Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-04-03 - Orange Coast Pilot• ........... arr1ers u .s Pet · Store Birds~ Poultry to Die In Co-.inty· Sweep DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * MONDAY A"FTERNOON, APRIL 3, 1972 VOL. U, NO, H, 2 SfCTIONS, ti. PAOIS Jolly Good Ride UPI Tel..,nolt Great Britain's Peter Duker, \Vho left Los Angeles March 15, em- braces· his wife, Ruth . as he arrives in New York April 1, breaking the coast to coast cycling record. Duker's trans-American run \Vas the last leg of a 14,000 mile around-the-world marathon which has taken him across four continents. 'Depopulation Teams ' Set ·For Bird Sweep in County . By RUDf NIEOZTELSKI Agriculture Department spokesmen said. 01 1h• 0111y Pl~t •1111 The number of pet store birds thal U.S. Agri culture Ocpactmenl insneclor.L_ have alr~a.dy ~ea.destroyed is unknown. are ~xpccted to move into Orang.e Counly One newsman said he saw several birds this week to _kill pet store birds and killed by carbon' dioxide gas Sunday at a poultry flocks 1n an attempt to stem the (Ste BIRDS Page iJ spreai1 or an exotic fowl disease. - -. - -, "OepopulatiOrl teams'' were already at work in ·Los Angeles .erea pet stores to- dny, gassing canaries and p~rrots af- flicted with Newcastle 's Disease, a spokesman said. A special control center set , up in Riverside will be a base of operations for the team which are scheduled .to vis.it pet shops and poultry growers in Ora~ge, Los ~geles, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura Counties. All of these areas are within the eight- county federal quarantine area whk:h lm· posed last month to eradicate the Asiatic virus disease. -The disease affects the respiratory systems of birds Rnd Is not considered 'harmful to humans. Chickens die 0£ It within' a day or t\\'O, according to authorities. • Flocks round carrying the disease are extermln1t..i· ind tge owners paid the ma rket va!Ue oft the dead birds, ·U.S. Director Quits Positio1i WM;IIlNGTON (UPI) -The· U.S. lntonnation Agen cy an- nounced today the resignation of Bruce HerschenS()hn, Its motion picture director, who called Sen . J. William 1'-u!bright (f).Arlt ), ''very n11ive and stupid'' for questioning USIA operatioils aboard. Informed sources contended that the agency's director, Fr a n k Shakespeare, and other USfA offl _. clals1 attempted unsucces!lfully to dissuade Henchensohn from quit· Ung. Firemen Rescue Three Youths On Laguna Cliff Three Anaheim youths who thought they could scale a Laguna Beach cliff Saturday evening didn't quite make it and had to be rescUed by city firemen. The boys were plucked from a perch some 50 feet above Crescent Bay beach about 7:30 p.m. by a team of firemen trained in cliff resue operations.-ac· cording to Fire Chief James Latimer. The youths were uninjured. The fire chief identified the three teenagers as David Tucker, Rolland \Vhite and Robei;t Shookman . Latimer said the boys, dressed in light clothing and without any climbing equip· ment, began their ascent with hope of making the top of the 90-foot-cliff before nightfall. However, Latimer said darkness set in when the boys were about half.way up the rocky cliff wall and they stopped climbing because they could no longer see what they were doing . The boys' shouts for help attracted residents of the area, who subsequently called authorities. Carpe1iters End Stan.d at Hotel l 1i Miami Beacli MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The Carpenters. one or the nation's most popular recording groups, have no.wn back to Cali fornia after cancelling seven days of a scheduled nine-da y run here because they refused to_perform over the clatter of dishes at a hotel. Tbe 13-member group led by young Karen and Richard Ca rpenter or Garden Grove, refuse() lO Come out for their se- cond performance Saturday n i g ht because they said the Eden Roe llote l falled to honor a C1lntract provision that it must hall food and beverage service in the night club while they are singing. "We can perform in a noisy room and It doesn't make any difference to us - we still get paid," said Richard Carpenter. "But we hon"estly believe the people deserve better. '1 Karen carpenter added : "I almost forgot the words during 'Close to You' because a waiter came up to a front table llfid f)fesented a checnery noiSily to a n1an . After the man Sa\Y the check, I don't think he C1luld enjoy any song." The maUcr was brought .to the at. tentlon of hotel owner Morris Lansburgh between shows Saturday night, but he: refused to stop service. during the act. ,j A very clear lld important clause 'in aur contract prohibits service from fi ve (S<t CARPENTERS, P11e !I - 0 Car enters Gron Ends Toni· After Platter Clatter I Deter111ined Kid · Plays B~eball Despite Leg Brcices TERRA LJNDA (APl -When Tracy Caldwell was born nine years ago with cerebral palsy, doctors said he would never walk. But Tracy has a v.•ay of surprising pro-- pie. Three weeks ago. when he told his parents he was going to try out for the Little League baseball team at Terra Linda, in ?\1arin County north of San Francisco, they didn't take him too seriously. After all , he \Years braces on both legs. Bu t Terry tried out and captured pitching and outfield positions on the team. Ray Siciliano, who coaches the team. said the youngster has been doing a good job and has served as an inspiration for the other players. "You ought to v.·alch him v.•hcn he·s picthing," said Siciliano. ·'Sometimes he loses his balance and ralls. But he just jumps up. brushes off his uniform and goes at it again as if nothing had hap· pened. He's been an inspiration for other membe rs of our club.'' The youngster also plays tennis and ):>ool, and ls one of the top students in his class. U.S. Rusl1es Air Carrie1~s Into Battle Against Reels · SAIGO:-.' (UPI ) -The aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk, recalled from shore leave in the Philippines, arrived off Vietnam to- day and its 50 planes \Yere ordered into &ction in1mediately against North Viet- namese armored columns which ha ve driYen 15 miles into South Vietnam. A second carrier, the Constellation, was ordered from leave in Japan with the guided missile cruiser Oklahoma City to join two other carriers on Yankee Sta· tion . It v.•ould be the greatest concentration of U.S. naval might si nce end of the bom- bing hall in 1008. The Kit ty Jlav.·k sped to Yankee Stalion from Subic BaY-afler the. U.S. command warned J1anoi it would take "precau. tionary actions'' to protect American Jives in South Vietnam. Such warning s in the past have preceded heavy bombing offensives against North Vietnam. The four carriers plus air force fighter· bombers based elsewhere in Vietnam and Thailand would enable the Un ited States to send as many as 500 planes against the Communist forces. South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu strlpped Saigon, Hue and Da Nang of aJ\ but their garrison forces t()o day and flew 10,000 government troops to Quang Tri to try to roll back the Com· munist invasion. Hanoi Radl'l reported that North V1eJ:- namesc antiaircraft gunners shot do.,.,·n a 852 bombing "popualted areas" just north or the Demilitarized Zone. The U.S. command In Sa,tgon denied the report. The Communi$ts hold the northern half or Quang Tri Province. just below the DMZ and front dispatches salJ Quang Tri city, the nearby Quang Tri base and Dong Ha were under heavy attack tonight. Quang Tri is 15 miles south of the DMZ. Dong •la about 10 miles. A new threat appeared to be developing to Hue, the ancient. imperial capital or Vietnam, but orficials said the situation was under control. Communist attacks were reported at Fire Base Anne, 18 mites west of flue, and Bastogne, 15 miles to the southwest. · Both bases protect against Communist infiltration routes through the A Sha u Valley to Hue, devastated in the 1968 Tet offensive. A South Vietnamese spokesman said the reinforcements flown in today would mount a counter-offensive "in a few days." They included marine<; ::ind rangers from Saigon. infanlry frorif H"ue and two tank brigades from Da Nang. They were flo\vn north in a collecuon of (See VlETNA~l , Page-%) Santa Ana Stab Victim Critical A Santa Ana cab driver. victim of a stabbing Sunday afternoon, Is reported in critical condition today. \Villiam Dawes. 22, or 500 \\'. 3rd St., .Yt•as waltlng_!or a.. tare In front Of $Rnlil Ana Community Ho~pital police sai rl, when he got into tin argun1cnt with another man over parking and was stabbed In the left side. The assa\lnnl. who flcd l Is described as a Mexican, American, about 30 years old, y,•lth long black ha ir and 11 goatee . , Dawes wa s treated at the hos.pital's emergency ant'c!r and held for obserxa· tiOn. 6 Suspects Now Held In Custody One more Hessian molorcyc/e gang member. S(lught since a pair of Nevada girls spilled a sickening storv of sexual captivity 111vo/ving fnrccd p 'er v ers t pleasures for 17 men and \\'Omen, wa s captured S;1turday in Coi;til r-.1esa. The arrl'st of Kcnnl·th R. "Varmint'' Bates. 27. of 1013 \V.' IR1h SL, and that ol a Cypr('ss woman rrlfi liated \Y ith the oulla\v cyclis t gang brough t to six the nurnbcr Jn custody. A mass arraignment was scheduled !his n1orning in Long Beach Municipal ~urt for other defendants linked to th8 b1~arre abduction disclosed Thur sday, with the prrest of four initinl suspects. Bates And the sixth suspecl , Bella "Taco" r-.·lorris, 29. of Cypress. .1re char.ged .,.,,ilh suspicion of kidnaping, forcible rape, sex perve rsion and assault \1·ith a deadly weapon . fd enti('t1I charges nre faced hy Albert C1Jltcr. 31. of Garden c:ro\'c, plus Ric hard Rizzone. 28. Linda ~t. Bai;?ula. 23. and James E. Alan IV. 39. all of Long Beach. Alan is owner of North Tov.1n Custom Cycpe Shop in Long Beach -where the initial _raid was made -and reputedly in- ternational president or the so-called outlaw cycle gang. Teams of Long Beach detectives led by Sgt. J im Racobs are still hunting specifica'lly named suspects among 1-lessians allegedly involved in the lurid (See ~·IOTORCYCLE, Page ZJ Orange Coast \l'ealher J\loslly sunny skies arc nn the agenda fnr Tuesday along the Orange Coast. with slightly cooler temperatures fxpected. Highs at the beach('s around 68 rising to 78 Inland. Lows 4$-$5, INSIDE TODA\' * federal ngt>11c11 ·n~~·now­ lt.dges it overlooks n rat or mo1ise pellet 1n racli pint nf u:ltr.nt. SPe !1cigf R for f1Uldelit1e.~ o,. hon1 m11clt filth t/1c agency ..&liuit.leri u1u11iolc/nhlf' 11t1d roler· nble 11t 11011 r fn1JOr1t.c fnorls. ' M. IOYll ' "" L Ollftrt " 80011 ... " Ml~l<I " Cot1lonll• I Nolto1101 ..~ ' c 1ou\11t~ ""' Of•11t1 c11~~1r " (tmf<I " S¥lvl1 '•rltr " (te,JWON " s"11i U-1t Derlh Nt1•c1' " "'" M1r~111 Jl•ll 1:.11trl•l P••t • 'Ttl•vl1!111 " '""110111 ..... ~• " Tht•ltrt " llillllltl ..... Wt11lllff • '" ~· lt.ecort " Wf/1'1111'1 N..-. 1).1~ ~r~'" " W1rlf Ntwl f I • I • t: OAIL V PILOT s McGovei:n Malt:e-s--Goof-NORTH ViiTNAM DEMILIT,O.l'tlZED ZONE T ~s<lay's Priniary Thrown · Into Confusion By STEVt: Gt;RSTEL 1he Republica n nauonal convention from h11rv<'sl or 67 delegates to the Democratic Vl"t 1"11111r11 wrll•• its taxable income, !\attonal Convention. fllll.\\'AUREE. \\'is. -A per~ps co.st-As 500n as the prosram 1 f'i:lce tfie-Nn· About 1.5 million voters <frc expected to ly mistake by Sen. George S. r.1cGovern hon -CBS ) ended. a dlstrauRht aide turn out Tue!lday for the fourth primary :>• idded to the confusion and uncertainty rushed to ~1cGovern to tell him he wos of the 19'12 election year. U Nixo1LEye_s Com1nunist I War Tl11~ust ol l r b f, wronfY and that the 1!171 report with lhf' Th lh · I d '-I about the outcome of rT~u;•~s~d~•;_i:y.,·~·-~~-~~-~~f·~~-~~:;"llri'.bill:JQllc_:'}3';.~";•:.:;m~•~J0~r~c~o!'.n~crnn~c~"~· ;,'~''v~~"~'j-" -i ·j· --------:;~-:-~""tl.~~ -•-n. n d be 1'1 d Ilse Y a :·:. ( ~"' • Don" Ha I\ t\SHl/'\GTO~ !AP I -President Nix- on ~u1nmoned a special fore ig n policy 1n1 to ses51o n tOdRY t(I nnS1yu-In;,_--8---·C1'1 :iiu""" \\'<15 made -~a not t'n t e · ~tcfrQvcrn's invalid accusations coi;!d ·:·:; ~ Cam lo, • which ~1cCovern, Hubert ii. Humphrey ~l cGovern thrn s1ud ihnt his accu sation become a fa ctor. e\•cn thoul!h none of i::l - and Edmund S. ~;tuskie battled for fir~t "'ns made on the bas is of statements by the other candidates jumped In to exploit ]~'.1 · SOUTH place. (See rel ated story, Page 41 111' officiii.ls that they considered i.; .. them. ~:; Catftft .iilllr a Quang Tri prl'pare npl10ns ror poss1blt action to rope \\'Ith the Comn,unlst thrust into South VielnRm. ~n a nationwide telecast Sunday. with proper business ex pense. He told Campa ign stratcJ:,ii;L~ for the can-·.·. VIETNAM ···~ ~ ilf- the primary t~·o days away, '.1-·lcGovern report.~rs that he had mtide "11n h<.ne.$l dida!es have shied tnvay fro1n tabbing the ;.:: Carroll Mai Loe But the. \\'h1te Houi;e Spokesman said the Co1nn1un1st pu.~h south of the rlcmilita r11.cd zone v.·1ll not htimper con· l1nuu1g schedulrd 1\•ithdra\\·al of U.S. troops frorn lndoch i~a, charged Securities and Exchange Com-error flntsh. citing the unc{'rtaint)· of the vole ·~ A 08 Q"• mission records showed that Jnterna· :\>lcGovern . Hu.mphrey <1nd .\luskir arc for Alabama 's Gov. George C. \\'nllace ., .. , o • "' .,.,, tional Telephone and Teleg raph, Inc . considered the three leading cand1dat1?s and the possibility or a mass crosso\·er ·;_·.~.'-~.:~.·-·. c__ -~J "°1••' deducted a $400,000 contribution to in the Wisconsin primary with its rich to1u..1.• by Republicans. •·our "'ithdr1nval program ii; on Frhedule and '"·111 be met ," deputy press st"Cretary (:fi•ald L. \\1arren sa id In response to· a question. Three J(illed, 11 Hurt In Nightclub Drug War ATLAN'TIC CITY. N.J . (UPI) -Two women and a man were shot to death and 11 other persons .were wounded early today in a crowded nightqlub in what au- thorities said \vas • drug war between rival Philadelphia gangs. ~·tario F. Florlani. public safely di- rector. said..JbtLs,hooting began about 2 a.m. in the Ciu8" Harlem where he esti· mated 600 persons were watching lhe floor show~when the shooting began. '"These shootings were the result of a drug war that has been taking place in Philadelphia," Floriani sa id. 'It started in the tatter part of February where one gang member was ahot and there was a $240,000 drug robbery. "Thus. the contract was put out by this group to more or Jess eradicate the ones responsible. They just used Al· lanlic City to settle their grievances." He said the shooting began when an unidentified man tapped Tyrone Pa lmer, 22, of Philadelphia. on the shoulder and to:d him he wanted to discuss something with him. The-unidentified man then shot Palmer From Page I BIRDS ... ' Los Angeles pet store and about 100 birds -ranging fr6m small canaries and parakeets to large parrots -being held In cages at the rear of the shop, ap- parently awaiting destruction. Officials advised owners of pel birds to check with veterinarians about vac- cinating their pets against the disease which broke out earlier this year in the Fontana area. ' They said birds with the disease display cold symptoms -fits of sneezing and gasping for breath -and diarrhea. About 350,000 chickens on 100 ranches ha ve died alone in San Bernardino Coun· ty. ~tore than a million chickens are ex· pected to be destroyed in an effort to halt the disease. Spokesmen from the pOultry indust ry say the ir loss from the· disease is now running about S3 mill ion a week. No infected flock! have been found in the othe r three counties of the quarantine area -San Diego, Santa Barbara and Imperial,· according to the Agriculture Department spokesman. From Page I CARPENTERS • • minutes before the show begins through the show until it ends," said Sherwin Bash, the Carpenters' agent . A hotel offi cial said Bash threatened to cancel the show Friday night "·hen he was forced to pay the $17.50 cover charge tor six guests. The Carpenters accep ted an $11 .000 ch eck for their abbreviated run. pro- rated do...,·n from the ori ginal $50.000 agreement for the nine nights. and fle1v horne Sunday. " DAILY PILOT two or three times. Floriani .1Sid . "When the fi rst shot rang ou t. all bed- tam broke loose'." Floriani said . •·Ta· bles were flying, chairs were flying. bot- tles were flying . ll y,•as a shamblrs." Witnesses to:d police that four or rive men had done the shooting and that 15 to 20 shots Y.'el't' fi red. Floriani said. J·le said l"'O 'A'eapons \\'ere recovered inside the club. In addition to Palmer. also kilted were Renee Cuff. 24, and Pamela Pollard, 23, both or Philadelphia. Richard Jenkins. of Willingboro. N .. J .. said, "Two guys, I don't k11ow who thcv were. they got up and started fighting and the next thing I knew there was gunshots off to my back and to my ~efl. ''I tried to pull my 1wife to the floo r and as I did I got the bullet thal wounded her ~nd wounded me. There were guys pull- 1~g guns out from al! ovf!r the pla c<'. The hght~ ,were dim in there -they couldn't poss1b,y see who they were shooting at." Listed in cril icaJ cond it ion wilh bullet w?unds were Jenkins' wife. Ruth. 20, and Gilbert Satterwhite, 25, o( Ph iladelphia. Trio Questio11ed In $212 Millio11 H eroi11 Seizure AJACClO. Corsica (UPI ) -Police t~ day quesl ioned two men and a y,·oman ar· rested in connection wilh the 'A'Orld's big- gest heroin seizure -935 pounds: V.'Orlh $212 million bound for the illicit U.S. marker. One of the arrested men was identified ~s Lou~s ~ntoni. 40, a Corsican res iding in Paris picked up by police "·hen he relumed to his home vi llage Sunday for an Easter vacat ion. Poli ce maintained silence on !he ar· rest.s, but. so~rce~ said they were parl of an 1nvesl!galron into the March I seizure of the heroin enca sed in cement in a shrimp boat captured near ~1arseille. fl was the biggest haul on record in the stepped-up war aga inst heroi n smugg li ng to the United Stares. The vessel's O\\ner. J\Iarcel Boucan. \1·as formally charged with drug traf- ficking. Devaluc1tion . . . Made Official \\IASHINGT01\I <APt -Presi· dcnr Nixon made the deva luation of rhc. dollar official today, signing leg1sla rion ra ising the \•alue of gold fr om $35 to $.18 an ouncr.. This change in the gold contenl or the dollar, the first since 1934, amounts to an 8.57 percen! increase in gold value. or a 7.89 percent Jol!ar devaluation. Actually, the change "·i!J not of· ficially lake effecl until Secretary of the Treasury John B. Connally notifies officials of the lnterna- lion al f\.1onetary Fund. GOP voters have Prrsident Nixon on the ballot alon~ y,·ith only Rep. P;iul X. !\fcCloskcy of California. n•ho has pulled out for lack of fund s, and Rep. J ohn ~I. Ashbrook of Ohio. v.·ho has not can1· paigned in \\'isrons1n. Also on the Dcmocrat1c ballot and cam· palgning hard arc: f"ew York i\·layor John V. Lindsay ar;~ Sen1 Henry ~I. Jackson of Washington. On the ballot but not campaigniri~ are Reps. Shirley Chisholm of New York, \Vi\bur 1'.1ills of Arkansas, Patsy ~link of Ha\va ii. l\1ayor Sam Yorty of Los i\nge!es and Sen. Vance Hartke. His voice cracking from long day" on the stump, Humph rey told Mily,•aukee's Jewish community that President Nixon ~·i ll be "In excellent position to intercede on behalf of the Soviet Jewry'' v.•hPn he \1isits Russia next month. He also charged that a ne\v meat slaughter bill in Congress could skyrork•)t the price of kosher food . He charged the legislation wit h 'religious discrimina tion through the back door." After taking his wife and three children to Easter Sunday mass. ~luskie issued a statement call ing the North Vietn::tmese invasion.of South Vietnam •·al rming but not unexpected,'' and v.·arned there was a risk of "great -not lesser -Amerk.-;n military involvement.'' ~tuskic said il v.1as a ''tr Jgcdv" thal the Nixon Administration refused to set a date .for \\'itbdrawal of American forces and.broke off the Paris negotiations. Although !\lrGovern had to retract fln e accusation against IIT, he held to his sec· ond charge -that ITT paid no federa l taxes for three years , ending in 1970. He also said that the North Vietnamesr:. offensive reinforced his call for a total v.·ithdra\\•a\ and added that the Uni~eoi States should sto p providing n\il:tary aid to South VietMm. Jackson acc'used The New York Times of a ''New J\1cCarlhy,ism" for \\'riting a story which he said left the impression t.hat the Boeing Company. aircraft make:- "'ith headquarters in Seattle, \Vas helping finance his \Visconsin campaign. He called the article. ""hich ran in the state edi tion of the Milwaukee loumal, ''a plain, simple hatchet job" and deman- ded an apol ogy. Fro111 Page I MOTORCYCLE .. case disclosed by the r\e\·ada victi ll)s. The pair, 19 and 20. said they y,·ere visiting Long Beach n·hen on Friday. !\larch 24. they met a group of cyclisls at a bar and were invited to go for a ride. The joyride. they said, turned into a five.day ordeal of horror. Riding to Alan's mo torcycle shop. the \\'Omen claimed they were repeatedly raped and fi nally forced to satisfy the sexual \vhims of male and fem11le Hessians throughout the period of cap- tivity. Beatings y,·ere included in the brutality, nccord ing to !he girls who \vere finally released on the ·condition they promised not. to go to police. One said she was forced to keep house for the communal crew, y,•hlle a second claimed she \\';IS put to 1\·ork dancing topless in a dingy nightclub. I\1iss Morris. one of the two latest ar· restees, was taken into custody at the club in Bell , 1\·hcre she also dan Ces. Long Beach police acco mpanied by Costa Mesa detectives picked up Bates locaUy on Saturday night and he wa s im- mediately returned to Long Beach · for booking into jail. Investigators saii:I they received an anonymous tip on y,·here to find Bates after the story broke. Felony charges in ;iddition to counts of kidnap and r;:ipe include forced sexual relallons with Hessian cycle gang members, males and females included. Tti. O••·-i • (o•ll O•H .. 'I' l"ILOT, w11'1 .,..,,k ll 11 coma.,, f!\1 N•...,.Prtn , 11 11Vbll1htd by IM' Otl"if C~ll Pijt llsll1"9 COITIP1r1y. ltP• raii eclll•IH'I 1r• PUb!lslltG, Monil1y "'rov;I! Frtd1y, !fir (GSll Mll l, NtwPO•I lle•t ll, H11n!•,,9to11 llt1c111Fo111'1•11n \11111v, L•t11111 1 .. 01, ln.!111 Std<l!e\uu t nd 5111 Cl1me11t1/ St" J~111 (1olt•r11'lo. A s1119lr r19ion1I ld\1•011 I& 11110:01~,d ~1111ro1~1 11'10 $yfld1v1. T"t P!lf'ICll!fl ll\IOll1l!lnQ plant Is I! llO Wt.II II'( $1r11t, (OHi Miii , Cthtorr11, •alt. Rob11f N. W11d ---·"~•1ld1111 •flt Pvo.w1,..r- J 1tlt R. CYrl1y Charlie·Cl1aplin Retur11 s -Af te1 20 Years in-Exile V.c1 Pr111at11t •'Id Citn1r11 M1ntoc• 'Thol'll tt K11•il E0110r. 'Thorn•• A. M11rohi111 M11119!11g ffltcr Ch1rl11 H. Looi Rit~1rd ,, Ni ll Al1lsl1nl H.1111~1119 Ealto•I Offk• Cost1 M61: lJll West 9•'f ~lrtt1 H1wporr ltJCll: .».u Nt ..... 1 l ov't•lrcl L•1Vfl1 ll"cll : m ~.,., ""'""' KIM1'"911111 atttri: 1111! l •tcll I O\lltv••• ltn Clt!Mnl•: lOS Hor111 El C1ml110 llltll Tl'l.,tl~ (7141 642-4121 C'-1"'4 A'"1tthl .. 642-1671 '"M C..ts•I ... ,... .. SIW!fll It L.••1111t IMcll 491-4420 '""' Hlf'ltt O<',,_, C-ll'-(•"'ITllfflif1n 14t-1JJI C00\'1'111\t, lf7J1 °''"'' C0t1I P1111>\l tfllnt COl!lotnf, N1 "'""' t~IK, llttn,,1111111,, lliltf•t t ""'"' ... ,,....,,i,_,. lllrt1n '"'' .. rtOtOINtelll ""'""""' •!*Ill Pff'- "'" ..... -Ul"t'l'itflt ·-· ~ cr1u ..,tHt Hlf ii Coll• Mui . c1nfor'1•1o1, .5"o.<r1111et1 Dr urrltr ,,,U 1'1t!'lll'll'r'r .., 1Ntl IJ.1J """1111•1 1"111/ter; •11111t111111 a .u Mtflllll•. NE\V \'ORI\ il'PI) -Charlie Chaplin, fil mdom 's be.loved ~ittle tramp. rtturns in triumph today to the countrv that 1umed It~ back on him 20 years ago. Chaplin. who mad~ his fortune In Am er- ica but v.'ound up in self-impastd ex1Jt in Switzerland because of taxe!i, politics and women trouble, will be feted in Ntw York and in Hollywood. where the Acad - emy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will present htm a !i~la: Oscar on April 10 -lhe date or his 83rd birthday. Acwmpanled by hi• wlf~na. and son-in.law Nicholas Sistovaris, husband of his stC'flnd oldest daughter Victoria Chaplin arrives· here today for a rJve-daf visit. He •ill be honored Tuesday It. a gala '·Sal ute tn Charles Cha plin" al Lincoln Center tor the Performing Arts.· Purchase.rs or tickets for the evening, during which two early Chap:ln films , ''The Idle Class" 11nd "The Kld". will be sho...,·n, include Mrs. Ethel Kennedy. who rec:ently suffered a broken leg but "'ho pmmised to attend; Paul Newman ~nd Jnanne Wood1A•ard. Johnny Carson, John HAy \Vhitney. Leopold Stokowskl, Olto Preminger, Norman Mailer and Paulette Goddard, Chaplin 's third wJre. Chap!in. who will not hold a news con· ference "'hi1c here. plans to make a brief $tatement at the ·Tuesday affair. ~ra.vor .John V. Lindsay Y.'111 host the Chaplin s. "'ho will stay at. the Plaza tf<r tel. ;it a Thursda~· evening rec<'ptlon at Gnicie ~lansion. the ma ·or's rfJ'sldence. during which he w111 be givl":n the ~landcl l\f cdal\IOn. thl": city's highest cu:tural honor. On Friday, the Chapli~ wil: fly to Los Angeles ror the Oscar awards. The Chaplins. who have elgbt children tnd live In Vevey, Swit?erland, left the Unlled Stat" Jn Scplember, 19!2. j Reds 01i Move- North \fietnamese troops have overrun the last l\\'O government out· posts of a tO\\'n to gain control of all but l\vo major cities of South Vietna1n's northernmost provinqc. Quang Tri. A~ South Vietnamese soldie rs retreated sooth. Communists stormed through Camp Carroll and r.-tai Loe bases, from \l.•hich U.S. advisers were evacuated just be· fore the attack. .Curbs Asked On M ethcidone Program Use WASHINGTON (UPll -The ad- ministration proposed today to bar doc- tors from running their ~wn methadone programs for heroin addi cts. It also announced new standards to keep the synthetic narcotic aWay from persons \,lnder 18. and to lighten record· keeping· on its' distribulio.n. The proposals and other administration efforts aimed at better controlling methadone. ~·hich eases addict s' craving for heroin. \Vhere drawn for the \V hite House Special Action Office for Drug Abuse Pre\·ention by the Food and Drug Administration. The standards will be published this wee)\. in the Federal Register and com· ments mav be made about them for 90 days after' y,·hich they may be put into ef- fect -possibly \vith so me revision·s. "The f'ood and Drug Administration concurs th at di version and medical misuse of methadone are potenlial dangers and that strong control must be maintained ove r the distribution and use of the drug." an FDA statement said . The administration is not certain how many addicts are in methadone treat- ment programs. Estimates ra nge from 25,000 to 67.000 and on~ element of the new controls will be lo survey the programs and find out how well the y are running. and fio,v many addicts are treated. Under the new rules. doctors could nol run individual clinics. They y,·ould have to participate in approved methadone treat· ment programs offering more tha n just dist ribution of methadone. Rehabilitation and even job counseling could be parts of the program. Under lhc proposal. patients under 18 could nol be admitted to··1he programs. "This v.•ill mean that juveniles 'A'ili be excluded from virtually all ongoing maintenance treatment progra ms." the FDA said. An FDA official said about 200 in· dividual doctors would be eliminated from methadone maintenance programs under the new rules . l\fessage on Hi gh BEATRJCE. Neb. tAP i -The message of Easter v.•as carried in an unusual manner Sunday by a class at St. Paul Lutheran Church. The class releas· ed 2.50 balloons y,·ith th e message "Jesus Lives." From Page I VIETNAM ... U.S. cargo Cl30s, Vietnamese air force transports and airliners commandeered from lhe government airline. The action follo\ve d President Thieu's flight to Hue and Da Nang in a com- mandeered Air Vietnam jet to look.over the situation. Rain clouds have ma sked the invading North Vietnam ese tank columns driv ing across the Dli-1Z but the weather im- proved today and U.S. and South Viel· namese fighter -bo mbers struck back at the Red offensive. B52s dropped bombs through the clouds !'arlier and th ree U.S. ith Fleet dest royer s of( the co ast pounded the enemy troops and tanks. The Commun ists threy,· up intense anti· aircraft fire , and seven American planes and helicopters were reported shot down · Sunday and today but American pla nes flew 128 strikeS Sunday and more today. ' Six Person s Die In Packed Car At Intersection FRESNO IUPl l -Six-perso ns were killed when a truck crashed into the. side of a car at an intersection five miles v.·est of here. The victims were riding Sunday in a car packed with 10 persons. The other four y,·ere seriously injured. 'T'he California Highway Patrol said the car ran through a slop sign and pulled in front or a truck driven by Dave Newell of F'resno. He \vas not injured. The six killed in the mis hap were iden- tified as Joe Mar io Ma rtinez, three months : Ernest Mar tinez. 1: Alfred Ro- que, 9: Gloria Martinez. 19: Gavina Tor- res, 36. and Jose Porforio Torres. 3. all of the Fresno area. Injured Yl'ere Jose Lopez. 30, of Sanger, who was driving the car: Jose ~fartinez, 28 and Ralph Martinez. 21. both of Fresno. and an unidentifie d girl. Producer Dies -SAN FRANCISCO (A·Pl -· Ml!mor ial- services win be held tonight for veteran motion pictufe producer George Nasser, 75, who died here Saturday after a long illness. Jn 1949, the General Service Studio in Hollywood . owned by N11sser and his brothers. began making films for TV and produced such shows as "I Love Lucy." "The l.Jlne Ranger." "21 Beacon Slreet" and "Burns and Allen." Elect \Varrl":n said Nixon asked th (' \\'ashington Sprcial Action G r o u p (WSAC1 to meet because the North Viel- namese thrust ~·as "a matter of concern to the Administ ration and to th e Presi- dent." The group, headed by' presidenti;:il foreign affairs adviser Henry Kissinge r, inclu des representatives of th e Defense and State Deparlments and the Central Intelligence Agency. It generally is called into session in crisis situatio ns to analyze developments and prepare options for the Presidenf. \Varren refused to discuss v.•hat actions Nixon might order. He indic~ted , ho\\'ever. that there is little likelihood that U.S.. i::round -for~ wil l-be com- n1itted. sa~·ing \\'hen asked abou t ground forces that "our policy i~ unchanged." 'As the President "y,•atched the situa- tion very closely.'' Warren said he met \11ith Kissinger and Adm. Thoma /\ l\·loorer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs or Staff. and co nferred by telephone with Secretary of State Will ian1 Rogers and Secretary of Defense J\1elvin Laird. At his' 1asl news conferer:ice li.larch 24 , · Nixon said the .S. commander in Soulh Vietnam. Gen . Cre ighton A b r a m s, assured him that South Vietnamese forces "·ould withstand the offensive. Asked 'ol'helher Nixon still is confident, \\larren responded that "certainly the ap- praisal still stands." f\1eanwhile. the Penlaf!'On also ind icated today the remaining U.S. gfoound troops in Vietnam "'o uld not be used to reinforce beleagured Sooth Vietnamese fo rces bat· tling the Communist offensh•e. Spokesman Jerry \V. Friedhei m 1aid the si x remaining U.S. combat maneuver ba ttalions are committed to the security of U.S. installations and are not involved in the action. County Assessor In UCI Laws11it Orange Couniy Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw has been accused of Jmpropuly taxing leased computer equipment at UC Irvine in a ~awsuit filed in Superior Court by the regents of the U11 iversity of California. The complaint demands the refund or $6 .475 paid .under protest by the regen ts last June 11. It is pointed out in 1he ac- tion tha t the equipment on which the as- sessor levied !a>.,,.,, is not owned by the university. Death Toll Five At Pop F es~v~l .. SAN JUAN, P.R. !UPI) -The criminal investigations corps is in· vestigal ing a second murder at the Vega Baja pop music festival near here. The homicide brought the death toll at the festival to five. The body of 22-year·old Robe.rt E. Poland. nf j\laine. was found covered with cuts Sunda y on the fest i\'aJ grounds, 20 miles from the capital. I"~. 'tlllktl MY. DOM RACITI as your Costa Mesa_ DOM ~ACITI (City Councilman HE'S CONCEllNED WITH THE CITY OF COSTA MESA ••• WITH ITS 1'£0PLE ITS· PROBLEMS ••• ITS CHALLENGES. AS YOUR CITY COUNCILMAN ·DOM RACITI WILL SUPPORT: e EXPANDED METHOD OF C~IME PREVENTION e 300 ,0.CRE ECOLOGY PARK e CITY WIDE CLEAN UP CAMPAIGN e _TIGHTER CONTROL ON CITY TAXES:- e TRAFFIC CONTROL DOM WILL LISTEN-DOM WILL WORK •• _, r-"'" ~ ..,....11114,.. 19\'TI & l.W.• ~ r--:R:-a-c7.it::-i--:-La-s":"t-:O:-n-:T=h-•-:B:-a~llo-:t:---:Ft:-:rs-:-t ":"ln--::C;;-lvt~' c;;;;;C::-;o:::;n::.:c.::er=n~~~~I C•mpoign HHdquartan •I 1140 N"'port Blvd., Phone 645-1360 ,or 54'-1313 • • ' I T Ora mo the rec cou p wa offi ban pos T me mo th• mo pro H Ing gla hel gr aim ope sta di vi cou T but gra unc A. 11.5 st• loda N v T T !. Jap bee but Stat Ct1u Ri bre gr<> sa id N tlon bra """ " Unit .. k, well like IOm Th New and he s M Japa ed b ' -. ~ ... ,., ,.. . .,. . • • • • s DAIL V Pll G'l 1J LA ·Heat Bringing-Out Deadly Rattlers GRA,'IAOA HILLS (UPI) -A 16-year· rrom -a Saugua .'OOspital to treat him tit wttks reported an increased numbtr of numbt'r or snake sigh11ngs lot111\ed nearly especia lly ,·ommoo in Chats14·orth .. Sum. ~fore they forage for fOOd 11 nJght. old boy. the third person in 1 week in Granada Hills Community Hospilal. sn11kes near popu:ated areas, including l'A'O dozens in the foothill region . and one m11.Tujunga 11nd Mulholland f0Mh1lls . He suggest~ that footh il l and call_)'(Jn the Los Angeles areR 10 be bitten by where he was ~isled at one point as in Southern ·callforn ill's -only V"enemous J1ve.foo~ranler was kil~ in Sunl11nd, ·"Snakts are basically C01\·ards!' s,aid · rei;idtnts rlear the brush around their 1 l k critical condition. .snake, the Pa cific Rat tlesnake. A Stt'flnd one ne11rby bit f>.year -0ld ~fi· Herman Ku la. senior ani ma l con trollrr hon1r~ and keep away from the buildingJ ra 1 csnt1 cs broughl OUl of their boles Animal authc>rities sRid the outbrrAk chael P<'nurt on the hand \\•hile he at !ht "'est Valley An lntnl Shelter. ·'If ti ny large moist f!o\\·er pots that s«akes by unseasonal wea lher, was in satl!-of snake bites was the rrsult of unseason· An assistant herbetologist at Gr lfiflh played In 1111 open field Th ursda)', but there 's qulte a bit of rnan·~..presence ," he might)ake a fa ncy fn factory condition today. , Park Zoo sa id U\iit 'once before th i! year K::iisrr ll os11ua l authorities said lhc c.hJld said. "Thev take off 10 parts unkno1•"n.'' Ku!;:i said both rattlers and the harm· ab ly warm "'eather awakening snakes hot weather interrupted the reptiles' "'in. \1•as in sa tisfa ctory condition. Ku la said tht <·old-blooded crea1ures Jes~ ~na kes are \'Ital in controlli ng moun. John Sargrnl WllS bitten on lhe li?fl and harmless reptlles from hibernatJon 1er sleep, but thal this time they'll prob-Ro~ ~lcGow~n. East Va lley's ~~s1stanl slither frorn underground burro~111.. for a tatn rodrn1 popula11oni1 a!lri that killing hand by a three-foot' rattler in the gar-and bringing them oul o( their "'in ter ably remain out until next fall . d1s1r1ct s.up.erv1~or, sa id the Pac1f1c Rat· ff'.'11· n11nutcs of mornu1~ su n, lh!'n rtr1re f('ptiles '''as unnecessary. dcn-Ol-his-ho.1ne-Saturda,.,_ _____ _,,otera-montlt-ea:rlier-tftan-ttStJ ah-------+he-E&st-\l&Hey-A'fttmat-Shelterre-· -t~+&llflil:l,IShed-b,Y"-A-bF?Wn~and·h•rt---bene11th-den~r bru!h-or1n-sorrn.•-root:---•E\ren a child could eas1:y outru11 our A police helicopter rushed anti venom Foothill and canyon dwellers in recent ported Friday that in recent weeks the coloring and triangular markings -was mois t location during lhe heat or the day local rattlers," he s!id. I . Pailled Froni Chi11iney J\·lichell Carn pbc!J, 6. of Wich ita~ Kan .• fo~nd the chim ney of her f~m· Hy's horne an unpleasant place to play hide and seek. After \valk1ng a\vav from her brothers on the r oof. she fell 22 feet before becom· ing iodged bet,veen floors. She emerged .crying but unhurt -\Vith the hel p of rescue squad firemen . County Eyes Use of Mail For Sale of Food Stamps The more than 66,000 residents of Orange County who hu y food stamps each month may get them through the mail if the Board of Super,•isors approves a recomm enda tion of Granv ille Peoples, county v.·elfare director. Peoples s· many mnnlhs ago th at he was checking the possibility of using post offices for sale of stamps, rather than banks. Friday he annoonced the new pr<r posal. The Welfa re directo r said the mail method \\'Ould sa\•e the county SI0.000 a month. Peoples told su pervisors last fall that it "'as costing the county $30,000 a month, paid,. to banks which handled the program. ' He added that the bank s were not mak- ing any mo ney on the deal and would be glad·to ·gefrid of it. "They only do i t to help us out." People said. The federally-financed food stamp pro- gram is expected to cost the county almos t $1 millio n next fiscal year to operate. The government provides the stamps which allow low·income in- dividuals and families to purcha se the coupons at a discount. The county pays only the operating cos t but Peoples said the gro wth of the pro- gram has been both spectacular and un expected. As recently as November of 1970. only 11.500 persons '"'.tre eligible for food stamps. This compares with the 66,000 today. New federal regulations will tighten V.S . Stude1its Take A Liki1ig To Japan -Sake LOS Al\'r.ELES I Al'l -The lr•dili ona! Jar>anes<' 1vine sake ha.s been replaced by beer as best seller in ils home COUfllry, but ihe beverage is thriving in the United States. Th'e'-·principal imbibers: y oung Ca11casi11ns. Rice Wine, oot a true wine because It is brewl'd rather than fermented , enj<lys growing popularity among the young, snld Importer Take Nurnano. Num 11nn, president of Numano Interna· tional Inc .. imports the House of Koshu btand . \\'hfch he says, has captured 40 percent of the America n mtrket. "Today the younger ge ne.ration in the -Vnlttd States is the la rgest consumer of s.11ke," Numano said. "It does-especiall y well in college to wns : students seem to like it because it's so~eth ing different, something exotic." The \Vest Coast Is th e best mar'ket. but New York. CHicago, Phlladelphi1, Bosto11 and ~f lam! art growing customer •reas. he said . · ~tea nwhile, beer is the best seller In Japan . Sake Is "cond, strongly chill~· ed by whisky, especio\ly scotch . eligibility for the stamps, Peo ples said. Effective next July 1 the value of food stamps will be ded ucted from th e allot- ment or those perso ns who are also on \\'el f are. Another new regulation allows reci- pients the option of receiving the ma iled stamps (Peoples thinks most will approve this ne w melhod l and they may purchase a Portion of their monthly allowance rather than all or none as at present. l\1any welfare recipients complained about the all or nothing procedure, pro- testing tha t some months they did not have enough cash. A new rule. inaugurated last year. cut a lot of people out of the program . Previously a group of related or unrelated people living in a single household were eligible. This was...JXlunced upcn by ten~nts of communes. Now only single persons or groups of related individuals Ji ving together are sold stamps. Persons qualify for stamps if their in- come is below stated levels-$185 for a single man or woman and $300 for a family of three per month, for exam ple. A single perSon ma y pay as little as 50 cents a month for $28 in food stam ps or as much as $18, depending upon income. A fam ily o! two can receive up to $56 in stamps. ,.. • t ; 1. r .. ~- Amnlts Verdict ' Ant iwar priest Phil ip Berrigan , · convicted ol smuggling a letter from a federal prison, waits for the decision on nine other charges against him. The dead· locked jury resumed deli bera· tl qns today, Story on Page 4. - • Cigarette Surge Seen By Experts V.'ASH INGTON (t:Pll -ln a reversal of forecasts. governmenl econom1st1 sec a chance that the average Amer i~a n smaker will be lighting up more cigaret- tes per day by 1980 than he is nov.•. One year ago . fo1Jo 1\.'ing three straight years of declining per.capita cigarette use, expe rts predicted consumption v.·ould d ~op from the current rate of near 200 packs ::i year to about 150 pac ks by 1980 -a 25 percent decli ne. Rut in 1971, use recovered to 203 packs per eapll a and lhat. figure is expe cled to hold steady in 19n. As a result. an Agricultu re Depa rtmen t rrport said today, new projections hold out the pos.~ibility !hat 1980 per capita consumption '·may fall only slightly from the curr;:ent level, or even increase slight- ly, depending on the-health-issue. prices .a nd the makeup of the pop ulation." The report. based on a speech lo an in· dus try meeting by eco nomist Robert H. Miller. said the biggest ga ining popula- tion age.group during the 1970's probably will be the 25-to-34 year old. Because the 25·to-44 age group has the highest per capita sm1Jking ra!e of a!! age groups over 18, J\'liller said. population foreca sts indi cate a possible 2 percent gain in overall per capita smoking in 1980, com· pllred with 1971. This would be an added four packs per person 'per year, liftin g the total to 207 packs. The rt>port said last year 's upturn in per capita consumption came despite the fact that millions of American s quit smoking . ~111ny new smokers in younge r age groups ap paren Uy look their pla ces Miller said. ' The ex~rt .said however, that in spite of the proJeC!Jons of steady or increasing per capit a cigarette use, there stil.1 is a pos!iibility of ! steep decline in smoking because of ste!dy price increases and continued health concerns. ' 10 Lose Lives Iii Higli-speed Texas AccUlerit DIJ\1~11TT. Tex. (U PI) -High1vay Patrolman Bill &ott and his partner '"'ere selli ng up a roadbloc k nea r this Texas Panhand l~ to\vn on a lonely hv<r lane st retch of highway V.'hen they heard .sirens in the distance. Suddenly a car packed with youngsters ~·hiz.zed past so fast It could not stay on its side of the road on a slighl cu rve. Anot her car, also filled \\'it h young persons, came around the curve going the opposit e directi on at the same moment Satu rday night They co llided. "Things went everyv.·here," Scott sa id. "My partner and I witnessed it. They camr. hy us before \1·e could gel the roadblock set up." Each car carried five persons. All 10 \\'t>re killed. One was a year old, but most were teenagers. The wreck was as bad as any in Texas history. "AU of them we.re pinned in the cars, and we literally ha d to pry the ca rs apart to get them out," Scott said. "The impact pushed bolh motors back to the front sea l." ~ He said the speeding car, headed easlw,11rd, was going faster. because "they traveled 86 feet east of the pnint of impact." UP'I TlltPhoi. llalr To11rl111p Sen. Geor ge McGovern gets last minute grooming as he prepares to appear on a na· tional television ne\l'S inter· view program from Mi Jv,.:aukee. ~'l CGovern is a candidate in 1'uesday's president ial primary. Singe r a Father LONDON IAP ! -Lovelace \\'atkins, the American singe:-, is a father. \Vatkins and Anne·Marie, his English wife of 16 . days. made a dash through the night Sun· day from Liverpool in time for her to gi ve birth to a 71h·pound boy at Hil!ington liospila l on the outskirts of London. The boy is to be named Mario Alan Lovelace. Spt"i1h Crui~ Wllilo Novy 811,k Castro County officers said the speeding vehicle was the object of a ~chase because de uties us~~_!he._ -..~\--- youngsters a en involxed in a knife figh t in ;i nearby community. The youths in 1he ca r coming into town we.re mostly Dimtnltt high school students. Sho1 to 1 I Width1 lA to C Capo Trustees to Di scu ss New ScJ1ool Bou11cla1~i es Ad1us1n1rnts in s< hnol !11 rndancc OOun· dari ts "·111 be cons1dertd by trusret ~ f1f !ht C11pis1rarm l'n1f1 td Srhnnl D1 ~t r1r1 l9n1ght. ·rhe c han1rr~. \\'h1t·h ha,·r hern 1 ·<1u~rd by explos1\'e grov.·th in S:i!I .lu,111 Capistrano. Laguna ;\1guel and Dcin:i Poi nl. will affect 111·0 bulg ing sr hool ... - CrO\\'n Valley and San .lua1 Elr n1en1 ;1r1 -as \11ell as others in lhe d1stl'Lrl. Proposer! changf's tn hC' t11~ru.~~f'd ..ii the 7·30 p.rll. ITICt'l l!l,C .'IT ~f'rr;:i Sih011l in<·ludr : -Transfer of 111n e1tuea t1on11lh han dir<1pped l·lassr s rn hnth La~ f'almri~ <ind Concord1<1 Schools froni \'1 l'Jn :"!i'hnol -Transfer nf !hl' :-1xth i.:rarlrr<. 111 l'ahsades School ;it1l'11d;11111· .~rrfl irnnl C<1 p1strano Srhvnl 111 t)le I lansnn Sl hool -Transfer of all !>l>:lh .i;:r;iders h\1ng 111 Laguna Ni~ucl lo Cap1strano Sc.hoot {rorn l'rO\\'n• \'allry Si·hou! -Transfer of h111dr r).lt1rlt'n thn111i:h fifth grade pupils l11·1ni:: lir!\\"ern (';u111nu de Campo and the coasl fron1 Cro11 n Valley School lo H1ehard Henry Dan;i School \\'h~re 10 ne\\' classroon1s are under conslruction. -Sixth graders from the present Da na attenda nce area wou ld attend Dana School ins tead nf Cap1s trann School. -Transfer of pupils !1v1ng 111 lhP Mission Hill s Ranch development. on Rosenbau1n Road . and in !he Spo tted Bu!I Liine area from San Juan School 10 \'ieJo School. These shi rt s. offi cia ls Sil\ v.·ould leave room for grO\\'th al Cro\\·n· VallPy, Da na, San Juan. Palisades ;ind V1ejt1 Schools. A district owned portable class room nn\~· located at Las Pa lma s School would ~ moved to Capistrano School this .c;ummer to hel p accommodate the enroll ment there. The most crowded school in the d1slr1cl is Crown Valle y with 870 students and more expected. "All available space is being used teacher ratios are the highest 1n the W .. it1 fl l~o & WhPto l row n & Wh!fo rlhlrirr .1nrt no rPltef is in sight." sa id n d 1~1 ~h:l -pol<..e~n1.Jn \n Jl lt('rni'll f' p!aw In ea~f' Cro11 n \allt"~ 's p1ob!r1n. hut to a lesser t>Xt<'nl, 10:-to $t'nd ~1.xth .'!ra ders to C'ap1s1r11nfl Schnol and k1P1dr r.i;:artners 1n !hr c1Jastal por11nn of L:igun;i Nig uel to Dil na . .\n Al tr1 natr 1s also being offered In hrlp i f'rl11 cr !hr rxpected CT01\'d1n,;: at ~au .!uan School b1 transferrin~ ~on1e of the children l1v1n~ rr round f'orsttr ,Junior H1jth 1T1·ov·:O.l<1 nna tracts 1 to Dana ~·ht)(ll . Schn11I nffll'1nls be!ie \ f' thev ha vt. coough t'las;;:roon1s to accommOOate. next .1 rar's <'nrnl!ment -but attenda nce pat· tPr:'.Js 11 ill havr. In be altered to effect1\'ely u~c them. Baro11ess Sets Si u !{i11 g Debui In Night Club !\E\V YORK !APl -Baroness Nina Ya n Pal!andt. the Danish cabarf>t si nger \1 ho figured in 1he inves1111.at 1nn of 1hi! fakr HO\\'ard Hujlhes autClhtngraphy, makNi hrr American night cluh clcbut tonight l'he blonde '.l!l·year-olcl s1n1o:er'i. engage· mrnt. 111 rhr tllai:so nene nf ihe St. Rt g1s Hntrl run~ through April 22. \11 ss Pallandt. who is eslran~ed fro m h<'r Dut t'h hus band. teslified before a grand Jury v.·hich ret urned indtc lnient.'I aaainst Clifford Irving. his v.·1fe and a11 assistant in conn«tion v.·1th the con· lrn\'ersial book. Irv ing had said that he nnce in· trr\'i ewed Hughes in 1\lexico. But ~li !J Pallandt said that while she and lr\•1n~ v.•ere in Mexico for a brief holiday that Irving never saw Hughes In her presence. ALE L,mitocl Timi 4 Sll4,..1Sti CllUSti •BLACK •NAVY •BONE •REC> eWHrTE 19.99 ••9· 2$.00 46 Persons Dead From Poisoning Ttil: VUMV WITti Ttil: lf413UL()US lflT! NEW DE~HI (UPll -The toll lrom weekend bottled HqUor poisoning in 1he captial rose to 46 persons t.oday with 11 more death..., reported by hospitals. Police sources said 70 others wer~ being treated in hospitals and that some v.·ere In serious condition. Police Sunday took rive persons into custody in coontttlon "'ith the sale. of spur!Ous lfquor. 1'ests revealed the klller dr ink \\'IS ml•ed wit h' methyl alcohol. More than JOO people dJed last January In New Delhi aflt.r drinking an almost ldent(cal illicit brew. S4 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644-4223 U1e Your 81nkAm1ric1rd • M11tor Chtrgt • Htmphlll ·Chorgt ' I ' •• 4 DAILV PILOT Dita Beard Interviewed On TYSl1ow NE\\' YORK (UP I 1 -Otta 0. Beard. the fnternnllonal Telephone a n d Tel1?graj)fi Corp. lobbyis t whose heart condition reportedly "''ill prevent her from testifying before a ~nate com· mittee for six months slipped ou(Of iler hospital room for s 9(}.minute tele vision interview, II was disclosed Sunday. Mrs. Beard, against the adv ice of her doctors; signed herself out of the' Moun· tain Valley Osteopathic Hospital Saturday for the interview with CBS correspondent 1\:llke Wallace for the "Sixty Minutes '' show aired Sunday. \\'hen she left tie hospital. f..trs. Beard \\'Ore a sweater and skirt . She donned a floor-length. gray hospital grown \l.'ith a high neclr and long sleeves for the in- tervie\\'. "1 !eel fine." she 'told \Vallace. "That \\'as a pretty strong pill the doctor gave me before we left ... As soon as 1 get back to bed I'll be all right." f\trs. Beard is due to be released from the hosp:tal Tuesday. When members of the Senate Judiciary Committee came to the hospital ~1arcn 26 to question lt1rs. Beard about the me.ma she all egedly wrote which linked the set- tlement of an antitrust suit against !'IT with the company's pledge to give $400,000 to help underwirte t he Republica n convention, she had a relapse of-heart problems. The interview \\'as cut short. Her doctors said she would not be ·able to testifv before the committee for another Six months. CBS said the interview was filmed at thi! place where f\1rs. Beard will conva- lesence aft.er her release from the hos· pital. The location was not re vealed . During the interview, which ran a~ an 11-minute segment on the show, Mrs. Beard again denied writing the memo and repeated her earlier statements that fonner Attorney General John f\1itchell had rebuffed her attempts to discuss the antitrust case. Asked about repeated statements by Anderson's assistant. Brit Hume, that she had acknov.1ledged \\'riling the memo, Mrs. Beard said : "Well. he remembered his notes so well that ... he called me the next day to check a few of the things that he had said ... r ·said, 'Just a minute. you dear boy. I sai d nothing of the sort Jasl night. and ' I had quite a few witnesses in this house .' . . . My son was in the kitchen 1' ost ,;f the time, my docto r was there more than hall the time ." Q: "\Veil. your doctor testified that ynn tiad said that you had writt<!n it when you were mad end disturbed. We're ta lking about Dr. Liszka ."' Mrs. Beard : "Poor Victor, ;Jid he say that?" Q: "Sure he did."' Mrs. Beard: "He gets so mixed up. He tr ies to translate Hungarian to English and it never works." ~1rs. Beard also said she felt "two or three" people in the compan y \Vere out to get her, but refused to name any bec2ui;.<! "I don 't believe in character assassina· lion.'' -DAILY-PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Del ivery of the Daily Pilot Is guara nteed M!lnd1y.Frk11y; II you ao nol h1v1 '(GI.Ir paper by 5:30 11.m., calf end VoUr ca,iv will DI broughl lo you. Cl!ll 1r1 !1~1n untll 1:30 11.m. Suurclay 111<1 Su¢•y; II you lkt llCll r1ctlv1 your copy cv 9 1.m. SoTurdtV, or t 1.m. Su<'tllay, call arid a co~v will bl brougM lo '(fl-U. Clill 1rt a•.t n until ID 1.m. Most Oraroot County ArH i ........ '4J-4J21 Nor!llwest f'IU"ll1t10l1)r; 8t1cll arid Wntm,n1ier . , , ...•..•.. J.cl·\11<1 -"' $.In Clt menTt , C&phtrtno 8e1cll. t.4onda1, .lpl'it 3, 1972 SOUTH CHINA &fA PAC IP IC OC!:AN IS. NEGlOS o· • BORNEO • ·°'!J. • au LU &<A ··o .': •.· . ei,. •·• • ·-. Aviator Rescued Cha rle s A. Lindbergh, famed fl yer, was rescued with a group Of 45 anthropologists stranded with d\vindli ng supplies among a tribe of cavemen in the Tasaday rain forest in the remote southern Philip- pines. The choppet from Clark Air Force Base flew nonstop to Cotabato Province on Mindanao island, 500 miles south of Manila and lifted them to a settlement a half an hour. away. Skin for Grafts Can Be Stored Up to 6 Months BQSTON (AP) Doctors have developed a way to store frozen skin for up to six months and use it to shorten the treatment of burn victims. Spo kesmen at the joint skin bank of Massachusetts General Hospit al and the Shrine.rs Burns Institute say the develop- ment has eliminated many problems as. sociated with conventional twirweek sk in storage. Fint Head Still Held; Kidnapers Arrested BUE NOS AIRES (AP ) -President Alejandro Lanusse has announced that the kidnapers of Oberdan Sallustro had . been arrested but the Italian Automobile man was still missing. l\1ore than 5.000 police kept up the search for the 56-year~ld general manager of Fiat's Argentine subsidiary. He was seized March 21 by guerrillas of the Trol$kyite People's Revolutiona.ry Army' the ERP. .. million ransom demanded by the kid· nape.rs, but Lanusse ordered the firm to do nothing that would aid the guerrillas "concretely or psychologically." Th.ere were rumors Fiat hl!d paid a ransom and that Sallustro bad been freed, but company officials denied it. The ERP said it wanted the money used to buy clothing and school supp lie's for poor children. It also demanded the release of political and labor prisoners .and rehiring of Fiat workers dismissed last yea r. • I • Still Deadlocked ·Harrisburg Jury • In -Deliberation HARRISBU RG. Pa. <UPl l -The Har- risburg Seven jury. deadlocked on the key issue of conspiracy aga inst _the government, lo kidnap H ~nry A. Kissinger and bomb Washington heating tunnels, went back into deliberation today . The panel of nine women and three men arrived at the Federal Building at 5:$4 a.m. PST, six minutes ahead or time in a blue station wagon and a red van. as they h.ad every court day since they "'ere locked up on F"eb. 8. Brown wrapping paper covered the windows of the two vehicles as it alwa ys has, to keep the jurors from any 1aint or• prejudice that might occur on their ride of about four miles lrom their motel . Federal Judge R. Dixon Herman told the jury Sunday that he knew they had "tried Jong and hard '' to arrive at a unanimous decision and asked them to try again to' reach a verdict. • , They had dclilierated 33 \iz hours in four days before finding th e Rel'. Philip F. Berrigan guilty on one peripheral issue - sending a letter out or Lewisburg Penitentiary to Sister E I i z a b e t h McAlister. a defendant, in violation of regulatiom. The maximum penalty that Berrigan, leader of the Roman Catholic left anti"·ar movement, could get for that conviction Js 19 years. He is already in pr ison for draft board vandalizing . A defense spokesman said he didn't expect the judge would make the new senteilce more than one year. But the nub of the case, the vital part whlch.t.he .prosecution contends shows an overall conspiracy to disrupt the govern· ment by the kidnaping, bombing and rakl ing draft boards is the first of the 10 indictment coun ts . It accused the Har- risburg Seven -of so plotting that co n· spiracy. It is the only count accusing all seven of anything and the only one nam ing anyone besides Berrigan and Sister Elizabeth. The seven are accused of con- spiring nearly all of 1970, The jurors looked wea ry and strainfld when they filed into the box •t-3:03 p.m. "'Ith their Easter Sunday message o{ failure to agree that there had been 1 conspiracy, or that there were individual threats by Berrigan and Sister Elizabeth to kidnap Kissinger contained ln two le t· ters to each other. The faces of some ot the women jurors were noticeably drained of e-0lor. A baby in lhe audience whimpered, the only ,noise. Judge Herman told them h.e had received their note . ll had reached him half an hour before, written in the neat and forward-slanting hand of Harold C. Sheets the foreman, a HarTisburg tax IC· countant : ''Judge 11erman: the jurors. after long, serious and conscientious deliberation on all facts available and th.eir recollection of testimony heard during the put weeks, are unable lo arrive 1t 1 unani mous ve rdict on 9 counts in the in- dictment." HUD Offices End Dealings With Firrn ' WASHINGTON !AP)-The Department of Housing and Urban Development hll ordered all 87 HUD offices acrou the country to stop doing bus iliess with 01.111 & Bradstreet , Inc., the national credit· rating firm charged by a federal grand jury in connection with a New York real· estate scandal. Dr. John F. Burke. a hospital surgeon "'ho is chief of staff at the Burns Institute. says keeping skin refrigerated for two weeks has many drawbacks. ''You may have a lot of donat~ cadaver skin from dead persons in a period of three or !our days when you don't need much," Burke said. "Three ¥:eeks later you may develop a great need and find the conventionally stored ma terial outdated and no donor in sight" "The investigation will continue in an effort to locate his whereabouts." Lanusse told a near-midnight news con- ference Sunday al the presidential reside nce'. The police said they ra ided a house in the northern suburb of Chilavert where Sallustro had been kept, but he had been transferred to another ERP commando group four hou rs before the police closed in. Protestants, Catholics At the same time. the department 1aid in an announcement Sunda y. HUD's Fed· era: Housing Adminstration has sus. pended its national cOl'ltract with the firnt under v,ohich it has pu rchased commer· cial cred it inform::1tion on business es aad ind i\·idual enterprises. Local and regional FHA offices havt been ordered not lo rely· on ind ividual Dun & Bradstreet credit reports for a11y single-fami ly morlgage-insu rance trans- sclion. Dr. Conrado C. Bondoc. a staff member at both institutions, developed the long- term freezing method . Bondoc soaks the skin in a 15 percent glycerol solution. The glycerol . which does not freeze. diffuses into the skin and replaces water. The treated skin is placed int o a plastic enve lope, wh.icb resists a wide ra nge of temperatuers and seals ltself off from outside gases and liqu ids. These skin packs are cooled to 256 degrees below uro, the temperature of the liquid nitrogen used for the freezing. Bondoc says the rate of thawing the skin is more critical than freezing it. "You can get away with fast freezing, but you can't get away with slow thaw· ing." Bondoc said. "The skin must be thawed in less than one minute." Using Bondoc's method of freezing and packaging. the skin thaws in seconds when the packet is imrilersed in 98.6- degree water. B52 Plane Crash Victim Succumbs ORLANDO. Fla . (UPI) -Ten-year~ld Anthony Ellington of Orlando. severely burned in the fiery crash of a B52 bomber Friday. died today in Brooke General Hospital at San Antonio, Tex .. the eighth person to die as a result of the crash. A funeral for the seven cre\vmen v.·ho died in the flames was to be held later to- day at l\1cCoy Air Force Base chapel here. The Air Force continued its in· vestigation to try to find out what started the fire in the planes No. 1 engine. When the fire started shortly alter takeo!f. the pilot tried to circle back to maKe en emergency landing at the base. The miss ing man's fingerprints were found in the cellar of the Chilavert house along with the bed in which he was shown in photographs distributed to the ERP, police said. A co mmunique said $25.000 also was found in the house. Lanusse said the abductors had bttn "identified and arrested ," but he did not give their names or say how many were picked up. He said they were mem bers of the Workers Revolu tionary Party. an ii· legal political group which split into two factions two years ago, with militants forming the ERP. Last week, police named six men and a v.·oman as the kidnapers. Unofficial sources said at least six persons had been arrested. Sallustro's company agreed to pay $1 Wicks In Irish Demonstrations Dun & Bradstree t sells credit report1 on individual applicants to private mort- gage companies that ma y use them in deciding whether to approve a mortgage loan . The :oans then may qualify for FHA mortgage insurance. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Protestants and Roman Catholics massed today for th.eir first s i mu l t an e o u s demonstrations since the long Easter weekend . Ten persons were injured Sun· day night when a bomb planted in a truck exploded outside a provincial post office. The Protestant apprent ice bo y s organization gathered for a rally today at Carrickfergus, a seaside resqrt northea st of Belfast. to commemorate the landing in 1690 of King William of Orange. The king crossed the Irish Sea, landing at Carrickfergus. to conquer Ireland and assert British Protestant domination that in the north still prevails. In the main Catholic demonst ration at Armagh, the spiritual capita l of all Ireland, republican leaders called for a mass march through the cathedral clty ·s Cath.olir areas. An army spokesman said 10 persons in· eluding six children suffered injuries in the bomb blast .at Magherafel t. 30 mite5 northwest of the'northern capital after a IS-m inute warning to police by an anonymous caller. All of the . injured were in a building next door. the spokesman said, and were cut by fl ying glass. Earlier, an explosion damaged a grocery in eas t Belfast and a fire of suspicious orig in damaged a wi ng of a Rom an Catholic school in the city's Ar- doyne district. The fire at the Holy Crw school follo\\•ed a controntation bet\veen Roman Catholic and Protestant youths, th.e arm y said. During one of Sunday's Roman Catholic: galtifrings marking the abortive 1916 Easler uprising in which Republican forces battled British troops in Dublin streets, an Irish Republican Army (IRA) leader rejected a peace plea from some Roman Catho lic housewives. Speaking a da y after some \\'Omen in Belfast's Roman Catholic Andersons:to'ol·n district publicly called for a truce to gi ve a chance to British direct rule over f\'orthern Ireland. "'hi ch began Thursday. lvlacStiofain sa id: "I hope to God that the nationally· minded women of the north "'ill stand behind their menfolk. behind the men, behind the wire and the prison wall - and the men who are carrying on the fight." Dun & Bradstreet was the largest of 10 firms and 40 individuals named In federa l indictments handed down In Brooklyn, N. Y .. last \l.'ee k. The indict· ments charged seven present and former FHA employes. including the top FHA underwriter i11 Ne\,Y" York state, with tak· ing bribes in a conspiracy to sell 1lum h o u s i n g to low-income people who couldn't keep up payment& on the mart,.. gages. Ul"IT•*"""9 Turning Seattle On Cold -wave Hits S. Dakota "There is only one attitude to adopt for the Irish people -conc~sion be damned !" Sean MacStiofain. leader , of the IRA 's militant Provisional wing, told 1,300 Roman Catholics in Londonderry. Vice presidents of Foster and Kleiser advertising help "turn on the lights" on one of 200 billboards in Seattle, part or a multimedia cam· paign to "Boost Seattle." 111ore than 40 businesses have combined ef· forts to publicize the improved economy, in retaliation to a sign spon· sored last year by two real state men that read "\Vill the last person leaving Seattle turn out the lights.'' Wisconsin Zoo 1. down their high-pressure campaigns in deference to Easter Sunday, Muskie, Humphrey and Lindsay dec ided the t00 might be a good place to go. With little fanfare and no advance work, Muskie came to the county zoo wtth. hls wife, Jane, his youngest son Ned, 10, and daughters Melinda, lS, and Martha. 13. • There was no overt attempt by Muskie. to campaign 1nd the a:owd was very amall. tn sharp contrast. Humphrey ar- riv ed with his wife, Muriel. Advance work. had been done. well and a_ lar:ge crowd mobbed the former vice president. Humphrey made no bones •bout look· Ing for votes, passing i:iut his campaign literature to any apcctafor at the zoo with e.n empty band. Muskie AOd Humphrey both took a six· minute trip aboard 1· mlnlJturt train. Standing 6-feet-5, Muskie scrunched in- to 1 seat, with Ned. on hia lap after blow· Ing the train's whlsile 1nd remarked "maybe oo Wednesday lrU be )\Ill my size." Humphrey loaded the train with •f many staff. media and supporter1 tblt • halfway around, the engine 1t1rted •' give out. So Humphrey, dressed In a dlltl , blue overcoat but hatless on a ~ J overcast da y, hopped out and helped ti: push the train. ,· t They, along with Lind.say, were lrea ... to the bird, monkey, fish . and reptii. ... r hibits. Looking at the parrots, Muskie claimed. "that's the-most colorful ~I of politicians you can aee. They can t 1nd usually say-noth ing of Importance. Muskie. also exchilnged glares •ta Simson who qt,1iC~Y becar:nc bored a.;if d!1missed the Maine stnalor ia chall•!'f• lo his poJllllarily. • Muskie managed to le.ave the zoo will befofe. the arrival of Uie other two cii! didales bill Llnduy came )usl behltd Hwnphrey and .had to ait In b1( motom1de walUna for lbe HHH crowd rlear. ' ---"I ·• I s Le Ca we fee "' pro Jlllt CRr bud A ago inc Go' 00 ho bef jou T that leg i sess hou a-ct' Jaw elec part So lion ' SA Spa fn c vale pose "It's to "S kids of th <;a tin Dym aa id Ma Dym woo l ~·hen from cess. Sh allow teach def en ~choo ~istu Dy beror l~re si p.a teach sluQe effr-ct ' oales e1ther be ha limits bette about a stu scar er 'g pad di Cor raus ciuse J~wsu 1•id Sena! PLA A dea say broke Dock police The with , been i few ashor said. dicati was b order . . ' ... Y,acatlon Over Solons Face Big Agenda in State Tliey Ate All of It RESEDA !UPll -Ques· tion: lf it takes 15 min· utes to concoct the longest banana split in the "·ortd. how long \\'Otlld it "l11kc a crowd of 200 ch1ldrt'n and adults tfJ rat 11 '! SACRAMENTO fUPll - Legisla tors returned to the Ca pitol today refreshed-arter a week-long Easter holida y to face a mountain or unresolved issues, ranging from coastli ne protection and no .ta u I t automobile insurance-to heallh care and a record slate budge t. And reapportionm ent -that agonizingly painful iss4e for incumbent lawmakers and Gov. Ronald Reagan -ste\\'S on a backburner with little hope it can be agreed upon before a proposed early .ad- journment of June 30. This will be the 14th wee k that the ele c tion -y e a r legislature will have been in session. Leaders of b o t h houses are hoping for speedy action· on most issues so lawmakers can stump for re- election and attend their parties' national conventions. So far. 1nost major Jegisla- t ion is stlll pending in com· 'S pcutk' Bait In Scltools I ntroclnced SACRAM·ENTO {AP) SpankiTig would be outlawed hi Californ ia's public and pr i. vate school.~ unl'ler a .bill pro.. poseC: by a la"'maker who i;ays "It's time thal \\'e moved on to better methods." . ''Spanking and whipping kids just shou:d not be a part of the public process of cdu· c;:ating student s." Sen . Mervyn Dymally. (0-Los Angeles,) said in a prepare d statement. Mari Goldmatt. a member of Oymally's staff, said the bill wou ld be introduC<'d this wee k "-'hen the legislatu r~ returns from a one·"-'eek Easter re- cess. Sh e said the e<iucation rode allows corporal punishment of kOhol children ~·hen it is .. deemed an appropriate cor- rective measure'' by loca l school officials. ' The bill woul d not prohibit teacherS from using force to defend Hrem selves, to protect ~chool propert y, or to quci: disturbances, Dyma lly said. Dymally, a college teache r before he ran for the Jcgi(lla- ture in 1963, said spanking sig11a ls a lack of abili ty on lhe tea cher 's part lo work with students and is not the most effective discipline. '"The student-once he grad- bates-:earns that society uses other means of restricting his behavior wil hin reasona ble limits," he said. •·tt's much better that a student learn about these means while he is a student-rather th an being scared in to being a ·good boy' er 'good girt' by threat of a l"'ddle." CorPoral punishment also ca use.! trouble for schools be- ca us e of parental complain lS, Jl~·suits and public outcry, t•id DymaJJy, cha irman of the St.nate Democratic Caucus. " ~Nude Body 3Jiscovered PL AYA DEL REY (AP l - A drad woman , who o(fice rs say m:ty have had her neck broken. washed up o n Dockweiler Beach near here, police said. The woman, about 20, nude. with short. brown hair. had been in the water for only a few hours before wa shing ashore Sunday, investigators said. They said there were in· dications the woman's neck was broken. An autopsy was ordered: miitee but legislative bud(e't. writers are driving for speedy mid-April passage of Reagan's ree<>rd $7.6 billion st a I e budget. The Democratic-<iominated Assembly plans tentatively to debate s beefed-up proposed $7.9 billion version of the governor·!'! budget Thursday. The Senate's version is ex- pected to approximate the Assen1bl y's but a final bill. as ;ilways. "'ill be written by a t wo..house confer ence com- mittee. Sen. Randolph Co 11 i er . Democratic chairman of the Sena te Finance Commilfee. said he hopes the confere nce committee will approvl' ·a compromise by April 15. The deadline for the state to have a new budget is July I, a date the legislature had ignored for two conseculi ve years. Except for quick action on the budge'.. only \ong·shot bets are heing booked on the suc- cessful outcome of other ma- jor legis lation. R ea g a n · s catastrophic health in sura nce plan along Ans1ver: 20 1ninutes. '!'hat rnuch \vas: estnlr !lshed when !he Calvary Chapel youth organ ization set out Saturday 10 break the world 's record, report. tdly held by a 59-foot ba· nana spl it assrn1bled in New Jersey last year. For those who v:ant thi: recipe, it took 150 bananas, 20 g a 11 on s of vanilla. strawberry and chocolate ice cream , an d a .gallon each of nuts, cherries and chocolate syrup to fill an 80-foot long galvanized iron rain trough . At the word "go," those who hRd constructed th(' split, dug· in with spoons from bot h sidl'S. taking only sligh1ly Jongl'r to make it disappear t_hat they did in puUin g it to- gether. Then they erected a sign Qn the chu rch lawn , boast· ing. '"Thl' World 's ~ongest bR - nana spilt , .. Rnd we ate the whole thi ng." with a rival "womb to tomh" '----------~ medical care proposar by Senate [)emocratic I e a de r George J\.1oscone face a seem- ingly unsurmoun table uphill fi ght The go\·ernor"s $300 million program. \\•hich is aimed at prevent ing a famil y from being wiped out fina ncia lly by a castastrophic ill ness such as cancer. hRs dra"'·" the fire of Den1ocratic s.1arpshoolcrs who insist it doesn"t go far enough. Moscone 's huge $7.5 billion · program is rated at a near zero cha nce for passage. Under his legislation, a Cali fornian ·would m a k e virtually no out-of-pocket ex· pendit ures for heal th care. It would be fi nanced by state, employe and employer con· tribul ions. The Senate N a l u r a 1 Resources and Wildl.ife Com· mitlee holds the apparent key to enacltTient or ·1egislat lon to protect the scenic t ,100-mile· long California coastli ne from the land de vrloper's bulldozer. 1'he comm ittee. which last yea r killed Assembly-passed leg islat ion to impose st rict controls on coastal de velop.. ment, is re pprtedly still split 4· 4 on si milar current legisla· lion . Sen. George Zenovich (D-fo·rcsno). is the swing vote and said he hasn 't made up his mind. Watts Study Gets Airing 111 Intervie'v LONG BEACH IUPll -The rioting in \Vatts in 1965 was most destructive in ghetto neig hborhoods wil h th e highest po pulation density and low educational levels. according to a. study ""by a polilical scien· list and a psychologist. "The ghetto is not a monolith . There arc all kinds of gradations in social struc- tures a n d neighborhoods," said Margaret J. G. Abad u, the political scientist. She reported on h e r fed erally finan"ced study of the riot ing, w i I h psychologist \Valier Raine of California State College, Lo ng Beach. to the annual meeeting Saturday of the S ou thwe s te r n Ant hropologic al Association. The rioting wa s most intense In neighborhoods with the highest bla ck population ctto- centrations and where average educational level!'i were eighth grade or below; she said. Dramatic Witness Set For Davis Testimony SAN JOSE (UPI J -The stale today calls its most drnm atic v.·itness of 1 he Angela Davis trial -the pros. ecutor who battled with his abductors in a yellow getaway van outside the San Rafael courthouse .• Gary Thomas, a. deputy di strict attorney, who w a s wounded in the spine and permanently paraly,1ed in lhe Augu st 1970 shooting in which he. J udge Harold Haley and three women jurors were taken hostage. Judge Haley's head "'as half blown off and three of their captors. including J onathan Jackson . 17. were killed an they tried to drive from the Marin Cnun ty Civic Center. \Vith the kidnsp-murder trial l'nlering its second week of evi dence, prosecutor Albert W. llarris Jr. was expected to try to estRblish through testimony by Thomas that you n g J;ickson and the other would· be escapers demanded the free ing of the ' ' So I e dad Brothers" in exchange for the hostages. The fir s! u•itness of the trial. Mrs . Maria Graham, one of the jurors taken captive. described how Thomas. 6-fcet- 2, seized a gun inside the Volkswagen van and opened ,fire on the men inside after Jackson had fired at police outside. l\1rs. Graham said 1'homas reached over her head as she sprawled on the fl oor of the vehicle and grabbed a revolver from Jackson. broth- er of "Soledad Br oth e r"· George Jackson . llarris also was expected to attempt to pro\'e through Thomas that Judge Haley was killed by a blast from a sa\\•ed-off shotgun held by Ruchel Magee inche s from his head . The defen se hRs sug· gested that shots fired into the van by deputies killed lialey. At the end of !he first week of testimony Th ursday, the three women jurors had told their story of the terror of their abduction. Harris. who has listed 104 witnesses he may call. said he felt the trial was Foi ng slO\ver lhan anlici pa tcd . PHAR·MACY WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME '..-cHICI THiii SUPllll SALi SPICIALS-s .... llet. Vitin• Eve Drop1, I 01 •••••••••••••• ,.,,,,,, ••• $1.49 N1 1.1tto91R1 So1p •• , , , • , • , , • , , •••••• , •• , , , , • , LOO lri9hl Sillle Sh1mpoo, 11 01 ••••••• , •• , ••••• , • , , , $1,6S J1r91n1 E•fr• Ory Hind Lotion , , , , , • , , , ••• , , • , , , $2.00 Aq1.11n1! H1i11pr1y, I) 01. , ••• , , , , , • , • , •• , •••••••• 69t 0.t It ... Prk1 '1.99 Jl< S l.)S _t_l.69 ... I "" ..... $1 .6' . Sfc· St.OS $1 .H Oc 2700 E. Coast Hi2hway, at Fernleaf, Corona del Mar • AMPU PAlllN• IN IU.t He•n -t :JO • 6:M ... ., ----644-7575 3 Pla11es Crash In State By Tht Associatf'd Press The pilot of a light plane \\'flS killed and lwo other men 1\·ere critically injured in separate crashes over the weekend in California. Jn a third inci ... a pllot was rescued unin-when he made a forced landing in !he Santa Barbara Cha nnel , 500 yards offshore from the Santa Barbara Airport The San Luis (lbispo County sheriff's office •a id Eugene KHstom, 4-0, of P~so Robles, died of burns suffered "'hen his crop-d uster hit a tree Saturday and crashed near Lrike Nii cimiento. In Pacoima, pilot Doycle Coller. 62. of Burbank, and George Stahis, 50, o f Pano rama City. su ffered 1nulliple injuri es early Sunday when their plane faltered at takeoff and fell Jess than JOO feet. Al Santa Barbara, t\vo fishermen rescued R o d Lrimbert of f<.1 odesto Satu rday 11·hen he landed in the water while coming in for an emergency landing at !he airport. The plane sank almost immediately. • ' Neiol1bors " . Aid Victin1 LONG B~ACH (UPJl -A 51-year-ol d "'Oman \I' a s hospit alized iii sat isf~clory c o n d ition today after neighbors rescued her from the bottom O( her aparl!TIE'nt house swin1ming pool. police rc1>0rtcd. Officers said f\-1r s. Juanita Ripley was discovered Sunday a fte~noon at the bottom or the pool by another of the building's te n a n l s , Ken Ramsey, 25. Ramsey enter£'d the pool and pulled r..1rs. Ripley out of the ·water. \\l hile he ran for hel p. another ten~nt . Deborah Scully, 19, applied mouth-lo- mouth resuscitation and re11i\" eel the woma n. 'Quieter' Easter Week Concludes By linilt.d l'rt"'~ lnlt roat lonal )'outhfu\ vacationers headed back to school tod a~' "'ilh tans and menloril's of 011e or 1 he (luierest Sout h1,rn Criltfurn1., Easter ""el'ks 111 t'<'l'('nl year~. but nl least 27;) nf thf'nl \Vlll remen1 ber a brush "'Jlh the la11·. Along the Colorado Rircr, \\'here thousanrls or younj!; pro. pie cainpcd aloni: the sh11rl', authorilil'~ n\;~dr i3 nrrrst.'I near Pnrkcr J);un. 1' h e charges rangC'd fron1 111ar1- ju_a na pos~cssinn t,p assa,ult \1•Hh a deadl~· 1\'L1apon. In Palin Springs-~ tradi· tionnl ~~aster meC'c;i f o r ,;tuderits and once tai,:J:E'rl "'the F l. Laudl'rd11Jt of lht' \\'est"I -arrrsts stood nt 175 Sundav. 1-;a«'ter in f'ahn Sprln~s hits bl't•u rtlativt!y t1ui1•! sinc e the 1969 l11va5iun \tlleu huudrcd:; of yo uths \\('ri' arre.-:ted in 'r11 hqu!ti Can yon, rtH1n~· (or frolic king in the nudf" ~\"OOthC.r.-35 '""11cr.,nn~ ~ r-;=;:-;r. rf';;trd this ea.,trr 11t'<'k. 111 Hl\ih"i. \ltlioui,:h 1110~1 1t1unc,t1'f'I h;td In be b.1rk 1•1 tht' t'l:J!\Sr(lllfll loclii\, :O-Olll!' Sl'llf'1ll.'i beg.in Th\·1r ~"srrr l111l1da1 !' l<1S\ Frida\' 11nd l.111 1~11- fnr(·,n1f'nt ·nff1crr' prrparrd for 1nnre \~1ulhs lh1.~ 11prl-. San Bernardino (' o u n t 11 Sher1H !:'rank Ul;1nd said afll'-r relali\{' <iu1c1 tar!y in the 11eck. nt«•rl~· 3.~ youths cro\\·dcd pn1 :l!f' Rnd go\'ern-1 --------~ '-. ' 11 DAI L v PIL OT II Bid. well's your heed· qu•rt ers for dou· bleknit s! Th e very b • 1 t 1election •round iii double kni t 'le eks & 1port co.tf1, 1•67 vr. Lido N1wporl l 11eh rnrnt pro1X"riy 11long the rivrr S:ilurday a11d Sunrtay. ··Sotnt' of thc~c kids shnw up wllh nothing n1nrc than thr clothl's 'on lhl'ir b:icks and . naturally, 1his rucans prob- len1s."' s;iid Lt. \\I a 11 e r Aruna. c·on11nt1ndcr of !hr Tormenting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved sheriff'i; offit:f' :ll Needle.~ l n 111·1".V 1":1S<'s Prrp:it.'ltion 1-f • ·• lo:i\'('S pnlm pt, ff'm por:i ry r('!iPf Deputies said some of lhl' from such pain :i nd itf'hi nit nffl'.'ndrrs had t11 be taken tu an'd llf'luallv hrlp~ 5hrin k detention fac1l1!1rs at Bar5tn11 s~·<'llin i: of hf'n1orrhoidal tis. and el.~r\~·hrre betaUS{' 111 s_Ut'11J;:au~ by inflamm:i til'ln. overcrowd ing at the 6mall I Te!ta by doctors on hun· Need les Jatl. drPds of pntien~ showed thia to ho"' I rue in many cases, ln fll<'l, ma Ti y doctors, them ... $<'1Vf'.s, use Preparation //~or rrromn1f'nd it for their fam. il ie!'I. P reparation H ointment or suppositories. Peo~le . 'with pia11s save at Impenal. The great Am erican vacation. It's whatever people with plan s make it. A welcome opportunity to unwind from our work-a-day world. A custom-mad e plan for active rec reation. Relaxation. What ever. ·And no matter how you enjoy your vacation, you'll probably agree it goes by too fast. Th at's why proper planning can really help out. And that's where Imperial Savings comes into the picture. At lme_erial Savings we believe in sound financial plann in~. Because we think you should get the most out of life now and in the future. So we maximize your saving interest with a full range of ~ programs to fit your needs. The highest rates on ·~ insured s.avings. And friendly full-family savings and .~}' loan service. ' · f~~ .. , These are just some of the reasons why so many ~~-"'!ft people with plans save at Imperial. Why not come • ~in, start saving, and see what we mean. We're sure you'll like the ass01;iation. per annum on $5000 deposits held 6 OOOL. two years or more.Actual annual yield • 70 when savings and lnlereat accumulate one·year. per annum on $1000 depos!ls held •5 750L. one to two years. Actual annual yield • 70 when savings and Interest accumulate one year. 5 25% per annum on 90-daycertilleates. Ac~ • . 0 tual annual yield when savings and Interest accu"}ulata one year. per annum on passbook accounts 5 OO Ol. compounded dally. Accounts earn • 70 from da!i!I ol deposit to dale of with· draw111. Actual ann ual yield when aav· lngs and lnlereat accumulate one year. Q D 1mPERIAL sAu1nGs and loan association Executive Office: 3366 Via Lido, Newport Beach, {714) 673·3130 Newport Center Olflce: 550 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, (714) 644-1481 other offices In Pasadena (main office: 61 South Lake Avenue) East Pasadena, Glendora, Redlands, Woodland Hilla 6.18% • • 5.92% 5.39% 5.13% A WHOU. V OWNED SUBSIDIARY Of 2 Bll.UON DOLLAR IMPERIAL CORPORATION OF AMERICA 0111!1 . ! • • • • -. • DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Jail Weel{~nding _Fails . Sentencing convicted Orange County men to serve their jail terms on \\'eekends seemed sensible when the practice "'as adopted 12 years ago. T)le idea \11as that short tern1 prisoners could keep their jobs and hold their families together while pay· ing their penally und er the Ja\v, Unfortunately, it has btely proved to be another case of good theory buf fa ilure in practice._:r,.oo many prisoners have arrived ror their weekend imprisonment under the influence of, or suffering the after·cffec!s or, dru gs or alcohol. Ja ilers have been unable to put such men through · the corrective system because of the mere tw o days be· fore they leave. Recently the state Department of Corrections filed a report cri tical or the weekend system. As a r.es.ult, criminal courl presiding Superior fourt Ju~ge \VIlham 1'1uri-a'y has ordered the program abandoned. The system \\1ill only graduaJly fade away. for some 140 convicted men are rurrently doing weekend time. When it is gone -and the municipal courts will have to cooperate, too -county lawmen will cheer. The system has been a continuing headache for them. Reflectorized Plates·· YES Cal ifornia more often than not leads the nation in adopting new ideas, especially those which stand to benefit most of its residents. But in one area we have been lagging behind. ~ome 43 s~ates and 27 countries. That is the business ol doi ng all that can be done to redu ce the number of rear end collisions on stref!t s and high"'ays. · \ As \vas reported in a column on thi.s page a. wee k ago today, the Nati onal .s~fety _..Council ,has r1~~re! showing there '"'ere 3.8 m11l1 on rear e~d car colhs1ons in 1970. The council 's safety experts said that rear end· ers were the largest single reason more than 54,800 Fluoridation: A Truly Great Advance By FREDRICK J, STARE, M.D. Nutrition Scienli~t Harvard· Univ.rrsily Fluor idation comes up f or con· sideration in some communities this spring. This is a technical issue requiring some understanding of den tis t r y , medicine. chemistry and water engi neer· ing to evaluate it properly. Hence it ought to be decided by local boards of health, with adV'lceirom speci allsrs. and not by a referendum . Unfortun ately the latter is required in .some loca lities, usually because the politicians have found this the easiest wa)' to get a good bit or the opposition off their neeks. Fluoriaation is one of the truly great advances in public health or this genera- tion, When one realizes that denta l deca y is the second most prevalent disease of mankind , that fluoridation will bring a reduction of 60 to 70 percent. at a ct>st av eraging. only 10 cents per person per year. and that it will ha.Tm no one. sick or well, young or old, here is a real advance in public health. · FLUORIDATION is no longer con- troversial from the scientific viewpoint True, there are still a few dentists and physicians that oppose it but in a pro- fessional group totaling approximately a half million individuals one will always find a fe~' who oppose any issue. There is nn single professional group of any generally recognized scientific status that opposes fluor ida tion today. Some~good people oppose fluorid ation on Dear Gloomy Gui Imagine the audacity of South Vietna m, Cambodia and Lacs, sti ll resisting a North Vietnam takeover after 10 years of Communist ag- gressjon! Could it be that North Vietnam stinks? -G. H.P. Thl1 fut11r1 t11lKll rtadtn' VkW1, Ml l>KllYrHw tlMH el tlM _....... s.-.. fff• "' -¥1 ti OIMmf On. 0.11• 1"1111. the basis that the fluoride added is a medicine or drug. This is misinformation becauR fluoride is not a medicine or drug. It is a mineral nutrient. as are calcium. iron, phosphorous and many other minerals. All waters contain some fluoride. many a deficient amount, some the correct amount t.o lessen tooth decay. and a few an excess amount. fn the former case we should add a small amount to make up the deficiency and in the latter case we remove the excess. GET THE FACTS on fluorid ation and a good source should be your local or state he~lth department. dental or medical society. Or better yet. if you have OC· casion to visit a community that has had fluor idation for 7 or 8 years. look in the mouths of a few children 7 or 8 years of age and compare their teeth . with youngsters of the ..same age 1n a nonflu oridated area. ft doesn't take professional training to realize there is a big difference. Ask ~ parents about their dental bills and compare them with yours! Human Irrationality No "practical'' solutions to any or ou r major problems will work until we are abl t11,to do something about the massive irrafionality of the human race. This ir· rationality is even more powerful than the so-called ''sense of self-preservation.'' F'or instance. a re- cent stale\\•ide study of \\·eekend auto crashes shO\\'t>d th111 74~ Ohio motorists died in such crashes u ithi n a single year. Of 1hem only 28 - or four percent - 11.·ere kn ou'n 10 be "·earing safety bells a! the time of the crash . ALL TH E EVIDENCE proves con- clusively tht1 t wearing belts saves lives - 3.500 last year u·ere saved by them , and abou! t1nnther li,500 niight have been sa\'· ed if the belts h:id been buckled. ll is not true that rnotorisls fall to use the belts hecau~e !hey are nc~ligent or because thty fff\ the belts ~·on 't improve lheir chance~ In a crash. The real reason. tn most cases, ls an unconsc ious Quotes ~lri. Bette f'lorr. San Carlos -"In these confusing. dismal days or high tax- es, c'ampus rioting, salary Increases for Congress. deman<ls for more foreign aid, ttc., does AN\'ONE 5top to !Ry a liW.le prayer for our men in V!etn11 m?" Or'·llle Luster, S.F. •:<«:. of yo uth wvjct group -"If soc1&1y looked upon every human being as a precious asset • . . there would be a follow t)'lrough - directed toward making eve:r;·one 1 particiPAnt rither than a recipient. h Adlai sttvetJOD Ill, Ill. stale treasurer, In Berbley tpett'b -"li'orct_ C~nnot bt part of the persuasion of fret SC1t1ety. '' (SYDNEY J. HARRIS) superst1lution that people will not admit to !hemselves. And that is the feeling that ignoring the belt somehow gives you a magic pro- tection against accidents ; whereas. on the contrary, acknowledging the possibili- ty of death on the highway by buckling the belt may actually bring on a fatal ac· cident. tJrlR PRL\1JTIVE belief in magic - which is only thinly coated by our ra· tionality -is part of the sc hizoph renic makeup of most people. One part of us kno~·s that safety belts are prudent and necessary : another. and usu a I I y dominating. part fee.ls that acknowledg- ing this danger ts to tempt the rates into viSiUn~ Oisasrer upon Us:-- We repress our fears by tucking them away In dark corners end hop ing they wlll-nQt sprjng out at us. instead-of ad· mltl ing them openly and taking some ra· tional measures to control them and their possible consequenets. THE ~10ST characterislic conduct in this sy1n bolic etlltude toward rear is nf the J>C!rS<ln who refuses to see a doctor betause he is afra id that a diagnosis will ~how some:thlng sertously wrong wilh him . Rationally , he knows that the longer ht wa its, the Jess chance Df arresting a 1.ruly serious ailment ; mngically, he hopes !hat if he ignores his symptoms, tht' disease will disappear. ·"'e tend 16 do this wllh most of our m11- jor social. as well as personal problems: 11nd it is shallow to blame thiJ on "negligence" or "apathy." Rather, it Is ,. manife station or lhe schizoid nalure of most or us, a.s well as of tht dominating Influence of magical belu~fs that remain as potent within us as within any "prlmitiYe" tribc!s. persons died and 2 miU ion were Injured that year . That same column told of one of two approaches to the rear ender pro blem. It is a deceleration warn- ing dev ice called Cy berlite now bein~ tested on 500 San Francisco taxi cabs unde r a California Highway Patrol permit. · CJberllte has 1-cont rol module_\,1hich senses-the car's rate of deceleration, and a specially designed puls· ing amber ligh t, centermoun ted on the rear of the vehicle. Pul sing of the light begins v.1hcn the driver steps oh the brake pedal. 'fhe quic ker the stop, the quicker and brighter the light. The on·time, intensity and tempo of the pulsing light continuou_sly warns follo v.•ing driv· ers at all phases from safe. slow stops to the fa st, dangerous and unexpected circumstances where the driver ahead suddenly jams on or Jock'i his brakes to av oi d trouble. The Inventor believes his Cybe rlite's strength is that "a person's mind separates the dangerous stop from the safe stor automatically -the \Vay everyone reacts. auto· matically and differently to touching a warm stove or a hot one." • The other approach is one adopted alrea8y in those 43 states and 27 foreign countries. It is use of reflector· ized license plates. They give added protection for ni ght driving and under foggy or dim daylight cond itio ns. And they're especially useful in spotting unlit parked cars. They cost a little more and their lifE! is shorter tha.11 present plates, but it 's worth it for all tests have sho\!1n a substan tial reduction in rear enders when they are used. Patent control by a sinj!;le ('Clmpany has ex· pired. so that past objection to adoption is no longer valid . Legislation to rcouire reflectorized plates is in the Sa cramento hopper. It should pass -in the name of saving lives and reducing injuries, as \Vell as lessening economic loss. tlN MY LINt OF WO~K Wf lfT ~OMf OF 1Hl g166£ST 0Nf5 60." ---. ~---·-- Blacks Think There's Black Way and ll'hite Way Is Professio.nalism Old Fashioned? WASHINGTON -Down with o!d fashioned professionalism . Therf;: is black justice and wh ite justice : b I a ck journalism and white j our n a I is m, Perhaps there i s bl ack medicine and white medicine also. Therefore black lawyers must be un- la wyerlike. if neces· sary, in fighting ra· cial injustice. Black journalists must be more than reporters a n d communicate for racial justice . If you do not follOw this ' line of reasoning, it is because you have not studied two important trends in the fields of law and journalism which are now being ~rongly asserted. The black journal ism trend surfaced here in discussions at Howard University. Objectivity,' detachment and ot her previously accepted journalistic stan· dards are not enough for black reporters. They must use their professional status to educate the white system. THE BLACK LAW trend came to the fore in Ne w Yo rk where black lawyers and law st udents are shunning previ ously accepted professional standards in favor of legal activism on behalf of their race. In short, there is a black way to report a major news event and a white wa;.r. Voices, ARKANS AS. JUNE 27. 1972 -The na- tion's 22nd and last Presidenti al primary u·as held here today. Sixteen or lhe surviving 17 Democratic candidates -their voices, funds and shoe leath er long since g o n e -managed somehow to reach the state during the past week in order lo go through the now-familiar cam· paign routine . A,1ost hiti:h·hiked in. The 17th. Wilbur Mills. evolved a bold plan to beat the others to the·scene. But he unfortunately fell off a box car near Chattanooga. Tenn ., and broke a leg. In his stead. he sent a post card urging Arkansans to vote for him for whatever It was he was running for. In recent months. he said, he had been ha ving more and more difficulty remembering. The current front · runner. Mayor John Lindsay , arrived in style. As he tottered off the Greyhound bus. he honored the Dear George: r recently \\'el1t lo a fortune tel· !er. He told me I would meet a mn n in uniform . I wenl back oul· side and ~·as getting a ticket from a traffic officer. How do you ex· plain this uncanny coincldcnce7 AMAZED Dear Amazed : Gee. it 's things like th ls that send cold chills up and down my back! In fact. t think 1'11 ltave this batch or kooky mall and go gtl a hot loddy. Dear George : l've been reading your advice for ' 11 years and nothing y6u 've said has worked yeti I'm going to qull paying attention to adv1ce columns! FURIOUS Dt'ar Furious: See1 I guaranteed you could Team • Jot Crom my column If you just put your mind to it. (RICHARD WILSON) There is a bla ck way to plead a case and a white ~'av. In practical terms. the b I a ck journalism trend is implicitly asserted in charges or discimin~tion filed against the Washington Post by seven b I a ck re1>4!ters. The "liberal. integrationi~t Post'' has been beating its breast under intense emotional stress througn many C()lumns of type over the issue raised within its integrated newspa per staff. ACCORDING TO the paper's executive editor. the Post has the best rw>rd in America in the employment Qf blac:; editors. reporters and phot~phers.·He does not favor i quota system pro- portionate to population in the employ- ment of professionals, whic h he claims would require' him to hire 100 more black newsmen and women at an annu:il Cllst or $2 million. Under that same principle hair his staff would be women. And . the quota system C()u]d be carried further into age groups -a qoota of under 3~year-olds, for example. Perhaps the Post's executive edi tor has not carefully studied the Nixon ad· ministration's ''Philadelphia PI an ' ' \\'hich. in effect. imposes the racial quot1 system of employment on go\'ernme:it contractors . The contractors. too, as dll most newspaper editors . claim tha t thry cannot find qu alified personn el. but t~ey have not escaped the Philadelphia Plan that way. TltE ~1ECHANJCS of this dispute may be less significant than the underlying motivations of committed bl a c k journalism . A few "paragraphs frorn a black Post columnist. \Villiam RaspDerry, provide a revealing insight. "We've known,'' he 11.•rote. "that the way you perceive events has a good deal to do with who you are, and \l.'e knew that most of the perceptions reporteiJ in the press were \li'hite. "We were grateful llr'hen opportunil if's in the press started to open up for black reporters, not because the jobs paid well, but because they represented an o~ portunity for b\ac;k influeqce on wha: is communicated. to whom and ho w.'' But this was an illusion . Ra spberry found. \Vbite editors imposed their \\•ill . The stories ca me out "white." whatever the color of the reporter. NOW, THE POST IS confidently ex· peeled to do '1what no cth~r wh ite newspaper has done : to stop being just a whi te newspaper ." No credit here to white or black reporters for trying to be objective. No praise for white and black editors for trying to present a balanced picture . Under the new doctrine such standards of fairness ~·ould be superhuman and th us must be reje<:te<l as impractical or a mask over continued whiteness. Somewhat the same d o c t r i n • permf'ates the la"·ycrs who 1net In Ne w York to assert their differences 11.·ith the old-time professionalism of the National Bar As sociation. Said the president-elect of the 2800-member association. O. ·r. \Veil s: "\Vhen a brother ascended to tht bench. he 'd forget his blackness.'' "1 AS HE NOT supposed to? Other! called for judicial notice by judges in trying cases involving problems faced by blacks in America. One speaker con· tended the whole system Is ra cist and the hypocrisy of justice "makes you vomit." A black lawyer must be black first. and a professional Second. A black reporter must be black foremost. and objec tive later on. He mu st "use" the com· munications media to adva nce his own con.cepts of justi ce. These are not the sta ndards of pre> fessionalism which have long b~J'I recognized. Both the black journalists and black lawye rs understand that. 'fhey thus move toward the kind of separatism which the more experienced black orga nizations distrust and deplore. Funds, Shoes Long Gone ) ( • ART HOPPE custom all the candidates had observed since last March and immediately releas- ed a list of his latest campaign con- tributor -a ct>usin in Elmira. N. Y .• who had loaned him at six percent interest the $43.92 in bus fare . LINDSAY TOOK over the front-runner spot by defeating the previous front-run· ner, Sen. Vance Hartke, in the New York primary last week. Lindsay garnered 16.l percent of the total vote to Hartke 's 15.9. Experts credited Lindsay·~ smashing triumph there to the appeal of his cam· paign slogan: ''Think of the job Lindsay's done as mayor and let's send him to Washington!" The campaign here In Arkansas. wh ich was covered by three reporters and the editor of Psychology Toda y, offered 1everal dramatic moments, Perhaps the most dramatic was when Senator f\.1uskie. who used to be the front· runner before New Hampshire last winter, consumed 18 cheese blintzes in 32 seconds at the only kaf fee klatsch held in his honor. It was assumed that ~fuskie had thus sewn up the Arkansas Jewish vote. But after consuming the 18th he immediately collapsed to the floor, holding his stomach in pain. With tears in his eyes , he explained to his outraged hostess : "Honest, it wasn't the blintzes. It was the fact I hadn 't e3ten for three da ys." Most experts felt-Hubert Humphrey, who was briefly the front:runner after the Florida primary, would win here due to • the. brilliance of his radical new cam· paign strategy: Thanks lo a cu I t laryngitis, he wa sn·t able to say a word. Unfortunately, the voters said what they've been saying all 1 pr i n g : "Humphrey and Nixon? Again?" THE RETURNS were announced this evening overt.he three network! during a station break. which gave weary viewer• an opportunity to go make a sandwich. They sho11r·ed that each of the candidates had received 217 votes. The retu rns were followed by a special h?~r-long program paid for by "The C1hzens for Teddy Kennedy Doing Whatever He Wants to Do." In an emotional speech, Senator Ken· nedy paid glowing tribute to "the glorious American system of Pre si dentia l pr imaries which so adequately tests the C()urage and resources of the aspirants.·• Power and Pollution In closing, he again said he wouldn't run for President -"unless," he added, "none of the other candidates have the strength or funds to get to the con• vention ." - -The experts--unmediately b e g a n speculating on who was still fit enough to 1Ddu5trl1l Newt Review Environmentalists are generally con- aidered lo be those who resist industrial ·expansion -particularly in such fields as electric en,ergy .. However, the day is not too far distant when the definition of. en- vironmentalist wiU have to be broadened If the term is to continue to designate those who lend their efforts in a substan- tial way to the improvement of the earth nn which we live. By this standard, there Is no more genuine environmentall!t than 'a power C()mpany th at is doing a good job of meeting the energy needs of its service area, A relet1se of one such compRny operating in lhe South st11rts orr with a surprising observation! "Chances are in· creasing that part of your old 1958 automobile will b< used to help bold toge.rhe.r new shopping centet1 bel111 built throughout tbe Caroll.n11s. Or tfi1t a fender from one of your earlier cars is part of a ho.!lpital. school, or gymn1slum from Milne to Florida. And if so, ch1J!Of1 are real good ifs due to electrlclty." JN T.HE PAST TWO years, power for be his running mete pollution control de vices has accounted · for about -10 percent or-eie·ctriclty re· quirements for new and expa nded in· dustries completed, announced or under construction in this co mpa ny's service area. One of Its · customers has a large electrically-operated shredder that turns junk automobiles into marketable shred· ded steel. Alter shredding, the old cars are reprocessed in a total~lectric steel mill which specializes In structural steel jotsts__._auch as are used in shopping centers, hospitals, schools and gym's, Thus, the electric company helps fulfill the need for recycling and for po\lulion- free stttl plan~. It also provides elec· l tricity for electric Jnclnuators, trash compactors and other devices . In a very practical wa.y, it· is contributing to 1 cleantr environment~ It is an en: vlronmenta.11st and so are hundreds of other electric companies 1 c 1 t t e r e d througbouflhe length and breadlh or the land, although this fact la not yet generally recocnlzed. OllANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. \Vecd, PuOliJhtr Thoma.s Kttvll, Editor Albert \V, Bat11 Editorial Pa.gc Editor The ~dilor!AI ~gt of the oi.11y Piiot aeek1 to Inform and stimu· '''' rndm by prntnUna this new&Pfl.Pf!r'1 opinions and com- mtnuu•y on tOpll'J or lntemt and tlanlfic•nct. by provid.lnr • forum for the ~xpreulon or -our rt•dtn' oplnlom,, •nd by ~ntl.n.( tbe afvtrse \tlewpolntJ of informtd ob-"' attYen •nd 1pokftlT'ltn °" top ct of the day. Monday, April 3, 1972 r ... . ·~. . .. --' . ., ' M0ttday, April 3, li;72 DAIL y PILOT T ' Gang Rumbles R~vived . ~ENIE -By Phil lnttrlandi Army's KP PlafJ, Youths .. Again Expode Into Street Violence __R.untlnw.Eim By CLIVE LAWRANCE ClltlUl•11 1ci.11c• Mtfllltr hrYICI NEW YORK -"Rumble !" The word has an ominous !OUnd and rhythm . It ha d an om inous meaning, too. in the New York City of the 1950's, It was even made \\'OrlCl·famous by the movieJ 'Westsi de Story." When the "''Ord "''ent out people stayed indoors because it meant teen-age gangs would meet in a wild melee of flymg fists, bottles, clubs, ,. and slashi ng knives. As the '50's drew to a close, the \'.'Ord was heard less and less unitL it seemed the war- ring street gangs were gone forever . Many experts believe the spread or heroiil was responsible. With :heroin, in- secure youths no longer need· L.M. Boyd ed "brothers ai'ound" to feet good . Now, suddenly. the word is coming back. For almost a year new lt has been murmured with in- creasing volume around the Bronx. Recently it exploded into vielence, Clashes between ri va l gaogs grew in intensity. New ene young man has been killed and many have been ar- rested . A 15-year-cld boy, a member of the Savage Nomads gang, was hospitalized with serious stab wounds following a brie f clash with a rival gang called the Galaxies. PoUce estim11te there now are 100 gangs in the Bronx. ''This was bound to come," Morton Weinberger, a Bronx school principal said. Police and Bronx reside nts see many similarities with the ,Readers Admire Ricl1 Widow Most "Only second band goods that sell at rlr1t class prices are rl<'h widows," Benjamin Franklin Jn that fiction known as the novel, which sort of heroine is most apt to appeal to the gentleman reader? Researchers did a study on this query, too. The rich and beautiful wido w whose husband was a heel, they clai m. Clearly, the masculine reader sees himself as the renewe r of this lady's faith.J n man. And as the manager of her money, I gather. Second most appealing heroine is said to be the pretty country girl who wants to leam. , BILL RUSSELL says John Ha vli- cek is the best basketball player he's eve r worked with . And Ru ssell has worked with qu ite a many, no? Ai\1 ASKED to name the most attractive woman on television the se days. \Vithout a doubt., Coke's b!Ue-eyed country girl, IF '\'OU CAN'T pick out the three mountain ranges in th is country with rotors as their names. your old geography teacher would be ashamed of you. Orange ~1ountains of New Hampshire. Green Mountains of Vermont, and - sing it, Sam -the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginny. Sl\IEU.. -How keen your sense of smell is depends to some degree on what you've had to eat. And just about any old boy in the medical dodge . familiar with your machinery, can tell you how your nose is doing at a given moment by sampling your blood sugar. Q. "I'm 29. Statistically , haw many working years do I have left?'' A. Just 36. And taxes, regret to report. will get all you make in 10 of them. WHY 00 skaters in roller rin ks all go counter-clock- wise? Because most favor !heir rlgbt. I'm told. A teacher of skaters says it's exceedingly difficult to train a left. handed , left-footed . left-eyed citizen to skate ('()Unter· clockwise. COWBOYS -Every third cowboy in the Old \Vest - after the Civil \Var. at any rate. -was a black man . . that·s the claim of the Pl ayboy ri.1ag azine researchers. IF ALL the people who got married in Las Vegas in a single year met in one spot. they'd make a town some· what more sizable than Las Vegas itself. A.N UNEMPLOYED customer reports bitterly he and numerous compatriots now out of work have no place to tum for help except to St. Ferdinand, the patron saint of engineers. rr HAS BEEN just 54 years since a wife in the Soviet Union could divorce her husband simply by . mailing the fellow a "Dear Iva n'' postcard. Address mail to ·L. ltf. Boyd, P. 0. Box 187.S,, Newport Beach , Calif. 92660. JamesJ. De Guelle FOR • HUNTINGTON BEACH City_ Council I NEED YOUR VOTE WHAT OE GUELLE CAN DO IN '72 IS UP TO YOU 0 Tii. tftltt te ••tt: 011 ell cepftol ,..,,.. ......... ,,.jocta, ..i c.itl .. ft • It It wlftiie1t Mttlllf Ip .,.ca.I ~ ,. ~: O ,..,,,.,, .. •ilr potlce "°"°""'• tlYi11t ttte • .,°"""°"' tlle ..,..,,...., llHded ,. 4o ttie 1•11 •IJ'OC._. .f ttie111. gangs of the •so·S. They 11lso see differences but seem unable to agree whether they are positive or negative. Some say the current gangs have older members carryi ng more dangerous v.•eapons And more violence-prone than their counterparts of almost two · decades ago. Others claim the gangs have a sense of ¥OCial commitment and political sophistication absent in the earlier gangs . Judging from re ports of a recent conference or gangs, both elements are presept. Some gang members said their deeds included repairing dilapidated houses, e v..e n "helping old people across the streets." Many are drugfree and some ar~considering action to rid thetr "turf" of drug pushers. But . when one youth counselor who called !he gangs together asserted that "violence is dead " he was 1net with a barrage of "no's." ''.You got to fight the white man," asserted a black youth. ''We tried this," he added. tX>inting to his head, "now \Ve i l I f gotta try this ," and he clench· ed his fist. Now · t h e violence--prone rivalry seems to be between a coalition o f black-Puerto Rican gangs and a white Italian gang called the Golden Guineas. It was en route to such a rumble tha t 22 youths aged between 12 and 17 were recently arres1ed by transit police with guns dra\l.'ll. This antagonism is not only directed against rival gangs. A local newspaper reparts that hundreds of students at a Bronx high school have s1a¥ed home since Seplember because they fear for their ~ . ..,., safety. ,., Tholnas Cronin Jr.. ex-''\'ou'll have to get your mind off lunch. You jusl said .. ecutive assista nt to Sta te Rep. ice-cubi~ inches, for cubic inches, and boozement for basement." Mario Biaggi (D-The Bronx)--~------------------­ asserted tha t black gangs roamed the school \'.·earing jackets inscribed, • ; Ki 11 whitey." He warned of a ''bloodbath" within six months or a year if safety measures were not taken. At the recent meeting of gangs one youth said, "Where I live there's ra ts . , .. Each and every one of us hates uthere we live. We want out." SDS Receives Ruling LOS ANGELES IAP I -A Superior Court judge says st udents at Los Angeles Trade Technical Co 11 e g e may organize a chapter of Students for a Democratic Society even ' !hough there is no racult\' sponsor. Judge Wi\li::im ~t. Lei 1t har:ded down his ru \lnp: after two students sued thr Boarrl or Trustees of L<ls Angeles Com- munity Co_!lege Dislricl. . WASHINGTON IAP I -The Army's plan to do away with KP in "the new volunteer Army" by hiring civilians for the job has run into fire from some ke y congressmen. They sa y the money could be better gpent elsewhere. A House AppropriAt1on~ Committee shokesman sa ys several members have r'x· press ed doubls O\'cr t h e Army's req uest for S9!l mi!liC'ln in next year's bud~et lo make pe rmanent 1ti: exprrunent C1f replacing sold1rrs 11•ifh civilian kilchen po\1ce1nrn, or KPs This has been pne of the Army's kr.v st>lling points 1n its can)paign to rt'!'r111t 1H1 111!· \'O]Unteer forrf' The t•omnllttee spokesnu1n said son1e n1embers feel "thars a lot of mane\' and a big departure rron1 the \\;l\' the ,Army has al11·rt~s <lone busi nes!l." ln lleartngs \1·ith tor Arm.v \f'aders 01 er !hr past. sel'ernl "rel.:.s, the spoke~man said, S(ln1r cornnuttrc mrmbC'rc; ques1ioned "'hct her the n1onr~· could be ~pen l "nn ranl·('r research or even a new tank." Other members. some of y.•hom pulled KP in their Army days, suggested the troops might be better off keeping busy by p e e 1 i n g potatoes and washin~ dishes ··than smoking marijuana." the spokesman said . Othe rs questiontd what the Russians do About KP and asked· if maybe the U.S. Army 1v;i~n't ~ciing soft. Jn response 1he Army has ~a!hered amn111nition from its l11p field co111manders for a counteratlark to impress l)pon lhe-comm iuce the importance .-if the KP-replacement pro- ~ra m to bnost lr('M'lr morale. (;en. ri.1 ich;"1el S. Davison. thft ·\rn1y's co m in and er In f:11rope, sa ys kerpin KP as part of a l°";l's duty •·would be to renege on a promise and tlJ undercut progress to~vard the modern volunteer Army.''. The general said that by hir· Ing civilians in Eu.foPe the 1\rmy has been able to return 3.500 soldiers to the ir primary duty . "Tills equates to more tha n four mechanized infa ntry bRttalions," he said. ' ' .· ,, .::;-•t :: ~ I - Manager Robert Ga rratt of Anaheim explains to a customer-friend the sign ificant · advantages of a Home, Pay·Yourself-First, "Vacation Account." You can be sure of earning the hi ghest interest possible because Savings Counselor, J eann ine Bailey, In Beverly Hills takes sincere interest in your savings program. · -..,.-,, Mrs. Lucy Myers , Senior Cliizens COunselor of the Alhambra office, enjoys assistine Home's many older customers with their savin es programs. Savlnp Counselor Birdie Giiiia m, In the new Vermont-Slauson office, transfers savines from a pill)' bank to $4 Billion Strona: Home. The People at Home do more for )10U $4Billion Strong Behind your savings at Home stand the greatest assets and the greatest actual dollar reserves of any savings and loan . association. For 83 years, Home Savings -h:as ~been °0ld Dependable." / Guaranteed, 2 year minimum term, on deposits o! $S,OOO or more. 533[% Guaranteed, 1 year term, on 14 deposits o! $1,000 or more. LA MIRADA 15128 E. Roeecrana Ave. 621·1310 SANTAANA 1300 North Main St. 647-9611 BUENA PARK 8010 Beoch·Bl•d. 828-466' GARDEN GROVE 11922 Brook.hum St. 63Q.U80 ANAHEIM IOI So~th Ruh<» Boulevard E35-2883 Americas Largest Years ago, H ome Savings became the nwnber one savings and loan association in the nation s1r:.ply by providing more of the services savers want most. Home Savings pays more interest to sayers, too .•. now at the rate of over $500,000 every single day. • Bonus Accounts. You earn 5% for the first 9Q.days. Then a bonus brings your interest to 51(4 %, which thereafter is paid to day of withdrawal, Passbooks, paid day·in to day· out (on the s ame fyp_e of accounts banks pay 4-4 'f.t %). 5% also is paid on 04Christma1 Accounts" and all the special "Pay Yourself First" plan&. fRff <:.rRvtc:rs •n.:Juc.!11 Not<• CoU.,tuon Tr.avl'lvtt CP\,.ck1"' M'l!IPV Ord,•r. 111·0 \111'1 m1nt1T1un bntonC C'"I ,,. . .., s .... n'J~ i:i-.,..1'1 Rr-l'l<:"mpl•O" Piivroll c: 1v•n'1· pl.•n· :ind 'op"r,;,! In• 11• · • ·" fJlit!Tlb•' FEDERAL llomr lo3n BJ~k Srstcm Ml'm.,rr Ff Df A/IL "'~'r, /Holl ~o:in 111\ul.~'l r-torpor,otlo11 Mulltpll' l\c-c-ounl '"""'•nci.> ••allable .111 u,u<l• Fo1 1t111mp1e-a l•mllw ol 4 m•r kl'Cp op tn ~2Stl.OOO lullr 1n1uritd :ii Hom~ S:.v1nq" -I t DAILY PILOT Monday, Apiil 3. lt;72 Your C11p of Teo? Filth Guidelines Chip Off Old Blo~k Ma uree n Reagan Swings l rito Cifreer Listed for , Food DALLAS ! UPI I -~1aureen Reagan. who used to cam- paig n for her polltician·father. is speaking , singing and acting for herself now. generation show bus i n e s s 1 stars. Dean Mart in saw the show and pron1pt ly slgned ?-.laureen for his series. From Wire Services WASHINGTON -The Food and D r u g Administraiion finally has made p u b I i c ltJ,idel ines on how much filth if coruldera unavoidable a n d Dried e11s: 100 million bacteria per gram. Frnb and froien flsll: Qin. any lot, no matter its size, containing decomposed eggs: decomposition based ()fl 5 mllli:;1 bacterlr> --,.,.am. t tolerable ln food, and the list doesn't make for good eating. The eight-page list indicates f the quantity of I n a e c t • fragments, rat manure, mag· • iota, worms and mold the · government regulators allow in food . The list had been held · aecret 61 years. --:-For example, the FDA said '~ it overlooks one rat or mouse : pellet in each pint of , .. heat. up ~ to 100 million bacteria in a : gram of dried eggs and 2,500 : aphidl per 10 grams of hops. Fresll and frozen Ush: Con· laminated if 5 percent of umples have "definite odor" of deco: . JsiUon o·::r at lea st one-fourth of their bodies, or i( 20 percent have ··slight odor" of decomposition over 45 per· cent of bodies. or a com- bination of the two. * * * Corn meal: Contaminated if : FDA officiJls !laid that the · : cont&mlnants in their opinion 20 percen t of samples contain fragments per 50 grams or 2 insects per 50 grams and if another 2-0 percent of samples contain more than 25 insect fragments per SO grams or 1 insect per SO grams. Also con- taminated il 20 percent of 11amples contain more than 5 rodent pellets feces per SO grams, and another 20 percen t contain more than 2 rodent pellets or rodent hairs per 50 gram!!. ; pose no hell.Ith hazard and '! rarely, if ever, are detected ljl.. ~; consu:.,Jrs. • : U the government allowed ~no filth in food, general : counsel Peter Hutt said, • "there would be no 1 ~gal food ,:in the United States." ;: He emphasized, 110wever, : that food may be seized at , : defect levels below t h e ; tolerance limits, i f in. :vest lgations disclose '~u n s a nltary manufacturing t . ~--····. .. -.. Er.amples from the list in- clude: . (Foods with contaminants ;above the llated levels are ':subject to seizure or recall as ;contaminated. One g r a m : equala 0.035 ounce,) ! Qoeolate: Average of 150 : Insect fragments and 4 rodent ~. halrl per 225 grams; max- ~tmum of 250 insect fragments -'and a rodent hairs In any · lin&le :m.1!'1111 sample. • ' ' . Canned and frozen blackber. rie1 and raspberries: Average of 4 larvae per 50 grams, or average of 10 larvae and in- sects per 500 grams. not coun· ting thrips, aphids and mites. Fresh, canned or frozen cllerrle1: If 10 perceftt are re. jected due to rot, the lot is contaminated. Al.so if 4 per- cent are insect infested~ J v Canned citrus fruit juices: Mold on 15 percent of samples. Al.so 10 drosophila and other fly eggs per 250 milllleters. or 2 drosophila larvae per 250 mll!Ueters. Iaiported black or grMa '. F emal,e Dogcatcher ;Reasons With 'Prey' I LONG BEACH fAPl - -'Colby Huntt, is tJ>e . kind ol ~ ""'"""'lllAt. any. stray ~og would trust. And there's the rub; she is a city ~catcher. ._, The attractive 22-yeat-OJd )aYI her main we a pons f8Aln1t canine violators of . ,/A.DI Beach 's leash law are a (~voice, a whistle, a cuddle ~ two on occasion ind reason.. ) .Reuon? :1 ~·in fact, I think you have a ~ter chance ··of reasoning :.with a dog than a person," :,ays Mlsa Hunter, the only :~an ,pn Loni Beach's 15- membtr animal control patrol. • Miss Hunter, who patrols in 'a radio-equipped truck with J>Ortable keMels, has been on the job for about six months. ~."I 've found talking lo people 1bout their dogs is sometimes ~•tier than talking lo people •bout their kids',' she says. )'They seem genuinely more lnleresled." She said she hates to patrol ichool area. - "The k..ids see the truck and they get scared," 11he said. "They think we're going lo hurt the dog." She adds quickly, however, that about a'.> percent of the dogs picked up by the animal control unit are placed with new owners in this seasi de ci- ty of JM,000. . A citlzen's alarm of "wild dogs" tent Miss Hunter into action. She found them, five dogs led by a mongrel with tangled white hair tumbling over his eyes. They were probing through some garbage, and t h e y watched Miss Hunter ap- proach, her shoulder-length dark hair blowing slightly in windy weather. They didn't appear wild and they showed only mHd interest in he feminine dogcatcher. Holding a rope wllh a slip knot in her right hand, Miss Hunter whistled softly and quietly coaxed, "Here puppy, here puppy." ,_1iss Reagan. a five.foot· nine blonde. is the daughter n( -011\'tl: If 10 ptrcent are actress Jane Wyman and wormy or worm-cut. RonaJd Reagan , the former PtacheJ: Aver1ge of S per actor who now is CallforniB'S cent of fruit '>''Ormy or moldy, Republican governor. She is or 4 percent if larva or its swinging into a sho\v business equivalent found in 20 percent career of her own, starring in of cans. a County Dinner Playhouse Canned and cru shed plnea~ role in "The ·Last of the Red pies: If 30 percent of samples Hot Lovers" in Dallas. show mold. ··1've alwa"s wanted to' be a * * * , star. not just an actress, but a Raisi ns: If more than 5 Cat Role star.'' she said "'ith a long percent are moldy : or is sand rippling laugh. and grit content of natural or "I started my career al the golden bleached r a i 11 in s Jn Cancer age of s in one or my mother's averages more than 4 0 movies. t.1y father talked me milligrams per 100 grams. or into retiring at 6 to continue if any 8 ounces of golden D .J.SCOlillle d my education. He said I'd bleached raisins contain IO or need to know how to read and ACTING FO R SELF MaurHn Rtilgan more insects anq 35 or more \vrite 50 I could sign• my con- drosophila eggs· CLEARWATER BE AC ff, tracls.'' she "s been financially in- Strawberries: Ir 5.5 per· Fl (AP ) R 1 't dcpendenls1'nce she '"'S 18 a. -e ax, you can During her "retirement.'' • · cent are moldy, with mold h "Th h be 't catc cancer from your cat. ~1iss Reagan attended Mary. ere ave en qui e a covering 65 percent of half the . 1. few $20 dollar bills slipped moldy rru,·1. says pr . Robert Schneider. mount College 1n Ar 1ngton, V b t k. ped under the table and care Popcorn: 0 n e rode n l Schneider and his associa lcs a.. u soon s 1P . across f t ed I the Potomac River to join the packages and free dinners. but pellet in one o 10 est ots at a California laboratory are sec re 13 r y corps in J've asked to make it on my of 225 grams each, or 6-10 oun-1 · · d ·• h 1 · ed k I the on y scientists j11 the worl Washington, D.C. There she own, s e exp a1n . ce consumer pac ages, p us one rodent hair in other lots: keeping track of tumor!! af-look up little theater, singing Being the daughter of such a or 2 rode nt hairs per pound, feeling household pets such as and romance \l'ith a first fan1ous twosome ha s been with rodent hairs in more than cats and dogs. lieutenant in the Marines. both an advantage and a half the samples; or 20 gnaw-During the three years of di sadvantage: "It helps in that She mixed her singing and television work \Vith politi cs 11nd spen t five \\·eeks en· tertaining Gl's on a lJSO tour in Vietnam in 1969. She's just barely past 30. but d(l(>sn't look it and doesn·t go around talking about l t '"because 1ny parents have a traun1a everv time I tell 1ny age. t.1y mOther slill insists she"s not a day O\'er 40 \\'hich Is just fine because she looks that good ." • · ~·tiss Reagan sa id she 111ay continue singing a'nd politick- ing but •·probably I'll con- centrate on acting no\~.'' She rece nt ly co1nplctcd sevrra! television sho1~·s and commer- cials and is signed for a co- starring role in a televis ion production called. ' 'The Blarney Casi le i\1urder." Af1er her slay \l'ith l)al!as production she'll go 10 San Diego"s Off-Broad1\•ay· theater for a role in '"Guys and Dolls.'' ··it's been a little slow," she said, '·but rm getiing there." Posl Fill ed ed grains per pound with ro-They coopearte with another their marriage. her career people come to see what the dint hairs in more than half laboratory which keeps tabs went into mothballs again. She governor's kitl looks like. But ~ lIOLLI STER (U Pl l -Dan the samples: or 5 percent field on can~ers in humans so they turned instead to politics and th ey expect a great deal and 1, d 1 r don't dare slip up." C. Spencer; a octor<1 can-corn mixed in. can assess the chances of stumped · the stale o didafe at the Uni\'e rs ily of Wheat: One roden t pellet anima ls transmit ting tumors California in support of her . She says _so me of her ~k-Southern California, \\"<IS ap · per pint. or 1 percent insect father. 1~gs back 1n the lean. begin· _tv\inted..\\'ednesd"" '" "U.cr£~ damaged kernels. No COn. to families with which they . g d f 1968 no• -..,_,..., ..I'm not as conservahve as n1n -ays .o --v.-ere • \Villian1 G. Cagney as taminants allowed for-nour. live. my father. l 'm what I call a always choice. supe rintendent of schools in Apple Butter ; Mold on 12 About three years ago, a niilitanl moderate,'' she said j'Pain£ully, I recall them. San Benito County. percent or samples; or more "Scientific 11 tu d y suggested in an interview. "I don·t There was a pl_ace in Anaheim The appointment v.•as m;i.de than 8 rodent hairs per 100 humans m i gh t contract believe in a welfare slate b_ut ! across Crom D 1 s n e Y I and , by the Board of Supervisors. grams ; or 5 Insects ·per 100 leukemia , a cancer of the support the Vietnamization where ther_e wer e SUPJ>O:Sed to Cagney is retiring after <16 grams, not counting mites, plan. be r I d the aphids, thrips' and scales. blood, from cats suffering · our gir ancers Jn years as superintendent. U b lied N I Ir 111 . "I believe in equal ri~hts for show. ?nly they turned out to Spencer wa s sch 0 0 Is ns e u 1: o owmg from a virus causing leukemia women but I'm afrai'd the be strippers I should have Co percentages or nuts are ran· . h . 1 · · superintendent in r..1ono un· 1n t e an1ma s. women 's libbers are pushing known when I saw that the ty from 1961 to 1970. cid, moldy, gummy. shriveled h · 1 · stage was actually a gold lame .,;~;;;;~;:,;~~~===;I or empty shells, lot is re--But, S c n e i d e r , a t e point into emascu ahng r jected: Almonds 5 percent, veterinarian, said his figures men and a backlash effect is runwa y," she said. TAKE THE NEWS QU IZ l:irazlls, baked chestnut s, "show no evidence to in· growing," sh e said. But by 1970, Miss Reagan filberts, pecans, pistachios, criminate cats in the oc-Her wide blue-gray-green had worked up to a successful walnuts 10 percent, green currence of human leukemia ." "chameleon" eyes make her .debut at Caesar·s Palace in chestnuts, lichee n1.1ts and pili He spoke . to the closing look like a younger, leggier Las Vegas and a television We Dare Yo u ..• nuts IS percent. session of an A merica n version Of her mother. She production called ·'The * * * Cancer Society seminar for says she keeps in close touch Name's ·the Same," which : Every Saturday science writers. ~ 1__.::w'.'.:it:'.'.h~bo:t;h~hieir iiiP'i'ieintsiiiibiutiiiifeiaituirie~dsieiveiriaiilotih~er~se~c~oind~~~~~~~--:==~1 Shelled Nut!!: A I mond s. brazils, cashews, dried Schneider heads the Animal chestnuts, filbe rts, pecans, Neoplasm cancer Registry of pistanchios and walnuts 5 per-Viral and Rickettsial Disease cent ; pill nuts IO percent. Laboratory of the California Uns helled Pe1.DUts: 10 per· State Department of Public cent deteriorated or unsound Health in Berkeley. LAGUNA ART GALLERY EXHIBIT -CAROUSEL COURT nu ts. He told of studies looking £or Shelled Ppnul5' 5 percent any association between cats C'outh Cioast 'PI· •a deteriorated or unsound. Also with cancer or leukemia and CJ 86 20 or more insects per 100 1 • _ _:h~u@m~a~ns~i~nth~a~t~c~a~l'::_•"=fa~m=i~ly~"J_ __ _:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!'lllll!!'lllll!!'lllll!!'lllll!~~~~-pounds· with such diseases. Peanut Butter: 50 insect fragments per 100 grams, or if peanut butter taste.!! gritty and r-----------------------------------------the water-insoluble inorganic residue is more than 35 milligrams per 100.grams. Allspice: S percent mold y. Bay leaves. cinnamon, leafy spices: 5 percent moldy, or 5 percent insect infestation , or mllligram excreta per pound. Nutmeg: 10 percent moldy or insect infested. Wbo le Black Pepper: l per· cent moldy or insect infested, or 1 milllgram eicreta per pound. Frozen Brussel Sprouts: 50 aphids or lhrips per 100 pounds. Canned Black Eyed Peas: 5 c·owpea ----cuFC\Jllo larvae per No. 2 can· Jorn us AT OUR 37th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION ... AND RECEIVE A GIFT PAINTING OF THE WESTERN · WHITE HOUSE FROM A LOUISE LEYDEN ORIGI NAL ~--·---- ED HIRTH HAS .. ,,.FOUGHT DILIGENTLY TO IMPROVE THE ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS FOR THE BENEFIT OF -YOUR FAMILY. It l•kes re sponsible legisl•ti on _t o eliminele ell inds of ele- ments thel produce pollution. Legisletion w h i c h produces effective controls for a -clean h • r b o r, more end better beache~ and create more areas th•t 'cen bo enjoyed by the residonh of Newport Beech. Ho is dedicated to protect tho ch•r•ctor of each commun ity end prtstrVO our neturel re- sourc1s. • • • [25] NEWPORT · BEACH NEEDS THIS MAN! VOTE APR.11-RE-ELECT MAYOi HIRTH! NIWl'OllT COMMITTl l TO RI-ELECT I D HIRTR. lllLL RING, 215 RIVERSID E DR., N,B., 645-6363. HONORING OUR BANNER YEAR OF GROWTH AND PROGRESS-L1guna Federal Savings now ranks as the 250th largest savings aod Joan association in the nation, advancing 19 places this past year. We owe it all to you! Please come and celebrate with us! "'c have a picturc.-fi lled souvenir brochure for -you. A_nd,-as a s~ci~ Anniversary gift, every visitor will be prcscotcd with a full-color, 16" x 20" lithograph of Lowse Lcydcn s oil painting of tho Western While Hou.so, commissioned in honor of our 37th Anni versary. • Enjoy Party Rel'!tshmcnts at Our Open House in All 3 Offices Monc!iy, April 3 through April 10-l:OOP.M. 'ti! ClosingTimo Hoslcd by tho Soroptomists of Laguna Beach, tho Laguna Niguel Art 'ation, Eastern Star Oiaptcr No. 524 of San Clcmcnie. SAN CLEMENTE BIIANCll 001 North El Camino RMI San Clemente, Calif. 9gs"72 Telephone: 49Z-119.'l COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS SPEC IALS FOR AP Rii: SUNfl OWER SEEDS t nd beeutlful I lb. ,11,. TORUMEL YEAST h<9h pof1n(y Toru!e yt•ll. 1 tb. 1il 1 . · "Let's Eat Right To Keep Fit" • by Adelle Ot•i1. A 9ood H I Uf (I of b t\it knowledge. ......... 119 Sl'ECIA L •.• -• COASTLINE'S VITA·STRESS • A high polenty B-complex formule with Vit1mi11 C . 100 t1bl1h on ly. .... "·" 2 19 SPECIAL • . • • • HA IN SAFFLOWER MARGARINE NATURAL VITAMIN E 200 i.u. d'1Jph1 Te1cophero!. too etp1ul 11 only. R-.. SJ .St 2 99 SPEC IAL • , • • • LECITHIN GRANULES •• ,.11 ... 1. 10Yrc1 of (~oline '"01itol. 1 lb. tit• •.•. "·" 2 49 SPECIAL • • • • • COAST LIN E'S VITA-TIME A on1·1·dey formu l1 '"'ilh 1 high pot1ncy l ·eompl1x and min1r1\i. Eich t1bl1t el10 cont1in 1 I 00 l.U. ef 30 TABLETS l'f. Sl.O 2 79 Sl'ECIAL .,., 1 60 TABl ETS l'f. SI.ti 4 79 SPIC I AL • • • • • COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS Twe Suptr S1or11 Tt Su••• Yt\I ltlltr T•rl11-1094 ll'Yi .. llf4, l11ttt Stv-Ori1 544-7134 C..tti M.....--270 I. 17tti It. Hlllf,_ 'wt,. 548-9537 ( • . . .. ... . .. ... , ... • ·Paul Harvey--Folk Hero r . Ne ws Broadcaster Calls It as He See s It By GUY HALVERSON can ·~ (u;te untxpected in his &tands -lerjeds, "we'\'e betn reevaluating our Chri.ttian. Science Monitor Service as when he changed his views on \'iet· role to try to search new depths within CHICAGO p 1 nd L f{ nam several years ago and came out in ourselves. For my part. I've always seen -au 8 ~nne arvey favor of U.S. withdrawal . Ironically, that him as a sower cf good seeds;" she lJeet ~e s~ra~ger at.lhthf~r subll!"ban put him in agreement with Arkansas Se:'I. laughs at her husband 's momentary Vtr . ores , ~e wi e gracious, J. w. Fulbright at a time when most dlscamfort. easygou;ig hospitality tha~ could almost Americans still supported U.S. in· "I have a difficult time not sounding make h1~ forge~ he was in the presence 1 1 · So th t Asia like a public politician" Harvey sa)'!. DAILY PILOT ? I ALL SEATS FREEi .YOUR INVITAT-IO ·N ·10 HUNZ·A LAND cf a genuine national folk hero -a news vo vemen in u eas · • • b d t t ned bi. . 1·1 ti Then in the spring of 1970 Harvey But he adds that what he d most llke to WHERE PEOPLE LIVE roa cas er ur pu 1c ins .1 u on. · · d · to h t th t " .:h~~n~~Jl _______ _::.:..:::::.:._:'...:::.::'...'....~~~.!-''-"''-" . . . stunned many listeners by speaking out o is e P ensure a we ang c ltOM 100-l'.O. 140- Harvey -whose . tw1c~a1\y radio against --PresidenLNixon~s-decision to thc~k.for..the.next decad •· broad~asts are carr~ed on some 500 i:end troops into Cambodia. ' Originally from Oklahoma. Harvey American Brcadcastlng Company af-.. . . started out as a broadcaster while : ::u a filiates, whose independently produced Mr. Pr~~iden!. I lo\'~ y~u -but >ou teenager in his hometown, Tulsa. His television programs beam fro m 125 sta· are wron~. ~e told radio hst~ners. . father, a policeman. was killed in a lion!, and whose thr;::e-wer' ·y newspaper Harvey 5 wife, Lynne! <a. Phh.1 Beta K~p-. Christmas Eve gun battle when the boy colunm is featured by about 300 p:-pers _ pa whom he calls ~~ge 1, is. 1s e~ecuttve was l. may well bt the United States' best· ~!~ucer and administers h15 business. af~ Mrs. Harvey, a petite, attractive kno~n ne~sman. (H~ wife and son both supponed a former schoo\teache,r, met her. husband Its estimated lh3:l ~ll. told H~rvey Vietnam withdrawal before Harvey and whell .he was a ~pectal-events director at reaches more than 35 m1\hon Americans were instrumental in helping him a radio station. in St. Louis. Ha~ve_y pr~ a week. reassess his <lWn views.) posed .<ln . the first d.ate, and, th1nk1ng h_e The Harvey approach _ str~ight· .. 1 .,,, was k1dd1ng. she said yes. • forward rugged individualism, political Just .v.·hat do you see as your roe . She found he wasn't kidding, and they · conservatism. and a humanist anecdotal Harvey 15 .asked . were eventually married. presentation cf the news -has won him . ~e admits, almost reluctantly, that he . "Young Paul ," in his early 20's and widespread praise. t~ in many ways an advocate -~ rol~ he standing a strapping 6 feet 7, is studying finds .~~ewhat awesome in · It s for a career in music. and has written But not without some criticism from re~.pons1b1hty. .. . and recorded several original com· liberals and conservatives ·alike . The last few years, f\.1rs. Harvey Ill· positions. "There won't be anu'.':er Paul Harvev," Perspective and vitality are prime In· he him.self says quietly, seated in his iiv. gredlents of a Harvey broadcast, from ing room and referring to the increasing Custod y. Granted his dramatically thundering "Hello, blandness and noncontrc.versialily of Americans" through the co n fi d ent, much of today's commercial ·broad-Spartanlike cadence of his delivery as he casting. T 0 y oko Unnon moves into "Pagel" to ti'· "c ~~::1 r :y!" For Harvey. a tall , blond-haired. at ending. \ times diffident man, it is the principles ("You'd better be right,'' C<lmedian he sees underlining the American PHILADELPHIA (UPI ) -The U.S. Danny ThQ.mas once told him, ''because Republic that most identify h is Third Circuit Court <lf Appeals has upheld you sound like God.'') diStlnctive. somewhal evangelical brand a-lower--court decision awarding-r-.trs. Of all issues. it is that of public and Yoko Ono Lennon custody of her of personal broadcast journalism : home , private lethargy that most disturbs fl I. d da ugh ter Kyoko , 8. family, church, nation, ag, pub 1c an The deci sion ended a three-year court Jiarvey. Jn one of his mo,st remembered privatt. morality. battle waged by the wife or former broadcasts he la mented the "Old Coun· And he is not. as he is the first lo aQmit BeaUe John Lennon .Jlt~r her l969 try," where "a farmer could plant with a grin, objective. divorce from Anthony D. Cox . anything he liked anyplace he wanted on "I've never pretended or tried to be ob-Cox had claimed the Virgin Island hls own land . Folks who worked harder jective." he says intently. "No matter federal court ruling th8t gave custody <l( were rewarded for it ... almost whaWhe issue, I insist on taking a the child to Mrs. Lennon last Sept. 24 had everybody had one idea about life: to stand." • no jurisdiction because he lived in Texas. leave the woodpile a little higher than he Though basically a conservative on But the court said : ''The plight <lf the found It · · · political questions (he's opposed to bus· spouse seeking to obtain jurisdiction pro-"It isn 't there anymore," he said in ing, for example. and considers hiiT1sel f a ceedings over a nomad is illuminated by painful ... plaintive ... tones. "I never "voice of the silent majority"), Harvey the record." left my country. It left me.'' FAMILY CIRCIJS 4-1 "" ... L-< •••• ... ,,._,, ...... b11 BIJ Keane ®· \{~ 11) con 1t dec ide what this cord for Mommy should soy: 'Happy Easter' cir 'Apr il Fool I"' Youthful Voters Do Their Thing ANN ARBOR, Mich . (UPI J relapse from 1969 to 1971. It -The political landscape in now has a Democratic mayor. Michigan's campus towns The five young candidates became green with youth late want to change• this. Their in 1971 as newly franchised allegiance is to neither tradi- voters under 21 entered elec· tional . party but rather to the t<lral politics as candidates flRP. fostered by for mer and voters. Democratic state chairman As a result, the traditional Zolton Ferency. conservative complexion of ci-A hint of what might be in ty government in such cities store for Ann Arbor -if the as East Lansing and Ann HRP 's two candidates with the Arbor is under going libera-greatest likelihood cf wi nn ing lizing changes. actually win -is provided by Just how great the change recent East Lansing city coun- could be reflected in the cil actions. results of the city council elec· In this case. a five-member tion toda y in this <lnce .staid. nonpartisan city council has Republican dominaled city of included since October two 100,000. new councilme n who were Five youthful candidates are elected with the help of new seeking council seats in five Michigan.state campus voters. wards, and at least t~·o of Since winning seals, junior them "'ere given a fair chance high teacher George Griffiths for victory with student sup-and Lansing legislati ve· aide port. George Colburn have fought Like their party. the Human for and won an amendment lo Rights Party (HRP ), -their the city personnel regulations platform is "new left." Their that specifically pr ah i b Its goals are far-reaching. d i s c r i m in a ti on against Author Expresses Fears For California Beaches The II-member city council homosexuals and, along with has been controlled b y mayor Wilbur Brookover, suc- By DONALD 8. THACKR EY tection of the sources of sand. Repub licans since 1929 with cessfully apposed a planned WOODSIDE (UPI J _ The our beaches could wash away on1y a brief De mocratic cross-campus highway. value of a beach ca nnot be ex-and be lost. This ha ppened to 1--------------------- pressed in dollars -only in the El Granada beach, once u nd dollars. beautiful. now gone. The And if the negotiable kind of source of its sand, Dennist<ln dollar is allowed to preva il. there may be little place for Creek, was dammed. Tax- the other kind on Northern payers are now required to California beaches. spend about a million dollars That is the concern of Olive for a seawall to protect the Mayer or Woodside, who is coastal road from the ravages d<ling something about it. She of winter storms . . once pro- has published a picture essay tected naturally by the beach· called "Coastside-san Mateo "The sand from the cree County, Cali fornia" in con· piles up in the harbor and junction with the San Mateo must be dredged out at public County Regional Group of the ._•_•.:.pe_n_s_e._" _______ 1 Sierra Club $2.~ "Can the value cf a beachdr-;;;;;;;0 ;;;;;;;;-;;;;o;-]I be expressed only in dollars?" she asks . ~~~~~~~ "Some people think so." ls'lt---.Cll her answer. 'Corporations are buyi n' miles of our Rla te shoreline and charging admis· sion. As mere and more people In our state want to use beaches, owners of beach Jots illegally fence off access. Only govemment can s a v e t h e beaches fer the;(lublic. If It re- fuses to act. ISeaches will be privately owned. expensive to use, and far the few." The sand dollars come Into the equation along with the San Mateo County beaches. MIYll AUIN ttt.t a&cl: '"""I They could leave with them _,_..., ..ii.t ...... .,. t<>?,·Few know that the beach TO.ILAFLIXe Itself is in dangei." Mrs. Tollet ~ Plun91r Mayer writes. "tts sand comes unun ordi1111ty ph1fll'"· 1\lilall•a to the st• from streaw. '-not P'Nnit compr..t elr or ch th _,,.,m to 1pl1th b«:lror.etpe". The whole bea move:s sou · With Tolt.ftn the tut! prtnure p1_.. pu·~d by wtnd and waves in tllro111h th• cl•11in1 "'••• ind ~~ d 'f ..W.it .... a process...call!!I littoral n t. At numtrous s~ll along the •W T1011nr11 "°" Siu.JH.wic I I •Clfn'IMITM\l',CAM'T .. IOMllOUND coast lht. sand sapptars nto •TN'llllDTA11.1rt11A111·ntt1Tr1r dttp undersea c1vems where ...... .....,. 'f....._. tt iJ to!I. The be-och iJ actually '2<1. at _.., ,_ a river of 11nd. l'"---..-;;,;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;_.J "Without aovernment pro-1-----------1 EARN with daily interest Passbook Thrill Accounts of any amount earn sYJ % per ye1r, paid from day invesled lo day withdrawn. Your funds always immediately available. Inte rest credited and compounded quarterly. Funds plactd by April 10 wn from April 1. ~11/.ake~fleYJielP,peopl~ , Morris Plan Newport Beach 3700 Newport lovltverd &73 ·3700 A'll!i1bl1 'to tllllorn11 m idll'lll e!'ll:f. • ' • DR . JAY M. HOFFMAN Pre1ident Emeri tus of the National Geriatrics Society AUTHOR EDITOR LECTURER WORLD TRAVELER A:utlior of the book, "Hunza, 15 Se- creh of" The World 's Healthiest ond Oldest Living People." Never To Be Forgotten! • INTERESTING • FASCINATING • AMAZING IN BEAUTIFUL COLOR PICTURES ON THE SCREEN in person JAY M. HOFflMAN, Th.D. who has returned from HUNZA LAND Shangri-la of the Himalayas where he produced o motion picture and hundred s of color scenes. He and his wife, Trudie , were quests of the Kinq and (j)ueen. Part 1. Friday, April 7, 7:30 p.m. Part 2. Saturday, April 8, 7:30 p.m. Part 3. Sunday, April 9, 7:30 p.m. This is a series: ttiere is a different showing for each day. All seats Free. DISCOVER THE • AMAZING H ·EALTH of HUNZA LAND • In Beautiful Color Pictures on the Screen SEE AND HEAR WHAT MONEY CANNOT BUY! LEARN THE SECRETS OF THE WORLD'S HEALTHIEST PEOPLE You too can learn how to live a healthy life. "HUNZA -an isolated shangri·la In the Himalayas, where the Inhabitants live to be 100 to 120 years old." ( "Yhe American Wffkly" I "There is evidence that men in Hunza land, a remote region in the Himalayan Mountains, live to be 120 or even 140 years old, the AMA said in Its current jour· nol." !"New York World-Telegram'') - "Hunza is truly a Utopia, where people live without the ailments of cancer, heart trouble, high blood pressure, arthritis, diabetes, .tuberculosis, mental illness , and many of the other ailments that plague the Western world." > ~ w w a: u. YOU MUST SEE • HUN"ZA LAND, SHANGRl-LA OF THE HIMALAYAS This Is the beginning of a series of lectures that will be held every Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 7:30 P.M. fREE CHILD CARE EVERY ME·ETING Al.L SEATS FREEi BETTER 'LIVING CENTER 271 Avocado Street Costa Mesa, California ' HOVV TO GET THERE FAIRVIEW ~ "' -g N N NEWPORT BEACH '--- N<wpo~; BLvo 0 " w AVOCADO ST. ---c z <{ "' , HARBOR BLVD. BEITE R LIVING CENTER" 271 AYocado Stree~ Cotti Mesa, C11lforn l1 92626 ui > <{ COLLEGE <{ a: 0 ... u > • • • • • . '• -' ' ! • • , t ' • .. • . •• ,, - "' ' fl DAIL V PILOT .. ~ ...... • F 01· tl1e Reco1·cl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t .••••• :.~~······:~::::: '.' ... Trains 'Derailed' Bf.rths IT. JCSll"H HOSl"ITAL Metdl II Mt, I nd Mfl. Wlllllm S le.i.,.t, 7JIJ G1tnrwvre St.M~~,ri, lttcll, D01. • Mr. I nd Mr•. Ptl,ll l . KOUd~lkt J•_ IU60 •1nb0r0U9h. Wntrnlnllt r, t irl Mr. •11!1 Mrt.. L.ortn Fotlltuo, 1911 J1nnrl(I!, '(o'nlmln•lf<, 9lrl. • Men;ll 11 Mr. •nd Mr1. Vtrnon I. Mt1ll.IUrt , l!IJ lt.utgoe1 AYt., Wt1tmln1tt!', tiev Mr. lrw:I Mrl. Mturkt A, P.-nit, ,101 e1rkw-A¥t., Irvine, boy MlrCll lf Mr. Ind Mr1. Chlrlel JI. Cl•rk, S1~ "O" Nor!h IS!h S!., El To•o. l!OY Mr. 1nd Mrs. Jl lcll•rd II. Bennert, lJ111 L1V•c1, El To!o, ~lrl Dissolutio11s Of Marriage ,.UH Mt rtll U Morris. Cvn"'I• JH n .,,., Otnn!1 Ow1vn1 G•ulhle•, Robe'rt H. tnd Grt!Cfltf! V. l l1t1u . ..,,,~,... loul1e 1nd Edw1rd KllO-Utf, Etrl F. Jr. Ind J tntl A. l-l, Dolor•1 Ind All!Jtl •lllh11n, Lvncll W. Ind Ptul L. r11lor, Jt"lct K. t nd 1"1ul l . oll11J.Of>. SllHn E. tnd M•r~ln .-. Wlldm1n. Ruin Ros, 1nd Jollf! J1>ue>ti Clt rk, LucU.,. r . 11'111 R01 8 , Marie, Dt vld Mtrlln tnd ~un Tok K1rp, Llnot LM 1nd W1ldr1>11 Ge0toe Wtl11er. P1mcl1 Jullt t nd Mltfo.ttl Alb!of! dt Dltr, M'•ct'dt• •nd Herm!Uo M. 0 0d>OI", Oon111 £1ialM'!I! 1nd Wlllitm KtnMth K•uct... Collftn E. t nd Rtl~ E. l.1ul•rllotn, Lt rr'f R. 1nd Sriellt R, Death Nnllee• ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 421 E. 17th St., Costr Mt11 616'4888 •· BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del l\lar Costa f\fesa • 613-91.18 646·242t BELL BROA OWA V MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa flte1a u 8-l'3l • 1'1eCORf\IlCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1715 Lapn1 Canyon Rd. 494-Hll • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuarf Cluipol asM P1clflc View OrlYt Newport Beach. Callfornl1 614-2700 ·-PEEK F A~llL Y COLOi\'lAL FUNERAL ROME 1101 Bolsa Avt. We1tmln1ter lt3-3SU • SMITHS' MORTUARY 11'1 Mila.SI. RuU11101 lluc• Iii IUt !!::~e~D;~ .. , ~..s..······ .. , .......... ~ •\ .... .--..-. ... , .... , ........... ~ .. ·········"~·--······~-\·· . . ...•... ' ... ' ... ' . . -1 . , 'lj:~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........ , ........ ·' . . ' ................. \ . . . . . . .... ' . . . . . .. .............. PUC Bows to Sleepy Irvine Re sidents B)' GEORGE LEIOAL 01 lllt O•Hr ,., .. , 11•11 TUSTIN -More than 40 Tustin ~leadoY.'S residents ·vho are un impressed by t he glamor of railroading have forced the Atcheson, Topeka and Santa F'e Railroad to change it.s nighttime s·witchi ng patterns on spur tracks lying within 00--1eel_oL1hLSAD.OOOI_+,..;....,. homes. al the Irvine anrl Co1nri sidings, (ailed to prn~ 1dt ' burler zone for rhP r111l road ar1ll sold homrs within 100-fet'l or lhc railroad tracks,'' the rue rharµt.'l.l . The PL1C notf'rl the lrvlni· Con1pany. the City of Tustin and the Count.v of Or11nge all "'rre aware or the problem hut non had offcrt'd to "C(lll· ~--t-< l'-ibule-11nythtng--ttrlhe-:iiolu•~-­ lion." During hea rings I a s t October. 40 Tustin Jl.1eado"~ residrnt ~ cornplained that s"•itching noise of r11ilro11d cars A\Yakcnrd bnth adults and children durinJ? !he niJ?hl. ., Ticl~i1ig Toward BitJ Show A Public Utilities Com- mission (PUC ) ruling an- nounced \\'ednesday "'ill re- quire the railroad to cease switching operations bel\\'Cfn 10 p.m. and 7 ,a.m. on the Casey-Swayne "runarou?ld'' the Irvine siding. the Ir vine near Ritchey StrccL" a PUC spur and the Como siding. All spokcsmrin said. That street is are tracks located generally loca ted across the Ne11•pJrl northeast or the Santa t\na Free"'llY in a Santa Ana in· Marine Corps Air Staiion dusrrial area. The\' also object to the pa rk· ini:: Or re frigrrattd c11rs - "'ilh motors running -along the Irvine sid1ni. Ted roster of Costa ~1esa has a lot of \V ind ing to do as he prepared his antiq ue. clock collection for display at the antique sh o''' at Anahei111 Conve ntion Cen· ter. ShO\Y ""ill run April 6·9. All Foster has to \l'orry about is running out of \\•inding·po1ver <()uring the four.day run. (Hel icopter J. "However." the PUC said , Jee to llead Cyclist's Trial Set In Shooting SAi\T A A~A former llessian pre~idcnt \\'a.v1nond (irisE'nli of l\untinglon Beach ha!! been ordered lo face trial f\1ay 17 in Orange Cj:lunty Superior Court on murder charges filed shortly after the shoa ling of a Lomita man in Grisenti's home . Judge \V il\iam ti.turra y set !hi! tria l date for Grisenti, 38, of 19402 JE'rril yn Lane. He ordered the former n1otorcy· cle club leader to return Apr tl 17 for a pretrial hearing. Grisenli is accused of the killiii,e: of Rusty Cook, 26. of Lomita. in an incident F'eb. 5 that was descri~ by Grisen- li's lawyer at tlif!tarraignment session as an a cc id en t a I shooting:-....._ Cook, shot through the throat with a .356 caliber magnum slu~. died on the \\'ay to a local hospital. Crisenti was arrested after he and members of his family v.·ere closely que.~lioned by----aun. lingfon Beach police. Huntington Ma11 Held Huntin gton Beach Chief To Speak at Graduation Except for the Ir vine Siding, "we will not order i1 at this the PUC order docs nol pr~ time because the Santa Fe has hibit the railroad fr o 1n abated the noise in a substan-Post Office operating freight trains or tial degree (al a cost of $110 a from selling out or picking up day l and because v.•e do not Douglas C. Tee has been cars at any time during the feel theo Santa Fe should be named po s t m 11 s I er in day or night. burdened with t~e complete Fullerton by the regional The PUC admits its ruling co~t of moving th~·.iiding . postma !'ter in San Francisco. will not solve the noise pro· "The evidence in this case The appnintment was er. Hun tinsto n Beach Police outstandin~ recruit and the blen:i entirely. , sho1\'s that the Irvine Com· frcti1·e Sf!turd::iy Al the san1e Ch ief Earle \\'. Robitaille 1,1•ill recruit "'ith the highest ''The optimum soluti on is pany, knowing that there 1,1•as timr. f\'fina A. \\'noton 1Ya5 a<'ademic avera,l!:e. construction of a ne1v siding going to be a problem of noise -rtt1med post1n11s1rr at Seeley. address the 4.5!h J{raduatingJ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_, class of the Orange ('ount y Peace Officers Academy Fri· day at Golden \\'est Colle ge. 1\.,.ent\'·nine officers frorn 11 Jaw enfOrcen1ent agencies. in- cluding Costa ?\fesa, •lun- tington Beach. Lagun;t Beach, l.os Alamitos. San Clemente. Santa Ana , Seal Beach, and \Vestminster will graduate in the ceremonif!S beginning at 2 p.n1. in the col!cge quad. l\l usic for 1hr. event \\'ill be furnished by the !st f\la rine Division Bilnd from Camp Pendleton. recen!ly .!'ielectcd as the 1nns t oustanding l\1arine j band in the nation. A1vards \\'i ll be gil'en to the Big Feast _SJate<Lin._,. Santa Ana SANTA Ai\A -Th e 10th An- n u a I Sc a n d l n a vi a nf Smorgasbord, presented by 1 the Salvat ion Arn1y here. will l be 1\pril 14. Its ··~'ly Falhcr's \Vorld "/ then1e 1;yn1boli7.es th e i r nlissionary 1vork in 74. cot.Jn· tries· Proceeds \viii go to1Yard the $J ,l000 the Sanla Ana S;:il vationists hope to raise this year. Sdl.ndinavian dishes of all kinds 11,ill be prepared under the supervision of natl\·e Scan.I dlna vians. and decorations and i music v.·ill ha ve an in· ternational fla1·or. Admission will be 12.75 for adu lts nnd $1.5-0 for children 1 under 12. The C-Orps is prepar· ing to serve 800 people at the Corps and Community Center, 1710 \V. Edinger in Santa Ana. Tickel s are a vai lab le .et the Center or by calling f\1rs. Ma- jor Toni Ci sar at 54.6-7880. Din- ner avill begin at 5 p·m. --Know Your Candidate * * * * DEE COOK is •n indepe.ndent candidate. He hes no connection with any organized group. He will ect in terms of benefits for the entire city, DEE COOK w•s t11 texpayer's Councilman! Hi1 fiscal t xptrtise wts elwa ys elert to reduce tht cost of City G'ovarnment - but NEVER to reduc• the level of service or protection. DEE COOK was for six ye•r1 Director or Ch.irman on the Orenge County San ifa · ticn Distric~ board. The District's yearly b,d91t .,,,.d, 50 MILLION DOLLARS. Dee Cook lcncws the complexities of this important County wide function respcn· sible fer all sewage from Ne wport Betch, DEE CCiOK, 1 BUSINESSMAN end C;ty resident for 24 ye•rs h•1 • broad b•t• knowledge qf •ll sections of the City - problemwite end h i1to~celly. He ha l an, outsf•nding record of c ivic contributions, * * * * DEE COOK served •ight ye.trs "' • Coun- cil man in N1wport Beach . He is acquein t- ed with every fot cet cf munic ipel opert· tic n, 1uch •'· budget control, lag isfetive prccedurei. planning, municipel finance .a nd g1neral po licy m•lc in 9. " DEE COOK served 1ix yeeTs as Com- mitteem•n and Ch.t irm•n cf the Oranqe· Newport Harber Comm ittee. H1 knows .. Newport Harber problems. DEE COOK'S personal 1tatu1 perm its him to ba a full t ime Ccunc ilm.a n, by this we mean he will be in Newport Beach when needed, and most omportant he will be IMMEDIATELY PRODUCTIVE! No dol•y for orientation !-· DEE COOK h•s th"' experienc e there is no substitutt! for which "SAVE NEWPORT BEACH FOR NEWPORTERS" 'VOTE FOR P. D. (DEE) COOK ON APRIL 11 • THE MOST QUALIFIED CANDIDATE K For • !t'• not 100 ]ate to, aTe. ~ income tax aggrn.uon tldJ' comee 'lrilh p,..paring 1oar """ ftlanl, H .t R Block'• <hlll'f!el 11111t ot •S •nd the •Ver•ge co1t wu under •12.so for over 7 mllllon retlll'DI we prepared fut year, DON'T UT AN AMATEUR DO H•R 81.0CK'8 .108. H&R Block. ewport Beac • VOTE FOR Aggravatlon hn't tu dedadlble, The income tu people. And we are. • -----ONLY 14 DAYS LEFT----- t A.M.·t ;.M. WllMDAYS t A.M .. S P.M,, SAT. & SUN, PHONI 642·6940 Ne A,,-lltnteM Ne< .... ry O"N TONITI Costo Mesa Corona del Mar 2300 ~arbor Blvd. 3427 E, Coast Hy. 1875 HarbofBlvd. • P. D_. ''DE.E'' COOK x "''" "'' I J VtfW!tMtt '" CMlt -Al M. hlr-. 1111 e11111 11'M, t•M. • • I DICK TRACY -BV TMAT 'l/ICJOVS l..ITTLE Cil:rOUF' 'OS: l-IUM.A~ OQOSS KNOWN A S-'" By Chester Gould -VES,"T\lEYVf EllEN GOT' YOU' r:E~l.OWS SEAT; IEUE.V!. M!! L JeHo~u!: PA FRESH CROP (J ROSY· CHE:E:KE:D l'l!MPKINS RE'J\DY T' ~E ROW.ED! UST' TO DA SCRATCH JINGLE.· JANGLIN' IN DERI:' JEANS! HeMl<EN TO PA SOFT FCUiTER O' PA IWJK M'.lm !'flN' fALLIEP IN PA VAULTS! WlllFF PA HEAi1'1 APIJMA O' PA MAN'/ CATTLES V1'RILY, MUDDER NATURE, YOU'SE IS ONE ROMANilC Mun AND" JEFF WE \JUST GOTTA DO 50MET+\ING Pll'l'ERE'NT 70 PL'EASE OUR READERS.' FIGMENTS '1 I· .. . , h • I ( NANCY IT WAS 'rtX.11? TURN 10 FEED THE CIQ$ LA"iT N~ AND \OJ DIDN'T .... HO.V DO \'tJ'J THINK 5l1E' FEELS :/ MY DOG 15 so SMART WAITIN' T'l'E. EMANCIPAWll FROM DORE OWNt:RS! ... ! DAILY CROSSWORD .•. by R. A. POWER I ACROSS 50 Violates Saturday's Puzzle Solved· =FiA-.~OLD ~ROAD! ./9fi"' ,.... ........... .. __... __ ,. By Dale Hale by Ernie I CAN'T BELI EV E. IT H I , ' Bushmiller __,_,__G , ___ , H ~~~ ,Ii •. SH A ~ 1 A IC ·"~OT CO ii~ A ~l':l accrpted metal 1 o .. e or the standa·os PEANUTS t~1ses ~l 5ma ll l'la,s'i A LO S • or;,~~TT •S 5 c,,es a!faJ 52 l•\\ernJt1onal t>as111y s:io·t lJ Addi• on.ti 55 Uti!.ty 14 Arrow pOiSOll CO'Tlp.tny's 15 Jtt· at 1reasurin11 l~ .A :,essibl e dev•~e : Ii; a'I 2 \\Ords. 17 Aid ethers~ 5'1 Si;methlng 21\~rds !hat pn\ictl 18 Engages ,., bl Poel"1 by etlrd'rla11\al Lo rd B1·•;n 4/3/72 9 Pol itical 34 Fix es in plac e relat1i;ns: b2 !~achi·ie pJrl Z 11 i;·ds b3 He~l th: French subilivis1ons 37 Paid Pos1tlon of the USA requi ring no JUDGE PARKER 10 Dtscr11ts of wor k , . DAILY PILOT ~J GASOLINE ~LLEY By Dick Moares ' ~'lai.t, Clovia! Vou · forqot t~e bottle!f! Yes! Rm4 fur re<:ijc linql There~ 1 'tation on the parl<inq lot at the bank! GORDO MOON MULLINS By Gus Arriola '-1..., 11..\TrE,C 1V~ECE I fU.}./--· . ;i.,..'~J['I Ek .511A~E/1'-1-"'f..\A1 T!...~'.' Bv Ferd I s,AY, You MADE -,.c,_ , GooD TIMI:·· ANIMAL CRACKERS ™I OOIY.T,~.Alm~"!,? ED AIJD ""'""" '""""~ • THo'l'~e. I PMOll1es. HERE' YA .ARE, .. fOJ CAll '<X> sMi -.<Ar~ ~ AG l1fJ,L. AG OJJ BE f OOIJ'T i.100 SEE. 1\<e PllOIJtNEGG 11.l Tl1El~ T~4l!lG'< 'T!:l 8E50 ~AL.7 By Charles M. Schulz .---..------, i'lL 6ET 'iOll WE ~EA6LES Mil'• ~..tv~· A LOT OF PRIDE :/' Jl!5T WON'T ADM IT IT .. By lF lHE</ WEJ?E. l?EAL- 1\lE</ \ll'.JOl.t>~•r HAVE mrrum BE so ~-IN FAcr. THE<i Mt~T EVEN APPEi.Fi:. PHOl:E:Q lt> or,.;~1;. THE GIRLS : < Ro9e r Solien <iOJflE. ~ :reA~ous· BECAl.JGE. 1\IE<,l'IZC I P£~0Cl:S. 20 Most 1n~r ~ b4 Re seriblln g 22 Bec o,..es ta ut ~t epi;s In our satelli te 39 Disliked I &UT I ACCUSED MER By Harold Le Doux .A.6lEED 111\MEPIATELY ••. WHICM M.A.ICES ME TMI Mk ~E WAS LYING! ~A~ CM.A.RLEV CAN GIVE U!> A CLUE AS TO WMAT MAP· PENED &ETWEEN MIM A~D 1 23 Noun e1d•1g scope 24 u~appet•l 1'19 b5 Sound of c.o.1~pt\•Q11 "''"d 25 La•ge O•rds bb The Stc!IJn 200~!~0 bl Sliop floor p>o~?1es a.,d susta 1~s OOi'IN SO"'t:hing 32 -· ta11de: 1 Ba~e•y W1lh honor oroducts 33 Ne ighoor of l Aga•nsti Saud! Arab ia • Prtf1( 35 Col'l"m itted a J '4'afe1 of wa( er 1irt ,1ff1 •td to a l b Malt li(ltlOr S documrnl 3~ Btstowtd 4 Ont making a • t•t essiv e lo~e n.tri-~tioo 40 Soapy w~ltr 5 Aceented 41 ln!l,.ibl t b s~sls fa ~n 43 L11brlc attd act1r:i11 •S Lin•\ or It.,,,,~ i U•1c Ir's wlft 4b A EurolltMI 8 \11~•11ht units: •8 Or1111~Jrlf~ Ab'l\r. I 2 l • ' • ' .. " " " " 21 ·~f'I",'' 2l I D " 27 " ,. ~ " 36 " .. 4\ ., •I .. ' ., ll'lh . so " " ,. . " " ., •• l -• below \ht strongly hor iZOl"l 42 Ml)'e terrible 11 S1~9u lar of 44 Universlt~ "ope·a" buil d irl'~: lz' ··· Cla11: lnfor.,.a! French motion 47 Police pi~tl't stati stic d1·rctor 49 Pared 13 Co..,.es lo a 51 Oev1lfi sh ;;:, · • c.onclusicm 19 Ta ~ts a nap 21 Blac'I'. 24 An afloy 25 Evidt nces of an injury 26 Flower ing plant 27 Gitrk leller 28 Foul·smetling 29 Aw~keri 30 K111d of bt rry 31 tA.1s1cal S)"111lt!\ • ' 1..;.. '" .>- ? •• " 22 • - "' .. " • 52 Droops SJ Olive ge nus 54 Group of rtlatrd' people SS Actor··-- Lock hart 56 ·-drck: Record ing rnechani s'" 57 Norse e~plorer 58 Tllin mass of Wind'·driven cloud's 60 Blt111lsh II 12 '.!..... h "' .,,_ " JO I '<\ "' " .. " ,, l . • ~ " " ,, ' ' " . - M " I ' I 1 A~ SAM. Dll1'/ER ARRIVES AT Tl-IE l--IOSPIT.'.L. ME Flt.IDS A88EY SPEt.ICER: Tl-IERE WAITI NG t=Oll HIM~ I DON'T GNl'ER· MAVEN"T' STAND! WHY DOESll'T ,._tN 1£)EA.. CAROLYN J'OY<.E A!!EY! WANT TO SEE ,...-1"'- HER FATMER:? Pft>W'T SME OF l&EING .A.SHAMED GIVE A.WV Of c.HARLEV 5E· K!M P OF ,l,N u.use HE RAt.I EXP\.AN ... TION? A. MA.M!URGER STAND ! l-llS DA UGl-ITEA:'. LET'S C>O SEE THE OLD l&OV! MISS PEACH By Mel TELL. Ml! ~sour YOU R WONDERFUl. G1F="r, , SHIRLEY.' PERKINS \\11/~'\j 1\11-r--.-.l Iii -1" KNOW THE S?AllE' I AM T01AL.LY CONVERSANT WITH THI: UNU5UAJ..., AMO FAMIL IA!r \\----'"·' LTILTHS M'ISreli:!OUS ... :~!}~""· Q.U~~! ,\\1 i \II ~~ ON THI: OTHE!r HAND, 1 HAVE TJW(J BLe HACKING IT WlTH THE 1---'<-C'OMMONPtAC!O "· ...:~ !!<'-.;« ·~ ' . .., " ---~ ,,,, .· ~~ ·'··' . ... By John Mild (((1 JI ....... ~ (I \II /" if\"' '"'""""-""""";;. ...... , ..... , ,,.,1'it ''Well . It certainly v.·ouidn 't hurt to ask -nt'lw that.~,,.,., bet · to tbelr plact, maybe they 'd lo"·e to ccune to nur pla cr:.'' DENNIS THE MENACE • 'TME QIJfS1lOtj 1s11T MIEl!U MY SQI OIO IT, Oil ~ ~ t>IO IT ..• llj~ Gl,IESTION rs .. : • ' . " ( 2 DA ILY PILOT Big Show Opens i11 Anaheim . Taur~s on Top in Tidela~ds Race Tauius. an Ericson·3S sloop Tribute, Fred Jl.1acrionald . ~1HYC: (3) Blue Streak. Gary owned and skippered by 11.1. NHYC (31 NewsBoy, Jack ll.1yers, NHYC. Rogerson of Cali fornia Yacht Bal\lie1 BVC. Cl.ASS C -{1) Firebrand, NHYC; CLA~S D -Taurus: (2) Primera: ~3 ~ America Jane, George T0oby, NHYC. i3) Second Wind, Bob Law, BYC. SHIELDS -(I) No. 157, A. l\1 arcus, CYC: 12) Charlotte, 1-1 .C. Say res. SSSC ; 13) Je1n Carl Reinhart. NHYC. Club was the correct~ 1irne CLASS B -ll • Red Cuchler &. West. NHYC : (2) · Rhodes·33 -(I I f iction: (2) Mistress, Bill Taylor. BYC: H. Werner Buck's b I g '\leslern Na tional Boat and f\1arine Sh<>"' opened noon Saturday at An ahclm Con- vention Center \Vith a "'ide. \1arlety of all kinds or boats in all sizes and stylt's [Hlin~ the winner or. Newport. Harbor Hoosier: 12J Swift. Arrigo, Trend . Jim Linderman. BYC; Yacht ClubtiHunt i n g t o n Edinger&ti.1allinkrodt 13 1 Betl ina IV , Tom Schock, Tidelands race Saturday, the ----~ _ _:__ --- massi ve Exhib it Ha G · y an Orange County Room. • It will continue through April 9, opening at noon on weekends and 6 p . m , weekda ys. \\lhether inte rested in a tri m little din ghy for that firsl· lime-on-the-water-ways I h i s sumn1er, a sleek ski craft for high-speed runs. a ·new in- board or ou tboard, a tough in- fl atable for riding the rapids, a fast-as-the-"·ind catamaran. or a $65.000 luxury power cruiser -they all. and more, are aL the boating expo. Even the "do-it-yourselfers'' will find a $20,000 sailboat in a kit \.\.'hich can be put together In units for a mere $5,0000. "Numerous models o f trailerable boals. with ei1her pov.•er or sail . for fresh or salt v.·ater use, are hea vily em- phasized at thi s y e a r ' s showcase. as are small -to- medium-s ized craft to match s i milar-sizcd pocketbooks," says producer Buck. Stellar attractions of 'the Anaheim show include a trio of Grand Banks deluxe power cruisers; Uniflite's custom- designed 36-foot double sedan cruiser making its f i r s t Orange County appearance. 48 Compete In Hi-Point Inaugural Forty-eight starters shov.•cd up Saturday for the inaugural race of South Shore Sail ing Club's Hi-Point Series. The Series is for Pacific llandicap Racing Fleet and Small Yacht Racing Fleet yachts. Winds ranged from S to 15 knots dur- ing "the race. Final results: PHRF . OVERALL -I II Niki II, John Ki nkel. VYC; f2J Sunda. Graham Gibbon. BYC~ 13 1 Tigress. Gil Knudsen. SSSC : 14! Sequoya, Jim !\1oore. SSSC. CLASS A -(I I Sequoya: (2 ) Serapis II. Bill Barry. BCYC: 131 Ella Speed, Bob Longpre, SSSC. CLASS B 111 Niki II ; 12) Sunda ; (3) Tigress. SYRF -t I l Sail le Vie,. DuBose & \\laid. VYC : (2) Pegasus, Jerry Montgomery, CBYC. Brazilian Wins Title PORTO ALEGRE . Brazil (AP ) -Nelson Piccolo of Brazil won the South Atlantic Snipe sailiiig championship even though he failed to win a !iingle race in the series. The 32·year-old Piccolo and his crew , Danilo Gruss ner. finis hed with a lo\Y of 22.7 poin,lYt!f the competition on ~Guaiba river. Agustin Diaz, a Cuban from 11.llami. one of the Un ited Stales representatives. finish- ed second v,.·ith 33.4 points. Earl Elms former "'orld champion from Sa n Diego. finished sixth with 42 point s afte r encountering t r o u b I e with tricky wi nd~. FLORIOA WINNER -The Ericson-4 6 Fi ne Feather, a Costa Mesa built yacht, found out 18 days later that she \Vas the Class C winner of Florida's South· ern Ocean Racing Conference. A protest "'hich qis- qualified the yacht was thro\vn out on appcaJ by the No(th American Yacht Ra cing Union. Fine Feather Final Winner in Florida The Ericson·46 sloop Fine Feather has been finally declared the \Yinner in Class C and 14.lh in the 125-boat fleet in the Southern Ocea n Racing Conference. 18 days after the F lorida series .,.,.ere e<1m- pleted. The dela y V.'<'IS caused by a protest against Fine Feat her because it v.•as believed her rating \vas too high. A. B. Phelps Jr. of Stan· ford, Conn.. ov.·ner of the Whitby-45 Sonny, alleged that Boat Guide Off Press The Nev.•port H a r b or fine Feather was measured without eittfer a life raft or an- chors and cha in aboard. This was so stated on her certificate by !OR measurer Tom Wilder of Ne~· port Beach. On these ground5. Fine Feather was disqualified from !he SORC. Fine Feather's o"•ner. John Root. Canton. Ohio, appealed~ the disqualification to the North ,\merican Yacht Racing Union. Eighteen days later the DSQ ~·as wilhdrav.'n. Wilder pointed out that the JOR rules provide for a yacht racing without a life raft if she was measured without one. "On anchors. chains, etc .. " \Vilde r said, "the only thing we are interested in is: Is it to the advantage of the yacht. As you add gear, generally speak· 'opening feature of the/ Ahmanson Series. I Winner in the Rhode s·33 class which sailed a short course was Blair Barnette's I Fiction from u . esults: I OVERALL -Taurus; t21 f Red Rooster. James Calley, CYC ; t3! Primera, Ph i I Morgan. NHYC. CLASS A -j 1) Dorothy 0. Bob Beauchamp, NHYC; (2 ) Edelstein Takes Race To Catalina l\.1orris E d elstein of California Yacht Club, a newc_omer lo predicted log racing, was the v..•inner of Huntingtorl Harbour Yacht Club 's Easter Catalina Race, Saturday. He na vigated the 38-mile course in his cruiser For !\Te Too "'ith an error of 0.912. The1 race started from three lo~a-\ lions. Ma rina de l Rey, Long Beach and Newpo rt Beach with 22 boats competing. Jn predicted log racing con- testant:: can start at any time from any location with a com· mon finishing point at which all boats theoretically finish at the same time. California Yach t Club skip- _pers dominated the race with first. third, fourth and fifth place finishes. Results: ( 11 For ti.1e Too. ~1orris 9delstein, CYC, 0.912: '2> I Margene . Gene De ''oung, SIYC, 1.007; (3) ~tinorca , Waller Delmar, CYC. l.209; (4) Miss Pam. Irv Phillips. eve. J.397 ; (5 ) Sonic, Bob Guhl, CYC. 1.58 1. COMPLETE STOCKS EVERY DAY IN THE DAILY PILOT Chamber of Commerce is ing. the yacht's rating will go reprinting its ~1arinc Service down ... and Information Directory for·1...::::.:::_ _ _,.---,.---~========::! the Harbor area. The directory, d es i g n e d ••••''' •' • • • • • •• • •• •••• • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • especially for the 9, 0 0 0 •' WESTERN NA'J] · ! Newport Harbor boil! owne'5. ! K ONAL ! was printed in 1969. It contains • • listings of all marine facilities ! : available in the harbor and in-: eludes a variety of naviga. • tiona l charts. ! • • Persons who want lo be : listed in the directory may : contact the chamber. :~~~~~~~__:(~Dl~NG~H~IES~T~O~~~lffi~O~A~~I~: • • • Beek Captures Easler Regatta • • Seymour Beek of Newport. • • • Beach was the winner of the Windsurfer Association's third annual ij:aster Regatta' at • B11hia de' Santa h-1aria, Baja. • California Saturday and Sun- day. There · v.•ere 14 \Vindsurfers entered in he regalia. final results: ( t l Scv mour Beek. Newport Bei\ch. 261.'i pts.: (2) Hoyle Schweitzer, Pacific Palisades . 31 ~~= (3 l Matt Schweitzer. Pacific Palisades, 35~~; {4) Di ck Munroe, Balboa Island , 50o/4: (Sl Frank W a I t , Newport Beach. 65. APRIL 1sr 111ni 9™ Win a Boat at ·the Boat Show ' I Gemico West, Incorporated Presents Snapir 420 Superboat Winner of every champion1hlp it hat sai led since launching In M•rch JM9 ... fastest, toughest, sleekest 420 ever built, Big Sister to The OD 11 to be Given Away by the DAILY PILOT at .the W11t1rn N•tkm•I Bo•t & Marine Show April 1 thru 9 Anfhtim Convention Center Snapir's OD II _the mini boat W maxi tun S.. ttih 14°,.11114 ,.,,., .... ~ .. fer •I HM fMt1N'I tit.f ed4 "P te ,.,. ••!•ylMtltl Yee c•• w"h tllh $4S5 '"9..ty et tM bo.t *°•· Cllp cowpo• ~ow n4 '"91 It.,.. ,......b .. f.c1l"'I· le, to tM DAILY PILOT IA4'reu It te: S.llltfft, DAILY PILOT, P. o .... 1560, e .......... e.: t26261 ., tklf.,.r tt ,, tll9 tMot lhow. Notttl-. ,.. ~ • .,. Wtt1Nr ""4 "' ~ ,,.....,. to wl11. I M•!1 tttlptll le "'' DAILY fl!LOJ •r dtH'ftr II II W•tltr11 flltle!l•I 1 l e•I & Merlnt Sllow, Hetlllllf No .,..,, Winner 111f'll Ml bf 11r1H11t te •Ill dr•wi<lt 11 • 11.m. 5unll1r, A~ll f, 11 l'M·Mtl thew. I HOM ........................................... I Addr!~ ......... ' ............ ' ....... ' ......... . I City ........................... t·················· I IJJ, ................. ~ ............................ , ________ _J HIGH SPEED SPOR·TS CAR· TIRES TUBELESS WHITEWALLS SIZE 550-12 600-12 ............... ' ....... . . .............. ~ ..... . 520-13 .. ,, ... ,,,,,,,,,,,, ... . 560-13 ....... ' ........... ' ... . 560-14 ····· .................. . 600-13 ..... " .......... ' ..... . 560-15 ... ' . ' ' .......... ' ..... . 600-15 ... '. '' '' .............. . PRICE·~~~ .. $13;-39 -1.11 13.52 14.08 15Jl 17.06 '" 14.85 12.91 13.97 ',,, 1.lO 1.1, 1.41 '·'' 1.77 All pri cH p!llS federal e.-cl~ a11d stote Mlet tax This 'ale e11d' April 29, 1971 FOR ALL POPULAR SPORTS CARS TUBELESS BLACKWALL 560•15 ............ 510 911X~ISI 100°/o . FREE .· _ 001 ... 5 ............ $t1'~:c:.:· R·EPLACEMENT -~---CJ ____ --• _u ••. 77 Doww to Treod Weot 1 .. dlcoton SHOULD THiS TIRI IECOME DEFECTIVE DUI TO WORKMANSHIP OR MATERIALS FOR THI LIFE Of THE TIRl, W)N5f0N ill WHEN BOUGHT WITH OUR BONDED WARRANTY YOU ARE PROTECTED AGAINST NAIL· HOLE, R 0 A D H A Z A R D S , WRECK, C 0 L L I S I 0 N AND EVEN RUNNING FLAT: TUBELESS WHITEWALLS SIZE 078-13 or 700-13 E78-14 or 735-14 F78-14 "or 775-14 G78-14 or 825-14 H78-14 or 855-14 J78-14 or 885-14 G78-15 or 825-15 H78-15 or 855-15 J78-15 or 885·15 L78·15 or 915-15 . .... -. . ..... ...... . ..... PRICE •:;~" $20.86 '·" 22.65 J.24 24.01 25,08 J.U 26.34 J.7$ 27.60 z.n 25.20 J.U 26.34 Ul 26.97 JOI 29.97 J.16 l .J, ALL PRICES PLUS EXCISE TAX AND SALES TAX ------------------• SIZE .165-13 1185-13 165-14 175-14 185-14 VREDESTEIN RADIAL PLY TUBE TYPE BLACKWALL PRICE .............. $21.26 .............. 26~35 .............. 23.01 .. . ........ 25.32 26.88_ IXCISE TAX t .65 1.17 1.72 t .17 2.01 DUNE BUGGY TIRE 11·15 SIZE ................ $21.24 EX. TAX :t.47 SUPER WIDE fULL 4 PLY WIDE OVAL TYPE 11U8ELESS WHITEWALL OR WHITE LElTERS PRICE··~~ .. 070-14 or 695-14 .... $2-1'.69 J.Jt E70-l4 .or 735-14 .... ·• F1o;.14 or 775·14 .... * G70·l4 or 825-14 .. .. 23.65 2.14 25.24 .... 26.72 J.77' * H70-14 or 855-14 .... 27.48 2.92 -...... 22.46 1-1-55-15- 1 fl.0-15 or 275-15 .... 24.18 ·G70-15 or 825·15 .... 25.86 2.6J .. '." ... ",3:82 l .7f H70-15 or 855-15 .... 27.33 ,J,ff ALL ra1c11 PLUS FIDl•AL IXCISI AND STA.Tl llJ.IS TAX • AYAILAILI IN WHITI LmERED llLTID TIRES . I Store Hou ~1 : Mon., Tuts., Wtcl., Thurs., Fri. 8:00 1.m.""6 p.m. S1turd•)' 8:00 a.m. to 12 noon. Closed Sund1y. • OLIY.II AND WINSTON, INC. ....... DELTA TIRE.· .COMPANY . ' COSTA MESA 141 E. 17th 645·2010 GARDEN GROVE 13362 Brookhurst- 638-5061 f SANTA ANA ---U120 $,Main . 541-6904 FULLERTON 623 W. Commonwealth 879·2880 ' ' • ; • • ' • ' i __ _..._ ·' • • •• • Signs-· Point • A Fashion horoscopes will be read Salu(· da y. April 15, during a !rip lhrough the galaxy or stars to be guided by Las Brlzas del Mar Auxiliary of Children's Home Society. For their seventh fashion show lunch· Ieon, auxiliary members have chosen Sign1 of the Times as their theme and the Saddleback Inn. Santa Ana as the setting. According to Mrs. Edward Gray'··------------;~~~?": i-----1'halnnan;-tht-tour-witHeaturn!'lebei;. colors and styles for each sign of the ·zodiac. . Commenlary will be offered by Miss Cheryl McDowell and the fashion parade will include a va riety of colorful en- r;emb\es .• Guests will be able to take the ir souvenir programs home aa their ~al guide for all the signs of the horosej'Pe. as planned by Mrs. William Ponn and lttrs. Alan Krilz. program chai rm en. Under the direction of Pilrs. Clyde ~story, deco ra liorl!' chairman, committee members are fashionin~ color decoupage zodiac plaques to center each table. Provision al member s, under th e guidance or Mrs. Art Caplett , have of· !ered their assistance and committee 'chairmen are the Mmes. Edward Lavalle, luncheon tickets ; John McClane, •hostesses ; Larry Kopriva and Anthony "Gajewski, publicity, .. and Ric hard 'Lockwood, prizes. Proceeds will benenfit Ch.ildren's Home Society,....ihe_!argest nonprofit adoption agency in the country. Tickets for the luncheon , which will be preceded by an 11 :30 a.m. social hour, ma y be purchased by calling l\1rs. Karen Ackley, 842-2396. An yone wishing in· formation on the services of CHS may call the Santa Nia office of the agency. ' ... ~ c: ilD c: "' All zodiecel signs will be in· duded in e fesh ioo· prediction April 15. Mrs . Edward Grey checks her y - to Fas LEO • ion Ill n 0 ::111 "V -0 King Neptune Emerges KATHI BAILEY SERVES ROY BARTHOLOMEW J ~Mu-s i-ci-an-s-T-on-e-Up · To Arrange Concert •• Music is a universa1 language. • Communicating thil sea.son through the 'community concert! of the Harbor Are.a ~munity Concert Association will be a1e.nted artists from Africa, France, Pain and the United States . Orange Coast College will be hQme for the concerts this season, open to ·.membefs only. Students In the OCC ,atew&rdess program will assist in usher· ng and s rve at rccepllons following ,.tach evenl. FOW" local concert. Ort acheduled for tho 11172-7! ,..... which bogins In ·~· ,,,e Dancers of Mall, repres~nting sir ~egions and 12 tribe! from the Republic of Mall, Africa, will open tho ... son. ·-'llleir perlonnonce bu been cfeJCr!bed u "unquul.ionably the greal..t of Africa '• treasures." VioliniJt Regis Pasquier, who won the First Prize lor · Violin at the Paris Conservatia,.e at age 12, will pefform In the ~nd event. He hrui performed in Europe, canada and the United States. Paula Robiruon , flute :· Scott Nlckrenz. viola; and Heidi Lehwalder, harp com· prise the Orpheus Trio, performing in the third ooncert. outstanding mu..icians as individuab, lhe trio have been nonied IUllOl1I ~ts in chamber m\Jalc. \~MUSICIANS, P11t II) Going down. to the sea to a ship - •amely the Queen Mary -will be party. 1oers attending the 13th aMual Neptune Ball, 1poosored by the Newport Harbor Spastic League. Many guests will arrive via chartered buses and will have an opportunity to tour the ship before moving to the main dining room tor the ball. Freddy Martin and his Orchestra will play for dancing. The fund-raising gala will be presented Friday, April 14. Highlighting the ba:I again Will t>e the emefgence of King Nep- tune who will receive the royal robe and crown from Mrs. William L. Kitchen, pre'sident. The identity of King Neptune is kept a &ecrel until the coronation. Each year an Orange County man is selected ror this honor because of bis efforts in his own pa~ticular field or endeavor. Past kings include J. S. Stoddard, 0.-W. Richard, Dr. Tom Robinson , John Kilroy, Judge Robert Gardner, who will serve as master of ceremonies, L e R o y Bartholomew, Sen. John A. Murdy. Dr. A. N. Tolo, Dr. T. G. Schoppe, Dr. Allen Leroy and Kenneth Sampson. Orange County victims of cerebral palsy and similar disabilities will benefit from proceeds. More than $150,000 has been raised by the league's 30 members 1ince 1957 through various events in· eluding the ball and contributions from businessmen and patrons. PalroM for 1972 include Col. and Mrs. Carroll D. Hudson, Ors. and Mmes. Arnold 0 . Beckman, Hansel Benvenuti, Richard A. Kredel, M. F. Lorenz and Norman-Watson, and1he Mmes. John E. Biby Jr., Bert B. Brewer, Vilan E. Couch, C. R. CrouLand Forrest DeMing. Others are the Mmes. Ethel Geohegan, John D. Heikes, Charles F'. Hilland , Paul J . Holmes, Mae Ingram, Robert L. Kincaid , Mary King, Rudy Leer, Archibald C. Macleisli, Jerry Marks, Anita bee Mac Master, William s. Messenger, J. Howland Paddock, George Piersol, Mary Pierce, Dorothy Proud, Richard, George E. Silver, Maurice C. Sparling and Rutb Sparling. Still others are the Mmes. Lillian Thatcher, Charles S. Thomas, William A. Thompso__!!L_Clara M~J'hurner. Claire Van Horn, Edward Wedekind, Annabelle Williams, Ra chel Williams and W. E. Woodruff, and the Messrs. and Mmes. Bewley Allen, Arthur G. Andresen , Ernie Ball, Robert S. Bardin, Richard E. Bar· relt. William P. Campbell and Bertrum C. Coffey Jr.- More are the Messrs. and .Mmes, Paul Connally, John Curci, Peler R. Damskov, J . W. OeBrulf, Charles Philip •Dewey, John T. Hogan, Walter E. Jansen, Melvllle Keim, John Killefer, KeMeth C. ' r .• -""""' 't f Kingsley, Ro)' E. Klolz, David S. Martin, John Robert ~1e,serve .. Paul A. Palmer, Richard Wh llney Pendleton. lladd R. Ring. Paul ~1. Rogers and John E. Shearer. Awaiting the Neptune Bell ere Freddy Mart in, Miss Carol Lyn Fisher and Mrs. William E. Fisher, chairmen. Concluding the list 11re the Me!srs. and ~1mes. Donald A. Streuss, I\ I e i n Swyga rd t Roland F'. Vallely, Gtorgt W. \\"eedon, Charles S. \\'heeler and Arthur B. Willis. . , I -~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor Mffl4tt. A11trU u. un ,.,, 1t Ann Landers Viewers Rocked By Acts · DEAR A'.'l'N LANDE llS: I've nevpr \l'ritten to you before but I've got to check \\'It h sonu:body to make sure l'n1 ."ane. If l'n1 u1 my right niind. n lol of p('ople in this 11•orld are cr:izy. Rl't'l'ntl~. I n\t('nd~ a rock concert. 1 d1dn '1 knO\\' sui:h madnc:-.s <'x1stl'd unti l !hat nii,:ht A guy g('ts up in girl°s cloth<'s, r~·e ntakeur gal,,re and ,, ton of JC\\elry. lie doe~ a numbl'r \\'here hC' chops off 1 doll°s head and sings a song called "Dea d Babies.•· At th~ end of his .act he hangs hims-ctr. That crr!'p,1• shO\\' 11•as a !icllout. Twen· ty-thous:ind peopl e scrl':in11•d their heads off and :ippl:iuded till th£'1r hands were r;tl\', I lrfL after the fifth cnt<"1re and 1 don't r111nd \cll 1ng you I "'11oopsed my {.~)Ok1rs. \\'hal _is there 111 peoe.le that makC's 1hr111 f'njoy su<!h sick stuff'! Did th!'y ha\'e It when you 11ere letnagers? \\!hat do )•)U make flf it, Ann ~ SQUARE PEG 1N A ROUND HOLE OEAR PEG: When I was 1 teenager there "'ere a few horror fllms around, such as Frankenstein end Dracula. But "'e didn't have the steady diet of vtolence the kids Jlel today in movies and on TV - not to mention a live war In li ving color, e1•ery night nn the 6 o'clock ne"'S. \\'ould you believe our sirk sorie ly has produced a market for Ulrture loys? One of lhe best selling· Jtems is a doll that screams wben plattd on a torture rack by a monster In 1 blood·splallered white coat The cust6mu has a choice of \'iC· tims -a man, woman or child. For SS.88 }'OIJ can buy a Vietnam bat,.. tleground. Dead and .dying soldlers are ell over the place In grotesqu e poslllons, • with horrible expressions on th eir fa cet -gaping wou nds and missing limbs. Fnr SI.99 you ca n own a doll n.Ymed Varn· pirella. She comes equipped with a beak· er of blood . If all this Isn't symptomatic of a warped society I'd like to know what is. DEAR ANN LA NDERS: "['ll Know Where to Look: in Fargo'' "';is the last ~traw. Th at idi ot refers to himself as a happily married man tor over 3-0 yea rs, and says if anything ever hnppens to hi .!1 dear wife he's going to look for a lady over 40. \V hy? Because, he expla ins in hi.!1 half-baked way, "She ""'on't yell. She Y:on't tell. She won't Sl'.'ell. She'll be gratefu l as hell." I'll bet he already has his next wife picked out. and I ho pe he gets what's coming to him. l\1y brother-in-Jaw had Iha same idea. only he didn't wait until my sister died . The lady he was sneaking around with was over 40 -but sh1 yelled, told , swelled and showed her grati tude by naming him In a paternity suit. His reputation was mud In our town after that ugly incident and my sister died of heart trouble as a result or it. I'd · like to know why a man who describes himself as "happily married'• is thinking about what he'd like in th11 way of a second "'ife. And to sit down and write to Ann Landers about it .suggests 111 strange preoccupation with the subject. If lhat man were l\.1Y hus· band l'd be afraid to fall asleep in th11 same bed with him. Do yoo agree?""Or am I paranoid? -TH I RD· E YE ELEANOR • DEAR T.E.E.: J rectlv' all kinds of letters from all kinds of people. l\.terely because a person •·rites along odd Unel doesn't mean he.'I "planning anything.?' 1 do ai:;ree, however. that he might be,,.. rlulglng ln some \\'lshlul lhinklng. Yo11 .arr right• about l'.'Omt n swelllng and yelling afttr. 1J happens all the time. Ann blinders discmses teenage drinking -its m)1M, its r 'alities. Learn the facts by readin g. "Booze And You -For Teenagers Only," by Ann Landers. ·Send 35 cents in coin and a long, stamped , self· Addressed envelope to Ann Unden tb care or th• DACLY rnm. ' ' ' • Monday, A,pril J, 1972 Creativity Evolves From Man 's Soul H. Raymo nd Hen ry (a bo ve ) so ys true art shows person ali ty as in the portrait (rig hi) of his wile , Isa bella, and miniatu re (far righ t ) on ivory of his wile's mothe r. Art Is a Bv LA URI!=; KASPER IJ 1s .,..•1fe. Isabella . testifies 01 '~' 01111 P'ue11 s1u1 that he is an authority on art. "Ari is the soul of O)an as "~1y husbnnd rtally was quite famous,." she said. Then the shown !hrnugh his creative ef-\vife sat back and Jet her hus- fori. band. who will soon reach the "If ynu (lnalyte th 11 t age of 90. do the talk ing. c;;ireflJlly ," H Raymond ffen ry -.. -r ave nmre pictures on ~aid, ·you'll find It a very dif· '"alls than anyone in the ~·est." llcult thing." Henry said. He claims to ha \'e • Vision • • 5.000 originals or r<'produc- lio ns of his paintings hanging in California alone. The couple said ''a long time back'' they entertained more than a half mi llion peo ple dur- ing nine' years in a San Juan Capistrano sfudio gallery. Around the time of the depression , thty n1oved tht;!ir ~allery to Beverly Hills and !he n to Laguna Beach· They no'v are retired in Costa i\1esa. But tmw much an artist his done or ho\\' much he has sold are not "the i m po r t a n t things." according .nr-Henry. Training. from the bottom up, is important. "Every great pain1er has had an education." Henry explained. He and his wife met while studying at the St. Louis Arl Academy in 1907. Mrs. Henry can still recite mos t of the bones of the body. .. The names of bone~ and muscles alwa ys bothered me.'' Henry admi tted. "But I ca n draw. each one of them " He believes it is im1X>rlant that an artist be able to pain l a full life-size body with no bone out of place. Artists , he addtd, oetd to know more • Feeling . than any other professional. "\'ou can't judge art li ke you do other things. There's too much ·of a personality, too much of the technical element in ii." Originality and creati\'ity al so are very i m po r I a n I aspects of the artist. Henry rejects the idta of ~o­ p.ving anyone else's work . "I'm not a painter who goes back here and paints something because I \\'as told lo." Peo ple v.•ho pick up painting and think its easy. he said, are ''all copier.!i." "They are the same 1s 1 man v.·riling a check on another man's bank accounl - They're forgers." Henry. who looks 11s an old arlist should look v.•ith a small po inted white goatee, bristly mustache. wire rim glasses and wearing a fl ouncy bow tie with tails and \a colton print jacket, says several of his works are "very rare in art." He eiplained why as he pointed them out on the walls of their small one-bedroom apartment . One ti tled Dolores uses con· trasting colors which most artists didn't think was possi- ble. As a result . he explained. ''the girl is quite a mysterious character.·· Th is is y,·hal he feels art is. "the creat ing of a vision ... a feeling ." He also has a single slroke picture, "the only one-of a portrait I know of." With th is techn ique. the pa int is applied In short single strikes and not blended with or covered by any ot her color. In some spots. the bare canvas can be Se('n. He has another •hich uses color 10 show sun hine and fog. both to the sa e extent. ln a forest. A self·port rait tilled The La ugh 's On Me ·as his joke . ' because one doesn't find I Jaughjng picture in a gallery. ·, ~1r!!. Henry's specially wal painting from lire on ivory . At school. she worked on the small ivory pieces. port raits or her mot her and father and delicate nudes or the class models. while the o t he r student:s worked on large can· vasses. Acrording to Henry. "There is a reason for a master." And 1hal is. "Each man ha11 pro- duced somethi n~ that gave the rest of the world reason lo progress ." He is considered the ''father or cnlor science." Henry said he discove.red that "people are so terribly in- nuenced by color 1hat they \vould run from it" after observing people look 1l 1ome piclures in a gallery. Often he felt they missed the full arfect of a picture. "The a verage person sees very little •.. maybe two-thirds of wha! ex ists." Scienlists a n d engineers have si nce realized th;it people y,•ould work more under cer- tain colors. Yellow denotes happines!, he explained ... If you want to <'reate excite ment. vi!alily and movemen t. put red in il." This makes orange. "If you 1o1•an1 power. you 11:0 slraight lo red . Red is po1ver wh ich the Chinese pro ved years ago.'' Henry hasn't done any ma· jor V.'orks h1tely because "I've never known of any artist or any consequence who paihted a good picture after he was 80." Bui he said he'll ne ver com· plelely srop and still does "a little touch here and a. little touch there" on pictures ht has alread,v painttd . He th inks a paint ing is ne ver quite what it should ha,·e been. She 's Top s in En thus iasm ; Wedding Bells Ring Along Orange Coast I I Honors Speak Well for OCC Coach ' CAZIER-STRATTON I r • r-;ancy Stratton. daughter of l\lr. and l\1rs. David Strallon of :\e" port Beach. became the· bride of Ronatd Cazier during ceremonies in Cal\•ary Ch;ipcl. The Rev. Charles Smith was !he off1c1anl; f\1iss Becky Cazier ll'as the maid of honor; \Vayne Cazier served as best man. and Buddy Stanton and !o.1i!chell Cazier were ushers. The bride is a graduate of Corona de] :\1ar l~igh School and Orange Coast Coll ege. Her husband, son of i\lr. and :\1rs. Harold Cazier of Greenacres, \Vash .. is serving in the Air Force at Peterson Fie ld. Colo. CAIN.STEPHENS I Fir~! United i\·I e 1 hod i s t Church. Anniston. Ala ..... ·as The scl!in,ll fnr The n1arria~e link- inl! Sherry Lynne Stephens of " Santa Ana Heights and Jerry L.\'nn' C'a 1n. Parents nf the bridal couple are ~Ir. and \Ir~ Pcrrv Gene Stephens of Srinla Ana i-!eights :ind ~Ir. anrl ~!rs Pierce Cnnv.a\' (;iin nf Anniston. " Perfr>rn1ing the rites \ras the Re\ Jeff Ba\nc. l\.ndd! a1tend1.1111s \1·ere the 1-lisses Debra Bf)(•. ~lary .Jovner. June nc\·nold.~. t·ecil1a R1d1::c. Patricia ·ll arrling. Lee Anne Siephen~. Donna Roe , l)t>1rlri Cain ;ind J:inrt Cu1n. Shenry Cain \.\its thr f!n\\'Cr girl ThC' bridcJ.trr1n1n·._ lnther :it- f1>nrlrd ;ic;: ))c<..T 1na 11. ::ind u"hers "''rr :-.t<•\f• l\irii:. Geor~e Hile\. J oh 11 n \' 1-·l(l(lrman :in<! J;1rnr~ At11ihnrt.I, 'The bride 1 ~ :i t,ir1111r a1 lhf' l'niverslly nr Al;,tianiri v.h"r" l'ihe is ViCC' prC'~Lden! 'r l){tltfl I Gammas. She i'I .1 ~raduate of E~l anci;i lligh ~hi)OI. Her hu!'hand r11rnC'rl a ' -, MRS. CAZIER MR S. J. L . .CAI N • ., - b:i<'hclnrs de~f'ff 1n rnn1m<'rtl' and busin~s1111dm1n1s1r:i11on at 1hr l'n1\'Cr~J1v of 1\'abama \\here he nov.• Is f'nrollrd 111 the School of !..av.. lie ar- filla1ed with Phi Kappa P~1 Jo~cph Becker of Stony Brook. :-. \'; Olflr111n1 "·as the Rev. The newlyweds Will rcs1dl' 1n Tuscaloosa. BECKER.SERGEANT SI Andres'li Prc~byterian hurch. Newpor1 lle<1c'1 \Ill!! the settlng for the \.\'tddin~ linking Charnlce Sef~eanl of 14ut'Jltngton Beach and RllY· roond J. D«.ker, Their partnts are ~1r. and fllrt. Chari'& Sergeant o! N~wporl Beach and rttrs. Or Charles Dirrcnfleld. ~lrs. Shirley Hess strved as the 1natron of honor. nnd • br1dcsn1aids \\'CrC' ~1 rs. Donald Endres, !\1rs. 1-loward Pa lmer and ~1lss Joan ~cker. Best miin was Anthony Becker. 11nl1 ushers were Peter Becker And Palmer. The bride is ;i ~r11du::itc nr Nev.·pnrl llarbor Righ SChool ; Or11ngc Coast College and California State CoHege lit Long Beach. Hor husband •l· tended 0 e I p h I University. ' They will make their home in Huntington Beach. GRIMM-HUDDLESTON Patrici a Ann Huddleston became the bride of Jeffrey Ralph Grimm during ceremonies conducted by the Rev. Dr. Charles Dierenfield in St. Andrew's Presbyterian ChurCh . The br ide is the daugh ter or t>.1r. and Mrs. Donald Insley Hudd leston of Newport Beacll and her hu sba nd is the-son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Grimm of Costa Mesa . ~ti ss Margaret 11uddleston served as the maid of honor and Suzanne Grimm was the flower girl. Wayne Tibbets at- tended as besl man an d Mark Cowling was the usher. The bride, a ju nior at Sonoma State College. is a graduate or Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coast College. Her husband is a graduate of Marina High School , Hunti ngton Be a ch. Santa Rosa Junior College and now is studying at Sonoma Sta1e. They will reside in Santa Rosi . HOGAN.HART Timoth y Patrick Hogan , son nf ~1r . and 1'1rs. John Thoma!! 11o~an of Newport Beach. and 1\la ry Ann Hart, daughter of l\ilr. and Mrs. Charles ~1cKey J.larl or Los Angeles. ex- changed vov.'S in All Sainls Episcopal Church, Beverly Hills . · The lle v. Ke rmi t Castellanos and the Rev. Robert Curtis officiated. J\frs, Craig Callen Ba ise served at matron of honor. Other at· lendanls were lhe l\l isses Emil y Fowler, Pani Crehan, Elizabeth Hay, Carol Hoff. man, N~nci Jense n and Kathy Holberton. Best 1n11n \.\:IS Thnmas 11ogan. Ushers \1·rre f.awrence ~~~~~,4lr~~f llart. Norman Rr vnolds .. John J Hogan, Richard · Ham blelon. '.i~_;;;-:;:=-----; ~1ua rt Austin and Gf'orge r Twi:;t. ThP bride a I t e n de d rt larlborough ~hool. Un1vc.c~1· ty or California. Bf'rkcley end L'SC. 'Yl'h!'!re sh( was preSident of Pi ftcta Phf. "The br ide· groom lltttnd'ed Newport Har· bor High School and USC, where he v.·as sfflllated with Phi Psi. Ba rbara Bu rgess surveys some of the t rophies her forensics teams have won at Orange Coast College. She claims enthusiasm is her only qualification for leading. By JO OLSON 01 tllt OaUy ,Itel l t1ff Barbara Burgeu his led three Orange Coast College forensics teams to t h e Western States Championships in three years but won't admit that she has anything to do with her teams' success. She first insists that credit be given to her fi\'e auisting coaches. then c!1 ims that enthusiasm is her o n I y qual ification for leading. "My only role is being the inspiration for my teams," she explained.- A slim blonde, Barbara must have more going for her titan Inspiration, though, for her foren!Jlcs teams also have collected 150 frophies In the past four years and occ·. team last year was second In the nation. Barbara came to Orange Coast College sis years a10 at the age of 22 with 1 masters degree fresh ·from California Stitt College 1t Long Beach, and w1s one or the youn gest te1chera ever hired at tbe ochool. 4 She claim• 1he was 1elected because the speech depart· riient needed some fresh youn1 blood ond thlt the fell into her coachlna: jqb becautt ahe was the only one who was 1lngle and could travel with the team .• LUCKY BREAK "It wa s the lu ckiest break in my life,'' she admits. ''I love to teach and I Jove forensics." She talsed her gr1dt in th11t cl11s to 1n A and found at, the semesters' end th11t th 1 teacher had taught her holf not to teach 1peech 11 well as how to speak., NO Os "He made it too Lensi a 1ituation," she 11id. •·r never give 1 D on 1 fir1t speech. I reinforce the positive." Barbara ell:pl1ined lhal she Is v e r y success-orient ed because of the weight and complesion problems she had 11 1 you th, ind credits this 10 her success with the {earn. Another plus fac tor was the con11tant meeting of new peo- ple she did as p1rf of an Army famlly which moved every three years. She wa11 born in California and Jived I n Germany. Jap1n and various parts of the United States. A third secret tn her success is her love for people. "I lo ve to watch introverted people become 1rtlculate," she ei· plained. "People i re going to be bet· ter from ha ving competed. Otherwiae, ii'• too much work 1nd too much lime." In class, B1rbar111 students get to choose their own topic• and she tries to make her clasaes fun a1 well a1 educa· tlonal. CWTHES HORSE • ' ' > ' ... r I h .I " • 0 d ~ ·~ < • Part of the fun for her students ill wa iting to see wh11t their teacher will wear to class. "I'm a clothes horse ·• ~u~~hshe nhe~e~r~landnned tod_1he !lai~ like lhing1-1h~t uic: 11 • ,eac er:-: ' ' n n make people look at me twice - D b le relati ves pred1c.ttd th11t some--I like bright colors and da y she would indeed become unusual clothes." a teacher. Her plans to become an in- terpreter for the Unlttd N1- tlons went out the window when her· Spanish grades prov· ed disa ppointing, so she swltehtd to speech, a new fa vorite. For someone lkilltd at ln- 1tructin1 in the sill: different ev1nta In roreflsics, which in- clude debate, pe r 1u 11 s Ive speaking, expository 1pe1kin1. or a I Interpretation. I X· temporaneous speaking and impromptu apeaking, Bl.rbara h11d 1 humble beginnlna In her profe11H>n.--- "I got 1 D on my first 1peech In college," she ad- mitted, "111<1 I 'ot a D on my second 1peech.' "U>ve" is one of her ra vorite word!. She loYes all SJ>?.rts, good . movie!!. ea ting, sknng, traveling, meeting peo- ple and playing bridge. "I love to do 1 little bit of everything, I love diversity," she aaid. . "I'm not a homebody though . I ~ \Ike to cook but that'• about the extent of my womanly t1lenl1:'' She's plannlng to co-authnr a "lively speech te:ii:t" ror use at in or ,, Os di "" college level , and It has to bt lo lively to be par for her courae. In Just ask 1ny or the so fr studtnt!J on~ her~foren1lc1•--+--~w1 team. Anythln& ! a r 1 r a fla Burge!A doea ls done. In a live-th ly maMer and wilh enth!Jo ha 1lasm, I "i Fashion s on Parade \'oun g Sophisticates \\'ill presen t a fashion sho\Y Satu rday. April 8, at 2 p.m. in Rol;>ins<:J n's, f'nahcim. P~oceeds \vill support the Beachco mbe rs Cen fer, Long Beac h \rh1ch aids the J?h ys1ca1 ly and mentally handicapped young adults. Ready to model are {lclt lo righ t) the ?11mes. Bruce Stephens, li al llorrocks and ~1ari· lyn \Vhitc . • I fi1ondav Apri l 3, \971 L~ILY PU.OT J 5 You r Ho roscope To morrow Sagittarius: Changes Bring Money TUESDAY APRIL ~ 11 as born "'1th a slroug Arie..: t' 111 p h a :; i :;; , ' ' tlamrnond dct!ared. By SYDNEY O~tA RR John Jlays l-la1nmond J r .. a reno\vned inventor "'ho held over 800 patents. ooce ex- plained that he attri buted n1uch of his origina l th inkinit of factors in his horoscope. ··1 AR IES 1.\1arch 21·Apri l 19 1: Look beyond s u r f a (' e in- dications. Strike al ht art uf n1ntters. Be dire<:t. (;ood lun:ir as1>eC'I coincidts nu1r \\ ith chance lo 11u1ke l'-Onstru1:11\ c To avoi d disappoint ment. prospective brides are reminded to have their \\'edd1ng stories wi th black and \\•bite ,l!l ossy photo· •graphs to the DAILY PILOT Womcn·s De· partmenl on e \!.•eek before Lhe \Vcdding. Pictures received after that time \viii' not be used. 1''or engagement announcements it is imperative that the s·tory, also accom panied by a bl ack and \vhite glossy picture. be sub· milted six 'vecks'or more befo re the \\'eddJn g date. lf deadline is not met, only a story 'riU be used. ·~ tuture plan .. '>. lia1n sho1vn lhrough "·rill en 11·ord. Pu blish and advCrtise. TA Ul\US (Ap ril 20-~lri~"21l 1 · Rerent n1oney dispu te \\·ith rnate. partner can be sett led. l\ey i$ to O\'ereome te1n ptalion to ht petty. II this you do. the sky could be the limit. ''ou feel lighter. A burden has bee n lifted . CE:'lllNI t.\lav 21-Junr 20 1: ~:mphas1ze <ibilit\· lo b r \'ersatile. I.ct others shn\\' 1heir hands He a coun- terpu ncher . 1r recepti1 e, ,\011 gain ,·alu able infor1nat 1011 , Contractual ob\lga t1on ~'ill bf" t.•lari f1ed. Past cf(or ls \I 111 pnv di1·idends. CAJ\'CEll tJune 21.July 2"!1 \'o u are on steadier t.·our~f'. :\llnor snags are elinunnted. CQ-11·urkrr. ass(K'iate btt·on1~.s ally. Be thoroug h in appro;R·h. Do n't pla y gan1es \\·hero security i~ involved l\.cf'p health resolutio ns. J\1·oicl r \· ce sses. J,EO (July 23·Aus:. :!2 J. 1\1 lention to children 1s r 11 1 phasized. Some desi re s are fulfill ed. Creative energy is ex. pended. There is possibility of change or scenery. Be analytical. 1''ind reasons tor To help fill require1nents on both "'Cd· ding and engagement stories, fonns a re available in ail of the DAILY P ILOT office s. F'urther questions \\'i ll be an s\vered by \Vomen's Section stalf members at 642-432l. July Date Gr~nn·ie' s Work· Revealed Spans a River :\Ir, :111d ~l rs. Hubert F. Fi n- ney of Costa i\1eli:i. h;i1 l' :u1· nounced the bctrothnl o1 Jhc1r ANTIOCJI tAP • -Ruby there as son1e \\\lJ!l cn do at daughter. Janet Huth l'i11111-.v Vanderliave, a blo n d e home," she says. to Alan ~I. Bradf ield . son of grandmother of three. makes i\1r. and i\1rs. Ve rno n Br;id. her living by raising and ~1rs. Va nderhave says she is field, also of Costa ~lesa. lowe ring a dra\v bridge. treated 11·ith courtesy and J ul y 15 rites a re planned in The only woman bridge respect by ship captains. tug lh SI E . 1 bo e . James p1scopa te nder employed by the state, al operators and other Ch h N B h b "d urc • ewporl eac . rectnt l1appen1ngs. Study and learn. VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22 1: Acctnt on affairs relating lo home-, domestic situa tion, prto. 1>erty1 ~toney changes hunds. Be sure you are n o t s h or I c h 11 n g t d • f'aniily 1uember 1nakes dt'111ands. ll<' attenli\'t', fn ir and dlplo1n:d 1r. Then you g<i iri. l.IRHA I ~\)1 t :}.Ll,·t ·•~ .~101d beton11 n.:-l ll\(l[\·erl 1n \\ild ,goo~e chase. \Ian\ nrr ptone no11 lu 111,1!..1· "' lra\aJ!an t pronu~rs. K1·\ 1~ l-1 ~tleet qual 11~ St r1\f" !u a.~1·l'· · 1n111 facls. l.r:11r j:!lr .. ..,11 11r~ ''1 lll ht•rs. 1 ;11~~IP\ l11•1j.!hh.11 ~II' ass0<·1at r :-111111!1! h1.' 1i.;1111n cl Sl'l)HPlll ill\· :?:> \,11 ~'\ l :t•l r1J:!!t l .!JHI pt•r1111 .... 111n 1111111 author1ta1 11 1· ... tiUH't' ~l lj'h 1 .. C'0!1.,C'1'1 :l\I\ t' t'tdl1 ~1· Appla~_'i t>~ltt't't.1!1 1 11 her(• lu11d' .111• f'o)lli'l'I lll'fl llpp11rtu1ut 1· 1~ (•fl hnri?1111 l>n.'1'! Ill" up :1.•t'!'. Bl' rr:1!l,1 to 11lirt l an;t d1•:11 - SAf;IT1'.\ll ll':-< t .\111 ~~ J)rt 211 t\c1·ent nn !•l'r:;onah 1;.. :i pjX':.uante. urig1n:1! 1Uri1~. Takr ln!llat1vto. r-.·lake ntw starts in different d1reel1ons. Be indepe ndent and direcl. L'Y· cle is high and your jud me11t is apt lo be on target {'Ol"llillgly . CAP RI CORN [Dec. I~ 1 · Behi nd scene~ acli\'il stressed. A i r complain l!r1 n~ 11110 ope n your need.'(, (lt'~lfl'~ l,,n1<1ue orRanization c ;1 11 aid 1f _1u11 <·onf1de. You ata\ 1erl 1·un r1nc-d. R:rallze th1, ~ hut !er11parar1. \l~LA RtUS -.11111. 20..Ft l• 11\• ~·r1cnd d 1.~p l1t 1' i.·111,1r ~a blr laethl\ rur r:SI' 111• 11•1 t·µluf' flnr \1ho t·or lult·' hunch 1~ ;1pr to bf' 1 '" • lt'\1 '1";11.r ad 1:lt1l:lj.!t' or 10~1d1· L!l!Ut lllil\1011 . '0 11 l ('I' f' \ I •' 111r.111111gtul 1•(Jnlpl111\t'll! Shu11 .ipp1 t'1'J tltHlll. 1'1:-.l'ES I Ft'b \9 :\la rt•h '.!0 . H 11~111e ss. spet·i:i l ho ti or :.;, i r p111:i11011 11rr hi11,hhghtrd. l·:'\p.111d hori1011~. Hr ;i I 1 1 e. th1:rc 1~ roon1 fvr .' ou at tup. I >1s1>l :-iy conf1d t'11ct' Sor ia li1f' \ 011 c·ould n1akt' Contact 111th onf' \1·ho y,•ill a id and t·onifon. IF TODAY IS YO li lt HIHTHOAY many fetl you Rrt 100 forceful. direct. Othrr~. ho11't1'er, re\'ere your ba.c;1{' honesty. You arf> due for act· ded recognit ion. But kno1v dif · ferr11ce bet wctn pu bhcit~ anrt 1wtoritty. A\'old lhe l<1Urr. /\ugus l slands ouf l\S prrhnp'i ~uur 1nost sign11ican1 1110111h. lo l·~d ovl r1'0•• •11C111I ~nu,.•11 •'" -•t•No•v, Gfltft ''Ol>•V Om•"' Jl•Q• bool<lt l. 1111 l •uln AO<lu~ A 'lrol011 ~. St nd blr!hdl l• •nd 73 t t oh IC 011't tr I Ol!lt.lfll, '"• OAIL Y ''LOI . llo• Jl•O. G••"" (on•r1I 31tilon. N• .. Yor~. N.Y. 100 1/, SECOND SPECIAL! fl.frs. Varx:lerhave says she's a r1 ge tenders. , F. ~iiss in!')ey was gradua ted JANET FINNEY ~ Thru April 1 natural fo r the job. "Ruby is definitely not a rrom Estancia High School C hoo'• •Knit Clyde Spenser, president or \\'01n cn's I 1 b be r . '' say s and attended Orange Coast Outfit t h e Calirorni a Drawbridge S1X'nser. •·she is a thoro ughly College. Lee\\'ard Colleg e anc1 l ·~r-•••;.;;;....;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mol SAVE 5001 , Libraries Operators Association, says he qualifi ed drtn1• bridge operator \.\•ill attend the Unil'crsi ty of U 'o , ___belj_excs......,\l.w ...-V--ande1:ha.1:e--•wd_lhe statc___Likc.s her 1131\•<tii-in-5epte111ber-:-Slie-1. mt!· ' 5-11--n1a\.' be the only 1\·oma n JK'rfonnance ., k •,~,; ~;r . c,'1 ·nown on the Orange t·oast ;i s I _ ... '"'-"-0 w drav"bridge operator 111 the 11011• does he r · hu sband. a fl ute teaeher and is no11· rna -.~~~ BJDTIQUE '}~ MARCY DAVIS Fall Date Revealed ·rhe cni.:a gen1cnt ot :\!arc~' Da\"1S 10 ,\1;11·\·1n 1:cnc (;alh· h<'r hn s been ri nno:.Jnccd b~ her p<1 ren1.~. :\Ir ;ind ~1r.~. . laincs \\'or1h [);11 1~ ol Hunt· ingto n l:lcac·h (:allihcr 1s the wn f1f ,\Jr. and :\!rs. \\";:iJter Lee <:aJhhcr of Sa n Diego. i\ Sepl. 16 \1•cd· ding in lhc C..:01nmun11y United 1\lethoclisl Church, l luntington Beach is planned. ~fiss Davis v.1as graduated wit h honors fro m i\tarina 1-ligh School and is affiliated ·wit h Chi On1ega soi:ority at San Di- ego Sta le College \1•herr shr is a junior. lier fiancc . a nati ve ot S<ln Diego. plays professional ba.~c­ haH 11·ith !he Los An~r ­ le~ Oodf!«r~. Co s tumes Outmoded t hinking of gelling mar ried in an Indian maid bridal gown, nf ~mething else really uncon· \e~tlo11al? r·orgej 11. says ' Oscar de la Rcnta . who prc- dicLs: ''The gl n11nicky lo0k 1.s 1 001. the coslume-y !ook 1s-m1t. \\'(' hll Vt' dl'flnilt·ly r1•t1u· \~I lo tra c/ll111nll1 v;ilut·s 1111t! a ladr·tlke look. ~~\·1··11 1nlh1t·n1:t')) rrom Other couni ru:•:; ;ire dealt Worldly Works Threr r1c11• l'ollel't ions will be on display rnJ.he i\larinera and Corona del i\lar librarie! dur- i n~ April. The 1\'0rks of i\li Mi Sharon Stein \.\'ill be fea tured in i\1ariners Librarv. LoJs Du if... 1nan and Bunn,· "crossand are the artists ('xi1ibiti ng. in the Corona de/ i\lar Librarv. ' . It 11•ill be the first tirne P.1 rs. Stein's "·orks. 11hich are being sponsored b~ the Ne\\·port Beach Citv 1\rt~ Con1n1ittee. ha1·e bccri di~pla~·ed u1 the Sou th Coa st area. She ha~ ex· hibited in Fr<ince. Swilzerla11d, Hong Kong and Los Angela.~. 1 ler dra1vin gs have been noted for an inoo1'afi\'e mixed n1cdia .a rnalgam of inks. 1~·a1cr <:olors and oil pastel s. lier paintings are an embodiment of oils \\'ith such collagt' n1a1eri ;1 Js as paper. \\'OOd <1nd From Pag e 13 cloth. Some of her painti ngs dcplc~ !':cenes and subjects she saw while traveling with he r husband, tifort Stein, a pro- fessional travei"Titer and Jee· lurer. Miss Duitm an·s paintings also feature portraits and scenes from around the world. Jier works are found in col· lections in 12 different coun- tries. She also has done television Brt\\·or k. taught art cla sses and designed do-il·yourself art projects r 0 r hospitalized t·hildren. She has ·chosen to exhlbil port raits and landscapes fron1 i\·!('xico. lndli1, !\Ianila and Si ngapurc. 1\liss Crossancl \\'ill be exhib- iti ng several n cc d I e po i nt \~or ks. • • • Musicians 'T'he fourth concert is 10 be announced. Community concert associa- 1.ion membe r_, may attend nt no charge co1nmunity concerts in nearby cities. on a sea!- availablr basi~. A rn o ·1:.: associations in JO nearby rili•'~ nre tho.se in Sant~ Ana. Lniauna. Long R('arh and \Vh il1ier. l\'e:i rb~· r·onrrrt~ inrludt• Jiu· .Johnnn S!r<1us.<1 Ensenibtr ol the Vien na !'iymp ho ny, r irn au<I his Ballet E~panol, !he ll:illas Symphony and thr piano duo or \\'hittmore and i.Qwe, l\orwegian soloist. Choi r of Oslo and i\1etropoliton baritone \Yilliam \Valker. The association will tune up for the 1972 me1nbersbip drive /\lond ay, April 17, in the Airportcr Inn 1vith a campaign banque t for \l'Orkers and their guest.~. C:1rl :\1 at lhc~. pianist. 1\•i[J cnll'rltrin and spen k briefly at ! thl' b11nqu ct. J!cullq~;i r1.crs r •• r !hl' t'<1111p~u.e.n !hrnuf:h Salur-1 <lti.1. t\11ril 2:!. 1r11! be the 1 ~c-11·porter Inn. i\lcmbcrship 1\'llJ ~ closed 11 nd no tickets will be sold for 1ndiv 1dun l con- <:ct1.s. COMPLETE SHOE & LU GGAGE RE PAIR . u1u .-' SHOES .. RE STYLI NG •I LITTLE SFIOES , ___ Rob inson' Shoe Repa ir country. Halph . a r11<1d 111a1ntena ne(< Jorin" in niusJt· .. 11r 1.1 ut1>11-o "f -i\lrs. Vanderha ve is sta-ll'Orkl'r. feel :ibour her unusual 1:> I , u.·.ti R o~ ·";. 101.o.-1-1.1t1tr C:ll••o• 1 .. , d II h d Hr<1dfield 11·as gradu;1lcd ~ 1 &1dwt ll C:ll••t • t: • lione 111 a sma ~ e job~ fru~n ~:stani:i a . <11!t'11drd OC(' 11 1'. ~ 10 1 v 1• LIOO ~ suspended above the Antioc::li .. Il l:' le1 s n1e du it.'' 11 a~ her and 11011' :;cries \\'it h the 1\la vv °"''~:~:;ro·'o~~,,~~~"~~; \l N1w ,o•T •1•cw · ~ Bridge. She operates the onl~ replr. 111 l'ei'i rl (l!~. ll <t1l"ai 1. · C•ueu1 v• s11.,, 1,, Chllt1••n -:h •IJ-~i11 ,, n1achiner.Y \\'hich elevalcs the 225 E. 11111 Sr.· ~ ~~ .... __ dra y,·bridge: allo1ving lar~c co,10 Meso . 541·2778 ~..,.;..-.::i~'i:.S: ships on !he Ant iot·h Hil·C'r 1 ol f-..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiiiiiii~iiiiiiii:::ii===:::i===~~:.;~""~~~-~-i;;;;;~~~~·-~~~ pass under. II ··1 am a natural !'or lhis job,'' Mrs. Vanderhave says. "I \.\'as reared on a rarm. operated heavy equipment and that's what this bridge Jilt :ipan is au about." Mrs. Vanderhave. ~·h o declines to re veal her age, Y.lorked .as a relief bridge lender on four other California bridges before taking over permanently at the 'A ntioc h Bridge near San F"rancisco. The job isn't as lonely as it may appear she sa~·s. She keeps i'n touch \\•ith paining sh ips. informing ship captains about traffic on · land "·att>rs. "I don·t /eel as alone Forties Back Secretaries in Pa ri~ are · adopt ing !he 40s fy,·in sweater sers and wearing then1 in lbe (_'lassie manne r \\'ith grt1dua ted matinee length necklaces of graduated pc'rls . A MORE BEAUTIFUL YOU • SPRING -$PlllHG, '"Mn Mo"'"' N1h1r1 11MG1 her-Wlntw r;wt. Haven't Voll olltn Wl•ntd YOl.I too, could illed 'IOUr Wlnt1r c°"" pte•lon •l'ld c-ovt 1klwlng ll't' lo 'l'Ollr own H..,.. 51N'll'IO? Vou ctn by US•ll<J Ille lotlowlng tlmpl• l ''"P compre.ion (9r• progr1m, Sl l'P ,, l e .. v• the SOOP "' 11'\t '"' Of vovr body, no! you• Mee. It Ctn leave 1 Cl~lllno lllm. o/1tn (Oll!lno COMDI•~"'" oreblt fl'I\ In. \tf~O !Ht A!t-PvrllOSt (old (re•m Joi clt'ooU1no srrp •? f., .. , 'lflu"•ll • Ml•e,e1 "T •t otmtn• •v••y 01n1r d.ty, It \ri<lll Cit In '"" I l••t your CC"1Plt•• Ion, l t EP •J F-ono.,. 1~.~ w••n ~ •Utt•. POro111, IO<'ICI IO"•l'll Mt •touP flt tt '!'-I jlfOIKI• •t lt IM!•i.r11l lf l, ti\•\ .. m~ J •1t D Dt09rt m w111 riv;. lt lltt your lOMPlt~ion. Hnt, ll~Cl'lftk Litt·l lv!l'ttrt· •frdlor GIMl'nf•• ID Pllt lllOlll!lts lrlto your o;llft-1, P•141 Sttlmn'lt,.. ln9 EYI' M•lt."'P• P t lt Eytllntrt (liqulO flt' Cllt.t) to lclf ... llt'lll!'f' ,. your Er• Mtltov.. Llgl\ltn &ro,... If too Cl•"' with B•r• ,,_, It i.c-lnO, t d.i Wiii! ,lfte- liM Brow Pencil •ncf ar.rv N•tvr•t Brutll On Brow. S-concf LR1lln INI • Non-Smt•r M•sctr•. f6r 1111 lln!1hl>19 IOlf(ll • fnO\llh 9lowh1t ...,,,,. ·c1u r, 1hl.,'irntrl~f Celor. WH,,t,f A llE•V Tt~VL NE'>.,. VOl.1111 T "' lo:ty lo me 100• 'f'GU 1'11 \lt t •woy, w•n"a It -n111tlnQ w>1-1 I~ l<tl 4./'d llO'I JO f,j~! !L cen t tJ. ,, . ,l.1 'fQU• M £itLE HO!tM,t.,N (01· ElJ~lLVDlO w UL IUC.h-10°"' The DAILY PILOT and Orancae Coast Colle9e Invite you to '90 by armchair' to beau· tlful British Columbia via another prOCJram in tht Evening College Lecture Series. FREE SEE THREE BEAUTIFUL COLOR MOTION PICTURES WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19 • 8 P.M. NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 15th & IRVINE, NEWPORT BEACH -with ~enl ly ,-rtfler t1111-.....,.--fnin1 !lavorrng of that trend. rat her Ui• Y•u• 110e11"••n c i."'•• ~ than using ~ hra1·y f'lhni l' l•lt~ '~ ~,. •o• v-.ut .... ~ •t11i.v• ll'lt• NEW MO~E Bf.A.VT!PlJL YCllJ'I! Get Your Free Tickets at Orange Coast Area Trav el Agencies , DAILY PILOT Offices, Qranqe Coast Evening College Office Available Startinq Thurs day, March 30 h.it i.d." l •••I of fl•~tler oe1n1mtt11. ii! E Urn 51 Ce,1• Mt,,, C•h! '2611, '' •tnd ill 111 olhrr wo1·cl.~.1 1 ·~ no longrr l Yev• q"'-''>flt'd ~ "In ·· lo be far-out. ''C _ _;. _____ _:_ ____________ j l\l::;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:~'I -. Near1 y Ev c1·yo1\e Liste ns to Landers ) , • • •• • r (· ~ h ,. ~ ~ I ~· ' • I ' • ' ' ' • I I l I ' ! ' • • l • l. ' . ' • • ' ' • j s ' l • • ~ -{- i. 1 . :· ·, ' . ' '• I· ,_ • • .. '· • ' ' . • ' • r --' ' . • ' • • ' • .. ,. 18 DAILY PILOT Monday, April 3. 1972 • . ·. I ' I I: . • . ~ ' ) • Batter Up Called N~tional Ocean Vie\v Little League is ''pitching" for ils annu~J Batter Up Dance to take place Saturday. April 15. in Carpenters Hall . Hu nt1~gton Beach. The fund· raising event \viii feat.ure ~us1c by the Dean \Var\\'lck Trro. Ready for "- a \Vinnin g event are Mrs. Dennis Craig Oeft ) and !\1rs. Jerry Evans. A . Diary of Remarks Wives Hate to Hear By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP ) Remarks that every doctor's · wife gets tired of hearing: •·I hate to call you at home, but would you mind waking up vour husband and ask him ~·•hat to da about my husband's hiccups ? They're keeping me awake." "Is that a new mink coat you're wearing?" "Oh.· you lucky woman. I certainly envy you. I lhink vour husba nd is-·lhe most 8.dorable man on earth.'' "Does you r husband !ell you eve rything about his patients? I hope nol in my case." J ANE CRA IG July Rites In Offing ~Ir anci ~lrs. E. F. Craig of Corona dtl Mar have an· nounced the engagement of their daughter. Jane Cr aig to Steven Dobbie of Newport Beach. A .July 1 wedding is being planned in the Community Church Congregation, C.Orona del 1'.lar. ~1 iss Cr11ig is a i;irr1duate of Corona del 1'1ar High School ;inti attends Orange Coast Ciollege. Her fian ct , ~n of f\.1r.s. "\Vha t's Or. Uptight ' s bedside manner like Y.'hen it's bis ()WO bedside?'' "Helene. you knew "'hat a doctor's 'vi.fe's life \\'Ould be like when y()u married me. Af· ler all vou "'ere a nurse for four y~irs." "Helene. why are you so in· sanely jealous of my female patients ? I don't even know the color of lhat "'Oman's eyes. The only thing about her that interests me is her left kidney, and I'm getting pretty bored with thal." "I hate to bother you at home. but my son just swallowed his top." "Would you r husband be an· noyed if T tried In reach him at lhe country club? He see ms to spend more time there than at his <Jffice." morning ?'' "All in all. you made a real good catch, Helene. You couldn't have done much be t· ter even if you had married an orthodontist." "Do n't you worry a Jltl!e bit ;about the 4>0ssibility of him bringing home some kind of strange disease sometime?" "They alwa ys say they have to stay late at the hospital. Helene, but if you ever spent ~ny nights in a hospital yourselr. how many doctors did you see hanging' around.?" "I !hink you and your hus· band both show a lot of tact, dear, by buying a new car on· ]y every other year. You know what people say." "I hate to call you at home, but my husband and I had a small quarrel, and now his nose is bleeding and -. " "With so much flu around I guess you and Vernon will be able to afford a winter as well ...,...,,...., ... -_,,,,""'::'""~'!Ill as a summer vacation this year." "So you're the httlc girl who married Dr. Vernon Uplight. I always wondered \.\'hat he'd fall for.'' "Dearie. your h usba nd keeps telling me t h e r e 's nothing wrong Y.<o:th my blad· der. but I think he's just trying to bolster my ego or sornethi ng . Could ynu a ~k hjm "'hat's really "Tong \vith my bladder, and let me knO\\' co n· fidentially?" "•Your husbA nd is on ly nn in· lrrnist. 1'1ine's a surgeon. They're much ha rder to \j\·e "'llh.'' "I hate to bother you at h<>me after midnight. but I Just looked in the mirror and my face seems swollen. Ask your husband if a woman can get. mumps after 50." "Helene, I have to treat homeJy women all day long . \Vhy should you resent the fact my secretary happens to look -like a beauty prize-winner? Actually, except for the In· teresting enlargemenl of her . mamn1ary glands and i:in overdevelo~d gluieus max· imus. she Is almost totally uninteresting, m e d i c a 11 y speaking." 1 SUSAN McDUFFIE Augus t Rites Set . l\1 r. and 1'.trs. \Villiam A. 1\1cDuffie o! Newport Beach have announced the engage. ment of their daughter, Susan Caro:yn J\.1cDuffie to H. John .,\1cnny. son or l\1r. and Mrs. J~. J . i\1eany of Newpor t. The bride-to-be is a teacher In the Cypress School District and h~r hance is a ~1udent .11 t !he l.1n1versity or ~thern California Dental School. Fund -raising · Events Fill Calendar Spring conferences i re scheduled by Orange Coast clubs for next "·eekend al ong with luncheons, fashion sho\\'S and dinners. ner of the Orange County Stanford Alumni honoring the Slaniord University ten ni s team . Stanford Alums f\·lr. and i\·Irs \Villiam L. Pereira Jr. "'Ill open their Laguna Beach home for the Saturday. APrll 8. buffet din· Team members will pla.Y in a benefit tournament Sunday, AprJI 9, al the Park Ne'tl1port apartme nts. Funds raised "'ill go toward a Stanf o rd scholarship for an Orange County student. ---- Le agu e to Spon so r Free Hea ring Tests ~·ree hearing tests for children from 6 months of age to 6 years \viJ I be gi ven \Vednesda v, Thursday an'd Friday, April 12· 14, in th e' John '!'racy Clinic Demonstration 'Home, Costa J\1esa. · Sponsoring th e screening is the Ne\vport Beach Chapter of the National Charity J,ea gue . Parents \vishin g lo take advantage of the opportunity may cal! the demonstration home at 642·2275 bet\veen 9 a.m. and 2 p.m . J\·Ion· days through Fridays to make an appoint· ment. , . • ' •• Nu rse ry Wtstminster Nursery School graduates will go back to school Saturday, April 8. from 9:30 to 11 a.m. Enrollment is being taken !or the fall sessions. Children from age 2 years, nine months to 5 years are ac· cepted. Jane McDonald has further information. Toastm istress Council 6 , International Toastmistress Clubs w i 11 gather at 9 a.m. Saturday, April 8, in the Greenbrier Inn. Garden Grove for a • C<lm· bination spring conference and speech contest. Alli You Ever Wanted to Know About Toastmistress "'iii theme the event. A representative will be chosen to C<lmpe~e in the Golden Desert Regional Conference June 2-4 in Las Vegas. AFS Honeycutt. La gun a Clu b f\.1rs. Ann l\1arie J\1iller of Los Alami tos, a mezzo· soprano. "'ill e n I e r t a i n members of the La g u n a Beach Woman's Club during 12:30 p.m. luncheon Friday, April 7, in the Clubhouse. Prior to the entertainment. members will vote on whether the club is to remai n in the Na tiona t--P-'lt-el'Tt lo n of Woman's Clubs. Wom en Vot ers League of \\'omen Voters of Orange Coast will register· \'Oters Saturday, April 8, the deadline fo r ihe June primary. Locations include I s I a n d House, Fashion Island, 1 to 3 p.m.; Sav-On and Thrifty drugstores, El Toro. 1 to 3 p.m. and 2 to 4 p.m., and Alpha Beta, Laguna Hills, I to 3 p.m. AA UW· California Stale Div ision, American Field Servi c e Southern District. American ;1:dult group members for Association of u n.i v e r s i t 'y U~iver.sity High School, Irvine, Women~ will 0 ff er a "'ill bid for treasu~es under L e g i s I a t i v e Processes t~e gavel of professional auc-\Vorkshop on Saturday. April t1oneer Sherman Crane ~tur-B, from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at day, !f 8, .at 8 p.m. tn the_Golden_West -.College, Hun- schoo s mull!purpose room. t' 1 Beach Fo ign desserts will be ing on · served. Tickets are available S B . b , from Ceil Davies, Kathy t. a r a ra s Huet t ! a nd Barb a ra Rue~ela1-fodeisthetheme as • ' .. chosen for the seventh aMual fashion show of the W<Jman'1 Council of St. Barbar a •t Catholic Church, Santa Ana, for Saturday, April 8, at 11 :30 a.m. in the Alrporter Inn. Proceeds will be put Into a building fund . Hospital Gift South Co a s t Communit y Hospital's Auxlliai:y preliented ., a check for $45,000 to th& hospital's board of directors, realized from ils fund-raisin g events. Receivi ng the gift from Mr!!. ~;lyrth M a I a b y , chairman, Silver and Gold Cha pter. and f\lrs . Stina \Volf, Auxiliary president, were Ha r o Id Osborn, chairman of the finance committee, and Victor c. Andi-ews, preside11t of the board of directors. The hospital auxiliary ha! pledged $150,000 over a three· year period. Boo sterettes UC! Boosterettes w i I I sponsor1 a round robin br idge tournament in April , May, June. September and October, culminating with a November 1 awards luncheon in the home of Chancellor and Mrs. Daniel G. Aldrich Jr . \Vomen I ntereste d tn participating may call Mrs. Bronco Millich . ' ·• • ~ pack of 10 Happy Day ~~!!~~,c!ass. " Your kids will think th ey're fun . And no wonder -each Happy Day Lunch Bag has a smili ng face that says "Have a Happy Day " -to everyone around. Pick up your free pa ck of 10 -2 wh ole weeks of se nd -off smiles-now at Standa rd Statio ns and almos t all Chevron Dealers. And when you run out, don 't let the smiles stop--co me bac k and pick up another 10-pack of Happy Day Lunch Bags. Off er may vary at participatin g Ch evro n Dealers. • -Chevron at Standard Stations andMnosta11 Chevron Dealers • -Janet Dobble ol Lake Tahoe ind Timothy Dobble ol Tustin, Is a graduate ()( Cd~S and occ. "\Voman to ··wnman, could you ask your hu!band whether my husband made a n y remarks about me when he talked to your husband this They wUI exchange vows i11 AUl\ISI. 1---..,-----.:.--------------'------------------------- ) • I • .. • TOMGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS ABC (7) 8:00 -''Plimpton al lhe Wheel." Re- po_rter and intrepid amateur participant George Phmpton gets a first hand look .at men and ma- chines pushed to the limit of their capabilities ill t' t\vo maj~r auto racing eve nt s. NBC 141 8:00 -"Laugh-In." Raquel Welch guest~ as a Foll\es showg_irl,_a \vaitress an_? an Army · recruiter. f\1artha ~1itche0 also Clrops 1n on the Ro,van and ~1artin gang. (' CBS 12) 10:00 -Sonn y and Cher. Daylime televi S'ion gets its lumps as Jean "Edith" Stapleton t and h:like "flilannix" Connors join the Banos for a musi ca l comedy spoof. • : J(J IJ ~9) 7:30 -"A-1oulin Rouge." Jose ~~errcr ), stars i\S the French artist Toulouse Lautrec in th is l 1952 biographical movie. ~ KCET (28) 8:00 -"The Andersonville Trial." r This Emmy \\•inning drama from Jiollywood Tele· vi si on Theater is based on an actual \var crimes trail of a Confederate officer after th·e Civil War. r. I ... ~--- • ,~ • .. ·--..• ., . ' ! TV ·DAILY LOG · Monday Evening APR IL l men and m1thines, both ~ushtd to lhe hm11 al their tapabili!its. fe1: ... lured are t.,..o major r1cin1 even1s: fht ltlhan Grind Prix 1t Monll, i nd l~e Meiican 1000 •t 81)1, Calif. 6;001J 111 NIWI Jt rry Dunphy Cl) l ill Huddy Rtpo rt 0 llNIC Ntw1 Tom Snyder D N11n B1nli, Sthubtck 0 (I) Wikl Wild Wtll @) ltlC Ntw1 m TH ninbtont1 CE I Dre111 If Jttnnlt ~fill f'tlJiloVM llOlflP~J @D Hodrepod,. Ltdtt €E1 Nolldt10 34 m D111rt Report ®) MfJbtFIY RFll (D Tht Yir1ini1n Et! (ill Sptci1I of the Werk '1h1 Andersonville Tri1I" Tht Emmy .,..in· n1n1 Hcltywaod Ttlev1s1on Ttlt1!rt prod uc1ion cl Saul Lev1tt'1 powerlul drama based on the aclu1I w1r c1imu !1irJ cl a Confedente olhter lcl!awinR the CiYil W11. @II La R1cogid1 ai)Nint l :lO IJ DEIUT Foru111 1:101in1 A new bol· ln1 show from the Forum wi1h 1111 ·.1r1a!esl n1mes in the fi1fttin1 world scheduled le 1ppe1r. mu A~ (i) Ntws Jim Hawthorn1 1:3D O Movie; (Zhrj "Comt •lld Get Ir (1~v)' 'J~[d.,..1rd Arnold, Jotl Mc· C111, r11nce1 r1rm11. D Movit: (CJ (90) "IJt, l )'I' l irdie" Par! l (mus) '63-Dlck Vin Oyke, Ja net l e11h. P1ul Lrnde. Bobby Rydell. Ann-M1r1ret. A reek 'n rcll si1110 ii about to b• dr1fted so his m1n11er s11rts 1 pubhc11y ploy which mikes him the house 1ueit al 1 sm1U town funjly th1! ices 111 out 10 1ive him 1 b11 1end off. ,:00 8 (]l Here's luq (R) Mike Con- nors 1s Joe Ma nnix 1nswers Lucy's call for tltlp when ihe stumbles on the 1deMity cl two b1nk 1cbber1. 0 m NBC Monday Movie: (C) (2ht) "A HowliAg kl tllt Wttds" (R) (mys) '71 -B1rb1ra Eden, Larry H11man, John Rubinstein, Vert Miles. Liu Croc ker (Miss Eden) U· turns 10 he1 hlh tr's lodge in • small Nevada town with pl1ns lo d1¥crce her husband (Hai;m•nl and linds tilt people 1ctin1 st11n1tly · cool and iecrelive. (I) C:IS News Willer Cron~ilt @) Th1 Mt1.1St FlctO'J' m Dodpr Dur.Out (!) Mllltlf tllCI ttlt Pl'9ftm1 ED ltyn Cllln Coo~s m T111sur1 . ff,mn Acre1 fJ'f31@ IE ABC Moaday Movit: . (C) (2br) "s.okf' (wes) '66--fei.s P1rke1. Diana Hyl1nd. Katy Jut11h, A wild bl1ck st1llicn is 1radua1tr broken In by 1 new wr1n1ler. The stallion esupes 1f1er tr1mplin1 !ht l'!r1n1ler's brother who hid been beating him spitelully . CE El P1ol, S.gi11rto &') Vlctoril l1111t1 Show 1:55 m hllfr llMbttl Ood1er1 ~S. 01kl1nd 7:00 IJ CIS NIWI W1Jt1r Cronkltt Cf) AIC ['tining N11n 0 m NIC Nrw1 John Ch1ncellor (JJ Tlllttl or ConMqUtftCIS ([) D11pt1 ®J Movie: (2h1) ".36 Haun" (d11) '64-James Garner, Rod J1ylcr. al Do-Rt-Ml ®, Mtrit: "Tt EJch His Own~ m N1lachl m Tiit Pt11u1d1f1 !l·JD IJ ([) Dari1 Day IRt Kly 81ll1rd 1s An1ie Pallucci 1tcG1Jtp1nln: Doris en 1n undercover 1ujanmetlf It 1 swank spi to maintain.· aumm anm Q W11ar1 MJ LIM? O Ac1111·lZ on the wile cl a $00n·l~be-released 1 ID I Dnam ti l11nnlt £D HlltMJ ti Art fE Unt P1111rit tn ti Camino 9 Filt11: (C) "ll1ck Widow" m Merntntos Musiu l11 7:15 m RIJ ~urr• canvicl. , O Mews Watch Jahn Full¥· (!) Newt Hu1h Williams al LI C1ll 10:00 U 00 Sonny alld CMr (R) Jttn Staplelon and Mike Clln110rs join In tar • musical camedy look at day· time televi5inn. 7:30 IJ S!llMI Up i nd Cllttr Guest l~ O Nnn Geora1 Putnam Joly Bishnp. O Movit: (2lfih1) "Thi Pewn· O Dr. Simon LDdit "De1th h 1 broke(' (dra) "65 -RGd Stai1er, W1nduer" (R) Nu111 Louise Wynn's m Newi Pete Miller lormu beau re1pp11r1 oflerln1 Mrs. m Dracnet Wynn hopt !or rentwinr their old s:l Rincan Araentino rom1nc1. Hcw~er. Dr1. Stlltfl i nd 10•30 O y T to Til• Bick Loc~t 1s~rt11n lh_•l !ht termer · 6) B~l~rec:~y Sllow beau htsn t lone lo hve. ~,..,Fil Od l~l (I)T1Ttlltll1T1ulh a:i ~ l m . YUIY ([) I Dr11111 ol Jtannit i.I) LI Slnt1n1c1 0 Miiiion $ Movit: (t) (2~r) ll:OD fJ (i) €?) New1 .. Mtull11 Ro1111 .. (du ) ·~2 -Jose O @l m NtWI Ferrer, Clllettt March1nd. Zs1 Zs• O Robert l Dorn1n Stiow G1bCN". Tht story al the Ille, loves @ M1r1lul Dillcll and tra1edies lactd by !ht lamou1 0 @ (i) News 1rtist. Toulouse l1utrec. m Truth 01 Consequencts @I Ltrs Makt • Dtal l!J Fullion1 in Sewin1 illJIEJ (}) :"'1r.:~! lrt 11 :10 (!) Movie: "Tht Ovtrl111dt11" (drl) In • ....,.. I '46-Chips Rafferty ED Cilywltclltrw ' m LH9t 11:30 fJ Cil cas Litt Mt'l'lt: (C) "Madt s:l Ml1uelit1 V11dtz Show In P1rls" (1om) '6~Ann·Mar1ret, Q) M111tr1p Lollis Jourdan. Edit Adams. 0 @) m lobnny Car!en D1vid l :OOIJ (J)C111111111l1 (R) "tu~t" Mor· E1tinbe1g is subslitudt l\ost, Vir1in- 11n Woadw1rd pltys 1 wounded aut la Graham rueSls. law on !ht run w~o Is try ing ID find 0 CIJ (jJ (E Dick tantt Harry lh• d1u1ht1r ht d1!trttd 14 ye111 Hapin 1uests. t1rllet belort ht ditt• m To Tell tht Truth 0 9 fD l•u1h·ln R1qu1I Welch OJ MCNit: "Badman's Counlry" guests IS I Folllts 1hcwgi1I, I ""Iii· 12:001J Movlt : "0111111 ZOM" (mys) '51 1ess 1nd 1n Army ucrulter. Mirtha -Hurh Beaumont, Edward B1ophy. Mitchell, .,..ift ol. l~t lormer U.S. m Movlt: "The l11tleol M1lln11n" Attorney Gentrtl, ts 1 spec ial cameo (com) '51-Robert Cummin1s. O ~~~PTON VS BAJA' 12:30 O Mo¥i1: "l1tak1h1111ch" t1dvJ '6J G~ORGE DRIVES THE -Eric Schuman, Marla Kerber. *SCORCHING DESERT 1 ,ooCIJ OO Cll~"'"' ROAD RACE! TONIGHT 1:306 M1ofit: "Sbh 0tp-.rt•111t Filt D (})III m I I JI Cle• I rli11pton! # 646" (adv) '4~Willi1m Lundi· Al tM Wt111/ Gtorr• Plimpton, ,,. 11n, Vir1ini1 Bruce. portU 1nd Intrepid 1m1!1ur p1111· 3:00 f) Merit: "Ctlt Younttr, Sun- cipanl, gets 1 linlh1nd look 11 liPltl" (Wts) 'SI-Frank lovtlor. Tuesday DXYTIME MOVIES, t:OO m "TM Conlu11 lrothui" (dra) '41 -Dou1l11 f1!rb1n~1 Jr., Ruth W•rrltk. t:JO D (C) '1ltt Sins et Rtch1I Cede" Colle!. (dra) '6l-.\n111 DleklniOn. Ptlu finch. 10:00 (fl "fnndl C111 \I Wtst Point" (com) '$4-Don1td O'Connor, Lori NelJOn. ll:JO 8 .. Dr11111 Sir!" (dt1l '4&-lltltJ Hutton. Mttdon1ld Cll'IJ'. "Mell, Inc." (mys) '41 -Robert Lowuy, Anne Gwynne. l :DO O .,Htnnibl!" (dn) '60 ....:. Vlc!Of Mature, Rill G1m, m (C) "Jlinm If Kllim1nl1re" (•dv) '&0-Robert fl)'lor, Antllonf Ntwley. 3:00 Cl) (C) "Fo1mr My lon" Part I ltom) '62-Romy Schntldtr, .Kiri Bohm. ®I (C) '.'l!!_il!ftoy """" Slol!" Cone!. (bloJ 'S&-Stm Allen, Oo11111 Retd. N11111 If tilt l111t. 4:00 IJ "Tho Ill Kllllt .. (dtl ) 'SS.-.jltl P1l1nu. Rod Sttip r. 1:!0 CD s. .. a 10 All lllq, I • I SCR Chekhov Dra111a • 'Vanya' Spl~·ndidly Staged By TOM TITUS Of tl!t 01Hw P'll91 lllfl "UNCLI VAN YA" A or11m.1 l>Y "'nron crw~"""'' alrt(I~ by 01•1• fmmtt. dtt•(IMG ti>' lloo/'I• Kl~ litoyct. U11n1lng 01110., bv RC>tlfttld ll'OGJ., c01•umt Ml•9" by llttlt Ntt l, or19ll'ltl "'""( by John Cll1•l,.1 Wtl(l'I, ptf11fllfd by Soi.Ith (0111 11.tl)frl"''I Tl'lur~tvl lhr0V9h S1ma1y1 11 I a'(loc~ ..,n111 Al)l'll :rt 11 "'" 1111ro $1111 ll!e1- 1er, l.J, NIWllOfl fllvd ' (0111 Mttl . Rnt•va!i0111 616-T:JIJ • Tl-ti! CAST Ufl(ll V1nv1 Oon TIKI!• ' is projected "'ith practiced sharing \~anya 's ftlnui but not skill and control, establ ishing his: dN>lre. a n'ood lhut represents tX• The heady role of the. )'Oun~ 1re1ne borrdom an:t frustra· d0<;lor v.ho fears lntrllectu ul lion wilhou l elicit\ng those erosion 111 his rui,til' selling is s;i n1e tralt.~ in it s aud ience given 9 solid, subdued in- terpret11iot} by Jlal J.1111clt1n Jr TME SCREEN EXPLODES WI TH I XCIT!MIHTI "B!LLY JACK" A S.or(k Fer Ptoce -Also-- r .. rl• Tkrlll1 1'1 "THE HOVSE OF DARK SHADOWS" W illianis' PerioclicaJJy, auy serious professional reptrtory th<!at~r must pay the proper homage tn those play .... ·righls of ages past 1vho have left their iln· print indelibly on the dramatic art. Shakespeare and · Moliere are t\VO v.·hose names come 1nosl inst.anlly to mind ..:.. a third is Anton Chekhov. O• A1l•ov fMt LtndOn J r, Sonle , Cll•"t Ptlcll This is-no in e a n 11c· Cherie Patch as th<' plain girl ' con1pliishn1ent, since Ch('khov '''ho IO\'Cs hiin but <·annot v•as 001 the \rorld's n1os1 ex-deelnr·e liersr\f Is pai nfullv J0011 l11111•tt- h·1 · \ ' ht .i Jonotlr1a11 ffid 1 araung P i'l)'\vrig u n 11 pret ise In anothrr C'.\l"C'lll'fll \Yhat Shakespeare y;•as to England and Moliere to France. Chekhov y;·as to the Russian theater -a pioneer y;·hose s!yle y;·as so pronounced it became a catch"·ord in the \\'Orld's theatrica l vocabulary for all time. \V hile Chekhov is regarded as Russia's greatest short story wr ite r. H ls his plays whieh have gi1·en him his foothold on the history of drama. Yt11n1 lt1llt JOl'lfl Stt~brl11i:av ....... Mlchatl Owtiu M1ri11• P1! 8•cwn '"Vany~" for all its inherent r lttli Color-ltcttecl CPGJ skill ln playwritinf.! and acttng Pt'r orinance, ~:G~;;::~:=;~=~ Ne1v Play Mixed Ba g By WILLIA:\1 GLOVER NE\V \'ORK t AP l -Ten- nessee \Villiams broods In his new play. "Small Craft \Varn- ings." aboul a batch of human \\Teckage ill-met in a honky· tonk bar. The familiar fervent pity and potent lyricism burst throu~h fitfully. but too often !he drama \\'hich 011ened Su'n- day night at off.Broadw.ay·s~ Truck and \Varehouse Theater is n1erely fe ve rish and, alas,· banal. 'fhere ar£> recurrent traces of earlier-\\'illia1ns heroes and heroines arnon~ the derelict squad who squabble. soli!o- qui7.e and nun1b!y ab~orb a thematic '"Souveni r" from a jukebox fiddle in-sad regret for lost hope. Of Chekhov's four most note\\·orthy plays, hC probably will be remembered least for '1Uncle V.anya ," a mentally ex· hausting chronicle of boredom ~nd despai r. It is like a geyser which bubbles \\•ith inner turmoil for a time, erupts in a wltd fren1.y, then settles back the \1·ay it was be fore. South Coast Repertory, v.•hich has given Orange Coun· ty the atergoers superb help- Telr•o•n A•• Kov1t1 1i: M1rl1 S1undr1 Mlll'l~W\·DffCOI\ Wotklnlln RttJ1nala ROOI< i n~s of Shak.es!K'arc and riloliere in lhf' past. turns its ;ittenlion to ·chckho\' \\'ilh a faithful ;ind ouilr pra1sr11·orth~' production of "Uncle Vanya." Taken for \\•hat it is. a pro- fessionally produced rc>presen· lt1li'1n of the life ChekhO\" ex- perienced and \\TOie about at the turn of the century before the Ru ssian rl-vo!ution, it is an exceptiona l lesson in the hi story or drama. The confl icts in a Chekho- vi an play are 90 percent in· tcrnal. a fa ct thaf ~ reQuires tr·emendous t h e t1 t r i c a I d is c i p I i n e . Under the meticulous direction of Da vid ~mmes. the SC!l con1panv cx- hibits this l'irtue glo11•ingly in ''tincle \'anya." Inner torment 'Picture Show' T 01Js List cannot C'{)lllptiri' 10 th!:! t'lcc· f1at Dro\i·n is fl u 1 r t l ~ 1 trifying past SC H produ('tioti~ 1nernor:.iblc 1r1 lht· 11111101 of n1ore eonten,pornr~· \'inlti ge ''h:11·11ct1~· uf an f'!<l1•rl~ but such as "Indians" or •·Onr \I t~{· tnrznhrr ,,r th i• FIC'\I Oi·rr the (;u c k oo·s h<)u<>rhnld. 11 hdt• \rl l\1us11k Nest.'" It is a cerebrnl dranH•. cio:C<'l~ 1n lh1• ulilit •. n1!1• 111 a and on that basis it succeeds haplr~s \ 1~11or Th •' 1·1 n · I !'iril'rnhl(' t,1J1•111 s 1oJ ~ 11uu!r,l n1tghti y. ~'larhc 11 " ll;•ru·ou <l'l<l li"'c!i11.1'd Ernn1es has J:alht•rfd his Hook . d1:-.p!:t\ f' I i.1 P"·1h. ,.r. strongt'St company nlemtJc rs rit·;cru·v ill .. ,1111111.r !·::11•1h"' for this labor of artistic IO\l\ :1111\ ··T,,111111\',' tt''-Jlf't'!ltl.'\ and all come of! qu11e nd-lll'C' \1rl\1;t!l.1 ll H~l!'d 111 Ill mirably, Yet the 1nost i1n· .<>I"..: ll l f It' a t1 I :i:'.,l\!1\llll'!l!:,. pressi \·e men1ber· of 1hc l'<l!SI nllliougli Hn·ik's ,.111,11·t11t1\l 'lll has only be.·n seen onrC' hcfort• Ii" dr!>i~nrr nf 111,. s;uhrl tri: in a meaD'er role -~tich:11•I ~ ltghllt\!~ t'flt•t'(:' l" ,! l'"llllL'il· 0 11•ens, 1vho cnacrs the trot· 1•11JS ll!'C' I .rhcty. caust ic p rofess n r , S eb . k 0 I ~IH't'l,d <·1·1110·.·1\ '•'l'\'l.·111,1· rr ria ov. 11·rns 1r111g~ th is ac:idernic purnsite Ill lilt· 1uu .. 1 hi• rr .. 1•:·1 :•d lnr )'.('! ,,·ith exccptionnl skill and l'O!I· clt·~1i.:nrr 1:11!u11s .. n 1!11\\'t" :111d centration. emc>rginl! as 1hf' lus 1nd~1 ... 1r1c11'' 1·11·11 1•.h·1 h~tll' play 's strongest a('1or in " (:1,ht,inr d a Ill~, 1~•111Plt•\. 111. potentially Y:ea k roll'. tr11·;1t<' "l'l"tfs 111 l •Ur ~1·n ,.. ·~·· ~l;10~111i.: :u ra:i f,,r 'l11•I" Don ·Tuche, an St:H r1nn~'L'r' \an~ ;1 ., T ht" S~ '!i h;u·h t::' I' gil'l'S a polished pe1'f,1r1 ua11l'l' . h . I r ~·c·111t11gt•n! IS ('\11•11111'1! \!I 11·· in t e tit e role o a rnan gr11p· l u P 1!~ :ts 111111·:1 :1~ I hi• ing for the life \1·hit'h ha1; passed him by and exploding llCrfnrnlt'l''l lhrn1~,,l\·~ '· '"Ev eryone needs somet hing beautiful in th e course or a lifetime to save the heart fro in corrupt io n .'' says one character in a line which tells the message of th e play. Of Press Group int o aln1ost hon11t·1d;1l f11 r1 "l 111·1t· \ an1:1" 11)!1\' 11111 A d "·hen 11·hat liule ht' h<1s i~ hl·1·11n1e th(' n·r,t b11\ · o[f1L't' ,.,31' _ S --1hr.c~ Eq_ually splendid 1·han11l11111 11[ S.111th C'i~::st "' js the portrayal of ''clfnn. 1ht• --1trprrtnr~--:-hu! Htt-tn"1,lu1·11on girl he covets a11•k\\'ardly. by goes a long 11 :1y to11ar<l fulfil!· Participati ng in the ruefully sq ualid pavan e are a blowzy fl.1other Coura ge s ee k i n g solace from passing males: a palbetical!y rn indless trollop: a· quack doctor who soaks up brandy bet11:een abortions: the inevitable sweet bird stud . and ;i pair of very ungay homosex- uals. Perhaps v.•lt h more c<1n- dor than earlier, the plaf\\·right faces this aspect of disturbed existence. r..1E\V YORK rU PI 1 -''The hesl, .su pporting actress for Leslie Jones. \1·ho paces th~ n1enl of the theater's artistic Last Picture Sho11•" took !op '"Pla7.a Suite.•' Peter _s_ta~g~e_l_ik_e_a_,_·a~g~ed--t~1g~·r_cs_s_._o_b_l~ib~''_1_io_n_s. ______ _ honors as the best English Bogdanovich 1vas nanled best !~---~------------------­ language fil m of 1971 in the direc tor for "The Last Picture 'I AJ !-A1nerican PrC ss Show.'' I Associate s' 14th Annual l\1oi·ie 1'he nl usic a1vard for best Be!>L5 Awa rds. ~01~g '~ent to the !\·!Ci\ol fil~ George c. Scott wns namer! ::s,haft" for Issa:, Hayes the best actor for his role in 1 hen1e from Shaft. '"Hospi tal" and Jane Fonda 1----- Each in turn re\'eals inner turbulence and yearnin'!s as !he lighting b~, John Gleason adroit ly dims the surroundin~ company in Fred Voelpel"s ultr.1dilapidated ~aloon setting. was cited as the best 2ctrcss ~ for her performance in fl • 67l-6260f "Kluie." (I .... 11' The av.·ards \\'ill be •• presented at a reccp_lion · JtQs IE.,, c.111 jj wy, \Vednesday. The AH-Amcrtcan ~ COAONA PEL MAil Press Associates is a n •==~-=~ Under the direction of Richa rd Altman . .the pla yers sustain an ex q u i s i t e I y sensitive mood. orga ni7.aliofi of 37 forc>ign and domestic publicat ions. The best su pporting actor aYi'ard 1vcnt to Leonard Frey for ''Fiddler on the Roof": !\laureen Stapleton was named ---..:.":11'..1' STADIUM · I .'1;, ·~ ---~= SfADIUM ·2 ',.' ·~-~ ---':;'.;£} SrADtUM ·J w, ·~ ---::;1C'li SrAotUM ·t ·'•' ·~ NllmlP~l~d For Be•! Actor GfClrg1 c . Scon "HOSPITAL" !GPJ Also • "THIE PAllTY" IE•clu•ive Oring1 Co1mrv ll eservtd ~'111 Engigemtnl NOm!nil«I tor I Ac1domy Aw.•rd1! "FIODLEll. ON THE ROOF" Clinl E•tl.......:I "OlllTY HARRY" 1111 • Hilarious Com..iv Mii "SKIN GAME" "50METJMIES A GREAT NOTION" (GP) plus Clinl IEiS!weod "PLAY MISTY FOR ME ~ "Tllf FrtMJ'I Conntc:llon" Ill) "' "V111IS11i119 Polnl" (Il l Cher~ton Ht•llln "THI! TIEN COMMAN OMENTS" AIM J1m11 G~tl't• -"SIJPPOPT YOUR LOCAL GUN FtGHT£;j" THE CAREY TREATMENT "THE CAREY TREATMENT is a fast paced. aclion-packed, f~lly film. II has a wild aulo ride. several spectacularly ex- c11.1ng scenes. a good deal of suspense. and some highly so- ph1sl1cated humor. II also has violence." ·)r1ck Holla11d, The Ne~·porter Ke~'S PETER CAREY,M.U: arrives from theCoast- finds hypocrisy in a big Boston hospital- and a brilliant surgeon accused of abortion that turns to munler. r- l intelitAH. •••t •f ic111tt .-s21.2223 SHOWTIME-1,00 P.M. I 'Con!lnuous llunnlng Sltow Sund1y 2:0~ P.M. loth ltatt"d IGl"I rml'Clltl • • .., ..,._--. G • And WALT DISNEY'S "PINOCCHIO" CONTINUOUS SHOW TODAY FROM 1 P.M . A NEW SURFING FILM ly ROD 5UMPTER "Oceans" Ah o Ployln9 t1"€ whlC€ SE6l1Ch ~ some!imas dangerous olten humorous alw1ys eiclllng quest for a winier parad1sr, 1---c+QiiHi) "THE ANDERSON TAPES" • IPGI l 1q '·"'· S+tn Ctnntry NATIONAL GENERAL THEATR:=S 'rARAMOUNT PICTURES IS PROUD TO AllHOUNCE THE-RETURN Of' INTACT! UNCUT! CONT INUOUS PERFORMANCES l :00-.11 :45 & 1:30 , .. ~~~it AT NEWPORT ~~~it AT BUENA PARK l2:3o-3:3o 7:00 & 10:15 P.M. 7:00 -10:00 P.M. •em'" Ptl~n~~1·1 "MACBETH" !:XCLUSIVa lltl SHORT SUIJECTS All CINEMAS • ) . "Woodstock" <*§fi!,i ) SMOWTIMIS-1110-S :l0~:40 r'1 !GI ....... rt. Al ht•• t•H4,.. ....,., lt li'•p CINIMA,I -'"WU,.L.il WOHW:A tlj0COLA1'1 llACTOlt'f" -I P'.M. Al'IO ' P',M, OHL.Y 8 ACADEMY NOMINAT,IO NS s,c11nd rr,; ,.. "THE DIARY OF A MAD HOUSEWlfE"' ContinuOll1 s ... ndnv lrom 1 Clint Eastwood CirlyHarry "'"'"'~~ ,,.. ,,, ..... -J";:;>(E] '"''""'""'° l GOl.Dfk ..-11 • 11N HU 011-11. ~··••• c•o"' • u • ''''' '"" 1 Sean Connery ·:tamesBond007- .. Diamonds 11t~ Dll'ft'~ r... ., "' On111~ Are rurever ~,. .... WIW'CISNFf-- rnl llEdlmabs • '8 l11'110111511Clll -LQiSBUBY nt.i.coo.00' 2l'!t! 01111ry Hof · lrln Ytme'i "H .000 llAGUll UltOll flll Ill" • • tj 8 DAILY P"OT Game's Living Greats Mourn Fallen Comrade Mates Tell :Of Hodge s' • Final Day WEST PALM O~ACH . f'l a. (API -G;l H'Xlges, 11 l1JV1?t1ble ,c:1ant \\"ho \\'on Dodger fans \rilh his bat and ~let he;1r1s \1'll h his brains. died on Easler Sunda v ~hen he should htH~ bc:t'n In a bascbail. uniform. "Gil w1ts \Yall.in~." said t:ddie 'Yost, 11then tun1hl«I h;1c kwa rds." Yost and ft'l low i'\l'1Y -York J\tets C1laches Rube \\'alkcr anti Joe Pignalano had just finished a {un d<1y on the golt C"ourse Y.ith their n1anagcr. "Only reai:.an ~·e \l'err playing golf." said Pignatanu, "was that the plavers• strike put us ou t of Jiusuif'ss. OtherWise, we'd been over in the \\lesl Pahn Reach .ballpark playing the Atlant a Braves." Yost still was stunned Sunday night as a full moon peeked over the Palm Beach !.Lakes Golf Cl ub '''here tlodg!fS pla yed •bours be fore. , -"Gil had a beer with us," said the man who played Ill years as a major leagu e infiel der. ·•t think he al so ate a piece of cake. Gil , Piggy, Rube and me shot the .bull \\'ith J ack Sanford for awhile." Sanford. a former star pitcher fo r the Ph1l hes and Gian ts. 1s nov.' golf pro al the iflllblic course that sits beside the Ramada Inn oo the Lake. ,. Ifs across the road from.the baseball park. .. HI S FINAL GOODBYE e Hodges and his coaches finally said ~oodbye to Sanford and began v.•a!kin g 4>clck to the mole!. Pignatano. a former catcher. yelled as they pa rted. "Hey, Gill ie, \¥hat time you \\'ant to meet for dinner~·· The husky sk ipper said, "7:30." Hodges. 6-3, 205 pounds with hands like a bear. then dropped to the ground in front of room 1$B. Despite speedy first ai d. the man \.\'ho ·v.·ould have celebrated his 481h birthday Tuesday WAS dead before he reached Good Samaritan Hospilnl. The native of Princeton, Ind., signed with the Brooklyn Dod gers for a $1.000 bonus in 1943 and became a regula r after rt>tu rni ng from the f\.1arines in 1947. .. Hodges was a brilliant first basen1a n J or 1 I seasons in Brooklyn, v.·hich became his permanent home, and \\'ent -west with the Dodgers in 1958 for four more years in a Los Angeles un iform. 'SPARKLING CAREER His playing career sho~·ed a still-stan- ding record of 14 bases-lfJaded hom ers ·:along with l.274 runs ba tted in. a .273 career average seven World Series, eight All-s tar games and a Natio nal League ·record of 370 hon1e runs by a ri~ht·ha nd­ "ed hitter which has since been surpassed by such mod ern sluggers as Wi!lie J\1ays and Hank Aaron. Hodges came home to New \'ork for a l hlrd lime in 1968 to manage the !\let~. a -team more famed for laughs than vic- tories. '· · After a ninth-place finish th e !irsl sum- mer. Hod ges march ed the f\.1els to a ·!tartling NL pennant and \\lorld Series ·thum ping of the Balti n1ore Orioles in '69. · "\\re•re all still a little glassy-eyed .'' ·~1e~s general manager Bob Scheffing said rlate Sunday. "" "Gil ne\'er :ooked better. He had "recoveicrl so n·ell from that allack in Atlanta that n1r.st people had forgotten it." Hodges was felled Sept. 24. 1968. dur inR • !he J\1ets ' fina l ~er ies the yea r before the · \Vnrld Ser ies miracle. Un!il then. he had nevC'r suffered heRrt ailments. "I don't think the pla.ve rs' strike \vas bothering him too n1uch,'' said Vos1, "but ~you ne\'er kno\Y. Gillie \Vas a quiet fello w v.·ho kep t so much inside. His main worry \l'i1S our ball club los ing its edge for the opener.'' • .---~. • ... .-J,;.,, UPI Te!eJIMlo CHICAGO'S NORM VAN LIER (2) REBOUNDS BUT IT ISN 'T ENOUGH AS LA KERS WIN, 108-1 01. Play Again Tuesday L.akers One Win Away From Sweep of Bulls CHI CACO tAP I -The Chica,1?0 Bulls. fre !inR some"·hat spooked. g11ve ii all they had Sunday only to advant e to the brink of elimination by the L.os Angeles Lakers In !he first round of the Na tional Basket ball Assoeial ion playoffs. The Lakers, led by !heir bri lliant bacilcou rl tanJen1 of Jerry \Vest and Gail Goodrich, defeated the inju ry-riddled Bulls 108-101 to make it th re.e straight. in their best-Qf-seven series. The Lakers could make it a sweep "·1th a victory in Chit'ago Tuesday night. If thev fa il. the fift h game will be played in LoS Angeles Friday night. \\fi lh the ir big 'center Torn Boer\\'inkle out for the series 1Yilh a pulled tend.tin in the left knee and the ir r;::reat for"·ard combination of Chet \\la !ker and Bob Love seeing only pRrll in1e ser\'iee because of inju ries, the Bulls still made a game of it. Three tirnes they tr;ulcd by 15 points in the second period but still managed to cli mb inlo the 58-58 lie earl v in the third quarter. The Bulls fou ght back fro m large deficits to close v.·i th in t\YO points late in I.he third quarter and ilga 1n in the fourth quarter. Dul each ti rne !hey threatened, \\'est, \\·ho scored 31 points. or Goodrich, \\'ho finished with 2.1. 11•ould ra lly the J.akers Rhead. \V ilt Chamberlain scorecl 16 and had a joyous ti n1e sl apping \\'O Uld be sh()IS out of bounds. "It wRs a tremend ous effort hy !he Bulls.'' said Los Ange les coRch Bill Sharman. "They ga ve 110 perce nt. \Ve had to shoot "'ell lo 1vin and we did.'' Sharman explained that he relierf'd Goodrich at limes in favor of Pat Rilev 1n order lo stop Norm ran Lier \~lho led.the Bulls with 22 points. "Van Lier kept grtting in the middle." said Sharman, "so 1Ye put Riley in to play hi rn tough. Goodrich is moce offensive n1inded and if he had to pl ay Van Lier tough we \11ere ti fraid he'd tire.'' • Dic k J\·lo11a. coat·h of the Bulls, s;i id "I !old n1y players aiter the game thry ga1·e rne niore than I dese rved. They gave all they had and more." 'Asked about the loss of Boerwi nkle, fl"loUa said ""If anybody kn o\l'S any thing <!bout basketball. thev'd kno\\' \\'hat the Joss of Tom rneans to -us. "Al times we had to have Ln\'e on Chan1berla1n." said i\1ol!a. "lt·s ·nQt fair to ask Love lo play Rgainst \\li lt. In fact, I think it en1barrassed \\'ill a litt le bit. "The series no\r ? "It's been a spooky series for us. Balls not going in 1he bl!s kel. Loose balls going o[f ou r fingers. \\le brell k up R pass and they gel the ball. \\'e block a shot and it goes into thei r hands.·· tr -tr ""'" _, Loi An9tle1 ODU Ch!C190 (1D1/ G ' ' G ' ' (1t~mritrl1on • ... " K•"9 • " " F11., ' .. ' LO\I • '' " GOO!:lncn • 11·12 " l'or1er • '" I 1->1ir1ton • " • '" ' " " /\lcM1l!11n ' "' " Slo•n ' .. " RiitV ' •• • V•nller • " " Tr1rn • .. • w~r~er ' " ' Wl\1 " '·' " Wei1! • •·• " lotl l$ o0 28·31 Illa 70111, •l \!.,2 101 LO• AnQ~les JO 16 15 ii -1~1 c111c1io 2• lt ?6 16 -101 t=o11l•d 0111 -Lo• .1not1e,, H1r•1!on TD!8I foul) -LO! An-.elet i J, Ch•tlQO 23 A!11nr1 flll l 8oHon {1Jl l G ' ' G ' ' 111~ .... ' " " Ha~h<I~ " .., " l'-~·nlnQto., ' , .. " S•nd•r~ ' .. • A11gel Players ' W orki11g Out; Allen Signs :\'ineteen of the 29 pla~·ers on the Cali fornia Angels roster took part jn a f\IO·hnur unsupervised v,·orkout at q. park near Anaheim Sunda y, P la~er representat ive Billy Co"·an sa id the other 10 players did not take part in the \.\'orkout because they chose to sp end Easter at home "·ith their fa milies. All the pla yers are slaying in the area a"•aiting strike developments, he added . Ano1 her 1Yor kout \tith a full com- plement of players v.·as ex peoted today at the park. • SARASOTA . l-'!a . - The Chicago \Vhite Sox ha\'e announ.i;~i!_ the slgning.....Q.{_Dick or "ll ichie" Allen for the highest salary orer R1rarded a \Vhite Sox player. Estimi'l!es of Allen's rich contract ranged fron1 ~!30,000 to "over $125,000.'' Genera l l\lanager Stu Holcomb said Allen signed Saturday after holding out for ii davs. The JO:year·old former N a t i on a I L~ague slugging star said of his signing \\•1 th the Sox. "For the first time in my career I rea lly fe el v.•anted." Allen has been traded three limes in his career . • BOSTO:-J -The Boston Celtics. behind !he stead.v shooting nf John Havlicek and J o Jo \\'hite, opened up a 21-point halftime lead Sunrlav afternoon and coasted to a lJfi-!13 'vic tory over the Atlanta Hawks. taku1 g a 2-1 lead in the ir Eastern Confer ence series of the National Basketball Assoc1a tlon playoffs. -Palmer Blows Fat Lead, s~·1emy • ,. " 1-iu<hOn ' » " ,.,.,,ovi<h 11 1 l-11 " y,.,.,D ' ,., " Giii••"" ' .. ' c~ ... ~~· ' Cn~nty ' W~i!~ " N~l•On ' \Yol''"'""' ' " " " " " " • ~ " " • !\~;\\1 YOR K - The New York Knic ks, po1\·ered by \Va lt Frazier's torrid fi rst half shooting. over\1·helmed !he Baltimore Bullets 110-88 Sunday night to even their Nationa l Basket ball Association Eastern Conference semifinal playoff series at one victory apiece. Blows Stack, Stomps Off GREENSBOHO. NC. 1AP) -George Archer had his car packed . loaded nnd • ready to go. "And then I sa1\• Arno ld mak e that six Rnd 1 ~aid. 'Ooops. let's go get the clubs.' " thr big guy said Rfler subdui ng Tnmn1y A;iron on the second .Jlole of a sudden dea1h pl<i.~off Suncl'~1y for [-the S40,000 first pri1c in Ille Greater C:,Greensboro Open golf lournnrncn\. ~ .Archer. ~ one liir1c ranch hand frnrn .. ,G1lroy. Cahl .. scored his second \'ictpry ;ror the season -b<Jlh in pl11\0H victories ~"<Iver Aaron -v.·hcn he made a routine ,•par three on the 16th h()\C al lhe ;-edge£ield Country Club cnursr. r. The playoff w~s set up "hen Arnold 1-'Palmer ble~ a l\1 0-stro~(' lead 111th three ~holes lo play . Palmer hit his te ~hot into ..-a creek far to the left of the par three ~16t h, :_ He elected to play it out of the shallow f wa ter and did 60. But he sllll h11d a trap f.to negotiate to reach the green 11nd -to r the stunned ama1.ement nf thousands whn !tbraved the wet and cold -dumped the ~l!ttle chip in t~e bunkrr. : Palmer, hlw broad shoulders 11\ump&d. :'his mouth R tight. griln line, bl11stcd out :.;and t~·o-pullcd fron1 eight feet for a tri· ~r.le boge)' tha t knocked him out of the , cad and out o! a (thance At his 61sL ,_career victory. ~ ArChl1r and Aaroo, both early 5tarters, ' had been in ttle clubhouse for ab<>ut an ~ho<1r wh<n It bapp<ned l\Qd watohed the Palmer collapse on teler\S1on ··1 was ready In go." Archer said. ''I had the car pa cked. but I \\'asn'l going to leave until son~eone got in the clubhouse at .13 under pa r'' · Arc her and A11 ron \\ere in at 12 under. Palmer rinishrd II und er, then stormed past ofric iRls. shrug~rQ off nev.•srnen 11nd left the course in1111cdi<itl•ly. The pilot of hls private plane \\'a~ on the run al· !empti ng to keep up ,.,ith hin1. Palmer didn't speak to anyone, Georot A•cllt r l om.,,y Ae-ron AtllOlll P•l"llr J (, '41Ud --Cll• Chi Rortrlgutt O.vt Sf0c,10ll J1,11111, ~e"°' 8•11Ct Cr1mpt0n le"V Jet-lin 8'11) (IUlfl~ 1"11!9 lrwln LOU Gt41Mm Jf•ry McGee A.l'tn MUltr L•b•on 1-l~r•I\ Oc<ttQ ~r'ldtl'\ JDl><I Lister llOd Cur! J•n'I J•m t-O'I eon J~"~·v O~v•O l'.••114m s~m !.<!1·d lle11~~ 1.1.tclltll Al G~·bl•ver M•~I 1-1"'1 1.-~~y l'ltGkin. Lft ElOe• "''llt' °'""ft J.fl W~ll F.11nt. Bt••CI Ml~t lt1414f &ob 5ion• Offfl« 81"1.,, ltf Trt~lnO P~~I H-•n•y see 1,.,1N 11•11<1¥ Wolft llOCI '-111\\tlll ~rt HQtd C:.•Y l ••-TtlTI ~l\tw f 'l'IMl'I 11: l'IO iv~~ f9 /~ St ISO tt ''° .... fS_t!l(I '~ fP'CI ... ,. .... .... 1• Q) '"'" IJ.306 IJ,:00 ll.J(lO 11 "' i L"l IT "1 11,ttJ l !.ttl II.HJ 11."· ti ,,, 11 ••l $1 ••l "·"l f l,lt(T 11.1~ tl.:-04 ti.XI• 11.11ll 11,)Q1 •11 '°I "" :ru ·~· ·~· .. u 70-6166 61-,11 11 ~).61 61 111 69 66..a.10-n1 661f./0.6l-:JJ 61 6• •• 11-111 69 tt ~· 61 )I) 61 ,, 61-11. Jlf 11 65-10.ll-JIS 69 $1 ft.1t-J7S 7(1 ..... 1D--J1' 6• 6169 lil-J/6 .... , l(l tt-116 10-61 •• I0--?16 '111 1161-111 1t .. 11 •• ,,, ... 11.1111-111 ••.• , .... 10-11' ,, 10 n 1•-211 ,, .• , "6'-211 Hf11J l(l.--'71 ... ,, 10·11-271 ro.tt ~••-211 11 65 '1110--'11 tt 11110..i.t-Ut 11 ~'+'~''' ••.•• '1 •• _,,. ..... l)lf-'71 1066 ,., ,,, n 1t6'6t ,,. 1• 6t ell""""" 11 .. 1).61-JeCI , •. ,, 1111-1•0 n ,,.1111 -Ho U II 11 70-a(I (!f.6' 11 1)-JIO 1(1.11~71-1'1 '° 10.1. 61-Jtl IC). .. /)11-HI t"Jt.l l.;'1-HI 11 .. ,.,,.,'-211 11 t$./ .. lf-HI Cnn •llt n 0 •• • Fin-ti • .. I l(rubru1~I • ,, " Total• •• 25-"3 113 To!fll 51 nn rl6 A.llln1• " ,. • ll -llJ 11011on " ,, n ..0 -13' Strike Talk s Ai·e Fruitless NE\V YORK tAP~ -Ba seball com- pl eted its lost v.·eek cnd and !he countdov.'n to opening -or non-open ing -day rt'achc J l1\'0 \.\•ith more n1cr.ti'ngs srheduled tod ay in an att~mpt to settle the pla yers' strike in a pension dispute \1·nh the O\Yner~. "The siluat ion remains the sa n1e," John Gaherin. representing the o"·ncrs Slli d followi ng Sunday's. session with ~l~rvin fl1ille r. executive direclor or the l\1ajor League Baseball Players Associa· li on. "There is no prnwess tov,•.'.lrds a set- tlemen. \Ve will mcel again ~Tonday." ~filler said toda y's get-together prob- ably \\'OUld be enlarged fron1 his head· !~head "'cckend mccti n11:s with Gaherin. "Hc·s been talking, about a fu ller com- n1ittce and 1111 probably hay e one, too," ~lillcr sa id. He added that the wrekend meeti ngs wrrc spent ''rephra sing and rrvic\vlng j)OSitions. Rea l:,v. it's b~Cn r A I h er fruitless. ~1r . Gahr.rin has no authorily to nu~ke anv new offer. He is pretending to barf;:a1 11.'1 The players went on strlkt. Saturda y seeki ng contrlbuUons from the J\vner1 above ttle--ontl·Bnd-on ly $400,000 offer ll)r the ht!a lth care segment of the ptnsion J>.!ckage. • SEAITLE -Lenny Wil ke ns, player· coach of the Seattle Supersonics of the National Basketball AssociRtion. an- nounced Sunday he was through as coach. "I've decided to gi ve up the coaching job and contin ue as a player," Wilkens sai~ The announce1nent came R little more than a \\'eek afte r a meeting in Los Angeles ~·i th Sonics president Si!m Schulman, who had expressed disair pointment in !he sonics' failure to make the playoffs for the fifth straight year and was expecled to discuss Wil kens' status "'ith ·the club. • \Vilkens said there u·ere no hard feel - \ ings bet\\'t'CO him and Schulman and that Schulman had asked h.im to he lp recruit a new coach. • • VALHALLA, N.Y. -Roy Campanella, Hall of Farner in serious condition at Grasslands Hospit11I. has not been told of the dc-Alh of Gi l Hodges, manager of the New York ~1ets .r:ind an old teammate o{ CamoaneJla on the Brooklyn D:>dgers. Pr. W. R. Dalziel said Campanella spent a restful Sunday in the hospitars intensive care unit. "I heard about Hodges' death" OL Dalzie.l said, "but have no Intention Of telling Gampan·cna." Ca mptlnella . SO. has been In the hospital since last Thur sday \Vitfl an em· bolls m on the lung. Hodges. 47. collapsed and died or a heart atlack at West Palm Beach , Fla., Sunday. • • Hodges' Sudden Deat h Saddens Baseball World By Ass0<·ialed Presti Sports Writer ''Oh. no. Oh. no. Oh-,-~ Durocher. mana~er of the Chicago Cu bs, ~ react rd "'lth disbelief when he learned of the death of Cil Hodges. mRnager of the New York ~lets and a longtimt associate in the old Brooklyn Dodger organization . "It's hard lo find wrirds to dtscribe a (!UY as fine as he was -lhcy don't cQflle any finer. both on or off the field,'' said Durocher after learning of Hodges' deat h Sunday. Hod$eS, <17, t~1llapsed and died nf a heart attack after pla.ving golf al \\'esl Palm Bf'ach, Fla .. The sudden dea th prompted rich eulogies and brought deep sorrow to associates and former team· mates. 'It \YRS a tren1r ndous shock and a Ire· n1endous loss ." sai d Durocher. "And Gil's dealh is a tremendous lnss for baseball - he \vas. a great pl.11yer and a great nian11ger." Casey Stengel. wl10 ma na,::ed Hod,ges both as a Dodger and in his fin :il pla) ing days as a Met, sai? Hodges "was always trying to do the ri ght thing on Rnd off the ball fit'ld.'' "It's a terrible time. It 's !c"rih!t! to have the players on slrike and then lose a man li ke Gil Hodges " Reflecting on flodf.:es as ;i pl:Jver. Stenge l said: "fie loo ked like' a dancer at first base. He played \1•it h as muC'h gra:-c as Rny person I e\'er saw.'' _ "li e \\'3S R lerriric fellow' -a high· class, fellow who \\'RS different than most ball pla yers." Casey had high µrai se for 1~odges· .11bilily to fill almost any gap on the ball field." "Thi s man \Yas so good thRI \.\1hen Brooklyn started gelling a rej}utat ion as a good ball club, he beca me an in1ividua! star because he would play .whe~ever he "'as told.'' \Valter Als ton. the cu rrent mana&rr of the Dodgers, sRid: "There "'as never a finer man in baseball. Baseball h~s lost a real big man. It \1•as guys li ke Hodges, Pee \Vee Reese and Roy Campart?lla \11h'l mad e it easY for me by helping a rookie manager when I went to BrooJdyn." Others associatrd v.·ith HO'iges c!l!rir.g his playing career in Brooklyn c:ted a keen personal loss. ··rm sick." said Johnny Pod res. t h~ pitcher v.•ho gave Brookl ~·n its only \\'orld Series victory with a 2-0 ronquest of :i.e New York Yan kffS in 195S, "This ruins everything for me . \\le v.'e re such breat friends and shared so ma ny \\'Onder[;.il experiences. I've never known a finer man.'' No t incidentall;;. Hodges knocked in both runs in that tille-clincher. Duke Snider, cen terfielder on the great GIL HODGES D:idger teams \1•1th Jl ){Jges. recalled a ••great player ... but Bn e\'en j:!reat~r man Hodges' <lc~lh \1·as a "·;irldcnin,a; e:t· perirnce" for J ackie Robin.;')n, anott-rr playe r "'ho sharrd the. glorie'\ of Broo i<lyri pennants. "His deR l)l niakcs OH' rcfle1:t on the great times 1\·e had.'' sairl Hobir.son. "If s terrib:y s;id !osing a gr rat man like Gil." Dick \V1llian1s. manage r of the Oak land A's and a teammate of Hodg4's in lhe early 1950s, ral!erl him ' one of the greatest guys in b;isebal!. r:vcrybody lnv- ed hini. He "'as very easy to ~et alon s \\'ilh. He got nlonJ: \\'ilh his teamm ates and he go! along 1Yilh the opposition. He was l\'lr. :"Jirr Cuy.'' \\I alter 0 '.\1a!ley. 011·ner of the Dodgers who kne\1• Hndi::es 1vhen he fi rst hil. baseball off an Ind iana f::irm. cited dre;'I respc rt and ?.ffcrtieln for the form-f r fi rst basen1an. "I kne1Y him his entire c·:i reer.'' said 0'~·\a llcy. ''I v.•ent lo his w1•dc1i1u(. Thi!'i JS a inan tha t had nur greatest ci ffcction :ind ' \l'hom I respected so much \\'c are \'rry sad to see hi m go at such an early age..'' "This will o\'ershadnl'-' th? strikr. - ma ke it the ins1gnif1cent fhing it should be.·· said former Dod.O?.er sta: P•ll'her C_arl Erskine Qf the death of his team· mate. Erskine, nnw bRseball c.1ach at Anderson. Ind .. College. c;aid Hnd ges' dea1h is .;like a bOll out of the blut .'' Erskine and Hodges came oul of ln· diana sandlot baseball. They ,vere &ig:icd by the same scou t. Ul"I TetephOI• OLD BROOKLYN DODGER GIL HODGES. DEAD AT 47. Priest J!rayed for Him, Fans Loved ,Gil Hodges NE\V YOllK (AP 1 -\Vhen Gil Hodges went hitless in 11· \Vorld Series, a prieo;t asked for Divine Intervention and !lun- dreds of fans sent "11:et-well" cards. \Vhen he Jay ill v.•ilh a het1rt attack in an Atlanta hospital 16 years later. he struck the same sy mpathetic response. "Everybody loved hhn ... he was (lr1'e o( the greatesl gu);S in baseball," said Oakland A's manager Dick Williams upon learning of Hodges· death Sunday. Hodges. 47. the golden boy of the old Brooklyn Dodgers who later managed the New York .fl1ets to their first \Vrirld Championship in v.•hat was considered a baseball miracle. coll apsed and died of a. heart attack Sunday In \\lest Palm Beach, Fla, Williams, a former tea mmate of Horlges, sald. "He was easy to gel 11long "'ith .. _ . he got along with hls team· mates Rnd he got along with the oJ> position. ~le was knov•n as ~1r. Nice Guy.'' As a player , Hod ges had " warm asaoci11rtlon with both t~ammAtcs 11nd rans. He was floo<h~d with mall ~a'ld il Brooklyn priest prayed for him when he couldn't gel a hit in the 19S2 \Vorld Series 1gainst the New York Yankees. Tho.se same adoring fans remem bered him v:il i1 cards after a mild heart attack in Atlanta in 1968. Vet the same Hodges \Yas later lahe led as "less than a man'' by one of his former players. Ken Harrelson. An J Hodges. who once protected Pce\Vce Reese by bea r.hug ging another Doclgt r teammate during an argu·ment. al so sub- jected a player to embarassment v"nen he managed the 'fl1et s. Hodges ·walked up to left-fie ld Cleon Jones during a game during the 1!169 season and yanked him ou t before 3 jc't'r· ing home to°"'" crowd. It follov.•ed Hodt!e.~· stoic manager ial \lfcstyle -he played no favorites. Hls image as a toug h boss melted irt the warm lfght of _ io terviews •v!th reporters. A lthou~h sofnetimes ill 111 ease. •his door was always open ta .new smen and he never failed to answer a question. His-only neAativc reaction wa1 that no one use tape rccorderir during a question-and-answer session . He liked to stay out of the limelight. Rodges was-a self-effa cing, modes· man des pite ac~mpll!hmenl.l th at In :1uded :1 1969 \Vorld Serles victory over Lh• heavJ1y.f&\'Ored Baltimore o r:oles. ,. . . \ . . Turkish T_rousers ~ .. Born for Stardom lb LAUR I ~ H~CKLUND Ot t~• 0•11, l"ilolt Sittt Consider a nomin;ilion for top athlete of the year : talk back and isn't alv.·a.ys asking for a raise." quips her trainer, the v.·orld-renowned Charl ie \Vhilt ingham. ... ever seen -dar brown, almost blaC'k -bu she just looks like she ca n un ," the lrainer says. • ' • l•a Oly••apies OAILV PILOT J 9 . Iha Assesses U.S • Cage Cl1ru1ces DAYTON. Onio 1Ar1 - "''ou are ln trouble "'hl!n you don't get your best athletrs " 7·2, S.10 and 6-9, Braztl is load- ed with spred. \Ve must have a tall and sptedy team, That's a hard mal.ch." A noted track star, she w11s top 1noney·winner in her age '-----g•roup lasr-ycar <1nd !e<rd!i1he held th is year after grossing over $100,000 In just four races. She runs the mlle in about a third the time Jim Ryun did when he set the \\'Orld record. Her official time in the mile and an eighth is less than 1:48. WhHlingham, a no.nonsense vr!cra0-w.ith-unblinki11g lua eyes and an ob vi ous resemblance to Yul Brenner, has been working with 'furki sh Trousers since she was a year- 1ing and readil y acknowledges his top filly has many of the prrsonality quirks of a distaff star. As the daughter ' $353,422· .ar ner-Baghdad_.aJJ.a That's the assessment of 1he United States' chances or prn.- ecting-ttnrn'beaten record in this summer's OJyn1pk· Gan1rs baskrtball (.'Onlpc!ition rro- m Hrink Iha, th is nation's Olympie basketb11U c·ompcu. lion froin !lan k lba , 1h15 n.1- tio~·s Olyn1p1c b11(krtbt1ll co.1eh for an unprt'Ct'dt'nted lhlrd time I lk.,.i.-..le<!ing-the---IH But chances are she won 't f\ er be considered for the ti· t i('. .~1 avbe because she's young. ·black and female. Maybe because she has a fun· ny name : Turkish Trouser's. Maybe because she's a horst". )'el the four-year-old filly "is better than a lot of athletes because she doesn't ··she "has very 1nut"h a mi nd 01 her 01.,.n and won't e\·e:r hesitate to kick -or bite for that matter -anybody who comes near her. She's got a Iol of fire ," he says. "But she's very intelligent. from !he moment 1ve saw her "·e thought she'd. be ,:?ood. She isn 't the prettiest filly I've liaela Stakes \\'fler Nas- ~lahl . Turkish Tro1ers was a born athlete. She as bred in Kentucky and eared In Pomona be Ca e being transfe rred to er present home at Santa ~ila by her · 0\1'ner .1'1rs. Hov.rd B. Keck. "She was \'fY easy to train.'' \\'h1ttin,aan1 recalls, "she ne\'er hadeny problem learning how ~ break from the gale or re.x in a race. She's definitel)the best filly I've ever trainl.'' The for1nrr Okl;ihon1a S1111t coach has a drasuc· .st1\ut1on to halt the-pros· r;11d1n~ "'i rnl· tege talent and C(ISIHlK thi~ ('Ounlry Olyn1p1(' pro~JX'1.'1!' "The parenl!I of " Yi\llni:,i;ter should h a 1 t" lo ~lf:tl <1 i:u11ranlrr 1hnt he 11111 rt•111a111 in school four .1 l'<ir~." fb.i .~u,i;­ gc!>itt•d. US. team when the NCAA • t\1\U, NAIA, junior college! and Armed Forces co mbine lo sPnd 66 ca nd idates to the fina l trials June 12 at Colorado Sprini:s. t:<illl. l!P is upset 11·11h the NCA1\, \\hi Ch \\Ill ll••I ptrmlt high sc·h(l(ll seniors If, 11trPnd the Olrmp1C's camp~ f''lrh su m1ner and has made undrrrl11ssm~n !.ibno fnr the All-~lar ~111ne 1n <in 01~ mpic ye<lr fnr the fir.sr tlHl(' "\\'c ha ve fl"IOUJ::h 1roub1e \\Uh th e pros 11·1thout l'.lUr 01\'ll .. peoplt· undern1111111J: !hr Olym- plC' program." I ha ~a 1d Against Jones Trio ll's been m<? than a year slnc'e \Vhitting~m hired ti.1ary fo.1eglemre of .ong Beach as his first femalexercise rider. Miss f\.1egleire feels she knows the !ii) well . "f feel likeier hea rt is big- ger than IT \vhole body sometimes tcause she tries so hard," 1e yo ung rider says. "It's Ii! she wants lo be able to do e?rything. "People in lhis t·ountry 11rt" so egotistical," 1hr n1;in 1\•ho coached 767 rol!cg<' 11·1nnr rs said. "The~· just th ink 1ou can go oul rind pir k 12 good pl;:i_vcrs and beat the 11·orld . The Olyn1p ic coach n1<ikes it t'l<>ar hr's not. hot~11ng a "'h1tP. tl;1~ fo r the U.S. squ11d, hn.11'evrr, ·· Jf 11·e'd h;1ppen to i:.el anorhe r Spen<'er I~ R y 1v o o d fron1 lhe junior colleges. a11d !he AAU and Arn1ed F'or<'l'~ pro1·1de the talent they did in l!'lf.S. 1\'e'IJ do "·ell." Iba says. Vns-er, Gurney "Those da.vs ;;ire i::one. \\'c"rf> ll r1b1e lo re<111~1 l'atch it 11nd f:<'I be:ll u1 ~lu nich." he Siltd . Face Shootout ··1 v.·atch£ her personality change \vhe she turned four. SI~ used 4o.ie a playful girl of three, but iow that she's a woman of four she's much more crud and ill -mannered and even as to be attended by a pony1hen she walks out to the rac so she won'i kick "\Ve didn't r1•rn i;:rt nut nf !hr s11drlle 111 1hc Pan.,'\n1 c:an1es la~! yt•ar. Cuba. :i ne\rC'omrr. beat u.~ in th1~ ftrsl 1la1·11·ood helped lrad !hf! t 'nitrd Statei;: to the Ol)1Ti pic title fou r years ago. Former Ya le n1e n t o r NE W YORK IAP I -II there is a real shootout in championship auto racin.e. lh1s year. it 1·ery likely \\'ill be bel1\·etn Bobbv Unser and a triumvi ra te or ex-ch<lmpions that includes his brother. Al Uhscr. Bnhbv and his car O\l'ncr. i:x -dril·ing ,:?reat Dan Gurney of Costa ~!('!-la want in th11t "'ay. And they insist the odds aren't as bad as !hey \\'Ould appear on the surface '"l"m dra~'in.'( a brad on them , no doubt abou1 !hat .'' Bobby said recenlly. ''\\~ith all lhe money they·\'e got. th ey could "'in it all u n I e s s somebody steps in lo shoot. 'em dov.•n." Unser, 39 , \\"as speaking of Ala111itos Harness Entries lo1 Altmil<11 l11rn1u tn!rlt1 f.or Mona1v, c111r & 1111. l'lrd pcr1t I o.m, 11 f:llCll lft Ill r1Ct. SI £•1<t• 1n •111 t M tlft r1c•1. l'lltST lt,loCE -Ont mflf. f'1 t-•. c11.min1. ,loll aors. no"·wlnner 1;ntr Mtrcti 10. Pur11 $1.'°°. Clllmlnt orltt 11,soo. . W1!1n91 Eid IG. l ongol fi•Jt lmprpnocn (L. L1co111) Jerr¥ [)(;ts Chf r!lt !G. H1 rdft) Mot!v Ootl U . Mlllt•I •rmttro Klro !G. Hn!I J 5,.111·1 Ct ro! c.r. lltnonnl M'•aow Het1hff r,1o Wlnqefl G~¥ Vfkl J. Todal Sl!:COHO ltACE -o ... ,.,,,. P,oce i ¥!~• olch & undfr, ,.,.1a~~1 Pu•ir Sl ~00. M•OI• HUI'! Actor U l.'onor,clll Perl'e Prim'"'' !O Crcn11 Good ll:•lqn 10. Ac••·"'~"• -'0•!1,0 'f P eco rJ Wt•~•'<ll Svm""'' Btau!y CT lla1clllora) BT~ck W ,ov (G 11,omlH 'f"l l•ity Ot!wln CC. J1cob1 ) Parnelli Jones' new driving trio of Al Unse r, Mario Andrei· -round, \\le lost 10 'i4~1a1•1a, Rrai1I and Ital\" 1n the 1970 \\'orld (i;imes." ·Jb11; conTinued. ti and Joe Leonard. Together. Uniled States auto Club driv- ing tiHe fi ve times and the rich Indianapoli s 500 !hree times in a row. Kol only that , they go inlo the 1972 campai gn "'ith nluch fina ncial backing from t\\'O prime sponsors, Vice-• roy cigarettes, and Samsorlite luggage. anyone," llss Meglemre says. CHARLIE WHITTINGHAM . WITH TURKISH TROUSERS As hors1 go. she's not very _____ __:::.:__:__:=:_::_::.:__:___:____:.:..__:_ __ _:_ _____________ _ 1'he U S, eoaeh says foreii;:n c·on1pet11ion has become so tough bcc.ause of natior111J tcan1s that play more than 50 "1'hey·re going lo be tough." Gurney admitted . "but "'e are fu rther along in ou r develop- ment progran1 than we have been in fi ve vears. and I think v.·e hal'e the ·,nachinery -and the dril'er -to give them a run ror the 1no11ey. The Llnser-Gurney rir epower 11 ill con1e frorn a screaming Eagle t u r b o ch a r g e d Of- fe nhauser built by Gurney. Unser dr ove it to an unof. ficial 196.9 miles per hour in Jests at the 2.5 mile Ontar io spetdv.•ay. before qualifying at a ne1\' lap record of 141.9!16 m.p.h. for the one-mile oval at Phoenix three "'ee ks ago. He "·on the 1;i0-mile race, rirsl of l"'O warmups before the USAC contingent reaches Indianapolis May L Then, earlier this week. the oldest of the Unser drivers bolled around Indy's oval at 190.8 m.p.h. -Jones didn"\ hal'e his ne"' cars readv for the Phoenix opener. bu.I plans to introd uce them at Trenton . N.J .. April 23. Earl\' tests at both Ontario and Indianapolis ha ve pro· duced speeds over 180 m.p.h. Gurnev's cars ha ve never lacked f0r speed . In four years on th e US AC circuit the Olso nite Eagles. \\1ith driverf Gurney and Bobby Un ser have won IO of 27 races. No only that. 1968 Indy winne Unser took Gurney's cars 1 seven track records last ye:- and 1\'as either on th e pole r in the front .row fo r 10 racs. But he won only 1~·0 ,r then1. "Our trouble was finishin. '' Bobby said. "We ne\1er \a~d for speed. It was the ~le things that kept us from 11n- ning. \Ve're starting new>his year. and we're going t be heard from .'' Pro Hock•y Standi11~ tall , just bout 15 hands. She has unus1tl v small feet and has to b• sPecially fitted for her alunnum shoes because the v.•all f he r foot is so thin , \Vhitlingam explains. She st -tias the uniquely fen1inin1habit of losing shoes frequent he says. getting a ne\\' doole pair about every 25 days She tefers -white blanke ts and v.·1rs only . the best of Englis·tsaddl es. She .Jso is accustomed lo onlv t! best of riders: Billy Sh0err.ker is one of the fe11' jocke~ "'ho is able lo ride the fill; nll because she is so dif- fi cu ltlo control, her trainer says. Bu perhaps the 1\'inner of the 100,000 Santa fo.larga r1ta Jnvillional !fafldicap at Santa Anit March 4 an;:! ac- cu mlalor of about $300,000 in l cs~han llvO years deserves the>est. Orange Coast Has Hex On Gaucho Baseball Team Thcre·s little doubt Iha! Orange Coast Col· Jcge \\'OUld like to play Saddleback a re11.· more times this baseball st>ason . The t\ro lei!rns h:i1·e played four games this season \\'ilh OCC on top on every oc- casion. 1\nd v.•ith the ex cept ion of the first gan1e sco re (4-2) the rest have been rather . lopsided 9-1, 7-0 and 17-6). Saddleback is in the throes of a 15-ga'me losing strea k "'ith no relief in sight. Al one point in the season Saddlcback"s -game. thus !hose final two contests are \•ery crucial. * * * OCC and Saddleback can bc.e:in making plans for next baseball seaso n as both are already out of their pennant chases. Coach Barry \Vallace!'s Pirates h111'e a 3.5 South Coast mark. traili ng Cerri to.1; \6-01 and Fullerton (7·1) by four games. The t1vo South Coast leaders bang heads this Friday al FJC. Cerritos bas a 26-3 season record 1\•hile Fullerton is 23-3. Sadd!eback is al so four games back in it.s conference r.iice. The Gauchos have an 0-4 Mission mark. games e:ich summer. Iba said 6-foot-10 Brigha m ''o\Jng center Kresimir Co~ic, 11·hn pl;i)'S fn r his nat ive Yui:oslav1a. !old hitn , "'\\le pla~·ed 52 ga n1es •bark home 1;1<.t !'un1n1er. Coach. 1 \·e pl;iyrrt niore ~ames f o r Yu~oslavia than you've v.•on as a coac h. ··Hctk. !h:1t's more than 700 .i;;.111H's ," said Iba. · l"rn worried abou l hig mC'n."" thr Olympic rriach con- tinued. "'The Russians go 7-4 , Quarry Bid · For Chance At Title Bout A.er al!, the obstina1e filly ha1 adhered to a training scedule prob8bl y more rlgicL- tflrJ an y human athlete ever hl attempted . CRA-IG SHEFF -.-. .-. ---~~ * * * Californi a's JC basketball all-stars did ex- tremely u·ell in the recent nalional AAU tournment. reaching the semifinals before losi ng lo the Armed Forces All-stars by jusl fi\·e points. ti.11ke Qu;irr~·. hop111g 1n :anrl a bou1 \1·ith 11·orld rharnp1on Bob Fos1rr. takes on San Fr11ncisco's Chuck l!an1ilton in the J(}...round off-TV main event tonight at Thr Forurn Qua rry, who just turnert 21, sports a 34-0 reco rd while scoring 10 knoc kout s. ~1 anag­ ed by older brother .Jerrv. Mike captured !he ~orlh American light-hea.,.y~·e1ght crown from Jimmy Dupree last October in Anaheim. Her day begins at -6 a.m. tien she ·ili run around the ·ack for about half an hour y an exercise boy or girl. \ft erward she is gi1·en a Jponge bath, follov.·cd by a 4(}. minute 1valk around the stable to cool off. , \\'hiltinghri m is the only trainer al Santa Anita v.·ho still u~es hot -walkers (people~ to lead the horses arounrt as they cool do\vn. The other trainers attach the hor ses to a metal device called a mechanic.:il walker w h i c h enables the horses to move around by themselves. Then Turkish Trouse rs goes lo her groom. a man kno"'n as Onofre. for an rilcoho! rub to stimulate her circulation. The filly has a slightly arthritic knee and some limes is give n a heat treatment called dia· pulse. \\'hich is also used in hospitals. She has a breakfast of straight oats at 10:30 and then settles back in her roomy stable for a five-hour siesta. Gauchos 1\·ere 2-2. But that was 15 games ago. "\\le've got some outstanding freshmen players. but \\·e just haven 't got the depth, especially in !he pitching department ," says Gaucho coach Doug fritz . Pitching is the name of the game in base- ball. as Fritz is finding out. * * * Speaking of u·hammies, Cypress has one on Golden \\lest. The Chargers ha l'e beaten coach Fred Hoover's G\YC Rustler.1; four tin1es this base ball season and lhere•s still t"·o 1nee lings left. _ Cypres~. "'ith 11 17·5 seHson ma'rk. has out· scored Golrlen \\'est. 26-9. in lhe rour Uh~. But the Rustlers trail Cypress i the So uth· ern California Conference leader) by Just one That's quilt an accomplishment and says a lot for junior college basketball in the stair. Plaudils to cCK:ciaches Barney Newlee fChaffeyl and Sid Phelan fSa n Francisco CCI "·ho bad only fi\•t days to prepare their 1quad for the tournament. * * * Saddleback College defensive back Bob McNamara who still has an other year of eligibility. has been drafted and will report to Ft. Ord the latter part of f\.1a y. * * ·* Saddleback ass istant rootball coach Vince ti.1cCullougb is a candidate for the San Joajuln Di strict board of tru5tees. He 's run · nlng against eight other candidates. Di11ner Set Area Sports Calendar For Dena Wfl1111M11y f.ltrll JI ll•llblll -Miler Oel 11 St. Peul T•n,.11 -S•n 01190 MtJI •I Or1n9e Coes t HJ, Sen 01f90 CllY Coll111 11 Mike is ranked number two in the ligh t-heavyweight d11·1- sion by both WBA and \VBC. He is listed as a J0-6 choice over Hamilton . Hamilton qua:ified for thi s fight by scoring an impressi"e knockout win over highly-re- garded Amado Vasquez three weeks ago in San F'rancisco. The ex-sta!e champ ion sport s :i 28-9 mark and holds victories over Terry Lee. Richard Steel and Ronnie Wilson. The JO-round tele vi."ion semi- main pits Glendale's :0.1ikc Nix- on against hard punching Arl Davis of San Diego in a mid· dlewcig hl scrap. Thi s shapes up to be a top ba!tle as Da vis scored an up- set knockout win over Nixon 1wo months ago in Long (l:~>. UC lrv,n• 11 30). Beach. A testimonial dinner l\'ill be Tenn11 -Sunn v Hltls 11 N•wDOfl Fr1u v 1-'••H 11 Davi s has done most of hi s h Id F "d -ht t h Sa I (3·1s1 •1 .. b•1t -Co•Clfl• a•1 Mir 11 FDUn· fighting out of San Diego and e rl ay n1g a l C n a Cy.,;n11llt1 -Coron1 Gf'I M1r •I 11ln V1lle\', LOI A!•ml!OI fl CO•I• Ana Elks Club in honor of !>onori, Niw&.rt 81 An 1 h , 1 m, M•••· Sinli Ana Vt llf'Y 11 EGlion, is a 19-4 as.a pro, former Servile Hi[:h h~ad root· ll~•wooG .. FDUnltln V•lley, Vlltr>til M19noll1 •! E1t1ntl1, Munu...,1on Undefeared heavyweight con. ba J: coach <1nd athletic direC· 11 w1s1m1nsre• 1.u 11 3:151 ee.(11 1r lo•'•· "'"""elm 11 M1•ln•. tender Ge<>rge Foreman 1.,.111 I G "'-sw1mmlnt -Anen•!"' et H11nt•nt!cn Newpo•I 11 S•nl1 An1, W111mlMltr •t fight Buffal o's Vi c Brown in Or eOrge ~na. lleitU!. we''"'" 11 M1rln1. Unl11er111v We1!frn, VIII• "1rlr 11 MIHlon Vltlo, k I A no-host cocklail hour is e1 L•eun1. T111t1n •' M111ton v1•10, sin 1<11e11. 11 S•n c1em1n1e. P1clllc:1 •' the mah11 evenl a wee rom Clemente 11 Foo111111 l•I! 11 J:U ). un•v••sllv. Scnor1 11 l••un1 lle1c11 ton ·ght t The f orum S\a!ed from 6-7 O'ClOCk, With Ntwr>O•I 1! We•!mln•lfr '6:Xl'I, (811 111 3:15), Golden We1t 11 ltlo Hondo I a ' d. r bei'ng seri'ed al 7 111ur1111, (.r.1r11 11 !):lO J. Tickets are priCi!d at $6 ancl l/011«~rd }fobson. 11·ho i:uide-d !hr East in the All-Star gamr. sard this country shou ld br> n1ore lenient to11•ard future pros. ··11hink a OOy should be able to play after he hires an agent and signs a contract, right up until his firs t pro grame,'' Jl obson said . Emerso11, Gonzalez Defeated \lACON. fia . -England'~ ~lark Cox caplured !he !25.IXNJ :\\,icon International ten nis lt)urnament singles champiO'I· ~hip Sunday, defeating Rof En1erson or Newport Beach, 6-3. ~7. ~3. The victory, 1vhie h earned the ~6-year-0:d tennls pro $4 .500 in fir st-pr ize money. ca me after a referee's error . cost Cox the second set of lhe rnatch. The referee inadv('rtanl l,v gave Emerson a point he h11cJ not earned. whirh allowed hun to win the l1c·break1ng play- off in the second 1i!'l. NeHher player recognized the error until 11 11•as too late. bul Cox·s 6.J victory 1n !he third set crasl'd any quesl1on of victory. Emerson gained a measure of revenge \vhen he teamed 11•ilh To m Okker 10 defeat Cox and Graham Snlwel! in the doob!es final. 7-6. 6-2. 1•a11cl10 Hon·s HONG KONG -Mil -'"derton of .r.u11r•l1• wnlnpt<:1 1 "''l'V P•flCllo Gonl8!e1 cl Loi. '4ngele$, •·l, M , 6-2, •octe¥ •nd won I~• mfn"1 tlntlet lfll1 at '"' Hon• l<o~e ~a•dcwr1 ltn~t' ell•m-plon,nln1. Andtrl(ln, h'"•''"ll Go n '•I•[' '''"'C• f~tlv n ~~{!'! ••' r•turn•d 1rrvic1 pnwe.,ully incl circvt brot!l•n!IY ltom 1111 b•"'''"' l11dla ll'l11s Lvc:,now, 1na•t-hld1 1 11"11 C1vlon I" druJble1 Sun!l~v •nit won 1np ''''' r11· ~It m1!tll In 1t11 £1•1 Zan4 01vl1 ( 11 Grout 8 1•nn•1 tDmll•t.hnn T)le dDUb!e• ''"'mll'> ol Jtlde•" Mullhtrltl tnd PrtM1<I Liii OY!• ce11on·, 9.,.,,,., P•nt11 '"" o ~. l<um•rf e.J, •I 6-l ••v• 1"<111 3.(1 lead In tll1 bf•I ol ••~ mtttll, S111ill1 ffolb ~AH JU•N, "'UlrTO llloco -NlntY ltlcnpv Gun!•• cl S•" An9•111, Tr• lt'ld 51111 Smhll ol ~II Plnrl. ' C . won '"• 1l,..lf1 cnem11l11nsnl11i on 1'>1 C1r101 Hiiien Tenn11 TDUrn1men1 !olina<1v. Mr1. G11nlf• won 1111 women't !1!14 m11c'1 bV l11rnlng blck fetfllg•r Ch•ll E~ert, for t L1VO•rcl1t1, fl1. 6-1, 6•l. Smolf'I, 1n1 No, 1 r1nlr!n1 olevtr fn t~o Un!lpci St1 l1"1, wet bflltn' b¥ Cieri{ Ur11bn1r, bl Ntw Yor-1·1, 7"4, but Jtill nn!t"t'l"l on 1011 In Ill• round robin At 3:30 she eats her big "serious meal '' of the da y: a "'armed mixture of mash. oats, sweet feed and liquid vitamins. Twel ve hours later she is awakened by one of \Vhittingham's 30 backstretc h emp!oycs tcxercise riders. hot,va[kers and groomsf for ano!her li gh : meal of oats. inn(' ' Triclr _ fDUnl1ln Vfllf'V 11 COH•n• W t I LA $ Dena Was al Servile for !he c1e1 M1 r, e1111on 11 5" v1rrtv, E1!•"tl1 Cvmniillci -Gold en ei 1 4. · 11 Mignoli•, L1>1r1 11t tlvn•·n~!On liirbQr (JI. ------------------------last IJ years before being SllC· 8otch, ,lonaht•m 11 M1rlna, S<1nt1 ,lon1 T•nnlt -FDUnleln V1ll1v t i Co1ona mt"'' compelltlon. SIGMA THREI' {I:J.) .FREEi I Surely no human athl ete "'OUld c.hoose to aphere to such a training table. S u re 1 y Turk ish Trou sers horses around less with her sport than ma n y human alhletes do with theirs. Surely she deserves at least a nomination for athlete of the year. d d b r r Ml'<sion Vie 1t N,wl>Ort .. We\l•rn 11 wes1m1n1 •••, 1111 Mar, Cost1 Mei• 11 Lot ,1o11ml!11t. Cee C Y Orme · • VIiii Pirlr 11 Mlstlon Viejo, l<t!•ll<' •I Ed1'on •I SenU An1 V1lltw. E111ncl• J'o grid aide Chuck G;illo and San Cl,m•nl", C:Oll l Mflf . u LO' 1! M19roo11.. LO•'• I I Hunlln11on • • , •··01• 1•11 lltKll, M1r ln1 11 AnMifom. S1n1• '4nt he'll be returning to his ahna Aiamftoi. L•tYn• tlKn 1 ..,.., 11 N~11or1, w1,11rn 11 -.....,1ml!ll11r. mater _ Anaheim lligh -11,!:,~~it11 _ s.1141eb•ck ,, c111Htv M''''Clfl v1110 11 v1111 P1rk , sin r l 'd . l l (1 XII. UC lrvl~f •1 UnlY. cl lll!dllndJ '"""en•• •' l<lltl1. Unlv•rs•IV II nexl a I as a gr1 ass1s nn . tn P1cl!it1. L11un1 •••c~ 11 sonor• 1111 Rcs .. -·:ltlons-are $6.50 per Swl!l"Mlftt -Se11lh C.N 51 '°"'"11'1;1 •Ll~IJ), Golffn Wt,r II LA H.,tior .... , , . .:~;;::;·;' ~·~' ~'~".;"~"~'";;.."~'·------".'".-'·----iiiii~---, person and m<ly be made 9_ - 1hrough th• Servile Boosier1 Meet the Man Club at 1952 \V. La Palma Ave .. Anaheim, 926-01. I Behind the I CAMERA REPAIRS Safeco· Smile. ''11cht in~ liabilily cov~r8 R:" et ur ttJ n f'lf \\hRt you may bf ·Pf!;yinl: nou·• NOW IN ORANGE COUNTY GENERAL CAMERA REPAIR A llAHCH Of GENERAL CAMERA, PASADENA . Fitctory tr8incd t-rchnicians--ractory parts (AMlltA$ e 1'110JECTOJI$ e lXP0$U~l "'ETE1t$ AUDIO 'ltSUA(. e SOUHO e JIECOltOlltS PULL YIAR GUARANT EE 12444 CHAPMAN GARDEN-GROVE HARBOR il OfAPl\.1A~·-<ine mflt! South or 011.n.e~·litnd 638•1622 Smile, You're With Safeco. -808 PALEY ~ •A FE CO INaURANCli 4'74 E. 17TH STREET COSTA MESA 642-6500 -546-3205 " DAVE ROSS ,ONTIAC S EXCL:JSIY[ NEW CAR 5 YEAR/50,DDD MILE WARRanty At No E •tr ;i Ch.1r 9& ••<t1&l•t>c•Oc~r•<P~ ... , ''' I HI DAIL Y PILOT . Game's Livi1_1g Greats-Mourn-Fallen Comrade -· Mate s Tell -Of Hodges' • • iI1atlJa y \VEST fJALr.·1 BEACH . f'Ja . tAP \ -c;1 1 Hf)(!ges, a lo\'eAhle !'!li'!nt \\ho \Von Dodger fans \\'ilh his bat and fllet hearts \l'lth his b1·a1ns. died on E<ister Sunday "1~t'n he should ha1·e bceJ1 in a baseball uniform. ··GiJ "'as 11•alkin~. '' ~aid Eddie Yost, "then tu111bled b:ickwards.'' ''ost and fellow i\e11• Ynrk J\tets coaches Rube \\'allier and Joe f>ignalano ti;:id just finished a \un day on the golf course 1ritb their nHu ager. "Only reason y1e 1verc playing golf,'' said Pignatano, "11•as that the plavers' strike put us out of bu.5i11css. OtherWise, we:d+been over in the \~'es~ Palrn Beach .ballpark pla ying the At lanta Braves." Yost still was stunned Sunda.v night as a full moon peeked nver the Palm Beach !Lakes Golf Club \vhere Hodges played •bou rs before. -"Gil had a beer with us." said the man .~'ho played JR years as a major league infielder. "I thlnk he also ate a piece of ,coke. Gil, Yigg_v. Rube and me shol the bul! \\'ith Jack Sanford for awhile." Sanf~rd, a !ormer star pitcher for th e Phi!liesaml Gian s. is no\.\' golf-proattli_e __ ,.public cnurse that sits beside the Ramada Inn on the Lake. . -1 . It"s across the road from the b;;iscba ll .Jlark, HIS FINAL GOODBYE Hodges'·Sudden Death Saddem Baseball World ''Oh. no. Oh. no . Oh, no." Leo Durocher. manager of the Chicago Cubs. reat!ed with di sbelief when he learned of the death of Ci! Hodges, m;inagcr of the l\1ew-Y-ork· ~1ersanaa 1ong1rme·a5sot'iatc -- in the old Brooklyn Dodger organi1.;ition. "It's ha rd to find words to describe a guy as fine as he "'as -Lhey don't C'f)'fll e anv finer. both on or off the field ,'' said DUrocher after le11rning of Hodges' death Sunday. I-lodges. 47, collapsed and died of a heart attack after playing golf at \VrsL Palm Bt>ach. Fla. The sudden dca!h prompted rich eul ogies and brought deep sorrow to associates and fornier tea1n· n1ates. ;lt was a tren1rndo11s ~hotk and a I re· mendous loss." said D,irocher. ··And Gil's death is a trem endous loss for baseball - he \Vas a great p\ayet and a great n1anagcr." GIL HODGES Casey Stengel, \V)10 1nana;::ed Hodges both as a Dodger and in his finol pla~ ing days as fl Met, said Hodges "1vas alwa ys trying to do the right thing on And of( the ball field ." D:>dgrr 1can1s \1·1th Hndges. reca lled a "It's a terrible tin1e. \l 's tc··~ib!c to ··great p!A~·rr , . but an evrn greater have the players on strike C}nd then lose ma n . a man like Gil Hodges·· Hodi?e.s' rlca1h \ras a "·.1rldcn1ng ex- --Reflecting on l!Odges as :1 plaver:--prrlence .. ffir-Jl"lckie R·ob1TG'ln. anottirr 2'>""~"""". · Stengel said: "He loo ked like' a dancer at playrr ll'ho sll~1rrd the glories of Broo,;lyn first base. He played 1vith as n1uch gra:.-.:: penn11nts . ·--iiilll!I:~ .... " UP I Tt !fPhG!O CHICAGO'S NORM VAN LIER 12) REBOUNDS BUT IT ISN 'T ENOUGH AS LA KERS WIN, 108-101. as any person I rvrr saw." "!·!is death n1akcs n1e rcflt'~·t on l h~ "He was a terrific fellow -a hig h-~re<it t11nc s 11·e had," sairt Hob1r.~on. "It's class fellow who 11•as diffrreiit than most terrib!r !'<irt losu1g a grea l man like Gil." ball players." Casey had hlgh µrai se fflr Dirk \\'i llia111s, n1anager of the Oa kland Hod ges' ability to fill almost any gap on A's and a tcarninate of Hodgfs In 1he tht' ball field ." earl\· 1950s. cal!rd him ' one of th!! "This man 11·as so good Iha! when grecitcst gu_r~ in bas<'ball. C:veryhod.\' lov- e Hodges and his coaches finall y said 'good bye to Sanford and began walking •back to the motel. Pignatano. a forn1er 'catcher. yelled as they parted, "Hey, Gill ie, what time You \Yant to meet for dlnner~·· The hu sky sk ipper said. "7:30." Hodges. 6-3. 205 pounds \Yith hands like a bear. then dropped to the ground in front of room 158. Play Again Tuesday A11gel Players W orl\.i11g Out; Allen Signs Brooklyn started geillng a re;1utation as ed hini. He "'as verY' ea sy to ~et ;ilong a good ball club, he beca1ne an in'li\"idu<i! \l'ilh . He got 1tlong ''"ith his teammates star because he would play whe .. rver he and he go! along with the opposition. He Despi te speedy first aid, the man \\'ho would have celebrated his 48th birthday Tuesday was dead before he reached Good Samaritan Hospital. The native of Princeton. Ind., signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers for a $1:000 .bonus in 1943 and bec;an1e a regular after returning from the tl-1arines in 194·7. \\'as told." was ~Ir. :'\tct' (;uv." \Vatt er Alston. the current n1ana&er (If -\Valter O'\·lalle;,, ov.·ner of the Dodgers the Dodgers. said: "There \\'as n('ver a \\'ho kne\\' Hodge'> \1•hen -he first hit finer man in baseball. Baseba ll h;:is lnst a baseball off an Ind iana f;:irm. cited clec;'I real big man. It y,·as guys likr Hodge.s, respect and affectinn for thr former firs t L.akers One Wi11 Away Pee \Vee Reese and Roy Catnpar~!la 11·hl) ba sen1an . made it easy for me by helping a rookie ··1 kne\\' hin1 hls en tire 1·;1reer.'· said manager when I went to Brooldyn ." o·~-1.<1llcy. "I y,·ent to his 11•t•dcli112.. Thi~ 1~ Others associated with Hotiges t:l.'ring a 1nsin that had our grrAtest tiffcr!i on :ind Nineteen of the 29 players on the his playing ·career in Brooklyn f :ted a "'horn J re sorcted so much. \Ve are vrry California Angels roste r took part in a keen personal loss. sad to see hrm go at such an early age.'' CHICAGO tAP! -'rhe Chicago Bu lls, had to shoot \\'ell to 11110 And i ·e did." "rm sick," said Johnn)' Padre~. th"! ··This will overshadow th<.' slri~e - Sh, I · I th 1 1 1· d t1vo-bour unsuper1'lsed 1\·orkout at a park From Sweep of Bulls ~ Hodges \\•as a brilliant first baseman Jor JI sea sons in Brooklyn. \\'hich •---'b«arne-hirpermanent-home;-and-\;f'n -West with the Dodgers in 19511 for four more years in a Los 1\.nge!cs uniform. feelin~ some'.'·hat spooked. gave it all nrinan exp a1nec a ie re Jeve pitcher "'ho gave Brooklyn its (lnly \Yurlri mtike it th<' inslgnif1ec nt thing it i::hould hey-hact-Sunday--only-to-a<f.v.t1nee-to-th&e-OiG~ood~r~ir:;.h',:a;;l"l;in;;iec;s~i"'n;:fa;.:v~o;_r ~of~Pae,:to.)Rc;ci~le"vn:i~n_.:"::;ea;;;r""A::Cna::h:.;eC:im':':-:S"u'".n"da'2y".:-;;~--;;---,--Se.Res--¥iGtor.~ll-a--2--0-con<ii\%Hlf~~id-f-0i:mor-D~er-S!.a;___p..tchet--i----order lo slop Norm \·an Lier who led.the Pta.ver representative Billy Co11·an said N y k ,, k · 19·5 "Th. · c 1 E k. f th d th f h. t brink of eliinination by the Los Angeles ew or an ees 1n :. . is ruins ar .rs ·inc o e .ea o is earn· ...•. Bulls with 22 points. th th JO 1 d.d k · h. f I' h Lak.,., 1·0 the fi·rsl roiind of the Nati·onal v L. k · e o er Payers 1 not ta e part Jn everyl 1ng or me. \ e v.·~re sue i,;reat matr. 'SPARKLING CAREE R " " an 1er ept getting in the middle,'·' h f · d d h ed d I I · b h .d Sh t e \1·orkout because they chose to spend rien s an s ar so manv won er~ Erskine. now ase all Ci:i<1ch at sa1 arn1an . "so \\'e put Riley in lo play · r· k · 1· d c II • · His playing career sho'.''Cd a still-stan- ding record nf 14 bases·l1Jaded horners :along with 1,274 runs batted in. a .273 ·career averAge seven World Series, eight All-star gam es and a National League "tecord of 370 hon1e runs by a right-hand- ~ed hitter whi ch ha s si nce been surpassed by such modern sluggers as Willie ~1ays and Hank Aa ron. Basketball Association pla.voffs. The Lakers, led by their brilliant backcourt tande n1 of Jerry \Vest and (',ail G.oodrich, defeated the injury-riddled Bulls 108-101 to make it three straight. in Easter at home \•:lth their families. experie nces. ve never nov.·n a .1ner An derson. In .. o ege. -;aid Hfldges hin1 tough. Goodrich is more offensive man." death is "like a bolt out of the biue." minded ·ind \I he !1ad to play Vao Li.er A!l the players are stay·ing 1·n the area · d ' Not 1nci entall.v. Hod ges knocked in Erskine <ind Hodges came out of In-tou0 h v.·e w~re afraid he'd tir"." awa1·1,·ng s!r1·ke developmenl h dd d ~ ~ s, e a e . both runs in that title-clincher. diana sandlot baseba ll. They ,.,.ere sig:ied fJitk l\lo!la, coach or the Bulls , said "I A th k t · h k · to ld niy players alter the game th ey ga\·e no er \\'Or ou "'JI a full com-Du e Snider, centerfielder on the grea t by the same scout. their hesl-0f-seven series. me more than I deserved. They gave all pleinent of players v.·as experted today lit they had ;ind more." the park. Hodges came home to New York for a lhlrd time in 1968 to manage the l\lets, a ·team more famed for laughs than vic- tories. ' · After a ninth-place fi nish the first su m· mer·. Hod ges marched the Me!.s to a ·~tartling NL pennant. and Vi'orld Series ~thumping of the Baltimore Orioles in '69. "\Ve're all still a lil!le glassy-eyed." -~lets general manager Bob Scheffing said ··Ja te Sunday. ~· "Gil never !ooked 1Je1ler. He had ~recnveied so "·ell from that 'alt ack in Atlanta th at nof,st people had forgotten it.,, Hodges was felled Sept. 24, 1968. during , the i\tets' final ~eries the ~1ear before the · \Vnrld Series miracle. Until then, he had never suffered heart ailment s. "I drin·t th ink the p!a,,·ers' strike "'as bot hering hint too much," said Yost. "but <you never kno\\'. Gillie \'las a quiet fellow \\'ho kept so much inside. His main worry \1·as our ball club losing its edge for the opener .. , The Lakers could make it a s1vcep 11'ilh a \'ictory in Chicago Tuesday night. If they fail. the fifth game will be played in Loi; Angrles Friday night. \Vith the ir big center To1n Boerwinkle out for t/1e series \Vith a pulled tendon in the left knee and their )?reat for\1•ard combination or Chet \Valkcr and Bob Love sering only partt in1e ser\'ice because or injuries, the Bull s still n1ade a game or it. Three !in1es the~· lr;iiled by 15 pn1nts in th e second period but still managed to climb into the 58-58 tie early in the third quarter. The Bulls fought back from large defic its lo close 1\•ithin two points late in the third quarter and again in the fourth quarter. But each titne they threatened. \Vesl, \1•ho seored 31 JX>ints. or Goodrich, 1\·ho finished wit h 23. would rally the I,akers ahead. \Vilt Chamberlain scored 16 and had a joyous tin1e slapping \Vbuld be sho ts out of bounds. "It \.\'as a tremendous effort by the Bulls .. , said Los Angeles coach Bill Sharman. "They ga,·e 110 percent. \\'(' Palmer Blows Fat Lead, Blows Stael\:, Stomps Off f GREENSBORO. N.C. 1AP) -George "!was ready tn go." 1\rcher said. ''I ' Archer had his car paoked. loaded and had the car packed. but I \l'a sn't going to • ready to go. "And then I sa\V Arnold leave until son1eone got in the clubhouse niake lhat six and I sairl. ·Ooops. fi.t ·s go a . fiffd~ar.·--- get the cl ubs,' " the big guy said after Arc her ;ind A;iron 11·erc in at 12 under , Asked ;;1bout the Joss of Boer11·inkle. J\·1otta saicl "If anybody knows anything about hasketbal!, they'd kno1v \\•hat the Joss or Tom !lH'ans to us. ''Al times v.·e had to ha ve Love on Chan1berlain." said ~1otta . •·1t's not fa ir to ask Love to play <1gainst \Vilt. In fact, I th ink it en1barrassed \Vilt a liU!e bit. ··_The series no1I''! "it's been a spooky series for us. Balls not going Jn the basket. Loose balls going off our fingers. \Ve break up a pass and they get the ball. \Ve block a shot and it goes into their hands." tt Los Anoete1 llllt) Cl>~mbtrllln l.'llO• Go<xlroch ~alr1ro11 McMilil1n Riley T rarn \\i!•t G ' ' 6 •·6 16 ' 0 0 1 b 1!·12 ~J • I 1 9 7 s.s 19 • 0 0 8 0 ~ 0 0 1] 7.7 ll ol() ?B·ll JOI LC! An~~I~~ cnrc~~o fl Clllc~gG (101> K.nq l D>f f'ortfr '" SloBn V~nLl~r W~l~er Wrl" Tol~I~ G ' ' • 1 2 10 & J • lS • 1).0 8 s 17 !2 s •·? u 9 • s 11 7 G-0 • a O·O 16 •l f,.i; 101 :!Cl 16 11 ll -!01 ,. 15 26 18 -101 Foul,.d out -Lo• An~~I~. Hainlon Tot~! fcu!i -LCl An~ele1 2f (hiC~Qo 13 l!!in!• 11!)) '~.m~ 'fl~·n•nr;i.tan 11~'1•mv H•JthC01 ,\l!•Ov1cn J,orir:o C.ilf11"" cn,.011n lot&ls A!l.inl~ eo1ton G ' ' s ; ~ 11 • l·• 11 q J 4 11 a J s 1~ 12 I J. I• JI 5 1-1 1! ' 0.0 2 0 11-Q 0 llOt!O~ (1Jj) !-<A~hce~ 5•nd•n Cowt~• c~~n,y Wnltt N•l•O" IY·l:,,m~ Fl~~~I l(rubr11~1<I Tot51s 17 'It 21 ll ~1 :12 G ' ' ll S·S JI J 0·0 6 5 11 11 l O·I 6 l1 S·S 10 6 2'2 l..C 1 s-~ 19 • 0·0 I j J.J 11 !721 iJ1)6 J2 -113 40 -1)6 Strilie Tallis Are Fruitless subduing Torn1ny A:iron on the ~eC'und Pal mer fini~hrd 11 und er. then stormed ~ole of a sudden dea th playoff Sunday for past officials. shrugg(•d nff ney,·smen and NE\V YORK !AP ) -Baseball cnm- 'the $40,000 first pritr in !he Greater left the course inirnl'dlR!e ly. The pilol of pleted its lost \\'eekend and the ..<J reensboro Open golf lourn:uncnt. his private plant~ was on lhe run at· l'ountdo•Yn to opening -or non-opening ~ Archer. a one lime rlln<'h hand from tempting to keep up 1\ilh hin1. '~· -day re;1chc : l\1•0 v.·ith more n1eetings :,Gilroy, Calif .. scor~d his: second victor)' Palmer didn 1t spe11k to anyonl'. srhcduled tod:iy in an attempt to seJtle ""•" f lhe season -bo!h in pla,1•off \'iCtor\es Geo~ot Arc1>~r \oli'l.~00 70-61·6661-171 the p!a.ve rs' Strike in. a pension dispute l crnmy A11ton t ?: eoo 11.~1-61·6'-'11 \\'i lh the owiiors. -liClver Aaron -\\'hl'n he n1ade a rou1 ine Arno1d P11 1m1r io1~ 6•6&-6~·1G-11J •~:;,ar-thrCt!"""" O •1.--J6!h hole •! tho. .J_(. Sntt<I fOllolJ U b9 71).t~-;11 ''The Siiu::tlion remains the San1e~·· ·~,.-uie " . (I>• ti>• ,;iQdr19lilll so 1.IO 6~ 69 6~ !Y~lll ( !>Sedgefield Country Club course. o,.v, St0<~1on s•.7}11 6•6•te&1-1i J John iaherin, re1>resent ing the owners '-Julius eoro~ SJ Of'O 66~t .. sn-11s said fol101Ying Sunday·s session \\'ith "i! The pla)•OU n 1as set up "'hen Arnold fl '"'' Cr•mpton s.1to0 e 76$.71).ll--?IS • ·~ ! bl TO~V J11e~!ln II 000 6961-69·69-'7S 1\IRJ'Vin ~·Ji\ler, eXctU!iVe director or \he ,. ra mer e\\ a t1\0·Slrnkc !rad v.·11h lhree _ 11ot1 c11~•1e\ 1•.~:ia to u -61-10-116 J\·tai'or League Baseball Pla.vers Assoc.ia· 'holes to play. Pa lmer hit his t e ~hot into 11~1• 1rw1n s~.~ ot·61&91G-i76 ~a creek far to !he left of the par three ~~~•v G;,;~~: ;!·,: ~~~-~; ~:=~! tl11'on. "Th1~;e is.11110 proi;ress tnwnrds a sel-~16th. • r.11~n M1tler '""' 6111 11.61-211 cmen. ,,e \YJ meet ngai n Monday." f L~11ro11 H~rr1, IJ.Jno •••1 11 t• 1n Miller said today's get-together prob-'. He elected to play It out of the shallow °'°"~ s~nc1'" s3.:::io 69·11 11 &7-111 bl Id b 1 ed f h h d JMin Li•ttr sl.~ 6,., • ..,.,, ,o-u1 a y "'OU e en arg rom is ea • ~"'alef' a1~d did so. Bul he still had a trap ~,~ ~~ ~~ :l:~~ ;!;!~ !!.:::~;: t~hcad weekend meetings 1vlth Gaherln. ~to nego 1ate to reach the green and -to 0on J•nu•I')' ''·"1 ~•'• ,, ;>G-111 ··~fc's bcrn talking about a fuller com- ... the stunned amazement of thousands who ~:~"'$n~'.~118m :;;;:; 1:::::::!::;~: nllttee and I'll probably have one, too,1• !-'braved the \\Ct and cold~ dumped the P.11cc~ M1tc~e11 11.••l 11 islll-1G--111 ~filler said. f:little chip in the bunker. A• c; ... 11~r11er s 1.~;.: 69 Ill10-&t-111 .... .-.ni.i 1 u•'' 1~•7.ioiio-111 He added that the. "''cekend n1eelings •, Palrncr,-hls broad shoulders slumped. i.tnnv 11110-•N. si,011 o~-01.11 ;,t-11t w. ere sn .. nt "r ... nhrasin" iind rcvi·c\vl ng '~ h • h Lt~ rldt1 n t~J 69·111·1J.(f-1JI 1·~ "'!' t> ~nJS mout ll Ilg I, grim line . blasted oul e•ll(• 0t"1'" t1,tt1 10 . .01&·&~--}11 positions. ncal!y. it's been rather ~and two.putted rron1 eigh t feet for a trJ· A•1 w•11 '11090 n ''''·••-11• fru itles s. ~1r. (;ahcrin has no authorit .v to '> I bo b k k d h' Ft•~I< Be~rd ,r,:!O '' 6'•6'·11-:rt •f. e. gey l at noc e 1m out of the M:~, R.,.~, 11,xi• n"' 1J.u-'10 1nake anv new offer. He ls pretending to f' d d I f h l h. 6J 1 eco S!Ol\t 11,xi• &t -69 1111-1•0 \ • SAHASOTA. l-'la. -The Chicago White Sox have announced the signing of Dick or .. Richie., Allen for the highest salary over av.•arded a \Vhite Sox pla yer. Estimates or Allen's rich contract ranged fron1 $130,000 to "over $125,000. '' General ~·tanager Stu Holco mb said Allen signed Saturday after holding out for 41 da \'S. The 30:year-o!d former Na ti o n a I League slugging star said of his signing \\•ith the Sox. "For the first time in my career I really feel wanted ." Allen has been traded three times in his career. • BOSTON -The Boston Celtics, behind the steady shooting of John Havl icek and Jo Jo \Vhite, opened up a 21-point halftime lead Sunday afternoon and coasted to a 136·113 victory over the Atlanta Hawks, taking a 2-1 lead in their Eastern Conference series of the National Basketball Association playoffs. • r-.·~~\V YORK - The Ne1Y York Knicks, rx>1vered by \Valt Frazier's torrid first half shooting. over\vhelmed the Baltimore Bullets 110·88 Su nday night to even their National Basketball Associtttion Eastern Conference semifinal playoff series 'at one victory apiece. • SEATILE -Lenny Wilkens. player- coach of the Seattle Supersonics of the National Basketball Association. an· nounced Sunday he was through as coach. "I've decided to give up the coaching job and continue as a player," Wilkens said. The announcement came a little more than a week after a n1eeting in Los Angeles "'ilh Sonics president Sam Schulman. who had expressed disap- JXJinlment in the S.Onics' failure to make the playoffs for the fifth straight year and was expected to discuss Wil kens' status \\'ith the club. \\1ilkens said there ~'ere no hard feel- ings bet\Yeen him and Schulman and that Schulman had asked him to help recruit a new coach. • VA LHALLA , N.Y. -Rny Camp30ella. Hall or Fsimer in serious condition at Grasslands 1-fospit21. has not ~n told of the death of Gil Hodges.~ manager of the New York Mets And ari' old teammate of Camnanclla on the Brooklyn podgers. U~I T•ltPhOll OLD BROOKLYN DODGER GIL HODGES , DEAD AT 47. Priest Prayed for Him, . Fans Loved Gil Hodges NE\V YORK (AP l -When Gil Hod'(cS \\'ent hitless in a \Vorld Series, a prie~t asked for Divin e Intervention and hun· dreds of fan s sent "~et-1vell" cards. \\!hen he la y ill "'ith a heart attack in an Allanta hospital 16 years later. he struck the same sympathetic response. "Everybody loved hlm ... he '"as l'ne of the greatest guys in baseball," said Oakland A's manager Dick Williams upon learning of Hodges· death Sunday. Hodges. 47, the golden' boy of the old ·Brooklyn Dodgers wh o later managed the New York .Mets to their first \Vt>rld Championship in what was considered a baseball miracle. collapsed and died of a heart attack Sunday in \\'est Palm Beach, Fl a. Williams, a former teammate of Hodges, said, "He was easy to get along with .. _ e._got .A.Jong with . his team· mn!e s and he got along with the O!>" position. He was known as Mr. Ni ce .Guy ." same adoring fans remembered him v:iti1 cards after a mild heart attack in Atlanta in 1968. Yet the same Hodges 1vas later laheled as "less than a man" by one of his former players. Ken Harrelson. An .:t Hodges. who once protected Pee\Vee Reese by bear-hugging another Dodgt r teammate during an argument, also sul> jecled a pl ayer to embarassment '.''Oen he managed the Mets. Hodges ,valked up to !eft-rield Cleon Jones during a game dur ing the 1969 season and yanked him out before 1 jeer· Ing home tO'o''n crowd. It follo wed Hod11:e.;' stoic managerial lifestyle -he played no fa\•orltcs. His image as a tough boss melted in the warm light of interviews •Yith reporters. AllhouRh sometimes ill al ease. his door was always open tG neY.'Smen and he never failed to answer a question. Hls only negative reaction •Was. that no one use tape recorders during a questfon-and-answer session. ., ea an 11u o a C ance 8 IS s DMn• e,..,.n s1.ro• ,,,.$,11.n-Ho bar~ain ." •---~c.ar ~lc.lo:cy, __ ....., ____ L,• Ti,v111a __ _..;11110• ... 1111.10-"'~:----Th" nlayers wenl-on strik• Saturday ' ' Ar h dA • bo h I "~i.n-mn!IV 1.~-H:W.:Tr.7~" -,.. ..... c er an a run, t car y starters, • 11~0 sm1111 J9"1 10.11"'•·11-111-' scckini:t contributions fmm the :nvners f>r. \V. R. Oalzic.I said... Campanell spent a restful Sunday in the hospital's inlensi"e care unit. ''I heard about Hodges' death'' Dr. Dalziel said. "but hR vc no Intention of telling Campanella." C11mpanel111J 50,~as been in the hospital since. Last Ttiurs<lay with an em· bolism on the lung. J!odges, 47. collapsed and died of a heart attack at West Palm Beach. Fla .. Sunday. As a player, Hodges had a warm association with both teammates and fans. Ae was~n60<ied v.•tth ma11-a11d-n Brooklyn priest prayed for him when he eouldn 't gel• hit In the 1952 World Series against the New York Yankees. Those He liked to stay out or the llmelight. -Hooges-wa mclf--effaclnr,modes man despite aceomplishments that in :luded a 1969 World Series victory over ih1 h~avily-favored Baltimore Orioies. 'had been in the clu••·u·· for about an R9'1d¥ wo111 •1~s 7010 '•·61-111 bo h d I "00 ooo fl 1 ! 111ru "" itao ~11"~"" 114.1 10.66•13.1,_,11 a Ye t e one-an -on y .,.. , o er or ;;. hour vlhen it happened and wa tched lhe · J~"' H•~rd s'llls ••-n.n.11-H1 th e health care segment of the P.f!ns.ion 'Palmer collapi;e on t<lev11!on. G•y ,,,_ f'lllJ 11"1'1>10-2•1 n.!lekagc. , rem s~~w t~l r1,,s.tH•-111 ,,. •• • " 041LV PILOT Jf) Turkish Trousers lta Olynapics Iha Assesses U.S. Born for Stardom Cage Cl1ai1ces By LAUIUE 8E(KLUND 01 !tit 0111~ f'llt! 11•11 Consider a nom ination for top athlrtt of lhc yea/': A noted track star, she was '-----~•ll!..llli!lll:l"J-~inner in . .lUli'-flMi group last year and leads the rield this year after grossing over $100 .000 in jll~t rour races. She runs the n1ile In about. .a-lhird the time Jim Ryun did \\'hen he set the world rP<:ord . •ler ofricial tlme in the mile and an eighth is less than I :"8. But chanc.:es are she \\'on't ever be ronsidcred for the ti- tle, ~1 aybe he-cause .she's young, black and female. ~1aybe because she has a fun- ny name : Tu rkish Trousers. Maybe because she's a horse. Vet the four-year-old filly ''is better lhan a lot or athletes becau.!lc she doesn't ... talk back and isn't al "'ays ever Sef!n -d11 rk brown. asking for a raise,'' quips her almost black -but she just trainer. the world ·reno\1'ned looks li ke she can ru n," the Charlie Whitt ingham . trainer says. Whittingbam; a ~o-~en_se~ As the da ~gh_ler of $353,422· vete ran wlifi unblinking blue eal'ffertili"gtitlad u11d ta C€1'1· eyes nnd an ob v i o us lioela ,Stil~cs "'i nner Nag.. resemblance to Yul Brenner. J\1ahl, 1 urk1sh Trousers v.·as. a has been working "'ittJ Turkish bfrn athlete. She was bred .1n TrouSfrs ·sinee--she-was·a·year-Kentucky ~nd reared .'· ting and readily ackno"·ledges Pomona be f o re being · his top filly has many o_f the transferred to h~r present personality quirks of a distaff ho1ne al Santa Anita by her star. O\vner. ~lrs. Howard B. Keck. "She has very much a n1ind ''She "'as very easy to 01 her 01vn and \von't ever train.'' \\l h1Uingham recalls, hesitate to kick -or bite for "she ne 1 er had any problem thal mailer -anybody who learning how lo break from comes near her. She 's got! lot the gate or relax in a race. of fire," he says. She's definitely the best filly ··s ut she's very intelligent. I've ever trained." Fron1 the nioment \Ve saw her · 1t·s been more than a yea r . \\"e thought 5he 'd be J?ood. She since \Vhiltingham hired ~1ary isn't the prettiest filly I've fi.1eglernre of l.-Ong Beach as his firs! female exercise rider. DAYTON. Ohio 1Ar1 - 11vou are in trouble "'hen you don't get your be5t Rthlf't r.~." That's the assessment of the United States' chances of prn- tecling its unbeat en retord in 'this summe r·~ O!_rn1p1c Garnrs basketball eon1pc1ition fro- m Hnnk Iba. tl11s nation 's Olympic b:iskrtb ('(frTiprlf· lion from H;i nk Iba, this na· t1o<t's Ol~·n1p1r ba!'keth,;!I co.1ch for an unpreceJenterl third t1n1e The forrncr ()k!tthon1a St.i!r C'Oach has a dra~t1(· sol u11nn tn h:tl t lhf' pro;<:' ra1d1n~ ,,f rnl· lege ·1alrnt ancl co1;,111g th1~ · rountry Cll ~ rnp1(' pr"~l l<'t'l s "Th e pilrf"nl~ nf a y1lt1n;:.'itC'r' shoutd h n 1 r rn ~1gn ii i:1111riln1re !h.~t he 11 11! rl'n1a1n in srhoo! four ,1 cars," lh.i ~ug· gr.su·n. 7·2, 6-10 and 6-9. Brazll is load· ed with speed. \Ve must have · a tall and speedy 'team . That'• a hard n1att'h." Iba will siart selecting the . team when the NCAA •. ---+-1 AA U. NAIA , junior college! and 1\rmed r orccs comb ine to '°and 66.candKla tK 10 the-flna'----..._1 !rials June 12 tll Colorado Srtrin,cs. C<i1o. f ~r 1.~ upset 11 tl h the NCAA. \1 h1ch \1 111 nnr rerm1 t high ~t·M1! srn1ors to t'lllend the (llympir~ can1p~ ea rh summer and ha~ made underclaslimen l<11'>on for !he All·lllar game 1n <1n 01~ mpic ye Ar for the hrst lll nt' ""\\'c ha v"e c 11<'lu~h !rouble \1 t!h the pros 1vllhQU\ our ov:n pr11plr un,Q_cr1~1 1nlng thr Olym· p1r program,'' lhri ll;Hd. Against Jo11es Trio Miss 1\1eglemre feel s she knO\YS the fill.y well. "I feel llke her heart is big- ger than her "'hole body sometimes because she tries so hard ," the young rider says. '"It's like she wants to be able to do everything. "People Hl lh1s eountr~ <Jr(' 50 egotis11cal ," thf' n111 n 11 ho coached 767 cn!l cg_C' 11 1nnrrs said. "They just th ink ~·ou 1•an go out and p(r·k 12 good . pla.vcrs and bcal thr ll'orld Thi' Oly mp it cnath makes st elrar he's not ho1st!ns a white 1l;1g fo r the U.S. squad. hn11'{'1 rr. ""If 11·e'd happen In get nnothc r Spencer H 11 y \V o o d fr on1 the junior C6llei;c!>. <ind the AAU and 1\r111ed Forces pt'O\'lde tbe tale nt they did in 19fill. 11·e'll do \1·cll ." Iba says. Unser, Gurney F trc-e Shuoro-ut NEW YORK IAP l -II there is a real shootout in championship au!n racing lhi s )'ea r. it very likely y.•iJI be bet\\'een Robhv Unser and a triumvira te of ex-champions th;it includes his brother, Al Unser. • Bnbbv and his car O\vncr. Ex-driving grcaL Dan r.urney of Costa '"'t1CSaWant in that y.·ay. And they insist the odds aren't as bad as they ·would appear on the surface. ··rm dra'.\'tni;: _;;i bead on them. no doubt abou1 that.'' Bobby said rec ently. "\\'ith all the money the y'\•e got. they could \\"in it all u n I e s s somebody steps in to shoot 'em do\\'n." Unser, 39, \\•as speak1n1;: of Ala111itos Harness Entries Parnelli Jones' new (driving trio of Al Unser, Mario Andret- ti and Joe Leonard. Together, Unite<l States -auto Club-driv- ing title five times and the rich Indianapolis 500 th ree limes in a row. Not only that, lhcy go into the 1972 campaign \\'ilh much financial backing from two prime sponsors, Vice- roy cigarettes, and Samsonite lu~,(!age . '"They're going to be tough." Gurney adm itted. "but \\'e are further along in our develop.. n1ent program than \Ve have been in fi ve years. and I think "·e ha ve the n1achinery -and !he driver -to give them a run ror the money. The t.;nser-Gurney fir epo"'er \1'ill ron1e rrotn a !'creaming Eagl e ru r b-or ha r ge d Of· renhauser built by Gurney. l.Jn;er dro\"e it to an unof- fic ial 196.9 n1iles per hour in tests at the 2.5 mile Ontario speedway. before qualirying 111 a ne\v lap record of 141.996 m.p.h. ror the one-mile oval al Phoenix lhree v.•ecks ago . lfe v.•on the 150-mile rnce, fir st of two warmups berore the USAC contingent reaches Indianapolis May l. Then. ea rlier this week. the oldest of the Unser drivers bolted around· lndy·s O\'al at 190.8 m.p.h. Jones didn·t ha ve his new ears readv for the Phoenix opener, bu·t plans to introduce them at Trenton. N.J .. April 23 . Early tests at both Ontario and Indianapolis have pro- du ced speeds over 180 m.p.h. Gurncv's cars have never lacked f0r speed. In four years on the USAC circuit the Olsonite Eagles. \vilh drivers Gurney and Bobby Unser. have won 10 of 27 races. Not only that. 1968 Indy winner Unse r took Gurney's cars to seven track records last yea r anrl 'vas eit her on the pole or in the fr ont row for 10 ra<;es. But he y,•on only two of them. "Our trouble wa s fi ni shi ng.'' Bobby said. "We never lacked for speed. tt was the little th ings that kept us from win- ning . \Ve're starting new thi s year. and we're going to be heard from." Pro Hockey Sta11dings "I 11•atched her personality .,. chttnge y,•hen she turned fou£. She uscd'o be a pla yful girl o th ree. bul now thal she's a \VOman of four she's much more crude and ill-mannered and e\'en has to be attended by a pony Y.1hcn she walks out IQ. !.k_rac!, ~s~~~t_kick- anyone," Miss Meglemre says. CHARLIE WHITTINGHAM As horses go. she·s not very ______ .:.:.:.:.::::.::::.::__:___:___:_ _ __:_ ______________________ _ tall, jusl about IS hands. She has unusually small feet and has to be specially fitlrd for her alun1inum shoes because !he wall of her foot is so thin, Whittingham explains. Orange Coast Has Hex She she has the uniquely fcn1inine habit of losing shoes frequent ly he says. getting a ne1v double pair aboul every 25 da ys. On Gaucho Baseball Team She prefers v.•hite blankets and \\'Cars only the best of English sadd les. She also is accustomed 1o The re's little doubt that Orange Coast Col. lcge .,,·ould like lo pla y Saddleback a few more times this baseball s('ason. onlv the best of riders: Billy ·rhe !1\0 learn s h11ve pla~·ed four games ShOem aker is one of the fe\\' this season \1•ith OCC on top on every .oc· jockeys v.·ho is able-to fi<JelJ'leCa:;ion . Anif ""ilh lhe exception of the first fill} \1·ell becau se she is so dif· game score f4-21 the rcsl have been rather ficul l to control, her trainer lopsid rd 9-1, 7--0 and li-61. savs: S:iddl eback is in the throes of a IS·game tlut perhaps the winner of losing streak .,..·ith no relief in sight. lhe $100,000 Santa r..·largarila At one point in the season Saddlebark's lnvilalional Handicap at S{inta Anita r-.1arch 4 and ;;ic- cu1nulator of about $300,000 in less than t1\'0 years deserves the best. After all. lhe obstinat e filly has adhered to a training schedule probably more ri gid th an an y hu man athlete ever Ha s attempted. CRA-IG SHEFF ' l~er day begins at 6 a.01. \vhen she is run ;;iround the ,track for abo1r1t half an hour by an exercise boy or gi rl. Gauchos .,,·ere 2·2. But that y.·as IS games After"·ard she is gi ven a ago. sponge bath. follo .... ·ed by a 40_ "\\!e've got some out standing freshmen minute WRlk around the stable players. but 1\·e just haven 't got the depth, to cool off. espec ially in the pitching department," sa ys Gaucho coach Doug Fritz. \Vhittingham is the only Pitching is the name of the game in base-traincr at Santa Anila \l'hO still uses hot-walkers (pcop lel to lead the horses around as they cool do.,vn. The other trainers attach the horses to a metal device called a mechanical walker w h i c h enables the horses to move around by themselves. ball as r~ritz is finding out. * * * Spea king of y.·hamm ies. Cypress has one on Golden \':est. The Char~ers have beaten coach Fred Hoover's G\VC Rustl ers four times th is baseball seaso n and there 's still l\\'O meeti ngs lrft. C,ypress. "''ith 11 Ji-5 season mark, has out· liCflred Golrlen \Vest. 26-9. in the four lilt~. But the Rustlers trail Cypre55 !the South· ern California Conference lea der I by just orie'' game. thus those final '"''0 contests are \"ery crucial. * * * OCC and Saddleback ca n beg in making plans for next baseball season as both are already out of their pennanl chase!'. Coach Barry \Val!ace "s Pirates have a J-5 South Coast mark. traili ng Cerritns t6-0) and Fullerton (i-1) by four games. The llvo South Coast leaders bang heads this Friday at F' JC. Cerritos h;is a ~li-3 season record while Fullcrt.on is 23-3. Srtddleback is also rour games back in ii_,; conference race. The Gauchos have an 0·4 Mi ssion mark. · * * * California's JC baskelball all·~tars did ex. tremely "'·ell in the recent nation al AAlJ tournment. reaching the semifinals before losing to the Armed Forces All-stars by just fivf' points. That's quite an accomplishmenl and says a !11l for ju nior college basketball in the staff. Plaudits to co-coaches Barney Newlee !Chaffey I and Sid Phelan fSan Francisco CC I "'·ho had only five days t.o prepare the ir 1quad for the tournamen t * * * Saddleback Coll ege defen sive bac k Boh r.-1cNamara who still has another year of eligibility, has been drafted and will report to F't. Ord the latter part of fi.1ay. * * * Saddleback assistant roolball coat·h Vince ~1cCullough i5 a candidate for the San J oajuln DlstrlC't board of trustees. He 'a ruo. nlng agaiost eight ot her candidatea. Then Turkish Trousers ~oes to her groom . a man known as Onofre. for an al cohol rub to slimulale her circulation . The fill y ha s a slightly arthritic knee and sometimes is given a heat treatment called dia· pulse. "'hich is also used in hospitals. Dinner Set Area Sports Calendar For Dena 11 .. 11111 -Miit• Or• '1 S•. 1'1ul (3:15 ). A testimonial dinner will be T1111111 -su..nv H1111 •' N1w1>0<"r Ttn11it -~"" Ol•to Mtll 11 0•1111t Coa11 U l. Sin DI~ Cl!y Co1l111 11 UC lr<•onr ll.llll. "Those davs arf' gnnr \\'e"rl' liable to reail.v catch 1t and ~rt be:it in ~luni('h ." hf' J1a1d "\\Ip didn't even gr\ nut 11f the saddlr 111 the l'<1n·Arn c:ames lnsl yea r. ('uba. ii ne\\'('OJnr r. heal us in 1hr fir!'t round . \\'e lost to \'ugnslav1i1 , Brazil and Italy In !he 1970 '\'nrld (:il n1es." Iba <'on1 inurd. 1'he U.S. roach says fnrcign <'Ompetilion has become so tou gh because nf natioanl teams that pla y n1ore than 50 games e::ch sufnmer. Iba said 6-fool-10 Brigham Ynung center Kre5imir C.Osic, 11•ho plays for his nat ive Yu~oslavia, told hirn . "\\le pl;;i~ cd ~2 gan1cs hack home );1o;t ~ummer. Coach, I've Illa~ e<I more ~a mes fo r Yugosl:ivla than you 've "'on as a cnal'h, '"lfcek. that"s n10re lhan 700 ,i;.in1rs." said lbil. "I'm 11·nrr1ed abo ut hig mr11" !h{' OlympiC' ('nach rnn- t1nu{'d. '"The Russians go i·~. Quarry Bids }~or Cha11cc At Title Bout ~·l ike Qu11rr.1·, hnping to ::ind a bou1 \Vi!h \l'Or!<l chttrn pion Bob F'ns1rr. t<i ke s on San F'rancisc·o's Chut k H11n1ilton lo lhe ID--round off-TV rna in event tonighl at The Foriull. Quarry. who just tu r,L1ed 21, sports a 34-0 record while scoring JO knockouts. M :ina~· ed by older brother Jcrr\', Mike -captured the North American light-heavy.~·e1ght cro"'n from Jimrny Dupree last October in Anaheim . l\1 ike is ranked number t1vo in the light-heavyweigh1 d1l'i· sion by both \\'BA and WBC. He is listed as a J0-6 choice over Hamilton. Hamillon qua:ified for this fight by scoring an imp ressive knockout win over highly.re· garded Amact..o Vasquer. three wee ks ago in Sa n F'rancisco. The ex·st ate champion sports a 23-9 mark and holds victorie!i over Terry Lee. Richard Steel and Ronnie Wilson. _ The JO-round television sc.mi- main pits Glendale's Mike Nix. on aga inst hard pun ching Arl Davis of San Diego in a mid- dleweight scrap. This shapes up to be a top battle as Davis scored an up- set knockout win over Nixon two mont hs ago"" in Long . Beach. I l:i 1·11·nod hrlpecl lead the t nu rd States 10 the Olym pic !Ille four years tt go. Former Ya le ni e n t n r llo1rard Hobson. \1•ho ~uidcd thr East in the All -Siar gamr, sa id this counlry should be n1ore lenient to1\·ard future pros "f think a bo\' should be able to play after hf.: hireli an agent and signs a contract, right up until his fi rst pro grame." llobson said . Emerso11, Gonzalez Defeated __ :'ltACON. Gil. -England 's r-.t.-.k Cox capt urrd the $25.000 ;\l.icon Inlernauonal te11fli9 tournament singles champiori. ship Sunday, defeating Roy Emerson Clf Newport Beach , 6·J. 6-7, 6-J. The \'ictory, \vhich earned 1he 26-year-0:d tenni.!l· pro $4.500 in first-prize money. came after a referee's error cost Cox the second set of the ma tch, The referee inad vertant l,v gave Emrrson a po1nl he had not earned . "·liich al!o"'ed hun to win lhe lie-breaking play. off in th e sreonrl .~l't. Neither plttycr rrcngnl1cd the error un11r it 11·as too la te, hut Cox 's 6-.1 '1c1orv in the rh1rd set crallrd any question of victory. Eme rson i;:.11nr1I a 1neasure of rc1·c11H, 11 hrn hr. tea med 11•ilh Tom u~kl•r 10 defeat o~ and Graham St11well 1n the doubles final. 7.6. 6·2, 1•a11rl111 ll111c.-. HONG KONG -Mt! And•ri.on et A<11trall~ w1'l11Pl'd 8 w~1rv P1nche Gon1~111 ol Lo1 An;eltt, •·J. ,_., 6·1. toe!IY •nd woii lh• m•n"I •f111te1 i lllr of ll>f Hong l(cng 01'o•Ot0<1rt l1n111.1 c"'"" plon11'ln1 A110tri.on. 11 .. ,~""I G n n I • I • t' ~~·••c• •••Iv " •••n \O! •••11•11•'1 1rrvlc1 110W1rl11lly •"<I oro•1 b"l!l•n!ly lrom lfOt tlt"I'"' l11dl" H'lrt.• Luc~now. tn111•-!rnl•• 1>"11 Ct~IOfl 111 doub1•1 S11n~8v •r>d ,..~,, ·~· '"" rcti~~ m l!CfO In t~t E&OI ZOO"e OI V•I c ~,. G•Cklll II !•nn11 '""'""•1•(111 T~e dOUbl•• ''""""" o! Jl od~ M11kht•I•• •nd P""''" Lall ov~r C~Y!Ofl'\ er•n1•d "'"'" 1"'1 P s. !(um••• 6·J. 61 6·1 ~·•• tnclll ).-0 ltM In lhr btil 111 liv1 m1tch, S111ill1 RD/ls She has a breakfast or straight oa ts at 10:30 and then settles back in her roomy stable for a live-hour siesta. At 3:30 she eats her big "serious meal" of the day : a ~·armed mixture of n1ash. oal s, sweet feed and liquid vitam ins. Twelve hou rs later she i.'i aw akened by one of 'Vhitti ngham's 30 backstretch employcs (exercise riders, hnl\valkers a~d grooms) for another ligh: meal of oats. held Friday night al the Santa CJ:u i Gymn11li(I -Coron1 dtl M1• ~t Ana Elks Club in honor of Sono••· Ntwl)O•I II A II .~ I ; m . former Servile High head foot· L•••wooO 11 F0<11111111 v11H•Y· v11r11C<t bal: coach and athletic direc· 11 W11tmln11rr (111 •t J.JJI Davis has done m05t of his llHll•lt -(P•on• G•l ""-' 11 Foun. lighting out of San Diego and 5AM JIJAN. Puer!O ltl(O -N•nt v '"In ll•lleY, Lal Al1m!101 I I (Cit• · ,9 • RltMv Gu,.l•r 111 S1n An9e!o. T•• 1-.d Surely no human athlete "'OU ld choose lo adhere to such a trainin g table. S u re l y Turkish Trouse rs hofse s around less with t\er sport than m 11 n y human athletes do with theirs. Surely she deserves at ll!ast a nomination for athlete of the year. G De 5w1mml111 -An1nrim 1T 1-iu"l'""'On tor reOrge na . Br.tch Wt1t•rn at M1r1111, Un•vtrJ11Y A no-host cocktail hour ili 111 1.1~11n1, t111tln '' Ml••I°" v1r10. sin Clem1nt1 111 Foathlll (all 1! J.Ul, slated from 6·7 o'clock, ~'Ith NtwPor1 111 we1rm11111rr t1·:ro 1. b · d l 7 Th11rldlY (APrU ., dinner e1ng serve a · Tr•e• _ Fn11n11 ... v111tv at corona Dena was at Servile for the dr 1 Mar. Edl1on ~1 SA v1lltY. Ei_t~nc1• ~! M~onOll•. Lo1r~ 11 tt11n!1no1on last 13 years before being suc-Be~'"· "'"~~elm ~1 M1rln1, s~n11 ""~ d db r M. · Vie 1t N~wi>0rl .. Wf\,,rn •! Wr\tmln11rr, cee e y ormer 1~s1on • y 1111 P•r~ i t Min ion 111110. !(.i~I!• ~' jo grid aide Chu ck Gallo and ~~" c1""'~ .. 1~. co.11 Mu• 11 Lo• he'll be relurninn to his alrna ,.,11m11o~. L1oYn• ar&<:h at So11or1 !111 "' 11 l 1 )) mater -: Anahei m l·ligh -· ••••11111 -s1dd1eb•t•• •' Chattev . l l !?·30), UC lrvlnt 11 U11lv ol R"dl1nO~ next fall l'IS a grid ass1s an . 131 · $6 50 ~wlm1'11ftt -Sau11' co,ut Co11•trtOIC't Mt••· 5•nt1 An1 v111r , '' E~l1011. IS a ., as a pro. s''" sml!11 01 s 11 Plne1, s c . won •I'll ........ 11 E1t111<l1. H11nllngl011 Undefeated heavyweight con-$i .. ole1 '""mplo11\l'l,l1>1 ln ,~. C1r!b• d G F ·11 Hii ton Ten"'' Tourn1m1nt Suna1v. !1•8(n 1, Lo8r1, A1181\t'!m 11 M1r1n1, len er reorge ore.man WI Mn . <illfllfr won '"' W«nen'i 1111,. Nt wpGrl "' S1nlt ..... W11!mln111r 1• fight BufraJo's Vic Brown Ill m1tct1 by lurn1nt 11.ttlo "'"~·· Cl'l•lt WeSl•r,., VIII~ P1r~ 11 MIU IOl'I YlllD. k f Evert, Foti l1U01rl)1l1, Fla ... ,, 6.J. 1<11ell1 81 Sin Cltmtnlt. P1tllic1 •I the mai .. event a Wee rom Smith. t1't No. t rtnklnt 11i.•er 111 tl>t u ni••rtl!Y. ~11or1 11 L•1111n• 1••ch tonight at The Forum. un11M s111r,, "''' 1i-e1t1n bv Cl••i.: tall 1r J:IS l. G11llJ1n Weit 1t llllo Hanc:Jo $6 d G•.MDntr, or Ntw Yotk •·•, 1-", bvt () JOl Tickets are price<l at an 11111 tfnl•nH! "" ra11 rn tf\11 round rob1,, Gymn11Ut1 -Golde" W11t 11 LA $4. m•n'• com~!ll!on. Hirt>o• U I. l~iliiiiiiiiilllii;P.!iiiiiiii~~P.•~~~~""~iiiiiiiiiiiii Tinnl1 -Foun!1on V1lltY 11 Coronl d'-1 M~r, (0111 Me1• 11 Liii Al~m/101, EOl1on 1! St~ll Ana V1lltf, E1t1ncl1 81 M aQnol+1, Lo••• al Hun1on91an Staci>, MerifO• It .t.n111eim, S1n)1 -.n1 11 Ntwi>Ort w,.,,.,n ~t W•1tmln11 rr. Mits•O" V~le t i VIiii P1r~, Si ft Clo••,.nl• ~r 1<11tl1, Unlv•t\11""/' 11 P .Kifo(I. L10ull• Ill•(~ 11 50...,11 till 11 J U). Got!J!n Wt\! 11 LA ttaroar Rescrvallons are · per ""'' 11 Fullr••on 121. person and may be made .1;-~;.ii.i;i;,i;;i;;;..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii0';;;;;-.-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-..-;;;;;-,1 through the Servile Booster! Meet the Man t!•Ji)J, Club al 1952 ,V. La Palma Ave .. Anaheim. 926-0L I Behind the Safeco· Smile. 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE WARRanty At No Extra Ch.1r9,_. ''"'-'l•b< o·eol o Po,. •, %ti DArl Y PILOT S Mood•• Apnl l , 1971 File New W-4· Form Now 2 Swres Fi11ance U.S. Wth holding Pl.an Penalizes Som e Recall I B1·iefs li " Sy SYLVIA PORTER If \Ou are amon~ the m1ll1Ms of taspaytrs ll'hn~e income taxes on your 1972 payC"herks are bei.ng O\'er11•11hh!ld, do yOIJ reahze what you are doing to you r- sell ~ f1n1~h1ng touches on a new is.(ue of lbree-)·e.=ir notes overwllhheld If_ you ha ve pot filed 1 new withholding Form W·< !Employet'I Wllhho ldmg pa ying s i ~ percent 3 year 1. Exemption Certificate ) ln the -You are ca re I e s s I Y past couple of months, warns forfeiting !he interest or Leon Gold. chief tax expert of dividends you could easily !he Research Institute of e11rn for yourself on this part America . rect underwitbholdlllg for 1. these elalses ot taxpayers, at OZ ' D · LI lhesamellm•theycr.1le1Y" ays e 1101el. P ln1111ed tematic overwlthhold1ng for the millions wi1hout a working LOS A;;GELES -Te ylor spouse and for The millions lnternatlonal Corp .. builder of without a second job. R. NORl\.1AN ~1ATHEt\"t' ~11ami Beach 's fountainbleu .. • • i -You are volunt.=irlly n1nk- lng an interest-free.Joan...oLup to onf' full year to the li S. Treasury ol part of each of your hard-earned p;iiyrheck~ - of your_pi_ycheck -mecely by This particularly 1pplies to depositing the.. mooo.y_in a-sa-1.·~-)'0ll . . lngs account or buying a stock If you are single e1rn1ng T 0 r re ,. en l th Is Cl!rll!I•" $(1111Ct M011ttor S1rv!(t and Las Vega!!' c ll es a r l'i o v e r w t h o 1 d i n g_. l:~he,,s,,_e _"-CRJGLER.SVlL.l.E,~VA•---p81irc-e-irn"d'"'mtmrntllr~lr.tras;lf---jL:--J7:-;:-:-:::-!:"11'.-;-;;::-:-;-:;:--;;::-;JH11-----f1 emp oyes -you -must file 1 Th~re are two stores In this been a\\·ardE'CI the contract for new Form w.4 11•hich you are tiny farming c<1mmunily. They I -and-~~n nol get h~ek a pen- ny of 1h1s inrerf'st-free In.in unit/ the start of '73 111 tl1e earlies! -You are inv1tinq thf' l" S. 'T reasury lo borro11· t h 1 s money from you al zero in- terest \l'hile 1t simultaneou~ly pays up to 6 percent for monev ii borrn"•s from other 1n\'~siors. ( Tod a y . rhe Trea'sury 1s putting t he pa yin g a regular, safe up to S25.000 a year. d1vid"nd -If you are a married cou· -At..tht \'try least., y01U.te pie.... with ~,v_..one working ca ~ually cutting your ov.'ll spouse earning up to Sli.000 a righffuJ take-home pay and !el· year . ling the Treasury use money Here 's the story In brief : you could be spending on As of Jan . 15. n e w your~~lf or others or In· withholding tables became ef • veslin~ etc ~ fective designed to correct the In b;Untes! words. btcaust of underwilhholding In past vears your ignorance or lazine.ss. o~ mlllio~s of husband-and· vou are unnecessarily hurting wife working couples and In· Yourself. divid uals holdlnp: two jobs. But You are almost surely being while the new ta bles do cor- Luxu ry Baig For the man who wants appearance of a luxury car and economy of ~'olksn1ag~n. Ivan Segal of Philadelphia ma y have the m?chine for you . He redesigned stand· ard bug using small-~ized version of classic Rolls-Royce hood. He hopes to market converted auto1nobile idea. Unit Elects R.F. Wes t Royal f . West, eng1neer1ng director for Asso ci at ed _Engineers and Planners of Newport Beach, has bten elected president of t h e. Orange County Chapter of the Western Mobilehome As3oc ia· tion . Associated Engineer~. 4~00 Campus Dr . d e s i g n s mobilehome parks. J\1argaret H o d g es of Treasure Island J'l"lnbilehome park in Lagun;i; Beach \r~s elected co rresp onding a;ecretary. Also elected to the 1972 slate were Alvin Ed11·ards. Rancho Fullerton . vice-pres.1rlent: \\'i n Devine. Plantati'n ~f o b i I e Estates in An a he 1 m . treasurer. and DianP ~1cCa!Ja. Emerald Isle in G a r cl en Grovf. recording secretary. RC A Sa le Told l\E\\' 'YORK -RCA Corp. says if will sell ifs \1ideo-com p ~lectron1c photocomposilions and typesetting sys t e m s business to Information International, Inc. of Los Angeles. LEGAL NOTICE --------1 ll~J '- i UPElllOlt COUlT 0, THE iTATI! 0, CALl~ORNtA ~Ollt THE COUNT Y 0, ORANGE No. A·7eUf HOTICE 0_, HEAii.iNG 0, PETITl.,N f'Olt AN OlltOElll: INSTlUCTING E.I· ECUTOl TO 111,END E~TA11! ,Uk05 TO Rl!HIW NOTI • In High Gear Women Ha~e Say In Choosing C.ar By CARL CARSTE~SEN 01 !tit 0111, 'lltt s11u Some of 1tt·e nation's moi>t representative wives t~ly agre e !hat the hus band ma s the fin al deci sion "·hen i :s time to buy a new car. but lhat the wives pli y a big role in framing ground ru les - with an eye to economy. And somewhat surprisingly, the sex wh ich stresses rhe closet space in the home doesn't emphasize trunk space in the car. SuC'h \\·ere some of the find· ings in a recPnt pol! of \\'!\':>' Also fami lied number reflecting marrled s!atus 1vere the reporting multiple cars and licensed dri\'ers in their households. J\1ost \vere lY"O car. two driver families. with one reporting seven rlri \'ers in the family. 11·ho 11·ere finalists i:i the l!l71 G!'ace R. Le1vltt of Ne1vport All-American family Sea ~ch Beach h~s been named a vice Enrrants 1n the ann 11'lf p:T~1rlent of Du Uums. a search for the nat ion·s m1:1 <i::'1:a1 tn1enr store ch;'i 11. She represeniath-~e fam ily 11 ::'-e 1c·ned lhe firm in 1050 and screened according to C"rireria became controller in 1959 11.nd est11blished by !he socio!o:::y \1•jJJ continue in Iha! cRpacity. department at the Univ ersity ~!rs. Lc<i\'1tl 1vas graduilted of i\1iami . f inalist famil iE's from He a:d's gathertd for 10 days of inter-Busin ess Col- ,.1,,11•1nk and testi ng by a blue. legc. and is ribl>nn Judging panel. The a dire.::lor of wrln~n survey (If mothers on lhe Lon g atti!udrs on cars 11•as con· Bea ch Bet· dur!ed by Dodge Di\'fsion of. · ler Business ficials. E·Jresu arid Despite widel y v a r y 1 n g a past pres1- ba rkgrounds . all f 1 n a 11 s I s dent of lhe sho11·ed agrecmtnt lhat lhe Re1:111 C"n· economic faC'lor!I arr priin e MAS. LEAVITT I rollers . As. supposed to get from your J\1e fro·Gold1vyn-~1ayer's lux· employer to claim a new are right across the strE'et ury hotel in lhe Nevada gam· ~'tpecial withholding allow. ftom each other at the 1n· ing center . ~1Gnt said its 25-ance." d tersection of Routes 670 an storv Grand Hole! "'ould be The Jnrernt1l Re v e n u e · ( Service took for granted That 642. the lt1rgest luxury hotel ever all of your employers 11·ould Both ha ve survi ved more built and include 2.084 rooms, • Imm ediately notify you that than half a century. and lhere a j:ii ali fronton. and a con- you should obtain and fll! out a are only 25 families rectiving ven11on hall. new Form \V-4 and thal all of you . would immediate ly res-mall at the post office, which pond and take the necessary is located in one of them. affirmative action to preven t Apparently there is enough automatic withholding on your business for both. And enough 1972 pay· But as Gold bet a top IRS of· services lo be shared . ficial back In January , it There is a school bus to be hasn 't turned out that way at driven ? E. E. Aylor Jr. takes all . , care of that 11•hile his mother !Have you been notified? Have you acted?) minds the store His father and In fact . even at the IRS, the mother purchased the General sculllebutt is that less than 20 Store more than 50 years ago, percent of the employes have and the post office \\'as in it. filed the essential forms ! Shortly afterward, there v:as Jr's eslimt1ted 1hat from S4 a change in politics, says ~1rs. billion to SIO bi:lion is being Aylor almost \l\ilhout lingerir:g overwithhP/d at a time v1hE>11 bitterness. At that time the all the \VashinRton emphasi~ post office was moved across is on stimulating consumrr the street to Criglersville Sup- spending. It's fear~d that ply Company. ~·here Robert unless this situation · i s Gibbs was proprietor for 52 changed , these billions will be yea rs. pouring out in tax pa Yer NOY.', his son-in· law . Harold refunds next year ~ af a time Seale, owns and operates the when the emphasis well may business. ~le look over last be shifti ng to restraining con· August, after 8 year's tour in !iumer spending. the . .\rmy in Vietnam. If you are in a higher in-Lou is T h 0 m p 5 0 n is come bracket and if in past postmaster. His pigeon·holes years you \•oluntari!y cut down are in one bark corner of the your exemptions to avoid store. underwilhholding bE'cause of Besides the postal sign. tll'o the old tables, you are prntr ahJy he i n g substantially nrhers declare that ··phone over\.\'ithhcld on yoPr pay nO\\', hills n1ay be paid here'' and f ile ti new 'V-4 tit O!'lce. sa\'S that this is an official "G a1ne Gold. and "claim all rour Checking Station." allowances now plus the ·new Each establishment ht1 s an special allowance." ancient coal slo\'e located near If you expect your 1972 the middle of the sa lesroom, itemized deductions to exceed \vith chairs and stools about by t1 big an1ount your '72 stan-for lingering c u s l n m e r s . dard deduction (15 percent of Sometimes there aren't \'ery adjusted gross income with 11: many customers to lini;ier. SI.300 minimum and a $2.000 Both ha ve shell·rs 1\·fth maximum \, claim not only numerous items that ha,cn·t your regular allo\vances and moved for some time . new special a!IO\\•ance but Aylor chuckles t1bnut the a!so . sugi;.tests Gold. "any several pairs of high-laci11g ponsible additional withholding Red Goose leather ,!:h1es he aJl011·ance on line 6 of Form stocks for "the mi~~us·· y,·hich \V-1 computed from the table bear a price of S2.i5. on the re \'E'rse side of the Across the street at the !:iup- form ." ply Company tall hatboxes line The IRS. it is reported. iS' a high shelf near rhe orna1e planning t.o takf'! JO.second TV n1eral ceiling . Cob11'cbs are spots soon fo try to .tlert yo u thirk bet11•een severAl. Seale on all this. If is truly em-sini!es and a!lov•s that he barrassed. doesn·t kn0,.,. if the boxes have Don '! 1rait. Heed th is 1\·~rn. any hats in them anymore ing. for i!'s more than enough. anyhow.~ He isn't about to Jn fact , if you are t1 married check, either. 'couple 1vith only . on e He repeats a story his breadwinner. il \\'OUld be father-in-!aiv tells about h!J\\'. sound lo gri ri,!!ht ahead and hack in 192.i. people from as file autom:irtcal!.v for the ne\\' far as !5 miles t11\·ay came to specia l a!1011·anc e. It's you r see and listen to his ne"· fan~l­ take-home pay, not )'OUr ed crystal radio. 11 y,·as th e emp:oyer's money or the .U.S. only one for even greater Treasurv's . co11yr10111 '1•n r:;e1d !11te•orl•••· '"''· distances. Seems they lined up clear out the door and dnwn Ca!Uoroia. a i\ewport Beach. based airline. He has been manager of prncedurf's and training for ~lu!ual Comrutcr Ser v ice~. ,Jaegerman 11· i 11 reside In Ne11·port Beach. * f'red \\1eller of Laguna Beach has joined Cochrane Chase and Company. Inr .. a.n advertising t1nd public rela- tions finn of Fullerton as vice prc~ident and account ex- ecutive He had been an ac· coun t exe c1Jt11·, itt Chiat Day. Inc .. Los Angeles. * the front steps for a chance at the single headset. A glimpse of ea r 1 y Americana the~e store;, gi\'e, might dra\v that kind of a crowd today . Levi-clad Girl s 1Iel1J SAN FRANCISO 1UPl 1 - A p<1ir nf oa111 s 11•znt un the flagpole during gro11nd-bret1k· inc: ceremonies at a S40 rnillion . 35-story building at th e Embarcadero Center. The building ~·Ill house the headquarters for l~evi Strauss & Co., makers of the pants th at date fron1 the Gold Rush . A flt1:i? \\•i:h the pants on e llospltnl :'1ove SAN' FRAt\CJSCO -Com- munity Psychialrir Centers. I "'hich operates hospitals in 10 \Vestern cities. a nnounced it 1 planned lo acquire the 55-bed Novato General Hospital in J\'1."lrin County. The agrf'ement in principle to ac(!uire Novatl) General \\'ill in\'olve issuing ] 26.000 ~hares of CPC common stock on a pooling of interest basis . board chairman Rober! L. Green said . e 1\irllus f•rojet•t CH ULA VISTA -Rohr Industries, Inc .. says it "·ill build engine pods for the European airbus jet airliner under a :S2i.S·million contract given J\1rDnnell Douglas Co. I The parts and pod assemblies , \.\'ill be put together at Rohr 1 plants ln Riverside and Chula \tista · 11·ith the final engin e buildup planned for a ne\\' Rohr plant at Toulouse , france. e 1'1nttel Lo•• LOS ANGELES -Blaniing I a slump in the tny busine~s and the \\'est Cllast clock st rike. l\lattel. Jnr. has repor_te d a $29.!I milhnn l(lss fnr the fisrt1I year ending ,Jt1n 29. It \vas the big tny nit1n11facturer's fi rst annual since the firm \vas in ror- porated in 1948. The firm reporred a deficit of Sl.84 per share for the year. • c n ,,1tatlo11 l'.p LOS A.'IGELES -Carnation Co. says it is enjoying growing sales for virtually all of its prod ucts and explcts first qut1r1er earn ings to be 10 to 11 percent higher than lhe $1.04 per share reported a year a,l!o. Ho\v ever. one di vision -mill - in~. 11•hich produces livestock 1 feed and eggs -suffered a 1 "_!;evere decline." shareholders 11·ere told at the inltrnational !nort com pany 's a n nu a I meeting . O .4g1·e e 1ne111 i'·eur OAKLAND -An agreement for Clorox Co. to acciuire the ' r-.1 a r t i n-Bro\1•ers Corp . of Chicago has been approverl byl directors of both firms. A joi nt announcement said Martin-1 Brower ~hareholders \Y 11 receive 821.144 shares of Clorox common stock. e Vnlue Climb• MO DESTO Stanislaus County's gross agricultural 1 :ilue climhed only 21~ percent r'•1ri ng 1971. but ~t ill sel 2 r e c o rd . Aqrirultura l Com- missioner St~nley D. Rt1y r'!port!i. f.rnss value nf the c'lunt:--··s t1izrirultural produrti: \V~!'i $21'.l .7 million. up $5.5 million from 1!170. e S lot·k• tn Split SAN FRANC ISCO -Hyatt Cprp .. an i n t er n a I i o n a I operator of hotels and motels, announced a 3-for·2 stock split. e ff e c t i v e l\1a y 16 10 shareholders of record March 29. Donald N. Pritzker . H~·att piesident. said 1~71 "11·ns the 1\'0rst year in !he hole] in-E1t8!t o• LESL IE 111 B~!4SON, 1110 t n<:"n tl l lit BE NS Oil 0Kt8\t d NOTICE I~ ~E l!(8V Gii/EN 11t11 WY,,',4N C ~NAPP. E•fCU!Or of !ht Woll C)'f ti!! abO•t·n1rnM1 d&Ctdt~!. htl lllM here111 • ~l!flon for 1~ Order l~1trvc!in9 •rid 01rec;ll111 !he E•eculor to ct~ fro"' fund• of ~•lo e.11111 to rt"'!w 1 or~"'lnorv r.o11 tlttcu!ea b~ !flt 4ecet1tnt 1" ~1, llftllfT11. rele•Mi;I to wfltcfl 11 Mi di k!r fllf!Mr 1trllwl1ri, Ind '"•' !!'le ,,.,,. '"" r>ltct cl l1t•'•llO lh• lt"'t flu ae•~ s•1 flll .l.orll IJ, l•lJ. 11 f JC 1 m , I~ 1~• u.urrr_., of O.,.trtm1"1 No l fiLu_d considerations \.\'ht'n the sr:c,a t:on o! Sou!hern Cahfor-Cbarle6 A. Cbamherlaln t'Jf women 1n the lan1l!y exprer,~ n1a. La5una BC'ach h;i~ bee n them was ''hited up" by Board Chairman \Valter A. Ha11s, Jr .. assisted by four young \\'nmtri 'vhose sh.an~!'i 1\'Cre 11crcnted bv the ti11h!-fittin1? Levii:. ·The huild!nli! scheduled fryr compltlion in December, 1973. du~try since !he depression·· but reported a 20 percent in· crrase in OCC'upancy f or 1 Febru11ry and Mi:irch over a year .ago. -i:llll'r.'lr1~1Y c-...,, Cii\•t > Ori~! Wf ll, ll'l tltt City ol S1n11 ""'' Cl lllor~I• 0.t'°" Mtrc~ ll. ltl1 Wlll.IAJ,.\ E S! JOl-lN, (OUMJ Clt rk ICNA,,, 011.L , flllllRT & lTfVINi t0t kYl!'I Ollv1 St., Suitt IU • LM ,t,11ttlt t. CtU~"1lt flOtU their opinions on 11•hat kind C'lf * elected t'l !he board of direc· cir the family will buy. tors of flttr~·nmt ~EntcTJ'lrise, Purchase price eronomv George C a I a m 1 r a 1 of lnr , a Riverside-hased, firm came first for JS of the Xtll[!Q!'t Bra;;h !las _bwt_1bat operates pl;:in1s .. n-20 .wttmen~rty;two-a ITi'>!iimelI ~enior vice pre~idf'nt· slittes to pi·oduce mob ilr- . agreed they have concern OVE'r operat io~~ for Lt'land Ollvl"r homes. trave l lra i l~rs. motor economy of operation. and .~3 Comp&nJ. Inc .. Orange adver-horhes and modula r housing. indicated they con s i d er tislng and publi c relation~ con· economy even to the car's sultants. He has been 11·lth the * Deficit Se t A~ain e Pact Amnrded WASHINGTON Th• Urban f\.1ass Tran~portat ion Adm inistration awa rded a $1.1 Ttl1 fflJ) •J1.f4'1 lllhlrftfrt fotr l •HUIM l'UOOtl'ltof Ott"lte Cc1JI OtJ.¥ o l•I Atrfl l, •· 10. lt72 II• 11 LEGAL NOTICE 'ICTITIOU • IUJINIJS NAMI lTATIMINT resale potenllal. firm since 1965. After ramily agreement on those matters. the womt1n agreed !hat dad lakes over !he shopping and negotlatin1. The womtn r~parted &verage trade-in time for the family car was three years. * TR~· Credit D1t11 nnounced 1'1'1polntn1ent of E. A. "Ned" fl1mlng of Newport Beach as director of market develop- ment and Oeor1e A. Rex of Tustin as director of product development. Fleming had been associated with Credit Bureau Central of Bellllower. Rex was 1 director o( the. Northtrn Oranae Co u n t y Credit Bureau. Robert ~I. lri1b of· i'fun· ting1on Bta<"h hag bten ap- pointed a lea~1ng oflicer 11•ith Stcurlly P1clflc. Na t f on a I Bank'& Los Angelts based credit st r\'lces department . WASHINGTON IAPl -The nal!on suffered ils second· hlghe!t monthlv tr11de dtficit in history in F'ebru 11ry. \\'hen the v11lue of imports topped exports b,v SS97.6 million, the govcrn1nent ht1s rr:ported. mll!ion contract to TRW Sy!ltems Group of R~dondo Beach. for the de\'clopment of computer programs for !he plAnnlng of public-tranail systems. The awa rd was parJ of $3 mll!if)n in contracts glv~ to three firms. e Cr edit R e nt sANTA ROSA -You can TMI ldlo"'l"I pt•Mll It dC•'lt Mitll'l•O .. T•EHC>CO 'lt00\ICT• COM,.t.NY, 17'05 A Skr ,.,,, le-ul•vtrl, l•v,~t. Ctl!fotl'lll tlW ".AUl l TltAYLOJI, )l(.t Llt~IO\o!M Ltflt, Ccret!t' ltl Ml•, C1tllO•l'lr1 llllt M lfllO 11 C-1/Cfel '" 1~ 111· •l•t•~tl ,.1111 L Tr•rtor f,.,(t llll tfl'Mnt WIS fl!M Wllfl !!It Ctu ... ty Uw• oJ 0.11191 (0!,1~!1 Ol'I Mtt(~ 11. "" .OlNAM Afr40 WONlflt t r r l kMP'I M. Wtflftt "' N, A•t llti l l'tf. Wlllftlllltel\t Ctti._,..1 M,14 lt~CJ1JI ..... • • 1'911 Because participation in the •·search'' is limited to f1mllles with at least one unmarried ch.lld at home . poll results are noi tepresenlati\•t of a l.1 Women who drive. * * It was the fifth conseculive m<inthlv deficit in the nallon·s tr;ir/C! figures and 1dded lo the !roubles of the dollar overseas ~v incrta~ing the red Ink in thr U.S. ~alahce of payments. rent an 5partment with • credit card under a new BankAmerlcard plan. The program will allow tenants of · 1he G as 11 g ht Apartments ' to use BankAmertcard fer monthly rtnt payments. . ',)__ ~I ' There 1s 1 new comic strip named '1Sa1ly B1 - nanas" th at will t empt you t o indulge 1n un- •e omly condud. It 's obou t this sing le yo un g lady who , w.hile w•itin g fo r her prin ce to co me, has all sorts of unusual adventure~ in the par k, In eddition · lo a t ei:>id swa in na med Arthur ..• end •n impouib lo clod ne mod Norbert .• , Se lly meoh kings end 1nch1nlod frogs and indoscr ib· ob lo th ings thot ox ist on ly in tho head of Cherlos , Ba rs otti, --- Tho hood o{ Charlos whoro tho bullo l• B 1 "o tt i -thot's room end tho unox· protty wil d co untry, pochd bocomos hil· on tho ba nks of t he eriou1. Barsotti is m e instr o • m of t ho righl·hondod Am1ricen humor, cartoon ist who hes creeled the unusually funny com ic strip !hot eppeers do ily in th o . . DAILY PILOT MUll\ld Df'tl'!M Cotti Oen., '111'1 N.trcfl 10. v •flf 111r11 •· 1~ 1•n n,.,, For exemple, the "All· American ~1oms" re\lelled a prtference for atallon w11ons flt) and at1nd11rd·size cars !21) over lnlermedlat .. and compacts. Robtrt W. J1e1erm11 Jr. has been named director of ·reservation sales for Alr TtrrJ' Har1m10, of c;osta ~lesa. formerly a project eng1netr In the water !yS!ems tlepartmcnt of VTN Corpnrt· tinn.' Irvine. h·as 15ern ap· pointed m1nager of the firm's (Jood CJ!ll!rol and dtallllg0- Cfepartment. He was named Californi a's out&tanrting voung cl~1r tnglnttr o! 19?1 by the Am@r ioAn Society of Civil Engineers. 1'he hi~hl"~f monihly trade defict of $821.~ mlllion OC· currtd ln-Oct<tber. Jn Janu9ry. the tradt derl~H 1vas $318.8 milllon. Tht February report £1\'eS ll!lf! hopt Of I quick turnaround In lhe nation'• trade accounts. Vttung America Homes 1s the developer and owner of the new 133-unit apartment com·11·-------------------..!l plu. " • • , • ,_ )_ • Here's What's for You THIS SUNDAY .AND EVERY SUNDAY SUNDAY SPECIAL Stories by, of and for the Orange Coast as only a DAILY PILOT ~taff writer can tell them. -These page-topping sto ri es set the .pace for Sunday's in-depth approach to news reporting;DAILY PILOT style. PEOPLE/QUOTES Kings or commoners -they're all people. And, sooner or later, they say something quotable. It makes commen·ts that are highly readable ... just part of the exclusive package of staff-produced features tailored for Sunday DAILY PILOT readers. ORANGE COAST ROUNDUP Coastwise, no one is more coast wise than the DAILY PILOT. Weekly roundup of significant happenings from Seal Beach to San Clemente helps readers keep up with all the communities of the Orange Coast . .. SPORTS Latest deadline for sports news in Southern California assures Sunday readers of the freshest and most ' complete overnight coverage of local and global events in the sports world. Still offering the most in-depth coverage of local a rea sporting events, the 'new' sports section now offers more scope and depth on Sundays. YOU Focus on you and your friends and neighbors through this lively 'Section 3' every Sunday. Feature article leading off the sec- tion is exclusively available in the DAILY PILOT, often is staff written. New 'AT YOUR SERVICE ' _column answers the hard questions, can even help you fight city hall. Other 'YOU ' features in section include 'You and Your Health', 'You and the Law', 'Good Deed Peop[e' (your neighbors who have taken on the comm itment to help their .ne ighbors). Column ists range from ----- Erma Bombeck, quickest wit in the west; and Count Marco, the man women love to hate; to Rex Reed, the celebrity-turned-col- umnist, who tells it like celebrities wish he wouldn't. And the 'YOU' section also offers locally ori ented and exclus ive enterta in-> ment and travel news. PLUS ••• EVERY SUNDAY ( • Ilg, Local ~la11lflecl Acl Sect~n • TV Week (With Full Week's Logs) • Color Co111lc1 Sedlon ' • Family Weekly Magazine All in the Big, New DAILY PILOT SUNDAY EDITION • ·, \ • ;,:2 DAILY PILOr Stale Rescues 'Freak' Sal1non SACHA.\lf·:l'•.'TO (L1r1 1 -The SI.ii!(' Deparlment or Fish and Game sa,\ s 2:14 adult k1.11g salmon tra pped dur· h1~ a fre:1k .!.pr1nci run on the ~la\'cras River near Stock· ton hal'C b«'n rc:,curd. '!'he drp:irtn1rnt sci1d an C.'lllmated 500 fish \\'ere strand· ed ncnr \11hcre H1gh"·ay 90 ('rosses a diversion ca nal after 11·a!l.'r 11·as rrle<1scd 1ntu !he ditch. ED HIRTH SEEKS TO • SAFEGUARD YOUR f AMIL Y BY ELIMINATING . Gt>orge \\'arnl'r, the dcpartnicnt's sahnon cxpcrl, said '-----1-l!Hs tr"1ng tn-ti~v-ttte i;almon go n o e ;i • avcr;i,s for U1e sprin~ run But he speculated they might be the proseny of fi sh that spa11'ned during flooding three -ARMFUL TRAFFI CONDITIONS. • )'Cars~go. __ --~- The l rt1 ~ped r1 ~fll1'cre removed from the diversion t•anal nnd transpl:intcd to a point above the uppermost di\er~inn on the ('alavcr11s. Thl'y 11ere re!cased into good water flow where they can re1na1n until the fall spawning season . It ta kes responsible st udy and. action to work with the Council to obtain realistic, acceptable solutions to our T raffie prob- lems. Hirth in itiated a commit· tee of citizens and outsjde pro- fessiont!!ls to protect your rights for a safe and congest ion-free traffic system. He has le d the negotiatin g team to null ify the freeway a.greement in accord- ance with the peoples wishes. H 1t11 ters , 9, Traffic, 1 SACRA,!ENTO I AP \ ' Nearly one out of every 10 deer killed in C';ilifornia last yea r v•as the victim or a tra f· fie accident. not a hu nter. s11~·s the State Department of Fish and Game. J-luntcrs repo rl cd k i 11 i n Jl 33.907 deer. \Vhile 3.R..12 deer were killcrt hy 1nol orists, the department reported. The hunter total included 422 deer killed by bo1\' and arro1\', A l!ni\'ersi1y of California s!udy cst im;itcs the stale's deer popul(\.lion al about one million. Coastal Op en Space Proposed BEHKELEY !UPI\ -A studv made for the Associa· 'lion 'or Aav ArcR GovP rnments urges open space. ra ther than developmenl. for coastline OUTDOORS I seclions near !he Pacific Ocean. Tile SUr\'CY v.1as m a d e b.v Sed1\1ay·Cookr. a San Fr;in- ciscn urban and e:iviron-ncnlal design firm . nnd presented by the ai::rncy's ocean coaslline commi lt rc. It rccon1n1cnds prcscrva1ion of lidcl:ind :;, bca ehes and coastal terr:.iccs \\•f!h scenic and rccreat1onal \'alucs as 1\·cll as farn1land s. such as those producinf.! ocean-rela ted crops as artich(>kes and broc- coli. Nev.• devel.opmcnts 11·ould be prnhibite<l except in or near existing con1muni lic s. Pub lic facili1ics such as sc1vcrs a:1d ro<1ds v.•ould he banned fron1 areas held for oPCn space and the stud.v rcco111mends rh;:it a "nrw hi;:h11·av :icross !hf' coastal range be prohibited." A n y in1provemcn1s I o 11igh11·ay I should he n1ade on the cxisrini: roadbed . it ar!ded. The sludv's final draft is ex- pected thiS sun11ner and 11•ill be \'Ofed upon by <igency 's ex· ecutive com rni!lce. l\fint Set As Shl'inc SAN FRA\'CISCO ! LiPT 1 - The old Vni!ed Stal"s ~lint in ~an Frnncisco's ~l i s s ion Disl rict will be restored as a n1usrun1 and a scr\ if'e ccnfrr for l ~c U.S. Trc;isury's coi n scr\'iccs. A dirt•ctfl'e frn:n rresiclrnt Nixfln guarantrf'd lhat the :\!in! 11·ould eontinuc !o be of service In thr nation. • The bui!di nJ,! is ronsidcrcrl l'I rlass1c of An1erir;J n ;irchitcc· turr 1'11ld hl'IS :ilrrarlv been r!eclared ii nrilinnAl l:irirlmark. The orrler incans it \\"ill be restorC'd . Tn rc;ilizc !hrit J?oril. the Pr('~idrnt lransferrr<l I h c · huild1ni;(s n\\•nerstiio from lhe General Services Adn1inistr11· tion to the Treasury Dcpart- mcnl. Forest Se rvirc PuJJli hes Book ' \VA$141XGTON I AP t -The U.S. r·orest Scr,·ice ha s pubf1sherf a rull-colrtr hooklrt on "\Vildlife for Tomnrro1\1'' ~h"wlng dif{t'renl specles tn their na lural hHbltats. Alttlough there are S fl species of wi ldli fe classed a~ •·rare and endangered, 11 tht 11$enc): ~11ys. the numbe r of h1g game an imals on National P'nrtst IAnd lncrta!~ from 900.000 head In 1928 to on c.stim11ted 4.5 rnilllon at the present. Planting Cost 91 Ce11ts l A Pound SACRAMENTO IAP I -Th• California Department of Fish and Game planted i;iore than four million pounds· of fi sh in ::;i'17sr~s~~i'·:::/~1 ".I\ )~~I IX! NEWPORT ·BEACH NEEDS THIS MAN! "'ei·age cost of 91 cenls •1 ~~;~~~l~~~~1~1 ~~,~·~~~~' VOTE APR. 11-RE ~ELECT MAYOR HIRTH! a hundred fish. TO CITY COUNCIL, FIFTH DISTRICT, NEWPORT BEACH Th c dcpan mcnl's repon NEWPORT COMMITTEE TO RE·ELECT ED HIRTH. s 3 i d the total plant v.·as BILL RING, 215 RIVERSIDE DR ., N.B., 645·6363. 70,144,004 fi.sh. :ii ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·1 The planti ngs in c I u d e dj; resident fish. ranging from IJ.5 million fingerlings to nearly 30,000 aged broodstock \\1hich 1\·cighed about two pounds each. Other plantings consisted of anadromous fish -t ho se v.:hich swim upstream for breedi ng -and warmwat er fish. For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT . United States National Bank still pays you a big on regular savings accounts. Vl/e slilf pay you 4 Y2 °iO interest on regu. Jar savings accounts. Which is not only the hi ghest allov1ed by law, it's Y2 °iD more than most ba nks pay. So if you r bank is paying you less tha n 4!'2°i~. it pays you to bank at United States National Bank. We pa y the highest interest rates allov1ed by Jaw. Regular Savings COS'lti MESA OFFI CE 1845 Newpo rt Bh·d. .... (714) 646-3291 F. Frank Zrebiec, J.f an~er. 90 Days' One Year' 61 convenient locations UN11'ED STATES NATIONAL BANK ~ • M""MtFOIC \\1hcre everything 1tarts with yoa ' -SOUTH COAST PLAZA OFFICE 333a Bristol St. (714) 540·5211 H. M. Sto lte, Ma,,.ger Two Years ' •ssoo minimum d•~•ft HUNTI NGTON BEACH OFFICE 302 Firth St. ' (71 4) 536-9361 Victor J, Ruedy, Manager DAILY. PILOT WANT WANT ADS TO • . - CLEAN I -. ... s. J~ I ......... ~. l~I ....... ,.~ I~ UP Ge neral ~c:neral Genfl'al _t::JT!R~U!ST~M~E[!:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:f_:~JI oN-1ng or R • YOUR CLEAN OUT? FOR FAST! FAST! Bil hon1e !hat h" 11 e1rr1·1t11111:.:. A lari,:e tan1ily nrrd~. Sre this choice l!:1rbo1· V1r1v Hills homr. 212 bnlh~ No p. d1n1n~ room +, f.lnlll~ rt1n111, Rll <>lrctric hl1-1n kit • qual ity 11 /11· rpr11 + (traflC"S. 2 frr)I<·. P.r;iu11ruJly land~(·a1K'l1 on!~ .Si 1.!100. Call tii3-!l;i>l.J. DREAM HOME ONLY $'..'J,950. Quirt traf/ic h•rr s1rcrt. ~lassivc lo!. t'hnr1n1ng 3 hcd1'POn1 hon1t'. .S:.!09. JX'r 1no inch1<lr~ tax<>s. $u1Jrnit FllA or \'A trt·1ns. Cnll 545·S42•l (Qpcu t'l"C'S.J ) "\ Uloi U. I II I iC ,ttt BAYSHORES .......: \•'ery cu te and very vacant! 3 bed room s and a big !Jvi ~1g roo1n_. cent.rat patio a nd for111al dini ng. T/11s ho1ne is on t ~ee lined \'ista Drive and O\vner \\'Ill rc!tnqu1 sh prin1e sli p space to buve r. Lo\\· land lease. Asking $59.500. PHONE 'UN IQUE NEWPOR T BEACH 645-6500 • Ge neral G e neral SPANISH! Red Tile Roof $27,000!! ACTION! \~uth ,. (~ oast Jt'ST LIS'rEO!· RED TILE rt001" !o vnull"d ,r,, hl"ilrned l"Pllllll!>li -Sl!Anr k SPA.'I· 1:-<ll: :-;11·p do1~11 111 .ciant !1v• ini,: n19111. i\Ja~s11e hr11·k rirPp];u•r: Fan11l,v rrom. CALL DAI LY PILOT CLASS· IFIEO 1 DEPT. D I A L D I R ·E c T ... 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 IS A BUTION CUTE? \\'t• l'f'ally l!orl"! kllf'lll' • nut MAGNIFICENCE 1h1s housr i": ~rar!y nr11· ~ Li·1 us sho11• ~ou 1hl" f1nrst brrlnn. + f<1n11ly rn1. 11121 hnnlf'· in <.'omn;i, £1<1 \t:ir. baths,{. 3 tar l:aracr. Ncitr 41h1ch has hf'rn supf'r 1111- 1\rll"Jl(ll"( Jlr ii:;IJJ ~_... \\'<ilk 111 fll'O \'l"1t, 11 ilh a l')\l'I} lanuly slmpp1 11~. Pric{'<f ri:i;ht a! rn1 .. or study. forn1al d1n1ni:: .S.'14 .. i()O. SEE IT. YOt.:'LL rn1., r:u·rption11I ki!l'hrn B!JY lT! 11·1th cxrras su<'h a.~ ;in JIA('IE~OA t;<lUR:'>IET ----1---IH ..AHl)~~!\ 1.:tTrnfJ'\::-."IJTlf'T au1onH1111· l'O/fl'f' hrr11rr. The pr11·c• 11·iiJ !o.lll"Jlt'1sc )OU: 675-3000 kit\.C T\\'O LE\'EL :'>ti\STER Sl'ITE! \\'alk-1n 1•losr1s. Pri· 1·a1r 1h·ps~1n_c 1w111. JOG TO l\E1\Clll:.:S' A.:t 11011· -Call 6-l.}.0303. IORISI L 01\0\ . " , ·R E A .. !O R S • Large Rumpus Rm. -~==-co"' 3 hrrtronrn + drn nr 111ak~ it I _ 1-iARBOR VIEW BAYiBEACU ' "iREALTY INC ' ·I bcd1·onn1 \, ilh r!1nu1g area. WHERE ELSE 'PALERMO Lari::r lllilSlt'!' hc>1l1'r10m, 2 Park Lido 1011•nhou~c. \\lht•rt"' f,;i>,t ·I b1•rl1·nnn1 hilU~t' on halhs. bu1l!tn~. 2 f1rt'placrs. ! <'!St' 111 i\t'11pt•Jl l'a11 ~ou i.:t'l 111,,rkrt 1n Harbor \'1r1Y JJJO! siz(' )<trd. ,\~king I M l Brinn., 2 h;( tnplt' J:;•r. t!oiint·~. ~).tr:i hu~" ~arrl $1:1,:'f(l(]. .~ a (·:u'f'frrr.-IUJL rur only 111th plr n11 uf !"()(1111 for I S33,.'iCla. 11n11l. p,1!1n. IJ.,;+t nr 1·111111wr, Lachenmyer . HIGHLAND DR. and ~:tnl l•·fl 111rr, Cus1nn\ 11 . t ' r l 11'11'111 dt't'kuu::. J!\u,h c!re p Realtor ~pa1·1u11~ •urni•. ,1n11 ~· ... 11 •11 1 r,.. 1 arr s, rrn., 2' i hath~. i-r p. lauJJ<try t :ii JX' ni::. ~ fl '' ·ror11.1nr 1!r·1pes and all ti:&-.~!l'lS 6i1-i.ii~1 rui.. k 11,-1i,~n /1Jt1n'., 11!/drr•"· ' ' · 1-------anrl a ., iar~J in, !l&·f !WL _ sp11f~ l'lran. Only I yrar nlrl ihe Reynolds 1 i:: .<1 11cl ht't!rr 1li;u1 r)f',1, rau P1·1111t• .• 11:1rhor ll 1~hl:11uls n<nv 111 5('('. Mil..';()(). Call Are At Sea arra. Sl ... noo. . 2'1' :11ti-·' .•. This n1<1krs lhr1r 31.M'Jrl)IJlll, CALL e 6-'6·24 14 2 ba1h 3 car garai.;l' hnn1e 91 ~ J'('11rly for you. lr11n1a('u!att' I ~ 11·i!l1 hu~e yar•I, roo1n for • RE AL TY boal or 1ra1lf'r siorag<' . .!':'!~"',.,..port P~s l Off lc:t P1·a·l"d l(l S!1l ICU' S!.·i.7.·tO ror inf·-,rn 1a1 1on c·all 616-7171. MAKE OFFER The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading I !'UJl<'I' 1111\:ious 01rnrr 1nus1 ~rll Jn Jll<'!\l' Ea~t. l1n- mrd1a!C' !o.f!ll' nc•i'rit'd on rrall.\' n"a t :1 U.·<lrooni. rnn1i;1I d1111n1?", lar~t' fan1t!y 1'l01n-trt·levcl honu•. Full,1• 1n1provf'<f inl·l uri i n~ 3 rar t'1raer-. ~r>11 a!o.k1n:!; $1!1.!KIO. Plrasr htHTY, hrtnl{ ulfrr. ('all :;.m.11.i1 •Op•'n <'I{'~.) ~~ERITAGE • REALTORS BAYC REST l; R ,, CI 0 t.: S a111! }:X- Pi\~!'JVE -bu! l"K't~ls s.:in1e ''l'lho11· .,;rl'a~r." L o 1·c I y nl"11::hh<:1rhood. One 11f !hi' hr.•t hll)S nn the 111arke1. :1 Rrdrn1., 1linini::-nn. and ft1rn 1!~ nn. :'\!l'(' lrne<>lf pool. Str 1t <tnd tt'alizc 1ht' po!rnr1.1l. s~i-:.:J10. PETE BA RRETT -REAL TY- 642-5 200 bcl'lroo111 u111ls + df'n or J hrdroom, 2 ba ths ra1·li, 11c1 har and hrrp!at'f'. Qualuv DAILY PILOT uni!.~ in Cn~ta :'>lr~;1. R<';I Carpet Rral1or.o;. J.16-8610. FOR ACTION. • 'I Dcrn't ,,v, up 1be '"'•' CALL 642-5678 I "LIM" " ;, "'";i;,,,, Ship to Short' Rc~u11s ! 6-l2-56iR $25,000 5 >/4 °/o Loan 1111·lu<1!'s 1:1.\f'~./in!C'!'f'~I. prin. 1·1pll" .t 1n.•unt111·r : 1'1ni::--~1z. c<I h1•drnnn1~. hu11i.1n <h'l"ilnl k1rr·h1 ·n. ('IH.'f'!'flll hns/l1tab!P, l!1·111i.: rc~•11i. Ur J i i,: h r f u I rovt'rrrl pat1n. Quirt rul-de- sac sttl'l'T. 9j):l~iili6. TARBELL -VA NO DOWN on !111s rare \•a!uc. 2·1 hC"dr011n1~ plu~ a 1 lx-droom r<'Mr un11. 2 l>cdroom now \'ac·ant find J'<';u1y for im· n1rrlla1 r o c <·upan1·y . 1 .. 1•droon1 renlf'tl M1 $120 per 1no111h rach. l\rrp as home ;inrl rrntMI. Only $31i.OOO. If you hal'<' IX't'n in the srn.·il·r, t"al! us. Walker & Lee nrallo1·s 5<1:..9491 Oprn 'til 9 p ,\f No Muss • No Fuss Unr1a1·k and i:;1arl l11·1ng in lhi~ ho.~1111.il clr;in eharminit 4 BP. hnn1r on eul-<!e·sac str'f'f't in Eiist Rluff. A com• plrlrl.1· ('11111pprd r a f • i n k1lchrn. All-111 Ol'en + ran~r. 2 halhs • truly llC'aut 1ful l11n<lscpr-d yard ;u1rl palm. Call for shov>'in& only S•li,500. GiJ.-8.XiO. \oTHEREAL ~I;~'fA.TE~ $©~4UlA~LlttfSe Th e Pu zzle with !he Buiff.fn Chuckle 0 l!eorron90 le!Ters of 1h& four scrambled words be. IJw to form fo.vr S•m.12le words I. OEVROO ., . I I I I' I' . fj Pl!f::r f\U/'.'E.EPED LEIIfRS I 1 l 4 • .... T b L rl ' s p ~ '· A ,, Ii $ 3 b "' Jo bl • • • • • • • Ju. 1a, lot. '1lo CA ~:·---'--~ SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 ~ IN "T HESE SOUAl!ES _e-"rc"':"'c:.:.t::~"'J,"'~~::..· '-H-IE-•\J..1 _· J..l __. ...... I I I I J t1lor1day April 3, 1972 DAIL V PILOT :1:J everyone Hes Something That Som eone El se. Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, T rede It Wit h e Want Ad S ·Bedrooms $35,000 Tahitian Pool $255 ·Move In! $25,500! \\'0\\'! BAflGAJN ! IUNTF:RS rQ~tr. QU !Ch:~ Ciani panel· rrj l1vin~ room. Coun1ry k>1 rhr 11. DI-:~' ON'll!\ IQ Ta- hit1;in pnnl linf'rl \1ilh Jara 1--.I->""'<.!' -R1g-IW'1r-fii1-"'l--Joll- Take O\'<'r C.I. LOA:'IZ \rith 11nnual [l('rren1a,ef' r;1tr of ONLY ~.,;r~ -Ort -S255 AND :0.10\/E IN'. llurr.v, it v.'on't last~ Call 645-0303. I OR1.\·1 E Ol.liO~ ' N E A lTdN~ ARE YOU AN INDIVIDUAL? This is ineome properly In ll':e form nf f\•fl !iCp11·111r h"l!nt's nn onr parcrl. !.narls nr grrrn 1.:1'?~<; bf>ll\'f'('ll then1 for privaey. Each 2- bPrh·ooin, I -b a t h and i:!itt'~l?."S. \'rry s'h a r p. S31.9:.0. General TREES AND SPACES Al'k anvone \\"ho l1VPS in the arra of thi5 4 bf'clroom hflm,. and 1hty'IJ 1ell ~ou how much !hf'Y hke the loca11on anrl schools! Th" 1ntPr1or is fully s<'1up for 11 fan11ly , "tlh fao1ilv l'Ql1m thai IOf'ks ou1 1u ;i pi('asant !'Irle yiir rl . 1;:asts1dr lori111on nrar Ra ck Ba). Jr'r. twrn VA appraiser! ancl 1f1; ready lo go~ Priced a! S30,9;i0. co: rs WALLACE · REALTORS -l4Ml41- (0p1n Evening,) Vermont English $31,500 3 + Den + Dine I ORIS! L OLSO\ R'E A 't.''rops ' . UPPER BAY !111~,. 69'xl3j' park·hke yard make!' l h1~ 4 hdrm. CUSTOJTI ''A \\'INNER". 0 1v n er tr.insfcrrf"rl and must sell~ Pr1re JUSt rt'duced to a realistic • $36,000 General "SEL LERS OF FINE HOMES" VIEW. VIEW· VIEW Sit anV\\'here in th is large living rm. & see the oCea n, harbor & city li~h ts. lmrna c. 3 bd rm .. 2 bath & family rm. home ,vthuge enclosed patio on each side. $50,500. CORONA DEL MAR· $32,500 Hard to believe? Le t us sho''' you this very nice 2 bdrm. home, close to shopping. WATERFRONT WITH SLIP Private slip & beach, good S\vimming. in .an exclusive community. Very love ly home '\I/Ith Jge. living rm. & bdrms. 2_ bathe;., dinin_g _rm. & brkfst. area. Great bays tde patio. An~:;ous O\\'ner leavlng area. $77 ,500. ** *·* ** TAYLOR CO. BIG CANYON -BRAND NEW You will Jove living in thi s prestige country club area right in lhe heart of Ne,vport Beach. Guarded entrance to area & nrivate C. C. 5 BR.. FR. & formal DR. Beautiful design. Large lot. $98 .500 1'0ur 27th Year" Qpl'n Saturrl;iy l·:'i 319 \1isla Baya, C.:\l. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors l -====2.,1~1,_1 S.an_Joaquin_Hills_Roa,da __ Newport NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644·4910 Evenings Call 646-5226 BY OWNER at Fairview 646·8811 (anytime) Lili~f' 11~50 sq. fl. l 4 Br, 21..J bath hnme in Sandpointe, 21 minutes ff'f'm S. Coast Plaza. $28,250! Living room 1\·ith sepnratc No Down Terms rlining area, Jireph1.cr, coun· I rrv kitchen v.·1th family G.I. lerms · lllw do"·n all rOOm. shag ca r pet i n g othr'r!I. 4 bedroom~. 2 haths, I 1hroughout. Patio. fully land· hu1J11n rlrl'a m k i 1 ch e n , 1 !leaped. JrncC'cf y11rrl. I blnck d11ihll'rt!lher. Serluded ~11 r l to elementary schf\01 ;1.nd 3 ]i\·1ng room. Pat:o. "Apple sl':ort bloeks to nc1v park-Pie" order Insid e &. out! r lay1f0Unrl. S::W ,900. Call ~ear all shopp1ni;:: . .schools. ) 5j7-'.-llt \ {if no ans"·cr, 1 8lli-0fi04. '1il2·9666J. I FIRST HOME? $19,000! Near Beaches A' LOT FOR A LITTLE: Pe.t· feet starter home ,,·ith big Jiving room. Formal dinr . 20:<20 FAr-.1J LY ROOl\t ALL IN Kl'\OTTY PINE ! Cabin kitchen. Cul cfe sac !of. Jog to bt'ach. \\':ilk to sho ps. Call no11• -645-0303, I ORl\I [ OI SO\ Rl A L,1-0R'i TARBELL ~24 \\'. LdJn~t'r, Hunt. Sch. -\i,-BLOCK TO BAY Custom 2·Slory with 2 Bdrms. & an off!cr. Zoned C·l. Close to beach & bay. A tine view from upstairs. Priced at S52.500. I Call: 6l'3-3663 979·8165 Eves associated BROKERS-REALTORS 1025 W lolboa 67J.Jlt&J Walk To 527 900 • No Down South Coast Plaza 1 1 t LAi;::e 4 bt'droom hom e 1n l 01•£"n1zrrt hcd~im!I, 2 :O.lesa \\'oods. l.u~h ('arpets j baths .. den. fan1,I~· room ;ind drapes. l\t irrored doors "'''' ,.,,11 11·ood pane'1 1n" 11 nd . "' in rnaster hcdroom. Over ele.eant flt'eplarr. fnn11al 2 •'" 1 1 h . · • N 1 .• 1 d . ,,., sq. !. o c arm riln1ni;:: room. 1 t'I\' Y pai .. e • A bl VA I 142 500 I ssuma e oan. , . dlsh"·ashcr. d E' c 0 r 8 0 r P hone 546·23 13. "·a!lpapt>r accenr~. Plun1ht'd for sof! 11·atrr. Patio. Dou- ble garage. Hugr Jr. estate grounds-landscaped lo pie· ture book pt"rlect i on. ~2-2j6J , \-0' THE REAL ~ESTATERS (, I'• "" < I'. Y.A. • F.H.A. Buyer General General HARBOR VIEW & CITY LIGHTS Immaculate 3 BR .. fam. rm., lg. sep. din. rm. Charming decor & lovely view plus great patio. A happy home! Priced at $59.500. Charlene Wh yt e· 2 NEWPORT WATERFRONTS Sharp, cust. b!t., 5 :.·rs. old -5 BR. apt. over gar .. pier & float $92.500. 2 Yrs. ol d cust. 4 bd rm., view of bay & ocean. Dock for 50' boat $129 .500. George Grupe 3200 SQ. FT . PLUS POOL Fashionable Irvine Terrace. vie,v. 4 BR . & hobby r m .. gourmet kitchen, 3 frplcs., library. Q\\1ners transf., must sell. Si6 ,000. Triona Bergin CAPISTRANO COU NTR Y ESTATE Near new, secluded ranch home. 5 BR., 50' pool -custom architect's design. Acre- age -room for horses -perfect family livin g, Sl65,000 . B. Au sti n VIEW LOCATION TURTLE ROCK -popular pla n 3. Good loc. nr. greenbelt. pool, tennis ; 4 BR .. fa m. rm., form. din. rm .. prof. landscaped, fee. $51.500. ''.Chuck" Lewis 77 FT. EAST BAY FRONT Outstanding estate on 1nain bay. Gracious 5 + BR .. u·/forrnal din. rm.; green la\\ln, sand y-beach, pier & slip for large yacht. Bill Benls LOVE LIFE? Easy fivin' in Corona del tvlar . 2 BR., 2 Ba .. DR ., patio, sundeck '\V/vie\v, You O\vn hte DR . patio, sundeck w/view_ You O\\in the COPPER KETTLE CHAR MER I BR.. playroom . FR .. country kitchen. Large corner Jot home "'Ith 4 Tasteful inside & out. Tile & brick elegance. hdrms., 1~4 hathr;, Room for Yes, see it ! $55,750. Call Bob Yorke TARBELL' "Cheaper Than Rent" * Price 523,j(](} * Paymf1nt.!i -Tul11l $235 * Clo.~e in Bench * 3 Berlrnoms, 2 Ba!h• * Large Livln~ Area * Brick F ireplace • Cal! 847...0010 \0 THE REAL '"'-ESTATERS . •, ., I'\' EASTSIDE camper or boat be hind PERFECT FAMIL y HOME fr'tlce. Thir; ""on't last long. 5 BR., \varm' famil .v rm. \Vith frplc; pooJ ,v/ Otren"d at S~.750. C dressing rm. & batb off terrace. Lo'cated on ORBIN-fee land in desirable Baycrest. Eileen Hudson MARTIN SEE TH.E SAILBOATS REAL TORS 644-7662 A-pretty picture at any price -rTghf?-Only $57 .500 in Corona de l Mar, with 3 BR's. & VACATION ALL YEAR really bi~ view. Hurry on th is one. Call Bill ui ~:our own ntar new l Comstock bdrm. home. Planned com- munity oflers use of pool, EMERALD BAY -578,500 clubhouse-. tennis court, Custom 3 bdrm. y iew home ur1th large park. pl11ygrounds e I c . r ooms. Lovely patio & guest ritrs. Don't de· GentTal Macnab-Irvine TRADITIONAL CAPE COD Bay & sand at your front door. Ne-1~· & spotless • 3 BR. -ron\·. den -fireplace in n111s1er BR. The ult1ma1e 1n :-.:e11·por1 &arh hving • char1ning & private 2 BR. bf-an1!'d C'f'tltn~ vit'11• apt. Barbara Aune, &12-8235. UNIVERSITY PARK POOL HOME · BP11utilully upgradt'rl 3 BR , FP.. & den. Great pool. Profe-ssional landscaping $44,950. Tom Q u een , 644-62QO. CORONA DEL MAR DUP ~EX I Extra sharp 3-BR. + 2 &. cl.en. Good 1nco1ne. Lots i\l1ller. 6·12-823.i I 60' ON BAYFRONT .Approx .. }:.000 sq . ft .. 5 B 51 ~ batliS-;"1 1mpres~ive litory DR, pier & float. $169,500. PIER & FLOAT SALBOA ISLAND Relaxing, tranquil bay 1·te11" r\ea1. sharri 2-slory home. $169,950. Call \\'alter King, 644-6200. Macnab-Irvine Realty 642·82ll ComPflny 644-6200 ·-NEWPORT SHORES Walk to Beach Pool + Tennis li:-.:BELJE\1i::ABLE'. $t>P this cu.sTo:i.1 BUILT 2·s1ory to- day~ Private beach~ Tennis cluh: Pool \\lith clubhouse~ PLLlS huge living room \\'ilh floor t~r~k-h place. Formal ri 1nin,;;! 4 gittnt herlronn1s. PRIVATE DOOR ENTRY FR0:0.1 BEACH. Call no11· -645·0303. ... UlKl\T L OISO\ '" N£A ,TV R S ' E\•enings Call 646-5226 ROOM FOR EVERYBODY MESA VERDE Lar;:-e 5 bf'droom + 16x28 bonus room 11.·ith pool table and room to spare. l\rw paint and carpels. l bath~. 3 f)l'('place~. formal dining room anrl large kitchen area. SO'xlOO' lot \1ith camrier anrl boat storage. 1 hlO<'k to school and '1e.!.a Verde Coun!ry Club. S50.500. P honl" M6·?313. • • • Mark Johnson 2150 Vista Entrada Newport Beach l'ou are the \\'i nner ot 2 t1cketR to the Western National Boat & M a rine Show -•Lth• ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Aptl.l tst thru April 9th Please call 642-5678. e-xt 314 I bet\veen 9 & 5 pm to claim your tickets. (North County toll.free number Is 540-1220) * * * GOV'T REPO Home has 1 acre of ground. lay on this. Call me today! Jim i\'l ullcr · l\'o money down VA ferm1. -Mesa Verde I "NOW HEAR THIS" AND... BUY IN HUNT INGTO N BEACH . 4 Bed rootm. FAMILY ROOM . used brick fireplace, 2 ,baths, bu iltin kitchen. close to shopp1n,I!. schools, Jr. College & free\vay. Only S31 500. "DECORATED DREAM" IN TURTLE ROCK AND IT'S FEE. 3 Bedrooms. fa mily room , 2 baths, atrium. bu 1lt 1ns \\'Jth self clcan1n~ oven. shag carpeti ng and cu5to1n drape-.. Large covered patio 'vith super landscaping. WOULD YOU BELIEVE . . . . . . . . . S47.900. "DIAMONDS All.E FOREV~R" AND SO IS THIS HOUSE All wrapoed uo in this nice T\\10 STOR'' 4 bedroom . 3 bath. HUGE RUMPUS ROO)! that will take a oool table. builtin kitchen, Jarge yard will accommodate you r 30 foot boat, and a spacious feeling prevails thruout. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $39.900 . "TRIPLE TREAT" CORONA DEL MAR TRIPLEX Built in range and O\'en. dishwa sher anrl rli'.'- posal, carpels and drapes. 2 Units ha,·e 2 bedrooms, 1 bath : 1. Unit has 2 bedrooms, 11n . bath ''·/firepl ace. Each unit has 2 c.a~­ ports, ma intenance free ya rd and pool pr1v1- leges. and from UPSTAIRS BALCONlES. A VlEW . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . ..... $75 .000 "F'ERENDIPITY" IN THIS ONE f)e.Hn-it.1onr-sornething.. special---VJ.ElV_Q Back Bay. "Skinny dip" in the priva cy of your own swimrnf.ng pool.J bedrooms 3 baths, island kitchen wit h BUILTIN S.S.Q. formal dining room, fireplace, study and a UNIQUE \VE T BAR. ln thi s house you can really do your own thing! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $97 .500 . C. F. Colesworthy & Co. Realtors RUSTIC HIDE·A·WAY !n Corona Del Mar tucked away in a wood- ed riell B.nd just a fe\V blocks lo the ocean- 2 bed :oom and den. Living room with stone fireplace and \Vooden deck with canyon view. Large patio with B.B.Q. $53,700 . BA YFRONT BARGAIN A truly beauti!ul family home that needs some redecorating but is priced according- ly. 5 big bedrooms. 3\1 baths, formal din· ing room and family room plus a 2 bed- room apartment. A great investment! Sho\\'TI by appointment. Eastbluff Office • 640°0020 Bayside Office • 675-4930 General Corona del Mer ··e,... • cc:.&'"" ii!'$ ?O<o! ._, OCEAN & HARBOR $23,SOO. VIEW FEE LAND 3 Bf'rlnn, 11: BA. rrpt~. drps. l.ike new _ Lusk Harlxlr View p.,t\o, tt!Or.1i':" blrlg. sprink-Jilli~. 4 Br .. 2 Ba. Fam, rm. lt'l'I. FHA VA t,.rm!I'. l\la.ny f'.\.Trll!>. $19,300. 1307 MS nutr1sai,Pr Dr. o\~·ner644-547ti FHA-VA TER r11r .\rr111 ~ Brrlrm -t f1m1ly rm. ,lM ~• --------, I rl.,nhl ... c;;r ~~r t1:innrt '!LL~r:_11arborV1~\. U~us1ti'I. -Roy McCardle Reallor 1",.. ~ ,OO!f rlecor )lo~v;:iterl I 1810 Nt'\\rr>rt"B\\-d C :0.1 . rr Agtnt, i:;r""'7'..'2.'l l!IR 548-7729 Costa Mesa • • • Rick Magner 25221 Pit,,rro Rd., El Toro \'ou ar,. thr \\'lnnl'r (If 2 l 1rkt'I~ tl'o !hi" Western ·National Boat & Marine Show 1\1 lh" ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER --------\1 .. ~a rl,.l ~111r <I or !I Br, ; Ba. lrg y11r<I, Trt'rS. Nr. "'·hMl". An.~1.,U'> ,., sell, rr f'!urt'd. By Own1>r 540-8159. fly ('l\\INER. t\le~ VerrlP I 0f'('n 1-!SP. VPry l'L""'' 3 BR. 1 '~ BA. hom,. nn C'lll·rtt·$ar \\.1lk to M'hool. churchrl', f:h11rly fenrl"d yM iv/play h..,,. t.rg. liv rm. bn11.s1s n 1111 ~tone frp!.. rhl'l'ry ram r1n , freshl;· rainlrtl Inter· l"r Anrl pr1c-C'tl right 81 Ar>ril 1~1 t)1n1 Ar>ril 'lih S\1.<'lf'IO V1~ll IG5.'l (11\l·ll ' Pl"as,. r:ill F.1'! ;'/liji;:, ""' ·:1 4 PLACE. c .~I. Ph 55i-6S.liS. I t hrll\f'"n :i k ;,, rn\ in r!n1m ;., Al\l l8·P~l Q'K•l'Ler moving .. \"''' ttl""rl\ 1 :-.:nrth ffl11n1~· " Jl11rry!. ! in1t.fr re nun1hrr 1~ :;1n 1~~1 ., • * ~1 r::;A Vf'rrll'. hy n'K'J'lf'r, 3 Lo;: iiiiiiii..,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil hfYlrm. 2 b;i, tam rm, 2 frplc, nu hltns/plumbtng, r L'-' c:l~r thru<'.lu! E·Z f'<1r1• O" nPr h1" mo1·l'rf anrl an..'-· k: cor Joi. C:an A~~um,. !'1 11 MESA VER DE 1 1.,11• \\'lll ~r\J lhl'-i FHA loan or othl"r S29.~ hl'('hoom rlin1ng T'(ll"lm 2 ;i.·11~1~. t111h, h11": p.1110, hl.,i·k "l lllT-R-,-\N-S_F_E_R_R_F._.D_.-T-ak_e_o,-,er fr>ncf' for \'A APPRA l~1\l. A trut va!u• 11.t $1';,.'-'lft Lxa ted on q111f"I cul-rle-~.1e. Call 540-1151 iOpen EvPs l n1v 1~ V,\ loan frir Sml toial <'Cl!.! N,.ar new 4 BR. 17~;, gq ft, t.rg fam rm. Lo mit int yarr!. 0 w n e r , ~---------.! 557-1346, 528-2i44. ~ERITAG! E.,t Blu ff ~ RtALTORS ----------• \\'ANTED' £,\STBl.UFF' __ --~ -PRIVATE PARTY DE~JRE!<o RANCH ST YL E -1-5 BR Pr.IV \Tf. llO~IE Sl~,500 PR INCIPAL~ ONl.'' ~ ~nrorim hnmop on R '! ln1 !714) 871-619:; FllLLERT0:-1 r.r1•111 invr-!tlmf'nt pn't'l'llP!l. Fountain Valley no11h!,. ;:11r<i ~t' ll1rrl\\'nnrl'l;;;;;;;;;;;_;;;;_;;;;;;;;;--.I 1!001~ CIO~" 1() 5ChMl~ RNi l1 Carpr1 r ... 11]t(IT~ . .:Hfi-S641'l -6°/o- --$2SO:ilO MOVE_S_ YOU IN VArant .t hPrlroo:im. 1 h:t1h. n,.11 aini 11.nd ca r r. 111rk fl"l~~"!>~IOn. · ...C::ulJ r r l <' f' $21,Z'lt R,,rl CllrpPt R"alt'>r-~lF,...AA.W A~!.um 11hlP VA l rian $2'<1.7/'(t ri1ya.bl1! S21.'l per m., PIT!. Lrg rornPr lnr. ~lumJ'I sion•' tire I Ir~ fam rm ·~""n ~lz,. drnl~ • king 111ze n1ai.ter w/hugt' c: Io Sf' t ~, rrp!i., drp!>. f ,V.'& fines1 loca11on. COMM ERCIAL ZONE $!7,500 I' 1 Berll'oom house. plen1y ol 1llJ ge ReJI EstJte parking, excellent O:i~ta 962-4471 ( =J 14W1Dl ~lt"sa location. Sub m 1 11,...,.,...,.,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"' t,.rm.!. Red Ca.rpet Re~ltoa,. BY O'\VNER 1800 aq. It.. 4 ~&6~0 . BR, 1% BA, fam rm. 11hag SHAKESPEARE WOULD cpt. used brick patio, big kitchen. $32,00'.l. 17926 Ash St. Open Hous~ Sat. &r: Sun. 96J.-.2146. like !.hi~ "'rought iron balcony $3 l 500 plus 3 bP.d room, ~ halh, huJll· , lng a.nd douhle <'ar garag" CORNER U)T, 4 BR. 2 BA. condominium horn,. Ex,.f'I· super sharp 1nsid11 & oul , lent location. Only $20.'.:!50. covd pa tio, b12 rms. Hall' 11 Vacant -Show anytime 6% VA Joan ol $2.3.900. Pay Call 540·1151 lOpen e\'f'S.I mis ar SZll . "r 5'10 do"n I •$1.500. 1 k paymnls of S2SO. l ~ITAGE A reaJ good buy close h1 ~ IHALTORS schools & !!hopping. 111.ige Real fst.ite !!!!!!!!!!!!!!==~11' 1 /3 Acre 531·5100 ( :-.:: J 531·5800 Newport Heights Huntington Boad! $32,900 2 8'dmom horn• "'""Uy $34,000 rem<x!~led. Bir Hv\n( room No Down Terms and fireplace. Zoned R·2 . allows for .t arlditional uni~. No down lerm1. 4 bedroo~s. Excellent value . R«I Carpet 3 1ep11r~V baths. family Rea.ltors. ~-room u.1 th ftr,.pll'lce, very CLOSE TO BEACH Large 3 BR. 2 ba. duplex with 3 fireplaces. $55.00J. Canal front lot .....• $20,000 George Wlllli1m1on Rei1ltor 548-<570 645-1564 STEPS TO BEACH (Ne-v.•port-$29,500) 3 BR., tarhl\y nn., 2 baths, bltns. Pools. tennis, rec. area. CALL NOW!! CAYWOOD REALTY * 548-1290 * College Park conveon1ffnt ,., ti-if' ;oiJI el~tric push h11tron hu1lt .1n kitchen. Beautiful 2 strrry home 1~1'h 2000 gq. f t, of finest family hving &· t'!nterta1n1ng. Patio. Sprinkler!:. T 11 s le t u l l y la.nd!!Cl'l~if pool ~ i % e d ground!!. New c"'rpeting much more! 962-1373. TARBELL 18884 Brookhurst, Huntington Beach SKY BLUE WATERS 10111: ft. deep 1n this lovely pool with c11ntilav~ deck eneral General One of a Kind anti a f11;ntastic waterla.lL ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;-;;;I 2546 Greenbriar LMe PLUS a really sharp l • 3 BR, 1~4 BA &: family rm. herlmom home PLUS M.\\I elinda PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 57 Linela l'i'li' D rive Custom 4 BR., 31n ba . ho me on La goo n. Mstr. BR. has sitting area & frplc. \Yater- .front family rm. w /conversation pit around the frplc.: Lovely garden, lge. slip. $189,500. For Compl1te Information On All Homo11 & Lot1, Please Cell : BILL GRUN DY, REALTOR 341 Boysldo Dr., Suilo I, N.B. 67~161 Perfect location, good valt1e. shag carpets PLVS. PLUS, Corner lot. Boat/trlr access. P LUS. Come In itnd ~ 11. Lge covered pal.Jo. Paneled VA:fl!A. of COUf$.t . Call garage. La.rge heated pool. ;,1n..~\l'i Intercom. AU tilt-in1. Quality SHERWeeo REALTY 1hag cpt, thruout. <Spani~h 18364 Brookhurst, F.V. Cold) Ex~llel'lf neighbor-.GOVERNMENT hood l or children. Y.'a1 listed OWNED at $38,00'.), ov.•ner no1v Mlhng fliA & VA repossessed at $33,500 F irm, Your ov.'n Townhouses & homes. Low GI or Conv. financing or \vill down. No points or Escrow aJTange financing. No 2nd'1. f~s. Gov't pays clos1ng Principals only. Bring cherk co'''· All price ranaes. C&ll book. Don·t wait too long, 968-4441 Call for app't S4!l·0!.10. -cREST REALTY Corona d1l Mar $25,950! A BEAUTIFUL J ust relc115Cd. S1250 do"•n to anyone: Sh11.rp Eastsidr cot- tage on O\'ersized secluded lot. Complctclx. (J!modcled. Don't mls.<i this One!. c;..11 ~. NEW LISTING -HARBOR VIEW 1 $27,500 SHERWeeo REALTY Lovel.v 3 bdrm. hom e in ll arbnr View Hills. 2 Gonorol IG1noral l89&1 Brookhur&t, r.v. Beautiful landscapin«. Lu xurious carpets & 3 liiplliCl'>U~ hf'ri rnoms. --------- DELUXE DUPLEX Nrar completion. M"' n y \•1e\'"1 from up per unit. BeamM ee1hng. Good In· REAL EStale s.,,1es. J.Jke sep. din . rm. Only $57.500. Cathr)'n Tennille I hathi. den. huilnn rtre11im l Br, 2 Ba Conl!il Ren11111 1 NEWPO RT HEIGHTS Call 54S..5AAO (Oprn e\·es.) ~llUITAGi -~ lttALTOR$ \\-'Ork1ng l.n Laguna Beac h! kll C'ht>n. BuNt!!lr a 111 rm' crpts. drps, bltns, end 1:ar I 523,250 Immcdi;i1e opening for t"'O --butll·ln intrroom. !\l'";Y $225. pe.rhaps le~s "'/ex-LoveJy cottage on lge, tree Cl\Ulliried licenli''d persoru. paint~. Sharply land,capell cepllonally .iood cr!dit. &h11.~t"rt lot. Bes t He!ghts lo- SANDCASTLE ReaJ £state 833..0700 & cratly m a n I cured ~·in R'&lry Jnc.. catlcn. C•ll ror app t. Vl'$tn'W'f'rl, MORGAN REAL TY_ 673-6642 675-6459 HARBOR View. PoOI, 2 br. 3 bedroom~. 2 bathl. d'"'l'I ln- villng firepl111ce ll"nd$ &ddtd chnrm to lar,t. llvmg room, All buillin kitchen. forntal d1Nn.a room . Out of area 011ritr. ~2'6691 TARBELL tfa1t re1ult1 are-just a p:nt CJJJ away. 642-5673 or he1t l"HUll S! 642.-5671 IN•w Ow"'"' Coldwe!l,Banker groum' ~mn. 96H<-0; BALBOA BAY PROP. • • <c 4!lH02S 3<"-* 644-2430 -~A EAL TO R~ ~ * 642·749i * -4 -S ·lOU1'1JTS Have aomeThing you "'ant to Cost1 lilesa Atta rNTER.VIE\VlNG R.E . sales· 1tll! ClassUied ads do it 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.I . 29M Ht1rbl'lr , C,,.1111 :\ltM FORTIN. REALTOR. menw/orwllhout exp.Cd~I v.·eu • call NO\\! &12-567.•· 11·------IO!!!!!'!,,. ________ • 642-YflO ~ Joe. HIR 673-1225. .. \Vh\te Elephant Dlme·A·l.lnt ---------- • pa,bo;-iana1 Sttar.Anxiott$. tftlll BC!acirBlvd. A£1. 675-722S HtR Huntington Beach Th1 .. :fa1lest draw in the VA. REPO. 4 br, 2 ba. \\'est. .. a Oa.Uy P 11 o t ~.~. $1250 ON. S~2 ~to. 01111i1fied, Ad. 64.2-&.?g. Authorizeit Broker 5'$-657' I .. , ... • J~[ ....... , .. ~ j[ie J1 [ -., ... .,.. ][ie j '"""'""'"'"' [~) '""~"""''"' [9 j 300 1~Hiouii .. i,iiiUin~fuirini.ii:.3iiil05 1~D;u;p;11;x;1;1;F;u;r;n;.~~34S~l 1A~p;t;.;U;n;fu;r;n;.;;;;:;;36S~~A~p;t.;U;n;t;u;rn;.;;;;;;,;;J6~5~1 _,,,We Hu ntington Bt ach Incom e Property 166 Houses Furnished SPREAD OUT E xc eptional Buy 2 81'!rn1. °"'"•)'0Ur-<7"'n 1pt Jftd. pool , 11! blt·lm lnel refr1g . \\'11.lk ti) 'lltlpplng '' beal"h, flurry on 11115 one at SI9.&00. Gcn•ral Hunting ton B•ach N-,-.,-po-rt...,..B-,-.-c-h___ General General S2S. Wk, l IJ;;; BR . t.a=:. Bch. e Coiy Conegt _ Beal'h BAY VIEW \iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiii NPT. JfJ:t11. 3 BR. 2 BA, li;:c Co-'-,,,-0-,-.-,,-~-l..;ar:.Jr-ip'-l,-,-. Good-- tam. nn .\ )d. Be.~! arPA, 1 2 B 1 8 At.< 1 rl ,_ 1 1 B oc. r., a .• f'8. n ne:w ~Pl!!. rpJ ~.Pit n • Y J ~7.\-722;} lllR In this lartf' 4 DMrm.. 2 litory homP 111lh lorn1nl dln· 1ng 11rr;i and a lar;e ranuly room. lllfif yarrl and 1n nnf'.()l·Tlw"btll 11tt11~ i n llunr. &h Only SZl.500. C11.t! .;.1()..8:.:t.i. SHERWeeo REAL TY 189G4 Brookhursl, F. V, ~ncr $3.\,900. 6•5--6611. ---------• 2 DELUXE 4·Plf'xr.<: '.\le'a San Jua n C ap1~trano \'l'rdf', lop rond. S11.500 ea. S'i3, mob1l" hn1t .. ~!. arta, 1 Rr, ill ulil incl $1M. 3 BR . 2 BA, con1p1 turn. Re· EL CORDOVA APTS. S17J 2 Br, k1tb/pe1s, X B. ALA Renti ls e 64S.l900 rll'r. 2 blks lo octan -44t ll Fr om S14S • VIE\\' ACRE f Pr1n only. ~17-2876. C!O$l' ln l 11crr parC'cl {'fluid Lots for S a lt :!..~ bf spli1. f' 11::1 ure.r;q u f', • 170 RENT·A-HOUSf; 979-8430 SI. S350t mo yrs 1st. Avail I Furnished & Unfurnished Houses Unfurn 305 •Spring Treats -2 hr, cpt:i1, ti 1;,_ Da)s 833-84&1 rves Dish"'asher . Shag Carpeting . \Valk-i n Clos· ------''~·---drps, kids/ptits. s14n. i<.'l'.!-9478. ets, r·orced Air Jl eat . Extra Large Room~· IE"bfllll~,y 11\'f>C&do Trrrli, and prrstigc C110lCI=: Jn1, IOO'x\3.Y, R·2 ~ '° (;,.o.U .. ~ IU'f'it. r1.111 Pr1rr I fll\\'!'f"{ l'lllry, 3'18 E ' Balboa Island ALA Rentals e 645-3900 o=-up""lc-,-.. -,-U~nr=-u-r-n-. -3=50 Beautifu l Game Roorn .. J-le11ted Pool.· BBQ 8· BEAUT FURN S * r-.:c11·ly d<'ftl ratt'd 4 bed· Enclosed Ga/'ages. Quiet surroun d1~gs and ., "' 2 a« 1. 1 ~I HSEhD room hon\e at end ()[ c:uJ-dl'-Jeneral close to sh opping. (Nr H arbor & Hamilton St ) .. ., .. I fl -= •IVRll", 11g ~ I k .. -..,...-------1;11rpc111, TV's p 1 a no, siu·. xtra arglf bnt: y11.r, •. 2 Bn, 1 BA, lower. Balho11. St.) ~~t.· v.(.J;A CAI.lo $31 7liQ ~H.tX·ht'Strr SL, C.lJ Shol't ......... Bou"""'~-~,c-. '' --~= FITZPATRICK'S 11;il k 10 171h S1. 5hPt\&. cntr. $200 DOWN . J ~Rl\lS &. DEN -Clltillitfftn&-'hll~-P.nit, $21.l.ll . ..6.ll,,9al9 Liv .. rm. 11·/frpl. opt>n<: to 31501 Conuno CapL!l!rano Mou ntain, Desert, p1;11lo, paneled drn off 111od San JuH.11 Cnpii;t1·ano Resort 174 1vasficrfdt)'l'f, etc. AvuII. S3C\ll · '*'~ 0'\0.-I , Bff=Tft,, (lrp,;, dryf'r, Gar. )'f'll.rly. S300. arw1n r ea ty inc. ~·riilc. Yrly fi 7;......o496 NU-VIEW RENTALS 9\\•·4105 ANYTIME . ' . Adult Living· No Pets. 2077 Charle St,, Co5f1 Mesi 642-4470 3 bl'droom. 2 bath, t\1'" 11tory ht>me. Plush rarpt•111 & drl\P"5 throughout. buil1·1n rangf' & oven ll'lrl trfriger'111or. Pool and patio v.·11h lots flf gretnel')'. il1ust bP sOlrl. C'!.fl IQ\\•. Walker & Lee blln. kltch. carp .. dr11pe5 493_1124 --------- &dly ln llft'd of y11rt1 **BIG BEAR LAKE Realtor Since 1965 ('lranuri but a real buy lor ~~~~~~~~~~ j Only $3,995. Cabin nestled in $36,9.')0. ; !he 11oocls. "Try ii, you'll ~llSSJON P.[AL T\' 491--073 1 [.fJJ 11kc it ~" Call Ross 17141 ----Re•I E1t•te, TINY BLI Tl:;JtP.ll'JC! Centr•I 5:'.6·1738 or \\Tilt': Spenc·er 2 BR rottage, frpl. near '--------' Real Estate, P.O. Box 2828, • , Huntington Beech £73-40.10 flr 49-l-J248 SPARKLJN(,, sunny, 1\'alk 10 ---------- BEAlIT. brach housr. 2 BR . 2 beach .ti 5tlop.iC. 3 Br., bltn5, MODERN 2 BR. bltns. crpt!l, BA. fpl , .!ihiti?; crpri:. $300. Sf'cludf'd palio, (:loscd dhl d rp_~. frpl:. carports & tndry m 0 1 yr 1 y. C 0 u Pl e . n 0 g~r., pOl)S"~-.t-1 rna,1~~· -~~a1ny fa1,11~ 0s1K~·NCouple t ... 1 ~m· chtl<lren. 3J 2 Ruhv. £•3-3770. Xtr11!'i ~>mo, ~-·~ c 11" • > o (lf'ls. 842-4664 a . · \\'ILL l'tnt tit-au!.~ BR honH! aftl"r 5:30 J ?.1. HACIENDA HARBOR From $150 DELUXE I & 2 BEDROOMS Furn ished & Unfurnished Pool-Garage-Dish\vasher. Utilities Paid Adu lts Only · No Pets Re11llon brach. Just l1stl."d s:a,500. 6lg Bear Lake . Cahf. B lboa Peninsula 10 rt'sponsiblr f;imily. FPnc.[liiiiillilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~>!!491 O~n 'Ill 9 Pt>.f NICHOL.<; REAL E!->IATE Mobile Homes Out of State P r op. 178 202.l S. Coast llv.y., For Sa le NE\\'. 2 BR 2 BA, f;im rtn 2 rd yant, [\rPpl. nr srhools. c<1r gar. &)' Vie11·. $275 P('r sm. 5?.6·3777 5?li-l.':&1. I Ap1r1mtnh foi Rtnl r~-WAL K to BEACH * 494-i220 • and c'Ule·ll!i·ll·butron' J-lellvy ---~=---­ i;h11ke roof. great bltins, incl Laguna H ills rlilihwi;hr., 3 BR, 2 BA <1nd "11 ---------250~1 E .. i t'k son , La.t::u n~ I 0 v' 1 Y profE":ssionally Hills. 0\1•ncr Anx ious, 3 Br lnrlscpd yard. f.1ove·in cond. h 0 me, 1mm 11 c 11 111 1 e , thruont. Sound expensive? Sprinkler uni.I. Immediately \\'oulrl you believe $23,500? avail. 6-12-Zls:>. Call 540-~. SHERWeeD REALTY Lido Isle 189&1 Brookhuri;t, F.V. GOV'T. REPO'S Fl-IA-V.A. For information nnd J()("at!on or these homes, KASABIAN Real E s tate 847°9604 MATCH THIS ONEI BAYFRONT VIEW Spacious 2 BR .. Oen, l'l1n . rin. & we! bal,'. Entry courtyarrl wlfounta tn, L;e. pat io on 60 fl. ~t. 3 car gar, $99.500. howonb tawson jrL acolCOA 34 16 Via Lido 3 BR:. + POOL Spanish sryle 4 BR. plus fam· $24,200. ily rm .. 3 ha .•..•.• Si!l.500 2 Bath!\, paneled dining Baylron1 trlplr~. 3 BR .. 2 IHI. rooni, w/v.• crp!. in kitch.. ea. Lease lanrl ..... $120.COO bllin RIO. heautilul poo1 LIDO REAL TY INC. area. Best buy in to11·n: 3377 Via Lido. 1''.B. --" ~1 125 19i0 Flt'('l\\r.K>d 12')(£0' Front & re11r bedrooms 1 1 ~ h:1 , blt·ins, a1\n)ngs, ~kl/'11111.:, slorage $ht'd. 40 ACRES, N.E. Urah, 11·;flk 10 l<1ke & small lt>11·n. $4200. S42 Dn., $42 t.lo. 83.1-30~. 1no. unr il _.Ju~ 30 Call e Prh•a{'y A:o1surl'rl -Cnz~ Hosem11ry 67;)...3000 days, or 1 Br, nr bt·h. SlOO, --~------ 96S-8.'>49 ('\'ros. ALA Rentals • 645·3900 Apts. Furn. Real Estate Coron• del Mar 360 Clu bhoust', gainr rm, Pool Li\'e in !he sun 8.· smog.free air at Rancho California, E xchange 182 ""-------8 UNITS _________ ,1e Ex1ra! 3 Br. 2 Bil. fnr1! General I BLOCK yrd, encl g<U', klrls lf>("rs $15.'i iiijiiiiiiiiiiii ttl f'Verylhing. I BR Jo11•t-T ALA Rentals e 645-3900 A unir, fully furnislwd, good NO-FEE arelh--Sl.iO u1 1J11lr! paid. "RENT \VJ-ll LE vou BUY" Bold New Concept NU-VIEW RENTALS This lovely 3 BR'! Ba hon1e, 67~3(1 oc 49+-3248 feo<ed yacd, dbl '"' '"'' FURNITURE RENTAL Sehrd11led gro~s income General man)'. many xtras. Vacanl! ---;n"1":s"E"R°'T~c"n"'i:"S1"'--I Sl2.480. Annually. Cenlr<1l sz1;, pcr n1onih. Costa t.lesa Localion -r\o !77 50 2 BR h 'It ~Tonlh to !vTonth l)11 n ~·nur 01\Jl lot · pvt mr gar 111'\\'E have a large selection * lOO'C Purchase Option Golf. CLUBHOUSF;, Nlltural Rrntal Problem Here. S1ar1 SI~ 2 BR alone on lor ol J and 4 bedroom home! * \\'Ide Selection. 11 l P I I'~, I 17''"" '72 Ta.-: Shf"l!er NOii'. Room 11·,· 2 BR k1"• p•f• H B o oo s, "·'"~ n ~= "' "Q • ·' · · that can be mo1·rrl in!o Eiylc-Color. ,.,,, s~1,,,,,~ fnr 3 Arkh11onal Units. Sub-II ~ 2 BR "l''""''lh1·0 ° C '[ 1 f I d-I ~ ,.-, • ..._ ~ ·II.I ' ~·~ .. ,. ··' • a mos mn1e 1a1e y on our w U I-Tour Deli\'cry t.:LRIDGFJ RF:ALTY CO. lllif Trrrns -SIOG.500. S\55 2 BR alone on lot, kids/ ~ n t -op 1 ion plan . • P.O. Bo:'I 665·0 THE: REAL F:STATERS -prts SI-JER\VOOD RE A LT y , Sl1 Ot>srrt l!ril Spnn,es, Cahf. INVEST:\TENT DIVISION $155 2 BR VIII." 1?:tr 11.B. S40.S555 ('"U UST M n?::J 17141 329-M44 Apartmrnt ilouse Specialis1s $1i5 2 BR. dbl iz:ar, val:, rencd, Lief MS -~ 546-1600 k1rls pcls r\.B. 1?11}.IACULATE ex. I~. 3 _ -NE\V 2 Stoty' • Reauty $145 3 BR i;:ar kidsl prts BR. 2 BA duplex, crpts, 2 BR , 2 BA. lg. L.R., Sl21'.l j BR• clea~Pr-upprr drp~. bltn~. lrg. lovl"ly SI? \V. l9lh,, C~I ~S1·-0"l81l4 sundC'ck. Npt Bay & Ocean .1165 3 BR k"" C ,11 private yard (garden<'r &r;"!!"'!!i!N!l!.!!'i!!'j'j'"•· !iS~A!!!!!!i~i!!!iiij Viel\'. . , gar, ius, .. . I! $8,oo:J. 114 1676-5155 Pnvate party s $$MAKER 241 Avocado St,, Cost a Mesi 646-1204 LA COSTA APTS. I & 2 BEDROOMS Furnished & Unfurnished Built·lns • Shag Carpets · Drapes • 'Valk ·ln Closets • Sn'imm inl.! Pnol • Bar ·b-Q ues • En- closed Garage . \Valk to s hnpping center. ALL UTILITIES PAID Adolts -No Pets 354 Avocado St .. Costa Me11 MESA VILLAGE APTS. 3 BEDROOM-$150 2 children welcome, no pets 642·9708 Forced A ir Hea.tinc: · \Valer Paid -Carpets • Drapes . Built·in Stove ·Carpe t -Stall Shon'· e r · Lri11ndr v Roon1 ·Fenced Ya rd. 1046 El Camino Dr. ~A, Cost1 Mesa 546-7331 VILLA GRANADA APTS. T ownhouse. Spacious 4 Bedroom . 21h Bath. Balcon ie~. Firc1Jlace. \Vet bar. Attached .2 .car garage. Near Cd~t h igh school. ,, 835 Amigos W1y, Newport Be1ch * * :it(}-3672 * w S17:i 3 BR everything kids/ 11·arcr pdl. t;ar + en<:I hugc- prts 11 .B.· -prk'g. 5200. Resp. married Balboa-Island ---- ;"11011117\G Oo1~'" • Assume Real Estate Wanted 184 S7:i l RR fitPpl lilllf' farni rouple. Adult~). 1\42-3276. _ Submit on terms! Call 673-73'00 '847-1221 I --RA-~1,..:....:...,-3:.,Bc:R __ , -XT c CM, .. l ·,, RA. 644-2991 loan. S22fl cover~ all, in-'rl I ' . ' ; SU:'\l:'\IER·Ch 1t r m 1ng TRIPLE A Con1pany look in~ ki s (>f'I!! 11n1mals, horse Oh. Large 2 BR, _•_'001 ()(·can b•i·rco"I• 3 BR. 2 BA o• 2 clu1l1n~ ut il, 20x•l3 Boi~e R t A H 979 8430 " " ' SEY;\10UR REALTY, 17141 .3.i' lot, t)o. si<le. O\VNER Beach Blvd .. Hun!. Bl'h. !>·JUST SELL. Trade? Bkr .. HIDDEN VILLAGE APTS. RARE INDEED! 6 BR. + 3 BATHS 67H7:i6. Cll~J·i><lr. 2 Br .. 1 Ba. ltun· fnr 4-7 acres of industrial en • -ouse -hl'P.C'Zf'~. Sl:t'J. h.10s & JM'!i:. BR. 1 BA. Choice da tes 111,~1nn Shnrrcliff.~. Call col· propt-i·ty. L.A . or OranRr LANDLORDS! Rent·A-House 979-8430 n/)f'n 6iJ:-32.;S, Home·Like Living Families Welcome! I ' 71).,_,, Coun1y. Prin<'i p11ls nnly. Re· . ==o~~----lect c rryr l:i: n-u71·1, l<ent Pl.\' lo Box 361, Daily Pilot. I \re Specialize in Ne11·fl(lrt Irvine * \\'O'.\lEN -S1nglc Rnomi>. $35,950. Newport Beach 2 BEDROOM-2 BATH From $159 2200 YI · ti. 2 s!ory, near golf * coursa F'ireplarr. h u g e master herlrm. !Wllf'. Jdr11J home for !he l&l'll:P. lamtly. * * • * NEWPORT * Rr11l1y. Aft 6:30, 7 I 4; P.O. Box 1560, Cos!a il!Psa, B<"llCh •Corona rlel il1ar • 'J'V Rn1. k1t(•hrri. \\'1n1er $j() 5 36-1) 210' Cali f. 92626. I J..aguna • & Dana Pnin1.l3 BR. 2 ba. fan1. rn1 ... t:{40 per 1110 J. up. 6jj...5-J6S· Carpets ~ Dranes -Air Conditioned • En clos· ed patios - Hea1 e el P ool • Forced Air Heat • Carport & Slora ge. 6 MONTHS NEW YO UNG atrornf'y & ranlilv Our nen1al &>r\'ict' ls FREE 3 BR. 2 ba. N'p1 ... $375 400 Balboa Peninsula All IPJ'mi'i. CAii s.;7-1221. · SEY'.\IOUR REALTY, 17141 Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bch. 2fix4.i, 2 BR. 11!1 hltns & l"X· nrrd 4 BR. at N.B. 52~ 1 to You! 4 BR. 2 ba. N'vt. , ..... 542''.i -. ·-------lr::i~. Family park S899~. S 3 J. o o o. 20,.0 doii•n., NU-VIEW RENTALS 2 BR. 2 ba ......... S2751300 e $2.J \V1' & UP.On Ocean e Condominium Living in thr lfl 7l·2FD. Payn1<'nts lo $225. Rr!Lab!e. 673-40::0 or 494.324,q 4 BR. 211 b<lths ..•• $325/375 Lo\'t'ly Barh-1 Br-Rooms RIVIERA 2500 South Salt1, Santa An1 (enter 2 blks \V. of Bristol. off \Varner on Linda \\'ay, south to \V. Ce ntral) Back Bay area overlook ing Ana Mobile Resale.t. fi73.52S4. ,. VERY CLEAN 4 BR homl" 3 BR. ~_ha. home . : ...• $.\00 l\lald st'r\'iC'P:!'°'!l-U!il pd 546· I 525 FRANCISCAN F o u n I a i n home. 4 BR. 3 BA. 3 t:ar gar.,· film. rm., Ulility rn1. Cpt, d p r s , landscaping, sprinkling system. Finan· eing Ava il. $47,500, By ow.ner.----841 beauli.ful Nf!lvport Beach. 531 -1100 * 4-PLEX \\'ANTED * \\·ith hleins & lr.s: frne<I yd 3 BR. t1l ,\ug .. furn. '" $400 • Call 6ra-8140 • Hen's an opportunity to 011·n LOVELY C.:\1.-1\.B. aff'it nnly fo{'. S~5 per n1n. F:\.'lllLIES (i .. , . d h.11 OC~A.NY~lO~! 4 Br .. SZT~. 'VILLA MARSEILLES a.home for Jrss lhan rrnl. ]O.\:l.1. 2 BP., fully ftirn. VA Buyer. a.iS-3202 OJ\IL,. Call 111t'f'nt ;}16-4141. ; "re I Ulll. ~ncld. hi end of June. SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. 4 mastet size bPdroom! \I'/ Bcaur park. All extras. Bus iness Balboa Peninsula _ '-:-''-""-'-"'-·------Furnished & Unfurnished huge walk-in clo~ts, 3 baths. Ana Mobile Resales . i Adult Living Floor-to-cf'1ling o~place in 531 -1100 Opportunity 200 PLEASANT Home·Pri\'ac)'. Rc',\LT"'" Corona del Mar d 1. --~d.~~.'...'.:'.:..-~--1----------+-< c. 1 ish\\·asher rolor coord ina te app !ances graeious-living r'O'l111. 11·-lw-~f"d-iz:aral:"r. P.anlt"I' &-~nhr:--Plirk--Ci'nli'l':lf'Vlife h -d d b d & d I Acr •• g' ror •• I' 150 DISTRIBUTORSHIP · FURN. or unfurn. l Br. itpL. P lush s ag car1Jet-m1 rrore \Va r ro es oors· <'rPlli:' cuslm rp! I 1ruou!. rrfrlj:'. CarpP1.!i & rlraprs. C::ill An.v11mr, R.1.~·Q.l!20 F~ · 2 blks to beach. ut il furn. indirect li,e:htin,g in kitchen • breakfast bar • A~I/ i>f intercom. BJ/ins in· 40 ACRES, take for only $29 Yearly. $200. 67::-;.;12. ['l:!!i!!i::==:;::::::;i::;:::::I Irvine elude -dish1\•shr. A<Trs of Largl" Corporation de~1r<'s ---'--------.(i r.1t11ure 11du!T only. Yl"ar!y h uge pr ivate fenced patio · pl us h land scap· I BUSINESS' month. $7250 fl{'r acre. hi Corona del M a r • ba J " 67' f,:<b4 b · k B b Q I h d I R:r('('n·gives :a park·l1ke 111-rrspor.51 c perstJn to ---------2 BR, 2 th, den ...... s::oo r11 · ....... '". ih 'l'. r1c . ar· e· ues -arge e ate poo s IS TERRIFIC I mM"pheN! to theiie magnifi· 96S·Q047 rhsrribu!e COCA· C 0 LA 2 BR Houses, crpt'd & drp'd, 3 BR. 21ii ba., Jam. rm. S32a Lar·i.:r--=s.-,~.h-.~,7·,-m-_-u~,~,,-, ~pd. & la nai. We have m joyed a l't'rord ~nt hrimri; prici-d from Commercial COt'f"EE PRODUCTS for ne\\'ly decorated, Sl7:l-Slr.o. 4 BR., 2\~ ha., fam. rm. S:!.iO $160 yrly. 2 blki 10 Big-.OJ· 3101 So. Bristol St., S1nta An1 month ln ~le1 & cons:cque11t· $261250. IO ~ do11·n -101<11 Property 158 usr in A·U T 0 .'11 A T IC Cati 499-1460. morns or 4 BR. ?lh ba., fam. rm. SJ90 rnna. \ adult . no pets. 557·8200 ly are in URGENT ti<-ed· of paymt5 as 1011' a~ $2.frl. prr }.;QUIP:'.lE:'\'T. cvrs. 642·~520. COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. - more pml'l('rliC'5 lo sho1v our mo. i11c!urll's all. l\lodC'ls CDJ\I Hi~hllllly fron!age, C·l C11n start par! or full time ~-;;-;;::-;:-,,,,..,-,.,~=-MANAGING AGENT land & b!dg• IO h 2 BR. 1 Ba, frplc. 11·/1v cpts, * * 2 Br !urn np!. $175 n10. , many clients, 1vho desire lo open from 10 to 6 daily. iFol-· 43-rs. per 1\·k.J "'!!!!!!!~lll!!!!!!!!!!i!!l!!l!!!!~~l!!!!!'!!!l!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j live in the ilf'autiful area of low Irvine to Santa Isabell. Agent. £75-7225 }I.LR. Company establish~s bus.i-hlrns, garag-r, no pe!s. on ye:ir's lea.si>. Adults only. 7 UNIVERSITY PARK, a nd Directional signs to !he Condominiums ness for distributors Yea?ly. 675-4352· ,,',.,':l-8='-1.,·1.,..,.""""'"~~~ ~A;:p_ts ... _F_u_r_n_. ____ 360_ Corona dtl Mar TURTLE ROCK_ If you are models er call 54(}.5147. for s•le 160 Costa Mesa FURN. ApL $14.'.-IJ!ll Paid. thinking of SELLING or VILLAGE REAL r'iTATE. ---------NO SELLING ~~ hlock 10 Ocran. l'\o pets. LEASING your home, .,...c * * * * * * \VANTED Blu ff,s 3 br 212 BA EAST SIDE ''SINCE 1946'' 2500 Sra1"ie1\·, Cd:.1 . would greatly appr~11te a 3 BR 2 BA Carmel modtl. con<lo 10 S~. lease/lease Go lt.~hi ng or sp('nd more 3 bedroom hi:irnr ii·ith 1st \Vestrrn Bank Bl<lg Costa Mesa call & a member of Oll'r pro-Harbor Vil'i~· homr~. \st option. s.1&-6TI4 or 614-4349 timi! 1v1th )our la\'Or1re hob-2 bilth!. enclo.sert yard _ UniveNiity Park, ln •inf' fe1sional staff 1\ill be happy qualiry, fully Im prove rl. ='-o',.,'',,'·=-=-="""--c-=-c-by and !rt the maC'hioe age beam ceiling, 2 car Days 552·7DOD Nights to consult \\'ilh you at your l\fust see tn ;ipprec1ate. For J BDR'.'lt. 2 BA Condo. Cpf!, ear-n you mnnry. CASH r.E. encloserl gar;1i;:-r. convenience! appl: 644-2'696. d rps, b 1 l n . ga r age QUIRED $2198. Secured. Quiet !'ielling. \\'ati>r Casa del Ora CHOfCE :\ Bdm1 .• 2 Ra . ALL UT ILITIES PAID {"1111 l1'l1 I'll ii. . AHOY MATE w/"°''"'· !21.!IOO 557-2''6. LIMITED & "" -'rl' P"d. 0~:::x•s/Unit1 162 OPPORTUNITY $2:i() per n10~.1h. frpl., form rl1n rm., 11.irium, Compare before you rent - poolt. tennis cts. Yearly Custom des1g-ned, featuring: lease. A\·a il .\lay 1. 833-lMS. • Spaciou! ki!chen 1.,.ith in- -- -'l\.1•nltor "STNCE 1946" ''nu ~an IL" your bo11t 1n the front yard. This NP11·port Be11,ch home on the channel 11·ith larg,e pier ha" just been made for salr. Hs ,.Pparatr homr5 -O™' 3 BR. one 1 BR. Gre<1t for rral f11n11ly living and 11,a ter fun. $95.500. 6-16-71 71. UNITS \1·anted. Have buyers for duplrXPS up to lge unit!. Agent 6ia-722.l ff!R . \\'r11e no11· for more in- formation, includ ing phone num ber. UNIV. Park, leasf' 3 Bdrm, 2 d irect ligh!ing bath. a1riun1. pools & nr • Separar.e d in'g a rea schools. SJ2j/mo 491-9514. • Ho~e·hke-s.torage _-'---~-~----I • Private patios Lagun.a Beach • Closed g11rage w/s1orage l s! \Vestcrn Bank Bldg. University Park, In'inc Days 552-7000 Nights JUST LISTED! 4 Bdrms .. 31~ ba's .• family rm. Choice f'nd unit. Lo1v ====~'=""""'='='= mainrcnance yard: upgrad-~ EASTBLUFF ed & nicely decorati>d lmmed. Occupancy lhruout, 2,!XXI Sq. YI. & of· Very sharp 3 bdrm .. 2 ha .. fered for $36.500. fami ly kttchen: s1ngl r level {"l.l 11~--pr11 i I. ---'llrallor "SINCE 1946" 1st \Vf!!!lf'rn Bank Bldg. Univrrsiry Park Days 552-7000 Nights REFRESHINGLY BR[GHT & CLEAN Shllrp 3 Bdrm., 2 hri. 1011·nhouse on grC'enhelt. F:x- CC'!)lional l'nd unn 11·11h atrium & Jou11rain. &r th1~ nnf' lf'lflny-)ou'll hC' plc11sl'd. 13·1.'l\IO. (ired hi l home on "manicured" lot. qui<'t strert nrar pnva!r park -all nr1v irnpmvl."- menls lhruour. Ligh t & hnght: 01vnrr rlc"ires 11u1r·k salr, Ask1ni: S'14 ,':71'J, EASTBLUFF REALTY 644-1133 Anytime NE\\'PORT Heights • By O....·ner. 3 Br. 2 ha .• hhn.!i, frplc. i<prinklf'I'~ frnn! & hricK. Lrg. pA!tO t..• yar1!. J Blk eli>ro. ~chi. 4 blk s ;\'11 p! Harbrlr H.S. r rlrnl' ar"fl. S37.!11Q_ or niter. riO 8 Rl'rlhinfls A1·e, '.\ . (] , 6t~·:ii29. *Bache lor 's P a la ce * R!'rlrr. 2 BR. "" LI'~" Cu~1om. qt.Hrr. Vaeanr. Call 11<'1\\: ~G_EM- Income Property * * * Jeff Ltdell 1313 39th St., 166 Newport Beach You are !ht' 11•innf'.'r of 2 lickr.ts lo the W estern National Boat & M a rint Show at thc ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER April lsf rhru 1\pril 91h Pleasc \all 642·5678, ext 314 hl"t\\'Ccn 9 &. 5 pm 10 claim you r 1icke1~. rNorth County toll.frre number is 540·12201 * * * 7 HOUSES ••. 2 LOTS r ixrr upper 1 and 2 Bdrm. Sll75. 1111), Income, SI0.000 do1\·n. $79,500. JO.J BEDRM UNITS F'11rn1shed apts, closr lo 1011 n. NO LOAl\' F'EE. 51 2.0C'O. do11n, 011'ner ""ill linance. $115,000 * CENTURY 21 * Hiiit\\'. Cn~sl lhi-y., N.B, REAL ESTATE 642~1771 U"I'" Park Ccntrr, Jf\·1ne P.F:,\L TIJR.S ~7-4623 CaU Anyt101e. ~20 Tri·Plex. Xlnr ·tax 5hclter. I"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...,...,..,,;,,,. I FOR sl'lfe hy O"'nrr, 5 Br, 4 $6.CKKI Annual Inc, Conven· BY 011·ner 3 &R. 2 &\ home. Ba. .ffix20 pool, cirtu.Jar i!'nl N'pl Sch k:Jc. 548.9695, Calbednil clni . Formal din dr1\'f', fee land. \\'f'.'11<'1111/ rm., frpl('. S.15.900. ~29ll llover Sharri. <lrl's. $i6.00J. PIRii\IES_004·P, lei< 3NBr .. d 2 Bav " Un1vrnit)' P11rk. Call 61tr4Wi hcl 9 or (lf!E't nc. 1 mo. 1 0 n A. 3 ,. p · 1 S62.500. N. Costa ?ltcsa . Legune Be1ch :....,. nnc. 011 Y· 557~!jl. REDl-RRC\V CORP. 1001 Ho11·ard Ave. -..... ~----• Full length marble pull· NORTH END San ;\Jateo. Calif. 9~401. REALTORS man Redecor ated l BR Garai;:c • King-sz Bdrrns CANDY SUPPLY ROUTE E~.ICE 1944 Apt. Stove, N'frig., crpl~. e Pool -Barbeques • 8ur- (NO SELLING INVOLVED) 6 73-4400 drps. lrg yard , child/pet round ed "'ilh plush land· PART OR FULL TIME ~~!!!!~~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!'! \1·rlcomc. Sl~JCI. ~caping No11· availahlp in ORANG E e Fre11h & Clcan 1 Br nr NU-VIEW RENTALS Adult Living a t It~ best COUNTY and surrounrling shop.~. child/pet $125. 673-1030 nr 494---32'18 Large J BR sin areas. \'ou niay krrn your ALA Rentals e 645-3900 S?,00. \\Toodsy Bluebird Cyn.. ~ lIT~ITIES FREE pr('!'Pn! position. ,\II loca· , . archt, desn. 2 hd., 2 ha .. 36.1 \V. \Vllson fi.12-1!1n t 1on~ arr rnmmerr i;il or • E.1a~!l"r Sp,.r1al -2 Br. frpl. cptr!. bhin k I 1 • Low Weekly Rates f?r!ory furnishrd h.v \lJ!. Ince yrd. cpl dJ'fls. $16.1. carrOrt, lncit:.' rn1. Arl lt~. 2080 Newport Blvd. Qualified Pf'rson 1v1ll bf>. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 ri>f. O\i·ner · San Diego. Costa Mesa con1e distr1hutor fnr our SHARP 4 BEDP.OOill 2 272-7976 or 4.l9-~:0S.l r\·r. 642-2611 C'andy INesiles. Plan1crs. Too1 s1e Roll~. illil k Duds, bath,;, ra!'prrs & rlrapes. VICTORIA BEACH STUDIOS & 1 BR'S. illilk Shaki>. Ptty Day, f!Pr· Nie~ location. $210. per Olrler 2 BR hon1e in xlnt ron· AVAIL\BLE shf'y Rally _ adv!'l'l i~rrl nionrh~ Call Ray G<1ull Oilinn. Ne11• carpet~. frpl<', • Full kitchen nationally on T.V. rlc.l. \\'c 54()-Jl ::il HERITAGE REAL yard. patio. Nice \'1c11·. $2'i5. e lleatM pool ;ir(' 11. national ('(lmpany. }~STATE . NU·VIEW RENTALS e Laundry facilitie! Very high inron1<' nritential. 3 BR. 2 BA. Responsible 673-4tm or 494-3248 • Free ~tilitil:'S You must have 2 rn II hrs people no pet~ Q ui e t • Free llnC'ns per 11·eek 5pare rim£' tdays E-side. 11.t't'll. {1) 635-16.i4 for Newport Beach • T.V. & maid serv. 11vail. or eve~l. appt. 11ARBOR VIE\V HO'.\iE _ 3 ! Phone ~ervice $1775 REQUIRl-.:D COii-IE e me! I'm a lovely 4 brdroom. farrii!y room, d in· FROM $35 A WEEK For niore infomvtlion '1ThC'; BR. home w/fllmily rm. On ing room. Available April 1. Executive Suites ROUTE DEPARTMENT •23 quiet cul dP 5at'. near 15. $400 per mon!h lease. 2080 Newport Blvd. P.O. Box 1739, Covina, CaHr. schools. $275 n10. 546-5704 . Agf"lll : 644•7270. Costa Mesa ~''.:1!:"C.--''""''"'""'''"'-'""'"~"'"'":.:""'''."'m"'""':'.:'-l.31m:11JA:1;;;;---;;;;: 442 2 1 .3 RR. 1 BA, fam rm., e BAY & BEACII e · 61 Business Wanted 210 BEACH resilient shopping fnr local husincsl'. '.\Tu5t show '7t books, iz:ood nl't. potential .Q'.l'O"'th. P rin nnly, PM_ ~·knds... (213l .J?.0-12.il. Investment Opportunity 220 EXCHANGES, ln\'estmc.nl5 & tax 11hetlen. llome & tnve5tment Rea lty. 6j'5-i225. Money to Loan 240 1·1·prs. rlrps, stnve. \1'ator prl. $175 2BR hm, g!\r, rncd. STUDIOS & I BR'S ho11! or !!'Ir cn!r. J'aml!ies kids/pl"IS. 1valk lo \\'t1.trr. • rREE Linen!'! flnl~·. 548-5170. $22:i. RENT-A·llOUSE 979-8430 e !-'REE Urilitle5 3 B.R 2 Ra SI , w t Houses Unfurn. 30$ • 1-"ull l\ltchen , .. • O\ e'. ll .er, .;~--------e llcl\ll"rl Pool ~f1C'nC'r. rlsh11·shr. \\ater 1n-1 • rluflffi. $215. 5 4 6 _ 176 5. Newport Beach • Laundry F11cilities • TV & n111irf 8erv A\'ail ~~9828. Pho •-I SINGLE Family Rf'sidt'nce 2 e n!' ...,rv r.e $165. Large. 3 BR .. vacant. Br & dton, quiet 11.rea, nr * $140. LES.S BONUS GarA.S:!', Brin.IC the kids. \\'Iller & Lido 1 h ops. "'""' trn. $.l:i off ls! mo .. I BR R e nt.A-House 979-8430 6iJ-1417. f\irn. AdultJll, no pe 15, LARGE :l Br duplex uni! l\'lodem. srt:ludcd pool •nr \\'/gAr. Sl40. 642-4253 or Santa Ana fl'\\·ys & So. Cst P1aU\. 2s3l 9'79-4TII. 3 BR. :l Ba, paneled gar for Brl11tol. C.i\I. 541).$791. Huntington 8e1ch playroom. Avail now. l\lus1 * \YINTER P.ATES * 5ce to 11ppreci11te. 644-7187. AHrac furn Studios SJ15. 1 11en llouJSe 2 Br. $~. Condorninlui,fl BR '11 S12.5. Adult5, no pe111. Foti: llorn 2 Br $13.l. Unfurn l20 2111 Elden. l\fjlT. Apl. 6. EM TilE BLun·s . BR rornlo I ""'" - 2 loll -N•. 1st TD Loans It ODELED fully air coD<I. many custom f'\'erythin.Q:. Xlnt rentals. 1 • 'ft'ature~. ll e du re l'l 10 I J.~rog FAncy 1111 liea S85. • , Claim ba it 11 t sea. 2 Br. $140 M • Furn. Bachelor & 1 Br I R -•-3 e it= Costa ••-----·I 11peci1lly nice. 2110 011r1ng .;io:;:ll r. .11.1 ___ .... Splash ®"'n 4 Br. s1:.o 2 BDR..VL l'i 8'1,. 2 CAI Newport Blvd., CM. b:lwe.~t r11tti1J OranJi:I' Co. BAI! Hou!!e $45 for grab~ garagr, pool & rec. f11cil. HOLIDAY PLAZA "WE BUY TD'S" \'11,cht1men ·OtUght $163 $190. mo. 89.'h)573 DELUXE: Sp11clnue: t BR. Sa ttler Mtg . Co. \Vr.t fCf't cloM! 5125 Business Rental 445 tum 11,pt. $135. I·reated pool. 642:2171 546-0611 Sun Lovrr11 $135 Ampl4> Jmrkln,. Adults -M Se'r'Vlnt 1rsf1ior arta 2I ""5. Cool hot housf! -s75 Nawpo;t Beach pet8. J965 Pomon11 Ave. Ci\I .,. S!':tCh H1:1 vtn Sill . t \o;ill buy your 2nd TD, HELP-U e e ll0.6381 Y&AR.L\' 2: BR .• ft'f)lc. 11un· Roomy 2 Br Jum Apt ups111.n'I lmmaUate c11~h. priw.11 ______ __:_;.;...;.;...c.1 deck. S250 mo. Balboa Bay Sli'5. UUls Pd. Biby O.K. -2P::•::;rt>::.":...64:.:..:.4-.. 76::9.:.7.:•::ll.:6:.· --.! Dlme-A-Llne 64W671 P rop. 67J. 7420. No pt ls, OO·w.l. 2 Bdrm!i., 2 bath~. huitt-in Good C'Ond. Le.a\1in1 area. 6~ % -NTER-EST kilch<o. '"' .. Pl"'" "'"' .~,..J;,,."3()~, _o-;-w""-;:.:r·...:64.:;4"'-i"'m-'.~l _A,, .. ,.,.c;:. '='::5--0-;;l,,-4•.· ;;-=-,,;,,;-.J2n .I TD -Loans ilructi<>n, rooke this fre~hly SHORES, 4 Br., 3 Ba. f3m BF.AUT ~ 20 uni! ai1ull U remodrlcd 1111·-'rd ll'tnnlfli 3200 ~q. It. S\rin1 & trnni11. 114 E 20 h S C • ho ' A I 67'"22" J Bfll. ~. t t.. ..,f, me an 11nbeatab1e value gion · ,,..., ·' llR Rkr partlclp11,(Jon invited. at $52.500. JlELP1 An:<i:ious owner 2 6~2-4900 \VESB, Bkr. -a'r., • &w:im pool, ~ ....,2"8"'U'""1 ,..N~~S""h-""' - - _"' ~,,., -Joe, Agont. 67;.7225. um. n t. r. op g. _V&-~11/ 1• 2 & 3 BR, 2 81. '8231 Elli& REAL EST..ATE !rs ,-.,,...,., ·"II )UU• Avo HB. 14~ M 347.3957- "' Hem! with ea!'oe. use DAILY UOO Glennt)tt St. Pilot Oauifitd. M2·567S. f'1 ttsW4 Are lu11t a phone ~73 549-<lllfi new 11tuU cali llw1y . 64l--5678 , J Costa Mesa * $30 WK . & UP * e Studio I.: 1 BR Apt! e Roo m $15 \VK & Up. • 1V & l\taid Scn·lce Avail e Phone ~rvicr. Util Pd • All major credit card! 23j6 Ne1\·port Blvd. 5-1.!i.975!i Thi~ Ad \Vonh SS on Rent Children f.: Pel Sectlnn * SUPER I BR. {.A)vt'ly furni111rc. :rrii,::irla\re appl'.~. rrosr ./rre l'C'lri~. rei~·-, ...,. ON TEN MJtES l Ir 2 BR. Fur.t. • Untum. Fireplaces / priv. patio&. Pools Tennis Contnt'J Bldrt. 900 Sea Lane, Cd M 6'-f..2611 f~111:cArthur nr Co111t Hwy ) queen ~z bcci, ('pl/Orp. 2 Brdroom, 2 Bath !!pa.rkling Arlulrs. $150. 2220 Eldt'n. rlean, firrplact', zun deck. 645-6:'.7!1, ldra1 11·alk·1D-bettch loca- $50 Move In Allowance lin n. Couple or mature E LM GARDENS AP1'S sing!,., no pe1 5 $250. CaJI Shady la1vn-Pool-S140 Up. 67·'\--85."ll ag1. 177 E. 22nd St. 642-3645. \\'ATCH the SLln!et in this exP.cutive 3 bdrm. Ocean I ATIRAC l Br. pool. arlult~. nn pet~. Ufil pd . Va-Blvd. rluplt'x. Adult.-: only. <'<Int 418. 1SS4 l\Tonrov1a. s450 Mo. Agent 675-4930, ~S..0336. G40.002tl. RN ISHED 2 BR A NE\\' 3 Br., 2 ba .. sun dt ck. FU 1 • pl. 11·11lk lo bch., cpl~. drp!. Util. pa.id. $170/mn. 22i7-B S101·e & rf!frig. Couple! nr :\Iaple Ave. 54!l-il913. mature sint:ll".~ flnly. No BEAUT. FlJRN.-2 BR-pr!.•. A$:'en1 . 67:>-722.1. I-ltd Pool. Arlults (iv, tl'rn ok) 2 & 3 Br. apts, ne11·, a great No pel5. $\jj up. 642·9520. pl::ict' 111 live yr-round: W~k AVA IL Ko"' 1 & 2 Br furn. be11ch & shops. Frpl., bltns. pool, rec rm. gd !()(", No ta.~lf'ful decor. 6 7 3 -O 9 3 7, childrn, no pet,;. 646-5824 67H87l. ONE Bedrm. Adults, no pets. LRG. 2 BR rluplex. Frpl. Pool & Utilitie.~ included. pri11. del"k. Ne\I' c3rpel, $145-Sl:icl. 548-7£89. pa int & drape5, $250 pel'mo. * 1 \VEf.:K FREE!* Agt . £73-6.)10. Eve 1 , B11ch., nu nee., no klt. $75. 673-.6n8. 2 Be .. ~165. Adll•. 642·2181. -.-3~B~R~-3~B~A-$~3-35-­ NICE 1 & 2 Br rrailf'rs. $75 &. On Bluffs. Great View. Frplc. up. r.1 aturf' atlul1!'1. Child ok, Pool. :l P11.tioz. Avail April Nn pet~. &12-126.i. 15. 979-126S. BACH F.LOR apt., $95 In· LARGE 3 BR, 2 BA, bltns. eluding utilitie5. J\.1ature gt'etn shag crpt'g. Ne1v person. 64~1809. drp~. lritlry room, fencat Huntington Beach La Quinta· Hermosa Spanish Country E5late Liv- ing & Spacioo5 Apll!. Ter- r aced pool: sunkt'n gas BBQ. Unbtli~11.bll' Lhfirig -. Only I Br uni $ISO.furn $175 2 Br uni $175-furn $210 3 BR Studio • furn $275 ( 4 blk!t S. ol San Ditgo rrwy on Beach. 1 hlk \V. on llolt to 16211 Parksitle Lane.) (714 \ 847·5'441 Laguna Beach LOVELY LOCATION Rcdec. I BR fltll)' lurni~hed ovcr:lookint ocean. Av11:ll yc<11rly. Small pet ok. $16.l utlJ paJd. NU-VIEW RENTALS 61~ l)r 494-3U8 patio. 644-8.10:l. UN IQUE cha teau on Bayside Dr. 2 bdrm. le clen -dining room. Adult11 only, $375 Mo. Agent 675-4930, ~. .. * GREAT VIEW 2 BR. * Frpl:::., bltn!, 11undeckr, pool. 1200 up. -· ~all. * 2 BR-View. Pool. Frplc, I'~ Bath dbl carpor1, $235. £T>l 386 or 673-8737. 2 BR, bll·lrl.$. Pool. Wslk to beach. SD> ~to.~ Ora.nge COAst.Rcal Esrare , 644-4848. .-2B R . UPPER$200- 3111, Ja!'imin~ * £73-8550 TIME FOR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR ACTION .•• CALL 642·5678 ------ .: , • • ... .. ,I .- .. •' •• !· I . I. -I ., • •• ·. • I FREE PASSES •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • f WESTERN NATIONAL , : • • Monday, Aonl '· 1972 DAIL V PILOT ~5 Find Your Name You Could f• One of Today's Winnen 10 Pain of $1. 95 Tic:kets Given Dally • • • • • I I • • • • • • If y--• 11 Nstod lo • spoclol " hro 11 th cleotl~od 1octloe, "'""• 64Z·H7t, ext..., .. 114, --t •·"'· _. I P·'"· to ..... ., ,... .... "' to ,1ck ., yew 2 frat Mow tickets •t any COftYeftlHt DAILY PILOT office • ¥1111 .._. 7t & ID f• detolb .. DAILY PILOT 9lveowoy -o $455 S..plr boot-YOU COULD WIN. • • • • • Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT Apt. Unfurn. 3'5 Cost• M•sa· HARBOR GREENS 2 Bedroom or 2 Bedroom & Den 1V2 B• or 2 Full Baths P.fasl<'r size bPdrooms \v/high beam ceiling11, large living roon1 \V/gas or \\'ood hurning f1replact>. Convenli!nt laun· dry Rrt'a off kitchC'n. En· elosed patios. 2 swimmi ng pool!, s1111na, recreation fac1lit il"s, ~fODELS OPEN 546-0370 • • :~~~~~~~-1---:(~Dl~NG~Hl~ES~T~O~SA~IL~BO~A~TS~l_! A1Nrlmentt for Rent / "f' 1 .______; -· • • • • • • • • • • • • -[,__L'_" "''-'"""__,J[Sl [ -ond ·-l ~ [ Apt.· Unfurn. · 365 Apt. Unfurn. 3'5 --------Cost• M•s• STABILITY PLUS SECURITY Huntington Beech LIYB near the. ocea.n, escape lo peace &. quiet, Neighbors lriendly, beaut. big 2 BR apl.!i., closM garage!. S1'4j In a. changing society, "'e mo. Call for details, Tom, all appreciale that ronfidenl 536•5763 or Russ, SJ6.l7l8. feeling .of hon1e -\\'ell· managt:d, well-maintained. 260ll England St., ~.B._ lt'i )'Ours ·ht'l't: in a garden LRG: 2 Br., 2 Ba., fncd apartment "'ilh 2 bedrooms. patio, shag cpts, drp11. bllns. 2 baths, guest room or den quiet dead·end SI. Children · plus patio arid all the ele· pet considered. $165. Also 2 gMce of ouldoor living. Br. rurn'd $175. 7681 Ellis Stop in soon: NCI' .A 84J-7547. • • • ~ (INFLATABLES TO CRUISERS) • ••••••••••••••••••••• APRIL ·1 THRU 9 ••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ACCESSORIES DISPLAYS EDUCATIONAL FEATURES Found (free •ds) FND~ Actor11.hlf! blk pupp)'. probllhly pll.rt po001,., ap. pmx. 6 11.·l(,s old. ~ hlk. Coasl Jh\·y., IAgun11. Brh. J\la.r. 30th. 4 9 9 -3105 , 642--016 . FOUN°''D~~ll'°'o~d.-G~,-,-,-,-,, 'bephcrd. Approx. '4 t'o lo. Fe-malf', bro~·n \\'llh blark OOSP, v1r. ol V1r1or1a St.. C.M. 548-91!:09. * * PARROT found DOORS OPUf · 1ic!e Cosra l\1e~11 W[EKDAYS "1..," 6 PM -F'~und G<'rn1an Shrphrrd VI<'. \Valk 3 Blks to Beach? WEEKENDS ot Garfie ld & t-.lain fitrf"rts. 11M5 Anaheim Avenue Lge 2 & 3 BR, ap!s, iiell•ly 12 NOON \Veil mannrrcd frn1 a!r. Jdrn- * FRESH AIR THE VENDOME -c_,1_1_64_2_·28;,.2~4:,.":cM:::rs::. :.P.::h::ill"'iP:::'c..1 tify. 847-511'1. dPcor. \Vi v.• crpl s, r~rps, ---------- DELUXE bltns, except rPfrig. $150 to round Blk Gl'rman Shf'phrrd. APARTMENTS S225. No fingl s, oo pels.1:;~~~~~===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::1malr·546-9580. Air Cond -F'rplc's . 3 S1,~1im-536-ITII. F"ound Iri5h &-Nrr .-· posl!r\'I' 1ning_ Pools· Health Spa • SEA AIR APTS • $130 ~ identification rrquirf'rl. Tennis Crts • Game & .,,.., I ,,_ 1 R c l!!:!I I JI & l R46-GS41 Billiard Room Ll-g 2 BR. Crpls. dip.~. blrns. ~menbfarlltent p;artmenls or tn T' •---"-"'-"-~--~ - 1 BEDR()(''f 1 h~k N. of Adam_s oU Beach1•------'-.J ~ . Found Gre<1t Dane f'ROt.I Sl6S Bh-d. 729-•6 Uti ca. ~ 646·6i 2" MEDITERRANEAN .536·~ or S36-ioio Apt. Unfurn. 365 Ai::~.~lt. or Unfurn. 370 Rent•ls .to Sh•r• 430 Jo'OUND. lllhagio-mal• dog. ROO)t Add1t>0n~. £slimar,s. plans &: layout. s1n1i:le nr 2 srory. L. T. Constn1cr1on lncom• Tax Smiley Tax Service 1141-1511. • 14 'i'Pan LOCAU..Y e J AC!.\ T a u I An f'·Rrpair . Fl"P SC'hf'd ule rf'mf'd , 1idtl L'. 20 \ r~. "'\'.fl. 1.la.llPd On R~uest l 1r·rl \ly \\'~v Co .5-f"-«l?.!i I \V.A. SllIILEY, C.r .A. ' · · · ' _ ._. 1 64:?-ml Anylimf! fi.4&.9666 Add ition..; • J'temo<lf"linj; GPrn·1ck k Son, Lir . 1 Lend1capln9 673-f.O.lt • :"1~Zl ill * CONSUL TANT Child Care l~ORTICULTVRlST Cl-1 /LD CaTf', 1 h'I ,i ,\rto. r utl l Colle~,. grad .. 27 yr.1 rim ... Al~ \\f'f'kcnds. ~1P~a 1 ~xp in Or11n,&.f' Co. ~·here Vf'rd,. 11 rea . .3Zii~190. ~ e\Jrr pJan•~ 11.r" grown, I Call 6<t4·7i01 for 11ppl . DEPENDABLE; Chilli rare_ -----~---"-- 1ny homf'. lfarbor·BRkf'r I Painting & 111·r a, 546·4145. P1perhen9in9 O riveweys * SALE * PROTECTIVE stal roaring -1 1'4 uller P11 1nr & \Vallpaper <lrv1\·y~. pa l~s. i::11r, nnnrs. \Ve are p111nt1 ng & dry \1·a ll 5't11y5 hlack. Ha 11 I "}' ' " , contr11ctor~. Lf't Ui'i adv!M! :;.i;,..519.i. you. Df'ror11.tnr a\·a1lable afl El•ctrical 12:00 P i\! Polnl o! Color, 5.16 \V, 19th Sr .• Cl\!, 646-G5 n . B of A nr :\last er Ch11rge. 1 YOUR cbo1ce 2 xtra sharp 1 ---------~-"--------vie Capo Be11 ch. '4.'.l&.-2.'Wl:i. . * * * VILLAGE BR 11pls. J ust 3 blk~ from Newport Be•ch Cost• Mes• Girl nf'eded to share apt \vi th Lost 555 Mrs. Gery Valiere 2400 llarbor Blvrl .. c.~I. Ocean. Sl40 • w/lrplc $1 50. 2 girls. S4fl./mo renL Nr. ELECTRICAi~ \\'ORK. All kinds. Big or srnitll Lic'd k ln.!i. r reie. P~f. 546-0211. Gardening Nq Wll$UnG: *WALLPAPER * \Vhen )'OU ca.JI "t'olac·· 29l4 Maui Place 17''1) 557-8020 Adltg, Pets on approval. 2 WESICi lFF ~R~A * * • * G.\V.C. 894-4329. KEYS (31 _ t shnulrl s11y Costa Mes• RENTAL OFFICE 5.36-ll!O. 81n~·· ,,';,· !rdp c, .sto\'~· El Puerto Mesa Apts Ford. on ~Id rh111n at· You are the \\'inner of OPEN 10 AM TO 6 P~f ~fOVE IN TODAY rt g.. P ' rps. priv Garages for Rent 435 !ached to large red fluffy patio. Small 12f'! considered. * * * * Expert Japll nt'SP Garrlr nrr ComplP!I" \'ard N>rvict Call :l4&-072>t tr 548-l «4 fN6. t ru •PATO I PLASTERING All typf'~. Yrf'<' e1111mates Ca.II 5-W-6825 2 ticke!s lo the New Villa Paula from $139. Kids ~·elcome S200. 1 Bedroom Apts, \\'ANTED garage • Cost~ po\\:der-puU type bAll. Lost 111 tht: 2 B 2 Br all xtra~ pool NU VIEW RENTALS i\'f!"Sa/Santa Ana area . Call in Costa J\fesa. Plase i:all p~JNTJNG -Honest, clean. W N . , I r., 2 Full Ba. 841,3669 =;1·10' • ' ,-,8 20 64~2142 &fl•r 6 •.m. estern at1ona f amiJips Welconie -or =a-.> 673-4030 or 43"1-3248 $130 & up Incl. ulill tle!I'.. Also "Ion . 1.r l {Ask for apt. ,. E:-.:p, J11p.a~sf! Gardener . guar11nref!d \\'Ork. Llc~sed Rl"commend~ By n:ka1a NursPry .••••••..•. Frtt Est. Boat & Marine Show Shag cP!ldrps, patio, 2 Br. Apt: Closed gar. Cr~ts; ** PRIVATE 2 Br., 2 B»., furn. Pool & Recrea!Jon B-41 1. LOST vie. of Bearh '-I;. Comp!l"'te Ya rd i\lain tf'nance 0&~in~•c.u~l'<'i=·-"~·;.s~1~•0~·=-~ ANAHEIM ~am r.eil., garages. drp!!. child, i;mall pct 0.1(. 11 drp bltns encl g r ·a·rea. Quiet Environment. Offic• Rental 440 <li11napolis. .S1!vrr f P n1. FrP, F:s1. 64S-034 7 PAINTING k PAPERING. CONVENTION· Fro m 1180 Sl40/mo. 847-2940. ' cp . ' ~ ' · il ·• Off street parking. No Chi!· ---------Schnauzer Iv s1lrrr ll"n1. 19 · fl ho LI • " . paUo. $1i:i. 5 4 8 -3 7 O 8, dr PROFESSIONAL trrr \\'Clrk. yrs 1n <1r r nrPa. r"" CENTER 6 Hamilton, C.M. 2 Br. Gar. fncd, crpts, drps, 673-2370_ . en, no pets. FURNISHED 2 room suite , poodle. 962-1004 d11ys. l:\'es. p r u n 1 n g , tr im m 1 n g . bond~. Rf'!'.' f11rn . &12-2356. April 1st lhru Aprll 91h See i\Igr. ~Ir. ,(: 1\1rs. Hoban 111und rm. Child O.K, SL35. Also Garages For Rent extra lgf'. exec. office ~5.1_&._20_7_9_. ------spr11y1ng , 1; pr 1 n k I" r s , PROFESSIONAL Palnllng Please call 642·5678, e:-.:t 314 54&-2062 527.3144 · 2 BR, 2 BA. crpts, drps, 1959-1961 Mllple Ave. \\'/connecting smaller offi« Lost Apricot <·oJorPrl n\11 lr landscapini:::. CI ~ a n u p , I nter & Ester. Reasonable bef\veen 9 '-5 pm 10 claim * \\Ill.SON GAR · bltins, dsh"'shr. Nr. Hoag Costa Mesa w/sec'y desk. Crpts, panel· cat. Vir: 121h & Raltxu1. O\\'n· G &16-.'l893 your tickets. INorth County 2 BR 1 ~· BA DE~/~* 2 BR w /gar & balcony Hosp. $172.50 mo. Adlts. """"""""""""""'!!!!!!!!!!' t'd & parking. 122.5 per mo. f'r Grif'ving 675-14M 11.(t. 6. eorge. . . Rat .. !. 5.'i7-i4.'.l:i. toll.free numhf'r is S40.l220l ' ' ' crp rps, No sml child. $135 962·2Rll 642-4387 L B h 2000 Placentia, 642-4097. 0 AL'S l.1.nrlsc11ping. Tr"" e PAPERlfANGERS • rlocks. "'"' patio. SI4D. "A" "ou. . -=-=--·=---=-•gun• ••c ay11 540-3605. n'mn"•I Y•rd I 1· f u -~~=-'---"-'=:.::.~.::::::__1 1 v · · rem0< f' 1ng. o s, vln} I. mu rills, . l..1r. & I;;;;;;•;;;;*;;;;*;;;;;; * 12 & 3 B } rv1ne \\1ATER View· 2 Br., 2 Ba. OCEAN OFFICE or desk space. f\.lale Siamese Ca t. Appco o 1 Tra!h hRuhnt:. lof l.'leanun. I-. Th• ll•"•m-.. "l-.'°" · r. "rplc. Blt·im . yrly lease. Side tie avail. lront, 1 BR, hit?h ' • N' I Sa ~ '' "'' .. ., "" ,,.. ,,,,...., *NEW* VILLA PEDRO CJ···• N' .. _ "' 20. '"' L ..... gona igue • on n mo nld . v1·r. ~hi'· ~· .. 20!h Ropair lllpr1nklt>rs. 673-1166. --.-... garage. rar South 673-8249. 11.ppl. '"'am c.:ewngs, x·ni l\" D. F .,.,., " ~ PAINTING, pmf. All ,1nrk CMst Plaza. s.&-2321. PARK WEST DELUXE l BR 2 BA 1 ing room. Avail. a pr. 16. ~el~: a':ii00 ~~: ~~ St. P.1on 3127. 646·2ill~ J I~1'S Gardenini::, mmplr r" gllarn. Color sp e c 1a 1i 1 1 LARGE J Be f I bl! APARTMENTS · · Lse. S40IJ-.$450. mo. Util. pd. fl · o·ii IAN\ l\.1ALE Irish i;et1H:"°'3-;;:;--n~. h11\n &·yard car", cleanups, M" A ~~". <.A7-14U. ·· rp · gar. • hlock to beach, )'early, Ml· · unus. °' -........ .......""""' "'' ins ""w ""'"' 1 d 1 Bdrm. From $160 494--07:\7 Dr. Levinson. \\'h1te chr!>t , \·1r, lflth • ~l:r.3662. PAPER HUNG s•o. · · "'' ,.-" · crp ~. rps. 124'/""r mo. 67'i...3126 f'\'f'S. DESK -"·bl S50 ' I 1210 "0 "1 7 2 Bdrm 2 Ba '° ~ N B h ·space ll.V&UG. e OrRl1"", H.B. R • w • 1 d . r } no pe !!. . ,,.,<>-<J. :l. ., • ewport eac mo. Will provide fumituu ... ,,1\l1I) :N l~'r. ~rrv1rr. r x. Any rm. ~ PRJ>Pr. 646-2449 2 BR, 2 BA APTS 3 Br. 2 Ba. unfurn, P"l ynl. From $195 Newport lsl•nd a t $5 mo. Answering service 536-4688. fl('r lenrrrl ;i nti ff'l11'ble. lrtt Super-Comfortable.Quiet encl gar, drps & crp1s, bltn l8ll3 ~arkview L<ine NE\V Duplex J Br, 2 Ba , OAKWOOD GARDEN available, 17875 Beach Blvd. ~tl mlllf'~. 963--1072. .~:~~:;~c·P~:~.~1~':°~: Near r\ewport Back Bay. ~tovt. Adul 1~. Spaeious & .Irvine. {Just of! crpts, drps, dsh"'hr. frplc, Apartments Huntington Beach. 642-4321 ~ E'.'l:Pf'r. La11 n ""'l'P & R<'fert"nces. 642-~'i Gas & \Vatf'r Paid. Mo. to ClPan! E. 18th St. Sli5. mo. San DieiO Fwy &t Culver Rd) $300/mo. Call 673-8169. iResott Living for DELUXE 200 gq. ft. oUice Instruction j ~ hauling. Frf'r Psr. f.1o. From SlR.i. ~5'16-~3~7~76~or~54Q.4".:'::'~43Jll::.. ---Ii-:-;;;::::-;;:::;,---San Cl•m•nt• Arlults Only1 suite, 585/Mo. Corona del ~-------' l.,;=-"'*,...':.:36--064::.::::.::8.c•;_~-PROF. Painti nc, also roofs, Children Welcome. 'Al'TRAC. 2 BR Townl1ousP, Laguna Be•ch 1----------NE\~RT B:EACH Mar, nr. Post Office Snack I•••••••••• EXP. Hawaiian Garde~r ~~~~;:;. F~~··e;~r~~5a~~: 2332 Elden Ave • ~f>.i0.34 111 Ba ., refrig .. btl·in~. * NE\V. 2 & 3 BR, ocea" 1 Br duplex, new condition, 1 at Irvine Shop. Private parking. .. Schools & Complete aardening ~rvice '"'""""""~~~!!!!!!!!~I 1 ... " 61j..()55(I or 642-8170 R ~ · B Pl' p * LARGE * .. crp s, urps, pool, no pets. vu., 1 blck 10 beach. S225 & cabJe •. c~r,i.aarage. ¥ult. e11runom1cs kr. 675-6700 Instructions 575 Kama.Jani, 646-4676. umb1ng NEW(Y DECORATID '4>-4220. up. <94-2119 & 494-33!.J. . 234 )~'. Palp,a,: 492-'596. VISTA DEL MESA Boy View OfficH * LANDSCAPING * B •• ull 'ful Grounds * TOWNHOUSE * It's always the r ight time & Aptl., " 1 • Apartments Deluxe, air·conditioned GRADUATE of Sl. Loui.!i Ntw la\yn~. Sprnklrs. df't'k!I, ECONO Rooter Ser v Ic e . 2 Br, 11,~ Ba, cpt/drps, palio. ah,·ays thf! right place 11 Fur·n. or Unfum. 370 <11: 2 BR. Furn. & Unr. Redecorated. Lido are:a lnstitule of Mu~lc. Seeking ('leanup. Slatf! lic'd. 5.16.1225. Drall'll opened $5. Main l~t-' ute~ lo Oc!"an Adlts. 1165. 134 E. J\telody you want RESULTS Call , Dishwasher· Stove & Refrig Realonomic!!, Bkr. 675-6700 piano l'itudents. 646-4i61. l ine11 min. $12.50. Service Clo bus line A: 11tore~ L 548 5986 C 1 M Shag c,.,,r,.1 ~e Rec GEN. Yard Cleanup. New chrg $3 50 Malller Chrg II' n. · or 548-176R. ,642-5678 41 place that ad OS •' •M .,. ...... DESK ,,,.-•"B1lable S50 la " · kl · t lied ' · · · G11s ' at &. Stove. atrr. center.. ..... • w.,s, sprin er!!. in!! a · B/A . Slue Chip Stamp~. ~e. Rer. Rm. Laundry 1 BR $13.'i. Refrig, bltns. ~'-od_•_Y_! -------... e .... D nu oo -RENT starts $155 mo. Will provide furniture ~ repaired. TTPC.!i & shrubs ~3161. ROOtn irteluded. crpr~. garh. displ. 71 2 Lagun• Niguel .. ........... ... Irvin ... & Mese Drive at $5 mo. Answering service removed. Free est. 963·3!58. 07=-~---'--~-1 1 BR. $140 -~~~~r Dr. Apt c. Cl\111----------I Sparkling new adult 8.pt. * .. 545-4855 * =:~ ~ :~a!'tt'Ave, i!iiiliiiiiii GARDENING SERVICE ' ~Y.E;;,f~;,ep~~~~··p~r:~ 2 BR. Sl60, j 16?. $175 · LAGUNA NIGUEL Lush garden setting" amid a ~ Appli1nce lep.1lr 0.EAN-UP. TRIJ\f intt111Ja 1ions, hauling. \Vork Hecienda ae Mesa LRG 2 BR w/pa!Jo. Quiet Ap•rtments towering pines ARCHITECT. Engineet', etc. & P•rt• e 646-7624 e gullr. 83~72. 160 IJ!... \\.ilson, Apt 1, c~r Crpts, drps:, stot·e. refrig, Call About Our New g 1.fo 1 Bedroom .... from $155. R1nt•ls I[ at.) Offices. 444 Old Newport PROFESSIONAL gar, adults, no p I!! ts. Lease Program Available 2 .Bedroom •..• from Sl85. ,,-Blvd. S<'e to appreciate: Ex. Discount Appham-e Repair Park·Lik• Surrounding &16-2768 f' 1 & 1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;~ tcr. entr<1nce, $85.SllO. Japane.i;e G~ning Srhdef! QUIET _ DJ::LJ.jXE · Kow. l BR $154, 2 BR, 1 Ba inc . garages. gas 1t•11iter \\r;i.~htr, Dryer, Dishwasher, frtt Est. * 64&-0lil9 2 &: 3 BR AP'l'S. * * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR.. S18i. 2 BR, 2 Ba, $196 per U4 E. 20th., C.~1. 548·01:!7 Rooms 400 ~5A=S-5=>XI_, ,_o_P_E_N_. =---Disposal Elc. Frtf! EsL AL·s GARDENING ALSO FURN. BAC1-IELORS Conte~porary Garden Apl s. month. 2 BR, too:! yard. Crpts, RENT or Lease cfficrs from GUARANTEED. • ~94 for gardening &. 1 m 11 I l Ptv. patios * Hid Pools p"' t to II' fr p I c. P o o I . 29041 Alom11. Ave. 4!}5.4272 Drps. $150. 26j8 "E" Orange WAl\'TED in Cdi\1. epa.ra!e S59 up. Also office \\'/liv C•rpet S•rvlce landscaping services. call $11 HR. Plum bing &: Jo:lrctrical Repair 612·2i:i5 or 642·1403 PLUl\JBING REPAIR No job !00 small .. 64Z-3l28 ... Nr shop:g. * Adults Only Sl5.S.Sli0. Call 546-51£.l M;i"; Verde A\'f'. 54:">-1657. quarter or share home area. Nr. 17th SI. &. Orange 54G-519! f!ves. Se rv i n < D P ~ h · Shop'g area. C.M. ~8-8118. COLE PLUMBING Martinique Apts. ana Qlnt 2 BR 1 ked Apt Managers, Elderly <"OU· \v,.,i Pr senior J ad y . JOHN'S Cl'l.I"pl'!t & Upholste-ry Newport. CdM. Costa ~fesa, . upper , oc gar11gP. pie 10 Units furn 0, unf"r" 677>-37i9. 1200 SQ. ft. plus. Air cond., CJ ea n er s , Ex 1 r a Dover Shoces, IVeslcI>'ff. 24 hr. s!'rv1rr. 645-1161 li77 SanlA Ana Avt: .. C.~!. 2 BR, lo\\-·er, ocean V\t'. Quiel . Mr. Harbor & B11ker p ' . 1 '548-_ u "' . ~lgr. Apl l l:t 646-5542 S!ove I relrig I w I w crpt. Shop'g. Adl!s, no pets. 1140 tirlla rf'nt. 5.116. --QUIETJ room for ~vork1ng dr:~~~~t.~ ;.M. Dri·Shampoo lrP.e Scolch· * Bos·s Lawn Service *' Remodel & Rep•ir $140. (213) &65-78.'.() tvei;. mo 64:>-3515. e SPACIOUS e ni;in 6th & Orang,., C.M. guard (Sol l Re!Rrdant~l . Complete lawn main-CUSTOM home remodeltn1 .&: 11.ddits. F"inish or rouch · carpf'ntry. David Stewart Gt'n'l Bld.i. Contr. &f&..2847 afl 5. * * $170 * * E · '' \\'ell-Designed Apti; SOO incl. lndry. 646-1822 aft Cdi\f furnished offices. i j ' lo DegreRsers &. 11.ll color tenance. Home, commf!rcial 3 BR, 1 ~: Ba .. newly painted. ast Bluff DELUXE 2 !..· • 3 Br, 2 Ba, 1 &. 2 BR. v.•/Terraces. :t. 1000· ;i v11u. 175 mo, Agent brighteners k 10 minute or apll!. fi42-206.5 . Bltns. crpt/drps. enrl p11.tio. 1 & 2 EiDRMS. 'o"fccl g,_'~",· $1.'JOMacu•p. ReA .~'.'". f'rom $140 • $275/mo.S _T_U_D_E_N_T--to_s_h_oc_•_h_o_me 67.l-722ii HIR. bleach for white carper~. GREEN MANSION • hi & 1 Ch'ld ,,.,~ ~ Save your money by 1avin« Nr sc: s s 1opg. i ren :l'ully Carpeted &.,dra-d "'."IO.". Shag c pls, drps, 11aunas, v.•/2 olhf'r student!!, $70 per Offices -600 Sq. Ft. ·~ G11r<!ening & Yard M•'>n-" ,,,,,, Ce 1 Sl ,,~ .no-,,.. me extrit trip!. Will clean o ... no pets. 15...., n er ·· Covrred parking st au,· pool, jacuzzk encl. gar. mQ. 1st & la!!L 64:">-l:liO. Co!!la Mesa • "A".21:JO li · di 1 tenanee. J~ E I m , r, ., ••02682 N a_. h U'flJ v1ng rm .. n ng rm. & R f' C.r.t. l>'•2-8340 or....,.,... . Ga~ & v.•aler paid ewport ~c Quiet Adult living DLX pd hm, "' OCC. ~,f h ll S • A 642-1137 oo ing 816 · c '' Busin•ss Rent•I 445 a l.l. ny rm. J7.50, ---'------· BRAND NEW 1 & 2 BR Amigos \Va~" NB PARK NEWPORT MERRIMA WOODS perm male sturl<'n!. Sl5/~·k. couch $10. Chair $5. 15 yr~ .. General S•rvlc•s • T. Guy Rnofin z, DMl FROM $130 >, •7S.&OSO 0 . AP 425 »1errimac \Vay, Ct.1 540-8.'i.'i5 ask for Enid. l X PER FOOT, 900 !;<£ ft. exp is what count~. not Dirt'ct. I <lo my own work . . , Kear shops, en c I o 11 e d • • 2 ARTMENTS • * * Gue1t Home 415 $13.i pe:r month. 821 So. meJl'locl. I do \\'Ork myself. CARPENTRY, paintin&. tt-64;).27SO. :>-18-9500. garages. buill·inll, enc I .1 IW ''''• 1 L& Oft the bay James McCall Brookhurst, Anaheim, Sui1e _Good __ r_e_f._5.1_1_.ji_l_O_L___ men1. n!model, etc . Small S•wing/ Alter•;lons pt1fios. a ttractive lndscpg. Huntinnton Beach Luxury apartm~nt Jiving OV· 210112 Crystal Avt., *PRIVATE ROOM* 13. Window front, 11 lr. heat, STEAM Carpel c1 .. aning. jobs ok. Bob 646-6446. • Adul ts only, no pets. 1970 • erlooldng the water Enjo BalbcMI Island for ambu1atory person. Good crpts, plenty of parking in Prof. Guam. Lowest Prices. TOTAL SERVICES CO. Altar•tlons -'42-sii'f \\"allace St., 5 4 8 · 0 8 G 4, HUNTINGTON'S $r::iO,OOO health spa, 7 swir:. You are the \\•inner of food, nice cheerful surround· Shf'rv.·ood Shopping Center. free est. 962--06n . Plumbg _ Paintg-_Carpentry Neat, aceurate. 20 years exp. 646-2209. min ... poo'• 7 Ji .. hted ten· 2 Lickels !Cl the irtgs. Drive by. C<IJJ ?i.lr. -------'---Elec. Repair-Inst. 646-1809. Television Repair ·~ ~ ~ W N • I * Call 548-4753 * 1.tcNamee. 962 "n 0 r Carpent•r BA y MEADOW APTS. FINEST niJ courts, plus m iles of estern at1ona SCj.-6.4.16. ""'" ----------THINGS by Moose. Lt. elect., * BLAlNE'S TV .. 2 BR. 1 BR. widen. 2 BA. bieycle trails, puttlll&'. 1huf-Boat & .Merine Show LARGE, private room & ----------LARGE OR SMALL pl b f nee til In tins bath, lo"ely ya~ & P•"-. um ' e •. e, s '• Strvici"" All Brandit '"'" 'Beam ceilings, priv patio. fleboard, croquet. Junior l 's a t the 1 . • ru uu lncfu1tri•I R•ntal 450 All Types Work: Cut doon, carpenh'y, paint. 545-{WJ~. '"thor';,.~d Mag"•vo• rec. facil., closed garage-. 3 BR Split Level Studio. 11,i from S17'5 monthly; al.so J ANAHEIM a so przv entrance:, balanced,.,,.,,..--..,..-----..... ..... ,.., ... ,, d "bed mea.15, 24 hr •u~-.,·,,·o·, I : P" n e I' remodel, firtl!h, H•uling Known tor ho~sty 540-4313 Gas heal . cooking & \VR!er Baths. 1400 "I• ft~ 2 acres an '" room plans and CONVENTION ,..... " 1300 IQ ft 1\.1 -l i'ipace, f · I 9621961 "'.".-:">"'"'-------" " t 111undrv incl'd, ''o 52"5. ram<'. rtpairs, e c. . . :: T'I · all pd. All 11dults, no pets. beautiful pa r k -1 i k e 5ur. vs ory town ho-•ses. Elec· CENTER ·J .,,.,~ £. w/front office, I& rear dr, YARD, garage c I e.--A nu p • ,_ I • tr. kit h pr1 ~ 1· S 67/ CUSTO:\r Woodwork Panel· 1 ----~----· 1 387 \V. Bay St .. C.M. roundings. Sunken Pool • IC c ens, va1"1:< pa ios April Jst thro April 9th BOARD I Care / Lliundry. l mo. 1789 Whittler, Remove trte!I, dirt. ivy. Call 646-0073 Bar·b-ques • Sp ark I i n g or balconies, .carpeting, dra-Plellse c11ll 642·56i8. ext 31-4 Good meals. Semi $200. Pri C.M. 64G-5033 d 11 y sf in~. Ca binell!. Gen'J ttpll i~. S kl p. I o • d ~ r, backhoe CERAMIC tile new k f" span i 11 h F 0 u n 1" 1 n ~ perie~: Subterranean pa.rk· behvern !I & 5 pm ti:i claim $250, ?\fen-Women. s.i l-54!4. 64&--0681 eves. Afr ~ Ph; Duke DaDurka, g.i7_2666. remodel. Free e~t. Small ·' • We81i8JIU 2) Townhou~f;' living fea!uring: ing . with elevators. Optional your tick!"t~. (North County S R I 4 ~N"E=W~d~eI,...W!-,-M~-1-un~i-"-· ~3 -p-h, _,_,_;.._7_Rt_.l_. ------LOCAL moves. ha u 1 i n g , johl! 'vf'lcome, 5J6..Z42S. Sp11rkling 1 & 2 BR garden ,. apts. Pool, jacuzzi, lu!i:h ldsr pg. i;:aragr!i:, Adull~ - r-. Iron\ $155. Also avail. furn· •" 1St E! 21st. C.i\f. 646-R666 BRAND NEW All UllllllH Pold 201 02 Birch St fnr. O.C. 11ir· port. S. of Palisades Rd) 1 & 2 BR rrom Sl55. Prh·. "" paUo. Billiard rm. jacuul. Nr. UC Irvine. Mgr. 557-4246 • SpRcioui; room s e ~111~. servlfe. dJui1t north of tolJ.free num:"'r is 540·1220! ummer tnt• s 20 po11·rr. 173.'\ Monrovi11. Cement, Concrete clean-up. Exp. rollrogl' stu- Se"'"·ate dining '''''''"'''' as ion Is an 11t .Jambnr-* * * -"AJ 314· e~"9198 I I L k R •·~ • Pd Sa J · l'lfl ,,.,, ·• a: o.>\1" • eve~. r Pn . rg. true . t!. Patio • W•lk·•·" clo••ts e ee 11 n oaquui 1 ' ' •tAK" S "'INTER R•l•s'. Concn'le '" 0• " = Road PALM MESA APTS. ~· ..... ynur · umm~r ''11c11• 576 to 9600 Sq. Ft. --~.01~:.:'~·-..,,,----=c--f-lomr·like k 11 ch ens & Trlep. ho."" (ll4I .,4 __ 1900 h.flNUTES TO NPT. BOI. 11on reservation now. 2 or 3 .,.,.1 8 . h N 8 1 ,.32 floors, p.a tiog, d rt v e 1. ;;''ARD & G Cl .b, . e n-I "< ~ •-d 1 1 .... .., irr. , . . 54 .. ~.. ••'de"' lk ...... .,,~ o-14 aragf! eanup. ~'>'>~n 11 "' 1 . 1 .'-7' UXP .huilt·ins. for rental information r-URN. OR UNFURN. f·~ ~hm!I c om P e 1 e Y iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. 11. s. uvn. V'16-0J • rree ('Sf. 7 days. Cllll ... ..., 11 1,1 11t1es pA1d. Unbelievably large a.pu., urn1s ed. one hlock to CF:MENT WURK. no jO"btO •nylimf', 54$-j(}~L Job Wentecf, Male 700 LA QUJNTA HER~fOSA BREATHTAKING huge pool. JAcuni elect bit· CX'f?an in Ne"·port or Coron11 I I~ miall. naMnable. Fre e '4 blka~ San Diego VIEW im, sh11g crpt5, drp5, uuna del Msr. Ask fnr_ea,.t o.c.. Penonels Estim. H. StuOh.k, 548-86I:i. TREE Wor k, rototilhng, BOOKKEEPER. Full-dlarp rr.t'Y· on Beach. l blk. \V, $27j. Huge 2 BR Apt. HI on 1 Ad II 00 1 J im. 54l\.8500 Agent. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;~· ~~ yard trash, garage <:lean-up. accounta nt. Tem-"" oc Ba k e c. u s, J>f' !I. PATIOS. walks, dri\-'e, in!!lall Move a: haul. 5'4S.-5863, ,,..,,_,, on ·1011 to c Bay Bluff w/ 2 SL'IJGLES •.••• From $135 new liwns, Jaw. break, permalll"'nt. \Vil I 1lep !MD 16211 Pfl'ksidP: Lane priv11te ~conie11. frplc. 1 BEDMt .••••• From $140 V•c•tion Rentals 425 Ptrsoni1l1 530 rcmO\'P . 548-8668 for rst. Hous•cl••niftl your office And ha.ndl~ It for '9iiiiiiiliil4ii'ii84ii..7-M4o.iii'iiiiiiiil Heated pool. Loads of 2 BEDRM ..... From $lli0 yoo. Over Z ")l9ll'I ct •X· • closet5, 745 Dom ingo Dr. You'n" right, they're under-* \IACATlON Special SlOS. FULLY LICENSED -FLOOR Work &: patios, MESA Cle11ning; Carpet1. perience u o«ic« manqu. ·ON BEACH! fCd)t HS) Call ~ll60. price.di 1561 Mesa Or. Adultir; only. No P e' 5. Renowned Hindu Spiritua1Ut drive'A·ays Ir:• I de w a I k •, \Ylndows, floor ·etc:. Rtsid. Ralph Gett)'. Mem.ae ph:me * * * (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) 645-4~. 132 \V, \\·ilson, Spiritual Rr~ding given daJ. Uc'd &. bonded. 64>0&26. It Comm'I. 5 S 7. 6 7 '4 2, 53ft..312!J. ~r""'_,,._.,. ~j[fi] '. ' * LOWER * GOLD l\.TMallion. front 2 Br, p.atio, encl 1ar. laundrom11t . Adul!s, no pels, Slb.'ilmo. 645-3515. 642-64~. • & UNFURN. R 2 o 0 '!" 1 rt 0 Martln 546-9860 C.M. al1y. 1 10 .A.'1·10 IP~t. Advi 1 ·ce on Contr•ctor I -i554.c8-4:..,,;:;w=,.C"'l-~.,--.~L-~d' I J.;ob~W:;;:.a"'n-,.,....,..,-=,-..,..--:i.-=jiicl R. From u;s ~ rang• matters. can hep you, ---------pru'I •an"'I _,_. ADULTS ONLY Costa Meia Rent•ls to Sh•r• •· 430 312 N. El Camino Re;tl, S&n e e e e e e Call Dutch Malnt. Servi~ for DAYWORK. ~nual ..... '. l· ! I ·r '· . .,> SPAC. 2 & 3 BR. apt, $140 'up. Pool, cpl/drps, bltns, kid!! ok. 2206 Collr1<:t• No. ~ fi12-iOl5 '11196 111plt No. I 642-3813 G. 2 Br, Iii 811 , llhag trpt, Ntns. fr ph:. nrtv patio, ~ncl gar. 1 blk ~hi!!. 6.'I~ Ham l lton.~48 -19~1 . " 6l~l!. :· ~~.--;;;:=~ I SPACIOUS Townhousf', 2 ., 2 Ba. vaultf'd ceUlnr. Garq e. Pool!. 540-4179. Furniture Avall;ible You a.re the \v\nner of BRAND NEW Clemente. 492-9136 o r FATIIER &: SONS -carpell!, floors A-windows. I n r. R el I able. C a r P ~ta.drape~ish\\•asht>r 2 ti cket• to the From $145. 0111\washe.r, shag ROOM MA Tl'.: w11nted. Bii.lboa 492-00J.4. Incoral!na. design, var0t-n· S.37·1508. . \ r II ntport&Oon. ~3--1006. •· W I N , I Island •t>l 2 OR. $75, ta r.h. RO E tcy. 1>lumbing, •·lrini:. etr. D·•· _, Cl , !1-11·93.'.0 ,,,,ated pool-saunas-tennis es trn at1on• carpeting, wa.lk·in c!Mtts. • 67 •.• 1 •. 3 • P Bb M Prtgnanty. Con-... 1c•.t-••n1na -'==·~-· ,....-.,...,---:-= Bo , M ;,...., u. ( i"-nerafions ~xj). 7 25th U¥, '-'• "EEO •-I 1 ~-? "' rec room«ean vie1vs at • •rlne Show .forced a.Jr heat, ext.-.. Ja..n-e ---tldent. a y mp At he I I c ~· * \VE DO EVF.RYnfIN G • 1" Ill:' P a '""'"' • ·r ·• \"ANTS ' I " h in bu!. • Lit"'d & bonded, patios-ample park1ni 111 the rdbms. BeAutiful game room, .... g:1r lo ,,., lo ii. 1'1'1" pregnitncy counMillnr . Abor· Rcls. Frte est. 64&~'m h11.ve Aldf'11 • Nun es • Securlty Guarrli1. ANAHEIM .-ht1aled pool. BBQ's, en<:l08-h f,S garde n apt. Call al~ 5 tifln & Adopli()n ref. AP· R.l8:~.'i lncomf Tax l·lou5t.keepe_rs • Com• HUNTINGTON CONVENTION ed gar•f!"•, qUlet •urroUn!I· pm. 642-9ll8. CARE. 6'2-443'. • • • • • • "'""'"' e !lomcmal<er• • CENTER 10•• & clcsc "' ohopp!o" $111 Mo. Share house '" 2 DISCOVER DISCOVERY TIME FOR CLARK & Too"'r"" Se.Wt. Upjoho, 5Al~ • PACIFIC AP.n1 1st 1hn1 Aprl l 9th Adult llvlns:. no pet!. • sruys. C11r11.ii:e. e1r. 1!1012 >"IM YOURSELF 1nSOmeon~ . 24 \'&4.RS ~!).-in 1.ff'11.1 ~M'=E'=oJ~CA=L~T~eeh7"67.-ltt:-,-:.ba....,c~1 lU OCF.AN A VE .. H.B. C714) 5.1&-1487 Ofc open 1D am-6 pm Dt.111 Wll.WAM WALTERS t'Q. ' Pl• ... call 642-561' ext 314 EL CORDOVA APTS. SUngroy Ln .. H .~. 61.J.<i318. c.11 POW .. Ko obligation QUICK CASH p""'"'' •<N•C< In >Wr offi<'• ., Lob po&itlon. between•9 • 5 pn\ 'to clilm 2077 Chllrle Sl 64244i0 Put 8 lHtle "klot" tn y(lur f714J 8.'l.Hi8&.~ 12131 387-Jl93 THROUGH A homt . Call tor APP I · Di\·ertt ak\11~. Xlnt ftfs. )'Our tick•i,. (North County Noar Harbor A H.unllton .SL Ltv1' -"11 thO" h<blu for NATIOl<ALLY DAILY PILOT :<16-113.'i, Howard Clork k 4!16-3<31. IGll·trtt numbu ii 54G-1220) "buck.a... c.JI OAssified RECOGNlZEO Joltn Toner. :'Mlt,--"~Y"«"lo_w_°'p'° ... -,..,,.,.--J • • •' M2-56l!. 1 'Dim"''-e-7A7-Llne.,.--:M-::~~1!=---WANT AD Call 61M67S A.S&,,.! claulUed ,,, ~71 . " • 26 OAlLY PIL~T .. L ..... ~ J[fl] L """', .... ![fl] L-1 _ ...... ..-___,![fl] I I~ Ho:p Wanted, M 6 F 710 l•H•••l•p•W•a•n•ted•, M•&•F•,•,•o lH••.,•p•w•.•nt•ed•,•M•,.•F•7•10 Help Wonte<I, M &-F 710 1 Help Wanted, MA F 710 I Holp Wonted, Mi. F 710 ~tip Wanted, M 6 F 710 j Help Won.led, M ." F 710 IA ~,..n_tiq.:.""-'--,....,,=,.,'OO:- BO A 1' m~c han l,·s . B ,\fPl~O 'l'f.tE NT O p. • ' • j LIVE·IN . SEA.:\ISTTI.ESSES \\·a t1l f'd SCRAM LEJS I ,\1~·h Dritflsman ms:8TO ADVERTISING carpf'ntm. c~ral yard ~ p or l un1 t 1f"ll to lf'11rnf Mike Klein V light housekt't> 1 In. HF;CitPTIO~'IST: l!O\\'\\'OUld ~I Sp•nl~h r pt a kln& ok. • .'°lr "lt"C"'t . f>r n,·rr .\ri'll ~1 r..111 OJ)IJ!U'\unlty fUl' luithly n1alnt. ,.,'Ork. SorM exp. nt't'. ft bt-i!lllll'll \1ork £:. 0011.1 562 Joann Apt. 8 ' ~'1:t a.Jg 1 ,ti"~ rl , )Oii l1kr lo v.·ork for Blklnls. Bt'ach •~a. ;.rply ANSWERS ('on ... 1ru• 11on ba1 kbrnd $1:1K n1c.l/\'a ted, highly sklllctJ rachlini: A~1oc111.1e,. Corp. builduig, Day & night lihifl Coit• Mes• 1: u Lsig r:ie • 1 ~1 ~ 11 e > thfo fl\$1est aro111na re.al J 10 Claa \fll'd Ad . 1".o. J:il ··10 I ,\1 •·011n!Rnt f.:1· SJ4K llK'crCllU')' to \I Ol'k Into broi.rl· 616--0~t. a1·a1l. Apply 111 J)CNIOll at \'ou arf' the. 11 inntr ol "''1°1~ianh in nio :. "11 d 0"'1"· "litll t" k i11\"t's!n1f"n t co~ Dail)' Pilot, P. O. &."' JltiO., r--nslblllt16'. at I•" •3111• r I "J C I A Ulll ave ''Ir ... 11. aui 1· ,. od k "·~·1 'I C ·~~ ~ Jo }'I m• \'ital -C'h.-11'1. t-:ngi.ne('r SldK t'r ..-,,,,.., · BOYS " .. er teto. ,, , 'l lickctr; 10 lh4: ler at 613,2134. JO A~l·S Pl\!. .?ung 111 r1·n lV-11or l'tll '-'Yfl a "f'8&, a ~v. • v•~ -ii , - • , . I I'! r I .. ~ ..... Pl•("f'd Ne\vport Bca('h ad· • }-.--• .-Western Ntto'onal \1 111 \\f'4."l'ln1t you, $400 SE•>r •r1•"SS--"1"'' •x1-r. ~tul'd'-' -l.A\' ODD!' ~·· )' :O-l').1111111 1 P u :..:. ••ert•<i·.... ,.,,... ... ,.,, Brei-A,ite 10· 1-' 10 del.t\'tr paprr& J~~ll LU, ':t .\lf.:'.'1 "" ., -..r:.. ..,. ... ·t J S«' p ""l _ ~ ...... ...,"'""" •-. OOUNSE LOJ I Bo•t & Merine Show Ll\'}';..JX. 1..:fl.re fo1· toddlel', Call llelen llayes 540-00J..; . pttf'd. i\tcKibbin :a i l a, llot'~ playpr on lhe/11nn· Y eniol>ll 1~.1111 1nll11t.ll\'1'. Ir: sh rtq\lired. m the D1.na Point, San Oe-. 1 l l11f' housekC'eping, ?\e11·port Coa11la.I Agf'll"'' 1 _,1•• lixl"•, C 0 "' P I< x • Ii• ftt<f!I his hen1 r11<'in1o: Cr CIC'rk-lloi;p11111 .JIN Call 13•1670 mentt1 a.rtias. Jr you llkt> 10 \\'Ol'k \\11h fl"O-a t th,. \ '" , • '" .... .. PT t-'JCOkkpr·l..ti& ... 50kr l <I'-DAILY Pli.OT 11lf" k IU1\'r had .s11.le1 or ANAHEIM ' I &,:iC'harr a.64.H\8:>4. 2700 Harbor BlatAdam1 ~»~368t lhr y c·an LA Y Pt'l"!IOnncl 1'ayroll s4.)(l l A,._~n1blcrs-Ftmal,. -4!t2..i·J21l publlf' t'Onlnct f').pf'J'U'~ j CONVENT1nw j MAlllTrN rtECEPTIOl'\IST: G r ea l s •. ~~No Sh to-ti.50 1--- 0ookkeC'prr '.i'IO pl,y_l422 Ei.t.cher-A\:• BrtlDAC-Counstlor. rnnrried W f'Wll1l ra1 n )O\J 111 an tn· 1 CENTER ·in-.-~ • public contact sm.ition for The "Righ! Arin·• to <.-hi#f \V 'TE 10 00):;-T!i fi ~ Acr~ ('ltrk tr.JO Costa 1'1~~ \Ionian. part 1\rnf'. 3 lo 4 tel't'~tina: c art' et', Con1· 1 April 1st thru April 91h A NCE th,. g~ \\1th a big 11mile. enginl't'I' or Irvlnc brnncb ot S "'' ed i • h RO rs tr• fl d 1 Se<-rnfar1t>S "h SO • lo Sj Q '-"•'-Id p c · · Cl · Pl t "" "81 " s~-,~. APT. MANAGERS r\'1'11 ptr ll'k., 7 to JO pm, mission + .x1io•I')' prov e, lease call 642·&678. ext :14 ompany movtng to ln:ine fanious n a t i 0 n a I t'O. • ir1sto1a!'. a e . .,.........,.. FllA \'i\ J'iiC"kllg•'t' v-.. h' I . •"-19000 '-I 9 & " ~-n,pl X SI I 'JOO d BR• .. I r Time Si ... ·rt'l!U'\I, 2.:,,a hr f or 50 1Jnll11 in Coil!la 1\lc~a. &1'. ~l~y11. $J hr. \\'e train. 1~ 1 earnll1&!L ~ .:. I uc 1veen 01 Ptn to claim '-'<1 e . a.r • . T're nwn<lous lx'nt'fl !~. ll · Pair of C.:llfNESf: ,. ...... 15:.IO Ex per. &-nd rtfs. back-836--1419. Call li1r. l{arpet, ~-fiOfm your lick,11'1. (Nor1h County MECH AN IC t.:aJJ Jean Bro\,·n. :>-W-ti:,(lj \'AnN•nitint oppo1-.. '1 :sahu ) \'ASE:S only $150.00.,. (.'all ~·y Botikkreprr d 1 Cl ·1 I d CoaslaJ l\genf'y toll·lrte 11un1btr i!S ~·12201 Coastal Agency i n('n>•~ll. AbiK&!l Abhnt 7' ~" Bark Olt'·,'\·ray lo S!;oo i:rm1n <> ass1 1l't n no. C A ~l Pt: R ~l1J nufactur1ng, ) . 2 911 I G , .. ......,:... I !.,-. 3."12 eto Da ily Pilot. P.O.&'< niu'll ha\f' ii"OOd li'Orkll'lgl :.'NIO !!arbor Bl 11t Adam11 • * • For &real neiv co. Xln't .-iill· '7 llarbor BL al Adam!I p". rron~I. ~enc~., '30 \I' ---ANTIQUE \s~\. Adn1. Si'f'll'PN !o ... J -II l s t """' s I\ p,111111" Bkkpr s2.50 hr • 1!"!60, Cos111 i\te.~a . Ca. 92626. ""Pf"r. Apply 8G9 \t'. 18!h St ., Extc. Secret•ry HSKPRS Emplyr payll f~. ary & bf'.nefil ~. X1ra long RETlP.EO or p J a 11 n i n g ~"" · ~~ "Ir.'· · .. · SHOW & SAL£ A p Clrrk ""lOO AVG-$j hr -Shoy.• Sarah C.i\I. ,_Taturo'. ~sponsible Y.'OOlan George Alle n B)liuld Aittn-ll'nn. as~gn1ncnL r .rr.tlrement I.. need Ad· SECRETARY Auali('lnt :'llllrui~ ro,1 \l' r C BoOkkf'C'pl'r S~ Coventry .le\1't lry . 1".o In. CASlllE:I~<:;: Car \\'ash-part lo a~:ilst in a manufAl'IUrt-r.~ C'y, 1()6.B £. 161h S.A. Irvine ......• , 540-4450 dltional incoinc.:' Trernen. \\a tell~ ~f·IAl"')ol ~ vest, rollfl"I.. or dl'h\'. i\hn. ' f/hmt. f-:xJl("r,. reqd. ~prrsf'nla tl\'t" l:ius1n1'.~~. Sh ~39·,, f NEVf:R A l<'P,I<: AT TE:\lPO · ~U!\ -JJOtential for ~pie I Rrsponsiblf' posilton opt'n 11 Ai·l'Olis Tronl Oist!f') l11nd Bkkpr-Privut,. Club S450 age 20. 897·3896. 846-943:'i. ~losl bf' l'.lV~i· 1!. !:162-2888, prcf'd. lloinr •·l·onom1c11 llOUSEKEEPE~ I , TEMPO v.;1lh lr.a~er~hip capabt.11 t~s. govl'rnrnf'ntal •1trnry for ,..,, _ _.\prtl 6. 'i. ~. ~-'l'hur~. ~·r\ P /Tiinr· Si-t·rt'tary 897-8564. CASTING NOW-bru:kg1'0l1nd dt-sirf'rf, &ond , Employcr Pay,.; Fri· Temporary Help No 110hc1tallo11, no f1n.a1K·1al i·rptionally lihal'p qualifi!'d · ~I. 1 1~.,.1111, 1:z 10 fi I Paste·LiP L.'lyout Opc,n BEAU'fICIA XS. malt 0 r , l'f',;ume: to Cla&Sifle:d td no. e Live-Oul, N.B, .Expel'. tr1 ~ L'E I ---ri~ks. Phone S.'l.7"""'4468. \'OUllg girl t;d sh &: t)·pinit I •11l I-1 :•IAr. monf'y n your spare . . r · . • . • Appli•nces -NEWPORT /rinall'. follo11'tnJ: pi·el'd. :? lo ly11·ood pnxluct r l>ffks 3i'l3, t·/o 0111\y P iloi, P. 0 . lrg. hm., n-f~. :>1,I da)s; ~J:!j tiniP all an hlclf'J)('l"lllc nt l{eccp1101u.s l, bu~y \\ t n11n 3 yrs f');pl'I'. 1n i·rsp ;.::::.::.....:,..,.;,.,.. ____ -,:- Personnel Agency i.hops · 11.B. I.· c :\I. 11.rea. 11e11•' fsiC'f',,; Y.'ho al'r. s im-er'f'ly Bo" 1560, Costa l\lrsa. r a. J)f'r wk. businrss nian! n e 1a i 1 DOCTOR'S OFFICE sticr1•tarla l 1·apacity. s~1.1uy ' APPL.JANC~S ron SALF. &33 Dover Or., N.8 . &12-1 ~22. Ul ll'N'dstt"d in br:i n,g in J c.·p 92616. • LiVt·ltl N.R. Cook, '2 j;tn . d;i+tribu!orship5 srlling !ht P.O. Bo~ 2431, Co~ta i\le1111. deJ>('ndt'n1· l!JXlll quahhc-11-\Va:<hf'1' "' dr~1·r •tilt'<'t!'lCI 642·3870 0 CARPEN-TERS l'a !!' niot)On P.1c url"!:-1 10 .... e EXP. \VAITRl::S:l 1 children, To $400 per mo. N11.tlo nally adveni~ed t.1nrk I tion?S. f'ull fringl' benefrts.· f<:Xcl'llenl 1nl'Chanical 1·on· B AT f1J111f'd "arly ~un1n1,.r. Fill· . . UNKF;L AGENCY R. I 'II s J 1 ' .. ,,,·0,,, ''OT shO\\' piectis. $~0 l:c:;:::::-C:=:=: f::c p'd. building JargP yat'hl~ on l•r•·••,,-fl"l '"'3121 Minimum 18 years o!d. '.:\Just II Vapor l11jeelor b ~ / <..11 ~Tr. Y Vf'll er or appr. '"' " I• prtfl'Tl'cd. Lo~ range pro-.. • ~.. ......... . ~ 11C<'\I It personable. l·l9 RiVl'l'liirlf', N.B. I Automotive Perfor1nance ol eirben j &l n1.4p1n !\lnn·Fri. 540·2'.llO {Ol' both. AFk ror C..:a.'lt) Acl:ounllng Cltricnl grain. conti nuous f'mploy. Clll~U car,.. 11·ant~d. 0<:· Available for Day & Night frl:N'iOO 1 A1nerica . T\011· available for or 002·241.I. &t2-940.i or 963-1618. Frr Paid mcnt Msurtd. cas1onal :ilternoons 0 k a Shifts, Apply In Person to INVEST IN • the So. Calif. area. For ifiliNhlORI·; _ Rcpairma-n Lo11n Proc. $500 Willard Boat Workt SC"hool Dis l .. al'iO teenager Ceorgt, aft 3 pm. YOUR FUTURE co1nplcte information. call L119un• Hills SENIOR ESCROW has v.•a!htr/dr:.,.er fdish\\·ash· Sec'y {sh 90) $500 t»> Logan A\•f'. sitter for c\·cs &. ~·kncis. OPEN SESAi\1E Richard \Vallace. ~94:>5. OFFICER 1 tr!, guarn. 5~6-52·11 . Applicant Pays Fer Co!lta :\tesa 963-J 'i'll. RESTAURANT Full or p/timt. r.1ATURE Cple to manage -:1 S O\\' ln1l rv1e11'lng 10 1"1.Jn t'SCl'O\\• dt>pl. at loca l -'='="--;=6=21!=·-----~~ Recept. $400 BOAT TOUCH-UP CLAIMS 2+40 W. Coast Hv.-y., N.8. BE YOUR OWN BOSSI 11ml. apt. buildings 130 s<1vings & loan. Salal'y i'Om· BEALrl'. lrost ~ree GE l 's)dr Gen'I Ofc $476 {" 1 , •• COVERAGE 1'' RON T O 1 e. g i r ! Men or Women uni ts ). Walking distance to BUSBOYS mensurate \1·ith experience. by sid<'" rtfn g. &. fr'f:tlf'r "'od B.ek Ole $loo .e roa f'Xper. requircu. · .. A,, ca 1 J 'Ir •fa•l•m•'ll•r w/inlurance expc.r. fo r beach. No pets. O'll)-3927. (0 ) J• • " .... •• \\'/i c e nt ak~r . S l OO. Dental A5st $400 f'ibtrglas,..:\toldrrs CLERK 08/G f Pl nd Le••• A v.11.... •Y• 492-t020 Coast<1I Recn.'8 tion, l nc. yn ° c. ease se .... I\tANICURtsr. lfairalylisl • -"'="'~'=-~='=·----- Cathier $300 ~ \\', 11th St. lmmed. OJ)C'ning in Hun· re.•ume lo P.O. Box 399'1, Taxi Cab \\'/some tollo\Ving. \\'estc1irt COOKS I SEil VICE S!alion Attend. &. R 1'~ F R t G r-; RA T 0 ~- Ofc Clerk $346 Cos ta i\'ll'sa 642-0.>42 tington Beach for exper. Long Beach. Calir. 90803· I j art& ~n. 61S-ii88. Jon S:lltaman (2) tull .1~ p/liint. \Vasher!'.. J)ryr1·~ • SlO\'"~ -G Ole lo K.y $43 3 1 F'RY COOK EXPER Call for App! G•••py ' Co. II a ,-r ( D•y & Nit•) JI · 11 I t ' ar ' · Bo.t R · coverage c erk \\'Igo me • " • j 6 .... "' "' Lile mcchan. exp<'t". ln:i1 l:. a ~11~s. 11 1'1:1 on1, .u · F/C Bkkpr $500 . epairman . gt6up medical e BLUE DOLPHIN e 54 -131 J ' 1 11-1anagen1ent. pd. vo e. Apply Chr \·ron Sta· 646-9820 A t ( h 70 ) $525 Pcrm. JOb, Jringf" bt'!llf'f1ts. . espoillurt"'. 3355 v· Lid N B r un 1'in1r Ct; "9 1 I Ca!\ •i141 ?.37·2501, Lakt Good typing req'd. Xl nl • 1• o, · · 1 Mature Ho1te11e1 11un, 604 SQ, Co.1s1 lh1y., RF.f'RIGERATOP. '..! fkiOt·. Order Cler.k . $425 An'Ov.•hf'ad lifarinas. bc;:_n:s I.: sa.h1ry. Call FULL, p/tiine_ mgmt u·ne, Ask Ior Hermatt TO tNTERVlf.\\' .<\pply Jn Persall I Lag. Bc-l1. a uio defrost. \l!'ry 1·ltoa n. 1'~rtt &.· Jo « PosiltonR 84..-•7.ll. no e:.:p nee. Salary/con1n1. • lt\TEP .. VIE\\1l~C :\O\\'! NE\V R1'.:SJ01'.:NTS 24001 A\'C. De LaCarlora 1, s~RVICE s1alin_n a ll tind11n1 ! , * 1!9.1--90li0 * RUTH RYAN AGENCY I Vat'<incifos Ol!I 1non<'y! llcnt UNIGARD I B I -· ••t• , c · p rt T. f'ul f'r rus 1 ,..,,__,.. · . 'o:'lmeuc Pf!9ple 1\'1th oo exp.! -a unt>-Laguna 1111!11 I &.: 1nr-f'han1(·. l'.:XPf'r. ,\Jusl 1 Furniture 110 l79.1 Nf>\\'JXll'f, Ci\i 64G·4S!"}ll 1 )\lur hou sr . a pl slort> INS "'ROUP ~'Utl.. OR PAH.T TIYJ f: 1 Orpl &. !'1)('cl alty-s1orei'I ~AR & TYPE\\'HJTER-N~:C <At th~ ~I Toro olf ran1 p b4' a hit lo do tunf'·UP I..· t ;_.:;,;.;:;;.;,;.;:.,. _____ ,, li'!l3l Bf'aeh. 118 1147·9617 i bldg .. r1t'. 1hru 11 Da 0 il) ?ilo! • "°' 11-orkers. no,.'.\. pr r i " n "" Call 83&-1 28~ da~!! & tv~. t 1540 D E. Edingrr, S.A. S.O. 1:-·ree11ayi + brake.'!. Do\~. :JOI r:. C0.1.s1 7 PC. NAUGAHYDE -j C!us1fietl Ad. COUNSELLOR--nePdNI. \\'lH 1rain. ~·a.st 11d· Call 541.309:; 1 lh\')'., .\fl.· OEN GROUP \\lt:il!' E!('phR nt Dime·A·Lint' ~a!ion's Leading ~· i g U I' e vancemen1 & good t-arnings. ;::r~\\l;{°G marhlnl' oprs. FAC· Con tr o I Solon nerd11 .\fus l be ncaF appt"a.ring k I MEDICAL $650 Salts iory <'XDPI'. 0 1 e r 1 0 1. k . eonsn1tfng or lay·back Kif.A tsltf'Pili :?). chair, in hf!A\)' duty naugUiyd~. end tab!CA. i:oflec. table I.: lamps. Co U I N I h d k A I !02 S Back Oll!., X·1·ay I i c . r · unse or n e v.• P o r ar \\"Ot ·ers. pp y . special lll'l'dle. s1nglf' nf't · Beach &!Jon. ~lusl b e 1:-:1 camino R.t!aJ. S a n Ncii·porf Beat'h. Ttmporary Pos1t1ons tllf•, \\Omens 1\ear. no.~!. 1 maturt'. attractiVI' and en· (.1 te i\Ion 1:. Tues. 2 • UNKEL AG&'\CY emen . 1 · 49 R' ., N 8 ln1-. 1608 Babcock, <.: .. \1. I joy \vorkina: with the publ ic. pm and 6 pm. I 1vr1111 e. · • F II ;1· ,,.,, -•As Salary pl~~ <:ommiulon. Gen'I Office $425 ! S45"-3?CIO u ~.:, ime . ! .~;;P· S\fOKl~G ! F?r. appotnlm~nt. C a I I Laguna atta co. neieds gal to MGMT TRAINEE The Euy \\'ay Ii: Earn I Lillian al 642--3&30. do intertaling variety \\"Ork """"'"' ~...... 2 Yr3. College Apply ll00-$1!XK> & mo. 892-42ll CAN'T FIND THE JOB YOU \VANT! in their admini.strati\'t ofcs. lf\.Yll~ .-~~"'°-Call lotrs. Schmidt Personnel Office CCD\llr"C'C" TELEPHONE so I i c i Io r A Oppor. lo advance &. top "'1UVl\,..Ll~ \\1ESTCLIF1'.. Third Floor 1v11.nted tor e\•e \\'Ork in benelils. Abigail Ab b 0 r Exel'. Secrttary $600 Ptrsonntl Arency The Broadway . airport area. i\lust ha\~ ALL FOR $16'. TRADERS FURNITURE 202 N. Bro•dway, S.A. 8.'5-1305 ()pf'n 7 Da)'~ VELVET living room If'!, For an •d in Wom•n's World TRY OURS! \\IE NEED. "'"°"""8 1 ~gt~Y·8 230, \\'. SC'r:'y, lilt sh lo $550 :.'04~ \Vestclilf Or., NB tnU1sp. Call Sur, 8.1.1-9470. \\'arner •• o1t~ s.vv, • . • Gt>n'I Ofc/Engrng to $550 ~2770 also }lcrrulon !IO'fa & Newport Beach TELEPIIONE Sal~s. Top to\'e!('al. 1\JI lik~ nr11 . Call Mary Beth 642·5671, ext 330 JfAJR S'JYl.J,S'r lnsurant'I" Billet' 10 $550 \\'.antf"d to r progres..<;ive, Cr II Co!ltcl/P.Ttdical S500 * MOTEL MAID· * 47 FASHION ISLAND t."f>1nmission11 and bonus. i\p. 1>1.>-1701 BALBOA INN. 675-8740 NEWPORT BEACH I ply in person behveen 9.00 c··:o::,..:,P::.L:.:,-'T-,-,-,,-.-.. -,-,-h-o~ld Sew and Crochet! ('rn.-l\r1 ;i Cl>/). , , hul'l'f' pn11rho 111·Hhl11·1tl11J111 <!I'll! ••Jl<'ning~I ro \l'(>M ovrr !hr pr1 11('f'!(.~ lop, pant~ ,.,,. :'lkil'I. Prin1Pd Patlr rn !(lZ6: NE:\\1 '\hs..,1•!!' S1lr11 10 !:!, 14. lfi, ts. ~t:\\' 11al r Si.:".s 121;, 141~. lG • • ., l ~'z. 201 ;., 2~1 .. Pl.,.:As t; 1'11A1·1·: lll?f:~s SIZt;. Instant Crachet! General Clericaf C.oori figurr 11·ork i.: typing skills htlpful. 1 Personnel Clerk It you likt tt'C<>td kt>eptng, rclr phon(' f;On1act~ '1 peoplr. thi~ joh i!'I for you. Kay punch ~1u~1 have 6 mo'11 working exper. on eilhtr a keypunch. keylape, or key disk deviCf'. Sec'y.Steno Type ~ 1vpn1, Sttno 90 1vpm Varied ~ interesting open- ings.~. ll\"TERVJE\\'ING l<.JONDA Y I:. TUESDAY 9Ai\1·2Pi\I o~ SIT,.; o~· OUR Xf.\\' BUii.DING PACIFIC MUTUAL fASll lON ISLAND !Corner Sanla Cruz k Ne11'JXll'I Center Dri\·f') beautiful Won. Good peoplP Girl ~·rida"y $4j(} lo 14'0l'k with. 'rl!E HAIR P/tln1e/lt>lepl10nf' $:! hr FAC.'TORY. C..:.)1. 6-Ei--0311. (')t>rk Typist 10 $·12:; 1 !IEALTlJl Food lteta..il Salr:'I '.\lath Abilit~ ":l:iO I.ad~. 01'~1' l l. ·Exprr. F!'l'f' &. f''rl' Pos111on~ kl'JoY>ledgt>o.l>ll' pf' r 1 on . 48." E. 17th •at Irvine• C)l f/liml'. ;wg....9~,_11. 641-1470 HELP!! l-INSURAKCi: Netrd man 1-. wile lo n11,t1agf! Jmmed. Ope 11 i n g for: rl'lail 1t11in& n1achil'll'! store, Subt'Ogation Adj u s I e r . Rtspo1111iblf'. To 1hose "'·ho Kno1\•lcdge 'P.O.. 1..'0Ui'i ion. qualify, guaranteed A.I&?')' Xlnt starting s 11. I a r y , lo! commi.Mion. $:E,000 per \VI" 1 I g a I e C a I i Io niia )T. + 5-1;;..nJB. Jn.c;uranct . 776-6130. NCR PROOF OPERATOR ltLLER I a nd 12:00 noon at 8381 Bolsa ! · . · .i, I Al'l'nUl' :\Tiriway Cil)'· 1 h1rn1~h1ng~, fi mn. Cl!d , n ('(!Ull _ _·_' _ _ __ ~ tj..\:)-JJ4:l. oppol'1unity en1ployrr TEACll AT Till-: HEACII. ---•"------~ 1\l'rd :Z 'p;11·hcrs in oil pu1n·, Jewelry 115 SALES.\1[~~\'~,.d-:!0-in·' terrsred in K'lliug 111 on lhr gr:ountl !loot' or • ne11· 1'0. t Y.'/& nl"I\' producl. For app!. phone 718-2'i0i. ling. h)'tll·a·t{ll, drc'Opagc I:' l'Ol'\lf(A 1 d d i Tl " ld I f" ~· . •· " OPJll' I n .. , i.:o . ra ing. .xpenf'n•..-•11blr .,.,,.z ltl\\I!'!, c·an 11P1111 de~1rrd bu1 no! l'lf't'l'ss:ir.· I Comme:rcia.J BanJc Experienct SALES, 'l'oung mun. good J)11 v &.· n!lr cla~st~. c .ill I ·10 . f':-.\r ndrd & 6 uphol. fi.'.!i~1206 11ft 7 p.111. 10:00 t:hairs_. lop l"O.nd .• $~00 n_ian~ A~1·12 Noon. 54~i.11, 0!11r.r 1ttm11 l'?led m Dimt· A-Line 11tart1n!I:' w/2 Pl'- 1..-ur.ved sectional davenport. S2i 1m Santiago or ... ~.B. 642-SMI. appearance Aggres!'live-. w;mng 10 '""''· s;s.:is;,;. 1l lllWAYS TOP tor "'" f.::.1 TEllPOIAl'I 1714) w.1121 'JlU ISSlllllDITS l\Jin g months required Ask for J\.!r. li!f"ndonca Sales Trne/Tn11 lo $100J C.-•& ..a....,._._. 1-fELP \Vanled; maid service JANITORS. rull 1ln1e, f!.\· Equal Oppor. Employer Extc. Sec'y/Pres to $700 r•,.. ·--• in general \Ve train. r~un p e: r i enc e d mf'n, Sao Ex Se /Ad A I < •r!LJ\ ,_.. .. ti".,.. 61• DIA i\fONDS-Buy Direct * WllOLESALE PRICES * Dana Diamond~ 496-3090 ·ec ey m s5 o <¥O.N No•·-.. -. 2112 _,~ or part time. Call l\Iomipr Cll!'lnente area. Call be! J l · L v N I • ..,.,, .._ .... -9WT f\faid , -496-.40Hi. 5 pm. 714; 6.'.J0..1001. ! OUTBOARD Fie' Bkkpr/t.tarina 10° ~ Drift, l"M.. IU-12tS Miicellaneous Ill HIGH CALJBE ER 1 STCOUPLE. JR. Al1:0U~'TANT: Top MECH"'NIC See'y/Enginer'g 10 $550 WAITRESS-P. TIME STF.P.EO. 19r.? Garr a r<I :r.tANAG D INCTIVf~ lllghl local rirm oflerio fiMtsl Penn. job, fringc benf'fils. Rtceptionl~r ro $47:1 & \\'eekend!'I. OVl'J' 21. Apply ntorll'I. f'ull ili i z e pro- IIOTEL. BONDABLE. EXP. condillons !: big ruturt. Call (7141 :'137·2501, La.kt Clerk Typist to $425 in i>f'l'SOn 1·5 pin or call for fl'ssional lurnlablf". sealed Send re;iu1nt lo ad • 279 Degf'f'e not rt>quirf'd . .$8400. Amnvhcad 1'1arina.~. Ordcr Desk S'12~i app1. Dell Shtf, Laguna llills Air JU.cpC'ni!iion ,., p k rs . Daily Pilot, c,P.O. Bo2x l5'i0 Call Bob \\'iL~oll, ;-,.!0-605:i OVERSEAS P(Nmf' Clrrk Typi.ict $2.50 hr I Shop, Ctr, F:I Toro. g30.4410. A.\l/F\I stcreo rl\::eh·er, Costa i\leM, 'E.i.lir .. 9 626· Coastal Agency l\lORE JOBS TIIAN PEOPLE EXECUTIVE \VAITRESS \\\w ted :Exp'<i. l.JeadpllOn<'~. Tal>f' deck. HouS('keepcr • child care. J 2190 llarbor Bl. ar Adan1!5 .<\JI skills & proressions PERSONNEL AGENCY Apply at Jamif'a Inn llotel, Pluit·in jacks. Still bnu1d live in. n1usl love children, '1 e Jligher 11•ages e Lo11't? 410 \V, Coast llv.'Y .. N.B. 2101 E. Coast Ill\"\'., Cd~J. ne1v in bo:\ k guarantf'td. boys 8 mos & l ~"'!5 $300 LAYOUT &. Paste.up.faking e T•• •·n•fils Suite 1-l 66-2716 · \V•• Jell •1o·'a•'m•·I •n ,.., .. •• • J ' • ' 11pplication!'I Tues fhru Sal. expcn?Sell -~ ~ 6i3-&l20. Ask for Glady~. " '-"' '" " Linda Isle. 6i5-713.). jj.lj r\twPort .81\·d, Cosllt e Frtt Transportation SALES Order Desk Gro\\·ing ---wAITHESS. EXPf:R. &\\'ay, Sold Jor Sl99.$, Pty alv.·ays the right plat't" Jf i\tesa . CALL 541·4345 boat manufa~~ing con1. 1 eBLUE DOLPHIN• oft hlllall!'f' of $97 or takP * 1-·rce daily bus transport&· you l\'ant RESULTS! Call Service Guarantttd pany has position ror ag. 335.i Via Lido N 8 o v ,.. r J))mnts. Collection lion for "·ork in Los Angele?S 642-5678 It place that •d LEGAL SECRETARY Cntil employment ac~pted gJ't'ssive individual 011 bosy I ~-· ·. · ~p1 .. 714/893-0:iOl. until move lo Ne11'porl. toda y! .Nev.· port Beach Area OVERSEAS SERVICES s a 1 f' l!I 0 rd t r d r !'I k • 1 \\ANTED ~lce:med hairdr~!· l l'ST ANT Cash for tood uae<I CLERICAL Office._ Al'rt in-* 642-!M40 .. J617 E. 17th St S.A. Suile 3 Re!lpnnsi bili tie!I 1 n c-I u d,. !Irr lo ass~st Qpt'Ta~~1-. 1'rn furn. bdr1n. i;;tl,r. \\'orking , ~ lrlli~enl \\On1an. intcrestinJ? DAIL y PILOT Ll~'EGl)ARDS \\/pool tert -P-GEE INDU~TR I ES coord ina li~n a nrl p~ssing l Trmpltlon s. 642-4i.\.}i , -ro\or TI''< rcfri~ "-1ppli, .I ~ 11ork. i\fust . be goo d CLASSIFIED s 1 High1ch!, OJ' t,'Olle e l rls., Needs Train••• or .all sale!i ol d ~rs./ WOMAN FOR l,Jlf'Jho11-rful. ~49 -2 2 41 . 13 . \\/nun1bf'rs. \\r ll1H !rain AD Apply Nei\·Porler fnn gf'.olf $508-$650 Per Mo. TelrphonP 11.ale~ 'xpenr ncc APT, CLEANING :-i.i1-;;::_::_. -------fd, Ae.a ~ :\ta,{;rrgor Yacht;<-, 1631 FOR ACTION. • • Shop for 11pPhl'a11011• 1107 Young n1cn mrrhRnt~al !!:<.:· necessa~'. ~1~')'.oprn h_a-~·, LARGE COMPLEX YACHT Club 1nrmb<>r~h1p "'f Plnccnti;i. C . .\J. J ani borc.e Rd. N B. J>C'T. helpfol, no r rrqd. ~Iusr f'd on quali fica t ion~. _Call , !\lust be !hOl'oughl.1· f'-'fJf'l'i· for ~alt a t ~ub~ra n!iii.l ly Ba1·k 1" a ~qua n'. f1'011! i~ COOK-1/ou~tJ;eeptr, live-in, he 18 or 01l'l'. Al>le lo~rart Coast CR tamaran, 493-4..18". j ~need in L'Ol'llmercial cltan· 1·r diu·erl prii·'" bus. ~i·561 1 '11 n,111~les -a rrnl 11u1rJ;i<'. ::.,irtr;Jrlrl'n, agrs 2 1 ~-5 1 ~-J .J. \\Ork imme<lia \ely, if 11c. f'ALLS PART TI~!~: rng. hrn 67.l·ii!>..'l. \\.•;•r turn-around ~urpllc·r Salai;o open. i\:!'11· home in * * * * * * el'p!('<I. f'or info on job 1\eal young nuu1 nl'cdcrl 2 Call 546-5025 PO\VJ::f~lov.~". Kine· ,;1yl1• \l"<l fron! or bRek. Jo1'l'I)' area. &i.»-28l0. placemenls. c~ll Tuesday 9 f"lles. & Sat. A.:\J, can l\'O:'llAJ'1fUillirTle-to 11·ork o-la'A-n. f''ronl lhl'O\I', 3 hp. Crut·J1rt •Jf knJHt ng ivorstt'U COUPLE, lil"t'·ln, Lido Isle. am-I pm only. 534-3081. ptflimt in office &: ptl•imt Band Sa1~ .... 12" Sean. 113 111 :i i·oJnrs. Pat1rn1 ;11~: :\!u~• b+· C'.\jX.'l'1enttd Phont 77&.8551 TIME FOR selling in retai! i;tore. r.t us1 hp motor k stand. G44-S2'i7. dJrf'r-l1ons shoulde1· bag, \•est l\\L-;s \\'llburn. fj\4 ) ~4G-(l:tv\I Trader's Pa·rad1"se be bll\'11 3().00-a ble to 140fk Ill sir.rill R·IR ln1'luded. , ·~........,! Cj)UICK CASH \\'knds. 644-$510. r.TODEL homes cancellation 8E\1f:~Tl'.t1\'f; . ('•:'.'"T~ 06~,· !.,~~s l:. \\knds t •l4)1 PAINTING in excht.nge for forcel'I sale fine q11a.lity car· for each pattern -add 2j ,.,....~. I motel apL 23i6 Newporl .THROUGH A \::~E~k1°~,a~~~~ ;~:;; pets 4 drapery fabric SO%. j•('Jlls fOt' rarh pa11crn for COUPl.F: to shO\V apt!!., Ii nes Blvd., C.M. 548-97$. -D '"ILY PILOT send manuacript8 to P.O. Jason, 492·2247. Air l\lail a nd Special ilan· an?Sv.·er pho64~ ;.,or part rent. I PART time he:lp needed for " Box 471 , So. Laguna 92677. 1 ' W h i"t e Elephant,•• over- d\lng: o th('r'IVlM' third-clas~ ~1s I t1"mes elderly lady. Colli• i tesa WANT AD running your house? '1\J.rn df'1!1•..,ry 11·i.11 t ak~ lhN'f' DINING ROOM -... area. 673-1226. Arry day b the BEST DAY to tMm Into "CASI!" -11tll 11 •...-k" n1· nu)!~· :-rncl 111 PET SHOP HELP 642 5678 run •n ad! Don't 1hen1 1hro Daily P i l o t Ah1·" Brool1~ Tht> llAlt 'i' HOSTESS • · delay .. call today &12-Zl6it:. Oau ifit'd. 642-5678. I'll.OT. 10:.· :-..~'l'llj('('l'~lt F11!1 01' p11rt tiln, dollars Tropical 1ish exper. pref'd, !::;;=:::=:::=====l..::::;;;;;::;;;;:;;;::;;;.;:::;;:;;;;::;l,;:::::;;::::::::::::;::;;::::::; I D"P', u ... '\ 11i.:. Olrl CJ•rl~ra l Thr :-;1ufl ~hh1 ti46.;,(lj1 Salei!i J)(lrson11 k 1~a!!hiPr~. f•ll' .~.1• 11 11 • !•·rn ~ 1uld l '-'I' ' R ' u )' -• I I -• :-;1H11'llt, ~1-11 Y01k. :'\.\'I DRIVER-I l 11$SO I!,...., a;.. .. IOn s a'"'· 1·<'111~ r1'l ••:,.i1 fo;ii1t·"11 rror t NB STAR GA,.E-.:a"~~ J\1t ~lu1J ~11d ~,,._,·1:•1 Jinn lllOll P1·1111 ;\"111111•, Adtln·~... • KENNELMAN . .. . "°'=·=~'=.,,.,.,....----.IL/ .n.. '1' di ••,~: o!hrt'I\ 1~,. itiiril·•·I~·· 'l.lp, l 'nlt1•r11 f\'111111> .. r, f I I I ood ,\ "--"'· \\ti ha\e banana.!'. And ARRO\\'llC:AD. be~I 2 lot~ I PROFr;5SI0 :'1l AL p ha n e: l"""'"-'!!:C.,.---•r CUT J. 'POLUN ' ,.., I: 0 L E Cr. A 1" T '~:.'· ''I' ·<lllllllR Ii 1: lri·. c.; (IP-•nct S"'"ndabl~! 1172,000 f ll I I ' D P ' S AllD th'! 1-1,r.1• 11111 1.ih" rl r1.,.. • 11.,1 ·11111 ;1, Xt ui f 1. 1 n ~" ..... . ru n tra('I, i\la:\. fl'!g . t'ln golf ! so 1c1 lor -a.n~ onir. an :1-,~A .. I, 11 W' 'YoW D.il; Acfiy/'7 GoJff l< 11,'f'k' ..,1. 11,.,1" .... ,1 '" f 101·hr!, kn11 <'1i. f~""I ! I ' p 1 1plantat1on ll 1).n1oll 1·ttll lr 1·1'1>1"; adJ .ni1•nf'd 11:rp.S27i\I ' C.en1tn l~. Cap1su·a.110 a.rea . , V J.ccortii,,t l•lii•Slin . ...,. 11.rr, 11on~ .0 1·r1t1• 1 ,:.-.... •\<' ~~,. 1i'rnia~1,1 J>O.~ • rarx:·h in Austral111 ~·o R t:al. o·•og·. ,.,,,., ll'•ol •·a•I• I \\ork In )'OUr ov.•n h0n1c. A'-'·'' f T Id \l11rmn 'l;ir111'l thr IJ \JI.\. :\)'I\, 1 1 :'I .. lvn. "u ... 1 lit\'f' 6""" tll'I\· ,-. ~-•· • ..,.,. ~ .,_ I Pl 17. To dt¥tlop mestoge or U. oy, PILO'r. II! P"tt"n' IJl'n ' ; . 11" 11 n1 , 1~1'r1uri+>. ing l'f'L'Ol'd k \' ll I id prop, Agt . i.1·1.r:,;J HIR 31'f'a . Bkr. 642·8!l~. 64~·7662 t rn:lll deal n are.t. ~Ile o1nodwzt'W:'~,rd~ .,,......,, 13:'.' \\P .. I J\111 . ..:.. , "\f'1\ 1 ... .i~1t', lane)" kllO!", pa1 . C11Hlorni11 Or\\'I'•· 1 ·,.,,~ .. l BR To\\'nhou!fe $10,(1()(]-.. i 83l·l46a bchvccn 9;00 a.m. yo.I "'"'' ..... lf'r n• ~1 " " ~. ...., and noon. I Mll!ft>W :'II F~ ill 01 York. -.\.\', 100\J !•r1111 t n ... ; \rl 111 II a I , p 1 n Appl~ 11 20611 1..t1gun1t Can· balanc:t. 51~ FllA, trad~ fol' 32. llou.sebof,t al Lake llav-P""u~~~l-nd-.,-S""'~l---,-1 2 Your 32'1citJ •?lnllt NA;\tf;,,\.DURl':S~1v11h 7.U0,I ....,' :__1' ,.26 ," . 1 ,\'Oil Hoad. Uguna Dtach.. acreagr N. ~an Diego, ~{Pis a a cam••, o:IQd .3.J~ 63= • '''"''". ov 1 vr~,gn! o a.~u. $10,000 clear. Also. ~o· Cd'! 5 • ~ h ""~ 14~ M" :->17.f: and· ~Tl'Lf: Jlil':\f., k 11-' -seciudr.d, wtler acct~!. p " ar@fl, .... ayr, -rs. •-I°' 0 1na r ower yi.cht $25.000 clear. · hill Top ........ Bt:R. 1n~1~n1 . ('rll(.'h .. 1 Bnnk -S•l•ry To 536-0158.. Principe!~ only. \VJ.tit local property or ? Nite JI "''&1'5· e;: •• '::-' ~T ..... ~EJ.; ,\!OH ~: s fl r 1 n K .lt"<trn by plehti.,~: Patltrn~. *Ext~ Sec'y $650 R-2 LOT J2l'x140', JmJ>l'O\lf'd 67>4922 Phone 673-7211 tor appt. ,.,_. t!...., 411'\'o.i f aghlom And t·hoM.t-Ol'M'I $1. *Ty~11t $425 w/house,may buildltunits Real Estate c.,.., 1•,..._. .i~ ~~ pattern lr t<' r;o11\ nf'I\' «'01nplt'lt 1n,.t•nt fllft QO(llr *S.c Y $500 In Costa. ?i.fefla. }'ot M·l lot · New or o:perienced, join the =..... •IC. 7IM Spr!'!'·Su m~1tr Catalog, t\ll , _ tnol't' th:in tOO ~ift~. _ $1. *Rtcept. S'.425 + hou!I', llAVE: 2 BR 1{0USE. C.1tt. Company that's irowint. Jf ;:: :=:--.. ~=--,;;lie~ Only .iO <"1"nt~. I~ Jlllv Hu1t hook1 -JO *FHA/lo•n proc ffiQ 646--2512 or 548·1234 Ni-.."X'T TO Cl ZONE, SlO?i,1 you do not have a license, ~ ~Meklf'e 74~ CAlll ... J/\'STll~I Sf:\\'tNC 'ROOK t.'t•nt~'. ' *B kk "'lO -. E~ IV 'T E;·c:.ti" chec~ on our IS"'"' AJD"pl.....-7'o.t.. mc.r~ I• I' I oo npar, ~ ORA.'IGF. Co. Silve.rado -~ ~...,. AN : 0 ~RT ll~I.. ..Moy .. ,~,.. ''T>tat ' C('\\ !oda). \\('{I.I' !Oll'L•lfTO\\ f\()llli nl -r tt. Alch9n~. * R~cept/ S.c y $500 prox IS at rr!. S:\000 .~~ 1.0TS, CAR OP. ~ ~ an.'ERS, -$49 ~~ ~~tn !: ~i. r. g;::~,~ ~~.f,.. 31 O 1 rn\~. *Oict•ph Opr $S2511rade $25.000 f'Q\llly 101' frt'c tii:J-67j6 l , 19l't!»I• .. ,,tolft 7•N~ S.M L'\ST,\,\T r AS ll IO:.. ituu1 u~o0~ i -J !·•llf'l'n < *Comm Int Rater $563 •. I II d ·"" h Root Estato '°'...,,., 50 "1"6 .w o.o,...i llOOK 11 I ~ n ~ !iJ....fC1l\.': \ . °" C' ~ar 111na e...,.' 01\l(' 11 c.... $1,_l IU:l!•t '"~h1on 111 ~'''· $~.m 1 ~ ''1 -~• \l1.1n1 Hook t -:I() **"Cut SeCrv Ctlrk S $41 +SO o~ btJild. l t'f?nJu'. 8.~4M2 \APL.ES •Lon& llt•chl '! br, L1ctntlhg .cour1t ~}:~ ~?i:c1 ~ :~t. , L'l\(3.. gcy ouns r • SANDPOJNT honif", ;\ BR, • f'ull sales trt.lnuli: pro11-arn ,, '" !>' HN rt &A \.lf'l•nW!r ~•1i11• hir TOOa.'"' IJ•lns .... SERVICE CENTER il7 l\1u1-i. "'· S.A. nr. So. (''.111. S.)(l:O.I \·Al '' nlobite liom t on -oo l'Oisl. i\f1nagcme.nt op· 2s Po-.'t ~5 t• ts T ,. . AGENCY ""~ •I 11 I U ... •1 :Hortti..,,., stw,11 8~~.""' J'j-brAur !fllJ 1i;.11rrn~. 50 Plaza. lo'llA IOfln, Tnidt S.1~1 o Y I 1 11 r lrnul sh111 ln 1 portunl ~. A Y< for 1~ r!I. ,1y_ $11' .. ilfrl••" 81 Ht:oh.I M'nb , 4262 c.a.mpu!\ Dr., •• B. eqty lot rl~r l1nt1. 1·aniJ)f'r, !\B, Tl1 1 e>r both ow-. prap. Jonell for J niormatlotl •I 21C#I 51 ..., .... ,.." •• 10- Suile B·4 $$7·2711 T\1111 or ?t flmk,.r $47,6469. NB. (''1~1 642·0i15 673-1623 842-558!. ~~Ir ::..,.. ::go;~ !•••••••••••••••••••• 11'1'" "'h'"" * * * * * · * Tarbell Realton {iGool @.u-()s-0::.J ltimf'·A·Une 642-(1.iTt \\'f''ll help }'OU If.Ill fi.t.l...56il l ____ J~~~~~~~~~~;==~~==~~~~~~--..: ... l>rin'1 Ii \I' uf. ti 11h1p:. t.. .. 1 11 1n •. ~:sil fMr. Shir j In '-'hi l(~llllj\! i-l~i& ----~---... I -' r· ' f rnl ). 11171 DAILY PILOT 17 -I -Jl§J I ,.b._. I~ I -~ I~ L-1 -_ .. _•___,J~I ..._ _., ... ~_ ..... __,j§J jf ....... Uo I~ L -· .. 1§] !-~ ....... l§l I !;M::lsc:o:l:l•:......,:::.:::::1:11 Dogs 154 Bo.ts, Speed I. S ki fll Dune BUffiH 956 A utos, lmportod 9 70 •A•u•t.,•,•1•m•po-rt•oc1•,-•9•7•0 l A utos, Imported 97 0 Autos, Used 990l 1 A•u•to•,•.•u•...i----990•I ........... I._ 11~ I 1~ BOAT 16' -Chryslrr '$5 f'D· ----"''-----·! 1·----'--J:•--- STEREO, Uncl1dmed J972 Garrard set. Auto turntable, atr 1u1pension s p e a. k e rs w/c ros1 -over systen1. A.i\f/FM /~fPX radio &: tape de1;k, Still branri new & guarantetrt. ~Id for over $300, P<IY olf balance of $120 er lllke over 1 in a 11 paymt'n1~. Credit Dept., 714/893.()001. • * • Glen R. Hoover 97A1 Cloverd•le Ave., Westmin1ter .h~. '"'than 50 hrl, skb. SACRiflCE: '12 Con .. i• CAPRI PEUGEOT VOLKSWAGEN BUICK CHRYSLER f'Xtru:, trailer,· $1.l~ takes DB. Green m"al flake body •"· 49'1·3558. !650. 962-1"18. CAPRI · ·11-2000. m•"'"'· * PEUGEOT * '69 VW Fas tback ALWAYS Tr ucks 962 lS~lJ.PlrcUI Rad i a\ s , d h 1 "69 Chryslt-r 300 2-<lr hd top, IRPt dff:k. lteluxe xtra1. $2,500. 494"-Tm· You are 1.he \1'1nn"r of 2 ttck('l!I lO the Western N ational Bo1t & Marine Show Tra n'P(lrl1tio1"1 lliJ at th• Camnars, Sale/Rtnt 920 ANAHEIM ,.. lntematlonal Harverler GIVE-A\\'AY GARR ARD CO NVE NTION 1~1MAC. Cond! Lo~· mileage RECREATION CENTER CENT~R--+-"' a...+.r• -~ 0-\!-G ·AR-VER.-ln • SYSTE:i\ 11 A~1 1 r:-.1 1Strrro/R tr a e k . rf't11 1I $199.95. r l-o n r r r Arnha~li:tdor ll:pt'ltkers \l•it h 12" IJaK.<i:. 6" mid rangr, 3" surw-r l\ll't'f('r, r<'lall $29!1 !fl, p I us , . . Ga1Tard1pr11• fe.,slon t t1 r n I 11 b I e \l'llh Mse duitt C'Qv1>r a n ti G1u·rad i;t.vln11. list S6!l.!t1. ~PECIAL· buy lhr "ll''ak1•rs Ap\-il Jst thru April 9\h ~eries. GarrlenA Cruise.Ire 2925 H&rbor Blvd. PIPA~ c·:ill 6'12·5678, l'Xt 314 Con\·f'r8ion. 6'12--096:i. Costa J..1esa 54f>.4444 IM'h,·ecn 9 li: 5 pin 10 t'lalm g• Parkw11.y, sip~ 2. xln't '66 Chev. Camper Special. ~ your tickr!s. !North Counly cond. $515. 1815 Tustin Ave , Ton P.U. ~·18' cabovl'r 1011-lrt'e nwnber is 54-0-12'..DJ c ·=·'::.1.::>_1s._1...:6::.l8::., _____ 1 camper. 32.000 ml. S\995. • .. * -962-4180. Cyclts, 8ike 1, * OPENING Sf>('clat, S:l.00 Di~count. All brttd dog .c.rrur11i11g. f ;dl Noah'l! Ark r.ronm1ns: Parlor. 642-9"2'.I. Scoote rs 915 Auto Le•sin9 964 for 5299.!'1;1 • Gt't lht• 6~'11 !ihortha ir pu~. reCT'iVf'" t;ipi• pla~;..,r .~ 111.Jrt•hn·rl, rl'<i sonablf'. Call AMF;Jl lCA.N Eagle dirl hike 12::, cc. Shirt kir. rl'hll l'ni:. '66 T sprol'kl'! $3.'JO. J1rm~ Prrfrct conrl. ~lll--0417, Garrard turn1al:tlf' for ::X:. 837-.'):119 all tlay \lkOOs or BON AN ZA l\11 Nr BI KE U.S.A. SJC'r~ E q ui p · I ar1('r 6·:l~krl~:;-"---5 hp enr.:lnr ... $1\0. \\larf'hn~s•'. J 1!1 E \~th SL, ST BERNARD p up p i r s, * 518-2667 . ....:_• __ Co!i!a :·.-1<'4'1-i, Ca. ti l:..-::~11. Al..::C, 7 1vks, Champ b!00<I -,,-u-s~T~,.,~ll~l!lil J-londa CB 92 Sq. Yds-nf_:t _inns:-0171 lint'll. shot~. \\'Ol'nl4-'d. 213: 350. 3300 nii. S675. 'carprtini::: \\' par!. 3 1·110111.~ 5!l:l-~:JI 646-0968 gold 5ha,c:-. 1 room blk & wht _SC_l_JN-'A_U_Z-.f-:P.-.-,-,-p-,.--'1-,d 1-1.A_"_B=R=E=TT:::A.:,::no::_I_"'_""° __ '_"· ·~] Try our lease eX[l('rfs lor Savings • Satislo.ct1on • Ser- vice. \\'E LEASF. ALL POPULAR 1972 l\'fAKES AT C0).IPET1- Tl\'E RATES. r;hai:::. \\'111 1>acrifice. Call Sf'rvice, ~1'0Cln1l1~. lC'.rn1s. J400 ni i .. blue' I: "·hite, good 714/5:\fl--484:l. •84f1-0~39• 1,."'Qnd . s175. 833_87!19 2060 Harbor Blvd. PHILLIPS-3 spc<r<l mari"s ENGLISH Sprtngrr Spanirl C=°'=ta:..:.M:.:':::"'::_ ___ &l:.;·::.2·.::00:.::10 Call l\1alcolm Rrld !or further detail~. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 'TO Triumph 650 Tigrr Chrom--bikf'. Likr llC'\\'. $:..O. Jli-Ln Pup, 4 n1n's old. Show.qua!. t'd, g('mi·choppcd. }.1ake Of-Autos Wanted 968 111.ble fnr bo;u mu.hog. $15(). L1\'1•r ,t, 11hit. l\30-4-1!!0. Dt-cor·Radio-Prl. P ty. :0.1u11 At k)w -~ $2.299. (No. ~5) ra_ io, P~11ruJ. "'1 mp eteh••· i ell .. ~1ake offto:r. !i.16.-7343. £lnf' ovr,,-111 n our a op. A Fine Selection or CORVAIR FRIT": \\'ARREN'S YBNS91. DATSUN Sport Car C e nter · SI 695 NEW & USED BU IC KS '&-I Corv11.1r. auto, r ib, 11:ood. hPSt offer, '69 1600 Roadster •ORA~G t~ CO U NTY'S J.ARGEST TIO t . lllt l't .• S.A. $47~764 -&pd.dll':-Alt·chromc W'tlrtls. CHE hardtop It IOI! lop. E.~olic rrd exle.rior, bl a<'k bu1·kf'l I ~---------Buick-Opel-Jaguar 2.~4 E. 17th S1 , .. .. !ll52-~ ... '[;;"1 :0.1onza. 62.000 miles. (;oorl condition. l!lot-2072 a!t 6 P.\1 srats. S3crifirr! Take stnatl OVER 25 dnwn. C11.ll 546-87?.6. Clean, Re cond it lontd, ~ .~ '70 DATSUN & Guor•ntHd. ' ('n~tll. ~l r"ll. :11~ -;";'li5 \!Iii() 4 door C 0 RV A IR · 1.,,11, Had1n run~ \1eU, $lj(). .~-R~1ck H1,·1t>r;1. .\.!\ .. '>' -.-~ .f. Or. 510 dlr. Auln. R.ll. T. Glass,Bucket SeA I 88crilic<'! {96CIAVA) .f.94-6811 ll1L10. 54&-8736. '67 O:ilsun truck, 130'.I "'1th C'a111J)('r ~hC'll. /\"r w f'ngioc, .. JjT-8444 • '72 DATSUN 510 Bis; Sffian. 4 spc<f'd dlr. Unrlf'r 4.000 milf's. R & II + 1''51\', Full pri1·e 511:\6. C;in linanre all. 1 a '.13-tlzj!) CaU 494-6811 llfl 10 arn 546-R736. FERRARI - FERRAR! '67 J.10 GTC. Con- course cul1d. Air, fu\l/F,\1 . Borrani "·heel~. S speed PORSCHES 911 '•. 912's. 914's 1957 to 1971 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V, C.."'oast lf\I')'. Ne1r()'lrt Rl'ach 642-9405 WE WANT PORSCHES f-UGJfES'f OF'F'ER AVAILABLE 41 j \-:. {'f!,'\~I 1111~·. NE\VPORT BEArl [ rqu1ppl'd A r f 111:d. \lr.! '~~-'--------1 {'(}nrl 6 16..,l;.i~. ___ _ DODGE 673-0900 F:xt. 5."l ;'I I CADI LLA;C iil .llndg~ Chin,"l·r • <;fl"C'Ptl '6S VW BUS $1195 1' .. ,.,0n .. \11'•' \"\rll-"'l 3 M'llls,·1u't'At rood. Oni.; 165 CADILLAC ' 1·a,11n_ ,\,r \1 •·1 ,,.,· ~1·n p11i111, onp n\\'O('r. CONVERTI BLE l•'rlri( i;rn \ill\I l"P s.~<tJ !. N rt I rts 1·11 p i;;,_·111 1~ 11!1 Ii P:-01 . ewpo mpo r u11 pt111rr ~· r.11·l1n1 .111" 1•n I 1"•1 1111 rl:n 1•..:n1I ... I :tlOO \\', Coa~t Hll). dl\!•'11 llio: \n1:••.'' ---1 /\('11port Rr:i<'h S 1299 '64 Dodge Coronet 642-9405 r ,r,11"1 conrt s: .. ·,, n-:'.i-4~T~ -.-,-.-\\-. -.6-!l Bug. Dt:>ad . ~h11rp. ~ FORD Nr11' 1·ar rr!\rlf', SP\"Jj 00 0 IZLA5Ji1. &f' a1 J11l1 ~ ~ '6fi FOR n C'n1ntry Stt111re- Slc.mo.n.s Imports. 1201 ~· o f.:XcPUr nr rondfllnn' • r>.la !n, Sa n!ll An.11 (\ r ' oS Get Jt nn11 '"r summer! ral~68 VW B~~:.2.12 Q~,t-p J~A~~-~_"-...:'';,-'''_1 ;_'_~,1 " ,·.1 }>"ord r.11.-on, nm~ & 64&-63~1. frr. 548·3066. Iri~h ~ltrr purs. Al\:C, Mini Hike '70 Rupp Sprint WE PAY TOP transa..xel. NC1\' ROid fini~h . CASH Be ige/\eathl'r inlC'rior, llC\I' 4 spd, rt lr. lla11: harl J<1\'1ni;: looks s::ood. fl ryL slick. Sl25. care: l:'.\(•rllcnt ,·nnd111011 44:1 E. Cni~r !111~'. ",1-.· 4393 • 1·,s ·'l•"I• \lista. DON BURNS 1\1ATEB NJTY ('lol hr.~ • l •I. READY }·on EASTER! 'l" I 3\~ 11.P. Xlnt Cond, $1.a. T11ll: X nL rond. Call t"\'('S 6 11•kJ1 old. P\t. ply. &l!Hi9llj 675-86.'X:I. 11[!rr 7 pni. unl!I 9 pm. -'-'--'o.------~ YO RKSHIRE 1r11·irn•. 2 642-BZ'l:l. f 21 '69 BSA l~ii.-:hlning. Low mi. 1 irf'~. 31.000 mile~. $11 ,000 or hest of.fer. Pr1\'ate Pr1y I OrangC'. Coun1 y. 7 1 4 : ~·14-:l936 \1·knd!'i , or ASK FOR GLEN 6.16-2333. '70 Porsche 911 T thrunut. Tnkf' ~n1:ill dn11 n f\~;\\'p(lftT Bf',Cl l r·~I. " \\'ill flnnr u·r P.,·1. Ply, C11 1t f>i1·09flfl B\I. ft';,~;'.'.1 __ 1-0.-'7.,+;-;-=-:=::--= 546-R7~.6 nr 434~R11. LARGEST G5 Jo'ord LTL), i;i:<lOd cond. SELECTI O N OF ;>.:riv 1 r11r1~ 13.000 m tll'~. ~------n111le R \\"ks. 1 !?n1. ~yrs. Prrfrct c"Onrl . SSOO or brs1 SACRIFICE: '1•q1rlC'ry, 4 4fH-1.'JSli. PacirH' \'it'IV ilC'sirablr -- _ ------offC'r. 64j...:i28:i or 892-66U, I I , 1,1 ··~ ~.,91 AJ.\C Ill.ISi ! SE'rrF:ns J·:-.;t. 259, ask Jor John. tor used ears a, trucks, Jiat call us f~ free t-stimates. _':.:':''::."::<>-::2::8::2'l:_•::·'::'::-l•;cY'::· ___ 1 Slt'rro, {'.liig!t, Private Party, GROTH CHEVROLET JAGUAR ~~';15583'·'""· '" ' - '70 VW CAD ILLACS IN !!01. ;:i&-ics_:,_;·----1 SUPER BEETLE ORANGE COUNTY 70 LTD c""'"" 5'1uuy "'"-'· Oll.•f ... 1~.,......,.,., ----3 \\'ks. Thendrrin chan1 p line 7 I '"h"I 100 CC LOVELY-pltish pnl~·rster SI ho "G 519 '6 Bu taro ...... 1 o • J • \01~, s \\' ,fii pe l .,.. -4 · · .... ,0• ch'm~" oom carf)('l1n~ ~hout 140 yrrl~ .. 52 Pxpa ... .; " ""''· - yrd. pf"ld incl. ~hs l green. PUPPIES for salC'.-Lab n1i."'I:. prPssion rt'lease, excellent $5 eaC'h. Ca.II after 6 pn1., conrl. $275. 979--1319. 642-5.).~3. 96&-92'1.1. ~-==~-1968 BULTACO 250, xlnt Miscellaneou1 BOX ER PUPS rond. $600. or best ofter. Wanted 820 AKC Chnn1r sired 5-16·8171 Extras. 96S-9875 DON 'T !!torr ~our piano! SILKY Terrier Pups, 4 '68 l-IONDA CL-3.10, good Pnor but honr sf piano $1 1.l· males, 6 \l"{'rks, AKC, Call rond. Nl'1V rt'ar tire & ba.t- rlent n<'r i1s piano for prac-11ftt''r 4 pm. 11.18--114?__ 1ery. $.~. 67J-la58. tice, call &lfi....1761. OLD ENGLISH S 11 E E P e '67 TRIUMP'H 650 \VANTEI) lo buy 1 968 DOCS, 1nalr, AKC. Scra1nblcr pipes, Good rond. Swed is h Ro r s tr a n ds ~--C'-•-"-"'c:._'-_27_29___ $650. 548-539t Chci.rm" P_1,_10._ 6_·14--1_68_7._ * LABRADORS * Mobile Homes 935 Ask for Sales P..fan111er 111211 Beach Blvd. Hunttnaton Be1cb 147-6087 KI 9-3331 \VE buy all makes or clean used sports can, paid for or not. Please drive in for free appraisal. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast liwy.1 ORGAN • PIANO so;..i;ot WAREHOUSE . ACll.OSS'. from Dana Harbor Ne\YPOrt Beach & beach. Luxur. 18:<50 ___ ...:64c:.::2·_.c9_40c..5c,.,.~~- Nr\l·-Used Famous Branr'ls STEIN\VA''· KIJl.fBALL , Cl-flCKERING. rte. (Q\'rr 1000 pianos t1.\"11 i!. 1 HAMMOND, t..::trilBALL & CONN , f'h·., 01;:-i111!, Horses 156 BEAUT. T"l'J:'. must:i.ng ntal'r , 7 yrs, 1:1.z h:11wl~. r ibbon \1 inner, 5:)()(1. X4'1-fi!H:i, SUSAN Smith S I a b I 1 . Boardint:, lraining & ll'S· l'iOl1S. Co!':!a ~1sa. 549--1953 Before you buy-Give us a try~ Largr.~t Dcalrr in the \rest PENNY 0\\'SLEY CO. or !"i l.'"i-!l~IO.'I. _____ _ 714 892-3.114 WANTED! 11352 Brar h Bl., S. o[ KatrllA Good u~f'd horsr trailrr. Daily 10-9, Sat 10-6. Sun l2-6 J1ra!ll)nabll'. 642-5769 *PUBLIC NOTICE! ~~~~~~~ Beforr you buy your piano ;l ______ _,l[t.!) or ors:an. ht-sure & st"e us M.in':'~t for Best Selection for !hr bes! ~l:'rYice in Sou1 hern California At Lowest D iscount P rices COAST MUSIC SERVICE 1839 Ne"·port Bl nt liarbor Costa P.1l"sa 642-2851 O~J'\ ~un<layi; 12 In 5pn':_ 1.tAJOR BRA~D ORGAKS From $395 inc. All M1 · Conn • Hammol1d • \\'urlitzer, etc. Alao Har ps ic hord• & Piano!!. GOULD l\IURIC CO. 2045 No. Maln, S.A. 54T--0681 * * Since 19U G e neral 9il0 GREGOR 1:!' 11.l u m i n u m boa1. r 1\·l'1l'd & ~·eldei.I. s:n:i. Oars, locks, oar guaf'fl~. $!6. Car s:u11rrls, $16. ('ii r h'P carrier $25. F'P model 3 !IP Se8"1Jll motor. nc11· $\li."1. C111·ry hag S:i. i\lntor s!!u1rl $10. i\l11 kr ofll'.r for nil. r~v cs/1\ knrls : •. 1~~1 1 4<. \1kdays 6-Jj...17ll _._,,_. l_o~~''-'..c"----- 11' PENGUIN \\'/trlr. Xlnt. cont:!. $;:.()(}. 16' Calamaran 1\'/lrlr $800. 12' Lark $300. WOULD YOU ~&-19ro l\C'cktlay~. BELIEVE Boats, Power 906 FREE ORGAN LE$..._~NS nwhile bon1e, 2 BR . deluxe \\'E PAY TOP DOLLAR e..:1ras. }'amily p ark. FOR TOP USED CARS 496-~!1!"15. It your car ls extra clean, Motor Homes 940 TEST DRIVE the Midas Mini Motor Home Dii;trihu!Nf'hy 1..::en Craft Products CREVIER MOTORS 208 \V. l~t Sr.. ~nca Ana 835-3171 * Maf'lin Pearce* Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 558-3222 14.11 S, Village \Vay, S.A. ~ U! tint. . BAUER BUICK n: E, 17th St. Costa ?afesa 548-7765 \\'ILL 'Buy your car paid for or not. Call Ralph Gordon 673·0900-445 E. Coast Hwy. Ne1,·part Beach. IMPORTS WANTED Orane;e Countte1 TOP $ BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. H'. Beach. Pli. 847-85$ WE-BUY-BY PHONE Top S for .sound running 1960 1hru 1967',;, any n1o<lel foreign & domestic, ask for buyer. 55i-5242 Autos, Imported 970 ALFA ROMEO Alf• Romeo ALWAYS A Fine Selection Qt' NEW I. USED JAGUARS ''Specializing in Quality'' BAUER Buick·Opel-Jaguar 234 E. 17th SL Cosla l\1esa 548-77fi5 KARMANN GHIA '69 Karmann Ghia Rarlir,. heatrr, belluliful con- dition thruout. YNM2i9. $1299 ~~ 455 E_-Coasl lh~·y .. NE\VPORT BEACJl 673-0900 Ext. 5.1-54 1969 Karma.nn Ghia. l owner. P..taroon. SI.JOO. * Call 644-5.1&.'1 + MGB * • • Laurie Otterbein 1210 KHI Dr. Corona del Mar You are the winnf'r of 2 tickets to the Wt stern N•tiona l Bo1t & Marine Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER April lst thru April 9th Pll'ase call 642-56nt. ex t 314 brtv.·f'<'n 9 & 5 pm to claim '' lo•• as 'UC'IU like? !\o re~"-1s· Chri!!I Cr11ft Contincnt{ll " JV :--~ed boat, '58 13l HP Cr1s lstration. No obligation. Just Cl'aft e n i;:-j n e, hlack 136.lt Harbor , Garden Crove NOW ON DISPLAY your tickel.5, (North County Comee 6~S~YML~1 Cm: cushions, fire extinguisher. 1 Blk. So. ol G.G. Frwy. bulge pump, neffis good ----='=36:_·2=3=3J'"'--~~ Sales Service toll.free number is 540-1220) Parts. Body Shop * * * --=~"'o-2·~28'~. l clranin~ up. Jn the \\"ater &: Tra ile rs, T rave l 945 PIANOS**ORGANS in running condit1o n. S600. COAST IMPORTS --.-~M~GB~-~G~T-.6~7-- 1000.1200 \\'. Coast l-J"·y. Ka\vlll, Stcin11·11y, lfammnnrl, :1 1~-9617. Allen, B;i.l_rl"in, r !c. Fronl 19· Spnr11·c;,-,~,,,~,b~,-,.-,-,-. ~IO~v-oc $295. P.F:NTA l..S $10" & u~·~ n1ght rr1 \vater ski or fish· D111ly 10·6 '1111 12·" ing, j j l!P E1·inrudr , lilt FIE L D '~ P IANO CO. j !Ir, ba!l t11.nk. SIS50, Call alt 18." .. 1 NC\lfl011 Bh«I: ~ r. a::m r :i.1 646-~150. Co!ilA 1'.1Psa 714 164.1-.. 2.iO 1 _ --~-- . . , OR-28' Boal. -1-cyl. Bud11. dsl. TOP PRTCI-.S I AID F auto.pilot , l\lont>I tanks. As St~in"·a,y~ & llllmrt'lllnrls is S.100. Call eves. t2l3) PENNY O\\"!=LF.Y C 0 , ' 6.Yt-5108, ~92-3.11·1 ------- 0 21' TROJAN. slttps 2. head. Sporting GOods 83 ~nlley. $2200 or trade for ~ailboat. M&-4791. Boats, Re nt/Chart'r 908 e ARISTOCRATS e NE\VPORTS Newport Beach 642-0406 AUDI e AUTO·l\IATES --------- Al•o. "v""1 """ 1395 & "P '70 Audi Super 90 "-'ORSJ-IA1it TRAILER SALES 2iO'J \V, 17th Street 4 11peed, r11dio, heater, rn. Santa Ana (71 4) 5..11-2595 owntd car, 690CQQ. Super saving at 19' FIREBALL, !!elf con· laincd . like ne"" t1t"W cpl., $2299 load lcvl"ling hltt'h, tram;. CflOlcr, elt>c brak .. comp!. X1r1li1, f l•ll 846-4320 eves. Auto Service, P•rt• Mt MAZDA • NOW OPEN Immediate Qelivery HUNTINGTON BEACH "i ,, • I. "i 17331 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH ., ' ........ p .. ~ 8 4 2. 6 666 radio, he11lt>r. 209ETB. SALES.LEASING \\'h1rr "/i;rrr ri inL Air . Sl 195 AUTIIOHJZED Goorf cond. sr.ioo. 6IB-(.(}45. '6!! Porsche 911E, Sp1-<t-m 1r, ~unroof, ioRded. Xlnt cond. .. SEil.VICE •• JEEP A11 _,,30 pm. &1&-2">41. @. Naber~ Cadillac 'fi6 {Porsche 911, Jo:IA.:. sun c ~ 2600 JIARBOR BL., IS J EEP -Sanl'I tlrl"5. tow roof. 5 spc-t>d. $3 .200 .1 b 0 COSTA MESA bar, \11lf't"I hub.s, .!ilreet ~192. '1 540.9100 Open sund11y le,1.::al. good motor. 557-SSXI. RENAULT le~"~.s . ~'.!,~~.D~'~" ~~~~'~'~: '" Ll~COLN Renault '67 RlO 4-Dr. JI" prrl lnrl11din~ A~! I r ~! .1 }.tARI\ 111. !all f10\1·er, ,,tr!'f'fl f11{'!nrv 111r rtr .. ;11r. ]<'II\ 1111!1''• \1~r ne,v. $59S 44:') E. Coasl !hi ~· $2100 nr h•·~! ~lfrr .olf,..J(i(MI Call 63.l-Si2i; Auto. tr11ns .. vinyl in!erio r. to NE\VPORT BEACH r.\\rn '.\t'l "On MER_C_U_R_Y---I 40 mpg. \\'ef'k rnd ~pecia!. l\VOl\1526 ~. 6f3-0900 F.xr. ;i.-:.zyi --,69 Convertible Renault '69 R·16 Sed. 1968 V\V Bui;, 7 f'lll"" \'.\!,, 11 ruln11:-.lv 1n~1n1,u11r1t. '67 MONTCLAIR Wagon Ai'ottrrit. new trhlt rnJ:.I Srn 1t•r rrf'f•rd'. ~u l11..:11r) Fi'Qnt 1''h<"cl dri\·r rarlio & nrw brakes & booi1F. SI .,,9) npllon.. Pt,t. !'1 \, Slii;1 2 Door II T ~Ir. \I. Tnp., Air . '. iiTH Ti4 I ~;'>-i~'l7 Cond. Al\! f:-01 l...Ntdl'l'I. Lit hralt'r, vinyl 1n1 er 1or. ,,. 30 _ ___ !Ir old l•:"!nkrr·~ r11r. 1vn 1'\ mpg-. prrlN·t for f11 mLly. '61 VW BUS $2195 '69 ('f"lthllar \,1n1ou s1nr TV. 0'191 Call ;11G.8i36 lift 10 businr~s or fun, Special oJ 9 pa~s., tan \1•ilh !An int r11!')r. har, s11'l'M !11pr . nr~t olfrr <l!M-6..~l !. !he \\'eek. $1495. 31 ,200 mi1C5, \'f'I')". \'f'r)' fi4j...~.1 ·13. ------- <-· 1 JYRV656) '.i6 ;\IC'rrL11)' \\'agon .-x~ to llpprec1a e clrnn. .,-, CAO Conv1-Cru 1~r ~111· Iv G{)()(t n1n1uni;t rnnrl. Sl75. OVER 50 NE & USED Newport Imports 1-1. •l"I'-•, 11r1, onr .... ,,, "' ,-" ' • 5-11\-~iJSO or ~17-344:l • TO ~~s~L~~O~f 3100 \V. Coa!ll l:h''Y· m1 . Ttnllll\r! 51 !:00. fii:l--~:ltn l-"-'"M--'u=s-=T::.A..:.:.Nc::.G;;;:..:.._1 2201 SO. MA IN, SANTA ANA Newport Brach .62 <:AD 4 1lr. IWrr P11rkl---·------- 557-5242 OPEN SUN. 642·9405 Avr", (;11. l11n<l., lo mi. air, .,,.._ ~I 1 'I Gd ,, I , 1 .,01 ·-~ "" " us ang. "11g!I, ... ~s '69 V\V Bus. Air. l..JJ\I• OlluN ii/:tl l'ff!t. '""""ti.,.. & body. Needs a little en~. Renault Sales & Service for over a. decade in Oran~e Counly, ~ervice departrnenl open until 8 p.m . 1'1ondays. Jfl'-1 SLEh-10NS RENAULT 2201 So, Maio, Sant11' Ana l bllt. north of \Varnrr sPrvicl' df'partment 546-4114 Sales <lrpartment 557-5242 TOYOTA WHITE 4 door sedan, 1970, air, a u!n, r/h, priv party, J900 Sl'rie~. like new. $1595. 644-8748. 54R·24.19. AHSOI 8 TOYOTA 'Tl Coron11 $2195 Dix. harrttop rpr., a ir cond., vinyl lop, R&H, 4 speed tranl!., le!t1 than 7 ,000 m.Jles. (DJB24Gl, e TOY OT A '71 Corona 4-i1r. 521!15. Drluxe 11 ir cond., rarl., htr., au10 trans. ($(-r. 1 lJWOJ Jim Sltmons Imports 2201 S. 1'.fAIN. SANTA ANA OPEN SUNDAY CALL 557-5242 '70 TOYOTA STATION WAGON Ne\\' car trade in, 4 sPted, radio, & hP1'lll"r. 748BZU, S1495 Santa Ana Toyot a Sl'rvit'e dept. Ol)('n i:JO 11 m '1il 9 pm Monday thru Fri- da)". PHONE 540.2512 4!7 \V. \\lamer, San!11 Ana GET OUR TOYOTA DEAL BEFORE YOU BUY! mileage. New t iff'~. Fm-Am '69 Cnupe de Vil!e, hlC"k wnrk. · $350. 6 4 5. 51 2 8, r adio. Call 962-7247. wlblck Int., fully equip. 54&-7516, '68 V\V. 1rss than 7a ml. Xln! ronfl. 644-l45R· -1,,,.,--CO-NV_E_R_T_\_B_L_E_.-'"-"'· on r<'hll 1600 W'g. $.~:;o 'CAMARO r lr. P IS, new tires. Xlnt Call nfler ~-81& cond. $645/oller, ~3877 '66 '0"· low mlle11, xlnt cond. ·ng Cam;iro i'S-:\9G 4 spd. CLEAN :68 i\1ustang. ~uto. $i"J&j. Recently reblt. '.\tany xt ras. R&H, \'Ln)'l top, new hftl, 61:>-3355 Clean & Sh<irp. Tkst offer. P/S. SJJ50. 962.-M32. '10 VIV B"g, A"lo, AM/FM. >44-8418 alw 5 pm . OLDSMOBILE Xlnt cond, $1Z75. Ca 11 -"i-"-v'w'":'-i'~";,';;r ;6~p~m~.';;;;;;;;:-l --.:C:.H:..:EV:.:._E_L_L_E __ , 1.67 Cutt;i~~ Sf'rl11n, radio, tac '64 V\V C11.ravelle Camper. 11ir. PS, PIB, Gd rubl:w-r. 11r11• HiOO eng., radio, g11;s '159 OlEVELLt.: \\IA GON Orig O\l'nt'r. Xlnt rond. att. ht-111t'r, vr1-y clean. SUOO or 1-·uu Po1vl'r 5 p.m, C11111!93--00S6. bC'sl offer. 494-3840. 540-9695 or 557 .... 12.10 1966 OLOS Ot'lla 88 4 Dr. adn. Ve ry clt'a n local, ortr::tnal car. Air, etc, $850. 545-20.11:::. '70 VW BUG, $14'° 54~·1449 111! 4:3t'I 'iO VW, Radio, 1terro, Lo mi's, Xlnt cond. $1100 cash. Pvt ply, 6J.l.-5924 aft Spm. '65 VW, 1500 S Sqbck 5425 * 837-4378 VOLVO 1972 VOLVO Lease Today •f B tst Rates $81.74 Per Mo. O.A.C. AJ\t /Ft.1. Auto. trans., disc brake~. 36 mo. For Leasing or buying . ;Dt.GX ltwi4 -VOLVO CHEVROLET • • • Ralph E . ·M e r rill 4605 Greentr ee Lane Irv ine You arr !he \Yinnrr ol 2 11ckct!i 10 thr '66 Olds 441. 2 Or , PIS, P/B. air, Bckt ~eat1, R!H. $800. 91)2-1i60. PONTIAC Western Nation al '&l Pontiac GTO. Xln't cond. Boat & Marine Show 36,000 miles, poY:er steerina:, at the big ~ngine, Max-X tires, ANAHEIM f:irtnry ma.gs (with locksl. CONVENTION Vin)'I tnr. llurst 1r11ns .. CENTER factory 111r t'ond. 826.1256. Apnl l5t thru Apnl !!th 1970 Pont 111r l..c~lans Convt Rlease call 642-5678, ext 314 Goll'! \\'/1vh ltr" top. r ul l between 9 &: 5 pm to claim JlOWl'r. Goorl cond . Best nf· y<1ur tlcke!Ji. {North County fer. Cati 11ft 5 pm. 645-i874. loll-free number i1 540-12201 ·6h J'ont1ac C111al1na, VR, * * * PIS, P/B, Stick shift, $500. '70 Impala Sta. Wagon ,:~0,;:,~T••c ,,,..1,... '" If rond, a1110 1ran~. 1 l mos 1966 llarhor. C.M. 646.9303 Farlory a ir, PS, Bf'aut ul Irwin wh ile with s:trliHe in-o!rl . ~lu~t sell. Exc,.l cond. 990 Co~t S·l.200. Sacrifice $2,950. terior (257BSY) S26!'Jj, 675--6164. _F_L_E_ET-SA-LE-Tommy Ayres Chevy 1 ~p-'oN-T.-.r.6-T,-m.,..-,-1. -s -ey1-1 Autos, UMd '70 T-Bird. l..andau. l.oade1I. Pwr, Sfr. P"T, brks. AIC. 4 Lo ., $3300 '70 F d V 946 ~. Coa~l lhvy. dr Hrrl-iop. R/H. Ex. cond. RELDADING e q u I p in r n I , Herlers prr~!t, RC BS po"·drr mrasurf". c11~1 trin1· me.r, rte, 585. Dies $10 each. 979-131!1. TV, Radio, HiF J, Stereo \VEEJ<END-VACATJON'? Luxury sloop. Sleeps 6. RC'as. rates. ! TI I I &1.">-4451 GOODYEAR Po I y g I a 11 Rlems all sl7.e~ low price!! 1-lijackcni: )..14.50 -G60xl5 J60X15. U.OX15 -29.95 + 1'.ET. US -Anscn American mags $15.95. Buy·scl\-tr11dr open Sund"ay, C.i\t. 64~3354 455 E~I II•~ IDi .,Pw.ltwi4 W' TOYOTA mi •· I or -l../guna Beach SS95 or bt'~l offer. 646-40.'")I. R. 12-pll ~Sf'nger Cl ub Wllgl'l11 4()4 .7744/546·9967 . Air, Lll m\'1, "300 g 'iO '67 f9nt1ac Flreb1rd, 11uto. Pont111c Gra.n Prix, LandAu '65 ~1allbu, stock 2A3 V-fl, 4 A/C Xlnt oond. Alter 4 pn1. lop, Air. Very clean, $257:'> sr>d. hur ke! "eA!~. new 548-4210. . 136 Boats, Sail 909 1972 ZENITH & RC A 28' KING Crui!t>r. Xlnt cond. 1!!50 Newport Tin• Ci\y. clo8eOUI 11ale. 'Tl mod<M a.r-Frr.~hly paintrd. New 1111ils, '66 Volvo 1800 S t'nll:. & tr11n~. riving l'la !ly. nnrk bt"J1tom fully t c1ui p. l\lany xlras. Xlnt. chrome \\Ide rtverM' price• on all 'T2'1 \l•h1le lh('y A.~kinJ,: S:>.~. Pri, party. 1'"i1tt 850 \\'h~ls. J i m . \ 11. 11 , 1 9 · · 7." n t 1 h ~fi-303,o d11ys, ~16-5986 nf!er 518-R406. Chrom0t'Olnr S3i3, 2~>" "°"" "6.• 11 rKI~._ -----1 =~~:!:!!::~~ 8C'lle $j25. RCA 2.1., ronso!f'~ CLA SSIC. 2':.._Danul:i_~totnr 5 $445. 25" <'Onsoles S4i5, 2.\" Saill:t'. rt'rently hulled. Sf.11 Aulwtlrlolo I[~ J Xl.,..100 ron~I" S~J49. 2.Y' or ~ubmlt lr1trlr rnr S'.>.000 . 7,..entlh <'ht'Qm()('(ll<lr rrn1fl!f' l'q ulty. ~l i p Avail. :'ltllani 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ii~ I combln11 t1on $600. bl' to iv f 7141 6·14""6Tlil6i:i.-8SOO. 1 -A ntiques/ Classics 953 rtlall. ABC Color TV, 902 l e HOB1E·16 Allan11, itunting1on Beach. COOd ('Or)(!., <'U~tm tral\cr 1~008~-X~3~29.~. ~~~~~~~I C!'ll f'\'es: 6-12-:\776 ] 14' CAT A ~t AR A N, tom· [ lit-, J pletely rlggtd, xlnt eond. ~Ind Supptitl r. $400. Call Aft 5 pm, 557-7514. Bo•ls, Slips/Docks 910 Pets, General 150 BA YSHOR"E ~l11.rtn11., 1kle 1te, 6 mo·~. up to 23', Cood TWO lguAnAS &: Ira. Cll~e park!nt. !!48--7244 $10. Rina: Neck Pllrakcel.J -1 ...:;;;:....;;:;_;=-,~--­ l pr • $20. P.ini; Nrrk Do\'t>!I SLIPS. 13'-42', f"lhe~l in Npt • SI each. Rln,it Nrck ll11;rbor. Beil f1c1I. F'rH Ptit11Mnt.s -t pi: •• $i,:,O. _ w~ing. 67l-Aill fill 10 pm. Baby para.k~t"t! • S2 tacn. "1'.ll\,ke Room 1-~or Dad- fta by Rice Blrd11 • 52 I'll.Ch. <I y • •. , ct,., n oul the Privste P11rl)' • 963--0833. 1a.ra1e .. )'our truh 11 CASH For that lttm Unt'ltr $SO. with a DAil.Y PILOT try I.he Penny Plnch'r O ll!11tltd 11t tl, 1.9'10 \V il\ys Jrcpster, 6 cyl., needs TLC, runntna 6 mos. •a<>, will furni1h new ba.I· tery. Sacrifice $275. EYnlwlm<i.t. 548-5147, "''kdays, 645-lTil a1k tor Sten, Dune ButglH 956 '71 HRD'TP 1200 cc Mtl Flk Cost $2100 new: Sel\ $12(X] Xlnl cond . 81~. • • J\AlL.-Bui;:in" fut k fan· cy, ·s. : . e fo epprcclli~e'. 615--%22 Terry. · The t.utnt dnw In the \\'tit .•. a O.lly P 11 o I Cl11s~\llrrl Ait. 642-~ig , , NE\\IPORT BEACI I 673·0900 Ext. 5.l54 BMW TEST DRIVE ALL NEW . Tii SEE US ABOUT Overse•s Oellverv CREVIE ILMOTORS 202 \\I. 1~1 S• .. ~11.ntll Ana 835-3171 Automotiv11 E:iccelltnct -& ROY CARVER, Inc. 2925 Rarbor Blvd. C\lta ?itesa. 546.+444 ' 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-930.1 ll!l ll•f\•\s ~'-"'" Toyota le Ja.gutt Dt11l,.r Authcrlzed Sa.Jes & ~rvlce 900 S. Coast Hi&h,11ay t.aiuna Be11ch 540·3100 TRIUMPH * TRrUMPHS * '71 CLOSEOUT • OPEL sP1r.-im:s AS LOW AS S23-'9 -------GT-6 SAVE $500 ALWAYS ~'RITZ WARREN'S A Fin' Selection or NEW & US EO OP ELS "Specla.Uilns.:: ln Quality" BAl,IER Buick·Opel-JTgu•r 234 E. 11th SI. Co.t11 Mti11t. 549-7763 • , a Dally Pllot Cluslflod Ad . ~2-5671 Sport Car C•nt•r ORANGE: !:_O V.llTY 'S LARGEST i10 E. 1st, S.A. 5-17....()76-1 1 TIME. FOR (j)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-567B I • • '69 Ford Torina, V·8, Air. palnl. Xln t c:ond. 5700 hrm.1 -"-P-L_Y_M_O_U_T_H--1 1.llntla u top. Very clean ~8::J;.:,2'7Zl:i'5'.i'=o--;cuiiii1'-·I._..:..:..:..:..:..::...::..:.:_ __ $177:o. '61 E L CAM INO 1.r:AS!f\G AVATLABLE 327 _ S!ick. Ne\'' patn1. iii-rs. '68 Ply f'Ury III Con1·t. nttrls ON 'rnE AllOVE CARS !'illll unrlf'r fartory 1~arran1y somft body ~~irk, S:\f'S '67 Roick RiYil'.!ra GS, A-1 Sl450. S42-ll2$1:. 6·1.>-2218, call btwn noon & " Cnnrl . Loaded. S19T:"> li~;;-:;;:;;;;-:.-i:;;i'(:;;;,-;;;-j:j;·l -'"Cm~. ----~-~ SOUTH COAST NEED Ca~h. 3~8 . hrvy Ht P LY )!. '66, Auto, PY.T, Str. CAR t EASING Pfrformanct>, 1r •·r>11 w_e. r A/C, R.&H. Very clean $6'1!1 'A'\lh new carhs, $60. :"t'\\' fl 646-40:;.4 300 \\', Coa~t ll\l'Y., f\.O. j\"' Of 396 Chl"\"Y p\gton 11n~.~ ()r bfJSl 0 fir. • 642-2182 Alter ~: 67W 269 $15. Al~ misc. 327 & J.jJ;; 1967 Plymout h Station \Va.gon AMERICAN Ch.vy pam. Allor ;, ru.-y 111. v~. A/C, p/1, p/b. 89~. S!KXJ. SJJ-0459. American Motors '66 Ch•">' P.u . • "'"' VEGA Uniroyal Tiltr Paw t1rei1. ----------1 ""Gre mlin• ,....HorMfl m11~ ~·hi~. nu p11 ln1, tuck 'n '71 V e 9a 2 Door "°'Mi1tHor1 ""Javelins roll uphol , Jtereo t11pe dck, ""Ambassadors SL100. fiM"ri. &l~'iS. Sport Sed. dtr. undtr 14,IXX! Ir: •72• mlles. O\\'Tltd by llnlo old •1u•e s10ck of '71'• 1 '64 Cll£VV Jmp1ta ,.Class m•n from Lll"'1n". tru had Bi9°Bi9 Savln9s Pack•. Good <~od . mn. or lovm• "" 1;oocuc1. Take H bo A -· ~ offrr.-401-0Va.v..att. Small Dovin. C"n flnanct Gr 1 m1r1c:an !tr~hJ113pol\1 ~ Beachl I! 8, p.tt, pty. Call MG-8736 &ft Home of Convenltnt 10 am 4...~-681 t. Paymoots TIME FOR 1969 Harbor Blvd. l'IUICK CASH Costa Mesa 646-0261 ,,. to outgrown Lev\1 -you can 1urn "tr11h to caah" In a DAILY PILOT tlu!Ulod ad -csll 642-11611 • THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 I V ALIANT 'aO \ia!lint 11a!)ort )!,qon._.6 c~ \, 11utn. pt. rood runnll'\& conl'I. $2!JO,. $45-9217. "llo1rartt" "'her! are )"OU? l.o$t eomeU1I~~ F'\nd tt, rla~ an a.d i 642..-56il , • ~ • ;, J :Zll DAILY ·PJLOT f~onday, Apl'l l ), 11172 SOFf·SELL Si\!tl bv iUnr1•ln !tl••ers . .. \ \ ~ lf )IX> DON'T MAKE MORE MONEY TRJ5 YEAR -'THEy'LL /lAUL YO!> IN FOR BRfAXJNCt THE ANTJ·PDYERTY ACT.I" • ~EGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE 14411 LEGAL NOTICE SIJPIERlOR COURT Qjl" THE Nl;WPORT·MESA IJNlFllED STATI! 01' CALlll'ORHIA 1'0111 SCHOOL Dl$TlllCT THE COUNTY OF ORANGE Nolle• lnYl!i111 Bldi CIM No, A·7G64S NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tllat lhe l!IOTICE OF HEAR1frl0 O" PETITION TO Bo1rd ol EC111cet1on ol lhe NtWPl!rl·Me~a ~ CONVf"Y Rl!AL PRO,.l!ltTY. -IJnllffl'<r Schoo1-0 l!!r1Gt Of Ora,,,ge Co1/l\ly, In the M111rr o! th• es111e of JAMES Cellfornle1, will receive ••el«i b•ds up 10 N. MILLS, OKeesed. 11:00 A.M. on Ille 11111 d•Y of APIH, 1912 Noll<t 1• hJreby t lve n Intl • he1rln11 ol 11 the olflce of r.tld School DlslrlU, th• pe!ltlon ot Marv M. Miii$ •• EJ-localed ar 18S1 P!acentlt A•en11e. Co•I• t cul•b O! lh• estere o• Ja'l!es N. Mllls Mfsa, Californle, al wlllcn tome .stld bids dece1Sffl, IO< .in oril•r lo complt!f • cet· will ~ oub!ictv oi>ened ind read lor; lain conrrKt f(l<' !he ••If ol .... 1 esrare MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS en!f!rtd ln!o bv Ill• dectclan! In hi• All bids are lo lie in accordance wllh lilellm• 1nd Jonn F, ~1>1 1no Anne II , Conditions Jnslr~cHOtls ana S!lf'C!•k •!lons Debs, bl haa 11 1111 Court Room ol which are r.ow on !lie In !he o!llce 01 Ille Dep11rtmfnt J ot s••d Sui>erlor Court ot PurchaslnO A11en1 of •••d School Dl,t•lct, 1119 Sl•le ol C;1htornla ln anct tor the lli7 Pl11centia Avenue, Cos1a Mesa, Counlv ol Dr1nw , Cllv of Senti An1, on C11itornla Ille tlh d•v of April 1912..i• 9:30 1.m. E.ich blOOer musr submil a bid dePOslt S11id real 11r~u:,i. 10 DI' corwevP.d I• In 1ne tarm ol 11 cerlllot!<I or ca..n.er'• 1l1u1IN In 1"' Counlv <>I O•an11e, Si.ire ot cl\Kk or 11 Did bond e<iu.il !"five percen1 C•llfornh1 anct I• oescrlDe<I 11 follows 10 1s-..1 of rne 11mount ot rnr Did m11dP wit: JNIVeDle lo the or~r ol Ille Newp0rl·Mew Loc•!fll wltnln Ille C I I y ol Sin Unl!iP.d SU.ool Dl1!rlcl. A Ptdormaoc:• Clllmtnle. Orang.e Coun1v, Calilornl1. Bon<I m11v be r-l•fll lll Ille 01Mrtl•OfO of comrnonlv known'''"° Tti!flllll•• Lilllt. !hp DtslrlU . In lne tven! of lallur• to S•n Cl1"11nte, C1 Ulornl1, w!d lltOPertv enter Into such co,,lri!cl, Int lull i.utn I• mart 111rlfculi1r!v descrlbeO 111 111ereof will be f"Wie lled lo 11!d scnoot follows: District OI Or.tr>ge Counr1. PAltCEL I : Lots l' Ind 13 In Block 10 No blG<lef m.tv w1thdr11w nts bl(I tor • of Tr.Kl No. 812 11 '11awn OfO a Map period ot forlV·five l•S) <lllYS •lier !hi recoro.ed h1 Book 75, p1tes 11 lo ,. In· date set !or _In"' 01>enln11 !ht'rrol. c1u1!v1 of Ml1<1!1aneou1 M11>10, Records The llllftd "' E<1ucari010 ar Ill• NewPOrt. of Or11n11e Countv. C11lllornl1. Mesa Vnilied St1'00I Dlll•lcr rt•erve1 lhe l"AltCEL 1: Thal l>Ol"llon ol Lot 31 In rl11hl lo reiecr <1nv or .ill bids. ilncl not !.lock 10 af Tract No. 111 •• shown on • neces1trllv acceo1 Ille lowesl bid, ilnd 10 Map recorded In Book 1i, p1111es 11 lo 16 w111ve an1 lnlormafl!v or 1rre11u l1rity In lnclutlve of Mlsce11aneou1 M 1111 s, •nv bid re<el11rd, records of Or1n11• Countv, deiJCrobed 111 Diiied Mtrcn '•· 1912 to11ow1; NEWi:>ORT-MESA UNIFIED Beolnnlno 11! !he Nortnerly corner o! SCHOOL DISTRICT (01 ·n In Block 10 o1 Traci No. 11', run· of Oran11e Cr11mlv. Calllornoo n1ng tl'lilnct. Nor!h &0• 23' 56·· we,r Bv Do•ol1'Y Harvev f lSl'ler 104.S' feel to 11'e Norrherlv corn~r of i:>urch~sln11 At;rt.n! l o! 31 In Block 10; 11\ence S.Oulh 35° .-o• 1.tJ.JUlO West Jl,56 lee!: thence Soulh 56° •!• Pub!l"ihr.d Oran;e Coast Dallv E11st '2.'4 IHI lo Ille W111terly cornet M11rch 27. and APril 3, 1911 o• Lot 12; 1111nc1 North sso ll' JO" E•srl--------------- ~ tee! 10 tne oo!m ol be!llnnltlil; Reference ii herebv made to !llf Pt.II· LEGAL l'iOTICE tlon Ofl Ill• herein lor lurtner p1rllcul1rs. I-----~--~---,,~--· I Datte! Mlr(h ,,, ltn NOTICE INVITING 11105 Wllll11m E. St John NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN the! the Countv Clerk 11no Clerk ol Bo.rd ol Trus!ee• ol rtie Fountt in Valley ulO Superior Courl. Schoot Dls!rlcl of Dran11e Coun!y, WILLIAM C. DlllON C;1Ufornla, will tPcelvp •lllU!d blOs UP to Allorne~ for 1"•1111-• 9:00 A.M. OfO 1ne !llh dav of April 1tn 01 417 5outll HIU SI., Sulle 6'I tlle offl(f o1 Sllld 5Chool d•strlcl Puttl\111· Los "'""'''• C11lll. "''J ln!I deoarlmt'nl al wh.ch limit Slid bods Tel: (21)) MAdho11 1·1'Sf,-will be openeo 11n0 read for !ht furnlsnln11 Pubtllhlld Ort1111e Coasl Doilv Piiot. purcnose of rt-11ular classroom and M11rcll JO, •ncl April 3, ltn IMl-11 orllllllledlc ciassroom turnhure 1n0 t<1ulp· rnent, music Jnsrrurnenl$ 11nct plovgrouncl ""1Ul11rr1enr. Su11plie1 to be furnished In accordtn(t -----,-.·0-,-,-.c0c,-,<cE·-----1 will! ~11.,.11on1 now OfO file In !he NEWl"OltT·ME5A UNll'IEO 11u•ch11s!no de11.irl"1ent of The Foun!aln Vallev Scl'IOOI Olstricl, Numb•" One LEGAL NOTICE 5CHDOl DISTRICT Llththouw Lane, corner ol Talbert and • NGllCt lnvllln1 lllds N•wlir>d S!reet, Fountain v ~ 11 a v, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N Iha! the Cilllo•nla 92108. !<Mrd ol Edut11tl()f0 of the NIWPOrt·M•)o BY ORDER OF THE BOARD Unl!ll'll Scfloot Dls!rlct ol Dr1n111 Counlv. OF TRUSTEES, Ca111orn!•, Wlll recelv1 •f.l!ed bld1 UP to FOUNTAIN VAL LEY 11:0 A.M. on lhe 11th of A1>rll. lf'2 11 lht Marv HI>, office of said School Dl1tr1<t, loctted a! Clerk pro tem 1151 Placent!a Avenue. Co.io Mesa. i:>ubllsned or11n11e coas! Delly C1llfornl1, 11 which rime said Dld1 wn1 be A.orll 3 .ind AprOI 10, 1911 PVbllcly OPOned and read tor: '---------------SEWING MACHI NE REPLACEMENT!" AU D!d1 •re to bt I" •ccoroanct with LEGAL NOTICE COf)(llllont 1 nstructl010S llnd SP«:lllcelion• l----,,cc;;:::-=::;:--;:c:-:::::7;--- whlch are now on 1111 In Hitt o!llct of tht FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Puru.11sin11 Ate"t of stld School 0!11r!cr. NAME STATEMENT 1157 Pl11c1nl11 Avtnue, CoS!a Mesa, Tht followin11 ' Ql!rwns are dolnt C11llfornl11. buslnes1 .is: . , Eteh b!Clder rnust submlr ii bid deposit B·L & B RECREATION STORAGE m Ille for"' of 1 ctrlltled or c11s111er·1 YARO, 17'31 Cr1Dt1 Ln., Hunlinglon cn•dl or a bid bond e11ual to five 1>e•cent Beach. '76•1 IS"-1 of the 11moun1 or The blcl. mede Bruce R. Burton, 9021 Reoa!la Dr .. pavabl• lo !ht order of The NeWPOl'l·Mes11 Hun1ington Se1th. Un!lled School Dlsirici. A Pertorm1nce Corl Jick LM, tt59l Nl11hllnoa11 Ave., Bond m1v bt tf<IU.red 111 lht dlMrlllOfl of Fountain Vallev the Dlslrlct. In 1111' even! ol !allure to Jonn F. &iOler. 7910 Juanita Pl1ce, t'nter lnlo wen Cllf'lract, the lull 111"1 Fullttlllf' tnerrof wlll bt lo.-t~ltt!<I to said Scflool This bu•lness fs Mino con<1ucted bV 1 Dhrrict of Or.inoe Counrv. Partnoersni1>. No bidder mav withdrew his bid 10< • Bruce R. Surran •••lad ol lorlv·llve t4S) davs •ll•r The C•rl Jack Lee c111e set for !ht ooenln11 thereof John F. Bibler lne Board ol Educallllf' of t111 NewPO•I· This s•aremeru tiled with tht Couniv Me11 Unllot!<I ScllOOI Olsrrlct reserv"'1 Int Clerk of Orange Counrv on: Ma r. 10, ,;,hr to relecl tnv or all b!O•: •nd no! 191z. B1 Beverlv J. M.id<101r, Oepu!V r.ecess.ir11v acceol the Jowet! tud. ind •o Coun!y Clerk welve anv lnlorm11nv or lrre11u!11rftv In · F 164SO Published Ora nge Caasr Dally Pilot. anv bid received . 0 1tlld Moren JI, 19/2 NEWl'>ORT.MESA VNIFIEO SCHOOL DISTRICT of Oran11e Countv. Cali•or"la Bv Oorolhv Harvtv Flshtr Purcha~lntt Aten! 645·1100 M1rch 13; 70, 21, .ind April J, 1972 l 7i·71 LEGAL NOTI CE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATE MEl"T Publl1ned Or1nge Coast Dl•IV Piiot. ' '''' .... ,, ,,',"' A1>rll 1r>d April l'!., ..,., following ~•son i1 oo;ng business LEGAL NOTICE 111« LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N'OTICE .. , TORO ('r'(L€. '6l82 VI• L•1e, N>•~soon V•t'10 NDTICIE TO CltEDITOllS H N~rman Cir'fflt', 76ll' '111 l1r1, SUP'EltlOlt COVR.T_ DF THE t.'•U'O'I Vo~ia ITATf: 0, CAllFOltHIA FOR Thot DYslness lt bc•"'l ('Qnd\1(11'(1 OV ii" THE COVHTY OF OltANGI. IM!ivldual. N1, A·12tU H. Norm.in Greene Esl11l1 ol GEORGE M. LOGGINS, T11l1 Hllfmtl'lt l.lf'd wl•n It•• C1111ntv Dete1Md. (l!!r~ Of Oranft Cauntv on~ Maren 24 , NOTICE IS HEREIV GIVEN Ill ~ lt12, Bv Bt~ttlV J, MfOdO•. 0tPUly trlldltof'I O!' tl'lil Ibo .. n1med dee...,.! COl.fnlY Clerk. th•I atl -•0111 1111wf1111 t!•lms 111r1ur the ,16742 iofd dl<:ocletll •rt roqulrfd to file !'hem, Putlhslltd Dron9t Co.,1 01llv Piiot. ,.itll rt.. ~n1rv v~che'•· In the oll,cp IYfr(ll ''· u111 A11rll J, 10. 11, 19n 1911l rf '"' obovt 111l!tltc1 cou11, or 10 ort .. ntl------:-:...::ccc-c------trem, with lilt necns•rY voucM•1. to. tllt Advtrtisern.tnl ll!dtr1l9ned al c/11 WUll11m M. WllCO•e". I i;oo Park A....,,ue, L•11Un• 8••(1'1. !•lltof'nl• 12651, w111c11 II tne o11t1 of 1utlnti1 ot Ille unoer,r1neo 111 111 m1t1Prs wirtionlnt to tht t1!11t1 of S•ld dKtdenr. 11111'111' tour monlh1 .ilttr !ht llr1r puolk• to~ DI tnr1 noflc•. Dlll!CI Marcil n. ,,,, ROBEltT J . MCDONNELL EM~culor of Ill• Wlll Of "" 1tiovt namtcl c1Kt01n1 t'JLUAM M. WIL.COlCa'f ff l"lrll A- .Olllllf leKtl, C·111tfernlt 11.11 1n11 "4·1SU lli.tlltY .., .... _,.., •i.Dfllhld Oro~ C:ot•I C•ll~ ,,llot. ~u " 10. 11, Jt, 1•11 1»-12 I Do Your r FALSE TEETH Drop, Slip, or Foll? Don 't knnp worrying-aboul your 111...i ll't'th droppini: •l the wron1 11m(', A dent\JN 1dhei1ive ctn httlp. t'A TEETH•iriYMdentute9 1 lonr· It, ll.rll'141r,_.i.o.dltr h&ldr-M•k8-eai:. Ing moru en;oyablt. t'or more iecurity ind comrutt, u.e F.4.STEETH Din· lur1 Adbt ivt Po~der. DenturH lht\ II\. llf-e 0111r;Dti1l lO btt\Lh. $ee f OW' dt11till tecuWIJ, •• • HU~RY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY! SPECIAL PURCHASE! Deluxe-Quartz SUN-LAMP · "With Adjustable Floor Stand!" • Haveatanyear'round-for · . anyone-'Clnytime--anywhere. • Use as a table model or with . adjustable stand. •lightweight, yet exceptionally stable. • Complete with lamp, adiustable ~--stand and sun goggles. ~::---::====-.:. -.,,,,,REG. $24.99 WOW! SAVE $7.001 TUES. & WED. ONLYI Made To Sell For $39.95 Better Quality CHAISE LOUNGE "Klngsixfi' & Flt for a King!" • Features a combinatio n of refreshing lime er citrus webbing & gleaming white vinyl. • 8 vertical webs--cdjusts to 7 positions . •White reinforced plastic arms ·&vinyl trimmed brace. REG. $16.99 SAVE $4.00! TUtS. & WED. ONLYI Hurry/ Hurry/ 6 LECi CiYM & SLIDE "Years of Fun For The Kids!" • 2'' dia. steel frame• 2 passenger lawn swing~ • 6 legs make it really sturdy • 7 ft. slide • 9 ft. 6" overa ll length . REG, $44.95 TUES. & WED. ONLYI --------9·1· Better Quality FOLDING CHAIR • 7 vertical web • ~ with . s rn i1me or citrus contrasting white v· I • Wh· my' ite reinforced I . Yiny/ t • P ast1c arms & runmed brace. • K' ings ize chair is'25. h inc es wirJe. $699 REG, $9,99 . SAVE $3.00I TUES, .. wro. 0NtYt 22 Pc. Lawn Furniture Tournament Mod•I Bem:i:·o·Mati~ SOCKET SET 11 AmericC.n Made- Lifetime Guaranteedt11 RE-WEBBING KIT 1100 .. 11-Yourself-lt's fasyl'' • 17 ft. of webbing -enough to do a choir one way. TENNIS RACQUET ''A Smasltfng Volu•I'' ' • Contains 1/, ''x 3/1 1' square dr ive sockets, square drive adopter, reversible •Your choice of colors. • Lam ine1led construction-strung with high test nylon. ratchet handle, extension, spark plug socket & tool box. •Zinc/chrome double plated. REG. $9.95 TUES. & WED. ONLY! • \ • REG, 19c TU ES. & WED. ONLYI SYLVANIA LIGHT BULBS "Stock Up At This low Pr/eel" • Famous Sylvania quality-your choice of 60 or 100 wolt bul bs. • The best value in town- don't pass this upl REG. 29:-15( Ea, TUES. & WID. ONLYI I •. Beovtifvlly balanced-tennis anyone? A $3.94Q'.:!uel WOW/ TUES. I. WED, ONLYI AdJust'a Show•r HAND SHOWER • Leh: you pvt the water wher• you want it-keeps your hair dryl •Includes shnwerwith on/off switch. 6 ft. hose, wall bracket & all the necessary hardware. • Convert your tub into a modem shower: REG. $11.95 SAVI $6.00t 0 y b n 0 y p fi c 0 w < • 0 f i n b w w • lh' in pl ful m cu sh lis sp ha bo u pl ne th in cl wi Ha 2. I da re g 121 m "' in rel •n re an of •h I t---•te to ~·· fie • San Clemente -C.apistrano EDITION VOL ·65, NO. 94 , 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • ~arr1ers Cle11aente Case Cyclist Killed; §uspect s_ought l-Ughway patrolmen said they were nearly complete in their investigation of a weekend hit-run traffic death near San Clemente and a ·su_spec.t has been e-0n· tac1ed. but not yet charged, they said. The incident claimed the lire of 16·yeAr· old Eugene Crawford of 622 W. Houston St.. Fullerton, lat(' Friday evening as the youth and a companion rode t'heir bicycles al ong old Pacific Coast Highway north of the city limits. Patrolmen said they were contacted over the weekend by phone by a person who might be involved in the case, but as yet have made no formal arrests. €rawford was killed instantly at 9:50 p.m. as he and a friend rode thl'ir cycles fitted with camping gear toward San Clemente. A white sedan hit the youth from behind at a high rate of speed, carrying the fatall y-inj ured cyclist about 150 feet ()n the hood before the boy's body fell off. An eyewitness -a San Clemente w()man dri ving by at the time of lhe crash -called local poli ce and furnished a license nurnber of lhl' hil·run car, local officers said . San Clemente patrolmen and CHP ()f· ficers drove to a spot in the Palisades near the crash scene and found the auto, bul not the dri ver. The car, officers said, had a broken windshield . The victim's sleeping bag was still in the front seat ~nd parts of Boat Slips Fill As Dana Marina Completes Basin The Dana Point ~1arina Compan y is 1ending its cranes and workmen home this week after the last 'of 1,426 boat slips in Dana Harbor's ea st basin wall com· pleted recently. The harbor 's basi"n already is nearly lull of limall craft and ~'ithin a few months most of the berths will be OC· cupied. \Vork on the basin preceded any on· ihore buildings at the harbor anrl waiting lists are standard for yachtsmen wishing space at the new marina. The completion of the berths brings the harbor to more than half its capacity of boat slips. Further construction in the harbor's upcoast section of the twin boat basins is planned for the neat future. The harbor's yachting filcilities have been heralded a.s among the most modern on the coa.sl. ~·ith each !!lip having its own phone, electrical, water and .storage facilities. Laundry and food machines are located near each closter of slip.s. Workmen also keep the docks among the cleanest anywhere with steam-clean· Ing devices used to keep the walkwa ys clean of stains. The next phase or dock construction will involve I.~ slips. bringing Dana Harbor's total spaces up to more than 2,600. young Crawford's cycle were jammed In· to the undercarriage, officers said. 1'he death car was towed to the Orange County-crime laboratory from its parking place near 34232 Camino Capistrano, Capistrano Beach. ~Depopulation' Tea1ns Killing "- County Birds By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 1111 D1Ur Pllllt lllff U.S. Agriculture Department inspectors are expected to move into Orange County ' this week to kill pet store birds and poultry flocks in an attempt t() stem the spread of an ex()tic· fowl disease. "Depopulation teams" were already al work in Los Angeles area pet stores to- day. gassing canaries and parrots af· ft icted with Newcastle's Disease, a spokesman sai d. A special control center 1et up in Riverside will be a base of ()))ll'ations for the team which are scheduled to visit pet shops and poultry growers in Orange, Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura Counties. All of these areas are within the eight· county federal quarantine area which im· posed last month to eradicate the Asiatic virus disease. The disease affects the respiratory systems of birds and is not considered harmful to humans. Chickens die of il within a day or two, according to authorities. Flocks founrl carrying the disease are exterminated and the owners paid the market value of the dead birds, Agriculture Department spokesmen said. The number of pet store birds that have already been destroyed ill unknown. One newsman said he saw several birds killed by carbon dioxide gas Sunday at a Los Angeles pet store and about 100 birds -ranging from small canaries and parakeets to large parrots -being held in cages at the rear ()f the shop, ap- parently awaiting destruction . Officials advised owners of pet birds to check with veterinarians about vac· cinating their pets against the disease "'hich broke out earlier this year in the Fontana area. They said birds with the disease display cold symptoms -fits of sneezing and gasping for breath -and diarrhea. About 350.000 chickens on JOO ranches have died alone in San Bernardino Coun- 1.y. More than a million chickens are eK· pected to be destroyed in an effort to halt the: disease. Spokesmen from the poultry industry say their loss from the disease i~ now running about SJ mill ion a week. No infeeted nocks have been found In the other three coun ties of the quarantine area -San Diego, Santa Barbara and Imperial, according to the Agriculture Departmenl spokesman. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIC 3, 1972 us BASE IS ERECTED SO RICHARD HENRY DANA MAY AGAIN VIEW DANA HARBOR Br~nze Statue Will Be Placed Permanen tly During Unveiling Ceremony April 28 April 28 Unveiling Set Richard Dana Siatue to Welcome Mari1ia Visitors By PAMELA HALLAN Of 111• Dl.llr Pllel 1111! Richard Henry Dana will return to the harbor he immoMalized in his classic "Two .Years Before the Mast"' on April 28. The bron7.e statue. created by John Terken of New York. will be permanently set in place during an unveiling ce1"emohy at 11 :30 a.m. in Dana Point Harbor. 'rhe un veiling v.•ill be preceded by a public receplion for the artist at 9:45 a.m. at the Quiet Cannon Restaurant in Dana Point. Tickets, available at the door. will be $15 per person or S20 per Couple. All funds will be contributed to the Dana Memorial. Les Remmers. San Juan Capistrano Historical Society member who tlas spent countless hours rai si ng funds for the memorial, said ()n]y $4,000 remains to be collected. The statue. Which was cast in bronze in Italy, cost $15,000. Other expenses, in· eluding miniature statues sent to the histori cal sociely by three artists who vied for the honor of creating the Dana Memorial. have placed the total cost of the project-at between $20.000 and 125.000. A pedestal and concrete stairway have already been constructed on the island at the end of the bridge in the harbor. The statue, which is still crated. ls being cared for by the Orange County Department of Beaches. Harbors and Park!! in their warehouse in Newport Beach. Remmers i1aid Kenr:eth Sampson, director of the department, will be ,master of ceremonies for the, unveiling. Other participants will be Mrl!. Charles Swanner. a distant nieee of Dana . ~·ho will do the unv"eiling, and other members of the Dana family who will be present. "We hope the statue wilt become ·a!I ~·orld famous as the Litlle Mermaid in Copenhagen, Denmark ," said Remmers. "I'm sure everyone will be proud of it in the years to come." Thousands of people have contributed to the Dana Memorial and , many will • have their name engraved Qn a speci;i l plaque to be placed al the foot of !he statue. Remmers said a guest speaker v.·11! ::id- dress the group attending the ceremony, but a firm committment has not vel been made. · Cl1arlie Chaplin Returns After 20 Years in Exile NEW YORK (UPI) -Charlie Chaplin, filmdom 's beloved iillle tramp. relums in triun1ph today to the country that tumed its back on him 20 years ago. Chaplin. who made his fortune in Amer· lea but wound up in self·imposcd exile in Switzerland because of taxes. politics and women trouble. will be feted in New York and in Hollywood , where the Acad· emy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will prese nt him a special Oscar on April 10 -the date or his 8Jrd birthday. Accompanied by his wife. Oona , and son-in-law Nicholas Sistovaris, husband of his second oldest daughter Victorifl , Chaplin ar rives here tOOay for a fi ve.day visit . He will be honored Tuesday at 11. galR ''Salute lo Charles Chaplin" al Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. Purchascri; of ti ckets for the evening. · during which two early Chaplin films, "The Idle Class" and "The Kid ". will be shown . include Mrs . Ethel Kennedy, who recently suffe red a broken leg but who promised to attend; Paul Newman and Jo..1nne Woodward, Johnn y Carson, John Hay Whitney, Leopold Stokowski, Otto Preminger. Norman Mailer and Paulette Goddard, Chaplin's third wife. Chap:in . who will not hold a news con- {erenceJ:hite here, plans to make a brief statement at the Tuesday affair. Ma yor John V. LindsRy wi ll host 1he Chaplins. who win stay at the Plaza HQ· lei, at a Thursday evening reception al Gra cie Mansion, the mayor's residence. during which he will be given the Handel Medallion, the city's highesl cu:tural honor. On Friday, the Chaplins will fly to Los Angeles for the Osca r awards. The Chaplins, who have eight chi ldren and live in Vevey. Switzerland. left the United St~fes in September, 1952. Trio Questioned In $212 Millio1i H ~i1i Seiziire Candidates Discuss Pot ~ Sailor Injured; Fell Into Rocks Off Dana Point A young Navy man from San Diego suffered a concussion and cuts Sunday afternoon when he fell onto e pile of rocks beneath Dana Point. AJACCTO, Corsica (UPI) -Police to- day questioned two men and 1 woman ar· rested In 'connection ~ith lhe world's big· gest heroin seizure -835 pounds worth $212 million bound for the Illicit U.S. market. One of lhe arrested men was identifitd 1111s Louis Santoni. 40, 1 Corsican residing In Pa'fis picked up by police when he returned to his home vi llage Sunday for an Easter vacation. POttce. mainlalotd silence on lhe 1r· r sts, bul sources nid lflfy were part of 110 investigation into !he M111rch 1 seizu re or the heroin encased l.n ce ment in a shrimp boat capturtd near .Marseille. It was the blggtSt haul on recori:l In the 1tepped·up w•r a9ainst heroin 1mugllng to the United States. ' The vessel's ()WTltr, Marcel Boucnn. ""'as formally charged With drug 1.ral· fie king. Laguna Forurn Hears Vieivs on Le galizing By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL 01 IM Olllr P!llll llfff Four Laguna Beach city council can· didates' views on t~ legalization of mari- juana took the spotlight at 1 gatheri ng <:alled 1 ''campaign boogie." tt was staged FriJay night by council candidate Beth Leeds. Responslng to a question on the sub- ject, incumbent City C o u n c i I m 11 n Charlwn &yd said: "I don 't think you wan{ a wis hy-washy answer and I'm not going to give you one. After 1tudying the lssu,, yes. I thlnk marijuana should be ltgaliud." An oppoilng view was offertd by in- cumbent .Roy Holm who commented: "I don 't think mariju.n1 should be legaliie<I. •• Noting tbe l1rge number o! young persons packed Into the Am erican Le:gion llall . Holm added : "This may be the wrong place: lo say this. I've' never sm oked marijuana, but J'm giving you J1.n honest Answer." Mr~. Leed s, who sponsored the rock mu sic dance and candidates for um. said sht, tqo, would.. h•v<>r legalizing the drug. ''I've Deen to j111\I for it." added ~!rs. Leeds. referring to 1 ma rijuana (!('1!1~ viction of 1970. "I ,don't think there '! an)'thlng wrong with marijuana whclOOr y()u're smoking it at home or driving down the slrttt. ~. 1-con't "WlliHill-tt'1 legal," said good. I can't wait 'till It's legJ.l.u gald Mrs. Lteds. "I don 't think 1'm qualllled to answer the quc slion, '' responded a t ~ o r n e y • Richard Carr. "Not all the inforn1ation is In yet." 1'he question. posed by one youth In tM aud ience. came at the end of a riuest:o!\- and -a nswer session with four czndidi:ites. Candidates Fran Haller and Harry Lawrence were not present at th e gather· ing. Each ()f the candidates 1gre!d that the Ma in Beach should. not be t1 91r""ki14'? lot thls summer and praise was given i'l plan by Mrs. Leeds to create an open air art festival .. Thi s plan is now under study b. the city staff. · "We are very near the park we h,a,vt1 all bofn1r~lng totr"t~. Anything short oI thal is inadequritc," lk)yd told 1:11 group. ''Now th11t we have tom down the bulldln~s. lcl'1 create. a paradi.s~/' said Mrs. L<eds. /, Harbor paliolmcn said Kerry Michael Beam's injuries were apparently minor in lhe spill which occurred at about 1 p.m. Authorities said 1he serviceman had been walkin~ on the rocky shoreline with friend s v.'hen he lost his footing . Initially Beam lapsed into unconsciousne~, and temporary paralysis, and his companions carried him to a sand y stretch of beach and sought help. Beam recover d qu\ckly. however. and was released after emergency treatment 111 South Coast Community liospital. Pets Die .in Fire SAN PEDRO CUP!) -An arsonist set fire. to a pet hospital Sunday. burnln~ to death more lhan 20 anim3ts. moslly an~s. lnvestigat.rs said Lhe San ·Pedro Animal Hospital had been l!prink led with ~l\sollnfl and sel afire, doing an estimated 5250.MO damage. • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS l{itty Hawl{. Pla11es Hit Re<l T1·oops ~\l f:iJ~ ~1·r1 1 -The ;-iircrall ctirr\rr h .t t\ !1:111k . rr('allcd frnrn lihn re leave io !ht• Ph1hpp1nE's, arrived ()if Vietn"m IO- d;1\' <111<1 11 s 50 planes \vcrr ordered into :ict1n11 1n1n1rd1a1ely againsl Nnrth Viet· 11.1nu·.~1· ;1r111'ired rolun1ns \\.'hich ha ve dr1,rn !5 iullc~ 11110 Soul h V1f'tnan1. \ sr(·nnrt c:1rr1cr. the ('onstell;ilinn. "'RS tlrd1'rrd r1·uru lrave in ,Japan with the gu1drd 1n1ss1ll· cruiser OklahQ_ma Ci~y to joi11 '"o o1hcr carriers on i 'an kee Sta- tiun . It would be the grt'atesl concentration of U.S. naval might since end of the born· birlf.: hall in J9fill_ Thr l\1tt y ll ;n.,·k sped to 'l'.111kcr Station frorn Suh1<· Bay after the U S. co mmand \1•;11·111-<I H<1nu1 it would lnke "prrcau- i 1nnarv :n·t11111s'' lo prnlN't Arnericnn 11 \l'S 111 South \'irtna n1. Surh "':irn1n~!! in !hr pa~r ha1 1• .preceded hf':l\'Y bombing offl'n siv rs <1g;i111st Nor1h Viet narn ·rht' fo11r carriers plus nir fnrce fl,llhler· hornbcr~ h<iscd elsC¥·hcre in \11elnam ;ind 'T'ht11lnnd 11·ntild enable tht lln1tcd States In !(f'nd a.~ many :"S flCXI planes aga1ns1. the ('rirnnltHllSt fhrccs. S11u th \'1c111a n1esc Prrs1d•·nt Nguyen \'n n ·rhiru sirippcd Sa1Jton. Hue ind Da ;\anJ;_ of ;ill hut their ~a rr1~n forces lo- d;i y and flew 10,000 government lroops to Qua ng 'l'ri tG try to roll back the Com· n1unist invasion. llanoi Hadin reported that North Viet· namcse antiaircraft gunners shot down 1 B12 bombing "popualled artas" just north of the Demilitarized 7.one. The U.S. comrnand in Saigon denied the report.· 'l'he Cornmun ists hold the north ern half of Quang Tri province just belOw the f)~l Z ;ind front dispa~ches sa.iJ Quang Tri tit~·. the nearby Quang Tri base and r o11g Ha were undrr heavy attack lnnight. Qu;ing Tri is 15 miles south oC !he OJ'\·lZ, Dong •la about 10 miles. A new threat appeared to I>--developin~ to Hue , the ancient. imperial capital of Vietn<1m , but officials said the s1tualion was unrlrr control. Con1munist atta cks 11•erc rcpurled Rt f·ire Base Anne. 18 mile.~ west of Hue, and Bastogne. 15 miles to lhe southwesl. Both bases protect ag;iinsl Communist infilt ration routes through the A ShRu Valley to Hue. devastated in the 1968 Tet offensive. A South Vietnamese spokesman said the reinforcement!! flown in today would mount a counter-offen sive "in a few da ys." They included marines and range rs fro m S,..gon. infantry from Hue and tv.·o tank brigades from Da Nang. The y were flown nortl , in a collection of U.S. cargo Ci30s. Vietnamese air force 1.r11nsports and airliners commandeered from the government airline. The action followed President Thieu's flight to Hue and Da Nang in a com- mandeered Air Vietnam jet to look over the sit un lion. Ra in clouds have 1nasked the in vadln~ North Vietnamese tank columns dr iving across the Df\.1Z but the weather im· proved today and U.S. and South Vie t· name.se figh ter·bombers struck back at the Red offensive. B52s dropped bombs throu gh the clouds earlier and three U.S. 7th Fleet destroyers. off the coast pounded the enemy troops and tank!!. Orange Coast \fe ather l\los tty ~unny skies are · on the. itgcnda for Tuesday along the Or<1nJ.:P Coast , wittr sllgh1ly cooler tem peratures expected. Highs at the hceches around 68 rising lo 711 • inland. Lo"'S 45--5.'i. I NS mE TODAY A f t dernt ClrJC'flCI! ocknoio- lrrlge!I it ouerlooks a ra t or mo14~C pellet in cac/1 pint of 1cllct\t. See Page 8 for gu1delb1e~ "" hoic muc~ ft/th the nr1encw cottsider! unavoidablt attd to/er· able ht your favorite food.$.. l . M. l •r• 1 lt•ll"llt II c.11~111· , CllHllltll )l-lt c-11:1 II C,_$l~ II Otllfl N1tlct1 It 1•l1trl1I Pt •• t l11IH"lfl11mt11I U ,."'"'' , .. ,, lier ltl• llttc1,.. tt itertKtM U ll.1111 Llll .... I II "'11 .. 110 " Nll~I! N.-, f °''"" c~"'' '' .\•llri1 !'"'1'tr II '""' , .. ,. llMll Mlrkt!1 M·ll T t11•!1flfl 0 ,.,,.,,.... , , Wt•llltr f Wem111'1 i<j1w1 U·l- w1rlll NtWI • • • • :l DAIL'!' PILOl SC • Summotas Aides KOT Proxmi1~e 's ·No Match For Old To111my T1~oja11 Nixon Huddling On Red · Thrust NORTH VIETNAM Ry GEORGE LEIDA!, Of 111• 0 1U1 Pllfl ~1•11 S07'1E 1''E\\'SROO.~I "'AG recently suggested Sen. \!:'lll1am Prnxn11rP (0.Wis.) might be ha\linq more troubles with his head thsn hP bar,1taincd for ajnce his recent h•ir transplant . · Proxmire. it i;eems. ohjf)C~ to lhp US. Dep:irt1nrnt of Transportation fr ivolously fr1 1ier ing 3\\•ay hard-ea rned tax mnney promotin~ Transpti ·12. ~le particularly directed _11 barb at_ Orange County's entertainment entrepreneur cxtraord1na1re -one Tomrrf'; \Valker. \\lalker grar1ously responded tn newsmen's Inquiries with an e:tplanalion. \\/hat Proxmire didn 'l kno~'. appar- ently, is that \\7alker signed a $.'I0.400, lhree·month C"nnlracl with the government to convert what "'as expeclE'd ro be Lt1DAL a losing proposition into a moneymaking, balance-of-pay- ments boosting , inlernational SPfCtacul.ir . After only eight days on the job, \Yalker increased predicted admissions lo lhe tra nsporation extravai::anza by some saoo.ooo.. ' FURTHER. as director of lhe Pr~Bowl halftime show last .January, Walker worked a ISG-second pitch for Transpo '72 into the televised hoop\n. He figures that's worlh about '70.000 of nat ional television air tin1e. if the government had to pay rnr it. Obviously. Proxm ire h;is !ill.le understanding of \Valkcr's foothal! back- ground which dates back to his unusual career as Tommy Trojan. drum major for the USC marching band. Yes. Walker -the enly varsity letter bea re r in USC football history "'ho never played a second of foo tball -nevertheless is one of the SC football greats. Standing a not-so-frightening 5-101~ and weighing all of 147 riounds. Walker, as band leader. held for a year the Pac-IJ conversions sC<>ring record, in 1947. "I LED THE band into the Coliseum wearing a drum majnr oulfil ovPr my football uniform."' Walker explains. Then. as th~ team scored A Louch- down, the SC equivalent of superman would strip down to his jersey. run onto the field and kick !he extra points. I ~ Needless to say il took a liUle gut~ I.ti get out there. on the field without , kouider pads or any other of !he usual proteclive equ ipment other players 'used. Pac-8 teams have never exactly enlisted a bunch of pansies and Walke r recalls some rather crushing moments. Now , the 49-year-old Walker is rushing in lo bail the gove rnmen t nut with program revisio.ns tn make the $5 million Transpo '72 venture a i;uccess. The whole 300-acre exh ihifion at Dulles International Airport near Washin~­ ton, D.C .. is bein g put toge ther on one---fourth the lime the Sear.Uc Warld's Fai r was organized. And. it's only six times bigger than that worldly wonder or human achievemen t. . _ If Walker's reC<>rd at USC, fo llowed by 12 years as entertainment dircc'tnr at Disneyland and a string of crowd·pleasing spect~cular~ ,in~ludin~ !he an- nual Rose Bowl f atriotic Fourth of .July. Show, continues. 1t s Just !•kely Sen. Proxmire will wish he hadn't tang led "'Ith the former Tommy Trojan . As for the S30 400 contract, Walker notes lhal 's less than hi!i ul'iual fee . The Pro Bowl paid ' him $19.000 for a 20-minute show. Transpo '72 runs for eight da ys -May 27 to June 4. • Two Men Perish In-Fiery Crasl1 TIVENTY·NINE PALMS <UPI\ -A Camp Pendfeton Marine and a 11 oceanside man were identified Sunday as the victims killed in a four -car crash near here Friday. The San Bernard ino coroner's flffice said the Marine. Ricke y J. Van Boxcl. 19, and Watson Su mner, 22. Oceanside. were westbound on Twenty.Nine P a 1 m s Highway when they collided headon v.·ith lwo eastbouna-c ...... . A pickup trUck cra shed into the wr eckage. settihg lt ablaze and lra1.1ping the two men. Two Riverside residents also were trapped but were freed Q.y passersby end hospitalized. They were identilied as Jane Paula Pyett, 31. and Roy Daniel Johnson. Yosemite Park Fall Kills Teen Santa Ana Stab Victi1n Critical A Santa Ana cab dr iver. vict im of a slabbing Sunda y afternoon , is reported in critical condition today . \Villiam rJawes. 2Z. of $00 \V . :lrrt St., wa ... waiting for a rare in fronr of Sanra Ana Community Hospital police i;aid. when he goL into an :trgun1cnt wirh another m11n O\•cr parking ;ind was stabbed ln the left side. The assailant . who fled . is dr,scribed a~ a ti.1exican. American. about 30 ytars old, "'ilh long black hair and a i!O.!ltce. Oa11·es wa.., treated al the hosp1t;il':i; emergency center and held for obscr1·a. tlon . i\1essage BEATRICE. on High Neb. (AP I -Th f' \~'ASHINGTON tAP \ -President N1 x- nn .~ummonrd a spcr1al foreign po!lr.v p;inel 1otn i;ess1on tod ay to analyie and pre p11re options for possiblt action tn rope with the Commun i.~t thrust in to South \'ietn.i m. But the Wh11e ll ou!e spr1kesn1an llia lrl the Commu111.~t push ."Outh of the demilitarized 1.one "'ill nnt hamper cnn- tinuinl!: schedultd "'ll hdr;i wal of U.S. lr()()ps fr o1n 1nd<ic h1na. "Ou r \\'ithdra \\'al pr·o11;ram is 1111 schedul e and "·111 be met ."' deput y press 11ccretary Gerald I.. \\larren said 1n re~pnnsr to a question. \\1ar ren sai d Nixon asked I h ,. \\'ashi ngtnn Special Action G r n u p (\\ISAC 1 to meet because lhe No'rth Viel · namese thrust was •·a matter of C<>ncern • 2 Flood , Plain Parcels foned For Residences Two chunks ,of acrtage. both of v.•hlch partly lie in a flood plain. were approved for residential zoning last week by the San Juan Capistrano City Council. One was a 29-acre parcel off Del Obispo Road "'hich is 1,500 fel't from the Capistrano Airport. The approval was given for a prezone for a planned development by \Yestport Home Builders 11·ho intend 10 annex to the city. Voling against the pre7.one was Coun- cilman Jim Thorpe. who said he "couldn'l vole for a prez.one that migh t be a safety hazard under some con· ditions." Thorpe was referring lo the proxim ily of the land to the airport. Jay Wilcox. co-owner of the airport, said there was no pro blem with safely or noise, but if the land is developed !he homebu vers should be told there is an ti irport ihere and an air-navigation ea se- ment should l>E' granted. The council also apprn1·ed inn ing or a 40·acre parcel off Ortega Highway next tn (ianado Road. The council voled 10 reione the unclassified properly for com- merc1<1l. multiple-family and '"'o-family residential. Approval was gr<1nted. but any plan.~ for de1·e/opmen1 in !he flood . plain will hR ve to conform with standa rds sel by 1he council. counl.1' floorl Cnntrnl Oistricl, and county Oood plain ordinance. Councilman Bill Bathgate said he thoug ht I.his was being "ton hard (In the ' develnper " but \'Oted for lb!:" ~conditions nonetheless. De valuc1tion Made Official \VASHJNCTON fAP \ ~ Presi· dent Nixon mt1de the devalua1ion .of 1hc dollar offici al today , siiznin~ leg isl<1tlon ri'lil'i ing the value or gold from S.1S 10 S.18 an ounce. This change in !he gold con1cni or the dollar. the rirst since 1934, amounts 10 an 8.57 percE'nt increa!!e in gold 1·t1!ue. or a 7.89 peicenl Jollar devaluai ion . Actual!~·. !hf chan)ill" wit! not of. fici.illy lake effect until Secrerar.v of the Tre.:isury John B. Connally no1 ifics officials of the Interns· Ilona! t\tonetary Fund. ... lo the Adm1nis!r;it 1on and lo the Pre11 1- dfn t " ThP f rnup, hradPd by president.Lal forr1i::n aff;urs Rd\'ISf.r Henry Kissinger, inclurles n:prescn!atives o( the Defense A11d Srate Departmen!s and the Central lntellige~ce Agency. It i:ienerally is called Jnln session Jn <'fists situations to ana lvie de\ elopments and prepC\re options for 'the PrPsident. ll'arren refused to discuss "'hat ;ictions Nixo n n11ghl order . lie indicated. ho"·c1·l"r. that lhcre is litt le likelihood Iha! t.: S ground forces \.\'Ill be com· rt111t ed. ~ay1n,: 11•hen asked about ground forces lhat "our policy is unchanged.'' As the President "watched the situa- tion \'er.v closel y," Warren said he met \\'1lh Kissingrr and Adm . Thomas t\ioorer. chairman of the Joint Chiefs or Starr. ;:ind conferred by telephone "'ilh Secretary of Stale William' Rogers and Secretary of Defense Melv in Laird. Al his last ne\VS conference March 24 Nixon said lhe U.S. comrr1ander in South \1ietnam, Gen. Creighton Abr ams ;issu red him that South Vietnames~ forces would ~·ithstand the offensive. Asked ~·hether Nixon slill is confident , \Varren responded that "cert-ainly-the ap· praisal still stands." ~\ean"•hHe. lhe Penlagon also indicated ~nda~ the remaining U.S. ground troops 1n Vielnam would not be used to reinforce beleai::ured South Vietnamese forces bat- tling the Communist offensive. Spokesman Jerry \V. Friedheim said the six remaining U.S. combat maneu \'er batlalions are committed to the securilv of U.S. installations and are not in1'olved in the action. Supre1ne Court Ruling Favors Uu:ivecl Fatliers \r1\Si{l1'\C:1'0N I AP 1 -Tj'le SuprrmP Court !od.Ay ruled . 5 lo 2. !hat i;tates rn.1\' no! au!nmal irally lake awa~· !he childrrn of unwed falhers. Oct1 ling w11 h an appt'al of a Cht<·a.c o n1;in, the court said a na1ural pa rent - 1n<1le or femal e -shou ld have a chancr. lo pro ve his filness. "It rna y be. as lhe slate ins1S!l'i. !h1t most unma1T ied fathers are n<'cll'l'tful parents," said .Justice Byron R. \\'hnc. ·• .. but all unmarried fat.hers are nnr in this c;:itegory. Some are "'holly su ited to have custody of !heir children.'' The father. Peter Stanley, Jost his 1hrrc children to the slale of Illinois upon thr death nf the worn;:in \\•ilh "'ho-n hr ha<I been living . on and off. for 18 year~. Stanley appealed. claiming hr harf nrver been sho"'n tn be an unrit parcnr. ,Justice "'hi!c s;:iid !he illi1101~ la1v violates the 14th Amendment l:if'c;;.use it discriminates against unwed !athrr_,, In Illinois, un\\'ed mnthers aid marr.ed fathers -whether divorced, 1\·it1n1vrd 11r S<'para!ed -are presumed fit to raise thei r ch ildren "\\'e conclude that as a m;11 111f ,)f rtue process of la \\', Stan lev ~·as l"nt•1irrl In a hea ri nl.! on hi s fitness ';is a pt1 rcn1 bcfo:·e his children werf' laken fr nn1 h1rr. ;i,1d that by denyinjl: him a heanni: ... !he stale den ierl Stan te.v the equal protec'inr- of the la"·.'' \\.hite st1id in the maJo ri1·1 opinion . i\lost states are believed tn 1 n1 pn~c si111ilar barriers to un111rd fathers -re- quir ing them to prove the ir fitness if they "'ant lo re!a in their chilclren. In Illinois. these father.~. inrludine: L AO& • • '-----J WM.I.• Reds 011 Mo·ve Nol'th \'ictnarnese troops have overrun the la!il 1"10 government oul· po11 ts of a IO\vn lo gain co ntrol of all but t\vo major cities of South \'ietn<1m's northcrnmo~t province, Quang Tri. :\s South Vi.etn amese 'solrt icr.~ retreated south. Co mmunists stormed throu~h Camp Carroll anrt ..i)'1aj Loe bases, from "'hich U.S. advisers were evacuated just be· fore the .11ttack. Cyclist Nabbed i11 Mesa 111 Sex Captivity Case One more Hessian mntorc~•cle ~ang mrmher. so ugh! since a pair of Nevacla i;trls spilled R sickening story nf sexual c;:iptivity involving forced p e r \' er s e pll"11sures for 17 men and women, "'as captured Salurclay in Costa Mesa . The arrest of Kenneth R. :·Varmint" Ba1es. 27, of 101.1 \V. 18th St.. and that of a Cypress woman affiliated with the outlaw cycli.~! j!'ang brought to !iix the nun1ber in custody. A mass arraignn1enl "·as scheduled lh1s rnornin,1:: in Loni:: Beach f\'tuni ci p;il Court ror other defendants linked ·to the hi;:nrre abduction disclosed Thursday, "'1th !he Rrrest of four initial suspect s. Bates and the sixlh suspect. Bella ''Taro'' ~lorris. 29. or Cypress. are rharged wilh suspicion of kidnaping. fnrc ible rape. sex perversion and assault y,·11h a det1d ly weapon. Ident ical char~es are faced by AlbE'rt t:uiter. 31. of Garden Grol'e. plus Richard R1zzone. 2R. Linda ~1 . Bagah1. 2.1. and James E. Alan JV. 39. all of Long Beach. Curbs Proposed On Ph ys icia:Qs' Metha<lone Units \l.'AS HI NGTO:"l lli'Pll -The ad- n1inistralinn prnposecl today to bar doc- lors from running their own methadone programs for heroin addicts. It also announced new sland;:irds to, keep the synthetic narcotic away from persons under IR. and rn lighten record· ker pinl!: nn it s distribution. Thr proposals and other 11dministralion cffnrts ;:iimed al better controlling 1neth11done. 11·hich eases addicts' craving for heroin, \\'here dra\1•n for thE' \Vhite Hnuse Special Arlio.n Office for Dru~ Abu~.e Prt>l'ention by the Food and Drug Adnlini strat ion. The standilrds "'ill be published this 11•cck in the federal Register and com- ments mRv be n1ade ;ihout them fnr 90 days after' '>\'hich they may be pul into ef- fect -possibly with some revisio ns. Alan is nwne r of North Town Custom Cycpe Shop in Long Beach -\\'here the inili<1I rai d was made -and reputedly in- ternational president of the &o-called oullaw cycle gang. Teams of Long Beach cletrcl ives led by Sg1. Jim Ra cnbs are still hunt ing" !ipecifically named 11uspect~ among Hessians allegedly involved in the lurid case disclosed by the Nevada victims. The pair. 19 and· 20. said they were \'isiling Long Beach "·hen on F'rida.v. ~larch 24. they met a group nf cycli11ts at a har and were in vited to gn for A ride. The joyride. 1hey said, turned into s ri ve-day ordeal of horror. Riding lo Alan's motorcycle shop. lhe women claimed the y \\'ere repeatedly raped and finally for ecd tn satisfy the sexual 1rhin1s of n1;ile 11nd female ll e.~sians throughout the per iod of cap- t i\'ilv Bf~l inp;s were in cluded in the brut ali ty,' according to the girls who "'ere finally released on the condilion they promised not lo go !o police. One said she "'as forced tn keep house for the cornmunal ere"'. while a $econd claimed she was put to work dancing topless in a dingy nightclub. M is~ Morris, one. of the lv.·o 1Rle.~t ar- restees, "'as taken into cu11todv 11t the club in Bell. "'her!" she Riso dRnCcl'i. Lnng Beach police ;iccompanied by Costa Mesa detectives picked up Bal es locally on Saturday night and he "'as im· medi;itely re lurned to Long Beach for booking into jai l. ln\'esti,::ators said thev rrcrivcd an anonymous lip on where' lo find Bates after lhe story broke. Felony charges in adrl ilion lo cnunls nr kidna p and rape includ e forced sexual re~inns "'ith Hesl'iian cycle gang mem bers. males and females included. Cou11ty Assessor In UCI Lawsuit Oran.1:e Counly A11sessor Andrew J. YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK IUPI\ -A ·Fresno leen.eger plunged 200 feet !o rus death wh ile climbi ng without ropes on the east side of Yosemite Falls. park rangers have reported. Clifford Thom pson, 19. was <'-limbing with his brother How,rd and an uniden- tified person when he fell late Friday afternoon. essage of ·rasfer was carrie in an unusual manner Sunday by a class al St. Paul Lutheran Church. The c!a.~s rcl{'a S· ed 250 balloons with the message ''Jesus Lives." McGovern's Comments Slt1nley. Could lry to adopt lhe <._.hildren . But Wh ite sald the y are treated "not ;is a parcnl but as a stranger'' during surh proceeding~. "The food and Dr ug Administration co ncurs that diversion and medica l misuse of methadone ;ire pntcntl;il danger11 and that stro ng control must. be maintained over !he distributi1Jn and use of the dru,g." 11.n FDA statement said. Hinsha11• h11.~ been accused of improperly taxing teased computer equ ipment at UC Jrvine in a ·la wsuit filed in Superior Court h.v the regen!i; of the U.i iversity of California. The complaint demands the refund of S6.47.') pairl unt1er prntfst by the rP.gent! la~t .June 17. It is pointed out in the AC· lion tha l the equipment on whi ch the as· l!f'ssor IPvied taxes is not owned by the un ive rsity. Chief Ranger Jack ~forehead said the climbers had gone abou,t 300 feel without ropes when the mishap occurred. OMN61 COAIT " DAILY PILOT 1"1 Ot inte Ct"I OAILY P ILDt . ,,.u,, w~ttll '' <D,,.,C•n•a l"t Ntw1.P•1u. 11 11Ubli1llfd bY 1~! O•*ntt Cout PvtiloJll•'lt Com1""Y· $11141· ••<t •d1ll•1~1 t•I Pllblilllt<:I, Morid1'f' 1~<0"'911 ~r•day. •o• Co1•1 Me••. '°'"""°'' lratl'I. >lu"''"11ln• llr&c:" Ft111n•1I" Vallr1. L•llll"' lr•tn '''""°'~IOdltblCI\ Ind s~ .. (lf,,.,tn!t / S!" Ju •• t u1•1lf1no, ,t.. 1Tnqlt re111otul ·~" "" • ""011111.a ~1t11•d1y1 and $~ncUy1. : ... Dr••CiPll PUDI'•"'"' plant II .o JJl'l W•il ~·· S••tt!, (111t1 MUI , (ll1!t)f,.11, 'l•I•. • Rob1rl N. W 11rl '"'•'Cltnl '"" P11Dh1"1• J1tC II C u•!t'f' ~ ·1 """"''"' 1'111 "''"'''l Mu••;u l ~., .... , '(,, .. ,, (d•10• T~o ..,11 "· M u·,o~in1 ·~·"lg "I (d<'Of Ch11l11 M. l 1101 Ri t~•·cl '· N~ll A\l•l'l •I Mt'l.llflng Ed IO•I 5• c1 ,,,..~,. Offlc • ~ 105 No•t~ El c,,..;~o R11I, ,J,72 Ot!itor Offltft C0t!1 Mrit l)ll Wt!! l t't' $!••'' NtWllOrt ltJC ~; l1lJ Nt ... ll&f! 80U~Yl•d ~lf~ll"flOf! flett~: 111/J flllC~ flt\fltYl f. LI Oll"lt lt1tft: )JI Fort\! A"wtllt T ... ~ .. (71 4J &42o4J21 Cluelfi.4 .t.4,,.,tlll .. 641-1671 See Ct.1t1e11N All Do111on"tf11tt: T•'-!llfl•M ••1·4421 Co11yrlff!f, JflJ, 0111n91 C1111! P11t1!lsft!111 Ctl'l'IHny, /Oo "'"'' ~ro•I•) J llu1111u,,.., .Oltorllt tNlltr o• •ll"''''''"''~tt 11,,.1., ""'Y 1111 r1t1rOdutM Wl!~•lll l lH(l•I M' "'!IJ/O" el ( .. yrf9f\I IWlll •. S-ct,.,. clt u llO''''' Pt ld 11 Co1•1 M•i~ ttrr,..1111. S11b1tfle11o<1 "" ''""' 11 u "'Clllllll•r br "'111 ll U l'llO""Ur, "'-h!1 •,. 0t111,..r1t111 Q 1J ""''"~'' I Raise Pri1na1~y Question 8,\' !iiTE\IE f.ERSTEL UP I Pollll<1I Wrlt1r hlll ,\\"A UKEE. \Vis. -A perhrips cosi - 1,v mistake by Sen . r.e-or,(!:e S. ~1cGo\'ern ridded to !hr conru~ion rind . uiq:crtain!y about the oul CTlme o( Tu es d a y ' ,; \Vlsccins in'!i pres1t'lcnl i11I pnm11ry in "'hich f\.1 rGO\'ern. ll ubcrt H. Hun1phrey and Edm und S. ~luskie bartfrd for firf-1 pl:i rr_ !Sec related stor.\', Pai;!e 41 In a n11lion"·ide lrlecast Sunt1:iy. \\'ilh the primary '"'" d;iys a1Y:iy , ,\·lrGo\'trn charged Sfruritits .:1nd E:i:changr Com. mission record s showed Iha! lnternA· li onal Te!ephonr fi nd Telegraph, Inc. dedu cted a $400.000 con!ribution 10 !he Republican natlon11.I convent ion frnm ns taxAblt. 1n('(l mc . i\s soon as the progr;im 1 r11cr thr ~:.­ lion -C85 1 ended. a rhslr:i•u,E:ht a•cle rushed to ~tcf.overn lo lcll him hP 11·a~ wrong and th.111 the 19i l ri"por1 w11h thr 1'F.C -the year 1n \\'hich lhP contr1bulion ""1~ made -i..ad nol-bee n flied. McCr<lvP.rn then said th at hi~ arcusath"tn , was made on the basis of s lalemcnt~ by !IT officials th11t thcv ronsidl'red 1: A proptr bus1nr~s e..;pcn~e. He Ir.Id reportrrs that he had made i.,.n hGnrst error ,. ~1cGovern, Hu'n1phrr and j\lusk1r Arc considered the three leAOjng aandidat s 1n Ifie \\lisronsln primary Wit h ils ric h harV1!$1 of 67 dclcg.etes to the Democratic National Convt:ntkln. About 1.5 million vot"'rs 11 r,. ~>:pertcd !tl turn out Tursd'Jy for thr fou rth pr1ma i"y of the 1972 tlttUon rrar Alth;:iugh :i.icG1\'ern hn'i In rctrrtr ' """ ( ' • accusation ap;ainst !TI. he held to hi.!! sec- onrf ch.::irp;e -!hat ITT pa id no federal t~YPS for lhree ye:irs. Pnding in Hl70. 1 But the AssociatPd Press .!laid today src records sho"· ITT did p11 y laxes in lhnse ~·car.) He al so sa id tha! the North Victnames€ nffcri!iiV(' rcinrorccd his rall for a tntAI \\'ithdrav•al anci added that the Uni'crf st~tes shnuld stop providing ntll:tar,\' aid to South Vietnam . The three m8jor contenders are hell<'V· rrt to be bunched ~o rlosely lh;it ~l cGov<'ni's in\'alid accusRtions coi.:ld be-come a fa ctrir. even thou,l!'.h none of the other cilndid.ite.!l jumped in to exploit them. CampA i~n s1ratri:iis1~ fnr lh<' r1tn· cl 1datcs hrtve ~ied A\\'RY from labbin,c: the finish. cllln,I!' the uncertainl .v of the-vo1c for Alrtbama 's Gov. G~rge C. \\'nl!Acc and the possi bilit y of a mass c:r11s~ov!r by Republicans. f.OP voters ha\'e Prr.~1dent Nixon nn the ballot alnn-" "'ith only Rep. Paul N. ~icCloskey of Californlt1. who h11s pulll'd oul for l~c.k of fundli. llnd Rep .. John )of, A!hhrook of Ohio. """°'has not can1- pa l1tned in \Visconsln. Also on 1he Ormocralic ballot 11nd cam- pal.i;t1ing hard arc. Nc\Y Vork Pl1avnr .John V, !Ands;iy and S'en. Henry M. JAcksnn or Washin~tnn. On thr ballot bu! not CAmpali;:ni"ll? .:irt 1lcps Shlrll"y Cb.isholm. of NP\v Yr.irk, \Vllbur ~!ills nf Arkanlia s, Pa tsy Mink nr H11 wa11 . ~la yor Sam ''orty of Los Angele~ anrl srn. Vsnct Hartke. ~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Justices William 0 . Douglas. \r1ll •am J . Hrrnnan .Jr .. Potter Stewart an d ThurgoOd ~1arshall joined "'ilh \\'hi!e to form the majcirit~·· The administration is not certain how many addicts are in methadone treat- ment program!!. Elect DOM RACITI as your Costa Mesa ·' DOM RACITI City Councilman HE'S CONCERNED WITH THE CITY OF COSTA MESA ••• WITH ITS l'EOl'LE· ITS PROBLEMS ••• ITS CHALLENGES. AS YOUR CITY COUNCILMAN DOM RACITI WILL SUPPORT: e EXPANDED METHOD OF CRIME PREVENTION e 300 ACRE ECOLOGY PARK e CITY WIDE CLEAN UP· CAMPAIGN e TIGHTER CONTROL ON CITY TAXES e TRAFFIC CONTROL DOM WILL LISTEN-DOM WILL WORK DM ...i fef91• wffti -.,....114,... • .. .... Raciti-Last On The Ballo~t -F,.,.irst In Civic Concern Campa ign H11dquortar1 at 1140 Newport llvd., Phone 64S·1360 or 541-1313 • l • ' I ' Turkish Trousers \ Born for Stardom Uy LAUrtr>: B~CKLUND 01 tl'lt O•lly l"IM! $1111 Con!iiider a nonilna tion for top athlete or the year: A noted track star, she was top money-winner in her age group last year and leads the firld this year after grossing over $100.000 in jusrlou races. She runs the mile in about a third the lime ,Ji m Ryun did when he set 1,he \\'Orld record . l-ler official ti?he in the mile and an eighth is lrss than 1:48. But chances are !iihe won 't C\'er be considered for the Ii· tlr. r..·laybe because shE•s young, black and female. 1\fil\'be because she has a fun ny · nilme : Turkish Trousers. ~taybt! because she 's a horse. Yet the four-year-old filly ''1s better than a lot of athlete/ii because she doesn't talk back find l!iin't al"•ays asking for a raise." quips her . trainer, the "·or ld-reno"·ned Chsirlie WhltUogbam. Whittingham, a no-nonsense veteran with unblink ing blue eves and an o b v i o u s rfsemblance· 10 Yl11 Brenner, has been working with 'J'urkish Trousers since she was a year- 1ing and re~d ily acknowledges his top filly has many of the personalit y quirks or a distaff star. "She has verv much a mind 01 her own a~d. won't f\'er hes itate to kick -or bite lnr that mBtter -anybody who comes near her. She's got a lot of fire." he sa ys. "8111 she 's very intelligent. From the mom ent we saw her ""e though! she 'd be good. ShP isn 't the prettiest filly I've Against Jones Trio Unser, Gurney Vace Shootout .... ('\'er seen -dcirk bro.,..·n, almosl black -but she just looks Hke shl!' can run ,'' the trainer sa ys . As the daughter of $353,422- rarner Baghdad and La Cen· linela Slakes winner Nas- M11hl;1Purkistr'l'tousers born athlete. She was bred in Kentucky and reared i n Pomona b I!' f o r e being transferred to her present home at Sania Anita by her o~·ner , Mrs. Howard B. Keek . ''She was very easy to train ." Whittinghan1 recalls, "she never had any problem \earning hoW to break from the gate or relax in a race. She 's definitA?ly the best filly l've ever trained.'' It's been more than a year since Whillingham hired Mary t.1eglemre of Long Beach as his first fem~le exercise rider. t.1 iss Aleglemre feels she know5 the Olly well. ··1 feel li ke her heart is big- ger than her whole body sometimes because she tries so hard," the young rider set vs. "!l's like she want s to be able to do everything. OAJL V PIL OT J 9 111 Oly111pics ... • Iha Asses ·e · l::J.S. Cag~ Cl1an ces DA,'TON. Ohio ~A r\ .. You are In trouble when you don·t get your b<ost ath lete/ii," That's the assessment nf thr. United States ' cha nces of pro- tecting its unbeaten record in . this sun1mer's O\y1npic Gan1es e1Ball t.:nmpctirio11 tro: m !lank lb;i , this n111 1on's Olympi c baskelbal! t'OlllP<'t•· lin11,. fron1 Ha nl( Iba . t hi~ na- tio"l'!i Olyn1p1t ba.~kf'tball e03ch for an unprf'C'f'flPn!{'rl thirrl lin1I'. Th e fonner Okl;il11wna SrATf C'Oat'h has a rl raslic /iinl uhfln In h;ilt tht prns ' ra1d1111.• 11f l'fll· ltJ:f' t<tlrnt ;ind <"fl"l1nc 1h1( ('(lUnlr~· C>lyn1p1t• prf1,J)('l'1', "Thr p.'lrent/ii of a yn11111:s!r1 ~hould ha,. t' 1.1 :;11:11 ;i guaran!rr rhnt hr 11 ii! rt1n:i1n in st'hrocil fnu!' ~(';ir, "·ih:1 ~lie J;t'Slt'rl , "Peoplr 111 th1:-c·t1\U\lr\ arr ~n ei::nlislif'aL" Tht• 11u1n \l'l]O coached 7fi7 c-nllr~r 111innrfs sairt "Thry just think you 1·a11 i;:o our. nnd piek 12 ,l!ood players and b::-<1t thr \.\nrld "Those d;i ,\·s 11rr ~one \\'r're liahle tn realt v ca!ch 11 find j!C'I bt'.it 1n 1\luni(·h." hr s111rl 7·2. 6·10 and 6·9. Braztl is load· ed 1.1•1th speed. \Ve must ha ve a ta ll and speedy team. That'• a hard matrh." Iba will st11rt selecting the U.S tC'Am when lhe NCAA. AA U, SA i . Rnd Armed f'o~tcs combine to srnd ~ candida tes to the fLnal trials .lune 12 at Colorado :-;prings, Colo llr 1s upM>t \1·1th the &CAA: 11 h1c·h \1111 not pe rm it high ~c·h·1<1I ~rn1nr~ to attend thot t)l.1 mpir~ t;imps r_;ich su mmet .1n<I has mt1de undercl<1ssmen t;ihon for tht All·star game 1n ;in Ol~•mpic ~ P.=tr ll"lr the firs~ 11n1r . "\\'e ha\ r enough troubl,. \1 1th the prns v.·1thoul ou r owti P•'"ple undrnn1nini;; lhC' Olym. prr proArsni." Jb;i said . The Olyrnplr <'Oach rnake~ 1l clea r he's not hoisti ng a "'htte llct i.: fnr the U.S. squad , ho1.1•ever. "If "'e'd happen tn ~et another Sprncer II a y wo o d f1·nn1 !he lun1nr colleges, arid !he AAU 11nd Armed Forres prov ide thr talent they did tn !!lli8. we'll do \\'rll ," Iba says. llay\1'nod helped le1td the l ni ted St;itr/ii to the Olympic titl e four yca(s ;igo. Former Yttle m r: n I or • l'\F.:\\I ''ORK IAP ) -If lherP is a re<1I shoolout in rha 1np1onship auto rt1cinR this 1·eiir. it ''erv tikel v "'ill be bc11.1·ren Bobhv Un.Ser and a lriumvirate of ex -cht1n1pions lhal includes his brolher. Al linser. Parnelli Jones' new dri ving trio of At Unser. MRrio Andret· Ii and Joe Leonard . Together, United States auto Club driv· ing title fi ve times and the rich Indianapolis 500 three. limes -in a row. Not only I.hat, the.v go into the 1972 camp;iign with murh financial backing from two prime sponsor.~. Vire. roy cigarettes. and Sai!"sonite luggage. "I "'atched her personality change when she turned four. She used to be a playful girl of three, but now that she's a "'oman of four she's much more erode and ill-mannered and even has to be attended by a pony when she walks out to the rack so she "'on't kick "\\'p <iirtn•1 e1en ~('! OU\ of the s;iddle in rhr l':in·1\n1 (;<1 mes last \'f'<lr ( 'uh<1. a ne\\·con1 er. Ix'~! II~ 111 lhr ftr~I round \Vr 10:-1 In Yu~nsl;i\'1a. Brazil ;ind Ital \• 1n the 1!17D \\fnrlrl ( i;i nlt'S. ,. 'Iba {'001 IJIUPrl. Hn1.1•ard Hobson. "'ho gy1de.Q.. _ !he East 1n the All·Star game, Bnhhy and his car O\.\'ner. px.driving gre;ir Dan Gurney of Cosra Mesa w;int in lhal w.i.v. And fhry insisr the odds aren 't as bad as they would apprar on the surf::i ce "I'm drawlnA a bead on them. no doubt about that .'' Bobby st1id recen tly. "With all the money they've gol. they could 1\·in 11 all u n I t' s s so1nebody sleps in 10 shoot 'em do"'n." Unser. 39. "·as speaking of AJa111ito~ Har11ess Entries Liit Al1mlloJ ~lr,,tu ,,,1rte1 lnr Mg,,C11y, delr & 11•1. f'l,sl ,.,11 I p.m, If E11d1 on ht r•~•. II lfllCll o" itft 11111 ti~ 'l (tt. ~!llST RACE -Ont ml!t Po<•. (l•.mlnt .loll 1g•1," "nn•Wl,,nor 1ln(• Morrn IO, Purst l!,5(IO. Cl1lmln1 pr"t 11,,00, Wt11nQ• Etrl IG l ""qnl Flrot IPlpr•s•lo" !l,. l•cos••l )t t(V [)(i!s '"••II• !G H1rdft , M~uv Dell CJ Mlll•d .llr.,,b•D l(lno !G. Hnltt Su1le's C1rol !A q,,,,,.,al Mp-\0-Heo!h•• !4, Wll'OOtl G1v vr1u J ToOcll SECOHO Ill.CE -Onf' ..,,,, P1•• J "''"' elds .. undp•, "'llO•ns Purse 11,IGI)_ MtPI~ "4;11'• Ac!or ! J l.IOllO"C", "·"'"•Prim'"" !O, C•cn-1 Good llei;n (0 oloc~•rmonl .. ~ .... y Paco IJ Wi·~-.~· Su"'"'"' fle11 uty <T Aftrhlnrd1 81•<.k w~v IG l!l•m"""'I ladv 0~1w1,, IC. J•cot>i l 5~'1ne Fovnr !IC M1vn1rdl TMllO llACI! -Ont molo Port Cl1l..,lnc All •O••. non.,.,!~n•r ,i~c• Mllrch 10. """" "·"'o c111m,no 11rlct 11,SOO C•r•l~ns F"'' (I! J Glllll •nl Emm8 S•u,.rl (J. M~hnrlcll) L11•Jle "'"" IG Lnnoo l l"raniK•n 4". Roc~11lo! G 8!"' IL. L•co•t•l ~kv i.old !~\. Sml!M' Ooct~r Vnnt1n (J. f <'><Ml • M••dllW l'1l•nd IF H•vfl•n) l'OllllTM RACI! -On• "'l!e. r • .,, (!11 "'11'1(!. All 1001. "urs• 11.100 (lti..,lng Df1cf 11.SflO. o.,R11·sDe('to1 !G ,..0111 """"t r Win•l 1na11n o,.o, (L l..•t•"to\ ~l•nr•mo ,,.Ir !O "<~''"'""' D-vl"n C•!<h 1r.. i"'••t•llo\ Al!llfln \to•lfnr!I J 10 M•voi:~•l •rovt l• IK Corln•l l ~. l ~crl IT. 81rto-:i•J Fll"Tlf 114CE -o .. ~ ml!t ,..,, ~ v•or n103 & und.,, no"·wlnn•r ol 1 r•rtt. 1.1"° flla•blt 1 v~11• o•d• & """"' 111•1 h•W nov•r won 1•.t'OO {NW·ll rurs• 17.600 ICa,,.,:, l!I. Tucci (A. l!•"ou1111 Wtt l!l<ll••d 0 !L 0 1u11,...1 !Iy o l!lvt ll•autv IJ. O'l!i r:~n) Hurr,1no •~•,,•v !J B•fl•vl ,..Hit o~~wcod IJ. TDddl l!ltry ltl(hfrd ,,,.. Smltll l Mtn~'< M•n r J Don,,l•I l!XTM RACI -0"" mll•. '°'(•. Al! IOf'· llOfl·Wfnne:r 110.000 In 1fl1·11. Al<O elfolble nofl·Wlnner 11 7.~ !n 1'11· 1tn '"'' "'' non·wl"""r 11,6(11) 11•11 "'nnf\' In la1t l 1to •h P•orie S!,000 P•r~on1lil¥ 10 . At~•r"'tnl Pht11nl• llv rd U . Cr•n<l 5.,,,. TM (J. MOl\Drlch) Mv Ot!\le~ lJ, 8alltv! Pocr>tr Orlve fG. Lnnonl GO<WI l(fnQ (I.. 1,.,.co•t•! t uck Ou1our IJ K•1m•ler) Sen!~ Sii~ PC. M•vn1rdl 1>op1>trOrlvo fnd Good Kin~ art un. fll""'"" l~r w•p~rtno 1>Ur11Mea M!v sf'VENTH ••CE -One "'llt Tr"' 1 yc1r 0101 & t•nde•, "on-In....-ol. ISCO tirJI mnnev twlct. Al•c o!IG;lll! 1 v•4r lll!I' .. Unclfr thfl htYI ll•"lfr WOO" 111.onii lh~I 1rt flO"·wlnNr 11.500 .flrtl -v ,1nc1 M~•c~ 10 1>11rl1 il.oOll. Mqll'f' O'Sl>e• IC. J1cobsl Luml1 Atf!ot. IG. Loooul Sir 01l•1• IJ. Ornrl'll Lll,M re. w'lle•t•rl ~1,1, fJ. wnu~ml Pr I $wt't1 kl Mtf l 18 M<ltl llon>M T11» IE. S!•w1r!I 51•!ol" !II. wltll•mtl . llGMTH llACa -Oii" f"!lf Pott•. !!UMV Tlmf !R. Wlltl11Ml 11.000 (IKllll"'I Ch!1t IA) !O. LOllQn\ 11.00ll TAYior C~ek llAI J, \toll1r11l 70,000 C:lltnct &uller tit J Glll!l•n l l&,Ot!O OlltnOlllt 10fl9 (G. Holl! l&.000 '1 Frtl'ICI, P, Ad lo' CJ 811t1YI U,CllO Suri 8Dt•0 IJ. Wltll~m\l ll,000 11\llldV Tln'll tit Wlll11mol 11,000 (.,cnvma Cill1f lAI !G. L.Ol'IOOl 1$_.ClllO li~•or CrNlc OAf IJ, \tallaro f 10.000 " ' 1A _ G. Lonoo trall\HI tntry NINTH llAC• -Or>I ml!•, l"1t t (.lilMlnti. All ll!ff. f'urM 11,500, TOii -tl~Tl'lllfllf ntltt Sil,3SO. COl'lllft OIAl'Mflll IJ Taddl Hi~ &Yll'I' Ot. \tillltl ICtyl Allflft !fine IJ, Mlllfr) "They're going In be tough," Gurnev admilted. "bul "'e are further along in our develop- ment progrim than ,we have been in fi ve years. and I think "'e h;i\·e the machinerv -and th~ dril'er -to give . them a run for the money. The lnser-(:urnc-y firepower \\'ill come fron1 a screaminf? Eagle I u r b o c h a r g e d Of· fenha user bu ilt by Gurney. t.:nser drovr it to an unof- fici al 196.9 miles per hour in tests at the 2.5 mile Ontario specd"•ay. before qualifying at a new lap record of 141.99fi m.p.h. for the one-mile ova! at Phoenix three ·weeks ago. ·lie \ron the J.)0.-mife race, first of two. w;irmups before the USAC co ntingent reaches Indiana polis May 1. Then. e<irlier this wee k. the oldest of the Unser drivers bolled around lndy·s oval Bl 190.8 m.p.h. Jones didn 'I h;i1·e his new cars ready (fir the Phoenix opener. but plans to introduce them at Trenton . N.J .. April 2:l. Early tests al both Ontario and Indianapolis ha\'e pro- duced speeds over 180 m.p.h. (iurnev's cars have never !arkt'd f0r speed. In four years on the USAC circuit the Olsonite r:ag:les. 1\'ith drivers Gurnev and Bobbv Unser. h;i ve Y.•on 10 of 27 face s. Not nnly tha t. 1968 Indy winner Unser look Gurney's cars to seven track rec0rds last yea r anrl \V3S either on th e pole or in the front row for 10 races. But he won only two of them. "Our trouble was finishin11 ." Bobby said. "We never lacked for speed. It \Va5 the little things th.it kept us from win· ning. We're starti niz new this year. ::ind we're going to be heard from ." Pro Hockey Standings eo•tnn New Vo•~ Ma,,t•eal Tcrnnto Detroit 8ul!elo V1ncouver Fifl•I Sl1nOi,,•1 11!:111 Divl1!on WL T Pl!..Gl"GA S<1 1) 11 11' l)O XII 0 1f 13 lot l!I ,., 4~ 1• ti IOI 301 XIS l3 J1 1. ·~ 109 701 11 .1S 10 76 ?'t ?~) U •l It SI l'0.1 ?It XI SC I II l'Ol 1'1 W11t Olvl1lo" C~l,~oo •6 • 1 B 107 l~ lM Mlnnt)G!ll 31 1' 1' M l l1 n1 51, Louis Jf! 3' 11 A7 2t'llt 111 Plll5btn 9ft 16 Y H M Jl'O J51 Phllldtll)l\(I 16 ,\Ii 111 M l'OG lll Ctll•ornl~ 71 ,. 11 60 11' 111 Los A ~lts 1" " t ct 1°' Jt» S111t(f1y'J •1s111l1 MO!'!lrtol 6, New York J ft OSIOll I , TorO!'!IO ' 1!11/llollto l . Phfl•delP11l1 1 V•l'IC~ 1,,M!nn1110ll 1 cr.rc1qn 1, Oe•rofl 1 P!ltsburOh I. SI. Loub f Otilw games K~UleG. SIGMA THREE FREE: AN ISTIMATI ON A IURGLAlt ALARM FOR YOUlt IUSINISS ~'CAl:i.-557-5333 t.I D,fl)tU ('9; wuu~"''' '""'"" kl!fl fJ, v,11trt1I ,..O!f\!', l(!o CR J, Glllol•"I .o.llu Ltlir1m '1J Willl1m•I In Iner !G ,..Oii) J~ for ln,.rrn•tlon "Y i•';=====~ J1• ... ' • anyon .... Miss Meglemre sa vs. -----~C~H":A~R:_L r~e:_w~H'._'.IT."_T.'_l'_"N~G~H~A~M~~W'..'l.'_T~H'_T~U~R~K~l'..'.S":H:..T::[Jl~Ql~u~Si~R~S".:.·--====-As horses go. she's not very tall, just about 15 hands. She has unusually small feet and has to be specially filled for he r aluminum shoes because the wait of her foot is so thin, \Vhittingham explains. She she has the uniquely feminine hab it of losing shoes frequently he says. getting a new double pair about every 25 days. She prefers white tilankets and wears only the best of En1?l ish saddles. ....., She also is acc ustomed to on ly the best of riders: Billy Shoemaker is one of the fe"' jockeys 1.1•ho is able to ride the filly 1.1·ell bec;iu~e she is so dif· fict:lt to control, her trainer Sa \'S, Hut perhaps the 1.1•i nner or the $100.000 Siinla t.1argarita ln\·it;itional !-1.indicap al Santi! Anita March 4 and ac- cumulat9r of about $300.000 in less than tw o years deserves !he best. After all. the obstinate fill.v h;is adhered 10 a train ing schedu le proba bly more rigid than anv human athlete ever has anfmpted. Her day begins at 6 a.m. v.·hen she is run around the track ror about ha ir an hour bv an exercise boy or girl. Anerward she is given a sponge bath, followed by a 40. minu!e walk arou nd the stable to cool off. \Vhittingham is the only lrainer at Santa Anita v.•ho still uses hot-walkers tpeople i In lead th e horses around as they cool dov.•n. The other trainers attach the horses to a metal devi ce called a mechanical \1•alker w h i c h enables the horses to move around by themselves. Then Turkish 1'rousers g()('s lo her groom. a ma n known as Onofre. for an alcohol rub to stimulate her circulation. The rilly has a slightly arthrilic knee and so metimes is Riven a heat trea tment called dia· pulS(', which is also used in Orange Coas .t Has Hex , - On Gaucho Baseball Tearri 1'here's little doubt that Orange \..oast Col- lege "·nuld like to play Saddleback a few more times this baseball season. The l\.\'O teams have pla yed four games this season with OCC on lop on every OC· casion. And "'ilh the exception of the first Aame score 1 4·2 ~ the rest ha1e been rather lopsided 9-1. 7--0 and 17·6!. Saddleback is in the thrOPs nf a 15-game losing streak "'ilh no relief in sight. Al one point in the season Saddteback's Gauchos "·ere ago. CRAIG Sl/EFF 2·2. Bul lhat was 15 games "\Ve '\'e got some out standing freshmen players. but v.·e just haven't gnl the depth. especially in the .pitching department." says Gaucho co<ich Doug Fritz. Pitching is the name of lhe game in base. ba ll as Fritz is rinding out. * * * Speaking of v.·h;immies, Cypres~ has one on (iolden "1est. The Charger~ have beattn coach Fred Honver's GWC Rustlers rour lim es this basrhaU !iieason end there 's :iitll l t1.1•a meetings left. Cypres/ii , "'it h a 17·5 sr:awn nlark, ha~ out- scnrr.d Golden \\''esl . 26-9, in the fnu r tilt~. But the Rustlers trail Cypres~ (the Sout h· tro California Conference leader J by ju~t one game. lb us thos' crucial. * fi nal two cont est~ are 1 <'ry * * OCC and Saddleback can begin mak1n1-t plans for next baseball season as both are already out of their penn;inl chases. Coac h Barry \\fa\lace 's Pirales ha vP ;i :'I !\ South Coast · mark . tra iling Cerritos 1fi.01 ;ind F'ullerton (7·1 1 by four games. The '"'n South Coast leaders bang heads lhis Fridiiy at F' JC. Cerritos hris a 2f>.3 season recnrd \\'hile 1'"ullerton is 23·3. S;:iddleback is also four ~ames b;ic:k in it-: conference race. The Gauchos ha\'e an 0-4 f\.1iss ion mark. * * * California's .JC basketball si ll·!'lfft r!I did r:x. trtmely well In th e recent national AA L' lnurnment, reaching the 5emifinals before losing hi thr. Armed Forces All·!llars by just Jive poi nts. That's quite an acC'Omplishmenl and 5ay:ii a lot ror jun io r college bsi 5kttball in the 5tate. Plaudit s ta c9-Cilac ht!'I R<1rne y Newlee (Chaffey) a nd Sid Phelan fS an f ranr.lsco CCI who had only five day1 to prepare !heir 5quad fo r the tournament. * * * Saddlcback Collei;:-e defensive back Bob McNamara who still has anot her year ri f eligibility, has been drafted and will report to F't. Ord the latter part of May. * * * Saridleback assistant root ba ll coach. Vi net McCullough is si candidate far lbe San Joajuin District board nr lruste:es. Ht'i run. nl ng against eight other candidates . Din11er Se t A rea Sports Cale11dar hospitals. She has a breakrast or For-De11a WN"IMllY !April I) · h I 30 d lh l!o•leb1ll -Miter Oel 11 51, "~ul stra1g l oa s at 10: an en l•flflll -51n Ol~IO M•s1 •I 0tl'11P (Mii !ll. 511n-Olt90 CltJ Co!'4!•1 ti I k h (l:1JI. sett e.s bac in er roomy A tesrimonial dinner will be T.,,,,ll _ ~nnv H•11, ,, Newoo•1 UC Irv,,,. f} . .10!. The U S. coach /ii;t\ !i fnrPlgn 1·c1npelll 1nn ht1!i b<'corne so !ill1d this counrrv ~hou'ld he n1o re lenient tO\\'ard future lough ht-c<1Ust" <Jf n;ir1n;inl pr~sl. h' k On , h Id he bl l""nlS. lhal U''"' lllOrc.lhatL50 l 1n 11 ~ s nu a e ~ h u:i,t.. • -loplay ahrr hf' hires ;in a'lent garnes ('~r s11n1 n1t'r · h Iba said 6-foot.JO Brighani and. s1g~s a.rontracl, rig t ur, ''oung center Kresimir Cosic, until his .first pro grame, "'hO ·plays for his nati ve Hobson said. \'u~o:;!avi a. !old hin1. "\\'e playt'd 52 Aames h:ir k hnn1e l<i/iit su mn1er. Co<1ch. l'\'f' pl;iyrd n1ore J:l'l nl('~ r I) r Yul!OS!<ivi;i th;i n ynu'vr 1\'0n RS a c·n;irh. "llf'!'~. th;iJ '( ITifll'f' lhtlrl 700 ,c:i1nrs," ~:i1rl 1h;i , · I'm "ornf'rl ahoul ht~ !llf'fl thr Ol~·mp1r ro.ich 1·n11 t1nued "ThC' Ruli:;:111ns l?O ;.4, Qu ar::Y Bid s F or Ch a-n1 ·c At 'fitle Bout t.1ike Quarry, hoping In lanrl ~ hout \1·ith 11·orlrl rhiimpinn Bnh Fns!rr. ta ~cs 11n San Fr:tncisrn's Chuck H::irn11!nn in the 10-rnlinrl nff.T\I 1na 1n even1 1onigh1 at ThC' F'onu1' Qu;irry, 1\•ho JUSI tu rned 21, sports a 34·0 rPcnrrl whilf' scoring 10 knockou1s. :\I.in;)~. cd by older brothrr .Jerry. Mike captured thr .Vurl h American iight-heavy11"c1ght crown from Jimmy Du prre last Oc1ober i,1 Anaheun. Mike is rt1nkcd num ber t11n in the light-hea vyweight A1111· siQn by both WBA and WBC. He is tistef'I as a 10.6 choice over Hamilton. Hamilton qua:ified ror this fight by scoring an impressive knockout win over high ly.re· gardcd Amado Va squez three weeks ago in Sa n Francisco. The ex·sta te champion sports a 28-9 mark and holds victories over Terry Lee, Richard Steel and Ronnie Wilson. The JO-round lelevisinn srnli· m;iin pits C.lendale 's Mike Ni;;;. on against hard punching Art Davis of San Diego i" a mid· dleweighl scrap. This shapes up to be a !or baltle as Da\•is scored an u~ set knockout v.·1n over N1xnn two mo n th s ago in Long Beach. E111 er son, Gonzal ez Defeated ~li\CO,'I, 1:a -F:ngland'1 ~l ark Cns cripturr'1 the S25.000 ~1:icon lntrrnauon.11 lrnntJ tnu rnan1cnt singles champ1n11· ship Sunda y, defeating Rnv Emerson of Newport Beach. 6-3. f>.7, 6-3. The victory, which earned the 21i-year-n:d tenn is pro $4.500 in first-prize money, came after a referee's error cost Cox the second set Of the match. The referee inadvertanrlv ga ve Emerson a point hf' had not e.irnC''I . "'hich :i llowed htm lo win rhe lie·brcaki ng play. off in the SC'C'Ond srt. Neilhrr pl.i.\f'r rccoJ:?nlt.ed the error unrlJ JI w;is Ion J,11r, bul Cox's fi •. 1 \'1ctnry tn lhfl third srt rr::is ed any question of viclory. Emer.~on ~a111f'd ;i measure of re\'f'n~r whrn hr team,.d with Tom Okker In defeat Co x and Gra ham Stll "·eH in the docbles final. 7-6. 6·2, #•attt•fttf lltfll"S HO"lli ICONG Mol A<>dtr'IOn el Au•lroli• wn•11""" I w'"'" Ptntho Gonr••~1 al Loi An91lts ... ), ....... t. !od1v 1"11 won I~• men '1 1!nllh 11111 ol •~• Hona Kont 114rdcourt t111nl1 c1l1m. PI0111hln1 Jln~e•snn. b•e11~'"'" G 11" 1 •It r' Sfr~lc~ ·~r iv '" ••(h '"'· r"'Uln"'1 !trvlce Drlw~r!ully 1no 11•0¥1 brllloen!lv !ram tht b•Stll"• l11difl H'h t< Lut.•n-. 1"0••-lncl•• 11<'1! C•vlll" I" d!IUbleJ Sun01v •M "'"" tll• '"11 roun,i molc11 In Int E•<I z.,.,. Oov" Coo GrouD II ••nnl• C""'~'"tl"" l'~t llo.Jble' tr ·""'~" 11• Jlod•i!'!J Mukher!•1 •n!I ,.r • ..,1n l•ll over Ctvl11n'1 "'""'4'" "lnln '"" I>' ICum•r• •-J. ~) ~ 1 ~•v• 1...,11 l.O ,,.., In H11 btsl ol !lvt mfl '<". stable for a five·hour siesta. held Fridai• night sit lhe Santa ll:U i. At 3·30 she eats her b1"g ovmn11ncl -coron11 11•1 M•r ,, · Ana Elks Club in honor nf ••serious meal" of the da y: a former Se,,,,.1, Hi"•h head loot-Son1>r1. Nrwoori •• A "•~• 1 "'• Davis ha s done mosl nf his A1H111n -Cora"• a-1 M•r 11 Fou"· fighting out of San Diego and ,.1,, v1uev. Lnt A11"'11M '' cost• is a 19-4 as a pro. 5_.."1 JV ... "1. Puor•• -"ll<ttY ed . f h " L•~•wood 11 Fou,,111,, \t,ii.v. \t1lfl'IC•I warm mi xture o mas . ba l: coach and sithletic dire<:· 11 w111"''"l'•r !111 •' J:u1 Oaf.S, Sweet feed and liqu id fle Swlmmln1 -Anll•el"' 1! Hun1;"11!nn vitamins. Twel ve hours later tor George na . 811tl'I. Wtlte•n •t M1.;,,,, unlvt•1i1v . A no·host cocktail hour is ., 1,.11oun1, Tustin Al Mlt!IOt'I Vl•lo. Son •he ,·, awakened by one of ''•m•"'' ot Foo1n111 (111 "' J,15 ), • · slated from 6·7 o'clock. with ·· Whittlngham 's 30 backstretch N•woort ·~ .. ~~~';'~":!.';.1:·~~1. employes <exe rcise riders, dinner being ser ved al 7· Trick -F"""'"'" veu•~ "' Coron• r D l Servile for lhe a•• Mor, Eols<1<1 11 s" \11+11,, E"•"d• hotv.•alkcrs and grooms ! or ena was a 11 Magr.o1:1, 1..0.r• 111 Hunu,,91on another ligh ~ meal of oats. last 13 years berore being sue. 81•t11. An•1111m 11 M•rln1, s11n11 ""' ded h lo mer Mi ssion Vie <1,1 N,wll0rl,,Wt51trn It Wlst"'ln,i~r. Surely no human alhlete cee Y r · · vi!11 Pirk 11 Mlss10,, vr111a. K111.111 •1 wo"ld choose to adher e to JO grid ;i1de Chuck Gallo and s.,, c•~mtni., cost• Mt.\• u Los t h I Al1mlla1, l..11un1 81 Kh "' ~""'I {111 such a training I.able. he'll be return ing. o 1~ a ma •1 J.1,1 k. h maler Anahc1n1 lht1 h -11u111tt -s.c1r11e11•ck •t cn11111v Su r e I y Tur IS Trousers -· -. . ~ tl.JOl. uc 1rv1ne ,, univ. 01 ''"a11nd• horses around Jess with her next fall as a grid assistant. 111 M•.••· 5~"11 •n• v.i,,v '1 t:oh.,.,, Undefeated heavywcinh1 con. M1onoll1 •• Etl11ricl1, Hun11,,.1on " R••~ 1t 1..oo11r1. An1netm 11 M1r1n1, tender George Foreman will "11!Wport 11 S1nt1 An1, w11tm1,,s11r 11 fi ght Buffalo's Vic Brown in w.1itrn, \tlt\t "••k 1t Ml1!.lon 'tfll llf, k K•te111 ,, ~1n c1em1n1e. P1tH •t• •• the main event 11 wee. from u,,1~e•1Hy, sonor1 •1 .L••11"1 Be•c~ ton·ght at The f orum l•ll II l !I,), GolOtn Well ., R1o Hondo i 'J . (t :»i. Tickets are priced at $6 and 1'1<11.., 'Gunt•• ot ~. "· t•~ •nd SI•" S"'I!~ ol &t• > C. • Wfln "'• llnalPs th1mn1"" t~• C '""• HltAPn ''""'' To· '.nn•y °""'1, Gunler ~ ~m•,.,•1 1111• m•!{h by !ur"i"l •~n101r Cll•i1 Ev1rl, For! l..~1111· ri1 ... I. ·~ Smith, tht Nn. I r•I"' rl ~Ytr In lhl Unllttl S!1!f1, W•I l!t•'" bY (l1r'lo; Gr1ebn1r, 11! Ntw Yor-A \ f..+. bllt i !lll U11l1hMI "" IDO ln tne rourld rDbh1 Gy"'n11Ut1 -Go!lle" W111 •I LA $4. ' ., •• !)or fll. 'riiiiiiiii~~"!!iP.P.~iir!9~~~n~~llli Ttnnl' -FounlA•n V1lltY •I C0t,9n1 ~·I M•r. (DS!A Mt•• •• LD\ Al•m11DJ, ea1son ot S•nt1 ""' V•lltv. E•t•nt+• 41 Moonn!I•. l,.g,or, •t Huntln1ta" 8tKll, M1r!n1 •t -'"th•T"', S•n!1 ....... ~· N•won•t, Wett•rn 11 W•s1m1,,,1•r. MIHoDn \lltlo It Vl!l1 1"1rk. S1n Cl•..,Onl• 11 .. fltlA, U"lv~••llY II "1cllic1. L11111n1 fl•1c~ •I SOllOt'• (11! " l .IJ), Go!dtn W•I! II L ... H1rbor mtn's corrir11!ltl.,.,, sport than m a n y human Reservations are $fi.~ per m!~~":1;'1;~1;;rt~~11~a•11 '°"''''"'' athletes do with theirs. person and n1ay be made.1;;.~;;;;;;i;;;;;_,_,_,_,~~---------;;;.'71 Surely she deserves al least through the Servile Booster ! th M a nomination for athlete of the Club at 1952 \"l . La Palma·1 Meet e an {,:101 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC S ElCLUSIVE NEW CAR year. Ave .. .Anaheim. 92601. I Behind the r . CAMERA REPAIRS NOW IN ORANGE COUNTY GENERAL CAMERA REPAIR A IRA.NCH 0,. •INIRAL CAM llA, PASADINA fl\r1ory trained ll't'hn!i;ia1!s-P3clory !'111.l'ls t•MIRA S • l"ltOJECTOtt:$ • IXl'OSUJtl Ml fEltS AUDIO \t!SUAL e $0UNO . RICOltOl•S FU LL YIAI GUAI ANTl l 12444 CHAPMAN GARDEN GROVE .HARBOR 4 C.HAIUJtAN""""°nP_tr1Ut.-South-0f. Disne-,vl11nd 631·1622 Safeco Smile. Y&chllni;:; llRbilll)' covcrap:e. at UI> In 1" n( wh&I you ma y ~ pttyin2 nn"'! Smile, You're With Safeco.-. I -BOB PALEY ~ 8AFECD tN•UAANC• 474 E. 17TH STREET COSTA MESA 642-6500 -546-3205 • 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE WoRRon t y At No E Klr;i Ch '''9" '°I'' & l •~" o· • I ' ~ .,, I I' • -. !0 DAILY PILOT 5C File New W-4 Form ·Now Luxury Bug For the man who \Vants appearance of a luxury car and econon1y of \'olkswage11. Ivan Segal of Ph1ladelph1a ma y have the n1ach1ne for you He redesigned stand· ard bug using smaJl-s1zed ve1 s1on of classic Rolls Royc e hood He hopes to market converted automob1le idea Unit Elects R.F. West Roy•! F \\1est , eng ineering director for A5 soc1 a ted Engineers and Pljilnners nf Newport Beach has heen elected president of 1 h e Orange Countv Chapter of !he We,stern Mob1lehome Associa "'° tion Associated Eniineers 4500 Campus Dr . de s 1 g n s mob1lehome parks Margaret Hod ges of Treasure Island mob1lehome park 1n Laguna Beach was elected corresponding aecret1ry All'io elected to the 1972 sla!e were Alvin Edwards Ranrho Fullerton vice prcs1d l'nt \V1n Devine Plantat1on Moh l I e Estites 1n Anahe im, treasurer. and Diane ~1cCalla Emerald ll'ile 1n G a r den Grove. recording secr etary RCA Sal e Told NEW YORK -RCA Corp sa ys 1t will sell Its Video-com p elect ronic photocom pos1t1ons and typesetting sys I e m s business to Inf or mation lnternat1onal, Inc ()f Los Angeles LEGAL NOTICE IC!&I JUl'lll lOll COUllT 01' THI. STATI 01' CAL l,OllHIA ,OJI THI COUNTY 0' OllANOI N• A "'" NOT l(I 01' HIAlltNO 01' .TIT10N l'Ol •N e l Oll INSTlUCTINO I!)( lC:UTOlt TO l!)(l'l!Nll I STATI l'UNDI TO llNIW NOfl. E1t•1t 111 LESLIE JI 8ENSON el$11 t 110W11 1$ L Ill IENSON Ot<tt ,ed NOfl(( IS tiEllE&Y C.IV!N ll'l~t WYMAN ( l(NAl'P Eittuto• o• 1111 Will el 11\f t~11v• 1'18mf<'l ""'"ll""' "'' 11tt'd lier.in • 1111111on ffl• 111 """' 1"11•ucllM• •Nl Glrt tllnt Hit E•K11t11r tll a1Y !•om tv!'ldt 11 ,1111 f1lt lt to renew 1 11•1>'l'Ol1~r1 Nltt t•ttllTOd CY tllt ll•C•,fn! I~ 1111 hfllllftt, rt ftt"'<t Ill IO/~!c~ It m1~1 tor f\lrlllilr ••rlic.11t1rt •l'IO 11111 1111 "'"'' t"41 •l•e• tt1 flttrinQ rhe ••-h111 D1•11 '" 101' AP"I IJ 1')J •I 9 )II I P"'I 111 '"f (...,•lrOlll" OI O..t t !,.,.,1111 "11 ) 111 1tltf (Ollft, I I 10ll C1YIC C•nt1• D1,.o Wti! 111 '"' City o! !111tt An1 Ctlllor"I' Otttd Ml •(ll JI !tit 'NILLIA.M I It ~Otill (ou~•y (lt rlt 101,li ,,, GILL NllllltT l ITIVI NI HI hllfll OUvt '1 , IUllt Ill LOI AllHltt. C•llllt'llll t11eu Tth (IU) 111401 Alltfllrfl fof l attui.r Plll llfl\td Or1111• Cou + c -IV A1t111 ~ • 10 un "" .. LEGAL NOTICE il'l(TITIOUI IUSINISI NA.Ml ITAflMlflf follo'll'l~• "''°" 11 001111 bu1l11t11 • In Hig h Gem• Women Have Say In ~ Glioosing Car By CARL CARSTE NS EN 01 tht 0111~ 1'1111 Sitt/ Some of !he nation s n1ost ' representative w1vr:s readily agree !hat the husband makes the final decision when 11 s l11ne to buy a new car, but that the wives play a big role IJl fram ing ground rules - with an eye to econom y And somewhat surpr1s1ngh·. the seK which s!resses the c!o11et space in the home doesn l emph asize trunk space 1n the car Such v.ere some of the find· 1ngs 1n 11 recent poll of wi ves "ho were fina lists in the 19il All American family Search Entrants in lhe ann ual search for the nation s most representative fa mily \\ere sc reened according to crHeria establish ed by the soc1ologv department at the Un1vers1 !y of Miami F'1nahst· families gathered for 10 ditys of inter· v1ew1nk anrl tesling by a blue ribbon Judging pRnel The written survey of mothers on alllludes on cars v.•as con· ducted by Dodie D1v1s1on of· flc 1als Despite w1delv v a r y i n g backgrounds . .a ll f 1n1 I 1 st s showed agrumtnt !hat the economic factors are prime cons1derallons \\hen t he v.·omen in the family expre s11 their op1n1onli on what kind of car the f1m1Jy will buy Pun:hase price econon1y came (1r1t for 35 of the \\Omen. Thlrty·two a I s o agreed they have concern over economy of operBtlon, anrf 38 1nd1c11ed thay con 11 de r economy even to the car's rcsAle polential Afte r family agreement on !IVise mall cr!I. the woml!n 11greed that dad takes over the &hopping and necot1alln&. The women reported average trade-in tune for the family car was three yeari BecaU8t partlclpatlon In the ' search ' Is limited to f1m1Hes w1th at least one unmarried child at home, poll result& are not representallve of a 11 women who drive For ea:ample. the •·All· Amer ican Moms" revt1\ed :11 prtference for llltlon waaons f II) and 11t1ndard·slzt ~ars f29 ) O\;er lntermtdlatu and temracta. Al!io famil1ed number refle cung ritatus re porting married \vtrt !he multiple rars and licensed dri vers in their households ~lost were l~o car 111,10 driver fam 11Jes, with one repo rtin g se ven drt \ ers tn !he family Grace R Leavitt of Ne\vport Bearh h~s bPen named 11 vice pre"1den1 of Buffum~ 11 departme nt store chain She Joi ned rhe firm in 1950 anti bec1n1e controller in 1959 and \l.'UI continue in that capaclly f\1rs Lea \ 1tl "'as graduated from Hc a,d s Business Col· Jege and is a director of the Long Beach Bel· !er Business Bureau and ll past prcsr den! of the Rel ;ul Con- Ml:s LEAVITT tro!lcrs As· soc1atlon of Southern Ca!Jfor- "" * Geor1e C1!1m1 r 1 1 of Newport Beach he s been nArned senior vice pre s1rient· operal lons fnr J.el11nd Oliver Company. Inc . Orange adver· t1slng and publi c relalinn~ con· !Uilants He has been \\'1th the firm slnce 19611 . COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST S•I~ Ntt -(Mt f Witll Ltw Ci.M Cllt • '•ltl Ht1 1111111 I Nlfll Ltw Cle14 Cllt St itt Net tPMfr:1 Nita Le• ci.• c111. • " ' " • • ' " • • • ~ " " " " ~ " " " N • "' •• "' "' "' •• ~: •• "' N • • "' ,, t • •• •• •• "' "' •• t: .. •• Er •• •• •• t,w t~ •• •• •• "' ... . ,, "' ~~ 8J ~~ ~~I 8" "" Om o .. 8~1 ~'I " " 8 •• •• 8 .. "' ... "' "' '" "11cs '" ., ' '" ••• ,.,Jn p~ln "" "" P• ··~ P~rc "•'0 .... ~ ··~ P••& "'"'" """" "" """" "' """" p" . " . " . " . " """" ·~~" ""' I "'"~ "~ P•er. l'•oe , ..... ··~ II'•! I ,.t i I ... " P•!•I ll'r !r ... ll'ct• 1 :~;..· p ,I•• pi..!1 •11~1 r •Ci ll'lllLS •tiH1 11'1!11 ,,,11, P iii i ll'l!fl "' p ,. . " P •1i II' ·~ "'"" f'>ll!C p •• Pl!l!I Pl1n Pl•Y Pl•t• ,.ftl l • "'"• ;:·'· .. ""~" '" .. ... ' ., ,. , ,, •M I ' ' ' I :. 'O M " . " . !l i U M " ~· " 'I ' ' ' lil ll f· " f!Y• ''""' .. , ·~ -•r.il (;1111 .,,,, v••r ' r~ .. ii.iy Arr/3 111z SC o•JLY tlLOr 21 ltlonday 's Closi11g Prices-Co111plete Nelv York Stock Exchange Li t • Market Fii1isl1e s On Higl1e1" Note NE\V ''ORK !AP ) -I he .;tock ma1 ket rinsed slightly higher ~londay after Jangu1sh1n~ "11h tn a narrO\\ ra nge Trading \\as modera!fl Ana l)!ils ::ittr1 hu1ed the n1a1 ket s slu of'l"h tone L---'·o--•-o..l11r ev sa1 some 1n \e ~101 s \\Cre on the sidelines pcncl1ng re lease of first quarter earnings results fh e Oo\1 Jo nes average of 30 1n<lt 1.,t11als f1n1s h ed up O 22 at 940 92 AdvAn <.es on the !\c\v Yor k Stock Exc:hange Y.e re narro \1 lv Rhead ()f derllncs -...... _J S• 11 thd1 I H th ... --· -'" Low C '" Ckt ~- i • •• "''' (~d• I H t h Llw (!Oii Cht $1 '' Htl J tl!tll / lo{ Ill l tw (ltll Cllt " ' " ' ,, r. I "' f 1~ , f, 'i '" l'I " "" '1! ' "' . ,. IS• U t ,. . . .... 1i 1' l ' 1 .. I ' ' .. ., . lS>o 'I I~ O t 114. 1' ~ I )J I " " ,, " . ;:,,: !l . 11 .... 6 • • • $t u • •• ,, tl • II o 10'• II 1 11!1 • , 1 ,, " ' 1l • I! '" " •l -.. • ! .. ' . •• ' ' ., . .. " . Jl'l.1 .. ll -• .. ' •l 1 I I l•'• •• .. ' .. " ll~ >--'l " . ti ?'I • 1' \.o 10~~};":',. 'D I~ 1• d o !tfvll' Coo 1,: n. l~ 1 ~· <I o • , U"L nee o l l 'l•lo l• 2• 1 U"L PA •D >,D 1 & A UGI (P 1l tl t 7 tl UMC lno " I&& .. \.o •SO. 41' __...._ UM•~"-I -0 111 u •!\1 d"-U>' I MV 1 11 llllO 11 • l l , Jl .. 1 ~ Ull Cu Olo 1 )t 1J )I ~ l '•-'-1.t UllC•rlllOt 'l 'JI 1t 11, \I,-i.;. U11ll11 Co o n g· 11~+..14011 I C l'll l'• \\-t..,unl "' It l 1.., l \1 IE• ...... 1 U11 t c of I o jf' , , lu" I •I , , I> " lf.' •1 + ~, Un lt c o I 1 J 0 I '6 .j. 1 U~• , ... 1• 14 • 1 l. lJ\ ~ U (11 ) > '''•"•• 1 Un •c<ol 10 Jl1' lj :u• u l'oc 01 '' !I 1t 1 1 lf ,.. rull•Mt IO I !l •••• 11 '+ •t n ov~ 10 '1 o J ,.._ '' Un•o·•~' 1 • • •3 •1 -<..1 u11 1~ .... oc •I l• • '"' 1' ., .. • U Aire• •It! ....... '""" V(.0. Co •~ \/ ' Cn 0 \/ 11(11"' II \/ o Cr ID ll•C P.~t 111 VI El1c 1 !) '" I N th Ltw Cltu C:lllt " ·a 'lt li s . 'it ~ • • I )~' .1 ~·· E " . .. • t '• " ' II J! , . '· ,, ll ,,, ' l• ,, 1) ll !} ' .. ' 1 1 ,,, • j I 11 Jf 11 ' ' "l j, " , ., • •• . " " " " . .. " . " . 11·· " . 11 ~ .. ii : J " . ... )l '" ,, . " ' ' . !. . • • ' ' " 1s11 I :1 " ' " , . ii ) " i. ,, .. " ' '• J~lo '' • 21' ,., :r· ~~ l )l • ,....._, .. 11 , ~ • ,. ,. ' • ' • , " ' ,, ., •• • '" ... ,. "" .. _, " ~ " ' " "' 1? 1! '" I', '" " " ~! ;i ,_ • u .. ii • '" • ' " .. • t " • ' • • . "' . "' •• 1 ' ., " • .... l~•t I • " " " • " " • " • " • " ,, • " " . l • ·- Co1nplete Closing Prices-A111erica11 Stotl~ Extha11~e Li st l•i.t H•t ~ lll'I I Hlfll L1w (Ill•• ci-, 1~ \1 " \\" :J ,: =kl'n!11(": I J2 )I , ~ -\•I' ln~ll hd '' 16 II h -0F 111k1N 60 !, ... 2• o 'Il l•-'• F t•n 0 Co 6 1 )6 1?6 'F • "°'" 'JI •. '•\I'""' .... ,,. > J I • 1,,. I' on "'I "'' ll Tllj, ?l 11 II-G•bt nd ,,. l o lit ] ll>A fl\ II • J\o J. 1 1• VA l>fA Co " 'l Jl,, '!"-•\.>I t i (o b 3J I~ 1~ 1 ,.i. • GI 1"11 ~10 I) TV, l\' '> Gl ll WI• l'I )',l ,.. l" .._ "Gt• o•d• J(I !.,,.,.. G&VllQ S! 1 '1 111•• 'l01 --Gt•h1 ll 10 ,, •1 ·~·-Gen ... OY\ s • ) I 'IG • ' l &"14 1•-en u d • 1411 ,1•, ,, •8:~e~ries12 ]J ~ Co 10"-'• I v 11 •..l'I tl 41'•* Gn EmQ!ov 6 JI )I ll IG•n ll!tr1~r 1• 1 :, 1 1 .,. ~GnMa ISb 11 6lo II /'t j> Gon f' vwOCI 77 7 '• 71 ;u . IGtn Fl•t ~c I l o 1 , 1o Gtt>O• fl<ll 'Wl l 1 1-1 Gtonn(lu 11t ~~ ,6 1• , Gro.rSt Jn }] ''• ,. ,. G An F so~ lt 1 , 301, Jl ~G 1111 S or • 6 ?• 'll'• ,,, • '\ G 1nrV 1t •O 3 ''•to '"' Gile Int ~ '~ I ,, I ,, • G Add ng r .. ll l" 19 , l" 11 G&1 ack P ?•• 1 ,•,-~G 1nGv1 SI 16 S :ti -J> GlenM 0 111 $1 "''I ,_, 711'\-,,_ Glotw St tu • 11 , 11 , ?l&o-V. l'l I011Crstr E l• 11 l~ I ~ r.tuc~n (<> • •· , •' Go ob~ ~ ' ·~ .. • (';0 C1t1> "'""" .. • 10 , 1~ "., 1 '?IGIKl<H.1 (" I 'l 7• '--~ G oo•h•~ Inc o, 7 o 1'• ''•-"' G<>,ln St JO 1 1 • Go Jl11110 10 ~! 1 : 1t . 'i ·= 1P,~1~~:· "5o ' l7, ,j l ~ G ~nd Au!n 7t 1" -G ~n ·~ Mo ",••J •+·G~V05d 1 61 • 6 ,_,. ('.,~~ MtoC<> 311 71\o lO • 7 \;-" • c; tAm no SJ I > < I • r.r "" P•! 't I! : l~ 11 •-G •\•• c~ • ,, u~,' n • 1j • ~'Scot! Suo " ' 1? l?:'o r, ! ~':'" ~ : i: i: !•:_ '~~~T~ 1,;g n H1 15 11 I'"" n "1 I I! 1 11 -11\-('; ~<d I~ ,, ,,~, tt tt , ..... 1 ('; ,. .. 1.1 ,a 'I ''• , • l'· r. .... c "" I Jl~ .5•• r. t n lnC111• 'f. 11 , 1 ~,. \', gs1 Enc~r~ s~ 10 1~ ~! E~~ ~~ n~v~ o I~ r.11 1c 1n All 1 Jt Jl o .1'>1 (: I MI "d Jn }<lo 7' ) r IM" WI A& ?Oh 78 7""' Gul!it m Ld Jn ' ' • • A? J 1 1' o ll'o •• 1? 'l ,~ • '1': ' . . nv .11 , 'I '' s•. o-• 10 1 . ,. ,. 77 I 1 n • • , ~ • t• l! J JJ~ 1 'l " -··-::.~ 'i; lJ .• ... .~ 'l~ • '! I 'l• 7•'• ~~ l.! ~~ ~'~ I , 11 ',l 1 • I 1 i n, .~ ~ t~. ,,~ ' ~ f! !o • 13 n ' ' . 11 l I 11 tO • •O ' . ' ,~ 'i f i~ ~! ij ' J~'' ll' J j~ !~ .. " • " " "' 9 , I • ~·• ]Slo ii l . . " 6 • i • ' " ,. , " ' ' • " " ' . 11' 16 ' 15 lT ~ , ~ ' ' ~ • 6 • ~I 'l ' 7• ' 70 H , 11 1 I I 6' Jt G , 1& , ,, ... ''" l• ' U lo 10 • • . ' " ' ' " -~F-'" '" 11 11 I 1 6 f \o t > ·: 'Ji: 7J .~ ' 11'• 11 ut lh ,,. 1 •14. ' • •• 1\t 1\<o J ll\.'11 llr., l ~ t ' ~ ll 11\t liJ ~11 10 ~ ,t l !~~ I 1' o 10 • IJ l! ;uo 11 ll ll • J1 ia~ 16 J' I! lG • l l'll •'lJ\io J J • l I '\t 6to \6 ?Jll ,, ~ ,: 1~ .... H 1 1 11 ~:!. 1 ,,,. 1~ • 30 '~" 1ft ~ !'' l1~ 'I I 1 , 1> , I ' • 1: l·' 1, ... ' I 1 I '' :1 u~ w: ff ! 1f : ,r; 11 •• "'" 'I. I~~ "" , lt . '~\· tt ,, "'" (II-•) M qi! Low c Olt Cht ' l • ,, .. . ' " " " '" '" ~ ' ' ' ... ' ~ -· " " ' 'I t • ~!. ~ • j ' ·-',l l I~~ " " ·: : '" " " "' '" ' I~., , "' 1 l L•tE" •rl •1• Let N• c., ,, l fl •~"· lo l •ohP ) 11 LP T•t ~. o l •n • c~ " , 1 L•n•S •o 5 • trb;',v f.~ 17 • bl' ,.. t I l t A. n (• I l.rl\nn~ !o olLl•<1Tm "'I' IS , Lf~q, Sh o i 1I L~thmn• Jl 0 , Lerw1(D w ,, Ila~·, .. lllo L•G~S• l# e l Nol thO• I M en Lew <011 c Q ' ,1 ' ' 2~~ 'l • ) " ' " " '. • ' l " ' ' ' ' . '. !" . ' "' " ... ' ' " ' • ' ' ' " 11.,. ~· " . "' ' ' itl• ... ·-11 ' . ) ' ' •• ' • • 0 -. ' ' • ' • :t • " • • ' • • " I 1 ~---- • • •t ~ ·~ . " . . ,., ~ • rr D II U Ht! (hlll ... tn I.OW (lOM c~, ' ' • , ~- r " h . ~ ':'· '• • " • ' . ~f • ,, ' ' r .. " ' in 19 • ... 0 • .. . " 71 1•1 .. ' . ~I •1 , ' ••• I Jh • l~u I Cr ., J , l ~!ltdYI ~ .. , l lV•o !G " ' " " . " . " ' ' G r P '' If'• q .. " . 'II II ,.., " " ' ' " _,....ll'M\-. .. S- 1\/ ~ "'\ .. "OT " ' .. ·'--i l•"-)\ • " .. • .. ' ' ' ' • • " . . " 'll 11 • ,, 'l• • :n I !O J ? • " ' l I; : 'l 111.1. l& l• .: j " • " " .. " l' , ' "' " ,. , • • '" l • ' I ' ,,,, .. l " . I > " " ' ' " " " l ' I .. TV•D"' , •' ,1LTV E XI • ,1LTV Ll11 i\ lD ,_ L l V LA wlO Jo LTA D l~c I lur<:lv[ i J\ I • \Yl!(h(Q D ~ " . ' ' . ll -• 1 11-l ) . " .. " , . ' " " ' •• . ' , ) -M M -1~ , •• " , l ' • ,, ) I . ' . ' .. ' . • 1 I • • " . ll 11 ... ' • " • ' ) , " " ' ' " . • • • • • " ... • 1• • '6 '' ' " 1' 71 ' " • " .. ,. " " " ' " ' .. " lilt ' . .. • '" .. "' ' .. 11 17 Ir)] ,.., . )] . 1~• ]? . " ' " . )• ' " II 11 " ' •• ••1 57• ,. ~ 0 1 "' ,. ' Jl10 Jl 't ,. u ~ ''" 1 l II ' .. •JI l"" J , , • " i" •ll 1 • . " JJ u ' M --H H-I O> " ' i " ' . ,, lt I 100 llt 11' ' ~ ,. ' 11• •O , 35 ,, 90 'l~ I n '~ I U ... .. ' <l 1 • ;1 " I . ' , " ' " , " ' , " ' . ·~ ; . ' . "' ... ) " • • • " .. ' " 'l•'• ' . " • .. .. " " . ' . ., . '" '"' "' ,. , ll'• • ' ' "' , .. '" " " ~ " " . " ", " . .. . , " " . ' . " •• '" "" '" " 1111 , . 11\t ,,, " . " . ~· .. • ) . 11~: • ' . ,.. .. ,,, •• "" ,. , . " " . " " , . , ' . • ' J\ •• 10 JI S~~ 'l'i';: ' ' ' ; I I o l', •.•. • 1 J ' • ,.. \lo ?0 l • J9 )~ l • l ,. . .: ~ ;1 ,, ,. ' -0 0- ' .. , .. ' . l le 7''• 1 ,, • ll•• n n1. n•. n I n o ' ' . -,.. 7 • ll 0 ,. 7l 6 9 t ' ' . . I • r'o '' 11. l• llo I 1 1017 1 71 '4 'l l•o 1 " •~ 9\o _,,_ la 1': ~; ,, l' . ,.\o ., ' • 111. ·.r ,. 1·• "' . ~ ) ~,. 111. •' ' • 11 1 ~ 11 • 1 •!ll 'o l~· "" I'' ,, . . ' .. I 10 10 • '" ) • • • ' " . • " • " • " , " " ,. " • '" •) . • 'Jlo-!J ,. ... It • +- ll ·-• "' • •• • iif ... ~ ~: • l;ll:'OM • • ::!:< T ,a Iii•,., ~ 111 ··~ .. R~nM o ,. ' ' llenNA Ir~ 'lll~!C(O 01 ll•t •t O Jl pil " 0!11 lilt~• In A •-•A .o.11oc Re tlo ••• !ill"! M• •I II bl• f' <I !I: ~ II I~ II (~ ~ ~ II en ~ ~ ~ ' . . • " ' ' ,, -' 16h ' " " . ) . ··-"' " " ... ' .. '" " " " "' " '. " " 11\-1-, h + l'•-110..- ltll ... I " ... . -• "" ,,_ 1 " ' '6 t 1 11"lo+ .,_ '. ' . • ' " ' " ' " 71 • l • ' ~ ". '1~ . .. " " .. • I I~ ' )f +-1 • ... ' • t , •• + ''• ~ • " '" ·' l ~~ ' I " " " " .. ... "' " ·~ • ,, " . u 1) " " t" r~ (11 I" (G n . "' .. ' '" i r r , ,. ' . ' 'Un n•~I n Un) \/d r<t ~l I I ' . • • '·-• un•M l lbd '" M " i; i ,, . ... "~ •• " " t ' I lt '' . , .. J 11 I ~ '• ' _, IJ 1•• ~ • • • ' , ' '• " • ,, ' ' ' " • ' • • ' • ' 'l • • " • ' ' ' .. ' .. " ' • • • . " l , " • • ' " . ' . " . " 'I " ' ' •• ' ' ,. ,, ' '"' "' ' '" • " ~• •n '" . ~ >I ~ ~~ ~. te • " ' " ,, .. , I"' L "° " ' W•~M•t !0 W(t>.t llit , W.tonrEt 41 " It CON IC, t W•d Ove " ' lft i1 I, VI~ <:!Fl:' wO , W1 c1~>0 " ' " " • 1 W•nD j> 11 , W1 Pa1 0 l: ~: ~: ..... ,~ 7 We d.o T ~D 11 , IN• <11 Enif> ' " • .c fW••N!I Sv ',j wr ICllP /1 Nt o 1!@ P•,t .. " • ' ·~ ·i " ' ' ! " ,. " 7 ~ 1'"' W*! b Fl tn 1! ; !!lo :t': F~•c~r!~ 11 , J;, ~~In Ortll , , ' 1 , W• P•(I wr I'" /" / lo V.~•t U11 lnr ' ' ''• '••' O o W• 1n1 In ''" l , wn C•b JO •,>,• 7! 1 lj 1 'N~ 11~11 El l'• I •W"l'lt CD l > i! • W• 11~1 WI • • "~ WI"'• '"! " > jj ~ W t o• Gl IJ • I••• W 1/'10tttt U • 11~~ Ul1 o W 1flr011 ,_ I~ o I :It H ')..... I W •n B' t!, t! • t•l~ t• I w 1n Fer R ii ' ~~ 1!l! '1(Z l:~ .. ~~ wt ll 1 I> il Vi WI 1n P~ 11 1', ll ~. l 'IWlhnSln .o IG 1 \lo l \-1 w1111'SG 6ft ' l6~1 h ' Wll SpGCI wt • 10 ' • j!i•-"' w .,_,,..,,. '° ' I .:~ 1 it.=-,,., Wl~t1on M ) 7'~ 10 ,, ' • 1 Woll Ht a l l '1 1,. ·~! L Vev•rl" l' ~ WQOd lnll k t lo~ 1 • 11 'IV""'IL Old 1n1 n 7 " ll I 'le•w "° 3' '~1: '!~ ~· 1: N •"t Cn u I) , l ~ 11 ~ 1"nl 1-1 • II 'll • 1 lo tfl•-:ZJ~A L -~~ iri .J ,!~ .l : lwv,.n 01 C<> I 11 1 fi Wvom u Cf> .i ;.i 1ll., 1ll., , 'Y • f nou ' 70 I ~ ~l V~n~J\ .1(1~ * l~\ 'lu lt" !"m0 Mm Ml: 1 t : ' "' 11~ I l .1e :o: • " , " _," • '" ' " 'll h ' " " " " . ' ' . . ' .. • _,' II • 1 o ' . " • .. • " .. .. • ' ' I -, ,. ' lJ ~+ " ,.., 1 ll1. f I • • .. • ''" • ' ' ll ' ' • • '. ' . " ' ' , . • " ' .. '. • • , .. • ' ' ,. ' ' • " ' • '1~. ''jl~. ~··1 ~ t I • ~ ~ '.I :: ~j ~ .~ 1l 11 fl'\o 10fo • -I 1 f • ' I I 1 ,! I , l~tt ,, I l \~ l''I g'1 ' l 1 • Ii;, 11'1 Fi11a11ce i ' 11 D 1• I • " . . , .... ' 31 i'lo . ' . ' ' . " .Jl ?i • ,, l • HI f t 11\ • n • ''' ••• 1 ~ I'• ..... l'~ 11\ 2• ,, " ' l~ I ,. , . ,, . ,~ 1i,, I •I ' I ' ' )1 • ,, • I I Briefs .. e ll111el Pln11ned ,~~11 .,1 1 61 . ' . • J'"' ?I )'1o . ' ... ,, ,. ! ' ! • . ' . 1• I) I OS AN G ELF S -T•ylor lnrr.rn11!1nn11I Corp builder of \f1amf Re11 ch ~ F nunt111nbleu • , •0 11 6 It l~ , 11 It !11 10 II l 11 l l 11 .. l• • Jl& '\ 10 'l ., !O l.. l I t ' I ' s1 )! , 'l,f;{ H )1 )1 ~ • n 1t • 1• '! : . :~ 10" 70 • I} ~ \\o 16 tl • 10\lo , tJ • ) ~ ' ' • ' • l•• 1 ,,, 111 11 1!' , •• lo • • ' • • \' • Uto t O't IO'lll ti J1: J'• ~r ;· i·· , ... .., ••l"r l • . &'• I I 1 • 'l ':,: i,r: 1S 10 "" ' J • ! . •1?611! '' . ~\ i u l• i: '!' 1 ,:'; I\~ ! ; I' t ~~ u n:: l'l"ITT'\ . . ' ' l! , ?•\o " ., If . 1r ., ' " ••• 11 ·- ' l'"'f' ~ ;~ •11'¥ ~ ~·· • lt h Al.,•m • '"'"n n.tr T-t;,,11! !11t• I T!'(""' " "" 1•(~~ ,, ·~ • Ttt S¥.,. Ct. • I • 111< !r t 1 '' 11m11 '·l •!t.t-0 w • 11:'1 1111'• C111" i!IT'""''e wh " §) 11 ••• ! 1'~1 l ,,,. 1 ~ Tl ; 11 I • 1' •"' ~ " ' " ' ' . " ' ' " ' ... 11 11 . " 11 H i.. I 11 1 •'ll ,., • " ' hi 1""' " u •• ,,,,, . ,, • l '; ~ • '" u , • • ,~. ~ 10 to ,,.l ,~ . " 1 • ' ' ' • ... • " " .. . ·-• .. -, .. . . . ' .. _, " ' " " " lJ • ,_ - '1 • !4 11 !~ ll'"ll llQ '" u , ) . • " ll'o " 1 " ' ,., .. • • " 1\:; )I }1 , . ) I I I I ,, ,, . J• • • ,, ,_ ~ ,.,, , . • ~· " 1r· ~ .. .. ' l " • • ' • Amerlenn Sol.,• Vol11mf' :ind l..'11' Vei;tas C A es a r 1 P11lricl' and Hilton llotcls hAs bctn awarded the c:ontracl for J\ofclro.Oold 'll )n M11)cr ~ lux urv holt:I 1n the :\le\ Ad a gam· 1nJt center MC,i\f satd its U. story ( r11nd tlotcl "nuld be !hf" lar~e~I Juxurv hotel ever built .11nd include 2 084 rooms .11 Jil l Ah fron1on vention hall and 1 con e 1lfnllf'I /,011 LOS ANGELES -Blaming a !!lump In the tnv business and the \\est Ctlast dock ii;tr1kl' ~h1Uel Inc ha 1 rtported a $29 n mllhnn loss fnr the f1ac1I )tar ending Jan 29 11 \I AS the big toy ll1,llnuracturer s flr51 1nnu1l swt tht fire\ was QL-- porAlf'd In IP4ft The firm rrl'nrtt-1 11 rltnrn of $184 per 1h,11 re !or the \tat • ' ' pA1LY PILOT S tnte Rescues 'Freak' Salmon StiCf{A~1E:\TO !t..:PI ) -The StatP Departmenl of Fi!h. and Gan1e say~ 2.84 adull kl~g salm_on tr.11pPfd (lur. In,:: R rrtak spnn~ run on the Calaveras River near Stock- ton h:ive l'><!<>n re~cued. 1'he department i;aid an estimated 500 fish were .strand· rd near "'hert' llighway 90 <-rosses a di version canal ;ifte r \1·;1!er 11•:is released inlo the ditch, .1;eor~e \V<1r1.1er. the r:lcpartmcnl's salmon expert. s;1i d he 1s Irving lo figure out how lbe salmon got into the CRl· averlls ror 1hc srri~g run. Rut he speculated !hey might be !he-prngeny of fish lhat spa"·ned du ring OoodlnR three years ni::n. Thr 1ra1>per:I fish "·ere removed from the diversion ' c.:in.:il <1nd lransplanted to a poinl above the uppermost d1\'ersinn on th e Calaveras. Thry ."·ere ;elcased intn good \•:aler flout where !hey can rc1na1n until the fall spa"•ning season. flunter~, 9, Trflffic, 1 SACRAMENTO 1Ar1 N!'arly onr ou1 of every 10 deer killed in California last \•car \\'as !he victim .of a traf- fic accident , no a hunter. sAvs the State Department nf Fish nnd Carne. Planting Cost 91 Cents A Pou11d ED HIRTH ·· SEEKS TO SAFEGUAR-D YOUR FAMILY BY ELIMINATING HARMFUL TRAFFIC CONDITIONS. It takos responsi ble study and action to work with the Council to obtain fe allslic, acceptable solutions to our Traf!ic prob· lems. Hirlh initiated a commit· t ee of c it ize ns and outside pro· fessionals to protect your righ,ts for a safe and congestion-free tr•ffic system. He hos led the negot iating team to nullify the freeway agreement in accord- ance with the peoples wishes. l-lunters reported k i I ! i n .ii: 38.907 deer, ~·hile 3.P...12 deer "'ert killed by motorist.~. the department reported. SACRAMENTO 1Ar1 -The f ;i li fornia Department nf Fish and Game planted more than four rnitJion pounds or fi sh '11 ;~~~17'1~~~1 1 'y~e;'r d".'.i:~ t~n f)(l NEWPORT BEACH NEEDS THIS MAN.I aver tige cost of 91 cents a ~ The hunter tntal included 422 drr.r killed by bo"' and arro~·. A l.1ni\'Crsi1 y or California ~tudy eslimarcs 1he slale's deer populat ion al about one million. Coa stal Open Space Proposed BERK ELE Y (UPI ) -A stud.v made for !he Associa- tion of Ray Arc;i t:ovPrnrncnts urges npen !lpare. rather than de\'elopmenl. for coastline [o vr DOORS sections ne;:ir the PacHic Ocean. The survrv v.·as 111 a d c by Sed11Jay-COoke , a San Fran- ci.sco urban and l'.'11\'iron·ne ntnl desig n firm. and 1>resentcrl by the aRenr y's ocean coastline co inmittce. 1• It reconln1Jnds preservation of tidelands. hc;ichcs and co11st.:i l terraces 111i lh scenic an<I recreational values as Y:ell as farmland s. suc h as those producing occan-relatcd crops as artichokes and broc- coli. Ne"' dc\(clo pmcnts 1~ould be prnhihilcd except in or near ex isting ·communities. Puhlic facilities such as ~e1vers an<I roads wn11td be bflnned from areas ~ for npen spare and lhe s tur:l.v recnn11nends tha t a "nc\1• hich11•ay acrn!'is the roaslal ran.[!c he prohibited.'' A n y irnproven1ents 1 o l!igh111a.v I should he n1ade on the existin~ rn;idbed, ii added. --·~The s1ur:ly's fi nal rlrafl i.~ C''l;- pcc1Pd 1his sun1mcr and v.•ill be \·o1cr:l upnn h.1' Hl'\Cnry·s CX· ecutil'e cn'1lmittcc. Mint Set As Shrine S,\\' FRA:'\CISC'O 11·r1 1 -- Th;o nlrl L'n11cd Stairs i\l1nj 1n ~;in Francisco's i\li s sin n Distr~! "''ill be reslnrC'd as ;i musrun1 ;ind ii sC'r\'ice crn!rr for !hr t·.~. Trcasur~ 's cnin ~rrrir('<;. A dircr1ive from Pre.~tdrnl \'.1\nn cunran1red th;:i l 1hr ~11n1 1\·nuld rnntinuP In he of ~pr\ 1t{' tn the nation. Thr h1nld111&: 1s cnn.~1drrrd ;i r!ass1r nf A'llcri<'an arct11rcr- 11H<' and h.:is atrradv hcrn <iPC.larcd ;i n1111on.:il larirhnark . The urdcr mrans it \1·ill he rr~1nr1~d. To renl1zr th;\1 '-!nHL !11P rrr ~irf('nt tran<;rrrrf>rl t h r h111l1!1n'(~ n\.\ncrsh1n from 1h" (-;"ner:il 'rr1 irrs 1\rlrn1nr~lr;\· linn to !he TrP:u;11ry f><'p;irt· men!. Forc~t ' Cl'\"lr!' Puhlishc · Bo ok \\'ASHINCiTON IAP1 -The U.S. for~.!!! Ser' ice h .:i !> published a full-<:olnr hooklet on ''Wildlife for 1'omorrnw'' sh0"'1n,i: different s~c1es in lhtir nalural habita1 s. --Atthough tht:re 1tre 5 ~ species or wlldllfe eh1ssed A~ "rf!re FJnd endangered," the 8J:Cncy says. lht number nf hig pamt anlmAls on N:tllotu1t F'nrc.fit lt1nd increased from pound. But one pound of fin•crl ing VOTE APR. 11 ~RE-ELECT MAYOR HIRTH.I trout could costain more than a hundred fl<h. TO CITY COUNCIL, FIFTH OISTRICT, NEWPORT BEACH T h e dcpart"1ent's reporr s a Id the total ptanr was NEWPORT COMMITTEE TO RE.ELECT ED HIRTH . 70.J H,OO< fish. BILL RING, 215 RIVERSIDE DR., N.B., .645·6363. 1 'h e p I a n t i n gs i n c I u d e d I ~"""""""""~~""""""""""""""""""""""""~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~I resident fish, ra nging from I t.5 million fingerlinRs lo nearly 30.Q®· aged broodstock \\'hich ~·eighed about '"'O pounds each. Ot her pfantir:igS consisted of anadromous fish -t h os e which ,<~wim upstrea1n for breeding -and warmwater rish. For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT . ' United States National Bank still pays you a big on regular savings accounts. We s!ill pay you 4 V2 ~~ interest on regu· lar sav tngs accounts. Which is not only 1he highest allov.'ed by Jav:, it's V2 °/o more than most banks pay. So if your bank is paying you less than 4!12°/o, it pays you to bank at United States National Bank. We pay the highest interest rates allowed by law. Regular Savings COST.A MESA OFUCE 1845 Newport Blvd. (1 14) 646-3291 • F. Frank Zrebiec, Manag er 5% 90 Days • One Year• 61 convenient locations UNITED S'Dfl'ES . NATIONAL BANK ~ H1mi... rote \\'here e,·crything starts wilh you T;yo Years• •ssoo minimum d1po11lt SQUTH COAST.PLAZA QF.ElCE _,,_u,NTINGTON.J3EACH OFF-IGE -. :i:in Brisl<>I s~ 302 Fifth St. (7 1 ~) 040·5211 (7H) 536-9361 H. ~1. Stol t~, Ma nager VictorJ. Rued y, Manag er 900.00Q head in J928 to &llt--- es11m.11ted 4.5 million til the prtscn1. ' I • WANT TD CLEAN UP DN YOUR CLEAN OUT? FDR FAST! FAST! ACTION! CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED DEPT. D I A - L D I R E c T -• DAILY PILOT·· WANT ADS ... ~~~·~~~~~~-~-~ J~[ l -·so. !~I -~,. I~ ~---~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ General I ~eneral Ge ner ii -TRUST MEi-,iiiiiiiii . If .\ou'vt hr-rn !<.10k1ni.; for 11. ~ Art honH' th;it has e\'C'r) thin:::. A ll\r~e f11n11Jy ll('f'r!.~. N>r !hi.~ ('hflir" J111rhor V1r\1 ll11ls hnmr. 2'~ h;iths. Si'p. d 1n1n:.: 1Y10n1 + fR nllly ronru, All r lr1•rr1r hJ1-1n kit. 11ual1 ry 11/11· C'pl!i + 1ir11J)f'io. 2 fr p I,. , Bcau11fu!I) tandsl'R/)f'fl only Sil.000. Call fi73-S.i.i0. -DREAM-HOME ONLY $2:!,!l50. QuiP! traff1{· frrl' Sll'C'<'I. J\l.1s~1\'<' l<Jt. I A I J...ilC .111' l iC '"[ SAYSHORES -'iery cute a nd very vacant ! 3 bed roon1s and a big Jiving room. central patio and form~! dining. This ho1ne is on tree lined Vista Drive and O\~ner \Viii relinquish prin1e sli p ~pace to buyer. LO\\' land lease. Asking ~59 .500 . PHONE UN IQUE NEWPORT BEACll 64;.6500· Churn1111.i.-: :1 Or11t·oo1n hnn1C'. 1 ~-•111!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!11!!!!!1!111111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! $200. rwr 1110 inr·l url1'S la.\C'S. /' Suhn1i1 t'llA or VA tC'rnis. General General Call 54j-8•1'.!4 t0Jl{'r1 c\·rs.J \outh"' (~ oast IS A BUTTON- CUTE? MAGNIFICENCE \\'t• t'l'ally <Inn '! knn\1' -Rul rh1<; houM' 1s! :\1•arl~ nf'11 :! I..rr Ui'i sho11• ~uu !hr f111C' ... I hrdrn1. + ran111y r111. 1•/'.!. ht1n1r in Corona 1111 :\Tar. halh!" ,t· 3 1·ar C''ll'il!:f' \rar 11h1<:h has brrn suprr 1111· Nt•11porl Hl'l£hl~. \\alk In p1n1·rd, 11 ith 11 !n1rl~ far11il~ !"hnpp1 n~. Pt·icrrl ri:;:ht :11 l r111. or sturl~. fc1nnal chnini::: SJ7.~l(lll. SEI-: IT. YOL:'LL rni., rx1·1•p11on;1l ki!('.h4•n RL.:Y IT! 1111h f'xlras surh 11<; an Lar9e Rumpus Rm . 1111tn111;111l· <~J!IC'<' Urr11·rr. Tllr pr1t•1• 11ill surpn!!t' )OU~ 675-3000 BAY i 8£ACJ..I . ' 'REALTY""' 3 hf'<h'l'llJn1 + dr'n or n1:'lk" it I hl'rlr'1'll>111 11 Ith rl111111i,: 1ll'f'fl. La1•gr n111s1rr llC'drnnn1. '!. harh~, h11il1in.<;, 2 !1rC'rl;1cr<;, P,"'(11 StZt' ~lll'd. :\~k1n:::J s 12.~iOO. WHERE ELSE P:\1'k l.idn to11nhl)U~C'. \\'h1•r<' r bi• 1r1 l\'f'11'JYll'I ('ii!! you i,:r! n J Hrlrrn., '.! ha, rnrl" g;ir." .~. a •·flL't'lrct' POOL fnr uni)' $1". .. -1()11. Lachenmyer Realtor :· H!GHLAND DR. 4 ~r11·1n1:'< hdrrn~.. [1unily rn1, 2': haths, ~rr. launrlry 6IB-39'1S 673-7Yi:i •rill., k11f·hrn hhin:<. t'J1!f1lr·p.~. The Reynolds-, an•! II -<pllrkl1n:::: H&~· ront..' -l'nrnr llarfvir l!1j:hlan1ls Are At Sea arra. s1:i.1J(l(1, Th i:< nliil:<'s 1he1r :l lw1!r0111n. CALL t;'\ 6-'•·2,14 2 hii!h J l',tl' g:11·a1,:r hn1nr ~ r1>11.rl~ Inf ~ou. Jn1n1ac·ut<il•' 11 11h hue(' .1~rd, 1'1••111 fnr Rt:ALTV t""'al or 1r;iilrr .~1ora:::P. Nr 1r Nrwpo rl_P__!.s_<_O __ rr ~t r Pr1e('rl rn s~~! for S4:'t.7:.0 for ---------· 1uf·.1r1111111ru1 e;ill (il&-71';'1, The MAKE OFFER Su[l<'r :1nxinus 011 ntr 1nu~1 ' srll Jn 111n1·e E11 ~t. lrn- 1 nH'tlllill' ~ile rtrC'drrl on rr1ll~ n••;it 5 hC'rlr•)lln1, frw111:=-l rl1n1111;. J;.cn:.:o !1111111\' rnon1-r n-IC'1 f'I hnrn1·. Fu!i; irnpro1!'1f inl'!11'11ru.: ~ <'ar i.;aL'il.C<'. :\n1\ ask1n::i; $19.900. J"'lf'as<' burr~·. hnnc off('r. Call :1!1}-11'!1 1Qf1f'n C\c_:;,) DAILY 'd'\~ HERITAGE ~ REALTORS PILOT ORANGE COAST'S ~------~ BAYCREST C: I: ,\(_'J IJ CS anrl EX- f',\Z\:i!VJ•: -bu! IK't':iS :;,'\>Ill,.. "1•l l>nv.• Crfll!Sr . '' L n \' e I ,1 !ll'1i;:hhorl1nod. 011r of lh<' hr~I hu~." nn !hf' 111;1rkC'L 1 Brr!rn1., •i1ning rni_ and f<crHl.1 nn. ;'l,';(·I' frn1·•'rl P')'ll. Si•e 11 Rlld rcahze lhl' SPANISH! Red Tile Roof $27,000!! ,JUST !.IS'Tf])! REr> TJLf..: fl()();' to \'llU[fl'rl /,, bf.11mrd l'ril il\,!!.~ -SllAl1P k SPAN• 1:-11: Strp rlo" n rn Kiani liv• ing ronni. l'ilas.~f\'e hrirk r1rr1ilH<'f'! F1un1ly room. H.'ICI ~:Nl1A l ;O URi\.1IT - (;Af{l)EN h:!TC'llEN~ Surrr k1111: T\\'O LEVEL i\IASTER SUITE! \\'alk·in 1'lo5r1". Prr· \'ate drr!<sing room. JOG TO BEACHES! Act no1\' -Call 1).15-0303. I ORIS! I. Ol \O\ ' N £ 'f ' 'Li). I HARBOR VIEW PALERMO Rrsl 1 h4>1lrnnn1 hou.sr nn n1.~!'k1>! 111 H11 rhor \'irll' I ln1nrs. }':'l;!ra hll).?f' yard \1 Ith rlrnry nf ffV>ffi fnr 1)1'11>1. p.iltn, ho111 nr r;i111prr, 11nrl ~arr! lr ft n1rr. f"u~1nm 111•lfl rlri·k1ni::. plush rlP"P ~·11r()('!1n1:. '.! f 1 rf' rila re ~. rl•'f'f>n,rnr rlrapr:<. 1ulff 11 11 spiffy t·lran. Only I yPa r old :incl l:M'llrr !h1111 nr11. CA ii 111111· ro ~er. $6--1.:#1. Call 5 lii-2.11:\. $25,000 5 3/4 °/o Loan inf'lurl<'." 1axr.". i111erP."I, prin- t•1rl<' $.· in.~u rAnc-r!..,King-~1z­ <'rl lwdroon1:<1, bt11!!-ln rln>;in1 k11rh111. Cl1e1'rl11I hospi1ahlft l1v1n:,: rl)nnl. n ('I i .il h 1 f u 1 ,,)\'('!'I'd PAiin. QUIP\ cul-de- S:l(; srrrl'L 9fi2-.-~·:iti6. TARBELL VA NO DOWN on this rarr valur. 2·1 tlC"irnonL<; pluJJ A :! hl'rlroom r1>11r un1r. 2 h<'rlMOn1 now \ IH'i!.lll 11nrl 1·r11tly for 1n1 • ll1f'<liR11' O (' !' U p R 11 r· ,\'. I . f'<!roon1 rPnl<'cl 111 S120 Pf'r 111nnlh c;u·h. 1.-l'rp a~ home flt)(! J'('n!iil. Only $36.000. If ~OU hR\'I' tll'C'n 111 the f.:f'l'Vl1·r, 1·1111 U.". Walker & Lee poicnfi<cl. $.i.I:,~:~). P.rAltnr:o1 leading PET~E~~~~-ETT N~r~·~~:~ .. ~~· ;:,, ~42-5200 Unpack 111\fl slRrl livin2 in --Marketplace ~ .. N_E_W __ D_U_P_L_E_x ... '" 1 ~i~~:<~!:l[f' cl~~n.;~I~~~!~~ ,.,.~, In ""' Blull. A mm· :\n1v unrlrr f'lll."tr\l('t1on. 2-2 plrl<'/y erpii[lpt'rl p A r.; 11 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 l><'rlrt'IQnl 111111." + 1lcn or 3 kil rhf'n. Blr·in O\'l'n + h<'rlroon1. 2 ha!hs C'arh, '\"1 nuig-r. 2 halhs • tnilv h11r anti f1rf'placr. QuRlily h<'auriful h1nrl~·IX'rl yard un1!.<; 111 Cn!'IJI :\l<'<;a. RC'rl arlrl palt.J. Call for 11ho"''ina: Carll"! R<'Rl lors. :il6-S610. only $47,500. 673-tm(l. DAILY PILOT ' FOR ACTIO N .• CALL 64 2-5678 I Don't .ill\'C up 1he ~hip! "Li.c;t" it 1n ('l;issifird, Ship lo Shnrr Re,c;ults! 612-567.11 \-O' THE REA!, \""-ESTATERS '. S@R&UM.-Lt£.7fS" The Puzzle wifh the Bui//./n Chuckle O Reorranol!I let•ers cf the four sc.rotr,bled v,ordt be- low to form fo;r ~;ml)le words I I I I' I~ DE V ROO I ~: _,...F .,E ,.M.,.A-'L=r-J/ . ~ _ I I' I I . ! ' I TILVA I' I I I J' ;, Horse pla yer on the farm: He feeds his hens rac.ing lr-_R_Y_T_S_U-.-0 -~, forms so they ca n -~ s I I I I' / '--0 Com_E1el• the chu~~'.e 9Q¥011d • by f1ffing lrline miu1n:ir wo1d1 yov de.,.t!op from srep No, 3 !:ie!o~. f} PRl/\i /Jl''<'B:P.ED lETTERS I 1• :a 4 l , IN THt LJOUAl!.fS SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION IOCJ ' \ I I d • 0 i r 0 b f w ti II t 0 v N d Q m n B n c or D ci r to th to VI w Fl an In Va off th m da ra an u. tra fro fii m the No I C l two can aud slu A can Coo Cit Bo Bos dea A lac ne alt 7:3 Ing 0 .pee Lag log the ~~' ICh IU • . . . • ' Laguna Beaeh EDITION VOL 65 , NO. 94, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MQNDAY, APRIC 3, '1972 • ana er en1es ,_ Carrier Joins Battle U.S. Ret;alls l(itiy Hawk , Utilizes Planes SAIGON IUPI 1 -1'he aircraft carrier Kitty Hav.·k. recalled from shore leave in the Philippines. arrived off Vietnam \()- day and its . SO planes v.·ere ordered into act ion i1nmcd iately against North Viet- namese armored columns which ha ve driven 15 miles into South Vietnam. A second carrier. the Constellation, was ordered from leave in Japan with the guided missile cruiser Oklahoma City to join two other carriers on Yankee Sta· tion. It would be the greatest concentration of U.S. naval might since end of the bom- bing halt in 1968. The Kitty Hawk sped to Y~nkcc Station from Subic Bay after the U.S. command \l.'arned Hanoi it .,.,·ould take "precau- tiona ry actions" to proteet America n lives in South Vietnam. Such warnings in the past ha ve preceded heavy bombing offensives against North Vietnam. The four carriers p:us air force fighter- bombers based else.,.,•hcre in Vietnam and Thailand wou ld enable the United States to send as many :>s 500 planes agai nst the Communist forces. South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu stripped Saigon, Hue and Da Nang of all but their ga rrison forces to- day and new 10.000 government trocfps to Quang Tri to try to roll back the Com- munist invasion. Hanoi Radin reported that North Viet- namese antiaircraft gunners shot down a B52 bombing "popualted areas" just north of the Demilitarized Zone . The U.S. command in Salgon denied the report. The Communists hold the northern hal£ of Quang Tri province just below the DA1Z and front dispa~ches saJJ Qu ang Tri ctty, the nearby Quang Tri base and rong Ha were under heavy attack tonight . Quang Tri is 15 miles south of the DMZ. Dong Ha about IO miles. A new threal appeared to b<> developing to Hue, the ancient. imperial capita l of Vietnam . but officials said the situation was under control . Communist attacks were reported at Fire -Base Anne. 18 miles west of Hu e, and Bastogne, 15 miles to the southwest. Both bases protec t against Communist Infilt rat ion routes through th e A Shau Valley to Hue, aevastated in the 1968 Tet offensive . A South Vietnamese spokesman said the reinforcements flown in today would mount a counter-0He nsive "in a few days." They 'included marines and rangers from Saigon. infantry from Hue and two tank brigades from Da Nang. The y were flown nortl. in a collection of U.S. cargo Cl30s. Vietnamese air force transports Bnd airliners co mmandeered from the government airline. The action followed President Th ieu's fl ight to llue and Da Nang in a com- mandeered Air Vietnam jet to look ove r ' the situatioQ. Rain clouds ha ve masked the inva ding North Vielnamese tank columns driving across the D!\olZ but the weather im- Laguna Council Hop efuls Fa ce Tliree F orunis proved today and U.S. and South Viet· name se fighter·bombers struck back at the Red offensive. B52s dropped bombs through the clouds t-arlier and three U.S. 7th fleet destroyers off the coast pounded the cnc:>my troops ano tanks. The Communists threw up intense anti- aircraft firt, and seven American planes and helico pters were reported shot do.,.,•n Sunday and today but American planes ne\V 128 st rikes Sunday and more today. President Holds Meeting s__ On New Offensive by Reds WASH INGTON (AP) -President Nix- on sun1moned a special fore ig n policy panel into session today to analyze and prepare options for possible action to cope Y.•i!h lhe Communist thrust into South Vietnam. But th e \Vhite House spokesman said the Communist push soUth or the demilitari1.ed zone wi!J not ha mper con· tinuing scheduled withdrav.'al or U.S. !roops from Indochina. ''Our .,.,.ilhdrawa l program is on schedule and will be met ," deputy press sec retary Gerald L. \Varrerr--said in response to a question. Warren sa id Nixon asked I he \Vashington Special Action G r o u p (\YSACJ to meet because the North Viet- namese thrust y.•as "a matter of concern to the Administration and to the Presi· dent." The group, headed by presidential foreign affairs ad viser llenry Kissinger, includes represe ntat ives of the Defense and State Departments and the Central lnlelligence Agency. It generally is called into sess ion in crisis situations to analyze de velopments and prepare options for the Presidenl. \Varren refused to discuss "''hat actions F~relllen .Rescue Tl1ree Youths On Laguna Cliff Three Anaheim you th s who though t they could scale a Laguna Beac h cliff Saturday evening didn't qu ite make it and had to be rescued by city firemen. The boys were plucked from a perch some 50 feet above Crescent Bay beach about 7:30 p.m. by a team of firemen trained in cliff resue operations. ac- cording to Fire Chief James Latimer. The yo uths were unin jured. The fire chief identified the three teenagers as David Tucker, Rolland White and Robert Shookman. Latime r said the boys, dressed in light clothing and without any climbing equip- ment , bega n their ascent with hOJH: of making the top of the 90-foot-eliff Defore nightfall . However, Latimer said darkness set in when the boys were abQJJt half·way up the rocky cliff wall and they slopped climbing because they could no longer see what they w~re doing. The boys' shouts for help aHractcd residents of the area, who subsequently called authorities. Nixon might order. He indicated, however. that there is litt le likelihood that U.S. ground fo rces will be com- mitted. saying when asked about ground forces ~hat "our policy is unchanged." As lhe President "watched the situa- tion rery closely," \Varren said he met 11•ith Ki ssinger and Adm. Thomas ~1ooret. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. and conferred by telephone with Secretary of State Will iam Rogers · and Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird . Poultry Flocks, Pet Birds Get Death 'Sentence' By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 1M 0.111 ,IMI Sti ff U.S. Agriculture Department inspectors are expected to move into Orange County this week to kill pet store bird s and poultry flocks in an attempt to stem the spread of an exotic fowl disease . "Depopulation teams'' were already at work in Los Angeles area pet stores to- day, gassing canaries and parrots af- flicted with Newcastle's Disease, a spokesman said. A special control center set up in Riversi de will be a base of operations for the team which are scheduled to visit pet shops and poultry gro\.\'ers in Orange, Los Angeles, Riverside, Sc:n Bernardino and Ventura Counties. All of these areas are within the eight- county federal quarantine area which im- posed last month to eradicate the Asiatic virus disease. The -disease affects the respiratory systems of birds and is not C<lnsidered harmful to humans. Chickens die of it "'ithin a day Or two, aCcording to authorities. Flocks found ca rrying the disease are exterminated and the owners paid the market value of the dead birds, Agriculture Department spokesmen said. The number of pet store birds that have already been destroyed 'is unkno~n. One newsman said he saw several birHs killed by carbon dioxide gas Sunday at a Los Angeles pet store and about 100 birds -ranging from small canaries and parakeets to large parrots -be ing held in cage.s at the rear of the shop, ap- parently awaiting destruction. Officials advi sed owners of pet birds to chec k with veterinarians about vac· cinating their pets against the disease which broke out earlier this year in the (St.e BIRDS, Page Z) Lagunagrlns by Phi l lnterlandi .. , , r l " "N1v1r Let Your Box Rent 81com1 Overdue" Hospital to Undertake New Medical Bu~lding Construction or a medical building to serve South Coast Community Hospital staff doctors wil( be undertaken by the hospital. the board of directors agreed at a special meeting Friday. A committee of doctors who formerly ha~ p~M~ to finan ce agd ~d a .oo. 1uite rhedical center on the hospital ground.1 decided against going ahead with the project after determininR" none of the group had time or experience to handle the undertaking, Dr. William A. Beck, Vice Mayor Boyd Attending Rites For His Brother Laguna Beach Vice Mayor Charlton Boyd left for Boston by air th is morning to attend services for his eldest brother, Ralph G. Boyd, 71, who died in Boston Friday arter suffer ing a heart attack. Services will be held Tuesday afternoon ln Harvard Memorial Chapel. Mr. Boyd, a corporation lawyer who had his own firm in Boston, was a ,ttraduate of Harvard University . He served as a brigadier·general during World War TL He is survi ved by his widow. Doroth y: a son, Douglas of Phoenix. Ariz.; three grandchildren: two sis ters: and fi ve brothers, including vice mayor Boyd. The Laguna Beach councilman, a can- didate lor re-election April 11. plans to return Wednesday afternoon, in time for the evening council session, his wife Mrs. Jane Boyd said today . He will not be presen t for candidate forums scheduled Tuesday even ing and Wednesday mornin g. Pets Die in Fire SAN PEDRO (UPI) -An arsonist set fire to a pet hospitaJ ·Sunda y. burning to death more than 20 animals, mostly dogs. - Investigators sa id the San Pedro Animal Hospital had been spr inkled with gF1soline and set afire, doing an estimated S250.000 damage, chief of the medical s1aff . advised lhe board . Board pr esident Vic1or C. AndreY..'S an- nounced that the facilit y, located ad - ja~enl to .the hew hosp ital garage. no1v will be built and owned by thi hospital. ll wil~ ~ovide, office spac~ and ambulatory care facilities on a rental basis ror doc· tors on l ·cal stall. Under the ne plan. the hospital will fi nance the o ice building on a self. amortizing bas ndrews sa id. Last October, the os ·al board ap-· proved the tentative plan o the doctors' group to construct a $2 milli n facility on the hospital grounds, but th e plan was op- posed by some doctors and area residen ts. At that time, Andrews said the matter of adding a medica l bu ilding to the hospital 's South Laguna complex had been under consi deratidn fo r 10 years and that the Irvine Foundation, whi ch gave the land for the hospilal , had approved such a project. It was pointed out at the time that con- veniently located medica l suites for doc- tors using the hospital's X-ray and laboratory facilities \.\'OUld help both !he doctors and their patien ts. The facility also would' provide a close hospital tie for a large group of doctors at a time when patients are being funneled off by the construction of new hospitals in neighbor- ing areas, lhc board agreed. Falllilies Needed To Host French Scl1ool Students Host families for 35 French high school students participating in a summer study project are needed in Laguna Beach, area coorainator of the TransAmerica sponsored Foreign Study League E. G. Jnge announced this week. The 35 student s will arrive. In Southern Califorpia Jul y 20 for a one·month stay, which will includ e study of American Jaw enforcement, education systems. racial pro blems, government and ecology, said Inge. Jn \h is final ~'eek of cam paigning for two Laguna Beach City Council seats, the candidates will face three forums before audiences ranging from Hig h School 1ludents to the chamber ot commerce. Candidates Discuss Pot Cla sses will be held each morning at Laguna Beach High School under the direction of Mrs. ri.targaret Gerlach. a California State College, Long Beach in· structor. Inge said that TransAmerlca's iD- volvement in the Foreig n Study League -project allow! the students to· spe_nd the month here for only $650. At 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. five of the six candidates will participate in a Coordinating Council·sponsored forum at City Hall. Incumbent candidate Charlton Boyd will be absent after being called to Boston over the weekend following the death of his brolher. · After a night's sleep, the sanie five will face the Chamber of Clmmerce Wed· nesday morning at lts breakfast meeting at the Hotel Lilguna. Rese rvations for the 7:30 am. breakfast may be made by call- ing 494-1018. On Thursday, all six ca ndidates are ex- pected to be on hand to speak before Laguna Beach Hjgh School students dur4 Ing two se,parale_assemblles. The topic or the sl'!sslons wlll be "Our Community a-nd My Plans for It." with each c:ouncil llopeful bel~ llowtd six minutes to 1peak. A q_uestion and answer period will follow each of the 115Clmblles, which are tchtdultd for 9:25 ond 10:211 o.m. In Ille 1udltorlum. ' • Laguna Forum Hears Views oti Legalizing By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL 01 #It rt.Uy ,lltl Sll ll Four Laguna Beach city courlll can· dida(es' views on the legalization of mari~ juana took the spotlight at a gathering called a "campaign boogie." • It was stag'd f'ri Jay night by council candidate Beth Leeds. Responding to a questi on on the sul>- ject, Incumbent City Co u n c 11 m a n Charlton Boyd said : "I don't th ink you want a wlshy-w_ashy answer..and I'm not going to give you one. After-1tudylng lhe Issue. yes. I think marljuana should be ltgalized. '' An opposing view wa s cffcred by in· cumbent Rtly Holm who commented : "I don't think marijuana should b e legalized." Noling the lorge number o[ 1 young persons packed into the American Legion Hall, Holm added : "This may be the wrong piece to say th is. I've never smoktd marijuana, but I'm giving you, 1tn honest Rnswer." Mrs. Leeds, who sponsoaed the rock music dance and candidates forum, said she. too. would favor legalizing the drug. "I've been to jail for i." added Atrs. Leeds. refcrrinc to 1 m1r ljuana t<'n· victlon or 1970. "J don't th ink there's anythlng-wl'Qng wUh tn#ljua11a whether you 're smoking it al bolftl or driv ing down the 1treet. 111t's so groovy 1nd '11kes me feel good. t can 't wait tW 11:1 legal," said Mrs. Leeds. "! d\!TI'l think I'm quaJlfltd to ITISWtr the question," resl*J(led attorney Richard Carr. "Not all the inforn1atlon is in yet." The question, posed by one youth In the audience. came at the end or a que.stiori- and·answer session with four cendidates . Candidates Fran Hall(r and, Harry- Lawrence were not present at the gather· ln~. Eac~ of the candidt1tes Agre~ that the 1'-1aln Beach should not be a parking !(;t th is summer and praise was given a plan by J\.frs. Leeds to create an open 1ur art festlval:--Thls ph1n is-now under study bv the city staff. "We are very n~ar the park we hitvll all been trying 10 create. Anything short ol that is inadequatt," Boyd told •ll! group. "Now that we ha ve torn down the buildings, let'! create a p.arAdlse,'' said IS.. CANDIDATES, Page I) "But because of the tight budget, we ha ve to rely on the host families,., sa id Inge. "We don't expect them to do a lot of entertaining with the students, but to provi de housing and meals." Persons Interested in providing a home need not have high school ag1 children or their own, l nge nottd. Personi desirln~ more information should call Inge after 5 p.m. at 495-4934. Ex-Governor Dies SALT LAKE CITY. Utah !UPI ) Former Gov , George Oewe~· Clyde died Sunday at his: home of natural causes. lie was 73. Clyde became governor of Utah In 1956 after ft career as an engineer "''hose 1pecirlty was water resources development. A '"tonservatlve Republican, ,he served two terms and decllned a lhlrd, stepping down In 1964. T~ay's Flnlil N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Ro se Qaims $215,000 'Left Ov er' 11~ RAH BARA KR EIRICH 01 1111 01ilJ ,11111 U1fl 111 a rncmnrandu m addrl'ssed lo the LaJ:U!lil Beal'h <·itr council. (;Hy Manager La"'renre Rn:;r stated r r1day tha t cur· rent budgel projeclions lndlrate the city \1·ill ha\·e funds amounting to $215,000 left over llt the close of the current fiscal .vear. rathe r than a "deficit" of $271.000 as reported in some ne\lts stories. Two cil y council men, with slrongly op- posing views on !he state ol the city'a finan ces. Roy Holm and Edward Lorr. both cited Rose's memo as confirmin& lhl'ir individ ual positions. lloln1 1naintaincd it proves his con· lt'ntion thal !he city \1·ill end the ye<ir \1i1h a C'On1forlable ~urplus of cash. rather lhan a deficit. Lorr said it proves hiot t1rgun1ent ·that !hr rlty has been follo11•111g a policy or d('fic1t sp£'nding . If l'urr('nt l'ilSh proj<'C'l1ons prove to be rorrC'l'I, Hose sta tes. the\' .... ·111 show that lh<' ci ly started the fisl·al \Par with a cash r<'ser\'e of $31~.000 . of 11."h1Ch 1hl' ci ty council voted to spend $1 119.009 in order tCJ mf'('t the year's budget "'1thoul an in- r rease ln the property 1ax . They 11·ould ha\·e left $126,000 in reser1 e at the end of the year. ll oY.·evcr. it now appears that onl y $100,000 Y.'i\I he needed to balance the budget, so $89,000 will be returned lo the reserve, leaving the city with $215,000 at the end or the year, says Rose. "Deficit," says the manager, ca n mean several things, but it is commonly llC:· ctpted as meaning the difference belween cash coming in and cash going out. Comparison of 197G-71 with prior years is not consistent, he maintains, hccause the figures used for the current fiscal year are strictly budget figures boscd on the accrual accounting system. Th is means, he explains. anti cipating revenues expected for the .vear and plan- ning expendilures accordingly. But it does mean !hat some of1he expenditures can he delayed if the revenue is not forlh corning. The lalcst figures indlrate the city wlll receive in cash this year revenue amount- ing to approximate_!y $3.500,000 and spend $3.600,000. Under cash accounting, thi s would mea n $100.000 less money coming in than going out. and this amo~nl was budgeted from the reserve, along with an additional S89,000, which apparently will not be spent. Rose points out that this $100,000 spe.n. ding deficit compared with similar figures of $165,000 in 1969, $21 5,000 in 1970 and $201.000 in 1971 , indicating a more lightly controlled budget currently. Councilman Holm, in tumbent c&n· didate for re-election April II, who ha,. been altackcd during the campaign for "fiscal irresponsi bility," sald Friday that Ro se's men-.o confirms his repeated statements that the city will end the year with a surplus of money ra1her lhan a deficit. "Those who can g't thrQUl:h Mr. Rose's memo." said Holm , "will learn that w& will not have a deficit of $271 ,000 at the end of the fiscal yea r. but rather that we will have a surplus· or $215,000. This means we'll have less left over th is year than last year. when we had $315 ,000, bu t it's still a safe margin." Holm added, "Budget slatistics are essentially confusing at any time, but the confusion is sometimes compounded in (S.. DEFICIT, Page ll Orange Cc1ast Weather J\.1ostly sunny skies are "on the Agenda for Tuesday along tht Oran ge Coast, with slightly cooler temperatures expeeted . Highs at the beaches around 68 rising to 78 Inland ., Lows 4~$$. INSmE TODAY A federal ngrnc11 ackno~ ledges it ovirlooki a rat or mo11se pelle1 in P.ach pi 11t o/ wheat. See Pngi 8 for gi uidtlines on how mucli filth the' agtncu considers 14navotdnble and toler· able in rtolr favo rite foods. L. ,M, • ..,. • Allll L...,.. " ... """ " ,. ...... " C1llttrM1 • Mllltfttl ,.., • (l••tltlM .... ... _ ,_~ " ""'"' " S•l¥l1 ,trtw " c ....... ,.. n '""' , .. ,, 0.11~ Nellt•t " SIKll Mtrlllh •tt ,,1 .. 1111 , ... • Ttltwf"°"' " lfllffll llll-1 " Tllffi.rt " '""llC' .... We11M1 • ,. "" ···" " W....'t ..... lt.IJ --11 wt!W "'"' • • .2 DAILY PILOT l! Mond.111 April l, l'n Prox1ni1·e's No Match Fo1· Old Tommy Trojan By GEORGE LEfDAL ~ 01 Ill• Oellv ,ilCll Stitt SOJ\IE NEWSRooi'I WAG recently suggested Sen . \Villiam Prnxm ire' <l>-Wi.s.) might be having ·more troubltt-with his head-lhan he bargained for since his recent hair transpl ant. Proxmire , it seems. objects to the U.S. Department or Transportation frivolously fr11ter1ng au•ay hard·earned tax mC1ney promoting Transpo '72. lie particularly directed a barb at Orange County's entertainment entrepreneur extraord1naire -one Tommy Walker. \VaJ ker grie1ously responded lo newsmen's irfquiries with an explanation. \Vhat Proxmire didn 't know. appar· ently, is that Walker signed a $30.400. three-month contract Al with the government to convert what was expected to be LllDAL ·a losing proposit ion into a moneymaking. balance-of-pay- ments boosting, international spectacular. • After only eight days on the job, Walker increased predicted admissions to the transporation extravaganza by some $800,000. FURTHER. as direc tor of the Pro-Bowl halftime show last January, Walker worked a ISO-second pi tch for Transpo '72 into the televised hooplr.i. Hi' figures that's 'A'Orth about $70,000 of national television air time. if 1he 'iovemment had to pay for it. ~ Obviouslv. Proxmire ha.~ little understanding of \Valker 's football back· ground \\'hich dates back to his unusual career as Tommy Trojan , drum major for the USC marching band. . . Yes. \Valker -the only varsity letter bearer 1n USC foolhall history 'A'ho never played a second of football -ne,rertheless is one of the SC football greats. · -. . · Standing a not·so-frightening ~101h and weighing all of 147 pounds. Walker, as band leader, held for a year the Pac-8 conversio ns scoring record, in 1947. --.1· -''l LED THE band Into the ColiSeum wearing a drum ma jor outfit over my rootball uniform." Walker explains. Then, as the team scored a touch· down, the SC equivalent of supennan would strip down to hi!I jersey, run onto the field and kick the extra points. . . Needless to say it took a little guts to gel out there on the field without shoulder pads or any other of the usual protective equipment other playe rs used. Pac-8 teams have never exactly enlisted.Ji bunch of pansie!I and \Valker recalls some rather crushing moments. Now, the 49-year-old Walker is rushi~g in to bai! the government out with program revisions to make the $5 million T~anspo ,12 venture a succ~ss. The whole 300-acre exhibition at Dulles Jnternat1?na! Airpo rt. nea r W~sh1n~·:r :ton, D.C .. is being put together on one-fourth the time the Seattle Warld !I Fair was organized. And, it's only eix times bigger than that 'A'orldly wonder of human achievement. . If Walker 's record at USC, followed by 12 years as ente~ainm~nt director at Disneyland and a string of crowd-pleasing spect~cular~ .1nc.lud1n_g the an- nual Rose Bowl Patriotic Fourth of July ShO\\', conllnues. 1t !I JUSt likely Sen. Proxmire will wish he hadn't tangled wilh the for~er Tommy T~ojan. As for the $30 400 contract. \Yalker notes thats less than b1!1 usual fee. The Pro Bowl paid 'him $19.000 for a ro-minute show. Transpo '72 runs for eight da ys -1'1ay 27 to .lune 4. FroHa Page 1 DEFICIT ... pre-election periods. \Ve all c 3 n remember the colorful warnings of fiscal dis•ster which preceded the high rise elettion, but were not borne out by reali- ty. I trust the electorate is intelligent enough to carcfUJly weigh the merits of the varying statistics now being re- leased.'' Councilman Lorr._on the other hand, saw i nthe Rose memo confirma· tion of his "'aming that the city is head- ing for financial ruin by continuing to dip into reserves to meet budget needs. eveq though the amount taken out this yew will be somewhat lower. •·A reserve of $215,000 is nowhere!: near enough.'' said Lorr Friday, ''especial.ly when the fii;ures ind icate the reserve will have been reduced by almost $700,000 in the past four years." Repeating his assertion tha t cost of the ~tain Beach purchase has created the need for annual dipping into reserves. Lorr asserted the increasing budget should have been met by an increase Jn property tax. . . While the councilmen debated his figures. Rose concluded. "It is fa ir lo S1'Y we are not far from where we expected to be.'' l\'l ess age on High BEATRICE, Neb. <AP ) - \ T h{ messa ge of Easter was carried in an unusual maMer Sunday by a class at St. Paul Lutheran Church. The class releas· ed 250 balloons with the message "Jesus Li\'es." OU.N•I COA ST LI DAILY PILOT Trio Questioned • In $212 Millio1i H eroi1i Seizure AJACCIO. Corsica (UPI) -Police i~ day questioned t1\·o men and a woman ar· rested in connection \~1ith the world's big: gest heroin seizure -935 pounds worth $212. million bound for the illicit U.S. market. One of the arrested men wee identified as Louis Santoni, 4(i, a Corsican residing in Paris picked up by police when he returned to his home village Sunday for an Easter vacation. Police maintained silence on the ar· rests, but sources said they "'ere part of an investigation into the ~larch t seizure of the heroin encased in cement in a shrimp boat captured near Marseille. I Dead, I Hurt In Grov e Crash Mrs. Katharyn \\'all, 48. or 10622 Kern Ave., Garden Grove, died Sunda,v of in- juries suffer ed when a car dr iven by her husband Harold. 54, slammed into a power pole on Euclid Street near \Vood· bury Avenue, Garden Grove police rt· porte<l . The husband. although victim of mulf i. pie injuries, is reported in satisfa ctory condition today. Mrs. Wa ll's death brin~s to fill the number of traffic fata ltilies 1n Orange County this year which compares with 59 the same date for 1971. Question s? Ask Ro se For Answer Laguna Beach City '-1anc.ger ~\4•rence Ro~e has · initiated an "answergram·• serl'ice by res ponding to resldenl s' ques· tioris throui h local newspapers. Jn his most recent outpourings of in. formati on, Rose told wh y bu ildings are smr stilnaing:On ~la1n Be llch Par~;iden• tificd the youngsters carrying cli pboards and asking que stions of motorists: and ta lked abOu~ the brush cutting activity in the hills above the city. The ci ty manager said he will continue the service as long as residents ask ques· . lions aOO said inquiries about city ma t· lers could be directed to his office at City Hall . The Ma in Beach buildings. Rose noted, might not all be gone unlil late 1973. The lease on Benton's Coffee Shop does not expire until that date and lhe owner is still trying -and has been trying for months -to find a new location for his business. The ARCO service station "'ill be purchased by the city soon. he noted, and then torn down. The third buildin g still standing, the Recreation Department. won't be demolished until the lifeguards and recreation officials can be relocated , he said. In answer to a question about the youngsters carrying clipboards and querying motorists. Rose said the youths a~ employed by \Vilbur Smith and Associates and are IlelPing make a survey of tr~1fic needs in the community. "The. principal reason for this is lo find out if there is any correlations between the location in which people park and the business or recreation they are intending to engage in," Rose said . In response lo an inquiry about the brush-cutting activity abo ve Rancho Laguna Road and Morningside Drive, Rose said county workers are making a "fuel break .. to cut do"'" nn fire dan ger. The wor kers are th inni ng out heavy brush and combustible undergrowth to lessen the chance of a fire spreading from one area to another. FroHa Page 1 CANDIDATES ... 1-lrs. Leed s. Carr said he would like to se ~ .. a:i artistic sort·or show. I think Beth's ide3 Is great ." "We need something there besides bare ground. An art festival is certainly superior to a parking lot," commented Holm . On the qeu stion of future deve lopment of the art colony, f{olm said the issue boils down .. lo commercial interests versus the res idents.·• For example. he said. the nexl city council will ha ve to. wrestle the issue ot the proposed Upland Industries de velop- ment on the oceanfront between Lag una Avenue and Sle epy Hollow Lane. "\Ve now ha ve a chamber of commerce-oriented majority on the city council and it's something I will try to reverse." said Holm. Boyd said the i~sue of build ing height is not dead in !lpite of the Aug. 3, initiat ive election introducing the 36 foot height limit. "Recently the majority on the city council made it possible for a si mple 3-2 simple majority to make zoning changes. \\'e used to ha ve a 4·1 rule and 1 will fight tn reinstate tha t rule ." said Boyd. J\1rs. Leeds called for re·c val uation of the 20,000 population density goal recently acce pted by the planning com· mission and city counc il. "Just driving around, 1 don't know where we ·re going to put another 7,000 people." Carr said he felt a need for low cost housing and that it should be placed in Laguna Canyon. ''And I don't know that we wo uld have to vio late any height limitations to build it. "I don't want to see any high rise in !own.·• Carr stressed. Tl\1 Ortn91 (Olllll OA IL Y PILOT, will! Wl'lldl 11 c~..,11.ned '"' NtW1·Prn1, 11 P1Jbll1htd bV f flf O•fr~• (011! Publ!1h!ng Coml)ln\f. SIPI• ri le edrt!oi1 l'I publl1told, MOl'd1y ttorou~h ""IG••· !~· CO''' Mrs•. Nt ... POrl er1cto, Hunr·glG'I !lc•t fl Founll \'1 VAllt y, L1011111 8t!C~, !•""' Std(!l~t~ 111\d S•n Cl1..,enlt l ~tn )u<i C•Dl.,1r1.,o. A 1lngl1 reg•!lllll !"'llh~n ., !N~·l!fled S~lurdfYI IMI Sur><11y1. 1n• r•·r• '"' P11bll1Mno pl1nl 11 •! llO w -.1 llt/ srrre!, C0111 Mes•, C111rDrnie, t leli. NOITH VllTNAM Robr rt N. Wt1d Pra ldt r>t tnd Publl~111r J .e~ R. C11rl1y \' ~t ''"' ~!nl f l'ld G"1tr1I M1n.g1r Tllo"''' K .... n EISltrer Tko111•1 A. Murplli111 M1n19!11t E01tor Ck1 rl11 H. Loos Ric.k•r4 #, Niii Alll9!1nl Mtnftlnt f:dltono L .. ••• IMcll Off!,_ 222 f or11t A¥tl'IUI M•ili11t Acl4r111 : P.O. l t1 66l, •2•52 Oftlet OfflC:el Coll• Mn•: llC Wnt ••r sir ... """""°'' le1ct1: JJ» "'"""""" l 8U+t¥•rd '"""'1"910'> IHcil: 1111J INtll aoui ... , •• Sin (11.......,tt; JOJ NOrlll I I C1mtno "tll t.i.,tt. .. 111 4) 6"42·4J2l ___ , Cl .... tfiM Alffrtlll"t 642·1671 L.,11• h•• All "P•,.,,_Jtf'lt ' t.i., ..... , •. ,.,, ~f•!fl'lt, 1tn. Orrntt-· l:o11T 'wblf111!~ C..,.,N ll'f'. Ht 11...,t J!Orff!, lllu1tr11i-, fd11'0rl1I f'ltnrr or .Ow1r11J-t1 htrtill lfltr be ~rtlluctd wf,.,Ollt IPICitl ...,. l'l'!IUIOtt llf ,Clil'f'ri9111 twn1r. ~ c.111' ll'l!lltH 11ld 11 C0t!t ,1,1., .. ,, C1Hl'Ort1l1. .t\lllK'rltl., "" c•rrltr n U -+lllYI ~ "''11 ll.1J. 1'1'11H1tlll\r1 m!111'1,., n1tl11ttlo111 N '1 mtntlllv. " L•Oa sou~ VllTNAM Reds on ~love Ul'f lrl1w1r111• 1''orth Vietnamese troops have over.run the last l\vo government out· po!ts of a town to gain control of all but two major cities of South \'letnam's norther nm ost province. Quang Tri. As South Vietnamese !Oldiers retreated south. Communis,ts stormed through Ca mp C1rroll and Mai Loe bases, from 1i•hlch U.S. advisers were evacuated just be· fore~e attack. · • \ '!" DAILY ,ILO,T l!lff ,11019 · BASE rs ERECTED so RICHARD HENRY DANA MAY AGAIN VIEW DANA HARBOR Bronze Statue Will a. PllCed Perm1nen tly During Unveili ng Ceremony Ap ril 28 April 28 Unveiling Set Ricliard Danct Statue to Welco1ne Mari1ia Visitors By PAMELA HALLAN Of t111 011t1 ,llClt s11fl Richard Henry Dana "Will return to the hafbo r he immorl a Ii zed in his classic "Two .Years BeforJ! the Mast" on April 28. The bronze statue. created by John Tcrken of Ne1v York , V.'i\I be permanently set in place during an unveiling cetemony at 11 :30 a.m. in Dana Point Harbor. · The unveiling "·ill be preceded by a publiC reception for the artist at 9:45 a.m. at !he Quiet Cannon Restaurant in Dana Point. Tickets, available at the dnor. \~:HI be $1 5 per person or $20 per couple. All funds '4'ill be contributed to the Da na ri.temorial. f\1emorial, ha ve placed the total cost of the project at between $2{),000 and $25,000. A pedestal and concrete stairway have already been constructed on the island at the end of the bridge in the harbor. The statue. wh ich ls still crated. is heing cared for by the Orange County Department of Beaches. Harbors and Parks in their \\'&rehouse in Ne\vport Bee ch. Remmers said Kenr.el h , Sampson, director of the department, u·ill be master of ceremonies for the unve iling. Other perticipants "'ill be ri.1rs .. Charles S\.vanner, a distant niec e of Dana, who will do the unveiling, and other members of the Dana famil y who will be present. -··we hope the statue-will ~~.81- world famou s as the Little Mermaid in Copenhagen. Denmark," said Remmers. "I'm sure everyone '4°itl be proud of it in the years to come." Thousands of people have contributed to the Dana ~temorial and many will ha ve their name engraved on a special plaque to be placed at the foot of the stat ue . Remmers said a guest speak er will ad· dress the gro up attending the ceremony, but a firm committment has not yet been made. Les Remmers. San Juan Capistrano 11istorical Society member u•ho has spent countless hours raising funds for the 1nemorial, said only $4,000 rema ins to be collected. Fullerton Cycli st l(illed; The statue, vl'h ic h was cast in bronze in Italy, cost $15.000. Other ex penses, i~ eluding miniat ure statues sent to the hisllJrical society by three artists who vied for the honor of creating the Dana Suspect Quizzed iI1 Case . 'Strollers' Set For Forest Ave. I11 Recall Drive •·Petition strollers " will be out-along Laguna 's Fort!St Avenue each afternoon this week as Citizens for Good Govern- ment continues lo seek signa tures on petitions asking for the recall of coun· cilman Edward C. Lorr. The strollers wil l daily from nonn to 5 p.m. carry clipboards idnlified 1\•i\h recall signs and focus on collecting signatures from downtown employes and shoppers. Even though the necessary 2,130 signatures needed to force a reca!J ele r· lion have been gathered, add itional sign atures are netded lo assure there wil l be enough names when the petitions are checked against current voter registra- tion rolls. Persons who will 'be 18 by Au g. I and :ire registered voters may sign the peti· lions as well as persons who registered to vote following the deadline for the April 11 city council election. a Citizens for Good Govemment spokesman said. Highway patrolmen !laid they 'A'ere neafly complete in their investigation of a "'eekend hit-run traffic death near San Clemente and a suspect has been con· tacted, but not yet charged, they said. The incident claimed the life of IS.year· old Eugene Crawford of 622 W. Houston SL , Fullerton, late Friday evening as the From Page 1 BIRD S • • • Fontana area. ' They said birds v.·ith the disease dis pliiy cold sy mpt oms -fits of sneezing and J!asping fnr bre.:ith -and diarrhea. · About Ja0 .000 chickens on 100 ranche!I l1a,·e lll ied alone in San Bernardino Coun· ty. ~lore than a million chickens are ex· peeled to be dest royed ln an effort to halt the disease. Spoke~mcn fro m the poultry industry say their loss from the di5ease is now runni ng about $3 million a "'eek. No infected flock! ha ve been found in the other thre e counties of the quiiranline area -San Diego, Santa Barbara and Imperial. according to the Agriculture Department spokesman. Elect youth and a £Ompanion rode thelr bicyc les along old Pacific Coast Highway north of the city limits. Patrolmen said they were contacted Ol'er the weekend by pho ne by a person who might be Involved in t~e case, but a!I yet have made no formal arrests . Crawford was killed instantly at 9:M p.m. as he and a friend rode their cycl es fitted u·ilh camping gear to1'•ard San Clement e. A 1''hite sedan hit the youth from behind at a high rate of spffil, carrying the fatally-injured c.vclisl aboul 150 feet on the hood before the boy's body fell off. An eye"·itness -a San Cl emente .,.,·oman driving by at the lime of the crash -called local police and furnished e lice nse num ber of the hit-run car, local officers said. San Clemente patroln1r n and CH P of- ficers drove to a spol in the Pall Sades near the crash scene and found the auto, but not the driver. The car, of ficers 11aid. had a broken windshielrl . The victim's sleeping bag was still in the front seat and parts of young Cra'.l•fo rd 's cycle were ja mmed in- to the undercarriage, officers said. The death car was to wed to the Orange County crime labor.story from its parking place near 34232 Camino Capistrano, Capistrano Beach. ,~, 'llllllcll A#V, DOM RACITI ,• as your Costa Mesa -DGM-RAcwr• ••• City C_oun_cilinan • HE'S CONCERNED WITH THE CITY OF COST A MESA ••• WITH ITS PEOPLE ·fTS l'ROILEMS ••. ITS CHALLENGES. AS YOUR CITY COUNCILMAN DOM RACm WILL SUPPORT: e EXPANDED METHOD OF CRIMI PREVENTION e 300 ACRE ECOLOGY PARK e CITY WIDE CLEAN UP CAMPAIGN e TIGHTER CONTROL ON CITY T(<XES e TRAFFIC CONTROL DOM WILL LISTEN-DOM WILL WORK DM9MT.,...wlrtl ._.hll ... I.--I l••ll• Raciti-Last On The Ballot-f.irst In Civic: Concern Cempolgn HMdquertero et 1140 Newport Blvd,. Phone 645·1360 or 541-1313 \ I " I t c Ii b h l • K hi • h » pi d lo of • m w off In sit ch hi• "" fou ltg fhe Co bte~ we Cou car 11 . • -. • , Saddlehaek Today's Final N.Y. Stoe.k8 VOL. oS, NO. 94, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIC 3, 1972 TEN CENTS NOITH VIETNAM Carrier Joins B-attle U.S. Recalls J(itty Hawk, Sends 50 Planes LAOS sou~ VIETNAM • • '-----' MU..llS Reds on Move SAIGON (U PJ ) -The aircraft ca rrier Kitty Hawk, recalled from shore leave in lhe Philippines, arrived off Vietnam Irr day and its SO planes were ordered into 11cflon immediately against Nort h Viel· namese. armored columns which have drive (I IS miles into South Vietnam. A second carrier, the Constell ation, "'AS ordered from leave in Japan \\'ith the guided missile cruiser Oklahoma City to join two other carriers .Qll Yankee Sta- tion. It would be the greates t concentration of U.S. naval might since end of the born· bing halt in 1968. The Kitty lla\\'k•sped lo Yankee Station fro1n Subic Bay after the U.S. comma nd warned •tanoi it "'ou ld take "precau- tionary actions'' lo protect American lives in South Vielnam. Such warnings in the past havt preceded hea vy bom»ing offensives against North Vietnam. The four carriers p;us air force fil!hter· bombers based clse"•here in Vietn am and * -tr * * Policy Panel Recalled' .... . ---. North Vietnamese troops have 0\1errun the last two governmenl out· T s d v • t s "t t • P?Sts of a town to gain conlr?I of all but t,v_o major citi es. of South 0 tu y le l ua ion Vietnam's northernmost province. Quang Tri. As South Vietnamese - soldi ers retreated south. Co r:nmun ists st~rmed through Camp _Carroll .~ 1 • ___ and-A-1ai-Loc-.bases,....Lrorn~.~·hich...U.S. advise rs ...were-e.vacuated·-JUSL-be-'d l N. namese thrusl was "a inaller or concern fore the attack. · Y.'A SH INGTON (AP l -Presi en lX· lo the Administration and to the Presi· • He Shaves 120 Pounds, Becomes 'Different Ma11' Mike Turin doesn't kid himsel f anymore. For ?.'> years he allowed himself lo· weii:th 220 pounds. Three years ago. afler suddenly hitting 2~. he decided to \\'eigh ""hat he should -135 pounds. Today, for first time in his \if~. he .is not overweight. Al 135 pounds. he 1s a dif· ferent man. "A lot of people kid themselves . They 1ttribute their overwei~ht to glandular problems or they say they are just big· boned or that lhey inherit it. You don't inherit fat . you stuff it in your mouth.'' Hi s method : a "common sense diet'' and exercise. At SO. he h.a.!! changed his goal s and at- titudes for living . He gave up a successful career in the fabr ics business and enrolled at Orange Coasl College. . He runs at least nine miles a week, pla ys handball and works out with weights. He hopes to help others Jose weight and become physically fit with his prograrn: Turin lives at 3006 Country Cl ub Drive In Costa Mesa with his wife and three children . Now a full -time student. !hey Jive on his savings from his past career. His philosophy is : "Anyone ca n lose as much weight as he or she wants : Jt 's all in how much effort you want \()expend ." It took 11 months to lose the 119 unwanted pounds. "I learned what my body nee'Jed , not what it wanted ." he recalled. "I at'! many or the same things 1. ~ad ealrn before. but in smaller quanllt1es. I ale healthful , balanced. nutritious meals and the weight started peeling off ." When he r'eached 135 pounds , he began exericising, following a prog ra m in "aerobics," a best-selling book by Dr. Kenneth Cooper, and slowly worked himself into shape. "l didn 't try to get into lop ph~ical shape overn ight." he said. "That would have been foolish. You aren't fat and fla b- ~y for 47 years and ex~ct to be 21 OJym- pic marathon runner 1n a matter of days." "Before." he remembers. "I was like a lot Of other people .. I thought 1 got ple~iv of exercise sitting 1n the stands wntch1ng a baseball or football game." His exercises include joggln;?, swim- ming. handball, cycling. basketball arid walking. . Generally. it 1s advised that people f HE 'S FIT NOW Turin J09s at 50 over 4n should not attempt a fitness and weight-loss program without a doctor's advice. The result: "I feel better now than I ever have. even as a youngster ... It's hard to believe that three years ago 1 IS.e WEIGHT, Page %1 on summoned a spec ial foreign policy dent.'' . panel into sessio n today to analyze and The group, headed by presidentia l prepare options for possible action to foreign affairs adviser Henry Kissinger, cope with the Communist lhrusl into includes rCpresentatives or the Defense South Vietnam. and Slate Departments and the Central But the Wh ite •louse spokesman sa id lnlelligence Agency. 11. ge nerally is called lhe Communist push south of the into session in crisis situations to analyze demilitarized zone vo'ill not hamper con· de velopments and prepare options for the tinuing scheduled withdrawal of U.S. President. troops from Indochina . Warren refu sed to discuss what actions "Our withdrawal program is on Nixon mighl order. He indicated,. schedule and will be" met." deputy press however . that there is little likelihood secretary Gerald L. Warren said in that U.S. ground fo rces will be com· response to a question. mitted. saying when asked about ground Warren said Nixon ;i sked I he force s that "our policy is unchanged." \Vashington Special Action Group As the President "watched the situa· tWSAC) to meet because the North Viet-iSee ADVISERS, Page%) ' Transit. Dire~tprs ~ccept County Busline Proposal By JACK BROBACK 01 no. 01llY P'119! 51111 Orange County should have new bus lines in operation wi thi n four to fi ve months. according to Martin Bouman, 11 consultant preparing Orange County Transit District's Special Bus Needs Stu· day. Tra nsit district directors today ap- proved Bouman's recom mendation that intra -community transit service be sup.- pli ed as rapidly as possible. that present services. 15 in all, be modified to provide better service, and that intercommunity lines be activated as justified by potential demand. Bouman. of Ala n M. Voorhees and Assoc iates of Virgi nia. who with VTN of Orange County are doing a $40.000 study on current bus needs made a fonnal report to the dist rict directors today. Pre viously, he had outl ined his pro- posals in a study session last wee"k. Bouman·s overall report ca lled existing transit service in the county poor . '"\Vhile there are .some I.'> public and private transit operations, for the most part they are uncoordinated. provide minin1al se rvice and use obso lete equip- ment ," he sai d. The consultant added that between now and 1980, growth in Orange County will follo""' traditional patterns. ''which un- fortunately are not conducive to high ly efficient transit service or patronage." He explained that residential growth will follow the typical low density sp rawl pat.ter n and industrial growth will consist largely of expansion of existing pockets. Bouman also said that commercial growth will come in fragmented shopping centers, that no major "downtwons" .are in the picture. Transit district general m a n a g e r Gordon .J. ''Pete" Fielding, said the con- sul tant's studies were on schedule. In answer to a question, he ~aid the Southern California Rapid Tr a n s i t Dislr:.ict, which has major opera tions in Orange County have been asked to estimate the cost of supplanting current South Coast Transit services if that firm should cease its operations, as threatened between Santa Ana and Orange Coast communities. Ruptured Main Douses May Co.; Loss $25,000 A rupturing coupling In a major water main on the lop floor sent a flood cascading through the May Company store in Costa Mesa early Sunday. caus· ing up to $2a.OOO damage, depending on final estimates. Several inches of w"ate r wa,; left stan· ding in the Sou th Coast Plaza store, which is nonethel ess ope0n for business to- day while mopup operations continue. The accidenta l br eak sent wat er bub- bling downstairs through all three levels like ra pids in a ri•1er -so loud ly, ir fact. that it set off a burglar ala rm that operates on so nic vibrations . Costa Mesa Fire Department Batlalinn Chief Ron Cole man said it was one or the worst such floodings his men have handled. Salvagemaster water vacuum i"'eepers (Set FLOOD, Pagt 2J · Prowler Suspect Held for Drugs · Candidates Discuss Pot J. BUE!l'ill Park man, cite"d by Sheriff's officers' Sunday night for allegedly prowl- ing 1boul • Mission Viejo construction sll.t tias booked on much more serious charges after deputies took a look Inside hls car. OUicers booked Timothy William Riiclne, 23, for possession of marijuana Mid dangerous drugs after they allegedly found 1ubst1nllal quantities of .bolh il· legal 1ubstances in the car. Deputies uid thty spotted Racine at fht intersection of La ...Yln• and VIII Conchita, 1 cnnstruction are.a th1t has bee n plagued by petty theft. In reooil wef:ks. Racine w11 kMf&ed in Orange County Jail following the aearch of' his car. l fugzina For urn Hears Views on Legalizin.g By FREDERICK .SCHOEMEHL 01 lfl1 o.t!IY Plit!~lllll Four Laguna Beach city counr:il can· dldates' views on the legalization of marl· juana took the spotlight at a gathering called a "campaign boogie." lt was staged FrlJay night by council cand idate Beth Leeds. Ret.ponding to a quesl ion on the sulJ.. ject, incumbenl City Co u n c 11 m a n Charlton Boyd said : 1o1 don't think you want a wi shy_-washy answer and r m not going to give you one. Afttt studying tne !$sue. yes, f think marijuana should be legalized." An opposi ng view was offered by in- cumbent Roy Holm who commented : "I don't think marlJu•n• should b • legalil~." Noting the large number of young persons packed into the America n Legion Hall, Holm 11dded : "Th is ma y ~ lhe wrong place to 'say th is. t've never miokf!d marijuana, &it I'm giving you .. n hnnest answer.'' Mrs. Leeds. who sponsored the rock music dance and candidates forum, said rshe. too. would favor leg1lizing the drug. .. I~ bee.n 1·0 jail for it," added ~!rs. Leeds. referring to 11 marijuana ctn· viction of 1970 •. "I don't think there's anything wrong with marijuana whl'ther you ·re smnk:lng it al home or drivi ng down the. street.. "It's so groovy and makes me feel gOQd. t can't wail till It's le_gal," s11kl Mrs. Leeds. ~ "I don't think I'm quaUfled·to answer the question, Ii responded • t ~ 0 r n e r Ric hard Carr. "Not all the inforn1atlon is in yet." The question, JX>Sed by one youth in the audience. came at the end o! 11 (tl>ISli(lf'l- and-answer se ssion wlt.h four candidates. Candidates Fran !,fall er and Harry La wrence were not present at the gather· ing. Each <lL the candidates agre~ t,h11t the Main Beach should not be a par·kirig l~t th is summer And pralse was 1111ven a plan by Mr,;, Lttds to create an open air art festival. Th is plan Is now urtder study bv ·the chy staff. "Wt are very near the park we h8v" all been tryln.i; to cre11te. Anything short Clf that Is Inadequate," Boyd told • .. t.t 11:!1>Up. "Nnw that we have tom dnwn the buOdinJ.l'.5, lei's create 11 parAdise." $aid IS.t CANDIDATES, P11e II Thai land "'ould enabl r the l'111h·rl St.lit'~ tn send RS n1an y ~i: 500 plants a~i1111~1 thP Communi st forrrs. Sout h Viet na n1e~ .r r('<.i1den!. \".i:111rn \Ian Thiru stripprri ~:11,gon. !111r 11 nd D;i Nang of all hul !hr1r garrison for\·r~ to-- day and ne"' 10.000 ~nvernnH•nt tr11(1r~ !o Quang Tn to try 10 roll baek thr ("(111\• munist i rl\·a ~ion Hanoi Hnd11"1 l'l'f>Or trd th;i1 :-0.nrth \ 1r1. namcst antiairl'raft i!llllllrr~ shot ftn1111 :i 852 bon1bing "popual1rd .1rl'<1~·· JU~l $156 Millio11 Med School Bill 011 Ballot From Wirt Strvict5 SACRA~-IENTO -The C'al ifor n1a Legislature's nn l~ phy~1«1 an today \Inn Senate Fina nc e C<1n1mi11 rr approval f11r his bill pultin~ a $1.'>6....mill1nn IJt'lnd 1s<;uf' to huild more U111l'rrsitv nr Califnrr11:i medical alld dPntal far1lilil''j nn the November hallo!, If voters appro i•t thr n1P:is11rr hy Sen. S1ephen Tealc tD-\Vrst Poin1) th1~ fall , 11 v.·ould allocate $37.27 niilho n for such con· struction at UC Irvine Other projects finanC'erl In 11 \\uuld :irtd buildings to uc·campuses tn flh•er!-lde, Los Angeles. Da vis. S;in Diego and San Fra ncisco. A second, sequential bill 1ntludcd in Sen. Tea le's legislat ion "'ou ld pu! anolhE"r S138 million bond issue nn the 1!)7.') California ballot. Legis1ator1 say the firsl bill . 1clual\y $1 55.9.million, would fina nce 18 new UC structures and increase the output of doc· tor s and dentists from 428 in 1970-71 10 694 per year. Poultry Flocks, Pet Birds Get Deatl1 'Sentence' By 'RUDI NIE DZIELSKI 01 !flt Dell~ Pll91 11111 U.S. Agricu lture Department inspectors are expected to move into Orange Counl.y this week to kill pet store birds and poultry flock:; in an attempt to stem the spread of an exotic fowl disease. ''Depopulation teams" were already at work in Los Angeles area pet stores to- day. gassing canaries and parrots af· flicted with Newc astle's Disease, a spokesman said. A special control center se t up in Riv erside will be a base or operations for the team wh ich are scheduled to visit pe.t shops and poultry growers in Orange, Los Angeles, River side, S&n Bernardino and Ven!ura Counties. All of these areas are within the eight· county feder al quarantine area which im· posed last mon th to eradicate the Asiatic virus disease. The disease af(ects the respiratory systems o( birds and is not c<lnsidered harmful lo human.!!. Chickeni. die of it within a day or two, accord ing to author ities. Flocks round carrying the disea se are exterminated and the ow ners paid the market value of the dead birds , Agriculture Department spokesmen said: The nu mber of pet store birds that have already been destroyed is unknown . One newsman said he saw seve ral birds killed by c.11rbon dioxide gas Sunda y al a Los Angeles pe t store and about 100 birds -rang ing from small canaries and parRkeels to large parrots -b6ing held in cages at the rear of lhe shop, ap- parently awa iting destniction. Orficials advi3ed owners or pet birds to check"" with veterinarians about vac· cl naling their pets against the disease whi ch broke out earlier this year in Jhe Fontana area. Con.Qty Assessor ' In UCI Laws'uit Orange County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw has been acC\lsed or Improperly taxing lr11sed computer eq11lpmcnt R(. UC Trvlne In a ~AW"SLllt riled in Superio r Court. by the regents of the u~1vcrslly of California. • The complaint de.m311d3 the. rerund or $6.475 pa id under prolest by the regent s hist June 17. It ls pointed oot In the 1e- tion that the equ ipment on whi ch the 8S· 1essor levied tax~ ls not owntd by the university. nru·th of !hi' f)t>mil ilariitd Zone. The U.S. cn1nm:ind tn $.:iigon drnied the rep:'lrl. 1·hr l'n nlrnunists hold !ht northern hRlr of Qu;ing 'l'n province jusL below !he f1,\fZ And rru1;r dispa.ches saiJ Quang Tri ('II\, thr 11l':1rby Quang Tri base and 1·011~ I la \\"ere undr r ht11vy attack ton ight. Qu:iug Tri is 15 n1iles ~uth ()[ !ht> l)\\l Z. Pong Ha 11bi111t 10 mill'll. 1\ 111'"' th,1·p:1t appearrd tn bn devtlopinj.l: 1,1 Hur. t)h.• ancienl. i1npcrial capital of \"1c1n;1111. hut offic ials !iaid the situation 11 ;L~ undrr ~·nntrol. Con1111uni~1 alt;i cks 11•rrr rl'ported 111t Fire Ba!it" An nr. 18 nul es "es! ol •Jue, and l\n:-<!o.t:nl". 15 miles ro the southwest. Ro1h basr!i protect ag ainst Com1nunist inf 1ltrat1011 routes lhrou~h lhe A ~hau \·allf'y to Hue. devast<1led in the 1968 Tet nffr11~11 E" A Soul h \'iet namese spokesman gaid lhP r('1nfort·1·rnents fin"'" in l.oda y wnuld 1nounL a cnunter..offensfvf' "in a few day!i." Thry included marine!!: and rangers frorn Sa igon. infanlry from Hue and t .... ·o lank brigades from Da Nang. Thcv were flown nortl. in a collection o[ l ' S. Cargo CIJOs. Viet namese air force tr;insporls and a irliner~ commandeered frorn !hf' govern1nen t n1rlinr. ·rhP ;u·11011 follo"'f'd President Thiru·s fl1)'.:h! to J lue and Da N<1n~ in 11 com· rnandc1·re ct Air Vietn am jet to look o"er th<> s1r11atl()t1, HAin ('[nuds have rn<tskrd the invad in.'!'. North Vie tnamese tank rol umns drivi n~ ;.u;ros!' the or..1z hu t tht> weather im- prov('d hx:lay and U S. <1nrl Soulh Viet· 11an1csE" fi~htcr·bombers st ruck hack at thl' Red ofte nsive . R52~ dropped bOm lJs through Jhe cloud!! rarl1er and three US. 71h fleet flC'Slro.vt·r!I: off the ro<1st pounded the l'11rn1y troops aoa tanks. 1'hr Communists threw up intense anti· ;i[rcr11fl fire. and seven American planes and helicopte rs )"ere reported shot down Sunday Rnd today but Americ1n planes flew 128 strikes Sunday a,nd more today, Carpenters End Sta.1id at Hotel In Miami Beach, T\-11AMI BEACH fU Pl l The Carpeilters, one. or tht. nation's most popu lr1r recording j:!roups, have flown back to Cali (ornia 11fltr canceling seven rf ays of a scheduled nine-day run here because they refu sed ln perform over the clatter of dishes at a hotel. The 13-inember group led by young Karen and Richard Carpenter of Garden \.rove, refused to come out for their ,se.. cond perform ance Saturday n i g ht because they said the Eden Roe Hotel failed to honor a contract provision that ii. must halt food and beverage service in the night club while they are singing. "We can perform in a noisy room and it doesn't make any diffe rence to us - we still ge.l pa id," said Richard Carpenter. "But we honestly believe the people deserve better.'' Karen Carpenter added : "[ almost forgot the words during 'Close In You• becau1'P. 11 waiter came up to a front table and presented a check very noisily to a man. After the man saw the check , I don 't thin k he could enjoy any song.'' The matter was brought lo !he al· lenti on of ho tel owner Morris Lansburgh between shows Saturday night, but he l'efused to stop service during the acL "A very clear and important clause in our contract prohibits service from five 1ninule!· before the show begins through the show until it ends." said Sherwin Bash, the Carpenters: agent. Orange C41ut Weather ~10!!:tly ~unny skJes are on the Agenda for Tuesday along the Orange Coasl, with sllghU y cooler tem peratures expected. 'Highs at the beaches around 68 rising to 78 l11 land. Lows 4$-:>5. INSWE TODAY A ftderat QQf"nc71 acknow- Ltdges . 1t overlook..~ o. rtlt or n1oust pelle t i11 iach pint of wheat. See Po'1e 8 /01 guid«/ine.1 on ho11, rnuch filth lht agellCf/ rnnsiclf!r.I uno voidable a-nd toltr· able tn your /o.vorite foods. l . M., • .,, , •••fi fl• 1) (•lilttllll J .Clttt/llM J).11 Ctmkt n C,.tlwtnl 11 Ottt~ Ntllct• 11 lt11tttn1I l'lft I (111 ... ltlfl!Mlll 11 "'"""'' l't-11 '" .... l:t<t,.. .. ~Mt... u .. "'"" ltlltllln 1) MtVM 11 Nt11tMI NtWI • °"""' (""" , • l•l'fl• ~ ,. IMm \llolt Ii.di Mt,_lt\ .. 11 "........ ,, Tllttlt" 17 w •• .,.., • w_., "'" 1i..1• w ... ·• ""' ., • J DAILY PILOT-IS • • MoN•y, April.J, 1972 P1·oxmiI·e 's No Match . For Old Tommy Trojan By GEORGE LEIDA!. 01 1111 Qlll• l'lltl 11111 SO~IE NE\\'-SROO~t "'AG recently ugge.sted Sen , \VHJ1a m Proxmire (0-Wi.!1.) might be having more troubles with his head than he bargained for since his recent hair transplant . Proxmlre. i~ seems. nbject~ to tht I" S. Df'pa.rtmenl nf Transportalion fr ivolously frittering ;i ..... ay hard-e.a rneri tax money promoting Transpo '72. He particularly directed a barb at Orange County·s entertainme nt entrepreneur extraordinaire -one Tomm y \Valker. Walker graciously responded lo nev.·srTIPn's inquiries with an explanation . What Proxmire didn "t know. appar- ently, 1s that \\o"alker signed ll $.10.400. thrf"e-monlh contract with the government to convert "'hat wal5 expected to be L110.t.L a losing pr<lposili<ln into a moneymaking. balance-of-pay- ments boosting, Jnterna tional spectacular. After only eight days on the job. Walker increased predicted admissions to the transporation extravaganza by some $800,000. FURTHER, a5 director of the Pro-Bowl halftime show last January, WaJker v.·<lrked a 150-second pitch for Transpo ·72 into the televised hoopla . He figures that'5 worth aOOut $70,000 of national · television air time, if the government had to pay for il. Obviously, Proxmire has little under.st.anding nr \Valk f'r's football back· ground which dates back to his unusual ca reer as Tommy Trojan . drum major for the USC marching band . Yes. Walker -the only varsity letter bearer in USC football history who never played a second of football -ne\lertheless is one of the SC football greats. Standing a not-so-frightening 5-1 01-? and v.·eighing 1tll of 147 pound~. Walker. as band leader , held for a year !he Pac-8 C<Jnversions scoring record, in 1947. "J LEO THE band into lh! Coliseum wearing a drum major outfit. over my football uniform." W111lker · explains. Then. as the learn srored ;i touch- do""'TI , the SC equivalent of superman v.•ould strip down lo his jersey, run onto the field and kick 1he elfra points. -- Needless to say it took a llttle guts to gel. llUt thert on the field v.·ithout shoulde r pads or any other of the usual prote'clive equipment olher pla~·er.~ used. Pac·8 teams have never exactly enlisted a bunch of pansie5 and Walker recalls some rather crushing moments. No"" lhe 49-yea r-old Walker is rushing in lo bail the govern ment out with program revisions to n1ake the $5 million Transpo '72 venture a success. The whole· 300-acre exhibition af Dulles Int ernationa l Airport. near Wa shing· ton. D.C., is being put together on one-fourth the time lhe Seatllt Warld's Fair v.·as organized. And, It's only six times bigger than that worldl y wonder of human achievement. JC Walker 's rec<>rd al USC, followed by 12 year~ as entertainment director at Disneyland and a string of crowd·pleasing spectaculars including the an- nual Rose Bowl Patriotic Fourth of .July Show. continues. it's just likely Sen. Proxm ire will wish he hadn't tangled with the former Tommy Trojan. As for the $30.400 contract, Welker notes that's less than his usual fet. The Pro B<Jv.•J paid him $19,000 for a ro-minute show. Traospo '72 runs for eight da ys -May 7l W .Tune 4. Cyclist Nabbed in Mesa 111 Sex Captivity Case One morel Hessian molorcycle gang member. sobght since a pair of Nevada girls spilled a sickening story of sexu.:i:I captivity involving forced p e r v er~ e pleasureii for 17 men and women, was captUred Saturday in Costa Mr.sa . The _.rrest of Kenneth R. "Varmint'' Bates, 27 , of 1013 W. 18th St.. and that or a Cy press woman affil iated with the outlaw cyclist gang brought to six the number in custody. A mass arraignment was scheduled this morning in [..(Ing Beach ?i.funicipal C.ourt for other defendanti: linked t.n the biza rre abduction disclosed Thursday, with the arrest of four initial suspects. Bates and the sixth suspecl, Bella ''Taco" ?i.1orris. 29. of Cypress. are charged with suspicion of kidnaping. forcible rape, sex perversion and assault with a deadly weapon. Identical charges are raced b~' Albert Cutter. 31. of Garden Grove, plus Richard Rizzone. 28, Linda M. Bagala. 2.3, and James E. Alan IV. 39. all or Long Beach. Alan is owner of North Town Custom .Cycpe Shop in Long Beach -where the initlal raid was made -and reputedly in· ternational president of the so-called outlaw cycle gang. Teams of Long Beach detectives Jed by Sgt. Jim Ra cobs are stlll hunting specifically named ~uspect.!i among Hessians allegedl y involved in the lurid OIANGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Th• Ortng1 Co11t D .. JLY l'JLOT, witl'I whlcl'I 11 CO"'lllned 1'1• N•w1-Pr!)S; ,, l'Ullll1heid lly ,,.. 0ff "tlt Cot11 P'ub!bl'lln1 Company. $epa· r111 t'd!1ioni frt 1>111>l11hed, Monclly lhrt1U1h Fr)d1•1'. tor (Olli Mttt, Htw1X1rl 1!1'1tn, H11n!lng!o'I l!!tlth/Founttl'> Vtl!t~. l1;11n• Btscf!, Irv in• S1daltblt~ 1ir,d Sin (lrm1~1r 1 ~·~ JUI'> C•11l1Tr1no. A 1in11l1 rtQ•On~I l<lo!oon b P11llh1hM $1t11nllys 1111'1 Sund •v~. tht prlnclCft 11u1>l1thlf'l1 pl1n1 11 11 ]JO V.•~t 1!11r $t1.ct, C~11 Mu•. C1lofornl•, t~61~- Robe rl N. w •• J Pr1ticlen1 l'!CI PuOhlQtr j . J 1t~ I!, C ur11'1 'V•CI Ptr~ Otnl l n<I Gtntrl l Ml~l~tf T~o''"' K1 • .,.il EOi1'0• Tko ,.,11 A. 1'1 urphi111 M1n19119 Et1TIW' Ch1rl11 H. lo&, l itl.••d P. Ni ll Al.•1111111 M•n1gong £4110•1 OffkM C.01!1 Mt11: J>O w1.i l•r Strttt Jiltwr:iarl 811cll: Jl.U N•WMH lovJt•l'111 L11UM 1!111<11: rn For111 ,..,..,."' "'untl"9!en l!le1c.11r 11t 1J l!ltttfl 111111t vi •d .Sin <.r~: JOS Hor111 I.I C11t1lno. l!.111 Ttl.,tl;•ite t714l '41·4JJ1 Cl-'flff Abtrtltl .. '42·S67t Sn Ct._.,. All D.,e?tMtllh: r.i.,... •t1.4420 C~yrl911t, 1t r2, °''"'' Ce11t fl'Utllltlllrll' Cl"'Nll}', Mt MWI 1ltr111. lthAlrltft~. H !flf'ltl f'lfl!ft' 1r a.IWrlll-" l\ertlfl 1t1t r 11i1 1ftlr0dutld Wllllout ••If• ••· 4"!1•lort 9f """""'' -• - •«~ i lt tt Ntlt<lf Nil! t i Cot!• Mbf, C.1 hlof1"1.. Suhtrl•'"'" b¥ c1riltr u.•:S · _,,.,,, e, "''" 11.11 rnentl'll¥1 m lhtl t"I .. u11111ltftt a .u ,,.,.,.1111Y. ' case d i~closed bv the Nevada victims. The pair. 19 ·and 20. said I.hey were visiting Long Beac h when on Friday. J\1arch 24. they met a group of cyclist.~ Al a bar and were invited to go for 111 ride. The joyride. !hey sllid, turned into a five-day ordeal of horror. Rid ing to Alan 's motorcycle shop, the women claimed they were repeattdly raped and finally forced to 11atisfy the sexua l \Vhims or male aod female Hessians throughout !he period of cap- tivity. Beatings were included in the brutalit\', according lo the girls who were finaliy released on the condition they promi sed not to go lo police. One said she was forced to keep hou.~e for the communal crew. while a second claimed she was put 10 work dan cing topless in a dingy nightclub. r.-tiss Morris. one or the two latest ar- restees. was taken into custody at the club in Bell, where she also danCeii;. Long Beach pol ice accompanied hy Costa Mesa detectives picked up Bate.s locally on Soturday night and he was im- mediately returned lo Long Beach for booking into jail. · Investigators s~id they received :in anonymous lip on whert.' to find Bates after the ~Wry .broke. Felony charges io addition lo count~ of kidnap and rape include forced sexual relations with Hessian cycle gang members. males and females included. Fro1n Pnge 1 ADVISERS ... lion very closely." Warren said ht mt'!l u·ith Kissinger and Adm . Thom11s Moorer. chairman or the .Join t. Chiefs of Starr. and conferred by telephone with Secretary or State William Rogers and Secretary of Defense r,.1elvin Laird. Al his last nev.·s conference M1trch 24 Nixon sa id !he U.S. comrr.ander in South \,. 1etnam. Gen. Creighlon A b r a m ~ , R ~sured him that South Vietnamese frirces v.·ou)d with~tand tht offensive. Asked whether Nixon !':till i~ confident Y.'arren responded that "certainly !he a~ prai.sal still stands." ~·lean1A1hll e , the Pent;igon al !!n indicaled ~oda¥ the remaining U.S. ground froops in Vietnam would not be used to reiniorcf! ~leagured South Vielname~e forces bat· thng the Communist offensl\le. Spokesman .Jerry W. friedheim 11ald the shi: remR lnin111 U.S. cnmbal mRneuvl!-r b:9ttalions 11re committed to the ~ecurilv nr U.S. inslallations and are not invol"cd in the action. !\'[essage on High Bf,ATRJG& NeO, (AP) -Th • message of Easter was carried in an unu!lu11l manner Sunday by a cl1sa at St. Paul 1.ulheran Olurch. Tht clasa relea~­ ed Z50 balloons with the message "Je.sus Lives." ' I , l • S'I • ' ITT Case 'Mistake' Fogs Primary Result B)' STEVE GERSTEl. U"I "ellllC•I W•lltr 11tl' three niajor <'nntr.ndcrs are believ- e-t1 to be bunched !':O closely that l\'lcGovtrn's inv111id accusations mt.;ld become a factor. even thou11:h none of the other candid~tes jumped in to exploit them . f\llLWA UKEE. \Vis. -A l"Jf'rhl'lp!I cost- ly mistake by SPn. Gtorae S. McGovern lidded to the confu5ion and uncertainty about the outcon1e of Tue s d a y · s Wisconsin 's presidential primary in Campaign stralegisls for t~ c.an- whlch McGovern . Hubert H. Humphrey . d.id_ates ~~ve shitd away from tabbing the f1n1sh. c1t1n11: the uncertainty of the vo te and Edmund S. ~1uskie battled for first for Alabama 's GO\', Ge<irae C. \\';10 ace place. \See related siory. Page ~I and the possibility of a mass cr<>SM>\'~r In a nationwide telecast Sunday, with by Republicans. the primar\' two days away McGovern GOP voters hav~ President Nixon o"n · . . • the ballot along with only Rep. Paul \'. _charged S~!l s ~ _E!_changLCQm·_ J..1cCloskey -<lf-California -who -has·-pullfl'd mission records ~howed that lnterna· out for lark of funds, a~d Rep. John ~1. tional Telephone-and ·relr.graph, tnc. As.hbroo~ of Ohio. who has not can1- drductcd a $400,000 Conlribution 10 p;i1gned in Wisconsin. the Republican national convention from p A,;·n'•,. onhthedDemocN raliyc bakllMot anrl c,1~· . . . a,., ng ar are e\Y or 11vnr ~nun !Is taxable income. V. Lindsa1• and Sen. Henry M. Jackson of A.s soon as the program (race the Na· \VashinJt"lOn . tinn -CBS ! ended, a rlistraught a ide On the ~11Hol. hu.t nf'll t ampa i,Rnl'llt" Are rushed to MrC.o vern to lrlt him he "'as R~p:oi. Sh!rlPy Chi sholm or New ~<lrk, \V1lbur Mill s of Arkansa.~. Patsy Mink ot v.Tong and that the 1971 report v.•i th the Hitwaii. Mayo r Sam Yorty of Los Angeles "A LOT OF PEOPLE KID THEMSELVES " ABOUT WEIGHT Turin Gulps Me.1lox Wh ile Sunning His Large Frame Sf.C -the year Jn v.·hich the contribution and Sen. Vance Ha rtke. v.·a.~ made -rad not bern filed. Bo y 'fhe y Said Would No t Walk Makes Ball Team --TERRA LINDA (AP ! -When Tracv C;ildwell wa~ born nine years ago With cerebral palsy, doctors said he would never walk. But Tracy has il way or surprising peo-ple. ,_ Three weeks a~o . v.•hen ht told his parents he v.·as going to 1ry out for 1he Little. League baseball Learn at Terra Linda . in M11rin County noi»h or San Francisco, they didn't · take him too seriou~ly. After all, he v.·ears braces on both legs. But Terry tried 2u l and captured pitching and outfield positions on the team. Ray Sicil iano. v.•ho coaches the learn , ~aid the youngster has been doing a good Jnb and has served as an inspiration for !he other players. '·You ought to v.·a1 ch hirn v.•hf'n hP's pirthing. ·• said Siciliano. ··Someti mes he loses his balance and rails. Bul he just jum ps up, brushes off his uniform and ~oes at it ag;:iin as if no!hinR had * pened. He's been an inspiration for other members of nur club.'' The you ngster also plays lennis and PfXJI, and is ont of the top students in his class. 1'.E. Heffernan, E~·FBI Agent, Attorney, Dies Catholic funeral services wil l bt held Tue sday ;ind Wednesday fTtr Thrimas E:. Heffernan. Harbor Area atrornev and former FBI agent·in-eharge for Orange Cou ntv. who died Sunrlav. He Was 55 <!nd had bCen ·ia for son1e time. Rosary for J\fr. Heffernan wilt bP. Tue.~­ day at 8 p.m .. and Requim i\1as~ V.'i !I he \\'cdnesday at JO a.m., both in lmmacu - Jare Heart or Mary Churc h. Santa Ana . Raised in c:eveland. Ohio, !\>Ir. Heffrr· nan came lo Orange County 30 yea rs a.s;:o and finally quit the FBI lo joi'1 the law firm of Harwood, Heffernan and Soden. He v.·as a past president of the Oran,!!e County Bar Association an honorarv life member of fht. Newporl Beach Exchange Club and was widely active in Catholic frate rn;il and strvice organization~. Memberships included the Holy NamP Society, Knights ol Columbus, the Burk Club of Stanford University. the Quarier- back Club of Mater Dei High School and service on the Catholic Welfare Aoard. During his legal ca reer follow ing ad- mission 10 the state bar in 1947. 1\fr. Hef. fernan v.·as primarily involved in cor- pora!e lav.• and represented one widel.v- known Orange Coast restaurant chain. HP laler left the partnership to start hi~ O"'n legal firm atone. :\ resident of 2927 S. Green\•ille SL. Santa Ana. Mr. Heffernan le:ives hi.'! v.•ife Bernice. plus sons Tom. Bob .. John and Pat Heffe rnan. The rarTii!y suggests contributions lo th e Thomas Heffernan Memorii:tl SchoJ. arship Fund for friend.!! v.·ishing to con· l!nue the concern of service he held in lift. Interment a! Holv Sepulcher Cemetery. Orangr. 11'ill follOw rites for Mr. Heffer· nan. with Smith & Tuthill i\tortuary. Santa Ana. in charge. 1 Dead, 1 Hurt In Grove . Crash ~1r!I. Katharyn \\fall , ~. of 10622 Kern A\·P .. G~rden (irl'lve. died Sunday of in- juries suffered when a car driven by her husband Harold . 54, slammed into ,. pawer pole <1n Euclid Street nt.ar Wood- bury Avenue. Garde.n Grove police rt• -~1"1. Theriusb•n<f."~oug vlc tlm m mulfl • pie tnjurle:s. is reported in sati.11f1ctory t'Mdition loday. Mrs . Wall's death hrinas to &O the num~r <K traffic f8tldtltits 1n Orange Coonly lhis Ytlf whkh compares with 59 the same date for 19'11. • ), f'rom l'age l WEIGHT. • • couldn 't v.•alk ::1rros~ the Tf)(lm \\':t hou! getting out of breath." he said. Staruni;: Tin lhP exerrise prn~r;irn 1\ <111 rou,llh fnr Tur1il.-ft1a'n)" times hr· -f1 ll discour.:ig ed. ··Thrre were limes whf'n I j u~! d1dn "t think I v.·as progressing' at all.'' he rPmf'n1berf'd. "Especi ;il)y when J started jo,llging. but I ke pt plodrling a\va y." "Sure .enough. it began to get. f'a sirr and. easier. It'll never get easier tha'l la ying on the couch watching television. but .~ome~irnes it's a Jot n1ore enjo yable and certainly more rewarding~" And now Tur in wants 10 help olner peo- ple ferl similar rev.·ards. In -between s!udying nu!rilion. speC'Ch and phvsi rill education he has started his ov.·n health progran1 ro help others li\'e at thP ir oplimum ;ind c1tlls ii the Planned Opti- melric~ Program t POP l. From speak ing en,iiagements at var:"u~ service club meetin~5. hr ha~ fhr ill Pri \\·hilP "v.·111ching other people get excited about losing weight and g e ~t i r. g physically fit. "'·he said. Six Persons Die In Packed Car FRESNO fL:Pf l -Six persons "·ere killed when 11 truck crashed into the sirlf' of a car lit an intersection five miles wesl nf here. The victims were riding Sunday in a c;ir packed v.·ith Ill persons. The other fnur were seriousl.v injured. The Calirornl111 Highway Patrol said the car ran through a slop sign and pulled in {ront of a truck driven bv Dave Newell of F'rPsno. He v.·as not inju;ed. The six killed in the mishap were iden- tified as Joe Mario i\1artinez. three months; Ernest Martinez. I ; Alfred Ro- <J ue, !I : Gloria ~1artinez. \!I : Gavina ior- re!I:, 3n, and Jose Porforio Torres. J. all of the Fresno area. Injured were Jose Lopez, :ll'l, nf Sanger, who wa! dri ving the car ; Jose ~tartinez. 2R and Relph Martinez, 21. both or Fresno . 11nd an unidentified girl. Ex-Go,·e rnor Di es SALT LAKE CITY. Ulah 1UPll Former GO\'. George Dewey Clyde died Sunda.v at his home. of natural causes. He 11·11s 7:1. r.·tcGovern then said that his accusal ion v.·as madt> on the basis of statements bv rrr officials that they considered i: ~ prnper business expense. He lr:ld reporters !hat he had made •·an he.nest error." ~lcGovem . Hun1phrey aod f\>lusk1t are ronsidered lhe three leading cand idates in !he \Visco nsin primary with its rich harvest of n1 dele Illes lo the Oemocra1ic , allnnalConveohon. About \.S million volers are expected to I.urn out 1·uesday for the fourth primaty of 1he 1972 ele<:tion year. Although McGovern had to re1rac1 one <1ccusntion against 11i'. ht held to his sec- 01111 chi:irge -that ITT paid no tede ral t.ir ~es for f!href' years, rndin11: in 1970. ! Rut the As.~nci1ttrrl Prf''.'iS said toclav SEC records show ITT did pav taxes iO I host. year. l - He also said that !ht Nnrth \'irina1nrse offensive rrinforced his call for a tnta l v.·ithdrawal and added that t!1e Uni'cri Stares should ~top providin11: n1:1 ~12rv aid to South Vielnam. · f 'ro111 Pnge l FLOOD • • • v.·ert borrnwed from both lhP Huntington Bf'ach ;ind S<1ota Ana fire departments to assist in the eight-hour cleanup job. "There was so much water we h111d to usP, a l 11 inch hose and a submersiblP pump just to empty the elevator sh;oft before we could use it." Chief Coleman remarked . He said the ini!\al 11\arnl was mnnilrired at 4:37 a.m .. and firemen v.•ere bu!v on the scene until noon . - The break occurred in 2 four-inC'l1 • v.•ater main su pplying the majority of v.·ater to the store . Chief Coleman said SPl'erR I thousand gallons of water poured out before the break wall di!lcovered and !he valves shut off to stop it. Store manager A. W. Mes ser sai·l lnda.v that half the top floor of the f\>lay Com· pany was flooded before the flow .~pilled down into lower levels. Damage downslairll was roncent ra led in the men's and boys' clothing section. where sodden boxes of me.rcha!ldise were still bein~ di~\'ered today. Chief Coleman s.:iid. much oi the af)- parel that got soaked is of I.he versatile double kn it variety which can take a Jot of punishment. Store Manager Messer ~hre\\" oold "'•Her on the hopes -0f any prospecth·~ customers looking for 11 discount due tn wafer·damaged mens weRr. He said that while the damage estimatt is still being co mputed there will be no special sate. such a5 some :iitores stage following a fire or ther disasler. Elect Airwest to Use Detecting A id On Passengers Orange County Airport ha~ been caught up in the current drive lo lncrta~e securi· I~· againsl bombings anti hijackings. Hughes Airwes\ passengers, beginning Tuesday, v.•ill pass through a new metal detecting gadget, known al! a magnatometer. before boarding jet liners. accordini;: t6 ciJ\1n1y Direc tor o{ Avialinn. Robert Bresnaht1n. He said Air Catiforoia the (l!her prin· e!pal con1mercial airline~ serving the airport should have similar devices in- s1a:1ed later th is month . ··Congress enacted a oe\¥ l;iw effec1 11·e ~tare~ I~ oullioina the dulie!I tJf Airports and a1rhne oper;ilor.!I regardinl!: securi· l}'." Bresnahan said, "but action wa!I !'Inv.· until the jetliner wall bombed in Las Vegas a rouple of v.•eeks agn." At that time. the Federal A1'iation Adm inistration used if.~ e m e r g e nc '! pov.·ers to require immediate rompliaflce v.·iih lhe ne1\' rules, the aviat ion director 5aid. Bresnahan said airport (\pera!nrs' duties includ e the normal ones of ex:· ervising pi:ecautioo to keep vehicle~· 11nd or people out of the operatinR 11rea .'!Uch as runwa ys, runup and freight load ing zones. Airline regulations ~re l'ery dela il~d, according lo avi1ttion directnr but the dirst step by Airwest and Air Cal is in- dictative of what we may expect in the future. Santa Aita Stab Victiui Critical A Santa Ana cab driver. victi m of a stabbing Sunday afternoon , is reported in critical cond ition today . \Villiam Oswell, 2Z, or 500 \V. 3rd SI ., v.·::1s v.·;i iting for a fRre in front nf Santa Ana Comn1unity Hospilal police said, v.•hen he got into an argument with another m11n over parking and was sl:ibbed in thf! lefl side. The a.ssailant. who Red, i.'t described as 11. Mexic an , American. about .'JO years old . ' with long black hair and A goatee. Dawes wa!! treal.ed 1t the hospital'• emergency cPnter ;iod held for observ• tinn. fl~. l'Mffkl l 146'¥, DOM RACITI as your Costa Mesa ' DOM RACITI City Councilman HE'S CONCERNED WITH THE CITY OF COSTA MESA ••• WITH ITS 1'£0PLE ITS PROBLEMS ••• ITS CHALLENGES. AS YOUR CITY COUNCILMAN DOM RACITI WILL SUPPORT: e EXP4NDED METHOD OF CRIME e 300 ACRE ECOLOGY PARK PREVENTION e CITY WIDE CLEAN UP CAMPAIGN e TIGHTER CONTROL ON CITY TAXES e TRAFFIC CONTROL DOM WILL LISTEN-DOM WILL WORK ----- Raciti-Last On The Ballot-first In Civic Concern C•mpoltn HHdqu•rl•ra •I 1'40. N•Wl""'I Blvd ., Phone 645-1360 or S41-13!l > r I r • • • I " ' I l I ' I w SU .. no re all pr bo in an tit la Co pla we In chi liv mu in I un wh ma bd he the exe .. , Ke hi sh ha by pie da " Joi ol • mi WR offi Ing sit ch his Ra An fou leg the bff we Co car ·Irrine. VOL. 65, NO. 94, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES NOITH VIETNAM ·: OE°¥tLITAAIZED ZONE .. .:~ . <~Com Lo_, Dono Ha . .>lllr: ~ Quang Tri sou~ VIETNAM Cam~~ ~ Carroll Mai Loe ci •• •• LAOS • • '--,; ... ~.c;.,--J .,.,, llt1"9f North Vietnamese troops have overrun the Jai;t tw9. go~e.rnment out- posts of a town to gain control of all but t'vo maior c1t1es ol South Vie~-a~s northernmos~rovince .. Quang Tri. As South Vietnamese soldiers retreated sou th . COmmUn1sts -stormed through-Cam p Carroll and 1rtai Loe bases, from v,ihich U.S. advisers were evacuated just be· fore the attack. He Sl1aves 120 Pounds, Becomes 'Different Man' r-.1ike Turin clocsn ·1 kid h i m s e I f aovmore. For 25 years he allowed himself to weigh 220 pounds. Three ye~Ni ago, af.ter suddenly hitting 254 . he decided to weigh wh3t he should -135 pounds. Today. for first time in his life, he is not overweight. Al 135 pounds, he is a dif· ferenl man. "A Jot. nf people kid themselves. They attribute their overwei'lht to glandular problems or they say they are just big· boned or that they inherit it. You don't inherit fat. you sturf it in your mouth." His method: a "common sense diet" and exercise. At so. he has changed his goals and at- titudes for living. He gave up a successful career in the fabrics bu siness and enrolled at Orange Coast College . He ru ns at least nine miles a week, plays tiandbal\ and works out with weights. He hopes to help others lose weight and become physically fit with his program: Turin Jives at 3006 Cou ntry Club Dri ve In Costa Mesa with his wife and lhrte child ren. Now a full -tin1e student. they li \'e on his savings from his pa st career. His philoso phy is: "Anyone can lo~c as much weig ht as he or she wal'!ts : It s a!! in how much effort you want to expend . It too k 11 months to lose the 119 unwanted pound s. "I learned what my body nee•Jed , not what it wanted ." he recalled. "I at~ many or the same things I . ~ad ea!<'n before. but in smaller quant1 t1es. I ate healthful, balanced, nutritious meals and the weighl started peeling off." When he reached 135 pounds, he begfln exericlsing, following a program in "aerobics," a best-selling book by Dr. Kenneth Cooper. and s\o\vly worked himseU into shape. "I didn't try to gel into top physical 1hape overnight," he said. "That would have been foolish . You aren't fat and flab-.~ by for 47 years and expect to be a Olym· pie marathon runner in a mailer of days."' " , " HE'S FIT NOW Turin Jog, 1t 50 •' "Before," he remembers, I v"as llke a lol of other people. I thought I got ple~ty ol exercise sitting in the stands w:itchtng, 1 baseball or football game." over 40 should not attempt a fitness and w'eight·lo~s program without a doctor's advice. His exercises include jogginrt, Swim- ming. handball, cycli ng, basketball and walk ing. Generally, it is advised that people The result: "I feel better now than I ever have. even as a youngster . , . It's hard to believe that three years ago I (See WEIGHT, Page %) Today's Final N.Y • . ORA,qGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MOND AY. APRI[ 3, 1972 TEN CE~S Carrier Joins Battle U.S. Recalls J(itty Hawk, Sends 5[) Planes ----~---- SAIGON (UPI ) -The alrtrafl carrier Kitty Hawk, recalled from shore lea ve in the Philippines, .arrived off Vietnam to- dav and its SO planes were ordered into aci ion immediately againsl North Viet- name se ar:mored--columns which have drive n 15 miles intoJiouth Vietnam . A second carrier, the C.Onstellation, was ordered from leave in Japan with the guided missile cruiser Oklahoma City to join two other carriers on Yankee Sta- tion. II would ht the greatest roncentralion of U.S. na val might since end of lhe bom~ bing halt in 1968. The Kitty Ha"1k sped to Yankee Station from Subic Bay after the U.S. command warned tlanoi it would take "precau- tionary actions'' to protect Amer ica n lives in South Vietna m. Such warnings in the past ha ve preceded heavy bombing .offensives against North Vietnam . The four carriers p;us air force fighter· bo1nbers based elsewhere in Vietnam and ix * ix * t: * Thailand 't'"ould enablt !he lJn11r!l S!.1fr.q lo send as many :is :)00 planes ::ig11insl !he c:orn munisl forcc!i. So uth Vietnarne~r l'rC'!IJ<ti·n! \'J.!ll,\<'ll Van Thieu stripped Sait;on, Hur .'l!lcl J):i Nang or 1111 but their garrt~on fr1rrf'il t1~ day and fle1\' 10.000 go\'r r11111t•111 troops lo Quang 1'ri to try 10 roll h:iek 1ht' Co n1- n1unist inva.~ion . l~anoi Radin rcportrrl lh.'11 .\11nh \'1r1· na1ncse anliaircraf! ,cunners i;hol (io1vn " B52 bombing "popualted arl'as" JUS\ Policy Panel Recalled $156 !Vlillio11 · Med Sc hool To Study Viet Situation_Bill on Ballot \VASH INGTON (AP ) -President Nix· on summoned a speci al fore ign policy panel into session today to analyze and prepare options for pos~ible action. to cope with the Communist thrust into South Vietnam. But the White House spokesman said the Communist push south of lhe demilitarized zone will not hamper con- tinu ing scheduled withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina. "Our withdrawal program is on schedule and will be met." deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren said in response . a question, Warren said Nixon asked the Washingt Special Actio n · G r o u p (WSAC ~ to eet because the North Viet· namese thru st was "a matter or concern to the Adm inistrat io n and lo the Presi· dent." The group, headed by presidential roreign affairs ad viser Henr y Kissinger, includes representatives of the Defense and State Department s and the Central lntelligence Agency. It generally is called into sessi on in crisis situations to analyze developments and prepare options for the President. Warren refused to discuss what actions Nixon might order. He ind icated, however. that there is little likeli hood that U.S. ground forces will be com- mitted. saying when asked about ground forces that "our policy is unchanged ." As the President "watched the situa- (See ADVISERS, Page !I Transit Directors Accept I . ' County Busline Proposal By JACK BROBACK 01 1t11 01llY ~llot Siii! Orange County should ha ve new ~us lines in operation within four to ftve months, according to J\.1artin Bouman. a consultant preparing Orange C.Ounty Transit District's Special Bus Needs Stu- day. . Transit district directors today ap- proved Bouman's recom mendation thal intra-commun ity transit service be sup-• plied as rapidly as pouib~e .• that pres~nt services, 15 in all, be mochf1ed to provide helter service , and that intercommun!IY lines be activated as justified by potenlial demand. Bouman, of Alan M. Voorhees and Assoc iates of Virginia, who with VTN of Orange County are doing a $40,000 study on cu rrent bus needs made a formal report to the district direct~rs tod~y. Previously, he had outlined his pr~ posals in a study session last week.. . Bouman's overall report called ex1slln g transit service in the county poor. "\Vhile there are some 15 public and private transit operations. for the most part they are uncoordinated, pro vi.de minimal service and use obsolete equip- ment,'' he said, The consultant added that between now and 1980. growth in Orange eounty will follow traditio nal patterns, "which un- fortunately are not conducive lo highly efficient transit service or patronage ." He explained that residential growth will follow the typical low density sprawl pattern and industrial growth will consist largely of expaMion of existing pockets. Bouman also said that commercial growth will come in fragmented shopping, centers, that no major "downtwons'' art in the picture. Transit district general m a n a g e r Gordon J. "Pele" Fielding. sa id the con· sultant's studies were on schedule. In answer to a question, he said the Southe rn Cali fornia Rapid T r a n s i t District, which has majo r operations in Orange County ha ve been asked to esti mate the cost of su pplanting current South Coast Transit services if that firm sbpuld cease its operations, as threatened between Santa Ana and Orange Coast communities. Ruptured Main -Douses May Co.; L-Oss $25,000 A rupturing coupli ng in a major wate r main on the top floor sent a flood cascading through the Ma y Company store in Costa Mesa early Sunday. cau s-' ing up to $25.000 damage, depending on final estimates. Several inches of w'ater was left stan- ding in the South Coast Plaza store, which is nonetheless open for business to- day while mopup operations continue. The accidental break se nt water bub- bling downstairs through all three levels like rapids in a ri•1er -so loudly, ir fact, thal it set off a burglar alarm that operates on sonic vibrations. Costa Mesa Fire Department BaltaJiQn Chief Ron Coleman said it was one of the worst such flood ings his men haVe handled. Sa lvagemaslcr wa ter vacuum .;wcrpers (See FLOOD, Page %) F"rom Wire ServiC'e~ SACRAi\1ENTO The ('<1l1forn101 LeglSlature 's only Jlh\~11·1;H1 !u<t<1v "on Senale Finance C<llnm111cr llpprov;il for his bill putting a $1M\ n1dl1on lx1nd issue to bu ild more Univt'r.~it:--nf Californi:i medical and denta l fac1 l1\11.'!i on the November ballot. If voters approve the measu!'e by Sen. Stephen ·Teale ! l).Wesl Point! this fall. il wou ld allocate $37.27 tn ilh"n for :.Ufh l'Qfl- struction at UC Irvine. Other projecls financeri b) it \\·ou!d :itld buildings to UC campu!it>S 111 R1\'f'rs1dr, Los Angeles, Davis. San D1rgo and S;io Francisco. A second , sequential bill inrlu deri in Sen. Teale's legislation would put another $138 million bond issue on !he 1975 California ballot. Legi slators say the first bill. actuall y $1 55.9 mill ion, would finance !8 new UC structures and increase the output of doc· tor s and dentists from 428 in 1970·71 lo 694 pe r yea r. Poultry Flobks, Pet Birds Get Death 'Sen tence' By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1111 0111~ ~i .. t 11111 U.S. Agriculture Department iospeclO'rs are expected to move inlo Orange Counly this week to kill pet store birds and poultry flocks in an attempt to stem the spread of an ex otic fowl di sease. "Depopulat ion team s'' were already at work in Los Angeles area pet stores t<r day. gassing canaries and parrqts af- fl icted with Newcastle's Diselise, a spokesman said. A special control center set up in Riversi de will be a ba se of operations for the team which are scheduled to visit pct shops and po•Jltry growers in Orange, Los Angeles, Riverside, S<:n Bernardino and Ventura Counties. All of these areas are within the eight- county federal quarantine area which im- posed last month to eradicate the Asia tic viru s disease. The disease affects the respiratory systems of birds and is not co nsidered harmful to humans. Chicken!i die of it ~'ilhin a day or two, according to authorities. Flocks found carrying the disease are. exterminated and the owners paid the market value of the dead birds, Agriculture Department spokesmen sa id . nnr1h of th!' ll<'1n1!11arized 7..one The U.S. <·omrnnnd 111 f':lll!t•n denied the re.port. ·rhe ConHlH1n1st.~ hold the northern half 11f ·Quani:: Tri 111 ovince Just below the J1i\1Z and front t.h.-.pa.ches sa1 I Quang Tri t'IL\'. thr nf';1rb.v Quang ·rri basf' Olnd rong H:o1 \\'l"rf' under heavy 11ttack tonight Q1t.'1tlf.! Tri is 15 milts south of lhl' 0!\17.. l'IOng !la about lllJnllf's. 1\ 11!'\\I 1hr1•;11 np1lE'ared In hn drvelopin~ tn Hur. !ht t1r1rlcnl, imprria l capital or \'1t'tn:uri, but officials sa id the situat ion l\:!!I undi>r' t·nntrol. ('nn1111un1.'.1 ;ittacks "'rrr rrported 11t F1rr l!<i:-f' Annr. 18 tnilrs wesl nf Hue, and H:istognr . I~ mil~~ tn rhe South"·est. Ao1h b:i.sf')i protect against C.ommunist inf1ltr1111on rout<'S throu Ah lhe. A Shau \'allry 10 llur, dc\·astated In the 1968 Tet offt'llSl\ ,. A S<iul h \'i<'tnamese spokesman said tht> rcinfurcrnients flown in loday would n1ounl a countcr-<1ffensive "i n a few days." The y includeCI ma rints 11nd rangers fro1n Saigon. infantry from Hue and two tank brigades from Da Nang. They \\'ere flown nortl, in a collection of t r S cargo CJ.10s. Vietnamest air force l r:in.~ports ;ind airliners l'Ommandeered frrun !hr go\·t•r11 n1ent nir!int, Thi' :ll'!1()r1 followed Pres1denl Thieu 's ll!gh! In ll ut> and Da Nang in a com- nl[1ndr11r1'd Air Vietnam Jft' to look over lht• siH1:1!1on. Hain clouds have mask~ !he lnv11ding J\orth \1ir!na1nrse tank co lumns driving ;1rross lhe OMZ but tho. wea ther im- prO\Cd toda\• and U.S. t1nd South Viet· 1111mf'se fLAl{tcr·bo mbers i;truck bar k 1l lhr Hrd°Offcns1ve. B:i2s drop1)C(j bombs throµgh the clouds l".1rller ;ind three US. 7th FleeL deslrnyrrs off tile cor1sl pounded the <'nen1y troops ana tankS. Thr Con1rnunisls thre w up lntenSt anti· aircraft fire. and seven American planes and helicopters were reported shot down Sunday and today ·bul American plane1 new.128 strikes Sunday and mor e today. Carpenters End Suuid at Hotel I tL Miami Becicli MIAMI • BEACH IUPll The Carpenters. one or' the nal ion"s most popular recording groups. ha\•e fl own back to California after ('ance/ing seven days of a scheduled nine-day run here because they refused lo perform over the clatter of dishes at a hotel. The JJ.membcr grou p led by young Karen and Richard Carpenter of Ga rden <:rove, refused to come oul for their se- cond performance Sa turday night beca use they sa id the Eden Roe Hotel failed to honor a contract provision that it must halt food and beverage service in the night club while they are singing. "We can perform in a noisy room and It doesn't make any difference to us - we still get paid," said Richard Ca rpenter . "But we honestl y believe the people deserve better." Karen Carpenter added : ''I almo~t forgot the words during 'Close to You' becaus~ a waiter came up lo 11 front table and presented a check very noisily to a man. After the man sa\v the check, 1 don 't th ink he could enjoy any song." The matter was brought to the at· tenlion of hotel owner fl.forris l~ansburgh hetwetn shows Saturday night. bot he refused to stop service during the acL "A very clear and important clau se In our contract prohibil.'i service from five mlnutes bet.Ore the show begins through the show until it ends,'' said Sherwin Bash, the Carpenters' agent. Orange c ..... Prowler Suspect Held for Drugs Candidates Discuss Pot The nu mber of pet store birds that have already been destroy,ed is unknown . One newsman said he saw several birds killed by carbon dioxide gas Sunday at a Los An'geles pet store and aboul 100 birds -ranging from small ca naries and parakeets to large parrots -being held in cages at the rear of the shop, ap- parently awa iling destruction. A Buena Park m.an. cited by sherirfs officers Su·nday nighl for 11llegedly prowl. Ing about 1 Mission Viejo con~truction site was booked on much more seriouS charges after dtputl'-! took a look inside his car. Officers booked Timothy Wiiiiam Racine, 231 for posseMion .of marijuana. and dangerous drugs after they 1.llegedl)' found subetantl1l quantities of both u~ lega l· substances Jn the cir. Depull,. 11ld they l])Olled Racine at the Intersection of La Vina and Vii Conchita. 1 construction area th8t -11.u bttn plagued by petty lhella In receol weeks. Racine was lodged In Orange County Jail lollowln1 lh• .. arch or his car. ' . t Laguna Forum Hears Vie ·ws 011 Legalizi1ig B_y FREDERICK SCHOEME HL Of 111t Oellr ,lie! St ... Four Laguna Beach city council can- didates' \litiws on the legalization Of mari- juana took the spotlight at a gathering called a 1·campaign boogie." It was staged F'riJay night by council candidate Be.th Leeds. - Rtsponding to a qu tstlon on the sut>- ject. incumbeJJl. Clly C o u n.c 11 m • n Charlton Boyd said : ''I don't think you want.a wisby·washy answer and l'm not . J'Oing to give you one. After studying the Jssue. yts..-1 think-marijuana 1hould be legallted ." _ An opposing view was orfere(I by In· cumbent Roy Holm who commented: 1'1 don't thlnk marijuana 1hoqld b e legallied." Noting the large number of young persons pa cked into the Amer ica n Richard Carr. '"Not all the inforn1ation Ji Ltgion Hall, Holm added: "This may be in yet " the wrong place to say this. I've never The question, posed by one youth in the ked "j but I' · · audience. came at the end or a '1Utst•ofl-smo mari uana, -m giving you "0 and-ansy,·er session with four c2ndidate.t. honest answer." Candidates Fr.110 HaUer and J'iarry ~1rs. Leeds, who sponsored the roci< Lawrence were not present at the gather· music dance and candida tes forum , si ld ing. she, too, would fa vor legalizing the drug, Eacfief't e candidates agreed illat the ''l'"e bee)'\ to jail for it," added ,.Ira. Mal o Beach should not be ·• parking Jot Leech, referring to a marijuana -C(lp. this summer 8nd praise was gJ\len a plan victlon of 1970. "I don't th.ink t~cre's by Mrs. Leed!i to create an open alf art anything wrong with m•rijuana whether fesUOal. Tllis plan is now undtr 11tudy b~· you're smoking lt 1t h!;>mt or driving the city 11ta.ff. down tht lli'eelt----------·we are very near1he par~e l'i'aYifAll "It's IO gfOOQy. .and makes-me teel been trying to ~reate. Anything short of good. l car)'t ·wait till ll't legal," said that Is inadequate,'' Boyd told 141~ group. Mrs. LeedS. "Now that we have tom down the 111 don 't think I'm qualified t.o answer buildings, let's crea te a paradi~!." old the question,'' re1ponded a t: or n e y (See CANDIDATES, Page l ) Officials advised owners of pet bitds to check with veterinarians about vac- cinillin~ their pets against the disease which broke out earlier thi1 year in the Fontana area. County Assessor In UO La,vsuit Orange County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw has been· 11ccused of improperly taxing leased computer equipment at UC Irvi ne In 1 ~a wsuit flied in Su~rklr Court by the regents o[ the Urtiver~ity o{ Californ ia. Tfie complaint de:1nands therefiiiiOOf '8,475 paid under protest by tht? regents last June 17, It Is pointed ouL ln the ae-~ lion th11t the equipment on which the as- sessor le\'led taxes Is not owntd by the universil}' • Weather ~lost!}' sunny sk:ies are ori the agenda Im' Tuesday along the Orange Coast, with tllghlly cooler lemperatures expected. Highs at the .bc~cbes a1ound 68 rising to 78 inland. Lows 4:>-$5. I NSIDE TODAY .4. fedt.rat O(}e'llC'?J acknozo.. ledats it overlooks a ro e or mouse pellet in cnch plnt_of t()hta.1. Se.c PCJ{}t 8 for guidelJu1 on hoto n1uch filth t}1e agencu coruidtrs 1i11avoiriablt-cnid taler· able in 11our favoritt. food&. l . M. l ov• 1 ''''"" ll C11ll1r1111 t _CilulllM---.-aJ.ll Cemk• 11 c,.. ..... ,. • 11 ONlll HtllttJ It E•tltrl•I '••• ' f'llltfttif!tntftt " 'lll•11C1 MoJI ~., ltM ltHt NI U ktr.w-u 2 DAil V PILOT IS MonihJ, Apt1t '· 1"7 l P1·o xmire's No Match For Old Tommy Trojan By GEORGE LE!OAL 01 lfll 0.ltY Plltl St•ll SO~fE NEWSR00.\1 \\'AG recenUy suggested Sr.n William Proxmire (Q.Wis.) might be havin~ more troubles with his head than he bargained for since his recent ha ir transplant. ; Proxmire. it see.ms, objecLs lo tht L·.s. 04!partmrnt of Transpartalion frivolously frittering a"'ay hard-earned tall:" money prnmOtiJ!g Tran~po 'i2. He particularly directed i:i barb at Orange County 's _entertainment entr.ewenewJ1traoffiinajre -!>Ill. Tumm.L Wa lker. 1' . \'lalker gra~iously responded lo newsmf'n'11 inquiries wuh an explanation. What Proxmire didn 't know appar· ently, is that Wa)ker signed a $30,400, three-month ~ontract with .the government to convert what Y.•as e:ii:pected to be l110.t.l a losing proposition into a moneymaking, balance~f·piiy- ments boosting. international spectacular. After only eight days on the job. Walker· increased predicted admissions to the transporation extravaganza by some $800,000. FURTHER, as director of the PrcrBowl halftime show last January, Walk~r worked a ISO.second pitch for Transpo '72 into the televised hoopl<i. He figures that's worth alxlut $70,000 of national television air time if the government had lo pay for it. ' Obviously. Pro:ii:mire has little under standing of \Va lker·~ footbaU back- ground '¥1-'hich dates back to his unusu al career as Tommy Trojan . drum major for the USC marching band. Yes. Walker -the only varsi ty letter bearer in USC football history who never played a second of football -nevertheless is one of th e SC football greats. Standing a not·sc>frightening 5-1011? and y,•eighing all of 147 JXlUnds, ~alker, as band leader, held fo r a year the Pac-8 conversions scoring record, In 1947. '"l LED TRE band into the Coliseum 'ol'earing a drum ma jor outfit over my football unifonn.'' Walker explains. Then . as the Leam scored 11 touch- down,. the SC .equivalent of~superman would strip dQwn to hisjers~y,_run onto the field and kick the e:ii:lra points. Needless to say it took a little guts lo ge! out there on lhe field without shoulder pads or any other of the usual protective equipment oth er players used. Pac-8 teams have neve r exactly enlisted a bunch of pansies and .walker recalls some rather crushing momel)t~. Now, the 49-yeH r-old Walker is rushing in to bail the government out with progra m revisions lo make the $.S million Transpci '72 venlure a success, The whole JOO-acre e:ii:hibition at Dulles International Airport. near Washing-. ton, D.C., is being put l.ogether on one-fo.urth the time the Seattle \Varld's Fair was organized. And, it's only six times bigger than that \\'Orldly wonder of human achieve ment. If Walker's record at USC. followed by 12 years as entertainment direct.or at pisneyland and a string of crowd-pleasing spectaculars including the an- nual Rost &wl Patriotic J>'ourth of July Show, continues, it's just likely Sen. Proxmire will wish he hadn 't tangled with the former Tommy Trojan. All for the S30,.f00 contract, Walker notes that's less than his usuAI fee . The Pro Bowl paid him $19.000 for a 20-minute show. Transpo ·72 runs for eight days -11ay 'll to June 4. • Cyclist Nabbed in Mesa In Sex Captivity Case One more Hessia n motorcycle gang member. sought since a pair of t-.'evada girls spilled a slekening story of sexuitl captivity involving forced per v e r s e pleasures for 17 men and women, was captured Saturday in Costa Mesa. The arrest of Kenneth R. "Varmint'' Bates. 27. or 1013 W, 18th St .. and that of a Cypress woman affiliated with the ouUaw cyclist gang brought to six the number in custody. A mass arraignment was scheduled this morning in Long Beach f\.1unicipal C.ourt for other defendants linked to the bizarre abductio n disclosed Thursday, with the arrest of four initial suspects. Bates and the sixth suspect, Bella "Taco'' 1forris. 29. of Cypress. are charged with suspicion of kidnaping. forcible rape, sex perversion and assault with a deadly weapon. ldentical charges are faced by Albert Cutter. 31. o{ Garden Grove, plus Richard Riuone. 28. Linda M. Bagala. 2.1 , and James E. Alan IV. 39. all of Long Beach. Alan is owner of North Town Custom Cycpe Shop in L-Ong Beach -where the initial raid was made -and reputedly ln-- ternational president of the so-called outlaw cycle gang. Teams of Long Beach detecHves led by Sgt. Jim Racobs are still hunting specifically named suspec ts among Hessians allegedly involv ed in lh! luri d ' OIAN•I COAST " DAILY PILOT Tl,. Ora11g1 Ca.11 D"1LY PILOT, wll!I w111c11 fl (O"'fllfl!d !~t N1....,.Pr1u, b Wflllsl\ld l>'f Tflt Orf n9t Co11t Pufll l1hl119 Comoanv. StOI· rti! "'''•Ofll ''' 111111ll111.c1, Mo...:l1r 111~1.tg!I Fr.01v. •o• Co11 1 M111, N1wood 8e1cri, M11"""11ef\ Bt1c11 "ou1"11n V1llt'f, l.tount !itt(fl l•v•flt •Sttkllt!l.1(~ 1r.d .\fn Clemtn1t/ >~n Ju.If\ C111i11r1no. A. 1l11o;l1 r•9·a~~• "'l•'•O~ 11 oua •11\td Stturlltys 1flCI .\unt1.1y~; t ~• odrc.1111 11111111111+ .. , oi.n• Ji."' llll \\I••! P•r S!•u1, Casi. Mui , C1Utorn11, •2•16. l!ob1rt N, W11d Presidt<>I i nd Pu!lllll'lt r J 1ck It C11,l1v V <1 Pr11.o.,.1 '"" Ge11trll M1nt7tr Thom 11 k'o1¥il Eo11or Tho111 11 A. Murp~i11 0 M1n191,9 f O•IOr Ch1rl11 H. Looi Rit~1 rd P. N•ll .\U \lll fll Mtfll8~ [0110•1 Offktt C&1l1 Mttt: lJlll Wttl ltr S!rt*I NfWPO" 8tlCl'I! 1UJ NtWJIOrl 8oultW1'11 l:•1111<1 9t1dl; m l"er111 ""'""'' H1t11tu•1:01>0t1 lttch-1111., lt&tll eou11v1•• $11'1 (ltlN~'t: JO! Nortfo l.1 C.'T!lP>O ftttl Tef.,he•• f11 4) 642·4J21 Cl.a1n.4 Alhiltbl..---44.2•1671 Id CltJM•te Aff D.,•ttJMlltt: 1 ......... 4t2-4420 ca se: disclosed by the Nevada victuns. The pair. 19 and 20. said they were visiting Long Beach when on Frida y. March 24 , they met a group of cyclisli1 a~ a bar and were invit ed to go for a ride. The joyride. they said, turned into a five-day ordeal of horror. Riding to Alan's moiorcycle shop. the women clair:ned they were repeatedly raped and finally forced lo satisfy the sexua l whims of ma le and female Hessians· throughout the period of cap- tivity. Beatings were included in the brutalitv. according lo the girls who were finaliv released on the condition they promised not to go to police. One said she was forced lo keep house for the communal crew, wh ile a second claimed she was put lo v.•ork dan cing topless in a dingy nightclub. Miss Morris. one of the ty,·o latest ar- restees. was taken into custody at the club in Bell. y,·here she also danCcs. Long Beach police accompanied by Costa 1'-fesa detectives picked up Bates locally on Saturday night and he was im- mediately returned to Long Beach f()r booking into jail. Investigators said they receh'ed :in anonymous tip on "·here to find Bates after I.he story broke . Felony charge11 in addition to counts of kidnap and rape include forced sexua l relations with Hessia n cycle gang members, males and females included. From. Pone 1 ADVISERS ... tinn very closf'ly," \\'arren said he met "1ilh Kissinger and Adm. Thoma~ Moorer, chairman of the .Joint Chiefs nf Staff. and conferr!d by telephone with Secretary of Slate \Villiam Rogers and Secretary of Defense Melvin La ird. At his last news conference March 24, Nixon ~aid the:· U.S. comrnander in Sout h Vietnam, Gen. Creighton A b r 11 ms assured him !hat South Vielnames~ fnrces would "'it hstand the offensive. Asked ~·helher Nixon still is confident, \\1arren responded that "certainty the 11p- pra isal still SI ands." ~leanwhile. the Pentagon al ro ind1c11trd loda~ the remaining U.Si.. ground troop~ 1n Vietnam would not bf: used to reinforce: beleagured South Vietnamese forces bat· tHng the Ccmmunist offensive. Spokesman Jerry \\'. Frledhe1m s;ud the six rem11inin~ tJ.S. combat m11neu''tr h;i!litlions are committed to the securit'' of U.S. ins1allations11nd ;ire-not ln\'oh·ed in the actlon. · ~fcssa ge on HigJ1 Cot't'l'l ... I, nn. Or11111t c •• ,, M lfilll"' C•mP'11r. No -,.,,1,,, lt!111tr•llt11l ••twl•I fl'lllttr or H ve'11.t-ll 11,,,i,; _., ... ~· ""1flwr JJll(ltl ""iir-m1Ultll of Ufr(tltf'il IWfltf", ~ <(-... , .. , N kl Of teollo Mtt• Ct lllen'll1, IUllUlfl"•11 1w tt M"ltr s1 •i Pfl9"1'11f / 1W .,..u U ,11 "'°""'"' l'llllf1t.., ft1l/11ttlent ll.U "*'lllllf . BEATRICE, Neb. CAP ! -The message of Easter w11! cltried In an unusual manner Sunday by a cl;iss at St. __ Paul Luth,ran Church. The. clas~ releas· ' . ._ ___________ _; ed 250 balloons "''llh the message "Jesus Lh·cs" • • ,. ITT Case ' 'Mistake' Fogs >4.,.=..!,-l'--- P ri mary Result By STEVE Gt:llSTEL Ul'I ft1Ullt•I WrUtr 1'he three major contenders 1trt bel lev· ed to be bunched so closely thil t-.1cGovern ·s invalid arcus::i!ion~ {'(It.Id become ::I factor, PVen thQuj?h nOnl' or the other candidaies jumped in to explo it them . ~llL\VA UKEE. \\'ls. -A perhaps cost- ly mlst11ke by Sen. GtorRe S. McGovPrn added lo the confusion and uncertaint y about the outcome of Tu e s d a y ' s Wlseonsln'! pr esldtntlal pr Ul'iary in Campaign-sll'RleJislrlor--1ht'<"'11'---l-.fr..--1 hi h M didales have shied away from !abbinl! tr1e • w c cGovern, Hubert H. Humphrey finish. citing the uncertainly of the \'Oi i! and Edmund S. ~1uskie battled for first for Alabama's Gov. George c. \\1nllare place. (See related slory. Page 41 and th~ possibility or a maSs cr.issortr In a nalionv.•1de telecast Sunday. With by Republicans. the prinJary two days away, McGovern \.OP voters hav~ Prrsident Nixon n.rt ---7~ . _ _ . the ballot alonR with only Rep. Paul '.'\. char~t.'U ~cunt 1~ EYctrange-Com-~ri.tcCloskey-of-Califomia. ·who has -pull!"d mission records showed that Interna• out for lack of funds. and Rep. Jphn ~I. UoaaJ t elephone. and Telegraph, Jnc. As.hbroo~-of . .Qhio., who ha! not~ carri- deducted a $400.000 contribution lo pa1gned in Wi sconsin. the Republica n nalional convention from ~ls~ on !he r>emocralic ballot And cam-. pa1gn1ng hard are New ''ork Mavor Jol"n Its taxable income. V. Lindsay and Sen. Henry ~1. Jacksnn of As soon as the prog ram (Face the Na· \Vashington. lion -CBSI ended, a distraught aide On the ballot but not campaigni'li:'. 11.re rushed to 11cGovern to lcll him he \\'as Brps. Shirley Chisholm of New ''ork. \Vilbur Mills of Arkansas. Patsy Mink o( "A LOT OF PEOPLE KID THEMSE"LVES'' ABOUT WEIGHT Turin Gulps Maalox While Sunning His L•rge Fr•m• "'rong and that the 1971 report wit.h the Ha"''aii. Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles SEC -the year in which the contribution and Sen. Vance Hartke. ~·a~ made -ha d not been filed. Boy They Said Would Not Walk Makes Ball Team TERRA LINDA (AP I -When Tracy Caldwell was born nine yea rs ago wit h cerebral palsy, doctors sa id he would never walk. But Tracy has a way or surpri~ing peo- ple. Three weeks ago. when he told hi.'1 parents he was going to try out for the Little League baseball team al Terra Linda. in Marin Cou nty north or Sa n Francisco, th ey didn 't take him too seriously. After all, he wears braces on both legs. But Terry tried out and captured pitching and outfield JXJSitions on the team. • Ray Siciliano. who coaches the learn. ~aid lhe you ngster has been doing a good Job and has served as an inspiration for the other playe rs. "You ought to y,·at ch him "'hen he 's picthing," said Siciliano ... Someti mes he !oses his balance and falls. But he just Jumps up, brushes off his uniform and goes at it a~ain as if not hing ha d hair pened. He·s been· an inspiration for other members of our club." The .• youngster also plays tenn is And pool. 'and is one of the lop students ln his class. T.E. Heffernan, Ex-FBI Agent, Attorney , Dies Ca1h0Jic funeral services will be held Tuesday and Wednesday for Thomas E. Heffernan. Harbor Area attorney and former FBI agent-in<harge for Orange County. "'ho died Sunday. He was 55 and had been i:l for some time. Rosa ry for !\1r. Hef(erna n will bt Tue~ day al 8 p.m .. and Requim Mass will be Wednesday ;:it 10 a.m .. both irt lmm acu· late Heart of Mary Church, Santa An11. Raised in c:eveland. Ohio. Mr. Heffrr- nan ca me to Orange County 30 years ago and fina lly quit the FBI to join the la w firm of Harwood, Heffernan and Soden. He was a past president of The Oran~e Coun ty Bar Association, an honorary life member of the Newport Beach Exchange Club and was widely active in Catholic fraternal and service organizations . ~1emberships included the Holy Name Society. Knights of Columbus. the Buck Club of Stanford University, the Quarter- back Club of -.:\iater Dei High School and service on the Catho:ic Welfare Roard. ~u~ing his legal career following ad. mission 10 the,, stale bar in 1947, Mr. Hef- fernan was primarily involved in cor· porate law and represented one widely. known Orange Coast restaurant chain. He later left the partnership to sta rt hi~ own legal firm alone. A resident of 2927 S. Greenville SL, Santa Ana , 1\ir. Heffernan leave!'! his wife Bemic!'. plus sons Tom. Bob .. John ahd Pat Heffemao. The famil'Y suggests rontributions to the 1'homas Heffernan f\olemo rial Schol- arship Fund for fr iends wishing to con- tinue the concern of service he held In lile. lntt.rmcnr at Holy SePJlchr.r Cemetery. Orange. "''Ill follow rites for Mr. Hrffer· nan. "'i fh ~milh A· Tu thi:I M ortu~ry, Santa An<t. 1n chargr. 1 Dead , 1 Hurt In Grove Cra sh t-.1rs. K3"tharyn \\ran . 48, of 10622 Kern Avt .. Garden Grove. died Sunday of In. Juries suffered when a car drive_n by he.r hush.and •larold. 54, slammed inr<1 1 power polr on Euclid Strett near Wood· bury Avenue, Garden Grove police re- ported. - The husband . although victim of mull~ pie injuries. is rrported In sa!lsf•ctory condition toda y. Mrs. W11ll 's death brlnas to 60 the number of traffic fatall fties ln <>:~nae COunty this ytar which compares "'Ith ·s9 the SRme date for J 9?1 . F'ro111 Pane 1 WEIGHT. •• couldn 't walk across the room without gettinp: out of breath." he said. Starting on the exercise_pmg:ram \\'as rough fnr Tur in. ~!any times he fc It discouraged . "There were times when I just d1dn·t think I "'as progressing at all."' he remembered. ''Especially when I started jogging, but I kept plodding away.'' I "Su re enough. it began to get easier and_ easier . It'll never get easier tha11 laying on the couch watching television. but some~i mes it's a lot more enjoyable and certainly more rewarding." And now Turin wanl6 to help other poo- ple feel similar rewards. In -between studyi~g nut rition·, spetch and physical educa11on he has started his o\\·n health prograrn to help ot hers Jive 11t fheir optimum and calls it the Planned Opti· metrici1 Program (POP ). from l'p<>eking engagements at v:'lr1ou 'I service club meetin!?S. he · has thrillf'rl \\'hile ·'wa.tching other people get e:ii:cited about losing we ight and g e ~ ! i r. g physically flt,'' he said. . Six Persons Die In Packed Car FRESNO IUPJI -Six persons were killed when a truck craslted into the side of a car at an intersection five mites west of here. The victims were ridi ng Sunday in a car packed with IO persons. The other four were serious ly injured. The Californh1 Highwa y Patrol said the: car ran through a stop sign and pUlled in front of 11 truck driven by Dave Ne"•ell of Fresno. He was not injured. The six killed in the mishap \\'ere iden - tified as Joe Mar io f\.·la rtinez. three months; Ernest Marti ne z, I ; Alfred Ro· que . !I : Gloria ti.1artinez. 19; Gavina Tor- res. 36. and Jose Porfori o Torres. 3. all of the Fresno area. - Injured w~r~ Jose Lopez, 30, of Sanger. who was driving the car: Jose Mart inez, 28 11nd Ralph Martinez. 21. both of Fresno. and an unidentified gir l. Ex.Governor Dies SALT LAKE CITY. Utah IUPll - Former Gov. George Dewey Clyde d'ied Sunday at his home of natural causes. He "·11.s 73. McC.overn then gaid that his accusation was made on the basis of statementi; by l1T officials that they conside red i~ a proper business expense. He Ir.Id reporters that he had made ''an -hc,nest error." McGovern. 'Humphrey and f\iuskie are considered the three leading candidat!S in the Wisconsin primary with its rich harvest of67 delegates to the ~mocratic­ Nat ional Convention. About l.S million vot ers are expected lo turn out Tuesday for the fourt h primary of the 1972 election vear. Although McGovei-n had to retr;:i ct one accusa1ion against ITT. he held to his sec· onil charge -that ITT paid no fede ral !11 xes for three years. ending in 1970. r But the AsSl)Ci;:itrd Press said todav SEC records show IIT did pay taxes ifl those year.) He also sa id that lhe North ViPtnamese ofrensiv e reinforced his call for a total withdrawal and added that t ~e Uni1ert States should stop providing n1 it:•arv aid lo South Vietnam. • f'rot11 Page 1 FLOOD • • • were borrt>wed from both th'-Huntington Beach and Santa Ana fi re departments to assist in the eight-hour cleanup job . "There was so much water we h11d to u~e 11. 11.J inch hose and a submersiblP pump just to empty the elevator sh11ft before we could use ii," Chief Coleman remarked . He said the In itial alarm w::i s m(\nilorecl at 4:J7 a.m .. and firemen v.•ere bus v on the scen e until noon . · The break occu rred in I!. fo ur-incll water ma in supplying the ma jority of water to the store. Chief C.oleman siiid sever11J thousand gallons of water poured ou t ~fcre the break was discove red and the valves shut of[ to stop ii. Store mana ger A. W. Messer sai·! toda y thal half the top Ooor of the ~lay Com· pany was rlo!lded before the now spilled - do11•n into lower le\'els . DJmr1ge downstairs was concentraterl in th e men·_.. and boys" clothing section. where sodden boxes of merchandi!le were still being discovered today. Chief Coleman said_ much of the ap- parel that got soaked i5 of f.he versatile double knit variety which can take ii lot of punishment. Store Manage r Messer :hre\~· cold ~·ater on the hopes of any prospectiv~ customers looking for a discount due to water-damaged mens wear. He said that while the dlmage estimate Is still being computed there wilt be nu special ir;ale. such as ir;ome ~tores stage following a fire or ther disa-ster . Elect Airwest to Use Detecting A id On Passengers Orange County Airpo rt has been caught up in the currenl drive lo inc rease securi· ty against bombings and hijack ing.'i. .Hughes Airwe~t pa ssengers, beginn ing Tuesda.v. will pass through A new metal detecting . gadget. known as a magnato1"!'eter . before boarding jet liners. ace<1rding to county Director of A\·iation . Robert Bresnahan . He said Air Californ ia !he other prin· cipal commercial airlines ... e:rving the airport should ha\'e similar devices in· sta:led later !his month . "Congress enacted a new law eHect ire ~larch 18 outlining the dlft ies of airport! and airline flperators regarding ~ecuri- 1~." Br~nahan said. "but action Y.'a.'i i;lo"'' until the jetl iner "'as bombed In Las re~as a couple of week-" ago .'' At that tin1e, the Federal Aviatio n Administration used its e me r ~ enc y po\vers to require immediate compliance \\•ilh the .. ew rul es, lhe aviation director &a id. Bresna ha n !laid airport operHlors' dut ies include ~he normal ones of ex· ervising precaution to keep vehicles and or people nut of the operating area such as runways, runu p and freight loading zonei;. Airhne reizu!alion~ are ''ery detailed, according tn avi11tion dlreclllr but the dirsl step by Airwest and Air Cal is in· dic tative of "'hat we may expect in the future. I Snnta Ana Stab Vi cti111 Critical A Santa Ana c8h dr iver. \'ic tim of 1 stabbing Sunday afternoon. is reported in criliczil condition todav. \\'il\iam Da\\"f'!i , 2Z. ·of 500 \V, 3rd St., was wailing fn r a f;ire in front of Santa Ana Community Hospital police 11aid, whert he got into an argument with another man over parking and wa1 stabbed in the left side. The assailant. who fled , is described as a l\-1exlcan. Ameri can . about JO years old, with long bla ck hair and a go11tee. Dawes was treated at the hosPital'1 emergency center and heid for observa- tion. DOM RACITI as your Costa Mesa DOM RACITI City Councilman HE'S CONCERNED WITH THE CITY OF COSTA MESA,,, WITH m l"EOPLE ITS PROBLEMS ••• ITS CHALLENGES. AS YOUR CITY COUNCILMAN DOM RACITI WILL SUPPORT: • EXPANDED METHOD OF CRIME PREVINTION • 300 ACRE ECOLOGY PARK • CITY WIDI ~LEAN UP CAMPAIGN • TIGHTER CONTROL ON CITY TAXES 9 TRAFFIC CONTROL DOM WILL-LISTEN-DOM WILL WORK ....... ,_ ...... ... w ..... , .... Raciti-Last On Th• Ballot-.R,.,1rst In Civic Concern C1mpolgn Hoeclqu~rt0rt II 1140 N•wporl lllwd., Phono 645·1360 or 541'1313 r p I M de " st In co th re .. t 12 A ' G .. H t" .. ta Iii th lif le 111 IV "" w n un fl B re ' ------- Huntington · Bea~h . Foonta-n Valley 'l'od1tY'• Final N .. Y. Stoek.8 VOL 65, NO. 9~, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRI~ 3, 1972 TEN CENTS Candidates Puttin By TERRY COVILLE Of Ill• D•HY Piiot 51•11 Indian garb. town . All or last week he had rapped them against 6.800 homes In his "person· to-person'' campa ign. on Colorful Show relying mostly on his ton sils. 1His cam-somelhln)l different , but not to.1 rx-bu1nprr .~orkrr~ he sells them for 25 paign in\'ol\'es SPf'Rking engagements. pensive." ('f'n!.~ t'fl<'h coffees and handing out brochures. Charles Geers is <1nolhC'r challcngrr ThP h<'ll-~ht11.l{'d key t:h iuns arr. an The paper-thin sponges are the pride of who believes in a [ow-key , lo"' f't151 can\· f'i:::\('nt iat par! of Richard Belyea 's cam· The campaign lrail toward lhe April I l City Council eleclion in Huntingtori Beach is littered with such oddities as· paper thin sponges, soft pot holders, bell-shaped key chains and political match books':' Whatever the Issues. however strong the individual personalities, one thing makes a colorful election -the cam· paign methods employed by each council hope ful. Miller is still knocking on doors and in- tends to keep it up until election day. Joseph WhaJirig had 20,000 book markers printed. He's given out about half of them in a campaign with few con·. tributO[S. _ _ _ _ _ J\.1ayor George !\1('Cracken., When filled paigo_~le andJtis wife...are hand -pai.n11n1: -p;:;l4:11. '"\\"e. \1an 1 people to remember-------! At least one candidate is blazing the campaign lrai\ on a bi~cle while a~othtr IS weariri{liis KnucKles ffitnrap:- p1ng on some 7 .000 front ,doors. A third &ailed into Huntington Harbour dressed in George Arno ld pedals his brcycle daily, towing a red wa~on up and dow n the ma· jor s_!reets witjl a _@rg~ $jgn lh§!.1_bl.iit:el;, "Vote for Arnold ," · Former city-administrator Doyle Miller cla ims to have the toughest knuckles in SOUTH VIETNAMESE FLEE COMMUNIST OFFENSIVE Trooper's Daughter Wis Wounded During Red Attack ' Soledad Brothers Tied To Marin Court Hearing SAN JOSE (UPT) -A ncv.•spaper photographer told the Angela Davis tri al today that the kidnapers in the 1970 ~farin County Courthouse shootings demanded freedom for the t h r e e ".SOiedad Brothers" -a key poin t in the 6tate case. James J. Kean of the San Rafael lndependent-Joumal, said San Quenti n convict James 'McCla in told him, "Tell th em we want the Soledad Brothers released by 12 o'clock.'' .. , asked him to repeal what he had said and he did," Kean said. "I said, 'So there will be no mi stake , do you mean at 12 o"clock today or 12 o'clock midnight~' And he said 12 o'clock today." s!ruct.or . is accu sed of helping plot the kldnaping. Prosecutor Albe rt W. Harris Jr. said she was in love with George Jackson, one of the Soledad Brothers -three Soledad State Prison convicts accused of killing a guard. , Kean. a press photographer for :10 years. said he came upon the Aug. 7, 1970, kidnaping as it was in progress in lhe courthouse. He said he aln,cst became the sixth hostage -along \\'Ith Haley. Thomas and three women jurors from Haley's courtroom. But he said Jonathan Jackson, George Jackson's brother and one of the kid- napers, said, "we 'don 't want this ---. We've already got enough." Then , Jean said , Jackson told him with a smile, "You can come along if you want to. But you may get killed." "'ith \\1atcr, th<'Y blow up to full size. and building their own signs. Like J\.hllrr. 1-l('l!', •• ~"'~ hi~ campa ign ma nager, J\.1cCrackcn is also handing ou l can1 paign he is also accepting no ot1 ts1dr cnn-John ··si..111" ~\\ilrt ley. "My largest contributor was my father. ~le gave me $10.'. Whaling proclaims. _j'.atds. wh ich-flHv-e--eme rgency-number!t--tribut1onr.· ---·-------... Thr,\' 1rrrr.,.'i1'.'n-carefu1-abou l chOOsing prin ted on the back ~Ide. Henry Duke a('cepts nn t'(1tl!nhu1111 11~ 1·<1111pa1(;n l·ol\")r.~. green and 14·hite . "It We're trying to give things that• ;1re nver SZS. He says he runs such ~ ngN nt'cds to bf ;1 color tha t is least offensive, useful," he explains. "\Ve al so look for can1paign that instead of hanchn~ nut car tSer CA~IPAIGS, Page Zl Incumbent Councilman Jerry ~1atney is I Carrier Joins Battle U.S. Recalls l(itty Hawk, Sends 50 Planes ... SAIGON (UPI) -The aircraft carrier JI would be the greatest co ncc ntralinn Thailand "'ould enahlP 1ht> lr111\('d sra1r~ Kilty Hawk, recalled from shore lea ve in or U.S. naval might si nce end of the born· to se nd as man~· "'s 500 plilnrs aJtaln!'J tht tl'!_e Philippines:.arrived off Vietnam to--__bjng_halLjn.J -----COmmunisl forces-: day and its 50 planes were ordered into The Kitty Hawk sped to Yankee Station South Vietnamese · President Nguyen 11ction immediately against North Viet-from Subic Bay after the U.S. command Van Thieu stripped Saigon. Hue 11nd Oa namese armored columns which have warned Hanoi it v.·ould take "precau· Nang of al\ but their garrison forces lo. driven 15 miles into South Vietnam. tionary actions" to protect American day and flew 10.000 gove rnment troops to A second carrier. the Constellation. wai; lives in South Vietnam . Such warnings in Quang Tri tn try to roll hack thr Cnrn- ordered from leave in Japan with the the p;1st have preceded heavy bombing monist invasion. guided missile cruiser Oklahoma City lo oHensive"s against North Vietnam . __ Hano i lladi'l rrporl ccl th;it Nnrlh \11('!- join two other carriers on Yankee Sta· The four carriers pius air force fighter· namese antiaircraft ~unners shot dn v.n " tion. bombers based elsewhere in Vietnam and B52 OOmbing •·popu;1l ted areas'' iust Research Unit .Aids Drive-in Petition Move The lawyer representing Fountain Valley Community Hospital in its right against a proposed four screen drive-in theater said today that a ma rket re· i;earch group had been hired to circulate referendum petitions. "It is the rule, rather than the ex~ ception to hire a group lo help out," ex~ plained Low ell Martindale. the hospitars ch ief counsel 111 the drive·in controversy. He said that a group of fountain Valley college students had circulated petitions for a salary and that they had collected approximately 500 signatures. •·1 have never been associated \.\•ith a referendum before that didn't use pro- fessional people. We onl y have 30 days to fiecure the signatures and many of those are lost organizing the dri ve. The idea isn 't who is circulating but who sig11s the petitions." said Martindale . Martindale also explained why the pe- titions call for preventing the industrial zoning of the property at Warner Ave nue and Newhope Street. rather than directly attacking the theater. "Under California 1~. a referendum can challenge a w~ ordinance but not a conditional use permit." said Martin-- dale. "We have to attack the zoning in order lo prevent the conditional use permit for the theater.'' "We tried to ge~ the council to give us a rehearing on the conditional use permit. but it refused. so this is the only route left open for us." said Martindale. Martindale also said th eater opponents are ont supporting any type of zoning and are only interested in blocking the theater . The disputed drive-in t!leater property is scheduled to be re-zoned from agricultural to industrial on April 7. At that time the condtional use permit for the theater also becomes effective. The construction of a drive-in theater is on .the approved conditional use list. rot industrial property but not f o r agricuUural property, city planners say. Joh His Nun1her Ex-engineer Assists Scliools '. ' ' ;· ·" . '" .-.,;•t•"' "· ' ' ' ' • ' ". ' ' ' ' ' • . " •• . ' LESS MONEY, MORE FUN Oce1n View's Tent• By JOHN ZALLER 01 tllt Dill' 'Ill! S1111 Two years ago. Tony Tente was 11 lop notch aerospace engineer . He spent his day,s in a, huge, windowless building. bent over ' a -drafting -&able,. a n a I y z i n g thousands of bits of lnrormation . And he considered himself happy. Educated at Princeton. Yale. Brown. and MIT, tie was making a good salary at the job he was trained to do . Toda y Tente is 50 and he is doi ng the same basic work he was doing two years ago. But he is making half as much money while feeling twice as good about it. . He's the statistics man at the Ocean View School District in Huntington Beach. Hired last October under the federal emergency Public E m p Io y m e n l Program (PEP), he's made him self a vital fixture in district offices, and he plans to devote thf rest or his ca reer educati onal adminfstration. ·•Jn personal te rms. I find my new work much more satisfying," Tente says. ••Jt's not that I disliked my old job. because I didn't. But I feel much better knowing that people -little school children -will benefit directl y from what I do. "I didn't have that feeling while I was in aerospace," Tente says. Tente·s orfice at Ocean V i e w . ne vertheless. i.s like 11 little co rner of !he l See ST A TISTICS, Page 11 Valley Mayor Criticize~ For Drive-in Movie View - Drive-i n opponent Robert Rusoff today criticized Fountain Valley Ma yor Ed Just for refusing to deb~te the four screen theater issue before the April l I City Council" el ection. "His answer is Inadequa t e, nonresponsive and In view of his conduct I regret he is taking that stance," said Rusoff, c~chairman of the Co nce rned Homeowners against the proposed drive· in. nc1rlh ut !ht> l:Wmi1ilarizrd Yine. The U.S. cornn1.ind in Saigon de nied the report. --1'hr.-COmm11nists~hold t!'llTTMrh~rrrhalr----11 of Quang Tri proyince just below the OMZ and front dispa.ches saiJ Quang Trl city. the nea rby Quang Tri base and rnng HA v.·ere under heavy attack loniAh! QuAn g Tri i.~ 1~ miles sou th of lht> l1<\1Z. l>ong Ha about lO miles. 1\ 11€'\.\' threat appeared to!)... developinj! !n Hue . !hr anc ient . imprr1al capital or \Srr \llETNAi\1, Page 11 -tr ·.' . ··- F oreign Policy Panel Recalled By President \V ASHIN<;TON (AP) -President Nix· on su mmoned 1 special foreign policy panel into session today to 1nalyu ind prepare options for possible action to cope with the Com munist thrust into South Vietnam. But the \Vhite House 1pokesm1n 11id the Communist push south of the demil ita rized zone will not hamper con• tlnuing sc heduled withdraw31 of U.S. troo ps from Indochina. "Our v.·ilh"drawal 'pro,ll'ram is on sc hedule and will be met.'' deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren sai d in response to a question. Warren said Nixon asked t he Washington Special Action G r o u p ·(·WSACJ to meet because the North Viet· nan1ese thrus t was "a matter of concern to the Admi nistration and to the Presi· dent." The group, headed by presidential foreign affairs adv iser lienry Kissinger, includes representatives of the Defeme and State Departments and fhe CentraJ Intelligence Agency. It generally ls called inl.o session in crisis situations to analyie developments and prepare options for the Presiden~ Warren refused to discuss what actions Nixon might order. He indicated, however. that there is little li kelihood that U.S. ground forces will be com· mitted, saying when asked about ground forces that "our policy is unchanged." As the President "watched the sit11a· lion very closely," Warren said he met with Kissinger and Adm. Thomas Moorer. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. and conrerred by telephone with Secretary of State Willlam Rogers and Sec retary or Defense Melvin Laird. At his last new1 conference March 24, Nixon said the U.S. comrr.ander in South Vietnam, Geny Creighton A b r a m 1 , assured him that South Vietnamese forces would ~lhstand the offensivt. Orange Jn a switch of signals, Kean was the state's leadoff witness today rather than Gary W. Thomas, a ~1arin County pro- _1;eculor who was one of the five hostages. }le was permanently paralyzed in the gunfire whic h killed Judge Harold J. Haley and three of the kidnapers (See ea rlier story Page 51. ~1iss Davis. the 28-year..old black mili- tant. Communist and former UCLA in· 'Depopulation' Teams ·out Ru sor f challenged Just to :i debR te After the mayor had criticized the con· duct of the petition drive lb bloc.k the construction of a drive-in lhl!ater at Warner Avenue and Newbope SL·eet. .J u~t al so had encouraged petition signe rs to remove their names from the li st. The ma yor did say he would ro nsider debating the issue after the election. · Weal.her J\.1oslly sunny skies are on the Agenda fQr Tuesday along the Orange Coast, with sllghUy cooler temperatures expected. Highs at th e beaches around 68 rising to 71 inl and . IA>ws 45--55. Guards Reco1·d 80 Surf Re sc ues . Huntington city and ' state beach 1\feguards reported Ml rescues over the three day Ea ster weekend. Douglass D'Amall. captain of the city lifeguard division, said that surf, water temperature, and air temperature were all slightly higher than 1 e 1 s o n 1 1 averages. He eilimatcd Uiit-90,000 persons sed e:tty~betehes over the weekend. "COnsldtr •II ti Mdlll • • number of rescues we made wa.s not unusual." D'Arnall sald. "Altogether, it '"' a pretty gooct-wcekend~' Weekend use of Huntington State Beach, where 2.\ of the 80 rescues were reported, "" termed light. ' • •• Coun,ty Pet Birds, Poultry Threatened by Disease By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 lflt Dtll'f Plitt Still U.S. Agriculture Department inspectors are upected to move Into Orange County th is week to kill pet store birds and poultry flocks in an attempt t~ stem the spreed o( an exotic fowl disease. "Depopulation teams'' were already at work In Los AngtJcs~area pct stores to- day, gtwing canaries and parrolll af· Dieted with Newcastle's Disease, a spokesman said. A 1peclal control center set up In Rlverside will ht • base of operations for the team whlcli are acheduled to visit pet 1hopg lnil poultry growers ln Orange. Los Angeles, Riverside, SBn Bernltl'dino and Ventura Counties. All ol lh•st 1reas are "ilhln the eight· ' county federal q1,1arantine area wh ich Im· . posed last month to eradicate the Asiatic virus disease. The disease affects the respiratory !'ystems of birds and is not considered harmful to humans. Chlcken!rlo die o( It within a day or two, t1ccording to authorities. FlocW ound carrying the di~ease are e1termin1ted and the owners pald the market value or the dead bird s, Agriculture Department spokesmen said. The number of pet store birds that have already been destroyed is unknown. One newsmao uid .he saw several .birds klllcd by carbon dioxide R" SUnday at 1 Los Angt.les pet store and about 100 birds -rt11ging from small c1naries and parakeet• to large parrots -btlng held in cag es at the rear or the khop, ap- parently awaiting dest ruction. Officials advised owners of pet birds lo chec k with vei;'rinarians about vac· clna ting their pets against the disease which broke. ou t earlier this year in the Fontana area. !he.y said birds wltll th d.iseate display cold symptoms -fits of sneezing and gasping for breath -and diarrhea. Abou t 350,000 chickens on 100 ranche!I have died alone In.San Bernardino Coun- ty, More than a milli<fl chicktns are ex- pected Ill he-de$lroyed in an effort to halt the disease. Spokesmen from the poultry industry say th eir Im from the disease 11 now ru,nning about '3 million B week . • ) ''After the elec\ion is unsalisf<?ctory.'' said Rusoff. "Many of the cand iMlel'I have taken a stand on the issue and the only ·way for the public to,koow "''hat ii'i 1 going on is to debate prior to the elec· tion." Rusof f also e1pressed his dis pleasure over the City Council'i; stand tha t !I will ·not ret'Ognize the petitions as ii. legal referendum issue. "lf they take that lllega~ po'11ion our Jawye s will take the necessa ry action 10 bring the liii1e o the courts. It lj" 11n'il· legal act not to allow the people lo rrfakc • decision,•t said Rosoff. Rusoff also· said he leans ~g:iin~· the construction.of homes upon the pr.>perty. .·"I thin k we need to know the impact nf taxes. If the tax situation stat~s the city nttds revenues. I would be compll'le ly against zoning the. property re lde·nt\al ,'' 1aid Ruso!f. ., L INSIDE TODA 1( A federal age-ncu ocknow- ledrjes it overlook.s n rat or moitse rellc r. in each pint of 1vheat. Sr.t. Pttge R (or uuidttirie1 on how rnuch f ilth tht agencu · cnn.yi dert unavoldablt a11d toltr· • obit fn. uour-favoritt Jo~. L, M. .... J a .. 1111, II c .. 11i.rt111 1 Clttl fflH 11-17 Ctf!'llcl n c,..,,....,,. !l Ottlo\ Ntl)(t\ 11 E•l1trl11 '••• 4 l!!!!t•t•l-111 ,, Plftl MI t .. 11 ,., ..... •tt••f 1t Mtl'ttCltt II o\ftft Lt~ 11 Mt,ltt I 17 H11'9!\1I Hm 4 0!"111t1 C-1'1' 11 Sy1¥11 """" Jt '"tll J S.1t Sita Mif'lttt 1W'I Ttlt vlil.. tr T1!11llt\ tr Wttll!tf' I W11¥1t.n Ntwt 1).1' Wtf!C Ntwt f • 2 DAIL V PILOT H MondtJ, .tpril l , 1912 ' ·Troubled Kids Get ~Dire~tion' -By MICHAEi, GOODRI CH DAtl'I" il'll.Of 1>t11i."' •ltlltr• l(M~ltr tlon la I October, ls a counseling ero-the Comrnu.n.i ly Services Pro ject t pro-throu&h the juven ile jus tice system. / Fountain Valley youn1ster1 Are fi nding ne11.· directions on. "alternate rou~s" - -notthttdgbw1y-type, but"the'Untq\le pro- gram for ~elpln&-tbem will> tbalr. prob- j!ram to a.salst youlhs ""ho ha ve run into gram 11lmed at copinR with problt.rru "In ta lklng ~·ilh the police. ~hool! and ~~ie:lt~ypol~~:: ~:!~ of t'--mcr~ruattedy. by the rapid growth of tht com., the community in general we discoverd __ ,:it::f- •l'll .. many youlh proDlems tnat used -tO btf I Oran1e COunty-P-robatlon Department..-Th&-who It ldt1-behind Alternate' h1tndled by pltrtnts and ntlghbor& ar ___ ..__ .,,,_ · -· Altern•te Routes,llts progratru inJ.o\ULJ!nute>. aa:ordlni tllJIJ tuper.ylsoot"Bnt0<<-now-bein~h•ndled-by-the pollce;"-aa~ -· Proxmi1·e 's No Match Fo1· Old Tommy Trojan ta.in va 1 1ley a~ 1 Ptacentla. Three ol the Sandie. hi to handlt youth probltms nn a Sand ie. 1 counse ors wor. n Fountain Valley under local community level rt1thr:r than He credit s thl5 lrtnd with thr ra oHt crn"•th of Orani:e Goun ry cnn1munlM lems. - Alternate Routes, v.·hlch btcan opera· •, T H • D • d Ki• d "·hich has lt>ft peo ple l11rgPly un· WO ear1ngs eterWllle aequa intod wit h their ne ighbo". "It usrd to be that if a neighbo r l'ilt\V' local kids ca using lrnub!e. he woulcf Due On Tl•act discipline them or c'll their porent.. Nnw By GEORGE LEIDAL Pl B b ll D , L B lnl'itead, he calls \ht. pOlicf'," adds S<ind ir. SO~fE NE\\'SROO~t \\1AG 1~~c~·~1&J;1~~:~~sted Sen. \~Hllam Pro:fmire ' Q,yS QS€ a esptle eg races Youngste r5 relerr@d lo ~· o u n I a i n b h h b ed f _AJ SJ \1allev 's three Alterna te R o u I t' (0.Wis.) might be having ml">re trou les °"'ith his head I an (' arga1n Qr oiig a•,i~:.._-----'<1':0 roun.~!Ori,-Ka the-,Jflnei:. .Jn h n ~----l -sinc&-hls-reeent.-Nit-U:anspla'nL-----------------1 ----· ·• ' RA•-t.WIM-l-i'fJ--"llieO-:i:..~-~!"--::-:::---:---:--:-:----&i;;; ' Proxmir e. 1\ seems. ObJeC~ to the l S. Otpartmenl C Id .II· bo I · h R s· ·1· h h h eiluahf'<lnd-Ron ttla~,.·~------; a we wa s rn n ne years ago wn ay 1c1 1ano. 'A' o roac e! I e team. problems rangi ng from pcrpelua l tru11ncy or Transport.ation frivolously rr1tter1ng etA av hard·eamed Coqncil man Donald Shipley \Ji \ovolV'ed cerebritl palsy. doctors said he would said the youngster has been doing a good 10 burgula ry. tax m<1ney promoting Transpo '72. in t11.·o of th e li\Pe pUbli c hearings set for ne\Per 'A'al k. job and ha~ seryed as an inspiration for 1 He particularly directed a b11rb at Orange Count~''s lhl!' 7:30 n'cl ock portion of ton ight's Hun· pl~.ut Tracy has a 'A'llY or surpr1s1n~ lhr other players. re~~~~s a~ ~e'l:r~:itehen~~~s :ui~~~~~ -entertain ment en trepreneur extraord ina ire -not: Tommy tlntiton Beach Citv. Counc1.·1 meeting. ' -''You ought lo 11.·atrh him tA·hen he's d' t I 0 ,. m ti·n, w1·th lh• Walk'r. " Thrr.e we¥kli ano. when he tn1 d hi!> pir thing." said Sic iliano. "Somelimes he me ia e y, s me imes ce "' Shipley is appea ling both a z.one cha nie "' t th m• day but "'''r p11rents he "'as goil)f: lo try out for the 1Qses hi s ba lance and fal ls. Bul he just voung~ er 0 0 e l!ll · ---,i;ra:JJ;er graciouslYfeSpondt.rl (Olll'V.'rn\t'n's inquirie.!I and...a..m.a.sler.JllfilL.£bal!,@! denied by the Little I nague b_aseball team at Terra . b h ff h" "f d 'more than 72 hours later. A }'OU!h assipn-"th I 1· \Vh l p . didn't know appar cil\•'g planning commisilOn. ~ Jumps up, rus es o Ill uni orm an -..1 -k n . 11· II d •t v.·1 an exp ana ion. a roxm1 re , · L;-•a . ;, 'l"ri·n Cou nti• north of •-n t .t . .1 lh " " d h ~1 a pr\JUOuon o 1cer usuA y oesn ~tr. tt · th t w lk · _.. ·~o 400 •k th contrai;l Bnth items invol\Pe lhe samP acre of nu 1•" .;)/!. goes a 1 a~a1n as i nn tng ,,a ap-k d. t s en y, 1s a a er s1gncu 8 ~ • . u1rPe·mon f'ranci·s•-. they dt.dn"t take hi"m tno -• H , be . . 1. f th him for SC\'en wet s. 11ccor 1ng o an· . h th t t h t -ted to be litncl on the north side-f!f Slat er Aven ue. i..v pencu. e s en an insptra ion or o er . wit e govemmen to conve r w a was exp"" seriously. After all. he wears Sr aces on members of f!Ur club.'' die. LllDAL a losing proposition inlo a moneymak ing. balance-Of·pay· 11 bout 268 feet east of Beach Boulev11rd. both legs. The youngster also plays tennis and Aside fron1 g\\•ing immrd ialP attention ments boosting. international spectacular . ThP land ,is currentl y inned R·~ toff ice-But Terry tried out and_ captured pool. and is one of the top students in his In the .problems the coun~elnrs try l<'I After on ly eigh t days on the job, \Viilker Increased pr Pdir.ted admissions profession11l ). but planners had 'been -pitching and outfield positions 00 lhe clas~. \\'ork rlosely Y:ith the fam ilie~. "We place to the transpora~ion ex\ravagania by some $800.000. asked by the council to rezone il C·4 a ~rcat..einphasis upon the fam ily rather FURTHER, as director of the Pro-Bowl halftiml' show l:ist .Janua ry, (commercial ). th;in the ind ividual because it~ a more ef· \Valker worked a 150-second pitch ror Transpo '72 into the !elcvls crl hoopl:i. ·Planners initia ted !hr 7.0ne l'h11n1te. hu t T , D • A fective method of ~ettin~ to the rool!I or 11 He figures that's worth about $70,000 of nationa l television air time, if lhe denied it because 1h'ey fell the of.fi ce·rro· rans1t n·ector ;::;i ccept problem ." says John SchtA•cigPritht. government had ro pay for it. fessional designation was better suited to ~ Obviously. Proxmire has liltle understanding of \Valker 's football b;ick-the property, Somet imes problems are solved quick· ground which dates back to his unusual carttr as Tommy Tro1an, drum majnr The land 11.·as original ly zoned for e<1rn-ly. If not. though. the counselor wil l for lhe USC marching band. mercial unt il 1967. when the plannin g recommend the fam iy seek addit io nal Yes, Walker _ the only varsity letter bearer in USC fnotbAH hi~tor.\' 'A'hn rnmmission rtzonerl it. Coun cilmen have c t B L' Pl assistance. never played a second of football -nevertheless is one of !hP SC foo tball asked for its return to commercial zonil}g 0 un Y. . us -me an "lf we don't h;ive the rt:sources to solve greats. because !he property owner protested the 1 problem we are fam ilisr with oth'r Standing a not-so-lrightening ~101/z and weighing all or 147 pounds, R·5 zoning. local agencies that can help," sayo; San· Walk'r. a' band leader. held for a year the Pac-8 conversions scoring record. Councilmen can overturn the t:::im· By .fACK BROBACK die. · d d • efficient lransit service or patronage.'' l·n l"'l. . mission's cnial tonight , if lhey esire. 01 tn• D•""' ~;101 ,1111 One of the most promising aspects nr ~ I I "r He explained thAt reside111 tal growth ··1 LED TH E band intn the Coliseum wearing a drum major outf it ovrr Ay sta te aw . the master plan mu st a so Orange Count.v should ha\·e new bus -11 f 1 h Alternate Routei; is Iha! it re11ches m11r.·1 . w1 nl ow t e typical low density spra"''i " my football Uni.form." Walker expla ins. Then .. as the team. •.cnred a touch-be changed with the zoning. hnes 10 operation 'A'ithin four to fi1·e nd d 1 .voungsters before the.Y de v e Io P pattern a in ustri& growlh will consist down, the SC equivalent of superman would strip down lo his Jer sey. run onto The other three public 'hearings are: months. accord ing to J\1art in Boum11n , a largely of expansion of existing pockets. permanent delinquency problems. St\'f'n· the field and kick the extra points. . . -A precise plan for the al ignment of a cnnsultanl preparing Orange Coun ty Bouman also said that commercial ty-five percent of !he Alternatt Roulf'!i ----,1----fVeedfe--o-sa · ook-a-UttJe-guts--to-get-out:-lhere-nn..lhe held w1lbnuJ_ _.c._aj-de-sac street parallel to and abo ut 200 Transi t District's Special Bus Need s Stu· lh -11 -f ed h · referra ls are i·ouths who have nn ~ ' -n ·1 d i;:row w1 come 10 ragmenl s opp1ng shoulder pads or any other of the usual protectiv e equ ipment other players feet easl. Q !leSolllhem Paci fic Rlll roa day. cente:rs. !hat no mBjor "downtwons" are pre.vious arrcsl rrt·ords and can be ustd. Pac-8 teams have never exactly enlisted a bunch of pansies and \Valker righl•of·way from Talbert Aven ue to 780 Transit districl directors today ap-In the picture. helped before the y do. recalls so me rather crushing moments. feet south of the. centerline of Talbert pro\Ped Bouman's recommendation that Transit di!!lric t general manager "As probal ion orficers 'A'e <'an 'l reach A Now. the 49-year-Old Walker is rushing in lo bail lhe go\Prrnment out Avenue . inlra·communHy transit ser\Pice be sup-Gordon J. "Pete" Fielding . said the con· kid until he is on probation." says with prog ram rev isions to make the $5 million T~anspo :12 venlure a succ~ss. -A change in the city codes wh i~h plied as rapidly as possible, that present sullant's studies were on schedule. Schweigeraht. "but with a.lle rna te routes The. whole 30().acre exhibition al Dulles Jntemat1onal Airport. nel'lr W~sh1n~· would require l'I licensed operator in non-serviceli, 15 in all, be modif ied to provide Jn ans~ver to 11 question, he said the we can see him before he gtts into ton, D.C., ls being put together on one-fourth the time the Sealtle Warld s Fair related care homeS. l heller servire. and that inter community Southern Cal ifornia Rapid Tran 5 it seriou s trouble. was organized. And, it's only si x times bigger than that worldly wonder of -An appeal to the planning c11m· lint!> be acfivated as justified by potential Districl, "·hich has majnr operation! in "Some kids and their parent s are a\50 human achievement. . . missio n's den iitl for a 1.nne change from demand. Oranll'.e Count y ha ve been asked to having problems that might not encl up in If Walker's record al USC. followed by 12 years a~ cnter_1a1n m~nt rl 1rrclor R·2 !low densit :-,' apartment s• to R<l. Pl) Boumlln. of Alan 1-.1. Voo rhres and estimatt lhe cos t of su pplanling current I.he juvenile enu rts. but need a!l entlon at Disneyland and a string of crowd.pleasing spect~cular~ ,1n~lud1n_g the iln· thl~her density in a planned de vc!op-Associates of Virp;inla. 'A'ho "'ith VTN nf South Coast Transit services if that fi rm anywa y and we're able to help them,'' nual Rose Bowl Patriotic r·ourth of Ju ly Show. continues. it s Just )ikel y Sen. menl ) for 4.48 acres on the snuthea st c(lr· Orange C-Ounty are doing a $40,000 study sho uld cease its ope rat ions, as threatened adds Schweigerat. Proxmire will wish he hadn't tangled with the former Tommy TroJan. / ner of Algonquin Street and Pearce on current busf needs made a formal bet.,.,.een Santa Ana and Orange Coast In addition to C(Junseling, lht Alternate As for the $30,400 contract, Walker notes that's less than his usual fee. Avenue. This may be Continued lo April report to the district directors toda y. communities. Routes s1,·r spends time holding group The Pro Bowl paid him $19.000 for a 20-minute show. Transpo ·72 runs for 17. Previously. he had outlined his pro-discussions at the high school~ and the ei&ht days -May TT to .lune 4. posals in a study session la st week .. Fountain Valley Teen Center. The Bouman 's overall report call ed existing c t E d' diseus~ions are 11 chance for the f'rom Page l STATISTICS MAN ... aerospace Industry, ll"s WAiis • are covered with charts containing dotted linell , bar graphs. clrcles. squares. Altogether. he has more than 1~.000 bits of information represented on his fou r of· fices wall s, 11nd he hopes ultimately to display 100.000 pieces of data . "I want any administrator in lhe district to be able to walk in here and see at a glan~e what is happening anywhere in the district ." Te;nte says. Tenie·s main efforts so far have betn aimed at m-0nitoring the progress of in· dividual schools as they develnp their educational pl ans. and at. analyzing the test scores of each school in the district. "\Ve 'A'ill be able to tell at a glance wh ich schools Rre stronR in which area~. and which afe weak." Tente says. "and then we will know where tn channel nur energy when we want to go about im· proving things.'' Six Candidates For Valley Seals Convene Tonight Six candidaJe.s seeking election lo the Fnunltiin Valley City Cou ncil tA·ill speak al 7:30 o'clock tonight in the F'ountain Valley High School cafeteri a. Each candidate wlll be given five minutes to present his platform. There will be a question and answer period rollo'A'ing tre speeches. transit ser\'ice in the count y poor. arpen ers n youn~slers lo rollcctively discuss their "\Vhil e there are some 15 pubhc and problem s. private transit operations. for the most S d H [ They also spend lime; In school part I hey are UnCOOfdina!ed . prO\'lde ta,,, I at ote ClaSSrflOmS d i~CUSSing IAW and how it minimal servire and use obsolete equip-relates to youth in Fountain Valley . men!," he sa id. J M • • B J The Alternate Routes staff membPr!I The consultant added that between now Jf, l,U Inf, CfiC l, !>ee nor. of their most finportant roles a." and 1980, growth in Orange COunt y will encouraging people throughout the com· follow traditional patterns. "which un· ~It AMI BEACH rU Pl l _ T h e munity play a role in the solv ing of youth fortunately are not conducive to highly Carpenter~. one of the natinn's most pro blems. popular recording grnup8, have flown · "\Ve want to f•reate a team compriserl back to Californi a afler canceling seven of the police. schools and the fam ilies,"' da.vs of a .!icheduled nine-da y run he re sa.vs Kath.v .Joni's. because they refused to perform over the Presently being funded by thr. F"ederal clatter of dishe11 at a hotel. 1..aw Enforcement Sy 11 I e m s ad- The 13-member group led by young ministra~lon . Alternate Routes is an !&- Karen and Richard Carpenter of Garden month pilot project. The team member~. Grove. refused lo come out for their se-though . feel th111 it will prove il!I value ·. "My task is to design graphs and charts that will demonstrate very \Pividly what is going on." he says. Tente said that about 20 other school dis tricls m across ihat state ha ve sent representat ives lo observe his operation. "As far as I know ," the applicat io n of aerospace management techniques to school administration is pretty new." Tente sa ys . "A lot of people seem to be thinking about doing the same th ing 'A'e are." The six candidates who will be spe11k· Ing are Marvin Adler, Clarence Casper, Roy Richards. Paul SavRrino. Bernie Sval slad 8nd Jan Wilhelm. They are seeking election In council seats being \Pacated by John Harper and Ronald Shenkman. Shopping Center Plan for Valley To Be Explored rond performance Saturday n i g h t and be re:nr1\·ed. __ because th ey 1a id the Eden Roe Hotel In tcr m!l of monry. thr prog ran' is !lit v- fa iled to honor a co nt ract provision tha t Ing the cost of send ing many youngslPr~ A pro posal to ma~ter plan ll 40-acre it must halt food and beverage servi ce in through the juvenile courts in additioo t.i I "My work al Ocean View is not as technically demanding as the work I did in aerospace." Tente admits. "buL it does involve the same basic management techniques. "And since I find my .school work so rewarding. I work much harder at it than J did at my old jobs. I just have a feeling that what I'm doing now is imtortant to AOmebody." Most of the administrative tasks .11t Ocean View are handled by the principals at their individual schools, Tente ex- plained . "F'or an administrator to keep track with all the things these principals are doing could be an enormously lime e-0n· suming task." Tente says. "ln many cases the job couldn't be done at all . or at least couldn't be done soon enough to prevent possible trouble. "My charts makt: the job or keeping track of thousands of bits of informa tion mana ~eabl e." Tenle sa~'s. ORAN6l COAST "' DAILY PILOT Th• Ort"tt COIH DA IL 'I" f'ILOT ""Ill\ ...tilth 11 tOtY>Dl"f.d l!lt Nl,,,,,·Prtst, 11 11Ubll1~tll bV tnt Or•"ft Co11t P'11Dl!1i'l!flt Com111nr, !otll•· r.it tdll•Ofll 1rt 11Ubll11'1td, MDl"'ll•1 1~rov9P! FrldtY, tor COlll MH t, Newport l tt tn, Ho.mllnglon B11~nl ~ftv~1tl11 \11111v'. L1gu'll BttC.h. lr~!f\1 1Stlldltb•ck t r.d !olf\ ClemtMt / ~I" JUlft C~pi11r1~0. A )•ng 1e •19•on1! '1111t.on 11 puPlh~ed S1 1urd1y\ ..-id Suno~~'· Th• prlf\cio11 pv~ll1hlng Pit~' ;, .i Jll wei r a1y $trte1, Co111 Mut, Ctl•!c•r••. t"6i6. ' Rob1rt N. W11d 'r r11>01n1 Incl Pubh,l'tf J 1t\ R. C ur/1 y Viet P'ru lOtf\l 1"11 Gt n1r1I M1111111r 7~o"''' K11 .. il [dl!CH" Tlio "''' A. M11rplli111 Ml"IQ•nf l4i!O• Cll1rlc1 H. L.01 Ric.~1 rd '· N•ll ,IH1l lfM Mlfl.l,lllO ld 1~11 T1•rv c ... a1. Wtd Ort f!tt C1111111y Editor H•11tl11tt•111 hecai OHlce I 117S l11c.~ l ou lt ¥t rd M1 ili119 Adcl t••1: ,.0 . lie 790, 92,41 C»Mr Offlcn · L•OU'rlf tttUI' m ~Ort1! .. .....,lit C.111 lol.nt; JXI Wtll ltV S!rtfl Ntwpo•I l t lci'I! 3JJJ Ht*OOrf I Oll'fYtl'fl £111 C11m1n11: •1 Hotl!I r 1 C1ml110 lltttl Tel.,a.e" l71 41 •42"4JJ1 Clnalflellll Alllll'ertl•h19 642·S•1t ,,."' Ntrtll Or11111 (t.,,.I)' ''"'IJIUlllll•t 140·1220 C.,.,r!ll'll, 1t12, O••Mrt Ci»tl ~uol!1nl119 ~1Mny, No f\t wt 'ft•lt1. 11111tir1t)Olil, idl!Oflt l rl'Ulltr tr •dwtr!ls~~ Mrt111 l'll•Y 1111 rttrO!d\IUd wllflOIJI 1111c.111 Jl!l"-"'lttloll llf t.,.,,.ffltt ... "''-. SfrCO.W Clt tl "ttttt Mid t! CM!t N111 , C.li'-'1111. Slltlttrlttlflll " C.ttrlllr JJ IJ 1"(111t1r..1 ., IMll 11.11 "*'""1¥1 "'ll•lafll •Ul'W!l!Mt tJ.U l!'IOl'l!lllY. t Tente. although he is 50, hope s to enroll at UC Irvine for graduate tra ining in educational administrA tion. "Right now. my main work is sim ply displa ying information. That's nnt an easy job 111 All. It takes me hours .11nd hnurs to come up 14•ith the hest graph~. But with add itional information , I feel !here are many other wa ys I could be useful in school administration ," Tenfe hss liv~ in Hunlington Be;ich "'ith his wife .!iince 1963, when he "'or kerl for Nor th American Rockwell space di\Pision. f'ro11a Page l VIE TN Al\'I ... \'ietnam. but nHicials sa id the situation "'as under control. Communist attacks were rtporte;d ;it ,f"ire .Base Anne. 18 mile.s 'A'l!'St of Hur, and Bastognt . 0 15 miles In rhe sOut hwe~t. Both bases pfottcl againiil Com~unist inTiltra!ion routes through the A Sh;i u Valley lo Hue. de\Pastatod in the 1968 Tet offensive, A Sou!h \.'letnamese spokesm;in ,;a id the re inforce:ments flow~ In today "'oulcl mounl a r ounter-1Jffeiis1\·e "in a ft\V days " They included ma rines and rangers fro m Saigon, inh~ntry from Hue and two lank brigades fff!m Oa Nang . They 11.·ere flo14•n nortl. in a coll ection of t: S. cargo Cl:Ws. Victname5e air force lransport.s and 8irliners commandr,rcd from the government 11 irline. The action followed Pres1d,nt Thieu's flight lo Hue ilnd na Nanll'. 1n a com- mandeered Air Vietnam Jet to look O\Pl'r the situation. R1rin clouds have ma skt'd !ht: 1n\·ad 1n1: r;ort h Vie tnamese l.11nk column! drivi ng across the D~IZ but tht 'A'eather Jm. proved todity ll nd li S and Soulh Virl· name.se fi~hter-bom~rs struck back 11t the Red ol(cnsive. ' B52." dropped bo1nbs through th t ('lourl~ e11rHer and three V S. 7th FlePI dtstroycrs off 1he coa.s1 pounded the. enemy troops ano tanks. The Communls111 th rew up intense 11nh- 1ircrafl Hre. and seven American planes 11nd helicopter• we re rt ported shot down Sunday ll nd today but Amt.rl c1n plants nt~· 128 strikes Sunday &nd more today.· The event is co-sponsored by the roun· la in Valley Women 's Division of the Chamber of Commerce and the League of \Vomen Voters. f'rotn Page 1 CAMPAIGN. • • area nf Fountain Valley ror commerc ial the ni ght club whi le th ey are singing. ligh len ing the load!> in police and schoo l development will be heard by city cnun· "We can perrorm in a noi~y room and rounsrling offi ces. rr1rent s also are able cil men when they meet al 7:30 p.m. ii doesn 't make any differenr e to us -tn deal wilh tht1r childrens problems in Tuesday. 'A't' sti ll get paid." said Richard the ir own hnmes ra ther lhan the cour~. Accord ing In city planning director Ca rpenler. "But we honestly believe the sa.vs Sand ie. Clinton Sherrod . the planning commission people deserve be.tier." ha s proposed that A shopping center be Karen Carpenter adderl: "! almost built in !he city center area bounded by forgn! lhe wo rd s d urin~ 'Clos e t.o You' Warner Avenue . San Mateo Slreel. Slater becaus~ a waller carhe up to a front table Avenue and Brookhurst Street. and presen ted a check very noisily to a In addition to stores. the planning com-man. After !he man saw !he 'check. I mission has sugges ted an office ce nter be dnn't think he could enjoy any song.'' Youth Falls, Killed As Cliff CrumJJl es built in the area. The matter was broug'ht to the al-SAN 011-.:(;Q ( AP I -A 19·vear-old soft. yet stands out." Swar tley exp!11ined . If appro\Ped. the cen ter will estab lish 11 tention or hotl'l owner Morris Lansburgh vouth fell 300 feet to his death ~hen the Dave Garofalo I.urned sailor over the commercial r~tin of six acres per J.000 between shnws Sa!urday night. but he edge of a cliff crumbled beneath his feet weekend. He and several friend.~ do nned persons in fountain Val!ey. accord ing 10 -refused to slop service during the act.. ;it Torrey Pines State Park 11orth of here, Indian cos1ume.s, boarded 11 24·fnot bo;it Sherrod. "A very clear and important clause in authorities said. and sailed into Hunrington Harbnu r in the 1( the council approves !he plan . Sher· our contract prohibits service from fi \'e The coroner's office said Sieve style of the Boston Tea Pa rty. rod said he feels the area will attract minutes before the show begin.s through Blrtkt.ley of Lemon Grove die<LSund ay at If was a dra1nalic evnt designPd lo enough commercial inl erest to be the show unt il it ends." said Sherwin Scri pps i\1emorial Hospital about two publicize his belief that resident!! in completed within five.years. Bash. the Carpenters' Agent. hours af1er the Accident. southeast Huntington Beach don'I recei1·e 1 ~;;;;;;;;;::;::;::;::;::~;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;:;::;::;::;;~:;:;::;;;;;:;::;;;;;;;:;::;::;::;::;::;::;:;;;;;;;;~;;.;::;::;::;::;::;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;-the same representation on the Ci!y Council as those in Huntington Harbour EI e ct .... P't>lllktl ,. .... and other parts of the city. '. Garofalo also donated a hot air ba lloon to Hunnttgton Center to bring in the EASier bunny Friday night , He often tises DOM RA c IT I slide.~ and a ta;ie recording at speeches to add . .son1 rthing extra. to his campal,n. Jim DeG uetle, a long·time bu.s1nt.s.s man in Huntington Beach. is re.lying partl y on his local reputation. He also knock.~ on doors, speaks at candid11tes niRh!s and ad vert ises. Soft pot holders. for the lacly of the house. h;ive become the trademark of t\lark Pnrter , He also hand ~ out colorin.ii: books for the kidd ies. with an ecolngy theme. His campaign time is also filled \1·ith !hP 11.~ua ! run of speeches. coffets and door pounding. Councilman Donald Shipley runs hi~ campaign by 11pptaring t vcrywhere,. He's not handing nut it lot of gimmicks, or lradema rks. but hls face can usually be found in lhP crowd at any major acll vlt)'. \\ill the gimmicks. the ll terAture. the appearances work ? Twel\Pe c11ndid1tcs apparenti)' think Ml. and perh11ps at Jtast one voter i.s li ke ly to be influenced by a mtttch hook cover. or a fingernRll file. Rut f'Ven after Aptll t i . .save lhiil ~ponge anri don't t<is~ aw·ay the key c.h1 ln -the~· may nne day become "aluable tn\·ia from a bygone cltction. l\1essairc on Hi11h v ' '='. BEATRICE. Neb. (AP1 -The messagt nr1:11ster wis carried In 11n unusual manner Sunday by a class at St. P1ul Lutheran Church. The cl11ss relta!· t<I 2SO balloons with the mes&Age •JJesut Lives." ' as your Costa Mesa DOM R_ACITI City Councilman ·HE'S CONCERNED WITH THE CITY OF COSTA MESA ••• WITH ITS PEOPLE ITS PROBLEMS ••• ITS CHALLENGES. AS YOUR CITY COUNCILMAN DOM RACm WILL SUPPORT: e EXPANOEO METHOD OF CRIME PREVENTION e 300 ACRE ECOLOGY PARK e CITY WICE CLEAN UP CAMPAIGN e TIGHTER CONTROL ON CITY TAXU ' e TRAFFIC CONTROL •I I DOM WILL LISTEN-DOM WILL WORK ~ ... ..... , .......... .,...w .... ·-''"l.M.6.. Raciti-Last On The lallot-Ftlrst In Civic Concern C~mpol9n HHdqu1rt1r1 It 11'40 Nowpon llvd., Phone 645·1360 or 541-1313 • I • / ! • , • -- H DAILY OCLOT :f McGovern Makes Goof uesda y s -Primar y T1irow n In to Confu sion By STEVE GERSTEL Ul"I l"•Kllt•I W'lftt ~1 1 1.\\'AUKEE. \VIiii. -A perhaps c°"t· ly mlsrake by Sen. Gr.nrgt S. McGovern added 1.0 \ht confusion and uncert;iinty 11hout the outcomt' --01 rut s d a y ' s \Visconsin's president\AI primary in "'hich ~1cGovern. Hubert H. Hump hrey and Edmund S. Musk ie ba ttled for fir~t plact. •See related st<lry, Pagt i i and the possibility or a mass cr\JSSO\'~r by Re publicans. GOP votf'rs h~v" Pres1drnt Nixon on the ballot a.Jong with only Rep P;llil ~. ~1cClo~kf'y of Ca:lifnrnh1, \\'h\"I h11s pull ~ out for lack of funds, and RP.p .• Jnhn ~1 . • Ashbrook or Oh io. who has not c.am· paigned in \Viscons1n. Alsn nn tht D<-mocralir ballot and ca m· paign1ng hard are ~ew York J\!ayor John V. Lindsay and Sen . Henry t<.f Jackson ot \Vashington. Cur bs Asked -..-,11nrn1tionwidrtelecasrstmdav .. ,-.,rth----7 the primar~· two da y5 away. l\1cGovern 011 Met 1iadone Little Piggy No Glutton This liltle piggy "'as one of eight born the other day on the \Vorlh t'arm near Bad Axe, Mich . Trouble \Va s, this Utile piggy didn 't like what mama had to oijer and refused to eat. So Amy \Vorth. 11;2, solved the dietary problem "'ith a little forced feeding. Trio Ques tion ed In $212 Millio n Heroin Se izure · AJACCIO, Corsica fU PI ' -Police to- day questloned two men and a woman ar· rested in connKl ion wilh 1he world's big- gest heroin seizure -935 pounds "'orlh $2 12 million bound for the illicit U.S. m;irket. One of lhe. arrested men '.l.'as identified as Louis Santoni. 4t. a Corsican residing in PAris picked up by police "'hen he returned to his home village Sunday for an Easter \'acalion. Police ma intained silence on the ar- rests, but sources said they v•ere part of an investi gat ion into 1he March I seizure , oL the heroin encased in cement in a :-shrimp boat captured near ~1arseil\e. It "'ilS ~e biggest haul on record in the gtcpped-u p war against heroin smuggling to the United Stales. / The vessel's owner. M;ircel Boucan. \v as formally charged "'ith drug traf- ficki ng . P ets Die in Fire SAN PEDRO IU Pl l -An arsonist aet fire to a pet hospital Sunday. burning to death more than 20 animals. mostly dogili . . Investigatorili said the San P~ro Animal Hospital had been 1prinkled with gasoline and set afire. doing en estimate<! $250.000 damage. De valuation Made Official WASHINGTON IAPl -Presi- dent Nixon made the devaluation of the dollar official today, signing legislation raising the value of gold from $35 to S38 an ounce. This change in the gold content of lhe dollar. the first since 1934 , amounts to an 3.57 percent increase in gold value. or a 7.89 percent Jolh1r devaluRtion. Actually. the cha nge will nl)t of- ficially lake effect until Secretary of the Treasury John 8. Con nally 'notifies officials of the lnlerna· tional Monetary Fund. Cl1arlie C~apli11 Returns After 20 Years i11 Exile NE\I.' YORK (UPI) -Charlie Chaplin. filmdom 's belove<! ~itlle tramp. returns in triumph today to the cou11lry that turned its back on him 20 }'ears ago. Chaplin . who mad e his rortune in Amer- ica but wound up in self-imposed exile in S"wi tzerland because or taxes, pol itics and women trouble, will be reted in Nrw York and in Holl ywood. where the Acad· emy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences "'iii present him a special Oscar on April 10 -the date of his 8Jrd birlhday. Accompa nied by his wife, Oona . and son-in-la w Nicholas Sistovaris, husband of his recond oldest daughter Victoria , Chaplin arrives here today tor a five-day visit. · He will be honored Tuesday at a gala '·Sa lute to Charles Chaplin" ,til Lincoln Center for the Performillg Arts. . P~rchas~rs of tickets for the even ing. during which two early Chapl in films. ''The ldle Class" and "The Kid", will be shown, include Mrs, Ethel Kennedy, "'ho recently suffered a broken leg but whn promised to attend ; Paul Newman ;ind Joanne Woodward , J ohnny Ca rson, . John !lay Whitney, Leopold , Stokowski, Oltn Preminge r. Norman Maile r and P;iu lelle Goddard, Chaplin's third wife. Cha p:i 11. 1vho "'ill not hole:! a news con· ference "•hile here. plans to make a brief statement a l the Tuesdav affair. Mayor John V. Lindsay will host the Chaplins, who wilt stay at the Plaza Ho- tel. at a Thursday evening reception at Gracie Mansion, the mayor's residence, during which he will be given the Handel Medallion, the city's highest cultura l honor . On Friday, the Chaplins will fly to Los Angeles for the Oscar awards. The Chaplins. who have eight children and live in Vevey. Switzerland. left the United States in September, 1952. Three J(illed, 11 Hurt In Nightclub Drug War ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) -Two women and a ma11 were shot to death and 11 other persons were wounded early today in a crowded nig htclub in what au- lhorities said was a drug war between rival Philadelphia gangs. Mario F. F\oriani. public safety di- rector, said the shooting began about 2 a.m. in the Club Harlem wriere he esli· mated 600 persons were wat ching the floor show when the shooting bega11. "These shootings were the result of a drug war that has been taking plaa! in Philadelphia,'' Floriani said. 'It started ·in the latter part of February where one gang member was shot and there was a $240.000 drug robbery. ''Thull, the contract was put out by this groop ta more or less eradicate the ones responsible, They just used Al · lantic City to settle their gritvances." He 1aid the 1hootin1 beg111 when an unidenlified man tapped Tyrone Palmer. 22 , of Philadelphi;i. on the shoulder and to:d him he wanted to discuss •mething with him. ' The uniden tifled man then shO! Palmer twn or three times , Florian i asid. · "When the first shot rang out, all bed~ lam broke loose," Floriani said. "Ta- bles were flyi ng, cha irs were nying, bot- tles were flying . It was a shambles.'' Witnesses to!d police that foor or five men had done ·the shooting l!nd that 15 lo 20 shots were fired . Floriani said. He said two weapons were recovered inside the club. In addition to Palmer, also killed were Renee Cuff. 2~. and Pamela Pollard. 23, both of Philadelphia. Rjchard Jenkins. of \Villingboro. N .• J., said, "Two guys, I don 't k11ow woo they were. they got up and started fight ing llnd the next thing I knew there was gunshots off to my back and to my ~eft. Food Stamps by Mail? Count y S.tudies Recommendation for $10,000 Savng The more than 66.000 residenls of Orange County Woo buy food stamps each month m1t y gel thtm tirough tht mail if the Board of Supervh;ors Approves a recommendation of Granville Peoples, toUJ1ty welfare dir ector. Peojiltll ~ man y months ago that he w.u checking lht possibility of using post otfiees for sale o< Stamps. rather than banks . Friday he annbunced the new pro., posal. The welfare direct.or said. the mail method "'Ould aave: the county $10,000 a month . Pe<'lples Wld supervisora hist~ fall f,hat It w11s costing the county SJ0,000 a month. 'paid to banks which handled the program .. • He. added that the.. banks were. not mak· lng any money on the. deal and would be Rl•d to g•t rid or It. '•They onl y do it to llelp 11.1 out." People .. Id. ' Tb• l«lorllly·llnanced Cood stamp pro- gram ts expected to cost lhe county alrqost $1 million ne:rt. fiscAI year to operate. The govemmenl provides the stamps which allow \ow·l ncome in- dividual s and famil ies to purchase the coupons at a discount. The county pays only the operating cost but Peoples said the growth of the pro-- gram has been both spectacular and unexpected. As recently as November <If 1970, only 11 ,500 persons were eligible for food stamps. This compares with the 66,000 today. Ne~ federal regulations will tighten eligi.bility for the stamps, Peoples sald. Effective nut July l tht. value of food stamps_ will be--deducled -1rom the 11lot- ment of those person~ who aire also bn wclfart. -Another ~ne\\' regulitiOn 1\lows rrct. pienll the option of recelvln; the malled 1t_amp1 (PeoplOI think! most wltl 1pprov• this new___mtthod ) and they may purchase 1 portion ol their mon~hly allowance • I ralher than all or oone as a.t present. Many welfare recipients complained 11bout the a.II or nothing procedure. prn-- le!iting that some months they did not have enough cash. A ne11.' rule. inaugurated l;ist year. cut a lot or people 00{ of the program. Previously a group of, relattd or unrelated people living in a 1ingle household wire eligible. Th is was pounced upon by tenanL, nf communes. Now only single perM>n5 or groups of related lndiYiduals living together are sold .!ilamps. Per~ns qualify for stamps U their in- come Is below ·!ilated levels--$Ul!) for 1 si ngle man or woman aird $300 for i family or three per month: for example. A slngle pcrS<>n may pay as. mue as ~ ' cents 1 mflnth fnr $28 In food sta mps or 1s much as $18, depend illlil upon lncflme. A family or two can receive up Ul '56 in 1t.ari;ipe. charge<! Securities And Ex ch;ingf' Com· mission rtrord" showed that lnlerna· Ilona! Teltphone and Tel ejtraph. lnr.. deducted a $400,000 contribution to the Rep11bliCJ1n nRtional ro n\'ention -front It~ taxable incomt. As soon as the program tFarr the r.i'a· lion -CRS l ended. a dislrRught .!l ide ru shed to J\1cGovcrn to tell him he "'d5 wrong and th;it the 1971 report with th!'! Sf.C -the ye ar in \\'hich lhe conl~ibutlon \\'as ntade -had nol been filed . McGovern then said that hi~ act·usa1inn wai1 made on the basis of statements by m officials that they considered i: a proper busine.~s expenst . He trild reporte rs that he had made "an h<,nrst error." • J\1cGovern, Humphrey and l\1usk ie are considered the three lead ing candidaleili in !he Wisconsin primary with its rich harvest tlf 67,delega tcs to the Democ ra tic National Convention. · About 1.5 million volers are r.xpected tn turn out Tuesday for the fourth primary of the 1972 election year. Although Ml'Govern had ln retract nne accusa1ion against ITT. he held to his sec- ond ch;irge -thal ITT paid no federal l11xes for three years. ending in 197(). <But the Associated Press said today SEC records;..show 11'1' did pay tires in those year. I He also said that 1he North Vi,.lnames(; offeniliive relnrorced his call for a total withdrawal and added that the UnP.erl ~!ates should stop providing mil'.tary ald to South Vietnam . The three major contenders are believ· erl lo be bunched 5o closely that Mc\.overn's invalid accusations cot.:ld become a factor. even though none of I he other candidates jumped in to exploil them . Campaign strategists for the cari· dida tes h;ive shied away from tabbing the finish. citing the uncertaillty of the vote for Alabama'5 Gov. George C. \Vallace s,,~"i1h Cruth Whlta , N••V l !1tk ' Si1•1 to I t Wi~th1 JA lo C Program Use oc-----'--- • \ \ \S)ll\liTO"\ 1UPI 1 -ThP ad· m1n151ralllln prllposed lodav In h;ir tior· tnr'.11 from running their n"'n meihadon1 pro~r<1m<; fnr hrroi n addu.·1 ~ !t t1!.~n anmunced nr1• ~1andards ti\ kf'rp thf' !'\ 111hr1ic nareot1f' il\YRy fro m prrson:r;. undrr 111. ;ind In h~hten recnrd· krrp1n.i: nn l\<; rl1slribution. ·rhr prnrns11l '> and nl hcr ad m1n1srr;itlnn f'ffnr!s 111nlrrl at bet lrr controlling n1eth11dnnt>, \l'htc•h eases .1drl1rts' cra\1ing rnr hrro1n. 11·hrrf' dra\1 0 for !he. \\lhite l\nu~r Spceial Action Of11r1" for Dru!( 1\bll SI" Prf'\'f'tltlOn by the Food And Drug Admin istration The st;indard!i will h<-puhil!iht'd thi! 11·ef'k in thf' Ft"der1l Rc~i5ler and C"Om• 1nents mt11· bt ma& abou! !hem fnr RO rla1·~ aftrr.11·hi ch they m11y be pu into e!· ff'cl -poss1 h\y with somt rrvisions. ""The Food and Dru~ Administratinn A rcn i• ~ '. (l't•di(•f 1·nneur:o; Iha! diversinn ;ind medicR:I An ii"•ar priest Ph ilip Rcrri,e:an, ntisu~e nf methadonP arf' pnLential rl;in~er!i ;ind lha:t stronii. f"nnlrnl must be CDO'ii c.ted nf srnug~linl? .a..lell~er~--rnalntained.1lllcr..J.he...distrj bulion and u nf the drug," an FDA slatement said. from II federal priso n, \Vaits The administration is not certain hour tor the decision on n ine other many addicts 111re in methadone treat- h h ·ri d rt men! pro~r11ms. C arges against •m lf' ra · Estima\e5 riinge fr om 2.'i.000 to fi7.!l00 locked jury rei;u rncci rlcl 1bera· ;ind one elen1ent of thf' ne11• controls will tions tod;i y, Stnr~· nn p;i~e 4. bt 10 sur\'e.v the prOJi!rRm11 and find nut ho11· wr ll thf'~' are running. anrl hnw many adc'licl~ are treated . Singe r a Fa th er LONDON rAP 1 -Ln,·tlacl" \\l.11tk1nir;, the American singe~. is a f;ithtr \Va1kin.!i and Anne-Ma rit, h1ir; EnJ?h:r<h wife nf Iii da ys, made a da sh thrnu~h lhP ni~hl Sun- da y from Liverpool in 11mP ror her f/\ give birth to a i l.-i-pnund bnl' ;:it H11li n11,tnn Hospital nn the oulsk1rls nf l/lndon The boy is t.o be n1med ~1ario Ala:n Loi•tlact . PUMP W~ii1 l lu1 j WloH1 l rown &: W~!lt Undrr lhe new rule'.". cinctors roulci nnl !'un inrlivirlu;il clin ics. Thev 1vnuld hav t In pRr t1c1pa-tt" in approvrd rTiethadonc treat.· men!. prngr;:ims offerin~ more than JUS t dis tribution of methadonf'. Ti eh Rbilitalion Rnd f'l'en Joh counselinii. cnuld be parts of the program. l·ndcr the pro posal. patirnl!i undt:r ti could not bP ;idmitted In the program!i. "This wil l mean that juveniles "'ill be e:xrludrd fro m virlual\y All ongoing m;:iintcnanC"e treatment programs," fhe FDA said_ ALE l i1nitalll Ti1n1 S ll4i'o11St! C~VSt! • BLAO: •NAVY •BONE 19.99 -..,. lJ.00 Ttil: Jl UMV WITti Tt-!I: f'Al3ULV US f'IT? ·' 54 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644·4223 U11 Your iankAmerrcarl:I • Muter Chorgt • Htnil!hlll Charge I ' I 4 DAILY PILOT Dita Beard futerviewed On TV Show NEW YORK !UPI) -Dila D. Beard, the Jn~mational Telephone a n d Telegraph Corp. \obbytsr-who:u-""he:a condilion reportedly will prevent her from testifying before a Senate com- mittee for six mon lhs slipped out of her hospital room for a 90-minute televlsiOif interview, it was disclosed Sunday. Mt1. Beard, against the advice of her doctors , signed herself out of tht Moun· tain Valley OsteopaUUc Hospital Saturday for the interview with CBS correspondent Mike \Vallace for the "Sixty Minutes" --&how aired-Sunday. \Vhen she left t3e hosp ilal. l\irs. Beard wore ti sweater and skirt. She donned a floor-length . gray hospital grown with a high neck and long sleeves for the in· terview. "I feel fine," she told Wallace. "That was a pretty strong pill the-doctor-gave me before we left ... As soon as 1 get back to bed 1 ·u be all right ." l\1rs. Beard is due to be relea sed from the hospital Tuesday. When members of the Senate Judiciary Committee came to the hospital March 26 to question Mrs. Beard about the memo she allegedly wrote which linked the seL- tlement or an antitrust suit aga inst rrr with the company's pledge to give '$400,000 to hel p underw irte th e Morld1y, Aprll J, 1972 SOUTH CHINA ..... PACl,IC OCfAH llORNEO ·.~. &ULU B•A ··o .': . . . ""' ,·• • ~. tor Rescued Charles· A. Lindbergh, famed flyer, \Vas rescued • \Vith a group of 45 anthropologists stranded with d\\1indling supplies among a tribe of cavemen in the Tasaday rain lorest .in the remote southern Philip. IS. U"I Tt lHM!t pines. 'fhe chopper from Clark Air Force Base flew nonstop to Cotabato Province on Mindanao island, 500 miles south ol Manila and lilted them to a settlement...-a-half an -hour-tiway. Skin for Graf ts Can Be Stored Up to 6 Months Fiat Head Still Held; l(idnapers Arrested . Harrisburg JJiry ·era ti on HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI) -The Har. sp~ing nearly all ol 1970. rl!bur~_o jury. deadlockecL o.n the -The-jurors-looked-weary and strained key is!ue or conspiracy against the when they filed Into the bos: at 3:03 p.m. government to kidnap Henry A. Kissinger with their Easter Sunday message nf and bomb Washina;ton heating tunnels, !aillll't t.o agree that there had been • went back into deliberation today.· __... conspiracy.,,_ or that there w.ere lndividuiil The p aner of-rune women and three threats by Berrigan and-Slste~liii'oiUt men ·arrived at the Federal Building at to kidnap Ki3singer conte.ined in two let· 5:54 a.m. PST, six minutes ahead of time ters to each other. In a blue statk>n wagon and a red van, as The faces or some of the women jurors they had every court day since they were were noticea bly drained o( color. A ba by locked up on F'eb. 8. h in the aud ience whimpered, the only B ·noi se. Judge Herman told them he had rown wrapping paper covered the received their note. Jt had reached him windows of the two vehicles as it always has, to keep the jurors from any taint or hair an hour before, written tn the neitt prejudice tha t might occur on their ride and forward-slanting hand of Harold C. of about four miles from their motel. Sheets the foreman, a Hanisburg ta1 RC· Federal Judge R. Dixon .Herman told counrant: the jury Sunday that he knew th ey had .. Judge Herman: the jurors, after lor'lg, "tried Jong and hard" to arrive at 8 serious and conscientious deliberation on unanimous decision and asked them to all fact~ available and the.ir recollect ion try again to reach a verdict. of testimony heard during . the past They had deliberated~33lfl hours in four wee~. are u~able to arrt~e at a days before finding the Rev. Philip F.=-u~an1mou.~ verdict on 9 counts In the ln· Ben;igan guilty on one peripheral issue -d,1ctm~nt. sending a letter out of Lewisburg Penitentiary to Sister E I i z a b e t h McAlister. a defendant, in violation of regulations. HUD -offices. Republi can convention, she had A rel apse BOSTON (AP ) Doctors have of heart problems. The interview v.•as cut de veloped a way to sto re frozen skin for BUENOS AIRES (AP ) -President Alejandro Lanusse has announced that the kidnapers of Oberdan Sallustro had been arrested bot the Italian Automobile mao was still missing. million ransom demanded by the kid· nape.rs, but Lanusse ordered the· firm to do noth ing that would aid the guerrillas •·concretely or psychologically." The maximum penalty that Berrigan, leader cf the Roman Catholic left antiwar movement, could get for that conviction is 10 years. He is already in prison for draft board · vandalizing. A defense spokesman said he didn't expect the judge would make the new sentence more than one year. End Dealings With Fir1ri short. Her doctors said she v.·ouJd not be able up to six months and use it to shorten the t.o testify before the committee for treatment of burn victims. another six months. ~--Spokesnien at the joint skin bank of -----cca~s sa1 the interview was ~ilmed at Ma ssachusetts General Hospital and the the place where Mrs. Beard will conva· lesence after her release from the hos· Shriners Burns Institute say the develop- pital. The location was not revealed . ment has elimina ted many problems as· During the interview. which ran as an sociated with conventional twcrweek skin ll·minute l!iegment on the show , Mr s. Beard again denied writing the memo and repeated her earlier stateml!nts that Jonner Attorney General John Mitchell had rebuffed her attempts to discuss the antitrust caie. Asked about repeated statements by Anderson's assistant. Brit Hume, that she had acknowledged writing the memo, Mrs. Beard said: "Well, he rem·emt>ered1iis~nct~rs<rwelJ that ... he called me the next da y to check a few of the things that he had said ... I said, 'Just a minute. yo u dear boy. I said nothing of the sort last night. and I had quite a few witnesses i11 th is house.' . . . My son was in the kitchen I· est .:.f the time, my doctor was thP.re. more than half the time." Q: '"Well. your doctor testified that you had said tha t you had written it when you were mad end disturbed. We're talk ing about Dr. Liszka." Mrs . Beard : "Poor Victor. ;)id he say that?'' Q: ''SW'e he did." Mrs . Beard : "He gets so mixed up. He tries to translate Hungarian to English and it never works." Mrs. Beard also said she felt "two or three" people in the company were out to get her, but refused to name any bec2use "I don"t believe in character .assassina· tion." DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of the Dally Pilot Is guaranteed Mllfld•Y·Fr~•v: If VDU oa not IMlv. row Otl"lr Oy 5;311 p.m., (Ill I nd your <:btl'f w!fl be brougllt to '(Oii. C1!11 1 r'! l•lttn u11tll 7:30 p.m. St!Urdly lr>d Sundt~: II \'GU do not rKtlUt y!Mlr COPY Oy f t .m. St1urd1y, Of" I l ,m, li.rnday, c111 end 1 copy win be brouohr to )'l>U. Ctll1 •r~ llla11 ""'It 10 t .m. storage. Dr. John F'. Burke. a hospital surgeo n who is chief of sta ff at the Burns Jnstitute. says keeping skin refrigerated for two weeks has many drawbacks. "You may ha ve a lot of don ated cada ve r skin from dead persons in a period of three or four days when you don't need -mueh . .u._ Burke-said:-''-'l'hree weeks later you may de velop a great need and find the conventionally stored material outdated and no donor in sight:'' Dr. Conrado C. Bondoc, a starr member at both institutions. developed the long· term freezing method . Bondoc soaks the skin in a 15 percent glycerol solution. The glycerol . which does not freeze. difru ses into the sk in and replaces v.•ater. The treated skin is placed into a plastic envelope. which resists a v.·ide rAnge of temperatuers and i;eals itself off from outside gases and liquids. These skin packs are cooled to 256 degrees below zero, the temperature of the liquid nitrogen used for the freezing . Bondoc says the rate of thawing the skin is more critical than rreezing it. "You can get away with fast freezing, but you ca,n't get away with slow thaw- ing," Bondoc said. "The skin must be tha v.·ed in less than one minute.'' Using Bondoc's method of freezing and packaging. the skin thaws in seconds when the packet is immersed Jn 98,6· degree waler. B52 Plane Crash Victim Succ1rmhs ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) -Ten-year-old Anthon·y Ell ington ()f Orland o. severely burned in the fiery crash of a B52 bomber Friday. died toda y in Brooke General Hospital al San Antonio, Tex., the eighth person to die as a result of the crash. Telephones Most Orange Co1.1n!Y. 1'•ff1 ........ 1•1-011- Northwut Huritlngtor. 8e1cll A funeral for the seven crewmen who _ djed inJhe flames was to be.held later to· day at McCoy Air F'orce Base chapel here. .......... Sll0•12JO ~1ore than 5.000 police kept up the search for . the 56-year-old genera l manager of Fiat's Argentine subsidia ry. He was s~ized March 21 by guerrillas of the Trotskyite People's Revolutionary Arm y. the ERP. "The in vestigation will continue in an effort lo locate his wherealxiuts." Lanusse told a near-midnight news con- ference Sunday at the presidential residence. The police said they raided a house in the northern suburb of Chilavert where SallusU:o...had been kept, but he had been transferred to another ERP commando group four hours be(ore the police closed in . The missing man's fingerprints were found in the cellar or the Chilavert house along with the bed in which he was shown in photographs distributed to the ERP , police said. A communique said $25.000 al.'iO was found in the house. Lanus.ir;e said the abductors had been "identified and arrested," but he did not J?iVe their names or say how many were picked up . He said they were members of the Workers Re volutionary Party, an il· lega l political group which split into two factions two years ago, with militants forming the ERP. Last week, police named six men and a Y.'oman as the kidnapers . Unofficial sources said at least six persons had been arrested. Sallustro's company agreed to pay $1 Wicks There were rumors Fiat had paid a ransom and that Sallustro had been freed , but company officials denied it. The ERP said it wanted the money used to buy clothing and school supplies for poor children. It also demanded the release of political and labor prisoners and rehiring of Fiat workers dismissed last year. But the nub of the case, the vital part which the prosecution contends shows an overall conspiracy to disrupt the govern· ment by the kidnaping. bombing and raiding draft boards is the first of the 10 indictment c;ounts. It accused the Har- risburg Seven of so plotting that con- spiracy. It is the only count acc using all seven of anything and the only one naming anyone be.sides Berrigan and Sister Eliza beth. The seven are accused of con· Protestants, Catholics In Irish Demonstrations BELF'AST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Protestants and Roman Catholics massed today for their first simultaneous demonstrations since the long Easter weekend. Teri persons were injured Sun· da y night when a bomb planted in a truck exploded outside a provincial post office. The Protestant apprentice bo y s organization gathered for a rally today at Carrickfergus. a seaside re sort northeast of Belfast , to commemorate the landing in 1690 of King Will iam of Orange. The king crossed the Irish Sea. landing at Carrickfergus, to conquer Ireland and assert .British Protestant dominat ion that in the north still prevails. In the main Catholic demonstration at Armagh. the spiritual capit11I of all lreland . republ ican leaders called fo r a mass march through the eathedral city's Catholic areas. An army spokesman said 10 persons in· eluding six children suffered injuries in the bl>mb blast at Magherafelt , 30 miles northwest of the northern capital after a IS.minute w.arning to police by an anonymous caller. AU of lhe injured were in e buildfng next door. the spokesman said. and were cut by flying glass. Earlier, an explosion damaged a grocery in east Belfast and a fire flf suspicious origin damaged a wing of a Roman CathnUc school In the cit y's Ar· doyne district. The fire at the Holy Cross: school followed a controntation between Roman Catho lic antt-Protestant youths, !hf': army said. Speaking a day after some .women in Belfast's Roman Catholic Andersonstown district publicly called fo r a truce to1gi ve a chance to Britlsh direct ru le over No rthern Ireland. which ~gan ThurSday, ,.,1acStiofain said: - "I hope to God that the nationally- minded women of the north will stand behind their menfolk, behind the men, behind the wire and the pr ison wall - and the men who are carrying on the fig ht." WASHINGTON (AP)-The Jlepartmenl of Hoofilng and JJrbanJjeveJopment-has- ordered all 87 HUD office! across the cou·ntry to stop doing business with Dun & Bradstreet. Inc .. the national cred it· rating firm charged by a Cederal grand jury in connection with a New York real·· estate scandal. At the same tlme. the department said In an announcement Sunday, HUO's Fed· era\ Housing Adm instration has 1us- pended its national cootract with the finn under which it has purch11std commer- cial credit information on businesses and individual enterprises. Local and regional FHA offices have been ordered not to rely on individual Oun & Bradstreet credit reports for aJll1 single-fam ily mortgage-insurance: tran• eclion. Dun & Brads treet sells credit report .. on individual Appl icants to pr ivate mor( ... gage companies that may use them ;,, deci ding v.'hether to approve a mortg<'Ae Joan. The ~oa ns then may qualify Jor F'HA mortg age insurance. D1.n1 & Bradstreet was the largest of 10 firms and 40 individuals named in ftderal ind ictments handed down in Brooklyn. N.Y., last week. The indict· ments charged seven present and former FHA employes. including the top FHA underwriter ii'! New York state, with {ak· ing bribes in a conspiracy to sell slum h o u s i n g to low-income people who couldn"t keep up payments on the mort· gages. Stn J utn Ctplstrtno, Dani Point, The Air Force continued its in· vestigation to try to find out wha t started the fire in the planes No. I engine. \Vhen the fire started shortly after takeoff, the pilot tried to circle back to make an emergency landing at the base. During one of Sunday's Roman Catholic ga therings marking the: abortive 1916 Easler uprising in which Republican forces battled British troops In Doblin streets, an Irish Republican Army (lRAJ leader rejected a peace plea from tome Roman Catholic house:wives. Turning Seattle On Sou!h L.1guna, LIQIJl'OI Nlllutl .... 4'l·«ff ·• Cold Wave Hits S. Dakota "Thert is only one attitude to ado~t for the Irish people -concession be damned!" Sean Macstiofain, leader of the IRA 's militant Provisional wing. told 1.300 Roman Catholics in Londonderry. Vice presidents of Foster and Kleiser advertising help "turn on the lights" on one of 200 billboards in SeatUe, part of a multimedia cam· paign to "Boost Seattle." More than 40 businesses have combined ef· forts to publicize the improved economy. in retaliation to a sign spon· sored last year by two real state men that read "Will the last person leaving SeatUe turn out the lights." Wisconsin Zoo Freeze, Frost W arnin,gs 0 ut in . Oklahoma, Georgia p.i,1.HOMAl WfAlHll ~llYl(l f0 tl{4$1 le lrlil 1$1+.) • .,, ~ 30.2• 30.~0 ~ Cold WtYt Wl•n•n•1 wt re '111utd tor !outl! D1111tot1 for lodty ''"' tonight. •nd ltmN!'tlurt 1 were sklddl"t tow1•d fl!t Jtro m1rk fl!rou11! m11cll o' fl!'" 011to111 • Ape Outshines Presidential Hopefuls •• , .. .,,,~[ • .. E•A•N~~MOW m"7J 'L. ,I.II ~$HOWllS ·~ f tQW Stocltmet1'1 WftrnlnJs ..,.,, In •l!r<:;I 11r1y 1oo:11, fr°'" ••11t1t1 w vom1ne MlLW1\UKEE, Wis. (UPI) -If some-· down their high·pressurt campaigns in 11Vou•11 t•nrr11 1<1nui. one -wants-a presidential .. c-andidate deference-lo Easter Sunday, Muskie, Fr"t1 w1rnl1191 "'1!rt 1<1 ti!ft(t lor 1,1~ 1oo:11v 11¥t r '"' noni..r .. P•ri of who is kind o! ugly and not really up on Humphrey and Lindsay decided the zoo o.1111orn•. 1nct trMr '"''"1"'' r1ntM the iss ues but full of charisma and great might be a good pla« to go. over norr11eesltr" Geor1lt tod1v 11 t told 1v111m 11r1tttcr over 111, 1ov111 at drawing crowd~, they might consider With little fanfare and no advance Alltnlic 1tate1. Sa > M k' •· th I Snow encr rfln wtrt •tPOrltd Jn Hew mson. wOr~, US le came w e COUn Y ZOO en1tlenct etrll' IOd1v. and -•11,1 .. 1,, Samson is 1 595-pound gorilla, domlc il-with his wife, Jane, his youngest son Ned. ~~1-t.1~:;;;1~.11• 1""''r Grett L•k•' 1"'0 ed in Milwaukee's very modern zoo, who 10, ind daughters Melinda, 15, and '""~r•tuer• ''"'" tt111 ,. .. 1on 11r1v drew much more attention on ENter Martha, 13. ~i:,~1,'1= .. ''c;:' ;f ~':,.~~.~;: Sunday than any of the th ree candklates Thtie was no overt attempt by Muskie Ttl!, who thought It might be good politics to to campaign and the crowd was very Coastal Weal her mingle with the animal lovers. small. Jn sharp contrast, Humphrey 1r- sv,..,• too•I'· l 1t111 v1r1tbl• winds If Samson, lumbtring e.round his glass-rived with his wife, Muriel. Advance :;::i~1:ni; ,~;17"°,':'u1~ .~_:.: enclosed home and pausing only lo sit on work had been done well and a large 10C1•, 111e1 tuesd•I'· ~oti 1«11y. u the scales which 1erve him ·as an cryJwd mobbed the former vice president. Cot11e1 ttmpere1ur11 r1"" fr""' '° h · cir t•· b' ~ d 't H h d bone bo t look kt •s. '"'•"° ''"'"'°1111,11 ,11111 frtM armc air. ew 1ie 1gge~ crow s. 1 ump rty ma e no s 11 l.l • "' "' ,., w.,,, ttmper1•v•• '°' was a tossup whether Sen.· Hubert H. Ing for votes, passing out his campaign Snn Moon, Tille• Humphroy or CBS' anchor m•n. Waller lllerature to any rpectotor al the zoo with MOHOA't' Cronkite. was asked for the most an empty haind. ~,,.,,,.n .. An•l!tlm •rid ~111• •n• n-$econ11 N111 ·• 11·01 •·"'· '·' au'·•raphs Muskie. and Humphrey both took 1 six-~" ,.~11i/Jl'" ~!Hint\, • ..,.. SKor-a '°"' 4·10.t_lft. 2i Wo • •• -.. '"''"-.,,..___ ·Tu1s0Ar · --------: senEafhlifKI s. ~ffiSRit ana-~~"-mrnute tftjr'atiOard a""lritnfiture ffaln . • • Utntnorg "1r11 111011 •• n: ... •·"'· '·' York M"ayor John v. Lindsay finished Sta~lng ~feet·5. Mus~le acruflched I~ Ar:~ ~~:1~11=·~~~·.:"~~llllffl ~~1':,11 i:oJ '·"'· '·' behind In both types of popularity con-to a seat, with Ned on h11 lap 1fter blow· "" Greet "i.'"' '•r•v 1oc:11¥, bflrttJttt St<-elld •ow .. tesls. Ing the train '1 whistle and remarked '"""' Wll'lcft .... lltllt -l lOfll IN $\111 ., .... S;V .. "" Sett 'i1J ,,,.,, ...... lt'U be I ".w11<1t tdtt o11ttt'"'Id 11r "'""' MOOll •1u11.11s 11.lft, s.11 1:N , m. ,Because presidr:ntlal candidates toned "maybe on Wedne--,-, ult my ·' ' • I size:." ._.. Humphrey loAded the train with ._ many StaH, media and aupporten thltc halfway around, the engine atarted .. - give out. So Humphrey, dressed in a d8* blue overcoat but hatleJs on a co"-1 overcast day, hopped out and helped *' push the train. 'l• They, along with Lindsay, were treat to the bird, monkey, fish and r<ptlle e\t hlblls. Looking at · the parrots, Muslde 94 claimed, "that's the most colorful g~ of politicians you can see. They can ~ and usually say nothing of importance. •i Muskie also exchanged glares .W Samson who quickly became bortd .. dlsrttlssed the Maine senator as ; challenge to his popularity. Muskit. managed to leave the zoo before the arrlvaJ of the olber two dld•lt1 but LlndS1y came just bell Humphrey and had to sit In motorcade waiting for the HHH crowd clear. '7 • • '· ' i I I • 7 I .. . . -.. Orange Coa·st Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 65, NO. 94, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES SOUTH VIETNAMESE FLEE COMMUNIST OFFENSIVE TrooptJr'1 Daughter W11 Wounded During Red Attack Hirth Calls Me~ting Over Building Permit Mayor Ed Hirth today called a special meeting of the Newport Beach CHy Council for Wednesday a; IO a.m. to con- 5ider revoking a building permit for a five-story structure at Newport Center. Hirth said he is calling the special ses- sion at the request of Broadmoor-Harbor View homeowners because the building would block some portions of their view of the bay. He explained that residents want a ''sight plane" that now governs build- ings In the civic center area extellded lo the north to c9ver the entire southerly sector of the Newport Center. The special session call was somewha t a surprise since councilmen 1ast Mon- day had tu_rned down the homeowners' requ est to block construction of the building. Hirth sajd this morn ing that he is rec· ommending the revocation "in order to give fair and full consideration to the desires and rights of the homeowners." Hirth pointed out that councilmen had promised to consider extension of _-the 11ight plane a year ago but for various reasons lhe matter did not get full hear· Ing. "I am recommending to the" counci~ that they delay construction of this building until meetings of the interested parties can be held and a reso1utio.o of lhe problem found ." City officials said a bQiJding permit was !ssued two weeks ago. It had been applied for in December. Developer of the structure is Beacot1 Bay Enterprises Inc., which also owns the car wash at Newport Center. No officials or the firm cou ld be Orange Const We a t her Mostly sunny 1k1es are on the agenda for Tuesday along the' Orange C'.oast, with slighUy COj)ler temperatures erpected. Highs at the beaches aroqnd 68 risinc to 78 inland. Lows 4:;.$5. INSIDE TODAY A /tderai agenc11 ack now- ledges it overlooks a rat or mouse pelll!t in each pin t of wheat. See Page 8 for gu deUne1 011 how much filth the agenc11 con.tidtrs unavoidable and toter• able in ~our fovoriu food.I. ,t,11111 UflWt Tt -" --. 0r .... c-n '' Jft.19 l'wttr ,. '""' 1 .. lt llMll Mmllft .. " '""".... 1, ,,_..,. 11· ... .., 4 --·· .. _ 1a.1• --. reached for comment this morning. Councilmen •last Monday did order a 90-day moratorium on construction of boil dings more than JS feet tall in tr 1 southerly section of Newport Center pending resolution of the sight plane is- sue. Witness Says Freedom Sought For 'Brothers' SAN JOSE (UPI) -A newspaper photographer told the Angela Davis trial today that the kidnapers in the 1970 l\.1arin County Courtho1,1se shootings demanded freedom for the t h r e e "Soledad Brothers" -a key point in the state case. James J...-Kea·n of the San Rafael lndependent-Joumal, said San Quentin convict James McClain told him, "Tell them we want the Soledad Brothers released by 12 o'clock." "I asked him to repeat what he had said and he did,t' Kean said. "I said, 'So there will be no mistake, do you mean at 12 o'clock today or 12 o'clock midnight?' And he said 12 o'dock today," In a switch of signals, Kean was the slate's leadoff wltness today rather than Gary W. Thomas, a Marin County pro- secutor who was one of the five hostages. He .. ·was permanently paralyzed in the gunfire whiC:h) killed Judge Harold J. Haley ·and three of the kidnape"rs (See earlier story Page 5). Miss Davis, the 28-year-old black mili· lant, Communist and former UCLA in· structor, is accused of helping plot the kidnaping. Prosecutor Albert W. Harris Jr. sai d she was ln love with George Jackson, one or the S;oledad ..Brothers -three Soledad Slate Prison convicts accused of killing a guanl. Kean, a press photographer !or 30 years, said he came upon the Aug. 7, 1970, kidnaping as it was in progress in the courthouse. He· Slid he almost became the sixth hostage -along with Haley , Thomas and three •omen jurors from Haley's courtroom. But ht said Jonathan Jackso n. George Jackson's brother -and one-of-the--ki napers, said, "we don 't want this ----. We've already got enough.'' Then, Jean said, Jackson told him with a 1mile, "You can come along i{.. you want to. Bu\ you may get killed .'' Kean said McClain also to!d him lo "bf! sure and get• Rood picJure o( the judge,'1 and he snapped ont, with McClain holding • uwed-orr shotgun to H1l•y'1 hold •nd holpleH police •l bfy In a cor- ridor ol llle-<:ourlhouse. - ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRI~ 3, ·1972 N TEN CENTS Carrier Joins ~attle U.S. Recalls l(it t-y-Hawk,Sends 50 Pla-ne s-. ~-- ,. SAIGON (UPI) -The aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk, recalled from shore leave in the Philippines, arrived off Vietn"m to-- day and its SO planes were ordered into action immediately against North Viel· namese armo red colurrins which have driven 15 miles into South Vietnam. A second carrier, the Constellation, was orde:r.ed from lea ve in Japan with the guided missile cruiser Oklahoma 'City to join two other carriers on Yankee Sta· tion. Store Ass ails Cook's Charge Over Airport Newport Beach council candidate John Store said today he is "unequivocally o~ posed" to Orange County Airport ex- pansion. Store's Seventh District opponent. P.O. °'Dee" Cook . had accused Store of favor· lng expansion because of a proposal to lengthen the runway. '"It should be very clear to anyone who has read my pre viously published posi· lion OOthe airport issue that I an com· milted to wo!k to redu~ the present levels of noise and pollutants," Store said. ''My opponent's stated position is to'" 'maintain the status quo' .at the airport ," he said. Store has called for lengthening the runways by 400 feet to allow jets to take off sooner, thergtore reachinc. higher altitudes by the time they are· over Newport Beach. Cook had said this is just the first step toward more traffic and bigger jets. At the same time, Cook ha d pointed out that Robert Clifford, president of Air California, is one of Store's key sup- porters. Cook hinted that Clifford would have influence over Store, a charge Store labeled as "pure garbage." Store also pointed out thal Daniel W. Emory, head of the Airport Noise Abate- ment Committee, and a long-time critic of airport noise and expansion, is also among his list of supporters. Store pleged ''to work diligently with the C-ity Council to move jet facilities to a new site which would allow the ulti- mate phasing out of jets at Orange County Airport." Easter Crowds Make Bus y ]Jay For Lifeguards Newport Beach lifeguards, operafing with a skeleton crew, had their hands full on a cloudy Sunday with a crowd of 80,000 and surf at its highest -point of the year. Guards made 24 rescues Sunday as the five-foot surf and strong undertow took Jts toll of swimmers and waders. The waves also brought in an invasion of jellyfish. Lifeguards said many of the day 's 60 first aid treatments were for stings as the creatures wa shed ashore and struck battlers. A lifeguard spokesm~n said today that two boys narrowly escaped drowning while-wading near Balbdi's Wedge 3l the entrance to Newport Harbor, Patrolling guard U>gan Lockabey spot. ted the pair as the current swept them off their feet and sucked them unde r water. He pulled both out but suffered minor injuries lrom the buffeting waves. Lifeguards warned today that the sur f 1$. still running high and I.he current is very strOOM. Water temperalure1 registered a slightly warmer 61 degrees loday. • $1.15 Robbery Suspect Killed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A young man shot to deat h by a San Francisco policeman arter a $1.15 -robbery was idcn- ified-after his mother=re1d newspaper accounts of his death, police said. Investigators said' Sunday the youth ll'IS Otis S. Scarborou.gb.. 1?', SCarborough was shot Saturday by plainclothes officer Ernest Maggio after a man held up some hitchhikers, hitting one. of hi victims with a .32-callber automatic and making oil with SI. The man lhon approached a hllchhlklng coop!• and got 11-cenl• allor pointing hi• IJln "al thtlr baby, poltce said . • It would be the greatest concentration of U.S. naval might since end of the born. bing halt in 1~8. . The Kitty Hflwk sped to Yankee Statioh from Subic Bay after the U.S. command warned Hanoi it \\'ouid take "precau. tionary actions" to protect American lives in South Vietnam. Such warnings in the past have preceded hea vy bombing offensives against North \1ietnam. The four ca rriers p:us air force fighter· bombers based elsev.·here in Vietnam and Thailand v.·ould enable the United Stales to send as many rs 500 planes 11gainst the Communist forces. South VietnameS(" Presidrnt Nguren Van Thieu strippt'd Saigon , Hut>--11nd Da Nang of all but their garrison forces to-- da y and flew 10.000 government lroops to Quang Tri to try to roll bal'k the Com- munist invasion. Ha noi Raditi reported that ~orth VrCI· namese antiairi.'raft Jl'.Unners shot do"·n a B52 bombing ' pnpu a\led areas" JUSt "A LOT OF PEOPLE KID THEMSELVES" ABOUT WEIGHT Turin Gulps M11lox While Sunning His Large Frame Battle ·of Bulge .He Loses 119 Pounds in Mike Turin doesn't kid h I m s e I f anymore. For 25 years he alJowed himself to weigh 220 pounds. Three years ago, after suddenly hitting 254, he decided to weigh what he should -135 pounds. Toda y, for first time "in his life, he is not overweight. At 135 poi.inds, he is a dif· ferent man. ''A lot of peOple kid themselves . They attribute their overweiJ!:ht to glandular protilems or ·1tiey say they are just big· boned or that they inherit it. You don "t inherit fat, you stuff it in your mouth.'. Hi s method : 1 "common sense diet'' and exercise. At SO, he has changed his goals and al· titudes for living. He gave up a success ful career in the fabrics business and enrolled at Or_ange Coast College. , 11 Months ' north or the lkmilitariztd Zone. The U.S. command 1n Sa igon de nied the report. The Col11munists hold the nori.hern half of Quang 1'n province JUst bel ow the l'lr.1 Z and front dispa.t•hes sai.: Quang Tri city, the nearby Quan,i:: Tri base and ronj? Il a \\'<'re undrr heavy attack lonij?hl. Quang Tri is l~ n1iles south of !ht> Or.lZ, l)(lng Ha about 10 mites. • A n<>w threat appearrd tn b" de\'elopin.'! 1n Hue. the ancient , 1n1prrial capital or tSte VIETNA!\1 , Page !) -t.,,· Foreign Policy Pan el Recalled By President WASHI NGTON (AP) -President NII"· nn summoned a special fore ign policy pnnel in tn session today to an11lyze and prcpnre options for possible action to copt> "'ith the Communist thrust into South \1ielna m. But thr \Vhite Hou~e :;pokcsman 11a1d tht' Com1nunist push south of the tlcn11htari1.ed zone will 1101 hRmper con· linu1ng scheduled· wi!hdr<l\\'al Qf U.S. troops frorn Indochina . ··our "'1lhdrawal pro~r;im 1s nn 11chedule and will be n1et.'' deputy press srt·retary Gerald I.. \\'arrrn said in response lo a question. \Varren said Nixon asktd th e \\1ashinglon Special Action 1; r nu p (\VSACJ to meet because the North Viet· namese thrust was "a matter of concern lo the Administration and to the Presi· de n!.'' The gi'oup, headed by presidential fnreign affairs adv iser Henry Kissinger, Includes representltlves of the Defense t1nd State Departments and the Central Jntelligence Agency, It generally is called into sessio n in crisis situations to analyze devel opments and prepare options for the President. Warren refused to di scuss whflt actions Nixon might order. He indicated, however. !hat there is little likelihood that U.S. ground forces will be com-- milted, saying when asked about ground forces that "our pol icy is unchanged.·• As the President "watched the .citua· tion vety closely," \Varren said he met with Kissinger and Adm . Thomas Moore r. ch3irman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. and conferred by telephone with Secretary of State William Rogers and Secretary of DeCense Melvin Laird. At his last news conference Marcb 24 Nixon said the -u:s. commander in South Vietnam. Gen, Creighton A bra m 11 , assured him that South Vietnamese (See ADVISERS, Paae ZI T.E. Heffernan, Ex-FBI Agent, Attorney, Dies Catholic funeral services will be held Tuesday and Wednesda y for Thom3s E. Heffern3PI, Harbor Area attorney and Janner FBI agent~in-<:harge for Orange County, who died Sunday, }le wa s 55 and had been Ill for some time. He run s at least nine miles a week, plays handball and works out with weights. He hopes to help others Jose weight and. become· physically fit with his program. Turin lives at 3006 Country Club Dri ve in Costa Mesa with his wife and three children . Now a full ·time student, they Jive on his savings from his past career. Rosary for Mr. Heffernan will be Tues- day at 8 p.m., and Requim Mass will be -Wl!Hne5aay at to a.m., both in Immacu· late Heart of Mary Church, Santa Ana. Hi s philosophy is: "A!l yone can lose a~ much weight as he or she wants : ll'a 311 in how much effort you want to expend." It took 11 months to lose the I 19 unwarited pounds. "I learned what my body nee1e<I , nol what it wanted ," he recalled. "I ate: many or the same things I had eai.<'n before, but in smaller quantities. I ale healthful, balanced, nutritious meals and the weight started peeling orr." When he reached lSS pounds, he began e1erlclsing, following a program in "aerobics,'' a best-selling book by Dr. Kenneth Cooper. and slowly worked hirNcU Into shape. "I didn't try to gel into top physical shape overnight," he said. "That would have been roollsh. OU aren'ffafinO ffa~ by for 47 years end expect.to be a Olym- pic marathon runner in a matter or days." · "Before." he remembers. ''l wa s Bke 1 Jot ol olhor poople. I lhoughl I got plenly of exercise sitt ing in the stand! wntchlng a baseball or football game.'' llls exercises include jogging, sw\nl- ming. handball, cycling, bfskotbfll and walking . G•norally, tt Is advised Lh.al people HE'S FIT NOW Turi n J091 at 50 over 40 should not attemPt a litnes.! and weight-loss progr11m without a doctor's advice . The result: 111 feel better now than I ever have, evt.n as a youngster ... It's hard. to believe th~t three yea ts •ao I (ll<o WEIGHT, Paa• !I Rai sed in C:eveland, Ohio. Mr. Helfer· nan came to Orange County 30 years ago Rnd finally qu it the FBI to join the Jaw firm of Harwood, Jleffernan and Soden . He was a past president of the Orange County Bar Association. an honorary life member of the Newport Beach Exchange Club 3nd was widely active in Catholic fraternal al'td serv ice organizations. Memberships iqcluded. the Holy N3mt Society, Kn ights of COiumbus , the Buck Club of Stanford University. the Quarttr· b1Jck Cl ub of Mater Del High School and service on the Catholic Welfa re Board. Dur ing his legal career following ad- mission to the state bar In 1947, ~1r. Hef •• f rnan was primarily Involved Jn cor· Porate law and represented one widely. kMwn Orange Coast restaurant chain. He later lefl the partnership to start hi~ own legal firm alone , A ttrident or 2927 S. Greenville -St., Santa .Ana , Mr. Heffernan leaves his wife Bernice. plus sons Tom, Bob, John •nd Pat Heffernan. The ramily suggests contrlbuUons to the Thomits Hefferna J11 Memorial Schol· 11rship Fund for fri ends wishing to con- tinue the concern of se.rvlce he hcld 111. lili. • lnterme:nt at Holy Sepulcht:r Cemetery, Orange. will follow rites for Mr, Helfe.r- n•n. with Smilh & Tuthl:I Mortua..,. , Santa Ana, In char ge. 2 D.AILY PILOT N Bl1s Lines < Du e Soon • Judge Rejects- Trial Delav ~ HARRISBURG , Po. (Al'! -A F o w l Disea se Move Planned , deactlocl<!l!!Jury...Pr.W:!sod lo stort Proxmire's No Mat_c_h_~-· ·-ln County --T-;~:_,n-."nii\7~~,?;!f~f:~;rt'~'"~,~.i.,~:r=ifi'~~. _.__On -Pet-B-1·rd-s Berrigan and six other peace ac· For Old Tomm y T1·ojan By GEORGE J.EJDAL 01 lftt D1UV Plitt lttft SOl\1E NEWSR00~1 "1AG_ recenUy_sugge.s.Le.d .Sen. \Vllllam Proxmire ([).Wii.1 might be -flavlng more troubles with his head than he bargained for since his recent hair transplant. ( Proxmire, it seems. objects In the U S Dep;irtment of Transportation fri\•olously frittering all•ay hard·eamed tax money promoting Transpo '72. He particularly directed a barb at Orange County·s . ehtertainment entrepreneur extraordinaire -one Tommy Walker. \Vilker graciously responded to newsmen's inquiries with an e1.planalion . What Pros.mire didn 't know, appar· ently, ls that Walker signed a $30,400, three-month contract with the government to convert '>''hat was expected to be LllOAL a ·losing proposition into a moneymaking, balance-of-pay- ments boosting, international spectacular. After only eight days on the job, \Valker increased predicted admiSsions to the transporation extravaganza by some $800,000. . FURTHER, as director of the Pro-Bowl halftime show last Januitry, Walker Worked a 150-second pitch for Transpo '72 into the televised hoopl.:i . He figures that's worth about $70,000 of national television air time, Jf th e 10.vemment had to pa y.for it. · Obviously, Proxmire has little understanding of Walker's football back· ground y,•hich dates back to his unusua l career as Tommy Trojan, drum major for the USC marching band. Yes, Walker -the only varsity letter bearer in Use football history who never played a second of football -nevertheless is one or the SC football greats. ·- Standing a not·so-frightening 5-10~ and weighing all of 147 pounds, Walk er, as band leader, held for a year the Pac.a conversions scorin& ecord, in 1947. 0 1 LED THE band into the Coliseum wearing a drum major outfit over my football uniform,'' Walker explains. Then, as the team scored. 1-touch· down, the SC equivalent of superman would strip-down to his jersey, run onto the field and kJck the extra points. ----•---"e'edll«1.0!aY1rto0k-a~llttleg1JlSU>get-out-1her~ -orr.lhe fie la WithoUt • shoulder pads or any other of the usual protective equipment other players used. Pac.a teams have never exactly enlisted a bunch of pansies and Walker recalls some rather crushing moments . Now, the 49-yeaNlld Walker is rushing in to bail the government out with program revisions to make the '$5 million Transpo '72 venture a success, The whole 300-acre exhibition at Dulles International Airport, near Washing. ton, D.C .. is being put together on one-fourth the lime the Seattle Warld's Fair was organized. And, it's only six limes bigger than that worldly wonder of huma n achievement. If Walker's record at use, followed by 12 years as entertainment director at Disneyland and a siring of crowd-pleasing spectaculars including the an. nual Rose Bowl Patriotic Fourth of July Show, continues, It's just likely Sen. Pro1mire will wish he hadn 't tangled with the former Tommy Trojan. As for the $30,400 conlract.'Walker notes that's Jess than his usual fee . The Pro Bowl paid him $19.000 for a 20-minute 11how. Transpo '72 runs for eight days -May 27 to June 4. . ~ Cablevision Schedule s Crime Coverage Debate A lively press-bar panel debate on jlre- trial crime case coverage will be aired on the Orange Coast tonight and Wednes- day, featuring noted jurist Robert L. Gardner as moderator. · The show will be "Seen at 7 o'clock to- night and 4 p.m. Wednesday on· Newport Beach CabJevisiOll, ChaMel 3. with four .1jpeclalists discussing the currently con· trovenial issue. Jus tice Gardner, of the Fourth District r.ourt of Appeals, presided over the de- bate, arranged by the Orange County Press Club with cooperation o! the Or- ange County Bar Association. Arguing in favor of 11trol'lg ~i mit! on Youth Fall s, Kill ed As Cliff Crumbles pretrial 4foverage will be Tom Barley, county court reporter for the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT and well-known trial la wyer Matthew Kurilich Jr., of Fullerton. f..1aking a case for freedom of cover - age -14'ith responsible media controls - as guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution, will be Los Angeles Times newsman William Farr and reporter-turned-lawye r Abner Fritz. Farr is fighting his conviction on 13 counts Of contempt of court imposed for his coverage of the Manson Family mur- der trial and must now go to the U.S. Supreme Court. The California Supreme Court just up. held the conviction, based on Farr's re· fusaJ lo ~ivulge who, among three Man. S!>n Family attorneys, gave him inform. .• tion for a story printed by his prior em· ployer, the Los Angeles Heraid·Examiner. By JACK BROBACK Of 11'11 Dt llr Pttet ti.It Orange-Count.y .should-ha ve new bus hnes in operation \\'ilhin four to ri ve months. according lo Martin Bouman, a consultant preparing Orange County Tr.aruil Oii lrict's Special Bus Nttds Stu· da~·. Tr~nslt district directors today ap- proved. Bournan's recommendation that intra.community transit service be sup- plied as rapidl y as possible, thal pre sent services, 15 in all. be. modiHed to provide better service, and that intercommunity . Hr.es be activated as justified by potential demanif:- Bouman, of Alan M. Voorhees and Associates of Virginia, who with VTN of Orange County are doing a $40,000 study on current bus needs made a formal report to the district directors today, Previously. he had outlined his pro- posals in a study session last week. Bouman's overall report called existing transit service in the county poor . "\Vh ile there are some IS public and private transit operations, for the mo~l part they are uncoordinated. provid e minimal service and use obsolete equip- ment ," he said. The consultant added that between now and 1980, grovt'lh in Orange County '>''i ll follow traditional patterns, "which un· fortunately are not condllcive to highly efficient transit service or patronage." He explained that residential growth will follow the typical low density sprawl pattern and industrial growth will consist largely of expansion of e1.isting pockets. Bouman also said that commercial -growth wilJ·come in. fragmented r;hopping centers, that no major "downtwons" are in the picture. • Transit district general m an age r Gordon J. "Pete" Fielding. said the con· sultant's studies were on schedule. In answer to a question, he said the Southern California Rapid Tr a n sit District, which has major operations in Orange County have been asked to estimate the cost of supplanting current South Coast Transit .services if that firm should cease its operalions, as threatened between Santa Ana and Orange Coast communities. From Page l VIETNAM .•. Vietnam, but officials said the situation y,•as under control. Communist attacks were reported at Fire Base Anne, 18 miles west of Hue, and Bastogne, 15 miles to the southwest. Both bases protect apinst Communlsl infiltration routes through the A Shau Valley to Hue, devastated in the 1968 Tet offensive. A South Vietnamese spokesman said the reinforcements flown in today would mount a counter-offensive "in a few days ." They inc1uded marines and rangers from S.aigon. infantry from Hue and lll'O tank brigades from Da Nang. The y were flown nort~. in a collection of U.S. cargo Cl30s, Vietnamese air force transports and airliners commandeered from the government airline. Uvists. However, the judge put a rein on the panel. The nine women and three men asked_ for a r,fl'cading Qi U.S. Dis trict Court. Judge R. Dixon Herman's enti re tw~hour charge, with which he sent them into .deliberations Thurs.Qa y. They previously heard a rerun of part.~ of il. (See earlier story, Page 41 The jury also asked again for a l'Omplete transcript of 2fl volumes of testimony by FBI inJormer Bu)'d F. Douglas, Jr.1 a government witness. Airwes t Begins County Airport Hija cker Tests Orange County Airport has been caught up In the current drive tO inCii3se seCUfi~ ty against bombings and hija ckings. Hughes Airwest passengers, beginning Tuesday, will pass through a new melRI detecting gadget. known .as a magnatometer. before boarding jet liners, according to county Director of Aviation, Robert Bresnahan. He said Air California the other prin· cipal commercial airlines serving the airport should have sinlilar devices in- stalled later' this month . ''Congress enacted a new law effect ive March 18 outlining the duties of airports and airline operators regarding securi· ty," Bresnahan said, ''but action v.·as slow until the jetliner was bombed in Las Vegas a Couple of weeks ago." At that time, the Federal Aviation Administration used its e merge n c y powers to require immediate compliance with the new rules, the av iation director said. Bresnahan said airport operators' dutie! include the normal ones of ex· en•ising precaution to keep vehicles and or people ou t of the operating area such as runways, runup and freight loading zones. Airline regulation! are very detailed, according to aviation director but the dirst .step by Airwest and Air Cal is in· dictative of what we may expect in the future . From Pagel WEIGHT. •• couldn 't walk across the room without getting out of breath," he said. · Starting on the exercise program was rough for Tu..!in. Many times he fr Jt discouraged. "There were times when I just didn 't th ink I was progressing al all ,'' he remembered. ''Especially when I started Jogging, but I kePt plodding away." The action followed President Thieu's flight to Hue and Da Nang in a com· mandeered Air Vietnam jet to look over the situation. Rain clouds have masked the invading North Vietnamese tank columns driving across the DMZ but the weather im· proved today and U.S. and South Viet· namese fighter-bombers struck back at the,, Red offensive. "Sure enough, it began to get easier and easier. 11'11 never get easier tha!l laying· on the couch watching television, but sometimes it's a lot more enjoyable and certainly more rewarding." By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 ll1t P11!r l'lltt Stt!f U.S. Agriculture Department inspectors are expected to move into Orange County 'this week. to klll pet store birds and poultry flocks In an attempt to stem, the spread of an exotic fowl disease. "Depopulation teams" were already at work in Los Angeles area pet stores '°" day , gassing canaries and parrots af· flicttd with Newcastle's Disease, a spokesman said . A special control center set up ln Riversi'de will be a base of operalions for the team which are scheduled to visit pet shops and poullry growers in Orange, Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura Counties. All of these areas are within the eight· county federal qua rantine area which im· postd last month to eradicate the Asiatic virus disease. The d iseas~ aff«icts the respiratory systems of birds ahd is not considered harmful to humans. Chicken~ die -of it within a day or two, according to authorities. ' Flocks found carrying the disease are exterminated and the owners paid the market value or the dead birds, Agriculture Department spokesmtn said. The number of· pet store birds that have already been destroytd is unknown. One newsman said he saw several birds killed by carbon dioxide gas Sunday at a Los Angeles pet store and about 100 birds -ranging from small canarie.s and parakeets lo large parrots -being held in cages at the rear of the ahop, ap- parently awaiting destruction. Officials advised owners of pet birds to check with veterinarial\S about vac· cinating their pets against the disease 'vhlch broke out earlier this year in the Fontana area, They said birds with the disease Newport Thro~·s Support to Park Projec t i11 Mes a Newport Beach hits resolved to support any effort by Costa t>.1esa or Orange County to arquire a 300-acre parcel of state land behind Fairview State J~ospital to be used a~ a park. The City Council resolution urges State Senalor Dennis Ca rpenter (R·Newport Beach), Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·Newport Beachl and Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R-Huntington Beach l to introduce legislalion which would pro· vide for a long term lease on the site. Costa Mesa has been stymied so far by the enormous cost of buying the land which is va lued at $4 million . Assemblyman Burke is currently pushing a bill through the legislature "'·hich would prov ide for the lease deal. Newport Beach joins Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach in support of Costa ~lesa's acquisition effort. Mee tin g Slated On Bond Issue display cold symplonl5 -fit~ o! SnefZ\ng and g11sping for breath -and diarrhta. About 350,000 chicken! on 100 ranches have died alone in San Bernardino C.oun- ty. More than a million chickens 11re e1· pected to bt destroyed in an effort to halt lhe disease. Spokesmen from the poultry industry say their loss from the disease ii now running about $3 million a week, $156 Million Med School Bill on Ballot From Wire Services SACRAMENTO -The Callforn la Legtslature's only physician today won Senate Finance Commiltee approval for his bill putting a $1$6 million bond issue to build more University of California medical and denial facil ities on the November ballot. If voters approve the measure by Sen . Stephen Teale (0.Wesl Point) this fall, it would allocate $37.27 million for such con· struction at UC Irvine. Other projects financed by it would add buildings to UC campuses in Riverside, Los Angeles, Davis, San Diego and San Francisco. · A second, sequential bill included In Sen. Teale's legislation would put another $138 millio n bond issue on the 1975 California ballot. ... Legislators say the first bill. actually $155.9 million, would finance 18 new UC structures and increase thi output of doc· lors and dentists from t2a in 1970-71 to 694 per year. Hopeful s to Air Vie,vs at Two Public Forum s The six candidates for Newport Beach City Council will be given a chance this week. lo air their views at two pu blic forums. An open public meeting, sponsored by the Balboa Island Improvement Associa· lion, will be held Tuesday at 7:30 p.rn. in the Com munity United Methodist Church, JIS Agate Ave . The hopefuls will also address a breakfast session of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce Wednesday at 7:30 a.m. at the Balboa Ba y Club. more than 200 members of the local business community are expecttd to at· tend . During the forums, each candidate will be given an opportunity to state his plat· form and then answer questions from the audience. From Pa.ge l ADVISERS . • • forces would withstand the offensive. Asked whether Nixon still is confident, \Varren responded that "certainly the ap. praisal still stands." SAN DIEGO (AP) -A lS..year-o!d youth fell 300 feet to his death 'fhen the edge of a cliff crumbled bt!neath' his feet at Torrey Pines State Park J'!Orth of here, authorities said. The coroner's office said Steve Blakeley of Lemon Grove died Sunday at Scripps Memorial Hospital about il''O hours after the accident. Hessian Cyclist Seized In 'Sex Capti ve' Case . And now Turin wants to help other peo- ple fccl similar re'>'•ards. ln·belween studying nutrition, speech and physical ed ucation he has started his own he11tth program to help others live at their optin1um and calls it the Planned Opti· metrics Program {POP). F"rom speaking eng agements at V3rious service club meetings, he has thrilled while "watching other people get exciltd about losing weight and g e: t i r. g physically fit," he said. Ne1vport Beach residen ts ~·ho support the $8.9 million park bond issue on the June primary ballot may attend l'tnd or· ganizational meeting of the Citizen's Ad· visory Park Bond Tea1n tonight at 7:30 o'clock in lhe city council chambers. Any clt.izen m11y attend this meeting, which will be chaircd by Mayor Ed Hirth. The team will probably have 50 to 60 members, according to Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department Director Cal Stewart. "But we can have up to 1,000 If the turnout Is good," he added . Meanwhile , the Pentagon also indicated ~odar the remRining U.S. ground troops 1n Vietnam would not be used to reinforce beleagured South Vietnamese forces bat· tling the Communist offensive. Spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim said the six remaining U.S. combat maneuver battalio~s are committed to the security of U.S. 1nstallatlons and are not involved in the action. o•AN•I CO AST • DAILY PILOT Tiit Or•fltt ColJ! OAILV PILOT, wll!'I whicl'I 11 tomolntd 1111 Nr...,,.Prtll, 11 1111ti1i1lltd b'f fl'I• Or•llO• Ca.it Pvb!11~ing com111nr Sllll· r11r t<l lliJm1 1r1 PVDlltllt<I, Mond•V-ll'l•O~ll Frlcr1r. 'for Cot!t Mt11, NtwJ)Clrt lll•t~. Ht.m!l,,.1011 lle1cllfil=o11n11<11 V1ll1r •• L1g11n1 Btt<ll, Jrvint 1Saddlrb1ck ,,,.,·Sin (ltnlentt/ Sin J11tn CtDl1lr1no A 1<110lt r~iC<lAI tdlllon 1, llUDll1~td Sttura1y1 I NI S11n01v1. T"-11tlncl111l ll\ill1f1llln') plt n! Is 11 JJO Wt1t Bt't' S1r11t, Collt Mui, Ctlltornlt , t?6l6. Rob11! N. Wt1cl P re10en1 •nd P1101i1n1r Jtc;~ R, C11rl1v Vltr Prt1i4eo'll tlMI C:.tnr rtl MtNgtr llto1T111 K11¥il li:l•IW Tl,11,.,11 A. M11rp1t;~• N1111gJn1 Ed1rot L P1!1r Krieg Htwl'Crl Bttcl'i City Editor N..,.n •'"'• OPflc• Jlll Newport l oult Ytrcl M1ili111 AclJro111 l'.O. l o• 1175, fl66l OtHr Offlc .. eoti. Mn.a: ))0 W111 lt't' Shtt! Ltt11111 a .. cll: 2'1 11'11t111 """""" M1Mtln010n lr1cll: ''''J l11c11 •oultvtre ltfl Clrl!'Mnlt: JU HOl'ltl ELCtfT!lr.e R .. I , ... , ..... (7141 642-4121 Ci.."'-1 A~tl1t1 642·1671 c:etyi>!fllt, lf72, 0'111'1.. Cot JI P11Dll'11111f ~llolllr. No M..., 1191'ftt, 11!11ttr11teit., ... IOrlll '"tTltr ti' td¥trl1Jll"1Mt• lltrt1n fl'llt M frol'odll:ftd wlf!>ollt H'f(lt J Dff• mla&lon ef COP'l'"9111 IWl'ltr. '-If c.11• tori ... Niii t i (osft Nue ~l ..... nlt. ~-i.1ion ""' e:tl'l'IH iJ U "*""""'' Irr r11tn u.n mont111J1 m1u1i,., *-'"''"-IUS -"'"'· One more Hessian motorcycle 1ang member, sought since a pair of Nevada girls spilled a sickening story of sexual captivity involving forced perverse pleasures for 17 men and women, was captured Saturday in Costa Mesa. The arrest of Kenneth R. ''Vannint" Bates, 27, of 1013 W. 18th St., and that of a Cypress woman affiliated with the outl aw cyclist pang brought to siX the number in custody. A mass arraignment was scheduled this morning in Long Beach Municipa l Cou rt for other defendants linked to the bi~a rre abduction disclosed Thursday, with the arrest of four Initial suspects. Bates and the sixth .suspect, Bella "Taco'' Morris. 29, of Cypress, are charged with suspicion of kidnaping. fllrcible rape, sex perversion and assault with a deadly weapon . • Identical charges are raced by Albert Cutter. 31. of Garden Grove, plus Richard Rizzont, 28, Linda M. Bagal1. 23, and James E. Alan IV, 39. all of Long Beach. Alan is ownu of North Town Custom Cycpe Shep in Long Beach -where the initial raid was made -and reputedly in· ternational president of the so-called outlaw cycle gang. Teams of Long Beach detectives It'd bv Sgt. Jim Racobs are still hunllni: specif ically named iuspects R.mong Hessians allegedly involved in lhe lurid case disclosed by !he Nevadn victims. The pair. 19 and 20. iiitid lht'y were. visiting Long Beach when on F'rlday. March 24. they met a group of cyclist~ at a bar and were Invited to go for 1 ride. The joyride. they aakt, turntd Into 1 five-day ordeal or horrcir. Riding lo A11n'1 moloreycle 1hop, the \\'omen claimed they were repeatedly , raped and finally forced to gatisfy the sexual whims of male and female Hessians throughout the period of cap. tivity. · Beatings "''ere included in the brutality, according to the girls who were finally released on the condition they promised not to go to police. • One said she v.·as forced t() keep house for the communal crew, while a second claimed she was put In \York dancing topless in a dingy nightclub. Miss ~1()rris. one of the two latest Rr- restees. was taken into custody at the club in Bell , where she also dances. Long Beach police accom panied by Costa r..1esa detectives picked up Bates locally on Saturday night and he was im· mediately returned to Long Beach for booking lnlo jail. Investigators said they received an anonymous tip on where to find Bates aft.cr the story broke. Felony charges In add ition to counts of kidnap and rape include forced sexual rel•Uons 'With Hessian cycle gang members, males and females included. Cd~i Man's Father Buried in J er ey fo~uneraJ services have been htld in New Jersey for Couis-Pro6o, !allier qf Mr1 . . J(lhn J. Lorenr. or Corona del Mar. Mr. Probo. who died in Miami Beach. was burled Wednesday followlng services at Our l,.ad y Star or the Se.a in Long Branch, N.J, He is survived by 'his wife itary, two ions, seven daughters, J3 grandchUdren and one gre~t.grandcbUd. , I Elect H , f'tolltlctl """· DOM RACITI as your Costa Mesa DOM RACITI City Councilman HE'S CONCERNED WITJ:t THE CITY OF COSTA MESA ••• WJTH ITS l'fOPU ITS P'ROIUMS ••• rrs CHALLENGES. . AS YOUR CITY COUNCILMAN DOM RAem WIU SUPPORT: e EX PANDED MI THOD OF CRIM E PREVENTION e 300 ACRE ICOLOGY PARK e CITY-WI DE CLEAN UP CAMPA IGN e TIGHTER CONTRO L ON CITY TAXES e TRAfFIC CONTROL DOM WILL LISTEN-DOM WILL , WORK Raciti-Last On The Ballot First In Civic Concern C-poltn Heffquort1r1 If 1'40 Nowport l lwd., Phone 645-1360 "' 541-1313 I • r l I I -. ..... -_____ ,.. • Orange Coast Today's Final N.Y. Stocks voe 65, NO. 94, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' MONDAY;· APRI[ 3, 1972 c TEN CENTS Carrier Joins Battle "A LOT OF PEOPLE KID THEMSELVES" ABOUT WEIGHT Turin Gulps M.alox While Sunning His Large Fr1m• Battle of Bulge He Loses 119 Pou1ids • in 11 Months Mike Turin doesn't kid hims e If anymore. For 25 years he allowed himsel(~to "\ weigh 220 pounds. Three years ago, after suddenly hitting 254. he decided , to weigh what he should -13S pounds. Toda y. for first time in his life, he is not overweight. At 135 pounds, he is a dif- ferent man. "A Jot of people kid themselves. They attribute their overwei~ht to glandular problems or they say they are just big- boned qr that they inherit it. You don't inherit fat, you stuff it in your mouth.'. His method: a "common sense diet" and exercise. At 50, he has changed his goals and at- titudes for living. He gave up a successful career in the fabrics business and enrolled at Orange Coast College. He runs at least nine miles a week , plays handball an~ works out with weights. He hopes to help others lose weight and become physically fit with his program. Turin li ves at 3006 Country Club Drive In Costa Mesa with his wife and three children. Now a full-time student. they Jive on his savings from his past career. His philosophy is: "Anyone can lose as much weight as .-.e or she wants; It's all in how much effort you want to expend." It took 11 months to lose the l 19 unwanted pounds. "I learned what my body nee'.led, not what it wanted," he rttalled. "I ate many of the same things I had eatrn before. but in smaller quantities. I ate healthful, balanced, nutritious meals and the weight started peeling off." When he reached 135 pounds, he began exericising, following a program in "aerobics," a best-selling book by Dr. Kenneth Cooper, and slowly worked himself into sha~ , , "I didn't try get into top physical shape overnight, said. "That would have been foolish . You aren't fal and flab- by for 47 years and e:s:pect to be a Olym- pic marathon runner in a matter of days." , "Before," he remembers. "I was like a lot of other people. I thought I got plenty of exercise sitting in the stands wntching a baseball or football game." His exercises include jogging. swim- ming. handball, cycling ~ baskelball and walking. HE 'S.FIT NOW Turin J091 al 50 ever have , even as a youngster . , , It's hard to believe that three years ago I couldn't walk across.. the room without getting out of breath." he said. Starting on the exercise program was rough for Turin . 1'1any times he fc It discouraged. "There were times when t just didn't Generally. il is advised that people over 40 should not attempt a fitness and weight-loss program without a doctor's advice. The result: "1 feel better now than I • think I was progressing at all ," he remembered. "Especially 1A'hrn ! started (See WEIGHT, Pa&• 2) SA1GON (UPI ) -The alrcfaft carrier ~itty Hawk , _rec_alled_from. shore leave in the Philij,pineS. 8frived off Vietnam I ~ day and it.s 50 planes we re ordered into action immediately against North Viet- namese armored columns which ha ve driven 15 miles into South Vietnam . A second carri er. the Constellation , was ordered from leave in Japan with the guided missile crui ser Oklahomt1. City to join two other carriers on Yankee Sta- tion. ··Captivity Case It wou1d be the greatest concentration. of U.S. naval-might since en_d of the bom- bing halt in 1968. ' The Kitty Ha"•k sped lo Yankee Station from Subic Bay after the U.S. command warned Hanoi it would take "precau- tionary actions" to protect American lives in South Vietnam. Such warnings in the past ha ve preceded hea vy bo mbing offensives against Nort h Vietnam. The four carriers p;u s air force fig hter- OOmbers based el sewhere in Vietnam and Thailand would enable the Unit.ed Sta!r,'I to send ·as many-~s 500 planes agaiiist the Communist forces. Sout h Vietnamese r?esident NJ:uyen Van Thieu strip ped Saigon, Hue 11 nd DH Nang of all but their gartison forces 11)- day and new 10.000 government troops to Quang Tri to try to roll bark the Con1· munist invasion. Hanoi Radirt reported !hat ~nr1h \'irl· namese antiaircraft j:!:Unners shnt do"'" a B52 bomblng ' popualted areas" iust Cyclist Held • Ill One more Hessian motorcycle gang member, sought since a pair of Nevada girls spilled a sickening story of sexual captivity involving forced p e r v e r s e pleasures for 17 men and WOR_len, was captured Saturday in Costa Mesa. The arrest of Kenneth R. "Vann int" Bates, 27, of 1013 W. 18th St., and that of a Cypress w~man affiliated with the outlaw cyclist gang brought to six the number in custody. A mass arraignment was sc heduled_ this morni ng in Long Beach 1'.1unicipal CoUrt for other defendants linked to the bizarre abduction disclosed Thursday, wit h the arrest of four initial suspects. Bates and the sixth suspect, Bella "Taco" Morris, 29, of Cypre ss, are charged with suspic ion of kidn11ping1-- forcible rape. sex perversion and assault with a deadly weapon~ ~ Identical charger-Ire faced bf Altii!rt CUtler, 31 , of Garden Grove, plus Richard Rizzone, ZB, Linda M. Bagala, 23, and James E. Alan IV, 39, all of Long Beach. Alan is owner of North Town Custom Cycpe Shop in Long Beach -where the initial raid was made -and reputedly in- ternational president of the so-called outlaw cycle gang . Teams of Long Beach detecti ves led by Sgt. Jim Racobs are still hunting specifically named suspects among Hessians allegedly involved in the lurjd case disclosed by the Nevada victims. The pair, 19 and 20, said they were visiting .Long Beach when on Friday, March 24, they met a group of cycli~ts at a bar and were invited to go for a ride. The joyriQe, they said, turned into a fi ve-day ordeal of horror. Riding to Alan 's motorcycle shop, the women claimed they were repeatedly raped and 'fi:nally forced to satisfy the ~ual whims of male end female Carpenters End Sw1id at Hotel In Miami Beach MIAMI BEACH (UP!) -The Carpenters, one or the nation's most popular recording groups, have flown back to California after canceling seven days ol a scheduled nine-day run here because they refused to perform over the clatter of dishes at a hotel. The 13-member group led by young Karen and Richard Carpenter of Garden Grove, refused to come out for their se- cond performance Saturday n I g h t because they •ai<\ the Eden Roe Hotel failed to honor a contract pro vision that it must hall food and beverage service in the night club while4bey are singing. "We can perform ln a noisy room and it doesn 't make any difference In us - we .i,ill get paid," uid Richard Carpenter. "But we honestly believe the people deser_!e better.'' Hessians throughout the period of ca~ tivity. Beatings were included in the brutality, according to the girls who were finally released on the condition they promised not to go to policer One sllid she was forced to keep house for the communal crew, wh ile a second claimed she was put to work dancing topless in a dingy nightclub. Miss Morris. one of the two latest ar- restees, was taken into custody at the club in Bell , where she also dances . Marin Shootout Long Beach JXllice accompa nied by Costa Me sa detectives picked up Bates locally on Sa lurday night and he w::is im· med iately returned to Long Qearh for booking into jail. , ,. Investigators said they rrrriverl an anonymous tip on v.•here to find Bates after· the story broke. Felony charges in additi on to counts of kidnap and rape include f(lrrcd ~exu11I relations with Hessian cycl e gang members. males and females inclu ded. Witness Says Release Sought for 'Brothers' • SAN JOSE (UPI) -A newspaper photographer told the Angela Davis trial today that the kidnapers in the 1970 Mar.in County Courthouse shooting~ demanded freedom for the t h r e e "Soledad Brothers" -a key point in the state case. James J. Kean of the San Rafa el Independent-Journal, said San Quentin canvict James McClain told him. "Teti them we want the Soledad Brothers released by 12 o'clock." ..t asked him to repeat what he had i;aid and he did,'' Kean said. "I said, 'So there will be no mistake, do you mean at 12 o'cl ock today or 12 o'clock midnight?' And he said 12 o'clock today." In a switch of signals. Kean was the state's leadoff witness today rather than Gary W. Thomas, I Marin Count y pro- secutor who was one of the five hosta ges. He was permanently paralyzed in the gunfire wh ich killed Judge Harold J. Haley and three of th e kidnaper s (See earlier story Page 5). Miss Davis, the 23-year-old black mili- tant, Commun ist and fonner UCLA in- i:lructor. is accused f)f help ing plot the kidnaping. Prosecutor Albert W. Harris J r. said she was in love with George Jackson, one of the Soledad Brothers -thrce Soledlld State Prison convicts accused of killing a guard. Kean, a press photographer fbr :10 years. said he came upon the Aug. 7, 1970. kidnaping as it was -in progress in the courthouse. He said he almost became the si xth hostage -along wilh Haley, Thomas and three women jurors from Haley's courtroom. ' But he said Jonathan JackSon, Geo rge Jackson's brother and one or the kid- napers, said, "we don't want this ---. We've already got enough.'' Then, Jean said, Jackson told him with a smile, "You can come along if you want to. But you may get killed." Kean said fi.1cC1ain also to:d him to ''be sure and get a good picture or the judge," and he snapped one. with McCla in holding a sawed-off shotgun to Haley's head and helpless police at ba y in a cor- ridor of the courthouse. Ruptured Main at May Co. Causes $25,000 Damage A' rupturing coupling ln.;1. major water main on the top floor sent a flood cascading through the May Company store in Costa Mesit earl:9 Sunday. cau11- ing ·up to $25,000 damage, depending on final estimates. Several inches of w·ater was left stan- ding in the South Coast Plaza store, which is nonetheless open for business to-- day while mopup operations continue. The actident.al break sent water bul> bling downstairs through ,all three levels like rapids in a ri·1et-so loudly, ir fa ct, that It set ofr a burglar alarm· that operates on son ic vibrations. Costa Mesa Fire Department Battalion Chief Ron Coleman 11aid it wa s one of the worst such flood ing.s his mtll have handled. Salvagemaster water vacuum ~weepers ~·ere borrowed from both the Hunti ngton Beach and Santa Ana fire departments lo assist in the eight-hour cleanup job. "There was so much water we had to use a l 1h: inch hose and a sub1nersl1Jle pump just to empty the elevator sh;ift before-we could use It';"'-' Chief C:>l.etnsn remarked. Move: Planned on Pet Birds, Poultry -~ He said Ole Initial alarm was monitored at 4:37 a.m .. 3nd firemen wrre busy on the scene until noon . The break occurred in e four-Inch water main suppl ying the majority of water to the store. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of .. Oeltr "" ...... U.S. Agriculture Department inspector• ire expected to move into Orange County this w,.k to kilt pet atore birds and poultry flocks in •• attempt to mm Ille spread o( In exotic fowl dlseate. "DepopulaUon teams" were already at "'·ork in Los Angeles 1r••:.rt stores ~ day, g1sslnt canaries 1 parrots 1f· rlicted with Ntwcastle·11 1>ilt!ue, 1 spokesman uld. A 1peclal control center .. , up In Riverside will be a ba11 of operations for the. team which are tchldu~ to visit pet sbopa and poultry growen· In 0ran1e. Loa ' An&eles, Riverside, San Bernardino ind Venturi Counties. All of theM areas .are within the eight· county federal quarantine area which im- posed lut month to eradicate the Asiatic virus dilease. _ The ~diieut affects the respiratory sy11tems of birds and is not co nsidered harmful to humans. Chicken!l die of It wtthln 1 Uy or two, according to authorities. Flocks l<tlnd carrying the disease •ra , extmninaled and the owners paid. the market value of UM: dead birds, Agriculture Department spokesm<n 1tld . The number of pol •tort birds that have already been destroyed Is unknown. and gasping for breath -1nd diarrhea. Chier Coleman .said sever:\I thousand One newsman uid he saw several birds About 3$0,000 chickens on 100. ranches gallons or water poured out before the break was diM:Overed and lhe valves killed by carbon dlo1ide gas Sunday 1t a have died alone In San Bernardino Coun-shut off to stop it. . Los Angeles pet store and About 100 birds ly. More than a million chickens are e:s:· Store manager A. w. Messer sal:I todAy -anglng_lrom small canaries-and-peeled to be destroyed in an -effort to h&lt that half the1op-floot'Of theN'lay Cnm- parakeets lo large p•rrot.s -being held the disease. pany w1S floodtd befot e the flow lipilled in cages at .~ rear of the shop, ap--"Spokesmen from the poul try industry down into lower levels. parently awa1t1ng destruction. , , Damage downstairs was conccntrttted Officials ad vised owners of pet birds to say their loss fron:' .the dlsea~ Is now ln the men's and boys' clolhlng section, check with veterinariln.s about vac· running about S3 m1lhon a week. , where sodden boxes of mtrchandise were cinating their pets against the dbei se No infected flocks have been found In aUll being discovered today. which broke out earlier this year In the the olh~'three counties or the quarantine Chief Coleman s1dd much ot the ap. Fontana 1rea. area -San Diego, Santa 81rblr1 ind parel that got 901ked Is of the ve.rsalile They 11id birds with the disease litlperlal. Bccording to the Aariculture -dOuble knit variety whrch can take a lot display cold symptoms -fits ol 1neezln1 0.partment spokesman: ol punishn!ent. I • 't nru:th oJ Uw Demllilarh:~d Zone. The U.S. command in Saigon denied the report. Tht" C:omm_unists hold U1e-northern ha\{ or Quang Tri pro\•ince JUSt below the nr..tz and front <fisl!_a.che~ sai.1_ Quang Tri \'1ty. 1he near by Qu11ng 1'ri base and rong l/<1 were undrr heavy attar.k lonij!hL Qtiang Tri is 15 miles south of lhe O,\IZ. !'long H<1. ttbout 10 miles. A nr1\' threal appea rrd to!)... de\Pel npinz. to Hut', !ht ancie nt. 1mprria l <'apital ot i~rl' \l lET/l\;\~1 . Page %! Judge Rejec ts Trial Delay _lli\RRISfillRG.-Ea_ {AEJ -A df:'a dlocked jury proposed to 5larl all over again today in its a ~,;ess­ ment of anti\.\'ar c on s p i ra c y charges against the Rev:• Philip Berr igan and six other peace ac- 1h·1s1s ~lowever. the judge put a rt'1n on the panel. The lll!H' wo1nen and thrf:'r men a5kl'd !or a r,ercading of U.S. l)i s1r1rt Court Judge R. Dixon ll<'rn1;11f~ entire tv10-ho11r charge. with "'hich he St'nt the1n into dclib<'rat1ons Thur~d11y. Th ey prev1nui;ly he ard a rrrun of part<.: of it. ! S1'f' Parlie r story. l'ni;:c •I\ The Jury also aS\iC'd a~aln fn r a romplelf" transcript or 20 volumP s . (lf teslimnny by F'Bl infn m1er &yd r Douglas, Jr.. a government \\'JlnC!-S. Air,ves t Begins County Airport Hijacker Tests Orani;e County Air-port has been caught up in !he current drive to increase securi· ly aga inst bo mbings and hi jackings. Hughes Airwcst passengers. begi nning Tuesda y, v.·ill pass through a new metal detecting gadget. known as a magnatometer, before board ing jet liners. according to county Director of A\Piation, Robert Bresnahan. He said Air California the other pr in.· cipal com mercial airlines serving the airport should ha ve simila r devices in· stalled tater thi s month. \ "Congress ena cted a new law effecfiv1 r-.tarch 18 outlining the duties o( airporta and airline operators regarding securj. ty," Bresnah an said , "but action w11 . . slow until the jetliner was bombed in La1 Vegas a couple of weeks ago." At that time, the federal Aviation Ad ministration used it.s e m e rg ency J)O\.\'crs to req uire im med ittte compliance with . the new rules, the avi ation director said . Bresnaha n said airport operators• dutie~ include the normal ones of ex· ervisi ng precaution to keep vehic les and or people out of the operating area such as runways, runup and fr eight loading zones. Airline regulations are very delailed, a~cording to aviation director but the dirst step by Airwest and Air Cal is in• dlctative or whttt we may expect in the future. Orange Coast Weather Mi)$tly s.unny s.kics are on the agenda for Tuesd::iy aloog the Orange Coast, with Slightly cooler temperatures ex pected. Highs at the beaches around 68 rising to 78 inland. Lows 45-55. INSIDE TODAY A fede ral age-nc11 acknow- ledges it overlooks o re l or moufr pellet in tach pint of wheat. Set Paoe 8 for guidelin e• on how much. /illh..._tl1e .g1.ncy1-1--- considtr$ tt nqvoicfablt and toltr· obit iti your favorite foodJ. l . M. lo~tl 1 •••""' IJ c.nttrlll• 1 c111t111M ,,.,, t.111111 11 ,,..".,.,... 11 Del!ll H611c•t 11 ltli16r111 ,,.. I l11l1rt1l11m111t II ,IFllllCI 1f.11 ,., Ill• •te:ttf •• HtftwtH 11 Aflfl L.....,1 I) '9\tYlll 1 •u1•1 "'"" t °'''"' c-" 11 s,h•t1 '""" 11 \Nl'll 1 .. 1. -Site:lr. Mlrtltt, •JI TtltYltlMI' 11 Tltttlf"' II WHtll ... • I Wt"'ll!'t Nnrt 1).1• WtrM Ntwt f • ~ DA.IL Y PILOT c --Pro~mirf!s·-i~o-Miiteh ~ For Old Tommy Trojan By GEO RGE LEIDAL 01 lrl• o.i1, l"ll•t 11t11 SO~lE NEWSRP0~1 Vl'AG recently suggested Sen. Wllltam Proimire (0-Wls.) might be haVing more trouble11 with his head than he bargained for since his recent h•fr transplant. ~ Proxmire, it seems, objecl.l lo the L",S. Oeparlmenl or Transportation fr ivolously friu.ering away hard-eamed tax money promoting Transpo '72. He particularly directed a barb at Ora nge Counly·s entertainment entrepreneur eitraordinaire -one Tommy Wa lker. l\1alker gra ciously reSP<1nded to nt'"'sm_en's inqu iries wit h an e1planation. What Pro1mire didn1t know, appar· ently, is that Walker signed a $30,400, three-month con~:~ct_ with the govemmen'tto-convert wh·at-,_ra·s-erpecte<ho be Lit a losing proposition into a moneymaking, balanc~f;pay· menta boosting, international spectacular. .' .. After only eight days on the job, Wa'lker increased predicted admissions to the transporatlon e1lravaganza by Mme 1800,000. FURTHER, as director of the -Pro-Bowl half~me show Ja~l January, Walker worked a l5G-1econd pitch for Transpo '72 into the le!ev1sed hoopla~ He figures that's worth about $70.000 of national television air time, if lhe government hid to pay for it. Obviously. Prozmire has little understanding of Walker:s football ba~k­ ground which dates back to his unusual career as Tommy Trojan, drum ma1or for the USC ma rching band. Yes Walker -the only varsity letter bearer in USC footba ll histo ry '~:ho never pla.yed a 1econd or {ootbalJ -nevertheless is one of lhe SC football great.sStanding a not-so-frightening f>.101.7 and "'eighing all of 1~7 pounds, Walker, as band leader, held for a year the Pac-8 conversions sconng record. •1m d -· ,,., "I LED THE band into the Coliseum wearing a rum major ou 1 over my football uniform " Walker explains. Then. as the team scored a touch- down, the SC equivaient of su~rman would strip down to his jersey, ru n onto the field and kJck the extra pomts. . . Needless to say It took a little guts t.o get out there on the field without shoulder pads or any other of the usual protective equipment othe r players uaed. Pac-8 teams have ne ver exactly enlisted a bunch of pansies and Walker recalls some rather crushing moments. Now the 49.year-<1ld Walker is rushing in to bail the government out with prog;am revisions to make the $5 million T~anspo :12 venture a succ~ss. The whole 300-acre exhibition at Dulles International Airport. near W~sh1n~· ton, D.C., is being 1put together on o~e-fou~ the time the Se~tt\e \Varld s Fair was organized. And, it's only six times bigger than that 'AOrldly wonder of buman achievement. . . 1~ u Walker'a record at USC, followed by. 12 years as en.te~a1nm~nt dtrec wr at Disneyland and a string of crowd-pleasing spect~cular~ .1nclud1n~ the an. nual Rose Bowl Patriotic Fourth of July Show, continues, its just ~1kely Sen. Proxmire will wish he hadn't tangled with the for~er Tommy T~o1an. As for the $30,400 contract. Walker notes thats less than h1.s usual fee. The Pro Bowl paid him $19,000 for a 20-minute show. Transpo 72 run.s for eight days -May 27 to June 4. Cablevision Schedules Crime Coverage De.bate A lively press-bar panel debate on pre· trial crime case coverage will be aired on the Orange Coast tonight and Wednes- day. featuring noted jurist Rbbert L. Gardner as moderator. The show will be seen at 7 o'clock ti; night and 4 p.m. Wednesday on ~ewport Beach CablevisiOfl, Channel 3, _!.lthJQ_ur specialists discussing the currently con· troversial Issue. Justice Gardner, of the Fourth District C:OUrt of Appeals. presided over the de. bate, arranged by the Orange County Press Club with cooperation ol the Or· ange County Bar Associat ion. . . Arguing in fa vor of strMlg i1 m1Ls on pretrial coverage will be Tom Bsrley, county court reporter for the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT and well-known. trial la\vyer Ma tthew Kurilich Jr .. of Fullerton. 1'.takJng a case for freed om of cover- age -with responsible media controls - as guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. wi:l be Uis Angeles Times newsman William Farr and reporter·tur11ed-Jawyer Abner Fritz. Farr is fighting his conviction on 13 counts of contempt of court imposed for his coverage of the Manson Family mur- der trial and must now go to the U.S. Supreme Court . The California Supreme Coort just up. held the conviction, based 6n Farr's re- DAILY PILOT Tflf Or•nt• Caul OAILY "ILOT, Wilrl Wlllcfl 11 c.omblnul thr prj..,....,,...,, 11 pUtllltlld ~ •~t Or1ngt Coal! Pu111J1,.l119 Co~nr. S.Pt·. tttt tdo!lon1 ,,..-111<11IT1heod, Moridtr lhr'!llltll Frodt v, ror (ll11t Mt:u, Nt"'POf"I lHclt, H11111tng111 .. Be~clt Founrtln Vt ll•'f, L•ount 8r1c1', lrvlnt Std<lltbllc~ ~ Sin (le'"fn!f/ Se• Ju•" C9ol1lrtn11. A 1lno11 •eolont l ..,,, Oft l~ ou0'111tl'd SJ1urd1r1 •rid Sunchv1. ln~ prlnc1ri11 pybl/1Jtlf'lt pl1nt II t r lJtl WMI I!.•/ Stre.,, ~II Mtv, CtllfOmlt , Plt16. ll:11D1rt N. w,,; Jlrr.ilot•t 11111 l"uoU11ttl" J1dr II. Cwrl1v V ~• l"rMklanr t lld Gtriertt Mtn,tftf Th.om11 K ..... u ldllllf' Tlio"''' A. Murphi11• MtM.t lrtt (dltw Ch 1r!11 H. Looi ~ichtnl '· Ntlt .f.JllllfJ'll Mtnatflll lf!lon C"t. ..... OHke 1111 Wt it lty Str11• M1ili"t Ad dt1111 ).O. 11.-11 •11. 9162' Ott.er OHk• Nl"'J!Orl lttclt· "n Ht"""'rt l iw!rvtrd LlfllN ltltlt: Jll Ft•t1! Av1nu1 Hll!'llf"lltn 111,.: lft ts auc~ t ou11vt rlf .$tn C.lt mt"!fl Jiii NOtl'! I ! (tl'l1no lttl fu sal to divulge who, among .thr:ee Man· son Family attorneys, gave him mform•- tion for a 11tory printtd by his prior em· ployer, the LoG Angeles Hera-Jd-Examin~r. T.E. Hefftrnan, Ex-FBI Agent, Attorne y, Dies Catholic funeral service5 will &e held Tuesda y and Wednesdsy fo r Thomas E. Hefferna11 , Har bor Area attorney 11nd former FBI agent-in-chsrge for Orange County. who died Sunday. He was 55 and had ~n ill for some time. Rosary for Mr. Heffernan will be Tues- dav at 8 p.m .. and Requim Mass will be wednesday at 10 a.m .. both in lmmacu- laie Heart of ~1ary Chu rch. Santa Ana. Rai sed in C:eveland . Ohio. ~1r. Hefft>r· nan' came to Orange County 30 years agn and finaUy quit the FBI lo join the law fir m of Harwood , Heffernan and Soden . He was a past president of the Orange County Bar Association. an honorary li fe member of the Newport Beach Exchange Club and was widely active in Catholic fra ternal and service nrganizalions. ~tembershi2_s included lhe Holy Name Sociely, Knights of Columbus. the Buc k Club of Stanford Unive rsity. the Quarter- ba ck Club of Mater Dei l:figh School and service on the Catholic Welfare Aoard. · During hif legal career follow ing 11d. mission In fhe sta te bar in 1947. ~fr. Hef. fernan was primarily involved in cor· porale law 11nd represented one widely. known Orange Coast restaur11nt cha in. He later lefl the p,11 rtnersh lp ID stBrl hls 01110 legal firm alone. A resident of 2927 ~ (;recnville St ., Santa Ana. ~Ir. J.leffern11n !r11vt'~ his wife Bernice. plus sons Tom. Bo b. John and Pat Hefleman. The fam il y suggl'sti; ct1n lribulion!I: lo the Thomas Herfernaft ~lemorh1l Sc hol· arship Fund for friends wishing to con- tinue the concern of zer vice he he1d ln ]if,, Jnterment ·at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery. Orange, will folkiw rites for Mr. He£fer· nan, with Smith & Tuthl:I Mortuary, Santa Ana. in charge. -· ,.,.,..,., 171 4) 641.(Jl1 ,,......, '"'"rtl-'11t 641·1•71 CdM !\Ian's Father Buried in J ersey --(....,.lftll, lt11, 0rll'llt (""I' l"11D!l1llfl'!f CtmMnr. Nt Mwl 1ltrl".£._._lt!1111r.i1MJ,1, 'lilli~lll~I!"°' iT.~~'''f'"""" lltrtln l"l•Y !It r•trOCllKH wll ...... 1 •l*-111 Pfi" "'lulen •f ""''""'' •--· 'ICOr.d cl•11 ,.,, .. , Hill II Ctt!t NtY, C.fl!~l1, SulllU'I.,~ th' u rr!tr IJ.U flleflllfll\tl "" -II U !I "'*"'llYI l"l\!ill ,.,. ..,,,l\ftleftl t2.6t ""11\lltlv, Funeral services have betn held In New _.Iersey-1oL..LouisJ3.Dbo.Jalhec_ of ..Airs. John J . Lorenz. of Coron11 de\ ~fl1r. 1'.·tr. Probo. who died in ~fi1ml Be111ch. v.•as burled Wednesday following ser\1lces 1t Ot# l.d.dy Sl1r (If the Sea 1n Long Branch. N.J. H~ is survi\·td by his 1'•ife ~t1ry, l\.\'O sons, seven daughters . 23 arandchildrcn and one gr~t·jlrand~hlld'. • Bus Lines Deter111ined Kid Nixo11 Eyes Due Soon Pla.ys. Baseball Despit,e Leg Braces Connnu11i st ' TERM LINDA (AP) -Wh•n Tracy ·-rn-cou· nty .---C.llcfwell-wao-born-nint· y .. rragcrwlth cerebral palsy, doctors said he would ltam. . By JACK BROBACK 01 lh• o.n., .-u11 11111 Oran~e Cou nty should have new bus ll nts in nperation within four to fl\'e rnnnth11, acco rding to Marti n Bouma n, a cnnsu llant preparing Or1nge County Transit Disrric t's Special ·eui; Needs Stu· day. -· Transit district directors lnd ay Ap- proved Boum an's recom mendation that intra-com munity transit service be sup- plied as rapidly as possible. that presen t services, 15 in all, be modified to provide befler serv ice, and that intercommunity lines be aclivaled as justified by potential demand. " -· •. _ ..BoJJman,-.of----Alan-M.,.-Voorhee1 and Associates of Virginia, who with VTN of Orange County are doing a $40.000 study on current bus needs made a formal report to the district directors today. Previously, he had outlinfd his pro- posals in a study session last week. Bouman's overall report called ex isting transit service in the county poor. "While there are some 15 public And private transit operations, for the most part they tire uncoordina ted. provi.de minimal service and use obsolete equ1p- mcnt," he said. The consu ltant added that bt'l wr.en now and 1980, growth in Orange Count y ~·ill follow traditional patterns, "which un- fortunately are not conducive lo highly efficient transit service or patronage." He explained lhat residentlal growlh will follow the typica l low density spraw l patlern and industrial growth will consist largely of expansion of t'Xisling pockets. Bouman also said that commercial growth will come in fragmented shopp ing centers, that no ma jor ''downt~·ons " are in the plcture. Ttansit district general manager Gordon J. "Pete" Fielding. said the con· sultant's studies were on schedule. In answer to a question. he said the southern California Rap id Tr a n s i t District, which has major operations in Orange County ha ve been asked In estimat e the cost of supplanting current SoutlL,Coast Trans it services if that firm shod'ld" cease its operations . as threatened between Santa Ana ·and Orange Coast communities. Mesa Recreation Office Sponsors Fitness Program -, A variety of physical fitness programs for both men and women will be offered by the Costa Mesa Recreation Depart· ment this spring. New sessions begin Monday and registrations are now being accepted in the Recreation Department, Room 30S. 77 Fair Drive. Physical fitness class for men is offer- ed from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday and Th ursdays at Estancia High School. The first hour consists of calisthenics and ~·E'ight lifting and the second of other ac- t-ivity such as volleyball or basketball. A S7.50 fee is charged for the IO-week ses· sion. For women there are two exerci!e classes. A "Slim an d Trim" course is offered from 7:30 lo 9:30 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays at Cosla Mesa High School and incldes volleyball and swim- ming . On Tuesday and Thursday mornin~s a "Trim to Rhythm" class is offered frn m ~:30 o'clock to 10 :30 o'clock in the Com- munity Recreation Center. A $5 fee is charged for each course. · A yoga class for men and women is of- fere<l from 6 to 7:30 p.m. \Ve<lnesdays un· der the direction of Mrs. Denise Ransom. Th is cla ss is also held at lhe Community Recreation Center but the fee is S20 for an eight-week session. Fro1n Page 1 WEIGHT ... joggin g. but I kept plodding away." "Sure enough, It began to get easier and easier. It'll never get easier than la,ring on the couch 'A'Rlching television, but some ti me s it 's a lo t more enjoyable and cer!aiilly more rewarding." :\nd now l'urin want.~ to help otner pf('l- ple feel similar rewards. In between, ii tudying nutrifion, speech and physicl'I ed~cation he has started his own he11.l1h program to help ol hers live at their opt imum and CAiis it the Pl11nned Opt!· mP..trics Program (POP). From spr;tking ('ngagemenl.~ al various !'iervice club meetings. he has thr illed "'hile "watching other people get excited about losing weight and g e t ti r. g physically fit," he said. . 36 Ce1its Oka y; $3 He'll Fight never walk . But Traey has a way or !urprisl ng peo- pl• Thrte wee ks ago. when he told hi$ p11rents he was going 10 lry out for the Little l,eague haseball learn at Terra Linda . in Marin County north of San Francisco. they• didn't take him too seri ously. After "JI, he we;irs braces on both leg•. But Terry trie.d out ;ind r.~plured pitc hing and oUtfleld positions on the rSlcftiano;-willrcoadltnhrm , aald the youngster has been doing a good job and has served as an Inspiration for the other players. "You ought to \\'lll Ch him when he's picth ing," said Sicili11no. ''Sometimes he lnse14 his b;ilance and falls. But he just jumps up , brushes off his uniform and goes at it again as if nothing had hap- pened . He 's been an inspiration for other members of our club." The youn~ler also plays tennis and pool, and is one of lhe top students in-hls class. High Court Okays Ruling War T11·u st WA S•llf\'GTON t AP l -President f\'ix· on sun1moned a spec!11.I fore ign pollc y p3nel into session tnd;iy t.n 11nAly~e and prepare options for pos sible 11cllon !n cope with the Communist thrust Into South Vi etnam. But the White House spokesman said !he Communist push Sl)Ul.h or the demilitarized zone will not hampe r con· tinuing scheduled withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indoch ina. "Our withdrawal program ls · on schedule and will be met." deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren said 1n response to a question. ~ Warren said Nixon asktd the Onl [u d F 1h Washington Special Action Gr o u P (WSAC) to meet bec.ause the North Viet· ssue.n nw_e -a e r__....,,,mes.-thrusr war•a mltt!r 6rcohttrn- WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Supreme Court today ruled : 5 to 2, that 11tates may not automat ically take awa y ttle ~hildren of unwed fathers. Dealing with an appeaLoi a C'J1icJ1;,Q, m;i n, the court said a natural parenl - ma le or female - should have a chance to prove his fitne ss. "It may be . as the state insi sts. !hat most unmarried fathers are ne,leclful p;irents ... said Justice Byron R. Wh he. '' ... but all unmar ried fathers are nQI in this category. Some are wholly su ited to have custody of their children." The father, Peter Stanley, lost his 1hree children to the slale of fllino is upon the death of the woman with 'A'ho>n he had been living. on and off, for 18 years. Slanley appealed, claiming he had never been shown to be an unfit parent. · Justice White said the illin ois l!i\Y violates the 14th Amendment bPCause it . discriminates against unwed fa thr.rs. In JllinoiS. unwed mothers aid marr:ed fathers -whether divorced. \\'idowed t1r separRted -are presumed fit to raise their children . .. \Ve conclude that 11s a matler of due process of law. Stanley w,as entitled fo a hearing on his fitness as a parent befo1·e his children were taken from him and that by denyi ng him a hearing ... ~he :state denied Stanley the equal protec!1on Fro111 Page l VIETNAM ... Vietnam , bul offici als said the situatio n was under control. Communist attacks were reported at Fire Base Anne. 18 miles "A·est of Hue, and Bastogne, 15 miles to the southwest. Both bases protect against CoJTlmun ist Infiltration ro¥1es through the A Shau Valley to Hue, devastated in the 1968 Tet offensive. 1 A South Vietnamese spokesman sa id the reinforce ments flown in today would mount a counler~ffensive "in a few days." They included marines and rangers from Saigon. infantry from Hue and two tank brigades from Da Nang. The y were flown nortl. In a collection of U.S. c11rgo C130s. Vietnamese air force transports and airliners commandeered from the government airline. The acti on followed President Thieu's night to Hue and Da Nang in a com· mandeer ed Air Vietnam jet to loo k over the situation. Rain clouds ha·ve masked the in vading No rth Vietnamese tank columns dri\'ing <1cross the DMZ but the weather im· proved today and U.S. and South \'iet· namese fighter-bombers struck. back at !hf' Red offensive. 852.~ dropped bom bs through the clouds rarlier ;ind lhree U.S. 7th Fleet destroyers off the coast pounded the enemy troops ana tanks. The Communists threw up intense anti· ;iircrafl fire . and seven American planes ;ind helicopters were reported shot down Sunday and toda y but American planes flew 128 strikes Sunday and more today. of the Jaw," White said in the ma jority opinion. Most states Are belie ved M ii;ipose 6in1ilar barriers to un"·ed faihers -re· 9u iring them to prove the ir fltn_e_s_3j f they want to rE'ta in their children. Jn Illinois. these fathe rs, lncludin ~ Stanley, eould try to .adopt the children . But White said they are treated .. not as a parent bul as a stranger'' during such proceedings. Justices William 0. Douglas, \ViJlian1 J. Brennan Jr., Potter Stewart a nd Thurgood Marshall joined with While to form the majority. U.S. Director Quits Pqsition \\IASHINCToN (t..:Ptl -The l!.S. Informat ion Agency an- nounced today the resigna tion nf Bruce Herschensohn, its morion piclure director, who called Sen. J. \\'i lliam Fulbrig ht i 0-Ark.) ''\'ery naive and 'slupid" ror questioning US IA operations abo;ird . Inform ed sources contended that !he agency·s director, Fr a n k Shakespeare, and other USIA offi. cials allempled unsuccessfully to dissuade Herschensohn from quit· ting. $156 Million Med School Bill on Ballot ' -From Wire Strvtces SACRAMENTO -The California Legislature's only physician today won Senate Finance Com mittee approval for his bill putting a SJ56 mil\iOn bond issue to build more University of California med ical and dental facilit ies on the November ballot. If voters approve the measure by Sen. Stephen Teale (0.West Polnl ) this fall. it "·ould allocate $37.27 million for such con· struction at UC Irvine. Other projects fi nanced by it would add buil dings to UC campuses in Riverside, Uis Angeles, Davis, San Diego and San Francisco. A second, sequential bill incl uded in Sen. Tea le's legislation would pul another $138 • mill ion bond issue on the 1975 Cali fornia ballot. Legislators say the fir st bill. actually SISS.9 million, would finance 18 new UC stru ctures and increase the output of doc· tors and dentists from 428 in 1970.71 tn 694 per' yellr. to the Administratio n and to the Presi· dent." The group, headed by presiden tial foreign affairs ;idvlser Henry Kl!!singer, includes representat ives of the Defense and State Dep;irtments ;ind the Central Intelligence Agency. Jt .• generally is called into session in crisis situations lo analyze developments and prepare options for the . President. • Warren refused to discuss what act ions Nixon mig ht 'order. He ind icAled. however. that there is ·littl e likelihood that U.S. ground forces "A'ill be com- mitted. saying "'hen asked ahout ground forces that "our policy is unchanged." As the President "watched !he situll· lion very closely," \Varren said he met 'A'ith Kissinger and Adm . Thomas f\toorer. chairman of the Joint Chie!i. ot Staff, and conferred by telephone. with Secretary of Stat e Willja m Rogers and Secretary of Defense Melvin La ird. At his last news conference March 24, ~ Nixon said lhe U.S. comrr.ander in Soutil Vietnam, Gen. Cre ighton Ab r a m s , assured hlm that South Vietnamese forces \vou ld withst;ind the offen~ive. Asked "'hcther Nixon still is confident, \Varren responded that "certainly !he ap- praisal still stands." . . ~1ea nwhile. the Pentagon also 1nd1c<1ted todav the remaining U.S. ground troop!C in Vle1nan1 'A'ould not be u~ed lo re inforce beleag_ured South Vietnan1ese forces bat· Ui ng the Comm unist offen~ive. Spokesma n Jerry \V. F'r iedheim ,:aid the six remaining U.S. cnmb11l maneu\'er bt1tlalions are comm illed to the security oi U.S. installations and are not invol\'ed in !he action. 1',¥o Youths Held 011 Drug Charges A young Costa f\lc san and his juvenile companion were jailed on drug charges during the "'eekend when California Highwa y palrnlmen who halted their vehicle on the Newport F'reeway alleged they found marij uana in the nulo. Orange County sheriff's officers ~k over from patrolmen In book Jeffrey Lee McKay, 19. of 2832 Drake St, Into Orange County J ail and lodge his IS.year-old male companion in ju venile halt. Patrolmen sa id they halted lhe t.1cKay car al the 1'.1cF'adden Street offramp ot the Nev.•pnrt Freeway for a trafric viola- tion . They said they spoiled marijuana in lhe vehicle and im mediately called i;heriff's officers to the scene. Youth Falls, Kill ed As Cliff Cr111nbles SA \' DI El;f) IAP 1 -A 19-vear-<>ld vouth fell 300 feet to his de;ilh ~hen the fctge of a cliff crumbled beneath his reet al Torrey Pines State Park north of here, authorities said. The coroner 's office said Steve Blakeley of Lemon Grove died Sunday at Sc ripps Memoria l Hospital &bout two hours afte r the accident H . l"tllllttl Aliv, as your Costa Mesa DOM-RA(;~TI City Councilman HE'S CONCERNED WITH THE CITY OF COSTA MESA ••• WITH ITS PEOPLE ITS PROBLEMS ••• ITS CHALLENGES. AS YOUR CITY COUNCILMAN DOM RACITI WILL SUPPORT: e IXPANDID -MITHOD OF CRIMI ,.RIVINTION e 300 ACRE ECOLOGY PARK Costa ~fcsa service station attendant Ken Rudd wanl3 if cltlr he lm't • man to quibble over 36 ce?nls. He reporttd a customer drove off "A·ithoul paying ror his gasoline thl5 week but 11 busy policeman wrote down only· 36 cent! for the theft loss. not $3.36 11s it should have read in the reJl(Jrl . e CITY WIDE CLIAN UP CAMPAIGN -.-TIGHTER<:ONTROt:Ofl Clf Y T~XES e TRAFFIC CONTROL DOM WILL USTEN-DOM WILL WORK ........ feNM ...,. •rnfthil.._ lte--& l•lll•• Raciti-Last On The Ballot-Rrst In Civic Concern Pnlice correcled the under-estrm11te. bu! the teenaged attendant wants r:vcryone to kno"'• especially cl111m1tts. "It's 1olng back to school Monday -lli-____ ,:C•:;m;,:pa:::,::1•:;":..;,;H,:ucl:;;,;:qua.;::rt,;;•;;,";..;;';.' .;1,;.MO..;..;N:.ow.;por~t-1.lvd...;.".P•ho•n••-64_s_.1_360 __ ._, _s.._-_u_1_3 _____ ,. they·u haras:..me," be said. ' \ I • '