/2 leaves, 6 uphOI. 2 tickets to the Must have own car. Com-chairs, $IOO get, Walnut Western National ml!s!<ln (Inly. Apply 3190 china cablnel or hutc;.h. Boat & Merine Show Hartxfr Blvd., C<lsla t<.1esa. 11lldlng glus ~ni. 1:50. at the .c.c::..o:c...=....:.c...:.. __ .:.... __ I. Very nice sml Vll'nlf' dlntttc \\/OMAN. energetic, neat, i;et, "'hlte top, • orangilih ANAHEIM work In motel laundry. chail'!I, $40. Like-new 11m11JJ CONVENTION Penna-Prf'SS & to"·els, no 11 circle walnut bar, S.1.5. CENTER Ironing. 494-1196. Nire handmode m;iple de11k. April lst thru April 9th \VOMAN ror food prt.para-c.11n convtrl lo 11ewlng Pltasc call 6'12·5678. ext 314 !Ion. 8 am-4 pm, l\1on-Frl. t'Abi nel, $33. 1.J>Boy 11;alnut between 9 &: $ pm t<l cla.lm St.65 hr 11ar1. Apply In 9 draY..'t-"r chtst w/mirror, your ticket~. (North County Pf'l'Mn, bch1:n 8 & 10 am & 2 S:ti, fine cont!. 1927 SantlAJlO toll-free number 111 540-1221'1) & 4 pm. Del Taco, 21U Dr .• NB (B11.ycr,1 t l * * * Bristol, N.B. 642-5a83. Household Goods 114 WOMAN over 65 y r •.. Sat. Sun. 9 to 5. CARPET !11.ye.r i acrif1cc• p/Ume to supplement social 3201 New York, C.M. hi h 1 1 &: sh SJ !13 S('c. Jnlertt.Ung w <l r k Oak Tbl. k ch•lrA, chest, yd~ ·1'; hny ?1n f ag 54 9~ w/ptOplfl on phone. No C'8.rptt, nld chln11. glasA, • 8 rn e rom ~ · · tr;aJes, Some dsyJ, evrs. sllvl':r. books. rf"COrd1 £._ Al~ d r I PC r l '1 • ""· wknds. ~1in. "~ltt· Nr. ?111111::. _•_!J6._t61_S_. _____ = ltoag H<lsp. 6 I\ 2. 9 9 j ~ Til1RD Annual U n It c d Jewelry 115 an~time. Airl!nrs GarAge Sa I,.. DIA:\fONDS _Buy DireC't WO~EN • cir ls • ladlts Earn f'um1tut'f', small applla ~s. flt \VHOU.:SAl.E PRICES + S~ pl!r hr, Service 'stab. tO)'l!, hooks, lools. ski eq uip-D11n11. 0111m<lnds 49&-JO!IO Fuller Bru.~h cu~tomtrs. m('nt. ~1nrch ~O. :I I &: April M hi IU r.tr. Levint, 96U116. t. 9 am·l pm, 1~17 C<lm-ac nery "1towanf' whtni arf' you? nvldnrt Rd, Nl"wport BCh, B_Li_\_C_K __ k:...,_O._c_k-'tr'""r-a_d_lal Ll>t;t M>methini::'.' find 11, Turn unuwd ltfm~ tll!O qultk l&\11 new ~5. place an ad! ~2-5618. r.•&h. call 64l-567~ 673-26. • t STEREO' UNCLAJMEO 1972 GARRARD SYSTEM. Auto tumlable, alr 1uspensk>n 11peaken . with cross over system, AM/FM /MPX radk> & tape deck. Sdll brand 'new fl auar. Sc>ld tor S~.8.i. Pay <lf[ bal. of S19~.47 ()r take over 1ma.U pymt of $9.00 m<lnthly. U.S.A. Stereo Equip . \Vare.hOuse, 179 E. 17th St., Cost a ll1esa , Ca. 645-UU. STEREO. Unclaimed 1972 Garrard atl. Aul<l tumtable, 11.lr suspen.!ilon speaker 1 w/c r o .,s-over system, A.\1/FM/MPX radio It: tape de<.41:. sun bra..nd new 1: guaranteed, Sold for ovtt $300, pay ott b&la.nce or $1.J:l or take <lVet amall p&ymtnlt. Credit Dept., 71</1193-0501. Game lbl , Iron 'ol.TOOght tbl It chrs. strolltr. plctur6. rocking chr. wshr & deytr. A.II l'f:lS. J\1lsc. 645-~7. ~UcroKOpe, B;o.Med to 1500 X. MMy extru. 962·4817 a.It. 7. .st-fi lht> old atult Buy tht nrw 11u(f D\~·A·Une 6"42-5611 I • ' 28 DAILY PILOT -Monday, March 27. 11}72 )~ [..__r~_• to v .. ____,j~ I ..... ' 3 Lln11, 2 Times, $2.00 I~ '--I ~--..-1oo~J~::rli I -. ..... -Autos. Imported Mlscell•lllOUI 111 l•••••••••IAlror1ft 915 Auto S1rvlc1, P1rt1 949 !!!!!~~~1 :~~~~~~~-~~I~~~~~~~~~ • I &&WP -..... J§] I A""'""I• )§] L[ -Aut_ .. ,,,_s.i.~)§1;;1~' ;.;A'~"·"'~"';;;' ~ 970 Autos, Imported 990 -970 Autos, Usoel 990 · ____ A_U_D_I ___ Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported KARMANN GHIA --T-O-YO_T_A__ VOLKSWAGEN CHRYSLER '66, Xlnt mech cond. Ne\\.' 1---.-..-............. ....,..,.,..,,... TO Good Ho~. purebred ---.--.--.--- WAREHOUSE SALE tom. Dalmatian. 64Z--051S or E H C odd k>t • • urry '70 AUDI C::~r;~~:W "cost. 3737 S46-7308. 9'8 Sprln9fleld Birch, SUlte G, N.B. Dtuly Coste M11a 9 to s, $48-1310. I ll~J You are lhl!l \l.'inner or l'tb Md ""'9t 2 tidreta lo the WANT TO BU Y , Western N1tlon1I COODYF..AR P oly g I a• 1 BJtms aU sizes low prices Hijackers $.14.50 -G60ill J tiOX15, L60X15 -29.95 + FET. US -Anllitn American magi $1:5.95,. Buy-wll-trade open Sunday, C.M. 64>355"4 1000 Ne'A•port Tire City. Super 90. • door. 4 &peed, radio,, heeler. Co. owned car, low miles. 688CQQ. Your belt buy a t only pain! job. Good inter. R/H,1---------·~ Nt\\'POrt 300 2 door 1 good-· $12-2651. GET OUR '70 SUPER BUG to p dlr. loodod. - TOYOTA DEAL lull'price $950 tVVN849) caµ '66 Karmann Ghia. 4.l,000 ml. 4 •peed. Radio, Heater, leath· 494~11 atl. 10 a r:o radio. $600. Call 644·U69. BEFORE YOU IUYI "'Jnt•rior. Jncredlbl• value. ~16-8736. LOTUS 404AGM. $119 5 .::..:C:...:0..:.:NTl~N~E""'"NT=AJ.;..,..,-Child'• Student size desk and Boat & Marine Show ch&lr. RcaM>nablc. \\' j 11 at 1he ,;,refl,.,._n,,,is_h;_.5<;_-'-'-9-06'-74~·~~-· I P1t1, General 850 ANAHEIM $2399 AU. Elec. hospital bed com· BAB Y PARAKEETS $2. CONVENTION plete, aide rails, nearly new. NonnaJ Colors CENTER Cost $653. Sell for $350. 621 e 968-0833 e April 1st thn 1 April 91h l\1aln St., H.B. 673-8961. I~--'-------..,= Please call 642-5678, ext 314 o~s 154 (5) SS 396 Rallye Sport Wheels & Douglas Wlde RadiaJ tires, good cond., all $80. Cust. trailer hitch for nev.'er Camaro $20. 548-4824. 483 IMPERIAL Eng for Sa.Je w/tranl!, starter & PIS unit $225. Xlnt Cond. 962'.-4219 e . - 1969 l.-Olus Europa, M"I•· srereo tape, X!nt cond. $3500. 538-7261 . TOYOTA roof. loaded. Xlnt I ~f41l lewU ~ "69 CONT. 2 cir. h.t. v i ft Ill 31,000 ml. $!JIO. Wk-days. I MAZDA 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-930.1 ~·~ 01' 64>-28l0. ' __ ...;..~;:;..:..:.;_ __ j:;.69.--:eor;;;...,;;;l;;;la<Sp;;;rln;:r.;;,.;;r:-, "ui"i·\;;;ke • ,s LINCO.LN Continental 196&~ , saAKLEE Producls (for a -• between 9 & !'i pm lo claim healthier, cleaner , wealthier LABRADOR PUPS your tickel11. {North Cowity you. 894-2564 or 892-3163. 4 males left 83T-47Q4 toll-free number is 540·1nll IRVINE COAST COUNTRY A --oo-RAB=u:.:.:;...;_A-K~C~Y-o~ .... -h.~rt ~--*-~·~-·~~= ewe 111Et.l BERSHlP ' ks Pu ho C1mnr.r1, Sale/ R.9nt 920 S.1~3438 aft 5 pm pupplH. 7 \\" . p I LS. r"- ,.~ 1 1 >41 I 445 E. Coa" Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH • new, Must sell, wholesale. 'A. ' DR. Gold w/ b I a c k NOW OPEN Pvt ply. 536-4691. .. .. "II' upholstery. Xlnt cend. $~1 ' ' Owner. 645-1260. lmmodi•I• Delivory TRIUMPH 44.1 E. Coast Hwy. CORVAIR \'. ' •546-2784 alt 5:30 p.m. WANTED' ANSAFONE AFGHAN PUPPIES ' ll'!LL PAY CASH Fiberglass &15-4820 or 540-3924 B "'ks w1xlnt bloodline1 ** C S Antlquts/Claasics 953 HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH ~· * TRIUMPHS * rn.oooo Ext 53->< • .., Monza. Xlnt c o n d . '71 CLOS 0 thruout. Good tirH. Priced I E UT 1969 VW &g, 4 speed. to sell. 61>-7459 .it" ~ 673-0900 Ext. Sl-54 --".:,1:-::MW:::::,..::..:.:__ _"i ,, • I • hi * 551-90011 * amper hell -------TOP SOIL-FrH Dellv. ---=----1 Fits '68 ·'72 CAI.J... Anytime 540-0097 • Sil.VER German Shepherd pup Purebred. -4 mos. cute Chevy El Camino Mi1cell•neou1 Wanted 820 & smart. 646-4671. GOO D CONDlTION SA CR if"IC E , German MAKE OFFERI Shorthair Pointers: AKC. l Call 137.5003 1940 FORD Excellent cond. -S850 or best offer. 836-5612 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON 1972 Bavaria's SPITFIRES AS LOW AS S2399 AM/FM ·radio, n1ns iood-1 ---~---==--I GT-' sAvE $500 11.100. .. ~2492. coRvmE . ' FRITZ \VARREN 'S •66 vw Camper . N~ reblt , I --------1Sport Car Center 1600 eng. 11850 or ottor. '67 CORVE'ITE ronv, 2 '""'· OR A NG E CO U NTY 'S 673--5143 9 to U a.m. auto, air, f ul l P'M'· w LARGEST Ai'1/FM/tapt', n>bll eng. I 17331 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH • . "'•• S'"'" n• w • • P~ono 842•6666 WANTE D: Tall tcak'4'00d male & I young female. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!> dresser ar.d te11lrn•ood bc l'l('h Also m iniature Schnauzer Cycle1, Blke1, '40 Plymouth -Club Coupe. Make Offer * 54.5-5850 for stereo co m P o n c n t s AKC R•a>0n•ble Scooters -· 540--2279 aft 5 PM. piips, • • ~~ Dune Buggies 968-1390. ---------956 \V ANTED to buy l 9 6 Ss ~J~B~E~R~rAN=~H'".,~ky-,-. -'-,-1-.J-w· I ACROSS fro m Dana Harbor S we d i 1 hR o r 1 tr an d 1 quality, AKC, 2 mo '&, &. beach, luxur. 18x50 christmu Pla.t~ 644-4687. blk/wht fem. pups. ·Champ. mobile home, 2 BR, deluxe 'TI HR.DTP l.a>cl cc Mll Flk Cost $2100 new, Sell $1200 Xlnt cond. 846-6236. Musical Instruments 822 !\.1onadnock blood 1 i l1 ea. extras, family p a rk . ;----,,--------..,~ 646--0963. 496-985.5. Trucks 962 DRUMS, full .set of Roxie NEED very reliable dog sif.1--:,o;68;-cG;creev:,.,--,-,,-good--c,-'°-nd~.- drums incl cymbals. Candy ter w/weU fenced ln. yard, * Make Offer * apple rt'd. Good cond. Grea t 12 days a mo. Vic Bal Pen Call 847-7301 buy a t i285. &fl.2378 art 6 & & S.D. Frwy. Pays $30, will c*.._,M,!IN=I ~B~ik.:.e.c....· "ao"--....,-,-5 wknds. provide aU food. 673-26.18. * Schwinn orangekrate, 5 International Harvester BEAUTIFUL &el of drums, BASSET ROUND speed. Call 546.5633. RRECROY EATIORNVCENTER "Zildlan cymbals. must sac., 8 mo's old male, Champion ~H;iO:;-N;;;Dc;A-:1:::0-::M~inc:i..,;Tn,:=U;.,SO~. E~x-CA ER, Inc. $250. or best ofr. 847-4654. stoc.k, tri-color. Mu at 1 nd ~ ~· Harbo' Blvd. ce co . r 1lvate street use ,.,..., P. /0 826 sacriUce to good family, on-Costa holes.a 546-4444 1anos rg•ns ly 175. 67>"""'2. ~o~nl_,Y;...·.:.ll~'°.:.·_•.:.94-;...95=22.:.· __ ~ :: '58 FORD Pickup truck *PUBLIC NOTICE! 1 'D"'ARL'=-=1~N~G-sm-.i~1-m"i-ni_ot_utt '1'2 YAMAHA 123 MX. Less w/camper, good all around &tore you buy ;your piano poodle , black $30. 642-4818, than 15 miles. IMMAC! cond., must see to .ap.. or organ, be sure & i;ce us 534-3885 alter 6. 644-2JJS preeiale, 830-1282. for Btst Seltction 3 Darling co c k a p o o a, ,Mob __ 1_1._H_om_•_s ___ 9_3S '66 1',ord Van: Re tr i g , tor the best 5<'rvlce in S "'eeks. $10, 642-4818, chrome whls., custm inter. Southern California 534--3885 after Ei. FLAMINGO • Doublewid e, Must Sell! 675--0828. At Lowest set u p in nice park. Children -~~~~-~~-PART Samoyan pup $10. & pet welcome. '60 Ford % Ton P ickup. Discount PriC:es Part Labrador pup, small 531_7294 Shortbed, lumber rack. CO~~V~cUJIC 17. 64Z-4818. 534-3885 after 6. l -.Mo""to-r"H"'o_m_e_s--~940~ $<!00. "4!>-2170, 613-004! SEE US ABOUT Overs••• Deliyerv CREVIER MOTORS 208 \\.'. 1st St., Santa Ana 83>3171 Automotive Excelleoce '69 FIAT 124 1839 Newport Bl at Harbor 1'r OPENING Special, $2.00 ---------'59 Chev. Pick-up -4 spd., Costa Mesa 642_2851 Discount, All breed dog TEST DRIVE short bed, ne w brakes, Sport CJK'. 4 iipecd, Radio, Open Slttlda)'11 l2 to Spm grooming. Call Noah's Ark rebuilt V-8 e.ng. 545-2083. Heater, Mag wheels, Engine ORGAN • P IANO Groom ing Parlor, 642--9823. '70 FORD J,ii ton pickup, auto just overhauled. YPS247. WAREHOUSE ENGLISH Setter Pupa !Dr-the Midas Mini trans, r/h, 6'6" bed, xlot $1595 Ne""Used Famous Brand!! ange Bellon) 7 wks, AKC, condition, 546-6958. ~ S1'EINWAY. K 111: BALL ' Ch stock shots, wo rmed . Motor Home 1955 FORD PIO.I.JP. CHICKERING, etc, (Over 962-2874. MERCURY V-8 ENGlNE. e ~ 1000 pianos ava!l .J * SHERRY'S POODLES * DI $350. Phone 642-9ll5 ~ stributtd by o HAMMOND, KI P.fBAI...L & EASTER P UPPY SALE! Ken Craft Producla Auto Leilsing 964 ~ s CONN. etc.. org•ns. $50. & Up. ALL COLORS. CREVIER 'A ,0, Before you buy-Give us a try! ,546-'=~284-8. __ ~~~-~ ~). .J p Larg"f De•ler In th• Wost IRISH Setten, AKC, Cham-MOTORS ~ "\ ,,. PEl'jNY O\VSLEY co. pion"""· 6 ~u old. -w l!t St ,.. __ , ... --' 714/892-3314 846-3004 -• .• ~-IU14 Try OUl' lease experts for Savin&:1 • Satisfaction • Ser· vice. 11352 Beach Bl., S. or Katena =,..---=--=--,,:,--,, 135.3171 G D••• Pu-'Grown "Giant•• Daily 10.9, Sat lo.ti, Sun U-6 -... .,.,. Velvet blk·a:ld fawn-Onyx MAJOR BRAND ORGANS Brlndle-Harle·Rta11 968-0590 From $395 inc. Allen • Conn • Hammond • Wurlitzer, etc. HorHI 156 Also H a rp 1 J cho rd 1 &. SUSAN Smith S ta b! a , Pianos. Boarding, training & les- GOULD 1-JUSIC CO. sons. Costa Msa.. 54~1953 2045 No. Mahl, S.A. or 545-9903. 547--0681 * * Since 1911 BOX Stalls with shavings. PIANOS**ORGANS All facilities. Costa Mesa Kawai, Steinway, Hammond, area. 962-8679. Allen, Bakt\vin, etc. From $295. REN'I"'.LS $10 & up. Daily 10-6, Sal 1(}.6, Sun 12-5 FIELD'S PIANO CO. 1833 Newport Blvd. C.OSta Mesa 714/645-3250 WOULD YOU BELIEVE FREE ORGAN LESSONS as long as you like! No reg. lstration. No obligation. Jus! Corot" 1.tondays 7: 30 pm. COAST MUSIC 642-2851 TOP PRICES PAID r~oR Steinways & Hnmmonds PENNY O\VSLEY C 0 . , 892-3314 SEARS electric 18 chord reed organ, play by numbC'r if destred, $139.95 vlllue, $75 or best offer. 546-0945. General 900 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Enough -Valet -Prune - Menace -GREEN Tourist"s comm ent: ''Down in Miami Beach there's so n1uch money the girls are coming back wilh GREEN sunburns.'' PACIFIC PASSAGE Yacht dealers for Coronado, Ne\vport & Sailcrafter kits, Sabots 5: Di nghys, all si?Ps. 2912 \\.'. Coast Hwy., N.B. 13631. Harbor, Garden Grove l Bik. So. ol G.G. Frwy. 636-233.l *Marvin Pearce* Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 558-3222 14.U. S. Village Way, S.A. WE LEASE ALL POPULAR Im MAKES AT COMPETJ. TIVE RA.TES. Call Malcolm Reid for further details. THEODORE ROBINS FORD ~Harbor Blvd. Co!ta Mesa 642-0010 Autos W•ntod 968 WE PAY TOP CASH tor used ean A tnicQ, Juat C&IJ Us b' free estimate&. GROTH CHEVROLET • RECREATIONAL Vehicles Aak for Sa.let Manager for Rent from $75 to $190 182U Beach Blvd. per week, plu~ 7c per mile, Huntin(ton Beach SJeeps 4 to 8. Offer expires IM'1-fi087 KI 9-3331 June l, 1972. 54!Hl29L 2995 Bristol. C.M. WE buy all makes of clean ===~=~~~-1 used sports cars, paid for BEAUTIFUL 1969 U1e-Liner or · not. Please drive in for 25', Dodge 413, slill under free appraisal. wan nty 558-3222 days. 25' Landau 70, 19.COO mi. Radio, like nu. $9950. 26' Diablo. 70, llCOO mi. Gene"rator, air. $8950, 8J9..9427. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \\.'. Coast Hwy., **RENT our ·n El Dorado Newport Beach BALD\\'l N Orga!!Onic organ. Triple a{'tion belt massager, l\.iake olfer . 67;)...5.'}.t7. Sporting Goods 830 645-5321 . motor home. Slttp.!!' 6 fully 642 .. 9405 Boats/Marine SE'lf-containerl. Rese rv e 1--:o!A::IPO=a'°rs"='"w"'ANTE'==D- 445 E. Coast Hwy. NE\\'PORT BEAC!i 673-0900 Ext. 53.54 '72 DATSUN 510 Big Sedan. 4 speed dlr. Vinyl Roof. Under 4,000 miles. R & H + \VSW. Full price $2136. Can fi nance al l. ( # 234128) Call 494-68U alt 10 am 546-8736. '71 DATSUN 240Z 6000 miles. AM/FM, Mag wheels, absolutely Uke new. 879DW. $4295 445 E. Coast Hwy. NE\VPORT B EACH 673-0900 Ext. 53-M '69 1600 Roadster 4 spd. dlr. All chrome wheels, hardtop & soft lop, Exotic red exterior, black' bucket scats. Sacrifice! Truce small down. Call 546-8736. '70 DATSUN '67 VW, good condition, new 427. $259.j, 545-4735 I I 710 E. 1st, S.A. 547..{)764 brakes, must sell! I 544-0119 189s. COUGAR * PEUGEOT * As ktw as $2,299. (No. 5545) FRIT~ WARREN'S Sport Car Center •ORANGE C O UN TY'S LARGEST no E. 1st St., S.A. 547-0764 PORSCHE WE WANT PORSCHES or wknds. '64 TRIUMPH Spitfire, dark blue. Xlnt cond. $650. or of· fer . 846-3039. -445 E. Coast Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH 673-0900 Ext. 5.1-54 * * * Je1s Cas.•santa 19728 Albt r\ Av1., Cerritos , You are the winner of 2 ticket~ to. the Wtst•rf'I ,..,atien•I Boat & M~rifte $flow at lhe ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER April 1st thru April 9th P lease call 642-5678. txt 314 1UGHES1' OFFER between 9 A: S~pm to claim AVAILABLE your tickets. (North County DON BURNS 1- 101_,.,'·"= .. *.....,n""'=':";-;"'=*511>-=12lll-> ASK FOR GLEN '681VW BUG 636-2333 4 apd. dlr. llas bad lovtnr --o='v"'E"'R0"-:2:-:5:---1 Cat•! Exe<ltmt condltlao Clean, Reconditioned, & Guarantud. PO RS CHES 911's .. 912'1·91411 1957 to 1971 thruout. Take small down will finance. Pvt. pt;y, Call 546-8736 or 494-681.L ·n Volkswqen SUpa 8ug. Yellow. Am·Fm . Im· maculate! $1750, C & 11 673-0136. VOLVO SAVE ON EUROPEAN D!l.IVERY ·n ·Dodge Coll, ll'ffn. f.dr I sedan. Lo mJ'a. S&crlfice .. 1 545-8136. i ~tu. Lewi& '70 LTD ~RD Squin W VOLVO wagon, po"·er m:rttring A brake!, factory air, deluxe 1966 Harbor, C.~f. 646-93ll3 luggage rack. $2,700 w bt&t '70 Volvo 164 4 DR Sedan. oUer. 830-5393. Auto, p/s, radio, air/co~ .• '69 FORD LTD 2 dr. HardtOe' 8 track stereo tape. Asking Brougham inter. 390 eng, $3700. 646-2383 aft 5pm. Air cond. PS A: PB. 1t1H. I 4utos, Used 990 Vinyl top, tinted sJ,aa: 10 Transportation Specials $399 AND UP American Motors 637-4156 aft 5 "'°kdays, anytime weekenda: $1195. '70 LTD Wp, air, I jus., 'xlnt eond, aaeritiee/ofter. -~ ' . '70 Ford Tori~ Air. vinyl lop, full pwr. Xlnt cond. Best oiler. 495--4671. '64 Fala:in v-a. s 1pd. IOOd transportalion1 $275. Eves 673--0!12. LEASE a 1972 Font Pinto $69.95/mo or BUy, PocaJ. Loasing Co. • 54&-1155. JEEP i"'Gremllns l"'Hornoto -.,..... ........ -----1 V~lodora 1"'J1voUns 11 '66 JEEP WAGONEER, ..., Ambassadors rlh, 4 whl drive, J:l.ot~CllllDd Htige ltOCk)rl '71'1 I: "12'1 644-2033; 675--8316...- ' Big•Bia Savings· ·1s JEEP .111s iallCl tirto, ". tow bar, wheel bubl:, ltrftt Hqr~r· Amerlc.c111 Jea.i, good mo .... !161-. · llm!!e o1,eonven1"'1 MERCURY Payments 1969 Harbor Blvd. ,67 MONTCLAIR Cost• Mosa ~261 •lllCK 2 Door H.T. Dir. V._Top,.·.\!< ,.-Cond, AM/FM. Loaded. Ut· __ Al.l_.,.W_A_YS ___ , tt. old l>MJ<.r's cu. (VOii- ,, 049) Cail 546-8736 aft 10 ' 494-6811 . A Flne1s.1ec:t1011 i...::..:.~M::;.,u=s=TA~N~G~-· . ' • 'f!.F NEW;& USED BUICKS "'SpecialiUng in Quality" BAUER 'fi6 MUSTANG hrd top ccqi., I V-8, auto, PIS. -air, .S,000 i miles. 842--81))9. OLDSMOlll! Buick-Opel-Jaguar w="-O'°'LD.._-----1 234 E. 17tb SL LiMI S Delta 11 4 Dr. Costa Mesa 5'8-7765 adn. Very clean loca:l, CADILLAC ~~.car. A1', etc. $850. NEWPORT IMPORTS * '67 Volkswagen * ---,L""A"'R-G'°'E'"s __ T ____ '"1 Old•, good ti '• s Car ln xlnt cond! AM/FM, SELECTION OF P/S-P/B, PW. Runs ,,,,.· bst offer. c a11 fArt) aft 7:30 CADILLACS IN S300 or oUer. 557-9305. p.m. 646-8049. O~NGE COUNTY * '63 Olds 88 Station Wapf : 31"1 W. O>ast H~. VW's '66.'69 $99 On. SALE·S.LEASING 'th. air, "'°" conditlo.i : '~, D AUTI!. ORIZED $250. 61:>-7608. 1 Newport Beictf L .A.C. Low payments, 30 da,y . 642·9405 or 1000 mi guarantee. 321 E . • SERVICE. '60 Olds 98. FWI powr 1912 lot , S.A. Ph. 542-1831 Dir. NaL-rs Cad1'Uac: 67.000 mi-.. R""' good, • Porsche 911T 7,&!0 , . U. or best oiler. 543---9605. ,miles. AM/FM , '•di o, 7l ~AMPER. 19,000 mdes. :lllOOCOSTllARBOA ..!.~ PINTO ' chrome r ims, many other ~· Pri, party. Eve1, _ extra!:; cocoa brown With S46-S89l. 540-9.lOO Open SUnda3 · • tan interior 543--4070 after 4'''6~9-P~o-p~to_p_c_a_m_pe_r_.-Ex~e<I~ ,68 • _ _. lm PINTO Runabout, atick; nd N · .... an 0.Vllle tinted gtass, .i-11 •-p.m. co . ew htt!l1 '2.600. Goraeoua, ful4.: luxury equip-$))) A: T.O.P. 6f5...40U. .... _, U.S. ?\fodel of 1917 Eddyslone rine and Rem i n g t on \Vingmaste.r Mode l 870, 12 ga. $100 each. 833-0SRS. Equlp. 904 NOW!!! 543-9513 Orange Counties ---------Trailers, Travel 945 TOP $ BUYER 4 f?r'· 510 dlr. Auto. R .H. T. G l as1,Buc ket Seat Sacrifice! f960AVA) 494-6811 aft 10. 54&-8736. '70 Por1che 91TT Pri vate ply, • 644--0866. ped. Including AM/FM -'---=;,=.;~;;7;~-..,1 Sleroo, Mags, Private Put;y, '66 VW Sed1n $900. ""'°' Factory A1', ot PONTIAC ' : Days 839-9560, aft 5 -Call after 6 pm, 646-1998 course-· 642-0918 • -l DEPIBSOUNDER Brookes Bll.L ?tiAXEY TOYOTA & Gatehouse HECTA, $200. e ARISTOCRATS 18881 Beach Blvd. Call 675-166.3. e NEWPORTS H. Beach. P.'l. 847.s555 Store, Rest•uranf, Bar 132 Boats, Power 906 e AUTO-MATES AJso, several used $395 & up \YILl. Buy YQur car paid for WORSHAM TRAILER SALES or not. Cail Ralph Gordon 36' CLASSIC Stephens sedan 2709 w. 17th Slttet 673-0900 -445 E. Coast Hwy. MEAT ca~ J2' lo n g \vlbrand ne1v tinlt. val. $2al0. i;e\1 $7jf), \\111lk·i~ /reach-In 7'x7 ', J v.·indo"" 1 door. $1250, Pizza or bread oven S3Th. Booths, $250. 549-12.""JO. w/mooring, Ne wp 0 rt , Santa Ana (7l4) 531_2595 Newport Beach. Sll.000. Alt 6 pm, 637-8623, TRAVEL TRAILER·. Im· WE PAY TOP DOLLAR 675-5063, £213) 821~ FOR TOP USED CARS ma{', comple tely refurblsh- 18' lNBOARD bay boat, ed; l'!leeps 5 adlts, SS9S. 2313 U )'Our car b extra clean, glass. full covers, good cond. La Linda Pl ( ~ blk from ~ Us finrt. $900. 673-3826· 23rd & Santa Ana, Costa B AUER BUICK TV, Radio, HIFi, Stereo 26' Cabin Cruiser. Eng. Xlnt J\.fesa). 23-1 E. 17th St. ----t-~--~ lion. Sac. $1250. AlRSTREAM '63-W' twin WE BUY-BY PHONE 1912 RCA & ZEN'll"I ,10., International, air/RI.I a c· 836 r ~ 548-6680 Ct!'!! J\.11 t nd ,.._ ·--" Top S for sotuid running 1960 out sale. Ab~lule minunun1 • n co · .xrvi ... ~, 967 Prlclna on all .72 m"'lrl· .. Boats, Sail 909 ready to roll. S5500/offer. lhru 1 's, any model "6 -' Pvt ov....,.r 6 7 J o" 5 foreign & domestic, ask for Som~ '73 modrl~ now 1n ' '"' ' -" " ' S.!000 t>qu!ry, classic 26' 673-5284. buyer. 557-5242 stock. Sn\•e duruig our <'nd f>anish Ylofor Sailer, Sell or I c-===-----of modd }'3r "''· w,.. AIRSTREAM '68-'1' tw in ALFA ROMEO tr11clr for 7'? l nspect out cf I t U nal I ranty on all i;ets is :I yr pie· n ern.a. o , a r/all RC----------ture tubt, 1 yr pans & 1 vr v.·ntl'r March 23th &. 2161h ccss. Mint cond. Sl>rvlced, Alfa Romeo service. Terms 11vallabic. J4ido Boat "\"an:I or calJ ttady to roll. $5500/offer. ABC Color TV, 90'11 Atlan1a Milani. <714> 644-6735 or Pvt owner. 6 7 J -0 4 4 5 a t lifa.gnol.la, liuntinaton 615-8800· 671-5284. ' Beach. 96S-3.U9. -FlNN, North & Kt'ttenhollen SEE the new 1972 15' ZENITH. Portable 1!1" Blar.k q fl'!, Royce tnasts. trlr, Scotsman &: Romer trailers. and white TV, new p!cn1re $850. 492--S603. .A better buy! Mna Camper tubl!!l. 1 year wamnty S85. Boat1, Slip•/Oock1 910 Sales, ll36 Harbor Blvd, ~1395. C.M. 646-4lJ02. S IC BAY SLIPS RCA 21" Color TV, new pie. Side li es from $2.25 ft. l 966 Chalet expand a b I ~ ture ttibt-, 2 year V.'aIT ty i:. A--2392 or 494~2671 t'Ve~. fiberglass A frame camping S225, ~8-1395. SL I P trailt r, Has stove, Ice box, 191. TV, blk & wht .. ~M v.~ S AVAILABLE ''"'P' 4. Tow llaht. S<O.l.11.2. .......... ·, F'rom 40' to 7t'. Just ou Via 54~"12 ll1Ue. 4'/ El PsJOO N.B. UOO, NB. ,,-,=-·.....,~~--- m.&!l7. Lido trlr 'Pk. ,71 41 645-71'20. ' · W h I I e Eic-ph&nls" o,·er. ROBERTS -v -1.-1 ;;0;;;;=,_c;;...:;;;:.::::;:. __ I running your house? Turn ''""' • .._ ,.... iOICE 11ip tor 50' to ..-~ the In • r •SH '-Pt rtcorder Sl65. '--v.1 m to 'o..n ·• .. 11ell IJS.9&55 .....,.,, Sllp it ~· wide. (n c) them thru t>aOy P I 1 o t l73-<i61l6. 0...Ulod, 64~18. . I NOW ON DISPLAY Sqlcs S«vicc Part> Body Shop COAST IMPORTS l tm.1200 w. Coast Jtwy. NcWJX>rt Beach 642-0406 Put a lillle "loot" tn )'OUr Levi$ ~ ttU tho~ he.bles for "buc1c>··. Call Ow!Jl<d 642'1618. LEASE a 1972 Datsun P ick Up. S69.95/mo. or Buy. P ocai Leasing Co. e 548-1155 FIAT &1J.3l55. '68 VW BUG: auto, AM/FM, '86 Conv De Ville, all pwr, 1968 G.T.O. Power at~ : '70 Porsche 914, AMJfl,f,'ap. }Jeccnt eng, overhall, Xlnt climatl' control &: stereo W/\V tires. Factory &Jr:' • pearance grp.. .perf. cond. Cond. $875. 646-5515. low m i., xlnl ·conc1. musi lac, magi, with locka, Huhi ; $3075. 497·1136, 832-0300, 'GS vw squareback. $995. &ell. i12X>. otter. 540-4013. tran1. Max X tlr!:1. 36,000 '59 Purache, strong eng., gd. Clean, extras. Private par.. '69 Olupe de Ville fully :_~~e new. $1 6 0 0 j ' body, P irelli tires. $100Cl. ty. '548--6660 equip'd leather upbol, nu i97i~~n;:o;;=::,-;=,.;I '71 Datsun 240-Z, all factory 4~7 aft 6. '69 V\V, AM /FM, Air oond, tires. Call 642-U54. 1970 PONTIAC Grand j equip'd, Crown t u r b o . '60 CAB. reblt eng &: frans., Xlnt cond, Sll75. · CHEYELLE lmm11.c. 10 ml. new 'tire , charger. 250 J·lP, Stereo, air hard & &Wt tops, tfti pnf. ** 968·8M9 ** _________ 1 every xtrn. possible, Bl & mags. $3100. 646-7403 Imm!lc· $14915, 525--8414. 1'r 1970 2 DR. SEDAN, lite '69 CHEVELLE WAGON booDak $395.S. Asklna: r bet 2 Full Power· Y• 49 3-4551 ~ · o.re pm. PORSCHE 914-'701 16,000 blue. Rad io/heater. i1350. 540-9695 Or 557-4 240 492--6924. 1 • , * !70 Fiat 124 Spyder miles, good •<.'Ond.' Radial Call 642-3187. 1971 · ' Rd ti 12!JOO ... ""'6 -CHEVROLET PONTIAC FIJ-o...... . str-magw, wide ovals, res. · .........,,,._. . '68 Bug: atrong running, cond, auto tra"·. "11""' moj ', FM s t er • o-b<aut rond-TOYOT' A dm· ged lend Bcl b I •• Ii\ er. ow "\\' s e old. Must aell Exoel = • asking blue bk value. boo_ k AT ONLY $800 !! t '70 CAPRICE Coot 14,ioo. &·••-12 I $2415. (Cosl over $400) new) 67 U6l .... u n;w Must Sell ! Eves 132-4013. ~ 1l tHrii1is ; . C Door Hardtop, V-8, Aul o-675-6164. ' ;\ j FJAT Sport 850 1970. 21 .000 ••' '64 VW le '66 V\\.', •lia:htl.Y , ma'tic, Air Cond. Power '71 Lt 1>1ana SporU lea::zrl: • lll.a-__. damaged. Make O ller. Steering &: Brakes. Black oounlry.14,<kXlm l.'air ~~ l nN. Like nev.·. By C>wnt!r. .WI• Rqtore or Dunt Buggy. Vinyl 'Roof, Beautiful Er-Mlle. 546-42&t ' 'J 1 $1350. 545-5180, 646-2816. 962.-1.711 Toyota & Jaguar Dealtt . . mlne white finish (191AFU} * * .70 Pohtla 2 ; JAGUAR Authorized 5a1,. "SeNlce '66 VW Sq..,..back. n!blt 12595 Mans, P•lp•~' ..,. dr ' ALWAYS 9llll s. Cotut Hi&hWll)' '"'· new dutch-braltft, Jug-T •Y Ayres Chevy mu.t sell! I 968-!280 .... Laguna Beach 5«}.3].00 gage rack $850. 673-1485 '69 CORONA $15'5 NEW, rebUilt. vw •oame. ,,. Hi s. C<>ut Hwy. T ·BIRD I ' A FIM Selection Autoniauc. afr 739AQC a tailed ' ... u. r •• t .. d • Laguna Beach '83 T-Blnl iclnt ,,.,.,,. or Santa An• Toyot• $289.50• MS-l!W. 494-17W546-9967 Radio, air, •to ••• 171111;, NEW & USED Service dept. open 7:30 am * 1970 VW bus. E>ole1 cond. '67 O!e\'dl• Wagon. P/S, 5.ll.,;142 • JAGUARS 'UI 9 pm Monday thnJ Frf. 12.700 0< beat ott•r. P/B. Air, Lua•!!' rack, VEGA day. 64&-l~ ~-~fj~~~Tu.tlii~n~A~vef,.~' ~C-~Mc.l '"':i;;'U'.:".:'.:'"-:~:-..il "Spcclallztog In Quality•• PHONE 540-2512 ·70 vw 7 pa"'nll'r wqon. * •70 Monte C&rlo Air Pwr '71 V BAUER i11 IV. Wtll'ner, Santa Ann Xlnt cond, AM/FM ''"'"" 'v1.,.\ top: Sport ega 2 D Buick-Opol-J1guu $200 Under Book · * 968-0665 .. · Tilt whl, $2195. Pvt pcy. 8"'. dlr. undor 14 234 E. l71h St. l 9 6 8 C' or o n a H • T , '70 vw Bug, xlnt: com, new 644-2587. mil~. owned by llttle 1 Costa M(>$8 548-7765 Yellow/black int • 8 M . tires. $1325. '63 Chevy Impala, 4 Dr • :1~ °::!e~!ll 1960 XKE lSO Original owner. Great Cer! &f5.8614 air cond. Xl.nt cond. Small Down. C&n fin Jaguar 494-1288. Vac....., coot .,_,t R•M llQO. Call ~74111 pvt, pcy. Cali Sl6-f736 ,i ScU tor P&rl• or rt11oratl6n. '70 Tuyola. Cbrona, a uto, r/h, ~r house, apt.. ltare '63 at.EVY Impala 10 am ~l. All good Shape. 5'&-2139 alt lo mi's, nu tires. $1500. bldJ",, 1tc. thnl •Dally Pilot Station Wqon. S315 The ·:Y@Uow Pa&:ea" 1 :6.:P.::~L:_ ____ _,___;_:-==5i05~:'.::_· -----01ullilol Ad. *** 61W4!6 *** dulitied ,,. 642.SGJs I ! ' ' VO Mr April portr of th schod Pu a.m. porn and s Pa Presi ' I w Th at a Sa M L F MA pedili, Chari a long pines "cave The discov IOU th IOU th Ai e e riCi!, lootls Am Fox. chief tional pedlli been 2,000 A s has sh 24 me limest mount The Cat ho I R exa Ta Pa fro and in~ re ton the lrt oon ~1 I .__ San Clemente Ca istrano voe. 65, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES First Lady to By JOHN VALTERZA Of Ill• IHUy Pilcll Sllfl Mrs .. Pat Nixon will visit San Clemente April 7 to formally accept the $8,000 portrait in bronze purchased by residents of the city, and dozens of celebrities are scheduled to join her. Public ceremonies will start at 9:30 a.m. in Old Plaza Park, with film personalities, local dignitarie~ and local and state legislators attending. ~ Paul Presley, chairman of t h'e President's Project Committee, said. tHe nation's first lady will leave for another appearance in Arizona later that da y. Television and radio personality Johnny Grant will be master of ceremonies at the event. San Clemente high school musicians also will participate. aa well as fourth, fifth and sixth graders from San Clemente schools. . The bronze bust of Pr~ident Ni~on was crafted by Corona del Mar sculptress Edith.Brand and was purchased from her after a months-long fund drive held in San Clemente. What's In The Bag1 DAll.l' 1"11.0T l tfft l'llflti I The Easter bunny probably thought she was seeing double Sunday at Bluebird Park. There were about 30 twins toddling or.scampering about. The occasion was a premiere glimpse of the bunny for the Saddleback Twins Club. Here Rundi Wiebers of Dana Point and sister Marka, 21k, see what goodies are available. Lindbergh Expedition Finds Tribe of 'Cavemen' MANILA (UPI) - A scientific ex· peditlon that included famed aviator Charl~s A. Lindbergh has discovered that a long-lost tribe in the wilds of the Philip- pines may be the first known living "cavemen." The tribe fs the Tasadays who, until discovered last June in a dense forest in iOUth Coto Balo Province about 500 miles aouth of Manila. had been living a Stone Age existence. They had no knowledge of rice. corn, tobacco, sugar, salt and other foods known by other tribes in the area . American anthropologist Robert B. was chi~ anthropologist for this month's expedition, said so far as he has been able to rmd out no other existing culture lives in caves. "This is-of major scientific importance, Lynch said: "Some people have used caves for storage purposes, but this is the first time we know that a natural cave is used for basic dwelling purposes." Another member of the expedition, which worked its way into the Tasaday by helicopter and on foot, was Lindberg, a director of the Tanamin C.Ompany that financed the' trek. Today's . n.aJ EDITI ON N.Y. Stoeks ORA NGE COtlNTY, CALIFORNIA -MON DAY, MARCH 27, ·1972 TEN CENTS Accept Portrait • Ill Clemente Public ceremonies were first planned for the Western White House complex, but later were changed. The President, who is rumored to be planning a trip west in coming weeks. will not accept the gift because or custom, Presley saii:I today. The local innkeeper said that according to tradition a public gift to the President is never personally receive<t by the Chief Executive while he is in office. Ultimately, the larger-than-life bust will form the local citizens' donation to 1 the Nixon Library, and members of the committee have .said they believe the gesture will help bolster chances for selection of a South Coast locale for the major building and grounds. The bus~ measuring 18 and a half in- ches high and 16 and a quarter wide stands on a marble base and has a plaque reading; "Richard Milhous Nix.on, 31th President of the United States, bronze original, Judith Bland~ sculptor." Members of the San Clemente com- munity raised $9,000 to purchase the bust wilh donations rangine· from pennies from school children to ~ from a leading business man. "Motivating the effort was the desire of the ciUze ns of San Clemente to express their pride and affection for the president and first family, who chose San Clemente for the Western White House as well as their permanent rtsidence", the White House said. The"" scu(plor Is a third generation Californian and has "won all the top awards in the Southern California art shows" for her bust of the president, the White House said, From San Clemente, Mrs. Nixon will fly to Tucson for participation in a 1 p.m. ribbon cutting ceremony dedicating the Fren1o nt House. built in 1858 and restored by the Tucso n Heritage Foundation. The House is the last territorial governor ·s house in Tucson and will be called "Fremont House, Casa del Gobernador .'' John Charles Fremonl was Arliona's fifth governor qf the territory and had a distinguished public service career in California as its first civil governor and Its first United States senator. Youth Leaps From Cliff To Escape Drug Arrest * * * * * * Beach Attendance Sparse But Rescue Activity High Beach attendance was extremely low as the Easter vacation period began this weekend along the South Coast, but res· cue activities-along cliffs and at sea- increased nonetheless. San Clemente lifeguards reported very low beach attendance despite one balmy day over the weekeed. Lt.-Hank Barnes said only a handful of rescues were reptirttd on Sunday as at- tendance dropped becau•e of chilly weather. Saturday, however, was warm and sunny. Two cliff rescues were logged over the two-day period-one of them involving an injured man at San Clemewte Stale Park. State lifeguards Sunday afternoon res- cued K.C. Pickering, 23, of Yorba Linda, after the man fell from bluffs in the 1ootherly JX>rtion of the city. Pickering was treated for back Jn. Juries at South Coast Community Hos. pital. J On Saturday morning a teenage girl required a boost from the face of a cliff In Sooth Laguna. Lisa Edwards, ts, of 9 N. Encino, Three Arch Bay, was taken from the face or Whaler's Rock by a team of San Clemente lifeguards. The girl, spakesmen said, was not hurt. Boating problems also were reported over the weekend as two cabin cruisers required rescue services. Sunday morning a 21-!oot cabiJI cruiser began sinking at its slip in Daua Harbor and harbor patr olmen were summoned to assist. Spokesmen said the $2,000 vessel was taking on water quickly and her decks were awash when they arrived to begin pumping the butt out at about 9:l> a.m. Owner William Horsman of 170 Canyon Acres, La.ltlln& Beach, said that he had been insta-lling a ne""! bilge pump and the mechanism apparently began leaking in the morning hour.1. Damage to the craft was set at about $1,000, patrolmen said. In another boating incide11t, San Cle- mente guards Saturday towed a disabled cruiser back to port afler it lo.st both its rudders off San Mateo Point south of the city. The 32·loot cralt owned and operated by C.R. Brentlinger of Pico Rivera wa! towed to \J--!or repalra. I Judge-Denies · Mrs. Thomas Two Motions Judge Charles A. Bauer tod ay denied two motions by attorney I>.idley Gray on behal( ol, Antonia Thomas. The judge refused a change of venue to Los Angeles 1County for the convicted murderess of ~er seven-day-old son four years ago in. San Clemente. He also denied a motiOn to disqualify all Orange County Superkr courts to hear her plea. A week ago, Judge Bauer refused to release Mrs. 'Ibomas on bail after at· tomey Gray argued that his client had been a model prisoner during her four years in the State Institute for Women in Frontera. Deputy District Attorney Alicemarie Stotler continued to oppose Gray's mer ti on. The district attorney had previously stated, "Mrs. Tlx>mas is in state prison where she belongs," and added, "she was tw ice convicted and every appeal filed by Gray in behalf of his cllent has been re- jected by higher courts." ..t""-...... .., • I I ., ' • HAS HEART SEIZURE Mrs. Dita Burd Dita Beard's Coll.apse Hazes ITT Inquest DENVER (UPI) - A Senate hearing at the bedside of, hospitalized lobbyist Dita D. Beard, aborted by the sudden collapse of ·the \Vitness, has left . the Senate Judiciary Committee with few answers and ftew quest ions about White Houlie in- volverrient in a giant conglomerate's financial aid for the Republican National Convention. Sen. P.bilip D. Hart ([).Mich.), who led a panel of six senators into a atuffy hospital lounge · Sunday to take sworn t~stimony from Mrs. Beard, called off the hearing alter the S3-year-old lobbyist suffered a heart seizure. Raids Net 33 Suspects A 15-year-old Huntington Beach boy who leaped fro m a 35-foot cliff in an at. tempt to escape arrest was among 3S narcotics orfenders rounded up by Laguna Beach police over the fmt weekend or the Easter holiday. Except for a couple of bookings on suspicion of possession or marijuana or other drugs for sale, the arrests all in· volved small amounts or narcotics, said Sgt. Neil Purcell. The youth, who escaped his spectacular leap with only minor injuries, was one of a trio of teenagers spotted by officers about 5: IS p.m. Sunday, sitting on a ledge about 35 feet above sand~ered rocks at Victoria Beach, apparenUy smoking marijuana, Purcell said. A3 the officers approached and an· nounced, .. You're under arrest," the boy 8houted, "Not me !" and leaped off the cliff, landing on the rocks below and !imping off through the water. He was apprehended. itbout three-- quarters of a mile away, at Diamond Street, by now doubled over and com· plaining of back pain. Officers summoned an ambulance and the youth was taken to South Coast Com· munity Hospital where he was examined and held for observation for several hours betore being released to hit parents, who today told Purcell be ts "very sore." A small amount of marijuana allegedly was found in his possession and he was booked in absentia, pending his recovery, police said. In another Victoria Beach area In- cident, officers arrested a 16-year-old couple at 10 p.m. Saturday after spotting them, totally nude, embracing in a park· ed car and also a11egedly smoking mari• juana. They are charged wi\h possession of the drug and indecent exposure. Fox, a longtime Philippine resident and chief anthropologist of the Philippine Na· Uonal Museum, said after the June e1- pedition the Tasadays appear to have been cut off fr0m civilization for 1,5CIO to 2,000 years. Hair Ruling-OK I • -, Gray's plea is based on a claim that the Orange County District Attorney reneged on a promise allegedly made to him before Mrs. Thomas' trial. He said he had been told that she would not be tri~ if she passed thei hypnosis and lie detector tests. The promise wa1 broken, Gray said again today , when 'the District Attorney's Office Uled the evidence handed them in strictest confidence1 by former Deputy Public Defender John Bond , Her collapse came in the first day of her bi1.arre encounter at t~ Rocky Mountain Osteopathic H9spital with the traveling delegation from C.Ongress. The. senators were planning to return to Washington today, and the committee ls scheduled to resume the hearings Wednesday with Harold Geneen, presi· dent of the International Telephone and Telegraph Corp .. as the witness. The remaining arrest.s for possession of pills and marijuana ranged from Woodland Drive to South Coast Highway, with a good deal ol &<Uvlty Jn the beach areas, Purcell said. A second expedition earlier this month has shown another important fact -the 24 members of the tribe live in three limestone caves about 600 feet up a mountainside deep in the forest. The Rev. Frank Lynch, a RomlUl Catholic priest from New York City who / Getty's W ife Dead of Heroin. ROME (AP) -Italian· medical examiners reported. today that Talitha Pol Getty , actress wife of Paul Getty Jr., died last summer from a massive Injection of heroin, and not from an overdose of sleep- ing pills as first suspected. The two examiners made their report to Domenico Sica, the assis- tant state prosecutor conducting the inquest into t~e 31•year-old IC· tress' death. Pau~ Getty Jr. is lhe 90n of the Amerlc~il king. Mrs. Oetty at· found un- conscious Jn her a tment in old Rome on July 10. Ide her bed was an empty sleep ue: pill bottle. ACL'l!l Appeal Nixed by-High Court WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court let stand today a lower court ruling which permits a state to expel or punish public school students whoSe hai r length exceeded lim1ts prescribed by· school ol· fJcials. The vote was 8-1. The American Civil Liberties Union asked the court to act because the lower courts are div)de. The appeal was turned down without elaboration and over Jhe d,lssent of JusUce William 0 . Douglas. The Supreine Court has never agreed to hear a caae concerning school dress codes and punishment ol students who vlotate the m. The ACLU appeal Involved seven students from Utah, New Mexico. Colorado W Ol<labomo. Last Sept.mber, the U.S. Circuit Court In Denver Upheld school authorities. The a_ppials court aald com~lalnt! based on nothlng ll!Qf• tl),an schoOI regulations of hair length do not "directly and sharply implicate basic corutltutlonal values." The Circuit Courts in San Francisco, Phlllldtlpbia aod Cinclnnotl also have bocked school olliclals, bot lour other Circuit C.Ourlt -In Boston, Chicago, St. · Laub and Richmond, Va. held atullenll • .. have a c:onsUtutlonal right to wear long hair. The ACLU said : '1Tbe bsue will con- tinue to be raised ao long a.s school boards persist' In rtgulatlng· the hair length of their male students and those students insist that the Constitution af- fords them the right to make such decisions for themselves. The Court ahould'resolve these competing claims." The seven studepts dlrecUy involved were Terry Freeman and Vyron Randall Ostler of Davis County, Utah ; Olarles Simmons of Utah county, Utati; Al Wblte of Hobbs, N.M .• Gregory Randall Cronson of La Junta, C.Olo., and Gary Christmas of El Reno. Okla. Prior to the Denver court's ruling, U.S. Dist. Judges A. Shennan Chriatensen o! Sal t La~e City, Wllllam E. Doyle or Denver and Luther L. Bohanon of Oklahoma City dtlerred to school authorities while Judae Howard C. Brat· to of Albuquerque ruled In disapproving the Mpemion ol the White hoy tbat "the right to wear one'a hair at •ny length ls an upect of pemoal liberty." The ACLU argued In appealing to the (See IWll, P ... I) ;1 'Ille petite, small Filipino woman has passed both hypnosis and lie detector tests. Judge Bauer dented the change of venue and qualification pleas without comment today. Gray said later he hopes to get a date set for a trial on his pleas later today. The trial following today'• denials by Judge Bauer will be Marci in" an Orange County co~rt. Sprinkler · Swps ' Cle ment,e BkrM A large electric motor d r I v I n I machinery at the Reeves Rubber Com- pany in San Clemente c1ught fire early today, but a aprlnlcler system kept damage. at a minimum. Firemen said the b(au began shortly before 2 a.m. In the ceater of the building along Avenida Pico, artd 1n automatic ex· tjngulsher system ~ed on moments arter the blue. Firemen mopped up water near the area then re.turned to the station. Damage wu about l300 to tbt motor. 'i Mrs. Beard's doctor said ahe "survived lier attack or acute angina pectora" but would be monitored carefully for the next several days. Before the seizure, Mrs. Beard again denied repeatedly that she had written a memorandum to her superior llnktn1 the ITT pledge f9 help San Diego underwrite the costs o( 'hosting the GOP convention with the Justice Department's out-of- court settlement last year or a huge an· tltrust action against the conglomerate. But, ·under questioning, the woman acttnowled1ed· that she had written por- tions or the memorandum that columnist J ock Andtl10!1 J>Ublbbed this month In· eluding a passage ln which she referred &o ''that call from the White Hou.se." '1That'ca.ll." Mrs. Beard explained Sun· day, 11.·1s an Inquiry . by someone tn the Executive Manslon -she was not sure who -to W.R. Merrlam , her supervisor In the Washington ollice. "wanting to know all about this commitment, this un· derwritin&" of San Diego's convention costs. Mrs. Beard said Merriam "asked me to explaln" and &he did -ln a mmoran- dum that _contained about hall the (See LOBBYIST, P'P I) t ·oranae Weather Sunshine and temperatures- ranging up to 70 degrees are fore- cast for the Orange Coast area Tuesday. Tem peratures tonight will drop Into the 30s and 405. JNSm E TODAY Aerospact manufacturtrs are about to plunge into competi· tion for tltt bioo«st fPOCC con· tract liktly to come their way for the ne:z:t decade -the $5.5 billio n-space 1huttle program. See storu, Poge l 0. l . M. ....... 1 A1111 l tlMftr• Jiii INll11t tt Mew ... t.IUWll!a I N.,.ltNI HtWll 4 Cltt•lflt• ll•M OtMM Cffi11Y t c.mk1 ,, lt'!Vlt ,..,,., ,. c,. ..... ,_ 11 "°"" 1 .. 11 °''"' Miiie" t lttdi: Motl'll•h 1 .. 11 •.it•ltl l'tM ' -te .. YI,.._ ti lllterltlllll'IMI ,. ™'"'' ,. ,.,.._. 1•11 ::::: • , .. ~ 1.tctN M I Ntwt 1).14 Hlf'ltc... If W9'tll ,._ l ' ... _ z DAil V PILOT SC C.·ops Hit By Freeze In State FRESNO (AP ) -f'reez ing tern. peraturts !hat may have damaged bud- ding crops struck California's Central Vall ey today. Fresno recorded' 31 - a record low for the date. The t:.S. Weather Service reported 27 degrees at Lem oore, 2711: at Clovis and 28 on the Sanger River bot tom. Readings were warmer both north and south with Merced and Stockton report ing 37 and Bakersfield 39. Fresno's low was four degrees under the previous low for the date, set in 1956. However, the area had anther late March reading of 31 degrees on ~larch 30, 1897. The Clovis low lasted 21/a hours. and Jim Steiner of the weather bureau said many valley fruits can sl;ind only 3D degrees for hair an hour at this stage of development before belng damaeed . Apricots and grapes can take only 31 degrees for one hair hour. he said. The valley is one of the major U.S. agricultural crop producers. Estimates of the extent of dam age are not expected for se veral days as farmers study their orchards and vineyards and report any damage to county agriculture offices. Many farmers went without sleep mo::;t of the night as they used sm ud ge pots and burned other materials to rai se field temperatures. Some irrigated extensively Sunday tp protect crops. Nearly Bad Trip UPI Tt!t11hOll One Madera County rancher who vineyard was among 1everal who hired reported a low of 27 degrees in . his vineyard was among several who hired helicopte rs to hover over f i e I d s , circulating air. Lucky thing for this Rio de Janeiro bus driver that there wasn't more room between lanes. People gathered to marvel at the J'osition of this bus after it careened off a safety railing and lande between two supports on th is hig hway overpass. No one was injured. Park Crackdown Ott Drugs, Booze- Nets 18 Arrests Chaplain Witness Hints Trips to Motel Innocent JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI) -A court·martlal board was told today. that ORINDA (UPI) -Rangers arrested 18 Navy Chaplain Andrew F. Jensen may She said Mrs. Jensen told her of meetin g Jensen on Tuesdays at a hospital where he worked to go from there to a mote l. persons during the weekend on drug and have gone to motels with his wife for a drinkina: charges at Briones Regional rest and not for adultery with the wife of Par1t. 1 fellow officer. It was the second 1traigtit weekend .. crackdown on dru}.and ~lquor users who Mrs, .Lucille ~er .• a neighb9r of t~e hav, inVaded Briones and other parks re~ J!nsen_ family, testified a.s Jensen s cenfl~ ahlfers said 1 court-martial opened lts second week .. "M°i~ft·s golng. to take a few ·mg~ • Sbe sald ,she had J.oked frequenUy, with wee'iien<li':\iefore the word gets arournf .Mrf.;;leMeO lboU~1us usl"&'mot'-!' to ge.1 that we mean b1Jsiness," said Larry 01· away from· the pressures of hts work as sen, chief of public safety Jor the East Protestant chaplain of the Civil Fleld Ba~Bqianal Parks District. Navil Air Station. ~l 'arresled 15 1oersons .the pre· ~en, 43, was accuSect-by"tWQ or- vloos''l!i!Pnd. • ·-, • il:tu'--Wlves of having affalts wllb them No .serious violence waa reported at :'aaa ··ra .On trial on chargei bl conduct Brion ea Saturday or Sunday. . .wlbecomlng an of fleer. He haa denied the However, Olsen said drug pusher1 Were cfil('tes. o~rating openly. Mrs. Turner said she would tease TbJrt'nn men were booked. at the Con· Kathleen Jensen, the chaplain 's wife, tra Calta COunty Jail in Martinez. Fi ve about the motel s. male juveniles were booked at the ''Yes, I would say. have a good time county'•· juvenile hall. but don't spend too much money," she The charges ranged from possession of testified. dan(el'OIJS drugs for aale to possessiO!l of marijuana and viO"Jation of regulations against .drinking in the park. Olsen iiaid rangers conllacated three to four pounds of marijuana plua 1mall amounts Of cocaine and other drug s. County Woman Killed lri Kansas Accident A Santa Ana woman has succumbed to traffic accident injuries suffered over the weekend on a trip to Kansas, when her car collided with a pickup truck in a suburb near Topeka. The Kansas Highway Patrol identified the victim as Mrs. Uvena Kinney, 71, whose home !!ddress \Vas not im- mediately availa ble. Her death Sunday in a hospital at Hays, Kan., brought the wheat state's weekend traffic death toll to three as the Easter Vacation week gets under way. OlAN•t ~OAST I( DAILY PILOT T'llt Ortnlt COtll DAILY ,ILOT, w!rtl Wlllcll 11 combined int Ntw1·Prtu, 1, p\l~lll'!fd bV ll'lt Ortnge Coail Publl1111111 Com11tny. Se~. ,.,. ed/1101'11 ••• oubll1llld, MOndtY thl'l!tJtll ,rldty, !tr Co~'• Mrw. NtwPOrt 8e1cf!, ~untlngton B~IClllF01111la•11 V•Uey, ltOll,,I eea cn, lrvln1/S1dd lt~d1. llrn'l Sen Cltme<lttl 5811 J uan CdPi1ir1no. " 1!n;ile ,._1onat ec1.ilon it puoli$l!to:I S11urelllYl end S1mdav1. Tilt orinc:w 1 "ut1111111ng ol•M 11 e1 lJO we51 Biy S!reel, Co511 Mr1~. Ctlilornlt , 92626. l;ebtrt N, W,,d Ptt$idcOJ '""' F'u~1;1~rr Jtck R. Cu•lty V•e• fl'rt1lcltn1 ,,,. C.rntrtl M•ntoet Tllorn11 K11 .. ,J l!ol!or Thomt1 A. Murph;nt M1nt1rng taller Clltr!11 H. Looi Richtrd P, Na ll Att!lltnl Mt11410llltl idllOrt S•11 Cltfrtelltt Offkt JOS Nott~ El Ctlft!no Rttl, ,2672 Other Offlcft Coitt Mts•: lllO WtS! l1v Str"t N1wporr 8HCll: "'' Newport lo~lt¥trlf Muntlntl!M 8e1<11: 11•1s Btttll l fll.lltv•rd LIOUM 9tttll < 12' FortJI Av•11vt TelepfteM (7141 642-4121 Cle1tlfled Advtrtldnt 642·S671 So• CltlMntt All Dtport""lltl: Ttl111tt111t 491·4420 (Of;l'fflll\1, !tit Or~ngt C:Ol)f l'vb!l)ll!'IO CMrii:•nw. Mo new• •lorlt,, lllut1r1t10~1. tdl!Cr\11 ,....lier or odvtrhst~lt !lt.-111 l'l'llJ' bot l'OOl'Od'-"itd Wlttloul lllttll l J!O'· 1n1,1lt11 of (Opyrliilll ~n«r, ll<Otld (It•• tblltt N ICI ti CO.ta Mfft, (lli'Or'nl• ~bw'!Ot!OJ'! 9't Cl'"ll' ., 'J """'11111'1 1r't lflllll •J.15 """'"'"'' l'n!Ullff N 1!11eneM U .U -Tr!I~, Corrigan Loses Hope in Search For Lost Son By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lht Dtl!y Piiot still Famed flie r Douglas "Wrong Way." C.Orrigan has given up hope for. his sportswriter son and a . boyhood friend missing six days on a flight from Santa Ana, but the hun t today continues. Ground searchers and Civil Air Patrol pilots flying six planes \Vere still seeking any traCe of Roy Corrigan . 22, and his passenger Roger Po~·elJ, 21, of Laguna Beach. Coordinators of the CAP search head· quartered at Long Beach Airport are con· centrating along the Southland coastline, also crisscrossing Inland hills and valleys. Corrig an. of 2828 N. Flower St, Santa Ana. and Powell, of 32 Crystal Cove, Laguna Beach , took off last Tuellday from Orange County Airport on what w11 to be a twi>hour sightseeing flight . They planned to buzz the Powells' new home and photograph it. then swing down to San Diego and back for a 4 p.m. return but falled to show up. "\Ve're making an all-out effort. but 've have no new leads," CAP Capt. Thomas Valenzuela said today Yl'hen con ta cted al the Long B:!ach command post. He said six CAP pilots would continue the search today, supplemented b)' Orange and San Diego County sheriffs aero squadron members scannlni the countryside from aloft. Boy Scouts giving up their Easter vaca· tlon from school are also combing coastal canyons and foothill areas for wreckage of Corrigan's Cessna 150 aircraft. Young Corrigan's father. who captured the fancy of the world Jn 1933 when he _took off from Brooklyn, N.Y. for Long Beach and turned up instead in Dubllri, Ireland, Is pessimistic. He said he gave up hope that his youngest son and passenger would be round after the first futile day's search. The fateful fli Ght was the firs! In • s:mall plane for PO\\'ell. son or a Santa Ana neon lightlng company owner. Corrigan believes his son •• a former Santa Ana Register sports reponer, went down at sea. He said Jast week that white co1stal "'tather \lr'JS clear before takeoff, forecasters missed an area of patchy fof <1[f Laguna Beach. She alsO testified that she \fas wlth Jensen and a Navy doc',vr, Dav~'Murphy, one day when Murphy told the 1chaplain, "You should get away and get tome rest because you are just going too 'S~ong/' ~ MrS."·Tu rner described Jenle~n · 3t the time as being "haggard loo.king/' and also as a "very God-fearing ra mtiy m11n.'' She was the third Jensen n!ighbor to te stify that the Jensen f<:mily car wa~ in the driveway each night during a week· long period in August, 1970 when Mrs. J ensen was away and dur:n-; which ooe of Jensc:i ·~ ~:::::.iscr.s tc!':';;:::~ she h1d Sl'X· ual relations with him si:I: times in motels and at her apartment. From Pqe l LOBBYIST •.. language used in the document Anderson published , but made no reference to a link between the antitrust settlement and the conventl::>n underwriti ng . She acknowledited writing : "I just had 11: long talk with EJG (E . J . Gerrity, vice presi dent of lTI'J. I'm so sorry that we got that call from the While House. I thought you and I had arreed very thoroughly that under no circumstances would anyone in this office discuss with anyone our participation in the con· venlion, incl uding me. Other than permlt· ting John l\1itche!J, Ed Reinecke, Bob Haldeman and Nixon besides Wilson, of couriie no one has knowft from whom that $400,000 commitment had come." Mitchell Is the former U.S. attorney general, Reinecke is lieutenant governor of Californ ia, Haldeman is President Nil· on's top aide and Rep. Bob Wilson (R· Calif.), is a congressman from the San Die10 area . From Pagel HAIR •.. Supreme Court Jan. 26 that "I.ha un- derlying issues posed by hair regul1tion1 are profound, for they touch upon the very relationship between tb• ind ividual_ and the state ." The ACLU sa!d school officials were Imposing short-hair rules because long· hair is a symbol of dissent, ua badge of defiance of authority." The •PP<•I add ed: '.'II ls eought to be prohibited not because there' is anything Intrinsically disruptive or distractlne alxlut it, but, rather, because of what it is perceived to represent." I A·Immh ' Victims To Be Treated LOS ANGELES (AP) -Three Japane11e doctors will come here in July to help lrf!at survivors o( the U.S. atom.Jc lxlmbings of lllroshlma and Nagasaki for lingering aliments. Victims of the bombing h1vt: com- plaln•d of physical and psychologtcal problems they AIY !hey believe ttem from exposure lo rad iation. • An estimated 500 to · 700 survivors of the blasts live Jn 1th ls country, mo1t of them in the Los Angeles •re'!. " ' Nixon ' l Member Business Official Set for Pay Board ' WASHINGTON (AP ) - Rocco C, Sic!· Jlano. former prCsident of a Los Angeles holding company and undersecretary of commerce, has been named by President Nixon as the lone business representa tive to remain on the revamped Federal Pay Board. The White House said Nixon made the decision over the weekend, which he spent at Camp David in Maryland, The oiher four business members "vot· unteered to resign," said deputy press Recretary Gerald L. Warren. in the wake or the walkout of three labor members of the Pay Board and President Nixon's ac· tion to reconstitute the panel as a seven·. member all-public pay board. Siciliano, 50, a na tive of Salt Lake City. served in both the Eisenhower and Nixon administrations and came from a post as president of the T.I. Corp., a Los Angeles holding company for title insurance oper. ations. , · He has considerable background in la· bor negotiations and formerly was presi· dent Of the Pacific Maritime Association in San Francisco and negotiated on the man agement side in West Coast dock disputes: He wa s undersecretary ot commerce in the Nixon administration from 1969 until about a year ago. And he was assistant secretary of labor and a special assistant to the President for personnel manage- ment during the Eisenhower administra· ti on. \Varren said Siciliano wa s "particularly qualified to serve as a public member be- cause of his business backg round and intimate knowledge of laobr relation!'.'' Business men who will be leaving the Pay Board are Virgil B. Day, a top la· bor negotiator for the General Electric Co.: Robert C. Bassett, chairman and president of Vertical Marketing lnc .. a Chicago ma~azine publishing company; Leonard F. McCol-lum, chairman of the Continental OH Co. and Benjamin F. Workmen Bolster Safety Railings Along Freeway Workmen from a Stanton metal in· stallation firm this week are continu ing to place new, stronger iron railing aear pillars and bridge abutments in a large part of the San Diego Freeway through San Clemente. The job, authorized several months ago, will cost $13.116 and will help stave off single-car collisions which have been common in the vicinity. The project, involving Installation of the safety rails at more than a dozen locati ons, stretches from the s.anta Margarita Bridge area to the south to the Camino de Estrella overcrossing near the north city limits. The railings. state spokesmen have said , will help keep fast-moving cara from slamming into the concrete fix· tures. Such coll isions have claimed several lives this ye ar on the stretch of freeway. Burglars Strike Dana Wharf Boat Bur glars hit a Dana Wharf sportfiahing boat as she was in her slip Sunday night or early today, stealing $18 in cash. The breakin on the sportfisher Clemente was one of several reported at the sportfishing landing at Dana Har bor in recent weeks. Biagg ini. presldent of the Southern Pa· cific Co. other laDar members walked out. The fi ve "publJc" members of the board , headed by for1ner Judge George Boldt. will continue to serve on the seven· member body. Frank E. Fitzsimmons, president of lhe Teamsters union, stayed on the board as the labor representative after the Court Won't Review Order To Desegregate San Diego • WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Supreme Court today declined to review an order that San Diego officials take "reasonably feasible steps" to balance the races in all public schools. The court gave no elaboration in unanimously turning · down a plea for a hearing filed by the officials Nov. 11. The case could have led to a ruliRg on whether racial imbalance in schools Is, of itself, unconstitutional. The challenged order was issued by a st.ate appeals court in California. The San Diego school district, one of the largest in the nation, has about 128,000 public schoo l children. About 95 ,200 are white, 16,000 black, 13,600 with Spanish surnames and another 4,000 of other minorities. Jn 1969 , the state attorney general began the ~uit, claiming racial imbalance in several schools violated the COD· stitutional rights of minority children and shOuld be corrected. Judge George A. Laur of San Diego ruled tha t without "intended segregation" school officials do not necessarily have 1 legal duty to eliminate racial imbalance. Last August, he was reversed by a court of appeal , which held "school authorities in California have a con· stitutional duty to take steps, insofar as reasonably feasi ble, to alleviate racial imbalance in schools regardless or its cause where the imbalance denies the minority !group equal educational op- portunities. '' School officials appealed in November to the Supreme Court. San Diego officials , in seeking a hear· Ing, said : "It is now time to examine the question of pupil racial imbalance arising in areas where there was no state im· posed segregation." Due to the Supreme C.ourt's not hearing the case, the next step evidently will be a trial in a CalUornia court. Dr. Thomas Goodman, 1upertntendent of &an Diego schools, 1aid the high cour\'s ruling was expected because of a Botanist Slain ' In Ax Attack; Husband Held MORRO BAY (AP )-Botanist Vera K. Barnes "'as killed in her home today with an ax . a few hours before she was to ha ve been installed as state director ol the State Board of California Garden Club. police said . Her husband, Dana, 75, turned him self in to police and was booked for in· vestigation of murder, pallce said. Mrs. Barnes, 57, retired three years ago as a botany professor at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. recent request by California Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger that the hearing be called off. '"\Ve agreed three or four weeks ago to go along \vith the attorney general ,'' Goodman said. "l think \ve'll go ahead now with plan s we've been developing. We've already presented some alternate plans." There will be some additional busing. he said, in the plan calling for shifts of Caucasian children from school·less hous· ' ing developments and others now in 48.J classrooms which are old and must be replaced for earthquake protection. Need for Police To Be Studied At Capo Meeting The need for a municipal police depart· ment will ~ discussed by the San Juan Capislrano City C.ouncil at tonight'• 7 o'clock meeting in city hall. A recommendation by cfirector of public safety Joe McKeown for the im· mediate formation of a municipal pollce operation has bti:!n outlined in a report given to the council and the public two weeks ago. The council was given a petition at its last meeting signed by 80 residents who wanted the police issue placed on a public ballot. Since then rumors have been circulating ·that the Orang! County Sheriff's Office, which provides contract service to the city, would reduce its · charges by 40 percent. Officials in the county administrators office and sheriff'• office denied thei rumor. Municipal versus contract po Ii c e service has become ·an issue in the city council campaign. C.Ouncilmen indicated at their last meeting that they may wait until alt er the election to make a decision. Council agenda is the proposed rezone of unclassified land between Ortega Highway and San Juan Creek adjacent to Canada Road . The proposed re1.0ne is for multiple family apartments,• two-family res idences and commercial activities. The council also will be asked to con- sider the prezone or 29 acres in the coun· ty south of the city boundaries adjacent to the C. Michael C.ompany property. County zoning for condominiums of the C. Michael Company land has been pro- tested by the city. Both parcels are near the Capistrano Airport. Capo Community Plan Revisions OK'd Mlscellaneous cash from the galley cash !xix was taken in the latest burglary dl.scovered early today when employes opened for business. She was to have been installed as head or the statewide garden club at a ~unch­ eon today. Minor revisions to the plans for the Thunderbird Capistrano planned com~ munity including deletion of a school site has been approved by the Orange Cou.oty Board of Supervisors. The school site had been reserved In the 455-acre subdivision in the north Dana Polnt area but will now be used for homes because the Capistrano Unified School District declared the property surplus. Offices of the landing were struck eeveral weeks ago by thieves using 1 prybar. ' E1t•bll1h Sal• llcyclo Trolls Police said she had been bludgeoned to death with an ax and tha t her body was fo und in her home arter her husband sur· rendered. as your Cost ~ Mesa City Councilman Dorn lll1clttl 1upport1 concept• of .• , better tchoolt .•. better community~ •. better bu1inNMi. e lvlfMC.,.I c .... "'-... .._.. e C ........ CH~ ef CM ... • e e .. ,. MIM•N..,trt Hot~r u .. ...... w tf ttlt kw4 of lllNCt.n Ch11t -fmMMf11f11 Pw PN11•11t • • P•ltlk ,.,_.. •• -4 ..... ,_,,,. • •lrl lcct•~i.. •f .... 1.,1 .. , .... 1111..... letlft, """"""' •114 ,.,,,.. ct111 .. tn1 .. Cothl M'" HlltOtlc•l SICWJ -• Y•wtll '"'Pl•YllMt ltf.rlct _,th mtfltltfr Hot._,'-'" -Viet P•llltf!t H•rhr Atot U11lt.lf ~4 -f11M e lty kt11fl •f A111trlt.-.S.1" ... '·"····· ,. .. •If "" ,.ld11t HtltNry S...kt A'dfd ltcl,1-t ,,, o .. ., .. u111, Cltl•11 •f tht YMr -CeU• .. PM PTA • c .. tt M ...... vtlrftatfff C•11t< • "''"" -..,,... ,., ...... '"" C•mpalg1t Be•fl9uart«r1 at 1840 Newport Bhifl. LAST ON THE BALLOT-1st IN CIVIC CONCERN PlloMe 845·1380 or 5411°1313 VOTI TUESDAY, APRIL 11 • , I I I I • ' For The Record lll'CCJ sµ;; h' #CIC' :;:;a Dissol11tions Of Mat·riage l"llM ,1bru•rv 21 Welner. Unnl R.R. and Stlf'utl A. JK0b1, Cy!\lhle A, 1n6 Ger1ld A. Che1111t!I. M1rl1111 M. •1'111 Rov Eu,.111 TOl'l1e. June L. 1nd w11111m R. B1ecl'+. Robert Cr&ddocl< 1nd l.IU ll!\ E. aurnttr, Ruth 11\d Wllllem R•~•• Prutcl!, Jn•le M1r1ar1r·M•rv 1nd Anll'+onY JOHlll'I IYrn1, Ellieb1r11 Jean 1rod Donn Cou1111 Sindy, G!rt•uat end W1r•tn S. l(ro!h. 1(1trov Wlntlle 1nc1 01•r11 Otan FrtdY, M1rl1 N. •nd Wollltm W. Hufford. D1nlel C•I 11'111 Sll1•or1 IC:tlley Ot Gro.t. S•ro!l•I M. 11'111 Ce11111r R. 01r1tr, J1c<1u1lyn M•rlt 11'111 H1rald Leslie Jr. lluHar, l11rb1r1 Je1n and Correll l.tt DiPlfY, Sh•rry M•rl1 1rod Crtl• l.1rry l.lwJon. Brtnd& Gwt!\ •nd Hu•h l.e '" Oare, l.10111 M11 •nd Jahn P1Uerton Roman. Mir¥ Lou Incl C111rl11 Merk P1r1vr1, Frenc:ont 1nd LUil McKt't', J11n Ind Joton ,..lltd M1rch 1 Tripp, E1111tr Muri 1nd Sll•I O. P1plllor1, Ro11llt An!\ •rod R1ymorod G, Bruni.on. Tl\Oi'l'ltl Buck Incl OllM il!OM Pll1 rl1. l1rblr1 0. trod Jal\!\ R. Fltzger•ld, S1nd•1 J. •ncl J1me1 E. Gr1YJon. Sl!ll'!llO!\ L11n encl Mlth1tl James 0.11. Goraor1 G. 11'111 Merv1rel A. W11v1r, Oorolhy L. •rod Jim l.. Ktnr. S1nd•• G. 11'111 Jol'ln R. P1dowor1k., '-lll'l(Y Sut Incl Mlch••I J. M•rt1111, Allred J. incl 011nn1 L. R001111, D•rlt!\& J11tnn1 encl Oontl6 '" 111vnooi.a. Pemtl• R8Yt 1nd John l.. II Ort. Miidred Ne ille •nd Jonn C. Huellt. Ann V. and L&•rv A. Bl•C.ltWJlll, M•rY •ncl C1r1 JOllPI'+ Oar!tY. Mtrlly l.uckv 11'1<1 RM•ld w., ... fo\91t11, Gery ltt •nd Sn•ra!\ l.tt M1~011. Otbre l.Y"" •l'!CI J1me1 lavd ,, Youn1. Cl!erYI Lindt t r>d Geor1t oc~111n 111 jl\epp•rd, 01vld C. and l.•w1n1 J, lotte, Jeco1,;1lyn Ann 111<1 J1ck llltlnt Kl1111, J.,.•ld H, tlld K•lhl~n M. $0mm1r1. FIO•ff'ICI F. •ncl VlclOI' L. Mytrt. RiChtrd . Edw•rd end 01lortl L1urle t Tobl•1. l.eoll tncl Hl•tm Wosl•tl, RtbKCI Su11n •no G•t• S!u•rl L•vto.,, Mldlelt1 l.ou!se tncl CnrlHlt!\ l!dwerd MICl'ltntr, Don• \., Incl RIY!flond l.. P1•11, Ju1n Ah•hOl'WI &Old C•l\d1ce Jt•!\ Death Notices Land Swap Gets Okay,. Warning SANTA ANA -A regional park land swap advantageous to Orange County has brought • . . DAILY PILOT tf Coutaty Polities a warning from c o u n t y supervisors to county depart· ment heads to cease pirating private property in the upper Santa Ana River area for nood ""' control or other purposes . • By O. C. HUSTINGS THOSE municipal co u rt Dr. Melvin H. Bernstein, judges appointed by Governor special assistant to the \'ice Reagan last week -Selim S. Robert Battin will emanate chancellor for student affairs Franklin of Costa ~fesa, rrom the second noor of the at UC Irvi ne, is keeping his Patrick McCray or Santa Ana Arcade Building, 515 \V. !\fain fingers on the collective pulse and Alan N. McKone of SI., Santa Ana. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN In a long delayed trade with the state, Orange County Supervisors h a v e approved the exchange of 172 acres or the' Bryant Ranch, a citrus operation, in return for 70 acres of Featherly Regional Park property taken for lhe Riverside Free"•ay. Apprais~ls made in 1969 valued the frce\\'8Y land al $353,868 and the 172-acre ranch land at $367,230. The trade \Yas made on the basis of those figure s, but the county Real Property Services Department said the land is worth at least 70 percent more today. The 172 acres to be purchas- ed from the Bryant Ranch by the state after condemnation and then turned over to the county include p r o d u c i n g orange groves and five water "'ells. Ranch manager Ernest Bryant said th~ loss would jeopardize the future of his 4,000-acre operation. Long range plans include a 400-foot wide flood control channel through the area which Bryant said C<luld wipe out prime gro"·ing areas on the ranch. Super\'isor David L. Baker of Garden Grove pushed through an amendment to the trade agreement w h i c h restricts county departments to use of park lands if at all possible for future flood con- trol projects. "This is the last major orange grove in the Santa Ana River Canyon area," protested Superviso r \Villiam Phillips of Fullerton, •:and it shOuld be protected as should all other citrus o p er a t ions and agricultural lands in the coun- ty. "Orange Counly deri\'ed its name from such groves and it hurts to see so many of them tOrn up for subdivisions and park additions." Phi 11 i p s argued in \'ain. of the 25 million young persons Orange -will draw annual * between the ages ol 18 and 21 salaries of $32 ,273 In their new Ca~~.~Ah~~Rd;~:t"ect ~\;:iu~' SA TU RDA YS IN TO FAR EAST Maj. Gen. Brown TAKING OVER Brig. Gen. Lang who will be able to vote for posts. * entitled "Biographical Direc·· THE DAILY PILOT the first lime this year. FIRST Di.strict Supe.rvisorial tory of !he American Congress 1 Dr. Bernstein, a lawyer and Candidate John \V. ''Bill" Hill 1774·1971'' to the UC Irvine] Marines Will Hold a political scientist. has been :~c~h~r~is~te~n~ed~~h~is~n~ew~c~a~m~p~ai~g~n~~L~ib~r~a~ry~.========~~~~~~~~~~~~~ studying census figures. opi· nion polls and election returns ·--------------·~·~·•:.;•~"•'"~";:'.;'~';:"'~"•":•m;;':"o:"-------------... from the four states that 11 Change of Command allowed those under 21 to vote in 1968. He ventures these con- clusions : -Youth will not vote as a EL TORO -Formations of jets, propeller planes and heli copters will swoop over the field here this Friday as part of Third Marine Air Wing change-of-command ceremonies. A traditional parade and Mother Set Free By Judge SANTA ANA -An Anaheim woman ruled to be insane by an Orange County Superior C o u r t jury which heard evidence that she fed her retired son what could have been a fatal dose of barb iturates has now r ecovered her sanity, the trial judge has ruled. passage of troop units in review will saluti outgoing commander Maj. Gen. L. E. Brown who is departing for the Far East. The 4 p.m. ceremony also "'elcomes Brig. Gen. Frank C. Lang , Gen . Brown's replacement. Gen. Brown has played a ke)\ role in ~1arine Corps avia· lion during a 32-year career and was the first ~1arine to ny a jet combat mission in the Korean War. He will take over the First Marine Aircraft Wing in Japan from Gen. Robert G. Owens, whom he replaced last year at El Toro. Class Set On Indians bloc. -The ne\v[y eligible voters in 1972 consider themselves predominantly Independent (42 percent), Democratic (38 percent} to a slightly lesser degree. with few identifying themselves as Republican (18 percentl. -Of the 25 million voters enfranchised to vote since 1968, about 65 percent are ex- pected to register for the 1972 He suggested that the lack elections, but only about 42 percent are likely to turn out at the pols. Stressing that there is no reliable method to predict how youth will vote this year, Dr. Bernstein said: ''On balance, the youth vote probably will be larger than expected, and more in- dependent in Character than the rest or the electorate." (lf a track record for the newly enfranchised voters makes prognostication r 0 r the presidential election this year more uncertain than usual. ORANGE -American In-"But perhans it makes it dian dance lessons Bre being even more interesting than offered to Orange County usual ," he added. grade and high school youths * every Friday from 7-9 p.m. at A RALLY is planned tonight the Hart Memorial Park in by Mexican-American backer~ custody after examining post-Orange. The lessons are open of Wallace R. "Wally" Davis. trial reports compiled by to the public without charge. who is seeking Orange Coun· psychiatrists. The introductory lessons will ty's First Supervisorial seat include old and contemporary currently held by Robert Bat- Judge Samuel Dreizman placed Mrs. Ruby ~1ae Jef- ferson, 39, on three years' pro- bation and freed her from ~lrs. Jefferson \vas charged dance styles. Other activities tin. The rally is scheduled for with attempted murder l~~t will include field trips to Jn-7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Santa June 4 shortly afte r she dian historical s ites, ex-Ana's El Salvador Park. ED HIRTH SEEKS TO SAFEGUARD YOUR FAMILY BY ELIMINATING HARMFUL TRAFFIC CONDITIONS. It takes responsible study and ' action to work with the Council to obtain realistic, acceFJtable solutio~s to our Traffic F>rob- lems. Hirth initiated a commit- tee of citizens and outside FJrO .. fessionals to protect your rights for a safe and congestion-free traffic system. He has led the negotiating teem to nullify the freeway agreement in accord- ance with the FJeoples wishes. ~ NEWPORT BEACH NEEDS THIS MAN! VOTE APR'. 11-RE-ELECT MAYOR HIRTH! Andy's Fun allegedly added a he avy dose cursions to Indian dance fairs, Among the organizers are of barbiturates to her 12-year· camping ventures and home, Ray Villa. Jess Perez, Gil TO CITY 'COUNCIL, FIFTH DISTRICT, NEWPORT BEACH AM•u11Gl!Y Ask any kfd. "Ask Andy" Is Id • "·dt' 'lk Th L.-Arviso. Fred Garcia and aosff1• Amburg.v. 1'91 N•wPOrl l tvd . r s 'l s t d . th 0 son s UC 1me m1 • e SuuWS. R I h E h co"• M•••· 0,11 0, a~.i11. M•rc11 2s, un. ee 1 a ur ays ·LD e t II t d d h'ld • 1.1 F f th · f 1· llll . ...'..~'~P!"'...'.".'.'~a~ve":·:_ ____ _.:~!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'~ BILL RING, CAMPAIGN MGR. 215 RIVERSIDE DR., N.B. 645-6363 it1J. su•v1ve<:1 bv 11u1~~nd, c111r1n; •eve!\ DAILY PILOT. men a y re ar e c J s J e or ur er m orma ion, ca 90!\s, Henry, f ro.ti , Na.h, OK1r, l~============-_::.:::_::::.:~~b::._:~:~::.::.._ ____ 6:"::_:54~99::.:. ________ 1 Albert, 5,,., •nd OrYIUt Ambur111v, 111 of WIS Save Y 0C Ors. .xi" l'.r"~ M~••· !l!rte dau•Mtr~. M•~. La11 M11!1r, 1C:eniucky1 Mrt. Minni• lltlmontr, '""'01 Mrs. Loreln~ C•o\whlte, New fl<e~· lco; 4f ,rrodel'+Udren: 11 'r • 1 I · l •an'lcl! ld•tn: on~ 9real-trt1!·11r1ndcfllld rrv1Ct5. 1 '""· loll~Y. />lond~v. Melro11 Abbey Cllepel, w!!h Rtv. Geor11• Mann ol· tlclelin1. lnterlf'e!\t, Mefrine Abbey. ll~ll1·8tre1ron Funer.i Homt. Co1t1 Mes•. 01rKto;.:i NDlPSON 'Thomfs W!ll•rd Handeri.a!\, A•e U. of 1429 Ooll>hl!\ T1rr1c1. Corona dfl M•r. Oer1 ol dtllh, M1rcl'+ 15, Hn. su;vlvtd bv w!lt Eltln1. ol Coron• d1I MA•. J°"r'' 'Thom•s' w. Jr .• Co.It Mew ; Dt!ln!s . Hender to!\ Tt••s: trw:I lour 1r1ndch\!d•t!l. Privere 11rvlcl1 wtre lttld loo:ttY .Y,cndev, B1ll1·B•r•1 ron F1,11>1r11 Home, Coron• dt~~N'l's f dne s. JOflts. lltsldtrol or SU!\,.I lltecl'+. WHe !' Cfl•rl•~ WJsl Jcnt1' mo!l'tl' ol P11tlc 1 M•n.,1n,, c111rl1s W. JoMs Jr1• P11r1c1~ Brvdotl 1/'ld Cl!rlsHM Se1v••• . Grav11ldt 11rvlc1s. tUH111v, 2 PM. Ptclllc VlllW M~moritl P1•~. P1cltlc Vltw Mo•tu1rY. Y~tf~°i.t'· Cad Ltt Llllltll'+. 11 L11un• Rov1I. l.1111m1 era cl'+. 0111 ol de1111, M1rch 16, 1tn. Survived by wilt, Allee. Strvlcts oel'llllnv er Sheller l.t•un•11BEelb~ Mortuerv. Evolvn Br1n~'"'" Reed. '12 Or•n•I SI .. Nffi'jrl B11ch. 0111 ol d1a!h._ M1rch 24! 1101 orv tv111 bw ion. Otr,.,1r ~. RHll, o NeW11orl Btechi d1u1hter. Ele1nor A. Reed. Nrw11ort e1ch ; ,1tter1. Mrl. An11e W1dd1ll, SllOkt!\lj W•ll'+lntlo!\; Mr1. Rost #cC ullou1111. p • r 0 I j • ' Pt ... nsvlVl!\I&. Prlv11t er1vt1l61 ••rvlcts, T11tsd1y, "'.! PM Evrrtrtt!\ CemeTerv1 Rlvenldf. 1<1rT.11, su11e1t1 those wl11'+ "' lo m11<.1 rnrmorl~I conrrlbu!/Qnt. 1111111 con,t•!bu,,•,• to the Am1rrc1n Cenctr Soelth. •c c Vltw Mortuery, O!re,10". StRAMIER .Aline W, S!rtrMr. 2141·'-' Vie Putrl1 . l•tllllt Hiii• Dale 01 dr11h, Merell 25, 197' Surv!vfd bv husb~nd. A!\tonl11; dau9111tr, MrJ. Vt•• Bronlt, o! W•rr•n, Mlchllll!\< t-ro".l!htr. V~lv Adtm, "' lngtewood. S1rvlcr1, Tuesd•V· I ,.M. P~cllk Vitw Cl'+lotl. tnu•nmtnt. P•clllc \litrw Mt""O•!el Per~. Peclllc VfllW MorlutrY. Ol•wc;.~~iNGTtlN -Btr!\lcl l lenclMlll W111tlngton. Rtsldtnl ot l.a,un• Hlll1. Oare of (!~1111. M3rrn 21. 1tn. Survlvtd b't' 11rath1r1, Frtdrrlc J. ~ltncl\tlt. SttlUt; H1rold IE. Bl1nchtt, OfO!\I dtl M~r; l.t!> M. B11ncl!ttll ortltn!I. Or11cn. Memorl11 1trv c.11 wll be h•ld WIO"'"'lav. M~•cl! 1'1, II AM. Pec lllc vi.... Cl'+•Pll. Femuv 1UV911l1 11\011 wl1Mn• to rn1•1 memorl•I cpn· rlbut!Ol'l•· 1111111 COl'llrlblllt to tilt Amtrlc•n C1nc1• Soclttv, P1clfk VlllW Mortutrv, O!rrctors. · ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY m E. 11th Sl, c.stc M•11 -• BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 673-MSO Co1ta Mesa 646-2414 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Me1a [J g.3131 • McCOR!lfiCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1'115 Llpaa Canyon Rd. lff.tlli • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK C<intlt1'1 Mortuary Chopel S$OG P1clflc View Drive Newport Beach. Ct.llforufa Mf.2lllt • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME '7801 Bolsa Ave. Westmlnstr.r IH-35ZS • SMITHS' MORTUARY Ill Mlle St. Bantlnit<>n Bt1c) Pltllt • Dlaplaya: and pol Ice narcotics experfl .. from the Costa Maso Police Department Wiii be ot our ca.to Meia office from Mofc'127th to March 31A durtng the fOJJowlng hOi.111; CO$TAMESA 3310 8r1stol Street 'lei: f714) 640.769t Monday thl\I Thursday 9 o.m. Ultll 1 p.m. 11'00d F•doy) 9 o.m. unttt noon Avco Savings wfshes to exprau tts oppreclotfon to the cooa Mesa Polle• Ceportment lo< Its ouls!ondlng oooperatton In fhli womiy program. ' To: Avco Savings and loon Association Coupon entitles bearer to FREE Informa- tive Avco booklet$ on drug abuse. Nome'~------'----~ Addre•SL--------- I I I I I City Jp, ___ _ OCO .. ---------- I ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT GLASS-BELT TIRE JUMB0780 • Glasa-Belled For Long Miieage • Polyester Cord Body For Strength • Original Equip- ment on '72 Cara • Ouragen• Tre1d Rubber For Tracti on Flt .. MUSTANG, COUGAR CAMARO, FIREBIRD, CHEVY II.,, 1nd MORE! 2tors47 95 Sim £78-14 tubelns bl1ekwan, • Callbrat~d• - for plu1 52.34 F1d, Ex. Tu: per tire. • lmooth ride :=======~=============:::: Fits BUICK SPECIAL. CHARGER, TEMPEST, F..-5, TORINO, IMl'ALA, IEL·AIA ••. and MOREi SJZ9 FTB-14 tut.I ... bl1e1CWan, plua '2.52 Fed. Ex. Tax per tlr1. Fiia VEGA, PINTO, GREMLIN, CORVAIR , VALIANT, DART, FALCON, •• ind MORE i $ 95 A71-l3 tub•le11 lllttll; for plus 13.61 f ,E..T. HIGH YISlllLITY~Y~l~LLUO~W;;----;:=====~=====::;"'l TENNIS BALLS Fl• MONT! CARLO, BISCAYNE. ;;:;s~ CAl'RICf, CATALINA, FURY, MONTEREY ... ""' llO!IEt •ATC SUPER-100 GOLF BALLS • Cura1on cover for long, eut·frn Irle • Enarglttd "PB" ctnltr gives gr111 dlttanee • UltlHlgiWfnolon Wfndlt'lg l.owotl Pib lftr Umlt 1 Doz. ....... ..,,,. 3ror'J33 1 doz. for S5.2tl 81%9 G78-15 tubeln1 bl1ekw1J1, plus S2.78 Fad. E.ic. Tu: per tlr1. Whllewall1 Of'lly $3 more per Ure. "AIN CHl'CI<! Sholild out l1117Ply of..,,... •lrM ~ ... -------------.. 111111 """ lflort dlrrin111111 '"'"t, '"'will MIMr '"" Fltt LE .SABRE, WILDCAT, ore'••• pl1ttc1 "°"'tor tullt•t HllVll')' at Iha 1ctwrtl11d NEWPORT, POUAA, MONACO, pr1c1. IAOUGHAM T·llRD, OLDS, IONNEVILU ••• nd MOREi :;-_.. r " -~ -.,. -/ ,---, >'· ~\ ' ., .. ,;·,, ~ Sire H7S.15 "1beleaa bl'ackwalf, P4ua '3.01 Fed. Ex. Tax par ti,.. DON SWEDLUND AVERY GENERAL TIRE SERVICE COAST GENERAL TIRE 585 Wost 19th, Costa Mo11 Phone 540.5710 or. 646-5033 16941 BHch Blvd., Huntington Beach Phone 847-5850 The safe~driver tire company. Priced U ahowfl At Gtneral Tl,. Slotaa. Compatlt!v11v priced at ll1d11>1ndlnl d111. att ditplay\ng lhl 01n1r1I ··~ I j 10 OAILY PILOT '' Space· Shuttl~ a Big Plum COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST 1•1-Mtl Nl:W YO")( !Ul'll-·killw!llt ltO 11.; Nil Sollot Ntf '111U·I Hltll LtW (ltM Cll .. orl<M Oii 'flt HIW Yori! SIO<k f.lr.1111191; tWa.l Hlt'll Lew clfu Cltf. IMIJ.J Mlell low CltM CJlf. '•lfflhd•l Hltll Low L•1t C/11, ~l'lt• c, '·'° ' :u ll"' S>'tt la ,,1N1$t ·Uj 1 >•,1 ll~ uu 11-=1~ J ~[~1 J·'J :1,18, ',ii ;~/! 11\Y!'.:1~ l.d P N B 1 ~ht:ia 1U ll M'" U\t .,.I'!.., t. F,iN~inl ll, t~ 11\lo <U'ho-'• i=,~ I tt lJt 'Lit 111 ~ 1• Companies Like Go rospectors at ew onanza ~t ·rn 1\ 1;'" ,4"=~ ~~1~·1 ~ 1i rra !it:. ~f t:{a::it ,:r ~ i!n 2=11~ ',1m:. ~.·.1~.;i~ .}ff ,u u~ .n~ .a~~ l~. A~'I .:& n in': ''n . ' (p p~ I tt'• •1" ;i., . ..t•W••( = '1 H r j"'n Jn 2 ff I~ ~ ... a~ ~ tNSEV decision on the shape of the In 1n Industry stagger@d by.tfati;k·~" ,,~ll''"Jrn". t_:: hl RIT.mu~ "u41'J J l'U . :1:~~.0:S. ' U"'~ h Sl~ .. ,~ o11n!-vc' 'f ~.::.· ntt~ ,~tt, By PHlLJP w. l\1cK gram. J Th d f d di Ad MUii• ' II \ft 1 \'I hc;r,:tc NW n 11 ~ 111\ JI\-'• F!t~trk .ll tt Ut. n~, n\.: VI Jol!Wfv.,. -20 ... ~\~ c11rh•1t• ~.......ii.. s11"Vlc• Al stake for each after a 1pace-shutlle pro ect. e e ense-an space-spen ng Addi••• u 'ft ,_""Ch( ,.. .70'3 1 •t• '" ~-'• FJee1r:nt .12 ., .1411, ,,1~ lll\:.-\/> JOfl 1 1 1 u -1" · -• long dry spell will be enough apace agen .. y ec1 '""' e cu c~, . _ • a 111r. wn ::::::ti,:, ~ 't l~ ..= ~ ~::rr:::t -·'i ~:1 r, r,h il'"= :: ~~n1~-"~,\ 1of Jr-1111 ll1' ll1~ ~ j'Ef,'::, '"11 f P.;~ N(t ff~-1' WAS'l'NGTON !Ak. Pros • d 'd·• that th lba "-NASA Ls t y'-• do "°"'1'" •J! » ~·· 1 ~-t• ,..., • tr•11 '"" '\~ •1•-1• F11,,.111<1 ..)0 "' 1.v. 1:ru. t~1-,, J,~Lo1A s 11• '' JI Jl peclarl rushing after reports shuttle will be boosted into some conditions. no company A1111n1 co i"' ~ l::= ~ c~rv111f ·'° 110 ,, .. 311~ J211 •• , Fl• •• .11 11 23~ "'•• 11 ffMtt 1 .., 3 i.. Uv• ._,..._ 1-'1 Of a gold 1trlke, the nation's busU'Jess lG assure prosperity orbit by twlo solid-fuel rockets -or team of companies -"',·,·•~, 'li;j ' ' j ~ ~ c11rv11.,-wt JI 1~ 1s1• 1)'t+ "'Fl• w ,, ' ,, u u \to-~1 · K ieroapjce manuiacturtrs are ·-barring cost overruns -n· rather than by the liquid-fueled wUI be able to bid on both the !'j(O'"°~"'' fi ~"t .U f;, ~ 9n a.1~ 1.JO ' ,,,., 1111 21'1-"'F1or1a. s11 1 u Mi 1' "' + \~ rr.itr p 611 '~ u s.u 1 I r ,.,. . l!. I -!l' 2~+ I.\ Cl""" .5111 J1 1~ 1\ 2~ Fl•Pwl t.to ,.. .S\<i '4 ....... \'. 1(~··1 " -i u·· µ, 24 -14 about to plunge into the com· lo the 1980's. boosters rhat have been used orbiter and th~ boosteri _prime ~~!oa:~n1.ll ~ r.t" "11" r.,~. ~~ >1~8~ i:t 11~ 1lfJ .1;~ 1ti:t: ~ ~!~c~f ',•,1 2~: u~ 1Z I& :t,·~ ~~~ 1i°1 4r:" 'l fl~-]~~ ll~i~• ~ l on a prev ous mann~-space AlbOflOC ·ll lt \lo 114 ,.,., t\ ..... ''; JO ~ ... ~. . ~~ c~ ':ll lot ,,..,, ~v. tl\ ... \':I k,J1J.' .oi'd 'I it-14 l''-~ rwotltlon for the biggest space The 'National Aeronautic& u I -• contractors will be required to A14sk4 1n1~1 131 j c '' I ~!t ~ ,~l~.l',•,,•,.4 1.xi "' '° .o Fl• '1°'' ~ )i,, 31 ~, ll~ '4 •1" 1"' • ~~ 1 31 ""' 1 u1. ~ ~. conlract JikeJy lO come thtir and Sp I Ci e AdminiSIJ'll On projects. £tonomics forced &Ubcontracl 8S much Of the :~11~1 'IO 15' '"'-!" f"'-tlli ~\'¥"\l-~..c11 '' n !;~ 41\t ,.~+ \\FMC ol 2l.. 1t 391,~ 4:'2 n~ ~ i'!i't'~' 2,1.12 r:ig' 'il,'1 f~'lfl .~.~'+ "• wal .for the next decade -lhe (NASA ) set Uie ztage recently that deCislon. , work as they can as quickly as Atto src1 JI 'I ,!~ i ~ I~+ 141 c1111ssv 1.10 11i o10'4 390,,. 3911-"" ,'~•'c' ·.'!" 1 1•• ,. ,» ti • 'Jod d th fJ-·1 Akon Lb . 6 lt 7'olo S i:; l ~~Cly tnv .S2 •141 '»''i *"-n""-\• F=:r, Ml.;I lt n~ ll~' ll~ C , ' "'I' 1 j ,, 41'1 41l•-\' JS. bll,Uon spaee-shuttle pro-when It n11 .own e uc1.1 Develop'ment eosts for a they can. A10••11 . '4 '"" 11 1"-~citv1nv wt• 10 11> th , .... '• •"•"•· "' -·~ l''• Jj" j•t1+ '• . . A11Afl'L .24d '° ~ '"" ll -\ (ltr 111~ Pl t 1(91 JJ\~ )ol"I, 3'h + !,,, FOfd M "1.60 u: Jl11i 1~t: 1!14 -~ 1"N. 1 n 1 61• ' "-6'h .. solid·fueJ b 0 0 st tr are In add1Uon. NASA ls tk· A I"'• .7Pt> J I '~· 13 ]~ ~ City S1cr1J l J ·~ •'· ···-'•For Mck ,1(1 " 21Vi ""' '' ~\Ii :~PLI .. ,l )) ,,~. li'' 11111+ ·~ .... •' est1·ma1·-• at 1300 million to -ted to look with favor on!l1~h.':_lldlJ' l"o ~ 21~ l! 1 ,",•,,·•,0•,,1.,'=' ':IO slh 52'~ 11-..-1u.FrMnt I.to '41~• u"' 4"'1-"!'lv 1nc1u1 '' '''~ '1 > -~ eu ,..,..,. U~ ~I •• 31,.. fl U 11 11~ I~ +.\o FOt!ltW .IO " n •t J!'-, n~ -1'1 1 Vol 1.'• l 1l1'• YI ~Vr-'• .' one> " 11's Worth $400 million, is against that Sl team~ contracting. Arid 'or-!118r; El ·,It m j!l: J~~ 1~+1~ ,'~.:'.,"', ,",, ' '4~1 ~·1 '411\+ 141 Fot!t,Wllf I 6 11'-'t 11·~ 11•;, . . 1uf&8r .10 r~ i1~ f"' :~:; i! · • f I h. f. I II h k Ill be''' <• 1 -,, 1 -·· 24,,. 1 · 1cs ~ J.S\~ :i.sl't + ~ .. Fo..boro .«1 210 31 1•u M\,-i.. l<•w«k ,,.. ,,., ... , .. ,_.,. •• '.JJ.uye r s: Beware • ' ·Of 'Hot St0cl\.s' .. ' . By SYLVIA PORTER The "hot" new Is• u es market In stocks is beginning to get too hot -as forecast and reared ,.i,n Wall Street - and ~the danger of another blow~ff hurting11s all ii again buildi ng up. During a recent fi\!e.<fay period, 25 separate new of· feriDgs of. stocks came to market, of which 19 im- mediately rose in price and only tWo declined. On a single recent day, 10 new stock issues came out and. says a Wall Streeter wor· riedly study- ins the situa- tion, "They almost see m to be dump- · ing thei r stocks on the public." A recent issue of a mobile home manufactur· er ·-among J972's "darling" industries -opered' al $15, then spurted to $32.75. Another recen t Issue of a leaser of medical equipment jumpe<t 50 percent from the opening qu ote. Still another issue of a New York motion 'Picture, TV · and stage producer opened at S5, then more than doubled. All this in a matter of hours, mlod you. T~e volume of new stock offerinps is the b,eaviest since 1968. just before the stock marlfet Wen! into a disastrous tailspin. In far too man:v whvs , loday's new issuei; rroark'!l ha!I characteMstlc:i. of the bOom- busl cycles: or 1.963-69, and of 1961~. Also. this time the insti· tutions are-much ")ore im· portant in the Search for hnt new stocks -and i~ · th,ey Ji. auldate as aggre!ls1vely as they bid, they'll just intensify and accelerate the boom-bust. trifonned speculation in hot new stocks can be exceediflgly w o 'f thwhile. Get-rich-q1•lc.k Jt:amblirig can be cataStrophic. The · threat I co nf ess REAL ESTATE INVESTORS GUIDELINES Mo"ltily PVblit~llo" with TAX IAV· ING iclffl. 1"1VE5TME'NT icl•~I, l"to 0" RMllY Tqrll1. TAX $"4ELTE". Hem~ evtrvone l"!ern1ed '" llP.E. 1hculd know. 1nc11,ldtno tffet! R.E. ht, °" STOCIC M1r~!I. FREE t011· 1ulllfl9·fl!1rr11 11r~1c• w/1ubscrlp. Uon. 'l"or THllEI: ''"''I• luun f..-1 Ill• Ifill, 11nd 11.to '91 Realty Enterprises U11lor1·76 lldt. l''Z H11bbord Madbo11, Ohio -44057 • frightens me -for I bitterly • re;enl u;:,~~billty ,thjllJ!lY list of 'cartTully s e 1 e c t e d season~ stocks will be taken !Or ,anolher "round I.rip'' by . the jrrespansjble ma.neuvers of the gamb:ers. • To protect yourself from blind gambling. and by so doing to protect the entire market. heed these basic "don'1s:" -DON'T buy any new of- ferinfl: of stocks unless you are fully Informed about what the company does and what it pro- spects are and until you have carefully 1 t u d i e d the statements and figures In its prospectus. -OON'T buy an y new issue on the basis of information not contained in !he prospectus - for if the information is true and if it's valuable, you may be suri: it will be in Ott pro- soectus covering the stock s8Je. ' , -DON'T fail to chP.ck Into the reputation of the un- derwrl(&r -one of !he best safeguards you could have. A firm with a long-established and excellent reputation and with a'n enormous stake in protecting that reputation is not e:oing to risk it by handling one su~oect deal. -DON'T ' buy a stock because it f~presents a . com· pany in one of this year's gl4mor iridusfriCs or a current favorite industry of I he , •speculators.' There are hun· dreds M b<irikriipt cOmpani"es with all uring natnes eodin~ in "!ionics" or including lhe wotl~ ''Qiic1ear:" ' _._DON'T ·b4y a new lsstle after it has been placed on the market. on rumors that ii is .slated for a great price rise. Why shou ld you. be privileged to havt this valuable in- fortnation? -DON'T tr:v to add to your original small allolmetit of a hot issue (assuming :you get some share$) by· buying more st~k at much higher Prkes in the ~o--called after-muket. -DON'T agr:ee with the broker allotting t"OU s(ock lo a deal to hold Your allotment for a snecified time -say, 30, 60 or 90 days. The broker mav be trying to limit the amount of stock on the market in ol'der lo push up the issue's price while insiders unload -and you are sharing in the decep- tion at your own risk. Admit it to yourself: these are no more than the rUles or common sense and integrity. They are designed to dG no more than nrevent your greed from wiping out your own neste~~ and undermining the investments or nther people. too . Play by the rules -or don't play at all . ORDER-~ , 1000 'eautif11I Stic;k-on •' ' " r ' ' . ' . ( '/":_ VoOlS ~·, 'TODAY! v v ~. LABELS .('ONLY~ $125 ~X INC~ Personalized • Stylish • Effic:ient Order Pot' YourH lf or 1 Friend Mty J,,~ ustd on 1~y~\op11 a_s return address ltbtli. Also ver y handy ~ identific ation ; ltbel, for m1rkin9 personal it1ras such •1 b'ooks, r•cords1 photos, •tc. labels stick on 9l1ss end mey be used for m1rkin9 ~ome canned foc,:d iftms. All lebtls ere printed with stylish Vogut type on fine qua lity wh ite gummed p•ptr. . . bilhoh for' a· 1rqu1d-ue ed ve I• 1c a y or not. t e wor \V Aud M':-.t :1'£ 1 «.i• ::;.-; t r:+::\ ?.iti~E• ",1.•o 1100 10• 11U 104 F,.,, • .:1,1 .•o u 111-i 11~ u~,,_ ·~ 1(•¥14'" ·"" ,; 15'.l, 35 .. " .. _VI cle that .would have · dropped distributed geograpically as Alld~1111 ·!! 11 1'" 1~ 19"--"c1ue111 · ~ ~l 1r~ ~ i,,•.., _.., :~:r 1:~ 1ff ~"': !r~ !;~-t :i ~:1'1~r°in -.~ n 2114 21~ :n~i-" •t111.-roo ... 1 m't n 2Jl.li-It ''"''' ~ 1 1 ' ,, c 1 1'9 2t 2111o 111. ba ck in· •-·the ocean after subcontracts are let A1u.cis1 1 'o " M11 15\' 3 ' 14 "' 1 n H'• 16'•-'' Fuau• in • uo 14'• ''~' ''to '-' 00o 0 io ~'l~ 32 1211.-'' w ' • A 1l~e1S1 pl ' 4 J!O J1~ 5711, ST•~-(NA Fin ,!O 106 14 13111 11~.-\~ -o 0-Ktl1y-H I.JO I ,~ 51~ Jt' + "' launch .nd been rcco"ered for Even so the prime contract Alld SuPmk1 " 1 6t~ ,(·,~ 1, 'c"f,', 1.,10 u 1111 11 11 -'"G11111 1no:111 16 r.y, ,. iv•i+ 11 1C•no:1•11 ·'° 4o 9 · ,, •• ,.~;+1v. rE;use, v ' , , , . •1111 Ch .lOd $1 u11 1]>.4; ,, •. _:_ \; 061 • 141 SJ'~ S?, Si'•-1\li GA.,C Coto llj •11 llU 1'\ -1,. l(onmo11 .10 11 2t.'J " l' a lure. Vymg for It wtll be All,,1,uro .60 ' 29.\o 21i1 ,.~ C1ISGPI 1.1' s SJ JJ JS _, GAF Cp ·"° ,, 21•• 2oM• 2,t,-., l(fnllfl:Otl 1 l:IJ 11ti 27"' 21·1o-,.., . AICOfl 111(1 119 Jl 49.l.li 49r° '1 Coc1Col t.~ 41 T1' 12''6 111 -1 gAF ol 1.20 10 31~1 r--. lO!-11 Ky Ulll I.•~ 2$ , .... 1&~ '''1-.... Until the· booster decision was made, NASA could not issue requests for proposals for the shuttl&-devetopment ; . . . pro1eet. Now, however, the space agency is moving quickly, with hopes ol being able tq pick its prirbe iebntractdr· ana' aw8rtt the contract for developing the orbiter -the delta-winged vehicle that will orbit and return to earth -by early August. To spread th~ work arou~ virtually all the mdustryAmoisu 1,60 1 21" 21\i 1,~.!Coc1ao11 .u 52 51•1 S! 51~-v. •mSk I.XI 110 """• J9 «1"'tt1•KorrMc ·'° '°" s1 49'-~1'\-l ''i h l Amii.c ,511 70 1J•, IS'~ ~ "Co!Clwl Bllilr 10 M 3l•i 34 +-'.lo •mblot 1:i.; 1 41 "° o +llJJ KtrrMof 411 1, 1:~c. lji1,. '1~\,.::1 \1 giants, sue compan es as Ame,1c 1.10 1 21r1 21:14 21h+ ·~ co11coln .u u 11,~ 51.,., 511.,_ ,_ G1msof '·'° l Jt l'I l9 -'• Kty'lt COf\'1 ·• , •+ " B I G l El ct . ... e. Pl 2.40 ' ,, ,, 41 .. Col9ot1 l " 47 •J"".I "'"' 61\,~ P' G•"ntrl ... 11 ,9 ""' il\1-1~ .. l(ICldt 2'~k 10 3lll l11\ 1 oe ng, enera e n.C,AmM1s .P1d i1t .uv. •d '• .U''il ···co11~Alk .1"6 •l 21,,, 11111 21.,.,_i:G•roon t .lO :u .12\1 .s2•. 11,,+._Klddeol l .70 11! t:~ r.,,,,~;:~~-'General Dynamics Marlin :~i''F~,' ·3~ 11l<n'h101 102'11 :· co111n R1dlo 39 """ 1J•' 1s:i~ Gorlock .ao 16 21•~ 21"1 21 \'J-\~ KlmbCI i .10 ,, iii t 11"' \l\lo _, .. , , ' , r I ·•v 3 14'1 14lolo 111oti-'-C010ftlt1St I 90 351;. lS .'l$ -1 ·G11Svc l.12 )4 1611 16-\o 16 ... ,, KlnG>OS .tt ) .. ,. •> ll -'\ Mariett.a ~1cDonnell Douglas A AlrFIU wr 1 l1Yi 37\, Jl'f>.--. counru 1.60 11 19,1 2t~ 1"11-,1, G11tw1Y In 1 11 121, 11 • KlrKh c .•t -?Ii • 'Am Alr11!'!e'I 1t0 44\.11 •N 4W. ColoSou DI • i lD SO !Cl SO +t GCA Coro l' l'Nll 11', 12 -11 KL M Alrl 20 31110 31 :JI -• Rockwell. ABe~tr .10d m lj'~ 12"11 10 + 'v. c011 11111 40 93 21.,.1 20" 11 Gem!"I cao . 1 U\lio 1• 16 , , , K"ahlN ,nd xJ tli.t 1l-. 1~1\ A 8rr.d 2.29 !57 4 '''• u"'° Coltl I ~'4 1 12 52 J? +·\~ GnAln J.s..:t ~7 23\11 2J~I 7l'"i ,, Koellro .10!! '5 21'oii 21 21'-' • • The booster contract will not Am a1c10 .15 > 49>.lt. """ "'""-·;Ac 8 $ P 1 .oo 11 "" mo ,1"" ~ G" Ao1 .6Pc( M .O'M> d ..,,._"' K-• 1,60 1 .,,,. "° ,1..., -11• be ded t.1 t · Am''" 2.211 111 ll\4 J?l< l2'._ \1 c B s i 1 , ,.,.,., ~"~ ~.,~ -. o0~T,•, 1~'4,, SI •v. •1U 41\'r+ '' 1Cot11>1r 01 4 1\no 5t'h 5~\!o a war un I nex year. A.. C1n 01 l\li 10 21 1.u,,. :!~ 'M C-of 6!!'1 ... ""'" ..... , .... • ... ' ,,.., ''") '11'1+ v. KOot"•coro 1.. 20 10 t1' '"'-«. ' •. . k Am C'1n' ~k JIJ I'"' t +'Ai(,."~ ·1• 2~t l:J'h 32'• 33V.-.'.'IG1n8111C 10 15 1•'1> 1•'4 1,14 ... Krillco 1.11 112 ''"' 4lh .u .-.1.1i , NASA JS trying to eep the A c111111 1·'° 1 26~ 16\i 2 ,, co:~ ~~c1 1 t " 1J" 1J1.', ll'"i-1~ G•n ear1irv jl 11~ 2u1i "" -~1 K•nQt s .Jo 2.0 1091~ lN" 109 + ~. ' Year.to-year cos'· of the shut•~~.",', ,-.~ ,,',,' ll'li> U~~ l1'.r.-_1lli C~b e t.io 3" 11'• 27'~ 21li • GnC•lllo llO 71 it \ololli o 11~ '-' lt:•01hltr .10 11 U'~ •J ~ 11 • ~ ,. ·• ,, ••-.. 1t SI t7''N 1'4 •71Jo -\ii Gn (Qr l'.'JO 1'0 71"'11 21-':ll ... K!'0'11r 1.)1) " ~Ii 2t'i JI"°-'• tie program down as well as to!-. 0•r,',,,,"•, "•' ~,," ~u"• ~n"• 1,. ~~~..\'! 1·.~ ' '° 'O 60 -""Gn o.~e ,._ • 21v. ,,.,,, 21 .. Ky1or 1n ·'° ss 10v. 1•'-' 1t~'i-~. ··• .,. 6t 1N j'\t 2.1-\<i + ~I Gen O~n1m l? 16\'i lS"-2. -"1 -L.L-rein in the total cost and the AOtstT ~ .1od '' Jt , .,,_"' ComSIPI .91> s llvt • 11.,.,+. 'Jo Gn EIK 1.40 S6I 64~ 61'1 64V.T "'LoclHlf l .'5 ' 111, "~ l'~ ' ' A ~II .lld 17 914 tV. ti..+ '·~ CmwEd 1.20 71 l~lo 3ol'Mi :16""+ 'i Gtn Flr111rt I '"' 11~ I~ . tim,Of\Srt I 6 lffi 1,'ill 6'1o . pacesetter in the fihuttle proJ· :Z"'E~ ·114.,•1 11: 1 >... ,'L, U.. ,.: ~E,,•,~1.,• , 1•, '!'!" 11>1. ',,o.i,_ ''1 GnFood 1.40 1011 r 29~• "~-*' L1n0Br .•s1 ,, l-1'-" 3'V1 Jit-"' , E I H.-. " ••-"l':W~ • 21'\ ~ Gn Host Ca 31 1'1~ 11~1i 19 -I\ Lirw:n dl6 21 3111, 30.W -~~ •eel nOW is ~eveJopmen~. Of, the A~ E1:.DO~f zlfo 2}~ 2!1Jo 11\'J++~ c:Egl'f71!y,~ ~l lri: ~~y~ 1'~~+ ~i Gt" lnslr 7" U 26"1 21'1 1t.l.li+ ... Ltlro,,_ 'su t 110 ,·.~ ,!.. ",, Pa's.nger •a-ying or"1Jer, A Fin y l,il 11 ll'h \1\' 11~-'-\. fomE11 9";1 l"t ,,,.. 1 -11!o G1nlns1 Pf l I n"i )9\1 lfl't-\o LeirSleg 10 JS lll'io ., ,,....... ,,.. °" •• I.I Ag8d <1 n >• •~ ) 011 ;; '"ii 1~')GtnMCI .Hid l J 41 1~ 411~ 4I Vo+.ltleflCO,cirr> lll 2H• 21~\ 11'1,+1• . II ~ 2 11\f, !,......._Vo am.... ' 109 u~. i.·~ 1(~ '.lo G1r.Mll!1 96 211 ~ •P • •1'\-\1 ,,,,,, ,,, " ,, •~' -+ la, A "1n1 .J 10• 2l "" >-• ,., wOllPi 1.n *' -•; ... , ... ,, • · 1 · ' " AG"ol1 , 12 "~• ll.,._ ll~hCom111 so 113 .Ii ,J,; 62":+i!Gt11Mor -·!~ 40I J 12~• tff,1 t'L1•1w1 .36 24 41'11 41:U. .M4'o-'I• ... m Hol1 ,40 10 JJ\o U~ 12\t-Ill Ccmov1r .$i-1 m IQ•' ~·· 10 1 GnMctol ll,:, 1121 19"• !t !t.._J I Lff!h~N JO )11( 1l Jl'IO 33 -1• • 1n· High Gear A Homt 1,,, lOS t•l• •:n• tJ4-l'I COtnPUI S.Ott n 141'. 21\i ,,,,.-~ G1nMot of ' •U m i 1tl!o l't\li LHIOlll '40 fllJ , ... 161/o , ... .,. \~ AmHoto .2 11 .. ;, 11•~ 44'.lo --ti. Cone Mlll1 \ o .~11 2S 2µ,,.i. ;~ GtnPCm .ID 2'I 2'1• 'l'9~ ,,..,__ lo L•h Pl C '"° II 1 11~ U 'li It\' Amlflll .120 ll 11111 11 \!o 11~ ~n"Mlt .Md -46 !i'4 1/(t 29\lo-Vf GPubU 1,60 I'll 21 21\lo :UV.+lo3LehVt!. Ind 11 '"' ~ 3\11--'lo A Medic\ ,1) so •V... 4l~~ •l~•-1\ O!!''tC ·'° 7 " j '• lH\-·~ Gtn Relrtct l~T Jtt ,f:': J~?-'-" Lth v DI ''·• l ll 31 31 -1 A Me<Jcoro 282 ?jl!o 2114 2J _,,., 01f"r'd 1.10 222 .J:Y. J\1 2.JIJ:i Genilol .61 •ll •f''•l'•'~1 .. ,~-Jv,Lohmn .tMI 1•7 17\\ 1''-"' 1•1-v, AM1IC~ 1.40 11 J l ll• 1111.-"' onstd pl s 10 70 etl.'i "9V,.i. ~'Gert IQ of ' '' ••• ~,",, ~,,,-_ ·~ Ltno• In .JO 21 36~ '361~ 3'\lo+ ~ • Amer Molor 19t 11'1 ''i 6~ onEol •.•J 1280 '4 6J•• '4 + Vi Gn Stttl 1nd ... , ........_ ,..,. ,.,,_ .,:. LIV Fd Cto 10 · l]W. 11'~ 1;µ6 • AmNG1 2.10 m 11.-3''1 3't-·'l'o QI!• Fd l'• 61 •S ...... u,,._ Iii GTE 1.51 ""1 ~·. ;;.~ ••• LIV !nc .IS• 15 13\ii 131'1 I]"+\~'· AmRei .llb r, ?O'lo 69\lo •91'1-\\ ~onFCIPI ,4'':1 1 1.11 !7 1,iOl• 1w-~~GTE of ,1.,.. ... ,,· ••• '' .. Livi SI .•U ,, 51~ 514'-fH'I + l'i " 'm ... ' '' ' '••• >>->>• ,. o"sF'rl G.i 11 '• 1>.!. • GTFl•ol 1'~ c 1 1 ••-\ >• 1•>'-.,,, • Am5"1o .6oo '31'"~ 31"" 31 =~ G,n l°f1si;,<1 61 11 1c1. 11 + .... GTIF lol ,,10 11~•11'~ 11\!o lli+-'•,LfVIUF ,,-11 ,,. • ..~' A Smell L'° 161 '°'" l'O\i ».,.,+ \.ii Of\.ING 1.tJ 101 lO 'll :JO lO . Gtn Tfre 10 1'!6 JO\lt :»'~ 30~ ~ LFE Corpn 21 Im IV. ltp+ """• AinS Al'r .70 SS 16 4s 41 -l ""-onsm P)lf 2 60 JO'° lO\\ ~ '~ Gn Tlri pl s l llO 7!~ n~ 11~+ LlbbvOWn 1 71 4 41'4 4n'o-r,.\· Ain Sll'ld .«I 14 14\!o 14'111 1•'1:1.+-~(onPpl 41/J r110 '''I• 6.j ''V•-'.l.Ginl•t 1.70 •47 29 ?t" 11~-' LOF Pl 41/i 17 I IOI\ 11~+\,a '; AtnSICIOI 4~\ 14 '°"" S'.\'I J9'"-,,; (onll Air Lrt .fl'\,j ,,, • 15 2f\/; G1111tr 110b 1 1.S'lo IJ•t IJ\'1-~'t Llbbv MCNI, l 6h ~ ~ V. ~ Howard Agency AmSlt•H ,,s, S] 37 .. ll\'t )t'/o-\•, !!l..c'"-11,o llt 30'/o "'"' lO + '" Ger>Perl ,ti> ~ 1)1? ll 13 + l't l!l>r!vC ·* •• 1th 11•1 lll'o-'• ' AmT &T -t .60 •62 43\1, •3 •l'.'il-\'t -· C--28 6:t.. j~ Iv,-'h G1 Pet '°' l60 -46\'i 451,1 .t61'-" 111 LlbrtvLn .JO '' 1414 14 14111+ V."' AmTA.Tol 4 x1S9 $9'!1 St\\ 59.,.1 ~c',,1'"> 110 IS I 1 +'111 Gt Pol '140 ?·d 44>,t ,,li-l''tLlbtrpf l"• 1 16\lt 16Vt 1611+ \' A""T&T wt "' 1~ 1~ 7~i.4 c;;\ico ,•,,,,_ "1• "11• ''''-4f>,i-V.G•rber 1·31 ,, 31\t 11 31 _ ll110 M'I ~\It 101 67\'o 'l~\67\lt-lio ~ .-. .... w.rr .llO 6 13-.. 1w. 1µ;, .. Con• 111 6J;l lt ~ ~v. ~\~ .. · GttlY 1 1'111 14 1w. l)l!o 111-.+ ' LlotMv of ' 160 101 100'4 01 + "• AWrrof l.'3 r•O ,~ l \Vj 21'"' . onrln<fll H ?1 IS~: 1;\41 ifv.::·a GettvDI i.to lO 10 19 1t LILIV Ell Jl ,, ,6.J" •5 '5 -'i\.10 Ameron .60 Jl lra 16>J 16:14-lo onMlo SJd 89. 15 101! u~-1~, GG>'o",,", ', ...... 10 14\.\ 1~~ 14"\+ •;, LlncNll 1.ot l'O '4 11\'t tJ -~ ' Aims for 1973 By CARL CARSTENSEN 01 lti• 01ttv 1"1111 Sl1fl C:round·breaking c~remonie! have been h8ld and con- struction will s t a r I im· mediately o.n the harbor area~s newest· car d e."a l er sh i p. Howard Chevrolet, in Newport Beach. Located near J a mob r ee Road and Palisades in Emkay Development C o m p·a n y ' s Newport Pl.ace. the dealership should be compl eted and open for business in time for the 1973 model y e a r an- nouncement. Tbe two-floor; $385,000 struc· ture. on, three acres purchased from Emkay h's been in the plannink st~e for t\V1t years. Tot31 rlOOr' erea under •roof will .be 31 ,700 square feet aad lnch!:de I. ro·~r·Car showrbom, service 'dePartment wilh '42 service ,, stalls,· 7.006-square foot .parts department, general offlCes,. and customer waiting lounge. There ,will be o utdo.o r display space for 150 new cars, trucks and recreational vehic les piuS 90 used cars. Initially, about 40 persons will staff the dealership. Howatd. Richaidson, owne r. said "our goal is to establish the ~sJ.~' • , Richardson has been part owner and gener,al manager of another Soilther'n California Chevrolet dealership for. 13 years and prior to that served with a Los Angeles Chevrolet dea)er for over eight years. He and his wife Margaret have been Eastbluff residents in , Newp,ort Be.a.ch for two years. David Hyu n Associates, Los Angeles,.is the architect, and Am,lell: .llOI 10 20'1i 70'!• 201Jr..,,. \'I c 110/1 '1' UIJ l"' •• v. ' 121 11V. 21~ ?)\'tt "'llncNtl DI 3 20 18"' IJ'l.!o. 11\))...114. AMF lnco I lSl 5711:1 57'1o Sl\'>-1-W t.::r Ol pf 1 2 911, 1; r-.J Gldd L-11 21 1111:1 ll\1 13\o'i V. Lint Tune 11 H•1 llVt 11111>-U. Amllc .60 16 1711 36',i 17 .+-I\ (n S!H/ 40 I 10'i :r,,_ I t Gjl Hiii .!Od n 2t"ll ,, .. tt\1.-•to Ll"'4 T•m • 1 11fo 12loii T~ ,,._. the Newport Beach offi(:~ of ~~-~r;; :,',' ~; "',~1 •r~.r. "'.ri= ~Con• Te -.~ 1"° 1• 20\t · ·"' G lber1 l"I•• " lt'ti Jt1\ :tt'll u"1Tv Pi' s 1 m. ,,.~ :m·-v.-: M . K d rA :.,,u,;,0ex Co 119 I ,, n~ ~ !;ontrl Oet~ ill St~'. !71/J 5t .+ ,, Gltltlle 1,40 ]IS 42\io 41'1o 41 -~ lloncl Corp J9 7.,., ra "'---\' orrtson· nu son \.Nmpany,Am•<• ,,,, ,, l'"' •s¥: ,,•-., .• ',M .. ••u '·~11. 1 Jl'll Jl•~ l3 G0•,m11t1e,•' ,,", ,•,~,• 11~• 211•+1\L!tto"·"J\'11' 41• 11\o'i ll ''t 1a1? ,. 1 n ,., 17 22._ 211' l'o ~ Mar · 'I 21't. 21>4-1 lllln tV pf J )j 24\4 2411 1•~+ \ji Boise, Idaho, P¥ent company~:::~ 2:~~ s~ ,lY,! ~~,... !l:~ ,, !Er.~,',::',:"', • 201·1 2Jt. -1, Glen AJ .2td 4 t11'" 1P'1 101•-\\ Ltltoritn plA' 11 2214 11:00 21 of Emkay is general con-Amstr pf .61 • "" 9l 9\-iii ;;op Li: \I 6!1 n,. j1f . n -~ ·%1:~:0J p~·'1 l 'l v, '~ =~~ ,Lockll,... • .. ~' 11\'J 1)\4 IJ~ ~"' • Am•1ed I" 1 M u cl• •~ .._ ~·, \T iJ5b Tl \R1 ~~\ 15!1-t ~ Gltn•PI 2"• , l i1•t. , ''• ,,,,t '·~ otw P 1,04 56-14 56':. '-',._ '• tractor. .....,,el Ill .70 11 6"1 ''"' 6~+ .... 000 DI 1•1, J 19t'2 191, ltV1+ ·~ Glob•I Mtr lio 22t• J! .. 11"" t~ LCIT .. t .5611 u lSti U \O ~ -.... • • • • A"ICOl'ld• 11 1•li ll'n l~li<o-li Cm!P A111ae 10 ,,, ,,,, 16'•j: '• Globeu" .60 )t JJ\ro JJ 3$'4-"" Lonelon """" 11 16'\e 1St\ 16\lo+ l. Anew Ho 1 4l 31'" 3'\:I lS ... {OPWI S!tl 1 21 w. ?Sit ~ I\ GoldWll Fcl 2J 11 IS" 1•\l. lhrf s lflel I " 26\".I 1~·t. 7'V.• '"' • F d D ... , p· t AncorPN .•I 'U 1.1 13-lt(ornG/'1>1 2'222"1 111 2111! Goodrich 1 130 71 J~\; ,.,.,._..;,lcn•SPI 4'~ 111o·i110\o'i llO'"'-*"'" or lV1Ston.s new .JnOAroCICI 1.200 7S 5$~ SS'" ~-\i1f"owl'"l om 1J 11·. 11''• 11'•-'J•Gooclr• ,!f 3'1 ll lO\~ """-'"LcnStG T.36 107 ll :io-. ~· .• I lot led 't S97 b AP&ch•C ·'' M '°"' 19·~ 1~0+1 .c: ..... Rr-l .., /'fl •1'> •4'• "'""+' Goidor.J 1, 141 26y, 1,,\ 261,, Lont lLt 1.311 1' 2:ii1 11 ~+i~" wagon sa es a , Y Aoco 011 •I 11 ,~ 10 2011+ ~' t Pcrnt1 ,:10 10 :ii•1t Jll.1 3J'h--~Gould ln<o 1, 36 35,, lS~._ ""'lon1r"' 1 s 11,0 61¥o ,,,. 6N-1•1i theendofihtrodUCtlOndayon!°ifc~ c:g il~ ~~ ~~i ~ ... +~~;:d~F!l ,~ 42 .l)'I Sl'lo 5j'1o +I Gr1ceW V-. 1211614 16 1611 Lo"•10t .10 Jl 781.l. 161.l 16"'-''> M h 17 APL pf8 .SO l 21 11 !' . C-••• .... , 7 21'0 25''t 2 V.-'~ .Gr1"bY 60 • 19 11•·1 lt!o lor1l Corp lJ fl.I,, 6'1 6'/.i-''i arc . A"Lotc J.Od 11 1w, 21,12 w.+ ,,_cc:'-,, ·,,, 13' 31~• Jl>.o lHir.-\O Grfnd u ·ao 116 20•1o 19•;, ti>"•-.-l•l•" xdE l tn _,.,,, ,, 41 _ 1,_ h Lo A I I H M :t.1 ''°" '' ,_,, •1 121;. 21\:. 21V.+ 1'4 Gr•nltvlle. I 10 lt\'t 1•:n 1°"'-'• LouG8s I.I• 12 34\lo 34•:, 34'~-"lo In t e s nge es sa es APP ed " 1 11''• 111(. rou11 Hn 1 i1 J1';1 3'•1 :u1._ .._ Gr•111 w ,,,,. :JI n ,11, -•• ,_,_, ·"' ,, ,, •• ,, ,,,. ,, AR.A Sv I.II 1 167 166 1'6 -1\• cra-u ( 41 121 11 llV. 11V..:. 'l~ G 0 110 4' ~" ... .... ...... district Ford dealers reported Arco••N .1• 24 11•. 16~ 11 .. crown '''l ,, -.. ,,~ -• o< 6 ",!M · 14 '1 '°'·" "°'..,_~·Lubrizol -·~ sa ,,,,., u11 +i1.1o-'' , • . Arch1rOnl 1 ?2 JJ'lt Jl ~ \loo .,... •• II-"" '" f ,7fd 1 lll.!o 3l1ii JJ~ "ii lucltv SI -~ lll 21"' 10'-'t 71 -''e 261 Pinto wagons sold on intro-Ar~tlc E"to i ' 31"' 31 ''> 11 >.ii ..• ~;:,"z~ !·1, '' 30"" 30'-"' lO"I + 14 rt A&P .IO 231 20'-19.\>o tt>:-''Ludlow 1.ot :u ,.,,. 20 ,, d t. d • t' f J& Ari1 PS 1,N 42 'JGt; 20~ 1010+ 14 CTS Co ·,, 1~2 'i.v. 6jSl4 'is..._ 'h g~~r,'0., 1·f: : i~~ lJh '3l'"' LU~"'' IDll IS m l 11'i 27U UC IOll ay, accoun 1ng or Arl1n1 0 SI 69 • S\1 .... •:, (ulll;1" '21 IJ 19~. ltl' 19\'t-"' 31NNtk l.60 1 '!' lP~· IOvt l v 0 Coro 1]1 ~ .... t\\-.. percent of the national total. !;~~o ~:r'0~ l~I Jl.1, ri'~~ ~lt:" Y; c,ummi"o :11 1u 59'-'• s• 59.,., . ""'Pt 1.60 ~ jg~ ~~'. ~it"..,, L,v~' v""n , 111 9~ I'• • ' h sal Arm Df 2 10 1' :Ith ""' 20li unn ruo 10 llli 14..., l~~t '" t Wt11 Fin '17 11 . 16'\ 21 t ~ v •• • P 59 1• 1W. 14 4-i.t. Te new wagon es aC•Armurpf .j~ z•JO il 6JV. u·~-1-..Cvrtlss Wrt ill,, 21'• 11'~ >;<GltWHI Un 46 11?'1 11•, 11~+ .:L•l'ICl'l$Y .•o • 2S'141 1S ,5 -\\ f A (t ao 91 '14'. 41 41''" > C1,1rtl11Wr A 21 lO 11 vt 1' .,.1 GrWl!Un DI 1• lS._, 11'" l>' -M ,.__ counted for 19 percent o total A~~~ 01 j,,.. i» ss " 5s'..-"cutlorH 1.20 10 JI\\ 36.\\ 31...._ fi Gr'I W•1~ in 1 sia 1,,. 5,,~-\• ~~c"o' ,,o.1h 16 11 v, 11•.r. 111~-"' P\.nto sales nati·oowi·de on i·ts ArmMR 1.60 1 ,1..:, 40V. 40>:.-"~ c,vc1op'•·'", • "" 23~ 2~ "'G,eenGt .H •S 2~i~ 11\11 Jl\0-lv, .,,,, on H ,,,, ''" •'• Aro Coro .90 J il'l.\ 11"" 21 '*'+ "Ii YDrus 1 '4 lS1, ll'N 35 -"'GftvtldCo ! 106 111!• 10\o'i 19...,_ 'A. M•~~:e C .lO 31 1 4~• 1•''> 11·11-'' f~st day Arvin !l'ld l 21 ....... )9'% ""--1-\lo -0.D-G~yhl'ld wt J1 ~· ••• .i • ..-'• M~cv RH I •S '6'• •N ,. + ,,, ' Alhl 011 1.10 l't 261/o ?S\I 2S'!lo-''I O.mOll Co . IS 57'11 S1 $7\.,..._.~ Grolier .tO 'l 2""" Jlll , 2 M1dlfd ,11d ll 1514 1S 1J -i \ • • • Asioc 8rew ' Ma 911 t~+ v. 01nR!vtr M SJ t1~ t 9\io-1" Gtllt'lmn l $l 1Mlo 141\ lt~ Med S<:iuo,o 3' J~~ l•'o l..._ t\io . , . Al OrvG I'' 139 Slli<o Sl'4 S•V.'+-"• D&rta Co ll(, ,11 •1'1 •1'i 0 '"-'A GtirCIMI .e!d 74 45'., .UV. 4S -'"-M19tcCh .AO to Jl~.'o $1 \l Jtl._ \\ While 1n Los Angeles this A1sosor 1.'° ' JIY, 3llo( 31~ ~Dart 111 .30o _.,. SJ'A SJ " -\4i Gulf Lit .300 as s.w. n141 J:Jlo\+ \to N1•1nov 1.)0 11' ,,._ ,,\ .• , •Jt._ '" k '° JM'• .fA•soc 'Tr1ns 6 9'.11 t1'1 9\io-\110.•llnd1112 J1 'S7 Y'ltS7 +'AGVllMI Llfll. ,f 103'tJ101V.\03"1+l'toMIUorv l.'O tJ' J•llo 'll.+-'!i past wee ,µ-enera Owf'S O·Aitolcn• ,10d JO 11. .. 111•·111,._v,01yco1 1.14 iJO 11 20•1 20"-"'"G~llOJ 1'1 ,.1101 u •.. ?Sl'I 25111>-1tM•lcneH .:ri ti"~ l' :I?-'"' r. ·d·· that totaJAttCl)'E 1,40 ll ,,.,.. 2'/\;o 13 _.,,D1ylln 2.• .J4 12¥1 n1Jo ·12v.-i1iGull R& Ch t7 si:. ,,~ •Jl't • M•nhl"d .56 1• 2!1o\ 11 l' _ .. 1cers sa1 Ar R1~ht1d 2 170 ~ ,,,,. 63\t + 1, 01vronH .JO 10 11v. 11 J1 GUR 01 .1111 11 17:. 11" 11,._." Mine-n 1 l i ~1 1 , automotive emissions are ARch ot .w. 1<(70 n 56111 56\'r+ 11 O•VPLJ J.~ U t ,,.., 2•'-i 1~ ~ Gvt1s1u l.IM 151 w-"' ,,,, u~o-\!. M 11Hn 1.u •n xv. :is'" 351,_,,., • ' tha . MiOAc l>i j.111 .,. n 50\oli .10~._.._D,.lpf!I :i~ 1\10 .s11,r,1,."",E\•,, .. 0..,,,,"," .. }·•,o rJOD •1> ,1 ,1 -'-MAPCO1 .o.1 11 •l'< '"· 411,+1 . i:lecllning there and t G ~u_.'"'"' 3 . • 1~ 1°'"' 1°''"-"".I 01PLp1 1,11> i10 11M ..... .. 1u,,.. z?bl) •1'h ,,,,., ,1111+.,,, M11 011 '"° ,~, 31" 11·• 111._ ·~ . All~1 Corp u ~ 2'·• 21i> : Oetn Vf ,IOd 23! ll\._ ~-'to J0'~-1 GulfWs .60of lQf 37-.Ul't J7"+ Vi .Mtrcor .IO u 111.1. '''• '''\+ •; wiJJspendS300millionin1972AU•tPr .1Jc 150 lb'.:.,,., 1"4-"10tf!•t &Co 2 220 '°'" 59"4 '°11o+1 Gu11&w, w1 m 1111t 11\!i 11 ....... M11cw pt 2 • !& s11i Jt'1>-i.. I r t . u ATO Inc .11 l8 ll V. 11\1 11\lo ... OtlP&L 1.12 102 17 .... 17 171\ GHw1_.i l>;, I 12"Jo 12l':1 113"!' ,, }111rem"' 711 · 11 4)1{ "'• 4]l•• •• for the conlro o au omo ve •uiom 0111 1 IP1 1s:1t u .,,+ ""'oe1 M111 1.10 16 21 2•"1i ''~•-\• G1rw1 p1 1•;, J 1s.•1t 1s.t.,, 154.., 2\11 M1rMld 1.711 ei> J"~ 3,.~ ~1~ d. · d I • I JI t' A•roml Inds "' ll' I •'• .. Otl!a Ar !Cl 24 J4I SJ lo6 4-~ GllW1pf 3l1 3 11'1o 71 71'11 ..., Mir Lib .«I 1• 1sv. 7, 14\/t-...., an 1n us r1a po u ion na· AY<o Coro 111 "'" 11'• l&'h-11o 0e11"" rri111 21U 1or. , • ., 10 +"' G1tw1ot 514 J 10 70 11> ..., M1r1oroL w! 1 J! :v.; JN-,1 f 'd Avco Co wh 3' P. S'" ~ ','i Ot!l!on1 (p 1' l'I" JI._ l'I'~ Gu/loro llMlt! 51 IO'lll 10\lo 10"'-~ M1rlen .S!d 11 6H• 1,~ 61'~ ~~ 1onw1 e. Av(o of l ,20 13 S1'h S0'1 lt"'-1 Iii nn1111 12 17 11•~ J7'di JI'~+ '" -1'1 "'-M1r1tv( .«I lj '' '' '' + •• GM E . v· p I Aver,Pd .24 11 21•. ll'" ,.~ l. ' ,· .• "'·Ho••• '... M '' c ~ xecutive ice res· Avn1 .o7d n tJ" Tl'• ll\\ i\ "-=~•'•'•' ,.1 1 29'4 11'" 2°'\"-'"' r · • 44•,r. ~• ~··i. 1r• em 1 Tl~~ l•Yt 1~i,,, .. I J j(I 11 "" 117~ I 7 """" 1'1 13 12\'J I] + ~-H1lllbtD l.CS t2 II 1Sl4 17 t iV.. M1rlot 2Vill 20 61~ """ 66.l't-" dent Oscar. A Lundin and Avo"Pg11 .s-1, 7'" 1 (-.~ 0e111101v · 1 12 .. 11v. ~ Jli<o'-H•mP_,, .so a, 11 int 11~ M•rrlort wl M ,u 31v, lJ~'• . . . AJllK 611. 61 "' I 'lo I 'I.-'"' Oerec:o of A ' "'• 69\!o 69'ft--.... H1md ( ·"° JJ IO•r. 10'11 \~,,,. ... Mlr.hF 1,10 41 l 2t't :11<\ l?"•-.,, Ernest S. Starkman, vice B•b&Wlt 15' JJ ~JM\ 3G'lo Oerec:o Pl e 1 10\\ '9'111 1111,.+ u. H1111111m .61 ff lt~ iov. lOli. MtrlMr 1.10 » 21" 11'11 11_..,_"' President in charge of-GM's B~ktr011 :10 ,, !O\iJ JO'h JO'l•+'i... 0t.,1",',1,'' ,·'!!. x1 ,,.,,. 2111. 2114..: \It H•ndY'H .n u 1•v. 11~ 11..., ···MCI cu o .511 io 11•1 M'lo 1.,1 . , . f 8eUG•• 1,119 101 30 19'4 290\0 , •• 0.0E 01 ··n"" 376 201;, 20 20 1"" Hone1(, .SO 1!0 111/o 16'~ 17v-'i,1, ~IK(P .16 14 .UV, u .U'lo environmental acuv1tles sta f a11G1 ot 4\!o 11co '4'" ,, 64"1lot • "''; ,, ,·,, im 11'1.'i 11' 116 + ""H•nn• 1.Js 11 s1 • .w.-.. ~~+ \~ :i:''°"11• -'' 11 69\~ '''• ,,.,,+ o.4 . f th a.noor Pn 111 16 l~ 1w. ,,.. "' _, ,. i:wo 1011.i; 1oov. 100>.1.-"' 1rcourt8 t 11 45\\ •J ~\~-''I 1?~r, '"• l 13.,., 1Jt\ 11•1-'i and fonner Cha\J'11lan 0 • ' • ' ' ' .. '." 20 I .,. 68 160 103 103 !Pl H1rnl1!1pr I t Wi 15'11 2 .. ,+ ,,_ 11.... 41 l•I Jlh 2110 ttVo-\'a . •no• ot '"' 1' •·· 0t1 IE DI j o,, l e?V. 11 11 _, .. Htn'l1l1tlD I •t il''" 52>o ,-,,.. ~ Mll•lif" ,1,d 2j1 j•• 'j" j•I-•1. T h . 1 Ad · C m 'ti Bio;,Co111 1.:ii 2• JO m1 2'~ ... ...__ c ,, 0 ,, ., •••·· c 1 21 . " ·-... Mitre1 10 , ,., , ec ruca · v1sory o nu ee el'lk 01 NY 2 2s 41•~ '1"*' o~ v, ~,·" ,• 1·,, tz -'" -0 • ,, W-m'I 231.,_ \~ M•~ 0 5 1:.0 ~ Vi ,,.__ ,., h C l·r · A " 811k1Tr 1t• n •1!\ 6\.,. 62\41-llii " r<• · 101 n..., 10'.4 11v.+11Ji H•r1SMx .. 10 ..... ~ "'• 30•.1,,+'-M , '" •1 4'V. "'"" ,,.,.__.., tO t e a1orn1a lreerbfrOl1 ·21 l• •l'A. •7"1• ,,,,,_,,1 011IFln'.SO ?t 16\lo IS~~ l~~}lfrVoAI ,e 11 14~ lll't l•V.' "'t IYPr , I )6\ol )6~) 3611 Resources Board made their Bard C .251 16 71'o\ 70'11 1or,1_ "1 g1:..;11~~ml.~ 11 41-\<i 40'~ 4014-1 lt1w1EI 1 .•~ S ?6 ' 2.S'• 26 +" M•~trOs .A2 n 2''4 1' 7t -'.Ir. • B•,IC In .«I • 9 ... ~ 114--'>ii Oi•'h-I ' 231 10"" 7'0 ·r, -.... H1•e1 •lb I 17 ·2no 11 21V.-"~:~1~w, 1J: 1• 1l\li 1)1.4-'4 remarks ducing a progressB•tt~ .oSd , 13~• l l'ti ll\o +\10,.,•,,··,·•,,, 'll''-l1'\ •,~ H1io111no 11·11.,. l!PO 101,_~MCAI··.. 4.1.\i °"' 4.l'o-'" eoresM of 1 ' 111 17'"' 11"•-''• 0-Cf~ h (: ·t 11''1 17 7"•+ '\'i 'HCA lr'!llllJ.t ,.u,, "" ll• 1'1-\It M~d" V.1i • ' l•I;• llh ll'I-" report on what Gene r, a I eo1h Ind .a 1n J9\4 :11v. ll'!lo-~ 0)~~11n ..,P 6.j 11 • 1 1 ~ 111\-•1.i .HI"',., .Old 46\'a. ''" .U'4-Yi,,. ro~ 120• JS l"" 35 . . . 81\1schL ·.a• 212 117?11 !Ml.:. 11'~~-J giG! . 60 2t 52V. Sl~ 51·,,._ f:! Hed1M" a · l~'' 11•.• 16\'i 16\._. \lo Mc rrv ot" 6 lt 11411 11 2"1+ "' ~fotors is do1n. g in the areas of eex1er L .TJ 111 •3 42'11 •2'ti:• " 'H'''•'•",,·,, " 15 1'"'° 14:11-•" >to111r H 1.u ,_,, .tM 4S''o 4!V.-v. Mc erm• 1 ''° 11>~ 13''< 73'•-""' \' ... 12,L 11 ,.. u 19•• •1"" u:v.i ~ Hellf>IR ,, ? 3,,, ,, •• ,, IS 4'>':1 401. 40•i.-'" Public concern B1•ukCC1 .5~ ' .... " .,. or Ing~ •O 52 ·u 11\\ 11 \\ H1i.ne c\.rt »' •• v,+ v. McDonld c.. ·ffl 94•1 tl'o ''"' · ~ 8t1rlncn '.5? 1• lSlti ''"' •514+ '.lo ~llln<1 PIA. j 1 1tV. 21 """ 1 ~lerlnt ,1, ljJ"21V. I 11._ I\ Mo::Ono .«to 45·4 u i; 4$ + \it They headed a team of ex· ee11 Fo 1.11 '" .w•i. •S\\ 16 -~ Utim PIB 1 20 '' .tt -\lo H11mePr . 40 , ..,.. 26V. 2"-. McG, E 1..o0 " :rt 31•1 3''•-"• 8eckm .12d' 11 Sl¥r. SP'I ~+ 'r\. i!IOl'IC tOtJ 4 JS 3''.i SJ Hel&Pne '2t1· , 2(). 19'11 19~-,, MtGr Hr .60 7() 11·~ 16 .. 1r•1o-;. io perts who described progtess Beclo"o ,30 • 9l ~1 4~ •l . 1, .. ~w ·.fOIJ 165 1S9\!i 1,,,0 '"'t 6· · .,.....,11P ~•D lO\r. JO'r'I JOI?-~• Mffiretr o 4 6,,,. ~i ~ . . 8ffCllAr .60 '2 ?l l<'t 20ll l l--!/; O!slilSt~ .10 17, l6 3$V. JS ~Hem In OO Jl lV. 4'~ ,,,._ V. Mcln!Yrt P rJ:20 V MV. '' t' · 1n fields such as automotive ee1coP1 .50<! 90 11 . 1 ~ 11 -'lo 01ytr111d tn 191 4~ ,,\ ~ k · 211 T'h 1·~ 1"".I + v. N,cK'"' & co 1 11t1 . . . BelMn 1,20 1 2Jl'i 21\IJ 131/H-14 O!vMt \,l~d 11' 27~ >O'O •'"+ •• ffCUlo .Sid Ht. •l'A 61"1 ':\.)+ "" McLt•n 60 1' »" H"i 1""' 14 emissions control, automotive e11d11H .lO!I 21 21 2011 :HIV.-~ Dr Peor ·'° ' ... ... Her1hy 110 ,st. 1.s>,1o 211-. is~•,;. Mclourh $11 ... :i:iv. 3'.Kt f d It l ' ol>&Hll .60 51 59~ SRI 51'1>-1 DomeMn ... 50 ~ _.V. JO~ Heubl1ln ... ,.1• S2fti $1\lt 1 •• McNeil JO JO II 172' II + 1't Sa ety an a .rna e power '''c ,.. " + .... 17 M•n il\11 66'})f\\' Htw111 p f.. " M n 11 ''" 11 , 81ml1Co .60 lt ·• " ""' ~FCI .51d ?! ,, .. ,•,• ,'"" ,., HOo•voo • · 5-1.,., Sol~-\oio ••Cl CP .l.O 141 11'.o'i 11'-'o t>'"+ " d dd ed Btnd ix 1.611 69 .WV. •Sli<o •S';'I-\. onluJ .o.Jd ·~ J " " lJ 11'1i 1!'11! 121'1+ i~ Mt18•I 2113· > •• " -sources, an a ress more &e!'ICll• pf. 3 9 6tl!IO """ ,,.,..,_ "" · nellv ,44 ,,, 1s.,.. 2ji• 25 _ \ii HU1on Hrt 1 · s1,,. S14' s14-1 Med ,-u ., ••'h 41h than '00 communi'ty leaders eenco i.10 36 43!/o 4l1,, •:•t1+~ocrkCP .l! •5 :wv. 21,,., ?t•'-'-\•Hob1r1 1.:IO 1t 6.Slh ,,,. '-''h+2"MEui' co.': ta '61,• •S>.ii ~-~, '> • 8enCppf 2V. t lOO 3lU 33\li 33~· ,. Derr Oll~r .! \6\~ 16'.r. 16'~ kotrntr .90 ll l5 ~·/i loll-V. Mtlvl $11 .13 rj ,.;:~ ~ n"'+ , educators en vironmentalists e"'c of 4.:JO 3 91 . '''"' t1v.-"" oc,1eyC .1P ]• 1S11.i 15~ 1Jl<I · H~"' E11"" ff 2fl6 21i;, :UY.-y, MllY Sii ,, l 11o 65..., •s•1o '''" ' • , 8tf'CllJll In l l 1h 1"9 7~ "'-Oovt,Co .l'I 1 s7 57 .sl't 'M ol In"' .1S 1 '.S2h .s1i,, lE= 11 Mtrnor111 . ~o l01'll _,, " · · and local GM 1 management eertev ,.ho 111 lO'h 1•~ '"-" '"' DoW c~ 1.l!O lot 1sv. 11 115... 'Iii · Oltvsu· -'Nd 11 16\li •11 M•tc si 1.40 1 ld ..,.,. '°~'+ 4"' .. ,~Sil L:IO 220 """ 32>.t. 3J t ~ g p F Intl! 46 10,)\ 10'4 lCIJ.-'" HH~ ••• ~Jk ,·: 1 23\41 22\i ~1 ... M•rck t.JO 11 ,!.... 1'1 '1'2 t ,, ·people and dealers, 81Qllod .J2 1 '1.,., 41"1 '1'1> "• 0 ravC >1.40 l JSI\ :15\li l5'4.-... Hflilv:.' i'lO "i';f1~~1~!~.1•2~+·,,Mll"ld010L!h .70 4 m:1:,1 1g,~_l.,"o Bleck Dk:r 1 1t It II~ n \' res1er .«I 311, .. l•~ "J', l•''•t "'Horjzon c., i61 st"' st•• :JI., .,. err • ·"° 14"1 .u•o '"• ,, _ ~ 81i1rJn ,d 31 21'1''< :ID 101" •.. Oresol 2.20 11 •• ~ ..,''o "°~',, •,,Horion wl U . Sl'!ti S8\\-,,...Mn•P1 .JO 1J Sl,_ .!P"i >I'" .''.'L.pllln l 21 ;ov,,, 20 10 -14 OrtH•r pl 2 ...,,, ,,,,v.; H O """' 31'11! 3' MH SI" 2'0 2 '" '~ 81ockHA 2• 639 Jl"li 16.\J 21'r'lt \\Ore•tl . .od 32 11't 11 " 2H~+ .. M"'Plll All ,, ?ii"' 16'1 2•~+·11M11ob .IN n ..-!, ..... 'Hl'•-1 .'•-OoO\ .·.. U .J?"° S2 51"'1 1,~ Orevlui(p l S 1IV. ,,~ tt" il OHlll•I Co ..., "' JO MMll ••k IOI~ TO 1~ &Oi>ii11 81'1l 61 ll\41 l:W. ll'lo .. OutieP "'° 126 ,, ... ,~-;z=~H.Oll Intl .3' I 31'4 .ltllo ll't.-~MGM ~ 11 22'A n zri.+··--~ Ba.!f'CIC '° ~ ?:l"' ,,,, "~·+ ~DukeDI 1.71> i..'0 111''i M1~il 1,.. HOW.lie .611 '16 14\'i h '.1. 1.Aio+ i.r.Melro SOo l2 11Vr 1tl~ 11"•-'J. Boise co ·.2s 211 11'4 1a 11\'I ... Oukepf 1.20 tl~tOl0° 1<•.101 +'v.H:~:'}~1:,,~ "•?I~-23'.IJ 2l ~Yo MetE01 l.90 !1 36~ lS'n 1511>---11-. Bo·.. ll'ldUI ' 1!'/o 1·1 11 . ~nBr 1,JOI ,v )i 1P< n'4 1~ H » ""'' .. 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C11ttlr 1.40 lU .5314 "~ a • • l &l ofO • uo "' 1!• tt4 . ~ ' hi .lO '" ft • ~c1,,co,•1 ·~ tbtt• '40 1~ ri?t ll" »t-~l l .. lplH 6 tl06 HI• 106 fv,1/1 11':u ,to I M1• l i~-I ~~o C11 ,'4 '! ll~ 1!~ llt ~ f~F :~ 1~ •.t 11r. jf~ -." \Ttlf'\,,J'~ ll 1~ ~ iit)~ li, t\ ._ \4 ~:t:n~ ,~ ·11f t:tt mt :u .. ·ii: ~1~1U'f~~ · ,? ~ •!., 1~.t: ~: ~j,',rJKn: .rs ;f" lt"' nt:.1~ Symbol onoc1n1 .JO n ~™' ,,,. ¥,~ 141 F1m'trYP . lt ~ I " ~ 1 T• olO .s 4J .,,. ''~ 994-1.4 • tntt'11: Corti tJ l41' 3)~ *-' ~ F•1111"1 n 14 ~ o.... 1 ~ '"'l th 1..0 U 4"" 47•it 41l'I-" a fflHuCI l.q $1 2•111 1•14 41~ .. flt Wlt ~If! 4 1' ~ I 14+ .. '"" ~Ill ~ 1 S6 S,\\ JJ\11-1"' t ~:11~rL i.~ ,1~ t !.t mt ~=-" "=~~, ~u ,:1 , ft\~ ~:tt. 'V) 1~1~~,:i, 1 .~ 11" ~~ ~;:= ~ f!:,' .~11or.ii~~~;m.J~~I o:~,I~ •If· '"P \·'° lt 11• U jl , F~rlCo , 1. I u , •nlor!l"Cllf • I ., t1 fl ._I /~'ldtd n IG 1~1 ... IOh ffld rl• ttt, onj.o .IM 70 I VI 21~• 114-\(0 Ft M11 1. li ,._ .. lnll'fllG ,1Gd • ''"" 1.Jl\ ,. 1' ~9. VIOfN 1\1 !'! !n.-.u~f" td fj l\MPw 1.n lt IJJ~ L1'! 17411 ~o tlMI 1 ~1 ''' 1\-~ 1n1>l'lrhd H ,, lt\'J 1'1\ '91++,. ;:-:IO'"T~~ iot1111 !~: 1 , 111 •• 'lnll't.t ' • '' ,~ 'l'~ ,1~ ,. ,.eel $ "" .60 20 161• u 14 1ntr1l•IO Sir " IN 13\\ 12"1-h "' th-h ~0, 1111 r"u~,,. '"''Ill or ~•Id 11 en • . ' .. 1 -., F , ,1 1 ~ Ii ,_em 51 4 ,, r 11i tt• Ill'! 1111 llockl fol • r1lo1 It cii.t. ., 1 •' \ ,, ,. ~ .. • BREAK GROl.INO -Turning firsl dirl lor Howard Ch~vrolet dealership are o. to r.) M. J. Schumarh· er, Chevrolet Los Angeles zone manager; Howard Richardson , owner: Mayor Ed Hirth, and Mrg. Richard.son . Facility Is lo be located at Newport Place near Jamboree and Palisades roads. thllr.Wr:·~ 1~, i•t:: ~I '! r:'~~~~~::;,~o~lft ' :'' 11'" ~41•=16 lnf,ttllw 1:11 l' ll\\ ll It\\ fi"lld ;i~1J:.:JJ,tf~1 ":Y~t I on ~ti~ rro Cori. 1~1 1.sti 1 S~'t-\ol F~S'l/1 1 0~ .n ~ "'• -1""" "' 1.>'1 14 ""' II"'• tM-,., v•l"•r·i hi , i:~ '''• •1v1 11~ rr:~~c: :ro 1r1 !!,~ !f il,~ +lj .. fed 1).y~ *1 ' w~ fl~-\t lowt!lG 1,311 10 1• • ,\ftit 11 +If ldfl'llll ""'\'~t:CIJ «1 .!.t'c."~1'~;-':/t(l "t:· "'"'A .fO l• 11,,1 21111 1t}'J "~rcoco :7l ' !J i' i•• fi" '" !ov:•IJl J '° io '"' • 2 I.-"' Jl!:i;,_<•nt :r.: Mlf 101 ¥t~r1 <~l '' tdllrn Int 36 lU l.lt 31.4 l• ,~t~d 213 >i) ·~ , ~ 1i1:-, !~.:~~ .;~~ ~ t~ rn1 r.~+ ~(~I l~~'f.j':f:1~\?!~1orj:rw:'.11~~1 ~~~;J.rl4 irj' n: JDsi~: ~·i= 5 \~~101.4: ,. ff;u 1~ ~: ~ llJ 't~ "'t P-1a mt !R:+,.., II~~~, ,~omt 1~1:.•rn,l~IM '·•· 114l• Mn. 3• ff\~ 1~ ' '' Ir M .IJ ~ ' " \':I ..w .M~ , ~ ~.._ ~!?+. .. fol"'"" nt •urti /' E"'ii:'' in I µi::: ''fU MM!t .t!d SI ~I \) Sftit+ W htrl J11 1" I\> '6';11' tll'IH ~· • li>o ult •w+ \\ ~owl:;! 1Ur1 ,? Kl In jMlhl11 ~ .o:r M01 11 J n -,... ,, 111c k'J u "w 41\\-'-1n11M1 . 11 l • J' + \' Pi!l .. ,. •y;:_,,. ,d.on Iii •111~ ~U ":~t, :,.41 11 •1, Hl' U -\1lf" te ~ 1•.._ lJ~ J&t~!, i; :,,.1~1 . jJ ,!tt " lft+' ltt~tn "' tr"'" I• "•t1iol. Iii rnNY 1.11 1~ L ": 51v.t ~;.,~~\'V.n '" ••~ /j" JA-* J Cnl"ot •·• ilOD 11f" J1 tlJ t I I • y r: ,, ~ ,, L " ~" ~~ t o t~ ~:ii "" "' "'" ~~ ~" .:i ""' ""' Nlhr Si. ·~ • •• Nwsr •• Nwst ""' ... Nr!S "" N "' _,, E.11<~• "" ... ' I All• l Om "' 4 C•ll J S"r . "' r ,., . " . " 10 Mt 11 '!IC 'l " . " 14 "" 15 C•~ "' 11 ll" 'I "' l Trn y :.~~1 1l t'' ,1,~tr llFi.Mi 1,1• 111 Gen .20 Gvo I.I» •. ., .... 'II Pldu11 • lldtl .tO 11 loll 1\:o ''I' i.10. I Ir¥ .U St111d .75 "l'•r ·""' ,, , .. 1 ivt rt,,.Tlr .if: 1tem11 .25 •f'-'ftt AO ,,,,.w '·U r:r~· 111 ... ri.11 .:in wmnt l .O<I Ya':''. •V) ·u~. ~ r..Mf 1.10 ilMo "# 11,,,.~ ' I M 3, IMI •-•S """I·" OMjf .It 1,, " ·"f ;,,~~'. s .,1/'ri2 ··~ • .. M"""1, M11th 27, 1'11 IC Monday's Closing Price~mplete New York Stock Exchange List .... ... ·-----------· C•I Nle9 &.-C... Ciiio Trading Lags; Market Lower Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List rrlil l.C• ti (oel .AO NA Ml! .SM NAm Piii I NoA R I.'° NG.All: pl •li E Al.kpl 1.35. ::!t Vt .tt II t ll 111:111 0: GI I.It NllG1pr I.to N ln1'5 I.! NONIGI I· ···~· . NoH Iii il.U No 1.70 ,,.,1 .,., J.60 No! l"w 11 7 aorll'ltlt•t E Ol'l~f' 1 111.~ ... 5 NW11Alrl .4$ ··•111 1.• Nwst 11 .2Sd Nwll llld WI Nw111111 •.10 Nwtl n1!C 5 NWM\11 ,)Sd Nwsi /' 2.10 Nor111 o II'> N01sm 2n k ""11 ,, 1.'° NV CO UI ~k l!IC .16 .~u·r· ·" Ult• .l~l'I (f(I,, ti ' °"'''' l.60 OC.tPIPI 1.1, ~'""'' ... '"" l' 1.t1 111 d I.Sot E pl t ~ Pwtl '·'° I• ·,t l•.l=: l.l1 Ok GEtf .IO •lfNl.o 1.!i u~r· M :fc11L .79 1111 .lo\ 1 "!~I 1,)0 It I CO 1 ulbor<I M 1 "'"'~ :i" II 1:1 ,, . nd 6.0 ,.ttG11 1.12 I*• <.•t \, .. , PacP11rl . .0 '"fwr I ..,. Pie wit o1.ir Pt .. I.JO Pat Tlt1 ~ P1lm I n ,.,l'I Am Su PM •'" rs Ptnhdl 1 Pa.ere . P1rt11 .t P1r• .. t1 1,56 Ptrk"tfl 1~ ,.,,b G/·'-Pt1111 111lr PtnfitY 1\Y. l"tnDl.1. . l't11n !'ru t ,.11111,.L 1.~ ""L tl •. 10 , "r ... PL D t .IO PL ti t,40 P PL ol •.W Ptnnwl 1.10 P11wl pf 1.10 Ptfll'llDll .to Pe111ID! 1.ll' PtOPI D 1.10 PoeP<>t 2.1' p-l(o 1 P,r11l11EI .t1 "'' Inc l.lD P1ll11<.0I .IO PtlerPI 1.)3 Pt1r l1 St .to Ptlrolflt .l4 Petri pt 1.)7 P1lr1C 1.S6d Pllier .401 Pnt lO 0 1.10 '"°llEI lj~ Phi Elof " Pn EI of 7.15 Pnll ll Pf 1 P nEI 111 t,.0 PllllSUI l.to Pllllh~M 1.Jt PllitMt r11I oi Pnltlpaln .16 ,.1111 lnd Ill I "111111 1.20 Pn l'J/\H .IO ,.l(~Wi)l 1111! PllKING 1.'l• P llltbrY I U P lonG11 .IJ P ltntt I .61 Pi1tFor1 .10 Pltt1t0fl .t.Oa Pi.11 A:ltrth P lt Yb¥ .06tl PletlfY .12 ll'oll lOld .:IZ Porlt< .to =:~&'l1 l~ POllllC.h F 1 '"J""' ' Pol I pl t\la Pol 111 t.o.1 ~J1 II~ l~ ,.,IJffllnd .60 "~"" ti ·'° "t' GI 1.Y, ,., 1t11 .lO Pu co1 1.11 ,.S •G ,,6' ' \' . ' . . DAILY r!LOT JJ DAILY PILOT Monday, March 27, 1q72 U~I .,...,_.. CAMPUS MURDER SUSPECT MAR LOWE BUCHANAN Haney Wyckoff (R) Murdered in Dormitory Roo m Campus Gripped By Death Fears , Champagne. AN1MaLo;c Sales Up In ~France REIMS, France tAP) -The strictly controlled area of eastern France that is the home of champagne sold a record 116 million bottles last year, 13.9 percent more than in 1970, the Champagne Wine Committee has announced. Bubbly rac ked u P Jm~ ~PADDY'~ A'>t.ffP, s1.rr llE f01i'60T. pressive sales increases at 'T"O TURIJ OFF fME. 'SOUND.• home -the French are b.Y far ----------the largest consumers -and . in all export markets except the United States. The committee noted with alarm that American sales dropped by about 750,000 bot· tJeg in 1971 compared with the previous year, and said it had Loyalty Da y Set commissioned a major market WASHINGTON (AP) CORVALLIS, Ore (UPI) - An 6minous reminder of the fear that descended on Oregon state University campus dur- ing a· one-week period last fnonth can be seen on every dormitory room d o o r -a newly-ipst.alled double lock. research study from a New P r e s i d e n t Nixon has York firm. designated May 1 as Loyalty the evening or Feb. 3 when a Britain remains the leading Day 1972 and asked Americans freshman coed was struck on export client for champagne lo "pause as a nation to ask the head with ·a piece of· con-sales of 7.3 million bottles last . ourselves how w_e can live our crete while walking to h'er yearj marking a rise of a loyalty better." residence hall. The second million botUes in one year. The proclamation, requirfd coed was attacked three The United States dropped by a congressional resolution nights later whllfi in the base· to fourth with · 3.7 million passed in 1958, urged ap- ment snack rl)Clm o( her dorm. behind' Italy, 6.6 million, and propriate ceremonies in , !Fhe fear -was not dispelled even· last week with the arrest Of a 17-year~ld male ·student charged with the knife slaying of Nancy Diane Wycko(f, 18, in Twa other "attacks'' were Belgium, 4.5 million. schools and other locaMons r,eported durfug the next two There were 84 bottles ex· and called uppn officials to weeks, including one on a ported to Sudan, and 960 got display the flag on all govern- male student, but they· proved throUgh the blockade t o ment buildings. Rhodesia, Nixon's proclamation said to be false. h 1 And 756 bottles cheered up Loyalty Day "is in a sense With Bue anan apparent Y sci·entists 1'n French antarct1·c 11 I t t" ~ ruled out as a suspect in the stations. equa Y m Po r an as T w· o a t ta.ck11 first two attacks, the cases re-___________ I_n_d_,ep_e_nd_e_nc_e_D...:•Y:._· ___ -= remain unsolved main open and the increased security has become a and .f tt c r e a s e d wrmanent part of campus •eri!rl.ffl has be· life. Mme a perman• rr and when the other at- t t I · tacks are cleared up, sChool ~ par 0 cam• officials say · the a~tional pu• life. vigilance will not be relaxed. ~ Doors to dorm rooms· an had normal key Jocks prior to the her third-floor dorm roo m Wyckoff slaying, but t h e s e Feb. 8. Two earlier attacks have been suflplemented with have not been solved. chain ,locks. District Attorney J a me s And the locks are being Brown says he will ask that taken seriously by t h e tbe youth, Marlowe James students who, for the most Buchanan, or Lake Oswego, part, did not bother to lock Qre., be tried in adult court . thei r doors at night. ,:The cleancut, slightly-built Another change has been the ·Buchanan was ... U:eshman .•. a~sigrirp~n.t, of personnel to be majl.5ring in ele'ctronlcs and on dUiy 24-hours a day at electrical engineering and residence hall desks and the earned a straight A record requirement that v i sitors during his first term at OSU. check in at the desk and be He also was a second·floor esco'rted by a dorm resident resident of Poling Hall, the ·while in.t~ building.· . coed dorm where M i s s In add1t1pn, campus security WycJwU Ji~e(I. . of~icers ate making periodic ··'l'he-s~ying_,of Miss y;yckpff....-Ch~.ks of the exterior doors Wil! pr~.M by 8 few da YS ·le_admg to the do_rms to make by nonfatal attacks on two s~re they remai n locked at other coeds, but Brown says rught. Buchanan Js not considered Jl The aU.ac,b on the three ouspe"' ~· tbose incirients. . coeds ~ave l>rought renewed ~ ; ~ · . "t.., • complapltl about tbe coed The · f, 0 st attackt GCcurred dorm J)!llicy, a plan whereby · . men ana Women students live Therapy Program Endorsed Orange Coast College has received official accreditation by the American Medical Association for its two-year in· halation therapy study course. The endorsement makes OCC graduates in that field eligibl~ for the National Registry Examination after completing an additional year of clinical experience. "AMA approval should give our program a real boost." said Mrs. Nell Woodward, chairman of the OCC division of consumer a·nd h e a I t h services. "The prestige of this paramedical specialty i s enhanced because it meets na· ti onal standards set by the AMA." in the same .residence haU on alternate floors. School officials say they have no intention of doing away with the coed dorm plan despite the charges from· off. campus sources that the policy encourages immorality. HERBERT L. MILLER TIRE CO. INC. or ·Angr y Mayor T ackles Trains Moretti Asks Noise Bill t'ORT VALLEY, Ga. (UPI) -Mayor Paul Reehling says trains of the Southern Railway have blocked grade crossings in this town for as long as 27 minutes. He has threatened to use a ~ulldozer to Stop the trains 1f the problem isn't cleared pp soon. J. E, Sims, d I v Is ion superintendent for Southern Railway, called the ma yor's statement the "first complaint of unusual trouble." t•we are trying --to ret in touch with the mayor aMd see what, if anything, can be done," Sims said. The mayor said he did not want to obstruct trains in any way but he warned the railroad that he might put a discarded bulldozer across the tracks and statio n an armed policeman on it if the city and the railroad can't work out a 5'Wll:ion. Reehling said blocked cross· lngs hav e made·Jocal residents late ..for work and school for years and at times have held up ambuJances and other emergency vehicles. A few years ago the city built a sec- ond fire station so there would be one on each side of the tracks. The tracks run through the center of Fort Valley. a to\vn of about 10,000 persons. Reehling said trains ha ve repeatedly violate<! the city·s Ordinance which sets three minutes as the limit any crossing can be blockM. SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) - Assembly Spea ker Bob Moret· ti , (0-Van Nuys) has urged 1 U.S. Senate subcommittee to ''do nothing to stall" the California Legislature's efforts to cur b noise pollution. Moretti, testifying before a subcommittee on air and water pollution, said legisla· tion pending in Congress would handcuff sta te en· forcement programs. VOTE FOR I P. D. "DEE" COOK I x I THE ONLY PR IOR NEWPORT .BEACH COUNCIL EXPERIENCE * Ind epe ndent *Qualified From * Ex perienced ·c a ndidate Dist. #7 * "I 11Will be a full time Councilman"· * "I will be · immediately productive;, NEWPORT BEACH CITYWIDE ELECTION APRIL • > • ~· IO, (!. ' ' . 11 ., • The college's inhalation thera py program has been in existence for three years and is one of less than a dozen such programs offered by Californ ia community col· Jeges. SANTA ANA · 209 Bush St. ·.• .. ·547.5695 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA OCC's program includes cl asses in respiratory physiofogy, chemist r y, m i crobiology, maintenance and operation of equipment. pa tient care and advanced respiratory therapy. · I ~;} : f~~~~~:I~ :1 it1'11i~.i 1·,..j.~1' 'Ph. 642,~8~ PLACENTIA · 144 So. Bradford 1 lll vr k S Q'f(knpmnn . 524-9280 I See by Today's Want Ads e TffE SHAPE of thinga to come? ·68 V\\1 bug, This one·s an <1u1omatic, has A1'.1 1FM and has had a recent engine overhaul. It's in excell{'nt condition, e 'S A1AGNlFIQUE! That's this French Provintial din· ing room table, It's only $60. e 0\1/N A BTG YARD? Th@n you llhould own this Kerry Blue Terrier, too. Hl'!'s 11 months old and needs a largl'! place to play, FI RST NATIONAL BANK A bank is the best place to get home· improv~m~nt money. The terms ·are liberal, tl;i~ interest is low. So if you rt family ne~ds more room (or rooms) maybe our money could help. Just stop by the SCFNB office nearest you and talk to one of our loan officers·. In the Newport area : BAYSI DE OFFICE COSTA "MES~ OFFICE 1090 Bayside Drive 230 East 17~~ Street HAR BOR VIEW OFFIC E 1666 MacArthur Blvd: SUPERIOR OFFICE 396 Superior Avenue Phone 642-9511 WESTCLIFF OFFICE 1501 Westcliff Drlve Phone 642-311 1 Phone 642-1141 Phone 642-1660 ORANG E COUNTY AIRPORT OFFICE 2001 Michelson Drive Phone 833-3111 ' ( Phone 644-851 1 Other Orange County oillces4n Cypr6as ,,Oana Poln~ Fullerton (3), Huntington 'Beach (2), Laguna Hillo, San Clemente, San Joan Capistrano, Sbrtt; 'Ana, Seal Beach, Tustin and Westfrtin.ster. Member R>I C I j 1 l , I ' I I th • CI to gu La di re bu ca to ty. Re w at a Sa M L F MA 'pediti Chari a long pines "cave The discov south south Agee rice, c foods Ame Fox, chief tional peditio been c 2,000 y As tias sh 24 me limes mount The Cathcli L p Th swi frij111 Sa tu Geor A free du ty. bri dres Th was ject Lire I I Laguna Bea~h EDITION -. .... • . voe. 65, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1972 ··- Incumbents Invite Selv~s to Laguna Laguna Beach city council incumbents Roy Holm and Charlton Boyd lnvited themselves to a candidates' forum 11ponsored by the Women's Republican Club ofi Laguna Beach Friday afternoon to air their views along with the invited guests, ca"didales Fran Haller, Harry Lawrence and Beth Leeds. The !lixth can- didate, Richard Carr, was not persent. Holm told the 30 women present, "I regret that I was not invited to attend, but I feel you should hear from all the candidates, I understand it Is your policy to invite only candidates of your own par· ty. In my case I ha ve been a registered Republican since I was 21." Boyd said later' he had not received an iovitation to speak at the forum, but had asked for and been given time. The meeting chairman later said the mix·UP in invitations was an "oversight." The otherwise brief and uneventful session was livened by a sharp exchange between candidate Boyd and Mrs . Marie Ware Mayer, president or the Laguna Beach Taxpayers Association, regarding Mrs. Mayer 's charges that Holm and Boyd were responsible for fiscal prob- lems arising from the Main Beach purchase. Boyd pointed out that the beach purchase was made by the council that preceded his and Holm's election. but ad· ded, "Thank goodness we purchased it when we did ; otherwise we never would have had it." He also had some sharp remarks to make about flyers being distributed by Mrs. Mayer warning against use of Hous· ing and· Urban Development (HUD) funds. "I don 't think people should be motivated by fear," said Boyd, ''by these things with squiggly monster signs . . . " Mrs. Mayer also zeroed in on candidate Leeds, who said she has been a registered Republican for 12 years but recently had changed to registration as an iiidependent in order to "disassociate myself from differences and divisions." "If you identify yourself as an in- dependent , would you also identify yourself al a Communist?" asked Mrs. Mayer. "Miss Leeds replied, "I don't really know what a Communist is. I grew up in Laguna and went through school here. I only know about what I was taught here." "Do you believe in communal living?" Mr s. Mayer persisted. Miss Leeds replied that she thought •iwe should all live together in harmony in our homes and our towns and on our planet." Candidale Halter reiterated her former criticism of "hidden '' laxes, noting ''Tax- es are a fact of life, necessary to support city services. They don't have to be disguised as a waste management tax or a construction lax. You can't call the same money two different names and ex- pect It to double. Mrs. Haller said she does not support the use of federal money for hou sing . ''We do not need low cost housing in Laguna Beach," she said, noting, "all of us have our limitations. Some people are more motivated, some would rather si t back and wait for help." Criticizing "young, healthy students . . -' Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS Forum getting food stamps" she added, "Hard work never h~rt ~nyone. ·· Lawrence again accused Holm and Boyd as responsible for what he termed "four ye3rs of fi scal chaos" and said the problem might be solved by someone who understands these matters , citing his own business ex perience. \Vilh regard to the Main Beach purchase. liolm pointed out it had been accomplished in a series of open city council 1ncctings. by unanimous votes and \Yith no public dissent, and that pur- chase of the t1vo nev; fire stations by the same non·profil co rporation pro-- cedurc had been rccived with no com· plaints. Youth Leaps From Cliff To Escape Drug Arrest What's In The Bag? The Easter bunny probably thought she was seeing double Sunday at Bluebird Park. There were about 30 t wins toddling or scampering about. The occasion was a premiere glimpse of the bunny for the Saddle back Twins Club. Here Runcli Wiebers of Dana Point aQd sister Marka, 21!.i:, see what goodies are available. Lindbergh Expedition Finds Tribe of 'Cavemen' MANILA (UPI) -A scientific ex· ·peditlon that included famed aviator Charles A. Lindbergh has discovered that a Iong·lost tribe in the wilds of the Philip- pines may be the first known living "cavemen." The tribe is the Tasadays who, until discovered last June in a dense forest in south Coto Bato Province about 500 miles south of Manila . had been living a Stone Age existence. They had no knowledge of rice , corn, tobacco, sugar, salt and other foods known by other tribes in the area. American anthropologist Robert B. was chief anthropologist for this month's expedition, said so far as he has been able to find out no other existing culture lives in caves. "This is of major scientific importance, Lynch said. "Some people have used caves for storage purposes, but this is the first time we know that a natural cave is used for basic dwelling purposes." Another member of the expedition, which worked its way tnto the Tasaday . by helicopter and on foot, was Lindberg, a director of the Tanamin Company that financed the trek. * * * * * * Beach Attendance Spar~e But Rescue Activity High Beach attendance was extremely low as the Easter vacation period began this weekend along the South Coast, but res- cue activities-along clUfs and at aa- tncreased nonetbeleu. Sin ciemente lifeguards reported very low beach atteidlnce despite one bolm7 day over the weekend. "' Lt. Hank Barnes said only a handful of rescues were reported on Sunday as at- tendance dropped because of chilly weather. Saturday, however, was warm and sunny. Two cliff resc ues were logged over the two-day period-one of them involving an injured man at San Clemente State Park. State lifeguards Sunday afternoon res- cued K.C. Pickering, 23, of Yorba Linda, .after the man fell from bluffs in the southerly portion of the city. Pickering was t,reated for back in- juries at South Coast Community Hos.. pital. On Saturday morning a teenage girl required a boost from the face of a cliU in Sooth Laguna. Lisa Edwards, 15, Of 9 N. Encino, Three Arch Bay. was taken from the face of Whaler's Rock by a team of San Clemente lifeguards. The girl , spokesmen said, was not hurt. Boating problems also were reported over the weekend as two cabin cruisers required rescue services. Sunday morning a 2l·foot cabin cruiser began sinking at its slip in Dana Harbor and. harbor patrolmen were summoned to a~ist. Spokesmen said the $2,000 vessel was taking on water quickly and her decks were awash when they arrived to begin pumping the huU out at about 9:30 a.m. Owner William Horsman of 170 Canyon Acres. Laguna Beach, said that he had been instal.ling a new bilge pump and the mechanism apparently began leaking in the morning hours. Damage to the craft was set at about $1,000, patrolmen said. In another boati ng incident, San Cl~ mente guards Saturday towed a disabltd cruiser back to port after it lost both its rudders off San Mateo Point south or the city. The n.foot craft owned and oper1t.d by C.11. Breodinitr of Pico Rivera wu towed to P.!!i• Hlrllor fi>r repaJrs. Pat to Accept Bust of Nixon In San Clemente Mrs. Pat Ni:xon will visit San Clemente April 7 to formally accept the $8,000 portrait in bronze purchased by residents of the city, and dozens of celebrities are scheduled to join her. PulJllc ceremonies will start at 9:30 a.m. in Old Plaza Park, with film personalities, local dignitarie~ and local and state legislators attending. Paul Presley, chairman of the Presiden t's Project Committee, said the nation's first lady will leave for another appearance in Arizona later that day. Television and radio personality Johnny Grant will be master of ceremonies at the event. San Clemente high school musicians also will participate as well as fourth, fifth and sixth graders from San Clemente schools. The bronze bust of President Nixon was crafted by Corona del Mar sculptress Edith Brand and was purchased from her after a months.Jong fund drive held in San Clemente. Public ceremonies were first planned for the Western White House comple:x, but later were changed. The President, who is rumored to be plann ing a trip west in coming weeks, will not accept the gift because of custom, Presley said today. Fox , a longtime Philippine resident and chief anthropologist of the Philippine Na· tional Museum , said after the June ex· pedition the Tasadays appear to have been cut off from civilization for 1,500 to 2,000 years. A second expedition earlier this month has shown another important fact -the 24 members of the tribe live in three limestone caves about 600 feet up a mountainside deep in the forest. Hair Roling OK Laguna Hopefuls Will Resume Speaking Stints The Rev. Frank Lynch, a Roman catholic priest from New York City who Laguna Swim Pool Available The Laguna Beach High School 1wlmming pool will be open dally frQ!ll 1 to 5 p.m.,lhls week through Saturday. Recreations DI rector George Fowler announced today. Admission for all ages will be free and there wlll be lifeguards on duty. "Come dressed to swim and bring • towel ," said Fowler. "No dressing rooms will be available." The Easter vacation pool opening was arranged as a cooper1tive pro- ject of the city's Recreation and LJrtguard Departments, h• added. ACLU Appeal Nixed by High ·Court WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court let stand today a lower court ruling which permits a state to expel or punish public school students whose hair length exceeded limit! prescribed by school of- ficials. The vote was S.l. The American Civil Liberties Union asked the court to act because the lower courts are divide. The appeal was turned down without elaboration and over the dissent of Justice~illiam 0. Douglas. The Supreme Court has never agreed to hear a case concerning school dress codes and punishment ot students who violate them. The ACLU appeal Involved seven students from Utah, New Mexico, Colorado and Oklahoma. Last September, the U.S. Circuit Court In Denver upheld school authorltlts. The appeals court !aid complaints based on nothing more than school rtgulatlons of l\air length do not "directly and sharply Implicate basic constitutional values." The Circuit Courb in San Franclsoo, Philadelphia and Cincinnati • also bave backed school officials, but four other Circuit Courts -in Boston, Chicago, St. L<>uis and RichmondJ Va . held students have a coostitutlonal right to wear long hair. The ACLU said : "The issue will con. tinue to be raised so Jong as school boards persist in regulating the hair length of their male students and thole students insist that the Constlt11tion af- fords them the right to make such decis)ons for themselves. The ·court should resolve these competlng claims." The seven students directly involved were Terry Freeman and Vyron Randall Ostler of Davis County, Utah: Charles Simmons or Utah county, Ulah: Al Willie or Hobbs. N.M., Gregory Randall Cran90n of La Junta , Colo., and Gary Christmas or El Reno. Okla. Prior to the Denver court's ruling, U.S. Dist. Judges A. Shermlln Christensen o! Salt Lake City. William E. Doyle o[ Denver and Lu\her L. Bohanon or (See .BAlll. race II f • A week's respite , Laguna Beach cll1 ii candidates will resume their public speaking engagements April 4, when the Lail;una Beach Coordinating Council will present the six council hopefuls in a "Meet the Candidales" night in city hall council chambers. C.ndldales wlil be asked to respond to the question, "What do you consider to be the most important issue In the cam- paign'!" Following a five-minute statement by each candidate, questions from the au. dience wlll be invited. Thi• will be the last major public forum before the April 11 election. On April S, the candidates have been Invited to address the regular Chamber of Commerce breakfast meetin& and on April 6. • they will appear at two assemblies 1t the high school, at 9,25 a.m. and 10'20 a.m. Following lhe high dool forums , 1pon!Ored by the as.11xlated student body, the candidates "111 be invited to tour lhe acbool. • r ......... y tll•t Tel""41fto HAS HEART SEIZURE Mrs. Dita Beard r Dita Beard's Collapse Hazes ITT Inquest DENVER (UPI) -A Senate hearing at the bedside of hospitalized lobbyist Dita D. Beard, aborted by the sudden collapse of the witness. has left the Senate Judiciary Committee with few answers and new qu@tie9s about White House in- volvement in a giant conglomerate's financial aid for the Republican National Convention . Sen. Philip D. Hart ([).Mich.), who led a panel of six senators into a stuffy hospital lounge Sunday to take sworn testimony from Mrs. Beard, called off the hearing after the 53·year-old lobbyist liuffered a heart seizure. Her collapse came in the first day or her bizarre encounter at the Rocky Mountain Osteopathic Hospital with the traveling delegation from Congress. The senators were planntng to return to Washington today, and the committee is scheduled to resume the hearings Wednesday with Harold Geneen, presi- dent of the lnternational Telephone and Telegraph Corp., as the witness. Mrs. Beard's doctoc said she "survived her attack of acute angina pectora" but would be monitored carefully for the ne1t several days. Before the seizure, Mrs. Beard egain denied repeatedly that she had written a memorandum to her superior linking the l'IT pledge to help San Diego underwrite the costs of hosting the GOP 'foQvention wl\h the JusUce DepaJQnenl's out-of- court settlement last year of a huge an- titrust action against the conglomerate. But, under questioning, the woma n acknowledged lhat she had written por- tions of the memor11ndum that col umnist Jack Andenon published lhis monlh in- cluding a passage In which she referred to "that call from the White l:louse." ''That call." ~1rs. Beard explained Sun· day, "'as an Inquiry by somrone in the Executive Mansion -she was not sure who -to W. n. ~1erriam. her supervisor in the Washln&ton office, "wanting to know all 1bout this commitment, this un- <S.. LOBBYIST', Pa&< %1 Raids Net ;33 Suspe~ts In Laguna By BARBARA KREIBICH Of lllt 0•11)' f'llol Slit! A lS.year·old Huntington Beach boy who Juped from a :JS.foot cliU in an at. tempt to escape arrest was among 33 narcotics offenders rounded up by Laguna Beach police over the first weekend of the Easter holiday. Except for a couple or bookings on suspicion of possession of marijuana or other drugs for sale, !he arrests all in· volved small a~unts of narcotics, said Sgt. Neil Purcell. The yout h, who escaped his spectacular leap with only minor injuries, was one of a trio of teenagers spotted by officers about 5: 15 p.m. Sunday, sitting on a ledge about 35 feet above sand-covered roCkt at Victoria Beach, apparently smoking marijuana, Purcell said. As the officers approached and an- nounced, "You're under arrest," the boy shouted, "Not me!" and leaped off the cliff, landing on the rocks below and limping off through the water. • He was apprehended about three- quarters of a mile away, at Diamond Street, by now doubled over and com- plaining of back pain. Officers summoned an ambulance and the youth was tak en to South Coast Com· munity Hospital where he was examined and held for observatiqJI for several hours before being released to his parents, who today told Purcell be Ls ••very sore." A small amount or marijuana allegedly was found in his possession and be was booked in absentia, pending his recovery, police said. In another Victoria Beach area in- cident, officers arrested a 16'-year-old couple at 10 p.m. Saturday after spotting them, totally nude, embracing in a park· ed car and also allegedly smoking mari· juana . They are charged with possession of the drug and indecent exposure. The remaining arrests for possession of pills and marijuana ranged from Woodland Drive to South Coast Highway, (See LEAP, Page Z) Orange Cout Weather Sunshine 11 n d temperatures ranging up to 70 degrees are fore- cast for the Orange Coast area Tuesday. Temperatures tonight will drop Into the 303 and 40s. INSIDE TODAY Aerospace 1m.anufacturer3 are obout to plunge into competi· tion for the bigge3t space con- tract li kely tn con1e their way for the next decade -the $5.5 billion &pace shuttle progra1n. See stor11, Page 10. \., M. l•Y• 1 INtlllt It Ctllft;r"I• I C1tt1il\N U•'f Ctll'lltl II CrtM-rll IS 0.1111 Hlllttt t ••tttf'ltl "... ' l•lffitlllin111! tt fllMMf lt·ll '" lllt ltK .... lot HtNMIH 14 A111t Lellftn 11 Mt\'lt\ tt Htlltlltl "'''" 4 Or111" Ct11111Y t SYl\'11 ,.,,., It '""' , .. ,. Sftiotl Mttt11t1 1~11 T1 ..... 111t11 ,. Tl'lt<111t1 H 'Nt1t111r • ,~-·"" f"WI ''°'' w•l'll ...., ' • I I I Smit}l: No Cont1·.~lfu1g . Of Airli11e ' WASHINGTON cUPI ) -c. Arnholt Smith, a longtime friend of President Nixon and one of hi.s financial backers. to!ay denied charges of several airlines that he continues to C<Jntrol a California commuter air line despite a government order to sell it. Smith, chairman of the U.S. National Bank and president of the multi·million dollar Westgate California CorpOration, told the Civil Aeronauttcs Board : "It is my position that all step!! that could reasonably have been taken to ac· com'p!ish the divesture hav~ been taken and neither I nor any entity controlled by me controls Golden West Airlines." Golden West is baSed in Newport Beach . In t.he Golden West case, the CAB issued an order in 1969 rejecting Smitb's proposed acquisition of Los Angeles Airways, a helicopter company con• necting airports in the Los Angeles area, and the acquisition of Aero Commuter, a California air taxi company already con· trolled by Smith. The order had the effect of forcing Smith's corporation to dispose of the air taxi company which is now called Golden West Airlines. However, Airwest, Pacific Southwest Airlines and Western Air Lines argued that Smith actually still controlled Golden West via an intricate financial ar· rangement wlth Smith's other companies. In testimony before the CAB, however, Smith said that the "United States Na· tional Bank continues to be a major lender to Golden West." He also said that because the air line has not reached a point "where we have absolute assurance of the collectlbility of our Joan. we continue to monitor the operation through analysis of its monthly results and discussions with its manage· ment where we feel they are desi rable." Sm ith said, however, that this was being done "out of necessity and as a matter-of sound banking practice, and not by choice." He said he was looking forward to the day when this activity will no longer be required to protect the bank's in- vestm~t. Smith was mentioned in an article in· Lite Masazine last week, which claimed the administration tampered with jusUc-e in San"Diego by Slopping an investigation of pPSSible illegal political contributions to President Nixon's 1968 electioD ~albt'' paign. I" According to the arti cJe, the fund!_ Wtire aIJecedJy funneled through some of Safitbls many corporations. From Pagel LEAP ... with a good deal ot activity in the beach ereas, Purcell said. Laguna Beach lifeguards reported an unll!Ually quiet weekend, with a chilly 58- d~e ocean temperature discouraging water enthusiast. A light crowd took to the sands Saturday, guards reported, but Sunday's overcast weathe r was what they termed "strictly a brisk-walk on the beach day." Lifeguard activity was limited to a few minor first~aid calls and c~ecking out an unfounded report that a low-flying plane had crashed. Weekend traffic in the Art Colony was heavy, as anticipated. A number of minor accidents and four injury accidents, none serious, were handled by police. A Placentia man was taken to South Coast Commun ity Hospital · Saturday evening for emergency treatment after a car in which he was a passenger was in- volved in a collision on Temple Hills Drive at 5 p.m. Police said the man, Arthur William Appleby, 29, was slightly hurt when driver Robert Allen Short, 30, of 960 Park Ave .• lo.St control of his car on a downhill curve, crossed the center line and struck a vehicle driven by Leigh Hill Harbold, 49, of 2008 Donna Drive. OU.NGI COAST 1.1 DAILY PILOT Tll• Oren11• Coal! DAILY PILOT, with wMd1 11 UU'!'lbl~ lll~ Newi-Pres1, Is l)Ubl11~ bV 1111 O••ri;• (0111 Publl1lllng COml!•nv. S!PI• '"'" edillM• •• , 11ub!l11!ed, Mond•V 11\•0Ullll Friday, tor Co11a M,11, Newi>0rt Beach, Munll11gton Be•Ch/Foun11in Vellty. L•tun1 Besch, lrvin,·S~dOl~b~t~ 1nd S~n Clrmen!•/ Sin Juan C~pl1!ren~ A sin.QI& rtglOna! l!dl!lon h publitll!'d sa•uro~vs end Sundtv,. Tht prlnciul ~u1t1l1h!no ol1n! 11 u JJO We$t &ty S1ree1, Co111 Mtu, c~1iror11t~. 91616. R.ob1r+ N. W11d Pr!'5k!ent er.ci llublot~•r J•,k R. Curlty Vice Prtsk11t11 1nd Gen1r1 1 M1n1Qr' Thom11 Kte •il l!O!'O• Thome1 A. M~rplunt M•n•o1rio Eo11or Ch1rl•s H, Looi ll iekt•d P. N~I! A»f1t1n1 M&l\ttlnt fd1Jor1 Leq1111• hoeh Offic.1 222 Forts! .Av111u• M1 ili 119 Addr111 : P.O. 101 '''· t26l2 Othr OHien C&ttt Mcu: UO We.11 81v ~t'"' M1wPOrt Befell: 1l3J ~Port &ovltv••O HuMI~ e~..cn: 1111r •••do e~vlt><t•d $1fl Cl•l'l'ltl'tlt: ~ Nor!ll Er G1111lno Rt•I Ttf•pho111 (7141 •42-4)21 Cl••lfled Ad¥erti1lng 642·5671 Lat••• hKll All Dtportmtflh t "T•l•phtflt 4t4·9466 CllPfrlOht, 1'12. Ortf!CI• C0<iit PllClll&f\1119 COt!'li!'tll'I'. MO nt-...s 11o•l1s. Ul\lltr1tton1. •l1orfel ltlllftt or tehtfl!ltlfltn!I llt1'1l11 f!ll V tie •tl!lroducftl wl!f'IO\ll 1peslel pt•· inktlon ot cot1vr11111 oWl'ttf. ~: lltclM CllU "°'119f N ld ti (Olli Mu1, (1!UM11l1, Svb.tC1i>t!Oll DI' c11rrlt,. U.'5 ll'!!Ol'ltllffi bl' m•ll ll IJ monllllfl l'P\ll!ttrv OtflH'ltllel't\ 0 ,'5 f"'Olllll! .... , UPI Ttl111llot1 Nearly Bad Trip Lucky thing for this Rio de Janeiro bus driver that there wasn't more r oom between lanes. People gathered to marvel at the position of this bus after it careened off a safety railing and landed between two supports on this highway overpass. No one was injured. Laguna Imports Newport Soil for Main Beach Par Ii When Laguna Beach's Main Beach Park is developed , some c:>f its greenery will be sproutinl{ in genuine Newport · Beach soil, Laguna Beach City Manager La wrence Rose revealed today. In response to questions as to why ~irt Is t?eing epread in the .area , where Thurston School ·~"' .1 . ~ef eats Capo Spelling T earn A Laguna Beach spelling team that trained for two months on polysyllabic words has defeated Marco Forster lntennediate School of San J u an Capistrano in a spelling meet. The 12-member team from Thurston Intermediate School won the cham- pionship Monday night by scoring 156 points to the opponents' 144 polnl s. Resource teacher Margaret Fox said the winning words a~ the contest were ac· tually easier than many encountered earlier in the contest. First place In the event went to elgh.th grader Stuart . Calderwood, son of UC Irvine English professor J a mes Calderwood. Young Stuart correctly spelled "opium" to eliminate his op- ponent and th en spelled "pageantry" to win first place honors. Jayne Orlowski. a seven!h grader at Thurston , placed second. Babe Ruth Loop Slates Tryouts Tryouts !or the Laguna Beach Babe Rut h Baseball League v.•ill be held April 8 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. for boys aged 13 to 16. The demonstration or skills will take place at the high school athletic field. A second tryout session is scheduled for April 16 for youths missing the first session. . League officials say a limited number of spaces are available on team s this season and the slots will be filled on a first come-first served basis. A birth certificate as proof of age and a $10 registration fee will be required at the tr yout session. Residents wishing to help with team coaching or requiring further information about the league may call Dr. Marlin Kruger at 494.0137. Fourtli Victim Of Crash Dies ' CONGERS. N.Y. IUPl l -A fourth high school student, Thomas Erosse. 14, died today of injuries suffered Friday when a school bus. which authorities said failed to stop at an unguarded railroad crossing, v.·as struck by a freight train. Seven of the 42 teen -agers and the dr iver injured In the tragedy remained in critical condition at Nyack Hospltal today as a result ol the colllsion between the Penn Cen· tral freight train and the schoolbus driven by a moonllghting New York City fireman. beachfront buildings recently we r e demolished, Lawrence explains, "Once lhe buildings ,..,ere do\lt·n. il became necessary to fill in depressions and to protect against drifting of sand across sidewalks and onto the highway. Since !he areas along the highway will become landscaped park. ihe material~ os.ed had to be adaptable for that purpose." f!'herefore , says Rose, Sandy htolJ is being imported from the Newport Beach srea and when summer is over, the fill will be mixed with other soils, nu'ti'ients and mulches to Serve as a borne for trees, shrubs, plants and grasses in the ne\V park. The material now be ing installed, he added, can be compact«! so that dust and sand will not blow or drift and is being landscaped park, the materials used had hold down erosion. Fron• Page I LOBBYIST ..• derwriting" of San Diego's convention costs. Mrs. Beard said Merriam "asked me to explain " and she did -in a memoran· dum that contained about half the language used in the document Anderson published. but made no reference to a link between the antitrust settlement and the convention underwriting. She acknowledi;::ed writing: "I just had a long talk with EJG (E. J. Ge1Tity, vice president of ITI'). I'm so sorry that we got that call from the White House. I thought you and 1 had agreed very th oroughly that under no circumstances would anyone in this office discuss with anyone our participation in the con· ventlon, including me. Other than permit· ting John Mitchell. Ed Reinecke, Bob Haldeman and Nixon besides Wilson, of course no one has known from whom that $400.000 commitment had come." Mitchell is the former U.S. attorney general, Reinecke is lieutenant. gover~or ot California, Haldeman is President NIX· on's top aide and Rep. Bob Wilson (R· Calif.), is a congressman fr6m the San Diego area. Fron& Page l HAIR ... Oklahoma City deferred to school authorities \vhile Judge Howard C. Brat. lo of Albuquerque ruled in disapproving the suspension of the White boy that "the right to wear one 's hair at any length ls an aspect of personal liberty." The ACLU argued In appealing to the Supreme Court Jan. 26 that ''the un· derlying issues posed by hair tregulatlons are profound, for they touch upon the very relatlonshlp between the individual and the state." The ACLU said school officials were Imposing short-hair rules because long· hair is a symbol or dissent, "a badge or defiance of authority ." The appea:l added ; "lt is sought to ' prohibited not because there is anyth · Intrinsically disruptive or distractlntt about it, but, rather, because of what It ts perctlvtd to represent." Aliens Surrender LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Hundreds of illegal allens have surrendered to federal authorities as a result or a new California law -already declared unconstitutional -which prohlbilo employers from know· ingly hiring 1uch persons, immigration officials said today. • Rec Opening Laguna Spring Activity Signups Begin R4Jgl!tration la lJ!lder way at the Laguna Beach Recreation Departmeot for a variety of spring classes designed-to improve art skills, firm up nabby bodies and add a touch of dancing skill to un· trained feet. The courses, costing a modest fee. are offered· at several different times of the daj to enable both working and stay-at· home residents to take part. 'rhe list of classes along with pert inent tnrormation follows. Course are taught at the department, 175 N. Coast High\vay. unless otherWise noted. Further in· formation may be obtained from the department by calling 494-1124 extension 45. Creative dance for children ages 5 to 8 will be taught on Saturdays at 11 :30 a.m. by Jill Sweet beginning Apriol 8. The fee is $5 for 10 lessons. Two ballet classes for children ages 61A1 to 12 \Vil! be taught on Saturdays begin· ing April · 8 for a fee of $6. Intermediate classes start at 9:30 a.m. followed by be· ginning classes at 10:30 a.m. Jazz Dance for ages 14 to adult will be taught on Mon· days at 7 p.m. beginning April 3 at the girls gym at Laguna Beach High School. The fee is $8 for 10 lessons. Womens dance and exercise will be of- fered Fridays ilt 9:30 a.m. beginning April 7 at the Boys' Club. 1085 Laguna Canyon Road. The fee· is $8 for 10 lessons. Guitar classes will be taught by Melanie Panush on Thursdays beginning April 27. Beginning classes will start at 7 p.m. with advanced classes following at 8 p.m. The fee is 55 for five lessons. Tennis lessons will be offered by Robert Isbell at noon on Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Irvine Bowl Tennis Courts beginning April 4 for beginners and May 2 for intermediates. The fee is $6 for eight lessons. Painting for beginners will be offered by Nellie Allen Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10 a.m. beginning April 11. The fee is $15 for 10 lessons. A course in body firming _for women will be taught by Dee Breslin on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10 a.m. beginning April II at Bluebird Park. The fee is $6 for six lessons. Crewel embroidery for beginners \viii be taught. by Connie Rose on Mondays at 7:30 p.m . beginning May 1 with another class on Fridays at 9:30 a.m. beginning May s. The fee is $15 for .six lessons. Laguna Niguel Landscaping OK Extension and revision of a contract to maintain landscaping in the Laguna Niguel Service Area has been (lpproved by the Board of Supervisors. The current contract with Lattirrier Landscaping has been accepted as up to county standards of work. Total cost to the county for all la"ndscaping maintenance in the service area , which is supported by its own ta" rate, is $230 a month, according to Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach. Long Study Session Awaiting Planners Laguna Beach planning commissioners will face what promises to be a lengthy study session when they meet at 7:30 o'clock tonight in city hall council chambers. On the agenda is study of street lighting needs in the area of the new library; review of Planning Director Wayne Moody's proposal for city participation in planning development of the oceanfront area south of Laguna Avenue; continued study of the Planned Residential Dev e Io pm en t (PRO) ordinance; and study of a proposal to return the Woodland Drive area, now zoned M-lA llight industrial) to R·l (single residential) zoning. Est1bllo h S.11 Blcycl1 Trails ~la crame for adults will be taught by f\!ary Worn1ald at Bluebird Park on M~n· days and Wednesdays at 7:30 a.m. begin· niOg April 3. The fee is $9 for six lesson_.s. BegiMing Hatha Yoga for adults will be taught by Jane Rosen at Bluebird Park on Tuesdays and Thursdays al 9:30 a.m. beginning April 4. The fee is $6Aor 'six les3Qns. A sem inar on bac kpacking and survlal will be offered from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 6 for residen ts over 12 years of age. The instructor is Frank Ashley. . Voice and speech de velopment w1ll ~e offered \\led nesdays at 7•30_ p.m. begin· ning April 12. }~ee is $6 for SIX lessons._ Court Won't Re view Orde1· To Desegregate Sa11 Diego WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Supreme Court today declined to review an order that San Diego officials take "reasonab ly feasible steps" to balance the races in all public schools. The court gave no elaboration in unan imously turning down a plea for a hearing filed by the officials Nov. IL The case could have Jed to a ruling on whether raclal imba lance in schools is , of itself . unconstitutional. The challenged order was issued by a state appeals court ln California. The San Diego school district, one of the largest in the nation, has about I28,000 public school children. About 95.200 are white, 16,000 black, 13,600 with Spanish surnames and another .f,000 of other minorities. In 1969 the slate attorney general began the suit, cl aiming racial imbalaoce in several schools violated the con· stitutional rights of minority children and should be corrected. J udge George A. Lazar of San Diego ruled that without ''intended segregation'' school officials do not necessarily ha ve a legal duty to eliminate racial im balance. Last August. he was reversed by a court of appeal. which held "school authorities in California have a con· stitutional duty to take steps, insofar as reasonably feasible , to alleviate racia l imbalance in schools regardless of its cause where the imbalance den ies the minority group equal educational op- portunities." School officials ·appealed in November to the Supreme Court. San Diego officials, In seeking a hear· ing, said: "It is now time to examine the question of pupil rac ial imbalance arising in areas where there was no state irn· posed segregation." Due to.the Supreme Court's not hearing the case, the next step evidently will be a trial in a California court . Dr. Thomas Goodman, superintendent or San Diego schools, said the high court's rullng was expected because of a recent request by California Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger that the hearing be called off. Mrs. Thornton Services Held services were held this morning in Pacific View Chapel for Gwendoline _jl'hornton. former Laguna Beach resident, who died Thursday in a San Gabriel rest home. She was 89. Mrs. Thornton, who recently lived ln Alhambra, was employed with a Laguna Beach architectural firm for many years A native of England, she lived in Orange County for 31 years. She is survived by two daughters, Phyllis Forrest of Alhambra a n d Constance Umsted of 1..-0s Angeles, and a sister, Eva Ray of South Laguna. Rev. Baird Coffin of St. Mary's Episcopal Church, Laguna Beach, of· ficiated at . today's service, which was followed by burial in Pacific View Memorial Park, Newport Beach. Elect I "We agreed three or four \veeks ago to I " go along with the attorney genera , Goodman said. "I think we'll go ah~ad nO\'I with plans \ve 've been developing. We've already presented some alternate plans .'' There will be some addit ional busing, he said. in the plan calling foi-shifts of Caucasian children from school-less h<>us· ing developments and others now in 483 classrooms which are old and must be replaced for earthquake pr otection. Judge Denies Mrs. Thomas Two Motions Judge Charles A. Bauer today denied two motions by attorney Dudley Gray on behalf of Antonia Thomas. The judge refused a change of venue to , Los Angeles County for the convicted murderess of her seven-day.old son four years ago in San Clemente. He also den ied a motion to disqualify all Orange County Superior courts to hear her plea. A week ago, Judge Baue"r refused to release Mrs. Thomas on bail after at· torney Gray argued that his client had been a model prisoner during her four years in the State Institute for \Vomen in Frontera. Deputy District Attorney Alicemaric Stotler continued to oppose Gray's mo- ti on. The district attorney had previously stated, "Mrs. Tlflmas is in state prison where she belongs," and added, "she wa s twice convicted and every appeal filed by Gray in behalf of his client has been re· jected by highe r courts." Grayrs plea is based on a claim that the Orange County District Attorney reneged on a promise allegedly made to him before Mrs . Thomas ' triaJ. He said he had been told that she would not be tric:.:! if she passed the hypnosis and lie detector tests. The promi se '>}'as broken, Gray said again today, when the District Attorney's Office used the evidence handed them in strictest confidence by former Depu ty Public Defender John Bond. The petite, small Filipino woman has passed both hypnosis and lie detector tests. Judge Bauer denied the change of venue and qualification pleas without comment today. Gray said later he hopes to get a date set for a trial on his pleas later today. The trial following today's denials by Judge Bauer will be heard in an Orange County court. Restaurant Has Fire SANTA FE SPRINGS (UPI ~ -Fire caused an estimated $20,000 damage to Wackecn's Restaurant early today. Cause of the blaze. which \'las confined to the kitchen and bar area, was under investigation. DOM RACITI as your Costa Mesa City Councilman Dom R1clttl 1upport1 concepts of. . • better 1choot1 .•. better community .•• bttttr businesses. e S.ic.-cMafvl c .... M•e lnl..-,,,_ • Ct1ttt M .. Cito.., ef CoMMffCO 8 Cotti M°"·Mhp1rt Horbtr L/0111 --t!t9"'btt tf tilt ~.rt! of 4lrMttl'I Cl.ib -lmlllfflttt P11t Pmlittnt • Ho11e,.ry S.,.,.lc• Aw•r4 •Hl,ltwt fer Ovht••''"' Cltl .. •' tltt r .. , -Collete '•rt PTA e CMttt M ... IMvtlfttetfo11 CtM• lllfttH -""" fOf' ...,.. \'*M ,.ttuc rtletlo• n4 ltthfllfl•• • •1t1 Sco11h-111fmb1r 1f tht I-ti•• CtlltMltfffl 1.u..... 110111l11ttl111 end tlMIYl'CI eo111mhtlH1 a ::.':.~ .. Hl1terlcel Se&loty -• Yollth lmpl•}'llltftt s.,.,.1,, •f tltt Hatlltt Arn -Vfc.o Prttld111t a Horher AfM U1IN4 P114 -tw114 • lo, Sco.ift •f A1Mric.1-SC01it·•· colltctlu NMI Hf 111114 l'tl.51111 Campaign Headquarter• at 1840 l\'etoport Blvd. LAST ON THE BALLOT-1st IN CIVIC CONCERN Phone 845·1360 or 548°1313 VOTE TUESDAY, APRIL 11 't I I ( v Ap por ol t sch p a.m Jl(r and p Pre nil ti Cl N'' D~ ' Cq WA Smith Nixon today that com order Smi Bank doll Br told t l•Jt could comp I and n me: co Gol Beach In Issued propo Airwa nectin and th C.llfo !:oiled ihe Smith' lixl c West How Airline thal s l\'e1t ranee In te Smith tlonal lender He a has no absolut our Jo opera ti result!! riient"" Smit being a matt not by He s day w requlr vestme I --- Saddlehaek Today'• Flnal N.Y. Stoeks VOL 65, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1972 TEN CENTS First Lady to Accept By JOHN VALTERZA OI flll D•lty 1'1111 llaff Mrs . Pat Nixon will visit San Clemente April 7 to formally accept the $8,000 portrait in bronze purchased by residents ot the city, and dozens of celebrities are 1cheduled to join her . Public ceremonies will start at 9:30 a .m. in Old Plaza Park, with film personalities, local dignitarie:i end local and state legislators attending. Paul Presley, chairman of the President's Project Committee, said the nation's first lady will leave for another appearance in Arizona later that day. Television and radio personality Johnny Grant will be master of ceremonies at the event. San Clemente high school musicians also will participate as well as fourth, fifth and sixth graders from San Clemente schools. The bronze bust or President Nixon was crafted by Corona de! Mar sculptress Edith Brand and was purchased rrom her after a months-long fund drive held in San Clemente. Public ceremonies were first planned for the Western White liouse complex, but later were changed. The President, who is rumored to be planning a trip west in coming weeks. will not accept the gift because of custom, Presley said today. The local innkeeper said that accordlng to tradition a public gift to the President is never personally received by the Chief Executive while he is in office. Ultimately, the larger-than-life bust "''iii form the local citizens' dona'tlon to A Sniooch for the Bunny The Easter bunny wasn't seeing double Sunday in Bluebird Park at Laguna Beach. The occasion was an outing for members of the Saddleback Twins Clu b with about 30 youngsters on hand for a pre- Easter preview and Mrs. Bunny handing oul bags of goodies. Here Mark and David Mullen , 5, of Mis- sion Viejo seem to be taking out some insurance for a good egg harvest. Nixo1i Supporter Denies Airline Control Cliarges WASHINGTON (UPI) -C. Arnholt Smith, a longtime friend of President Nixon a_nd one of his financial backers, today denied charges of several airlines that he continues to control a California commuter air line despite a government order to sell it. Smith. chairman of the U.S. National Bank and president of the multi-million dollar Westgate California Corporation, told the Civil Aeronautics Board : "Jt is my position that all steps that could reasonably have been taken to ac- complish the divesture hav.? been taken anµ nei ther J nor any entity controlled by me controls Golden West Airlines." Golden West is based in Newport Beach. Board to Examine Total Of Comtµunity Expenses A $94,879 budget detailing part of the Tustin Union High School district's com- munity se rvices expenses will be dis-. cussed by trustees at their meeting at . 7:30 o'clock tonight in the board room, 1171 Laguna Road, Tustin. The budget summary, requested by . Trustee Dickran &ranian, was to have helped trustees determine how" best to spend the money produced by a five-cent per $100 of property value "civic center act" tax. Until now, the district has committed the funds raised by the tax to providing equal recreational programs a n d facilities at each of the four high schools: University, Mission Viejo, Tustin and Foothill. A· month ago, Boranian called for con- sideration of lighting tennis courts and swimming pools at night so they could be used by the "entire community." He was told that a SI60,000 ' . ..,. mitment to build a swimming p::. at University High School in Irvine made it impossible to light facilities at any school. Thus, Boranian asked (or an accounting of the community services budget. The document presented for trustees• consideration tonight spells out the C{)Sts of personnel related to recreation pro- grams, but does not include capital ex- penses: for the estimated $300,000 a year the rive-cent tax rate raises. Of the $94,000 tota l, $90,000 Is for salaries. They break down as follows : $20,000 for pool directors and instructors, $15,000 for sw im assistants and life guards, $39,000 for custodians and $14,34-0 for lay noon supervisors during the school ~car. Supplies and equipment for the sum- mer program round out the budget at a cost of $4 ,000 a year. Portrait • Ill Clemente the Nixon Library , and members of the com mittee have said they believe the gesture will help bolster chances for selection of a South Coast locale for the major building and grounds. The bust, measuring 18 and a half ln- ches high and l& and a quarter wide stands on a marble base and.has a plaque reading: ''Richard Milhous Nixon, 37th President of the United States, bronze original, Judith Bland, sculptor." " Members of the San Clemente com· munity raised $9,000 to purchast)he bust with donations ranging from' pennies from school children lo $500 from a leading business man. "Motivating the effort was the deslre of the citizens of San Clemente to. expres!' their pride and affection for the president and first family , who chose San Clemente for lhe Western White Hoose as wtll as the fr permanent residence", the White l-l91.1se said. The sculptor is a third generation Californ ian and has "won all the top awards in the Southern California art 6hows" for her bust of the president, the White House said. From San Clemente. Mrs. Nixon will fly to Tucson for participation in a 1 p.m. ribbon cutting ceremony dedicating the Fremont House, built in IS58 and restored by the Tucson Heritage Foundation. The House is the last territorial governor's house ln Tucson and will be called · "Fremon\ llou se , Casa del • Gobernador .'' John Charles Fremont "''as Arizona's fifth. governor of the territory and had 1 distinguished public service career in California as its first civil governor and its first United States senator, Schools Rebuffed Court Upholds San Diego Decision WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court today declined to review an order that San Diego officials take "reasonably feasible steps" to balance the races in all public schools. The court gave no elaboration in unanimously turning down a plea for a hearing filed by the officials Nov. 11. The case could have led to 'a ruling on whether racial imbalance in schools is, or itself, unconstitutional. The challenged order was issued by a state appeals court in California. The San Diego school district, one of the largest in the nation, has about 128,000 public school children. About 95,200 are white, 16,000 black, 13,600 with Spanish surnames and another 4,000 of other minorities, In 1909 the state attorney general began the sui t, claiming racial imbalance in se veral schools violated the con- stitutional rights of minority children and 1hould be ~reeled. · Judge Ge0rge A. Lazar of San 'Diego ruled that without "intended segregation•• school officials do not necessarily have a legal duty to eliminate racial imbalance. Last August. he was reversed by a court of appeal, which held "school authorities in California have a con- stitutional duty to take steps, insofar as reasonably feasible, to alleviate racial imbalance in schools regardless of its cause where the imbalance denies the minority group equal educat ional op- portunities. '' Tommy Walker Defends Pact With Government By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 1M Dilly '"li.t SI.ti An Orange County entertainment en- trepreneur today defended his $.10,000 contract with the Department o f Transportation that has come under fire from Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wis.) as being "foolishness." Tommy Walker. former entertainment director at Disneyland and principal in Tommy Walker Enterprises or Anaheim, said his $30,4-00 fee was Jess than he charges non-government organizations to .set up public relations extravaganzas. Further. "the two and a half minutes of free air time on national television pro- moting Transpo '72 during the Pro Bowl halftime would have cost the government $70.000 if they had to pay for it," Walker said. Proxmire charged today that ex- ecutives h.ired to help stage the May 27 to !See WALKER, Page I ) School officials appealed in November to the Supreme Court. San Diego officials, in seeking a ~ear· Ing, said: ''It is now time to examine; the question of pupil racial imbalance ari~ing in areas where there was no state im- posed segregation ." Due to the Supreme Court's not hearing the case, the next step evidently will be a trial in a California C{)urt. Dr. 1bomil! Goodman, superintendent ~AS HEART SEIZURE t Mrs. Dita 8e1rd Dita Beard's Collapse Hazes ITT l1iquest DENVER (UPI J -A Senate hearing at the bedside of hospitalized lobbyist Dita D. Beard. aborted by the sudden collapse Of the lVitness, has left the Senate Judiciary Committee with few answers and new questions about White House in· volvement in a giant conglo merate's . fina.ncial aid for the Republican Nationa l Convention . or San Diego schools, said the hl8'1 court 's ruling was expected because of a recent request by California Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger that the hearing be called off. "We agreed three or four weeks ago to go along with the attorney general," Goodman said. "I think we'll go ahead now with plans we've been developing. We've already presented some alternate plans." Irvine Advisory Groups Closing Roll of Members Automatic memberships in two lrvlne citlzerui advi90ry committees wilt close during meetings !hi.s week and one other Is expected to elect a permanent chairman, the first since the 10 advisory bodies were set up by the City Council earlier this month. The parks and open space committee will meet for the fourth time at 7:30 p.m. today Jn cily hall. The group is expected to elect a permanent chairman. Public highways and transportation comrplttee will continue to accept new members and may, under council rules. elect a chairman when that group meets at 7:30 p.m, Wednesday in city hall, 4201 Campus Drive, Irvine. The charter committee plans its third meeting for 7:30 p.m. Thursday, also in city hall. Andrew May is serving as tem- porary chairman or that body. Councilman Gabrielle Pryor said today she has not been told by any committee that they have yet selected permanen' chairmen . Some groups have opted to elect a chainnan at their fourth meeting, although council rules governing the ad· visory bodies allows such an election at the third meeting. Those rules also made it possible for Irvine residents to join a committee at any of the group's first three meetings. After the third meeting new members may be allowed to join as voting members of lhe group if their mem· bership is okayed by a majority of the committee. Two other committees are operating with temporary chairmen. They are the housing committee, with John Sanders of University Park; public highways and transportation, with Vince Cherene of University Park, and arts and culture with Vivian Hall of Turtle Rock. In the Golden West case, the CAB issued 'an order in 1969 rejecting Smith.'s proposed acquisition or Los Angeles Airways, a helicopter company con- necting airports in the Los Angeles area, and th~ acquis ition of Aero Commuter, a california air taxi company already con- trolled by Smith. Airline, Farms Talk of Merger Hair Huling :oK Sen. Philip D. Hart (D-Mi~h.), who led a panel of six senators into a stuffy hospita l lounge Sunday to take sworn testimony from Mrs. Beard, called olr the bearing after the 53-year~ld lobbyist suffered a heart seizure. Her collapse came in the first da y of her bi1.arre encounter at the Rocky Mountain Osteopathic Hospital with the traveling delegation from CongreSs. To date no committees have scheduled meetings for next week, Mrs. Pryor said. Orange Cout T1he order had the effect of forcing Smith's corporation to dispose of the air taxi company which is now called Golden West Airlines. However, Airwest. PacirJc Southwest Airlines and Western Air Lines argued th.a{ Smith actually still con trolled Golden West -via an intricate financial ar· rana:ement with Smith's other com panies. Jn testimony before the CAB. however, Smith said that I.he "United Slates . Na· tlonal Bank continues to be ·a major lender to Golden West." He also said that because the air line has not reached a paint "where we hav! absolute assurance of the collectibility or our Joan, we continue to monitor the operation lhrough analysis of lt! monthly results and dlscusston! with its maoage· ment where we feel they are desirable.'' Smitli said, however. that this was being done "out of necessity and as a matter af sound bn.nking practice, and oot by choice.'' Ht said he was looking forward to the day when this activity wlll no tanger be required to protecl the bank'• In· vestment. f I. Golden West Airlines, lnc., -a scheduled commuter airline headquartered in Newport Beach, will begin merger talks with Roberts Farms, Inc. of lhe San Joa· quln Valley_ Hollis B. Roberts of McFarland, Calif. is the controlling stockholder and board chairman of both airporations. Roberts Farms produces citrus fruits, nuts and grapes. If merger plans are. agreed upon. they will be subject to approval by company shareholders and the n e c e 1 s a r y regulatory bodies. Aliso To Be Park Future Meet Topic The proposed All'° Park wll be the (oplc or t.hf: Aliso Valley llomeowners' Association meeting Tutsday, March 28. The group will meet at 7:30 p.m. In Ollv..,ood School In El Torn. Plam for the 12-acre park will be outlined by coun· ly olflci11'. ' ACLU Appeal Nixed by Iligh. Court WASHINGTON (AP! -Tho Supreme Court let stand today a lower court ruling which permits a state to expel or punish public school students whose hair lengt h exceeded limits pre.scribed by school of~ ficials . The vote was 8-1, The American Civil Liberties Union asked the court to act because the low1r courts are divided. The appeal was turned down without elaboration and over the dissent or Justice William 0. Douglas. The Supreme Court has never agreed to hear a case concerning school dress codes and punishment of students who violate them. The ACLU appeal involved seven students from Utah, Ne.w M!!xlco, Colorado and Oklahoma. Lost September. the U.S. Circuit Court In Denver upheld school authoritlc•. The &ppeals court said complaints based on nothing more than school regulations of hair length do not "d~cctly and sharply implicate basic constitutional values." The Circuit Courts in San Franclsco. Philadelphia and Cincinnati also have backed school officlals, but four other Circuit Courts -in Boston, Chicago, St. Louis and Richmond, Va . held students have a constitutional right to wear long hair. The ACLU said : "The Issue will con- tinue to be raised so long as school boards persist in regulating the hair length of their male students and lho!e sludcnts Insist that the Constitution af· fords them the right to make such decisions for themselves. The court should resolve these competing claims.'' The seven students dlrectly involved wt.re Terry Freeman and Vyron Randall Ostler of Davis County, Utah: Charles Simmons of UUih county, Utah; Al White of Hobbs. N.M .. Gregory Randall Cranson of Lii Junta, Colo., and Gary Christ mas ol El Reoo. Okla. Prior to the Denver court's ruling, U.S. Dist. Judges A. Shennen Christensen of Salt Loke City. William E. Doyle of Denvtr and Luther L. B<ibanon of !See HAIR, Pa1e I) The senators were. planning to return to Washington today, and the committee is schedu led to resume. the hearings Wednesday with Harold Geneen. presi· dent of the International Telephone and Telegraph Corp .. as the witness. Mrs. Beard's doctor said she "survived her attack of acute angina pcctora" but would be monitored carefully for the next several days. Before the seizure. Mn1. Beard again denied repeatedly that she had written a memorandum to her superior linking the ITI pledge to help San Diego underwrite the costs of hosting the GOP convention with the Justice Department's out-of· court settlement last. year of a huge.an· tltrust action agaihst the conglomt.rate. But, under questiqning, the womsn acknowledged: thst she had written por~ tton1 or the memorandum that columnts l Jnck Anderson published thl~ month In· cludirig a passage In which she referred to "that call from the White House.'' "That call," Mr s. Beard explained Sun· day, Y.·as an inquiry. by s«neone in the F.:itecutivt. Manslan -she was not sure tS.. LOBBYIST, Pap I) Weather Sunshine a n d temperatures ranging up to 70 degrees are fore- cast for the Orange Coast area Tuesday. Temperatures tonight will drop into the 30s and 40s. INSmE TODAY Aerospace tna11ufacturers are about 10 plunge into competi· tion for lhe biugest space co11- tract likcJY lo come th.eir 1oay for the nei:t decade -the $5.S billion .space ,huttle program. See 1to711, Page 10. \., M. 11,11 1 ''''"'' 1• C1llfo.rf\j• I Cl-l••lthtl 1\•?t C""ln IS c,..,.,.,. 11 0.lltt Htllc:H t l.llll1rl1I ,.,,. 4 ll'lltrltl4\!Mtll 1t flhMMI 1•11 l'W trll llK.,. ... l+tf'lltfft 11 AMI l,tloftrt ti ...... " N1!1-i111I M1w1 4 011,... (lllll'Y • l•l\Otl ... ltf It '"'"' , .. ,. Jtetl! M1rt1.t11 1 .. 11 , ... ,11.... ,. TM.tiff• ,. w ...... , ' WtmM'I H"' 1a.1• W1rlit """ 4 2 DAILY PILOT IS C1·op s Hit By· Freeze y In Stat e FRESNO I AP J -Freez.mg Lem· peratures that may have damaged bud- ding crops struck California's Centra l Valley today . Fresno recorded 31 -a record low for thP date . The U.S. Wea ther Servlce reported 27 degrees at Lemoore. 271'2' at Clovis and 23 on the Sanger River bottom . Readings y,:ere warmer both north and south with Merced and Stockton reporting 37 and Bakersfield 39. Fresno's low was four degrees under the previous low for the date. set in 1956. However, the area had anther late March readi ng of 31 deg rees on March 30, 1897. The Clovis low lasted 2 ~ hours, and J im Steiner Or the weather bureau said many valley fruits can stand only 30 degrees for half an hour at this stage of development before being damaged. Apricots and grapes can take only 31 degrees for one half hour. he said. The vall ey is one of the major U.S. agricultural crop producers. Estimates of the extent of damage are not expected for several days as Canners study their orchards and vineyards and report any damage to county agriculture offices. Many farmers went withou t slee p most of the night as they used smudge pots and burned other materials to raise fle!d temperatures. Some irrigated extensively Sunday to protect crops. One Madera County rancher who vineyard was among several who hired reported a low of 27 degrees in . his vineyard was among several -w~o hired heliccipters to hover over. f 1 e I d s , circulating air. Corrigan Loses Hope in Search For Lost Son By ~RTHUR R. VINSE L Of lht Dally ,llot Stall Famed flier Douglas "Wrong Way" Corrigan ·. has given up hope for his sportswriter son and a boyhood friend missing six da ys on a fligh t from Santa Ana; but the hunt today continues. Gr~d searchers and Civil Air Patrol pilots' flying six planes were sti ll seeking any trace lJf Roy Corrigan. 22. and his passenger Roger Powell1 21, of Laguna Beach. Coordinators of the CAP search head· quartered at Long Beach Airport are con· centraiing along the Southland coastline, also crisscrossing inland hills and valleys. Corrigan, of 2823 N. Flower St., Santa Ana, and PoWell , of 32 Crystal Cove, Laguna Beach, took off last Tuesday from Orange County Airport on what was to be a two...hour sightseeing flight. They planned to buzz the Powells' ne w home and photograph it, then swing down to San Diego and back for a 4 p.m. return but failed to show up. "We're making an all-out effort, but we have no new leads," CAP Capt. Thomas ValenzUtla said today when contacted at the Long Beach co'mmand post. He said six CAP pilots would continu e the search today, supplemented by Orange and San Diego County sheriffs aero squadron members scanning the countryside from aloft. Boy Scouts giving up their Easter vaca- tion from school are also combing coastal canyons and foothill areas for wreckage of Corrigan's Cessna 150 aircraft. Young Corrigan's father, who captured the fancy of the world in 1938 when he took off from Brooklyn, N.Y, for Long Beach and turned up instead in Dublin, Ireland, is pessimistic. He said he gave up hope that his youngest son and passenger wou ld be Iound after the first futile day's search. The fateful flight was th e first in a small plane for Powell, son of a Santa Ana neon lighting company owner. ORANGI COAST IS DAllY PILOT n, Or•not Coint DAILY PILOT, wllh which Ii .;ombine<j 1n1 News.Pren, I~ oublls~rd by !ht Or1nge (CG!! l>ubli11'1i119 Comp.iny. 5t~· rai. fd lt11m11 art llYb!l1llrd, Mo"<lav fh•OVflh Friday, fer C~!ll Mes,,, NewpOrl Beien, MuMlngton B•~ch1 Foun•~1n Valley, Lagun1 Beac~. !rvlnf lS•ddltbllck and San (l~rnentet ~•n Ju~n C~o111rano. A 111na1e •!'Qlonal ~lllon 11 1111bli1hrd s~1urday1 and 5u'Wl•~1. tne orlntlNI oubll!l~ln; olant 11 " ljo Wt~! Bty $!r'lff, C:o1ta Mes•, Cali!orn\a. t26l~. aobtrt N. w,,d Prtsltl~nt •na Puo11,ner Jae~ II , Curl•v Vlt• Pre1ioen1 tfld C.•nrral Manager Tho"''' K11vH Editor Tho/'1111 A. M111phin t IJ1on191~1 Edltcr Ch11!t i H. locu Richard P. Ntll N1!11tnt Mu11tln9 fdl!cr1 OHien Costa Mt$•: l)O Wtat 8•v $1rr11 N•WPO•! St•Ch: llll Newi:iori 1<11.iltVl'lil L•QIMt Beach. 2n For~!"'"'"~ MunrlnotOt't 8ttcl'I: 1711-' Battll 10ul1v1rd $tn C:ltmtn•t: JOS NOr!h l!:l,Ca.,.,lnc "tll T.re,ho11• C71 4) ••2""41 21 Cloulfle4 A.tlvMhl111 4'42·5471 S.11 CS.me11'-A.II D•pttrtN11ts~ TeStpllo11t 4f2o4420 Ccovtltl'll, 1f12, Or•na• Cot11 '11ti llJ11tn.i COl¥!1N1nY, No ntws •10rl11. !1111ur11ten1. ..:llterlf:I mtlltr or ffvtrl1,e1ntnts l'l.,.t tn ll'llY tit rt1110Chlctd w!IPIOul .-i.t 11tr. M fH ... of (~rrlfl'lt ewnv. IKlono:I crr11 toSf19f ur4 •I Cml• fllt.M C..!!ftrnl•. Sll~f•tlol'I by ,,,,ft, 11.U _,"""' bv ,,..n 1i.11 ""°""''Y' 1'1'111f1•rv ... ,r~tton1 U U ll'IOnfl'lty, -. rAt1nd11, Martta 27, 1972 V'I Ttltt~ti. Nearly Bad Trip Lucky thing for thi s -Rio de Janeiro bus drive r that there wasn't more room be twee n lanes. People gathered to marvel at the position of this bus alter it careened off a safety railing and I.anded between two supports on this highway overpass. No one was injured. Lindbergh Expedition Finds Tribe of 'Cavemen' MANILA (UPI) -A scientific ex- pedition that included famed aviato r Charles A. Lindbergh has discovered that a long-lost tribe in the wilds of the Philip- pines may be the first known living From Pa.ge 1 LOBBYIST ... who -to W. R. Merriam, her superviS<>r in the Washington office. "wanting to know all about this commitment, this un - derWriting" of San Diego's convention costs. Mrs. Beard said Merriam ''asked me to explain" and she did -in a memoran· dum that containt!d about half the language used in the document Anderson published , but made no reference to a link between the antitrust settlement and the convention underwriting. She acknowledged writing : "I just had a long talk with EJG (E. J. Gerrity, vice president of ITI'J. I'm so sorry that "'e got that call from the White House. I thought you and I had agreed very thoroughly that under no circumstan ces would anyone in this office discuss with anyol)e our participation in the con· vention, including me . Other than permit· ting John Mitchell, Ed Reinecke, Bob Haldeman and Nixon besides WilS<>n. of course no one has known from whom that $400,000 commitment had come." Mitchell is the former U.S. attorney general. Reinecke is lieutenant governor of California, Haldeman is President Nix- on's top aide and Rep. Bob Wilso n (R· Calif.). is a congressman from the San Diego area . From Page 1 HAIR ... Oklahoma City deferred to school authorities whil e Judge Howard C. Brat· to of Albuquerque ruled in disapproving the suspension of the White boy that "the right to wear one 's hair at any length ls an aspect of personal liberty." The ACLU argued in appealing to the Supreme Court Jan. 26 that "the un- derlying issues posed by hair regulations are profound, for they touch upon the very relationship between the individual and the state." The ACLU said school officials "'ere imposing short-hair rules because long· hair is a symbol of dissent, "a bad ge of defia nce of authority."' The appeal added : "It ls sought tn be prohibited not because there is anything intrinsica lly disruptive or distracting about it, but, rather, because of what It is perceived to represent" A-bomb Victims To Be Treated LOS ANGELES (AP) -Th re• • Japanese doctors will come here in July to betp ircat survivo rs of the U.S. atomJc bombings nf Hiroshima and Nagasa ki for lingering ailments. Victims of the bombing havt com· plained of physical and psychological problems !hey say they believe stem /rom exposure to radiation. An estimated 500 to 700 survivors of the blasts live In this country, most of them lr.i the r.>s Angeles area. "cavemen." The tribe is the Tasadays who, until discove red last June in a dense forest in south Coto Bato Province about 500 miles south of f\.-1anila. had been living a Stone Age existence. They had no knowledge or rice, corn, tobacco. sugar, salt and other food s known by other tribes in the area. American anthro pologist Robert B. Fox. a longtim e Philippine resident and chief anthropologist of the Philippine Na- tional Museum, sajd after the June ex- pedition the Tasadays appear to have been cut off from civilization for J,500 to 2,000 years. A second expedition earlier this month has shown anot her important fact -the 24 members of the tribe live In three limestone cave5 about 600 feet up a mountainside deep in the fo rest. The Rev. Frank Lynch, a Roman Catholic priest from New York City who was chief anthropologist for this month's expedit ion. said so far as he has been able to find out no ot her existing culture lives in caves. "This is of major scientific importance. Lynch said. "Some people have used caves for storage purposes. but this is the first time we know that a natural cave is used for basic dwelling purposes." Another member of the expedition. which worked its way into the Tasaday by helicopter and on foot, was Lindberg. a director of the. Tanamin Company that financed the trek. Sig11ups Slated For Irvine Kids In Kindergarten Little buckaroos fr om several Irvine communities wh o eicpcct to attend Irv ine Elementary schoo l neJt:t year will be "rounded up" d u r i n g kindergarten regi slratinn hegi nn ing April 12. Any child who will be five years old by Der. 2. 1972 livi ng in California Homes. Grrentrct". Old Irvine Ran ch. The Rae· qurt Cluh . Th e Ranch, Walnut Square or Thr \Villows. may register al the school between the hou rs of 8 a.m. and 4' p.m. Proof of date of birth mu st be given at the lime of enrollment and the school will acc<'pt a birth certificate. insurance palicy \\•\1h blrthdate or a baptismBI cerlificatc sho111ing date of birth. A medical his tory and the names of persons other than parents who may be rontactrd in the event o{ an emergency al.~n are needed. Parents also will be. asked to make th eir choice between the "conventional" year school or the "45-15" all-year school. Both schools will be housed on the Irvine School site until th e 'new building in the Californ ia Homes tract is completed . ac· cording to ~ district spokesman. Parents may call the school, 54'4-1717, for further details . Sagar Ray Fund Gets $100 Boost The Sugar Ray Robin80n Youth Foun· dation is $100 richer thanks to the Sad· dleback Valley Eicchnnge Club, Funds wlll be used to sponsor sport.$. music J1nd other cultural programs for underprivileged children. For Information on the (oundatlon's program call club momb<r Bill Kohler at 831Ml87 or 832· 3906. • Nixon Member Business Official Set for Pay Board WASHINGTON lAP) -Rocco C. Sic!· llano, president o( a Los Angeles hold - ing company and undersecretary of commerce, has been named by President Nlxon as tbe lone -business representative to remain on the revamped Federal Pay Board. The White House said Nixon made the decision over the weekend, which he spent at Camp David in Maryland. The othe r four business members "vol· unt eered to resign," said deputy press secretary Gerald L, Warren, Jn the wake of the wal kout of three labor members of the Pay Board and President Nixon 's ac. lion 10 reconstitute the pane-I as a seven· member all-public pay board. Siciliano, 50, a native of Salt Woke City, served in both the E1srnho"·er and Nixo!\ administrations and is now president ol the 'J'.I. Corp ., a Los Angeles hold l~S company tor title Insu rance operat1oos. Can Show Davi s Guilty, He has coosiderahle ha1:kground in la· bor negotiations and form erly was presi· dent of the Pa cif ic Marltin1e Association in San Francisco and negotiated on lhP management side in West Coast dock disputes. He wa s undersecretary of commerce in the Nixon administralion from 1969 until about a year ago. And he was assistant secretary of JabOr and a special assistant to rhe Preside,nt for personnel ma nage. ment during the Eisenhower administra· ti on, Prosecutor Tells Jury SAN JOSE (UPI ) -Prosecutor Albert W. Harris Jr. said today the state had evidence to prove that Angela. Davis entered a conspi racy to kidnap hostages from a San Rafael courtroom and that her action led to the murder of Judge Harold J. Haley Au g. 7, 1970. Jn a low-keyed opening statement to the jury at Miss Davis' trial on murder, kidnaping and conspiracy charges, Harris said that her motive was to free George Jackson and two other ' ' S o 1 e d a d Brothers" being held in San Quentin Prison. (See earlier story , Page 5) Harris told the eigh t·woman . four-man jury that the 28-year-old former UCLA assistant philosophy professor and Co m- munist Party member did not herself participate in either the kidnaping or shooting or in the killi ng of the judge. But he said that as "principal" in the conspiracy she was responsible for the crimes and that she entered into them "knowingly and criminally.'' "The evidence will show that by the time of the San Rafael inciden t the life and fortunes of Angela Davis were firmly committed to George Jackson," Harris sa ld. Harris, an assistant state attorney general appointed to prosecute the case, cautioned the jurors that what he had to say was not evidence in itself. But he said he is confident lhe state could prove its charges of first degree murder, kidnaping and criminal con· spiracy. Harris said the prosecu tion would sho\v that Miss Davis was com pletely aware oE the plans of 17-year-o\d Jonathan Jackson. George Jackson's brother. to break into the Marin County Courthouse. Har ris ~said she plotted with young Jackson in the commission o[ the crime, in which Judge Haley, an assistant district attorney and three women jurors were taken at gunpoint from the courtroom. Beach Y ou1igster Leaps off Cliff, Still Ca.ptured A 15-year·old Huntitliton Beach boy who leaped from a 35-foot cliff in an at· tempt to ·escape arrest was among 33 narcotics offenders rounded up by Laguna Beach police over the first weekend of the Easter holiday. Except for a couple of bookings on suspicion of possession of marijuana or other drugs for sale, the arrests all in- volved small amounts of narcotics, said Sgt. Neil Purcell. The youth, who esca ped his spectacular leap with only minor injuries, was one lJ[ a trio of teenagers spot ted by officers about 5: 15 p.m. Sunday. sitting on a ledge about 35 feet above sand-covered rocks at Victoria Beach, apparently smoking marijuana, Purcell said. As the officers approached and an· nounced, "You're under arrest." the boy shouted, ''Not me !" and leaped lJ!f the cliff. landing on the rocks below and limping off through the water. E1t1bli1 h Safe Bicycle Trails Dom Racitti supports concepts e Succecafirl Cott• Mine lvtl.,...Mn e Ho11orory Senlc• Awaul Recl,IHt for 0 1rf.lta114ht9 Cltbtfl af the leer -Call•t• Pttrlt PT A e C•t• M..., ... vtlflc;lttio• Com• ... r,,.. -..,..,.., t« ...,.. ,...,, • They were taken outside to 1 yellow van parked oulside. where a violent gun battle broke out with shel'iff's deputies and San Quentin guards. Haley was killed by a shotgun blast inside the van and three of the four kidnapers were killed . Harris was expected to lake up much of today's session, with his opening state· ment. Irvine Co. Backs District's Plan "' . To Use Ce1iter The San Joaquin Elementary School District decided to ,;think big" and aim for the Anaheim Convention Center for its annual spring music festival this year. But the board of trustees refused to spend money to rent the facility, saying it would approve the location if the com· munity \\'Ould provi de the funds for ex-- penses. Thanks to thi Irvine Company. all systems are •·go." The company has offered to finance the spring music festival whi ch will be held on June 6 at 7:30 p.m. This year's theme will be ''Patriotism on Parade" and will feature 2.000 students in instrumental and vocal performances. Because the event !alls on the night or the June primary election, the program will include numbers relating to politi•I conventions, voter registration and voter llctivities. Coordinator of the program will be Mrs . Marilyn Harris, director of_ educa- tional services, and Joanne Harris, whO directs the music program for the district. Joaquin School Clerical Staff Finishes Course The San Joaquin Elementarv School District's clerical staff has recerltly com· pleted the American Red Cross Multlmedia Standard First Aid Course. Written work , practical applications, and rilm viewing were part of the training for lhe secretaries and clerks who must handle many min or crises oc· curring each day. The district employs only th ree nurses tor the 15 schools in their district. Over 90 percent of the sec retaries and clerks participated. Those who passed in· elude Bea Megow, Irma Peterson, Phyllis Mackey, Geraldine Sessions, Pat Burghardt, Georgia Stafford, Harriet Wa rd, Bobbie Bossard , Phyllis Bryant, Alice McDermott. Shirley '.Bauchiero, Karen Mueller and Pat Watts . Others are Molly Bauman, Mae Ross, Soledad Dyer, Joan Dornan. Julie West, Dia ne Adams, Natalie Bye, Bet te Haught, Jane Cooper, Suzie Coleman, Marti Walker, Marie Rice, Helen Griswold , and Bonnie McClure. Fron• J•a.ge 1 WALKER ... June 4 transpartalion exhibition ir \Vashington \Vere Jiving il up at taJpay. ers· expense. He said the Transpo '72 organizer~ "'ere charging taxpayers for luxury livin~ quarters, coast-to-coast airfares and ex· pensive meals. Walker, one of two persons named b}' Proxmire. said his expenses, includin_g transportation, meals and lodging. wer·~ agreed on in his three·month contract !01 services. While Proxmire described the costs a~ "gross misuse of tax dollars," Walke: said, "I have a contract that spells out three moolhs of work although I bega r working on the project mu ch earlier. J thi nk his criticism comes a little bi'. late," Walk er noted. He also said the Dulles 1Aternationa: Airport exhibition as originally set u~ was predicted to have taken tn $!.~ million. "Since J've been working or Transpo '72 changing operating hou rs ant ~how schedules the projected gross ha! increased by $835,000," Walker said. Walker said his contract wit h the Department of Transportation camt about after he was contacted b) Transportation Secretary John Volpe'; special assistant W. J. Bird. Proxmire said Bird. an executive Witt Kaiser Industries in San Francisco, is !iv· ing in an $850 a month hotel suite an~ paying $388 each week for flights betwee11 Washington and his San Francisco home. To date, Proxmire said, Bird 's ex· penses have totaled $1 1.000. He recei ve! no government salary. \Valker said his contract fee covers all expenses and part or the overhead on hi3 Anaheim promotion business. He said he believed he got the contracl "because DOT realized they had none ol'I board who had erperience in setting up successful expositions." "I am one of the few people in the U.S. wit~ such experience.'.' Walker said1 noting he spent 12 years at Disneyland a:t director of entertainmenl and handled the Disney promotion at Expo '67 Jn Mon· treal. Walker cites "30 yea rs' experience set• ting up halftime sho.,.,·s for football ~ames." an~ has undertake n other pro-1 Jects including the Winter Olympics al Squaw Vallcyjn 1960 and the recent Lon· don Brirlge opening at Lake Havasu Citv. The Anaheim promoter said there will be 300 major exhibitors displaying the ''latest in transportation technology and concern for transit systems' effect on ecology" at. the U.S. Internationa l Transportation Exhibition, lhe formal ti· tie for Transpo '72. Noting the project is "to further publio understanding of transportation" Walker sa!d. "44 countries are sending (heir ministers of transportation to view the systems that will be displayeed ." Sen. Proxmire who directed Volpe to provide an "explanation for all thi" foolishness" today said th at altho'ugb costs for Transpa '72 are relative:y sriiall, ''the cavalier attitude displayed irJ permit.ling hard-earned tax dollars to be virtually thrown awa y to no good purposes has contributed substantially" to the government's $39 billion budget deficit. • I as your Costa Mesa City Councilman of . • • better schools ••• better commun ity ••• better bu1lnt1ses. ' I e Cesto MtH Cholnber of C•mPNtce • Catto Mtso•N•wport Harber u 0111 -•tt1ber af rht boeNf of dlrac;,.,, Chtb -1111-dlart Pott Prttil4ettt pvbllc ttlotlotn •nd ~l•lotl._ e Glrl k o11tl--fne111ber of the i..11• I co111111lttte1 lotl,., 110111lntth1t olld rn o1trtt e C"N Mn• Hlm rlc•I Sec.lety -....... e Herber ANO U11ll't4 F•IMI -f11114 coll.ctl•tt cammlttlft.s • Yo11tft r111,to''"'"' S.l'\'lct of flM Horltor AtM -Ylco 'mlde11t • l ey Scou11 of AM1lco-Sco1tt•e• Nfl'I• •11• 10114 reltlt1t • •. Cnnipnlgn Headquarter • at lAST ON THE BALLOT-1st IN CIVIC CONCERN 1840 Newport Bl.vd. Phone 646·1360 or 548·1313 YOTI TUESDAY, APRIL 11 ' '•If,.,.., Clllfttll ft llttl 0.111 lltc!tl, Mr. loltrTil•t9'. C:htlMMtt,. IM"'"'"" llWI. -folJ-lJ.M l 1 I I I \, I I I ( l ' • m A pil an pa B I Al vol v pie Whi 'ii!I 'ills ~ H~ ,w ting step • a not "S Beac week lor ICh "H us," tend think lfe w Sm coun cipal s:iid • coun jldis . "] ""'" "An th,e s , Sm thee tervi and ' o~ lni • <{,() niva boom 11tn1c to th Lt. Verd -.vale ~p Huntington Bea~h Fountain Valley • • 11 " F ' • Today's Flaal N.Y. Stoek8 yoL 65, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANG E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1972 .TEN CENTS . ~~~~~~~~~_;.·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~--~~ Corrigan Gives Up ·Hope; Search Continues By ARTHUR R. "INSEL Of ltlt D1Uy '11•1 Slaff Fa~ed flier J?ou glas "\Vro ng Way" Corrigan has given up hope for his 1~rt.swrit.er son and a boyhood friend m1ss1ng six days on a Oight from Santa Ana, but the hunt today continues. Ground searchers and Civil Air Patrol pilots flying six planes were still seeking any trace of Rog Corrigan, 22,. and hi s passenger Roger Powell, 21, of Laguna Beach. Coordinators of the CAP search bead- quartered at Long Beach Airport are con· centratl ng along the Southland coastline, also crisscrossing inland hills and valleys. Corrigan, of 2821 .N. Flower St., Sa nta Ana, and Powell, or 32 Crystal Cove, Laguna Beach, took off last Tuesday from Orange County Airport on what was to be a two-hour sightseeing fligh t. They planned to buzz the Powells' new home and photograph it , then swing down to San Diego and back for a 4. p.m. return but failed to sbow up. "We're making an all-out effort, but we Districts Redrawta Incumbents Vie In Seal Election An odd situation faces Seal Beach voters in Tuesday's city counci l election. Voters from one di strict will have to pick between two incumbent councilmen , while voter s in another district must ftlect one of three newcomers. •The city has five co u n c i l manic ::aistricts, two of which (districts four and STEPPING DOWN Principal Smith Huntington High Principal Says 'He'll Step Down • Woodrow Smith, the principal cf Hun· tingtan Beach High School since 1961, will &tep down at the end <1[ the current school year and become a counselor at aoother high school. Smith told officials of the Huntington Beach Union High School District this week that he feels it's the "Right time for a c!A.nge in the leadership cf the 1chool." "His dec isicn was a total surprise to u.s," Dr. Jay Settle, associate superin- tendent of operations, said today. "We think he's done a fine job, but this is what he wants." two ) have elections Tuesday. Councilmen recently redrew the district lines and moved Councilman Edward Smith out ort District Four into District Two, already represented by councilman Franklln Sales. fo.1eanwhile , three newcomers, Jay T. Covington, 'lbomas 1. McNew and Carl Poynor, are seeking Smith's old district, which represents most of the College Park East development. The College Park area has been the focal point of the campaigning, as nearly all candidates have attacked the polilices or S and S Construction Co., developer of lhe College Park area . Homeowners in the area have pleaded for more park land and more control on the use of land. The city has recently become embroiled in a fight with S and S over 360 houses allegedly built illegally. The houses, according to the planning department, cover more 1quare footage on their Jots than a11owed by the city boildlng code. Four oC the five council candidate.s have attacked S and S and promised tighter land management. Sales is the only one who has not jumped into the middle of the land management iS!ue, pr-efering to run on a campaign of fiscal responsibility. District Two in which Sales and Smith are battling covers the western tip of College Park East, Rossmoor Center and part of Leisure World. The three candidates in District Four are all currently, or have been, officers in the College Park East Homeowners Association. Covington ls 1 banker-economist, McNew a corporation attorney and Poynor a lumber merchant. The polls in Tuesday's election wlll be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. On a citywide basis, voters will have a chance to choose either incumbent city clerk Jerdys "Jody" Weir, or challenger Lynne Shirley. City Treasurer Barry Morgan is seek· Ing re-election. He has no challc:igers. Candi.dates Air Views Tonight The dozen City Council can- didates in Huntlngton Beach will clash again before the pu blic at II o'clock tonight In the community center at Harboor View Park, 4.34.3 Pickwick Circle. Candidates have been asked to give their views on three issues : The Bolsa Island project, in· creasing residential density in Hun· tlngton Harbour and limits on development of the Bolsa Chica marshland. There will also be time alloted for questions from the audience. have no new leads," CAP Capt. Thomas Valenzuela said today when contacted at the Long Beach command post. He said si:s: CAP pilots would continue the search today, supplemented by Orange and .San Diego County sheriff's aero squadron members scanning the countryside from aloft. Boy Scouts giving up their Easter vaca- tion from school are also combing coastal canyons and foothill areas for wreckage of Corrigan·s Cessna 150 aircraft. Young Corrigan's father, who captured HAS HEART SEIZURE Mrs. Dita Beard Beard Session Gives Panel New Questions DENVER (UPI) -A Senate hearing al the bedside of hospitalized lobbyist Dita D. Beard. aborted by the sudden collapse or the witness , has left the Senate Judici ary Committee with few answers and new questions about White House in· volvement in a giant conglomerate's financial aid !or the Republican National Convention. Sen. Philip D. Hart (0-Mich.),.who led a panel of six sena tors into a stuffy hospital lounge Sunday ta take sworn testimony from Mrs. Beard, called of! the hearing after the S3·year--0ld lobbyist suffered a heart seizure. Her collapse came in th e first day of her bi7.arre encounter at the Roc ky Mountain Osteopathic Hospita l with the traveling delegation from Congress. The senators v.·ere planning to retum to Was hington today, and the committee is scheduled to resume the hearings Wednesday with Harold Geneen. presi· dent of the International Telephone and Telegraph Corp., as the witness. Mrs . Beard 's doctor said she "survived her attack of acute angina pectora'' but would be monitored carefully for the next several days. Before the seizure, Mrs. Beard again denied repeatedly that she had written a memorandum to her superior linking the ITT pledge to help San Diego underw rite the costs of hostlng the GOP convention with the Justice Department's out-of· court settlement la st year of a huge an· titrust action agalnst the conglomerate. But, under questioning , the woman acknOwledged. that she had written por· lions of the memorandum that columnist Jack Anderson published this month in· eluding a passage in which she referred to1"lhat call from the White Holl!e." "That call," Mrs. Beard e:s:plained Sun· (See LOBBYIST, Pare %) Smith has spent 19 years as a teacher, counselor, ass istan t principal and prin· cjpal at Huntington Beach High. Settle &(id Smith would probably become a Counselor next fall at Fountain Valley or Edison High School. "I think he wants to go back and work more ck>sely with the kids." Settle said . l'And he wants to do some traveling il'I Bathers Saved the summer." 1 Smith will continue as principal until the end of June. District officials will in· terview prospect.! for his post Crom lnslde and outside the dlst'fict Officer Drowns In Long Beach 'LONG BEACH (UPI) -A n>Ured U.S. iiaval officer drowned Saturday when the boom of the IS loot dinghy be was aalll111 1truck him on the bud, knocking him Jn. to the waler, 1 N1vy spokesman said. Lt. Cmdr. William McMahan, 59, Palos Verdes Peninsula, was pulled from the water by 1 passing boat. He was pro- nounced dead •board the Navy hosptlal ship USS Repose. . . • t l • 21 Rescued in Rough Beach Surf Rough surf at HunUngton city beaches resulted In 21 reacues over the weekend And the proSpect Is that the dang'erous conditions will conOnue during Easter Week vacaUon. "It's lucky the weathu has been ao poor," said C.pt. Dooglas D'Arnall of the Huntington Buch IUe guards. "II we had larger crowds here, we would really have had to make a Jot more rescues." D'Arnall said that surf over the wtekend ran four to tlvt feet with "90me pretty heavy riptides." . D'Arna.11 gave city be.acb use figures u 1&,000, 11,000. 1nd U.000 persor11 for Fri· da1, SlturdlJ', and Sunday. "Twenty~ne rescut.s is quite 1 fe~ eonslder!ni how lew people we had. And , only a very small perctntage of them even went swimming." D'Arnall ~Aid the same dangr:rou! 5urf conditions prevailed today. "Utiless a person Is an expert swim· mer, he shouldn't go into water above hls waist," D'Amall said. ~le also warned that there 11re many underwater holes due to winter surf action, and that. these constitute an addlUonal hazzard.. Olllcials at l!untiilgton Stare Beach reported light use and no rescues ovt.r the.;weekend. Less than 40 J!<rcenl of the facllitf's parking spaces wfre In use al any one time. Octin temptrature wu reported 1t 60 degree1 which 11 !J'O ar thret degrtes above the seasonal norm, JUeguard.s aald. the fancy of the world In 1938 when he took off from Brooklyn, N. Y. for Long Beach and turned up instead in Dublin, Irela nd, is pessimistic. He said he gave up hope that his youngest son and passenger would be round afte r the fi rst futile day's search. The fateful flight wa s the first in a small plane for Powell. son of a Santa Ana neon lighting com pany owner. Corrigan believes his son. a former Santa Ana Register sports reporter, went down at sea. He said IRst week lhat whlle coasts! weather was clear before takeo[f. forecasters missed an area of patchy fog off Laguna Beach. Corrigan suspect s his son tried to fly under the soupy haze, miscalculated and dove into the ocean. His two elder sons have been walking up and down the beaches between LagunR Beach and Corona del Mar ih search of wrec kage from the orange and white, single engine plane. One seat cushion carried in the craft "·HI noat and could glve 11 clue to Its wh ereabouts on the sea floor if It washes · up. Corrigan, however. discounts th e po.'isibility the n1issing you th! ma y be found alive. "lie was such a nice kid .• ,"the griv· ing falher said, choking. Search spokesnlan Capt. Valenzuela sai d today the CAP has set no specific lime for ceasing lhe hunt if no clues turn up. Leaper Captured Suspect Jumped off Cliff in Chase A 15-year·old Huntington Beach boy who leaped from a ~foot cliff in an at· tem pt to escape arrest was among 33 narcotics offenders rounded up by Laguna Beach police over the firs t weekend of the Easter holiday. Except for a couple of bookings on Suspicion of possession of marijuana or other drugs for sale, the arrests all ln· volved small amounts of narcotics, said Sgt. Neil Purcell. The youth, who escaped his spectacular leap with only minor injuries, was one of a trio of teenagers spotted by officers about 5:15 p.m. Sunday, sitting on a ledge about 35 feet above sand-covered rocks at Victoria Beach, apparently smoking marij uana, Purcell said. As the officers approached and an· nounced, "You're under arrest," the boy shouted,. "Not me!" and leaped off the cliff, 1anding on the rocks below and limping: of(. through the water. He · "'Was · i:pprehended about three-- quarters of a mile away , at Diamond StreetL ~y now doubled over and com· plaining of back pain. O!ficers summoned an ambulance and the youth was taken to South Coast Com· munity Hospital where he was examined and held for observation for .several hours before being released to his parents, who today told Purcell he is "very sore." A smai l amount of marijuana allegedly was found in hi!ii possession and he was booked in absentia, pending his recovery. police said. Jn another Victoria Beach area in- cident, officers arrest.ed a l6·year--0ld couple at 10 p.m. Saturday after spotting them, totally nude , embracing in a park· ed ca r and also allegedly smoking mari· juana. They are charged with possession of the drug and indecent exposure. The remaining arrests for possession of pills and marijuana ranged from Woodland Drive to South Coast Highway, with a good deal of activity in the beach areas, Purcell said. Laguna Beach lifeguards reported an unusually qu iet weekend , with a chilly SS. degree ocean temperature discauraging Water enthusiast. A light crowd took to the sands Saturday, guards reported, but Sunday's overcast weather was what they termed "strictly a brisk-walk on the beach day." Lifeguard activity was President Names Comrnerce Aide To Pay Board WASHINGTON (AP ) -Rocco C. Sici· Hano, president of a Los Arigeles hold· ing company and undersecretary of commerce, has been named by President NixOI! as the Jone bur..i ncss represent111ive to remain on the reva mped Federal Pay Board. The Wh ite House said Nixon made the decision over the weekend, which he spent at Camp David in Maryland. The other four business members "voi· un teered to resign," said deputy press l!lecretary Gerald L. Warren, in the wake of the walkout of three labor membtrs of the Pay Board and President Nixon 's ac- tion to reconstltute the paJ11el as a sevtn· member all-publlc pay board. Siciliano. SCI, a native of Salt Lake City. served In both the Eisenhower and Nixon administrations and is now pre.sidcnt or the T.l. Corp .. • Los Angeles holding company for title insu rance operations. He has caaslderable background In Ja. bor negotiations and formerl y was pres!· dent of the Pacific MariUme: Association In San Frllncisco and negotiated on the manage ment side Jn West Coast doek ditputes. He waii: undcnecrtlary of commtrce In the Nixon admlnlstr&tioR from 1969 unlit about a yea r ago. And he was assistant 8tertl.ary of labor and a 1peclal asslsta.nt to the Pl'Hldmt for personnel manage-- me:nt during the Eisenhower ad.ministra· UOh. • limited to a few minor first aid call s and checking out an unfou nded report that a low-flying plane had crashed. Weekend traffic in the Art Colony was heavy, as anticipated . A number of minor accidents and four injury accidents, none se rious, were handl ed by police. A Placentia man was taken to Sout h Coast Comm un ity Hospital Saturd11y evening for emergency treatment after a car in which he was a passenger was Jn· volved in a collision on Temple Hills Drive at 5 p.m. Police said the man, Arthur William Appleby, 29, was slightly hurt when dri ver Robert Allen Short . 30, cf 960 Park Ave., lost cont rol of his car on a downhil l curve. crossed the center line and stn1ck a vehicle driven by Leig h Hill Harbold, 49, ot 2008 Donna Drive. Hair Ruling OK ACLU Appeal Nixed by fligh Court WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court let sta nd today a lower court ruling which permits a atate to expel or punish public school students whose hair length exceeded limits prescribed by school of· flcials..The vote was i .. 1. • The Am&iCan Civil Liberties Union asked the court to act because the Jowet courts are divided. The ·appeal was turned down without elaboration and over the dissent of Justice Will iam O. Douglas. The Supreme Court has never agreed to hear a case concerning .school dre.ss codes and punishmen t of students who violate them. The ACLU appeal involved seven students from Utah, New Mexico, Colorado and Oklahoma. Last September, the U.S. Circuit Court In Denver uphe ld school authorities. The appeals court said complaint.! based on nQthing more than school regulations or ha.i{ length do not "directly and sharply implicate. basic constitutional values." The Circuit· Courts in San Francisco, Philadelphia and Cincinnati also have backed school officials, but four other Circuit Courts -in Boston. Chicago, St. Louis and Richmond, Va . held 1tudents ha ve a constitutional right to wear long ha ir. I The ACLU $iaid: "The issue will co~ tinue to be r~sed so long as school boards persist in regulating tht hair Jerglh of their male students and those .students Jnsist that the Constitution tf· fords them the right to mako such decisions for themselves. The court should resolve these competing claims." The seven student.! directly lnvclved were Terry Freeman an d Vyron Randall Ostler of Davis County, Utah; Charles Simmons of Utah county, Utah ; Al White of Hobbs. N.M., Gregory Randall Cranson of La Junta, Colo., and Gary Christmas of Et Reno, Okla. Prior to the Denver c.:ourt's ruling, U.S. Dist. Judges A. Sherman Christensen of Salt Lake City, Will ia m E. Doyle or Denver and Luther L. Bohanon of Oklahoma City deferred to school authorities while Judge Howard C. Brat· to cf Albuquerque rule~ in disapproving the suspension o( the White boy that "the right to wear one's hair at any length i.s an aspect of personal liberty." Can Show Davis .Guilty, P~osecutor Tells Jury SAN JOSE (UPI) -Prosecutor Alb<rl W. Harris Jr. said today the state had evidence to prove that Angela Davis entered a con spiracy lo kidnap hostages from a San Rafael courtroom and that her action led to the murder of Judge Harold J. Haley Aug. 7, 1970. In a low-keyed opening statement to the jury at Miss Davis' trial on murder, kid naping and conspi racy charges, Harris said that her motive was to free George Jackson and two other ' ' So I e dad Brothers" being held in San Quentin Prison. (See earlier story, Page 5) llarris told the eight·woman, four-man fury that the 28-year--old former UCLA assistant philosophy professor and Com· -munist Party member did not herself participate In either the kldnaping or shooting or In the kl11\ng of the judge. But he said that as "principal" in the conspiracy &he was resPOnsible ror the crimes and that she entered into them "knowingly and crimina lly.'1 "The evidence will show that by the time of the San Rafael incident the lire and fo rtunes of Angela Davis were nrmly committed to George Jackson," llarrls raid. llarris, an assistant slate attorney general appointed to prosecute the case, cautioned the jurors that what he had to say was not evidence In Itse lf. But he said he is confident the stale could prove Its chai"aes of first degree murder. kklnaping and criminal ·con- 1piracy. Harris said the proii:ecutlon wtuld show that Miss Davis was completely aware of the plans of J7.year-old Jonathan Jack&on, George Jackson's brother. to brtak into the Marin County Courthouse. Harris 11aid she plotted with young ,Jackson tn the commission of the crime, In which Judge Haley, an assistant district attorney and three women juror1 were taken at gunpoint from the courtroom. They were taken outside to a yellow van parked outside, where a vi olent gun battle broke out with sheriff's deputies and San Quentin guards. Haley wa s killed by a shotgun blast inside the va n and three of the four kidnapers were killed . Harris was expttted to take up much of today's session, with hi s opening state· ment. Orange Coast Weather Sunshine an d temperatures ranging up lo 70 degrets are fore- cast for the Orangf! Coast area Tuesday. Ttmpcratures 1onighl will drop into the 30s and 40.S. INSIDE TODA V Aerospact man11facturcr11 nrl! aboui to plunge into compcti· tion for the bigge st space con- tract likely to con1c Lhtir way for Liit ne:it decode -tht $5.S billion .tpace 1huttle program. Ste ~tor11. Pape lO. L M. '"°' 1 IHllftf It c.i11WM• i Cl•Ul!lff JI •'' C1m1c, 11 CNH"'NI IS Dt•lfl N1tkn t ••flwl•I '"''' ' •llffflllll-1 " Fl"lllCI 1 .. 11 lltr 1"-lK.,. l•t N-KNI It AM L1!9Nn IJ "'-Win )'I N .. 11~11 Ntwt 4 Ortlltt Ch~IY t lw!wi. ~trltr 11 , .. ,,.. , .. ,. Stoc• MttWtt1 1•H Tll1~hl!HI JI Tlltl llf"t ,. Wttllll'r I W."'lft't N_, J._U w.t"M ""'' t ) ' I Crops Hit By F1·eeze In State FRESNO (AP) -Freez ing tom· ptratures th~t may ha ve damaged bud· ding crop~ slruck Cali!drni e's Central \'alley today. Fresno recorded 31 -a record low for the date, I i I I I Mond'7, MW 27, 1972 I I I I I ;-I I I OAJLY I'll.OT lttlf "hOll The V.S. Weather Service reported 27 deirees at Lemoore . 27\2 at Clo\'iS and 28 on the Sanger River bot tom. Readings were warmer both north and south with Merced and Stockton reporting KINDERGARTENERS AT FOUNTAIN VAL LEY 'S TAMURA SCHOOL DISCOVER JOYS OF READING Gary McG ln ni1, Leah Montgomery and Kelly King (from left) Ab10rbed in Books 87 and Bakersfield 39. I Fresno's low was tour d~ under the previous low for the date, set in 1956. However. the area had anther lall~ March reading of 31 degrees on March 3(), 1897. The Clovis low lasted 21h hours, and Jim Steiner of the weather bureau sa id many valley fruits can st;1nd only 30 degrees for half an hour at this stage of development before being damaged . Apricots and grapes can take only 31 degrees for one half hour. he sa id. The valley is one of the ma jor U.S. agricultural crop producers. Estimates of the extent of damage are not expected for several days as farmers study their orchards and vineyards and report B11Y damage to county agriculture offices. Many farmers went without sleep mo't of the night as they used smudge pots and burned other materials f.o raise field temperatures. Some irrigated extensively Sunday to protect crops. One Madera County rancher who vineyard-was among several who hired reported a low of 27 degrees in his vineyard was among several who hired helicopters to hover over f i e l d s , circulating air. P at to Accept Bust of Nixon In San Clemente By JOHN VALTERZA Of t111 Dlll't' Pllfll Slrff Mrs. Pat Nixon will visit San Clemente April' 7 to formally accept the $8.000 portrait in bro'nze purchased by residents of the ;city, and dozens of celebrities are &r...1.edUJe~ to join her. PubUC.,....ce:remonies will start at ?:30 111..m. 'fiTTV Oid Plaza Park, with filni personalities, loca l dignitarie) and local and s.tateJegislators attending. .. Paul Presley, chairma n of the President's Project Cofnmittee, said the nation's first lady will leave for another appearance in Arizona later that day. Television and radio personality Johnny Grant will be master of ceremonies at the event. San Clemente high school musici ans also will participate as well as Jourth, fifth and sixth graders from San Clemente schools. The bronze bust of President Nixon was crafted by Corona de \ ti.1ar sculptress Edith Brand and was purchased from her aft.er a months-long fund drive held in San Clemente. Public ceremoniM were first planned for the Western White House complex, but later were changed. The President, who is rumored to be planning a trip west in coming weeks, will not ~ccept the gift because of custom,-Presley said today. The local innkeeper said that according lo tradition a public gift to the President is never persona!ly received by the Chief Executive while he is in office. Ultimately, the larger-than-life bust will form the local citizens' donation to the Nixon Library, and members of the committee ha ve said they believe the gesture will help bolster chances for selection of a South Coa~t locale for the major building and grou nds. The bus&, measuring 18 and a half in· ches high and 16 anC: a quarter wide stands on a mar ble hase and has a plaque reading : "Richard Milhous Nixon. 37th President of the United States. bronze original, Judith .Bland, sculptor"" OJI.A.NG-I COAST DAILY PILOT Tiit Or&nOI Ce!st DAILY P!LOT, with """kh h tomblnHj !he Newt-Pr!u. It l!uCl1Jl\l'(j tlY lhe Orenge Co~st Pu11io~hlng Comrieny. St~· rt!e l!dlt~n~ r re Put11;111c<1, Mona•v t~rouo11 Fndev, lor Cosie Mtie. N 'w~rl Bet ti!, t;untlngton 8eat n/Foun1e1n Velley, Leoune 8,•ch, lr-..lne/SoddlrMc)I end Sen (lementr l Sen Juen Ceriistreno. A tingle r~ione l ~iHon Is 11u111!11>"" ~tvrdey! •nd Sund•v1. Tne 11rl11Clpal iivtlllshl/\Q Pl1nt •s et 3Jll w,11 Bay Strttr. co,tt Mese, t e1;torn1a, t1616. Aob1rt N. w,,d Pr•i Hl1nt •no f'ullthhlr J1t!i II:. C ur ley Vk1 Pre~~'"' 1no G•nt•t' Mtn1ot• T~Oll'lil K11-..il Edhor 1'!1orr.e1 J.. MurJl~;n t Mtntolng Eo1tcr Ch11l11 H. Looi ~i d1e1d P, Nell "5s1Htnt Mtneg!ng Eo11or1 Terry Covill1 Weit Or1no1 Ccun1y Eoif!lf' Hu11tl119tot1 hoch Offlt• 17875 Beech Boul1v~rd M•iling Adcl r111: P.O. lo• 790, 916.t• Oth•r Offltn LIQ!lll• 81!(/\! 'n Fa'"' ........ ..,. CO!ill Mtt1: 3ll0 Wtt l , • .,. itreu N...,,port l e.di: ,1).U NtWOCl"I I OUltVftd $fll Cle.,.,t rtlt. JC! Not!" II C..m•!ICI ll:trl T~ephone (714) 642 ... 321 Clouifled .44•ertld119 642·S67t ,.,.m N•rfll Or11191 CIUlll't' Clmmllflllltt 140·1220 :one Vol ·u111e for Ea~h Week ' . Kindergarten Pupil 'Reads' • in Valley Program By JORN ZALLER 01 lilt 01Hr ,!1111 Sift! Five.year-old I..eah Montgomery owns a JO--volume library, and by lhe end of the year. she may be able to expand it to 52 volumes . She simply loves to read and she likes lo keep her books around to prove it. \Vhat's more. Leah's teachers say she is just a typical kindergartner in the Fountain Valley Schoo! District. She can 't yet spell her last name , and she may not be able to recite the alphabet all the way through. But there are whole books she can read and , if you ask her questions about them, she can probably answer them. "See Sam •. , I see Sam •.. Sam! Sam!" Just four letters, but Leah knows them and how they go together to make words. And she loves reading them . Ask her why and you'll get a five year~ld's invariable answer to any serious question. "Because . . . because .. , it's just fun ." "Fun" is indeed the key word in the SWRL kindergarten reading program. "Kindergarten children don't have the ability to concentrate on anything that doesn't amuse them," said Deloris Flint, primary learning coordinator at Tamura School. "But this program solves the problem nicely. With just a few letters you can't tell a very engrossing story, but the pio- tures are interesting, and the kids want to read the words to find out more about the pictures," said the teacher of seven years' experience. The SWRL program ls being used for the first ti me by Fountain Valley School District this year at six of its schools. Next year a new federal grant wilJ make it possible to expand the program to &even more. Neit the Ocean View nor the Hun- tington B Cit ementary) school districts have formal k i n e ar t en reiding programs, spokesm.en .t. s~y, although they do provide 1nd1v1dual in· struction if a child seems ready to read . "All children na turally like to read," said Mrs. Flint, "they see qdults doing it and they want to do it, too. . "Children also Jlave more learning ability in kindergarten than they do in later grades, and this program takes ad· vantage oI that ability while the children still ha ve jt ." Mrs. Flint listed several features of the program which she considers crucial : Allowing the children to keep tach of the books as they finish them gives a sense of accomplishment. "It's a reward built into the system," she said. "It give's kids something to work toward." -Instruction on the program works best for groups of five to I(} children. "Kindergartners are at all different levels. Some are ready for the program when they first come into school. others will need a few months to get ready. So Demolition Job Goes to LA Fir1n A black-owned demolition and land clearing firm has been awarded a *6.150 contract lo clear an apartment structure from the site of the new federal building in the Orange County Civic Center. Goldbar Land Clearing and Wrecking Co. of Los Angeles got the job. It is one of four black-owned companies which received federal contracts last week, of· ficia!s said. The federal building will be located just north of Santa Ana Boulevard and west of Parton Street in the growing civic center area south of the new courthouse. The nine-story building has a n esti mated co~t of S14 million. Construe· tion is slated to begin this summer if Congress appropriates the necessary money. Airline, Farms Talk of Merger Golden We!t Airline!, lnc .. a scheduled commuter airline headquartered in Newport Beach, w!ll begin mer8er lalks wlth Robert& Farms. Inc. of the San Joa· qu ln Valley. Hnllis 8. Roberts of McFarland, Cali f. we start up a group only as often as we have children ready." -The program includes parent in· volvement. "The children take their work home and show jt off to parents. and parents. in turn, can help out and become involved with their child's education." The reading program is carefull y designed to build up a child's sequence. At the end of the 52 volume series - which most children probably won't reach. Mrs. J.'Jint says -a child should know 100 words on sight, basic punctua· tion . and how to sound out unfamiliar words. She estimates that the program can save two to four months of work that is normally done in the first grade. "Kindergarten is often just a period or social adj ustment. But if the kids are ready and willing to begin read ing. I think u.·e shouldn't hold them back,'' Mrs. Flint said. Har risburg Seven Case De fendant Acquitted HARRISBURG, Pa . (AP) -Eqba l Ahmad, one of the defendants in the Har· risburg Seven trial , was acquitted today of sending a Jetter threatening to kidnap presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger. U.S. District Court Judgf" R. Dixon with conspiracy to kidnap, bomb and van· dalize draft boards. U.S. District Court Judge R .Dixon Herman also handed down a directed verdict of acquittal on a charge o[ caus· ing an illegal letter to be smuggled into a federal pe nitentiary. But the trial judge reject.ed other defense motions to acquit the six other defendants on all charges. The decision on Ahmad. a Pakistani 'Moslem and the only non-Catholib arilong the defendants, reduces the possi,ble max· lmum penalty he could receive· ~f "COn· victed from 2() years to 5. Only two of the defendants race lengthy sentences -antiwar priest Philip Berri· gan. who could get up to 45 years. and Sister Elizabeth McAlister could get 40 years. The others are subject to five·year .,renalties on the conspiracy count. Herman's decision to remove Ahmad from the letter exchange about Kissinger stemmed from his striking of a!! evidence relating to the Pakistani's voice iden· tification by paid FBI informer, Boyd F'. Douglas Jr., the govern ment's chief witness. Douglas testified he received two phone calls from Ahamd relating to the letter outlining the alleged plot to kidnap Kiss· inger which was sent by Sister Elizabeth to Berrigan. Sister Elizabeth had written in the letter that the kidnaping idea was Ahmad 's. At the time, Douglas and Berrigan were inmates al the federa l penitentiary in Lewisburg , Pa . Douglas. who was a convict on study-release at nearby Bucknell University, was serving -as the courier for Berrigan and his peace move- ment followers . The attorneys were expected to be.gin their summations later today. On Sunday. hundreds of peace militants in black robes , with faces painted white to resemble death masks, marched past the federal courthouse. Girl, 6, Struck By Car, Injured A little Huntington Beach gir l who, witnesses said, was looking over her shoulder as she ran Jnto the streilt re- mains hospitalized toda.v with Injuries suffered when she collided with a car. Carolyn Gage , 6. of 63625 Silverwood Drive. was admitted to the Pacifica Hospital intensive care ward Friday following the accident. ~ledical personnel said she has head and internal injuries. plus multiple bruises. Motorist Ann Maltby. 17, of &.101 Myrlie Drive, was not cited by police In· vestigatin(I; the accident which occurred near the Gage girl's home. Cyclist., Car Crash; Youth, 16, Injured A Huntington Beach bicyclist I!' reported improving today after sufferinr. crlUcal head injuries Sunday in a co· llslon with a car at Garfield Avenue and Pauline Lane. Among spectators on the steps were chief prosecutor-William Lynch and twfl ol his aides. They apparently inter.rupted preparation of final trial tactics to observe the march. f'•·o•n Puge 1 LOBBYIST ... day, "·as an inquiry by someone In the F:xecut ive fl1ansion - she ""·as not su re \\'ho -!o \V . R. Merriam , her supervisor in the Washington office. "wanting to knO\V a!I about this commitment. this Un· derv.'fiting '' of San Diego's convention costs. Mrs. Beard said fl1erriam ''asked me In explain" and she did -in a memoran· dwn that contained about half the language used in the document Anderson published, but made no reference to a link between the antitrust settlement and the con v~ntion underwriting. She acknowledged writing: "I ju st had a long tlllk lvith EJG (E. J. Gerrity, vice president of IITJ. l 'm so sorry that we got that caU from the White House. I thought you and I had ~greed very thoroughly that under. no circumstances would anyone in this bffice discuss with anyone our participation in the C-On· vention. including me. Other than perm it· ting John Mitchell , Ed Reinecke, Bob Haldeman and Nixon besides Wilson. of course no one has known from whom that $400,000 commi tment had come." Mitchell is the former U.S. attorney general, Reinecke is lieutenant governor of California. Haldeman is President Nix· on 's top aide an d Rep. Bob Wil son J R· Calif.), is a congressman from the San Diego area. What Mrs. Beard den ied -vehemently and under oath -was that she had writ· ten : "tam convinced. because of several conversations u•ith Louie. former Ken· lucky Gov. Louis B. Nunn re Mitchel , that our noble commitment has gone a Jong 'vay toward our negotiations on the .. mer· gers enven tually coming out a Hal Geneen) wants them ." Establish Safe Bicycle Tr1i l1 Dom R1clttl supports concepts e Sutc.ec•h•I Coit• Men l 11tlut1mMt e Ho11orory Se"lce Awenl lletlpltt1t for 011ht•11dln9 Cltl•11 •f the Ye•r -Coll•t• l'•rk '1' A e C11t• M•• leoutlflcet-1011 CoM• Mlttte -Mtffd for ..,._ ,...,.. f I I I I , I -•""'.flll ·1 ' Seal Beach Race 2 Women Seek Clerk Position 1'wo Seal Beach women are seeking the office of city clerk in Tuesday's election. Mrs. Jerdys "Jod y" \Ve.Ir, 39, of 636 Beachcomber Dr ive. is the incumbent, clerk. She was elected to the post for the first time four years ago. Mrs . Lynne Shirley, 30, of 241 Sixth St., Is the challenger for the jo b. She is mar· rled and has two children. eight and ni ne. She ma jored in business and Journalism at the University of Colorado. Mrs. Weir and her husband have two sons. She studied political science and sociology at Cal State, Long Beach. Each woman answered three questions submitted by the League of Women \1oters of Huntington Beach. The ques· tions were : -What speci al qualifications dn you feel you bring to Ifie office you seek? -In your view , what is the function and role of the office you seek ? -\\'hat three civic problems, in orde r of priority. do you feel are of most vi tal importance? What solutions do yo u en· vision for ea ch? Mrs. Shirley: ';My qualification~ and experience include many years in both government service and private industry. I have worked for the U.S. Department of Interior. North American Rockwell, and most recently was the Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Of· ficer of \VB Man· agement Corp., a SHUILEY California. property management firm. This background has i:tiven me experience in organization and management \l'hich I feel are the most essential qualifications for this office. "The office of cit y clerk is the people's office. lt 's function is to provide the citizens and city council \11ith complete. accurate acco unts of all city business. In addition jt is the funct ion of the city clerk to impartially and efficiently conduct all city electio ns. This position is not a policy making one . It is administrative, for the convenience of the public. "I feel our most important civic pro· blem is that of divisive politics. Cam· paigns or hatred. personal lll·will. must be ended in Seal Beach. The citizens and council should make a serious effort to resolve differen ces in a democratic way, without resorting to personal attack. If elected to the office of city clerk. I will maintain an attitude of impartiality and responsiveness. "I feel that the second most important priority item in our city is environmental planning. However. since 1 have stated tf.at the city clerk's office is ad· ministrativ e rather than policy making, I feel that I should not suggest solutions, but leave those dec isions to the duly elected city councilmen.'' ~1rs . Weir: "The knowledge and ex· perience that 1 have acquired over the past four years as 'city clerk in the M ultiple·unit Homes Approved The rezoning of 15.5 acres between the G<llden Triangle and Zody's shopping centers for construction of multiple fami· ly homes has been approved by the Foun- tain Valley City Council. According to a report by the city plan· ning department the Larwin Company plans to develop the property on the Tiburon Townhouse plan similar to those homes situated along the south side of the San Diego Freeway east of Br ook· hurs t Street. The density of the development will be 13.5 dwellings per acre which is within the 20.per-acre master plan ratio required by the city, according to the planning department. Elect specialized field of city government is ve.rv valuab le to our city. I l111ve taken eve'ry opportunity to attend all :i;eminars, conferences and meetings 1•c!al!ng to legislation pa s s e d and pending. that ef· fects the duties of my office. I h a v e gained the respect or n1y peers as an ac· tive m e m b e r of Sou thern Califo rn ia City Clerk 's Associa. tion and have been appointed by the Cal-wri11; ifornia League of Cities to serve on the Comm ittee on Elec· ti on Law. "[ ha ve had 10 ye~rs ·experien ce ip secretarial·adm inistrative work for the U.S. Department of Agr iculture. the Ex;· port Department of Sunk ist Growers Inc. and private business respectively. "My husband. Larry, and I moved to Seal Beach wit h our t1vo sons in 1958. \Vhcn our boys were sn1all my extra·CUf· ricular activities included volu nteer work \\'ith the Long Beach Con1munil y Hosplt:tl Auxiliary. fund raising for the South Coast Child Guidance Clinic, Golden Key Auxiliary and the Seal Beach PTA Board, "The city clerk n1ust attend all city council n1ceti ngs and maintain true and correct record of those n1eetings, n1us1 certify and maintain all o ff i c i a I documen ts and make th em avail able for public inspection upon request. and must conduct all city elections according to la11'. "I have implen1ented a fil in,g syste1n o{ all city counc il actions v:it h cro~s reference by subject matter for efficient handling and quick retrieval of public documents and have ini tiated a microfilming project for the safeguard of tho~e documents. "I would continue to main!ain good communications with community leaders from all areas of the city to provide cor· reel informa tion of our ci ty go"ernmtnFs actions to lhe public and encourage the public to utilize the clerk's office for thiB information. "The city clerk's office does not determine poli cy matters of the city and therefore 1 have not included cort· sideration or civic problems and the~ solutions in this statement. As a citizen l do have my views on the subject. but do not feel that they pertain to my qualifica- tions as city clerk .'' City Emp1oyes Disso]ve Group Leader~ of the Hunting ton Beach City Employes Association have dissolved their group and urged their members tO join the newer Municipal Employes As- sociation. The MEA voill now represent most of !he city work ers, except policemen and firemen. in wage negotiations and other management discuss ions with the city. A split in philosophy among city workers caused the founding of the ME .A last year as a rival to the established CEA . Leaders of both gr<lups ha ve now healed old wound s and agreed to transflr CEA fund s to the J\fEA and start again as one orga nization. \Vhen it "'as ror111cd. some MEA members had criticized I.he CEA for no~ giving city workers strong representation in wage negotiations. J\'leeting Ca ll ed Off Tuesday'.~ regularly scheduled meeting of Hunt ington Beach City (elementary) School Distric t trustees has been can· celed . A school spokesman said trustees never meet dur ing Christmas or Easter vaca- tion periods. DOM RACITI as your Co sta Mesa / ' Ci ty Councilman of. , • better school• ••• better community ••. better bu1ine$ses. ~ • Cotto MeM Ch•m!Mr ef C•M,...,c.e • C0tt• Mn.·Newibrt H•rltor lf•11t '"'-ll'l•Mbtr of the lle•rd •f 41rect•n Cl1ll -lmtMdlete Pott Pr1tldo11t pdllc ,.letf•• •d l"bletl~ • Girt Sc•11t..,_,..111bor of th• 1.,11, C•"'lllttttfft l•tiYe, 11•1111f11e1tf11t •1111 rfl•ll'Ce e CNt• Mne Hflterk•l lecl.ty - Mfltlbet e H.tttot AIM U11lht4 h11d -ftlHI: collectlee eom111 IHIH1 e Y11tll lm,laymettt S."lc• •f ""- H•ffr Aroe -Vice Pml4e111t • l•y k••N ef .AMri........SC.eut ... N ll'le 9fl4 fllfld ,.ltlt1t '•' ~rltPlt, lt12, Or•rtlll Ccwiil fl11blhht"" ""'°Penw. Ho 1ttwt storlft. lllu11r11w, 9f!ll:Wltl N l!tr or 1c1.,..r11••l'l'ltnll 1Mr1!11 mtY t19 rtDtOOui:ecl Wfll'lolll IOKltl I*"· 1111ldon ol <OP)'t JfPlt ,_,, Is . the controlling stockholder and board cha irm111n of both CQrporations. · Roberts Farms produces citrus fruit~. nut.. and grapes. Warren \Vellsey. 16, of 17352 Lee Clrcl,, Is listed In 11atisfactory condition by nurses In the Pacifica Hospital Intensive care ward. '"'-'\\, .... Police 1aid the boy ran Into a car driven by Allee Hoycs, or 18828' Los Ltones St,, Founlaln ValJ('y, when he made a left turn onto busy Garfield Avenue. Campaign Headq,.arte r 1 at 1840 l\'eHJport Bh:d. LAST ON THE BALLOT-1st IN CIVIC CONCERN "'"°'1d (Ith N l!IOt Hid t i Cot!I f.'.tM, ttlltwnlt . lu&t<:""littlo,. lw t•,,l•r at" tN1r1lll1"1 fl't' m•ll U.IJ mcl'1!1!1.,./ "1lllf1rv dbllfllJIOt!I UAJ mcnlt!!'t' 1( merger plans ue Rgreed 11pan, they 9.'i\l be subject to approval by company 11hartholdera and the n e c e 11 a r y rcgulslnry bodies. Phone 645·1360.or 548-1313 V OTE TUESD.A Y, APRIL 11 - ' Th no It t ' I " I County Jail Facilities Win.Praise A survey team from the California State Board of Corrections has ,given Orange County's three jail systems an "A plus," but criticized a weekend Prisoner program dictated by the courts. The state report, released today, says In part, "l\.1orale is better than average of both . inmates and staff personnel. Physical fac ilities or the total operation are of good design and are well main· tained." Sheriff James Musick said he was-very plea~ed by the report but added, "there~ nothing we can do about changing the weekend sentence• program. That is up to the judges wbo created it." The state team, which spent seven "'l'.fks . on _the survey. was charged prunarliy with checking the county's in· dustrial or hohor farm in Trabuco Can- yon north of the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. However, a spokesman for the team said, "We expanded the study to Include the three jails because of th eir related pature." 1 Both lhe main jail in Santa Ana, only iwo years old, and the Theo Lacy branch jail in Oran~e won the approval of the team. The state agents did make some recommendations for changes at the in- dustrial farm . Suggested were reducing the inmates in each barracks from 100 to SO : providing additional educational and vocalional programs: restoration of staff supervisors eliminated in the present budget; more space for indoor recrea- tion, and new alcoholic, narcotics and drug treatment programs. Several of the suggestions already have been initiated or have been approved by the county Board of Supervisors. ·/ ~:I •• I • . . { . I' •• • I Friends ita Ireland It's a. ~riendly scene in Belfast as two smiling youngsters accompany a Br1t1sh. troop-er of the Royal Engineers as he walks patrol in Bridge End section. There has been some violence since the British takeover but rebel officials are reportedly in favOr of calling a 60 to 90 day truce. Story Page 4. - Lindbergh Expedition Finds Tribe of 'Cavemen' .. ; f I r. r / 1 1 I I ' I ''/I ' ' ' .' Mond•!, M•r<h 27, 1972 H DAILY PILOT ;J Walker -D'ef end·s Pact ' Top Show Stager Says He Earned Money By GEORGE LEIDAL Of ltM O•U• ,llfl SI.ti An Orange County entertainment en- trepreneur today defended his '3tl,000 contract with the Department o I Transportation that has con1e under fire from Sen. William Proxmire (0-Wis.) as being "foolishness." Tommy Walker. former entertainment director at Disneyland and principal in Tommy Walker Enterprises of Anaheim, said his $.10.400 fee was less than he charges non-government organizations to set up public relations extravaganzas. Further. "the two and a half minutes of free air time on national television pro- moting Transpo 72 during the Pro Bowl halftime would have cost the government $'70,000 if they had to pay for it," Walker said. Proxmire charged today · that ex- ecutives hired to help stage the May 27 to June 4 transportation exhibition in Washington were livi ng it up at taxpay- ers' expense. He said the Transpo '72 organizers were charging taxpayers for luxury living quarters, coast-to-coast airfares and ex· pensive nleals. \Valker, one of two persons named by Proxmire, s~id his expenses, including transportation. meals and lodging, were agreed on in his three-month contract for services. · ANSWERS ALLEGATIONS Entrepreneur Walker While Proxmire described the costs as ., Ka iser Industries In San Francisco. is th·· gross misuse of tax dollars," Walker said, "I have a contract that spells out ing in an $8.50 a month hotel suite and three months of work although I began paying $388 each week for flight s between working on the project much earlier. I \\lashing ton and his San Franc1scn home. think his criticism comes a litUe bit To date, Proxmire said , Bird's ex· late," Walker noted. Disney promotion at Exp(I '67 in Mon- treal. Walker cites "JO years' experience set· ling up halftime shows ror football games'' and has undertaken other pro- jects including the Winter Olympics at Squaw Valley in 1960 and the recent Lon- don Briclge opening at Lake Havasu City. The Anaheim promoter said there wW be 300 major exhibitors displaying the •·latest in transportation technology and concern !or transit systems' effect on tcology" at the U.S. lntematlonaJ TransJX>rlation Exh.ibiUon, the formal ti· tl e for Transpo ·12. Noting the v.roject is "lo further public understanding of transportation" Walker said "44 countries are sending their ministe rs of transportation 10 view the systems that will be displayl!ed." Sen. Proxmire who directed Volpe to provide an "explanation for all this foolishnes s" toda y said that although costs for Transpo ·12 are re!aliveiy small, "the cavalier ai_tiJ_ude displayed in permitting hard·eil'.rfled tax dollars to be virtually thrown awa y to no good purposes has contributed substantially" to the government's $39 billion budget deficit. 5 .People Killed In House Blaze He also said the Dulles International J:Jenses ha ve totaled $11 ,000. He receives Airport exhibition as originally set up no government salary. AURORA, Colo. {UPI ) -Five persons v.-as predicted to have taken in $1.2 \Va!kcr said his contract fee covers all were killed and two others were million . "Since I've been working on expenses and part of the O\'erhead on his overcome by smoke when fire struck a Transpo '72 changing operating hours and Anaheim promotion business . bric k home east of this Denver suburb. show schedules the projected gross has He sa id he believed he got the contract The dead were identified as Wilber increased by $835,000,'' Walker said. '·bec11use DOT realized they had none on Routon 40; his wife, pnet, 36 ; a stepsoo, Walker said his contract with the board who had experience in setting up Ronald McReyhew, . 18, and two Department or Transportation came successful expositions." daughters, Susan, IO. and Joyce, 6. about after he was contacted by "I am one of the few people in the U.S. Routon's son, Joseph, ll. and the boy's Transportation Secretary John Volpe's with such experience," Walker said, grandmother, Edith M. Routon, 76, were A medium security cente r was sug- gested at Theo Lacy to re I i ev e overcrowded conditions in the main jail. Lacy now provides only minimum securi· ty. Musick said this proposal could be very expensive and he wou ld not ask for it in the 1972·73 budget. ~1ANILA (UPI) -A scientific ex. pedition that included famed aviator Charles A, ·Lindbergh has discovered that a long-lost tribe in the wilds of the Philip- pines may be the first known living "cavemen." special assistant W. J . Bird. noting he spent 12 years at Disneyland as reported in satisfactory condition 1uf· has shown another important fact_ the , __ P_ro_x_m_ir_e_s_ai_d_B_ir_d_._•_n_•_x_e_c_ut_iv_e_w_ith __ d_ir_ec_t_o_r_o_! e_n_te_r_ta_i_nm_e_nt_a_n_d_h_a_n..,dl_ed_th_• __ fe_r_in_g_l_ro_m_s_mo_k_e_in_h_a_la_t_lo_n_. --- 24 members of the tribe live in three 1 Last week he suggested a record spen· ding program of $8 million up $615,000 Over the current budget saying he needed more m o n e y to increase patrols particularly in the fast growing El Toro -Mission Viejo -Laguna Hill! - Capistrano area. For the main jail the team urged com- pletion of the fourth floor of the men 's division, something Musick has requested for the coming fiscal year. The $1.8 million project was recom- mended last year by the Sheriff, but elimi.,.ttd by county supe rvisors. The tribe is the Tasadays who, until discovered last June in a dense forest in south Coto Balo Province about 500 miles south of ~1anila. had been Jiving a Slone Age existence. They had no knowledge of rice , co rn. tobacco, sugar, salt and other foods known by other tribes in the area. American anthropologist Robert 8. Fox. a longtime Philippine resident and chief anthropologist of the Philippine Na- tiona l Museum. said after the June ex- pedition the Tasadays appear to have been cut off from civilization for l ,500 to 2,000 years. A second expedition earlier this month limestone caves about 600 feet up a mountainside deep in the forest. The Rev. Frank Lynch. a Roman Catholic priest from New York City who was chief anthropologist for this month's expedition. -said so far as he has been able lo find out no other existing culture Jives in caves. "This is of major scientific importance, Lynch said. ''Some people have used caves for storage purJX>ses, but this is the first time we know that a natural cave is used for basic dwelling pUrJX>ses." Another member of the expedition, which worked its way into the Tasaday by helicopter and on foot, wa s Lindberg, a director of the Tanamin Company that financed the trek. The county's ~·ork furlough program was praised by the state team. They sug- gested y.·ork for the weekender's rather than the normal "two days vacation" in the comfortable main jails. Smog Devices Big Failures, Says Scientist Judge Denies Motwns By County Murderess LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Smog has Worsened in Southern California because automobile antismog devices fail to screen out the major poisons, says a university resea rcher. Prof. James Pills, director of the Uni· versity of California's Air Pollution Re- search Center at Riverside. said the de· vices are required to limit hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide but 11ot nitro~n oxides. "Because of the vastly increased emis- sions or oxides of nitrogen. the result in much of the South Coast air basin has actually been a deterioration in air qual- ity in terms of the key health haiard - oxidents and the brown. toxic gas, nitro- gen dioxide," Pitts said. Hotel Bites Dust Judge Charles A. Bauer today denied two motions by attorney Dudley Gray on behalf of Antonia Thomas. The judge refused 1 change of venue to Los Angeles County for the convicted murderess or her seven-day-old son four years ago in San Clemente. He also denied a motion· to di squalify all Orange County Superior courts to hear her plea. A week ago, Judge Bauer refused to release Mrs. Thomas on bail after al· tomey Gray argued that his client had been a model prisoner during her four years in the State Institute for Women in Frontera. Deputy District Attorney Alicemarie Stoller continued to oppose Gray·s mo- tion . The district attorney had previously "'' Ttltllfltle The 12-story Rober! E. Lee Hotel in Winston.-Salem, N.C. is• mcmoiy now. Explosives placed inside the bullding look 10 seconds lo reduce II to a three·s.tory pile ot rubble. A mOdern hotel will lake 115 place. • I ' staled, "Mrs. Thomas Is in state prison where sh!! belongs." and added, "she was tw ice convicted and every appeal filed by Gray in behalf of his client has been re-- jected by higher courts." Gray 's plea is based on a clai m that the Orange County District Attorney reneged on a promise allegedly made to him before Mrs. Thomas ' trial. He said he had been told that she would not be trie.:! if she passed the hypnosis and lie detector tests. The promise was broken, Gray said again today , when the District Attorney's Office used the evidence handed them in strictest confidence by former Deputy Public Defender John Bond. The petite, small Filipino woman has passed both hypnosis and lie detector I es ts. Judge Bauer denied the change of venue and qualification pleas without comment today. Gray said later he hopes to get a date set for a trial on his pleas later today. The trial following today's den ials by Judge Bauer will be heard in an Orange County court. Witness Hints Chaplain, Wife Went to Motel JACKSONVILLE, Fla. !UPI\ -A court·martial board was told toda y that Navy Chaplain Andrew F. Jensen ma y have gone to motels with hi s wife for a rest and not for adultery with the wife of a fellow officer. l\frs. Lucille Turner. a neighbor of the Jensen family, te stified as Jensen 's court-martial opened its second week. She said she had joked frequently will Mrs. Jensen about his using motels to gr' away from the pressures of his work a Protestant chaplain of the Civil FielL Navil Air Station. Jensen, 43, was accused by two of· ) ricers' wives of having affairs with thrr I itnd is on trial on charges of C(')nduc unbecoming an officer. He bas denied the \ charges. t J\frs . Turner said she would tease Kathleen Jensen, the chaplain 's ,.ue. about the motel~. ''V~. t would say, bavl! 1 good time bot don't spend too much money," abe testified. United States National Bank still pays you abig on regular savings accounts. We still pay you 4Y2°/o interest on regu· lar savings accounts. Which is not only the highest allowed by law, it's Yz 0/o more than most banks pay. So if your bank Is paying you less than 4Y2 °/o, it pays you to bank at United States National Bank. We pay the highest Interest rates allowed by law. Regular Savings 90 Days• One Year• 61 convenient loca11ons UNITED SOO'ES NATIONAL BANK@ Mell!Mt f'OIC Wbue "erythlng starts with you Two Years• •asoo rnlnlrnum dtpoali J COSTA MESA OFFICE 1845 Newport Blvd. (714) 646-3291 SOUTH COAST PLAZA OFFICE 333~ Bri stol S~ HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE 302 Fifth St. F. Frank Zrebiec, Mana ger (714) 540-5211 H. M. Stolte, Manager .(714) 536·9361 Victor J . Ruedy, Manager 1, i 4 DAil Y PILOT Quiet Reigns ;On Vacation RITES OF SPRING DEPT. Somehow lhe whole Orange Coast seemed asleep in the ear ly hours of this Monday. Traffic: jams had forgotten W accumulate on Pacific: Coast Highway. Except for a few birds twittering, it was so quiet around my place you could hear the gr.iss grow. The air was filled wJth little more than idle hums. For some time . th is absence of tumult was disquieting to me. Pondering the tr&nquility, it finally came to me as tG why all this quiet seemed so disruptive. I Monday, M1rch 11, 1972 • UPI T1l1PhOlt A Guy Could Lose Shirt This is spring vacation . I wasn't sup- pose to have gotten any sleep over the weekend because of visiting students who we're celebrating one week's freedom from books, classes and teacher's dirty looks. Otto, a 240·pound talking robot. owned by the Celanese Corp., whirred and cl anked his way into the Desert It'ln in Las Vegas and faced·off with another mechanical monster, a mechanical slot machine. Otto, with an assis t from Shelia Kelly, in· vested a dollar -and prompUy lost. THERE SHOULD have been loud eX· baust pipes roaring through town. acreeching tire!, loud music. profane yelling into the night and the sounds of distant crashing and falling glass. All of thiJ became part Of, the Euter Week vacation sctne along the Orange Coast each yesteryear. No sooner had the tones of the final Friday's acboolbell died away. than here they came over the hUl ; driving Oivvers. trucks, vans. motorcycles, old limousines, hot rods or whatever· else would roll to the coastline. They flooded down to the flatlan ds of Huntington Beach. They filled every available rental and chickencoop in L;;iguna. They took over the Newport· Balboa Peninsula and places like Balboa Island by the sheer weight of numbers. TREY CAME looking for sun, fun and freedom. The boys came because this would be where the girls are. The girls came for vice-versa. The whole spring vacation movement to the coastline was enjoyed by all in earlier yeats. For the youngsters, of course, lt was pure fun. For coastal peo- ple who had gru bbed it through the winttr. Jt was the spring thaw bringing the first flow of cash to the region. The kids particularly seemed to like the Orange Coast in those days because ~'e must have had the loosest Jaw west of the Pecos. WE DIDN'T HAVE an over-abundance of puce officers in those days. And those we bad were pretty well occupi ed wi th keeping track of the hard c o r e troublemakers. For the reEt. It was pre t· ty much free and easy. When permanent residents began to discover that th e Orange Coast is a great place to Jive year·around, things began to cht111Jt for the ri tes of spring. All·ni&ht parties in the rental place next door became a real irritation instead of ju1t being considered a boon to business. The hot rod parking across a driveway now meant somebody would be late to work. And so It was that law and order came to the Orange Coast. AND THE STUDENTS began to take their hijinks elsewhere. The week that was just wasn't anymore . Well, you can hardly mourn the absence of furniture in the swimming p::iols. smuhed flov.·erpol.!, cars parked on lawns or whoopi ng and hollering Into the night. Those of us who grew up with all this, however, will just have to readjust to the new way of coastal life . Indeed. this week has been so quiet. So far . North Ireland Paralyzed In Strilie by Protestants BELFAST, Northern Ireland UPI) - A strike called by Protestant extremists to sabotage British direct rule paralyzed Northtrn Ireland today. It crippled com· munJcationa and transport. blacked out electricity and threa tened shortages of food and water. A regiona l command of the outlawed Irish Republi can Army (IRA) announced a four-week truce in attacks on .civilian targets -onl y to have it angrily coun· termanded by IRA headquarters. \Villiam Craig, the former Home Af· fairs minister whose right-wing va nguard movement called the two-da y str ike, told more than 20,000 cheering Pro testants in downtown Belfast it was time to fight to regai n rights he said Britain seized in assuming direct rule of Ulster. "\Ve have been betrayed by our friends," Craig shouted above cheering and chanting in front of Belfast's domed city hall. "We have been robbed of our rig hts. We intend to fight, and we will win them back." The strike, apparent first ste p in that fight, brought the six-county, British pro. vince of 1.5 million r!!idents to a near· standstill. Buses stood empty and unused, the drivers at the rally. City traffic snarled at intersection after intersection. Traffic Wicks '< .. :ro~oA>l , • .. ···· 'Lox and bagel for six!' lights were not working and pohce v.·ere occupied el sewhere. Power cuts blacked out 70 percent of the province. Trains did not run . Airline flights in and out of Belfast were can· celled. International telephone service dropped to a minimum. with only a handful of opera tors and maintenance per sonnel on duty. At least nine small bombs exploded in and around Belrast today but no one was injured and they caused little damage. There were no major bombing incidents during the weekend although the death toll since August, 1969. rose to 288 Sunda y when the body of a man killed by gunfire wa s found in Belfast. Soviet Approval On Nuclear Pact Seen1 for Summit LONDON I UPI l -Russia will be ready to sign a limited agreement on nuclear weapons curbs with President Nixon at the May 22 Mosco w summit, Soviet bloc sources said today. The agreement will center largely on antimissile defe nses (AMBl with a pos· sible interim ceiling on land·based Inter· Qlntinentai Ballistic ?o.fissiles (ICBMs). It will steer clear of immediate curbs on submarine Jaurfched rockets, the sources &aid. While the board outlines of the pro- jected accord are already drawn, many details. some of considerable importance, have yet to be sett led and some con· siderable differen ces need to be ironed out, according to the sources. An attempt \V iii be made at the current session of the Soviel·America n Strategic Arms Limitatio n Ta lks (S ALT) to clear the wa.v as f<1r as possible for the top le.Aders lo sign an accord. The meetings resume Tuesday at the Soviet embassy in Helsinki. A limited agreement on nuclear \vea pons curbs appeared a virtual cer· tairlt.y. barring failure of the .summit meeting on the board policies of th e two superpowers in the wake of the Sino- American reconciliation. the sources said. Winter Still • Ill Midlands Montana, North Dakota Also Report Some Snow Temperatures T1"'Dtrtl11t• Pnd 11•P1"!11111t1r" ior 11\t '' !lour ttr!od tndl"o 1! ' • ,., ,t.•l1n11 !MIO!\ B11f/2le ~!l~rlol!e .l\•t~•~ (ll'!Clflllltf Cltvtl•ncr ~lilt nv'• l r.'olnu t~il Honolvlu lndllfttl>Op1 ru~~V• It VMll l1v11t1 z:r.~"i"1' MlhvlU~H MlMelPOl l~ Hew Orlftn1 ~I" Yark 1P~ml C1tv m "' 111f1~ro~!• •l'IOtllfk •1111ouro1t Pfc",!111'!1. 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MJisi'IJIPOI V1lltv tnd "°''" U" !hi All1ntre co11f to New Eno11nd 111111 •nd drl1.t!e. with occ,.•lon~! tnvno.rtlorm1. c•1c1ded through Ille 0~10 1nd jtnhOl'lt~ v1l!ev•. Cold1 rt nv cr>,,dlllont wort •~o~cltd lo h~lo swev ov~r moJt n: Mo n~llo~·t n!erlor i nd turihtr 1now!e!l'I wero dul !n Ir~ !ht northo'n Pl~ln• t.~ !he AD· ClflC!lltnt 1nd UCl!Mlt NIW fr>!lllnd. Th~ n~1lon't hloh w~• 91 d~'l'tt~ In Monertl Wtlfl, Tt•. while !ht low soot -"''' lh•M bttcw 1ero ln Ev1n1l011. W•o. Suu, ~loo n, Tides Sunnv ICc11y, Llthl vt•l•~lt w!11rl• hlah! •nd "10•nino hOllt\ htCcn'll'!'l wt1!er1y l 10 H knot~ '" ~Hor"OOfl• toddy '"d lU4''cl~y. Hlgll ff!cll y In 6CJ, Co.~ttl ttmrie.rtlUN!$ •trl!ll lrCl'fl l1 •o l.I 1"1tnd '4im1M~11ure1 rt~"i!4 uem •1 10 6"#. W$••r t•m11tr•1urt 5' Coastal '11eat/1er 41CO<ld 11101'1 Sttond lfl'W •1•1t hfg!I ~lfll low Ste"''1 lllCl'I $~O~d low; MONDAY TUllOo\V Sun llJlfl ! ''' 111, ~llOtl 1trtt1' )111111 f.11 fl,m. 4t 2.00 D m. C,O 1•16•'" '·' 2·16 t l"I Ot l :SI fl,I"\, JI ,,'1 o,,, O.l fctt601p"I. 1111 ~.30 • m. Kidnap Victim's Kin Takes Slap At Kleindienst SEATTLE (U Pl )-Richard Kleindienst "lacks the qualities" needed to be an at· torney general. the son·in·law of a U.S. Official kidnaped by terrorists in Uruguay says. Denn is F. Kane said Sunday that Klein- dienst had "frustrated" an opportunity for the early release or Dr. Claude L. Fly and had recommended he be •·sacrificed." ~ Fly, a U.S. soils rt. was kidnaped in 1970 when Kleindiens v:as deputy at· torney general. Kane told the Senate Judiciary Com· mittee in a letter that he prolested Klein· dienst's appointment as attorney general because he la cked "true concern for human rights and wisdom.'' Fly was · kidnaped Aug. 7, 1970 and released in poor health March 2, 1971. Kane said efforts ./or his fa ther· in.Jaw's release '"ere in "delicate ba lance in Decemher of 1970. ··At that time Mr. Kleindienst suddenly announced to the world that any ranso m demands or negotiations with kidnapers would ne,·er be considered . Jn fact. he recommended that any kidnap victim less than the president or vice president and their families be sacrificed." 'Violence Index' E yed for Crime Programs on T\.' WASITTNG'l'ON !AP) -Almost all tho top brass or television who appeared before a Senate hearing ack nowledged there is too much TV violence for child ren. Sen . John O. Pa store (D-R.I.), who headed the four days of hearings last week before his commun ications sub- committee, said something needs to be done. But wha t? One possible action is the creation of a "Violence index'' to measure the amount of televised crime entering the American home. Pastore asked the secretary of health, education and welfare, the U.S. surgeon general and the Federal Communications Commission to set up the study and report their find ings each year. Pastore called TV industry and federal 'vitnesses to discuss the U.S. surgeon general's Scientific Adv i so r y Com· mitte e·s report on the impact of televised violence on young persons. The voluminou s report got mixed news coverage when it came out several weeks a~. some said it largely absolved TV or any major role in encouraging violence. Others said close reading revealed there was a de.finite link between TV violence and agg ressive behavior of some ldren. DAI LY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oellvrry of the Da lly Pilot ls guaranterd MClllllY·Frld•Yt II \'OU do 11(11 hl vl vour OllCtr ttv J:lO p,m., <•II Ind '/OUr CODY Wtll 111 tt•o111~1 11 you. ·c,u, 1r1 l•k1n ""'II 7·3C 0."1, r.1turd•v 1ncf lt>t'ld•Vt II Y9U dl'I Ml rt c1rv1 rou• fODV tty I 1.m, S1lllrd1y, or • '·"'· •vnd1y, tt!I 1/'111 I COllY w!ll M brOVOhl to )'OU, (lilt ltl •~tn U"lll 10 1.1!'1. Ttftphonrs MM! 0•1'1(11 Cou"IY Art11 ,,,,,,,, '41-IUl Nc•'"wttt Htmtln9tor, Bue.I! .......... , .. ,,,. '•" Cltmtntt. G1011tr1no Ille~. ''" J~" Ctn11tr1P10, ~"• Petr<!, loVI" LIO U"'' L11911111 Nltlutl , , ,:;I • -- Radlo, TV Court Backs Ads On Smoking Ban WASHJ NGTON (AP ) -Tbe supremo Court today upheld the ban on cigarette 11dvertising on radio and television. The National Association of Broad· casters (NAB ) and six broadcasting com· panies had argued in appeals that the ban restrains freedom o! .speech a n d discriminates agains radio and telev ision. The court bru shed aside wit hout elaboration theil\pleas for a hearing and. as proposed by the Justice Department, aff irmed a ruling by a three-judge panel in favor of the black-o ut. The NAB appeal wa s turned aside 7 lo 2, with Juslices William O. Douglas and Willi am J. Brennan ca lling for a hea ring. The appeal by the broad.casting com· panies V.'as turned doWn 6 to 2, with Douglas and Brennan dissenting again and Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. dis· qualifying himself from consideration of the case. Congress imposed the ban in the Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act of 1969. It v.•as signed into law by Presiden t Nixon, April 1, 1970, and all cigarette advertising was swept from radio and TV beginning with Jan . 2. 1971. The NAB said Congress acted without any evidence th at cigarette advertising ind uced smoking. Stressing th a t newspapers, magazines and the re· rnainder of the print med ia rema ined free to publish such ads, the NAB asked the court : ;·Jr Congress sincere ly cqnsidered tha t cig arette adverti si ng was 1 harm to the public. how could it leave open the op- portunity for the public to be injured through the vastly increased quantities or such adve rtisi ng available in all other media, save broadcasting ?" The Justice Department replied tha t Congress could have applied the ban to all media. "But , as this court has fre- quently held, leg islative reform is not in· \'alid merel y because it does not go far enough." the government said. The NAB. whose membershi p include! 2.118 AM radio stations, l .259 FM rad io stations and 5.'30 TV stations, rem inded the court that it had amended its industry codes ln 1969 to provide !or a total elimination or cigarette advertising by Sept. J, 1973. The si:t broadcasting companies that appealed were Capital, Do.ver. Turner, Northwest, La Grange , and North America n. owners of WNAV in Annapolis, Md.: WDOV in Do ver. Del.: WTMA in Charleston, S.C.; KVFD in Ft. Dodge, Teamster Chief's Conviction Case Voided by Judge ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -A fodoral judge has .set aside the conviction of Louis iana Teamsters' boss Edward Gardy Piirtin on three counts of con· spiracy to violate anti trust laws and ordered a new trial on an extortion con· spiracy charge. Partin, 47, of Baton Rouge, v.·as con· victed March 2 of all fou r charges and hi.! lawyers moved for a mi strial or for the judge to set aside the verdicts. The ruling. disclosed today, was made by U.S. District Court Judge Ja mes Bat· tin of Billings, Mont. Battin was the judge for the five-week trial, held in Georgia on a change of venue. Battin said a new trial date would be set for the extortio n conspiracy charge. which alleges that Parti n used strong~ arm tactics to force a contractor into doing bu siness with Bat<in Rouge ctmtnt producer Ted F. Dunham Jr. Dunham was conv icted last year ~f conspiring with Partin to gai n a monopo- ly over the concrete business in I.he Lo uisiana capital through labor stop-- pages, sabotage and various other lllesal means. Partin is business agent of the Teamsters local in Baton Roug e. His testimony helped the government convict national Teamsters boss James R. Hoffa of jury tampering in 1964. Hoffa has since been paroled. Iowa: WLAG in La Grange, Fa.; and WMNJ, In Columbus, Ohio. Thty said they were "aware oI no other case that has reached the Supreme Court in which a legislature, federal or otherwise. had attempted to impost an absolute or outright prohlblti9n on the ex• ercise of co mmerci al speech ." 'MALICIOUS LAWSUIT ' Mayor ~01eph Alioto Alioto, 2 Others Win Court Fight On Fee Sharing VANCOUVER. Wash. (AP ) -MayOt' Joseph Alioto of San Francisco and two former Washington state official s have challenged continua tio n of I e de r a l criminal action aga inst them after win· ning verdicts in a $2.3 million fee-sharing suit. A Clark Cou nty Superior Court jury of six men and six women deliberated 10~ hou rs before finding una nimously Sunday in favor or Alioto. former Attv. Gen. John J. O'CoMell and George k. Faler, a former O'Connell aide. The state of Washington and 12 publicly owned utilities had filed the suit, seeking recovery of $2.3 million in legal fees paid to Alioto during the 1960s when as a prac· ticing attorney he recovered $16.2 millio n from major electrical e q u i pm en t manufacturers. The plaintiffs contended that Alioto im· porperly and secretly shared $800,000 of his fees wit h O'Connell and Faler, who were state officials. The defendants denied any wrongdoing. They mai ntained that the fees were shared for work performed and that O'Connell and Faler were acting as private attorneys. Alioto, who wa~ in Wash ington, D.C., when the verdict was returned , said "This was a malicious political lawsuit from the beginning •.. J1 now call upon Ni.ton 's c.ampaJgn mana,er, John Mitchell, the archli.<t of th" Porlidy, t<o do tht dtcmt Ullng and dismiss the mallclouJ S.a• U. lndlctm .. t." Ml1<h<U rr ;nlly m IJlfd u U.S. al· torney Ct.t ....... .t.1. "nit lln'W Jvte detendlnls face federa l c:hlr1e1 f 1 flftlplnni:; to bribe a st ate of· Odll. A , rtlrllJ hearing i& tcheduled fridly ;. St 1tle and a tentative trial dllt al April ti h.u betn &•I. Alioto and O"<mnoll, who are both Democrat.I. have charged throughout the civil liUJ;ation that it was politically motivated by the R e p u b 11 c a n ad· ministr1tion in the state of Washington and the n1tion'1 capital. Food Chains Target U.S. Will Lodge 'Beef' Over Meat Pric.e Gains WASHINGTON ( U P f l An Agriculture Department report due for publication soon will show food ch ains widened their margins on beef ln February, It was learned today. The disclosure came on the heels of • demand by Tony T. Dechant, President of the Natlonal Farmers Union. for adml· nistration and Congressional investigation of the profit margins qf chain stores and processors lnvolvtd in setting retail food prices. Treasury Secretary John B. Conn ally said the administration would bt watch· ing margins. Altd congressional M>U\Ces disclosed late last week that a House agriculture subcommittee is ex· ptcted to la unch Ua awn study Into what haJJ been happening ta meat price~. The forthcoming Agriculture Depart· ment report is 11 regular monthly sum· mary of changes in farm. wholesale and retail prices and fann·to-retall margins. tnrormed sources here said last week'• Labor Department report on February meat price hikes means the Agriculture , Department's February report will also show retail beef price aver11ges up again kl another all time record. But since live catUe and wholesale beef prices began turning down after mid·February, the average farm price for the month ls ex· pected t.o be reported down from January level!!. As a result , &ourcts said, the department's February margins data will show &n increase In the farm·to-retall price 1pread for beef, with the gain con· centrated at lhe retail store level. · · Dechant asserts that while some chain 1tore ads have blamed fann ers for high retail beef prices, current government Price Commission rules glye a "special 11dvantage" to food cha ins and J>N>o cessors. Unde r eurr~nt rules, Dechant points out, a meat packer wMse cost for live cattle goes up can raise its prices to maintain lhe aame poollt margin it had during th• llO<l•Y price 1r .. ,. whi~ began lut Aupsl 15. .I I ) • v~ ~ .. F COr •po mis Ana, G pilot any pass Bea w p Of m . ye po Fo p and c April City fees " City er r lE:hj 1City mend specia excep a· fee ,,,, Is pl O'N b ... w jt·wa to a fit th Cha financ waive In wrote crafts crisis gener ill pa Tbo come Indian The ment Of In 'LO naval boom struc to the ~::1e1 nounc ahlp Wr~ Mu~ Any "'be the A file a City Vol count declar dlstri l ! ' • ' L Y 0111" Bometowa Dally Paper vor. 65, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 27, ·1972 N TEN CENTS Corrigan Gives Up Hope; Search Continues .. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .... ~Uy 'llfl Iliff Famed flier Douglas "Wrong Way" Corrigan has given up hope for his .sportswriter son and a boyhood friend missing six days on a flight from Santa Ana, but th~ hunt today continues. • Ground searcher! and Civil Air Patrol pilots flying six planes were still sttking any trace of Roy Corrigan, 22, and his pusenger Roger Powell, 21, of Laguna Beach. Coordinators of the .. CAP search head- quartered at Lona: Beach Airport are con- centrating along the Southland coastline, also crisscrossing inland hills and valleys. COrrigan, of 2828 N. Flower St., Santa Ana, and Powell, of 32 Crystal Cove, Laguna Beach, took oU last Tuesday from Orange County AirPort on what was to be a two.hour ~glltseelng flight. '{bey planned to buzz the Powells'rnew hotne and photograph It, then swing do)Yn to San Diego and back for a 4 p.m. return but failed to show up .• ''We're making an all-out effort, but we have no new leads,",CAP Capt. Thomas Valenzuela said today when contacted at the Long Beaeh command post. He said six CAP pilots would continue the search today, supplemented by Orange and San Diego County sheriff's aero squadron members scanning the countryside from aloft. Boy Scouts giving up their Easter vaca- ,tion from school are also combing coastal canyons and foothill areas for wreckage of Corfigan's Cessna 150 aircraft. Young Corrigan's father, who captured the fancy of the world in 1938 when he took off from Brooklyn, N.Y. for Long Beach and turned up instead in Dublin, Ireland , is pessimistic. He said he gave up hope that hi5 youngest son and passenger would be found after the first !utile day's search. The fateful flight was the first in a small plane for Powell, son of a Santa Ana neon lighting company owner. Corrigan believes his son, a fonner Santa Ana Register sports reporter, went down al sea. He said last week lhat while coastal weather was clear before takeoff, forecasters ..missed an area of patchy fog or! Laguna Beach. Corrigan suspects his son tried to fly under the soupy haze, miscalculated and dove into the ocean. His two elder sons have been walking up and down the beaches between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mat in search of wreckage from the orange and white, single engine plane. One seat cushion carried in the craft will float and could give a clue to lt1 whereabouts on the seafloor if it washes up. Corrigan, however , discounts t h t possibility the missing youths may be found alive. ,;He was such a nice kid . , ."the griv· ing father said, choking. Search spokesman Capt. Valenzuela Sfiid today the CAP has set no specific time for ceasing the hunt if no clues tura up . Smith: NO ContrOI Airlines Ownership Claim Denied Whatever Happened to Bal Week? Photograph taken today at 11 a.m. shows the lack of beach activity at Newport's Big Coro na. lt was a marked contrast to the Easter vacation crowds of . years past. Only about 75,000 persons visited New· port's beaches during the weekend, about half as many as last year. Boat traffic over the weekend was brisk but dropped today. A 57 degree week· end ocean temperature was reported but hardy . so~ took advanta&e of a four-fool 1!¢. Newport Asked To Waive Fees For Indian Show Promoters of an Indian Nations arts · and crafts exhibit at Fashion Island in April have asked the Newport Beach CJty Council to waive required permit fees "in the name of the Indian people." City couneilmen will consider the waiv. er request by Robert Hemstreet, of Bal- boa, Western director Of the Indian Na· ti()ns Economic Development Council tonight at 7:30 o'clock in City Halt lCity Attorney DeMis O'Neil has recom- mended against any waiver of the $10 special events permit because "once an exception is made it is difficult to waive a fee in one case and JtOt Jn the other." The arts and crafts exhibit and auction Is planned for April 21-23. O'Neil did add that the city council has waived fees in the past when it felt it was "making a financial contribution to a worthwhile cause which would bene- fit the city." Charitable events or sponsors with financial hardship have also received waivers, he said. In making the request, Hemstreet wrote that marketing of Indian arts and crafts is expanding "due to the economic crisis of the southwest Indian people in general and the Navajo and Hopi artists 111 particular." The waiver and an official city wel- come "would mean a great deal" to the Indian artists, he added. ' The Indian Nations Economic Develop.. ment Council is located in Cortez, Colo. Council to Hear Plans For 2 Bicycle Trails Newpart Beach councilmen, facing a ~ight agenda, tonight will be told bow they can spend $18,000 and get two bi· cycle trails from the hills to Pacific Highway through Mariners Mile, over the Arches and to the beach. The proposal, first advanced by a dele- gation of Girl Scouts two weeks ago, may meet some opposition from merchants. however, since it will require removal of parking spaces on various streets, includ- ·ing Riverside Avenue alld Coast Highway. Three separate trails leading to beach areas are plaMed : -Jamboree Road, A 10.foot trail will be built on the west side of Jamboree Road from Ford Road to Coast llighway, leading across to Balboa Island. -Dover Drive, The existing sidewalk will be widened to eight feel ll'<lm Cliff Drive south to the retaining wa~I. just above the highway and the approach to Back Bay bridge will be widened. -Arcbea: iatercb1J1ge1 widen the as- phalt path adjacent to the southeasterly down ramp and construct an eight-foot path between the ramp and the county · parking Jot. -Mariners Mlle, Stripe and sign bi - cycle ~anes foJl()Wing adoption <lf an ordinance prohibitiag parking on one side of the street. This last phase ts likely to meet op.. position since it requires removal of a handful of parking places on the west side of Riverside Drive below the Pos:t Office and 18 spaces on the south 1ide of Coast Highway between Riverside Drive and the Centinela Bank. In addition to the trail system, the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Depart- mait will install 36 additional coocrete bicycle stands, 12 at the 15th street beach, 12 at the. Ba~boa Pier and 12 at 23rd. Street. Also before cowlcilmen tonight are: -Introduction of an ordinance to boost the fees charged new businesses for us- ing city parking lots instead of provld· ing their own parkit1g. Pennits to be hiked from $30 to $250 each. -Action to tighten controls on beach parking. City Manager Robert L. Wynn proposes elimination <lf the validation system at the Balboa · Parking kit, con- struction of a vehicle counter and a ticket booth at the Corona del Mar lot and the use of multi-colored tickets at both lots. Earlier, Wynn had suggested the use of meters at both iots but nearby pro~ erty owners objected. He is pushing for new controls, however, because of a criti- cal auditor's repart. Patrol Car Stolen MERCED (AP) -Merced police had a special interest in recovering a ear re parted stolen Sunday. It was one of their patrol cars. 'Mle prowl car was swiped while an officer was inside a house investlgatlng ·a burglary report, police said. It was found stuck in the mud cf ft. almond orchard five hours later. WASHINGTON (UPI) -C. Arnholt Smith, a longtime friend of President Nixon and one of his financial backers, today denied charges of several airlines that he continues to control a California commuter air line despite a government order to sell it. Smith, chairman of the U.S. J;Jational Bank and president of the multi-mil.Hon dollar Westgate California Corporation, told the Civil Aeronautics Board: . "It is my position that all steps that could reasonably have been taken to ac- complish the divesture have been taken and neither I nor any entity controlled by me controls Golden West Airlines." Golden West is based in Newport Beach. In the Golden West case, the CAB issued an order ili 1969 rejecting Smith's proposed. acquisition of Los Angeles Airways, a helicopter company con- De9l!ri altior1a ill lbe Los ~ area, and 'tlit acqilbition of Aero Commuter, a CalilC1111l.a .u-lul ccm1pant .,,..., -Ironed by Smith. , The order had the effect of forcing Smith's corporation to dispose of the air taxi company which is now called Golden West Airlines. However, Airwest, Pacific Southwest :Airlines and Western Air Lines argued that Smith actually still controlled Golden West via an intricate financial ar- rangement with Smith's other companies. In testimony before the CAB, however, Smith said that the 0 Unlted States Na- tional Bank: continues to be a major lender to Golden West." He also said that because the air line has not reached a point "where we have absolute assurance of the collectibility of our loan, we continue to monitor .the operation through analysis of it.. monthly results and discussions with iCs manage- ment where we feel they are desirable." Smith said, however, that this was being done "out of necessity and as a matter of sound banking practice, and G~tty's Wife Il'ead of Heroin ROME (AP) -Italian medical examiners reported today that Talitha Pol Getty, actress wife of Paul Getty Jr., died last summer from a massive injection of heroin, and not from an overdose of sleep.. ing pills as first suspected. The two examiners made their report to Domenico Sica, the assis- tant state 'prosecutor conducting the inquest into the 31 -year-old ac- tress' death. Paul Getty Jr. is the son <lf the American oil king. Mrs. Getty was found un- conscious in her apartment in old Rome on July 10. Beside her bed was an empty sleepin' pill bottle. Officer Drowns In Long Beach • LONG BEACH (UPI) -A retired U.S. naval officer drowned Saturday when the boom of the 15 foot dinghy he was saiJina struck him on the head, knocking him in- to the water, a Navy spokesman said. U.S. 'Beautiful' to Teacher Lt. Cmdr. William McMahan, 59, Palos Verdes Peninsula, was pulled from the water by a passing boat. He was pro- nounced dead aboard the Navy hospital ship USS Repose. Write-in Candidates Must File Declaration Any Newport Beach resident who wanU to be counted as a write-In candidate for the April ti City Council election must file a declaration at City llall by April 3, City Clerk Laura La1ios aaid today. Votes for _write.in candidates are counted only for those who havt filed declarations, which murt state in whlch dl•trict the candidat. reslde1. l , Blind Instructor Directs Patriotic Program By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ,.._ O.lly ,lltt Slftf When Donald Ericksen joins his !ixth grade class in a spirited ch<lrus or "America the Be1utifut" he believes every word Of it. lie has lo beoau,. he Is blind. Erlckset'I has traveled this nation from c11st to coast. Ask hlm Jf he has visited .. Statue of Liberty, the Lincoln Memo iiol, the baltleFOUnd al Gettysburg or • monuments and he y.illl always re- it;, "Yes, l've been there, but I didn't -it.'' lf these monuments have the capobil· ity of apeakin1, they have 1poken l• Ericksen. An un•baslled patriot, ha now wanta lo IA!!! othera wbat they said. For the post !ew weeks the 43-year-old I Wilson School teacher has betft showing a patriotic program to students in the Newport-Mesa School District and to lo- cal clubs and organizations. The kaleidoscope in red-white.and blue ts called "A Living "Portratt in Sound" and features some of his students in re- enactment.. of America's greatest mo- ments. ~ 37·mi1nrte program, the "Living Por .. larit in Sound" draws on music, slides and Jt~ading American patriots ~ de-- liver their own ipeeches "lo help us ap- preciate America a little bit mote," 1c- cordlng lo Ericksen. The three leadln1 characters are the Statue of Liberty (llttoy Elford) Abra· ham Lincoln (David Crocker), and Uncle Sam (Cralf Pritchard), Their colorf\11 costumes were designed to Ericksen's specifications and paid fer by the Wilson PTA, the Rotary Club ol Costa Mesa, and the Americanism Committee or lbe school district. The roor stud<nls perform poems and songs ~against a backdrop of about 20 other Wilson stude,.ts all dressed In matchln1 whit. shiri. and blooses and blue shirt,. and !rouse". 11I Wf'Qte the narration myself and planned the ootlin• Of the slides we show on lhe screen1" eald Ericksen. "Th~ kids work this program tnlirtly on tbeili own and without cues." ~ A master of orgaaliation , Ericksen has polished his program to the point wbere he only needs to call on his 1tudents to (See BLIND, P11e I) not by choice." He said he was looking forward to the ~~~en ~Is ;~~~7 ~~ oo i!k'.er r;: vestment. Smith was mentioned in an article in· Life Magazine last week, whlch claimed the administration tampered with justice In San Diego by stopping an investigation of possible Illegal political contributions to President Nixon's 1968 election cam- paign. According to the article, the funds were allegedly funneled through some of Smith's many corporations. Dair Ruling OK ACLV Appeal Nixed by High Court W ASBINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Coort let stand today a lower court ruling which permit.s a state to ei:pel or punish public school students whose hair length exceeded limil;s prescribed by school of- ficjals. The vote was 8-1. The American Civil Liberties Union ...pd !!Jo courl lo act becll'se lbe lowu courts are divided. '!'be appeal waa turned ' d""" without elabontiaa lad • ...,. lbe diaaent of Jlllllce Wlllilm 0 . Doqlar. The Supreme Court has never agreed to hear a case concerning school dress codes and punishment of students who violate them. The ACLU appeal involved uven students from Utah, New Mexico, Colorado and Oklahoma. Last September, the U.S. Circuit Court in Denver upheld school authorities. The appeals court said complaints based on nothing more than school regulations of hair length do not "directly and sha rply implicate basic constltuti<lnal values .'' The Circuit Courts in Sar. Francisco, Philadelphia and Cincinnati also have backed school ofiicials, but four other Circuit Courts -in Boston, Chicago, St. Loilill and Richmond, Va. held atudents have a constitutional right to wear long hair. The ACLU said: FThe issue will con- tinue to be raised so long as school boards persist in regulating the hair length of their male students and those students insist that the Constitution af· fords them the right to make such decisions f<lr themselves. The court ahou.ld resolve these competing claims." The seven students directly Jnvolved were Terry Freeman and Vyron Randall Ostler of Davis County, Utah; Charles Simmons of Utah county, Utah; Al Whitt of Hobbs, N.M., Gregory Randall Cranson of La Junta, Colo., and Gary Christmas of El Reno, Okla. Prior to the Denver court's ruling, U.S. Dist. Judges A. Shennan Christensen of Salt Lake City, William E. Doyle of Denver and Luther L. Bohanon of Ok.Jaboma City deferred to school authorities while Judge Howard C. Brat- to or Albuquerque ruled in dlsapprdving the suspension of the White boy that "the right to wear one's hair at any length it an aspect of personal liberty." LAExecutive WillRemain On Revamped Pay Board WASHINGTON (AP) -Rocco C. Sic!. liano, president of a Los Algeles hold- ing company and undersecretary of com merce, has been named by President Nixon as the Jone bur.iness repreM:ntative to remain on the revamped/Federal Pay Board. The White House said Nixon made the decision over the weekend, which he spent at Camp David Jn Maryland. The other four business members "vo1· unteered to resign," said deputy press seeretary Gerald L, Warren, in the wake of the walkout of three labor members ol the Pay Board and President Nixon's ac. tion to reconstitute the paael as a seven· member all-public pay board. Siciliano, 50, a native of Salt Lake City, served in both the Eisenhower and Nixon Police Intensify Hunt in KUlnap BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -PoUce 1 .. tenslfied: a uarch of this capital's 1uburbo and outsklrt.s today for kidnaped Flat auto executive Oberdan Sallustro after Argentina's military governmr.nt aquashed the auto maker's efforts to stave off bis threatened execution at mid· night. The government flatly 1'\lled out any ''extortion" deal with the terrorists, haltin1 Flat eff~rls lo coiled $1 million In 1chocl supplies, one of the demands made for Sallustro's release. H1' Trollky!te kidnapers, members or the terrorist People'J Revolutionary Army, vowed to execute Sallustro by fir- ing squad unless ransom demands were met by mldnlahl '· administrations and is now president of the T.l. Corp ., a Los An1el" holdins company for title insurance operations. He has considerable background in la· bor negotiations and formerly was presi- dent of the Pacific Maritime Association in San Francisco and negotiated on the management side in West Coast dock disJ)utes. He was undersecretary cf commerce in the Nixon administratiOft from 1969 until about a year ago. And he was assistant secretary of labor and a special assistant to the President for personnel manage-\ ment during the Eisenhower adrrtinistra· ti on. Orange Coast Weather Sunshine a n d temperatures ranging up to 70 degrees are fore- cast for the Orange Coast area Tuesday. Temperatures tonight will drop Into the 30s and 40s. INSIDE TODAY Aero&pact manufacturer& are a:bout to plunge into competi· tion for the bigges£ space con- tract likely to come their way for the nett decad e -tile $5.5 billion space shuttle program. See 1tort1, Page 10. 1..M.•t~f 1 ... 11n1 tt c111..,•• s Cllultltf 1l·M Cetfilk1 IJ C,...1wtN II OMl!I Ht!lttJ t lf!loritl ..... . ' •11t.rltlftlnlftl 10 l"lr111nct 1•11 "'" tllt •Ktrf .... MtrttceH 14 AMI 1.UMltrl 1) Ml•\ft 1t N1tlell1I N,.., 4 Of"1q • (tvflt'I • IYITlt l"ttfff lt s-n 1•11 S!«ll M•rll•lt 1•11 Ttlt~hlttl ti Tlltttfrt 1t Wu!1'1..-t w.m11111 Htw1 1>-lt WttMI Htw1 t I. it OAILV PiLOf, II ITT Inquest ,Clouded .Lobbyist's Seizure Abort.s Senate Probe DENVER (UP!) -A Senate hearing •t the bedside of bos:pitallzed lpbbyist Dita D. Beardf aborted by the sudd en collapse of the witness. has left the Senate Judlclary Committee with rew answers and new questions about White House In· volv"ment in a giant conglomerate's financial aid tor the Republican National Convention . Sen. Philip O. Hart (0.Mich.), who Jed a panel of six senator1 into a stuffy ho1pltal lounge Su nday to take sworn testimony from ]\1rs. Beard , caUed off the hearing after the 53-year~ld lobbyist suffered a heart seizure. Her collapse came in the first day of her bizarre encounter at the Rocky Mountain Osteopathic Hospital with the lravelinJ del.,ail<01 from Conrrtu. The aenaton were planntnc to return te :~!~~~op ::'a~~,~~e thet;m~~~:~: Wednesday with Harold Geneen, preol· den t of the lntematlonal Telephone and Telegraph Corp .• as the witness. Mrs. Beard 's doctor said J.he "survived her attac k of acute angina pectora" but would be monitored carefully for the next aeveral days. Before the seizure, Mrs. Beard again denied repea tedly that she bad written a memorandum to her superior linking the f11' pledge to help San Diego underwrite the coats .of hosiin1 the GOP convention wlth the Justice Department's out-of· court atttlement last yur of a huae an· Utruat adlOll 11aln1t the conrlomerate. But. under questlonlni. the woman acknowltdgtd that Jhe had written por- tions af the memorandu m that columnist Jack Anderson published this month Jn. eluding a passage in which she referred to ,;that call from the White House." "That call," Mrs. Beard explained Sun- day, ~·as an Inquiry by someone in the Executive Mansion - she was not sure who -.to W.R. Mer riam. her 1upe.rvlsor In the Washington offict:, "wanting to kno w all about this commitment , this un· derwr iting" of San Diego's convention costs. Can Show Davis Guilty, Prosecutor Tells Jury Mrt. Beard sald Merriam i'asked me to e:rplaln" and she did -in a memoran- dum that contained abou t half the language wed in tht: document Anderson published, but made no reference to a link between the antitrust settlement and the convention underwrltini. She acknowl!:dged writing : "I just hid a long ti.lie with EJG (E. J. Gerrity, vice president of ITT). Ifm so sorry that t;e got that call from the White House. I thought you and I had agreed very thoroughly that under no circumstances would anyone in this office discuss with anyone our partici pation in the con· vention, including me. Other than permit· ting John Mitchell, Ed Reinecke, Bob Haldeman and Nixon besidt:s Wilson, 0£ course no one has known from whom that ·$400,000 commitment hall come." SAN JOSE (UPI) -Prosecutor Albert W. Harris Jr. said today Ole state had evidence to prove that Angela.' Davis entered 1 conspiracy ·to kidnap hostages from a San Rafael courtroom and that her action Jed to the murder of Judge Ha rold J. Haley Aug. 7, 1970. In a low-keyed opening atatement to µie jury at Miss Davis' trial on murder, kidnaping and conspiracy charges, Harris gaid that her motive was to free George Jackson and two other ' ' Soledad Brothers" being held in San Quentin Prison. (See earlier story, Page 5) Harris told the eight-woman, four-man jury that the 28·year-old former UCLA assistant philosophy professor and Com· munlst Party member did not heraelf Mr. Henderson Last Rites Held Private funeral services were , con· ducted today at 11 a.m. in Corona del Mar for ;Jp--year Corona del Mar resident and rial estate broker Thomas W. Henderson Sr., who died Saturday. He WU '5.· The, owner of the Harbor Investment COm?fny . ln Corona del Mar~ Mr: Henderson resided. With his wife, 'Elaine, at IGt;Oo.iP)iin Terrace. Mrs: ;Henderson served as presldent ,of the lrVlno Coast C:OUntry Club and thf New~t Harbor Board of Realtors. FUniil 1ervlces took place at Baltz. Berceron-VOrtuary. O'emation followed. Jn addition U> hls wife. he Is survived by two SOnJ, Thomas W. HenderlOn Jr., a Colt.a Mua attorney, and Dennis T. HendetBOn of Dallas, Texas, and Jour sralldChlldren. From Pqe. l BLIND ..• . help · aot up the t.lpe recorder and to focus. the slide projector. Ericksen, who teaches a regular sixth grade class, does not consider his blind· ness a severe handicap. He entered col· lege knowing that he would be blind. "The , light went out between semester• of my junior year," he a aid. "There are lots of others like me, .. he said. "There are about 100 blind teachers in the State of California. It proves you can do anything if you really want to." His patriotic program is aimed at both the students and the community and Er· lcksen says he feels "very strongly'' about its subject matter. "l believe in it. The kids aren't be ing gi ven enough opportullity to participate In thh1gs of thls nature . Patriotism isn't beng taught much in the schools any. more," he said. "Obv iously, the story Of our country hasn't been told enough, or we wouldn't have au the oblems we do ... ORA.Nell COAST • DAILY PILOT Tiii Or•ftDI Cot1t OAIL Y l"ILOT, wll!I wlllcl'I 11 COl!'l~l"td 1111 N1w1.Prn1, 11 PUblltllM by ~ Orlft;I (OIU Puttl!slllnD (Ol!'ll>ll'l'f, $IN- •••• e<lllloni ,,, PUblllhe<I, MOndli' !llrOvgll FrJtl1y, IOr Co»tl Mtll, NtwPQrf l11e11, Hul"flflllOn 8r1ch/Foun11!" Vtlley, t.11un1 llH(h, ll"Y1M/~elldlebilck 1r,d Sin Cltmt"!f/ Stn Ju1n C'pt$1rt no. A 1r"g11 reolon1I (dltlon 11 D41hthllM Sl!urdtyJ •'Ill Sund•i'-'· Tne prlnci1>1I pub1l1llJn1 pl1nt 11 11 llCI Wr1r St'f S!ftt1, Co111 Mtt1, C1/lf'ornl1, t 2'2,, Rob1rt N . W11d ' Pr11Hj1n1 tl'ICI Puo!l1hrr J1 t.~ R. Curl1y Vltl Prul!lt,11 IM Gt Mttl Ml lllltr Thom•• IC11•il Eol!or Thom11 A. M11rphin1 Ml'fltlli19 l dltor L. '•t•r 1Crt19 NIWllOrt llWT City ldltor New,.,, IMCt. Off/u l JJl N1wport l o11l1v1(cl M11/i n9 Aclclr111: P.O. l o• 1111, 92441 Otke' Offlc11 Co1f1 Mftt: JJC Well t t \' $!rttl Lt1un1 l t.tC.ltt JD ftor111 Av'"111 Hurillfltlol'I lbA!cfl; 1711J llftll IOVl1v11'111 $111 Cl1mel'llt 1 JIU Nor!ll £1 Ctl'!llno ~lfl TllophoJll C714J 642-4121 CIOllHl-4 .Ad .. rtl1lrtt 442·5671 C&1Wr1t1111, 1tn, o''"'' co~,, 11;i"rt111i1t CM111111y. Ho 111wi 1!0tlt1, llt111rrtttoiu. Wltorlal rNfltt er 14111trll,1mtntt !'11r1ifl ~'; bll ... ~llCed Wlll',OUI $0fC\ll Ill'• ml.11o!1 of Cff~tftl'll IWMr. $~ t ll•• 110lltt1 Mid el Cotti Mu., Ct!lfor11!1. ~btctl•flel'I Iii' Cllfltr t2.IS "'*"ll'll•o "1 melt SJ.It ~1~1~1 mllfltrt 9Mtl1111i.u n.u IMl'ltl'IJy, participate in either tbi . kidnaping or ahooting or in the killing of the judge. But he said that 11 "principal" in the conspiracy she was responaible for the crimes and that she entered into them "knowingly and criminally." j'The .evidence will show that by the time of the San Rafael incident the life and for tunes of Angela Davis were firmly committed to George Jackson,'' Harris said. Harris, an assistant state aUomey general appOinted to prosecute the cue, cautioned the jurors that what be had to aay was nat e\tidence in it.self. But he 11id be Ja confident the 1t1te could prove ita charges of first dearee murder, kJdnaping and criminal con- spiracy. Harris said the prosecution would show that Miu Davis w11 completely aw11e of the plans of 17-year-old Jonathan Jackson, George Jackson's bratht:r, to break into the Marin County Courthouse. Harril aaid she plotted with fOUng Jackson in the commlsaion of the crime, in which Judge Haley, ·an assistant district attorney and three women jurors were taken at cunpoint from the courtroom. They were taken outside to a yellow van parked outside, where a violent gun_ battle broke out with 1beriff'1 depu ties and San Quentin guards. Haley was killed bY, a a~tJll/D blut inalde the van and thret of the four (((dnapera ware killed. Harris w1s expected to take up much ertocfay'a•....i ... wlllillii opoatn1 . ..iat .. · fuenL , , Freeze Damages :central V al,ley' s Budding Crops FRESNO (AP) -Freeiinc tem- peratures that may have damaaed bud· ding crops struck Calilornla'a Central Valley loday. Fresno recorded 31 -a record low for .the date. The U.S. Weather Servlot reporttd 27 degrees at ~moore, 271h at Clovis and 28 on the Sanger River bottom. Readings were warmer both north an'd south with Merced and Stockton reporting 37 and Bakersfield 39. Fresno's low was four degrees under the previous low for the datt, set in 1956. However, the area had anther late March reading of 31 degrt:es on March 30, 1897. The Clovis low lasted 2Y.r: hours, and Ji m Steiner of the weather bureau sa id many valley fru its can stand only 30 degrees for half an hour at this stage or development before being damaged. Apricots and grapes can take anly 31 degrees for one half hour, he said. The valley is one cf the major U.S. agricultural crop producers. Estimates of the e.xtent of damage are not expected for several days as fanners study their orchards and vineyards and report any damage to county agriculture offices. Many farmers went without sleep most or the night as they used smudge pot11 and burned other materials to raise field temperatures. Some irrlgated extensively Sunday to protect crops. One Madera County rancher who vineyard was among several who hired reported a low of 27 degrees in his "ineyard was among several who hired helicopters to hover over f I e l d s , clrculatlng 1.lr. NeWJ;>ol1 Harbor Yacht Ransacked A boal·bolrding burglar hH p~1ted nearly 1900 "°rth of valuables from the yacht af an, Ontario man moored in Newport Harbor, lncludlnr hi• official Ski PP'T '1 Cl p. !Mlle M. Farrar roported the theft from his bolt tied up at 1113 Bayside Drlve o Officer Vince Antista Saturday, aaying a varie\)' of loot was taken: The Joss includes 1 . televi1ion ael. stereo and tape recorder heis ted from the vessel's main salon, plus assorted bottles of llquor and hunting trophlOI. Farrar said the latter included a wolf pelt and a bobcat akin, the latter reco(nlubJt DeCIU!e he bqged tbe predator with ahotgun oo tho troplty is riddled with buck>hol bolu . Mitchell is the form er U.S. attorney general, Reinecke is lieutenant governor of California , Haldeman is President Nix~ on's top aide and Rep. Bob Wilson (R· Calif.), is a congressman from the San Diego area. What Mrs. Beard denied -vehemently and under oath -was that she had writ· ten : "I am convinced, because of several conversations with Louie (former Ken-. tucky G'ov. Louis B. Nunn ) re Mitchel, that our noble commitment has gone a Jong way toward our negotiations on the mergen enventual!y coming out now Hal {Geneen) want& them." Mariners School Bounds to Stay Same Next Year Attendaace boundaries at Mariners Elementary School in Newport B'eacll will remain as thty are for the 1972-73 achoo! year, NewpOrt·Me.sa trustees have decid· ~' while iPCrt:ases_in Costa Mes,,_a middle 1chool enrollments will be impl~e'!ted . Tlµsje es had been considerlJ:l.lf94.king ~ai\ners a walking-school only-"'-,nd eUminaUng aJI bus transportation to that •chooJ. Ttiis would have sent • -.ne elementary ttudents to other dl1tiict 1chooJs. ' But the board voted last week to keep the current transportation patter13s 'pend- ing completion of a study on implement· ing a sirth through eighth grade middle tchoot program at Enaign School. Th1t study will be done with Porten· Jensen and Associates, architects. · .' At the same time, the board decided to move more sixth graders inU> Harbor middle school!, in attempts to realize the three-grade policy adopted in 1966. ' All ·1ixth graders in the Lincoln School area will be attending that middle school in 1972·73, and all •izth grader•· in the Rea Middle School attendance , ·area will 10 to that achoo!. All Monte Vista Elementary school sixth grader! will go to Kaiser School in September. No one from those areas ob- jected to the change. Some parents from Sonora Elementary School, whose sixth graders will attend Davi! Middle School in September, did object to expected soci al pressures which cou ld accompany the move. Trustees excluded Woodland School sixth graders, whose part:nts were the most vocal opposition, from the move to Kaiser Middle School next year unt il the program of subject &peeialization and electives is expanded there. They also wanted to avoid taking more student! out of an already-low-enrollment school. Trust~es also voted to: -Auth,orize a co.mmittee to develop a curriculum for an early ChiJdhoOd Educa· tion program, to be started as a plJot pro- gram at Victoria and Ctnyon Schools in September with possible district-wide im· plementation in 1973-74. -Provide extra specialized 1lllfing money for nine elementary schools in Costa Mesa with less than 400 enrollment. They a~ Balearic, Bay View, Bear Stret:t, Canyon, Killybrooke. Monte Vist1, Presidio, Victoria, and Woodland. Search Resumes • For Lost Plane ASHLAND, Ore. (UPll - A search resumed near here tOdly for a Ugbt plane missing on a· filcht from Burbank to Boeing Field in SeatUe. A camper told Jackson C.U.ly depuUos he saw 1 1infle engine plane circle Hyatt Like seveta times late Friday before plunginr IJ>to the water. Chuck Spaeth of Kenl, Wash., • 'Vnlversity of Washinaton student, was returning from a lrlp to Southern California with three friends In a club- owned plane when the mishap occurred, 1ct0rdlng to a friend of the family. Restaurant Has Fire SANTA FE SPRINGS (UPI) -,Fire caused an e1tim1ted $80,000 dama ge to Wackeen'1 Restaurant early tod ay. • • • • • Circus in Town DA ILY PILOT 511H l'llote,. Circus roustabouts tighten tent supports for big top that went up today at Newport Center. Circus is in town under sponsorship of Newp ort Beach Jaycees. They will use their share of the ga te for community serv ice proj ects. Performances are scheduled tonight at 6 and 8 o'clock and Tuesday · at 2 p.m., 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. • ' •J Harrisburg Seven Case Defendant Acquitted Pat to Accept Bustof Nixon In San Clemente HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -Eqbal Ahmad, one of the defendants in the Har· risburg Seven trial, was acquitted today of sending a letter threatening to kidnap presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger. U.S. District Court Judge R. Dixon with conspiracy to kidnap, bomb and van- dalize draft board!. U.S. District Court Judge R .Dixon Herman also handed down a directed verdict of acquittal on a charge of caus· ing an illegal letter to be smuggled into a federal penitentiary. But the trial judge rejected other defense motio ns to acqu it the six other defendants on all charges. The decision OQ Ahmad , a Pakistani Moslem and the only non-Catholic among the defendants, reduces the possible max· imum penalty he could receive if con- victed from 20 years to.5. .Only two of the defendants.race lengthy sentences -anti war priest Phiijp Berri- gan, who could get up to 45 Yea rs, and Sister Elizabeth McAlister could get 40 years. The others are subject to five-year penalties on the conspiracy count. Hennan's decision to remove Ah ma d from the letter exchange about Kissinger stemmed from his striking of all evidence relating lo the Pakistan i's voice iden· tification by paid FBI informer Boyd F. Douglas Jr., the governmen t's chief witness . Douglas testified he received two phone calls from Ahamd relating to the Jetter outlining the alleged plot to kidnaJI Kiss· inger which was sent by Sister Elizabeth to Berrigan. Sister Elizabeth had written in the letter that the kidnaping id ea was Ahmad's. At the time, Douglas and Berrigan were inmates at the federal penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pa. Douglas, ~·ho was a convict on study-release at nea rby Bucknell University, was serving as the courier for Berrigan and his peace move- ment followers. The attorneys were expected to begin their summatio ns later today. On Sunday. hundreds of peace militants in black robes, with fa ces painted white to resemble death masks, marched past tht: federal courthouse . Eatablish S1f1 Bicycle Trails Among spectators on the steps were chief prosecutor William Lyn.ch and two of his aides. They apparently interrup~ preparation of final trial tactics to observt: the march. Doctor Indicted On Tax Charges Dr. J. D. Leggett, who practices in Garden Grove and lives at 6800 W. Ocean By JOHN VALTERZA Of lftt Diiiy ,!let Staff Mr5. Pat Nixon will visit San Clemente April 7 to formally accept the $8,000 portrait in bronze purchased by residents of the city, and doze ns of celebritlt:s ue scheduled to join her. Public ceremonies will start at 9:3P a.m. in Old Plaza Par k, with filtp personalities, local dignitarie:, and local and state legislators attend ing. Paul Prt:sley, chairman of the President's Project Committee, sa id the nation's first lady will leave for another Front, Newport Bt:ach, has been indicted '' appearance in Arizona late r that day. ,1 by a federal grand jury in Los Angeles on Television and radio person ality Johnny four charges or fili ng false income tax Grant will be ma ster of ceremonies at returns. the event. San Clemente high gchool Accord ing to allegations of U.S. at-nlusicians also will partici pate as well al: torney William D. Keller, Dr. Leggett fourth, fifth and sixth gra ders from ~ turned in false returns Ior four years, Clemente schools. 1965 through 1968. · . . Keller said the indictments charged Tht: bronze bust of President Nixon was that the su rgeon filed joint individual_ cra.fted by Corona del !\-Jar sculptress ret urns alleging that he was married to Edit h Brand and was pu rchased from her Rita Leggett when in fact he bad been . after a months·long fund drive held in divorced from the woman on Dec. 15, San Clemente. · .J Keller sa id the indictments resulted Public ceremonies were first plaMe4! from an investigation conducted by the for the \\'estern White House compl~, intelligen ce di vision of the Internal Rev· but late r were changed . enue Service. The President, who is rumored to be 1964. pl~nning a trip west in .coming week~. will not accept the gift because ol Rock Basl1 Held For SF Convicts SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Sherill Richard Hongisto has staged a rock music concert for the benefit of pri soners in the San Fra ncisco jail and a sellout cro~·d of 5,000 showed up at Winterland. "We all know why this benefit is necessary," he declared. "It's because ... it's the poor people who go to jail." The con<'ert, he estima tes, raised $15,000 Sunday for the prisoners' welfare fu nd and will be spent on items such as stamps, writing materials, televlsion sets and gymnasium equipmenf. custom, Presley said today . The local innkeeper said that accordiag to trad ition a public gift to the Presidett ls nt:ve r personally received by the Chief Executive while he is in office. Ultimately , the Jarger<-than-life blllft will form the local citizens' donation -tb the Nixon Library, and members of the committee havt: sai d they believe the gestu re will help bolster chances fof &electio n of a Sout h Coast loc ale for th\ majo r building and grounds. The bus t, rneasurlng 18 and a half lh· ches high and 16 anC: a quarter wide stan~s on a n:iarble base an d has a plaqOe reading: "Richard A-1ilhous Nixon 37tll President of the United States, bron'zO origina l, Judith Bland, sculptor." ~~ Among those who performed Gra ham Nash and David Crosby. Members of the San Clemente con1. munity ra ised $9,00P to purchase the bust with donations ranging from J'lennies were from school children to $500 from ·a leading business man. · - as your Costa Mesa City Councilman • Dom R1clttl 1upports concepts of ., • better achoef1 ••• bett1r communlty , •. better ltuslnes1es. e l11ccoclff11I CM .. M .. lnf._.11tn e c .... M .. CIMIM-ef Ctfl!Mfff e • • H•Mnl" ._.,k1 .AW9rd •oc.tplttrt fir Oirtttowdf11t Cltl•• of tfle Yt11 -Col ... 1 hirk PTA • C•t• M•• .. 01tlflcetlo11 C..nto • l'llttM -Nn'H ,., ...... .,..,. _,..,,..., ef '" ~ .. '"""'" .. ... u. rtletl•• ... lotllf.tl .. c•Mml""9 ColfW M .. Hl ... rkot SMltfy -_ ... Hm.t A,.. U11ltM Ptr•4 -fllMf COllNtfH Campaign Bead9uarte r1 at 1840 Ne!Dport Blv d. LAST ON · THE BALLOT-1st IN CIVIC CO~CERN ' Phone 845·1380 or 548·1313 YOTI TUESDAY, APRIL 1 1 • • \ l I l ! VO~ Fa Qirrig sports missin Ana, Gro pilots any passen Bote:ch (;)or ' ,SAN found nocent white Oefe John to firs hugg rnothe The thew mend Sund a deadl Jud (or f WA Court which p.Jblic exce ficials. The asked courts down dissen The to he codes violat seven Color a Fi Re M Ar ayste tops Costa face a counci To that t comp! the gr ex pen prov id Both planrtl the au tom to pro Two new$ posed South Acti which parcel comm Ile de! for fu The ment Stree t be ' atructi merci flcull rea~l Also !ngs ceptio Po MIA Congr maine In tens Hospit only t but be lik' I Orange Coa·st . EDIT ON Your BometoWll Dally Paper VOL. 65, NO. 87, 2 S6CTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, M>,.RCH 27, '1972 c TEN CENTS ' Corrigan Gives Up Hope; ·Search Continues By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of "'9 Delly '1'-1 Slaff Famed flier Douglas "Wrong Way" CJtrigan has given up hope for his 1portswriter son and a boyhood friend missing six days on a night from Santa Ana, but the hunt today continues. Ground searchers and Civil Air Patrol pilots flying six planes were still seeking any trace of Roy Corrigan, 22, and his passenger Roger Powell, 21, of Lagµna Beech. .1. Coordinators of I.he CAP search head- quartered at Long Beach Airport are con. ctnlrating along the Southland coastline, also crisscrossing inland hills and valleys. Cmrigan, of 2821 N. Flower st .• Santa Ana, and Powell, of 32 Crystal Cove, Laguna Beach, took off last Tuesday irom Orange County Airport on what was to be a lw\>-hour ~ghtseeing flight. They plan.ned to buzz the Powells' ne'!' home and photograph ii, then swing down to San Diego and back for a •· p.m. return but failed to show up. "We're making an aU-out effort, but we have no new leads," CAP Capt. Thomas Valenzuela said today when contacted at .the LA:ing Beach command J>OSt, He said six CAP pilots would continue the search today , supplemented by Orange and San Diego County sheriff's • aero squadron members scanning the countryside from aloft. Boy Scouts giving up their Easter vaca- tion from school are also combing coastal canyons and foothill areas rot wreckage of Corrigan's Cessna 150 aircraft. Young Corrigan's father, who captured 'Brothers' Cleared Two lnJWcent in Soledad Slaying SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A jury today found the two black Soledad brothers in- nocent of all charges in the death of a white prison guard two years ago. Defendants Fleeta Drumgo, 26, and John Clutchette, 28, who pleaded innocent to first-degree murder charges. rose and hugged their altorneys. Clutchette's mother began sobbing with joy. The verdict came at 11:45 a.m. after the white jury of nine women and three men deliberated since Friday night. On Sunday, they reported t h e m s e I v .e s deadlocked S-J. Judge S. Lee Vavuris sent them back for further deliberations, and they returned the verdict about two hours after resuming discussions today. In the stonny, tightly guanled 13-week trial, the Soledad brothers were accused of beating white prison guard John V. Mills to death Jan. 16, 1970. Also charged was George L. Jackson, 28, killed last Aug. 21 by guards who said he was trying to escape from San Quentin Prison. Overcome with emotion, Drumgo's mother ran from the courtroom, after a court clerk recited the acquittal vudict. Prosecutors contended that Mills was beaten to death with his own flashlight Hair Roling 'OK ACLU Appeal Nixed by High Court WASHINGTON (AP) -The SUpreme Court let atand today a lower court ruling which permits a state to expel or punish public school students whose hair length aceeded limits prescribed by school of· ficials. The vote was 8·1. The American Civil Liberties Union 1sked. the court to act because the lower courts are divided . The appeal was turned down without elaboration and over the dissent of Justice William 0 . Douglas. The Supreme Court has never agreed to hear a case concerning school dress codes and punishment of students who violate them. The ACLU appeal involved 1even students from Utah, New Mexico, Colorado and Oklahoma. Fire Sprinkling Request Facing Mesa Planners A request to delete the !ire sprinkling 1ystem from the proposed Holiday Inn tops the agenda items members or the Costa Mesa Planning Commission will face at their 7:30 meeting tonight in city council chambers. Topeka Inn Management has asked that the requirement for the five-story complex on 3131 Bristol St. be deleted on the grounds tbat the syste m would be too expensive and that extinguishers would provide adequate !ir.e safeguards. Both the Fire Department and the planning staff have recommended against the request. They argue that the automatic sprinkling system is necessary to protect the safety of hotel guests. Two other items deal directly with the new $20 million Four Seasons Village pro- posed on the city's north side, also near South Coast Plaza. Last September, lht U.S. Circuil Court in Denver upheld acbool authorlt)e1. The appeals court said complaints 'based on nothing more than school regulations ol hair length do not "dlrecUy and sharply implicate basic constitutional values.'' The Circuit Courts in San Francisco, Philadelphia and Cincinnati also have backed school 0Uicia11, but four other Circuit Courts -in Boston, Chicago. St. Louis and Richmond, Va. held students have a constitutional right to wear long hair. The ACLU said: 11Tbe issue will con.- tinue to be raised so Jong as school boards persist in regulating the hair length of their male students and those students insist that the Constitution af- fords them the right to make such decisions for themselves. The court should resolve these competing claims.'' The seven students direcUy involved were Terry Freeman and Vyron Randall Ostler of Davis County, Utah; Charles Simmons of Utah county, Utah; Al White of Hobbs, N.M., Gregory Randall Cranson of La Junta, Colo., and Gary Christmas of El Reiio, Okla. Prior to·the Denver court's ruling, U.S. Dist. Judges A. Sherman Chr.istensen of Salt Lake City, Wiltiam E. Doyle of Denver and Luther L. Bohanon of Oklahoma City deferred to school authorities while Judge Howard C. Brat· to of Albuquerque ruled in disapproving the suspension of the White boy that "the right to wear one's hair at any length is an aspect of personal liberty." The ACLU argued in appealing to the Supre me Court Jan. 26 that "the un- derlying issues posed by hair regulations are profound, for they touch upon the very relationship between the individual and the state." The ACLU said school officials were imposing short-halt rules because long- hair is a symbol of dissent, "a badge of defiance of authority." The appeal added : "Jt is sought to be prohibited not because there is anything intrinsicaUy disruptive or distracting about it, but, rather, becawie of what it is perceived to represent." and his body toSsed over a lhird-fioor tier. Four convicts testified they were eyewitnes,,es, and several testified they saw Jackson hitting Mills and the other two surviving defendants near the death scene. Defense lawyers, however, contended that there could have been many convicts at Soledad Prison angry enough to kill a guard. They said this feeling stemmed rrom a white guard's shooting three black con- victs to death earlier during a convict fi st-swinging melee. Mills was killed within hours after the county grand jury declared the black deaths "justifiable homicide.'' Angela Davis said the verdict "is beautiful." · She got word in San Jose where she Is on trial accused of plotting to free the Soledad trio through an aborted hostage- kidnaping from a San Rafael courtroom Aug. 7, 1970. Four Jjersc;ins died ln, the resu1i1N shootout, including 1Jackson's younger brother Jonathan. Miss Davis faces murder, kidnap and conspiracy charges. "I am only sorry that George Jackson did not live to see It," said Miss Davis' chief lawyer, Howard Moore Jr. The Soledad brothers' cause became known after Jackson's book of prison let .. · ters rose to the top of the underground 's best-sellers lists. Supporters Portrayed . the three blacks -all convicted originally or robbery of- fenses in the Los Angeles area -as vic· tims or an unjust system run by whites. Like Miss Davis who is a black Com· rnunist, they claimed to be victims of a political frame-up. 1 Defense lawyers Floyd Silliman and Richard Silver attacked , s a y i n g authorities persuaded them to testify in return for favors of release or early parole. Judge Vavuris, presiding at his first criminal trial, instructed the jury Friday night that it could have returned a verdict of guilty or innocent of first or second-degree murder, manslaughter, or aggravated or simple assault. _Soden Appointed Superior Judge Attorney Mark A. Soden of Newport Beach has been appointed to the Orange County Superior Court bench. Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke made the an- nouncement toda y and confirmed also the appointment of Judge Walter W • Charamza, former Newport Beach city attorney, to the Superior Court. Soden, 55, is a Republican, while Charamza, 51, of Huntington Beach is a Democrat. They will be paid $35,000 a year. · The two judgeships were created by the 1971 legislature. Charamza has been presiding judge or the \\fest Orange County Judicial District since 1969. Soden bas practiced law in Orange County since 1949. Action on a master plan amendment which would change the use or the 40-acre parcel rrom high density residential to commercial uses, however is expected to be delayed. The planning staff has asked for further study on the matter. Rosetta A~burgey the fancy of the world in 1938 when he took off from Brooklyn, N. Y. far Long Beach and turned up instead in Dublln, Ireland, is pessimistic. . He said he gave up hope that his youngest son and passenger would be found after the first futile day's search . The fateful flight was the first in a small plane for Powell, aon of a Santa Ana neon ligµtiug company O\Yner. Corrigan believes his son, a former Santa Ana Register sports repOrter, went down at sea. ' He said last week that while ceastal weather was clear before ~eof!, forecasters missed an area of patchy· fog off Laguna Beach. Corrigan suspects his son tried to fly under the soupy haz.e, miscalculated and dove into the ocean. His two elder sons have been walking up and down the beaches between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar in searcH' of wreckage from the oringe and white, · singlt: engine plane. One seat cushion carried in the craft . . wilt float and cbuld give a clue to its whereabouts on the seafloor if it washes up. Corrigan, however, discounts t b e possibility the missing you1hs may be found alive. • . "He was such a nice kid ••• "the griv· ing rather said, choking. • Search spokesman Cap\. Valenzuela said today the CAP has set no specific time for ceasing the hunt if no. clues turn up. - NEWPORT-MESA TEACHIR'S STUDENTS PUT PATRIOTISM ON STAQf, IN ACTION From· Left, Betsy Elford, David Crocker, Te1cbar Ericknn and Craig Pritchard '' 'America the Beautiful' - -Blind Teacher Believes By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1t1e Dell' l'llol Steff When Donald Ericksen joins his sixth grade class in a spirited chorus or "America the Beautifut" he believes every word of it. He has to because he is blind. Ericksen ha s traveled this nation from coast to coast. Ask him if he has visited the Statue of Liberty, the Lincoln Memo- rial, the battleground at Gettysburg or other monuments and he will always re- ply, "Yes, I've been there, but I didn't see it." If these monuments ha ve the capabil· ity or speaking, they have spoken to Ericksen. An unaba shed patriot, he now wants to tell others what they said. For the past few weeks the eyear-old Wilson School teacher has been showing a patriotic program to students in the Newport-Mesa School District and to I~ cal clubs and organizations. The kaleidoscope in red-white-and blu e is called "A Living Portrait in Sound'' and features some Of his students in re- enactments of Ameri ca's greatest m~ ments. A 37-minute program, the "Living Por- tarit in Sound" draws on music , slides and leading American patriots who de.- liver their own speeches "to help us ap. preciate America a little bit more," ac- cording to Ericksert. The three leading characters are the Stalue of Liberty (Betsy Elford), Abra· ' ham ·Lincoln (David Cr~er), and Uncle . Sam (Craig ,Pritchard). Their colorful costumes were designed. to EriCksen's specifications and paid for by the Wilson PTA, the Rotary Club of Costa Mesa, and the Americanism Committee of the1school district. The four students perform poems and songs against a backdrop of about 20 other Wilson students all dressed in matching white shirts and blouses and blue shirts and trousers. "I wrote the narration myself and planned the outline of the slides we show on the screen," said Ericksen. "The kids work this proguim entirely on their own and withouf cues." A master of organization, Ericksen has polished his program to the point where he only ·needs to cail on his students to help hlm set up the tape recorder and to focus the sl ide projector. Ericksen, who teaches a regular sirth grade class, does not consider .his blind- ness a severe handicap. He entered col· lege knowing that he would be blind . "The light went out between semesters of my junior year," he said. ,;There are lots or others like me," he said. "There are about 100 blind teachers in the State of;Califomla. lt proves you can do anyt hing lf you rea1ly want to." llis patriotic program ls aimed at both the stude nts and the co,nmunity and Er· icksen says he feels "very strongly" about Its subject matter. Nixon Supporter Denies Airline Control Charges WASHINGTON (UP I) -C. Arnholt Smith, a longtime friend of President Nixon and one of his financia l backers, todat' denied charges of several airlines that he continues to control a California · commuter air-line despite a government order to sell it. Smith, chairman of the U.S. National Bank and president of the multi·mllllon dollar Westgate California Corporation, told the Clvll Aeronautics Board : ••it is my position that all steps that could reasonably have been taken to ac- complish the divesture have been taken and neither I nor any' entity controlled by me controls Golden West Airlines." Golden West is based in Newport Beach. In the Golden West case, the CAB Issued an order in 1969 rejecting Smith's proposed acquisition of Los Angeles Airways, a helicopter company con• necting airports in the.Los Angeles area, and the acquisition or Aero Commuter, a California air taxi company aJready con· trolled by Smith. The order had the effect of forcing Smith's corporation to dispose of the air taxi company which is now called Golden (See SMITH, Page I) Orange Coast Weather The other item concerns the realign- ment of South Coast Road between Bear Street and Smalley Road. The road has t~ be shifted northward to allow con· etruction of the Four Seasons com. merciaJ.recreatlooal complex. No dif· ficulty is foreseen with adoption of the , real.ignment. Noted Coast Resident Dies "I believe in it. 'I'lle kids aren 't being given enough opportuJ1ity to participate in things of th is nature. Patriotism Jsn't beng taught much in the schools any- more," he said. .. Obviously the story of our country hasn't been /.old enough, or we wouldn 't have ail the problems we do.'' Sunshine a n d temperatures ranging up to 70 degrees are fore- cast for the Orange Coast area Tuesday. Temperatures tonJght will drop into the 30s and 405. Also on the agenda are 10 public hear- ings bot most of them are for ione et· ceptions of a minor nature. Powell Critical MIAMI (UPll -Former New York Coniressman Adam Clayton Powell re- mained in critical condition today In the fntensive care unit 1t Jackson Memorial Hospital. llospJJal spokesmen would uy only that Powell's condition was crltlcal, but he hH been reported to be In a death· JI~-·· ) • Grieving members of the Harbor Area 's wtll·known Amburgey family gathered today lor funeral services for matriarch Mrs. Rosetta Amburgey, who died Saturday leaving a clan of 120 descendants . She was 78 and succwnbed In a con- va.lescent hospital following a long Illness. RJtes for Mn. Amburgey, of 1991 Newport Blvd., Costa. Mesa, we.re sd!eduled for 2 p.m. al Melrose Abbey Chapel in Anaheim with interment to follow there. Baltz·Bergeron Funeral Home was in charge ol local mangemenl& and l\ev. George MaM was to olliclatt. A 24-year Harbor Area resident, Mn. Amburgey wasn 't too active in com· mun!ty affairs. keeping busy with her large family, most of whom are local resident s. "She just took care of us kids," says her son Noah "Joe" Amburgey, operator ot a service station at Harbor Boulevard and Wilson Street in Costa Mesa. Besides her husband Charles, Mrs. Amburgey had seven sons and three daughters, plus 48 grandchildren, 71 gi:eal·grandchUdren and one great-great· granchlld. The sons. all or Cosla Mesa, include Costa Mesa City Communlcalions Dire<- ·~ tor Orville Amburgey; Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Sam Amlxlrgey; service station operator Noah Amburgey; garage owner Ernest Amburgey, Oscar Amburge~ Alberl Amburgey and Henry Amburgey. Oaugh~rs Include Mrs. Lala Miller, of Kentucky, Mrs. Loraine Croswhite, or New Mexico and Mrs. Minnie Delmonte, or Ind io. ~ family suggests memorial con· trlbuilons to the Girls Club ol the HarbOr Area , or to any charitable or service organlz.atlon preferred by ?ti rs. Amburgey'• friends. Officer DrQwns In Long Beach LONG BEACH (UP I) -A retired U.S. naval officer drowned Saturday when the boom of the 15 foot dinghy he was sailing 1truck hlm on the head, knocking him in- to the waler, a Navy spokesman said. Lt. Cmdr. William McMahan, 59, Palos Verdes Peninsula, wa11 pulled from the water by a passing bo•t. He was pr~ nounced dead aboard the Navy hosplJal ship USS Repo,., I \ INSIDE TODAY Ae1'ospace manu}acturtrs are about to pht11Qe fn to compe:ti· tion for the biggtst space con· tract likely to come the ir way for the next decade -th< $5 .5 billion space shuttl,t program. See &toru. Page 10. l . M, lev• ? 11111111 It C.ll1trlll1 S Cll•t11'411 tl·7• CMlltl 1J Ct1u._.,. 1S Dell!! H1llttt t ••11w111 ~••• 6 lllltfltlll-111 " fl llltflCf , .. 11 l'W !!ti tKf,. t.t Mff'ttClff H • • ) Anll Lllldtrt lS ,,,,..,... t• HllfMlll H.-i 4 Or11111 C11111ty t S1'1¥1t ,..,,.,. 11 1.,.i1 1 .. ,. Stec• M•A:•l• '"n Tt1111hllfl II '"'"''" ,. W111f\tf t Vffmtn Nrwt 1).14 WtrN NIW1 4 ,, • ' t DAILY PILOT c Moodq, M"'h 27, 1971 ITT Inqllest Clouded . Lo_bbyis.t' s Seizure A bort,s Senate Probe DENVER (UPI) -A Senate bearing 11 the bedside of hollpitallud lobbyist Dita D. Beard, aborted by the sudden collapse If Ibo · wtuieos, h8!1 left !he Senate Jlidic.iary CooJmUtee wlth few answerJ and new ques l.iona about While House in· \/Olvement In a giant co11glomerate's financial aid for the Republican National CormntJon. Sen. Phlllp D. Hart (0.Mich.), who led a panel of alJ: 11enator1 into 1 1tUffy hospital lounge Sunda)' to take sworn testimony from Mrs. Beard . called ~ff the bearing after the S3·year-old lobbYJS t 1uffered a heart &eiJure. Her calllpoe came ill the first cay ol her blwn encounter 11 till Ra<k;J lllountlln Q1t.opothlc HOlplW •Ith tho traveling delegation from Congress. The senators were pl~MlnC to return to WasbingtOn today, and the committee la 1cbeduJed to uaume the hearinga Wedne3d1y with Harold Geneen, presi· dent 9f the International Telephone and Telegraph Corp .. as the witness. Mrs. Beard 's doctor aaid ahe "IW'vlved her attack of acute angina pectora" but would be monitored carefully for th~ ne1t several days. Before the u irure , Mrs. Beard again denied repeatedly tha t she had written a memorandum to her superior linking the l1T pledge to help San Ditgo und'"'rite Ille ...U cl holtt., tllt COP eonventlon with the Justice Department'• out-of· court aetllement last year of a huge an- tJtrust action against the conglomerate. But. under question ing. the woman 1cknowledged tha t. ahe had written por· tions o( the memorandum that column ist Jack Anderson published this mon th Jn. duding a passage in wh ich she referred to "that call from the White House." .. That call," Mrs. Beard explained Sun- day, "'as an inquiry by someone in the F.x ecutive Mansion -&he was not au re who -to W. R. ~1erriam , her supervisor in !he Washing ton office, •·want ing to know all aboot this commitment , th is un- derwriting'' of San Diego's convention cost(. I Can Show Davis .Guilty, Mrs. Beard said Merriam "asked me to eiplain" and ahe did -in a memoran· dwn that contained about ball the language used in the document Anderson published, but made no reference to a 1iok between the antitrust settlement and the convl:ntion underwriting. Whatever Happened to Bal Week? Prosecutor Tells Jury SAN JOSE (UPI) -Prosecutor Albert W. Harris Jr. uid today the state bad evidence to prove thlt Angela DaviJ entered ·a conspiracy to kidnap hostages from a San Rafael courtroom and thJt her action led to the murder of Judge Harold J. Hiley Aug. 7, tll70. .Jackson and two other ' ' So I e dad Brother>" bolrur held in Son Quentin Pri.son. (See earlier story, Page 5) She acknowledged writing : "I just had a 'long talk with EJG (E. J . Gerrity, vice f" pPesident of IIT). I'm so sorry that we got that call from the White House. I thought you and I had agreed very thoroughly that under no circumstances would anyone in this office discuss with anyone our participation in the con- vention, including me. Other than permit- ting John Mitchell, Ed Reinecke, Bob Haldeman and Nixon besides Wilson, of course no one has known from whom that $400,000 commitment had come." Photograph taken today at 11 a.m. shows the lack ol beach a.ctivity at Newport's Big Corona. It was a marked contrast to the Easter vacation crowds of years past. Only about 75,000 persons vi sited New· port's beaches during the \Veekend 1 about half as many as last year. Boat traffic over the ~1eekend' .was brisk but dropped today. A 57 degree week·; end ocean temperature was reported but hardy souls took advantage of a four-foot su rf. IA I IOW·keyed opening 1tltemeot to the jury at Mi.a Davia' trial on murder, klclnapi.nc and conspiracy charges, Harris said that her moUve waa to free George Harris told the eight·woman, four-man jury that the 28--ye.ar"ld former UCLA assistant philosophy professor and Com- munist Party member did not herself participate in either the kidnaplng or shooting or in the killing of the judge. Freeze Damages Central J1 alley's Bud.ding Crops FRESNO (AP) -Freezing tern· per.J!Ur~ that J!lAY ~·1ve damaged bud· ding crops atruct California'• Central Valley today. Fnsno recorded 31 -a record low for the date. But~e uld that as "principal" in the conspira she waa responalble for the crimes d that she entered into them "Imo . gly and criminally." "The evidence wlll lhow thlt by the lime of the San Rafael Jncident the life and fortunes of Angela Divis were firmly • committed to George Jackson," Harrla &aid. Harrill, an aasiltant state attorney general appointed to prosecute the cue, eoutiontd the jurol'll thlt •hit he hid to uy was not evidence in liaelf. But he uld he II eonlldent the atlte could prove its charges of flrat degree murder; kidn1pin1 and criminal con· apir1cy .. Harria said the prosecution would show that Miaa: Davis waa completely aware of the plans of 17-year-old Jonathan Jackson, George Jackson's brother, to break into the Marin County Courthouse. Harril uid she plotted with youn g The U.S. Weather Service. reported 27 Jackson in the commiaalon of the crime, degrees at Lemoore, 27"2 at Clovis and 21 in which Judge Haley, an assistant on the Sanger River bottom. district attorney and three women jurora ReadiDp were warmer both north and. were taken at JunPoint from the aoulb wllb Merced'lod Stoek!OO-l'<portlni ' eoW'lroom. '¥1 w:Jlllersffe1d 311. -_ '!'bey were taken outaide to 1 yellow Fiiiii'a...,,low was four degrees under van parked ouiatde •. where a ~olent ~ the p&y;1 low for the date, set in 1 .. .,... "baWe b~ out ~th she.riff 1 deput1u Hoft9tr, the are.a had anther late March' 'and San Qlitntin guards. 'Haley was tilled reading of 31 degrees on March 30, 181?. by a thdtf\Ul~blut .lnaJde the van and . 'J11'-<20;!Ja Jow lasted 21,2 hours, and three of the four kJdnape.rs were killed. Jim S~ of the weather bure.1u said . many -vaJJey fruits can stand only 30 .Harris was e.1pecte.d to take up much degrw-lor half an hour at thia i lage of of today's session, with 1111 opening ttl.te- development before being damaged. ment. Apricots and grapes can take only 31 degrees for one half hour. he said. The valley la one of the major U.S. agricultural crop producers. Mr. Henderson tast Rites Held Private funeral services were con· ducted today at 11 a.m. in Corona del Mar for :JO.year Corona de! Mar resident and real estate broktr 1bomas W. Henderson Sr., who died Saturday. He was 6S. Tbe owner of the Harbor Investment C:Ompany in Corona del Mar, Mr. Henderson resided with his wife, Elaine, at 1429 Dolphin Terrace. , Mrs. Hend erson served as presiden t of the Jrvine Coast Country Club and the Newport Harbor Board of Realtors. Funeral services took plac e at Baltz· Bergeron Mortuary. Cremation followed. In addition to his wi(e. he is survived by two sons, Thomas W. Hender son Jr., a Costa Mesa at torney, and Dennis T. Hendenon of Dallas, Te.1as, and !our grandchildren. DAILY PILOT Tl!• O!'fl'll Co.11 OAILY "ll Of, wilt! wMcll 11 ~lntld 1111 H1wa·Pr111, II MUV!td .,.. 1111 Or•"O• C.0111 Pubt1111t"o Coml)lny, S1111· r1 tt tdillCl"I ••• llUblllhed, Mond1Y lh~ugh Fr1dev, tor Co1!1 Mt~•. Ntwllllrl Bt1ch. H11r.t!n;11c" Be1cn/Foun1tl" Ve llt y, Lt•11n1 l etc/I, lr"l"r/S1ddleb1c~ 1nd Sin Ct1menlt/ $an Juan C1pt1t•1110. A 1lngl1 re91fl.111! eoltllln !1 llllbll1llM S1tur111y1 Ind Sund1v1. fll• !ll'!nc!NI oub!l1hln1 p!tnt 11 11 »O Wtsl f> '! l lrMI, COlll Mt11, Ctlllornlt , t 2616. Rob11t N. W11d PrMIClt"t Incl Put1 U1h1r .lie~ R. C11rl1y \'ct Prtildenl 1roc1 Gent r11 Mtnt~tr Thom•• Ktt"il Editor Tho1¥11f A. M11rphin1 Mllllfll'll ElllOr 1 Ch1rl11 H. l oot Rlch11il '· Nill A.11l1tt1'1! MtMl'"9 E111!0" Cott• 111 ... Office lJO W11t l1y Sh11t M11lh1t Addr111; P.O. l ox 1560, •1626 OtMr OHie .. Ht wport eucto~ uu NtWJIOl1 I Ol,ll ......... Presi.dent · Names Commerce Ai.de To Pay Board WASHINGTON (AP) -11oe<o C. Slel· lf&no, president cl 1 Los A.gelet hold- ing company and undenecretary of commttce, has been named by President Njxon as the Jone bw.i.nesa representative to remain on the revamped Federal Pay Board. The White House said Nixon made the decision over the weekend, which he 6pent at Camp David in Maryland. The other four business members "vof. unteered to resign," a aid deputy press secretary Gerald L, Warren, in the wake of the walkout of three labor members of the Pay Board and President Ni1on'1 ac- tion to reconstitutt the puel aa a seven· member all-public pay board . Siciliano, SO, a native of Salt Lake City, servtd in both the Eisenhower and Ni.zon administrations and is now president ol the T.I. Corp., 1 Los Angeles holding company for title insurance operallons. He has considerable background in I•· bor negotiations and formerly was presi· dent of the Pacific Maritime Association in San Francisco and negotiattd on the management &ide in West Coast dock disputes. He was undersecretary ot commerce in the Nixon administi:Miwt from 1969 until about a year ago. J.'Mlhe was assis tant secretary of labor and a special assistant to the President for personnel manage..· ment during the Elsenhowtt admlni.rtra. ti on. New Safety Law To Be Discussed Mitchell is the former U.S. attorney general, Reinecke is lieutenant governor of California, Haldeman is President Nii· on'1 top aide and Rep. Bob Wilson (R· Calif.), la a congressman from the San Diego area. What Mra. Beard denied -vehemently and under oath -was that sbe had writ- ten : "I am convinced, because of several conversations with Louie (former Kerr lucky Gov. Loull B. Nunn) "' Milcllell, that our noble commitment has gone a long way toward our negotiations on the mergers eventually coming out how Hal, (Gf:neei.) wants them.'' Getty's Wife Dead of Heroin ROME {AP) -Italian medical ei:aminers reported today that Talitha Pol Getty, actreu' wife of Paul Getty Jr., died last summer from a massive injection of heroin, and not from an overdose of aleep- iDI pills as first suspected. • ..... The two ei:aminers madf· tilt repcrt to Domenico Sica, the anls- tant state prosecuto1· cond~ the inquest into the 3I·year.oJd ~a.c· tress' death. Paul Getty Jr. ia the ton of the American oil king. Mrs. Getty was found un- conscious in her apartment in old Rome on July 10. Beside her bed was an empty sleepin!j pill bottle. Plea by Schools Against Busing Order Denied WASHINGTON (AP\ -The Supreme Court today declined to review an order that San Diego officials take "reasonably feasible steps" to balance the races in all public schools. The court gave no elaboration Jn unanimously turning down a plea for a hearing filed by the offi cials Nov. II. The case could have led to a ruling on whether racial imbalance in schools Is, of itself, unconstitutional. The challenged order was Is sued by a state appeal' court in Californ ia. The San Diego school district, one of the largest in the nation, has about 128.000 public school children. About 95,200 are white, 16,000 black, 13,600 with Spanish ~urnames and another 4,000 of other minorities. In 1969 the state attorney general began the suit, claiming racial imbalance in several schools violated the con· stitutional rights of minority children and should be corrected. . Judge George A. Lazar of San Diego ruled that without ''intended, segregation '' school officials do not necessarily have a legal duty to eliminate racial imbalance. Last August, he was reversed by a court of appeal. which held "school authorities in California have a con- stitutional duty to take steps, insofar as reasonabl y fea si ble, to allevia te racial imbalance in schools regardless of its caust where the imbalance denies the minor ity group equal educat ional op- portunit ies. '' School officials appealed in November to the Supreme Courh San Diego officials, in aeeking a hear- ing, sa id: "It is now tlme to o:amlne the question of pupil racial imbalance arising in 11reas whtre there was no state im- posed segregation." Due to the Supreme Court's not hearing the case. the ne.1t step evidently will be a trial In a caJifornla court. LIOlll'lt Inell. m Fornt Avtn...e H1.111lli.tton 8ttcll: llllJ Bttcll B0\11t y•f'11 '4111 Cltlntl\N; .xi$ l'OMh El C.tnlnt "ffl Teleph•H l714J '4Jo4l21 Cl-HIM Adffl'thhit 642·1611 C:OP't'tlot!t, lt1t, Ort f!Ot C114tt Pullll•~ln1 COl'l'IJM"f. N1t ,..,.., norlts, 1!t111tr111-. tcllfol!tl "::ti Of' t 0' ... •r1llfl"lellll lltrtl" ,,...V bt t II('° w1lflovl •Pt<lll Pl» m1.t1l1111 ~ COPY'tlO"'I 1..n1r. Co.sla Mesa businessmen can leam the Ins and outs of the new Occupational Safety and Health Act during a luncheon meeting of the Chamber or Commerce April I. Gu"t •peaker will be W I 111 a m Marseillts, director of occupational 11fe- ty for the Greattr l<>s Anseles Chapter of the National Salety Councll. The no-host luncheon ls scheduled for noon in the banquet room of. the Coral Reef Restaurant, 2645 Harbor Blvd. Dr. Thomas Goodman, tuperintendent of San Otego schools, "Id the high cour t's ruling was expected bec1use of a recent reque$t by C11lilornia Atty. Gt:n. £veJJe Younger that the hearing be called orr. lktnd ci.M Ml\110. N iii II Cent ,..,,M, Ctllfomlt , MttTl-'~ 111' ctrr~r c ff "'Ol'lll'll\IJ ~ ll'll U IJ.IJ ,._~trir,, "'lftf1ry ONllM.lllN NM ft'IOll1Jlll', Seats may be reserved by aendlna '3 to the. Costa hiesa Chamber of Commerce, $33 W. 19th SI., C..ta Mw 92627, ' "We 11greed three or four "''eeks IJ!O to go along with 0 the 1ttorney geoe.ral,'' Goodman saW. "l think we'll gj) ahead now with plans we've Men developing. We've alrt1dy presented t0me alternate plan1.'' Harrisburg Seven Case Defendant Acquitted Pat to Accept Busto£ Nixon In San Clemente HARRISB URG , Pa. (AP ) - Eqbal Ahmad, one of the defendants in the Har- risburg Seven trial, was acquitted today of sending a letter threatening to kidnap presid ential adviser Henry A. Kissinger. U.S. District Court Judge R. Dixon with conspiracy to kidnap, bomb and van- dalize draft boards. U.S. Distric:,t Court Judge R .Dixon Herman also handed down a directed verdict of acquittal on a charge of caus· ing an illegal Jetter to be smuggled into a federal penitentiary. · But the trial judge rejected other defense motions to acquit the si1 other defendants on all charges. The: derision on Ahmad , a Pakistani Mos lem and the only non-Catholic among the defendants1 red uces the possible ma x- imum penalty he could recei\'e if con- victed from 20 years to 5. Only two of the defendants face lengthy sentences -antiwar priest Philip Berri- gan, who could get up to 45 years, and Sister Elizabeth McAlister could get 40 years. The others are subject to five-year penalties on the conspiracy count. Herman's decision 19 remove Ahmad (rqm the letter exchange about .Kissinger stemmed from his strikii:ig of all evidence relating to the Pakistani's voice iden· Wication by paid FBI informer Boyd F'. Douglas Jr., the govert)ment 's chief witness. Douglas testified he recei ved two phone calls from Ahamd relating t.o the letter outlining the alleged plot to kidnap Kiss· inger which was sent by Sister Elizabeth to Berrigan . Sister Elizabeth had written Rock Bash Held For SF Convicts SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -Sheriff Richard Hongisto has staged a rock music concert for the benefit of prisone rs in the San Francisco jail and a sellout crowd of 5,000 showed up at Winterland. ''We all know why th is benefit is necessar y," he declared. "It 's because ... il's the poor people who go to jail." The conrerl, he estilllates, raised StS,000 Sunday for the prisoners' welfare fund and will be spent on items such as stamps, writing materials, television se ts and gymnasium equipment. Establish Saft Bicycle Trails Dom R1c itti supports concepts e S11cc.cuf11I C••t• w ... 11111,....,...11 • Honorory Ser.le• Awor4 •.clfllltttt fer 011tttoM1J111 Cltl-. tf the Y .. r -Celi.t• P•rt PT A • C•tto M•• .. tutlflctttl•1t Ct"'• "''"" -.. fftd f•t ..... II fffl'I In the letter that the kidnaping idea was Ahmad's. At the time. Douglas and Berrigan were inmates at the federal penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pa. Douglas, who was a convict on study-release at nearby Bucknell University, was serving as the courier for Berrigan and hia peace move- ment foll owers . The attorneys were expected to begin their summations later today. On Sunday. hundreds of peace militants in black robes, with faces painted white to resemble death masks, marched past the federal courthouse. Among spectators on the steps were chief prosecutor William Lynch and two of his aides. They apparently interrupted preparation of final trial tactics to observe the march. From Pagel SMITH • • • West Airl ines. However, Airwest, Pacific Southwest Airlines and Western Air Lines argued . that Smith actually still controlled Golden West via an intricate financial ar· rangement with Smith's other companies. In testin1 ony before the CAB, however, Smith said that the "United States Na· lio nal Bank continues to be a major lender to Golden West." He also said that because the air line has not reached a point "whete we have absolute assurance of the col!ectibility of our loan, we t.'Onti nu e to monitor the operation !Qrough analysis of its monthly results and discussions with its manage. ment \\•here we feel they are desirable.'' Smi th said. however, that this was being done "out of necessity and as a matter of sound banking practice, and not by choice." He said he wa s looking forward to the da.v \\'hen this activity will no longer be required to protect the bank's in· vest ment. Smit h was mentioned in an article in- Life ~1agazine last week, which claimed ~he adm~niStration tampered with justice in San Diego by stopping an investigation of possible illegal political contributions to President Nixon's 1968 election cam- paign. Accord ing to the articlt , the funds were allegedly funneled through mme of Smith's many corporations. By JOHN VALTERZA Of !tit Otlly Pli.t Slaff Mrs. Pat Nixon will visi t San Clemen te April 7 to formally accept the $8,000 portrait in bronze purchased by res idents of the city, and.: dozens of cele brities are scheduled to join her . Public ceremonles will start at 9:30 a.m. in Old Plaza Park, with film personalities, local dignitarie~ and local and state legislators attending. PauJ Presley, chairma n of t ~,t: President's Project Committee, said the natio n's first lady ~'ill leave for another appearance in Arizona later that day. Tel evision and radio perso nality Johnny Grant \\'iii be maste'r or ceremonies at the e\'ent. San Clemente high school musicians also will participa le as wtll as fourth , fifth and six th graders from San Clemente schools. The bronze bust of Pres ident Nixon waa crafted by Corona del Mar sculptress Edith Brand and was purchased from her after a months·long fund drive held in San Clemente. Public ceremon ies were first planned for the Western White House complex, but later \\'ere changed . The_ Preside.nt, who _is rumored to ~ pl~nn1ng a tri p west 1n . coming wetk!, wtll not accept the gr ft because of custom, Presley Said toda y. The local innkeeper said that accordi~ to tradition a public gift to the President is never personall y received by the Chiif Execu tive while he is in offi ce. Ultimately, the larger·than ·life bust Yr'ill form the loc al citize ns' donation to the Nixon Library, and members of the committee have said they believe the gesture will help bols ter chances f~r selection of a South Coast locale for th major building and grounds. The bust, measuring 18 and a hall j,. ches high and 16 anG a quarter wide stan~s on~ n:iarble ba~e and has a plaque readrng : Richard Milhous Nilon J7th President of the United Sta tes. bronz.e original, Judith Bland, sculptor." Mem bers of the San Clemente com· munity raised $9,000 to purchase the bu.st with donations ranging from pennies from school children to $500 from ~ lead ing business man. "Motivating lhe effort was the desi re of the. citi~ens of Sa n Clemente to txpres1 their pride and affection for the presldent and first family, who chost San Clemente for. the West ern Whit e House as well as their permanent residence" the Whit. House said. ' ' as your Costa Mesa City Councilman of . • • better 1choof1 ••. betttr community ••• bttttr businesses. e Ce&ht Mwcr C"9.a.er frf c .. "*" e C..n M .... N-.,.tt Horlter Lit .. Chia. -httlt!Hl .. t p._ "911•et -tMMMr 9f tlte a.n ef tllNct.n ,,,,k,. ....... ..,~ ... , ....... ,,,... e C01to Mno Hl1t.rkol S.CJ.ty -_ ... e H•rMr ArH Utlr.4 hH -ft!H •• u.,, •• . • .,,. kt•b """'"' ., ,.... letJto. l.tfyt, 1t•,..lllett11t •1111 r•••rc• COl•HnJttl ... e Y•11tli 1,..,,,,_rtt S.,.lce •f tti. H•Ur "'" -'flc• Pr•llltttt • loy Sco11tt •f AIMrlce-k"t ... "'""' olMI 111114 rolthlt Campal91a Headquarter• at 1840 Ne1vport Blvd, Pltone 645-1':160 or 548·1313 LAST ON THE BALLOT-ht IN CIVIC caNCERN VOTE TUESDAY, APRIL 11 • • J I c ' i:ri A Cl \h Su op cu fr re pa Ci In s Sta recou Dorot counc herd the A Lat Ba Court com minu of cu mont The was Sept for e eepl eondl f759. The the cl she is daug ciJmp Orne A bofor Ta ten The Chari